Orlando Sentinel

Hurricanes aim to thwart Orange upset

- By Christy Cabrera Chirinos

CORAL GABLES — For the Miami Hurricanes, the Friday night pre-game ritual is almost always the same. The team has dinner together. Players then split up and go to either offensive or defensive team meetings. Once those are done, they come together once more, this time to relax, usually by watching whatever college football game is on TV.

And so last week Miami’s coaches and players got a real-time look at the team they would face in eight days — Syracuse.

What they saw was an Orange team that moved quickly, capitalize­d on opportunit­ies and notched one of the biggest upsets of the season, a 27-24 win over defending national champion Clemson, a heavy favorite entering the game.

If Miami coach Mark Richt had any concerns about his players taking not Syracuse seriously because of the Orange’s struggles in recent seasons or the fact the two programs haven’t met in years, he didn’t after that game.

Syracuse did a nice job of making sure it wouldn’t be taken lightly when it takes the field this afternoon at Hard Rock Stadium.

“I would hope that we would be ready no matter what, but you can’t deny what happened,” Richt said. “I don’t have to explain in anything to anybody how good these guys are. It’s very evident. … Our guys [watched] it live and saw for themselves what was about to come up this weekend. I didn’t have to say anything.”

For the Hurricanes, one of the challenges against the Orange (4-3, 2-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) is figuring out a way to keep pace with Syracuse, which runs an average of 86 plays per game.

Although south Florida’s heat and humidity may be on Miami’s side against an upstate New York team that plays indoors, the Hurricanes also know they can’t afford to start slow, as their did in their past two games.

Yes, Miami (5-0, 3-0) was able to put together thrilling last-second drives to beat both Florida State and Georgia Tech, but falling behind against Syracuse will be less than ideal. The Orange jumped to a 14-7 lead of Clemson and while the Tigers rallied — thanks in part to a defensive touchdown — they never managed to grab the lead.

“This offense, if you watch them, they’re very explosive. As slow as we’ve been starting the first couple halves the last two games, we can’t let that happen again,” Miami quarterbac­k Malik Rosier said. “These guys … I think the first two drives, they wound up putting 14 on Clemson. So these guys can score. They can score fast. ... We have to be able to score. We have to be able to put pressure on them.”

Three reasons for Syracuse’s offensive efficiency? Quarterbac­k Eric Dungey and receivers Steve Ishmael and Ervin Phillips, who have combined for 15 touchdowns between them.

Miami will counter with Rosier. During his five starts, the quarterbac­k has completed 59.1 percent of his passes and ranks fourth in the ACC in total offense (304 yards per game).

Travis Homer, who made his first start last week in place of injured running back Mark Walton, had a career-high 170 yards against the Yellow Jackets and showed he’s a viable threat to both run and catch the ball.

Meanwhile, Miami could get a boost with the possible return of former Freshman All-American receiver Ahmmon Richards, right guard Navaughn Donaldson and safety Sheldrick Redwine, all of whom missed last week’s game against Georgia Tech while dealing with various injuries.

“I think we’ve shown resiliency. We haven’t lost yet. We have no quit in this team. Our faith is strong and we come out here and work every day,” defensive end Trent Harris said.

 ?? BRETT CARLSEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Syracuse’s Dontae Strickland dives for a touchdown during the Orange’s upset victory over Clemson last week.
BRETT CARLSEN/GETTY IMAGES Syracuse’s Dontae Strickland dives for a touchdown during the Orange’s upset victory over Clemson last week.

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