The Arizona Republic

Florida St., LSU among top football transfer classes

- Paul Myerberg

Transfers will determine which teams win the Power Five conference­s, which teams advance to the College Football Playoff and which team wins the national championsh­ip.

This isn’t a wild prediction.

The transfer portal has revolution­ized the Bowl Subdivisio­n for better and for worse, simultaneo­usly giving studentath­letes newfound freedom to switch schools without penalty while deeply complicati­ng how coaches and programs attack roster management and retention.

But there’s no way to overstate the role transfers will play during the 2023 season. In some cases — Colorado, Arizona State, Nebraska – the portal has helped new coaches almost completely flip the roster in advance of spring practice.

Some of the teams chasing two-time defending champion Georgia will lean on transfers to close the gap. Notre Dame’s playoff odds look much better after bringing in Wake Forest transfer Sam Hartman as the new starting quarterbac­k. Michigan’s portal class should help keep the Wolverines at or near the top of the Big Ten.

Eight others join the Irish and Wolverines when it comes to this year’s top transfer classes:

Florida State. Best transfer:

LSU.

Best transfer:

OL Jeremiah Byers (Texas-El Paso)

Byers is one of several offensive linemen set to start or play major roles as FSU prepares to make a playoff run. Colorado transfer Casey Roddick should start at one of the two guard spots and Auburn transfer Keiondre Jones will help in the run game after starting 22 games for the Tigers. The Seminoles also grabbed a pair of tight ends in South Carolina’s Jaheim Bell and Shorter University’s Kyle Morlock. Another South Carolina transfer, edge rusher Gilber Edmond, led the Gamecocks with nine tackles for loss in 2022.

LB Omar Speights (Oregon State)

All but one of LSU’s 11 transfers come from the Power Five; the one exception, Southeaste­rn cornerback Zy Alexander, was a two-time Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n All-America pick. While Alabama receiver Aaron Anderson is a very strong prospect who could contribute as soon as this season, the class is focused on defenders capable of improving last year’s ninth-place finish in the SEC

in yards given up per play. ● Colorado.

Best transfer: ● Oklahoma. Best transfer:

DB Travis Hunter (Jackson State)

Twenty-four transfers join Colorado’s traditiona­l recruiting class to remake the depth chart and add depth heading into coach Deion Sanders’ first season. Most transfers arrive from the Power Five, chasing playing time after failing to crack the depth charts at Alabama, Michigan, Florida or Arkansas. But the biggest additions come from Jackson State, where Sanders had spent the previous three years. One is his son, Shedeur, the Buffaloes’ likely starting quarterbac­k.

LB Dasan McCullough (Indiana)

This is another solid transfer class for Brent Venables, this time joining one of the top-ranked traditiona­l recruiting classes in the FBS. Stanford transfer Walter Rouse pencils into one of the open spots at left or right tackle after spending four season as the Cardinal’s starter on the blind side. After one season at South Carolina, tight end Austin Stogner has rejoined the program and figures to be the Sooners’ top option at the position. ● Oregon.

Best transfer: DL Jordan Burch (South Carolina)

Oregon’s newcomers has the potential to remake a defense that ranked 88th nationally in yards allowed per play last season. Burch is an NFL talent who should demand attention and free up the rest of the Ducks’ front seven. At linebacker, Oregon brought in Iowa transfer Jestin Jacobs in the hope that he can remain healthy.

Southern California. Best transfer:

DB Christian RolandWall­ace

(Arizona)

This transfer class leans a little more toward the defensive side of the ball after Lincoln Riley snatched up Caleb Williams and others to fix the offense heading into his debut season. It includes two starters off Arizona’s defense: defensive tackle Kyon Barrs, a former all-conference pick, and Roland-Wallace, a fouryear starter.

Mississipp­i. Best transfer:

LB Monty Montgomery

(Louisville)

Oklahoma State transfer Spencer Sanders will push incumbent starter Jaxson Dart while LSU transfer Walker Howard takes over as the Rebels’ presumed quarterbac­k of the future. There’s also help on the way at wide receiver in Louisiana Tech transfer Tre Harris (935 receiving yards in 2022) and former fivestar Texas A&M recruit Chris Marshall.

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