MIAMI HURRICANES PUT SMACK DOWN ON FLORIDA GATORS IN ‘THE SWAMP’

Miami rolled into The Swamp on Saturday afternoon and beat the brakes off of Florida in precisely the best-case scenario type of game Hurricanes fans have dreamt of since this match-up was announced.

529 total yards, while holding the Gators to a paltry 261—the Canes dominating in the trenches, while transfer quarterback Cam Ward surgically and calmly picked apart Florida’s supposedly-improved defense—Miami jumping out to the early lead and never letting up en route to a 41-17 throttling that wasn’t even as close as the final score.

Of course a win like this will have the media starting hyping “The U” being back—which won’t be the case until the Hurricanes win a sixth national championship ring—but it’s a good sign when Miami is running trick plays late third quarter to pour it on; a pass from receiver Xavier Restrepo just missing Sam Brown reeling it in in a then 38-17 ball game, as Mario Cristobal and staff looked to put a boot on a rival’s neck.

Moments before that pass, it was the Canes’ defense putting their final stamp on things when defensive end Tyler Baron smashed quarterback Graham Mertz, knocking him out of the game—safety Mishael Powell snagging the pass near the goal line, returning it for 67 yards before the Restrepo pass was called.

Bonus points as Miami even notched the first-ever interception of freshman-sensation quarterback DJ Lag-well; defensive back Jaden Harris picking off the pass while on the ground

Further proof that when it’s your day, it’s your day—Miami creating their luck through preparation-meeting-opportunity; sending a message to all of college football—do believe the hype, as this Hurricanes’ roster is for real.

TURNING A BIG CORNER YEAR THREE

Miami faithful—and fans of the sport in general—had reason not to believe as it’d been a lean couple of decades for the Hurricanes—a low-rent program run by a liberal president who saw athletics as a necessary evil, while doing zero to fundraise and support a once-great football program.

ItsAUThing.com touched on this in the preseason with a wake-up-call type piece, breaking down the how and why things got so off track since the turn of the century—while explaining why it was finally time to believe in where Cristobal and this program are entering year three of his tenure.

A dismal 2021 season changed everything for this program and by late November behind-the-scenes moves were being made to bring Cristobal home; Hurricanes football ready for a seat at college football’s big boy table—a 10-year, $80,000,000 payday to bring the native son home—and the former Canes’ offensive lineman only signing on for the gig when his alma mater sold him on their vision and commitment to building a winner.

Without this detailed, long-term plan, Cristobal would’ve returned for a fifth season at Oregon, where he’d amassed a 35-12 record, two double-digit win seasons, a Rose Bowl victory and two Pac-12 titles over the previous four seasons.

The Ducks were a rising national power under Cristobal, who not only had the backing of the university; he essentially had a blank checkbook from Nike founder and Oregon booster Phil Knight—the program loaded with talent and in stellar shape.

It’s no mystery why first-time head coach Dan Lanning went 22-5 his first two seasons in Eugene with what Cristobal handed over—while heading back to Coral Gables to clean up the dumpster fire left behind by Manny Diaz, going 12-13 since 2022 as Miami was completely in the toilet culture-wise, which we touched on in a “c-word” related piece last week.

Miami’s top brass assured Cristobal he’d have a huge stack of chips and a seat at the high-stakes table representing “The U”, so he went all-in on the recruiting trail—bringing in the seventh-ranked class in 2023, fourth-ranked in 2024 and sky’s the limit for 2025 and beyond if this throttling of Florida is a sign of things to come.

MASTERFUL RECRUITING MEETS NIL DOMINANCE

Traditional recruiting aside, Cristobal has proved masterful in the NIL world—reeling in some big fish the past two seasons, but none bigger than the acquisition of Ward in mid-January, two weeks after months of waiting and the former Washington State announcing on New Year’s Day that he was forgoing a final year in college, taking his talents to the NFL.

