New York Post

THE TOP 25

Bama revenge tour begins as Tide No. 1 in preseason Post ranks

- By ZACH BRAZILLER

The college football season tarts like so any others: ith Alabama as e prohibitiv­e vorite. Between reigning eisman Trophy nner Bryce Young, menacing pass-rusher Will Anderson Jr. nd an obscene mount of talent around them, it would be a stunner if Nick Saban’s Crimson Tide didn’t reach the ollege Football layoff title game or the seventh in eight years. This fall will feature the typical contenders, from Big Ten dynamo Ohio State to defending champion Georgia. Clemson will be looking to return to the playoff after a rare down year, and Texas A&M is hoping for a breakthrou­gh in Jimbo Fisher’s fifth season in College Station. The Pac-12, without a playoff participan­t in six years, may have two challenger­s in Utah and USC following the arrival of Lincoln Riley and his quarterbac­k, Caleb Williams, from Oklahoma. Coming off its first playoff appearance and with the potential for its best offense under Jim Harbaugh, Michigan has to be accounted for, and the Marcus Freeman era begins at Notre Dame. But, as usual, the conversati­on begins and ends with Alabama. The Post breaks it down in its preseason Top 25:

Alabama 1

Arguably, the two best players in the country — defending Heisman Trophy winner Bryce Young and sack artist Will Anderson Jr. — lead yet another stacked Crimson Tide roster that might have won it all last season if not for late-season injuries to star receivers Jameson Williams and John Metchie III. Anderson could break Terrell Suggs’ sack record of 24 set in 2002 for Arizona State, and Young is a preseason favorite to become the second repeat Heisman winner ever. And they have an absurd assortment of talent behind those two that includes AllSEC preseason first-team selections Jordan Battle and Eli Ricks at defensive back, Henry To’oTo’o at linebacker, Jahmyr Gibbs at running back and Emil Ekiyor Jr. at offensive tackle. Scary as always.

2 Ohio St St.

Last season was a rare down year in Columbus, the first time since 2016 Ohio State failed to win the Big Ten East. Don’t expect history to repeat itself, not with coach Ryan Day’s electric offense featuring potential No. 1-overall NFL draft pick C.J. Stroud under center and elite skill-position players at his disposal in wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba and running back TreVeyon Henderson. Senior edge rusher Zach Harrison could be the next star Buckeyes pass rusher, and safety Ronnie Hickman will guide a defense that came up short in losses to Oregon and Michigan.

Georgia 3 The Bulldogs’ first national championsh­ip in 41 years came with a price: They lost 14 starters, most of them difference­makers. This is where recruiting is so essential, and it’s why there won’t be too steep of a drop-off for Georgia, which has created Alabama-esque depth since Kirby Smart’s arrival seven years ago. It still features two of the nation’s premier talents in tight end Brock Bowers and defensive lineman Jalen Carter. Quarterbac­k Stetson Bennett IV returns after his storybook run last year, as do linebacker Nolan Smith and cornerback Kelee Ringo from that record-setting defense.

4 Texas A&M

Jimbo Fisher has recruited at an elite level and has six top15 victories since taking the job in College Station. What he doesn’t have is a double-figure win season in four years at Texas A&M. You can blame the inability to find a quarterbac­k, and unless someone emerges among an unproven trio — sophomore Haynes King reportedly beat out LSU transfer Max Johnson and true freshman Conner Weigman — that crucial position could be the otherwise-stacked Aggies’ downfall yet again.

5 Clemson

Forget just quarterbac­ks, there may not be a player dealing with as much pressure as junior DJ Uiagalelei this year. The former five-star signalcall­er failed to come close to expectatio­ns last year, throwing more intercepti­ons (10) than touchdown passes (nine) as Clemson failed to reach the playoff for the first time since 2014. Dabo Swinney had to replace both of his coordinato­rs, but he does have a potentiall­y elite front seven on defense led by linemen Myles Murphy and Bryan Bresee. That group could be similar to the one that started Clemson’s run atop the ACC eight years ago. But if Uiagalelei can’t find his freshman year form— or top recruit Cade Klubnik is unable to unseat him — another trip to the playoff seems unlikely.

Michigan 6 Between the return to health of star wideout Ronnie Bell, the top five pass catchers from a year ago, top running back Blake Corum and quarterbac­ks Cade McNamara and J.J. McCarthy, Jim Harbaugh may have his best offense as Michigan’s coach. If the Wolverines’ defense, under a third coordinato­r in as many years — Jesse Minter replaced Mike Macdonald, who left for a job in the NFL — is able to withstand the loss of standout edge rushers David Ojabo and Aidan Hutchinson, a second straight trip to the playoff is within reach.

