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Category: 2026 Previews

  • 2026 Louisville preview: Cardinals look like an ACC title threat with Brown at RB… but will QB play be good enough?

    2026 Louisville preview: Cardinals look like an ACC title threat with Brown at RB… but will QB play be good enough?

    There are going to be a lot of people who like Louisville in the ACC this year.

    The Cardinals went 9-4 last season. They beat Miami, which ended up being the ACC team everyone remembers because the Hurricanes went all the way to the national title game. Louisville did not just beat Miami, either. The Cardinals got after Carson Beck, made him uncomfortable, and showed on a big stage that this team was good enough to bother anybody in the league.

    But that is kind of the Louisville story right now.

    There is a lot to like. There is also a lot to replace.

    And the entire season may come down to whether Lincoln Kienholz is ready to be the guy at quarterback.

    HEAD COACH:

    • Jeff Brohm, entering year four at Louisville
    • Brohm is 28-12 with the Cardinals.
    • Louisville went 9-4 last season.
    • Since joining the ACC in 2014, Louisville has had only one 10-win season, which came in 2023.

    I think Jeff Brohm has done a great job at Louisville.

    This program has been competitive. It has been fun. It has been dangerous. And when Louisville is right, the Cardinals are one of those teams nobody really wants to play because they can score, they can create pressure, and they usually have enough taent to make a game uncomfortable.

    That is why people are going to talk themselves into Louisville as an ACC contender.

    The league feels open after Miami. There is no obvious Clemson monster sitting there like there used to be. Duke just won the ACC, but the Blue Devils have to replace Darian Mensah. Virginia was in the title game, but the Cavaliers feel like part of the chasing group again this year, not a clear title contender. Florida State is trying to get off the mat. Georgia Tech has questions without Haynes King.

    So why not Louisville?

    That is the case.

    But if Louisville is going to take the next step, it has to prove it can survive all the turnover on offense.

    QUARTERBACK:

    This is the biggest question.

    Miller Moss is gone, and now Louisville turns to Lincoln Kienholz, the transfer from Ohio State.

    Kienholz is talented. That part is not really the issue. He was the No. 13 quarterback in his class as a senior in 2022, and there is a reason Ohio State wanted him in the first place.

    But he has not played much college football.

    At Ohio State, Kienholz went 11-of-14 passing with a touchdown this past season. He also ran 11 times for 66 yards and two rushing touchdowns. In his entire college career, he has thrown only 36 passes.

    That’s right, 36 passes. This is not a proven Power Four starter walking into Louisville.

    This is Louisville betting on talent.

    That does not mean it’s a bad bet. It might be a great one. But it is still a bet.

    The good news is that Louisville does not need him to be perfect. The Cardinals have a run game that can help him. They have a coach who knows offense. They have enough schedule advantages to let this thing build.

    But they do need him to be better in one area where Moss was not great last season — The deep ball.

    Moss threw 16 touchdowns and seven interceptions last year, but he was not great pushing the ball down the field. He went 18-of-44 on throws of 20-plus air yards, with five touchdowns and three interceptions.

    That has to improve.

    If Kienholz can hit some vertical shots, this offense changes quickly. If defenses have to respect the deep ball, those Louisville running backs become even scarier.

    But if teams can crowd the line of scrimmage, squeeze the run game and force Kienholz to win with new receivers behind a rebuilt offensive line, that is where things get complicated.

    THE REST OF THE OFFENSE

    The Cardinals might have the scariest running back duo in the entire ACC.

    And it is not really thunder and lightning. It is more like lightning and lightning.

    Isaac Brown led the nation last season with 8.8 yards per carry. That is ridiculous. He was basically a walking first down every time he touched the ball.

    Then his backup, Keyjuan Brown, averaged 7.3 yards per carry, which ranked fourth nationally.

    So Louisville has the No. 1 running back in yards per carry and the No. 4 running back in yards per carry on the same roster.

    That is insane.

    Isaac Brown had 101 carries last year. Keyjuan Brown had 96. This is not some situation where one guy had eight carries and popped a long run. These guys were consistently explosive.

    That gives Louisville a real identity.

    If Kienholz is settling in, lean on the backs. If the passing game is not quite ready, lean on the backs. If the offensive line needs time, let the backs create some explosives by bouncing outside and making something happen.

    The problem is that the offensive line is also being rebuilt.

    Lance Robinson is the only returning offensive lineman. Louisville has to replace five of its six most experienced offensive linemen, which is a big deal for a team that wants to run the ball and protect a new quarterback.

    That is probably the biggest concern on the entire offense.

    Because you can have great running backs, but if the line is not ready, those lanes close fast.

    The receiver room is also very different.

    Louisville lost its top targets. Chris Bell is gone after catching 72 passes. Caullin Lacy is gone after catching 60 passes. The top four players in targets from last year are no longer on the roster.

    That is a lot.

    The Cardinals did bring in help though.

    Trey Richardson comes in from Vanderbilt after catching 46 passes for 806 yards and seven touchdowns. That is a big addition. LaWayne McCoy comes in from Florida State. Brody Foley, an All-AAC tight end from Tulsa, comes in after catching 37 passes and seven touchdowns.

    Louisville also brings back TreyShun Hurry at receiver and Jaleel Skinner at tight end. They had 36 catches combined last year and will look for bigger roles.

    So there are options.

    But there is a difference between having options and knowing who the guy is.

    That is what Louisville has to figure out.

    Who is Kienholz going to trust on third down? Who scares defenses outside? Who replaces the production Bell and Lacy gave them?

    If Louisville finds those answers, the offense can be really good.

    If not, the Cardinals may be a dangerous running team that gets stuck when opponents force them to throw.

    DEFENSE

    This is the part that made me buy Louisville last year.

    The pass rush was real and ranked fourth in Pro Football Focus’ grades last season.

    Before that Miami game, I remember thinking Louisville’s defensive front could give Miami problems. And that is exactly what happened. The Cardinals bothered Carson Beck, sped him up, pressured him and made Miami look uncomfortable.

    In modern college football, if you can bother the quarterback without having to blitz everybody, you have a chance.

    The question is whether Louisville can do it again.

    The Cardinals return some really nice defensive pieces. TJ Capers is back at linebacker. Tayon Holloway is back at defensive back. Defensive lineman Cleve Lubin is back after earning third-team All-ACC honors with 8.5 sacks. Antonio Watts is back in the secondary after a three interception season.

    Brown was also a third-team All-ACC player. Watts and Holloway earned honorable mention All-ACC recognition.

    So this is not an empty defense.

    There is talent here.

    But if Louisville is going to be a real ACC contender, the defense has to be more than “solid.” It has to still be disruptive.

    Because the offense may need time.

    Kienholz is new. The offensive line is new. The receivers are new. That usually means there will be some awkward drives early in the season.

    If the defense can keep pressure on quarterbacks and create short fields, Louisville can survive that.

    If the pass rush takes a big step back, the Cardinals may have to win more shootouts than they want.

    And that is dangerous when you are breaking in a quarterback.

    SCHEDULE

    This is one of the biggest reasons to like Louisville.

    The schedule sets up really well.

    That does not mean it is easy, because it is not. But it is friendly in some very important ways.

    Louisville opens on a Sunday in Nashville against Ole Miss. That is a huge stage. Labor Day weekend, national spotlight, SEC opponent, neutral site.

    That is the kind of game that can change the way people talk about your program immediately.

    If Louisville beats Ole Miss, the Cardinals are going to get a lot of national attention very quickly.

    The weird part is what happens next.

    Louisville plays Villanova five days later on Friday. That is strange scheduling. I cannot imagine many Power Four teams are playing two games in five days, but that is what Louisville is doing.

    After that, the Cardinals get SMU, which is one of the biggest early ACC games on the schedule.

    So even though Louisville’s schedule is favorable overall, the beginning is not a joke.

    Ole Miss and SMU in the first three games is a real test.

    Then Louisville gets Wake Forest, goes to NC State on Oct. 3, and hosts Florida State on Oct. 9.

    Here is the part I love for Louisville:

    The Cardinals do not play at Cal, Stanford or SMU.

    They also do not play Miami, Duke or Virginia.

    That is a big deal.

    In this version of the ACC, avoiding the West Coast trips matters. Avoiding Miami matters. Avoiding the two teams that played in last year’s ACC Championship Game matters.

    Louisville’s farthest ACC road trip is Syracuse.

    That is a win before the games even start.

    By the end of October, Louisville will have only played two true road games: NC State and Syracuse. The Ole Miss game is neutral site, but it is not a true road game.

