Monday, April 30, 2007

Update on our Bryan Pata Foundation donation...

allCanes wanted to update everyone on our involvement with the Pata family in regards to Bryan Pata.

Last fall, our loyal customer based scooped up over 1,100 of our U FAMILY shirts (with a #95 on the back for BP) over a six week span. From mid-November through December 24th, for every U FAMILY tee sold, allCanes put $9.50 towards the Pata Foundation. When we tallied everything up, just over $11,000 had been raised.

Last week our GM Harry Rothwell attended the unveiling of the new #95 locker. Pata's old locker now sports a plaque with "U FOOTBALL", his name, number and "Donated by the allCanes Family."

I spoke with Harry earlier and will recap what was a rather emotional experience, attended by Roger Bell (associate AD), Randy Shannon, Jeanette Pata (mother), Ronette Pata (sister), Josh Peskin (allCanes) and Harry. It was the Pata family's first trip back to The U since the memorial service last November and seeing the locker where BP used to dress proved very difficult for his family.

allCanes donated the $11,000 to the Pata foundation and a portion of that went to the plaque on Bryan's old locker. After the unveiling, the Pata family dropped by allCanes to reminisce.

We want to take this time to offer our heartfelt thanks to all of you who purchsed the U FAMILY shirt. For those who don't remember, we created that shirt as a pick me up for our players and coaches in the midst of a down season.


The shirt was slated to hit shelves around the time Pata was murdered and it seemed a no brainer to add his #95 to the back of this special tee. It became a rallying cry and was featured on several diehard fans in the stands for the Thanksgiving match up against Boston College.

Last week was special and on some levels, brought an ounce of happiness to an otherwise tragic story. Thank you all again for helping support this cause.


The allCanes Family

Sunday, April 29, 2007

For those who missed it, we're STILL NFL U!!

By day's end Sunday, Miami had it's fifth and final player selected in the 2007 NFL Draft. Not quite 2002 when 11 Canes were drafted or even last year when 9 were selected. Still, three first rounders in Brandon Meriweather, Jon Beason and Greg Olsen with Kareem Brown and Baraka Atkins both taken in the fourth round.

The only downer was seeing Tyrone Moss and Ryan Moore both passed on. Both had the talent, but neither seemed to have the drive or focus. Moss came to The U as Broward County's all time leading rusher and over the next few years, dealt with injuries and weight issues.Many expected a Frank Gore-like pre-Draft workout to get his weight down, but it never happened.

Regarding Moore, on the field injuries and off the field personal issues kept this once five-star recruit from reaching his potential.

With Moss, Moore and the deceased Bryan Pata, Miami should've had up to eight draft picks in 2007, but things don't always turn out as expected.

For those keeping score or questioning how many first rounders the Canes boast since the turn of the century, we're more than glad to provide you with that information:

Brandon Meriweather (2007)
Jon Beason (2007)
Greg Olsen (2007)
Kelly Jennings (2006)
Antrel Rolle (2005)
Sean Taylor (2004)
Kellen Winslow II (2004)
Jon Vilma (2004)
D.J. Williams (2004)
Vernon Carey (2004)
Vince Wilfork (2004)
Andre Johnson (2003)
Jerome McDougle (2003)
Willis McGahee (2003)
William Joseph (2003)
Bryant McKinnie (2002)
Jeremy Shockey (2002)
Philip Buchanon (2002)
Ed Reed (2002)
Mike Rumph (2002)
Dan Morgan (2001)
Damione Lewis (2001)
Santana Moss (2001)
Reggie Wayne (2001)
Bubba Franks (2000)

Those are just your first round picks. Since 2000, a grand total of FIFTY NINE Canes have been selected over the past eight off-seasons and it's now 13 years straight that The U has boasted a first rounder.

Again, choke on that, haters.



.:Canes305:.

Guess who stopped by the other day....

Good ol Clinton Portis - a.k.a. Coach Janky Spanky - was in store a few days back. He chatted it up with the allCanes crew and other customers in store. When he saw the 2001 highlight DVD playing, he got sucked in (as we all do) and relived some great Canes memories he helped created. He ended up scoring the DVD and some great gear to take back home to Washington.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Nice call, critics...

Wow. Where are the haters now? Miami underachieves their way to 7-6, the first round run was "in question" and instead, it's three picks in the first thirty-one of this year's draft -- extending this decade's streak to 25 first round NFL Draft picks.

Goes to show you the kind of talent in/talent out you see consistently at The U. With the right coaching staff, sky's the limit.

Congrats to Brandon Meriweather, Jon Beason and Greg Olsen. It's a U thing... Let's turn it around and right the ship, Coach Shannon.

