Areas to be addressed by AD and HC (Long)

You know I've been against moving the stadium for most of the reasons people mention. I greatly fear the only ones making money would be the ones building the stadium.
With all the so-called "revenue" these stadiums generate you wonder why new stadiums are so hard to get completed and most require either large amounts of public funds, tax breaks, donated land, etc on top of huge investments from the NFL to make these stadiums happen. We would also then be competing with Hard Rock to host events as well as naming rights/sponsorships/etc.
 
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Great post. Where do you see the transfer portal fitting in? A separate department within the recruiting department? I can see the need for at least 1 -2 full time staffers there for sure. It's becoming an integral part of the overall recruiting picture. I know Dabo, who doesn't even use it, set up a full time staff member this year to moniter it.
Same department but a different person leading it. But it flows the same way all the way to position coach-coordinator-HC.
 
Good stuff but I am curious how you think the stadium issue "can be addressed long term". The campus is pretty well built out and they will never be able to clear out enough space to build the actual stadium let alone the parking required to service it. And the space constraints are really an afterthought compared to the trouble they would get from Coral Gables and surrounding residents.

And then there is the secondary problem of what that stadium would look like. In my opinion, if you build anything short of 60k you are just cementing your position as a lower tier team. The big boys play in front of 75k-110k. Building something modest is almost worse than nothing at all.

The only viable discussion I have heard would also be off campus such as an expanded Intermiami stadium near the airport. Potentially better for students but possibly worse for everyone else going to the game. Maybe that improves revenue but I don't see how it really changes things a great deal. Especially considering that the size of that potential stadium that I saw being discussed seemed pretty modest as mentioned above.

Just curious what you have in mind?

Students should be the last thing to consider while talking about stadiums... even if 5K (half our on campus enrollment) decided to attend every game, it would be miniscule compared to a 70K capacity
 
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This post is mostly specific to football - as many have said - it is the driving force behind the change in AD that we are undergoing. Not the only facet of the athletic department - but the key revenue that drives the rest of the department. I'm not in tune with much about basketball so I won't speak there beyond the need for a new guy leading the program. Baseball is another story because of where that program's money is coming from and who is the HC - is DiMare the right guy for the job? Don't think so but if he's out then where does the money come from? It probably only gets worse for that reason alone. Fix the rest of the athletic department and then when it's self-sustaining - there may be additional funds for baseball. He still recruits at a high-level.

This is why it's deeper than Wins and Losses at their current school for an AD - what is their vision for the program? Old school guys are going to get left behind. Give me a young guy who commands respect from the administration, who they trust and will work with, that has a vision to grow the dept and has a business-like mindset to make moves in the changing landscape. There's no room to let someone learn on the job at a private institution like Miami. The money will dry up so fast - you have to know people and where the money comes from right away. Then, how to use that to generate your own self-sustaining revenue for the rest of the dept. First and foremost - fix your money maker (football)

We've heard talks of the $20-30M that is going to be committed to the football budget. It is totally necessary - and based on what I know of our previous budget in comparison to the rest of CFB - should put us in the top 10 nationally - that's how far we are behind.

This is mostly in comparison to programs I am familiar with and trends I have noticed or seen first hand. I can speak in facts regarding a few SEC schools that I have seen the operation from an internal perspective - relative to Miami. We're very far away and it's amateur hour at UM - but contrary to most people's belief - a lot of this gap could be bridged in a month with the right hire at AD and HC - guys with the right vision for the program and athletic dept - and with the assistance of these boosters that have seemingly jumped on board recently.

Facilities - This is where all of the debate comes in from other fan bases that say we are behind - news flash: We're not that far behind and it's not hindering us. Our IPF is brand new and more expensive than the others in the state. Florida is getting their upgrade but ours is still state-of-the-art and connects to the Schwartz center and Hecht building with the remaining facilities. Most of which are within 5 years old. The locker room is set to undergo another facelift in the near future from what I have heard - maybe it's this off-season (Blake's plan but maybe it changes now idk) The training table and nutrition center are virtually brand new. Weight room got a facelift with the IPF. No we're not Oregon, Alabama, Tennessee, Texas, etc but I don't think being flashy is making guys commit and sign. It does the job.

Stadium - Another focal point of debate - Of course it's an issue but it has nothing to do with Hard Rock. Hard Rock is state of the art, brand new, incredible venue. Yes, it's far away. The key downside is the loss of revenue from parking, concessions, ticket revenue, and the $1M per year lease expense. Bigger ticket losses include naming-rights revenue, sponsorships, revenue from other events, potential lease revenue, etc. I think the talk resurging about a stadium is because we have big money businessmen involved and they're trying to solve the issues - they're obvious - the see the ancillary items available and it sticks out bad in a budget comparison from ours to a school with their own venue... but it has nothing to do with it being off-campus or a 45 minute drive or that Hard Rock is a bad stadium. This can be addressed long-term.

Here's where we're behind that I think leads to what we actually see on the field. These need to be addressed IMMEDIATELY and are relatively affordable. I think Mario or any high-profile coach requires these as part of the deal or addresses it when they come in:

Sports science/Strength and conditioning: Not talking directly about Strength and Conditioning or Feeley. We took a serious step forward with the inception of the 'Catapult' system which tracks heart rate and energy exertion, assists in monitoring the athletes, making decisions regarding recovery and training, etc. However, there's more to it that is being handled by Feeley himself - we need to add a specialized sports scientist. Alabama has Dr. Rhea - he spent years consulting professional/Olympic athletes in training and recovery. It takes what you're doing and ensures it is the most efficient. Utilizing kinesiology towards training, rest, recovery, and injury prevention. Prior to Alabama, he was with David Ballou (also at Alabama now) at Indiana. If Indiana can do it, so can we.
Side note: To address a common misconception on here - the way we look on the field has almost nothing to do with S&C. Feeley is better than Swazey and Felder - but it's 90% who you recruit and 10% who you've got running the weight room. Alabama looks like monsters, mostly because they recruit monsters. Recruiting a 200 pound linebacker and expecting him to look like Reuben Foster or Devin White isn't going to happen. This leads me to the next topic:

Talent evaluation/recruiting strategy: We've got to revamp our recruiting department with legitimate talent evaluation. I know Andy Vaughn personally, great guy and he does a decent job, but he's not a good talent evaluator and he's never lead a department to field a championship caliber roster. We're so far behind in this area. We require position coaches to perform the majority of the evaluations after a GA or Vaughn and his assistants identify someone - and we're giving Banda, Patke, and that crew too much authority to say yes/no and give the final stamp of approval and they're not more qualified than those they're telling.

