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2016 Predictions Revisited
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Flashback: Summer of 2016.
Colorado was coming off of a 4-9 (1-8) campaign in 2015, the program’s tenth consecutive losing season.
Mike MacIntyre’s overall record in his first three years at Colorado: 10-27.
CU’s five-year record in Pac-12 conference play: 5-40.
With that backdrop, it was not surprising to see the preseason magazines predict Colorado to finish last in the Pac-12 South. After all, the Buffs had finished in the basement every year since joining the league, and had won all of two conference games since Mike MacIntyre moved to Boulder from San Jose.
Still, when Buff fans are perturbed that Colorado is not getting much love from the 2017 preseason magazines, it may give some solace to look back at what was being said about CU … before the Buffs went from worst-to-first in the Pac-12 South, winning ten games (you also might get a grin or two checking out the predictions for Oregon and UCLA … before they stumbled to 4-8 campaigns).
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Stassen compiles consensus from preseason magazines for the Pac-12 standings
From Stassen … Not a surprise, but Colorado is once again the consensus pick to finish last in the Pac-12 South. The Buffs are getting closer to 5th, or, better stated, the consensus is that Arizona is getting closer to the bottom.
There is no consensus as to the winner of the Pac-12 South, with USC and UCLA tied for first. In the Pac-12 North, Washington is the pick to unseat Stanford. Oregon, meanwhile, is picked to finish third this fall.
In the national race, Alabama is the choice to collect another national title, with Clemson and Oklahoma tied for second. Stanford and Washington were in a three-way tie for the No. 10 team in the nation (along with Baylor … pre-melt-down). USC was picked to be the No. 17 team in the country, with UCLA coming in at No. 19 and Oregon at No. 24.
Pacific 12
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Notes:
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Lindy’s Top 25 includes five teams from the Pac-12
1. Alabama … 2. Clemson … 3. Oklahoma … 4. Ohio State … 5. Baylor
6. Tennessee … 7. Michigan … 8. Florida State … 9. LSU
10. Stanford … Stanford is the most stable and trustworthy of the league contenders, but the balanced Pac-12 is the least likely of the Power-Five conferences to send a team to the College Football Playoff
11. Notre Dame … 12. Houston … 13. Ole Miss … 14. Louisville … 15. Iowa … 16. Oklahoma State
17. USC … We’ll trust that the Trojans have moved past all the coaching turmoil and a six-loss season in which they still managed to win the Pac-12 South
18. Georgia … 19. San Diego State … 20. TCU
21. Washington … No one has ever doubted Coach Pete’s coaching chops, and he has a chance to put together the Huskies’ best team and season since they won 11 games and went to the Rose Bowl under Rick Neuheisel in 2000
22. Michigan State
23. UCLA … The Bruins have the raw materials to be a perennial Top 25 team and needs to act like it. Beat USC and these gutty littles can take the South.
24. Oregon … The Ducks have the skill to thrive and win the North, but the safer course of action here is to put the Ducks’ D in prove-it mode.
25. North Carolina
The rest of the Pac-12:
26. Washington State
32. Utah
45. Arizona State
47. Arizona
64. California
71. Colorado
76. Oregon State
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Athlon – The Verdict
2016 Projection: 4-8, 2-7 Pac-12
Colorado is making progress under Mike MacIntyre, but the pressure is building on the fourth-year coach after he’s recorded only two Pac-12 wins in three seasons. However, the Buffaloes could be on the verge of a breakthrough after losing five games by eight points or fewer last year. Taking the next step in the win column will require improvement on both sides of the ball, but the offense is a bigger concern after averaging only 24.6 points per game in 2015. MacIntyre is hoping staff changes improve an offensive line that gave up 40 sacks last season. Colorado’s first bowl game since 2007 is within reach, but the schedule – the Buffs play at Stanford and Oregon from the North – could be too much to overcome.
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Rising Star … Wide receiver Kabion Ento is a junior college transfer who showed an ability to stretch the field in the spring, which should complement Shay Fields’ speed on the opposite side of the slot. Ento is expected to compete for a starting job.
