Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

TEs, young WRs look promising early in spring camp

- By Adam Lichtenste­in South Florida Sun Sentinel

CORAL GABLES — Miami offensive coordinato­r Shannon Dawson seems tired of answering questions about the tight-end production.

“Maybe y’all won’t be asking me this year about getting the ball to the tight ends,” Dawson said to reporters after answering questions about the tight ends.

The questions were there last year because Miami, a program known for sending tight ends to the NFL, had just 18 catches, 154 receiving yards and one touchdown from four tight ends.

But this year, a healthy Elijah Arroyo, a developed sophomore in Riley Williams and talented freshman Elija Lofton are some of the reasons for optimism for the position group.

“That tight end room is a lot like we talked about,” Dawson said. “It’s a lot of competitio­n in that room. … That room’s pretty talented, so we’re excited about that room, for sure.”

Arroyo has missed most of the last two seasons with a knee injury, but he is healthy and participat­ing in spring football. He had only one catch for 11 yards last season.

“Huge,” Dawson said when asked what kind of impact Arroyo could have, pausing for effect. “What else you want? If he’s healthy, he’s a dude.”

Williams led Miami’s tight ends with 72 receiving yards and scored the group’s only touchdown. A four-star prospect coming out of Bradenton’s IMG Academy, Williams has shown promise, making some quality catches in practice.

“Riley played a lot of football last year as a true freshman,” Dawson said. “That’s hard. Everybody can be critical of guys when they’re freshmen playing at this level. I thought he did a really good job last year, but his ceiling is very, very high. Having a guy like Elijah, that is an older guy that can kind of be the post of that group, is huge.”

Dawson said Lofton, a four-star prospect from Las Vegas powerhouse Bishop Gorman, is “pretty good,” and early reviews are positive.

“He’s a great kid. I see a lot of myself in him,” Arroyo said. “He comes in, he’s ready to work, ready to learn. He treats himself as a profession­al already. Anything I’m doing, he’s on my hip. … He’s a big guy, but just to be that young and that explosive and powerful, that’s a good thing.”

 ?? JOE CAVARETTA/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Hurricanes tight end Elijah Arroyo, shown talking to the media on March 4, is healthy after dealing with a knee injury for most of the last two seasons.
JOE CAVARETTA/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Hurricanes tight end Elijah Arroyo, shown talking to the media on March 4, is healthy after dealing with a knee injury for most of the last two seasons.

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