| FTBL USA Today/Coaches pre-season

planomateo

Member
Here it is.

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RANKTEAMRECORDPOINTSFIRST PLACE VOTESPREVIOUS RANK
1
Alabama
13-11545581
2
Ohio St.
12-014273NR
3
Oregon
12-1139702
4
Stanford
12-2126206
5
Georgia
12-2125004
6
Texas A&M
11-2121515
7
South Carolina
11-2113607
8
Clemson
11-2104709
9
Louisville
11-21010013
10
Florida
11-2930010
11
Notre Dame
12-187203
12
Florida St.
12-284408
13
LSU
10-3797012
14
Oklahoma St.
8-57260NR
15
Texas
9-4622018
16
Oklahoma
10-3620015
17
Michigan
8-55890NR
18
Nebraska
10-4426023
19
Boise St.
11-2420014
20
TCU
7-64000NR
21
UCLA
9-52020NR
22
Northwestern
10-3186016
23
Wisconsin
8-01720NR
24
USC
7-61650NR
25
Oregon St.
9-4135019
<dl class="poll"><dt style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration: underline;">Schools Dropped Out</dt><dd style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px;">No. 11 Kansas State (11-2), No. 17 Utah State (11-2), No. 20 Vanderbilt (9-4), No. 21 San Jose State (11-2), No. 22 Cincinnati (10-3), No. 24 Northern Illinois (12-2), No. 25 Tulsa (11-3).</dd><dt style="margin: 10px 0px 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration: underline;">Others Receiving Votes</dt><dd style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px;">Kansas State (11-2) 113; Miami (Fla.) 101; Michigan State 89; Baylor 80; Virginia Tech 65; Fresno State 62; Arizona State 51; Mississippi 32; Vanderbilt (9-4) 29; Utah State (11-2) 23; Brigham Young 20; North Carolina 19; Northern Illinois (12-2) 19; Tulsa (11-3) 9; Ohio 8; San Jose State (11-2) 8; Arizona 5; Cincinnati (10-3) 3; East Carolina 3; Kent State 3; Mississippi State 3; Washington 3; Central Florida 2; Arkansas 1; Arkansas State 1; Rutgers 1; Tennessee 1; Toledo 1.</dd><dt style="margin: 10px 0px 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration: underline;">List of Voters</dt><dd style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px;">The USA TODAY Sports Board of Coaches is made up of 62 head coaches at Bowl Subdivision schools. All are members of the American Football Coaches Association. The board for the 2013 season: David Bailiff, Rice; Frank Beamer, Virginia Tech; Tim Beckman, Illinois; Bret Bielema, Arkansas; Bill Blankenship, Tulsa; Terry Bowden, Akron; Art Briles, Baylor; Troy Calhoun, Air Force; Matt Campbell, Toledo; Rod Carey, Northern Illinois; Dave Christensen, Wyoming; Dave Clawson, Bowling Green; Larry Coker, Texas-San Antonio; David Cutcliffe, Duke; Mark Dantonio, Michigan State; Tim DeRuyter, Fresno State; Ron English, Eastern Michigan; Larry Fedora, North Carolina; Jimbo Fisher, Florida State; Kyle Flood, Rutgers; Dennis Franchione, Texas State; James Franklin, Vanderbilt; Al Golden, Miami (Fla.); Todd Graham, Arizona State; Jim Grobe, Wake Forest; Mike Gundy, Oklahoma State; Bryan Harsin, Arkansas State; Bobby Hauck, UNLV; Mark Helfrich, Oregon; Brady Hoke, Michigan; Dana Holgorsen, West Virginia; Doc Holliday, Marshall; Mark Hudspeth, Louisiana-Lafayette; Curtis Johnson, Tulane; Joey Jones, South Alabama; June Jones, Southern Methodist; Brian Kelly, Notre Dame; Jerry Kill, Minnesota; Kliff Kingsbury, Texas Tech; Mike Leach, Washington State; Rocky Long, San Diego State; Dan McCarney, North Texas; Bronco Mendenhall, Brigham Young; Urban Meyer, Ohio State; Les Miles, LSU; Ken Niumatalolo, Navy; George OLeary, Central Florida; Bo Pelini, Nebraska; Chris Petersen, Boise State; Mark Richt, Georgia; Mike Riley, Oregon State; Rich Rodriguez, Arizona; Nick Saban, Alabama; Steve Spurrier, South Carolina; Rick Stockstill, Middle Tennessee; Bob Stoops, Oklahoma; Charlie Strong, Louisville; Dabo Swinney, Clemson; Kevin Sumlin, Texas A&amp;amp;M; Don Treadwell, Miami (Ohio); Tommy Tuberville, Cincinnati; Kyle Whittingham, Utah. AFCA policy bars schools under major NCAA or conference sanctions from receiving votes.</dd></dl>

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If there aren't but 23 teams better than USC, then CFB is in trouble. If there aren't 9 better than UF, then it is in a heap of trouble.
 
