2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season

2014 NCAA Division I FBS season
Number of teams 125 full members, 3 transitional
Duration August 27 – December 13
Preseason AP #1 Florida State Seminoles
Post-season
Duration December 20, 2014 – January 12, 2015 (excluding all-star games)
Bowl games 39
(including national championship game)
AP Poll #1 Ohio State Buckeyes[1]
Coaches' Poll #1 Ohio State Buckeyes[2]
Heisman Trophy Marcus Mariota, Oregon
College Football Playoff
2015 College Football Playoff National Championship
Site AT&T Stadium
Arlington, Texas
Winner Ohio State Buckeyes
Division I FBS football seasons
 2013
2015 

The 2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season, play of college football in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) level, began on August 27, 2014,[3] with the regular season ending on December 13, 2014, and, not including all-star games, concluded on January 12, 2015.

Appalachian State, Georgia Southern and Old Dominion made the move from FCS to FBS this season. This was the last season for UAB football, who dropped their program at the conclusion of the 2014 season due to financial reasons.

The 2014 season marked a major change to the post-season with the introduction of the College Football Playoff, replacing the Bowl Championship Series to determine a national champion of Division I FBS football through a semi-final and championship game. The 2015 Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl served as the semi-final games, with their four participants chosen by a committee, rather than determined through an aggregation of polls and other statistics.

In the inaugural College Football Playoff National Championship game played on January 12, 2015 at AT&T Stadium, Ohio State beat Oregon to claim the first ever College Football Playoff championship title. Following the game, Ohio State was named the #1 team on the AP Poll and Coaches' Poll for the season, making the Buckeyes consensus national champions among the major polls.[1][2]

Rule changes

The following rule changes have been made by the NCAA Football Rules Committee for the 2014 season:[4]

A rule meant to slow down the "hurry-up offense" by preventing teams from snapping the ball within the first ten seconds of the 40-second play clock to allow for defensive substitutions, or be penalized five yards for delay of game (except within the final 2:00 of each half or when the play clock is set to 25 seconds) was tabled by the Rules Committee and not voted on.[6]

Conference realignment

Membership changes

School Former conference New conference
Appalachian State Mountaineers Southern Conference (FCS) Sun Belt
East Carolina Pirates C-USA The American
Georgia Southern Eagles Southern Conference (FCS) Sun Belt
Idaho Vandals FBS Independent Sun Belt
Louisville Cardinals The American ACC
Maryland Terrapins ACC Big Ten
New Mexico State Aggies FBS Independent Sun Belt
Old Dominion Monarchs FCS Independent C-USA
Rutgers Scarlet Knights The American Big Ten
Tulane Green Wave C-USA The American
Tulsa Golden Hurricane C-USA The American
Western Kentucky Hilltoppers Sun Belt C-USA

Other headlines

Updated stadiums

Three FBS schools opened new stadiums in the 2014 season:

The three schools that moved from FCS to FBS this season use existing on-campus stadiums:

These FBS schools are expanding or opening renovated portions of their existing stadiums:

One other FBS program, 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.[28]

Television viewers and ratings

Most watched regular season games

Excludes Conference Championships

Rank Date Matchup Channel Viewers TV Rating Significance
1 November 29, 7:45 ET #15 Auburn 44 #1 Alabama 55 ESPN 13.53 Million 7.4 Iron Bowl
2 October 18, 8:00 ET #5 Notre Dame 27 #1 Florida State 31 ABC 13.25 Million 7.9
3 November 15, 3:30 ET #1 Mississippi State 20 #5 Alabama 25 CBS 10.27 Million 6.4 Rivalry
4 November 8, 8:00 ET #5 Alabama 20 #16 LSU 13 9.11 Million 5.3 Rivalry
5 November 15, 8:00 ET #2 Florida State 30 Miami (FL) 26 ABC 8.74 Million 5.3 Rivalry
6 November 29, 12:00 ET Michigan 28 #6 Ohio State 42 8.23 Million 4.9 The Game
7 September 20, 3:30 ET Florida 21 #3 Alabama 42 CBS 7.95 Million 5.1
8 September 20, 8:00 ET #22 Clemson 17 #1 Florida State 23 ABC 7.34 Million 4.5
9 November 8, 3:30 ET Texas A&M 41 #3 Auburn 38 CBS 7.21 Million 4.4
10 November 8, 8:00 ET #14 Ohio State 49 #8 Michigan State 37 ABC 6.83 Million 3.9

