Some thoughts on the season

DMoney
DMoney
3 min read

Comments (114)

I know we didn’t win the big one bit this was my second favorite season and team of all time. I loved the way this team played and beating all those teams we beat the way we did was amazing
 
Awesome post @DMoney , and I appreciate the coverage all season by you and Pete! What a year! I became a Miami Hurricanes fan in 2001 when I was an 8 year-old boy in Columbus, OH, because I thought OSU played the most boring football and Miami football was captivating.

2003 crushed 9 year-old me wearing my orange #2 Willis McGahee jersey while watching the Fiesta Bowl. I’ve been searching for vengeance ever since. I used to be embarrassed to be a Miami fan—I would often hide my fandom because of how pathetic we were. Not anymore.

We are now a legitimate top dog again. This season didn’t end with a storybook ending, but it brought me more joy than I thought it could. We kicked everyone’s a$$ in the CFP, and I couldn’t be prouder to be a Cane fan. The trajectory for this team is through the roof. Let’s finish the job
 
I said in another thread how much fun I had this season. With a few more plays(Louisville) and less cheating(SMU) this team could have easily been 16-0 as well. I like the direction this program is headed. Miami will continue to stack top 5-10 recruiting and portal classes. The only thing that concerns me is losing(and replacing) the current staff as some will eventually go to other programs or the NFL. This looks like a decade or so run of championship level Miami football, IMO.
 
My dawg D-Money! Great write-up.

I was actually just thinking about this same thing a few days ago. The energy around the city... the way people respond to a Canes hat... or my Canes license plate... it's just different right now. A lot of 🙌🏻 gestures these days.

Some of the coaching pages/resources and sites that I follow/subscribe to... are posting Miami game and practice footage on how to tackle, how to play defense, how to play Linebacker, etc etc etc. When is the last time that ANYBODY used Miami Hurricanes footage as an example of how to play football.
MatchQuarters.com has referenced Hetherman and our defense in multiple articles this season.

I'll be in Orlando this month watching Mario and Hetherman speak at a clinic, and it's probably going to be standing room only.

And beyond just being a life long fan...
As a local HS coach, I finally feel 100% secure handing my kids over to this staff/program. I can't wait until Jaylyn Jones arrives in Coral Gables.
 
Great post. The only thing I would add that really separates this era from other good seasons like 2017 is that for the first time in 20 years, not only are we good, we have had some of the most exciting players in the sport: Cam, Mali and Bain are Special Players in any era and then you have guys like Daniels, Scott and Thomas who made iconic plays in big games.
 
Great post. The only thing I would add that really separates this era from other good seasons like 2017 is that for the first time in 20 years, not only are we good, we have had some of the most exciting players in the sport: Cam, Mali and Bain are Special Players in any era and then you have guys like Daniels, Scott and Thomas who made iconic plays in big games.
Scott is a very very special player in any era
 
Excellent write up D.

Mario has built this thing the right way, a first class organization with first class culture that parents want their sons to be a part of. We are here to stay
 
It’s been a two-month sprint. We went from Selection Show to Signing Day to the Playoffs to the Portal to the Courthouse. There were no breaks. Thanks to all of you, CanesInSight is about to hit 8 million posts (and counting). Now that things are more settled, I wanted to reflect on the 2025 Canes.

This season was about the wins. Miami won a school-record 13 games. We beat four Top 10 teams and seven ranked teams. We beat every single rival possible- Notre Dame, Ohio State, Florida, Florida State, Virginia Tech. And in each game, we were clearly the better team.

We also buried narratives. There was no November swoon. We killed the Fiesta Bowl curse. Two decades of SEC dominance? Dead and buried. We beat their two best teams with our C+ game. There are no more ghosts.

This run validated the Cristobal Era in three ways. First, it validated his roster-building. We played all the best teams and stacked up physically. When we played our in-state rivals, the talent gap was demoralizing. We're in the top weight class again.

Second, this run validated Mario's core values. As it turns out, the 12-team playoff is a lot like the past 150 years of championship football. Run the ball, play defense, win in the trenches. We're built to win in Winter.

Finally, this run validated Mario’s culture. Our game tape is littered with violence. Skill players blocked and linemen ran to the ball. We pushed piles like a rugby scrum. Everything he preached showed up on the field in the biggest moments. That’s culture, and it goes beyond talent acquisition.

