Miami’s offense has gone from a question mark to one of the loudest talking points in college football.
Six months after falling to Indiana in the national title game at Hard Rock Stadium, the Hurricanes are back in the national conversation - and this time it’s because of what they can do with the ball. Head coach Mario Cristobal had to replace quarterback Carson Beck, both starting outside receivers and four offensive line starters from that team, but the answer he put together has turned plenty of heads.
Cristobal brought in former Duke quarterback Darian Mensah, who threw for 3,973 yards and 34 touchdowns last season, and added Duke teammate Cooper Barkate, who led the ACC in receiving. Those moves came on top of the return of sophomore Malachi Toney, the No. 2 receiver on my top receivers list, after a freshman season in which he caught 109 passes for 1,211 yards. Miami also has 1,192-yard rusher Mark Fletcher Jr. back in the mix, giving the Hurricanes a skill group that looks dangerous all over the field.
That’s enough for On3 analyst J.D. PicKell to put Miami at No. 1 in his top 10 offenses for the 2026 season, ahead of Oregon, Ohio State and the rest of the national field.
"You tell me how you're stopping Miami," PicKell said. "They're three or four deep at running back. They've got not one but two wide receiver ones in Malachi Toney and Cooper Barkate."
The biggest pushback, of course, comes up front. Miami has to replace four starters on the offensive line, and five-star freshman Jackson Cantwell is expected to open the season at left tackle. PicKell wasn’t buying the idea that would sink the unit, pointing straight to Cristobal and offensive line coach Alex Mirabal.
"They are not going to let that unit be the Achilles' heel," PicKell said. "Miami will reach 20 degrees in temperature as a city and freeze over, iguanas falling off the palm trees, before that ends up being a reality. If the question for your football team is a Mario Cristobal offensive line, you've got good questions."
PicKell also leaned on the system itself, crediting coordinator Shannon Dawson and noting that Beck threw for 3,800 yards in the same offense a year ago.
"Shannon Dawson is going to be able to maximize what Darian Mensah brings to the table," PicKell said. "If you can do all that with Carson Beck, what can you do with Darian Mensah?
I think they will be the best offense in college football. I think that they average right around 40 a game."
That kind of production is easy to imagine when you look at Miami’s weapons, and 40 points per game doesn’t feel like a wild number. But there’s still a real reason for caution: the line is rebuilt, and Mensah has never taken a snap for the Hurricanes. Miami also opens against Clemson early and has a November trip to Notre Dame, so the path won’t be soft.
Ohio State, meanwhile, has the cleaner case. Julian Sayin led the FBS in completion percentage while throwing for 3,610 yards and 32 touchdowns, Jeremiah Smith is the best player in the sport at any position, and the Buckeyes return an offensive line with 91 career starts. Ohio State also ranks first nationally in returning offensive success rate, and unlike Miami, it’s bringing back a proven quarterback, a proven top receiver and a proven front five from a 12-0 regular season.
PicKell’s Miami pick is easy to understand. The Hurricanes have built the deepest collection of skill talent in the ACC and maybe the country.
If the line comes together quickly, that offense has the juice to live up to the hype. But when it comes to the safest bet for No.
1, Columbus still looks like the better answer than Coral Gables.
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Day is already working on the next wave, and Christopher Vargas has emerged as the name to know in the 2028 class. The five-star has visited Columbus multiple times and seems to have a strong feel for the program, which is why Ohio State is in a promising spot, even if nothing is locked in yet. For a staff that likes to stay ahead of the curve at quarterback, this is one of those recruitments that could shape the depth chart well beyond the current era. [Read more 🡒]
