1984 NCAA Division I-A football season
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The 1984 NCAA Division I-A football season saw an aerial attack (in a college version of the West Coast offense), as undefeated Brigham Young won the national championship as decided in an unanimous AP Poll. The Cougars were led by LaVell Edwards who was one of the best coaches in college football history.
The 1984 national championship is somewhat controversial as BYU played in a supposedly weaker conference, and prior to the advent of the BCS, BYU was contractually committed to play in the Holiday Bowl as the Western Athletic Conference champion. Both Washington and Oklahoma were invited to play against BYU in the Holiday Bowl, but both declined. Washington, whose only loss came in a last-minute decision vs. Southern California, ended up at #2 after defeating Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. While Washington had the opportunity to compete for the national championship title, it opted for the more lucrative Orange Bowl instead. Early in the following 1985 season, BYU pummelled Washington 31-3.
Some critics of the Bowl Coalition and its successors (the Bowl Alliance and the Bowl Championship Series) claim that in the wake of BYU's win, the larger conferences felt that their dominance was being threatened. Thus, these conferences agreed among themselves to create exclusive bowl bids for the national championship to prevent a repeat of other teams like BYU. Critics consider this exclusion was made with the intent of adversely affecting recruitment to excluded conferences and to create a de-facto two-tier Division I-A conference system. Since the implementation of the biased bowl bids, five unfavored conference Division I-A teams have finished the regular season undefeated (Tulane in 1998, Marshall in 1999, Utah in 2004, and Boise State in 2004 and 2006) without being given an opportunity to win the title, making it practially impossible for an unfavored conference team to compete for the national title regardless of their achievements on the field.
The season was also famous for the Boston College v. Miami game, in which Doug Flutie threw a Hail Mary pass to defeat the Hurricanes. Doug Flutie won the Heisman Trophy that year as well, and Boston College obtained a number 5 final ranking.
Contents |
[edit] AP Final Poll
- Brigham Young
- Washington
- Florida
- Nebraska
- Boston College
- Oklahoma
- Oklahoma State
- SMU
- UCLA
- Southern California
- South Carolina
- Maryland
- Ohio State
- Auburn
- LSU
- Iowa
- Florida State
- Miami (Fl)
- Kentucky
- Virginia
[edit] Notable rivalry games
- Alabama 17, Auburn 15
- West Virginia 28, Pitt 10
- Arizona 16, Arizona State 10
- Florida 27, Florida State 17
- Florida 27, Georgia 0
- Georgia Tech 35, Georgia 18
- Iowa 59, Iowa State 21
- Michigan State 19, Michigan 7
- Army 28, Navy 11
- Notre Dame 19, USC 7
- Ohio State 21, Michigan 6
- Oklahoma 17, Nebraska 7
- Oklahoma 24, Oklahoma State 14
- Oregon 31, Oregon State 6
- South Carolina 22, Clemson 21
- Texas 15, Oklahoma 15
- UCLA 29, USC 10
- Washington 38, Washington State 29
- Minnesota 17, Wisconsin 14
- BYU 24, Utah 14
[edit] Bowl games
- Rose Bowl: #18 USC 20, #6 Ohio State 17
- Fiesta Bowl: #14 UCLA 39, #13 Miami (Fl) 23
- Sugar Bowl: #5 Nebraska 28, #11 LSU 10
- Orange Bowl: #4 Washington 28, #2 Oklahoma 17
- Florida Citrus Bowl: #15 Florida State 17, Georgia 17
- Gator Bowl: #9 Oklahoma State 21, #8 South Carolina 14
- Holiday Bowl: #1 Brigham Young 24, Michigan 17
- Peach Bowl: Virginia 27, Purdue 24
- Sun Bowl: Maryland 28, Tennessee 27
- Independence Bowl: Air Force 23, Virginia Tech 7
- Liberty Bowl: #16 Auburn 21, Arkansas 15
[edit] Heisman Trophy voting
The Heisman Memorial Trophy Award is given to the
Most Outstanding Player of the year
Winner: Doug Flutie, Boston College, Quarterback (2,240 points)
- 2. Keith Byars, Ohio State (1,251 points)
- 3. Robbie Bosco, Brigham Young (443 points)
- 4. Bernie Kosar, Miami-Fl (320 points)
- 5. Kenneth David, TCU (86 points)
[edit] Other annual awards
- Maxwell Award (College Player of the Year) - Doug Flutie, Boston College
- Walter Camp Award (Back) - Doug Flutie, Boston College
- Davey O'Brien Award (Quarterback) - Doug Flutie, Boston College
- Lombardi Award (Lineman or Linebacker) - Tony Degrate, Texas
- Outland Trophy (Interior Lineman) - Bruce Smith, Virginia Tech
- Paul "Bear" Bryant Award - LaVell Edwards, BYU
Preceded by 1983 Division 1A Football Season |
D1A Seasons 1984 |
Succeeded by 1985 Division 1A Football Season |