College Football Preview 2022: CFN 131 Team Previews, Schedules, Rankings

CFN College Football Preview 2022: 131 Team Previews, Conference Previews, Predictions, Rankings

CFN College Football Preview 2022: Team Previews, Conference Previews, Predictions, Rankings


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

College Football Preview 2022

CFN Preseason Ranking of Every Team 1-131
CFN Preseason Bowl Predictions

CFN Predictions of Every Game
ACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SEC
AAC | C-USA | Ind | MAC | M-West | Sun Belt

CFN All-Conference Teams, Top 30 Players
ACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SEC
AAC | C-USA | Ind | MAC | M-West | Sun Belt

2022 Unit Rankings  
QB | RB | WR&TE | OL | DL | LB | DB
Offenses | Defenses

Note: Most team previews were done earlier in the summer. We try to update everything on the fly, but if we’re missing something please let us know at @ColFootballNews

ACC 2022 Team Previews

ACC Atlantic

Boston College
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Clemson
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Florida State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Louisville
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

NC State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Syracuse
PreviewTop 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Wake Forest
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

ACC Coastal

Duke
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Georgia Tech
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Miami
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

North Carolina
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Pitt
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Virginia
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Virginia Tech
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

American Athletic Conference 2022 Team Previews

Cincinnati
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

East Carolina
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Houston
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Memphis
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Navy
Preview | Top 10 Players | Schedule

SMU
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Temple
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Tulane
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Tulsa
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

UCF
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

USF
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Big Ten 2022 Team Previews

Big Ten East

Indiana
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Maryland
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Michigan
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Michigan State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Ohio State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Penn State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Rutgers
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Big Ten West

Illinois
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Iowa
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Minnesota
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Nebraska
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Northwestern
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Purdue
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Wisconsin
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Big 12 2022 Team Previews

Baylor
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Iowa State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Kansas
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Kansas State
Preview | Top 10 Players | Schedule Analysis

Oklahoma
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Oklahoma State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

TCU
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Texas
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Texas Tech
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

West Virginia
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Conference USA 2022 Team Previews

Charlotte
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
FIU
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Florida Atlantic
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Louisiana Tech  
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Middle Tennessee
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

North Texas
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Rice
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

UAB
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

UTEP
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

UTSA
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
WKU 
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Independent 2022 Team Previews

Army
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

BYU
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Liberty
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

New Mexico State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Notre Dame
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

UConn
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

UMass
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

MAC 2022 Team Previews

MAC East

Akron
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Bowling Green
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Buffalo
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Kent State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Miami University
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Ohio
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

MAC West

Ball State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Central Michigan
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Eastern Michigan
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Northern Illinois
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Toledo
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Western Michigan 
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Mountain West 2022 Team Previews

Air Force
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Boise State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Colorado State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Fresno State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Hawaii
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Nevada
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

New Mexico
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

San Diego State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

San Jose State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

UNLV
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Utah State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Wyoming
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Pac-12 2022 Team Previews

Arizona
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Arizona State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis
Cal
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis
Colorado
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Oregon
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Oregon State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Stanford
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

UCLA
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

USC
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Utah
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis
Washington
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis
Washington State 
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

SEC 2022 Team Previews

SEC East

Florida
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Georgia
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Kentucky
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Missouri
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Tennessee
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

South Carolina
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Vanderbilt
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

SEC West

Alabama
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Arkansas
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Auburn
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

LSU
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Mississippi State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Ole Miss
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Texas A&M
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Sun Belt 2022 Team Previews

Sun Belt East

Appalachian State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Coastal Carolina
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Georgia Southern
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Georgia State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
James Madison
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Marshall
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Old Dominion
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Sun Belt West

Arkansas State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Louisiana
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

South Alabama
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Southern Miss
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Texas State
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule
Troy
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

ULM
Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

New College Football Head Coach Expectations 2022: Meet The First Year Coaches

College Football New Head Coaches: What are the expectations for all 29 going into 2022?

What are the reasonable expectations for all 29 new college football head coaches for 2022? What’s the goal for the next five seasons?


New College Football Head Coach Expectations 2022

Last season there were 17 head coaches taking over new jobs. This year there are a whopping 29.

To do this right, no, coaches like Brian Kelly and Lincoln Riley aren’t new, but they’re new to their respective schools. And then there’s Don Brown at UMass and Jeff Teford at Fresno State, who coached at their schools, left, and are now coming back.

What’s the expectation for each new college football coach this year? How about for five years from now?

