Saturday, September 30, 2006

Miami 14, Houston 13

Miami outlasted Houston 14-13 today. Still trying to process this one. Wow. Glad we won, but why does it still feel like we lost?

Definitely some bright spots, most notably Javarris James. JJ lived up to the hype... though I'd liked to see him get a few breathers in the first half. Mix in some other backs and let's see James with some fresh legs running on a tired defense late in the game. Instead it was Derron Thomas who got the 4th quarter carries. He looked good, but that should been James' time.

The defense made key plays and pretty much saved Miami with the late fumble recovery has Houston was driving and looking to go ahead as much as 20-7. The Canes stepped up, made some plays, SCORED IN THE SECOND HALF and pulled out the 14-13 win.

Who ever thought Kyle Wright's first game-winning drive would've been against Houston? Doesn't pack the same punch if he'd have done it his last two shots against Florida State or last year against Georgia Tech. Still, it had to start somewhere.

I'll have to rewatch the game to take it in. The whole thing is still a blur right now.


.:Canes305:.

Like Vultures Circling Their Prey...

The critics and armchair quarterbacks really put their money where their mouths were this week. A certain Canes fan site had it's members pitch in $1,400 in an effort to voice their collective opinion regarding head coach Larry Coker and Athletic Director, Paul Dee.

One sign read, "Enough Is Enough. Dee & Scapecoker - Pack Your Stuff". The other simply stated, "Fire Dee & Coker. Go Canes" while promoting their website.

We're a few hours from kickoff and you have to wonder what effect this will have on both teams, coaching staffs and the fans. Does the team really block this kind of stuff out - or do the glance at the sky for a second and contemplate where they really stand on the matter?

Sitting at 1-2 and not having taken the field since getting embarrassed at Louisville, 31-7 one would hope that the Canes are solely focused on beating Houston.

Word is that Javarris James will be the primary back today. I wonder if that translate to a balanced rushing attack or another event like The Devin Hester Experiment, where coaches force fed Hester the ball the entire Peach Bowl. It was an act of pure desperation. Will James we used wisely or will the staff force feed him a la Tyrone Moss at Florida State in 2005. Moss was toast by the second half, overworked and cramping up.

Back to the banner.

When I heard about it earlier this week, it sparked different emotions. One side of me loved the idea. Freedom of speech. People making their voice heard nationally instead of in some late night message board rant which six other people read. This wasn't meant to be some historical movement. No one expected Coker's head on a platter Monday morning. It was just a collective group of fans who wanted to shout a little bit louder than the rest of the angry mob.

The other side of me truly felt bad for Coker.

He knows he's at 1-2 and isn't getting the job done. He feels the pressure daily - sometimes by the hour sometimes by the minute. Hell, the media stands up for Coker because they seen the abuse a Miami coach endures when things start to unravel. The most anti-Coker guy out there - even HE has to feel bad for LC right now.

Flying those banners right now? Pointless in the long-run. Somewhat classless in the short-run. Larry Coker doesn't deserve to have his nose rubbed in it. He won a title and had a nice three year honeymoon at The U.

Am I saying keep him in board in 2007? At this point - no. It's time for change but nothing is happening until next season, at best. Starting with, Coker has ten Saturdays to save his job. Nine regular season games and I included the ACC title game, because without getting to Jacksonville he's done at Miami.

For his sake, I hope he turns it around and I hope that 180 happens today. Will it? We'll see. Worry about moving the chains, playing defense and scoring some second half points. The wins will come and I personally would like to see Coker go out with some dignity.

I don't give Miami a shot in hell regarding winning the ACC and I give them a 25% shot of even getting to Jacksonville. Winning at Georgia Tech and hosting Virginia Tech back-to-back weeks seems absolutely brutal considering the struggles against Florida State and Louisville.

These next few weeks pit the Canes against four consecutive cupcakes. It has to be the easiest four-game stretch Miami has seen this decade. Starting today the Canes have 12 quarters of football to work out all their kinks before the REAL season starts.

For now let's see how Houston unfolds... I'll say Hurricanes 26, Cougars 13.


.:Canes305:.

Thursday, September 28, 2006

Vilma Weighs in on Coker's Future...

Jon Vilma is the latest Hurricanes alum to chime in on the Larry Coker saga. Sports talk radio finds any opportunity to point out the decline to former players, how it impacts the current head coach and what they see in the program's future.

Michael Irvin and Melvin Bratton stated their peace on Dan Le Batard's show last week, both in favor of change. 1-2 isn't acceptable. They're disappointed in the coaches and the players. A change is in order and personally, I'm shocked Vilma stayed so PC on the matter.

This is a time former players need to rally together, get involved and push for change.

In an interview on ESPN News Vilma stated that he supports his former coach because of his recent resume. Credits him for the 2001 National Championship and the 54-11 record. Enough said. Vilma also believes the Canes are going to win the ACC and wind up in a BCS bowl game.

We'll see, regarding the latter comments.

As for his blind loyalty towards Coker, he's too close to the situation to comment objectively.

Bratton played for Howard Schnellenberger and Irvin, for Jimmy Johnson. Two guys. Two coaches. Each with a ring. Bratton and Irvin both left Miami on a high. Vilma left Miami with one ring and played for two coaches. Coker replaced Butch Davis entering Vilma's sophomore season.

Bratton and Irvin can see the forest for the trees here because the never played for Coker. There is no loyalty to its current leader. The loyalty is with The U. It's all about the program.

How would Vilma feel about Coker the head coach, had he entered Miami as a freshman in 2003 instead of 2000?

Gone would be the 46-4 record he helped amass between 2000-2003. Instead, he'd be looking at 30-10 between 2003 and the early part of 2006.

The National Championship he came to earn at Miami? Gone. The Canes haven't played for a title since 2002 meaning any graduating senior on this current squad won't earn a ring. That dream died Labor Day weekend.

How about the four straight BCS games Vilma experiences as a Cane always on teams loaded with talent? The 2001 Sugar Bowl, 2002 Rose Bowl, 2003 Fiesta Bowl and 2004 Orange Bowl look pretty solid in the ol' college scrapbook.

This year's seniors can still decide how 2006 plays out, but their last three bowl losses include back-to-back Peach Bowl appearances and an Orange Bowl classic against Florida State. They'll also remember being part of a team on the wrong end of a 40-3 New Year's Eve beat down; Miami's worst ever bowl loss.

Vilma left Miami with a 5-0 record against arch-rival Florida State. This current bunch will most likely leave, 3-2 - unless there's a rematch in Jacksonville this December.

Regarding the combined record, 11-1, 12-0, 12-1 and 11-2 has a much nicer ring to it than 11-2, 9-3, 9-3 and a 1-2 start.

Simply put, Vilma came in on the upswing and was out the door right before things got bad. And that's not a knock on him. He put in his work at The U. He was a huge part of that dominating run earlier this decade. He will go down as an all time Hurricane great. If he's a senior right now, the Canes aren't 1-2. Bank on it.

As for Coker, this latest Hurricane great is being loyal to a fault here.

If guys like Melvin Bratton, Michael Irvin and others can speak up - so can Jon Vilma.

He owes it to the program and he owes it to every kid who signs a LOI to play for Miami in the future. This is family and family has to be united on difficult decisions such as this.



.:Canes305:.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

allCanes.com UWIN Winners - 9/27/06

allCanes has pulled the UWIN winners for Wednesday September 27th.

Today's winners are:

> Peter DeFalco - Phoenix, AZ - allCanes Gift Card
> Kathleen Fehr - Miami, FL - Tony Roma's Gift Card
> S. Jaundoo - Miami, FL - GameWorks Gift Card

Winners will be officially notified today and gift cards will be sent out first thing next week.

Congrats to our UWIN winners today and for those of you yet to sign up, click here to officially enter the 2006 allCanes UWIN Contest.


(Note: Registering once makes you eligible for every drawing during the 2006 season. Multiple entries will be deleted.)

Monday, September 25, 2006

Hester In Hindsight...

We all saw this one coming. The day that former Miami punt returner, kick returner and sometimes wide receiver/cornerback Devin Hester started flaunting his stuff in the NFL - causing an outcry that his talents were underused during his tenure at the University of Miami.

