NCAA Division I-A national football championship
The NCAA Division I-A national football championship is the only Division I NCAA-sponsored sport without an organized tournament to determine its champion; in fact, while various other organizations (as described below) designate a national champion at the Division I level, the NCAA itself does not award a championship for Division I-A football. The manner in which a "champion" is crowned is probably unique in that it uses neither a fully quantitative season-long scoring system (e.g., auto racing, tennis) nor a sequence-dependent playoff system. Because there is not a playoff system in which qualification is clear and the top contenders enter in a largely non-controversial manner (unlike professional football and other team sports), the current NCAA Division I-A national football championship format has received much criticism (see BCS controversies).
The poll system :
Since the start of college football, there have been many individuals, publications and organizations that have selected their national champions. Some carried more weight than others. Also, some organizations have gone back and researched those early seasons and retroactively constructed rankings and determined recognized champions of major college football. Some examples of these type of polls include the National Championship Foundation, the College Football Researchers Association, and the Helms Athletic Foundation. Other systems, such as the Dickinson System, used statistical analysis to determine a ranking.One of the first major media poll was the AP Poll released in 1936, which is still in use today. This poll utilizes a vast network of sportswriters to determine its rankings. Although modified slightly, another poll still in use today is the Coaches' Poll, which polls a random selection of 62 collegiate football head coaches to determine its rankings. However, both polls failed to take into account bowl game results, often between two top-ranked teams, thus calling into question their designation of a "national champion" prior to the actual end of the season. Until 1968 college football season, the final AP poll of the season was released following the end of the regular season, with the exception of the 1965 season. Beginning in the 1968 season, a post bowl game poll was released and the AP championship reflected the bowl game results. The UPI did not follow suit with the Coaches' Poll until the 1974 season.
The tradition, and the controversy, is carried on today with the Bowl Championship Series ("BCS"), created for the 1998 season, and its predecessors — the Bowl Coalition from seasons 1992 to 1994, and the Bowl Alliance from seasons 1995 to 1997. The AP and Coaches' polls, computer rankings, strength of schedule, and performance against other top teams were combined into a formula, with the top two teams meeting in the BCS National Championship Game. But, the system has not been without controversy.
Most recently, in 2003 USC did not play in the BCS title game, despite finishing the regular season as #1 in both the AP and Coaches' polls. Under the BCS formula, Oklahoma was ranked #1 at the end of the regular season with LSU #2. Under the BCS agreement, Oklahoma played LSU in the BCS National Championship game. LSU won the BCS title game, giving it the BCS national championship and the #1 ranking in the Coaches' poll, while the sportswriters voted USC #1 in the AP poll. The resulting "split" national championship resulted in more tweaks to the system for 2004.
On two occasions, the BCS formula has worked as planned. In both 2002 and 2005, there were only two undefeated teams at the end of the season. In 2002, those teams were the Ohio State University Buckeyes and the University of Miami Hurricanes, while in 2005, those teams were the USC Trojans and the University of Texas Longhorns. For the 2002 title, Ohio State defeated Miami in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl to claim the BCS title, while in the game for the 2005 title, Texas defeated USC in the Rose Bowl to claim the BCS title. The use of the Bowl Championship Series formula, however, has fostered debate amongst those college football fans who are proponents of a playoff system.
Football Bowl Subdivision :
On August 3, 2006, the Division I Board of Directors took action regarding the two football subdivisions in Division I (Division I-A and I-AA), the Board approved new labels. The presidents approved a change in terminology to "Football Bowl Subdivision" for the former I-A classification and "NCAA Football Championship Subdivision" for the former I-AA group. The Collegiate Commissioners Association helped develop the new labels.The presidents believe the new nomenclature, which became effective in December 2006, more accurately distinguishes Division I institutions for purposes of governing football, the only sport for which such a distinction is necessary. Members felt the old nomenclature inaccurately tiered Division I institutions in all sports, not just football, and produced instances in which media outlets and other entities incorrectly cited institutions as being Division I-AA in basketball or baseball, for example.
