Sun Belt Preseason Predictions For Every Game: Preview 2021

The College Football News Sun Belt preseason predictions for every game, predicted order of finish, and lookahead to the 2021 season.

The College Football News Sun Belt preseason predictions for every game, predicted order of finish, and lookahead to the 2021 season.


Sun Belt Preseason Predictions: East

Sun Belt East

T1. Appalachian State*
T1. Coastal Carolina
T3. Georgia Southern
T3. Troy
5. Georgia State

Appalachian State Mountaineers

2021 Preseason Prediction: 9-3
2021 Sun Belt Prediction: 6-2
2018: 11-2 2019: 13-1 2020: 9-3

Sept. 2 East Carolina (in Charlotte) W
Sept. 11 at Miami  L
Sept. 18 Elon W
Sept. 23 Marshall W
Oct. 2 at Georgia State W
Oct. 9 OPEN DATE
Oct. 12 at Louisiana  L
Oct. 20 Coastal Carolina W
Oct. 30 ULM W
Nov. 6 at Arkansas State  L
Nov. 13 South Alabama W
Nov. 20 at Troy W
Nov. 27 Georgia Southern W
Appalachian State 2021 Preview

Coastal Carolina Chanticleers

2021 Preseason Prediction: 10-2
2021 Sun Belt Prediction: 6-2
2018: 5-7 2019: 5-7 2020: 11-1

Sept. 4 The Citadel W
Sept. 11 Kansas W
Sept. 18 at Buffalo W
Sept. 25 UMass W
Oct. 2 ULM W
Oct. 7 at Arkansas State W
Oct. 16 OPEN DATE
Oct. 20 at Appalachian State  L
Oct. 28 Troy W
Nov. 6 at Georgia Southern  L
Nov. 13 Georgia State W
Nov. 20 Texas State W
Nov. 26 at South Alabama W
Coastal Carolina 2021 Preview

Georgia Southern Eagles

2021 Preseason Prediction: 6-6
2021 Sun Belt Prediction: 5-3
2018: 10-3 2019: 7-6 2020: 8-5

Sept. 4 Gardner-Webb W
Sept. 11 at Florida Atlantic  L
Sept. 18 at Arkansas  L
Sept. 25 Louisiana  L
Oct. 2 Arkansas State W
Oct. 9 at Troy  L
Oct. 14 at South Alabama W
Oct. 23 OPEN DATE
Oct. 30 Georgia State W
Nov. 6 Coastal Carolina W
Nov. 13 at Texas State W
Nov. 20 BYU  L
Nov. 27 at Appalachian State  L
Georgia Southern 2021 Preview

[lawrence-related id=532457]

Georgia State Panthers

2021 Preseason Prediction: 5-7
2021 Sun Belt Prediction: 4-4
2018: 2-10 2019: 7-6 2020: 6-4

Sept. 4 Army  L
Sept. 11 at North Carolina  L
Sept. 18 Charlotte W
Sept. 25 at Auburn  L
Oct. 2 Appalachian State  L
Oct. 9 at ULM W
Oct. 16 OPEN DATE
Oct. 23 Texas State W
Oct. 30 at Georgia Southern  L
Nov. 4 at Louisiana  L
Nov. 13 at Coastal Carolina  L
Nov. 20 Arkansas State W
Nov. 27 Troy W
Georgia Southern 2021 Preview

Troy Trojans

2021 Preseason Prediction: 6-6
2021 Sun Belt Prediction: 5-3
2018: 10-3 2019: 5-7 2020: 5-6

Sept. 4 Southern W
Sept. 11 Liberty  L
Sept. 18 at Southern Miss  L
Sept. 25 at ULM W
Oct. 2 at South Carolina  L
Oct. 9 Georgia Southern W
Oct. 16 at Texas State W
Oct. 23 OPEN DATE
Oct. 28 at Coastal Carolina W
Nov. 6 South Alabama W
Nov. 13 Louisiana  L
Nov. 20 Appalachian State  L
Nov. 27 at Georgia State  L
Troy 2021 Preview

NEXT: Sun Belt Preseason Predictions: East

College Football News Preseason All-Sun Belt Football Team: Preview 2021

Preview 2021: Previewing and looking ahead to the Sun Belt season. College Football News Preseason All-Sun Belt Team & Top 30 players.

