MANNY DIAZ OPENS UP AS MIAMI PREPARES TO TAKE ON FLORIDA

And just like that, it’s officially Miami versus Florida week.

After one of the most unexpected and wild offseason’s in Hurricanes’ history—Mark Richt stepping down, Manny Diaz “returning” from Temple to take over as head coach, salvaging a recruiting class from being decimated and keeping a few necessary senior defenders on board, while bringing in some immediate-impact puzzle pieces via the Transfer Portal—the first game since that rock-bottom, program-changing bowl loss to Wisconsin is set to get underway.

Diaz officially released the first UM depth chart of the season, while doing the media rounds—calling into the Joe Rose Show, followed by his Monday presser where he broke down all things related to the big showdown, as well as the overall state of ‘The U’.

It would be easy to dismiss a lot of what was said as standard coach-speak—while the skeptic could quickly point out that Al Golden talked the talk and Randy Shannon understood the program’s brand DNA—something feels different about Diaz’s attitude, approach and overall understanding of what makes University of Miami football tick.

A few standouts from the Rose interview, as well as thoughts on the newest depth chart:

No hotter topic right now than the emergence of r-freshman Jarren Williams taking over as Miami’s newest signal-caller; beating out r-sophomore N’Kosi Perry and r-sophomore Tate Martell, the heralded Ohio State transfer.

Rose and crew fired off standard, expected questions—some of which Diaz answered in cliché fashion, while other responses help bolster the case that his blueprint and ability to push the right buttons is going to reap long-term effects.

One of the more obvious sentiments; there’s been a team-wide calming effect since Williams was named starter and guys can now rally around him, as the time finally has an identity.

Diaz went on to talk about offensive coordinator Dan Enos and the game plan to get Williams settled in on Saturday night, by way of a quarterback-friendly game plan—as well as a system that has both sides of the ball excited.

Diaz explained that players are grasping that the offensive game plan is two-fold; not just more unique play calling, putting guys in motion and what not—but how these new schemes are designed to cause problems for opposing defenses. Out-executing the opposition is part of the process—but so is implementing a plan that can allow them to trip themselves up.

When contrasting this new approach against complaints last season that opposing defenses were literally calling out what plays Miami’s offense was running before it ran it—this change in offensive philosophy simply can’t be overstated.

Miami got to 10-0 in 2017 by way of every lucky offensive bounce, as well as overachieving quarterback play from Malik Rosier. Once the air was let out of that balloon for the regular season finale in Pittsburgh, the Canes found themselves worked over by Clemson, Wisconsin and LSU in the 2018 opener; never regaining an offensive groove and playing rotating quarterbacks en route to a dismal 7-6 season.

Decent quarterback play in 2017—even with a bland game plan—mixed with next-level defense; Miami was inching closer to “contender”, which is the first step towards championship caliber. The addition of Enos, improved quarterback plan and an offensive philosophy that is a mix of innovation and defensive confusion; it’s not a shock so many have the Hurricanes as a dark horse squad to make some noise in 2019—especially with Diaz at the helm; the architect of the 2016 defensive rebuild.

Diaz’s assessment about Florida was also part-obvious, yet also part-astute. The first-year head coach praised the Gators’ as a “skilled” bunch; top-flight secondary, deep stable of running backs, returning all wide receivers and having experience at quarterbacks—as well as sound special teams.

This would’ve been an easy place to end the answer, but Diaz wanted to clarify some thoughts on both Miami and Florida over the past few years—giving a more-detailed breakdown in his presser than he did on the Rose show:

“I look at two programs, in a way, separated by 12 months. I look at Dan Mullen and his staff coming in and inheriting a four-win team two years ago—changing the culture of that program—and I think of us both being 5-1 on the same weekend last October. Florida’s down 21-3 to Vanderbilt and finds a way to come back and win that game and then that night we go play Virginia and in a close game we find a way to not win that game.”

Diaz continued on about Florida’s resilience a few weeks later at home, down double-digits to an average South Carolina squad—rallying to win—and how that late comeback (after back-to-back losses to Georgia and Missouri) set the stage for a strong finish to the season; rolling up Idaho, Florida State and Michigan in the Peach Bowl.

Other times the question has been asked in recent months, Diaz has used it as an opportunity to compliment Mullen’s first-year turnaround—10-3—on the heels of inheriting a 4-8 team, while contrasting this to the Hurricanes’ going 10-3 in 2017 with back-to-back, primetime wins against Virginia Tech and No. 3 Notre Dame.