-Other programs have guys that make the evaluations, get all of their testing numbers, gauge interest, cut-up film, talk to people, and then get it to a position coach and coordinator to make the call to offer or not. Highsmith has to have a connect to improve this and make it a more centralized effort and let position coaches focus on coaching and building relationships and less performing their own evaluations (even Zo's son is in an NFL scouting department and would be a solid choice)
-We can get ahead of the curve and appoint a separate person to identify and scout guys that are in the portal that can help our current roster. Have a HS/juco guy and have a guy that monitors transfers
-We're not recruiting the right types of guys, in general, at a lot of positions. Our LB evaluations have been obviously poor since Manny got here. We're not prioritizing production at the HS level, we're recruiting guys that are too small, and we're expecting S&C and nutrition to do far more than it's designed to do. On the OL - again we recruit too small and it shows on game day. We've got to set base lines for guys height and weight and even testing numbers and let position coaches/evaluators go to bat for someone if they're smaller or don't meet those standard set for baseline testing numbers. Let them put their reputation on the line if they want to risk it for someone that doesn't fit your formula. Someone like Seymore would fall into that category. Rare occasion. Same can be said at DE and DT but primarily we just need more numbers at those positions. At CB we're just hindered by Rumph's recruiting. Stop whiffing on guys 5 miles up the road and it will self-correct. I can't complain too much about the other positions. Fix LB recruiting, recruit bigger OL and less guys that require a 3-4 year weight room transformation. Take a project every now and then, not 2 every year. Just recruit and sign more CBs and DLinemen.

Staff: This goes back to some of the points I have made previously - we need an additional nutritionist to support Kyle Bellamy. We need a sports science specialist. It also comes down to analysts. We have Bob Shoop - that's a step in the right direction. To get to the next level we are going to need to bring in 2 guys on each side of the ball with a similar pedigree to Bob Shoop - guys looking to make a 1 year pit stop to collect their buyout money and then move on. We're currently at 1 total and have GA caliber guys holding down the other analyst slots. They don't command a lot of money - you just need a coach respectable enough that guys want to work for them and maybe learn something or reinvent themselves a little. It helps with scouting upcoming opponents, self-scouting your own tendencies and weaknesses (which I've heard we do very little of), and they make great candidates for fillers on future staff if you lose a position coach or coordinator - like you saw Muschamp slide in for Georgia when Scott Cochran stepped away for a bit. Same thing Saban has done with Sark and several other coordinators and position coaches he's had.
Side note: Our current on-field staff is the 2nd highest paid in the ACC from my understanding. Slightly above FSU and well below Clemson. Manny had the approval to hire a DC at $1M per year and he chose not to - that is $650K higher than he spent on the coach that filled the final slot. Of the $20-30M increase in budget - In my opinion, it should have to be spent on something along these lines:
Head coach: From $3M currently to $7M+ on the next HC (+$4M) - looks like this number could keep climbing with these salaries I have seen lately
Position coaches and coordinators: From $6M currently (could be $6.5M with a DC) to $7.5M (+$1.5M)
Additional Analysts: It would be ideal to have 2 on offense and 2 on defense at all times (+$500K-$1M)
Nutrition: Hire an additional nutritionist and possibly an assistant: (+$200K)
Sports science/additional S&C staff: (+$1M)
Recruiting department overhaul and recruiting budget: We currently spend just under $1M in recruiting - putting us on-par with Kentucky. We need to allocate another $1M per year to that (putting us at a Texas A&M or LSU level) - this goes towards bringing in more official visitors, flying to see OOS prospects, etc - plus improve our staffing (+$2M total)

These numbers are rough estimate but that would leave between $10-20M per year leftover to allocate to facilities/etc beyond necessary staffing to compete with CFB powers.

Summary: Staff salaries, additional recruiting staff, revamped recruiting department and strategy, additional analysts, revamped S&C philosophy and staffing, additional nutritionists.

All ACC 1st team quality post

I just want to make an observation about the stadium situation. There are lots of posters here who either can't or refuse to see the bigger picture. UMs lease with Hard Rock runs through 2032. The current lease costs UM about 4 million per year (I believe that is an all inclusive figure that basically amounts to lost revenue to UM since it all goes to Ross)


Mas is going to build a privately funded soccer stadium. He has come out of nowhere to be a guy kicking in doors at UM and trying to get rid of the old guard. This isn't a coincidence.

Assuming the construction isnt delayed by lawsuits (pretty much 100% there will be lawsuits by environmental groups) the expected groundbreaking is late 2022. If they start on time, the stadium will be likely be done in 2025 or 2026. Now this this would only be 6 years before the end of the lease with Hard Rock. Any forward thinking AD would already be looking at the plan for the next 20 years after the lease runs out. Right now UM has only one option- renew the lease at Hard Rock which will almost certainly cost more than the 4 mil a year it is currently paying.

Option two is partner with Mas to expand Freedom Park from 25,000 seats. Back in 2014 when it was in talks with Beckham,, UM said it wanted at least 40,000 seats. Current price tag for the 25k seat stadium is $1 billion. Adding another 15k seats would probably cost somewhere in the $60-80 million range. When Louisville added 10k seats to their stadium a couple years ago, it cost 55 mil (Btw this was negotiated by Tom Jurich in case you needed more proof he should be the AD). Ideally UM would aim for around 50,000 seats, which would make it just smaller than Autzen Stadium.

If the cost of another 20 yr lease at Hard Rock was to go up to 6 million per year, that means the cost to LEASE the stadium for 20 years would be more than double the cost to expand Freedom Park, of which UM would be a part owner. It's a smaller venue with fewer seats, but on the flip side UM gets to make up a lot of it with naming rights, concessions, parking fees, luxury boxes etc.

One more thing to keep in mind, as delighted as we all were with the $400 million renovations in 2017, by 2032, these renovations will be almost 15 years old and it will likely need another massive face-lift, or we again become a national joke for playing in an outdated stadium. Since we don't own the stadium, we'd have to hope Ross is willing to pony up 100s of millions of his own money again.
Now the economics of the new stadium should be a little clearer. UM isn't breaking a lease to move into a new stadium tomorrow. This is about making a long term decision for the future as UM nears the end of the Hard Rock lease.
 
