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1998 NCAA Division I-A football season

American college football season


American college football season

FieldValue
year1998
imageFile:NCAA primary logo 1980.svg
number_of_teams112
preseason_ap[Ohio State](1998-ohio-state-buckeyes-football-team)
number_of_bowls22
bowl_startDecember 19, 1998
bowl_end
January 4, 1999
championship_systemBowl Championship Series
championship_bowl[1999 Fiesta Bowl](1999-fiesta-bowl)
championship_locationSun Devil Stadium,
Tempe, Arizona
champions[Tennessee](1998-tennessee-volunteers-football-team)
heismanRicky Williams (running back, [Texas](1998-texas-longhorns-football-team))

January 4, 1999 Tempe, Arizona

The 1998 NCAA Division I-A football season, play of college football in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association at the Division I-A level, began in late summer 1998 and culminated with the major bowl games in early January 1999. It was the first season of the Bowl Championship Series (BCS), which saw the Tennessee Volunteers win the national championship, one year after star quarterback Peyton Manning left for the National Football League (NFL). Tennessee defeated the Florida State Seminoles, 23–16, in the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe, Arizona, to secure the inaugural BCS National Championship.

The BCS combined elements of the old Bowl Coalition and the Bowl Alliance it replaced. The agreement existed between the Rose, Fiesta, Sugar, and Orange bowl games, with the Cotton Bowl Classic diminishing in status since the breakup of the Southwest Conference. Like the Bowl Alliance, a national championship game would rotate between the four bowls, with the top two teams facing each other. These teams were chosen based upon a BCS poll, combining the AP Poll, the Coaches Poll, and a computer component. The computer factored in things such as strength of schedule, margin of victory, and quality wins without taking into account time (in other words, a loss early in the season and a loss late in the season were on equal footing). Like the Bowl Coalition, the BCS bowls not hosting the national championship game would retain their traditional conference tie-ins.

The first run of the Bowl Championship Series was not without controversy as Kansas State finished third in the final BCS standings, but was not invited to a BCS bowl game; Texas A&M, who upset K-State in the Big 12 title game, took the league's automatic bid. Ohio State (ranked 4th) and two-loss Florida (8th) received the at-large bids instead. Also, Tulane went undefeated, but finished 10th in the BCS standings and was not invited to a BCS bowl because of their low strength of schedule.

Rule changes

The following rule changes were adopted by the NCAA Rules Committee during their 1998 meeting:

  • Defensive players are allowed to recover and advance backward passes. Previously the defense was only allowed to recover but not advance backward passes.
  • Illegal touching of a forward pass by an ineligible receiver is a five-yard penalty from the previous spot but no loss-of-down.
  • Defensive players may not rough an offensive player in position to receive a backward pass (i.e. trail man on option play).
  • Standardized uniform recognition regarding memorializing of deceased or severely ill teammates/coaches.
  • Eyeshields must be clear.
  • The titles of side judge and field judge were swapped, with the field judge now working on the same side of the field as the line judge (and ruling on placements with the back judge), and the side judge on the same side as the head linesman. Coincidentally, the NFL swapped the titles of back judge and field judge to match the NCAA prior to its 1998 season.

Conference and program changes

With no teams upgrading from Division I-AA, the number of Division I-A schools was fixed at 112.

  • Army broke away from almost one hundred years of tradition as an independent, joining Conference USA.
  • The Western Athletic Conference realigned their Divisions. Pod two and Pod three swap the Divisions
School1997 Conference1998 Conference
Army CadetsI-A IndependentConference USA

Regular season

August–September

The AP voters selected Ohio State as the top-ranked team to begin the season, followed by No. 2 Florida State and No. 3 Florida. Last year’s co-champions, Nebraska and Michigan, were ranked No. 4 and No. 5 respectively.

August 29–31: No. 2 Florida State beat No. 14 Texas A&M 23–14 in the Kickoff Classic while No. 4 Nebraska defeated Louisiana Tech 56–27 in the Eddie Robinson Classic. Most other teams had not begun their schedules, so no new poll was taken until the following week.