The ripple effect from that moment opened the floodgates for Miami—some huge last-minute gets recruiting-wise, as well as some monster-sized portal pulls and immediate-impact players that are setting up an all-in, successful 2024 season.

Miami saw tailbacks Don Chaney and Henry Parrish bailing out on bowl season and heading for the portal early last December—leaving workhorse freshman Mark Fletcher to carry the depleted roster load in the Bronx against Rutgers—where a foot injury cast a shadow of doubt around his sophomore campaign.

Cristobal and staff won the Damien Martinez sweepstakes, pulling in the former Oregon State running back—the former Beavers back doing some tough early, tone-setting running in Gainesville, which took the pressure off of Fletcher, allowing him to ease his way into the rotation where he wound up with two big touchdowns against the Gators.

Miami lost reliable center Matt Lee to the NFL as well; Cristobal turning to Zach Carpenter and bringing in the former Indiana center south, fully aware how important it would be for Ward to have a veteran in the middle and snapping him the ball.

Depth, size and strength in the trenches; Cristobal was maniacal about taking what he learned in four years under Nick Saban in Alabama and applying it to how he’d rebuild Miami from the ground on up—a power running game behind a monster offensive line, tough receivers who also aren’t afraid to get dirty as blockers and a deep defensive line that could be rotated out and fresh all day, while wearing down the opposition’s offense.

Miami’s defensive line was so on point Saturday that the early first quarter loss of defensive tackle Reuben Bain—last year’s ACC Defensive Player Of The Year—literally had zero impact on the Canes’ ability to overwhelm the Gators’ sputtering offense.

The first rule of playing in front of 90,000+ opposing fans; find a way to demoralize them and to shut them up fast—which Miami defense did by way of limiting the Gators to a four-play, 13-yard opening drive—followed by a an 11-play, 84-yard offensive drive of their own, capped off by a nine-yard Cam McCormick touchdown pass on a great play call; Florida baited into thinking the run-blocking tight end was in the game to do just that, before peeling off and wide open for the catch and score.

Florida snatched some momentum their ensuing defensive possession when Ward tried a cross-body pass that sailed and was picked off by Shemar James on the Miami 33-yard line, but the Canes’ defense didn’t flinch—holding the Gators to ten yards on six plays, forcing a field goal.

Miami responded with a field goal, stuffed Florida again and on the next drive saw Ward hooking up with Isaiah Horton for 30 yards, followed by a 10-yard touchdown run by Fletcher.

Montrell Johnson briefly brought The Swamp to life with a 71-yard scamper to pay-dirt, cutting Miami’s lead to 17-10—but the Canes’ answered the bell with an eight-play, 75-yard touchdown drive—capped off by Restrepo splitting two defenders and Ward hitting him in stride as he darted into the end zone for a 24-10 half time lead.

Florida could’ve taken the power back by stopping Miami on the opening possession of the third quarter, but the Canes again rose to the challenge—a 40-yard hook-up between Ward and Restrepo on 3rd-and-4 and a 22-yard dump-off to Fletcher, putting the running back in position to go over-the-top, punching it in for the 31-10 lead two plays later.

Another defensive stop; another Miami drive—86 yards on nine plays, including a 3rd-and-10 demoralizing 27-yard connection between Ward and Horton, as well as the back-breaking 23-yard touchdown strike to a new and improved Jacolby George, pushing the lead to 38-10 and sending many Gators fans heading for the exits halfway through the third.

This heated rivalry is chock full of these kinds of game-sealing moments and this was another for the history books.

EARLY-SEASON STATEMENT MOMENTS SET TONE

Back in 2002, Miami was up 27-16 late third quarter as Rex Grossman drove Florida into scoring position—dropping back and throwing towards the same end zone when Maurice Sikes snatched that pass out of the Gainesville night sky, returning it 97 yards and turning a gap-narrowing touchdown for the Gators into a 34-16 lead for the Hurricanes, who went on to win 41-16.

