Some fans question the tanking objective. (Tony Capobianco for Five Reasons Sports)

Dolphins’ victory worth celebrating despite draft implications

It’s OK, Dolphins fans, to take a much-needed victory lap. And a brief break from fixating on next year’s draft.

Everyone’s psyche in South Florida needed that 26-18 win against the New York Jets, perhaps as much as the Dolphins can use the first overall pick in 2020.

No matter how much one may have become invested in #TankForTua, there was no way to hang on to any semblance of aqua-and-orange allegiance and root for a loss to the much-despised Jets. Especially when the coach on the opposing sideline was Adam Gase, who was such a disappointment in three seasons in Miami and is doing even worst with New York.

This hoping for losses to bolster draft position hasn’t been any fun for anyone. It’s tedious and burdensome.

Dolphins may not be done winning

Jockeying for draft position is far from settled. Halfway through the season, the Bengals, lone remaining winless team (0-8) is positioned to take touted Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa or whoever they may want.

The 1-7 Dolphins are just one of several one-win teams and now have a tie-breaker edge on the 1-7 Jets — which means the Jets have the advantage on Miami in the draft.

The Dolphins, with the Bengals and a rematch with the Jets in the Meadowlands remaining on the schedule, may not be done winning. The Bengals and Jets also face each other.

It’s pointless to fret about the implications for next April’s draft. As fans, it’s not your job.

As much attention as has been directed at Tagovailoa, it is unknown if Dolphins brass is convinced he is the next Marino.

Is Tua even best choice?

It is uncertain if Tua is even the best choice. That he has had significant injuries to both ankles since late last season raises some questions about durability and how he may hold up in the NFL.

What hasn’t changed is the Dolphins must come away from the next draft with a quarterback to lead a resurgence of the franchise. So they better pick a good one. It’s the task of general manager Chris Grier and his assistants to make that happen.

Grier and Co. have stockpiled a boatload of draft picks over the next two years, including three first-rounders in 2020 and two in 2021. How they play those chess pieces will be more interesting than anything that happens on the field in the next two months.

Sunday’s result doesn’t mean this Dolphins team is going anywhere notable this season. It was a sanity saver to get a day off from humiliation, particularly in light of recent events:

Not only did they squander a 14-point lead last Monday at Pittsburgh, Minkah Fitzpatrick, the 2018 first-round pick they traded away, intercepted two passes for the Steelers.

Then Thursday, Kenyan Drake, another discard who was an underutilized asset in Miami, ran wild in his debut with Arizona (110 yards rushing, 52 yards receiving and a touchdown).

Perhaps toughest to swallow, Ryan Tannehill was playing at an elite level in winning his first two starts for the Titans before losing Sunday to Carolina.

This win feels like miracle too

Nothing good had happened for the Dolphins since the Miami Miracle win against the Patriots on Dec. 9. Of the four players involved in the wild, multi-lateral desperation touchdown dash, only DeVante Parker remains. Drake, who finished it, Tannehill, who started it, and Kenny Stills, who kept it going, are all gone.

Coach Brian Flores, who finally got his first Dolphins win Sunday — along with the requisite Gatorade bath and game ball from the players — was a defensive coach on the other side that day.

Flores has a team that looked in the early weeks like one of the worst ever assembled in NFL duds showing marginal improvement the past three weeks. That is important for various reasons, even with the organizational objective clearly remains in the tank.

The habit of losing can become so ingrained it is tough to break even when the talent has been upgraded. The over-hyped Browns are a case in point.

In addition, you can’t draft an entire team in one or even two years. Something must be mined from this season.

Players on the rise

There are encouraging signs. Tight end Mike Gesicki, who has been much better in his second season, had his best NFL performance Sunday with six catches (on six targets) for 95 yards. Rookie receiver Preston Williams had receptions for 72 yards and two touchdowns (though he injured his knee and reportedly will have an MRI Monday).

