Orlando Sentinel

’Canes, Panthers renewing rivalry

- By Christy Cabrera Chirinos

CORAL GABLES — Their campuses are located just 8 miles apart and their rosters are filled with dozens of former South Florida high school football standouts — players who know each other, have competed against each other and have, in some cases, grown up together.

And yet, for more than a decade, the two have not met on the field.

That will change today when, for the first time since 2007, No. 21 Miami and Florida Internatio­nal University will renew their rivalry with an afternoon showdown at Hard Rock Stadium, the Hurricanes’ home field.

For Miami, it will be a chance to build on a twogame winning streak before the Hurricanes turn their focus to ACC play. For FIU, it’s a chance to try to notch a program-defining upset as the Panthers look to take another step forward under second-year coach Butch Davis.

Those aren’t the only things at stake, though.

For both the Hurricanes and the Panthers, today’s matchup will be another opportunit­y to move past the ugly incident that defines the short rivalry — a benches-clearing brawl in 2006 that resulted in the ejection of 13 players from that game at the Orange Bowl and later resulted in suspension­s for a combined 31 players from both teams.

The melee — which included players throwing punches, swinging helmets and stomping on each other — made national headlines and was an embarrassm­ent for both schools who opted after a second meeting in 2007 to discontinu­e their series for a while.

Eleven years, it seems, has been long enough.

Now as both Miami (2-1) and FIU (2-1) prepare for what they expect will be another emotionall­y charged game because of all the local connection­s, the Panthers and the Hurricanes say it’s essential all of their energy is channeled the right way — on the field.

And both teams’ coaches are confident that will happen.

“Everybody knows everybody. … It’ll be an emotional game, for sure,” Hurricanes coach Mark Richt said. “But that’s where everybody has to be discipline­d and do a good job. If you look at their team and the number of penalties they’ve had all year long, it shows discipline, to me. Even us, a week ago, [we] had no penalties. That’s important.

“There will be guys getting their blood pumping, which should happen in the game of football. It’s a game of adrenaline and a game of guys physically getting after each other. But everybody knows that if you do something stupid, then you don’t get to play. That’s the way football is and the way it should be. I don’t anticipate anything foolish.”

Added Davis, “Anytime you play another school within the state of Florida, there’s always going to be guys that played together on high school teams, or played against them in high school. There’s relationsh­ips and familiarit­y. That obviously raises the level of excitement. But the reality of it is, if you’re really doing your job as a coach and as a staff and as a team, you’re trying to make sure your level of preparatio­n is exactly the same every single week.”

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