Oh yeah, and for those keeping score, it was Miami (3), Florida (2) and Florida State (1) in regards to first rounders in 2007.


.:Canes305:.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Reddick sidelined for 2007...

Miami safety Anthony Reddick is sidelined for the 2007 season with a torn ACL. His second such injury in two years. His first came in the 2005 season opener at Florida State and this latest injury occurred in a pick up basketball game. Reddick underwent surgery this morning

Instead of my own rant about how our oft quick to accuse or blame fan base shouldn't blame #26 for this injury, I'll quote Sun Sentinel columnist Omar Kelly, who put it rather eloquently:

"From what I'm told Reddick tore his ACL playing basketball, which is what a lot of UM's past and present players do to keep up their conditioning in the off-season. Don't start questioning what he was doing participating in a pickup game because those games usually include NFL players who are making more in a season than some of us do in a lifetime, so they are generally VERY careful."

Between two torn ACLs and last year's suspension for his part in the FIU brawl, Reddick's spirits have to be in the toilet. No reason to kick a Cane when already down and out. Get well, #26. Hang in there.

For those worried about who will step up for Reddick, know that there are a slew of capable Canes. Reddick will be missed, but secondary is the one position where The U is pretty deep.

Willie Cooper is a viable option. Thus far, Cooper is known for getting shot in the ass and for a game saving interception at Duke last season. There's also talk of Randy Phillips moving to safety somewhere down the road due to his size an ability to hit.

No reason to jump that gun right now, but should the safety position take another hit Big 6 could make the move. Especially with the staff jacked about the addition to Doug Wiggins and DeMarcus Van Dyke at the corner position. Both are incoming freshman and are green, but should either overcome that high school to college transition, it's could help dictate Phillips' fate.

Same to be said for Damien Berry, Jared Campbell and Joe Nicolas at the safety positon. If those guys step up early (Reddick did as a freshman in 2004), that'll help dictate things as well.


OTHER NEWS AND NOTES: Randy Shannon has landed a few more verbal commitments as of late. Patrick Johnson (DB), Jeremy Lewis (DT), Micanor Regis (DT), Justin Thompson (DT), Brandon Washington (OL) and Joe Wylie (DB). I haven't spent much time covering or reporting this because I'm a skeptical Canes fan and journalist. I know these are 17-year old kids and what they believe today might not be the sam as what they feel come February 2008. That said, kudos to Shannon for what he's pulling off here.

Five of these six recruits are from south Florida, five of the six are defensive players and three of the six are defensive tackles. Shannon is proving he has the Sunshine State on lockdown, that defense is still the key to dominating again and that the defensive tackle position is vital in Miami's success.

I won't go nuts until the ink is dry on the letters of intent, but it's nice to see recruiting top talent is again job #1 at The U. Now it's time to develop it and get back to winning ways.


.:Canes305:.

Monday, April 16, 2007

God bless our Virginia Tech brethren today...

A lunatic gunman murdered 33 students and residents in Blacksburg, Virginia this morning. This bloodbath occured on the campus of our longtime rivals and is already being called the deadliest shooting rampage in American history, according to federal law-enforcement officials.

God bless Blacksburg and our Virginia Tech brethren today. This is beyond tragic, incomprehensible and disgusting. I'm not sure if I even have it in me to blog about something of this nature. There are no words in a time like this, outside of "what in the hell is wrong with our screwed up society?"Little commentary is necessary. Words feel useless and pointless right now. Seems more logical to say a prayer and think of all those impacted by this.

For more on this story, click here for a Google news search on the subject.


Future first rounder Greg Olsen drops by allCanes...

Former Miami tight end Greg Olsen dropped by for a signing session on Saturday. For those who missed out, we have some signed 8x10s available for purchase. They are high quality action shots taken by Canes' photographer J.C. Ridley.

All pics are signed with a black Sharpie - you just have to choose between the away white jersey shot or the home green.

Here's the recap from our GM Harry Rothwell:

"Greg was at allCanes from 6-7 pm on April 14, 2007. We had another great showing. There were over 50 people in line wating for #82 to arrive. Like Jon last week, Greg did a great job.

He was very friendly, personable and helped make all the customers feel great. He signed photos, mini helmets and even a guy's arm as he has the only known Olsen tattoo in existence.

Greg had his brother (Virginia quarterback) Chris with him, as well as his team of agents, Jason Rosenhaus and Robert Bailey.

We thank the players we had this year and wish them the very best. We now look forward to seeing them on Sundays. Thanks for the memories, fellas!!!!


