Notre Dame May Have Found CJ Carrs Go To Target After All

As Notre Dame gears up for the 2026 season, the unexpected rise of Mylan Graham alongside CJ Carr could redefine the Fighting Irish offense.

Notre Dame’s offense is heading into 2026 with a lot of moving parts, and the wide receiver room is right in the middle of it. Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price are gone to the NFL, which has naturally pulled plenty of attention toward the backfield. But the bigger question might be who takes charge on the outside.

A lot of people would point to Jordan Faison as the answer there. J.D.

Pickell sees it differently. He believes Mylan Graham will be the real leader of the group, and he thinks Graham’s ceiling is high enough to make him one half of one of the best quarterback-wide receiver pairings in the country with CJ Carr.

Pickell ranked Carr and Graham as the No. 5 QB/WR combo in the sport for 2026, a strong vote of confidence for a duo that has not yet had the chance to prove itself on the field together. For Notre Dame fans, it’s the kind of prediction that immediately puts a spotlight on what Graham could become in South Bend.

Carr already gave people plenty to chew on in his first season as the Irish’s starting quarterback. Notre Dame came up just short of the College Football Playoff last season, but Carr still threw for 2,741 yards and 24 touchdowns, and he is projected as one of the top quarterbacks in the 2027 NFL Draft.

Graham’s path to Notre Dame has its own intrigue. He arrived over the winter from Ohio State, along with former Buckeyes teammate Quincy Porter.

Both were former 5-star prospects when they committed to Ohio State, but neither saw much playing time in Columbus. That hasn’t stopped the belief that both can make an immediate impact in South Bend.

Pickell is especially bullish on Graham. He wrote that Notre Dame “hauled in former Ohio State wide receiver Mylan Graham” and said that, despite Graham having just six career catches for 93 yards, the former four-star recruit is “bound to blossom in South Bend under the guidance of head coach Marcus Freeman.” He also described Graham as someone who “seems poised to be the next Ohio State transfer to blossom with a different team, joining the likes of Joe Burrow and Jameson Williams.”

That is lofty company, and Notre Dame would be thrilled if Graham’s production followed anything close to that kind of trajectory. At the very least, he already has some college experience under his belt, which gives him a head start as he tries to carve out a bigger role in 2026.

Carr and Graham are part of a broader list Pickell put together of the top QB/WR combinations in the country. Their pairing landed in the middle of that group, and the list includes several names that would make any defense take notice.

One other wrinkle makes this all the more interesting: in the transfer portal era, Carr and Graham might usually be at a disadvantage because they did not play together last season. But that is true for half of the combos on Pickell’s list, so Notre Dame’s duo is hardly alone in trying to build chemistry on the fly.

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