Only two of last year’s top 10 Heisman Trophy vote getters are back on the field this season. Only four of the 26 consensus All-Americans from one year ago have returned.
Nick Saban, he of the seven national championships, seven of the past 10 SEC titles and the “a’ight” that has always carried the weight of Thor’s hammer, is off the sidelines for the first time since 1970, now on the road with ESPN’s “College GameDay.”
So in this season of transition, of confusion, of a perpetually shapeshifting college football atlas, who now stands alone as the beacon of the sport? Who sits atop the game’s highest peak, as the person who rightfully surveys their football domain? Whom do we now select as CFB’s chosen one, the human best equipped to represent and perhaps speak on behalf of every team, school, conference and even the future of this increasingly complicated world?
Who is the Face of College Football? And yes, that title is capitalized on purpose.
“Well, it’s not me,” Saban said in July during SEC media days, his first official gig through the looking glass and on the other end of the endless questions to the endless conga line of coaches who marched to the podium. As he said it, the look on his face was that of happiness and relief, with a dash of confessed confusion. “Now I get to express my opinions, which I’ve certainly not had an issue with in the past. Maybe this is an even bigger platform now. We’ll see. But does that effect change? I’m not sure I had that strong of an effect when I was coaching, but your chances are better to become that person when you are one who is actually in the arena.”
OK, GOAT, let’s peer into that arena, holding our flashlight in one hand and our college gridiron hopes in the other, seeking that perfectly procured pigskin prophet to lead us through the 2024 darkness.
The nine-year veteran
We’ve already established that the vast majority of last year’s stars have moved on. That’s nothing new in a sport where every player’s time on the roster comes with an expiration date. But what is still new is the way that date slides. A timeline that used to be altered only by injuries, redshirts and mandated one-year sit-outs after transferring is now augmented by greyshirts, blueshirts, greenshirts, the instant gratification model of the transfer portal and that little global pandemic we all endured a few years ago. Yes, there are still college athletes on rosters today who were on rosters when COVID-19 arrived.
Miami tight end Cam McCormick actually was on a college football roster a full four years before the world went into lockdown, redshirted by Oregon for his freshman year of 2016. The Bend, Oregon, native appeared in all 13 games for the Ducks in 2017 but suffered a devastating left leg break that shredded the ligaments in the leg. Over the next three years, he underwent three surgeries, which carried him through the 2020 season, including having a screw installed in his ankle that malfunctioned, caused another fracture and sidelined him again. He returned in 2021, only to be taken down by an Achilles injury after two games. He played in 13 games in 2022 before transferring to Miami to be reunited with his former Oregon coach, Mario Cristobal.
After the redshirt, medical waivers, COVID eligibility waiver and, finally, one last NCAA waiver granted for this season, Cam McCormick, the 26-year-old who has already earned his undergraduate and master’s degrees, will be playing his ninth season of college football, the first — and likely last — time we’ll ever see such a thing.
So does that make him the face of this craziest of college football eras?
“I like that idea because of what it represents,” Cristobal said ahead of Miami’s season opener at Florida this weekend. “There are people who seem to want to criticize his situation, just as they like to criticize everything about college football right now. But in Cam’s case — and in the case of all these kids who have overcome so much and worked so hard or made very difficult decisions that they know could really impact their lives and the lives of their families — we could do a lot worse than to give Cam that job.”
The superstar
As long as college football has been played, there have been those whose faces and names have represented the sport, from Red Grange and Doug Flutie to Herschel Walker and Tim Tebow. Their names become transcendent, even though their actual time on campus is transient. In recent decades, thanks to the rise of freshmen (who weren’t even allowed on varsity rosters until 1972) and the relaxing of the unwritten agreement among Heisman voters that the youngest players couldn’t win the sport’s most prestigious award, not to mention the recent nitrous boost of NIL advertising superstardom, household names have garnered more attention than ever. They’re on billboards on the way to said houses and part of video games on the TVs inside those houses.
