Sunday, October 19, 2008

Miami 49, Duke 31

Down 17-7 late in the second quarter, it looked like another, "oh s#@t" moment for the Miami Hurricanes.

After dropping six straight ACC contests, even a rising Duke squad is no longer a 'gimmie' game for the Canes. Miami will have to earn every win down the stretch, starting with what eventually became a 49-31 rout in Durham this past weekend.

Bigger than the win, the post-game story revolved around quarterback play. Robert Marve again got the start, but it was Jacory Harris who would 'finish'. Marve went 4-of-17 for 64 yards with 1 touchdown and an interception with his pick coming early in the second quarter during a 7-7 tie.

On a roll out, with good protection, Marve had the option of throwing away or running out of bounds. Instead, a rookie move where the r-freshman heaved a desperation pass towards two Canes and three Blue Devils.

Duke put together a 10-play, 77 yard drive which put them ahead 14-7 when Harris entered the game with 6:48 remaining in the half. After a quick pass to TE Chris Zellner for no gain, the freshman was sacked for a seven-yard loss on third down. Duke's ensuing six-play drive resulted in a field goal and 17-7 Blue Devils lead with 2:50 remaining.

From there, Harris was in the Matrix - in the zone and virtually unstoppable. His legs accounted for 22 yards on the ground and his arm, 47 through the air. A nine-yard strike to Zellner narrowed the Duke lead to 17-14 at the half.

The Northwestern connection shone as Harris comfortably found his old high school counterpart Aldarius Johnson thrice on that scoring drive and four more times in the second half.

A boneheaded interception to start the second half put Miami in a 24-14 hole and unlike Marve, Harris was given a chance to dig his way out of the mess he helped create. A 37-yard scamper by Graig Cooper set Miami up at the Duke 32. Harris found Travis Benjamin for a 17-yarder and a play later, the quarterback used his own wheels to reel off a 15-yard score to bring Miami within three.

A Harris-led Miami squad went three and out the next two possessions thanks to incomplete passes, an stalled ground game and a six-yard sack on a 3rd and 6. Late in the third, good field position and a 23-yard catch by Kayne Farquharson put Miami just outside the redzone and three plays later, Harris found A. Johnson for a six-yard score, giving the Canes a lead they'd never relinquish.

Harris wrapped up the afternoon 18-for-28 with four touchdowns and two interceptions, which now has many wrongly clamoring for him to assume the starting role.

Not to throw any cold water on this latest win, but one good performance doesn't earn anyone a starting role. Say you start Harris next week and Marve comes in for the second half, outplays him and clearly has a better game. Then what? Do you switch back to Marve a week later when heading to Virginia?

Not to sound like Miami's former lame duck head coach, but it's time to stay the course. Randy Shannon has oft said the Canes have two starting quarterbacks and at this early point in both their careers, he is correct.

You don't bench Marve for a 4-of-7 performance and the game's first scoring drive - nor do you elevate Harris for effectively picking apart Duke late in the second half, thanks to a no huddle offense that kept the Devils' D on their heels.

Marve starts against Wake Forest, Harris gets his reps and the hot hand of the afternoon deserves to press on. That's how you coach in a rebuilding year with two freshman quarterbacks who both need nurturing. You stay the course and don't punish or over-reward based on a performance or two.

Harris looked like the more comfortable quarterback last Saturday. The true freshman throws a nice ball and made some great decisions. He seems to find the tight end easier than Marve and sports more confidence regarding threading a needle and getting the ball to covered wide outs.

Both quarterbacks are prone to making rookie mistakes and while Marve has the stronger arm, Harris seems to have better touch. Instincts-wise, both appear to have 'it' but both have looked 'off' at times.

By the two competing down the stretch, the hope is that one surpasses the other and proves why he should start. That hasn't happened yet, no matter how some folks are trying to spin the second half rally at Duke. The current system should stay in play until proven otherwise. While many can't see past the next game, folks need to realize you're building for 2009, 2010 and 2011 by letting these kids cut their teeth in this fashion.

4-3 going into a showdown with Wake Forest next weekend, Miami finally had a 'breakout' game against a lesser opponent. The offensive outpour against Duke was the type of contest most were expecting against Central Florida the week prior. Some will say it's only the Blue Devils, but the seven touchdowns the Canes laid on them was the most they'd given up all season. Even Georgia Tech with their potent offense only mustered up 27 in a win.

