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Miami vs Ole Miss Prediction, Odds, Picks, College Football Playoff Betting Preview

Miami vs Ole Miss Prediction, Odds, Picks, College Football Playoff Betting Preview article feature image
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Imagn Images. Pictured: Miami RB Mark Fletcher Jr. (left) and Ole Miss QB Trinidad Chambliss (right).

The Miami Hurricanes take on the Ole Miss Rebels in the 2026 Fiesta Bowl and College Football Playoff semifinals in Glendale, Arizona, on Thursday, Jan. 8. Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m. ET on ESPN.

Miami is favored by 3 points on the spread with a moneyline of -165. Ole Miss, meanwhile, enters as a +3 underdog and is +140 on the moneyline to pull off the upset. The over/under sits at 52 total points.

Here’s my Miami vs. Ole Miss prediction and college football picks for Thursday, January 8.


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Miami Hurricanes vs Ole Miss Rebels Predictions, Pick

  • Miami vs. Ole Miss Pick: Over 52 · Ole Miss 1H +1.5 · Fletcher Over 86.5 Rushing Yards · Wright Over 25.5 Receiving Yards · Hasz Anytime TD

My Ole Miss vs. Miami best bet is on both teams to go over the total, the Rebels to cover the first-half spread and player props for both Miami and Ole Miss. Find the best line available on our live NCAAF odds page.


Miami vs Ole Miss Odds, Spread, Betting Lines

Miami Logo
Thursday, January 8
7:30 p.m. ET
ESPN
Ole Miss Logo
Miami Odds
Point SpreadOver/UnderMoneyline
-3.5
-105
52.5
-115o / -105u
-170
Ole Miss Odds
Point SpreadOver/UnderMoneyline
+3.5
-125
52.5
-115o / -105u
+140
Odds via BetMGM. Get up-to-the-minute NCAAF odds here.
BetMGM Logo
  • Miami vs Ole Miss Point Spread: Miami -3.5, Ole Miss +3.5
  • Miami vs Ole Miss Total: 52.5 Total Points
  • Miami vs Ole Miss ML: Miami ML -170, Ole Miss ML +140


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Miami vs Ole Miss Preview

Two unlikely participants will meet in the Fiesta Bowl for a berth in the 2026 National Championship game.

Ole Miss was the unlikely winner in the Sugar Bowl, besting SEC peer Georgia as a near-touchdown underdog. The Rebels' offensive assault on the Bulldogs' secondary was enough to give Pete Golding his second win in as many games as head coach.

Miami also scored an upset as an underdog of more than a touchdown against Ohio State. The Hurricanes defense was relentless, with an early pick-six setting the tone for an ACC team to advance to the semifinals.

However, there's a lack of history between these two storied programs.

Ole Miss took two victories from Miami before World War II, while the Hurricanes took the third and final game of the series in 1951. The Rebels are making history within the program, but the three national titles claimed over 60 years ago did not include votes from the AP Poll or Coaches Poll.

The roster has been motivated by the turnover at the head coaching position, as Lane Kiffin’s departure for LSU gave way to defensive coordinator Pete Golding’s promotion.

Offensive coordinator Charlie Weis Jr. will eventually reside in Baton Rouge and will be dealing with a depleted assistant coaching staff heading into this national semifinal.

The Hurricanes, meanwhile, are looking for their sixth national title and first in 25 years. Head coach Mario Cristobal looks to join an elite list of former coaches to lead "The U" back to championship status, including Jimmy Johnson and Dennis Erickson.

Until a victory in the first round at Texas A&M, Miami had stumbled in previous postseason games with nine losses in its 10 bowl games dating back to 2013.

This version of the Hurricanes defense is a throwback to the national champion version, boasting the best pass rush of all FBS teams.

Both teams will ascend to State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, a venue that has a long history of high-scoring New Year’s Six games.

The winner of the Fiesta Bowl has scored at least 29 points in every iteration of the game since 2011. The last semifinal to be played at this site came in 2022, when TCU and Michigan combined for 96 points.

There's a common opponent on the 2025 schedule, as Ole Miss beat Florida, 34-24, in Week 12, while Miami dominated the Gators, 26-7, in Week 4.

The Rebels generated nearly a full yard per play more than the Gators, posting five methodical drives. Miami had similar success on offense with five possessions featuring two or more first downs, but the defense held Florida to just 2.7 yards per play.