Key Buffaloes …
– Sefo Liufau, QB … Few teams in the nation will have as much experience under center if Liufau is able to overcome his foot injury and play this fall.
– Chidobe Awuzie, CB … He can play any spot in the secondary and is the leader of the Buffs’ defense.
– Tedric Thompson, S … One of the most experienced safeties in the nation has recorded six interceptions over the past two seasons.
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Sporting News Pac-12 rankings
Pac-12 North
No. 11 – Washington – It’s been sixteen years since Washington’s last conference championship and an additional nine years since the Huskies won their only national title. An entire generation might not believe that there was a time that Washington – not Stanford, Oregon, or USC – was the premier program out west. Since Washington’s 2000 Rose Bowl season, the Huskies have had five coaches. One coach went 1-10 in his final season. Another went 0-12. At one point, Washington went seven years without going to a bowl game.
The Huskies, however, appear to be on the verge of returning to relevance, both in the league and nationally. Washington returns 17 starters from a young team that made easy work of the lesser opponents in 2015 and held its own in most of its losses.
No. 12 – Stanford – The Cardinal finished 8-5 in 2014, and the clock on the program’s reign as a national power seemed to be ticking in 2015. Stanford’s momentum changed as quickly as Christian McCaffrey could flip a field. The Cardinal shook off a season-opening loss to Northwestern and rounded into form as a College Football Playoff contender. A two-point loss to Oregon on November 14th prevented Stanford from earning that coveted postseason spot, but Stanford often looked like one of the four best teams in the country.
This will be a top-25 team again, but the new quarterback will have to be a quick study against a very difficult schedule.
No. 24 – Oregon – The Ducks are one season removed from winning the Pac-12, playing for the national championship and producing a Heisman winner. And yet Oregon seems to be a something of a crossroads. The Ducks went 9-4 last season, the first time since 2007 the program didn’t win ten games or more. A collapse in the Alamo Bowl prevented the Ducks from getting to the 10-win plateau, but also highlighted Oregon’s problems. The Ducks couldn’t hold a 31-point halftime lead against TCU as the Horned Frogs scored at will, winning 47-41 in overtime.
Unless the defense – which ranked 117th in the nation last season – shows significant improvement, Oregon could lose more ground in the tough Pac-12 North.
No. 30 – Washington State
No. 49 – California
No. 90 – Oregon State
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Pac-12 South
No. 15 – UCLA – Gone are the days when the Bruins should be satisfied with a decent bowl game. Jim Mora has won 37 games in his first four seasons as UCLA’s head coach. No other Bruins coach has won more than 29 games in his first four seasons. The Bruins have been ranked in the top 10 at least a week in each of the last three seasons, and reached the Pac-12 title game in the two seasons before that. UCLA has also been one of the more volatile teams in the country; it lost its final two games last season, by 19 to USC and by eight to 5-7 Nebraska in a bowl game.
Four consecutive top-20 recruiting classes – all in the top three in the Pac-12 – have closed the gap between UCLA and the rest of the league. It’s time for the Bruins to shine.
No. 23 – USC – Promoting Clay Helton from interim coach might not have been the splashy move some USC fans wanted, but his hire is a departure from Lane Kiffin and Steve Sarkisian. Like Kiffin and Sarkisian, Helton is a former offensive coordinator with plenty of familiarity with the USC landscape. Unlike his two predecessors, Helton has no direct ties to the Pete Carroll era, and lacks their California swagger … though he may not need it.
USC is hoping Helton will create some stability … With a brutal schedule, Helton may quickly learn that being the full-time coach isn’t as forgiving as being the interim guy.
