The Beast : Refreshing

I’ll be honest. As I walked into the stadium for Saturday’s game, I wasn’t feeling too positive about Miami’s match up with North Carolina.

Sure, on paper half the Tar Heels were either hurt or suspended. Based on that alone, the Canes should’ve won. However, as we’ve seen this season crazy things really do happen in the world of football.

Back to my walk into the stadium. Why was I feeling less than positive? Crazy as it sounds, my tailgating experience often effects my thoughts on the game. When tailgating goes well, I feel like we should win. If things go awry, I feel a loss on the horizon.

Yesterday proved interesting. With all these new directional parking rules, everything was our of sorts. I admire the athletic department trying to make changes, but I’m not sure directional parking is the right answer.

In theory it sounds great meeting your friends somewhere outside the stadium, forming a convoy and parking together – but that’s not how it played out. Parking attendants were splitting cars up, even if they came together.

On top of that, while I embrace being able to tailgate in a safe, fan friendly environment, the police were overzealous and in many ways ruined the fun – right down to a half dozen warnings regarding turning our music down. One small speaking pumping out old and new school jams and we were told to pipe down at least six times in three hours.

The whole thing felt like Sun No-Life Stadium. Was this a football game or a chess match? There really needs to be a happy medium and last night there wasn’t … which led to my bad vibes entering the stadium.

The first half was pretty much representative of how the Canes have been playing all year. Big play given up on defense, following by Jacory Harris throwing an interception in a mostly-empty end zone press box. (Evidently allCanes Radio isn’t high enough in the pecking order to garner a seat in the main press box. Upside? I had almost three dozen seats to myself.)

Miami took the 13-10 lead into the locker room, but I still didn’t have the premonition that an ass whooping was about to happen. I figured the game would be close in the second half, coming down to some crazy play at the end of the game. Thankfully, I was wrong.

I have no idea what Randy Shannon said in the locker room at the half. I guess I failed as a reporter by not getting to the bottom of that at last night’s post-game presser or this morning’s day-after recap, but whatever was said, it finally worked. Miami, for a half, looked like “Miami” again.

– The defense was stifling. Tackles for loss. Allen Bailey with sack after sack (3.5, which earned him National College Football Performance Awards Co-Defensive Player of the Week honors today.) Brandon Harris registered his first pick of the year and we saw dancing, shaking, heads bobbing and tons of jumping up and down. For the first time in a while, I had goosebumps.

– Jacory gained some serious confidence, too. Did you notice the offensive game plan in the second half? It was all about putting #12 in confidence-gaining situations. Roll outs. Swing passes. Short passes. Sure, there were some shots down the field (that amazing catch and run by Travis Benjamin for touchdown), but it seemed Mark Whipple finally gave in, calling a game to suit Harris, rather than trying to make him fit into a game plan that overextends his abilities.

Lamar Miller, Damien Berry and Mike James all had success on the ground. Having that many backs with different skills sets and different looks is such a huge benefit for Miami. I thought coaches did a great job using those guys in different spots.

– Also, getting Miller the ball in space. It worked and it’ll be something awesome to watch as the season rolls on and he gets more touches.

Of course all this begs the million dollar question; what happened between Florida State and last night to allow this? What was the difference?

While the local sports media and fan base has been all over Shannon, let’s take a quick step backwards. Weeks ago when interviewed, Randy told me that this team needed to develop leadership from the inside. He wanted players to come to the conclusion on their own and in hindsight, maybe Shannon knew exactly what he was doing the whole time.

We’ve been beating that point home on Tuesdays when we get a chance to talk to the kids, asking them question after question about stepping up, leading and becoming the guy. This week things finally came to a head.

A players only meeting was called days back by LaRon Byrd and others. (I still don’t have conformation who, but I’m getting Vaughn Telemaque and B. Harris were involved). The players got together last Tuesday and aired it all all out. Word is it was emotional, but a great and necessary process and the outcome speaks for itself.

Coinciding with the players only sitdown, Antrel Rolle spoke with the guys the same day and according to Berry, Rolle drove home the point that the players needed to force Coach Shannon out of his shell. Antrel shared with the team that when Randy was his coordinator, he’d have fun with the players, joke with them, dance with them, etc. None of these current guys had seen that side of Randy and as fans, neither have most of us.

