Updated: August 22, 2007, 9:08 AM ET
Trojans sit atop preseason Power 16
7. Virginia Tech | 8. Florida | 9. Louisville |10. Wisconsin | 11. Georgia
12. Ohio State | 13. Penn State | 14. Cal | 15. Florida State | 16. Auburn
1. USC Trojans Last season: 11-2, 7-2 in Pac-10
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseWary of his young wideouts, QB John David Booty will turn to TE Fred Davis a lot. Smart move: Davis flat-out knows how to play the game. Expect him to far outpace his 38 catches for 352 yards from 2006. Bill Curry on Run Offense
Nine good but inexperienced backs, and a very capable QB calling plays. No one's better than Booty at ditching bad pass plays and calling the right run. Look for senior Chauncey Washington to break out of the pack. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
Safety Taylor Mays is a throwback-type who eliminates the middle of the field, and corners Terrell Thomas and Cary Harris do a good job of funneling passes inside for him to clean up. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
This unit led the Pac-10 in total defense (295.8 ypg) and is as good as there is in college football. MLB Rey Maualuga is the boss. He can hit and has incredible balance shedding blockers. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
PR Desmond Reed has the physical skills -- elusiveness and raw speed -- to be dangerous, but he has to do better than 2006's 5.4 ypr. Jim Donnan on Coaching
Carroll is the nation's best at generating lost-yardage plays on D and using motions and shifts to set up favorable mismatches on O. Brad Edwards on Schedule
Even if USC suffers an early loss, its loaded Pac-10 sked will help vault it up the polls with every win. The game versus Cal, as usual, will decide the conference title and could determine one of the BCS title game contestants as well.
2. LSU Tigers Last season: 11-2, 6-2 in SEC
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffensePeople are calling QB Matt Flynn a rookie, but he has appeared in 38 games. He's ready. I love WR Early Doucet. He used to be all speed, but now he's a savvy route runner. Bill Curry on Run Offense
As impressive a runner as Keiland Williams is -- and he is very impressive -- LSU has to figure out how to work FB Jacob Hester into the offense, too. He isn't a game-breaker, but he is a hard-nosed bruiser. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
Even with FS LaRon Landry gone, this may be the nation's best pass defense. CB Chevis Jackson is just the kind of player D-coordinator Bo Pelini loves. He can stick Jackson on an opponent's best wideout, then call all those zone blitzes he lives for. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
Glenn Dorsey is a stud at DT. He's so disruptive, and not just with all those TFLs. His knack for pushing the pocket into the backfield lays it all out for DE Tyson Jackson to get the sacks. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
No doubt, Doucet is one of the best receivers in the country. He may be too good: Don't be surprised if LSU stops having him return kicks before too long. Jim Donnan on Coaching
Pelini is a future head coach. His D will gamble, but they cover their butts, too. New O-coordinator Gary Crowton is going to have to mesh his finesse approach with head coach Les Miles' pound it mentality. Brad Edwards on Schedule
This has to be the nation's top season ticket, with home games against Virginia Tech, South Carolina, Florida, Auburn and Arkansas. No matter what anyone says, there's no reason to think Flynn won't be able to win right away, even against a defense like Virginia Tech's.
3. Texas Longhorns Last season: 10-3, 6-2 in Big 12
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseColt McCoy has the head, body and arm (29 TDs, 7 INTs). Add WRs Limas Sweed and Quan Cosby, and you have maybe the nation's top pass offense. Bill Curry on Run Offense
There's lots of work to be done on the offensive line, and RB Jamaal Charles isn't a push-the-pile kind of runner. But if they can get him to the outside, he'll eat up yardage. With his speed, he just turns the corner and is gone. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
The secondary can't give up another 21 TD passes this season. CBs Deon Beasley and Brandon Foster are just okay, but they do a good job of playing off receivers and coming up to make stops. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
DT Frank Okam is, simply put, a pain in the neck to block. It's tough to run against him because he pushes into the backfield on every play. Pair him with Lokey, and you wonder how anyone gains anything on the ground against this D. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
Texas emphasizes special teams as much as Virginia Tech does, and that says a lot. The Horns have averaged four blocked punts per season over the past six. Cosby is a valuable wideout, but UT is smart to put him with the return teams, too. Getting him extra touches will pay off. Jim Donnan on Coaching
This is a first-class staff, and Brown is an underrated talent developer. But UT's recent rise comes down to recruiting. And Brown deserves all the credit for that. He, not an assistant, makes most of the calls and sweet-talks the moms. Brad Edwards on Schedule
The offensive weaponry is there to run the table. Obviously, the OU game is the Everest. But Texas A&M looks like a trap game; the Aggies gave UT fits last year, and the Horns could already be thinking about the Big 12 title game.
