Miami v. North Carolina : The Preview

The craziest headline this week has to be “Miami winless at North Carolina”. Seems hard to fathom there’s a stadium in the country where the Canes haven’t gotten a win.

That said, UM has only trekked to Chapel Hill on three occasions; way back in 1963 – two decades before the Canes were even relevant – and twice since joining the ACC. Miami rolled in No. 3 back in 2004 and lost 31-28 on a last-second field goal. Two years back an 27-0 halftime deficit was too much to overcome in a 33-27 loss.

Even more of a sting, last year’s 28-24 loss after sitting on a 24-14 early fourth quarter lead. Butch Davis is now 2-0 against Miami. The Canes are 2-3 against the Heels after five seasons in the ACC.

I discussed the match up earlier this week at the Raycom Sports Miami Blog, where I’ve been chiming in all season. I went into match ups and breakdowns a bit, for those interested.

A day before the game, feeling a little bit more rah-rah and bleeding heart; something I haven’t felt much these past few seasons. Miami is No. 12 and 7-2 with three to play. The brutal portion of the schedule is in the rearview, though the final three are no slouches. Entering Chapel Hill, there are reasons to feel good.

If you believe at all in the football gods, there’s a sense the stars are aligning for Miami. Duke looked mortal last week in a 13-9 loss to North Carolina, while the Heels didn’t look all that solid against the Blue Devils. For the Canes, both represent their next two foes.

A few days later, Rutgers beats down and shuts out South Florida, 31-0. The Canes get the Bulls in the season finale.

None of this should take away anything from the one-at-a-time mentality Miami has employed all season – but for fans, a reason to believe. 10-2 is a reality, as is an outside shot at a BCS at-large bid.

The odds of Duke upsetting Georgia Tech are slim, but as I watch film of the Canes/Yellow Jackets from a few months back, anything can happen on Saturday.

Should Georgia Tech take care of business, hopefully the BCS folk pop in a copy of the September 17th beat down at Land Shark: Hurricanes 33, Yellow Jackets 17… and it could’ve been a whole lot worse.

When healthy, Miami looked like it could hang with just about anybody. Ran into a buzzsaw and suffered a heartbreak along the way, but the Canes have continued to hold their own – even when banged up.

North Carolina will come to play on Saturday. Davis is playing up Miami as the be all/end all in college football right now, but don’t be fooled – he knows his team can win. The Heels are a stout defensive bunch with solid fundamentals; a Davis staple. Their front seven will come after Jacory Harris all day, meaning the offensive line must show up like they did against Oklahoma.

The big-bodied Javarris James and shifty Graig Cooper need to be difference makers. Wear down North Carolina with Lee Chambers and Damien Berry, as well. The Canes finally have a few key ingredients missing from past match ups with the Heels – most namely, big time running backs and a capable quarterback.

Throw offensive coordinator into that mix as well as it’ll be Mark Whipple going up against Davis and his defensive staff. The play-not-to-lose Patrick Nix era is officially over.

Nine games into this season, everyone should have a feel for where this team is at. Whether you get there through logic, emotion, elation or frustration, everyone has a feel.

Rewatching Georgia Tech this week and some of the Oklahoma game last week, it served as a solid reminder as to where this team is headed. At 7-2, Miami is truly a few players and an ounce of experience away from 9-0. This isn’t the year, but the Canes are definitely on the brink of greatness.

The 2010 season truly begins now. In 1999 you saw Ken Dorsey saddle up as a freshman, beating three Big East nobodies as the season closed out, leading to a Gator Bowl victory and setting the stage for 2000.

Miami sputtered down the stretch the past four seasons, but you get a sense that can change with this current bunch. There’s seems to be a will to win and a different overall mindset.

Against Virginia last week, talk of a revenge-fueled bunch wanting some redemption from a 48-0 shellacking in the Orange Bowl finale. The result – a 52-17 pasting of the Cavaliers.

The talk this week revolves around 0-3; Miami’s record in Chapel Hill. Whether that’s faux motivation or not, it’s giving this team something to rally around. Combine that with last season’s fourth quarter collapse and these Canes are playing with a purpose.

This was week two of lighter practices for Miami. Fresh bodies and sharp minds are the new MO at The U. Keep kids healthy, rest up and come to play Saturday. It worked last week and the Canes welcome back some fresh faces from the MASH unit sideline; most notably, senior defensive lineman Eric Moncur. DeMarcus Van Dyke is also expected back, while Ray Ray Armstrong, Pat Hill, Sean Spence and JoJo Nicolas are still out.

The Canes are far from healthy, but if a few veterans can return each week, it’ll help Miami as a collective unit and could be the difference-maker in a close game.

Former Tar Heels assistant John Lovett is handling defensive coordinator duties for Miami, which also plays into the ‘football gods’ thing – should you buy into that. Lovett knows the Heels and their tendencies and safe to say he’ll be ready for his return home.

