Miami reached deep into the future this week with a scholarship offer to Treyson Reynolds, a Class of 2030 offensive guard/defensive tackle from Cypress Bay. Reynolds announced the offer on X.
Reynolds’ profile lists him at 6-foot-1 and 270 pounds with a 4.0 GPA to go with the physical measurable. RNR Sports Media lists Reynolds as a prospect who has played offensive tackle for the Plantation Wildcats, while Larry Blustein’s site noted earlier this year that Reynolds played on both sides of the line and showed promise against older competition.
Reynolds has not even reached high school, yet Miami already wants to get involved. Mario Cristobal and Alex Mirabal do not throw offensive line offers around without purpose, especially this early. When Miami offers a young South Florida lineman, the staff usually sees frame, movement skills and long-term upside.
The Hurricanes have built their roster identity around the line of scrimmage. Cristobal’s best recruiting work at Miami has often started up front, where the Canes have stacked blue-chip offensive linemen and continued to prioritize size, power and development. Reynolds fits the type of player Miami wants to evaluate over multiple years instead of rushing late into a recruitment.
Cypress Bay sits in Broward County, one of the most important recruiting areas for Miami. Offering Reynolds now gives Miami a chance to set the pace, keep communication open and make sure a young lineman from South Florida knows the Canes saw him early.
Reynolds also brings two-way value. Young linemen who can play offense and defense often develop better feet, hands and leverage. That helps him down the road, even when his long-term position sorts itself out.
Reynolds has years of development ahead, and recruiting rankings for his class will change often. Still, this offer deserves attention because Miami made the move early, and the staff has shown confidence in its offensive line evaluations.
The Hurricanes want to own South Florida again. Sometimes that starts with five-star seniors. Sometimes it starts with identifying a young Broward lineman before most programs catch on. Miami planted an early flag with Treyson Reynolds.

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