This team restored the feeling we lost in the 2005 Peach Bowl. How many times have we gotten stomped since then? Now, we always show up to fight. We’re 23-6 over the past two years, and those six losses are by a combined 25 points. No matter how we're playing, we're always going to be physical.

My kids don’t understand why I wasn’t angrier after the Indiana loss. It’s hard to explain because they haven’t lived through the past two decades. Probation. Bryan Pata. Sean Taylor. 48-0 in the Orange Bowl. Shreveport. El Paso. Blue fields. Halfback passes in a blizzard. FIU. Middle Tennessee State. After all that, I can't get too mad about losing to a deserving champ in an instant classic.

More than anything, this run cemented Miami’s place in the new age of college football. The sport is moving fast and we're at the forefront. The old SEC Era is done. Our game against Indiana was the highest-rated, non-NFL sporting event in a decade. We got 8 million more viewers than Ohio State v. Notre Dame last year. The Hoosiers brought viewers, too, but there’s a reason Saturday Night Live was running skits about us. Miami football is the biggest show in town again.

It's hard to overstate the buzz in the city. When I go to my son's baseball practice, every kid is asking me about Malachi Toney like he’s LeBron James. People who never saw a great Canes team (and that's everyone under 30) finally understand what it looks like. You don't have to watch a documentary to see our logo on ESPN. For the next generation of recruits, we're a blue blood with no asterisk.

It's always great to be a Miami Hurricane, but it's never felt better than right now. Good things come to those who wait. And the wait is finally over.
In my 50+ years as a Cane I was seen the pendulum swing many times. From irrelevance to Dominance, from the lowest low to the top of the mountain, but this season encapsulated all that. Just when we had our heads down, again, these kids didn’t. They stood up and stood out . Climbed up on the shoulders of Cane greats a reached out for that Holy Grail. It was a he** of a run, and tho we get the golden ring, we most definitely exceeded our grasp. GOCANES🙌🏽
 
you left out

"losing to FIU, DUKE AND LOUISIANA TECH"

in the same season!!
 
Saw the Canes win the '83 natty at 14 years old. Been hooked ever since. This reminds me of the Butch teams. He learned from JJ. We are built inside out, and front to back. However, in my opinion this time we have a coach that isn't leaving us. Enjoy the times . . . it's GREAT to be a Miami Hurricanes fan.

so you are one year older than me

I first started watching the Canes in 1984 with Bernie losing to Maryland and Boston College and UCLA in absolute shootouts. the maryland loss is still the worst ever blown lead by a Miami team in history (I think 31 point lead and they lost)

probably the worst Hurricanes defense in the last 40 years (including 2024)
 
I'm with you that it was hard to get too upset with the outcome. We've all watched sports for years, the great stories all have triumphs and heartbreak, like we had this season, along the way.

The difference between the great stories and the ones that don't get made into documentaries is what comes next.

I have not re-watched the game, I can't, but I really do hope to some day within the narrative of a bigger story.
 
Great write-up as usual @DMoney.

I want to underscore one of the points you made.

For the first time in a long time, we're making and winning over new fans and it's impressionable boys aged 8-12. It's been a long time since we could do that.

Kids born after 2000 (or thereabouts), never saw what tied each of us to this team and this program. They did not see a competitive product for decades. But they did see a good FSU run with Jameis and Dalvin, and a good UF run during the Urban Tebow years. They also saw a lot of homegrown talent leave the state (Jeudy, Amari Cooper, Jeremiath Smith, etc.) and make waves. A lot of these kids are unfortunately likely fans of other teams. We've had little to persuade young kids to become fans.

Now, it's different. I have an 11 y/o that plays flag football and for the first time in a long time, kids are talking about the U again. Last year, Cam and X was a major topic of conversation. Now, it's Toney. We're winning over impressionable young fans who will hopefully be the next generation of hardcore Canes fans (and Canes Connection members!). And when these impressionable kids are now 16, 17, 18 and choosing where to play college ball, there's a backbone that didn't exist for a lot of So Fla kids for a long time. The U is now cool again. This is going to take a few years to reap the benefits but we shouldn't lose the Dalvin Cooks and the Jeremiah Smiths the next 5-7 years anymore.
 
Great write-up as usual @DMoney.

I want to underscore one of the points you made.

For the first time in a long time, we're making and winning over new fans and it's impressionable boys aged 8-12. It's been a long time since we could do that.

