Dec. 29, 2009
More Deacon Decades Football Photo Gallery The top 10 most significant moments of the decade for Wake Forest football can all be attributed to a singular decision made by Director of Athletics Ron Wellman: to hire Jim Grobe as head football coach. Grobe was introduced as Wake Forest's head coach on Dec. 11, 2000. But, for the purposes of defining the football Deacon Decade, we will concentrate on the other 10 most significant events that affected the football program. 10. The 2008 EagleBank Bowl In similar fashion to the Meineke Bowl a year earlier, Wake Forest fell behind early and trailed the Midshipmen 13-0 late in the second quarter. A Josh Adams touchdown run just before the half cut the deficit to 13-7 at intermission. Kevin Harris carried 13 times in the first half for 97 yards. He would finish the game with a career-high 136 rushing yards on 24 carries. During the regular season, Navy had upset the 15th-ranked Deacons 24-17 at BB&T Field as Wake Forest committed a season-high six turnovers. Unlike that game, when Riley Skinner threw a career-high four interceptions, the junior quarterback turned in a stellar performance in the bowl game. Skinner set an NCAA bowl record by completing all 11 of his pass attempts, totaling 166 yards.
While Harris moved the Deacons up and down the field on the ground, it was Adams who finished off the drives, scoring on runs of 4 and 5 yards. Wake Forest took a 14-13 lead midway through the third quarter but Navy bounced back to lead 19-14 early in the final quarter. Taking over at their own 20 with 12:31 to play in the game, Skinner and Harris moved the Deacons to the Navy 8 when Skinner hit tight end Ben Wooster in the back of the end zone for the go-ahead score. Skinner then threaded the needle on the two-point conversion pass to Devon Brown to give the Deacs a 22-19 lead. Rich Belton would add a 35-yard insurance touchdown in the closing minutes to account for Wake's 29-19 win. During the game, cornerback Alphonso Smith became the ACC's all-time interception leader, picking off his 21st career pass. 9. The 2002 Seattle Bowl 8. The 2007 Meineke Car Care Bowl After falling behind 10-0 in the first half, the Deacons rallied to score 24 unanswered points for a 24-10 win over the Huskies. Kenny Moore earned Most Valuable Player honors as he caught 11 passes for 112 yards. Riley Skinner completed 29 of 38 passes for 268 yards and a touchdown pass to John Tereshinski. Josh Adams and Micah Andrews each rushed for a score and Sam Swank added a 43-yard field goal. 7. Wake Forest 32, North Carolina 31 Little went right for Wake Forest in the first half as North Carolina built a 24-0 lead. The Tar Heels held a 338-118 advantage in total offense yards and had completed 15 of 19 passes for 264 yards. Wake Forest had just 49 yards passing through the first two quarters. After Wake punted on its first possession of the second half, things started to go Wake's way. After Marquis Hopkins recovered a UNC fumble, the Deacons drove to the Tar Heel 11 before John Stone ran it in for a score with 9:19 to play in the third quarter. UNC punted on its next possession and Fabian Davis scored on a five-yard run to cut the lead to 24-14. UNC scored on its next possession to extend its lead to 31-14 after three quarters. With 11:01 to play in the game, Tarence Williams ran up the middle for three yards and a score and Wake trailed 31-21. After Carolina punted, Wake marched to the UNC 25 where Tyler Ashe kicked a 42-yard field goal to make it 31-24 with 5:56 to play. Wake forced the Tar Heels into a three-and out and the punt snap went over the punter's head and out of the end zone for a safety. Wake was within five at 31-26 with 4:59 to play in the game. After the free kick, Wake started at its 41 and ran the ball deep into Carolina territory. On second and goal, James MacPherson scored on a 1-yard run. The 2-point PAT failed, and Wake led 32-31 with 1:17 to play. UNC reached the Wake 47 when Quintin Williams came on a safety blitz, knocked the ball out of Darian Durant's hand and Caron Bracy recovered with 45 seconds remaining. 