| Miami Hurricanes football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| |||
| First season | 1926; 99 years ago | ||
| Athletic director | Dan Radakovich | ||
| Head coach | Mario Cristobal 4th season, 31–18 (.633) | ||
| Stadium | Hard Rock Stadium (capacity: 65,326) | ||
| Year built | 1987 | ||
| Location | Miami Gardens, Florida, U.S. | ||
| NCAA division | Division I FBS | ||
| Conference | ACC | ||
| All-time record | 682–393–19 (.632) | ||
| Bowl record | 19–24 (.442) | ||
| Claimed national titles | |||
| 1983,1987,1989,1991,2001 | |||
| Unclaimed national titles | |||
| 1986,1988,1990,2000 | |||
| National finalist | |||
| 1983,1986,1987,1992,1994,2001,2002 | |||
| Conference titles | |||
| Big East:1991,1992,1994,1995,1996,2000,2001,2002,2003 | |||
| Conference division titles | |||
| ACC Coastal:2017 | |||
| Heisman winners | Vinny Testaverde – 1986 Gino Torretta – 1992 | ||
| Consensus All-Americans | 36 | ||
| Rivalries | Florida (rivalry) Florida State (rivalry) Louisville (rivalry) Miami (OH) (rivalry) Nebraska (rivalry)Virginia Tech (rivalry) | ||
| Current uniform | |||
| Colors | Orange, green, and white[1] | ||
| Fight song | Miami U How-Dee-Do[2] | ||
| Mascot | Sebastian the Ibis | ||
| Marching band | Band of the Hour | ||
| Outfitter | Adidas | ||
| Website | hurricanesports.com | ||
TheMiami Hurricanes football team represents theUniversity of Miami incollege football. The Hurricanes compete in theNCAA's Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). The team is a member of theAtlantic Coast Conference (ACC), one of the fourpower conferences in college football. The program began in 1926 and joined the ACC in 2004, competing in the conference's Coastal Division from 2005 until the ACC eliminated divisions in 2023.[a]
The Miami Hurricanes are among the most storied and decorated football programs in NCAA history. Miami has won fiveAP national championships in1983,1987,1989,1991, and2001.[3] Miami is ranked fifth on the list of all-time Associated Press National Poll Championships, tied withUSC and behindAlabama,Notre Dame,Ohio State, andOklahoma.[4] Two Hurricanes,Vinny Testaverde in1986 andGino Toretta in1992, have won theHeisman Trophy. As of 2023, eight University of Miami players and four coaches have been inducted into theCollege Football Hall of Fame. Among players,Bennie Blades,Don Bosseler,Ted Hendricks,Russell Maryland,Ed Reed, Vinny Testaverde, Gino Torretta, andArnold Tucker have been inducted. Coaches inducted includeDennis Erickson,Andy Gustafson,Jack Harding, andJimmy Johnson.[5]
As of the end of the2023 season, the Miami Hurricanes have a compiled record of 663–388–19 since the program's 1926 founding. In addition to its five national championships, the University of Miami has won nine conference championships and appeared in 42 majorbowl games.[6]
As of 2024, eleven Miami Hurricanes have been inducted into theNFL'sPro Football Hall of Fame:Jim Otto in 1980, Ted Hendricks in 1990,Jim Kelly in 2002,Michael Irvin in 2007,Cortez Kennedy in 2012,Warren Sapp in 2013,Ray Lewis in 2018, Ed Reed in 2019,Edgerrin James in 2020, andDevin Hester andAndre Johnson in 2024.
Since2008, the University of Miami has played its home games atHard Rock Stadium inMiami Gardens, roughly 22 miles (35 km) north of the university's primary campus inCoral Gables. Prior to 2008, from 1937 until 2007, Miami played their home games at theMiami Orange Bowl in theLittle Havana section ofMiami, which was demolished in 2008 after 71 years of use by the NFL'sMiami Dolphins, the Hurricanes, and for other athletic and entertainment purposes.
In December 2021, the University of Miami announced the appointment ofMario Cristobal as the team's new coach. Cristobal signed a 10-year, $80 million contract with the Hurricanes.[7]


TheUniversity of Miami football program began with a freshman team in1926.[8] The program's first game was a 7–0 victory overRollins College on October 23,1926 before 304 fans.[9] Under the guidance of head coachHoward "Cub" Buck, a formerNFL player, the freshman team posted an undefeated 8–0 record in its inaugural season.[10] Two of Miami's wins in 1926 came against theUniversity of Havana,[11] one onThanksgiving Day inMiami and one inHavana, Cuba, onChristmas Day. The Hurricanes won both games against the University of Havana by an identical shutout score of 23–0. The Hurricanes won their last home game of its inaugural 1926 season against Howard College, nowSamford University, 9–7, at the University of Miami's University Stadium. Its win over Howard College was also the first Hurricane football game played onNew Year's Day.[12]
The following year, in 1927, the team adopted the "Miami Hurricanes" as the name for its athletic teams. The origins of the name are not exactly clear; some reports suggest the name was a reference to the devastating power of the1926 hurricane that postponed the program's first game by a month, and others that it was suggested by a player in response to rumors that university officials wanted to name the team after localflora orfauna.[13][14]
Varsity competition began in1927, with the Hurricanes beating Rollins, 39–3, in its first game and going on to a 3–6–1 record.[15] The team improved to 4–4–1 in1928,[16] but the program fired Buck, who was replaced prior to the1929 season withJ. Burton Rix, previously head coach atSouthern Methodist.[11] Rix's arrival was funded by a group of local businessmen.[17]
Rix was replaced the following season, in1930, byErnest Brett. The Hurricanes playedTemple in its first game outsidethe South, losing 34–0 in a game played inAtlantic City, New Jersey.[11] On October 31, 1930, the Hurricanes played in one of the nation's first night games, facingBowden College in Miami.[18]
Brett only lasted one year, andTom McCann became the program's fourth head coach in1931.[19] Under McCann, the football program experienced its most successful seasons to that date.
Following a difficult first year, the Hurricanes recorded a winning record in the1932 season and served as host to the inaugural Palm Festival, later renamed theOrange Bowl, where it defeatedManhattan College 7–0 at Moore Park in Miami.[11] A 5–1–2 campaign and another Palm Festival berth followed in1933, and in1934, the program played in its first officialbowl game, losing toBucknell in the first Orange Bowl, 26–0.[11] In 1935, a group of Hurricanes' football supporters sought to hireRed Grange as coach,[20] but the move was vetoed by PresidentBowman Foster Ashe in part because of what was perceived as the excessive $7,500 salary that Grange sought.[21]Irl Tubbs took over as head coach in 1935. The Hurricanes compiled an 11–5–2 record in his two seasons,[22] but the team failed to reach abowl game in either year.[23]
AfterIrl Tubbs resigned following the1936 season to become head coach atIowa,[24]Jack Harding was hired to serve as both head football coach andathletic director at the University of Miami.[9] In 1937, the Hurricanes moved into the brand new Burdine Municipal Stadium, renamed theOrange Bowl in 1959, located inLittle Havana just west ofDowntown Miami.[9] The following year, Miami played archrivalFlorida for the first time, defeating the Gators 19–7 atFlorida Field, and won the program's firstSouthern Intercollegiate Athletic Association title with an 8–2 record.[25]

Harding led the Hurricanes to an eight-win season in 1941 and a seven-win campaign in 1942 prior to being called away for service inWorld War II.[9]Eddie Dunn, a former star running back for the Hurricanes under Harding, stepped into the void and served as head coach during Harding's two-year absence during World War II.[26] In 1943, the Hurricanes won five games,[27] but they faltered the following year, in 1944, winning just once and losing seven and tying one game.[28]
Harding returned in 1945, and the Hurricanes improved to 9–1–1, and returned to theOrange Bowl for the first time since 1934, where they defeatedHoly Cross 13–6.[29]
Harding was succeeded byAndy Gustafson, who introduced a "drive series" offense, which featured anoption-oriented attack from theSplit-T formation that relied onzone blocking and either afullback fake or carry on every play.[30][31] Under Gustafson, the Hurricanes went 9–1–1 in1951, including a 35–13 win in its first-ever game against rivalFlorida State. The same season, the Hurricanes produced their firstAll-American,Al Carapella, and returned to theOrange Bowl, losing toClemson 15–14.[9][32] Thefollowing season, the Hurricanes won eight games and went to a bowl game in consecutive years for the first time in school history, shutting out Clemson 14–0 in a rematch at theGator Bowl.
In the later years of Gustafson's tenure, two-time All-America quarterbackGeorge Mira guided the Hurricanes to berths in the1961Liberty Bowl and the1962Gotham Bowl, where they lost both games.[33][34]
In1963, the team struggled to a 3–7 record.[35] Nevertheless, Mira, who set many of the school's passing records during his four years at Miami, appeared on the cover ofSports Illustrated and finished fifth in theHeisman Trophy voting as a senior.[9][36][37]
Following the season, Gustafson decided to step down as head coach andCharlie Tate, an assistant atGeorgia Tech, was hired to replace him.[38] Gustafson has the Hurricane record for most years as head coach (16) and most wins (93).[39][40][41]Charlie Tate's first seasons at Miami were uneventful, with the team posting a 4–5–1 record in1964[42] and a reverse 5–4–1 record in1965.[43]1966 brought the arrival ofdefensive endTed Hendricks, the only three-timeAll-American in school history,[44] andthe Hurricanes won eight games, earning a trip to theLiberty Bowl, where they defeated No. 9Virginia Tech, 14–7.[9]
In December 1966, the program wasintegrated whenAfrican-Americanwide receiver Ray Bellamy signed a letter of intent to play football at the university.[45] The Hurricanes returned to bowl play in1967, appearing in theBluebonnet Bowl, where they lost toColorado 31–21.[46] The Hurricanes had a 5–5–0 season in 1968[47] and 4–6–0 in 1969.[48]
Tate resigned as head coach two games into the1970 season, later citing burn out and fatigue from "fighting the money battle and other battles" as the basis for his decision.[49]Walt Kichefski, an assistant on Tate's staff, was elevated to head coach in the wake of Tate's resignation and coached the team to a 3–8 record in 1970.[50] He was not retained the following season.
On December 20, 1970,Fran Curci, a formerAll-American quarterback for the Hurricanes underAndy Gustafson, was named as the program's new head coach.[51] Curci's1971 team improved by a game, but rivalFlorida Gators defeated the Hurricanes in a game that came to be known as "the Gator Flop".[52] The Gators led throughout the game and were up 45–8 whenJohn Reaves threw an interception to the Hurricanes' defense with little time left in the fourth quarter. Reaves needed just 15 more passing yards to break theNCAA record for career passing yards.[53]
Lou Saban, formerly head coach of theNFL'sBuffalo Bills,Denver Broncos, andBoston Patriots,[45] was hired on December 27, 1976, as the team's new head coach.[9] The Hurricanes won only three games in1977, but Saban was able to put together a well-regarded recruiting class that included futurePro Football Hall of Fame quarterbackJim Kelly ofEast Brady, Pennsylvania.[45] Kelly had been recruited byPenn State as alinebacker and agreed to come to Miami after Saban promised him he would play quarterback.[45] Among the other 30 signees in Saban's first recruiting class were 11 future NFL players.[9] The Hurricanes improved by three games in Saban's second season andOttis Anderson emerged as an NFL talent. Anderson became the first University of Miami running back to rush for 1,000 yards in a season and led the team in rushing for three straight seasons from 1977 through 1979. Anderson set numerous school rushing records and was the Hurricanes' career rushing leader until 2014, when he was overtaken byDuke Johnson.[9] After just two seasons, Saban left after the 1978 season to take the head coaching position atArmy.[45][54]