CFN Predictions of Every Game
ACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SEC
AAC | C-USA | Ind | MAC | M-West | Sun Belt
CFN Preview 2021: All 131 Teams
2022 Bowl Projections | Preseason Rankings 1-131
Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

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Don Brown, UMass

UMass Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Before This … The former UMass head coach from 2004 to 2008 became a top defensive coordinator at five difference schools, most notably Michigan.

Top Line of the Resumé: Led UMass to a 23-5 run over 2006 and 2007 with two Atlantic 10 championships and long runs in the D-IAA playoffs.

Realistic Expectations In Year One: Improve the D that gave up 517 points and get to three wins – UMass one one game last year..

Realistic Expectations Over Next Five Years: Come up with two winning records and at least one trip to a bowl game.

Timmy Chang, Hawaii

Hawaii Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Before This … The former star Hawaii quarterback was a good assistant at Nevada since 2017 before getting his first job as a head coach.

Top Line of the Resumé: The NCAA’s all-time leading passer with 17,072 yards and 117 scores.

Realistic Expectations In Year One: Get Hawaii – 6-7 last season to a bowl game in a big rebuilding job.

Realistic Expectations Over Next Five Years: Make the Rainbow Warrior offense amazing as he takes them to five bowl games and at least one Mountain West Championship appearance.

Mario Cristobal, Miami

Miami Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Before This … The former Miami offensive lineman was the head coach at FIU and later at Oregon, getting a reputation as an elite recruiter.

Top Line of the Resumé: Two Pac-12 Championships and a third appearance in four years at Oregon.

Realistic Expectations In Year One: At least eight wins and a solid bowl game – all while at least flirting with a spot in the ACC Championship.

Realistic Expectations Over Next Five Years: Crank up the talent level, at least two ACC Championship appearances, one ACC title, and a College Football Playoff appearance.

Sonny Cumbie, Louisiana Tech

La Tech  Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Before This … A high-powered passer at Texas Tech, he went on to become a top offensive assistant at TCU and Texas Tech. He became the Red Raider interim head coach last season.

Top Line of the Resumé: Besides his 4,742-yard, 32 touchdown season for Texas Tech in 2004, he helped turn TCU into a Big 12 contender with the Air Raid offense taking over in the mid-2010s.

Realistic Expectations In Year One: Get Louisiana Tech past the three-win 2021 with a big-time passing game on the way to a bowl game.

Realistic Expectations Over Next Five Years: At least four bowl games with one Conference USA championship and another appearance.

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Michael Desormeaux, Louisiana

Louisiana Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Before This … The former Ragin’ Cajun star quarterback was a key assistant for the program over the last six years, serving as the offensive coordinator last season.

Top Line of the Resumé: The all-star quarterback for Louisiana threw for close to 3,300 yards with 23 touchdowns and ran for almost 2,200 yards and 12 touchdowns in 2007 and 2008.

Realistic Expectations In Year One: In a bit of a rebuilding year, win the Sun Belt championship anyway – or at least get there.

Realistic Expectations Over Next Five Years: Five bowl appearances, two Sun Belt championships, be a yearly conference contender.

Stan Drayton, Temple

Temple Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule

Before This … A career assistant coach – mostly for the running backs – at 13 different schools/teams, he was part of the Texas staff over five years after coaching for two seasons with the Chicago Bears.

Top Line of the Resumé: A three-time Division III All-America running back for Allegheny, he led the way to a national championship in 1990.

Realistic Expectations In Year One: At least four wins as the Owls build for the future, especially with the running game.

Realistic Expectations Over Next Five Years: Three winning records and bowl appearances with one season as a conference contender.

Sonny Dykes, TCU

TCU Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Before This … Head coach at SMU going 30-18 in just over four seasons.

Top Line of the Resumé: Won the 2011 WAC championship at Louisiana Tech.

Realistic Expectations In Year One: At least seven wins and a bowl game as the offense shows signs of potential greatness.

Realistic Expectations Over Next Five Years: Five bowl games and two Big 12 championship appearances thanks to a high-powered attack.

Mike Elko, Duke

Duke Preview | Top 10 PlayersSchedule Analysis

Before This … Defensive coordinator at Texas A&M for the last three seasons.

Top Line of the Resumé: Helped turn the Bowling Green defense into the sixth best in college football in 2012 and made the 2020 Texas A&M D the ninth best in the country.

Realistic Expectations In Year One: Instantly improve the Duke defense that allowed 477 points last year. Win four games.

Realistic Expectations Over Next Five Years: Three winning seasons with bowl appearances, and a vastly improved defense.

NEXT: Tony Elliott, Marcus Freeman, Clay Helton, Brian Kelly, Jerry Kill, Dan Lanning, Rhett Lashlee

Big Ten Expansion. NOW What Does It Do? 22 Thoughts For 2022, No. 14

Big Ten expansion – what can the conference do to keep up after the SEC landed Texas and Oklahoma?