Parker, the much-maligned 2015 first-rounder, had a TD catch and is putting together a respectable season.

Last year’s top pick, Christian Wilkins, may have had his best game, with five tackles (three solo) including his first career sack.

Driven by some old-fashioned FitzMagic — veteran quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick had three touchdown passes and a 118.8 passer rating — it added up to the Dolphins’ sixth win in the past seven meetings with the rival Jets. That’s never a bad thing if you favor aqua over green.

Fitzpatrick said: “To do it with these guys, the things that we’ve had to fight through and all the negativity that is surrounding from the outside looking in, the way that guys have decided to be positive, decided to practice well, decided to come to work every single day and work hard, that’s what makes this one so special.”

So go ahead, Dolfans, toss aside the paper bags. Let someone else bury their heads in shame for a change.

Craig Davis has covered South Florida sports and teams, including the Dolphins, for four decades. Follow him on Twitter @CraigDavisRuns

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Canes Chances of Winning the ACC Coastal are Slim

Note: Photo courtesy of Tony Capobianco.

Two weeks ago, when Miami fell to Georgia Tech, ACC Coastal dreams were a distant memory. A win over Pitt and a dominant destruction of Florida State has Canes fans getting out their abaci to try and calculate their ACC Coastal odds.

Unfortunately, the Canes winning the ACC Coastal will take a minor miracle. The reason? There are essentially 4 teams (excluding Miami), in the mix (or of concern to Miami. Duke is hanging around but the Canes still have to play them): North Carolina, Pittsburgh, Virginia, and Virginia Tech. And while the Canes have gone 2-2 against those teams, they have a big problem, which is their ACC Coastal record.

North Carolina, Virginia, and Virginia Tech are guaranteed to finish with better ACC Coastal records in a situation where they end up tied with the Canes, and Pitt at best would tie Miami. The Canes minimized their ACC Coastal record.

This is important because after head-to-head, ACC Coastal record is the tiebreaker. The Canes poor ACC Coastal record eliminates all 3-team tiebreaker scenarios involving North Carolina or Virginia Tech. There are some really wacky 4-team ties where Miami ends up tied with Pittsburgh, Virginia, and one of North Carolina or Virginia Tech where they could win on head-to-head, but those are really outlandish. Not only would there need to be a 4-way tie, but the specific losses would have to be such that North Carolina/Virginia Tech are eliminated on head-to-head 4-way record prior to ACC Coastal record coming into play.

There is a 3-team tiebreaker which Miami wouldwin, and that is a tiebreaker where the Canes end up tied with Pittsburgh and Virginia. And while that doesn’t seem too far-fetched, the following would have to occur:

  • Virginia loses one game.
  • Pittsburgh loses one game.
  • North Carolina loses one game.
  • Virginia Tech loses two games.
  • Miami beats Louisville and Duke.

Even that doesn’t tell the full story, which is only apparent when looking at schedules:

  • UVA: Georgia Tech, Virginia Tech
  • UNC: at Pittsburgh, at NC State
  • Pitt: North Carolina, at Virginia Tech, Boston College
  • VT: Wake Forest, at Georgia Tech, Pittsburgh, at Virginia

With so many games between the contenders, it’s hard to have them collectively lose the requisite games.

Perhaps the most realistic scenario would be Pittsburgh beating North Carolina and Virginia Tech, and Virginia Tech losing to Wake Forest but beating Virginia. That would tick all the boxes and seems realistic. If that were to happen and the Canes beat Louisville and Duke, they win a 3-team tiebreaker over Pitt and Virginia. You want a cold does of reality? There is a 0.496% chance of that “realistic” scenario happening according to ESPN’s FPI.

Miami blew it in the Georgia Tech game. Not only did they throw that game away, but they lost an ACC Coastal game to the field, with Georgia Tech looking like finishing 1-7 in the ACC. If Miami had won that game, they’d simply need one Virginia Tech loss to control their own destiny. Instead, they need 5 combined losses across 4 teams. The Canes can still have a decent season, and finish with a nice winning streak to carry some momentum into recruiting and 2020. But the ACC Coastal will take a series of results breaking their way that are extremely low probability.

