Phil Steele’s latest college football preview gives Miami a clear vote of confidence across the board.
In his 2026 magazine, Steele stacked the Hurricanes up well at nearly every spot, and the headline is simple: Miami shows up as one of the most complete teams in the country on a unit-by-unit basis. The Canes landed inside the top 15 nationally in five of Steele’s eight position-group rankings, which puts them right in the mix with the nation’s best.
Here’s how Steele sees Miami:
- Quarterback: No. 8 in the country
- Running Back: No. 4 in the country
- Wide Receiver: No. 3 in the country
- Offensive Line: No. 39 in the country
- Defensive Line: No. 6 in the country
- Linebacker: No. 17 in the country
- Defensive Back: No. 5 in the country
- Special Teams: Not ranked inside the top 65
The strongest part of Miami’s profile is the skill talent. Steele has the Hurricanes in the top 10 at quarterback, running back, and receiver, and only Oregon and Texas can match that kind of top-tier trio across those three spots.
Darian Mensah is set to guide the offense in 2026 after a 2025 season that featured 3,973 passing yards, 34 touchdowns, and six interceptions. Mark Fletcher gives Miami a proven presence on the ground after piling up 1,192 rushing yards and 12 touchdowns in 14 games last season. And at receiver, the Hurricanes return a dangerous pair of 1,000-yard targets from 2025 in Malachi Toney, who finished with 1,211 yards and 10 touchdowns, and Cooper Barkate, who posted 1,106 yards and seven scores.
The one area Steele clearly doesn’t love is the offensive line, which checks in at No. 39 nationally. That’s a unit with plenty of new faces, and the ACC comparison shows why the ranking stands out. Steele slots Miami’s offensive line behind Virginia, SMU, Virginia Tech, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Pittsburgh, and Louisville within the conference.
The group will be built around a true freshman at left tackle in former five-star recruit Jackson Cantwell. The rest of the projected starting lineup includes first-year full-time starters Samson Okunlola at left guard, Ryan Rodriguez at center, and Max Buchanan at right guard, with Matthew McCoy moving from left guard to right tackle.
Even with all that turnover, Miami’s line would still need to finish much lower than expected to end up as only the eighth-best line in the ACC.
Defensively, Steele is also high on the Hurricanes. Miami ranks No. 6 on the defensive line and No. 5 in the secondary, with linebacker as the lowest-rated group on that side at No. 17 nationally.
That overall balance is what helps explain why Miami sits seventh in Steele’s list of top teams for 2026, behind Notre Dame, Georgia, Ohio State, Texas, Indiana, and Oregon. The Hurricanes are tied with Ohio State and trail only Georgia and Indiana among teams with the most top-15 units.
Steele’s top 10 looks like this:
- Notre Dame: 6-of-8
- Georgia: 7-of-8
- Ohio State: 5-of-8
- Texas: 6-of-8
- Indiana: 7-of-8
- Oregon: 6-of-8
- Miami: 5-of-8
- Alabama: 3-of-8
- Texas Tech: 3-of-8
- BYU: 2-of-8
The rankings also underline how strong some of the other national contenders look by position. Ohio State and Oregon stand out on offense, with the Buckeyes ranked third at quarterback, 11th at running back, first at receiver, and second on the offensive line, while Oregon is first at quarterback, eighth at running back, second at receiver, and eighth on the offensive line.
On defense, Notre Dame and Oklahoma draw the most praise. The Irish are fifth on the defensive line, first at linebacker, and first in the secondary. Oklahoma comes in third on the defensive line, fourth at linebacker, and eighth at defensive back.
Within the ACC, Miami stands alone in terms of overall balance. Outside of the Hurricanes, only a handful of conference position groups crack Steele’s top 15 nationally: SMU at quarterback, Louisville and Florida State at running back, Florida State at receiver, Virginia and SMU on the offensive line, Pittsburgh and Clemson on the defensive line, Clemson and SMU at linebacker, Clemson at defensive back, and Duke on special teams.
That leaves Miami as the league’s most complete team on paper heading into 2026. Clemson has talent on defense, Florida State has skill players worth watching, and SMU has generated plenty of buzz. But Steele’s rankings make one thing clear: no ACC team stacks up as cleanly across the board as the Hurricanes.
In Other News...
Miami Just Lost A Chaminade-Madonna Playmaker To A Bitter Rival
A familiar South Florida recruiting name came off the board with a choice that will sting plenty of people around Coral Gables. Hollywood Chaminade-Madonna wide receiver Armani Strong, a four-star prospect in the 2028 class, is headed to Florida after drawing serious attention from Miami, USC, Notre Dame and Michigan, giving the Gators an early win in a battle that had plenty of local significance for the Hurricanes.
For Miami, the miss is especially notable because Strong has long been part of the South Florida talent stream the program works so hard to keep home. He enters the cycle as one of the more highly regarded receivers in the country and in Florida, while Floridas new staff under Jon Sumrall gets its first commitment of the 2028 class. Even this early, the recruiting board is already starting to show which battles the Hurricanes can afford to lose and which ones they probably cannot. [Read more 🡒]
EA Sports Just Sent Miami Fans A Clear Message About This Roster
EA Sports latest College Football 27 ratings offer a pretty clear snapshot of where Miami sits in the national conversation heading into the games July 9 launch. The Hurricanes come in at 88 overall, tied with LSU and Ole Miss and trailing a group that includes Oregon, Ohio State, Indiana, Notre Dame and Texas, which is the kind of placement that suggests respect without quite reaching the sports top shelf.
The bigger takeaway for Miami fans is how much talent the roster carries beneath that team number. The Hurricanes have 15 players rated 85 or better, with the group split across both sides of the ball, a sign that this is not just a team built around a few headline names. Early access opens July 6 for eligible players, so plenty of fans will be getting their first close look at how the roster is stacked and where the game thinks Miamis strengths really lie. [Read more 🡒]
Miami Just Lost Ground In A Key 2027 Recruiting Battle
Miamis push for one of the countrys top 2027 tight ends hit a setback this week when Anthony Cartwright III came off the board after a recruiting process that had included a look at Coral Gables. The Detroit Country Day standout had taken official visits to Miami and Oregon in June, and his profile as a Rivals four-star prospect made him a priority name for a Hurricanes staff trying to build early momentum in the class.
Cartwrights decision matters for Miami because he had been one of the marquee targets on the board at his position, and the Hurricanes had spent June trying to make a strong impression on him. His final group also included Michigan, LSU and Michigan State, so the interest was broad and the competition was real, but Miami now has to turn the page and keep working a tight end board that was already starting to take shape. [Read more 🡒]