No. 32 – Utah
No. 45 – Arizona State
No. 50 – Arizona
No. 61 – Colorado
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Associated Press preseason Top 25
The 2016 preseason AP Top 25 (first-place votes in parenthesis):
Others receiving votes: Miami, Texas A&M, Utah, Washington State, Boise State, San Diego State, Wisconsin, Auburn, Pittsburgh, Arkansas, Texas,Nebraska, Navy, Northwestern, Western Kentucky, South Florida, Toledo
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The Final 2016 Associated Press poll
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Others receiving votes: Kansas St. 83, Georgia Tech 47, Nebraska 38, W. Kentucky 32, Air Force 30, Pittsburgh 21, Boise St. 19, Iowa 14, Minnesota 12, Tulsa 10, BYU 9, Temple 8, Houston 8, North Carolina 8, Navy 1, Washington St. 1.
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Stuart
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2016 Predictions Revisited
—
Flashback: Summer of 2016.
Colorado was coming off of a 4-9 (1-8) campaign in 2015, the program’s tenth consecutive losing season.
Mike MacIntyre’s overall record in his first three years at Colorado: 10-27.
CU’s five-year record in Pac-12 conference play: 5-40.
With that backdrop, it was not surprising to see the preseason magazines predict Colorado to finish last in the Pac-12 South. After all, the Buffs had finished in the basement every year since joining the league, and had won all of two conference games since Mike MacIntyre moved to Boulder from San Jose.
Still, when Buff fans are perturbed that Colorado is not getting much love from the 2017 preseason magazines, it may give some solace to look back at what was being said about CU … before the Buffs went from worst-to-first in the Pac-12 South, winning ten games (you also might get a grin or two checking out the predictions for Oregon and UCLA … before they stumbled to 4-8 campaigns).
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Stassen compiles consensus from preseason magazines for the Pac-12 standings
From Stassen … Not a surprise, but Colorado is once again the consensus pick to finish last in the Pac-12 South. The Buffs are getting closer to 5th, or, better stated, the consensus is that Arizona is getting closer to the bottom.
There is no consensus as to the winner of the Pac-12 South, with USC and UCLA tied for first. In the Pac-12 North, Washington is the pick to unseat Stanford. Oregon, meanwhile, is picked to finish third this fall.
In the national race, Alabama is the choice to collect another national title, with Clemson and Oklahoma tied for second. Stanford and Washington were in a three-way tie for the No. 10 team in the nation (along with Baylor … pre-melt-down). USC was picked to be the No. 17 team in the country, with UCLA coming in at No. 19 and Oregon at No. 24.
Pacific 12
Rank | Team | Total Points | Athlon | McIllece Sports | TSN | Lindy | ESPN | Phil Steele |
North | ||||||||
1 | Washington | 8 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
2 | Stanford | 11 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
3 | Oregon | 17 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
4 | Washington State | 24 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 |
5 | California | 31 | 5 | 6 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
6 | Oregon State | 35 | 6 | 5 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 |
South | ||||||||
1t | Southern Cal | 9 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
1t | UCLA | 9 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
3 | Utah | 20½ | 3 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 3½ |
4 | Arizona State | 23½ | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 3½ |
5 | Arizona | 28½ | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 3 | 5½ |
6 | Colorado | 35½ | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 5½ |
Notes:
- Phil Steele predicted a tie between Arizona State and Utah for 3rd-4th in the Pac-12 South.
- Phil Steele predicted a tie between Arizona and Colorado for 5th-6th in the Pac-12 South.
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Lindy’s Top 25 includes five teams from the Pac-12
1. Alabama … 2. Clemson … 3. Oklahoma … 4. Ohio State … 5. Baylor
6. Tennessee … 7. Michigan … 8. Florida State … 9. LSU
10. Stanford … Stanford is the most stable and trustworthy of the league contenders, but the balanced Pac-12 is the least likely of the Power-Five conferences to send a team to the College Football Playoff
11. Notre Dame … 12. Houston … 13. Ole Miss … 14. Louisville … 15. Iowa … 16. Oklahoma State
17. USC … We’ll trust that the Trojans have moved past all the coaching turmoil and a six-loss season in which they still managed to win the Pac-12 South
18. Georgia … 19. San Diego State … 20. TCU
21. Washington … No one has ever doubted Coach Pete’s coaching chops, and he has a chance to put together the Huskies’ best team and season since they won 11 games and went to the Rose Bowl under Rick Neuheisel in 2000
22. Michigan State
23. UCLA … The Bruins have the raw materials to be a perennial Top 25 team and needs to act like it. Beat USC and these gutty littles can take the South.
