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Wednesday, August 27, 2014

2014 Rambling Sports Week 1 CFB Preview

This season I am doing something a little bit different with the weekly preview. I am still predicting all the top 25 games and games of interest to me and hopefully you, but I am also incorporating the number from a rating system I have been tinkering with the last couple of seasons. The numbers in the in the () after each team are the power rating numbers and I will use those to inform my picks. Hope you enjoy.

Thursday, August 28th, 2014:

#21 Texas A&M (48.29) at #9 South Carolina (56.80) (HFA:4.85), 5:00 pm SEC Network: This game is intriguing on a couple different levels. Both teams have to replace quarterbacks and natioanl stars. For A&M that is one and the same Johnny Manziel, who was both the most intriguing player on and off the field. South Carolina needs to replace Connnor Shaw and Jadeveon Clowney. To replace Shaw is Dylan Thompson who has all the tools and the confidence of the Ol' Ball Coach to replace Clowney will be a team effort but there is a deep group of talent to do it. I think this one is a bit of a slog but the A&M defense is the weakest unit on the field and the Gamecock defense should be good enough to hold the Aggie offense in check most of the game. Power Pick: South Carolina by 13.37 My Pick: South Carolina 24-21 Line: S Car -10.5

Boise State (21.79) vs #18 Ole Miss (45.16) (Atlanta), 7:00 pm ESPN: Boise State is in it's first game of it's first season without Chris Petersen at the helm since '05 and the first time without him on the sideline since '00. A tough game against a very good SEC squad will tell us a lot about how this team is going to look year one under Bryan Harsin. For Ole Miss, Dr. Bo is back for his senior year and at the helm of what is the best Rebel squad in some time. Hugh Freeze should have the offense rockin' and rollin' and the defense anchored by Robert Nkemdiche should slow down the Broncos Rushing attack. Power Pick: Ole Miss by 23.37 My Pick: Ole Miss 35-17 Line: Ole Miss -10 to -11

Saturday, August 30th, 2014:

Penn State (25.26) vs UCF (26.88) (Dublin, Ireland), 7:30 am ESPN2: Penn State and UCF head to Dublin and give you some early morninng football to enjoy. UCF should be fun to watch if only to see how they replace Blake Bortles and Storm Johnson. The defense should be improved off a top 40 performance in 2013. Penn State has a distinct advantage with Chrsitian Hackenberg under center but Allen Robinson is gone and with sanctions a lack of experience on the offensive line may bring up unforseen depth issues. This one is a toss up by the numbers and one I could see going either way. Power Pick: UCF by 1.62 My Pick: UCF 17-13 Line: UCF -1 to -2

#5 Ohio State (37.94) at Navy (32.87) (HFA:3.49), 11:00 am CBS Sports Net: Ohio State heads to Navy week one for a tricky test without Braxton Miller who is out for the year. At first blush to me this was a blowout but when my numbers say something this radically different I have to take another look. Navy returns a lot for an offense that is intricate and based on getting to know the feel. While Ohio State lost a lot on both sides of the ball, they do have a much improved defensive line. Secondary, quarterback and o-line are quesiton marks and if Navy can score on offense this could be uncomfortably close for The Ohio State University. Power Pick: Navy by 1.58 My Pick: Ohio State 24-17 Line: Ohio State -15 to -16.5

#7 UCLA (59.39) at Virginia (23.59) (HFA:3.19), 11:00 am ESPN: UCLA travels to Virginia in an early morning week 1 trap game. I'll explain... teams traveling from the west coast to the east coast suffer from jet lag and it affects the traveling team in a pretty significant way. I think UCLA still wins much like Oregon in last years opener, but I don't think it's affects them enough to lose the game, just the amount they dominate it. Power Pick: UCLA by 32.61 My Pick: UCLA 31-17 Line: UCLA -21

Rice (16.90) at #17 Notre Dame (38.30) (HFA:4.79), 2:30 pm NBC: Rice travels to Notre Dame to face a squad mired in a academic scandal. Three starters and a key back up are off the team but Notre Dame shouldn't have too much trouble with a Rice squad that is much less experienced than last year. Power Pick: Notre Dame by 26.19 My Pick: Notre Dame 21-10 Line: Notre Dame -21

FAU (9.17) at #22 Nebraska (27.36) (HFA:5.12), 2:30 pm BTN: What would have been the Pelini bowl is now one man and cat's vendetta against a school. FAU-Nebraska: This time it's personal. Power Pick: Nebraska by 23.31 My Pick: Nebraska 28-10 Line: Nebraska -22

Arkansas (26.98) at #6 Auburn (65.76) (HFA:4.84), 3:00 pm SEC Network: Bert and Hogville head to the plains to take on Malzahn and co. Arkansas should have a very good running game and be able to move the ball a bit, but the pass game could be close to non-existant if Brandon Allen doesn't improve this season. Auburn lost Tre Mason and Dee Ford but the pass game should be more dangerous and Arkansas isn't the team to exploit their flaws. Power Pick: Auburn by 43.61 My Pick: Auburn 42-20 Line: Auburn -19.5

#16 Clemson (39.34) at #12 Georgia (41.76) (HFA:5.13), 4:30 pm ESPN: Clemson-Georgia was the best game of opening weekend last season. Clemson outlasted Georgia on the strength of their defense and the solid play of Boyd and Watkins. Georgia lost Aaron Murray but get a bunch of players healthy in the receiving corps and Keith Marshall in the backfield to pair up with Todd Gurley. Clemson for it's part lost Boyd, Watkins and Bryant, but the defense should be the strength. If the defense is as good as expected this should be another barn burner in Athens. Power Pick: Georgia by 7.55 My Pick: Georgia 27-21 Line: Georgia -7.5

Louisiana Tech (-1.34) at #4 Oklahoma (54.96) (HFA:4.99), 6:00 pm: Two years ago this would have been one hell of a match up but since the departure of Sonny Dykes La Tech has done a similar nose dive to Cal. Oklahoma should romp and work out any of the kinks in the defense and passing game. Power Pick: Oklahoma by 61.28 My Pick: Oklahoma 42-3 Line: Oklahoma -38

Fresno State (22.57) at #15 USC (51.35) (HFA:4.32), 6:30 pm FOX: A rematch of last years bowl game see Fresno a much lesser version of that December team with the departure of Derek Carr. USC is rid of Kiffin but brough in eight win Steve. This should be an easy USC win as they are one of the most talented starting lineups in the country. Power Pick: USC by 33.11 My Pick: USC 45-10 Line: USC -21.5

#1 Florida State (58.94) vs Oklahoma State (30.15) (Arlington), 7:00 pm ABC: One of the headliners of the evening and the site for College Gameday is the showdown of the Seminoles and Cowboys. This would have been a hell of a game last season with a Cowboys defense that was severly underrated and an offense that was pretty darn good. With the losses on defense though Oklahoma State is going to need to make this a track meet to have a chance and Florida States have the guns for that type of game too. Power Pick: Florida State by 28.79 My Pick: 56-38 Line: Florida State -17.5 to -19

#14 Wisconsin (30.22) vs #13 LSU (39.21) (Houston), 8:00 pm ESPN: This is the game I'm most interested in on Saturday. Both teams have stellar running games, passing games that lost their producers and defenses that saw high levels of attrition. The biggest difference is LSU restocks with 4 and 5 star players and Wisconsin reloads with 3 stars. That being said Gordon-Fournette is going to be a hell of a show and this game is going to fly by. Power Pick: LSU by 8.99 My Pick: LSU 24-20 Line: LSU -4.5 to -5

#25 Washington (46.85) at Hawaii (1.27) (HFA:2.34), 9:30 pm CBS Sports Net: The late game from the islands and shouldn't be very close. Washington is a Pac-12 dark horse candidate with Chris Petersen at the helm and should trounce a Hawaii squad that is probably wondering how long their team will be together. Power Pick: Washington by 43.24 My Pick: Washinton 38-10 Line: Washington -17

Sunday, August 31st, 2014:

Utah State (19.17) at Tennessee (20.91) (HFA:4.99), 6:00 pm SEC Network: This isn't the game with a top ten team in it but it is the more intriguing of the games on Sunday. CHUCKIE KEATON is back after falling to injury last season, he may not be all the way back to speed in game one but as Spener Hall (@edsbs) said last year, "Chuckie gonna fuck somebody up." Tennessee is at least a year off but there is talent and this game is at home which should give them the edge in a close contest. Power Pick: Tennessee by 6.74 My Pick: Tennessee 20-17 Line: Tennessee -6

SMU (6.38) at #10 Baylor (42.44) (HFA:3.4), 6:30 pm FOX Sports 1: The other game of note on Sunday is an in-state game between SMU and Baylor. SMU is in a rebuilding year under June Jones but should be back in a year or two. Baylor for it's part needs to prove it's healthy on offense and that it can fill holes on defense while maintiaining a level of play near where last saeason was. Power Pick: Baylor by 39.46 My Pick: Baylor 56-17 Line: Baylor -33

Monday, September 1st, 2014:

Miami (FL) (35.80) at Louisville (33.11) (HFA:3.95), 7:00 pm ESPN:  The last game of the weekend will set up the upcoming ACC season outside of Florida State. Miami comes in with a true freshman QB under center. Although that is something to pause over he is able to turn and hand off to Duke Johnson. Johnson is one of the ten best backs in the country and is the focal point of the offense. Louisville needs to replace Bridgewater and with Devonta Parker that is going to be much more difficult. The defense should be good and with Petrino at the helm the offense should be competent but I'm intriguied to see the transition from Strong to Petrino. Power Pick: Louisville by 1.26 My Pick: Louisville 21-20 Line: Louisville -3.5

2014 SEC Preview

The SEC’s run of seven straight national championships came to a halt when Auburn fell to Florida State. Let us all rejoice and realize it could just as easily start up again this season. The SEC is still at worst the second best conference and that is mainly attributed to the question marks surrounding the loss of eight starting quarterbacks in the league. Will anyone step up to challenge Alabama and Auburn, can Vanderbilt continue its success without James Franklin and who’s coming out of the East?

Subtractions/Additions


No change in the conference structure have been made since the additions of Texas A&M and Missouri in 2012. Although there is speculation of moves to 16 team conferences there isn’t anything specific.

Recent History


The SEC hasn’t had a repeat winner since the ’97 & ’98 years when Tennessee won the conference in successive years. The last three seasons have seen West division teams win it. 2011 saw LSU take the conference crown after a 9-6 game against Alabama in the regular season to claim the division. 2012 saw Alabama win the conference in one of the more entertaining championship games of the past couple years that saw Georgia fall short in the red zone as time expired. Last year’s champion was the surprise return to glory of Auburn, who reached Atlanta with the help of back to back last second wins against Georgia and Alabama. Auburn beat the equally surprising Missouri in a high quality game and went on to the National Championship.

Coaching Changes


There was only one coaching change in the SEC and it was at best an immediate downgrade. James Franklin is gone for Penn State and a permanent place in the angry hearts of the entire southeast. Franklin brought Vanderbilt to new heights but decided three years was enough time to spend in Nashville. To replace Franklin the Commodores brought in Derek Mason the Stanford DC the last couple of years. I don’t doubt Mason’s ability to coach, his love of the game or his recruiting ability but I will always be skeptical of a new coach going into one of the toughest major conference jobs in the country.