6. Wake Forest 31, Maryland 24 (OT) Things could not have gone worse. Wake trailed 17-3 at the half and 24-3 in the third quarter. With just over three minutes to go in the third quarter, Maryland stopped the Deacons on a fourth-and-four from the Maryland 43. Two plays later, Darrius Heyward-Bey rambled 54-yards on a reverse to set up a first-and-goal at the Wake 3. After an incompletion, Maryland quarterback Jordan Steffy threw into the end zone where Alphonso Smith intercepted the pass and rambled 100 yards for a touchdown. Faced with trailing 31-3, the Deacons now had life and were behind just 24-10. Smith's interception sparked the Deacons as Riley Skinner scored on a 1-yard sneak to pull within a touchdown at 24-17. After trading interceptions, Wake Forest got the ball back at its own 20 with 1:51 to play. Skinner completed six of eight passes on the drive, the last one a six-yard touchdown pass on fourth-and-goal from the five with three seconds to play. In overtime, redshirt freshman tailback Josh Adams carried three straight times to put Wake ahead 31-24. The Deacon defense did the rest, sacking Steffy on third and fourth down to preserve the win. 5. Wake Forest 38, Maryland 24 After the game, the Wake Forest players ran to the far corner of the end zone and serenaded the Wake Forest faithful with a rendition of the school fight song. 4. Wake Forest 30, Florida State 0 Sam Swank kicked a pair of field goals to stake the Deacons to a 6-0 lead. Riley Skinner threw an 18-yard touchdown pass to John Tereshinski one play after Stanley Arnoux had intercepted a Xavier Lee pass. Rich Belton's 33-yard touchdown run put the Deacs up 20-0 at half. After Swank boomed a 51-yard field goal in the third quarter, Kevin Patterson capped the night with a 48-yard interception return for a touchdown and the 30-0 victory. The win jumped the Deacons to No. 14 in the nation. More than anything else, this victory proved to the nation that the Deacons had arrived. 3. The Fresh Deacs But when it was all said and done, this recruiting class, ranked 95th-best in the country in 2004, would prove itself as the best in school history. Five players out of this class would be drafted by NFL teams and numerous others found themselves in preseason camps. Linebacker Aaron Curry was a first team All-ACC performer who won the Butkus Award in 2008 as the nation's top linebacker. Curry was a first round draft pick of the Seattle Seahawks, the fourth player picked overall, in the 2009 NFL Draft. Cornerback Alphonso Smith set the ACC record for career interceptions with 21 and was a second round draft choice of the Denver Broncos. Linebacker Stanley Arnoux was a four-year starter at linebacker and became a fourth round pick of the New Orleans Saints. Safety Chip Vaughn was also a fourth round pick of the Saints and contributed one of the most significant plays in school history, a blocked game-winning field goal against Duke in 2006 that led to a 6-0 start for the Deacons en route to winning the ACC Championship. Jeremy Thompson, the only true freshman to see action in 2004, concluded his career as a draft choice of the Green Bay Packers. All told, 13 players from the 2004 recruiting class became starters including fullback Rich Belton, wide receivers Chip Brinkman and D.J. Boldin, defensive ends Anthony Davis, Antonio Wilson and Jeremy Thompson, defensive backs Kerry Major, Kevin Patterson, Chip Vaughn and Alphonso Smith, linebackers Curry and Chantz McClinic, and placekicker Sam Swank. 2. Riley Skinner 1. 2006 ACC Championship/FedEx Orange Bowl Sam Swank booted three field goals to lead Wake Forest to a 9-6 win over Georgia Tech at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville in the ACC title game. Wake had trailed the Yellow Jackets 6-3 in the fourth quarter when Riley Swanson intercepted a Reggie Ball pass to set up Swank's second field goal of the day, a 33-yarder that tied the game with 8:27 to play. The Wake Forest defense forced Tech to punt on the next series and the Deacons took over at their own 20. Riley Skinner completed four consecutive passes to move the ball to the Tech 12. Three straight rushes got the ball to the five allowing Swank to kick the go-ahead 22-yard field goal with 2:55 to play in the game. Honorable Mention: Wake Forest's 34-30 win over Virginia in 2001 ended a 17-game losing streak to the Cavaliers. Wake Forest's 45-17 win over Clemson on Nov. 1, 2003 featured two defensive touchdowns and a 163-yard rushing effort from Chris Barclay. Chris Barclay was named the ACC's Player of the Year in 2005 after rushing for 1,127 yards and 10 touchdowns. Barclay was just the fourth Demon Deacon ever named Player of the Year and the first since Jay Venuto in 1979. |