Preview 2021: Previewing and looking ahead to the Sun Belt season with the College Football News Preseason All-Sun Belt Team & Top 30 players. 


[mm-video type=playlist id=01f1343a1wt7q817p7 player_id=none image=https://collegefootballnews.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews 

2021 Sun Belt Team Previews
East Appalachian St | Coastal Carolina
Georgia Southern | Georgia State | Troy
West Arkansas St | Louisiana | Texas St
South Alabama | ULM
2021 CFN Preseason All-Sun Belt Team
2021 CFN Sun Belt Top 30 Players


2021 Preseason CFN Sun Belt Offensive Player of the Year

QB Grayson McCall, Soph. Coastal Carolina

There are a whole lot of good quarterbacks in the Sun Belt. Louisiana’s Levi Lewis has been around for forever, Arkansas State’s Layne Hatcher might throw for a bazillion yards, South Alabama is getting in transfer Jake Bentley, Georgia Tech transfer James Graham is a perfect fit for Georgia Southern, and Georgia State’s Cornelious Brown is outstanding.

Until Grayson McCall starts to screw up, he’s the guy.

Brilliant in the program’s breakout season, he completed 69% of his throws for close to 2,500 yards and 26 touchdowns with just three picks, and he ran for seven touchdowns. Now he’s a year older, his team is every bit as good, and he should once again be special.

2021 Preseason CFN Sun Belt Defensive Player of the Year

LB Carlton Martial, Jr. Troy

Just 5-9 and 210 pounds, he’s not built to be a big linebacker who can do huge things, he’s as pound-for-pound tough as any defender in the Sun Belt. The only player in the conference to averaged ten or more tackles per game – and one of two to average more than nine – he hit everything with 113 stops coming off a 126-tackle season. Just assume 100 more tackles are coming.

2021 CFN Preseason All-Sun Belt Team
2021 CFN Sun Belt Top 30 Players

NEXT: CFN 2021 Preseason All-Sun Belt Team

Oklahoma salvages series winning finale against Georgia Southern 14-4

Oklahoma baseball salvaged the series with a 14-4 run-rule win over Georgia Southern on Sunday.

Oklahoma baseball concluded their three-game home set with Georgia Southern on Sunday afternoon after dropping the first two games in a doubleheader on Saturday. Continue reading “Oklahoma salvages series winning finale against Georgia Southern 14-4”

Oklahoma falls to Texas State 5-2, six-game winning streak snapped

Oklahoma baseball fell to Texas State 5-2 on Wednesday night to have their six-game winning streak come to an end just before Big 12 play.

Oklahoma baseball entered Wednesday night on a six-game winning streak behind consistently supreme offensive output and improved pitching over the past week. The stretch was easily their best of the season as the team looked to have really started to find their stride just about a month into the new campaign.

Unfortunately for the Sooners, that successful run would come to an end at the hands of Texas State on Wednesday night in a 5-2 Bobcats win. It had been quite some time, but the bats finally cooled off for a night where they were unable to get much going.

Getting the start was right-hander Javier Ramos, who was sharp in his two innings of work not allowing a hit and striking out a pair. Ben Abram would relieve him in the third and would run into some trouble in his second inning out of the bullpen. He allowed two runs to cross in the fourth inning which put Oklahoma in a deficit they would never climb out of, giving Abram his first loss of the year to go to 1-1.

The Sooners would get one of those runs back right away in the top of the fifth on an RBI single by catcher Jimmy Crooks. His grounder up the middle scored left fielder Kendall Pettis all the way from first base. The Bobcats, however, would immediately push their lead back to two in the bottom half of the frame on a solo home run by right fielder Jose Gonzalez.

A two-run homer by Texas State shortstop Justin Thompson in the seventh extended their lead to 5-1 and seemingly put the game away, but Oklahoma would not go quietly into the night.

