College football is well-represented in the Twitterverse by people who know the game intimately and aren't afraid to tell you about it. We took a(nother) look at the lengthy list of CFB-oriented Twitter accounts and whittled them down to 100 that are definitely worth a follow.

These tweeting all-stars are sure to entertain, educate and occasionally enrage. Let us know your favorites (and anyone we missed).

ESPN

No doubt if you're any kind of college football fan you're familiar with ESPN's stable of college football reporters, columnists and broadcasters. Here are the best on Twitter:



@McMurphyESPN (1)

Brett McMurphy was a good get for the Worldwide Leader, and as he was with CBS Sports, he's a prolific breaker of news via Twitter, even when it involves his employer.

ESPN buys Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, according to industry sources. @ESPN owns 8 of current 30 non-BCS bowls — Brett McMurphy (@McMurphyESPN) August 14, 2013

@TravHaneyESPN (2)

Travis Haney is on the national beat, though most of his work is behind the ESPN Insider paywall. He drops enough knowledge from his travels on Twitter to entice readers to fork over a few more bucks to the Worldwide Leader.

@cbfowler (3) and @ESPN_ReceDavis (4)

A pair of total pros who anchor ESPN's college football coverage night and day.

@notthefakeSVP (5)

From ESPN's radio empire, Scott Van Pelt brings a mix of humor, knowledge and insight. The Maryland grad will spend the next year brushing up on the Big Ten.

Conference bloggers (6)

It’s tough to pick out one, but this is a good place to start to follow your favorite team or league: @ESPN_ACC (Heather Dinich and Andrea Adelson), @ESPN_BigTen (Adam Rittenberg and Bryan Bennett), @ESPN_Big12 (David Ubben and @Jake_Trotter), @ESPN_Pac12Blog (Ted Miller and Kevin Gemmell), @ESPN_SEC/ @AschoffESPN (Edward Aschoff and Chris Low), @Matt_Fortuna (Notre Dame)

@ESPNStatsInfo (7)

A must-follow during Saturday’s action if you’re interested in a deep dive into the numbers.



CBS SPORTS



Verne Lundquist can’t be found on Twitter and Gary Danielson hasn’t Tweeted since 2011. These will be good follows anyway.



@BFeldmanCBS (8)

Bruce Feldman is a prolific and informative tweeter with a history of breaking news via the medium. Few carry as much in-depth knowledge as Feldman.



@dennisdoddCBS (9)

CBS' national college football columnist Dennis Dodd can be infuriating, but he's never not interesting.



@JFowlerCBS (10)

A young gun on the CBS college football staff. He’s not a “bad guy” on Twitter or otherwise, despite what Urban Meyer may say.

FSU and LSU both outside of AP top 10. Thinking that will change by late November — Jeremy Fowler (@JFowlerCBS) August 17, 2013



@MrCFB (11)

Referring to yourself as Mr. College Football may seem a little self-aggrandizing, but after years in the SEC trenches, Tony Barnhart's earned the right to pat himself on the back.



CBSSports.com’s bloggers (12)

For news and hard analysis, go to the ESPN blog network. CBSSports‘ Eye on College Football bloggers share news and viewpoints, but they’re a little bit of an edge here. Viral videos and colorful jabs are welcome with @TomFornelli, @Chip_Patterson and @JerryHinnen.



@jppalmCBS (13)

Two things no college football fan can live without: Bowl projections and BCS tidbits. One thing to remember: Don’t blame the messenger.



@GreggDoyelCBS (14)

One of CBS’ national columnists, Doyel rarely pulls punches (shaddup). He doesn’t care if you disagree with him. He can rip someone with the best of them, but he’ll also write a piece that pulls at the heartstrings.

Meet Memphis QB Jacob Karam. You're gonna like this guy. And you're gonna love Bree http://t.co/DyPmhaRcsE — Gregg Doyel (@GreggDoyelCBS) July 24, 2013

SPORTS ILLUSTRATED



@slmandel (15)

Sports Illustrated's Stewart Mandel describes himself as a "Writer, author, lover, humanitarian and college football writer for SI.com." We can only vouch for the college football part. Guy's a fountain of information and opinion, although he doesn't always seem to welcome criticism very cheerfully. Of course, who does?



