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The Bell tolls for Atrews
By Marc Connolly
BCSfootball.com

MIAMI -- After his three catches for 66 yards and a touchdown against the Florida Gators on Nov. 18 helped secure Florida State's third straight appearance in the national title game, all Atrews Bell could do was stare at the locker five feet across from him.

Atrews Bell
Atrews Bell was second on the team with 10 TD receptions this season.
He didn't say a word as he smiled at his teammate, Snoop Minnis, while Minnis recounted his two touchdown catches and 187 yards receiving for an endless stream of reporters and Seminole hangers-on.

When approached by a reporter wearing a "penny for your thoughts" look, Bell explained.

"I was just so proud of Snoop," said Bell, a junior flanker whose 10 touchdown receptions trail Minnis for the team lead by one. "He was the next in line after (Peter) Warrick left, and he has come through. We (receivers) all know that our turn to shine will come soon enough, but it's Snoop's turn this year."

Ah, but little did Bell know that Minnis would carry his celebration through the last few weeks of classes and lose his eligibility to play in the FedEx Orange Bowl against Oklahoma on Wednesday (ABC, 8 p.m. ET). His "time" came sooner than he thought.

"No one expected Snoop not to be playing," said Bell, who caught 37 passes for 675 yards this fall. "It was a surprise even to the coaches. But I've just always prepared myself like I was a starter here. I mean, I walked on here, and I knew that in order for me to get onto the field I'd have to work extra harder than the next guy beside me because my road would be tougher."

It's hard to imagine it now, with him being a factor in whether or not FSU repeats as national champion, but Bell recanted the truth when he mentioned walking on the Seminoles squad back in fall of 1997. And it was before he'd ever played the role of pass-catcher at any level of football. In fact, he terrorized high schools all over the Sunshine State at a position those in Tallahassee know a thing or two about -- quarterback.

Receivers coach Jeff Bowden realized the athletic gifts Bell held long ago, when he played for Lee High School, a two-hour drive east on I-10 from Tallahassee.

"I've been watching Atrews since he was a sophomore in high school," said Bowden. "As a quarterback, you could see him run around out there kind of like a man amongst boys. He was just on a different level. The biggest knock on him through his last few years of high school was always that he was an underachiever."

Along with the stable of quarterbacks already in the mix, his work ethic was one of the reasons Bowden didn't offer him a full scholarship, but rather an invitation to walk-on.

"I took a risk, since I had scholarship offers to Marshall and Indiana, but I really wanted to be here and play here," said Bell, who watched Edgar Bennett and LeRoy Butler excel at FSU after playing at Lee several years earlier.

Bell remembers gawking at the players he shared the field with those first few days on campus -- studs such as Andre Wadsworth, who was already a collegiate legend. Before the coaching staff even knew what position to assign Bell to, suspensions were handed out to Pooh Bear Williams and Mario Edwards, which opened scholarships. With a free ride in hand, he was initially thought to be part of FSU's vaunted secondary.

"The first week or so I was with Coach (Mickey) Andrews at safety," said the 5-foot-11, 201-pounder. "But I came in to get my stuff one day and the color of my jersey switched. They said I was moving to receiver."

Not one person asked if he'd played there before, so there was no way Bell was going to fess up that he was clueless. The younger Bowden said it wasn't too hard to figure out, but he worked extremely closely with him through that first redshirt year and again in 1998, even though he was nowhere in Mark Richt's offensive plans.

"I was really hard on him his first two years," said Bowden, with the classic family laugh. "That was to get him to realize the abilities he had. I could see them, but he needed to see them and work harder than most to bring them out."

"I was so low on the totem pole, it was incredible," said Bell, who caught only two balls for 18 yards his freshman year and 14 for 202 as a sophomore.

That's when he rededicated himself to the sport that had previously come so easily to him. He not only got his body in prime condition, but he studied how teammates Ron Dugans and Warrick read coverages and managed to get open.

"I just got so tired of watching games from the best seat in the house," said Bell, a Criminology major. "To play all week and not have a chance to shine on Saturdays was very frustrating. If you asked me my biggest accomplishment here just awhile ago, I'd say it was meeting coach (Bobby) Bowden. I didn't think I'd get a chance to get on the field."

He's now considered a workaholic and has gained the respect of his teammates.

"His heart is football and no one works harder than him," said roommate and offensive tackle Todd Williams. "I'm happy for him to get the chance. He's put his life into it and waited his turn. He deserves this."

It's paid off to the point where he admits to being in awe of his accomplishments this fall, even though he hasn't been a regular starter.

"When I sit back and think of the stuff I've done this year, I'm really amazed because Snoop has been the go-to guy," said Bell. "I've had 37 catches -- equate that to 10 touchdowns and that's pretty amazing to me.

"I was talking to Ron Dugans (who graduated last year, and now plays receiver for the Cincinnati Bengals) the other day, and he was saying how I scored more touchdowns in one year than he did his whole career. Those guys talking about how proud they are of me means a lot, because they know how it was when I got here."

He's taken a lot of those calls this week. The biggest being from Snoop -- one of his closest friends. His well-wishers and he have seen what people have been saying:

Bobby Bowden: "We're going to play six, seven (receivers), so when we lose a guy, we just take one of these guys and move him over here."

Bob Stoops: "It's (loss of Snoop Minnis) not going to change their game plan one bit. Stick another guy in and I'm sure he's a quality player. They'll go about their business as usual."

And they know who they are talking about mostly.

"This right here is a platform where I can raise my level of play and give a preview of what it'll be like next year," said Bell. "It's national TV, the national championship, I'm getting a chance to shine and I'm really, really excited for it."

He's one of the main guys," said the elder Bowden. "And I'm very comfortable with Atrews being in that role this game. Very comfortable."

Marc Connolly is a senior writer for ABC Sports Online.



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