Categories: Uncategorized

Miami Hurricanes: The U’s Road Back To Glory

The Miami Hurricanes are one day away from ending 2013 on a high note or dealing with the disappointment that will result from a fourth setback in six games.

Welcome to the thin line between winning and losing.

After self-imposing postseason bans the past two seasons and losing its three previous bowl outings, Miami has to trek all the way back to 2006 for its last December victory—a 21-20 win over Nevada on the blue turf in Boise.

On paper, the difference between a 9-4 finish and 10-3 is hardly monumental, but for a Hurricanes program in “rebuild mode” for years, it’s all about positive steps forward, achieving milestones and remaining on a proper track.

With Al Golden at the helm, local talent staying home and the distraction of the NCAA scandal no more, UM’s road to glory is officially underway. Below are nine things the Hurricanes must accomplish en route to once again becoming a perennial power.

Finish the Season on a High Note

Three straight losses in early November were an absolute punch in the gut. No. 7 Miami was undefeated entering it’s annual showdown with Florida State and within weeks reduced to 7-3 and all-but out of the ACC’s Coastal Division race.

The Hurricanes won their final two games, scored over 40 points in each and began clicking on offense, but the defensive woes continued.

Miami clearly wasn’t worthy of a Top 10 ranking at any point this year, but reaching the postseason, closing with a three-game win-streak and earning double-digit victories for the first time since 2003—it’d be a fine way to close out year three of the Golden era.

Especially with the dark clouds parting since the NCAA investigation came to a close in October.

Close Strong on the Recruiting Trail

The best way for the Miami program to end the “talent” vs. “coaching” vs. “scheme” debate—reel in some of the nation’s best athletes and witness what some quality players do to fix the current situation.

Former Hurricanes head coach Butch Davis was hardly beloved while leading the Miami program. The sixth-year coach stocked the cupboard before heading to the NFL in early 2001, and the Davis love affair began when Larry Coker couldn’t maintain the same level of recruiting excellence—35-3 the first three years and 25-12 his final three.

Miami’s front seven struggled mightily in 2013, and the Hurricanes could lose upwards of a dozen key defenders—especially if a few choose to depart early. In short, the Hurricanes’ depth, talent and overall experience on defense is set to take yet another hit it can ill afford.

Golden and staff currently have 29 verbal commitments, a third-ranked recruiting class and possibly eight early enrollees. There are also a handful of top-flight players with Miami on their radar, which would give the Hurricanes program a huge boost come February.

Miami lost a few “signing day” battles over the years. With a strong class already assembled and the NCAA drama in the rear view, the Hurricanes have a good chance at some day-of, last-minute steals, serving as poetic justice for all the kids Golden and staff lost recently due to negative recruiting.

Click here to continue reading article.

Comments

comments

C. Bello

Longtime Miami Hurricanes columnist. Wrote for CanesTime.com, Yahoo! Sports and former BleacherReport featured columnist. Founder of allCanesBlog.com no longer toeing any company line. Launched ItsAUThing.com to deliver a raw, unfiltered and authentic perspective of all things "The U".

View Comments

    • ... an absolutely abysmal performance, but honestly, how can the finger-pointing be at Mark D'Onofrio tonight? OF COURSE Teddy Bridgewater was going to have his way with Miami—but where in God's name was the Hurricanes' offense?

      This was the lowest offensive output all year. Scoreless until early in the fourth quarter against a Cardinals' defense that supposedly hadn't seen this type of offensive talent?

      Louisville came to Orlando on a mission to kick some ass. What about Miami?

      How could Stephen Morris put together another bad game? How could the offensive line get so beat up? Where was the running game? What about offensive playcalling and an ounce of innovation?

      This was a fail top to bottom tonight and that is on Al Golden to face and deal with.

      Yes, there are defensive issues—but there were a million bigger, newer issues tonight that warrant ranting and raving more than just the, "Fire Coach No D" beat-up line. Wouldn't you agree?

Recent Posts

ACROSS-THE-BOARD IMPROVEMENT UNDENIABLE FOR MIAMI HURRICANES DESPITE LATE SEASON SKID

The constant re-litigating of the winning-cures-all-while-losing-exposes-warts sentiment rolls on as Miami faithful continue flailing in…

5 months ago

“THE LATE KICK” WITH BETTER THUMB ON PULSE OF MIAMI HURRICANES’ REBUILD THAN MOST

Josh Pate gets it... and I'm not just saying that because he dedicated an entire…

6 months ago

DISASTEROUS QUARTERBACK PLAY DOOMS MIAMI HURRICANES AT NORTH CAROLINA STATE; WOLFPACK ROLL

Tyler Van Dyke may very well have thrown his last meaningful pass for the Miami…

6 months ago

FIND-A-WAY HURRICANES OUTLAST VIRGINIA CAVALIERS; BACK-TO-BACK OVERTIME VICTORIES FOR MIAMI

We can debate the merits of winning-curing-all and losses-killing-perspective at another time. For now, focus…

6 months ago

MIAMI HURRICANES GO TOE TO TOE WITH CLEMSON TIGERS; “THE U” PREVAILING IN DOUBLE OVERTIME

  Winning might not cure everything, but it certainly can shift a narrative overnight—immediately lightening…

6 months ago

MIAMI HURRICANES FALL SHORT TO BETTER, FURTHER-ALONG NORTH CAROLINA TAR HEELS

The only remedy for a gut-wrenching loss to Georgia Tech would've been the Miami Hurricanes…

7 months ago