The Youth Movement continues, with baby Canes starting to shine all over. Those frustrated with the play of upperclassmen like Sam Shields are now seeing the junior receiver demoted in favor of freshman. Outside of first-year players A. Johnson and Benjamin combining for 11 catches, 129 yards and two touchdowns, LaRon Byrd and Davon Johnson broke out of their shells with three grabs for 46 yards and two scores. Thearon Collier is seeing some reps as well.

All in all, eight receivers touched the ball last Saturday, not counting Cooper and J. Harris, the recipient of a 17-yard receptions from Benjamin on a reverse.

It took half the season for things to start falling into place, but the "out with the old, in with the new" mentality is in full force. Freshman are starting to play above their age and experience. Miami is starting to jell, though it's too soon to tell how much. That won't be known until better competition is across the ball down the stretch.

Shannon said months back that the ACC beats up on itself and that's proving true. Of the remaining foes, Wake Forest got thumped by Maryland (26-0) who was schooled by Virginia (31-0), who was embarrassed by Duke (31-3).

Virginia upsets a North Carolina team on a roll (16-13, OT) and Virginia Tech falls to Boston College (28-23), who lost to Georgia Tech (20-17), who the Hokies beat (20-17) mid-September.

Miami is 1-2 in the ACC race, but things are wide open again thanks to a few upsets. Over the next two weeks Florida State faces Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech, which could really help shake things up in the Coastal division.

While it's way too soon for the Canes to start thinking about winning their division, the past few weeks have proven anything can happen. The race truly is wide open and the team who takes things a game at a time will be representing in Tampa early December. How crazy would that Miami v. Florida State rematch look six weeks from now if things play out as they could?

Until then, it's Wake Forest, Virginia (11/1) and a bye week. Miami then closes out with back-to-back Thursday night ESPN games - Virginia Tech (11/13) and Georgia Tech (11/20) - and a season finale at N.C. State (11/29).

24 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

If miami takes out wake forest,,,we will see an fsu/miami remacth for the acc!

12:27 PM  
Blogger allCanes said...

One would hope, but sitting at 1-6 in the last seven ACC games, there's not one "gimmie" left on Miami's schedule. You have to take each week at a time.

Virginia - Lost a few, but also has laid the wood to some good ACC teams.

Virginia Tech - Only ACC loss on the year is a close one at Boston College. They're still a well coached, sound bunch.

Georgia Tech - Has had Miami's number three straight years. At their house. Triple option offense that could give the Canes defense fits and their D is sound, as well.

NC State - The closest thing left to a 'gimmie' on the schedule, but still a tough season finale up in Raleigh late November.

12:31 PM  
Blogger CitizenCane said...

I've been saying that Harris reminds me a little of Dorsey in the sense of tall, not that strong of an arm but a smart QB. He knows he needs to get the ball into his playmakers hands.

1:06 PM  
Blogger allCanes said...

A lot of folks have made the Dorsey comparison. Talk, heady, lanky kid with a good enough arm, solid decision maker and a born leader.

Of course after seeing his wheels this season, he's also definitely more mobile than KD was.

1:12 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

allcanes..."Harris was in the Matrix - in the zone and virtually unstoppable"

LOVE THAT!!!

Is it just me, or does Cory have more of a conection with our recevers than mave does?

1:25 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Two interceptions, one as stated boneheaded. Don't forget the other Harris pass that Duke dropped inside the Miami 10. I was there, the game was poorly called both ways. We got lucky on a scoring drive with a pass that was called complete (clearly incomplete) on the Duke sideline.
Harris is not Dorsey, Marve is not Jim Kelly, Shannon is not Shnellenberger and Nix is not Earl Morrall tutoring Kosar and taking us to the National Championship.

2:06 PM  
Blogger Gamal said...

Well done as usual allcanes.

Marve starts and that's the end of story. In game reps (to the hot, composed, reliable hand) is what really matters. So kudos to Shannon for his QB rotation. As Harris had just enough experience to play as well as he did. But more importantly thank God Nix, decided to go with a hurry-up no huddle attack. That was the real key. As you’ve stated, Duke had no answer.

I saw a stat somewhere that stated UM was something like 15-20 scoring on plays taking 3 minutes or less. Humm, I guess Nix saw that stat too. Bottom line, stop being so conservative and come out with a balanced attack from the start. Keyword being 'attack' you pussy(cat).

