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1983 NCAA Division I-A football season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football season

1983 NCAA Division I-A season
Number of teams105
Preseason AP No. 1Nebraska
Postseason
DurationDecember 10, 1983 –
January 2, 1984
Bowl games16
Heisman TrophyMike Rozier (running back,Nebraska)
Champion(s)Miami (FL) (AP, Coaches, FWAA)
Division I-A football seasons
← 1982
1984 →

The1983 NCAA Division I-A football season ended with theUniversity of Miami, led byBernie Kosar, winning their first national championship over perennial power and top rankedNebraska in theOrange Bowl.

The Hurricanes' 31–30 win over Nebraska is still talked about as one of the greatest games of all time, not only for its last minute finish, but for its role in changing the face of college football. Miami came into the game ranked No. 5, but losses by No. 2 Texas in the Cotton Bowl and No. 4 Illinois in the Rose Bowl launched them to No. 1 (despite protests from No. 3 Auburn, who played the toughest schedule in the nation that year).

Nebraska scored a touchdown with 48 seconds remaining, putting them within one point of the Hurricanes. Despite knowing a tie would still give Nebraska the national title, CoachTom Osborne decided to go for two points and the win rather than one point and the tie. Miami was able to hold, snapping Nebraska's 22-game winning streak and launching Miami as a powerhouse program.

This Miami team was the first to win a national title without a single player voted to the first team All-Americans and only the second to win a national title gaining more passing yards than rushing.

TheAuburn Tigers, featuringBo Jackson, also had a stellar season, going 11–1 and beating Michigan in theSugar Bowl 9–7. Despite entering the bowl games ranked third in both major polls, and having both teams ranked higher losing their bowl games, the Tigers ended ranked third in the final AP poll as Miami jumped from 5th to ranked No. 1 when they beat No. 1 ranked Nebraska to gain the National Championship.[1] Auburn had played the toughest schedule in the nation, including eight bowl teams, seven of which were ranked in the top 20 (four in the top ten). With this difficult schedule the Tigers were ranked first by a few polls, includingThe New York Times computer rankings. The NCAA record book also informally recognizes the Tigers as co-national champions, along with Nebraska (and Miami).[2] It is not uncommon for the NCAA record book to "recognize" multiple national champions in a given year, with the AP and Coaches' poll winner regarded as national champions.

TheHoliday Bowl was also a classic, as Brigham Young University, led by future NFL starSteve Young, defeated Missouri with a last second halfback pass.

This season's edition of the annual rivalry game between Oregon and Oregon State is still widely known and derided as"The Toilet Bowl", as the teams played to a 0–0 tie, the last scoreless tie in college football. The game featured 11 total turnovers, as 6 fumbles were lost (out of 11 total), 5 interceptions, and 4 missed field goals.

This season saw no conference have two or more teams tie for the title—an event that did not happen again in either Division I-A or its successor, Division I FBS, until2009. (Note, however, that even when a conference officially recognizes multiple champions, it will invariably have some kind of tiebreaker system to determine placement for bowl berths.)

Rule changes

[edit]

These rules were published in the 1983 version of the NCAA Football Rules Book.[3]

  • The winner of the pre-game coin toss now has the option to defer their choice to the second half.
  • Roughing the passer now includes an automatic first down in addition to yardage penalties.
  • Running into the kicker is now a foul, with a five-yard penalty assessed.
  • Unsportsmanlike conduct will be called against a kicker or punter who feigns being roughed to draw a penalty.
  • Unsportsmanlike conduct will also be called for taunting a defender with the ball, spiking the ball, etc. against a player or if an entire team runs onto the field to celebrate a score.
  • A two-yard buffer (halo) is established around a kick/punt returner when the ball begins its downward flight.
  • Conferences are permitted to add a seventh official (side judge) to their crews. TheBig Ten Conference is the first to establish seven-man crews.
  • Extended the "team area" from 30-yard line to 25-yard line.
  • Penalties that occur at the end of any quarter will cause the period to be extended for one un-timed down. This rule was modified in the2023 season to only extend the period in the second and fourth quarters.
  • The visiting team must wear white jerseys. This rule change mostly affectedGeorgia Tech andLSU, which traditionally wore white at home. It also impacted the UCLA-USC rivalry tradition of home jerseys. LSU would be allowed white jerseys at home for the 1995 season. This rule again would change to allow contrasting colors following the 2008 UCLA-USC rivalry game in which the two teams wished to restore the tradition of both teams wearing home jerseys.