Facing a big-time 3rd-and-11, Ward dropped back, rolled left, shook off a one-hand tackle and again launched it cross-body—finding George in the back of the end zone, between two defenders—DJ Douglas and Jason Marshall both wrecked and shell-shocked; a lasting image of of Douglas halfway wedged in the end zone shrubs, while George, Horton, Restrepo and others mocked the Gator chomp and celebrated in front of dozens of Florida recruits, mocking the hometown team in their house.

Talk about a lasting snapshot of this showdown, as well as a tale of two programs who appear headed in completely different directions.

Same to be said for Mertz writhing in pain on the turf minutes later after Baron ended his day with that jarring hit, as Powell picked off a heady quarterback who only coughed up three interceptions in a brutal seven-loss season for Florida last fall.

Florida managed one final stat-padding score with Lagway slinging it around in an out-of-reach game, but Miami answered with a 26-yard field goal from Andres Borregales—the kicker atoning for miss on the previous possession—and with that, 41-17 was in the books; a dream scenario for the Hurricanes, while the Gators’ newest nightmare is just getting started as their season is pretty much over before September even arrived.

Insult to injury for Florida and a happy accident for Miami; the Hurricanes post-game celebrating taking place by their locker room tunnel and feet away from where the Gators had a sea of recruits and commits with front-row seats to UM’s afterparty—Miami players celebrating with fans, while gloating and telling the high school starts in attendance to pledge their allegiance to “The U”, while mocking the current state of Florida football.

Video footage of the back and forth, as well as freshman defensive lineman Justin Scott dapping up and laughing with current LSU commit DJ Pickett—all over social media for the past few hours, no to mention the interesting twist as the 5-Star cornerback remains high on the Canes, which got more interesting after LSU fell to Southern Cal in their season opener Sunday night.

The Gators paid for hotel, airfare, meals and nightlife—not to mention a ringside seat to this debacle—only to get embarrassed on and off the field by the Canes; a nightmare recruiting situation that made an already bad situation that much worse.

DELUSIONAL GATORS BUYING FOOLS GOLD

Billy Napier was already on the chopping block; 11-14 after two seasons—including a 9-4 run at The Swamp, where seven of those wins came against scrubs. This was a do-or-die season for Napier, resulting in a lot of off-season selling from the third-year coach about the type of team he expected to field this fall—which in itself helps explain the delusion, denial and desperation of a Florida fan base clinging to any modicum of hope and positivity since winning five games and missing the postseason last fall.

Napier attempted to address his team’s dismal defensive effort in 2023 by punting on co-defensive coordinator Sean Spencer, bringing in Ron Roberts to work with Austin Armstrong this fall.

This personnel change—and some portal action—was enough to convince Gators fans, vloggers and former players that the Canes were going down and an 8-4 type season was doable; Florida faithful cocksure they’d beat up on Miami and could get this thing rolling for the first half of the season, before the back-end of the schedule bit them in the ass—closing with Georgia, Texas, LSU, Ole Miss and Florida State.

One beatdown by Miami later, these unhinged super-fans are scared Florida will struggle with Samford and are going to hit the Vegas under on four seasons wins—still processing Ward putting on a clinic as the Canes handed the Gators their first home season-opening loss in 35 years, as well as their worst-ever home opener loss in history.

Offensively, a belief that another year of game-manager Mertz distributing the ball to Wilson and other playmakers, as well as a healthy Johnson at running back—Gators Nation was high on their own supply—each next talking head less-informed about this current Hurricanes roster and Ward’s abilities than the next.

It’s one thing for the ill-informed YouTube narcissist to talk out of their ass, but to hear former Gators wide receiver Chris Doering going all fan-boy, calling for a 5-0 start, while predicting that Florida would go 3-0 against state rivals Miami, Florida State and Central Florida … it really shows you just how off the rails and delusional the entire Gators base is as the Napier era crashes and burns.

