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Haugh: Orange Bowl setback can’t dim luster of Northern Illinois’ season

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(MCT) — MIAMI — On Northern Illinois middle linebacker Victor Jacques’ left shoulder, a tattoo featuring a giant orange in the middle of clouds over the Miami skyline stretches across his skin.

Near his bicep, a dolphin jumps out of the water. It took a local artist four hours to etch the scene on Jacques’ arm that commemorated Tuesday night’s Orange Bowl at Sun Life Stadium — the biggest football game in NIU history.

“It was a good homecoming,” said Jacques, a Miami native. “But this isn’t the ending I wanted.”

No, but regardless of a gutsy 31-10 loss to a far superior Florida State team the Huskies’ memories of bowl week will last as long as Jacques’ tattoo and the overall experience be every bit as indelible.

“We still had a great season,” NIU quarterback Jordan Lynch said after his team’s first defeat in exactly four months.

Not even NIU losing by 21 in a game that really never was close diminished that.

Huskies coach Rod Carey felt too perturbed to put anything in perspective immediately afterward but teams from the Mid-American Conference playing in a Bowl Championship Series game always will value the journey more than the destination. Approaching it any other way wastes the opportunity for the NIUs of the college football world to turn the accomplishment of getting here into positive momentum for recruiting and campus morale.

An upset would have been epic for NIU but it was hardly urgent. Oh, the Huskies wanted to beat Florida State as badly as they wanted to beat Kent State or Toledo. But they didn’t have to do so to capitalize on a historic, memorable season.

The 60 minutes of the game itself were mostly forgettable. The Huskies hung around until the fourth quarter but every series Florida State didn’t score felt like a major relief. As expected, the Seminoles used their speed to make NIU players look like plodding Midwestern farm boys. The holes on offense closed quicker than they did against Bowling Green and opened wider for NIU’s defense, which gave up a whopping 534 yards.

On Florida State’s 60-yard touchdown run by Lonnie Pryor — the fullback — bad angles NIU defensive backs took reminded everybody the Huskies don’t regularly face backs that explosive. On NIU’s first third down offensively, Lynch failed to get to the corner the way he did so often against MAC competition. And it never got easier.

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