Pro Football Focus ranks all 130 CFB teams: Where is Georgia?

Ranking all 130 college football teams. Where does Georgia football rank in the preseason CFB rankings?

Pro Football Focus recently ranked all 130 college football teams for the upcoming 2021 season.

Georgia checked in at No. 4 in the rankings, and PFF gave UGA a 7 percent chance of winning the national title and a 24 percent chance of leaving Atlanta as SEC champs.

Per PFF, Georgia’s highest-graded returning player is quarterback J.T. Daniels at 88.3.

A few SEC teams worth noting include Alabama (1), Texas A&M (6), Florida (7), LSU (10), Auburn (15) and Tennessee (45).

Click here for the full list and see below for PFF’s top-five.

Report: Longtime MSU assistant coach Mike Tressel heading to Cincinnati

Longtime Michigan State assistant coach Mike Tressel is reportedly heading to Cincinnati to become the Bearcats’ new defensive coordinator.

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Longtime Michigan State assistant coach Mike Tressel is reportedly heading to Cincinnati to become the Bearcats’ new defensive coordinator.

Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports tweeted the Tressel news on Monday afternoon. Tressel came to Michigan State from Cincinnati with former head coach Mark Dantonio in 2007, and has been with the program ever since.

Tressel was one of the few former Dantonio assistant coaches that remained on staff after new head coach Mel Tucker took over this past year. Tressel coached the safeties in 2020, and had previously served as a linebackers coach and defensive coordinator while at Michigan State.

Tressel had previously worked with Cincinnati head coach Luke Fickell at Ohio State in the early 2000s, according to Thamel.

Tressel will be the first assistant coach to leave the program since Tucker took over as the head coach last February.

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Big news for 2021 Notre Dame opponent

Notre Dame’s game against Cincinnati in 2021 just got that much harder as Desmond Ridder announced his return on Friday.

One of the best stories in college football in 2020 was the Cincinnati Bearcats who went unbeaten in the regular season before taking Georiga to the wire in the Peach Bowl.

A last-second field goal ultimately kept the Bearcats from a perfect season but it was a great year nonetheless for a program that continues to impress.

That program is set to make their first trip to Notre Dame Stadium in 2021 and that game didn’t get any easier for the Fighting Irish on Friday as it was announced that Cincinnati quarterback Desmond Ridder will return for a final year.

The 6-4, 215 pound Ridder has thrown for over 6,900 yards in his three seasons at Cincinnati while throwing for 57 touchdowns and rushing for 22 more, 12 of which came this past fall.

Ridder also completed over 66% of his pass attempts this past year.

Related: An early look at Notre Dame’s 2021 football schedule

Georgia vs Cincinnati: Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl 10 Thoughts On UGA 24-21 Win

Georgia 24 Cincinnati 21. 10 thoughts on the Georgia win over Cincinnati in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.

Georgia 24 Cincinnati 21. 10 thoughts on the Georgia win over Cincinnati in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.


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Georgia 24 Cincinnati 21: Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl

10. Of course Georgia cared.

The whole “SEC team doesn’t care” narrative when it comes to bowl games outside of the College Football Playoff is misguided. Remember, the SEC is going to make up about 25% of the NFL Draft, like it always does.

Of course there are going to be more key players ready to move on to the next level – or at least thinking about it – and of course that makes a difference in a non-CFP bowl game.

Also, yeah, SEC teams that lose the conference championship game – those teams really do think College Football Playoff or bust – don’t play as well when their hearts get ripped out.

That wasn’t the case in this for Georgia, and while there were opt-outs, there weren’t enough to make a massive difference – at least compared to Florida’s issues vs. Oklahoma. Georgia cared, and Cincinnati was just that good.

9. Don’t read anything more into the performance by Cincinnati than what it was.

Of course this Bearcat team can play with and hang around with the top teams, but that was never the point. As always, it’s about the long haul of a Power Five conference schedule against Power Five conference talent.

Again, though, don’t make too much more out of this than the 2021 Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl being a blast. Once you start trying to take it into something else, it’s all disappointing.