So who best represents those names-in-neon national stars? The veteran quarterbacks of the SEC? Quinn Ewers of Texas? Carson Beck of Georgia? Jaxson Dart of Ole Miss?
“Yeah, I will take that job, but only after I feel like I have really earned it — and I haven’t yet,” Alabama returning QB Jalen Milroe said when asked about the Face of College Football gig earlier this summer, before adding with a smile, “But I’m close.”
But when Cristobal made his comment about people being unfairly critical about all aspects of college football, it might as well have been a Mad Libs sentence with a blank line at the end where written in Sharpie is the name: SHEDEUR SANDERS (again, caps on purpose).
Sanders is a transfer student, coming to Colorado with his coach/father — Deion? Ever heard of him? — after an award-winning two seasons at FCS and HBCU Jackson State. He helms a team that is riding the realignment wave, as the Buffaloes move from the Pac-12 to the Big 12. He electrified the nation one year ago, slinging 27 touchdown passes and only three interceptions even while running for his life — Colorado surrendered 56 sacks, the most of any power conference team. But he also became the tip of the lightning rod for a nation divided about the Buffs, who ruled college football after a 3-0 start, then crashed back into the Rockies as they lost eight of their last nine games.
Shedeur makes bold predictions. He has no issue setting fire to his social media timelines. His NIL valuations have him nearing the $5 million mark, tops in the sport, and he has rolled up to practice in a $350,000 Rolls Royce, a $175,000 Mercedes-Maybach and most recently in Colorado’s first known $110,000 Tesla Cyberbeast supertruck. To many of the grey-haired college football fan set, it feels like way too much, like it always did back in the day with his father, Coach Prime. To the younger crowd, it feels much more normal, like, just the way the world is now.
“Are you asking, do I want the pressure of this job?” the 22-year-old said in reply to the idea of being the Face of College Football. “Pressure has been a part of my life my whole life, certainly my whole football life. Just as it was and is for my father. I already know what the expectations come with. The goal is to remain level-headed. To stay grounded.
“You can’t be the face of anything if you don’t perform and take advantage of the opportunity you have been given, that you have earned. That’s power. But power can be lost. By losing.”
The power broker
Ah, power. With the greatest respect to Saban, the real power in collegiate athletics might not belong to anyone in the arena, but rather to the ones who operate that arena. The maestros who ultimately determine the construction and governance of the rosters, staffs and money that flow through those arenas, and even how the games on the arena floors and stadium fields are scheduled and played.
This potential Face of the Sport wears no eye black. It isn’t encased in a helmet. It’s not even under a ballcap. It’s framed by a tailored suit, and instead of speaking into a headset to send in a play, it’s leaning into a microphone, either in front of the assembled national media or at a special hearing of a Congressional committee, saying stuff like:
“We as leaders are responsible for navigating what really are for us in college sports uncharted waters of change.”
“We’ve been incredibly successful, and I understand why so many from outside of the campus and conference realm are interested in coming in and being a part of it, but that responsibility lies with us to bring people into the solution, not to cede authority to external actors.”
“It’s time to update your expectations for what college athletics can be.”
Greg Sankey said all of that and more as he glided his way through the hotel ballrooms of Dallas at SEC media days. This is the man who has had his hand on the steering wheel (purposeful motorsports metaphor, he loves racing) of the Southeastern Conference since 2015. All he has done since is expand the league to include Texas and Oklahoma, and steer all of college football through the 2020 pandemic, all while also serving on the NCAA committees assembled to determine the future of college sports and the governing body itself, which yes, includes traveling to Washington, D.C., to meet with elected officials who operate at an intensity that makes his SEC head coaches look calm and reasonable by comparison.
So … Mr. Commissioner, you want the job?
“Well, first I don’t know if anyone wants this face to be the face of anything,” the 59-year-old replied, chuckling, as he sat beside Saban, who also laughed. “But I think the job of people in my position is to create the best world possible for those who should truly be the face of the sport, and that would be the competitors.”