Conference and program changes

[edit]
School1982 Conference1983 Conference
Georgia TechYellow JacketsI-A IndependentACC
CincinnatiBearcatsI-A IndependentI-AA Independent

September

[edit]

Big 8 rivalsNebraska andOklahoma were No. 1 and No. 2 in the preseason AP Poll, followed by No. 3Texas. Defending championPenn State was No. 4, andAuburn was No. 5.

In the kickoff classic on August 29, No. 1 Nebraska routed No. 4 Penn State, 44–6. The Nittany Lions opened with three straight losses and never made it back into the polls. None of the other top–ranked teams played in the first week of September, and the next poll featured No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Texas, No. 4 Auburn, and No. 5Notre Dame.

September 10: No. 1 Nebraska beat Wyoming 56–20, and No. 2 Oklahoma won 27–14 at Stanford. No. 3 Texas still had not started its schedule. No. 4 Auburn defeated Southern Mississippi 24–3, and No. 5 Notre Dame won 52–6 at Purdue. The latter two teams switched places in the next poll: No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Texas, No. 4 Notre Dame, and No. 5 Auburn.

September 17: No. 1 Nebraska annihilated Minnesota 84–13, setting a school scoring record against a Division I opponent. Otherwise, this was a day of shakeup in the top five. No. 2 Oklahoma lost at home to No. 6Ohio State, 24–12. No. 3 Texas won at No. 4 Auburn 20–7. No. 5 Notre Dame lost at home to Michigan State, 28–23. Moving up in the next poll were No. 7Arizona, which beat Washington State 45–6 (the Wildcats had outscored their first three opponents 133–12) and No. 10North Carolina, which defeated Miami–Ohio 48–17. The poll featured No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Texas, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Arizona, and No. 5 North Carolina.

September 24: No. 1 Nebraska defeated UCLA 42–10, and No. 2 Texas beat North Texas State 26–6. No. 3 Ohio State lost at No. 7Iowa 20–14, while No. 4 Arizona won 27–10 over Cal State Fullerton and No. 5 North Carolina beat William & Mary 51–20. The next poll featured No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Texas, No. 3 Arizona, No. 4 Iowa, and No. 5 North Carolina.

October

[edit]

October 1: No. 1 Nebraska blew out Syracuse 63–7, and No. 2 Texas defeated Rice 42–6. However, No. 3 Arizona was tied by California 33–33; No. 4 Iowa had the same level of defense but none of the offense, being shut out 33–0 byIllinois. No. 5 North Carolina won 38–21 at Georgia Tech, which was beginning its first year in the ACC. Moving up were No. 6Alabama, which had started 4–0 in their first year without Bear Bryant (the most recent win being 44–13 over Memphis) and No. 7West Virginia, which edged Pittsburgh 24–21. The poll featured No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Texas, No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 North Carolina, and No. 5 West Virginia.

October 8: No. 1 Nebraska finally ran into trouble, being taken down to the wire in their Big 8 opener against Oklahoma State. The Cornhuskers pulled out a 14–10 win with an interception in the end zone on the game’s final play. No. 2 Texas matched up with Nebraska’s conference rival, No. 8 Oklahoma, and won 28–16. No. 3 Alabama lost at Penn State, 34–28. No. 4 North Carolina beat Wake Forest 30–10, No. 5 West Virginia was idle, and No. 7 Auburn won 49–21 at Kentucky. The next poll featured No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Texas, No. 3 North Carolina, No. 4 West Virginia, and No. 5 Auburn.

October 15: No. 1 Nebraska breathed a little easier with a 34–13 win at Missouri. No. 2 Texas beat Arkansas 31–3, No. 3 North Carolina won 42–14 at North Carolina State, No. 4 West Virginia shut out Virginia Tech 13–0, and No. 5 Auburn defeated Georgia Tech 31–13. The top five remained the same.

October 22: No. 1 Nebraska led by just two points at the half but exploded after the break, scoring 48 third quarter points in a 69–19 rout of Colorado. No. 2 Texas beat No. 9SMU 15–12, ending a 21–game unbeaten streak for the Mustangs. No. 3 North Carolina was idle. No. 4 West Virginia lost 41–23 at Penn State. No. 5 Auburn defeated Mississippi State 28–13, and No. 6Florida won 24–17 over East Carolina. The next poll featured No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Texas, No. 3 North Carolina, No. 4 Auburn, and No. 5 Florida.

October 29: No. 1 Nebraska won 51–25 at Kansas State, and No. 2 Texas defeated Texas Tech 20–3. No. 3 North Carolina started a three–game losing streak by falling to No. 13Maryland 28–26. No. 4 Auburn beat No. 5 Florida 28–21. Another SEC team, No. 6Georgia, won 31–14 over Temple, while No. 7Miami (which had won eight straight games by double digits after a season opening loss to Florida) beat No. 12 West Virginia 20–3. The new top five was No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Texas, No. 3 Auburn, No. 4 Georgia, and No. 5 Miami.

