College football: Winston, No. 1 Seminoles travel to face Wolfpack

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RALEIGH, N.C. — Florida State has had plenty of trouble at North Carolina State — especially when carrying a national ranking.

The top-ranked Seminoles have lost their last two games in Raleigh heading into Saturday’s game, including one two years ago that was their last Atlantic Coast Conference loss.

Overall, ranked FSU teams have lost five of seven in Raleigh dating to 1998.

“The field sits close to you,” FSU coach Jimbo Fisher said. “It’s down in a pit so it’s a little different, and they have a passionate fan base and they have very good players and they’re coached well. You combine all those things, it makes for a tough venue.”

Florida State (3-0, 1-0 ACC) was ranked No. 3 when it last visited in October 2012. The Seminoles took a 16-0 lead before the Wolfpack rallied to win 17-16 on a last-second touchdown pass.

“I don’t know if it was a turning point,” Fisher said. “It was some awareness and a wakeup call knowing that you had a game and you let it slip away. Hopefully it doesn’t happen again.”

FSU has won 16 straight against league opponents since and owns a school-record 19 straight wins overall, which includes last year’s unbeaten run to the national title behind Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Jameis Winston.

Winston is back from a one-game suspension for making an obscene public comment on campus last week. Backup Sean Maguire led the Seminoles to an overtime home win against Clemson.

The Wolfpack (4-0) have already surpassed last season’s win total against a soft opening schedule and beat Presbyterian 42-0 last week. Things will get much tougher with eight straight league games for a team coming off its first winless ACC record since 1959.

“We just talk about it as the opportunity that’s in front of us,” Wolfpack coach Dave Doeren said. “There isn’t an athlete in the world that doesn’t want to play against the best. They’re the best until they get beat so it’s an opportunity for us to play against the best team in the nation. And you know, why not us? That’s the approach we’re taking.”