Miami has more elite players across its roster than Ole Miss, which often relies on one standout like five-star WR Caleb Cunningham in recent classes.High School Recruiting (2025 Class)Miami finished around top 12-15 nationally (best in the ACC for multiple years), with multiple blue-chip prospects upgraded to five-star or high four-star status in final rankings (e.g., EDGE Hayden Lowe became a five-star after flipping from USC; several top-50 national recruits like OL Seuseu Alofaituli and others in position top-5s).Ole Miss finished around No. 16 nationally (top 15-16 per 247Sports/On3), anchored by one clear five-star (Caleb Cunningham, flipped from Alabama) and a solid group of four-stars, but fewer overall high-end talents in the class.Miami's 2025 HS class has greater depth in elite (four/five-star) recruits.Transfer Portal (2025 Cycle)Ole Miss added a high volume of transfers (~30 commits, ranking ~No. 5 in portal class per 247Sports), aggressively rebuilding via portal under Lane Kiffin.Miami had a more targeted but high-quality portal haul (~19 commits, ranking ~No. 4), including big names like former Georgia QB Carson Beck.Overall Roster Talent (247Sports Talent Composite)This metric combines HS recruiting ratings of current players + transfers:Miami ranks higher (around top 15-16 nationally).Ole Miss slightly behind (around top 20-21).Miami edges out in overall elite talent depth, while Ole Miss excels at portal volume but often builds around fewer "one standout" type players from HS cycles.In short, Miami spreads elite talent more broadly across the roster rather than relying on just one or two headliners like Ole Miss frequently does.
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