Team Write-ups (Division, 2013 W-L, Total Returning Starters, Returning Off (Starters (QB), % Yards), Returning Def (Starters, % yards) *coach records are career numbers


Alabama Crimson Tide (West, 11-2, 12, 7(N), 84.2%, 5, 59%) Saban has apologized for the lackluster 2013 season and is ready to move on and win with drones again in 2014. And in a decision that is all the rage in 2014, like twerking or the #ALSIcebucketchallenge, Saban has named co-starters for week one. Blake Sims and Jacob Coker haven’t separated from each other in practice and will need game time to break the tie. Whomever wins the is going to end up in the McCarron, McElroy mold and have a great group of players around them and be asked not to fuck it up. The backfield is loaded with former four and five stars (like most of the lineup) and headlined by T.J. Yeldon. Yeldon the former five star junior ran for 1235 yards on 5 yards a carry and as seems to happen every year in the Bama backfield was overshadowed by a younger player. That player was Derrick Henry who averaged almost 11 yards per carry in 2013 and had a strong showing in the bowl game against Oklahoma. The lost man in this equation is junior Kenyan Drake who averaged 7.5 yards a carry on 92 carries in 2013. This sis a loaded backfield with not enough carries to go around and isn’t a worry added to the drop-off talk. Heading to the outside of the field the Kenny Hill and Kevin Norwood are gone but this is still a stacked group that should be a great help for either Sims or Coker. Amari Cooper is the headliner, a junior Cooper had an excellent sophomore campaign at 9.9 yards per target but needs to be a bit more sure-handed as 60.8% catch rate is a bit low for an elite receiver. Christian Jones and DeAndrew White are back for good sized roles in their senior year and provide a pair of options with great hands. Add to that group five star sophomore TE O.J. Howard and this is a group that can attack you in multiple ways just in the passing game. Ed Stinson and Jeoffrey Pagan are gone but they are replaced by a pair of five star sophomores in A’Shawn Robinson and Jonathan Allen who should pick up the slack with little problem. Sandwiched in the middle is senior Brandon Ivory who is there to clog the middle and create space for the linebackers. Behind those three are three four star sophomores and a five star freshman Da’Shawn Hand who could see considerable playing time in his freshman year. C.J. Mosley will leave a leadership void but from a talent standpoint the linebackers will see little to no drop off. Every starter will be a four star junior and followed on the depth chart by at worst a four star sophomore and/or freshman with two five star’s stuck in the two deep. Saban does a great job of coaching his DBs and this year’s talented group should be no different. If Landon Collins and Nick Perry (coming off injury) play up to their potential then this should be a secondary that at worst is above average and at best is one of the 5-10 best in the country. This is the most talented roster in the conference and the nation but they underwhelmed (slightly) last season but should be championship quality once again. Head Coach: Nick Saban (165-57-1) Since 2007

LSU Tigers (West, 10-3, 12, 5(N), 24.5%, 7, 67.8%) LES!!!! Prior to the week one tilt with Wisconsin Les Miles has said that both Anthony Jennings (So) and Brandon Harris (Fr) will play in the opener and although that isn’t ideal having two supremely talented players at your disposal. Jennings was bad in his limited action, completing 45% of his passes for 4.5 per attempt. He obviously hasn’t completely blown away the staff to be splitting duties with Harris but that’s not to say he hasn’t improved over the offseason. Harris is an exciting athlete and the combination of him and Leonard Fournette has the LSU faithful jazzed (get it because New Orleans is in Louisiana). Jeremy Hill and Alfred Blue are gone and with them 1750 yards. Terrence Magee is back for his senior season off a year in which he carried the ball at a 7.3 yard per attempt clip. Behind him Kenny Hilliard was good enough but at 4.5 yards per carry nothing to write home about. The headliner and game changer is the aforementioned Fournette. A five star back who Fournette is thought of by many to be the next Adrian Peterson and there have been whispers of Heisman around the true freshman. I don’t want to go that far but am giddy to see what this young man can do with such hype surrounding him. That rushing attack needs to be because no one is back from the receiving corps. Now that is an exaggeration but not a huge one. There are 33 catches back from last season and only 8 of them are from returning receivers. Well Landry and Beckham Jr aren’t coming through that door and that means the Tigers must replace 2300 yards of production. Now some of that should come from the rushing attack but most of it will need to come from the receivers so let’s take a look at who they will likely be. It all starts with Travin Dural, he of 7 catches, will see a large jump in his targets. Dural in his limited opportunity took advantage by averaging 9.7 yards per target but he needs to improve his hands as a sophomore to be truly effective. Joining Dural will be five star freshman Malachi Dupre (awesome name) who has impressed this fall in camp and should be a big part of the game plan from week 1 on. There are a litany of four stars and high three stars in the wings as freshman but Dural, Dupre and a group of RS freshmen will probably be the bell cows. The offense is a work in progress but a great running game will certainly help stabilize the ship as the passing game and quarterbacks come along early in the season. Three defensive linemen are gone including both starting DTs Ego Ferguson and Anthony Johnson. To replace them are high three star sophomore Christian LaCouture, five star RS freshman Frank Herron, four star RS freshman Greg Gilmore and two four star freshmen who should be able even if in a rotation to replace the production of Ferguson and Johnson. On the outside both starters are back but they need to be much better at create pressure off the edge, because 7 sacks isn’t going to cut it. Lamin Barrow is gone at Will linebacker but he is replaced by Kwon Alexander a junior former four star recruit who played the SAM last year. The new SAM backer will be Lamar Louis another junior who will have sizeable but not unreplaceable shoes to fill. This should be a solid unit and Alexander and MLB Welter should be able to create some disruption in the backfield.  I’m not going to go into too much detail in the secondary because Miles and co. are ‘cruitin. Tre’Davious White will be a stud as he move into his sophomore year and bookends with Jalen Mills. When you look at the depth chart there are three four star sophomores, four four star sophomores and a four star junior and well it’s just a back four loaded with talent. The defense should be fine, if John Chavis has proven anything it is that he can coach a defense. The running game will be spectacular but the question is what if anything can they get out of the passing game. That being said I’d be surprised if they are outside the top three in the west. Head Coach: Les Miles (123-45) Since 2005

Auburn Tigers (West, 12-2, 14, 8(Y), 68.5%, 6, 62.2%) Malzahn had one hell of a reintroduction to the SEC as he lead Auburn to a SEC championship and national title game in year one at the helm. Returning to the plains for his senior season is Nick Marshall. Marshall wasn’t the most accurate passer but at 59.4% completion percentage he wasn’t bad and a 7.2 yards per attempt is plenty good when combined with his 1193 rushing yards. At 7.8 yards per attempt clip Marshall ran Malzahn’s offense to a T in 2013. Marshall’s accomplice from 2013 is gone as Tre Mason moved on to the St. Louis Rams. Replacing 1800 yards from any one player is never easy but Auburn looks to be in pretty good position to do so. Seniors Cameron Artis-Payne and Corey Grant are back after averaging 6.7 and 9.8 yards per carry last season. Both will surely see regression with an increase in carries but both have pedigree (four star recruits) and some production to suggest the running game won’t regress too much. Add to those two five star freshman running back Roc Thomas and you have a possibility for this rushing attack to not miss a beat. There is potential to have an even better passing attack and threat in 2014. The top five receivers return lead by Sammie Coats who had 902 yards and averaged 11.3 yards per target. He only caught 52.5% of his targets but that was most likely due to the slight accuracy issues of Marshall and an abundance of deep passes that have a lesser chance of completion. WRs Ricardo Louis (Jr), Marcus Davis (So) and Quan Bray (Sr) who all were between 6.5 and 7.5 yards per target as you would expect from a spread attack with quick hit routes and 63.5% to 76.7% catch rates that you’d expect from talented players on shorter routes. Along with them is senior tight end C.J. Uzomah who went for 9.1 yards per target and gives them a creative option from in-line in the passing game. The line loses Greg Robinson but returns a bunch of experience and a 1st team All-SEC center. On defense, Dee Ford is gone and with him 10.5 sacks and the next highest sack total belonged to Carl Lawson with 4 who went down with an ACL injury in spring but is attempting to be “healthy” for the season. Assuming Clawson doesn’t come back at full health or at all there is talent at DE but it’s mostly unproven. Starter senior LaDarius Owens is back but at 5 TFLs and 2.5 sacks he’s going to have to produce at a level he hasn’t shown yet in his college career. The highest upside may be sophomore four star Elijah Daniel who in limited time and just six tackles had 3 TFLs and 2.5 sacks. The new starting DT should be five star sophomore Montravius Adams and a group of talented young players that should be just fine in replacing those who left. The Linebackers should be very good as well in the 4-2-5. Both are back and both are junior starters returning from last season. Cassanova McKinzy is a former four star and Kris Frost is a former five star. Between them they need a bit more presence in the backfield but are solid options on a very good front six. The secondary loses a couple starters and a back-up at both safety positions but with very good recruiting and a shutdown corner back this group is very much capable of picking up the slack and being just as good in 2014 as they were in 2013. Jonathan Mincy is the key cog with 15 passes defensed but only 1 INTs should have a much more “productive” 2014 as far as takeaways are concerned. Auburn will be very good again in 2014 with good coaching but the close game luck is almost assuredly going to run out and that may doom them to a slightly underwhelming season in some eyes. Head Coach: Gus Malzahn (21-5) Since 2013

Georgia Bulldogs (East, 8-5, 15, 5(N), 72.9%, 10, 75.5%) Aaron Murray is gone, but Hunter Mason was solid in a fill in role last season. Mason completed 61% completion percentage, an acceptable 7.8 yards per attempt and unfortunately a 6.8% sack rate. The best news for Mason is that Todd Gurley is back and should be the focal point of the offense. Gurley rushed for 6 yards a carry and almost a thousand yards in only 165 carries. An explosive runner Gurley is one of the best backs in the nation and should take a lot of pressure of Mason and the pass game. Keith Marshall is back off an injury that put a damper on the preseason hype around the pairing of Gurley and Marshall. This year add in sophomore Brendan Douglas and the Georgia backfield may be the deepest in the country and that doesn’t even consider five star freshman Sony Michel. Wide receiver should be loaded as well. Malcolm Mitchell is back after missing 2013 injured, along with seniors Chris Conley and Michael Bennett who both averaged at least nine yards a carry and were sure handed. If they stay healthy this receiving corps will be very good. If they don’t junior Justin Scott-Wesley, four star sophomore Reggie Davis and sophomore Blake Tibbs are all talented in waiting for their opportunity. Defense looks every bit as good as the offense does. Only two linemen are gone from last season. DEs Garrison Smith, a starter and DE John Taylor. The good news is despite Smith’s departure the other starter at end is still there and the junior Sterling Bailey saw plenty of time last year and should fill in nicely. NG is a bit shawllow with just junior Chris Mayes who missed two starts and senior Mark Thornton who didn’t see much time on the field. If Mayes gets injured again it will be interesting to see how Richt and company respond. Linebacker returns all four starters and the entire two deep which suggests that this will be a great group. The four starters combined for 269.5 tackles, 37.5 TFLs and 16 sacks and should build on that number with Jordan Jenkins in his junior year and Leonard Floyd growing and building off his freshman season. With a strong front seven the secondary should be able to weather some growing pains as they replace two starters and a plethora of depth chart players. If the group of RS freshmen can live up to the four star hype I think new coordinator Jeremy Pruitt should have plenty to work with to make this defense a heck of a unit. Overall there are some big questions, mainly, health, QB and DB but there is enough residual talent to presume this should be a very good Georgia team again this season. Head Coach: Mark Richt (126-45) Since 2001

