All Canes Blog - Hurrica Let Defining Moment Slip Away

Copeseticman

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I think people are pretty set on there way on Coach Golden, but I thought this was a thought provoking / factual blog post.

Source: http://blog.allcanes.com/miami-hurr...-sun-life-stadium-abc-saturday-night-football


Driving away from the Orange Bowl mid-October in 2002, the exhaustion a comeback, dodging of a bullet and thrill of victory were all that washed over as winning ways continued and the defending champs lived to see another day.

The top-ranked Miami Hurricanes trailed the Florida State Seminoles, 27-14 early in the fourth quarter but put together two memorable scoring drives and survived a missed game-winning field goal attempt, remaining undefeated an en route to a second consecutive title game appearance.

For the Hurricanes, business-as-usual—like so many showdowns during that 34-game win-streak. There were some blowouts, but also some battles and even scarier than surviving at Boston College and Virginia Tech the year before, Florida State gave Miami the scare of the era and have to live with the “what ifs” ever since.
A dozen years later, it’s Miami turn to feel the sting of defeat and forever replay one that got away.
Another scenario with a defending champion, a win-streak, a team that finds a way and an underdog who raised ****, fell short and came as close as one can without prevailing.

UM v. FSU … AND THEY’RE OFF

The Hurricanes forced a three-and-out on the Seminoles’ opening drive, but tight end Clive Walford coughed up a would-be 24-yard gain on Miami’s first play from scrimmage and Florida State was back in business.

Still, a once-maligned defense made another home-stand, regained possession, made its presence felt with the ground game of Duke Johnson and Joe Yearby, before two huge throws from Brad Kaaya to Phillip Dorsett, going for 36 and 27 yards—the latter resulting in a touchdown. Nine plays, 83 yards and the Canes appeared to be in business.

Another three-and-out for Florida State and Miami went right back to work—Kaaya finding Stacy Coley for 22 yards and then back to Walford, who atoned for his earlier turnover with a 22-yard gain of his own.

Dorsett reeled in an 18-yarder before Johnson eventually punched it in on 3rd-and-Goal from the one and after a Michael Badgley PAT was blocked, the Canes led, 13-0 late first quarter—in business, but still having left points on the field that would come back to haunt.

Miami’s special teams responded a play later, with Deon Bush forcing a fumble on the return, recovered by Corn Elder. The Hurricanes went back to work, but had a third-down conversion negated by an illegal formation and facing a 3rd-and-11 had to settled for a 45-yard field goal, which Badgley drilled and the Canes were up, 16-0.

Dalvin Cook tore off a 44-yard touchdown run the ensuing possession, putting Florida State on the board and seemingly returning some early momentum, but Walford snatched it back with a 61-yard touchdown reception, outrunning a handful of speed Seminoles defenders.

Back on the field after a two-minute break, again the Miami defense rose up, holding Florida State to 50 yards on nine plans and forcing a 43-yard Roberto Aguayo field goal.

Up 23-10 with 8:10 in the half, the Hurricanes went to work—a steady diet of Johnson and Yearby, including a 22-yard pass to Johnson on 3rd-and-4 from the Florida State 41-yard line—this on the heels of going for it on 4th-and-1 three plays prior and Johnson moving the chains.

Facing a 1st-and-10 from the Noles’ 19-yard line, it appeared to be guaranteed points for the Hurricanes. On 2nd-and-8, a perfect throw by Kaaya slipped through the hands of Braxton Berrios for a guaranteed touchdown.

A play later Coley got back five, but on 4th-and-3, Miami was content to settle for three and Badgley sailed a 29-yard attempt left—more points left on the field against a team known for second-half rallies … and rally the Noles did, outscoring the Canes, 20-3 down the stretch in an eventual, 30-26 comeback victory.

CONSERVATIVE CANES ARGUMENT; AN INACCURATE COP-OUT

As so often happens in the wake of such a loss; a difference of opinions regarding why Miami lost—including an off-base “coaches got conservative” narrative from the anti-Al Golden contingent, the myth debunked by Sun-Sentinel columnist Dave Hyde on Monday morning.