In the wake of Saban's departure, the extensive coaching upheaval the Hurricanes faced in the prior decade, and various fiscal challenges then confronting the university, the university's board of trustees considered holding a vote on whether to reclassify the football program at theDivision I-AA level, or even eliminate it altogether.[55] University of Miami executive vice presidentJohn L. Green Jr. successfully convinced the board to giveDivision I-A football another shot. To replace Saban, the Hurricanes hiredHoward Schnellenberger, the former head coach of theBaltimore Colts from 1972 to 1974 and theoffensive coordinator for theMiami Dolphins underDon Shula. In1972, Shula and Schnellenberger led the Dolphins to the first and only undefeated,Super Bowl-winning season in NFL history.[56][57][55] In addition to his NFL experience, Schnellenberger had playedend atKentucky from 1952 to 1956 under head coachBear Bryant and then served as Bryant's offensive coordinator atAlabama from 1961 to 1965, helping the Crimson Tide win three national championships in 1961, 1964, and 1965.[58]
At the outset of his tenure,Howard Schnellenberger announced to his staff and players his intention to win anational championship within five years, a bold claim for a program that was seemingly on its last legs.[59] His five-year plan had two main priorities: installing apro-style passing offense and upgrading the talent level on the roster through a new recruiting strategy aimed at heavily targeting the best local talent from the city of Miami and the region ofSouth Florida, a strategy that would drastically change national recruiting in the state ofFlorida in the coming years.[60] On the recruiting front, Schnellenberger spoke of mining the "State of Miami", which entailed fencing off the fertileSouth Florida recruiting base from other programs and cherry-picking the rest of the nation for a few choice recruits.[61] To help with the new pro-style offense, Schnellenberger hired formerBaltimore Colts quarterbackEarl Morrall as a volunteer quarterbacks coach.[60] Schnellenberger also sought to exploit the freedom provided by Miami'sindependent schedule to gain "intersectional exposure" and make the program "national".[60]
On the field, Miami went 5–6 inSchnellenberger's debut season,[62] which was highlighted by a 26–10 upset win at No. 16Penn State in whichredshirt freshmanJim Kelly threw for 280 yards and three touchdowns in his first career start as Miami's quarterback.[63]
Schnellenberger set a bowl berth as the goal of the1980 campaign and the team made good on its head coach's expectations, winning nine games and earning a trip to the1981 Peach Bowl, where the Hurricanes defeatedVirginia Tech 20–10.[45] The bowl berth was Miami's first since 1967 and the team finished the season ranked 18th in both theAP andCoaches' Polls.
Miami continued to improve in1981, going 9–2[64] and defeating No. 1Penn State 17–14 in a late-October game at theOrange Bowl.[65] In the season's final game, the Hurricanes topped rivalNotre Dame for the first time since 1960, 37–15, finishing the season eighth in the AP Poll.[66]
Thefollowing season, the team finished with four losses following Kelly's shoulder injury.[67] Entering the1983 season—the fifth of Schnellenberger's tenure—the program had to find a replacement for the recently graduated Kelly. Ultimately, Schnellenberger choseBernie Kosar as the team's starting quarterback over fellow redshirt freshmanVinny Testaverde.[68]
The1983 Miami Hurricanes started the season unranked and lost 28–3 atFlorida in their first game, though Kosar tiedGeorge Mira's single-game school record of 25 pass completions.[45] The Hurricanes rallied by winning their next 10 games, including a 20–0 early-season shutout ofNotre Dame,[69] and earned a berth to the1984 Orange Bowl to play the undefeated, top-rankedNebraska team that had bothMike Rozier andTurner Gill.
The Orange Bowl-berth was Miami's first since 1951, but the program's first national championship remained a long shot, as the Hurricanes entered the game ranked fifth. Miami got much needed help early on New Year's Day when second-rankedTexas, the nation's other undefeated team, lost in theCotton Bowl Classic and fourth-rankedIllinois lost in theRose Bowl.[70] Behind Kosar's passing, Miami jumped out to a 17–0 lead, but Nebraska battled back and cut Miami's lead to 31–24 in the fourth quarter.[70] With 48 seconds remaining, Nebraska scored a touchdown to make it 31–30 and as the number one-ranked team in the nation needed only to kick the extra point to tie the game and put itself in position to win the national championship. Nebraska head coachTom Osborne elected to go for the win and attempt a two-point conversion instead.[70] On the ensuing play, Miamisafety Kenny Calhoun tipped away Gill's pass to receiver Jeff Smith in the end zone, saving the game and winning Miami the national championship when it leap-frogged No. 3Auburn to finish first in the final polls.[70] Although Schnellenberger had made good on his five-year plan to win a national championship, he left after the season to accept a head coaching position in theUSFL.[71]

Two weeks later, athletic directorSam Jankovich hiredOklahoma State head coachJimmy Johnson to fill the vacancy.[71] One of Jimmy Johnson's immediate priorities upon taking over as Miami head coach was to switch to a 4–3 defense.[72] Johnson wanted to implement the change for his first season, but lacking the time, personnel, and staff, he decided to postpone the switch and kept Schnellenberger's 5–2 defensive package for the 1984 season.[72]
The team struggled to an 8–5 record in Johnson's first season, losing a number of noteworthy games.[73] In the next-to-last game of the regular season, the No. 6 Hurricanes squandered a 31–0 halftime lead againstMaryland and lost 42–40 in what was then the biggest comeback in NCAA football history.[74] The following week, Miami lost 47–45 whenBoston College'sDoug Flutie connected withGerard Phelan for a 48-yardHail Mary touchdown on the final play in what has been called theHail Flutie game.[75] The Hurricanes ended the season on a three-game losing streak by dropping the1985 Fiesta Bowl toUCLA, 39–37, in a game that featured six lead changes.[76]
During the off-season, Johnson made a number of coaching changes, facilitating the switch to the 4–3 defense, and juniorVinny Testaverde succeeded early-graduateBernie Kosar at quarterback.[45]
The1985 team opened the season with a loss atFlorida[77] before winning their next four games, including a 38–0 win overCincinnati that began a then NCAA-record 58 game home winning streak,[78] heading into a matchup at No. 3Oklahoma. Facing the nation's top-rated defense, Testaverde amassed 270 yards passing and threw touchdowns toMichael Irvin andBrian Blades, while also running for an additional score, in a 27–14 win over the Sooners.[45][79] The Hurricanes ascended to number two in the rankings following a 58–7 victory overNotre Dame in the final game of the regular season,[80] earning a trip to theSugar Bowl to play the No. 8Tennessee Volunteers. With No. 1Penn State losing to Oklahoma in theOrange Bowl, Miami was in position to capture its secondnational championship, but those hopes were dashed with a lopsided 35–7 loss to Tennessee.[81]
Miami openedits 1986 season as the third-ranked team in the country and climbed to number two after winning its first three games, setting up a No. 1 vs. No. 2 showdown at the Orange Bowl against top-ranked and defending national championOklahoma.[45][79] After much pre-gametrash-talk between Oklahoma'sBrian Bosworth and Miami'sMelvin Bratton andAlonzo Highsmith, Testaverde tossed four touchdown passes in a 28–16 win.[45][79] Testaverde's performance led Oklahoma head coachBarry Switzer to remark that he had "never seen a better quarterback" in his 21 years with the Sooners, and at the conclusion of the regular season, Testaverde was awarded theHeisman Trophy with the fifth largest margin of victory in the voting's history.[82]
Having seized the number one ranking with the win over Oklahoma, the Hurricanes finished the regular season at 11–0, outscoring their opponents 420–136, and accepted a bid to the1987 Fiesta Bowl to play No. 2Penn State.[83][84] There, the team's "outlaw" image grew when playerDan Sileo was doing an interviews in a Hells Angels jacket, plus arriving in Arizona clad infatigues.Jerome Brown staged a walkout of a pre-game steak fry attended by both teams.[83] Before an estimated television audience of 70 million people,Penn State upset the heavily favored Hurricanes 14–10 to win the national championship, forcing seven turnovers, including Pete Giftopoulus' game-sealing interception of Testaverde in the end zone in the game's final seconds.[45][83][84][85]
Led byMichael Irvin and new quarterbackSteve Walsh, the1987 Miami Hurricanes won the school's second national championship and completed its first undefeated varsity season.[9] The season was highlighted by one of the most memorable games in the history of theFlorida State–Miami football rivalry. Trailing No. 4Florida State 19–3 in the third quarter atDoak Campbell Stadium, the Hurricanes rallied to take a 26–19 lead late in the fourth quarter on a 73-yard touchdown pass from Walsh to Irvin. Florida State responded with a touchdown in the final minute, but Seminoles head coachBobby Bowden opted to go for two points and the win rather than kick the extra-point for a tie, and Miami's Bubba McDowell broke up the conversion pass in the end zone to preserve the 26–25 victory.[86]
Following the 1987 season, more than 60 players on the combined rosters for the game went on to play in theNFL.[87] The 12–0 campaign was capped by a 20–14 win over the then-No. 1Oklahoma Sooners in anOrange Bowl billed as "The Game of the Century".[79] The win was Miami's third over Oklahoma in the last three seasons, accounting for Oklahoma's only losses during that time period.[79]
The Hurricanes had a then-school record 12 players from the 1987 team selected in thefollowing spring's NFL draft,[45] including Irvin andBennie Blades, but with Walsh returning in1988, the team gained the number one ranking with a season-opening 31–0 shutout of then-No. 1 Florida State at the Orange Bowl.[9] The following week, Miami scored 17 points in the final 5 minutes and 23 seconds to top No. 4Michigan 31–30 atMichigan Stadium.[88] Hopes of a repeat national championship were dashed, however, in the so-calledCatholics vs. Convicts game, with Miami dropping an emotional 31–30 loss toeventual-national champion Notre Dame on a failed two-point conversion pass in the final minute.[45][89][90]
Johnson left the program in February 1989 to become the head coach of the NFL'sDallas Cowboys,[91] ending his tenure at Miami with a 52–9 overall record and a 44–4 mark over his last four seasons.[92][45]
Despite having the support of students, players, and even the Miami police and fire departments,offensive coordinatorGary Stevens was bypassed for the head coaching job and athletic directorSam Jankovich choseDennis Erickson ofWashington State to succeedJimmy Johnson instead.[93]
In1989, Erickson became just the secondDivision I head coach to win anational championship in his first season at a school.[9][94] Erickson's1989 team, led byCraig Erickson (no relation) at quarterback,[95] rebounded from a 24–10 mid-season loss atFlorida State[96] and moved back into the national championship picture with a 27–10 win over then-top-rankedNotre Dame in the final regular-season game.[97] Miami's 33–25 win over No. 7Alabama in theSugar Bowl, combined with No. 1Colorado's loss to Notre Dame in theOrange Bowl, earned the program its third national championship.[94][98]
On October 28, 1989, Miami mascotSebastian the Ibis was tackled by a group of police officers for attempting to put outChief Osceola's flaming spear prior to Miami's game against long-standing rivalFlorida State atDoak Campbell Stadium inTallahassee. Sebastian was wearing a fireman's helmet and yellow raincoat and holding a fire extinguisher. When a police officer attempted to grab the fire extinguisher, the officer was sprayed in the chest. Sebastian was handcuffed by four officers but ultimately released. Miami quarterbackGino Torretta, who started the game in place of injuredCraig Erickson, toldESPN, "Even if we weren't bad boys, it added to the mystique that, 'Man, look, even their mascot's getting arrested.'"[99]
Miami entered thefollowing season as the number one team in the country, but a 28–21 upset loss toTy Detmer and No. 16BYU in the opener derailed both the team's national championship chances and Craig Erickson's nascent Heisman campaign.[100] Later in the year, the Hurricanes lost toNotre Dame 29–20 in a game dubbed the "Final Conflict", as Notre Dame had decided to discontinue the 27-game rivalry,[101] feeling the intensity of the series had reached an unhealthy level.[45] Miami ended the season with a 46–3Cotton Bowl Classic victory over No. 3Texas in the1991 Cotton Bowl Classic in which the team was penalized a bowl- and school-record 16 times for 202 yards, including nine unsportsmanlike conduct or personal foul penalties.[102] On one play,Randal Hill scored on a 48-yard touchdown reception and continued to sprint out of the end zone and up theCotton Bowl tunnel, where he then pretended to shoot at the Longhorns with imaginary pistols.[45] The program was widely criticized for its conduct, withWill McDonough of theBoston Globe likening the Cotton Bowl Classic display to a "wilding" andBill Walsh calling it "the most disgusting thing [he'd] ever seen in college sports".[45] After the season, theNCAA responded with the so-called "Miami Rule", which made it a 15-yard penalty to engage in excessive celebration or flagrant taunting.[45][103] Also during the off-season, Miami ended its 48-year status as anindependent and joined theBig East Conference.[104]
The1991 Hurricanes finished 12–0 and captured the program's fourth national championship in nine years behind quarterbackGino Torretta and a linebacking corps that featuredJessie Armstead andMicheal Barrow.[105] Miami's toughest test came in mid-November at then-No. 1Florida State in the initialWide Right game; with the No. 2 Hurricanes leading 17–16 in the final minute of the game, Florida State kicker Gerry Thomas' potential game-winning field goal attempt sailed "wide right" of the uprights.[106] Miami completed the second undefeated season in school history with a 22–0 shutout of No. 11Nebraska in the1992 Orange Bowl[107] and finished first in theAP Poll, splitting the national championship withCoaches' Poll champWashington.[9]
Hurricane Andrew devastated much ofSouth Florida in August 1992,[108] causing the program to relocate its preseason practice sessions north toDodgertown inVero Beach.[9] That season,Miami went 11–0 against the second-toughest schedule in the country,[109] topping No. 3Florida State inWide Right II and No. 7Penn State the following week inBeaver Stadium.[9] Meanwhile, Torretta became the second Hurricane to win theHeisman Trophy, throwing for 19 touchdowns and 3,060 yards on the season and setting 11 school passing records during his career.[9][110] Miami earned a trip to the1993 Sugar Bowl, where the top-ranked and heavily favored Hurricanes were denied a repeat national championship by No. 2Alabama, 34–13.[111][112] The Sugar Bowl loss ended the program's 29-game winning streak, which dated to 1990.[112] The Hurricanes were frequently thrown off their rhythm by Alabama's 11-man fronts. Torretta threw three interceptions, one fewer than he had all season, in what would be the only loss of his collegiate career.[113] After the 1992 season, defensive coordinatorSonny Lubick left to take the head coaching position atColorado State.[114]
Although it was not apparent at the time, the Sugar Bowl loss marked the start of a downturn in Miami's fortunes. In1993, the Hurricanes lost three games in a season for the first time since 1984,[115] failed to win the Big East for the first time since joining in 1991, and was shut out in theFiesta Bowl byArizona, still the worst loss Miami has ever suffered in a bowl game.[9] This led observers to wonder whether the Hurricanes were in decline.[45][116]
In1994, Miami defeatedGeorgia Southern in the season opener for its 58th consecutive home win, setting an NCAA record.[117] The streak, which began in 1985,was snapped two weeks later whenWashington defeated the Hurricanes 38–20 at theOrange Bowl.[118] Led byAll-American defensive tackleWarren Sapp[119] and sophomore linebackerRay Lewis,[120] the team rebounded to earn a berth in the1995 Orange Bowl, where No. 1Nebraska outscored Miami 15–0 in the final quarter to win the game, 24–17, and the national championship.[9][121]
With the threat of NCAA sanctions hovering over the program for a variety of infractions, Erickson stepped down after the 1994 season to become head coach of the NFL'sSeattle Seahawks.[122][45] Erickson departed Miami with a 63–9 record over six seasons and the highest winning percentage (.875) and most national championships (2) of any coach in school history.[123][121]