Knocking overzealous Gators isn’t so much the point—as is pointing out the fact that so many people supporting this Florida program were not only light years off regarding the state of their program, but also proved clueless as to The State of Miami—what the Canes have under center in Ward and the overall talent (and energy) the 305 was bringing to the 352 in regards to game plan and overall attitude.

To be that off-the-mark; the Gators have a bigger problems than just the team their fielding and current state of their program—and for a fan base accusing the Canes of living in the last; seems like a big contingent of that crew still thinks it’s 2008 in Gainesville.

FINALLY A REASON TO BELIEVE

Weeks back we wrote about why it’s finally time to drop the believe-it-when-we-see-it approach to Miami football; highlighting the financial investment the past three years and now NIL and the transfer portal were tailor-made for Cristobal’s rebuild—and we followed it up with a deep dive into the importance of “culture”, and the type of roster being assembled through new, on-brand additions—while getting rid of dozen of wrong-fit guys who weren’t on board with new-look, old school Miami.

The final piece of the recent trilogy; an all-in explanation regarding Ward being that dude—a total program-changer that would make for a special season at Miami, as this program is only as good as its quarterback and the Canes haven’t had a real one in decades.

We shared that “Ward’s moxie will be the x-factor” to this season, while stating he’d be the “difference maker” as the Canes “tamed The Swamp on Saturday afternoon”—followed by a 30-20 prediction in Miami’s favor.

Cristobal, assistant coaches and teammates have raved about Ward’s “it factor” all offseason; an old-school alpha dog who makes everybody around him better; which was on full display as the Canes kicked the Gators ass in Week One as everybody on that roster upper their game and energy.

This wasn’t just a victory for Miami; it was a statement—this is a special football team and all the off-season chatter was real—the Canes with a roster that would be ready to compete in year three.

That’s not to say Miami is on the level with Georgia, but the Canes are certainly part of the conversation regarding other contenders as this new seasons is upon us—and when looking at Clemson, Virginia Tech and Florida State laying eggs in their openers—Miami certainly looks like the best in conference, wholeheartedly in the mix for the program’s first ACC title.

Throw in a friendly schedule where things lighten up a bit with Florida in the rearview; Florida A&M, Ball State and South Florida all on deck before ACC play opens on late September on a Friday night at home against Virginia Tech—who lost to Vanderbilt last weekend.

Road game at Cal and Louisville follow—the Cardinals winning the Coastal last year and besting Miami at HardRock—before a home showdown against what looks to be a reeling Florida State program before a former head coach rolls south with Duke; Diaz in his first year in Durham.

An early November road trip to a rising Georgia Tech squad; one the Canes have circled after last year’s five-turnover, refuse-to-kneel debacle—before Senior Day against Wake Forest and a regular season-ending road trip to Syracuse.

Lest fans get ahead of anything, Miami has seen a double-digit win season once since joining the ACC in 2004 and in twenty seasons has never won more than a lone division title in 2017.

The present and future look bright for the Hurricanes here in early 2024, but not out of line to occasionally check the rearview to see where other Miami teams have fumbled the bag in the past—due to distractions, overconfidence, letting up or stepping down.

Until then, savor the Florida beatdown, enjoy Florida State’s backslide and trust that year three couldn’t have gotten off to a better start, by way of winning a portal quarterback battle and revamping this roster with the right kind of buy-in players that championship-caliber squads need to compete.

Christian 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 is a storyteller for some exciting brands and individuals—as well as a guitarist and songwriter for his Miami-bred band Company Jones, who released their debut album “The Glow” in 2021. Hit him on Twitter for all things U-related @ItsAUThingBLOG.

‘U’ PREVIEW: MIAMI HURRICANES TAKE ON FLORIDA GATORS IN ‘THE SWAMP’

247 days after a hamstrung Miami Hurricanes squad lost a third-tier bowl game at a baseball stadium in the Bronx, Mario Cristobal and “The U” are set to open the 2024 season with a road trip to ‘The Swamp’ and a heated showdown with the Florida Gators.

