Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Jenkins back in 2007 as well...

Yesterday we got the news that Glenn Sharpe got his medical redshirt and would head back to The U in 2007. Today we can add senior WR Darnell Jenkins to that mix.

Jenkins was injured early in 2006 and missed the majority of last season. Some thought the new regime would send the senior wide out to the NFL a year early, but Jenkins will bring his skills back to Miami for one more year.

I've seen mixed results regarding Jenkins' return and I don't get it. The Canes are weak at receiver. Make no mistake about it. Lance Leggett has been up, down and all around the few years he's been on the roster and senior Ryan Moore was suspended the majority of last year and if headed to the NFL come April. Freshman Sam Shields was a pleasant surprise his inaugural season, but one 'pretty good' season doesn't ensure success over the next few years. Leggett has a strong freshman campaign and then fell completely off the map, so Shields has his work cut out for him entering 2007.

Jenkins brings leadership to the table and he's the Canes most experienced receiver. That in itself is reason enough for excitement. He has that vintage Canes attitude, which is great for a first year kid like Kayne Farquharson, who's already talked about wanting to pick the brains of past/current Hurricanes receivers.

Here's hoping Jenkins can be this season's Andre King circa 2000. Not the most talented or best receiver in the history of Miami Football, but a little bit older, wiser and more mature than the young bucks on this squad. For a program which has struggled at wide out since 2002, these Canes need all the help they can get and having #8 back in the fold is definitely a plus.


.:Canes305:.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Thug Who?

I saw this mentioned in another blog and online this weekend and wanted to make note of it. With all the bad press The U gets from the national media outlets, you'd expect them to throw the program the occasional bone with some good coverage. Nah.

It was announced over the weekend that the University of Miami led the ACC with the most student athletes on the All-Academic Team. G Andrew Bain, OT Jason Fox, TE Greg Olsen, PK Jon Peattie, S Kenny Phillips, LB Darryl Sharpton, WR Sam Sheilds and C Anthony Wollschlager were the eight Canes who were honored.

Miami's eight selection trumped both Boston College and Duke, two programs thought to be academic powerhouses. The Eagles and Blue Devils had six each, with Florida State next in line with their four.

To be eligible, the player must have earned a 3.00 grade point average for the fall semester or have held down a 3.00 cumulative average during his academic career.

"I guess we're not a football factory anymore. We're an academic factory now," said head coach Randy Shannon. "You have to give a lot of credit to our academic staff. This university and football program attract a lot of great student-athletes that will be successful in life, and we are proud of that."

I wouldn't go as far as calling The U an 'academic factory' but Shannon's point is well taken. Miami does places a priority on academics and even football players are expected to hold down their own in the classroom, as well as on the field.

In 2005, the University of Miami recorded an 87% NCAA Football Graduation Rate. The U has exceeded the average (70% graduation rate) among football student athletes in nine of the past 15 seasons and has exceeded the national graduation rate for American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) member schools 13 of 15 years.

Miami's 84.2% AFCA graduation rate in 2004 absolutely dwarfed the national average of 58%.

Choke on that critics and haters.


IN OTHER NEWS: Miami cornerback Glenn Sharpe has been granted a sixth year of eligibility. Sharpe was the freshman corner who was jobbed on the bogus PI call on Chris Gamble, giving the Luckeyes a second chance and costing Miami back-to-back titles against Ohio State in the 2003 Fiesta Bowl.

Sharpe was a Carol City standout who came to The U with big plans as the next great corner. He suffered a season-ending knee injury seven games into his sophomore season (2003) and returned for the first two games of 2004, only to discover that the knee wasn't completely healed. Sharpe received a medical redshirt and before he could mount a comeback in 2005, he tore his right ACL during summer workouts. He spent the entire season and off-season rehabbing and getting back to playing shape for 2006.

With only two and a half full seasons of NCAA football under his belt, Sharpe has more than earned a sixth year of eligibility and will hopefully become that mature team leader who can bolster a talented and energetic Miami secondary. Welcome back, Glenn.


.:Canes305:.

Friday, February 16, 2007

Friend of allCanes.com rolling at Nissan...