“There’s no perspective anymore. Lose and it becomes a referendum on who to blame and how to blame them. This too-conservative idea had validity in the Louisville opener when Golden (like many coaches would) over-protected a freshman quarterback playing on the road, at night, in his first game. It had validity earlier on in the way the defense played off receivers, safeties played way back and there wasn’t enough attacking,” wrote Hyde.

“You don’t have to like the job Golden has done this season. It took three ugly losses to change the defense. That was the big problem this season. The depth isn’t where it should be in part because of NCAA issues and in part because more than 30 players have left the program. That’s too many.

But there’s minimal validity to questioning the conservative strategy in this loss.”

Hyde goes on to point out four points lost in the kicking game, three turnovers—which a three-loss Miami team simply cannot afford when facing the defending champs—as well as Johnson sidelined with cramps for the Hurricanes’ final possession and attempt at a game-winning touchdown; an overtime-forcing field goal not an option due to the missed point after.

While the next few paragraphs won’t be a treat to write, read or digest, the drive-by-drive deep-dive is necessary based on emotional-overload and lack-of-logic being displayed by some in the wake of this loss.

Hyde touched on it and it’s fact; after an event like this, it’s finger-pointing time and a blame game.

Someone is at fault and based on the the past few years and sub-par results, going after the coaches is understandable—until one rewatches the second half with a truly discerning eye. Below is the result of doing just that:

Up 13 points, how did Miami open the second half? Attempting to do what worked up until that point; attacking the middle of the field as Kaaya went right back to Walford. This time around, Kaaya’s throw as a little behind and defensive back Jalen Ramsey knew was what coming, made a play on the ball and almost came away with an interception.

Seminoles coaches watched the Hurricanes pick apart the middle of the field the first half, made adjustments and weren’t going to let that fly the rest of the game.

Facing 2nd-and-10, Miami ran Johnson in an attempt to get something back, would up with ten. With a new set of downs, Kaaya threw to Johnson in the flats, but the play lost two as Ramsey read it, was in the backfield and made the tackle.

On third down Kaaya had Coley streaking down the right side, a window in which to fit the ball and he simply overthrew the receiver, setting up the punt—but again, nothing conservative about the Canes’ opening second half possession.

Miami’s Sonny Odogwu gets hit with a 15-yard personal foul, hitting the returner half a mile out of bounds and the Noles start on the Canes’ 40-yard line but Raphael Kirby is in there two plays later, forces a fumble and Miami’s offense is back in business.

Johnson rushes on first down and picks up five, but Danny Isadora is hit with an illegal chop-block. Sets up a 1st-and-21 and Miami immediately goes back to the air—Kaaya finding Walford again in the middle of the field. 19-yard gain and on 2nd-and-2, Johnson plows ahead for five yards.

The Canes went back to Johnson for seven and back-to-back Yearby runs netted nine total yards. Is four runs in a row conservative when it’s working and moving the chains?

Facing a 2nd-and-7, Kaaya looked for Malcolm Lewis—who appeared to be held when streaking up the right sideline. On 3rd-and-7, Kaaya went quick-strike to Dorsett, who would’ve had a first down and more, but Mario Edwards got a hand on the ball, forcing the punt.
Blame execution here if need be, but the playcalling wasn’t conservative. The Canes were looking to move the chains and score.

Florida State dinked-and-dunked their way to a touchdown on the ensuing possession, going 85 yards on 11 plays. Facing a 3rd-and-Goal from the 11-yard line, Tyriq McCord gets a hand on Winston’s pass, tips it in the air and Karlos Williams brings it down and rolls in for the touchdown—as fluke as fluke can get, but the Canes still led, 23-17.

Miami went to Johnson on first down and the running back picked up six. On 2nd-and-4 a four-yard run was good for first down.
A third run with Johnson resulted in a one-yard loss so on 2nd-and-11 Kaaya goes back to the middle of the field, this time finding Standish Dobard for a would-be 33-yard gain.