    That is a very manageable travel setup.

    The tougher part comes late.

    In November, Louisville plays at Georgia Tech, at North Carolina, hosts Pitt, then goes to Kentucky.

    So three of the final four are on the road.

    That is not easy.

    Georgia Tech should still be a bowl team. North Carolina has plenty to prove. Pitt could be tough. Kentucky is a rivalry game, and there are a lot of people in Lexington excited about that team.

    Still, compared to what some other ACC teams are dealing with, Louisville should feel pretty good about this schedule.

    If you are going to make a run in the ACC, this is the kind of schedule that gives you a chance.

    OUTLOOK

    I understand why people are going to like Louisville.

    I may end up talking myself into them too.

    The running backs are scary. Isaac Brown and Keyjuan Brown can flip the field at any moment. Jeff Brohm knows offense. The schedule is favorable. The defense has enough returning talent to stay dangerous. And if the pass rush is even close to what it was last year, Louisville is going to be a problem.

    But there are real concerns.

    Lincoln Kienholz in inexperienced and raw. The offensive line is replacing almost everybody. The receiver room lost its top targets. The passing game may take time. And even with the schedule advantages, games against Ole Miss, SMU, NC State, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Pitt and Kentucky are not automatic.

    That is why Louisville is interesting.

    The case for them is easy to make.

    The case against them is also pretty easy to make.

    The best-case scenario is that Kienholz is ready right away, the running backs are as explosive as they were last year, one or two new receivers become real weapons, and the defense stays disruptive enough for Louisville to compete at the top of the ACC.

    If that happens, the Cardinals could absolutely be in the ACC Championship conversation.

    The worst-case scenario is that Kienholz looks inexperienced, the offensive line takes too long to come together, defenses load up on the run, and Louisville loses a couple of early games before the offense finds itself.

    My gut says this team is dangerous.

    Full disclosure: I use AI tools to format my research into an article encompassing all of the information.


  • Georgia Tech season outlook: With Mendoza stepping in at QB, can Georgia Tech flirt with ACC championship again in 2026?

    Georgia Tech season outlook: With Mendoza stepping in at QB, can Georgia Tech flirt with ACC championship again in 2026?

    For a while last season, it really did feel like Georgia Tech might sneak into the College Football Playoff conversation.

    That sounds crazy if you zoom out and remember where this program was not that long ago.

    But the Yellow Jackets went 9-4, finished 6-2 in the ACC, climbed as high as No. 7 in the AP poll, and had their first nine-win season since 2016.

    And unlike 2016, Georgia Tech did not need a bowl win to get there. The Jackets were already a nine-win team before bowl season. The last time that happened was 2014, when Paul Johnson won 11 games.

    So now the question is simple.

    Was last year the start of something real under Brent Key, or was it the high point before a step back?

    Because Georgia Tech was good last year.

    But now Haynes King is gone.

    And that changes everything.

    HEAD COACH:

    • Brent Key, entering another important year at Georgia Tech
    • Key is 27-20 at Georgia Tech, including his interim time.
    • Georgia Tech went 9-4 last season and 6-2 in the ACC.
    • The Yellow Jackets have had a winning record in all three of Key’s full seasons.

    I think people have stop[ed wondering if Brent Key can be a great coach.

    He can.

    Georgia Tech has had a winning record every full season under Key. That is not nothing. He did not take over some machine that was already rolling. He took over a program that needed stability, needed belief and needed someone who understood what Georgia Tech could be.

    He has given them that.

    Now comes the harder part.

    It is one thing to build momentum. It is another thing to keep it when you lose the quarterback who has been the heartbeat of your offense.

    That is where Georgia Tech is now.

    Haynes King was the guy the last couple years. When Georgia Tech needed a first down, a big run, a tough play, something to settle the offense, King gave them that. He was not perfect as a passer, but he made the offense go.

    Now Georgia Tech has to prove the program is bigger than one quarterback.

    That is the next step for Key.

    QUARTERBACK:

    The new name is Alberto Mendoza, and if that last name sounds familiar, it should.

    His brother, Fernando Mendoza, just became a college football star at Indiana, won the Heisman Trophy, led the Hoosiers to the national title game, and became the No. 1 pick in the NFL Draft.

    Now his brother is expected to get his shot at Georgia Tech.

    Alberto Mendoza transferred in from Indiana, where he backed up his brother last season. He played in nine games, mostly in mop-up duty because Indiana blew out a lot of teams. In his career, he’s completed 19 of 25 passes for 292 yards, five touchdowns and one interception.

    He also showed he can run, finishing with 187 rushing yards and a touchdown on just 15 carries.

    Now, we do have to be fair here.

    That was not a full season of high-pressure football. That was not starting against ACC defenses every week. That was a quarterback getting late-game opportunities on a team that was rolling people.

    But there are things to like.

    Mendoza had five straight appearances last season where he did not throw an incompletion. He was the No. 55 quarterback in the country by ESPN coming out of high school and was a three-star prospect.

    The talent is there.

    The question is whether he is ready to replace a player who meant as much to Georgia Tech as Haynes King did.

    That is not a small ask.

    And the offense is changing around him too.

    Buster Faulkner is gone, and George Godsey replaces him as offensive coordinator. So this is not just a new quarterback. It is a new quarterback with a new offensive voice trying to rebuild an attack that had been built around King’s toughness, legs and playmaking.

    That is why the quarterback situation is the whole season.

    If Mendoza is good, Georgia Tech can stay dangerous.

    If he struggles, the Yellow Jackets probably take a step back.

    THE REST OF THE OFFENSE

    This is where Georgia Tech has a real chance to help Mendoza.

    The run game could be good. Really good.

    Justice Haynes transferred in after stops at Alabama and Michigan, and he has the talent to be a true No. 1 back. Last season, when he was healthy, he had over 100 rushing yards in six of seven games and averaged around 17 carries per game.

    That tells you something.

    Haynes can be the bell cow if Georgia Tech needs him to be.

    But the scary part is that the Jackets may not need him to carry everything by himself because Malachi Hosley is also back.

    Hosley ran for 697 yards on 98 carries last season. He is probably not going to be the 20-carry-a-game guy, but he does not need to be. If Haynes is the hammer, Hosley can be the change-up. Together, they have a chance to be one of the better running back duos in the ACC.

    That is how you help a new quarterback.

    You run the football. You stay ahead of the chains. You do not ask Mendoza to be a hero in September.

    The offensive line has two important pieces back too: Malachi Carney and Ethan McKinney. Both earned honorable mention All-ACC recognition, and both need to play like all-conference guys again.

    That is especially important because Keelan Rutledge is gone after being taken late in the first round of the NFL Draft by the Houston Texans.

    Rutledge was a mauler. That dude opened lanes in the run game.

    Georgia Tech has to replace that.

    The bigger concern is receiver.

    The only returning wide receiver who caught a pass last season is Jordan Allen, who had 22 catches. That is not much returning production.

    So the transfer additions matter a lot.

    Jaylen Mbakwe comes in from Alabama as a former five-star recruit. He has played both wide receiver and defensive back, and it will be interesting to see if Georgia Tech uses him on both sides of the ball. I am not saying he is Travis Hunter, but he is talented enough to be used creatively.

    Isaiah Fuhrmann comes in from Elon, and he is one of the most interesting players on the roster. If there is one transfer name Georgia Tech fans should know, it might be him.

    He can stretch the field.

    His long receptions in different games last season went for 47, 53, 62, 76, 81 and 96 yards.

    That is explosive.

    Yes, he was doing it at Elon, and the ACC is different. But speed and big-play ability travel. If Fuhrmann can give Georgia Tech even a few of those chunk plays, it changes the offense.

    Javan Plummer also comes in from Cal, giving the receiver room another new piece.

    So the offense has a pretty clear formula.

    Let Haynes and Hosley carry the early weight. Let the offensive line settle in. Use Mendoza’s legs when needed. Then hope one or two of the transfer receivers can become real ACC weapons.

    That can work.

    But it has to come together quickly.

    DEFENSE

    Georgia Tech has to be better on defense.

    That is not optional.

    The Jackets won nine games last year, but they were not good enough defensively for that to feel like a clean formula moving forward. Opponents averaged nearly six yards per play, Georgia Tech allowed more than 400 yards per game, and the Jackets gave up around 26 points per game.

    That is too much.

    You can survive that when your offense is humming and your quarterback is making big plays. But when you are replacing Haynes King, the defense has to carry more of the load.

