Sunday, December 13, 2009

Review of Rakontur's "The U" documentary

I love that the entire nation had two hours of "The U" shoved down its collective throat on Saturday evening. The numbers are in and the Rakontur doc will officially go down as the most viewed documentary in ESPN's storied history.

Moments after Tim Tebow failed to take home the Heisman trophy, the only Florida team on the minds of 2.3 million viewers; the University of Miami.

So much for "The U" being deemed 'insignificant' these past few years.

Unapologetic. Aggressive. In your face. "The U" was real. The good, bad and ugly were exposed. Sensational at times? Sure. But that's to be expected regarding the most influential college football program in recent memory.

Opinions varied the morning after. If you're a Cane, your chest was puffed out as this piece served as a reminder regarding the most dominant run the game has seen in the modern era. For two hours, you reveled in those glory days. When it ended, you called friends or family who lived through that era with you. The anticipation for this documentary was a kin to the energy felt before a big game; checking the clock all day, every hour feeling two.

When it was over, you felt like you won. There was a buzz in the air and even though the haters would continue to hate, they couldn't deny what they just saw. They'll still nitpick the 'thuggish' behavior, but in the same breath they had to admit that UM kicked the ass off everyone in their path; opponents, the administration and anyone not part of the U Family.

For the Cane haters, casual fans or folks who never say past the dark skin, over the top scoring celebrations, 202 yards in penalties or the depiction of the city of Miami in the 1980s - more fuel for their fire. Former Canes did nothing to endear themselves to the haters two decades later. Their on-camera bravado and recollection of the events reeked of the same 'swagger' show on-field in their hey day.

"The U" let the outsiders behind the curtain. The old adage, "It's a Canes Thing, You Wouldn't Understand" -- Rakontur finally let you behind the curtain.

Folks from the northwest, south, midwest and left coast - if you didn't live through Miami in the 80s, you'll never truly appreciate why these players, fans and the overall program is the way it is. Light a match at anytime back then and the city would've exploded. A certain energy was in the air the entire decade.

58-straight wins at the Orange Bowl between 1985 and 1994 didn't just "happen". It was the players, the attitude, the rickety stadium and every rabid fan in attendance. All the critics quick to trash a private school with an off-campus stadium for poor fan support - you obviously weren't there for the 27-10 shredding of top-ranked Notre Dame in 1989. I defy you to find me a stadium louder than the OB that night.

Throw a 34-20 win over Florida State in 1994 on that list, as well.

It got pretty raucous when Ken Dorsey found Jeremy Shockey for the game-winner against the Noles in 2000. Same for the 2002 content when Xavier Beitia fired a potential game-winner wide left and the '92 showdown where Micheal Barrow decleated Tamarick Vanover.

Speaking of Florida State, how many times did you rewind the DVR for the 'Seminole Rap', followed up by Cane commentary where old schoolers reminded everyone who was boss? The defending national champs roll into the 1988 season opener - at home, ranked No. 6 while the Noles muster up some faux hope to go with an overblown No. 1 ranking.

Miami 31, Florida State 0... and louder than hell that night, too.

Just like the team, this fan based showed up ready when on the grandest of stages. Canes might've bagged on on the those noon kickoffs against Temple, but damned if wasn't a bunch of hellraisers when it was 'go' time. This oft-criticized fan base got rowdy when it needed to.

When was the last time such dominance occurred in the college game? When can you recall the "nation's best" getting that shredded by a team outside the top five? Shut out. Shut down. Flat out embarrassed on national TV. Rakontur reminded us that six times Miami faced top-ranked teams during that span.

The Canes won all six.

This out-of-nowhere program did things nobody had done to date. Things that nobody will ever do again. Miami changed the game, making college football seem more like the NFL than ever before. College kids who were superstars and that much better than the other guys.

Stronger. Faster. Better.

Penn State may have upended Miami in the 1987 Fiesta Bowl, but needed seven turnovers to eke out that four-point win. The Canes racked up 445 total yards to the Nittany Lions' 162. 22 first downs to 8 first down. Five Vinny Testaverde interceptions later, Penn State didn't "win" the game. Miami lost it.

It was an era where only Miami could beat Miami. Itself or some shady refs in South Bend. Rakontur reminded the nation how bogus that Cleveland Gary fumble in the 31-30 loss to the Irish in '88. How many times have you debated that game with some Notre Dame elitist claiming that it was a good call.