The new nomenclature does not affect the voting structure used in Division I governance matters.
Rankings overview :
As mentioned previously, the NCAA does not award a consensus national champion for Division I-A football. The NCAA guide lists 340 national championship selections in 137 seasons, an average of between two and three selections every year ever. On that list, Notre Dame is credited with 21 championships, Oklahoma and USC with 17, Alabama and Michigan with 16, Ohio State with 13, Nebraska and Pittsburgh with 11--an amount exceeding claims by almost any university. Nebraska, for example, is credited with five consecutive titles from 1980 to 1984, a time period during which they were not once awarded a championship by the selectors recognized by the NCAA as consensus selectors. Such obscure schools as Centre (1919), Washington & Jefferson (1921) and Detroit (1928) are credited with titles in the same years as championships were also awarded to such national powers as Notre Dame (1919), Cornell (1921), and Georgia Tech (1928). Princeton and Yale are credited with 28 and 27 championships, respectively, the vast majority of which came before 1912 and during the period when the national sports media was focused on the Northeast U.S.Note that prior to 1906, no governing organization existed for college football. The NCAA's predecessor organization was formed in 1906 and renamed in 1910.
Since 1934, human polls have been used to subjectively rank the teams believed to be the best. Even with the institution of these systems, these polls did not rank teams after the bowl games until 1967 (for the AP). The most widely accepted polls in use today are the AP Poll and the Coaches' Poll. In 1998, the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) became a system for crowning a national champion. The BCS uses both objective and subjective data, including human polls, to determine the top two teams at the end of the season, which then play each other in the BCS National Championship Game.
Determining national champions for the years prior to 1936 is more difficult. According to the website College Football Data Warehouse, the most acceptable selectors throughout history are the National Championship Foundation, Helms Athletic Foundation, and the College Football Researchers Association. Following is a table of the polls that will be used for this ranking based on this criteria. (To be moved to main text after table is updated.) The proposed table recognizes these additional selections listed in the NCAA guide, but they are given less weight as the selectors are often considered less credible or subservient to other selectors (e.g., the computer polls in the BCS (This note to be removed after table is updated.) The rationale for choosing these polls over others has NOT been documented elsewhere in this article, and thus should not be viewed as definitive or non-controversial. The CFDW opinion referenced is based on the opinion of two individuals. Note that this table differs significantly from the NCAA's own listing of champions prior to 1924, most notably excluding the NCF rankings form 1883 to 1923, but including them prior to and after that period. This omission creates the false impression that there were almost exclusively single champions prior to 1924 when in fact co-champions were the rule, as leading teams rarely played each other, or even had common opponents. The proliferation of co-champions after 1924 in the CFDW table below makes this point obvious.