South Carolina Gamecocks (East, 11-2, 14, 8(N), 75.4%, 6, 68.8%) Hatin’ Ass Spurrier is back for another year at the helm of the Gamecocks. Connor Shaw is gone and despite an unheralded career he was a pretty solid quarterback. Dylan Thompson steps in, he improved his accuracy in 2013 but he was still much too inconsistent at 58% completion percentage. He was however very adept at avoiding sacks and that’s a skill along with another improvement in history that portends good things. The good news for Spurrier and Thompson is Mike Davis is back. At 5.8 yards per carry Davis rushed for almost 1200 yards last season and should be one of the best backs this side of Gurley in the SEC. Behind Davis are juniors Shon Carson (4.2 y/c) and Brandon Wilds (5.1 y/c) should be deep enough that an injury to Davis would be bad but not catastrophic. Bruce Ellington is gone and with him a reliable target with good hands and incredibly YAC (yards after catch). The good news is the corps of receivers is full of upperclassmen. Seniors Damiere Byrd and Nick Jones are back, Byrd being the big play threat whose catch rate at 54% is down because of deep balls and iffy hands and Jones who was the sure handed possession type but wasn’t a big play threat. Joining them and possibly the most important cog may be Shaq Roland. Rolland caught 62.5% of his targets and went for 11.4 yards per target. With an increased workload he should be able to at least replace part of Ellington along with Byrd. The other interesting piece is junior TE Jerell Adams who went for 10.4 yards per target in limited attempts last season. On the defensive line Clowney is gone and although his production wasn’t quite what we were expecting last year, offenses won’t need to double, triple and chip one of your ends every single play. That being said I think because of the Clowney effect I think the production of Quarles and Sutton are eminently replaceable. The other good news is that a lot of players got good playing time in 2013 and although it’s a young line it’s experienced. J.T. Surratt should retain his starting spot this year after a 4 TFLs and 1.5 sacks. DE should be a rotation of four juniors and sophomores who all were high three stars and showed flashes of good production last season. DT should be deep with Surratt and three players including two former four stars filling out the two deep. The entirety of the linebacking corps is back combined with high four star freshman Bryson Allen-Williams this should be one of the best and stoutest units in the country let alone the conference, led by Skai Moore. Moore the WLB had 43 tackles and four INTs as a freshman and should only get better. In the secondary, the safeties should be stellar with the entire two deep being back and experience. The problem is a good secondary loses the top three corners from last season and only two players have returning experience. The good news is there are two high three star corners waiting in the wings and three four star freshman who were brought on campus and may be able to work into a rotation based on talent alone. The defense should be very good once again, with an extremely talented linebacking corps, a line that could be better than expected and a secondary that will have great safety play and needs young players to step up outside. The offense should be good behind a very good run game with Davis and Dylan Thompson has enough promise to make you think the offense shouldn’t take too much of a step back. This looks like a division winning squad and a potential conference champ, but the latter will assuredly need everything to break right. Head Coach: Steve Spurrier (219-79-2) Since 2005

Mississippi Rebels (West, 8-5, 15, 6(Y), 57.8%, 9, 81.7%) Dr. Bo, is back for another sesason at the helm for the Ole Miss offense under the tutelage of Hugh Freeze. Bo completed 64.8% percent of his passes for 6.9 yards per attempt. Being a mobile quarterback Dr. Bo takes a lot of sacks (5.2% sack rate) and needs to learn to get rid of the ball when leaving the pocket. Along with Bo’s passing is his rushing at 4.8 yards per carry he is an effective threat as a QB but not as explosive as some runners we have seen in the SEC. Joining Bo in the backfield are Juniors Jalen Walton and I’Tavius Mathers. Walton averaged 4.7 yards per attempt in 2013, compared to Mathers and his 5.9 he wasn’t nearly as effective. If we include Mark Dodson in this race at 5.6 yards per attempt, Walton looks like at best the second best running back option and quite possibly the third best option in the backfield. Walton for his part was by far the best back on the team at 8.7 yards per target compared to Mathers 6 yards a target. The receiving corps lost three of the top five WRs including Donte Moncrief but they return a five star sophomore (Laquon Treadwell), a former four star senior with a 70% catch rate (Vince Sanders), and four star sophomore slot receiver (Quincy Adeboyejo). Of those with 20 catches or more only Sanders and sophomore TE Evan Engram had greater than 6.5 yards per catch. That isn’t too concerning as the offensive system is based on quick passes and options to put the defense in poor position. Treadwell should be the key. He was good as a freshman, but if he can become an even better playmaker in year two no one will miss Donte Moncrief. A very good run defense line loses it’s starting DEs, but has ridiculous depth in the middle which should keep the run stopping level high. The key to it all is sophomore phenom DT Robert Nkemdiche, a five star prospect he recorded 29.5 tackles, 8 TFLs and 2 sacks in his freshman season in the SEC. The biggest question is pass rush. Last year’s line only had 12 sacks all year, but only lost 4 which could be a signal that there is growth in the front four. If the pass rush isn’t there that limits what can be done in the back seven on passing downs. Even with this issues this should still be a very good front if only because of Nkemdiche. Serderius Bryant is back for his senior year after 65 tackles (12.5 TFLs) in just 11 games last year. Fellow senior D.T. Shackleford also returns at MLB after 32.5 tackles last year (7.5 TFLs). The two of them should be able to batten down the linebacking corps and produce behind a stout defensive line. The secondary should be one of the best in the conference. After finishing 27 against the pass they return the top seven DBs from last season and any improvement up front is going to make this passing defense even better. It all hinges on FS Cody Prewitt, with 60.5 tackles and 13 passes defensed his control of the deep middle will be the controlling feature of the defense. This could be Ole Miss’s season to make some noise. With the good recruiting classes recently, they have a couple year window, but Dr. Bo is in his senior year along with some key cogs in the back seven which means the Rebels need to not waste what looks like their best team since Eli left. Head Coach: Hugh Freeze (45-18) Since 2012

Texas A&M Aggies (West, 9-4, 15, 6(N), 35.4%, 9, 59.7%) Johnny Manziel is gone but Kevin Sumlin is still there and fills the Manziel shoes with four star sophomore Kenny Hill is an accurate passer and fleet of foot and should fit into Sumlin’s philosophy just fine and with the returning talent, how much of a drop off will there be. The backfield around Hill should be experienced and at worst not a hindrance to a good to great offense. Tra Carson (Jr), Trey Williams (Jr) and Brandon Williams (Jr) are an excellent trio. Carson saw the most carries and had the worst yards per carry at 5.3 yards per carry, Trey Williams had four less carries but averaged 7 yards per carry and did a great job of taking advantage of good blocking. Lastly, Brandon Williams had 44 carries and averaged 6.1 yards per carry and makes up a good trio. Running back brings back a bunch of talent but wide receiver got hit hard by attrition. Mike Evans is gone after being one of the most dominant receivers in the country. With Evans, Derel Walker and Travis Labhart who combined for 1444 yards are also gone. Returning to catch passes from Kenny Hill are, last year’s second most targeted receiver Malcome Kennedy. Kennedy had a 70% catch rate, 7.7 yards per target and 650 yards receiving and should be suited well enough for the number one role. To pick up the slack are a pair of four star sophomores, LaQuvionte Gonzalez and Edward Pope, who need to take a step forward in their second year in the system. Behind that are a RS freshman high four star Kyrion Parker, five star freshman Speedy Noil (watch him) and four star freshman Frank Iheanacho. This should be a good receiving corps this year and a potentially great one next year. Jake Matthews is gone but Ogbuehi moves to LT and the rest of the line should be very good and very experienced and the third straight very good line in College Station. The defense shouldn’t get much worse this year and the level of talent they brought in should mean at worst a slight rise in level of play and for the sake of A&M a nice little jump in production. On the line, a bunch of sophomores got considerable playing time last year in the A&M defense and that experience should be a net positive this season and beyond. Juniors and sophomores populate the two deep headlined by four star sophomore RUSH end Deshon Hall. The biggest impacts could be four star sophomore NG Hardreck Walker who needs to be a force at the one technique if this line is going to be better. There is hope abound on the line with another class of four and five star players coming in the talent says this is a group that is trending up. The linebackers better hope that the line gets better otherwise there will be a lot of tackles available for players that haven’t seen bulk field time. The linebackers should be all high three star sophomores and good players but will they gel early and be good enough to fill the gaps if the line doesn’t produce? The secondary should be pretty good with the duo of Deshazor Everett and De’Vante Harris at CB and Howard Matthews at safety, the group of which had 27 passes defensed, six of which were INTs. Whomever fills the open safety role is going to be an upperclassman with good pedigree. Behind that the two deep is filled with talented sophomores and intriguing freshmen suggesting this should be a pretty good unit. The defense should get better but it is dependent on growth from a young front seven and especially a front four that hasn’t shown great pass rush ability. The offense is going to be very good again and should see the assimilation of Kenny Hill in a smooth transition. Overall a good team but in a deep division it probably isn’t enough. Head Coach: Kevin Sumlin (55-23) Since 2012

Florida Gators (East, 4-8, 14, 7(Y), 69.3%, 7, 67.2%) What to do with Florida? Muschamp has been here since 2011 and oversaw a complete collapse after a better than expected 2012. 2013 was bad even before the loss to Georgia Southern and that was the cherry on top of the injury and shit sundae that was last season. Kurt Roper was brought in to run the offense and at worst should be an upgrade to the group of monkeys typing Shakespeare that called the 2013 plays. Roper and Muschamp have named Jeff Driskel (Sr) the starter and there are some things in Driskel’s favor. 69% completion percentage, 6.8 yards per attempt are both good numbers although the later isn’t exactly stellar. If Roper can bring some of the productivity that his Duke offense had Driskel good be productive if not spectacular behind center for Florida this year. A trio of running backs are back for 2014, senior Mack Brown, sophomore Kelvin Taylor and junior Matt Jones are all back and at least for Taylor there is optimism. 4.6 yards per carry in your freshman year in the SEC behind an oddly inept offensive line should be considered a positive for any back and in a good enough 4.3 for Jones and you might have a halfway decent running game in Gainesville this season. No receiver had more than 550 yards or 40 catches and that is partially to blame on equal parts, poor QB play, poor offensive line play and questionable playcalling. The roster is loaded with talent, much of it blue chip but of the top three returning WRs no one had a catch rate below 66% but only Quinton Dunbar (9.3) had greater than 5.1 yards per target. The passing game can’t be worse and with Roper at the helm has a lot of talent and room to grow. As we move to the defense remember that Florida had an NSFW level of injuries on defense in 2013. Dom Easley was lost after playing in 3 games and only two line starters played in all 12. There is however talent galore in the front four for Florida. Former five stars, BUCK end Dante Fowler Jr and DT Jonathan Bullard are back after leading the line in tackles last year. Fowler is going to be the spark that ignites the defense after a 10.5 TFLs and 3.5 sack sophomore year. If he can disrupt the pass even more as a junior he will be one of the best linemen in the country. Seniors Leon Orr and Darious Cummings are back to split time at NT and should be just as stout as 2013 when they combined for 31 tackles and 3.5 sacks. At DE the competition is a high three star sophomore (Bryan Cox Jr), a four star sophomore (Joey Ivie), a four star RS freshman (Jordan Sherit and a four star freshman (Gerald Willis). That combination should produce at least one and more likely multiple excellent rotation options both at DE and BUCK. Inside to back up the three previously listed are two four star RS freshman and two four star freshman. This front should be really good if it only sniffs its collective potential with the opportunity to be so much more. Two starters return at LB and both had at least 41 tackles but neither was a disruptive force behind the line and that’s a bit of a concern. They made stops but if you’re only making plays behind your own defensive line that’s a problem. At SAM linebacker a couple of highly touted sophomores have the opportunity to add that spark but even without the disruption in the backfield this should be a stout and experienced linebacking corps. Five star sophomore Vernon Hargreaves III is back and should be paired with four star RS freshman Marcell Harris or five star freshman Jalen Tabor and this should be a very secondary once again but they just need to play up to their talent level and this is a top 20 at worst secondary and defense. Overall the offense is the key for Florida if Kurt Roper can work his magic Florida should rebound, maybe not all the way, but most of the way. Head Coach: Will Muschamp (22-16) Since 2011

