National Storyline of Hurricanes upcoming 2016 season

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Larry Blustein, who has covered recruiting for 45 years in the South Florida area and currently does so for SouthFloridaHighSchoolSports.com, explains that Miami’s new found backyard success is due to a combination of factors. The answer lies in the same way the program’s dynasty teams were built. Of the ‘Canes 18 commitments in the 2016 class, 12 are from players who are from a trio of counties—Dade, Broward and Palm Beach—that are in close proximity to Miami’s campus in Coral Gables. The quickest way to turn things around is by locking up the top talent in your backyard. ”The nine combined commitments that Miami has in the 2017 and 2018 classes all hail from the same trio of counties in South Florida.

The first thing Golden and his staff have done is to get more support locally from the high school coaches and mentors in the South Florida area. New Hurricanes receivers coach Kevin Beard, who also played wideout for the Hurricanes from 1999-2003, explained in a radio interview with WQAM 560 (via Matt Porter of the Palm Beach Post) that Miami needed to mend the relationship with the South Florida prep football community. “I want them to be heard,” Beard told WQAM. “Once that happens, things will definitely start changing a whole lot faster. The community will start getting back to being for us and not against us because of what the record is. They’ll see we’re making moves in the right direction.”

Blustein agrees and said that the vibes toward the program have changed recently. “What has happened was that there was a little change here in the last two months or so,” Blustein said. “On signing day, a lot of kids were shuffling off to Alabama and FSU and not staying at home. The guys in the community got together and decided to listen more to Miami and hear them out."

Blustein notes that most kids in the nation’s most fertile recruiting territories have grown up fans of The U—which makes staying at home an easy sell in most cases. However, given Golden’s struggles since taking over the program five years ago, there’s been an exodus in terms of the top talent leaving the area to go to schools such as Alabama, Florida State, Georgia, Ohio State, etc. Golden drew his share of criticism for that from alums and the people involved with the recruiting scene in the area.

“This year, [Golden] took crap from all of the alumni,” Blustein said. “Jon Beason put it the best when he said that by knocking Al Golden down, what you are doing is hurting your school. If you tell kids don’t go there, you are hurting your alma mater. So why would you do that? You have to back your guy as long as he’s employed by the school. Once he’s not, then we will back the next person. A lot of people took heed to that and took a couple of steps back and realized that he had a point.”

Blustein also said that another thing helping Miami’s cause is the fact that the program’s former stars are still coming back to work out with the current players—something that today’s prep stars notice and look up to. “One thing that separates Miami from a lot of schools is that the former players aren't pretenders,” Blustein notes. “They really do come back every year. Jimmy Graham was in the weight room here one day after being traded to Seattle. Lamar Miller is out here with the guys. When the high school kids start seeing that stuff, that’s what the tradition was built on and I think that’s what will eventually get them out of this rut.”

Golden’s staff has also done a better job of getting on top talent early. “A lot of these kids, like Sam Bruce and Dionte Mullins and the 2017 kids in Waynmon Steed and Tyler Dunning, they are players as good as you will find nationally,” Blustein said. “They are absolute beasts, those type of kids, now they are getting the type of kids that Alabama, USC, Ohio State and FSU are coming down here and getting.” As for the ‘Canes looking to put a fence around their backyard, Blustein said that it’s a strategy that Golden simply had to master in order to turn things around for the Miami program.

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Whether UM wins big or merely wins more games than last year, if Golden and his local brew of coaches can build that field of dreams in his recruits to feel that they are THE ones to turn the U around and bring it back to its Championship heydays, then these recruits can stick even without a stellar 2015 year. but...their dreams would just have to be fulfilled with another.
 
