Hoosier Huddle

Know Your National Championship Opponent: No. 10 Miami Hurricanes

The Miami Hurricanes cheerleaders celebrate their Vrbo Fiesta Bowl victory over Ole Miss. Under Coach Mario Cristobal, the team boasts a 10-3 record for the season and significant statistics, including strong defensive performances. Notably, this marks Miami's first National Championship Game appearance since 2001, adding pressure and excitement to the match.
Miami
Miami Hurricanes cheerleaders celebrate the team’s Vrbo Fiesta Bowl win over the Ole Miss Rebels at State Farm Stadium on Jan. 8, 2026.

Head Coach: Mario Cristobal

Overall: 97-78 including 35-18 at Miami

Bowl Appearances at Miami: Three

2024 Record: 10-3 (6-2) and loss in the Pop-Tarts Bowl

Mascot: Sebastian the Ibis

Colors: Orange, Green and White

Outfitter: adidas

National Titles: Five

Conference Titles: Nine (most recently in 2003)

Heisman Winners: Vinny Testaverde (1986) and Gino Torretta (1992)

Last Week: 31-27 win over Ole Miss in the Fiesta Bowl

Betting Information

Indiana (-8.5) vs. Miami | Total of 48.5

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Miami Statistical Leaders

Passing: Carson Beck – 319 of 435 (73.3 percent) for 3,581 yards with 29 TDs and 11 INTs

Rushing: Mark Fletcher Jr. – 199 carries for 1,080 yards with 10 TDs

Receiving: Malachi Toney – 99 receptions for 1089 yards with 9 TDs

Tackles: Mohamed Toure – 73 total with 32 solo

Miami Stat of the Week

In the two losses for the Miami Hurricanes this season, Carson Beck had six interceptions (four against Louisville and two against SMU). Miami is +15 in turnover margin in wins and -4 in losses.

Hurricanes’ Talking Points

  1. Owning the Trenches

Mario Cristobal strongly believes that the most physical team will set the tone and win more games than they lose. He set about building his Miami program in the trenches and his fourth Hurricanes’ squad is realizing his vision. “He wants us to always believe we’re the alphas and just continue to be the most violent team,” running back Mark Fletcher Jr. said after Miami won at Texas A&M.

“That just goes to how we approach practice, how we approach the weight room, how we approach everything we do. We want to be the most violent team in everything we do. We take pride in that.”

Miami’s offensive line averages 336 pounds and they have bullied their way to 4.25 yards per carry while the defensive front limits opponents to just 2.95 yards per rush. Now, a lot of ink has been spilled about how the Hurricanes are a smashmouth team that will physically pound you but Indiana ran the ball on 60.78% of plays while Miami runs on 53.54% (most similar to Illinois and Ohio State, if comparing to teams IU has played).

The Hurricanes are great on the defensive line, ranking 13th in sack percentage and that unit anchors a defense that surrenders the 5th-fewest points per game. Akheem Mesidor and Rueben Bain combine for 19 sacks stud defensive back Keionte Scott has 13 tackles for loss as a heat-seeking missile from the secondary. These might be the two most physical teams in the country and establishing the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball will be a key factor for both coaching staffs.

2. The Time (of possession) Has Come

The Indiana Hoosiers and Miami Hurricanes are both among the leaders nationally in the amount of time they hold possession of the ball each game. Miami is fourth with 34:06 of possession per game while Indiana is sixth at 33:15. Both teams will be doing everything possible to keep their offense on the field and wear down the opposing defense. Indiana played six teams that place in the top 50 in time of possession (Wisconsin, Illinois, Oregon, Alabama, Iowa and Ohio State). None of those were as dominant as Miami in keeping possession but the time of possession played out as follows:

IU – 39:43 vs. Illinois – 20:17

IU – 27:18 vs. Iowa – 32:42

IU – 33:10 vs. Oregon – 26:50

IU – 33:58 vs. Wisconsin – 26:02

IU – 29:47 vs. Ohio State – 30:13

IU – 34:21 vs. Alabama – 25:39

IU – 31:13 vs. Oregon – 28:47

In short, the Hoosiers have played a number of teams that excel at winning the possession battle and have really only been significantly bested by the Iowa Hawkeyes while dominating the stat against Illinois, Oregon, Wisconsin and Alabama. In comparison, Miami has played only two teams in the top 50 of time of possession: Texas A&M and Ohio State:

Miami – 26:16 vs. Texas A&M – 33:44

Miami – 33:20 vs. Ohio State – 26:40

Make of those numbers what you will but the Hurricanes went on a number of lengthy drives against Ohio State and Ole Miss and they excel on third down on both sides of the ball (17th on offense and 11th on defense).

3. Seize the Moment

The Miami Hurricanes have a storied football history but this is the school’s first National Championship Game appearance since 2001. As we all know, this season is unprecedented for the Indiana Hoosiers. Regardless of the past of the two schools, Monday night’s contest will be the biggest game and largest stage that any of these players will have played in or on. Will the players and coaches embrace the emotion and rise to the occasion or will they shrivel under the bright lights with the sport’s ultimate prize on the line?

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