Miami Has The Most Delusional Fanbase In The ACC
Even I, a somewhat objective bystander with little to no interest in the happenings in Coral Gables, couldn’t help but get somewhat caught up watching 30 for 30: The U and its subsequent sequel. Those days were undeniably cool, but this is 2016. Ray Lewis is no longer a Hurricane flirting with first-degree murder charges; he’s gone on to expire in the NFL and move on to the broadcasting booth since the glory days of Jimmy Johnson and the Miami program.
Yes, cheatin’ Butch Davis (as I’m guessing is the proper Trump nomenclature) and Larry Coker briefly brought back the trophies, shattering conference records on offense, defense, and arrests. But the dark ages have now spanned a decade of pure, unfiltered hopelessness, with Randy Shannon and Al Golden tarred and feathered after wholly unsuccessful tenures. At this point, when most of us were in elementary school when Brock Berlin, Clinton Portis, and Sean Taylor had The U back to being The U, you’d think the Hurricane faithful would have resigned themselves to third fiddle in the state of Florida, right?
Well, in fairness I’m not exactly sure the Miami “faithful” exist judging by their endowment and Saturday afternoon attendance, but let’s assume there’s a smattering of fans still out there. You know, the assumption the players have to hold on to come the third quarter of every home game. However, now with failed Georgia Coach Mark “9-3” Richt back at the helm of his alma mater, the supposed “lifelong fanatics” are coming out of the woodwork like fair weather cockroaches.
I’m just here to stomp them.
The Miami “return to glory” is over before it even began. There is no semblance of rational hope or reasoning for this ongoing discussion of future championships, a rebirth of the feared U running things in South Florida. Miami has, without question, one of the worst stadiums in all of college football — nearly an hour with traffic from the actual campus — and the sort of pathetic fan attendance that warrants their punishment in the pitiful home confines. You’d think with their past football success they would have a roaring booster base, overflowing with donations to right the atrocity that is their total lack of home field advantage. But apparently unless it’s hookers and cocaine for players, the Miami fan base is good for little tangible assistance.
Though Miami sits in the heart of one of America’s most fertile recruiting grounds, since the departure of Larry Coker, more than twice as many top 100 overall recruits hailing from South Florida have called Columbus, Ohio home than Coral Gables, with current Buckeyes Coach Urban Meyer only widening the gap with his focus on Florida talent. To put this in the proper perspective, Miami has not signed a single 5-star recruit from Ohio, likely the nation’s third or fourth best state for high school football, at any time in the last decade. Miami is being pillaged by out of state invaders and their far more successful “rivals” to the north in Florida State and Florida.
Speaking of which, has there ever been a time Miami lagged so far behind both of their main in-state rivals? Florida State is an absolute machine, in the midst of their best ever 4 year stretch under Coach Jimbo Fisher, and Florida, though I’m admittedly not as high on their future as most people, won the SEC East in Coach Jim McElwain’s first season in Gainesville. Florida and FSU have both out-recruited Miami each of the past 5 years, with Florida State perhaps building the most talented overall roster in the nation. The ineptitude of past regimes to develop pipelines in their own backyard, and immense strengthening of their in-state competition, has relegated Miami to the scraps with UCF, USF, and probably Rich Rodriguez.
Miami, in their supposed resurgence, lags continents behind the ACC’s two-headed monster in Clemson and FSU, seemingly at best a fortuitous coaching loss (Swinney to his alma mater Alabama and/or Fisher to LSU) and several years from even being in the discussion as an ACC power. In fact, since 2011, much less heralded programs such as Duke, Georgia Tech, and North Carolina have won more conference games than the Hurricanes.
Miami has an immense amount of ground to make up. Not just with the Titans of their conference, but with their in-state rivals and even the mediocre programs of the ACC. To do so, new coach Mark Richt, who has arguably had one of the five easiest to succeed in jobs in the nation the last decade and a half, will have to overcome terrible facilities, a total lack of funding compared to blue chip programs, a massive talent discrepancy, and rivals that have never been stronger.
Sorry, Miami fans, but this is a cluster fuck. On the plus side, you’ll have no reason to leave South Beach on Saturday afternoons..
You’re riding the fine line of over saturating the college football hot-take market.
8 years ago at 2:58 pmThe season starts two weeks from tomorrow, if you don’t want college football hot takes its time to head to Canada, champ.
8 years ago at 3:00 pmI’d go ahead and delete your account, football hating communist
8 years ago at 3:11 pmWhere he lives he thinks you mean soccer.
8 years ago at 3:18 pmMiami falls under the category of “die hard fans who never went to the university”
8 years ago at 3:40 pmEven more fall under the category of “Die hard fans who never go to their games”.
8 years ago at 4:11 pmAnd Ohio State
8 years ago at 7:03 pmCare to build on that, chief?
8 years ago at 10:37 amAlso Bama, ND and USC.
8 years ago at 5:33 pmJust Bama.
8 years ago at 5:46 pmAnd UNC
8 years ago at 8:45 pmConsidering used car salesman Al Golden & Mark D’Onofrio, along with James Coley each had the play calling abilities of a middle schooler playing Madden, we still managed a winning season. Now with actual, proven coaches that can mold talent I would expect Miami to be in contention for its first ACC Championship. Not to mention Gus Felder & Co. has been beating the brakes off these kids in the weight room.
Brad Kaaya is unequivocally in the top 1% of all CFB signal callers, the defense this season is anchored by a line that has a Top-10 pick in Al-Quadin Muhammad, Chad Thomas is finally showing his 5 Star potential, and a slew of guys playing the 3 & 1 technique that have more than their share of experience I would expect the the run defense to resemble that of an SEC West team when this young linebacker corp gets in form. Also I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the duo of top flight safeties, and the young but tested cornerbacks.
