Even after the emergence of the professional
National Football League (NFL), college football has remained extremely popular throughout the U.S. Although the college game has a much larger margin for talent than its pro counterpart, the sheer number of fans following major colleges provides a financial equalizer for the game, with Division I programs – the highest level – playing in huge stadiums, six of which have seating capacity exceeding 100,000 people. In many cases, college stadiums employ bench-style seating, as opposed to individual seats with backs and arm rests (although many stadiums do have a small number of chair back seats in addition to the bench seating). This allows them to seat more fans in a given amount of space than the typical professional stadium, which tends to have more features and comforts for fans. Only three stadiums owned by U.S. colleges or universities,
L&N Stadium at the
University of Louisville,
Center Parc Stadium at
Georgia State University (which itself was a reconstruction of
Turner Field which was a reconstruction of
Centennial Olympic Stadium), and
FAU Stadium at
Florida Atlantic University, consist entirely of chair back seating.
Early history Modern North American football has its origins in various games, all known as "football", played at
public schools in Great Britain in the mid-19th century. Early 19th century American college students played a disorganized game resembling medieval
mob football. In 1827, a
Harvard tradition known as "Bloody Monday" began, which consisted of a mass ballgame between the freshman and sophomore classes. Violent games such as this were banned from college campuses around 1860. By the 1840s, students at Britain's
Rugby School were playing a game in which players were able to pick up the ball and run with it, a sport later known as
rugby football. The game was taken to Canada by British soldiers stationed there and was soon being played at Canadian colleges. The first documented gridiron football game was played at
University College, a college of the
University of Toronto, on November 9, 1861. In 1864, at
Trinity College, also a college of the University of Toronto, F. Barlow Cumberland and Frederick A. Bethune devised rules based on rugby football. On November 6, 1869,
Rutgers University faced
Princeton University, then known as the College of New Jersey, in
the first collegiate football game. The game more closely resembled soccer than rugby or gridiron football. It was played with a
round ball, and used a set of rules based on
The Football Association's
first set of rules. By 1873, representatives from Yale, Columbia, Princeton, and Rutgers met at the Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City to codify the first set of intercollegiate football rules, based closely on association football (i.e., soccer). Before this meeting, each school had its own set of rules and games were usually played using the home team's own particular code. in
Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1874; Harvard won 3–0. Unable to agree upon rules with American colleges, Harvard instead played
multiple games against McGill University in 1874. In as much as Rugby football had been transplanted to Canada from England, the McGill team played under a set of rules which allowed a player to pick up the ball and run with it whenever he wished. Another rule, unique to McGill, was to count
tries (the act of grounding the football past the opposing team's goal line; there was no end zone during this time), as well as goals, in the scoring. In the Rugby rules of the time, a try only provided the attempt to kick a free goal from the field. If the kick was missed, the try did not score any points itself. Harvard players were enthusiastic about McGill's rules and quickly abandoned most of the "Boston game." In 1875, Harvard played with adapted McGill rugby rules against Tufts, and then against its closest rival, Yale. Yale and Harvard agreed to play under a set of rules called the "Concessionary Rules", which involved Harvard conceding something to Yale's soccer and Yale conceding a great deal to Harvard's rugby. On November 13, 1875, Yale and Harvard played each other for the first time ever, where Harvard won 4–0. At the first
The Game, as the annual contest between Harvard and Yale came to be named, the future "father of American football"
Walter Camp was among the 2000 spectators in attendance. Spectators from Princeton also carried the game back home, where it quickly became the most popular version of football. Although American football was developed with input from McGill University, Canada had formed a separate amateur rugby league in 1873, the Foot Ball Association of Canada. The
Canadian Rugby Football Union, founded in 1880, closely imitated American football rules, but interest in collegiate sports in Canada flagged over the succeeding decades and American football developed much more rapidly.
Walter Camp: father of American football , the "Father of American Football", then the captain of the
Yale University football team, in 1878 Walter Camp is widely considered to be the most important figure in the development of American football. On the 27th,
Vanderbilt played
Nashville (Peabody) at
Athletic Park and won 40–0. It was the first time organized football played in the state of
Tennessee. The 29th also saw the first instance of the
Army–Navy Game.
