You're dreaming if you think a couple of portal moves and some future high school commits fix a fundamental flaw overnight. Miami's red zone issues are systemic, not just a talent problem. That offensive line you're hyping up? Tyler Ford is a 2027 kid, he's not touching the field for three years, and Jackson Cantwell is still in high school. You're talking about spring practice battles with guys who won't see a real snap this fall. The current line got pushed around in short yardage all last season, and believing a new quarterback alone changes that is naive. Darian Mensah put up numbers at a lower level, but the speed in the ACC is different, especially when the field shrinks. His decision-making will be tested immediately, and history shows it takes time for portal QBs to gel, if they ever do. The Hurricanes lost key weapons, and you're assuming the new piecces just click. Red zone efficiency is about cohesion and toughness, things you build over years, not something you portal your way into by September. The staff might get it, but the proof isn't in future recruiting rankings, it's in results on the field, and I haven't seen anything from Miami lately to suggest a top ten finish in anything but hype. The ACC is wide open, but counting on unproven crootits and a transfer to win close games is a massive gamble. I'll believe it when I see them consistently punch it in against Clemson's or Florida State's front seven, not before.