Following Erickson's departure, Miami initially pursued former University of Miami defensive coordinator and then-Colorado State head coachSonny Lubick; however, he withdrew from consideration and opted to remain with the Rams.[124] Eventually, Miami settled on another former Hurricanes defensive assistant coach, then-Dallas Cowboys defensive coordinatorButch Davis.[125]
The Hurricanes finishedDavis's first season with a record of 8–3.[126] However, on December 20, 1995, the NCAA announced that Miami would be subject to severe sanctions for numerous infractions within the athletic department.[127] The Hurricanes were forced to sit out postseason play for the first time since 1982 and docked 31 scholarships from 1996 to 1998.[127] Miami had actually self-reported the violations in 1991. However, when the Department of Education got word that school officials helped athletes fraudulently obtainPell Grants, it asked Miami to stop its own investigation while it conducted its own. Ultimately, 60 athletes were implicated, but all of them avoided criminal charges after being sent through a pretrial diversion program.[128]
In 1994, Tony Russell, a former University of Miami academic advisor, pleaded guilty to helping more than 80 student athletes, 57 of whom were football players, falsifyPell Grant applications in exchange for kickbacks from the players themselves. The scandal dated all the way back to 1989 and fraudulently secured more than $220,000 in federal grants. Federal officials later said that Russell had engineered "perhaps the largest centralized fraud ever committed" in the history of the Pell Grant program.[129][130]
In late 1995, the NCAA concluded that, in addition to the fraudulent Pell Grants facilitated by Russell, the university had also provided or allowed over $400,000 worth of other, improper payments to Miami football players. The NCAA also found that the university had failed to wholly implement its drug testing program, and permitted three football student-athletes to compete without being subject to the required disciplinary measures specified in the policy. The NCAA found that this was evidence that school officials didn't have adequate control over the football program.[131] Miami docked itself seven scholarships as part of a self-imposed sanction in 1995, and theNCAA took away another 24 scholarships over the next two years.
As a result of the scandal,Sports Illustrated'sAlexander Wolff wrote a famed and controversial cover story, arguing that Miami should at least temporarily shut down its football program.[129]
On June 21, 1996, Miami football players broke into the apartment of the captain of Miami's track team and struck him repeatedly.[132] In response, Davis suspended three key players for the coming 1996 season,[133] in which the Hurricanes finished 9–3.[134] Davis also suspended two other players who were involved in separate violent incidents.[135]
The low point for Miami came in1997 when they posted a 5–6 record, the first losing season since Howard Schnellenberger's first year in 1979.[136] The 1997 season saw the Hurricanes suffer one of the program's most humiliating losses, a 47–0 beating at the hands of in-state rivalFlorida State.[137][138]
The Hurricanes began to reassert themselves in1998, when they finished 9–3.[139] In late September, Miami was forced to postpone their game withUCLA due toHurricane Georges.[140] The game was rescheduled for December 5 and for the number 2-ranked Bruins, a trip to the national championship game was at stake. The Hurricanes rebounded from a 66–13 "caning" at the hands ofSyracuse quarterbackDonovan McNabb[141] to put up over 600 yards of total offense against UCLA en route to a stunning 49–45 victory for the Hurricanes.[142]
The following season carried high hopes and expectations for the Hurricanes. They opened the year with a 23–12 win overOhio State inEast Rutherford.[143] Early success, however, was tempered by tough losses toPenn State[144] andFlorida State[96] during a three-game losing streak. The Hurricanes rebounded to win their last four games including a 28–13 win overGeorgia Tech in theGator Bowl.[145]
In2000, Miami was shut out of theBCS National Championship Game. Despite beatingFlorida State head-to-head[146] and being ranked higher in both human polls, the Seminoles were chosen to challenge theOklahoma Sooners for the national championship.[147] The Seminoles were also chosen overWashington, who also had one loss and who had handed Miami its only loss early in the season. Washington had been ranked third or fourth in the human polls, behind Miami. The Hurricanes went into the2001 Nokia Sugar Bowl as the Big East champions and, after much pregame antics including a brawl between members of the two teams on Bourbon Street inNew Orleans, Louisiana,[148] defeatedFlorida 37–20.[149]
On January 29, 2001,Butch Davis left Miami to become head coach of theNFL'sCleveland Browns.[150]
After being turned down byWisconsin head coachBarry Alvarez, athletics directorPaul Dee promoted offensive coordinatorLarry Coker to head coach to replaceButch Davis.[151]
Angered at being snubbed by the BCS, the Hurricanes stormed through the2001 season. They opened the season with a 33–7, nationally televised rout overPenn State inBeaver Stadium.[152] Miami followed up the victory with equally decisiveRutgers,[153]Pittsburgh,[154] andTroy.[155] After building up a 4–0 record, the Hurricanes defeatedFlorida State inDoak Campbell Stadium, 49–27, ending the Seminoles' 54-game home unbeaten streak.[156] The Hurricanes then defeatedWest Virginia, 45–3,[157] andTemple, 38–0,[158] before heading toChestnut Hill to take onBoston College. In the final minute of the fourth quarter, with Miami clinging to a 12–7 lead, Boston College quarterbackBrian St. Pierre led the Eagles from their own 30-yard line all the way down to the Hurricanes' 9. With BC on the verge of a momentous upset, St. Pierre attempted a pass to receiver Ryan Read at the Miami 2-yard line. However, the ball deflected off the leg of Miami cornerbackMike Rumph, landing in the hands of defensive end Matt Walters. Walters ran ten yards with the ball before teammateEd Reed grabbed the ball out of his hands at around the Miami 20-yard line and raced the remaining 80-yards for a touchdown, resulting in an 18–7 Miami victory.[159] After surviving this scare, Miami shutout No. 14Syracuse, 59–0,[160] and defeated No. 12Washington, 65–7 in the Orange Bowl.[161] The combined 124–7 score set what theOrlando Sentinel described as an NCAA-record for the largest margin of victory over consecutive ranked opponents.[162][163]
The final hurdle to the2002 Rose BowlBCS National Championship Game was atVirginia Tech. Miami jumped on Virginia Tech early, leading 20–3 at halftime, and 26–10 in the fourth quarter. But despite being outgained by the Hurricanes by 134 yards and being dominated in time-of-possession, the Hokies never quit. Virginia Tech added a couple of late touchdowns, attempting two-point conversions on each. The first conversion was successful, pulling them to 26–18, but receiverErnest Wilford dropped a pass from quarterback Grant Noel in the end zone for the second conversion. Still, the resilient Hokies had one more chance to win the game late, taking possession of the ball at midfield and needing only a field goal to take the lead. But a diving, game-saving interception byEd Reed sealed the Miami victory, 26–24.[164] Defeating Virginia Tech earned the top-ranked Hurricanes an invitation to the2002 Rose Bowl to take on BCS No. 2Nebraska for the national championship.
In the Rose Bowl, the Hurricanes took a 34–0 halftime lead and cruised to a 37–14 win over the Huskers to capture their fifth national championship and put the finishing touches on a perfect 12–0 season.[165] The Miami defense shut downHeisman winnerEric Crouch and the vaunted Huskers offense, holding Nebraska 200 yards below its season average.Ken Dorsey andAndre Johnson were namedRose Bowl co-Most Valuable Players.[166]
Six Hurricane players earned 2001 All-American status and six players were finalists for national awards, includingMaxwell Award winner,Ken Dorsey,[167] andOutland Trophy winner,Bryant McKinnie.[168] Dorsey was also aHeisman Trophy finalist, finishing third.[167]
The2001 Miami Hurricanes are considered by some experts and historians as one of the greatest teams in college football history.[169]
Miami started the2002 season as the defending national champion and the No. 1 ranked team in the country.[170] Behind a high-powered offense led by senior quarterbackKen Dorsey, new starting running backWillis McGahee,[171] and a stout defense anchored byJonathan Vilma,[172] the Hurricanes completed their regular season schedule undefeated. The season was highlighted by a 41–16 win over rivalFlorida atBen Hill Griffin Stadium, the first regular season meeting between the rivals since 1987.[173]
The Hurricanes' toughest test was an October clash with in-state rivalFlorida State at theOrange Bowl. Miami overcame a 13-point second half deficit to defeat the Seminoles, 28–27.[174] The game was clinched whenFlorida State kickerXavier Beitia missed a 43-yard field goal, wide left, as time expired.[175] Another signature win came four weeks later when Miami dominated theTennessee Volunteers, 26–3, before a crowd of 107,745 atNeyland Stadium, considered one of the most hostile road venues in college football.[176] Miami would finish 12–0 and clinch a berth in theFiesta Bowl BCS National Championship Game after a wild 56–45 victory over Virginia Tech in which McGahee rushed for 205 yards and a school-record six touchdowns.[177] Both Dorsey and McGahee were named as finalists for the Heisman Trophy, finishing 4th and 5th, respectively.[178]
In the midst of a 34-game winning streak, Miami was a 13-point favorite going into the Fiesta Bowl match up against No. 2Ohio State. The Hurricanes took an early 7–0 lead on a 25-yard touchdown pass from Dorsey toRoscoe Parrish, but Ohio State seized control in the second quarter behind an aggressive pass rush, bolstered by constantblitzing, and a stifling rush defense. The Buckeyes held a 14–7 lead at the half, and a field goal byMike Nugent extended Ohio State's advantage to 17–7 midway through the third quarter. A touchdown run by McGahee brought the Hurricanes within 3 points, but he suffered a knee injury early in the fourth quarter.[179] Miami was able to fight back and force overtime on a 40-yard field goal by Todd Sievers on the final play of the fourth quarter. Miami scored a touchdown on its first possession in overtime on a 7-yard pass from Dorsey toKellen Winslow II, and, on Ohio State's ensuing possession, the Hurricanes appeared to have won the game, 24–17, after Buckeyes quarterbackCraig Krenzel's fourth-and-3 pass from the Miami 5 fell incomplete in the end zone. Miami players and coaches rushed the field and stadium fireworks were set off to commemorate the program's apparent sixth national championship. The celebration proved premature.[180] At the conclusion of the play, Big 12 official Terry Porter threw a flag and made a controversialpass interference call against Miami cornerbackGlenn Sharpe.[180] The penalty took the air out of Miami's sails and gave Ohio State new life, first-and-goal at the 1.[180] The Buckeyes scored a touchdown to tie it at 24–24 at the end of the first overtime, andMaurice Clarett's 5-yard touchdown run in the second overtime gave Ohio State a 31–24 lead.[180] Miami's ensuing possession saw Dorsey briefly knocked out of the game after a hit from linebackerMatt Wilhelm.[180] After backup quarterbackDerrick Crudup completed an 8-yard pass on third down, Dorsey re-entered and converted the crucial fourth-and-3 with a 7-yard completion to Winslow.[180] Miami then drove to the Ohio State 2 yard-line, but was held to one yard on its next three plays, givingOhio State the national championship.[181]
Miami suffered through some offensive struggles in2003 behind new quarterbackBrock Berlin. A blowout loss atVirginia Tech in early November ended Miami's 39-game regular season winning streak[182] and a loss the following week toTennessee[183] ended Miami's national championship aspirations. The Hurricanes rebounded to win the Big East Conference championship and finish the season 11–2[184] with a2004 Orange Bowl victory overFlorida State.[185]
Miami joined theACC in 2004.[186] Despite three conference losses, the Hurricanes ended the season with aPeach Bowl victory over rivalFlorida.[187]
The2005 season marked the debut ofKyle Wright as Miami's starting quarterback, although the much-ballyhooed Wright would struggle with consistency during the season with much of Miami's success that year fueled by its defense.[188] After a loss toFlorida State after placekick holder Brian Monroe bobbled the snap for what would have been a game-tying field goal attempt,[189] Miami would win eight straight games, including a road win over No. 3Virginia Tech,[190] only to stumble two weeks later against underdogGeorgia Tech.[191] Miami's second conference loss of the season cost it a place in the inaugural ACC Championship game and it competed instead in thePeach Bowl, where it lost toLSU, 40–3.[192]
2005 also saw the program embroiled in more controversy when it was reported several Miami football players had recorded a rap song in 2004 that contained lewd sexual references.[193] The song, recorded by an informal group that called itself "7th Floor Crew" and set to the beat ofAaliyah's "If Your Girl Only Knew".Bomani Jones wrote about the incident a couple of years after the recording.[194]
The Hurricanes went 7–6 during a2006 season[195] that included anon-field brawl againstFlorida International,[196] the shooting death of Miami defensive tackleBryan Pata,[197] and a four-game late-season losing streak. Only aThanksgiving night victory overBoston College, in Miami's last game of the regular season, saved the Hurricanes from a losing regular season record.[198]
The day following the Boston College victory, university presidentDonna Shalala fired Coker.[199] Coker coached through the postseason, where he won his final game, a 21–20 victory overNevada on December 31, 2006, in theMPC Computers Bowl.[200]