In the ninth, first baseman Tyler Hardman picked up a run-scoring triple to narrow the deficit to 5-2. Then, the Sooners managed to get two more runners on to load the bases with two outs for the designated hitter Logan Kohler. But, alas, Kohler popped out to shallow center to extinguish the rally and end the game.

The loss is the first in ten days for Skip Johnson’s club, and dips them down to 12-8 on the year. Now, after a day off, come some very important games for Oklahoma as Big 12 play opens on Friday against rival Texas.

An off game in the middle of the week against a lesser opponent right before a big series is not exactly unheard of, and shouldn’t be too much cause for concern as long as they bounce back with a good weekend in Austin. These games happen a lot over the course of the college baseball season.

Game one of the Red River Showdown baseball series is set for Friday night at 7:00 p.m. CT.

Oklahoma keeps bats hot in 9-1 blowout of Arkansas State to split doubleheader

Oklahoma kept the bats rolling in a 9-1 blowout of Arkansas State Sunday night to split their doubleheader and get back to .500.

Oklahoma dropped the first game of Sunday’s doubleheader with Arkansas State in a 15-14 slugfest where they seemingly couldn’t find a way to throw a clean inning. The second game of the day was a different story.

The Sooners kept the bats rolling putting up nine more runs, but were delivered a sorely-needed clutch start from left-hander Jake Bennett who tossed five solid innings allowing just one run and two hits while striking out six. He picked up the win for his effort to go to 2-1 on the year.

Oklahoma never had one overly huge inning, instead just steadily keeping things moving all night long. In fact, they scored in every single inning except for the bottom of the eighth.

Second baseman Conor McKenna picked up an RBI double in the first to get the ball rolling, then shortstop Brandon Zaragoza drove in a run on a fielder’s choice in the second. Center fielder Tanner Tredaway and third baseman Peyton Graham each picked up run-scoring hits in the next two innings to keep the lead growing.

In the fifth, Connor Beichler had an two-RBI double followed by another driven in on a Zaragoza knock for the Sooners biggest inning of the day with three runs in the frame. Left fielder Diego Muniz and McKenna would both get RBI hits before games end to bring the final score to 9-1.

After Bennett’s solid five innings of work, Jaret Godman and Carson Carter teamed up to dominate the final four innings throwing two each and allowing one total hit and striking out seven. The bullpen shut the door in a major way on Sunday night.

Now at 7-7, Oklahoma has a chance to take the series and get back above .500 in the rubber match on Monday afternoon. First pitch is set for 1:00 p.m. CT at L. Dale Mitchell Park.

[lawrence-related id=26796]

Oklahoma drops front end of doubleheader to Arkansas State in 15-14 shootout

Oklahoma dropped the front end of a doubleheader to Arkansas State 15-14 on Sunday in Norman.

Oklahoma Sooners baseball is back on the diamond on Sunday with a doubleheader against Arkansas State out of the Sun Belt. The series was originally set to be a traditional Friday-Sunday weekend set, but it was altered due to weather in the area.

The first game of the day was another slugfest for the Sooners, who have seen that a lot in the early part of the season as the offense has been dynamite as of late with the pitching continuing to struggle. Once again, Oklahoma ace pitcher Wyatt Olds had a rough day giving up six earned runs over his four innings pitched.

The Sooners faced a 7-0 deficit at the midway point of the third inning, again in a big early hole to attempt to climb their way out of. They would do a pretty darn good job it, though, as they came right back with a huge six-run bottom of the third to bring things to 7-6 behind home runs from first baseman Tyler Hardman and center fielder Tanner Tredaway.

But, unfortunately for Oklahoma, they couldn’t keep the Red Wolves offense down as they would put five more runs across in the fifth and sixth innings to gain a 12-6 lead.

The Sooners would not go down quietly though as they again managed to get the bats going and go on another rally. They would put up two runs in the seventh to cut the deficit to 12-8, before Arkansas State got those right back in the top of the 8th to push things to 14-8.

Oklahoma would immediately respond with five runs in the bottom half of the inning highlighted by home runs from third baseman Peyton Graham and catcher Jimmy Crooks. The game stood at 14-13 heading to the final inning.

