Current State - Miami Turnaround

jdg3158

Recruit
Premium
Joined
Nov 4, 2011
Messages
156
I read so much on this site about Mario’s not going to make it, players stink, our OC blows, mostly just a lot hyperbole. I have a few thoughts I want to bring because I’ve been involved in a few corporate turnarounds (currently in one) and understand the depths of what it takes to turn something around from the brink of failure to a success.

  • Turnrounds are not easy – it why they are called a turnaround. For 20 years we have not played good football, invested correctly, hired competently, developed talent the right way, etc. It’s why we had a crappy season last year and it’s why we’ve continually had bad seasons with lots of unrealistic expectations. It’s also why we have few players drafted and why so few have developed. Makes complete sense. To think this can be fixed overnight is not correct. It took me and a very talented group 5 years to turn around a business with 30K employees and we didn’t get every hire right. Mario didn’t get the OC right last year. I hired a CFO from Microsoft, great pedigree, etc., yet he failed. Not everything is going to work, especially with senior level hires. Making changes quickly is important when you identify problems. Not everyone on paper that looks the part is going to be successful or have the wherewithal to know the challenges ahead and adapt. Not to mention the CEO has to be able to chance and evolve too. I think we are seeing that in Mario.
  • Focus on 3 things and do those well. Miami has far more problems than just 3 things as we all know, and you can’t fix everything all at once nor can you do it at the drop of a hat. This stuff takes TIME. Far too often in turnarounds people try to tackle a hundred things but do a hundred things average so you don’t really improve drastically. It’s mostly just band-aids on the problems. Focus on 3 things – fix those and move to the 4ththen the 5th and so on. I think all of us would agree Miami never invested in the program. Issue 1. They are doing that. Capital injection and bringing Miami up to par. Paying for coaches, staff, facilities, etc. Again, not always going to get everything right but it’s a start. You can’t compete with Bama or OSU if you aren’t going to invest. Issue 2 – identify talent. I believe in Mario, but he can’t do it all on his own. Alonzo and the strong team he gathered around to identify talent I believe will help – something we haven’t had in years since Butch (Al had an eye but didn’t develop that well or change). All of you talk about evaluations and players, something I can’t speak to as just a fan, but it takes time. If you haven’t been good at identifying talent and developing it, why do you expect to be anything other than middle grade and few guys drafted??? Issue 3 – Develop it. Again, it takes time and having good coaches. Outside of Gattis – and look the guy was at Bama, worked at Michigan, the signs all pointed but like everything – not everyone on paper that appears to look great works out. We must develop talent and hopefully the coaches we have will do that. But to expect guys to be overnight sensations and live off the high school highlight reels is not realistic. Being great at something requires time, mentorship, help, coaching, support, all those things need to happen. Hopefully we are injecting this into the program.
Overall, patience is not something people want to hear. But the truth is. This is a turnaround, and the fruits of this turnaround are not all noticeable nor seen just yet. They take some time and my guess is we see this in year 3 (not this year), but to expect to be in the playoffs or top 10-15 after so many years being average or slightly above is not realistic.
 
Advertisement
I read so much on this site about Mario’s not going to make it, players stink, our OC blows, mostly just a lot hyperbole. I have a few thoughts I want to bring because I’ve been involved in a few corporate turnarounds (currently in one) and understand the depths of what it takes to turn something around from the brink of failure to a success.

  • Turnrounds are not easy – it why they are called a turnaround. For 20 years we have not played good football, invested correctly, hired competently, developed talent the right way, etc. It’s why we had a crappy season last year and it’s why we’ve continually had bad seasons with lots of unrealistic expectations. It’s also why we have few players drafted and why so few have developed. Makes complete sense. To think this can be fixed overnight is not correct. It took me and a very talented group 5 years to turn around a business with 30K employees and we didn’t get every hire right. Mario didn’t get the OC right last year. I hired a CFO from Microsoft, great pedigree, etc., yet he failed. Not everything is going to work, especially with senior level hires. Making changes quickly is important when you identify problems. Not everyone on paper that looks the part is going to be successful or have the wherewithal to know the challenges ahead and adapt. Not to mention the CEO has to be able to chance and evolve too. I think we are seeing that in Mario.
  • Focus on 3 things and do those well. Miami has far more problems than just 3 things as we all know, and you can’t fix everything all at once nor can you do it at the drop of a hat. This stuff takes TIME. Far too often in turnarounds people try to tackle a hundred things but do a hundred things average so you don’t really improve drastically. It’s mostly just band-aids on the problems. Focus on 3 things – fix those and move to the 4ththen the 5th and so on. I think all of us would agree Miami never invested in the program. Issue 1. They are doing that. Capital injection and bringing Miami up to par. Paying for coaches, staff, facilities, etc. Again, not always going to get everything right but it’s a start. You can’t compete with Bama or OSU if you aren’t going to invest. Issue 2 – identify talent. I believe in Mario, but he can’t do it all on his own. Alonzo and the strong team he gathered around to identify talent I believe will help – something we haven’t had in years since Butch (Al had an eye but didn’t develop that well or change). All of you talk about evaluations and players, something I can’t speak to as just a fan, but it takes time. If you haven’t been good at identifying talent and developing it, why do you expect to be anything other than middle grade and few guys drafted??? Issue 3 – Develop it. Again, it takes time and having good coaches. Outside of Gattis – and look the guy was at Bama, worked at Michigan, the signs all pointed but like everything – not everyone on paper that appears to look great works out. We must develop talent and hopefully the coaches we have will do that. But to expect guys to be overnight sensations and live off the high school highlight reels is not realistic. Being great at something requires time, mentorship, help, coaching, support, all those things need to happen. Hopefully we are injecting this into the program.
Overall, patience is not something people want to hear. But the truth is. This is a turnaround, and the fruits of this turnaround are not all noticeable nor seen just yet. They take some time and my guess is we see this in year 3 (not this year), but to expect to be in the playoffs or top 10-15 after so many years being average or slightly above is not realistic.
Season 5 Finger Guns GIF by Curb Your Enthusiasm
 