4. West Virginia Mountaineers Last season: 11-2, 5-2 in Big East
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffensePatrick White is one of the best players in the country, and not just because of his running (101.6 ypg last year). He's always had a big arm, but his accuracy last season (65.9 percent) gets overlooked. He'll hook up a lot with WR Darius Reynaud, who's emerged as a major deep threat. Bill Curry on Run Offense
White and RB Steve Slaton (134.2 ypg last season) eat up the chains on the ground, but FB Owen Schmitt, the best fullback of this century, sets the table for a terrific rushing attack. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
CBs Antonio Lewis and Vaughn Rivers will do. FS Eric Wicks will do everything and more. He's already solid covering short inside routes. Now he has to dedicate himself to improving the Eers' awful deep-ball coverage. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
Here's the game plan: The 3-3-5 D hems in runners, then safety Wicks -- a tough, physical tackler -- cleans up the mess. Works for us, and for WVU: The Mountaineers' Big East-best run D allowed only 93.3 rushing ypg. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
Call freshman Noel Devine The Transformer. This game-buster from North Fort Myers (Fla.) High is the kind of kid who can remake a game on returns. Opposing teams should think twice before scoring. Jim Donnan on Coaching
Rodriguez is a master of the spread offense; nobody balances finesse and power better. On defense, he and his staff really believe that the 3-3-5 defensive scheme is the answer. It'd better be, because last year's No. 109 pass D (243.3 ypg) raised a lot of questions. Brad Edwards on Schedule
Everybody knows WVU has to beat Rutgers and Louisville. But the Maryland game is pivotal. The Eers need to win, then have the Terps put together a good year. Otherwise, it's just another case of a Big East team playing an unfriendly BCS formula nonconference schedule.
5. Michigan Wolverines Last season: 11-2, 7-1 in Big Ten
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseJunior WR Mario Manningham (65 career catches for 1,136 yards) has become one of college football's few real go-to guys. He has great speed and leaping ability, but his best attribute is how badly he wants the football. He goes up and gets it. Bill Curry on Run Offense
Hart's career numbers are staggering: 3,679 rushing yards, 111.5 ypg, 29 total TDs. But it's even more staggering that he's lost one fumble -- one! -- in his UM career. He's as reliable as college RBs come. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
UM coaches are desperate for the team to get faster in the secondary. Freshman CB Donovan Warren will get a serious look because of his raw speed, and FS Stevie Brown was a 100- and 200-meter guy in high school. Brown has only 14 career tackles. But he can fly. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
OLB Shawn Crable is a big, athletic kid who can drop into coverage or stuff the run. He really played with a mean streak down the stretch last year and finished with 10.5 TFLs. SS Jamar Adams (47 tackles) isn't great in coverage, but he hits like an LB. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
KR/PR Steve Breaston's departure really stings. His replacement, Johnny Sears (89 return yards in '06), has similar physical skills but doesn't find seams like Breaston did. Jim Donnan on Coaching
Lloyd Carr gets a bum rap because he's struggled with Ohio State (1-5 against Jim Tressel) and lost his past four bowl games. But he deserves credit for knowing when to shake up his staff, like when he promoted Ron English to defensive coordinator last year. Brad Edwards on Schedule
Everybody knows the importance of the Ohio State game. But if everything goes right early for the Wolverines, their season begins at Wisconsin. A win probably vaults Michigan to No. 1 leading up to Ohio State. Then we could have another Game of the Century.
