College Sports Fans Favorite Teams, Coaches, Conferences in 2023

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Deion Sanders recently arrived at the University of Colorado to much fanfare, media buzz and on-field expectations. From sold-out season tickets to celebrities like Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson on the Buffaloes’ sidelines, the “Coach Prime” effect is already having an outsized impact on a recently dormant football program.

And while Sanders’ squad won’t contend for a College Football Playoff championship this campaign, the former NFL and MLB star with no prior Football Bowl Subdivision coaching experience can already claim that he’s one of college football’s most popular coaches.

Per new Morning Consult research, Sanders scored a favorability rating of 62% among self-identified college sports fans, the largest share of the 12 well-known college football head coaches included in the survey. Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh and Alabama’s Nick Saban rounded out the top three, scoring favorability ratings of 49% and 48%, respectively.

Business is booming for Sanders, who signed a reported five-year, $29.5 million deal to lead the Buffaloes. His natural charisma and boisterous personality have made him an instant media darling, whether it’s on ESPN or his son’s YouTube channel, the latter of which chronicles behind the scenes at Colorado and has hundreds of thousands of more followers than the football program’s own channel. 

Already seen in national TV commercials for Aflac and Kentucky Fried Chicken, Sanders is also making his presence known via Amazon’s streaming service. Last winter, Prime Video released a four-part docuseries on Sanders’ final season at Jackson State, a historically Black college that competes in the Football Championship Subdivision, before his transition to the Power Five. Season 2 of “Coach Prime” will debut on Prime Video next month. 

Interest in the 56-year-old Sanders, who generated over $90 million in earned media value for the university through the first few weeks of this season, should only grow, whether he stays in Boulder long term or moves on to a bigger campus.

Buckeyes on top of college football

While the Buffaloes have garnered tons of attention under Sanders, the team still has a way to go before it becomes a favorite among the college football fandom, where Ohio State reigns at the top.

The Buckeyes are among the top five all-time winningest college football programs, so it’s not a surprise they are college sports fans’ favorite team. 

Morning Consult asked college sports fans to write in their favorite college football program. The Buckeyes came in at No. 1, with 6% of college sports fans saying they support Ohio State, followed by Georgia and Notre Dame (4% each) to complete the top three.

Winning is familiar to the Buckeyes, who won the inaugural College Football Playoff title in the 2014 season. Ohio State, which debuted atop the College Football Playoff rankings last week, has finished every season of the new postseason era in the top 10. Meanwhile, Georgia and Alabama have accounted for five of the most recent nine national titles, including back-to-back victories for the Bulldogs.

Though the Buckeyes haven’t won a football national championship in nearly a decade, the program has competed atop the Big Ten for years. Ohio State, one of the country’s largest universities, won four consecutive conference championships from 2017 to 2020. 

The Buckeyes also have the third-most regular-season wins in the College Football Playoff era and count LeBron James as one of their biggest celebrity fans. Over the years, the four-time NBA champ has gifted school-branded Beats by Dre headphones and custom cleats to the football team. And Ohio State’s new apparel collaboration with Lululemon will provide a brand boost for the activewear company.

When it comes to conference allegiances, 56% of college sports fans said they typically root for schools in the Big Ten or Southeastern Conference each, versus 45% who said the same for each of the remaining Power Five conferences.

For the conferences’ media rights holders — ESPN and ABC secured an exclusive 10-year deal with the SEC in 2020, while a year ago CBS, Fox and NBC all announced a 7-year partnership with the Big Ten — the billions of dollars committed to each entity have been a worthwhile investment. As these conferences’ teams continue to win on the field (and more blue-blood programs join them as part of next season’s realignment), the networks are poised to do the same, given the conferences’ popularity with the sport’s fans.

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