After a search that lasted two weeks, Miami athletics directorPaul Dee nameddefensive coordinatorRandy Shannon, a starting linebacker on the 1987 national champions, as the Hurricanes' 22nd head coach on December 8, 2006.[201] Shannon reportedly agreed to a four-year deal worth over $4 million.[202] His hiring made him the firstAfrican American head coach in Miami football history.[203] One of Shannon's first acts as head coach was to impose a strict code of conduct for the team enacted in large part due to the misbehavior and arrests of Miami players during Larry Coker's tenure as head coach.[204]
Shannon's first year as University of Miami's head coach in2007 was one of the worst in the Hurricanes' modern history, with the team registering a losing 5–7 record.[205] Under Shannon, the team failed to reach a bowl game for the first time in a decade. Notably, it was the first time in 25 years that the Hurricanes had missed a bowl game with a full complement of scholarships.
Media draft experts considered the freshmen on the2008 team to be one of the top recruiting classes in the nation.[206] The 2008 season resulted in a 7–6 record.[207] The regular season was highlighted by losses to rivalsFlorida,[208] andFlorida State,[209] and an upset victory overVirginia Tech.[210] The 26–3 loss to Florida was Miami's first in that series since 1985, snapping a 6-game winning streak against the Gators. Afterwards, the tension between the two teams was heightened when Shannon accused Florida coachUrban Meyer of trying to run up the score with an unsuccessful deep pass into the end zone in the game's final minute.[211] The visiting Hurricanes were 221⁄2 point underdogs in the nationally televised game but only trailed 9–3 heading into the fourth quarter, leading some to wonder whether Meyer was trying to compensate for his team's unimpressive performance before kicking afield goal with :25 remaining".[212][213][214]
Miami was knocked out ofACC Championship contention with a late-season loss toGeorgia Tech in which the Hurricanes surrendered the second-most rushing yards in school history (472).[215] The Hurricanes finished the 2008 season with a 24–17 loss toCalifornia in theEmerald Bowl.[216]
After the 2008 season, Shannon fired offensive coordinatorPatrick Nix, citing philosophical differences.[217] Also, starting quarterbackRobert Marve left the team because he claimed not to be able to play for Coach Shannon.[218] Shannon placed strict restrictions on Marve's potential transfer destinations and received much criticism in the media.[219][220][221] However, the University of Miami claimed in a press release that the restrictions were set because of suspected tampering by Marve's family or others on behalf of the Marve family.[222]
Shannon's staff suffered more upheaval when defensive coordinatorBill Young left to assume the same position atOklahoma State, his alma mater, in late January 2009.North Carolina assistantJohn Lovett was hired to replace him.[223] Shannon hired formerUMass head coachMark Whipple as Miami's new offensive coordinator and associate head coach.[224] Several Miami offensive players from the 2008 season returned, including quarterbackJacory Harris, both starting running backs, most of the offensive line and its top six receivers.[225] Shannon has been able to recruit a number of Southern Florida's top high school football players by telling them that they would be able to play immediately. In fact, 21true freshmen played during the 2008 season opener.[226]
The2009 season began on a poor note after two back up quarterbacks, Taylor Cook and Cannon Smith, both transferred out during fall practice, leaving the young Hurricane team with only one serviceable backup in true freshmanAlonzo Highsmith Jr.[227] SophomoreJacory Harris directed the newly implemented offense. To make matters worse, starting defensive endAdewale Ojomo suffered a broken jaw in a locker room fight that led to a season-ending injury, causing the already young Hurricane team to go into their season short handed.[228]
Miami faced a difficult schedule to start the 2009 season with visits to No. 18Florida State, a home game against No. 15Georgia Tech, a visit toLane Stadium and the No. 7 Virginia Tech Hokies and a home visit from the defendingBig 12 Conference champions and BCS Champion runners-up in No. 3Oklahoma.[229] Some national media outlets and sites such asESPN predicted at best a 2–2 record for the Hurricanes with some even predicting an 0–4 start.[230] Miami opened up their 2009 season againstFlorida State onLabor Day night for a national broadcast for ESPN. Billed as a "Battle of Rebuilding Programs",[231] Quarterback Jacory Harris led a heroic comeback in Tallahassee to beat the then ranked Seminoles 38–34, overcoming a late interception and apparent injury to Harris in the 4th quarter.[232]
The next week, Miami welcomed thetriple option offense of the No. 14Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in yet another ESPN prime-time game. Georgia Tech came in hot off of a big ACC win againstClemson University the previous week and held a 4–0 record against the Hurricanes in the last four years, including the previous years pounding in Atlanta. The 2009 contest would be a different story all together, as the Hurricanes handily beat the Jackets 33–17 at home and allowed only 95 rushing yards in the process.[233] The next week, with the Hurricanes in the national spotlight for the first time in 5 years, the No. 9 Miami team visited the No. 11Virginia Tech Hokies. In pouring rain, Tech defeated the Hurricanes by a final score of 31–7.[234] Beat up and embarrassed, Miami then playedOklahoma. WithoutHeisman Award winnerSam Bradford,[235] Oklahoma took an early 10–0 lead after two early Jacory Harris interceptions. Going into halftime, the Hurricanes trailed the Sooners 10–7 in a highly contested football game. Miami came out for the second with a huge hit on the kick off team byCory Nelms that forced the Sooners to start inside their own 20. The following play, sophomore cornerBrandon Harris hit Oklahoma QuarterbackLandry Jones and forced a fumble that eventually led to a Hurricane touchdown. The momentum stayed with the Hurricanes as they rode to a 21–20 win over the No. 8 team in the country.[236] Following the opening four weeks, Miami was 3–1 and was the talk of sports stations nationwide. Following the gauntlet first third of the season, the Hurricanes won againstFlorida A&M at home[237] and on the road against in-state foeUCF,[238] moving all the way up to No. 10 in the polls. The Canes then had to take onClemson inMiami in what was a contest of speed and athleticism. Turnovers, missed opportunities and stand-out backC. J. Spiller led the Tigers to a 40–37 overtime win against the Hurricanes, knocking them out of BCS contention and putting theACC Championship Game in serious jeopardy.[239]
A win againstWake Forest onHalloween kept the Hurricanes in the conference race,[240] which they followed up on with a 52–17 defeat ofVirginia in Miami.[241] The following weekNorth Carolina, led by former Miami head coachButch Davis, topped Miami 33–24 with an unimpressive performance by Jacory Harris and the offense.[242]
Miami finished the 2009 regular season with back-to-back wins overDuke[243] and in-state opponentSouth Florida.[244] Miami's final record was 9–3, finishing in 3rd place for theACC Coastal Division behindGeorgia Tech andVirginia Tech.[245] The announcement of the 2009 bowl selections stirred some controversy. Instead of choosing the 3rd best team in the ACC (Miami),Gator Bowl officials choseFlorida State to represent the ACC againstWest Virginia instead of the Hurricanes because of the retirement of legendary FSU coachBobby Bowden, who served as West Virginia's head coach from 1970 to 1975.[246]
The Hurricanes were relegated to the2009 Champs Sports Bowl inOrlando, Florida, to play against the 9–3Wisconsin Badgers.[247] Though the Hurricanes were heavy favorites coming into the contest, the Badgers beat up on the Hurricanes consistently throughout the game. The Hurricanes started off fast with a big return to open the game bySam Shields, but the Canes just could not maintain any offense throughout the game and had no answer for the power offense of Wisconsin. Going into halftime, the Hurricanes trailed 17–7 andGraig Cooper blew out his knee on the poor turf just before halftime on a kick off return.[248] Though Miami scored a late touchdown and recovered theonside kick, they fell to Wisconsin 20–14 and finished the season at 9–4.[249][250]
After the 2009 season, Shannon signed the No. 13 recruiting class in the nation according to ESPN.[251] Shannon addressed many depth issues including offensive line, line backers and running backs, however the media claimed that the staff missed out on several of the more highly touted recruits on signing day, including a couple of "5 star" players.[252] Coaching changes were made before and after signing day, including the departure of defensive line coach/recruiting coordinatorClint Hurtt to theLouisville[253] and the loss of running backs coachTommie Robinson to theArizona Cardinals.[254] Shannon replaced them with former Hurricane andKentucky defensive line coach Rick Petri[255] and running back coach Mike Cassano fromFlorida International University.[256] Subsequently, Shannon named wide-receiver coachAubrey Hill as the recruiting coordinator for the program.[257]
In May 2010, the university raised Shannon's pay and extended his contract as head coach through 2014.[258]
The Hurricanes finished the2010 season with a 7–6 record,[259] which included losses to rivalsFlorida State[260] andVirginia Tech[261] and their first ever loss to in-state opponentSouth Florida in the last game of the season.[262]
Shannon was fired by athletics directorKirby Hocutt after the loss to South Florida.[263] Interim head coachJeff Stoutland, who was offensive line coach under Shannon, led the team into its2010 Sun Bowl matchup versusNotre Dame; the Hurricanes lost theNew Year's Eve game 33–17.[264][265]


