College football has undergone some radical changes in the past decade, but
none that have loomed larger than the creation of the BCS and subsequent
reconfiguration of the big six conferences. The end result for VT was an oft
coveted, yet seemingly impossible, bid to the ACC. With the addition of Miami,
VT and eventually BC, the ACC suddenly looks to be at worst one of the top three
football conferences in the country and arguably the best.
While both Miami and FSU still deserve to be regarded as perennial favorites
because of their overabundance of talent, the conference is legitimately nine
deep this year with quality teams. That makes it foolhardy for anyone to attempt
to predict accurately the outcome. So, here I go:
1. MIAMI
Until they lose a conference crown –whatever conference they are in – I’m
putting Miami first in the preseason. The fact that they’ve beaten FSU the
last five years and get the Noles at the Orange Bowl makes me feel a little more
confident about the prediction.
Areas of Strength: Umm, talent. Nineteen first round NFL draft picks in
the last four years suggests the Canes know how to reload. As for specific
strengths, I think the defensive line with Orien Harris and Baraka Atkins, among
others, will be terrific. The offensive line will also be very good, and I
expect the young wide receivers to play better than they did last year.
Areas of Concern: At quarterback, Brock Berlin did not get it done last
year, and he’ll be battling hotshot redshirt freshman Kyle Wright if he doesn’t
play better this fall. At linebacker, while Leon Williams and Roger McIntosh
will be solid, all of the other prospects here are young and there has to be
some concern over two true freshmen possibly figuring in for substantial playing
time (Willie Williams and James Bryant). They will really miss Jon Vilma and D.J.
Williams.
Key Game: At Virginia. I know, you think I should be committed right now.
However, the Canes can lose to FSU on September 6th and still bounce back for a
BCS bid. I really think traveling to Charlottesville against a talented UVa team
with nothing to lose, on the heels of a tough game with Clemson, will be tough
for Miami.
Fearless Predictions: Tyrone Moss will win the starting tailback job
ahead of Frank Gore. I thought Gore was going to be the next truly great Miami
back, and I still hope it happens, but two knee surgeries likely will ensure
that he doesn’t become the back he otherwise would have been. Eric Winston and
Orien Harris both turn pro early and are first round picks. After cracking the
two deep, Willie Williams takes Donna Shalala out for a lobster dinner.
2. FLORIDA STATE
Bird's-Eye View: On paper, they should be the favorite. They have the
most overall experienced talent, an offense that is scary on paper and young
studs on defense just waiting to emerge, like A.J. Nicholson, Ernie Sims,
Antonio Cromartie.
Areas of Strength: The offensive line and the running backs. Alex Barron,
David Castillo and Ray Willis all could be all conference up front, and Leon
Washington and Lorenzo Booker are scary talents at tailback. Throw in tough guy
B.J. Dean at fullback, and the makes for a great running game are all there. The
secondary is deep and talented.
Areas of Concern: I’m just not sold on Chris Rix. He has great talent,
but he seems to make a couple of killer mistakes in the key games. He needs to
utilize running backs Booker and Washington as safety valves, as they provide
electricity that hasn’t been around Tallahassee since Warrick Dunn left. They
can, and probably should, beat the Canes but they have to prove it.
Key Game: At Miami. If FSU can win, they will be firmly in the driver’s
seat for the conference crown.
Fearless Predictions: While FSU only returns one starter among their
front seven, the group will be better by the end of the year than last year’s
group. Nicholson and Sims will both have strong seasons. FSU has struggled with
NC State in recent years, but this year they take care of the Pack in Raleigh
comfortably. After losing to Miami again, Papa Bowden offers to trade Rix to
Tommy for Charlie Whitehurst and a batch of Mom’s cookies. Tommy holds out for
a kicker too.
3. VIRGINIA
Bird's-Eye View: This is the year Cav fans have been pointing towards
ever since Al Groh landed his superstar 2002 recruiting class. He has a whole
lot of experience and talent returning and the Wahoos deserve this ranking. If
they have another five loss season, however, questions about the staff will
emerge.
Areas of Strength: This is the best front seven in the ACC as six
starters return. Canty, Blackstock, Brooks and Parham all have bright NFL
futures. Hoffman and Schmidt are solid players too. The offensive line also
should be a strength as all five starters return and finally have enough
experience to be able to control the line of scrimmage. Lundy, Pearman and
Michael Johnson are a solid tailback trio. Heath Miller is the best pass
catching tight end in the country.
Areas of Concern: Can Marques Hagans be effective in a UVa system that
has tended to be a drop back style? While the Cavs will use more bootleg action
and roll outs, it will be tough for Hagans at 5’10” to make a lot of the
traditional throws. The secondary has some talented athletes, but most are
unproven. Safety in particular remains a concern, although Tony Franklin looks
to have a bright future. Wide receiver also is a question mark going into the
year.
