Finding the University of Miami's weakness last season was easy for opponents. It was the Hurricanes' run defense. The collective numbers were about as ugly as it gets for a program that has always prided itself in stuffing the run.
How ugly was the Canes run defense in 2008? UM allowed 1,974 yards on the ground -- a 151.85-yard average that ranked worst in the ACC and 75th in the country. It's an amazing drop off when you consider in 2006 UM's run defense allowed just 882 yards the entire season -- tied for fourth fewest in the NCAA and tops in the ACC. That season just so happened to be the last year Randy Shannon was defensive coordinator.
The Canes have been getting progressively worse at stopping the run with a different guy calling the shots on defense. In 2007, UM ranked 40th against the run (133.75 ypg) and eighth in the ACC under Tim Walton. Bill Young obviously didn't do any better last year.
UM didn't just give up more yards collectively, they were often gashed by long runs and big plays. N.C. State and California each ran for more than 200 yards on UM in the final two games of the season.
But nobody had more success against the Canes running the football than UM's first two opponents this year -- Florida State and Georgia Tech. The Seminoles, behind scrambling quarterback Christian Ponder and running back Antone Smith, ran for 281 yards and had 14 runs of 10 or more yards against UM. Georgia Tech carved up the Canes for 472 yards and 13 runs of 10 or more yards.
So what makes linebacker Sean Spence feel like the Canes will not get pushed around in 2009?
"We're all bigger, heavier, stronger," Spence told me two weeks ago. "We're not little freshmen anymore."
Size definitely matters when it comes to college football. And if you watched the Hurricanes last season on defense you know it was more than just the size of the depth chart and injuries that held UM back. Sure, Spence earned ACC Defensive Rookie of The Year honors. But he played most of the season right at or under under 200 pounds. For all of the great plays he made as the team's third-leading tackler and leader in tackles for loss, he admits he often got bounced around by bigger linemen and was out of position to make plays.
"Last year, I was more like a ping pong. I'd bounce off a guy, bounce off another and then make a play," said Spence, who came to UM weighing 193 pounds. "Now, I'm taking on blocks, breaking through the blocks, making tackles."
Spence is now 212 pounds. His linebacker mates are bigger too. Ramon Buchanon, who moved over from safety where he was weighing 200, is now 220 and backing up Spence on the strongside. Jordan Futch, considered UM's first linebacker off the bench, came to UM weighing 205 pounds. He's now up to 230.
"We were probably the smallest linebacker group in the nation last year," Futch said. "We had no depth because guys were hurt and we had no size. Now, we're knocking heads off literally. I feel like it's helped me a lot. I know its helped Sean a lot. Sean was always a big hitter. But he's filling holes. Buchanon lights people up. When you see that weight and the speed we have, it's awesome. We're going to be much better stopping the run than we did last year."
The return of Colin McCarthy from a season-ending shoulder injury is another reason Spence is excited. McCarthy, the projected starter on the weakside, has made a huge difference just in practice according to Spence.
"Colin is a great player, vocal leader," Spence said. "He's another playmaker. He'll make interceptions, pick up fumbles. He's a great open field tackler. I watch him a lot and where he fits up on guys. We missed him bad."
While the Canes have sustained a few injuries to its defensive line this fall (Adewale Ojomo, Eric Moncur, Dyron Dye), Spence said he sees improvement in the guys in front of him. Defensive tackle Marcus Forston and Micanor Regis, both freshmen last season, have been praised repeatedly throughout camp by Shannon. A healthy Allen Bailey in the middle has also made a difference according to Jason Fox.
"Our d-line got a lot better," Spence said. "Guys are sitting in the right gap, wrapping up, anticipating and reading assignments. We're not going backward anymore.
"Last year, guys weren't really buying into what we did last year. Guys are all on one page now. We're ready to stop the run."
The first test is Monday.
Finding the University of Miami's weakness last season was easy for opponents. It was the Hurricanes' run defense. The collective numbers were about as ugly as it gets for a program that has always prided itself in stuffing the run.
How ugly was the Canes run defense in 2008? UM allowed 1,974 yards on the ground -- a 151.85-yard average that ranked worst in the ACC and 75th in the country. It's an amazing drop off when you consider in 2006 UM's run defense allowed just 882 yards the entire season -- tied for fourth fewest in the NCAA and tops in the ACC. That season just so happened to be the last year Randy Shannon was defensive coordinator.
The Canes have been getting progressively worse at stopping the run with a different guy calling the shots on defense. In 2007, UM ranked 40th against the run (133.75 ypg) and eighth in the ACC under Tim Walton. Bill Young obviously didn't do any better last year.
UM didn't just give up more yards collectively, they were often gashed by long runs and big plays. N.C. State and California each ran for more than 200 yards on UM in the final two games of the season.