Instead, the second fumble by a Miami tight end on the night and Florida State is back in business, looking for a go-ahead score.
Credit to the Hurricanes’ defense, it forced a 37-yard field goal by Aguayo, putting the Noles in a 3rd-and-9 situation that was further aided by a false start.

Where field goals used to sail up, down and all around in this rivalry, Aguayo was perfect, scoring 12 of Florida State’s 30 points on Saturday night and has been a one of this program’s most valuable players for years now.

With 14:45 remaining, Miami went back to Johnson, who picked up seven yards on first down and tore off a 28-yard run a play later—underscoring why the Hurricanes continued to run and leaned on their best player, who cramped up and was immediately sidelined.

Kaaya tried a first down pass to Yearby that had big yards written all over it, but it was batted down. On 2nd-and-10 the Canes ran Yearby and the true freshman picked up six yards. On 3rd-and-4 he barreled ahead for four more and Miami had another first down.

The Canes went back to Dobard on first down—wide open in the middle of the field—but Eddie Goldman got a mitt on it and stopped a potentially big gain. Miami ran on 2nd-and-10, looking to avoid a third-and-long, but Johnson only gained a yard.

On 3rd-and-9, Florida State brought heat, Ramsey blew by true freshman right tackle Trevor Darling and rushed Kaaya’s throw, which was tipped and fell incomplete. Badgley lined up for the 46-yarder, nailed it and Miami again led by six points with 11:01 remaining.

The Hurricanes’ defense held again, as Aguayo knocked through a 53-yarder a stop on 3rd-and-5—a nine-play, 37-yard drive. With 7:12 remaining and Miami up, 26-23, Johnson ran for a loss of one.

Conservative? No. Not based on how the junior had been running, right up through the last possession. On 2nd-and-11 an untimely false start on Jon Feliciano cost Miami five yards, making the play calling a bit more one-dimensional.

Once the Hurricanes were in 2nd-and-16, the trajectory of the possession changed. No worse timing for an offensive line penalty, but it happened and so the game goes.

Kaaya overthrew Lewis on an attempted eight-yard gain and on 3rd-and-16, a dump off to Johnson simply to get something back and to keep the clock rolling, pre-punt.

Florida State’s game-winning drive started with an attempt to tight end Nick O’Leary. A bang-bang play that looked like a catch, tuck and two feet down, before a hit and would-be fumble—the play was called incomplete and wasn’t reviewed.

Miami didn’t challenge, nor did booth officials signal an official review. A play later Winston hit Rashad Greene for a 17-yard gain before anyone had time to process the almost-turnover.

Winston then rushed for 18 yards but it was called back for a hold. Facing a 1st-and-20, a pass to Cook went 14 yards. Cook then ran for 15 yards and set up 1st-and-10 from the Miami 26-yard line.

On his touchdown run a play later no less than four Hurricanes whiffed on an attempt to take the true freshman back down; McCord, Olsen Pierre, Denzel Perryman and Thurston Armbister all failed on the game’s biggest defensive play.

Miami had one last offensive shot and came out swinging. Kaaya found Johnson for a 14-yard gain on first down.

Johnson got three on first down, Kaaya scrambled for five on second and hit Dorsett for a nine-yard gain on 3rd-and-2, setting Miami up with a first down at the Florida State 44-yard line.

Kaaya attempted to hit Yearby on a wheel route—similar to one that went for a score against Duke—but overthrew the back. Yearby got a yard on second down, unable to break for more. Both occurred with Johnson on the sidelined, cramped up having already carried 27 times for 130 yards.

On 3rd-and-9, Ramsey blitzed and got to Kaaya, who was again looking towards the middle of the field for an open tight end.

On fourth down, a forced pass into triple coverage, looking for Dorsett, intercepted by Ramsey—who **** near single-handedly owned the second half for the Noles.

While that overly-detailed rant took up a ton of real estate, it truly was necessary for history-sake and setting the record. A supposedly-conservative second half offense didn’t do Miami in; the culprit here was in the execution and players not stepping up.