Navy won 24–0.
East Rutgers was first to extend the reach of the game. An intercollegiate game was first played in the state of New York when Rutgers played
Columbia on November 2, 1872. It was also the first scoreless tie in the history of the fledgling sport.
Yale football starts the same year and has its first match against Columbia, the nearest college to play football. It took place at
Hamilton Park in
New Haven and was the first game in New England. The game was essentially soccer with 20-man sides, played on a field 400 by 250 feet. Yale wins 3–0, Tommy Sherman scoring the first goal and Lew Irwin the other two. After the first game against Harvard, Tufts took its squad to
Bates College in
Lewiston, Maine for the first football game played in
Maine. This occurred on November 6, 1875.
Penn's Athletic Association was looking to pick "a twenty" to play a game of football against Columbia. This "twenty" never played Columbia, but did play twice against Princeton. Princeton won both games 6 to 0. The first of these happened on November 11, 1876, in
Philadelphia and was the first intercollegiate game in the state of
Pennsylvania.
Brown entered the intercollegiate game in 1878.
Penn State played its first season in 1887, but had no head coach for their first five years, from 1887 to 1891. The Army–Navy game of 1893 saw the first documented use of a
football helmet by a player in a game.
Joseph M. Reeves had a crude leather helmet made by a shoemaker in
Annapolis and wore it in the game after being warned by his doctor that he risked death if he continued to play football after suffering an earlier kick to the head.
Middle West and the
University of Michigan football team in 1903 In 1879, the
University of Michigan became the first school west of Pennsylvania to establish a college football team. On May 30, 1879, Michigan beat
Racine College 1–0 in a game played in Chicago. The
Chicago Daily Tribune called it "the first rugby-football game to be played west of the
Alleghenies." Other Midwestern schools soon followed suit, including the
University of Chicago,
Northwestern University, and the
University of Minnesota. The first western team to travel east was the
1881 Michigan team, which played at Harvard, Yale and Princeton. The nation's first college football league, the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives (also known as the Western Conference), a precursor to the
Big Ten Conference, was founded in 1895. Led by coach
Fielding H. Yost, Michigan became the first "western" national power. From 1901 to 1905, Michigan had a 56-game undefeated streak that included a 1902 trip to play in the first college football
bowl game, which later became the
Rose Bowl Game. During this streak, Michigan scored 2,831 points while allowing only 40. Organized intercollegiate football was first played in the state of
Minnesota on September 30, 1882, when
Hamline was convinced to play
Minnesota. Minnesota won 2 to 0. It was the first game west of the
Mississippi River. November 30, 1905, saw
Chicago defeat Michigan 2 to 0. Dubbed "The First Greatest Game of the Century", it broke Michigan's 56-game unbeaten streak and marked the end of the "Point-a-Minute" years.
South and
Georgia between
VMI and
Virginia Tech 's 1899 "Iron Men" team in action; note the grid pattern on the field Organized collegiate football was first played in the state of
Virginia and the south on November 2, 1873, in
Lexington between
Washington and Lee and
VMI. Washington and Lee won 4–2. Some industrious students of the two schools organized a game for October 23, 1869, but it was rained out. Students of the
University of Virginia were playing pickup games of the kicking-style of football as early as 1870, and some accounts even claim it organized a game against Washington and Lee College in 1871; but no record has been found of the score of this contest. Due to scantiness of records of the prior matches some will claim
Virginia v. Pantops Academy November 13, 1887, as the first game in Virginia. On April 9, 1880, at
Stoll Field,
Transylvania University (then called Kentucky University) beat
Centre College by the score of –0 in what is often considered the first recorded game played in the
South. The first game of "scientific football" in the South was the first instance of the
Victory Bell rivalry between
North Carolina and
Duke (then known as Trinity College) held on
Thanksgiving Day, 1888, at the North Carolina State Fairgrounds in
Raleigh, North Carolina. On November 13, 1887, the
Virginia Cavaliers and Pantops Academy fought to a scoreless tie in the first organized football game in the state of
Virginia. Students at UVA were playing pickup games of the kicking-style of football as early as 1870, and some accounts even claim that some industrious ones organized a game against
Washington and Lee College in 1871, just two years after Rutgers and Princeton's historic first game in 1869. But no record has been found of the score of this contest. Washington and Lee also claims a 4 to 2 win over
VMI in 1873. On December 14, 1889,
Wofford defeated
Furman 5 to 1 in the first intercollegiate game in the state of
South Carolina. The game featured no uniforms, no positions, and the rules were formulated before the game. January 30, 1892, saw the first football game played in the
Deep South when the
Georgia Bulldogs defeated
Mercer 50–0 at
Herty Field. The beginnings of the contemporary
Southeastern Conference and
Atlantic Coast Conference start in 1894. The
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA) was founded on December 21, 1894, by
William Dudley, a chemistry professor at
Vanderbilt. The original members were
Alabama,
Auburn,
Georgia,
Georgia Tech,
North Carolina,
Sewanee, and Vanderbilt.