6. Oklahoma SoonersLast season: 11-3, 7-1 in Big 12
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseNo one is sure what OU will get with either Joey Halzle or Sam Bradford under center. But book this: The passing offense will get by. The wideouts will make sure of it. Malcolm Kelly, in particular, is not only big (6'4", 217) and very physical, he also has terrific hands and speed. Bill Curry on Run Offense
Patrick is potentially a great tailback. At 6 feet, 191, he's smaller than dearly departed Adrian Peterson, but he's just as fast (4.45 speed) and he's sturdier than his size suggests. The line returns nine of the two-deep top 10, so the run-blocking will be ferocious again. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
Reggie Smith is a classic CB/safety tweener. He's a little too aggressive to play corner but not quite big enough (6'1", 197) for safety. Still, he is a really nice problem to have. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
You know what the most important factor in honing OU's run D will be? Its offensive line. Just wait until young, talented kids like DT DeMarcus Granger, a 6'3", 300-pound soph who can collapse pockets, get some reps against the first-team blockers. By Week 10, they'll be tough. Believe it. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
Smith is a stud return man (7.8 ypr on punts, 22.6 ypr on kicks), but he'll split duties with WR Juaquin Iglesias. Better yet, Stoops, an underrated special-teams mind, should give Smith one job and Iglesias the other, to give each player a break. The Sooners can't afford either guy getting hurt. Jim Donnan on Coaching
At 86-19 for his career, Stoops is obviously one of those very successful coaches who came from a defensive background. But the Sooners did bite a bit too hard on play-action last season, and what about that No. 41 pass D (188.4 ypg)? Brad Edwards on Schedule
Sure, OU has to beat Miami, and taking down Texas goes without saying. But playing at Texas Tech is never fun, with that unorthodox offense and wild crowd, and this time it could be a real trap game. Stoops will be glad to skip out of Lubbock with one more point than the Red Raiders.
7. Virginia Tech HokiesLast season: 10-3, 6-2 in ACC
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseVa. Tech has top-tier wideouts. Possession guy Josh Morgan is steady (33 catches, 448 yards), bullet-quick Eddie Royal is spectacular (31, 497) and Justin Harper (6'4", 214) is a handful. But someone has to get them the ball. Another 11 TD/11 INT season from QB Sean Glennon won't cut it. Bill Curry on Run Offense
On a gimpy ankle, RB Branden Ore ran for 1,137 yards and 16 TDs last season. Healthy, he may rewrite the record book. Beamer actually trusts Glennon to run this team and is impressed by how his QB always audibles to the right play. Which usually means handing it to Ore. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
This is a terrific secondary. Corners Brandon Flowers and Victor Harris are technically sound cover guys. Both are exceptional finishers (85 combined stops) and catch the ball if they get their hands on it. Expect them to top last season's seven combined picks. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
Xavier Adibi and Vince Hall are the best LB duo in the country. Hall is the plugger (128 tackles) and Adibi is the playmaker (3 INTs, three forced fumbles). Desmond Howard on Special Teams
News flash: The Hokies are beasts on special teams. Boring? Okay, how about this? KR/PR Royal can blow open a game all by himself (735 return yards, 1 TD). He's such a dangerous weapon, he's bound to get even more snaps at wide receiver as well. Jim Donnan on Coaching
One thing we know about Beamer: His team will always play rugged D. He's the best at recruiting talented kids who aren't afraid to mix it up. No team gets the better of Va. Tech for very long. And in the wake of the tragic shooting, Beamer's staff won't let the team's emotions run away from them. Brad Edwards on Schedule
Realistically, Va. Tech could lose a close one to LSU and still play for the BCS title. That makes the Hokies' game at Clemson the pivotal one of the season. The Hokies should be 4-1 by then, and facing a team they hammered 24-7 last year. Win that one, and they can easily run the table.
