St. Thomas Aquinas Makes Last Second Defensive Stop To Clinch Championship And Ultimately Set South Florida Record For state championships in a year
St. Thomas Aquinas Makes Last Second Defensive Stop To Clinch Championship And Ultimately Set South Florida Record For state championships in a year
Marcus Benjamin works as the senior writer and editor for FootballHotbed.com. He attended Florida A&M and Florida Memorial University completing a bachelors degree in communications in 2010. He's covered high school football in the South Florida area since 2010 for the Miami Herald, Miami Sports Tribune and ShawSports.net. He is married and lives in Fort, Lauderdale, FL.
Follow In a College Football Playoff National Championship that will be remembered for its drama, legacy and unexpected storylines, the Miami Hurricanes came up just short in a 27-21 loss to the Indiana Hoosiers at Hard Rock Stadium. Miami, vying for its first national title since 2001, fought with heart and grit, but an undefeated Indiana squad — led by Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Fernando Mendoza — had just enough in the tank to secure the Hoosiers’ first national championship in program history.From the opening whistle, Indiana took charge. The Hoosiers jumped out to a 10-0 lead before halftime and never relinquished control. Miami’s defense, which had been one of the nation’s stingiest throughout the season, faced its toughest test of the year against a poised, explosive Indiana offense. Despite the Hurricanes’ best efforts — including two second-half rushing touchdowns by running back Mark Fletcher Jr. — Indiana’s balanced attack and opportunistic defense kept Miami at bay.The defining moment of the game — and the season — came midway through the fourth quarter. On fourth-and-4, with Indiana clinging to a slim edge, Mendoza took the snap and ripped off a 12-yard touchdown run, barreling through would-be tacklers and stretching the ball across the goal line with sheer force and determination. The sequence became an instant classic, encapsulating his competitive spirit and the Hoosiers’ Cinderella run.Mendoza’s performance was emblematic of his entire season: clutch when it mattered most. Finishing the game with 186 passing yards and that memorable rushing score, he was named the offensive MVP and cemented his status as one of the top NFL draft prospects in the 2026 class.For Football Hotbed readers, Mendoza’s rise carries a special meaning. Long before he was leading Indiana on college football’s biggest stage, Mendoza made a name for himself on the Football Hotbed national showcase circuit. As a high school standout out of Miami’s Christopher Columbus High School, he took part in Football Hotbed’s National Sophomore Showcase, an event designed to expose emerging talent to college recruiters and national audiences.The platform played a vital role early in his development, giving college programs a closer look at his unique blend of size, arm talent and athleticism. Though he was a two-star prospect coming out of high school, Mendoza’s early exposure helped him garner attention that eventually led to scholarship offers and, ultimately, his collegiate path that saw him develop into a Heisman Trophy winner and national champion.Miami’s season will go down as a triumphant return to relevance — the Hurricanes reestablished themselves among college football’s elite and battled all the way to the title game. But on this night, it was the story of an underdog program and a Football Hotbed alum who defied expectations that stole the spotlight.
Follow Miami defeated Ohio State 24–14 on December 31, 2025 in the Cotton Bowl, riding a suffocating defense and a physical ground game to one of the biggest recent upsets of the College Football Playoff era. The win sent the No. 10 Hurricanes past the defending national champions and into the CFP semifinals, while the No. 2 Buckeyes’ title defense ended in Arlington.Miami controlled the game early, building a 14–0 lead behind a pick-six and a methodical offense that kept Ohio State off balance. Ohio State closed the gap in the second half, but Miami’s late touchdown run and clock management sealed the 24–14 final margin.Final: Miami 24, Ohio State 14.The Hurricanes held Ohio State scoreless in the first half and allowed only 14 points total, the most the Buckeyes had given up all season but still well below their offensive average.A fourth-quarter Miami touchdown drive, capped by a short ChaMar Brown scoring run, effectively put the game out of reach.Miami’s upset was built on a rugged run game and opportunistic defense that consistently flipped momentum.Running back Mark Fletcher Jr. powered the ground attack with a strong, downhill performance that helped Miami control tempo and sustain drives, repeatedly moving the chains in short-yardage and late-game situations.Quarterback Carson Beck managed the game efficiently, throwing a touchdown pass and avoiding major mistakes while directing a balanced offense that mixed play-action with inside runs.Receiver CJ Daniels and the perimeter group contributed key third- and fourth-down catches, including a late grab that set up Miami’s final touchdown inside the Ohio State 10.Miami’s defense set the tone from the opening series, limiting explosive plays and forcing Ohio State to drive the length of the field for every scoring chance.Cornerback Keionte Scott delivered the signature play of the night when he jumped a screen pass from Heisman finalist Julian Sayin and returned it more than 70 yards for a touchdown, giving Miami a two-score cushion.The Hurricanes’ front generated steady pressure, producing sacks and hurries that disrupted Ohio State’s timing and kept the Buckeyes behind the chains.A late interception of Sayin in the fourth quarter ended any realistic comeback hopes and allowed Miami to bleed the clock with its run game.Ohio State found some rhythm after halftime but never fully recovered from the early deficit and Miami’s defensive intensity.Julian Sayin threw for over 250 yards with a touchdown but was intercepted multiple times, including the pivotal pick-six that swung momentum decisively toward Miami.Star receiver Jeremiah Smith was Ohio State’s most dangerous weapon, posting over 150 receiving yards and a long touchdown that pulled the Buckeyes back within one score in the second half.The