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Badgers, ’Canes find way to Orange Bowl

- By Tim Reynolds Associated Press Sports Writer

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — The only common opponent for Wisconsin and Miami this season has no home stadium, made no bowl game and most assuredly has no fan base. It wasn’t even a football team. Hurricane Irma hit Miami, not Madison, though the devastatin­g storm left a lasting impact on both programs. Miami was forced from its campus for more than a week because of the storm — as was Florida Atlantic, which played at Wisconsin on Sept. 8 and became the Badgers’ guests for several days afterward until it was safe for the Owls to return to their storm-struck home.

So maybe it’s fitting that No. 6 Wisconsin (12-1) and No. 10 Miami (10-2) were paired for the Orange Bowl, which will be played on the Hurricanes’ home field tonight.

“I think any time you’re around other people and you get a chance to learn, you’re appreciati­ve of what you’ve got,” said Wisconsin coach Paul Chryst, whose team will vie for a school-record 13th win on the season. “It was just college kids being good to other college kids. It was pretty cool.”

Most of Miami’s coaches and players ended up riding out Irma in Orlando, since that was the nearest spot where the Hurricanes could both escape the storm’s wrath and find enough hotel space to have everyone together.

The time made Miami get closer as a team, and coach Mark Richt said that clearly helped during the season. And he also has great respect for what Wisconsin did, opening its home to FAU.

“There’s good people everywhere in America, and everybody knows when there’s an issue and some type of catastroph­ic storm coming or whatever it may be, everybody is like what can we do to help?” Richt said. “What can we do to help?”

Irma cost Miami a bye week and necessitat­ed a change in the date of the Florida State game, so the Hurricanes played on 11 consecutiv­e weekends — and it took a toll. Miami’s worst two games, and its only losses, were on the last two weeks of that grind. Miami limped to the finish line, and was simply overmatche­d in the Atlantic Coast Conference title game against Clemson.

“There’s no doubt that we paid the price,” Miami defensive coordinato­r Manny Diaz said.

But they’re fresh now after basically a month off, and will need to be against the Badgers — a team that was one win from the College Football Playoff.

“You know, we could obviously finish in the top 10. That would be big,” Richt said. “Get 11 victories, which would be nice. So I mean, there’s a lot of things. But if you look at the things that Wisconsin is playing for, they’ve got some pretty strong motivation, as well.”

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