November

[edit]

November 5: No. 1 Nebraska put on another offensive clinic, winning 72–29 over Iowa State;Mike Rozier rushed for four touchdowns to set a new Big 8 record for TDs in a season. Meanwhile, No. 2 Texas was held without a touchdown but still beat Houston 9–3. No. 3 Auburn defeated No. 7 Maryland 35–23. No. 4 Georgia visited No. 9 Florida and dealt the Gators their second straight close loss, 10–9. No. 5 Miami needed a late touchdown to beat East Carolina 12–7; they were passed in the next poll by No. 6 Illinois, which won 50–23 at Minnesota. The top five were No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Texas, No. 3 Auburn, No. 4 Georgia, and No. 5 Illinois.

November 12: No. 1 Nebraska posted their fourth consecutive 50+ point performance, defeating Kansas 67–13. No. 2 Texas beat TCU 20–14. In a battle for first place in the SEC, No. 3 Auburn pulled out a 13–7 win over No. 4 Georgia, the Bulldogs’ first conference loss in four years. No. 5 Illinois beat Indiana 49–21 to clinch a surprise Big Ten title andRose Bowl berth. No. 6 Miami finished its schedule with a 17–16 win at Florida State on a late field goal. The next poll featured No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Texas, No. 3 Auburn, No. 4 Illinois, and No. 5 Miami.

November 19: No. 1 Nebraska and No. 3 Auburn were idle. No. 2 Texas clinched the SWC title and aCotton Bowl berth with a 24–21 win over Baylor. No. 4 Illinois finished its schedule by defeating Northwestern 56–24. The Illini’s Rose Bowl opponent would beUCLA, which earned the Pac-10 title with a 27–17 victory at USC. (In less dignified Pac–10 action, this was also the day of“The Toilet Bowl”, a 0–0 tie between Oregon and Oregon State which is regarded as one of the worst–played football games of all time.) No. 5 Miami had finished its season, and the top five remained the same.

November 26: Despite the season–long dominance of No. 1 Nebraska, unranked Oklahoma only had one conference loss and could still gain anOrange Bowl berth by defeating the Cornhuskers. Trailing by only seven points with under a minute left, the Sooners got as far as the Nebraska 1–yard line before a Cornhuskers defensive stand preserved a 28–21 victory. No. 2 Texas had an easier time, winning 45–13 at Texas A&M. No. 3 Auburn was again idle, and the top five remained the same.

December

[edit]

December 3: Similar to Nebraska’s situation the previous week, No. 3 Auburn was undefeated in SEC play but No. 19 Alabama could keep their rivals out of theSugar Bowl with a victory in their game against each other. The Tigers prevailed 23-20 in a torrential rainstorm, with the key play being a 71-yard touchdown run byBo Jackson. All of the other highly-ranked teams had finished their seasons, and the top five was the same as the past few weeks: No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Texas, No. 3 Auburn, No. 4 Illinois, and No. 5 Miami.

Because the winners of major conferences were tied to specific bowls, none of the top four teams were able to play each other in the postseason. The highest-ranked matchup would be No. 1 Nebraska against No. 5 Miami in the Orange Bowl. No. 7 Georgia and No. 8 Michigan, the runners-up in the SEC and Big Ten, would respectively play No. 2 Texas in the Cotton Bowl and No. 3 Auburn in the Sugar Bowl. As always, the Rose Bowl would feature the winners of the Big Ten and Pac-10, No. 4 Illinois and unranked UCLA.

