The Commercial Appeal

Fresh faces join Tide in preseason coaches poll

- Eddie Timanus

By their very nature, preseason polls are essentiall­y guesses. They’re educated guesses, but since no football has been played, they should never be taken as ultimate predictors of success or failure.

They can, however, be gauges of the anticipati­on levels in various college towns throughout the country. But first and foremost, they should generate excitement, because their arrival means the season is near at hand.

In that spirit, we present the preseason USA TODAY Sports AFCA Coaches Poll, which features a lot of familiar names at the top but also some programs with truly unpreceden­ted expectatio­ns.

Alabama will open at No. 1, claiming 63 of 65 first-place votes despite losing a lot of talent from last year’s title team. The voters clearly believe there are ready replacemen­ts to step in for the Crimson Tide, and Nick Saban has earned the benefit of the doubt with many voters thanks to his six national championsh­ips won in Tuscaloosa.

Clemson, the preseason No. 1 in each of the past two years, will open at No. 2. That could prove to be good news for Tigers fans, however, as Clemson opened second before its title run in 2018 but came up short in the playoff each of the past two years when starting at the top.

Oklahoma received the remaining two first-place votes but will open at No. 3. Ohio State and Georgia round out the top five. If the top five looks familiar, you shouldn’t be surprised. The quintet has occupied every spot in the top five in the past four preseason polls except when LSU edged Oklahoma for No. 5 last season.

Coming in right behind them are Texas A&M and Notre Dame, two teams that finished in the top five last season.

It is after the top seven that we start to encounter schools that don’t usually get this kind of attention in preseason balloting. Iowa State will enter the campaign ranked eighth, its highest starting position since USA TODAY assumed administra­tion of the coaches poll in 1991. No. 10 Cincinnati also has its best preseason ranking, and No. 17 Indiana is in the preseason poll for the first time. Not to be overlooked, No. 9 North Carolina has its highest starting point since opening at No. 8 in 1997 during Mack Brown’s first coaching stint in Chapel Hill.

The Sun Belt Conference also is worthy of mention. The league has never had a team ranked in the preseason. This year, there are two: No. 23 Louisiana-lafayette and No. 24 Coastal Carolina.

On the other side of the coin, a couple of programs accustomed to lofty expectatio­ns will begin the season unranked. Michigan and Auburn received votes but not enough to crack The top 25. The Wolverines will open without a number for the first time since 2015, and the Tigers for the first time since 2016.

The SEC has the most representa­tives in the poll with six teams, thanks to Mississipp­i edging out Utah for the No. 25 spot. The Big Ten is next with five, followed by the Big 12 with four (Yes, Oklahoma and No. 19 Texas are still there for now). No. 16 Miami (Florida) gives the ACC a third ranked club. The Pac-12 also has a trio headed by No. 12 Oregon.

 ??  ?? Quarterbac­k Bryce Young scrambles for a first down during Alabama’s spring game.
Quarterbac­k Bryce Young scrambles for a first down during Alabama’s spring game.

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