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Miami WR Ahmmon Richards' football career ended by neck injury

College Football, Miami Hurricanes

Miami Hurricanes wideout Ahmmon Richards' career appears to be over because of a disabling neck injury that will make playing football too high-risk a proposition for him going forward.

Miami announced the news Sunday, without revealing the exact nature of the injury or how it happened. The announcement came one day after the 16th-ranked Hurricanes rallied to win their annual rivalry game with Florida State.

Richards spent that game on the sideline, jumping and celebrating with teammates as Miami pulled off its biggest comeback win since 2003.

That will be his role going forward. Richards' career ends with 74 catches for 1,382 yards and six touchdowns. The former four-star recruit was a freshman All-American in 2016, with 49 catches for 934 receiving yards and three touchdowns.

ESPN's Todd McShay had Richards as the No. 9 wide receiver for 2019 in his preseason rankings, while Mel Kiper Jr. had him as the No. 4 wideout among underclassmen.

"I'm extremely appreciative of the university's athletic training and medical staffs for diagnosing this injury, and to the football coaches and staff for always putting my health first," Richards said in a statement distributed by the school. "I plan to continue working towards my degree at UM and look forward to the next chapter in my life."

Richards will remain on scholarship at Miami.

"While we share in Ahmmon's disappointment that his football career is over, his health must be the top priority," Miami coach Mark Richt said.

After the Miami Herald reported the extent of the injury citing a source on Saturday night, Richards retweeted a video of the locker room celebration Saturday night, with his own caption of "Last time ... mixed emotions."

Richards becomes the second prominent Miami player to see his career end with a neck injury in less than a year. Malek Young's final game was in last season's Orange Bowl, where a helmet-to-helmet collision left him in need of surgery that stabilized the C1 and C2 vertebrae at the top of his neck -- and doctors later told the cornerback that he was extremely lucky to have avoided full paralysis.

Young walked off the field after that hit, not immediately aware of the severity. And now Richards is dealing with a similar matter.

"Our faculty and staff can attest to his good-natured personality and remarkable maturity," officials at Wellington High School, Richards' alma mater in Palm Beach County -- about an hour north of Miami -- said in a statement posted to Twitter. "Ahmmon's future prospects remain bright, and we will continue to root for him."

It is a devastating blow for both Richards and the Hurricanes. Richards has long been touted as a future NFL player, someone who many thought would consider forgoing his final season of eligibility and turning pro after this season.

No freshman in the country had more receiving yards two years ago than Richards, who piled up 934 on 49 catches in 2016 -- breaking the Miami freshman record that had been held by Michael Irvin. Richards was dogged last season by leg injuries that kept him off the field for about half the year and limited his numbers when he was out there, and he had just one reception for nine yards in Miami's season opener against LSU last month.

That was his final appearance.

Richards had been listed as out on Miami's injury report since, though initially with a bone bruise in his knee.

"Ahmmon, he's a competitor," Miami safety Jaquan Johnson said earlier this season. "Everybody knows he's an elite athlete, a speedster. What they don't understand is how he lays out for the team, how he's always trying to block you, how he's trying to put you into the ground. He's got that competitive spirit in him."

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