Conference standings

[edit]
1983 Atlantic Coast Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Maryland $500840
North Carolina420840
Georgia Tech320380
Virginia330650
Duke330380
Wake Forest150470
NC State150380
No. 11Clemson *000911
  • $ – Conference champion
  • * – Clemson was under NCAA and ACC probation and was ineligible for the ACC title. As a result, their ACC games did not count in the league standings.[6]
Rankings fromAP Poll
1983 Big Eight Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 2Nebraska $7001210
Missouri520750
Oklahoma520840
Oklahoma State340840
Iowa State340470
Kansas250461
Colorado250470
Kansas State160380
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1983 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 10Illinois $9001020
No. 8Michigan810930
No. 14Iowa720930
No. 9Ohio State630930
Wisconsin540740
Purdue351371
Michigan State261461
Indiana270380
Northwestern270290
Minnesota0901100
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1983 Mid-American Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Northern Illinois $8101020
Toledo720920
Bowling Green720830
Central Michigan720830
Ball State440650
Western Michigan450650
Miami (OH)350470
Ohio360470
Kent State1801100
Eastern Michigan0901100
  • $ – Conference champion
1983 Missouri Valley Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Tulsa $500830
No. 1Southern Illinois ^4101310
No. 5Indiana State ^320940
New Mexico State320560
Illinois State221641
Wichita State330380
Drake1601100
West Texas State0510101
  • $ – Conference champion
  • ^ – NCAA Division I-AA playoff participant
  • The conference was a hybrid of NCAA Division I-A and I-AA programs. New Mexico State, Tulsa, and Wichita State were I-A and the other teams were I-AA.
Rankings fromNCAA Division I-AA Football Committee poll
1983 Pacific Coast Athletic Association football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Cal State Fullerton $600840
Utah State420650
Long Beach State330840
Fresno State330740
San Jose State330560
Pacific (CA)240480
UNLV0600110
  • $ – Conference champion
  • Records adjusted for UNLV's forfeit of all 7 victories
1983 Pacific-10 Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 17UCLA $611741
Washington520840
Washington State530740
USC430461
Arizona431731
Arizona State331641
Oregon331461
California341551
Oregon State161371
Stanford1701100
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1983 Southeastern Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 3Auburn $6001110
No. 4Georgia5101011
No. 6Florida420921
Tennessee420930
No. 15Alabama420840
Ole Miss420660
Kentucky240651
Mississippi State150380
LSU060470
Vanderbilt060290
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1983 Southwest Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 5Texas $8001110
No. 12SMU7101020
Baylor431741
Texas A&M431551
Arkansas440650
Texas Tech341371
Houston350470
TCU161182
Rice0801100
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1983 Western Athletic Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 7BYU $7001110
No. 13Air Force5201020
Wyoming530750
New Mexico430660
Hawaii331551
Utah440560
Colorado State440570
San Diego State161291
UTEP0802100
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1983 NCAA Division I-A independents football records
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 1Miami (FL)   1110
Virginia Tech   920
No. 19Boston College   930
No. 16West Virginia   930
No. 20East Carolina   830
No. 18Pittsburgh   831
Florida State   840
Penn State   841
Southern Miss   740
Memphis State   641
Notre Dame   750
Syracuse   650
South Carolina   560
Cincinnati  461
Southwestern Louisiana   460
Temple   470
Tulane   470
Louisville   380
Navy   380
Rutgers   380
Army   290
Rankings fromAP Poll

AP final poll

[edit]
Main article:1983 NCAA Division I-A football rankings
  1. Miami (FL)
  2. Nebraska
  3. Auburn
  4. Georgia
  5. Texas
  6. Florida
  7. Brigham Young
  8. Michigan
  9. Ohio State
  10. Illinois
  11. Clemson
  12. SMU
  13. Air Force
  14. Iowa
  15. Alabama
  16. West Virginia
  17. UCLA
  18. Pittsburgh
  19. Boston College
  20. East Carolina

Final coaches poll

[edit]
  1. Miami (FL)
  2. Nebraska
  3. Auburn
  4. Georgia
  5. Texas
  6. Florida
  7. Brigham Young
  8. Ohio St.
  9. Michigan
  10. Illinois
  11. Southern Methodist
  12. Alabama
  13. UCLA
  14. Iowa
  15. Air Force
  16. West Virginia
  17. Penn St.
  18. Oklahoma St.
  19. Pittsburgh
  20. Boston College

Notable rivalry games

[edit]

I-AA team wins over I-A teams

[edit]

Italics denotes I-AA teams.