But nobody had more success against the Canes running the football than UM's first two opponents this year -- Florida State and Georgia Tech. The Seminoles, behind scrambling quarterback Christian Ponder and running back Antone Smith, ran for 281 yards and had 14 runs of 10 or more yards against UM. Georgia Tech carved up the Canes for 472 yards and 13 runs of 10 or more yards.
So what makes linebacker Sean Spence feel like the Canes will not get pushed around in 2009?
"We're all bigger, heavier, stronger," Spence told me two weeks ago. "We're not little freshmen anymore."
Size definitely matters when it comes to college football. And if you watched the Hurricanes last season on defense you know it was more than just the size of the depth chart and injuries that held UM back. Sure, Spence earned ACC Defensive Rookie of The Year honors. But he played most of the season right at or under under 200 pounds. For all of the great plays he made as the team's third-leading tackler and leader in tackles for loss, he admits he often got bounced around by bigger linemen and was out of position to make plays.
"Last year, I was more like a ping pong. I'd bounce off a guy, bounce off another and then make a play," said Spence, who came to UM weighing 193 pounds. "Now, I'm taking on blocks, breaking through the blocks, making tackles."
Spence is now 212 pounds. His linebacker mates are bigger too. Ramon Buchanon, who moved over from safety where he was weighing 200, is now 220 and backing up Spence on the strongside. Jordan Futch, considered UM's first linebacker off the bench, came to UM weighing 205 pounds. He's now up to 230.
"We were probably the smallest linebacker group in the nation last year," Futch said. "We had no depth because guys were hurt and we had no size. Now, we're knocking heads off literally. I feel like it's helped me a lot. I know its helped Sean a lot. Sean was always a big hitter. But he's filling holes. Buchanon lights people up. When you see that weight and the speed we have, it's awesome. We're going to be much better stopping the run than we did last year."
The return of Colin McCarthy from a season-ending shoulder injury is another reason Spence is excited. McCarthy, the projected starter on the weakside, has made a huge difference just in practice according to Spence.
"Colin is a great player, vocal leader," Spence said. "He's another playmaker. He'll make interceptions, pick up fumbles. He's a great open field tackler. I watch him a lot and where he fits up on guys. We missed him bad."
While the Canes have sustained a few injuries to its defensive line this fall (Adewale Ojomo, Eric Moncur, Dyron Dye), Spence said he sees improvement in the guys in front of him. Defensive tackle Marcus Forston and Micanor Regis, both freshmen last season, have been praised repeatedly throughout camp by Shannon. A healthy Allen Bailey in the middle has also made a difference according to Jason Fox.
"Our d-line got a lot better," Spence said. "Guys are sitting in the right gap, wrapping up, anticipating and reading assignments. We're not going backward anymore.
"Last year, guys weren't really buying into what we did last year. Guys are all on one page now. We're ready to stop the run."
The first test is Monday.
By GREG COTE
gcote@MiamiHerald.com
SLIDING AWAY The indignity! UM used to be the national seat of stars, the darling of the NFL Draft's first round, the consistently flowing pipeline from Saturdays to Sundays.
Now, in 2009, there is a solitary Cane, running back Graig Cooper, checking in 173rd. (And we would intend nothing against Cooper personally to mention that most fans of The U are not yet rushing to include him among Edgerrin James and Clinton Portis, et al, in the pantheon of the school's greatest at the position.)
No. 173. Can you imagine?
The Florida Gators had five guys just in the national top 63, led by overall No. 1 Tim Tebow. The upstart South Florida Bulls had two players ranked higher than Miami (much), and three overall. FAU quarterback Rusty Smith was ranked No. 89. Florida State had two guys higher than the lone Cane.
And, for the ultimate gut-punch: Even cross-town kid brother FIU had a player, young receiver/return man T.Y. Hilton, ranked higher than UM's top guy.
This is a reminder that the best coaching in college football is not done on sidelines on Saturdays. It is done in living rooms when the cameras aren't on.
Recruiting = talent = UM's return to prominence. That, or bust. That, or a continuation of the decline.
I get a kick out of so
many Hurricanes fans railing about Randy Shannon's coaching decisions during games, or the way he carries himself in news conferences, or his clock management, etc.
Make no mistake, Shannon, beginning his third season as coach, will succeed or fail here ultimately by his work in living rooms, or when he has recruits' moms and dads in his plush office, the one with the small New Age waterfall trickling serenely.
Which brings us to the Bull Market.
UM's fortunes, and Shannon's job, depend on which way it goes from here.
The bunch of Miami Northwestern High players he convinced in 2008 to stay in town -- led by quarterback Jacory Harris -- are the saddle on which a program's and a coach's fortunes ride. The nucleus of Bulls also includes linebacker Sean Spence, defensive tackle Marcus Forsten and receiver Aldarius Johnson, but make no mistake Harris is the hub, the essential impetus.
