Game Six : Miami 28, Duke 13

A 15-point win against a ACC bottom-dweller wasn’t exactly what the fans were looking for in the wake of a four-touchdown beat down, courtesy of Florida State.

Miami chose to sleepwalk its way past Duke this past weekend, instead of coming out with some passion and making a lowly conference rival pay for last Saturday’s no show.

Post game, Randy Shannon stated that he was proud of his team’s effort and that Duke is a “tough” place to play. I guess he missed some of the other squads who blew through there this past year, winning convincingly – Army (35-21), Alabama (62-13) and Georgia Tech (49-10) to name a few.

In typical fashion, the Canes played down to the level of the competition – which has been a glaring weakness at UM for decades now, lesser squads bringing their “A” game while UM sleepwalks to victory. Still, an average showing against Duke is tolerable when you’re on the right end of a 45-17 game against your arch rival two weeks back. Not when you’re still licking your wounds and looking to regroup.

As a collective unit, Miami flat out played poorly … again. Yes, the Canes defense forced seven turnovers, but didn’t capitalize – only amassing 28 points against a truly inferior foe. UM was 3-of-12 on third down and 0-of-4 on fourth down – twice throwing a home run deep ball on fourth and short, instead of simply picking up the first down. (A fake punt was also snuffed out, again, by Duke).

Another headscratcher? 12 penalties for 90 yards. A week after not executing against Florida State, Miami again is mentally not in a game, shooting themselves in the foot a dozen times. Where is the discipline? Where is the focus? Where is the passion?

Shannon is out there attempting to win games and in the end, that’s what he did this past weekend – he got the “W”, so on that level it’s job well done. Regarding the bigger picture, lackluster wins against sub par teams paint a disturbing bigger picture regarding what’s wrong with this program and simply put, the wins aren’t going to continue piling up when you see the struggles you have against both a lesser team like Duke or a more focused, prepared team like Florida State.

North Carolina is on deck and it’s Monday morning entering a big game week. What is Shannon’s game plan for the Tar Heels? What is Mark Whipple going to draw up for the mentally and physically injured Jacory Harris? How will John Lovett shut down the UNC offense? Will he allow the average T.J. Yates to look above average? Does he have an answer for Ryan Houston’s ground game? Will a back up tight end play the role of hero now that Zack Pianalto is injured? (Pianalto got Miami for 51 yards on 5 receptions last year.)

Bet your ass Butch Davis and staff are preparing for Miami, studying that Florida State game tape, seeing holes and will come in ready to attack. This has nothing to do with Davis having Shannon’s number as much as it’s simple Xs and Os. Find the weakness and exploit. It worked for Jimbo Fisher two weeks back and it’ll continue to work for any smart staff that outwits Shannon and crew.

The Heels opened the year 0-2 and have won four straight – Rutgers, East Carolina, Clemson and Virginia. No victories over juggernauts, but then again Miami is hardly a powerhouse right now, either.

I’ve heard from many of you who were at the Duke snoozefest and the consensus is the same. This is a divided team. To what degree we don’t know, but this is no championship caliber squad. The talent is there, but the camaraderie is lacking.

Miami isn’t playing like a cohesive unit. Sure, there have been some bright spots. When Vaughn Telemaque picks off a few passes, the event is celebrated with some excitement and a few chest bumps, but across this board, this 4-2 squad doesn’t resemble a team that is ready to go into battle arm in arm.

Those who watched on TV, you see Harris a coming back to the bench after a three-and-out, either taking a knee by himself or letting Whipple’s words fall on deaf ears. There isn’t a pupil / teacher relationship and neither appears to be learning or growing. Instead, the two look more like an unhappily married couple, stuck with each other for the time being.

While this no-love-lost relationship takes place on one side, a stoic Shannon stands on the other – arms folded and stonefaced.

On one level, I do get Randy’s frustration. You teach these kids best you can, they get it right in practice, you believe you have this thing where you want it – and then on game day they don’t deliver. Shannon isn’t the type to get up in arms over things in his day-to-day — not after all he’s seen and the world he grew up in — so it’s not going to happen on the football field, either.

That said, this isn’t about Randy. It’s about this team, this program and finding something that works. You have to figure out a way to get through to kids and you have to win ball games. Trying, trying, trying and failing doesn’t give you the right to just stand silent and frustrated. You’re a head coach and you must continue going back to the drawing board until you find the answer.

It’s your responsibility, it’s in your job description and it’s what you’re paid to do – recruit, develop players, help them become men and win games. Period.

You can be the strong, silent type as a father, should that be your preferred MO – but not as a head coach. In the words of writer Samuel Beckett, “Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better.” In life you’ll always have successes and failures, but you need to grow and through each experience. Year four and Shannon is still making some of the same mistakes he made early in his career, which is what makes so much of this unacceptable.

