Friday, July 31, 2009

Vaughn Telemaque ready to get busy...

Some good ink from Shandel Richardson regarding safety Vaughn Telemaque in Thursday's Sun Sentinel.

Standard fare regarding an up and coming safety; the Ed Reed and Sean Taylor comparisons. New young player wants to be the best he can be. Injured last year and ready to go this season. Wants to step up and be a team leader. Nothing we haven't heard before.

Richardson did turn up one small tidbit I've never come across on the message boards, though. Seems the California-bred Telemaque was set to sign with Southern Cal out of high school, until Miami got in the game late. Randy Shannon trekked west for an in-home and in need of a haircut, Mama Telemaque (Veronica) edged the head coach up in their basement.

"That was the highlight of him coming out," Telemaque said. "I'm like, this could be my head coach and he's letting my mom cut his hair. There are barber shops all around here, and he let her do it. So I thought that was really cool."

Never underestimate the art of recruiting, right?

Thursday, July 30, 2009

A Cane that really IS a soldier...

I received this pic from LTJG Robert "Jake" Bebber, USN earlier today. Jake fired this our way as we're asking fans to send us pics for our Facebook page. That being said, I felt this shot deserved to be singled out and mentioned in the blog. Check out Jake's note with the pic:

"I had this picture taken while I was on deployment for a year in Afghanistan. That’s me in the center in ACUs – Khost province, Afghanistan 2008. One of my duties was being in charge of all the local Afghan interpreters and cultural advisors. Fellow Canes sent me old t-shirts and hats and I gave them to the local Afghans working with Coalition Forces – spreading the Cane gospel all over the world! You’re welcome to use the picture."

Thanks for the pic, Jake... and thanks for all you've done for our country. Go Canes!

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Mike Bianchi chimes in on Tavadis Glenn...

Tavadis Glenn threw up The U at Florida's Friday Night Lights camp. Since then, a Sunshine State mini-media frenzy.

Amazing how a story of this nature becomes front page news and will grow in folklore over the years. We'll see where it all ends up, but for now let's check out the Orlando Sentinel's Mike Bianchi - a self-proclaimed Gator - and his insight on the Glenn situation.

It hardly comes as a shock that Bianchi took the stance that Gator coaches were in the right to toss Glenn out of last week's camp. He was warned, he 'represented' a rival school and for that, he deserved to get bounced.

Unfortunately Mike, you're wrong again.

Glenn is a Miami commitment and Florida knew that before rolling out the invite to camp. The Gators are still pursuing Glenn, even though he's a full-fledged Cane. The same coach who threw an arm around him and warned him to stop with the U-related antics would just as quickly get in his ear, convincing him that Florida is where he should be.

Welcome to the game of recruiting, coaches. It goes both ways.

Glenn went up against a Florida commitment, beat him in a drill and exuded some excitement after the fact. He tossed up Miami's "U hands" towards his defeated foe and again for his coach and friends in the stands -- folks who paid $35 to see Glenn in action.

Florida is pursuing a kid committed elsewhere, yet gets upset when he pledges his allegiance to said program.

That's like inviting over a girl with a boyfriend and then getting mad when she talks about him.

Florida team spokesman Steve McClain attempted to spin things, saying "He (Glenn) was asked to leave during the last drill period of the camp because of potential safety issues to other campers."

Right, Steve. And Nike confiscated tapes of LeBron James getting dunked on because cameras weren't allowed. It had nothing to do with saving face. Please.

A Florida assistant is said to have told Glenn to "take that s**t down there" regarding his Canes-related display. Classy move, coach. Way to let a 17-year old kid get under your skin.

Had this been a Florida kid doing the 'gator chomp' at a Miami camp, my stance would be the same. The issue isn't with a kid acting like a kid. The problem lies with coaches having no respect for the term 'commitment' - especially Florida, where Urban Meyer has oft been accused of shady recruiting practices. (Google 'urban meyer recruiting' and do some digging.) It's one thing to pursue. It's another to trash-talk a rival and spread rumors, a common practice in Gainesville.

The fact two Jacksonville products (Glenn and Raines High teammate Louis Nix) are thinking Miami is mud in the eye of the defending champs. Guarantee Florida coaches wanted Glenn in camp to talk down the Canes while hyping the Gators. The fact that Glenn continued to show his love for The U? Nothing more than a case of playing with fire and getting burned.

Next time around Gators, leave the Cane commits alone.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

The Latest at The U...

Some recent Miami Hurricanes related news going down this summer. Let's dive right in:

CanesFest has come and gone and from those I've spoke with, fans seem to be in agreement that this was one of the better events in recent memory. The University of Miami's marketing department hasn't always stepped up in times like these, but it's safe to say the new regime is underway. Kirby Hocutt is definitely younger, more energetic and looking to make a name for himself in comparison to Paul Dee, who came to Miami later in his career and with different aspirations. This is definitely a welcomed sign for Canes fans who want to see this program shown in a brighter light.

Manny Navarro had some good ink on CanesFest a few days back, calling it a 'fan friendly event' and giving props to both Hocutt and Shannon.

One thing that jumped out from Manny's piece; the commentary about the 'film junkies'. Who's putting in the extra time and who isn't.

For those who remember the ESPN piece "The Season" from 2001, there was a scene during Florida State week where Ed Reed and Philip Buchanon were mowing down a bag of Burger King, burning the midnight oil and cramming for the Noles like it was a final exam. They talked about the extra effort being the difference-maker and they were downright studious in their efforts.