    The good news is Georgia Tech has some real pieces back.

    Kyle Efford is the name that jumps out. He had 77 tackles last season and earned honorable mention All-ACC recognition. He is one of the most important players on the roster.

    The Jackets also bring back Amaree Bradford and E.J. Lightsey at linebacker, Zachary Tobe in the secondary and A.J. Hoffler on the defensive line.

    That is a solid starting point.

    Georgia Tech also added Noah Carter from Alabama. He did not have huge production there, but he was a highly recruited player, and sometimes a change of scenery plus a bigger role is exactly what a player needs.

    The defense does not have to become elite overnight.

    But it has to become more reliable.

    Georgia Tech cannot give up six yards per play again and expect to repeat last year’s record. The offense is going through too many changes for that.

    If the Jackets want to stay in the upper half of the ACC, the defense has to be more than just “good enough if the offense scores 35.”

    It has to win Georgia Tech some games.

    SCHEDULE

    The schedule is interesting because it looks manageable in some places and tricky in others.

    Georgia Tech opens at home against Colorado, and that is a fun one right away.

    Last year, the Jackets got behind early because of turnovers, but they came back and beat Deion Sanders and the Buffaloes. This time, the game is in Atlanta.

    Then comes Tennessee in week two.

    That is a big test, but maybe not as terrifying as it could be. Tennessee still has to answer quarterback questions, and while Josh Heupel usually figures out offense, this may not be a fully polished Tennessee machine early in the season.

    Georgia Tech also gets nine days before that game, which helps.

    After that, the Jackets host Mercer, then make the long trip to Stanford on Sept. 26.

    That is the one big West Coast trip.

    The good news is Georgia Tech does not play at Cal, and it does not play at SMU. In the new ACC, avoiding extra long-distance trips matters.

    Then comes Duke, the defending ACC champion, in Atlanta.

    So Georgia Tech plays four of its first five games at home.

    That is huge.

    But the games are not soft. Colorado, Tennessee and Duke all come to Atlanta, and the Stanford trip is not easy because of the travel.

    After that, the Yellow Jackets alternate home and away for the final seven games. There is no brutal back-to-back road stretch, which helps.

    The final five games are where things get serious:

    at Pitt, Louisville at home, at Clemson, Wake Forest at home, and at Georgia.

    That is a tough close.

    Pitt should be solid. Louisville is dangerous. Clemson is still Clemson, even if there are questions. Wake Forest is a game Georgia Tech probably has to win if it wants another strong season. And Georgia is Georgia.

    So the schedule gives Georgia Tech a chance early because of all the home games.

    But it does not give the Jackets much room to fake it late.

    OUTLOOK

    I like Georgia Tech.

    I like Brent Key. I like the direction of the program. I like the running backs. I like that the Jackets only lost 17 scholarship players from last year, which is not a crazy number in this era. I like the fact that Georgia Tech has started to feel like a real ACC factor again.

    But I also think we need to be honest.

    Last year was a lot.

    Georgia Tech went 9-4. It got as high as No. 7. It had a veteran quarterback who fit the program perfectly. It had a first-round offensive lineman. It had an offense that knew what it was.

    Now the Jackets are replacing Haynes King, replacing Buster Faulkner, rebuilding the receiver room and trying to fix a defense that gave up too many yards.

    That is a lot to ask.

    The best-case scenario is that Alberto Mendoza is ready right away, Justice Haynes and Malachi Hosley become one of the best running back duos in the ACC, one of the transfer receivers pops, and the defense improves enough for Georgia Tech to stay in the conference race.

    If that happens, Georgia Tech can absolutely be a dangerous team again.

    The worst-case scenario is that Mendoza is not ready, the passing game lacks weapons, the defense still gives up too many explosive plays, and the schedule catches up with the Jackets.

    My gut?

    I think Georgia Tech can still be good.

    I do not know if I see another season where the Jackets are flirting with 10 wins or hanging around the playoff conversation deep into the year. That feels like a big ask with this much change at quarterback and offensive coordinator.

    But eight or nine wins?

    That is on the table.

    And that says a lot about where Brent Key has this program.

    Georgia Tech is no longer a team you just pencil in as a win.

    The Yellow Jackets are good enough to make people uncomfortable.

    Now they have to prove last year was not just a fun one-year ride.

    Full disclosure: I use AI tools to format my research into an article encompassing all of the information.

  • Florida State 2026 season outlook: Is there any hope left for Mike Norvell and the Noles?

    Florida State 2026 season outlook: Is there any hope left for Mike Norvell and the Noles?

    Did anyone ever think it could get this bad at Florida State?

    This is the program of Bobby Bowden, national titles, top-five finishes, top-10 finishes, NFL players everywhere and that feeling that the Seminoles were always supposed to matter.

    And it was not that long ago that Mike Norvell had Florida State unbeaten in the regular season. The Noles were 13-0, had the Jordan Travis injury, got left out of the College Football Playoff, got blasted by Georgia in the Orange Bowl, and most people still assumed they would be fine.

    Instead?

    Florida State is 7-17 over the last two seasons.

    Even worse, the Noles are 3-13 in ACC play during that stretch.

    Take the Florida State logo off the helmet for a second. If you did not know the brand, and I just told you a team was 3-13 in conference play over two seasons, would you be treating that team like a sleeping giant?

    Probably not.

    That is what makes this season so important.

    Florida State still has the name. It still has the history. It still has the recruiting base. College football is better when the Seminoles are good.

    But right now, this program has to prove it is more than a logo.

    HEAD COACH:

    • Mike Norvell, entering year seven at Florida State
    • Norvell is 38-34 at FSU.
    • Florida State went 5-7 last season.
    • The Noles are 7-17 over the last two seasons.
    • Florida State is 3-13 in ACC play over the last two years.

    This feels like a pressure-cooker season for Mike Norvell.

    And honestly, I do not even know how he sits down with how hot that seat has to be.

    The weird thing with Norvell is that he has taken Florida State to highs the program had not seen in years. That undefeated regular season was real. The national conversation was real. The feeling that Florida State was “back” was real.

    But now he has also taken Florida State to lows that feel almost impossible for this program.

    That is the problem.

    You can sell a rebuild for a while. You can sell patience. You can sell portal turnover. You can sell injuries. You can sell needing time.

    But year seven is not year two.

    At some point, Florida State has to look like Florida State again.

    I do not think the standard has to be national title or bust this year. That would be unfair. But if this team is not in the eight- or nine-win range, it is hard to imagine the administration and fan base just shrugging and saying, “Let’s keep waiting.”

    This feels like the year where Norvell either stabilizes the program or Florida State starts looking for the next answer.

    QUARTERBACK:

    The new quarterback is Ashton Daniels, and he has already been named the starter.

    Daniels comes over after stops at Stanford and Auburn, and he replaces Tommy Castellanos, who had transferred in from Boston College, made the shirts about Alabama and then watched the season fall apart after that opening win.

    Florida State beat Alabama in Tuscaloosa last year, and for about five minutes everybody thought the Noles were back.

    Then they were not.

    Now Daniels takes over an offense that badly needs stability.

    At Auburn last season, Daniels completed 56% of his passes for 797 yards, three touchdowns and two interceptions. He also started the Iron Bowl, which is about as pressurized as it gets in college football. Against Alabama, he went 18-of-39 for 259 yards, one touchdown and one interception.

    That game showed some good and some bad.

    The good is that Daniels has played in big spots. He has been in real environments. He is not going to walk into ACC stadiums and be shocked by the moment.

    The concern is the passing profile.

    Daniels has not been a quarterback who consistently attacks deep. In the Iron Bowl, he was 5-of-16 on throws of 20-plus air yards. He had production on those throws, but that was still not a huge part of who he has been.

    That matters because Florida State needs more than five-yard throws and quarterback runs.

    Daniels can move. He has more than 1,400 career rushing yards, and that part of his game is important. Castellanos was Florida State’s leading rusher last year, so the quarterback run game may still be a major part of what this offense is.

    But the Noles need Daniels to be more than a runner who occasionally throws.

    They need him to control the offense, protect the ball and make defenses respect the field.

    The other part of this is Tim Harris.

    Harris takes over the offense after Gus Malzahn retired, and it will be interesting to see how much the offense changes. Last year, Castellanos had a much larger percentage of his throws come off play action than Daniels did at Auburn.

    That is something to watch.

    Does Florida State lean into play action to help Daniels? Does it use his legs to create easier throws? Does it try to become a more controlled offense after finishing near the bottom of the country in time of possession?

