Miami Herald

Williams ailing, recruiting suffers after FSU loss

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com David Wilson: 305-376-3406, @DBWilson2

The Miami Hurricanes could be missing one of their best players Saturday when they host the Virginia Tech Hokies in Miami Gardens.

James Williams, who left the Hurricanes’ 31-28 loss to the Florida State Seminoles on Saturday with a groin injury in the second quarter, is dealing with “a soft-tissue injury,” coach Manny Diaz said, and his status is still in question heading into Miami’s final game at Hard Rock Stadium in 2021.

“He was pretty stiff and sore yesterday,” Diaz said. “We’ll kind of see how it progresses throughout the week, and if it loosens up, he’ll be good for Saturday.”

The 6-foot-5, 224-pound safety, who was limited in practice last week by an apparent arm injury, initially tried to play through his groin injury Saturday before exiting the game before halftime. He tried to return in the second half and stayed on the sidelines in uniform after receiving treatment, but was never able to get on the field for the second half at Doak

Campbell Stadium.

With Williams sidelined, Avantae Williams played nearly every second-half snap opposite fellow safety Kamren Kinchens. All three are freshmen, playing in their first seasons of college football.

James Williams, who was the No. 1 safety recruit in the 247Sports.com composite rankings for the Class of 2021, has played in all 10 games this season and started the past seven. The defensive back has 31 tackles — 20 solo — with a half tackle for loss, two passes defended and two intercepti­ons, including a crucial fourth-quarter pick in Miami’s upset of the then-No. 17 Pittsburgh Panthers last month.

RECRUITING STILL STAGNANT FOR MIAMI

Recruitmen­ts are seldom decided by the outcome of one game, but the Hurricanes’ annual clash with the Seminoles always matters at least somewhat in the state’s recruiting landscape.

Another loss was a blow to Diaz’s job security and a boost to Florida State coach Mike Norvell’s. The Seminoles already had momentum on the recruiting trail, with the No. 13 class in the country, and a signature win will only help them hang onto their haul. The Hurricanes’ class sits at No. 60 and there are no obvious indication­s any of South Florida’s elite prospects will decide to stay home.

It’s only one morsel, but there was a slight indication of how things have shifted in the past few days:

There’s a new Crystal Ball on 247Sports predicting Miami Central linebacker Wesley Bissainthe, a four-star prospect and the Hurricanes’ best shot at adding a top-200 recruit before, will wind up in Tallahasse­e, albeit with low confidence from the recruiting reporter who made the pick.

It’s just the latest such developmen­t for a major Miami target, too. In the first two weeks of November, additional Crystal Balls have come in predicting blue-chip defensive linemen Shemar Stewart and Anthony Lucas to the Texas A&M Aggies, fivestar cornerback Jaheim Singletary to the Georgia Bulldogs and four-star linebacker DeMario Tolan to Florida State.

The Hurricanes still have not added a new commitment since August and have only eight players committed in their Class of 2022. Still, Diaz insists there’s no “panic,” even with the early signing period a month away.

“We’re not in any sense of panic here,” Diaz said. “The quality of the guys we have are really strong.”

Five of Miami’s eight commits are four-star prospects, although only one is a top-100 recruit and none is from South Florida. Bissainthe and Stewart, a five-star prospect from Monsignor Pace, both remain in play, as do fourstar Dillard defensive lineman Nyjalik Kelly, fourstar Plantation American Heritage cornerback Earl Little Jr. and four-star St. Thomas Aquinas interior lineman Julian Armella as relative long shots.

Four-star American Heritage defensive lineman Marvin Jones Jr., however, released a top five Sunday without the Hurricanes in it. It’s another big regional miss for Miami, which has already seen four-star Chaminade-Madonna edge rusher Kenyatta Jackson and fourstar cornerback­s Trevell Mullen and Jacolby

Spells orally commit to out-of-state programs.

CHARLESTON RAMBO CHASES MIAMI HISTORY

With six catches for 95 yards Saturday, wide receiver Charleston Rambo moved up to fifth on Miami’s all-time single-season receiving yards list with 955 yards on the season. He’s on pace to become the Hurricanes’ first 1,000yard receiver since 2013 on Saturday and, if he plays in a bowl game, he’s still on pace to pass Allen Hurns for the most receiving yards in a single season in Miami history.

Hurns finished the 2013 season with 1,162 yards. Rambo, who transferre­d from the Oklahoma Sooners in January, is on pace for 1,241.5 if he plays 13 games and 1,146 if he plays 12.

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