On December 13, 2010, it was announced that athletics directorKirby Hocutt hiredTemple head coachAl Golden as the program's 23rd head coach.[266] Golden was regarded as an up-and-coming coach who had turned around an abysmal Temple football program.[267] Shortly after announcing Golden's hiring, Miami signed Golden to a five-year contract.[268]
In2011, Golden's first season, the Hurricanes posted a 6–6 record.[269] It was only the third time, since 1979, that the program had failed to register a winning record.[270] The Hurricanes kicked off the season with a 32–24 loss toMaryland.[271] After upsetting No. 17Ohio State,[272] the Hurricanes lost toKansas State by a margin of 28–24.[273] Golden's team defeated in-stateFCS foeBethune-Cookman on October 1 by a score of 45–14.[274] After a close 38–35 loss toVirginia Tech,[275] Miami defeatedNorth Carolina by a score of 30–24[276] and No. 20Georgia Tech by a score of 24–7.[277] The Hurricanes alternated between win and loss for the remainder of the season; losing toVirginia 28–21,[278] defeatingDuke 49–14,[279] losing to archrivalFlorida State 23–19[280] beatingSouth Florida in a 6–3 defensive struggle[281] and losing toBoston College by a score of 24–17.[282]
On November 25, 2011, Miami signed Golden to a raise and four-year contract extension through the 2019 season.[283]
In2012, the Hurricanes finished with a 7–5 mark.[284] They started the season with a 41–32 victory overBoston College on September 1.[285] After a 52–13 blowout loss toKansas State,[286]
Golden's team won their next three; defeatingBethune-Cookman 38–10,[287]Georgia Tech 42–36[288] andNC State 44–37.[289] Next, however, the Hurricanes lost their next three, dropping a 41–3 blowout to No. 9Notre Dame,[290] an 18–14 struggle toNorth Carolina,[291] and a 33–20 loss to No. 12Florida State.[292] On November 1, Miami defeatedVirginia Tech by a score of 30–12.[293] After a heartbreaking 41–40 loss toVirginia,[294] the Hurricanes won their last two; dominatingSouth Florida 40–9[295] and outlastingDuke by a score of 52–45.[296] This resulted in a three-way tie, withNorth Carolina andGeorgia Tech, for the best record in the ACC Coastal Division.North Carolina, which had defeated the Hurricanes earlier in the season, would have been declared the coastal division champion based on the ACC tie breaker formula.[297] However, due toNCAA sanctions, they were ineligible for postseason play.[297]
Miami finished in second place based on the formula. However, due to likely pending NCAA sanctions from theNevin Shapiro scandal, the university's administration preemptively chose to forego post-season play for the second consecutive year.[297] Had they played, it would have marked their only appearance in the ACC championship game, since joining the conference, in 2004.[297] It would also have set up a rematch withFlorida State, who had defeated the Hurricanes earlier in the season.[297]
The Hurricanes compiled a 9–4 record in2013.[298] Golden's team came storming out of the gate, winning their first seven; a 34–6 win over in-state opponentFlorida Atlantic,[299] a 21–16 win over rivalFlorida,[300] a 77–7 thrashing ofFCS opponentSavannah State,[301] a 49–21 victory overSouth Florida,[302] a 45–30 win overGeorgia Tech,[303] a 27–23 close win overNorth Carolina[304] and a 24–21 nail biter overWake Forest.[305] The Hurricanes suffered their first loss of the 2013 season on November 2, losing to No. 3Florida State in a 41–14 thrashing.[306] Miami dropped a second straight game by way of a 42–24 loss toVirginia Tech[307] and a third consecutive loss toDuke in a 48–30 disappointment[308] dropped the Hurricanes from a No. 7 national ranking to unranked in those three weeks. The Hurricanes were able to close out the regular season with two wins, defeatingVirginia 45–26[309] andPittsburgh 41–31.[310] Miami received a berth in the2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, a game they lost to No. 18Louisville in a 36–9 blowout.[311] In October 2013, after an investigation spanning two and a half years, the NCAA announced that "the committee acknowledged and accepted the extensive and significant self-imposed penalties by the university".[312] Therefore, no further bowl ban would be enforced.[313] As a result, Miami was eligible to compete in ACC championship and BCS bowls for the 2013–14 season.[313] However, the NCAA stripped Miami of nine scholarships over three years.[313]
The Hurricanes went 6–7 in2014.[314] Miami kicked off the season with a 31–13 loss to No. 25Louisville on September 1.[315] Miami defeatedFlorida A&M 41–7[316] andArkansas State 41–20[317] over the next two weeks before losing to No. 24Nebraska by a score of 41–31.[318] On September 27, the Hurricanes defeatedDuke by a margin of 22–10.[319] On October 4,Georgia Tech defeated Miami by a score of 28–17.[320]
Miami won their next three, winning 55–34 overCincinnati,[321] 30–6 overVirginia Tech[322] and 47–20 overNorth Carolina.[323] Golden's squad struggled to finish the season, losing their last four; a 30–26 letdown to archrivalFlorida State,[324] a 30–13 disappointment toVirginia,[325] a 35–23 defeat at the hands ofPittsburgh in the regular season finale[326] and a 24–21 close defeat in the2014 Independence Bowl inShreveport, Louisiana, toSouth Carolina.[327]
The Hurricanes finished 8–5 in2015.[328] By this time, many Miami fans had grown restless and irritated at the team's inconsistencies and began to call for Golden to be fired using different means, including flying airplanes overHard Rock Stadium with various "Fire Al Golden" banners.[329] The Hurricanes started the season with a 45–0 shutout ofBethune-Cookman on September 5.[330] A 44–20 win overFlorida Atlantic[331] and a 36–33 overtime victory overNebraska[332] followed before the Hurricanes lost 34–23 toCincinnati[333] and 29–24 to No. 12Florida State.[334]
Miami defeatedVirginia Tech by a score of 30–20 on October 17 in what would be Al Golden's last win as Miami head coach.[335]
On October 25, 2015, the day after a 58–0 home loss toClemson,[336] the worst defeat in school history,[337] the university's athletic director Blake James announced Golden's firing.[338] Golden was 32–25 in his five seasons at Miami and led the program to bowl games in 2013 and 2014.[339][340]Tight ends coachLarry Scott finished the season as interim head coach.[341]
In Scott's first game as interim head coach, the Hurricanes recorded a controversial win overDuke.[342] The Hurricanes used eightlaterals (reminiscent of the1982 Cal-Stanford ending) on a kickoff return with no time remaining to score the game-winning touchdown and stun the Blue Devils by a score of 30–27.[343] However, video evidence showed the play should have been blown dead and not counted as a touchdown, as Miami players who possessed the ball on that play's knee were shown to be on the ground more than once.[343] Although the outcome of the game couldn't be changed, theAtlantic Coast Conference subsequently suspended the game and replay officials for failing to catch the errors and make the correct call.[344]
On November 7, Miami defeatedVirginia by a score of 27–21.[345] The next week, the Hurricanes lost to No. 17North Carolina by a score of 59–21.[346] Miami then defeatedGeorgia Tech 38–21[347] andPittsburgh 29–24.[348] The Hurricanes received a berth in the2015 Sun Bowl, a game they lost toWashington State by a score of 20–14.[349]