Fast forward eight years and you're finally seeing that mindset return. LaRon Byrd and Aldarius Johnson are said to be in the film room 'almost every day'. Same with Demarcus Van Dyke and Brandon Harris, breaking down film daily before class. Their reason for the extra early wake up call; the desire to break things down with the former NFLers on campus working out this off-season. Van Dyke mentions Buchanon as well as Antrel Rolle making time to help the younger guys out. (Yet another one of those things that makes Miami, "Miami".)

Vaughn Telemaque says he's there five of seven days, only taking weekends off because the film room is closed. Ray Ray Armstrong is breaking down film with defensive backs coach Wesley McGriff. Even first-year, senior tight end Jimmy Graham is in there daily, checking out footage of Bubba Franks, Kellen Winslow II and Greg Olsen.

The most telling part of the piece? Senior cornerback Sam Shields admitting that he's spending a mere two days a week in the film room.

Let's get this straight, a wideout who's been buried on the depth chart gets moved to cornerback this off-season - a last ditch effort to give him a second chance and create depth at a depleted position. The same kid who spent his sophomore and junior in Shannon's doghouse, to the point where his father gave the Miami coach kudos for helping make his son a man.

Shields is a first-year cornerback with one last shot to prove his mettle... and he's doing two days when true freshman and sophomores are pissed off they can't spend their weekends breaking down film. Pretty much tells you all you need to know about Country Club Larry's Canes versus the type of athlete Shannon is focusing on.

The culture is changing, people. The type of kids Butch Davis brought on board in the late nineties are the same type that Shannon is going after ten years later.

This time next year just about every Larry Coker recruit will be gonzo. Ironically enough, that's the same year many are pegging the Canes to be 'back'. Rather telling, if you ask me.

Thankfully a few upperclassmen do *get it*. Eric Moncur and Colin McCarthy are clamoring to get back on the field, but Randy Phillips seems to be the senior Cane most young players are gravitating to. Manny mentioned that nearly "every" defensive Cane goes to the fifth-year senior when they have a problem.

Phillips took some heat from the fans after getting torched at corner in the 2007 beatdown at Oklahoma. From there, an up and down year and then out the majority of 2008 after an injury at Texas A&M. Phillips is back at safety, his original position. While he might not have the natural talent or raw ability of Telemaque or Armstrong, his know-how and experience are a much-needed asset for a depth-starved secondary.

Randy Shannon took in the ACC's Football Kickoff this morning in Greensboro, NC. The media wanted to talk about the lack of an extension (Shannon is entering year three of a four-year contract), while the Miami coach chose to focus on winning games and the immediate future.

Shannon takes a lot of grief for his lackluster approach to dealing with the media. "Coach speak" isn't part of the Miami coach's vernacular. In some cases Shannon could probably do a better job marketing The U and glad handling a little bit more. I won't argue that. In this case, who cares? A room full of media members who picked the Canes to finish fourth in the ACC Coastal Division? Chit chat about contract extensions and fueling a fire that doesn't need fanning? It's pointless.

Miami needs to recruit, rebuild depth and win more ball games. When the wins come, so will the soundbites. For now, I'm all for a tight-lipped head coach more interested in winning games than talking shop with some beat writers.

Talking the talk isn't going to impress the media or this fan base. Ws will. No more, no less. Damned if you do, damned if you don't when coaching at this level. Results matter, not efforts. Why waste time going through the motions? It won't matter anyways. Focus on winning games and everything else will fall into place.

Last but not least, a little blurb on recruiting and the bias that goes into the reporting of the news.

Cardinal Gibbons wideout Shawn Corker verballed to Texas Tech earlier today. The Ft. Lauderdale three-star prospect chose the Red Raiders over a reported thirty-five scholarship offers. Corker cited academics and stability with a coaching staff who showed him "a lot of love".

Miami was absolutely in the mix and Corker admitted that he'd have "more opportunities to make plays at Tech".

Bet the farm the anti-Shannon contingent will piss and moan about a local prospect getting away. Same way they did Quinton Dunbar, the Booker T. Washington wideout favoring Florida.

No position is more loaded at Miami than wideout, so those afraid of competition need not apply. The majority of the Canes' receivers are underclassmen and Shannon has already gone on record as saying the rotation will be trimmed in 2009. Only the best will play and those buried on the depth chart aren't even going to travel to away games.

Be it a Corker or a Dunbar, this isn't the year Miami is going to reel in top-flight wideouts. Conversely, any kid who does sign up for the job is exactly the type of kid you're looking for; one who doesn't fear competition. Carol City wideout Allen Hurt fits that bill. After tearing up UF's Friday Night Lighs camp, Allen will visit The U later this week and has talked about committing on the spot.

Corker or Dunbar would be nice additions to the U Family, but if the depth chart is scaring them off, good riddance.

Monday, July 27, 2009

allCanes.com : Relaunched, Reloaded & Ready!

Out with the old and in with the new. It's the motto regarding Hurricane Football right now and with a new season and renewed attitude towards The U, allCanes decided to revamp our website before fall ball. Check out the new and improved allCanes.com!

Over the coming weeks, we're asking you - the fans - to get involved. We want a more interactive site. allCanes is celebrating it's 50th anniversary this year and there's a lot of Canes-related history that's come in and out of our doors over the years. We want to hear your stories. We want to see your photos.