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http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...rategy-could-make-them-a-national-power-again
March 18, 2015 - The University of Miami is in Dade County. The most talented group of football prospects in the country each year also resides in Dade County. The Hurricanes need to keep those prospects in Dade County. The Hurricanes are well aware of the issue, but being fully aware of a problem doesn’t always mean the solution is easy. The easy part is to state the issue. In order for the University of Miami to return to its former dominance on the football field, the Hurricanes have to keep homegrown talent from leaving Broward, Palm Beach and, especially, Dade counties. UM is coming to close to the solution. It doesn’t take a brain surgeon to understand that if you recruit successfully in Dade County, you will be successful as a college football team.
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Miami 2016 Headliner Commit Sam Bruce out of Ft Lauderdale St Thomas Aquinas

Of course it takes much more to win a title than recruiting a top local class to UM on National Signing Day, but the groundwork has to start right at home and head coach Al Golden and his crew seem to be making the inroads necessary. The Hurricanes cannot let big-time talent leave the county and expect positive returns on a national level, and that’s what we’re talking about here. Sure, winning the ACC is a start, but really, that’s not the concern. It’s about national titles, of which Miami won four back in the Hurricanes’ heyday — 1983, 1987, 1989 and 1991. That was back when players like Michael Irvin, Cortez Kennedy, Russell Maryland, Bennie Blades, Brian Blades and many, many others pumped their chests and walked the swagger that is The U.

Larry Coker won a title in 2001, and it appeared the ’Canes were on the verge of returning to greatness with two straight national title-game appearances, but that was short-lived. Then came Shapiro Gate and the end of the Randy Shannon era. Many figured Miami would never recover from the repercussions of the most recent probation. Golden has not only stood the test of the time, he has Miami in a good position. The staff even endured some fallout during this past offseason that led to several high-profile players leaving Dade County due to rumors about the staff’s job security. But the crew stayed the course and now UM is sitting with the top recruiting class in the nation for 2016, as ranked by 247Sports.com. And with 18 commitments already, the ’Canes will start working more on holding onto recruits, as well as luring more.

It can be quite a cut-throat world in college recruiting. One minute a top player can be sitting in your corner and the next thing you know, he’s blasting away on Twitter that he is gone. Commitments mean nothing in this day and age, which is why the 18 players currently committed to UM will be incredibly difficult to hold onto for the next 11 months. In fact, UM probably has a more difficult task in keeping these commitments than it did of luring them toward committing in the first place. High school players need attention. Go a few days without contacting a committed prospect and that’s like opening the door and welcoming another school to take a shot.

High school players want to hear they are loved on a daily basis. Allow another school to start showing more love and you just lost your date to the dance. It seems childish and disloyal the way some prospects jump from school to school with their commitments. It’s not easy, however, for these 16-, 17- and 18-year-old kids who are trying to make a very difficult life decision. They are easily swayed, easily manipulated and very impressionable.

Numerous players during this past recruiting cycle were committed to more than two different schools. Take defensive lineman Keivonnis Davis of Miami Central, for example. He signed with Florida after having been committed to both Oregon State and Syracuse. Defensive back Sheldrick Redwine of Miami Killian ended up with Miami after flipping on Louisville and West Virginia. Of the 50 Football Bowl Subdivision signees out of Dade County alone last month, 14 of them had been previously committed to other schools.

So the Hurricanes staff has its work cut out, but that’s not to belittle what work it has already done. The top five players in the UM Class of 2016 have all been committed since last summer, no small feat. It’s an impressive class led by mighty mite receiver Sam Bruce of Fort Lauderdale St. Thomas Aquinas, a Broward kid heading up a list of 12 South Florida pledges among the 18 committed to Miami so far. There are others out there, like Coconut Creek corner Trayvon Mullen, or one of several more receivers like Miami Central’s Darnell Solomon, a Hialeah Champagnat Catholic transfer, or Binjimen Victor of Coconut Creek or Dredrick Snelson of Plantation American Heritage.

Miami just does not want to see a list like last year’s locals who got away. Players like Davante Davis (Texas), Antonio Callaway (Florida), Jordan Cronkrite (Florida), Tim Irvin (Auburn), Devante Phillips (FSU) and more left Dade. They even had stars escape from Broward and Palm like Calvin Ridley (Alabama), Tarvarus McFadden (FSU), Torrance Gibson (Ohio State) and one that really hurt — Jordan Scarlett , a UM commit who flipped to UF.

That’s what needs to be avoided this time around. Visions of Dalvin Cook running around in the Garnet and Gold this past season can’t be the sign of the future, or there will be no serious talk of future titles in Coral Gables.
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/spor...es-2016-recruiting-class-20150317-column.html
The recipe is obvious; the ‘Canes just need to stop running out of locally produced ingredients.
 
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