1972 college football season

The 1972 NCAA University Division football season saw the USC Trojans, coached by John McKay, go undefeated and win the national championship as the unanimous choice of the fifty AP panelists. Eighth-ranked in the preseason, the Trojans were narrowly voted #1 in the first AP poll, and stayed out front for the rest of the year.

During the twentieth century, the NCAA had no playoff for the major college football teams in the University Division, which became Division I in 1973 (and Division I-A in 1978). 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" by Associated Press (AP) was the most popular, followed by the "coaches' poll" by United Press International) (UPI). Through the 1973 season, the UPI issued its final poll in early December before the bowls, but since 1968 (and 1965) the AP Trophy was withheld until the postseason was completed. The AP poll in 1972 consisted of the votes of fifty sportswriters, though not all of them voted in every poll. Those who cast votes would give their opinion of the ten best teams. Under a point system of twenty points for first place, nineteen for second, etc., the "overall" ranking was determined.

This season was historically significant because it was the first in which freshmen were eligible to play varsity football in the University Division. The NCAA had historically prohibited freshmen from varsity competition, except during the U.S. involvement in World War II. In 1968, the NCAA allowed freshman eligibility in the University Division in all sports, except football and basketball, and extended the rule to those sports effective with the 1972–73 academic year.

Rule changes

Conference and program changes

NCAA structure

This was the last season for the "University" and "College" divisions. For the 1973 season, the NCAA created the three-division structure that exists today with teams and conferences designated accordingly:

Five years later in 1978, Division I was subdivided (for football only) into I-A and I-AA. In 2006, these were renamed Division I FBS and FCS, respectively. Many of the teams and conferences now in FCS (Big Sky, Ohio Valley, SWAC, Yankee) were initially in Division II and moved up to I-AA.

Membership changes

School 1971 Conference 1972 Conference
Appalachian State Mountaineers Independent Southern
McNeese State Cowboys Independent Southland
New Mexico State Aggies Independent Missouri Valley
Trinity (TX) Tigers Southland Independent

Program changes

September

October

November

In 1972, only the Rose Bowl (Big Ten vs. Pac-8) and Cotton Bowl (SWC winner) had rigid conference tie-ins. Thus, Big 8 champion Oklahoma passed up an Orange Bowl invitation to play in the Sugar Bowl, while SEC champion Alabama passed the Sugar to meet Texas in the Cotton. For the first time, the Sugar Bowl was played at night on New Year's Eve, rather than New Year's Day afternoon. With two consecutive victories in the Orange Bowl, #9 Nebraska was invited to a third against #12 Notre Dame.