Chicago Sun Times staff reporter, Brad Briggs wrote an article this morning called "Hester glowing like neon" and in his praise of Deebo's skills - there were some quotes and knocks on how The U failed to use the former #4 correctly. Below is an exerpt from Briggs' article:

Hester's affinity for Sanders has affected his position. He dreams of playing cornerback, and that's a primary reason why he has not been moved to offense. Hester chooses his words carefully, but his heart lies on defense and that's what he told Bears coach Lovie Smith when he was approached a week after the draft to see if he had an interest in moving to the other side of the ball. But he's willing to do what is best for the team, and if it means playing offense, he's game.

He is moving elsewhere -- up the depth chart, passing Dante Wesley last week to become the backup to Nathan Vasher on the right side. When Charles Tillman needed a breather in the second half, the Bears felt good giving Hester three snaps with a safe lead.

''The game slowed down for him,'' secondary coach Steve Wilks said. ''That's the key. We gained a lot more confidence in him because he gained a lot more confidence in himself.''

Hester's athletic ability is off the charts. But along with his plant and drive, change of direction, flexible hips, burst and vision, he needed assuredness.

''It was a confirmation when they moved me up the depth chart,'' he said. ''That told me to keep my head up and keep working to get better.''

Everyone involved agrees he would be further along if he hadn't been switched back and forth so much in college. Sanders blamed the Miami program for putting out the word that Hester struggled to learn the playbook, perhaps because the Hurricanes were upset he would not be returning for his final season of eligibility. Hester had a team-high four interceptions as a sophomore, more than first-round pick Antrel Rolle.

''Miami pretty much missed the boat,'' Sanders said. ''I don't understand how a guy can't learn the defense when he led them in interceptions. Then as a junior, he can't learn the same defense?

''Not only that, but then they featured him on offense in the [Peach] Bowl. The same guy who couldn't learn the defense could learn plays on offense? That puzzled me, and we just had to get around that whole rap. If they would have played that kid the whole time on defense, he would have been a first-round cornerback.''

For his part, Hester said he's not upset, but he added, ''I know they are going to regret they didn't play me more.''



Hester's career at The U will remain a mystery. Many will remember the super-freshman returning the opening kickoff against Florida; 97-yards for the touchdown. A year later he changed the tone of the game with a 78-yard punt return for a go-ahead score against Louisville - as well as another opening kickoff, this time at NC State.

There was the field goal block and touchdown return against Florida, the blocked field goal against Florida State, highlight reel returns against the likes of Duke and Temple - as well as some stellar run backs after interceptions.

Then there was the Peach Bowl Massacre.

In an effort to sell Hester on returning to The U for his final season, Coker and staff put together a game plan which featured Deebo on offense. It was playground football, at best. 9 plays for 68 yards, receiving and rushing - simply by just forcing the ball to the most 'talented' kid on Miami's side of the ball.

The experiment failed, the Canes got worked 41-3 and Hester declared for the NFL Draft weeks later, drafted by Chicago in the third round.

Miami coaches oft knocked Hester for his inability to learn the playbook - while bouncing him back and forth between offense and defense, in an effort to get him on the field. At day's end, it appears that Hester is set to be a cornerback in the NFL, as well as a stellar return man. Why did the Hurricanes coaching staff shy away from putting Hester at cornerback and leaving him there for a few years? I don't know.

Maybe he really couldn't learn the playbook. Maybe his head wasn't in it until he started getting those NFL paychecks. Maybe he was in Randy Shannon's doghouse. Lord knows enough talented kids have ended up there the past few seasons.

Whatever the case, Devin Hester is going to become a household name as he continues sharpening those NFL skills - bringing joy to Bears fans and frustrating those Canes who feel his skills were greatly underused.

allCanes.com UWIN Winners - 9/25/06

allCanes has pulled the UWIN winners for Monday September 25th.

Today's winners are:

> Brad Pinker - Coral Gables, FL - Big Cheese $20 Gift Card
> Carmen Martinez - Miami, FL - allCanes Gift Card
> Anthony Woodby- Miami, FL - GameWorks Gift Card

Winners will be officially notified today and gift cards will be sent out first thing next week.

Congrats to our UWIN winners today and for those of you yet to sign up, click here to officially enter the 2006 allCanes UWIN Contest.


(Note: Registering once makes you eligible for every drawing during the 2006 season. Multiple entries will be deleted.)

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Front Page News...

Have you ever seen a 1-2 college team get more publicity? Love us or hate us, we're still Miami. All eyes are on The U to see what happens next. ESPN is even in Coral Gables doing a segment for College GameDay regarding the state of the program and the fans' reaction to Larry Coker.

The Canes have a bye this week and they're still front page news on ESPN.com, CBSSPortsLine.com and CNNSI.com... Not the kind of publicity we want (at 1-2) but it does show that the media and the college football community are OBSESSED with whatever is going on at The U.

It's a rUmor Thing...

Even at 1-2, the Canes are dominating the headlines. Paul Dee made an appearance on the Dan LeBatard radio show yesterday in an attempt to defend the program and Larry Coker's job.

As most of you know, Dee is an attorney. Coaches have 'coach speak' and Dee had his 'lawyer speak' in full force. While he reaffirmed that Coker would stay on as head coach for the Canes in 2006, no promises were made for 2007. He also left the door wide open for the rest of this season.

Dee could've easily come out and said, "Larry Coker will remain the coach of the Hurricanes this season come hell or high water. You have my word that we are not going to fire our coach midseason."

Instead, he talked around the issue with statements like "The plan right now is to have Larry be the coach the remainder of the year - and hopefully beyond, but we'll see."

Not exactly a ringing endorsement, but we'll see how it plays out. Most likely, Coker will be around through 2006 - but based on Dee's comments, even that doesn't seem 100% guaranteed.

For those who missed the Paul Dee interview on the Dan LeBatard show, click here.

The 'what the hell's going on with the Canes' chit-chat continues around the nation. Here are some other recent comments on The U:


Stewart Mandel of Sports Illustrated: Butch Davis and Greg Schiano are intriguing possibilities, but by no means sure things. Davis burned a lot of bridges at UM when he abruptly bolted for the Browns right before Signing Day in 2001. Would most 'Canes fans welcome him back with open arms? Absolutely. Would Dee? That I'm not so sure about. (Though, according to Tuesday's South Florida Sun-Sentinel, there may be a movement afoot at the school to force Dee out with Coker.)

Schiano is an ideal fit in a lot of ways -- he's continued to recruit South Florida hard while at Rutgers -- but it's a big step up from running a long-time Big East doormat to a long-time national juggernaut. Miami may prefer someone more experienced.Obviously, Miami has the cachet to attract some very big names. The question is, will it be able to afford one? Despite all those national titles, the 'Canes do not do overly well attendance-wise at the Orange Bowl and are not as well-funded as many of the nation's elite programs, and it's already going to cost the school an arm and a leg to buy out Coker after it just gave him a fat contract extension last year.

For the right price, Miami could probably land someone like Tommy Tuberville (a former Miami assistant under Jimmy Johnson and Dennis Erickson) or Rich Rodriguez, or perhaps go the Pete Carroll/Charlie Weis NFL route. If Miami gets rebuffed, or if it can't afford it, expect Schiano's phone to be ringing. (Note: Schiano's spot on the call list could rise exponentially if Rutgers beats Louisville and/or West Virginia this season.)


Wisconsin State Journal: The former coach and current athletic director at the University of Wisconsin, Barry Alvarez, interviewed for the Miami job in 1995, turned it down in 2001 and, if Coker is eventually fired, can expect a call as long as Donna Shalala is president at the school.

Shalala, the chancellor who hired Alvarez at UW in 1990, has great respect for the way Alvarez turned around the UW program.But even though people close to Alvarez say he misses coaching, there are some good reasons why he won't end his one-year retirement to be the next coach at Miami: As AD, he's already got a good-paying job that doesn't include the day-to-day stress and 24/7 work week of a coach. Plus, he has a successor, Bret Bielema, who appears capable of keeping the football program - and the athletic department - in fine shape.

Dry runs have indicated Alvarez is going to be a natural as a game analyst for Fox when it televises the Bowl Championship Series in January and he likely will parlay that into a lucrative TV contract for next season.With apologies to the governor, he's the most high-profile public figure in Madison, a status he seems to enjoy. And he's surrounded by his entire family - wife, children, grandchildren - in a place where he's lived for almost 17 years.The Hurricanes might have more interest in other coaches, especially Davis, who recruited the talent Coker won with before leaving for a short, ill-fated stint in the NFL.

Dee might still be mad at Alvarez because he felt Alvarez used Miami to get a raise at UW when he rejected the school's $1.4 million-a-year offer in 2001.At 59, Alvarez would lack the energy to resurrect another program, although resurrect might be too strong a word for Miami, which recruits top-10 talent almost by default.