One doesn’t have to read too hard between the lines to get Diaz’s points; (1) Miami had a double-digit win 2017 season, bought into their own hype in 2018 and took a big step backwards and (2) as bad as Florida looked in 2017 under their previous head coach, a new guy stepped in year one and had an immediate impact on the team.

In short; these two programs aren’t as far apart as the sports media—or Florida fans—might try to imply, if you read into Diaz’s words.

Where former head coach Richt was known for his 10-bite approach to eating a sandwich, Diaz is making his name on his social media prowess—hitting the ground running back in January when officially taking over as UM’s head honcho.

The topic of social media was quickly woven in and out during a quick exchange during the Rose interview, but the message itself was loud and clear—Florida is choosing to talk shit in public forums, while Miami is holding their tongue and will let their actions speak on game day.

Diaz referenced that there are no points for any social media snarkiness; but followed up with what has obviously been his message to his team—the Canes have no business in the shit-talking business after laying a 7-6 egg last season; dropping four of the last six and getting smoked 35-3 the last time they were on a football field.

Muzzling one’s players on social media is a fine art and it appears Diaz has taken the right approach in getting his players to to fall in line—earn the right. A student of the Decade Of Dominance-era Canes, Diaz saw first hand how those UM legends led by example; working their asses off on the practice field and in the weight room, which is what led to big time victories, winning streaks and eventually end zone celebrations.

Over the past several years there has been a chicken-versus-the-egg type question in regards to swagger. What is swag? Does swagger pave the way to victory—or do you have to win first, letting the swag follow? Legendary running back Alonzo Highsmith answered the question on Twitter weeks back:

“Swag is never missing a practice. Swag is practicing like every day is your last day. Swag is earned. It’s time to bring swag back to Greentree.” 

When a former national champion focuses on the world “practice’ twice in two sentences—let it serve as evidence where the process begins; on campus, fighting to earn starting jobs.

Those great teams of yesteryear; a common thread as those players all made it clear their work ethic and skills-set was set going up against the best competition day-in and day-out on Greentree. Get back to that—and UM will finally be on its way again.

Florida and Miami haven’t teed it up since the 2013, when the Hurricanes upset the No. 12 Gators in South Florida.

Another Diaz-ism that is a throwback to the days of Jimmy Johnson or Butch Davis and Miami’s dominant era; putting the Canes’ best athletes, starter and players on special teams and turning things loose.

How many times over the past decade have former UM coaches tossed second or third string receivers and running backs on punt and kick return, instead of those guys with ultimate game-breaking ability?

Come Saturday, it will be DeeJay Dallas, transfer K.J. Osborn and the electric Jeff Thomas on the return teams. Diaz let it be known; he’d rest a guy on first down if he has to—but there is always a better chance to score on special teams than their is 1st-and-10. A lot of grass equals a lot of space—and The New Miami is going to make sure is has playmakers getting the ball in their hands when the opposition is kicking it their way.

So simple and obvious—yet lost in the rebuilding shuffle by so many other leaders over the past dozen years.

The last standout point; the understanding and acceptance that once the prep work is done, there’s nothing more to do that take on the task at hand.

A good example is looking back at kids who were successful in college, versus those (like me) who tried to cram until the final minute. Friends of mine who were acing tests; they’d shown up for class, did the work, put in their time studying and reached that point where there was nothing more to do except take the test.

Then there were those of us who were unprepared and reading / highlighting notes the morning-of, all the way up to the final minute before books had to be closed and tests handed out.

French biologist Louis Pasteur said, “Change favors only the prepared mind”—meaning that sudden flashes of insight just don’t *happen*—they are products of preparation. To that point, Diaz believed that Miami is prepared as much as it can be prepared and now it’s time to get busy:

“You got a feeling like you just reached a point where sometimes you’ve practiced all you can practice,” Diaz said. “We have made great strides, certainly since the spring. We have obviously made great strides since coming back on July 25 when we reported.”

“But now, we have to play a game. Sometimes you’ve just got to get into games, you’ve got to mix it up against somebody else, find out what you’re all about. Find out who shines under the bright lights. It’s going to be a very emotional setting. Both teams will be very highly energized.”

Whatever happens come August 24th, it won’t be for lack of effort or preparation on the part of Diaz’s Canes.

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.

