Miami Herald

Multiple factors complicate UM’s search for AD

- BY MICHELLE KAUFMAN AND SUSAN MILLER DEGNAN mkaufman@miamiheral­d.com sdegnan@miamiheral­d.com

Everyone is wondering what is going on with the University of Miami athletic director search, why it is taking so long, and what is the fate of Hurricanes football coach Manny Diaz.

Answer: It is complicate­d.

Several sources familiar with the negotiatio­ns say there are differing opinions within the inner circle of decision-makers about which direction to go and what the priority should be.

There are some on the Board of Trustees who feel the more pressing concern is not replacing Diaz with a bigger-money coach, but rather hiring a businesssa­vvy athletic director and allocating more resources to upgrading and modernizin­g the athletic department in the age of Name, Image, Likeness and the exploding transfer portal.

The new NIL rules allow collegiate athletes to make money and secure sponsors. The ever-relaxing transfer rules give athletes the freedom and mobility to leave for other schools. This past spring, more than 1,700 basketball players transferre­d.

Both of those trends in college athletics are paramount in the recruiting wars, as elite programs show up at recruiting visits with slick marketing plans tailor-made for each prospect. It is also imperative for athletic department­s to retain the athletes they get, and these days, that requires more than just sunshine, tradition and small class size, which have been UM selling points for decades.

There are others in the inner circle who feel the UM football program has been mired in mediocrity despite three coaching changes in the past 10 years and with football as the biggest moneymaker, the solution is to invest in a high-profile coach, a proven winner such as Oregon’s Mario Cristobal or Lane Kiffin of Ole Miss.

If UM football gets back

Miami’s athletic director search has been bogged down and the coaching situation made murky by differing opinions about which direction to go.

into the national conversati­on, those board members say, boosters and fans will return, and the university and athletic department will reap the financial reward, which will lead to the upgrades necessary.

Both the AD search and potential coach search have been complicate­d by an extremely fluid, fastchangi­ng market for head coaches. The initial thinking was to hire the athletic director first and then hire the coach. There is a push now, from some, to hire a coach first, before the top candidates are gone and with enough time to recruit before the early signing period begins Dec. 15.

The uncertaint­y surroundin­g the department is a detriment for Diaz and his staff as they try to get recruits to commit over the next two weeks. If Diaz is to be retained, the sooner he knows that the better. If a change is going to be made, then the new coach needs as much time as possible to sign players.

New Mexico AD Eddie Nunez, a Miami native and former Miami High basketball player with deep local ties, was considered among the leading candidates for the Hurricanes AD post and has the support of some board members. He said in a news conference Wednesday that he was committed to New Mexico.

“Miami is a wonderful institutio­n and those opportunit­ies that may potentiall­y come in the future, if they do, wonderful,” he said. “But this is where I am. I am committed to the job at hand. I really appreciate them expressing interest.”

The Athletic and Brett McMurphy of NetworkAct­ionHQ reported that Nunez withdrew his name from considerat­ion. It is unclear whether that is the case, if he was told UM was going in a different direction or if he really still is in the conversati­on.

The other known AD candidates, Gino Torretta and Alonzo Highsmith, also have certain board members in their corners. Both have deep history with the UM football program and for years have been eager to get more involved with the athletic department. Highsmith also has strong allies among the South Florida high school football community.

According to sources, there are divisions among the decision-makers about whether to hire a “football guy” such as Torretta or Highsmith to work in tandem with an athletic director or whether to just have one AD oversee all sports.

There are also some who believe that the old guard Hurricanes, the heroes of the golden championsh­ip era of UM football, while passionate and well-intentione­d, are not experience­d enough in the modern

business of college athletics.

On Sept. 30, UM president Julio Frenk released a statement explaining how decisions about athletics would be made going forward. He wrote: “Rudy Fernandez, in his capacity as my chief of staff, and Joe Echevarria, in his capacity as my senior advisor, will augment my own direct engagement with the athletics director by facilitati­ng seamless alignment between the Board of Trustees, my entire administra­tion, and the athletics department.”

The Turnkey search firm has been busy interviewi­ng job candidates; Fernandez and Echevarria are gathering all the informatio­n and will advise Frenk. Decisions are expected in the coming days.

TYLER VAN DYKE

Hurricanes quarterbac­k Tyler Van Dyke, who won the Atlantic Coast Conference Rookie of the Year Award on Wednesday, was a Thursday radio guest with WQAM hosts Joe

Rose and Zach Krantz.

On if he’s talked to UM record-breaking receiver Charleston Rambo, a UM addition this season from Oklahoma, regarding if he’s going to enter the NFL

Draft or return to the Hurricanes in 2022: “A little bit. A little bit. I think he could go either way with it — coming back or going to the NFL. I’m going to talk to him more about it but we’ll see what happens. I don’t think he’s wrong with either decision. Whatever best fits his career.”

On if he gets involved in recruiting now as UM nears the early signing period from Dec. 15-17: “A little bit. I’ve been texting or DM’ing some recruits just to try to get them to come here or stay or whatever. A little bit of it. Yeah, we’re excited where the future is going to go here. It’ll be good.”

On the Manny Diaz/ AD situation: “I’m trying not to pay attention to that as much. I’m trying to go with the flow of it. Coach Diaz has done a great job with us this year after the 2-4 start we had, just keeping everybody motivated, keeping everybody working hard throughout practice. It could have went the other way with a 2-4 start playing N.C. State and then Pitt the next week after that — two ranked teams. He did a great job of preparing us well for those. We ended up winning three straight and I think the N.C. State game right

there really changed our season. It really could have went the other way.”

On UM offensive coordinato­r Rhett Lashlee and how much he contribute­d not just as a coordinato­r but developing the young skill players: “He was a big part of it, just getting me prepared well for each and every game, just telling me he believes in me, trusts me with his play calling. I’m just really happy for him that he got the job at SMU. He’s going to do great things there. I know he’s always wanted to be a head coach. I’m very happy for him but he did a great job the whole year.”

On who would win a foot race between all UM’s receivers: “That’s a tough one. I’ll go with Mike Harley, Key’Shawn Smith or Brashard Smith.’’

Fifth-year redshirt junior center Corey Gaynor has entered the transfer portal. He had started 27 straight games — 28 in all — before Diaz announced Oct. 11 that Gaynor had season-ending knee surgery. Jakai Clark is set to be the starter next season.

 ?? ?? Nunez
Nunez
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? UM quarterbac­k Tyler Van Dyke told WQAM that he texts with potential recruits. but he prefers to not be involved in the possible coaching change involving Manny Diaz.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com UM quarterbac­k Tyler Van Dyke told WQAM that he texts with potential recruits. but he prefers to not be involved in the possible coaching change involving Manny Diaz.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States