Clemson,
Cumberland,
Kentucky,
LSU,
Mercer,
Mississippi,
Mississippi A&M (Mississippi State),
Southwestern Presbyterian University,
Tennessee,
Texas,
Tulane, and the
University of Nashville joined the following year in 1895 as invited charter members. The conference was originally formed for "the development and purification of college athletics throughout the South". The first
forward pass in football likely occurred on October 26, 1895, in a game between Georgia and
North Carolina when, out of desperation, the ball was thrown by the North Carolina back Joel Whitaker instead of punted and
George Stephens caught the ball. On November 9, 1895,
John Heisman executed a hidden ball trick using quarterback
Reynolds Tichenor to get
Auburn's only touchdown in a 6 to 9 loss to
Vanderbilt. It was the first game in the south decided by a field goal. Heisman later used the trick against
Pop Warner's Georgia team. Warner picked up the trick and later used it at Cornell against Penn State in 1897. He then used it in 1903 at Carlisle against Harvard and garnered national attention. The
1899 Sewanee Tigers are one of the all-time great teams of the early sport. The team went 12–0, outscoring opponents 322 to 10. Known as the "Iron Men", with just 13 men they had a six-day road trip with five shutout wins over
Texas A&M;
Texas;
Tulane;
LSU; and
Ole Miss. It is recalled memorably with the phrase "... and on the seventh day they rested."
Grantland Rice called them "the most durable football team I ever saw." Organized intercollegiate football was first played in the state of Florida in 1901. A 7-game series between intramural teams from Stetson and Forbes occurred in 1894. The first intercollegiate game between official varsity teams was played on November 22, 1901. Stetson beat Florida Agricultural College at Lake City, one of the four forerunners of the University of Florida, 6–0, in a game played as part of the Jacksonville Fair. On September 27, 1902,
Georgetown beat Navy 4 to 0. It is claimed by Georgetown authorities as the game with the first ever "roving center" or
linebacker when
Percy Given stood up, in contrast to the usual tale of
Germany Schulz. The first linebacker in the South is often considered to be
Frank Juhan. On
Thanksgiving Day 1903, a game was scheduled in
Montgomery, Alabama between the best teams from each region of the
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association for an "SIAA championship game", pitting
Cumberland against Heisman's
Clemson. The game ended in an 11–11 tie causing many teams to claim the title. Heisman pressed hardest for Cumberland to get the claim of champion. It was his last game as Clemson head coach. 1904 saw big coaching hires in the south:
Mike Donahue at Auburn,
John Heisman at Georgia Tech, and
Dan McGugin at Vanderbilt were all hired that year. Both Donahue and McGugin just came from the north that year, Donahue from Yale and McGugin from Michigan, and were among the initial inductees of the
College Football Hall of Fame. The undefeated
1904 Vanderbilt team scored an average of 52.7 points per game, the most in college football that season, and allowed just four points.
