Manny Diaz May Have Found A Crucial Piece For Dukes Defense

Duke's defense is poised to make a comeback in 2026 as head coach Manny Diaz rebuilds around old challenges and new faces, with Kyon Loud emerging as a key player to watch.

Duke’s 2026 outlook starts on the defensive side, and that makes one of the Blue Devils’ quieter portal additions worth a closer look.

Manny Diaz and his staff are trying to put together a defense that can carry more of the load this fall after a 2025 season that didn’t match what Duke had built the year before. The contrast was stark: in 2024, the Blue Devils won with defense. In 2025, they were driven by offense, jumping from 26.3 points per game in 2024 to 34.6 points per game, which led the ACC.

That shift matters because Duke is now moving into 2026 without quarterback Darian Mensah or wide receiver Cooper Barkate, who were both described as arguably the best players at their positions in the ACC last season. Walker Eget, who came over from San Jose State, is projected to take over at quarterback, while Javen Nicholas from Charlotte and Jared Richardson from Penn are among the new receiver additions. But as Diaz knows well, it’s hard to know exactly how quickly portal newcomers will translate at the Power Conference level.

So the burden may fall back on the defense, just as it did in 2024 when Duke won nine games. That unit finished seventh in the ACC in opponent scoring at 24.5 points per game, while also leading the league in sacks with 43, forced fumbles with 19, and interceptions with 14. The challenge now is replacing the kind of production that came from Chandler Rivers, Wesley Williams, Vincent Anthony Jr., and former safety Terry Moore, who transferred to Ohio State.

That’s where Kyon Loud comes in.

Loud is entering his redshirt sophomore season at Duke after spending his first two college years at Montana. A product of Junipero Serra High School in California, he was a 3-star recruit and rated by the 247Sports 2024 Composite Rankings as the No. 2,850 overall player, No.

270 ATH, and No. 289 player in California. His offer list included UC Davis, Idaho, Portland State, and Montana.

At Montana, Loud quickly carved out a role in the secondary. As a freshman in 2024, the 6-foot-2 cornerback played in 13 of the Grizzlies’ 14 games and recorded 18 tackles and two pass breakups. Montana reached the FCS Playoffs that season before losing to South Dakota State in the second round.

The next year was supposed to be Loud’s chance to take over as a full-time starter, but injuries interrupted that path. In Montana’s fourth game against Idaho, he suffered a shoulder injury that sidelined him for the rest of the regular season. He finished with 25 tackles and four pass deflections before entering the transfer portal.

Loud arrives in Durham without much buzz, but there is a real opening for him to rise. He is expected to start the season as a reserve corner behind projected starters Landan Callahan and Kimari Robinson. Even so, his track record suggests he could push for more snaps if he settles in quickly.

That matters because Duke’s secondary is still a work in progress. Diaz added several other defensive backs through the portal, including Dylan Flowers from Western Kentucky, Che Ojarikre from Stanford, Patrick Smith-Young from North Texas, and Evan Smith from Northwestern. But Loud’s production stacks up well against many of those additions, especially considering how fast he became a breakout player at Montana after not drawing a Power Conference offer out of high school.

The Blue Devils still have some uncertainty in the front seven, but the secondary looks like the area that will determine how far this defense can go. Diaz and defensive coordinator Jonathan Patke have shown they can make it work before. Diaz has already posted a nine-win season and delivered Duke’s first ACC Championship since 1989.

Now the question is whether this group can come together quickly enough to give Duke a reliable coverage unit in the ACC. Loud may not be the most obvious name in the room, but he has a clear path to becoming a steady contributor.

Keep an eye on Kyon Loud throughout training camp.

In Other News...

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The pipeline does not stop there, either. A fresh wave of Duke names is headed to Summer League, with Cameron Boozer, Isaiah Evans, Maliq Brown, Trevor Keels, Cam Reddish, DJ Steward and Sion James all set to suit up for different teams, while former Duke captain Amile Jefferson will coach Bostons Summer League group. For a program that has long measured its reach by how often its players show up in the league, this is one of those stretches that keeps Duke visible everywhere at once. [Read more 🡒]