San Diego Union-Tribune

Cristobol takes complete blame for Miami’s gaffe

We just couldn't let this stuff go …

- Lance Guidry

Miami coach Mario Cristobal reiterated Monday that he takes full responsibi­lity for the Hurricanes not taking a knee in the final seconds of their loss to Georgia Tech, even as offensive coordinato­r Shannon Dawson revealed he actually called the play in which the ball was fumbled away.

“I made the wrong call,” Cristobal said.

Miami led Georgia Tech 20-17 and could have been in victory formation — taking a knee to essentiall­y end the game — when a play was called. Don Chaney

fumbled with 26 seconds left, and Georgia Tech took over on its own 26-yard line.

It took the Yellow Jackets four plays — an incompleti­on, a 30-yard gain, a spike to stop the clock and a 44-yard pass with 2 seconds left — to find the end zone and win 23-20, handing Miami (4-1, 0-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) its first loss of the year.

“What we did at the end was the wrong decision,” Dawson said. “I called it. It is what it is. I wished we would have done something different, but we didn't. Got to live with it. … I'm not going to sit here and go through the process with you guys. What's said on the headsets is between us, and ultimately, I called the play. And I can live with it. It was the wrong thing to do.”

Cristobal said immediatel­y after the game that he should have stepped in and called for a kneel-down, and did not blame anyone else Monday — saying he takes “complete ownership.”

Miami fell eight spots to No. 25 in the AP Top 25 after the loss, and Cristobal was asked how the team would recover in time to prepare for a trip to play No. 12 North Carolina this weekend.

“You do it with honesty and transparen­cy, go and fix all the things we can do better and realize the opportunit­y in front of us,” Cristobal said. “Football is very much like life. We owe it to ourselves and to our players, to our entire organizati­on like we do our very own families to look each other right in the eye and demand the best, the absolute truth from each other so we can go forward.”

Miami has asked the ACC for an explanatio­n about why Chaney was not ruled down, and why the play wasn't overturned on review. Cristobal said the league has not given Miami an answer yet.

Commentato­rs and those on social media have, predictabl­y, not been kind to Miami in recent days for the blunder of not kneeling down — and for how Georgia Tech receiver Christian Leary got behind two defenders, including All-America safety Kam Kinchens,

for the winning score.

Cristobal said players have responded the right way, which is all he can ask. He also told Chaney, Kinchens and any other players who were on the field in the final 26 seconds that they were in no way responsibl­e for the final events that led to the loss.

All the blame, he insists, goes to him. “You go through things and sometimes you're not prepared for things and sometimes you still have conflict, but family stays together,” defensive coordinato­r said. “And that's what we preach around here.”

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