Guts Check: Introduction + Early Miami Heat Observations

Welcome to the first edition of Guts Check. A weekly column aimed at bringing readers my perspective on all the hot topics surrounding the Miami Heat. You can expect a regular balance of intel, analysis and a window into the mind of the fan base. Hopefully it can develop into a weekly thermometer of just how much the Heat is on.

My intention is for this to stay fresh. One week it may be player performance focused, the next week rumor heavy or discussion on rotations. We probably will even take some trips down memory lane or spend time hope trafficking about the future. Let’s call it position-less. Trust the Spocess.

In the spirit of having the Guts (as The Godfather so eloquently put it) this is going to be the genuine authority on all things Miami Heat.

That’s the intro, now IT IS TIME. (as Jax so emphatically puts it)

#JustiseBetter still….

Justise Winslow has arrived.

It could be argued that no player has benefited from Jimmy Butler’s absence in the early going as much as Winslow. Not because he or the team is better without Butler of course, but more because I think it allowed him to build up the confidence that has proven to be so vital to his ability to flourish.  I believe these moments as the alpha are going to help as the season progresses and Butler looks for other “dogs” (as Winslow calls them) to depend upon.

Despite the stellar start for Bam Adebayo and the emergence of Kendrick Nunn (more on both of those guys in a moment), I believe Justise Winslow has been the best player through 3 games for the Heat.

Winslow has done it all and aside from some free throw struggles, has continued to be BETTER than he was even at the end of last season when he appeared to find his game.

These two plays essentially sum up the type of all-around excellence Winslow has provided the team through 3 games:

On offense:

On defense:

The trio of Nunn, Winslow and Butler in the starting lineup is particularly intriguing when you consider Nunn’s ability to score in bunches combined with the defensive versatility of the trio to switch everything. We can’t wait to see this trio on Tuesday night.

BAE – The Bam Adebayo Experience

Since the moment Adebayo was drafted, people around the Heat have considered Bam the recent Heat draftee with the highest ceiling. That showed itself in countless ways the first week of the season for the Heat.

Whether it was making quick work of a double-double in a opening night win versus Memphis, having an absolutely masterful performance versus Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Bucks, to his defense on Karl Anthony Towns in the last 3 quarters of Sunday’s matchup, Adebayo has been awesome.

It helps that he is also putting in a good word for HEAT Culture to the current Bucks star after the game on Saturday:

If Adebayo continues this play, he is quickly going to be vying for Most Improved Player.

Any idea how to stop Kendrick? Answer: Nunn.

Heat rookies have had 1 good game to begin a season before, Willie Burton comes to mind. (I am showing my age). But make no mistake, Nunn is not Burton, this kid can play. The question has become, is this closer to a flash in the pan, or panning out like Flash?

I know, I am getting way ahead of myself. However, from summer league to preseason and the first 3 games of the regular season, has Nunn had a bad game? The answer is likely no. Spoelstra just can’t keep him off the floor.

If Nunn proves to be this type of scoring threat all season, it dramatically changes the ceiling of this Heat team. If not for Trae Young starting the season unconscious from every angle of the court, Nunn would have likely won Eastern Conference Player of the week. He has been that good.

Side note: Nunn vs Young is coming up twice this week. FUN.

