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Florida State 13, MIAMI 10 (final)

I LOVE it...I can't believe I was rooting for Florida State, but now all the Cryami fans will be crawling back into that shithole they came from (or solitary confinement in some cases) until next year at this time, when they will have a zero in the loss column again.

Since they play about as many good teams the rest of the way as West Virginia, it's a really good thing they lost.

Remember when invincible Miami teams only lost championship games? :slappy:
 
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The Seminoles, now with a 2-0 record against the Miami Hurricanes, have decided they need their own Sports Drink.

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Miami's best is just not good enough anymore
BY DAN LE BATARD


Nobody wants to hear this today, but the scoreboard tells the truth in a way that is cold and cruel and allows very little room for debate. The truth is up there in lights etched in a way that leaves a searing, ugly mark on a program that once felt flawless:

The University of Miami football team feels too common today. Not special. Not dominant. Too close to ordinary for a football school that, once upon a time, seemed to monopolize the extraordinary.

Miami's season started Monday night in a way that makes it feel finished. It isn't merely that Miami lost at home against Florida State, 13-10, on one of those electric Orange Bowl nights the Hurricanes used to own. That's allowed. FSU is excellent. You can lose to an elite program with a legendary coach by a field goal.

No, it's that the Hurricanes lost with their quarterback playing well and their defense playing better. Miami didn't turn the ball over on a rainy field until the final desperate 29 seconds. Miami played well, in other words. And it has been an awful long time since a Miami team's best wasn't good enough at home on a night like this.

The reason?

Miami isn't good enough.

That's where the program is today. Miami doesn't have nearly enough fluorescent players, on either side of the ball, who can erase all other mistakes in an 80-yard burst of game-changing blur, no matter how vibrant the venue. Once upon a time, on a curtain-raising night like this at home, Miami would do things like club Deion Sanders and the No. 1-ranked Seminoles, 31-0. But the program's skill-position speed has slipped in a way that is obvious to the eye, handcuffing even a talented quarterback like Kyle Wright. Poor Wright had to feel very alone Monday night even in a stadium full of people who were loud until the final, fateful fourth quarter.

So UM Coach Larry Coker (now 59-10 in his career) is about to come under an avalanche of criticism. He fired some assistants this offseason in search of improvement. Now there aren't a lot of places to look beyond the mirror. For better or worse, these are his players who aren't good enough. ''I want to make sure our fans don't give up on this football team,'' Coker said. ``We're going to be a good football team.''

And perhaps UM will be.

But good isn't good enough.

Not around here.

Miami has slipped at least in part because it would have been impossible not to, given the dizzying heights. You can't keep going from Edgerrin James to Clinton Portis to Willis McGahee at running back, from Bubba Franks to Jeremy Shockey to Kellen Winslow at tight end, from Santana Moss to Andre Johnson at wide receiver and Ed Reed to Sean Taylor at safety. Those aren't merely great players. Those are some of the best players in the entire world at their positions, as they've proven in the pros. The drop-off was inevitable.

But Monday was hard to watch. Miami didn't have a running back who could bust a run or a wide receiver who could create space for Wright. Hence, one first down in the second half and two measly rushing yards for the game. So Miami coughed up a 10-3 lead and was impotent for the entire second half as the rabid Miami defense weakened ever so slightly, allowing as many points in the fourth quarter as UM scored in the entire game.

''We just couldn't get anything going,'' Wright said.

Coker took a noble stand by suspending his best receiver and running back for this game. It is a stand FSU Coach Bobby Bowden, always honest, admits he probably wouldn't have taken -- not before this big a game. But those UM players were missed Monday. And UM fans might pay lip-service to winning with integrity but not if it means losing with integrity.

There is a certain standard at Miami, unreasonable and insane. This is what happens when you have lost less often than any college football team in America since 1983. It is what happens when you've been ranked in the Top 25 for 105 consecutive weeks -- since 1999, longer than any program in the country. And its why Miami can be very good, as it was last season, and Coker must still fire a bunch of his coaches as sports-hate radio changes his name to Larry Choker and/or Larry Joker.

