‘THE NEW MIAMI’ READY FOR DEBUT; FLORIDA GATORS AWAIT

After months of anticipation, game day is finally here; college football getting the ultimate kickoff in 2019 for the sports’s 150th anniversary; Miami versus Florida—in primetime, with all eyes on this big-time showdown.

The Gators roll in No. 8 in the country, while the Hurricanes are in that all-too-familiar Others Receiving Votes category; understandable and expected on the heels of a six-loss season, a head coaching change and no proven quarterback—though it doesn’t properly speak to the overall talent level of this squad.

Most have Florida tabbed to take care of business on Saturday night—albeit in much closer fashion than the Gators’ delusional fan base and some of their players are predicting. All that to say, games aren’t played on paper, because if so, last season’s eighth-ranked preseason team—Miami—wouldn’t have gotten boat-raced by LSU in 2018’s season-opener.

PRESEASON RANKINGS BASED ON YESTERDAY’S NEWS; NOT TODAY’S

Preseason predictions are a fickle beast. For the most part, Miami earned a Top 10 ranking going into last fall due to a 10-0 start that included a primetime massacre of then-No. 3 Notre Dame. A regular season-ending loss at Pitt was swept under the rug as the Canes locked up their first Coastal Division title in 14 tries—while a loss to defending national champion Clemson in the ACC title game was expected and also forgiven.

A one-loss Wisconsin squad outlasted Miami in the Orange Bowl; which also wasn’t completely held against the Canes when going into 2018, as a 10-3 record—just as Florida posted in last year—looked good on paper and fit an on-the-rise narrative.

In reality, Miami still had some glaring weaknesses that were fast-exposed against LSU in Dallas, while the Tigers ultimately surprised with a brand new quarterback—Ohio State transfer, Joe Burrow—and a head coach few were expecting to turn a corner so quickly; Ed Orgeron, a perennial assistant who’d struggled in all previous head coaching stints, but ultimately had a break-through season.

That’s not to say Miami is—or isn’t—this year’s LSU, that Manny Diaz is destined to get everything right in his first game leading the Canes, or that r-freshman quarterback Jarren Williams can do game one what Burrow did in his first start; the Tigers’ quarterback cutting his teeth as a back-up the year prior. This is simply a reminder that when a team believes its own hype, as well as those preseason accolades bestowed upon them—things can sometimes go south quickly. Last year’s Canes are living proof and the jury’s out regarding how the Gators respond to their early positioning.

Entering Saturday’s opener, it’s hardly a shock that Florida thinks they’re hot shit—with an air of superiority like it’s 200 and not 2019; when Dan Mullen was calling plays under Urban Meyer and rolling into a new year as defending national champs, opposed to the former offensive coordinator entering year two with an inaugural season that truthfully wasn’t as strong as the 10-3 record it posted.

DEEP-DIVING THE GATORS’ 2018 CAMPAIGN & STUMBLES

Give Florida props for a convincing bowl win over Michigan; though one would be remised to not acknowledge the 62 points the Ohio State laid on the Wolverines in the regular season finale for a seventh-straight series win, which certainly took the piss out of the *other* UM and left them flat  for bowl season.

Those three losses? Falling to Kentucky at home (for the first time in 31 years), an understandable 19-point loss to rival Georgia (a title contender and pride of the SEC East) and a 21-point home loss to Missouri; a game that saw starting quarterback Feleipe Franks benched in favor of Kyle Trask— thought it was a short-lived move as the r-sophomore broke his foot in practice days later, allowing Franks to return by default for a home showdown against South Carolina.

The Gators trailed by 17 late in the third quarter before scoring 21 unanswered to avoid the upset against the Gamecocks; who finished 7-6 and fell to Virginia in the postseason, 28-0.

The point in this quick history lesson; Florida’s perceived invincibility and the supreme confidence in Franks both seem built on a similar house of cards to last year’s Miami hype. Maybe the Gators are the real-deal and will prove it Saturday night—but there’s at least room to question if this team is as good as they believe they are.

Miami’s off-season approach has been the exact opposite—and with good reason as one can’t run their mouths when on the wrong end of a 35-3 post-season ass-kicking; on that forced former head coach Mark Richt into early retirement; the keys tossed to his former defensive coordinator who was 18 days into his new stint as head coach at Temple University.

