BYU Walk-Ons To Get Tuition Paid Thanks To NIL: College Football Daily Cavalcade

College Football Daily Cavalcade: Thanks to the new NIL rules, BYU walk-on football players are getting their tuition paid for.

College Football Daily Cavalcade: Thanks to the new NIL rules, BYU walk-on football players are getting their tuition paid for by a sponsor. How could this be used as a loophole?


College Football Daily Cavalcade: BYU Walk-Ons Getting Tuition Paid For

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Sorry if this take sucks, it’s not my fault …

Don’t yuck the yum … don’t yuck the yum … don’t yuck the yum …

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As we speak, hundreds of tasteful items are being broken by parents of recently graduated football walk-ons

I’m so freaking torn.

As I’ve said over and over and over again over the last 20 years, the Name, Image and Likeness concept as it’s playing out is the pragmatic answer.

The schools don’t have to pay anything to the revenue producing athletes, the market dictates who the stars are, and the athletes all get to have jobs now.

However, I can’t get past that every positive step taken by the players ends up turning into a giant leap for for the corporate adults. For example, yeah, the top players are getting huge NIL deals, and the schools, TV networks, coaches, and conferences benefit by using that as a mega-recruiting and promotional tool all while avoiding having to actually pay the labor.

Meanwhile, thanks to the NIL rules, 36 BYU walk-ons will get their tuition paid by a sponsor …

Of course this is awesome.

Of course it’s amazing when some college kid goes from having to spend tens of thousands of dollars – and the possible soul-crippling debt that comes with it – to having his tuition paid for.

Of course this is a good thing, and of course I’m taking this little molehill and turning it into a mountain as I actively seek the potential issues in something wonderful …

The biggest of the big programs are probably going to use this as a loophole.

Not saying any of this is necessarily bad – especially for the players – but again, what aspect of any of the recent changes and tweaks to college football hasn’t been exploited by the superpower programs to become more superpowery?

If companies can get tons of play and exposure for funding the tuition for walk-ons, what’s to keep Alabama or Ohio State or Texas or any giant rich school from creating a system that circumvents the limit by making sure the players who aren’t on scholarship are taken care of?

No, getting tuition paid isn’t the same as being on an athletic scholarship – more benefits, perks, etc. – but it sure as shoot isn’t far off.

If you’re some two-star prospect, would you rather go play for that random MAC school, or maybe go to the Big Ten as a walk-on with a shot to show what you can do all while having your tuition paid?

And may God help the transfer portal.

Since scholarship limits won’t mean anything if there’s a way to fund the walk-ons, the superpowers who have their corporate funding systems in place can go after anyone and everyone to load up with any position or player it wants, and …

Okay, okay, I’ll stop with the panic siren, because 1) college football will still be fun, 2) no one will care once the ball is kicked off, and 3) all of these changes actually are a good thing, even if The Man benefits in the end.

I’m torn, but I’ll take the W in my hope for more good things for the players. More college kids don’t have to pay for college. Yay.

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CFN College Football Preview 2021: All 130 Team Previews, Schedules, Rankings

CFN College Football Preview 2021: All-America Teams, Conference Previews, Predictions, Rankings, Schedules, and all 130 Team Previews.

CFN College Football Preview 2021: Team Previews, Conference Previews, Predictions, Rankings


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

College Football Preview 2021

2021 CFN Preview Rankings
Ranking All 130 Teams 1-130
ACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SEC
AACC-USA | Ind | MACM-West | Sun Belt

2021 CFN Predictions For Every Game
ACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SEC
AACC-USA | Ind | MACM-West | Sun Belt

2021 CFN All-Conference Teams 
ACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SEC
AACC-USA | Ind | MACM-West | Sun Belt

Win Total Projections For All 130 Teams
Preseason Bowl Projections, CFP Predictions

Please Note: Most of the team previews were done earlier in the summer. We’ve tried to update everything as we go, but if we’re missing something please let us know at @ColFootballNews

ACC 2021 Team Previews

ACC Atlantic

Boston College Preview | Schedule
Clemson Preview | Schedule
Florida State Preview | Schedule
Louisville Preview | Schedule
NC State Preview | Schedule
Syracuse Preview | Schedule
Wake Forest Preview | Schedule

