That take completely misses how volatile red zone performance actually is year to year. Miami's 72% rate last season is impressive, but returning three offensive line starters guarantees nothing. Physicality isn't a carryover stat. Look at their overall offensive consistency, they ranked 78th in yards per play. A high red zone percentage can be a mirage built on a small sample size and a couple of broken plays. Their top-ranked recruiting class is irrelevant for 2024, those freshmen aren't the ones who established that foundation. The real test is whether they can sustain that efficiency against better defensive fronts in the ACC, and history shows these numbers often regress. Their success had more to do with favorable field position and specific matchups than some permanent line identity. Let's see them do it again before calling it a program cornerstone.