Florida State Looks More Fragile Than Ever Under Mike Norvell

The Florida State Seminoles are facing a pivotal season in 2026 with a revamped roster heavily reliant on transfers, yet significant challenges remain in fulfilling championship expectations.

Mike Norvell’s Florida State tenure has been a study in extremes, and 2026 looks like another season built on shaky ground. After going 38-15 in four years at Memphis, Norvell arrived in Tallahassee and spent two seasons crawling before Florida State caught fire, winning 23 games across 2022 and 2023. Since then, though, the bottom has dropped out again, with the Seminoles winning just seven games over the past two seasons.

That’s why the roster keeps getting turned over. Florida State is set to have 17 transfers in the 2-deep again in 2026, a sign of how hard Norvell is leaning on the portal to keep the program afloat. The problem, as the source material frames it, is that the same strategy that has helped him patch holes has also left the culture in rough shape inside the field house at Doak Campbell Stadium.

The numbers paint a mixed picture. Florida State’s high school recruiting has not been nearly as poor as it’s been made out to be; over the past three years, the Seminoles rank 16th in prep signings and 14th in transfer portal additions, averaging out to 15th overall.

But the development side is where things get weird. Over the past couple of years, Florida State has produced only eight NFL players, and only eight have stuck it out from the 2025 and 2026 NFL Draft classes.

The source points to the talent pipeline that once produced names like Jameis Winston and Jared Verse and asks, “Right now it’s Deuce Robinson and who else?”

Even with that talent base, the team projection doesn’t scream contender. Bill Connelly’s preseason SP+ slots Florida State 35th overall, with the offense 45th, the defense 30th and the kicking game 94th.

In other words, Norvell is working with what the source describes as the 15th-best players, but the product on the field is only the 35th-best team. Once again, the staff is changing too: Gus Malzahn is out, and Tim Harris Jr. has been promoted to offensive coordinator.

The portal-heavy approach is also at the center of Florida State’s bottleneck. The Seminoles used it to jump from 5-7 to 10-3, then dipped back in to reach 13-1, and they were “Jordan Travis ’ leg away from competing for a national championship.” But the source argues that the constant roster churn has come at a cost, especially when injuries hit and the starting quarterback goes down.

The schedule doesn’t offer much breathing room either. Florida State’s strength of schedule is 45th of 138 in FBS, according to CFB News.

The Seminoles open with SMU before an off week, then travel to Tuscaloosa to face the Alabama Crimson Tide. After a cupcake, they host UVA, then go on consecutive road trips to Louisville and Miami.

Clemson, Pitt and Florida are also waiting on the back half of the schedule.

There is still some real talent on the roster. Florida State returns 57% production, which ranks 48th in FBS.

Deuce Robinson and Mandrell Desir are the only Seminoles on the On3 top-100 list, with Robinson coming in at 74th and Desir at 97th. Robinson is also Florida State’s lone Athlon preseason All-ACC selection.

The transfer class fills a lot of the gaps. Florida State brought in four transfers who could start on the offensive line, along with quarterback Ashton Daniels from Auburn and running back Quintrevion Wisner from Texas.

Daniels arrives with the same issue that has followed other FSU quarterbacks, namely a tendency to throw interceptions. Robinson is coming off a 2025 season in which he averaged 19.3 yards per catch and scored six touchdowns, while Wisner brings more than four yards per carry and three touchdowns from Texas.

There’s help on defense too. Desir returns after posting 7.5 tackles for loss and 6.5 sacks. Southern Miss transfer linebacker Chris Jones had 9.5 tackles for loss and 3.5 sacks a year ago, and defensive back Nehemiah Chandler added 13 pass breakups and two interceptions last season.

Norvell’s paycheck remains part of the story as well. After the 13-1 season and the Alabama opener with Nick Saban’s retirement, he landed a raise to $10.3 million per year. The source notes that Florida State has won only six games per season under Norvell, which works out to $1.7 million per win and ranks second only to Bill Belichick in the “grand theft coaching category.”

The expectation inside this framework is simple: eight wins or better has to be the goal. That would still be a far cry from where Florida State stood three seasons ago, when it looked like a national championship program. The larger lesson, as the source puts it, is the danger of living by the transfer portal and dying by it.

Even with the talent level, the forecast is murky. The source sees Florida State landing somewhere between 5-7 and 7-5, and while the Seminoles have the 15th-best grouping of talent in the country, there’s real doubt that Daniels, four new offensive linemen, a new running back and another dozen newcomers on defense will mesh fast enough to turn this into a revival under Norvell.

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