And that brings us back into the arena …
The coach
Saban’s ring collection is now stored at his house, which leaves only three active FBS head coaches with national championship jewelry. North Carolina‘s Mack Brown, who won his natty in 2005, and two men who have earned two titles each in the College Football Playoff era and will begin their roads toward a third this weekend against each other, Clemson‘s Dabo Swinney (2016 and 2018) and Georgia‘s Kirby Smart (2021 and ’22).
Both are relatively young but still veterans. Both are outspoken. Both are already arguably the faces of their conferences, the ACC and SEC. OK, fellas, who wants it?
“I think when there’s something you philosophically believe in that helps or hurts the game, it’s my job to make the game better and keep the game around for my kids and my kids’ kids,” Smart said. “I think football’s a really good game, and if you don’t do things that you believe in, then why are you coaching?
“Nick taught me that, to look at things through a lens of what’s best for the game of football and maybe not what’s best for you. I’m a big believer in leaving the game better than you found it.”
All right, Coach Smart! Folks, I think we have a willing candidate!
“Nobody replaces Nick.”
Aw, dammit.
“The spot he was at was so far ahead of everybody else, the mantle fits him and not any of us,” Smart said. “There’s a group of college coaches who are experienced and have won games and done a great job, but there’s none of them in Nick’s stratosphere.”
OK, fair enough … Dabo?
“I’ve got a job to do, and my job is those players and serving them and my staff. Hopefully, I can do my job in a way that can be a good example to people,” said the man who admits he has worked to step back from the spotlight so that others can have it. And so as not to get burned.
“There was a time I answered every question that anybody ever asked me. I never went into press conferences with pre-planned answers. I’m just available. I would answer any question anybody asked me about anything. But as we had success, it became a point where they only wanted to ask me a question to attach their agenda, and it’s just not worth it. It’s a distraction for my team. So you have to be guarded. I wish I could always speak exactly how I want to, but you have to be guarded. That’s just the world we live in now.”
Perhaps Swinney and Smart, even at only 54 and 48 years of age, are too tied to the way the game used to be, too busy wrestling with what it is now, to free up the time it takes to be the Face. In that case, we need to go younger.
How about 38? How about a guy who spent a season working for Saban as a graduate assistant at Alabama, where he won a ring, then spent four years under Smart, winning another title as defensive coordinator? And how about a guy who has been at his current job for only two years, but is already 22-5, has installed an SEC-type recruiting mentality on the West Coast, seems to have mastered the transfer portal and is one of if not the headliner of the Pac-12’s migration into the Big Ten?
Hey, Dan Lanning, head coach of the always trendy Oregon Ducks, do you have anything big and philosophical you’d like to add?
“The game right now is as fun as it has ever been to watch,” Lanning said. “We’re seeing a lot of different teams in a position to compete at the end of the season now, and that’s only going to improve with the expanded College Football Playoff. The sport, to me, is in as good a shape as ever, but with so much change, that’s probably tainted a lot of peoples’ view. We start playing games and I think it will remind everyone that this sport is as great as it’s ever been.”
I mean, dang, y’all. Those sound like words that would come from a fresh, new Face of College Football to me. Whaddya say, Lanning?
“No!!! Sounds like a job for Kirby. Lane Kiffin for entertainment.”
Speaking of entertainment, maybe the Duck is available?
Facing the truth of The Face
No one really wants the gig. At least, that’s what they claim. But when one looks back through the history of the Face of College Football, it is a yearbook of people who all said the same thing, that they weren’t looking for the job, but the job found them. Even when that has been true, it was only to a point.
Grange, Flutie, Walker and Tebow. Jim Brown. Roger Staubach. Peyton Manning. Walter Camp. Knute Rockne. Woody Hayes. Jimmy Johnson. Lou Holtz. Saban.
