AP: Before Ohio State, Shannon Takes a Field Trip

Sept. 7, 2010

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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — When No. 12 Miami visits No. 2 Ohio State in a long-hyped matchup this Saturday, the Hurricanes know they won’t see many friendly faces in the stands.

Maybe that’s why Miami coach Randy Shannon surrounded himself with a roomful of backers Tuesday.

Making an unusual addition to his regimented game-week schedule — considering this might be the biggest matchup of his tenure with the Hurricanes — Shannon took a few hours to mingle with and then address 100 lunching boosters, most of whom wore either suits and ties or some sort of Miami-themed attire.

“I think this is unbelievable,” Shannon told the group. “I think this is the first time in a long time we’ve had this kind of support.”

Football coaches tend to have just about every minute plotted during game weeks, especially so when it’s a game that might end up carrying championship implications.

Shannon isn’t really an exception to that rule. So it was surprising to see the coach in a gray suit and blue shirt at the front of a dining room, taking questions for about 30 minutes and spending probably twice that much time simply milling about and shaking a few hands.

Despite his insistence otherwise, maybe Shannon does think meeting Ohio State is a big deal after all.

“That’s what we came here for, the big games, the spotlight,” running back Damien Berry said. “That’s why we’re at ‘The U,’ right? It’s most definitely one of the highlight games of the season.”

He was relaxed, laughing, smiling, emotions he doesn’t always show when he’s at work and hardly ever shows to fans who watch him on gamedays. Shannon didn’t make big news, other than revealing quarterback Jacory Harris “injured” — a word the coach rarely uses — his thumb against North Carolina last year and dealt with more pain in the last three games of 2009 than the team ever acknowledged.

Other than that, Shannon told the boosters what they wanted to hear: Miami is getting closer to championship form. Shannon didn’t make any grandiose predictions for the game, or the season either, but told fans some of the reasons why the Hurricanes feel confident heading into a game that could vault them back into the national spotlight.

“A game like this, you’ve got to take it in stride,” Shannon said. “We’ve been there before.”

And shortly after he was done, his car was pulled up alongside the restaurant, Shannon hopped in and headed back to work in Coral Gables, maybe 45 minutes away with traffic.

When it was over, Shannon was clearly happy he found the time in his schedule for the rare get-together.

“Anytime I can be around what I call my friends, or associates, it’s great,” Shannon said. “I was saying this earlier: Anytime you can be around somebody who’s passionate for the University of Miami, that’s what it’s all about. And to come out and enjoy things like that, that is my typical day.”

Within reason, of course.

If he stayed and answered every question everyone in the room had for him, Shannon might have missed Friday’s flight to Ohio.

“It’s no different for me this week,” Shannon said before his appearance. “It’s just like me going to the grocery store. That’s how I have to treat it. Yeah, people know who I am. They speak, I speak back and I keep going. There can’t be a deal where I speak for 30 minutes with this person, 15 more with that person and so on. I think people respect that. I’ve got things I’ve got to get done.”

By Tim Reynolds

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.All rights reserved.This material may not be published,broadcast,rewritten or redistributed.