Mississippi State Bulldogs (West, 7-6, 16, 8(Y), 82.4%, 8, 81.4%) I’ll admit I’m not sure I will ever have the preseason ranking of the Mississippi State right. But with 80% of the production returning on both sides and Dak Prescott coming back I think they deserve to be in the tier of dark horses and dream crushers. Dak is bak. (I’m sorry I couldn’t help it) And that is the main source of optimism. After sharing snaps during 2013 with Tyler Russel the job is all Dak’s and he needs to improve. In 2014 Dak is going to need to improve his consistency, especially against above average defenses, from his 58.4% completion percentage and with that should come an increase in his yards per attempt from 6.8. Dak didn’t take saks (I promise I’ll stop) last season and that ability could be key in keeping him healthy and Miss State pulling upsets. Dak is also the leading returning rusher, with 7.1 yards per carry and around 900 yards on 125 carries he should be an explosive element but what else is there in the run game? Josh Robinson is back after rushing for 5.9 per carry in 2013 he should assume the lead role where he will be spelled by sophomore Ashton Shumpert who ran for 4.1 yards a carry but doesn’t have that explosive element to make something out of nothing. So the combination of Robinson and Prescott should be pretty solid in the run game but who’s on the receiving end for the Bulldogs? The top four options from 2013 are back. And the only one that doesn’t inspire much is senior Robert Johnson who despite having the second most targets only averaged 6.7 per target which was lowest among the four with 45 targets or more by at least a half yard. Senior WR Jameon Lewis is a speedy undersized option that went for 9.1 yards per target last season. Sophomore WR De’Runnya Wilson is the big 6’5” target that had a productive freshman year and with better hands should be a great weapon for Prescott. Add in there senior TE Malcolm Johnson and his 8.1 yards per target and you have a pretty solid group of pass catchers for Dak to get better throwing to. If the top group falters there are a gaggle of high three star sophomores waiting in the wings for their shot. On defense, woo hoo hoo is this iteration of the always stingy Dan Mullen defense gonna be fun up front. Only DE Denico Autry is gone of the major producers from last year’s group that was 19th in F+ and 18 yards per game. The front four is populated with four seniors, a junior and three sophomores and they are all looking to build on a pretty exciting 2013. DE Preston Smitih (Sr) and DT Chris Jones (So) are back after a combined 13.5 TFLs and 5.5 sacks and are joined by a pair of former four star seniors who had 4.5 TFls and a sack combined. The replacement for Autry is either high three star sophomore A.J. Jefferson who had 4 TFLs and 2 sacks in a back-up role or junior Ryan Brown who had 2.5 TFLs and 1 sack in even more limited time. If they continue to grow and coalesce this should be a hell of a front four rotation once again and the basis for one hell of a defense (note that one I took from section 6 of the Bill Connelly preview). Behind them Deontae skinner is gone after a very good 2013 but that shouldn’t hurt too badly. Benardick McKinney is back after 56 tackles, 7 TFLs and 3.5 sacks. Matthew Wells is back for his senior season after 39 tackles and 6 TFLs and a couple sophomores who saw enough time to get 27 tackles a piece and a combined 7.5 TFLs and 2 sacks. (Beniquez Brown and Richie Brown) This linebacking corps should be as good or better as a group of young players continue to grow. Much Like the linebackers the secondary is losing one starter from last season and once again I am not too worried about the loss. Justin Cox should fill the role just fine and did well in fill in work in 2013. SS Kendrick Market is an aggressive player and a tackling machine and should be even better in his junior season. Corner back goes four deep with experience from last season led by Taveze Calhoun and Jamerson Love who combined for 17 passes defensed and should be lockdown options on the outside. The longer I went into this preview the more I liked what I saw but until they bust through it there is always a glass ceiling on the Bulldogs but 2014 could be the year they put real fear back into the SEC West once again. Head Coach: Dan Mullen (36-28) Since 2009

Editor’s Note: The esteemed Mr. Kriha joined again to write about 2013's second biggest surprise.

Missouri Tigers (East, 12-2, 9, 5(N), 35.4%, 4, 52.1%) One year ago Mizzou shocked the world by going 11-1 in the regular season and making it to the championship game in toughest division in the land despite being a relatively new entry to the conference. The Tigers went on to lose the SEC championship to national runner-up Auburn but went on to beat #13 Oklahoma State in their bowl game. The one regular season loss was a double overtime loss to South Carolina, the best team in the state despite what Clemson fans would have you believe, in a game started by then backup Quarterback Maty Mauk. One-T Maty entered the Georgia game after an injury to future Penn St Head Coach James Franklin and held on for the win and then proceeded to go 3-1 as a starter in Franklin’s stead. Mauk loses top wide receiver Dorial Green-Beckham whose history with drugs and pushing women down stairs earned him a spot on Oklahoma’s roster, but he does have a receiver named DeSean which is a very promising sign. The defense was decimated by the loss of several All-SEC players including the first openly homosexual NFLer, Michael Sam who is the only one to publicly acknowledge how much he likes getting in piles of men wearing spandex even though we know they all like it. The defense will need some youngsters to step up and while Mauk has been the focus of most people’s attention, it’s the defensive unit that will determine if Mizzou can back up its performance from a year ago. The Tigers have a couple tough road tests in Columbia and College Station as well as a marquee home game against Georgia, but can pad their record at home against the likes of the South Dakota Jackrabbits and the perennially awful Indiana Hoosiers. The highlight of their schedule is a sightseeing trip to Toledo to see the infamous Jambulance (http://www.tailgatingideas.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/jambulance_parked.jpg). My prediction: Tigers and their ridiculous array of uniforms take a step back from last year and go 9-3 in the regular season and earn an appearance in the prestigious Belk Bowl. Head Coach: Gary Pinkel (175-100-3) Since 2001

Tennessee Volunteers (East, 5-7, 10, 5(Y), 67.7%, 5, 69.1%) Butch Jones enters year two at the helm of Tennessee and is coming off an offseason in which they brought in a top ten recruiting class and started what looks like a top ten class for 2015. Looking toward the 2014 season Justin Worley is back under center but needs to stay healthy and be much more consistent in his abilities. 55.6% completion percentage isn’t going to do much for the offense, but if he can continue to not take sacks behind a brand new offensive line then he should be at worst a net positive. Joining Worley in the backfield are seniors Marlin Lane and Deanthonie Summerhill. Lane returns with the most carries from last year at 101 and did well with his opportunity, putting up 5.3 yards per carry. Summerhill only had 20 carries but was productive at 5.8 yards per carry. Even if both lose some production with increased workloads they should be productive enough to stabilize the offense. Jalen Hurd is the ace in the hole for the running game, if the five star freshman can contribute at a high level in year one this rush attack could be much better than just keeping the offense a float. A young receiver corps returns, talented and deep. Pig Howard (Jr), Marquez North (So), Josh Smith (So) and Jason Croom (So) are back and should grow but consistent QB play and continued playmaking by North and Croom are needed to make this passing game truly something scary. I single out North and Croom because they were both over 8 yards a target last year. The entire offense and the growth of younger players is based on how well the offense line becomes a cohesive unit with no returning starters. There is young talent here with a gaggle of four stars and high three star recruits but there are just six career starts and five of those are LG Marcus Jackson. As we progress to the other side of the ball the defensive line falls into the same trap as the offensive line. Six players who saw time are gone including the top five players from last year’s line. The good news is 2012 starter Curt Maggitt is back after missing all of 2013 with an injury, but he produced 5 TFLs and 2 sacks that two years ago. There are a couple bright spots returning, well maybe not bright but there is some experience combing back. Maggit we already talked about. Four star sophomore NG Danny O’Brien had 3 TFLs and a sack in a back-up role as a freshman. Fellow sophomore Corey Vereen had a sack in nine appearances as the fourth DE his freshman year. And then there are four four star recruits coming into the program as well as two high three stars that should at least challenge for some playing time. Linebacker lost a lot as well with four of the top six performers no longer with the program but senior A.J. Johnson returning after a 83 tackle season should be a rock on which to build the front seven. Joining him with time from last season is sophomore Jalen Reeves-Martin who played in 11 games but didn’t see much time behind Dontavis Sapp as a freshman. The biggest question here is who plays SLB but there is some talent in the wings. The secondary returns every starter, but do lose their nickel back (NB) and back up free safety. If the four starters can build off a very good performance last season then this could be a good secondary hampered at least early by a poor front four. Also they brought in five four star DBs and that should be a real boon for them real soon. Tennessee could be alright this year but should show signs of proper coaching and top ten recruiting in 2015 and beyond. Head Coach: Butch Jones (55-34) Since 2013

Arkansas Razorbacks (West, 3-9, 15, 7(Y), 81.1%, 8, 66.7%) Bert’s first season in the SEC didn’t quite go as well as he expected. That’s partially contributed to a team not suited to his style, the known teambuilding woes of Petrino and a loaded SEC west. The task doesn’t get easier in 2014 but the roster is starting to look familiar. Brandon Allen is back, much to the chagrin of the Hogville. Allen completed 49.6% of his passes last season for 5.6 yards per attempt. The good news? He was only sacked on 2.6% of his drop backs. In a vacuum Allen is what you want in Bielema’s system a junior four star quarterback back for his second year under center but that assumes a level of success in the SEC that Allen hasn’t come close to approaching. If things get bad there are two RS freshmen high three stars and Rafe Peavey a four star freshman who could at least see some time to give the fan base hope. As we move to running back we see a group reminiscent of the Wisconsin backfields. Four Star sophomore Alex Collins returns for his sophomore campaign looking to improve on his 5.4 yards per carry and 1026 yard freshman campaign. He is the offense but he will share the load with junior Jonathan Williams who ran for 900 yards on 6 yards a carry. The third man in the rotation is sophomore Korliss Marshall who broke away for 8.6 yards a carry on a couple handful of carries last season. Who’s going to catch passes? The better question is do we know who has the talent with the inaccuracy of Allen. If Allen can even marginally improve let alone become much more consistent WR Keon Hatcher and TE Hunter Henry look to have a bit of talent to make plays. Henry despite a catch rate under 57% still was able to average 8.3 yards per target and Hatcher at 53% was at 6.8 yards per target. A couple more completions and both are at least a reasonable threat that defenses need to accommodate for. The line is good young and talented and should be just fine and continues to show the molding of the Hogs like the Badgers. Three of the top five linemen are gone from a unit that wasn’t very good, everyone else is back. And oh boy are there a lot of sophomores that saw playing time in 2013. Senior DE Trey Flowers is back after 13.5 TFLs and 5 sacks and a fair amount of passing game disruption and is joined by sophomore DT Darius Phillips who looks like he could be one of the better young DTs in the conference. Aside from those two there is a group of four sophomore, three of them DEs and a junior DT who showed flashes last season but were either too young or didn’t get much rotation time. IF the youth grows into new roles, there isn’t much place to go but up for this unit outside the pass rush game but this unit might still be a year off. The linebackers should be solid. Seniors Braylon Mitchell and Martrell Spaight should be holding down the SLB and MLB respectively. The stud could be sophomore Brooks Ellis who had 22.5 tackles, 2 TLFs and .5 sacks in limited time behind Jarrett Lake and shouldn’t have too much trouble being more of a force in the backfield with increased playing time. This could be a pretty good unit but may need to big up too much slack from an inexperienced front. The secondary should be the best part of this defense. FS Eric Bennet is gone after 54 tackles and 4 passes defensed, but he is the only loss from the secondary. Non-coincidently this is the most senior unit on the defense with two senior starters a junior and a sophomore with two juniors, one senior and a sophomore in the two deep. IF they can build off good disruption from last year this could be a very good group on a defense that has a lot of holes. 2014 may not see an increase in record but should be a step forward for Bielema and the Hogs and set up for a bit of a breakthrough in 2015. Head Coach: Bret Bielema (71-33) Since 2013