The Latest at The U…

Nine days until kickoff and the scent of Miami Hurricanes football is officially in the air Regarding “The State of Miami”, let’s dive right in:

Thearon Collier is officially in Los Angeles and has joined the Southern Cal family. There’s been some ink on it, but none better than a little blurb on NBC Miami yesterday, as it really complimented UM’s depth at the wideout position.

UM is eight-deep at wide receiver and while Collier had a nice run last two years (44 receptions, 574 receiving yards, three touchdowns – as well as housing two punt returns), but according to the report a “variety of problems” caused Collier to miss spring ball. (Collier reported refused to regularly attend class, even after being given time to grieve while dealing with family issues.)

Obviously you wish a kid like Thearon the best. He’s a Miami guy, things didn’t work out with the hometown team and he’s starting anew. Good on him.

That said, it’ll take more than a fresh start to clear the slate and here’s hoping he grows up, learns from these setbacks and becomes a responsible young man. As the article stated, Lane Kiffin isn’t known for being a hard-ass and it’s not in Collier’s best interest to simply trek three time zones west where he can run amok for a coach who turns a blind eye.

Under a coach like Kiffin, kids have to police themselves. Can Thearon do that? Will he focus on his academics or is this strictly a football decision? He’ll sit out the 2010 season and will have 2011-2012 to ball. Here’s hoping he shines both on the field and in the classroom as we all know football is only part of the game of life.

Some good ink on former Miami safety Randy Phillips a few days back. The oft-injured Phillips landed in Detroit as a free agent after spring’s NFL Draft and his leadership played a big part in the signing.

For those who forgot, Phillips decided to forgo shoulder surgery at the beginning of the 2009 season, which would’ve had him healthy for the draft, though he’d have missed his senior year. Citing that he didn’t want to let his teammates down, he played through the pain, wanting to lead last season.

For those who never knew, Phillips and his father raised 19 siblings (without a mother) and he made a point of being a role model to all his brothers and sisters.

Injuries amongst the Lions’ secondary got Phillips a call-back and an opportunity to shine – which he did. His knowledge of the game, work ethic and attitude shone. A week ago he trekked from Michigan to Florida to be by his fiance’s side while she gave birth to their daughter. He flew back to Detroit on Monday night, made it to practice on Tuesday, battled dehydration all day, got sick, headed to the locker room but came back out that afternoon and picked off two passes.

Regarding his football know-how, defensive coordinator Gunther Cunningham praised Phillips.

“It’s funny, I asked him a couple of questions (about the defensive system) while he was stretching (before his first practice) and I almost fell over,” Cunningham said. “He knew the answers to every question and they weren’t easy questions. You knew right then that he was a smart kid and he’d been coached really well.”

For all the anti-Randy folk who refuse to put a precedence on character guys and quality kids, here’s further proof that Randy Shannon is right and you’re dead wrong.

Miami recently made ESPN’s “20 Teams With A Title Shot” list, coming in at #14 – based on their road to Glendale (not best teams). As expected, the non-conference schedule was cited as a roadblock, but the meat of the ACC schedule is at home — Florida State, North Carolina and Virginia Tech. (Road games at Clemson and Georgia Tech are tough, though.)

It’ll be interesting to look back at this poll come December to see where the chips fall. It’s understandable that ESPN has ads to sell, so concepts like this are drummed up to keep viewers logged on … but what’s the point? On paper, sure, this all sounds good – but intangibles aren’t taken into consideration. Injuries. Elements. Momentum. Teams that are hot versus not, as the season rolls on.

Miami has as good a shot at the national championship as a handful of teams out there – barring the Canes win and teams ahead of them lose. That’s the recipe every year and won’t change next week. Take care of your business and hope others take care of theirs.

The team and coaches have their ‘one at a time’ mentality in place, which is good – but benchmarks need to be set, most importantly; finishing. Miami has gotten better each November under Shannon, but has still lost it’s share of must-win games.

You can forgive a loss to North Carolina, where an injured Jacory Harris tossed four interceptions (two pick sixes were the difference-maker), but the overtime loss to Clemson is still inexcusable. Special Teams breakdowns. Looking lackadaisical at times. Not to mention piss poor attendance for what at the time was a top ten team in the middle of a solid run.

Win the games you’re supposed to win, stay focused, bring it harder than the other guys in games where you’re an underdog and hope the football gods are looking down on you as the season closes out.

It’s the same recipe for everyone, so how much weight can you really put into these opinion-based lists?