I read so much on this site about Mario’s not going to make it, players stink, our OC blows, mostly just a lot hyperbole. I have a few thoughts I want to bring because I’ve been involved in a few corporate turnarounds (currently in one) and understand the depths of what it takes to turn something around from the brink of failure to a success.

  • Turnrounds are not easy – it why they are called a turnaround. For 20 years we have not played good football, invested correctly, hired competently, developed talent the right way, etc. It’s why we had a crappy season last year and it’s why we’ve continually had bad seasons with lots of unrealistic expectations. It’s also why we have few players drafted and why so few have developed. Makes complete sense. To think this can be fixed overnight is not correct. It took me and a very talented group 5 years to turn around a business with 30K employees and we didn’t get every hire right. Mario didn’t get the OC right last year. I hired a CFO from Microsoft, great pedigree, etc., yet he failed. Not everything is going to work, especially with senior level hires. Making changes quickly is important when you identify problems. Not everyone on paper that looks the part is going to be successful or have the wherewithal to know the challenges ahead and adapt. Not to mention the CEO has to be able to chance and evolve too. I think we are seeing that in Mario.
  • Focus on 3 things and do those well. Miami has far more problems than just 3 things as we all know, and you can’t fix everything all at once nor can you do it at the drop of a hat. This stuff takes TIME. Far too often in turnarounds people try to tackle a hundred things but do a hundred things average so you don’t really improve drastically. It’s mostly just band-aids on the problems. Focus on 3 things – fix those and move to the 4ththen the 5th and so on. I think all of us would agree Miami never invested in the program. Issue 1. They are doing that. Capital injection and bringing Miami up to par. Paying for coaches, staff, facilities, etc. Again, not always going to get everything right but it’s a start. You can’t compete with Bama or OSU if you aren’t going to invest. Issue 2 – identify talent. I believe in Mario, but he can’t do it all on his own. Alonzo and the strong team he gathered around to identify talent I believe will help – something we haven’t had in years since Butch (Al had an eye but didn’t develop that well or change). All of you talk about evaluations and players, something I can’t speak to as just a fan, but it takes time. If you haven’t been good at identifying talent and developing it, why do you expect to be anything other than middle grade and few guys drafted??? Issue 3 – Develop it. Again, it takes time and having good coaches. Outside of Gattis – and look the guy was at Bama, worked at Michigan, the signs all pointed but like everything – not everyone on paper that appears to look great works out. We must develop talent and hopefully the coaches we have will do that. But to expect guys to be overnight sensations and live off the high school highlight reels is not realistic. Being great at something requires time, mentorship, help, coaching, support, all those things need to happen. Hopefully we are injecting this into the program.
Overall, patience is not something people want to hear. But the truth is. This is a turnaround, and the fruits of this turnaround are not all noticeable nor seen just yet. They take some time and my guess is we see this in year 3 (not this year), but to expect to be in the playoffs or top 10-15 after so many years being average or slightly above is not realistic.

Exceptional take. A best seller strategy book back in 2000s was called from Good To Great and found that the best public company performers brought in new leaders that took several years before they started to outperform the pack. Hurricanes football is a smaller operation and turns its personnel over at a much higher rate, so we should be able to pull that forward. But even the best turnarounds take time.

Mario started with virtually no organically-recruited and developed talent outside of the Covid class of 2021. And we all know the portal is a band-aid, not a cure. He needs 2 more back to back classes for the flywheel to gather momentum. I have no expectations between now and then other than the program keeps showing progress.
 
Exceptional take. A best seller strategy book back in 2000s was called from Good To Great and found that the best public company performers brought in new leaders that took several years before they started to outperform the pack. Hurricanes football is a smaller operation and turns its personnel over at a much higher rate, so we should be able to pull that forward. But even the best turnarounds take time.

Mario started with virtually no organically-recruited and developed talent outside of the Covid class of 2021. And we all know the portal is a band-aid, not a cure. He needs 2 more back to back classes for the flywheel to gather momentum. I have no expectations between now and then other than the program keeps showing progress.
Grover you get an award for not only reading all that but also for a thorough response. Glad you’re here.
 
