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Note: This list shouldn't be taken as any draft upshot. That's Mel's gig. This is just a look at the 100 top impact players in 1-A college football for the first half of the 2002 season as well as with a hint of how we expect them to perform the rest of the year. (Season-ending injuries are taken into account. Hence, the removal of Cadillac Williams and Shaun Cody.)
1. Byron Leftwich, Marshall, QB
The anchor of the country's toughest D. Has a team-high 12 hurries. 6. Maurice Clarett, OSU, RB Agile 230-pound rook has the best stiff arm this side of Lennox Lewis. 7. Brett Williams, FSU, OT Dominated Miami's O-line and a big reason why Jones may get a rushing title. 8. Bradie James, LSU, LB Making Butkus noise by sparking a D that leads the SEC in almost every category. 9. Terrell Suggs, ASU, DE Lip-reading snap count fiend has 13 sacks already and also shown he can play the run now too. 10. Kelley Washington, Tenn., WR Not only UT's only wideout, but also might be the Vols only legit arm now too.
11. Chris Brown, Colorado, RB
Pure playmaker has been the most consistent of all Heisman frontrunners. At least until Oklahoma got him. 16. Philip Rivers, NC State, QB Heady gunslinger is the country's passing efficiency leader. By a lot. 17. Nat Dorsey, Ga. Tech, OT What Chan Gailey means when he tells backs to 'follow the Yellow Brick Road." 18. Reggie Williams, Wash., WR Ate up Zona for almost 200 yards and is just now getting healthy. 19. Jeff Faine, ND, C Brings a nasty streak to the Irish offense. 20. Jason Gesser, Wash. St., QB Gritty scrambler has been superb (16 TDs, 5 INTs).
21. Andre Woolfolk, Oklahoma, CB
Coming off his best game of the season with 9 tackles, two sacks and a blocked kick against Memphis. 26. Dave Ragone, L'ville, QB Without an O-line, he's beating teams six-on-11. Could be another Daunte Culpepper. 27. Rashaun Woods, Okla. St., WR Has come up against three name corners and lit them all up. 28. Kevin Jones, Va. Tech, TB The (slightly) more explosive half of The Untouchables. 29. Jimmy Kennedy, Penn. St., DT His four sacks against Wisconsin showed how dominant he can be. 30. Lance Mitchell, Oklahoma, MLB The Sooners leading tackler, a JC import, is better than former OU star Torrance Marshall. Had 15 tackles against UT.
31. Shane Walton, ND, CB
The SEC's most productive wideout (57 rec., 905 yds., 8 TDs). 36. E.J. Henderson, Maryland, LB Hasn't been as great as last season, but still a force (12 tackles per). 37. Andre Johnson, Miami, WR Big East 60-meter king is a 227-pound nightmare for cornerbacks. 38. Dennis Weathersby, Oregon State, CB Huge, physical corner is the top cover man on the west coast. 39. Eli Manning, Miss., QB May not want the hype, but certainly deserves it (12 TDs, 4 INTs). 40. Trent Smith, Oklahoma, TE OU's money receiver had a TD vs. UT, but has also shown this year he can really block too.
41. Shawn Andrews, Ark., OT
Averaging 19 yards per punt return, he also broke up two passes and had a sack against OU. 46. Cecil Sapp, Colo. St., RB Nobody runs harder. Just ask Virginia or Colorado. 47. Michael Boulware, FSU, LB Top coverage backer made a big pick vs.Miami. 48. Jerome McDougle, Miami, DE Great pass rusher (12 hurries), he is a sure-fire first-rounder although he disappeared against FSU. 49. Marlin Jackson, Michigan, CB Fast and physical, he's as close as there is to a shut-down corner in the Big Ten. 50. Stu Schweigert, Purdue, S Can hit. Can run. Wondering why opposing QBs are completing just 45% against the Boilers? Just watch #9 play.