Southwest The first college football game in
Oklahoma Territory occurred on November 7, 1895, when the "Oklahoma City Terrors" defeated the
Oklahoma Sooners 34 to 0. The Terrors were a mix of Methodist college and high school students. The Sooners did not manage a single first down. By next season, Oklahoma coach
John A. Harts had left to prospect for gold in the Arctic. Organized football was first played in the territory on November 29, 1894, between the Oklahoma City Terrors and Oklahoma City High School. The high school won 24 to 0. USC faced its first collegiate opponent the following year in fall 1889, playing
St. Vincent's College to a 40–0 victory. In 1891, the first
Stanford football team was hastily organized and played a four-game season beginning in January 1892 with no official head coach. Following the season, Stanford captain John Whittemore wrote to
Yale coach
Walter Camp asking him to recommend a coach for Stanford. To Whittemore's surprise, Camp agreed to coach the team himself, on the condition that he finish the season at Yale first. As a result of Camp's late arrival, Stanford played just three official games, against San Francisco's
Olympic Club and rival
California. The team also played exhibition games against two Los Angeles area teams that Stanford does not include in official results. Camp returned to the East Coast following the season, then returned to coach Stanford in
1894 and
1895. On December 25, 1894, Amos Alonzo Stagg's
Chicago Maroons agreed to play Camp's
Stanford football team in San Francisco in the first postseason intersectional contest, foreshadowing the modern
bowl game. Future president
Herbert Hoover was Stanford's student financial manager. Chicago won 24 to 4. Stanford won a rematch in Los Angeles on December 29 by 12 to 0. The
Big Game between Stanford and California is the oldest college football rivalry in the West. The first game was played on San Francisco's
Haight Street Grounds on March 19, 1892, with Stanford winning 14–10. The term "Big Game" was first used in 1900, when it was played on Thanksgiving Day in San Francisco. During that game, a large group of men and boys, who were observing from the roof of the nearby S.F. and Pacific Glass Works, fell into the fiery interior of the building when the roof collapsed, resulting in 13 dead and 78 injured. On December 4, 1900, the last victim of the disaster (Fred Lilly) died, bringing the death toll to 22; and, to this day, the "Thanksgiving Day Disaster" remains the deadliest accident to kill spectators at a U.S. sporting event. The
University of Oregon began playing American football in 1894 and played its first game on March 24, 1894, defeating
Albany College 44–3 under head coach
Cal Young. Cal Young left after that first game and J.A. Church took over the coaching position in the fall for the rest of the season. Oregon finished the season with two additional losses and a tie, but went undefeated the following season, winning all four of its games under head coach Percy Benson. In 1899, the Oregon football team left the state for the first time, playing the
California Golden Bears in
Berkeley, California. Bloss's son William started the first team, on which he served as both coach and quarterback. The team's first game was an easy 63–0 defeat over the home team, Albany College. In May 1900, Yost was hired as the football coach at
Stanford University, and, after traveling home to West Virginia, he arrived in
Palo Alto, California, on August 21, 1900. Yost led the 1900 Stanford team to a 7–2–1, outscoring opponents 154 to 20. The next year in 1901, Yost was hired by
Charles A. Baird as the head football coach for the
Michigan Wolverines football team. On January 1, 1902,
Yost's dominating
1901 Michigan Wolverines football team agreed to play a 3–1–2 team from Stanford University in the inaugural "Tournament East-West football game" what is now known as the
Rose Bowl Game by a score of 49–0 after Stanford captain Ralph Fisher requested to quit with eight minutes remaining. The
1905 season marked the first meeting between Stanford and USC. Consequently, Stanford is USC's oldest existing rival. The
Big Game between Stanford and
Cal on November 11, 1905, was the first played at
Stanford Field, with Stanford winning 12–5. At the time, the future of American football was very much in doubt and these schools believed that rugby union would eventually be adopted nationwide. During 12 seasons of playing rugby union, Stanford was remarkably successful: the team had three undefeated seasons, three one-loss seasons, and an overall record of 94 wins, 20 losses, and 3 ties for a winning percentage of .816. However, after a few years, the school began to feel the isolation of its newly adopted sport, which was not spreading as many had hoped. Students and alumni began to clamor for a return to American football to allow wider intercollegiate competition. However, the threat by Roosevelt to eliminate football is disputed by sports historians. What is absolutely certain is that on October 9, 1905, Roosevelt held a meeting of football representatives from
Harvard,
Yale, and
Princeton. Though he lectured on eliminating and reducing injuries, he never threatened to ban football. He also lacked the authority to abolish football and was, in fact, actually a fan of the sport and wanted to preserve it. The President's sons were also playing football at the college and
secondary levels at the time. Meanwhile,
John H. Outland held an
experimental game in
Wichita, Kansas that reduced the number of scrimmage plays to earn a first down from four to three in an attempt to reduce injuries. The
Los Angeles Times reported an increase in punts and considered the game much safer than regular play but that the new rule was not "conducive to the sport". In 1906, President Roosevelt organized a meeting among thirteen school leaders at the
White House to find solutions to make the sport safer for the athletes. Because the college officials could not agree upon a change in rules, it was decided over the course of several subsequent meetings that an external governing body should be responsible. Finally, on December 28, 1905, 62 schools met in New York City to discuss rule changes to make the game safer. As a result of this meeting, the Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States was formed in 1906. The IAAUS was the original rule-making body of college football, but would go on to sponsor championships in other sports. The IAAUS would get its current name of
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in 1910, and still sets rules governing the sport. The rules committee considered widening the playing field to "open up" the game, but
Harvard Stadium (the first large permanent football stadium) had recently been built at great expense; it would be rendered useless by a wider field. The rules committee legalized the
forward pass instead. Though it was underused for years, this proved to be one of the most important rule changes in the establishment of the modern game. Another rule change banned "mass momentum" plays (many of which, like the infamous "flying wedge", were sometimes literally deadly).
