Reflections/random thoughts as I await my flight back home...

k9cane

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So I was able to get a couple of hours of sleep after last nights Fiesta Bowl thriller. Quite simply, it's on my Mt Rushmore of most exciting/best #Canes games I have ever attended (certainly based on the stakes, the setting and how it played out). The Hurricanes held off the gutty Ole Miss Rebels 31-27 to advance to the national title game.

It still feels surreal to even type that out here at Sir Veza's near my Southwest terminal as I sip on late victory, early morning Bloody Mary. (Hey, I'll start working out again tomorrow). This was a game full of frustration before elation. Some thoughts on the game..

- As Miami dominated the time of possession, and were rushing the ball effectively with Mark Fletcher and Marty Brown, it was frustrating that they would get away from the run game at the most inopportune time. I get why Shannon Dawson wants to mix things up (admittedly, many of us were begging for this), but when you are gashing for 6, 7, 8 yards, consistently, there's no need to dial stuff up like a Flea Flicker which killed the momentum of one drive. Fletcher had 22 carries for 133, but you wonder if he should've gotten something closer to 30 totes. I get the sense Miami left about 10-13 points out there last night.

Miami had the ball over 22 minutes in the first half, and over 40 minutes overall. But while they seemed to control the pace of the game, they could never shake the pesky Rebels throughout. They bent a lot, but Miami could never get them to break

- The Hurricanes secondary dropped three, if not four INT's last night. Get one or two of these and the complexion of the game changes.

- Malachi Toney and CJ Daniels both had plays where they had great second efforts on third down catches to move the chains on what became TD drives. There is a certain toughness to this unit that can not be overlooked

- Speaking of the wideout unit, can we put to rest that Keelan Marion is just a really good kick returner and a guy who is effective at running end-arounds and reverses? In the second half of the year he's become a reliable receiver who is tough and his dig route on that third down late in the game was huge.

- Ruben Bain and Akheem Mesidor didn't have great numbers last night, but they did enough to speed up the internal clock of Trinidad Chambliss. Chambliss was as good as advertised. Quick release, shifty and some real arm talent. He threw some real dimes on the Ole Miss last drive before that Hail Mary. I'm a fan of this guy. If he gets another year of eligibility, Chambliss is a Heisman contender from the get go.

Credit to Ole Miss, not one time during this playoff did I ever really think they missed that guy who is leading LSU now.

- Did Carson Beck just put on the greatest last minute, game-winning drive in Miami history? Now, we've seen great comebacks (Steve Walsh vs FSU in 87 and Michigan in 88) and Ken Dorsey's late drive vs the Seminoles in 2000 (hottest day I can recall at the Orange Bowl), but again, considering what was at stake, this has to be in the conversation. He delivered in the clutch and capped it off with his legs.

A lot is always made of what his NIL deal was. After last night, it turns out Miami got an absolute bargain.

- As the Rebels last pass dropped to the ground, I found it interesting that our section of Miami fans, and really everyone else, was a bit muted, or really didn't have any reaction for several seconds. It was almost as if they were waiting for a late flag (ala the 2003 Fiesta Bowl), and it wasn't till the UM players started streaming on the field that everyone started to come to the realization that Miami had won and was advancing to the national title game.

It was a surreal feeling as total strangers were hugging one another. What a feeling. After two decades of mediocrity, Mario Cristobal, through his efforts, has brought this to our fan base a program that can be respected again. I can't lie, I'm in a bit of awe over what I've been able to witness live.

And yes, there is one more hurdle to climb. Cristobal didn't come back home to be a runner-up. He will be the first to tell you this (and don't ever ask or tell him that ''Miami is back''). But to put this into perspective, in this past month the Hurricanes have won three post-season games (including the Cotton and Fiesta Bowls), in the previous twenty seasons or so, they haven't won that many bowl games.

Three down, one to go.
 
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Agree with a lot of this… but I heard Fletcher had the flu (as did many others).
That would certainly explain why it seemed he got cut off a little just when he got going. But I would have use the other RBs a bit more in those spots. The Oline was bullying them on the run plays.

I too held my breath on that last play.

But now we go home!!! Let’s go!
 
So I was able to get a couple of hours of sleep after last nights Fiesta Bowl thriller. Quite simply, it's on my Mt Rushmore of most exciting/best #Canes games I have ever attended (certainly based on the stakes, the setting and how it played out). The Hurricanes held off the gutty Ole Miss Rebels 31-27 to advance to the national title game.