Miami Herald: If Larry Coker is fired after this season (which is expected to happen if the program's downward spiral continues), Miami intends to conduct a national search, and Butch Davis and Rutgers coach and ex-UM assistant Greg Schiano would be among those considered, several UM officials said in the past week. UM also would consider two others with UM ties -- Auburn's Tommy Tuberville and Georgia's Mark Richt -- but there's skepticism about whether either would leave their programs.

Former Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez, who drew UM's interest when Davis left, likely would not be a candidate, and defensive coordinator Randy Shannon would be an unlikely choice, highly-placed UM officials said.

There's no front-runner yet if Coker is fired. Davis has some internal support, but it's not universal -- one top UM official wasn't impressed with his work in big games at Miami.
Davis, who coached Miami from 1995 through 2000, left on strained terms because Hurricanes officials thought he was staying when he took the Cleveland Browns job. But that's not much of an issue now.

Word in the NFL is Davis would love to coach the Dallas Cowboys if Bill Parcells retires. But if that doesn't materialize, he would have interest in several college jobs, including UM and North Carolina, though UM's strengthened admissions standards (which concerned Davis when he left) could be an issue. Davis told his employer, NFL Network, he won't do interviews about UM.


The Playmaker chimes in: Regarding Coker, ex-Canes star Michael Irvin on Monday told Dan Patrick on ESPN Radio: "It's time to make a change. I'll call Larry and apologize to him later. You lose two games a season in Miami, it's bad. And you've already lost two? . . . Look for this to be a tough year.'"

allCanes.com UWIN Winners - 9/20/06

allCanes has pulled the UWIN winners for Wednesday September 20th.

Today's winners are:

> George Patten - Palm Bay, FL - allCanes Gift Card
> Leonard Cremia - Ft. Myers, FL - allCanes Gift Card
> Andrew Timmons - Austin, TX - iTunes Gift Card

Winners will be officially notified today and gift cards will be sent out first thing next week.

Congrats to our UWIN winners today and for those of you yet to sign up, click here to officially enter the 2006 allCanes UWIN Contest.


(Note: Registering once makes you eligible for every drawing during the 2006 season. Multiple entries will be deleted.)

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

allCanes Helps Alums Put On Game Face On Louisville Trip


CORAL GABLES, FL - The University of Miami Alumni Association and the Golden Canes made the trip with the Hurricanes last weekend as UM took on the Louisville Cardinals and allCanes was right in the thick of things.

The Alumni group hosted a pregame tailgate party outside the Howard Schnellenberger football complex at Papa John's Stadium. Several hundred Canes' fans from the Midwest region attended as well as a loyal group of followers from South Florida.

General Manager Harry Rothwell and his staff set up a mini-retail store in a tent during the festivities and Canes fans had a great time browsing and buying the latest in Canes fashion to get ready for the clash with the highly-ranked Cardinals.

"We love going on these trips," Rothwell said. "Our motto is 'Have Canes, Will Travel'. Not only do we see great football, but it gives us a chance to visit and get feedback from our mail order customers and Canes fans around the nation. It was great to see so many of our customers in Louisville."

"We're extremely grateful to Donna Albride and the entire UM Alumni Association staff for inviting us to be a part of what turned out to be an outstanding event. While the result on the field was not what any of us expected, we know our Canes and Head Coach Larry Coker will turn things around and have another successful season."

Monday, September 18, 2006

allCanes.com UWIN Winners - 9/18/06

allCanes has pulled the UWIN winners for Monday September 18th.

Today's winners are:

> Natasha Soto - Miami, FL - allCanes Gift Card
> Kenneth DiCredico - Andover, MA - allCanes Gift Card
> Wendell Harris - Miami, FL - Big Cheese Gift Card

Winners will be officially notified today and gift cards will be sent out first thing next week.

Congrats to our UWIN winners today and for those of you yet to sign up, click here to officially enter the 2006 allCanes UWIN Contest.


(Note: Registering once makes you eligible for every drawing during the 2006 season. Multiple entries will be deleted.)

Saturday, September 16, 2006

You can't have it both ways...

There was another point weighing on me earlier, but I didn't want it to get lost in the last lengthy blog. This comment needs a place of its own.

Coker supporters oft say that his Canes are "winning with class" and that his impact is being felt on the field and in the classroom, as Miami is churning out quality young men.

Being that Miami's only won 2 of their past 6 games, I can hardly remember 'winning' at all - let alone, 'winning with class.'

That said, the whole notion is a complete farce.

Classy teams don't roll into an opposing stadium and disrespect the competition the way Miami did today.

Stomping the Cardinals' logo was a feigned effort to rally the troops here. I'm not even saying it backfired. The Canes were getting whipped today whether they stomped the logo or not. Poor game planning by this coaching staff was much more offensive than the actual pregame actions.

My point is that the whole 'winning with class' notion is way blown out of proportion.

Not only did Miami eat crow today - but they ended last season's debacle against LSU in similar fashion. Trash-talking and jumping around before the game, getting worked 41-3 over the next sixty minutes and the throwing hands with the Tigers, in the tunnel after the game.

Over a four game span, those are two rather embarrassing displays by Coker's supposedly squeaky-clean bunch.

'Swagger' isn't rolling into an opponents stadium and doing the 'jump around' on their 50-yard line. That's plain foolish. Especially if you get your ass kicked over the next few hours.

The old Canes had that bravado - but they more than walked the walk after talking the talk. Today's display was infinitely worse than anything I've seen in the past. If you're going to disrespect a team pregame, you better be on the winning end of that 31-7 ball game.

As if the theatrics aren't bad enough, Coker's bunch have also earned a reputation of being quitters. They folded up the tents against LSU and it appears the Canes packed it in midway through the second half today. Did all the kids give up? No. But the aura of this team was that of a bunch of quitters. How can this team continuously lose big games, not score in the second half and not have one kid step up and say, "enough already" and make a friggin play?

It's hard to give Miami the benefit of the doubt when a back-up running back and back-up quarterback are taking it to the Canes' vaunted defense.

Oh yeah, as for Coker the disciplinarian... this team currently has a wide receiver in limbo (Ryan Moore) for choking out a female bar patron - as well as a few other players who received suspensions for academic reasons.

Point being, Coker's ace in the hole has always been the fact that he's fielded classy teams and even that appears to be in jeopardy after today.


.:Canes305:.

Random thoughts on Miami/Louisville 2006

>>> This one is going to sting for a while. Not because it was Louisville. Not because Miami lost 31-7. Not because the Canes are sitting at 1-2 for the first time in almost a decade. This one stings because of how far Miami has fallen since its level of dominance 2000-2003. You really want to depress yourself, go back and watch the 2002 Rose Bowl tonight. We are eons away from the program we were then.

>>> Several visions danced in my head as Miami stomped out the Louisville field logo after warm ups. I saw ghosts of Hurricanes past - remembering defiant acts like the 200+ yards in penalties in the 1991 Cotton Bowl. Seconds later, I remembered a 'fired up' bunch of Canes entering the Georgia Dome for last year's Peach Bowl against LSU. I wasn't sure which Miami team showed up to talk some pre-game smack and I gave the Canes 50/50 odds in the 'all bark, no bite' category.

>>> If I could ask Larry Coker and Rich Olson a question today, it would be, "what was our game plan against Louisville?" This is the third week in a row I've watched the Canes and wondered what the hell that team is doing out there. You could SEE the Louisville game plan on both sides of the ball. Exploiting Miami's man coverage on defense. Blitzing Kyle Wright from all angles - and mixing up which defenders they were going to rush. It kept a weak Hurricanes offensive line completely off balance. The Cards had a game plan, but a day later I still can't tell you what Coker, Olson and Shannon drew up going into the biggest game of the season.

>>> It's only fitting that Darnell Jenkins, this team's biggest offensive threat, is sidelines for 3-4 weeks. If Miami didn't have bad luck, it wouldn't have any luck at all.

>>> Why was Greg Olsen spending the majority of his day blocking? Yeah, I know that the line is weak and that they need help - but this is a big time TE here. Olsen needs to be an offensive weapon, either catching balls or drawing the double team and leaving another receiver open. That said, #82 - when a third down pass hits you in the mitts, you HAVE to catch it. For all the hype, sadly I remember more Olsen miscues than I do stellar catches. Olsen has 8 catches for 79 yards - not against Louisvile, but on the entire season. That's sad.

