×
Mohun Bagan holds East Bengal to draw, stays alive in ISL title race  East Bengal vs Mohun Bagan had so far been one-way traffic in the Indian Super League (ISL). Ten matches, nine wins, a draw for Bagan – its fans dominated the cheers and led the narrative. But the stakes remained starkly different this time.The top two teams in the ISL went neck-to-neck in the contest, and late fireworks by Edmund Lalrindika and Jason Cummings ensured the rivals shared the spoils in a 1-1 draw at the Yuba Bharati Krirangan in Kolkata on Sunday.The draw ensured East Bengal stayed on the top of the standings, owing to its higher goal difference, and forced the title-winning round to the final matchday on May 21.AS IT HAPPENED | Mohun Bagan vs East Bengal HighlightsBagan started the match aggressively, with its front four — Sahal Abdul Samad, Manvir Singh, Liston Colaco and Jamie Maclaren – hovering around the box as the club dominated possession in the first five minutes.On the other hand, East Bengal soaked in the press, with up to six players in defence when out of possession, and got results – denying three clear chances in the first 10 minutes. Bagan’s high line was exposed when Prabhsukhan Gill took an Alisson-esque kick, aiming for Vishnu.The southern and eastern ends of the stadium, comprising East Bengal fans, looked to have found a new life as the decibel scales shifted. But Vishnu’s delay in pulling the trigger saw Vishal Kaith put the chance to bed with the ball safely in his gloves.Kaith, however, was beaten seven minutes later when Anton Sojberg won the ball off Alberto Rodriguez and took a left-footed hit. Time stopped for East Bengal fans as the ball went past the Bagan goalie’s gloves, but their hands went to the back of their heads as the ball rattled the woodwork. The moment repeated itself eight minutes later, this time Bipin Singh delaying a pass to Sojberg. The frustrations in the stands only got louder.For Bagan, Anirudh Thapa almost scored in the 24th minute, shooting on target with a half-volley but Gill met it with equal quality to ensure the scoreboard did not tick.After a scoreless opening period, Bagan’s coach Sergio Lobera chose to go all guns blazing in the final quarter of the match, bringing on Jason Cummings, Robson Robinho and Dimitrios Petratos. That forced him to replace a foreign defender due to the league’s rules, which saw Mehtab Singh, one of Bagan’s weaklings at the back, take the pitch. Celebration followed after Jason Cummings’ equaliser, this time at the Mariners’ end as the fans in red-and-gold stared in disbelief.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                PTI
                            

                            Celebration followed after Jason Cummings’ equaliser, this time at the Mariners’ end as the fans in red-and-gold stared in disbelief.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                PTI
                                                    With six minutes left, that change bit Bagan at the back as Edmund, getting a pass from Miguel Figueira, beat Mehtab and then Kaith to cause delirium in the East Bengal stands. Coach Oscar Bruzon punched the air, bumped up the fans like Jurgen Klopp, while the forward removed his shirt, put it on a corner flag and planted it on the hallowed turf as a sign of victory.However, Bagan did not go down meekly.Five minutes later, Cummings’ header from a corner rattled the net to spark celebrations at the other end, leaving the fans in red-and-gold staring in disbelief.Maclaren could have sealed the match for Bagan in second-half stoppage time, but a crucial save by Gill ensured nothing could separate the two teams after 90-plus minutes of quality football.A win here would have nearly sealed the title for East Bengal and their supporters. The draw meant they have to wait a round more.While the derby rivals are level on points, East Bengal will win the title if it can win its final match against Inter Kashi since it boasts a +5 goal difference over Bagan. For Bagan, it will need a favour from Inter Kashi when it takes on East Bengal in the final match day or rack up the goals while beating Sporting Club Delhi to pip East Bengal to the title.A draw for both teams could see Punjab FC vs Mumbai City FC determine the title-winner.Published on May 17, 2026  #Mohun #Bagan #holds #East #Bengal #draw #stays #alive #ISL #title #race

Mohun Bagan holds East Bengal to draw, stays alive in ISL title race

East Bengal vs Mohun Bagan had so far been one-way traffic in the Indian Super League (ISL). Ten matches, nine wins, a draw for Bagan – its fans dominated the cheers and led the narrative. But the stakes remained starkly different this time.