This post is mostly specific to football - as many have said - it is the driving force behind the change in AD that we are undergoing. Not the only facet of the athletic department - but the key revenue that drives the rest of the department. I'm not in tune with much about basketball so I won't speak there beyond the need for a new guy leading the program. Baseball is another story because of where that program's money is coming from and who is the HC - is DiMare the right guy for the job? Don't think so but if he's out then where does the money come from? It probably only gets worse for that reason alone. Fix the rest of the athletic department and then when it's self-sustaining - there may be additional funds for baseball. He still recruits at a high-level.

This is why it's deeper than Wins and Losses at their current school for an AD - what is their vision for the program? Old school guys are going to get left behind. Give me a young guy who commands respect from the administration, who they trust and will work with, that has a vision to grow the dept and has a business-like mindset to make moves in the changing landscape. There's no room to let someone learn on the job at a private institution like Miami. The money will dry up so fast - you have to know people and where the money comes from right away. Then, how to use that to generate your own self-sustaining revenue for the rest of the dept. First and foremost - fix your money maker (football)

We've heard talks of the $20-30M that is going to be committed to the football budget. It is totally necessary - and based on what I know of our previous budget in comparison to the rest of CFB - should put us in the top 10 nationally - that's how far we are behind.

This is mostly in comparison to programs I am familiar with and trends I have noticed or seen first hand. I can speak in facts regarding a few SEC schools that I have seen the operation from an internal perspective - relative to Miami. We're very far away and it's amateur hour at UM - but contrary to most people's belief - a lot of this gap could be bridged in a month with the right hire at AD and HC - guys with the right vision for the program and athletic dept - and with the assistance of these boosters that have seemingly jumped on board recently.

Facilities - This is where all of the debate comes in from other fan bases that say we are behind - news flash: We're not that far behind and it's not hindering us. Our IPF is brand new and more expensive than the others in the state. Florida is getting their upgrade but ours is still state-of-the-art and connects to the Schwartz center and Hecht building with the remaining facilities. Most of which are within 5 years old. The locker room is set to undergo another facelift in the near future from what I have heard - maybe it's this off-season (Blake's plan but maybe it changes now idk) The training table and nutrition center are virtually brand new. Weight room got a facelift with the IPF. No we're not Oregon, Alabama, Tennessee, Texas, etc but I don't think being flashy is making guys commit and sign. It does the job.

Stadium - Another focal point of debate - Of course it's an issue but it has nothing to do with Hard Rock. Hard Rock is state of the art, brand new, incredible venue. Yes, it's far away. The key downside is the loss of revenue from parking, concessions, ticket revenue, and the $1M per year lease expense. Bigger ticket losses include naming-rights revenue, sponsorships, revenue from other events, potential lease revenue, etc. I think the talk resurging about a stadium is because we have big money businessmen involved and they're trying to solve the issues - they're obvious - the see the ancillary items available and it sticks out bad in a budget comparison from ours to a school with their own venue... but it has nothing to do with it being off-campus or a 45 minute drive or that Hard Rock is a bad stadium. This can be addressed long-term.

Here's where we're behind that I think leads to what we actually see on the field. These need to be addressed IMMEDIATELY and are relatively affordable. I think Mario or any high-profile coach requires these as part of the deal or addresses it when they come in:

Sports science/Strength and conditioning: Not talking directly about Strength and Conditioning or Feeley. We took a serious step forward with the inception of the 'Catapult' system which tracks heart rate and energy exertion, assists in monitoring the athletes, making decisions regarding recovery and training, etc. However, there's more to it that is being handled by Feeley himself - we need to add a specialized sports scientist. Alabama has Dr. Rhea - he spent years consulting professional/Olympic athletes in training and recovery. It takes what you're doing and ensures it is the most efficient. Utilizing kinesiology towards training, rest, recovery, and injury prevention. Prior to Alabama, he was with David Ballou (also at Alabama now) at Indiana. If Indiana can do it, so can we.
Side note: To address a common misconception on here - the way we look on the field has almost nothing to do with S&C. Feeley is better than Swazey and Felder - but it's 90% who you recruit and 10% who you've got running the weight room. Alabama looks like monsters, mostly because they recruit monsters. Recruiting a 200 pound linebacker and expecting him to look like Reuben Foster or Devin White isn't going to happen. This leads me to the next topic:

Talent evaluation/recruiting strategy: We've got to revamp our recruiting department with legitimate talent evaluation. I know Andy Vaughn personally, great guy and he does a decent job, but he's not a good talent evaluator and he's never lead a department to field a championship caliber roster. We're so far behind in this area. We require position coaches to perform the majority of the evaluations after a GA or Vaughn and his assistants identify someone - and we're giving Banda, Patke, and that crew too much authority to say yes/no and give the final stamp of approval and they're not more qualified than those they're telling.

-Other programs have guys that make the evaluations, get all of their testing numbers, gauge interest, cut-up film, talk to people, and then get it to a position coach and coordinator to make the call to offer or not. Highsmith has to have a connect to improve this and make it a more centralized effort and let position coaches focus on coaching and building relationships and less performing their own evaluations (even Zo's son is in an NFL scouting department and would be a solid choice)
-We can get ahead of the curve and appoint a separate person to identify and scout guys that are in the portal that can help our current roster. Have a HS/juco guy and have a guy that monitors transfers
-We're not recruiting the right types of guys, in general, at a lot of positions. Our LB evaluations have been obviously poor since Manny got here. We're not prioritizing production at the HS level, we're recruiting guys that are too small, and we're expecting S&C and nutrition to do far more than it's designed to do. On the OL - again we recruit too small and it shows on game day. We've got to set base lines for guys height and weight and even testing numbers and let position coaches/evaluators go to bat for someone if they're smaller or don't meet those standard set for baseline testing numbers. Let them put their reputation on the line if they want to risk it for someone that doesn't fit your formula. Someone like Seymore would fall into that category. Rare occasion. Same can be said at DE and DT but primarily we just need more numbers at those positions. At CB we're just hindered by Rumph's recruiting. Stop whiffing on guys 5 miles up the road and it will self-correct. I can't complain too much about the other positions. Fix LB recruiting, recruit bigger OL and less guys that require a 3-4 year weight room transformation. Take a project every now and then, not 2 every year. Just recruit and sign more CBs and DLinemen.