@Andy_Staples (16)

Mandel's SI colleague is a college football savant and full-time BBQ expert who's also equal parts funny and astute.

Direct deposit, usually. RT @Michael_ATK: You are literally stupid. How do you get paid for your idiotic ideas. — Andy Staples (@Andy_Staples) August 14, 2013

@SIPeteThamel (17)

Thamel has a nose for news that has infuriated a handful of fanbases (Hi there, Big Blue Nation).



Campus Union bloggers (18)

Sports Illustrated’s bread and butter is news and features, but the Campus Union/SInow pair of @MartinRickman and @ZacEllis focus on quick-hitters and other college football oddities.

Vandy's James Franklin offers to call fan's boss to get him off work and attend Ole Miss game: http://t.co/iLZlJCIeIv — Zac Ellis (@ZacEllis) August 14, 2013

USA TODAY



@PaulMyerberg (19)

Myerberg would have difficulty hitting Athlon magazine word counts with his extensive team previews. Nevertheless, he condenses his prodigious knowledge into 140-character chunks.

I like this fact: Frank Beamer is 1 of 4 HCs to make 20 consecutive bowl games, joining Bowden (28), Osborne (25) and Bryant (24). — Paul Myerberg (@PaulMyerberg) August 16, 2013

@GeorgeSchroeder (20)

Another USA Today scribe, Schroeder freely dispenses observations on a variety of topics, not just college football. He's moving away from Oregon, though, so no more Springfield police log.



@DanWolken (21)

Wolken isn't shy with strong opinions. A shame he won’t have Gordon Gee to kick around anymore.



NATIONAL VOICES



@YahooForde (22)

The Forde-Yard Dash remains a college football staple.



@DanWetzel (23)

A thorn in the side of the NCAA, Wetzel isn’t someone you want sniffing around your organization. Now that he’s achieved Death to the BCS, what’s next?



@MattBrownSoE (24)

Brown heads up college football coverage for Sports on Earth, USA Today’s version of Grantland, for long-form pieces and advanced analysis. His breakdowns of each of college football’s top 10 quarterbacks was a must-read this offesason.

B.J. Daniels in the NFL? I refuse to believe that he isn't still at South Florida as quarterback for life. — Matt Brown (@MattBrownSoE) August 17, 2013

@Bachscore (25)

The Wall Street Journal follows college football a little differently than most. Rachel Bachman brings quality reporting and analysis to business, legal and NCAA issues.



@RalphDRussoAP (26)

You might associate the Associated Press with relics of a different time, but AP college football writer Ralph Russo's Twitter feed, delivered in Brooklyn-ese, is anything but stale.



@Matt_HayesSN (27)

Another national college football columnist bringing views from around the country.

@CFTalk (28)

A one-stop shop for injuries, lineup changes, transfers and other new.

BLEACHER REPORT



@KegsNEggs (29)

Adam Kramer bills himself as "Founder and gatekeeper of Kegs ‘n Eggs. Lead College Football Writer for Bleacher Report. Advocate of FAT GUY TOUCHDOWNS, #MACtion and Las Vegas tomfoolery." Nothing to add to that, except to recommend a follow.

@BarrettSallee (30)

Bleacher Report's lead writer for all things SEC, Sallee will fill your Twitter feed with reactions and analysis all over the Southeast.

@InTheBleachers (31)

Michael Felder's feed is aptly named. His careening from college football to other tangents is perfect bleacher talk.



SB NATION



@JasonKirkSBN (32)

The college football editor at SB Nation never runs out of clever quips about the goings on in college football.



@38Godfrey (33)

Steven Godfrey is a long-form “writerer/journamalist” (and Athlon contributor) who knows his way around SEC and Sun Belt football.



@DanRubenstein (34)

Sarcastic college football observations, Oregon fandom and ‘90s trivia. What more could anyone want?



@TyHildenbrandt (35)

Rubenstein’s co-host on the @SolidVerbal podcast will be worth following if only to watch to watch the Notre Dame fan squirm with Tommy Rees leading the team.