ACC Coastal

Duke Preview | Schedule
Georgia Tech Preview | Schedule
Miami Preview | Schedule
North Carolina Preview | Schedule
Pitt Preview | Schedule
Virginia Preview | Schedule
Virginia Tech Preview | Schedule


American Athletic Conference 2021 Team Previews

Cincinnati Preview | Schedule
East Carolina Preview | Schedule
Houston Preview | Schedule
Memphis Preview | Schedule
Navy Preview | Schedule
SMU Preview | Schedule
Temple Preview | Schedule
Tulane Preview | Schedule
Tulsa Preview | Schedule
UCF Preview | Schedule
USF Preview | Schedule


21 for 2021 Preview Topics  
21. Thoughts, Wishes, Hopes for 2021
20. Best Teams To Not Make CFP
19: Teams That Will Rebound Big
18. Teams That Will Fall Back
17: Every Power 5 Team’s Letdown Game
16. Expectations For New Head Coaches
15. Expectations For 2nd Year Head Coaches
14. Power 5 Hot Seat Coach Rankings
13. Key Transfers You Need To Know
12. Group of 5 over Power 5 Upset Alerts
11. 5 of College Football’s New Superstars
10. Group of 5 Teams In New Year’s Six Hunt
9. Power 5 Sleeper Teams
8. Ranking Power 5 Quarterback Battles
7. 5 Teams That Might Disappoint
6. 5 Teams That Might Surprise
5. Group of Five Conference Ranking
4. Power 5 Conference Ranking
3. Top Non-Obvious Heisman Candidates
2. 5 Nutty Predictions That Might Be Right
1. The College Football Playoff call


Big Ten 2021 Team Previews

Big Ten East

Indiana Preview | Schedule
Maryland Preview | Schedule
Michigan Preview | Schedule
Michigan State Preview | Schedule
Ohio State Preview | Schedule
Penn State Preview | Schedule
Rutgers Preview | Schedule

Big Ten West

Illinois Preview | Schedule
Iowa Preview | Schedule
Minnesota Preview | Schedule
Nebraska Preview | Schedule
Northwestern Preview | Schedule
Purdue Preview | Schedule
Wisconsin Preview | Schedule 


Big 12 2021 Team Previews

Baylor Preview | Schedule
Iowa State Preview | Schedule
Kansas Preview | Schedule
Kansas State Preview | Schedule
Oklahoma Preview | Schedule
Oklahoma State Preview | Schedule
TCU Preview | Schedule
Texas Preview | Schedule
Texas Tech Preview | Schedule
West Virginia Preview | Schedule 


Conference USA 2021 Team Previews

Conference USA East

Charlotte Preview | Schedule
Florida Atlantic Preview | Schedule
Florida International Preview | Schedule
Marshall Preview | Schedule
Middle Tennessee Preview | Schedule
Old Dominion Preview | Schedule
WKU Preview | Schedule

Conference USA West

Louisiana Tech Preview | Schedule
North Texas Preview | Schedule
Rice Preview | Schedule
Southern Miss Preview | Schedule
UAB Preview | Schedule
UTEP Preview | Schedule
UTSA Preview | Schedule 


Independent 2021 Team Previews

Army Preview | Schedule
BYU Preview | Schedule
Liberty Preview | Schedule
New Mexico State Preview | Schedule
Notre Dame Preview | Schedule
UConn Preview | Schedule
UMass Preview | Schedule 


MAC 2021 Team Previews

MAC East

Akron Preview | Schedule
Bowling Green Preview | Schedule
Buffalo Preview | Schedule
Kent State Preview | Schedule
Miami University Preview | Schedule
Ohio Preview | Schedule

MAC West

Ball State Preview | Schedule
Central Michigan Preview | Schedule
Eastern Michigan Preview | Schedule
Northern Illinois Preview | Schedule
Toledo Preview | Schedule
Western Michigan Preview | Schedule 


Mountain West 2021 Team Previews

Mountain West: Mountain

Air Force Preview | Schedule
Boise State Preview | Schedule
Colorado State Preview | Schedule
New Mexico Preview | Schedule
Utah State Preview | Schedule
Wyoming Preview | Schedule

Mountain West: West

Fresno State Preview | Schedule
Hawaii Preview | Schedule
Nevada Preview | Schedule
San Diego State Preview | Schedule
San Jose State Preview | Schedule
UNLV Preview | Schedule 