8. Not having Gerrid Doaks mattered.

The Cincinnati running game had one big 79-yard Jerome Ford touchdown run to open up the second half, and that was about it. QB Desmond Ridder couldn’t get free, and there weren’t any big runs outside of the Ford dash, especially in the second half.

Doaks was UC’s best back and leading rusher, and while Ford is more than fine, the team needed another option for the ground attack.

7. Not having James Cook didn’t matter, because …

The Cincinnati run defense was amazing. Georgia second-leading rusher James Cook didn’t play after the loss of his father a few days before, but that wasn’t the issue.

The Georgia offensive front couldn’t generate anything of a push, there were problems keeping JT Daniels from getting hit, and the Bulldogs only ran for 45 yards averaging fewer than two yards per carry. Georgia’s offense was all about …

NEXT: Top Six Thoughts From The Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl

A look at Cincinnati’s 2020 season

Here’s a full look at the No. 8 Cincinnati Bearcats’ season leading up to the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl against the No. 9 Georgia Bulldogs.

The Cincinnati Bearcats had their best football season in school history this past year, going 9-0 and finishing No. 8 in the College Football Playoff rankings.  On Friday they take on the No. 9 Georgia Bulldogs, who will be missing their fair share of star players due to opt outs and injuries.

The Dawgs are a seven point favorite right now (odds are courtesy BetMGM) but the Bearcats are hungry to prove the committee wrong and gain some national attention and respect with a big win.

Cincinnati won three games against teams in the FBS top-25 this season and zero against top-15 teams.  Although they didn’t have the toughest schedule, they won seven out of their nine games by two or more touchdowns.  They beat UCF by three points, as well as Tulsa in the American Athletic Conference Championship Game.

Bearcats junior quarterback Desmond Ridder is having a great year, throwing for 2,090 yards, 17 touchdowns and 6 interceptions.  He has also rushed for another 609 yards and 12 touchdowns to go on top of that.  His rating in his third season has vastly improved, providing much more efficient play through just nine games.

Cincy’s leading rusher is senior running back Gerrid Doaks.  Doaks is having a career season, rushing for 673 yards and 7 touchdowns on 144 carries.  He also has 202 yards receiving and 2 receiving touchdowns, providing the Bearcats with another dual-threat weapon on offense.

Cincinnati’s defense is playing exceptionally well in 2020, ranking 7th in scoring defense and allowing opposing offenses just 16 points per game.  They are 18th defending the run and 20th defending the passing game.  That puts them at 8th in total defense, letting up 310.8 yards per game.

One of their biggest weaknesses is themselves.  Cincinnati is averaging 8.6 penalties per game, taking a 76.4 yard per game hit.  They rank 119th nationally in that category, one of the FBS’s worst.

Here’s how the Bearcats did against their opponents in 2020:

  • vs Austin Peay – W, 55 – 20
  • vs No. 22 Army – W, 24 – 10
  • vs USF – W, 28 – 7
  • @ Tulsa – Postponed
  • @ No. 16 SMU – W, 42 – 13
  • vs Memphis – W, 49 – 10
  • vs Houston – W, 38 – 10
  • vs East Carolina – W, 55 – 17
  • @ UCF – W, 36 – 33
  • @Temple – Canceled
  • @ No. 24 Tulsa – Canceled
  • vs No. 23 Tulsa – W, 27 – 24

The 2021 Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl kicks off Friday, New Years Day, at 12:00 P.M. ET.  National coverage will be provided by ESPN.

 

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

Everything Kirby Smart said at the Peach Bowl presser

Kirby Smart’s Peach Bowl press conference with the media

The following is a transcript from Georgia football head coach Kirby Smart’s Peach Bowl press conference.