Vanderbilt Commodores (East, 9-4, 10, 7(N), 37.8%, 3, 48.4%) James Franklin has moved on from the Commodores after reaching heights not glimpsed since the 40s. In comes Derek Mason, Stanford defensive coordinator to help continue the success and build a lasting program in the mold of Stanford. By all accounts Mason is a young, energetic football crazed coach who has the passion and skills to do that at Vandy, but I’m not convinced the transition is going to be smooth early on in the Mason era. Year one of the Mason era starts with changes under center. Austyn Carta-Samuels is gone and in steps sophomore Patton Robinette, a former three star recruit who looked like a freshmen in the limited amount of snaps he saw last season. If Robinette can increase his consistency while not losing the deep ball and make smart decisions in the running game he could be a boon for the new staff. That admittedly is a lot to ask from a sophomore. The running back situation is a lot of good and little explosion. All three returning backs were in the 4.5 yards per carry range and both Jerron Seymour (5’7”) and Brian Kimbrow (5’8”) are undersized. Mason will probably try to model the offense off Stanford and if that’s the case are undersized backs going to stand up to the workload and stay healthy? The receiving corps is depleted with the departures of Jordan Matthews and Jonathan Krause (2191 yards combined) there is a lot of opportunity and a lot of questions. Into the void steps four star sophomore Jordan Cunningham who was the third leading receiver on the team, had good enough hands, but didn’t really flash as a down the field threat. Joining him are Junior Kris Kentera who needs to work on hands consistency and high three star sophomore Latevius Rayford who caught two thirds of his targets and flashed some deep threat ability. The line is experienced heading into year one but the production in the running game didn’t show up last year and growth must occur in the unity. The defense is in transition from 4-3 under Franklin to the 3-4 under Mason but they seem to be in good shape up front much like Wisconsin last season under Gary Anderson. Adam Butler returns for his sophomore year and moves to the 3-4 DE and at 6’5” 305 should be perfectly suited for his new role. Inside 6’4” 295 senior Barron Dixon fits more of a DE build but fellow senior Vince Taylor at 6’1” 310 should be an anchor. The breakout inside could be Nifae Lealao at 6’5” 314 four star freshman who could be THE anchor for three or four seasons insisde for Mason. Across from Butler if it isn’t Dixon there may be a rotation of similarily younger players both at 280 and 6’3” to 6’4” in Torey Agree (So) and Jay Woods (RSFr). There are a lot of linebackers on this team… based on depth chart there are 14 linebackers on the roster. The good news is there is a lot of experience. The bad news is that they don’t have a lot in this system but converted DEs Kyle Woestmann and Caleb Azubike combined for 10 sacks last season and if they adjust to rushing from the upright position they should be beastly off the edge. Inside Darreon Herring is back and had a heck of a season in any scheme and Jake Sealand showed flashes in limited time in the middle and will need to step into a much bigger role this season. Rebuilding while transitioning has pros and cons. The pros are you don’t have to gradually transfer a unit to the new system but the cons are that there isn’t much seniority to work with. The Vandy secondary should be closer to the pros than the cons the five returners who saw time last season are all sophomores or juniors and the two deep is full of redshirt freshmen who are high three star recruits. Overall this group may have growing pains from youth but the cupboard is stocked well from the franklin era and the defense looks primed to grow under Mason’s tutelage. Every unit has some challenges both on offense and defense but even if 2014 is a rough year this is a team looking up in the future. Head Coach: Derek Mason (0-0) Since New Hire

Kentucky Wildcats (East, 2-10, 16, 8(Y), 58.3%, 8, 74.3%) Year 0 of the Mark Stoops ear went like you’d expect. While they build up the roster through recruiting there are going to be bumps along the road but a top-20 recruiting class is a great start. Maxwell Smith started last year, but was replaced by Jalen Whitlow who transferred out of the program this offseason. Smith was the presumed starter, but this week Mark Stoops announced that the week 1 job is going to Patrick Towles. Towles redshirted last season after losing the starter competition to Smith/Whitlow but came into camp and won the job over Smith and four star freshman Drew Barker. All reports point to Towles growing over his year off and being the best quarterback throughout camp. If Towles can improve upon the roughly 60% completion percentage and 5.5 yards per attempt of Smith/Whitlow last season this offense should be able to move from below average to at worst an average or slightly above average product this year. The backfield is a bit decimated but sophomore Jojo Kemp is back and with the growth curve from freshman to sophomore looks primed to pop above 5 yards per attempt in 2014. The wildcard here is how transfer Braylon Heard from Nebraska performs in the Kentucky offense. Heard averaged 6.7 yards per carry on 52 carries for the huskers in 2012 and could be a boon for the backfield production. The receiving corps is is a mix of youth and seniority and a mixed bag of alright production. Some of this is definitely on the inconsistency at quarterback last season and some on the offensive system but sub seven yards per target is pretty meh. Let’s look toward the future though. Sophomores Ryan Timmons, Jeff Badet and Alexander Montgomery are saw 25 or more targets and had 64% catch rates or better. With continued growth all should be close to the 70% mark as they enter their junior and senior seasons but may not be ready just yet to make the leap heading into second year campaigns. Add in the two four star freshmen, Dorian Baker and Blake Bone this is a passing game that should only be looking up in the future. On the defensive line starting ends Alvin Dupree and Za’Darius Smith are back for their senior season and are looking to build off a combined 16 TFLs and 13 sacks. Behind them is sophomore Jason Hatcher, a former four star, who had 3 TFLS and 2 sacks in just 9 games has to have the coaching staff intrigued about what he can do as he continues to grow. The interior of the line is going to be iffy though as none of the top three options return this season. In fact, there was only one lineman on the squad that saw any game time at all. Those behind and next to Mike Douglas on the depth chart don’t inspire much confidence as they include 1 senior, 2 juniors and 2 redshirt freshmen, neither of whom was highly touted coming out of high school. Linebacker has a wealth of experience returning and should be solid enough but Avery Williamson’s 74 tackles aren’t going to be replaced by one man. On a rebuilding team a wealth of experience in one unit is always helpful. Much like the team as a whole, the secondary has nowhere to go but up. The question is, with ten players returning who played last year and sixty percent of those being upperclassmen how much improvement can we expect with the same players on the field. All in all Kentucky is at least a year from scaring people and two from doing major damage but there are positive signs. Just not for 2014. Head Coach: Mark Stoops (2-10) Since 2013

2014 Predicted Standings

East: 1) South Carolina 2) Georgia 3) Florida 4) Missouri 5) Tennessee 6) Vanderbilt 7) Kentucky
West: 1) Alabama 2) Auburn 3) LSU 4) Ole Miss 5) Mississippi State 6) Texas A&M 7) Arkansas

The West is stronger again than the east but South Carolina and Georgia are both more than capable of knocking off any of the top four West teams. LSU and Florida are interesting dark horses to watch as the season goes on, if LSU can stabilize at QB and Florida can stop getting hurt and find an offensive identity both have recruited well enough to be elite in conference and country.

Thursday, August 21, 2014

2014 Pac-12 Preview

The Pac-12 has had a good couple of years, supplanting the Big XII and Big Ten as the second best conference in football and in certain individual seasons ascending to the top of the conference dog pile. The big questions heading into this preview is who will win the North and will a South Division team put up a real challenge to either Oregon or Stanford.

Subtractions/Additions


Once again no additions or subtractions for the Pac-12 since the addition of Utah and Colorado. Unlike the Big XII, where there are often rumors and proposals of what additions could be made, the Pac-12 doesn’t have an obvious next move in realignment.

Recent History


The Pac-12/10 has been won by either Stanford or Oregon since 2009. Oregon won the title in ’09-’11 and Stanford has won back to back in ’12 and ’13. Over the course of that stretch, USC has buckled under the strains of major NCAA sanctions both Arizona schools replaced head coaches and UCLA has been working their way back to prominence.

Coaching Changes


There were two coaching changes after the 2014 season and both were caused by the firing of Lane Kiffin from USC. Kiffin proved to not be able to handle all of the challenges of being a major college football head coach and his time at USC culminated with a fractured squad and dismal results that saw him fired mid-season. To replace Kiffin the Trojans hired Steve Sarkisian from Washington. Sarkisian was best known at Washington for always losing four games and never doing what he threatened and break into the elite tier in the conference. Sarkisian is another Pete Carroll assistant, as was Kiffin, and I’m intrigued by what he can do at a place with a truly elite recruiting base. To replace Sark Washington brought in Chris Petersen from Boise State. Boise had taken a step back the last couple of seasons but what Petersen was able to accomplish there was truly impressive. 92-12 is impressive anywhere and if it weren’t for #CollegeKickers Petersen and Boise would probably have had a chance at a National Championship. If he can do what we all expect from him at a program that has shown a renewed financial backing for the football program then this could be a potential buster of the Oregon Stanford strangle hold on the North. I really like the Petersen hire and think it was of the best this offseason. The Sark hire? Well let’s just say I have tempered my expectations and wonder how many four loss seasons will be tolerated.

Team Write-Ups (Division, 2013 W-L, Total Returning Starters, Returning Off (Starters (QB), % yards), Returning Def (Starters, % yards) *coach records are career numbers


Editor’s Note: Brock got a little carried away on Stanford and I apologize but they have enough turnover and enough talent that it needed to be explored.

Stanford Cardinal(North, 11-3, 5(Y), 57.5%, 6, 52.4%) When David Shaw took over for Jim Harbaugh, many thought Stanford would regress back towards their historical place in the Pac-12 order. That didn’t quite happen. Since stumbling that first season against Oregon and losing out on the division, Stanford has beaten Oregon twice in a row and won the conference championship game both seasons. Shaw has kept the identity started by Harbaugh and continued to build on the success of the former regime. Kevin Hogan is back under center for the Cardinal. He has been inconsistent as a starter, showing flashes of being one of the better QBs in the country but with far too much inconsistency in the middle. Hogan had a 2:1 TD to INT ratio, completed 61% of his passes at 8.3 yards per attempt. The offense should be built around Hogan a little bit more this year as he enters his third season as the starter. Especially with the departures of Tyler Gaffney and Anthony Wilkerson who combined for over 2000 yards on the ground in 2013. To replace that production, is Resmound Wright who averaged 5.1 yards per carry on limited snaps last season. The player I’m most excited to see perform is Barry Sanders. The few opportunities he had last year, he showed flashes of some of that same brilliance his father had. With an increased role in the offense Wright and Sanders could provide the next great 1-2 for Stanford. Much like we alluded to when talking about Hogan, the returning receivers should allow the offense to open up a bit. Leading the returners is Ty Montgomery who should be one of the best big play receivers in the country. Both he and Devon Cajuste return with 62% catch rates and sophomore Michael Rector joins with a 16 yards a target freshman year but needs to work on the drops. There is a lot of talent returning among the pass catchers, and should be a very good unit once again. Overall this offense should be just fine even with the attrition and if they can get better on standard downs they could be downright nasty. The defense finished 2013 fourth in F+, but losing five starters won’t be a cake walk to replace. Stanford only needs to replace one starter from the defensive line, but Josh Mauro was a disruptive force of a 3-4 DE. Mauro contributed 42 tackles, 12.5 TFLs and four sacks and created three turnovers. The good news si his replacement should signs of having the burst to pick up the slack left over. Senior Henry Anderson only played in 8 games last season but in that time he recorded 14 tackles, but more impressively were his 4 TFLs and 3 sacks. If he and returning starter Blake Lueders can increase their output and disruption the line shouldn’t fall off too much especially with a very talented two deep. Linebacker got hit a little harder. Shane Skov and Trent Murphy are gone and both were key cogs in the last couple Stanford defenses. Skov was the tackle machine from on the inside with 85.5 tackles, 13 TFLs and 5.5 sacks but his disruption pales to what is lost in Murphy. Murphy only had 49.5 tackles but he had 23.5 TFLs, 15 sacks and had 7 passes defensed. How Stanford replaces Murphy will decide how far this defense falls. There are great players returning, A.J. Tarpley and James Vaughters return for their senior seasons and Tarpley has all the makings of a great college inside linebacker. 2013 saw him provide 72.5 tackles, 5 TFLs and 1 sack and enough effects on the pass game over the middle to have an impact. Vaughters was definitely the least active of the starters with 28 tackles, but if he can continue to build off of his 6 TFLs and 4 sacks, and if he does what last year hinted at he should pick up a good portion of the slack left by Murphy. The replacement on the inside should be Joe Hemschoot who saw time in all and had flashes, but the more intriguing replacement is at OLB. The battle should be between Senior Kevin Anderson, who saw time in every game, and high four star RS freshman Peter Kalambayi. Anderson has the edge experience wise but Kalambayi has the look of a shot to the arm athlete who could add a dimension lost with the departure of Trent Murphy. Stanford’s secondary is a good place where talking about returners becomes a fun exercise. I could say any of these and they would be true… They return, 3 of the top four players from last year, 3 of 6, 4 of 7, 4 of 8, 5 of 9 or 6 of 10 and each tells its own story. But the way I look at it is they bring back two corners and a SS with 19 passes defensed, but lose the starting and back up free safeties who combined for 98 tackles. Senior Kyle Olugbode will be the key cog on whether this secondary will have a weak spot. Overall there is a lot of talent back but who will step up to fill the vacancies because outside the big three of Lyons, Richards and Carter there remains a bunch of question marks. Stanford is going to be a top ten team once again in 2014 and could have one of the best offenses in the offenses in the country. The defense has a lot of talent back but the departures are very good players and replacing that production won’t be easy. Head Coach: David Shaw (34-7) Since 2011

