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By HurricaneSports.com CORAL GABLES, Fla. – The Canes are looking forward. Just a few days after their appearance in the Advocare Classic, the University of Miami football team still feels the sting of the season-opening loss to LSU. They're also doing everything they can to avoid feeling this way again any time soon.
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'We're hard on each other,' defensive lineman said. 'The coaches are hard on us. We're just practicing hard and working hard like it's the same game [as LSU].'
Miami's second game is just a few days away, as Savannah State comes to Hard Rock Stadium for a 6 p.m. Kickoff on Saturday.
A week later, they have a trip to Toledo followed by a matchup with crosstown rival FIU and then the ACC opener against North Carolina. 'We don't have time to sit and sulk about this game,' linebacker said. 'We have a game in a couple of days and we have another game after that. The games just keep coming, for weeks to come. In a couple weeks, this Game 1 will be all a blur.
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That's how I see it.' And don't think the Canes are taking Savannah State lightly. Miami is aware of the different levels of success the two programs have had historically, but they also know the Tigers will come in looking to make a statement. 'Those guys are going to come out and play hard,' defensive back Michael Jackson said. 'Just imagine if they come out and beat us. For the rest of their lives, they can say, 'I beat the Miami Hurricanes'.' Jackson, a Preseason All-ACC pick who went largely untested by LSU on Sunday, has been one of the veteran leaders emphasizing the importance of 'just do your job.'
'I tell them we have different type of leaders,' Jackson said. 'Everybody doesn't have to make a Hollywood speech to be a leader. But then you do need some guys to make those types of speeches. But everyone just needs to do their job.
Leaders lead and followers follow. You can't be a leader and not be willing to follow another.' The Canes have come together as a team following Sunday's loss at LSU.
Veterans like Jackson and Quarterman have stepped up to rally the team. They know that leadership in the locker room and on the field will help get the team back on track. 'This school came from people who did the same thing before us,' Quarterman said. 'It can't be the coaches. A coach-led team cannot win a championship. It has to be a player-led team.
It has to be people on the team willing to step out front and be the one to say, 'enough is enough.' We have a lot of those guys on the team.' While the Canes learned about some deficiencies in Sunday's game, they also found out some good things about several players who stepped up in big moments. 'The freshman worth highlighting is Al Blades,' defensive coordinator said. 'When we lost Trajan [Bandy], which is a whole other topic, we lost two players, because not only our starting corner, but we lost our starting nickel on third down. Al came in there and did not blink.
It was not too big for him. He covered maybe their best guy, foot for foot.
Al was very encouraging, the way he played in there. And then played the majority of the last third of the game, and we kind of had the same feeling with DJ. It didn't seem too big for DJ. He did a nice job.
He wasn't challenged with a pass, but kind of did his job and looked like he knew what he was doing.' Jackson also was impressed with Ivey's play, especially late in the game as Miami. An early enrollee, Ivey participated in spring football and flashed signs of brilliance and moments of youthful inexperience. But Jackson believes the freshman defensive back's play on Sunday proved no moment is too big for him. ', he stepped up,' Jackson said.