ESPN analyst Desmond Howard chimed in on Miami v. 2010 today, having seen more practices and scrimmages than the local media are allowed to take in.

No earth shattering news, but some good commentary: Linebacker is still a weakness in his eyes and will come down to the health of Colin McCarthy, the ability of Sean Spence to break out of a sophomore slump and the ‘if’ factor regarding back ups stepping up. Howard feels the lack of depth / proven talent at linebacker is Miami’s Achilles’ heel and this team goes where the linebackers take them.

Howard touted the Canes’ wideouts as the best since the Santana Moss / Reggie Wayne / Andre Johnson era of 2000. He talked of their maturity (most are finally juniors this season) and expects a lot out of Aldarius Johnson and LaRon Byrd and wants to see this group get it done against some of the heavy hitters early this season. (“When you want to compare them against receivers in the past, in my estimation it’s not just what you do, but who you do it against and they’re going to have plenty opportunities to do it against big time teams,” said Howard.)

He called Storm Johnson “one of the most impressive true freshmen” he’s seen in a long time. Johnson has come on strong in scrimmage, albeit against the second and third team defenses. Mike James, Damien Berry and Lamar Miller are still the guys to beat and don’t count out the return of Graig Cooper. That said, Johnson sound like he’s ready should someone go down.

Howard also touted Brandon Harris (“a shutdown corner”) and Allen Bailey (will judge him based on how he plays at Ohio State and Pittsburgh), while mentioning that J12’s thumb isn’t yet 100%, but should be by week two.

Great to see an ‘outsider’ echoing the same sentiments as the close-to-the-program diehards. ESPN gets a lot of grief for an anti-Miami bias (which really is just good business as there are so many Cane-haters nationwide), but this isn’t a like / dislike thing. It’s some unfiltered commentary from a guy who knows football, analyzing nationally while living locally.

Much has been made about three straight road games so early in the year (as well as the fact they’re against three tough opponents in three tough venues – Ohio State, Pittsburgh and Clemson), but the upside is no dirt.

Outside of the season opener against Florida A&M next Thursday night, odds are the Canes won’t have to play another home game on the infield dirt, due to the three straight road trips. Miami’s next home game is October 9th against Florida State and by that point the Marlins – fourth in the NL East and ten games out of first – will be home for the holidays, their season ending Sunday October 3rd, against Pittsburgh.

Outside of FAMU, Miami won’t see any infield dirt this year as Shannon has made it clear he won’t even let his guys practice at Sun Life Stadium.

“One thing about playing on dirt is you can get real serious burns and those burns are hard to….you can get a lot of staph infections from those burns if you’re not careful so we don’t even go on it.

“You go up there and practice this time of year and a guy gets a dirt burn or a sand burn. Then now he can’t heal and now he misses the FAMU game and the next week is the Ohio State game and he misses that game. You don’t want to put yourself in that situation.”

Just this talk of disgusting infield dirt makes me miss the Orange Bowl that much more, but it is what is it. Get the Marlins out of there already and make this stadium football only.

Lastly, athletic director Kirby Hocutt came out swinging today regarding reports that Miami didn’t use up it’s allotment of tickets from Ohio State. “We have allocated each and every one of the 4,000 tickets in our allotment of the Ohio State [game] on Sept. 11,” Hocutt said in the statement. “Any reports that Miami returned unused game tickets to Ohio State are absolutely untrue.”

Hocutt made it clear that the outpouring of ticket requests from Hurricane Nation was more than UM could accommodate, which I can vouch for based on the amount of emails we’ve received at allCanes.com … via our Facebook page … my personal account. Not a day has gone by this summer where some fan didn’t ask what the story was with tickets and if we had any pull.

Unfortunately, we don’t … but we’ll be in Columbus front and center, partying from 7pm until midnight on Friday September 10th at the local Buffalo Wild Wings (2151 N. High Street – on OSU’s campus). A live DJ, special guests, private room with game day gear for sale.

Advance RSVP guarantees a spot at the party and the first 200 paid guests receive a FREE “No Excuses” wristband (like the team has been sporting all summer). Click here to reserve your spot today.

SHAMELESS PLUG ALERT: Make sure to tune into allCanes Radio on Wednesday night from 7pm to 9pm as both The Beast and his partner in crime Phil de Montmollin have another great show on deck. Tomorrow night former defensive lineman and assistant coach Greg Mark and former fullback / current boxer Quadtrine Hill are on board.

For those of you who can’t listen live, check the archive on Thursday morning or download the Podcast via iTunes.