Coker is in a position unlike any in amateur coaching. All he must do is win every single time. Around these parts, it takes but a single hiccup to ruin the entire opera, which is why Coker was singing afterward about the season not being over.

Bowden has done more winning than anyone. And he has lost to the Hurricanes six of the last eight times he has played them. A 2-6 record, mind you. The winningest coach ever. And he coaches under smaller expectations this season than Coker. Its not hard to understand why. Coker has had more talent to play with than Bowden. Over one three-year span, Miami had 16 first-round NFL picks to FSU's one.

Not anymore, though. That gap is closed now. That's on Coker, as is more pressure than he has ever known.
...
 
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:slappy:


Link

Miami angers ex-players by limiting sideline access
Tuesday, September 05, 2006
Brian Costa
THE MIAMI HERALD

MIAMI — Some former University of Miami football players returning to the Orange Bowl this year might have to learn a new phrase:
Down in front.
The athletic department is planning to cut the number of sideline passes given to explayers and other guests, offering some of them regular tickets instead. The move has some former players concerned about the future of what they call a distinctive Hurricanes tradition.
Miami athletic director Paul Dee would not specify the number of sideline passes that will be issued. He said the university is looking to cut back on all sideline personnel, from groundskeepers to camera crews, in an effort to reduce congestion.
"This policy is not directed at former players," Dee said. "Sometimes there are just too many people on our sidelines."
Still, as word of the change spread among former players during the past few weeks, many resented the idea that they are part of the excess. Some discussed the issue in an e-mail for football alumni, and others called or e-mailed Dee.
"The heck with this," said Bennie Blades, who won the Jim Thorpe Award as the nation’s top defensive back in 1987. "I’m not listening to this. I’ve left a lot of blood, sweat and tears on that field."
Richard Mercier, an All-American guard in 1999 who attends most home games, said the large sideline presence of ex-Canes is part of the fraternal feel of Miami football.
"I know a lot of guys are fuming about it," he said, adding that he would not complain. "Hey, man, they’re giving us something. If someone is giving you something, you can’t really complain about it."
Former players have been a staple of the Orange Bowl sideline through much of Miami’s rise to prominence in the past two-plus decades.
Sideline passes, which also have been issued to city officials and other special guests, provide field-level access otherwise restricted to people with a working function — team and stadium personnel, media and cheerleaders.
Dee would not say how many passes were typically issued per game. Ex-players’ estimates ranged between a dozen and three dozen for former players alone.
Scores of other former players each game opt to sit for free in the stands, where they can bring a guest — something they cannot do on the sideline.
Those who stand on the sideline gladly give up that luxury. To them, the sideline passes are about more than a desirable viewing location. They are about participating in a tradition they appreciated when they were playing.
"We always took as it a camaraderie thing to let the younger players know, ‘Hey, we’re here to support you guys,’" said Alonzo Highsmith, the former Miami and NFL running back who is now a scout with Green Bay.
Recalling his own playing days in the mid-1980s, Highsmith said he got extra motivation from then-NFL quarterback Jim Kelly and other ex-players walking by and encouraging the team.
"You have something to live up to, and you don’t want to fail," he said. "That’s what made ‘The U’ football program what it is."
Dee said part of the new policy will be that former players must stay outside the coaches’ box, which extends between the two 25-yard lines. In the past, he said special guests were not stopped from entering that area.
 
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Cane Mutiny?

