2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season
The 2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season was the highest level of college football competition in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
The regular season began on August 27, 2014 and ended on December 13, 2014. The postseason concluded on January 12, 2015 with the inaugural College Football Playoff National Championship game at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
The 2014 season marked a major change to the postseason with the introduction of the College Football Playoff, a four-team knockout tournament to determine the national champion of Division I FBS. The College Football Playoff system replaced the Bowl Championship Series, which had been in use since 1998.
Ohio State beat Oregon to claim the first ever FBS national title awarded using a playoff system. Following the game, Ohio State was named the #1 team in the AP Poll and Coaches' Poll for the season, making the Buckeyes consensus national champions among the major polls.
Rule changes
The following rule changes have been made by the NCAA Football Rules Committee for the 2014 season:- Modifying the "targeting" rule enacted for the 2013 season whereby if a targeting ejection is overturned on review, the 15 yard penalty will be overturned as well, unless the foul was committed in conjunction with another foul.
- Targeting definition expanded from "Initiate contact" to "Make forcible contact" and defining that any forcible contact with the crown of the helmet to an opponent is a targeting foul.
- Allowing all conferences the option to experiment with eight-man officiating crews. The Big 12 Conference experimented with eight-man officiating crews during the 2013 season. The eighth official is referred to as the "Center Judge", positioned opposite the Referee in the offensive backfield, and wears a "C" on the shirt. In 2014, the Atlantic Coast Conference, Big Ten Conference, Big 12 Conference, the Mountain West Conference, and the American Athletic Conference used eight-official crews. The Southeastern Conference experimented with eight officials in selected games in the 2014 season. The Pac-12 Conference made no plans to implement eight-official crews. The eight-man crews were used in bowl games if one of the conferences provided a crew for a particular game.
- Modifying the 15-yard Roughing the Passer penalty to include hits at or below the knees from defenders that are not fouled/blocked into the quarterback, not engaged in tackling the quarterback, or are rushing unabated to the quarterback.
Conference realignment
Membership changes
, Georgia Southern and Old Dominion moved from the Football Championship Subdivision to FBS. 2014 was expected to be the final season for UAB football, who dropped their program at the conclusion of the season due to financial reasons. The UAB football program later restarted in 2017.School | Former conference | New conference |
Appalachian State | Southern Conference | Sun Belt |
East Carolina | Conference USA | |
Georgia Southern | Southern Conference | Sun Belt |
Idaho | FBS independent | Sun Belt |
Louisville | ACC | |
Maryland | ACC | Big Ten |
New Mexico State | FBS independent | Sun Belt |
Old Dominion | FBS independent | Conference USA |
Rutgers | Big Ten | |
Tulane | Conference USA | |
Tulsa | Conference USA | The American |
Western Kentucky | Sun Belt | Conference USA |
Other headlines
- May 14
- * The NCAA announced its Academic Progress Rate sanctions for the 2014–15 school year. Two FBS teams, Idaho and UNLV, were among the 36 programs in 11 sports declared ineligible for postseason play due to failure to meet the required APR benchmark.
- * Boise State announced that it had received a waiver from the NCAA allowing the school to immediately provide assistance to incoming freshman recruit Antoine Turner, a defensive end originally from New Orleans who had been homeless due to financial and family issues.
- June 26 – UNLV announced that the school would be eligible for postseason after the upcoming season; they stated that the NCAA had accepted an updated Academic Progress Rate score submitted by the university.
- September 8 – The NCAA restored Penn State's postseason eligibility effective immediately, and full complement of 85 scholarships effective with the 2015 season. This means Penn State could qualify for a bowl game for the 2014 season. Penn State was originally banned from postseason play from 2012–2015 because of the Jerry Sandusky child abuse scandal.
