Miami Hurricanes quarterback Tyler Van Dyke had the possibility to play in entrance of an enormous, hostile crowd at Texas A&M final Saturday.
Those forms of environments are what he prefers. He advised reporters final week that he likes “going into another team’s stadium and making plays, making the crowd quiet.”
The third-year sophomore expanded on that reply when talking to former Florida Gators and NFL quarterback Jordan Palmer on his present, The Room.
“We don’t really have much of a college atmosphere because we play at Hard Rock,” Van Dyke stated within the interview, which was posted on Jordan Palmer’s TikTok on Saturday. “So we’re about 25 minutes away from campus, so a variety of college students don’t go up a lot of the sport except it’s an enormous sport.
“That’s why I like going into away stadiums and seeing that college atmosphere and making the crowd quiet.”
Palmer agreed with Van Dyke that highway video games had been preferable.
“When you silence a crowd, when you throw a touchdown pass on third and long — it was just as loud as it gets, instantly it just got quiet and the only people celebrating are the people who actually put in the work with you: the coaching staff, the trainers, equipment managers, people on the sideline and the players,” Palmer stated. “Some of my most memorable games I was a part of were just like huge road wins.”
Playing in entrance of greater than 107,000 individuals at Kyle Field on Saturday, Van Dyke went 21 of 41 for 217 yards. Miami misplaced 17-9 of their first highway sport of the season. Van Dyke has a profession document of 2-3 on the highway, with losses to Florida State, Texas A&M and UNC, and wins over Duke and Pittsburgh.
Miami has introduced a complete attendance of 103,217 individuals for its first two video games of the season, which had been towards Bethune-Cookman and Southern Miss. The season-opener drew 56,795 followers whereas the second sport drew 46,422. Hard Rock Stadium, which is about 22 miles from UM’s Hecht Athletic Center, has an official capability of 65,326.
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Source: www.bostonherald.com