From Dan Wetzel - Yahoo

MIAMI – Maybe Larry Coker ought to hire his old assistants back. Or fire some new ones. Or exert some form of authority while he still has it. Because if the new-look/old-school Miami Hurricanes he trotted out Monday is what he had in mind, he isn't going to be calling the shots down here much longer.
That's the reality for Coker after a 13-10 loss to arch-rival Florida State on a warm, rainy night in the Orange Bowl, and he knows it.
As if the meager 17 second-half yards, nine penalties and two total rushing yards weren't ugly enough, by the fourth quarter the ESPN announcers were already offering spin cycle apologies about Coker molding young men and things like that in the ultimate sign of a dead coach walking.
"I just want to make sure our fans don't give up on this football team," Coker himself would implore in his postgame press conference, hoping to weaken the wave of talk show callers and Internet posters.
http://us.bc.yahoo.com/b?P=sd6CsNG_...6383.9137346.9962674.1414694/D=LREC/B=3912330
How quaint. How unrealistic.
"People are going to do what they are going to do," he admitted. "I just want our fans to know this is a good football team [with] good young men. Don't give up on us just because we lost one game to a very good football team. Don't give up on this team."
It ain't pretty in Miami, where the expectations are gobbling up Coker the way the Seminoles' defense did with his running game. The party line is that the fan demands are out of control – after all, even after this loss Coker is 53-10 with a national title.
But it was Coker who canned six assistants, including both coordinators, after a 40-3 loss to Louisiana State in the Peach Bowl capped a 9-3 season. If there was truly nothing wrong – and with no reason to panic – why clean house?
Then his new system came out and did nothing offensively against FSU.
"We did not run the ball well. We did not throw the ball well," Coker admitted.
Other than that, things were great.
And so the coach who started his career 24-0 now has 11 games to figure out how to make it to next fall because this gold standard program is showing signs of rust. Anything less than a run of the regular season table and he'll struggle to survive. The talk-show heat is inevitable.
"Well, that goes with the territory," said FSU's Bobby Bowden, who picked up his Division I-best 360th career victory in his 41st season opener. "If you are a football coach, you are going to catch that.
"I've been under the heat, too. Especially West Virginia, when they wanted me to leave town. It's part of coaching. And if you can't handle it, you have to get out of it. A lot of coaches get out of it because they can't handle criticism. You have to learn to handle it."
Bowden survived it because he kept winning and he rarely changed course. Calls to fire his coordinators following last season's disappointing 7-5 campaign fell on deaf ears. Of course, he has that power. No one is pushing Bobby Bowden out of Tallahassee.
As for Coker, Bowden understands the fans are angry. He doesn't think they should mutiny yet, though.
"They'd be making a mistake," Bowden said. "There is one thing about both of us. These people who open – and we probably will next year – with somebody and they are 30-point favorites, after they win they still don't know what they've got. They ain't been tested. We play Miami and they play us [and] we know what we got.
"We could open with Northeastern Canada and Southwestern Mexico and beat them by 40. Or we can play Miami and know what we got. And they know what they got. If we get things corrected, both of us can be pretty darn good football teams.
"You don't know; he may win the rest of his ball games. We came here (in 1988) and got beat 31-nothing and won the rest of our games."
That might be what it takes for Coker. Miami has the highest winning percentage in college football since 1983 (.824) and own five national titles, so the bar is high. This is a big media, pro sports market and the thought of any kind of step back by the program will not be tolerated. Coker may have won the 2001 title, but critics note it was with players signed by Butch Davis.
Coker made a point of complimenting the FSU defense for his team's struggles, which isn't what the fans want to hear. There is little question that in a game that so often is decided by speed, the Seminoles – especially on defense – had more of it.
Not that FSU was brilliant or anything. It gained just one yard rushing and struggled often. But it won. And that's the point. "This is one of those games [where] you know it's going to be ugly [and] I hope we win," Bowden said.
At the very least, the 'Noles cobbled together some recognizable drives against what is unquestionably a great Miami defensive front.
"In my estimation, his front four has three first-rounders, I bet ya," Bowden said.
Which Miami fans also don't want to hear (all that talent going to waste?). At this stage, what's fair or not doesn't matter. The reality for Coker is to win now or perish. That's how it is at this level, at this pay scale and on this stage.
"It is a long season," Coker cautioned.
He may find out just how long.
Dan Wetzel is Yahoo! Sports' national columnist.
 
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While everyone's enjoying the 'Canes' troubles, I must kick them while they're down just a little bit more by noting that the whole running out of the inflatable helmet in a cloud of fog thing is just SO 1985.
 
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