Oregon Ducks(North, 11-2, 9(Y), 67.7%, 6, 55.3%) Oregon took a step back in year 1 post Chip Kelly. That said they still finished fifth in F+ and went 11-2. Looking ahead, Oregon has one more season of Marcus Mariota at QB and that alone should keep them in the top ten nationally. Mariota may not go 11 games without throwing a pick but he should continue to build off a great 2013. At least pre-injury. Mariota completed 63.5% of his passes, threw 31 TDs and 4 INTs, while throwing for 8.7 yards per attempt and a respectable 4.5% sack rate. Mariota was the offense in 2013, yes the skill position players were great and the talent overall was very good but the chinks in the armor showed up to a much greater degree once Mariota was injured. If he comes back healthy and performs as well as last year this offense should be a beast to handle once again. The run game was still very good, but Mariota is the best rushing threat they have. At 11 yards a rush he almost doubled the production per rush of the running backs. His main compatriots in the back field will be junior Byron Marshall and sophomore Thomas Tyner. Tyner missed five games last season but averaged 6.1 yards a carry when on the field, about the same as Marshall who averaged 6.2. Tyner did take better advantage good blocking and is worth some salivating as he heads into his second year in the system. I would have been much more upbeat about the receiving corps had Bralon Addison not been lost for the season this offseason. Addison was a very consistent option for the Mariota last season and second on the roster behind Josh Huff as far as efficiency. Huff and De’Anthony Thomas are gone and now we get to see how the improved recruiting is going to translate. Senior Keanon Love will need to improve off a solid, if unspectacular, 2013. Sophomores Johnny Mundt, TE, Dwayne Stanford, WR, and Chance Allen, WR, all need to step up in a big way. Mundt and Allen both exceeded 80% catch rates and Stanford’s 2012 showed flashes of brilliance but all will have much increased roles. The defensive line loses three players from the seven that saw time last year. And there is talent, you can see the effort to recruit on defense, but they need to perform in their junior years. DE DeForest Buckner had a solid season as a junior and at 6’7” 286 is a beast of a man. To bookend him, I think they will call on 6’8” 296 Ark Armstead, to make twin towers that should disrupt throwing lanes. Inside, Alex Balducci and Sam Kamp need to make their presence felt with. There is talent here, but at some point the old cliché is true. “You’re going to get me fired with your potential.” Four of the top five tacklers return from last season and most important is rush backer Tony Washington who recorded 12 TFLs and 7.5 sacks. He was a force for this group last season and needs to do that and more to help the out the inexperienced front three. WLB Derrick Malone should have ample opportunity to improve on his 76 tackles but MLB and SLB will need a greater impact for this unit to be well above average. The great news for the secondary is that Ifo Ekpre-Olomu is back, the bad news is the next three back four players are gone. Ekpre-Olomu is one of the best corners in college football and should be a rock on which to build this defense, but he is going to need a lot of help from fellow seniors CBs Troy Hill & Dior Mathis and FS Erick Dargan as they also assimilate a lot of young raw talent to the secondary. I think the linebackers should be very good, that there is a lot of talent hitting the show me year on the line and an elite CB with seniors in the back but a lot of question marks that need to be sured up fast. Overall this is still going to be a fifteen team but another regression from the defense could be what keeps this team from being a top five or ten team and starts the wonderings about Mark Helfrich’s ability to keep this an elite program and not just a good one. Head Coach: Mark Helfrich (11-2) Since 2013

Editor’s Note: I let Kriha work on a team with a little more upside this week and it turns out snark can work for possible title contenders too.

UCLA Bruins(South, 10-3, 8(Y), 76.8%, 8, 68.7%) I was assigned UCLA because Brock wanted me to preview “Neil Armstrong’s college team.” So let’s settle a couple things first. 1) Neil Armstrong got his masters at USC, not UCLA. I’m sure they don’t mind be confused for each other. It’s a harmless mistake, like not knowing the difference between India and Pakistan. They all look the same as each other. India and Pakistan are fighting over the Kashmir and kids at UCLA and USC also fight over Cashmere, probably. 2) Neil (we were on a first name basis) got his USC masters AFTER the moon landing. The man was there to capitalize on being the biggest badass in the history of ever and get himself some SoCal poontang, the degree was just to show off. Now that that’s out of the way, let’s take a look at this UCLA team. The Bruins, named for a Dutch brown bear who frequently fell victim to the schemes of a French fox, look to make a run at the Pac-12 title aided by their lack of any games against foxes or the French. The Bears are led on the field by Heisman hopeful quarterback Brett Hundley who decided to return for his junior season after multiple mock drafts had him going to the Minnesota Vikings. Roaming the sidelines is Coach Jim Mora. Who is known mostly for his father’s famous rant, (PLAYOFFS?! YOU KIDDING ME?! PLAYOFFS?! I JUST HOPE WE CAN WIN A GAME!) and had his NFL career cut short when the Seattle Seahawks replaced him with USC’s Pete Carroll who was fleeing the college ranks after years of cheating with the Trojans. With the Mora/Hundley duo, UCLA can do pretty much anything. The other offensive skill positions are led by speedy WR Jordan Payton who is due for a huge season and running back Jordon James who should be the second leading rusher behind Hundley. On the defensive side of the ball, the Bruins are loaded at linebacker with Myles Jack and Eric Kendricks both looking to take their games to the next level. The question mark on this side of the ball is the line, where they should feature a deep rotation of players, but lack star power. So now that I’ve sufficiently BSed my way through a player preview, let’s look at the schedule. The season starts with nonconference play on the road against my adopted team, UVA of the ACC, at home against Memphis of the AAC, and on the road against the Big XII’s Texas who feature their first new head coach since Mack Brown started last millennium. Despite the atypically difficult nonconference schedule for the Brown Bears, expect a 3-0 start with only slightly more than minimal effort. The conference schedule is about as manageable as anybody could have hoped, with powerhouses Stanford and Oregon (and sleeper USC) making the trip to Pasadena, while the toughest the road has to offer is conference opener Arizona State on September 25th. I’m gonna go slightly more optimistic than most with a prediction of 11-1 or 12-0 with that possible loss coming against Oregon or Stanford, a Pac-12 championship game victory, and a berth into the new college football playoffs. Head Coach: Jim L. Mora (19-8) Since 2012

USC Trojans(South, 10-4, 7(Y), 59.4%, 7, 69.2%) What to say about Sark that hasn’t been joked about a million times. I think this is an uninspired hire, not a bad hire, but not one that I think takes this program back to the level of success they expect. That being said he inherits a depth chart that lacks some depth but has a lot of top flight talent despite NCAA sanctions. The enigma that is Cody Kessler will more than likely be the deciding factor of Sark year 0. If the Kessler of the second half season (70% comp., 11-2 TD-INT) or even just his season average 65.2%, 7.1 yards per attempt show up then the offense could be better than expected but if subpar Kessler shows back up then all bets are off. If Kessler does start off slow, RS freshman Max Browne has the talent to be very good but Sark may not want to use him this early in his career. The good news is the skill players are deep and talented. Tre Madden and Javorius Allen both return for their junior seasons after splitting careers last season. Allen was a bit better at 5.8 yards per carry to Madden’s 5.1, and slightly better with better blocking but the difference is marginal. The real game breaker may be sophomore Justin Davis. Davis rushed for 6.8 yards per carry did a great job of taking advantage of good blocking when he got the opportunity to carry. Overall whomever is QB should be aided by a very good running game. Marquise lee is gone and that’s not good but Nelson Agholor is back and was the better receiver by just about all measures in 2013 (918 yards/62.9% catch rate). In addition to Agholor are four star sophomore Darreus Rogers (64.7% catch rate), and a handful of young players who will be called upon to replace the departed and those who didn’t pan out. The defensive line will need to replace George Uko at DE, a job that will likely fall to former four star recruit Greg Townsend Jr. The good news is that DE Leonard Williams and NT Antwaun Woods. Woods was your prototypical 3-4 NT and controlled two blockers to allow the LBs to stuff plays. A bigger rotation than four players would probably behoove the new staff, but that assumes that unproven commodities like DT Delvon Simmons and five star RS freshman Kenny Bigelow show they are ready for the responsibility. The linebackers should be pretty good even with the loss of Devon Kennard (no small loss). Denards presence off the edge was big but an increased role for J. R. Tavai suggest he should be able to recreate enough of the disruption to limit the drop off. Hayes Pollard should be the rock in the middle after a 69 tackle 7 passes defensed 2013. And the rest of the corps will be the winners of a battle of a handful of four star athletes that saw varying amounts of 2013 playing time. The secondary should be a nice blend of young, experienced and talented. FS Josh Shaw is back after an 11 passes defensed season and 55 tackles. SS Su’a Cravens, a five star sophomore, with 46 tackles and 5 passes defensed should continue to grow and created a very good pair of safeties over the top. The CBs should be a need to see some younger players step up but Kevon Seymour (JR), Anthony Brown (SR) and Devian Shelton (SO) should be good enough with help over the top to allow younger players to work into the rotation. The defense should have a good enough front, a very good LB corps and a secondary that has pieces but will need to coalesce at CB to be very good. Overall this is a dangerous Trojans team, but the play of Cody Kessler is the key to it all working right. Head Coach: Steve Sarkisian (34-29) Since New Hire

Arizona Wildcats(South, 8-5, 6(N), 44.5%, 6, 49.7%) Rich Rod is back to his old ways in the desert, after the disastrous stint in Ann Arbor, and has Arizona trending in a great direction in year three. Year three might be a little more challenging though. 10 starters to replace including the QB and heading into fall ball they don’t have that hole filled yet. There are six options on the roster but three make the most sense. First is Jesse Scroggins, a 6’3” 208 pound senior who transferred from USC after the 2012 season. A former four star recruit Scroggins has seen a lot in his four years but there is a reason he hadn’t seen the field yet. To compete with Scroggins are sophomore Connor Brewer (6’2”, 196 lbs) and RS freshman Anu Solomon (6’2” 198 lbs) who were also four stars but relative unknowns heading into the year. Whoever plays QB is going to have to acclimate with a new backfield mate. Only Jared Baker (JR) is back and he was pretty meh, in his limited carries in 2013. To replace Ka’Deem Carey (1889 yards) you more than likely are going to be looking to RS freshman Zach Green, diminutive freshman Tyrell Johnson or freshman Nick Wilson. Wilson is the most highly touted and Johnson by stature looks to be more of a spell back and change of pace. Whichever one of the four of them starts has big shoes to fill as Carey, carried (I know) the offense at times in 2013. Finally some good news, the receiving corps returns talent. Austin hill is back after a torn ACL in last year’s spring game, if he has regained his athleticism he will certainly be a boon to whomever starts at QB. Joining Hill are sophomores Nate Phillips and Samajie Grant, return after leading the team in receiving in 2013. Although in Grant’s case that isn’t a great thing as he only averaged 5 yards catch. Phillips was much better averaging 9.2 yards per target, with good hands. The key is going to be the steps forward those two young receivers make while incorporating a mix of young and old as you move farther down the depth chart. The offense overall will be fine and Rodriguez knows what he is doing but early season may see a few more bobbles than are normally associated with a Rich Rod offense. On defense the story is all about speed, and the Wildcats have done a good job of recruiting that way. The line only returns two players with experience, and that problem is minimized some by the 3-3-5, but young guys are going to need to step up early to keep the depth issues from becoming too serious. DE Reggie Gilbert should be a force setting the edge, coming off a junior season in which he recorded 7 TFLs and 4 sacks and should improve on his 24.5 in a more premiere role. Bookending the line opposite Gilbert is fellow senior Dan Pettinato who missed three games last year but in a backup role he produced a sack and a TFL but needs to prove he can stay healthy and perform at an increased rate in 2014. A trip of RS freshman should provide depth on the outside, whereas inside at NT there is nothing but questions. There are three NTs in on the roster, sophomore Dwight Melvin a high three star at 6’1” 272, junior Jeff Worthy 6’2” 282 and freshman Marcus Griffin 6’3” 296 a four star out of Washington who has the size to clog the middle for the Wildcats. If Griffin matures, and Melvin can mold into a solid performer this could be a very good interior with the experience on the edge. The LBs lose two starters from last year’s corps and a combined 154.5 tackles. The biggest loss is WLB Marquis Flowers who had 11.5 sacks and was a disruptive force. Scooby Wright who started at SLB last season will move inside to replace Jake Fischer and his 80 tackles but that creates even more of an issue on the outside as Wright contributed 9 TFLs from the outside last seasons. Sophomores Derrick Turituri and DeAndre’ Miller will need to show early on that they have what it takes to replace very good production on the outside if the Wildcat defense is going to be as stout in the front six as last season. The secondary is the strength of this defense and in a league with great offenses that’s a really nice thing to have. The back five only loses one of the five starters from last season and one of the top nine players from last season. CB Shaquille Richardson and his 47.5 tackles and 7 passes defensed are gone and that’s a bummer but it’s not exactly crippling. This is a senior laden group, BANDIT safety Jared Tevis, FS Jourdon Grandon, SPUR safety Tra’Mayne Bondurant and CB Jonathan McKnight are all seniors and combine to bring back 243 tackles, 12 TFLs, 9 INTs and 21 pass breakups. That and a handful of younger players with playing time under their belts means this defense is going to be really good with anything for a contribution from the front six. This team is going to be very good on defense and Rich Rod has a history of putting out good offenses returning depth be damned. The biggest key is making the right decision at QB and working in new RBs and DLs. Head Coach: Rich Rodriguez (136-94-2) Since 2012

