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Program overview

Miami

2025 finish: 13-3-0 across 16 games. Jump into coaching history, title years, and long-view program trends.

Hard Rock Stadium • Miami Gardens • FL

ACCHard Rock Stadium
All-Time Wins
638
All-Time Losses
365
Win %
63%
National Titles
5

Track coaching history, title years, Heisman winners, roster movement, and the conference path that shaped the modern program.

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Current season hub

2026 Miami hub

Next game: Miami at Stanford on Fri, Sep 4.

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at Stanford

Fri, Sep 4 · Week 1

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2026 Miami watchlist

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How to read this page

Miami football program guide

This overview connects the core facts behind Miami football: conference home, stadium context, all-time record, title seasons, Heisman winners, coaching tenures, and the recent season baseline. It is meant to be the starting point before moving into the deeper team tabs.

The latest indexed season is 2025, when Miami finished 13-3. Use the related links to compare Miami against national title lists, all-time wins, rankings, rivalries, recruiting, and transfer activity.

Program history

Miami football history

Miami football is the ultimate story of a program that exploded from regional relevance into national dominance. Before the 1980s, the Hurricanes had moments of success, but they were not yet the cultural force the sport would come to know. Howard Schnellenberger changed that by focusing on South Florida talent and convincing local stars that staying home could produce national championships.

The 1983 national championship upset of Nebraska gave Miami its breakthrough and changed the sport’s geography. Jimmy Johnson, Dennis Erickson, and later Larry Coker built on that foundation with teams known for speed, swagger, and overwhelming NFL talent. Miami’s 1980s and early 1990s teams were as feared and polarizing as any in college football history, blending elite defense with a confidence that felt new and disruptive.

The Hurricanes won five national championships between 1983 and 2001, and the 2001 team is often discussed among the greatest rosters ever assembled. The list of Miami stars is staggering: Michael Irvin, Vinny Testaverde, Bernie Kosar, Ed Reed, Ray Lewis, Warren Sapp, Sean Taylor, Andre Johnson, Clinton Portis, Willis McGahee, and many more. “The U” became shorthand for a style of football as much as a school.

Miami’s move into the ACC brought new expectations but not the same consistent championship results. Still, the program’s history remains powerful because its peak changed college football’s recruiting, culture, and television image. For fans, Miami is a reminder that speed, attitude, and local talent can flip the sport’s power structure when they arrive together.

Program Snapshot

Program essentials

Core program details, venue context, and team visuals in one place.

Conference

ACC

Division

Not listed

Home field

Hard Rock Stadium

Location

Miami Gardens, FL

Capacity

64,767

Venue type

Outdoor

Team Colors

AP Titles

5

Program Dashboard

This season and next actions

Start from the latest season record, then jump into the team history, coaching, and title surfaces most fans usually need next.

Current read

2025: 13-3-0

16 games tracked with a 81% win rate.

Current Season

Performance pulse

Wins
13
Losses
3
Ties
0
Games
16
Win %
81%

Conference Timeline

Realignment context

  • Atlantic Coast Conference2004-
  • Big East Conference1991-2003
  • NCAA Division I FBS independent schools1978-1990
  • NCAA Division I FBS independent schools1942-1977
  • Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association1929-1941
  • NCAA Division I FBS independent schools1926-1928

Stadium Access

Venue links

Coaching History

Sideline eras

21 coaches indexed
Mario Cristobal2022-202522-16-0
Jess Simpson20210-0-0
Manny Diaz2019-202121-15-0
Mark Richt2016-201826-13-0
Al Golden2011-201532-25-0
Randy Shannon2007-201028-22-0
Larry Coker2001-200660-15-0
Butch Davis1995-200051-20-0
Dennis Erickson1989-199463-9-0
Jimmy Johnson1984-198852-9-0
Howard Schnellenberger1979-198341-16-0
Lou Saban1977-19789-13-0
Carl Selmer1975-19765-16-0
Pete Elliott1973-197411-11-0
Fran Curci1971-19729-13-0
Walter Kichefski19702-7-0
Charlie Tate1964-197034-27-3
Andy Gustafson1948-196393-65-3
Jack Harding1945-194719-10-2
Jack Harding1937-194235-22-1
Irl Tubbs19366-2-2

National Championships

Title profile

5
Total Titles
0
CFP
1
BCS
5
AP
3
Coaches

Title Years

1983AP1987AP/Coaches1989AP/Coaches1991AP2001AP/BCS/Coaches

Heisman Trophy Winners

Award lineage

2
Total Winners
YearWinnerPositionPointsDraft
1992Gino TorrettaQB1,400#192
1986Vinny TestaverdeQB2,213#1

Quick Answers

Miami quick answers

Record

13-3

Conference
ACC
Championship seasons
5
Coaching leader
Andy Gustafson (93 wins)
Heisman winners
2

Frequently Asked Questions

Page-specific answers for the current selection.

What does Miami coaching history show?

Miami coaching history on this page spans 21 tracked head coaches, led by Andy Gustafson with 93 wins from 1948-1963.

How many national championships does Miami have?

Miami has 5 recorded national championship seasons on this page: 1983, 1987, 1989, 1991, 2001.