Conference standings

1972 ACC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
No. 12 North Carolina $ 6 0 0     11 1 0
No. 17 NC State 4 1 1     8 3 1
Maryland 3 2 1     5 5 1
Duke 3 3 0     5 6 0
Clemson 2 4 0     4 7 0
Virginia 1 5 0     4 7 0
Wake Forest 1 5 0     2 9 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll[2]
1972 Big 8 football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
No. 2 Oklahoma $ 6 1 0     11 1 0
No. 4 Nebraska $ 5 1 1     9 2 1
No. 16 Colorado 4 3 0     8 4 0
Oklahoma State 4 3 0     6 5 0
Missouri 3 4 0     6 6 0
Iowa State 2 4 1     5 6 1
Kansas 2 5 0     4 7 0
Kansas State 1 6 0     3 8 0
  • $ Conference champion
  • Due to a dispute over Oklahoma forfeiting games, both OU and Nebraska claim this title.
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 Big Ten football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
No. 6 Michigan + 7 1 0     10 1 0
No. 9 Ohio State + 7 1 0     9 2 0
Purdue 6 2 0     6 5 0
Michigan State 5 2 1     5 5 1
Minnesota 4 4 0     4 7 0
Indiana 3 5 0     5 6 0
Illinois 3 5 0     3 8 0
Iowa 2 6 1     3 7 1
Wisconsin 2 6 0     4 7 0
Northwestern 1 8 0     2 9 0
  • + Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 NCAA University Division independents football records
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
No. 10 Penn State         10 2 0
No. 14 Notre Dame         8 3 0
Utah State         8 3 0
West Virginia         8 4 0
Florida State         7 4 0
Northern Illinois         7 4 0
Rutgers         7 4 0
No. 20 Georgia Tech         7 4 1
Air Force         6 4 0
Army         6 4 0
Virginia Tech         6 4 1
Houston         6 4 1
Tulane         6 5 0
Temple         5 4 0
Colgate         5 4 1
Holy Cross         5 4 1
Syracuse         5 6 0
Miami (FL)         5 6 0
Dayton         4 6 1
Boston College         4 7 0
Navy         4 7 0
South Carolina         4 7 0
Southern Miss         3 7 1
Xavier         2 8 0
Cincinnati         2 9 0
Villanova         2 9 0
Pittsburgh         1 10 0
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 Ivy League football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
Dartmouth $ 5 1 1     7 1 1
Yale 5 2 0     7 2 0
Penn 4 3 0     6 3 0
Cornell 4 3 0     6 3 0
Harvard 3 3 1     4 4 1
Princeton 2 4 1     3 5 1
Columbia 2 4 1     3 5 1
Brown 1 6 0     1 8 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 Mid-American Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
Kent State $ 4 1 0     6 5 1
Bowling Green 3 1 1     6 3 1
Western Michigan 2 2 1     7 3 1
Miami (OH) 2 3 0     7 3 0
Toledo 2 3 0     6 5 0
Ohio 1 4 0     3 8 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 Missouri Valley Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
No. 18 Louisville + 4 1 0     9 1 0
Drake + 4 1 0     7 5 0
West Texas State 3 1 0     5 5 0
Tulsa 3 1 0     4 7 0
Memphis State 3 2 0     5 5 1
Wichita State 2 4 0     6 5 0
New Mexico State 1 3 0     2 9 0
North Texas State 0 7 0     1 10 0
  • + Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 Pacific-8 football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
No. 1 USC $ 7 0 0     12 0 0
No. 15 UCLA 5 2 0     8 3 0
No. 19 Washington State 4 3 0     7 4 0
Washington 4 3 0     8 3 0
California 3 4 0     3 8 0
Oregon 2 5 0     5 6 0
Stanford 2 5 0     6 5 0
Oregon State 1 6 0     2 9 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 Pacific Coast Athletic Association football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
San Diego State $ 4 0 0     10 1 0
Pacific (CA) 3 1 0     8 3 0
Fresno State 1 3 0     6 4 1
Long Beach State 1 3 0     5 6 0
San Jose State 1 3 0     4 7 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 SEC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
No. 7 Alabama $ 7 1 0     10 2 0
No. 5 Auburn 6 1 0     10 1 0
No. 11 LSU 4 1 1     9 2 1
No. 8 Tennessee 4 2 0     10 2 0
Georgia 4 3 0     7 4 0
Florida 3 3 1     5 5 1
Ole Miss 2 5 0     5 5 0
Kentucky 2 5 0     3 8 0
Mississippi State 1 6 0     4 7 0
Vanderbilt 0 6 0     3 8 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 Southern Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
East Carolina $ 6 0 0     9 2 0
Richmond 5 1 0     6 4 0
William & Mary 4 2 0     5 6 0
The Citadel 4 3 0     5 6 0
Davidson 2 3 1     3 7 1
VMI 1 5 0     2 9 0
Furman 1 6 0     2 9 0
Appalachian State 0 3 1     5 5 1
  • $ Conference champion
1972 Southwest Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
No. 3 Texas $ 7 0 0     10 1 0
Texas Tech 4 3 0     8 4 0
SMU 4 3 0     7 4 0
Arkansas 3 4 0     6 5 0
Rice 3 4 0     5 5 1
Baylor 3 4 0     5 6 0
TCU 2 5 0     5 6 0
Texas A&M 2 5 0     3 8 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1972 WAC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
No. 13 Arizona State $ 5 1 0     10 2 0
BYU 5 2 0     7 4 0
Utah 5 2 0     6 5 0
Arizona 4 3 0     4 7 0
Wyoming 3 4 0     4 7 0
New Mexico 2 4 0     3 8 0
Colorado State 1 4 0     1 10 0
UTEP 1 6 0     2 8 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