But not to rain on our parade too much, there's a bigger issue stemming from this game. The Marve vs. Harris thing to me is a non-issue. Rotating (due to punishment) starting QBs, now that would be an issue. Granted, I personally would have punished Marve only for the first half and given him a chance to redeem himself to start the 3rd. Oh well, he knows full well what’s on the line and should do well in the start against Wake.

Now to the real issue, DEFENSE! I mean WTF!!! Instead of thanking Harris for a job well down, we need to thank WR - Eron Riley #15, of Duke, for all the KEY dropped passes and errors. So many times Duke had our number. We can just thank God it worked out in our favor.

I know constant 3-and-outs; costly INTs; and a youth movement on Defense doesn’t help. That being said, teams are scoring way too much points on us and our red zone defense is just plain no existent. Granted the last TD by Duke was in garbage time. Bill Young, be aggressive but do so with these guys knowing their assignments first.

If we sure up the D and Marve play composed, Wake Forest should go down. GO CANES!!!

2:07 PM  
Blogger allCanes said...

Two interceptions, one as stated boneheaded. Don't forget the other Harris pass that Duke dropped inside the Miami 10.

Honestly, that should've been returned for a score if that LB could've held on. Javarris James wasn't even looking or expecting a pass to come his way. Harris definitely made a freshman mistake there -- as has Marve.

Both of these kids need the playing time and hopefully down the road we see separation between the two. That said, neither has 'it' more than the other right now, so expect the growing pains and let's see where it goes as they're both going to play.

2:10 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'll take the win, although I did not get to see the game. I will agree that there is no gimmie game the rest of the season. We lost to each team still remaining on the schedule last year, minus Wake since we did not play. Wake likes to run the QB, so we have to make sure the line and LB's stay discliplined. Wake is a good team overall, and it will be interesting to see how we do. I am not really a fan of Thursday games for Miami, because we never seem to play very well over the last few years. Maybe we can squash that and just get those W's. At this point I just want wins, and don't care about how we do it, as long as we do it. We'll definately have to earn wins for the rest of the season against some decent teams. The most important thing playing all these teams is stopping the run, especially both the Techs.
-Columbus Cane

2:11 PM  
Blogger allCanes said...

I saw a stat somewhere that stated UM was something like 15-20 scoring on plays taking 3 minutes or less. Humm, I guess Nix saw that stat too. Bottom line, stop being so conservative and come out with a balanced attack from the start. Keyword being 'attack' you pussy(cat).

I agree fully, Gamal and have believed that since the loss to North Carolina.

What were the two most impressive drives that game? The first, when Marve led the Canes downfield to go up 7-0 -- and the last, when playing from behind with virtually no time left, the Canes aired it out, made plays and was a fingertip away from a game winning catch.

All that conservative b.s. is what kills this offense's momentum. Show some cojones and play ball.

Better to lose games going down swinging, than keeping it so close to the vest and giving games away.

2:13 PM  
Anonymous John said...

Patrick Nix did a much better job of mixing plays up not being conservative with plays such as the reverse pass to Jacory Harris and Patrick Nix looked like and offensive genius compared to Kurt Roper the Duke offensive coordinator. Roper plays were more predictable than even Nix's plays early in the season. Roper would call run after run (although it was very effective early) then mix in a dropped pass by Eron Riley lol. All in all much praise to Nix for a great game and tons of improvement.

3:15 PM  
Anonymous twentybinders said...

I hated how the second the Duke game ended boards were comparing Marve to wright/freeman and saying that Marve is exactly the same as the two. All this after saying Marve will lead the Canes to the promise land and playing harris for two series is a bad idea.

Then this happens and its totally reversed calling Harris the king and Marve should ride pine.

Seriously, just because Harris had a good day against a bad defense shouldn't crown him starter. Harris is good and does make reads, but right now Marve is the guy and stick with him. However, it is nice to see that if the starter is struggling you have a good #2 to cover his ass and hopefully get a spark going.

3:32 PM  
Blogger Kevin said...

allCanes/Canes305

What's your opinion (judging from the season thus far) about Patrick Nix's future with Miami after this season? I understand that a lot can happen, but even if Miami finishes strong, do you think Shannon will be looking around for a "bigger name" OC? Lane Kiffin and Tommy Bowden come to mind for me... If the Canes can finish the season 9-3 or even 8-4 does this make Miami better able to lure in a more established OC? Or does it keep Patrick Nix here? I've been on Nix's back early this season, but I will give the devil his due and credit him with a good game against Duke. It just seems to me, especially with the addition of an established DC in Bill Young, that Miami is moving on up in the talent of it's players and coaches.

