Larry Coker FIRED at Miami [Archive] - Wildcat Nation Forums - Kentucky Wildcat Discussion and News

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BigBlue75
11-24-2006, 11:09 AM
n/m

baldcat
11-24-2006, 11:12 AM
Wasn't really hard to see that one coming.

He completely lost control of that team a good ways back.

Of course all the criminals and thugs they sign down there didn't help any either.

RV
11-24-2006, 11:44 AM
If any of our coaches were to leave, there are some good coaches that were on that staff. Maybe Rich can do his magic again. :thumbup

ukbob
11-24-2006, 11:47 AM
So where does Coker go? NFL?

Spanish Moss
11-24-2006, 11:56 AM
No shock, very expected. His players played well last night and put up a big W against BC.

The search for a new coach should be interesting. President Donna has a Wisconsin background and that may be an influence.

Spanish Moss
11-24-2006, 11:58 AM
RV wrote: If any of our coaches were to leave, there are some good coaches that were on that staff. Maybe Rich can do his magic again. :thumbup

Yes, I would definitely look at that staff. The Bama staff has some good solid defensive minds also, so if Shula goes that may be a good place to look.

Good point, RV.

Mountain Cat
11-24-2006, 12:43 PM
Spanish Moss wrote: RV wrote: If any of our coaches were to leave, there are some good coaches that were on that staff. Maybe Rich can do his magic again. :thumbup

Yes, I would definitely look at that staff. The Bama staff has some good solid defensive minds also, so if Shula goes that may be a good place to look.

Good point, RV.


Spanish and RV,

Nice thinking!

I did not think we could lure a top DC to come here from a top program to work under Brooks, but I didn't think about the prospect of catching a DC from a fired HC. It would be nice to find one where a failing Offense was the demise of the HC. It would appear that this is the case with Miami, as they are 6th (if youfactor in the 193yrds they held #BC to last night)in Defense and 80th in Offense.

Come on Mitch, go get them!

Spanish Moss
11-24-2006, 01:18 PM
And Bama has Joe Kines, he has a good pedigree. He knows the SEC and he knows defense. However, he is getting up in age.

2003-Present Asst Head Coach, Def Coordinator & Linebacker Coach Alabama
2000-2002 Linebacker Coach Florida State
1995-1999 Defensive Coordinator & Assistant Head Coach Georgia
1993-1994 Assistant Head Coach & Defensive Coordinator Arkansas
1992 Head Coach Arkansas
1985-1986 Defensive Coordinator & Inside Linebacker Coach Alabama
]1981-1984 Defensive Coordinator Florida

Every program he has been associated with is a football school and a good one

Terry L. Wildcat
11-24-2006, 01:37 PM
Mr. Moss, Is there any validity to the Spurrier to Miami rumor? I know a totally obnoxious Miami "fan" (band wagon jumper, he never ever lived in Florida) who hates Spurrier...boy, could I have fun with that ;)

Spanish Moss
11-24-2006, 02:24 PM
Terry L. Wildcat wrote: Mr. Moss, Is there any validity to the Spurrier to Miami rumor? I know a totally obnoxious Miami "fan" (band wagon jumper, he never ever lived in Florida) who hates Spurrier...boy, could I have fun with that ;)

I really don't think so. I would be shocked. Spurrier has a great class coming in next year and he fits the South Carolina lifestyle. Columbia is a nice place to live and Carolina fans support football much more than Miami fans.

So, I would be shocked but to be honest, I shouldn't be shocked at anything anymore. I could see the UL coach going before Spurrier. Petrino would fit in real nice down there. He recruits the same type of players and he is use to a small following of his team.

Bottom line, I think Spurrier retires at South Carolina.

I. Melvin
11-24-2006, 02:32 PM
I heard they were paying Coker $2 million per year.

How much is UofL paying for Petrino?

Btw, will Brohm be back?

CATHYnKY
11-24-2006, 04:15 PM
Terry L. Wildcat wrote: Mr. Moss, Is there any validity to the Spurrier to Miami rumor? I know a totally obnoxious Miami "fan" (band wagon jumper, he never ever lived in Florida) who hates Spurrier...boy, could I have fun with that ;)
My uncle who lives in a Suburb of Columbia, S.C. says Spurrier not interested. But then he isn't a sports fan.

Spanish Moss
11-24-2006, 04:36 PM
CATHYnKY wrote: Terry L. Wildcat wrote: Mr. Moss, Is there any validity to the Spurrier to Miami rumor? I know a totally obnoxious Miami "fan" (band wagon jumper, he never ever lived in Florida) who hates Spurrier...boy, could I have fun with that ;)
My uncle who lives in a Suburb of Columbia, S.C. says Spurrier not interested. But then he isn't a sports fan.