Staff: This goes back to some of the points I have made previously - we need an additional nutritionist to support Kyle Bellamy. We need a sports science specialist. It also comes down to analysts. We have Bob Shoop - that's a step in the right direction. To get to the next level we are going to need to bring in 2 guys on each side of the ball with a similar pedigree to Bob Shoop - guys looking to make a 1 year pit stop to collect their buyout money and then move on. We're currently at 1 total and have GA caliber guys holding down the other analyst slots. They don't command a lot of money - you just need a coach respectable enough that guys want to work for them and maybe learn something or reinvent themselves a little. It helps with scouting upcoming opponents, self-scouting your own tendencies and weaknesses (which I've heard we do very little of), and they make great candidates for fillers on future staff if you lose a position coach or coordinator - like you saw Muschamp slide in for Georgia when Scott Cochran stepped away for a bit. Same thing Saban has done with Sark and several other coordinators and position coaches he's had.
Side note: Our current on-field staff is the 2nd highest paid in the ACC from my understanding. Slightly above FSU and well below Clemson. Manny had the approval to hire a DC at $1M per year and he chose not to - that is $650K higher than he spent on the coach that filled the final slot. Of the $20-30M increase in budget - In my opinion, it should have to be spent on something along these lines:
Head coach: From $3M currently to $7M+ on the next HC (+$4M) - looks like this number could keep climbing with these salaries I have seen lately
Position coaches and coordinators: From $6M currently (could be $6.5M with a DC) to $7.5M (+$1.5M)
Additional Analysts: It would be ideal to have 2 on offense and 2 on defense at all times (+$500K-$1M)
Nutrition: Hire an additional nutritionist and possibly an assistant: (+$200K)
Sports science/additional S&C staff: (+$1M)
Recruiting department overhaul and recruiting budget: We currently spend just under $1M in recruiting - putting us on-par with Kentucky. We need to allocate another $1M per year to that (putting us at a Texas A&M or LSU level) - this goes towards bringing in more official visitors, flying to see OOS prospects, etc - plus improve our staffing (+$2M total)

These numbers are rough estimate but that would leave between $10-20M per year leftover to allocate to facilities/etc beyond necessary staffing to compete with CFB powers.

Summary: Staff salaries, additional recruiting staff, revamped recruiting department and strategy, additional analysts, revamped S&C philosophy and staffing, additional nutritionists.


What a great post, and it pulls together a lot of different things I've discussed and heard about "where we are" and "where we need to be".

Completely agree on "AD vision", and then we need "AD leadership" to execute on the vision.

Facilities - I've tried to explain to people that we sit in a strangely good spot here, what we have is pretty decent. Sure, the Beta Blake "locker room" could be improved upon, but the next big step is probably more office space for more analysts, more video guys, more recruit support staff, etc. NOT enough office space in the current Hecht for "where we need to be".

Stadium - completely agree, regardless of the "We are never ever getting back together" porsters. Gonna take a LOT of work, but for the first time in a long time, I see a complicated pathway possibly being there.

Sports Science/Conditioning - I am hoping that in addition to the "20-30 million broken off of UHealth" that we can also find some in-kind benefits by utilizing students/doctors from UHealth and maybe even setting up a more robust Sports Science/Conditioning program (I believe we have something now, but without as much integration into the UHealth System).

Talent Eval/Recruiting - I've been a strong advocate of Alonzo for this very reason, yet we have porsters who seem to be experts on "reading resumes" and concluding that Alonzo is "unqualified" to do anything of value for UM. Regardless, the days of "position coach decides everything" are long gone, and we need to get in the game fast, because we are way behind IN A TARGET-RICH ENVIRONMENT (SoFla).

Staff - also agree. UM has the types of programs, whether in the Business School or the Med School, that would be natural fits for the new "hot topics" in sports (NIL, fitness/training, etc.). We have to create the right mashup/partnerships that will allow us to lead the way in these emerging areas.

As for issues where you may not have had as much background knowledge, hopefully I can help to fill in some of the blanks.

With Basketball, we have to put the resources into Talent ID/Recruiting. I realize there is some good talent in SoFla, but hoops recruiting has to be "almost-national". Recruits play on AAU teams, they travel, they are not just concentrated in one area the way that SoFla football talent is. I love Coach L, but he is older now and has dropped off since he lost his best assistants. If we retain Coach L for another year or two, we need to pay top dollar for an assistant coach who is the "next head coach in waiting", because the old assistants got tired of waiting and took other jobs.

With Baseball, I am still on the fence with DiMare. The guy spent almost 20 years learning from Morris, and the last three years haven't been terrible. We may have done some real damage in the Covid year, but got wrecked with the season cancellation. I am a firm believer that we absolutely positively need to lobby the NCAA to make baseball/softball into head-count-scholarship sports, and allow for an increase in salaried coaches (I believe that our 4th highest ranking baseball coach is an unpaid position). Look at what is about to happen in the MLB. They are going to have a lockout AND IT IS THE RICHEST OVERALL SPORT. These millionaires and billionaires are fighting over money, but at the collegiate level, everyone has partial scholarships and they get coached by a volunteer. It's insanity.
 
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This post is mostly specific to football - as many have said - it is the driving force behind the change in AD that we are undergoing. Not the only facet of the athletic department - but the key revenue that drives the rest of the department. I'm not in tune with much about basketball so I won't speak there beyond the need for a new guy leading the program. Baseball is another story because of where that program's money is coming from and who is the HC - is DiMare the right guy for the job? Don't think so but if he's out then where does the money come from? It probably only gets worse for that reason alone. Fix the rest of the athletic department and then when it's self-sustaining - there may be additional funds for baseball. He still recruits at a high-level.

This is why it's deeper than Wins and Losses at their current school for an AD - what is their vision for the program? Old school guys are going to get left behind. Give me a young guy who commands respect from the administration, who they trust and will work with, that has a vision to grow the dept and has a business-like mindset to make moves in the changing landscape. There's no room to let someone learn on the job at a private institution like Miami. The money will dry up so fast - you have to know people and where the money comes from right away. Then, how to use that to generate your own self-sustaining revenue for the rest of the dept. First and foremost - fix your money maker (football)

We've heard talks of the $20-30M that is going to be committed to the football budget. It is totally necessary - and based on what I know of our previous budget in comparison to the rest of CFB - should put us in the top 10 nationally - that's how far we are behind.

This is mostly in comparison to programs I am familiar with and trends I have noticed or seen first hand. I can speak in facts regarding a few SEC schools that I have seen the operation from an internal perspective - relative to Miami. We're very far away and it's amateur hour at UM - but contrary to most people's belief - a lot of this gap could be bridged in a month with the right hire at AD and HC - guys with the right vision for the program and athletic dept - and with the assistance of these boosters that have seemingly jumped on board recently.