Key Game: Home versus Maryland. With northern Virginia and D.C. a fertile
recruiting ground, this game takes on extra significance. Maryland is the rising
ACC power, and both the Cavs and the Hokies need to flex their muscles or risk
losing some key regional recruits.
Fearless Predictions: UVa will have more players taken in the first two
rounds of the next NFL draft than Miami as Brooks, Miller, and Blackstock decide
to depart early and join Canty and Elton Brown in the blue chip rounds. Hagans
gets benched at least once by Groh during the season because of inconsistent
pocket passing. The Hoos beat one of the big two, but lose one they shouldn’t
in conference this year to prevent them from making a run to the top. And,
finally, Al Groh decides to challenge Bobby Fischer to an exhibition chess match
but is upset with the way the media characterizes Bobby so he refuses to talk to
them after checkmate.
4. MARYLAND
Bird's-Eye View: The antithesis of FSU. You look at their roster, and
they shouldn’t be this high. The only have eight starters back, one true
offensive weapon and are going to be playing a lot of sophomores and freshmen.
But they have the Fridge and his 31-8 career record speaks for itself.
Areas of Strength: The Terps do a great job executing on the fly and that’s
a tribute both to the coaching and the players. Few coaches have so many
formation and plays that are run out of different blocking schemes (zone, man,
traps, etc.). Personnel wise, the Terps are solid at tailback with Josh Allen
and former OSU recruit Sammy Maldonado. The Terps probably have the best special
teams in the conference.
Areas of Concern: Are the Terps really at the point where they can
reload? They lost a lot of experience and are young at some key places,
particularly at quarterback and in the secondary.
Key Game: At Virginia Tech. VT, in my opinion, has slightly more talent
and more experience than the Terps. They also have the home field. However, the
last coach that was this sophisticated on offense, Walt Harris, owned the Hokie
D. This would be a big win for Maryland with no Miami on the schedule, so expect
the Fridge to pull out the kitchen sink. This game also could have some
recruiting implications with a significant number of key VT targets in the state
of Maryland this year.
Fearless Predictions: True freshman Jordan Steffy will be starting for
the Terps before the leaves change this fall. Two other youngsters to watch are
Wes Jefferson at linebacker and Vernon Davis at tight end. Maryland will beat
West Virginia – again. Ralph Freidgen will lose at least one recruit because
he demands a commitment prior to offering a scholarship.
5. VIRGINIA TECH
Bird's-Eye View: This is a big homer pick, and I’ll be the first to
admit it. VT probably has as good a shot at staying home during the bowl season
as finishing fifth, but I just have a feeling that the new team chemistry will
matter. In order for VT to finish this highly, they need to have some key guys
stay healthy and have a lot of young players whose production matches their
hype.
Areas of Strength: A favorable conference schedule that doesn’t require
VT to play either FSU or Clemson, and brings similarly situated programs UVa,
Maylrand and N.C. State to Blacksburg. Three of VT’s four conference road
games are against three of the worst teams in most preseason polls (GT, Wake and
UNC). The offensive line should be strong for the Hokies, and I think the
defensive backfield will surprise. Once everyone is healthy and back from
suspension, the running game will be strong.
Areas of Concern: Major depth problems exist at quarterback, offensive
tackle, defensive end and rover. Injuries abound in the preseason, and this is
an inexperienced team that can’t afford to have key players lose reps.
Defensive tackle may be the key to the entire defense this year. It is put up or
shut up time for some of the experienced talent there. Special teams,
particularly kicking, must improve or VT will lose a couple of games it shouldn’t.
Key Game: Home versus N.C. State. This is almost a must win for VT. The
Pack has talent, but they will have an inexperienced quarterback and the Hokies
are at home. A win here is a springboard to bigger and better things and puts
the team into a positive mindset going into a stretch with West Virginia and a
tougher than you think Wake Forest team. We already know the late season slate
is tough, but a slump in the middle of the year would be devastating.
Fearless Predictions: VT will beat the Cavs in Lane in late November, but
will lose conference games at Miami, versus Maryland and at Georgia Tech. Bryan
Randall will have a really solid year as the starting spot is his alone. Eddie
Royal will have two touchdowns on returns this fall and show flashes of
brilliance. Despite looking desperately, Frank can’t find Helen to distract
the men of Troy and the Hokies get roughed up in the opener by USC.
6. CLEMSON
Bird's-Eye View: Everyone loves the Tigers as the team on the rise after
their finish last year, but I have some doubts. The no huddle has its benefits,
particularly with a very good veteran QB, but Tommy Boy makes things tougher on
his defense by passing so much.