Natural leaders naturally lead. The position finds them, even if they say they don’t want it. Because the reality is that deep down, they really do. In the end, we can try as hard as we might to assign the task and title from the outside, but becoming the Face of College Football, as with any face, is something we grow into.
“No one wants extra work, especially in these jobs as coaches and players and administrators,” Saban said earlier this summer. “But if you truly love something, if you really want it to be something that other people will love like you do even after you’re gone, then you take on that work. Because it has to be done.”
ESPN reporter David Hale contributed to this report.
SURPRISE, Ariz. — When Jacob deGrom stepped on the mound for his first live batting practice this spring, a voice in his head told him: “All right, I want to strike everybody out.” That instinct had guided deGrom to unimaginable heights, with awards and money and acclaim. It is also who he can no longer be. So deGrom took a breath and reminded himself: “Let’s not do that.”
Nobody in the world has ever thrown a baseball like deGrom at his apex. His combination of fastball velocity, swing-and-miss stuff and pinpoint command led to one of the greatest 90-start stretches in baseball. From the beginning of 2018 to the middle of 2021, he was peak Pedro Martinez with a couple of extra mph — Nolan Ryan’s fastball, Steve Carlton’s slider, Greg Maddux’s precision.
Then his arm could not hold up anymore, and for more than three years, deGrom healed and got hurt, healed and needed Tommy John surgery in June 2023 to repair the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow, then healed once more. That delivers him to this moment, in camp with the Texas Rangers, ready to conquer a 162-game season for the first time since 2019 — and reminding himself when to hold back.
The instinct to be all he can be never will go away. But instead, as his efforts at learning to throttle down manifest themselves daily and were particularly evident in those early live ABs, deGrom induced ground balls on early contact and ended his day with a flyout on the second pitch of the at-bat.
DeGrom had blown out his elbow once before, as a minor leaguer in October 2010, and this time he understands his mandate. He is now 36, and nobody has returned to have any sort of substantive career after a third Tommy John, so keeping his arm healthy as he comes back from his second is imperative. This is the last phase of deGrom’s career, and to maximize it, he must change. It does not need to be a wholesale reinvention. For deGrom, it is more an evolution, one to which he accustomed himself by watching video of his past self.
DeGrom at his best simply overwhelmed hitters. At-bats turned into lost causes. He was the best pitcher in the world in 2018, when he threw 217 innings of 1.70 ERA ball and struck out 269 with just 46 walks and 10 home runs allowed. The following year, he dedicated himself to being even more, winning his second Cy Young and proving he was no one-season fluke. DeGrom routinely blew away one hitter, then made the next look like he’d never seen a slider. He painted the plate with the meticulousness of a ceramic artist.
“I look at the best — ’18,” deGrom said of his first Cy Young season. “There were times where I hit 100 or close to it, but I think I sat around 96.”
He did. Ninety-six mph on the dot for his high-spin four-seam fastball. It jumped to 96.9 in 2019, 98.6 in 2020 and 99.2 in 2021. In the 11 games deGrom pitched toward the end of 2022, it was still 98.9 — and then 98.7 before he blew out again.
“I have to look at it like, hey, I can pitch at that velocity [from 2018],” deGrom said. “It is less stress on your body. You get out there and you’re throwing pitches at 100 miles an hour for however many pitches it is — it’s a lot of stress. It’s something that I’m going to look into — using it when I need it, backing off and just trusting that I can locate the ball.”
He had not yet adopted that attitude in 2022, when those 11 starts convinced deGrom to opt out of his contract with the New York Mets, who had drafted him in the ninth round in 2010. Immediately, the Texas Rangers began their pursuit. General manager Chris Young pitched for 13 years in the major leagues and knows how hard it is to be truly great. He grunted to hit 90 with his fastball. Someone who could sit 99 with 248 strikeouts against 19 walks in 156⅓ innings (as deGrom did in the combined pieces of his 2021 and 2022 seasons) and make it look easy is one of a kind. Injury risk be damned, Texas gave deGrom $185 million over five years.