- October 4
- * For the first time since Week 11 of the 1990 season, four teams ranked in the top six of the AP Poll lost during the week. Additionally, five of the top eight of the AP Poll lost in the same week for the first time ever. The week's upsets began on Thursday, when #2 Oregon lost 31–24 at home to Arizona. Saturday saw #3 Alabama lose 23–17 at #11 Ole Miss, #4 Oklahoma lose 37–33 at #25 TCU, #6 Texas A&M lose 48–31 at #12 Mississippi State, and #8 UCLA lose 30–28 at home to Utah.
- * Washington State quarterback Connor Halliday set a new FBS record for single-game passing yards, throwing for 734 yards in a 60–59 loss to Cal. This broke the previous record of 716, set in 1990 by Houston's David Klingler, and was five short of the all-divisions NCAA record of 739 set by Sam Durley of Division III Eureka in 2012. In the same game, Cal's Jared Goff threw for 527 yards, giving the two teams an FBS-record 1,261 passing yards in the game.
- October 12 – The release of the Week 8 AP Poll saw Mississippi State, previously tied for #3 with cross-state rival Ole Miss, leapfrog Florida State to reach #1 for the first time in school history. Mississippi State had just beaten #2 Auburn at home by a score of 38–23, the Bulldogs' third straight over a team then ranked in the top 10. Most significantly, the Bulldogs became the first team in the history of the AP Poll to go from unranked to #1 in five weeks, surpassing the previous record of six weeks set by Ohio State in 1954.
- October 18 – Marshall quarterback Rakeem Cato threw for four touchdowns in the Thundering Herd's 45–13 win at FIU, giving him a touchdown pass in 39 consecutive games. This broke a tie for the FBS record with Russell Wilson, who threw for TDs in 38 consecutive games while at NC State and Wisconsin. Cato went on to finish the season and his Marshall career in the Boca Raton Bowl with a streak of 46 games, tying the all-divisions NCAA record of Central Washington's Mike Reilly.
- November 16 – Wisconsin running back Melvin Gordon set a new FBS record with 408 rushing yards in the Badgers' 59–24 win over Nebraska. The previous record of 406 yards had been set by TCU's LaDainian Tomlinson in 1999.
- November 22 – Melvin Gordon's single-game FBS rushing record, which had been set less than a week earlier, is broken by Oklahoma's Samaje Perine, who ran for 427 yards in the Sooners' 44–7 win over Kansas.
- November 29 – Louisville safety Gerod Holliman intercepted his 14th pass of the season, tying the single-season FBS record set in 1968 by Washington's Al Worley. The interception in the final minute sealed the Cardinals' 44–40 win over archrival Kentucky.
- November 30 – Police in Columbus, Ohio discovered the body of Kosta Karageorge, a wrestler at Ohio State who had walked on to the football team but had yet to appear in a game. Karageorge, who disappeared on November 26, was found with an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound. He had been complaining about post-concussion symptoms in the last weeks of his life.
- December 2 – UAB announced that it would drop football at the end of the season. The Blazers, under first-year head coach Bill Clark, became bowl-eligible for only the second time in program history with a win on November 29 over Southern Miss. UAB became the first FBS-level program to fold since Pacific dropped football after the 1995 season.
- December 5 – The board of governors of Colorado State approved the construction of a new on-campus stadium to replace the Rams' then-current off-campus home of Hughes Stadium. No date for completion had been set; potential capacities ranged from 35,872 to 41,200. The venue would open in 2017 as Colorado State Stadium with the full 41,200 capacity, and since 2018 has been known as Canvas Stadium.
- December 8 – Sporting News reported that the Big 12 Conference had been planning to expand beyond its current ten teams even before being left out of the inaugural College Football Playoff. Specifically, conference officials met with officials from the University of Cincinnati. These expansion plans were later dropped.
Updated stadiums
New stadiums
- Baylor opened McLane Stadium, returning home games to its campus for the first time since 1935. The stadium opened with 42,000 permanent seats plus 3,000 standing-room places, and is designed for future expansion to 55,000. The first game was a high school contest on August 29; Baylor's first game was a 45–0 win over SMU on August 31.