The top two teams in the ISL went neck-to-neck in the contest, and late fireworks by Edmund Lalrindika and Jason Cummings ensured the rivals shared the spoils in a 1-1 draw at the Yuba Bharati Krirangan in Kolkata on Sunday.

The draw ensured East Bengal stayed on the top of the standings, owing to its higher goal difference, and forced the title-winning round to the final matchday on May 21.

AS IT HAPPENED | Mohun Bagan vs East Bengal Highlights

Bagan started the match aggressively, with its front four — Sahal Abdul Samad, Manvir Singh, Liston Colaco and Jamie Maclaren – hovering around the box as the club dominated possession in the first five minutes.

On the other hand, East Bengal soaked in the press, with up to six players in defence when out of possession, and got results – denying three clear chances in the first 10 minutes. Bagan’s high line was exposed when Prabhsukhan Gill took an Alisson-esque kick, aiming for Vishnu.

The southern and eastern ends of the stadium, comprising East Bengal fans, looked to have found a new life as the decibel scales shifted. But Vishnu’s delay in pulling the trigger saw Vishal Kaith put the chance to bed with the ball safely in his gloves.

Kaith, however, was beaten seven minutes later when Anton Sojberg won the ball off Alberto Rodriguez and took a left-footed hit. Time stopped for East Bengal fans as the ball went past the Bagan goalie’s gloves, but their hands went to the back of their heads as the ball rattled the woodwork. The moment repeated itself eight minutes later, this time Bipin Singh delaying a pass to Sojberg. The frustrations in the stands only got louder.

For Bagan, Anirudh Thapa almost scored in the 24th minute, shooting on target with a half-volley but Gill met it with equal quality to ensure the scoreboard did not tick.

After a scoreless opening period, Bagan’s coach Sergio Lobera chose to go all guns blazing in the final quarter of the match, bringing on Jason Cummings, Robson Robinho and Dimitrios Petratos. That forced him to replace a foreign defender due to the league’s rules, which saw Mehtab Singh, one of Bagan’s weaklings at the back, take the pitch.

Mohun Bagan holds East Bengal to draw, stays alive in ISL title race  East Bengal vs Mohun Bagan had so far been one-way traffic in the Indian Super League (ISL). Ten matches, nine wins, a draw for Bagan – its fans dominated the cheers and led the narrative. But the stakes remained starkly different this time.The top two teams in the ISL went neck-to-neck in the contest, and late fireworks by Edmund Lalrindika and Jason Cummings ensured the rivals shared the spoils in a 1-1 draw at the Yuba Bharati Krirangan in Kolkata on Sunday.The draw ensured East Bengal stayed on the top of the standings, owing to its higher goal difference, and forced the title-winning round to the final matchday on May 21.AS IT HAPPENED | Mohun Bagan vs East Bengal HighlightsBagan started the match aggressively, with its front four — Sahal Abdul Samad, Manvir Singh, Liston Colaco and Jamie Maclaren – hovering around the box as the club dominated possession in the first five minutes.On the other hand, East Bengal soaked in the press, with up to six players in defence when out of possession, and got results – denying three clear chances in the first 10 minutes. Bagan’s high line was exposed when Prabhsukhan Gill took an Alisson-esque kick, aiming for Vishnu.The southern and eastern ends of the stadium, comprising East Bengal fans, looked to have found a new life as the decibel scales shifted. But Vishnu’s delay in pulling the trigger saw Vishal Kaith put the chance to bed with the ball safely in his gloves.Kaith, however, was beaten seven minutes later when Anton Sojberg won the ball off Alberto Rodriguez and took a left-footed hit. Time stopped for East Bengal fans as the ball went past the Bagan goalie’s gloves, but their hands went to the back of their heads as the ball rattled the woodwork. The moment repeated itself eight minutes later, this time Bipin Singh delaying a pass to Sojberg. The frustrations in the stands only got louder.For Bagan, Anirudh Thapa almost scored in the 24th minute, shooting on target with a half-volley but Gill met it with equal quality to ensure the scoreboard did not tick.After a scoreless opening period, Bagan’s coach Sergio Lobera chose to go all guns blazing in the final quarter of the match, bringing on Jason Cummings, Robson Robinho and Dimitrios Petratos. That forced him to replace a foreign defender due to the league’s rules, which saw Mehtab Singh, one of Bagan’s weaklings at the back, take the pitch. Celebration followed after Jason Cummings’ equaliser, this time at the Mariners’ end as the fans in red-and-gold stared in disbelief.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                PTI
                            