| Retroactive/research polls | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| | National Championship Foundation | | Table below reflects selections from 1869-1882 and from 1924-1953 |
| | College Football Researchers Association | | Table below reflects selections from 1924-1953 |
| | Helms Athletic Foundation | | Retroactive 1883-1941, Contemporaneous 1942-1982 |
| Statistical analysis | |||
| | Dickinson System | | Contemporaneous 1926-1940 |
| Media/opinion polls | |||
| | Associated Press | | Before Bowls 1936-68 except 1965; then After Bowls 1969-current |
| | United Press | | After Bowls |
| | International News Service | | Before Bowls |
| | Football Writers Association of America | | After Bowls 1955-current |
| | Harris Interactive Poll | | Used only for BCS Rankings |
| The Coaches' poll, published by: | |||
| | United Press | | Before Bowls |
| | United Press International | | Before Bowls 1958-73, After Bowls 1974-1990 |
| | USA Today/CNN | | After Bowls |
| | USA Today/ESPN | | After Bowls |
| | USA Today/ESPN | | Required to vote for BCS title game winner |
| | USA Today | | Required to vote for BCS title game winner |
By year :
| Year | Champion | Source | Record | Bowl | Head coach |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1869 | Princeton | (NCF) | 1-1 | ||
| 1870 | Princeton | (NCF) | 1-0 | ||
| 1871 | No football games played | ||||
| 1872 | Princeton | (NCF) | 1-0 | ||
| 1873 | Princeton | (NCF) | 1-0 | ||
| 1874 | Yale | (NCF) | 3-0 | ||
| 1875 | Harvard | (NCF) | 4-0 | ||
| 1876 | Yale | (NCF) | 3-0 | ||
| 1877 | Yale | (NCF) | 3-0-1 | ||
| 1878 | Princeton | (NCF) | 6-0 | ||
| 1879 | Princeton | (NCF) | 4-0-1 | ||
| 1880 | Princeton | (NCF) | 4-0-1 | ||
| Yale | (NCF) | 4-0-1 | |||
| 1881 | Yale | (NCF) | 5-0-1 | ||
| 1882 | Yale | (NCF) | 8-0 | ||
| 1883 | Yale | (H) | 8-0 | Ray Tomkins (Captain) | |
| 1884 | Yale | (H) | 9-0 | Eugene L. Richards (Captain) | |
| 1885 | Princeton | (H) | 9-0 | Charles DeCamp (Captain) | |
| 1886 | Yale | (H) | 9-0-1 | Robert N. Corwin (Captain) | |
| 1887 | Yale | (H) | 9-0 | Harry W. Beecher (Captain) | |
| 1888 | Yale | (H) | 13-0 | Walter Camp | |
| 1889 | Princeton | (H) | 10-0 | Edgar Poe (Captain) | |
| 1890 | Harvard | (H) | 11-0 | G.A. Stewart/G.C. Adams | |
| 1891 | Yale | (H) | 13-0 | Walter Camp | |
| 1892 | Yale | (H) | 13-0 | Walter Camp | |
| 1893 | Princeton | (H) | 11-0 | Tom Trenchard (Captain) | |
| 1894 | Yale | (H) | 16-0 | William C. Rhodes | |
| 1895 | Pennsylvania | (H) | 14-0 | George Washington Woodruff | |
| 1896 | Princeton | (H) | 10-0-1 | Garrett Cochran | |
| 1897 | Pennsylvania | (H) | 15-0 | George Washington Woodruff | |
| 1898 | Harvard | (H) | 11-0 | W. Cameron Forbes | |
| 1899 | Harvard | (H) | 10-0-1 | Benjamin H. Dibblee | |
| 1900 | Yale | (H) | 12-0 | Malcolm McBride | |
| 1901 | Michigan | (H) | 11-0 | Won Rose | Fielding Yost |
| 1902 | Michigan | (H) | 11-0 | Fielding Yost | |
| 1903 | Princeton | (H) | 11-0 | Art Hillebrand | |
| 1904 | Pennsylvania | (H) | 12-0 | Carl Williams | |
| 1905 | Chicago | (H) | 11-0 | Amos Alonzo Stagg | |
| 1906 | Princeton | (H) | 9-0-1 | Bill Roper | |
| 1907 | Yale | (H) | 9-0-1 | Bill Knox | |
| 1908 | Pennsylvania | (H) | 11-0-1 | Sol Metzger | |
| 1909 | Yale | (H) | 10-0 | Howard Jones | |
