Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Blackman’s comebacks encourage teammates

- By Safid Deen Staff writer

TALLAHASSE­E – Florida State quarterbac­k James Blackman was on the verge of throwing his third intercepti­on in his third career start.

Blackman dropped back and fired a pass to his favorite target, junior receiver Auden Tate, before it was nearly intercepte­d in a basic Cover-4 scheme by Miami safety Jaquan Johnson during last Saturday’s matchup in Doak Campbell Stadium.

As the Seminoles scrambled to get in position for their next play, a third-and-10 from their 16-yard line down 10-3 early in the fourth quarter, FSU coach Jimbo Fisher called an instrument­al timeout to coach up Blackman, the 18-year-old quarterbac­k tasked with replacing injured starter Deondre Francois this season.

After a demonstrat­ive talk on the sidelines with Fisher, Blackman went on to complete all nine of his passes for 127 yards with two touchdowns to lead the Seminoles to its secondfour­th quarter comeback in as many weeks until Miami snapped FSU’s 7-game winning streak in the series in the final minute.

“I think it was a big moment,” Fisher said Wednesday of Blackman, who hopes to help FSU beat Duke for the 20th consecutiv­e time on Saturday.

“He played a great fourth quarter. The last three times we touched the ball, we scored a touchdown, a field goal and touchdown. He had a big part in a lot of it.

“It’s a constant growing process for him. I think he’s getting better and better. The way he played in the quarter, the magnitude of the game, the opponent and all the things that went on, I think he did take great steps.”

Florida State’s offense has struggled mightily to put points on the scoreboard during the first three starts of Blackman’s career after Francois suffered a seasonendi­ng knee injury in the season opener against Alabama.

But the Seminoles (1-3, 1-2 ACC) are highly encouraged with the process Blackman is making, especially in the fourth quarter.

After tossing a 40-yard touchdown to Tate, leading FSU to its first victory of the season at Wake Forest on Sept. 30, Blackman put the Seminoles in position to win another game in dramatic fashion with his 20-yard touchdown to Tate with 1:24 remaining against Miami.

Blackman’s strong finish against the Hurricanes came after starting the game completing just 8 of 19 passes for 76 yards with two intercepti­ons.

“It’s very encouragin­g to the offense, even the O-linemen, seeing [Blackman] step up in those big moments and take charge of the offense to take us down the field and win the game,” FSU receiver Nyqwan Murray said. “It’s very encouragin­g.”

As Blackman continues to grow more comfortabl­e in practice, the Seminoles are starting to also see him acclimate better with each ensuing start under his belt.

Senior safety Ermon Lane said when Blackman was first named FSU’s starter early last month, the Seminoles defense had five intercepti­ons on the young quarterbac­k, trying to navigate Fisher’s elaborate prostyle offense.

Now, Blackman is starting to read defensive coverages better, evident by his work in the fourth quarters of the last two games.

“We know we’ve got somebody that can step up and lead the way,” Lane said of Blackman. “We just have to come together.”

Third-year safety Derwin James and fourth-year tight end Ryan Izzo both praised Blackman for playing under immense pressure as an 18-year-old trying to lead a team that started with a preseason No. 3-ranking and championsh­ip aspiration­s.

“I couldn’t imagine having that much pressure on me at 18 years old,” James said. “I feel like he has a lot of pressure, and to me, he’s doing great.”

 ?? STEVEN CANNON/AP ?? After getting coached up late, Florida State’s James Blackman completed nine straight passes for 127 yards and two touchdowns against Miami.
STEVEN CANNON/AP After getting coached up late, Florida State’s James Blackman completed nine straight passes for 127 yards and two touchdowns against Miami.

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