UM Players Buckin Trend Will Rebound 2 Meat FSU in ACC Title

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Timing is everything, so it’s been said, which is why Florida State-Miami has been fun but, well, a little hollow the past few seasons. They have provided drama the last 2 games with undefeated matchups and fourth-quarter lead changes, but though it’s been entertaining prime-time programming, it’s lacked championship intrigue on both sides.

After the game, Brad Kaaya vowed that the Canes will meet FSU again in the ACC title game. In a speech reminiscent of the promise made by that former QB of a State university in Gainesville after dropping a game https://books.google.com/books?isbn=1612153453 to Ole Miss, UM Brad Kaaya made a promise to his players and Cane Fam after Saturday night nationally televised loss that he will outwork anyone, and vowed that he will lead his players to the ACC Title game, and meet FSU once again in dramatic fashion. [Shots fired?]

“We can’t lose the Coastal,’’ Kaaya vowed. “That’s been our goal since day one.’’

The Virginia Tech game kicks off at 3:30 p.m. Saturday (ESPNU) at Sun Life Stadium. The Hokies (3-3, 1-1) defeated North Carolina State on Friday night.

The No. 6 Clemson Tigers (5-0, 2-0) visit Miami for the first time since 2009 on Oct. 24. And Duke (5-1, 2-0), just out of the ranking as of this past week, meets Miami in Durham, North Carolina on Oct. 31.

Following the 29-24 loss, Miami quarterback Brad Kaaya declared to FSU defensive coordinator Charles Kelly that would change later this season.

“For the past eight months we’ve been working our tails off,’’ Brad declared, “and it has to show up on game day. That’s my plan and that’s our team’s plan. We can definitely beat the Noles. We definitely can. I told a lot of their guys and their defensive coordinator that I’m going to see him again… we will handle business in the Coastal first week by week.’’

This has been the one game that has derailed Miami’s season the past few years, however. Two seasons ago, Miami lost three of its last five after Florida State dropped the Canes from the undefeated ranks. The Seminoles ended the Canes’ title-game hopes last year, and Miami lost its final three games after that to finish 6-7.

Miami is 2-6 the rest of the season after losing to FSU the past two seasons, and opponents outscored them 313-220 in those games.

The rhetoric following this latest loss to the Seminoles was similar to what was heard in 2013, but Miami fell apart. It was an even uglier finish in 2014, as the final three losses were to teams with a combined record of 18-20.

"I don’t see any quit in this team," Al Golden said following Saturday’s loss.

Kaaya said after the game that this loss would not break Miami. Patience was running thin in the 24-hour aftermath of the loss, as Golden and Kaaya, two of the more considerate interviews, looked and sounded a little annoyed about the questions on how Miami was handling the loss.

It’s understandable, given they have been asked about it since before preseason camp.

Now they’re in a similar situation, and the general sense is Miami is in danger of allowing another season to slip away following an emotionally crushing loss to a rival. Golden would not be able to survive a third collapse.

"We laid it on the line and came up short. There’s going to be no less fight in this team," Golden said Sunday. "This team is going to be ready to go when we get back on the field on Tuesday."

Unlike last season, when the loss eliminated Miami from Coastal contention, the Hurricanes still have a full slate of ACC games left. They’re 0-1 in the conference, but reside in a lesser division that has afforded teams second and third chances the past few seasons. A team with at least two conference losses has won the Coastal the past three seasons.

Miami athletic director Blake James is giving Golden the entire 2015 season, and it’s conceivable Miami can climb into the Coastal race. The Canes host Virginia Tech this coming weekend and Clemson on Oct. 24.

"They know we haven’t played a division game, so we better move on quickly and learn from this," Golden said of his team, "and I think they did that today and did a good job today of just moving on. We already started on our Virginia Tech preparation, and they did a really good."

Kaaya said Miami can "definitely beat" Florida State in an ACC Championship Game rematch, but acknowledged the Hurricanes have to play their way to Charlotte. Miami has struggled to close out games under Golden, and even in a win earlier this season, Miami blew a 23-point fourth-quarter lead.

And of course there was Saturday, when Miami scored a touchdown to take a 24-23 lead only to allow Florida State to respond with the game-winning touchdown on the ensuing drive.

"We had them right there on the ropes ... but things happen and you got to bounce back," Kaaya said.

Miami believes it will, but it’s a pretty small bandwagon at this point. Jared Shanker. Who's still on board?
 
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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Timing is everything, so it’s been said, which is why Florida State-Miami has been fun but, well, a little hollow the past few seasons. They have provided drama the last 2 games with undefeated matchups and fourth-quarter lead changes, but though it’s been entertaining prime-time programming, it’s lacked championship intrigue on both sides.

