Chicago Sun-Times

HUSKIE-WOW-WOW

This time, Northern Illinois stands legitimate chance to beat Florida State

- STEVE GREENBERG sgreenberg@suntimes.com | @SLGreenber­g

Six seasons ago, then Northern Illinois quarterbac­k Jordan Lynch looked me dead in the eyes during a one-on-one interview and said of upcoming Orange Bowl opponent Florida State:

‘‘We plan on wearing them down. In the fourth quarter, we plan to have them on their knees — and then just keep pounding away. They’re just like us. They’re human, too. If you cut them, they bleed.’’

I asked Lynch, a Heisman Trophy candidate and the leading rusher in the country among quarterbac­ks, if he was sure he wanted to put such a strong message out there. He said he was.

Suffice it to say, the Seminoles — second only to eventual champion Alabama in total defense — were all too pleased to stymie Lynch and the Huskies in a 31-10 victory.

New coach Rod Carey, who’d replaced N.C. State-bound Dave Doeren after the regular season, fumed during a postgame news conference. He claimed to have been present as I interviewe­d Lynch (he wasn’t) and that Lynch had been misquoted (also untrue).

It was an unpleasant episode, but it’s water under the bridge now.

Six years later, though, Northern Illinois at Florida State (2:30 p.m., ESPNU) is interestin­g for at least a couple of reasons. One is that the Huskies are confident again.

‘‘I feel like we’ll match up no problem with them,’’ linebacker Lance Deveaux told reporters this week.

‘‘[FSU is] just a name,’’ receiver Spencer Tears said. ‘‘[They] strap up just like we do,

so we’re going to come to play football just like they are.’’

And guess what? That confidence is warranted. Orange Bowl-bound NIU was a 13½-point underdog that, in hindsight, really didn’t have much of a chance. But 1-2 NIU heads to 1-2 FSU at a time when the Seminoles — favored by 10 — are by far the bigger mess.

First-year coach Willie Taggart’s team already has lost by 21 points to Virginia Tech and by 23 last week at Syracuse. FSU ranks 111th in the country in offense and — even harder to believe — 96th in defense.

‘‘It’s a dynamic football team,’’ Carey said. ‘‘I know their record doesn’t show that, but you put on the film, and they have players all over the field that are big, long, strong, fast, good football players.’’

There’s no doubt the ’Noles again look more daunting than the Huskies getting off the bus, but it would be foolish to say Carey and Co. can’t hang in there in this ‘‘rematch.’’ One of these teams will contend for a Mid-American Conference title, while the other will fade away as an Atlantic Coast Conference afterthoug­ht.

An outright upset would be a scream, wouldn’t it? NIU 20, FSU 17.

Five other enticing matchups Saturday:

No. 2 Georgia (-14) at Missouri (11 a.m., ESPN): The unbeaten Tigers have a future NFL quarterbac­k in Drew Lock and an offensive line that has been outstandin­g in protection. What they don’t have is a defense that can go nose-to-nose with the Bulldogs. Nose-to-chest, maybe? Georgia runs away, 45-27. Nebraska (+18½) at No. 19

Michigan (11 a.m., FS1): Forget the Huskers’ winless record. The question I have is, when will they start competing under new coach Scott Frost? An effort they can be proud of in this one might go a long way. Wolverines by 10. No. 7 Stanford (-2) at No. 20

Oregon (7 p.m., Ch. 7): The Ducks’ offense is flying again. In other news, the Ducks have yet to play an opponent with a pulse. The last two meetings have gone to the Cardinal — by a combined 67 points. Fear the Tree. No. 24 Michigan State (-5)

at Indiana (6:30 p.m., BTN+): The Spartans, who still see themselves as Big Ten contenders, are looking to avoid what would be a disastrous second defeat in September. The Hoosiers are trying to get to 4-0 for only the second time in 28 seasons. Sparty by a touchdown. No. 18 Wisconsin (-3) at Iowa

(7:30 p.m., Fox-32): Watch this sneak up on everybody as the game of the week and a fitting successor on the thrill-o-meter to the Hawkeyes’ prime-time home classics against Penn State in 2017 and Michigan in 2016. The Badgers, coming off an upset loss to BYU, need this one in the worst way — and they get it, 24-20.

My favorite favorite: No. 1 Alabama (-26½) vs. No. 22 Texas

A&M (2:30 p.m., Ch. 2). The Crimson Tide are 3-0 against the spread, with, on average, about three touchdowns to spare. Is that compelling enough for you? My favorite underdog: Arizona State (+18) at No. 10 Washington

(9:30 p.m., ESPN). Just like Auburn sacked Jake Browning five times in the 2018 opener, the Sun Devils had five sacks in their upset of the Huskies last season. Washington has to earn this ‘‘W.’’

Last week: 3-4 straight up, 4-3 against the spread.

Season to date: 11-8 straight up, 9-10 against the spread.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Florida State’s Rashad Greene and Greg Dent celebrate after Greene scored on a six-yard reception against Northern Illinois in the Orange Bowl on Jan. 1, 2013.
GETTY IMAGES Florida State’s Rashad Greene and Greg Dent celebrate after Greene scored on a six-yard reception against Northern Illinois in the Orange Bowl on Jan. 1, 2013.
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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Missouri quarterbac­k Drew Lock might have an NFL future, but he will face a stern test Saturday against No. 2 Georgia’s defense in Columbia, Mo.
GETTY IMAGES Missouri quarterbac­k Drew Lock might have an NFL future, but he will face a stern test Saturday against No. 2 Georgia’s defense in Columbia, Mo.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Scott Frost is winless in two games as the coach at Nebraska, which is an 18½-point underdog Saturday against Michigan in Ann Arbor.
GETTY IMAGES Scott Frost is winless in two games as the coach at Nebraska, which is an 18½-point underdog Saturday against Michigan in Ann Arbor.

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