                            Celebration followed after Jason Cummings’ equaliser, this time at the Mariners’ end as the fans in red-and-gold stared in disbelief.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                PTI
                                                    With six minutes left, that change bit Bagan at the back as Edmund, getting a pass from Miguel Figueira, beat Mehtab and then Kaith to cause delirium in the East Bengal stands. Coach Oscar Bruzon punched the air, bumped up the fans like Jurgen Klopp, while the forward removed his shirt, put it on a corner flag and planted it on the hallowed turf as a sign of victory.However, Bagan did not go down meekly.Five minutes later, Cummings’ header from a corner rattled the net to spark celebrations at the other end, leaving the fans in red-and-gold staring in disbelief.Maclaren could have sealed the match for Bagan in second-half stoppage time, but a crucial save by Gill ensured nothing could separate the two teams after 90-plus minutes of quality football.A win here would have nearly sealed the title for East Bengal and their supporters. The draw meant they have to wait a round more.While the derby rivals are level on points, East Bengal will win the title if it can win its final match against Inter Kashi since it boasts a +5 goal difference over Bagan. For Bagan, it will need a favour from Inter Kashi when it takes on East Bengal in the final match day or rack up the goals while beating Sporting Club Delhi to pip East Bengal to the title.A draw for both teams could see Punjab FC vs Mumbai City FC determine the title-winner.Published on May 17, 2026  #Mohun #Bagan #holds #East #Bengal #draw #stays #alive #ISL #title #race

Celebration followed after Jason Cummings’ equaliser, this time at the Mariners’ end as the fans in red-and-gold stared in disbelief. | Photo Credit: PTI

lightbox-info

Celebration followed after Jason Cummings’ equaliser, this time at the Mariners’ end as the fans in red-and-gold stared in disbelief. | Photo Credit: PTI

With six minutes left, that change bit Bagan at the back as Edmund, getting a pass from Miguel Figueira, beat Mehtab and then Kaith to cause delirium in the East Bengal stands. Coach Oscar Bruzon punched the air, bumped up the fans like Jurgen Klopp, while the forward removed his shirt, put it on a corner flag and planted it on the hallowed turf as a sign of victory.

However, Bagan did not go down meekly.

Five minutes later, Cummings’ header from a corner rattled the net to spark celebrations at the other end, leaving the fans in red-and-gold staring in disbelief.

Maclaren could have sealed the match for Bagan in second-half stoppage time, but a crucial save by Gill ensured nothing could separate the two teams after 90-plus minutes of quality football.

A win here would have nearly sealed the title for East Bengal and their supporters. The draw meant they have to wait a round more.

While the derby rivals are level on points, East Bengal will win the title if it can win its final match against Inter Kashi since it boasts a +5 goal difference over Bagan. For Bagan, it will need a favour from Inter Kashi when it takes on East Bengal in the final match day or rack up the goals while beating Sporting Club Delhi to pip East Bengal to the title.

A draw for both teams could see Punjab FC vs Mumbai City FC determine the title-winner.

Published on May 17, 2026

#Mohun #Bagan #holds #East #Bengal #draw #stays #alive #ISL #title #race

East Bengal vs Mohun Bagan had so far been one-way traffic in the Indian Super League (ISL). Ten matches, nine wins, a draw for Bagan – its fans dominated the cheers and led the narrative. But the stakes remained starkly different this time.

The top two teams in the ISL went neck-to-neck in the contest, and late fireworks by Edmund Lalrindika and Jason Cummings ensured the rivals shared the spoils in a 1-1 draw at the Yuba Bharati Krirangan in Kolkata on Sunday.

The draw ensured East Bengal stayed on the top of the standings, owing to its higher goal difference, and forced the title-winning round to the final matchday on May 21.

AS IT HAPPENED | Mohun Bagan vs East Bengal Highlights

Bagan started the match aggressively, with its front four — Sahal Abdul Samad, Manvir Singh, Liston Colaco and Jamie Maclaren – hovering around the box as the club dominated possession in the first five minutes.

