The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

ACC coaches enjoy Year 2

- By Joe Reedy,

Mark Richt wanted to put his imprint on Miami in his first year by establishi­ng certain standards and his way of doing things.

Now in his second season, Richt has his alma mater back in the national spotlight. The No. 7 Hurricanes have the nation’s longest winning streak and are relevant again heading into Saturday’s showdown against No. 3 Notre Dame (8-1).

“They know the standard,” said Richt, who has led Miami to 13 straight wins. “I think it’s a matter of guys really truly understand­ing what coaches want and the willingnes­s to not only get themselves to do it, but the players around them to do it.”

Miami is the Atlantic Coast Conference’s lone unbeaten team at 8-0 and one of five in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n. Richt is a leading candidate for conference coach of the year honors, but he isn’t the only ACC coach having success in their second season in the league.

— Bronco Mendenhall has Virginia headed to a bowl game for the first time in six years. The Cavaliers won just two games last season and were picked to finish last in the Coastal Division.

— Syracuse’s Dino Babers’ has the Orange in position to possibly qualify for a bowl game for the first time since 2013 with two of their final three games at home.

— Virginia Tech’s Justin Fuente has 17 wins, the most by a coach in his first two years at the school. The Hokies have not lost consecutiv­e games with Fuente in charge.

Even though there is a difference in head coaching experience among the four, former Clemson coach Tommy Bowden said there is one thing they have in common — confidence.

“There is a gap you have to bridge in your second year because it’s a mix of players” between old and current staffs, said Bowden, who is a studio analyst for the ACC Network. “A lot

of times you have to go in there and have discipline. I think if you go in there and feel confident in what you are doing the players sense it and buy in quicker.”

They’ve also shown there are various roads to success.

Miami and Virginia Tech have first-year starting quarterbac­ks in Malik Rosier and Josh Jackson but the teams are among the league’s top defenses. Virginia and Syracuse have relied on down field passing games. The Cavaliers’ Kurt Benkert leads the ACC with 20 touchdowns and the Orange’ s Eric Dungey is sixth nationally incompleti­ons per game (25.0). His receivers — Steve Ishmael and Ervin Philips — have combined for 151 receptions.

Richt is the unquestion­ed second-year headliner in the ACC. After last Saturday’s 2810 victory over Virginia Tech , the Hurricanes can clinch their first Coastal Division title on Saturday if Louisville beats Virginia.

“We’re not at the point where we can just lineup and impose our will on people,” Richt said. “We have to bat- tle every week. We know it.”

Virginia might be getting more attention nationally if it wasn’t for Miami’s resurgence.

If the Cavaliers (6-3, 3-2) can win onemore game, the five-win improvemen­t would mark the same increase that Mendenhall had his first two seasons at Brigham Young. The Cougars were 6-6 in 2005 and 11-2 the following year.

“Let’s be honest, this is not business as usual at UVA. Otherwise we’d be a bowl team every year and I wouldn’t be here,” Mendenhall said.

Syracuse’s 27-24 win over then-No. 2 Clemson on Oct. 13 was not only the biggest win of Babers’ tenure, but it was the second highestran­ked opponent the Orange (4-5, 2-3) have defeated in their 128-year history. A win over the Tigers and ap ossible bowl bid would give Babers a foundation to build on.

“We’re doing things to change the culture, but I think the biggest thing, especially with the millennial­s, is seeing the results,” said Babers, whose team hosts Wake Forest on Saturday. “Until we have something that we can grab onto, I think we’re still on a journey.”

 ?? GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Miami head coach Mark Richt speaks into his headset during a game against North Carolina in Chapel Hill, N.C.
GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Miami head coach Mark Richt speaks into his headset during a game against North Carolina in Chapel Hill, N.C.

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