Diaz drove home the we-have-no-business-talking mantra home from early on, when he posted 7-6 signs on tackling dummies all over UM’s new indoor practice facility and encouraged his players to take out their frustration there—not on their smartphones, offering up any bulletin board material.

Hurricanes players have been suspiciously quiet and even-keeled these past few months, while the Gators are spewing noise any time a microphone is stuck in one of their smug faces.

“I don’t really see them as a challenge. I just see them as another team really, because I feel like my whole team—we face big-boy teams,” defensive end and linebacker Andrew Chatfield said about Miami months back. “They faced one SEC team and got smashed by LSU last time I checked. But whatever though, it’s just another game.”

A spirited rivalry dating back to 1938—of which the Hurricanes have taken seven of the past eight is, “just another game”. Upperclassmen should’ve thought about muzzling the r-freshman, but instead many chose to pile-on when given the opportunity.

HOW FAR APART ARE MIAMI & FLORIDA AS NEW SEASON GETS ROLLING?

Regarding Miami, there’s been understandable outside focus on the setbacks of 2018—yet a short memory regarding what this program successfully managed to do in 2017; the same way few recall that four only managed to win four games while the Canes were rolling heads en route to winning the ACC’s Coastal Division.

Simply put; the Canes are as far removed from a successful 10-win season as the Gators are dropping six of their final seven in 2017.

Also ignored; as quick as Miami ascended, it crashed down hard the following year—and as bad as Florida was two years back, it won 10 games year one with Mullen; begging the question, are these two teams really as far apart as the way the narrative is being written for 2019’s opener?

What about the monster hit the Gators have taken to an offensive line that was masterful in protecting Franks; buying him time and opening up holes for Lamical Perine and other running backs? Long gone are Martez Ivey, Jawaan Taylor, Tyler Jordan and Fred Johnson—paving the way for a lot of youth on the Gators’ line, similar to what Miami is dealing with up front. Any way you slice it, it’s a step back for Florida—while despite the young line, Miami can only improve based on the offense they fielded a year ago.

For both Miami and Florida, each taking on a team of this caliber for an opener deserves the tip of a hat—as it’s always advantageous to work out the kinks against a doormat, or two. Neither gets that luxury this season; both putting their balls and pride on the line Week 0.

Of course facing a foe like each will face this early in the schedule will also alter overall game plans; both head coaches well aware early match-ups like these are usually lost more than they’re actually won. Translation; whoever eliminates mistakes, excels in special teams and get a few fortunate bounces is usually the team that prevails in what should be a low-scoring affair with its share of three-and-outs and rusty timing.

INTANGIBLES OUTWEIGH OVERALL GAME PLANS & STRATEGIES

As far as an X’s and O’s breakdown goes for this one; throw it all out the window for this one as there are simply too many unknown in a late August match-up like this.

Yes, Florida has an advantage with Franks under center—but how will the junior quarterback respond behind his young and green offensive line in the face of UM’s pass rush? Last year #13 had the benefit of protection that he simply won’t have against a Miami fronts seven that has some talent on the defensive line, as well as some of the best linebackers in the nation in Shaq Quarterman and Mike Pinckney—heavily-relied upon seniors who only returned when Diaz was handed the keys to the kingdom.

Williams will deal with the same pressure on his end as the Canes’ line is also inexperienced—though a safe bet new offensive coordinator Dan Enos keeps the newbie reeled in a bit; whereas Franks and his blend of confidence and experience could lead to him taking more chances that might backfire. Miami, and new defensive coordinator Blake Baker, also have years’ worth of film on Franks and know his tendencies, while Williams is an unknown and expectations are low in regards to his carrying the Canes—which could be also blessing in disguise if this game somehow goes UM’s way.

Back to last year’s opener at LSU; Burrow was the biggest question mark for the Tigers—the Canes banking on the transfer turning the ball over. Instead, he had a clean outing (11-of-24 for 140 yards) and played all the part of game manager. By season’s end; Burrow was the MVP of the Fiesta Bowl in LSU’s win over Central Florida—the unknown signal caller playing a big part in a 10-3 season.

Special teams should also have a massive impact on this season opener. For Miami’s sake, it better hope kicker Bubba Baxa has shaken off any of last year’s freshman jitters that left points on the field—while the punting game immediately got an upgrade when former Australian football player Lou Hedley transferred to Coral Gables (by way of City College of San Francisco); a move that could prove MVP-worthy based on the UM’s punting woes the past few seasons.