Pac-12 2021 Team Previews

Pac-12 North

Cal Preview | Schedule
Oregon Preview | Schedule
Oregon State Preview | Schedule
Stanford Preview | Schedule
Washington Preview | Schedule
Washington State Preview | Schedule

Pac-12 South

Arizona Preview | Schedule
Arizona State Preview | Schedule
Colorado Preview | Schedule
UCLA Preview | Schedule
USC Preview | Schedule
Utah Preview | Schedule 


SEC 2021 Team Previews

SEC East

Florida Preview | Schedule
Georgia Preview | Schedule
Kentucky Preview | Schedule
Missouri Preview | Schedule
Tennessee Preview | Schedule
South Carolina Preview | Schedule
Vanderbilt Preview | Schedule

SEC West

Alabama Preview | Schedule
Arkansas Preview | Schedule
Auburn Preview | Schedule
LSU Preview | Schedule
Mississippi State Preview | Schedule
Ole Miss Preview | Schedule
Texas A&M Preview | Schedule 


Sun Belt 2021 Team Previews

Sun Belt East

Appalachian State Preview | Schedule
Coastal Carolina Preview | Schedule
Georgia Southern Preview | Schedule
Georgia State Preview | Schedule
Troy Preview | Schedule

Sun Belt West

Arkansas State Preview | Schedule
Louisiana Preview | Schedule
South Alabama Preview | Schedule
Texas State Preview | Schedule
ULM Preview | Schedule  

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5 Potentially Disappointing College Football Teams: 21 For 2021 Preview Topics, No. 7

21 for 2021 key college football offseason topics: Which five college football teams have the potential to disappoint?

21 for 2021 key college football offseason topics: Which five college football teams have the potential to disappoint?


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2020 was a strange year for everyone so a free pass has to be given to everyone who had a rough year, but …

Wisconsin was supposed to be good enough to play for the Big Ten title. That didn’t happen – global pandemic things had a wee bit to do with that.

Penn State seemed like it had top ten talent, and then it had the worst start in the program’s history.

Michigan struggled, Virginia Tech wasn’t that great, Minnesota wasn’t special, Mississippi State didn’t break through, and LSU took a massive step back.

Last year we got it close to the pin, hitting Florida State, Minnesota, and Baylor. Give us a mulligan on USC because the schedule changed, and for what the piece is about, Georgia was right considering it didn’t play for or win the SEC Championship and didn’t get to the College Football Playoff.

No one’s saying these teams are going to be bad, but …

It’s all relative. Keep those three words in mind with each of the five teams on the list, because for all of them, anything but less an appearance in the respective conference championship game – at least – will be a disappointment.

Which Power Five teams will start the season with big expectations and will likely fall short?

2021 Power Five Possible Disappointments
Big Ten | Big 12Pac-12 | SEC

ACC: North Carolina Tar Heels

There isn’t any one team in the ACC that appears to be overvalued too much when it comes to the preseason win totals, so this is more about overall expectations.

North Carolina is going to be fantastic, but will it win the ACC Championship? Clemson still appears to be miles ahead of the rest of the conference

Will the Tar Heels win the Coastal Division and get to the ACC title game?

Across several board, the win total line is 10, but Mack Brown’s club has to go to Notre Dame, it starts out at Virginia Tech, ends with NC State, and has to deal with Pitt on the road and Miami at home.

2021 CFN North Carolina Preview

That’s not to say it won’t or can’t win any of all of those meetings, and it’s a huge help to not have Clemson on the regular season slate, but is there a defensive meltdown coming like the 44-41 loss to Virginia last year? Is there a brain-cramp like the 31-28 thriller of a defeat to Florida State?

This is when just about everything should be in place after a few years of great recruiting – along with the third year at the helm for QB Sam Howell – but again, the bar is set on ACC Championship appearance or bust.

Anything less than being the second-best team in the ACC – at least – and a ten-win season will be a disappointment.

By the way, North Carolina has one double-digit win season since 1997.