The Hurricanes need a star, a national focal point. ``UM is back'' needs a face.
It is time.
The young men who forged the Hurricanes' most recent of five national championships, in 2001, will soon be marking that milestone's 10th anniversary. In college football, that's a couple of generations ago.
It is time.
The U's 14-year streak of NFL first-round draft picks ended this past April, after barely surviving the previous three years. Miami hasn't had a top-10 pick since cornerback Antrelle Rolle in 2005.
It is time.
No Cane has won a major national individual honor since Kellen Winslow's Mackey Award (top tight end) in 2003, or been a recognized All-American since '05.
It is time.
Somebody, and Harris is only the most obvious and out-front candidate, must step forward and become UM's next big-time, headline-making, earth-quaking, national star.
Somebody who can stand shoulder to shoulder with the Jim Kellys and Michael Irvins and Ray Lewises not just because they shared the same uniform but because they shared the same defining, extraordinary skills.
The gradual decline in overall talent was something Shannon inherited, but, three years in, he still must prove he has overcome that and steered the franchise right.
Shannon is a polarizing figure in South Florida sports, and certainly among Canes fans. I hear it, see it in blog comments, read it in e-mails.
I used to wonder if it might have to do with race.
I have come to think it has more to do with the race against time. UM fans are tired of waiting. Five national titles bunched inside two decades make a fandom hungry -- and impatient. Watching the once-nemesis Florida Gators rise to preening glory surely doesn't help.
Miami must stop relying on its heritage, its past accomplishments and ``family'' and create new lines on the résumé - in much the same way the Dolphins must get past the old familiar crutch of Don Shula/Perfect Season/Dan Marino and start putting some fresh, wet ink to the franchise history book.
It is a wonderful thing, UM's tradition of former Canes returning to work out at the school and nurture their heirs. It is what 1983 championship coach Howard Schnellenberger meant this month when he referred to the bloodline as ``the brotherhood of players.'' And when he referred to the coaches who succeeded him as ``smart enough to not screw it up, to not mess with the recipe.''
The thing is, in college football all it takes is a few bad or underperforming recruiting classes in a row to leave a once-proud program with nothing much to grasp but the past.
Frank Gore's younger brother just snubbed the Cane bloodline to go with the Gators. Why? Because he wants a ticket to the NFL, and the UM pipeline narrowed and got rusty fast, and Kid Gore saw what UF did for Percy Harvin and put his chips on that.
Loyalty only stretches so far.
Flourishing major programs don't so much recruit players as see star prospects recruiting them. Miami once enjoyed such a situation but now must work for its gold by cajoling talent.
Which brings us back to the Bull Market, and the 2008 Northwestern class fronted by Harris.
Shannon is betting UM's return to prominence, and his own career, on the recruiting gamble embodied by this kid -- the idea that a nucleus that went 30-0 in high school and won everything could do it at the next level in the same city.
The coach thinks Harris is all that.
The coach thinking Harris is all that was so obvious that it led 2008 starter Robert Marve to tuck his tail between his legs in defeat and transfer.
Nationally, though, the same disrespect -- or is it disregard? -- that had no Cane ranked higher than 173rd among the best players has Harris nowhere in a CollegeFootballNews.com list of 30 young QBs to keep an eye on.
OFTEN OVERLOOKED The guy who will replace Tebow in Gainesville, John Brantley, is No. 5. E.J. Manuel of FSU is 11th. One B.J. Daniels of South Florida is 30th.
Harris? You'll find him, for now, nowhere but in the sweetest dreams of Shannon and Canes fans.
The sophomore might have been kidding when he said on a local radio show that he looks forward to wearing a pink suit to pick up his Heisman Trophy.
Star-starved UM prays he was serious about the Heisman, if not the suit.
No kidding.
By GREG COTE
gcote@MiamiHerald.com
SLIDING AWAY The indignity! UM used to be the national seat of stars, the darling of the NFL Draft's first round, the consistently flowing pipeline from Saturdays to Sundays.
Now, in 2009, there is a solitary Cane, running back Graig Cooper, checking in 173rd. (And we would intend nothing against Cooper personally to mention that most fans of The U are not yet rushing to include him among Edgerrin James and Clinton Portis, et al, in the pantheon of the school's greatest at the position.)
No. 173. Can you imagine?
The Florida Gators had five guys just in the national top 63, led by overall No. 1 Tim Tebow. The upstart South Florida Bulls had two players ranked higher than Miami (much), and three overall. FAU quarterback Rusty Smith was ranked No. 89. Florida State had two guys higher than the lone Cane.
And, for the ultimate gut-punch: Even cross-town kid brother FIU had a player, young receiver/return man T.Y. Hilton, ranked higher than UM's top guy.