COMIC RELIEF



@edsbs (36)

Spencer Hall (formerly Orson Swindle) brings us The Fulmer Cup, the Curious Index and a twisted look at college football because, well, college football is always a little twisted.

I don't care whether you're an Alabama fan or not: yelling ROLL TIDE at inappropriate moments remains one of life's great pleasures. — edsbs (@edsbs) June 7, 2012

@celebrityhottub (37)

Another member of the "Every Day Should Be Saturday" empire, “sir broosk” regales with absurdist observations, never failing to bring the funny on college football and anything else that springs to mind.



@HollyAnderson (38)

Former Every Day Should Be Saturday and SI Campus Union writer has taken her talents to Grantland. She made Bill Simmons take an interest in college football. That’s saying something right there.



@ClayTravisBGID (39)

Love him or hate him, you can't deny that Travis entertains and inflames with his SEC-centric observations. Prepare to get angry, although Travis' affection for those he lampoons takes some of the edge off. The last year has seen Travis post about butt-chugging, dumbest fanbases, a catfight, ruminations on Johnny Football and the occassional breaking news.



@KevinonCFB (40)

Phildelphia-based writer Kevin McGuire has news and views for all over the country. He knows his stuff.



@SteakNStiffArms (41)

Football and food. What more is there to the Internet? Elika Sadeghi covers both with a Big Ten emphasis. To follow her is to love her.



@DanBeebe (42)

Remember when the Big 12 almost collapsed? The Fake Dan Beebe does. He’d be bitter, but he’s enjoying #buyoutlife. No one taunts the current and former Big 12 membership better.



@lsufreek (43)

The reason GIFs were invented.



PLAYERS AND COACHES



@CoachHand (44)

This is why Twitter is awesome: No one would have predicted Vanderbilt’s offensive line coach to be a must-follow, but here we are. Hand beats the drum on Twitter for Vandy, Nashville and the SEC while offering words of wisdom for everyday living. Not your usual coach-speak.



@Coach_Riley (45)

Oregon State’s Mike Riley is more and more of an outlier in the college football profession ... in a good way. He’s not paranoid. He’s approachable. And he’d prefer his players feast on In-N-Out Burger.

@LSUCoachMiles (46)

Les Miles once spent the entire course of a Miami Heat game Tweeting at himself. Pretty much what you’d expect.



@Coach_Leach (47)

Who knew the Washington State coach was such a cinephile?

I've come up with a list of 50 films, in no particular order, that command attention. — Mike Leach (@Coach_Leach) June 25, 2013

@JManziel2 (48)

Johnny Manziel, you may have heard of him and his Twitter feed.



@aaronmurray11 (49)

Judging by his posts from the Milledge Run, the Georgia quarterback is enjoying his final year on campus.

@10AJMcCarron (50)

Exhibit A for why he’s the consummate Saban quarterback:

You're right I'm not at the espy's! I don't have to be at a award show to know what my team did. I'm back at school working to get another — AJ McCarron (@10AJMcCarron) July 18, 2013





@TajhB10 (52)

We wanted to highlight a handful of Heisman conteders, but Clemson shut down Twitter for its players. See you in December, Tajh.



RECRUITING



@JeremyCrabtree (53)

A senior writer with ESPN’s Recruiting Nation, Crabtree has covered recruiting more than just about anyone. A great follow for the big picture in college football’s second season.



@TomLuginbill (54)

ESPN’s top eye for college football prospects is good at interacting with readers with #AskLoogs hashtag. Go ahead and ask him about a player or issue.



@BartonSimmons (55)

A national analyst at 247Sports, Simmons is knee-deep in recruiting knowledge from evaluations to commitments.



@Niebuhr247 (56)

A former Rivals and current 247 analyst, Niebuhr is as active on Twitter as anyone. You won’t miss anything in recruiting on his feed.



@jcshurburtt (57)

Another can’t-miss voice from the 247 stable. He’s their National Recruiting Director and happy to take questions from readers.



@rivalsmike (58)

Mike Farrell is simply the Godfather of recruiting. Trust us, that’s what his Twitter bio says.



