Duke Rose Quickly Under Mike Elko. Now Manny Diaz Is Aiming To Keep That Upward Trajectory

Duke football coach Manny Diaz speaks during the Atlantic Coast Conference NCAA college football media days, Wednesday, July 24, 2024, in Charlotte, N.C. (AP Photo/Aaron Beard)
Duke football coach Manny Diaz speaks during the Atlantic Coast Conference NCAA college football media days, Wednesday, July 24, 2024, in Charlotte, N.C. (AP Photo/Aaron Beard)
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DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Duke made a quick climb under Mike Elko. Now it's up to Manny Diaz to build something more.

The former Miami head coach and Penn State defensive coordinator has taken over in Durham, leading a program that crashed in the final seasons of David Cutcliffe's long and successful tenure before winning 16 games in two seasons under Elko.

Elko left for Texas A&M as the Blue Devils prepared for their bowl game. The 50-year-old Diaz took over in December for his second stint as a head coach, the first ending when he was fired in 2021 after three seasons with the Hurricanes.

“We all learn,” Diaz said. "I've never been the same defensive coordinator twice in my career. You're always taking the lessons from the last year, the last season, the career, and applying it and trying to be a better person. No different as a coach than what you would expect and demand from your players.”

Diaz went 21-15 at Miami, including a 16-9 record in Atlantic Coast Conference games that stood second only to Clemson (22) in league wins.

He inherits a roster that lost seven offensive starters and eight on defense from last season. That list includes four Associated Press all-ACC performers, as well as quarterback Riley Leonard (transferred to Notre Dame) and running back Jordan Waters (transferred to North Carolina State).

Duke leaned into the transfer portal to add 17 graduates, including eight on the offensive line alone. This year's team is picked to finish 11th in the expanded 17-team ACC.

“We've got an outstanding group of graduate transfers and instantly transformed our team from being very young, which in way-back-when days not very long ago, might set you back for a few years,” Diaz said. “And we feel like now we’re poised to go again, and I think our players believe that as well.”

Welcome back

Diaz knows Duke's home in the “Triangle” region of North Carolina well. He coached at nearby North Carolina State from 2000-05 under Chuck Amato and had two sons born in Raleigh, about 30 minutes east of Duke's campus.

QB battle

The highest-profile position battle entering the season was between Texas transfer Maalik Murphy and returning sophomore Grayson Loftis.

But Diaz announced Monday night that Murphy had won the job.

“Maalik has earned the opportunity to be our starting quarterback with his preparation, work ethic and productivity,” Diaz said.

Murphy appeared in seven games with two starts for the playoff-bound Longhorns last year, which had followed him creating a buzz in the spring game.

“Nobody wants to be in a quarterback room that kind of just sits back and no one gets better,” Murphy said. “Everybody’s getting pushed.”

Loftis started the last five games with Leonard injured last year, winning three and leading Duke past Troy in the Birmingham Bowl as a true freshman.

Defensive carryover?

Duke safety Jaylen Stinson is one of the returning defensive starters, who are largely concentrated in the secondary. He said Diaz's success with the Nittany Lions — who finished second nationally in total defense (247.6 yards) and third in scoring defense (13.5) — was an appealing aspect of his arrival and had him envisioning what he could do in the scheme.

“Those guys were on fire last year,” Stinson said, adding: “So a lot of guys were excited to have him come here because we know what he can do.”

He said it

“Credit to Elko and everything he did here. I'm just excited to see what Coach Diaz has to bring. He seems like a coach that likes to listen, very player-oriented coach. I'm excited to see how the season goes.” — Duke receiver Jordan Moore

The schedule

Diaz's debut comes Aug. 30 against Elon at home, followed by a trip to Big Ten country to face Northwestern in the Blue Devils' top nonconference game.

The ACC schedule opens at home against rival North Carolina (Sept. 28). There's also a visit from No. 10 Florida State (Oct. 18) as reigning league champion and preseason favorite. Duke's only game against the three newly added ACC schools comes at home against SMU (Oct. 26). Duke closes the year with a Nov. 30 trip to Wake Forest.

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