September 5: No. 1 Ohio State won 34–17 at No. 11 West Virginia. No. 2 Florida State was idle. No. 3 Florida opened their schedule with a 49–10 victory over The Citadel, while No. 4 Nebraska beat Alabama-Birmingham 38–7. No. 5 Michigan was upset 36–20 at No. 22 Notre Dame. No. 6 Kansas State blanked Indiana State 66–0 and moved up in the next poll: No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Florida State, No. 3 Florida, No. 4 Nebraska, and No. 5 Kansas State.

September 12: No. 1 Ohio State shut out Toledo 49–0. No. 2 Florida State fell 24–7 at North Carolina State, just their second loss in ACC play since joining the conference in 1992. No. 3 Florida beat Northeast Louisiana 42–10, No. 4 Nebraska won 24–3 at California, No. 5 Kansas State blew out Northern Illinois 73–7, and No. 6 UCLA defeated No. 23 Texas 49–31. The next poll featured No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Florida, No. 3 Nebraska, No. 4 UCLA, and No. 5 Kansas State.

September 19: No. 1 Ohio State beat No. 21 Missouri 35–14. The biggest game of the weekend took place in Knoxville between No. 2 Florida and No. 6 Tennessee. The Volunteers had lost to the Gators each of the past five years, despite having Hall of Famer Peyton Manning under center in four of those games. This time they finally came away with the victory, as Florida missed a 32-yard field goal in overtime to seal a 20–17 Tennessee triumph. No. 3 Nebraska was idle, No. 4 UCLA won 42–24 at Houston, and No. 5 Kansas State defeated Texas 48–7. The next poll featured No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Nebraska, No. 3 UCLA, No. 4 Tennessee, and No. 5 Kansas State.

September 26: No. 1 Ohio State was idle. No. 2 Nebraska overwhelmed No. 9 Washington 55–7. No. 3 UCLA’s game against Miami was postponed due to a hurricane, a situation which would have repercussions later in the season. No. 4 Tennessee defeated Houston 42–7, and No. 5 Kansas State blew out Northeast Louisiana 62–7. The next poll featured No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Nebraska, No. 3 Tennessee, No. 4 UCLA, and No. 5 Kansas State.

October

October 3: No. 1 Ohio State opened conference play with a 28–9 victory over No. 7 Penn State. No. 2 Nebraska needed a fourth-quarter punt return for a touchdown and a game-ending goal line stand to get past Oklahoma State 24–17. No. 3 Tennessee won 17–9 at Auburn, No. 4 UCLA beat Washington State 49–17, and No. 5 Kansas State was idle. The next poll featured No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Nebraska, No. 3 UCLA, No. 4 Tennessee, and No. 5 Kansas State.

October 10: No. 1 Ohio State shut out Illinois 41–0. No. 2 Nebraska suffered their first regular-season loss to a conference opponent since 1992, falling 28–21 to No. 18 Texas A&M. No. 3 UCLA visited No. 10 Arizona for a 52–28 victory. No. 4 Tennessee also had an easy time against a highly-ranked foe, beating No. 7 Georgia by a 22–3 score. After outscoring their first four opponents 249-21, No. 5 Kansas State was forced into a defensive battle against No. 14 Colorado, but the Wildcats still prevailed 16–9. No. 6 Florida beat No. 11 LSU 22–10 to move back into the top five: No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 UCLA, No. 3 Tennessee, No. 4 Kansas State, and No. 5 Florida.

October 17: No. 1 Ohio State defeated Minnesota 45–15. No. 2 UCLA ran out to a 17-point lead against No. 11 Oregon but allowed the Ducks to come all the way back; the lead changed hands several times before the Bruins finally won 41–38 on a field goal in overtime. No. 3 Tennessee was idle, No. 4 Kansas State beat Oklahoma State 52–20, and No. 5 Florida breezed past Auburn 24–3. The top five remained the same in the next poll.

