Allen College Football Top 10
When looking into the future to
determine who will be the next college football
national champion, several key factors must be
considered. Talent of course is key, but when
it comes right down to it, the difference in talent
between football factories Oklahoma, USC, Ohio
State, and Notre Dame is really very negligible.
Game-breaking super studs like Vince Young and
Reggie Bush help. Breaks and avoiding injury are
key. Underrated in the mix might very well be
schedule which plays a critical part in determining
who will go to the National Title Game.
#1 Auburn:
If ever there was a schedule tailor made for a
National Championship run, it’s the Auburn
Tigers. The War Eagle returns just six starters
on each side of the ball but the offense showcases
Kenny Irons, a 1293 yard, 13 touchdown game breaker
who should run wild against a non-conference menu
of Washington State, Buffalo, Tulane, and Arkansas
State. The Tigers gets SEC heavyweights LSU, Arkansas,
Florida, and Georgia at home. The SEC West is
theirs to lose.
#2 Oklahoma:
The Sooners are loaded again, particularly on
the defensive side of the ball where they return
nine starters. On offense, Adrian Peterson appears
to be healthy and will look to avoid the nagging
injuries that plagued him throughout his sophomore
season. Oklahoma’s non-conference schedule
features September 16th trip at Oregon to take
on the Quack Attack at Autzen Stadium. Oklahoma
also benefits from bye week before Red River showdown
with Texas.
#3 USC: Gone
are the Hollywood Marquee names of Palmer, Leinart,
and Bush but the Trojans still return a solid
core nucleus from a program that has gone 38-2
over the past three years. USC will be in capable
hands with either Booty or Sanchez and all-world
wide out Dale Jarrett has been cleared to play.
The Trojans will be about defense in 2006 and
should again be unbeaten after eight games before
facing Oregon, Cal, and Notre Dame, all on their
home field.
#4 Michigan:
This could be the year that Wolverines upend Ohio
State for the Big 10 Conference title. Michigan
is loaded on offense with third year junior QB
Chad Henne looking fulfill his hype. Mike Hart
has all kinds of talent in the backfield but has
not stayed healthy. Mario Manningham is dangerous
playmaker with excellent hands. If Blue and Maize
can win in South Bend and avoid other early upset
( a regular occurrence of late), it will be OSU/Michigan
for the cash on November 18th at the Horseshoe.
#5 Texas:
The Longhorns start the post-Vince Young era with
13 returning starters and a very manageable schedule.
Ohio State comes knocking in Week Two but then
it’s a full month before meeting Oklahoma
in Dallas. Texas will have its usual power ground
attack but may go to the air more with it’s
quality group of talented veteran receivers. A
Friday home game vs. A&M in their conference
finale could be a boobie-trap.
#6 Miami Florida:
Larry Coker’s bunch could the under-the–radar
team in this year’s title chase. Coker spent
a lot of the summer weeding out bad kids but what’s
left is still formidable. Highly touted junior
QB Kyle Wright gets the Seminoles right off the
bat and then play a revenge minded Louisville
on the road. After that it’s cruise control
before November home games with Virginia Tech
and Boston College.
#7 Ohio State:
The Buckeyes are the wildcard and could just as
easily be ranked first as seventh. The Buckeyes
will be tested right away at Texas and are at
Iowa, Michigan State, and nemesis Northwestern.
OSU has two potential Heisman candidates in Troy
Smith and Ted Ginn Jr. but with only two starters
returning on defense, it’s highly unlikely
they can run the table.
#8 Notre Dame:
The Irish are loaded for Charlie Weis but open
with Murderer’s Row schedule of at Georgia
Tech. Penn St, Michigan, at Michigan State, and
Purdue. If they emerge unscathed, they have Stanford,
UCLA, North Carolina, and the Services to pad
Brady Quinn’s stats before traveling to
the Coliseum for the Trojans. Nine returnees from
last year’s underrated defense make the
Domers a threat for the National title.
#9 Louisville:
The Cardinals will make their run to foul up the
system by having every opportunity to go 12-0
and winning another very mediocre version of the
Big East. Louisville starts with warm-ups against
state rival Kentucky and Temple before taking
on the Hurricanes at Papa John. They also get
10 days to prepare for only real conference test
West Virginia who they also get at home. Cards
are decked with pro prospects Michael Bush, Brian
Brohm, and super-soph WR Mario Urrutia. Like Utah
two years ago, this team could be the fly in the
ointment.
#10 California:
Every year several pre-season publications seem
to settle on one reach that pretty much serves
as the media flavor of the year. In 2006, the
Golden Bear’s apparently fit the bill. The
hype centers around junior RB Marshawn Lynch who
rushed for 1874 yards at 7.0 ypc and still grabbed
34 passes for eight yards per pop. If the Bears
knock off the Vols on the road in their opener,
they still must win at USC and at Arizona in November.
California could be playing in the Vegas Bowl
or on New Year’s Day.
Jeff Allen is a documented member of The Professional
Handicappers League.
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