We have plaques with name plates you can get for either player for $17.99 as well as mini helmets and jerseys. Call 800.226.4247 for pricing."


Saturday, April 14, 2007

Never too early to talk Miami vs. Florida State...

I received an email this week from Rich Halten of http://www.chantrant.com/. Rich is a Florida State grad, booster and 30-year season ticket holder. He oft checks our blog for Canes-related content and wanted to trade mini interviews with a long-time fan.

He sent me five questions related to The State of The U and I did the same regarding FSU as they just completed their spring game today.

Miami and Florida State have a healthy rivalry and for the most part, a mutual respect exists between both programs. That and we both hate Florida. Both the Canes and Noles finished 7-6 last year and made some coaching changes in an effort to reinvigorate some now stagnant and once powerful offenses.

Below are my questions to Rich and his to me. Look for more ACC rival-related features like this later this season at allCanesBlog.com. Enjoy!


How is UM different after Shannon's first spring game than it was a year ago after Coker's last spring game?


I think you see a difference in the attitude and mindset. Larry Coker and Randy Shannon are two totally different styles of coaches. I don't want to trash the old regime anymore than I already have, but I don't think there's any mystery why the Canes progressively got worse since the 2002 season. The talent wasn't being recruited and developed. Shannon preaches accountability, competition and he's a disciplinarian. The kids respect him and mildly fear him, which is a good thing.

Entering spring, the depth chart was scrapped and it was no longer and offense vs. defense battle. Shannon is promoting team unity. He has offense and defensive players interacting by creating orange vs. white teams and switching up the layout of the locker room.

Miami's spring game took place last week and par for the course, defense won the battle. I'm warning our fans not to put too much weight into the product on the field last week. I expect this team to have a completely different look and feel come fall.

Coach Shannon needs a few more months to instill what he calls a "winner's mentality" into our kids. Get 7-6 out of their heads, let them continue healing from the murder of a teammate (Bryan Pata) and get them believing they can win again.

The Canes weren't as bad as their record last year and need to learn how to finish. Several of those games down the stretch were winnable (Virginia Tech, Maryland and Virginia).


Both QBs have had their problems. Is that the biggest Achilles heel of the team, and will it seriously affect the W - L record?


A team is only as good as their quarterback. Any Miami or Florida State fan can acknowledge that as both programs have struggled a bit since the departures of Ken Dorsey and Chris Weinke, respectively. Brock Berlin. Chris Rix. Kyle Wright. Drew Weatherford. Kirby Freeman. Xavier Lee. Who'd have thought the most successful one of the post-Dorsey/post-Weinke era would be Berlin?

I think Shannon is smart for creating competition between Wright and Freeman. The depth chart won't be released until soon before the season opener and both QBs were given the gag order regarding he media. Wright basically ran the first team last week and Freeman the second. Wright is the most experienced of the two but Freeman showed the most promise at the end of last season. Wright is the hunted and Freeman is the hunter.

My sneaking suspicion is that the staff wants Wright as he's more your prototypical and much heralded QB. He has the most upside, but he's also had his share of brain farts on the field. In his defense, he hasn't has 1/3 the supporting cast Dorsey had and he's on his third offensive coordinator in three seasons. I blame Miami's old staff for their underdevelopment of Wright more than I personally blame him. He came in all world and turned down both USC and Texas to come to The U. I think he'd be a different QB had he gone to either program.

I think the key for 2007 is designing an offense based around either QB. Wright is the gunslinger and Freeman is more your scrambling playmaker-type. It's on new offensive coordinator Patrick Nix to find a way to have his quarterbacks get the ball in playmakers' hands.


With a new Offensive Coordinator, what kind of attack will we see in 2007?


I believe Nix will have that "do what it takes" mentality. Get the best players on the field and get the ball into their hands. Create mismatches. Keep opposing defenses on their toes.

Shannon went after Nix for a few reasons - one being Georgia Tech's 38-35 bowl loss to West Virginia. GT's defense let them down late, but offensively they put up five touchdowns early in the third quarter with Reggie Ball on the bench. Back up QB Taylor Bennett threw for over 300 yards and 3 touchdowns against a pretty solid Mountaineers team. That impressed Shannon. As did the fact that Nix's offense gave Miami fits and handed them losses the past two seasons. If you can twice confuse one of the nation's better defenses like ours, you're doing something right.

Miami will be stronger at WR this year as Sam Shields, Lance Leggett and Darnell Jenkins all have another year under their belt. I think JUCO transfer Kayne Farquharson is going to surprise as well. Javarris James returns after a solid freshman campaign and newcomer Graig Cooper is already turning heads. Cooper should really bolster the return game and give the Canes much better field position than we had in 2006.