Kickoff games

Rank Date Matchup Channel Viewers TV Rating Game Location
1 August 30, 3:30 ET #2 Alabama 33 West Virginia 23 Regional ABC 6.4 Million 4 Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game Georgia Dome, Atlanta, GA
2 August 30, 8:00 ET Oklahoma State 31 #1 Florida State 37 ABC 6.03 Million 2.4 Cowboys Classic AT&T Stadium, Arlginton, TX
3 August 30, 9:00 ET #13 LSU 28 #14 Wisconsin 24 ESPN 4.68 Million 2.8 Texas Kickoff Reliant Stadium, Houston, TX
4 August 28, 8:00 ET Boise State 13 #18 Ole Miss 35 ESPN 2.42 Million 1.5 Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game Georgia Dome, Atlanta, GA

Conference championship games

Rank Date Matchup Channel Viewers TV Rating Conference Location
1 December 6, 4:00 ET #1 Alabama 42 #16 Missouri 13 CBS 12.8 Million 7.8 SEC Georgia Dome, Atlanta, GA
2 December 6, 8:00 ET #4 Florida State 37 #11 Georgia Tech 35 ABC 10.1 Million 6.2 ACC Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, NC
3 December 6, 8:00 ET #13 Wisconsin 0 #5 Ohio State 59 FOX 6.13 Million 3.5 Big Ten Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, IN
4 December 5, 9:00 ET #7 Arizona 13 #2 Oregon 51 FOX 6.00 Million 3.7 Pac-12 Levi's Stadium, Santa Clara, CA
5 December 6, 10:00 ET Fresno State 14 #22 Boise State 28 CBS 1.53 Million 1.0 MW Albertsons Stadium, Boise, ID
6 December 6, 12:00 ET Louisiana Tech 23 Marshall 26 ESPN2 725K 0.5 C-USA Joan C. Edwards Stadium, Huntington, WV
7 December 5, 7:00 ET Bowling Green 17 Northern Illinois 51 ESPN2 692K 0.5 MAC Ford Field, Detroit, MI

College Football Playoff

Note: All games aired on ESPN

Game Date Matchup Viewers TV Rating
Rose Bowl January 1, 2015 5:00 ET #3 Florida State 20 #2 Oregon 59 28.2 Million 14.8
Sugar Bowl January 1, 2015 8:00 ET #4 Ohio State 42 #1 Alabama 35 28.3 Million 15.2
National Championship January 12, 2015 8:30 ET #4 Ohio State 42 #2 Oregon 20 33.4 Million* 18.2