On December 4, 2015, formerGeorgia head coachMark Richt was named Miami's 24th head football coach.[350] The hiring generated much excitement and was well-received and praised all across the country.[351][352][353] Although he had recently been fired as head coach of the Bulldogs,[354] Richt achieved great successes during his 15 years as Georgia head coach. His teams represented the SEC in three BCS bowl appearances with a record of 2–1, and finished in the top ten of the final AP Poll seven times (2002–2005, 2007, 2012, 2014). His 2008 team also finished in the top ten of the coaches poll. His Georgia teams averaged about nine wins per season, won twoSoutheastern Conference championship games and reached four more, reached bowl games each of his 15 seasons as head coach and sent many players toNational Football League playing careers.[355]
Richt had prior ties to the Miami football program, having playedquarterback for the Hurricanes underLou Saban andHoward Schnellenberger from 1978 to 1982 and, despite being behind the likes ofJim Kelly,Vinny Testaverde andBernie Kosar on the depth chart, amassed nearly 1,500 passing yards during his college playing career.[356] Richt also served as offensive coordinator atFlorida State from 1994 to 2000 underBobby Bowden, overseeing an offense that was one of the most potent in the country, won two national championships, and produced twoHeisman Trophy winners inCharlie Ward[357] andChris Weinke.[358][355] Miami signed Richt to a five-year contract worth $4.1 million annually.[359]
The Hurricanes improved to 9–4 in2016.[360] They began the season on September 3 by blowing out in-stateFCS opponentFlorida A&M 70–3.[361] The next week, the Hurricanes defeatedFlorida Atlantic by a score of 38–10.[362] After defeatingAppalachian State 45–10,[363] Miami defeatedGeorgia Tech by a score of 35–21 to record their firstAtlantic Coast Conference win under Richt.[364] Then, the Hurricanes embarked upon a four-game losing streak, dropping games to No. 23Florida State by a score of 20–19,[365]North Carolina by a margin of 20–13,[366]Virginia Tech by a count of 37–16[367] andNotre Dame to the tune of 30–27.[368]
The Hurricanes rebounded to win their last five games of the season, a 51–28 trouncing ofPittsburgh,[369] a 34–14 victory overVirginia,[370] a 27–13 win overNC State[371] and a 40–21 win overDuke with quarterbackBrad Kaaya becoming Miami's all-time leading passer to close the regular season.[372] On December 28, 2016, Richt led the Hurricanes to their first bowl win in 10 years, when they defeated No. 16West Virginia in the2016 Russell Athletic Bowl by a score of 31–14.[373]
Miami finished 10–3 in2017.[374] The Hurricanes began the season on September 2, defeating in-stateFCS opponentBethune–Cookman by a margin of 41–13.[375] The Hurricanes were supposed to playArkansas State on September 9, but the game was canceled due toHurricane Irma battering the state ofFlorida that weekend.[376] Although the game was to be played inJonesboro, Arkansas, the University of Miami administration contended that it would be too difficult for the football team to safely travel in and out of Florida due to the intensity of the hurricane.[377] When Miami refused to reschedule the game and pay the $650,000 they agreed to pay the Red Wolves, the Arkansas State University administration filed a lawsuit seeking the payment.[378] As a result of the cancellation, Miami only played 11 regular season games in 2017 as opposed to the usual 12.[379] Miami also rescheduled their game againstFlorida State from September 16 to October 7 due to the aftermath of the hurricane.[380]
On September 23, Miami played its second game of the season, defeatingToledo by a score of 52–30.[381] After a 31–6 victory overDuke,[382] Richt's team defeated archrivalFlorida State by a score of 24–20.[383] After a 25–24 nail biting win overGeorgia Tech,[384] the Hurricanes defeatedSyracuse by a margin of 27–19.[385] On October 28, Miami defeatedNorth Carolina by a score of 24–19.[386] That was followed by a 28–10 victory over No. 13Virginia Tech.[387] On November 11, Richt's squad obliteratedNotre Dame by a score of 41–8.[388] After a 44–28 win overVirginia,[389] Miami suffered its first loss of the season in the regular season finale, falling toPittsburgh by a margin of 24–14.[390] In the2017 ACC Championship Game, Miami was obliterated by No. 1Clemson by a score of 38–3.[391] The Hurricanes accepted a berth in the2017 Orange Bowl, a game they lost to No. 6Wisconsin by a score of 34–24.[392]
On May 3, 2018, the University of Miami administration signed Richt to a five-year contract extension.[393] Miami ended 2018 with another loss to Wisconsin, this time in the Pinstripe Bowl 35–3, finishing 7–6. On December 30, 2018, Richt abruptly announced his retirement from coaching.[394]

The University of Miami hiredManny Diaz as their new head coach on December 30, 2018. AMiami native, Diaz had previously been the team's defensive coordinator the previous three seasons.
Diaz had been hired as head coach byTemple 17 days prior to Richt's retirement. On December 30, 2018, however, Diaz withdrew his commitment to Temple to accept the head coach opportunity at Miami.[395]
Diaz compiled a 21–15 record as head coach during the 2019, 2020, and 2021 seasons. On December 6, 2021, Miami fired Diaz.
On December 7, 2021, the University of Miami announced the hiring ofMario Cristobal, a former Miami Hurricanes lineman and member of two University of Miami championship teams in1989 and1991, and the former head coach of theUniversity of Oregon, as the new head coach.
In his first season, in2022, Cristobal had a 5–7 record and brought in a much improved recruiting class.[396] In Cristobal's second season as head coach, in2023, the team registered a 7–6 record and appeared in the2023 Pinstripe Bowl atYankee Stadium, where it lost toRutgers 31–24.
The 2024 team saw significant improvements over recent years and finished with a 10–3 record, but experienced disappointment after missing out on both theACC Championship Game and losing the2024 Pop-Tarts Bowl toIowa State 42-41.
Miami has been selected a winner of anational championship nine times from NCAA-designated major selectors, for which the school officially claims five of them.[397][398] Miami has won five national championships (1983, 1987, 1989, 1991, and 2001), which saw them finish number one in the final AP Poll each time.[399]
| Year | Coach | Selector(s) | Record | Bowl | Result | Final AP | Final Coaches |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1983 | Howard Schnellenberger | AP,FWAA,NFF,UPI (Coaches),USA Today/CNN | 11–1 | Orange | W 31–30 | No. 1 | No. 1 |
| 1987 | Jimmy Johnson | AP, FWAA, NFF, UPI (Coaches), USA Today/CNN | 12–0 | Orange | W 20–14 | No. 1 | No. 1 |
| 1989 | Dennis Erickson | AP, FWAA, NFF, UPI (Coaches), USA Today/CNN | 11–1 | Sugar | W 33–25 | No. 1 | No. 1 |
| 1991 | AP | 12–0 | Orange | W 22–0 | No. 1 | No. 2 | |
| 2001 | Larry Coker | AP,BCS, FWAA, NFF,USA Today/ESPN (Coaches), | 12–0 | Rose (BCS National Championship Game) | W 37–14 | No. 1 | No. 1 |
Claimed national championship
Miami has won nine conference championships, six outright and three shared.
| Year | Conference | Coach | Overall record | Conf. record |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | Big East | Dennis Erickson | 12–0 | 2–0 |
| 1992 | 11–1 | 4–0 | ||
| 1994 | 10–2 | 7–0 | ||
| 1995† | Butch Davis | 8–3 | 6–1 | |
| 1996† | 9–3 | 6–1 | ||
| 2000 | 11–1 | 7–0 | ||
| 2001 | Larry Coker | 12–0 | 7–0 | |
| 2002 | 12–1 | 7–0 | ||
| 2003† | 11–2 | 6–1 |
† Co-champions
Miami has one division championship in the ACC Coastal Division.
| Year | Division | Coach | Opponent | CG result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | ACC Coastal | Mark Richt | Clemson | L 3–38 |
Miami has played in 43 bowl games with a record of 19 wins and 24 losses in these 43 bowl games. Miami's most common bowl destination has been theOrange Bowl, where they have appeared nine times, compiling a 6–3 overall Orange Bowl record. Miami's most common opponent in bowl play has beenNebraska. The schools have met six times in bowl play with the Hurricanes winning four times and losing twice against the Cornhuskers.
| Date | Bowl | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| December 28, 2013 | Russell Athletic Bowl | Louisville | L 9–36 |
| December 27, 2014 | Independence Bowl | South Carolina | L 21–24 |
| December 26, 2015 | Sun Bowl | Washington State | L 14–20 |
| December 28, 2016 | Russell Athletic Bowl | West Virginia | W 31–14 |
| December 30, 2017 | Orange Bowl (NY6) | Wisconsin | L 24–34 |
| December 27, 2018 | Pinstripe Bowl | Wisconsin | L 3–35 |
| December 26, 2019 | Independence Bowl | Louisiana Tech | L 0–14 |
| December 29, 2020 | Cheez-It Bowl | Oklahoma State | L 34–37 |
| December 28, 2023 | Pinstripe Bowl | Rutgers | L 24–31 |
| December 28, 2024 | Pop-Tarts Bowl | Iowa State | L 41–42 |
Current coaching staff[400]
| Name | Title |
|---|---|
| Mario Cristobal | Head coach |
| Alex Mirabal | Assistant head coach/offensive line coach |
| Shannon Dawson | Offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach |
| Corey Hetherman | Defensive coordinator/linebackers |
| Danny Kalter | Special teams coordinator |
| Zac Etheridge | Defensive pass game coordinator/cornerbacks coach. |
| Jason Taylor | Defensive ends/Rush coach |
| Damione Lewis | Defensive line coach |
| Kevin Beard | Wide receivers coach |
| Matt Merritt | Running backs coach |
| Cody Woodiel | Tight ends coach |
| Will Harris | Safeties coach |
| William Vlachos | Asst. Offensive line coach |
| Todd Stroud | Senior football advisor |
| Mike Rumph | Director of recruiting |
| Eric Renaghan | Executive director of human performance |
Miami's rivalry withFlorida dates back to 1938, making it the oldest rivalry among Florida's "Big Three": the University of Miami, the University of Florida, andFlorida State.[401] The Hurricanes defeated the Gators, 19–7, in the first meeting between the geographic rivals.[401] The Seminole War Canoe was carved in 1955 out of a cypress struck by lightning and was given to the winner of the annual football game. The canoe is meant to symbolize the fighting spirit of the Seminole people that is often on display during games between the Hurricanes and Gators. The canoe is now on permanent display at the University of Miami Sports Hall of Fame on the Coral Gables campus.
Miami holds the edge in the all-time series with a 29–26 record against Florida. The two schools met every year from 1944 until 1987, but have not played regularly since then. Florida canceled the annual series after the 1987 season,[402][401] when the requirement of theSoutheastern Conference for member schools to play eight conference games induced the University of Florida to fill out the non-conference portion of its schedule with teams that do not require a home-and-home arrangement,[401] except for Florida State.
From 1986 to 2003, Miami won all six of the games between the schools, including victories in the 2001Sugar Bowl and the 2004Peach Bowl. Florida snapped its 23-year drought against Miami with a 26–3 win over the Hurricanes in 2008. In 2019, the series resumed with Florida winning 24–20 in theCamping World Kickoff in Orlando, Florida.[403]
They most recently met on August 31, 2024, atBen Hill Griffin Stadium, Florida's home stadium inGainesville. Miami delivered a convincing 41–17 victory over the Gators.[404]

