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USA Today's Top 25 College Football Coaches

Posted on 5/12/24 at 9:26 am
Posted by JetDawg
Los Angeles, California
Member since Oct 2020
7306 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 9:26 am
#25 -- MARK STOOPS, Kentucky

Kentucky is no longer just known for basketball -- and Mark Stoops is the primary reason why. Using his extensive recruiting ties in both Florida and Ohio, he's built a very strong roster in Lexington. The Wildcats have eight bowl appearances with Stoops as the head coach -- including two 10-win seasons. Considering the history of the program, and the fact they play in the SEC, this is essentially unheard of.

#24 -- JOSH HEUPEL, Tennessee

In just three seasons, Heupel has already brought Tennessee back to national prominence. The Vols are in a spot that they haven't resided in since the late '90s/early '00s. And, Heupel can be credited for that turnaround. He joined Tennessee in the 2021 season after three winning seasons at UCF. Heupel's Vols won 11 games last year and boasted the nation's top-scoring offense. Though some of his biggest playmakers left for the NFL following the '22 season, it doesn't seem like Tennessee's attack will slow down any time soon as long as Heupel is at the helm.

#23 -- Jamey Chadwell, Liberty
#22 -- Jedd Fisch, Washington
#21 -- Dave Doeren, N.C. State

#20 -- ELIAH DRINKWITZ, Missouri

Only 40 years old, Drinkwitz should have a long coaching career ahead of him. Drinkwitz's rise to becoming one of the hottest names in college football seemingly came out of nowhere. Before joining Missouri in 2020, Drinkwitz had been a head coach for one year. In 2019, he led Appalachian State to a 12-1 record. His work that season was enough to convince Mizzou to bring him on as head coach, and that faith is being rewarded. The Tigers were great in 2023 -- finishing the year with an 11-2 record and a national ranking of No. 8.

#19 -- James Franklin, Penn State
#18 -- Kirk Ferentz, Iowa
#17 -- Luke Fickell, Wisconsin
#16 -- Jeff Brohm, Louisville
#15 -- Chris Klieman, Kansas State
#14 -- Lincoln Riley, USC
#13 -- Willie Fritz, Houston
#12 -- Mike Gundy, Oklahoma State
#11 -- Dan Lanning, Oregon

#10 -- STEVE SARKISIAN, Texas

Sark is throwing up the horns and is feeling great about the state of his program. Earlier in his coaching career, Sarkisian had underwhelming stints as the head coach at both Washington and USC. His reputation took a hit following his USC tenure, but a nice run as Alabama's offensive coordinator resulted in one more crack at guiding a program. Sark took over as Texas' headman in 2021, and the program took a huge step in '23. The Longhorns knocked off Alabama in Tuscaloosa, went on to win the Big 12, and reached the College Football Playoff for the first time. Now, Sark will look to take over the SEC.

#9 -- LANE KIFFIN, Ole Miss

Kiffin knows how to coach offense -- and he knows how to recruit. The former USC headman seemingly has gotten humbled in recent years. That'll happen when you go from head coach of the (then) Oakland Raiders to running the Florida Atlantic program. This perspective seemingly has done Kiffin a ton of good. He's now a more likable, seemingly down-to-Earth figure. In the process, he took the Ole Miss job with the hopes of turning it into a threat in the loaded SEC West. He's led Ole Miss to Bowl Games in each of his four seasons, and has finished in the top-30 in scoring every year.

#8 -- Mike Norvell, Florida State

#7 -- BRIAN KELLY, LSU

Brian Kelly's decision to leave South Bend for the LSU job was a bit of a gamble. In his last five years at Notre Dame, Kelly won 54 games. He's just over 10 years removed from having the Fighting Irish in the National Title game. However, Kelly believed that making a move to an SEC power could be highly beneficial. In Year 1 with the Tigers, Kelly led LSU to a 10-4 record capped off with a dominant 63-7 Citrus Bowl victory over Purdue. The Tigers are still a step behind the elite teams in the conference, but Kelly has started his tenure with back-to-back 10-win seasons.

#6 -- Lance Leipold, Kansas
#5 -- Ryan Day, Ohio State
#4 -- Dabo Swinney, Clemson
#3 -- Kyle Wittingham, Utah

#2 -- KALEN DeBOER, Alabama

Following a quick rebuild at Fresno State, Kalen DeBoer was plucked by a Washington team in desperate need of a makeover. In his first year with the Huskies, DeBoer led the team to an 11-2 record and a win in the Alamo Bowl. With stars such as QB Michael Penix Jr. and WR's Rome Odunze and Jalen McMillan, the Huskies reached the National Championship Game in 2023 -- where they came up short against Michigan. Following Nick Saban's retirement, DeBoer was convinced by Alabama brass to take over the program.

#1 -- KIRBY SMART, Georgia

At only 48 years of age, Kirby Smart is sitting pretty. Smart is coaching a premium program in the heart of the most talent-rich region in the country. He's winning recruiting battles versus Alabama, and can even stake the claim as the current best program within the SEC. Smart has won two National Championships with the Bulldogs, and Georgia should find itself in the playoffs once again in 2024 -- and that's thanks in large part to the job Smart has done building this program and establishing its identity as the current national juggernaut.