Still have some old school Canes tees from back in the day? Send them our way and we'll post in our gallery. Pictures of you and either friends or family sporting your Miami gear across the globe? Bring it on.

More to come on the interactive portion of the site. For now, check out the new look and remember that we're giving out schedule magnets for all orders in-store or online over $20. (While supplies last!)

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Tavadis Glenn kicked out of UF football camp

It's another one of those stories that fuels a rivalry and keeps that hate pumping. Another Hatfield v. McCoys-type situation that keeps Canes and Gators at odds, even though they only meet up a few times per decade.

Miami offensive line recruit Tavadis Glenn trekked to Gainesville this weekend for the University of Florida's Friday Night Lights camp and was eventually booted for tossing up the U hands during a drill. The Canes earned the commit from the Jacksonville Terry Parker High product, which can't sit well - a kid from Gator Country headed to Coral Gables.

Another situation that has Canes fans high on a future recruit, while making Davis persona non grata with Gator faithful.

In case Florida fans are wondering, Davis let it be known that he understands this is how the game is played... but that he plans on making the Gators pay if/when the two teams meet up in 2013. Stay tuned.

Friday, July 24, 2009

allCanes gearing up for CanesFest on Saturday

CanesFest kicks off at noon on Saturday and allCanes will be in the mix. Drop by, mention you saw this post to Harry and we'll give the first fifty Canes to do so a prize.

allCanes can't sell merchandise at CanesFest, but we'll have all the new Nike gear on display. If you're at CanesFest, ask Harry for a coupon for an in-store sale this weekend. If you can't make the event, swing by the shop Saturday or Sunday and we'll give you a coupon there, good for your in-store purchase.

Get on out there this weekend and support The U!!!

Thursday, July 23, 2009

It's back to depth fueling competition at The U...

Randy Shannon has endured his share of blows from the critics. When the first-time head coach took the reigns in late 2006, Miami was in shambles. Not quite the depleted squad Butch Davis coaches to a 5-6 season in 1997, but not too far behind.

Gone was the depth that allowed the Canes to 'reload' instead of 'rebuild' every off-season. Except this time around it was lazy recruiting and abandoning South Florida talent that led to the demise. Not a Pell Grant scandal or lack of institutional control.

Known for being some of the harshest critics out there, it's the Miami fan base who's been hardest on Shannon. Immediate results were expected and when a 5-7 was the result after year one, emotion bested logic and a proud fan base was humbled. Half a decade earlier, Miami was playing for back-to-back National Championships and waltzing their way into four straight BCS games. After year one of the Shannon Era, Miami's season ended late November for the first time in a decade.

Shannon's mission when taking over a battered and bruised Miami program; focus on local talent and rebuild the depth chart. With year three kicking off in just over a month, we're finally seeing Shannon's plan coming to fruition. Positions like linebacker and the secondary are still a class or two away from being rebuilt, but the Canes are ready at wide receiver and competition is going to be the driving force, making or breaking many in this bunch.

Simply put, competition is what made Miami into "Miami" two decades back. There was no resting on laurels, always feeling the guy behind you nipping at your heels, wanting to take your job. Upperclassmen playing hurt and ignoring injuries for fear they'd never see the field again if a hungry freshman got a chance to shine.

Both Susan Miller Degnan and Manny Navarro profiled Louisiana-bred wideout LaRon Byrd in Wednesday's Miami Herald. Navarro talked of Byrd being loaded with "talent and swagger" - which better be the case if you have the stones to wear Michael Irvin's number 47 on your chest.

Swagger. An insanely overused term these past few years. There have been a lot of Canes who talked that talk, but never walked the walk. Fat and happy off the program's history, many assumed they'd strap on that helmet and things would simply fall into place. They never knew how much blood and sweat was left on Greentree, building up this program, working their way to 12-0 or 11-1 seasons. Many players came to Miami when the getting was good, with no clue what it took to get there. Hence the eventual demise.

Those on board now - they're a part of the rising. Whether it's a Sean Spence, Jacory Harris or Marcus Fortson - you're talking about kids who grew up loving the Ed Reed-era Canes, saw their beloved program nosedive and consciously made a decision to sign with The U, with the goal of bringing Miami back.

Swagger is a state of mind. It's confidence, not cockiness. You believe it to your core. It's not false bravado, which has been the case as of late. Shannon is changing the Miami culture recruit by recruit. Winners from winning programs. Kids from the area who grew up Canes and feel honored to be a part of something special. That's not enough to make a difference year one, but after you reel in three full classes with this type of mentality, it becomes infectious. Old school is new school again.

The wideouts have been put on notice; only the best will play. The receiver rotation is being shortened this season. Last year everybody got their shot and saw the field, but nobody stepped up and became that go-to guy. Coaches don't blame the players for the lack of production. The rotation didn't allow for consistency, which is the reason things will change this year.

"They've told us the bus is going to be shorter," Byrd said. "I love it. It's going to bring out the best of both worlds. You're going to see who really wants it, who is going to back away from the competition and if it gets the drive out of you. You cut the list, say only three are going to travel and people are going to work harder. I love it, love the challenges."

Byrd's counterparts better bring that same thunder, or it'll be no mystery who's making plays and who's watching from the sideline.

