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No. 16 Hurricanes hammer Bethune-Cookman 70-13 in Mario Cristobal's debut

Henry Parrish rushes for 108 yards, 3 TDs
Mario Cristobal prepares to run out of tunnel with Miami Hurricanes for first time in 2022
Posted at 7:08 AM, Sep 04, 2022
and last updated 2022-09-04 07:11:16-04

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Mario Cristobal ran through the smoke alongside the Miami Hurricanes as they entered the field, grabbed his headset and gave someone on the sideline a hug.

It was the first of many celebratory moments in Cristobal's debut game as Miami's coach.

Henry Parrish rushed for 108 yards and three touchdowns, Tyler Van Dyke passed for two more scores and No. 16 Miami started its season by topping Bethune-Cookman 70-13 on Saturday. Miami rushed for seven touchdowns on the day, piled up 582 yards of offense and turned three takeaways into touchdowns.

Miami Hurricanes running back Henry Parrish runs for first down vs. Bethune-Cookman, Sept. 3, 2022
Miami running back Henry Parrish Jr. runs for a first down during the first half against Bethune Cookman, Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022, in Miami Gardens, Fla.

"The goal was to be 1-0 by 7:15 tonight," Cristobal said. "And that was achieved. ... We did what we had to do."

Thaddeus Franklin rushed for two scores, while Devon Perry and Terrell Walden II also ran for touchdowns for the Hurricanes (1-0).

Gilbert Frierson had an interception return for a score, while Xavier Restrepo and Michael Redding III caught the TD passes from Van Dyke — who completed 13 of 16 passes for 193 yards. Jake Garcia completed all eight of his passes for the Hurricanes in relief.

"Amazing to start the season like that," Frierson said.

For Bethune-Cookman (0-1), Que'Shawn Byrd caught a 34-yard touchdown pass from Jalon Jones.

"It gives us a measuring stick for our football team," Bethune-Cookman coach Terry Sims said. "When you play a team the caliber of the University of Miami, you have no choice but to play at your best. Our guys, I thought went out and they fought."

It was Cristobal's 12th season-opener at Miami — he had five as a player, including his redshirt year, then three as a graduate assistant and three more as a full-fledged assistant.

But this was the first, of what Miami expects to be many, with him in charge of the operation.

"The energy was through the roof," Restrepo said. "Coach Cristobal, he carries the entire team on his shoulders."

There was much to like: Van Dyke’s passes were crisp, Parrish stepped up to lead an injury-depleted running back corps, Frierson had the return touchdown, Key’Shawn Smith had three kickoff returns for 184 yards — barely stepping out 17 yards from the end zone on what would have been a return score — and the Hurricanes blocked a field goal.

There also were things that will jump off the film and needs to be corrected, such as Bethune-Cookman getting seven plays of at least 20 yards, two of those being passes that wound up going for gains of 44 and 48. And a red-zone fumble also bothered Cristobal, though he blamed himself for the particulars that went wrong on that play.

"Overall, I thought we played relatively hard," Cristobal said.