Barring injury, will this be one of the more dominating Cane defenses in recent years?


It could be. I like the defensive line, led by Calais Campbell. He's the anchor. The safeties are as solid as ever with Kenny Phillips and Anthony Reddick back there. The cornerback has some experience and depth as well. Carlos Armour. Willie Cooper. Bruce Johnson. Glenn Sharpe was granted another year, Randy Phillips returns, Chavez Grant won some freshman of the year type honors and had a great first season.

Still, the key is linebacker. It's a position where Miami hasn't thrived since 2003 when Jon Vilma and D.J. Williams played their last game as Canes (16-14 Orange Bowl win over FSU). We need stability in the middle of the field and it's on guys like Colin McCarthy and Daryl Sharpton to step up and be the next great Cane linebackers. If we get production out of linebacker, this will be a consistently solid Miami defense. Absolutely.

I think Campbell's presence is also key. He looks primed to not only be the next Miami great on defense, but he also has that Canes attitude and looks like he can be an Ed Reed-type leader. Someone needs to step up and I think #81 will be the guy.


Is Shannon restoring the swagger and supreme confidence of Miami teams of old?


He is, but it'll take time. It's not like flipping on a light switch. He has to rebuild this from the inside out. There was no unity last year and I believe complacency set it the past few years. This program was hungry in the late 90s, climbed back a top the hill (2000-2003) and seemed to 'expect' the wins to roll in these past few years. Shannon is going to whip them into shape. I believe the promoting of competition will really help these kids get hungry again. 9-3 was tolerated under Coker and that led to 7-6. Even worse than the losses was the fact Miami quit on a few occasions. The 40-3 loss to LSU in the 2005 Peach Bowl. The 31-7 loss at Louisville. That's unacceptable.

I've traded emails with a handful of fans lately and we all seem to be looking for the same thing; more effort. I'm not thinking Ws and Ls right now as much as I want to see our kids busting their asses. A nine-win season is tolerable if we see improvement and effort like we did back in 1998 and 1999. We saw budding talent back then and resiliency. The '98 Canes were throttled 66-13 at Syracuse and a week later knocked off #2 UCLA, 49-45. The past few seasons Miami has struggled to bounce back from losses against the likes of second-tier ACC teams.

If Shannon gets these kids to win the battle between their ears, the 'swagger' will return. You don't win because you have swagger; the swagger comes from winning.

________________________________________________________________


Both Florida State and Miami have fallen off a bit over the past few seasons, for different reasons. It seems the Noles have never really recovered after losing Mark Richt. FSU lost some serious luster the past six seasons and legendary coach Bobby Bowden isn't getting any younger. Can this once great program experience a rebirth underneath him? Are the younger kids relating to him? Even as ACC champs in 2005, the Noles still lost a slew of games that season which they wouldn't have lost in years past.

Bobby has recommitted himself to winning at least one national championship before he hangs up the whistle. He frankly took his eye off the ball in the first half of the decade, especially with the hiring and supervision of his son. FSU was on cruise control. And Bobby appeared distant from game planning and coaching during games. Though he fought to keep Jeff as Offensive Coordinator, when a deal was finally struck to move Jeffrey to an administrative job, the spell seemed to be broken with the older Bowden.

He got the fire back in the belly. And putting his priorities in order, he fiercely dedicated himself to overhauling the coaching staff and doing whatever it took to recapture the dominant, winning ways of his teams of the 80's and 90's.


Speaking of offense - can Jimbo Fisher turn this thing around? Jeff Bowden came under some serious fire last year, much like recent Miami o-coordinators Dan Werner and Rich Olson. It sounds like Fisher is throwing everything and the kitchen sink at FSU's offense this spring. Can they grasp all this and turn it around before September?

If anybody can turn the offense around, Fisher can. He provides two very important things that have been missing: installing a high-powered attack that's not predictable, and expert teaching and development of young QBs. While Fisher's throwing a lot at them, he's patient and doesn't expect it all to stick right now. He believes players will digest the playbook and schemes over the summer and in fall drills. Probably most important, Fisher — and the other new assistants — are re-instilling a commitment that every player must do their job flawlessly.

Somebody who was part of the program the last few years told me that far too many plays that could have gained big yardage in '05 and '06 broke down because one guy missed a block, or somebody went the wrong way. Basic stuff. Fisher and company won't tolerate that.