On the other hand, East Bengal soaked in the press, with up to six players in defence when out of possession, and got results – denying three clear chances in the first 10 minutes. Bagan’s high line was exposed when Prabhsukhan Gill took an Alisson-esque kick, aiming for Vishnu.

The southern and eastern ends of the stadium, comprising East Bengal fans, looked to have found a new life as the decibel scales shifted. But Vishnu’s delay in pulling the trigger saw Vishal Kaith put the chance to bed with the ball safely in his gloves.

Kaith, however, was beaten seven minutes later when Anton Sojberg won the ball off Alberto Rodriguez and took a left-footed hit. Time stopped for East Bengal fans as the ball went past the Bagan goalie’s gloves, but their hands went to the back of their heads as the ball rattled the woodwork. The moment repeated itself eight minutes later, this time Bipin Singh delaying a pass to Sojberg. The frustrations in the stands only got louder.

For Bagan, Anirudh Thapa almost scored in the 24th minute, shooting on target with a half-volley but Gill met it with equal quality to ensure the scoreboard did not tick.

After a scoreless opening period, Bagan’s coach Sergio Lobera chose to go all guns blazing in the final quarter of the match, bringing on Jason Cummings, Robson Robinho and Dimitrios Petratos. That forced him to replace a foreign defender due to the league’s rules, which saw Mehtab Singh, one of Bagan’s weaklings at the back, take the pitch.

Celebration followed after Jason Cummings’ equaliser, this time at the Mariners’ end as the fans in red-and-gold stared in disbelief.
| Photo Credit:
PTI

lightbox-info

Celebration followed after Jason Cummings’ equaliser, this time at the Mariners’ end as the fans in red-and-gold stared in disbelief.
| Photo Credit:
PTI

With six minutes left, that change bit Bagan at the back as Edmund, getting a pass from Miguel Figueira, beat Mehtab and then Kaith to cause delirium in the East Bengal stands. Coach Oscar Bruzon punched the air, bumped up the fans like Jurgen Klopp, while the forward removed his shirt, put it on a corner flag and planted it on the hallowed turf as a sign of victory.

However, Bagan did not go down meekly.

Five minutes later, Cummings’ header from a corner rattled the net to spark celebrations at the other end, leaving the fans in red-and-gold staring in disbelief.

Maclaren could have sealed the match for Bagan in second-half stoppage time, but a crucial save by Gill ensured nothing could separate the two teams after 90-plus minutes of quality football.

A win here would have nearly sealed the title for East Bengal and their supporters. The draw meant they have to wait a round more.

While the derby rivals are level on points, East Bengal will win the title if it can win its final match against Inter Kashi since it boasts a +5 goal difference over Bagan. For Bagan, it will need a favour from Inter Kashi when it takes on East Bengal in the final match day or rack up the goals while beating Sporting Club Delhi to pip East Bengal to the title.

A draw for both teams could see Punjab FC vs Mumbai City FC determine the title-winner.

Published on May 17, 2026

Source link
#Mohun #Bagan #holds #East #Bengal #draw #stays #alive #ISL #title #race

Previous post

इंदौर के हॉस्टल में तोड़फोड़ की मिलेगी सजा: 25 हजार रुपए प्रति स्टूडेंट लगेगी पेनाल्टी, रिजल्ट रोकेंगे; हॉस्टल में डांस कर मचाया था उत्पात – Indore News

Next post

रेलवे ने उठाया बड़ा कदम, 16 करोड़ से प्राइवेट कंपनी करेगी ट्रैक मशीनों का मेंटेनेंस

োস্টন স্টেডিয়ামে চলমান ২০২৬ ফিফা ফুটবল বিশ্বকাপের নকআউট পর্বে জার্মানি ও প্যারাগুয়ের মধ্যকার ম্যাচটি এখন চরম উত্তেজনাকর মুহূর্তে রূপ নিয়েছে। প্রথমার্ধের ৪২ মিনিটে হুলিও এনসিসোর গোলে প্যারাগুয়ে এগিয়ে গিয়ে চমক দেখালেও, দ্বিতীয়ার্ধের শুরুতেই ৫৪ মিনিটে দারুণ এক হেডার থেকে গোল করে জার্মানিকে ১-১ সমতায় ফেরান কাই হাভার্টজ।

