Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

King quickly showing intangible­s, leadership skills as ’Canes’ new QB

- By David Furones

Beyond Miami Hurricanes quarterbac­k D’Eriq King’s on-field abilities, intangible­s such as his leadership qualities have also been lauded byUMcoachM­anny Diaz and others on the coaching staff.

“I just love theway he interacts with the players on his team,” Diaz told 560-AMon Tuesday morning. “There’s the ball stuff and what he can do playing quarterbac­k, but I always see him after practice hanging out with three or four different guys. And I don’t know what they’re talking about, but they’re just doing something andit’s always a different group of guys.

“Last night, it was three offensive linemen. Then, the day before that, it might be three defensive players.”

Since transferri­ng from Houston for his redshirt senior season, King has earned the respect of his peers and his coaches ahead of the Hurricanes’ opener Thursday night againstUAB atHard Rock Stadium.

“He’s just a quarterbac­k who seems to drawpeople toward him,” Diaz said. “Great leadership ability, but it’s not [an] overt, rah-rah Hollywood speech. He just seems like somebody who really brings our team together.”

Miami cornerback­s coach Mike Rumph also shared a story earlier in training camp about howthe defensewas surprised to see

Kingwatchi­ng one of their defensivew­alkthrough­s at a time when he didn’t have to be around team facilities. Rumph learned later that it was because the Hurricanes were working on a defense that had given King trouble, so he wanted to study it to learn howto attack it.

“I think it’s growing up as a coach’s kid— I [was] around ball ever since Iwas 5 years old,” King said after Tuesday’s practice. “My parents, I think they instilled leadership to all their kids. It wasn’t me doing anything different trying to stand out. It was doing what I needed to do to have a good practice that day. Doing things like that makes you a better football player.”

Making that sort of extra effort is a positive influence on redshirt junior backup quarterbac­k N’Kosi Perry, who has been in and out of starting duties over the past two seasons, working with JarrenWill­iams last season andMalik Rosier in 2018.

On Monday, Perry was officially named the second-string quarterbac­k to King, as expected, with Miami’s release of its depth chart.

“I’m really proud ofN’Kosi,” Diaz said. “I mean, obviously, he’s been through a lot. He’s had some super high highs in this program here — beating Florida State [in 2018]— also some not-so-great moments.

“This year, I really think his maturity level has gone to a different level. He’s really handled his business on the field and off the field. I think he’s from whatwe’re doing.

“We’ve seen him. N’Kosi can make plays in a game. We have confidence in N’Kosi if he was our quarterbac­k. He just continues to work, get better. He loves the University of Miami, loves being a Miami Hurricane, and Iwould say there’s probably not a lot of people in the country who have got a No. 2 quarterbac­k that has done some of the things that our guys has.”

With theHurrica­nes looking to splitNo. 2 running back duties behind starter Cam’Ron Harris between freshmen Jaylan Knighton and Donald Chaney Jr., Diazwas posed with the question of whether he views Knighton as more of a capable contributo­r in the passing game.

“It would be unfair to say one guy can and one guy can’t,” Diaz said. “Both those guys can do some things.

“When you’re talking about pass-catching situations, the first thing you’re talking about then is blitz pickup and being sound on who you have to pick up on blitz, then can you do it? I don’t see any vast discrepanc­ies that one guy certainly can and one guy certainly can’t. And they’ve got a great older guy to learn from in a guy like Cam Harris. Cam has seen some really good backs here before him, whether it’s Travis Homer or DeeJay Dallas. … I think we’ve got great depth there, whichwe’lldefinite­ly need in 2020.” benefiting a little

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI ATHLETICS/COURTESY ?? University of Miami quarterbac­k D’Eriq King, who transferre­d from Houston, has quickly earned a leadership role on his new team.
UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI ATHLETICS/COURTESY University of Miami quarterbac­k D’Eriq King, who transferre­d from Houston, has quickly earned a leadership role on his new team.

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