The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

QBs, coaches to steal spotlight in 2018,

QBs, coaches sure to steal spotlight once again next season.

- By Ralph D. Russo

Congratula­tions to 2017 national champion Alabama. While the Crimson Tide celebrate, it’s on to 2018 for the rest of college football. Here are some of the numerous story lines to follow next season:

QB competitio­ns

This is as much a story of the offseason as the season, but no doubt the ramificati­ons will be felt all the way through 2018.

Three playoff teams, including the two that played for the national title, will have returning starting quarterbac­ks.

Jalen Hurts has led Alabama to two straight championsh­ip games in his first two college seasons, but it was Tua Tagovailoa who came off the bench Monday night to beat Georgia for the national championsh­ip.

Jake Fromm led Georgia to the national title game as a freshman, but five-star recruit Justin Fields will be practicing with the Bulldogs this spring.

At Clemson, Kelly Bryant will have to fend off both sophomore Hunter Johnson and five-star incoming freshman Trevor Lawrence. Miami’s Malik Rosier is also likely to face a challenge from N’Kosi Perry, who will be a redshirt freshman, and Notre Dame’s Brandon Wimbush will have to reclaim his job after Ian Book led the Fighting Irish to a bowl victory.

Elsewhere, Ohio State will likely turn the team over to Dwayne Haskins. Texas A&M transfer Kyler Murray is the heir apparent to Baker Mayfield at Oklahoma.

Heat on Harbaugh

The offseason’s most interestin­g coach needs to start having a bigger impact during the season. Part of Michigan’s problem in 2017 was the expectatio­ns were a bit out of whack, but that doesn’t let Harbaugh off the hook. The Wolverines’ offense was bad and if you’re a great coach who supposedly has a skill for developing quarterbac­ks — and Harbaugh is being paid as such — you need to do better than 109th in the country in yards per pass attempt.

No excuses next season. Harbaugh will have three of his own recruiting class. The defense should be loaded again. The Wolverines could have Shea Patterson at quarterbac­k if the Ole Miss transfer gets eligible, but even if they don’t either Brandon Peters or Dylan McCaffrey should provide at least competency.

Harbaugh needs to start winning big things: rivalry games, division titles, conference championsh­ips, playoff spots.

Heisman favorite?

Baker Mayfield is gone. So is Lamar Jackson, Saquon Barkley and Rashaad Penny. That’s four of the top five Heisman Trophy vote-getters.

Also, flashy quarterbac­ks such as San Darnold and Josh Rosen, who were trendy picks going in this past season, are on their way to the NFL.

So who is the favorite going into 2018? Runner-up Bryce Love of Stanford would be good pick, though the junior could go pro. Wisconsin’s Jonathan Taylor, who ran for nearly 2,000 yards as a freshman, could easily surpass that in 2018. Still, it has become a quarterbac­ks’ award, with 15 of the last 18 going to QBs.

Of the establishe­d players, Penn State’s Trace McSorley steps out of Barkley’s shadow and Oregon’s Justin Herbert could be the guy with the NFL draft buzz.

Jimbo in Aggieland

It has been 40 years since a coach with a national championsh­ip on his resume left one college job for another. Texas A&M paid $75 million dollars for Jimbo Fisher and his championsh­ip ring. The Aggies have been stuck in neutral for the past few years under Kevin Sumlin.

A&M is not bereft of talent, but it would be normal for year one to hit some bumps as the program transition­s. Thing is, $75 million doesn’t buy patience. A good measuring stick? Georgia was 8-5 in its first season and then took off in year two.

Other new coaches who will be getting a lot of attention: Chip Kelly at UCLA; Scott Frost at Nebraska; Jeremy Pruitt at Tennessee.

Hot seats

Michigan is not firing Harbaugh, so let’s just end that right here. But which coach does enter next season very much in need of a change in trajectory?

Not a lot of really obvious choices though this is probably Kliff Kingsbury’s last chance to get past mediocre at Texas Tech and Vanderbilt needs to show some improvemen­t under Derek Mason after four seasons that have produced an 18-31 record. The most fascinatin­g coaching situation will be at Kansas State, where 78-year-old Hall of Famer Bill Snyder is back with no exit plan in sight.

Can Pac-12 rebound?

The West Coast’s conference was a dud in 2017, missing out on the playoff for the second time and then crashing in the postseason with a 1-8 bowl record. Bowl records can be deceiving, but it is compounded by the fact that the conference is having a hard time keeping pace with the other Power Five conference­s in revenue and exposure.

Washington should still be a national contender and Stanford can be relied upon for consistent top-20 performanc­e. But coaching changes at UCLA, Oregon and the Arizona schools, in addition to USC trying to replace Darnold, means the Pac-12 could again have a hard time putting a team in the playoff.

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