On the other sideline Billy Napier also enters his third season in Gainesville, coming off  two sub-par seasons and a combined 11-14 record—while Cristobal hasn’t fared much better with a 12-13 start at his alma mater.

Of course the unwritten story of these two head coaches will ultimately be defined by off-season moves made and how that translates to wins and losses this fall; each with a second full recruiting class, another transfer portal haul and the addition-by-subtraction roster turnover that comes from sending off-brand players packing, making room for new ballers who buy-in.

MIAMI LOATHES ‘THE TEAM FROM UP NORTH’

Some quick history between these two Sunshine State powers who first tussled back in 1938 and are preparing for their 57th-ever meeting. Miami and Florida continue despising each other despite not playing annually since 1987—the Gators bowing out of the rivalry after joining the SEC; the two programs only meeting seven times in almost four decades.

The 2001 Sugar Bowl was a battle royale between two top ten squads in the postseason—#2 Miami screwed out of a title-game shot against #1 Oklahoma; the Canes taking out their frustration on #7 Florida, 37-20.

#2 Miami was also on the right side of a home-and-away; rolling into Gainesville as defending national champs in 2002 and smacking around #6 Florida, 41-16.

A year later, a massive home comeback in the Orange Bowl for third-ranked Canes; trailing the eighteenth-ranked Gators, 33-10 late third quarter and rallying for a 38-33 win behind the arm of a former teammate, quarterback Brock Berlin.

Berlin got his old team one more time in the Peach Bowl; Miami rolling Florida, 27-10 behind some big special teams play and defense—recent NFL Hall of Fame inductee Devin Hester an assassin in both those games, as well.

The Gators got their first win over the Canes since 1987; an early-season showdown in Gainesville during their national championship run of 2008, pulling away late for the 26-3 victory.

Since then, a turnover-defined affair at HardRock back in 2013—Miami hanging on to win, 21-16—followed by a 2019 season opener, where Florida again coughed it up consistently, but a fumbled punt on the goal line was the day’s biggest gaffe and the Canes lost the inaugural game of the Manny Diaz era, 24-20.

Miami still leads the all-time rivalry 29-27—having won seven of the last nine match-ups—the Hurricanes also with five national titles (1983, 1987, 1989, 1991, 2001) to the Gators’ three (1996, 2006 , 2008).

All the piling on Miami  for “ancient history” championships, Florida is now 16 years removed from the last time they brought home the hardware— both the Canes and Gators spending years trying to reconfigure paths-to-greatness with a revolving door of head coaches—which is why both Cristobal and Napier are feeling that pressure to deliver in year three.

Florida State laid an egg in their season opener against Georgia Tech, but fact remains that Mike Norvell turned a corner year-three in Tallahassee—a 10-3 run in 2022, followed by 13-1 last fall—and in a very competitive state, ‘The Big Three’ always look at the trajectory of hated rivals as a measuring stick; the Seminoles a few steps ahead last year, but still a decade removed from their last title and stuck at three overall (1993, 1999, 2013).

All that to say, the past is the past and the time is now as both squads spent the entire spring and summer preparing for Saturday’s showdown in Gainesville.

YESTERDAY’S MOVES MADE FOR TODAY

Regarding the aforementioned off-season moves, it’s hard to not give Miami the edge—Cristobal reeling in the seventh-best freshman class in 2023 and fourth-best last year, while Napier snagged the 13th-best group in back-to-back years—but portal moves and void-fillers are what really separate the two.

Miami won the Cam Ward sweepstakes in early January, weeks after the Washington State transfer quarterback had a change of heart regarding bolting to the NFL—citing “unfinished business” and wanting one more season in college to up his game, brand, image and stock.