The Red Wolves would add an insurance run that turned out to be large, as the Sooners could only muster up one run in the bottom of the ninth in response to fall by a 15-14 final. Needless to say, the pitching seriously failed Skip Johnson’s club in this one.

The team absolutely wouldn’t give up and continued to battle and rally all game long but it just ended up being not quite enough. Allowing 15 runs is obviously incredibly difficult to overcome and they almost found a way to do it, but it all goes down the same as another loss.

Something that may get lost in the all the offense and the loss, Hardman was absolutely sensational on the afternoon hitting for the cycle in his five hits with four RBIs. He showcased himself as one of the better hitters on the team in this one, albeit in a losing effort.

Now at 6-7, they’ll try to keep the bats going but figure out the pitching in the second end of the doubleheader in Norman.

[lawrence-related id=26796]

Oklahoma bats have big night in 15-5 win over UT-Arlington

Oklahoma has a big night behind the plate scoring 15 runs to knock off UT-Arlington and move back to .500 on the young season at 6-6.

Oklahoma baseball returned to the diamond on their home soil on Tuesday night hosting UT-Arlington in a rematch of their game at Globe Life Field a couple of weeks ago. Similar to that night, the Sooners played well virtually all around to pick up the victory.

Things didn’t start off especially strong for Oklahoma, though, as starting pitcher Javier Ramos had a rough opening frame allowing four Mavericks runs. He would bounce back with a solid second inning to conclude his day after just six recorded outs.

The Sooners bats would pick him up quickly after he exited, putting up three runs in the bottom of the second, two of which coming on a double by right fielder Jace Bohrofen. They would then tack on six more runs in the bottom of the third on a home run by second baseman Conor McKenna, another 2-RBI hit by Bohrofen and then another two-run knock by designated hitter Jimmy Crooks.

Braden Carmichael entered the game in the third and was somewhat shaky allowing a run to cross, but really settled in after that. He tossed three shutout innings after that totaling up five strikeouts along the way. He gets the win in relief.

Oklahoma would score six more runs over the course of the sixth, seventh and eighth innings highlighted by a missile home run by third baseman Peyton Graham and yet another two-RBI hit by Bohrofen, this one a triple. He finished his evening with six runs knocked in.

The big day for the bats helps get the Sooners back to .500 on the young season at 6-6 and gives them a mini-season sweep of UT-Arlington winning both matchups this year. Oklahoma will now take a couple days off before returning to action at home for a three-game set with Arkansas State.

When, where, how to watch Oklahoma baseball take on UT-Arlington

Everything you need to know for when Oklahoma takes on UT-Arlington on Tuesday night in Norman.

Oklahoma (5-6) is set to return to L. Dale Mitchell Park on Tuesday night when they host UT-Arlington (5-5) in a rematch of their game a little less than two weeks ago at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas. On that night, the Sooners had one of their more complete performances of the young season with a 7-1 win over the Mavericks.

Oklahoma is hoping for a bounce back week on their home soil after a disappointing performance overall at the Frisco College Baseball Classic. Other than a big offensive outburst against Missouri in the third game of four at Dr. Pepper Ballpark, few things went right at the event for the Sooners – specifically with the starting pitching.

Arizona put up staggering offensive numbers in their two games against Oklahoma to start the weekend and then Dallas Baptist closed the week with a big day behind the plate of their own. Skip Johnson’s club could certainly use a bounce back outing on Tuesday night to steer things back in a positive direction moving forward.

This will be the 37th all-time meeting between the Sooners and UT-Arlington, with Oklahoma taking 25 of the first 36 including each of the last four. This will be a welcome return back to Norman for the squad after playing nine straight games away from home, and will be the first time fans will be able to be back in the ballpark at L. Dale Mitchell Park this season.