সমতা ফেরার পর জুলিয়ান নাগেলসম্যান আক্রমণ আরও জোরদার করতে ৬২ মিনিটে ডেনিজ উন্দাভের পরিবর্তে মাঠ নামিয়েছেন তারকা মিডফিল্ডার জামাল মুসিয়ালাকে। অন্যদিকে প্যারাগুয়ে তাদের গোলদাতা এনসিসোকে তুলে নিয়ে মাউরিসিওকে মাঠে নামিয়েছে। দুই দলেরই শেষ ১৬-তে যাওয়ার লড়াইয়ে ম্যাচটি এখন উন্মুক্ত। ম্যাচটি সরাসরি দেখা যাচ্ছে ZEE5 অ্যাপ ও ওয়েবসাইটে।

#জরমন #বনম #পযরগয #লইভ #সকর #কমবযক #জরমনর #হভরটজর #দরদনত #গল #সমতয় #ফরল #ডই #মনশফট">জার্মানি বনাম প্যারাগুয়ে লাইভ স্কোর: কামব্যাক জার্মানির! হাভার্টজের দুর্দান্ত গোলে সমতায় ফিরল ডাই মানশাফট  Kai Havertz celebrates scoring for Germany during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round Of 32 match against Paraguay. 
                                                                          | Photo Credit:  
                                      Getty Images via AFP
                                                                      
                        Kai Havertz celebrates scoring for Germany during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round Of 32 match against Paraguay.
                                                  | Photo Credit:  
                          Getty Images via AFP
                                              োস্টন স্টেডিয়ামে চলমান ২০২৬ ফিফা ফুটবল বিশ্বকাপের নকআউট পর্বে জার্মানি ও প্যারাগুয়ের মধ্যকার ম্যাচটি এখন চরম উত্তেজনাকর মুহূর্তে রূপ নিয়েছে। প্রথমার্ধের ৪২ মিনিটে হুলিও এনসিসোর গোলে প্যারাগুয়ে এগিয়ে গিয়ে চমক দেখালেও, দ্বিতীয়ার্ধের শুরুতেই ৫৪ মিনিটে দারুণ এক হেডার থেকে গোল করে জার্মানিকে ১-১ সমতায় ফেরান কাই হাভার্টজ।সমতা ফেরার পর জুলিয়ান নাগেলসম্যান আক্রমণ আরও জোরদার করতে ৬২ মিনিটে ডেনিজ উন্দাভের পরিবর্তে মাঠ নামিয়েছেন তারকা মিডফিল্ডার জামাল মুসিয়ালাকে। অন্যদিকে প্যারাগুয়ে তাদের গোলদাতা এনসিসোকে তুলে নিয়ে মাউরিসিওকে মাঠে নামিয়েছে। দুই দলেরই শেষ ১৬-তে যাওয়ার লড়াইয়ে ম্যাচটি এখন উন্মুক্ত। ম্যাচটি সরাসরি দেখা যাচ্ছে ZEE5 অ্যাপ ও ওয়েবসাইটে।  #জরমন #বনম #পযরগয #লইভ #সকর #কমবযক #জরমনর #হভরটজর #দরদনত #গল #সমতয় #ফরল #ডই #মনশফট

Miami football isn’t back yet, but it’s close

Plenty of discussion last winter was reserved for dissecting if the Miami Hurricanes were, in fact, back. For as the much of The U being back has been a topic, predating the 2025 Hurricanes’ run to the National Championship Game, what being back actually means can have vastly different definitions.

Surely, had Miami knocked off an unbeaten Indiana — and the Hurricanes came a Jamari Sharpe interception away from doing just that — it would have constituted The U being back. Right?

Well…

Miami’s run to the finale of last season’s College Football Playoff was remarkable; so, too, was it taking Indiana to the wire in a 27-21 classic, with the Hurricanes playing the Hoosiers closer than most of the national champions’ competition in the 2025 campaign.

That run was also unprecedented in the history of college football. Of course, there have been only two instances in which a team like Miami, which went 10-2 in the regular season and missed its own conference championship game, could win a national championship in such fashion.

The 2025 Hurricanes capitalized on the opportunities afforded them by a much different landscape than that which existed during the program’s roughly 20-year heyday, and that’s commendable. But it’s not comparable to that heyday, unofficially spanning from 1983 when the late legend Howard Schnellenberger coached The U to its first championship and ending on Ohio State’s improbable win in the 2003 Fiesta Bowl.

