Florida State’s offensive line is the biggest unsettled puzzle in the program heading into 2026.
Some groups came out of spring with their pecking order already clear. This one didn’t.
Mike Norvell and Herb Hand are turning over all five starters from a line that was inconsistent a year ago, and beyond left tackle, very little feels locked in. The real battlegrounds are inside, where the guard-center-guard spots could be among the most heated competitions on the roster before week zero.
That leaves the Seminoles at a crossroads. Do the blue-chip recruits finally start to pay off in a major way, or do the transfers continue to run the show in the trenches?
Last season offered a strange mix of production and frustration. Florida State finished 11th nationally in rushing yards per game and landed in the middle of the pack in sacks allowed, but the line never really felt like a unit that could seize control of a game. When the Seminoles needed a surge, a finishing blow, or even just one play to swing momentum, it usually wasn’t there.
At left tackle, the job looks built for redshirt senior Xavier Chaplin. At 6-foot-8 and more than 350 pounds, he brings the kind of size that jumps off the page, and he arrives with SEC experience after starting 12 games for Auburn last season. He still has to put everything together, but he is the anchor on the edge and will get every chance to make himself an NFL Draft name in 2026.
Behind him, redshirt sophomore Jayden Todd is a depth piece worth watching. He didn’t appear in a game in 2024 and spent most of his 2025 snaps on special teams, but now he enters a key third year with the program.
Listed at 6-foot-6 and 314 pounds, Todd has enough length to stay at tackle here and could be the top backup for Chaplin. Freshman Nikau Hepi is even more of a long-term project, but his size is impossible to ignore.
The true freshman from the NFL Academy in New Zealand checks in at 6-foot-7 and 370 pounds, and while he is unlikely to play in 2026, he’s the kind of raw prospect whose development will be worth tracking.
Left guard is where the first real opening appears. Redshirt junior Andre Otto has the inside track to start, even though the path there has not been easy.
He’s now in his fourth season at Florida State, and with no portal addition clearly separating itself as a must-start option, a strong fall could be enough to put his name in the first lineup. Sophomore Paul Bowling is the transfer who could change that.
He’s the first of three interior additions from the portal and the youngest of the group, but after an impressive freshman year at Troy, he’s making the jump to Power 4 football with a real shot to win the job. He played left guard at Troy and can also work at center, which makes him a direct threat to Otto.
Center could be the cleanest battle on paper, but it still isn’t settled. Redshirt junior Bradyn Welch-Joiner comes in with the most experience after starting 12 games at Purdue last season, and Florida State targeted him hard in the portal.
He would be the obvious choice if not for the growth of Sandman Thompson, who has quietly become one of the program’s better homegrown success stories. Thompson was unheralded out of high school, impressed in his redshirt freshman season, and looks like the Seminole most likely to break through from the recruiting pipeline at this spot.
Welch-Joiner is the favorite to open the year at center, but even if he doesn’t win that job, the staff will find a way to keep him in the starting five, likely at guard.
Right guard should belong to another transfer, redshirt senior Nate Pabst. He arrives with a strong résumé from Bowling Green, where he earned second-team All-MAC honors in 2025 and started 38 games for the Falcons. At 6-foot-7, he has the size to kick out if needed, but right guard looks like the most natural fit.
The last of the interior newcomers is freshman Jakobe Green, who profiles more as a developmental piece than an immediate answer. He’s a panhandle kid who flipped from Mississippi State last June and stayed committed to Florida State all season. If the Seminoles can get the kind of second-year jump from him that they’re hoping for, he could become part of the future at guard.
On the right side, redshirt junior Chimdia Nwaiwu has put himself in position to start at tackle after arriving late in the transfer cycle. He played in the FCS ranks last season, so the jump to the Power 4 level is a major one, but a strong spring camp moved him into pole position. The physical tools are there; the question is how fast he can adjust to the speed of this level.
Redshirt sophomore Jonathan Daniels is still in the mix too. Like several of the program’s other homegrown linemen, he’s entering his third year with plenty of potential and a real chance to beat out a transfer for a starting role.
There was even some thought he might leave via the portal last offseason because of limited playing time, but he stayed put. If Florida State can turn the Pensacola native into a reliable right tackle, that would count as a real development win for Norvell’s staff.
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For Florida State fans, the next step is a useful one: Jones is headed into summer league with a real chance to show what he can do against NBA competition. He is set to debut in the California Classic before moving on to the 2026 NBA Summer League in Las Vegas, and his early challenge is the same one every late pick faces, carving out enough trust to earn minutes and stay in the picture. [Read more 🡒]
