Cane Dynasty
Thunderdome Survivor
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2013
- Messages
- 19,983
There are indeed similarities. When I tell people I'm a USC alum but also root for Miami, I often receive this response: "I hate both of those teams."
USC has a nicer campus with plenty of landmarks. But Coral Gables trounces USC's surroundings. USC has crammed so many new buildings into its compact campus that there's not as much room to maneuver or view as when I was there, or compared to Miami's campus.
Game day is a vast difference. The Coliseum may not be on campus but it's a relatively short walk across Exposition Boulevard. That trek is part of the game day tradition. Miami sadly has next to nothing. It's a pseudo college atmosphere. The Orange Bowl was so intimidating and influential that the pregame hours were not a topic. Now we're stuck in a bland cement dump in a comically irrelevant location on the edge of the next county. Brilliant.
USC won several Rose Bowls during that lull from 1983 to 2000. It's true they were seldom a national force deep in the season, other than 1988 until losing at home to Notre Dame. The two joke coaches were the first and last. I was still a student when Ted Tollner was hired as assistant head coach. I couldn't believe USC elevated Tollner to the top job when John Robinson bolted to the Rams. I interviewed Tollner for the USC student newspaper. He was pure cupcake. He literally diagrammed one finesse play after another, excited at all the false influence he would create. I asked him the only question that seemed proper, "Are we ever going to hit anybody?" The response was a blank stare. He didn't understand what that had to do with football. Ted Tollner was unfortunate enough to start his career more than 3 decades ago instead of recently, where he would fit right in.
The second flop was USC's version of Al Golden. I won't say Paul Hackett was despised to the degree that this board hates Golden, but it's in the same realm. In some ways USC fans take it further. You aren't supposed to mention Hackett by name on their forums, to this day.
During those late '90s years I was living in Las Vegas. None of my college buddies would agree to make the trip and watch a game with me at the Coliseum, unlike the late '80s through mid '90s. That's how bad it got under Hackett. There wasn't even much interest and not much hope during the subsequent coaching search. Nearly everyone was discouraged, convinced the brand was in a sustained lull. Many coaches turned USC down, including both Oregon based guys. I applauded the Carroll hire and wrote a related (unpublished) letter to the editor to the alumni magazine but overall it was viewed as disappointing, like USC had to settle for a lesser guy far down the list.
I don't know what it's like to be a Miami alum. From a USC perspective there's a sense that the brand owns the Los Angeles area, and extending much further. I didn't need contacts since I detoured to an unusual venture in Las Vegas. But I was offered tons of contacts had I remained. You certainly don't feel the influence from faraway schools, similar to Gator and Seminole presence in Miami. Even UCLA is mostly a sub plot. USC runs ahead of the pro teams in that area when in full bloom, other than perhaps the Lakers during the Showtime era. I never get that sense with the Canes in Miami. The radio programs default to Dolphins.
Regarding the similarities of the 30 for 30 programs, Miami benefited immensely from a longer delay. Principals are willing to be much more candid when it's decades removed. Reggie Bush is still defensive and cautious. The USC version needed to be filmed 15 years from now.
The finishes to the second title game were similarly devastating but the defending champion teams varied quite a bit. Miami lost tons of defensive talent from 2001 to 2002 but retained a stalwart defense, albeit not nearly the turnover greed of 2001. USC's defense in 2005 was a depleted and injured farce compared to the great unit of 2004.
Ryan Ting is the Terry Porter of USC's agonizing defeat, the name that is attached and recalled years later. Ting inexplicably batted down a terrible Vince Young pass instead of intercepting it to seal the game. USC had a healthy 12 point lead at the time, well beyond the midway point of the 4th quarter. Ting received death threats and decided to transfer.
Thanks for the modern day 'War and Peace', Tolstoy.
How do you feel about 3rd down screen passes?
