Miami Herald (Sunday)

QB Van Dyke confident he and UM will bounce back

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com

Tyler Van Dyke strode off Greentree Practice Fields for the first time in the spring Saturday with the same sort of quiet confidence and easygoing demeanor he rode to an out-of-nowhere, star-making freshman season in 2021. He took his place in front of a throng of reporters, just like a franchise quarterbac­k usually does.

He had plenty to talk about because it had been a long time since the quarterbac­k had last gotten to go through a practice. When last seen, Van Dyke was grimacing and grabbing at his right shoulder as he left the field at Hard Rock Stadium in the early stages of a season-ending blowout loss to the Pittsburgh Panthers. It was the moment his once-charmed career truly took a detour into the calamitous. It was his third time leaving a game with a shoulder injury and sealed the Miami Hurricanes’ fate. They missed out on bowl eligibilit­y for the first time since 2007.

“I’m feeling good,” Van Dyke said, more than three months after his season finally ended with the injury. “Game tomorrow, I’d play. I’d probably say I’m like 90-95 percent.”

It was the most important place to start with Van Dyke, who was the Atlantic

Coast Conference’s Rookie of the Year in 2021 and then finished only six games last season with his production plummeting in nearly every category.

It was not all there was to discuss, though.

He had tough decisions to make in the offseason and so did the program.

Van Dyke could have entered the 2023 NFL Draft or even the transfer portal and opted not to. Miami had to figure out how to fix its offense and made wholesale changes, firing offensive coordinato­r Josh Gattis and replacing him with Shannon Dawson.

“This year’s going to be the year,” said Van Dyke, still not lacking any confidence.

He came back to school, he said, because he felt he still needed “to develop in some ways and ... felt like here was the right place.”

He believes this year will be better, he said, because “guys are tired of losing and being 5-7.” There were lessons to take from last year and he believes adversity will make him better.

“I think that’s maybe not what I needed, but something that just helps me grow in many ways,” Van Dyke said. He angled his arm to make an upward, diagonal line — like the stock market when the economy is really humming — and used it to make his point. “Nobody’s career is going to be like this. There’s always ups and downs, and I think I’m just going to grow from it.”

Success will be in his hands, but also his new coordinato­r’s.

The Hurricanes’ major regression on offense last year — certainly due in part to Van Dyke’s injuries — ultimately cost Gattis his job after just one season. It also prompted a somewhat astonishin­g philosophi­cal shift for coach Mario Cristobal. For the first time, a pass-happy air raid offense — or at least an offense largely inspired by it — is coming to Coral Gables. It’s poised to be a major departure from Gattis’ power spread offense, with an emphasis on the power.

Optimism abounds in South Florida and for good reason, given the prolific passing attacks Dawson orchestrat­ed at Houston.

There are challenges: Dawson will be Van Dyke’s third OC in three years as a starter. As confident as the quarterbac­k is, there’s still a long way for Miami to go.

“It’s just communicat­ion, honestly,” Van Dyke said. “Football is football. Everybody runs the same routes and highlows the linebacker­s, read the safeties, so it’s all communicat­ion and how you communicat­e with that person.

“That’s pretty much the challenge, but Coach Dawson’s a great guy, and we connected well early and

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