The Day

Strong has Bulls on rise

USF ranked No.19 in AP preseason poll

- By FRED GOODALL AP Sports Writer

Tampa, Fla. — Charlie Strong is accustomed to high expectatio­ns.

But the situation is a little different in for him at South Florida. He isn’t building or re-building a program in his first season. He is trying to lead a talented Bulls team to another level.

The Bulls could be on the verge of something special. The former Texas and Louisville head coach heads a USF team coming off a school-best 11-2 finish under Willie Taggart, who left for Oregon last December.

But this isn’t just about what happened last year.

The Bulls’ No. 19 preseason ranking in Monday’s Top 25 poll matches the highest in school history. And after being ousted by Texas after three tumultuous seasons, Strong relishes the challenge USF presents.

“What we have to understand is it really doesn’t matter where you start. It’s where you finish,” Strong said, adding the challenge is to do everything it takes to ensure the Bulls remain among the nation’s elite at the end of the season.

The Bulls also made some AP poll history on Monday by joining the No. 3 Seminoles, No. 17 Gators and No. 18 Hurricanes in becoming the first quartet of schools from the same state — third overall — to be ranked in the preseason poll since 1958, when No. 8 TCU, No. 11 Texas, No. 17 SMU and No. 20 Texas A&M were listed.

The only other instance was in 1952, when No. 8 California, No. 13 Stanford, No. 16 USC and No. 18 UCLA all made the initial list.

Strong was a long-time assistant at Florida before landing his first college heading coaching job at Louisville.

He understand­s that in order to be at or near the top when the dust settles, his Bulls need to make a strong bid for USF’s first American Athletic Conference championsh­ip.

“The thing we can’t do is get complacent, get full of ourselves,” said Strong.

Though likely detrimenta­l as Strong warns, it would almost be understand­able for the Bulls to get a little over confident; they are loaded.

Strong inherited a roster returning 16 starters, including dual-threat quarterbac­k Quinton Flowers and defensive leader Auggie Sanchez.

Flowers was the AAC’s offensive player of the year, as well as the nation’s second-leading rusher among quarterbac­ks last season behind Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson in Louisville.

In addition to averaging a conference-record 7.7 yards per carry while rushing for 1,530 yards and 18 touchdowns, Flowers also completed 62.5 percent of his passes for 2,812 yards, 24 TDs and eight intercepti­ons.

Flowers and Sanchez were instrument­al in helping Taggart revive a program that fell on hard times after climbing as high as No. 2 in the Associated Press poll in 2007.

The leadership of the seniors also has facilitate­d a smooth transition under Strong, who spent four seasons building Louisville into a national contender before going 16-21 during his time at Texas.

USF’s goal since its inaugural season in 1997 has been to establish a program capable of competing on a national scale and take a rightful place alongside the Sunshine State’s Big Three of Florida, Florida State and Miami.

“As an assistant at Florida, I watched USF from afar. You saw them get. All the way up to No. 2,” Strong said. “Everything that’s needed to compete nationally is in place here. . As a coach, that’s what you want. You want those expectatio­ns.”

Like Strong, though, Miami coach Mark Richt cautioned that preseason rankings have to be kept in perspectiv­e.

“It’s a popularity poll right now. No one really knows for sure and they base it on returning starters and how you finished last year,” Richt said. “If you tend to win a bowl game, you’re more apt to get ranked in the fall. That’s pretty typical.”

But it’s not typical for USF to be a part of those preseason conversati­ons.

 ?? NICK LISI/AP FILE PHOTO ?? South Florida quarterbac­k Quinton Flowers, the 2016 American Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year, looks to pass in the second half of a game against Syracuse last season at the Carrier Dome. With Flowers returning, the Bulls are ranked...
NICK LISI/AP FILE PHOTO South Florida quarterbac­k Quinton Flowers, the 2016 American Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year, looks to pass in the second half of a game against Syracuse last season at the Carrier Dome. With Flowers returning, the Bulls are ranked...

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