22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 14: After the SEC landed Texas and Oklahoma, how can the Big Ten possibly respond to expand and keep up the pace?


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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak
2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22, College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show
18. Sun Belt is the cool conference
17. Transfer Portal will only get bigger
16. NFL, keep your hands off our announcers
15. Big 12: Get bigger and stronger, or else

14. Big Ten expansion: NOW what does it do?

Conference expansion and realignment have been a part of college football ever since college alliances began, but business-wise, it all went up a few notches in the early 1990s.

The Southwest Conference and Big 8 created the Big 12, Florida State joined the ACC – setting the tone for a wave of additions from the Big East – and Penn State went to the most forward-thinking conference of the bunch, the Big Ten.

Even when the Big Ten wasn’t bringing aboard schools, it was getting everyone talking.

When it has expansion and big business ideas, the B1G usually tells you what it’s going to do – or, at the very least, hints at it – and why? Because it can.

However, after Texas and Oklahoma made the move to the SEC, the Big Ten has been strangely quiet when it comes to conference expansion. As in, like, dead silent.

Under former Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany, the conference had a way of subtly letting out the expansion trial balloons to see which way the wind was blowing. So far under new commissioner Kevin Warren, there’s apparently no interest in adding more schools, everything is fine as is, and …

There aren’t a whole lot of options. That’s the problem. And there’s a bigger existential concern that Big Ten people don’t like to talk about at parties …

Ohio State.

All of a sudden, the SEC is positioning itself to take over the Big Ten as the most dominant revenue producing conference, but it needs more. It needs to make people outside of the southeast part of the country care about the product when it’s not the Alabama vs. Big Other SEC Team of the Moment showdown.

The SEC getting Oklahoma was one thing, but landing Texas changed the game.

First, it’s Texas. Blow off the problems on the football field; that’s the big boy at the table when it comes to revenue producing athletic departments.

Second, it’s Texas. It’s going to step in and be the second-best academic institution in the SEC behind Vanderbilt, or arguably 2B along with Florida.

Third, it’s Texas. Having Texas A&M is great, but you get the University of Texas, you get all the big markets across the entire state including a lockdown of the Dallas/Fort Worth area – the fifth largest media market in the country.

The SEC now owns Dallas, it owns Atlanta (7th largest media market according to the Nielsen Ratings), and it pretty much has Houston (8th), Tampa/St. Petersburg (13th), and Orlando (17th). That’s not quite like having Chicago (3rd), Philadelphia (4th), Washington DC (9th), Minneapolis (14th), Detroit (15th), Cleveland (19th) and whatever parts of New York that cares about college football, but it’s huge.

And the Big Ten totally blew it.


Big Ten 2022 Schedule Analysis: 3 things to know
Illinois | Indiana | Iowa | Maryland | Michigan
Michigan State | 
Minnesota | Nebraska | Ohio State
Penn State | PurdueRutgers | Wisconsin


It was one of those spitballed ideas several years ago when the Big Ten was looking to expand. Texas was – and still is – the PERFECT fit for the Big Ten in every possible way. As I said in an earlier rant, Texas people aren’t doing their jobs – in terms of potential football success, revenue, and academic profile – if it doesn’t do a double-take on this SEC move.

But that’s not going to happen, Texas is going to the SEC, and that opens the gate for every big-time athletic school that would trade it all for a little bit more.

It’s doubtful the SEC could ever get Michigan – horrible academic branding downgrade – but Ohio State? It’s been more than just hinted that the SEC would love to get THE school in Ohio and all but end any possible balance of college football power.

Of course there’s the sports side, but to get all of the Ohio markets – and create a much, much bigger overall media deal – would be a devastating blow to the Big Ten.

No, I don’t think Ohio State is ever leaving the Big Ten, but it sure as shoot has a whole lot of negotiating power with a whole lot of muscle.

So now the Big Ten has to do something splashy to not only keep up with the SEC, but to make the current members richer and happier. 

But how?

There are two expansion issues for the conference. Expansion only makes sense if it raises the revenue for everyone. There’s no reason to keep adding schools just to add schools if it splits up the pie a few more slices. The other issue is the lack of options.

Part arrogance, part negotiating stalemates, part not wanting to add big-time football schools to make life a wee bit harder for the powerhouses – notice there was no griping whatsoever from the football coaches after adding Rutgers and Maryland – the Big Ten didn’t get Texas. It never really came all that close to figuring it out with Notre Dame – that was on both sides. It completely whiffed by not jumping on Missouri and Colorado to expand west, and it didn’t really go hard enough on the top ACC schools when it had the chance. 