“If you build it, they will come” feels apropos regarding the Hurricanes’ all-in approach to the 2024 season.

Ward was truly the tip of the iceberg that led to some big names who followed his pledge; Oregon State running back Damien Martinez, Houston wide receiver Sam Brown, Tennessee edge Tyler Baron, Washington edge Jayden Wayne and safety Mishael Powell, MTSU defensive lineman Marley Cook, Marshall edge Elijah Alston, Indiana center Zach Carpenter, North Carolina State defensive lineman C.J. Clark and Michigan State defensive tackle Simeon Barrow—massive additions while sending 28 off-brand former Canes packing.

Napier and Florida went portal-heavy, as well; some instant upgrades to defense that needed a boost, as well as top-flight receiver in Elijah Badger, who will be in action Saturday—but Miami’s leaps-and-bounds improvement at quarterback, wide receiver, running back, center and defensive line are poised to define the season—as is Cristobal’s continued focus on the trenches, which is where this game will ultimately be won.

The Hurricanes’ biggest struggles the past two decades has been average offensive and defensive line play and a who’s who at quarterback.

Even when Miami was an annual power, some special seasons went to hell in a handbag (1992 and 2002, notably) due to offensive line regression when championship teams the previous season saw its best up-front talent leaving for the NFL—resulting in some pretty good quarterbacks having some rough title game appearances.

Aside from being a former offensive lineman and two-time national champion with the Hurricanes (1989, 1991)—Cristobal also cut his teeth in Tuscaloosa for four years under Nick Saban, winning a natty—and more-importantly, learning the importance of building an SEC-caliber program and winning those trench battles.

With solid offensive line play a focus for Cristobal-led teams, establishing the run—and staying committed to it—is the focus for Miami as this new season gets underway.

RUN BALL, CONTROL CLOCK, WEAR ‘EM DOWN

Shannon Dawson is back at offensive coordinator and a disciple of the Air Raid offense, having worked under Dana Holgerson—who worked under the late, great Mike Leach—the temptation to fling the ball all around the yard will be there; but there needs to be a discipline and commitment to run if Miami is going to wear down and beat Florida.

The Gators gave up 5.1 yards-per-carry last season—117th in the nation—which saw Napier getting rid of co-defensive coordinator Sean Spencer and replacing him with Ron Roberts, while Austin Armstrong retained his co-coordinator duties and returns for a second season.

Stopping the Canes’ ground attack will be key for Florida, but do they have enough horses on the defensive line to go toe-to-toe with Miami’s offensive line—and if needing to bring in additional defensive help, does that give Ward the ability to take some shots at a Gators’ secondary that will have a lot of new talent at a position that was a weak link last season?

Dawson got away from the run at times last season; all right in a win over Texas A&M—Tyler Van Dyke chucking it around for 374 yards and four touchdowns—making the 77 yards on 24 carries moot in a 48-33 ballgame.

Conversely, there were other outings where Miami’s offense got away from consistently pounding the rock—a pass-happy offense where defenses didn’t have to respect the rushing attack; baiting Van Dyke, picking him off and stealing winnable games that the Hurricanes could’ve survived with a little bit more patience and process.

Miami game-managed their way to an overtime win over Clemson last fall–forced to commit to the run when true freshman quarterback Emory Williams replaced the injured Van Dyke; the Canes owning time of possession and going for 211 yards on 38 carries—which set Williams up to take some calculated shots when the Tigers let their guard down.

For this showdown Miami needs the discipline showed against Clemson, while letting Ward do some of what Van Dyke did against the Aggies when the shots were there to be taken.

CANES WITH DEEPEST D-LINE IN YEARS

Defensively, Miami returns coordinator Lance Guidry for a second season and his ability to scheme and get after the stoic Graham Mertz will also be a huge key to success for the Hurricanes.

Where Miami’s 2023 season fell apart courtesy of Van Dyke’s 12 untimely interceptions, Mertz played smart football and only threw three picks all fall.