Quick Hits:

  • Chris Silva has the Guts. Silva had to have been injected with UD’s blood at halftime of the home opener versus Memphis. Although Silva is likely heading to Sioux Falls relatively soon, it’s nice to see an additional big man in the pipeline that appears ready to contribute sooner rather than later.
  • Is Goran Dragic the 6th man of the year in the making? Likely to lead the team in scoring once every couple weeks (see that Bucks game). If he continues to flourish in his bench role, could he follow in the footsteps of Alonzo Mourning as a Heat All Star turned key cog off the bench on a contender? While Goran was certainly dangled in trades over the summer, and still carries a valuable expiring contract for potential future deals, his handling of this transition to the bench is the stuff Heat Lifers are made of.
  • Tyler Herro has quietly been very solid through the first 3 games as a starter. Despite his rookie mistakes, overall he just looks like he belongs and has had moments where you really see the intriguing potential. His move to the bench with the return of Jimmy Butler is going to make the reserve unit even more potent. Again, Tuesday’s match up versus Atlanta can’t come soon enough.

 

That’s all for this week Heat Nation. If you’ve got the guts you will be back next week.

 

Brian Flores

Coaching separating Miami Dolphins from worst of the worst

The Miami Dolphins did everything they could to deprive the roster of talent for 2019. They traded almost every player with any possible value for draft picks, gearing up for 2020 and beyond. So far, things have gone according to plan. Miami is 0-6 (possibly 0-7 after Monday Night Football) and racing towards the first overall pick.

However, the Dolphins have competition to be the worst of the worst.

On paper, there’s no question which of these teams are the least talented. Miami is filled with scrappy young players, but very few are proven. Now, with the recent trade of Kenyan Drake to the Arizona Cardinals, there’s even less talent on the roster. How can the Miami Dolphins possibly have any competition to the rights for the first player off the board next offseason?

Simple answer. Coaching trumps talent.

Average players can be coached beyond their alleged limitations. However, talented players who are badly coached end up looking a lot worse than they really are. This is what is happening around the league now.

The Cincinnati Bengals have plenty of talent, but head coach Zac Taylor is not living up to expectations. It doesn’t help that veteran Andy Dalton is hindering his team at quarterback more than helping.

The Washington Redskins fired their head coach Jay Gruden, putting Bill Callahan as the interim. Gruden did not want to play rookie QB Dwayne Haskins, opting to put in veterans Case Keenum or Colt McCoy over the owner’s wishes.

And of course, the New York Jets, coached by former Dolphins coach Adam Gase.

Enough said.

Bad coaching can ruin football teams, and it really brings into question what the Dolphins could have accomplished if Gase was the coach he was originally advertised as. Could Miami have made it to the playoffs for two consecutive years? The talent was obviously there. But clearly, Gase is not a good coach. He wasn’t with Miami, and he’s not with New York.

So now Brian Flores takes command of a team with players who have undeveloped talent. Role players fill out the roster, but very few players are easily recognizable. Xavien Howard, Jerome Baker, Reshad Jones, Albert Wilson, maybe a few others. And yet, despite the lack of talent – and their winless record – the Dolphins are somehow trending up.

How is that possible?

Maybe, just maybe, Brian Flores is a good coach, teaching his players how to win in the face of challenges they don’t really have the talent to overcome.

“From the first play to the last play and every play in between, they all count.” Flores said on Thursday. “So you want to have high execution really on every play, and good communication, because you don’t know which one it’s going to be that is the difference between winning and losing. I think that mentality, that every play counts and if you dwell on previous plays – good or bad – that will affect the next play. So just having a next-play mentality and an every-play-counts mentality. That’s where I would start.

“To me, the next part is there are critical moments in the game. Let’s call it critical red-zone possession or a critical third down or a defensive possession after a score. There’s kind of critical points in the game. Again, every play counts and every play is critical; but there are critical moments and junctures in a game where as a team, we need to kind of recognize that and play our best football right then.”

That is the mark of a good coach. Good coaches take whatever they have and make the best of it. That is also what Bill Belichick has made a career out of. He turns otherwise nameless players and turns them into stars. True, he has Tom Brady to help make ends meet, but there are very few teams who can talk about the ‘next man up’ mentality, and actually apply it effectively.