| 1910 | Harvard | (H) | 8-0-1 | Percy Houghton | |
| 1911 | Princeton | (H) | 8-0-2 | Bill Roper | |
| 1912 | Harvard | (H) | 9-0 | Percy Houghton | |
| 1913 | Harvard | (H) | 9-0 | Percy Houghton | |
| 1914 | Army | (H) | 9-0 | Charley Daly | |
| 1915 | Cornell | (H) | 9-0 | Al Sharpe | |
| 1916 | Pittsburgh | (H) | 8-0 | Pop Warner | |
| 1917 | Georgia Tech | (H) | 9-0 | John Heisman | |
| 1918 | Pittsburgh | (H) | 4-1 | Pop Warner | |
| 1919 | Harvard | (H) | 9-0-1 | Won Rose | Bob Fisher |
| 1920 | California | (H) | 9-0 | Won Rose | Andy Smith |
| 1921 | Cornell | (H) | 8-0 | Gil Dobie | |
| 1922 | Cornell | (H) | 8-0 | Gil Dobie | |
| 1923 | Illinois | (H) | 8-0 | Bob Zuppke | |
| 1924 | Notre Dame | (H)(D)(CFRA)(NCF) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Knute Rockne |
| 1925 | Alabama | (H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Wallace Wade |
| Dartmouth | (D) | 8-0 | Jesse Hawley | ||
| 1926 | Stanford | (H)(D)(NCF) | 10-0-1 | Tied Rose | Pop Warner |
| Alabama | (H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 9-0-1 | Tied Rose | Wallace Wade | |
| 1927 | Illinois | (H)(D)(NCF) | 7-0-1 | Bob Zuppke | |
| Yale | (CFRA) | 10-0 | T.A. Dwight "Tad" Jones | ||
| 1928 | Georgia Tech | (H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Bill Alexander |
| USC | (D) | 9-0-1 | Howard Jones | ||
| 1929 | Notre Dame | (H)(D)(CFRA)(NCF) | 9-0 | Knute Rockne | |
| 1930 | Notre Dame | (H)(D)(NCF) | 10-0 | Knute Rockne | |
| Alabama | (CFRA) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Wallace Wade | |
| 1931 | USC | (H)(D)(CFRA)(NCF) | 10-1 | Won Rose | Howard Jones |
| 1932 | USC | (H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Howard Jones |
| Michigan | (D) | 8-0 | Harry Kipke | ||
| 1933 | Michigan | (H)(D)(CFRA)(NCF) | 7-0-1 | Harry Kipke | |
| 1934 | Minnesota | (AP)(H)(D)(CFRA)(NCF) | 8-0 | Bernie Bierman | |
| 1935 | Minnesota | (UP)(H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 8-0 | Bernie Bierman | |
| SMU | (D) | 12-1 | Lost Rose | Madison A. "Matty" Bell | |
| 1936 | Minnesota | (AP)(H)(D)(NCF) | 7-1 | Bernie Bierman | |
| Pittsburgh | (CFRA) | 8-1-1 | Won Rose | Jock Sutherland | |
| 1937 | Pittsburgh | (AP)(D)(CFRA)(NCF) | 9-0-1 | Jock Sutherland | |
| California | (H) | 10-0-1 | Won Rose | Leonard Allison | |
| 1938 | TCU | (AP)(H)(NCF) | 11-0 | Won Sugar | Dutch Meyer |
| Notre Dame | (D) | 8-1 | Elmer Layden | ||
| Tennessee | (CFRA) | 11-0 | Won Orange | Robert Neyland | |
| 1939 | Texas A&M | (AP)(H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 11-0 | Won Sugar | Homer Norton |
| USC | (D) | 8-0-2 | Won Rose | Howard Jones | |
| 1940 | Minnesota | (AP)(D)(CFRA)(NCF) | 8-0 | Bernie Bierman | |
| Stanford | (H) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Clark Shaughnessy | |
| 1941 | Minnesota | (AP)(H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 8-0 | Bernie Bierman | |
| 1942 | Ohio State | (AP)(CFRA)(NCF) | 9-1 | Paul Brown | |
| Wisconsin | (H) | 8-1-1 | Harry Stuhldreher | ||
| 1943 | Notre Dame | (AP)(H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 9-1 | Frank Leahy | |
| 1944 | Army | (AP)(H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 9-0 | Earl Blaik | |
| Ohio State | (NCF) | 9-0 | Carroll Widdoes | ||
| 1945 | Army | (AP)(H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 9-0 | Earl Blaik | |