He played the part in his first five starts for Texas. Then he left the sixth with elbow pain. Done for the year. Surgery on June 12 — 11 days after the birth of his third child, Nolan. He carried Nolan around with his left arm while his right was in a brace that would click a degree or two more every day to eventually reteach deGrom to straighten his arm.
He taught himself how to throw again, too, under the watchful eyes of Texas’ training staff and Keith Meister, the noted Tommy John surgeon who is also the Rangers’ team doctor. They wanted to build back the deGrom who scythed lineups — but this time, with decision-making processes guided by proper arm care.
Part of that showed in deGrom’s September cameo last year. His fastball averaged 97.3 mph, and he still managed to look like himself: 1.69 ERA, 14 strikeouts against one walk with one home run allowed in 10⅔ innings. Rather than rush back, deGrom put himself in a position to tackle the offseason. Those innings were enough to psychologically move past the rehabilitative stage and reenter achievement mode. He trained with the same intensity he did in past seasons. The stuff would still be there. While peers were spending the winter immersed in pitch design, deGrom was seeking the version of himself that could marry his inherent deGromness with the sturdiness he embodied the first six years of his career.
“I wasn’t trying to build anything in a lab,” deGrom said. “My arm got a little long a few years ago, so trying to shorten up the arm path a little bit and sync up my mechanics really well is what I’ve been trying to do.”
Rather than jump out in the first start of the spring to prove that heartiness, deGrom took his time. It is a long season. He wants to be there in the end. His goal for this year is straightforward: “Make as many starts as I can.” If that means throwing live at-bats a little longer than his teammates, that’s what he’ll do. Ultimately, deGrom is the one who defines his comfort, and he went so long without it that its priority is notable.
So if that means shorter starts early in the season, it won’t surprise anyone. There is no official innings limit on deGrom. The Rangers, though, are going to monitor his usage, and he doesn’t plan to use those limited outings to amp up his velocity. This is about being smart and considering more than raw pitch counts or innings totals.
“I think it’s going to be a monitor of stressful innings versus not,” deGrom said. “You have those games where you go five innings, you have 75 pitches, but you’ve got runners all over the place, so those are stressful. Whereas you cruise and you end up throwing 100 pitches and you had one or two runners. It’s like, OK, those don’t seem to be as stressful. So I think it’s monitoring all of that and just playing it by ear how the season goes.”
That approach carried into deGrom’s spring debut Saturday against the Kansas City Royals. He averaged 97 mph on his fastball, topping out at 98. His slider remained near its previous levels at 90. He flipped in a pair of curveballs for strikes, too, just as a reminder that he’s liable to buckle your knees at any given moment. On 31 pitches, deGrom threw 21 strikes, didn’t allow a baserunner and punched out three, including reigning MVP runner-up Bobby Witt Jr. on a vicious 91.5-mph slider.
On his last batter of the day, deGrom started with a slider well off the plate inducing a swing-and-miss from Tyler Gentry, then followed with a low-and-not-quite-as-outside slider Gentry spit on. When a curveball that was well off the plate was called a strike, deGrom saw an opportunity. This is the art of pitching — of weighing the count, what a hitter has seen, how to take advantage of an umpire’s zone. He dotted a 97.3-mph fastball on the exact horizontal plane as the curveball and elevated it to the top of the strike zone, a nasty bit of sorcery that only a handful of pitchers on the planet can execute at deGrom’s level. Gentry stared at it, plate umpire Pete Talkington punched him out and deGrom strode off the mound, beta test complete.
“It’s always a thing of trusting your stuff,” deGrom said. “It’s one of the hardest things to do in this game, and part of it’s the fear of failure. You throw a pitch at 93 when you could have thrown it at 98 and it’s a homer, you’re like, ‘Why did I do that?’ So that’s the part that gets tough. You still have to go out there and trust your stuff, know that you can locate and change speeds, and still get outs not full tilt the whole time.”
