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1996 NCAA Division I-A football season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football season

1996 NCAA Division I-A season
Number of teams111[1]
Preseason AP No. 1Nebraska[2]
Postseason
Bowl games18
Heisman TrophyDanny Wuerffel (quarterback,Florida)
Bowl Alliance Championship
1997 Sugar Bowl
SiteLouisiana Superdome,
New Orleans, Louisiana
Champion(s)Florida (AP, Coaches, FWAA)
Division I-A football seasons
← 1995
1997 →

The1996 NCAA Division I-A football season ended with theFlorida Gators being crowned National Champions after defeating rivalFlorida State in theSugar Bowl, which was the season's designatedBowl Alliance national championship game. Florida had faced Florida State earlier in the year, when they were ranked No. 1 and No. 2, and lost 24–21. However, unrankedTexas's upset of No. 3Nebraska in the first everBig 12 Championship Game set up the rematch of in-state rivals in New Orleans. In the Sugar Bowl, Florida'sHeisman Trophy-winning senior quarterbackDanny Wuerffel and head coachSteve Spurrier led the Gators to a 52–20 victory and their first national championship.

Because thePac-10 andBig Ten Conferences were not yet part of the Bowl Alliance, their champions met in theRose Bowl as they had for decades. In 1996, these conference champions were potential national title contenders in No. 2Arizona State and No. 4Ohio State. In a close Rose Bowl contest, Arizona State'sJake Plummer ran for a touchdown with 1:40 left to play to give his team the lead, but Ohio State responded with its own touchdown drive led by backup quarterbackJoe Germaine and won 20–17. Ohio State finished No. 2 in the final AP poll behind No. 1 Florida, and Arizona State finished No. 4 behind Florida State. The poll results helped push the Pac-10 and Big Ten to give up their Rose Bowl tradition. Before the 1998 season, they both agreed to join an expandedBowl Championship Series (BCS) agreement, giving their programs a chance to play in a national championship game. Another controversy that led to the creation of the BCS was that No. 5BYU was not invited to a major bowl game but were snubbed in favor of lower ranked teams from Bowl Alliance conferences.

The 1996 season saw ongoing realignment of many conferences. One of the most notable developments was the creation of theBig 12 Conference, which consisted of programs from the oldBig 8 along with four former members of the dissolvedSouthwest Conference, namelyTexas,Texas A&M,Texas Tech, andBaylor. The Big 12 began play as a two division conference, withOklahoma andOklahoma State joining the South Division, breaking up the classicNebraska–Oklahoma rivalry, but making the Texas–Oklahoma rivalry, known as theRed River Shootout into a conference game. The first Big 12 football game featured Texas Tech and Kansas State. Kansas State won by a score of 21–14.[3]

The 1996 season was also notable as it marked the end of ties in college football, as anovertime system was put into place across all of Division I. Though it has been modified slightly, the "Kansas Playoff" overtime rules have been used ever since. (The1995 season also had overtime rules, but only forpostseason games. These rules were first used in the 1995 Las Vegas Bowl between Toledo and Nevada.[4])

Rule changes

[edit]
  • Theovertime system adopted in the1995 season for bowl games was expanded for all Division I-A games.[4]
  • On punts and field goal attempts, the defense cannot touch the center/long snapper for one second after the snap. Violators are penalized 15 yards and an automatic first down.
  • Officials were instructed to more strictly enforce intentional grounding rules.

Conference realignment

[edit]

Four teams upgraded from Division I-AA prior to the season and one university dropped its football program. As such, the total number of Division I-A schools increased to 111.