While it’d be a disservice to LSU—and a handful of the teams that beat Miami last season—it’s impossible to not bring up how often the Canes lost field position battles due to the inept Zach Feagles, as well as his replacement Jack Spicer. Against the Tigers, Feagles first three punts were short, giving LSU the ball at mid-field—which led to 13 first half points. Toss in Baxa having a 45-yard field goal attempts blocked and quarterback Malik Rosier coughing up a painful-to-watch pick-six and it’s no mystery the Canes were in a 27-3 halftime hole they couldn’t dig out of.

Miami looked outmatched by LSU; not so much talent versus talent—but due to holes at quarterback, offensive play calling and shoddy special teams play; all of which continued into ACC play and were a common theme en route to 7-6. If nothing else, simple addition-by-subtraction will play into the Hurricanes’ favor as Richt has yielded to Diaz, Enos has installed a more up-to-date offense and Rosier made way for Williams; who realistically should’ve been given his shot last season based on upside and potential, versus Rosier’s experience and Richt going the “safe” route in a weak Coastal Division.

Aside from all those aforementioned intangibles, it can’t be ignored that literally all the pressure here is on the eighth-ranked Gators; Florida expected to take a step forward this fall, while Miami comes in a bit more stealth and undetected—on the heels of a six-loss season, a new head coach, an entirely new offensive staff and a brand new quarterback. Attention has already been paid to UM’s favorable schedule this year and many have the Canes continuing to improve as the year rolls on; earning them a division title and a crack at defending national champion Clemson in the ACC title game.

With no real pressure on Miami to perform game one—it can afford to play loose and to pleasantly surprise the nation should it pull off an upset that really isn’t all that unthinkable.

ALL THE PRESSURE ON THAT TEAM FROM UP NORTH; THE GATOR

Florida—like Miami last season—is coming off a step-forward season and is expected to go to the next level this fall; hence the overconfidence and belief pouring out of Gainesville; something the Canes are familiar with after so many false starts the past few years, which begged all the, “Is ‘The U’ back?” queries by the media and college football analysts anytime UM did something noteworthy.

There’s a different type of pressure when you’re on the mend and expected to grow year two under a new head coach—versus year one; proven by the fact there were no real expectations for Mullen in 2018 having taken over a four-win team. Anything he did was gravy, but after reaching the 10-win mark—Florida faithful have high expectations for his second act.

Conversely, everything for Miami has come up roses since the morning after losing the Pinstripe Bowl last December—starting the moment Richt abruptly retired and walked away from a multi-million dollar buyout; not wanting to hold his alma mater over a barrel. Had Richt stuck around for a fourth season, the following would most-likely be true as the Canes roll into Camping World Stadium on Saturday night:

— Diaz would be the head coach at Temple University and two former defensive assistants would be running the Canes defense this season; barring either Ephraim Banda and Jonathan Patke didn’t ultimately follow him to Philadelphia as the Owls’ new staff came together. Morale was low after that Wisconsin-sized beat-down. Instead, Banda is co-defensive coordinator and continued working with safeties, Patke handles strikers and special teams and Diaz brought in Blake Baker to run the defense, opposed to simply promoting from with in.

— Quarterman and Pinckney would’ve left for the NFL a year early and the Canes would be breaking in a young, inexperienced group of linebackers this fall—instead of that position being rock-solid and the soul of the defense. The Canes would also be without the services of speedster and special teams demon Jeff Thomas; who was dismissed by Richt, appeared Illinois-bound but earned his way back on to the team through a sit-down with Diaz.

— Richt would’ve made minimal changes to his offensive philosophy—under protest; his hand forced by UM’s administration and the Board of Trustees—which would’ve created some form of contention as coaches don’t like pencil-pushers and suits telling them how to run their program.

Gus Felder would still be Miami’s strength and conditioning coach instead of David Feely; who’s had an immediate impact on this team since his arrival—getting this Hurricanes’ program in the best shape it’s been in for over a decade.

– The much-criticized Stacy Searels would still be coaching UM’s offensive line instead of NFL veteran Butch Barry; another immediate-impact guy who is getting underclassmen to play above their level, resulting in true freshman Zion Campbell winning the left tackle job while r-freshman John Campbell turned heads in his quest to lock down the right tackle position.