Bowl games

Major bowls

Sunday, December 31, 1972
Monday, January 1, 1973

BOWL
SUGAR #2 Oklahoma Sooners 14 #5 Penn State Nittany Lions 0
COTTON #7 Texas Longhorns 17 #4 Alabama Crimson Tide 13
ROSE #1 USC Trojans 42 #3 Ohio State Buckeyes 17
ORANGE #9 Nebraska Cornhuskers 40 #12 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 6

The final AP poll in January was: 1. USC (12–0), 2. Oklahoma (11–1), 3. Texas (10–1), 4. Nebraska (9–2–1), 5. Auburn (10–1) [3][4]

Other bowls

BOWL City State Date Winner Score Runner-up
SUN El Paso Texas December 30 #16 North Carolina 32–28 Texas Tech
GATOR Jacksonville Florida December 30 #6 Auburn 24–3 #13 Colorado
TANGERINE Orlando Florida December 29 Tampa 21–18 Kent State
ASTRO-BLUEBONNET Houston Texas December 30 #11 Tennessee 24–17 #10 LSU
LIBERTY Memphis Tennessee December 18 Georgia Tech 31–30 Iowa State
PEACH Atlanta Georgia December 29 N.C. State 49–13 #18 West Virginia
FIESTA Tempe Arizona December 23 #15 Arizona State 49–35 Missouri

Source:[5]

Other champions

College Division

Prior to 1973, the NCAA was divided into two divisions, University and College. College Division teams (also referred to as "small college") were ranked in polls by the AP (a panel of writers) and by UPI (coaches). The national champion(s) for each season were determined by the final poll rankings, published at or near the end of the regular season, before any bowl games were played.

College Division final polls

Both the UPI and AP panels ranked Delaware (10–0) first, followed by Louisiana Tech (11–0), and Cal Poly SLO (8–0–1).[6][7] Louisiana Tech later defeated Tennessee Tech in the Grantland Rice Bowl, while Cal Poly SLO lost to North Dakota in the Camellia Bowl. Delaware declined an invitation to face Massachusetts (7–2) in the Boardwalk Bowl, and did not play in the postseason.[8]

United Press International (coaches) final poll
Published on November 22[9]

Rank School Record No. 1
votes
Total
points
1 Delaware 10–0 21 334
2 Louisiana Tech 11–0 12 310
3 Cal Poly SLO 8–0–1 1 239
4 South Dakota 9–1 1 193
5 Tennessee State 9–1 184
6 North Dakota 9–1 148
7 Ashland 11–0 104
8 Tennessee Tech 10–1 98
9 Grambling 8–2 68
10 Carson–Newman 9–1 46

Associated Press (writers) final poll
Published on November 23[10]

Rank School Record No. 1
votes
Total
points
1 Delaware 10–0 9 272
2 Louisiana Tech 11–0 4 237
3 Cal Poly SLO 8–0–1 197
4 Ashland 11–0 1 195
5 Tennessee State 8–1note1 164
T6 South Dakota 9–1 1 144
T6 North Dakota 9–1 144
T8 Grambling 8–2 76
T8 Western Carolina 7–2–1 76
T10 Carson-Newman 9–1 55
T10 McNeese State 8–2 55

^note1 Tennessee State actually 9–1 when the poll was taken.[11]

College Division bowls

The postseason consisted of four bowls as regional finals, all played on December 10.

