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Miller’s return to field has been uneventful for Bulls

Posted Mar 19, 2010 by Scott Carter

Updated Mar 20, 2010 at 10:47 AM

TAMPA—Joel Miller is finally back where he is most comfortable.

“I’m out here playing football,’’ Miller said Friday evening. “This is what I want to do. Everyone has a fresh slate, a fresh start. Everyone gets to show what they can do.’’

The University of South Florida football team donned pads Friday for the first time since former coach Jim Leavitt was fired and replaced by Skip Holtz.

Miller, a walk-on running back from Wharton High, was at the center of Leavitt’s ouster. A four-week investigation concluded Leavitt grabbed Miller by the throat during halftime of a Nov. 21 game against Louisville and struck him twice in the face.

After initially denying the incident as reported by FanHouse.com, Miller later acknowledged the confrontation happened as originally reported and said he was only trying to protect Leavitt by telling investigators and school officials a different story.

More than two months later, the Bulls are back on the field for their first spring practice under Holtz. There was speculation that some of his teammates may not want Miller back on the team following the messy end to Leavitt’s tenure.

When Holtz took over in January and began meeting individually with players, he gauged the mood surrounding Miller’s return to the team. He decided to move forward with Miller remaining on the roster.

“I addressed it with everybody individually to find out if it was a problem,’’ Holtz said Friday. “And I don’t think it is on this team. I think time heals a lot of things and these players right now are interested in moving forward.’’

Senior receiver Dontavia Bogan, who voiced disappointment the day Leavitt was fired in January, has accepted Holtz and said Friday that there has been a sense of team unity during the first three days of spring practice.

Miller’s role in Leavitt’s firing and his presence back on the field has not been a distraction, according to Bogan.

“No one hates him,’’ Bogan said. “He’s family. We are all one. We treat him the same as we treat anybody else. We’re past all that.’’

Since the story broke and Leavitt was fired, Miller has often been a target of fans on message boards and sports-talk radio. Some blame him for Leavitt’s firing. Others say he should have never spoken up. Miller said once he steps inside the fence surrounding USF’s practice fields, none of that matters.

“When you come in here, it’s to play football,’’ he said. “That’s it. Coach Holtz has been great. Everyone has been great around here.’’

Miller remains a walk-on but is striving to make more of an impact on the field and perhaps gain a scholarship. As a running back at Wharton, Miller rushed over 1,000 yards as a senior.

“That’s always a hope,’’ he said of earning a scholarship. “That’s what I’ve always wanted ever since I walked on at USF. If the opportunity comes, that would be a great opportunity for me. I just want to show them what I can do. I’d love to get some reps at running back.’’

The day after Holtz was introduced as USF’s coach on Jan. 15, he said he would evaluate Miller the same way he would every other player. So far, Holtz is confident that Miller remaining part of the team won’t disrupt team chemistry.

“I haven’t seen it,’’ Holtz said. “I haven’t heard of anything nor seen anything that would make me say that there is any kind of animosity toward him right now with what’s gone on.’’

Reader Comments

Por (Dan Alatorre) on March 22, 2010 (Suggest removal)

Miller is a sore spot for me and a lot of other fans, so I would prefer his name not be mentioned unless he really starts putting up big plays and big numbers on the field during games. Coach Holtz made his decision about Miller staying on the team, so it’s time for Miller to go big or go home. If he sucks for 2 different head coaches, it’s him that sucks, not team politics or favoritism.

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Por (rashad) on March 22, 2010 (Suggest removal)

so if he does well for your team he is ok, but until then he is not….because cjl slapped him??

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Por (Dan Alatorre) on March 22, 2010 (Suggest removal)

No. I think if he was bad for both coaches, he was bad. If he was good for both coaches, he was good. If the coaches split decision on him, then his current coach gets to decide. There will be a judgement call - and therefore room for dispute - in every case except the first one now (where he is bad for both) because Leavitt’s gone and Leavitt’s opinion on this player has to be questioned due to the circumstances. Putting everything else aside, the player has to show that he is a good player, because if Holtz later decides that Miller is not a good player, that pretty much ends things for Miller as a player.

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Por (Dan Alatorre) on March 22, 2010 (Suggest removal)

I think it’s fair to say that we don’t know right now if Miller is or is not a good player today, because of the circumstances. So Miller’s going to have to prove it. But does everybody else when they get a new coach.

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Por (rashad) on March 22, 2010 (Suggest removal)

just trying to clarify….you said:

Miller is a sore spot for me and a lot of other fans, so I would prefer his name not be mentioned unless he really starts putting up big plays and big numbers on the field during games

i interpret that as saying that you don’t want to hear about him unless he plays well….it has nothing to do with whether or not he is any good right now….he is what he is…a walk on special teams player that just wants to play college football without his coaches hands around his throat….help me understand if i am wrong…

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Por (Dan Alatorre) on March 22, 2010 (Suggest removal)

I think if Miller does really well and makes big plays, he should be highlighted like any other player making big plays would be. If he doesn’t, then he shouldn’t be - like any other player NOT maing big plays wouldn’t be.

I don’t know if Miller is any good or not. Supposedly he couldn’t cut it. Supposedly, he quit the team several times. Supposedly a bunch of other stuff. I don’t know what happened at halftime during the Louisville game. My guess is, you weren’t there and don’t know, either.

I think it’s most fair to leave the guy out of the headlines unless he does well in games, and then showcase him like we would anybody else who makes big plays in games.

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Por (Dan Alatorre) on March 22, 2010 (Suggest removal)

I can’t see how you’d have a problem with that. Do you believe that dredging up this story again and again is helping him move on with his football career? I don’t.

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Por (rashad) on March 23, 2010 (Suggest removal)

you missed the point…i give up…i should have known better

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Por (Dan Alatorre) on March 23, 2010 (Suggest removal)

I just didn’t take the bait.

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Por (rashad) on March 23, 2010 (Suggest removal)

no bait…i am trying to understand a line of thinking and you didn’t get it….i am not here to argue…only to discuss

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