Facilities - This is where all of the debate comes in from other fan bases that say we are behind - news flash: We're not that far behind and it's not hindering us. Our IPF is brand new and more expensive than the others in the state. Florida is getting their upgrade but ours is still state-of-the-art and connects to the Schwartz center and Hecht building with the remaining facilities. Most of which are within 5 years old. The locker room is set to undergo another facelift in the near future from what I have heard - maybe it's this off-season (Blake's plan but maybe it changes now idk) The training table and nutrition center are virtually brand new. Weight room got a facelift with the IPF. No we're not Oregon, Alabama, Tennessee, Texas, etc but I don't think being flashy is making guys commit and sign. It does the job.

Stadium - Another focal point of debate - Of course it's an issue but it has nothing to do with Hard Rock. Hard Rock is state of the art, brand new, incredible venue. Yes, it's far away. The key downside is the loss of revenue from parking, concessions, ticket revenue, and the $1M per year lease expense. Bigger ticket losses include naming-rights revenue, sponsorships, revenue from other events, potential lease revenue, etc. I think the talk resurging about a stadium is because we have big money businessmen involved and they're trying to solve the issues - they're obvious - the see the ancillary items available and it sticks out bad in a budget comparison from ours to a school with their own venue... but it has nothing to do with it being off-campus or a 45 minute drive or that Hard Rock is a bad stadium. This can be addressed long-term.

Here's where we're behind that I think leads to what we actually see on the field. These need to be addressed IMMEDIATELY and are relatively affordable. I think Mario or any high-profile coach requires these as part of the deal or addresses it when they come in:

Sports science/Strength and conditioning: Not talking directly about Strength and Conditioning or Feeley. We took a serious step forward with the inception of the 'Catapult' system which tracks heart rate and energy exertion, assists in monitoring the athletes, making decisions regarding recovery and training, etc. However, there's more to it that is being handled by Feeley himself - we need to add a specialized sports scientist. Alabama has Dr. Rhea - he spent years consulting professional/Olympic athletes in training and recovery. It takes what you're doing and ensures it is the most efficient. Utilizing kinesiology towards training, rest, recovery, and injury prevention. Prior to Alabama, he was with David Ballou (also at Alabama now) at Indiana. If Indiana can do it, so can we.
Side note: To address a common misconception on here - the way we look on the field has almost nothing to do with S&C. Feeley is better than Swazey and Felder - but it's 90% who you recruit and 10% who you've got running the weight room. Alabama looks like monsters, mostly because they recruit monsters. Recruiting a 200 pound linebacker and expecting him to look like Reuben Foster or Devin White isn't going to happen. This leads me to the next topic:

Talent evaluation/recruiting strategy: We've got to revamp our recruiting department with legitimate talent evaluation. I know Andy Vaughn personally, great guy and he does a decent job, but he's not a good talent evaluator and he's never lead a department to field a championship caliber roster. We're so far behind in this area. We require position coaches to perform the majority of the evaluations after a GA or Vaughn and his assistants identify someone - and we're giving Banda, Patke, and that crew too much authority to say yes/no and give the final stamp of approval and they're not more qualified than those they're telling.

-Other programs have guys that make the evaluations, get all of their testing numbers, gauge interest, cut-up film, talk to people, and then get it to a position coach and coordinator to make the call to offer or not. Highsmith has to have a connect to improve this and make it a more centralized effort and let position coaches focus on coaching and building relationships and less performing their own evaluations (even Zo's son is in an NFL scouting department and would be a solid choice)
-We can get ahead of the curve and appoint a separate person to identify and scout guys that are in the portal that can help our current roster. Have a HS/juco guy and have a guy that monitors transfers
-We're not recruiting the right types of guys, in general, at a lot of positions. Our LB evaluations have been obviously poor since Manny got here. We're not prioritizing production at the HS level, we're recruiting guys that are too small, and we're expecting S&C and nutrition to do far more than it's designed to do. On the OL - again we recruit too small and it shows on game day. We've got to set base lines for guys height and weight and even testing numbers and let position coaches/evaluators go to bat for someone if they're smaller or don't meet those standard set for baseline testing numbers. Let them put their reputation on the line if they want to risk it for someone that doesn't fit your formula. Someone like Seymore would fall into that category. Rare occasion. Same can be said at DE and DT but primarily we just need more numbers at those positions. At CB we're just hindered by Rumph's recruiting. Stop whiffing on guys 5 miles up the road and it will self-correct. I can't complain too much about the other positions. Fix LB recruiting, recruit bigger OL and less guys that require a 3-4 year weight room transformation. Take a project every now and then, not 2 every year. Just recruit and sign more CBs and DLinemen.

Staff: This goes back to some of the points I have made previously - we need an additional nutritionist to support Kyle Bellamy. We need a sports science specialist. It also comes down to analysts. We have Bob Shoop - that's a step in the right direction. To get to the next level we are going to need to bring in 2 guys on each side of the ball with a similar pedigree to Bob Shoop - guys looking to make a 1 year pit stop to collect their buyout money and then move on. We're currently at 1 total and have GA caliber guys holding down the other analyst slots. They don't command a lot of money - you just need a coach respectable enough that guys want to work for them and maybe learn something or reinvent themselves a little. It helps with scouting upcoming opponents, self-scouting your own tendencies and weaknesses (which I've heard we do very little of), and they make great candidates for fillers on future staff if you lose a position coach or coordinator - like you saw Muschamp slide in for Georgia when Scott Cochran stepped away for a bit. Same thing Saban has done with Sark and several other coordinators and position coaches he's had.
Side note: Our current on-field staff is the 2nd highest paid in the ACC from my understanding. Slightly above FSU and well below Clemson. Manny had the approval to hire a DC at $1M per year and he chose not to - that is $650K higher than he spent on the coach that filled the final slot. Of the $20-30M increase in budget - In my opinion, it should have to be spent on something along these lines:
Head coach: From $3M currently to $7M+ on the next HC (+$4M) - looks like this number could keep climbing with these salaries I have seen lately
Position coaches and coordinators: From $6M currently (could be $6.5M with a DC) to $7.5M (+$1.5M)
Additional Analysts: It would be ideal to have 2 on offense and 2 on defense at all times (+$500K-$1M)
Nutrition: Hire an additional nutritionist and possibly an assistant: (+$200K)
Sports science/additional S&C staff: (+$1M)
Recruiting department overhaul and recruiting budget: We currently spend just under $1M in recruiting - putting us on-par with Kentucky. We need to allocate another $1M per year to that (putting us at a Texas A&M or LSU level) - this goes towards bringing in more official visitors, flying to see OOS prospects, etc - plus improve our staffing (+$2M total)

These numbers are rough estimate but that would leave between $10-20M per year leftover to allocate to facilities/etc beyond necessary staffing to compete with CFB powers.

