Florida States Rebuilt Secondary Still Has Everything To Prove

FSU's defensive backfield faces a crucial test of talent and experience after a major overhaul, aiming to evolve into a formidable force this coming season.

Florida State’s secondary enters 2026 with a very different look, and that’s putting it mildly. No defensive position group on the roster took more of a hit in the offseason, but Mike Norvell and his staff responded by loading up on talent through both high school recruiting and the transfer portal. The result is a back end that could become one of the ACC’s best pass defenses - or a young, shaky unit that gets stressed all season long.

The 2025 version of the secondary was hard to pin down. It showed up against Alabama’s receivers, then got carved up by Virginia and Pitt not long after.

The turnover production also lagged for much of the year, even after Tony White and his staff made ball disruption a major talking point. By the end, Florida State clearly needed a reset, and that is exactly what it pursued.

At cornerback, the biggest name is R-Jr. Ja’Bril Rawls.

He missed the finish to last season with an injury, but through his first seven games he was one of Florida State’s best defenders. Norvell’s staff clearly believes there’s another level coming, and Rawls’ status as one of the most expensive players on the Seminole roster backs that up.

He’s also one of three Florida State player representatives at ACC Kickoff, which says plenty about where he stands in the program.

The other returning corner to watch is Sr. Quindarrius Jones.

Like Rawls, he flashed early before an injury ended his season, and now the senior is in a true prove-it year. His size and athletic ability have never been the issue.

The next step will come under a new cornerbacks coach, and Jones will need to show NFL teams he can turn those traits into consistent play.

Florida State also brought in a major portal piece in R-So Nehemiah Chandler. The Jacksonville native spent a redshirt year at Georgia Tech, then moved to South Alabama and broke out, earning First-Team All-Sun Belt honors after starting 11 of 12 games and averaging more than one pass breakup per game. He was one of the Seminoles’ top portal priorities, and his versatility should help him get on the field quickly.

The freshman to know at corner is Chuck Kennon, Florida State’s highest-rated recruit in the 2026 class. He arrives with a P4 frame and the kind of size that could earn him early snaps if he proves ready. The program has had plenty of highly touted prospects come through lately without much payoff, and Kennon will try to be the one who changes that trend.

Safety brings its own mix of certainty and questions. The main addition is So.

Ma’Khi Jones, who comes over from Duke after playing in all 14 games and logging more than 300 snaps for an ACC championship team. With overlap between the Florida State and Duke personnel circles, including general manager of player personnel John Garrett, the staff made sure Jones landed in Tallahassee.

He looks like the answer to the opening left by Shyheim Brown’s departure.

R-Jr. K.J.

Kirkland is the top returning safety and should be right in the mix for a starting job. He’s played 24 games over the last two seasons and has tape that shows both the good and the bad.

Even so, he should be a regular presence on the field and could also grow into more of a leadership role in his fourth year with the program.

Florida State added two more new faces at safety in R-So CJ Richard Jr and Jr. Karson Hobbs.

Richard Jr. arrived late after spending 2025 at Illinois State, where he was part of a team that reached the FCS title game. The Seminoles clearly liked what they saw, because he committed two days after entering the portal.

Hobbs, meanwhile, comes from Notre Dame after seeing limited action in two seasons. At 6’1” and 189 pounds, he has the size and athletic profile to move around the back line, though there’s risk attached after the Irish let him go.

The rover spot may be the most important one in the group, and R-Sr. Ashlynd Barker looks like the likely fit after Earl Little Jr. moved on.

Barker has the frame for it at 6’3” and 217 pounds, and he already has nine starts in White’s defense from 2025. The issue has been consistency, but Florida State will still need him to handle a heavy workload.

Behind him, R-Fr. Zae Thomas is the name to keep in mind.

There isn’t much tape to go on yet, but his length and physical style could make him a useful option. The South Florida native is also 6’3” and split time between corner and safety in high school, so easing him into the rover role could be a path to getting him on the field in year two.

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Florida States 2026 season already looks like the kind that can expose every weakness in a hurry. After a 5-7 finish in 2025, Mike Norvell is heading into a year loaded with pressure, and the schedule does him few favors. The Seminoles are set to see Alabama early in the year in Tuscaloosa, a sharp reminder that one good win in Tallahassee last season will not buy much margin for error now.

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Florida State Just Made An Early Move For A Major QB Target

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Dyson already has a growing list of suitors, with offers from several major programs and recent visits elsewhere, so the Seminoles are still early in the process. Even so, getting him on campus this quickly after entering the mix gave Florida State a useful first impression, and it now has a chance to keep building that relationship as the recruitment develops. [Read more 🡒]