Conference standings

2014 American Athletic Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
#25 Memphis §   7 1         10 3  
Cincinnati §   7 1         9 4  
UCF §   7 1         9 4  
East Carolina   5 3         8 5  
Houston   5 3         8 5  
Temple   4 4         6 6  
South Florida   3 5         4 8  
Tulsa   2 6         2 10  
Tulane   2 6         3 9  
SMU   1 7         1 11  
Connecticut   1 7         2 10  
§ Conference co-champions
As of 16:00, 3 January 2015 (UTC); Rankings from AP Poll
2014 ACC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Atlantic Division
#5 Florida State x^   8 0         13 1  
#15 Clemson   6 2         10 3  
#24 Louisville   5 3         9 4  
Boston College   4 4         7 6  
NC State   3 5         8 5  
Syracuse   1 7         3 9  
Wake Forest   1 7         3 9  
Coastal Division
#8 Georgia Tech x   6 2         11 3  
Duke   5 3         9 4  
North Carolina   4 4         6 7  
Pittsburgh   4 4         6 7  
Miami   3 5         6 7  
Virginia Tech   3 5         7 6  
Virginia   3 5         5 7  
Championship: Florida State 37, Georgia Tech 35
^ College Football Playoff participant
Conference champion
x Division champion/co-champions
As of January 1, 2015; Rankings from AP Poll
2014 Big Ten football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Eastern Division
#1 Ohio State x#^   8 0         14 1  
#5T Michigan State   7 1         11 2  
Maryland   4 4         7 6  
Rutgers   3 5         8 5  
Michigan   3 5         5 7  
Penn State   2 6         7 6  
Indiana   1 7         4 8  
Western Division
#13 Wisconsin x   7 1         11 3  
Minnesota   5 3         8 5  
Nebraska   5 3         9 4  
Iowa   4 4         7 6  
Illinois   3 5         6 7  
Northwestern   3 5         5 7  
Purdue   1 7         3 9  
Championship: Ohio State 59, Wisconsin 0
# College Football Playoff champion
^ College Football Playoff participant
Conference champion
x Division champion/co-champions
As of January 13, 2015; Rankings from AP Poll
2014 Big 12 football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
#7 Baylor §   8 1         11 2  
#3 TCU §   8 1         12 1  
#18 Kansas State   7 2         9 4  
Oklahoma   5 4         8 5  
Texas   5 4         6 7  
West Virginia   5 4         7 6  
Oklahoma State   4 5         7 6  
Texas Tech   2 7         4 8  
Kansas   1 8         3 9  
Iowa State   0 9         2 10  
§ Conference co-champions
As of January 1, 2015; Rankings from AP Poll
2014 Conference USA football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Eastern Division
#23 Marshall x   7 1         13 1  
Middle Tennessee   5 3         6 6  
WKU   4 4         8 5  
UAB   4 4         6 6  
Old Dominion*   4 4         6 6  
FIU   3 5         4 8  
Florida Atlantic   2 6         3 9  
Western Division
Louisiana Tech x   7 1         9 5  
Rice   5 3         8 5  
UTEP   5 3         7 6  
UTSA   3 5         4 8  
North Texas   2 6         4 8  
Southern Miss   1 7         3 9  
Championship: Marshall 26, Louisiana Tech 23
Conference champion
x Division champion/co-champions
  • Ineligible for post season bowl due to transition from FCS.
    As of 22:24, 20 December 2014 (UTC); Rankings from AP Poll
2014 Mid-American Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Eastern Division
Bowling Green x   5 3         8 6  
Ohio   4 4         6 6  
Buffalo   3 4         5 6  
Akron   3 5         5 7  
UMass   3 5         3 9  
Miami   2 6         2 10  
Kent State   1 6         2 9  
Western Division
Northern Illinois xy   7 1         11 3  
Toledo x   7 1         9 4  
Western Michigan   6 2         8 5  
Central Michigan   5 3         7 6  
Ball State   4 4         5 7  
Eastern Michigan   1 7         2 10  
Championship: Northern Illinois 51, Bowling Green 17
Conference champion
x Division champion/co-champions
y Championship game participant
As of November 28, 2014; Rankings from AP Poll
2014 Mountain West Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Mountain Division
#16 Boise State x   7 1         12 2  
Colorado State   6 2         10 3  
Utah State   6 2         10 4  
Air Force   5 3         10 3  
New Mexico   2 6         4 8  
Wyoming   2 6         4 8  
West Division
Fresno State x   5 3         6 8  
San Diego State   5 3         7 6  
Nevada   4 4         7 6  
Hawaii   3 5         4 9  
San Jose State   2 6         3 9  
UNLV   1 7         2 11  
Championship: Boise State 28, Fresno State 14
Conference champion
x Division champion/co-champions
As of January 1, 2015; Rankings from AP Poll
2014 Pacific-12 football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Northern Division
#2 Oregon x^   8 1         13 2  
Stanford   5 4         8 5  
Washington   4 5         8 6  
California   3 6         5 7  
Oregon State   2 7         5 7  
Washington State   2 7         3 9  
Southern Division
#19 Arizona x   7 2         10 4  
#10 UCLA   6 3         10 3  
#12 Arizona State   6 3         10 3  
#20 USC   6 3         9 4  
#21 Utah   5 4         9 4  
Colorado   0 9         2 10  
Championship: Oregon 51, Arizona 13
^ College Football Playoff participant
Conference champion
x Division champion/co-champions
As of January 13, 2015; Rankings from AP Poll
2014 SEC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Eastern Division
#14 Missouri x   7 1         11 3  
#9 Georgia   6 2         10 3  
Florida   4 4         7 5  
Tennessee   3 5         7 6  
South Carolina   3 5         7 6  
Kentucky   2 6         5 7  
Vanderbilt   0 8         3 9  
Western Division
#4 Alabama x^   7 1         12 2  
#11 Mississippi State   6 2         10 3  
#17 Ole Miss   5 3         9 4  
#22 Auburn   4 4         8 5  
LSU   4 4         8 5  
Texas A&M   3 5         8 5  
Arkansas   2 6         7 6  
Championship: Alabama 42, Missouri 13
^ College Football Playoff participant
Conference champion
x Division champion/co-champions
As of January 3, 2015; Rankings from AP Poll
2014 Sun Belt football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Georgia Southern*   8 0         9 3  
Louisiana–Lafayette   7 1         9 4  
Appalachian State*   6 2         7 5  
Texas State   5 3         7 5  
Arkansas State   5 3         7 6  
South Alabama   5 3         6 7  
Louisiana–Monroe   3 5         4 8  
Troy   3 5         3 9  
New Mexico State   1 7         2 10  
Idaho**   1 7         1 10  
Georgia State   0 8         1 11  
Conference champion
    • Appalachian State and Georgia Southern ineligible for postseason play due to FCS-to-FBS transition rules
      ** Idaho ineligible for postseason play due to APR penalties
      As of November 22, 2014; Rankings from AP Poll
2014 Division I FBS independents football records
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
BYU               8 5  
Notre Dame               8 5  
Navy               8 5  
Army               4 8  
As of 29 November 2014; Rankings from AP Poll