| Alabama | (NCF) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Frank Thomas | |
| 1946 | Notre Dame | (AP)(H)(NCF) | 8-0-1 | Frank Leahy | |
| Army | (H)(CFRA) | 9-0-1 | Earl Blaik | ||
| 1947 | Notre Dame | (AP)Michigan and Notre Dame traded the #1 spot in the Associated Press poll during the regular season, with Michigan ranked #1 on 11/16/47 and Notre Dame taking the #1 spot in the final regular season poll on 11/23/47, taken before the bowls. Michigan won the 1948 Rose Bowl 49-0 over USC, a greater margin than Notre Dame had beaten USC in the regular season. While the final regular season poll had been considered the "official" determination of the AP's national champion, the AP held a special post-bowl poll, in which Michigan was selected as the national champion, 266-119. The two schools continued to debate which AP poll was "official" for years afterward.(H) | 9-0 | Frank Leahy | |
| Michigan | (AP)(H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Fritz Crisler | |
| 1948 | Michigan | (AP)(H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 9-0 | Bennie Oosterbaan | |
| 1949 | Notre Dame | (AP)(H)(NCF) | 10-0 | Frank Leahy | |
| Oklahoma | (CFRA) | 11-0 | Won Sugar | Bud Wilkinson | |
| 1950 | Oklahoma | (AP)(UP)(H) | 10-1 | Lost Sugar | Bud Wilkinson |
| Tennessee | (CFRA)(NCF) | 11-1 | Won Cotton | Robert Neyland | |
| 1951 | Tennessee | (AP)(UP) | 10-1 | Lost Sugar | Robert Neyland |
| Michigan State | (H) | 9-0 | Biggie Munn | ||
| Maryland | (CFRA)(NCF) | 10-0 | Won Sugar | Jim Tatum | |
| 1952 | Michigan State | (AP)(UP)(H)(CFRA)(NCF) | 9-0 | Biggie Munn | |
| Georgia Tech | (INS) | 12-0 | Won Sugar | Bobby Dodd | |
| 1953 | Maryland | (AP)(UP)(INS) | 10-1 | Lost Orange | Jim Tatum |
| Notre Dame | (H)(NCF) | 9-0-1 | Frank Leahy | ||
| Oklahoma | (CFRA) | 9-1-1 | Won Orange | Bud Wilkinson | |
| 1954 | Ohio State | (AP)(INS)(H) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Woody Hayes |
| UCLA | (UP)(FWAA)(H) | 9-0 | Red Sanders | ||
| 1955 | Oklahoma | (AP)(UP)(INS)(FWAA)(H) | 11-0 | Won Orange | Bud Wilkinson |
| 1956 | Oklahoma | (AP)(UP)(INS)(FWAA)(H) | 10-0 | Bud Wilkinson | |
| 1957 | Auburn | (AP)(H) | 10-0 | Shug Jordan | |
| Ohio State | (UP)(INS)(FWAA) | 9-1 | Won Rose | Woody Hayes | |
| 1958 | LSU | (AP)(UPI)(H) | 11-0 | Won Sugar | Paul Dietzel |
| Iowa | (FWAA) | 8-1-1 | Won Rose | Forest Evashevski | |
| 1959 | Syracuse | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 11-0 | Won Cotton | Ben Schwartzwalder |
| 1960 | Minnesota | (AP)(UPI) | 8-2 | Lost Rose | Murray Warmath |
| Mississippi | (FWAA) | 10-0-1 | Won Sugar | John Vaught | |
| Washington | (H) | 10-1 | Won Rose | Jim Owens | |
| 1961 | Alabama | (AP)(UPI)(H) | 11-0 | Won Sugar | Paul "Bear" Bryant |
| Ohio State | (FWAA) | 8-0-1 | Woody Hayes | ||
| 1962 | USC | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 11-0 | Won Rose | John McKay |
| 1963 | Texas | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 11-0 | Won Cotton | Darrell Royal |
| 1964 | Alabama | (AP)(UPI) | 10-1 | Lost Orange | Paul "Bear" Bryant |
| Arkansas | (FWAA)(H) | 11-0 | Won Cotton | Frank Broyles | |
| 1965 | Alabama | (AP)(FWAA) | 9-1-1 | Won Orange | Paul "Bear" Bryant |
| Michigan State | (UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 10-1 | Lost Rose | Duffy Daugherty | |
| 1966 | Notre Dame | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 9-0-1 | Ara Parseghian | |