Conference changes

[edit]
School1995 Conference1996 Conference
Alabama–BirminghamBlazersI-AA IndependentI-A Independent
Arkansas StateIndiansBig WestI-A Independent
BaylorBearsSWCBig 12
Boise StateBroncosBig Sky (I-AA)Big West (I-A)
Central FloridaKnightsI-AA IndependentI-A Independent
ColoradoBuffaloesBig 8Big 12
CincinnatiBearcatsI-A IndependentConference USA
HoustonCougarsSWCConference USA
IdahoVandalsBig Sky (I-AA)Big West (I-A)
Iowa StateCyclonesBig 8Big 12
KansasJayhawksBig 8Big 12
Kansas StateWildcatsBig 8Big 12
Louisiana TechBulldogsBig WestI-A Independent
LouisvilleCardinalsI-A IndependentConference USA
MemphisTigersI-A IndependentConference USA
MissouriTigersBig 8Big 12
NebraskaCornhuskersBig 8Big 12
North TexasMean GreenI-A IndependentBig West
Northern IllinoisHuskiesBig WestI-A Independent
OklahomaSoonersBig 8Big 12
Oklahoma StateCowboysBig 8Big 12
PacificTigersBig WestDropped Program
RiceOwlsSWCWAC
San Jose StateSpartansBig WestWAC
SMUMustangsSWCWAC
Southern MissGolden EaglesI-A IndependentConference USA
Southwestern LouisianaRagin' CajunsBig WestI-A Independent
TCUHorned FrogsSWCWAC
TexasLonghornsSWCBig 12
Texas A&MAggiesSWCBig 12
Texas TechRed RaidersSWCBig 12
TulaneGreen WaveI-A IndependentConference USA
TulsaGolden HurricaneI-A IndependentWAC
UNLVRebelsBig WestWAC

Regular Season

[edit]

August–September

[edit]

Two-time defending championNebraska was heavily favored to win a third straight national title, and the Cornhuskers were followed in the preseason AP Poll by No. 2Tennessee, No. 3Florida State, No. 4Florida, and No. 5Colorado.

August 31: No. 1 Nebraska and No. 3 Florida State had not begun their schedules. No. 2 Tennessee overwhelmed UNLV 62-3, No. 4 Florida defeated Southwestern Louisiana 55-21, and No. 5 Colorado beat Washington State 37-19. The top five remained the same in the next poll.

September 7: No. 1 Nebraska opened with a 55-14 win over Michigan State, No. 2 Tennessee beat UCLA 35-20, No. 3 Florida State defeated Duke 44-7, No. 4 Florida prevailed 62-14 over Georgia Southern, and No. 5 Colorado won 48-34 at Colorado State. The top five again remained the same.

September 14: The only top-five team active this weekend was No. 5 Colorado, who committed 14 penalties (one of which nullified a game-tying touchdown) in a 20-13 loss to No. 11Michigan. No. 6Penn State shut out Northern Illinois 49-0 and moved up in the next poll: No. 1 Nebraska, No. 2 Tennessee, No. 3 Florida State, No. 4 Florida, and No. 5 Penn State.

September 19–21: No. 1 Nebraska took a 26-game winning streak into their matchup with No. 17Arizona State, a team they had defeated by 49 points the previous year. However, the Sun Devils completely neutralized the Cornhuskers’ offense in a 19-0 shutout win, Nebraska’s first loss since the1993 national title game. In a matchup of SEC contenders, No. 4 Florida took a 35-0 second-quarter lead over No. 2 Tennessee and held off a Volunteers comeback for a 35-29 victory. No. 3 Florida State won 51-17 at North Carolina State, No. 5 Penn State shut out Temple 41-0, No. 7Ohio State blanked Pittsburgh 72-0, and No. 9Notre Dame beat No. 6Texas 27-24 on a field goal as time expired. The next poll featured No. 1 Florida, No. 2 Florida State, No. 3 Penn State, No. 4 Ohio State, and No. 5 Notre Dame.

September 28: No. 1 Florida dominated Kentucky 65-0, and No. 2 Florida State shut out No. 11North Carolina 13-0. No. 3 Penn State earned a 23-20 win at Wisconsin, but No. 4 Ohio State was more impressive in a 29-16 victory at No. 5 Notre Dame. No. 6 Arizona State beat Oregon 48-27 to move into the top five: No. 1 Florida, No. 2 Florida State, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Penn State, and No. 5 Arizona State.