The offensive line finally resembles a college football offensive line instead of five copies of Donnie Scrab, three tight ends one of which was an All-American are returning, Gus Edwards is back to lead the three headed monster of running backs. The only spot I would be overly concerned about would be wide receive with Braxton Berrios and Stacy Coley being the only two worth mention.
TL;DR: Miami goes 8-5 with above average talent and shit coaches. Now with actual talent and actual coaches don’t be surprised if this is the resurrection of Schnellenberger’s “State of Miami” plan.
8 years ago at 3:51 pmIn case you’re unaware, which seems to be the case based on everything you just said, you’re who he was referencing when he wrote this.
8 years ago at 4:19 pmIt’s not like UM has the best coach from the SEC not named Nick Saban.
8 years ago at 4:28 pmYou’re literally the purpose of this article.
8 years ago at 5:39 pmLet him roll, he’s feelin himself
8 years ago at 7:16 amYou seem to be really high on FSU, Siblings
8 years ago at 4:24 pmThey’re a machine nearing Bama level talent in an incredibly weak conference. Elite facilities, recruiting base, and coaching staff. Hard not to like.
8 years ago at 4:26 pmConsidering the ACC Coastal division consists of Duke, GT, UNC, Pittsburgh, UVA, and VT, it really doesn’t matter how delusional their fan base is, they’ve probably got the easiest route to a conference championship appearance year in and year out. This year aside from the ND game they even got lucky and got FSU and a borderline respectable UNC team at home while not having to play Clemson at all. Not saying you’re wrong in any way, just that even with all of the schools drawbacks, the switch has the potential to flip very easily.
8 years ago at 4:51 pmMiami plays FSU and UNC every year. I guess Miami’s lucky every even year and unlucky every odd year because thats when they play those two teams on the road.
8 years ago at 4:58 pmI’m sorry, did you miss the part right after that where I said they didn’t have to play one of the top teams in the country in Clemson? That might’ve factored in just a little bit when I said they got lucky schedule-wise, especially considering last years debacle. Could’ve been worse, the Canes could’ve actually scheduled a power 5 team during the nonconference as well.
8 years ago at 5:12 pmThey played Louisville and Clemson the past 2 years. They’ll play Clemson in the ACC Championship game anyway. Miami basically always has a harder schedule than other Coastal teams due to fsu being a permanent crossover.
8 years ago at 6:17 pmHaving a tougher schedule than other ACC Coastal teams is like being crowned tallest midget. Congrats I guess, but your schedule still comes up short, especially this upcoming year.
8 years ago at 6:39 pmUNC is no where the team they were last year because of the departure of Marquise Williams.
8 years ago at 10:11 pmMiami stadium just underwent $500M in renovations. The drive is closer to 30 mins, but Tailgating is still great. The stadium only sells out big games because unlike other schools, there’s other things to do in Miami, and playing at noon when it’s hot as fuck doesn’t generally help.
You didn’t mention: Miami’s sold a record # of season ticket, will unveil a $28M Indoor Practice Facility within the month, and created probably the biggest recruiting camp of any college this summer in which former stars such as Ray Lewis, Michael Irvin, Jeremy Shockey, Duke Johnson, Philip Buchanon, Antrel Rolle, Warren Sapp, Calais Campbell all came back to actually coach the recruits. What other college can/has done that?
The last time Miami played Florida was in 2012 with Al Golden, and still won. Meanwhile the last 2 yrs against Florida St, The Canes have lost by a combined 11 points, again with the worst coach in the P5.
I think it’s delusional not to admit the potential Miami has and will always have to win championships.
8 years ago at 4:53 pmMiami hasn’t managed to win even a single Coastal Division championship since joining the ACC over a decade ago. Fucking Duke won a Coastal Division championship. Goddamn Wake Forest has won more division championships than Miami. You haven’t beaten a P5 team in a bowl game since 2004. Please tell me what potential you are talking about?
8 years ago at 9:48 pmDidn’t know Paul Finebaum started writing TFM articles
As for tailgates they are probable one of the most unique thing this school has to offer and recruiting wise reference the 30 for 30 where they declared the state of Miami and recruit any known star from that area
8 years ago at 7:39 pmYes the stadium is off campus but it is now one of the coolest to play at after the 500 million dollar renovation just because a stadium is off campus doesn’t mean it is bad the orange bowl was not right on campus either and look at the repetition Miami has from dynasty to fall to dynasty and with the talent they have built up in kaaya their receivers their d line and even their punter is incredible they are due to come back for a championship and do what they do best which is win national championships
Unique tailgates? As in the parking lot of a pro team’s stadium? As in 40 minutes away from campus? If you say so…
8 years ago at 9:10 pmWhat fans?
8 years ago at 8:00 pmMiami is playing Appalachian State in fucking Boone, NC this season. My guess is they don’t have the funds to pay for a home game and had to settle for a home and home deal with a team two years removed from FCS. Embarrassing.
8 years ago at 9:16 pmApp State paid Miami to come because they want another Michigan.
8 years ago at 10:10 pmAnd they took the money – because they’re broke.
8 years ago at 10:18 pmIf App St is paying Miami, that is beyond embarrassing
8 years ago at 10:53 pmThis author is referring to the glory days with Brock Berlin? I believe you meant Ken Dorsey. Brock Berlin was NOT successful at all and Dorsey was VERY successful. I wonder if they made the error on purpose.
8 years ago at 7:52 am