Heads22 Posted May 25, 2006 Share Posted May 25, 2006 No. 15 The Run (1996) Nebraska vs. Florida In the Cornhuskers 62-24 Fiesta Bowl win, QB Tommie Frazier left several Gators in his tracks for an amazing 75-yard touchdown run. "How many tackles can one make break?" exclaims the announcer. No. 14 Teague Runs Down Thomas (1993) Alabama v. Miami Trailing 27-6 early in the second half, Gino Toretta hit a streaking Lamar Thomas down the sideline for an apparent Hurricanes TD. Thomas, a member of Miami's 4x400 relay team and considered one of the fastest receivers in the nation, appeared to be headed for an easy score, but DB George Teague ran Thomas down, stripped the ball and gained possession. Unfortunately for Alabama, the play was nullifed by a penalty. No. 13 Bill Newton's Blocked Kick (1972) Auburn vs. Alabama Alabama was up 16-3 and only five minutes away from a 11-0 start and a chance to play for the national championship. But Auburn's Bill Newton blocked a punt, which bounced to teammate David Langner who took it for a 25-yard touchdown with 5:30 remaining. Auburn held on defense and with three minutes remaining and forced Alabama to punt. Once again, Newton blocked the kick, Langner picked it up and ran for the score, giving the Tigers a 17-16 win. No. 12 Prothro's Catch (2005) Alabama vs. Southern Mississippi Down 21-10 with 25 seconds left in the first half, Alabama QB Brodie Croyle threw a Hail Mary in the direction of receiver Tyrone Prothro. In a "you have to see it to believe it" moment, Prothro reached around safety Jasper Faulk, grabbed the ball just before it hit the defender and held on tight as the two hit the ground and flipped into the end zone. Although Prothro's knee was ruled down at the one-yard-line, the Tide scored on the next play. No. 11 Belue's Miracle (1980) Georgia vs. Florida Georgia QB Buck Belue was having an atrocious game with only 52 total passing yards and two INTs, but thanks to Hershel Walker the Dogs were only trailing 21-20 with 1:31 remaining. Facing a third-and-7 on the Georgia 7, Belue faded back and found receiver Lindsay Scott in the middle of the field for the first down. Two Gators defenders appeared to be in position for the tackle, but both fell, allowing Scott to run free down the left sideline making his way for the improbable 93-yard touchdown. No. 10 Miracle in Michigan (1994) Michigan vs. Colorado On the game's final play, Colorado found itself down five with the ball on its own 36-yard line. Kordell Stewart uncorked a 73-yard bomb, which is deflected by a Michigan defender into the hands of diving receiver Michael Westbrook, who clung to the ball to gave the Buffaloes an improbable 27-26 victory. No. 9 The Run II (2002) Iowa State vs. Texas Tech Iowa State QB Seneca Wallace showed off his elusive ability, zig-zagging through defenders with the help of a crushing block by Michael Wagner for a ridiculously long 12-yard TD run that covered nearly 100 yards to give the Cyclones a 10-3 lead in the third quarter. (Yay) No. 8 Amazin' Hawkeyes (2005) Iowa vs. LSU After LSU battled back to erase a 12-point fourth-quarter deficit in the Capitol One Bowl, Iowa QB Drew Tate threaded a bomb to Warren Holloway who caught the ball in stride at the 10-yard-line and ran it in for a 56-yard touchdown as time expired to give Iowa a 30-25 win. No. 7 Immaculate Reception (1997) Nebraska vs. Missouri Trailing 38-31 with 12 seconds left and the ball at the Missouri 12-yard line, Nebraska quarterback Scott Frost fired a pass to Shevin Wiggins in the end zone. The pass was deflected by a Missouri defender, kicked into the air and eventually caught by Nebraska receiver Matt Davison with no time left. The Huskers went on to win in overtime. No. 6 Miracle Bowl (1981) BYU vs. SMU It wasn't just Jim McMahon's incredible 60-yard game-winning touchdown pass to Clay Brown with no time remaining , but the entire final three minutes. BYU was trailing 45-25 when it scored a TD, recovered the onside kick, scored again and then failed to convert a second onside kick. But the Coughars defense held tough and forced a punt with 16 seconds left. McMahon then found Brown between three SMU defenders to cap one of the greatest comebacks in college football history. No. 5 Bluegrass Miracle (2002) Kentucky vs. LSU Down 30-27 amd pinned back at their own 18-yard line with two seconds remaining, LSU quarterback Marcuss Randall threw a Hail Mary that didn't even make the endzone. The Wildcats went into full celebration mode, pouring Gatorade over the head of coach Guy Morriss as Kentucky fans stormed the field. One problem, though. LSU's Devery Henderson caught the ball on the 15 yard, broke a shoestring tackle and scored the game-winning touchdown. No. 4 Vince-anity (2006) Texas vs. USC On fourth down with the national title