Conference champions

Conference Champion(s) Runner-up Game score Offensive Player of the Year Defensive Player of the Year Coach of the Year
American Memphis
UCF
Cincinnati
N/A N/A Shane Carden, QB, East Carolina[29] Jacoby Glenn, CB, UCF &
Tank Jakes, LB, Memphis[29]
Justin Fuente, Memphis[29]
ACC Florida State (Atlantic) Georgia Tech (Coastal) 37–35 James Conner, RB,
Pittsburgh
(Player of the Year)[30]
Vic Beasley, DE,
Clemson[30]
Paul Johnson,
Georgia Tech[31]
Big 12 Baylor
TCU
N/A N/A Trevone Boykin, QB, TCU[32] Paul Dawson, LB, TCU[32] Gary Patterson, TCU[32]
Big Ten Ohio State (East) Wisconsin (West) 59–0 Melvin Gordon, RB,
Wisconsin[33]
Joey Bosa, DE,
Ohio State[33]
Jerry Kill,
Minnesota
(coaches and media)[33]
C-USA Marshall (East) Louisiana Tech (West) 26–23 Brandon Doughty, QB, Western Kentucky (MVP)[34]
Rakeem Cato, QB, Marshall (Offensive POY)[34]
Neville Hewitt, LB, Marshall[34] Doc Holliday, Marshall[35]
MAC Northern Illinois (West) Bowling Green (East) 51–17 Jarvion Franklin, RB,
Western Michigan[36]
Quinten Rollins, DB,
Miami (OH)
P. J. Fleck,
Western Michigan
MW Boise State (Mountain) Fresno State (West) 28–14 Garrett Grayson, QB,
Colorado State[37]
Zach Vigil, LB,
Utah State[37]
Jim McElwain,
Colorado State[37]
Pac-12 Oregon (North) Arizona (South) 51–13 Marcus Mariota, QB,
Oregon
Scooby Wright III, LB,
Arizona
Rich Rodriguez,
Arizona
SEC Alabama (Western) Missouri (Eastern) 42–13 Amari Cooper, WR,
Alabama (AP, Coaches)[38]
Shane Ray, DE,
Missouri (AP, Coaches)[38]
Dan Mullen,
Mississippi State (AP)[38]
Gary Pinkel,
Missouri (Coaches)
Sun Belt Georgia Southern N/A N/A Elijah McGuire, RB,
Louisiana–Lafayette[39]
David Mayo, LB,
Texas State[39]
Willie Fritz,
Georgia Southern[39]

    Bowl Games and the College Football Playoff

    Starting with the 2014–15 postseason, six College Football Playoff (CFP) 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.[40]

    Semifinals 2015 Championship Game
    January 1 – Sugar Bowl
      1   Alabama 35  
      4   Ohio State 42  
     
    January 12 – National Championship
          4   Ohio State 42
        2   Oregon 20
    January 1 – Rose Bowl
      2   Oregon 59
      3   Florida State 20  