Aside from Byrd, the other wideouts vying for a spot in 2009: Travis Benjamin, Thearon Collier, Leonard Hankerson, Aldarius Johnson and Davon Johnson, as well as Tommie Streeter and Kendal Thompkins, both injured and redshirted in 2008.

Wide receiver isn't a position for the weak this year, which was all part of Shannon's plan - finally coming to fruition year three.

From day one, this was a four to five year rebuilding process. Two years down, year three around the corner and an insane amount of depth at a position where the Canes have always thrived.

Once linebacker and secondary are as deep as this year's receiving corps, these Canes will officially be back. For now, sit back and watch the fireworks as it's game on with the wide outs.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Former Canes CB Antrel Rolle gives back...

Check out some recent ink on former Miami Hurricanes cornerback and current Arizona Cardinals safety Antrel Rolle. Another feel-good story about an NFLer doing right and in this case another Cane giving back to the community.

On Tuesday South Dade High's weight room was renamed "The Rolle Room" thanks to a $30,000 donation from the 26-year old superstar.

"I think it's a great motivator," said Rolle. "When they come in and see fresh new weights and those pictures of me up there as someone to inspire them, maybe that will help them to keep their eyes on their prize as far as where they want to go."

For those wowed by Rolle's random act of goodness, it should be noted that this isn't the first time he's stepped up to the plate. Prior to this recent donation, $4,000 was given to Southridge athletic director Harvey Clayton Sr. for new football uniforms. Before that, Rolle's foundation gave three South Dade High seniors and six Homestead High seniors $2,500 scholarships.

Manny Navarro also pointed out in his blog that Rolle made this commitment to give back with former teammate and long-time friend, the late Sean Taylor. Random, quiet acts of kindness was their modus operandi.

Now it's a challenge Rolle is taking on alone.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

2009 Miami Hurricanes Football Roster Released...

The 2009 Miami Hurricanes football roster has been released. Some initial thoughts:

Ray Ray Armstrong is taking on the challenge of wearing the late Sean Taylor's legendary #26. Good luck, my man. Huge shoes to fill... Travis Benjamin will be the best looking prospect at #3 Miami has seen in a while. Hoping he can be Tremain Mack-esque on special teams. Plus, fast guys should be in single-digit numbers... Sam Shields traded #83 for #9 and WR for CB. Curious to see that play out... Jamal Reid landed #15 now that Jermaine McKenzie has transferred. When was the last time a Miami great wore #15? I can't even recall... A.J. Highsmith and Daniel Adderley are both sporting #19 - as it back up QB Matt Perrelli, who amazingly is only entering his senior season I'd have sworn Perrelli had been around long enough to own a national championship ring - maybe two...

Damien Berry in Ed Reed's old #20, though less pressure there now that he's remaining at running back... Brandon McGee at #21. Great number... Jared Campbell still wearing the obscure #37. Does he see the field this year?... Joe Wylie still listed at #41 even though he's transferred to Tennessee State... #47 LaRon Byrd. Hoping for a Playmaker-esque type season for Mike's old number-sake... Georgia product Shayon Green wearing Jon Vilma's old #51. Bring it... Marcus Robinson still in linebacker coach Mike Barrow's old #56. Channel the spirit of the Bermuda Triangle, MR - even though you're on the defensive line... Nice to see more depth in the 60s and 70s as the offensive line needs more worthwhile bodies... former Miami basketball forward-turned-tight-end Jimmy Graham will sport #80... #83 remains a small guy number with Kendal Thompkins wearing it, a la Sinorice Moss and Shields last year...

Hoping Leonard Hankerson can break the Ryan Moore-like curse that resides with the #85. I'd settle for a Chris T. Moore-type season... Billy Sanders took Jeremy Shockey's old #88. Live up to the hype, BS... #93 is Luther Robinson and that just sounds like a big guy who is going to put a hurting on you. We'll see... Ready to see #95 Gavin Hardin in Bryan Pata's old number this year. Hardin endeared himself to Miami fans with his emotionally-fueled outburst, injured on the sidelines during last year's Florida State loss. Now it's time to match it with his show skills. He'll get his chance Labor Day night against the same foe. Stay tuned.