October

[edit]

October 5: No. 1 Florida won 42-7 at Arkansas, and No. 2 Florida State defeated Clemson 34-3. In their second top-five matchup in two weeks, No. 3 Ohio State looked dominant in a 38-7 rout of No. 4 Penn State. No. 5 Arizona State beat Boise State 56-7, and No. 7 Nebraska overwhelmed No. 16Kansas State 39-3 to move back into the top five: No. 1 Florida, No. 2 Ohio State, No. 3 Florida State, No. 4 Arizona State, and No. 5 Nebraska.

October 12: No. 1 Florida defeated No. 12LSU 56-13. After two straight wins over highly-ranked opponents, No. 2 Ohio State needed a fourth-quarter comeback to escape unranked Wisconsin 17-14. No. 3 Florida State visited No. 6Miami and beat their rivals 34-16. No. 4 Arizona State came back from a 21-point deficit to win 42-34 at UCLA. No. 5 Nebraska shut out Baylor 49-0, and the top five remained the same in the next poll.

October 19: No. 1 Florida dominated another ranked SEC opponent, winning 51-10 over No. 16Auburn. No. 2 Ohio State won 42-14 at Purdue. No. 3 Florida State was idle. No. 4 Arizona State fell behind again and again in their game against USC but made three game-tying drives in regulation and another one in overtime. After taking their first lead of the game in double overtime, the Sun Devils put the game away with an 85-yard fumble return for a 48-35 final score. No. 5 Nebraska defeated Texas Tech 24-10, and the top five again remained the same.

October 26: No. 1 Florida was idle. No. 2 Ohio State visited No. 20Iowa for a 38-26 win. No. 3 Florida State faced No. 14Virginia, who had defeated them in a major upset the previous year, and the Seminoles got their revenge with a 31-24 victory. No. 4 Arizona State won 41-9 at Stanford, and No. 5 Nebraska beat Kansas 63-7. The top five again remained the same.

November–December

[edit]

November 2: No. 1 Florida defeated Georgia 47-7, No. 2 Ohio State blanked Minnesota 45-0, No. 3 Florida State won 49-3 at Georgia Tech, No. 4 Arizona State visited Oregon State for a 29-14 victory, and No. 5 Nebraska blasted Oklahoma 73-21. The top five were the same yet again.

November 9: With all of the top-ranking teams on long winning streaks, several conference races were effectively over by early November. No. 1 Florida had an unexpectedly hard time with last-place Vanderbilt, but held on for a 28-21 win which clinched the SEC Eastern Division title for the Gators. No. 2 Ohio State posted their second straight shutout, 48-0 at Illinois. No. 3 Florida State wrapped up the ACC title with a 44-7 victory at Wake Forest, while No. 4 Arizona State earned the Pac-10 crown with a 35-7 defeat of California. No. 5 Nebraska beat Missouri 51-7, and the top five continued to stay the same.

November 16: No. 1 Florida defeated South Carolina 52-25, No. 2 Ohio State clinched the Big Ten title with a 27-17 win at Indiana, and No. 3 Florida State beat No. 25Southern Mississippi 54-14. No. 4 Arizona State was idle, while No. 5 Nebraska won 49-14 at Iowa State. The top five remained unchanged for the fifth consecutive week.

November 23: No. 1 Florida and No. 3 Florida State were idle as they prepared for their upcoming game against each other. For the third time in four years, No. 2 Ohio State was undefeated going into their season-ending contest with archrival Michigan. In both 1993 and 1995, the Wolverines had spoiled the Buckeyes’ perfect record—and the result was the same in 1996, as No. 21 Michigan held OSU without a touchdown in a 13-9 come-from-behind victory which dropped Ohio State coachJohn Cooper’s career record against Michigan to 1-7-1. No. 4 Arizona State, soon to be the Buckeyes’ opponent in the Rose Bowl, did manage to complete a perfect regular season with a 56-14 win at Arizona. No. 5 Nebraska and No. 6 Colorado, who would play each other the following week, were both idle. The next poll featured No. 1 Florida, No. 2 Florida State, No. 3 Arizona State, No. 4 Nebraska, and No. 5 Colorado.

