OT: Gettin' the Swag back!

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My favorite part...


"To delve into the massive undertaking that Diaz just signed up for at Miami, a person has to dig not only into how Miami lost its way but also what has made the place so unique. And that’s the really fun part, because there is no college program that has stories like the ’Canes got stories.

Let’s start with the most misunderstood term connected to Miami — and the rest of the sports world today. Swag.

“Make sure you write this, because this gets lost on a lot of people, and because there’s so many things that it encompasses,” Alonzo Highsmith said. “Swag encompasses you going to class all of the time, being a leader and being accountable.”

. . .

“Swag is watching Michael Irvin running routes wearing a 30-pound weight vest after practice in like 100 percent humidity,” Highsmith said. “Swag is running hills at Tropical Park after you’ve done all your work with the strength coaches. It’s the whole team showing up to run in combat boots on the beach. That’s swag. It’s never missing a practice. It’s practicing like every day is your last day. You don’t get swag because of a haircut. Or because you pound your chest or because someone said you were a five-star. Swag is something that is earned. You don’t just give it to somebody.

“Everyone keeps looking for this swag thing. You know who has swag? Alabama has that swag and Clemson has swag. It only comes from winning championships and from beating the best.”
Preach, Zo!!!
 
Problem is most of these entitled kids now a days are not like this anymore. Sigh

I don’t believe that; yes kids r entitled, but we’ve been lacking leadership from the top for a minute. Kids haven’t respected our coaches for a while, and they’ve been showing it in both their off season & in season regimens.

How can a kid commit to us, put in the work for us, if they don’t respect us? Ppl wanna talk about Clem$on; OK, let’s be real, Dabo earned that respect. He completely changed the culture there. Hate to say it, but he knew what winning was about from his Bama playing days and he brought that over to Clemson and the boosters got behind him. Saban changed the culture at Bama, and the boosters got behind him.

We haven’t had any trend setting, respected coaches for a minute. The last guy was Butch. We got Richt waaaaaay too late. If we got Richt in 2007-08, things would’ve been different, but Richt looked way older than his age and that’s b/c he was burned out. Furthermore he hired a green staff that no one respected.

Manny will have to change the culture here, too. That’s getting in kids faces, staying on their ***, identifying the leaders who teammates respect and RUNNING UP THE SCORE AT WILL. Win games, have fun doing it, and we’ll us get back. We just need the right coach to press the right buttons to get us back going.
 
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Thought this was great, too:


“We knew that we had a lot of work in front of us,” Lewis said. “We held each other accountable. By my redshirt sophomore year, the coaching staff didn’t have to say anything as far as downstairs in the weight room. We took the lead.”

They also helped select their future teammates. On Sundays, the team leaders would get together with the coaches to discuss recruits. Hey, we don’t like this guy. Or Hey, we gotta have this one.

Among the gotta have ’ems, Lewis remembers, was Brett Romberg, an unheralded O-linemen from Canada who later became the anchor of the best line in school history, and Ed Reed, a defensive back for whom Miami only had to beat Tulane. “He had such a good vibe about him,” Lewis said. “He was raised around his grandparents and just really believed in hard work.”

Then there was the all-world defensive end recruit who Lewis told the coaches to pass on. “I’d taken him out on a recruiting trip. I knew he ain’t gonna make it in our meeting room. He was so arrogant. I said, ‘Look here, bro, you ain’t the only ************ who had stats in high school. Get your ******’ nose out of the air.”

That kid signed elsewhere and never ended up playing a down in the NFL.
 
And also this clip:

Many of the players who grew up on the cutthroat ’Canes of the ’80s and early ’90s and later led UM’s resurgence from the devastating scholarship losses of the mid-’90s had a sense of pride to bring Miami back to the top, Morgan said.

It didn’t matter that Morgan may have been a white kid who grew up in Philly or Lewis played in a buttoned-up high school program in the Dallas area or that a bunch of their teammates were local Miami kids, they all seemed to be wired the same inside.

“We all talked about that once we got to know each other,” said the soft-spoken Morgan, now the director of player personnel with the Buffalo Bills.

The dynamic inside the ’Canes program was hyper-competitive. “That’s what made them so great,” says Don Soldinger, an assistant on the Miami staff under Johnson and later Davis and Larry Coker. “In my running backs room, I had Clinton Portis, Najeh Davenport, Willis McGahee, Frankie (Gore), Quad Hill and Jarrett Payton. It was unbelievable. Portis came in, ‘Which one of you guys will be the fullback blocking for me?’

“They understood that you’d better not mess up or else you’re not gonna see the field very often. If they messed up, I’m not gonna run ’em. I’d just play the next guy. We’d go against the linebackers on a blitz drill, and it’d be Portis and McGahee against Jon Vilma, D.J. Williams and Rocky McIntosh. It was the elite of the elite going against each other.”
 
For the last decade, our players have been soft with the exception of a few. Last year’s team was more focused on social media than winning. Díaz needs to change the soft culture he inherited and inject a new level of passion for this program.
 
Cliff Notes:

-Starts with Manny reflecting on the HOF speeches from antrelle, vince and Stephen on how they detail the recipe for success at UM. They all talked about the competition amongst the players and nobody mentioned their coaches during that time.

