BEST AND WORST, SO FAR
The first half of the 2016 college football featured the emergence of a new star quarterback, the re-emergence of an old Pac-12 power and the end of an era at LSU. Texas is back! Nope. Houston to the playoff! Nah. Tom Herman to LSU? Tom Herman to Texas? Tom Herman to the Chicago Bears? This, unfortunately, has only just begun. With seven weeks of the season in the books, we assess the best and worst of the first half.
MOST SURPRISING UNDEFEATED TEAM
No. 6 Texas A&M The Aggies were unranked and appeared to be an unsettled program to start the season. Assistant coaches made offseason headlines for the wrong reasons . The five-star quarterbacks had fled and were replaced by former inconsistent Oklahoma quarterback Trevor Knight. There is no more hotseat talk about coach Kevin Sumlin as the Aggies head to No. 1 Alabama for a game that could decide the SEC West on Saturday. There is still potential for things to go sideways for Sumlin and the Aggies, but so far A&M has replaced the swag with substance.
MOST DISAPPOINTING TEAM
Notre Dame There are some serious candidates here. Oregon, but the Ducks were showing signs for crashing coming into 2016. Michigan State, but the Spartans were probably due for a reset season. Notre Dame, however, is a big hot mess . Seven games in and coach Brian Kelly has fired his defensive coordinator and created an unnecessary quarterback controversy. Even allowing the Fighting Irish some leeway for overinflated expectations, 2-5 and scrambling to get bowl eligible is unacceptable.
BEST COACHING JOB — HEAD COACH
Nick Saban, Alabama, and Urban Meyer, Ohio State We often reward the coaches who exceed expectations and do the most with the least. That’s all well and good, but sustained excellence is really where it’s at. No. 1 Alabama won the national championship last year and is better this season with a freshman quarterback . No. 2 Ohio State lost one of the great NFL draft classes from one school of all time and the Buckeyes have not missed a beat.
BEST COACHING JOB — COORDINATOR
he re-establishes himself as one of the better defensive coordinators in the country. He took over a wellstocked group after Dave Aranda left for LSU, but the 10th-ranked Badgers are as feisty as ever.
BEST TURNAROUND
Colorado It has been a long, hard road back to relevance for the Buffaloes, but Mike MacIntyre has Boulder interested in its college football team again. CU has not won more than six games since 2004 and had just two Pac-12 victories in MacIntyre’s first three seasons. Now the Buffs (5-2) are a win away from bowl eligibility and 3-1 in conference with a legit chance to take the Pac-12 South.
BREAKOUT PLAYER — OFFENSE
(not named Lamar Jackson)
Dede Westbrook, WR, Oklahoma Lots of good candidates here among receivers, most notably Cal’s Chad Hansen and Syracuse’s Amba Etta-Tawo. Westbrook was the Big 12’s offensive newcomer of the year last year so it’s not as if he is coming out of nowhere. His recent surge (26 catches for 574 yards), though, has him playing like an All-American and he has already surpassed last year’s numbers for receptions and yards.
BREAKOUT PLAYER — DEFENSE
Joe Mathis, LB, Washington Mathis has gone from solid player to an absolute force for the fifth-ranked Huskies in his senior season. He has already topped his career total for sacks with five and nearly doubled his career tackles for loss with 7.5 this season.
BEST GAME
Clemson 42, Louisville 36 Two great quarterbacks doing spectacular things. Talented players everywhere. Huge swings in emotion and momentum. Comebacks on both sides and clutch performances . All played in one of the best venues in college football. And it came down to 1 yard. Sure it was sloppy at times, but so much fun.
WORST GAME
Michigan 78, Rutgers 0 Maybe the most noncompetitive conference game in the last 25 years of college football.
WORST OFFICIATING
Central Michigan-Oklahoma State game. It is one thing to blow a judgment call. It is quite another to badly misinterpret a rule and that have that mistake cost a team a game. Both the MAC officials on the field and Big 12 replay officials earned suspensions.
WORST FIRING
Les Miles, LSU LSU Athletic Director Joe Alleva wanted Miles out last season, but botched it and allowed Miles to gain a groundswell of support. So at first chance this season, after an ugly loss at Auburn dropped the Tigers to 2-2, Alleva canned Miles before the coach could go out and save himself again.
HOT-SEAT COACHES
Cooling contracts
Mark Stoops, Kentucky. Has a $12 million buyout. With assistants, firing him could cost more than $17 million . Warm
Paul Johnson, Georgia Tech; Mark Helfrich, Oregon; Gus Malzahn, Auburn Warmer Charlie Strong, Texas Toasty David Bailiff, Rice Cooked Tim DeRuyter, Fresno State