Day by day, deGrom inches closer to that. He’ll get a little extra time, with the likelihood the Rangers will hold him back until the season’s fifth game, just to build in rest before the grind of a new season. He’s ready. It has been too long since he has been on the field regularly, contributing, searching for the best version of himself. It might look a little different. And if it does, that’s a good thing.
FORT MYERS, Fla. — Boston Red Sox right-hander Brayan Bello won’t be ready for the start of the season, manager Alex Cora told reporters Tuesday.
Bello, the Opening Day starter last season, has been dealing with soreness in his shoulder this spring. The Red Sox have been taking a cautious approach with him.
In addition, infielder Rafael Devers, who has focused on building strength in his shoulders and refining mechanics, has again had his spring training debut delayed. He was scheduled to play Wednesday, but it has been pushed to Saturday.
Bello, 25, was 14-8 last season with a 4.49 ERA. He had 153 strikeouts over 162⅓ innings. The pitcher from the Dominican Republic agreed to a $55 million, six-year contract last March after originally signing with the Red Sox in 2017 for $28,000.
This will be his fourth season in the majors with Boston.
“He’s behind. So he’s not going to be with us for the Opening Day,” Cora said. “Just doesn’t make sense to push him and rush everything and then something major happens.”
Bello is slated to throw a bullpen session Wednesday.
“He’s going to be part of it,” Cora said. “But he’s behind, so we’ll take care of him.”
The Red Sox expect Devers, who hit .272 with 28 homers and 83 RBIs last season despite complaining of soreness in both of his shoulders, to be ready for the start of the season.
The three-time All-Star spent the first couple of weeks of spring training trying to strengthen his shoulders for the rigors of a 162-game regular season.
Bregman appears to be the likely starter at third base with Devers beginning the season as designated hitter. The Red Sox maintain no decision has been made, and Cora repeated the call will come only when he has to make it official with the Opening Day lineup card in Texas.
“He’s getting there,” Cora said of Devers. “But I think the whole progress from when he got here in January to where he’s at now, he feels a lot comfortable on the inside pitch. You see it in the way he’s driving the ball to left-center, which is something that he missed [late last year].”
Devers, who has led the American League — or been tied for the lead — in errors three times in the past seven seasons, has balked at moving to DH, though, saying last month: “Third base is my position.”
Bregman hasn’t played second base in a game this spring, but Cora said he will get work there “at one point.”
The Associated Press and Field Level Media contributed to this report.
Plans for a pair of aces are on hold with Gerrit Cole out for the 2025 season before it began, pushing Max Fried to the front of the New York Yankees‘ rotation.
Fried, 31, has known Cole since they met on a recruiting visit to UCLA and recently signed as a free agent to team up with the right-hander in pinstripes. With Cole set to have season-ending Tommy John surgery, the spotlight now shifts to Fried.
“At the end of the day, no one is Gerrit Cole, right?” Fried said. “I’ve got to take the ball every time that I take the ball. It doesn’t matter if he was on the mound or not. Realistically, it’s just about doing my job. It’s going out there and making sure that, when I take the ball, we have a really good chance to win that day.”
Fried signed a $218 million contract with the Yankees in hopes of being at the front of the rotation for the next eight years after posting a record of 73-36 with a 3.07 ERA in 168 games — 151 starts — over eight seasons with the Braves.
Cole is projected to return to the Yankees next March, but he might not be cleared to pitch competitively for 18 months.
“From the time I first dreamed of wearing the Yankees uniform, my goal has always been to help bring a World Series championship to New York,” Cole said in an Instagram post. “That dream hasn’t changed – I still believe in it, and I’m more determined than ever to achieve it.”
Minus Cole, it’s expected Fried will become the No. 1 starter, beginning with Opening Day, March 27 against the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium.
“The way I try to see it is, it’s one of, hopefully, 33 starts,” Fried said.
Information from Field Level Media was used in this report.