Incredibly, as we head into the silver anniversary of Miami’s last national championship, it’s been almost as long since a Hurricanes team won a conference title. That came in 2003, the program’s final season in the Big East, when The U shared the crown with West Virginia (albeit having survived a 22-20 struggle with the Mountaineers in the head-to-head matchup).

For context, Miami’s conference championship drought is going on five years longer than the span between its first national championship and last.

As a program-first ACC title continued to elude Miami, with losses to Louisville and SMU instead landing Virginia and Duke in Charlotte, the Hurricanes’ 2025 postseason run isn’t in the same category as the 2001 title won in dominant fashion by arguably the most talented collegiate roster ever assembled.

It’s not the 1987 or 1991 crowns when Miami ran the table, nor is it 1983 and 1989 when the Hurricanes rallied from regular-season losses to in-state rivals to finish on top. But 2025 could be the foundation on which Miami is back.

Although none of the 2026 Hurricanes when Miami was Miami, the mystique never faded. Running back Mark Fletcher Jr., Offensive MVP of last year’s Cotton Bowl, offered commentary on Adam Breneman’s “Next Up” podcast to this end:

“’Ive seen how great Miami was, seen the great players that they’ve had, and I could help Miami at least a little closer to that, and I’ve got one more year to do it,” Fletcher said. “I would love to do that.”

Fletcher and wide receiver Malachi Toney, both products of South Florida (Fort Lauderdale and Miami’s Liberty City), provide the 2026 Hurricanes with one of the nation’s most potent skill-position combos. And while Miami has no ACC championship experience, its quarterback does.

Adding ACC Championship Game MVP and the conference’s passing yards leader a season ago, Darian Mensah, sets up the Hurricane offense nicely. A key transfer likewise provides the pillar for Miami’s 2026 title outlook on defense, with Damon Wilson II coming to Coral Gables off of a nine-sack season at Missouri.

There’s plenty to like about Miami’s chances of returning to past glory in 2026 — and doing so in a fashion that unambiguously declares the Hurricanes as being back by any definition.

#Miami #Football #Poised #Return #College #Footballs #Elite #Deadspin.com">Why Miami Football Is Poised to Return to College Football’s Elite | Deadspin.com   Miami football isn’t back yet, but it’s closePlenty of discussion last winter was reserved for dissecting if the Miami Hurricanes were, in fact, back. For as the much of The U being back has been a topic, predating the 2025 Hurricanes’ run to the National Championship Game, what being back actually means can have vastly different definitions.Surely, had Miami knocked off an unbeaten Indiana — and the Hurricanes came a Jamari Sharpe interception away from doing just that — it would have constituted The U being back. Right?Well…Miami’s run to the finale of last season’s College Football Playoff was remarkable; so, too, was it taking Indiana to the wire in a 27-21 classic, with the Hurricanes playing the Hoosiers closer than most of the national champions’ competition in the 2025 campaign.That run was also unprecedented in the history of college football. Of course, there have been only two instances in which a team like Miami, which went 10-2 in the regular season and missed its own conference championship game, could win a national championship in such fashion.The 2025 Hurricanes capitalized on the opportunities afforded them by a much different landscape than that which existed during the program’s roughly 20-year heyday, and that’s commendable. But it’s not comparable to that heyday, unofficially spanning from 1983 when the late legend Howard Schnellenberger coached The U to its first championship and ending on Ohio State’s improbable win in the 2003 Fiesta Bowl.Incredibly, as we head into the silver anniversary of Miami’s last national championship, it’s been almost as long since a Hurricanes team won a conference title. That came in 2003, the program’s final season in the Big East, when The U shared the crown with West Virginia (albeit having survived a 22-20 struggle with the Mountaineers in the head-to-head matchup).For context, Miami’s conference championship drought is going on five years longer than the span between its first national championship and last.As a program-first ACC title continued to elude Miami, with losses to Louisville and SMU instead landing Virginia and Duke in Charlotte, the Hurricanes’ 2025 postseason run isn’t in the same category as the 2001 title won in dominant fashion by arguably the most talented collegiate roster ever assembled.It’s not the 1987 or 1991 crowns when Miami ran the table, nor is it 1983 and 1989 when the Hurricanes rallied from regular-season losses to in-state rivals to finish on top. But 2025 could be the foundation on which Miami is back.Although none of the 2026 Hurricanes when Miami was Miami, the mystique never faded. Running back Mark Fletcher Jr., Offensive MVP of last year’s Cotton Bowl, offered commentary on Adam Breneman’s “Next Up” podcast to this end:“’Ive seen how great Miami was, seen the great players that they’ve had, and I could help Miami at least a little closer to that, and I’ve got one more year to do it,” Fletcher said. “I would love to do that.”Fletcher and wide receiver Malachi Toney, both products of South Florida (Fort Lauderdale and Miami’s Liberty City), provide the 2026 Hurricanes with one of the nation’s most potent skill-position combos. And while Miami has no ACC championship experience, its quarterback does.Adding ACC Championship Game MVP and the conference’s passing yards leader a season ago, Darian Mensah, sets up the Hurricane offense nicely. A key transfer likewise provides the pillar for Miami’s 2026 title outlook on defense, with Damon Wilson II coming to Coral Gables off of a nine-sack season at Missouri.There’s plenty to like about Miami’s chances of returning to past glory in 2026 — and doing so in a fashion that unambiguously declares the Hurricanes as being back by any definition.   #Miami #Football #Poised #Return #College #Footballs #Elite #Deadspin.com

