Game Twelve: Boston College 28, Miami 14

I never thought I’d utter these words, but I hate all things college football right now.

Can’t stand any aspect of it. Still sick that I wasted twelve Saturdays since September getting roped in loss after loss. Too numb too even enjoy the slew of heartbreaking let downs so many teams endured in 2007.

I couldn’t even enjoy a three-loss Florida campaign because they actually looked good doing it and have the second coming in Tim Tebow behind center. The soph will win the Heisman. Everybody’s All-American. Dude even teaches Sunday school and will have the Gators in the hunt next year while the Canes are still figuring things out. 

Miami bit another big one today, losing 28-14 to Boston College. 5-7 on the season. No bowl game. Worst outing since the 1970s. The probation teams weren’t even this bad.

The Canes have become the polar opposite of what they once were. Now the lesser team in most match ups, Miami can temporarily hang in there – but the better team overcomes the ebbs and flows of the game and does what they’re expected to do.

Boston College looked suspect for a few drives around the middle of the game, while Miami was overachieving and making some plays. Eventually, as the ACC Atlantic Division rep should do, the Eagles turned it up a notch, pulled away from the lesser Canes, putting the game out of reach.

Remember when The U used to do that? This feels like some kind of bizarro world.

Worst part of all this was being duped into expecting more. 7-6, an on the field brawl, a murdered player, a blue turf bowl game and a fired coaching staff? The only thing missing were the plagues. It couldn’t get any worse. Impossible. Things had to turn around. Rock bottom seemed to be already witnessed.

Randy Shannon
took over. He was one of “us”. Miami-bred and a three-headed Hurricane threat as a former player, grad assistant and defensive coordinator. Three rings. One earned at each level. Shannon will bring Miami back. He has the blueprint and simply has to implement it.

The U won’t be rebuilt in one day. We know that. We just didn’t expect 5-7. No one saw 51-13 coming at Oklahoma, a 23-9 dogfight with lowly FIU or a 27-0 halftime deficit at North Carolina.

Tashard Choice never should’ve rushed for 204 yards in a third straight loss to Georgia Tech. Kirby Freeman never should’ve gone 1 of 14 in a season-defining OT loss to NC State.

Then again, he never should’ve gone 3 for 3 down the stretch in an upset of Florida State – the brightest spot of 2007.

48-0 in the Orange Bowl finale? File that one under “unforgivable” – as are back-to-back losses against Virginia Tech and Boston College, outscored 160-28 the final three games.

I won’t quite say this team lacked heart, though it didn’t come out in large enough doses. There was some fight in the Canes against the Hokies and Eagles. Just not enough to hang four quarters.

Miami used to beat up on middle of the pack teams. Now it’s become one. Pretty bitter pill to swallow. But I’ll focus on the silver lining.

The 2007 season has been taken out to pasture. I’d rather have seen a bowl game, but with it all coming to an end today it officially became ‘recruiting season’ at The U. An area Shannon and staff can shine and the only place the ghost of Larry Coker doesn’t lurk.

Shannon has a few more years with his predecessor’s players, but he’ll rebuild with his own.

Rebuild. Get used to the word. These aren’t your turn of the century Canes. The talent is few and far between. Tons of holes to fill and Shannon needs to seek out Miami-type players.

Shannon has to rebuild this thing from the ground on up.

Great teams are made, not born. They usually start with a “special” freshman class and the weeding out of upperclassmen responsible for the team’s decline. New players start making an impact, experience some growing pains but said team improves.

A few more great classes are signed and a few years later, you see the chemistry. That “special” freshman class reaches their junior season and you start seeing a turnaround. Close to or in a BCS game that season and in the hunt a year later.

To rebuild, plant some good seeds, nurture them and watch ’em grow. It’s a fool proof recipe.

I’ll say it again – great teams are made, not born. Look across the current collegiate landscape and top-ranked teams for further proof.

Kansas rolls into this evening ranked No. 2 in the land and 11-0. The past five seasons of the Mark Mangino era? 25-35. Mangino started out 2-10 year one with the Jayhawks. A first-year head coach in 2001, MM cut his teeth calling offenses for Oklahoma and Kansas State the eleven previous season.

A respected, big time assistant earning his first shot as a head coach. Sound familiar?

Regardless of where Kansas winds up this season, they’re on the right track. Mangino planted some seeds a few years back, nurtured the project and it’s harvest time.

Same can be said for Les Miles. LSU may be out of the title race, but not many would want to face this two-loss team in a playoff. This year’s redshirt seniors were on the bench for the 2003 title, set out to win one of their own and although recruited by Nick Saban, all benefitted from the past four classes brought in by Miles and his four year effort to bring home a title. 