PGA Tour player Pat Perez is a friend of allCanes and we wanted to wish him the best this week at the Nissan Open. Double P shot 66-69 on Thursday and Friday, putting him in great position to make a run this weekend as he searches for his first PGA Tour victory.

Some might remember that PP sported the allCanes logo on his polo last year for the Florida swing, including his 3rd place finish at the PLAYERS Championship at Sawgrass.

PP and your pal Canes305 were roommates for a few years after college and during that time, he was educated on all things related to The U through old VHS tapes, highlight DVDs and tickets to the 2002 Rose Bowl and 2003 Fiesta Bowl. Though Double P is an Arizona State alum, he's a Canes fan as well and sports his UM gear with pride.

Best of luck this weekend, brother. Bring it home.


.:Canes305:.

Monday, February 12, 2007

I like Mike...

Miami made it official and kept it in the family today hiring former linebacker Michael Barrow as it's new linebacker coach today. Barrow was a second round Draft pick of the Houston Oilers in 1993 and spent thirteen season in the NFL before hanging it up two seasons ago due to a knee injury. He spent the 2006 season as an assistant coach back at Homestead High.

Also, as expected,Randy Shannon promoted defensive backs coach Tim Walton to defensive coordinator. Rumors were flying weeks back that Walton had already moved into Shannon's office, but nothing was made official until today.

More coming later on both hires, but for now, welcome back Mike and congrats Tim.

NFL U on display at the Pro Bowl...

Here ye, here ye. Future recruits, kids that just signed with The U or those who snubbed Miami to go elsewhere. You want to see first hand why the Canes have earned the moniker NFL U? Check out yesterday's action on the NFL Network replay or just check out the box score as it was a who's who of Miami alum:

Frank Gore: 6 carries, 26 yards, TD
Devin Hester: 5 returns, 160 yards
Andre Johnson: 3 catches, 73 yards
Ed Reed: 3 tackles, 2 INT
Sean Taylor: 6 tackles, 1 forced fumble, 1 fumble recovery, 1 demolition of AFC punter
Reggie Wayne: 6 catches, 137 yards, TD

22-first round Draft picks since 2002 and four of them (Johnson, Reed, Taylor & Wayne) were on display Sunday in Honolulu. Gore and Hester were the throw ins and both delivered as well.

To this year's Signing Day bunch, get it done the next few years at Miami and your NFL day will come. To those who snubbed us, let yesterday be a lesson to you.

Ride with us or collide with us.


.:Canes305:.

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

People are finally starting to 'get it'...

I've wanted to write something on Randy Shannon for a while now, but I haven't gotten to it. I think our new coach had done a tremendous job month one into turning this thing around.

I think back to early December when I was calling for someone from the Stoops family tree. I was dead wrong.

I thought promoting from within was weak, strictly because of how it turned out last time. I wanted that 'new blood' and felt The U needed to disassociate the new era from an embarrassing five months of Miami Football.

I wasn't anti-Shannon. I just wanted a name that at least sounded like it could be an instant fix.

The day he was hired, I knew Shannon was the perfect guy for this job. The week the coaching search dragged out, I couldn't see the forest for the trees. Once the decision was made, it all made sense to me.

When Shannon talks, I believe him. When he preaches his philosophy about how Miami will become Miami again, it makes complete sense.

You want the Canes to get back to their roots? Let one of the guys who laid the foundation lead you out of this current mess. Davis was a former assistant under Jimmy Johnson and he led Miami through a probation era that would've crushed a weaker program.

Shannon is cut from that same mold and not only did he coach under Johnson; he played under him, doing so in thick of Miami's glory days.

It's been a while since this type of attitude trickled down from the top. You see a lot of JJ in him. That attitude and mindset seem to have rubbed off on Shannon.

There's a little bit of Butch Davis, as well. Especially on the recruiting front. Mix in Larry Coker's class and you have a pretty solid head of a program.

I watched Shannon's press conference today and it's a breath of fresh air. No coachspeak. No nonsense. Straightforward. Shannon has a vision. Ask him and he'll tell you all about it. Quality kids. Winners from successful high school programs. A mindset where every job is up for grabs. May the best Cane win.

That competition will either motivate you, or it'll break you.

Shannon officially signed 17 quality kids today, with a few more making it official in the coming days. He did so after one month on the job, a staff half assembled, no offensive coordinator until the final two weeks of recruiting and no defensive coordinator until next week.