8. Florida GatorsLast season: 13-1, 7-1 in SEC
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseJust because we saw so little of it last season, don't think Tebow has no arm. His nearly 10,000 aerial yards at Ponte Vedra Nease High is testament enough. But with do-it-all WR Percy Harvin (5 TDs), he won't have to force the action. Note to Tim (with apologies to Nike): Just dump it. Bill Curry on Run Offense
Junior RB Kestahn Moore is steady, but if he has flashes of special, he's keeping them to himself. So Tebow will do his share of lugging it. The QB may not be Patrick White, but he could be Alex Smith with muscle, a physical (6'3", 235) runner who smells the first-down marker. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
Young CB Markus Manson, a former running back, will have to go from getting his licks in on special teams to manning up for 60 plays a game. Safety Tony Joiner is a steady tackler (59 stops), but he'll never be the first guy Meyer thinks of when he needs a lockdown. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
The Gators don't boast a great D. Of course, how great does it have to be? All it has to do is keep foes under 35 ppg. DE Derrick Harvey had 11 sacks, and that means he'll draw lots of double-teams, freeing raw LBs Brandon Spikes and Dustin Doe (37 combined stops). Desmond Howard on Special Teams
Brandon James gets a B+ on punts (11 ypr) and a C on kicks (18.2). UF needs big plays, but at 5'6", 181, his durability is an issue. So is his judgment: He'll miss the opener after a drug arrest. Jim Donnan on Coaching
Meyer recognizes his team's flaw -- the lack of a running game. Then again, who doesn't? But he's the only one who has to coach around it. His solution is to run a Utah-type spread behind Tebow, but it's tough to see how that is going to work given all the speedy SEC secondaries. Brad Edwards on Schedule
The Tennessee game is a huge early test. Tebow killed the Vols last year with runs in big spots, so expect them to stack the line to make him put it in the air. If he can't execute, film of that game will be more popular than "The Bourne Ultimatum" throughout the conference.
9. Louisville CardinalsLast season: 12-1, 6-1 in Big East
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseBrohm (3,049 passing yards) may be the best QB in the country, but it doesn't hurt that he has WRs Mario Urrutia and Harry Douglas shagging his tosses. At 6'6", 228, Urrutia is the physical one. Douglas, 5'11", 170, is the speed. He had 70 catches for 1,265 yards last season. Bill Curry on Run Offense
RBs George Stripling and Anthony Allen have game. Know what else they have? Only three starts between them. Good thing even a Pop Warner kid could run behind this Cardinals O-line. Center Eric Wood (25 straight starts) is a Rimington Award favorite. He's a terrific QB up front. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
Corner Rod Council is a solid cover guy who has learned to play man, and FS Latarrius Thomas plays like former UL star Kerry Rhodes. He just needs to pick better times to gamble. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
LBs Malik Jackson and Preston Smith had a combined 101 tackles last season; they're perfect for D-coordinator Mike Cassity, who schemes for pursuit. Yes, they're going to miss DT Amobi Okoye, but sophomore DE Peanut Whitehead looks like another future first-rounder. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
Carmody is the best kicker in the country, period. And in the high-scoring Big East, a last-possession kick could easily be the difference more than once. As for the return game well, don't expect Trent Guy (145 return yards last season) to bust one, and you won't be disappointed. Jim Donnan on Coaching
This is Steve Kragthorpe's chance of a lifetime: a stacked roster and a much bigger stage than he had at Tulsa. Of course, this is also the best group of foes he's ever faced. And what will the option-lover do with ace-chucker Brohm? Brad Edwards on Schedule
Louisville has two monster games: at West Virginia and a season-ender against Rutgers. A BCS run means sweeping both, but it may actually depend on beating NC State early, then hoping the Wolfpack can build a schedule-strengthening bowl season of their own.