That last one is the killer. 

The Big Ten would LOVE to have North Carolina – it fits in the exact same way Texas would have. It would have probably pushed for Georgia Tech for the Atlanta market – just like it wanted Rutgers for New York/New Jersey and Maryland for Baltimore/Washington DC – Boston College and Syracuse would’ve been interesting ideas, and Virginia would be a no-brainer.

But the ACC has its schools locked up until 2035 in a rough media deal – that’s sort of why you haven’t heard much about the SEC putting a fence around the southeast part of the country by taking over Clemson, Florida State, and Miami.

Everything has its price, and there’s always a way, but the ACC is all but out. Notre Dame continues to be a non-starter, and the Big Ten and Pac-12 don’t seem to want to mess with each other in any sort of expansion rumors – even though USC, UCLA, Arizona State, Arizona, and Washington are all probably more in the Big Ten’s thought bubble than many might want to believe.

So now what?

There are only a few schools that make sense for what the Big Ten is looking for. They have to be Tier 1 research universities with a good media reach and the ability expand the overall footprint – don’t worry too much about geography and travel; it’s 1,300 miles from Piscataway to Lincoln.

And it has to have the main schools the respective states – like THE University of Nebraska, and THE University of Maryland, and THE State University of New Jersey.

The easy starting point would be Kansas – great basketball, Tier 1 research, Kansas City and St. Louis markets, easy geographic rival for the Big Ten West – but that’s not exactly matching the SEC getting Oklahoma and Texas.

All of the other Big 12 schools other than TCU have the Tier 1 academic profile, but … nah. West Virginia doesn’t really fit, and the Big Ten isn’t going after Iowa State when it has Iowa, or Kansas State when it can probably get Kansas.

So that leaves the Pac-12. The Big Ten doesn’t want to ruffle that relationship, but business is business, and Colorado would slide right in and be at home in the Big Ten. The Pac-12 would get all mad, and then it would finally do what it should’ve done years ago and snatch Colorado State, San Diego State, and UNLV from the Mountain West.

Colorado and Kansas? Really? That would be the Big Ten’s smartest and best answer to the SEC getting Texas and Oklahoma? 

Yeah – because it works. 

Remember, this is business – don’t get caught up in level of play on the football field. 

Colorado would be about adding Denver – the 16th biggest media market in the country – and Kansas, again, gets you Kansas City (34th) and helps with St. Louis (23rd) to go along with the national basketball base that would park it on the Big Ten Network during the season.

Or nothing could happen, the Big Ten will keep printing money, and it’ll spend its time working on keeping the member institutions from thinking about entering the conference transfer portal.

But it’s the Big Ten. It might be quiet, but ohhhhhhhh, no. It’s not going to sit this one out.

You really think the Big Ten is going to let the SEC take over the world?

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22, College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show
18. Sun Belt is the cool conference
17. Transfer Portal will only get bigger
16. NFL, keep your hands off our announcers
15. Big 12: Get bigger and stronger, or else

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

 

Big 12 Needs To Keep Expanding: 22 Thoughts For 2022, No. 15

The Big 12 lost its two stars and made up for it with a smart expansion move. Now it needs to do more. 22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 15

22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 15: The Big 12 made some great moves after losing Oklahoma and Texas to the SEC. Now it needs to do more.


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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak
2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22, College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show
18. Sun Belt is the cool conference
17. Transfer Portal will only get bigger
16. NFL, keep your hands off our announcers

15. Big 12, get bigger, better, stronger, or else …

The Big 12 adding BYU, Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF was great – it should’ve done that ten years ago, and added USF, too – but it’s not replacing Oklahoma and Texas with those four.

It’s not going to Moneyball its way past losing Damon and Giambi without doing a whole lot more to not only strengthen the conference, but to have an overall contingency plan.

The Big 12 is in a strange place – and yeah, I sort of mean the middle part of the country, because geographically it’s able to draw on other schools that make sense for the league … and for other conferences to pick off its members.

Basketball-wise the Big 12 is a rock star even without the two monster football Oklahoma and Texas programs, but football pays the bills.

Thumping the chest about Kansas, Baylor, and the last two basketball national titles is awesome, but who’s the football powerhouse? Oklahoma State? Baylor? Iowa State? Eventually BYU and Cincinnati? No, there isn’t one at the high-end SEC or Big Ten levels.

There’s a reason why the Big 12 is more than happy to dive into the College Football Playoff expansion idea. A Big 12 champion would almost always be in, and so would a 10-2 team that would likely be 8-4 or 6-6 in the SEC or Big Ten. A weaker Power Five football conference isn’t necessarily a bad thing in an expanded CFP.