Just imagine what this guy can do year two after a season which fared better than, 7-6.

Miami's fan base still seems split on Shannon. They don't want to give him his due. I think most feel so burned by the last regime and some boneheaded decisions along the way that they'll believe it when they see it.

After the last few seasons, I understand the cynicism. Still, for all the negative talk, someone occasionally does 'get it' - which is a nice change of pace.

I put off writing about Shannon these past few weeks, in the wake of Signing Day I realize it's time to start getting fired up about the direction we're headed.

I found the following post online earlier and edited it to make it sound less like a message board post:

God bless Randy Shannon. He continues to amaze me.

For years we've heard that Shannon was going to be hired away from us. Lucky for us he wasn't snapped up.

Regardless, he's a Cane now and forever. I truly believe - and the facts are there - that Shannon is the very personification of everything we hold dear.

He is a Miami guy. He's is a U of Miami guy. He's a great man and he's a great coach. Nothing he has done or said has ever made me cringe like the "blah, blah, blahs", the cliches and the inane behavior of LC these past few years.

Randy Shannon makes me proud to be a Cane in everything he has said or done since being named head coach. I thought we may have needed a marquee name to save us. I know now that he IS the right man at the right place at the right time.

I never heard much from him while he was defensive coordinator, so I had not much to guide me. His recruiting today and his philosophy is sound and is a model for the country.

If we did go 7-6 again, I have a feeling we will be there not for the lack of trying or looking stupid or be a laughing stock like we were made us to be in 2006. This is not an opinion - it's a fact. Look at the fallout after the Duke game, the collapse at Georgia Tech, the choke against Virginia Tech and the no show at Virginia.

Shannon will play the best players. Put the pedal to the metal. He will not tolerate mediocrity like LC inculcated. (Wasted players like a certain Chicago Bear, etc). When I hear people doubt Shannon or trash him at this point of his tenure, I shake my head in wonder.


I feel that Randy Shannon is home forever. I don't see that Schnellenberger, JJ, Erickson or Davis "ego disease" sending them all the NFL at some point. He seems too well-grounded and humble for that. The college game seems to suit him and he's doing it at his alma matter, in his hometown and at a place which he helped make successful in its hey day.

I believe he could be the next GREAT ONE at The U and that he could be around, helping us win for the next 20 years.


Hard to argue with that. Go get 'em, Coach Shannon. It's your team and your time.


.:Canes305:.

Signing Day... the latest

Signing Day is officially here. We'll update this post as things progress. It's late afternoon now and it seems things have quieted down a bit.

Miami's last big name guy they were waiting on was Deonte Thompson and he committed to Florida within the last hour. Par for the course, the Canes message boards are in meltdown mode... chastising the 18-year old for his decision instead of focusing on the 20 or so new additions to The U. Get your priorities in check, people.

How about what Randy Shannon was able to poach or steal back from Florida? Demarcus Van Dyke signed with Miami this morning, after verballing to the Gators back in December.

The Canes also nabbed Allen Bailey, a linebacker out of Georgia who was down to Miami and Florida and went with The U.

Regarding losing Thompson, it is what it is. Welcome to big time college football recruiting. The Belle Glade, FL product is headed to the home of the current National Champions.

In the end, Thompson proved to be caught up in the recruiting game, promising a "signing day shocker" which he delivered. Thompson had been talking up The U, wearing Miami gear, downplaying Florida, flirting with Southern Cal and in the past few days there were rumors that Florida State entered the big picture.

As of last night, Miami assistant coaches were feeling good about their chances, but as Signing Day approached, that good feeling slipped away. I'm sure more will come out on that later. Right now, it reeks of 2005 when Antone Smith played everyone like a fiddle with his last minute decision to become a Seminole.

While I'd have loved Thompson's skills at The U, I can do without these childish Signing Day hijinx and I believe coach Shannon feels the same way. I can't see him kissing ass or licking boots to get a 17-year old kid to Miami. Here's the game plan, here's his vision, get on board or get out of the way.