It still feels surreal to even type that out here at Sir Veza's near my Southwest terminal as I sip on late victory, early morning Bloody Mary. (Hey, I'll start working out again tomorrow). This was a game full of frustration before elation. Some thoughts on the game..

- As Miami dominated the time of possession, and were rushing the ball effectively with Mark Fletcher and Marty Brown, it was frustrating that they would get away from the run game at the most inopportune time. I get why Shannon Dawson wants to mix things up (admittedly, many of us were begging for this), but when you are gashing for 6, 7, 8 yards, consistently, there's no need to dial stuff up like a Flea Flicker which killed the momentum of one drive. Fletcher had 22 carries for 133, but you wonder if he should've gotten something closer to 30 totes. I get the sense Miami left about 10-13 points out there last night.

Miami had the ball over 22 minutes in the first half, and over 40 minutes overall. But while they seemed to control the pace of the game, they could never shake the pesky Rebels throughout. They bent a lot, but Miami could never get them to break

- The Hurricanes secondary dropped three, if not four INT's last night. Get one or two of these and the complexion of the game changes.

- Malachi Toney and CJ Daniels both had plays where they had great second efforts on third down catches to move the chains on what became TD drives. There is a certain toughness to this unit that can not be overlooked

- Speaking of the wideout unit, can we put to rest that Keelan Marion is just a really good kick returner and a guy who is effective at running end-arounds and reverses? In the second half of the year he's become a reliable receiver who is tough and his dig route on that third down late in the game was huge.

- Ruben Bain and Akheem Mesidor didn't have great numbers last night, but they did enough to speed up the internal clock of Trinidad Chambliss. Chambliss was as good as advertised. Quick release, shifty and some real arm talent. He threw some real dimes on the Ole Miss last drive before that Hail Mary. I'm a fan of this guy. If he gets another year of eligibility, Chambliss is a Heisman contender from the get go.

Credit to Ole Miss, not one time during this playoff did I ever really think they missed that guy who is leading LSU now.

- Did Carson Beck just put on the greatest last minute, game-winning drive in Miami history? Now, we've seen great comebacks (Steve Walsh vs FSU in 87 and Michigan in 88) and Ken Dorsey's late drive vs the Seminoles in 2000 (hottest day I can recall at the Orange Bowl), but again, considering what was at stake, this has to be in the conversation. He delivered in the clutch and capped it off with his legs.

A lot is always made of what his NIL deal was. After last night, it turns out Miami got an absolute bargain.

- As the Rebels last pass dropped to the ground, I found it interesting that our section of Miami fans, and really everyone else, was a bit muted, or really didn't have any reaction for several seconds. It was almost as if they were waiting for a late flag (ala the 2003 Fiesta Bowl), and it wasn't till the UM players started streaming on the field that everyone started to come to the realization that Miami had won and was advancing to the national title game.

It was a surreal feeling as total strangers were hugging one another. What a feeling. After two decades of mediocrity, Mario Cristobal, through his efforts, has brought this to our fan base a program that can be respected again. I can't lie, I'm in a bit of awe over what I've been able to witness live.

And yes, there is one more hurdle to climb. Cristobal didn't come back home to be a runner-up. He will be the first to tell you this (and don't ever ask or tell him that ''Miami is back''). But to put this into perspective, in this past month the Hurricanes have won three post-season games (including the Cotton and Fiesta Bowls), in the previous twenty seasons or so, they haven't won that many bowl games.

Three down, one to go.
After miami dropped 4 maybe 5 ints, and Ole miss scored to go up 27-24, I was getting worried. Beck is an absolute gamer and so is Toney and Fletcher Jr, and Marion improved as the year went on. Daniels is clutch also.
 
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I’m gonna make a k9 style observation.

This team reminds me me of The Wire. The show where you got so many contributions from secondary characters like Prezybylewski, slim Charles, prop Joe. The main guys were the stars, but the secondary roles made the show great.

Josh Moore with a fingertip catch first down on a ball thrown behind him.

Marty Brown ready every time his number is called.

Mo Toure bulldozing a rb and getting a 3rd down sack.

Marion making catch after catch and moving chains.

Justin Scott getting pressure up the middle after Moten came out.

31 played a great game. 41 has been giving us quality snaps since November started. ****, even lofton held onto it after getting crushed and made a huge catch.

I have criticisms too, but I’ll save those for later in the week cause right now it’s time to celebrate. Real ones like k9 have the bloody, but I have to pretend to work.

