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1974 NCAA Division I football season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football season

1974 NCAA Division I football season
PreseasonAP No. 1Oklahoma[1]
Regular seasonSeptember 7 – November 30, 1974
Number of bowls11
Bowl gamesDecember 16, 1974 – January 1, 1975
Champion(s)Oklahoma (AP)
USC (Coaches,FWAA,NFF)
HeismanArchie Griffin (running back,Ohio State)
← 1973 ·football seasons· 1975 →

The1974 NCAA Division I football season finished with two national champions. The Associated Press (AP) writers' poll ranked theUniversity of Oklahoma, which was on probation and barred by the NCAA from postseason play, No. 1 at season's end. The United Press International (UPI) coaches' poll did not rank teams on probation, by unanimous agreement of the 25 member coaches' board.[2] The UPI trophy went toUSC.

During the 20th century, the NCAA had no playoff for the major college football teams, later known as "Division I-A". The NCAA Football Guide, however, did note an "unofficial national champion" based on the top ranked teams in the "wire service" (AP and UPI) polls. The "writers' poll" byAssociated Press (AP) was the most popular, followed by the "coaches' poll" byUnited Press International) (UPI). Starting in 1974, the UPI joined AP in issuing its final poll after the bowl games were completed. Both polls operated under a point system of 20 points for first place, 19 for second, etc., whereby the overall ranking was determined. The AP poll consisted of the votes of 60 writers, though not all voted in each poll, and the UPI poll was taken of a 25-member board.

Rule changes

[edit]
  • Blocking below the waist is prohibited on kickoffs, punts, or free kicks, and anywhere on the field except in a three-yard area around the line of scrimmage.
  • Shoulder pads are required equipment for all players. Prior to this, kickers and wide receivers frequently played without shoulder pads.
  • Penalty enforcement on running plays is from the end of the run except for fouls committed by the offense; those are penalized from the spot of the foul.
  • Players who enter the field are required to remain for one play, and players who leave the field are required to stay on the bench for one play. This ended the practice of sending "messenger" players in to relay plays from the sideline, then leave the field without participating.
  • Players leaving the bench to participate in touchdown celebrations will result in a five-yard penalty for the scoring team. If a coach joins in the celebration on the field, the penalty is 15 yards.
  • Successful field goals now must travelbetween the uprights; previously a field goal was declared good if the ball went over an upright, the standard still used by theNational Football League. This became a point of dispute in the1974 Ohio State-Michigan game, as Michigan's game-winning field goal attempt was declared no good due to the ball going over the left upright. Michigan claimed the ball curled just inside the left upright.

Conference and program changes

[edit]
School1973 Conference1974 Conference
Cal State Los AngelesGolden EaglesPCAA (D-I)CCAA (D-II)
Cal State FullertonTitansCCAA (D-II)PCAA (D-I)
XavierMusketeersIndependentDropped Program

September

[edit]

In the preseason poll released on September 2, 1974, the AP rankedOklahoma No. 1, followed by No. 2Ohio State, No. 3Notre Dame, No. 4Alabama and No. 5USC.

September 7: No. 3 Notre Dame, the defending national champion, beat Georgia Tech in Atlanta, 31–7, in a nationally televised game on Monday night, September 9. The few other schools playing that weekend included No. 11Houston, which lost 30−9 to No. 15Arizona State, and No. 12UCLA, which tied No. 16Tennessee 17−17. Elsewhere, the scheduledOle Miss-Tulane game inNew Orleans was postponed until November 30 due to the threat ofHurricane Carmen. The next poll featured No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Notre Dame, No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 Ohio State, and No. 5 USC.

September 14: No. 1 Oklahoma beat Baylor, 28–11. No. 2 Notre Dame was idle. No. 3 Alabama won at No. 14Maryland, 21–16. No. 4 Ohio State won at Minnesota, 34–19. No. 5 USC lost to No. 20Arkansas in Little Rock, 22–7. No. 7Nebraska, which beat Oregon in its opener, 61–7, moved up in the polls. There was considerable disagreement between AP voters at the top of the next poll, with 19 first-place votes going to Notre Dame, 18 to Oklahoma, and 17 to Ohio State. The top five were No. 1 Notre Dame, No. 2 Ohio State, No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 4 Nebraska, and No. 5 Alabama.

September 21: No. 1 Notre Dame won at Northwestern, 49–3. No. 2 Ohio State beat Oregon State 51–10. No. 3 Oklahoma was idle. No. 4 Nebraska lost at Wisconsin, 21–20. No. 5 Alabama beat Southern Mississippi at home, 52–0. No. 6Michigan, which beat Colorado 31–0, replaced Nebraska in the top five. In the next poll, Notre Dame had the edge in first-place votes (26 to 23), but Ohio State took the lead based on overall points. No. 1 Ohio State and No. 2 Notre Dame were followed by No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 4 Alabama, and No. 5 Michigan.