Video and transcript versions are available below…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwSQlWh9wqM

THE MODERATOR: Morning, everybody. Appreciate everyone joining in. We’ll begin this morning with Coach Smart. We’ll begin by asking Coach Smart for a brief opening comment, then go to questions. KIRBY SMART: First I’d like to open with thanking Gary Stokan and the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl staff. Always done a tremendous job with this bowl. Always near and dear to my heart because I was fortunate enough to play in it twice. It’s a special event. Our team has been working really hard to prepare for Cincinnati. I’ve spoken on Cincinnati it seems like a lot. They’re a tremendous team. Luke has done an incredible job with his staff, their team. I’ve talked repeatedly about the fact they’re one of the winningest teams in all of college football over the last three years. They’re a complete team. We’ve played teams with really good offense, defense. I don’t know that we’ve played anybody with all three, including special teams, areas they’re really strong in. When you have an experienced quarterback, in my time in coaching I found that the more experienced the quarterback, the better the team is. They certainly have that. They have a great player. With that, we’ll open it up. Q. We’ve asked you about Desmond before. Y’all faced dual-threat quarterbacks before. What is different about the way he goes about his business? KIRBY SMART: He’s really smart. He puts them in the right play a lot. I think they put a lot on him check-wise. You can see he does a great job of getting them in the right play. You very rarely see them in a play that is bad for them, meaning when somebody is doing this, they’re doing this. They have an answer for whatever you do. He’s done a great job of putting them in the right place. He’s a really good athlete. I think it’s deceiving how fast he is. He has really long legs. When he takes off running, you see him outrunning people all over the place. When you start outrunning linebackers and DBs in college football, says a lot about your speed. There’s times where plays have broken down, he’s turned them into big-time gains and plays. A tremendous passer, athlete. When you talk about dual-threat capabilities. He’s got really good people around him. Q. Ever seen a quarterback with a 91-yard touchdown run? KIRBY SMART: Not that I remember (laughter). I’m sure probably somebody has. I don’t remember anyone going 91. Q. You touched on this yesterday, that you felt Richard LeCounte was making a hard run at trying to play in this game. Since then there’s been a good photo on Twitter of him leaping for a ball in practice, him saying, Shh. Can you talk about the ability of him trying to play in this game? What would you say the odds are of him being able to participate? KIRBY SMART: I can’t put odds on it. It all boils down to the health and safety of that young man. If he’s capable of playing winning football, he’ll go out there and play. He’s never been shy about it. He wants to play. He’s a football player. That’s the way he’s been since he was in ninth grade, and I watched him running around playing spring football down in Liberty County. That’s just who he is. He loves the game, he enjoys the game. He’s pushing really hard, he’s taking a lot of reps, a lot of reps for the twos. He’s working hard to get out there and play. It’s going to be conditioning, it’s going to be physicality, it’s going to be how comfortable he is. When you go that long without playing, it’s not always just straight line speed. It’s throwing on the brakes, understanding angles, feeling confident in contact because it’s a physical sport.  I don’t know what the odds are. I know he’s out there doing everything he can to be able to play. We’ll have to make a game time decision on whether he’s able to or not. Q. You mentioned the other day that COVID was one of the opponents. Since then Missouri had to pull out of their bowl game. How are you doing four days before this game? KIRBY SMART: Thrill a minute. We’ve had good information, bad information, information that changed (laughter). It’s been a struggle. I can say that. That’s really all I can say about it. I’m not going to get into details. We’ve had our issues. Q. You said you’re not going to get into details. When you say information changed, are you talking about false positives? KIRBY SMART: I mean, you take it for what it’s worth. It just changes every day. I’m not saying that’s the case. I’m just saying we’ve dealt with a lot of things, a lot more things here recently, than we have in the past. Q. When you look at your defense in 2020, ranked first in the SEC yards per play allowed, but two games stick out. Do you look at it in the big picture as you faced different kind of opponents, especially those two very high-octane offenses, or how do you look at your defense in the context of the whole season? KIRBY SMART: I would first say the season’s not over. We try to look at it in the context of the entire season. Although we won’t have the exact same defense out there for this one that we had most of the season, we’ll have some of the same guys. To be honest, we didn’t have the whole defense out there after Kentucky the rest of the year in terms of complete and healthy. That’s the case all across college football. We try to go back and look at things from the perspective of an entire season. Be objective about it, try to find areas we can improve in, things we can work on. Won’t be any different with this group. I’m very pleased with our staff, the work they put in, the teaching they do. I’m very pleased with our players, how hard, how conscientious they’ve been about learning what we want to do defensively. Look, you’re not going to play in football in general, but in college football any more, and not give up plays. The risk you have to take to give up negative plays gives you an opportunity to give up explosive plays. One of the key ingredients