TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – The two Hall of Fame coaching legends greeted each other on the sidelines Monday night, resplendent icons in their twilight. Former Florida State coach Bobby Bowden and former Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer drew cocoons of microphones and television cameras for some benign pregame soundbites, recalling the days of building and defining their respective programs.

As No. 20 Virginia Tech proceeded to suffocate and embarrass No. 19 Florida State, 24-3, the third Hall of Fame-caliber coach in Doak Campbell Stadium on Monday night reminded everyone that he’s still locked into the prime of his career. On a night where the 75,237 fans roared pregame for the debut of first-year coach Willie Taggart, stalwart Virginia Tech defensive coordinator Bud Foster further etched himself as the preeminent assistant coach of this, or perhaps any, generation.

Tech knocked Florida State woozy all night, forcing five turnovers and keeping the Seminoles out of the end zone at home for the first time since 2008. The final flare of Foster’s artistic performance came from authoring a Tech defense that created more tackles for loss (14) than Florida State mustered first downs (12). Somewhere up above the field in a box, Beamer smiled as Tech scored on a blocked kick, won here for the first time since 1974 and ended the game hearing Virginia Tech fans mocking the sing-song Tomahawk Chop chant in the south end zone.

For third-year Virginia Tech head coach Justin Fuente, the win ranks as his biggest in terms of scope and scale in his Hokie tenure. And he can thank the defensive coach who stuck around after Beamer retired, as Tech improved to 100-1 in games with Foster as defensive coordinator where they’ve held the opponents to 10 points or less. (If you are wondering what the one loss is, search Wake Forest-Virginia Tech and 0-0.)

After the game, I lobbed the idea to Fuente that Foster, Tech’s stalwart coordinator since 1996, should be the first coach enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame solely for his work as an assistant coach. Fuente immediately started his stump speech.

“First of all, he should be in the Hall of Fame,” Fuente told Yahoo Sports. “Second of all, it’s hard to quantify the longevity, the consistency. You can’t point to one player. He’s been the steady force behind those performances.”

View photos Virginia Tech defensive coordinator Bud Foster talks to players during a spring practice in Blacksburg, Virginia. (AP) More

And that force just kept pushing Florida State backwards on Monday night, leaving Taggart looking as overmatched on the sideline as his offensive line did in the trenches. Florida State spent much of the offseason hyping up Taggart’s “Gulf Coast” offense and the “Lethal Simplicity” of his spread system. Foster just made it look simple to stop.

It’d be unfair to cast imminent doom on the entire Taggart era with this loss. (Let’s remember, Chip Kelly flopped in his debut with Oregon at Boise and went 46-6 in Eugene after.) But it’s fair to say that Taggart took a step backward from the 7-6 Florida State program that Jimbo Fisher abandoned last season when he left for Texas A&M.

Under Taggart, FSU spent most of the night in the fetal position – hurt by penalties and moving laterally or backward. (It was telling that Foster said he wasn’t particularly surprised by anything FSU did, other than a few possessions of empty backfield.) In his return from injury, FSU quarterback Deondre Francois completed just 22-for-35 for 233 yards and threw three interceptions. (Taggart didn’t consider replacing him.) “We didn’t handle adversity well,” Taggart said. “And there was a lot of adversity.”

No play better summed up Florida State’s inertia better than receiver Nyqwan Murray running backwards on a gadget play in the first half, losing eight yards and then fumbling after minimal contact from linebacker Rayshard Ashby. It provided a microcosm of the night – Florida State looked lost, soft and heading in the wrong direction. That play unfolded like so many others, with Tech’s defensive front renting a timeshare in the FSU backfield. “We played a sloppy game and that’s on all of us, starting with me,” Taggart said.

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