This semifinal preview will look at investments from all angles, including the spread and total. With a breakdown of run concepts and coverage looks from defenses, player props will be spread throughout the preview.

Game flow always dictates an opportunity to live bet, as each team's tendencies for the coin-flip and Middle 8 differentials can help in determining a live number.


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When Miami Has the Ball

Offensive coordinator Shannon Dawson kept the lead against Buckeyes thanks to success on money downs. Miami went 8-for-15 on third- and fourth-down attempts against Ohio State, consistently remaining in standard downs.

The Hurricanes generated at least two first downs in half of their offensive possessions, averaging just 6.1 yards to go on third downs.

Running back Mark Fletcher Jr. has been the driving force behind the offense, rushing for 262 yards in two playoff games.

Similar to the Ole Miss offense, Miami uses inside zone and man blocking assignments as its primary run concepts. The Rebels defense has been shredded by those specific concepts this season, averaging a Success Rate of 46% or worse against both.

Ole Miss Defensive Run Concept Report via SportSource Analytics.

There's no threat of explosives coming out of the Miami offense, ranking near dead last in Rush EPA and 75th with the pass.

With Ole Miss ranking top-20 in both Passing Success Rate allowed and contested catch rate, Fletcher becomes the most important piece of the Hurricanes offense in terms of creating methodical drives.

Quarterback Carson Beck will need another clean sheet to keep the offense moving after completing 33-of-46 passes with no interceptions through two playoff games.

Wideout Keelan Marion has been the primary target for Beck, as nearly half of the receiver's total targets have come over the past five games.

Miami will face an Ole Miss defense that uses a heavy amount of quarters coverage, as Golding allows opponents to take the middle of the field without giving up explosives.

Beck has been elite against quarters coverage this season, generating a 63% Success Rate with an explosive on one of every five attempts.

Ole Miss cornerback Antonio Kite is expected to draw the assignment against Marion after allowing just half of his man's eight targets to be caught against Texas A&M and Ohio State.


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When Ole Miss Has the Ball

The Rebels offense has been on fire since midseason, averaging at least 6.3 overall yards per play since Week 9.

Led by Ferris State transfer Trinidad Chambliss, Ole Miss owns top-25 rankings in Success Rate, Quality Drives and Finishing Drives.

The balanced attack starts with the run behind running back Kewan Lacy, using gap assignment blocking with power and inside zone read concepts.

Lacy has been on a heater of late, rushing 10 touchdowns and 15 explosives over the past five games.

The A and B gaps on the right side of the offensive line have been the sweet spot for Lacy, who has averaged at least seven yards on 73 attempts there this season.

Inside zone will be the concept that gets the most traction against the Hurricanes' defensive front.

Miami has dominated teams using gap or man assignment blocking on the offensive line, but the efficiency cools against teams using inside zone with 11 personnel.

Ole Miss' success on the ground will be determined by Lacy running behind Arkansas transfer right guard Patrick Kutas. The senior ranks 15th of all guards in PFF run blocking and will line up directly against Justin Scott, David Blay Jr. and Ahmad Moten Sr.

None of those defensive interior players mentioned ranks within the top 100 of PFF run defenders, so Ole Miss will have success running inside zone to the right side of the offensive line.

The biggest handicap on this side of the ball is the pass rush's ability to get to Chambliss. Miami edges Rueben Bain Jr. and Akheem Mesidor rank in the top 35 of all defensive linemen in pass rush productivity, per PFF.

Blindside offensive tackle Diego Pounds ranks within the top 100 of all pass blockers, as the former North Carolina lineman has not allowed a sack all season.

In four games against Georgia, Florida and Oklahoma, the senior has allowed a total of five pressures.

Right tackle Jayden Williams will get the opportunity to keep Mesidor out of the backfield. The senior has allowed two sacks this season against 16 pressures.

The positive news for Ole Miss is the recent play of Williams, allowing just four pressures in the past six games. There's reason to believe the Rebels' tackles will have success in keeping Chambliss clean.

The multiple front of the Miami defense changes depending on the down and distance, but a nickel Cover 3 has been the primary tendency for coordinator Corey Hetherman. The Hurricanes play a low amount of man coverage and option to the zone look on more than 80% of opponent passing attempts.

Chambliss has blistered defenses using Cover 3, generating a 58% Success Rate while averaging an explosive on 25% of attempts.

Ole Miss has been particularly explosive between the hashmarks, as Chambliss has an average NFL rating of 121 with 13 touchdowns across the middle.