For this midweek non-conference matchup, here is everything you need to know:

PITCHING MATCHUP:   Oklahoma TBA vs UT-Arlington TBA

WHERE:   Norman, Oklahoma

WHEN:   6:30 p.m. CT

HOW TO WATCH:   FOX Sports Oklahoma (Chad McKee & George Frazier)

HOW TO LISTEN:   Sportstalk 1400 AM/99.3 FM KREF; Tune In Radio App; Sportstalk1400.com (Toby Rowland)

Sun Belt Heat: The College Football Playoff Is A Lie

The College Football Playoff Committee screwed the conferences that risked life and limb to save the season Contact @astatefanrules It was as anticlimactic as it was profoundly unjust. The College Football Playoff committee delivered their annual …

The College Football Playoff Committee screwed the conferences that risked life and limb to save the season


Contact @astatefanrules

[jwplayer IyoyGc7S]

It was as anticlimactic as it was profoundly unjust. The College Football Playoff committee delivered their annual bounty to the game’s wealthy elite – the same committee who had once upon a time said that “if you take care of business, win your conference, and go undefeated, the Playoff will take care of itself.

This was a lie.

Even during an unprecedented season that turned the entire college football world upside down, the Committee did what they do best: maintain the status quo. Consider, not a single team selected for the Playoff is new to the format. Even worse, not a single team truly deserves to be there.

Alabama didn’t play a single opponent outside of the SEC.

Ohio State played six games. They shouldn’t even qualify.

Clemson and Notre Dame have already played twice, and canceled each other out.

Meanwhile, two programs – Coastal Carolina and Cincinnati – did everything the Committee told them to do, which is to beat Top 25 teams, win its conference, and (as if it’s not hard enough) go undefeated. The Committee’s response was to rank Florida, Oklahoma and Texas A&M ahead of the Bearcats, and rank the Chanticleers completely out of NY6 consideration.

It. Was. A. Lie.

I’m not the only one bitching. While the Committee patted itself on the back for rewarding the same wealthy programs year in and year out, a handful of pundits raised a voice to grouse:

The Playoff is just one insult. The Bowl lineup is a completely separate line-item of Power Privilege. Look at this ghastly menu of sub .500 SEC teams who are awarded a plum Bowl game in 2020:

2-8 South Carolina – Gasparilla Bowl
4-6 Kentucky – Gator Bowl
3-7 Arkansas – Texas Bowl
3-6 Tennessee – Liberty Bowl
2-7 MissState – Armed Forces Bowl

Combined, they have exactly two more wins than Coastal Carolina, And yes, 2-7 Mississippi State is going to the Armed Forces Bowl while 9-2 Army get the shaft. This system is complete crap. It rewards teams not for their merit, but for their privilege.

It was all a lie. The College Football Playoff was supposed to bring balance to college football. We were told we’d have a place at the table so long as we pulled ourselves up by the bootstraps and proved our mettle to out just and benevolent overlords. In this dumb season of COVID, you’d have thought that playing more than 10 games would count for something, or that playing only within your conference would count against you. Nope. Not a bit. It’s they eye test that counts.

Why do we even play?

A former notary public, Jeremy Harper is a professional writer and Chief Instigator for Storm the Castle Creative. He spends much of his free time staring blankly into space. 

[protected-iframe id=”361699434b6d70baf15f631ed2408ac1-97672683-92922408″ info=”https://www.googletagservices.com/tag/js/gpt.js” ]

Positive COVID test at Coast Carolina scuttles Sun Belt Championship

A COVID-19 positive test at Coastal Carolina has led to the cancelation of the Sun Belt Championship game with Louisiana

One of the more interesting conference championship games is no more.

The Sun Belt championship between once-defeated Louisiana and unbeaten Coastal Carolina is off due to a positive COVID-19 test in the Chanticleers’ program.

The teams had played earlier in the season with Coastal coming away with a thrilling, 30-27 victory.

Combined, the teams were 21-1.

“We are very disappointed that the championship game cannot be played, but we are so proud of all of the players and staff members and their hard work during this truly challenging season,” said Sun Belt Commissioner Keith Gill in a statement.

Louisiana Athletic Director Bryan Maggard said in a separate statement released by the Ragin’ Cajuns, “We are severely disappointed for our student-athletes and staff to not have the opportunity to play in what would have been a truly exciting championship game for the Sun Belt Conference. For our football program, fans and alumni, we look forward to learning of our bowl destination this weekend.”

It would be great if the conference and schools could work something out with one of the bowl games in this bizarro season to have the teams eventually play, anyway.