Miami Herald
1/5
Kehoe, Soldinger both deserved better
LINDA ROBERTSON
[email protected]
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Legions of disillusioned University of Miami fans are asking why coach Larry Coker wasn't fired instead of the four assistant scapegoats.
Coker doesn't deserve to be fired, and neither did two of the assistants. Nor could UM justify firing a coach coming off a 9-3 season who has a 53-9 record and a national title in his five years on the job.
Coker is a man of integrity. UM, an institution of higher learning, could not fire him without looking like an institution of higher earning. It's still a football team, even though the hyperventilating over the stakes makes it seem like a Fortune 500 corporation.
UM is not in the Rose Bowl, and hasn't been in the national title game for an eternal, oh, three years now, but Florida State isn't going to fire Bobby Bowden after an 8-4 regular season, and Penn State didn't fire Joe Paterno after a 4-7 season. Coker should not be fired after a 40-3 humiliation by Louisiana State in the Peach Bowl. It was inexplicable, but the way in which the UM players surrendered was an aberration.
Have the Canes slipped? Definitely. Has the talent level declined? Slightly. Has the program lost its flair? Some. Were the recruiting classes of Butch Davis the best ever? You can't argue with 15 first-round NFL draft picks.
But to keep harping that anybody could have won the 2001 title with the Davis treasure chest is unfair. Coker led that team to No. 1. Davis wasn't here.
What isn't justified is the sacking of Art Kehoe and Don Soldinger. It's a decision Coker will regret.
The firings of linebackers coach Vernon Hargreaves and offensive coordinator Dan Werner make sense. Hargreaves did not see eye to eye with defensive coordinator Randy Shannon. Werner was the author of UM's snooze of an attack.
Under Werner, UM's quarterbacks have been inconsistent, the running backs underutilized and the offensive line unsettled. The predictability of his system was exposed when the season turned sour against Georgia Tech. Tech players said they anticipated everything UM did, and were surprised by the absence of reaction.
''You stay the same and people catch up -- they understand your schemes and game plans,'' Coker acknowledged. ``We need to put some energy on the field and some explosiveness in the offense.''
This season, for the first time in a couple of decades, UM didn't have a playmaker on offense (or on defense). Nobody pulled fans to the edge of their seats or got draftniks yakking. Was it a lack of skill or a lack of opportunity? Greg Olsen, touted as the next Jeremy Shockey, had zero catches in the Peach Bowl. Sinorice Moss, brother of Santana, had two. Charlie Jones got only eight carries. It was a pattern. Players such as Ryan Moore and Devin Hester never got on track during the season.
FOUNDATION COACHES
So Werner had to go. He's the variable after five years in Coral Gables -- not Kehoe, who has five national championship rings in 25 seasons, or Soldinger, two rings in 16 seasons.
Kehoe and Soldinger were rocks of the community and the program, adored by players. Kehoe, the former Canes lineman with the bullhorn voice, will probably be buried in an orange and green casket. Soldinger, winner of two state titles at Miami Southridge High, coached under three UM regimes with a 108-17 record. Not good enough when you are only as good as your last game.
Neither received an explanation when they met Monday with Coker and Pete Garcia and were told to clean out their offices. They deserved one.
''I was flabbergasted, and I don't think Larry handled it well,'' said Soldinger, coach of running backs and special teams. 'I've been in charge and I am a bottom-line guy, and if Larry had said, `Don, I'm not happy with this or with that,' I would respect him as the boss and the one on the hot seat. But there was no warning.''
Soldinger has mentored Edgerrin James, Clinton Portis and Willis McGahee. Tyrone Moss was rumbling toward a 1,000-yard season until a knee injury ended it. UM's kicking game has had its deficiencies, but how can you pin enough blame on Soldinger to cost him his job?
As for Kehoe's offensive line, it never jelled after allowing seven sacks against Florida State; his 2000 and 2001 lines allowed seven sacks in two seasons. There were too many injuries to overcome. Kehoe hasn't had the parade of All-Americans he had from 1991 to 2002, but he did have Eric Winston, a projected first-rounder.
PLAN IN PLACE
A certain staleness has taken hold under the easygoing Coker. There is a plan behind this shake-up, and former offensive coordinator Rob Chudzinski, now with the San Diego Chargers, is likely at the top of it. Out with the old (and outspoken) -- Kehoe and Soldinger -- so the new guy can command his own.
Athletic director Paul Dee supported Coker's decision to make ''a
total change with respect to the offense,'' Dee said. ``It was difficult. The key was the productivity of the offense the past two years and not having to rely on defense every game.''
Coker took responsibility, and then he took the heads of four assistants -- two too many.
Former and current Canes called Soldinger and Kehoe on Tuesday.
''We had a fabulous run -- arguably the best in college football,'' Soldinger said. ``Tyrone [Moss] called to say he didn't want anybody to coach him but me. The kids know. I'll really miss them.''