2021 Power Five Possible Disappointments
Big Ten | Big 12Pac-12 | SEC

21 for 2021 Preview Topics (so far)  
21. Thoughts, Wishes, Hopes for 2021
20. Best Teams To Not Make CFP
19: Teams That Will Rebound Big
18. Teams That Will Fall Back
17: Every Power 5 Team’s Letdown Game
16. Expectations For New Head Coaches
15. Expectations For 2nd Year Head Coaches
14. Power 5 Hot Seat Coach Rankings
13. 21 Key Transfers You Need To Know
12. Group of 5 over Power 5 Upset Alerts
11. 5 of College Football’s New Superstars
10. Group of 5 Teams In New Year’s Six Hunt
9. Power 5 Sleeper Teams
8. Ranking The Power 5 Quarterback Battles

CFN 2021 Preview: All 130 Team Previews

NEXT: Big Ten Potential Disappointment

College Football Power Five Sleeper Teams: 21 For 2021 Preview Topics No. 9

21 for 2021 key college football offseason topics: Every Power Five conference’s sleeper team. 

21 for 2021 key college football offseason topics: No. 9. Every Power Five league’s sleeper team. 


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

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Texas A&M wasn’t exactly a sleeper last going into last season, but it was ranked 13th in the preseason polls and turned out to be a whole lot stronger.

Iowa State was 23rd in the preseason AP Poll and 25th in the Coaches Poll, Northwestern received just one vote in the AP, and Indiana got just one in the Coaches.

In last year’s Power Five Sleeper Teams piece, we got Texas A&M right, hit it on 8-4 NC State, and was sort of right on a West Virginia team that went 6-4.

Politely give us a free pass on UCLA – and anything Pac-12 – and we’ll all move right along on the thought that Nebraska was finally going to become a thing under Scott Frost.

The 5 Power Five programs listed below almost certainly aren’t going to win their respective conferences, and they’re not likely to be ranked all that high – if at all – but they should give their fans a fun year.


21 for 2021 Preview Topics (so far)  
21. Thoughts, Wishes, Hopes for 2021
20. Best Teams To Not Make CFP
19: Teams That Will Rebound Big
18. Teams That Will Fall Back
17: Every Power 5 Team’s Letdown Game
16. Expectations For New Head Coaches
15. Expectations For 2nd Year Head Coaches
14. Power 5 Hot Seat Coach Rankings
13. 21 Key Transfers You Need To Know
12. Group of 5 over Power 5 Upset Alerts
11. 5 of College Football’s New Superstars
10. Group of 5 Teams In New Year’s Six Hunt

CFN 2021 Preview: All 130 Team Previews


College Football Power Five Sleeper Teams

ACC Sleeper: Boston College Eagles

CFN 2021 Boston College Preview

To be totally honest, Boston College is here mostly because there’s not a whole lot to choose from.

NC State was the ACC call last year – and it should be every bit as strong again this time around – but Clemson is obviously amazing, and North Carolina and Miami performing well wouldn’t be that much of a surprise.

Boston College has the best shot of being that quirky out-of-the-blue team that pulls off a shocker or three thanks to a transformed passing attack that gets almost everyone back around QB Phil Jurkovec.

2021 CFN Preseason ACC Rankings

It took a year to transform the attack, the defense should be better, and the schedule will help with no Miami or North Carolina from the Coastal.

It’s asking too much to win the ACC Atlantic, but it gave Clemson fits last year, and … forget that. Clemson is Clemson.

Colgate, at UMass, at Temple. That’s three wins right there, and it’s followed up by getting a home date against Missouri. Win that, and the program’s first eight-win season since 2009 should be on the way.

To get even more jacked up, NC State, at Louisville, Virginia Tech, at Georgia Tech, Florida State, Wake Forest. Find the game after dealing with Clemson that BC can’t win.

NEXT: College Football Power Five Sleeper Teams: Big Ten

Group of Five Teams In New Year’s Six Bowl Hunt: 21 For 2021 Preview Topics

21 for 2021 preseason topics: No. 10. The top Group of Five college football teams that should be in the New Year’s Six bowl chase.

21 for 2021 preseason topics: No. 10. The top Group of Five college football teams that should be in the New Year’s Six bowl chase.


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

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This piece is almost certainly going to be wrong.

Two years ago we didn’t get Memphis – who ended up getting the New Year’s Six Bowl nod – and last season we weren’t even in the right zip code when it came to the rise of Coastal Carolina and Louisiana.

But we did have Cincinnati on the 2020 list.

So far in the College Football Playoff era, six teams from the Group of Five conferences – the American Athletic Conference, Conference USA, MAC, Mountain West, Sun Belt – have been the highest-ranked conference champion in the final CFP rankings to get the New Year’s Six spot. None of them have been able to get into the playoff, but if the tournament expands, that will change.