The U being back has been a topic, predating the 2025 Hurricanes’ run to the National Championship Game, what being back actually means can have vastly different definitions.

Surely, had Miami knocked off an unbeaten Indiana — and the Hurricanes came a Jamari Sharpe interception away from doing just that — it would have constituted The U being back. Right?

Well…

Miami’s run to the finale of last season’s College Football Playoff was remarkable; so, too, was it taking Indiana to the wire in a 27-21 classic, with the Hurricanes playing the Hoosiers closer than most of the national champions’ competition in the 2025 campaign.

That run was also unprecedented in the history of college football. Of course, there have been only two instances in which a team like Miami, which went 10-2 in the regular season and missed its own conference championship game, could win a national championship in such fashion.

The 2025 Hurricanes capitalized on the opportunities afforded them by a much different landscape than that which existed during the program’s roughly 20-year heyday, and that’s commendable. But it’s not comparable to that heyday, unofficially spanning from 1983 when the late legend Howard Schnellenberger coached The U to its first championship and ending on Ohio State’s improbable win in the 2003 Fiesta Bowl.

Incredibly, as we head into the silver anniversary of Miami’s last national championship, it’s been almost as long since a Hurricanes team won a conference title. That came in 2003, the program’s final season in the Big East, when The U shared the crown with West Virginia (albeit having survived a 22-20 struggle with the Mountaineers in the head-to-head matchup).

For context, Miami’s conference championship drought is going on five years longer than the span between its first national championship and last.

As a program-first ACC title continued to elude Miami, with losses to Louisville and SMU instead landing Virginia and Duke in Charlotte, the Hurricanes’ 2025 postseason run isn’t in the same category as the 2001 title won in dominant fashion by arguably the most talented collegiate roster ever assembled.

It’s not the 1987 or 1991 crowns when Miami ran the table, nor is it 1983 and 1989 when the Hurricanes rallied from regular-season losses to in-state rivals to finish on top. But 2025 could be the foundation on which Miami is back.

Although none of the 2026 Hurricanes when Miami was Miami, the mystique never faded. Running back Mark Fletcher Jr., Offensive MVP of last year’s Cotton Bowl, offered commentary on Adam Breneman’s “Next Up” podcast to this end:

“’Ive seen how great Miami was, seen the great players that they’ve had, and I could help Miami at least a little closer to that, and I’ve got one more year to do it,” Fletcher said. “I would love to do that.”

Fletcher and wide receiver Malachi Toney, both products of South Florida (Fort Lauderdale and Miami’s Liberty City), provide the 2026 Hurricanes with one of the nation’s most potent skill-position combos. And while Miami has no ACC championship experience, its quarterback does.

Adding ACC Championship Game MVP and the conference’s passing yards leader a season ago, Darian Mensah, sets up the Hurricane offense nicely. A key transfer likewise provides the pillar for Miami’s 2026 title outlook on defense, with Damon Wilson II coming to Coral Gables off of a nine-sack season at Missouri.

