Half of the offensive touchdowns in the College Football Playoff were scored by South Florida players. Seven out of 14.
Great theory, though.
How many blocks, tackles, completions thrown, completions caught, etc etc were made by non SF players?
Half of the offensive touchdowns in the College Football Playoff were scored by South Florida players. Seven out of 14.
Great theory, though.
How many blocks, tackles, completions thrown, completions caught, etc etc were made by non SF players?
South Florida high school football is definitely softer than it used to be. I attend enough games per year to get a sense of that. I posted the same thing several years ago here and got ripped. Who cares? There's some type of aura here attached to the local kids. It's fine if you cherry pick a few and otherwise install them in a tough environment. But when you've got a roster full of those kids it's like a prancing parade with everyone wanting a running clock type of high school game...celebrations galore. Screen pass mentality.
Yes, the turnover chain is a perfect fit for that type of roster. Meanwhile Alabama players would be snarling and snapping that turnover chain in half using two fingers apiece.
South Florida defensive tackles suck. I can't say its getting worse because it's never any good.
With a mentality like this we need more astonishing players to win a national championship. That's the unfriendly bottom line. Look at that early 2000s set of players. Yet it equated to one national championship. Alabama yawns and wins more than that in any 3 year period.
Every year there are touts on this site of how many players we placed in the NFL, how many of our guys unexpectedly made a roster and are contributing. Big deal. It is not a 1-1 relationship with other premier programs. We need more elite players period. The Canes are so flash dependent that there's a glass jaw tendency, one that hasn't gone away in more than three decades. Blue collar teams have no chance to expose Alabama and hold them to next to nothing in a title setting. Yet it happened to great Canes teams repeatedly. Once those prancing touchdowns aren't flowing like a high school game we panic and have little to fall back on.
As for blocking, we need to recruit nationally.
The mentality around the Miami program, and around the South Florida football community at large since the Coker days, has just been weak-minded and entitled. Straight diva ****.
We think that just because a kid is from South Florida, or just because a kid has the "U" plastered on the side of his helmet, that he's automatically superior to anybody else. We ALWAYS overrate our players, and we ALWAYS think we have better talent than any of the teams we play.
Nevermind that it took us over a decade to win the Coastal, or that we haven't won **** since 2001.... nah we just tell ourselves we are better.
And when **** inevitably goes wrong, we always have the same fallback excuse. The same complaint every time....different coach, same complaint. Since it can't ever be the kids, we ALWAYS blame X's and O's.
Coker, Shannon, Golden... all had talented players (or so we're told), they were just dummies with X's and O's.
They said Shannon ran his vanilla defense and went through a string of ****** OC's, each with his own X's and O's problems (Patrick Nix's bubbles, Whipple's reliance on big plays). Golden had dorito's "bend don't break" defense and Fisch's bubble screens. Richt? Outdated offense, no motion, offense straight out of the 90's. Of course it never occurs to any of us that maybe the players just aren't that great.
Here's the bottom line.
The kids from Miami have egos that don't match their production. Point blank. They're not as good as they think they are. And that's true at the high school level as well as the ones currently at UM. And that's the fault of the coaches, the handlers, the families, the friends, and the community at large who think that just because the Canes dominated 30 years ago, that somehow these players today don't have to work for it or earn it.
Yeah, you get one or two kids like Jaquan Johnson who have that old school Canes mentality and work ethic and who are willing to do what it takes to achieve greatness, but kids like him are too few and far between.
Too few and far between. We used to fill a whole team with guys like Jaquan Johnson.
There is way too much entitlement, way too much "feeding the fam," way too much respecting of stupid decisions and frankly way too much feeding in to the egos of kids who straight up do not deserve it because they haven't earned it.
None of that would be a problem, except that they don't feel like they have to put in the time, focus and work to become great.
Do you think this team took Wisconsin seriously? Or Pitt? Do you think they have the hunger or the attitude of a team like UCF?
The soft Miami culture is something that needs to change. And it's bigger than just the head coach. It's a city of Miami problem. People in this community need to stop stroking these kids ego's, and stop giving these kids credit for **** that happened before they were even born.
RESPECT NEEDS TO BE EARNED, NEVER GIVEN.
We can be great, and we can win national titles, but to do this we need to get back to the winning culture we had back in the day... back when we were hungry and wanted it. We saw flashes of it against Notre Dame and VT.
Just my 2 cents. I'm sure it will offend people, but it's something to think about.
Or are we relegated to celebrating Florida guys scoring for other teams or amount of NFL talent from down here?
The problem isn't Miami players. They are the most successful group of players at the college and NFL level.
Blaming them for our failures is like blaming the hot girl when you can't get any ****. The problem is Miami. There's a reason why Golden and Coker are unemployed and why Shannon has a **** job.
Half of the offensive touchdowns in the College Football Playoff were scored by South Florida players. Seven out of 14.
Great theory, though.
Half of the offensive touchdowns in the College Football Playoff were scored by South Florida players. Seven out of 14.
Great theory, though.
And that has what to do with the topic of team chemistry and mental focus?
And that has what to do with the topic of team chemistry and mental focus?
Half of the offensive touchdowns in the College Football Playoff were scored by South Florida players. Seven out of 14.
Great theory, though.
And that has what to do with the topic of team chemistry and mental focus?
The point is obvious. South Florida players seem to have the "mental focus" when they play for other teams.
It's not that complicated. Al Golden is unemployed. Larry Coker is unemployed. Randy Shannon is a Group of Five defensive coordinator. That has been our problem.
Richt has already improved us by a win both years. If he caps out at the level of his Georgia teams, it's not a "Miami culture" issue. It's a Richt issue.
South Florida high school football is definitely softer than it used to be. I attend enough games per year to get a sense of that. I posted the same thing several years ago here and got ripped. Who cares? There's some type of aura here attached to the local kids. It's fine if you cherry pick a few and otherwise install them in a tough environment. But when you've got a roster full of those kids it's like a prancing parade with everyone wanting a running clock type of high school game...celebrations galore. Screen pass mentality.
Yes, the turnover chain is a perfect fit for that type of roster. Meanwhile Alabama players would be snarling and snapping that turnover chain in half using two fingers apiece.
You simply can't blame coaching anymore with a straight face.
It's a question worth asking, IMO. Mind you, I'm not suggesting we abandon our strategy of recruiting South Florida.....but there may be something to it. What other schools try to load their rosters with near-exclusively South Florida talent? It's Miami, Florida State, and Florida, more or less. The funny thing is, haven't each of those schools had problems with weak-minded, entitled, diva players for many years now? FSU only won a title because they hit on the generational talents of Crab Legs and Dalvin Cook, but otherwise, they have had their issues too.