— Miami also wouldn’t have robbed the Transfer Portal blind, reeling in Tate Martell, Trevon Hill, K.J. Osborn, Chigoze NnorukaBubba Bolden and few other immediate-impact kids who are going to be difference makers this season.

Even scarier, all signs were pointing towards William transferring out between the end of the regular season and the bowl game last year; leaving the Canes with with N’Kosi Perry, who would’ve gotten the job by default (over freshman Peyton Matocha)—opposed to the spirited competition on Greentree where Williams came on strong late, beating out both Martell and Perry; all three of them better for it.

— Lastly, there wouldn’t be The New Miami and this new-yet-old-school attitude that Diaz has been infusing. The new head coach kept things rolling defensively, while injecting some life and swag into his offensive players—with links to the past and a focus on competition; pushing players’ buttons in the style of greats like Jimmy Johnson—who Diaz is leaning on as a mentor and bringing around to inform his current players about the way it was done during that Decade Of Dominance.

While none of these feel-good reminders necessary mean the Hurricanes are going to upset the Gators on Saturday night—they are all worth mention as important pieces to this storyline; one that seems to have been reduced to, “7-6 last year, a new head coach and a quarterback playing his first game”. Seems everyone is overlooking Miami; which is just fine as the Canes are definitely relishing the opportunity to fly-under-the-radar for this one.

Again, on paper—Florida should prevail as they’re one year ahead in their rebuild—but dammit if it doesn’t feel like something special is brewing in Coral Gables since Diaz took the reins.

Maybe it’s all that TNM hype, this renewed energy, former players and coaches buying in—coupled with a slew of off-season victories for a program out of the spotlight for way too long—but there’s a nagging sentiment that UM is being devalued here and that the Canes are going to play off of and respond to that.

On the 27th anniversary of the devastating Hurricane Andrew—it seems like another type of storm is fittingly brewing.

Logic says Gators—but the intangibles are saying the Canes pull a fast one on an unsuspecting Florida team that isn’t giving Miami its due, and doesn’t seem as good as their current hype.

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Miami 23, Florida 20

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Chris Bello has been covering University of Miami athletics since the mid-nineties. Getting his start with CanesTime, he eventually launched allCanesBlog—which led to a featured columnist stint with BleacherReport. He’s since rolled out the unfiltered, ItsAUThing.com where he’ll use his spare time to put decades of U-related knowledge to use for those who care to read. When he’s not writing about ‘The U’, Bello earns a living helping icon Bill Murray build a lifestyle apparel brand. Hit him on Twitter for all things U-related @ItsAUThingBLOG.

Breaking down CFN’s Miami Hurricanes ’08 analysis…

CollegeFootballNews.com broke down the 2008 version of the Miami Hurricanes earlier today. Their Miami preview was pretty solid, but being that CFN has a slew of teams to analyze and only so much time and manpower to do so… I figured I’d take a stab at things and break down their breakdown even further.

The CFN opening: “How patient can Miami be? While there’s a good nucleus of players to build around, like RB Javarris James, it could be tempting to throw several true freshmen from this year’s great recruiting class to the wolves. Check out the CFN Preview of a Hurricane team that should be better, but should still be a year away.”

Hard to disagree that the Canes are at least a year away, despite the beliefs of some of the uber diehards. Miami did reel in a top-ranked class this past February and Randy Shannon has definitely righted the ship, but until the depth returns Miami is still going to have some ups and downs.

A week or so ago I broke down the 2004 tussel with Louisvile, where Miami railled to a 41-38 comeback victory. If you look at the names on that roster, the Canes were loaded and two-deep at some positions. Compare that to 2001 where Miami was damn near three-deep in several spots, it’s all a far cry from 2008 where the Canes simply don’t have the depth to make a legit run and beat some of the bigger name teams on the schedule.

Sure, anything can happen and that’s why they play the game… but it’d take a near flawless season by the Canes, who’d have to remain injury-free, hit the ground running regarding the new youth movement and pull a few upsets to gain the momentum needed to become anything close to a contender in 2008.

This season is all about improvement, valuable playing time for younger players, winning the close games Miami has dropped the past few years and proving the Canes are on the right track, in an effort to haul in another big time class in 2009.