is can you give people lost yardage plays, tackles for loss, get sacks. We’ve done that at a higher clip than we have in the past. We have to improve in not giving up as many explosives, then you have a recipe for what you want. Q. You’ve told us one of the things you do is look at the opposing defense. Marcus Freeman, the turnover streak Cincinnati has, the number two pass efficiency defense, what are they doing over there? What have you seen from that coach? KIRBY SMART: He does a tremendous job. They have some different schemes than we play in our league. They give you different looks. They’re very multiple in the three down and four down looks they can give you. They have a couple guys that play hybrid positions. They can be quasi linebacker, quasi safety. They do a good job mixing that up. It’s not like you can say, Oh, they’re like them. They’re not like really anybody we play. That’s unique. They play extremely hard. They’re very sound in what they do. They’re good at what they do. When you create turnovers like they do, that’s probably one of the most amazing stats that I’ve ever seen in terms of generating that many turnovers or that many games in a row. I’ve been coaching defensive football for a long time, been around some really good defenses. I don’t know that has ever happened. Number one, it’s a credit to them, what they’re doing to generate those turnovers. We got to try to avoid them. Q. You talked a little bit about Desmond Ridder. What about the other offensive weapons that Cincinnati has, running backs, the wide receivers? KIRBY SMART: Their backs are really physical. Both get downhill. They complement each other. Really good players. Wideout, they’ve had the emergence, the Pierce kid has done a great job. He gets the ball vertical, makes a lot of plays down the field. The speed they have out there with Young and Tre Tucker are really exceptional. When you look across the board, the complete group of wideouts probably right there, outside of Alabama, is as good as we’ve faced in terms of wideouts. They do a great job using their tight ends. Those two tight ends are huge. They do a great job in the run game of mixing their tight ends in to create run-pass conflicts for players. When you look at their tight ends, they do a tremendous job doing it. Ridder has a great group of guys there he can use to pass the ball. There’s been a lot of discussion leading up to this month about teams like Cincinnati who are undefeated not getting a shot of being in the Playoff. From your perspective, what have you seen from them, how they compare against teams you’ve seen in the Playoff in the past? KIRBY SMART: Like I said earlier, they’re the most complete. I think the problem this year is not necessarily them being undefeated, it’s the not having the cross-conference games. It’s hard to compare. If they had had a year, I don’t know how many guys they play out of conference in a traditional year, if they were able to go and get a Big Ten, SEC, other opponents, it makes it much easier to compare that. It’s harder this year for us, when you look at stats, résumés, everything within conference, it’s within your conference. It’s relative to your conference. You don’t get to get cross-conference comparisons, which makes it tougher. Not to say if they had played out-of-conference opponents, they definitely would have got in. I don’t know that. I know this: They’re a really well-coached, sound, talented football team. When you have a quarterback, a good defense, great special teams, you very rarely beat yourself. Regardless of who they’re playing, they’re winning and they’re doing it the right way. They’re playing really sound football which makes them a high-quality opponent. Q. As your guys have come back from their break, have you gotten a feel for their hunger, their morale coming into this game? Does it make a difference, the hunger factor, not having that last senior game, being able to play close to home? KIRBY SMART: I think our guys are in a great place. The time away, I noticed that for the Missouri week. The best practices we had were the time away they had the weekend before for the Missouri week. It’s been kind of the same way, they got a little time away for Christmas. Since they’ve come back, not even 48 hours, they’ve been tremendous in terms of focus, attention to detail, guys being places on time. You don’t have school going on, so you have a little more time with your players. What you don’t want to do is bog them down with being over here all day. There’s a fine balance between too much and not enough. Balancing that as a coach is tough. We’ve had morning sessions, everything like that, to help out. Q. You just hit on the fact you don’t have school right now. You’re also not getting to have the traditional bowl experience. Do you try to use some of that time to maybe do new things, keep it fresh? What are some of those things you’re doing to have fun, build team stuff, be a family right now? KIRBY SMART: Hard in COVID. Opponent number three besides Cincinnati and Cincinnati. There’s not a lot you can do. Everything you think about doing that’s fun, I mean, put a mask on them, tell them they can’t go public place, what are you going to do? Play kickball, wiffle ball in the indoor? They’re over here a lot already. The fun we try to have is in the meetings, in our walk-throughs, our focus for the game. But the fun has always been in winning for me. How do you win the game best? You have practices, you have competitive practices. You try to raise the temperature a little bit to get the competitive nature and the fire with which your opponent is going to play with and say, Match my intensity in practice. If I’m not going to be the guy in the game, can you match my intensity in practice so that you can match his when the game time comes. I mean, we’ve had to say, You have four to six, you can go to the bowling alley. But if you go to the bowling alley, you have to wear your mask the whole time, stay in your