CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — The No. 25 Miami Hurricanes’ secondary knows they have a tough task on Saturday night. They have to find a way to stop highly touted wide receiver Tez Walker.
What makes things difficult is they only have one week of film to watch to prepare. Walker returned to the No. 12 Tar Heels’ lineup last week after a protracted dispute with the NCAA over his transfer eligibility.
“Well first of all, good for him,” Miami defensive coordinator Lance Guidry said. “You never want a guy that has eligibility left not to be able to play. We’re supposed to be in this profession for the kids, and I think they did the right thing.
“Talented guy, big guy, can run. You just kind of really don’t worry about him individually because they’ve got other receivers. If it was just him, it’d be different. You could prepare to double cover him, but they’ve got other guys that can hurt you. So you really got to break down the offense and try to stop things they do well and on third down, maybe you can lean on him a little bit. But they’ve got other players. You can’t focus on just him.”
Integrating a player who has missed so much time (despite being healthy) can be a tough task. Walker had six catches for 43 yards in his season debut against Syracuse. But Miami offensive coordinator Shannon Dawson said if Walker has been practicing while waiting for the NCAA to reinstate him, it likely won’t take long for Walker to get to game speed.
“I don’t know what their process is, but if they thought the guy was going to be eligible at any point in the season, he’s probably been taking reps,” Dawson said. “I don’t know how he did last week because I don’t look at that side of the ball, but I’m sure the kid has been taking reps if they had any kind of percentage of him maybe being available.”
The Tar Heels have several talented receivers in addition to Walker, and they have earned respect from Miami’s defensive backs.
“(UNC receivers have) speed, explosiveness,” cornerback Te’Cory Couch said. “They’re good in space, deep threats. They’ve got all-around guys that can do everything. They can block. Whatever you need them to do, they can get it done.”
Key Hurricane remains out
Miami defensive end Akheem Mesidor remains out of the lineup for Miami due to injury.
The fourth-year junior defensive end was in street clothes before UM’s game against UNC Saturday night. Mesidor has been out since suffering an injury against Texas A&M on Sept. 9.
Mesidor has five tackles this season. Last year, he had 38 tackles and a team-best seven sacks.
Miami misses out on key prospect
The Hurricanes are still looking for more defensive line help in their 2024 recruiting class.
Four-star Aydin Breland had Miami in his top three schools, but he chose Oregon over Miami and Georgia on Saturday afternoon.
Breland, who plays for California powerhouse Mater Dei, is rated the No. 7 defensive lineman and No. 38 player in the 2024 class in 247Sports’ composite rankings.
Miami has four defensive linemen committed in the 2024 class: edge rushers Marquise Lightfoot and Elias Rudolph and interior linemen Artavius Jones and Daylen Russell.