Categories
Music

Bucky Covington Returns to ‘American Idol’ for Full-Circle ‘The Thunder Rolls’ Performance With Chris Tungseth

Bucky Covington returned to the American Idol stage on Monday, teaming up with finalist Chris Tungseth to perform “The Thunder Rolls,” the iconic hit made famous by Garth Brooks.

Covington was one of several members of the Idol Class of 2006 who returned for the show’s 20th reunion, alongside Kellie Pickler, Taylor Hicks, Paris Bennett, and Elliott Yamin, all of whom appeared to duet with contestants from this season’s Top 5.

Bucky Covington; Photo via ABC, American Idol
Bucky Covington; Photo via ABC, American Idol

Covington and Tungseth brought the dramatic storyline of “The Thunder Rolls” to life on the Idol stage, delivering a powerful performance that paid tribute to the country classic.

The moment marked a full-circle return for Covington, who originally performed the song during the American Idol semi-finals on March 1, 2006. Nearly two decades later, he revisited the track on the same stage alongside a new generation of contestants.

Bucky Covington, Chris Tungseth; Photo via ABC, American Idol
Bucky Covington, Chris Tungseth; Photo via ABC, American Idol

Now 48, Covington ultimately placed eighth during Season 5 of American Idol. Following his time on the show, he signed with Lyric Street Records and released his self-titled debut album on April 17, 2007. The project debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and produced charting singles including A Different World, It’s Good to Be Us, and I’ll Walk. He also earned recognition for songs like A Father’s Love (The Only Way He Knew How). Although a follow-up album was expected, the closure of Lyric Street Records ultimately ended that chapter of his recording career.

Covington also made a memorable appearance in Hannah Montana: The Movie.

According to a press release, Covington is now preparing to return to the studio to record new music this year and is also planning an acoustic tour.

Bucky Covington, Chris Tungseth; Photo via ABC, American Idol
Bucky Covington, Chris Tungseth; Photo via ABC, American Idol

Monday night’s episode also welcomed back original American Idol judges Paula Abdul and Randy Jackson, who appeared as a guest judge and guest mentor, respectively. The show also featured Dancing with the Stars pros, adding a touch of ballroom flair to the celebration, while America voted live to narrow the Top 5 down to the Top 3.

The American Idol grand finale is set for May 11, 2026, when the remaining finalists will take the stage one last time to earn America’s votes. Alicia Keys will serve as guest mentor and perform, with additional “music legends” set to be announced soon.

The post Bucky Covington Returns to ‘American Idol’ for Full-Circle ‘The Thunder Rolls’ Performance With Chris Tungseth appeared first on Country Now.

​Country Now

Categories
Entertainment

Cardi B’s Polarizing Met Gala Look Is Being Compared to Intestines

Cardi B arrives at Met Gala 2026 red carpetWhy yes, Cardi B, you are the drama—at least when it comes to making jaws drop upon arrival at the Met Gala.
The “Costume Art” theme and complementary “Fashion Is Art” dress code for the May 4,…
​E! Online (US) – Top Stories

Categories
Entertainment

It’s Pineapple Season: Here’s How Experts Choose The Sweetest, Juiciest Fruit At The Store

When pineapple season rolls around, you’ll probably start seeing more of them in stores, but how do you pick out a good one? We asked some experts to find out.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

Categories
Alaska News

Alaska Legislature declines to override Gov. Dunleavy’s veto of bipartisan election bill

Speaker of the House Bryce Edgmon, I-Dillingham, and Senate President Gary Stevens, R-Kodiak (at rear) preside over Monday's joint session of the Alaska Legislature on May 4, 2026. (Corinne Smith photo/Alaska Beacon)

Speaker of the House Bryce Edgmon, I-Dillingham, and Senate President Gary Stevens, R-Kodiak (at rear) preside over Monday’s joint session of the Alaska Legislature on May 4, 2026. (Corinne Smith photo/Alaska Beacon)

After two southeast Alaska Republicans reversed themselves, the Alaska Legislature on Monday failed to override Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s veto of an elections bill intended to take effect this year.

Forty votes were needed to override the veto. Monday’s vote was 38-22, with Rep. Jeremy Bynum, R-Ketchikan, and Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, providing the critical votes to sustain the veto. Both previously voted to pass Senate Bill 64 and send it to the governor.

Each said after Monday’s vote that they did not believe state officials would be able to implement the bill in time for this year’s elections.

As written, SB 64 contained a swath of changes to state law that were intended to make it easier for Alaskans to vote and to improve the security of state elections.

Among the proposed modifications: Free postage for absentee ballots, a new system for absentee voters to track their ballots through the counting process, a 10-day period for absentee voters to fix problems that disqualified their ballots, updated procedures for auditing the state’s voter list to remove ineligible people, a requirement that the financial backers of ballot measures disclose their identities and a special liaison intended to fix widespread voting problems in rural Alaska.

Dunleavy vetoed the bill on Thursday. In his veto message to the Legislature, he wrote, “the Division of Elections warns such changes would be extremely difficult if not impossible, to implement securely and reliably in advance of the 2026 elections.”

Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, supported the bill and the override. Speaking ahead of the vote, he said that in 2022, during a special election held after the death of Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, the state was able to implement a ballot-tracking system within six weeks.

“I’m not prepared to tell Alaskans, ‘Sorry, it’ll have to wait another year. It’s just too hard,’” Wielechowski said.

Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, speaks in support of overriding a veto by Gov. Dunleavy of an elections reform bill on May 4, 2026. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, speaks in support of overriding a veto by Gov. Dunleavy of an elections reform bill on May 4, 2026. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)

But Bynum said afterward that he was swayed by statements from the Division of Elections, which said it was uncertain about its ability to implement the system so quickly this year.

“I can’t speak to what they may or may not have done in 2022. I can only speak to what the Division of Elections is telling me today. And what they told me is that this timeline is too aggressive for them to effectively put this in the law,” he said.

Bynum said another factor in his vote was the use of tribal IDs by voters at the polls. SB 64 would have mandated the state to accept their use as voter ID. Bynum said that until the past week, he was unaware that tribal IDs could already be used as a matter of policy.

Bynum said the vote was a difficult one for him and that if the bill had taken effect Jan. 1, he would have voted for it.

Stedman was one of the last legislators to vote, and his opposition was significantly less important because Bynum’s decision had already sustained the veto.

“I think they need more time to implement it. That was it, pretty much. I think there’s a lot of good work in this bill and a lot of positive things, but it just needs a little more time,” he said while walking away from Monday’s joint session.

In a joint legislative session, lawmakers in the Alaska House and Senate failed to override Gov. Dunleavy's veto of an elections reform bill, SB 64, by a vote of 38 to 22, sustaining the veto on May 4, 2026. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
In a joint legislative session, lawmakers in the Alaska House and Senate failed to override Gov. Dunleavy’s veto of an elections reform bill, SB 64, by a vote of 38 to 22, sustaining the veto on May 4, 2026. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)

In March, the House voted 23-16 on March 23 to pass the bill. Rep. Ashley Carrick, D-Fairbanks, was excused absent from that vote but later expressed her support. Two days later, the Senate voted 16-4 to approve the House’s changes and send the bill to Dunleavy.

The veto of SB 64 was Dunleavy’s 10th in the two-year 34th Alaska State Legislature. While prior governors have vetoed more bills during a single Legislature, this Legislature has passed relatively few bills, and Dunleavy has vetoed bills at a higher rate than any previous governor.

Legislators overrode two of Dunleavy’s 10 vetoes. Two others, in addition to SB 64, saw override votes fail. The remaining five were never brought up for an override vote despite opportunities to do so.

The veto means a sixth consecutive year will pass without a significant update to the state’s election system. Bipartisan bills failed in 2022, 2024 and now 2026.

This year’s bill appeared to have the most likelihood of success — it was endorsed by Reps. Sarah Vance, R-Homer, and Kevin McCabe, R-Big Lake, two of the most politically conservative members of the state House, and it had support from House and Senate progressives.

The Alaska Federation of Natives issued a statement urging legislators to support an override, as did other groups.

But many Republicans opposed the changes because they wanted a more rigorous cull of the state’s voter list and oppose easier access to absentee voting.

Ahead of the final vote, Republican writer Suzanne Downing lambasted the bill, as did other socially conservative commentators.

Vance, speaking Monday to the Legislature, said she received “threats” and “bullying” because of her support of the bill and an override. 

After the vote, she said “there has been slander and an all-out assault to discredit and, frankly, lie to the people about what this bill does.” 

Asked whether she was referring to Downing and her website, which has published a series of articles against the bill, she said, “Very clearly — intentionally misleading the people about what’s actually in the bill, what it does, and claiming that I’m no longer a conservative.”

One of the articles was from Rep. Rebecca Schwanke, R-Glennallen, who urged Dunleavy to veto the bill and on Monday asked legislators to sustain the governor’s decision.

Speaking on the floor, she said rural voters in her district need more than 10 days to fix problems that might have disqualified their absentee ballot.

Sen. Mike Cronk, R-Tok, represents Schwanke’s district and another Fairbanks-area House district. He was in favor of the override.

“If I lose an election because a little old lady in Arctic Village had to cure her ballot and have that one ballot cost me my election, so be it,” he said. “Aren’t we here to make sure every vote counts?”

SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Categories
Food

Why You Might Want To Skip Packing Cheese For A Picnic

It’s getting to be picnic weather again, but there’s something you should look out for when you pack your meal: It might be better to avoid cheese.

​Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips

Categories
Entertainment

The 8 Best New Costco Kirkland Signature Items So Far In 2026

Costco has introduced all kinds of new products to its stores in 2026. It can be tough to know which ones are worth a try, so we narrowed down some favorites.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

Categories
Alaska News

Judge considers request to halt controversial bear cull in Western Alaska

A brown bear stands in water in Katmai National Park on Sept. 27, 2022. (Photo by T. Carmack/National Park Service)

A brown bear stands in water in Katmai National Park on Sept. 27, 2022. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game is poised to start a spring predator control program targeting bears west of the park, in the area used by the Mulchatna Caribou Herd. Some critics of the program say it might wind up killing Katmai bears. (Photo by T. Carmack/National Park Service)

With the Alaska Department of Fish and Game poised to start culling bears in a program to boost the population of a depleted caribou herd, critics have asked a state judge to block the program before the shooting begins.

The Alaska Wildlife Alliance is seeking an injunction to prevent the department from resuming a controversial predator control program in 40,000 square miles of state land east of the Togiak National Wildlife Refuge and west of Katmai National Park and Preserve. The territory is used by the Mulchatna Caribou Herd. 

The alliance maintains that the predator control program the department seeks to pursue is no better than the program found unconstitutional last year by two state Superior Court judges, Andrew Guidi and Christina Rankin.

The Department of Fish and Game, however, argues that the constitutional violations the judges identified have been addressed and that the program is too important to Western Alaska subsistence hunters to delay. The department says it must remove bears from the area to give the Mulchatna herd a better chance to recover — and that the removal needs to happen soon, this spring, when the caribou are giving birth to calves that might be vulnerable to bear predation.

The parties were in court on Friday arguing their cases before a third Superior Court judge considering the matter, Adolf Zeman.

“The board has reinstated the exact same predator control program that was struck down by the court as unconstitutional for failure to consider bear population data,” Michelle Sinnott, the attorney representing the Alaska Wildlife Alliance, told Zeman at the hearing.

The only new information that the department has provided concerns caribou, information that is irrelevant to the question of whether bears are adequately protected, Sinnott said.

Kimberly Del Frate, the state attorney arguing on behalf of Fish and Game, told Zeman the bear-culling program, as designed by the department, will not harm the overall bear population.

“The bear removal itself is narrow and targeted,” and therefore does not threaten the sustained yield of the bear population, she said.

Further, an emphasis on Mulchatna herd health over bear numbers is justified, Del Frate argued. Past state Supreme Court rulings and state legislation shows that the concept of “sustained yield,” which is in the Alaska constitution and expresses the principle of managing natural resources for long-term health, is meant to be flexible, she said.

“It expressly allows for preferences among beneficial uses, such as a preference for prey species as a food source over other uses of predator species,” she said.

Zeman, at the conclusion of Friday’s hearing, promised a speedy decision.

“I understand that we’re time-sensitive here, so I will issue a decision here as soon as I can,” he said.

The bear-culling is planned for this month, when the caribou begin giving birth to their calves, said Patty Sullivan, a spokesperson for the Department of Fish and Game. There is not a firm start date, she said.

“Typically, we would start looking for signs of calving in the Mulchatna (area) during the first couple weeks of May. Exact timing varies from year to year depending on how and where calving is occurring. It’s fairly dynamic,” she said by email.

Critics of the program say it threatens populations of bears that use habitat in Katmai National Park and Preserve, among other sites.

The program was initially authorized by the Alaska Board of Game in 2022, and it started in 2023. From 2023 to 2025, the program killed 186 brown bears, five black bears and 20 wolves. Of that total, 11 brown bears were killed last spring, days after Rankin’s May 7, 2025, ruling that found the program legally void. The judge responded by issuing a restraining order against the department.

Both Guidi and Rankin had found that the Mulhatna predator control program, as approved by the Board of Game and carried out by the Department of Fish and Game, violated the constitution’s sustained yield provision by failing to assess population impacts on bears, as well as provisions requiring adequate public notice and participation.

The Board last July approved a revived Mulchatna predator control program; board members said it addressed issues raised by the earlier court rulings.

The Mulchatna herd population peaked at about 200,000 animals in the 1990s but is now down to about 15,000 animals, according to the Department of Fish and Game. Hunting was closed in 2021. The department’s goal is to bring the numbers up to between 30,000 and 80,000 animals, a population size that would support resumed hunting.

The department argues that predator control done to date has already helped the herd. But critics argue that the herd’s population has now stabilized and that factors other than bear predation — including habitat change, disease and past overhunting — are more likely causes of the population decline.

SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Categories
Music

Eagles’ Band Member Suffers Medical Episode – NOLA Show Cut Short

Eagles’ fans didn’t get to hear one of the group’s biggest hits on Saturday night. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

Categories
Music

Eagles’ Band Member Suffers Medical Episode – NOLA Show Cut Short

Eagles’ fans didn’t get to hear one of the group’s biggest hits on Saturday night. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

Categories
Sports Fox

2026 College Football Rankings: Oregon, Notre Dame Highlight Post-Spring Top 25

We’re still several months away from the first practices of fall ball, but there are already seven teams that I believe are in a tier of their own ahead of the 2026 college football season. You can likely guess a few of them, as programs like Ohio State have become mainstays at the top of college football. But is Indiana poised to make another run in 2026? Is there another Big Ten team that might be better than those two programs? Does Georgia still run the SEC? With spring ball in the books for most of the country, let’s take a look at my post-spring top 25. There were a lot of teams I considered at No. 25, but Tennessee has been very consistent, at least on offense. Josh Heupel took over five years ago and Tennessee has been the No. 1 scoring offense in the country ever since. However, the Vols have a big question at quarterback entering the summer, which is why they aren’t ranked higher. It looks like the QB competition is down to two players, with redshirt freshman George MacIntyre and five-star freshman Faizon Brandon vying for the job. Both have little or no experience. I think Tennessee will be fine on offense, but it is a quarterback-driven offense. Defensively, Tennessee brought in former Ohio State and Penn State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles for the same job. There’s a lot of talent in Tennessee as it’s been one of the top recruiting programs in the country. The schedule isn’t terrible, but I like that the Volunteers get three of their four toughest games at home (Texas, LSU, Alabama). This is a bet on top-end talent at important positions. It’s a make-or-break year for head coach Shane Beamer after South Carolina went 4-8 after being a top-10 team early on last season. Quarterback LaNorris Sellers came into the 2025 season as a Heisman hopeful, but that fell off. Edge rusher Dylan Stewart could be a top-10 pick in the 2027 NFL Draft, and I had him ranked in my way-too-early top 10 prospects for next year’s class. The Gamecocks also brought in Kendall Briles as their new offensive coordinator, a move aimed at injecting energy into the offense. South Carolina returns the most offensive production in the SEC, but they have to overcome a really tough schedule. The Gamecocks have road games at Alabama, Florida, Oklahoma, and Clemson, plus home matchups against Tennessee, Texas A&M, and Georgia. I think new head coach Morgan Scalley keeps some semblance of continuity at Utah, even though many people in that program left with Kyle Whittingham for Michigan. Scalley had to basically replace the entire offensive coaching staff. The Utes still have quarterback Devon Dampier and running back Wayshawn Parker, but they’ve got to replace two first-round picks on their offensive line. That won’t be easy. Scalley knows how to produce on the defensive side, so that’s not a concern. Another Big 12 school checks in early on the list. I really like Houston head coach Willie Fritz after he helped the Cougars win 10 games in his second season. Conner Weigman not only returns at quarterback, but he has 26 starts in his career. The Cougars also return wide receiver Amare Thomas, who was second in the Big 12 in receiving yards and receiving touchdowns a year ago. Watch out for running back Makhi Hughes at running back, though, as he reunites with Fritz at Houston. Hughes can return to being one of the most productive running backs in the country. Another staple makes the list. Iowa isn’t sure what it’s doing yet at quarterback, but we know the Hawkeyes aren’t a quarterback-centric team. That quarterback battle is going to go on for a bit. Do we care? Yes, we kind of do. I’m more concerned with the Hawkeyes’ offensive line and how they plan to replace some key players, though. That O-line was the best in the country last year, or at least they were awarded as such with the Joe Moore Award. Brent Brennan is a hell of a head coach. Plus, quarterback Noah Fifita is back after being named first-team All-Big 12 last year. He’s got the second-most starts among all quarterbacks in the country with 34. All of those have come at Arizona. In fact, I was talking to Nick Foles, and he’s excited about Fifita and the legacy he’s building at Arizona. I thought the Huskies would take a jump in 2025, and they did. However, Washington made some key mistakes in big moments last season. Demond Williams Jr. is back at quarterback, and he’s got four of his offensive linemen from last season protecting him. I love that. The Huskies have to replace wide receivers Denzel Boston and Raiden Vines-Bright. Dezmen Rouebuck had a strong true freshman season at receiver, though. There’s also some continuity on the defensive side of the ball, namely with defensive coordinator Ryan Walters. He kind of figured things out during the course of the year. Rhett Lashlee has done a marvelous job as SMU’s head coach. The Mustangs have done a marvelous job of making sure Lashlee remains their head coach as well. SMU has won 31 games over the last three years. That’s the 10th-most in the country, and SMU has gone 14-2 in its last two seasons of ACC play. The Mustangs also have experienced quarterback play with Kevin Jennings returning. This is a team that’s not going anywhere. BYU has been sort of pushing its ceiling. When the Cougars faced Texas Tech last season, they didn’t play very well and couldn’t get over the hump. They did get a major boost with Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year LJ Martin opting to return to Provo, and quarterback Bear Bachmeier back after leading BYU to 11 wins as a freshman. The situation with wide receiver Parker Kingston, which led to his dismissal from the program due to some terrible accusations, hurts the Cougars’ ranking. BYU also lost its defensive coordinator, Jay Hill, to Michigan. I know I’m going to get some flak for this, but I couldn’t put Alabama higher than 16th. Alabama has slowly been slipping, and we’ve seen that with its play on the field. Head coach Kalen DeBoer just got a contract extension, which was a bit interesting, as he heads into Year 3 at Tuscaloosa. At quarterback, the Crimson Tide have two very talented, but very inexperienced options in Austin Mack (last year’s backup) and redshirt freshman Keelon Russell (a former five-star recruit). DeBoer has said he won’t name a starter until the fall. Regardless, the winner will have zero college starts. I just don’t like that in this day and age. Alabama needs wide receiver Ryan Coleman Williams to get back to what he was as a freshman. He wasn’t near what he was last year. Ultimately, this team’s identity still hinges on the defense and run game — areas that were once the program’s foundation under Nick Saban. Did you know they were 126th in yards per carry last season? Ty Simpson put them on their back, and they don’t have that anymore. This one is a lot about the schedule. There are some teams ranked behind Penn State who have better rosters, but if you look at the schedule, the Nittany Lions should be a top-15 team. Now with Matt Campbell as its head coach, Penn State has essentially become East Iowa State. He almost brought the entire Iowa State roster with him. Campbell’s going to be charged with winning big games. However, here’s the thing: they don’t have a ton of big games. The schedule falls in their favor, and they’re going to have the most experienced quarterback in the country with Rocco Becht. I think they can make a run at 10 wins. Ole Miss had a tremendous College Football Playoff run, but the Rebels lost too much from that roster for me to put them in the top 10. Quarterback Trinidad Chambliss was amazing, leading the Rebels to the CFP semifinal. If you have Chambliss, you’re going to have a chance in any game. Kewan Lacy is also back at running back after rushing for 1,567 yards as a sophomore. I thought head coach Pete Golding did a good job in the CFP and hitting the portal hard to strengthen the defense. The situation with incoming quarterback Brendan Sorsby obviously isn’t ideal. We all thought that was a tremendous fit after he transferred to Texas Tech before the news broke that the NCAA was investigating his alleged sports gambling. Will Hammond played well as a backup quarterback for Texas Tech last year, but he tore his ACL, and it’s questionable if he’ll be back for Week 1. Still, Texas Tech was aggressive in the portal once again to shore up its roster. The Red Raiders lost a good bit of talent in their front seven, with edge rusher David Bailey, linebacker Jacob Rodriguez and defensive lineman Romello Height being among some of the players taken in the first two days of the draft. Michigan seems to be all over the place in other rankings. So, I placed the Wolverines relatively in the middle because it’s a wait-and-see for me on one key element: the combination of quarterback Bryce Underwood and offensive coordinator Jason Becht. Becht has been outstanding in the last couple of seasons, getting the most out of guys like Devon Dampier at New Mexico and Utah. We’ll see if he can do the same for Underwood. The schedule isn’t easy, though, and they’ve got four games against CFP teams from last season. I think Michigan can have a pretty good team, especially if the Underwood-Becht combo meshes well. Michigan is in good hands with Kyle Whittinham. I’m just not sure the Wolverines can win the Big Ten, though. Head coach Brent Venables has the Oklahoma defense exactly where he wants it. He took over defensive playcalling duties last season for the Sooners and it worked, ranking top 10 in the country. The Sooners have four returning All-SEC players on defense, including defensive tackle David Stone, who is already generating early first-round buzz for the 2027 draft. We all know quarterback John Mateer can be really good when he’s healthy as well. He was the Heisman front-runner before that injury to his hand. They just need to run the ball a bit better. Truth be told, when I got to 16, there was a line. So, from BYU to my 30th- or 35th-ranked team, there were a lot of teams I considered placing in the top 25. Then, from No. 15 to No. 8, there was another grouping of teams I found difficult to order. So, while we hold the top 10 in high regard, I just wanted to make the delineation clear. USC gets in at No. 10 as I’m bullish on the Trojans. I think they fixed the line of scrimmage. Lincoln Riley knew at some point they needed to improve in the trenches, and they brought back their entire starting offensive line. That was an offensive line that helped USC’s run-game improve in 2025. Riley’s teams have also been really good when they can run the ball. Running back Waymond Jordan was spectacular last season before he got hurt. There are some questions at wide receiver, but Riley’s offenses always develop pass-catchers. I really love what head coach Mike Elko has done in his first two seasons at College Station. Last season didn’t end well, though, but I think that just means the Aggies will be even more motivated in 2026. They started out 11-0 before losing to Texas and Miami (Fla.) in the playoff. This is a team that’s built under the right things. They’re built on their defense, which will still be very good. There will be some changes on the offensive side, with offensive coordinator Colin Klein leaving to become Kansas State’s head coach. They do get quarterback Marcel Reed back for his third season as a starter, and he’ll be able to throw to wide receiver Mario Craver. That’s a big deal for them. This is the top team of my second tier, and this is a major nod to Lane Kiffin. Sure, the way he left Ole Miss was a disaster, but Kiffin can coach. LSU’s offense has the potential to be among the best in the country after an aggressive overhaul in the transfer portal. The Tigers brought in roughly 40 transfers, highlighted by quarterback Sam Leavitt, one of the top available players at the position. They also added wide receiver Jayce Brown, offensive tackle Jordan Seaton, and edge rusher Jordan Ross. Kiffin also retained defensive coordinator Blake Baker. That was a great move. Now, we get into the cream of the crop. I think the national champion will be one of these seven teams, starting with Texas. Some will be higher on Texas, and some might even be lower. Arch Manning is obviously the headliner as he enters Year 2 as the Longhorns’ starting quarterback. I think he’ll play really well because his play late in the season suggests that. He finished with 20 total touchdowns and just two turnovers in his final six games. Head coach Steve Sarkisian revamped the offense with some portal players, including wide receiver Cam Coleman. Watch out for Coleman, who I think can have a monster year and made my way-too-early top-10 2027 draft prospect list. You can see guys like wide receiver Ryan Wingo also having a big year, too. The offensive line was also revamped, and Will Muschamp returned as defensive coordinator. Edge rusher Colin Simmons joined Manning and Coleman on my way-too-early top-10 2027 draft prospects list as well. That Ohio State game early in the year will determine who has the inside track of being ranked No. 1 or 2 in the country and a CFP berth. Miami was one drive away from winning the national championship last season, and I think getting quarterback Darian Mensah from Duke (however the Hurricanes got him) was huge. He led Duke to the ACC title last season, and he now has talented players like running back Mark Fletcher Jr. and wide receiver Malachi Tooney around him. The offensive line should still be good because head coach Mario Cristobal knows how to build an offensive line. And I also believe in Cristobal as he showed improvement in his game-managing skills last season. It’s easy to take Georgia for granted, isn’t it? The program hasn’t won a title in three years, so we think Georgia isn’t what it used to be. But Kirby Smart recruits his butt off and in those three seasons, the Bulldogs have gone 36-6. They’ve also won two SEC titles in that stretch. Sure, they haven’t won a playoff game in that time, but they still have players. The SEC still goes through Athens. Quarterback Gunnar Stockton is back, along with several other key players like center Drew Bobo and safety K.J. Bolden. I really wanted to rank Indiana higher than this. However, the three teams ranked higher than the Hoosiers just have so much returning talent. But the Hoosiers aren’t going anywhere as long as Curt Cignetti is at the helm, especially if offensive coordinator Mike Shanahan and defensive coordinator Bryant Haines are still there. The big portal addition was ex-TCU quarterback Josh Hoover. All eyes will be on him as he replaces Fernando Mendoza. He’s almost a Mendoza clone, though, as Hoover was only second to Mendoza for the most run-pass option throws in college football last season. Indiana also got former Michigan State wide receiver Nick Marsh, who will line up on the outside with Charlie Becker. The offensive line and defensive should be very good, too. Quarterback Julian Sayin and wide receiver Jeremiah Smith headline the returning players for Ohio State. Sure, there might be more turnover than usual in Columbus, but the Buckeyes have their Heisman finalist quarterback and the best player in college football returning. There is a new offensive coordinator as Arthur Smith will likely run a more pro-style offense for Sayin. I think the best part about Ohio State, though, is that four of its offensive linemen and running back Bo Jackson returned. So, this offense could be as good as any in college football. The Buckeyes hit the portal hard defensively to make up for the lost talent on that side of the ball. Sure, they had three players on defense picked in the top 11 of the NFL Draft, but they just showed last year that they can replace that level of talent in an offseason. I love a team that’s pissed off, and Notre Dame is going to be ready from Jump Street. You think Marcus Freeman’s not going to have the attention of his team after the way last season ended? That was a team that felt like it could make a run to the national championship. This will be an offense more centered around quarterback CJ Carr, with running backs Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price going to the NFL. But Notre Dame does have its two top receivers returning (Jordan Faison, Jaden Greathouse) and got two really good wide receivers in the portal (Quincy Porter, Mylan Graham). The Fighting Irish have a ton of experience coming back in the trenches. Four returning starters on the offensive line to go with a defense that will probably be the top defense in all of college football. They’ve got five of their seven starters back up front. Oregon remains in the top spot after I ranked the Ducks No. 1 in my way-too-early poll at the start of the offseason. When you look at the teams that have won the last three national championships, Oregon fits the blueprint those teams followed to a tee. The Ducks are a veteran-led team with talent returning everywhere while holding the best defensive line in the country, an experienced quarterback and the ability to be explosive. They’ve also inched closer and closer to getting over the hump. They only have three losses over the last two seasons, and all three were to the eventual national champion — one loss to Ohio State in 2024 and two losses to Indiana in 2025. Every year that Dan Lanning has been the head coach, Oregon moves one step forward. And just look at the talent this team is returning. It starts with quarterback Dante Moore, but continues with the likes of wide receiver Dakorien Moore, wide receiver Jeremiah McClellan, running back Jordon Davison, tight end Jamari Johnson, edge rusher Matayo Uiagalelei, defensive tackle A’mauri Washington, defensive tackle Bear Alexander, edge rusher Teitum Tuioti and cornerback Brandon Finney Jr.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports