Miami Herald

Cristobal convinced UM will provide resources to win

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com David Wilson: 305-376-3406, @DBWilson2

Mario Cristobal has been on the front lines of college football excess, seen facilities he likened to the “Taj Mahal” and “Starship Enterprise,” and learned what those kinds of investment­s and amenities can bring.

Maybe this Taj Mahal is in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, where the Alabama Crimson Tide rules all and spends more than $2 million a year on recruiting, and $30 million on administra­tive and support staff pay to rack up national championsh­ips on a nearannual basis. Perhaps the Starship Enterprise is in Eugene, Oregon, where Phil Knight has donated more than $1 billion to the Oregon Ducks’ athletic department and helped turn his alma mater into the class of the Pac-12 Conference.

With his decision to coach the Miami Hurricanes, Cristobal is leaving it all to operate something more Millennium Falcon than Starship Enterprise. As nice a facility as the Carol Soffer Indoor Practice Facility in Coral Gables is, its roughly $40 million price tag still pales in comparison to the resources other schools have put into theirs.

“Just look at the people sitting in the audience now,” Cristobal said at his introducto­ry news conference inside the Indoor

Practice Facility, “and look at what they accomplish­ed here when the resources had not even hit this level yet.”

The key word is his last one: “Yet.”

Cristobal’s arrival signals a shift. Miami (7-5) is finally ready to spend big on football in the way most of their alleged peers do.

Cristobal — and his 10-year, $80 million contract — are walking proof. His contract rivals the one he was offered by Knight and Oregon, The Oregonian reported, but he also needed to see a deeper commitment to winning from the Hurricanes to leave the Ducks. In modern college football, this directly translates to money.

“That was one of the critical pieces, to be honest with you,” Cristobal said when asked about the university’s increased investment of resources. “Football has changed so much and it continues to change.”

At Miami, this investment won’t mean a locker room to rival Oregon’s or a fancy new on-campus stadium for the Hurricanes.

At Miami, it will be about “investing in people” for Cristobal to put around the program, he said.

“The massive investment in making sure that these student-athletes have the best chance for success — it was a huge,

overriding factor, and I learned that when I had a chance to go away, work at some different spots,” Cristobal said. “It was mind-blowing — it really was — and I’m excited to dig into that.”

Cristobal will have a large budget to hire assistant coaches, sources told the Miami Herald, and it will let him continue to beef up the recruiting department and cache of analysts. Former coach Manny Diaz started things in the right direction with a staff including six quality control analysts and four non-position coaches with “recruiting” in their title, and Cristobal will want to add more.

With the Ducks, Cristobal’s staff also included multiple people with a focus on sports science to go along with a big group

of recruiting personnel, and multiple strength and conditioni­ng coaches.

Cristobal also mentioned the importance of sports psychologi­sts, a nutrition staff and academic advisors, and the ability to bring in speakers and NFL coaches for visits. It all requires money, and Cristobal wouldn’t be back in Coral Gables if he didn’t believe his alma mater was actually going to pony up.

Cristobal won two national championsh­ips with the Hurricanes back when they could win as the scrappy private school underdog, practicing on a strip of grass at Greentree Practice Fields and trusting their local talent to will them past bigger public schools. He knows why it worked then, which means he also knows why

it isn’t working now.

“We’re in a new era of college football,” he said, “where investment of resources reigns supreme.”

With those resources, he will try to assemble an elite coaching staff and turn Miami back into a recruiting powerhouse.

He will have difficult decisions to make in the coming weeks. He said he will meet with all the current assistant coaches as he tries to put together a staff, although he didn’t tip his hand about whom he might keep.

Assistant coaches were scheduled to go back on the road Tuesday, even though they were uncertain about their futures following initial meetings with Cristobal. Offensive line coach Alex Mirabal is, so far, the only Oregon

position coach definitely expected to follow Cristobal to South Florida, 247Sports.com reported. As for what he’s looking for, Cristobal was vague, saying he wants the Hurricanes to be “multiple on both sides of the ball and very aggressive.”

His staff will probably never look like Alabama’s, which currently features two former NFL head coaches as assistants, but he will be able to make it bigger and better than Diaz or any of his predecesso­rs ever could. At Miami, it might just be enough.

After all: With the right pilot, the Millennium Falcon did take down a Death Star.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Mario Cristobal expresses his vision for the Hurricanes on Tuesday inside the $40 million indoor practice facility that opened in 2018. UM officials have committed more resources needed to elevate the program.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Mario Cristobal expresses his vision for the Hurricanes on Tuesday inside the $40 million indoor practice facility that opened in 2018. UM officials have committed more resources needed to elevate the program.

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