Sweet Lou, that phantom fumble almost makes Terry Porter's late Fiesta flag look ticky-tack.

Between 1986 and 1992, UM arguably had 50/50 odds of winning a title at the end of each season. Over that seven-year span, three championships won, two left on the field in the title game and two occasions where the Canes were the best team in the land at year's end, but mid-season losses cost Miami a shot at a title.

"College football was hit by a decade-long hurricane" -- tagline from ESPN's preview for "The U"-- damn near an understatement when you see a 78-6 run over seven seasons.

The reason for that run, is two-fold. Aside from college football simply being ripe for change, it was a blend of visionary coaches -the right guy for the job at the right time - as well as a collection of unique, hard-hitting, brash, talented characters with a true will to succeed.

In that era, football or bust was the only way to describe it. A ticket to a better life for you and your family, there was nothing recreational about Pop Warner or Optimist League football. It wasn't a game. It was a culture. Only the best of the best made it and it was the stiffest competition nationwide.

Stronger. Faster. Better.

Hometown kids finally staying home in the early 80s, instead of taking their talents north. It's what Howard Schnellenberger referred to as "The State Of Miami" and it became the blueprint for success in Coral Gables. Shannon is following the path his predecessors succeeded with and in time, will have Miami as "back" as one can be in the modern game, chock full of big money and much more parity.

Shannon is three years into his rebuild and is two classes away from having nothing but 'his' kids on the roster. That is the day to start judging this era, much like Butch Davis is remembered for the cupboard he stocked 2000-2002, instead of his early career flubs. The guy who they flew a "From Champs To Chumps" banner for during a home game was revered a few short years later when his rebuild was complete.

To the point where he had enough talent to overcome his game day blunders, as did his inexperienced and incompetent predecessor.

The "Thug U" moniker will be en vogue again for the critics who took in the piece. Rakontur definitely played up the 'bad boy' angle, which is to be expected. Rakontur's Billy Corben and Alfred Spellman are 31 years old, putting them around nine years old for that 1987 championship won over No. 1 Oklahoma. Eleven for the '89 ring and thirteen for '91.

I'm 35 and too am a 'child of the eighties'. I saw four Miami championships between third grade and senior year of high school. My family watched 'Miami Vice' together on Friday night and rolled to Little Havana for game day the following morning.

A far cry from Lincoln, Nebraska and board games on Friday before some wholesome 'Huskers action on Saturday and some on-campus pre-game festivities.

"The U" was the greatest show on earth if you grew up during that run. Part Muhammad Ali, part rock concert, part WWF - you got it all in one with the Decade of Dominance era Canes and I completely get why Corben and Spellman told the story from the perspective they did. This wasn't a story about the Canes; it was about their Canes and why they embraced that era.

Melvin Bratton. Michael Irvin. Alonzo Highsmith. Bennie Blades. Jerome Brown. These guys were 'gods'. No one else stares down top-ranked Oklahoma during the coin toss, eyes locked and telling them, "I ain't scared of you, bitch" - hours after calling opposing players in the middle of the night, describing the beating that was coming.

C'mon now.

This isn't revisionist history from an overzealous fan base. These guys were cut from a different cloth. Wise beyond their years, in sync as a program, reloading every off-season - there's a reason the collegiate Canes were indeed bigger than the hometown Dolphins. Some former Fins took offense to that notion, but facts are facts.

Between 1986 and 1991, it was a 67-5 run for the Canes and three titles won. The Dolphins went 50-45 during that same span and left the beloved Orange Bowl for Joe Robbie Stadium. UM took over the stadium the two once shared and put its orange and green stamp on it for good. Owned. Back then there was one show in town and it was on Saturday, not Sunday.

Sadly, so much of that dominance was overshadowed by off the field antics, some of which seem tame two decades later. As pioneers, the Canes edgy urban flair didn't mesh with conservative America - the same way the city of Miami didn't mesh with the rest of the country.

The Canes weren't choir boys, but accusations of illegal use of calling cards, Pell Grant fraud and other scattered arrests were absolutely blown up by mainstream media. The country hated Miami, so anti-Cane articles are good business. Piling on UM became the thing to do, though Miami didn't do itself any favors living up to the perception at times.

