Miami Herald (Sunday)

Top 2022 draft prospects struggling for UM

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com

Bubba Bolden hears it all the time and, to an extent, he understand­s why.

“Everybody looks at it like, Oh, Bubba, you should be playing how you played the first half of [last] season,” the safety said Wednesday. “I feel like I’m playing good.”

The Hurricanes clearly do, too — Bolden has played more snaps than anyone else on defense — but his play, at least in the mind of outside evaluators, has not been up to the standard he set last season, when he was a second-team all-Atlantic Coast Conference selection.

Bolden, who had his name mentioned as a potential first-round pick in several way-too-early mock drafts for 2022, has fallen off the Day 1 radar as his play, according to Pro Football Focus, has not graded out well and his raw counting stats have been underwhelm­ing.

Bolden’s play is part of a larger issue for Miami, which was trying to snap a two-game losing streak Saturday against N.C. State. at Hard Rock Stadium. The Hurricanes (2-4, 0-2) didn’t begin the year with many players expected to go early in the 2022 NFL Draft, and those few who were have mostly had disappoint­ing seasons.

Bolden has missed 10 tackles, according to Pro Football Focus, and has just 2 1⁄2 tackles for loss, no sacks, two passes defended, no intercepti­ons and one forced fumble. Offensive

lineman Zion Nelson, whose raw size and athleticis­m made him a trendy pick as the potential top tackle in the 2022 Draft, missed time in training camp with a knee injury and hasn’t taken an obvious leap forward in his third year as a starter. Even fringe candidates, such as cornerback Tyrique Stevenson, haven’t done enough to vault their way into clear Day 2 position.

In Mel Kiper Jr.’s most recent big board for ESPN last month, the Draft analyst didn’t rank any Miami players among his top 10 at any position. Both Bolden and Nelson know they need to play better in the second half of the year.

“To be honest,” Nelson said Wednesday, “I’d say right now it’s not up to the standard that I would like it to be.”

Said Bolden: “I want to improve every game. That’s the main thing. I never want to stay stagnant, I never want to regress, but one thing I really want is to get some intercepti­ons. Hopefully, that ball comes my way or hopefully I can put myself in a better position to make a play.”

BREAKING DOWN BUBBA BOLDEN’S SEASON

Bolden said he feels part of the perception has come from opposing offenses game-planning for him. At the start of the year, Bolden carried a reputation as the best player on the Hurricanes’ defense, and it has meant fewer opportunit­ies for the 6-3, 204-pound redshirt junior. His 41 tackles barely have him on pace to surpass his 77 from last year, when the regular season was only 10 games because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the gamechangi­ng plays — sacks, tackles for loss, intercepti­ons and fumbles — have almost entirely vanished.

Some of that can be written off to fewer opportunit­ies, as opponents run their offense away from him. The problem is fewer opportunit­ies magnify mistakes and Bolden’s 10 missed tackles are second most on the team. Defenses have figured out how to limit Bolden’s strengths while also highlighti­ng his weaknesses.

“There’s been some situations where the ball hasn’t found Bubba,” coach Manny Diaz said Wednesday. “I know he wants to make more plays, but we talk about just being where you’re supposed to be and being responsibl­e for your area of responsibi­lity.”

Diaz also pointed to one intangible area. Bolden, he said, is Miami’s best communicat­or in the secondary, which is especially important these days with freshmen James Williams and Kamren Kinchens getting the vast majority of snaps at the other safety spot.

BREAKING DOWN ZION NELSON’S SEASON

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ?? Hurricanes offensive lineman Zion Nelson, right, was a trendy pick as the potential top tackle in the 2022 Draft, but was injured and his third season has been underwhelm­ing.
DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com Hurricanes offensive lineman Zion Nelson, right, was a trendy pick as the potential top tackle in the 2022 Draft, but was injured and his third season has been underwhelm­ing.

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