7 Utah

With just two losing seasons in 17 years, Kyle Whittingha­m has turned Utah into one of the Pac-12’s top programs, winning the league’s South division three of the past four years. Dual-threat quarterbac­k Cameron Rising would be the conference’s top signalcall­er if not for USC’s addition of Caleb Williams, and he has top running back Tavion Thomas and skilled tight end Brant Kuithe back by his side. A season-opening win at Florida would be an early statement that the Utes belong in the playoff race.

8 Notre Dame

Players are excited and the fan base is giddy, but now comes the hard part for first-time head coach Marcus Freeman: delivering on all that hype. Inexperien­ced sophomore Tyler Buchner will start at quarterbac­k, and Freeman lost experience­d difference­makers in running back Kyren Williams and safety Kyle Hamilton to the NFL. The Irish remain stout up front — led by All-American offensive lineman Jarrett Patterson, menacing defensive end Isaiah Foskey, a potential firstround pick, and may have the best tight end in the country in Michael Mayer. But there remains a lot of questions, particular­ly for Freeman, who will open against Ohio State in Columbus. Patience will be required.

9 USC

The most fascinatin­g team in the country features a new coach (Lincoln Riley), new quarterbac­k (Caleb Williams) and new star receiver (Jordan Addison), creating significan­tly heightened expectatio­ns. USC last won more than 11

games in 2008 and is coming off its fewest victories (four) in a season in 30 years. But by landing the ultra-successful Riley, who led Oklahoma to the playoff four times, the Trojans are expected to make a major leap. The transfer haul was impressive, pairing Williams, Addison and wideout Mario Williams with returning stars such as offensive tackle Andrew Vorhees and defensive end Tuli Tuipulotu, all of them All-Pac-12 first-team choices.

Oklahoma 10

Riley left town and took his quarterbac­k with him. But that doesn’t mean the Sooners can’t contend in the pedestrian Big 12. New coach Brent Venables helped Swinney build Clemson into a powerhouse, and look for defensive improvemen­ts under the former defensive coordinato­r’s watch. He brought in Central Florida quarterbac­k Dillon Gabriel to run the offense and was able to keep top receiver Marvin Mims.

11 N.C. State

It’s been two decades since the Wolfpack won double-digit games, which is also the last time they were ranked in the top 10. This could be the year N.C. State ends that drought behind ACC Preseason Player of the Year Devin Leary, a New Jersey native who is coming off a 35-TD, 3,433-yard-passing junior year. His return — along with four starters on the offensive line, receiver Thayer Thomas and All-ACC linebacker­s Drake Thomas and Payton Wilson — has created rare buzz in Raleigh.

Baylor 12

Dave Aranda engineered one of the biggest turnaround­s in the sport last year, guiding Baylor to the Big 12 crown and a Sugar Bowl victory over Ole Miss a season after going 2-7. Another league crown in the watered-down conference is possible, particular­ly since the Bears are projected to be stellar up front on both sides of the ball. Left tackle Connor Galvin and nose tackle Siaki “Apu” Ika are two of Aranda’s anchors, experience­d players who were key to last year’s breakthrou­gh.

Oregon 13 The architect of Georgia’s dynamic national championsh­ip-winning defense, Dan Lanning could have the best unit in the Pac-12 in his first year at Oregon. Linebacker­s Noah Sewell and Justin Flowe, and defensive end Brandon Dorlus are joined by Colorado transfer cornerback Christian Gonzalez. Whoever gets the nod under center — Auburn transfer Bo Nix, or redshirt freshmen Ty Thompson or Jay Butterfiel­d — will have an experience­d line featuring five returning starters.

Okla. St. 14

In his fourth year as Oklahoma State’s starting quarterbac­k, is Spencer Sanders ready to finally make a leap? The Sooners’ Big 12 title hopes likely depend on it. Their ninth-ranked scoring defense could take a step back after losing six of its top eight tacklers, along with defensive coordinato­r Jim Knowles to Ohio State, putting added pressure on the gifted-but-inconsiste­nt Sanders to produce more this season. After his top receiver and running back moved on to the NFL, it’s up to Sanders to make others around him better.

15 Miami

Mario Cristobal is the latest coach out to restore relevance to the Hurricanes’ once-proud program. Cristobal, a former player and assistant coach at Miami who went 35-13 in five seasons at Oregon, got off to a solid start, bringing in a strong transfer class keyed by UCLA front-seven duo Mitchell Agude and Caleb Johnson. Quarterbac­k Tyler Van Dyke finished his first year as a starter exceptiona­lly well, giving Cristobal a potential difference-maker right away at the most important position.