Take any four year run Miami had in the 80s and put it up against Florida's off the field issues since Urban Meyer got on board. A media darling, Meyer has been referred to as a "disciplinarian" in the past. Such is the case when you have over two dozen arrests since taking over.

Carlos Dunlap, the latest. Suspended for a DUI days before the SEC Championship game, the senior defensive end became the 27th Florida arrest since 2006. Some more of the Gators' Greatest Hits : 2006-2009.

Dawayne Grace, battery and theft. Avery Atkins, domestic battery before dying of drug overdose. Brandon James, felony drug possession. Ronnie Wilson, use of a semiautomatic rifle in a dispute. Tony Joiner, breaking into car impound to steal back girlfriend's car. Torrey Davis, driving numerous times on suspended license. Cam Newton, burglary. Carl Johnson, violation of sexual restraining order.

Lest not forget Jamar Hornsby, one of few players Meyer has booted. Pretty tough to skirt around the issue regarding running up a $3,000 tab on a stolen credit card; swiped from a dead girl, no less.

Perception became reality and the Canes took more heat for end zone celebrations than these recent Gators have taken for over two dozen embarrassing arrests under this current regime. For those keeping score it's Florida 27, Miami 1. UM's lone arrest, the long-gone Robert Marve for punching a car mirror.

Yet Miami remains "Thug U".

All in all a reason to embrace that unapologetic picture Rakontur painted. The college football world sees Miami the way it sees it. Nothing can change that - good, bad or indifferent. It's not the Miami way to run from that history. Own it. That's who the Canes were and because they backed it up, nobody had any room to say anything.

I hope this current crop of Canes tuned in Saturday night. For the fans, a simply documentary. For those players, it was their family tree. They have a name to live up to and even if you don't buy into the antics, buy into the responsibility, mindset and ability to dominate.

That bravado was what made those old school Canes tick. Find what makes you tick. It's turn the corner time. Reconnect with some of those old timers. There's a lot of wisdom to be gained from their experience. No one better to teach you how to win than your current head coach, on board for the past twenty-five years. Just two shy of matching Florida's arrest total.

"The U" ended with a thud. Edited down to fit that two-hour ESPN time frame, a rushed ending and a story unfinished. Images of the Orange Bowl getting demolished in 2007, with thirteen year old audio from the loss to Washington, ending the 58-game streak. Video of Butch's hiring, combined with footage from his career-opening flop at UCLA, 31-8.

I felt like I was watching the end of Scorsese's "Casino" - the Sam Rothstein era Sin City crashing down and new school 'Disney' Vegas taking over.

Completely left out, the fact Miami overcame five years of probation and dozens of lost scholarships for the Pell Grant scandal. The program was taken to its knees and Davis rebuilt the right way, setting the stage for a 34-0 run that began his final season in 2000.

I appreciate that this piece wanted to focus on a particular sliver of Hurricanes football history, the resurgence and resiliency of this program is as big a story as the swagger. The grittiness of the city is ingrained in UM. Miami is a fighter. Despite the odds, it finds a way. It adapts. It survives.

"The U" was a reminder to the nation, when the Canes are on - look out. We're not going to see 1986-1992 again, nor does 'back' have to mean a 2000-2003 type of run. Miami is a simply a few pieces from being as good as anybody currently in the game.

Once there, instinct will take over. The Canes are again chock full of hometown kids and when it's time to represent Miami, those kids will make the difference.

32 Comments:

Anonymous bigsteveu said...

Great follow up. Could not agree more. Pretty much have said the same thing in other blogs but don't have enough space to fit it all in! Keep up the great work.

10:15 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I read this article and it seems that all the credits went to Billy Corben and Rakontur, did someone forget to mention Kevin Brinkworth along the way? If it wasnt for all his sideline interviews I doubt this documentary would have taken place, no less be the most watched documentary in ESPN history!! Its a good article I just think you forget to mention a key part of the puzzle

3:49 AM  
Blogger Jonathan said...

Nice review, CB. I too felt the program ended a bit too soon. I'm hoping the DVD has more footage. As a younger fan (I just turned 26 today) this was extremely educational for me. I was raised a UM fan, but didn't really start following them until the early 2000's. I also would have liked to see more recent current NFL Canes speak such as Warren Sapp, Ray Lewis, or even Ken Dorsey. I know it focused on the Canes from the 80's - 90's, but they had a few current players give interviews.