I have lived in Miami and went to Junior High School next to the University of Miami campus. Ponce de Leon Jr. High.

I would rather be in Columbia, South Carolina. It isn't even close and offers a much better lifestyle. The people are friendlier, the food is better and the women are prettier.

Russ24ky
11-24-2006, 05:57 PM
I heard awhile back

Barry Alvarez is wanting back in coaching



How about him a DC if Archer leaves.. just Wondering

Caveman Catfan
11-24-2006, 06:18 PM
I. Melvin wrote: I heard they were paying Coker $2 million per year.

About that.

UedK
11-24-2006, 06:33 PM
Mountain Cat wrote: Spanish Moss wrote: RV wrote: If any of our coaches were to leave, there are some good coaches that were on that staff. Maybe Rich can do his magic again. :thumbup

Yes, I would definitely look at that staff. The Bama staff has some good solid defensive minds also, so if Shula goes that may be a good place to look.

Good point, RV.


Spanish and RV,

Nice thinking!

I did not think we could lure a top DC to come here from a top program to work under Brooks, but I didn't think about the prospect of catching a DC from a fired HC. It would be nice to find one where a failing Offense was the demise of the HC. It would appear that this is the case with Miami, as they are 6th (if youfactor in the 193yrds they held #BC to last night)in Defense and 80th in Offense.

Come on Mitch, go get them!

Please, Please, Please let this happen. :thumbup

SCBlu
11-24-2006, 06:54 PM
RV wrote: If any of our coaches were to leave, there are some good coaches that were on that staff. Maybe Rich can do his magic again. :thumbup
Who's their DC?

Mountain Cat
11-24-2006, 07:23 PM
SCBlu wrote: RV wrote: If any of our coaches were to leave, there are some good coaches that were on that staff. Maybe Rich can do his magic again. :thumbup
Who's their DC?

Randy Shannon

Randy Shannon is widely considered one of the top defensive coordinators in college football. The longest-tenured member of the Hurricanes coaching staff, Shannon is now in his sixth season as defensive coordinator, and his tenure at UM dates back to 1985.
Shannon restored the University of Miami's legendary defensive reputation as one of the nation's fiercest. A former Hurricanes linebacker who returned to UM from the Miami Dolphins coaching staff in 2001, Shannon has produced defenses that rank among the best in the history of the program.
Shannon's aggressive 4-3 scheme annually produces one of the nation's most opportunistic defenses. In 2005, Shannon's defense led the nation most of the season in nearly every category and finished No. 1 in pass defense (152.17 ypg) and pass efficiency (89.48 rating), fourth in total defense (270.08 ypg) and scoring defense (14.25 points), and 23rd in run defense (117.92). He was named Defensive Coordinator of the Year by Rivals.com. The UM defenses in 2002 and 2003 led the nation in passing yards allowed, and the 2003 unit was fourth nationally in pass efficiency defense (96.16 rating), while finishing second in the nation in total defense (257.5 ypg). The 2003 Hurricanes also ranked among the national leaders in scoring defense (fourth, 15.1 ppg). In 2004, Shannon's defense ranked ninth in the country in pass defense despite having three new starters in the secondary. That unit was led by consensus All-America cornerback Antrel Rolle, marking the fourth consecutive season that Shannon has coached an All-America defender.
His 2002 unit led the nation in passing yards allowed (119.7 ypg) and in pass efficiency defense (83.91 rating), while finishing seventh in that nation in total defense (285.0 ypg), all of which was accomplished with an entirely new starting unit in the defensive secondary. Six Hurricanes were named All-Big East by the league's head coaches in 2002.
In 2001, Miami led the nation in turnover margin by forcing a school-record 27 interceptions and 45 turnovers. Miami defenders allowed a national-best 9.4 points per game, led the nation in pass efficiency defense (75.60 rating), ranked second in pass defense (138.2 ypg) and was sixth in total defense (270.9 ypg). The 2001 Hurricanes allowed just 12 touchdowns (seven rushing, five passing) and scored seven touchdowns of their own. Two UM defenders received All-America acclaim in 2001 - safety Edward Reed and cornerback Phillip Buchanon - and four Hurricanes were voted to the Big East All-Conference team by the league's head coaches.
His work with the 2001 defense earned Shannon the praise of his coaching brethren, as he became the first UM coach to be named the winner of the Frank Broyles Award, presented annually to the nation's top assistant coach. Shannon earned the honor from a field of 112 nominees from across the nation, with the winner chosen by an elite panel of seven college football coaching greats: Vince Dooley, Don James, Dick MacPherson, Tom Osborne, Darrell Royal, Bo Schembechler and Grant Teaff.
A native of Miami, Shannon became defensive coordinator at UM after a successful stint as an assistant for the NFL's Miami Dolphins. He was a defensive assistant in 1998 and 1999 before assuming the role of linebackers coach in 2000. Shannon developed the Dolphins' linebacker corps on one of the NFL's top defenses in 2000 for head coach Dave Wannstedt, another former UM assistant, and he worked with All-Pro linebacker Zach Thomas.
Prior to his time with the Dolphins, Shannon spent seven seasons with the Hurricanes as an assistant in various capacities. He began his coaching career at Miami in 1991 as a graduate assistant and was promoted to full-time defensive assistant (defensive line) in 1992 before becoming linebackers coach in 1993. During his first stint as a UM assistant, Shannon tutored linebackers such as Darrin Smith, Ray Lewis, Jessie Armstead, and Micheal Barrow. Shannon has coached in 10 bowl games with the Hurricanes.
One of three former Hurricanes players on the Miami staff, Shannon was a four-year letterman at linebacker, a member of Miami's 1987 national championship team, and was the winner of the Christopher Plumer Award for most inspirational player in his senior season of 1988. Shannon started at strongside linebacker his final two seasons at UM and was an 11th-round draft choice of the Dallas Cowboys in 1989. That year, he was the first rookie to start at outside linebacker for Dallas since 1963.
Personal Information
Full Name: Randy Lannard Shannon
Hometown: Miami, Florida
Education: B.S., University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida (1989)

