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Ranking the best college football coaches: From national contenders to overachievers
ESPN PLUS $ MATERIALCollege coaches love to talk about how great things are this time of year. A new season looms. Everyone is 0-0.
But while they all start with the same record, they are not all equal.
I've wanted to do a college coach ranking for some time, but I needed the right format. National Top 25 lists are fine and somewhat insightful, but I never understood how coaches from schools with vastly different resources -- and realistic goals -- could be lumped together in a single ranking. How do you fairly compare Alabama's Nick Saban and Army's Jeff Monken, or even outstanding coaches in the same conference, such as Clemson's Dabo Swinney and Wake Forest's Dave Clawson?
Other factors include longevity and overall background. Some coaches start at -- or close to -- the bottom and work their way up, while others, such as Georgia's Kirby Smart, Ohio State's Ryan Day and Lincoln Riley of Oklahoma and now USC, inherited turnkey programs ready to compete nationally. Baylor's Dave Aranda won the Big 12 in only his second season as an FBS coach, so how should he compare to those who have done the job much longer?
The goal of the following ranking is to be both smart and fair. Coaches are ranked in four categories, within which I tried to identify the best 10 truly comparable candidates. I evaluated coaches based on consistency, championships won, AP Top 25 finishes and other metrics. The rankings are weighted toward recent performance, but I also included some coaches whose overall profiles merited inclusion despite some struggles lately. Coaches who genuinely impacted the sport, and whose achievements at certain programs haven't been replicated since their departures, were typically given extra credit.
Coaches cannot appear in more than one category. First-time head coaches are not ranked here, so you won't see Oklahoma's Brent Venables, Notre Dame's Marcus Freeman and others. Only current FBS head coaches are eligible.
Each of the four categories will be defined.
Let's get started.
National contenders
Coaches who lead teams pegged to regularly compete for the College Football Playoff or to do so in the near future.
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1. Nick Saban, Alabama
Age: 70FBS résumé: 9-2 Toledo (one season), 34-24-1 Michigan State (five seasons), 48-16 LSU (five seasons), 183-25 Alabama (16 seasons), 274-67-1 overall (27 seasons)
Conference titles: 11 (10 SEC, 1 MAC) | National titles: 7
Saban is the greatest coach of his time and should go down as the best to ever walk a college sideline. His seven national championships rank as the most in college football history, and he has won 10 SEC titles at Alabama and LSU. His run of consistently elite success from 2009 to 2021 might never be matched, as Alabama has finished No. 1 or No. 2 nine times in the AP rankings, and never ended outside the top 10. Since his debut season at Alabama in 2007, Saban has lost more than two games only once (three in 2010). He also guided LSU to the 2003 national title and in 1999 helped Michigan State to its first AP top 10 finish in 12 seasons.
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2. Dabo Swinney, Clemson
Age: 52FBS résumé: 150-36 Clemson (14 seasons)
Conference titles: 7 (ACC) | National titles: 2
Swinney took over a Clemson program that had become a frequent underachiever (and occasional punchline) and turned it into a national power. Clemson made the CFP every season from 2015 to 2020, winning national titles in 2016 and 2018 and twice finishing as the national runner-up. Swinney has dominated the ACC with seven league titles and nine division titles, and his teams have won no less than 10 games since 2010. No one has consistently challenged Saban's Alabama teams on the national stage better than Swinney and Clemson.
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3. Kirby Smart, Georgia
Age: 46FBS résumé: 66-15 Georgia (six seasons)
Conference titles: 1 (SEC) | National titles: 1
Several coaches would list Georgia as the best job in the country, and the program has some clear advantages that Smart is now maximizing. He's the coach who ended Georgia's four-decade drought without a national championship, beating his former boss Saban and Alabama in the process. Since his first season, Smart is 58-10 with five consecutive AP top-7 finishes, four SEC East division titles and a 5-2 postseason record. He seems to be building the next consistent national power program.
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4. Lincoln Riley, USC
Age: 38FBS résumé: 55-10 Oklahoma (five seasons)
Conference titles: 4 (Big 12) | National titles: 0
Riley is somewhat tricky to evaluate, as he inherited an Oklahoma program from Bob Stoops that was coming off back-to-back Big 12 titles. Still, he had already impacted the program as offensive coordinator, sparking the quarterback play. He then took things to the next level, reaching the CFP and winning the Big 12 in each of his first four seasons as head coach. Riley made Oklahoma a premier quarterback destination, mentoring two Heisman Trophy winners and a Heisman finalist. His next mission is reviving one of the game's great programs at USC.