6:15 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Amen to this piece! While I'm too young to remember this born in 89, I've seen all the videos but this one put a lot of the things you hear about into perspective and pushes back the curtain.

7:50 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Recruiting has changed over the years especially since players today are looking more for immediate playing time than waiting for their turn while being developed but I do believe Miami can reach a level of success that can possibly match that of earlier this decade. The way we did and should have embarassed GT on national TV easily takes you back to 80s as an example. Their comeback victories the last two years is more evidence that that Miami culture and swagger is coming back as they the Canes of the past never ever gave up on a game even if it seemed impossible. Usually it is not the best team that wins national championships but team that can play together. The funny thing is, I see that they love and play for each other and most of these sophomores and freshman are just flat out nasty so that right there I see is a deadly combination to endless amounts of victory. I know this documentary got everyone fired up and I do not see why a few more excellent recruits are not added on the table before Feb. I see the Hurricanes doing really big things in the not too distant future but people say they can not or will not match earlier this decade or the 80s for that matter. I do not understand why they cannot reach that level of success. If there is anyway you can explain that to me, I would appreciate it.

8:07 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

FYI- There is going to be a DVD release that is much longer and with more content and more on the 2001 days. ESPN had to keep it under 2 hours... you'll have to wait for that to get a full grasp of what the director was going for. I guess.

8:08 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

WE'RE THE BOSS, WE'RE THE BOSS!! one has to remember the players from the past played for a reason, purpose to better themselves and show the stuck up communities in and outside Florida how kids from poor neighborhoods can be successful.
Miami from the 80's had to prove everyone they were not afraid of the OKlahoma's in the world. It's now up to today's players to beat the Florida's (if they're not scared to play the U)USC's in the world to build up confidence. the canes are coming back and YOU will see who will be the BOSS!

9:00 AM  
Blogger SaraLinn said...

I loved this movie! I've already watched it three times. One of my favorite parts had to be Randy Shannon, the "disciplinarian", high stepping down the field! There were only a couple problems I had with it...I didn't like the way they portrayed Davis. Like you said, they ended the film showing the loss to UCLA and Washington, and implied Davis had destroyed the program. If you never followed Miami football, that's what you would believe, when in fact, it was Davis's player that won in 2001 and should have won in 2000 and 2002.

Also, I thought Lamar Thomas was too much. While all the former players were entirely unapologetic (which I loved) they also seemed at least a little tongue-in-cheek about the stuff that had gone down. Like Hill joking that it wasn't his fault that he ran down the corridor at the Cotton Bowl or Bailey smirking about the hit that knocked the guy out of the game. Thomas was pretty much just a dick.

On a side note, does anyone know where you can find the "Miami Rule" video? I think that would be hilarious!

9:07 AM  
Blogger jqb12 said...

I would've liked to have heard from Toretta, a guy who is still very much involved with the program. OK, Lamar Thomas may have come off as a "dick", but that's what made these guys who they were...they just didn't give a darn about what anybody thought. I also agree about the comments about Butch Davis. He did a helluva job in COral Gables!

10:16 AM  
Blogger Scott said...

Great post, Chris. The U was an incredible stroll down memory lane. I love the way those players still have the same swagger 20-25 years later when they speak about Canes' football.

Although I grew up and lived in Miami for 28 years, I live in Texas now. Believe or not, the still talk about the Cotton Bowl around here when UM called their mommas names then kicked their a@#s. It was great seeing Randall "The Thrill" Hill take that go route all the way back through the tunnel.

I have even heard a few burnt orange whiners ask, "Why don't they have a documentary on UT?"

We all know the obvious answer, "You haven't won 5 titles or 3 in one decade like we did."

The U reminds me why I love this team and why the U is hated by so many. It's a Canes' thing. You wouldn't understand it.

12:25 PM  
Blogger allCanes.com said...

FYI- There is going to be a DVD release that is much longer and with more content and more on the 2001 days. ESPN had to keep it under 2 hours... you'll have to wait for that to get a full grasp of what the director was going for. I guess.

... was aware of the DVD, but there still won't be resolution regarding the ending. Corben stated that this piece was 1983-1991 and there's talk of a 1992-2002 follow up.

I'm sure the DVD will have more... but it'll still cover the same nine-year span, so there won't be any real resolution regarding probation and Butch's rebuild.