    That may decide whether this offense becomes respectable or stays frustrating.

    THE REST OF THE OFFENSE

    The offense basically starts with two returning receivers: Duce Robinson and Micahi Danzy.

    Robinson coming back is massive.

    He was a first-team All-ACC player last season after catching 56 passes for 1,081 yards and six touchdowns. He is also the only returning All-ACC player on Florida State’s roster.

    In this era of college football, that matters.

    Players are basically on one-year contracts now. If you have a star, he can go to the NFL, he can transfer, or he can find a better NIL situation somewhere else. So the fact that Robinson is back gives Florida State at least one clear offensive building block.

    Danzy is also back after catching 27 passes and three touchdowns last season.

    That is a decent starting point at receiver.

    But the rest of the offense is full of questions.

    Florida State had 33 scholarship players enter the transfer portal, and the offensive line has been completely rebuilt. The Noles brought in five new offensive linemen with 118 combined career starts.

    That sounds good, and it might be good.

    But it also tells you how much had to be fixed.

    The offensive line is not just adding a piece or two. It is being remade.

    Florida State did run the ball well statistically last season, ranking near the top nationally in rushing yards per game, but that number needs context. Castellanos was the leading rusher. So if you are asking whether the run game was a true, traditional, reliable run game, I am not sure the answer is yes.

    That brings us to Ousmane Kromah, who should have a chance to be a major part of the offense.

    If Florida State can run the ball with the running backs and not just the quarterback, that changes everything. It keeps Daniels out of obvious passing downs. It helps the new offensive line. It gives the defense a chance to rest.

    And that last part is important because Florida State was 113th in time of possession.

    That is brutal.

    The Noles could not control games. They could not put together long drives. They could not consistently finish in the red zone either, ranking 92nd in red zone scoring.

    That is how a season falls apart.

    It is not just one thing. It is all of it together.

    You cannot stay on the field. You cannot finish drives. You cannot protect your defense. Then the defense gets exposed, and the whole thing snowballs.

    That is what Florida State has to stop this year.

    DEFENSE

    The defense has a few pieces back, but this group also has a lot to prove.

    The key returning names are Daniel Lyons on the defensive line, Blake Nicholson at linebacker, and defensive backs Ashlynd Barker and Ja’Bril Rawls.

    That is not nothing.

    But it is not enough by itself.

    Florida State needed help in the transfer portal, especially in the front seven, and the Noles added some players who should matter right away.

    Rylan Kennedy comes in from Texas A&M as a pass rusher. Chris Jones comes in from Southern Miss after putting up 133 tackles and 3.5 sacks last season.

    Those guys have to make an impact.

    Because Florida State’s defense was not just dealing with normal problems last year. The red zone defense was a disaster. Opponents scored on 88% of their red zone trips, and Florida State ranked 109th nationally in red zone defense.

    That is the kind of number that kills you.

    It is one thing to give up yards. Everybody gives up yards now. College football is built for offense.

    But once the opponent gets close, you have to find ways to force field goals, create negative plays or steal possessions.

    Florida State did not do that enough.

    The turnover margin was also a problem. The Noles were minus-0.5 in turnover margin per game, which ranked near the bottom nationally.

    Again, this is how bad teams lose close games.

    You lose the turnover battle. You fail in the red zone. You cannot stay on the field offensively. You put your defense in bad spots.

    Suddenly, the helmet does not matter.

    The other team does not care that you are Florida State.

    SCHEDULE

    The schedule gives Florida State a chance early, but it also gives the Noles a chance to spiral quickly.

    That is the scary part.

    Florida State plays four of its first five games at home, which is a real advantage. The Noles open with New Mexico State, then host SMU on Labor Day night.

    That SMU game is huge.

    It is another standalone-type spot for Florida State, and we have seen those go badly before. If Florida State wins that game, there is some real early momentum. If the Noles lose it, the pressure immediately gets louder.

    Then comes the trip to Alabama.

    And let’s be honest: Alabama is going to remember what happened last year.

    Florida State beat Alabama 31-17 in Tuscaloosa last season. Kalen DeBoer is not going to let his team forget that. The crowd is not going to forget that. That place is going to be nasty.

    After Alabama, Florida State gets Central Arkansas and Virginia at home.

    The Virginia game matters because that was where things started to go sideways last year. Florida State lost on a Friday night, and after that, the season never really recovered.

    Then comes the meat of the schedule.

    Florida State goes to Louisville on a Friday night, then goes to Miami eight days later.

    That is a brutal two-game road stretch.

    The Miami game is always big, but it would be great for college football if Florida State-Miami felt like it did in the early 2000s again. Right now, Miami is the program expecting to compete for the ACC and the playoff. Florida State is trying to prove it is not broken.

    That is a very different dynamic than what this rivalry used to be.

    The good news is Florida State gets a bye before hosting Clemson.

    That helps.

    After Clemson, the Noles host Boston College, go to Pitt, host NC State, and then finish with Florida in Tallahassee.

    The schedule is not impossible.

    But it is dangerous.

    If Florida State beats New Mexico State and then loses to SMU and Alabama, this could be a 1-2 team by the middle of September. And at that point, with Louisville, Miami, Clemson, Pitt and Florida still ahead, things could get ugly fast.

    On the other hand, if Florida State starts 2-0 and goes to Alabama with confidence, maybe the whole conversation changes.

    That is why the early games are massive.

    Florida State also plays eight of its 12 games in the state of Florida, which helps. The travel is not terrible. The schedule gives the Noles chances.

    But the margin for error does not feel big.

    Not with this roster. Not with this staff pressure. Not after the last two years.

    OUTLOOK

    I want Florida State to be good.

    I really do.

    College football is better when Florida State is one of the big boys. It is better when the Noles are in the top five or top 10. It is better when Florida State-Miami means something nationally. It is better when Doak Campbell Stadium feels like a place nobody wants to visit.

    But wanting it does not make it true.

    Right now, Florida State has to earn back the benefit of the doubt.

    The Noles are 3-13 in ACC play over the last two seasons. That is the fact that sticks with me more than anything else.

    Three and thirteen.

    That is not a rough patch. That is not one weird year. That is a program that has been one of the worst teams in its own league for two seasons.

    So when people say, “Well, it’s Florida State, they’ll figure it out,” I get it.

    But will they figure it out under Mike Norvell?

    That is the real question.

    The best-case scenario is that Ashton Daniels gives Florida State steady quarterback play, Duce Robinson becomes one of the best receivers in the ACC again, the rebuilt offensive line comes together quickly, and the defense gets enough help from the portal to fix the red zone and turnover problems.

    If that happens, Florida State can absolutely be a bowl team and maybe push toward that eight-win range.

    The worst-case scenario is that Daniels is not the answer, the offensive line takes too long to gel, the red zone problems continue, and the early schedule puts Norvell in survival mode before October.

    That is on the table too.

    My gut?

    Florida State will be better eventually.

    There is too much history, too much passion and too much talent in the state of Florida for this program to stay down forever.

    But I do not know if “eventually” starts this year.

    And I do not know if it happens under Mike Norvell.

    For now, Florida State is not a powerhouse.

    It is a team trying to prove it is not lost.

    And for a program with that logo, that history and that fan base, that is a very uncomfortable place to be.

    Full disclosure: I use AI tools to format my research into an article encompassing all of the information.

  • Is Dabo on the hot seat as Clemson tries to get back in ACC title conversation? 2026 preview

    Is Dabo on the hot seat as Clemson tries to get back in ACC title conversation? 2026 preview

    Clemson is one of the most fascinating teams in the country this year.

    And not because the Tigers are coming off some monster season.

    It is actually the opposite.

    Clemson went 7-6 last year, finished 4-4 in the ACC, and had its worst record since 2010. That is not normal Clemson football. That is not normal Dabo Swinney football. From 2011 through 2022, Clemson lost only nine ACC games total. Over the last three years, the Tigers have lost nine ACC games.

    That is the story here.

    For almost a decade, Clemson felt inevitable. The Tigers were the standard in the ACC. They had the quarterback. They had the defensive line. They had the NFL receivers. They had the coaching staff. They had the swagger.

    Now?

    Now Clemson feels like a mystery.

    And honestly, that makes them a lot more interesting.

    HEAD COACH:

    • Dabo Swinney, entering year 18 at Clemson
    • Swinney is 187-53 as Clemson’s head coach.
    • Clemson went 7-6 last season and 4-4 in the ACC.
    • It was Clemson’s worst record since 2010.
    • Clemson lost the Pinstripe Bowl to Penn State.