Washington Huskies(North, 9-4, 7(N), 40.3%, 5, 59.6%) I’m going to say this every time I talk about Washington and that is they got a coup of a hire when they acquired Chris Petersen. Keith Price is gone, but by-gosh is there talent to replace him. There are four players on the depth chart to replace price. All are sophomores or younger. All are four star recruits. Cyler Miles was the only one of those four that saw time last season, but Miles was suspended in February and will miss the opener against Hawaii. Battling Miles in fall camp has been RS freshman Troy Williams who has impressed at times, but neither has pulled away. Williams will most likely start week 1 but this battle is far from decided. Whoever starts will be breaking in a trio of backs who saw some time last year but nothing substantial (43-48 carries). Seniors Jesse Callier and Deontae Cooper will battle it out with sophomore Dwayne Washington and RS freshman and high three star Lavon Coleman. Washington has the high upside of the group as he averaged 7.1 yards per carry last season to Callier’s 4.4 and Cooper’s 6.3. A new staff may put a greater emphasis on the youth and working towards the future but Washington definitely showed flashes of being the next in a line of very good Washington backs. WR is where it gets interesting for the Huskies offense. Slot receiver Jaydon Mickens is back for his junior season after catching 65 passes for 688 yards. Along with his 79.3% catch rate he should be a stabilizing force for whomever starts at QB. Behind Mickens it gets slim quick. Austin Seferian-Jenkins is gone to the NFL and the Huskies are going to have a time finding his replacement. Senior Kevin Williams is a big bodied (6’3” 221 lb) WR but his production suggests he may not be much more than a big target. The intrigue with the receivers lies with sophomores John Ross (WR) and Darrell Daniels (TE). Ross was explosive in a small sample of receptions last season and could be a spark for an offense that could use some help and Daniels, although raw, has the physical traits to slide into the hole left Seferian-Jenkins and the pedigree to suggest he could do it. The good news for the replacements is the line should be solid as every returning projected starter has 20 or more starts to his name. On the other side of the ball, Petersen and company find themselves with an abundance of experience coupled with youth to mold. The line returns four starters, three of them seniors, from last year’s team. The ends are fantastic, senior Hau’oli Kikaha and junior Cory Littleton combined for 105.5 tackles, 25.5 TFLs and 18 sacks (Kikaha had 13). If Littleton can continue to improve off his sophomore year and Kikaha just replicates his junior season this could be one of the better pass rushes in the conference and country. Inside one technique Danny Shelton is back for his senior season and is looking to build off a stellar junior campaign (47.5 tackles, 3.5 TFLs and 2 sacks). The three technique Evan Hudson was statistically the least impactful of the trio and needs to become much more active, especially in the run game. Behind those four old soles is a group of youth that should benefit from another year of tutelage and considering the offenses in conference, some playing time. Of the group of five younger players, sophomore DE Marcus Farria and his 5.5 tackles, 2.5 sacks (also counted as TFLs) along with RS freshman four star NT Elijah Woods could be players headed for breakouts over the next year or two. Behind a stout and deep DL is a Linebacking corps that should be very good despite losing OLB Princeton Fuimaono and his 68.5 tackles and 4 TFLs. Shaq Thompson has all the tools to be one of the best edge players in college and just overall a disruptive force, and should improve on his 64 tackle, 4 TFL and 5 passes defensed from last season. On the other side, Travis Feeney was a bit more disruptive than Thompson on the stat line with 5 TFL and 6 passes defensed. Inside John Timu looks to reprise his junior output of 57.5 tackles. Behind the three upperclassmen are four RS freshmen (1 4* & 3 3*). The front seven is going to be very good and very deep and probably the best combination of units on the team. The secondary is a different story. Junior CB Marcus Peters returns after a sophomore campaign in which he contributed 49.5 tackles, 3.5 TFls and 14 passes defensed, the five INTs might come down a touch but none the less the defense builds around a lockdown corner. Gone from the secondary are a combined 185 tackles, 9.5 TFls and 29 passes defensed from three safeties and 2 CB. If Peters is a great known the rest of his compatriots in a reworked secondary are the great unkowns for the 2014 season. Only sophomore safety Kevin King played in more than half the games (10) or recorded more than seven tackles (15.5). The rest of the secondary is likely to be comprised of a collection of very young but high upside talent. Four star recruits in the form of sophomore safety Brandon Beaver, and RS freshmen, CB Jermaine Kelly and Budda Baker may become household names sooner than later and need to make strides as the season goes on if the defense is going to gel. Overall there are questions at QB, WR and DB but the RBs, OL and front seven should all be above average to great units that are able to help mute the shortcomings in year one of Chris Petersen. Head Coach: Chris Petersen (92-12) Since New Hire

Washington State Cougars(North, 6-7, 8(Y), 91.5%, 6, 52.1%) Mike Leach is headed into his third season and is looking to build off the jump they made in 2013. Connor Halliday is back and much maligned but he wasn’t horrible in 2013. 63% completion percentage, 4.2% sack rate was high for a pocket passer, but he was asked to carry the offense with 714 pass attempts. In Leach’s offense you’re never going to have huge yards per attempt so just about 6 is what you would expect. If Halliday can continue to improve, this Air Raid attack should be a real scare for everyone in the Pac-12. The backs were good enough when they got attempts, but with the Cougars passing 85% of the time they saw a combined 172 attempts between the top 3. Both Marcus Mason and Teondray Caldwell should be good enough when they get the chances to make enough happen. The two running backs saw 99 targets in the passing game and Mason was much better at taken advantage of those extra targets, with 6 yards per and 79% catch rate. Everyone of consequence is back in the receiving corps and the two deep returns all but 65 targets from last year or just under 10%. If Gabe Marks (Jr), Dom Williams (Jr) and River Cracraft (So) can continue to improve this could be an elite passing offense and start to reach levels that Leach’s Tech teams did. Only two players that saw action last year are gone from the front are gone and only one was a starter. Ioane Gauta and his 8 TFLs and 3 sacks are going to be missed but Junior Darryl Paulo put up comparable numbers in limited time and should combine with Kalafitoni Pole (Sr) and Xavier Cooper (Jr) to create a pretty good interior for the Cougars. There is some good depth but they will need to be much more consistent with the experience they have returning. Will linebacker Justin Sagote is gone after a very productive season. To replace his 83 tackles, is Junior Tana Pritchard who had 43 tackles last year in 13 games as the number two on the depth chart. The starting four should be good, all but SAM backer Cyrus Coen saw time in all 13 games and if they can build off the collective 25.5 TFLs this front seven could be much better than is expected from a Leach team’s defense. The secondary is going to need that font seven to be better than expected because five of the top seven from last season are gone. Sophomore CB Daquawn Brown and junior FS Taylor Taliulu are going to need to be rock on which younger players learn and rally around or this back four is going to be torched. Overall I’m hopeful for the defense, the front seven has good experience and production, but the key is as always Leach and his offense. If Connor Halliday can improve with on good but inconsistent numbers and the skill positions come along this could be the third year breakthrough for Wazzu we’ve been waiting for. Head Coach: Mike Leach (93-59) Since 2012

Arizona State Sun Devils(South, 10-4, 7(Y), 59.1%, 3, 29.1%) Todd Graham managed to stay in one place for more than a year and has settle in Tempe, where he surpassed almost all expectation year one. Heading into year three there is some remodeling to be done on defense, more work to be done in recruiting, but the offense should be pretty good. Taylor Kelly is back for his senior year and year three under the tutelage of Graham and OC Mike Norvell. Kelly’s numbers in 2013 weren’t as good as 2012 but they were still good enough and if he continues to grow into the system in his senior should rebound to near 2012 levels. That would mean 65% completions, 7+ yards per attempt and hopefully a sack rate that reduces from 7.5% with added experience. Kelly also adds a dimension in the run game, averaging 5.9 yards per carry, but with Marion Grice leaving where the production next to him will come from is a big unknown heading into the year. Junior D.J. Foster is back after a limited role in 2013 (93 rushes), but he showed flashes in those attempts and at 5.4 yards per carry should be able to recreate Grice’s role fairly well in 2014. Behind Foster is Senior Deantre Lewis who, rushed for a respectable 5.2 yards per carry but that was on a small sample of 58 rushes. The back of the future, four star freshman Kalen Ballage, may see some limited snaps but will be buried on the roster. Unlike the backs, WR is a position that doesn’t have those who should assume more time after solid work in limited snaps. The pass catchers here are raw and will need to mature fast in a system that looks to pass first. Jaelen Strong is back after a 1100+ yards last season and a 63% catch rate. With the lack of depth behind him he may see even more than 120 targets in 2014. Foster could be a boon in the pass game out of the backfield after 63 catches last season. The next four pass catchers from last year are gone and what is left is uninspiring to say the least. Sophomores Cameron Smith and Frederick Gammage need to step up in a hurry. Smith only caught 8 of his 19 targets in 2013 and at a 42% clip that won’t keep you on the field. Gammage catch all six of his targets but will see a much heavier workload in 2014. Behind those two, RS freshmen Ronald Lewis and Ellis Jefferson will push the two sophomores and hopefully produce a competitive environment in camp that improves everyone’s game. There is hope on offense, a good amount of returning players and a senior QB who started the last three seasons. The defense, well you saw the numbers up top, three returning starters, less than 1/3 of the tackles returning. The defensive line loses all three starters from last season, and even considering a less than optimal Will Sutton the loss is big. 116 tackles, 35.5 TFLs and 16 sacks are gone and replaced by a group that had 4 TFLs and 1 sack to their names. Those three players have good pedigree (two 4 stars, one 3), but between their increased workload and the maturation of some younger players there figures to be a lot of growing pains up front. Onto linebacker where, woohoo, a starter returns. High three star sophomore Salamo Fios is back to build upon his freshmen year in which he had the second most tackles of the LBs and 5.5 TFLs and 3 sacks. Around Fiso, Lauiu Moeakiola and De’Marieya Nelson each played in at least 10 games last season but need to make big strides to adequately replace last season’s starters. The good news looking forward is that three of this year’s starters should be sophomores who will get great experience, but 2014 looks to be a bit of an uphill climb. The Secondary returns…. TWO WHOLE Starters. All kidding aside with the front seven being as depleted as it is having two starters returning may mean the difference between a secondary that wets the bed and one that makes an occasional stop while working in a gaggle of redshirt freshmen. The defense is going to be a struggle, as one would expect, when replacing eight starters. There is talent to replace the departed but nothing game changing to make a unit even above average. The offense should be good to very good once again but without the ability to stop anyone they’re going to take their lumps in conference. Head Coach: Todd Graham (67-38) Since 2012