12:47 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Can't wait for the sequel. "U2".

2:01 PM  
Blogger Caneiac1 said...

I LOVED it! The cocky, arrogant, brash, and reckless nature of the Canes is what I love about the Canes! I love that the Canes would tell you they were going to kick you a$$, tell you how they were going to kick your a$$, kick your a$$, and then leave you wandering why you couldn't stop them from kicking your a$$! Anyone who has an issue with this movie is not a true fan, because the bad boy image is what true Cane fans love most about the Canes! I would like to see the current Canes step up the swag a little! Bottom line: You either love the Canes or hate the Canes...there is no middle ground! Personally, this movie was a reminder of why I boarded the Hurricane Train in the first place!...The U...nuf said!

2:21 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Chris,,, this was the greatest tool ever, to show my 15 year old daughter exactly what had evolved for me to be the Canes fan that I am today. For the first time, she understood why I am the way I am towards Cane football.

I drug her to the Virginia game for the last game at the OB,,,, she didn't get it, who could blame her. Just recently,,, I took her to watch a glimpse of real Cane football, here at our hometown Raymond James as they obliterated South Florida.

It never seemed to register....

NOW,,,,, she gets it.

Awesome piece,,, have watched it 3 times now.

take care, have a great holiday,

Jack M. Greene, P.S.M.
Tampa

3:24 PM  
Blogger allCanes.com said...

Well put, Jack. Felt the same way. I have a slew of friends out here in San Diego, who FINALLY get it...

Happy Holidays to you too, brother.... C

3:32 PM  
Anonymous Willis said...

There are a lot of people who want to be anonymous and that's okay. The third one though, that said, "Keep living in the past because the Canes have no future".

YOU ARE AN IDIOT!! You probably come from a long line of idiots. Almost for sure, you're a Gator fan. You're reign is over. Really, it's been over. In the game with Arkansas, the Gators won ONLY, because of some bullshit ass SEC officials that GAVE the game to the Gators. The Gators are a joke and this will be shown over and over again. It started with getting destroyed by Alabama. It will continue with another loss against Cincinnati. And it will be followed up with more losses to come next year.

4:44 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I arrived in Miami in 82, fresh out the Navy. Only 22 years old. Man, what a time. Stayed till 89. Been hooked ever since. I love the U.

5:23 PM  
Anonymous Willis said...

In that last one I was mostly just pissed. Why are Gator fans so stupid? That is one of the many unanswered questions of the universe!

On Monday, on ESPN, Jimmy Johnson was saying that UM didn't want them making this documentary. I don't really see why not. I don't think that the 'Canes back then were so terrible. Even with the all the shit that happened when they played Notre Dame, Lou Holtz looks back on those 'Canes players with a great deal of respect. Explain that one!

SarahLinn! It was Larry Coker that destroyed the program. Right now we are in the 'Trying to fix it phase'. I think at this point all we need is a little fine tuning, and then the U really will be back. There is no doubt that the U is now the absolute shit in the state of Florida! The Gators are done. The only thing they had was Tim Tebow and very soon he will be nothing more than a memory. At least UF does still have his immortal words forever on display to inspire future players to the greatest heights.

The thing is that you know a time will come when nobody even knows who Tim Tebow was.

One other thing. Why is it that FSU, UCF, and USF were all wanting to play Miami, but there was that one Florida team that wasn't interested? Even Nebraska wants to start having Miami on its schedule, because they are looking to get back to where they once were.

6:35 PM  
Blogger SaraLinn said...

Willis, I'm not sure if you're emphatically agreeing with me or very upset...Regardless, I have to disagree with you about one thing. Tebow will never be forgotten in Gainesville. Twenty years from now, when UF is still hovering around mediocrity, the white trash in North Florida will take a break from shotgunning beers and cow tipping to remember the good ol' days and their one and only hero.

8:43 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

North Florida will take a break from shotgunning beers and cow tipping to remember the good ol' days and their one and only hero.

SaraLinn: LMAO

6:05 AM  
Blogger Micki said...

As a Cane and former UM Band of the Hour member from 86-90 and hubby 85-93, undergrad plus med school, (can that get any better?), I loved "The U" and this follow up piece. Although my kids haven't seen it, you can bet they will to truly understand why Mommy and Daddy love the U so much.