10. Wisconsin BadgersLast season: 12-1, 7-1 in Big Ten
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseThe QB -- either Tyler Donovan or K-State transfer Allen Evridge -- will rely on Beckum, who's fast enough to stretch D's and tough enough to work the middle. Bill Curry on Run Offense
P.J. Hill ran for 1,569 yards as a frosh; now that he's trimmed down to 223 pounds, he'll be even quicker to find holes. He should have lots of them: The vet O-line returns nine of its top 10 players. So what's the call? Hand it to Hill. Repeat as necessary. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
Corner Jack Ikegwuonu has terrific feet, hip turns and anticipation. He'll need his whole skill set, as teams test sophomore safeties Shane Carter and Aubrey Pleasant with play-actions and misdirections. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
In spot duty last year, MLB Elijah Hodge got two sacks; he has big-play potential. Jonathan Casillas can tackle (83 stops) and run with receivers in nickel defense. DE Matt Shaughnessy isn't the most gifted athlete, but man, is he nasty. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
KR Josh Nettles (14.7 ypr) and PR Luke Swan (5 ypr) do only so much, but PK Taylor Mehlhaff does it all. He hit all 47 of his PATs and went 15-of-20 on FGs last season. In a close game, UW expects him to come through. Jim Donnan on Coaching
Bret Bielema made a risky move last year when he let go of a bunch of proven winners to build his own staff. UW is clearly his program, one that plays with atypical physicality (even for Madison), but can he squeeze a passing game from these QBs? Brad Edwards on Schedule
Wisconsin gets props, but not nearly as many as USC, Texas or Florida. So the Badgers have to work the room to sway pollsters. That makes Nov. 3 -- against host OSU -- huge. Maybe UW can afford a November loss. But not this one.
11. Georgia BulldogsLast season: 9-4, 4-4 in SEC
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseQB Matthew Stafford took his lumps (7 TDs, 13 INTs) last year as a freshman. But he has a big, accurate arm and surprising mobility. Question is: Who will be his safety valve? Senior Sean Bailey is speedy, but he has only 36 career catches and is coming off a knee injury. Bill Curry on Run Offense
The Dawgs have lots of backs but no stud. Kregg Lumpkin is a slasher, not a home run threat. And, while Thomas Brown can break into the secondary and run away from DBs, he's coming off a knee injury. No matter who's back there, Stafford is going to face stacked fronts. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
Asher Allen and Prince Miller are small (5'10" and 5'8", respectively) but scrappy CBs. They're fast enough to cover. Just not sure yet if they'll be able to tackle anyone. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
Both DTs -- 6'3", 292-pound Jeff Owens and 6'5", 315-pound Kade Weston -- command double-teams. That should allow new starting DEs Roderick Battle and Marcus Howard to work one-on-ones and become backfield pests. Combined, they had only 2 TFLs last year. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
Henderson can flat-out fly, and he's one of the few guys who can legitimately take it to the house at any time. Just have to wonder if a guy who's 5'10", 150 pounds and playing a bigger role on offense will hold up back there. Jim Donnan on Coaching
Mark Richt is a terrific special-teams coach, but he relies too much on field goals. And while he did an underrated job bringing along Stafford, he needs the QB to take a monster step in red zone efficiency this year. Brad Edwards on Schedule
A 2-0 start would vault Georgia toward the top of the polls, but the Tennessee game is huge. It's Georgia's first big SEC road test, and the Dawgs lost at home to the Vols last year, 51-33. Now they have to win in Knoxville.