October 24: No. 1 Ohio State won 36–10 at Northwestern, No. 2 UCLA visited California for a 28–16 victory, No. 3 Tennessee beat Alabama 35–18, and No. 4 Kansas State crushed Iowa State 52–7. No. 5 Florida was idle, and No. 6 Florida State’s 34–7 win at No. 20 Georgia Tech was impressive enough to move the Seminoles ahead of their in-state rivals in the next AP Poll: No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 UCLA, No. 3 Tennessee, No. 4 Kansas State, and No. 5 Florida State. The first-ever BCS standings were released on October 26 and featured UCLA in the top spot, followed by Ohio State in second and the next three teams in the same order as the AP Poll.

October 31: AP No. 1 Ohio State posted another dominant win, 38–7 at Indiana. BCS No. 1 UCLA trailed by 10 points in the fourth quarter against a Stanford team with a 1–6 record, but the Bruins scored two late touchdowns for a 28–24 victory. UCLA’s close shave against inferior competition caused them to drop in both the BCS and the human polls. No. 3 Tennessee won 49–14 at South Carolina and No. 4 Kansas State visited Kansas for a 54–6 triumph. No. 5 Florida State beat North Carolina 39–13, but No. 6 Florida’s 38–7 blowout of No. 11 Georgia led the voters to switch the two teams again. The AP and BCS had the same top five: No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Tennessee, No. 3 UCLA, No. 4 Kansas State, and No. 5 Florida.

November

November 7: No. 1 Ohio State, having won all of their previous games by at least 17 points, was heavily favored to beat Michigan State at home. The Buckeyes held a 24–9 lead in the third quarter, but the Spartans (under the direction of up-and-coming head coach Nick Saban) responded with 19 unanswered points and sealed their 28–24 victory with an interception in the end zone on Ohio State’s last drive. No. 2 Tennessee defeated Alabama-Birmingham 37–13. No. 3 UCLA had another close call, needing a last-minute touchdown to beat Oregon State 41–34. No. 4 Kansas State won 49–6 at Baylor, No. 5 Florida visited Vanderbilt for a 45–13 win, and No. 6 Florida State handled No. 12 Virginia 45–14. The AP’s top five were No. 1 Tennessee, No. 2 Kansas State, No. 3 UCLA, No. 4 Florida, and No. 5 Florida State. The BCS also had Tennessee at No. 1, but placed UCLA over KSU and Florida State above Florida. The Coaches Poll further muddied the waters by placing Tennessee and Kansas State in a tie for first.

November 14: No. 1 Tennessee trailed No. 10 Arkansas by double digits at the half, and the Razorbacks still led by four points with three minutes left. But a snap went over their punter’s head for a safety, and a fumble on Arkansas’ next possession enabled a Volunteers touchdown drive for a 28–24 win (the third time in three weeks that a No. 1 team played a game with that score). No. 2 Kansas State beat No. 11 Nebraska 40–30 to clinch the Big 12 North title and end the Cornhuskers’ 29-game winning streak over the Wildcats, one of the longest in NCAA history. No. 3 UCLA won 36–24 at Washington, No. 4 Florida defeated South Carolina 33–14, and No. 5 Florida State visited Wake Forest for a 24–7 victory. The AP and BCS top five remained the same, but Kansas State now stood alone at No. 1 in the Coaches Poll.

November 21: No. 1 Tennessee clinched a spot in the SEC Championship Game by defeating Kentucky 59–21. No. 2 Kansas State completed an undefeated regular season with a 31–25 victory over No. 19 Missouri. No. 3 UCLA beat USC 34–17 and earned the outright Pac-10 title. No. 4 Florida fell 23–12 at No. 5 Florida State. After their crushing defeat two weeks earlier, No. 7 Ohio State found some solace in a 31–16 win over No. 11 Michigan, the team which had dealt them several upset losses in recent years. The next AP Poll featured No. 1 Tennessee, No. 2 Kansas State, No. 3 UCLA, No. 4 Florida State, and No. 5 Ohio State. The BCS standings kept their previous top four and elevated Texas A&M, champion of the Big 12 South, to fifth place.