Miami's traditional rivals areFlorida State[137][138] andFlorida.[402][401] Since 2002, theFlorida Cup has been awarded to the team that finishes with the best head-to-head record in years when Miami and Florida face each other.[405] To date, six Florida Cups have been awarded with Miami winning the first three.
Miami's rivalry withFlorida State dates to 1951 when the Hurricanes defeated the Seminoles 35–13 in their inaugural meeting. The schools have played every year since 1966, with Miami holding the all-time advantage, 33–30. Upon the conclusion of their 2003 regular-season schedules, the teams represented their respective conferences in the 2004FedEx Orange Bowl (Miami being the champions of the Big East, and Florida State being the champions of the ACC). Miami won the bowl game 16–14; it was the only time the schools have met in post-season football play. The 63 meetings between the teams of FSU and Miami eclipsed the rivalry between the Hurricanes and the Gators (from theUniversity of Florida) following their 2010 game; the series of games between the University of Miami and Florida is Miami's second-longest at 55 games.
During the 1980s and 1990s, the series emerged as one of the premier rivalries in college football.[citation needed] Between 1983 and 2002, the Hurricanes and Seminoles combined to win 7 national championships and play in 14 bowl games with a national championship at stake. The 1988 game starred 57 futureNFL pros on the combined rosters. Since 2004, the year Miami left theBig East Conference to join the expanded 12-memberAtlantic Coast Conference, the universities have been conference foes, though they are placed in separate divisions within the conference. This alignment creates the potential for the two teams to meet for a second time in theACC Championship Game, should each win their respective divisions in any particular season. Such a rematch has yet to happen after 14 years of ACC Championship Games, as of 2018.
The series has consistently drawn very hightelevision ratings with the 2006 Miami–Florida State game being the most-watched college football game—regular-season or postseason—inESPN history, and the 2009 and 1994 meetings being the second- and fifth-most watched regular season games, respectively.[406]
The Miami Hurricanes lead the all-time series 35–32 as of 2022. The most recent meeting was in 2022 on November 5, when the Seminoles won 45–3 in Miami, this is the largest margin of victory in the opposing team's stadium in the series history. Their next scheduled game is November 11, 2023.
The football rivalry betweenLouisville and Miami dates back to 1933 and has been played 17 times.[407][408] The series became a conference rivalry when Louisville joined the ACC in 2014.[409] The programs are connected by head coachHoward Schnellenberger, who resuscitated both schools' football programs and led both teams to great successes when they were struggling and facing financial issues.[410][411] A trophy was introduced to the rivalry in 2023 honoring Howard Schnellenberger, a bronzed pair of boots worn by Schnellenberger awarded to the winner of the game.[412][413][414][415] The Hurricanes lead the all-time series 12–5–1.[416][417][418]
The series withNebraska is tied at 6–6 as of 2018.[419]

The Hurricanes and theNotre Dame Fighting Irish first met during the1955 college football season.[420] They met three times during the 1960s (1960, 1965 and 1967) and proceeded to play each other annually from 1971 to 1990 (except in 1986). Notre Dame consistently dominated the series in the 1970s. However, in the 1980s Miami began to dominate and the rivalry intensified significantly. Both teams were national contenders in the latter part of the decade, and both teams cost each other at least one national championship. Hostilities were further fueled when the Hurricanes routed the Fighting Irish in the 1985 season finale 58–7, with Miami widely accused ofrunning up the score in the second half.[citation needed] The rivalry gained national attention again and both teams played their most famous games from 1988 to 1990.[citation needed] The game known asCatholics vs. Convicts was won by the Fighting Irish 31–30. In 1989, Miami ended Notre Dame's record 23-game winning streak with a 27–10 victory. The rivalry ended after the Fighting Irish dashed #2 Miami's hopes for a repeat national championship with a 29–20 victory at Notre Dame.
The two teams are scheduled meet in the following scheduled dates in the 2026, 2028, 2031, 2032, 2034, and 2037 seasons.[421]

The Hurricanes andHokies first met on November 13, 1953, in Miami. The two teams have played annually since 1992, and the rivalry developed when the Hokies became a member of the Big East Conference for football in 1991. When the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) expanded in 2004, both Miami and Virginia Tech became members of the ACC. Both teams continued to compete annually as part of the ACC's Coastal Division. After the removal of divisions in the ACC, and a year break from the matchup in 2023, Miami and Virginia Tech have been scheduled as annual opponents through the year 2029. Miami and Virginia Tech have twice met in bowl games, the1966 Liberty Bowl and1981 Peach Bowl. As of 2024, Miami leads the series 25–15.[422] The last game between the two teams was September 28, 2024 inMiami, and Miami won 38–34 after a controversial decision by the referees following the final play.
The two teams will next play during a yet to specified date in the 2025 season atLane Stadium.

Hard Rock Stadium is the home field of the Hurricanes football team during their regular season. The stadium is located inMiami Gardens, Florida, located approximately 22 mi (35 km) north of the University of Miami's mainCoral Gables campus.[423] Hard Rock Stadium is also the home stadium of theMiami Dolphins of theNational Football League.
At its inception, the Miami Hurricanes played atTamiami Park and, later, at Moore Park. In 1937, they moved to theMiami Orange Bowl and played at the Miami Orange Bowl for seventy consecutive years, until 2007 when the stadium was designated for demolition.[424] The University of Miami then signed a 25-year contract for the team to play at Hard Rock Stadium through 2033.[425]
The Miami Hurricanes practice facilities are located on theUniversity of Miami campus at Greentree Practice Fields, which was named the College Football Field of the Year by the SportsTurf Managers Association in 2007.[426] The Hecht Athletic Center, also located on-campus, serves as the program's training facility and is home to the football offices. In November 2010, the university announced a gift of $5 million from the Ted and Todd Schwartz Family Foundation that was used to build the Schwartz Center for Athletic Excellence, which caters to over 400 student athletes and includes a sports medicine facility, training room, and academic center. The facility also has features specifically designed for the football team:
In May 2017, the university broke ground on the new Carol Soffer Indoor Practice Facility. The $34 million facility was the product of a $14 million gift from Miami billionaire Jeffrey Soffer, owner of theFountainebleau Hotel inMiami Beach. The building exceeds 100,000 square feet and includes two turf fields that combine for 81,000-square feet. The indoor facility, located on the current football practice area, also houses a football operations center with a mezzanine level for football coaches' offices and meeting rooms.
Miami has two of thelongest winning streaks in NCAA Division I history. From 2000 to 2003, Miami won 34 consecutive games, tying for sixth all-time, although it is the longest since 1957. The streak started on September 23, 2000, with a 47–10 victory atWest Virginia and ended on January 3, 2003, with a 31–24 double overtime loss toOhio State in the2003 Fiesta Bowl. Miami also won 29 straight games from October 27, 1990, to January 1, 1993, good for 13th on the all-time list. That streak was snapped when the top-ranked Hurricanes were upset by second-rankedAlabama, 34–13 in the1993 Sugar Bowl.
Miami owns the record for the longest home winning streak in NCAA history, winning 58 straight games at the Orange Bowl. The record streak began with a 38–0 shutout victory overCincinnati on October 12, 1985, and ended with a 38–20 loss toWashington on September 24, 1994. The 58 game streak includes three Orange Bowl victories where Miami was the away team because of the Orange Bowl's tie to theBig Eight Conference.[429]
In addition to its own lengthy winning streaks, Miami has snapped four streaks of 20 games or more in its history. The only other school to snap four winning streaks of 20 or more games isPrinceton.[430] In the1984 Orange Bowl, Miami ended top-rankedNebraska's 22-game winning streak and won its first national championship with a 31–30 victory. The Hurricanes halted top-rankedOklahoma's 20-game streak and won their second national championship when they defeated the Sooners, 20–14, in the1988 Orange Bowl. The Hurricanes ended top-rankedNotre Dame's 23-game winning streak with a 27–10 win on November 25, 1989. Miami also ended the 20-game winning streak ofUCLA when Miami defeated the third-ranked Bruins 49–45 on December 5, 1998.
Miami has nine wins against AP Number 1 ranked teams, which is tied withAlabama for the most all-time in college football. Overall, Miami is 9–10 against AP Number 1 teams, with the most recent win againstFlorida State in 2000. Rankings below are all from the Associated Press (AP), and games listed are when Miami's opponent was the Number 1 team.
| Date | Location | Miami | Opponent | Result | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| September 4, 2021 | Atlanta, GA | #14-Miami | #1-Alabama | L (9–10) | 13–43 |
| October 10, 2020 | Clemson, SC | #7-Miami | #1-Clemson | L (9–9) | 17–42 |
| December 2, 2017 | Charlotte, NC | #7-Miami | #1-Clemson | L (9–8) | 3–38 |
| October 7, 2000 | Miami, FL | #7-Miami | #1-Florida State | W (9–7) | 27–24 |
| October 9, 1999 | Tallahassee, FL | #19-Miami | #1-Florida State | L (8–7) | 21–31 |
| October 7, 1995 | Tallahassee, FL | Miami | #1-Florida State | L (8–6) | 17–41 |
| January 1, 1995 | Miami, FL | #2-Miami | #1-Nebraska | L (8–5) | 17–24 |
| October 9, 1993 | Tallahassee, FL | #3-Miami | #1-Florida State | L (8–4) | 10–28 |
| November 16, 1991 | Tallahassee, FL | #2-Miami | #1-Florida State | W (8–3) | 17–16 |
| November 25, 1989 | Miami, FL | #7-Miami | #1-Notre Dame | W (7–3) | 27–10 |
| September 3, 1988 | Miami, FL | #6-Miami | #1-Florida State | W (6–3) | 31–0 |
| January 1, 1988 | Miami, FL | #2-Miami | #1-Oklahoma | W (5–3) | 20–14 |
| September 27, 1986 | Miami, FL | #2-Miami | #1-Oklahoma | W (4–3) | 28–16 |
| August 27, 1984 | East Rutherford, NJ | #10-Miami | #1-Auburn | W (3–3) | 20–18 |
| January 2, 1984 | Miami, FL | #5-Miami | #1-Nebraska | W (2–3) | 31–30 |
| October 30, 1981 | Miami, FL | Miami | #1-Penn State | W (1–3) | 17–14 |
| November 17, 1979 | Tuscaloosa, AL | Miami | #1-Alabama | L (0–3) | 0–30 |
| September 26, 1975 | Miami, FL | Miami | #1-Oklahoma | L (0–2) | 17–20 |
| October 10, 1959 | Baton Rouge, LA | Miami | #1-LSU | L (0–1) | 3–27 |