12. Ohio State BuckeyesLast season: 12-1, 8-0 in Big Ten
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseJim Tressel will let QB Todd Boeckman throw. Well, safe passes, anyway. Then again, WRs Brian Robiskie and Ray Small turn safe passes into game-breakers (37 catches, 451 yards between them). They have Ginn-Gonzalez skills. It's time to put up Ginn-Gonzalez stats. Bill Curry on Run Offense
As usual, the O-line is a solid asset. LT Alex Boone (6'8", 325) is the best of the bulky bunch. Boeckman isn't mobile, so OSU loses the run threat from the QB position, but that just means more carries for soph RB Chris Wells. He could double last season's 576 yards and seven TDs. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
The Buckeyes excel in rugged man coverage. Future first-rounder CB Malcolm Jenkins is a 6'1", 202-pound bully (55 stops, four picks). He might be the most physical corner in the country. Donald Washington (6'1", 195) is a hitter too, with two forced fumbles and 41 tackles in 2006. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
DEs Gholston and Lawrence Wilson are run stoppers, and LBs James Laurinaitis and Freeman stuff everything else. Laurinaitis has great instincts, and he's going to get better; he's started only 13 games. Freeman, who ran the 100-meter relay in high school, has the tools to be a star too. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
KR/PR Small has the same lean build (6 feet, 175) and sprinter's speed as Ted Ginn Jr. But here's something he has that Ginn doesn't: exactly zero career returns. Jim Donnan on Coaching
No big revelation here: Tressel builds around defense and the kicking game. He recruits PKs harder than any other coach in the country. On offense, he's spread things out a lot lately, but he's a power guy at heart. He'll never stray too far from smashmouth. Brad Edwards on Schedule
The UM-OSU hype exists for a reason -- it's always a monster match. But watch for Illinois the week before. The Illini kept improving last season, including a tough 17-10 loss to OSU. They'll be just as ornery this time, and they lie in ambush between the Buckeyes' two biggest games.
13. Penn State Nittany LionsLast season: 9-4, 5-3 in Big Ten
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseNobody questions QB Anthony Morelli's ability; he has all the tools. He showed the whole bag in the Capital One Bowl win vs. Tennessee (14-for-25, 197 yards). This season his wingman will be steady senior Deon Butler. Butler may be only 5'10", 168, but he's a sure thing (48 catches, 637 yards). Bill Curry on Run Offense
Austin Scott is afflicted with the "potential" curse. This is the season he sheds it. At 6 feet, 222, with good speed, Scott could easily duplicate his career stats (1,021 yards, 10 TDs). One obstacle: The O-line has issues; it's not a good sign that JoePa signed two jucos to it. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
You have to love CB Justin King. He's a great athlete who can turn and run with anyone. And playing wideout earlier in his career has helped him understand how to cover. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
Dan Connor will move to middle linebacker, but that won't limit his big-play ability (113 tackles, nine TFLs). Dominant as he is, he could really use a couple of graybeards on the D-line. Only junior DE Josh Gaines, with nine career starts, has logged any serious PT. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
PSU will use dynamic playmakers Derrick Williams and A.J. Wallace on returns. It's called picking your poison: Williams is elusive and gets to his high gear as fast as any returner in the country. Wallace can just flat-out fly. Jim Donnan on Coaching
O-coordinator Galen Hall doesn't often get a lot of credit, but he deserves every bit of what he gets and more. The Lions lured a slew of speedy recruits after he took over the offense. But it's still JoePa's show, and he reminds everyone of that with his boot camp practices. Brad Edwards on Schedule
PSU really has only one big road game, and it's early, at Michigan. If the Lions are 3-0 at that point, a win in Ann Arbor would catapult the team into the top five and BCS title contention. Not so fast, though. Penn State is 0-8 against the Wolverines since 1997.
14. Cal Golden BearsLast season: 10-3, 7-2 in Pac-10
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseQB Nate Longshore ended his junior season by completing 19 of 24 passes for 235 yards and 1 TD against Texas A&M in the Holiday Bowl. Expectations are even greater this season. Bill Curry on Run Offense
He doesn't have Marshawn Lynch's talent, but RB Justin Forsett is capable. When Lynch got hurt against Oregon, Forsett gained 115 fourth-quarter yards in a 45-24 win. But even with All-Pac-10 C Alex Mack back on the O-line, Cal has to set up the run with the pass. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
Despite 21 picks, the pass D was bad last season. CB Syd'Quan Thompson is solid, but expect redshirt freshman Darian Hagan, the fastest corner Cal has, to play a lot. Safeties Bernard Hicks and Thomas DeCoud are physical, but coaches don't want them covering people. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
They have to shape the run D around Malele, who's almost impossible to move in the middle. That creates bubbles at the line so LBs Zack Follett and Worrell Williams can come up and make stops. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
Forsett is a steady kick returner, but don't expect to see him there for very long. Two reasons: He's too important in the offense to risk injury on special teams. And that DeSean Jackson guy. Jim Donnan on Coaching
This is really the only coaching staff that consistently has given USC trouble. Take a bow, Jeff Tedford. He's a terrific QB tutor and offensive schemer, which is why his O against Pete Carroll's D is college football's best head-to-head coaching matchup. Brad Edwards on Schedule
Last year, Tennessee ruined most of Cal's goals for the season. This game has been circled on Cal's schedule ever since. For a real chance at getting to the BCS title game, Cal has to win this one.