16 Michigan St.

The Spartans far exceeded expectatio­ns last year with their first top-10 finish since 2015. They found a quarterbac­k in junior Payton Thorne and return eight starters on defense, which could lead to improvemen­t for a unit that was last in the nation against the pass (324.8 yards per game). Replacing star running back Kenneth Walker III will be a tall task for newcomers Jalen Berger (Wisconsin) and Jarek Broussard (Colorado), particular­ly since Michigan State will be working in two new starters up front.

Kentucky 17

They don’t just wait around for basketball in the fall anymore in Lexington. Mark Stoops has made football relevant there, winning bowl games in four straight seasons. Though there are holes to fill on the offensive line and defense, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see the Wildcats win 10 games for the third time in five years following the return of quarterbac­k Will Levis, top rusher Chris Rodriguez Jr., and leading tacklers DeAndre Square and Jacquez Jones.

Arkansas 18

Sam Pittman worked magic last year, leading Arkansas to its most wins in a decade, but he’ll need to be a flatout magician to improve on that this season after losing game-breaking wide receiver Treylon Burks and key players on all three levels of his stingy defense. Multi-dimensiona­l quarterbac­k KJ Jefferson was a breakout performer a year ago, and will have the benefit of four returning starters protecting him, and there is hope transfers Drew Sanders (Alabama) and Jordan Domineck (Georgia Tech) can fill some of the holes defensivel­y. A brutal schedule that includes non-conference games against Cincinnati and BYU only adds to the degree of difficulty. 19 Wisconsin

Learn the name Braelon Allen. The sophomore, who ran for 1,268 yards and 12 touchdowns as a freshman, is up next at Wisconsin, following in a long line of star running backs like Ron Dayne, James White, Melvin Gordon and Jonathan Taylor. With a defense that returns just three starters, ball control will be key for the Badgers after consecutiv­e down years.

20 Pittsburgh

Yes, the defending ACC champs lost quarterbac­k Kenny Pickett to the NFL and top receiver Addison to USC. But Pittsburgh did find replacemen­ts in the transfer portal in quarterbac­k Kedon Slovis (USC) and wide receiver Konata Mumpfield (Akron). Plus, the defense returns seven starters and includes one of the nation’s top fronts, led by stud defensive tackle Calijah Kancey and pass-rushing force Habakkuk Baldonado.

Wake Forest 21

With a healthy Sam Hartman, Wake Forest could win the ACC. Without the star quarterbac­k, out indefinite­ly due to a “non-football related medical condition,” the Demon Deacons may not be good enough to reach a bowl game. The Heisman Trophy contender is that important to last year’s ACC Central champion.

Houston 22

It took Dana Holgorsen a few years, but last fall he got the ball rolling for the Cougars with a 12-win campaign that should bleed into this season. Quarterbac­k Clayton Tune and receiver Nathaniel “Tank” Dell connected for 12 touchdowns a year ago, and should be a force in the AAC. Leading tackler Donavan Mutin and edge rusher Derek Parish return from a defense that was ranked 19th in the country in points allowed (20.4). benefitted more from the transfer portal than Ole Miss. It landed what it hopes are difference­makers at quarterbac­k (Jaxson Dart, USC), tight end (Michael Trigg, USC), running back (Zach Evans, TCU; Ulysses Bentley IV, SMU), linebacker (Troy Brown, Central Michigan) and safety (Isheem Young, Iowa State) after losing so many key pieces to last year’s 10-win season that equaled a Rebels record.

Cincinnati 24

Now we really see what kind of program Luke Fickell has built. Gone are key elements to last year’s playoff berth — from Desmond Ridder, Alec Pierce and Jerome Ford on offense to Sauce Gardner, Curtis Brooks and Coby Bryant on defense. Cincinnati does return its entire offensive line, and senior ballhawk Arquon Bush could blossom replacing Gardner as the Bearcats’ lock-down cornerback.

Texas 25

No, Texas is not back, not among the nation’s elite yet. The Longhorns, though, will be entertaini­ng. Running back Bijan Robinson is a future Sunday mainstay who will pile up yardage, and Ohio State transfer quarterbac­k Quinn Ewers — a Name, Image and Likeness star — will have plenty of options to throw to in experience­d receivers Xavier Worthy and Jordan Whittingha­m. Don’t expect Texas to stop anyone. Coach Steve Sarkisian’s program isn’t back, but it will be fun to follow.

zbraziller@nypost.com

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