Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FSU struggling

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After a week of optimism about the overall direction of the football program following a hardfought overtime loss to Notre Dame in the season opener, Florida State now finds itself inexplicab­ly facing a gloomy outlook for the future.

After a week of optimism about the overall direction of the football program following a hard-fought overtime loss to Notre Dame in the season opener, Florida State now finds itself inexplicab­ly facing a gloomy outlook for the future.

And all it took was six seconds to erase what many believed was the turning point for a program looking to return to national relevance.

That’s how long it took for Jacksonvil­le State receiver Damond Philyaw-Johnson to bob-and-weave his way past several defenders 59 yards into the end zone for a game-winning touchdown with no time on the clock to give the Gamecocks a stunning 20-17 win over FSU Saturday night.

As JSU players and coaches swarmed the field at Doak Campbell Stadium in celebratio­n, many of the 60,000 in attendance were left speechless as to what they had just witnessed.

“We did not have our team ready to play today,” a disappoint­ed Mike Norvell said after the loss. His eighth loss in 11 games as the coach at FSU. “Coming off last week, we came out and definitely didn’t play in any way to the standard of what we’re capable of. The penalties, the self-inflicted mistakes — it’s 100% on me. We did not have the guys ready to go.”

It was FSU’s first loss against a team from the Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n in 27 games dating back to 1978. The Seminoles open 0-2 for the second consecutiv­e season and for the third time in the last five years.

“It’s embarrassi­ng, the way we performed on a field today,” said FSU quarterbac­k McKenzie Milton.

Afterward, Norvell tried to explain how FSU’s defense could allow Philyaw-Johnson to score with relative ease.

“It was two-deep, man-under and we wanted to make sure we tried to get pressure on the quarterbac­k,” said Norvell. “[We didn’t want] to give up something real quickly underneath or in the intermedia­te passing game with a timeout, so we did not go to immediate prevent [defense].”

“We just didn’t execute how we’re supposed to and it’s kind of embarrassi­ng,” said defensive end Jermaine Johnson, who led the team with 11 tackles, 2.5 sacks and 3.5 tackles for loss. “All we can do is watch the tape, figure out what we did wrong, fix it and put our best foot forward.”

A week after providing an offensive spark late against the Fighting Irish, Milton struggled to get FSU’s offense on track. Too many self-inflicted mistakes led to the offense stalling out throughout much of the game. The Seminoles punted on half of their offensive possession­s and only crossed midfield five times against the Gamecocks.

“There were too many times as we would get something going, we would have something negative that would set us back,” added Norvell.

Penalties doomed any momentum FSU could muster as the team was flagged 11 times for 114 yards. It was the fifth time under Norvell that the Seminoles have been called for double-digit penalties and it was the most penalty yards in a game since Nov. 3, 2018.

“The biggest thing was penalties,” said Milton, who finished 18-of-31 for 133 yards with a touchdown and an intercepti­on. “We would get a first down and next thing you know it’s 2nd-and-25. When you keep putting yourself in those situations is a recipe for disaster.”

For the second consecutiv­e week, FSU was stout up front on defense, holding the Gamecocks to 108 yards rushing including a 2.8 yards per attempt average. But it’s the passing defense that has regressed with the team ranked dead-last in the ACC.

Florida State has allowed a dozen explosive passing plays (20-plus yards) so far this season including three of 40-or-more yards including the game-winning 59-yard strike Saturday night.

The mood following this loss was a very different one than after the loss to Notre Dame last week. Players and coaches seemed encouraged by the team’s effort against the Fighting Irish, rallying from 18 points down to send the game into overtime.

“I think when you’re satisfied after a loss, this is the kind of stuff that happens,” Milton said. “I’m not saying we’re OK with losing last week, but you get a pat on your back for effort but we still lost. We lost today. ”

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