SaraLinn: Boy did you call it on how North Florida worships the ground Timmy walks on. (Sadly, some of those shot-gunners and cow-tippers are relatives of mine.)

11:39 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Well said Chris. I had a smile on my face during the whole documentary. Ithought they said the viewership was 2.3 million, but it was a record regardless. It's easy to remomanticize those days, but the program really revolutionized the sport and exploded onto the scene. I think the brand of ball as well as who brought that brand was and still is being held against Miami to this day. We won't stop being reminded about how appalling (according to the haters) we played until these old ass, out of touch, priviledged writers keel over. F 'em. Great job to all those who took part in front of and behind the camera. A truly great showing of college football history, showing the roots of one of the most dominant programs ever.
-Columbus Cane

4:31 PM  
Anonymous Jordan H said...

What a great documentary! I can't wait for the DVD/Blu-ray (which Corben said would arrive in early 2010). I could listen to those interviews all day.

A common criticism I've heard from people who didn't like the film is that it was too slanted, too pro-Miami. First off, that may be true. But who cares? Corben wasn't tasked with doing a journalistic assignment.

But secondly, and more importantly, I think Corben was far too easy on many of The U's detractors. Sure, he let Tad Foote have it. But I really, really wish he let the old Big 8 and Southwest Conference players/coaches/media/fans have it. Those teams had such a sense of entitlement, and they really hated seeing a mostly black team take the titles they felt were rightfully theirs.

I'll just come out and say it: they were racist scumbags. Case in point: The '91 Cotton Bowl. Remember the local Texas newspaper headline Corben showed: "Miami picks Cotton"? Remember the blown-out quote from UT player Stan Thomas: "They had players wearing earrings on both ears and funny hats jumping on stage. They looked like typical gangsters. I thought I was in prison"? The players also received a bale of cotton in their grab-bags when they got off the plane in Dallas.

The Canes had to endure racist jabs like this on nearly every road trip during the 1980's and early 1990's. The bigger the opponent, the more overt the jabs (e.g. Catholics vs. Convict t-shirts at Notre Dame).

How great would it have been had Corben tried to interview some of these former players or journalists?

The great thing about all the players from the U--they never back down from their old antics. They stand-by and/or own up to it all. They had and still have swagger and are damn proud of it. In short, they have integrity.

I'd love to see some of those old Big 8/SWC players, coaches and media go on record and own up to their overt racism. I'd love to hear an old headline writer try and explain away something like "Miami picks Cotton."

But that'll never happen. The U were thugs and the Big 8/SWC/ND teams were helpless, model programs.

I'm glad I cheer for a team with swagger and integrity. I love the U!!!

7:45 AM  
Blogger Joshua said...

I'm from California and I have to admit, "The U" is THE BEST DOCUMENTARY (not just sports documentary) I'VE EVER SEEN! Growing up (I'm sixteen), all I ever heard form my parents was that I had to go to Cal or Stanford. But after watching "The U", I know the only school I'm going to is the U.

8:03 PM  
Blogger Ben said...

It would've been interesting to see a different ending: Davis rebuilds them to glory, then Coker destroys it (climaxing with the FIU brawl), then Shannon comes in and gets all the kids from Miami again...If the University would've helped Corben out AT ALL, it could have been 10x better...and I still love it enough to have watched it several times.

9:45 PM  
Blogger allCanes.com said...

Ben - This documentary was only supposed to cover 1983-1991 and there's talk of "U2" which will cover 1992-2002.

My issue with the ending was the fact it went past 1991 an was rather unclear -- showing Davis on board and failing... footage of the OB being torn down in 2007 while audio and video of the 1994 loss to Washington played on.

It had an eerie and depressing feel to it... and then there's a voice over of Art Kehoe talking about his pride in all of Miami's past success.

The editing gave it the feel that the dynasty died in 1994 and that was it.

Miami went on a 34-game win streak, won a title, had one stolen and reached four straight BCS games from 2000 to 2003. That didn't need to be covered in this piece... but the ending gave the feel that UM football crumbled and that was it. The end was somewhat misleading.

