• Sun. Oct 6th, 2024

Heartbreaking news for Miami Hurricanes: Key player has sustain a carrier ending injury

Miami’s Running Backs Must Step Up With A Key Player Injured

How many running backs will show out this spring?

The Miami running back room has a new leader and a unique situation with a key injury keeping the starter out for spring practice.

Taking over for Tim Harris, Jr. would be Matt Merritt, who is coming over to The U from USF. He certainly has a unique experience with working knowledge of what it’s like to coach former Ohio State and NFL star Ezekiel Elliott and work with Urban Meyer, among his coaching stops.

He’s taking on a unique challenge this spring with Mark Fletcher, Jr. wearing a boot due to a Lisfranc joint injury in his foot. It’s not a quick-healing injury and Miami must move forward as if Fletcher is not even ready for the beginning of the 2024 season when it travels to Gainesville to play the Florida Gators.

That is hard to accept because Fletcher was the bell cow running back towards the end of the 2023 season, with CFB Stats showing him with 68 carries, 332 yards, and 3 touchdowns during a four-game stretch late in the season.

So, which Canes help the running back depth continue to progress until Fletcher is back and competing with his teammates? Here’s a breakdown of the position and expectations.

Which Running Back Leads The Way?

Miami's Running Backs Must Step Up With A Key Player Injured - All  Hurricanes on Sports Illustrated: News, Analysis, and More

Until otherwise proven, Henry Parrish, Jr. should be the player to watch. The fifth-year senior has plenty of experience and should be the likely starter out of the gate.

The 2023 season has Parrish with 625 yards and 6 touchdowns, and he averaged 6.3 yards per tote. Here’s the issue.

The question resides with whether Parrish can be a year-long starting runner and produce at the same level during Game 1 and Game 12. He did not accomplish that task in 2023, per Pro Football Focus grades.

Rating from 68.7% efficiency to 82.7% from the first five games he played in, the Miami running back later went through four games with grades ranging from 54% to 62.4%. That’s probably due to being banged up. Then again, that’s the point.

Can Parrish stay healthy enough to play at a high level for 12 contests? He’s the likely leader of the pack, but this probably does need to truly be a group effort; running back attrition is a reality of football in general anyway.

Do The Canes Possess Enough Depth?

At least one of Ajay AllenTreVonte’ Citizen, and Chris Johnson, Jr. must display the ability to at least compete for starter’s reps.


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