To both Beast and Phil’s credit, they’ve put together a truly compelling show – one that the Sun Sentinel’s Steve Gorten has praised, as well as a handful of writers at the Herald.

This isn’t a standard, been there / done that / heard it all before type show. Weeks back Beast had Joaquin Gonzalez getting deep regarding Ed Reed’s speech at Doak in 2001. He had former linebacker great Rohan Marley talking about his off the field ventures (Marley Coffee) and dug deep, getting former cornerback Nate Brooks on board, discussing his involvement in the community, as well as how the murder of Marlin Barnes still haunts him (Brooks named his son Marlin, after his fallen friend).

Where a show like HBO’s “Real Sports” takes its game to a level that ESPN and their puff pieces don’t – that’s what allCanes Radio is doing regarding the coverage of UM football. Tune in and see for yourself this Wednesday night, live in-store from allCanes this week.

Plant some seeds, watch ’em grow…

I hope the cynical, opinionated, know-it-all portion of the Miami Football fan base is paying attention to what we’re seeing out of The U’s baseball team – as well as what was just displayed on the hardwood this post season.

Success doesn’t happen overnight. It’s a calculated process. Hell, it’s scientific. Plant some seeds, give them time to grow, nurture and in due time, prepare for the harvest.

Right now, it’s ‘grow’ time for Miami Football.

A year from now it’s back to ‘go’ time.

Randy Shannon is entering year two on the job. Year one – a disaster. Make no bones about it. Little positive comes out of 5-7 losing six of seven down the stretch.

Outside a Thursday night beat down of Texas A&M and a win at Florida State, the 2007 highlights included some off-season firings, a few new hirings and the dismissal of some players this coaching staff felt were dead weight.

Amazing what you can get done when your season ends late November instead of early January.

Miami’s final spring game took place just over a week ago and a few things were apparent. (1) The Canes have some playmakers and (2) most of said playmakers are underclassmen or true freshman.

Youth is king in Coral Gables and with youth you have to expect some inexperience.

I believe wholeheartedly that Miami is on the mend and will be a top the hill again. It’s not if, it’s when. I echo the sentiments of defensive line coach and recruiting coordinator, Clint Hurtt in a recent Sports Illustrated article:

“In my heart of hearts I believe we’re back on the path to being what we were again.”

Amen, Clint.

Miami will reap what it soughs and the past few seasons, the Canes haven’t been soughing much worth writing home about.

Andy Staples hammers this point in this recent and rare SI gem on The U. Former coach Larry Coker went after the nation’s top talent instead of finding success in his own back yard. Simply put, Coker didn’t put the focus on the Tri-City area – Dade, Broward and Palm Beach – the way Shannon and staff are.

As Staples points out, some of the highly touted talent between 2003-2006 was big time on paper – but many kids failed to live up to the hype/their rankings due to playing against inferior competition in high school. The lack of production and lack of development during the tenure in Coral Gables, combined with a change in mentality helped produce the Canes recent decline.

You don’t need to over-recruit the rest of the nation when you’re this close to so much South Florida talent – quite possibly the hottest hot bed of high school football stars in the nation.

Any Texas or California doubters, look no further than Class 6A champs and national champions, Miami Northwestern. Same to be said for St. Thomas Aquinas of Ft. Lauderdale – the 5A state champs – and Miami’s Booker T. Washington, who took home the 4A title.

After Northwestern showed Southlake (Texas) Carroll who was boss back in September, there’s little doubt that the rest of Florida’s best wouldn’t take it to their 5A and 4A counterparts nationwide. The Miami kids ‘outtalented’ the Texas kids the same way great Hurricanes teams have over the years. Stronger, faster and better. Men amongst boys.

Shannon and staff target local ballers because they are damn well sure what kind of talent these highly touted players face daily in practice as well as Friday night, under the lights. That’s why eleven of the aforementioned state and national champs are suiting up for The U this fall and ready to make an immediate impact.

Not only do the local high schools again have strong ties with Canes coaches – something that fell off during Coker’s tenure where he didn’t even employ a recruiting coordinator – but these local Miami-bound Bulls and Tornadoes were barely teenagers when the Canes made their last run.

“The Canes were gladiators that never could get beat,” said freshman Miami defensive tackle and former Northwestern Bulls star Marcus Forston. “They always found a way to win. When I was growing up, those were my heroes, my role models.”