“Although this latest recruiting class has brought a spark and some rare positive national pub back to the Miami program, it’s not likely to have a profound impact on the Hurricanes’ win total in 2008.”

Gotta love the “rare positive national pub” jab. Typical. Moving on, I slightly disagree with this class not having a “profound impact on the Hurricanes’ win total in 2008.” Miami dropped seven games last year. Losses to Oklahoma, Virginia Tech and Virginia were utter beatdowns with no way to spin positively.

That said, losses to North Carolina, Georgia Tech, NC State and Boston College were all winnable games. A 27-0 halftime deficit was the difference-maker in a 33-27 loss at UNC. An inability to stop Tashard Choice on the ground in the second half gave GT the 17-14 win. A 1 of 14 performance by then-quarterback Kirby Freeman caused The U to fall in OT, 19-16 to NCST and even the 28-14 season finale at BC was 14-14 with 11:21 left in the contest.

5-7 could’ve, should’ve and would’ve been 9-3 if last year’s team had a little more depth, experience and heart. With a lot of the ‘wrong’ players gone and the right players in place, Miami can grow leaps and bounds this upcoming season. The ACC crown is still a year away, but winning most of last year’s losing efforts is a reality.

Offensively: “The last time Miami started a freshman under center, Bernie Kosar was a teenager on campus in the 1980s. It’ll happen again this year, as Robert Marve tries to reverse a recent trend of inconsistency at quarterback and a last place ACC finish in passing. He’ll be surrounded by 10 players with something to prove, particularly RB Javarris James and WR Sam Shields. James is looking to bounce back from an injury-riddled sophomore season and a drop in production. Shields has a world-class blend of speed, burst, and leaping ability, but needs to put it all together to finally reach his enormous potential.”

Ten players have something to prove, but it all starts and finishes with Robert Marve. End of story. Miami has been a non-factor offensively since Ken Dorsey rode out of town with a 38-2 record.

True, ol’ Brock Berlin had his share of big time wins while at The U and wound up 5-0 against Florida and Florida State — but he’s also the gunslinger who didn’t sling in a 31-7 loss at Virginia Tech, a 10-6 loss to Tennessee, a putrid second half collapse against Clemson (L, 24-17 OT) and another big time faceplant to end the 2004 season with an ACC title on the line (L, 16-10 to the Hokies).

Marve needs to be “the man” and needs to hit the ground running. The Canes will go as far as their quarterback takes them. Period. Yes, Sam Shields needs to be the wideout everyone expects and the frosh and soph wide outs need to step up, but Marve needs to look more Dorseyesque than Kyle-Wronged.

A healthy Javarris James and beefed up Graig Cooper are going to take some of the pressure off the passing attack, while a more experienced offensive line needs to prove their worth.

Defense: “The Cane defense will be looking to rebound from a November collapse that saw it sink to an un-Miami-like 10th place ACC finish in scoring D. While LB Colin McCarthy and DE Eric Moncur will be the catalysts, new coordinator Bill Young will also be weaving in a handful of younger players, including blue-chip true freshmen Marcus Forston, Arthur Brown, and Sean Spence. Keep an eye on sophomore DE Allen Bailey, a converted linebacker who has torn it up in the offseason and possesses a ridiculous combination of size, speed, and strength.”

The real key defensively has less to do with the players and more to do with the head honcho pulling the strings. Bill Young is your difference-maker here. He’s as important to this defense as Marve is to the offense. Shannon ran the defense from 2001-2006 and there’s no mystery why 2007 was the abortion of season as it was; Tim Walton. Walton didn’t have the pedigree to run Miami’s defense. He couldn’t improvise or adjust on the fly and the Canes paid dearly. Most notably in the 48-0 loss to Virginia where the Cavs seems to run the same few offensive plays and the Canes never found a way to stop them.

The upgrade from Walton to Young is the difference between a Yugo and a muscle car. Young is a wily veteran who’s made his name on gameplanning for each week’s particular opponents and employing the blitz. Young might already have more talent in Miami than he had in just over half a decade in Kansas. The Canes team speed and Young’s scheming are going to make this a completely different defense than witnessed in 2007.

And yes, names like Marcus Forston, Arthur Brown and Sean Spence are going to be immediate impact players. Colin McCarthy and Eric Moncur have to pick up where they left off last year and they have to get better with this addition of newer, yet raw, talent. Allen Bailey is going to be an utter freak this season and will be a household name by year’s end. No doubt.

