The Bowl Championship Series farewell tour has begun.
Love it or hate it – we’re guessing there are far more haters – the system for determining college football’s national champion will be mothballed after this season, replaced by the new, aptly-named College Football Playoff.
As farewells go, this one has a chance to be a memorable one, filled with intriguing storylines, great players and great teams, led by two-time defending national champion Alabama.
And, because this is the BCS, we probably can expect plenty of debate about what team should be where in the rankings.
This final go-round started Thursday, so here’s a few things to look for:
Top Teams
Alabama: All those future pros, an unflappable quarterback, one of the game’s all-time great coaches – hard to pick against the Crimson Tide making it three consecutive titles.
Ohio State: The Buckeyes went 12-0 in their first season under Urban Meyer but were tattooed out of the national title game because of NCAA sanctions. They’re still loaded with talented players.
Oregon: Don’t expect any drop-off under Mark Helfrich. Chip Kelly left the cupboard plenty full before leaving for the Philadelphia Eagles.
Stanford: The defending Rose Bowl champions are eyeing the big prize this season.
Texas A&M: Johnny Manziel is good to go – well, after his suspension for one half of football – after the NCAA looked into whether he was paid for signing autographs.
Georgia: The Bulldogs have to replace a few players on defense, but their offense is loaded with playmakers, led by QB Aaron Murray.
Top Players
Manziel, QB, Texas A&M: The first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy, Johnny Football still may have something to prove this year after a difficult offseason.
Jadeveon Clowney, DE, South Carolina: The most disruptive force in college football could become the first full-time defensive player to win the Heisman. The 6-6, 274-pound defensive lineman was credited with three tackles and four quarterback hurries in the sixth-ranked Gamecocks’ pedestrian-like 27-10 victory over North Carolina on Thursday night.
AJ McCarron, QB, Alabama: He has as many national titles (two) as losses.; Nuff said.
Marqise Lee, WR, Southern California: One of those threat-to-score-on-every-touch guys.
Ka’Deem Carey, RB, Arizona: Nation’s leading rusher should continue to thrive in Rich Rodriguez’s snap-before-they’re-ready offense.
De’Anthony Thomas, RB, Oregon: Possibly the most dynamic player in the country.
Best Games
Alabama at Texas A&M, Sept 14: Manziel had the signature game for his Heisman résumé by handing Alabama its only loss of the season. The Crimson Tide want payback – in a bad way.
Oregon at Stanford, Nov. 7: The ultimate in contrasting styles could have a huge impact on the national championship race again this year.
LSU at Alabama, Nov. 9: Another Game of the Century? Maybe, but it will have national championship implications and will be fun to watch no matter what.
Georgia at Clemson, Saturday: The No. 5 Bulldogs and No. 8 Tigers have two of the nation’s best quarterbacks in Murray and Tajh Boyd. The marquee game of the opening weekend provided plenty of fireworks – 73 points – in Death Valley.
Notre Dame at Stanford, Nov. 30: The Fighting Irish won last year’s game in overtime on a goal-line stand and went on to the national title game. The Cardinal had to “settle” for the Rose Bowl and will be looking for payback at home.
Wisconsin at Arizona State, Sept. 14: The Badgers’ speed vs. the Sun Devils’ power in an early-season test for teams that have BCS bowl aspirations.
All-Name Team
Run through college football rosters across the country and you’ll find some interesting names. Here’s some of the coolest we could find:
Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, Alabama defensive back.
Taco Charlton, Michigan defensive end.
Spiffy Evans, Boston College receiver.
Cassanova McKinzy, Auburn linebacker.
Thor Jozwiak, South Florida offensive lineman.
Silverberry Mouhon, Cincinnati defensive lineman.
Munchie Legaux, Cincinnati quarterback.
Pharoah McKever, North Carolina State receiver.