Boise State beat Arizona in the first shot for the Group of Five, and Houston followed it up with a win over Florida State. Western Michigan, Memphis, Cincinnati, and UCF (twice) are the other schools to get the big spotlight game, going 3-4 overall and generally playing very, very well in the losses.

This year, the Group of Five champion – if it’s not in the College Football Playoff – will either play in the Playstation Fiesta Bowl or the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.


21 for 2021 Preview Topics (so far)  
21. Thoughts, Wishes, Hopes for 2021
20. Best Teams To Not Make CFP
19: Teams That Will Rebound Big
18. Teams That Will Fall Back
17: Every Power 5 Team’s Letdown Game
16. Expectations For New Head Coaches
15. Expectations For 2nd Year Head Coaches
14. Power 5 Hot Seat Coach Rankings
13. 21 Key Transfers You Need To Know
12. Group of 5 over Power 5 Upset Alerts
11. 5 of College Football’s New Superstars

CFN 2021 Preview: All 130 Team Previews


So what does it take for a Group of Five program to get that New Year’s Six slot? Realistically – but not technically – 1) needs to go unbeaten or finish with just one loss, 2) it should have at least one signature win to impress the College Football Playoff committee that does the rankings, and 3), as part of the requirement, it has to win its conference championship.

Here’s hoping that a few teams will rise up and shock the world, but assume that one of these teams will likely have the best shot at getting the New Year’s Six nod.

Let’s start with a total cop-out.

College Football Group of Five Programs in the New Year’s Six Hunt

5. San Jose State at Nevada winner

CFN 2021 San Jose State Preview

Boise State is always the instant pick from the Mountain West to have a shot at the New Year’s Six bowl bid, but this year’s team is undergoing a coaching overhaul and it has a few tweaks it has to make, but there are three problems …

Non-conference schedule, non-conference schedule, non-conference schedule.

The Broncos should be strong enough in a relatively weak Mountain Division to get to the Mountain West title game, but they have to start the season at UCF, host Oklahoma State, and they have to go to BYU.

If they win all three they should probably be No. 1 on this list, if they win two of the three they’ll be in the hunt, and if they win just one, forget it. Throw in the road games at San Diego State, Colorado State and Fresno State, and it’s a tough ask.

CFN 2021 Nevada Preview

From the West, Fresno State will be dangerous, San Diego State always has a puncher’s chance to get to the NY6, and Hawaii will be plucky, but it should – like last year – come down to the showdown between San Jose State and Nevada.

The Spartans have to go to USC, but they other three non-conference games are against Western Michigan, New Mexico State and Southern Utah. If they’re good enough to win the Mountain West title, they’ll be good enough to win all three of those.

They don’t have to play Boise State and get San Diego State and Fresno State at home. However, they start November with a trip to Reno.

The Wolf Pack are loaded with high-octane offensive talent, the overall experience is in place, and the coaching staff is hitting its stride. They have to at least split the road games against Cal and Kansas State, and they follow that up with a trip to Boise State. Throw in road games at San Diego State and Fresno State, and there’s a problem.

However, get by San Jose State, go on to win the Mountain West title, and they should be in the hunt.

NEXT: Group Of Five Teams In New Year’s Six Bowl Hunt, No. 5

21 Power Five vs Group of Five Upset Alerts: 21 For 2021 College Football Topics, No. 12

21 for 2021 college football topics. The most dangerous upset alert games for Power Five teams vs. Group of Five programs.

21 for 2021: 21 most dangerous upset alert games for Power Five teams vs. Group of Five programs.


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You want to make a statement as a Group of Five program? You want to sit at the lunch table with the cool kids? Beat the Power Five teams.

The Group of Five – American Athletic, Conference USA, MAC, Mountain West, Sun Belt – doesn’t have the success you might think it does against the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC.

The Gof5ers went 4-8 last season against the P5, and that’s after going 22-81 in 2019.

But they’re there. There are big wins to be had to cripple the seasons of the schools with the big money, bigger names, and snobby expectations.

Here are 21 Group of Five vs. Power Five games to watch out for.