Schedule: The Canes will know just how much better they’ve gotten this off-season in a big hurry. After a warm-up against Charleston Southern, road dates at Florida and Texas A&M could either set the tone for the season or show just how far the program still has to go. On the flip side, the big Coastal showdown against Virginia Tech is at home, missing Clemson and Boston College from the Atlantic, and getting Florida State in Miami are all tremendous breaks. Closing up with three road dates (Virginia, Georgia Tech and NC State) in the final four, with the home game against the Hokies, isn’t a plus.

One has to almost pray a hurricane warning is in effect September 6th when Miami is slated to go to Gainesville. This will be the first time in the past six meetings that A) the Canes aren’t ranked and B) that the Gators will be the higher ranked team. There was a formula to Miami’s six-game win-streak against Florida and that’s not the case in 2008. A road game with a freshman QB on one side of the ball and a Heisman winner on the other also doesn’t bode well.

The Canes had a similar experience last year getting #4 Oklahoma on the road the second week of the season and we all remember how that played out (L, 51-13). That said, it didn’t truly “set the tone” for 2007. The Canes could’ve absorbed the out of conference loss and moved forward.

The true tone-setter was a 24-14 win against Duke where Miami nursed – and almost blew – a 17-14 lead with upwards of three minutes remaining. If the Canes struggled against the Blue Devils, how would Miami fare the rest of the way conference-wise? How about 2-6 — with the other win, an inexplicable upset at Florida State.

Wins against Florida or Texas A&M would be great feathers in a young team’s cap, but the tone-setter is North Carolina on September 27th. Earn revenge for last season, get to 1-0 in ACC play and gear up for the annual showdown with Florida State the following week.

The home schedule is favorable, but Miami has three road games in November – @Virginia, @ Georgia Tech and @ NC State. Sandwiched in there, a home game against Virginia Tech.

This Miami team will have to actually get BETTER as the year goes on and not backslide like they did in 2007. Games in Gainesville and College Station can literally be thrown out the window as long as this team is ready for ACC play.

The Rest: CFN says James is the best offensive player – I like Cooper. I think the added weight and explosiveness are the difference. James will be much better this year, but I think Coop is the more special player.

Defensively CFN gives the nod to McCarthy, but I like Moncur. Defensive line is the key this season and Moncur needs to be in 2007 what Calais Campbell should’ve been in 2007. Pressuring opposing quarterbacks and stuffing the run at the line will take the pressure off the linebackers and secondary. Moncur needs a monster season.

Everyone’s in agreement that the November 13th match up against Virginia Tech is the game of the year. The ACC could be on the line and Miami will have nine games under their belt by that point of the season. We’ll all know by mid-November if this team has jelled or not. This game could mean everything if the Canes have come together or mean little if Miami stumbles in 4-5.

CFN calls the season a ‘success’ if Miami goes 8-4 and returns to the postseason – and that’s the magic number in my book, as well. Eight wins is doable with this home schedule and OOC match ups. But it’s also not a gimmie when coming off of 5-7 and some of the shellackings the Canes took last season.

As successful season is one that gives everyone hope for a legit run in 2009. To do that, it’ll take the Canes overachieving instead of underachieving. Marve needs to get Miami one step closer back to being Quarterback U. Receivers need to step up and keep progressing – which is a lot considering guys like Lance Leggett and Ryan Moore actually regressed during their tenure at The U.

Guys like Shields and James need to reach their potential, while younger guys need to have an immediate impact.

Defensively, Young needs to be as good as advertised and truly put his fingerprints all over that side of the football. His players need to be quick learners and Miami needs to set the tone early on, instead of simply “reacting” to what other offenses throw their way.

Some other not-so-fun stats that need to change? Fourth quarter scoring. Gone are the days of holding up ‘four fingers’ and owning the final period of play. Miami needs to take that back, pronto. Last season the Canes were outscored 112-61 in the fourth en route to seven losses.

Regarding third down conversions, opponents were 67 of 174 (39%)and Miami was 61 of 167 (31%). The Canes needs to wake up on offense and shut ’em down on defense.

All in all, a good enough outlook from CFN. Now we’ll see how fair other publications prove to be as summer is near.