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Some interesting and useless data :)



Via Paul Myerberg.

http://ftw.usatoday.com/2013/08/25-...eseason-usa-today-sports-top-25-coaches-poll/


[h=1]25 things to know about the preseason USA TODAY Sports Top 25 Coaches Poll[/h]The preseason USA TODAY Sports Top 25 Coaches Poll begins with Alabama, of course, winners of three of the last four national championships, and continues with Ohio State, which was ineligible for last season’s coaches poll due to NCAA sanctions. It’s an SEC party: No. 1 Alabama, No. 5 Georgia, No. 6 Texas A&M, No. 7 South Carolina and No. 10 Florida rank among the top 10, with No. 13 LSU close behind.
Then comes the Big Ten and Pac-12, with five teams apiece, followed by the Big 12 (four teams) and the ACC (two teams). The Mountain West Conference and American Athletic Conference have one team apiece. Then there’s No. 11 Notre Dame, of course.
Need a primer for the 2013 preseason coaches poll? We’re here to help. Because you’ve got a lot on your plate, here’s one thing to know about each team in the preseason top 25:
1. Alabama (2012 record: 13-1). The Crimson Tide are 50-0 since the start of the 2008 season when rushing for 150 or more yards.
2. Ohio State (2012 record: 12-0). Coach Urban Meyer is a combined 34-1 during his second seasons with a program (9-3 at Bowling Green in 2002, 12-0 at Utah in 2004 and 13-1 at Florida in 2006). The latter two teams reached a BCS bowl; the 2006 Gators won the national championship.
3. Oregon (2012 record: 12-1). New Oregon coach Mark Helfrich has not coached on the field (as opposed to upstairs in a coaching box) since the 1996 season, when he was the running backs coach at Southern Oregon.
4. Stanford (2012 record: 12-2). The Cardinal have come within one win of an appearance in the national championship game in two of the last three years (2010 and 2012).
5. Georgia (2012 record: 12-2). While the offense is elite, Georgia’s defense returns only four starters – only one along the defensive line and one in the secondary.
6. Texas A&M (2012 record: 11-2). This is where Johnny Manziel goes to school. Also, the Aggies return only 10 starters, the fewest of any team in the SEC.
7. South Carolina (2012 record: 11-2). The Gamecocks are 22-4 during the last two seasons. Carolina recently went six full seasons (1994-99) with a combined 23 wins.
8. Clemson (2012 record: 11-2). Clemson brings back seven starters on offense, including potential All-American picks in quarterback Tajh Boyd and wide receiver Sammy Watkins.
9. Louisville (2012 record: 11-2). Louisville might have a bulls-eye on its back due to the team’s standing as the undisputed American Athletic Conference favorite, but during American media day, coach Charlie Strong said this fact has only made his team hungrier. Clichés!
10. Florida (2012 record: 11-2). Before Florida’s loss to Louisville in early 2013, the last SEC team to lose the Sugar Bowl by double-digits won the national championship the following year – Alabama lost to Utah 31-17 in the 2009 Sugar Bowl and went undefeated a season later.

11. Notre Dame (2012 record: 12-1)
. The Irish will replace starting quarterback Everett Golson, sidelined for the 2013 season due to academic issues, with senior Tommy Rees, who brings 18 career starts into his final year.

12. Florida State (2012 record: 12-2). FSU will start a redshirt freshman quarterback, Jameis Winston, who has already drawn comparison to past program greats like Charlie Ward – a Heisman winner and national champion. (And a point guard for the Knicks.)
13. LSU (2012 record: 10-3). The Tigers have a new offensive coordinator in former Indiana coach and Baltimore Ravens assistant Cam Cameron. Also, Les Miles rappelled down a building earlier this summer.
14. Oklahoma State (2012 record: 8-5). Like LSU, the Cowboys have a new offensive coordinator. Todd Monken’s replacement is Mike Yurcich, the former coordinator at Division II Shippensburg. That’s in Pennsylvania, by the way.
15. Texas (2012 record: 9-4). The Longhorns have not won 10 or more games since 2009, marking the program’s longest such run since 1996-2000.
16. Oklahoma (2012 record: 10-3). OU coach Bob Stoops holds a career record of 99-23 during Big 12 play.
17. Michigan (2012 record: 8-5). The Wolverines will lean toward a more pro-style offense behind junior quarterback Devin Gardner, the team’s permanent replacement for Denard Robinson.
18. Nebraska (2012 record: 10-4). Last year’s defense allowed 214 points to UCLA, Ohio State, Wisconsin and Georgia, and only 172 points to the remaining 10 teams on its schedule.

19. Boise State (2012 record: 11-2). The Broncos are 51-2 under coach Chris Petersen when returning a starting quarterback. Guess what: Boise brings back its starter, Joe Southwick, in 2013.
20. TCU (2012 record: 7-6). The Horned Frogs’ offensive line is an even bigger question mark after all-conference left tackle Tayo Fabuluje left the program for “personal reasons.”
21. UCLA (2012 record: 9-5). The Bruins might have finished second nationally in total offensive plays last fall, but coach Jim Mora said last week he wants his offense to be dramatically quicker in 2013.
22. Northwestern (2012 record: 10-3). The Wildcats capped last season with the program’s first bowl win in more than 60 years.
23. Wisconsin (2012 record: 8-6). Despite serving as a backup to Montee Ball during the last three seasons, senior James White enters 2013 as the active career rushing leader among FBS running backs.
24. Southern California (2012 record: 7-6). The Trojans lost five of six games to end last season after opening the year ranked No. 1 in the Associated Press preseason poll. (USC was No. 3 in the preseason coaches poll.)
25. Oregon State (2012 record: 9-4). The Beavers have yet to officially name a starting quarterback between Sean Mannion and Cody Vaz, though coach Mike Riley said he has already made his decision.
 
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