@adamgorney (59)

Rivals.com’s recruiting expert out West



@rivalsjason (60)

No look at recruiting would be complete without someone keeping an eye on the state of Texas. Jason Howell is Rivals’ guy for the Lone Star State.



@BrandonHuffman (61)

Completing the roundup of recruiting names is Scout’s national expert, Brandon Huffman.



MEDIA WATCHDOGS



@jasonrmcintyre, @tyduffy and @thebiglead (62)

McIntyre and the Big Lead have their fingers on the pulse of the media transaction wire. Follow him for all the news and trends that will impact your consumption habits.



@bkoo and @awfulannouncing (63)

Ben Koo and Awful Announcing cover plenty of media trends, but college football fans will take special interest in the Pammies — a collection of Saturday’s best verbal snafus unfortunately named after ESPN’s Pam Ward.



@bubbaprog (64)

Deadspin’s Tim Burke is a must-follow on Saturday for his collection of videos, images and GIFs. Miss a key play, chyron fail or sideline shenanigans, Burke’s your guy. Oh, and he helped break the Manti Te’o girlfriend hoax story.



@mattsarz (65)

If your team is being broadcast sometime or somewhere, Matt Sarzyniak knows.



NICHE INTERESTS



@SBN_BillC (66)

A writer for SB Nation’s Football Study Hall, Bill Connelly is college football’s top advanced statistics guru. Follow him to get smarter.



@smartfootball (67)

If you prefer a more cerebral take on the game, this feed's for you. Editor Chris Brown's also a Grantland contributor if you're not into the whole brevity thing.



@DarrenRovell (68)

Athlon once named him the No. 1 follow in all of sports, but college football fans will take particular interest in Rovell (who has since moved from CNBC to ESPN) after he reported on Johnny Manziel’s involvement with college athletics’ shadow autograph industry.



@SportsBizMiss (69)

Kristi Dosh is the founder of BusinessofCollegeSports.com and now she reports on sports business for ESPN. Want to know how much college athletes would really make off jersey sales? Dosh does.



@JimMWeber and @LostLettermen (70)

Jim Weber keeps up with college athletes past and present. His site and Twitter feed is a mix of where are they now and what’s new.



@coachingsearch (71)

During the season, Pete Roussel follows what coaches are saying and doing like none other, but he’s indispensable once the coaching carousel starts for his nuggets from the top of college football to Division II grad assistants.



@footballscoop (72)

Scott Roussel (Pete’s brother) runs a competing site full of coaching scuttlebutt. Between the two of them, you won’t miss a hiring or firing from around the college football world.



@bylawblog (73)

A former compliance director at Loyola Marymount, John Infante is the most knowledgable voice in the media when it comes to the gargantuan NCAA rulebook.



@pollspeak (74)

The polls are infuriating. Pollspeak knows where you should direct your anger. They look through the AP ballots each week to publicly shame the most extreme voters.

The most extreme AP Voter of the preseason is @MitchVingle : http://t.co/DrjRFNpPzy — College Sports Polls (@Pollspeak) August 17, 2013



@HeismanPundit (75)

His self-descriptor says it all: CBSSports.com writer/Heisman voter breaking down the politics of the most prestigious award in sports, plus hard-hitting college football commentary & analysis. What more do you want?

REGIONAL INTEREST



@SEC_Logo (76)

A news aggregator that’s all things SEC. Not affiliated with the SEC, but this feed probably should be on the payroll.



@JonSDS (77)

Saturday Down South’s Jon Cooper analyzes SEC football from top to bottom and left to right — predictions, depth chart news, practice reports and player rankings.



@Josh_Ward (78)

A radio host in Knoxville and writer with MrSEC.com, Ward brings SEC news from around the Southeast with a Tennessee bent.



@wesrucker247 (79)

When there’s an award for covering an athletic program in continuous tumult, it may be called The Rucker. And half of Wes Rucker’s followers seem to hate him for it.

Bray: "I'm paid to win games." Reporter: "You're paid?" Bray: "I mean ... my education. That's what the SEC likes to call 'getting paid.'" — Wes Rucker (@wesrucker247) November 13, 2012

@finebaum (80)

SEC country’s top radio voice takes his show to the World Wide Leader. You can’t spell WWL without PAAAAAAWWWL.