Santana Moss said it in 2000 after an upset of Florida State, paraphrasing Rohan Marley after a game-definining interception by Carlos Jones in the 1994 version of this rivalry; “big time player, step up in big games,” or “big time players make big time plays,” depending who one chooses to quote.

Miami was the epitome of that much of the first half, but by in large unraveled in too many defining moments. The early Walford fumble. The Berrios drop. The Badgley misses. The Dobard fumble. The batted down balls to wide open receivers, or tip that led to a Florida State touchdown. The O’Leary non-fumble. The Kaaya pick to seal a win for the Noles.

Coaches won’t name names or pin it on one play and will always call it a team loss, but reverse even one of those missteps and the Canes arguably emerge victorious in their biggest game in almost a decade. Too many moments simply didn’t go UM’s way.

WINNING THE STATS COLUMN, SANS THE SCOREBOARD

Did Miami play good enough to win? Yes, in one sense—but no, based on the simple fact they lost.

Numbers-wise, the Canes seemingly did what they set out to do. Owned the time of possession 35:27 to 24:23. Put up 492 total yards to Florida State’s 418. Rushed for 176 yards to the Noles’ 114 and won the passing battle 316-to-304, despite a true freshman going up against a Heisman winner.

Miami finished 10-of-18 on third down conversions, but was 8-of-11 in the first half. The turnover battle also cost the Hurricanes late—a big reason for the three-point second half.

Penalties-wise, Miami was also dinged five times (51 yards) to Florida State’s two (15 yards)—three of those coming for the Canes in the second half during crucial moments.

Another year without a run at an ACC Championship and two wins necessary to simply reach 8-4—by way of a road trip to Virginia and a home showdown against Pittsburgh.

The Canes certainly proved Saturday night that they can win out—but nothing will soon erase the pain regarding what slipped away on November 15th.

Another hard lesson absorbed, opposed to a win and necessary step forward.
 
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Good article. Some fools (see above) lack the ability to take in different perspectives. The answer is probably somewhere in between, with respect to conservativism. It wasn't as awful as I thought night of. It was however too conservative for victory
 
Good news/ bad news. Good news -- that was Al's best coaching job since he has been here. Bad news -- it was good enough. They made the plays that mattered when they mattered. You can blames several players or our favorite villain, Al. For me, as painful as loss was, I think noles are heading down and we are heading up. We should have passed them in this game but didn't get it done. Al needs to go, BUT if he can keep the aggression up like the last three games, maybe he can do something for us. So, let's consider when we fly banners again, cause for me they worked -- not like we wanted, but team sure a **** got better after them. That is all I care about. I want NCs and don't care who coaches them.
 
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CANE94November 19, 2014 at 3:34 pm
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So the bottom line is our players failed to execute. So let me ask a few questions:
Why not roll Kaaya away from pressure when Ramsey blitzed over and over? Why did Dorsett say the O failed to adjust to FSU coming out in zone in the 2nd half? What happened to our A gap blitzes that were working in the 1st half?
 
So when Phillip Dorsett says, FSU played zone and that the team had not prepared for that he was lying? Or did he not know what he was talking about?

FSU adjusted, clearly adjusted and we didn't. Point to this over throw or that fumble or that missed tackle, at the end of the day, we lost to a team that plays one half of football, a team that unlike us adjusted to what was being thrown at them.
 
I call bull****. Golden has said repeatedly that NOTHING has changed. He's even marched out the players to parrot him.

Now this ******* guy says different. Who am I to believe, Golden or Hyde?

“You don’t have to like the job Golden has done this season. It took three ugly losses to change the defense. That was the big problem this season."
 
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Golden was asked point blank about halftime adjustments. All he kept muttering was "we didn't make the plays, didn't make plays, left alot of plays out there". ASKED ABOUT ADJUSTMENTS and that was his response. Never addressed the question, didn't know HOW to address the question. Because there was no other way to address it without saying we (THE COACHES) didn't make adjustments. Instead he says "we" (THE PLAYERS) didn't make plays.

He is a piece of **** who should be thrown out on his ear and losing should be the least of all reasons.
 
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