Like Miami, Florida State has had their quarterback woes in the post-Chris Weinke era. Chris Rix wasn't the guy you expected him to be and Drew Weatherford has been hot and cold the past two seasons, much like Kyle Wright. Both programs have experimented with their back ups (Xavier Lee and Kirby Freeman) and it's seems competition is wide open at both programs. Who do you think will be "the guy" come fall and how long is his leash? It doesn't seem like QB failure will be tolerated at either program any longer.

Nobody can predict who'll win the QB derby. But at least the coaches won't be playing any favorites. The starting job will be won on the practice field. However, the leash will not be long if a starter can't get the job done. That's why I believe we'll see both QBs this year. The guy that has the hot hand in a winning performance will keep the starting job until he falters.

Fortunately, both Drew and Xavier Lee appear to be improving in areas of weakness. I will predict that we'll see third string QB Dvontrey Richardson at some point in the season — especially if Drew or X. are injured. This two-sport star (currently batting nearly .400 for the baseball team) is just too athletic a playmaker to keep off the field. Even if he suddenly appears as a running back to turn a lateral into a TD bomb.


What are your thoughts on the five and six loss seasons even though Florida State has pulled in some top notch recruiting classes? Like Miami, there's too much talent there to underachieve and put together a 7-6 season.

The five and six loss seasons, I believe, were a result of losing some of that killer instinct. That total commitment and confidence to play all-out until the final gun. Frankly, some guys who were blue chip recruits appeared to be performing less for the Garnet and Gold and more to show off for pro scouts.

The most important thing this coaching staff, which Bobby has given full rein, can do is change those attitudes.


Where is Florida State's rushing attack. Greg Jones. Leon Washington. Lorenzo Booker. Antone Smith. You've had some talented backs over the past few years, but the Noles ground game hasn't 'wowed' anyone in forever. Lone gone are the Warrick Dunn and Travis Minor days. Why can't Florida State scare opponents with their ground game anymore?

The '07 team will run the ball better than any FSU team this century. OL Coach Rick Trickett — who built a dangerous running game at West Virginia — has brought his Marine Corps/Vietnam Vet toughness to the unit. He's building a Denver Broncos-type line: quick guys with low body fat who can lead a fast back through a hole and flatten linebackers — not just big guys who can pass block. He's shown no mercy, from driving guys harder than they've ever worked, to supervising their strict diets, to designing their weight regimens.

Good thing, because Fisher (with whom Trickett has coached before) is on a mission to have a powerful running attack. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised to see FSU run more than pass this year.

Finally, first-year running back coach Dexter Carter (former Nole and 49er) has been a breath of fresh air, bringing new ideas and attitudes to Antone Smith and the other young backs.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Priorities...

Lest not overlook the way our mainstream media is handing some current news stories this week.

We've all heard the soundbite from Don Imus, a.k.a. The Crypt Keeper. He called some members of the Rutgers women's basketball team, a bunch of "nappy headed hos" and starting Monday, he'll serve a two week suspension for the insensitive remark. MSNBC has also announced they'll drop his syndicated radio show, which they run on TV early weekday mornings.

This took place a week ago and it's still front page news, for some reason. So in your face and popular that Imus wasn't suspended immediately. He has to endure the backlash all week and then when the story is tired, only THEN will he be suspended.

Why in the hell is this front page news and getting infinitely more coverage than say, the Duke lacrosse case? Charges were dropped against David Evans, Reade Seligmann and Collin Finnerty earlier today a mere 395 days after their ordeal began. The stripper in question had a story with more holes than Swiss cheese and this saga is now put to rest. I mean, outside the fact that three lives and reputations have been ruined.

Evans, Seligmann and Finnerty are white boys from privileged backgrounds and that has worked against them this past year. Many implied that the rich college boys took advantage and raped an African American woman. Turns out, they didn't. It also turns out the stripper in question has a rap sheet and a rather shady past. As everyone tries to move forward from here, it gives us a little more perspective as to who the real 'victims' are.

What about another story swept under the rug even thought it deserved much more attention... LSU women's basketball coach Pokey Chatman resigning after having a sexual relationship with a former player, rumored to have been a player on the team when this all went down.

Yup, that's our mainstream media for you. Let's focus on an off-color comment by a fossil of a radio announcer. Some old, decrepit man who was filling air time with insults - something Imus made his career by doing. Let's be more offended by the phrase "nappy headed ho" - which sounds like nothing more than a bad rap lyric. That said, I'm not African American, so I won't pretend to comprehend how someone of that race interpreted that comment.

Still, than the fact a coach had an inappropriate relationship with a player or the fact that three innocent NCAA athletes were accused of something they didn't do and had their names dragged through the mud for over a year is receiving less news than some tongue in cheek comment? It's moronic.