Summary: Staff salaries, additional recruiting staff, revamped recruiting department and strategy, additional analysts, revamped S&C philosophy and staffing, additional nutritionists.
**** of a post, super informative and well thought out. Completely on board with throwing more money at dedicated specialists and talent evaluators. So important now to keep up with the latest in nutrition and S&C.
 
What is your understanding of Zo's role down here if he were to come? Because where I get lost on Zo is adding a layer of bureaucracy between implementing things the AD or HC may agree on or even their communication. I don't want that. But if Zo can come in a more consultant type role that helps modernize our football program and surrounding departments and oversees only that, then it sounds 100% better.


Lots of posters have been trying to convince everyone on the Anti-Alonzo Train that this is NOT about "bureaucracy" or "an AD not having his whole portfolio" or any of the other invented reasons for trashing Alonzo, yet there have been some real hard-heads who have copied/pasted their same responses about a hundred times.

Alonzo has some fantastic ideas to implement, yet people are white-knighting for some as-yet-identified, as-yet-hired AD, as if he can't possibly mesh his own ego with that of a former player who just wants UM to win games. But, yeah, "bureaucracy"...and "who's going to report to who?"...and a lot of other nonsense.

But nice to finally have you on board with giving Alonzo a role in the mix.
 
The biggest problem is going to be the location. Far too many come from the north to games and won't be willing to deal with traffic. There's a reason Joe Robbie put it where he did. I'm old enough to remember those days when people up this way started talking about going to games. They never did that for the OB.

I’m not sure the % of fans that travel from The North to Canes games; what I will say is this:

A lot of SC fans are outside of Los Angeles City/County. ****, we have so much traffic on both the streets & Frwys during SC games, that it could literally take u 45 mins to drive 3 miles when SC was good, but u’re also talking about a stadium that can hold close to 80k.

The fans that lived far would come early; they beat traffic & primarily it’s b/c USC offers great tailgating at their stadium. So whether someone lived 2 miles away or 80 miles away, it didn’t matter, b/c the tail gate was popping. Plus, the stadium is really convenient for students to just walk to the games.

I know Miami is a fickle sports town, but so is L.A except for The Lakers. I’m wondering where is a happy medium that would make sense for more student support, that can provide an awesome tailgate experience, that wouldn’t be too much of an inconvenience for traveling fans?

Honestly, The U wouldn’t need a mega stadium. I remember a student had a virtual stadium idea for us at one point, as a project. If I’m not mistaken, that idea was posted on here. We could still use HRS for a huge game, but man, I’m telling u, the amount of revenue we could make/save having our own, sheesh.
 
All ACC 1st team quality post

I just want to make an observation about the stadium situation. There are lots of posters here who either can't or refuse to see the bigger picture. UMs lease with Hard Rock runs through 2032. The current lease costs UM about 4 million per year (I believe that is an all inclusive figure that basically amounts to lost revenue to UM since it all goes to Ross)


Mas is going to build a privately funded soccer stadium. He has come out of nowhere to be a guy kicking in doors at UM and trying to get rid of the old guard. This isn't a coincidence.

Assuming the construction isnt delayed by lawsuits (pretty much 100% there will be lawsuits by environmental groups) the expected groundbreaking is late 2022. If they start on time, the stadium will be likely be done in 2025 or 2026. Now this this would only be 6 years before the end of the lease with Hard Rock. Any forward thinking AD would already be looking at the plan for the next 20 years after the lease runs out. Right now UM has only one option- renew the lease at Hard Rock which will almost certainly cost more than the 4 mil a year it is currently paying.

Option two is partner with Mas to expand Freedom Park from 25,000 seats. Back in 2014 when it was in talks with Beckham,, UM said it wanted at least 40,000 seats. Current price tag for the 25k seat stadium is $1 billion. Adding another 15k seats would probably cost somewhere in the $60-80 million range. When Louisville added 10k seats to their stadium a couple years ago, it cost 55 mil (Btw this was negotiated by Tom Jurich in case you needed more proof he should be the AD). Ideally UM would aim for around 50,000 seats, which would make it just smaller than Autzen Stadium.

If the cost of another 20 yr lease at Hard Rock was to go up to 6 million per year, that means the cost to LEASE the stadium for 20 years would be more than double the cost to expand Freedom Park, of which UM would be a part owner. It's a smaller venue with fewer seats, but on the flip side UM gets to make up a lot of it with naming rights, concessions, parking fees, luxury boxes etc.

One more thing to keep in mind, as delighted as we all were with the $400 million renovations in 2017, by 2032, these renovations will be almost 15 years old and it will likely need another massive face-lift, or we again become a national joke for playing in an outdated stadium. Since we don't own the stadium, we'd have to hope Ross is willing to pony up 100s of millions of his own money again.
Now the economics of the new stadium should be a little clearer. UM isn't breaking a lease to move into a new stadium tomorrow. This is about making a long term decision for the future as UM nears the end of the Hard Rock lease.


Very good points.

Couple things. Article was written 6 years ago, so the end of the lease is nearer and some of the numbers (and leverage) may have changed.

I did think that the LEASE was not $4 million per year (closer to $1 million) and that the other $3 million in revenue was from concessions/parking. If someone else has solid info on that, I am open-minded, I just want to be sure on the math.

When I raised the issue of the "Freedom Park" option on another thread, someone said that there may be "height" issues that limit the addition of more seating, since Freedom Park is in flight path for MIA. I raised the option of the "dirt mall" immediately north of Magic City Casino, or the 8 square blocks immediately east of the Marlins Stadium.

The "never a UM stadium" crowd is quick to talk about how awesome Hard Rock is, as if the 2021 version of the stadium will be forever relevant, forever perfect, and forever cutting-edge. Meanwhile, the stadium ownership keeps carving up the parking lot and prioritizing other sporting events over UM's tenancy.

I hope that Jose and Jorge will buy the dirt mall across from Magic City, if only to have it as a bargaining chip if the city creates problems with Melreese. And then, if they don't need it anymore, they can "donate" it to UM...
 
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We also used to have the highest paid HC's in the country - as recent as Coker i think - everyone else surpassed us once those salaries got up into the millions.


I believe that I posted an old article once that said that Coker's extension put him in the Top 10. Also, Butch's extension would have been near the top of the market for college football, but for that damned buyout clause.