Shannon's Coaching Career
2001-06 University of Miami (defensive coordinator)
2000 Miami Dolphins (linebackers)
1998-99 Miami Dolphins (defensive assistant)
1993-97 University of Miami (linebackers)
1992 University of Miami (defensive line)
1991 University of Miami (graduate assistant)


Bowl Games as a Coach (10)
2005 Peach Bowl
2004 Peach Bowl
2004 Orange Bowl
2003 Fiesta Bowl
2002 Rose Bowl
1996 Carquest Bowl
1995 Orange Bowl
1994 Fiesta Bowl
1993 Sugar Bowl
1992 Orange Bowl


Coaching Accomplishments

In 2005, led the nation in pass defense (152.17 ypg) and pass efficiency (89.48 rating) and finished fourth in total defense (270.08 ypg) and scoring defense (14.25 points)
2004 pass defense ranked ninth in the country
2003 defense was fourth nationally in pass efficiency defense (96.16 rating), second in total defense (257.5 ypg) and fourth in scoring defense (15.1 ppg)
Led the nation's No. 1-ranked defense in pass defense and pass efficiency defense during the 2002 season
Winner of the 2001 Frank Broyles Award as national assistant coach of the year
Led the nation's No. 1-ranked defense in turnover margin, scoring defense and pass efficiency defense during Miami's 2001 national championship season
His 2001 defense set a school record for turnovers forced (45) and interceptions (27)
Developed the linebacker corps of one of the NFL's top defenses with the 2000 Miami Dolphins
As an assistant at UM from 1991-97, worked with Miami's outstanding 1992 and 1994 defenses that registered 48 sacks in 1992 and led the nation in total defense in 1994

Honors as a Player


Four-year letterman at linebacker at the University of Miami
Starting linebacker on Miami's 1987 national championship team
Winner of the Christopher Plumer Award for most inspirational player as a senior in 1988
Started at strongside linebacker his final two seasons at UM
An 11th-round draft choice of the Dallas Cowboys in 1989, became the first rookie to start at outside linebacker for Dallas since 1963

UK 4 Life
11-24-2006, 08:39 PM
No big surprise here. The Canes have become a average program at best the past few seasons. That won't cut it at Thug University. The brawl and nightmare this season was the final nail for Coker. I think there is a good chance we'll see Barry Alverez end up at the U. I don't see Coker getting a big time job at any top notch school.

Dr. H Lecter
11-25-2006, 10:34 AM
Spanish Moss wrote: No shock, very expected. His players played well last night and put up a big W against BC.

The search for a new coach should be interesting. President Donna has a Wisconsin background and that may be an influence.




I had always heard that Shalalah would be happy if the football program just went away.

What about that new upstart guy at Rutgers? ;)

Dwight Schrute
11-25-2006, 10:41 AM
I've heard that same thing. Heard most of the board and many prominent alumni wish football would just go away, as well. I wouldn't be surprised if Shalala goes after someone who will clean the program and its image up - on field results be damned.

Dr. H Lecter wrote: Spanish Moss wrote: No shock, very expected. His players played well last night and put up a big W against BC.

The search for a new coach should be interesting. President Donna has a Wisconsin background and that may be an influence.




I had always heard that Shalalah would be happy if the football program just went away.

What about that new upstart guy at Rutgers? ;)