The Miami Maniac (often shortened to just The Maniac) is the official mascot of the Miami Hurricanes baseball program at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida.
College Baseball Hall of Fame head coach Ron Fraser created the Maniac in 1982, with John Routh as the original performer. The Miami Maniac has an anthropomorphic body mostly covered by orange fur, with patches of green on his head and large snout. He usually wears a Miami baseball jersey with the number on it.
The Maniac is the mascot of only Hurricanes baseball. Sebastian the Ibis represents Miami's other teams .
The following year, in 1982, Fraser and a major university donor helped create the Miami Maniac. They decided to introduce the Maniac during Miami's series against Florida State that year and invited Routh down from South Carolina to show students how to work a crowd. After the Hurricanes won their first CWS championship in 1982, Fraser offered Routh a permanent position as assistant director of marketing, which included performing as both the Miami Maniac and Sebastian the Ibis. Routh, who had just graduated from the University of South Carolina, accepted the position. During his tenure at the Miami, Routh created many of the cheers now associated with Hurricanes athletics. The Maniac developed the "C-A-N-E-S... Canes!" cheer, which has become a popular tradition among Miami football fans.
From 1983 through 1991, the Maniac was the official mascot of the NCAA Division 1 College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, although the character had to wear a neutral jersey during each series to avoid being seen as favoring Miami when they participated in the tournament.
The Hurricanes released a non-fungible token (NFT) of the Maniac after launching their own NFT platform in 2021.
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