Flores isn’t there yet. However, the fact that the Miami Dolphins are still competing in games and fighting to the very end to succeed, that’s coaching. Flores just might be Miami’s next great coach, but it will take some time for the talent to arrive before that judgment can be made. Belichick is successful with Tom Brady, and vice versa.

Wait until 2020 when Flores (hopefully) gets his version of Tom Brady, whoever that may be. Once the QB position has been firmly addressed, maybe Flores can build on what he’s doing with the players he has to make do with, and turn the Dolphins back into a true contender. His talentless team is trending up, while talented teams are falling on their face much worse. That speaks volumes.

Luis Sung has covered the Miami Dolphins for numerous outlets such as Dolphins Wire for six years. Follow him on Twitter: @LuisDSung

Dan Marino

Dolphins dissed again as Dan Marino ranks 41st on NFL Game Changers

It’s no secret that the national media has a bias against all things Miami. It doesn’t matter if it’s the Dolphins, the Heat, or the Marlins. Media members have called for action to be taken against the Dolphins for their apparent tanking efforts. Meanwhile, those same media members are saying teams like the Bengals would be wise to cut their losses and attempt to put themselves in a position for the number one overall pick.

In other words, tank 2019.

That double standard is something Miami sports fans have had to accept. However, when the greatness of Miami’s legends is disregarded as nothing more than average, then it’s time for heads to roll.

Ask almost any defender from the 80s and 90s who the toughest quarterback to defend against was, and they will probably tell you it was Dan Marino. He lacks a ring, but was no doubt the greatest passer to ever play in the NFL. Marino set records that wouldn’t be broken until the NFL took action to accommodate quarterback play. In just Marino’s second season, 1984, he threw for over 5,000 yards and 48 touchdowns. He then threw 44 touchdowns in 1986. Those numbers were unheard of back then. No QB would get to 40 touchdown passes for another 13 years (Kurt Warner, 1999). No QB would get to 5,000 yards for another 25 years (Drew Brees, 2008).

In many ways, Dan Marino is responsible for the type of play we see in the NFL today.

So how in the world can anyone make a top 100 list of things/players who changed the NFL as we know it, and only put Marino in 41st place?

Now, some would say that this is just an arbitrary list in order to put together a clip show. Perhaps, but then don’t make it a top 100 list. When someone makes a list like this, the placings matter. Anyone who watched Dan Marino play knows how ahead of his time he was. He had amazing velocity on throws. His release speed was unmatched. If he were in his prime today, Marino would likely break all the records again, and no one would be able to catch him this time.

But what makes this truly egregious is not where he’s placed. It’s who – or what – is ahead of him.

So they expect viewers to believe that a group of cheerleaders and fake grass (really, fake grass?) had more of an impact on the game of football than the man who turned the NFL into a passing league? The astroturf is the worst offender here, especially since a lot of teams are looking to transition back to normal grass. So, is the impact really still felt (literally) today?

Changing the game means forever, it means that it reshaped the NFL as we know it. Dan Marino did that. Dallas cheerleaders? All due respect to them, not really. Astroturf? Players don’t even like it and teams are going back to grass. How do they rank above the greatest passer in NFL history?

Either this is a result of a young intern who doesn’t know who Dan Marino is and thinks Patrick Mahomes is already the greatest QB of all time, or it’s a slap in the face to the legacy of the Miami Dolphins and their most legendary player. Either way, something needs to be done about this. If not now, then in future lists when discussing greatest anything. Dan Marino was the Patrick Mahomes of his era. The level of excitement fans had watching him across the nation prompted the NFL to change the rules to let future QBs have a chance of pulling the same feats.

41st overall, that’s the most blasphemous thing that can ever be said about the legend that is Dan Marino.

Well, except for the idea that he wasn’t good enough of a QB because he never won a championship. But that’s a discussion for another time.

Luis Sung has covered the Miami Dolphins for numerous outlets such as Dolphins Wire for six years. Follow him on Twitter: @LuisDSung

Justise Winslow Is Ready To Elevate Miami Heat

If ever there was a time for Justise Winslow to get comfortable, this offseason was it.