After the game, Brad Kaaya vowed that the Canes will meet FSU again in the ACC title game. In a speech reminiscent of the promise made by that former QB of a State university in Gainesville after dropping a game https://books.google.com/books?isbn=1612153453 to Ole Miss, UM Brad Kaaya made a promise to his players and Cane Fam after Saturday night nationally televised loss that he will outwork anyone, and vowed that he will lead his players to the ACC Title game, and meet FSU once again in dramatic fashion. [Shots fired?]

“We can’t lose the Coastal,’’ Kaaya vowed. “That’s been our goal since day one.’’

The Virginia Tech game kicks off at 3:30 p.m. Saturday (ESPNU) at Sun Life Stadium. The Hokies (3-3, 1-1) defeated North Carolina State on Friday night.

The No. 6 Clemson Tigers (5-0, 2-0) visit Miami for the first time since 2009 on Oct. 24. And Duke (5-1, 2-0), just out of the ranking as of this past week, meets Miami in Durham, North Carolina on Oct. 31.

Following the 29-24 loss, Miami quarterback Brad Kaaya declared to FSU defensive coordinator Charles Kelly that would change later this season.

“For the past eight months we’ve been working our tails off,’’ Brad declared, “and it has to show up on game day. That’s my plan and that’s our team’s plan. We can definitely beat the Noles. We definitely can. I told a lot of their guys and their defensive coordinator that I’m going to see him again… we will handle business in the Coastal first week by week.’’

This has been the one game that has derailed Miami’s season the past few years, however. Two seasons ago, Miami lost three of its last five after Florida State dropped the Canes from the undefeated ranks. The Seminoles ended the Canes’ title-game hopes last year, and Miami lost its final three games after that to finish 6-7.

Miami is 2-6 the rest of the season after losing to FSU the past two seasons, and opponents outscored them 313-220 in those games.

The rhetoric following this latest loss to the Seminoles was similar to what was heard in 2013, but Miami fell apart. It was an even uglier finish in 2014, as the final three losses were to teams with a combined record of 18-20.

"I don’t see any quit in this team," Al Golden said following Saturday’s loss.

Kaaya said after the game that this loss would not break Miami. Patience was running thin in the 24-hour aftermath of the loss, as Golden and Kaaya, two of the more considerate interviews, looked and sounded a little annoyed about the questions on how Miami was handling the loss.

It’s understandable, given they have been asked about it since before preseason camp.

Now they’re in a similar situation, and the general sense is Miami is in danger of allowing another season to slip away following an emotionally crushing loss to a rival. Golden would not be able to survive a third collapse.

"We laid it on the line and came up short. There’s going to be no less fight in this team," Golden said Sunday. "This team is going to be ready to go when we get back on the field on Tuesday."

Unlike last season, when the loss eliminated Miami from Coastal contention, the Hurricanes still have a full slate of ACC games left. They’re 0-1 in the conference, but reside in a lesser division that has afforded teams second and third chances the past few seasons. A team with at least two conference losses has won the Coastal the past three seasons.

Miami athletic director Blake James is giving Golden the entire 2015 season, and it’s conceivable Miami can climb into the Coastal race. The Canes host Virginia Tech this coming weekend and Clemson on Oct. 24.

"They know we haven’t played a division game, so we better move on quickly and learn from this," Golden said of his team, "and I think they did that today and did a good job today of just moving on. We already started on our Virginia Tech preparation, and they did a really good."

Kaaya said Miami can "definitely beat" Florida State in an ACC Championship Game rematch, but acknowledged the Hurricanes have to play their way to Charlotte. Miami has struggled to close out games under Golden, and even in a win earlier this season, Miami blew a 23-point fourth-quarter lead.

And of course there was Saturday, when Miami scored a touchdown to take a 24-23 lead only to allow Florida State to respond with the game-winning touchdown on the ensuing drive.

"We had them right there on the ropes ... but things happen and you got to bounce back," Kaaya said.

Miami believes it will, but it’s a pretty small bandwagon at this point. Jared Shanker. Who's still on board?

:laughing-1:
 
Heard it before. Sorry kids, ya'll just don't have that dog in u...way too much barking. Don't blame u, u want to be great...u just play for a chitty coach. Next year, the world will be yours
 
I like his confidence. Hes got a long road ahead to backup that statement. He can probably only afford one more loss in the ACC.
 
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Folden with Joe Rose after the VT Game:

"Well, Joe, that was only our first Coastal loss. We have more games to play....we're gonna trust our training."
 
Love Kaaya's attitude and resilience.

He's going to make our next coach a happy man.
 
Bobby Bowden use to say that they thought they could beat Miami but Miami knew it could beat them.