1 -- Harris, Brandon
2 -- Cooper, Graig
3 -- Benjamin, Travis
4 -- Johnson, Aldarius
5 -- James, Javarris
6 -- Phillips, Randy
7 -- Telemaque, Vaughn
8 -- Van Dyke, DeMarcus
9 -- Shields, Sam
11 -- Brown, Arthur
12 -- Harris, Jacory
13 -- Hill, Ryan
15 -- Reid, Jamal
16 -- Smith, Cannon
17 -- Cook, Taylor
18 -- Epps, Dedrick
19 -- Highsmith, A.J.
19 -- Adderley, Daniel
19 -- Perrelli, Matt
20 -- Berry, Damien
21 -- McGee, Brandon
22 -- James, Mike
23 -- Johnson, Tervaris
24 -- Grant, Chavez
25 -- Bosher, Matt
26 -- Armstrong, Ray Ray
27 -- Miller, Lamar
28 -- Collier, Thearon
29 -- Nicolas, JoJo
30 -- Hill, Patrick
31 -- Spence, Sean
32 -- Chambers, Lee
34 -- Holton, C.J.
35 -- Vernon, Olivier
36 -- Robinson, Kylan
37 -- Campbell, Jared
39 -- Hill, Devon
40 -- Lucking, Joe
40 -- Wieclaw, Jake
41 -- Wylie, Joe
43 -- Calhoun, John
44 -- McCarthy, Colin
45 -- Buchanan, Ramon
47 -- Byrd, LaRon
48 -- Smith, Andrew
49 -- Dye, Dyron
49 -- Harris, Courtney
50 -- Sharpton, Darryl
51 -- Green, Shayon
53 -- Paalua, Levi
54 -- Regis, Micanor
55 -- Jones, Ben
56 -- Robinson, Marcus
57 -- Bailey, Allen
58 -- Futch, Jordan
60 -- Ivory, Chris
61 -- Figueroa, Joel
63 -- Horn, Tyler
64 -- Fox, Jason
65 -- Pipho, Matt
66 -- Gunn, Harland
68 -- Symonette, Ian
69 -- Goldstein, Sean
69 -- Byrne, Jake
70 -- Trump, A.J.
71 -- White, Cory
72 -- Washington, Brandon
74 -- Franklin, Orlando
75 -- Wheeler, Jared
78 -- Johnson, Jermaine
80 -- Hayes, Chris
80 -- Graham, Jimmy
81 -- Johnson, Davon
82 -- Plein, Stephen
83 -- Thompkins, Kendal
84 -- Gordon, Richard
85 -- Hankerson, Leonard
86 -- Streeter, Tommy
88 -- Sanders, Billy
88 -- Kimball, Kris
90 -- Wesley, Steven
91 -- Joseph, Joe
92 -- Holmes, Josh
93 -- Robinson, Luther
94 -- Moncur, Eric
95 -- Hardin, Gavin
96 -- Porter, Curtis
97 -- Ojomo, Adewale
98 -- Lewis, Jeremy
99 -- Forston, Marcus

Monday, July 20, 2009

Kacy Rogers & Clive Walford commit to The U...

Cornerback and tight end are two glaring weaknesses for Miami, which makes the verbal commitments of Kacy Rogers and Clive Walford that much more meaningful.

Again, the standard 'verbal commitments aren't binding' and 'a lot of time left between now and Signing Day' type disclaimers you'll see here whenever a kid (or two) gives their word in late July. Still, the fact that more needs are being met and that the Canes now have thirteen high school seniors pledging their allegiance for February's "Signing Day"... one has to like the way things continue rolling.

Rogers is a defensive back out of Southlake Carroll in Texas who "chose" Miami over almost two dozen other scholarship offers. The 6-foot-2 baller is yet to visit UM's campus, but has local ties as his father is the defensive line coach for the Dolphins.

Rogers calls his commitment "100%" at this rate and he'll visit UM's campus within the next month. Some of the schools also offering - Georgia, Ohio State, Tennessee, Nebraska and Notre Dame.

Regarding Walford, the 6-foot-6 tight end is a three-star out of Belle Glade and chose Miami over Purdue, FIU and Indiana. Walford spent some time on campus, met some current players, some NFL veterans working out at Greentree and contrary to the beliefs of others, actually gave Miami's facilities rave reviews.

Even during the dog days of summer, Miami's staff continues reeling in the talent. Stay tuned for the latest.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Athlon Sports lets Jorge Milian talk Canes

Kudos to Athlon Sports. Arguably my least favorite preseason college football publication, though this time they got something right that so many other mags miss.

Athlon's regional Atlantic Coast issue features a great piece by Jorge Milian of the Palm Beach Post and some great insight to Randy Shannon's thoughts, history and agenda for this upcoming season. Very refreshing to read the words of a solid writer familiar with the program, than the compiled stats of some national hack who probably sees one Miami game per year. Check it out.


When Randy Shannon was hired as the Miami Hurricanes coach in December 2006, it appeared to be the ultimate Horatio Alger story. Born in the rough-and-tumble section of Miami known as Liberty City, Shannon grew up the hard way. His father was murdered. Three siblings died of AIDS. All that while growing up in a neighborhood infested with drugs, crime and poverty.

But, because of his determination, Shannon conquered all the dysfunction around him. He earned a scholarship to Miami and was a starting linebacker for the 1987 national champs.

After a brief stint in the NFL, Shannon embarked on a coaching career at his alma mater that included Miami’s fifth national championship in 2001. Shannon, UM’s defensive coordinator at the time, capped the title season by receiving the Frank Broyles Award as the nation’s top assistant coach.

When Shannon was named to replace Larry Coker as Miami’s head coach following a tumultuous 2006 season, the move couldn’t have been more popular. Shannon was the local boy who made good and, most important to the program’s supporters and former players, understood exactly what it meant to be a Hurricane.

But Shannon’s rags-to-riches trip has encountered a few speed bumps. The Hurricanes were 5–7 in Shannon’s first season in 2007, marking the program’s first losing record in a decade. That seemed forgivable after Miami began 2008 by ringing up a 7–3 record heading into a late-November showdown against Georgia Tech with an ACC Championship Game berth on the line.

The Hurricanes wound up humiliated on national television, allowing 472 rushing yards — the second-most in school history — during a 41–23 loss in Atlanta. Two more defeats followed that one, including an Emerald Bowl loss to California that ended with a caught-on-camera tiff between Shannon and offensive coordinator Patrick Nix.

The unflattering finish to the 2008 season turned Shannon into a punching bag on message boards and sports talk shows. The hometown discount given to him by critics was over.

