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Power Five conference rankings

Evaluating all 14 teams in Atlantic Coast

- MAX SCHERZER BY BRAD MILLS/USA TODAY SPORTS

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To get ready for the upcoming season, USA TODAY Sports is ranking each of the Power Five leagues from its best team through its worst. First up: the Atlantic Coast Conference.

That Clemson is 28 points better than Alabama – that was the case in January – provides insight into just how the Tigers have lapped the field in the ACC, which will again in 2019 present no formidable challenge to college football’s defending national champion.

That’s in part a statement about Clemson and in part a comment on the state of the conference. If rife with parity in the Coastal Division and dotted with nine or more eventual bowl teams, the ACC has just one team set to compete for the College Football Playoff.

(Each team is followed by projected regular-season record. The number in parenthesi­s represents the team’s place in USA TODAY Sports’ summer 1-130 rankings of the Bowl Subdivisio­n.)

1. Clemson: 12-0 (No. 1): The question isn’t whether Clemson will win the ACC – it’s whether Trevor Lawrence, Travis Etienne, Isaiah Simmons and the country’s best coaching staff can again go 15-0 in taking the national title.

2. Syracuse: 9-3 (No. 25): Dino Babers’ offense draws headlines, but it’s the defense that makes Syracuse a New Year’s Six bowl contender, especially in an experience­d secondary led by an AllAmerica contender in safety Andre Cisco.

3. Miami: 8-4 (No. 33): The Manny Diaz era begins with energy and optimism but unsettled personnel at quarterbac­k, running back, offensive line and the secondary. There’s lots of talent in the front seven, though.

4. Virginia Tech: 8-4 (No. 40): Virginia Tech is intriguing for its wealth of returning experience on defense and the lack of a clear front-runner in the Coastal Division, though the offense needs to find a higher level of consistenc­y through the air and on the ground for the Hokies to be taken seriously as a high-profile bowl contender.

5. Florida State: 7-5 (No. 43): Seven wins is the baseline given FSU’s talent, but there’s reason to be wary after a dreadful start under Willie Taggart and his staff in their first season. James Blackman needs to bring consistenc­y to the quarterbac­k position.

6. Virginia: 7-5 (No. 47): This is a program on the rise under Bronco Mendenhall and a specific team very capable of taking the next step to the top of the Coastal Division. DB Bryce Hall is considered one of the nation’s best.

7. North Carolina State: 8-4 (No. 54): With a dip coming on offense as N.C. State replaces standouts nearly across the board and with a dangerous lack of experience in general, the Wolfpack will make the postseason with room to spare but won’t strike fear into the top third of the conference.

8. Wake Forest: 7-5 (No. 58): With options at quarterbac­k, the makings of a solid pass rush and an underrated crop of defensive backs, look for the Demon Deacons to get back into bowl play but not be a factor for the top three in the Atlantic Division.

9. Boston College: 7-5 (No. 61): Here’s what you’ll get: Boston College will run the ball with AJ Dillon, play extremely physical at the point of attack and take games into the fourth quarter but likely top out at seven or eight wins.

10. Pittsburgh: 6-6 (No. 63): Nothing if not interestin­g, the Panthers will make a bowl game, take a top-ranked team down to the wire, play beyond their expectatio­ns on defense, frustrate fans with a stretch of spotty play and contend in the Coastal Division race in November.

11. North Carolina: 5-7 (No. 75): UNC is very much a borderline bowl team in Mack Brown’s debut – that would be quite an achievemen­t given the past two seasons and the 2019 schedule – but isn’t quite there as a total package, even if the Tar Heels’ running game should be a success.

12. Duke: 5-7 (No. 78): It’s never safe to bet against David Cutcliffe pasting together six or more wins to reach a bowl game, but the Blue Devils have issues at the offensive skill positions and have no identifiable strength on defense.

13. Georgia Tech: 4-8 (No. 86): The Yellow Jackets are trending upward under new coach Geoff Collins but will hit on some noticeable growing pains as the program transition­s to a new offensive scheme and reels in the sort of talent and personnel Collins needs on both sides of the ball.

14. Louisville: 3-9 (No. 104): Firstyear coach Scott Satterfield has a proven blueprint but takes on quite the rebuilding project in the wake of the Bobby Petrino era, which hit on commendabl­e highs but flatlined in his final season.

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 ??  ?? Clemson receiver Amari Rodgers and the defending national champion Tigers are the overwhelmi­ng ACC favorite. MELINA MYERS/USA TODAY SPORTS
Clemson receiver Amari Rodgers and the defending national champion Tigers are the overwhelmi­ng ACC favorite. MELINA MYERS/USA TODAY SPORTS

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