Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2005 Miami Hurricanes football team

American college football season


American college football season

FieldValue
year2005
teamMiami Hurricanes
imageMiami Hurricanes logo.svg
image_size125
conferenceAtlantic Coast Conference
divisionCoastal
short_confACC
CoachRank18
APRank17
record9–3
conf_record6–2
head_coachLarry Coker
hc_year5th
off_coachDan Werner
oc_year2nd
off_schemePro-style
def_coachRandy Shannon
dc_year5th
def_scheme[4–3](4-3-defense) Cover 2
stadiumMiami Orange Bowl
(Capacity: 72,319)
bowl[Peach Bowl](2005-peach-bowl)
bowl_resultL 3–40 vs. [LSU](2005-lsu-tigers-football-team)

(Capacity: 72,319) The 2005 Miami Hurricanes football team represented the University of Miami during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. It was the Hurricanes' 80th season of football and 2nd as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Hurricanes were led by fifth-year head coach Larry Coker and played their home games at the Orange Bowl. They finished the season 9–3 overall and 6–2 in the ACC to finish in second place in the Coastal Division. They were invited to the Peach Bowl where they lost to LSU, 40–3.

Season

Miami dropped its first game of the season at archrival Florida State, 10–7, when punter/holder Brian Monroe fumbled the snap on a 28-yard game-tying field goal attempt by kicker Jon Peattie with 2:16 left to play in the fourth quarter. Despite gaining 313 yards of offense to Florida State's 170, Miami lost to its archrival for the first time since 1999 (6 straight wins by Miami). The three turnovers, two missed field goals, and a muffed hold on the game-tying field goal attempt were also a contributing factor in the outcome for Miami.

The Hurricanes rebounded by winning 8 straight games (including a 27–7 win over previously unbeaten Virginia Tech in Blacksburg) and climbed to the #3 spot in both polls. However, any hopes of a sixth national championship were dashed when the Hurricanes were upset, 14–10, by Georgia Tech at home on November 19 (the game was originally scheduled for October 22, but was postponed in the wake of Hurricane Wilma). The Miami offense, which had problems all season, sputtered badly against Georgia Tech and quarterback Kyle Wright was booed continuously during the second half of the game by the Orange Bowl crowd for his ineffective play. The loss also knocked Miami out of a spot in the inaugural ACC Championship Game.

Miami finished the regular season at 9–2 (6–2 ACC), ranked #9 in both polls, and received an invitation to return to the Peach Bowl to face the 10th-ranked LSU Tigers. However, this trip to Atlanta was much different from the Hurricanes' last visit, as Wright and the Miami offense struggled, and the defense, which had been the top-ranked defense in Division I-A for most of the season, was shredded by the LSU offense. Miami was routed, 40–3, in the worst-bowl loss in the program's history. The 'Canes finished the 2005 campaign with a 9–3 record and ranked #18/17 (USA Today/AP).

Aftermath

Coker's three-loss seasons at Miami were viewed as failures, and the season-opening loss to FSU and the bowl loss to LSU made the 2005 campaign particularly difficult for alumni and fans of the proud program to swallow. The Hurricane offense had been the center of criticism all season long (as well as during the two previous seasons). In particular, offensive coordinator Dan Werner, offensive line coach Art Kehoe, and quarterback Kyle Wright were assigned most of the blame. In the aftermath of the Peach Bowl loss, head coach Larry Coker fired four assistants: Werner, Kehoe, running backs coach Don Soldinger, and linebacker coach Vernon Hargreaves. Kehoe's firing was particularly controversial, as he had been with the program as a player and then a coach for over 25 years and took part in all five of Miami's national championships.

With Miami failing to win a conference championship or go to a BCS bowl the previous two years and not having won a national championship since 2001, it was widely assumed that Coker would enter the 2006 season on the hot seat and need to take Miami to a BCS bowl to keep his job.

Schedule

|{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = l |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = w |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = w |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = w |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = w |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = w |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = w |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = w |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = w |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = l |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = w |{{CFB schedule entry | w/l = l

Rankings

Awards and honors

[[College Football All-America Team|First Team All-Americans]]

  • Kelly Jennings, CB (Sports Illustrated)
  • Brandon Meriweather, FS (Football Writers Association of America, ABC Sports)
  • Eric Winston, LT (Walter Camp Foundation, American Football Coaches Association, Sports Illustrated)

All-ACC Selections (First Team)

  • Devin Hester, KR/PR
  • Kelly Jennings, CB
  • Tyrone Moss, RB
  • Eric Winston, LT

Awards Finalists

Bold indicates winners

  • Eric Winston, LT – Jacobs Trophy (Top ACC Lineman)

[[Jack Harding]] University of Miami MVP Award

  • Eric Winston, LT

References

References

  1. "UM Hurricanes: Round Three".
  2. (January 2, 2006). "Kehoe one of four Hurricanes assistants fired". ESPN.
  3. Hyde, Dave. (August 30, 2006). "Coker should be held to higher standard". MSNBC.
  4. Dienhart, Tom. (April 15, 2006). "Coker biggest name of ACC coaches on hot seat". MSNBC.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2005 Miami Hurricanes football team — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report