The Feldman details the history of UM and how the "Swag" was created. He then begins to interview former players.

Here is a direct quote from Alonzo Highsmith
“Swag is watching Michael Irvin running routes wearing a 30-pound weight vest after practice in like 100 percent humidity,” Highsmith said. “Swag is running hills at Tropical Park after you’ve done all your work with the strength coaches. It’s the whole team showing up to run in combat boots on the beach. That’s swag. It’s never missing a practice. It’s practicing like every day is your last day. You don’t get swag because of a haircut. Or because you pound your chest or because someone said you were a five-star. Swag is something that is earned. You don’t just give it to somebody.
“Everyone keeps looking for this swag thing. You know who has swag? Alabama has that swag and Clemson has swag. It only comes from winning championships and from beating the best.”

A lot of the players then talked about how much work was put in during the off season and how it didn't matter who the coaches were because the players were all dawgs and all they were chomping at the bit to play ball. One thing they highlight the coaches for is how good they were at evaluating talent. Taking guys who might not have been heavily recruited but fit the culture of the program and potential the staff liked.

Here is another excerpt on how the players use to host recruits back in the day.

When prospects came in on visits, Bratton told The Athletic, “We’d take them into the hood, have them in certain uncomfortable environments, to see how they’d handle it to see if they could vibe with us.

“We wanted to see that if he didn’t feel comfortable and was not able to adjust, we thought, how will he do in the fourth quarter?”

One top recruit they brought in, Derek Brown, already had the frame of an NFL tight end, but the ’Canes players were skeptical. “We said, ‘Let him go to Notre Dame. He’s a good guy. He’s not a great fit for us,’ ” Bratton says.
Bernard “Tiger” Clark remembers asking some blunt questions to one touted tight end prospect who had asked the ’Canes middle linebacker for his thoughts on whether he should pick Miami or Penn State. “I said, ‘If you want to come and compete for the job, come here. These guys are good. They bust their behinds. If you want to start, go to Penn State.’ ” After the kid announced he was going to Penn State, a Miami assistant circled back with Clark on his advice to the recruit, asking him, “Are you running guys off?”

Clark responded, “What’d y’all want me to do? Lie to him?”

Later he talked more about the competition like how Clinton Portis walked into a rb room of him, Mcgahee, Gore, davenport, Quad hill and asked them "who's going to be my FB". Also highlighted how Al Blades broke Santanna Moss jaw.

Then it gets into the players sharing their opinion on what has gone wrong since the dominance by UM.

A lot of them blame recruiting and say we haven't recruited the true blood blood hard nose guys. One guy even mentioned that geographic of where we recruit changed.

“If we’re going to be a good football team, you gotta have some Texas, some Louisiana, some New Jersey guys in addition to the local guys,” Lewis said. “It made a **** of a combination for us, and by the time everybody becomes friends, it’s magic. But then we really stopped going into Texas, and by the time (Al) Golden got there, we didn’t have a name in the state of Texas anymore.”

They relayed that Florida guys play with an intensity that's unmatched but guys typically have more skill and when you blend the two together it makes for some good players. "I learned there that you’re not gonna play perfect, but my effort can be perfect."

Manny talks about how hard it is to stay at the top and he attributes the decline to recruiting as well. Uncle Luke and Larry Bluestein talk about how UM was doing their due diligence with recruiting while Luke talks about how unfair Randy Shannon was treated and how after he was fired is when Nick Saban and everyone else claimed territory in SFL.

This part about the staff whiffing on Amari Cooper ****ed me off smh

"The only recruiting story that might sting even more than the Bridgewater story is Amari Cooper’s. Campbell and Cooper’s high school coach Billy Rolle knew Cooper had grown up as a big ’Canes fan. The wideout, though, had generated little recruiting buzz in his junior year at Miami’s powerhouse Northwestern High.
“I’d seen this kid’s work ethic. He had a hip injury but I told (the Miami staff), ‘This ************ is the deal,’ ” Campbell told The Athletic. “I took him down there myself and said, ‘You need to see this kid.’ They were like ‘Yeah, he’s OK.’ They said they were taking somebody else.”
In the spring of Cooper’s junior year of high school, Northwestern High offensive coordinator Chris Perkins worked out the receiver in front of the ’Canes’ receivers coach. “We went through our whole route tree,” Perkins said. “He didn’t drop a ball. He was being Amari Cooper. Their coach said, let’s get him to camp. So Amari went to their camp and was killing everybody. Beat every DB that was there. We were like, ‘Oh, this is it.’ He did his thing.”
Perkins and Campbell said Cooper went up to Golden’s office and tried to commit to Miami but was told he only had a “soft” offer."

Then just talks about the downfall after that in recruiting and how the perspective in SFL changed dramatically toward UM.

Manny finishes the article stating he wants to UM to establish the backbone of the old. Only way that will take place is competition on GreenTree.
 
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Highsmith said it best!! BUT, in today's world ppl don't look at it like that.. Ppl look at stars and rankings and determine IF a kid has swag..
Hopefully, Manny can get TNM back to where it once was.. Find the talent that fits Miami football, all top talent isn't fit to play at The U.. THIS why Manny needs to hire more ex-Canes on his staff, put them on the recruiting side, get these guys here to evaluate and fight for true Miami Canes talent..
 
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