In some ways, the turbulence was just beginning.

Two days after the Emerald Bowl, Shannon fired Nix. After his dismissal, Nix said he and Shannon had a “philosophical difference” on how to run the offense, which ranked 89th nationally with an average of 326 yards per game.

“What I want to do is just not what he wants to do,” Nix said.

The airing out of that dirty laundry was nothing compared with what came days after.

Quarterback Robert Marve, a starter for 11 games but suspended for two others, told Shannon he wanted to transfer and asked for a release from his scholarship. Shannon agreed, but with the stipulation that Marve could not sign with an ACC or SEC program, or any school in the state of Florida.

That’s when things really got ugly. Eugene Marve, a former NFL linebacker and Robert’s father, called Shannon’s restrictions “vindictive” and “shameful.” Robert Marve cited a poor relationship with Shannon. Robert Weiner, Marve’s coach at Plant High School in Tampa, said he wouldn’t advise a player to attend Miami as long as Shannon was coach.

School officials said the stipulations were put in place because there was evidence of contact between people connected to Marve and several SEC schools.

Marve appealed the decision and got the terms changed so that he was barred only from accepting a scholarship from any ACC school as well as SEC programs Florida, Tennessee and LSU.

The case may have been resolved, but neither side came out looking particularly good.

A couple of weeks after the Marve situation, defensive coordinator Bill Young quit after one season to take the same job at Oklahoma State. A desire to coach at his alma mater sparked Young’s departure and the split was drama-free, but there were whispers that Shannon — now on his third defensive and second offensive coordinator — was difficult to work for.

“When you become a coach, you become a target,” says Shannon of the criticism he’s received. “You accept what it is and move on.”

All will likely be forgotten if Shannon, who is 12–13 at Miami, is able to turn around a program that hasn’t been to a BCS game since the 2003 season. The Hurricanes appeared on their way before last year’s meltdown.

The last Miami coach to post a losing record after his first two seasons? That would be Lou Saban, who was a combined 9–13 in 1977-78.

But supporters point out that, unlike the coaches who preceded him, Shannon was left with very little talent to work with. The rush of NFL players that flowed out of Miami’s program for years has dried up dramatically. The Hurricanes’ only representative on the 2008 All-ACC team was Matt Bosher, who was selected to the second team as a punter and placekicker. Further proof of Miami’s dearth of high-impact players came in April when the school’s NFL-record run of producing a first-round pick for 14 consecutive years came to an end.

“People just don’t realize how bad it was,” Shannon says of the talent drain. “People see it as, ‘You have all these players, so you should be doing this and that.’ Well, where are the players at? They’re all puppies.”

Which brings up Shannon’s unquestionable strength -- recruiting. His first full recruiting class in ’08 -- which included linebacker Sean Spence, the ACC Defensive Rookie of the Year -- was ranked No. 1 by ESPN. The ’09 class wasn’t rated as highly because the Canes signed only 19 players. But, according to Rivals.com, 10 of the 19 are either four- or five-star players.

“Particularly in Dade and Broward counties, the coaches are still pro-Randy Shannon and pushing players (Miami’s) way,” recruiting analyst Tom Lemming says. “As long as you have those high school coaches in the area on your side, you’re going to recruit well because you have a huge advantage with that amount of talent within a 100-mile radius.”

Other Shannon backers point to the lack of off-the-field trouble since the no-nonsense 43-year old coach took over the program. In the past two-plus seasons, only one Miami player has encountered issues with the law.

The exception? Marve.

The quarterback was arrested on Halloween Night in 2007 after vandalizing a car and briefly running from police. Charges were later dropped, but Shannon suspended the freshman for the 2008 season opener.

Marve was suspended again before the Emerald Bowl for academic reasons, leading to his desire to transfer and the ensuing mudslinging. Among Miami’s football team, it’s hard to find anyone who thinks Shannon didn’t make the right choice by allowing Marve to leave.

But discipline and young talent haven’t translated into victories.

Shannon admits the transition from defensive coordinator to head coach was more involved than he once imagined, which may explain several game-management snafus that have proven costly over the past two seasons.

Shannon enters the 2009 season with two years left on his original four-year contract. Miami athletic director Kirby Hocutt has repeatedly stated his support for Shannon.

But if Miami gets off to a wobbly start in 2009 -- no stretch considering the Hurricanes open with Florida State, Georgia Tech, Virginia Tech and Oklahoma -- questions regarding Shannon’s future could grow louder.

“Everybody says, ‘You have to do this or that,’” Shannon says. “I don’t put pressure on myself. I just know we have to be better than we were last year.”

Monday, July 13, 2009

The Sporting News breaks down the 2009 Canes...

The preseason rags have been out for a month or so, but it's summertime and there's little to talk about... so let's break down The Sporting News' take on the 2009 Canes.

TSN didn't show Miami much love, which is fine. After a 19-19 run the past three seasons, it's tough to play the "disrespect" card. Truth be told, UM hasn't really done a lick since joining the ACC in 2004 - which is more an of indictment on the state of the program than it is a feather in the conference's cap. The ACC has been there for the taking any of the past five years and the Canes simply haven't had the personnel - players and coaches - to compete.