November 28: No. 1 Tennessee put an exclamation mark on their regular season with a 41–0 shutout of Vanderbilt. No. 2 Kansas State and No. 3 UCLA were idle, and No. 4 Florida State and No. 5 Ohio State had finished their schedules. The AP and Coaches top five remained the same, but the BCS standings moved Ohio State to No. 5 when Texas A&M lost their regular season finale 26–24 at Texas.

December

December 5: Despite being ranked first in the Coaches Poll and second in the AP ratings, Kansas State was No. 3 in the BCS standings and needed a loss by one of the teams ahead of them in order to have a shot at the championship. The game between UCLA and Miami—a makeup of the hurricane-canceled contest from September—turned out to be just what the Wildcats needed: the Bruins blew a 17-point second-half lead as Edgerrin James ran for a Miami record 299 yards and led the Hurricanes to a 49–45 win. As time was running out on UCLA, Kansas State held a 17–3 lead over No. 10 Texas A&M in the second quarter of the Big 12 Championship Game, and the crowd roared at the announcement of Miami’s victory. However, the Aggies chipped away at the Wildcats’ lead and tied the score at 27 with one minute to play. Kansas State quarterback Michael Bishop completed a 55-yard Hail Mary with time running out, but the receiver was tackled just short of the goal line and the game went into overtime. The teams traded field goals until A&M’s Branndon Stewart threw a 32-yard touchdown pass to Sirr Parker that gave the Aggies a 36–33 double-overtime triumph and ended Kansas State’s dreams of an unlikely championship.

The day almost went three-for-three on upsets as No. 23 Mississippi State held a slim lead over No. 1 Tennessee in the fourth quarter of the SEC Championship Game. However, the Volunteers scored a touchdown on a long pass by Tee Martin, forced a fumble on the next play, and immediately picked up another TD on another throw by Martin. The game ended 24–14 in favor of Tennessee, and the final AP Poll of the regular season featured No. 1 Tennessee, No. 2 Florida State, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Kansas State, and No. 5 Arizona. The final BCS standings were topped by Tennessee, Florida State, Kansas State, Ohio State, and UCLA in that order.

The Fiesta Bowl would feature a battle for the national championship between No. 1 Tennessee—the only undefeated team from the major conferences—and No. 2 Florida State, the highest-rated of several one-loss teams. (The Seminoles had previously defeated Miami and Texas A&M, the two teams which had just ended UCLA and Kansas State’s perfect seasons.) The Rose Bowl featured the traditional Pac-10 vs. Big Ten matchup between No. 6 UCLA and No. 9 Wisconsin. No. 3 Ohio State, who had tied the Badgers for the conference title, went to the Sugar Bowl against No. 8 Texas A&M. The final at-large BCS spot went to No. 7 Florida, who would face Big East champion No. 18 Syracuse in the Orange Bowl. Controversially, No. 4 Kansas State was left out of the BCS bowls despite their high ranking, instead being sent to play unranked Purdue in the Alamo Bowl. No. 10 Tulane was undefeated, but their light schedule eliminated them from championship consideration; the Green Wave would match up against Brigham Young in the Liberty Bowl.

Regular-season top-10 matchups

Rankings reflect the AP Poll. Rankings for Week 8 and beyond will list BCS Rankings first and AP Poll second. Teams that failed to be a top-10 team for one poll or the other will be noted.

  • Week 3
    • No. 6 Tennessee defeated No. 2 Florida, 20–17 OT (Neyland Stadium, Knoxville, Tennessee)
  • Week 4
  • Week 5
  • Week 6
    • No. 3 UCLA defeated No. 10 Arizona 52–28, (Arizona Stadium, Tucson, Arizona)
    • No. 4 Tennessee defeated No. 7 Georgia 22–3, (Sanford Stadium, Athens, Georgia)
  • Week 11
    • No. 1/1 Tennessee defeated No. 7/10 Arkansas, 28–24 (Neyland Stadium, Knoxville, Tennessee)
  • Week 12
    • No. 4/5 Florida State defeated No. 5/4 Florida, 23–12 (Doak Campbell Stadium, Tallahassee, Florida)
  • Week 14

Conference standings

I-AA team wins over I-A teams

Italics denotes I-AA teams. | w/l = | w/l = | w/l = | w/l = | w/l = | w/l =

Rankings

Main article: 1998 NCAA Division I-A football rankings

The top 25 from the AP and USA Today/ESPN Coaches Polls.