Modernization and innovation (1906–1930) '' photograph of
Brad Robinson, who threw the first legal forward pass and was the sport's first
triple threat As a result of the 1905–1906 reforms, mass formation plays became illegal and
forward passes legal.
Bradbury Robinson, playing for visionary coach
Eddie Cochems at
Saint Louis University, threw the first legal pass in a September 5, 1906, game against
Carroll College at
Waukesha. Other important changes, formally adopted in 1910, were the requirements that at least seven offensive players be on the line of scrimmage at the time of the snap, that there be no pushing or pulling, and that interlocking interference (arms linked or hands on belts and uniforms) was not allowed. These changes greatly reduced the potential for collision injuries. Several coaches emerged who took advantage of these sweeping changes.
Amos Alonzo Stagg introduced such innovations as the
huddle, the
tackling dummy, and the pre-snap shift. Other coaches, such as
Pop Warner and
Knute Rockne, introduced new strategies that still remain part of the game. Besides these coaching innovations, several rules changes during the first third of the 20th century had a profound impact on the game, mostly in opening up the passing game. In 1914, the first roughing-the-passer penalty was implemented. In 1918, the rules on eligible receivers were loosened to allow eligible players to catch the ball anywhere on the field—previously strict rules were in place allowing passes to only certain areas of the field. Scoring rules also changed during this time: field goals were lowered to three points in 1909 Star players that emerged in the early 20th century include
Jim Thorpe,
Red Grange, and
Bronko Nagurski; these three made the transition to the fledgling NFL and helped turn it into a successful league. Sportswriter
Grantland Rice helped popularize the sport with his poetic descriptions of games and colorful nicknames for the game's biggest players, including Notre Dame's "
Four Horsemen" backfield and
Fordham University's linemen, known as the "
Seven Blocks of Granite". In 1907 at
Champaign, Illinois Chicago and
Illinois played in the first game to have a halftime show featuring a
marching band. Chicago won 42–6. On
November 25, 1911 Kansas played at
Missouri in the first
homecoming football game. The game was "broadcast" play-by-play over telegraph to at least 1,000 fans in
Lawrence, Kansas. It ended in a 3–3 tie. The game between
West Virginia and
Pittsburgh on October 8, 1921, saw the first live radio broadcast of a college football game when Harold W. Arlin announced that year's
Backyard Brawl played at
Forbes Field on
KDKA. Pitt won 21–13. On October 28, 1922, Princeton and Chicago played the first game to be nationally broadcast on radio. Princeton won 21–18 in a hotly contested game which had Princeton dubbed the "Team of Destiny".
Rise of the South One publication claims "The first scouting done in the South was in 1905, when
Dan McGugin and Captain
Innis Brown, of Vanderbilt went to
Atlanta to see
Sewanee play
Georgia Tech."
Fuzzy Woodruff claims
Davidson was the first in the south to throw a legal forward pass in 1906. The following season saw
Vanderbilt execute a
double pass play to set up the touchdown that beat Sewanee in a meeting of the unbeaten for the SIAA championship.