TSN sees Miami finishing the season fourth in the Coastal Division. Regarding player accolades, Ray Ray Armstrong earned the ACC's "Top Impact Freshman" award - partly due to physical skills, as well as the lack of depth Miami sports in the secondary. After Armstrong, the rest of the Canes top five newbies are Lamar Miller, Brandon McGee, Brandon Washington and Dyron Dye. "The Next Big Thing" award went to running back Mike James, applauded for his ability to 'befuddle the defense' during spring ball and a solid understanding of the offense.

The Canes also earned the "Best Stadium" award - proof that the move from the Orange Bowl to the newly dubbed LandShark Stadium was a necessary one. The OB's mystique is missed, but you can't argue with the upgrade to an NFL-ready stadium that's hosted its share of Super Bowls.

Recruiting-wise, TSN ranks the Canes third in conference, behind Florida State and North Carolina. They're also quick to mention that Miami didn't need a big class and that only 19 prospects were reeled in last February.

The "Game To Watch" is Georgia Tech - a program that's inexplicably had the Canes' number four straight seasons. The bowl projection has Miami going to a "Lower Tier Bowl" and landing in the Humanitarian.

Regarding the commentary, much of the focus was obviously on Mark Whipple and what the new offensive coordinator can bring to the table. With Miami's offense looking lifeless since the 2002 season, it's no mystery that Whipple's O is the linchpin this season, making or breaking the Canes.

The piece ended with another quote from the Mr. Soundbite, offensive lineman Jason Fox.

"We're Miami," Fox said. "We have a lost of talent at this school. We're always going to have talent. If we put it together the right way and things come together at the right moment, there are a lot of things that come in and factor to make a good team great."

"Every year I've bee here we've gotten closer to accomplishing that goal. And hopefully this is our year."

Big talk, big expectations and big potential. It's been the story the past few seasons. Time will tell if thing play out as Fox predicts come fall.

Friday, July 10, 2009

allCanes is all about Social Networking...

A heads up to our loyal readers, allCanes.com has built out a Facebook fan page. Click here to check it out and add us to your wheelhouse.

We also have our MySpace page going strong and we're officially on Twitter, as well. Please get on board and check us out.

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Hurricanes Performing Community Outreach...

Don't expect to see this story on the ESPNews ticker anytime soon. Doing good deeds doesn't make for good headlines. People want drama. Arrests. DUIs. Guns. Thankfully our Florida and Florida State brethren have those bases covered these days.

Down in Coral Gables, Randy Shannon is pressing on with his mission to mold young men, as well as football players.

Throughout the month of July, every football player on Miami's roster will perform community outreach throughout Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties.

"South Florida is our home," explained Shannon. "This is a way for our players to give back to the community and it allows the football program and the athletic department to say thanks as well."

Team members will host events for youth teams with upwards of 15 to 20 players attending each event. The events are open for kids up to and including the eighth grade. Outreach events will focus on "football and life skills" and will last up to 45 minutes. Click here for a list of the events.

Let this be a reminder to all the feeble-minded idiots who still toss around the 'Thug U' moniker in regards to Miami. That phrase is a good two decades past its expiration date and better suits Urban Meyer and his merry band of hoodlums up in Gainesville.

For those keeping score, it's a solid two dozen arrests on Meyer's watch since 2006 and one for Miami when former quarterback Robert Marve punched a car mirror in Coconut Grove in 2007.

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Summer Media Day: Veteran Canes talk 2009...

One month from fall ball, the Canes are finally allow to chat up the media regarding the upcoming 2009 football season.

With so much focus on youth, it's no mystery head coach Randy Shannon has focused so much on the leadership he expects out of some returning upperclassmen.

Injuries took their toll last season, forcing freshmen into action and causing young bodies to break down as the season stumbled to a close. Sean Spence early on at Florida wasn't the same #31 at year's end. A long freshman campaign came on the heels of spring ball, early enrollment and a national championship run the previous fall at Miami Northwestern. The lack of down time takes its toll.

The loss of Eric Moncur, Colin McCarthy and Randy Phillips (present in today's media season) took all the leadership away from a young bunch struggling to learn a new system.

For those wondering how the Canes held Tim Tebow in check but allowed Russell Wilson look like a Heisman candidate, that's the difference between September and November when so heavily dependent on true freshman. Injuries and a lack of depth allowed both Georgia Tech, N.C. State and Cal to run roughshod over a depleted bunch.

According to Phillips, Graig Cooper and Jason Fox in today's presser, all of that is a thing of the past. That's what they're saying, at least.

Optimism is a good thing, but after so many recent summers full of false bravado, it's hard to put any weight into those words.

Hearing another crop of Canes talking like it's 1987 after playing like it was 1997, I'm numb to the chatter. I'd rather they say nothing and let their actions do the talking come Labor Day. How much can this program say after a 19-19 run since getting gutted by LSU in Atlanta and without a signature win since?

"One thing I've learned is nobody knows what goes on here and knows how good we are except the guys here. It's up to us to go out and show the world how good we are. I know we're not where we should be," said Jason Fox. "No one respects us, but we were one game away [from the ACC title last year]. This year, I think we're one game better, two games better, three games better. I think we're going to be a lot better."

There could be some truth in Fox's assessment, but this is the seventh straight year we've heard big promises that somehow ended with a thud. Kevin Beard all but guaranteed a return trip to the title game back in 2003, talking about the team's collective hunger after the Fiesta Bowl.

Two lackluster efforts against Virginia Tech and Tennessee over an eight day span derailed those dreams.