How many incoming freshman across the nation had that same love and adoration for the Canes? Some, but nothing like the impact it had on the locals. When asked about the first time Forston runs through the smoke on game day as a Cane? “I might cry,” he said.

Kids like Forston are the foundation for this rebuilding project. Local kids that could’ve played anywhere, but wanted to be a part of the Canes resurgence.

All the ‘feel good’ stories aside, Miami remains a work in progress. As impressive as these newbies are, fans have to remember that underclassmen are going to make rookie mistakes.

Ed Reed and Mike Rumph were both a huge part of Miami’s title run in 2001, but peel it back a few years and you’d be hard pressed to forget both sophomores blowing their coverage in a 27-23 loss to No. 2 Penn State in 1999.

Nursing a 23-20 lead with 1:52 left to play, Chafie Fields streaked past Rumph and Reed, scoring the game winner on a 79-yard strike from Kevin Thompson. Years later, both Cane defenders would cite that as a career-defining moment and a learning experience, en route to a national championship and first round NFL Draft picks.

A similar tale regarding recent first rounder, Brandon Meriweather.

Trucked by running back Quincy Wilson on a nationally televised nailbiter against West Virginia, the sophomore safety endured the embarrassment of that highlight for the rest of 2003. A year later, a stronger, more experienced Meriweather was on the delivering end of a bigger blow when he sent a woozy Louisville tight end to the sidelines after breaking up a pass during Miami’s thrilling 41-38 comeback win.

Even Mr. 38-2 Ken Dorsey proved mortal as a true freshman. Hurled into action at No. 2 Virginia Tech when Kenny Kelly went down, a wide eyed Dorsey’s head was swimming during a 6-of-17 performance for 45 yards and an interception during that 43-10 loss.

Fans expecting Robert Marve or Jacory Harris to walk on water from day one and overcome all obstacles simply because of their high school accolades – look no further than the early history of the great Canes listed above. There will be mistakes when you’re thrown into the fire and expected to perform early. There are gonna be some growing pains.

That said, if Miami Faithful remain patient, there will be also be reason to celebrate down the road. This thing is being rebuilt carefully from the ground on up. Patience must remain a virtue a while longer.

The seeds have been planted and the nurturing is underway. Anyone that’s followed spring ball can attest to that. Shannon and staff threw the depth charts out the window a la Jimmy Johnson. No more seniority and other Coker-esque tactics are being employed. The best players will see the field.

In an effort to promote camaraderie, locker room assignments are being reshuffled every few weeks. As Staples’ article mentioned, defensive backs will get used to sitting next to receivers, quarterbacks will suit up next to defensive lineman and scholarship players will be hanging out with the walk ons.

“You can sit by a guy for four years, and that’s the only guy you’re going to talk to,” said Shannon. “Now, you mix them around the locker room, so you get to talk to four or five guys every so often. By the time your senior season is over, there are about 70 guys that you’ve had two to three months to spend every day with.”

On paper it doesn’t sound like much, but the mental aspect of the coaching game is as important as Xs and Os come Saturday. To the average fan, who cares about locker room assignments? In the coaches eyes, this promotes a “personal connection” to each teammate – making them more accountable to each other and less likely to want to let those guys down.

A far cry from the rumored issues a worn out defense felt these past few seasons regarding a lethargic and non-productive offense.

All these little moments, adjustments and fine-tuning are how you build a champion. Great teams don’t just “happen”. They’re built from the ground up and only after you’re a top the mountain can you look back and add up all these experiences, realizing the profound impact the had on a championship team.

Miami Basketball is coming off a 23-11 season, a No. 7 seeding in the NCAA tourney and a mid-season upset of No. 4 Duke. A year ago, 12-20 and no post season.

Miami Baseball goes 37-24 last season and has a streak of 13 consecutive NCAA Regional titles snapped. A year later, the Canes are No. 1 in the nation for the first time since 2004, are riding a 13-game win streak and sit pretty at 27-2 halfway through the season.

A year ago, this fan base wouldn’t have given you a nickel for either squad. Critical of coaches and players involved with both squads, only the long-sighted fan base realized it was a rebuilding process and that both teams were a few players away from getting things back where they belong.

I hope the short-sighted contingent takes the lead of the long-sighted folks. Miami Football has officially turned the corner and the resurgence is on – but the ship won’t be righted overnight. This is a process. Shannon and staff need to nurture these young, talented kids and grow some champions.

Mike Leach To Take Over Miami Hurricanes?