    I don’t care what anybody says — Dabo Swinney still deserves respect.

    You do not accidentally win two national championships. You do not accidentally build Clemson into a national powerhouse. You do not accidentally go 187-53 at a place that was not this before you got there.

    But that does not mean the questions are unfair.

    They are very fair.

    Clemson has not looked like Clemson lately. The program has slipped from “national title contender” to “maybe this team can get back to the ACC Championship Game.” That is a huge drop for a program that used to own this league.

    And this offseason, Dabo finally did something that people had been begging him to do for years.

    He used the transfer portal.

    He also made a major staff change, bringing Chad Morris back as offensive coordinator. Clemson officially announced Morris as the new OC in January.

    That is a very Dabo move.

    Instead of chasing the hot new name, he went back to someone he knows. Morris was part of the first Clemson offensive boom under Dabo. Now he is being asked to help fix a Clemson offense that has become way too ordinary.

    It feels like Dabo is trying to go back in order to move forward.

    We’ll see if it works.

    QUARTERBACK:

    This is where the season starts.

    Cade Klubnik is gone, and Clemson has to figure out what comes next.

    The main name is Christopher Vizzina. He played some last season, completing 45 of 71 passes for 406 yards, four touchdowns and one interception. He also ran 25 times for 41 yards.

    Those numbers are fine.

    But they also do not tell us everything.

    Vizzina has talent. He was a big recruit. He has been in the program. He knows the offense. And coming out of spring, Chad Morris said Vizzina was the guy.

    So if you are asking who I expect to take the first snap, I would say Christopher Vizzina. It’s hard to image Reynolds being the guy to lead Clemson into the other Death Valley (LSU) to face Lane Kiffin and a raucous crowd in Baton Rouge on Sept. 5.

    But that does not mean this is settled forever.

    Tait Reynolds is also in the room, and the interesting part there is that he is a talented freshman who barely got to play as a senior in high school. So Clemson has a young quarterback with upside, but also a quarterback who needs reps badly.

    That makes this hard.

    “Absolutely, absolutely,” Dabo Swinney said in the spring when asked if Reynolds could push Vizzina for the starting QB position. “Ain’t nobody got lifetime contracts around here. Everybody has to prove it. Everybody has to show up. Everybody has to earn it.”

    If Vizzina is ready, Clemson can be dangerous. Not necessarily national-title dangerous, but “back in the ACC race” dangerous.

    If he is not ready, this season could get sideways fast.

    Because Clemson does not have the old Clemson margin for error right now. This is not the version of the Tigers where the defense gives up 13 points every week and the offense just has to be decent. This team needs the quarterback to be good.

    Not okay.

    Good.

    That is the biggest difference between Clemson being back in the mix and Clemson being a 7- or 8-win team again.

    THE REST OF THE OFFENSE

    This is where I actually like Clemson more than I thought I would.

    The Tigers have some real pieces.

    The receiver room starts with T.J. Moore and Bryant Wesco Jr.. Moore and Wesco combined for 83 catches last season, and both give the QB room something to work with right away.

    That matters.

    A new quarterback’s best friend is a receiver who can win.

    Clemson has two of them.

    Olsen Patt-Henry is back at tight end, and the offensive line brings back Colin Sadler and Harris Sewell. That is not a perfect offense, but it is not empty either.

    The bigger issue is identity.

    Last year, Clemson scored 27.2 points per game. That is not terrible, but for Clemson, it is not good enough. The Tigers also averaged 3.95 yards per carry, which is not the kind of run game that scares anybody.

    That is why Chad Morris matters so much.

    Clemson needs juice again.

    The Tigers need tempo. They need explosives. They need a run game that does not feel like it is being dragged uphill. They need to stop looking like a team that is trying really hard to be Clemson instead of just being Clemson.

    The transfer to watch is Chris Johnson Jr., the former SMU running back.

    Johnson ran for 479 yards and four touchdowns at SMU last season while averaging more than seven yards per carry. He also caught 17 passes for 180 yards and a touchdown. And Clemson fans already saw him up close — he had 59 rushing yards, a touchdown and 40 receiving yards against Clemson last season.

    That is a fun addition.

    Johnson brings speed. Clemson has needed more of that.

    He may not be a 25-carry-a-game back, but he gives the offense something it badly needs: a player who can turn a small crease into a big play.

    So offensively, the question is simple:

    Can Chad Morris make Clemson explosive again?

    Because the names are not bad. Vizzina, Moore, Wesco, Patt-Henry, Johnson, Sadler, Sewell — there is enough there to be good.

    But Clemson needs more than “good on paper.”

    The Tigers need production.

    DEFENSE

    This is the part that feels the least Clemson-like.

    When you think about Clemson at its best, you think about defensive linemen who look like they were created in a lab. You think about pressure. You think about linebackers flying around. You think about offenses getting uncomfortable.

    Last year, Clemson was not bad defensively.

    But it also was not the old Clemson defense.

    The Tigers allowed 20.5 points per game, which sounds good, but opponents still threw for 3,266 yards against them. Teams also attempted 484 passes against Clemson compared to 387 rushing attempts, which tells you opponents were not afraid to put the ball in the air.

    That is the part that stands out.

    Teams were willing to throw on Clemson.

    That sentence used to sound weird.

    The returning names matter. Sammy Brown is back at linebacker. Will Heldt is back, and he was a third-team All-ACC player. Ashton Hampton gives them experience in the secondary.

    But Clemson also lost a lot.

    That is why the transfer portal was so important.

    Dabo brought in real defensive help, including Jerome Carter III from Old Dominion and Corey Myrick from Southern Miss. Carter had 75 tackles and a school-record six interceptions at Old Dominion last season, while Myrick came to Clemson after a 2025 season at Southern Miss with 92 tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss, two interceptions and a forced fumble.

    That is not window dressing.

    That is Clemson admitting it needed help and actually going to get it.

    And honestly, that might be the most interesting thing about this team.

    For years, people criticized Dabo for not using the portal enough. Now Clemson is coming off a disappointing season, and suddenly the Tigers are bringing in players who could actually start right away.

    That tells you Dabo knows this cannot just be “business as usual.”

    The defense does not have to become 2018 Clemson overnight.

    But it does need to feel dangerous again.

    SCHEDULE

    The schedule is not easy.

    Clemson opens at LSU.

    That is a statement game immediately. There is no easing into this season. There is no soft opening. You start in Baton Rouge against an SEC opponent, and we will learn a lot about Clemson right away.

    After that, the Tigers get Georgia Southern and North Carolina at home before making the long trip to Cal on a Friday night. Then comes one of the biggest games on the schedule: Miami at Clemson on Oct. 3.

    That first month is fascinating.

    At LSU.

    Home for North Carolina.

    At California.

    Home for Miami.

    That is not boring.

    The good news is Clemson plays five of its first seven games at home. After the open date, the Tigers get Charleston Southern and Virginia Tech in Death Valley before the schedule turns again.

    The final stretch is where it gets tricky.

    Clemson plays at Florida State, at Syracuse, home against Georgia Tech, at Duke, and then home against South Carolina.

    That is not a brutal schedule from start to finish, but the big games are very real.

    And the SEC games are fascinating.

    Clemson has gone 4-8 in its last 12 games against the SEC, and this year the Tigers get LSU and South Carolina. Those games matter for the record, obviously, but they also matter for perception.

    If Clemson beats LSU to start the season, the whole narrative changes.

    If Clemson loses that game and then drops one to North Carolina, Cal or Miami, suddenly people are asking the same old questions again before October even really gets rolling.

    That is the pressure of being Clemson.

    When you have been great, people do not give you much time to prove you are still good.

    OUTLOOK

    I keep going back and forth on Clemson.

    Part of me says this is the year the Tigers bounce back. The roster still has talent. Dabo Swinney is still Dabo Swinney. Chad Morris should bring some energy back to the offense. Christopher Vizzina has upside. T.J. Moore and Bryant Wesco are real weapons. Chris Johnson Jr. gives the offense speed. The portal additions on defense should help right away.

    That is the optimistic version.

    The other version is this:

    Clemson is replacing its quarterback. The offense was not good enough last season. The run game was not scary. The defense is not the old Clemson defense. The schedule opens at LSU and includes Miami, Florida State, Duke and South Carolina. And the program has not looked like the dominant version of itself for a few years now.

    That is the concern.

    I do think Clemson will be better.

    But I do not know if I am ready to say Clemson is back.