September 28: No. 1 Ohio State defeated SMU, 28–9. No. 2 Notre Dame was upset at home by Purdue, 31–20. No. 3 Oklahoma rolled over visiting Utah State, 72–3. No. 4 Alabama beat Vanderbilt 23–10. No. 5 Michigan beat Navy, 52–0. Losses by the sixth- through eighth-ranked teams opened the door for No. 9Texas A&M, which won at Washington 28–15, to move into the top five. The next poll featured No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 Michigan, and No. 5 Texas A&M.

October

[edit]

October 5: No. 1Ohio State beat Washington State 42–7 in Seattle. No. 2Oklahoma shut out Wake Forest 63–0. No. 3Alabama beat Mississippi at Jackson, 35–21. No. 4Michigan won at Stanford, 27–16. No. 5Texas A&M lost at Kansas, 28–10. No. 6Nebraska, which beat Minnesota 54–0, moved up to No. 5 in the next poll, with the top four remaining the same.

October 12: No. 1 Ohio State beat visiting No. 13Wisconsin 52–7. No. 2 Oklahoma barely defeated No. 17Texas in Dallas, 16–13. No. 3 Alabama survived a game against winless (0–4) Florida State, winning 8–7. No. 4 Michigan beat Michigan State, 21–7. No. 5 Nebraska lost to Missouri 21–10 and was replaced in the next poll by No. 10Auburn, which beat Kentucky 31–13. The poll featured No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Alabama, and No. 5 Auburn.

October 19: No. 1 Ohio State beat Indiana, 49–9. No. 2 Oklahoma won at Colorado, 49–14. No. 3 Michigan won at Wisconsin, 24–20. No. 4 Alabama won at Tennessee, 28–6. No. 5 Auburn beat Georgia Tech 31–22. The top five remained the same.

October 26: This week was defined by blowouts. No. 1 Ohio State won at Northwestern 55–7, No. 2 Oklahoma beat Kansas State 63–0, No. 3 Michigan beat Minnesota 49–0, No. 4 Alabama beat TCU 41–3 at Birmingham, and No. 5 Auburn beat Florida State 38–6. The top five again remained the same.

November

[edit]

November 2: No. 1Ohio State defeated Illinois at home, 49–7. With a record of 8–0, the Buckeyes had outscored their opposition 360 to 75. No. 2Oklahoma won at Iowa State, 28–10. No. 3Michigan won at Indiana, 21–7. No. 4Alabama beat No. 17Mississippi State 35–0, and thereby jumped over Michigan in the next poll. No. 5No. 5 Auburn lost at No. 11Florida, 25–14. No. 8Texas A&M, which beat Arkansas 20–10, returned to the Top Five: No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 Michigan, and No. 5 Texas A&M.

November 9: In East Lansing, Michigan, No. 1 Ohio State was upset by unranked (and 4–3–1)Michigan State, 16–13. No. 2 Oklahoma, which had beaten Missouri 37–0, took the first spot. No. 3 Alabama beat LSU in Birmingham, 30–0. No. 4 Michigan won at Illinois, 14–6. No. 5 Texas A&M lost at SMU, 18–14. No. 8No. 8 Notre Dame was idle, but rose to fifth place after losses by No. 6Florida and No. 7Penn State. The top five were No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Alabama, No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Ohio State, and No. 5 Notre Dame.

November 16: No. 1 Oklahoma won at Kansas, 45–14. No. 2 Alabama won in Florida over Miami, 28–7, and No. 3 Michigan beat Purdue. All three teams were undefeated and untied. No. 4 Ohio State won at Iowa, 35–10, and No. 5 Notre Dame beat No. 17Pittsburgh, 14–10. The top five remained the same.

November 23: No. 1 Oklahoma beat No. 6Nebraska, 28–14. No. 2 Alabama was idle as it prepared for its season ender with Auburn. The latest battle of "The Ten Year War" took place in Columbus, Ohio, as No. 3 Michigan (10–0) met No. 4 Ohio State (9–1) in their annual clash for the Big Ten title. OSU won, 12–10, to clinch a third consecutiveRose Bowl berth. Over the last three years, Michigan was 30−0 against all opponents other than Ohio State, but the Big Ten's rule that only the conference champion could participate in a bowl game kept the Wolverines out of the postseason each year. No. 5 Notre Dame beat Air Force, 38–0. No. 6USC topped UCLA 34–9 for the Pac-8 title and the right to face Ohio State in the Rose Bowl. The next poll featured No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Alabama, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Michigan, and No. 5 Notre Dame.

