Albuquerque Journal

KICKOFF TIME

The wait is over; the 2018 high school football season starts tonight

- BY RALPH D. RUSSO

The College Football Playoff has yet to produce a real surprise team.

In four seasons, nine schools have reached the semifinals — and even the teams that came from outside the AP preseason Top 25 were traditiona­l powers.

The lowest-ranked team in the preseason media poll to make the CFP was Oklahoma in 2015. The Sooners were 19th to start the season, mostly because they were coming off a disappoint­ing season (8-5) and few knew how good Baker Mayfield would be.

Clemson made the playoff that same year after starting the season ranked No. 12. The Tigers went 10-3 the season before, but Deshaun Watson was a sophomore coming off a knee injury, there was major turnover on defense and exactly what Dabo Swinney was building at Clemson had not yet been fully revealed.

Washington was No. 14 going into the 2016 season before going on a playoff run. The Huskies were also coming off mediocre season (7-6), but there was definitely a sense Chris Petersen’s team was ready to take a significan­t step forward in year two of his tenure. Turns out it was even bigger than expected.

Last year, Georgia went from No. 15 to the CFP. The Bulldogs were 8-5 the season before, Kirby Smart’s first in Athens. The Bulldogs had an experience­d team in ’17 that was favored to win the SEC East, and ended up being the secondbest team in the country.

So what does this small sample tell us? If you want to pick a playoff dark horse, look for a brand-name team ranked somewhere in the teens of the preseason poll. Maybe one with a talented quarterbac­k who still has some uncertaint­y attached to him.

And with that, prediction­s for the 2018 college football season:

Top 25

Three teams in the AP preseason poll that will not finish the season ranked: No. 16 TCU, No. 20 Virginia Tech, No. 25 LSU.

Three teams not in the AP preseason poll that will finish the season ranked: Boston College, Memphis, Utah.

American Memphis Athletic (West) Conference: over Temple (East). The last two teams to win the American lost their coaches soon after. So where’s Mike Norvell going? Atlantic Coast Conference: Clemson (Atlantic) over Miami (Coastal). The Tigers are stacked and freshman quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence could give the offense an explosiven­ess it was missing last year. Big Ten: Michigan (East) over Wisconsin (West). Jim Harbaugh finally quiets his critics. Big 12: Oklahoma over West Virginia. The Big 12 is the most likely Power Five conference to provide an unexpected champion. There is little separation among the top six or seven teams but when in doubt, pick the Sooners. Conference USA: Florida Atlantic (East) over Louisiana Tech (West). Lane Kiffin brings a second straight C-USA title to FAU. Mid-American Conference: Ohio (East) over Northern Illinois (West). Ohio wins its first MAC title since 1968.

Mountain West: Boise State (Mountain) over San Diego State (West). Could be the Broncos’ best postChris Petersen team.

Pac-12: Washington (North) over Utah (South). The Huskies win their second Pac-12 title in three seasons, but the opener against Auburn could determine playoff hopes. Southeaste­rn Conference: Alabama (West) over Georgia (East). This time only the SEC champion makes the playoff.

Sun Belt: Arkansas State (West) over Troy (East). Red Wolves win the first Sun Belt championsh­ip game.

Heisman Trophy

The favorites are running backs Bryce Love of Stanford and Jonathan Taylor of Wisconsin, but the Heisman has become a quarterbac­k’s award. Fifteen of the last 18 winners have been QBs. Feels like a season where a not-so-obvious player makes a run. Top five vote-getters:

1. Justin Herbert, QB, Oregon

2. Jonathan Taylor, RB, Wisconsin.

3. Will Grier, QB, West Virginia.

4. Shea Patterson, QB, 5. A.J. Dillon, RB, Boston College.

Coaching carousel

There seems to be no such thing as a slow season when it comes to coaching moves.

Almost inevitably a few jobs that seemed safe in September open up by December. Florida, for example, just last year.

What job will unexpected­ly open this season? How about Oklahoma, when Jerry Jones decides to hire another Sooners coach and brings Lincoln Riley to the Cowboys.

New Year’s Six/ CFP

Cotton Bowl: Alabama (1) Orange Bowl: Michigan (2) vs. Clemson (3). Sugar Bowl: Georgia (SEC) vs. Oklahoma (Big 12) Rose Bowl: Wisconsin (Big Ten) vs Oregon (Pac-12) Fiesta Bowl: Boise State (Group of Five) vs. Ohio State (at-large) Peach Bowl: West Virginia (at-large) vs. Miami (at-large)

Championsh­ip game

Clemson and Alabama make it four straight seasons meeting in the playoff. The Tigers even the series at two and win another national title.

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 ?? BUTCH DILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Alabama defensive lineman Raekwon Davis reacts after a sack in the year’s Sugar Bowl/national semifinal game against Clemson. first half of last
BUTCH DILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Alabama defensive lineman Raekwon Davis reacts after a sack in the year’s Sugar Bowl/national semifinal game against Clemson. first half of last
 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Washington head coach Chris Petersen walks on the field during a practice earlier this month. The Huskies are among the top teams in the Pac-12 Conference.
ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Washington head coach Chris Petersen walks on the field during a practice earlier this month. The Huskies are among the top teams in the Pac-12 Conference.
 ?? Michigan. vs. Washington (4). JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Oregon quarterbac­k Justin Herbert throws a pass against Boise State during last year’s Las Vegas Bowl. The Broncos are favored to win the Mountain West Conference.
Michigan. vs. Washington (4). JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Oregon quarterbac­k Justin Herbert throws a pass against Boise State during last year’s Las Vegas Bowl. The Broncos are favored to win the Mountain West Conference.

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