On the plus side, that lack of any monster football programs will temper the expansion interests of other conferences, but soon the basketball side of the Big 12 is going to play a role.

There’s one giant whale out there that’s been eerily quiet.

The Big Ten can’t pick off schools from the ACC – that’s for a later rant; the ACC contracts are way too tough to get out of – and it’s not going to start sniffing around the Pac-12. That doesn’t leave a whole lot of options.

No, Kansas isn’t great at football – neither are Rutgers and Maryland. The Big Ten expanded the last time around because it wanted a footprint for the Big Ten Network – among other things – in the New York/New Jersey area and in Baltimore/Washington DC. As I’ll keep reiterating through all this expansion talk, the Big Ten wants THE school in a state.

It wants the massive big state Tier 1 research schools, and there are only a handful of them who might be available.

The University of Kansas is one – by the way, the rest of the Big 12 schools are Tier 1 other than TCU and, from the new batch, BYU – and yeah, it just won the national championship in basketball, and yeah, it helps to bring in the Kansas City and St. Louis markets, and yeah, it’s an easy and natural rival for Nebraska, Iowa, and most of the Big Ten West.

If you’re the Pac-12, there are only so many places you can go, too, without simply taking over the Mountain West. For a conference that likes basketball – even more than football in some ways – Kansas might start to look a whole lot better.

Most of the Big 12 schools have to be in a discussion at some Tuesday afternoon meeting in George Kliavkov’s office.


Big 12 2022 Schedule Analysis: 3 things to know
Baylor | Iowa State | Kansas | Kansas State | Oklahoma 
Oklahoma State | TCU | Texas | Texas Tech | West Virginia


To keep hammering this home, there’s a prestige in having the University of (insert state name here), which is why West Virginia might have some interest for the ACC, but that’s likely low on the Big 12’s lists of concerns at the moment.

But let’s say everyone is standing pat and the current Big 12 configuration for a few years from now is solid. Again, what else you got, Big 12, football-wise? How can the conference learn from the Oklahoma and Texas blindside and go on the offensive?

USF should be part of the future plans – the Tampa market and huge enrollment helps – but there’s one big move the Big 12 can make that would make too much sense – beat the Pac-12 to the Mountain West punch.

Not to sound all geopolitical, but by landing BYU there’s a bridge that works for the Big 12 to expand west.

If the Big 12 wants to fire a shot across the bow, grab UNLV – Las Vegas is going to be to the Pac-12 what Indianapolis is to the Big Ten and Atlanta is to the SEC – or Nevada. Colorado State works awfully well – by the way, Nevada, UNLV and Colorado State are Tier 1 research schools – and then if it really wants to make some noise …

Nab San Diego State and that market and that basketball team and that football program with its shiny new stadium before the Pac-12 figures out that the school is a perfect fit – other than the Tier 1 research part.

Oh, and one more move that makes way too much sense. You’re missing a football powerhouse, Big 12? How about North Dakota State? Tier 1 research school, insane rabid base, and …

I know I’m getting way off the rails here.

Let’s give credit to a Big 12 that was considered all but dead by some after losing its two superstar members – and remember, that’s after losing Nebraska, Missouri, and Texas A&M over the last few years, too.

BYU was a fantastic get. So was Cincinnati, so was UCF, so was Houston. The conference is still alive, there’s a great energy around those four new schools coming in, and there’s a chance to keep on growing.

But it’s the world of college athletics. Either you’re eating, or you’re being eaten.

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22, College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show
18. Sun Belt is the cool conference
17. Transfer Portal will only get bigger
16. NFL, keep your hands off our announcers

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

 

NFL, Keep Your Hands Off Our Announcers: 22 Thoughts For 2022, No. 16

College football announcers are going to be used more for the NFL … because some are that good. 22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 16

22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 16: The NFL announcers are fine, but the college stars are better … and we can’t lose them to the next level


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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak
2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22, College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show
18. Sun Belt is the cool conference
17. Transfer Portal will only get bigger

16. Here’s the deal, NFL broadcasting world …

The NFL hates to admit that some aspects of the college game are better.

The college version of instant replay … better.

Overtime system – as contrived as it might be … better.

Rivalries and traditions … way better.

Length of halftime … okay, so the NFL wins that by seven touchdowns, but there’s one area that college football has all over the NFL.

1) Pregame shows, and, with some huge exceptions calling college games that I won’t get into, 2) the announcers.

Nothing against all the hard-working and more-than-competent people doing NFL broadcasts, but there’s a reason why Peyton and Eli made it so easy for fans to move away from the normal call of a game – and why ESPN spent a gajillion dollars for Joe Buck and Troy Aikman.