Preseason talk a year later, citing Brock Berlin as the next best UM quarterback great. In retrospect, Berlin had a fine career. But following Ken "38-2" Dorsey, anyone was in trouble.

Dan Werner's offense. The Kyle Wright Era. The return of Rich Olson. The dismissal of Larry Coker. Every year new reason for optimism, causing pre-season sound bites such as today's.

I want to believe and a part of me does, but I don't want to hear it. Come fall, show me.

Unlike recent Cane teams, this year's upperclassmen have a better supporting cast and this offense will breathe new life thanks to offensive coordinator Mark Whipple. Depth at running back and receiver. An improved offensive line. A Dorsey-esque quarterback prospect in Jacory Harris - one who finally has the tools, the supporting cast and coordinator behind him.

Phillps, McCarthy and Moncur will anchor a defense that sorely missed their leadership. Conveniently enough, each returning player can anchor their unit - Phillips in the secondary, McCarthy at linebacker and Moncur on the defensive line. Lead by example. Keep the young guys calm. Upperclassmen are like coaches on the field for newbies. Should all three fall into line, the Canes defense could make some serious strides this year.

On the ground, Cooper will finally have a fair shake at becoming a 'next level' guy. Two years straight, the undersized tailback was asked to shoulder a bigger back's burden. With Javarris James sidelined, Cooper's explosiveness wore down after too many carries.

Fast forward a year and you have a healthy JJ, a budding star in freshman Mike James, spring game superstar Damien Berry, upstart Lee Chambers and a potential freshman phenom in Lamar Miller. Coop can finally play the role of feature back as he has enough support should one go down.

I'm not doubting the sentiments of the three who attended today's media event. I hope their instincts are correct and that Miami is going to surprise this year. There's definitely some truth to that and the Canes will make strides in '09. How large remains to be seen.

We just don't need the big talk. The "we come to Miami to win national championships" canned speech. Right now I'd settle for a freakin' win against Georgia Tech. I was dating the last time the Canes beat the Jackets. I'm now five years married and will have a daughter by season's end. How's that for perspective?

Before Foxy drops another sound bite, I'd rather see him channel his inner Brett Romberg. Forget the media. Rally your other linemen, get in the sandpits and push a pick up truck around the Greentree parking lot, like it's 2002 all over again. Reach out to a K.C. Jones or Richard Mercier and let some former greats coach you up.

One month until fall ball, veteran Canes. Use it wisely.

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Miami Herald: Barry Jackson talks optimism for Canes

Some good ink in the Miami Herald on Tuesday when Barry Jackson wrote about Randy Shannon's optimism for the 2009 season.

"You will see this team taking the next step," Shannon said. "The Georgia Tech game last year made us grow a lot. That will make us a better team record-wise. We're a lot more talented, have a lot more depth. You don't have to worry about [defensive-line] depth any more. Two years ago, you had only five defensive linemen to play in a game. That alone should tell you how far we've come."

Entering year three of The Shannon Era, the depth is starting to return and with some upgrades at coordinator, many expect for the Canes to begin their climb back. A few reasons for Shannon's optimism:

- Depth At Running Back: Miami has a half dozen solid players and the depth to overcome a slow start by the upperclassmen. "The best guys will play," said Shannon.

- Brandon Washington and Harland Gunn were named two of the most improved players; a bright spot after years of offensive line struggles. Defensive end Adewale Ojomo was also singled out, as were veterans Leonard Hankerson and Randy Phillips. Shannon also called for "big things" from Brandon Harris.

- For those wondering why or if Shannon handcuffed the inexperienced Patrick Nix last year, don't expect the same with Mark Whipple. The new offensive coordinator has been given the green light to spread the ball around and light up scoreboards.

- Jackson mentioned a Shannon quote regarding Glenn Cook's leadership abilities last year and immediately I saw a few message board folk up in arms and missing the point. What Cook lacked on the field, he made up for with his maturity and ability to lead.

The loss of Eric Moncur and Colin McCarthy hurt Miami big time down the stretch and both are back this year, hopefully able to step up and lead. The lack of upperclassmen put too much pressure on last year's first timers. Especially the early enrollees who went straight from fall high school ball to spring practice and then right into their freshman season.

Cook jumped on board as an assistant coach during the 2007 campaign and when healthy again, attempted to jump start 2008 with the "No Excuses" motto and team bracelets. While the result was still a 7-6 campaign, the leadership was a step forward and hopefully someone steps up to carry the torch this year.

- Of the 19 enrollees only 17 made the grade. Offensive lineman Malcolm Bunche is headed to prep school and defensive back Prince Kent is transferring elsewhere, due to academic issues.

- Most exciting in the Jackson piece, Shannon's comments about the current culture being "totally different" - no off-field distractions or arrests putting Miami in the headlines for the wrong reasons. Shannon stated in the past that he had to play the role of hard-ass year one, as the program was broken. Weed out the bad seeds, recruit the right kind of players and with these kids in the regime for two years, it allows more of a hands-off approach year three.

"I approach things differently. I don't have to keep grinding them. The are doing all the right things," said Shannon.

Besides the addition of Whipple as offensive coordinator, the fact Shannon is pulling back is equally as exciting. Expect a looser brand of Miami football come fall, resulting in more wins.

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Go Canes! : 4th of July 25 Off Sale!

Head to www.allCanes.com for more.