The transfer is beyond explosive in passes exceeding 20 yards, connecting for 24 big-time throws in just 50 attempts.

Both Texas A&M and Ohio State targeted the inside, specifically slot cornerback Keionte Scott and middle linebacker Mohamed Toure.

Ole Miss will look to Cayden Lee and Winston Watkins in the slot, while tight end Dae’Quan Wright will also be in the mix for targets against the middle of the Hurricanes defense.

One area the Rebels can expose is poor tackling from the Miami defense. The Canes rank 119th in PFF tackle grading and 93rd in broken tackles allowed, per SportsInfo Solutions.

In two consecutive playoff games against Texas A&M and Ohio State, the Hurricanes missed 25 total tackles, leading to eight explosive passes from the Aggies and Buckeyes.


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Miami vs Ole Miss NCAAF Pick to Make

There are a number of factors indicating Miami has earned the title of favorite in the Fiesta Bowl.

The nickel defense is the best in the nation in terms of pass rush. Although Ole Miss survived an SEC schedule that included the defenses of Oklahoma and Georgia, neither of those units ranked in the top 10 in pass rush.

However, both Mesidor and Bain were taken out of the Cotton Bowl because of the tempo from Ohio State. Ole Miss has one of the faster offenses in the nation at 23.8 seconds per play, so tempo may be used to gas Miami's Havoc-minded defense.

Rushing attempts from Lacy behind Kutas on the offensive line should keep Ole Miss in standard downs. Miami has struggled in tackling at the second level, suggesting that the Rebels should have short third downs and a few quality drives that lead to scoring attempts.

Chambliss should have success in the middle of the field, specifically targeting Wright, Lee and Watkins. The Hurricanes have not created small windows against opposing passing attacks, ranking 69th in creating a contested catch.

Wright is the player to target in the prop market after generating at least five targets in the Rebels' biggest games of the season against Oklahoma, Georgia and Florida.

The methodical nature of the Miami offense will come through Fletcher on inside zone carries. Ole Miss has struggled against the concepts the Hurricanes will use, as the Rebels sit outside the top 90 in Defensive Line Yards.

Ole Miss' tackle grading has been poor at 77th, per PFF, indicating Miami’s top-25 ranks in Quality Drives and Finishing Drives will put points on the board.

With a total projection above the key of 55, the expected tempo from the Ole Miss offense should create extra possessions for each team and a wager on the over.

Our Action Network projection calls for Miami to be favored by 2.5 points, in line with the current market. While no action is suggested on the full game, there are other wagers for consideration.

Ole Miss boasts one of the highest-scoring offenses in the first half, ranking ninth of all FBS teams with an average of 20.6 points. The Miami offense has been slow out of the game this season, averaging just 5.4 points through the first quarter.

With a depleted offensive staff due to Kiffin's departure to LSU, Weis and the Rebels may struggle to make adjustments in the second half after the scripted portion of the game.

The Rebels have been fantastic in "Middle 8" this season, ranking third nationally in that area.

Tight end Luke Hasz will be another option for Chambliss when attacking the middle of the Miami defense. Hasz was a standout player for Arkansas before transferring to Oxford and suffering an ankle injury that threatened the season.

The junior has a target in each of the Rebels' two playoff games and is a red-zone option. After scoring the first touchdown for Ole Miss against Georgia, a long-shot flier can come in the form of 35-1 for the first touchdown or an anytime touchdown at +550.

Fletcher will have success running inside zone and man concepts against Ole Miss' defensive front. The junior averages 5.4 yards per carry on the season with 36 carries through two playoff games.

The ceiling for Fletcher resides just shy of 100 rushing yards against the Rebels, giving value to a props market that falls just shy of 90 yards.

Pick: Over 52 · Ole Miss 1H +1.5 · Mark Fletcher Jr. Over 86.5 Rushing Yards (-115) · Dae'Quan Wright Over 25.5 Receiving Yards (-120) · Luke Hasz Anytime TD (+550)

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About the Author

Collin is a senior writer for the Action Network, but serves in various roles behind the scenes as well. As someone who specializes in data visualization of probabilities, power ratings, and head-to-head matchups, Collin’s work within the college football space powers the Action Network’s PRO projections throughout the college football season, and has done so since the birth of the app in 2017. Collin contributes similarly to the college basketball vertical, and his passion for predictive analytics have led him to become a key force in finding betting edges in more niche markets such as professional wrestling and entertainment awards.

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