Mike Leach to Miami? We’ll see. But it’s definitely the latest stop in Rumorville.

Word is Paul Dee met with Leach this evening in New York. Both are in town for the National Football Foundation’s College Football Hall of Fame event. Several coaches are in attendance, so Miami is making the rounds.

Word on other sites is that things could move quickly here. One report had Leach’s agent has being contacted to speed up the process.

“Leach to Miami” would also shed some light on the rumors of Miami being in contact with Bob Stoops recently. Both sides have been talking, but no one has confirmed if this is a recommendation for Leach, or is Miami talking-talking to Stoops?

Earlier I read Miami could have a new coach as early as Tuesday. The latest reports now say the meeting was informal, but that talks could heat up.

I don’t know if Leach is the 3rd, 4th or 5th choice for The U, but with so many coaching vacancies out there, Miami can’t sleep at the wheel. But it also can’t overreact either.

Miami can’t knee-jerk their way into a hire. Coker got the boot ten days ago and consultant Chuck Neinas was hired to show everyone Miami means business. This is a nationwide search. It’s time to swing for the fences and get that A-list guy.

Leach is a B-list guy with an A-list offense. This job would make him or expose him.

A Monday morning meeting with Greg Schiano, turned down by lunch. A dinner meeting with Leach and talks are turning serious? That’s too quick for a headhunter to take Miami’s wish list, merge it with his own, contact all candidates, review information, discuss with the administration and make a decision.

College football’s regular season ended two days ago. Most coaches can’t discuss other offers until the post-season. Miami is officially 48 hours into the process. They can’t be at a point where they’re already offering the position to Leach. Can they? Is he that impressive or are Dee and Donna Shalala that desperate?

On Monday, Stanford canned Walt Harris and Louisiana Tech fired Jack Bicknell. Two more to add to the growing list of programs looking to hire new leaders in a hurry.

Miami doesn’t have to be desperate. Let Neinas do his job, interview a handful of guys, mull it over and make a play in the next ten days.

Unless you have that “ace in the hole” signed, sealed and delivered.

.:Canes305:.

Greg Schiano Turns Down Miami Hurricanes

ESPN reported that Greg Schiano officially turned down Miami today, deciding to take the $20M Rutgers offered and run. You go, Greg. $2M a year for 10 years is hard to turn down. Plus, you were NEVER going to see a ten year commitment out of The U. Not after one good year at Rutgers.

I’ve received a ton of emails from Scarlet Knight faithful attempting to break balls about Miami being “turned down” by Schiano, as if that’s an indictment on The U. Please. If Schiano put these rumors to rest by lunch on Monday that tells you two things, (1) he wasn’t all that interested and (2) Paul Dee didn’t pursue him vigorously.

If Miami threw it all at Schiano, this thing would’ve taken a few days to mull over. You don’t turn down a multi-million dollar deal over a hoagie. You let it sink in a bit. The way it all played out today, this meeting seemed like it was just a formality.

I’ve been on the phone this morning, curious to get to the bottom of things and a few different sources have reported the same name back to me, Bob Stoops.

While I have NO CLUE how Miami will compete for one of the game’s highest paid coaches, there are some signs (albeit far fetched at this point) which could point to Stoops being Miami’s guy.

>>> The talk has been of a “high profile” coach coming to Miami. Schiano and Steve Spurrier were mentioned early on and seemed to fit the bill. Spurrier used Miami for leverage (once a Gator…) and Schiano merely seemed logical based on ties to The U and the fact he’s a an up and coming coach.

Both names were thrown out there to feed the masses the past few weeks. People devoured anything Spurrier or Schiano related, but at day’s end neither had merit.

Stoops has been contacted by Miami. We know that much. What hasn’t been confirmed is the purpose of the call. Is Stoops a candidate or a sounding board? He did employ Mike Leach as offensive coordinator (1999-2000) his first two seasons at Oklahoma. Was this a brain-picking session regarding Leach, or is Stoops that “big name” guy the Miami boosters wanted and have kept mum on?

I don’t know if there’s any merit to this Stoops talk. I’m going on a tip that Miami and the Oklahoma head coach have been in discussions since last Thursday. What that means, we’ll find out soon enough.

There are $3,400,000 reasons why I don’t believer Stoops would bail Oklahoma for Miami, but I’ll play devil’s advocate below:

>>> If this plays out, then Chuck Neinas stayed true to form and was worth every dollar. Neinas helped bring Stoops to OU years back and helped bring Urban Meyer to Florida in 2004. He knows how to work with big name coaches, top universities and every article I’ve read mentions how discreet he is in the process.