lane, got to do this, do that, all kinds of stipulations. At the end of the day our guys feel most comfortable being in their own environment, which is here or at home. Q. From the standpoint, you as a coach, you have massive aspirations every single year. Obviously this year didn’t work that way. You’re able to play in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl as a consolation prize. How does it feel to have this as a prize even though you weren’t able to compete for a national championship? How do you embrace this challenge of being able to build and get some guys experiences that may not have been able to get as much playing time throughout the year? KIRBY SMART: I look at it as a blessing. Because when you get to a New Year’s six bowl, that’s an accomplishment. Let’s be honest, not everyone gets to go to a New Year’s six bowl. I’m not going to diminish that or say it’s a disappointment. When you do that, you set yourself up for failure. If every year is a disappointment that you don’t get to the Playoffs or the national championship game or you don’t win the national championship, what kind of lessons are you teaching your players and your kids in life? A lot of the goals I set, I set as a young man, as a young player, I didn’t necessarily reach them. When I fell short, I  still felt in success. There’s a certain barometer, what is success, what is it defined as? For us getting to a New Year’s six bowl was one of the expectations we have every year. This is an awesome bowl game. You get to play a top 10 opponent. You’re right, you get to play some guys that maybe have not gotten as much of an opportunity this year. They’re going to get an opportunity to play. It’s a blessing for next year. The focus is how you finish this year for the seniors and the guys that may be leaving as juniors, this is the last game of their career. You want to send them out on top at Georgia. Q. A couple weeks ago Greg Sankey said he hoped 10 years, 20 years from now the teams of 2020 will be brought back for homecoming and honored, given recognition for what they went through. You have pressing business with UC this week. Are you able to step back yet and think, Look at what we’ve been through, now we’re about to finish our season? KIRBY SMART: Yeah, I have not had the ability to step back and look at that, but I will (laughter). If you could just write a book on this season, I mean… It would be hard for me to imagine people being able to handle another year like this year back-to-back. I have no idea what the future holds. I’m not suggesting anything. I don’t know. I’m not smart enough to know. I’m not a medical expert, I don’t know where it’s headed. When you talk across the board, you don’t really know what your pain threshold is for pain until you have pain. I’m not comparing this to pain, but I’d like to be able to say I don’t know what the threshold is for what you can deal with in a season and stay sane. We’ve stretched that rubber band about as far as you can. The elasticity is ready to break in terms of what you can withstand to have a season and go through. It’s really tough because it’s competitive. Look at the coaches that lost their jobs during this year. I mean, that to me shows it wasn’t a free-pass year. It wasn’t that. Sometimes for the kids, it kind of was. But for the guys that are organizing things, trying to stay on top of it, win games, it’s extremely competitive. Rightfully so because we’re paid a lot of money. To look back on this year, I definitely think it will be looked upon this group was a special group to endure what they’ve endured. Q. After you guys have gone, I mean, three and a half months without any issues with COVID, you said your team is fortunate, do you have some disappointment for your guys in the fact that you’re having issues now, some of them might not be able to play given the fact all that they’ve sacrificed over the whole year? KIRBY SMART: I didn’t say anybody wouldn’t be able to play. I don’t want to say that. I’m not saying that. I’m saying there’s always issues and problems. Doesn’t matter whether it’s contact tracing or other guys having a test and being affected in the organization. Everybody, not just the players. I want to lead with that. But certainly we’d be disappointed if we lost guys, they weren’t able to play in the game but they were able to play all year. You know what I mean? That stinks, especially if it’s like the last go-round. Where does the merry-go-round stop? We missed this game, this game got moved, this got adjusted, but none of it was ever on behalf of us; it was on behalf of our opponents. If it ends up being the case with us, I don’t think it will be, but if a guy misses a game because of it, you certainly hate it for that guy. It’s tough because he was successful all year. One time out of 12 or 11, you get a situation where somebody has an outbreak and it can affect the whole team. Q. This will be configured to seat 15, 16,000, whatever it’s going to be. Do you expect some kind of atmosphere in here? If I had to ask, having gone through this season, what has been the best atmosphere y’all have played in? The early game against Auburn? That seemed kind of loud. KIRBY SMART: Not really thinking about it, I would probably say the Auburn atmosphere would have been the best, that night at home for us seemed like it had the most crowd noise to it. I expect it to be great. You would think it might be louder in the dome with that number of people because outside you figure the noise may not be the same. I’m expecting it to be as good as we’ve played anywhere in the dome because I think it will seem more full than maybe a 93,000-seat stadium with 20,000 as opposed to whatever Mercedes holds with how many we have in it. I’m expecting it to be a great atmosphere. Again, the players turn that off once the game starts. I know it’s hard to believe. You don’t hear that whether there’s 15, 20, or 90,000, you go out and play the game. THE MODERATOR: Thank you, coach.

