Canes celebrate move into the IPF today, Richt gives thoughts

Canes celebrate move into the IPF today, Richt gives thoughts

Stefan Adams
Finally, the Carol Soffer Indoor Practice Facility is open for business.

After many fundraisers and countless hours of construction, the nearly 3 year process culminated Friday morning with the Miami Hurricanes moving into their very own indoor practice facility for practice #11 of fall camp. How did it feel, Coach Richt?

“For the first time in my head coaching career, I don’t have to worry about ‘Plan B’,” Mark Richt said. “This was super fun. And I got a little emotional, too, when it first started. Just seeing Carol [Soffer] loving it. It was awesome. When that horn blows and we come straight in…we’re looking forward to that.”

UM had already taken small steps towards an IPF before Richt was hired in December 2015, but Richt made it a personal mission of his to get the project done, donating $1 million of his own money to get things off the ground. It was also Richt’s idea to put upgraded coaching offices inside the IPF.

“The big change was incorporating the coaches’ offices and the mezzanine level that is now suspended from the rooftop,” Richt said. “That was the biggest thing, because I knew our football operation needed a facelift badly. And I knew we needed this. So I’m thinking, I’ve got two projects. Which one? I’ve got to go for the indoor. Truly, one morning, about 2 [o’clock] or 3 [o’clock] in the morning, I woke up and thought maybe we could do both at the same time, make it one project.”

“The thing that really I appreciate the most is Blake James allowing me to spend time with the architects to talk about exactly what we need and how we needed it, let us bounce ideas on how we can do it.”

That will to modernize UM football inspired Jeffrey Soffer, who then donated $14 million of the projected $34 million needed and dedicated the donation to his mother, Carol. However, despite the building being safe enough to practice in, the project is not yet 100% completed. There are still funds to be raised and the coaching offices that Richt wants are not done either.

“I want to make this real clear: we’re not done with this project,” Richt said. “We’re practicing in it, but we’ve still got a lot of branding to do. We’ve got things to do in the coaches’ offices and the football operations area. We’re not done fundraising for this project, is what I’m saying.

“We need at least $3 million [more] to make it the way it should be made. I always tell everybody, ‘we got one chance to do it right.’ Let’s do it right the first time, let’s not go cheap on anything. Let’s go first-class on everything – and we have, on every single thing we have done on this building and this project.”

The IPF includes two separate fields, 80 yards and 40 yards. Just because the Canes have their own swanky, air-conditioned facility now, doesn't mean Richt plans on having the team lose its competitive edge working in the heat. The plan was to use the IPF today just to mark the occasion, but in the future, the team will use the facility at the end of a long practice week to give the players a break from the heat and of course in the event of heavy rain or lightning.

“We did it today because we wanted to celebrate the building today, and we have a scrimmage tomorrow and I didn’t want to take a lot out of them,” Richt said. “So that’s why we’re in here today.”

“We have to practice in the heat. We have to play in the heat. We understand that. But when you’re in a camp setting, and we have 24 practices over a three-and-a-half-week period, there really isn’t a break. And every [camp] practice is like a Tuesday [practice]. It’s a full, fundamental practice. It’s like Tuesday, Tuesday, Tuesday…you do six of those in a row, especially in the heat, you’re depleting all of their electrolytes and all that. You grind really good for maybe three or four days, whatever it is, then on the next day, instead of taking the day off and going bowling, you get in the air condition and you still get your work in, and obviously we’re going to need it when the [lightning] horn blows.”
 

Comments (35)

Great article, Stefan.

Glad that Richt said they would continue to practice in the heat to maintain that advantage. But I like the idea about using it at the end of the week to give the players a break. This facility is going to help our team so much. I’m amped up!
 
I always tell everybody, ‘we got one chance to do it right.’ Let’s do it right the first time, let’s not go cheap on anything. Let’s go first-class on everything – and we have, on every single thing we have done on this building and this project.”

Coach richt just gets it
 
Too bad it won’t be ready for another month or two

**** construction in S. Fl
 
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Coach Richt got The U a real nice crib.. all we need now is for the local kids to make it great!
 
Coach Richt would make one **** of an AD.
 
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“You grind really good for maybe three or four days, whatever it is, then on the next day, instead of taking the day off and going bowling, you get in the air condition and you still get your work in”

Loved this part
 
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its more about recruiting. im glad he said in good weather we will be outside. practicing in that weather is what made our teams so tough.
 
The beautiful part about all of this, coach richt is a True Cane! To be honest, Georgia made a bold move by getting rid of coach richt, and to be honest, it was a good move for them in that they wanted to get where they got last year at all cost. Let the Truth be told coach richt from most accounts is going to run a clean program, he wasnt going to try and win at all cost, so it cost him his job at UGA!

The move was good for UGA, but even better for coach richt. Let's face it, 15yrs ago or however many years ago when coach richt got to UGA, the players mindsets they had was not championship material. He elevated that program as high as he could take it, he kept trying to manufacter confidence in his teams that he was use too coming from Miami and than Fsu to UGA! He instilled alot and recruited well, but ultimately the atmosphere of alot of players coming to UGA were not championship minded, which is why this happened:


Now that coach richt is home, where he belongs, the fire that was going dim at UGA is not flickering anymore but is burning as a full flame now, he understands that he's back amongst like minds and the True championship spirit that he doesnt have to manufacter or try and generate, but just recruit them who have it, develop them and than watch the rest will take care of itself.

Hs's never won a championship as a headcoach so the drive to do it and bring his alma mater back on top is real, stay Tuned!
 
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@stefanadams Any feedback from players?, how did they like it? I'm interested in hearing whether a day a week in the AC helps, also in the old days these turf surfaces were a concern for injuries, how is this synthetic surface? how does it feel to get tackled and land on it vs grass? thanks
 
Stefan has put more articles and valuable information out there in the last few months then that ****y sob Pete in the years he ran this.
 
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