Grantland Rice cited this event as the greatest thrill he ever witnessed in his years of watching sports. Vanderbilt coach Dan McGugin in ''Spalding's Football Guide'' summation of the season in the SIAA wrote "The standing. First, Vanderbilt; second, Sewanee, a might good second;" and that
Aubrey Lanier "came near winning the Vanderbilt game by his brilliant dashes after receiving punts."
Bob Blake threw the final pass to center
Stein Stone, catching it near the goal among defenders.
Honus Craig then ran in the winning touchdown.
Heisman shift Using the "
jump shift" offense,
John Heisman's
Georgia Tech Golden Tornado won
222 to 0 over
Cumberland on October 7, 1916, at
Grant Field in the most lopsided victory in college football history. Tech went on a 33-game winning streak during this period. The
1917 team was the first
national champion from the
South, led by a powerful backfield. It also had the first two players from the
Deep South selected first-team All-American in
Walker Carpenter and
Everett Strupper.
Pop Warner's
Pittsburgh Panthers were also undefeated, but declined a challenge by Heisman to a game. When Heisman left Tech after 1919, his shift was still employed by protégé
William Alexander.
Notable intersectional games runs against undefeated and unscored upon
Georgia Tech in the 1918 game at
Forbes Field In 1906, Vanderbilt defeated
Carlisle 4 to 0, the result of a Bob Blake field goal. In 1907 Vanderbilt fought Navy to a 6 to 6 tie. In 1910 Vanderbilt held defending national champion Yale to a scoreless tie. Commodore fans celebrated by throwing some 3,000 seat cushions onto the field. The game features prominently in Vanderbilt's history. That same year, Alabama upset
Penn 9 to 7. Vanderbilt's line coach then was
Wallace Wade, who coached
Alabama to the South's first
Rose Bowl victory in 1925. This game is commonly referred to as "the game that changed the south". Wade followed up the next season with an undefeated record and
Rose Bowl tie. Georgia's 1927 "
dream and wonder team"
defeated Yale for the first time. Georgia Tech, led by Heisman protégé
William Alexander, gave the dream and wonder team its only loss, and the next year were national and
Rose Bowl champions. The Rose Bowl included
Roy Riegels' wrong-way run. On October 12, 1929, Yale lost to Georgia in
Sanford Stadium in its first trip to the south. Wade's Alabama again won a national championship and
Rose Bowl in 1930.
Coaches of the era Glenn "Pop" Warner Glenn "Pop" Warner coached at several schools throughout his career, including the
University of Georgia,
Cornell University,
University of Pittsburgh,
Stanford University,
Iowa State University, and
Temple University. One of his most famous stints was at the
Carlisle Indian Industrial School, where he coached
Jim Thorpe, who went on to become the first president of the
National Football League, an
Olympic Gold Medalist, and is widely considered one of the best overall athletes in history. Warner wrote one of the first important books of football strategy,
Football for Coaches and Players, published in 1927. Though the shift was invented by Stagg, Warner's
single wing and double wing
formations greatly improved upon it; for almost 40 years, these were among the most important formations in football. As part of his single and double wing formations, Warner was one of the first coaches to effectively use the forward pass. Among his other innovations are modern blocking schemes, the
three-point stance, and the
reverse play. The youth football league,
Pop Warner Little Scholars, was named in his honor.
Knute Rockne Knute Rockne rose to prominence in 1913 as an
end for the
University of Notre Dame, then a largely unknown Midwestern Catholic school. When Army scheduled Notre Dame as a warm-up game, they thought little of the small school. Rockne and quarterback
Gus Dorais made innovative use of the forward pass, still at that point a relatively unused weapon, to defeat Army 35–13 and helped establish the school as a national power. Rockne returned to coach the team in 1918, and devised the powerful
Notre Dame Box offense, based on Warner's single wing. He is credited with being the first major coach to emphasize offense over defense. Rockne is also credited with popularizing and perfecting the forward pass, a seldom used play at the time. The
1924 team featured the
Four Horsemen backfield. In 1927, his complex shifts led directly to a rule change whereby all offensive players had to stop for a full second before the ball could be snapped. Rather than simply a regional team, Rockne's "Fighting Irish" became famous for
barnstorming and played any team at any location. It was during Rockne's tenure that the annual
Notre Dame-University of Southern California rivalry began. He led his team to an impressive 105–12–5 record before his premature death in a
plane crash in 1931. He was so famous at that point that his funeral was broadcast nationally on radio.