Bowl Region Location Winning team Losing team Ref
Boardwalk East Atlantic City, NJ Massachusetts 35 UC Davis 14 [12]
Grantland Rice Mideast Baton Rouge, LA Louisiana Tech 35 Tennessee Tech 0 [13]
Pioneer Midwest Wichita Falls, TX Tennessee State 29 Drake 7 [14]
Camellia West Sacramento, CA North Dakota 38 Cal Poly SLO 21 [15][16]

Conference standings

1972 Big Sky football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
Montana State $ 5 1 0     8 3 0
Idaho State 4 1 0     7 4 0
Boise State 3 3 0     7 4 0
Montana 3 3 0     3 8 0
Idaho 2 3 0     4 7 0
Weber State 2 4 0     5 5 0
Northern Arizona 0 4 0     3 8 0
  • $ Conference champion
  • No Big Sky teams advanced to the postseason

NAIA

In the NAIA Division I championship, East Texas State (now Texas A&M-Commerce) beat Carson-Newman 21-18. Missouri Southern beat Northwestern College (of Iowa) 21-14 for the NAIA Division II crown.

Black College National Championship

Grambling State defeated North Carolina Central in the inaugural Pelican Bowl to capture the 1972 black college football national championship.[17]

Minor conference champions

Conference Champion Record
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association Adrian
Alma
4–1–0

Heisman Trophy

The Big Eight Conference dominated the Heisman race in 1972,
as the top three were from Nebraska & Oklahoma:

  1. Johnny Rodgers, WB - Nebraska, 1310 points
  2. Greg Pruitt, RB - Oklahoma, 966
  3. Rich Glover, MG - Nebraska, 652
  4. Bert Jones, QB - LSU, 351
  5. Terry Davis, QB - Alabama, 338
  6. John Hufnagel, QB - Penn State, 292
  7. George Amundson, RB - Iowa State, 219
  8. Otis Armstrong, RB - Purdue, 208
  9. Don Strock, QB - Virginia Tech, 144
  10. Gary Huff, QB - Florida State, 138

Source:[18][19]

See also

References

  1. http://www.appollarchive.com/football/ap/seasons.cfm?appollid=407
  2. "1972 Atlantic Coast Conference Year Summary". sports-reference.com. Retrieved January 25, 2013.
  3. "Hey, guess what? USC acclaimed poll champs". Spokane Daily Chronicle. (Washington). Associated Press. January 3, 1973. p. 31.
  4. CFB Data Warehouse - final AP polls - 1970-79
  5. "Bowl games at a glance". Spokesman-Review. November 22, 1972. p. 15.
  6. "UPI Names Delaware College Div. Grid King," Pacific Stars and Stripes, Nov. 24, 1972, p19
  7. "AP Poll Picks Hens as Little Big Men," Pacific Stars and Stripes, Nov. 25, 1972, p19
  8. "Hens Scratch Bowl..."Paid subscription required. Philadelphia Daily News. November 22, 1972. Retrieved February 22, 2017 via newspapers.com.
  9. UPI (November 22, 1972). "Delaware Names As Small College National Champs"Paid subscription required. The Brownsville Herald. Brownsville, Texas. Retrieved February 25, 2017 via newspapers.com.
  10. AP (November 23, 1972). "Delaware Top Squad"Paid subscription required. The Clarion-Ledger. Jackson, Mississippi. Retrieved February 25, 2017 via newspapers.com.
  11. http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/active/t/tennessee_state/1970-1974_yearly_results.php
  12. http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/bowls/bowl_results.php?bowlid=36
  13. http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/bowls/bowl_results.php?bowlid=127
  14. http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/bowls/bowl_results.php?bowlid=235
  15. http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/bowls/bowl_results.php?bowlid=328
  16. "Cal Poly upset". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. December 10, 1972. p. 4B.
  17. AP Staff Reporters (December 3, 1972). "Grambling wins and claims title". New York Times. Associated Press. Retrieved January 11, 2011.
  18. Heisman.com - 1972 - Johnny Rodgers
  19. "Johnny Rodgers Heisman winner". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. December 6, 1972. p. 17.
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