@MattScalici (81)

A sports producer at AL.com, he’s a go-to source for all things Alabama. Pro tip: You may want to pay attention to the upstart CrimsonTide



@CecilHurt (82)

Cecil's been covering Bama since the Bear's last season. That makes him a suitable go-to guy for all things Tide-related. Not bad with the one-liner either.



@BTNTomDienhart (83) and @BTNBrentYarina (84)

Veteran reporter Tom Dienhart sends dispatches from Big Ten campuses year-round, and editor Brent Yarina shares Big Ten insights from all over the internet. Two must-follows from the Big Ten Network team.



@TeddyGreenstein (85)

Teddy has one of the best self-descriptions on Twitter: "lover, fighter, Chicago Trib sportswriter." Kind of says it all. A go-to follow for Big Ten news, though the Second City writer tilts a bit to Northwestern and Illinois.



@11W (86)

Eleven Warriors is your source for all things Scarlet and Grey. It's the largest free Ohio State sports source on the internet, and they've extended their footprint to Twitter in a big way.



@BCastOZone (87)

Another source of Ohio State news, Brandon Castel at The-Ozone.net is heavy on recruiting news. When Urban Meyer is involved, that’s a worthy follow.



@Sean_Callahan (88)

The publisher of HuskerOnline.com, Sean Callahan has seen the Nebraska program suffer through some uncharacteristic struggles the last several years. But unlike the team, Sean's coverage is consistently solid.



@ACCSports (89)

Someday, maybe soon, ACC football will be relevant, and when that day comes, Jim Young is poised to rule. He's your ACC source on all things football and basketball.



@D1scourse (90)

Another key writer from ACC country, Patrick Stevens keeps a close eye on Maryland, but his feed is full of great statistical discoveries.

Other tidbit in tomorrow's lookahead segment ... The last Virginia quarterback to throw 15 touchdown passes in a season was Matt Schaub. — Patrick Stevens (@D1scourse) August 15, 2013

@BryanDFischer (91)

Prolific Tweeter now writes for the Pac-12 Networks. A go-to source for West Coast football news and more.



@Mengus22 (92)

Louisville fan, blogger and radio host Mark Ennis has carried water for the maligned Big East over the years (he ran SB Nation’s Big East Coast Bias blog). Needless to say, this will be an interesting season for him.



@BlatantHomerism (93)

An Oklahoma fan who knows his way around the college football landscape.



@GBHunting and @cuppycup (94)

All things Texas A&M and Johnny Football. With GIFs.



@HustleBelt (95)

One word: #MACtion

@Miller_Dave (96)

There are plenty of names for ESPN, CBS and SI worth following for college football, but don’t let National Football Post’s Dave Miller fall through the cracks.



@TheOregonDuck (97)

If you follow only one college football mascot, make sure it’s the one who can dance to Gangnam Style and befriend spiders.

14 DAYS! That's like 2 weeks, which is like half a month, which is like 1/24th of a year, which is like really really soon! #FOOTBALL — The Oregon Duck (@TheOregonDuck) August 17, 2013

@CapitalOneBowl and @RussellAthBowl (98)

Don’t like the bowl system, that’s fine. These two accounts keep their Orlando-based games entertaining all year long. Give credit to these bowls to creating a public persona apart from the old men in fancifully colored blazers.

Hai @rosebowlgame, we r in ur stadium, stealing ur events and operations strategies pic.twitter.com/OldhUVXSVI — Capital One Bowl (@CapitalOneBowl) April 25, 2013

@ChaseGoodbread, @DanGreenspan and @MikeHuguenin (99)

NFL.com has expanded their college football coverage with writers covering the NFL Draft year round. If you want to know what the No Fun League thinks of your favorite college players, start here.



@AthlonSports, @AthlonMitch, @AthlonSteven, @BradenGall, @DavidFox615 and @AthlonDoster

And last but not least, the Athlon Sports team.

List and bios compiled by Rob Doster and David Fox.