Oh sure, there’s Al Michaels, and Buck is terrific – he’s so unfairly dogged – but the NFL announcing teams are all … fine.

It’s the NFL. It likes things to be uniform, which is why Tony Romo can be goofy and he sounds like a breath of fresh air.

Now, find the NFL announcing team that has as much fun calling a game as Mark Jones and Robert Griffin III when they’re rolling.

There will never be another Keith Jackson, but Chris Fowler and Kirk Herbstreit are far better than you think. The NFL figured out that Herbstreit would be fantastic for its broadcasts, too, as he pairs up with Michaels on Amazon’s Thursday Night Football. That’s where it needs to stop.

Of course these are professional talents who can be great juggling different levels of football – certainly Jackson did other sports without a problem and Fowler is terrfic with his tennis work – but having signature voices in college football matters.

It’s part of the identity of the sport. Having a side hustle is fine, but the top college announcers and analysts need to stick around.

Eventually, the NFL is going to figure out just how miserable the pablum of their big-network pregame shows are – seriously, NFL, fewer big brand name ex-jocks and coaches doing fluffy talk – and it’ll steal the whole College GameDay crew. Everyone tries to imitate it now for every sport, but it’s just not the same. It’s not as authentic.

So here’s the deal, NFL.

Yeah, fine, college football loans you Herbstreit for Thursday night games, and college football gets Peyton and Eli for Tuesday night MACtion and the occasional Saturday afternoon SEC showdown. The Mannings actually like the college world better, anyway.

Cool?

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22, College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show
18. Sun Belt is the cool conference
17. Transfer Portal will only get bigger

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

Transfer Portal Will Only Get Bigger, However … 22 Thoughts For 2022, No. 17

The transfer portal will be a bigger and more prominent part of college football, and that’s a problem. 22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 17

22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 17: The transfer portal will only get bigger and more prominent, and that’s going to be a problem.


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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

17. The transfer portal will only become more important. However …

Don’t be stunned if the NCAA comes up with a way to clamp down a bit on how easy it is for the players to move around.

The NCAA and Mark Emmert might be going all Chicken Little on the Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals, but that’s one cat that’s not going back into the bag. However, what they can start to work on and tweak is the transfer portal that might be a positive overall, but quickly went rogue.

Here’s the problem – now everyone has to recruit players from other schools all the time, all while coaches have to keep wooing their own guys. And if you’re not pinging around to see who might not be totally happy at whether they’re at, you’re not doing your job.

The transfer portal is the new recruiting. Outside of the elite prospects, why mess around with a guess when you can bring in ready-made men ready to play?

You ready to have some transfer portal fun? Wait until the depth charts start to come out – if they come out.

That’s like a list of Glengarry leads for a salesman – every No. 2 on the chart, especially at quarterback, will be offered the world. But coaches are going to wise up to this fast.

Get ready for this phrase over and over again …

“We’ll settle it in fall camp.”

You have to be insane if you come out with a depth chart that say anything but OR after every player’s name.

I’m a full proponent of players’ rights in every way, shape, and form, but on this I do get how there has to be something to tone this down, because it’s not fair.

It’s not fair to the coaches, it’s not fair to the players who might transfer to a school for an opportunity only to get shoved out when someone else wants to transfer in, and it’s not fair to the entire process when the big schools can go vulture away the best players from the smaller ones.

Oh yeah, and there’s that silly little thing about, you know, college. Yeah, go play football and go have fun, but maybe do a little of that learning thing along the way. That goes all out the window when players transfer just so they might be able to see the football field.

So how does this get fixed? Does it need to be fixed, since regular students can transfer at any time, so why not football players?

Maybe limit the number of transfers a school can bring in to be eligible for a given year. Maybe limit the transfer time to a fixed number of weeks – but make sure it’s not set up so players can get screwed over by depth chart manipulation.

Maybe limit the number of games a transfer can play – if a kid wants to actually go to a school to go to school, then not getting to play a few games shouldn’t matter. But, of course, that’s totally naive.

Where this gets even trickier is with the NIL deals. If a kid has a deal, and he’s all of a sudden the second string quarterback, then the entire world changes and moves will be based on whatever contracts and deals are set up and which states have the right rules to keep it all going.

But for now, the changes will likely come flying fast and furious very, very soon.

Pray for the coaches who’ll spend way too much time trying to keep everyone happy, and God bless those poor souls who keep putting out a print version of a preview that – thanks to the on-the-fly changes – will be worthless the second it’s off the presses.

