TboneJones
Freshman
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2025
- Messages
- 410
At some point we have to stop pretending the “massive contract + big-name savior” model still works in modern college football. NIL fundamentally changed the game. Success now comes from resource allocation across roster, staff, and systems — not betting everything on one head coach and hoping branding carries the rest.
And after today’s 26–20 OT loss to SMU, it feels like Mario Cristobal may have officially lost a big chunk of the fanbase. Fans were patient. They bought into the vision. But patience runs out when the results never match the investment.
Let’s be honest about the issues:
And as painful as it is to say, Cristobal’s long-term deal isn’t that different from LSU’s now-disastrous contract with Brian Kelly. They bet big on a name, structure, and philosophy that fit a pre-NIL era. LSU cut ties. They didn’t cling to a sinking model.
If Miami reaches that point — and we may be closer than many thought — the next hire cannot repeat this formula.
What Miami should prioritize going forward:
- A proven coach who can maximize what he has, not just recruit stars
- A modern offensive identity that fits personnel and evolves
- Coordinators who stick, not a revolving door
- Discipline and development, especially in the trenches
- A strategic NIL plan tied to roster construction and retention
It can’t be about nostalgia, hype, or emotional hires anymore. The model has changed. The sport has changed. If Miami is serious about getting back, we have to change with it.
Cristobal may still turn it around — but after today, a lot of people aren’t convinced. And if this is the pivot point, then the lesson needs to be clear:
Stop building programs around one name. Start building programs around sustainable football economics, modern strategy, and disciplined execution.
And after today’s 26–20 OT loss to SMU, it feels like Mario Cristobal may have officially lost a big chunk of the fanbase. Fans were patient. They bought into the vision. But patience runs out when the results never match the investment.
Let’s be honest about the issues:
- Cristobal has cycled through multiple OCs, yet the offense still feels stagnant, predictable, and not aligned with the strengths of a QB like Carson Beck.
- His calling card — the offensive line — continues to pile up drive-killing mental-error penalties. That’s not talent. That’s discipline and coaching.
- And the trend that really matters: Cristobal is now 4–11 in November and December. Elite programs get stronger when the games matter most — we fade.
And as painful as it is to say, Cristobal’s long-term deal isn’t that different from LSU’s now-disastrous contract with Brian Kelly. They bet big on a name, structure, and philosophy that fit a pre-NIL era. LSU cut ties. They didn’t cling to a sinking model.
If Miami reaches that point — and we may be closer than many thought — the next hire cannot repeat this formula.
What Miami should prioritize going forward:
- A proven coach who can maximize what he has, not just recruit stars
- A modern offensive identity that fits personnel and evolves
- Coordinators who stick, not a revolving door
- Discipline and development, especially in the trenches
- A strategic NIL plan tied to roster construction and retention
It can’t be about nostalgia, hype, or emotional hires anymore. The model has changed. The sport has changed. If Miami is serious about getting back, we have to change with it.
Cristobal may still turn it around — but after today, a lot of people aren’t convinced. And if this is the pivot point, then the lesson needs to be clear:
Stop building programs around one name. Start building programs around sustainable football economics, modern strategy, and disciplined execution.