Look at all the top teams and see a similar pattern. Nobody came out of nowhere. Every team up there has been progressively getting better the past few years. All programs were on the rise. Even second tier teams like Southern Cal or Florida. Both in the hunt at some point in 2007, beaten and strongly improved down the stretch and entering 2008.

Miami had a great run 2000-2003 and unfortunately, most of us remember those days as being a lot more recent than they were. The Canes have fallen off big time as of late. It’s now been four down seasons to counterbalance the four straight BCS games the preceding years.

That’s a lot of time to be out of the mix for a recently proud and tradition-heavy program. A big mix of poor recruiting and even worse development of players helped make it a reality. Each year, this program eroded a little be more. On top of the college football world for four semi-recent years and some giant steps back every year since. 

This thing didn’t crap out overnight and sure as hell can’t be fixed that quickly either. 

These current Canes don’t have rings. Hell, they haven’t even reached the ACC title game, even after The U was the crown jewel in the conference expansion four seasons ago. The ghosts of Miami’s past earned that right to talk as part of an era built from the right way from the ground on up. Talented players. Leaders. Solid chemistry. Character-defining losses which helped earn the program some unforgettable wins down the road. 

Ask ol’ Ed Reed and Mike Rumph if their blown coverage against Chafie Fields in 27-23 loss to No. 2 Penn State in 1999 didn’t fuel their fire for a title run in 2001. Ask ol’ Ken Dorsey if a 34-29 loss at Washington in 2000 didn’t help his composure weeks later in a 27-24 upset of No. 1 Florida State, a title run and a 38-2 career record.

This was a horrid football season for anyone who bleeds the orange and green. Make no mistake about it. But plans for the rise from the ashes are being worked out as we speak.

Shannon will recruit and the talent will return to Miami. Bank on both. Late November and almost two dozen kids ready to sign with The U. Kids from winning programs are being targeted, hence the half dozen or more potential signees from No. 1 ranked Miami Northwestern and currently No. 1 rated recruiting class, according to ESPN.com.

Even on the day the Canes take their seventh loss of the season, Miami reeled in a linebacker recruit already committed to Wisconsin. Losses on the field right now have nothing to do with what the future generation feels they’ll be able to do the next four years in Coral Gables.

Top talent and some under the radar, special kids. Miami-type recruits are coming back to the program. The type of kids who buy into Shannon and staff. No mutiny or divided team. Everybody will eventually get on the same page. It’ll get better class by class. 

It sucks to be in this position – counting down to recruiting season and missing a bowl game for the first time in a decade. I can’t deny that. I’m sick over it and do what I can to keep my mind off it. Much more fun to be on top riding it out than to be on the bottom rung prepping to start the climb. That said, the rebuilding process helps us all appreciate getting back on top again and makes you realize all that goes into being a champion.

2007 or 1997, both feel like one in the same right now. Five-win seasons, but strong recruiting classes the next few years as you’re bringing in kids who “get it” and want to be part of of the resurgence instead of hanger ons who are riding the gravy train. It was the case then and will be the same moving forward. 

We’ve seen it before and we’ll see it again. The 1997-1999 classes at Miami were special and based on how things are unfolding, 2008 is going to be a gem reminiscent of yesteryear.

A few good classes and you’ll see this program start its climb back. Until then, chill. Attempt to absorb a handful of losses and enjoy the ride as much as you can. Quit trashing your fellow Canes and bickering over unanswerable, hypothetical questions as to how it got this bad or when exactly this program will re-turn the corner. Who really cares “why” or “how” it came to this. We’re knee-deep in it, we all want out and bringing in better talent is the first step in the journey. 

Miami will rebuild. Kids still want to play for The U and the right kids take pride in rolling up their sleeves, jumping in on the ground floor and starting to fix this mess. This ain’t a fire sale. Big time players want in and Shannon will bring them home. Ignore the Internet rumors. Come February, the Canes are going to reel in a stellar class.

Until then, pray for lesser of a few evils and a Kansas/Missouri vs. West Virginia championship game, hope the teams you hate find a way to lose and put your faith in February’s signees and future Canes. Don’t let yourself stay shortsighted about the current situation, in denial about what it’ll take to turn it around or simply bitter that it had to come to this.

The present is a mess, but the future looks promising and the talent is lining up to help rebuild. It’ll take time, but with the kids Shannon has coming in, Miami will be back.

Simply bleed your orange and green and realize better days lie ahead. Or remain bitter and bury your head in the sand until The U is back. Your call.

.:Canes305:.

Comments

comments

8 thoughts on “Game Twelve: Boston College 28, Miami 14

  1. Well said. Any coaches or coordinators you think Shannon needs to replace over the off-season?

    Knee-jerk reaction? Yes. But the more I think about it, I can’t talk out of both sides of my mouth. I’ve knocked Tim Walton a bit, but I can’t say that Shannon deserves a few years to turn it around with new players and then not cut the assistants some slack for the lack of talent they have on their side of the ball. Walton is fielding the least talented and deep defense Miami has seen in a decade.

