Tyler Van Dyke shares belief Miami teammates have expressed in him

Matt Connollyby:Matt Connolly11/18/23

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Miami veteran quarterback Tyler Van Dyke is taking back over the Hurricanes starting QB job this weekend with freshman Emory Williams out for the season.

Van Dyke has played well at times during his career but has also had his share of struggles, including throwing six interceptions in his past three games.

Still, his teammates have faith in him, which gives him confidence heading into Saturday’s game against Louisville.

“A lot of guys have come up to me and said they have full trust in me,” Tyler Van Dyke said earlier this week. “They’ve told me, ‘You’ve done this before. We know what you’re capable of and we have full trust you can go do it on Saturday.’ So it’s been good having full support from my teammates.”

Van Dyke earned ACC Rookie of the Year honors in 2021, but he has been up and down since. Injuries have certainly contributed to his struggles, but when he has been healthy, he has played at a high level at times.

That includes earlier this year when he passed for 374 yards and five touchdowns against Texas A&M. The hope for Miami is that Van Dyke can play at a high level on Saturday against Louisville. His teammates believe he will.

“We’ve all stayed close together, even through these tough times,” Van Dyke said. “I’m so close with all the guys on offense and doing the best I can to lead them. It’s been good, even with this unfortunate circumstance.”

Tyler Van Dyke not letting football ‘consume his happiness’ after Miami fans cheer against him

While Tyler Van Dyke has had some bright moments this season and throughout his career, last weekend against Florida State was not one of them. Van Dyke completed only two of his seven passes against the Seminoles and threw an interception in the loss.

Van Dyke shared how he has handled struggles and criticism this year.

“My grandfather has been a really good person to talk to,” Van Dyke said. “He grew up an athlete, played football, baseball and coached Division 1 football and baseball, as well. So he kind of understands the situation I’m in. I’ve kind of leaned on him and my mom, my dad, you know, just just the people in my circle. So at the end of the day, I’m not gonna let football consume my happiness, you know?” 

Van Dyke and the Miami offense have been booed at times this season, but he isn’t letting that bother him.

“I love playing football and I want to accomplish my dreams of playing college football and playing in the NFL, so I’m gonna do my best and I love the game,” Van Dyke said. “But at the end of the day, I’m not gonna let that consume my happiness, you know, and I don’t want to be upset the rest of my life because football didn’t go my way. 

“I just kind of learned that throughout the process of the last few weeks and maybe that was the life lesson that God was trying to teach me. There’s things that you can be grateful for when things go badly and then because of lessons you learn from it.”