15. Florida State SeminolesLast season: 7-6, 3-5 in ACC
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseDrew Weatherford (23 starts) has an edge on Xavier Lee at QB. Whoever throws will try to find 6'6" junior WR Greg Carr, who has great hands in traffic (key stats: 12 TDs in 34 receptions). Bill Curry on Run Offense
FSU's run game has been horrible lately, despite a continuous string of marquee recruits. Junior Antone Smith is the latest blue-chipper who is expected to blow up. His speed and ability say he should. His 644 yards in two seasons indicates something different. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
CB Tony Carter is 5'9", 170, but he plays bigger; he can take out a receiver by himself. Soph SS Myron Rolle covers slot guys well and can tackle (77 stops), but as long as he plays a little tentatively, he'll never be the enforcer his game promises. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
DTs Fluellen and Paul Griffin are solid, but FSU needs them in the backfield on every down. Alex Boston is a handful too. He's played all four line positions, but now that he's settled in at DE, he might triple last season's six TFLs. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
KR Michael Ray Garvin could be a game-breaker. He averaged 22.6 ypr last season, with a long of 47. He may be only 5'8", 183 pounds, but he can fly: He ran a 10.21 100 for the Seminoles' track team. Jim Donnan on Coaching
This offseason, Bobby Bowden led a JoePa-like staff shake-up. Now we'll see if it spurs a PSU-like turnaround. The clock is ticking. How long before new O-coordinator Jimbo Fisher realizes he has much less to work with than he did at LSU? Brad Edwards on Schedule
This might be the toughest schedule in the country. In the season opener, Clemson replaces Miami, and that's not exactly an upgrade. But the killer is that Alabama game. The schedule says it's a home game, but FSU can count on little more than a 50-50 crowd in Jacksonville.
16. Auburn TigersLast season: 11-2, 6-2 in SEC
Let's Ask Bristol
Todd Blackledge on Pass OffenseWhen QB Brandon Cox is healthy, he's very good. He doesn't have a huge arm but completes 60 percent of his passes. He's a cerebral Leinart type. That is all he has to be with WRs like Rod Smith. Bill Curry on Run Offense
Despite an inexperienced O-line -- only LT King Dunlap is back -- Auburn will be solid on the ground. Sophomore RB Ben Tate is a big weapon, and Brad Lester is one of the few FBs who can bust long runs: He had a 21-yard TD run against Georgia last season. Rod Gilmore on Pass Defense
FS Aairon Savage goes after a lot of balls but had only one pick to show for it. Corners Jonathan Wilhite and Patrick Lee are small (5'11" and 6 feet respectively) and need to catch the balls they get their hands on. The team had only 10 picks all season. Chris Spielman on Run Defense
Groves broke through last year -- 11 TFLs -- but he'd better be ready for lots of double-teams. NG Josh Thompson and DE Sen'Derrick Marks have the ability to divert blockers away from Groves. They just need to use it. Desmond Howard on Special Teams
KR Tristan Davis, who averaged an SEC-leading 27 ypr last season, has the pure speed to always be a threat for six. But he's going to have an expanded role playing tailback. Look for steady PR Mario Fannin to field his share of kickoffs. Jim Donnan on Coaching
Tommy Tuberville really believes in running the ball and stopping the run, and he shows that in practice. Nobody runs more first-team O against first-team D, and that creates a seriously physical mind-set -- which the Tigers show every Saturday. Brad Edwards on Schedule
Of those four road SEC games, realistic fans have to hope for a split. The Tigers probably have to beat LSU to win the division and get to the SEC title game. If they don't, they're probably heading to the Capital One or Outback Bowl.
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