Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Receiving corps is deep

Richards leads one of the nation’s most talented groups

- By Christy Cabrera Chirinos Staff writer

CORAL GABLES — Ahmmon Richards lined up on one side. Lawrence Cager on the other. In the slot, Jeff Thomas stood poised, ready to run.

During the opening minutes of Thursday’s practice — their last before a closed Saturday night scrimmage at Hard Rock Stadium — the Hurricanes put a trio of speedy, veteran receivers on the field to run drills with the No. 1 offense.

Standing off to the side, another group of nearly equally talented receivers, including speedster Mike Harley, clutch playmaker Darrell Langham and four-star freshmen Mark Pope, Marquez Ezzard and Brian Hightower waited its turn.

As the Hurricanes continue working toward their Sept. 2 season opener against LSU in Arlington, Texas as part of the AdvoCare they know when gametime rolls around, they’ll be able to feature one of the deepest, most talented receiving corps in the ACC, if not the nation.

And that means receivers coach Ron Dugans has the enviable task of trying to formulate a depth chart, something he joked this week he’s not even close to ready to doing, not with the kind of players he’s working with every day.

“It’s a dogfight right now, kind of up in the air,” Dugans said on Wednesday. “I tell these guys I don’t have a depth chart. I got an organizati­onal chart. That’s how we’re doing it the whole camp until somebody breaks away.”

Through six practices, players are rotating at the No. 1 spot across several positions for the HurriClass­ic,

 ?? MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ahmmon Richards battled a number of injuries last season, but still finished as the team’s third-leading receiver.
MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES Ahmmon Richards battled a number of injuries last season, but still finished as the team’s third-leading receiver.

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