Areas of Strength: The best quarterback in the conference and perhaps the
best secondary (4 returning starters) are a good place to start. The defensive
system is predicated on eight in the box so the Tigers likely will be strong
against the run even with some inexperience in the front seven. In my opinion,
they probably have the fourth most talent in the ACC.
Areas of weakness. Ugh, look at their schedule: they are the only team to go
to Miami and Florida State, and they visit the Cavs too. Somebody at the league
office doesn’t like them. It’s not that hard to see them at 4-4 in
conference despite having that talent. I’m also not sold on their coaching, as
I think they have a shot to pull at least one defeat from the jaws of victory.
Key Game: At Virginia. Clemson thinks they can challenge the big two, but
I think the game at Virginia will determine their season. I don’t think they’ll
catch the Noles napping after last season’s beat down, and UM will be primed
to smack Whitehurst in November. So, Virginia could be the game that determines
whether this is a Gator Bowl year, or whether the Tigers are in scenic Boise for
the Humanitarian.
Fearless Predictions: Justin Miller will show DeAngelo Hall flashes, both
good and bad, this fall. He will emerge as a great return guy. Whitehurst will
live up to his advanced billing. Jamal Fudge will have 140 plus tackles from
strong safety this year as he crowds the box and comes off the corner. The
Tigers will go as their d-line goes, and it will disappoint. Tommy won’t feel
too secure by the end of the season, but he’ll have four million reasons to
stay in place next fall (that’s the amount of his buyout).
7. NC STATE
Bird's-Eye View: Perhaps the biggest wild card in the entire ACC race,
but most seem to think (and I agree) that the loss of Philip Rivers will really
sting. Rivers was probably the most accurate quarterback in college football
last year, and his touch enabled the Pack to use a short passing game as an
extended running play. T.A. McClendon benefited greatly. That won’t be the
case this year.
Areas of Strength: Four returning starters on the offensive line, along
with a strong tight end and McClendon should make this a potent running attack.
On defense the linebackers are talented, led by Pat Thomas on the weakside, and
the secondary has three of four starters back led by Andre Maddox.
Areas of Concern: Quarterback has to head the list. The loss of Rivers is
huge, and the Pack will miss wide receiver Jerricho Cotchery as well. The guys
up front on the defensive line have some talent, but they are green. A pass rush
will need to come from rising star DE Mario Williams.
Key Game: At Wake Forest. The Pack will be coming off games back to back
against Ohio State and in Blacksburg, so the Demon Deacons may sneak up on them.
You know Jim Grobe will have his guys ready to play, and that could be a tough
game to win.
Fearless Predictions: Marcus Stone will beat out Jay Davis for the
starting quarterback job because of superior arm strength. McClendon won’t
have a great year, but will jump to the NFL anyway because he feels a bevy of
good young backs (Darrell Blackman, Bobby Washington) coming up through the
ranks. Tramain Hall will be the best receiver, but Richard Washington will show
everyone why he was a highly touted recruit out of Florida. Chuck Amato will
decide to go shirtless for at least one conference game before getting
reprimanded by John Swofford.
8. GEORGIA TECH
Bird's-Eye View: This is a team with some big name players and a lot of
holes and depth issues. Jon Tenuta is rightfully the coordinator du jour in the
conference, but the team’s success will rest on the shoulders of sophomore
quarterback Reggie Ball.
Areas of Strength: This is a team that has some playmakers. P.J. Daniels
was the leading rusher in the conference and three offensive line starters
return. On defense, Eric Henderson and Travis Parker are outside pass rushers
and Mansfield Wrotto controls the inside for an underrated defensive line.
Wrotto is only a sophomore but he could be really good. The secondary is led by
NFL player in waiting James Butler. Blue chip incoming freshman wide receiver
Calvin Johnson could be a the answer to upgrading the passing game.
Areas of Concern: Ball has proven he is capable of playing at an ACC
level competently. He now has to take the next step and prove that he is capable
of winning games, not merely managing them. There is a whole lot of inexperience
in the passing game generally, and the early departure of left (blind side)
tackle Nat Dorsey is a concern.
Key Game: Home versus Virginia Tech. This is a year where things could go
either way in Blacksburg, and it’s not easy going to Atlanta and getting a
win. Ask the Hoos. Georgia Tech needs this one, though, with games at Clemson
and Maryland and against Miami in their first five.
Fearless Predictions: P.J. Daniels won’t finish in the top three in
rushing in the conference this year, although he’ll still break 1,000 yards.
Depth along the defensive line will come from at least two true freshmen playing
which bodes well for the future, not so well for today. Chan Gailey will gain
another year of NFL experience just by coaching against Al Groh.