This is a reminder that the best coaching in college football is not done on sidelines on Saturdays. It is done in living rooms when the cameras aren't on.
Recruiting = talent = UM's return to prominence. That, or bust. That, or a continuation of the decline.
I get a kick out of so
many Hurricanes fans railing about Randy Shannon's coaching decisions during games, or the way he carries himself in news conferences, or his clock management, etc.
Make no mistake, Shannon, beginning his third season as coach, will succeed or fail here ultimately by his work in living rooms, or when he has recruits' moms and dads in his plush office, the one with the small New Age waterfall trickling serenely.
Which brings us to the Bull Market.
UM's fortunes, and Shannon's job, depend on which way it goes from here.
The bunch of Miami Northwestern High players he convinced in 2008 to stay in town -- led by quarterback Jacory Harris -- are the saddle on which a program's and a coach's fortunes ride. The nucleus of Bulls also includes linebacker Sean Spence, defensive tackle Marcus Forsten and receiver Aldarius Johnson, but make no mistake Harris is the hub, the essential impetus.
The Hurricanes need a star, a national focal point. ``UM is back'' needs a face.
It is time.
The young men who forged the Hurricanes' most recent of five national championships, in 2001, will soon be marking that milestone's 10th anniversary. In college football, that's a couple of generations ago.
It is time.
The U's 14-year streak of NFL first-round draft picks ended this past April, after barely surviving the previous three years. Miami hasn't had a top-10 pick since cornerback Antrelle Rolle in 2005.
It is time.
No Cane has won a major national individual honor since Kellen Winslow's Mackey Award (top tight end) in 2003, or been a recognized All-American since '05.
It is time.
Somebody, and Harris is only the most obvious and out-front candidate, must step forward and become UM's next big-time, headline-making, earth-quaking, national star.
Somebody who can stand shoulder to shoulder with the Jim Kellys and Michael Irvins and Ray Lewises not just because they shared the same uniform but because they shared the same defining, extraordinary skills.
The gradual decline in overall talent was something Shannon inherited, but, three years in, he still must prove he has overcome that and steered the franchise right.
Shannon is a polarizing figure in South Florida sports, and certainly among Canes fans. I hear it, see it in blog comments, read it in e-mails.
I used to wonder if it might have to do with race.
I have come to think it has more to do with the race against time. UM fans are tired of waiting. Five national titles bunched inside two decades make a fandom hungry -- and impatient. Watching the once-nemesis Florida Gators rise to preening glory surely doesn't help.
Miami must stop relying on its heritage, its past accomplishments and ``family'' and create new lines on the résumé - in much the same way the Dolphins must get past the old familiar crutch of Don Shula/Perfect Season/Dan Marino and start putting some fresh, wet ink to the franchise history book.
It is a wonderful thing, UM's tradition of former Canes returning to work out at the school and nurture their heirs. It is what 1983 championship coach Howard Schnellenberger meant this month when he referred to the bloodline as ``the brotherhood of players.'' And when he referred to the coaches who succeeded him as ``smart enough to not screw it up, to not mess with the recipe.''
The thing is, in college football all it takes is a few bad or underperforming recruiting classes in a row to leave a once-proud program with nothing much to grasp but the past.
Frank Gore's younger brother just snubbed the Cane bloodline to go with the Gators. Why? Because he wants a ticket to the NFL, and the UM pipeline narrowed and got rusty fast, and Kid Gore saw what UF did for Percy Harvin and put his chips on that.
Loyalty only stretches so far.
Flourishing major programs don't so much recruit players as see star prospects recruiting them. Miami once enjoyed such a situation but now must work for its gold by cajoling talent.
Which brings us back to the Bull Market, and the 2008 Northwestern class fronted by Harris.
Shannon is betting UM's return to prominence, and his own career, on the recruiting gamble embodied by this kid -- the idea that a nucleus that went 30-0 in high school and won everything could do it at the next level in the same city.
The coach thinks Harris is all that.
The coach thinking Harris is all that was so obvious that it led 2008 starter Robert Marve to tuck his tail between his legs in defeat and transfer.
Nationally, though, the same disrespect -- or is it disregard? -- that had no Cane ranked higher than 173rd among the best players has Harris nowhere in a CollegeFootballNews.com list of 30 young QBs to keep an eye on.
OFTEN OVERLOOKED The guy who will replace Tebow in Gainesville, John Brantley, is No. 5. E.J. Manuel of FSU is 11th. One B.J. Daniels of South Florida is 30th.
Harris? You'll find him, for now, nowhere but in the sweetest dreams of Shannon and Canes fans.
The sophomore might have been kidding when he said on a local radio show that he looks forward to wearing a pink suit to pick up his Heisman Trophy.
Star-starved UM prays he was serious about the Heisman, if not the suit.
No kidding.

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