A loss against Florida State would’ve been tolerable, but you’re not trying again, failing again and failing better when your defense isn’t playing fundamental football, giving up 300 rushing yards. The week prior, defense looked to be the Canes strong suit, with six turnovers forced at Clemson. A week later, backsliding again.

Shannon has stated that he spends his off seasons meeting with other coaches and sitting down with his mentors. Jimmy Johnson, Bill Parcells, et al. One message these football giants passed down; assembling a solid staff, which Shannon eventually did, turning the reigns over to Whipple and Lovett. Neither are perfect, but both were an upgrade from where Miami was early in Randy’s regime and both have helped win games week in and week out, despite some of their shortcomings.

One name I’d like to see added to Shannon’s guru list immediately; Tom Coughlin – for nothing more than talking with another stubborn coach who almost lost his job, finally gave in and achieved ultimate success.

The New York Giants upset the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLII, but not before Coughlin was almost run out of the Big Apple for his stubborn, hard-to-relate-to ways. A man once referred to as “Colonel Coughlin” by players who didn’t “get” his hard-ass ways, was now getting a bucket of Gatorade dumped over his head after pulling the upset of upsets.

Chastised early in his career at Jacksonville for his “rules and regulations, insistence on practicing in pads, flare-ups with quarterbacks and bad locker room chemistry” (Paul Newberry, AP 2/4/08), Coughlin has long-since been thought of as a Gestapo. Where Shannon removed players names from jerseys during the 2007 season, Coughlin has oft said that he’d like all names removed from the backs of NFL players. Both men have that field general mentality, though one has learned to work within it, while the other is still learning.

Both Shannon and Coughlin have done great things off the field. Recently it came out how Shannon reached out to linebacker Jordan Futch after losing a brother and one can imagine how many other instances like that have gone unreported.

Years back a story came out regarding Coughlin and his dynamic with Jay McGillis, an overachieving safety at Boston College who the then-head coach took a liking to McGillis, who was diagnosed with leukemia and lymphoma in November 1991. Coughlin continues to call the McGillis family annually on Jay’s birthday. This is after spending nights by his players’ bedside and hunkering down with the family the night he passed.

On the human interest side, both gruff men have shown they have big hearts. Unfortunately, to date only one of them has proven they can win big time football games, which is what they’re both paid to do.

With year four at the halfway point and with the ACC still in reach, it’s time for Shannon to let his guard down a bit. Again, find a way to relate to these kids and to get the most out of them. If you see potential leaders on this team, now’s the time to put an arm around them, asking them to step up. You can’t wait on them to grow into the role. Throw them into the fire and let them know what’s expected.

Any stubbornness that might have caused a rift between the university and former players who are ready to step in and help, mend fences and bring those old school Canes aboard. No one is talking about a paid position. Play liaison and get yesterday’s Canes on the phone with the current day players. There are decades of wisdom just waiting to be passed down. This isn’t the first Miami squad with its collective back against the wall. This is the first bunch of Canes that lost to the Noles and struggled to rebound.

Part of being CEO is delegating tasks. Randy doesn’t need to be the be all / end all, but the buck stops with him, so until he finds a way, he’ll be a target of criticism and will shoulder the blame – right or wrong as that may be.

Coughlin’s Super Bowl run began with an 0-2 start to the 2007 season. The regular season wrapped with a 38-35 loss to New England and the payoff was a gauntlet of three straight road playoff games – @Tampa Bay, @ Dallas and @Green Bay. From there, a rematch with the undefeated Patriots, which turned into one of the biggest upsets the game has ever seen.

At 0-2, the standoffish Coughlin sent a direct message to his team – that there was no group of guys he’d rather have there with him. From there, the winning began. The statuesque head coach found a way to relate to his players, getting them to respond accordingly.

With six games remaining, Shannon needs his “Coughlin moment”. Miami beat Duke, but looked sub par in the process. A lack of passion, an inability to capitalize on turnovers, mental mistakes and poor play calling on third and fourth down turned a would-be rout into a respectable game.

Of course the beauty of college football is the ability to put last week behind you and to go out again and do it the following week. Next up, North Carolina – a big game, a conference rival and no explanation necessary regarding motivation as the Heels are 3-0 against the Canes since Shannon took over.

It’s time for change in Coral Gables, but that doesn’t necessarily mean replacing a head coach. Not yet, at least. Not with six games remaining. Not mid-season. Not after three-plus years of rebuilding. Right now change needs to come from Shannon and from within. Look no further than some small personnel shifts on the field last week for proof that change works.

