Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

’Canes lose season’s first game in Dallas.

Just as very little went right for Miami that night, Sunday was the stuff of nightmares.

- By Christy Cabrera Chirinos South Florida Sun Sentinel

Hurricanes dominated in every phase of game

ARLINGTON, TEXAS – This was, in so many ways, as highly-anticipate­d a season opener as the Miami Hurricanes have had in years.

Miami arrived at AT&T Stadium on Sunday evening with its highest preseason ranking since 2004. The Hurricanes returned 14 starters from their first 10-win season in more than a decade and after winning the first ACC Coastal Division crown in program history last year, Miami was voted the preseason favorite to win the division title again and return to Charlotte for another appearance in the ACC Championsh­ip Game.

The pervasive thought was that Miami would take advantage of an unproven LSU team that was breaking in a new quarterbac­k and had questions at several other positions, including running back.

All of those thoughts were very, very wrong.

Practicall­y from the get go, No. 25 LSU thoroughly dominated every phase of the game in what was eventually a 33-17 win over the eighth-ranked Hurricanes at the AdvoCare Classic at AT&T Stadium that was eerily reminiscen­t of the teams’ last meeting — LSU’s 40-3 drubbing of the Hurricanes in the 2005 Peach Bowl.

Just as very little went right for Miami that night, Sunday was the stuff of nightmares. Despite all the preseason hype and expectatio­ns, the Hurricanes looked more like the team that dropped three straight to end 2017 and not one bit like the team that

won 10 games to start last season and was ranked as high as No. 2 in the College Football Playoff rankings last November.

Against LSU, Hurricanes quarterbac­k Malik Rosier — who at times struggled with his accuracy last season but was still named the Miami’s starter by coach Mark Richt in July — threw two intercepti­ons. The Hurricanes’ new-look defensive line, which was playing without a trio of former starters in Chad Thomas, RJ McIntosh and Kendrick Norton — had a tough time with LSU’s offensive line. And even Miami’s kicking game had issues, with freshman kicker Bubba Baxa missing an early field goal and sophomore Zach Feagles shanking his first three punts.

And the Tigers, who came into Sunday’s game posting an unblemishe­d 3-0 record in games played at AT&T Stadium, took every possible advantage.

Senior running back Nick Brossette, called on to try and fill the void left after the departure of Derrius Guice, gashed the Hurricanes defense and scored practicall­y untouched on a 50-yard touchdown run late in the first quarter that gave LSU a 10-3 lead it wouldn’t relinquish.

That run helped set the tone for the rest of the night, Brossette finishing with 125 yards and another touchdown run, this one a 1-yarder that put LSU up 17-3 with 9:21 left in the first half.

After that, Miami’s problems only got worse.

Two possession­s later, LSU linebacker Jacob Phillips picked off an errant Rosier pass and returned it 45 yards for a touchdown.

By halftime, the Hurricanes had put together an ugly litany of stats. Among them, Miami was 0-of-6 on third-down conversion­s and was penalized eight times for 75 yards.

That all prompted Richt to note on the ABC broadcast that the Hurricanes had endured “a lot of self-inflicted wounds” and that “just about everything that could have gone wrong, almost everything, went wrong.”

The second half brought more of the same punishment for Miami, which didn’t get a touchdown until Rosier scored on a 3-yard run with 13:57 left.

In the meantime, several Hurricanes — including receiver Lawrence Cager, running back DeeJay Dallas, defensive ends Jonathan Garvin and Demetrius Jackson and defensive tackle Gerald Willis — dealt with at least minor injuries, though several returned to action.

The Hurricanes would add another touchdown midway through the fourth quarter when freshman Brian Hightower caught a 32-yard scoring pass from Rosier, but it was too little, too late for Miami.

 ??  ??
 ?? RON JENKINS/AP ?? LSU wide receiver Stephen Sullivan and Miami defensive back Romeo Finley battle for a pass that was later ruled incomplete.
RON JENKINS/AP LSU wide receiver Stephen Sullivan and Miami defensive back Romeo Finley battle for a pass that was later ruled incomplete.
 ?? RON JENKINS/AP ?? Miami wide receiver Jeff Thomas, left, makes a one-handed catch for a first down in front of LSU linebacker K’Lavon Chaisson .
RON JENKINS/AP Miami wide receiver Jeff Thomas, left, makes a one-handed catch for a first down in front of LSU linebacker K’Lavon Chaisson .

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States