The 10th overall pick from the 2015 draft had just completed his most productive NBA campaign to date. His stat sheet was essentially a string of career highs, including his 12.6 points, 4.3 assists and 1.5 threes per game. His 43.3 field-goal percentage was a new personal best. Ditto his 51.3 true shooting percentage. His 37.5 percent perimeter success rate narrowly missed his best mark, but it shattered the dismal 25.8 percent from his first two seasons.

If he wanted to kick his feet up and bask in the finest offerings available on South Beach, who could’ve blamed him?

But that’s not how Winslow operates. That season—a mini-breakout at the very least in the eyes of everyone—wasn’t what he wanted.

Before his second season even started, he made his grandiose ambitions known. The then 20-year-old told assembled media at the Bahamas-based training camp that he not only wanted to lead the team “but to be a star and have my own team one day.”

So, Winslow didn’t settle this summer. He barely left the gym.

Despite skyrocketing his three-point percentage over the previous two seasons, he overhauled his shooting form. He changed his release point and sped up his stroke. He took hundreds of shots per day, from all spots on the court.

He had turned his three-ball from a worrisome weakness to something he could unleash when he really needed it. But that wasn’t enough. In his mind, his outside shot can be one of the sharpest weapons in his arsenal.

“I think I should be [shooting] around five or six threes a game, but shooting a high percentage,” Winslow told Five Reasons Sports. “I want to shoot plus-40. I’ve been around 38, but I think shooting more will make it easier to get that percentage.”

Winslow relays this information so calmly and confidently it’s easy to overlook what he’s saying. Ten players shot 40-plus percent with five-plus attempts last season. Four maintained that accuracy rate on six-plus shots a night.

It’s a wildly ambitious aim to join that company, but dreaming big is kind of his thing.

When laying out his roadmap for the season at Media Day, Winslow’s laundry list of self-imposed duties and goals included: “Starting point guard. Playmaking. Second-Team All-Defense. Most Improved [Player].”

Remember when Winslow’s pining for the point guard spot caused such a media frenzy in September? Well, there he was running the first team offense on opening night while veteran Goran Dragic steered the second team.

Winslow ran it tremendously, too. He scored 27 points, dished seven dimes and snagged seven boards. When the cameras deservedly came his way in the locker room afterward, he essentially shrugged, stared straight into the lens and asked, ‘What did you expect?’

“This is who I am,” Winslow told reporters. “I’m not going to have 27, seven and seven every night. But my role is to lead this team, and I want to be held accountable to it. I’ve earned it.”

Once billed as a potential franchise savior, Winslow again finds himself with a franchise that doesn’t need saving. Not when four-time All-Star Jimmy Butler will make $142 million to fill that very role.

But for Miami to elevate its ceiling, to leap from a lottery team to one hosting a first-round playoff series, to post elite ranks on defense and above-average ones on offense, it could certainly use a costar.

Winslow—hungrier, more confident, more aggressive than ever—looks ready to share the center stage.

“He has an ability to impact winning, put his fingerprints on winning in a lot of different facets,” coach Erik Spoelstra said. “That’s not just with the statistics or the box scores, but it’s with his voice, with his leadership, with his command of the game on both sides of the floor. He really truly has to be a great two-way basketball player for us.”

The Heat don’t need Dion for the playoffs

There are two planets. One’s ozone is collapsing, with overheating oceans causing superstorms.

The other is 2700 light years away, moderate amount of sunlight, with and 297 day calendar. That is the solar divide between living on Planet Dolphins and Planet Heat.