From a regional to a national sport (1930–1958) in 1940 In the early 1930s, the college game continued to grow, particularly in the
South, bolstered by fierce rivalries such as the "
South's Oldest Rivalry", between Virginia and North Carolina and the "
Deep South's Oldest Rivalry", between
Georgia and
Auburn. Although before the mid-1920s most national powers came from the
Northeast or the
Midwest, the trend changed when several teams from the South and the West Coast achieved national success.
Wallace William Wade's
1925 Alabama team won the
1926 Rose Bowl after receiving its first national title and
William Alexander's 1928
Georgia Tech team defeated
California in the
1929 Rose Bowl. College football quickly became the most popular spectator sport in the South. Several major modern college football conferences rose to prominence during this time period. The
Southwest Athletic Conference had been founded in 1915. Consisting mostly of schools from Texas, the conference saw back-to-back national champions with
Texas Christian University (TCU) in 1938 and
Texas A&M in 1939. The
Pacific Coast Conference (PCC), a precursor to the
Pac-12 Conference (Pac-12), had its own back-to-back champion in the
University of Southern California which was awarded the title in 1931 and 1932. The
Southeastern Conference (SEC) formed in 1932 and consisted mostly of schools in the
Deep South. As in previous decades, the Big Ten continued to dominate in the 1930s and 1940s, with Minnesota winning 5 titles between 1934 and 1941, and Michigan (1933, 1947, and 1948) and
Ohio State (1942) also winning titles. As it grew beyond its regional affiliations in the 1930s, college football garnered increased national attention. Four new
bowl games were created: the
Orange Bowl,
Sugar Bowl, the
Sun Bowl in 1935, and the
Cotton Bowl in 1937. In lieu of an actual national championship, these bowl games, along with the earlier Rose Bowl, provided a way to match up teams from distant regions of the country that did not otherwise play. In 1936, the
Associated Press (AP) began its
weekly poll of prominent sports writers, ranking all of the nation's college football teams. Since there was no national championship game, the final version of the AP poll was used to determine who was crowned the
National Champion of college football. The 1930s saw growth in the passing game. Though some coaches, such as General
Robert Neyland at Tennessee, continued to eschew its use, several rules changes to the game had a profound effect on teams' ability to throw the ball. In 1934, the rules committee removed two major penalties—a loss of five yards for a second incomplete pass in any series of downs and a loss of possession for an incomplete pass in the end zone—and shrunk the circumference of the ball, making it easier to grip and throw. Players who became famous for taking advantage of the easier passing game included Alabama end
Don Hutson and TCU passer
"Slingin" Sammy Baugh. In 1935, New York City's
Downtown Athletic Club awarded the first
Heisman Trophy to
University of Chicago halfback
Jay Berwanger, who was also the first ever
NFL draft pick in 1936. The trophy was designed by sculptor
Frank Eliscu and modeled after
New York University player
Ed Smith. The trophy recognizes the nation's "most outstanding" college football player and has become one of the most coveted awards in all of American sports. During World War II, college football players enlisted in the
armed forces, some
playing in Europe during the war. As most of these players had eligibility left on their college careers, some of them returned to college at
West Point, bringing Army back-to-back national titles in 1944 and 1945 under coach
Red Blaik.
Doc Blanchard (known as "Mr. Inside") and
Glenn Davis (known as "Mr. Outside") both won the
Heisman Trophy, in 1945 and 1946. On the coaching staff of those 1944–1946 Army teams was future
Pro Football Hall of Fame coach
Vince Lombardi. The 1950s saw the rise of yet more
dynasties and power programs.
Oklahoma, under coach
Bud Wilkinson, won three national titles (1950, 1955, 1956) and all ten
Big Eight Conference championships in the decade while building a record 47-game winning streak.