Colin McCarthy struggled at middle linebacker from the get go. After getting torched by the Noles, No. 44 was either sick or suspended last week and didn’t travel to Duke. In his place, Kelvin Cain – a two-star prospect and freshman out of Clovis, CA who tallied up nine tackles, one sack, a forced fumble, another fumble recovery and two quarterback hurries.

On the other side of the ball, freshman tight end Asante Cleveland had two receptions for twenty yards while starter Chase Ford had another drop in one attempt.

While both Cain and Cleveland deserve time to develop, both positions – middle linebacker and tight end – have been weaknesses for Miami this season. McCarthy has killed the Canes in run support, while Ford’s drops have added to Harris’ woes.

Long gone are Dedrick Epps and Jimmy Graham, two sold tight ends that combined for 36 receptions, 460 yards and 8 touchdowns last season. Six games, Ford, Cleveland and Richard Gordon have 10 receptions for 90 yards and one lone touchdown between them, taking away what was a very valuable asset for Harris last season; a reliable tight end.

While it was only Duke, the play of Cain and Cleveland showed that there are other guys ready to step up if current starters aren’t getting it done. That’s been the “way” at Miami for years and that pressure needs to be on every current starter as it’s a hell of a motivator. Harris may not have that same motivation due to a lack of proven talent and depth at quarterback, but should anybody else slack off, Shannon saw proof last week that others are ready to get their job done.

Miami looks healthy with North Carolina looming. McCarthy is expected back, as are offensive lineman Jermaine Johnson, defensive lineman Josh Holmes and running back Lamar Miller.

Across the field, the Tar Heels are still dealing with injury and suspensions. Marvin Austin (dismissed). Robert Quinn (suspended). Greg Little (suspended). Quan Sturdivant (hamstring – questionable). Kendric Burney (waiting on reinstatement / conflicting reports). Zack Pianalto (broken fiblua).

Doesn’t matter who’s in or out for this one, though. Everyone on that field is coming to play. This will be another physical game and both sides will rise to the challenge.

Harris’ four interceptions (two picks sixes) were the difference-maker in last year’s nine-point loss. The Heels brought a top five defense into the match up and turnovers aside, Miami still torched North Carolina for 435 total yards.

What will be the keys to this year’s game? Will Shannon have his team ready? Can Harris bounce back? Do Whipple / Lovett have the answered they need to pull the victory?

Another night game at Sun Life. The last one didn’t turn out so good but Miami – the fans, players and city – have a chance at redemption this Saturday night, under the lights.

The Canes remain in Must-Win-Ville. Time to get to 5-2, 2-0 in Coastal player and to start prepping for a road game at Virginia. No margin for error as an ACC Championship game berth is a must.

Comments

comments

12 thoughts on “Game Six : Miami 28, Duke 13

  1. Still don't want to be Negative Nancy, but another lackluster performance. It's a shame when a defense can get 7 turnovers (albeit against a less than quality opponent) and there are still complaints about the product on the field. I mean in all honesty, if not for those, this Duke team probably ends up beating Miami, as much as it pains me to say that. The offense still continues to have problems being consistent. I think if you take a realistic snapshot of where this team is at 6 games into the season, you have to be genuinely worried with the upcoming stretch. Games that look winnable, but challenging, now seem to be a bit daunting. Maybe it's just me, but I think you have to be concerned about UNC, GT and VT, especially after the Hokies put 50+ up. I'm not saying that this team won't win those games, but it still seems like they had another slow start. I'm sure it's hard to get up for a game like Duke, but if that mindset isn't corrected soon, Miami could potential slip up in all those games.

  2. Other than the INT'S and Berry reaching 100 yards 3 straight games, not much to recap!

    5 int's = win!

    The offense is in BIG trouble!

  3. AllCanes & Canes Nation , I was at the Duke game yesterday . I sat in the first row 50 yard line , right behind the UM bench . I can not believe , or even describe exactly what I witnessed from the team that invented " swagger " ( AllCanes , those t-shirts should be taken off the shelves and given to 3rd world countries ! ) I do believe that emotion and being too pumped up can sometimes be overated , but this team does not have any ! Aside from Damien Berry , I saw NOTHING that resembled emotion or really even giving a damn ! This is not the NFL ! This is COLLEGE FOOTBALL !!! It is all about passion , emotion , fun , and yes , even SWAGGER ! I also attended the Clemson game , and although not right behind the bench , I did see passion & intensity . FSU took something from the Canes last Saturday and it is up to the players & coaches to get it back . I realize that Duke is a very BLAH atmosphere for a college football game , but after what happend vs FSU one would think those players would be chompping at the bit to get back on the field again and redeem themselves ? Something is just not right with this team . I am not saying it is all Shannon , but he is in charge . It DOES all fall on him when everything is said and done . Before the Duke game I was trying to make myself believe that FSU was just a " bump in the road " that the Canes could bounce back and still make it to the ACC Championship . After what I witnessed yesterday , I do not think that is going to happen . Looking past Duke to UNC ? Who knows , but if the Canes don't get this thing fixed we are going to see the Tarheels put another A*% whopping on us !

