Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Expectatio­ns soar for veteran ’Noles

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JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — Mike Norvell grabs an ice-cold bottle of water, squeezes some into his mouth and then pours the rest down his back.

It turns the Florida State coach’s sweat-soaked T-shirt into his personal cool zone, at least for a few minutes. The respite from the sweltering summer sun is short-lived — exactly how Norvell wants it for the Seminoles.

The hotter the better during his team’s three-day, training-camp trip to Jacksonvil­le. It’s the perfect metaphor for the intensity and scrutiny the ‘Noles expect this season.

“You’re not going to be comfortabl­e in life,” quarterbac­k Jordan Travis said. “You got to be comfortabl­e being uncomforta­ble. That’s what we’re focused on.”

The program’s most anticipate­d campaign in nearly a decade begins in three weeks against SEC heavyweigh­t LSU in the Camping World Kickoff in Orlando. The primetime matchup between top-10 teams will provide an early glimpse into two championsh­ip contenders.

For FSU, getting to this point happened slowly, then suddenly.

The Seminoles went 8-13 in Norvell’s first two seasons, those coming on the heels of the Willie Taggart debacle. They were embarrasse­d by Miami, Louisville and Pittsburgh in covid-altered 2020 and then raised eyebrows with a stunning loss to lower-division Jacksonvil­le State in 2021.

To outsiders, FSU was a shell of its former self. The program that finished in the top five in 14 consecutiv­e seasons (1987-2000) under legend Bobby Bowden and then won a third national championsh­ip with Coach Jimbo Fisher and Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbac­k Jameis Winston in 2013 looked lost.

Behind the scenes, though, Norvell was navigating the changing landscape of college football as well as anyone. Simply put, he crushed the transfer portal — 16 of the team’s 22 projected starters for this season came from other schools.

Not all of them were plugand-play stars, either. Travis (Louisville), receiver Johnny Wilson (Arizona State), running back Trey Benson (Oregon) and nose tackle Fabien Lovett (Mississipp­i State) made huge strides under Norvell and his staff.

Making the group even more special: most of them, including All-Atlantic Coast Conference edge rusher Jared Verse (Albany), returned to school in hopes of winning it all. They enter this season with a six-game winning streak, the fifth longest in Division I, but currently are 2 ½-point underdogs against the Tigers.

“We just knew we had unfinished business,” Travis said. “We all came back. We have goals and expectatio­ns for this football team this team.”

“It was big for everything. … All of us coming back, it brings confidence back to this football team, a lot of experience.”

Verse, widely considered a first-round NFL talent, looked like he would be a one-anddone transfer and jump to the draft after 16 ½ tackles for loss in 2022. But he and his fellow draft-eligible teammates wanted more.

“It’s huge; guys that want to be here,” Norvell said. “They’re bought into what we’re doing as a program and they also believe that they’re going to develop. These guys are great players that have had really good success throughout their career, but they want to take another step.”

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