9. WAKE FOREST
Bird's-Eye View: The job Jim Grobe has done at Wake is miraculous. He
inherited a program that was dead in the water and has them 18-18 over the last
three years (by comparison, Al Groh is 22-17 and John Bunting is 13-24). Wake
has acquired some nice pieces, but still suffered a significant talent gap from
most of the teams in the conference.
Areas of Strength: Grobe’s precise option attack eats up undisciplined
teams, and he’s got a terrific tailback in Chris Barclay and a seriously
underrated weapon on the outside in Jason Anderson. Cory Randolph has experience
at quarterback.
Areas of Concern: The front seven has gotten pushed around a lot in the
running game and hasn’t consistently pass rushed well either. There is finally
some depth up front (particularly in the d-line) so improvement might be on the
way. The secondary isn’t that bad with three starters back, but it’s tough
to cover without a pass rush.
Key Game: Home versus Boston College. The Eagles, a future conference
foe, were beaten at home last year by Wake, and Wake really could use a win here
going into a stretch at State, versus VT and versus FSU. Dropping those four
games would eliminate a bowl game from contention.
Fearless Predictions: Jason Anderson will make as many big plays for his
team as any wide receiver not playing in Florida. Redshirt freshman Ben Mauk,
who rewrote the Ohio High School record books, will take a lot of time for
Randolph giving Grobe a two headed monster at QB (Randolph as the mobile QB,
Mauk as the pocket passer). The defense will be slightly better, but the
increased competition in conference will keep Wake from bowling. Grobe will
place at least one call to Skip Prosser to see if Eric Williams is interested in
playing left tackle.
10. NORTH CAROLINA
Bird's-Eye View: This program is really the sleeping giant in ACC
football. It has a huge alumni base, very good academics, great facilities,
terrific all around success in sports, and it’s close to fertile recruiting
grounds (including Tidewater). The program has also been laconic, if not
downright comatose, for the past two years compiling a 5-19 record. The hot seat
for John Bunting couldn’t be any hotter.
Areas of Strength: Darian Durant is an experienced leader who has a very
good group of wideouts including Derrele Mitchell, Jarwarski Pollock, Adarius
Bowman and Jesse Holley. Ronnie McGill showed signs of being a solid tailback
last year as a freshman.
Areas of weakness: Defense is the problem, plain and simple. There simply are
not enough playmakers, particularly in the secondary, for this unit to be solid.
The linebackers are all big, but perhaps not as mobile as they should be. Expect
the Hargrave contingent, particularly Khalif Mitchell, to play early and often.
Key Game: Georgia Tech at home. Bunting needs to be bowl eligible to
survive, and this is a winnable game at home early in the year. The Heels need
this one to make sure the team doesn’t tune out the staff.
Fearless Predictions: Bunting will be looking for work next year, but
Steve Spurrier will not be his replacement. Former VT coach and current UNC
offensive coordinator Gary Tranquill will land a QB coaching job elsewhere.
Freshman kicker Connor Barth will be a highlight in an otherwise dreary season.
More Hokie fans will turn out for November 6th game than UNC fans (and those
there will be asking about whether the Blue or White should be favored in the
Heels preseason b-ball scrimmages).
11. DUKE
Bird's-Eye View: I have no idea if Ted Roof will ultimately get the job
done at Duke, but you have to love his approach. He took over the team for the
last five games and led them to conference wins over Georgia Tech and UNC. He
generally lit a fire under his players, and has vowed increased competition. He
has carried that attitude on the recruiting trail as well, as Roof landed nine
kids from Georgia, his home state, and has shown no intention of backing down
when the big boys are after a player he wants.
Areas of Strength: The quarterback position has three possibilities, all
who have some talent but bring something different to the table. QB Mike
Schneider is a drop back passer who has some talent, but senior Chris Dapolito
protects the ball better and is more mobile. Also factoring into the equation is
Nebraska transfer Curt Dukes, a kid talented enough to have a final three of the
Huskers, PSU and VT out of high school. Duke uses a lot of two tight end sets
and Andy Roland and Ben Patrick are both very good.
Areas of Concern: Duke lost four starters from its offensive line, and
the growing pains will be felt. On defense, there is a lot of experience back
but not many playmakers other than solid pass rusher Patrick Alexander.
Key Game: At UConn. The Blue Devils still have a ways to go to compete
with in the ACC, but UConn is a solid program with a very good quarterback. The
out of conference slate is beefed up this year, so winning that game will be
imperative if Duke wants to match last season’s win total of four.
Fearless Predictions: Cedric Dargan will emerge from the shadow of Chris
Douglas and break the 1,000 yard barrier as Roof emphasizes establishing the
run. Curt Dukes makes an impact for the Blue Devils, but in a slash role where
he plays a lot of wingback. After getting bounced in the first round of the NBA
playoffs, the Lakers call Roof to see if he’s interested in coaching Kobe.