>>> Olson and crew need to figure out when to use particular backs. Up 7-0 in the red zone, Tyrone Moss is your running back, not Charlie Jones. I'd say that whether Jones fumbled or scored the touchdown. Moss is the best blocking back this team has. Neither Jones or Javarris James can hold their own back there yet. Let both Jones and James get their carries midfield - especially with James' ability to break one. But deep in Miami or Louisville territory? Stick with your best blocker and downhill runner, Tyrone Moss.

>>> Anyone questioning Bobby Petrino's offensive scheming, look no further than what he's done with his back ups. The Cards back up QB and RB found a way to score 14-0 against the Canes' vaunted defense. Petrino was continuously one step ahead of Shannon. Watching the game, there were times everyone swore a run was coming and Louisville threw. The two final Cardinals' scores were brilliant. Louisville 'took what the defense gave them' and capitalized.

>>> Regarding Miami's defense, how can you play man coverage and STILL not get pressure on the quarterback? All I heard this off season was how deep Miami's defensive line would be. Where's the pressure? Baraka Atkins? Brian Pata? Calais Campbell? Eric Moncour? Kareem Brown? How could these guys not penetrate the Louisville offensive line with a back up QB and RB in the game?

>>> Kyle Wright voiced his opinion before the game, stating that the Canes wanted to "kick their ass" in regards to Louisville. Today he is eating his crow like a man. He said that 'big talk' doesn't win games and admitted that Nate Harris was right; Miami is no longer Miami.

>>> Furthermore, anyone who wants to blame Wright for this loss - they are dead wrong. This kid isn't the next Ken Dorsey - but he also doesn't have 10% of the offensive support Dorsey had. As a sophomore, Dorsey was throwing to Santana Moss, Reggie Wayne, Jeremy Shockey and was handing off to James Jackson, Clinton Portis and Najeh Davenport. A year later, Moss, Wayne and Jackson were gone, but Dorsey had Andre Johnson and Willis McGahee in the mix. A year later Shockey is gone and Dorsey gets Kellen Winslow II.

Put Wright with that offensive talent and behind the 2000-2002 offensive lines and tell me that Wright sucks. Wright turned down USC and Texas to play for The U. Where do you think his career is today in 2006 had he gone to either of those programs?

>>> I shut this game off at 31-7. This is the first time I've shut off a Miami game since the Peach Bowl. Before that, I hadn't walked away from a game since 66-13 at Syracuse in 1998. I couldn't stomach watching Louisville celebrate nor could I listen to the media rip us for the pre-game antics. Had Miami won, the 'Cards stomp' would've blown over. Talk some pre-game smack, wear that U on your helmet and lose a road game, 31-7? You're giving Miami haters an open invitation to pour it on.

>>> There are rumors of a emergency Board of Trustees meeting today regarding the future of Larry Coker. I'm sure this is the first of hundreds of rumors we'll win this season. We'll see how is all plays out. I can't see Coker fired mid-season, but stranger things have happened. Paul Dee is already in hot water over the Ferne Labati lawsuit, the Perry Clark firing and Coker's extention. Firing Coker midseason is an admission that the extention was a bad idea. In an attempt to save face, I believe (for now) that Coker is here through 2006 and anything less than a BCS game results in his firing.

>>> Regarding past coaches - has anyone called Butch Davis yet? What did Greg Schiano think when he saw "Louisville 31, Miami 7" scroll buy on the ticker? What about Dan Werner and Art Kehoe? You think seeing the Canes getting worked helped them get over Ole Miss' 31-14 loss at Kentucky? I can only imagine ol' Donny Soldinger watching this debacle at home on the tube. Running backs fumbling and whiffing on blocks? If Sol was dead, he'd have rolled over in his grave.

>>> A quick note to my Seminoles bretheren - before you start blowing up my Inbox and text messaging me, you might want to wait until the clock hits 0:00 on your game. The only saving grace for me last night was seeing Clemson upset Florida State in Tallahassee. I called for a 19-16 Tigers win in my blog yesterday, but I'll take 27-20. I can just imagine the look on my buddies faces (yeah, Molbes and Savage, I'm talking about you) as Clemson drove the field and scored in the final seconds. Sorry guys, but BOTH our programs are in a world of hurt right now. Florida beating Tennessee late - that makes matters even worse. Don't sweat it, though. The Gators face LSU, Auburn and Georgia in October. The Urban Legend won't escape that run unscathed.



.:Canes305:.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Canes305 Looks at this Weekend's Top Games


Somebody's gonna fall on Saturday. A few upsets are brewing and a handful of marquee teams are about to get tested. ESPN is billing it as "Separation Saturday." I'm asking, who's "all in"?

Yesterday I blogged that Miami's Kyle Wright had some choice statements for Louisville. By drawing that line in the dirt, I was saying that Wright was "all in" with his Canes. This is a Texas Hold 'Em weekend for college football and a lot of teams will have bet it all on one hand.

1-1 Miami has a point to prove at Louisville. Is Nebraska back? A win at #4 USC could prove it. The Noles beat the Canes but then struggled against Troy. How will they fare against Clemson? The Tigers are 0-1 in the ACC. Another conference loss and they can kiss Jacksonville goodbye.

The SEC steals the spotlight this weekend. In the East, Urban Meyer hasn't won a big road game yet at Florida. Does he bring one home this weekend? #4 Auburn hosts #6 LSU in the West, in a rivalry that recently has been decided in the fourth quarter.

There are some serious "can't miss" games this weekend:


[5] #19 Nebraska @ #4 Southern Cal - This one was a toss up. I could've put #11 Michigan @ #2 Notre Dame, but I like the Reggie Bush sub plot this week. Plus, it's fun to leave the Irish out of any Top Five.

Do the Trojans really care about #5 losing his Heisman or any future sanctions taken against the school? No. They want to go out this week and get it done. Nebraska looks good, but they've played nobody (my condolences to Louisiana Tech and Nicholls State.)

USC smacked up Arkansas a few weeks back on the road, but it's not like the Razorbacks are anything to write home about. This game will challenge the Trojans and ol' John David Booty. Especially if NU channels the ghosts of "Blackshirts" past. Sure, Nebraska has the #11 ranked defense - but again, they played two soup cans. The Huskers' offense can make some plays, but against the Trojans' defense? USC is a little banged up on that side of the ball - making things a little more interesting.

Southern Cal should beat Nebraska by 10-14 points, but at this point of the season - on national TV - this has the feeling of a game which could sport some fireworks.

Hoping the Huskers can pull it out, but logic forces me to pick the home team.

>>> Southern Cal 31, Nebraska 21


[4] #7 Florida @ #13 Tennessee - This one all comes down to which Tennessee shows up. The one who rolled Cal or the crew that struggled against Air Force? Florida is finding some balance and they're looking pretty good. That said, they've played nobody.

Here's another game where you can throw the stats right out the window. These two squad hate each other, though the rivalry isn't as fun without visor-throwing Satan Spurrier on the sidelines. Still, there will be fireworks.

Can the Urban Legend finally win a big one on the road? This is Knoxville, not some Utah road trip. And what about Fulmer? Big boy has been on the hot seat a while now and a win over the hated Gators will certainly silence the critics.

The Vols' offensive line will have to continue to give Ainge a day and a half to throw the ball... which is no picnic against this Florida defense.

Need a little more drama? The lesser ranked team has prevailed the past few seasons. Will the trend continue? I'll bite and say, hell yeah. We've seen home teams falter on the main stage. That streak can last one more year.

>>> Tennessee 23, Florida 21


[3] Clemson @ #9 Florida State - This one isn't going to get too many headlines as the Tigers are unranked, but growing up a Canes fan - I'm a sucker for Bowden, Sweet Bowden. Little Tommy has risen up on dad as of late. Can Clemson work that magic again? We'll see.

Florida State's defense is legit, but the offense is porous. Lo-Lo Booker can sure run his mouth, but he hasn't been running the ball as of late. (6 carries for 18 yards against the *mighty* Trojans of Troy?)

Clemson looked good against Boston College last week and they blew a golden opportunity. How will they respond? The Canes ripped their guts out in a triple overtime loss in 2005 and it sent Clemson reeling. Will that be the story in 2006, or can CU put a heartbreaking loss behind them and rise up against a long-time ACC power?

You hate to say 'do or die' - but if the Tigers go down 0-2 in the ACC standings, they can write off representing the Atlantic division in Jacksonville this December. This game will define Clemson's season.