This post was edited on 5/12/24 at 10:48 am
Posted by Oklahomey
Bucksnort, TN
Member since Mar 2013
5047 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 9:32 am to
Good list. I’m surprised to see Leipold that high when he has done nothing much as of yet unless KU defeating OU and getting to a bowl is considered a big deal.

I’d think Gundy and Riley would be higher.

Swinney is falling. His relevance is slowly declining but those two national titles still help.

Smart is easily the undisputed #1.
Posted by Lucado
Member since Nov 2023
2828 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 9:35 am to
DeBoer is a good coach, but there's absolutely no reason to have him ranked #2 in the nation.
Posted by Globetrotter747
Member since Sep 2017
4332 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 9:45 am to
Smart is clearly #1 but hard to say beyond that. Swinney has the best resume, but he seems too old school to fully embrace NIL and the portal. (He’s not too old school to accept a $100,000,000 contract to lead an extracurricular activity, though.) He also isn’t hitting on QB’s anymore and is experiencing more staff turnover.
Posted by bamameister
Right here, right now
Member since May 2016
14362 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 9:48 am to
What a copy-and-paste pile of worthless material. Those thoughts had to come from either a junior in high school or a 1000-mile-high worldview.

Posted by Tuscaloosa
11x Award Winning SECRant user
Member since Dec 2011
46685 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 9:52 am to
quote:

What a copy-and-paste pile of worthless material. Those thoughts had to come from either a junior in high school or a 1000-mile-high worldview.


It’s also either plagiarism, or not from USA Today, and it was published 3 months ago.

LINK
Posted by ThundrHawg
The Flagship™
Member since Sep 2010
3209 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 10:03 am to
No Pitboss!


List is shite...
Posted by Evolved Simian
Bushwood Country Club
Member since Sep 2010
20622 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 10:16 am to
quote:

I’m surprised to see Leipold that high


He's a hell of a coach.

quote:

KU defeating OU and getting to a bowl is considered a big deal.



It is. Not to mention he took Kansas to 2 consecutive bowls. That's only happened once in 135 years of football there.

Also, I think Drinkwitz is rated too low. What he did at App St. and now Mizzou is pretty damn impressive.
Posted by Smokeyone
Maryville Tn
Member since Jul 2016
16161 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 10:23 am to
I like how both sources and methodology where presented with the list. Mostly because no standard methodology was employed and the talking head that created list likely doesn’t know anything about the coaches other than they coach at X school plus a blurb from Wikipedia.
Posted by pbro62
Baton Rouge
Member since May 2016
11449 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 10:38 am to
Ignorant hillbilly are you. Poor little retard doesn’t like because his coach is poorly rated. frick off
Posted by Evolved Simian
Bushwood Country Club
Member since Sep 2010
20622 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 11:21 am to
quote:

He also isn’t hitting on QB’s anymore


Well, that's clearly false. Just last year he picked up Paul Tyson. And this year he added Bo Nix's mediocre little brother.

Posted by DirtyCreekBottoms
Member since Mar 2024
826 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 11:40 am to
Especially after having a generational QB like Phenix and those NFL skill guys around him.

Josh Dobbs almost single handedly made Butch Jones look decent against a much tougher schedule.

I'm by no means suggesting Daboer is that bad but he's still a big time unknown as far as I'm concerned enterting this conference.

Bama fans acting like he's a shoe in may be in for a rude awakening.
Posted by Tuscaloosa
11x Award Winning SECRant user
Member since Dec 2011
46685 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 11:45 am to
quote:

Especially after having a generational QB like Phenix and those NFL skill guys around him.


Michael Penix is a generational QB now?

Lmaaoooooo
Posted by tgrmeat
Member since Sep 2020
4359 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 11:47 am to
quote:

Heupel has already brought Tennessee back to national prominence.


National prominence must be a low bar for that writer.
Posted by ChexMix
Taste the Deliciousness
Member since Apr 2014
25250 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 12:28 pm to
The Freeze snub is obvious. They even ranked his replacement at Liberty in the top 25
This post was edited on 5/12/24 at 12:29 pm
Posted by iconucon
St. Louis
Member since Jan 2018
1233 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 12:36 pm to
quote:

Heupel's Vols won 11 games last year and boasted the nation's top-scoring offense.


What? Whoever this is needs an editor.
Posted by Kashmir
Member since Dec 2014
7824 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 12:49 pm to
quote:

Kelly is a good coach, but there's absolutely no reason to have him ranked #7 in the nation.


FIFY
Posted by djsdawg
Member since Apr 2015
33059 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 1:15 pm to
quote:

Especially after having a generational QB like Phenix and those NFL skill guys around him.


You use that word way too often.
Posted by Clark14
L.A.Hog
Member since Dec 2014
19820 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 3:22 pm to
quote:

No Pitboss! List is shite...


Well, he got a lot of positive press after the 2021 season, but I guess one good season doesn’t carry much weight a couple of years later.
Posted by DawginSC
Member since Aug 2022
4397 posts
Posted on 5/12/24 at 3:46 pm to
quote:

Michael Penix is a generational QB now?


"generational" is a word often overused. But Penix was an elite QB last year. He finished second in heisman voting and was drafted 8th overall.

While both may have been in large part due to an overall weakness at QB compared to prior seasons, it still means UW had a QB better than all but 3-5other QB's in the nation last season. That's elite. It also gives a coach an edge when he's almost always going to get better QB play than his opponent.

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