A New Quarterback Steps Into the Miami Sunlight All he has to do is 'make something happen' erhaps never in the history of college football has one team been blessed U with a succession of quarterbacks like Jim Kelly, Bernie Kosar and Vinny Testa- verde. Excitement at Miami has been building for a decade. And after Kosar led the Hurricanes to a national championship three years ago, Miami became one of the most-watched teams in football. Last year the Hurricanes were ranked at the top of the polls almost all season and favored in their titantic championship matchup against Penn State. They lost. Testaverde left school. Miami's players and fans fell } back to earth. Steve Walsh was waiting for them. Walsh is a bright young man-National Honor Society and a high-school Academic All-American from St. Paul, Minn.-and he knows what people expect from him: "to go out and win games." But he insists that filling Testaverde's slot is not agonizing. "Replacing Vinny is not really putting more pressure on myself than I would nor- mally," Walsh says. "I don't really think about it too much." Besides, he says, "I don't think they are going to heap all the criticism on me if we lose or all the praise on me if we win." UM coach Jimmy Johnson agrees that comparison is irrelevant. "I think it's real- ly not fair to compare anyone to Vinny Testaverde," says Johnson about his Heis- man Trophy-winning former quarterback. Walsh does not possess the natural tools of Testaverde-the size and strength, and the throwing arm. But fans say Testaverde's absence makes another im- portant-and positive-differ- ence. "It isn't Testaverde's show now," says junior busi- ness major Neal Bumgarner, "it's the Miami Hurricanes' show." Teresa Mallea, a UM freshman who watched 'Canes games as a Miami high-school senior last fall, expresses a sim- ilar view. "Because of all the attention paid to Testaverde," Mallea says, "it seemed like he wasn't a student anymore." Walsh, a sophomore in eligibil- ity (he is a third-year student), is still no celebrity and less like- ly to be than Testaverde. He calls his own leadership style "not outspoken, but more qui- et" than Testaverde's. Passing muster: Steve Walsh at practice Lost stars: Walsh actually faces a tougher job than Testaverde had last year when the 'Canes fielded a team of battle-tested veterans (some would suggest war veterans after a series of well-publi- cized brushes with the law). The two sea- sons under Testaverde were in a sense dis- appointing: in successive years Miami lost bowl games that, had they won them, would have meant a national champion- ship. A host of stars is gone from the 1986 squad, including three who were National Football League first-round draft choices, Testaverde, tackle Jerome Brown and full- back Alonzo Highsmith. Testaverde was, of course, the first selection in the draft. Now at Tampa Bay, he joins in the NFL his two star Miami predecessors, Kelly of Buffalo and Kosar of Cleveland. Because Miami was stripped of so much talent, less was expected of this year's team, not just by fellow students but by the rabid boosters of the city who are harder to please. Walsh had to make his debut as a starter in a nationally televised game against bitter rival Florida. The un- tested Miami quarterback outpassed his heralded Florida rival, Kerwin Bell, and led the 'Canes to a stunningly one-sided 31-4 victory before a sold-out Orange Bowl crowd of 77,224. Afterward, coach Johnson underlined the obvious in noting that Walsh had gained the confidence of the team. Now, all he has to do is put in three years pleasing the fans. What does Bumgarner expect of Walsh? "When it's third down and eight, he's got to make something happen." PATRICK MCCREERY in Miami ROBERT L. SMITH CLEVELAND BROWNS DAN HELMS--DUOMO On to the NFL: Buffalo's Kelly, Cleveland's Kosar, Tampa Bays Testaverde OCTOBER 1987 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 13