Oregon State Beavers(North, 7-6, 8(Y), 61.3%, 6, 74.4%) 2013 wasn’t quite what the high point of 2012 was but it was still a pretty successful year as far as Oregon State is concerned and with the amount of returning players I might be way to low on the Beavers in 2014. Sean Mannion is back for his senior season in Corvallis and he’s looking to build off a very good junior campaign. Mannion completed 66% of his pass while pushing the ball downfield at a 7 yards per attempt clip. If Riley and staff continue to have Mannion throw the ball around 600 times again in 2014 this offense should be very good again in 2014. The top two returning backs are meh and a slightly better version of meh. Junior Storm Woods averaged 3.8 yards per carry in 2013 and was not good if he didn’t have defined running lanes. Senior Terron Ward was better at 4.6 yards per carry but neither is an explosive option to combine with the passing game behind Mannion. The game changer for this offense could be sophomore Chris Brown. Brown’s freshman year only saw him get 19 carries but in that small sample he flashed a burst that none of the other returning options showed. Even if with a bigger workload Brown doesn’t average 7.6 yards attempt, having a back with the potential to get 5.5 to 6 yards a carry would add a ridiculous dimension in 2014. Brandon Cooks is gone and that is a big loss, and one that no one player will likely fill but there is some talent returning and some players that will need to prove themselves in bigger roles early. Richard Mullaney average 8.9 yards per target and should be the number one option for Mannion in the upcoming season. Tight Ends Connor Hamlett (Sr) and Caleb Smith (Jr) should provide good check down options for Mannion and Smith could be a seam buster and a game changer with more targets. Malik Gilmore should see time at the slot and showed flashes of being above average there in limited snaps, but he caught 63.6% of his targets and did a respectable job of getting some YAC out of the slot. There isn’t a great option to replace Cooks at the Z but if Victor Bolden can improve from his freshman year and reel in more of his targets he looks like the long term solution to that problem. The defensive line is going to miss the pair of DE Scott Crichton (19 TFLs/7.5 sacks) and DT Mana Rosa (32 tackles, 3.5 TFLs, 1 sack). Not that Rosa was great but he did a good job of hunkering down inside and was by far the best interior player. Dylan Wynn is back for his senior season, after a 48 tackle 1 sack season, with Crichton and two other major DE contributors gone Wynn is going to be asked to should more of the load in 2014 and needs to build upon those base numbers from last season. DTs Bud Delva, Siale Hautau and Brandon Bennett-Jackson, along with DEs Obum Gwacham and Jaswha James need to be much more productive in 2014 than they were in 2013 when all saw time in the majority of games. If the experience laden group can gel and improve the drop off may not be too bad up front but that is a big if to build a defense on. The linebackers are a much better story. Every backer who saw time last season is back and 2012 starter at WLB Michael Doctor is back as well. If Doctor plays up to his 2012 season (63.5 tackles, 11 TFLs) the all senior linebacking corps would be a huge bright spot and in a front seven that has a lot of holes up front. Behind those three are a group of sophomores that saw good time last year all playing in at least 12 games but could all use another year to develop before hitting the big time. The back four is a mixed bag, and a mix of the dichotomies of the front seven. The two deep at safety is back and that means that Tyrequek Zimmerman and Ryan Murphy who combined for 141 tackles, 11 TFLs and 7 passes defensed they will be the rock the secondary is built upon. Corner is a different story, two of the top four are gone, but Steven Nelson should be a stud (55 tkls, 14 passes defensed) and Larry Scott should be good in a bigger role than last season. The biggest impact both in the secondary and possibly on the defense is RS freshman CB four star Dashon Hunt who has some people to jump on the depth chart but is probably more talented than most he is competing with. If Hunt and Nelson combine to make up a pair of lockdown corners and the LBs can hide some of the front four’s deficiencies then this could be a pretty solid unit at least against the pass. Against the run? Well that’s a scarier proposition. Overall this could be an above average team bordering on feistily annoying but I think the problems in the trenches could derail what is otherwise a very rosy outlook. Head Coach: Mike Riley (88-73) Since 2003

Utah Utes(South, 5-7, 6(Y), 59.4%, 5, 58.6%) Kyle Whittingham succeeded Urban Meyer at Utah and was really good in the MWC but has never been able to put together sustained success in the Pac-12 due to inconsistencies and injuries at QB. Tyler Wilson is back and I’m not going to give you his stats because I think he’s good enough to make this team successful. Based on adjusted points per game (Thanks Bill Connelly), with Wilson fully healthy Utah 36.8, opponent 24.6 (six games) with Wilson unhealthy or out, opponent 23.1 and Utah 20.1. Wilson was the offense and that made this team tick, with Wilson cleared to play and assuming health the Utes could be dangerous once again. Junior Bubba Poole is back and that’s good but he only averaged 4.1 yards per carry which is respectable but you can see why after Wilson and the pass threat were gone, the team stalled. Poole is the only back with experience and his backups will be a pair of RS freshmen Dre’Vian Young and Troy McCormick who are both 5’9” 170 some-odd lb backs who should provide some spell but who knows if we will get more out of them than we got out of Poole last season. Dres Anderson (Sr) is back to reprise a 1000 yard season, Kenneth Scott (Jr), former four star, is back after missing 2013 and Geoffrey Norwood (Jr) is back. The problem is none caught 60% of their targets but both Anderson and Norwood were around 8 yards per target and should be good enough deep threats but need to become much more consistent with their hands. On the defensive line a lot is gone but a lot is coming back. DTs Tenny Palepoi and LT Tuipulotu are gone and with them 12.5 TLFs and 6 sacks. That wealth of output and experience will be tough to replace but Viliseni Fauonuku (Jr), Sam Tevi (So) and Sese Ianu (Sr) all saw time last year and Fauonuku was a force in the seven games he participated in 2013. On the edge around them are Nate Orchard (Sr) and Hunter Dimick (So) who combined for 57.5 tackles, 11 TFLs and 5 sacks. Dimick could be the next Utah defensive beast after such an explosive freshman year. If the younger players can take big strides in their games, mainly Dimick, Fauonuku and Tevi this could once again be a great defensive front. STUD linebacker Trevor Reilly is gone and with him 78 tackles, 16.5 TFLs and 9 sacks. He will be replaced by Jacoby Hale who put up 31 tackles, 10 TFLs and 6.5 sacks, if Hale stays healthy this year the loss of Reilly should be mitigated. MAC LB Jason Whittingham and ROV LB Jared Norris are back and if each can improve on their sophomore campaigns this may be one of the best linebacker corps in the conference but it is shallow and could crack and crumble easily. The secondary, much like the line loses a lot and brings back a lot. FS Eric Rowe (Sr) & CBs Davion Orphey (Sr), Justin Thomas (So) and Reginald Porter (So) are all back. Add in SS Brian Blechen who missed 2013 but had a very good 2012 this group should be able to weather the storm. The defense will be dependent on a group of young talented players to grow after strong freshmen and sophomore years. The team as a whole and its success is predicated on health which is a fickle mistress but Utah has a chance to be a top thirty team and remind us of such in 2014. Head Coach: Kyle Whittingham (76-39) Since 2005

California Golden Bears(North, 1-11, 8(Y), 70.9%, 6, 64.5%) Sonny Dykes’ first season at the helm for Cal was by all intents and purposes a clusterfuck. Jared Goff put up a lot of pass attempts (529) and they weren’t very affective (5.9 yards per attempt). Goff is talented and was thrown into a situation where he was going to battling uphill but he needs to be much better in his sophomore campaign and I think he and Dykes can get there. Sharing the backfield with Goff is fellow sophomore Khalfani Muhammad, who despite Dykes’ air raid tendencies needs to get so much more than 75 carries in 2014. At 6 yards per carry he outperformed the passing game in 2013 and should be a much bigger part of the offense in 2014. Daniel Lasco was good last season too, at 4.7 he wasn’t nearly as explosive as Muhammad but in this system that’s plenty good enough to be useful. With four star Tre Watson coming in as well this could be a very potent running game to go with a historically potent and efficient Dykes passing game. The top three receivers from last season are back and are young (2 Jrs, 1 So). Treggs and Harper should reprise their 100+ target seasons New starting Y receiver Darius Powe should get more targets with Richard Rodgers and Kenny Lawler should be able to build off a 65 target season. Overall this offense is young talented and in a system that should put a lot of that talent in space. The defense is… well… another story all together. On the line who plays DT? Former fours star junior Mustafa Jalil missed all of last year, and the rest of the two deep at that position is a bunch of players who saw no playing time last season and don’t have great pedigrees. DE is loaded with experience and should be good enough, and is filled with a group of highly touted recruits that haven’t lived up to the hype just yet. The linebackers have a lot of talent and some returning experience up top but without help in front of them they are exposed to trying to make too many plays. If everyone stays healthy this unit should be able to steady the defense but they need help and I’m not sure it’s coming from up front. The California secondary will be a case study in the value of experience and the growth patterns of young players. Only one senior returns and the rest of the group are juniors and sophomores so there is a lot place to grow and they can’t get much worse so much like with LBs they should improve but may be weighed down by the line. Nowhere to go but up should be the montra here and in a lot of places there is a lot to be excited about, but I think this is at least a year away from making waves in the Pac-12. Head Coach: Sonny Dykes (23-26) Since 2013

Colorado Buffaloes(South, 4-8, 7(Y), 66.8%, 8, 74.2%) I believe in Mike MacIntyre but this rebuild is going to be a slog and it starts in making recruiting in-roads into places that have been underutilized especially California’s talent base. 2013 was a step forward, because you know competent coaching after horrid coaching makes a big difference. Sefo Liufau looks to improve upon a good not great freshman year under MacIntyre and staffs tutelage and should continue to get better but he’s going to have to do that without Paul Richardson which is a big blow for the offense as a whole. Michael Adkins II was the most productive back and with a squad still working towards competency should be the back to lean on for the Buffaloes. Christian Powell will still have a use but he averaged a yard and a half worse than Adkins and shouldn’t really be the number one. As noted before Richardson is gone and the supporting cast of upperclassmen need to step up or a group of RS freshmen and freshmen will need to step up in a hurry. The receiving corps may call this a building year because of lack of production but MacIntyre has brought in some promising youngsters who will need some time to germinate. The front seven returns a lot of experience and although no one stands out on the line as an impact player they should be solid enough and are young enough to make another jump. The star of the defense will be sophomore Addison Gillam who had 89 tackles, 9.5 TFLs and 3 sacks. Not to sound like a broken record but if four star sophomore Deayshawn Rippy can step in and play like a four star recruit then Gillam and Rippy should be a heck of a combo on the second level for the next three seasons and complete a good core of players this year. The secondary was good if not elite last year and everyone but Park Orms is back and he should be replace by Terrel Smith who missed last season but had a good 2012. If this group can do what it did in 2013 the defense will surprise and keep many of the Buffs games respectable. Colorado is the doormat of the conference but with another year of seasoning this could be a team to watch in 2015 and beyond and MacIntyre will be a hot commodity once again. Head Coach: Mike MacIntyre (20-29) Since 2013

2014 Predicted Standings

North: 1) Oregon 2) Stanford 3) Washington 4) Oregon State 5) Washington State 6) California
South: 1) Arizona 2) USC 3) UCLA 4) Utah 5) Arizona State 6) Colorado

Oregon and Stanford are the class of the conference, but much like last season the strength of the next tier of teams is what makes the Pac-12 truly special. Washington, Arizona, USC, UCLA and Utah should all be very good this season and Wazzu, Arizona State and Colorado are all set up for future success. Arizona is my surprise obviously but I really like what Rich Rod is doing there and I think Petersen and the Huskies have an outside shot of shocking the world in year one. All in all the Pac-12 is going to be a bunch of fun to watch and a bane to my sleep cycle in 2014.