Look: Georgia football will don new uniforms for Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl

The Georgia football team will wear new uniforms for the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl

Wednesday, the Georgia football team announced it would be breaking out a new set of uniforms for the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.

The set is a fan favorite, which was last worn in November against Mississippi State in Sanford Stadium.

The Bulldogs are 4-1 all time when wearing black jerseys.

Previous games wearing the jerseys include:

2007 Auburn: W

2007 Hawaii: W

2008 Alabama: L

2016 Louisiana Lafayette: L

2020 Mississipi State: W

Ohio Sate vs. Michigan canceled. Three ways Ohio State could still get into Big Ten Championship Game

Here are three things that could happen for the Buckeyes to still get to the Big Ten Championship Game after the Michigan cancellation.

If you haven’t heard yet, the Ohio State vs. Michigan game has been canceled. The annual grudge match between two of college football’s most storied historical programs won’t be played because of the state of the coronavirus outbreak inside the Wolverine program. It’s the first time since 1918 that The Game between these two arch-rivals won’t be contested.

And while the news is deeply disappointing for both sides, there are ramifications to what happens next for the Ohio State program. The Buckeyes will now only finish with five regular-season games, one short of the mandatory six games the league outlined as in its return to play policy for teams to be eligible for the Big Ten Championship Game.

There are also College Football Playoff implications. Having one-less game against a quality opponent, and not winning a conference championship could play into the College Football Playoff Committee’s decision-making when selecting the four best teams.

But don’t panic yet Buckeye Nation. There are still some things that could happen for OSU to still go to Indy and we’re going to outline them for you here.

Here are three ways Ohio State can still get into the Big Ten Championship Game and improve its resume for the College Football Playoff. Either way, it’s going to take some work, and might need the conference to step up, but the Buckeyes should not be penalized for things they cannot control.

NEXT … Play another Big Ten team

College Football News Preview 2020: Cincinnati Bearcats

College Football News Preview 2020: Previewing, predicting, and looking ahead to the Cincinnati Bearcats season with what you need to know.

College Football News Preview 2020: Previewing, predicting, and looking ahead to the Cincinnati Bearcats season with what you need to know.


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

– What You Need To Know: Offense | Defense
Top Players | Key Players, Games, Stats
What Will Happen, Win Total Prediction
Schedule Analysis
– Cincinnati Previews 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015

2019 Record: 11-3 overall, 7-1 in AAC
Head Coach: Luke Fickell, 4th year, 26-13
2019 CFN Final Opinion Ranking: 22
2019 CFN Final Season Formula Ranking: 22
2019 CFN Preview Ranking: 64

No one knows what’s going to happen to the 2020 college football season. We’ll take a general look at where each team stands – doing it without spring ball to go by – while crossing our fingers that we’ll all have some well-deserved fun this fall. Hoping you and yours are safe and healthy.