Rolle’s message was heard loud and clear and players have gotten Randy to lighten up a bit. Coach mentioned this morning that he’s made a concerted effort to be more animated the last two weeks and while we really couldn’t see that on ESPN3 at Duke, it was loud and clear when he and Orlando Franklin chest bumped late in the game. I almost fell out of my chair and even contemplated asking Randy if he needed some sort of neurological evaluation by the UM medical staff after that move.

While we watch from the outside, we’ll never know if the team was ready to have a fun-filled, animated coach. There’s your whole argument about timing and a hard-ass coach versus a players coach. Different teams need different styles of leadership and what I think we’re seeing is a team finally mature enough to handle a more animated leader.

Until players stepped up and found a way to lead on their own, Shannon wasn’t going to let his guard down. With a void of player leadership Shannon couldn’t afford to let up because no one inside the locker room was ready to make sure things stayed on track.

After this past week and now after this win. Miami has guys that don’t fear speaking up in the locker room, on the sideline or in game. They have the respect of each other, as well as the maturity to listen to each other, understanding what’s best for the team.

I go back to the piece I wrote before the game. Just as I think Miami’s downturn started that fateful night at North Carolina in October 2004, I think next year when this squad is kicking ass and taking names, that we’ll look back on the second half of this beat down as the turning point. It’s just a feeling but an infectious one at that.

One last thing. Both last night and this morning, Randy did an amazing job breaking down a few plays and getting into hardcore Xs and Os and that’s when he truly is at his best. I’ve been saying it for years, but when I was on the broadcast team, we’d constantly talk about how we could help Coach Shannon do a better job just simply getting his message across.

We as the broadcast team saw that Randy was at his best when sitting down, relaxed and able to talk football on his terms. Putting him behind a podium with a ton of reporters barking at him – it’s not going to give you the best of him, but should you get the chance just to hear him talk the intricacies of football? Your jaw will drop. Anyone that doesn’t think the man is cerebral and football smart is flat out wrong.

I know I’m no longer part of the broadcast team, but as an alum, I still want my head coach to come across best he can and to do so, I highly suggest a change in the way Randy addresses the media. Put him in his comfort zone and you’ll get the most out of him.

It’s like putting a shotgun quarterback under center. Sometimes you just have to tweak a few things and put a guy where’s he’s comfortable if you want him to shine.

I’ll be back on Tuesday via Twitter and Facebook regarding the weekly press conference and of course we have another big allCanes Radio show live this Wednesday – again coming from you via allCanes, where you’ll save 20% off all merchandise if you drop by to show while we’re broadcasting live. Go Canes!

Comments

comments

16 thoughts on “The Beast : Refreshing

  1. That game started off very shaky and I had a "here we go again" feeling right from the start…I mean we were just getting gashed.But the team deserves alot of credit for shutting down NC and not allowing any points in the second half…a big win for the team and the program a s a whole…this should keep the critics silent for at least a couple of weeks…

    And I agree with the Beast about the over abundance of law enforcement…it's all a knee jerk reaction from the FSU game…as season tix holders we pay too much money at these games to be suffocated by police…it lessens the pleasure of the experience and is unnecessary…

  2. "I'll be honest. As I walked into the stadium for Saturday's game, I wasn't feeling too positive about Miami's match up with North Carolina."

    For me this feeling was almost too much for me to bear. All of my usual friends and family bailed out on me to go to the game. We live in Palm Beach and making the trip to Joe Robbie stadium usually is no problem, but when I was left to go it alone. (no replacement fans) With the way I felt about the Canes after FSU I wasn't confident that the game would go as it did. So I watched. And what I watched made me feel GREAT.
    The problem with this years team is that they are close to the cusp of something great. And when the hardcore UM fans see steps backwards the only two to blame are Randy & J12. I am very proud to see the Canes get the Tar Heel off their backs.
    Congrats
    Go Canes – Well Done!!!

  3. Thanks for the insight. The whole player leadership vacuum makes more sense now that you've shed a little light on it.

    Hope this isn't me once again drinking the water, but I too got the sense there was a turning point in this game, and I think it happened with Telemaque's fumble recovery in the endzone in the 1st half.
    I also hope it carries through this season, next, and beyond.