The Hurricanes’ defensive line is one of the best in the nation entering the 2024 season; veteran players, portal pick-ups and a two-deep that will allow fresh bodies to wear down that Gators’ line all afternoon—will Guidry dial anything up to get after the second-year transfer quarterback—in a game that could again easily come down to ball-protection and turnovers?

While Miami has the edge in the trenches—offensive and defensive lines superior to Florida’s—both programs have unproven secondaries; where one breakdown in coverage or a blown assignment could also be the difference in a game that will be a hot and humid, heavily contested battle with little margin for error.

Whichever team holds it down better without flinching; a make-or-break moment with some green secondaries could prove pivotal.

Both programs underachieved last year and each head coach did all they could these off-season to better their squads, knowing that big step forward is a must in year three—and Miami fans can take some solace in the fact that the Hurricanes are now passing the eye test, which hasn’t been the case over this decade of disaster.

CALLING IT AS THEY SEE IT

CBS Sports analyst and The Late Kick host Josh Pate is respected as a straight-shooter—and for long-time fans of Miami, his take on the program feels eerily similar to the way Kirk Herbstreit was an early-adopter who predicted the Hurricanes’ resurgence in early 2000, just before the program pulled out of its probation-funk and went on a 34-game tear—hosed out of a title shot, winning the natty the following year and screwed out of a second ring in 2002, prematurely ending the win-streak.

Herby may be an Ohio State loyalist at heart—just as Pate is a Georgia guy—but in both cases, each puts their love of college football and their roles as analysts above any partisanship.

Three years ago it was Herbstreit calling out Miami’s top brass for not caring about football, which ultimately was the beginning of the end for Diaz—while Pate has been an early adopter on the Cristobal era, quick to point out the importance of the former Canes’ offensive lineman building culture, as well as needing to strip a broken program down to its studs for a complete rebuild.

A recent sit-down in Coral Gables after a tour of the football facilities, Pate mentioned recent treks to Alabama, Georgia and Ohio State—and how the athletes walking around Miami look like the guys walking around those other powerhouse programs—and while that doesn’t guarantee wins, it does guarantee that you need players that pass the eye test to even compete at the highest level, and after the Hurricanes not measuring up for years—they are “back” in that sense.

Something is brewing at “The U” but too many coaching changes, false starts or late fades has set up this believe-it-when-we-see-it attitude around the program—which is understandable in a sense, but at some point there will be payoff when the right moves are made and as off-brand guys are run off for a new crew that buys-in.

The Hurricanes spent a decade-plus known as “Quarterback U” and found ways to win four national titles–in a nine-year span—with four different signal callers.

When Miami was back a decade later, it was quarterback Ken Dorsey who was the conductor of that resurgence; a reminder that the Hurricanes are only as good as the guy throwing the ball—proven by an almost two-decade run of guys who simply didn’t measure up at the position, or at best lacked the offensive line, skills players and coordinators to set them up for success.

GAMECHANGER: EXIT TVD, ENTER C-WARD…

Cristobal and Dawson thought they had the guy in Van Dyke last year; primed for a comeback season after injury in 2022—but in hindsight, the magic shows in a few games freshman season never returned. Van Dyke was an introvert, a quiet kid and seemed to shun the role of ‘team leader’—wanting to let his play do the talking for him.

Last year’s 4-0 start and upset of Texas A&M went right out the window after a three-interception performance at home against Georgia Tech; Van Dyke visibly rattled, head down and a deer-in-headlights look that ultimately proved the kid was all right when the getting was good, but the moment adversity and doubt crept in, he was toast.

All that to say why there’s so much excitement around Ward entering the building; an alpha dog, a born leader and a confident kid who has remained unfazed his entire career.

ESPN will most-likely delve into the backstory on College GameDay, but the Lake Jackson, Texas-born quarterback got his start at Incarnate Word where he had an explosive 2020 season out of nowhere.