The same holds true today but now the opposite we lost our edge because Golden has enabled his players to accept mediocrity.
 
i keep hearing this same bs year in and year out. kc mcdermott promised a nastier o line and what do we get? a team that repeatedly cant convert third and shorts. this is unacceptable and kehoe needs to go
 
Love Kaaya but it's sad to see that he has no clue as to this league. FSU will not be in the ACC championship game unless Clemson suffers some critical injuries. Not that I think we will win the Coastal either. If you consider the loss to Cincy and the barely won game over the Huskers. Two teams that would be middle of the road ACC teams.
 
"n danger of allowing another season to slip away"?

It's already over, five games in.

If I never again hear the word "coastal" in connection with college football, it will be too soon.
 
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FSU is garbage and will need Clemson to pull a Clemson to make it to that game.

Last weekend was Al's one shot to beat Jimbo and it was blown.
 
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Hoping to put last week’s 29-24 loss to FSU behind them, the Hurricanes will face an opponent seeking revenge for last year.

“They just came in here and kicked us like we don’t get kicked very much,” Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer told reporters in Blacksburg on Monday, as his team prepared to visit UM on Saturday (3:30 p.m., ESPNU).

grace-virginia-tech.webp
Jermaine Grace (center, with ball) looks to run after recovering a fumble last season at Virginia Tech.
On a Thursday night game last Oct. 23 at Lane Stadium, the Hurricanes demolished the Hokies. They handed Virginia Tech a 30-6 loss, its worst home defeat since 1989. A sold-out crowd that stomped to “Enter Sandman” before the game was sullen and booing its players by the end.


You don’t forget it,” said sophomore receiver Isaiah Ford.

Last year, Miami rushed 53 times for 364 yards, the highest total against the Hokies in Frank Beamer’s 29-plus seasons. Duke Johnson went for 249, tying the third-highest single-game total in Hurricanes history and the most ever by a Hokies opponent in Lane Stadium. Gus Edwards added 115. “Didn’t throw it very much,” Beamer said of Miami’s game plan. “Didn’t need to.”

They also caused three fumbles, produced six tackles for loss and two sacks and allowed 262 total yards. They entered the night ranked second-to-last nationally on third-down and converted 7-of-15. They also committed a season-low four penalties for 28 yards and did not commit a turnover.

Yes, in a night game on the road.

It was one of the most complete performances of Al Golden‘s four-plus seasons as coach. Entering Saturday’s rematch, Golden could use more of the same.

He hopes his team can forget last Saturday’s 29-24 loss at No. 12 Florida State, their sixth in a row to their in-state rivals and fifth on his watch. The Hurricanes had a one-point lead in the fourth quarter, wherein Dalvin Cook (269 total yards, three touchdowns) put them away.

“Everybody was crushed” by the loss, Golden said Sunday. “There’s no way around that. When you invest in that kind of a game — that kind of emotions involved, then the way it played out, the comeback, the resiliency and then lose it — there’s no way around that.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_F07wsb4S4M

“I think at the same time they know they haven’t played a division game yet, so we’d better move on quickly and learn from this. They did that today

No one need be reminded of what happened after last year’s loss to FSU. With little to play for against Virginia last Nov. 22, UM’s game — so completely good against Virginia Tech a month earlier — completely stunk. But Miami has no reason to check out, as it did last year.

Starting Saturday, UM has six ACC Coastal opponents (and Clemson) to finish the year. Both UM (3-2, 0-1 ACC) and Virginia Tech (3-3, 1-1) are looking up at No. 25 Duke (5-1, 2-0), Pittsburgh (4-1, 2-0) and North Carolina (4-1, 1-0) in the standings.

Dwelling on the FSU loss was expected, Golden said. But for one night only.

“If we weren’t upset or distraught after a game like that, an emotional game like that — you saw [FSU’s] reaction to winning the game — then we’ve got the wrong guys in the locker room and we’re not doing a good job as a coaching staff getting ready for that game,” he said.

“We prepared the way we wanted to prepare for that game, which was to control things we wanted to control. It didn’t necessarily mean going on Twitter and doing all that stuff and adding to the noise, and I think our guys did a good job of that … just focusing on what they needed to do to give the Miami Hurricanes a chance to win that game.

“We did, we laid it on the line, we came up just short. Going to be disappointed, but there’s a lot of things we can learn from that, certainly a lot of things we need to improve today. There’s going to be no less fight in this team. This team’s going to come out ready to go when we get back on the field on Tuesday.”

Note: ESPN exercised a six-day option on Miami’s Oct. 24 home game against Clemson. That means the time and TV info for the game will be released after Saturday’s games. [MENTION=7184]Matt[/MENTION]yports
 
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