4:41 PM  
Anonymous 47 said...

Well i was afraid all the UM blogs would be calling for Harris to start, thank God my trusted AllCanes.Com isn't one of em. I still think, fundamentally, Marve is light years ahead of Harris. Marve's mechanics are much more sound and fluid than that of #12 Marve is also the better athlete. I am disappointed in Marve's play as of late. I mean the guy was so poised and composed at UF and hasn't looked very comfortable since. Maybe Marve's confidence is shaken a bit? I think he needs a great, blowout game to regain it. Maybe a great Marve performance is in the cards against Wake???

7:59 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Give the starting nod to Harris.Marve has not proven by his play that he is not vastly superior to Harris.Why not experiment,this is another rebuilding year. Why not settle this on gameday instead of the practce field.

6:13 AM  
Anonymous Brian C. said...

47,

thank YOU! everyone is calling for marves head after 2.5 quarters of good play from jacory against a rising duke team. Marve still has the "it" he just needs to get more confidence. I think he's scared to go against the play thats called in fear that NIX will chew him up like the UNC td pass to aldarius. If he stands in the pocket longer instead of rushing out the pocket the minute the ball is snapped, then he'll do better. We have 2 very good quarterbacks, we just cant evaluate them just yet on whos the starter based on 7 games of flip flopping

8:24 AM  
Blogger allCanes said...

Give the starting nod to Harris.Marve has not proven by his play that he is not vastly superior to Harris.Why not experiment,this is another rebuilding year. Why not settle this on gameday instead of the practice field.

Again, say you make Harris the starter this week, he falters early, Marve comes in late second quarter (like Harris normally does), he lights it up, plays the rest of the game and gets the "W" -- then what? Do you go back to starting Marve next week?

Your suggestion is a foolproof way to wind up with a quarterback controversy.

Let Marve start. Don't kill his confidence. Harris is getting significant playing time, so let it continue as is. As Shannon says, you essentially have two starting quarterbacks. Doesn't matter who starts if both are playing. Stay the course. Let them both do their thing.

Don't "over-reward" Harris or on good game and don't "punish" Marve for a boneheaded INT.

9:42 AM  
Blogger Gamal said...

Well I just got my tickets, section 141, for the Wake Forest game. Show my support and hopefully witness a Hurricane victory.

Besides, this is like the 3rd straight ESPNU broadcast. Better off just watching it live, in person.

1:48 PM  
Blogger Caneiac1 said...

I watched the replay of the game last night and I gotta tell you there are some things that we need to fix quick!!

1-Busted plays: On several occasions this weekend, the Canes looked like they had no clue where they were supposed to be.

2-Slow developing plays- There was a WR reverse in the 3rd QTR where Harris held the ball out for about 30 seconds before the WR arrived.

3-Blown coverages-How many times did wide open Duke recievers drop balls??

This was a good win, but don't get lulled into believing that it was a wonderful performance by the Canes because it wasn't!! We need to bring our A-B and C game to beat Wake this week!!

4:06 PM  
OpenID Justin2796 said...

I'm excited to be coming back to Miami for homecoming and sitting in Section 111. (especially since its close to snowing here in Pennsylvania..brrrrrrrrrr)

Regarding the Marve/Harris QB Situation...

I'm excited that we have 2 very talented QB's in the system. I think its to early to choose one over the other, however I think it's important that the coaches stick with the "hot arm". So I say we put Harris's 51-0 record as a starter on the line this week!

5:04 PM  
Blogger Caneiac1 said...

Hey Chris,

Were you able to look at any of the Maryland vs Wake game from Saturday and see what they did to stop the Deacons?? I live about 15minutes from UM and the game was on TV, but I didn't watch any of it!

9:43 PM  
Blogger CitizenCane said...

Here is a great article on the state of Miami from ESPN.Very nice read.

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/wire?section=ncf&id=3658099

5:55 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Can Miami wear more green? they looked great in those Green pants Vs. Duke... how about they wear their Green uniforms for once?!

8:36 PM  
Blogger allCanes said...

Can Miami wear more green? they looked great in those Green pants Vs. Duke... how about they wear their Green uniforms for once?!

Three of the next four are on the road and the lone home game after this weekend is a Thursday night match up with Virginia Tech.

IF the Canes are going to sport home green jerseys, this is the week to do it. Noon kickoff, so the green won't get lost in the night sky.

I haven't heard anything, but we could see green this weekend.

9:01 PM  

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