Speaking of stealing talent …

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22, College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show
18. Sun Belt is the cool conference

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

Sun Belt Is The Cool Conference This Offseason: 22 Thoughts For 2022, No. 18

The Sun Belt was able to add four teams, avoided getting picked off, and has come out of the latest round of expansion as one of the big winners: 22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 18

22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 18: The Sun Belt is coming out of the expansion moves as one of the biggest surprises


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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022

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18. All of a sudden, the Sun Belt has become the cool conference

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22. College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show

The conference has only been doing football since 2001, and it was always the land of the paycheck programs – the ones the big boys scheduled for an easy 55-3 win on Homecoming.

In one of the shockers of the conference realignment changes over the last year, the Sun Belt wasn’t picked off in the expansion run. Instead, it added James Madison from the FCS and snagged Marshall, Southern Miss, and Old Dominion from Conference USA.

It was a battle to see if Conference USA could hold on to the Thundering Herd, the Golden Eagles, and the Monarchs through the football season, but the divorce is final, and those three are getting remarried right away to go along with a fun James Madison program.

How ugly did it get? Both Conference USA and the Sun Belt released their 2022 schedules including those three teams, but the Sun Belt has their teams.

The Sun Belt East will be made up of Appalachian State, Coastal Carolina, Georgia Southern, Georgia State, James Madison, Marshall, and Old Dominion. The West will be Arkansas State, Louisiana, South Alabama, Southern Miss, Texas State, Troy, and ULM.

No, it’s not time for the SEC to start shaking, but it’s an amazing story that the Sun Belt is not only surviving, but it’s getting a whole lot stronger and more entertaining.

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22. College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

James Madison, Welcome To The Show: 22 Thoughts For 2022, No. 19

It’s the newest member of the FBS world: James Madison. Don’t be shocked if it’s an instant factor in the Sun Belt. 22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 19

22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 19: It’s going to be a fun year for a James Madison fan base that gets a chance to shine in the spotlight.


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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022

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19. James Madison is going to be a whole lot of instant fun

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22. College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not

The Dukes are going from the Colonial Athletic Association into the FBS world as they rise up and join the Sun Belt this season.

No waiting period. No passing go. They’re in, they’re about to play an adult table schedule, and the fan base is eating up every step of the process.

This isn’t just some cute story. James Madison is coming off of three straight CAA championships and six of the last seven years. There’s no pressure in this first season at the adult table, but you’ll have to forgive the base if it doesn’t accept anything less than fun.

The pressure of winning a national title at the lower level is off, and no one’s expecting miracles this first year, but …

The schedule isn’t all that bad, but for now, JMU fans are enjoying the bigger spotlight and the higher status for a team whose time has come.

The program is going to be an extra jolt of energy.

It was a regular in the FCS playoffs, it’s got the talent to be competitive right away in its new league, and it’s about to add a whole lot of energy to the hottest conference in college football …

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22. College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

The SEC Is Great At College Football Whether You Like It Or Not: 22 Thoughts For 2022, No. 20

The SEC is going to be great at college football again this year. It’s time to stop arguing about how good this league is. 22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 20

22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 20: It’s amazing that this is still a debate in any way, but the SEC is awesome at college football.


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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22. College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC? 

20. The SEC is great at college football whether you like it or not

I know, I know, the SEC took a hit in the last bowl season.

Missouri lost to Army, Florida lost to UCF, Auburn fell to Houston, Mississippi State got rocked by Texas Tech, Tennessee lost an overtime thriller to Purdue, Ole Miss and LSU were blasted in their respective games, and Texas A&M had to tap out of its bowl because of COVID issues combined with a ton of personnel losses.

And oh how did social media laugh, and laugh, and laugh …

And laugh.

Forgetting for a moment that most of those teams were missing a ton of key parts to the transfer portal or the NFL Draft process – LSU was barely able to field a team in the sad loss to Kansas State – it’s a bad look when the supposedly invincible conference catches a beating from the rest of college football.

And then Georgia beat Alabama in the College Football Playoff National Championship.

I get accused of having a thing for the SEC, but I have no dog in this fight whatsoever.

I love all 131 college football programs equally – fine, so I give some a pony for Christmas and others a $5 Red Lobster gift card – but let 2022 be the year we stop with any semblance of “SEC is overrated” banter any time one of its member programs stubs its toe.

I wish it wasn’t like this. I wish the Pac-12 would rise up and be awesome, and I wish the ACC could come up with stronger teams 1-through-14 this year – and eventually add Notre Dame full-time.

I wish all the leagues would rock. I wish there was a better disparity of NFL-level talent across the other conferences, but the SEC is the SEC, and it’s about to get even bigger, better, and stronger in the coming years.