24. Oregon … The Ducks have the skill to thrive and win the North, but the safer course of action here is to put the Ducks’ D in prove-it mode.
25. North Carolina
The rest of the Pac-12:
26. Washington State
32. Utah
45. Arizona State
47. Arizona
64. California
71. Colorado
76. Oregon State
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Athlon – The Verdict
2016 Projection: 4-8, 2-7 Pac-12
Colorado is making progress under Mike MacIntyre, but the pressure is building on the fourth-year coach after he’s recorded only two Pac-12 wins in three seasons. However, the Buffaloes could be on the verge of a breakthrough after losing five games by eight points or fewer last year. Taking the next step in the win column will require improvement on both sides of the ball, but the offense is a bigger concern after averaging only 24.6 points per game in 2015. MacIntyre is hoping staff changes improve an offensive line that gave up 40 sacks last season. Colorado’s first bowl game since 2007 is within reach, but the schedule – the Buffs play at Stanford and Oregon from the North – could be too much to overcome.
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Rising Star … Wide receiver Kabion Ento is a junior college transfer who showed an ability to stretch the field in the spring, which should complement Shay Fields’ speed on the opposite side of the slot. Ento is expected to compete for a starting job.
Key Buffaloes …
– Sefo Liufau, QB … Few teams in the nation will have as much experience under center if Liufau is able to overcome his foot injury and play this fall.
– Chidobe Awuzie, CB … He can play any spot in the secondary and is the leader of the Buffs’ defense.
– Tedric Thompson, S … One of the most experienced safeties in the nation has recorded six interceptions over the past two seasons.
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Sporting News Pac-12 rankings
Pac-12 North
No. 11 – Washington – It’s been sixteen years since Washington’s last conference championship and an additional nine years since the Huskies won their only national title. An entire generation might not believe that there was a time that Washington – not Stanford, Oregon, or USC – was the premier program out west. Since Washington’s 2000 Rose Bowl season, the Huskies have had five coaches. One coach went 1-10 in his final season. Another went 0-12. At one point, Washington went seven years without going to a bowl game.
The Huskies, however, appear to be on the verge of returning to relevance, both in the league and nationally. Washington returns 17 starters from a young team that made easy work of the lesser opponents in 2015 and held its own in most of its losses.
No. 12 – Stanford – The Cardinal finished 8-5 in 2014, and the clock on the program’s reign as a national power seemed to be ticking in 2015. Stanford’s momentum changed as quickly as Christian McCaffrey could flip a field. The Cardinal shook off a season-opening loss to Northwestern and rounded into form as a College Football Playoff contender. A two-point loss to Oregon on November 14th prevented Stanford from earning that coveted postseason spot, but Stanford often looked like one of the four best teams in the country.
This will be a top-25 team again, but the new quarterback will have to be a quick study against a very difficult schedule.
No. 24 – Oregon – The Ducks are one season removed from winning the Pac-12, playing for the national championship and producing a Heisman winner. And yet Oregon seems to be a something of a crossroads. The Ducks went 9-4 last season, the first time since 2007 the program didn’t win ten games or more. A collapse in the Alamo Bowl prevented the Ducks from getting to the 10-win plateau, but also highlighted Oregon’s problems. The Ducks couldn’t hold a 31-point halftime lead against TCU as the Horned Frogs scored at will, winning 47-41 in overtime.
Unless the defense – which ranked 117th in the nation last season – shows significant improvement, Oregon could lose more ground in the tough Pac-12 North.
