
2025 Coastal Carolina Football Predictions: Chanticleers Ranked 94th in RJ Young's Ultimate 136
Published
Aug. 10, 2025 9:29 p.m. ET
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This isn't your average college football ranking.
My Ultimate 136 is a set of rankings that is fluid, but it's my job to look ahead and make a claim for all FBS teams based on what I know and why I know it. Here are the three pressing questions I started by asking when putting together this list:
Who do I think is good?
Why do I think they're good?
What are the chances they will finish above or below my expectations?
Here is a look at where Coastal Carolina lands in my Ultimate 136.
Coastal Carolina ranking: 94
Last year's ranking: 60
Top player: WR Jameson Tucker: Has totaled 1,002 receiving yards and 9 touchdown catches over the last two seasons.
[Coastal Carolina's 2025 schedule]
RJ's take: Tim Beck's Chanticleers yearn for consistency. Only four of his players started every game last season — and they still went bowling.
With the entire starting backfield of quarterback Ethan Vasko and running back Braydon Bennett transferring out, Beck is looking to signal-callers MJ Morris (Maryland) and Emmett Brown (San Jose State) to plug and play alongside three returners at wideout in Bryson Graves, Jameson Tucker and Cameron Wright.
On defense, the addition of SEC and ACC talent in the backfield in Ja'Marion Wayne (Missouri) and Robby Washington (Miami) should help keep the Chanticleers in position to defend the farm at Myrtle Beach.
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[ Check out RJ Young's Ultimate 136 College Football Rankings here ]
Coastal Carolina Win Total Odds: Over 5.5 (+106) Under (-130)
Have an issue with my rankings? Think your alma mater is too low, or your school's rival is too high? Get at me on X, @RJ_Young , and I'll select my favorite tweets and respond to them in a future article.
RJ Young is a national college football writer and analyst for FOX Sports. Follow him at @RJ_Young.
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Their average crowds (9,663 last year) are typically closer to McNeese and North Carolina Central than Delaware or the Dakota schools. 'My theory is, it wasn't that people didn't want football,' said Smart, the university's president emeritus after retiring last year. 'They didn't like losing football. They didn't like bad football.' There are early indications Smart's theory is correct. Season ticket revenue is up $200,000. Students voted to approve a $140 increase in their athletic fees to help fund the move. The fact that the Bears were able to keep Clark — one of FCS' top passers after setting school records in passing yards (3,604) and touchdowns (26) last year — in the transfer portal era wasn't lost on school president Richard 'Biff' Williams. 'There's a culture that did that, but of course I'm sure there's some donors and some NIL and some things that helped him stay,' Williams said. 'I think that tells you kind of where our community and coaches and others are.' 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