And Richt's salary was not bad. Maybe not Top 10, but not bad, and very competitive.
 
You know I've been against moving the stadium for most of the reasons people mention. I greatly fear the only ones making money would be the ones building the stadium.


Miami construction is...not exactly "spotless reputation" type guys...

But I also like to think about "own vs. rent". The key would be getting some help on land/roads from either the city or county (depending on location).
 
This post is mostly specific to football - as many have said - it is the driving force behind the change in AD that we are undergoing. Not the only facet of the athletic department - but the key revenue that drives the rest of the department. I'm not in tune with much about basketball so I won't speak there beyond the need for a new guy leading the program. Baseball is another story because of where that program's money is coming from and who is the HC - is DiMare the right guy for the job? Don't think so but if he's out then where does the money come from? It probably only gets worse for that reason alone. Fix the rest of the athletic department and then when it's self-sustaining - there may be additional funds for baseball. He still recruits at a high-level.

This is why it's deeper than Wins and Losses at their current school for an AD - what is their vision for the program? Old school guys are going to get left behind. Give me a young guy who commands respect from the administration, who they trust and will work with, that has a vision to grow the dept and has a business-like mindset to make moves in the changing landscape. There's no room to let someone learn on the job at a private institution like Miami. The money will dry up so fast - you have to know people and where the money comes from right away. Then, how to use that to generate your own self-sustaining revenue for the rest of the dept. First and foremost - fix your money maker (football)

We've heard talks of the $20-30M that is going to be committed to the football budget. It is totally necessary - and based on what I know of our previous budget in comparison to the rest of CFB - should put us in the top 10 nationally - that's how far we are behind.

This is mostly in comparison to programs I am familiar with and trends I have noticed or seen first hand. I can speak in facts regarding a few SEC schools that I have seen the operation from an internal perspective - relative to Miami. We're very far away and it's amateur hour at UM - but contrary to most people's belief - a lot of this gap could be bridged in a month with the right hire at AD and HC - guys with the right vision for the program and athletic dept - and with the assistance of these boosters that have seemingly jumped on board recently.

Facilities - This is where all of the debate comes in from other fan bases that say we are behind - news flash: We're not that far behind and it's not hindering us. Our IPF is brand new and more expensive than the others in the state. Florida is getting their upgrade but ours is still state-of-the-art and connects to the Schwartz center and Hecht building with the remaining facilities. Most of which are within 5 years old. The locker room is set to undergo another facelift in the near future from what I have heard - maybe it's this off-season (Blake's plan but maybe it changes now idk) The training table and nutrition center are virtually brand new. Weight room got a facelift with the IPF. No we're not Oregon, Alabama, Tennessee, Texas, etc but I don't think being flashy is making guys commit and sign. It does the job.

Stadium - Another focal point of debate - Of course it's an issue but it has nothing to do with Hard Rock. Hard Rock is state of the art, brand new, incredible venue. Yes, it's far away. The key downside is the loss of revenue from parking, concessions, ticket revenue, and the $1M per year lease expense. Bigger ticket losses include naming-rights revenue, sponsorships, revenue from other events, potential lease revenue, etc. I think the talk resurging about a stadium is because we have big money businessmen involved and they're trying to solve the issues - they're obvious - the see the ancillary items available and it sticks out bad in a budget comparison from ours to a school with their own venue... but it has nothing to do with it being off-campus or a 45 minute drive or that Hard Rock is a bad stadium. This can be addressed long-term.

Here's where we're behind that I think leads to what we actually see on the field. These need to be addressed IMMEDIATELY and are relatively affordable. I think Mario or any high-profile coach requires these as part of the deal or addresses it when they come in:

Sports science/Strength and conditioning: Not talking directly about Strength and Conditioning or Feeley. We took a serious step forward with the inception of the 'Catapult' system which tracks heart rate and energy exertion, assists in monitoring the athletes, making decisions regarding recovery and training, etc. However, there's more to it that is being handled by Feeley himself - we need to add a specialized sports scientist. Alabama has Dr. Rhea - he spent years consulting professional/Olympic athletes in training and recovery. It takes what you're doing and ensures it is the most efficient. Utilizing kinesiology towards training, rest, recovery, and injury prevention. Prior to Alabama, he was with David Ballou (also at Alabama now) at Indiana. If Indiana can do it, so can we.
Side note: To address a common misconception on here - the way we look on the field has almost nothing to do with S&C. Feeley is better than Swazey and Felder - but it's 90% who you recruit and 10% who you've got running the weight room. Alabama looks like monsters, mostly because they recruit monsters. Recruiting a 200 pound linebacker and expecting him to look like Reuben Foster or Devin White isn't going to happen. This leads me to the next topic:

Talent evaluation/recruiting strategy: We've got to revamp our recruiting department with legitimate talent evaluation. I know Andy Vaughn personally, great guy and he does a decent job, but he's not a good talent evaluator and he's never lead a department to field a championship caliber roster. We're so far behind in this area. We require position coaches to perform the majority of the evaluations after a GA or Vaughn and his assistants identify someone - and we're giving Banda, Patke, and that crew too much authority to say yes/no and give the final stamp of approval and they're not more qualified than those they're telling.

-Other programs have guys that make the evaluations, get all of their testing numbers, gauge interest, cut-up film, talk to people, and then get it to a position coach and coordinator to make the call to offer or not. Highsmith has to have a connect to improve this and make it a more centralized effort and let position coaches focus on coaching and building relationships and less performing their own evaluations (even Zo's son is in an NFL scouting department and would be a solid choice)
-We can get ahead of the curve and appoint a separate person to identify and scout guys that are in the portal that can help our current roster. Have a HS/juco guy and have a guy that monitors transfers
-We're not recruiting the right types of guys, in general, at a lot of positions. Our LB evaluations have been obviously poor since Manny got here. We're not prioritizing production at the HS level, we're recruiting guys that are too small, and we're expecting S&C and nutrition to do far more than it's designed to do. On the OL - again we recruit too small and it shows on game day. We've got to set base lines for guys height and weight and even testing numbers and let position coaches/evaluators go to bat for someone if they're smaller or don't meet those standard set for baseline testing numbers. Let them put their reputation on the line if they want to risk it for someone that doesn't fit your formula. Someone like Seymore would fall into that category. Rare occasion. Same can be said at DE and DT but primarily we just need more numbers at those positions. At CB we're just hindered by Rumph's recruiting. Stop whiffing on guys 5 miles up the road and it will self-correct. I can't complain too much about the other positions. Fix LB recruiting, recruit bigger OL and less guys that require a 3-4 year weight room transformation. Take a project every now and then, not 2 every year. Just recruit and sign more CBs and DLinemen.

