
Dec 8, 2006 6:52 pm US/Eastern
'Canes Promote Randy Shannon To Head Coach
He replaces Larry Coker
Shannon was the team's defensive coordinator
Click PLAY to watch Randy Shannon's entire news conference
by Kim Bokamper
CORAL GABLES (CBS4) ―
It's official. The University of Miami has promoted defensive coordinator Randy Shannon to head coach. He replaces Larry Coker, who was dismissed two weeks ago after the Hurricanes finished the regular season 6-and-6. That's their worst record since 1997.
Coker is staying on to coach the team in its December 31st bowl matchup against Nevada.
Shannon, introduced at a news conference Friday, is a former Hurricanes linebacker who helped the team win three national championships. He's also been their defensive coordinator since 2001.
"This is a great day for the University of Miami," school president Donna Shalala told reporters. "Randy Shannon is Miami and I'm absolutely delighted he'll be the next head coach."
"It's one of my dream jobs," Shannon said. "Always been."
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The Miami Herald first reported the hiring Thursday night.
"It's the guy that I wanted. It's the guy a lot of us wanted," Miami quarterback Kirby Freeman said. "Randy's been extremely sincere to this football program. He's been sincere about his feelings toward everyone on this team and the direction he wants this program to go. This is definitely the decision I wanted."
Last week, athletic director Paul Dee said the university had "serious interest" in Shannon, even though the school was also speaking with Rutgers coach Greg Schiano -- a former Miami assistant -- and Texas Tech's Mike Leach about replacing Coker, who was fired after the Hurricanes went 6-6 in the regular season.
"In our national search, we spoke to a lot of people about coaches and to a number of coaches about their availability," Dee said in a statement. "As the search progressed, it became very clear that Coach Shannon was the right person for this position."
The 40-year-old Shannon will become the sixth black head coach currently at one of the 119 Division I-A schools, joining Mississippi State's Sylvester Croom, UCLA's Karl Dorrell, Buffalo's Turner Gill, Kansas State's Ron Prince and Washington's Tyrone Willingham.
Coker was fired Nov. 24 with three years remaining on his contract.
He was 59-15 in six seasons with one national championship and another appearance in the Bowl Championship Series title game, but lost 12 games the past three seasons -- including six this year, when the Hurricanes fell from the national rankings for the first time since 1999, a span of 107 weeks.
Dee has said repeatedly that, even if a new coach was hired beforehand, Coker would coach Miami in its season finale against Nevada on Dec. 31 at the MPC Computers Bowl in Boise, Idaho. Shannon said he wants Coker to coach the finale.
"This team is still coach Coker's team," Shannon said. "If he wants to coach in this bowl game, he will be the coach in this bowl game."
Shannon will likely assume many typical head-coach duties, particularly in the recruiting area, almost immediately.
"Randy is the future of our football team now," Freeman said. "And we're going to have some bright, bright success. I'm excited. I'm really excited."
With Shannon's hiring will come at least one more change -- a new offensive coordinator. Dee said the university has given Shannon "the resources to seek his offensive coordinator," which means Rich Olsen, who was brought back to Miami before the 2006 season, will not be retained.
Most of the Hurricanes' struggles in recent years stemmed from inconsistent play on offense -- while the defense put together by Shannon continually ranked among the nation's best, a fact the university obviously took note of during its search for Coker's replacement.
Shannon's 2001 defense at Miami led the nation in turnover margin, scoring defense and pass efficiency defense, plus set school records for turnovers forced (45) and interceptions (27). His defenses also led the nation against the pass in 2002 and 2005, plus have always ranked among the national leaders in total defense.
Even this season, while the Hurricanes struggled, Shannon's defense was the fifth-stingiest in the country, yielding only 252 yards per game.
"I love him as a coach," Miami defensive end Calais Campbell said earlier this month when asked about Shannon. "I have the most respect for him of all the people I know. I think he's a great guy. ... He played here. He is a die-hard 'Cane. He wants to be a head coach. He definitely has the qualities."
This season was turbulent at Miami -- which reeled from the death of defensive lineman Bryan Pata, who was shot and killed outside his off-campus apartment complex on Nov. 7. The Hurricanes, who entered the season as favorites to win the Atlantic Coast Conference, also were involved in an on-field brawl with Florida International which resulted in the suspension of 31 players -- 13 from Miami.
Shannon -- whose son, Xavier, plays center at Florida International -- was a four-year letterman at Miami, a two-year starter at linebacker and part of the Hurricanes' 1987 national championship squad. He was drafted by the Dallas Cowboys in 1989 and became their first rookie starter at outside linebacker in 26 years.
A Miami native and graduate of the school, Shannon has spent most of coaching career with the Hurricanes, first as a graduate assistant in 1991, a defensive line coach in 1992 and then as linebackers coach from 1993-97.
He was with the Miami Dolphins from 1998-00 as a defensive assistant and linebackers coach then returned to the Hurricanes in 2001 as defensive coordinator -- and immediately helped the program win its fifth national championship in his first season back at Coral Gables.
(© 2006 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)