    That word gets thrown around too easily. “Back” for Clemson does not mean going 8-4. It does not even mean being decent. For Clemson, back means winning the ACC, making the Playoff and looking like a team nobody wants to play.

    I’m not sure we are there yet.

    The best-case scenario is that Vizzina wins the job and looks ready, Morris fixes the offensive rhythm, Moore and Wesco become one of the best receiver duos in the league, and the defense gets immediate help from the transfers. If that happens, Clemson can absolutely be in the ACC Championship conversation.

    The worst-case scenario is that the quarterback spot is shaky, the offense still feels stuck, the defense is just okay, and the schedule exposes the Tigers early.

    My gut?

    Clemson is too talented to be bad.

    But the Tigers are no longer too talented to question.

    That is the difference.

    For years, Clemson entered the season as the ACC team everyone else was chasing.

    This year, Clemson enters the season trying to prove it still belongs in that conversation.

    And for Dabo Swinney, that makes this one of the most important seasons he has had in a long time.

    Full disclosure: I use AI tools to format my research into an article encompassing all of the information.

  • Duke season outlook: The Blue Devils are out to prove ACC title wasn’t a fluke

    Duke season outlook: The Blue Devils are out to prove ACC title wasn’t a fluke

    Ask the average college football fan who won the ACC in 2025, and I bet a lot of people would say Miami.

    And that’s funny, because Miami didn’t even play in the ACC Championship Game.

    The Hurricanes made the national title game. They were the ACC team everyone remembers. But the actual ACC champion? That was Duke.

    The Blue Devils beat Virginia, finished off one of the weirdest conference title runs you’ll ever see, and gave us the kind of season that is going to become a trivia question five or 10 years from now.

    Duke went 9-5 overall, 6-2 in the ACC, won a strange five-team tiebreaker to get into the championship game, and then actually won the league.

    That is a big deal.

    But now comes the problem.

    The quarterback who made it happen is gone. His top receiver is gone with him. And Duke has to prove last year was not just a weird, magical season that history slowly forgets.

    HEAD COACH:

    • Manny Diaz, entering year three at Duke
    • Diaz is 18-9 through two seasons with the Blue Devils.
    • Duke went 9-5 last season and won the ACC.
    • Duke has only won 10 games once in school history, back in 2013.

    I don’t think Manny Diaz gets enough credit for what he has already done at Duke.

    When Mike Elko left for Texas A&M, it would have been easy for Duke to slide right back into being that program people only mention when basketball season starts. Instead, Diaz has gone 18-9 through two years and just won the ACC.

    At Duke, that is pretty incredible.

    This is a school that has only won 10 games once ever. So the funny part is, Duke won the ACC last year and still did not even get to 10 wins.

    That tells you how strange the season was.

    It also tells you why this year is so interesting. Duke is not some obvious powerhouse that everyone is going to pick to repeat. But this is also not the old Duke anymore.

    Diaz has made Duke relevant.

    Now he has to keep it there after losing the most important player on the roster.

    QUARTERBACK:

    This is the whole season.

    Darian Mensah is gone. He transferred to Miami, and that changed the entire feel of the ACC offseason.

    For a while, it looked like Duke might be loaded enough to make another run near the top of the conference. Then, suddenly, Miami needed a quarterback, Mensah ended up there, and Duke went from having one of the most exciting quarterbacks in the league to having a major question.

    Mensah was not just productive. He was aggressive.

    That is what made Duke fun. He was not afraid to throw the ball downfield. He challenged defenses. According to Pro Football Focus, Mensah threw 86 passes of 20-plus air yards last season. Duke did not just dink and dunk its way to an ACC title. The Blue Devils attacked people.

    And then Miami did not just take Mensah.

    The Hurricanes also got Cooper Barkate, one of Duke’s best receivers.

    That makes it hurt even more.

    Now Duke turns to Walker Eget, the transfer from San Jose State. And I actually like a lot about this move.

    Eget threw for more than 3,000 yards last season. He had 18 touchdowns and nine interceptions. He was only sacked six times all year. He finished 11th nationally in passing yards per game at 277, just behind Mensah.

    And here’s the part I really like: Eget also threw it deep.

    He had 82 throws of 20-plus air yards, which ranked third nationally. Mensah was right there near the top too. So Duke did not just grab an experienced quarterback. It grabbed another guy who is comfortable stretching defenses.

    That matters.

    There are quarterbacks who live within 10 yards of the line of scrimmage. Eget is not that guy.

    The concern is that he was not healthy in the spring. That opened the door for freshman Dan Mahan to get a lot of the meaningful reps. I still think the intention was probably for Eget to be the guy, but you do have to wonder whether Mahan gained real ground.

    At the very least, it makes fall camp more interesting.

    Duke does not need Eget or Mahan to be Mensah. That is probably unfair.

    But Duke does need good quarterback play. Not average. Good.

    Because the Blue Devils are not going to defend their ACC title if the quarterback spot becomes a weekly problem.

    THE REST OF THE OFFENSE

    The good news is Duke still has pieces.

    The offense should be built around Nate Sheppard, and honestly, that might be the safest place for it to start.

    Sheppard ran for more than 1,100 yards and 11 touchdowns last season and earned second-team All-ACC honors. With Mensah gone, Duke probably needs Sheppard to be the foundation early.

    That does not mean the Blue Devils should become boring. It just means they need to make life easier on whoever wins the quarterback job.

    If Eget is the starter, give him a run game. If Mahan pushes him, give the young guy a run game. Either way, Sheppard has to be heavily involved.

    Jeremiah Hasley is also back at tight end, and he should be a big part of the offense. He caught 40 passes and six touchdowns last season, including the game-winner in the ACC Championship Game.

    That is the kind of player a new quarterback loves having.

    Duke also brings back Matt Craycraft and Jordan Larsen on the offensive line, and the Blue Devils added Nick Del Grande from Coastal Carolina. Del Grande was a 35-game starter, so Duke has some real experience up front.

    That matters a lot.

    When you are replacing a quarterback, the offensive line can either make the transition manageable or make it impossible.

    The other big name to know is Jared Richardson, the transfer receiver from Penn. He was an FCS All-American and has almost 200 career catches.

    Can he step in and replace Barkate? Maybe. That is asking a lot, but Duke needs somebody in that receiver room to become the guy.

    Because if defenses can crowd Sheppard, take away Hasley and force Duke’s receivers to win outside, somebody has to answer.

    That is probably the biggest offensive question after quarterback.

    DEFENSE

    This is the part that is hard to ignore.

    Duke won the ACC last year, but it did not exactly do it because the defense was dominant.

    The Blue Devils had serious issues on that side of the ball. They were 96th in scoring defense. They were dead last nationally in passing yards allowed. Not last in the ACC. Not last among power-conference teams. Dead last in the entire country.

    That is hard to do.

    And that is also why I think there is room for improvement.

    Duke almost has to be better against the pass because it is difficult to be worse. Manny Diaz and his staff clearly know this had to be a priority, and Duke does bring back some experience in the secondary.

    The Blue Devils have Luke Mergott back, and they return three defensive backs in Landan Callahan, Kimari Robinson and DaShawn Stone. They also have multiple defensive backs with starting experience, which should help.

    But this defense needs more than experience.

    It needs results.

    Last year, Duke survived a lot because the offense was good, the quarterback was careful with the ball, and the defense found ways to create enough big moments.

    The turnover numbers were a huge part of it. Duke was top 10 in turnover margin per game and top six in interception percentage. That is great, but it is also the kind of thing that can swing the other way the next season.

    Turnover luck does not always travel year to year.

    That is the danger.

    If Duke is not as good at protecting the ball without Mensah, and if the defense does not force as many mistakes, suddenly those close games can flip.

    That is why the pass defense has to improve. Duke cannot just rely on turnovers again. It needs to actually get stops.

    SCHEDULE

    The schedule is one of the reasons I do not want to write Duke off.

    There are some tricky games, but there are also some things that set up very nicely.

    Duke opens at home against Tulane, and that is not some cupcake. Tulane was a playoff team last year, and that program is not scared of anybody. (Also, Tulane literally beat Duke last year.)

    Then Duke goes to Illinois, which is another interesting test. After that, the Blue Devils come back home for Stanford and William & Mary.

    So three of the first four games are at home.

    That is big.

    And in the new ACC, this next part matters even more: Duke avoids the Pacific Time Zone completely.

    No trip to Cal. No trip to Stanford. No road game at SMU either.

    That is gigantic.