Preseason polls

APRankingTeam
1[Ohio State](1998-ohio-state-buckeyes-football-season) (30)
2[Florida State](1998-florida-state-seminoles-football-season) (22)
3[Florida](1998-florida-gators-football-season) (5)
4[Nebraska](1998-nebraska-cornhuskers-football-season) (4)
5[Michigan](1998-michigan-wolverines-football-season) (4)
6[Kansas State](1998-kansas-state-wildcats-football-season) (2)
7[UCLA](1998-ucla-bruins-football-season) (1)
8[Arizona State](1998-arizona-state-sun-devils-football-season) (2)
9[LSU](1998-lsu-tigers-football-season)
10[Tennessee](1998-tennessee-volunteers-football-season)
11[West Virginia](1998-west-virginia-mountaineers-football-season)
12[North Carolina](1998-north-carolina-tar-heels-football-season)
13[Penn State](1998-penn-state-nittany-lions-football-season)
14[Texas A&M](1998-texas-a-m-aggies-football-season)
15[Colorado State](1998-colorado-state-rams-football-season)
16[Virginia](1998-virginia-cavaliers-football-season)
17[Syracuse](1998-syracuse-orangemen-football-season)
18[Washington](1998-washington-huskies-football-season)
19[Georgia](1998-georgia-bulldogs-football-season)
20[Wisconsin](1998-wisconsin-badgers-football-season)
21[Southern Miss](1998-southern-miss-golden-eagles-football-season)
22[Notre Dame](1998-notre-dame-fighting-irish-football-season)
23[Michigan State](1998-michigan-state-spartans-football-season)
24[Arizona](1998-arizona-wildcats-football-season)
25[Auburn](1998-auburn-tigers-football-season)

|

USA Today/ESPN coachesRankingTeam
1[Ohio State](1998-ohio-state-buckeyes-football-season) (31)
2[Florida State](1998-florida-state-seminoles-football-season) (10)
3[Nebraska](1998-nebraska-cornhuskers-football-season) (12)
4[Florida](1998-florida-gators-football-season) (1)
5[Michigan](1998-michigan-wolverines-football-season) (4)
6[Kansas State](1998-kansas-state-wildcats-football-season) (1)
7[UCLA](1998-ucla-bruins-football-season) (3)
8[LSU](1998-lsu-tigers-football-season)
9[Arizona State](1998-arizona-state-sun-devils-football-season)
10[Tennessee](1998-tennessee-volunteers-football-season)
11[North Carolina](1998-north-carolina-tar-heels-football-season)
12[West Virginia](1998-west-virginia-mountaineers-football-season)
13[Penn State](1998-penn-state-nittany-lions-football-season)
14[Syracuse](1998-syracuse-orangemen-football-season)
15[Texas A&M](1998-texas-a-m-aggies-football-season)
16[Colorado State](1998-colorado-state-rams-football-season)
17[Washington](1998-washington-huskies-football-season)
18[Georgia](1998-georgia-bulldogs-football-season)
19[Virginia](1998-virginia-cavaliers-football-season)
20[Wisconsin](1998-wisconsin-badgers-football-season)
21[Southern Miss](1998-southern-miss-golden-eagles-football-season)
22[Auburn](1998-auburn-tigers-football-season)
23[Michigan State](1998-michigan-state-spartans-football-season)
24[Notre Dame](1998-notre-dame-fighting-irish-football-season)
25[Arizona](1998-arizona-wildcats-football-season)