James Davis is running the ball well for the Tigers and C.J. Spiller looks like the real deal. That said, the Noles' front seven is the real deal (as Miami can attest.)

This will be vintage Noles. Mickey Andrews will have his defense harass Clemson QB Will Proctor. How will Clemson respond?

This one will be close and down to the wire. Based on Florida State's lack of a running game, the loss of mojo last week and the fact that the Tigers need this game more... I'll scream upset, yet again. Spiller's special teams returns could be a deciding factor.

>>> Clemson 19, Florida State 16


[2] #17 Miami @ #12 Louisville - Would this be #2 on everyone else's list? Probably not. Then again, those who saw the 2004 throwdown between these two squads might argue otherwise. Down 24-7 at the half, the Canes rallied to a 41-38 victory.

Miami has their backs to the wall right now. The past five times that's been the case (underdogs), Miami is 5-0. Many are pointing to last year's 27-7 win at Virginia Tech... but this Louisville team is much more potent on offense. The Canes' defense will have their hands full. Brian Brohm is the real deal. Unlike that fraud, Marcus Vick.

The Canes are still unproven on offense, but as we know - all it takes is one game to break things wide open. The Cardinals are hardly a defensive juggernaut, though they're stronger now than they were a few years back.

Louisville is averaging 60.5 ppg; albeit against the likes of Kentucky and Temple. Something tells me that Miami's defense will 'bring it' a bit more than the Cards' other foes. Miami's defense is for real. All those who harp on the 38 given up to UL in 2004? Remind them that N.C. State and North Carolina each put up 31 the next two weeks. The Canes were weak at LB and Bobby Petrino exposed it, giving the Wolfpack and Tar Heels a blueprint for how to score on The U.

The key to this game? Miami's ability to run and control the clock. Canes fans are clamoring for super-frosh Javarris James. He's not the answer this week. The U needs a steady diet of Tyrone Moss and Charlie Jones. Miami doesn't need flash. It needs to move the chains. Moss and Jones need to grind it out and keep the Louisville offense off the field, while keeping Randy Shannon's defense fresh.

Both teams need this game. The Miami demise is a hot topic, while Louisville has been labeled a team who can't win the 'big one'.

My call isn't blatant Miami homerism. I will call out The U when need be. The Canes defense asked the offense for 21 points, and Miami's QB Kyle Wright is taking this one personally. Can this be his Matrix-like transformation into the next Hurricane great? Or was his rant this week on the Dan LeBatard show nothing but hot air?

We'll find out on Saturday. With the Canes 5-0 in underdog games and the Cards never winning the big one, I'll stick with my boys here.

>>> Miami 27, Louisville 20


[1] #6 LSU @ #3 Auburn - By ranking alone, this HAS to be the weekend's biggest game. Two hard-hitting and high octane SEC foes? How can this not be more action-packed than last week's #1 vs. #2 match up between Ohio State and Texas?

The last few times these two have met, the victor has prevailed by three points or less. Will this one shake down the same way? Quite possibly.

Auburn's defense has gotten after opposing quarterbacks the past few weeks. How are they going to handle JaMarcus Russell? Big boy has had a day and a half in the pocket thus far this season, but LSU wasn't facing an Auburn defense. The Tigers' offensive line has lost a step since 2005, but they can still rise to the occasion.

Auburn's Kenny Irons ran like a madman in last year's contest. 218 yards and a touchdown, to be exact. Will that be the case again?

The past two years neither team topped 20 points. That could be the case again this year. A low scoring affair with two powerful place kickers deciding the outcome; Auburn's John Vaughn and LSU's Colt David.

I like homefield advantage and Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville as the difference makers.

>>> Auburn 19, LSU 17




.:Canes305:.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Wright to push back...

Nate Harris spoke. Miami listened. Kyle Wright responded.

A guest on The Dan LeBatard Show (790AM) earlier today, LeBatard grilled Wright about the current state of the program and Saturday's matchup sending #17 Miami to the Bluegrass State to take on #12 Louisville.

The following exchange occurred (click here to listen)

LeBatard: He (Nate Harris) said Miami's not what they used to be. That Louisville player is now not being allowed, by Bobby Petrino, to speak to the media before this game. I thought he just told the truth, Kyle. This program isn't where it has been in recent years. Did you get bent out of shape by his comments?

Wright: Anytime somebody comes out in the media and basically 'tries' your whole program, of course you're gonna get bent out of shape. You know? We've been challenged.

We'll be there Saturday. They just need to make sure they show up.

We're gonna go out and play Miami Football. We didn't come out and have a great game the first game. To me, what's gonna define our team is how we're gonna respond from that.

We're not gonna let some kid from Louisville - who couldn't get into Miami; determine how we're gonna go out and play. Of course it gets you fired up, but it has no effect on me. We want to go out and kick their ass.

LeBatard: You sound pissed...

Wright: I'm just tired of people writing us off - and part of that's our fault. When someone disrespects your program, your players and your coaches - of course you're gonna take offense to that.

It was the perfect response. Now he has to back it up.

What Wright did here was bold. All those who piss and moan about this team lacking a solid leader? Someone just stepped forward.

A comment like this will be attached to Wright from this date on - win or lose on Saturday.

If he plays like garbage, there will be some serious crow to eat and he'll feel the pressure like never before. The City of Miami loves a bold statement, but doesn't forget a promise like this. Cane fans can be brutal if one of their own speaks out and then doesn't deliver.

But if Wright comes to play, wakes this offense from a three year slumber and lights up Louisville?

Look out, this thing is finally going to come together. Kyle Wright just went 'all in' with his bet. Everything is riding on this hand. Put this game on his shoulders Saturday, come away with a win, earn a place in history and set Miami up for a nice little five week stretch.

Bye week. Houston. North Carolina. FIU. @Duke. 6-1 heading into a revenge-fueled Georgia Tech weekend (10/28) while watching others in the polls drop like flies.

Things should really fall into place with a win this weekend. The Canes will in the thick of it come November, when the real season begins. The home stretch. An area where Miami has to prove itself.

Since joining the ACC, the Canes are 5-3 these past two years in November and December games - fueling the venom spewed by Coker's Hater Nation.

If you ask me, all the focus and chit-chat about Coker? Displaced. LC will coach this team throughout the season - win or lose. He's not getting canned mid-season at 1-2. Not with four pushovers leading up to Georgia Tech. This team could sleepwalk its way to 5-2. Any Coker drama will be dealt with in January 2007. No, the focus here isn't Coker. It's all about #3.

Coker needs Wright to not be wrong. The coach needs his quarterback to make today's comments a reality come Saturday.

Wright needs to use this opportunity to finally become that 'next level' Miami quarterback. Get that signature moment; like Ken Dorsey in 2000 - down by four with one minute to change history, knocking off #1 Florida State.

Dorsey had his bad game a few weeks earlier, losing at Washington, 34-29. He had to stew on that like Wright has had to endure this recent Florida State loss. Dorsey started his legacy that day against the Noles, 27-24.

On a smaller scale, Wright gets a similar chance this weekend.

#12 Louisville is no #1 Florida State. But Miami was on the up in 2000 when they knocked off the best and that was just the beginning of something special.

Right now, the college football world thinks the downward spiral is in full force if Miami gets worked here. They're right. There is nowhere else to hide if the Canes lose this game. It's all out on the table.

Get whooped by LSU? OK. Fire the majority of the staff and bring in some solid new guys.

Start the season with a 13-10 loss to an arch-rival and conference rival? Not good.

Scoreless in the second half, no halftime adjustments and beaten in the fourth quarter at home? Even worse.

Seriously, how can that seat not be hot?

Still, it'll get a-whole-lot-cooler for Coker if Wright can go out and be 'that guy' this weekend. A big win can quickly erase the memory of a recent loss.

I think this game is going to be the sleeper of this weekend. Miami's pissed and Louisville's standing its ground. This one is going to provide some highlights. It's not the marquee matchup of LSU at Auburn, but people are taking even more notice.

Is Miami on the ropes? Are the Cards about to deliver that knockout blow? ESPN's Mark May is calling for Louisville to rain down 40+ on Miami's defense. I guess that's his right since The U got worked for 41 three shorts games ago.

The D has something to prove and again, I'm liking what I'm hearing out of Jon Beason. Calling out teammates for half-assing it practice on Tuesday. Everyone tightning up their game and responding on Wednesday. It's a step in the right direction.

The Beast needs to take care of his squad and Wright needs to come out and work some magic with Rich Olson's O. Everything Olson left in the playbook and not on the field against Florida State? Make it happen this week. It's time to blow a team out in the second half; not hang on for our dear lives.