Color me curious, but what if Chatman was a man and had an inappropriate relationship with either a male or female player. Why am I led to believe the Imus story would pale in comparison if that were the case?

I could go a million and one more ways with this topic... even tying to the excessive media coverage the Miami/FIU brawl garnered, but I'll let my readers come to their own conclusions. I believe you know where I'm coming from.

Just another rant as our national media makes me sick.


.:Canes305:.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Spring Football? Don't believe the hype...

I'll never understand the hype that surrounds spring football. This year's game already came and went, prompting every type of fan to come out of the woodworks and chime in. This team sucks. The quarterbacks suck. We have no offensive line. There's no skill at the skills positions. Our kicking game is pathetic.

Maybe there's some truth to some of this, but being that it's April, who the hell cares?

Spring football is insanely overrated. There's no other way to slice or dice it. The players have been off their game for three months, injuries are nagging and everyone knows the season is still a lengthy five months away.

Big time decisions aren't made in spring. No one is climbing up the depth charts for something they've done in March. The goal is to break a sweat, get used to the pads and avoid injury - yet some folks seem ready to determine the 2007 Canes' fate based on a few recent scrimmages.

I've traded a bunch of emails with members of our fan base this week. Many are asking if they should be worried. Are the Canes that bad? Can Randy Shannon turn thing thing around as soon as this upcoming season? We'll see. For now, let's look at some of the facts:

>>> Shannon has officially been on the clock just over three months now. In that time he landed the #9 recruiting class in the nation (according to Scout.com). He did most of this without a staff in place and on the heels of Florida winning the National Championship and competing with a young, flashy Urban Meyer, as well as the best closer in the business, Bobby Bowden.

>>> Larry Coker's fingerprints have been on this program for just over six seasons. While I believe Shannon can change the philosophies and instill that "winner" mentality, it's fact that it'll take a year or so before this is officialy his team, made up of his players.

The point? You'll immediately see Shannon blaze the recruiting trail and rebuild The U with the right players - know it'll take a little longer for his impact to translate on the field. Fact remains, a lot of these players are still Coker's guys. Anyone who expected to see a complete 180 by the spring game is off their rocker.

>>> Defense always dominates spring football. The offense rarely clicks this early and with Shannon's new orange vs. white format and splitting of the squads, the offense will feel those effects more than the defense. A back up defensive tackle will usually win the battle against a back up left tackle. Toss in the fact that Miami was without it's top three offensive lineman, two of its top wideouts and minus super frosh tailback Graig Cooper. The offense also lost Javarris James early, due to injury. This is hardly the offense you'll see lining up against Marshall in the season opener.

New offensive coordinator Patrick Nix also stated that he was going to keep this scrimmage very vanilla, due to personnel mismatches and the fact that the game was televised. No reason to give anything away to the opposition this early in the game.

>>> Did I mention the season opener is forever and a day away? The product you see today will benefit greatly from five more months of Shannon in their ears and Andreu Swasey busting heads in the weight room. Because Shannon isn't releasing a depth chart in spring, expect competition to be taken to new levels when fall ball is upon us. I expect to see a battle at almost every position.

At day's end, what should we really expect here? I don't know about you, but I want to see a throwback to the late 90s. The effort and unity of our players was apparent. Bring me back a decade right before Miami peaked and became a major player (2000-2003). There was talent, but more than that, there was heart.

Give me the type of kids who can get throttled 66-13 at Syracuse, losing a shot at an Orange Bowl berth against Florida - only to regroup a week later and upset #2 UCLA, 49-45. The past four seasons, Miami has struggled in "rebound" games and Coker was unable to get the kids' psyche back to where it needed to be the week after a loss. Shannon needs to end that mindset immediately.

I'd love to see a 1998-1999 type effort out of our current kids. A crop of young talent which stepped up and made plays. Sure, they lost to the likes of Florida State, Virginia Tech, Syracuse and choked a few away against Penn State and East Carolina, but you never questioned the heart of those Hurricanes.

The 2007 season is going to be a rough one. Make no mistake about it. Coker had a cakewalk in 2006 with Florida State and Virginia Tech coming to our house. Not to mention OOC games against the likes of FAMU, Houston and FIU. This year Miami treks to Norman, Tallahassee, Blacksburg and Chestnut Hill while welcoming Marshall and Texas A&M to the OB, out of conference. The Canes also travel to North Carolina, where Butch Davis is now in charge and get Virginia, NC State and Georgia Tech at home.