This team plays hard for each other. ******* warriors. As my old high school coach used to say, tougher than cat ****.
 
So I was able to get a couple of hours of sleep after last nights Fiesta Bowl thriller. Quite simply, it's on my Mt Rushmore of most exciting/best #Canes games I have ever attended (certainly based on the stakes, the setting and how it played out). The Hurricanes held off the gutty Ole Miss Rebels 31-27 to advance to the national title game.

It still feels surreal to even type that out here at Sir Veza's near my Southwest terminal as I sip on late victory, early morning Bloody Mary. (Hey, I'll start working out again tomorrow). This was a game full of frustration before elation. Some thoughts on the game..

- As Miami dominated the time of possession, and were rushing the ball effectively with Mark Fletcher and Marty Brown, it was frustrating that they would get away from the run game at the most inopportune time. I get why Shannon Dawson wants to mix things up (admittedly, many of us were begging for this), but when you are gashing for 6, 7, 8 yards, consistently, there's no need to dial stuff up like a Flea Flicker which killed the momentum of one drive. Fletcher had 22 carries for 133, but you wonder if he should've gotten something closer to 30 totes. I get the sense Miami left about 10-13 points out there last night.

Miami had the ball over 22 minutes in the first half, and over 40 minutes overall. But while they seemed to control the pace of the game, they could never shake the pesky Rebels throughout. They bent a lot, but Miami could never get them to break

- The Hurricanes secondary dropped three, if not four INT's last night. Get one or two of these and the complexion of the game changes.

- Malachi Toney and CJ Daniels both had plays where they had great second efforts on third down catches to move the chains on what became TD drives. There is a certain toughness to this unit that can not be overlooked

- Speaking of the wideout unit, can we put to rest that Keelan Marion is just a really good kick returner and a guy who is effective at running end-arounds and reverses? In the second half of the year he's become a reliable receiver who is tough and his dig route on that third down late in the game was huge.

- Ruben Bain and Akheem Mesidor didn't have great numbers last night, but they did enough to speed up the internal clock of Trinidad Chambliss. Chambliss was as good as advertised. Quick release, shifty and some real arm talent. He threw some real dimes on the Ole Miss last drive before that Hail Mary. I'm a fan of this guy. If he gets another year of eligibility, Chambliss is a Heisman contender from the get go.

Credit to Ole Miss, not one time during this playoff did I ever really think they missed that guy who is leading LSU now.

- Did Carson Beck just put on the greatest last minute, game-winning drive in Miami history? Now, we've seen great comebacks (Steve Walsh vs FSU in 87 and Michigan in 88) and Ken Dorsey's late drive vs the Seminoles in 2000 (hottest day I can recall at the Orange Bowl), but again, considering what was at stake, this has to be in the conversation. He delivered in the clutch and capped it off with his legs.

A lot is always made of what his NIL deal was. After last night, it turns out Miami got an absolute bargain.

- As the Rebels last pass dropped to the ground, I found it interesting that our section of Miami fans, and really everyone else, was a bit muted, or really didn't have any reaction for several seconds. It was almost as if they were waiting for a late flag (ala the 2003 Fiesta Bowl), and it wasn't till the UM players started streaming on the field that everyone started to come to the realization that Miami had won and was advancing to the national title game.

It was a surreal feeling as total strangers were hugging one another. What a feeling. After two decades of mediocrity, Mario Cristobal, through his efforts, has brought this to our fan base a program that can be respected again. I can't lie, I'm in a bit of awe over what I've been able to witness live.

And yes, there is one more hurdle to climb. Cristobal didn't come back home to be a runner-up. He will be the first to tell you this (and don't ever ask or tell him that ''Miami is back''). But to put this into perspective, in this past month the Hurricanes have won three post-season games (including the Cotton and Fiesta Bowls), in the previous twenty seasons or so, they haven't won that many bowl games.

Three down, one to go.
Could not agree with you more about Dawson getting cute with the play calling.

Also, sitting in my living room, after watching the Hail Mary hit the ground, I paused. Total PTSD. Then I erupted. Amazing.
 
So I was able to get a couple of hours of sleep after last nights Fiesta Bowl thriller. Quite simply, it's on my Mt Rushmore of most exciting/best #Canes games I have ever attended (certainly based on the stakes, the setting and how it played out). The Hurricanes held off the gutty Ole Miss Rebels 31-27 to advance to the national title game.

It still feels surreal to even type that out here at Sir Veza's near my Southwest terminal as I sip on late victory, early morning Bloody Mary. (Hey, I'll start working out again tomorrow). This was a game full of frustration before elation. Some thoughts on the game..

