Miami Herald

Hurricanes coach Larrañaga adds Heat’s Herro to team’s playbook

- BY BARRY JACKSON bjackson@miamiheral­d.com Barry Jackson: 305-376-3491, @flasportsb­uzz

A six-pack of Miami Hurricanes notes:

While watching the

Heat’s impressive rookie guard during the NBA Finals, ABC’s Mark Jackson cracked that “a Herro is more than just a sandwich.”

Tyler Herro, apparently, also can now be found in the UM basketball playbook.

Hurricanes coach Jim Larrañaga is using some plays from the Heat’s playoff run as a teaching tool with his players and has even added a new play and named it after Herro.

“We’ve added a sideline out of bounds play that we call Herro, named after Tyler Herro,” Larrañaga said in a phone conversati­on this week. “We have repeatedly shown our players highlights of Heat games. We’ve shown them defensive clips of how they cover certain situations that we will see. They have had a great impact [on our teaching].

“We’ve always used

NBA clips [as a tool], more from the Heat than from any other team. We showed a Kobe Bryant

clip in the last practice, shown clips of Giannis Antetokoun­mpo and Kemba Walker and Jayson Tatum and LeBron James.”

Larrañaga said he “was texting with [Heat president] Pat Riley throughout the playoffs. I’m very excited and proud of the job his team did.”

We’ll have more on UM’s highly regarded freshmen ( Earl Timberlake and Matt Cross) in the coming days. But Larrañaga believes the third eligible newcomer — former Cincinnati center Nysier Brooks — is going to help.

“Nysier brings a physical presence like a Tonye Jekiri and Ebuka Izundu,” Larrañaga said of two former Hurricanes centers. “He’s a very vocal defender. Tonye and Kamari Murphy are probably the best frontcourt defenders we’ve had because of their ability to talk their teammates through screens and be prepared to help when necessary.

“I am hoping Nysier can do the same thing. Defensive and offensive rebounding are things we are counting” on from him.

Brooks, 6-11, averaged 8.1 points, 6.3 rebounds and 1.5 blocks — and 22.9 minutes per game — in 35 appearance­s (all starts) for Cincinnati in 2018-19. Brooks, who has never attempted a three-pointer in a game, sat out last sea

son under NCAA transfer rules.

It would be very surprising if guards Chris Lykes and Kam McGusty aren’t starters, but the other starting jobs are wide open. “Isaiah Wong, Sam Wardenburg, Rodney Miller, Harlond Beverly, Anthony Walker are all back and all competing for starting jobs,” Larrañaga said.

Cross, Timberlake and Brooks might enter the mix, too. At the very least, UM expects those three players will get minutes.

“I think we have a good team,” Larrañaga said. “The question is always how good is the ACC going to be.

“There are certain teams that you can look at and project them to be top 10 — Virginia, Duke, North Carolina, Florida State. We’ve got other very talented teams: Louisville, Syracuse, Notre Dame. I’m confident we have a good team but our league has some” excellent teams.

UM will open its yet-tobe-announced 25-game schedule in late November.

few quick hits from Larrañaga : He said he doesn’t anticipate having fans in attendance for home games through the end of the calendar year and “it won’t be determined if there are fans in January until much closer to that date.”…

UM’s five nonconfere­nce games will be against FAU, three other schools in Florida or the Southeast (not yet announced) and a Big

10 team (not yet disclosed). …

Larrañaga said players have missed practices the past two weeks for various reasons (death in the family, child with a cold, nagging injuries) but nobody is on track to miss the opener and nobody on the team has contracted Covid-19.

●Two of the UM football players who bypassed their senior seasons to turn pro this year — receiver Jeff Thomas and cornerback

Trajan Bandy — are out of the NFL completely, not even on practice squads. And it’s not the first time that players have left UM early over the years and then faced unemployme­nt within months.

But if this angers coach

Manny Diaz, he wasn’t letting on during his Wednesday news conference.

Asked what can be done about UM players leaving early and whether he will mention the Thomas/ Bandy examples to players

this year, Diaz said:

“We always show our players the facts every year. We show all of our guys where they go, what their contracts are like, how an NFL contract breaks down to try to arm them with as much informatio­n as possible. We’ve got all kinds of data on how many early entrants get drafted. It’s not a Miami issue. This is an issue that’s occurring all over college football.

“But it’s still their personal choice, and it’s hard to make a wide sweeping decision on it because you can’t unpack, in each of these individual cases, the financial realities of these families. To your point, being unemployed eight months later doesn’t help that financial reality but that’s not the way the world looks before the jump.

“So our job is to be nothing but be a mentor and provide informatio­n. No matter what they choose, it’s up to them to make their decision right.”

Financial issues were in play with Bandy when he decided to turn pro, according to a source. Pittsburgh moved Bandy to its practice squad on Labor Day weekend but released him Sept. 25. As for Thomas, the New England Patriots released him after training camp and didn’t sign him to a practice squad. Neither player was drafted in April.

Even if a player turns pro early, UM pays that player’s tuition if he returns to

school to get his degree.

●One Hurricanes player who needs to improve to make a case for NFL teams: defensive tackle

Jon Ford. A former UM assistant coach said he thought Ford had firstround talent when UM recruited him. Ford has been serviceabl­e but hasn’t lived up to those lofty expectatio­ns.

He has six tackles and one quarterbac­k hurry this season.

“He’s a big load inside,” defensive coordinato­r

Blake Baker said. “Sometimes he doesn’t necessaril­y show up on the stat sheet, but he’s doing a nice job occupying blocks. There’s areas he can improve in and he knows that, but overall he’s been really solid.”

Baker said the other starting defensive tackle,

Nesta Silvera, “has taken his game to the next level. I talked to him [Sunday] night, was as proud of him in that [Pittsburgh] game as I’ve been since I’ve been here. A couple of times he got banged up, went to the tent, fought through those injuries. He has stepped his game up to an All-ACC level.”

Diaz said Silvera “has good foot speed. When your big guys can run, that presents problems in a lot of different ways.”

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ?? ‘We’ve added a sideline out of bounds play that we call Herro, named after Tyler Herro,’ UM coach Jim Larrañaga said. ‘We have repeatedly shown our players highlights of Heat games. ... They have had a great impact [on our teaching].’
DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ‘We’ve added a sideline out of bounds play that we call Herro, named after Tyler Herro,’ UM coach Jim Larrañaga said. ‘We have repeatedly shown our players highlights of Heat games. ... They have had a great impact [on our teaching].’
 ?? Miami Herald file ?? Larrañaga was ‘texting with Pat Riley’ in the playoffs.
Miami Herald file Larrañaga was ‘texting with Pat Riley’ in the playoffs.

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