November 29−30: The annual Alabama-Auburn game took place on a Friday night in Birmingham, with No. 2 Alabama winning 17–13 over No. 7 Auburn to close its season at 11–0. The next day, No. 1 Oklahoma won its annual season ender against Oklahoma State, 44–13, to also finish 11–0. With Oklahoma barred from the postseason due to NCAA probation, theOrange Bowl organizers had already arranged for Alabama to meet No. 5 Notre Dame in a rematch oflast year's national championship game. However, the Fighting Irish still had one more regular season game left, against No. 6 USC in Los Angeles. After trailing 24–0, the Trojans scored 55 unanswered points and cruised to victory, keeping themselves in national championship contention and effectively eliminating Notre Dame. The final regular season AP Poll featured No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Alabama, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Michigan, and No. 5 USC. Since teams on probation were ineligible to be ranked in the coaches' poll, the UPI named Alabama as No. 1, followed by Ohio State, Michigan, USC, and Auburn.

In other action, Tulane lost its final game atTulane Stadium 26–10 to Ole Miss. The Green Wave played 38 of their next 39 seasons at theSuperdome, except for 2005, when they were forced to play all of their games away from New Orleans in the wake ofHurricane Katrina. Tulane returned to campus in 2014 whenYulman Stadium opened.

Conference standings

[edit]
1974 Atlantic Coast Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 13Maryland $600840
No. 11NC State420921
Clemson420740
North Carolina420750
Duke240650
Virginia150470
Wake Forest0601100
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll[3]
1974 Big Eight Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 1Oklahoma $7001100
Missouri520740
No. 9Nebraska520930
Oklahoma State430750
Colorado340560
Iowa State250470
Kansas160470
Kansas State160470
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1974 Big Sky Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 5Boise State $^6001020
Montana State420730
Idaho221281
Montana231361
Northern Arizona230360
Idaho State240550
Weber State150470
  • $ – Conference champion
  • ^ – NCAA Division II playoff participant
Rankings fromAP small college poll
1974 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 3Michigan +7101010
No. 4Ohio State +7101020
No. 12Michigan State611731
Wisconsin530740
Illinois431641
Purdue350461
Minnesota260470
Iowa260380
Northwestern260380
Indiana1701100
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings fromAP Poll
1974 Ivy League football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Harvard +610720
Yale +610810
Penn421621
Brown430540
Dartmouth340360
Princeton340441
Cornell151351
Columbia070180
  • + – Conference co-champions
1974 Mid-American Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 10Miami (OH) $5001001
Ohio320650
Toledo320650
Kent State230740
Bowling Green230641
Western Michigan050380
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1974 Missouri Valley Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Tulsa $600830
Louisville320470
West Texas State330650
Drake231371
New Mexico State230560
North Texas State132272
Wichita State141191
  • $ – Conference champion
1974 Pacific Coast Athletic Association football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
San Diego State $400821
San Jose State220831
Pacific (CA)220650
Long Beach State130650
Fresno State130570
Cal State Fullerton000460
  • $ – Conference champion
1974 Pacific-8 Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 2USC $6011011
Stanford511542
California421731
UCLA421632
Washington340560
Oregon State340380
Washington State160290
Oregon070290
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1974 Southern Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
VMI $510740
Appalachian State410650
East Carolina330740
Richmond330550
The Citadel340470
William & Mary230470
Furman240560
Davidson030270
  • $ – Conference champion
1974 Southeastern Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 5Alabama $6001110
No. 8Auburn4201020
Georgia420660
No. 17Mississippi State330930
No. 15Florida330840
Kentucky330650
No. 20Tennessee231732
Vanderbilt231732
LSU240551
Ole Miss060380
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1974 Southwest Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 14Baylor $610840
No. 17Texas520840
No. 16Texas A&M520830
Arkansas331641
SMU331641
Texas Tech340642
Rice250281
TCU0701100
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1974 Western Athletic Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
BYU $601741
Arizona610920
Arizona State430750
New Mexico340461
UTEP340470
Colorado State231461
Utah1501100
Wyoming160290
  • $ – Conference champion
1974 NCAA Division I independents football records
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 6Notre Dame  1020
No. 7Penn State  1020
Temple  820
Boston College  830
Utah State  830
No. 19Houston  831
Rutgers  731
Cincinnati  740
Memphis State  740
Pittsburgh  740
Georgia Tech  650
Hawaii  650
Miami (FL)  650
Southern Miss  650
Tampa  650
Holy Cross  551
Tulane  560
Colgate  460
Northern Illinois  470
Navy  470
South Carolina  470
Virginia Tech  470
West Virginia  470
Army  380
Dayton  380
Villanova  380
Air Force  290
Southern Illinois  290
Syracuse  290
Florida State  1100
Marshall  1100
Rankings fromAP Poll