- Houston opened TDECU Stadium, a 40,000-seat venue, designed to be easily expandable to 60,000, and built on the site of the school's former Robertson Stadium. The opening game was a 27–7 loss to UTSA on August 29.
- Tulane opened Yulman Stadium, a 30,000-seat on-campus venue located near the former site of Tulane Stadium. This returned home games to the Tulane campus for the first time since 1974, the year before the Superdome opened. The first game was a 38–21 loss to Georgia Tech on September 6.
- Appalachian State plays at Kidd Brewer Stadium, home to the Mountaineers since 1962 and affectionately known to the school's fans as "The Rock". It has an official capacity of 24,050, but has frequently hosted significantly larger crowds, with the record being 31,531.
- Georgia Southern plays at Paulson Stadium, home to the Eagles since 1984. The stadium was expanded to 24,300 for GSU's move to FBS.
- Old Dominion plays at Foreman Field. The 20,118-seat stadium first opened in 1936 for the football program of what was then known as the Norfolk Division of The College of William & Mary. After football was dropped after the 1941 season, the stadium was used for other football games, plus other ODU sports, until the school reinstated football in 2009.
Renovated stadiums
- LSU opened a new south end-zone upper deck expansion of Tiger Stadium that added approximately 60 "Tiger Den" suites, 3,000 club seats and 1,500 general public seats and brought the total capacity to approximately 102,321, making it the seventh-largest college football stadium in the country.
- Ohio State added 2,500 seats to the south stands of Ohio Stadium. These seats, built over the entrance tunnels, raised the official capacity of the stadium to 104,851, making it the third-largest stadium in the country and the fifth-largest stadium in the world.
- Texas A&M opened Phase 1 of a major three-year renovation of Kyle Field, which includes re-construction of the east side first deck, and construction of the south end zone, which in turn includes seating, media interview areas, 12th Man Productions and related gameday support, a commissary and recruiting area.
- Mississippi State opened a new north end-zone expansion of Davis Wade Stadium which took stadium capacity from 55,000 to over 61,000. The renovation created new concessions and restrooms, plus a new west side concourse.
- Missouri opened a new east side expansion of Faurot Field. An upper bowl was completed for the east side of the stadium, providing 5,200 general admission seats and 800 club seats.
- Louisiana-Lafayette enclosed the south side of Cajun Field. The stadium upgrade added 5,900 seats increasing the capacity from 31,000 to 36,900.
- Purdue removed the majority of their south end-zone bleachers at Ross–Ade Stadium and replaced it with a patio area. This stadium upgrade lowered the stadium capacity from 62,500 to 57,236.
- The Rose Bowl opened the final phase of its multi-year renovation project, which included the removal of seats on the east and west sidelines to restore the original oval shape of the seating bowl. Also included in the project were additional new restrooms, new entry gate structures, and additional new concession stands. The historic hedges surrounding the field were restored to create a new "Rose Garden Walkway". An iconic plaza opened outside of Gate A in front of the south main entrance to the stadium, featuring a large logo of the Pasadena Tournament of Roses.
Other
- Eastern Michigan installed a gray FieldTurf playing surface at Rynearson Stadium. The stadium is only the second FBS venue with a non-traditional field color, after Albertsons Stadium at Boise State, and the sixth college stadium overall with this feature.
