The Commercial Appeal

Miami QB King needs season-ending surgery

- Tim Reynolds

CORAL GABLES, Fla. – Miami quarterbac­k D’eriq King needs surgery to repair his right shoulder and will miss the remainder of the season, a major blow to the reeling Hurricanes and their hopes of contending in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

King was injured in the second half of Miami’s loss to Michigan State last month, a game that may end up marking the last appearance of his college career. He left the field after getting hurt, then returned and didn’t miss a series but was clearly laboring. The Hurricanes learned the following day that he likely needed surgery, but both they and King were holding out hope that rehabilita­tion would give him a chance of playing again in 2021. That hope is now gone, coach Manny Diaz said Monday.

“We’re now however many weeks out, and I think in D’eriq’s mind we’ve exhausted that opportunit­y, that possibilit­y,” Diaz said on his weekly radio show on WQAM-AM. “So, he’s going to get the surgery on his shoulder and it’s going to be Tyler Van Dyke’s team.”

Van Dyke has started each of Miami’s last two games and is in line to start again Saturday when the Hurricanes (2-3, 0-1 ACC) visit North Carolina (3-3, 2-3). The teams were the consensus top picks in the ACC’S Coastal Division race to start the season and have struggled since.

King, who was in his sixth college season – taking advantage of a redshirt year at Houston and the NCAA decision to give everyone an extra year of eligibilit­y in response to playing through a pandemic last season – completed 66% of his passes in three games for Miami this season. He entered the year widely touted as one of the nation’s top dual-threat quarterbac­ks, is the most accurate passer in Miami history and has accounted for 111 college touchdowns, 76 of them passing, 32 more rushing and three receiving.

No player in college football over the last 20 years has had as many touchdowns in each of those categories.

“That guy, as you saw in the Michigan State game, would do anything to get back on the field and be able to play for us,” Diaz said.

Later Monday, Diaz said that he and King have not discussed whether he will consider applying for a medical redshirt and asking the NCAA for a seventh year of eligibilit­y. Diaz said King made the decision over the weekend to have the surgery, which is scheduled for this week. “D’eriq can play for us as long as he wants to,” Diaz said. “But that’s going to be up to D’eriq and what his thoughts are on his career going forward.”

It’ll be two major surgeries now for King in less than a year. He underwent surgery to rebuild the ACL in his right knee in January, after getting hurt in Miami’s bowl loss to Oklahoma State to end the 2020 season. King went through his rehab and didn’t miss a game, starting for the Hurricanes against Alabama on Sept. 4 when this season began.

The Hurricanes lost that game, then beat Appalachia­n State and lost to Michigan State in the game where King was injured. Van Dyke and Jake Garcia split the snaps in Miami’s win over Central Connecticu­t State; Garcia injured an ankle in that game, needed surgery and is out until at least November.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP ?? Miami quarterbac­k D’eriq King, seen Sept. 25 needs surgery to repair his right shoulder.
LYNNE SLADKY/AP Miami quarterbac­k D’eriq King, seen Sept. 25 needs surgery to repair his right shoulder.

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