It's too early to talk wins/losses, but you have to believe the mindset and effort level will be greatly improved when September rolls around. You hear it in the players and coaches alike. Last year's Canes lacked unity whereas this year's bunch hears the word "team" come out of Shannon's mouth more frequently than anything else.

Make no mistake, this won't really be Randy's team until 2008-2009. These are Coker's kids. Butch left the cupboard full; Larry left it close to bare. We getting the recruits again, but that'll take a year or so to translate on the field. Shannon knows what he needs to do.

Part of the reason Miami struggled on offense the past few years is due to a lack of playmakers. That issue was partially addressed by bringing in quarterback of the future Robert Marve, uber tailback Graig Cooper and a handful of capable receivers, some of which who will start immediately. Other kids already on the roster will obviously have to step up.

More talent on offense will make Nix's job easier, over time. Right now he inherits a very average bunch. It'll take a hell of an effort on his part to turn that around year one. It sounds like he's mixing it up and has that "do what it takes to move the ball" mentality instead of worrying about balance or what looks pretty.

Still, recruiting is only half Randy's battle. He needs to take that talent, put it on the field, get their heads right, score points and win games. He know how to run a defense - but can he run a team and make some offensive decisions? Miami hasn't consistently scored points on offense since 2002. Fixing that is job #1.

For now, do your best to ignore spring ball. It's pointless. Pay closer attention to the cloud of Shannon which now hangs over this program. Watch the mindset and attitude change over the coming months. Pay close attention to developing storylines, increased team unity and how the competition plays out between now and the opener.

Let's see if the raised bar regarding competition has guys like Kyle Wright and Kirby Freeman working with the wideouts this summer on their own watches, when coaches aren't allow to work with the players. That type of stuff is infinitely more important than a 7-0 final score between a few depleted squads this past weekend.

Miami needs to heal and get their heads right after a tumultuous 2006. Once these Canes are mentally on the right page, you'll see a different product on the field.


.:Canes305:.

Deebo throws out first pitch at Wrigley...

Devin Hester remains a cult-like icon in Chicago, after one season as a scene stealer for the Bears. Here's a shot of #23, a mystery guest at yesterday's Cubs' game, throwing out the ceremonial first pitch.

Hester also led 41,388 fans in the traditional singing of "Take Me Out To The Ballgame" during the seventh inning stretch.

"Chicago fans are the greatest fans I have ever been around," said Hester, who became the first player to return the opening kickoff for a touchdown in a Super Bowl.

"If I could tell them to their face, they're probably the spark of our life and the momentum that keeps us going."

Bears coach Lovie Smith was on the field wearing a Cubs jersey as Hester tossed the ceremonial pitch, which was caught by Ryan Theriot.

"It was an honor for them to call me and ask me to throw out the first pitch," Hester said.

Saturday, April 07, 2007

The Beast wows 'em at allCanes...

Jon Beason was in store today for an autograph session. For those who missed today's signing session, we have a few extra 8x10s available for purchase. Shots of The Beast in his home orange or away white. Scoop yours up while supplies last. Here's a quick recap of the experience from our GM Harry Rothwell:

"What a great event. Jon showed up around 4pm and was greeted by a long line of fans and customers. It went all the way out the front door. Some fans were waiting for hours to secure a spot in the front of the line.

The Beast was friendly and inviting to all fans in attendance. He posed for photos with everyone and signed a bunch of memorabilia for the fans. Be it a #2 jersey or a fan with a cast on his leg, Beason took care of everybody.

Past, present and former Canes like Jon are a breath of fresh air. He's the kind of kid you're proud to have on your team and a great ambassador for the University of Miami. A class act and hopefully in a few weeks, a first rounder from The U."

Even Gator fans will want to puke...

Florida linebacker Dustin Doe was charged with fighting in public earlier this week regarding his involvement in a royal rumble in a downtown Gainesville parking garage. Days later, Florida offensive lineman Ronnie Wilson was arrested for firing a semiautomatic rifle in the air during a dispute with another man after a nightclub altercation.

Hear those crickets chirping? Gator fans are tongue-tied after so smugly calling Miami "Thug U" for years, yet their rap sheet reads like "War & Peace".

I wonder if these latest Florida thugs got into some beef with opposing fans making fun of this ridiculously stupid and embarrassing clip posted on YouTube this week. A lame-ass musical parody with some cheeseball, drama club 'Turd fans skipping around campus, wailing like Sanjaya and attempting to show their cute little 'swagger'. Nice.

Even my diehard Florida acquaintances are shell shocked after watching this pure crap. Best to check out on an empty stomach than lose your lunch on your monitor.