November 29–30: No. 1 Florida and No. 2 Florida State, both undefeated, met with a spot in the national title game seemingly on the line. The Seminoles jumped out to a 17-0 lead in the first quarter and held off a late Gators comeback to earn a 24-21 victory. No. 3 Arizona State, the only other undefeated team, had finished their schedule. No. 4 Nebraska and No. 5 Colorado, both with one loss, faced each other for the championship of the new Big 12 Northern Division, and the Cornhuskers prevailed 17-12 on a rain-soaked field. The next poll featured No. 1 Florida State, No. 2 Arizona State, No. 3 Nebraska, No. 4 Florida, and No. 5 Ohio State.

No. 1 Florida State and No. 2 Arizona State, the only two undefeated teams at the end of the regular season, could not play each other for the national title; as the winner of the Pac-10, Arizona State was contractually obligated to meet Big Ten champ Ohio State in theRose Bowl. In previous years, No. 3 Nebraska would have been the next team in line to face Florida State. However, due to the recent merger between the Big 8 and SWC, the Cornhuskers needed to play one more game before heading into the bowls. Inthe first-ever Big 12 Championship Game onDecember 7, Nebraska faced off against Texas. The unranked Longhorns trailed in the fourth quarter, but scored two late touchdowns to pull off a 37-27 upset. Later that day, No. 4 Florida beat No. 11Alabama, 45–30, in theSEC Championship Game to move back ahead of Nebraska in the final pre-bowl poll. No. 6Brigham Young, with a 28-25 overtime defeat of No. 20Wyoming in theWAC Championship Game, also moved up: No. 1 Florida State, No. 2 Arizona State, No. 3 Florida, No. 4 Ohio State, and No. 5 Brigham Young.

Therefore, just a month after their previous meeting, Florida State and Florida were set for a rematch in theSugar Bowl. The Rose Bowl between Arizona State and Ohio State would also have national title implications, especially if the Seminoles lost and the Sun Devils won. The major games were rounded out by No. 5 Brigham Young and No. 14 Kansas State in theCotton Bowl, No. 6 Nebraska and No. 10Virginia Tech in theOrange, and No. 7 Penn State and No. 20 Texas in theFiesta.