There’s plenty to like about Miami’s chances of returning to past glory in 2026 — and doing so in a fashion that unambiguously declares the Hurricanes as being back by any definition.

#Miami #Football #Poised #Return #College #Footballs #Elite #Deadspin.com">Why Miami Football Is Poised to Return to College Football’s Elite | Deadspin.com

Miami football isn’t back yet, but it’s close

Plenty of discussion last winter was reserved for dissecting if the Miami Hurricanes were, in fact, back. For as the much of The U being back has been a topic, predating the 2025 Hurricanes’ run to the National Championship Game, what being back actually means can have vastly different definitions.

Surely, had Miami knocked off an unbeaten Indiana — and the Hurricanes came a Jamari Sharpe interception away from doing just that — it would have constituted The U being back. Right?

Well…

Miami’s run to the finale of last season’s College Football Playoff was remarkable; so, too, was it taking Indiana to the wire in a 27-21 classic, with the Hurricanes playing the Hoosiers closer than most of the national champions’ competition in the 2025 campaign.

That run was also unprecedented in the history of college football. Of course, there have been only two instances in which a team like Miami, which went 10-2 in the regular season and missed its own conference championship game, could win a national championship in such fashion.

The 2025 Hurricanes capitalized on the opportunities afforded them by a much different landscape than that which existed during the program’s roughly 20-year heyday, and that’s commendable. But it’s not comparable to that heyday, unofficially spanning from 1983 when the late legend Howard Schnellenberger coached The U to its first championship and ending on Ohio State’s improbable win in the 2003 Fiesta Bowl.

Incredibly, as we head into the silver anniversary of Miami’s last national championship, it’s been almost as long since a Hurricanes team won a conference title. That came in 2003, the program’s final season in the Big East, when The U shared the crown with West Virginia (albeit having survived a 22-20 struggle with the Mountaineers in the head-to-head matchup).

For context, Miami’s conference championship drought is going on five years longer than the span between its first national championship and last.

As a program-first ACC title continued to elude Miami, with losses to Louisville and SMU instead landing Virginia and Duke in Charlotte, the Hurricanes’ 2025 postseason run isn’t in the same category as the 2001 title won in dominant fashion by arguably the most talented collegiate roster ever assembled.

It’s not the 1987 or 1991 crowns when Miami ran the table, nor is it 1983 and 1989 when the Hurricanes rallied from regular-season losses to in-state rivals to finish on top. But 2025 could be the foundation on which Miami is back.

Although none of the 2026 Hurricanes when Miami was Miami, the mystique never faded. Running back Mark Fletcher Jr., Offensive MVP of last year’s Cotton Bowl, offered commentary on Adam Breneman’s “Next Up” podcast to this end:

“’Ive seen how great Miami was, seen the great players that they’ve had, and I could help Miami at least a little closer to that, and I’ve got one more year to do it,” Fletcher said. “I would love to do that.”

Fletcher and wide receiver Malachi Toney, both products of South Florida (Fort Lauderdale and Miami’s Liberty City), provide the 2026 Hurricanes with one of the nation’s most potent skill-position combos. And while Miami has no ACC championship experience, its quarterback does.

Adding ACC Championship Game MVP and the conference’s passing yards leader a season ago, Darian Mensah, sets up the Hurricane offense nicely. A key transfer likewise provides the pillar for Miami’s 2026 title outlook on defense, with Damon Wilson II coming to Coral Gables off of a nine-sack season at Missouri.

There’s plenty to like about Miami’s chances of returning to past glory in 2026 — and doing so in a fashion that unambiguously declares the Hurricanes as being back by any definition.

#Miami #Football #Poised #Return #College #Footballs #Elite #Deadspin.com
Celebrities At The Los Angeles Lakers Game
Celebrities At The Los Angeles Lakers Game

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – FEBRUARY 07: LeBron James speaks with Stephen Curry following a basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Golden State Warriors at Crypto.com Arena on February 07, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images)
Getty Images

#LeBron #James #Warriors #suddenly #doesnt #sound #crazy">LeBron James to the Warriors suddenly doesn’t sound so crazy  LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – FEBRUARY 07: LeBron James speaks with Stephen Curry following a basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Golden State Warriors at Crypto.com Arena on February 07, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images) Getty Images  #LeBron #James #Warriors #suddenly #doesnt #sound #crazy

Post Comment