    Conference performance in bowl games

    Conference Total games Wins Losses Pct.
    SEC 12 7 5 .583
    ACC 11 4 7 .364
    Big Ten 11 6 5 .545
    Pac-12 9 6 3 .667
    Big 12 7 2 5 .286
    MW 7 3 4 .429
    American 5 2 3 .400
    C-USA 5 4 1 .800
    MAC 5 2 3 .400
    Independents 3 2 1 .667
    Sun Belt 3 1 2 .333

    Final CFP rankings

    CFP School Record Bowl Game
    1 Alabama 12–1 Sugar Bowl
    2 Oregon 13–1 Rose Bowl
    3 Florida State 13–0 Rose Bowl
    4 Ohio State 13–1 Sugar Bowl
    5 Baylor 11–1 Cotton Bowl
    6 TCU 11–1 Peach Bowl
    7 Mississippi State 10–2 Orange Bowl
    8 Michigan State 11–2 Cotton Bowl
    9 Ole Miss 9–3 Peach Bowl
    10 Arizona 10–3 Fiesta Bowl
    11 Kansas State 9–3 Alamo Bowl
    12 Georgia Tech 10–3 Orange Bowl
    13 Georgia 9–3 Belk Bowl
    14 UCLA 9–3 Alamo Bowl
    15 Arizona State 9–3 Sun Bowl
    16 Missouri 10–3 Citrus Bowl
    17 Clemson 9–3 Russell Athletic Bowl
    18 Wisconsin 10–3 Outback Bowl
    19 Auburn 8–4 Outback Bowl
    20 Boise State 11–2 Fiesta Bowl
    21 Louisville 9–3 Belk Bowl
    22 Utah 8–4 Las Vegas Bowl
    23 LSU 8–4 Music City Bowl
    24 USC 8–4 Holiday Bowl
    25 Minnesota 8–4 Citrus Bowl

    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

    Special overall

    Offense

    Quarterback

    Running Back

    Wide Receiver

    Tight End

    Lineman

    Defense

    Defensive Line

    Defensive Back

    Special teams

    Coaches

    Assistants

    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 (interim)
    Buffalo Alex Wood (interim) November 30, 2014 Replaced [43] Lance Leipold (permanent)
    Central Michigan Dan Enos January 22, 2015 Hired as offensive coordinator by Arkansas[44] John Bonamego
    Colorado State Jim McElwain December 4, 2014 Hired by Florida[45] Dave Baldwin (interim)
    Colorado State Dave Baldwin (interim) December 22, 2014 Replaced Mike Bobo (permanent)
    Florida Will Muschamp November 16, 2014 Resigned [46] D. J. Durkin (interim – bowl game)
    Florida D. J. Durkin (interim) December 4, 2014 Replaced[45] Jim McElwain (permanent)
    Houston Tony Levine December 8, 2014 Fired David Gibbs (interim)
    Houston David Gibbs (interim) December 16, 2014 Replaced Tom Herman (permanent)
    Kansas Charlie Weis September 28, 2014 Fired [47] Clint Bowen (Interim)
    Kansas Clint Bowen (interim) December 5, 2014 Replaced [48] David Beaty (permanent)
    Michigan Brady Hoke December 2, 2014 Fired Jim Harbaugh[49]
    Nebraska Bo Pelini November 30, 2014 Fired [50] Barney Cotton (interim)
    Nebraska Barney Cotton (interim) December 4, 2014 Replaced Mike Riley (permanent)
    Pittsburgh Paul Chryst December 17, 2014 Hired by Wisconsin Joe Rudolph (interim)
    Pittsburgh Joe Rudolph (interim) December 23, 2014 Replaced Pat Narduzzi (permanent)
    Oregon State Mike Riley December 4, 2014 Hired by Nebraska[51] Gary Andersen
    SMU June Jones September 8, 2014 Resigned [52] Tom Mason (interim)
    SMU Tom Mason (interim) November 30, 2014 Replaced [53] Chad Morris (permanent)
    Troy Larry Blakeney October 5, 2014 Retired [54] Neal Brown
    Tulsa Bill Blankenship December 1, 2014 Fired [55] Philip Montgomery
    UAB Bill Clark December 2, 2014 School dropped football[21] None
    UNLV Bobby Hauck November 28, 2014 Resigned [56] Tony Sanchez
    Wisconsin Gary Andersen December 10, 2014 Hired by Oregon State Barry Alvarez (interim – bowl game)[57]
    Wisconsin Barry Alvarez (interim) December 17, 2014 for bowl game Paul Chryst (permanent)

    See also

    References

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