Regular season top 10 matchups
- Week 2
- *No. 3 Oregon defeated No. 7 Michigan State 46–27
- Week 7
- *No. 5 Baylor defeated No. 9 TCU 61–58
- *No. 3 Mississippi State defeated No. 2 Auburn 38–23
- Week 8
- *No. 2 Florida State defeated No. 5 Notre Dame 31–27
- Week 10
- * No. 3/4 Auburn defeated No. 4/7 Ole Miss 35–31
- Week 11
- *No. 9/11 Arizona State defeated No. 10/8 Notre Dame 55–31
- *No. 6/6 TCU defeated No. 7/9 Kansas State 41–20
- Week 12
- *No. 5/4 Alabama defeated No. 1/1 Mississippi State 25–20
- Week 15
- *No. 2/3 Oregon defeated No. 7/8 Arizona 51–13
- *No. 6/5 Baylor defeated No. 9/9 Kansas State 38–27
Conference standings
Conference summaries
Rankings reflect the Week 15 AP Poll before the conference championship games were played.Power 5 Conferences
Group of Five Conferences
Note: Records are regular-season only, and do not include playoff games.Conference | Champion | Runner Up | Score | Record | Offensive Player of the Year | Defensive Player of the Year | Coach of the Year |
AAC | Memphis UCF Cincinnati | N/A | N/A | Memphis 9-3 Cincinnati 9-3 UCF 9-3 | Shane Carden, QB, East Carolina | Jacoby Glenn, CB, UCF & Tank Jakes, LB, Memphis | Justin Fuente, Memphis |
C-USA | Marshall | Louisiana Tech | 26–23 | Marshall 12-1 | Brandon Doughty, QB, Western Kentucky Rakeem Cato, QB, Marshall | Neville Hewitt, LB, Marshall | Doc Holliday, Marshall |
MAC | Northern Illinois | Bowling Green | 51–17 | Northern Illinois 11-2 | Jarvion Franklin, RB, Western Michigan | Quinten Rollins, DB, Miami | P. J. Fleck, Western Michigan |
MW | #22 Boise State | Fresno State | 28–14 | Boise State 11-2 | Garrett Grayson, QB, Colorado State | Zach Vigil, LB, Utah State | Jim McElwain, Colorado State |
Sun Belt | Georgia Southern | N/A | N/A | Georgia Southern 8-3* | Elijah McGuire, RB, Louisiana–Lafayette | David Mayo, LB, Texas State | Willie Fritz, Georgia Southern |
CFP College Football Playoff participant
Postseason
Bowl selections
Starting with the 2014–15 postseason, six College Football Playoff bowl games will host two semifinal playoff games on a rotating basis. For this season, the Rose Bowl and the Sugar Bowl will host the semifinal games, with the winners advancing to the 2015 College Football Playoff National Championship at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.Bowl-eligible teams
- American : Cincinnati, East Carolina, Houston, Memphis, Temple, UCF
- ACC : Boston College, Clemson, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Louisville, Miami, NC State, North Carolina, Pittsburgh, Virginia Tech
- Big 12 : Baylor, Kansas State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, TCU, Texas, West Virginia
- Big Ten : Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio State, Penn State, Rutgers, Wisconsin
- Conference USA : Louisiana Tech, Marshall, Middle Tennessee State, Rice, UAB, UTEP, Western Kentucky
- Independents : BYU, Navy, Notre Dame
- MAC : Bowling Green, Central Michigan, Northern Illinois, Ohio, Toledo, Western Michigan
- Mountain West : Air Force, Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, Nevada, San Diego State, Utah State
- Pac-12 : Arizona, Arizona State, Oregon, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Utah, Washington
- SEC : Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, LSU, Mississippi State, Missouri, Ole Miss, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas A&M
- Sun Belt : Arkansas State, Louisiana–Lafayette, South Alabama, Texas State
'''Number of bowl-eligible teams: 81
Bowl-eligible teams that did not receive a berth
, Texas State, Temple, UAB, Middle TennesseeBowl-ineligible teams
- American : Connecticut, SMU, Tulane, Tulsa, USF
- ACC : Syracuse, Virginia, Wake Forest
- Big Ten : Indiana, Michigan, Northwestern, Purdue
- Big 12 : Iowa State, Kansas, Texas Tech
- Conference USA : FIU, Florida Atlantic, North Texas, Old Dominion†, Southern Miss, UTSA
- Independents : Army
- MAC : Akron, Ball State, Buffalo, Eastern Michigan, Kent State, Massachusetts, Miami
- Mountain West : Hawai'i, New Mexico, San Jose State, UNLV, Wyoming
- Pac 12 : California, Colorado, Oregon State, Washington State
- SEC : Kentucky, Vanderbilt
- Sun Belt : Appalachian State†, Georgia Southern†, Georgia State, Idaho‡, Louisiana–Monroe, New Mexico State, Troy
† – Appalachian State, Georgia Southern, and Old Dominion were conditionally eligible based on win/loss record. However, under FCS-to-FBS transition rules, they are not eligible because enough teams qualified under normal circumstances.