Conference standings

[edit]
1996 Atlantic Coast Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 3Florida State $ 80  111 
No. 10North Carolina 62  102 
Clemson 62  75 
Virginia 53  75 
Georgia Tech 44  56 
Maryland 35  56 
NC State 35  38 
Wake Forest 17  38 
Duke 08  011 
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1996 Big 12 Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
North Division
No. 6Nebraska x% 80  112 
No. 8Colorado 71  102 
No. 17Kansas State 62  93 
Missouri 35  56 
Kansas 26  47 
Iowa State 17  29 
South Division
No. 23Texas x$ 62  85 
Texas Tech 53  75 
Texas A&M 44  66 
Oklahoma 35  38 
Oklahoma State 26  56 
Baylor 17  47 
Championship:Texas 37, Nebraska 27
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
  • $ – Bowl Alliance representative as champion
    % – Bowl Alliance at-large representative
Rankings fromAP Poll
1996 Big East Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 13Virginia Tech + 61  102 
No. 14Miami (FL) + 61  93 
No. 21Syracuse + 61  93 
West Virginia 43  84 
Pittsburgh 34  47 
Boston College 25  57 
Rutgers 16  29 
Temple 07  110 
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings fromAP Poll
1996 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 2Ohio State + 71  111 
No. 15Northwestern + 71  93 
No. 7Penn State 62  112 
No. 18Iowa 62  93 
No. 20Michigan 53  84 
Michigan State 53  66 
Wisconsin 35  85 
Purdue 26  38 
Minnesota 17  47 
Indiana 17  38 
Illinois 17  29 
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings fromAP Poll
1996 Big West Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
Nevada + 41  93 
Utah State + 41  65 
Idaho 32  65 
North Texas 32  56 
Boise State 14  210 
New Mexico State 05  110 
  • + – Conference co-champions
1996 Conference USA football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
Houston + 41  75 
Southern Miss + 41  83 
Cincinnati 23  65 
Louisville 23  56 
Memphis 23  47 
Tulane 14  29 
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings fromAP Poll
1996 Mid-American Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
Ball State $ 71  84 
Toledo 62  74 
Miami (OH) 62  65 
Ohio 53  66 
Central Michigan 44  56 
Akron 35  47 
Bowling Green 35  47 
Eastern Michigan 35  38 
Western Michigan 26  29 
Kent State 17  29 
  • $ – Conference champion
1996 Pacific-10 Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 4Arizona State $ 80  111 
No. 16Washington 71  93 
Stanford 53  75 
UCLA 44  56 
Oregon 35  65 
California 35  66 
USC 35  66 
Arizona 35  56 
Washington State 35  56 
Oregon State 17  29 
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1996 Southeastern Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
Eastern Division
No. 1Florida x$ 80  121 
No. 9Tennessee 71  102 
South Carolina 44  65 
Kentucky 35  47 
Georgia 35  56 
Vanderbilt 08  29 
Western Division
No. 11Alabama xy 62  103 
No. 12LSU x 62  102 
No. 24Auburn 44  84 
Mississippi State 35  56 
Ole Miss 26  56 
Arkansas 26  47 
Championship:Florida 45, Alabama 30
  • $ – Conference champion
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
  • y – Championship game participant
Rankings fromAP Poll
1996 Western Athletic Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
Mountain Division
No. 5BYU x$ 80  141 
Utah 62  84 
Rice 62  74 
SMU 44  56 
New Mexico 35  65 
TCU 35  47 
Tulsa 26  47 
UTEP 08  29 
Pacific Division
No. 22Wyoming x 71  102 
San Diego State 62  83 
Colorado State 62  75 
Air Force 53  65 
Fresno State 35  47 
San Jose State 35  39 
Hawaii 17  210 
UNLV 17  111 
Championship:BYU 28, Wyoming 25OT
  • $ – Conference champion
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
Rankings fromAP Poll
1996 NCAA Division I-A independents football records
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 25Army   102 
Navy   93 
No. 19Notre Dame   83 
East Carolina   83 
Louisiana Tech   65 
UAB   56 
UCF   56 
Southwestern Louisiana   56 
Northeast Louisiana   56 
Arkansas State   47 
Northern Illinois   110 
Rankings fromAP Poll

Bowl Alliance first and seconds

[edit]

The Bowl Alliance did not include thePacific-10 andBig 10 conferences, whose champions played in theRose Bowl. Thus,Arizona State andOhio State (who met in the Rose Bowl) were excluded from the Bowl Alliance championship.

WEEKSFirstConf.SecondConf.EventDate
PRE-4NebraskaBig 12TennesseeSECArizona St. 19, Nebraska 0September 21
5-6FloridaSECFlorida StateACCOhio State 38,Penn State 7October 5
7-14FloridaSECNo. 3 Florida StateACCFlorida St. 24, Florida 21November 30
15Florida StateACCNo. 3 NebraskaBig 12Texas 37, Nebraska 27December 7
16Florida StateACCNo. 3 FloridaSECFlorida 52, Florida State 20January 1