DateVisiting teamHome teamSiteResultAttendanceRef.
September 3Kent StateAkronRubber BowlAkron, Ohio (Wagon Wheel) 6–13  37,111[7]
September 3Appalachian StateWake ForestGroves StadiumWinston-Salem, North Carolina 27–25  25,711[7]
September 10AkronEastern MichiganRynearson StadiumYpsilanti, Michigan 13–0  5,173[7]
September 10ColgateArmyMichie StadiumWest Point, New York 15–13  33,285[7]
September 10CincinnatiNo. 20 (I-APenn StateBeaver StadiumUniversity Park, Pennsylvania 14–3  83,683[7]
September 10Idaho StateUTEPSun BowlEl Paso, Texas 12–10  20,193[7]
September 10Southwestern LouisianaNortheast LouisianaMalone StadiumMonroe, Louisiana (Battle on the Bayou) 6–31  20,451[7]
September 17ChattanoogaSouthwestern LouisianaCajun FieldLafayette, Louisiana 38–14  20,157[7]
September 17DelawareWilliam & MaryCary FieldWilliamsburg, Virginia (rivalry) 30–17  13,440[7]
September 17FurmanGeorgia TechGrant FieldAtlanta, Georgia 17–14  24,311[7]
October 1ArmyHarvardHarvard StadiumBoston, Massachusetts 21–24  15,000[7]
October 1No. 16 (I-AANorth Texas StateNew MexicoUniversity StadiumAlbuquerque, New Mexico 18–8  21,048[7]
October 8Ball StateNo. 18 (I-AAIndiana StateMemorial StadiumTerre Haute, Indiana (Blue Key Victory Bell) 14–35  9,219[7]
October 8Boston UniversityRichmondUniversity of Richmond StadiumRichmond, Virginia 26–17  7,110[7]
October 8Wichita StateUT ArlingtonMaverick StadiumArlington, Texas 34–24  5,187[7]
October 15Wichita StateIndiana StateMemorial Stadium • Terre Haute, Indiana 22–24  8,782[7]
October 22LehighArmyMichie Stadium • West Point, New York 13–12  41,000[7]
October 29Long Beach StateEastern WashingtonJoe Albi StadiumSpokane, Washington 17–20  2,200[7]
October 29No. 19 (I-AAIdahoPacific (CA)Pacific Memorial StadiumStockton, California 19–31  11,500[7]
October 29Cal State FullertonNo. 15 (I-AAIdaho StateASISU MinidomePocatello, Idaho 10–43  8,215[7]
November 5Pacific (CA)NevadaMackay StadiumReno, Nevada 24–34  8,174[7]
November 12RichmondNo. 15 (I-AAColgateAndy Kerr StadiumHamilton, New York 14–43  4,000[7]
#Rankings fromAP Poll released prior to game.

No. 1 and No. 2 Progress

[edit]

In the AP preseason poll released on August 27, Big 8 Conference rivalsNebraska andOklahoma were No. 1 and No. 2. After the Oklahoma Sooners lost 24–14 to Ohio State on September 17, the Nebraska Cornhuskers remained No. 1 and were trailed for nearly the entire season byTexas. Nebraska received all 60 of the first place votes in the polls of September 26 and October 3, and no fewer than 51 as the season continued, while the Longhorns never received more than five votes during the same period. Meanwhile, the University of Miami Hurricanes, unranked in the preseason Top 20, began winning after their first week 28–3 loss to Florida. Miami came in at No. 15 in the September 26 poll. As they continued unbeaten, the Hurricanes gathered force, rising to No. 12, No. 10, No. 8, No. 7, and reached No. 5 by October 31, where they remained in the final regular season poll after they were invited to play against Nebraska in the Orange Bowl.

Bowl games

[edit]
Main article:1983–84 NCAA football bowl games

January 2 Bowls:

Other Bowls:

Heisman Trophy voting

[edit]

TheHeisman Trophy is given to the year's most outstanding player

PlayerSchoolPosition1st2nd3rdTotal
Mike RozierNebraskaRB482154471,801
Steve YoungBYUQB153312891,172
Doug FlutieBoston CollegeQB2338108253
Turner GillNebraskaQB114175190
Terry HoageGeorgiaS72541112
Napoleon McCallumNavyRB61850104
Jeff HostetlerWest VirginiaQB5172271
Bill FralicPittsburghOT6102866
Walter LewisAlabamaQB4131654
Boomer EsiasonMarylandQB4111751

Other annual awards

[edit]

Attendances

[edit]

Average home attendance top 3:

RankTeamAverage
1Michigan Wolverines104,486
2Ohio State Buckeyes89,018
3Tennessee Volunteers84,928

Source:[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Barnhart, Tony."Auburn Wins 1984 Sugar Bowl, but National Championship Still Eludes Tigers".The Atlanta Journal-Constitution/CBS. RetrievedSeptember 5, 2010.
  2. ^"NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records"(PDF). NCAA. 2013.
  3. ^1983 NCAA Football Rules, NCAA Publications
  4. ^"The National Collegiate Athletic Association Monday officialy [sic] approved the... - UPI Archives".UPI. RetrievedDecember 10, 2025.
  5. ^"The First Time A Ranked FBS Team Lost To An FCS Squad".Homefield. September 19, 2023. RetrievedDecember 10, 2025.
  6. ^Williams, Larry (2012).The Danny Ford Years at Clemson.
  7. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuv"FCS wins vs. FBS teams: All-time victories, upsets, wins vs. ranked teams".NCAA.com. September 7, 2025. RetrievedOctober 2, 2025.
  8. ^"ATTENDANCE RECORDS"(PDF).
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