    Shannon needs to be more involved with this defense and the jury is still out on Walton, but I can’t see firing him after a one-year experiment.

  2. very well said…
    i look forward to the MARVElous era about to be undertaken…
    but…in the meantime, we may actually have a basketball team to watch and cheer proudly…
    they are 5-0 and won the puerto rico tip-off against marist, VCU, and Providence….seems like Frank Haith has shaken off the perry clark cobwebs!!!
    Go Canes….

  3. I agree. It’s time to focus on basketball and give it a chance and let’s not forget this is the “U” and that also means baseball as much as football.

    I maybe wrong but I believe The U has, not a half dozen but a dozen Miami-Northwestern kids committed. Country Club Larry tried to take the Miami outta the U. That didn’t work and never will. Glad to see Shannon is returning Miami back to the U.

    Nothing I hate more then seeing a football game and seeing a Miami kid in some far off school rather then playing in his own backyard. That NEVER used to happen until C.C. Larry came to town. Time are a lookin’ up but will somebody please find a decent kicker somewhere?!

  4. Well, good luck. The Randy Shannon experiment HAS to work. Otherwise…

    … well, it’s such an ugly alternative it can’t be seriously considered. Miami could go on a permanent bender into mediocrity. Or worse.

    FSU isn’t a good team. But they have resources. They sell tickets. They can still get top coaches.

    They’re down now, but they’re unlikely ever to be out.

    Same at Nebraska. That’s a sleeping giant right now. Their facilities are positively unreal. They’ll spend megabucks, if that’s what it takes, for the right coach. Sooner or later, they’ll bounce back.

    At Miami… well, the disadvantage isn’t imagined. It’s real. When Shalala hired Shannon it was clear that Miami had to pin their hopes on an underdog. Shannon is the head coach because Shannon’s the only guy they can get.

    There aren’t any top tier coaches beating the doors down to come to Miami. That isn’t likely to change anytime soon.

    Miami could very well paint themselves into a corner and truly have NO way to get back out.

    It’s going to be a rough few years AT BEST in my opinion. You’d think in year one, even if the talent still sucked, that this team would have had more heart than they’ve displayed. That’s an early indicator on Shannon’s progress, which is to say he’s not making much.

    The ‘Canes have the unfortunate luck of drawing my Gators early in 2008. Bad timing and all of that.

    In all sincerity, I wish you good luck but I echo the fears which have been hinted at here.

  5. nice commentr magicity, BUT with a decent kicker, would have won at least one, maybe 2 more games and be subject to have to watch this drek play a bowl game….
    let’s just thank goodness for small favors…

  6. Last years class was decent too. Cooper and DVD showed that they are gamers all ready. Hankerson already has more heart than a senior Wide Out who shall remain nameless…

    McNeal will challenge for carries next year.

    If guys like Allen Bailey, Orlando Franklin, Doug Wiggins, and Marve can step up next year, the U will be on the way back…

  7. Well, good luck. The Randy Shannon experiment HAS to work. Otherwise…… well, it’s such an ugly alternative it can’t be seriously considered. Miami could go on a permanent bender into mediocrity. Or worse. FSU isn’t a good team. But they have resources. They sell tickets. They can still get top coaches. They’re down now, but they’re unlikely ever to be out. Same at Nebraska. That’s a sleeping giant right now. Their facilities are positively unreal. They’ll spend megabucks, if that’s what it takes, for the right coach. Sooner or later, they’ll bounce back.

    At Miami… well, the disadvantage isn’t imagined. It’s real. When Shalala hired Shannon it was clear that Miami had to pin their hopes on an underdog. Shannon is the head coach because Shannon’s the only guy they can get. There aren’t any top tier coaches beating the doors down to come to Miami. That isn’t likely to change anytime soon. Miami could very well paint themselves into a corner and truly have NO way to get back out.

    I get your point, but it’d take a hell of a lot to ever deem Miami insignificant. There’s too much recent history, too many NFL superstars who made their name at Miami and the talent pool in South Florida is beyond rich. There will always be kids who want to be part of “it” down here. It’ll never drop off completely.

    Even if Shannon couldn’t coach, dude can recruit. To go 5-7 and have a top three class lined up going into 2008 is beyond impressive. A few more of those and Miami is right back in it. That’s really the biggest difference when you watch other top teams right now — the talent level. Get the talent back to Miami and success will breed success.

    And you’re right, no big name guy is ever ‘lined up’ to come coach at Miami, but we always nab some up and comer who gets the job done just fine. Our legacy was built on the shoulders of five different coaches – four of which who won titles. It’s the complete opposite of most programs who are defined by their head coach. This program makes head coaches.

    Again, we’ll see. No point in speculating further. Get out, recruit and start rebuilding for 2008.

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