21 for 2021 Preview Topics (so far)  
21. Thoughts, Wishes, Hopes for 2021
20. Best Teams To Not Make CFP
19: Teams That Will Rebound Big
18. Teams That Will Fall Back
17: Every Power 5 Team’s Letdown Game
16. Expectations For New Head Coaches
15. Expectations For 2nd Year Head Coaches
14. Power 5 Hot Seat Coach Rankings
13. 21 Key Transfers You Need To Know

CFN 2021 Preview: All 130 Team Previews

21 College Football Group of Five vs. Power Five Upset Alerts

21. Syracuse at Ohio, Sept. 4

It’s a new era of Ohio football in the first game after the Frank Solich retirement, but there won’t be any sort of a slowdown. Syracuse is the better team, but it’s a road trip to start the season for a program that hasn’t blocked a pass rush in a few years.
Syracuse Preview | Ohio Preview

20. Georgia Southern at Arkansas, Sept. 18

Curveball game alert. It’s about as big a sandwich as this gets for Arkansas, playing Texas the week before and Texas A&M right after. Georgia Southern is 0-10 against Power Five programs since moving into the full-time FCS world in 2014 – more often than not getting stomped – but if the option attack starts to work like it did against Minnesota in 2019 and Alabama in 2011, this could be interesting.
Arkansas Preview | Georgia Southern Preview

19. Army at Wisconsin, Oct. 16

In theory, Wisconsin is the perfect team to destroy Army. Through the years, the Badgers generally have had problems with the better passing games and hurry-up attacks. Army’s slow, deliberate running game along with a smallish defensive front should be right in Bucky’s wheelhouse. However, if the knuckleball is working, and if Wisconsin is a bit off after playing Notre Dame, Michigan, and Illinois in the Bret Bielema game, there might be problems.
Army Preview | Wisconsin Preview

18. South Carolina at East Carolina, Sept. 11

Call this the puncher’s chance game. South Carolina will get a warm-up against Eastern Illinois to start the Shane Beamer era, but East Carolina should have a dangerous offense that might catch the Gamecocks looking ahead to the SEC road opener to Georgia up next. The last time ECU had a home game against a Power Five program, it rim-rocked North Carolina 41-19 in 2018.
East Carolina Preview | South Carolina Preview

17. Fresno State at Oregon, Sept. 4

Be very, very careful here. Fresno State has a Pac-12-caliber quarterback in Jake Haener leading a high-powered offense that’s going to keep on pushing. It might be the season opener for the Ducks, but their attention might already be on the monster date at Ohio State the following week. Speaking of Pac-12 vs. Big Ten focus …
Fresno State Preview | Oregon Preview

16. Arkansas State at Washington, Sept. 18

Can Washington hit the four-foot putt? The Huskies should be able to roll if they’re fully focused, but this comes right after the trip to Michigan and just before the Pac-12 opener against Cal. Ask 2020 Kansas State what Arkansas State can do – the Red Wolves pulled off a 35-31 shocker – and new head coach Butch Jones has a dangerous team. Speaking of Sun Belt road stunners …
Arkansas State Preview | Washington Preview

NEXT: Top 15 College Football Group of Five vs. Power Five Upset Alerts

21 Key Instant Impact Transfers: 21 For 2021 College Football Topics, No. 13

21 for 2021 College Football Topics: 21 key transfers who should make an instant impact on the 2021 season.

21 for 2021 College Football Topics: 21 key transfers who should make an instant impact on the 2021 season.


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The transfer portal is the new recruiting world.

Let everyone else develop your players – all you have to do is go shopping in the portal, and boom, problems get solved.

You could come up with a list of at least 200 transfers who should be on this list, but here’s our call on 21 who should be the biggest deals. Does that mean everyone here will rock? Nah, but most of them will.

21 transfers you need to know about are …

21 for 2021 Preview Topics (so far)  
21. Thoughts, Wishes, Hopes for 2021
20. Best Teams To Not Make CFP
19: Teams That Will Rebound Big
18. Teams That Will Fall Back
17: Every Power 5 Team’s Letdown Game
16. Expectations For New Head Coaches
15. Expectations For 2nd Year Head Coaches
14. Power 5 Hot Seat Coach Rankings

CFN 2021 Preview: All 130 Team Previews

21 Key Instant Impact College Football Transfers

21. QB McKenzie Milton, Florida State from UCF

No matter who wins the Florida State starting quarterback job, Milton will be one of the best stories of the college football season. It’ll be a battle for the gig – Jordan Travis and Chubba Purdy will get every shot – but after battling back from a horrific leg injury suffered a few years ago, anything Milton does will be amazing.
CFN 2021 Florida State Preview

