For Miami, tough trip to Appalachian State leads into tough game

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) -- For No. 25 Miami, simply getting to Appalachian State is going to be a challenge.

Winning may prove even tougher.

The Hurricanes (2-0) will fly into a regional airport that can't accommodate a full-size jet, so Miami will take a smaller-than-usual plane. As such, some support staff got bumped from the charter for commercial flights. And then there's lodging issues; a long ride awaits the players from the airport to their hotel 20 minutes from Appalachian State's campus in Boone, North Carolina, while school officials and cheerleaders will stay even farther away.

Those are mere inconveniences.

The real test comes Saturday at noon, when the Hurricanes face an upset-capable opponent and what will be a frenzied crowd.

"When Miami's rolling into town, it's always a big game, wherever you go," Hurricanes quarterback Brad Kaaya said. "No matter what the Hurricanes are ranked, it's always a big game."

Make no mistake, this is a very big game to App State (1-1), a team that won 11 games last year and nearly beat Tennessee to open this season.

Adult tickets are usually $40 for Mountaineers home games; they were priced at $60 for this one, and they're going for much more than that on the secondary markets. App State added a standing-room student section that will put some on field level, a premium seating area also at field level, along with another video board.

A sellout is certain; every ticket App State had was gone about an hour after they went on sale. Extra planning was done in an effort to figure out how to minimize traffic problems on game day. There's even going to be a pep rally on Friday night with two bands, food trucks and appearances by App State coach Scott Satterfield and some players.

Fans have been excited for months. Now App State players can join in the fun.

"Throughout the offseason, everybody's like, `Man, you play Miami at home,'" Appalachian State quarterback Taylor Lamb said. "And we're like, `Yeah, we've got two games before that.' ... Now all our focus goes to Miami."

It's the first time App State has played host to an opponent from one of college football's five power conferences, and is something that Satterfield called "a milestone for our university." The game was scheduled last year when Miami needed to fill an opening, and the Hurricanes had to agree to head to Boone first to get what will become a home-and-home done.

App State is a program that won three straight FCS national titles from 2005 through 2007 -- the last of those championship years starting with an unforgettable win at Michigan.

Hurricanes coach Mark Richt said his team won't need any history lessons this week.

"How can you take this team lightly? How could anybody that knows football take this team lightly?" Richt said. "We don't even have to say that to our guys. They see the film. They watched them play against Tennessee. They know ... this is a really good football team, everybody knows it, and we're geared up to try the best we can to play great that day."