Bowl games

[edit]
Main article:1996–97 NCAA football bowl games
Sugar BowlNo. 3Florida52No. 1Florida St.201/2/97
Rose Bowl:No. 4Ohio St.20No. 2Arizona St.171/1/97
Cotton Bowl Classic:No. 5Brigham Young19No. 14Kansas St.151/1/97
Fiesta Bowl:No. 7Penn State38No. 20Texas151/1/97
Florida Citrus Bowl:No. 9Tennessee48No. 11Northwestern281/1/97
Gator Bowl:No. 12North Carolina20No. 25West Virginia131/1/97
Outback Bowl:No. 16Alabama17No. 15Michigan141/1/97
Orange Bowl:No. 6Nebraska41No. 10Virginia Tech2112/31/96
Sun Bowl:Stanford38Michigan State012/31/96
Independence BowlAuburn32No. 24Army2912/31/96
Holiday Bowl:No. 8Colorado33No. 13Washington2112/30/96
Alamo Bowl:No. 21Iowa27Texas Tech012/29/96
Peach BowlNo. 17LSU10Clemson712/28/96
Carquest BowlNo. 19Miami (FL)31Virginia2112/27/96
Liberty BowlNo. 23Syracuse30Houston1712/27/96
Copper Bowl:Wisconsin38Utah1012/27/96
Aloha BowlNavy42California3812/25/96
Las Vegas BowlNevada18Ball State1512/18/96

Final AP Poll

[edit]
Main article:1996 NCAA Division I-A football rankings
  1. Florida
  2. Ohio St.
  3. Florida St.
  4. Arizona St.
  5. BYU
  6. Nebraska
  7. Penn St.
  8. Colorado
  9. Tennessee
  10. North Carolina
  11. Alabama
  12. LSU
  13. Virginia Tech
  14. Miami (FL)
  15. Northwestern
  16. Washington
  17. Kansas St.
  18. Iowa
  19. Notre Dame
  20. Michigan
  21. Syracuse
  22. Wyoming
  23. Texas
  24. Auburn
  25. Army

Others receiving votes: 26.West Virginia; 27.East Carolina; 28.Southern Mississippi; 29.Stanford; 30.Wisconsin; 31.San Diego St.; 32.Virginia; 33.Clemson

Final Coaches Poll

[edit]
Main article:1996 NCAA Division I-A football rankings
  1. Florida
  2. Ohio St.
  3. Florida St.
  4. Arizona St.
  5. Brigham Young
  6. Nebraska
  7. Penn St.
  8. Colorado
  9. Tennessee
  10. North Carolina
  11. Alabama
  12. Virginia Tech
  13. LSU
  14. Miami (FL)
  15. Washington
  16. Northwestern
  17. Kansas St.
  18. Iowa
  19. Syracuse
  20. Michigan
  21. Notre Dame
  22. Wyoming
  23. Texas
  24. Army
  25. Auburn

Heisman Trophy voting

[edit]

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

PlayerSchoolPosition1st2nd3rdTotal
Danny WuerffelFloridaQB3001581471,363
Troy DavisIowa StateRB2092061351,174
Jake PlummerArizona StateQB116113111685
Orlando PaceOhio StateOT87101136599
Warrick DunnFlorida StateRB407669341
Byron HanspardTexas TechRB156870251
Darnell AutryNorthwesternRB9102085
Peyton ManningTennesseeQB4232381
Marcus HarrisWyomingWR771853
Beau MorganAir ForceQB331126

Other major awards

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"1996 NCAA Division IA Football Power Ratings".www.jhowell.net. RetrievedMarch 23, 2018.
  2. ^"Archived copy". Archived fromthe original on October 2, 2011. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^DeLassus, David."Kansas State University football records--1996".College Football Data Warehouse. Archived fromthe original on October 20, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 4, 2013.
  4. ^ab"No more ties: NDAA D-I football adds tiebreakers".Moscow-Pullman Daily News. (Idaho-Washington). Associated Press. February 17, 1996. p. 4D.
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NCAA pre-divisional
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NCAA Division I
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