51. Boss Bailey, UGa, LB
Still flashy and backing it up (44 rec., 801 yds). He, not Chuck Rogers, has been the Big Ten's most productive receiver. 55. Terrence Holt, NC State, S Great pass defender is also the best kick blocker in college football history. 56. Cory Redding, Texas, DE Hasn't generated the numbers, but has helped young horns flourish. 57. Anquan Boldin, FSU, WR Physical 225-pound former QB is averaging 16 yards per grab and has four TD catches. 58. Kyle Boller, Cal, QB NFL scouts call the cannon-armed senior the nation's most improved player. 59. Larry Johnson, Penn State, RB His 257 rushing yards vs. Northwestern wasn't a fluke. 60. Zach Mills, Penn State, QB Run-pass threat is the biggest reason why Lions convert on a Big Ten-best 46% on third downs.
61. Shaun McDonald, Arizona State WR
The best deep threat at his position has backed up his plea for more passes. 66. T.A. McLendon, NC State, RB Touchdown Anytime has been living up to his name (12 TDs) while playing through pain. 67. Jimmy Wilkerson, Oklahoma, DE Still hasn't had a huge game yet, but has been solid (11 pressures, 3 sacks). 68. Cody Pickett, Washington, QB Putting up sick numbers and is already making a case to be a Heisman candidate for 2003. 69. Kellen Winslow II, Miami, TE UM's leading receiver (22 rec., 4 TDs), K II has replace Shockey as Dorsey's go-to guy. 70. David Pollack, Georgia, DE The ultimate "motor" guy is good for at least two huge plays every game. Has 7 sacks.
71. Artose Pinner, Kentucky, RB
Was slowed by a bad hammy, but still UT's top threat. 76. Kawika Mitchell, USF, LB The one-time Georgia Bulldog has shined against everyone, including Oklahoma and Southern Miss. 77. Jason Witten, Tenn., TE Soft hands, good hands and a terrific blocker, he is playing like a future first-rounder. 78. D.J. Williams, Miami, LB Making more big-plays this fall (7 TFLs), this is the Canes next great NFL 'backer. 79. Gerald Hayes, Pitt, LB An artist off the field, he's also one on it as well (68 tackles, 9 TFLs). 80. Kwame Harris, Stanford, OT You can't blame the Cardinal woes on him.
81. Quentin Griffin, Oklahoma, TB
Slow start but has come on fast. 86. Justin Gage, Missouri, WR Bowling Green schemed to shut down Brad Smith so Gage caught 16 passes on 'em. 87. Fred Russell, Iowa, TB Hawkeyes short speedster has been a rock toting the rock (133 rushing yards per). 88. Jared Lorenzen, Kentucky, QB So what if he weighs 315 lbs? Try these numbers (61% completions, 17 TDs, 3 INTs). 89. Jordan Gross, Utah, OT The NFL scouts know all about Gross, who might be first-round material. 90. Matt Wilhelm, Ohio State, LB Not overthinking any more, #35 is keying a D that has only yielded 7 TDs in 22 Red Zone visits.
91. Michael Turner, No. Illinois, RB
The Blue's top tackler (51) also is UM's top playmaker (9 TFLs). 96. Josh Harris, Bowling Green, QB Only Brad Smith may be a better run-pass threat. 97. Booger Kennedy, No. Texas, NG Kenoy Kennedy's 5'9" 304-pound baby brother is an unblockable, leverage machine. Has 11 TFLs and 4 sacks. 98. Dallas Clark, Iowa, TE Showing TEs can stretch the field (23 catches, 18 yards per). 99. Terry Jackson II, Minn., TB Charlie Rogers' unheralded former prep teammate is making Gophers look like geniuses for giving him a scholarship. Has 636 rushing yards in last three games 100. Calvin Pace, Wake Forest, DE Former prep QB is coming off a six TFL game against Duke. Has 14.5 TFLs on the season. Bruce Feldman covers college football for ESPN The Magazine. E-mail him at bruce.feldman@espnmag.com. |
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