    In this version of the ACC, travel is a real part of the story. Some teams are going to have to fly across the country, adjust three time zones and play teams that are sleeping in their own beds.

    Duke does not have to deal with that this year.

    Stanford comes to Durham. Cal is not on the schedule. SMU is not on the schedule. Duke’s longest ACC road trip is Miami.

    And look, Miami is a monster trip in terms of opponent. That is the defending national runner-up, and now the Hurricanes have Duke’s quarterback and Duke’s receiver.

    That game is going to have some juice.

    But geographically, Duke got a pretty favorable draw.

    The Blue Devils also play eight of their 12 games in the state of North Carolina. That is wild. Between home games and road trips to NC State and Wake Forest, Duke is staying close to home more than most ACC teams could ever hope to.

    That gives this team a chance.

    The road games at NC State, Miami and Wake Forest will not be easy. Clemson at home is obviously a huge test. North Carolina is always interesting, especially with Bill Belichick in year two.

    But the schedule is not impossible.

    For a team replacing its quarterback, that matters.

    OUTLOOK

    I keep coming back to the same question.

    Was Duke’s 2025 season the start of something, or was it the weird season people are going to forget?

    Because I really do think that is how history may treat it.

    People will remember Miami making the national title game. They will remember the Hurricanes. They will remember the big names. But years from now, someone is going to ask, “Who won the ACC in 2025?” and a lot of people are going to get it wrong.

    The answer is Duke.

    That deserves respect.

    But respect does not win games in 2026.

    Duke has to replace Mensah. It has to replace Barkate. It has to fix a pass defense that was the worst in the country. It has to prove the turnover margin was not just a one-year wave that disappears.

    That is a lot.

    But I do not think Duke is in trouble. I think Duke is interesting.

    If Walker Eget is healthy and wins the job, he gives the Blue Devils a quarterback who can push the ball down the field. If Dan Mahan makes it a real competition, then maybe Duke has more at quarterback than people realize. Sheppard is a legitimate ACC running back. Hasley is a strong tight end. Richardson could be a major addition. The offensive line has real experience.

    And the schedule gives Duke a chance to get comfortable.

    So no, I am not picking Duke to repeat as ACC champion right now.

    But I am not dismissing the Blue Devils either.

    The best-case scenario is that Eget gives Duke solid-to-good quarterback play, Sheppard remains one of the best running backs in the ACC, Richardson helps replace Barkate, and the defense improves enough against the pass to keep Duke in the upper half of the league.

    The worst-case scenario is that Mensah was the magic, the turnovers regress, and the pass defense still cannot get off the field.

    My gut says Duke will be competitive. The Blue Devils will annoy people. They will probably ruin somebody’s season.

    But to win the ACC again?

    I need to see it without Mensah first.

    Last year, Duke gave us one of the strangest ACC title seasons in recent memory.

    This year, the Blue Devils have to prove it was more than a trivia answer.

    Full disclosure: I use AI tools to format my research into an article encompassing all of the information.


  • California season outlook: Can Sagapolutele take the next step and can Lupoi fix the Bears?

    California season outlook: Can Sagapolutele take the next step and can Lupoi fix the Bears?

    I’m continuing my tour of college football with a look at the California Golden Bears, which still looks strange every time I type it next to the ACC.

    Cal’s second year in the league was not a disaster. The Bears went 7-6 and 4-4 in ACC play, won at Louisville and got to a bowl game.

    But it still wasn’t enough to keep Justin Wilcox around.

    Now, Cal turns to a Bay Area guy and former Golden Bear in Tosh Lupoi. And while Cal might not be a national title contender, the Bears are one of the more interesting teams in the ACC because they have a quarterback, a new coach, a brutal travel reality and a schedule that could either give them early momentum or expose the holes quickly. Could they – at bare minimum – play spoiler to playoff contenders in the ACC?

    HEAD COACH

    • Tosh Lupoi, entering year one at California
    • Lupoi is a former Cal player and assistant who comes back to Berkeley after serving as Oregon’s defensive coordinator.
    • Last year, Cal went 7-6 and 4-4 in the ACC.
    • Cal has not had a winning record in conference play since 2009, obviously going back to its Pac 12 days.

    This is a homecoming, but it’s also a gamble.

    Lupoi has coached in big-time programs. He has been at Oregon. He has been at Alabama. He has NFL experience. He can recruit. He knows the school. He knows the Bay Area.

    But this is also his first head coaching job, and Cal is not an easy place to win big.

    The good news? He doesn’t walk into the job without a quarterback. That’s a rare reality for a first time head coach.

    QUARTERBACK

    Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele is the reason Cal is interesting.

    Usually with a coaching change, the first question is whether the new coach has a quarterback. Cal does.

    Sagapolutele threw for 3,454 yards, 18 touchdowns and 9 interceptions last season while completing 64.2% of his passes. For a freshman quarterback in a new conference, that is a real foundation. He threw the ball deep 71 times last year, ninth most in the entire country. That’s a stat I love for QBs. The kid is not afraid to let it fly.

    He wasn’t perfect. Cal still had too many games where the offense felt like it was asking him to do everything. He also took too many sacks (30), which is what happens when a team cannot consistently run the ball and opponents know the quarterback has to carry the offense.

    But there is a major difference between “we need to find a quarterback” and “we need our talented young quarterback to take the next step.”

    Cal is in the second category.

    Sagapolutele had enough flashes to make you believe he can be one of the better quarterbacks in the ACC. Now the question is whether Lupoi and the offensive staff can build an actual offense around him instead of asking him to survive every Saturday.

    THE REST OF THE OFFENSE

    Cal returns six starters on offense: Sagapolutele, wide receiver Mark Hamper, tight end Mason Mini and offensive linemen Tyson Ruffins, Sioape Vatikani and Frederick Williams III.

    That sounds decent on paper.

    But the run game has to be fixed immediately.

    Cal ran for just 1,062 yards last season, averaging 81.7 rushing yards per game and 2.8 yards per carry. That is not just bad. That is the kind of number that makes every third down feel like third-and-forever.

    The Bears also return almost nothing at running back, which means Washington transfer Adam Mohammed may have a chance to become the starter right away. Mohammed had 523 rushing yards and five touchdowns with the Huskies last season, while also catching 17 passes.

    That is useful production, but Cal is likely asking him to be more than a rotation piece.

    And they have completely reloaded at wide receiver.

    Mark Hamper, a returner, is also interesting. He only had 17 catches last year, but he had 49 catches for 961 yards and six touchdowns at Idaho in 2024 before eventually landing at Cal. If he is healthy and takes a step forward, he could become a much bigger part of this offense.

    Tight End Mason Mini should help, too. He had 35 catches and four touchdowns last season and gives Sagapolutele a reliable tight end target.

    But the reinforcements at WR mean everything. Chase Hendricks, who comes in from Ohio, caught 71 passes last year. And many might say, “well, it was Ohio.” Think again. In the Bobcats’ first three games last year – all against Power 4 competition (Rutgers, West Virginia and Ohio State) – Hendricks caught 20 passes. And he had a huge TD against Ohio State that made it a 13-9 game early in the third quarter. It wasn’t garbage time, as the outcome was still in doubt.

    At TE, Dorian Thomas also transfers in from New Mexico. He had 56 catches, 560 yards and four touchdowns last year. And like Hendricks, he showed big game potential, catching 10 passes and two touchdowns against Michigan in the Lobos opener.

    Cooper Perry, an Oregon transfer, also comes in at wide receiver.

    Ultimately, offense comes down to two things:

    Can Cal protect Sagapolutele?

    And can Cal run the ball well enough to keep defenses honest?

    If the answer to both is no, the Bears may have a good quarterback and still be stuck in a frustrating offense.

    DEFENSE

    This is where Lupoi’s background makes things interesting.

    He is a defensive coach, and Cal needs defensive improvement.

    The Bears return only three defensive starters: defensive backs Aiden Manutai and Cam Sidney, and linebacker Jayden Wayne. None of Cal’s All-ACC players return.

    That is a lot of turnover.

    And the defense was not disruptive enough last year. Cal had 21 sacks as a team, forced eight interceptions and allowed opponents to average 4.7 yards per rush. If you can’t pressure the quarterback, force turnovers or stop the run, you are never going to get off the field on defense.  

    That is not how a Lupoi defense wants to live.

    If you cannot sack the quarterback and cannot consistently stop the run, you are reacting instead of dictating. That is a dangerous way to play in this version of the ACC, especially when you are dealing with teams like Clemson, Virginia Tech, SMU, NC State and Pitt.