Pat Riley’s organization had an 89 percent chance of going to the playoffs before the last game of the preseason. The Dolphins have a 42 percent chance of finishing dead last and garnering the number one draft pick.
For the past two years the Heat have been one game away from making it into the playoffs. This summer they had the chance for Russell Westbrook but the ledger price would cost them the majority of the roster. Imagine parting with Goran Dragic, Justice Winslow, and Bam Adebayo- who’ve all proven to be Biscayne Bay approved, for one player. Especially coming off a season where Klay Thompson and Kevin Durant just got injured. The math didn’t make sense.

Last Friday night Erik Spoelstra, before God and Mike D’Antoni, sent out the JV squad to keep pace with James Harden and Russell Westbrook. The fourth quarter mirrored a finals game. Westbrook ran off the floor with an injured finger. Kendrick Nunn, a total unknown here before July, scored 32 points in 30 minutes — and ended the game with eight more. The Heat were within five. Spoelstra’s motive wasn’t to win. He came to compete. Jimmy Butler was on the bench, Dragic saw little time. This was about turning everyone into the first string.

The real glitch didn’t come from the Rockets. It was obvious Spoelstra wanted to see his second tier compete against Harden and D’Antoni. The main problem was Dion Waiters complaining as Nunn and Herro were scoring. A clear shot of the bench saw everyone clapping. Waiters, at one point, had his arms crossed.

If you’re sulking in preseason, what the hell happens during the playoffs? One of the biggest worries about bringing Butler down to Miami was how he would mesh with an already formed team. Meanwhile Waiters is on Instagram liking comments that say trade him. On Twitter, he’s doubling down on how “anyone can win with the Big Three.” He must have been on 2K when Hassan Whiteside was put on a plane to Portland.

While Jimmy Butler is getting everyone in the gym at 3:30am, the other serves friction. His message, “They’re stealing my showtime.” Pat Riley didn’t concede the team to Lebron James. What makes Dion Waiters think that he owns Miami? If Butler had instigated half of this, there would be hell to pay. Eighty-nine percent. The Miami Heat are going to the playoffs. Just don’t expect Dion Waiters to be there.

Hurricanes morale being tested in Manny Diaz’s first season

The rare five game homestand concluded with a very disappointing overtime loss to Georgia Tech and now back-to-back road games against Pittsburgh and Florida State awaits them.

According to expectations, the Miami Hurricanes were supposed to win all five home games and be well positioned for a spot at the ACC Championship Game. Instead they went 3-2 including a win against a ranked Virginia team.

“Last week, we just lost our focus,” said safety Gurvan Hall Jr.

Due to the losses to Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech, the criticism and skepticism towards first year head coach Manny Diaz is beginning to mount. Some on social media even went as far as to suggest that he should be fired and replaced with a big name coach. Saying “this is a rebuild” in his most recent postgame press conference set off fans and media alike due to it being contrary to the offseason hype that was “The New Miami.”

So far the players still support him.

“He’s still the head of the snake,” Hall said. “I mean, he coached the defense last year. We all believe in him. We all trust him.”

“There’s going to be criticism wherever you go,” said senior defensive tackle Pat Bethel, who went through three years of having Diaz as defensive coordinator before this season. “It don’t matter if you’re a meter maid. It don’t matter if you’re a doctor. It don’t matter if you work on the powerline. It’s going to be criticism regardless, and that’s just the way it is. We got to put our mindset and put our tunnel vision on so that we can do the job at hand. We can’t be worried about the outside world.”

Why does Bethel or the rest of his team still feel like Diaz is the right guy to lead them?

“He just is,” he said. “He’s a guy you’ve got to be around. He brings the same energy every day. He knows how to run the system. He knows how to coach. He knows exactly what he’s doing, so we trust him fully, and we’re all in for him.”

For better or for worst, the Hurricanes are stuck in the Manny Diaz experiment. It takes a lot of money to hire a head football coach and it takes just as much to fire him prematurely. Diaz has been with the team for three years as Mark Richt’s defensive coordinator prior to becoming the head coach so these are also his guys. 

With road games against Pitt and Florida State coming up, Diaz may not afford to return to Miami empty handed.