The erratic T.J. Yates is behind center for North Carolina, which on paper plays into the Canes’ hands. The Heels are banged up at running back, as well – theoretically making this offense one-dimensional. Combine that with Lovett’s know-how and Miami’s defense should have a sizeable advantage over North Carolina’s.

On offense, look no further than Miami’s offensive line as the gamemaker or gamebreaker. Harris and the running game will be as efficient as the line. With protection, it could be a long day for the Tar Heels’ defense; even with all their talent.

Davis and his Heels have had the Canes’ number the past two seasons, but this is a different Miami monster. A road game is no easy feat, but UM has hung tough with UNC the past two years, even in losses. This year, Miami has enough to get over the hump and to 8-2. Canes are due.

The Call: Miami 27, North Carolina 19

Comments

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17 thoughts on “Miami v. North Carolina : The Preview

  1. Miami needs to focus on coming out to play from the start of the game. We can't have a replay of the Wake Forest game. Come ready to play from the opening kickioff and our chances are great. If we come out flat or acting like we can go through the motions, Carolina will run the ball down our throat.
    -Columbus Cane

  2. i can not believe the clock management by the coaching staff!!!! also the lack of emotion and fundementals week in and week out! i mean im the biggest canes fan but they aggervate me that they let some teams beat them every year sense joining the acc.

  3. Once again J12 and his INTs. No team will win with 4 INTs (with 2 directly leading to TDs) This is where QB depth would come into play. If we had any QB's J12 should be benched to learn from his mistakes. He has no backlash from his mistakes. Man I'm so disappointed in this game because it's one that should have been won. i'm not even gonna comment on clock management..

    LOL Cane
    Clayton

  4. Youcan't give the other team 14 goddamn free points and expect to win. 2 of the 4 int's were from Harris getting hit as he threw so I blame the line. The other two were all Harris not getting some zip on the ball and instead lobbing them into coverage. Lastly, the whole offense gets the blame on the two scores for not making a tackle. Pathetic. NC's offense is weak and we gave them the game. Take care of the f*cking ball.
    -Columbus Cane

  5. Pathetic offensive performance! Once again we are beaten by an inferior team because of erratic play at quarterback…when will it ever change?? J12 should not be making such poor decisions at this point in the season…he hurt us at Clemson and killed us today…hang in there Canes!

  6. Randy Shannon can not get the team pumped up to play. Where the hell is the emotion? we get out coached by Butch Davis every year cause he is a real coach. Getting punts blocked and ints ran back for tds is pathetic and not miami football!!

  7. Looks like ALL the preseason talk was DEAD ON, Miami is going to finish 4th or lower in the ACC Coastal race. Im not so sure Miami doesnt pack it in for Duke and USF. No excuse for this loss. NO excuse.

  8. So much talent and such a bad head coach!!! Fire him soon before the talent stops coming to Miami.

  9. Here on the west coast I don't get to see the Canes every week, so I dont know whether Harris is always so inconsistent intra-game. And this may sound crazy… but did anyone else notice Harris threw horrible balls every time we were close, then threw perfect darts every time we were down 2 scores?

  10. This team is coached by cowards who don't inspire confidence or fire and emotion. Pure and simple. Shannon makes Gerry Faust look like Vince Lombardi. Lovett cannot or will not make any defensive adjustments. Week 10 and still no QB pressure, secondary is still suspect and the LB's cannot cover TE's or RB's coming out of the backfield. And don't get me started on the tackling.
    Whipple was a genius through 3 weeks, and he still is a godsend after the debacle that was Patrick Nix, but the clock management is a joke. It wouldn't hurt to max protect or to have a sense of urgency at times either.
    In a perfect world, Shannon would resume DC duties and a real HC would be hired. That said, that won't happen, so in a less than perfect world, Shannon doesn't get an extension, they take a slight hit in recruiting, but a real coach comes in and maximizes the talent on the roster. I fear that with Shannon, even next year when the core of the team is Juniors and Seniors, they will win some big games but inevitably play down to an NC State, Duke, Clemson, etc and come away with 2-3 losses. They don't deserve that.

  11. If Whipple is not offered the head coaching spot in ttwo years, he s out the door. He is too good of a coach to put up with Shannon's incompetence!!

  12. Listen I'm a diehard canes fan and I'm always pissed when we lose. But to say we were out coached is a joke. When we out produced them. This game is on J12 and he knows that. Our oline is the most unless group of 300lbs I've ever seen. Our "best" lineman Fox averages 2 penalties a game. They can't even protect agasint a 3 man rush. The reason this offense isn't consistantly good is because of this mediocore line. But I guess Butch out-schemed Randy because he knew that 5 Miami olineman can't block 3 nc dlineman.

  13. No way Butch outcoached Randy. Butch did nothing, because he didn't have to. We killed ourselves, but that UNC offense struggled overall. Too bad we never had the chance to really test them. Like I said, 14 free points directly from our offense is the difference – not anything Butch did with coaching. Those who are anti-Randy will always be anti-Randy. This guy is the reason we all have the high expectations we do now. We have to finish off these next two games and get to 9-3. No excuses to lose to Duke and USF.
    -ColumbusCane

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