20. QB Hendon Hooker, Tennessee from Virginia Tech and/or Joe Milton, Tennessee from Michigan

The Vols lost a ton of talent to the transfer portal, but new head coach Josh Heupel has a slew of quarterbacks to choose from. There are already a few nice options in place, but Hooker was a rising star at Virginia Tech and Milton has all the tools – but couldn’t put them together – at Michigan. Whoever gets the gig will be a statistical star.
CFN 2021 Tennessee Preview

19. OT Cain Madden, Notre Dame from Marshall

The Irish needed to revamp the line, and they’re hoping a few superstar young prospects can rise up right away. Madden should be much more than a veteran insurance policy, though, as an all-star blocker coming in from Marshall.
CFN 2021 Notre Dame Preview

18. WR Charleston Rambo, Miami from Oklahoma

The Hurricanes already have a terrific receiving corps returning, and they added another big piece to potentially take over the home run hitting role. A former star recruit for Oklahoma, Rambo is a deep threat averaging over 17 yards per catch last season.
CFN 2021 Miami Preview

17. DT Siaki Ika, Baylor from LSU

Baylor has a star defensive mind in head coach Dave Aranda, and he brought in the bulk to make his D rock. The former LSU defensive coordinator took the 350-pound Coke machine from the Tigers. Now the Bears have their anchor.
CFN 2021 Baylor Preview

16. S Tykee Smith, Georgia from West Virginia

The Georgia defense was already going to be good, and now it has a few all-star caliber defensive backs coming in. More on the corner part of the equation in a moment. At safety, Smith was a key performer at West Virginia with 111 tackles and four interceptions and nine broken up passes in his two seasons.
CFN 2021 Georgia Preview

15. QB Bailey Zappe, WKU from Houston Baptist

Easily one of the most exciting offenses early in the weird 2020 season, Houston Baptist gave everyone fits. WKU didn’t have an offense, so it took the top guys from the Huskies. The Hilltoppers got HBU’s offensive coordinator, a few great receivers, and the quarterback who hit Texas Tech for 572 yards and Texas for 480.
CFN 2021 WKU Preview

14. LB Mike Jones, LSU from Clemson

The Tigers have their linebacking corps now. They got Navonteque Strong from the JUCO ranks to go along with the 6-0, 220-pound Jones, a guided missile of a defender who was great at getting into the backfield at Clemson. Now he should break out with a bigger role.
CFN 2021 LSU Preview

13. QB Jack Coan, Notre Dame from Wisconsin

The hope is for Drew Pyne to grow into the type of baller who can do a little bit of everything for the offense, but before that happens – if it does – the Irish will hope the veteran accurate passer to take over the offense. Coan might not run, and he might not be next-level great, but he can be what this slightly-rebuilding team needs.
CFN 2021 Notre Dame Preview

12. LB Ben Davis, Texas from Alabama

Yet another Alabama five-star recruit, Davis didn’t do too much for the Tide, and now the linebacking corps in place is otherworldly. That’s fine – Davis just followed former offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian over to the Longhorns where he should quickly be one of the leaders and statistical stars.
CFN 2021 Texas Preview

11. WR Wan’Dale Robinson, Kentucky from Nebraska

The UK offense has always been more steady than sensational, and now it’s going to try cranking things up a few notches. Offensive coordinator Liam Coen – a former assistant for the LA Rams – has a few nice weapons to work with, and getting Robinson from Nebraska gives the attack a versatile, do-it-all playmaker who needs the ball in his hands.
CFN 2021 Kentucky Preview

NEXT: 2021 Top Transfers To Watch, Top 10

Has The College Football Playoff Gone Stale?: Daily Cavalcade

With few new teams in the mix and a whole lot of bad games, has the College Football Playoff gone stale?

With few new teams in the mix and a whole lot of bad games, has the College Football Playoff gone stale?


College Football Daily Cavalcade: Has the College Football Playoff gone stale?

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

Sorry if this take sucks, it’s not my fault …

I’m still getting past the idea of an 11-seed that finished fourth in its conference could be one overtime away from playing for the college basketball national title.

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No, stale is absolutely every one of the 2,493 songs in my iPhone library and the 10,000+ saved elsewhere, but …

(Superflex/brag way to start a rant … GO)

So I was on the Paul Finebaum show the other day and he asked an interesting question.

