College football: Joel Klatt’s top 10 rankings for 2026 season
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The echoes of Hoosiers fans celebrating their first-ever national title in Bloomington haven’t even faded, but the college football world is already obsessed with what comes next. Joel Klatt has officially weighed in with his “Way-Too-Early” Top 10 for the 2026 season, identifying a clear three-way race for the No. 1 spot between the West Coast’s new giant, a perennial SEC powerhouse, and the reigning kings of the sport. With the 12-team playoff era in full swing and coaching legends making high-profile moves, the 2026 landscape looks as volatile and exciting as ever.
10. Texas Tech
Klatt is a massive believer in Joey McGuire’s recruiting momentum, especially after the Red Raiders dominated the winter transfer portal window. The addition of former Cincinnati quarterback Brendan Sorsby and defensive anchor Austin Romaine gives Lubbock a veteran floor they haven’t seen in years. After flirting with a Big 12 title in 2025, this squad enters the new year as the dark horse most likely to crash the quarterfinal stage.
9. Michigan
The Wolverines are hitting the reset button in the best way possible by hiring Kyle Whittingham to bring his signature brand of toughness to Ann Arbor. Despite a messy 9-4 finish last year, retaining Bryce Underwood at quarterback and adding offensive mastermind Jason Beck has Klatt bullish on a quick turnaround. Their 2026 schedule is a nightmare with road trips to Columbus and Eugene, but Whittingham’s teams are notoriously difficult to kill in high-stakes environments.
8. LSU
Brian Kelly’s defense was a liability at times during the 2025 campaign, but Klatt notes that the Tigers have aggressively filled those gaps through the portal. The headline move was Lane Kiffin landing Sam Leavitt, the portal’s top-ranked player, who should provide the explosive quarterback play needed to survive the SEC gauntlet. With a revamped wide receiver room featuring Eugene Wilson III, LSU has the offensive firepower to outpace almost anyone on this list.
7. Miami (Fla.)
The Hurricanes were just six points away from a national title in 2025, and Mario Cristobal has ensured that the resurgence isn’t a one-year fluke. Even with some key departures, Miami is landing Duke transfer Darian Mensah will keep things humming alongside a physical, returning offensive line. Cristobal has finally built the “Alabama-lite” depth in Coral Gables that allows the Hurricanes to sustain the physical toll of a 16-game season.
6. Texas
Arch Manning is officially the undisputed face of the program heading into 2026, and Klatt believes he is the key to Texas’s place in the No. 1 conversation. Steve Sarkisian’s offense remains the most creative in the sport, and the Longhorns have consistently improved their interior line play to match SEC standards. If Manning can maintain the efficiency he showed in the 2025 Citrus Bowl, the Longhorns will be the favorites to take the SEC crown away from Georgia.
5. Notre Dame
Marcus Freeman’s squad is fueled by the frustration of being the first team left out of the 12-team playoff in 2025, a snub that has defined their offseason. Klatt expects a more vertical passing attack in 2026, led by rising star CJ Carr, who finally has the weapons on the perimeter to complement a top-tier defense. The Fighting Irish are built for the long haul, and their motivation to prove they belong among the elite makes them a terrifying draw for anyone in September.
4. Ohio State
The Buckeyes are losing eight starters to the NFL, but the presence of Julian Sayin and Jeremiah Smith keeps them firmly in Klatt’s top four. While there are questions about the defensive coordinator spot, the sheer blue-chip talent in Columbus ensures that their floor is still a New Year’s Six bowl. The 2026 road schedule—featuring trips to Indiana, Texas, and USC—will test whether this younger roster has the mental toughness to match its physical gifts.
3. Indiana
The defending 16-0 national champions aren’t planning on a drop-off, as Curt Cignetti has already secured TCU’s Josh Hoover to replace Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza. Klatt points to Indiana’s Top-2 portal class as proof that Bloomington is now a premier destination for players who want to win at the highest level. The third chapter of the Cignetti era begins with the Hoosiers as the hunted, but their disciplined infrastructure makes them a safe bet to repeat as Big Ten contenders.
2. Georgia
Kirby Smart’s Bulldogs are Klatt’s pick for the best in the SEC, largely due to the return of senior Gunner Stockton and a veteran-heavy defensive front. After a down year by their standards, Georgia is bringing back nearly every key contributor from a unit that dismantled Alabama in the SEC Championship. They represent the gold standard for roster retention in the NIL era, and their path to the 2026 title looks remarkably clear.
1. Oregon
Dan Lanning’s methodical, slow build has finally culminated in a No. 1 ranking, bolstered by the return of star quarterback Dante Moore. The Ducks will field arguably the best defensive line in the country in 2026, and their portal additions in the secondary have erased their only glaring weakness. With Moore opting to stay for another year rather than enter the NFL Draft, Oregon has the continuity and the trench talent to be the team to beat.
Conclusion
The 2026 season is shaping up to be a collision between traditional powers reloading and new-age powerhouses like Indiana and Oregon, trying to maintain their grip on the trophy. Joel Klatt’s rankings remind us that in the modern game, the winner isn’t just the team with the most stars, but the one that best navigates the chaos of the portal and the pressure of the 12-team bracket.
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