Clemson Just Got Pulled Into A Brutal New ACC Debate

Miami Hurricanes poised to redefine dominance in the ACC as Clemson's era faces pivotal challenge.

College football’s new season is still a little more than a month away, but the conversation around the ACC already has a new centerpiece.

Paul Finebaum says that team is Miami.

Appearing on McElroy and Cubelic in the Morning, the college football analyst made the case that the Hurricanes have taken over as the league’s leading program, a spot long associated with Clemson.

“I think this is the first time in a long time that Miami takes center stage,” Finebaum said. “They played for the title.

They almost won it. They are now the face of the league.”

It’s not hard to see why he went there. Clemson’s grip on the conference has started to loosen, and Miami’s 2025 run put the Hurricanes back in the middle of the national picture. The 2026 ESPN FPI still features a familiar name in the top 10, but the ACC may be shifting toward a different power.

Miami’s path back into that conversation wasn’t immediate. Mario Cristobal had two rough seasons to open his tenure in South Beach. Then 2024 brought a more recognizable Hurricanes team, one that won 10 regular-season games and the Florida Cup.

The roster moves only added to the momentum. Miami brought in Carson Beck from Georgia through the transfer portal, and he became a key piece of the run alongside Malachi Toney.

From there, the Hurricanes forced their way into the College Football Playoff without winning the ACC, then ripped off a huge postseason stretch. They won at Texas A&M, knocked off defending champion Ohio State and then beat a resurgent Ole Miss team to reach the national title game.

Still, if Miami is going to claim the ACC’s top spot in a lasting way, the Hurricanes have more to prove. Finebaum’s argument comes with a catch: they need a conference title this year, and they can’t afford a step back.

The good news for Miami is that the roster keeps getting stronger. After landing Darian Mensah in the transfer portal, the Hurricanes have a real shot to chase the championship again.

So the question hanging over the league is simple: Miami is clearly on the rise, but have the Hurricanes truly become the face of the ACC?

In Other News...

Clemson Just Got A Major Test In Its Tampering Fight

Clemsons tampering fight has moved from a recruiting gripe to a conference-level issue, with Dabo Swinney accusing Ole Miss and coach Pete Golding of going after linebacker Luke Ferrelli after he transferred from Cal to Clemson and then entered the portal again before landing in Oxford. The ACC has now stepped into the conversation, with commissioner Jim Phillips stressing that tampering needs real consequences and saying more schools should be willing to call it out publicly.

For Clemson, the next step is out of its hands for now. The school has already sent evidence to the NCAA and is waiting on a ruling, while Golding has brushed off the investigation and framed tampering as a common problem across college sports. However this one is resolved, it has become a test case for how seriously the sport is willing to police the transfer market. [Read more 🡒]

Dabo Swinney Says NCAA Change Could Reshape Clemsons Roster Chess Match

The NCAAs latest eligibility tweak is already changing how coaches think about roster management, and Dabo Swinney sees it as more than just a paperwork update. By giving athletes five years to play over five seasons and trimming back the old redshirt setup, the rule gives Clemson more room to develop players without having to treat every early-season appearance like a permanent decision. For a program that is always balancing depth, development and future roster planning, that is a meaningful shift.

Swinney said the change could make the Tigers less likely to play roster chess with young players and more likely to let them get on the field when they are ready. It also may alter the calculus for players who once would have been tempted to protect eligibility before a transfer decision, since the old incentive to sit after four games is no longer as clean-cut. For Clemson, the ripple effects could be felt across the depth chart, from veterans to the freshmen the staff wants to evaluate in real games without burning a season. [Read more 🡒]