Miami Herald (Sunday)

‘Losing is always tough’: Gore Jr. shrugs off lackluster homecoming

- BY PAYTON TITUS ptitus@miamiheral­d.com

Frank Gore Jr. came home to Miami to play the No. 15 Hurricanes Saturday for the first time in his college career. His father, Frank Gore Sr., won a national championsh­ip with Miami in 2001 and is a member of the UM Sports Hall of Fame.

But it wasn’t the explosive homecoming Gore Jr. and Co. may have hoped for.

The Hurricanes seemed largely able to contain the sophomore Southern Miss running back, especially in the second half. The Miami Killian High School alumnus ran for just 10 yards and managed 13 yards receiving in front of an announced paid crowd of 46,421 fans in his team’s second loss of the season. But Gore didn’t seem all that impressed.

“The atmosphere wasn’t as great as I thought it would be,” he said. “It was a lot of empty seats, but it was great playing in front of my family and friends.”

Gore, a three-star recruit out of Miami-Dade, didn’t receive a lot of attention from Power Five schools and had less than half a dozen scholarshi­p offers total. He has since spent his playing time attempting to show such schools, a group that includes the Hurricanes, the error in their overlookin­g him.

“All the people in neighborho­od, Coconut Grove — they get to see all the kids who wasn’t five-stars, all the kids who’s not fourstars, all the kids who was three-stars just like me and considered a small recruit, they have a chance and they can be special as long as they keep working and stick to the script,” Gore said to the Miami Herald ahead of the game.

Heading into Saturday’s game, Gore ranked among the top running backs in the NCAA in rushing yards, accumulati­ng 178 and two touchdowns in a quadruple overtime loss to Liberty the previous weekend. He tallied no such numbers against the Hurricanes.

Miami coach Mario Cristobal, another native son, recognized Gore’s elite play earlier this week. Cristobal just barely missed Gore Sr.’s tenure at Miami, having started his coaching career at UM as a graduate assistant coach from 1998-2000 and returning as an assistant coach from 2004-2006 after a stint at Rutgers in between.

“He’s a stud,” Cristobal said of Gore. “First guy rarely brings him down. Very versatile; obviously they use him in all kinds of stuff, back in the Wildcat, can chuck the ball around, he’s a good receiver as well. He’s a really dangerous football player, really good football player. We all know who he reminds us of.”

Gore jogged onto the field for Southern Miss’ first offensive possession, raising his arm and pointing a finger toward the sky. He helped the Golden Eagles muscle their way from third-and-1 to firstand-10 with his first touch, but the Hurricanes held him to just 9 yards in the first half.

His 18-yard reception on third-and-4 at the beginning of the second quarter brought Southern Miss to Miami’s 32-yard line, allowing quarterbac­k Zach Wilcke to connect with Jason Brownlee for a touchdown to take the lead. Gore’s catch accounted for about a quarter of the Golden Eagles’ yards on that scoring drive.

As the Hurricanes offense surged in the third quarter, their defense shut Gore down. A few tackles for loss, one by five-star defensive lineman Leonard Taylor that brought the home crowd to its feet, pushed Gore’s statline back to 10 net yards rushing and two catches for 13 yards. He averaged nearly 67 rushing yards and about 13 yards receiving per game last season.

“Losing is always tough, but I feel like the week with all the media, that was the toughest thing,” Gore said when asked how it felt to come home and falter. “But no excuses. I mean, we lost that game fair and square. But we’ll be back. And for the rest of the season we have something to look forward for, so teams better be ready.”

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Golden Eagles running back and Killian High alum Frank Gore Jr. tries to break a tackle by Hurricanes cornerback Tyrique Stevenson on Saturday at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens. Miami held Gore to 10 net yards rushing and two catches for 13 yards.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Golden Eagles running back and Killian High alum Frank Gore Jr. tries to break a tackle by Hurricanes cornerback Tyrique Stevenson on Saturday at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens. Miami held Gore to 10 net yards rushing and two catches for 13 yards.

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