|}

BCS final rankings

RankTeamConference and standingBowl game
1[Tennessee](1998-tennessee-volunteers-football-season)SEC Champions[Fiesta Bowl](1999-fiesta-bowl) (BCS National Championship)
2[Florida State](1998-florida-state-seminoles-football-season)Co-ACC Champions[Fiesta Bowl](1999-fiesta-bowl) (BCS National Championship)
3[Kansas State](1998-kansas-state-wildcats-football-season)Big 12 North Division Champions[Alamo Bowl](1998-alamo-bowl)
4[Ohio State](1998-ohio-state-buckeyes-football-season)Co-Big Ten Champions[Sugar Bowl](1999-sugar-bowl)
5[UCLA](1998-ucla-bruins-football-season)Pac-10 Champions[Rose Bowl](1999-rose-bowl)
6[Texas A&M](1998-texas-a-m-aggies-football-season)Big 12 Champions[Sugar Bowl](1999-sugar-bowl)
7[Arizona](1998-arizona-wildcats-football-season)Pac-10 second place[Holiday Bowl](1998-holiday-bowl)
8[Florida](1998-florida-gators-football-season)SEC Eastern Division second place[Orange Bowl](1999-orange-bowl)
9[Wisconsin](1998-wisconsin-badgers-football-season)Co-Big Ten Champions[Rose Bowl](1999-rose-bowl)
10[Tulane](1998-tulane-green-wave-football-season)Conference USA Champions[Liberty Bowl](1998-liberty-bowl)
11[Nebraska](1998-nebraska-cornhuskers-football-season)Big 12 North Division second place (tie)[Holiday Bowl](1998-holiday-bowl)
12[Virginia](1998-virginia-cavaliers-football-season)ACC third place[Peach Bowl](1998-peach-bowl-december)
13[Arkansas](1998-arkansas-razorbacks-football-season)Co-SEC Western Division Champions[Citrus Bowl](1999-florida-citrus-bowl)
14[Georgia Tech](1998-georgia-tech-yellow-jackets-football-season)Co-ACC Champions[Gator Bowl](1999-gator-bowl)
15[Syracuse](1998-syracuse-orangemen-football-season)Big East Champions[Orange Bowl](1999-orange-bowl)

Final polls

RankAssociated Presscolspan'"1"Coaches' Poll12345678910111213141516171819202122232425
Tennessee (70)Tennessee (62)
Ohio StateOhio State
Florida StateFlorida State
ArizonaArizona
FloridaWisconsin
WisconsinFlorida
TulaneTulane
UCLAUCLA
Georgia TechKansas State
Kansas StateAir Force
Texas A&MGeorgia Tech
MichiganMichigan
Air ForceTexas A&M
GeorgiaGeorgia
TexasPenn State
ArkansasTexas
Penn StateArkansas
VirginiaVirginia
NebraskaVirginia Tech
Miami (FL)Nebraska
MissouriMiami (FL)
Notre DameNotre Dame
Virginia TechPurdue
PurdueSyracuse
SyracuseMissouri