Woody Hayes led Ohio State to two national titles, in 1954 and 1957, and won three
Big Ten titles. The
Michigan State Spartans were known as the "football factory" during the 1950s, where coaches
Biggie Munn and
Duffy Daugherty led the Spartans to two national titles and two Big Ten titles after joining the
Big Ten athletically in 1953. Wilkinson and Hayes, along with Robert Neyland of Tennessee, oversaw a revival of the running game in the 1950s. Passing numbers dropped from an average of 18.9 attempts in 1951 to 13.6 attempts in 1955, while teams averaged just shy of 50 running plays per game. Nine out of ten Heisman Trophy winners in the 1950s were runners. Notre Dame, one of the biggest passing teams of the decade, saw a substantial decline in success; the 1950s were the only decade between 1920 and 1990 when the team did not win at least a share of the national title.
Paul Hornung, Notre Dame quarterback, did, however, win the Heisman in 1956, becoming the only player from a losing team ever to do so. The
1956 Sugar Bowl also gained international attention when Georgia's pro-segregationist
Gov. Griffin publicly threatened
Georgia Tech and its President
Blake Van Leer over allowing the first African American player to play in a collegiate bowl game in the south.
Modern college football (since 1958) (orange and blue home uniforms) playing
Penn State Nittany Lions (all-white away uniforms) in 2012 at
Scott Stadium Following the enormous success of the
1958 NFL Championship Game, college football no longer enjoyed the same popularity as the NFL, at least on a national level. While both games benefited from the advent of television, since the late 1950s, the NFL has become a nationally popular sport while college football has maintained strong regional ties. As professional football became a national television phenomenon, college football did as well. In the 1950s, Notre Dame, which had a large national following, formed its own network to broadcast its games, but by and large the sport still retained a mostly regional following. In 1952, the NCAA claimed all television broadcasting rights for the games of its member institutions, and it alone negotiated television rights. This situation continued until 1984, when several schools brought a suit under the
Sherman Antitrust Act; the
Supreme Court ruled against the NCAA and schools are now free to negotiate their own television deals.
ABC Sports began broadcasting a national Game of the Week in 1966, bringing key matchups and rivalries to a national audience for the first time. New formations and play sets continued to be developed.
Emory Bellard, an assistant coach under
Darrell Royal at the
University of Texas, developed a three-back
option style offense known as the
wishbone. The wishbone is a run-heavy offense that depends on the quarterback making last second decisions on when and to whom to hand or pitch the ball to. Royal went on to teach the offense to other coaches, including
Bear Bryant at Alabama,
Chuck Fairbanks at Oklahoma and
Pepper Rodgers at
UCLA; who all adapted and developed it to their own tastes. The strategic opposite of the wishbone is the
spread offense, developed by professional and college coaches throughout the 1960s and 1970s. Though some schools play a run-based version of the spread, its most common use is as a passing offense designed to "spread" the field both horizontally and vertically. Some teams have managed to adapt with the times to keep winning consistently. In the rankings of the
most victorious programs,
Michigan,
Ohio State, and
Alabama ranked first, second, and third in total wins.
Growth of bowl games In 1940, for the highest level of college football, there were only five bowl games (Rose, Orange, Sugar, Sun, and Cotton). By 1950, three more had joined that number and in 1970, there were still only eight major college bowl games. The number grew to eleven in 1976. At the birth of cable television and cable sports networks like
ESPN, there were fifteen bowls in 1980. With more national venues and increased available revenue, the bowls saw an explosive growth throughout the 1980s and 1990s. In the thirty years from 1950 to 1980, seven bowl games were added to the schedule. From 1980 to 2008, an additional 20 bowl games were added to the schedule. Some have criticized this growth, claiming that the increased number of games has diluted the significance of playing in a bowl game. Yet others have countered that the increased number of games has increased exposure and revenue for a greater number of schools, and see it as a positive development. Teams participating in bowl games also get to practice up to four hours per day or 20 hours per week until their bowl game concludes. There is no limit on the number of practices during the bowl season, so teams that play later in the season (usually ones with more wins) get more opportunity to practice than ones that play earlier. This bowl practice period can be compared to the spring practice schedule when teams can have 15 on-field practice sessions. Many teams that play late in the bowl season use the first few practices for evaluation and development of younger players while resting the starters. == Organization ==