Slightly different from a semi-recent Canes campaign put out by The U's marketing department, no?



Yeah, yeah, yeah. Miami had a its most down season since the 70s, but it's still 5 to 2 in football titles and the Canes are allowed a down year. Funny how quickly Florida faithful forget their three five-loss seasons this decade after that second title in school's history.

I think I'd rather go 7-6 from now until the end of time and have a little bounce in our step than back into a title, act like we've never been there before and prance around with the glee club like a bunch of Grease rejects.


... and Gators wonder why Canes and Noles alike hate them.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Goodbye, Coach Rob...

Former Grambling head coach Eddie Robinson passed away overnight after a recent battle with Alzheimer's. He was 88-years old.

allCanesBlog.com extends its deepest sympathies to the Robinson family, his former players and all those who looked up to this college football legend. This is a Miami Hurricanes blog, but we're also college football fanatics and realize the impact this legendary coach had on the game. He deserves to be acknowledged and remembered.

Robinson was Grambling's coach for 56 years from 1942 to 197. He was the first college head coach to total 400 wins and completed his career with 408-165-15. Coach Rob sent over 200 players to the NFL in his half a decade plus career.

Rest in peace, Coach Rob.

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Did I really just get some perspective from Jenn Sterger?

I think I just learned something from a girl who got famous showing her cans on national TV and milking the experience over the next two years. Kudos, darlin'.

I'll admit that Jenn Sterger is easy on the eyes. The former Florida State coed earned national recognition on Labor Day 2005 during the Miami/Florida State 10-7 snoozefest in Trailerhassee when cameras panned in on her and her scantily clad friends after a commercial. Since then, she's found her way into Maxim, Playboy and even Sports Illustrated, where she writes a college football column.

I'll always poke fun at pseudo-celebs. I think it's every non-celeb's God given right. I have no issue with the girl being a pin-up, but college football analyst? I think we can draw the line there. That said, her CNNSI.com column I stumbled across today actually had a pearl of wisdom in it. When discussing last night's National Championship on the hardwood, Sterger logically explained why she was pulling for Florida over Ohio State"

"When faced with the challenge of Monday night's wardrobe fiasco, my dad still insisted I wear blue. His reasoning? Despite having attended college at Florida State, my parents raised me in a Miami Hurricanes household.

In 2003, the Hurricanes faced Ohio State in the BCS National Title Game at the Fiesta Bowl. Needless to say, the outcome of that game is still widely debated in the sports world and in the Sterger household, and has commonly been dubbed 'Robbery in the Desert.' With the Gators being the only Florida team that has had a shot at defending the state's honor against the Buckeyes in the past few years, my father made an exception to the aforementioned 'Never-Cheer-For-the-Gators Rule,' and lent his support to Billy Donovan's kids in Monday nights game while giving me permission to wear blue on this one occasion."


I can do without the "what should I wear to the big game?" commentary, but the point is still valid. Miami hates Florida and has for a century. That'll never change. While every Canes fan should be sick whenever the Gators bring home the hardware, ol' Mr. Sterger was on to something with his exception to the 'Never-Cheer-For-the-Gators-Rule' on Monday night and months ago when the two schools met on the gridiron. Miami's hatred for Florida can disappear for a few hours when Ohio State is on the other sideline or other bench.

The Suckeyes robbed the Canes of back-to-back titles and then were insanely arrogant for the next few years. I'm not a big believer in the concept of Karma, but if I ever were to be sold on the concept, the past two Florida/Ohio State title games help drive the message home.

I'll always loathe Florida, but from here on out, if the opponent is Ohio State there's no longer a mystery who I want to see go down. The Suckeyes stole a title from us... the Gators have lost to us six straight times since 1985. Choke on two straight heartbreaks from the Sunshine State, Suckeye Nation. Makes 2002 feel like a lifetime ago, don't it?


.:Canes305:.

It's that time again...

allCanes is gearing up for our annual in store signing session with some former Canes who are NFL bound. First up, Jon Beason will be in store Saturday April 7th from 4:oo-5:30pm ET. We will have 8x10s and mini helmets available for purchase. (Only one non-store bought item allowed per person for signing.)

Can't make the event? Email us to find out how you can get a signed 8x10 afterwards.

On Saturday April 14th from 6:00-7:00pm ET, future first rounder Greg Olsen will be in store. Same rules apply regarding one non-store bought item allowed per person.

We apologize in advance for not being able to land both guys on the same day. Both have insanely busy schedules with the NFL Draft weeks away and we're luck both The Beast and Olsen are friends of allCanes and are making themselves available for us.


.:Canes305:.