Bowl games

Main article: 1998–99 NCAA football bowl games

BowlSite
[Fiesta Bowl](1999-fiesta-bowl)No. 1 [Tennessee](1998-tennessee-volunteers-football-team)
[Sugar Bowl](1999-sugar-bowl)No. 4 [Ohio State](1998-ohio-state-buckeyes-football-team)
[Orange Bowl](1999-orange-bowl)No. 7 [Florida](1998-florida-gators-football-team)
[Rose Bowl](1999-rose-bowl)No. 9 [Wisconsin](1998-wisconsin-badgers-football-team)
[Cotton Bowl Classic](1999-cotton-bowl-classic)No. 20 [Texas](1998-texas-longhorns-football-team)
[Peach Bowl](1998-peach-bowl-december)No. 19 [Georgia](1998-georgia-bulldogs-football-team)
[Florida Citrus Bowl](1999-florida-citrus-bowl)No. 15 [Michigan](1998-michigan-wolverines-football-team)
[Outback Bowl](1999-outback-bowl)No. 22 [Penn State](1998-penn-state-nittany-lions-football-team)
No. 12 [Georgia Tech](1998-georgia-tech-yellow-jackets-football-team)
No. 24 [Miami (FL)](1998-miami-hurricanes-football-team)
[TCU](1998-tcu-horned-frogs-football-team)
[Alamo Bowl](1998-alamo-bowl)[Purdue](1998-purdue-boilermakers-football-team)
[Insight.com Bowl](1998-insight-com-bowl)No. 23 [Missouri](1998-missouri-tigers-football-team)
[Holiday Bowl](1998-holiday-bowl)No. 5 [Arizona](1998-arizona-wildcats-football-team)
No. 10 [Tulane](1998-tulane-green-wave-football-team)
[Colorado](1998-colorado-buffaloes-football-team)
No. 16 [Air Force](1998-air-force-falcons-football-team)
[Mississippi](1998-ole-miss-rebels-football-team)
[Music City Bowl](1998-music-city-bowl)[Virginia Tech](1998-virginia-tech-hokies-football-team)
[Las Vegas Bowl](1998-las-vegas-bowl)[North Carolina](1998-north-carolina-tar-heels-football-team)
[Marshall](1998-marshall-thundering-herd-football-team)
[Humanitarian Bowl](1998-humanitarian-bowl)[Idaho](1998-idaho-vandals-football-team)

Rankings are from the AP Poll.

Heisman Trophy voting

The Heisman Trophy is given to the year's most outstanding player

PlayerSchoolPosition1st2nd3rdTotal
**Ricky Williams****[Texas](1998-texas-longhorns-football-team)****RB****714****91****31****2,355**
Michael Bishop[Kansas State](1998-kansas-state-wildcats-football-team)QB41250169792
Cade McNown[UCLA](1998-ucla-bruins-football-team)QB28217178696
Tim Couch[Kentucky](1998-kentucky-wildcats-football-team)QB26153143527
Donovan McNabb[Syracuse](1998-syracuse-orangemen-football-team)QB135485232
Daunte Culpepper[UCF](1998-ucf-golden-knights-football-team)QB5113067
Champ Bailey[Georgia](1998-georgia-bulldogs-football-team)CB682155
Torry Holt[NC State](1998-nc-state-wolfpack-football-team)WR282244
Joe Germaine[Ohio State](1998-ohio-state-buckeyes-football-team)QB2111543
Shaun King[Tulane](1998-tulane-green-wave-football-team)QB1111338

Other major awards

  • Maxwell Award (College Player of the Year) - Ricky Williams, Texas
  • Walter Camp Award (Back) - Ricky Williams, Texas
  • Davey O'Brien Award (Quarterback) - Michael Bishop, Kansas St.
  • Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award (Senior Quarterback) - Cade McNown, UCLA
  • Doak Walker Award (Running Back) - Ricky Williams, Texas
  • Fred Biletnikoff Award (Wide Receiver) - Troy Edwards, Louisiana Tech
  • Bronko Nagurski Trophy (Defensive Player) - Champ Bailey, Georgia
  • Chuck Bednarik Award - Dat Nguyen, Texas A&M
  • Dick Butkus Award (Linebacker) - Chris Claiborne, USC
  • Lombardi Award (Lineman or Linebacker) - Dat Nguyen, Texas A&M
  • Outland Trophy (Interior Lineman) - Kris Farris, UCLA
  • Jim Thorpe Award (Defensive Back) - Antoine Winfield, Ohio St.
  • Lou Groza Award (Placekicker) - Sebastian Janikowski, Florida St.
  • Paul "Bear" Bryant Award - Bill Snyder, Kansas St.
  • Football Writers Association of America Coach of the Year Award - Phillip Fulmer, Tennessee