    Cam Sidney and Aiden Manutai give Cal some experience in the secondary. Jayden Wayne had 25 tackles and two sacks last season, and he feels like the kind of player Lupoi needs to unlock.

    But Cal needs more than a couple of returning names. It needs a defensive identity.

    That is probably Lupoi’s biggest year-one job.

    SCHEDULE

    There is some good news for Cal.

    The Bears play five of their first seven games at home, and some of those ACC teams have to deal with the long trip west.

    Cal opens with UCLA at home, then goes to Syracuse before returning home for Wagner and Clemson. After a trip to UNLV, the Bears host Virginia Tech and Wake Forest, meaning three east coast to pacific times trips in the first 7 games for Cal opponents.

    That stretch matters a lot.

    If Cal is 5-2 or even 4-3 after those first seven, you can talk yourself into the Bears being a bowl team again. But if they stumble early, the middle of the schedule gets dangerous fast.

    After Wake Forest on Oct. 17, Cal does not play another home game until Nov. 21. The Bears go to SMU, NC State and Virginia with a bye mixed in.

    That is the Cal-in-the-ACC experience.

    Three true Eastern Time Zone road trips. Another long trip to SMU. Then the season ends at home with Stanford and Pittsburgh.

    The Big Game being at home matters after Stanford ate their lunch last year. The Pitt game could matter, too, especially if Cal is sitting around five or six wins.

    But the schedule feels like one where Cal needs to take advantage of the early home games, because the middle of the season could get rough.

    OUTLOOK

    Sagapolutele gives the Bears a chance. Lupoi should bring energy, recruiting juice and defensive credibility. The offense should be explosive with JKS at QB and all of the weapons at wide receiver.

    And you bring in a defensive guy to fix the defense right? That should help.

    Cal has pieces. The cupboard is far from bare.

    But in the ACC, especially for a West Coast team living in an East Coast league, pieces are not enough. Lupoi has to turn those pieces into a real identity quickly.

    I think Cal could be a sneaky contender in a wide open ACC after Miami. And guess who isn’t on the Bears’ schedule? Yeah, Miami.

    The first seven games feel gigantic. Can Cal get off to a good enough start for conference games to matter in October and November? I think it can.

    Full disclosure: I use AI tools to format my research into an article encompassing all of the information.

  • Boston College season outlook: Can Roof revitalize defense and can Eagles find a QB?

    Boston College season outlook: Can Roof revitalize defense and can Eagles find a QB?

    
    
    
    
    

    I’m starting my tour of college football with a look at the Boston College Eagles, the first team in ABC order in the up-and-down, sometimes confusing ACC. And while Boston College might not captivate a national audience, the Eagles do get a chance to pull an upset or two once the season turns to November.

    That’s why it’s important to get to know them now, whether you’re going to be gambling, a college football junkie, or a Notre Dame or Miami (FL) fan with national championship aspirations.

    HEAD COACH:

    • Bill O’Brien (9-16 at Boston College, entering year three)
    • Last year, the Eagles were 2-10, 1-7 in the ACC. Their one ACC victory was against a Steve Angeli-less Syracuse Orange.
    • BC has not had a winning record in conference play since 2009.

    QUARTERBACK:

    Dylan Lonergan, now at Rutgers, looked like he was going to set the world on fire. He threw 8 touchdowns in BC’s first two games, and on my daily TikTok show, I remember saying that this was not the same BC offense. Lonergan had nearly 400 yards in a week 2, 2OT loss to Michigan State.  

    And then he had 333 yards in a loss to Stanford, giving him 991 yards through three weeks. As it turns out, that was one of my worst predictions of the year.

    By week 5, he was getting pulled from the Pittsburgh game, BC’s fourth straight loss. BC lost 10 in a row before beating the Angeli-less Orange in the final week of the year, led by senior Grayson James at QB, not Lonergan.

    Lonergan is now a Scarlett Knight, and the BC offense will turn to one of three guys – Mason McKenzie, Grayson Wilson or Femi Babalola.

    McKenzie is a transfer from Saginaw State who threw for 4300 yards, 31 TDs and 17 INTs last season. He’s exactly the kind of player you take a flyer on when your program is among the hardest to recruit at in the Power 4. However, playing at Harvey Randall Wickes Memorial Stadium in front of 6,800 fans (when it’s at capacity) is going to be very different from playing at Hard Rock Stadium 60,000+ fans. He also can move if he gets flushed from the pocket.

    Wilson is a redshirt freshman who spent his first year at Arkansas. He did not get any game action with the Razorbacks. He was a former four-star prospect out of high school and the number two overall prospect from the state of Arkansas, per 247 Sports.

    Babalola is a three-star prospect who also plays basketball and competes in track and field.

    THE REST OF THE OFFENSE

    Only one offensive player returns, offensive lineman Michael Crounse, who ranked 606th in Pro Football Focus’s offensive linemen rankings. He allowed 13 quarterback pressures and plays all of his 632 snaps at center, per PFF.

    Running back Evan Dickens, who was third in the nation in rushing at Liberty, figures to be the focal point of the offense. He had 1,339 yards last season and 16 touchdowns on 229 carries. I always like to evaluate non-Power 4 players by how they played against a Power 4 opponent, but that’s impossible for Dickens. Liberty’s toughest game last year was against playoff-bound James Madison, and he had 17 carries for 67 yards in that game. He finished the season on a tear, with over 100 yards in five straight games and over 200 in three of the five games. He had 267 yards against Kennesaw State in the season finale on 43 carries.

    He is a breath of fresh air for a BC team that threw the ball 57% of the time last year, 10th most in college football.

    Wide receiver Jackson Wade, a preferred walk-on at Florida, has now transferred to BC and was a spring standout. He played 62 snaps for the Gators last year, mostly all on special teams.

    DEFENSE

    Ted Roof, who has decades of coaching experience and helped lead the Cam Newton-led Auburn Tigers to the BCS National Championship game, is now the BC defensive coordinator.

    And he has his hands full.

    BC gave up nearly 35 points and 450+ yards per game last season, among the worst in the nation. The Eagles gave up 5.3 yards per rush and allowed opponents to complete over 65% of their passes. Ouch.

    Four players are back on defense – DB Carter Davis, DB Isaiah Farris, DL Chris Marable and DB KP Price. The Eagles also brought in reinforcements via the transfer portal in Anthony Palano (Washington State), Bodie Kahoun (Notre Dame) and Kris Jones (Georgia). Palano is the most accomplished in college from that trio, playing in 18 career games at Washington State and South Dakota State. In 12 games (seven starts) with the Cougars, he had 65 tackles, four QB pressures and two pass breakups. Jones was previously the number two overall prospect from the state of Virginia. The defensive end played two seasons for Kirby Smart at UGA, appearing in 14 games, including the Sugar Bowl.

    SCHEDULE

    There is some good news if you’re a Boston College fan. In an ACC that now includes two schools in the Pacific Time zone, the Eagles won’t make a trip to either Stanford or California this year. But trips to Notre Dame and Miami highlight an insanely tough November. You may be talking about BC around the Thanksgiving table this year, but it might be because you’re wondering if they can hang around with a top 5 team – twice.

    Even while opening at Cincinnati, BC plays four of its first six games at home. The only other road trip in that span is the long trek to SMU, which figures to be a contender with Kevin Jennings back.

    The home opener on Sept. 11 includes a return of Lonergan, as Rutgers comes to Chestnut Hill. BC takes on Maine in week three and then gets James Franklin-led Virginia Tech on Sept. 26. Many will be watching how Franklin fares in year one with the Hokies.

    Four of BC’s final 6 games are on the road, with trips included to Georgia Tech, Duke, Notre Dame and Miami. The only home games in that stretch are against Florida State and Syracuse, and I expect the Orange not to be quarterback-less this time around, as they were in 2025.

    OUTLOOK

    There are some things to like here, but it feels like BC is trying to push a boulder uphill – and the mountain keeps getting larger. The ACC is improving. Yes, Duke won it in 2025 in a weird five-team tiebreaker, but Miami (FL) made the national title game and is again reloading.

    O’Brien needs to find a quarterback and Dickens could be the key to the offense at running back.

    The defense needed reinforcements, and they found them. Jones was highly recruited and has been in huge games at UGA. Maybe he can be a star. They need them.

    And the schedule feels daunting. Early season games at Cincinnati and Rutgers feel winnable, and if BC hopes to go to a bowl game, they have to be, because nothing stands out as a sure win on this entire schedule after the Maine game.