No. 30 – Washington State
No. 49 – California
No. 90 – Oregon State
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Pac-12 South
No. 15 – UCLA – Gone are the days when the Bruins should be satisfied with a decent bowl game. Jim Mora has won 37 games in his first four seasons as UCLA’s head coach. No other Bruins coach has won more than 29 games in his first four seasons. The Bruins have been ranked in the top 10 at least a week in each of the last three seasons, and reached the Pac-12 title game in the two seasons before that. UCLA has also been one of the more volatile teams in the country; it lost its final two games last season, by 19 to USC and by eight to 5-7 Nebraska in a bowl game.
Four consecutive top-20 recruiting classes – all in the top three in the Pac-12 – have closed the gap between UCLA and the rest of the league. It’s time for the Bruins to shine.
No. 23 – USC – Promoting Clay Helton from interim coach might not have been the splashy move some USC fans wanted, but his hire is a departure from Lane Kiffin and Steve Sarkisian. Like Kiffin and Sarkisian, Helton is a former offensive coordinator with plenty of familiarity with the USC landscape. Unlike his two predecessors, Helton has no direct ties to the Pete Carroll era, and lacks their California swagger … though he may not need it.
USC is hoping Helton will create some stability … With a brutal schedule, Helton may quickly learn that being the full-time coach isn’t as forgiving as being the interim guy.
No. 32 – Utah
No. 45 – Arizona State
No. 50 – Arizona
No. 61 – Colorado
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Associated Press preseason Top 25
The 2016 preseason AP Top 25 (first-place votes in parenthesis):
- Alabama (33)
- Clemson (16)
- Oklahoma (4)
- Florida State (5)
- LSU (1)
- Ohio State (1)
- Michigan (1)
- Stanford
- Tennessee
- Notre Dame
- Ole Miss
- Michigan State
- TCU
- Washington
- Houston
- UCLA
- Iowa
- Georgia
- Louisville
- USC
- Oklahoma State
- North Carolina
- Baylor
- Oregon
- Florida
Others receiving votes: Miami, Texas A&M, Utah, Washington State, Boise State, San Diego State, Wisconsin, Auburn, Pittsburgh, Arkansas, Texas,Nebraska, Navy, Northwestern, Western Kentucky, South Florida, Toledo
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The Final 2016 Associated Press poll
1 | Clemson (60) | 1500 | 14-1 | 3 |
2 | Alabama | 1440 | 14-1 | 1 |
3 | Southern California | 1292 | 10-3 | 9 |
4 | Washington | 1277 | 12-2 | 4 |
5 | Oklahoma | 1252 | 11-2 | 7 |
6 | Ohio State | 1240 | 11-2 | 2 |
7 | Penn State | 1130 | 11-3 | 5 |
8 | Florida State | 1105 | 10-3 | 10 |
9 | Wisconsin | 1032 | 11-3 | 8 |
10 | Michigan | 1001 | 10-3 | 6 |
11 | Oklahoma State | 920 | 10-3 | 13 |
12 | Stanford | 730 | 10-3 | 16 |
13 | LSU | 651 | 8-4 | 19 |
14 | Florida | 640 | 9-4 | 20 |
15 | Western Michigan | 619 | 13-1 | 12 |
16 | Virginia Tech | 610 | 10-4 | 18 |
17 | Colorado | 585 | 10-4 | 11 |
18 | West Virginia | 368 | 10-3 | 14 |
19 | South Florida | 358 | 11-2 | 25 |
20 | Miami (Fla.) | 338 | 9-4 | NR |
21 | Louisville | 277 | 9-4 | 15 |
22 | Tennessee | 253 | 9-4 | NR |
23 | Utah | 222 | 9-4 | NR |
24 | Auburn | 206 | 8-5 | 17 |
25 | San Diego State | 113 | 11-3 | NR |
Others receiving votes: Kansas St. 83, Georgia Tech 47, Nebraska 38, W. Kentucky 32, Air Force 30, Pittsburgh 21, Boise St. 19, Iowa 14, Minnesota 12, Tulsa 10, BYU 9, Temple 8, Houston 8, North Carolina 8, Navy 1, Washington St. 1.
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Stuart
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