Staff: This goes back to some of the points I have made previously - we need an additional nutritionist to support Kyle Bellamy. We need a sports science specialist. It also comes down to analysts. We have Bob Shoop - that's a step in the right direction. To get to the next level we are going to need to bring in 2 guys on each side of the ball with a similar pedigree to Bob Shoop - guys looking to make a 1 year pit stop to collect their buyout money and then move on. We're currently at 1 total and have GA caliber guys holding down the other analyst slots. They don't command a lot of money - you just need a coach respectable enough that guys want to work for them and maybe learn something or reinvent themselves a little. It helps with scouting upcoming opponents, self-scouting your own tendencies and weaknesses (which I've heard we do very little of), and they make great candidates for fillers on future staff if you lose a position coach or coordinator - like you saw Muschamp slide in for Georgia when Scott Cochran stepped away for a bit. Same thing Saban has done with Sark and several other coordinators and position coaches he's had.
Side note: Our current on-field staff is the 2nd highest paid in the ACC from my understanding. Slightly above FSU and well below Clemson. Manny had the approval to hire a DC at $1M per year and he chose not to - that is $650K higher than he spent on the coach that filled the final slot. Of the $20-30M increase in budget - In my opinion, it should have to be spent on something along these lines:
Head coach: From $3M currently to $7M+ on the next HC (+$4M) - looks like this number could keep climbing with these salaries I have seen lately
Position coaches and coordinators: From $6M currently (could be $6.5M with a DC) to $7.5M (+$1.5M)
Additional Analysts: It would be ideal to have 2 on offense and 2 on defense at all times (+$500K-$1M)
Nutrition: Hire an additional nutritionist and possibly an assistant: (+$200K)
Sports science/additional S&C staff: (+$1M)
Recruiting department overhaul and recruiting budget: We currently spend just under $1M in recruiting - putting us on-par with Kentucky. We need to allocate another $1M per year to that (putting us at a Texas A&M or LSU level) - this goes towards bringing in more official visitors, flying to see OOS prospects, etc - plus improve our staffing (+$2M total)

These numbers are rough estimate but that would leave between $10-20M per year leftover to allocate to facilities/etc beyond necessary staffing to compete with CFB powers.

Summary: Staff salaries, additional recruiting staff, revamped recruiting department and strategy, additional analysts, revamped S&C philosophy and staffing, additional nutritionists.
Solid stuff
 
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I’m not sure the % of fans that travel from The North to Canes games; what I will say is this:

A lot of SC fans are outside of Los Angeles City/County. ****, we have so much traffic on both the streets & Frwys during SC games, that it could literally take u 45 mins to drive 3 miles when SC was good, but u’re also talking about a stadium that can hold close to 80k.

The fans that lived far would come early; they beat traffic & primarily it’s b/c USC offers great tailgating at their stadium. So whether someone lived 2 miles away or 80 miles away, it didn’t matter, b/c the tail gate was popping. Plus, the stadium is really convenient for students to just walk to the games.

I know Miami is a fickle sports town, but so is L.A except for The Lakers. I’m wondering where is a happy medium that would make sense for more student support, that can provide an awesome tailgate experience, that wouldn’t be too much of an inconvenience for traveling fans?

Honestly, The U wouldn’t need a mega stadium. I remember a student had a virtual stadium idea for us at one point, as a project. If I’m not mistaken, that idea was posted on here. We could still use HRS for a huge game, but man, I’m telling u, the amount of revenue we could make/save having our own, sheesh.


Yes, and I believe the student-generated idea was for a spot at UM where the newest dormitory has now been built.

As a huge proponent of an on-campus stadium, and a UM alum who lived on campus for all of undergrad, I can tell you that we have built over almost all of the previously-available spots. The only thing that COULD work (coupled with some selective demolition) would be the northeast corner of the campus.

But the Dade-County off-campus sites could work. Too much has been made of Broward-Palm Beach fans, as if they are so amazing in their attendance that we are SELLING OUT every game currently...

I drive from Orlando, if I have to hear some Palm Beach "fan" complain about having to drive an extra 13 miles (differential between Hard Rock and two of the sites I mentioned along NW 7th Street), I am going to punch someone.
 
Students should be the last thing to consider while talking about stadiums... even if 5K (half our on campus enrollment) decided to attend every game, it would be miniscule compared to a 70K capacity


Ignorant point.

Today's students are tomorrow's fans. If the Athletic Department stops ****ting all over the UM students, you might be surprised by how many super-fans we have in 20 years.
 
I’m not sure the % of fans that travel from The North to Canes games; what I will say is this:

A lot of SC fans are outside of Los Angeles City/County. ****, we have so much traffic on both the streets & Frwys during SC games, that it could literally take u 45 mins to drive 3 miles when SC was good, but u’re also talking about a stadium that can hold close to 80k.

The fans that lived far would come early; they beat traffic & primarily it’s b/c USC offers great tailgating at their stadium. So whether someone lived 2 miles away or 80 miles away, it didn’t matter, b/c the tail gate was popping. Plus, the stadium is really convenient for students to just walk to the games.

I know Miami is a fickle sports town, but so is L.A except for The Lakers. I’m wondering where is a happy medium that would make sense for more student support, that can provide an awesome tailgate experience, that wouldn’t be too much of an inconvenience for traveling fans?

Honestly, The U wouldn’t need a mega stadium. I remember a student had a virtual stadium idea for us at one point, as a project. If I’m not mistaken, that idea was posted on here. We could still use HRS for a huge game, but man, I’m telling u, the amount of revenue we could make/save having our own, sheesh.
It would depend on a lot. There are pretty much 2 main N/S arteries, I95 and the turnpike. Once you get into Miami, add the Palmetto Expressway to the mix and all three are congested much of the time. That's what people want to avoid.

My biggest issue is if we get convinced into sharing a stadium with InterMiami at Melreese, we could find ourselves still not enjoying any revenue, but we'd have a worse location and less seating.
 
Ignorant point.

Today's students are tomorrow's fans. If the Athletic Department stops ****ting all over the UM students, you might be surprised by how many super-fans we have in 20 years.

Nonsense... the students have plenty of cheap ways to get to any stadium and those who care do. I made it to the OB and Knight center. Some of them won't even walk across the parking lot to the basketball arena ..... and you want to build a multi million dollar stadium near campus for them?? Insane waste of $$$.
 
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