Orlando Sentinel

THE MIAMI HURRICANES gain a measure of respect after trouncing Notre Dame this past weekend.

- By Christy Cabrera Chirinos Staff Writer

The touchdown was Miami’s first of the night. The celebratio­n after it, an emotionall­y charged moment for the player that scored it.

As he trotted off the field after scoring on a 7-yard touchdown catch, Hurricanes receiver Braxton Berrios clasped his hands behind his back as if they were handcuffed and bowed his head.

The gesture, he later explained, was a not-so-subtle nod to Miami’s reputation as the “convicts” in the “Catholics vs. Convicts” narrative that reappears every time the two longtime rivals have met since 1988.

It was also acknowledg­ment of some of the still-existent perception that the Hurricanes are “thugs,” a word that popped up on social media quite a bit after

Miami’s in over Virginia Tech last week.

“I was having fun,” Berrios said with a smile after Miami’s 41-8 win over the Irish. “It was kind of Thursday, Friday [I got the idea]. It was kind of like the same thing as UNC. You can label us what you want, you can say whatever you want about us. But at the end of the day, we’re going to make you respect us. If you want us to play that. But I was having fun.”

Added quarterbac­k Malik Rosier of his teammate’s post-touchdown celebratio­n, “It was actually kind of funny. They call us convicts, but I think we’re No. 1 in community service [hours performed], so you can’t really say that. I don’t think convicts do that, willingly at least. … There are so many guys giving back. … You can call us thugs, you can call us convicts, but that’s not who we are or what we represent.”

But it wasn’t just the national perception of their offfield behavior that bothered the Hurricanes.

In the days leading up to their matchup against Notre Dame, Miami’s players watched as national college football analysts picked the Irish to win, questioned the Hurricanes ability to stop Notre Dame’s vaunted run game, and generally counted Miami out in this game, and beyond.

Once on the field, the Hurricanes silenced those critics, too.

The Miami defense held Notre Dame — which had averaged 324 rushing yards per game — to just 109 rushing yards on Saturday. Heisman Trophy candidate Josh Adams managed just 40 yards, while dual-threat quarterbac­k Brandon Wimbush had 24 rushing yards, was sacked five times and had two intercepti­ons.

Meanwhile, the Hurricanes put together a dominant rushing performanc­e of their own, with Travis Homer gaining a game-high 146 yards, DeeJay Dallas adding 53 with two touchdowns, and Rosier rushing for 46 yards and a touchdown.

In all, Miami finished with 237 yards on the ground with three scores.

“We had a mental mentality today to go out and prove everybody wrong,” offensive lineman Kc McDermott said. “They had the best rushing offense in the country and we wanted to prove that they should be talking about us because we’re a pretty [darn] good offensive line too.”

Added Berrios, “The U is back. I don’t think anybody can say we’re not. I don’t think we can get disrespect­ed anymore. We still have to play two teams and we still have to win the ACC championsh­ip. There is still a long road ahead but I don’t think they can say it’s a fluke anymore.”

Rise in polls

While it’s Tuesday’s College Football Playoff rankings that could start shaping the Hurricanes’ postseason fate, Miami’s performanc­e against the Irish earned some of the respect the Hurricanes say they deserve.

Miami rose to No. 2 in both the AP Top 25 and the Amway Coaches’ polls on Sunday and while those rankings aren’t necessaril­y considered by the CFP committee when it meets to formulate its rankings, the jump could indicate the Hurricanes also will rise in the CFP rankings.

For the Hurricanes — who received four first-place votes in the AP poll — it matched the highest ranking for the program since 2003.

Huge ratings

ABC’s Saturday Night Football featuring Notre Dame at Miami delivered a 4.5 overnight rating, the highest-rated prime time game of week 11 across all networks and potentiall­y the most-watched game of the week when viewership numbers are reported later this week.

 ?? MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES ?? UM receiver Braxton Berrios scores the Hurricanes’ first TD during Saturday’s statement win against Notre Dame.
MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES UM receiver Braxton Berrios scores the Hurricanes’ first TD during Saturday’s statement win against Notre Dame.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States