| Michigan State | (H) | 9-0-1 | None | Duffy Daugherty | |
| 1967 | USC | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 10-1 | Won Rose | John McKay |
| 1968 | Ohio State | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 10-0 | Won Rose | Woody Hayes |
| 1969 | Texas | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(RMN)(H) | 11-0 | Won Cotton | Darrell Royal |
| 1970 | Nebraska | (AP)(FWAA)(H) | 11-0-1 | Won Orange | Bob Devaney |
| Texas | (UPI) | 10-1 | Lost Cotton | Darrell Royal | |
| 1971 | Nebraska | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 13-0 | Won Orange | Bob Devaney |
| 1972 | USC | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 12-0 | Won Rose | John McKay |
| 1973 | Notre Dame | (AP)(FWAA)(H) | 11-0 | Won Sugar | Ara Parseghian |
| Alabama | (UPI) | 11-1 | Lost Sugar | Paul "Bear" Bryant | |
| 1974 | Oklahoma | (AP)(H) | 11-0 | Barry Switzer | |
| USC | (UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 10-1-1 | Won Rose | John McKay | |
| 1975 | Oklahoma | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 11-1 | Won Orange | Barry Switzer |
| Ohio State | (H) | 11-1 | Lost Rose | Woody Hayes | |
| 1976 | Pittsburgh | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 12-0 | Won Sugar | Johnny Majors |
| 1977 | Notre Dame | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 11-1 | Won Cotton | Dan Devine |
| 1978 | Alabama | (AP)(FWAA)(H) | 11-1 | Won Sugar | Paul "Bear" Bryant |
| USC | (UPI)(H) | 12-1 | Won Rose | John Robinson | |
| Oklahoma | (H) | 11-1 | Won Orange | Barry Switzer | |
| 1979 | Alabama | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 12-0 | Won Sugar | Paul "Bear" Bryant |
| 1980 | Georgia | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 12-0 | Won Sugar | Vince Dooley |
| 1981 | Clemson | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 12-0 | Won Orange | Danny Ford |
| 1982 | Penn State | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA)(H) | 11-1 | Won Sugar | Joe Paterno |
| SMU | (H) | 11-0-1 | Won Cotton | Bobby Collins | |
| 1983 | Miami (FL) | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA) | 11-1 | Won Orange | Howard Schnellenberger |
| 1984 | BYU | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA) | 13-0 | Won Holiday | Lavell Edwards |
| 1985 | Oklahoma | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA) | 11-1 | Won Orange | Barry Switzer |
| 1986 | Penn State | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA) | 12-0 | Won Fiesta | Joe Paterno |
| 1987 | Miami (FL) | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA) | 12-0 | Won Orange | Jimmy Johnson |
| 1988 | Notre Dame | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA) | 12-0 | Won Fiesta | Lou Holtz |
| 1989 | Miami (FL) | (AP)(UPI)(FWAA) | 11-1 | Won Sugar | Dennis Erickson |
| 1990 | Colorado | (AP)(FWAA) | 11-1-1 | Won Orange | Bill McCartney |
| Georgia Tech | (UPI) | 11-0-1 | Won Citrus | Bobby Ross | |
| 1991 | Miami (FL) | (AP) | 12-0 | Won Orange | Dennis Erickson |
| Washington | (CNN)(FWAA) | 12-0 | Won Rose | Don James | |
| 1992 | Alabama | (AP)(CNN)(FWAA) | 13-0 | Won Sugar | Gene Stallings |
| 1993 | Florida State | (AP)(CNN)(FWAA) | 12-1 | Won Orange | Bobby Bowden |
| 1994 | Nebraska | (AP)(CNN)(FWAA) | 13-0 | Won Orange | Tom Osborne |
| 1995 | Nebraska | (AP)(CNN)(FWAA) | 12-0 | Won Fiesta | Tom Osborne |