Attendances

#TeamGamesTotalAverage
1Michigan6665,787110,965
2Tennessee6641,484106,914
3Penn State6579,19096,532
4Ohio State6561,01493,502
5Georgia6513,71085,618
6Florida6511,79285,299
7Alabama7578,69382,670
8Auburn7567,77381,110
9Florida State6482,94180,490
10LSU6481,73980,290
11Notre Dame6480,07280,012
12Texas6464,64277,440
13Wisconsin6464,57077,428
14Nebraska7533,30576,186
15South Carolina6448,46374,744
16UCLA5368,54773,709
17Washington6428,13471,356
18Oklahoma5353,88570,777
19Michigan State7490,98970,141
20Clemson7482,50068,929
21Iowa6409,98168,330
22BYU6376,21062,702
23Arizona State6368,33561,389
24Southern California7426,29560,899
25Texas A&M6349,75558,293
26Kentucky6346,42257,737
27Missouri6344,01057,335
28North Carolina5278,35055,670
29West Virginia6324,81654,136
30Purdue6318,39653,066
31Arkansas6315,59752,600
32Virginia Tech6294,26749,045
33California6292,50048,750
34Arizona6287,49447,916
35Syracuse6287,38647,898
36Colorado6279,01946,503
37Mississippi6276,55146,092
38Air Force6273,92445,654
39Oregon6265,01144,169
40Virginia5218,80043,760
41Texas Tech6259,53743,256
42Miami Hurricanes6259,20943,202
43Kansas State7295,53742,220
44Oklahoma State5208,28041,656
45Boston College6247,20141,200
46Pittsburgh7286,66040,951
47Northwestern6245,44140,907
48Georgia Tech6242,82540,471
49North Carolina State6239,64539,941
50Minnesota5199,21439,843
51Louisville6238,07139,679
52Illinois6237,53939,590
53Utah6232,88038,813
54Mississippi State5186,92537,385
55Fresno State5185,51137,102
56Army5184,64136,928
57Indiana5182,26236,452
58Iowa State6211,08535,181
59Stanford6208,65634,776
60Washington State6208,00234,667
61Baylor5168,48533,697
62Navy6199,30133,217
63Kansas6194,20032,367
64East Carolina5158,71631,743
65Vanderbilt6190,38531,731
66Colorado State4125,16931,292
67Hawaii8234,82129,353
68Oregon State6171,28828,548
69Maryland5141,73628,347
70Tulane6167,66127,944
71TCU6163,08827,181
72New Mexico6158,83426,472
73Marshall7173,51624,788
74Southern Miss5122,80724,561
75San Diego State6146,87824,480
76Cincinnati6144,80824,135
77Toledo6142,86623,811
78Duke5118,48223,696
79Boise State7165,51523,645
80Memphis6140,87123,479
81Rutgers6139,78323,297
82UCF5113,25222,650
83Rice5110,57322,115
84Western Michigan5109,33421,867
85Nevada5105,46721,093
86Wake Forest6125,60020,933
87Central Michigan5102,99520,599
88Ball State481,68320,421
89New Mexico State5101,71120,342
90UTEP5100,72320,145
91Tulsa6116,06319,344
92Ohio592,08818,418
93SMU6109,30618,218
94UAB6108,99118,165
95UNLV590,00218,000
96Wyoming6107,55317,926
97Louisiana Tech583,73816,748
98Houston581,47716,295
99Northeast Louisiana691,43115,239
100Miami RedHawks460,51815,130
101Temple575,63515,127
102Utah State685,48014,247
103Idaho453,15613,289
104Arkansas State679,55813,260
105San Jose State562,65912,532
106Northern Illinois562,59112,518
107Eastern Michigan560,01212,002
108Bowling Green556,38511,277
109North Texas440,90410,226
110Southwestern Louisiana438,1939,548
111Akron542,0658,413
112Kent538,5147,703

Sources:

References

References

  1. (February 2019). ["NCAA Rules Changes 1998"](http://football.refs.org/rules/NCAA98pr.htmlaccessdate=2012-12-31}}{{Dead link).
  2. (1997-03-11). "Sports Briefs: Army set to join Conference USA".
  3. (2025-01-04). "Western Athletic Conference football". Wikipedia.
  4. (September 7, 2025). "FCS wins vs. FBS teams: All-time victories, upsets, wins vs. ranked teams".
  5. "Football Records". ATTENDANCE RECORDS.
  6. "NCAA Football Attendance – kenn.com blog".
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