5. College Football News Preview 2020: Cincinnati Bearcats Offense 3 Things To Know

The Cincinnati offense wasn’t the best in the AAC, and it certainly stalled out way too often, averaging just 390 yards and 30 points per game. The O moved the chains and controlled the clock, but it was about the running game rolling and the defense taking care of the rest.

Head man Luke Fickell and offensive coordinator Mike Denbrock wanted to create a powerful attack, and they did just that. Cincinnati went from running for 1,624 yards in 2017 to over 3,000 with 38 touchdowns in 2018 and close to 3,000 last year with 30 scores. However, the main man for the ground game is gone.


CFN in 60 Video: Nebraska Preview
Cincinnati at Nebraska, Sept. 26
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Michael Warren ran for well over 2,500 yards over the last two seasons with 33 scores. He was the focus of the attack, but the system had a lot to do with the production.

Enter Alabama transfer Jerome Ford, a superstar get for Nick Saban who couldn’t find his way into a ridiculously loaded backfield. He’s the most talented option, but 230-pound Gerrid Doaks is a pounding veteran who can handle the work, running for 526 yards and five scores last season.

They might have a better line to work behind than Warren did.

The guard situation is a wee bit iffy going into the fall, but the addition of Michigan transfer James Hudson gives the staff a whole lot of flexibility. There’s depth, good size – expect the UC line to average about 315 pounds per man – and a whole lot of options to play around with. Now the pass protection has to be stronger.

The passing game has to be more consistent, but Desmond Ridder was great at pushing the ball down the field, and he’s a tough, dangerous runner who was second on the team with 650 yards and five scores. However, he only completed 55% of his passes. Sophomore Ben Bryant subbed in for the big game against Memphis late in the season and was good enough – he’s at least a solid No. 2.

The receiving corps loses star TE Josiah Deguara to the Green Bay Packers, and a few other parts are done, but leading receiver Alec Pierce is back coming off a 37-catch, 652-yard, two touchdown season.

The addition of Notre Dame transfer Michael Young along with Ohio State transfers Blue Smith and 6-6 Garyn Prater give the corps an upgrade of talent, and Michigan State transfer Noah Davis will make a push to be the new Deguara at tight end.

NEXT: College Football News Preview 2020: Cincinnati Bearcats Defense 3 Things To Know

Urban Meyer’s son Nate walks on to Cincinnati football program

Luke Fickell told Pete Thamel that Urban Meyer’s son Nate has joined the Cincinnati program as a walk-on and wants to pursue coaching.

Like father like son — sort of. Urban Meyer’s son Nate, who was already a scholarship athlete with the Cincinnati Bearcats baseball team, has reportedly switched sports and joined the football program as a walk-on. Bearcats’s head coach Luke Fickell told Pete Thamel of Yahoo! Sports that he wants to follow in his dad’s footsteps and become a coach.

He has also switched his major from business to psychology, which is the same major Urban had. Many have pointed to that background as a key in his ability to motivate players and teams throughout his career.

From Thamel:

He’s switching sports to better prepare himself for his goal of becoming a college football coach, as he’s hoping to follow in his father’s footsteps.

Nate Meyer will be a junior in the fall and has already begun taking part in Zoom calls with the Bearcats wide receivers. Fickell said that special teams likely looms as his best chance to contribute.

Nate Meyer is looking forward to the experience to help him on his coaching path.

“Dad, I made a decision. I changed my major to psychology like you were and I want to be a football coach,” Urban Meyer said with a laugh by phone on Wednesday. “I thought, ‘Oh boy.’”

Nate Meyer said his father has been supportive and excited about the move. His mother, Shelley, was a bit more hesitant. Nate Meyer also joins his brother-in-law, Ohio State quarterback coach Corey Dennis, in the family profession. “Oh, God,” Nate Meyer said, recalling his mother’s reaction. “There’s another one going on this path.”

Nate could often be seen on the sidelines with his father before, during, and after football games Urban was coaching at Ohio State. He’s grown up with the game being a part of the family, and there’s obviously a dream there he wants to try and pursue. We say good on you Nate.

We’ll have to keep an eye on how this all transpires down at Cincinnati and beyond. If he’s gotten anything from his dad as far as competitiveness and drive, look out football world.