More to come as the day progresses, but for now, here's the official list of signees. Welcome to The U, gentlemen:

Daniel Adderley
Allen Bailey
Jared Campbell
Lee Chambers
Kayne Farquharson
Orlando Franklin
Graig Cooper
Harland Gunn
Leonard Hankerson
Tyler Horn
Robert Marve
Jermaine McKenzie
Joseph Nicholson
Adewale Ojomo
Chris Perry
Demarcus Van Dyke
Doug Wiggins

On a side note, one more big, collective "kiss my ass" to ESPN U and their lack of coverage on Signing Day. I swear to the good Lord above that in the 2+ hours I watched their worthless program, I saw absolutely NOTHING on the University of Miami.

I saw Ron Zook and heard all about Illinois. I heard more flip-flopping from Urban Meyer and stroking of the National Champs. I heard about Louisville, Rutgers, USC and a slew of other programs - but nothing on Miami. Nothing on coach Shannon taking over. Nothing on the class the Canes are putting together, the solid recruits they stole last minute from Alabama and Florida or the fact that Shannon has done what he's done coming off a 7-6 season and with only one month on the clock.

The bias continues... but I'll never get used to it or accept it.


.:Canes305:.

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

... and Flori-duh wonders why we hate them.

A bunch of idiot Gators sent me the above picture last week. I was going to comment on it days ago, but I was too busy enjoying the State of The U to let their nonsense irk me.

As we're hours away from Signing Day and Miami has stolen a few last minute recruits from Florida, I figured now was as good a time as any to address this notion that the Gators are staring at the Canes in their rear view.

Seriously, Florida faithful... do you even have to ask why we loathe you? You back into your second title in your program's history and you're ready to toss dirt on the coffins of Miami and Florida State? Please. Get over yourselves.

This decade alone, you have a title and so does Miami. You've been to one title game. We've been to two, were undefeated heading into both and were snubbed of a shot of playing for one when we beat FSU and they got to play OU.

You've been to two BCS games since 2000 and we've been to four. We've had one season with more than three losses, you've achieved that feat three times. You're 65-24 since 2000 and we're 71-16. As for talent at the next level, it's 22 to 5 regarding first round Draft picks the past seven Aprils.

I'll give credit where credit is due. 13-1 and a convincing beat down of #1 Ohio State. Florida won it all and deserves their kudos. Problem is you can't even give it to them as they're too busy stroking themselves and talking smack about everyone else.

We know the Gators are egomaniacs, hence why I was actually pulling for them to lose this year's title game. I knew what the rest of us were in for if and when they won that cute, little second title. I lived in Gainesville back in 1996 for Round I of that garbage.

Now we're all living it and are forced to hear that Year of the Gator crap after UF won the basketball title months back and now one in football.

Thank God former Florida quarterback Rex Grossman wet the bed on the game's grandest stage in last Sunday's Super Bowl.

We've come to expect the arrogance of Florida, but they cross a line when they take shots at Miami. Yes, we're embarrassed about a 7-6 season - just as I'm sure Florida was embarrassed after posting three consecutive five-loss seasons (2002-2004). Larry Coker was fired, Randy Shannon was given the keys the the program and the rebuilding process is on.

In his first month on the job, Shannon is hours from arguably Miami's best recruiting class since 1999. There are a few four and five-star kids, but there are also those kids with that 'Hurricane mentality' and the type that would run through a wall for their new coach.

Coker let things spiral out of control, but it seem Shannon will have that opposite effect. Current players are already talking about how he's making his presence felt inside the walls of the football program. It's a steady dose of fear and respect.

All of this just makes the Urban Meyer image, with Shannon in the rear view, seem that much more idiotic and delusional. Miami was stripped of scholarships during the probation era and settled on Butch Davis, the fourth choice would be head coach, to clean up the mess. A few years later a 34-game win streak ensued and the Canes were the hottest team in the nation from late 2000 through late 2002.

The image above is wishful thinking. Florida wishes Miami would go away. The piss-ant private school with 20% the student body, worse facilities and less money in the athletic department, has been a thorn in the Gators' side for three decades now. Miami has more than twice as many titles and has beaten Florida six straight times, dating back to 1986. Even as National Champions, that doesn't sit well with Florida alum. Bring it up and stand back as they're quick to lash out.