Things could very well be coming together here. Wright & Beason need to do their best Dorsey & Reed this weekend. Lead this team. Be those big-time players, making a big-time plays in a pretty damn big-time game. We haven't had one special player in a while and Miami's not going to Tempe (Glendale!) without one.

The Canes are 'all in' thanks to Wright. All that's left now is sixty minutes of football.



.:Canes305:.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Take it down a notch, Nate...

Louisville linebacker Nate Harris is running his mouth this week. I was going to let it slide, but I haven't seen anyone else call him out the past 48 hours, so I'll chime in here.

For those who don't recall, Harris was 'this close' to becoming a Cane back in February 2002. Larry Coker and staff were ready to welcome the former Miami Edison High star to the program, until he went down for armed robbery. One week before high school graduation, Harris decided to pull a stick up on a few men playing checkers on a street corner.

This lapse in decision cost Harris six months in boot camp, two years at a JC in Kansas and ultimately, a shot at playing for Miami - his dream school. Two years house arrest and three years probation and boot camp were the final verdict, in lieu of a year behind bars and probation.

To his credit, Harris has finally cleaned up his image - albeit, four years too late for Miami. The 16 gold caps in his grill have been removed, the corn rows have been shorn and this Butkus Award candidate has done a full on 180 with his life. Kudos to Harris for seeing the light before it was too late.

That said, I take issue with his comments towards The U.

Harris is pissin' and moanin' this week as Miami travels to the Bluegrass state to take on Louisville. He's taking pot shots at the Canes, which go a little beyond standard bulletin board material.

Simply put, Harris is getting personal.

Regarding Miami's decision to admit troubled linebacker Willie Williams two years after snubbing Harris:

"They gave him a chance, but they didn't give me a chance. That's the big thing to me and my family, and that's what's really burning me up inside to get ready for this game.

Once I got in trouble, they never called my mom, they never called none of my parents, none of my family members, my coach. Once I got in my situation, they just left me alone and took my scholarship away . . . [but] I've put the past behind me and I'm ready for this game."

First of all, Nate - the comparisons to Willie Williams are off base. True, Williams had a checkered past and Miami gave him a shot - but he had kept his nose clean for years before coming to Coral Gables.

Sure, he hugged a girl against her will in Gainesville and set off a fire extinguisher - and while stupid, both can be chocked up to high school hijinx. As for his prior record, Williams had stolen some car stereos and pulled some other childish stunts.

It's a wee bit different from jacking two men on the side of the road months after Miami had already extended a scholarship your way. Your refusal to see it that way is nothing more than sour grapes.

Everyone feels Harris is reformed, but part of turning things around is knowing when and where to blame ourselves. This displaced frustration towards the University of Miami is off base. Harris needs to look in the mirror and truly understand why his scholarship offer was revoked. Miami didn't turn its back on him. He turned his back on Miami when he pulled a gun on two innocent men.

Harris' comments don't end there. The standard bulletin board fodder is there as well with comments like, "Everybody knows they're not the Miami team they used to be. They still have their swagger... they still have great players, but they're not producing the way they used to."

Maybe not, Nate... but why not wait until Sunday morning to make those comments? Beat Miami this weekend, make some plays and you can talk for a lifetime. Shooting off your mouth beforehand? Why even give an underdog something to ruffle its feathers about.

True, Miami has dropped off a bit the past few seasons. We can't argue that. But you also know that this sleeping giant can awaken from a slumber at any given moment. We're still the Canes.

Last year the college football community turned its back on Miami the week of the Virginia Tech match up. The result? The Canes' most complete game in three years - a dominating 27-7 beat down.

If there's ONE program out there which other teams shouldn't start a war of words with, it's The U.

I give Nate Harris all the credit in the world for his turnaround. He deserves all the success and praise coming his way right now. He's living proof that people can change and for the record, I do wish he was a Cane. I also wish Willie Williams had learned a little something about flipping the script. Harris would've been a good role model.

That said, a kid from the streets of Miami like Harris should know better than to blame the program or take cheap shots at the Canes lining up across the field from him this coming Saturday.

'"Yes, we take it personally,'' UM receiver Darnell Jenkins said.

"That makes everyone on the offense be like, 'Who is this guy to be talking about us like that when we haven't played the game?' So that makes a bull's-eye on him. Everyone is after him, even me. He criticized us real bad. We took that personal."

Yet one more interesting subplot when #17 Miami heads to #12 Louisville this weekend. Tune in at 3:30pm ET to see how it all plays out.


.:Canes305:.

allCanes.com UWIN Winners - 9/13/06

allCanes has pulled the UWIN winners for Wednesday September 13th.

Today's winners are:

> Ryan McCarty - Lawrenceville, GA - allCanes Gift Card
> Stephen Livingston - Palm Beach, FL - iTunes Gift Card
> Crystal Canfield-Zerpa - Miami, FL - Bed Bath & Beyond

Winners will be officially notified today and gift cards will be sent out first thing next week.

Congrats to our UWIN winners today and for those of you yet to sign up, click here to officially enter the 2006 allCanes UWIN Contest.


(Note: Registering once makes you eligible for every drawing during the 2006 season. Multiple entries will be deleted.)

Monday, September 11, 2006

Five Long Years Since 9/11

Five years ago the AP photo above ran on some sports sites. I can't recall which, but the shot of our beloved Orange Bowl with our flag at half mast remained indelible in my memory.

I saved the pic and figured I'd use in an article somewhere down the line.

Now's the time.

Five years ago today the biggest tragedy on US soil occurred. Five years later, people are still recovering; though some wounds are never going to heal.

There is little light I can shed on 9/11 which you won't see on countless documentaries this week. Katie Couric and the CBS Nightly News will obviously roll out something big, her second week on the job.

As for this day in Hurricanes history, Miami was 2-0 on the season - year one in the Larry Coker era. A 33-7 win over Penn State and 41-0 shutout of Rutgers had the Canes sitting pretty at #1 in the nation.

September 11th fell on a Tuesday in 2001 and Miami was four days away from a rematch against Washington in the Orange Bowl. The same Huskies team who blemished the Canes unbeaten campaign in 2000, keeping The U out of the championship game and the same bunch to end Miami's 58-home game win streak back in 1994.

Safe to say, the Canes had this game circled on the calendar.

Terrorism struck home and all college football was cancelled on Saturday September 15th - when the photo above was taken. Instead of almost 80,000 cheering Miami on to victory against Washington - the sacred stadium was eerily silent, as was a wounded nation in mourning.

The Canes endured a 19-day layoff between the Rutgers win and an eventual 43-21 Thursday night victory at Pittsburgh on September 27th. Miami would eventually take down Washington 65-7 on November 24th en route to a 12-0 season and the program's fifth National Championship.

Five years ago all was well at The U. Coker had taken over for Butch Davis, the team was full of vocal leaders (Ken Dorsey and Ed Reed still prove irreplaceable) and the Canes were 12 games into what eventually grew to a 34-game win streak.

Five years later, Coker's bunch is 52-10 in this post-9/11 era and by the reaction of some fans, you'd think this record was as big of a tragedy.

I admit that I'm the first to be critical of Miami's 23-9 record in our past 32 games. It's far cry from Coker's 31-1 mark the first 32 times he took the field as the Canes' head coach. Still, on a day like today coaching records seem rather meaningless. As does the loss to Florida State and any nervous energy regarding this weekend's trek to Louisville.

Keep it all in perspective, people. As cliché as it sounds, there are things more important than college football.

While that statement might not ring true the other 364 days of the year - on the five year anniversary of 9/11, I can't think of anything more poignant.

God bless all those who are still hurting today.



.:Canes305:.

allCanes.com UWIN Winners - 9/11/06

allCanes has pulled the UWIN winners for Monday September 11th. Today's winners are:

> Sony Patterson - Morrison, TN - Best Buy Gift Card
> W. McCullough - De Leon Springs, FL - allCanes Gift Card
> Olga McDonaugh - Davie, FL - allCanes Gift Card

Winners will be officially notified today and gift cards will be sent out later this week.

Congrats to our UWIN winners today and for those of you yet to sign up, click here to officially enter the 2006 allCanes UWIN Contest.


(Note: Registering once makes you eligible for every drawing during the 2006 season. Multiple entries will be deleted.)

Sunday, September 10, 2006

"Respect It!" Hits The Big Time...

