There’s a different feel around the Miami Hurricanes right now. Not the kind of cautious optimism that comes with a rebuild, but something more settled. More confident. Year one under Jai Lucas was about figuring things out on the fly, patching together lineups, and finding ways to compete. Year two feels like the version he actually had in mind all along.
This roster looks strong. It looks like a group built to play a certain way, not just a collection of talent trying to make it work.
The backcourt tells the story of this rebuild
You can see the change right away when you look at the guards Miami added. Nick Dorn brings size and shooting on the wing, something the team needed more of, while Brent Bland adds a different kind of value. He’s the type of player who can come off the bench and change the tone of a game without needing plays drawn up for him.
Bland can score in bunches, but it’s everything else that makes him important. He rebounds, defends, and creates moments when things get stagnant. Last season, those stretches where the offense stalled could linger. This year, there are more players capable of breaking that cycle.
It also helps that these guards aren’t locked into one role. They can handle the ball, space the floor, and slide between positions. That kind of flexibility gives Miami options it simply didn’t have before.
A starting group that fits together naturally
The projected starting lineup doesn’t just have talent; it appears to work. There’s balance across the floor, with players who can score, defend, and adapt depending on the matchup. Nothing feels forced.
That’s a quiet but important difference. Last season had moments where roles felt a little stretched. This time, players look like they’re stepping into situations that suit them.
It’s not about one player carrying everything. It’s about a group that can shift from night to night and still function at a high level.
Depth changes everything for Miami this season
If there was one thing that held Miami back at times, it was depth. Rotations got tight, minutes piled up, and there weren’t always reliable answers off the bench.
That shouldn’t be the case anymore.
This roster has real depth, especially on the perimeter. Players like Bland, Dorn, and others give Miami a second wave that can keep the energy up instead of letting it drop. That means more consistent shooting, fresher legs late in games, and the ability to play with more pace and pressure.
It also gives Lucas the freedom to coach differently. He can experiment with lineups, ride matchups, and trust that the drop-off won’t be as steep.
The expectations are catching up to the roster
Miami isn’t going to surprise anyone this season. After finishing near the top of the ACC last year, the spotlight is already there. The difference now is that the roster looks built to handle it.
There’s more shooting, more size, and a better overall fit across the board. It’s the kind of team that can stack wins in the regular season and still have enough depth to hold up when March arrives.
Year two under Lucas was always going to be important. Now it feels like the moment where everything starts to come together.