on the line, Vince Young, scrambled eight-yards untouched into the end zone for the last of his three rushing TD's to give Texas a 41-38 lead with 19 seconds remaining to complete an improbable comeback. Young literally put the Longhorns on his back and carried them to the title. No. 3 Flutie Magic (1984) BC vs. Miami Down 45-41 to the No. 1-ranked Hurricanes at the Orange Bowl, the Eagles had one final chance. The 5-foot-9 Flutie dropped back, scrambled to his right and heaved a 48-yard bomb with time expired. The ball sailed over the fingertips of the three Miami defenders and into the arms of Gerald Phelan giving BC a 47-45 BC victory. No. 2 The Play (1982) California vs. Stanford You've seen it many times: John Elway leads the Cardinal down the field to take a 20-19 lead with four seconds left. But on the ensuing kickoff, Cal completed six laterals (some of them illegal) and survived several near tackles before the Bears' Kevin Moen found himself with the ball and nobody standing between him and the final 26 yards to the endzone ... except the Stanford Marching Band. No problem for Moen, who ran through the band on his way to the endzone and a 25-20 Cal win. No. 1 The Bush Push (2005) USC vs. Notre Dame Trailing,31-28, USC QB Matt Leinart had a choice: spike the ball and kick a field goal or go for the win. Leinart chose the latter and after getting stopped at the goal line, he got a push (albeit an illegal one) push from Reggie Bush to give the Trojans a 37-34 win and extend their winning streak to 28 games. Number four and number one shouldn't be on the list. Hell, that wasn't even the biggest play on USC's drive. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WHarris1 Posted May 26, 2006 Share Posted May 26, 2006 Hahaha how is that USC play better than #2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chisoxfn Posted May 26, 2006 Share Posted May 26, 2006 This list is freaking terrible. Also, Heads, look 1 play ahead of that one..thats right IOWA over LSU Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Brian Posted May 26, 2006 Share Posted May 26, 2006 BS to that Nebraska/Missouri play. It was illegal and Michigan keeps the National Title to themselves! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Heads22 Posted May 26, 2006 Author Share Posted May 26, 2006 QUOTE(Chisoxfn @ May 25, 2006 -> 08:04 PM) This list is freaking terrible. Also, Heads, look 1 play ahead of that one..thats right IOWA over LSU The ISU play was more spectacular. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoxFan1 Posted May 26, 2006 Share Posted May 26, 2006 Outside of Michigan/Colorado, this is the Top 15 College Football plays in the South. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Heads22 Posted May 26, 2006 Author Share Posted May 26, 2006 I'll agree there's a lot of south, but like Iowa and ISU, the north prevailed. Until the North had to play Oklahoma later that year. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Soxbadger Posted May 26, 2006 Share Posted May 26, 2006 I dont even see how 1 was on the list. Was it because the game was played at ND between media darlings? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BabyJesus69 Posted May 27, 2006 Share Posted May 27, 2006 i'm not sure why haughtlin's kick in 85 isn't on there Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WilliamTell Posted May 28, 2006 Share Posted May 28, 2006 I didn't even think number 1 was all that great. All of these have happened in the last 26 years and are they calling these the greatest plays ever? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Human Borch Posted May 28, 2006 Share Posted May 28, 2006 (edited) The "Bush Push" was complete bulls***. There is no way in hell that should be the number one play in college football, it should not be in the top 100! Thats just another example of the media's love affair with USC. Edited May 28, 2006 by The Human Borch Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aboz56 Posted May 29, 2006 Share Posted May 29, 2006 I was at #5. What a game. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dam8610 Posted May 29, 2006 Share Posted May 29, 2006 #4 should not be on there, but Vince Young's performance in the Rose Bowl was one of the greatest individual performances of all time, if not the greatest. #1 should not be there at all, although that was probably the 2nd or 3rd best game of the year. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pauly8509CWS Posted May 29, 2006 Share Posted May 29, 2006 Personally I think #10 should at least be top 3. Damn, I've seen that play a bunch of times and I dont know how that couldn't be up there. #1 is a complete joke. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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