The largest-ever college football audience tuned in for last week's Miami/Florida State match up. ESPN has reported that the Labor Day game drew an average of 6,330,000 households on both ESPN and ESPN2. The 6.9 rating made is the network's second highest-rated college football game - behind a 7.7 rating for Florida State at Miami on Oct. 8, 1994.

The monster-sized audience which tuned in for this classic rivalry were also treated to a preview of THE shirt for Hurricane Nation this season.

As ESPN analyst Kirk Herbstreit was picking Miami to knock off Florida State, he simultaneously held up and waved our new "Respect It!" tee. This shirt is an allCanes Original and is only available at allCanes.

Maybe next time we can get Kirk to drop www.allCanes.com on the air in an effort to help spread the word, but for now you can click here to order the new "Respect It!" tee.

Saturday, September 09, 2006

Random thoughts on Miami/FAMU 2006

I'm not going to spend much time blogging about this game here. I'm glad Miami worked FAMU to the tune of, 51-10... though I am still frustrated we gave up 10 points to the mighty Rattlers.

I didn't get to take in this entire game as ESPN opted out of GamePlan and threw it on ESPN360. I have a 60" plasma HDTV, surround sound and a slew of games on. As much as I love my Canes, I am not going to watch this dog of a game on a computer screen when we have #1 and #2 going toe to toe tonigth - as well as a slew of other stellar match ups.

From what I saw, the running backs looked good. Even ol' Derron Thomas got 100+ yards as the fourth string back. That said, this was FAMU.

Charlie Jones got his two touchdowns and Javarris James was turning heads with his elusiveness and natural ability. Again, this was FAMU. We needed that running game five nights ago against Florida State.

Tyrone Moss saw his first action since the Virginia Tech win last year, so that's definitely a plus. Glad to have the big man back and I'm sure the 20-yard touchdown run helped his confidence. We're really going to need his blocking and downhill running next weekend at Louisville.

Other than that, it was business as usual for a good Miami team playing a I-AA program like FAMU. There's really little else to say. I'm still pissed over the 13-10 loss to Florida State and I am cautious about Miami's chances in Louisville next week. Having Heisman hopeful RB Michael Bush out for the year DEFINITELY helps Miami cause, but they still have Brian Brohm throwing the ball.

This Hurricanes coaches better be ready because Bobby Petrino and staff are going to throw everything AND the kitchen sink at them next week.

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Random thoughts on Miami/Florida State 2006

The dust has finally settled on Miami/Florida State 2006. I apologize for the late posting of this column, but truth be told, I didn't have it in me to break down the game on Tuesday. I needed to digest this one a bit. I wasn't sure what I was feeling as I stumbled out of the Orange Bowl in a daze.

I don't really want to write a recap about this game. At this point, you've read all the typical columnist breakdowns of the debacle. The Herald. The Sun-Sentinel. The national columnists. Everyone's spoken their piece.

Instead, I'll share my random thoughts on this game. I spent four days in Miami, soaking up the vibe and rolled up in Little Havana at 2:00pm on game day. I got knee-deep in this one and want to share it with this blog's loyal readers.

>>> Miami fans were in rare form this past week. Everywhere I went, Canes fans were ready to talk football. Throwing up the "U hands" or talking about the match up. It was on the forefront of everyone's mind. The town seemed backed up from the LSU loss and there was general excitement entering the 2006 season.

>>> The Orange Bowl was electric on Monday night, but the real energy was outside before the game. I actually think a lot of fans shot their load. From 3:00 - 5:00pm, people were literally partying in the streets. The sun made a brief appearance, car trunks were open with stereos pumping hometown rap icon Rick Ross, beers were guzzled, horns were honked and Hurricane Nation was cranked up to 11. ESPN's College GameDay really choked by setting up inside the stadium. The special vibe outside the Orange Bowl; that's where it was at.

>>> I was disappointed Miami got the ball first. I really wanted the defense to take the field and set the tone. That said, I was even more disappointed with the three-and-out. I'd like to have seen Miami go for it on 4th and less than a yard - especially from their 32-yard line. I know conventional wisdom tells you to punt, but the Canes are conventional too often. This was a great time to make a statement with the offensive line. Let Kyle Wright push for that first down and let your team know you believe in them. Keep the crowd going and show Florida State to expect the unexpected that night.

Late in the third quarter of Saturday's Auburn/Washington State game, the Tigers pulled a fake punt on fourth and long from their own territory. WSU scored on their last possession and Auburn led 26-14. A turnover would've been a disaster and conventional wisdom would've been to punt. Tommy Tuberville threw predictability out the window. The fake punt was a direct snap to linebacker Will Herring who rumbled 42 yards for a first down. It was a backbreaker. Auburn went on to outscore Washington State, 14-0 from that point.

The Notre Dame/Georgia Tech game also featured some ballsy 4th and 1 calls. The Irish went for them, the Yellow Jackets punted when in a similar situation and we all know how that one played out.

>>> Jon Beason had some big pre-game words these past few weeks. He talked the talk and he walked the walk. He truly lived up to his "Beast" nickname on Monday night. If Miami had a Beason-like player on offense, the Canes would've beaten the Noles. I am still amazed that not one offensive player had that 'aura' about him. No one wanted to shoulder the burden, make a play or be 'the guy' that night. Many went the other route and self-imploded with boneheaded plays at the most inopportune times. Fumbled snaps on handoffs and dropped passes... I still cringe thinking about the mistakes. With Miami/Florida State - every play counts.

>>> Brian Monroe's 23-yard punt on the first drive was a killer. You can't lose the field position battle so early on in this game. The Canes basically handed the Noles a 3-0 lead. One has to wonder if Monroe will ever get it together. The more I think about him lining up at wide receiver in fall practice, the more it pisses me off. Not for a moment did I believe Monroe was going to catch a pass in this game with Lance Leggett, Darnell Jenkins, Sam Shields, Ryan Hill and Greg Olsen in the game. Monroe shouldn't spend one second lining up at WR in practice. There aren't enough hours in the day for him to work on his punting efforts. Hopefully freshman Daren Daly sees some action against FAMU this coming week. It's time to let the future see some real game experience.

>>> Leggett and Jenkins are going to do just fine this season. Both seemed to have that 'it' quality our receivers lacked last year. I believe Jenkins will be our biggest playmaker. What he lacks in overall skill, he makes up for in effort, attitude and experience. Leggett will be fine, as well. He's catching the ball with his hands - not his body. The biggest concern with our passing game is all the short passes. I understand taking what the defense gives you, but we never went deep outside of the first play of the opening series. Florida State knew early on that they didn't have to respect the deep ball.

>>> How come every time we threw the short ball, Florida State was snuffing out the play with ease - but when they ran a similar play, it seemed they got that ONE block they needed to turn a 2-yard gain into a first down? The Noles' closing speed was beyond impressive. They were all over damn near every offensive play.

>>> Why did Rich Olson continue throwing the swing pass to Shields all night when it never proved successful? I was hoping he'd pull some magic out of his 1994 playbook where he had Frank Costa throwing to Jammi German and abused defenses with the slant.

>>> Speaking of Shields... how can anyone really blame a true freshman for that late game drop? Crucial? Absolutely. A game breaker? No doubt. Still, a 3rd and 9 pass to a freshman receiver in a sold out Orange Bowl, against Florida State, down three with the game on the line? Shields never should've been in a do or die situation like that. Nor should Javarris James. The true freshman got zero carries in the first half, but was expected to enter the game late in the fourth quarter, with horrendous field position.

"Welcome to college football, JJ. We know it's your first game, but get out there and break off a 95-yarder. You've got the lineage. Become the next Edgerrin game one."

It was unfair to both those kids. They needs to be brought along slower in the first half, not thrown to the wolves late.

>>> Oh yeah, as for the conspiracy theorists and fire starters - even IF Shields caught that ball, he wasn't going more than 3-yards after the reception. I've read online that some fans felt he was due for a big gain or could've even taken it all the way a la Sinorice Moss on the jailbreak screen in 2004. Let that rumor die here and now. Shields had no chance. There were three Noles within a few yards ready to take him out.

>>> We didn't miss Ryan Moore on Monday night, but we did miss Tyrone Moss in a big way. I think back to his efforts against Florida State last year and the OT against Clemson. The kid is like a bowling ball with legs. He just seems to power over people. We needed that against Florida State. Especially in short yardage situations. He's never a threat to break one open - but as of now, none of our running backs are. We needed consistency and a strong, powerful runner like Moss in the backfield. If he's not back to form by Louisville, Miami is in serious trouble.