Miami isn't going anywhere by up. Florida fans might not buy it, but a few on the fence recruits sure are. As Shannon has put together a stellar class, under the gun, he's swayed some potential Gators and brought them back from the dark side.

Come Wednesday, Demarcus Van Dyke is expected to commit to Miami after verballing to Florida weeks back. Van Dyke is a four-star corner who liked the Canes early on, looked towards the Gators when Coker was fired and was won back over when seeing what Shannon has been putting together these past few weeks.

A few days ago, another Gators defect was Georgia prospect Allen Bailey. This freakish-in-size, five-star linebacker picked Miami over Florida and come tomorrow, there could be one more top-ranked baller headed to The U. Five-star wide out Deonte Thompson is supposedly deciding between Miami, Florida and Florida State. I am not ready to bust open the bubbly just yet, but two sources have told me to day that Thompson is "Miami's to lose."

Again, we'll see. I believe that stuff when the ink is dry. Two years ago Antone Smith to Miami was a done deal and at the last second he pulled the rug out from an entire fan base - and even his mama - when he chose Florida State.

Should Miami land Thompson, this will be a top ten recruiting class for a program many - especially the Gators - were ready to stick a fork in. One month on the job, Shannon has landed what many experts predict will be his "worst recruiting class" which is a tongue in cheek reference based on the job he did this year with limited time to recruit and without a full staff in place.

Just wait until late fall when Shannon is operating like a well oiled machine and cleans up the Sunshine State and the rest of the nation.

As for our Gator brethren and their lame picture, the only thing Meyer will be checking out in his rear view a year from now is the city of Gainesville after he's packed his bags and is NFL bound.

Enjoy your one year on top because Shannon's Canes will be ready to knock you off that perch in the very near future. Bank on it.


.:Canes305:.

Monday, February 05, 2007

And another one... and another one...

I swear to God, it's getting easier to be a Cane again each and everyday. Seems that every time I log on, I'm seeing some great news regarding recruiting. Sure, a few guys got away here and there, but no one Miami really expected to land.

More good news today out of Darien, GA as McIntosh County Academy LB/DE Allen Bailey chose The U today, over state rival Florida. Bailey is a five-star prospect at 6'3" and 260 lbs. He committed to Miami this morning after visiting a week ago. Yet another feather in Randy Shannon's cap.

Signing Day is Wednesday and there are still a few prospects on the fence which Miami is in the hunt for, namely Demarcus Van Dyke and Deonte Thompson. Like Bailey, both were weighing their options riding the Gators' bandwagon or being a part of the Canes' resurgence.

Other rumors are swirling that Thompson is thinking Florida State, but we'll see. It looks to be down to the Canes and Noles, making this par for the course with our annual "FSU shocker" and losing a recruit to the charm savvy of Bobby Bowden.

As expected, Jacksonville product Brandon Hicks is headed to Gainesville so here's coming the trend of 'sticking close to home' continues in the case of Van Dyke (Miami's Monsignor Pace) decides to stick around South Florida for the next few years.

Miami also got good news regarding Hoover, AL prospect Kerry Murphy. Measuring in at 6'5" and 313 lbs., Murphy was an Alabama lock who was "stunned" by his trip to The U and is now seriously considering being the next recruit to bail Nick Saban for Miami. Gotta love the irony in Bama Saban losing kids to the city he just jacked and bailed a few weeks back.

More to come in the next 48 hours, but for now let's celebrate Shannon landing Bailey. This is a huge pick up for The U.


.:Canes305:.

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Super Canes Sunday...

I loved watching a game where I had no vested interest. At day's end, I really couldn't have cared who won Super Bowl XLI. The NFL does little for me, in comparison to college football. The real reason I watch is to see former Canes and hope that they do well at that next level.

Which is the biggest reason Sunday was such a treat as both Reggie Wayne and Devin Hester were suited up and looking to make a mark on the game's grandest state. (I know Darrell McClover was on special teams for the Bears, but it's not the same as a marquee guy.)

I used to pull for Indy when they had Edgerrin James, along with Wayne, but he bailed for Arizona and I bumped Baltimore up to my #1 Canes-esque NFL franchise as I want to see Ray Lewis get #2 and Ed Reed get to the big game.