A year later a 47-touchdown, 10-interception season where he threw for 4,648 yards for the Cardinals—before transferring to Washington State for the next two years.

Running for his life in Pullman, Ward still found a way to throw for 3,094 yards, 23 touchdowns and eight interceptions in 2022—taking Oregon and Utah to the wire, as well as upsetting Wisconsin on the road—and in 2023, a 438-yard clinic on the road against #Oregon, while throwing for 317 yards and three touchdowns in the Apple Cup, #4 Washington surviving on a last-second field goal that helped propel them to the national title game.

The logical reaction of sports fans and pundits is to project based on what seem like logical narratives; in this case, a storyline that a quarterback from smaller programs will be overwhelmed and intimidated in his first start for Miami, against Florida at ‘The Swamp’.

Maybe for some, but don’t see that as the case for Ward—the kid just wired different and built for the big stage.

That doesn’t guarantee a flawless game—or even that he’ll lead Miami to victory—but the notion that the moment or venue will be too big for him is the opinion of the ill-informed, or those who are just looking a this portal pick-up on a surface level.

Ward rolls into this season-opener for Miami at 22 years old and a fifth-year college quarterback; the same age as top-draft pick Caleb Williams, who will take the field for the Chicago Bears this fall—Ward with 48 starts under his belt and a journey that took him from Central Texas, to East Washington and now to South Florida over a five-year span.

Those who have been around Ward know he’s “that dude”—that his attitude will set the tone for Miami in Gainesville this weekend and that his teammates will go as he goes—just as the Hurricanes saw from a losing perspective last year when Van Dyke was leading them into battle.

All signs point to Saturday’s showdown being both Ward’s and Miami’s coming-out party.

TODAY’S ‘SWAMP’ AIN’T YESTERDAY’S X-FACTOR

The pundits are all talking up ‘The Swamp’—which is a hell of an environment—but conveniently leave out that Napier is 9-4 at home these past two years and seven of those wins came against McNeese State, Charlotte, Vanderbilt, South Florida, Eastern Washington, Missouri and South Carolina.

Florida got the 2022 opener against #7 Utah when Cameron Rising threw an end zone interception with :17 remaining—as well as downing #11 Tennessee last fall—quality wins, but the Napier era at home a far cry from what Steve Spurrier or Urban Meyer did to ensure dominance at home.

This is Miami’s game to lose—and not give away—hitting the ground running, not giving it away late and (hopefully) sitting on a little double-digit lead before Tom Petty blares over the PA system to start the fourth quarter.

In reality it’s anybody’s game—and as it goes in Sunshine State rivalries between The Big Three; throw history and record books out the window when any combination of Miami, Florida and Florida State tee it up.

Still, those favoring the Gators seems to be doing so based on home field advantage and a strong SEC brand as the difference-maker—while pointing to decades of Miami’s incompetence and no-showing in big moments, which the Hurricanes have to own.

All that to say, in this new-look version of college football—where seasons are made by way of get-after-it recruits and transfer portal dominance—Ward’s moxie will be the x-factor, as last year’s Hurricanes know this year’s role and off-season additions understand the assignment.

Win the trench battles, run the football, take shots when they’re there, get after Mertz, protect the football and erase home field by taking care of business across the board.

Easier said than done, but in the end “it’s all about the W”—which stands for “win” and “Ward”—Miami fielding one of the biggest game-changers college football is going to see this fall, which will allow the Hurricanes the elusive breakthrough this program has chased for decades.

Miami’s transfer quarterback is the difference maker and the Canes tame ‘The Swamp’ on Saturday afternoon.

The Prediction: Miami 30, Florida 20

Christian 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 is a storyteller for some exciting brands and individuals—as well as a guitarist and songwriter for his Miami-bred band Company Jones, who released their debut album “The Glow” in 2021. Hit him on Twitter for all things U-related @ItsAUThingBLOG.