>>> Wright looked very solid in the first half. Composed, making solid throws, finding secondary receivers and displaying his arm strength. Olson was calling a ballsy game. The Canes threw a few times on 3rd and short, with Wright and his receivers completely in synch. The second half was bizarro world. Olson's play calling got conservative. Way too many runs on first down. Everyone knew it was going left or right to Jones. It also seemed he lacked confidence in the kids executing anything more than a basic play call.

Wright was 15-of-19 in the first half and a paltry 3-of-8 in the second half. There was no second half adjustment to throw off the Noles' defense. Conversely, Jeff Bowden deserves credit for shaking up the offense and having Weatherford throw floaters to his physical receivers. He found our weakness and exploited it. We never found the Noles' Achilles Heel.

>>> Going up 10-3 instead of 14-3 was a victory for Florida State. We had them on the ropes and could've put them away late in the second quarter. We didn't. From settling for 3 to not getting a score after the Meriweather interception - both are unforgivable. The Noles went into the locker room feeling like they won and the Canes were wondering how they were only up 7 after clearly outplaying their biggest rival.

>>> Anyone who blames Wright for not getting rid of the ball fast enough is crazy or biased. There might've been times where Wright zigged when he should've zagged, but Florida State's defense was in his face all night. Even on occasions where the offense line did their job, a RB or TE didn't pick up a blitz. Mickey Andrews did a great job disguising the blitz and confusing Wright's blockers. Wright didn't step up and make that 'big time' game changing play (oh the legacy he'd have created if he dove in for a score instead of getting clocked and sent out of bounds at the 3-yard line) - but he was hardly the problem on Monday night.

>>> The play of the game was the Weatherford to DeCody Fagg 27-yard reception on a 3rd and 10. Glenn Sharpe defended it well, but Weatherford put it where he needed to for Fagg. The Noles gained momentum there. Sharpe had a crack at an interception a play later, but didn't reel it in. Two plays later Glenn Cook dives at Lorenzo Booker's feet, misses and Booker rumbles inside the 5-yard line. None of that happens without the Weatherford to Fagg hook up; the first big offensive play of the game.

>>> Does anyone else have a Beavis & Butthead-like moment and giggle like a 12-year old when the commentators call a play where "Fagg" is involved? Of course I stopped laughing as soon as he hauled in the 27-yard pass and picked up the first down...

>>> The game-changing series of events was the 3rd and 10 from the FSU 11-yard line. Bruce Johnson deflects a Weatherford pass, Meriweather looks to have picked it off and the Canes appear to be in business on the 27-yard line. The interception is ruled off (the ball hit the ground), the Noles punt, the Canes get hit with illegal participation and Florida State winds up with a fresh set of downs and possession at their 26-yard line.

It reminded me of the Miami blunder back in 2002 where the Canes were around the same part of the field, sitting on a 7-0 lead and in position to go up 14-0. Instead, the Noles take over, the Canes commit a few boneheaded plays and it's 7-7. You only get so many chance to step on a team's throat. The Canes missed that chance in 2002, yet still pulled out the 28-27 win. That wasn't the case in 2006. A 14-3 lead was all Miami would've needed to put this one to rest for good.

>>> Miami totaled 17 yards in the second half. Did we learn nothing from the Peach Bowl?

>>> I still have faith in Rich Olson and don't think it's fair to judge his brand new offense after one game. Especially when that one game was against one of the best defenses in the country. Our second half adjustments were weak, but we also have it in our heads that we're no longer a second half team. The last time we rallied was 2004 when down 24-7 to Louisville, Miami stormed back with a 41-38 victory. Until the Canes can beat someone in the second half, the stigma will haunt us.

>>> And until we DO pull out a second half victory, Miami fans should be banned from holding up 'four fingers' at the beginning of the game's final quarter. What an embarassment. Florida State (2006), Georgia Tech (2005), Virginia Tech (2004), Clemson (2004) and Tennessee (2003) were all home losses where we could've stepped up and won the game late. We didn't. Keep those four fingers in your pocket until this team proves it can step up and win a game late.

>>> The Canes secondary will be a force to be reckoned with as this season progresses. Kenny Phillips is the real deal. Talk about a sure-fire first rounder who will bail after his junior season. His instincts are incredible. He broke up that pass to TE Caz Piruowski without even turning for the ball. He played it perfectly. Another standout was his second half tackle, stopping a sure third down conversion. The kid has 'it' and will leave Miami as one of our best safeties ever. Sharpe had a strong showing as well, especially after recovering from ACL surgeries the past few years. Meriweather is one of the nation's best, Reddick it still a stud while Randy Phillips and Bruce Johnson are going to find their groove.

>>> Was it me, or did Coker's reaction to Reddick taking out Chris Davis (not giving him enough room to field the punt) seem extremely forced? It's almost as if he reads the message board comments about him being emotionless and tried to muster up some faux anger. Conversely, you could read the frustration on Olson's face as the game progressed. Fans are losing their marbles in the stands. How can a coach look scared or emotionless during moments like that?

>>> Speaking of Coker... just once I'd like to see LC take blame for a loss instead of making comments about the team being a 'work in progress' or stating that the Canes lack playmakers and spouting off about someone needing to step off. Coach, if this team is lacking playmakers, whose fault is that? Teams take on the personality of their leader. If the head coach isn't fiery and energetic, his team won't react that way either.

>>> Random stat: The media loved to pump Coker's 53-9 record this off-season (now 53-10). Amazing how no one wants to point out that since losing at Virginia Tech in 2003 (Miami's first regular season loss since Washington 2000), Coker has since underachieved his way to 22-9. Doesn't make the fans sound so loco now, does it?

>>> As for the Noles, they deserve credit for the win and halftime adjustments. Down 10-3 in the waning moments of the 3rd quarter, Miami looked to have this one in hand. Florida State hung around, never gave up and made a few more plays than The U. Frustrating, but credit has to be given when it's due. In three of the past four games, the Canes have been out coached. They've also lost three of the past four games, two of which were in the Orange Bowl.

>>> Noles' linebacker Buster Davis is crazy good. I couldn't believe the instincts this undersized kid had. Everytime he blitzed, no one picked it up. It seemed he spent the majority of the night in Miami's backfield, either harassing Wright or snuffing out a run or short pass. Davis had more of an impact on Monday night's game than Ernie Sims and A.J. Nicholson combined in 2005. He single-handedly destroyed at least a half dozen would-be, big plays for the Canes.

>>> Regarding the game, the TV timeouts and reviews were pure hell. I've never witnessed a game with a worse flow. The new clock rules are garbage as well. Those who loathe the changes can click here and vote against the new system.

>>> I can almost live with losing to Florida State IF this team can rally around the loss and get to Jacksonville. That's the plus with a conference title game. With this rivalry, the edge will always go to the team who lost earlier in the season. Beating Miami or Florida State twice in a season is next to impossible.

>>> In closing, this truly must be the end of times because I agree with Lee Corso. His post game comments were as poignant as I've ever heard:

"Miami has not scored a single point in their last four losses in the second half. That's lousy coaching and that's lousy adjustments... I think Florida State won the game with halftime adjustments with both parts of their staff."

Sad, true and a knife in the heart. At 0-1, Coker better turn this thing around quickly. FAMU is a gimmie, but a trek to Louisville on September 16th means everything. Miami used to play what was dubbed the "Game of the Year" almost every year, which was a gusty match up with the likes of Florida State of Notre Dame.

These days, it seems we're always faced with "The Biggest Game in the Coker Era" where Larry is again playing to save his job. Last year it was Clemson (a week after the Florida State loss) and Virginia Tech, midway through the season. He passed both tests, but after losing 40-3 to LSU and now 13-10 to FSU, that noose to hang himself just got one rung shorter. ESPN's Bruce Feldman feels that a 1-2 will equal the end of the Coker Era.

Tune in ten days from now to witness history...



.:
Canes305:.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Miami/FSU postgame thoughts coming later...


The allCanes.com Blog will break down the Miami/Florida State match up later Wednesday.

I just returned from my trek to the Orange Bowl and need to check out my DVR copy of the game. As we all know, so much is missed seeing a game in person versus on TV - with commentary, replays and eight zillion different angles.

More to come in a bit... and yes, there will be some heads rolling when this one is written. Another loss where the Canes were scoreless in the second half, a lack of halftime adjustments and the second straight year with a season opening loss to the Noles?

This game recap ain't gonna be pretty. Stay tuned.


.:Canes305:.