Is This Program At The Caliber We Think It Is?

We recruit at an elite level. **** Golden has been the worst at pulling in recruiting classes and he's still somewhere in the #13 overall average class rank over 5 years
 
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Being an attractive place to live to professional athletes ages 20-35 is much different than being attractive to "family men"ages 37-65.

Texas also has no state income tax ...


Let's see:

We are located in Miami. No state income tax and some really nice places to raise a family if you have the money. Sure seems to help the Heat and even the Dolphins when trying to lure free agents.

The recruiting ground is extremely fertile. You really don't have to leave the tri-county area to build a contending team.

The facilities are solid. Not elite, but solid. The excuse that we have "crappy" facilities can't be used at this point.

So yes, I do believe that the job is attractive.

Your facilities can't be considered solid when you have no IPF and lease an NFL stadium 45 minutes from campus. The facilities are still not up to par with many other FBS programs.
 
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3 publications have UM in their near the top 20 for most attractive college football jobs. So take that however you want

Texas Longhorns, Alabama Crimson Tide lead list of college football's best jobs

23. Miami (Fla.)
A number of coaches, especially those in the ACC, are down on Miami. "It's a s---- job," one coach said. Well, all right then. One thing that particularly sticks out to rival coaches is a lack of atmosphere for Miami's home games. Unless the opponent is Florida State, it's a ghost town. It makes sense, of course. The Hurricanes are playing 30-60 minutes from campus, depending on traffic, and in a part of town that has little else going on. What do you expect? "The Orange Bowl was awesome," a coach told me last fall. "How they didn't do something on that site, I'll never know. They're hurting now." Upgrades are on the way for Joe Robbie/Pro Player/Dolphin/Dolphins/Land Shark/Sun Life Stadium -- but will that really bring in new or existing Miami fans? It's something the school is going to have to address if it's serious about growing the football program and not merely leaning on the past.

But that past does mean something. The history of "the U" is something that resonates, but more with adults than recruits. Having survived the NCAA's recent investigation, Miami now must do some soul-searching if it truly intends to reinvent itself. On the bright side, there is so much talent within a 100-mile radius of campus. Coach Al Golden has signed as many as any ACC Coastal program, and yet he hasn't done a whole lot with it. Miami is not completely broken, but it's in desperate need of repairs.

Ranking All 128 College Football Coaching Jobs for 2014 | AthlonSports.com

21. Miami

Pros: With the possible exception of USC and UCLA, no school in the country has a better local recruiting base. And while the Canes have struggled in recent years, the program won a national championship as recently as 2001 and played for a title in ’02.

Cons: Miami has a small fan base and has struggled to fill its stadium. Last season, the Canes ranked 36th in the nation in attendance, averaging 53,837 per game (according to the NCAA at least) at Sun Life Stadium. The facility is 20 miles from campus and lacks the big-time college football atmosphere.

Final Verdict: Miami is an intriguing job. The recruiting base is outstanding — which gives you a great opportunity to win — but the position lacks many of the other qualities that make coaching at a big-time school so attractive.

The Top 25 Jobs in College Football | FOX Sports


17. Miami

Ah, The U, a storied program of excess both on and off the field. Except when it comes to financial resources and fan support. There the Hurricanes are severely lacking, which is why they ranked here. If you could only recruit players within an hour of your campus, Miami would be the nation's best job. That's because south Florida is full of talent. Many of these players grow up dreaming of becoming Hurricane players.
But then programs with greater resources come calling, forcing Miami to rely upon its network of players and support in the city to combat schools with much greater resources. Many don't realize that Miami, a small private school, isn't very much like most other schools on this list. (USC is also a private school, but it's massive.) Miami has more in common with Duke or Vanderbilt when you analyze the student bodies than it does Florida State or Florida.
One of the best details from the Nevin Shapiro scandal is Shapiro's assertion that the reason Miami took recruits to strip clubs and on yacht trips was because they couldn't compete with the money that the big SEC schools were paying for recruits.

These ranking should increase if the admin decides to commit more resources toward football and add an IPF and own a stadium
 
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