- As Miami dominated the time of possession, and were rushing the ball effectively with Mark Fletcher and Marty Brown, it was frustrating that they would get away from the run game at the most inopportune time. I get why Shannon Dawson wants to mix things up (admittedly, many of us were begging for this), but when you are gashing for 6, 7, 8 yards, consistently, there's no need to dial stuff up like a Flea Flicker which killed the momentum of one drive. Fletcher had 22 carries for 133, but you wonder if he should've gotten something closer to 30 totes. I get the sense Miami left about 10-13 points out there last night.

Miami had the ball over 22 minutes in the first half, and over 40 minutes overall. But while they seemed to control the pace of the game, they could never shake the pesky Rebels throughout. They bent a lot, but Miami could never get them to break

- The Hurricanes secondary dropped three, if not four INT's last night. Get one or two of these and the complexion of the game changes.

- Malachi Toney and CJ Daniels both had plays where they had great second efforts on third down catches to move the chains on what became TD drives. There is a certain toughness to this unit that can not be overlooked

- Speaking of the wideout unit, can we put to rest that Keelan Marion is just a really good kick returner and a guy who is effective at running end-arounds and reverses? In the second half of the year he's become a reliable receiver who is tough and his dig route on that third down late in the game was huge.

- Ruben Bain and Akheem Mesidor didn't have great numbers last night, but they did enough to speed up the internal clock of Trinidad Chambliss. Chambliss was as good as advertised. Quick release, shifty and some real arm talent. He threw some real dimes on the Ole Miss last drive before that Hail Mary. I'm a fan of this guy. If he gets another year of eligibility, Chambliss is a Heisman contender from the get go.

Credit to Ole Miss, not one time during this playoff did I ever really think they missed that guy who is leading LSU now.

- Did Carson Beck just put on the greatest last minute, game-winning drive in Miami history? Now, we've seen great comebacks (Steve Walsh vs FSU in 87 and Michigan in 88) and Ken Dorsey's late drive vs the Seminoles in 2000 (hottest day I can recall at the Orange Bowl), but again, considering what was at stake, this has to be in the conversation. He delivered in the clutch and capped it off with his legs.

A lot is always made of what his NIL deal was. After last night, it turns out Miami got an absolute bargain.

- As the Rebels last pass dropped to the ground, I found it interesting that our section of Miami fans, and really everyone else, was a bit muted, or really didn't have any reaction for several seconds. It was almost as if they were waiting for a late flag (ala the 2003 Fiesta Bowl), and it wasn't till the UM players started streaming on the field that everyone started to come to the realization that Miami had won and was advancing to the national title game.

It was a surreal feeling as total strangers were hugging one another. What a feeling. After two decades of mediocrity, Mario Cristobal, through his efforts, has brought this to our fan base a program that can be respected again. I can't lie, I'm in a bit of awe over what I've been able to witness live.

And yes, there is one more hurdle to climb. Cristobal didn't come back home to be a runner-up. He will be the first to tell you this (and don't ever ask or tell him that ''Miami is back''). But to put this into perspective, in this past month the Hurricanes have won three post-season games (including the Cotton and Fiesta Bowls), in the previous twenty seasons or so, they haven't won that many bowl games.

Three down, one to go.
Nah that shii was 4, Thomas, Day, Bissainthe, and O’Connor all missed ints.
 
Nah that shii was 4, Thomas, Day, Bissainthe, and O’Connor all missed ints.
This was probably the most frustrating thing to me about last night. Glad those dropped interceptions did not come back to haunt us.

Hopefully it all evens out in Miami and we hold on to at least a couple of similar opportunities in the Championship Game.
 
This was probably the most frustrating thing to thing to me about last night. Glad those drop interceptions did not come back to haunt us.

Hopefully it all evens out in Miami and we hold on to at least a couple of similar opportunities in the Championship.
I believe Lucas dropped one also off a deflection before he left the game for targeting. Unreal how we missed out on all those ints.
 
So I was able to get a couple of hours of sleep after last nights Fiesta Bowl thriller. Quite simply, it's on my Mt Rushmore of most exciting/best #Canes games I have ever attended (certainly based on the stakes, the setting and how it played out). The Hurricanes held off the gutty Ole Miss Rebels 31-27 to advance to the national title game.

It still feels surreal to even type that out here at Sir Veza's near my Southwest terminal as I sip on late victory, early morning Bloody Mary. (Hey, I'll start working out again tomorrow). This was a game full of frustration before elation. Some thoughts on the game..