Buckeyes’ defense tightened after the break and forced several punts, but extended drives by Miami in the fourth quarter kept them on the field and ultimately wore them down.Several of the standout names in this game, including Mark Fletcher Jr. for Miami and Jeremiah Smith for Ohio State, were already familiar to South Florida youth football followers thanks to years of exposure at national showcase-style events during their middle school and high school careers. Their impact on one of the sport’s biggest stages underscored how early development and elite regional competition can shape players who later decide College Football Playoff games. After a score, Jeremiah Smith lets out a yell as he draws Ohio State closer to his hometown University of Miami team in the college football playoff on December 31, 2025. Photo by Robson Lopes for Football Hotbed Head coach Mario Cristobal walks into battle vs. Ohio State Mark Fletcher scores to strike first blood vs. Ohio State on December 31, 2025
Follow College Station, TX– As a freshman in high school, Malachi Toney fumbled the football on what would have been the go-ahead drive for his American Heritage High School Football team in a comeback effort versus Miami Central. He was inconsolable and ran off the field through an exit that players were not supposed to take. Saturday night, the exact same scenario took place in the University of Miami’s first ever trip to the College Football Playoff. Teammate Mark Fletcher, was there both times. This time Fletcher says he told his teammate, we need you, you aren’t done. His words would prove prophetic and this time as a true freshman in college, Toney would score the game winning field goal after fumbling in a game defining situation and the Hurricanes would go on to beat Texas A&M 10-3 on the road. The Miami Hurricanes’ 10–3 College Football Playoff win over Texas A&M turned into a national showcase for two former American Heritage stars, Malachi Toney and Mark Fletcher Jr., who powered Miami’s offense on the sport’s biggest stage. In a defensive slugfest where every yard mattered, the South Florida duo authored the defining moments that extended the Hurricanes’ season and underscored the pipeline from American Heritage to Coral Gables.Heritage boys on the big stageToney and Fletcher, once teammates at American Heritage in Broward County, carried that chemistry straight into the College Football Playoff, providing the Hurricanes’ two most explosive offensive performances of the afternoon. Both stepped into starring roles late, with Fletcher’s punishing ground game and Toney’s clutch touchdown sealing a win that validates Miami’s rise back into the national conversation.Fletcher finished with a career-high 172 rushing yards, setting the tone against a Texas A&M front that had dominated SEC play.Toney, a true freshman, delivered the game-winning score in the final two minutes after earlier adversity, showing the resilience that defined his rise at American Heritage.Mark Fletcher’s career nightIn a game where Miami’s offense struggled to finish drives, Fletcher became the Hurricanes’ identity, repeatedly churning out tough yards and finally breaking the Aggies’ will in the fourth quarter. His physical, downhill style looked exactly like the back who dominated Florida high school defenses on Friday nights in Plantation.Fletcher ripped off a career-long 56-yard run on the final scoring drive, flipping field position and igniting the Hurricanes’ sideline.Miami leaned on him four more times on that march, riding his legs into scoring range in a game where he was clearly the best offensive player on the field.For Football Hotbed readers who followed his high school journey, this performance was a confirmation: the same back who carried American Heritage deep into the playoffs is now doing it in the College Football Playoff for Miami.Malachi Toney’s redemption momentToney’s night told the story of a freshman growing up in real time on the biggest stage the sport offers. After a costly fumble in the fourth quarter that gave Texas A&M the ball in plus territory, he could have faded into the background but instead authored the defining play of Miami’s season.Earlier, Toney flipped the field with a 55-yard punt return that set Miami up deep in Aggie territory, showcasing the burst and playmaking he flashed constantly at American Heritage.With 1:44 left, he took a short touch—reported as an end-around or quick toss depending on outlet—and turned it into an 11-yard game-winning touchdown, breaking the 3–3 deadlock and sending Miami to the CFP quarterfinals.Teammates surrounded a visibly emotional Toney on the bench after his fumble, and when he got his second chance, the former Heritage standout responded with the same confidence and explosiveness that made him one of South Florida’s most feared offensive weapons in high school.American Heritage pipeline pays offThis playoff win serves as a living commercial for American Heritage’s status as a true national recruiting factory, particularly for Miami. On a field filled with blue-chip talent, it was two products of a Broward powerhouse who decided the game and extended the Hurricanes’ season.The Toney–Fletcher connection underscores what Football Hotbed has tracked for years: South Florida’s elite programs are built to feed college football’s biggest stages. With both players producing in high-pressure moments, Miami’s staff can point directly to this CFP win as proof that staying home and repping the crib can lead to the sport’s highest platform.Miami’s moment and what’s nextThe 10–3 victory not only pushes Miami into a Cotton Bowl showdown with No. 2 Ohio State, it also quiets the debate about whether the Hurricanes belonged in the expanded 12-team field over brands like Notre Dame. A defense led by stars like Rueben Bain Jr. and Bryce Fitzgerald did its job, but it was the American Heritage duo that gave Miami the offensive spark needed to survive and advance.For Football Hotbed’s youth and high school audience, the message is clear: two kids who once dominated South Florida Friday nights just swung a College Football Playoff game on Saturday, and they did it together, wearing the same colors they chose back at American Heritage. Mark Fletcher at american heritage-teammates with malachi toney

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