| 1996 | Florida | (AP)(CNN)(FWAA) | 12-1 | Won Sugar | Steve Spurrier |
| 1997 | Michigan | (AP)(FWAA) | 12-0 | Won Rose | Lloyd Carr |
| Nebraska | (ESPN) | 13-0 | Won Orange | Tom Osborne | |
| 1998 | Tennessee | (AP)(BCS) | 13-0 | Won Fiesta | Phillip Fulmer |
| 1999 | Florida State | (AP)(BCS) | 12-0 | Won Sugar | Bobby Bowden |
| 2000 | Oklahoma | (AP)(BCS) | 13-0 | Won Orange | Bob Stoops |
| 2001 | Miami (FL) | (AP)(BCS) | 12-0 | Won Rose | Larry Coker |
| 2002 | Ohio State | (AP)(BCS) | 14-0 | Won Fiesta | Jim Tressel |
| 2003 | LSU | (BCS) | 13-1 | Won Sugar | Nick Saban |
| USC | (AP) | 12-1 | Won Rose | Pete Carroll | |
| 2004 | USC | (AP)(BCS) | 13-0 | Won Orange | Pete Carroll |
| 2005 | Texas | (AP)(BCS) | 13-0 | Won Rose | Mack Brown |
| 2006 | Florida | (AP)(BCS) | 13-1 | Won BCS Title Game | Urban Meyer |
| Source: http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/national_championships/index.php | |||||
Most national championships :
This is a source of much debate. Before 1901 the national title was dominated by teams that are now members of the Ivy League. Yale and Princeton each claim as many as 24 national championships. However, Yale's last title was in 1927 and Princeton's was in 1935 (according to Dunkel, not reflected above). The University of Michigan won the first non-Ivy League national championship in 1901 (game played in January, 1902).In an attempt to settle countless arguments, in 1970 Sports Illustrated made an in-depth study into college football's mythical national champions. Every recognized authority that ever presumed to name a No. 1 was included: Associated Press, Football Writers Association of America, National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame, United Press International and many other authorities. At that time they claimed Notre Dame had the most national championships with 17, Alabama with 13, Yale 13, Princeton 12, and USC 10.http://graphics.fansonly.com/photos/schools/pitt/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/06guide-pantherhistory.pdf
The following teams have won the most championships since 1901. The rationale for choosing these polls over others has NOT been documented elsewhere in this article, and thus should not be viewed as definitive or non-controversial. The CFDW opinion referenced is based on the opinion of two individuals. Note that this table differs significantly from the NCAA's own listing of champions prior to 1924, most notably excluding the NCF rankings form 1883 to 1923, but including them prior to and after that period. This omission creates the misimpression that that there were almost exclusively single champions prior to 1924 when in fact co-champions were the rule, as leading teams rarely played each other, or even had common opponents. The proliferation of co-champions after 1924 in the CFDW table below makes this point obvious::
| Team | Recognized titles | Winning years |
|---|---|---|
| Notre Dame | 13 | 1924, 1929, 1930, 1938, 1943, 1946, 1947, 1949, 1953, 1966, 1973, 1977, 1988 |
| USC | 11 | 1928, 1931, 1932, 1939, 1962, 1967, 1972, 1974, 1978, 2003, 2004 |
| Alabama | 11 | 1925, 1926, 1930, 1945, 1961, 1964, 1965, 1973, 1978, 1979, 1992 |
| Oklahoma | 9 | 1949, 1950, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1974, 1975, 1985, 2000 |
| Ohio State | 7 | 1942, 1944, 1954, 1957, 1961, 1968, 2002 |
| Michigan | 7 | 1901, 1902, 1932, 1933, 1947, 1948, 1997 |