Bowl games

[edit]

Tuesday, December 31, 1974

Wednesday, January 1, 1975

Major bowls

[edit]
BOWL
COTTONNo. 7Penn State Nittany Lions41No. 12Baylor Bears20
SUGARNo. 8Nebraska Cornhuskers13No. 18Florida Gators10
ROSENo. 5USC Trojans18No. 3Ohio State Buckeyes17
ORANGENo. 9Notre Dame Fighting Irish13No. 2Alabama Crimson Tide11

Nebraska erased a 10-point deficit by defeating Florida in the Sugar Bowl played on New Year's Eve. The following afternoon, Penn State defeated the surprise SWC champion Baylor in the Cotton Bowl. Third-ranked Ohio State (led byWoody Hayes) and No. 5 USC (coached byJohn McKay) played in theRose Bowl before a crowd of 106,721 in Pasadena. Ohio State led 7–3 after three quarters, and 17–10 in the closing minutes. With 2:03 left,Pat Haden fired a 38-yard pass toJohn McKay Jr. (son of USC's coach) to make the score 17–16. Coach McKay then passed up a chance for a tie over the favored Buckeyes, and ordered the Trojans to go for two. Shelton Diggs dove and caught Haden's low pass in the end zone to give USC an 18–17 lead. Ohio State could only get close enough for a desperation 62-yard field goal attempt that fell about 8 yards short as time expired.[4]

Alabama, coached byBear Bryant was ranked No. 1 in the UPI poll, and No. 2 (behind on-probation Oklahoma) in the AP, as it went to the Orange Bowl, where it faced 9th ranked Notre Dame, playing its final game underAra Parseghian. The Irish went out to a 13–0 lead early in the game, but Bama battled back with a field goal, a touchdown and a two-point run to close the score to 13–11 with three minutes left. After ruling out an onside kick attempt, the Tide force a Notre Dame punt and got the ball back with 1:37 left. QuarterbackRichard Todd attempted to drive the team to field goal range, but he threw his 3rd interception of the game, and Notre Dame ran out the clock to preserve the upset win.

In thefinal polls, USC was ranked first by UPI, followed by Alabama, Ohio State, Michigan, and Notre Dame. The Trojans were second in the AP poll, where the Oklahoma Sooners were the first place choice for 51 of the 60 writers. The NCAA recognized both the Sooners and the Trojans as champions in its football guide.

Other bowls

[edit]
BOWLCityStateDateWinnerScoreRunner-up
SUNEl PasoTexasDecember 28Mississippi State26–24North Carolina
GATORJacksonvilleFloridaDecember 30No. 6Auburn27–3No. 11Texas
TANGERINEOrlandoFloridaDecember 21No. 15Miami (Ohio)21–10Georgia
ASTRO-BLUEBONNETHoustonTexasDecember 23Houston(tie)31–31No. 13N.C. State(tie)
LIBERTYMemphisTennesseeDecember 16Tennessee  7–3No. 10Maryland
PEACHAtlantaGeorgiaDecember 28Texas Tech(tie)  6–6Vanderbilt(tie)
FIESTATempeArizonaDecember 28Oklahoma State16–6No. 17BYU

Heisman Trophy voting

[edit]

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

PlayerSchoolPosition1st2nd3rdTotal
Archie GriffinOhio StateRB483198751,920
Anthony DavisUSCRB120148163819
Joe WashingtonOklahomaRB87146108661
Tom ClementsNotre DameQB264968244
David HummNebraskaQB234649210
Dennis FranklinMichiganQB63022100
Rod ShoateOklahomaLB12162997
Gary SheideBYUQB12191690
Randy WhiteMarylandDT9201885
Steve BartkowskiCaliforniaQB6132064

Source:[5][6]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Archived copy". Archived fromthe original on October 2, 2011. RetrievedDecember 30, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^"UPI Coaches Omitting Oklahoma,"Mansfield (O.) News Journal, Sep. 24, 1974, p19
  3. ^"1974 Atlantic Coast Conference Year Summary". sports-reference.com. RetrievedJanuary 25, 2013.
  4. ^"The Great Gamble Pays Off In Trojan Win,"Star-News (Pasadena), January 2, 1975, p B-1
  5. ^"Archie Griffin".Heisman Trophy. 1974. RetrievedJanuary 17, 2017.
  6. ^"Heisman to Griffin".Spokane Daily Chronicle. (Washington). Associated Press. December 3, 1974. p. 17.
Pre-NCAA
NCAA pre-divisional
NCAA University Division
NCAA Division I
NCAA Division I-A/FBS
NCAA Division I-AA/FCS
NCAA College Division
NCAA Division II
NCAA Division III
1974–75 NCAA Division I championships
Until 1981–82, all championships for men only
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