Regarding this rendition of the Super Bowl, it was as good as any Hurricane could ask for. Hester returned the opening kickoff 92-yards for the game's first score and Wayne caught the game's first touchdown pass, a 53-yarder.

On the other side of the equation, the 'Year of the Gator' seemed to come to a crashing halt when Florida alumnus Rex Grossman coughed up three turnovers, including the game-sealer - a 56-yard interception return making it 29-17 in the game's final minutes.

Wayne got his ring, Hester made it into the record books and Grossman solidified his place as one of the worst quarterback's to ever play in the Super Bowl.

Oh yeah, I also picked up a few bucks with Chicago +4 for the first half and Indianapolis -5 for the second. I love it when a plan comes together... and then the NFL's best kicker sends one wide left in the half's closing moments. Thanks, Adam.


.:Canes305:.

Saturday, February 03, 2007

Welcome to the Hall of Fame, Playmaker...

Michael Irvin was inducted to the NFL Hall of Fame today and allCanesBlog.com wants to say 'congrats' to the man we'll forever refer to as 'The Playmaker' even though he hasn't strapped it up since 1999.

I read some articles today about media members pissing and moaning about Irvin being voted in over a handful of others, most notably former NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue and former Miami Dolphins offensive guard, Bob Kuechenberg. Tags ran the NFL for 18 seasons before stepping down a year ago and Kooch helped anchor the Fins' o-line from 1970-1984.

Maybe I'm too new school for the old schoolers, but to me, Irvin's career as a wideout deserve more recognition than an offensive lineman or league commissioner. If Troy Aikman is in, how can his #1 receiver not be in there with them? Aikman retired in 2000, a year after Irvin and was inducted last season. It was the Playmaker's time.

I know a lot of folks out there don't pull for Irvin. Hell, just ask the Philly fans who booed him and cheered the neck injury which helped force his retirement.

He's brash. He's arrogant. He's a Hurricane. Hell, he embodies everything University of Miami haters loathe. Irvin is The U, which is great if you cheer for the guys in orange, green and white.

Those who didn't vote for him today will point to Irvin's off the field actions over the years. The guy did his share of blow, messed around with some hookers and had some outlandish accusations and distractions thrown his way over the years.

Should that be condoned? I guess I want to know who's doing the condoning. Sports fans? Sure. If Irvin plays for your team, you'll look past that. If he's the "enemy", you don't. We're not talking performance enhancing drugs here. We're talking about recreational crap which hurts athletes. Not something to raise his game.

Are the old schoolers really going to lambaste a guy who partied off the field? Since when did the NFL consider that a crime? How many times this week have we seen Super Bowl highlight shows where former Green Bay receiver Max McGee rambles on about his pregame escapades on the eve of the inaugural big game?

You remember McGee. The back up wide out who was thrust into the game after Boyd Dowler separated his shoulder on the Packers' second drive of the game. McGee spent the previous night in a brothel, an opium den and jail before strapping it up and catching 7 balls for 138 yards and 2 touchdowns in Green Bay's 35-10 win.

Four decades later, the old timers can get a big chuckle out of that story as if it was nothing more than harmless, frat house, jock-like fun. Let the cameras roll, the writers write and plaster McGee's face all over ESPNews for a week straight. Everyone and their mothers would chime in with their two cents and tisk-tisking of the event. The same way every has chastised Irvin for getting loaded and chasing tail in his day.

I'm not here to judge any of these athletes or determine who deserves in the Hall of Fame, but I'm also not ready to leave out The Playmaker, the ying to Jerry Rice's yang in the 90s, just because he was a little rowdy off the field.

He wasn't a cheater; he just partied harder than others. Musicians do it and win Grammys. Actors do it and win Emmys. CEOs and politicians do it and it's swept under the rug.

It's not like Irvin sliced up his ex wife, her boyfriend, almost offed himself on the 405 freeway in 'Broncogate' and jetted to Kendall for a life of swinging the wrenches on sub par golf courses during the day and drunken evenings at "Hooligan's" on Flip Nite.

Congrats, Mike. Hurricane Nation is loving this. After a horrid 2006, things are looking up in 2007. A new regime. A slew of stellar recruits. People believing in the future of The U. And now The Playmaker makes the H.O.F.

A great bit of news to carry us over 'til Signing Day.


.:Canes305:.