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5. Brian Kelly, LSU
Age: 60FBS résumé: 19-16 Central Michigan (three seasons), 34-6 Cincinnati (four seasons), 113-40 Notre Dame (12 seasons), 166-62 overall (18 seasons)
Conference titles: 3 (2 Big East, 1 MAC) | National titles: 0
Kelly was always up front about how national championships are the only goal that matters at Notre Dame. While he didn't win one, he guided the Irish to their most consistently successful stretch since Lou Holtz's tenure. Notre Dame made two CFP appearances, finished as the national runner-up in 2012 and won 54 games with five AP top-12 finishes in Kelly's final five seasons there. Kelly also recorded a top-4 finish with Cincinnati. He has won everywhere, including a MAC title at Central Michigan and two Division II national titles at Grand Valley State. Anything less than a national title at LSU will be a major disappointment for Kelly.
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6. Ryan Day, Ohio State
Age: 43FBS résumé: 34-4 Ohio State (three seasons, coached three games in 2018)
Conference titles: 2 (Big Ten) | National titles: 0
Five years ago, Day was a mostly unknown assistant working with J.T. Barrett, Joe Burrow and Dwayne Haskins in the Ohio State quarterback room. His rapid rise underscores his coaching talent, and he has made Ohio State -- not known for elite quarterback play -- a top spot for elite signal-callers. Day didn't lose a Big Ten regular-season game until last year's finale against Michigan, and reached the CFP in his first two full seasons at Ohio State. He also inherited one of the best jobs in American sport, from one of the Big Ten's most historically dominant coaches in Urban Meyer. Day ultimately must win the national title to rise on this list.
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7. Jimbo Fisher, Texas A&M
Age: 56FBS résumé: 83-23 at Florida State (eight seasons), 34-14 at Texas A&M (four seasons), 117-37 overall (12 seasons)
Conference titles: 3 (ACC) | National titles: 1
Fisher has done some good things at Texas A&M, including a No. 4 finish in 2020. His win over Alabama last season made Fisher the first of Saban's assistants to beat him. But his time in College Station, without any championships to date, has hurt his overall profile. Fisher led Florida State to the 2013 national title and the program's only stretch of elite success -- four AP top-10 finishes, three ACC titles and a 59-9 record from 2012 to 2016 -- since Bobby Bowden's incredible run quieted down in 2001. His next step is bringing titles to Texas A&M.
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8. Jim Harbaugh, Michigan
Age: 58FBS résumé: 29-21 Stanford (four seasons), 61-24 Michigan (seven seasons), 90-45 overall (11 seasons)
Conference titles: 1 (Big Ten) | National titles: 0
Harbaugh had always placed well in national coach rankings, but needed to justify his position by beating Ohio State and winning the Big Ten. He accomplished both last season, helping Michigan to its first CFP appearance and its first outright Big Ten title since 2003. Harbaugh has improved Michigan's program but now must start competing more frequently for national goals. He also engineered a dramatic turnaround at Stanford, which had five losing seasons before his arrival and went 12-1 with a No. 4 finish in his final year.
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9. James Franklin, Penn State
Age: 50FBS résumé: 24-15 Vanderbilt (three seasons), 67-34 Penn State (eight seasons), 91-49 overall (11 seasons)
Conference titles: 1 (Big Ten) | National titles: 0
If this were 2020, Franklin could appear higher. He had guided Penn State to 40 wins and three AP top-9 finishes in the previous four seasons. The past two years have hurt his stock a bit, as Penn State has split 22 games and gone 8-10 in Big Ten play. But Franklin has shown he can break through, winning the conference in 2016 and nearly getting to the CFP. His work at Vanderbilt -- 24-15 overall with three bowl appearances and two AP Top 25 finishes -- looks even more remarkable as the years go by.
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10. Luke Fickell, Cincinnati
Age: 48FBS résumé: 6-7 Ohio State (one season), 48-15 Cincinnati (five seasons), 54-22 overall (six seasons)
Conference titles: 2 (AAC) | National titles: 0
Fickell accomplished what many believed was impossible at a Group of 5 school, leading Cincinnati to the CFP in 2021. Although Cincinnati has a history of success, Fickell's ability to elevate the program since 2018 helped lead to a Big 12 invitation last fall. Since 2018, Cincinnati trails only Alabama, Ohio State and Clemson in winning percentage (.863). Fickell, who endured a challenging head-coaching debut at Ohio State in 2011, boasts back-to-back league titles and AP top-8 finishes at Cincinnati. He's set to guide UC into the Big 12.