  4. We need a lot of help. Someone needs to talk to J12 and see what's on his mind. Obviously,he does have something on his mind and I have played a lot of football in my lifetime (WR) and I could always tell when my QB's was having problems or hurt. J12 is not only hurt physically but also mentally. The Duke game told the story…

    Go Canes

  5. Too bad Teddy Bridgewater and Eli Rodgers don't share your undying love for Randy Shannon. High schoolers are now calling our offense a joke. Time to end your lovefest with Shannon, he needs to go at season's end.

  6. Too bad Teddy Bridgewater and Eli Rodgers don't share your undying love for Randy Shannon. High schoolers are now calling our offense a joke. Time to end your lovefest with Shannon, he needs to go at season's end.

    Enlighten me to anything in last week's blog that was a "lovefest" for Shannon after the 45-17 loss to Florida State.

    I gave Randy a chance – as fans should any coach who inherits a dog of a team – and I was more than clear about years 4-5 in the rebuilding project being the time when he needed to take a huge step forward, stating that if he didn't I'd be the first on board with him going.

    Last week was a step back and the Duke win was cruising in neutral. This weekend against North Carolina is again do or die for Shannon. Lose and there will be no defending him.

  7. TO ALL YOU HATERS OUT THERE, PLEASE BE PATIENT WITH THIS TEAM, THIS TEAM RIGHT NOW IS TRYING TO FIND ITS IDENTITY, IT HAS THE TALENT AND THE COACHES, JUST GIVE THEM A BREAK, I PROMISE YOU THIS TEAM WILL FINISH STRONG, J12 WILL BE FINE HE'S JUST IN A LITTLE FUNK, WITH INJURES AND THE RACISM THROWN HIS WAY DOES NOT HELP.HE'S THE BEST THEY GOT RIGHT NOW.AND GAVE RANDY SOME PROPS,FOR CLEANING THE PROGRAM HIGH GRADUATE RATES, HE DESERVES BETTER THAN THIS ITS NOT HE'S FAULT THE OFFENSE IS NOT CLICKING, BUT LIKE I SAID I HAVE FAITH IN THIS TEAM, THEY WILL FINISH STRONG AND REMATCH FSU IS JUST A MATTER OF TIME. AND THIS TIME WE WILL BE READY. NO MORE EXCUSES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  8. "It's a shame when a defense can get 7 turnovers and there are still complaints about the product on the field. I mean in all honesty, if not for those, this Duke team probably ends up beating Miami, as much as it pains me to say that."

    I was mostly ok with this effort from the canes.
    Big Big props to the d for 7 turnovers. Great Job.

    My biggest point that I see need to be addressed is when Duke scored in the 4th quarter and cut the lead to 15. Why didn't they defend the ensuing onside kick. What, Duke wasn't suppose to try to win.
    That is coaching, plain and simple. The coaches decide on strategy. Maybe, Shannon needs to play some Madden to sharpen up his in game strategy.

  9. Duke was probably a good game for us to have this past weekend, coming off the rediculous loss. I couldn't get it, but right now we don't have a good enough team for "style points". Win and move on.

    That being said, as others have commented, somethign needs to be done about the attitude (lack of passion). I think that comes from Shannon and trickles down to the players. The kids need to act like they want to be there. Let's get an ex player in there for a talk each week if possible to remind them of where they are and who they represent.

    As far as Rogers and Bridgewater, if they want to go elsewhere, then go. Make no promises to these kids just because they want to hear it. Don't promise not to recruit another player at a position, because as we've seen plenty of times, we'll end up high and dry with them changing their minds last second. You do what's best for The U, not a high schooler who's proven nothing at this level. All positions are about competition, not guarantees. The Recruiting Coordinator needs to hit the trail hard right now because we're getting left in the dust. The offense is being scaled down right now because the players are struggling with assignments. If a kid can't see that, then move on. No matter what school you go to, a lack of production will result in criticism.
    -Columbus Cane

  10. I wonder what former Miami coaches think about what's going on this year with our team. I guess they really can't talk to media as it would undermine Shannon. Certainly the views of Schnellinberger, Johnson ,Erickson and Davis would be interesting.
    I keep reading about lack of team leaders. At the end of the day this comes down to coaching,preparation and desire. We are attracting good players from the hotbed of highs cool players. Other teams do more with less. I don't care what kind of speech a player gives on the field, if you aren't as well prepared you loose.

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