Has the College Football Playoff become stale?

Short answer – sort of, but not in the way many might think.

Of course it would be better if we had a slew of new teams playing, but that’s not really the problem.

America doesn’t seem to have an issue with Alabama – that’s an SEC-hate thing – as we’ve all come to accept it like Amazon. It’s an unstoppable monster that’s crushes the little guy like a grape, but what are you going to do?

By the time you’ve finished reading this, Clemson will have won another ACC Championship and will be in another CFP as the 2/3 seed, but at least it has fun NFL quarterbacks.

No one likes rooting for Ohio State – Ohio State fans aren’t even happy rooting for Ohio State – and Oklahoma can’t get over the hump, but again, the teams aren’t why the College Football Playoff is a tad stale, even though we have yet to have one without at least two of those four – Tide, Tigers, Buckeyes and Sooners – in it.

Everyone wants something new, but even then it doesn’t seem to work.

LSU got in, brought amazing energy to the mix, and then obliterated everything in its path. That sucked.

Notre Dame got in twice and got steamrolled. That sucked.

Washington didn’t have a prayer against an Alabama team that went through the motions and won in the 2017 CFP Chick-fil-A Peach – no joke, I’m still working off the weight from that week loaded with bins of free Chick-fil-A and Krispy Kremes for the media – and Michigan State didn’t even get off the bus in its CFP appearance in the 2016 CFP Cotton. Both of those games sucked.

Give Florida State and Oregon a pass because the CFP was a fun novelty in the first year, leaving Georgia as the outlier newbie with the two classics it played in the 2018 playoff.

I’ve said over and over again that the playoff needs to expand to eight – five Power 5 champs, top Group of Five champ, two wild-cards – with the first round played on the higher-seed home field the week after the conference championships. However, that would bring more energy and excitement to the regular season and not necessarily the CFP. An expanded playoff would likely have more blowouts in the first round, but that’s fine – teams at least want the opportunity.

No, the real problem with the College Football Playoff is simple.

The games have been AWFUL.

As a postseason format, I’ll continue to pound the table that the College Football Playoff really is the best in all of sports, issues at all.

Is it the most exciting way to do a post-season? No. Is it the fairest? Absolutely not. Should it come down to a panel of judges who kinda sorta watches college football and turtles at the idea of showing even the teeniest tiniest bit of transparency in the decision making process? Uhhhhh, no.

But the CFP isn’t a gimmick like the college basketball thing we just went through, and it preserves the integrity of the regular season unlike – for example – EVERY pro sport. There’s no such thing as a cheap College Football Playoff national champion.

No, the CFP as a system hasn’t gone stale. Again, the playoff games have to stop being bad.

We were spoiled.

The Alabama 45-40 win over Clemson in the second CFP national championship was outstanding, and the third – the Deshaun Watson drive for a 35-31 win over the Tide – was as good as college football has ever been. However, those two classics made up for the miserable semifinal games in both years.

The Georgia 54-48 double-overtime win over Oklahoma at the end of the 2017 season was epic, and Tua to DeVonta to win a national title was arguably the biggest single play in college football history. Since then, though, the College Football Playoff has been a giant gift box of socks.

Eight of the last nine CFP games were ugly blowouts – give some forgiveness to last year’s Sugar Bowl; the Ohio State 49-28 win over Clemson was at least entertaining – with three national championship games that were a total waste of time. The 29-23 Clemson semifinal win over Ohio State in the Fiesta two seasons ago was the only redeeming battle of the bunch.

That means we’ve had 21 College Football Playoff games and – throwing in the Ohio State win over Alabama in the first year – only six have been any good.

So how do we fix it? We can’t.

We’re getting the four best teams every year – or really close to it – and we’re getting powerhouse vs powerhouse games. You can’t ask for better matchups.

We just need a little more luck.

You want ugly? From blowouts to horribly played snoozers that just so happened to have close final scores, try the Super Bowl from the beginning in 1967 until 1989, with a few Pittsburgh wins over Dallas counting as the bright spots in a vast wasteland of bloated sports darkness.

The College Football Playoff hasn’t had enough time to be stale.

Give us a good national championship or two, and throw us a bone with competitive semifinals, and all of a sudden we’ll love the thing.

And if there happens to be a CFP without Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State and Oklahoma … cool.

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