Yeah, I've been a squire to the mopesmen since about 13, but regarding Mario - he's a fraud until proven otherwise and it takes time...blah blah blha. I just expect to see competitive product even if the W/L ratio doesn't improve. Getting boatraced by MTSU at home and the other abysmals have ALL their reasons...I just want to see 6-6 with no absolute grape stompers at home by directional cosmetology academy, Brigham Young Episcopalian or the like. That's what 23 needs to be. That's all.
 
Advertisement
@jdg3158 If the Microsoft CFO failed, I have some potential recruits that might be suitable for the position for the right price, provided, of course, they ink with us. Interested? It's not a conflict of interest at all.
 
@jdg3158 If the Microsoft CFO failed, I have some potential recruits that might be suitable for the position for the right price, provided, of course, they ink with us. Interested? It's not a conflict of interest at all.

Putting a Softee in charge of a turnaround situation was his first mistake. They're used to dealing with multimillion dollar OPEX budgets at the line manager level. Dealing with scarcity is not something you learn at Microsoft.
 
He's going to turn it around for sure. He just needs a lot of time. This sh was a dumpster juice, and fans think we have a chance in the past even this season. Talent has been bare for ages but the fans got sucked in like we had a chance. This is a complete proper rebuild it will take long like Michigan. Give the man time to bring in the savages and stack it properly.
 
Advertisement
I read so much on this site about Mario’s not going to make it, players stink, our OC blows, mostly just a lot hyperbole. I have a few thoughts I want to bring because I’ve been involved in a few corporate turnarounds (currently in one) and understand the depths of what it takes to turn something around from the brink of failure to a success.

  • Turnrounds are not easy – it why they are called a turnaround. For 20 years we have not played good football, invested correctly, hired competently, developed talent the right way, etc. It’s why we had a crappy season last year and it’s why we’ve continually had bad seasons with lots of unrealistic expectations. It’s also why we have few players drafted and why so few have developed. Makes complete sense. To think this can be fixed overnight is not correct. It took me and a very talented group 5 years to turn around a business with 30K employees and we didn’t get every hire right. Mario didn’t get the OC right last year. I hired a CFO from Microsoft, great pedigree, etc., yet he failed. Not everything is going to work, especially with senior level hires. Making changes quickly is important when you identify problems. Not everyone on paper that looks the part is going to be successful or have the wherewithal to know the challenges ahead and adapt. Not to mention the CEO has to be able to chance and evolve too. I think we are seeing that in Mario.
  • Focus on 3 things and do those well. Miami has far more problems than just 3 things as we all know, and you can’t fix everything all at once nor can you do it at the drop of a hat. This stuff takes TIME. Far too often in turnarounds people try to tackle a hundred things but do a hundred things average so you don’t really improve drastically. It’s mostly just band-aids on the problems. Focus on 3 things – fix those and move to the 4ththen the 5th and so on. I think all of us would agree Miami never invested in the program. Issue 1. They are doing that. Capital injection and bringing Miami up to par. Paying for coaches, staff, facilities, etc. Again, not always going to get everything right but it’s a start. You can’t compete with Bama or OSU if you aren’t going to invest. Issue 2 – identify talent. I believe in Mario, but he can’t do it all on his own. Alonzo and the strong team he gathered around to identify talent I believe will help – something we haven’t had in years since Butch (Al had an eye but didn’t develop that well or change). All of you talk about evaluations and players, something I can’t speak to as just a fan, but it takes time. If you haven’t been good at identifying talent and developing it, why do you expect to be anything other than middle grade and few guys drafted??? Issue 3 – Develop it. Again, it takes time and having good coaches. Outside of Gattis – and look the guy was at Bama, worked at Michigan, the signs all pointed but like everything – not everyone on paper that appears to look great works out. We must develop talent and hopefully the coaches we have will do that. But to expect guys to be overnight sensations and live off the high school highlight reels is not realistic. Being great at something requires time, mentorship, help, coaching, support, all those things need to happen. Hopefully we are injecting this into the program.
Overall, patience is not something people want to hear. But the truth is. This is a turnaround, and the fruits of this turnaround are not all noticeable nor seen just yet. They take some time and my guess is we see this in year 3 (not this year), but to expect to be in the playoffs or top 10-15 after so many years being average or slightly above is not realistic.
Pretty good take. We need a sustainable turnaround, not a one and done. We've got a ways to go. We absolutely cannot lose any cupcake games for starters.
 
Patience is a virtue and many football fans are not very virtuous including myself. After 20 years of mediocrity, anyone that thought a turnaround in 1-2 years was possible is totally unrealistic. Mario, and even Rad, are having to totally rebuild the entire football program. We were way behind in all areas and fixing all that needs fixing will no doubt take time.

We should be encouraged by the things we see but also I have no doubt there’s things we don’t see.

As the old saying goes “Rome wasn’t built in a day.”
 
Back
Top