- As Miami dominated the time of possession, and were rushing the ball effectively with Mark Fletcher and Marty Brown, it was frustrating that they would get away from the run game at the most inopportune time. I get why Shannon Dawson wants to mix things up (admittedly, many of us were begging for this), but when you are gashing for 6, 7, 8 yards, consistently, there's no need to dial stuff up like a Flea Flicker which killed the momentum of one drive. Fletcher had 22 carries for 133, but you wonder if he should've gotten something closer to 30 totes. I get the sense Miami left about 10-13 points out there last night.

Miami had the ball over 22 minutes in the first half, and over 40 minutes overall. But while they seemed to control the pace of the game, they could never shake the pesky Rebels throughout. They bent a lot, but Miami could never get them to break

- The Hurricanes secondary dropped three, if not four INT's last night. Get one or two of these and the complexion of the game changes.

- Malachi Toney and CJ Daniels both had plays where they had great second efforts on third down catches to move the chains on what became TD drives. There is a certain toughness to this unit that can not be overlooked

- Speaking of the wideout unit, can we put to rest that Keelan Marion is just a really good kick returner and a guy who is effective at running end-arounds and reverses? In the second half of the year he's become a reliable receiver who is tough and his dig route on that third down late in the game was huge.

- Ruben Bain and Akheem Mesidor didn't have great numbers last night, but they did enough to speed up the internal clock of Trinidad Chambliss. Chambliss was as good as advertised. Quick release, shifty and some real arm talent. He threw some real dimes on the Ole Miss last drive before that Hail Mary. I'm a fan of this guy. If he gets another year of eligibility, Chambliss is a Heisman contender from the get go.

Credit to Ole Miss, not one time during this playoff did I ever really think they missed that guy who is leading LSU now.

- Did Carson Beck just put on the greatest last minute, game-winning drive in Miami history? Now, we've seen great comebacks (Steve Walsh vs FSU in 87 and Michigan in 88) and Ken Dorsey's late drive vs the Seminoles in 2000 (hottest day I can recall at the Orange Bowl), but again, considering what was at stake, this has to be in the conversation. He delivered in the clutch and capped it off with his legs.

A lot is always made of what his NIL deal was. After last night, it turns out Miami got an absolute bargain.

- As the Rebels last pass dropped to the ground, I found it interesting that our section of Miami fans, and really everyone else, was a bit muted, or really didn't have any reaction for several seconds. It was almost as if they were waiting for a late flag (ala the 2003 Fiesta Bowl), and it wasn't till the UM players started streaming on the field that everyone started to come to the realization that Miami had won and was advancing to the national title game.

It was a surreal feeling as total strangers were hugging one another. What a feeling. After two decades of mediocrity, Mario Cristobal, through his efforts, has brought this to our fan base a program that can be respected again. I can't lie, I'm in a bit of awe over what I've been able to witness live.

And yes, there is one more hurdle to climb. Cristobal didn't come back home to be a runner-up. He will be the first to tell you this (and don't ever ask or tell him that ''Miami is back''). But to put this into perspective, in this past month the Hurricanes have won three post-season games (including the Cotton and Fiesta Bowls), in the previous twenty seasons or so, they haven't won that many bowl games.

Three down, one to go.
Great write up... but players were streaming onto the field in 2003 too! I think I waited 15-20 seconds at home.
 
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Thank you for making the trip for us Canes fans that couldn’t

I’ve been saying there’s…something in the air with this team for a while now

Watching us try to give it away over and over again and then ultimately win on a no interference flag in the end zone at the fiesta bowl?

Not sure destiny exists in sports truly but, this team has something extra on its side right now
 
Could not agree with you more about Dawson getting cute with the play calling.

Also, sitting in my living room, after watching the Hail Mary hit the ground, I paused. Total PTSD. Then I erupted. Amazing.
I’m not sure if this is exactly correct or not or maybe it’s just me but Dawson has irked me over the years when he seems to call plays because of the other team

I can’t prove it but it’s like based on the opponent and what they do he gets out of our identity. He did it last year a few times but how are you gonna complain about a record setting offense?

Felt like another one of those games to me and it drives me nuts because I like Dawson
 
I believe Lucas dropped one also off a deflection before he left the game for targeting. Unreal how we missed out on all those ints.
Will Lucas be disqualified for the NC game? Or, sit out part of it. What’s the ruling for the playoffs?
 
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