The Miami Hurricanes are lining up an offense that should scare just about everybody in 2026. Duke transfer Darian Mensah is coming off a 2025 season in which he threw for nearly 4,000 yards, Mark Fletcher topped 1,000 rushing yards, and wideouts Malachi Toney and Cooper Barkate are both fresh off 1,000-yard seasons of their own.
But the biggest question mark sits up front. Miami’s offensive line is set to be a new-look group, and it comes with plenty of uncertainty.
Samson Okunlola and Ryan Rodriguez are projected to become full-time starters for the first time in their careers, Max Buchanan is moving into a starting job in his second year, and true freshman Jackson Cantwell is expected to start as well. Matthew McCoy is the one lineman with real starting experience, having played 1,427 offensive snaps mostly at left guard.
In 2026, he is expected to shift to offensive tackle.
That makes the Hurricanes’ regular-season schedule a little more interesting, because there are some nasty defensive players waiting on the other side. Miami already dealt with plenty of top-end defenders in 2025, including Notre Dame CB Leonard Moore, Notre Dame DB Adon Shuler, Florida CB Devin Moore, Florida LB Myles Graham, Florida State DT Darrell Jackson, Louisville DE Clev Lubin, NC State DT Brandon Cleveland, and Pitt LB Kyle Louis and Pitt LB Rasheem Biles.
Looking ahead, here are the five defensive players Miami’s offense will have to worry about most in 2026.
No. 5: Wake Forest DE Langston Hardy
Hardy checks in at 6-4, 250 and enters the year as a redshirt senior with 1,330 career defensive snaps under his belt. In 2025, the Connecticut transfer was a real problem for offenses, posting 67 tackles, 17 tackles for loss, seven sacks and 38 quarterback pressures. PFF also credited him with 10 missed tackles.
He’s not the flashiest edge rusher on the board, but he gets after it with length, effort and a motor that keeps him around the football. Hardy does a steady job setting the edge against the run, and when he gets a clean first step, he usually finishes the rep. He’s especially effective as a pass rusher when Wake Forest uses him in stunt and twist packages.
No. 4: Clemson DE Will Heldt
Heldt brings a big frame at 6-6, 260 and enters the season as a senior with 1,443 career defensive snaps. His 2025 production was strong across the board: 46 tackles, 15.5 tackles for loss, 7.5 sacks and 45 quarterback pressures.
He’s a dependable edge presence who makes life hard in the run game thanks to his length and ability to hold the edge. As a pass rusher, he leans on second effort and keeps working when the quarterback holds the ball.
Heldt spent most of 2025 working against opposing right tackles, though he can also line up across from the left side at times. He was especially disruptive against Troy, Furman and South Carolina, where he piled up 6.5 tackles for loss, 3.5 sacks and 13 pressures.
The next step is sharpening his pass-rush fluidity.
No. 3: North Carolina DE Melkart Abou Jaoude
At 6-5, 260, Jaoude is a redshirt senior with 1,367 career defensive snaps and one of the best underdog stories in college football. He started as a walk-on at Delaware, where he had 6.5 sacks in 2024, then moved up to North Carolina and kept producing.
In 2025, he finished with 47 tackles, 12 tackles for loss, 10.5 sacks, one forced fumble and 42 quarterback pressures. PFF said he missed only four tackles.
Jaoude plays with the kind of hunger you expect from someone who had to earn everything. He’s the best pure pass rusher among the defensive linemen on this list, and he finished the regular season ranked fifth nationally in sacks at North Carolina in 2025.
No. 2: Notre Dame DB Adon Shuler
Shuler is listed at 6-0, 202 and enters his junior season with 1,481 career defensive snaps. He’s one of the most explosive hitters in the country at safety, and he’s already shown he can do a little bit of everything.
In 2025, he had 53 tackles, two interceptions, two forced fumbles and five passes defended. PFF noted that he missed 12 tackles, was targeted 28 times in coverage and allowed 18 catches for 172 yards and one touchdown.
What makes Shuler so dangerous is the range of jobs he can handle. He can play in the box and help against the run, blitz as an extra rusher and punish receivers who wander into his area.
He’s also solid in coverage, especially underneath. He plays fast, physical football and gives Notre Dame a tone-setter on the back end.
No. 1: Notre Dame CB Leonard Moore
Moore is the headliner. The 6-2, 195 junior has 1,368 career defensive snaps and looks like a lock to be a top ten pick in the 2027 NFL Draft.
In 2025, he put up 31 tackles, five interceptions, one forced fumble and seven passes defended. PFF said he missed seven tackles, was targeted 48 times and allowed 26 receptions for 201 yards and three touchdowns.
Moore is the kind of corner who can erase a receiver. He has length, elite ball skills and the versatility to play both man and off coverage.
He also knows how to bait quarterbacks into bad throws. When Miami meets Notre Dame in early November, the matchup to watch could be Moore lined up across from slot receiver Malachi Toney in what should be an epic battle.
In Other News...
Miami Arrives At ACC Kickoff With No More Room For Doubt
Miamis trip to the 2026 ACC Football Kickoff arrives with the kind of expectations that only come when a program has spent enough time circling the same summit. Mario Cristobal, Darian Mensah and Mohamed Toure are among the faces carrying that message in Charlotte, where the Hurricanes are being asked to talk about a season that has less to do with proving they belong and more to do with finally cashing in on the talent and momentum around them.
The backdrop is simple enough: Miami wants its first ACC championship and a real College Football Playoff push, and this week is the leagues annual stage for sorting contenders from hopefuls. The schedule for the kickoff event gives the Hurricanes a chance to keep that conversation going, but the larger question hangs over everything they say and do - whether this is the year the program turns the noise around it into something far more permanent. [Read more 🡒]
Miami Just Got More Validation On A Commit Cristobal Already Loved
Jayvon Dawsons commitment gave Miami a promising edge-rushing addition from Palm Beach County, and it also served as another sign that the Hurricanes may have landed a player whose stock was still climbing. The coaching staff already liked Dawson for the things that tend to travel well from recruiting board to Saturdays: his physical traits, his work ethic and the competitive edge he brings off the edge.
The latest evaluation only sharpens that picture. Dawson has moved into the conversation with some of the better prospects in Florida and among the nations top edge rushers, a boost that fits the way Miami has talked about him since the start. For a program trying to stack local talent and build depth at a premium position, it is the kind of validation that matters even before he takes a snap. [Read more 🡒]
Miami QB Darian Mensah Just Landed A Stunning New NIL Status
On3s latest overhaul of its NIL valuation model has already reshuffled the college football money conversation, and Miami quarterback Darian Mensah is right at the center of it. The new system is built on current deal values rather than the old algorithm-based approach, giving a more immediate look at what top players are actually commanding in the marketplace.
For Miami, the headline is less about the methodology and more about the company Mensah now keeps at the top of the sports NIL pecking order. The updated rankings put him No. 1 in the country, a notable marker for a Hurricanes program that has leaned heavily into the modern roster-building era and now has a quarterback whose off-field value matches the attention surrounding him. [Read more 🡒]