Because this is so under the radar, it deserves some consideration. Speculation is that “Spurrier to Miami” blew up when the media got a hold of it. If Stoops is Miami’s ace in the hole, that news is being held close to the vest and these other coaching rumors are just a smoke screen.

>>> Random message board rumors have mentioned Stoops being frustrated with the booster situation at OU and the events leading to QB Rhett Bomar’s dismissal. Others say Carol Stoops is over Norman and is ready for change. The Stoops own a condo in South Florida, so they obviously dig the area.

Pure speculation? Absolutely but after eight seasons in the midwest, it’s not far fetched for the Stoops to be thinking change and trek back to the Sunshine State. The most dominant program in Florida awaits. Howard called it The State of Miami.

Christy Schiano supposedly didn’t care for South Florida, which obviously played into her husband’s decision to stick around New Jersey. Don’t underestimate a wife’s influence whether Coach stays or goes.

>>> Miami message boards are reporting that Dee is in New York today conducting interviews at The National Football Foundation’s College Football Hall of Fame. Coaches and athletic directors from across the nation are all gathered in this centralized location. Stoops and Leach are both at the event. Dee will talk to one or both of them.

>>> After Stoops, I’m not sure what Miami is thinking outside of a current NFL guy, if they’re still thinking “big name” head coaching hire. Leach continues to get press, but that’s because he’s the only one vocal about wanting the opportunity. As of this morning Leach stated that no one from Miami has contacted him, but who knows? His interest level alone might vault him to the #2 guy. He told a mutual friend of ours that he’d “gnaw off his arm” for a chance to coach The U.
That’s exactly the kind of guy Miami needs.

>>> Randy Shannon is still a viable candidate, but I believe that’s only if plans A, B and C fall through. Shannon had to be publicly named in an effort to keep other schools at arm’s length. The premise of Leach’s offense with Shannon’s defense would be a helluva fit, but is that too many egos under one roof? Shannon will get offered a head coaching job somewhere. Miami would have to sweeten the pot to keep him around as a coordinator. More money and the Assistant Head Coach title, you’d think.

>>> More to come, but for now make note; Stoops is a viable candidate. There’s enough stuff floating around out there to warrant throwing his name in the mix. Bear with me, Sooners.

It’s highly unlikely Miami lands an A-list guy like this. But it’s a dream scenario and Miami is at a huge turning point regarding the program’s future. The Canes don’t just need a hire, they need a proven entity who’s not a retread.

Stoops got his first title at Florida in 1996. He knows the state and how to recruit it. Took over a national power in Oklahoma. Won a title year two. Solid teams year in and year out, he’s possibly coming off of his greatest coaching feat yet.

10-2 and a BCS berth after dimissing Bomar, getting robbed of a win at Oregon and losing would-be Heisman winner, Adrian Peterson to a busted collarbone weeks back. Stoops kept his team focused and they got a hell of a consolation prize in a “down” year; a Fiesta Bowl berth against Boise State.

Stoops has the resume of an old timer.

He’s only 46.

The guy’s in his prime. Does he want a new challenge or is he set to stay put? We’ll see.

Either way, you don’t let something like this out of the bag until it’s a done deal. Not with a big name, big money guy like this. “Stoops to Miami” is out of left field, but until he officially says he’s not a candidate, my interest will remain piqued.

The more this is playing out, the more I believe Stoops was Miami’s #1 option after firing Coker. Spurrier and Schiano were thrown in so the media would muck up the waters. This could be the calm before the storm. The Canes are pursuing the Sooners top dog. Does Dee have enough in the tank to lure Stoops back to the Sunshine State? Let’s see how it all unfolds.

>>> OU folks already flooding the Inbox, let’s clarify a few things. I am not reporting this as a done deal. I got a tip, I read some rumors and I’m connecting the dots from a Miami fan’s perspective.

Two Miami sources mentioned Stoops to me. When I posted it on CanesTime, I got a few PMs from guys close to The U who told me the same thing. Does that give it legs? Who the hell knows.

I’m just reporting what I heard this weekend. Stoops is talking to Miami. Whether that’s to recommend Leach or to test the waters for himself, we’ll see.

Until then, let us Miami folk speculate.

We’re bored as hell and less than thrilled about New Year’s in Boise.

.:Canes305:.