Kids born after 2000 (or thereabouts), never saw what tied each of us to this team and this program. They did not see a competitive product for decades. But they did see a good FSU run with Jameis and Dalvin, and a good UF run during the Urban Tebow years. They also saw a lot of homegrown talent leave the state (Jeudy, Amari Cooper, Jeremiath Smith, etc.) and make waves. A lot of these kids are unfortunately likely fans of other teams. We've had little to persuade young kids to become fans.

Now, it's different. I have an 11 y/o that plays flag football and for the first time in a long time, kids are talking about the U again. Last year, Cam and X was a major topic of conversation. Now, it's Toney. We're winning over impressionable young fans who will hopefully be the next generation of hardcore Canes fans (and Canes Connection members!). And when these impressionable kids are now 16, 17, 18 and choosing where to play college ball, there's a backbone that didn't exist for a lot of So Fla kids for a long time. The U is now cool again. This is going to take a few years to reap the benefits but we shouldn't lose the Dalvin Cooks and the Jeremiah Smiths the next 5-7 years anymore.
Yeah, this was cool. Associate with people who never before cared or talked about Miami football suddenly asking about this Heatherman & this dynamic little guy who’s 17 or 18. It’s hard grasping how many people identified with & were intrigued by Toney around the country, not just South Florida.
 
As Mario said, we're not back, we're here. And I think we'll be here for a while. From our recruiting to portal or player retention, we seem to be doing things right. Obviously time will tell but so far I'm happy with what we're seeing. Mario is that dude and we're in good hands
 
It’s been a two-month sprint. We went from Selection Show to Signing Day to the Playoffs to the Portal to the Courthouse. There were no breaks. Thanks to all of you, CanesInSight is about to hit 8 million posts (and counting). Now that things are more settled, I wanted to reflect on the 2025 Canes.

This season was about the wins. Miami won a school-record 13 games. We beat four Top 10 teams and seven ranked teams. We beat every single rival possible- Notre Dame, Ohio State, Florida, Florida State, Virginia Tech. And in each game, we were clearly the better team.

We also buried narratives. There was no November swoon. We killed the Fiesta Bowl curse. Two decades of SEC dominance? Dead and buried. We beat their two best teams with our C+ game. There are no more ghosts.

This run validated the Cristobal Era in three ways. First, it validated his roster-building. We played all the best teams and stacked up physically. When we played our in-state rivals, the talent gap was demoralizing. We're in the top weight class again.

Second, this run validated Mario's core values. As it turns out, the 12-team playoff is a lot like the past 150 years of championship football. Run the ball, play defense, win in the trenches. We're built to win in Winter.

Finally, this run validated Mario’s culture. Our game tape is littered with violence. Skill players blocked and linemen ran to the ball. We pushed piles like a rugby scrum. Everything he preached showed up on the field in the biggest moments. That’s culture, and it goes beyond talent acquisition.

This team restored the feeling we lost in the 2005 Peach Bowl. How many times have we gotten stomped since then? Now, we always show up to fight. We’re 23-6 over the past two years, and those six losses are by a combined 25 points. No matter how we're playing, we're always going to be physical.

My kids don’t understand why I wasn’t angrier after the Indiana loss. It’s hard to explain because they haven’t lived through the past two decades. Probation. Bryan Pata. Sean Taylor. 48-0 in the Orange Bowl. Shreveport. El Paso. Blue fields. Halfback passes in a blizzard. FIU. Middle Tennessee State. After all that, I can't get too mad about losing to a deserving champ in an instant classic.

More than anything, this run cemented Miami’s place in the new age of college football. The sport is moving fast and we're at the forefront. The old SEC Era is done. Our game against Indiana was the highest-rated, non-NFL sporting event in a decade. We got 8 million more viewers than Ohio State v. Notre Dame last year. The Hoosiers brought viewers, too, but there’s a reason Saturday Night Live was running skits about us. Miami football is the biggest show in town again.

It's hard to overstate the buzz in the city. When I go to my son's baseball practice, every kid is asking me about Malachi Toney like he’s LeBron James. People who never saw a great Canes team (and that's everyone under 30) finally understand what it looks like. You don't have to watch a documentary to see our logo on ESPN. For the next generation of recruits, we're a blue blood with no asterisk.

It's always great to be a Miami Hurricane, but it's never felt better than right now. Good things come to those who wait. And the wait is finally over.
Great perspective. Even better reflection
 
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