10:40 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Gabriella from Houston here. Miami used to be so good, maybe they can come back? I follow recruiting, directors cup etc and Miami is never in the top 10...Are they lacking funding because they are a private school? UF is hurting them i think with the media time, ESPN/CBS deals, Gatorade etc. Miami needs to upgrade facilities and get a big time coach. I like Randy but recruiting is the foundation and its not being laid. Alot has changed since the BCS era and Miami is struggling. I'm young and want to see this present and future not just the past...We have to get Florida. They are freaking stealing USC's best recruit from Cali! They think they have the swagger now :(

10:16 PM  
Blogger allCanes.com said...

Gabriella, you sound like a closet Gator, trolling on a Canes board.

Miami had the number one recruiting class in the country in 2008 and a top ten class in 2009. There are already over two dozen verbals for the 2010 class and Randy Shannon has absolutely shut down Urban Meyer's pipeline to the tri-city area. The Gators only got one local kid in last year's class.

Florida has always had more money and has been a big time state school. Didn't give them an edge over Miami in the 80s, 90s or early 00s.

Only difference the latter half of this decade was Meyer getting on board when Larry Coker was destroying the program. The lack of recruiting and poor development of players from 2003-2006 is what put the Canes in a lurch - and this happened when UF was making their run with Meyer. Ron Zook stocked the cupboard and Meyer took over.

Florida lost their OC last year, their DC this year and will lose upwards of a dozen senior starters - including Tebow. There are also a few junior starters who will leave.

Combine all that with an improving SEC conference and the Gators are going to take a healthy step back in 2010, while the Canes take another step forward.

All your 'upgrade facilities' and 'get a big time coach' is nonsense. The facilities are good enough for a slew of NFL Canes to come back and train every off-season. If they can do it, so can a bunch of green freshmen.

As for the supposed 'big time coach', you're one of those people who conveniently forgets that NOBODY wanted the Miami job when Coker was canned. Randy Shannon was the lone guy with a game plan and the desire to clean up the mess.

Any 'big time' coach you want - I promise you two things; (1) they aren't going to recruit South Florida like Randy and staff will - giving Meyer and Jimbo Fisher and edge they don't currently have and (2) any 'big time' guy is going to use UM as a stepping stone. This is only the job for a lifer like Shannon - a local guy with local ties who has no desire to head to the NFL.

A Brian Kelly... a Gary Patterson... those guys aren't going to make their careers at a Miami. They'll do what Howard, Jimmy, Dennis and Butch did -- they'll bolt when their stock is highest.

Shannon knows the culture and the blueprint for how to make Miami successful. That being the case, he took over a deleted program that'll take five years to rebuild... so employ some patience and quit spewing this nonsense about how Miami needs to follow Florida's lead. Please. The Gators have been sweating the Canes for the past three decades. Their nice little run came when Miami was down - just like their mid-90s run. Tide is turning again. Get on board or get out of the way.

Five titles to three and Miami has won 6 of the last 7 against Florida. Remember that.

10:37 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Chris - Bama had top recruiting class in 08, 09 (I think) and will have another No.1 class in 10...

Love you anyway - I hope the Canes continue to build as it makes college football better
When the Canes are at the top....

Here is to a Bama / Canes rematch in a year or two!

11:01 PM  
Blogger allCanes.com said...

Bama had top recruiting class in 08, 09 (I think) and will have another No.1 class in 10...

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/recruiting/football/columns/story?columnist=luginbill_tom&id=3233826

According to ESPN, Miami had the top-ranked class in 2008. I'm sure Rivals, Scout and others had different opinions, but Tom Luginbill and folks at ESPN had Miami #1... Alabama was #3 in that poll.

All that said, top classes never meant much at The U. Some of the Canes best players of all time were three-star talent, not highly touted five stars.

Shannon is recruiting "Miami style" players and he has the Tri City area locked down. The best talent in the country is staying home and after two more classes, Miami will be back to being "Miami" again.

10:38 AM  
Blogger allCanes.com said...

Thanks for the fix, Mat. I'm chalking it up to sleep depravation and I'm blaming my less than a month old daughter for the typos..

7:56 AM  
Anonymous Willis said...

Mat... Many of the comments that you find here also have spelling and grammatical errors, but of course these are not term papers for English class. It was, however, very fortunate for all of us that you were able to find and point out this error. Outstanding work!! Perhaps you can go through and point out all the errors that I am referring to in these comments. You know of course that there are hundreds, if not thousands of books out there, where you can find such errors. In many newspapers and magazines as well. We need you, Mat. America needs you. Find and point out those errors.

8:23 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home