As of 2024, the Hurricanes have retired the jersey numbers of four former players:
| Miami Hurricanes retired numbers | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Player | Pos. | Tenure | No. ret. | Ref. |
| 10 | George Mira | QB | 1961–1963 | 1997 | [436] |
| 14 | Vinny Testaverde | QB | 1982–1986 | 1997 | [436] |
| 42 | Jim Dooley | E/HB | 1949–1951 | 1997 | [436] |
| 89 | Ted Hendricks | DE | 1966–1968 | 1997 | [436] |
As of 2024, eleven players and coaches with the Miami Hurricanes have been inducted to theCollege Football Hall of Fame:
| Name | Position | Years | Inducted | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jack Harding | Coach | 1937–1942, 1945–1947 | 1980 | [437] |
| Andy Gustafson | Coach | 1948–1963 | 1985 | [437] |
| Ted Hendricks | DE | 1966–1968 | 1987 | [437] |
| Don Bosseler | FB | 1953–1956 | 1990 | [437] |
| Bennie Blades | S | 1984–1987 | 2006 | [437] |
| Arnold Tucker | QB (also at Army) | 1943–1946 | 2008 | [437] |
| Gino Torretta | QB | 1989–1992 | 2009 | [437] |
| Russell Maryland | DT | 1987–1990 | 2011 | [437] |
| Jimmy Johnson | Coach | 1984–1988 | 2012 | [438] |
| Vinny Testaverde | QB | 1983–1986 | 2013 | [439] |
| Ed Reed | S | 1997–2000 | 2018 | [440] |
As of 2024, eleven former players have been inducted into theProfessional Football Hall of Fame:[437][441]
| Name | Position | Inducted | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jim Otto | C | 1980 | [442] |
| Ted Hendricks | LB | 1990 | [443] |
| Jim Kelly | QB | 2002 | [444] |
| Michael Irvin | WR | 2007 | [445] |
| Cortez Kennedy | DT | 2012 | [446] |
| Warren Sapp | DT | 2013 | [447] |
| Ray Lewis | LB | 2018 | [446] |
| Ed Reed | S | 2019 | [448] |
| Edgerrin James | RB | 2020 | |
| Andre Johnson | WR | 2024 | |
| Devin Hester | Return specialist | 2024 |

| Name | Position | Occupation |
|---|---|---|
| Dwayne Johnson | DL | Actor, wrestler under ring name "The Rock" |
| Lex Luger | OL | Wrestler, was inducted into theWWE Hall of Fame in 2025 |
| Rohan Marley | LB | Entrepreneur, son ofBob Marley, and father of artistSelah Marley,YG Marley, and football playerNico Marley. |

Miami holds a number ofNFL draft records, including most first-round selections in a single draft and most consecutive drafts with at least one first-round selection.[431] As of 2024, at least one University of Miami player has been selected in (49) consecutive NFL drafts, dating back to 1975,[449] and (67) first-round picks the 5th most in college football. Miami has had (369)players drafted, ranking 13th among all college football programs for the number of draft picks.[450]
Among all college football programs, the University of Miami holds the all-time record for the mostdefensive linemen (49) and is tied withUSC for the mostwide receivers (40) to go on to play in the NFL.[432]
As of September 2025, 42 former Miami players are on an NFL roster.

Touchdown Tommy is the cannon that is fired off when the team runs out of the tunnel, after every point that the Hurricanes score, and at the conclusion of all team wins. The cannon is kept by the University of Miami'sSigma Chi fraternity's Cannon Master and fired off during the games by senior brothers of Sigma Chi. Touchdown Tommy is the third-oldest tradition at the University of Miami after theIron Arrow Honor Society, the highest honor awarded by the university founded in 1926, andSebastian the Ibis, the mascot of theMiami Hurricanes since 1957.
One of the Hurricanes best-known traditions is the team's entrance scene. The team enters the field through a large cloud of white smoke billowing from its entrance tunnel, amid a tape of a hurricane blasting over the sound system. The smoke comes from fire extinguisher exhaust that billows from a series of pipes welded together by school transportation director Bob Nalette in the 1950s. In 2008, the pipes were moved from theMiami Orange Bowl, the former home field for the Hurricanes, toHard Rock Stadium, where the team has played since 2008.
Following the University Miami football program's rise to national prominence in the 1980s, many high school, college andNFL teams over the last 25 years have copied this practice, and in 2001ABC made a parody of it for a Saturday college football commercial.

In 1997, the university established the 'Ring of Honor' as a way to honor outstanding players who have passed through the Hurricane football program.[452] Members are selected by an anonymous advisory committee, the director of athletics and the head football coach.[453] The names and jersey numbers of the inductees were displayed on the upper deck of theOrange Bowl. The inaugural class of includedJim Dooley,Ted Hendricks,George Mira, andVinny Testaverde. These four players are the only ones in the history of the program to have their numbers retired by the university as well.[454] In the 2015–16 season, Vinny Testaverde's retired number was unretired at his own request, allowing his son,Vincent Testaverde Jr., to wear No. 14 for the first time since its number retirement.
A second group of players consisting ofOttis Anderson,Don Bosseler,Bernie Kosar, andBurgess Owens was inducted in 1999. After a nine-year hiatus, five new players were added in 2008:Pro Football Hall of FamersJim Kelly andJim Otto, formerHeisman Trophy-winnerGino Torretta, running backEdgerrin James, and defensive linemanCortez Kennedy.
In 2009,College Football Hall of Fame defensive backBennie Blades, running back and former Miami head coachEddie Dunn, and quarterbackSteve Walsh were inducted.[455]
In 2017, the Miami Hurricanes began to award its "Turnover Chain", an honor that contains a 36-inch, 2.5-kilogram, 10-karat gold chain, with 900 orange and green sapphire stones arranged in a "U" that is 6.5 inches wide.[456] It is presented during a game to any defensive player who forces a turnover.
Through the 11 regular-season games Miami played in 2017, the Hurricanes' defense created 29 turnovers (17 passes intercepted, 12 fumbles recovered), the third most in FBS football. During the same period, Miami gave up 12 turnovers (throwing 9 interceptions, and losing 3 fumbles); the net gain of 17 turnovers resulted in a margin of +1.55 per game. That figure represents the greatest margin in the nation this year, an achievement shared withCentral Florida.[457]
In 2022, the Miami Hurricanes retired the chain.[458][459]
TheUniversity of Miami football program has been at the center of several controversies, scandals and incidents, some of which have led toNCAA sanctions, suspensions, and negative publicity. In 1978, three University of Miami players threw a man into a lake, leading to the resignation of coachLou Saban.[460] In the 1991 Cotton Bowl Classic, the team's unsportsmanlike conduct during the game gave rise to the so-called "Miami Rule". In 1995, the program was involved in aPell Grant scandal.[129] In 2005, several Miami players recorded a lewd rap song, "7th Floor Crew", which drew criticism thatBomani Jones wrote about a couple of years following the event.[461]
Other controversies and scandals involving the Miami Hurricanes football program include:
In the 1980s,2 Live Crew memberLuther Campbell was alleged to have been behind a "pay-for-play" system, which involved cash rewards toUniversity of Miami players for scoring touchdowns, big hits, and other game accomplishments, though Campbell has never donated directly to the University of Miami or its athletic department.[462]
On October 28, 1989, University of Miami mascotSebastian the Ibis was tackled by a group of police officers for attempting to put outChief Osceola's flaming spear prior to Miami's game against long-standing rivalFlorida State atDoak Campbell Stadium inTallahassee. Sebastian was wearing a fireman's helmet and yellow raincoat and holding a fire extinguisher. When a police officer attempted to grab the fire extinguisher, the officer was sprayed in the chest. Sebastian was handcuffed by four officers but ultimately released. Miami quarterbackGino Torretta, who started the game in place of injuredCraig Erickson, toldESPN, "Even if we weren't bad boys, it added to the mystique that, 'Man, look, even their mascot's getting arrested.'"[99]2003: The 7th Floor crew
On October 14, 2006, in the first meeting of cross-town programs, Miami and theFlorida International Golden Panthers brawled after aPAT.
FIU cornerback Chris Smith wrestled Miami holder Matt Perelli to the ground after the kick and appeared to punch him in the chin. Another FIU cornerback, Marshall McDuffie Jr., kicked Perelli in the head.[463] Miami'sAnthony Reddick swung his helmet at FIU players and Miami'sBrandon Meriweather kicked an FIU player. FIU's A'Mod Ned, who was injured, came onto the field and swung at Miami players with his crutches. The fight lasted just over one minute before the coaches of both teams were able to separate the players. Florida Highway Patrol state troopers and City of Miami police arrived on the field as the fight was going on and remained a visual presence on the sidelines and in the stands to prevent further fighting. The game was delayed approximately 15 to 20 minutes as the officials attempted to sort out which players were ejected and what, if any, penalty yards needed to be enforced.
The next day, 31 players from both schools were punished, including 18 from FIU and 13 from Miami. The Miami players were handed one-game suspensions while the FIU players were suspended for the remainder of the season. Three Miami players were suspended indefinitely and the rest were also assigned community service work.[464]

APonzi schemer, convictedfelon and former Miami booster,Nevin Shapiro, claimed he used investor funds to finance donations to the University of Miami's athletic program and gave an estimated $2 million in illegal benefits to at least 72 current or former football and basketball players and coaches from 2002 to 2010. AYahoo! Sports report alleged that Shapiro, through his donations, violated at least four major NCAA bylaws.[467]
During the investigation of the allegations, the university self-imposed a ban on bowl participation. In October 2013, the NCAA announced that the university would lose three football scholarships in each of the next three seasons, but there would be no further bowl ban. The university became eligible again for bowl participation as of the 2013–14 season.[312]
The Miami Hurricanes football program has been the subject of two widely viewed documentaries. In 2009,The U, developed byMiami-based studioRakontur was released and aired as part ofESPN's30 for 30 film series.
According to the filmmaker, the University of Miami chose not to be involved in the project, and denied the film crew access to former coachRandy Shannon, former athletic directorPaul Dee, or former university presidentTad Foote.[468]
The film features the rise of the University of Miami football program beginning in the 1980s and through the early 1990s during which the University of Miami won three national championships (1983, 1987, and 1991) followed by the program's subsequent fall from various national scandals related to the program and team, including player crimes and drug usage and privileges provided players throughLuther Campbell's alleged "pay for play" scheme in which the rap star reportedly paid University of Miami players for major hits and plays. The film addresses the controversial and pioneering nature of the University of Miami football program rise and fall during this era.
The film was pre-screened on the University of Miami campus on December 10, 2009, with only two student athletes attending.[469] Two days later, however, it aired globally onESPN following theHeisman Trophy award ceremony, drawing 2.3 million viewers and setting a record for the largest audience ever for an ESPN30 to 30 episode.
Following on the success ofThe U,The U Part 2 was developed and released, depicting a similar rise and fall of the University of Miami football program, this time from its 2002 national championship team, which is widely considered to be one of the best college football teams in the history of the sport, to yet another downfall featuring national scandals that cost the University of Miami football program scholarships and damaged its competitiveness for much of the early 2000s.
Announced opponents as of October 6, 2025.[470]
| 2026 | 2027 | 2028 | 2029 | 2030 | 2031 | 2032 | 2033 | 2034 | 2037 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Florida A&M09/12 | vsUtah09/04 (in Las Vegas, NV) | South Florida09/09 | Auburn09/01 | atAuburn08/31 | atNotre Dame TBA | Notre Dame TBA | Notre Dame TBA | atNotre Dame TBA | |
| Central Michigan09/26 | Troy09/11 | atNotre DameTBA | Temple09/15 | ||||||
| atNotre DameTBA | |||||||||
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link){{cite web}}:Missing or empty|title= (help)[dead link]{{cite web}}:Missing or empty|title= (help)[dead link]{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)Remember the 7th Floor Crew