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3 takeaways from another come-from-behind win by Miami and Cam Ward

Brett Friedlander

By Brett Friedlander

Published:


Cam Ward keeps bailing No. 5 Miami out. Only this time he didnโ€™t wait until the end to do it.

The Hurricanesโ€™ star led his team to 5 second half touchdowns to rally it from a 10-point deficit and a 53-31 victory against Duke that keeps it undefeated. In the process, Ward re-ignited his own Heisman Trophy hopes by throwing for 400 yards and 5 scores against a defense that came into the game allowing the second-fewest points in the ACC.

Miami outscored the Blue Devils 36-10 in the second half to reach the 50-point mark for the fifth time in 9 games this season. The Hurricanes came into the game leading the nation in scoring offense at 46.8 points per game.

Here are 3 takeaways from the win that spoiled Duke coach Manny Diazโ€™s return to Miami โ€“ where he coached from 2019-21 โ€“ and should keep the Hurricanes in the top 5 when the first College Football Playoff rankings are announced on Tuesday:

Getting Cam going early

Maybe it was a product of the defensive look Duke was giving Miami to start the game. Or maybe Mario Cristobal was trying to get his quarterbackโ€™s name back up to the top of the list of Heisman hopefuls.

Or maybe it was a combination of the 2.

Whatever the reason, the Hurricanes unleashed Ward early on Saturday. Of the first 7 plays on their opening drive, 6 were passes. Five of them were completions for 72 yards, including a Heisman-quality 34-yard touchdown strike to Xavier Restrepo in which Ward scrambled out of trouble, bought time and finally hit his man in with a dart in the corner of the end zone.

Ward hit tight end Cam McCormick for a more conventional touchdown pass later in the first quarter on his way to a 5-touchdown performance. It was the sixth time this season in which he has thrown for 3 or more scores. And it comes a week after a pedestrian performance in which he was held without a touchdown pass in a win against Florida State.

Record-breaking Restrepo

Xavier Restrepoโ€™s 66-yard touchdown catch and run with 7:36 remaining didnโ€™t just break the game open for the Hurricanes. It also broke a record while tying another career mark.

The senior receiver took a short pass across the middle, split 2 potential Blue Devils tacklers and took off on a sprint to the end zone to give Miami a 46-31 lead. In doing so, he passed Santana Moss for first place on Miamiโ€™s all-time receiving yardage list. Moss amassed 2,547 yards from 1997-2000 before going on to a successful NFL career. With his 8146-yard performance against Duke on Saturday, Restrepo now has 2,573.

The long touchdown pass was Restrepoโ€™s eighth in the game. That increased his career total to 182, tying Mike Harley (2017-2021) for the most in Hurricanesโ€™ history.

The catch that kick-started Dukeโ€™s offense

Sometimes the smallest things can make the biggest difference in a football game. For Duke in general and quarterback Maalik Murphy in particular on Saturday it was a well-placed toe tap on the sideline by Jordan Moore.

The graduate receiver managed to get a foot down inbounds as he caught a 27-yard pass from Murphy that set up a rushing touchdown by Payton Jones and ignited what to that point had been a dormant Blue Devils offense.

Murphy completed only 1 of his first 6 passes with an interception and Miami outgained Duke 156-5 over the first 11 minutes as the Hurricanes jumped out to an early 14-0 lead. But Mooreโ€™s catch, along with completion on a slant to Eli Pancol 2 players earlier changed everything.

Murphy completed 10 of his next 12 passes for 159 yards and touchdowns to Sahmir Hagans and Jones in leading the Blue Devils to a 21-17 halftime lead. Murphy started strong in the second half by putting together another touchdown drive to increase his teamโ€™s lead before throwing a pair of interceptions that helped the Hurricanes battled back.

The Texas transfer finished the game 25-of-41 for 325 yards and 3 touchdowns. Moore also showed that heโ€™s as good with his hands as he is with feet by making an incredible, leaping 1-handed catch that led to a fourth-quarter field goal.

Brett Friedlander

Award-winning columnist Brett Friedlander has covered the ACC and college basketball since the 1980s.

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