| Minnesota | 6 | 1934, 1935, 1936, 1940, 1941, 1960 |
| Nebraska | 5 | 1970, 1971, 1994, 1995, 1997 |
| Pittsburgh | 5 | 1916, 1918, 1936, 1937, 1976 |
| Miami | 5 | 1983, 1987, 1989, 1991, 2001 |
| Texas | 4 | 1963, 1969, 1970, 2005 |
| Tennessee | 4 | 1938, 1950, 1951, 1998 |
| Georgia Tech | 4 | 1917, 1928, 1952, 1990 |
| Harvard | 4 | 1910, 1912, 1913, 1919 |
Most Associated Press National Championships :
Since 1936, the Associated Press has polled sportwriters resulting in an annually awarded national championship. Until 1968, the final poll was conducted before the bowl games were played.| Rank | Team | Total | Last |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Notre Dame | 8 | 1988 |
| 2 | Oklahoma | 7 | 2000 |
| 3 | Alabama | 6 | 1992 |
| 4t | USC | 5 | 2004 |
| 4t | Miami | 5 | 2001 |
| 4t | Ohio State | 5 | 2002 |
| 6t | Nebraska | 4 | 1995 |
| 6t | Minnesota | 4 | 1960 |
| 9t | Texas | 3 | 2005 |
| 9t | Michigan | 3 | 1997 |
| 10t | Florida | 2 | 2006 |
| 10t | Florida State | 2 | 1999 |
| 10t | Tennessee | 2 | 1998 |
| 10t | Penn State | 2 | 1986 |
| 10t | Pittsburgh | 2 | 1976 |
| 10t | Army | 2 | 1945 |
Most Coaches' Poll National Championships :
Since 1950, various media organizations including the UPI, ESPN, USA Today and CNN have polled current head coaches resulting in an annually awarded a national championship. Until 1973, the final poll was conducted before the bowl games were played. Beginning in 1998, it has been contractually bestowed upon the winner of the BCS National Championship game.| Rank | Team | Total | Last |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1t | USC | 6 | 2004 |
| 1t | Oklahoma | 6 | 2000 |
| 3 | Alabama | 5 | 1992 |
| 4t | Texas | 4 | 2005 |
| 4t | Miami | 4 | 2001 |
| 4t | Nebraska | 4 | 1997 |
| 7t | Ohio State | 3 | 2002 |
| 7t | Notre Dame | 3 | 1988 |
| 9t | Florida | 2 | 2006 |
| 9t | LSU | 2 | 2003 |
| 9t | Florida State | 2 | 1999 |
| 9t | Tennessee | 2 | 1998 |
| 9t | Penn State | 2 | 1986 |
Most Poll Era National Championships :
The "Poll Era" began in 1936, the first season a poll (Associated Press poll) determined the national champion. Some sources only recognize a consensus championship as one of the Poll Era.| Team | Recognized titles | Winning years |
|---|---|---|
| Notre Dame | 10 | 1938, 1943, 1946, 1947, 1949, 1953, 1966, 1973, 1977, 1988 |
| Oklahoma | 9 | 1949, 1950, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1974, 1975, 1985, 2000 |
| USC | 8 | 1939, 1962, 1967, 1972, 1974, 1978, 2003, 2004 |
| Alabama | 8 | 1945, 1961, 1964, 1965, 1973, 1978, 1979, 1992 |
| Ohio State | 7 | 1942, 1944, 1954, 1957, 1961, 1968, 2002 |
| Miami | 5 | 1983, 1987, 1989, 1991, 2001 |
| Nebraska | 5 | 1970, 1971, 1994, 1995, 1997 |
| Minnesota | 4 | 1936, 1940, 1941, 1960 |
| Tennessee | 4 | 1938, 1950, 1951, 1998 |
| Texas | 4 | 1963, 1969, 1970, 2005 |
| Michigan | 3 | 1947, 1948, 1997 |
| Pittsburgh | 3 | 1936, 1937, 1976 |
See also :
- NCAA Division I FCS national football championship
- NCAA Division I FCS Consensus Mid-Major football national championship
- NCAA Division II national football championship
- NCAA Division III national football championship
- NAIA national football championship
- NJCAA National football championship
- List of college bowl games
- Mythical National Championship
References :
Notes :
Other College Football links :
- NCAA football page
- {{cite web|