    One question: You mention Shannon getting into "X's and O's" after the game and this morning…is there audio or a link somewhere to hear it? I'm very interested.

    Thanks, and go Canes!

  4. I like to see that Shannon is becoming more of a players coach. That is truly the only way to be successful in Miami. Hopefully this keeps up. I say bring on the Excessive celebration calls, if the players are having a good time, it seems like they play better.

  5. I don't think the defense did as good of a job as everyone thinks they did. We had horrible run defense. If you put us back against FSU today we lose the game again because their backs are much better than UNC's. We have to stop being so dang porous.

  6. "Horrible" run defense?

    Outside of that one run, 73 yards on the ground and 3 points given up.

    North Carolina broke one, as teams do.

    Minus that play the Canes defense at the Heels lunch for about 59:40.

    Sounds like you're making something out of nothing there, guy.

  7. Interesting take. You guys are right. This team is really close to something great. I hope the swagger is back to stay and not just on loan for a week! Go Canes!

  8. There it is, finally for all of us Canes fans who have eagerly waited to see this kind of reaction from this program for years now. Passion, leadership, emotion, fire, hunger to win and win big, both from the coach and the players. THAT is what a championship team looks like, that second half is how Miami should be playing for the remainder of this season and all of next year. It's so much more than just X's and O's, you need leadership, confidence, emotion, swagger and the trust and belief from your coach and fellow players. You have to believe that you can win in any given situation and in any environment. We saw all of that be released by Shannon and this team on UNC saturday night. That is all we as fans wanted to see, that is how you win games. Make people afraid to play you in the future, after all, we are the []_[].

  9. that parking was garbage…i loved the sign outside the stadium "to park together come in together" but as soon as you tell them your together they dont care and seperate you. start of the game i wasnt impressed. defense played a lot better in second half. offense still need work. and jaoory i just dont know to many over thrown passes. only one week hopefully they keep it up rest of the season. and does anyone know the name of the song(beat) that was played during timeouts where all the players danced? thank

  10. Great job by the entire coaching staff. Let's keep working and staying focus. GO CANES 2010!!!!

  11. Here we go again with all this feel good "we've turned the corner" story-line-again. Can we wait to proclaim this until we get a true signature win….as opposed to one against a half a team with one arm behind their back. I am sorry I just refuse to get drawn into this reasoning so soon after the public execution of our season against FSU. I understand the journalistic need to be first but as a blogger I don’t have that complexity. The ‘earn’ part of trust has not been fully established and I can’t forget how badly they played 3 Saturdays ago. I will still go to the GT & VT games and do the usual. But for me its all about the double U. When that starts to happen consistently……. I’m all in.

  12. Again Clay, no one said Miami turned the corner. This is simply a game to build on.

    Beast wrote days back that Miami would be 'back' when he's covering a post-game presser after the Canes won a BCS game and he's right.

    You're missing the point here – it's not about beating North Carolina as much as its about the WAY Miami finally played and responded. From the coaches to the players, everyone exuded some much-needed and long-awaited passion.

    Cautiously optimistic is a fine way to proceed, but let's not play this "one arm behind their back" bullshit regarding North Carolina. They came into this game 4-2 and were a dropped pass away from beating a very good LSU team.

  13. The reason they gashed us in the running game a few times was because Colin was back. I need to see Cain on the field more. I went to the Duke game and he was a beast.

  14. Yeah,the whole "arm behind the back" thing is a tired argument…you have to play the team that is on the field…as previously said that same team almost beat LSU and have played very respectably otherwise…their QB went into the Canes game with only 1 interception…he left there with a couple more and was effectively shut down…take this for what it was:a good win and a win that has the potential to give up a different outlook and a different course of action moving forward…sometimes you just need to leave the cynicism behind for a week and enjoy a win…

  15. Well… I agree to disagree as I don’t think I missed the point. I agree that playing an emotional game with emotion/passion is the way to go. My point was to wait with the accolades. An understated 'good job, better than last week' is enough. I am more in line with your cautiously optimistic viewpoint. And I do feel that the team seems to go the wrong way with an earful of pleasantries.
    I am new to this blog and dont have all the dynamics down yet to it…but it seems that you can disagree without the personal attacks here….
    The one arm behind their back was referring specifically to their leading receiver being lost the week prior.

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