The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Florida State players, coaches still hurting as they refocus on trying to stay unbeaten

- By Bob Ferrante ASSOCIATED PRESS

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — The heartache won’t go away. Not anytime soon, anyway. Not for Florida State players and coaches who were driven to earn a spot in the College Football Playoff and play for another title.

The Seminoles had to settle for the Atlantic Coast Conference championsh­ip, which followed a perfect regular season.

“Nobody can take that from us,” senior defensive back Jarrian Jones said.

The CFP selection committee dropped Florida State (13-0) from fourth to fifth and outside the fourteam playoff, a move it justified because of star quarterbac­k Jordan Travis’ season-ending broken leg. It prompted outrage from coach Mike Norvell and FSU administra­tors, and had state lawmakers crying out for answers.

No one felt the pain like the players who did everything right for months.

“I ain’t going to lie, I’m going to be hurt with that for the rest of my life,” Jones said. “It just feels like somebody ripped your heart out of the chest.”

Since the playoff snub, Norvell and his assistants have been busy. They hit the road to visit 2024 commitment­s and a few prospects they’d like to flip on national signing day. They’ve hosted several transfer prospects, most notably quarterbac­ks Cameron Ward (Washington State) and DJ Uiagalelei (Oregon State). They’ve landed a commitment from Georgia defensive end Marvin Jones Jr., the son of one of the Seminoles’ top linebacker­s in program history.

They’ve also tried to listen and advise players through upcoming decisions on their futures. Standout defensive end Jared Verse, running back Trey Benson and receiver Johnny Wilson are among those who have opted out of the Orange Bowl against Georgia (12-1) on Dec. 30. There could be more, although Norvell declined to discuss any juniors or seniors weighing choices.

All while commiserat­ing a wild, 24-hour span in which they celebrated the program’s first ACC title since 2014 only to be left out of the CFP the next day.

“It’s been challengin­g,” Norvell said. “You basically got 12 hours to celebrate what was an unbelievab­le accomplish­ment for this

NO. 4 FLORIDA ST. VS. NO. 6 GEORGIA

Sat., Dec. 30, 4 p.m. team. Then you had to learn how to work through disappoint­ment, hurt, frustratio­n, anger, every bit of it. And you’re 18- to 22-yearold kids and a 42-year-old coach.”

Norvell called it one of the toughest two-week stretches of his coaching career. But he also refused to let Florida State’s accomplish­ments go unrecogniz­ed.

“I will always have the feelings of what happened,” Norvell said. “But at the end of the day, I wasn’t in that room. It wasn’t my choice, so my beliefs of what it is, that’s that. … I’m so proud of what and who this team is and what they represente­d for 13 weeks of the season.

“It doesn’t take away from what these guys have accomplish­ed throughout the course of this year.”

Florida State practiced Tuesday as the team continued preparing for Georgia. Quarterbac­k Tate Rodemaker and Brock Glenn led the offense. All-ACC selections defensive end Patrick Payton and linebacker Kalen DeLoach guided the defense.

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