‡ – Idaho was ineligible for postseason play due to an insufficient Academic Progress Rate. However, the Vandals would not have been eligible without the ban, as they finished with a 1-10 record.
College Football Playoff
Conference performance in bowl games
Rankings
Final CFP rankings
Final rankings
Unlike the BCS, the Coaches' Poll is not contractually obligated to name the CFP champion as its #1 team.Awards and honors
Heisman Trophy
The Heisman Trophy is given to the year's most outstanding player.Player | School | Position | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | Total |
Marcus Mariota | Oregon | QB | 788 | 74 | 22 | 2,534 |
Melvin Gordon | Wisconsin | RB | 37 | 432 | 275 | 1,250 |
Amari Cooper | Alabama | WR | 49 | 280 | 316 | 1,023 |
Trevone Boykin | TCU | QB | 8 | 45 | 104 | 218 |
J.T. Barrett | Ohio State | QB | 0 | 19 | 40 | 78 |
Jameis Winston | Florida State | QB | 4 | 10 | 19 | 51 |
Tevin Coleman | Indiana | RB | 2 | 8 | 22 | 44 |
Dak Prescott | Mississippi State | QB | 2 | 4 | 28 | 42 |
Scooby Wright III | Arizona | LB | 0 | 4 | 13 | 21 |
Bryce Petty | Baylor | QB | 1 | 3 | 4 | 13 |
Other overall
- Archie Griffin Award : Ezekiel Elliott, Ohio State
- AP Player of the Year: Marcus Mariota, Oregon
- Chic Harley Award : Marcus Mariota, Oregon
- Maxwell Award : Marcus Mariota, Oregon
- SN Player of the Year: Marcus Mariota, Oregon
- Walter Camp Award : Marcus Mariota, Oregon
Special overall
- Burlsworth Trophy : Justin Hardy, East Carolina
- Paul Hornung Award : Shaq Thompson, Washington
- Campbell Trophy : David Helton, Duke
- Wuerffel Trophy : Deterrian Shackelford, Ole Miss
Offense
- Davey O'Brien Award : Marcus Mariota, Oregon
- Johnny Unitas Award : Marcus Mariota, Oregon
- Kellen Moore Award : Trevone Boykin, TCU
- Manning Award : Marcus Mariota, Oregon
- Sammy Baugh Trophy : Brandon Doughty, Western Kentucky
- Doak Walker Award : Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin
- Jim Brown Trophy : Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin
- Fred Biletnikoff Award : Amari Cooper, Alabama
- Paul Warfield Trophy : Amari Cooper, Alabama
- John Mackey Award : Nick O'Leary, Florida State
- Ozzie Newsome Award : Nick O'Leary, Florida State
- Dave Rimington Trophy : Reese Dismukes, Auburn
- Outland Trophy : Brandon Scherff, Iowa
- Jim Parker Trophy : Reese Dismukes, Auburn
Defense
- Bronko Nagurski Trophy : Scooby Wright III, Arizona
- Chuck Bednarik Award : Scooby Wright III, Arizona
- Lott Trophy : Eric Kendricks, UCLA
- Bill Willis Award : Joey Bosa, Ohio State
- Dick Butkus Award : Eric Kendricks, UCLA
- Jack Lambert Trophy : Scooby Wright III, Arizona
- Rotary Lombardi Award : Scooby Wright III, Arizona
- Ted Hendricks Award : Nate Orchard, Utah
- Jim Thorpe Award : Gerod Holliman, Louisville
- Jack Tatum Trophy : Gerod Holliman, Louisville
Special teams
- Lou Groza Award : Brad Craddock, Maryland
- Vlade Award : Roberto Aguayo, FSU
- Ray Guy Award : Tom Hackett, Utah
- Jet Award : Tyler Lockett, Kansas State
Coaches
- AFCA Coach of the Year: Gary Patterson, TCU
- AP Coach of the Year: Gary Patterson, TCU
- Bobby Bowden National Collegiate Coach of the Year Award: Gary Patterson, TCU
- Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award: Nick Saban, Alabama
- Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year: Gary Patterson, TCU
- Maxwell Coach of the Year: Dan Mullen, Mississippi State
- Paul "Bear" Bryant Award: Gary Patterson, TCU
- Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award:
- SN Coach of the Year: Gary Patterson, TCU
- The Home Depot Coach of the Year Award: Gary Patterson, TCU
- Woody Hayes Trophy: Gary Patterson, TCU
- Walter Camp Coach of the Year: Gary Patterson, TCU
Assistants
- AFCA Assistant Coach of the Year: Gary Campbell, Oregon
- Broyles Award: Tom Herman, Ohio State
All-Americans
Coaching changes
This is restricted to coaching changes taking place on or after May 1, 2014. For coaching changes that occurred earlier in 2014, see 2013 NCAA Division I FBS end-of-season coaching changes.School | Outgoing coach | Date | Reason | Replacement |
Buffalo | Jeff Quinn | October 12, 2014 | Fired | Alex Wood |
Buffalo | Alex Wood | November 30, 2014 | Replaced | Lance Leipold |
Central Michigan | Dan Enos | January 22, 2015 | Hired as offensive coordinator by Arkansas | John Bonamego |
Colorado State | Jim McElwain | December 4, 2014 | Hired by Florida | Dave Baldwin |
Colorado State | Dave Baldwin | December 22, 2014 | Replaced | Mike Bobo |
Florida | Will Muschamp | November 16, 2014 | Resigned | D. J. Durkin |
Florida | D. J. Durkin | December 4, 2014 | Replaced | Jim McElwain |
Houston | Tony Levine | December 8, 2014 | Fired | David Gibbs |
Houston | David Gibbs | December 16, 2014 | Replaced | Tom Herman |
Kansas | Charlie Weis | September 28, 2014 | Fired | Clint Bowen |
Kansas | Clint Bowen | December 5, 2014 | Replaced | David Beaty |
Michigan | Brady Hoke | December 2, 2014 | Fired | Jim Harbaugh |
Nebraska | Bo Pelini | November 30, 2014 | Fired | Barney Cotton |
Nebraska | Barney Cotton | December 4, 2014 | Replaced | Mike Riley |
Pittsburgh | Paul Chryst | December 17, 2014 | Hired by Wisconsin | Joe Rudolph |
Pittsburgh | Joe Rudolph | December 23, 2014 | Replaced | Pat Narduzzi |
Oregon State | Mike Riley | December 4, 2014 | Hired by Nebraska | Gary Andersen |
SMU | June Jones | September 8, 2014 | Resigned | Tom Mason |
SMU | Tom Mason | November 30, 2014 | Replaced | Chad Morris |
Troy | Larry Blakeney | October 5, 2014 | Retired | Neal Brown |
Tulsa | Bill Blankenship | December 1, 2014 | Fired | Philip Montgomery |
UAB | Bill Clark | December 2, 2014 | School dropped football | None |
UNLV | Bobby Hauck | November 28, 2014 | Resigned | Tony Sanchez |
Wisconsin | Gary Andersen | December 10, 2014 | Hired by Oregon State | Barry Alvarez |
Wisconsin | Barry Alvarez | December 17, 2014 | for bowl game | Paul Chryst |
Television viewers and ratings
Most watched regular season games
- Excludes Conference Championships and Kickoff Games
Kickoff games
Conference championship games
College Football Playoff
Note: All games aired on ESPN- Does not include viewers from ESPN Megacast which also included channels ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPNews, ESPN Classic, and ESPN Deportes. 34.1 Million viewers for all channels combined.