Don’t assume that it’s a good thing.

For most die-hard SEC fans, life in the conference is a miserable existence – either you win the national title, or your season was a disaster.

For almost anyone else, doing what Alabama did in 2021 – with an SEC Championship and College Football Playoff National Championship appearance – would be legendary. Alabama fans act like last year was a failure – which it most certainly wasn’t.

You can’t lose in this league, and if you do, you can’t have a bad few weeks or a sizable chunk of the fans are going to want the coach gone, more top players through recruiting and the transfer portal, and an overhaul of the program from top to bottom.

But it’s just that kind of unrealistic insanity that ups everyone’s game.

You can put together a whopper of a top ten recruiting haul and still not finish in the top five of SEC classes.

You can get a top shelf head coach, and he’s still going to be among the guys you recognize with one name, like Nick, and Leach, and Jimbo, and Kelly, and Lane, and Kirby.

Your league might have a ton of NFL guys, but will it take up 25% of the draft like the SEC will?

Your league might have a national title contender or two, but does it have six programs that won 14 of the last 24 national titles and 12 of the last 16?

Let the SEC do what it does, and please don’t get so offended when anyone points out just how good the conference is. More to the point, if you’re not an SEC fan, you’re probably better off.

You probably lead a fuller, richer, happier existence with a ten-win season seen as a positive.

There’s fun to be had all across the rest of the college football landscape without the SEC’s whack-job intensity.

Seriously, you want excitement? You want a fan base that’s out-of-its-mind jacked? Welcome to …

(Up Next: The new member of the FBS world)

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22. College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?   

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

Texas and Oklahoma, You REALLY Want The SEC?: 22 Thoughts For 2022, No. 21

Texas and Oklahoma are still on track to leave for the SEC in a few years. Is that really a good idea? 22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 21

22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 21: Texas and Oklahoma are still on track to leave for the SEC in a few years. Is that really a good move?


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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022

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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22. College football is changing, and it’s okay
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not

21. Hey, Texas and Oklahoma, you still want to leave for the SEC, huh?

There’s still time to appeal to your sanity, Texas and Oklahoma.

I know, I know, you want to get out of your Big 12 deal and move into the SEC before 2025, but are you really sure you want to do this? Are you positive you thought this through?

No, really. You do understand that life in the SEC isn’t fun.

Oh, sure, you’re going to make gobs and gobs of money, and the exposure will be amazing, but – last I checked – Alabama isn’t going to quit playing college football.

Georgia doesn’t seem like it’s leaving the SEC any time soon, LSU is LSU, Florida is about to rise back up, Texas A&M appears to be on the verge of something massive, and …

Again, Alabama put out a football schedule. It’s still around.

Are you seeing what’s happening in this conference? Does it look like Texas A&M is having happy happy fun time pushing the rock up the mountain? Seriously, if it stuck around the Big 12, it almost certainly would’ve made a College Football Playoff appearance by now.

How about Ole Miss? The Lane Kiffin thing is great and we all have fun watching that offense, but it still has to play against the rest of the SEC West.

Kentucky has been great … and it’s not exactly dominating the SEC Championship lately.

LSU might have had the greatest team of all-time three years ago. Coach canned.

Florida was this close to getting by Alabama in each of the last two seasons and had an argument for a College Football Playoff spot if it pulled off the 2020 SEC Championship. Coach canned.

If you’re a big-time SEC football program, you … can’t … lose. Ever.

Texas, you think you’ll be “back” after you go to the SEC? Yeah, ask Tennessee how easy it is to return to superpower status.

Most of the current Texas players weren’t alive the last time the program won a national championship – and it’s having a hard time just getting to the Big 12 Championship – but suuuuuure, it’s all going to kick in by moving to the SEC in a few years.

Oklahoma has been outstanding, but it hasn’t won a national title since 2000 and hasn’t played in one since the end of the 2008 season. So it’s going to get over the hump as a member of the SEC?

I don’t care, Texas and Oklahoma. You’re adults. You do what you want, but Texas, if you really wanted to move, you have been, and always will be, a far better fit – at least in terms of school status – with the Big Ten.

Oklahoma, how you didn’t somehow connect with the Pac-12 – and up the overall exposure and profile of the school to all those massive media markets – is beyond me.

Or, stay in the Big 12 and be the anchor tenants of the mall – more on that in a later 22 for 2022 thought.

So for 2022, the Big 12 season is going to be about how much Texas and Oklahoma want to be somewhere else as soon as humanly possible.

Meanwhile, as amazing as those two are, someone needs to get them the memo …

(whispering) The SEC is awesome at college football.

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22. College football is changing, and it’s okay
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams