The 12-team College Football Playoff may have opened the door a little wider, but the national championship picture still feels tightly packed at the top. A handful of programs can talk themselves into the race every August. Only a few actually look built to stay there.
Five teams stand out heading toward 2026, and each one has a different path to the same destination. Some are riding elite quarterback play. Others are leaning on portal additions, defensive depth or a schedule that doesn’t leave much room for chaos.
Ohio State has the kind of profile that keeps showing up in this conversation. Ryan Day has Julian Sayin back after a full season of starting experience, and Sayin’s freshman ceiling has already pushed him into Heisman contention.
He’ll have Jeremiah Smith, the best wide receiver in the country, giving him a weapon who can tilt coverages before the snap even happens. Day’s program has also finished inside the top three of national title futures for nine straight seasons, and Arthur Smith’s arrival as offensive coordinator adds an NFL-flavored rhythm-passing element that should test the Big Ten’s better secondaries.
Losing to Indiana in the conference title game hurt, but Ohio State has the personnel to rewrite that ending.
Notre Dame enters with a different kind of momentum. Freeman spent last winter watching the committee leave his team out despite a resume that arguably deserved better, and that snub has clearly changed the way the program carries itself.
CJ Carr finished 2025 on a long stretch of clean quarterback play, and the defense looks loaded from top to bottom. The secondary is a major strength with Leonard Moore, Tae Johnson and Adon Shuler, while Kyngstonn Viliamu-Asa and Drayk Bowen give the Irish two dynamite linebackers.
The schedule also helps the case, since Notre Dame should be favored in nearly every regular-season game, with only a few ranked opponents bringing much turbulence.
Texas has its own star power, and Arch Manning’s late-season surge changed everything around Steve Sarkisian’s roster. After Week 8, Manning was throwing for roughly 285 yards per game and piling up 19 touchdowns, which is the kind of stretch that forces a reevaluation.
He had minor foot surgery in January, but he is expected to be full-go for camp. Sarkisian also added Cam Coleman from Auburn after a 93-catch, 13-touchdown run over two seasons, pairing him with Ryan Wingo.
In the backfield, the Longhorns are likely to use a committee built around Raleek Brown, Hollywood Smothers and five-star freshman Derrek Cooper. Sarkisian has won 35 games over the past three seasons, and the combination of trench depth, quarterback upside and coaching continuity points to Texas finishing higher than it did a year ago.
Oregon might have made the single most important offseason move of any contender. Dan Lanning’s team has become a regular double-digit-win outfit, and Moore’s choice to pass on an estimated $52 million rookie contract in the 2026 NFL Draft keeps the whole thing pointed forward.
He completed 72 percent of his passes in 2025 for 3,565 yards and 30 touchdowns. The receiver room gets Evan Stewart back from a knee injury, while Dakorien Moore enters Year 2 after arriving as the nation’s top wideout recruit.
Up front, the Ducks have NFL-level talent in Bear Alexander, Teitum Tuioti, A'Mauri Washington and Matayo Uiagalelei. The secondary may be even better, with Brandon Finney Jr. and Koi Perich giving Oregon one of the sport’s best back ends.
Lanning has taken the Ducks to the playoff in three straight seasons without getting over the hump, but the pieces are there to finally close the gap.
Indiana rounds out the group, and at this point there’s no pretending the Hoosiers are a fluke. Curt Cignetti is 27-2 in two seasons in Bloomington after going 16-0 and delivering the program’s first national title.
That alone makes the idea of betting against him feel reckless. Fernando Mendoza is off to the NFL, but the roster around the quarterback spot looks deeper than it did a year ago.
Josh Hoover arrives from TCU after a 3,900-yard season, and Turbo Richard joins after putting up nearly 1,000 total yards and 11 touchdowns at Boston College. The defense still has anchors in Rolijah Hardy and Jamari Sharpe, and the portal again addressed the offensive line and skill spots.
The schedule is tougher than a cakewalk, with trips to Nebraska, Michigan and Washington and home games against Ohio State and USC.
In Other News...
Michigan Finally Faces The Reckoning Ohio State Fans Wanted
Michigans athletic department is staring down another ugly chapter, with the football program under investigation for multiple scandals that have already put the school on the defensive. The allegations include illegal scouting and an inappropriate relationship, and the fallout has only deepened the sense that this is no longer just about one bad episode but a broader institutional mess.
For Ohio State fans, the intrigue is obvious because the Buckeyes have spent plenty of time dealing with Michigan on the field while watching the off-field drama swirl around Ann Arbor. Athletic director Warde Manuel is now at the center of the latest uncertainty, and the full investigation report should bring a clearer picture of how far the damage goes and what kind of leadership changes may follow. [Read more 🡒]
Ohio State Faces A Huge Recruiting Week With QB Pressure Rising
Ohio States 2027 class already sits inside the top 10 nationally and carries the kind of per-player quality that keeps the Buckeyes in the middle of almost every major recruiting conversation. Even with that foundation, the next few days matter because the staff is still working through a cluster of high-end decisions, with quarterback Lukas Prock now listing Ohio State among his top five schools and giving the Buckeyes another chance to stay in the mix at the position.
The bigger pressure point is how the board could shift around those announcements, especially with wide receiver Monshun Sales and defensive lineman Karlos May both nearing decisions. Sales is expected to go first, and while Ohio State remains part of the conversation, the Buckeyes are not being viewed as the front-runner there, which only raises the importance of what happens next as the class keeps taking shape. [Read more 🡒]
Ohio State Loses Top In State Recruit To SEC Powerhouse
A prized in-state offensive tackle from Youngstown has already given Ohio State a reminder of how unforgiving recruiting can be, especially when the Buckeyes are trying to keep building around the line of scrimmage. Anthony Blalock Jr., one of the more coveted big men in the 2028 class, had been a name worth watching for a program that continues to lean heavily into trench recruiting while sitting at No. 7 in the 2027 cycle with 18 commitments.
Blalocks choice stings because this is the kind of Ohio prospect Ohio State usually expects to keep home, particularly with the Buckeyes need to stockpile elite offensive linemen. Instead, a different heavyweight program won the battle, leaving Ohio State to regroup and keep pressing on a board where every top in-state miss carries extra weight. [Read more 🡒]
