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2003 NCAA Division I-A football season

American college football season


American college football season

FieldValue
year2003
imageSugar Bowl Game 2004 from Flickr 29799042.jpg
image_captionGameplay during the BCS National Championship [Sugar Bowl](2004-sugar-bowl) for the 2003 season
number_of_teams117
preseason_ap[Oklahoma](2003-oklahoma-sooners-football-team)
number_of_bowls28
bowl_startDecember 16, 2003
bowl_end
January 4, 2004
ap_poll[USC](2003-usc-trojans-football-team)
championship_systemBowl Championship Series
championship_bowl[2004 Sugar Bowl](2004-sugar-bowl)
championship_locationLouisiana Superdome,
New Orleans, Louisiana
champions[LSU](2003-lsu-tigers-football-team)
heismanJason White (quarterback, [Oklahoma](2003-oklahoma-sooners-football-team))

January 4, 2004 New Orleans, Louisiana

The 2003 NCAA Division I-A football season ended with an abundance of controversy, resulting in the claim of a split national championship. This was the first claimed split title since the inception of the BCS, something the BCS intended to eliminate. Due to on-field circumstances, the BCS becoming a means of having a single champion going forward, and finally the four-team title playoff system's institution in 2014, as of 2025 this is the most recent Division 1-A season to end with split national champions between the AP Poll and Coaches Poll. Several teams have been selected National Champions by designated selectors such as 2017 UCF and 2024 Oregon.

At season's end, three BCS Automatic Qualifying (AQ) conference teams finished the regular season with one loss, with only two spots available in the BCS National Championship Game. Three BCS Non-Automatic Qualifying (Non-AQ) conference teams also finished with one loss, TCU, Boise State and Miami (OH), stirring the debate of the BCS being unfair to BCS Non-AQ conference teams.

LSU defeated Oklahoma in the 2004 Sugar Bowl, securing the BCS National Championship, as the ESPN/USA Today Coaches' Poll was contractually obligated to vote the winner of the BCS National Championship Game No. 1, although three coaches violated this agreement by keeping USC atop their ballots. Meanwhile, when AP No. 1 USC beat (number 4) Michigan in the 2004 Rose Bowl, the AP voters kept USC in the top spot.

Army became the first team in NCAA Division I-A football modern history to finish the season 0–13.

The Home Depot Coach of the Year Award sponsored by ESPN chose USC coach Pete Carroll as their award recipient, while the Paul "Bear" Bryant Award, voted on by an association of sportswriters, chose LSU coach Nick Saban.

The Orange Bowl game was noteworthy in that Miami and Florida State previously had scheduled to play each other on Labor Day in 2004 in Miami's first game as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. Playing in the Orange Bowl ensured that their next meeting would be each of their very next games and their first of the 2004 season.

BCS selection process controversy

USC had lost in triple overtime at California on September 27, LSU lost at home to Florida on October 11, and Oklahoma, which had been No. 1 in every BCS rating, AP and Coaches' Poll of the season, lost to Kansas State in the Big 12 Championship Game, 35–7 on December 6. Although USC, then 11–1, finished ranked No. 1 in both the AP and Coaches' Polls, with LSU (12–1) ranked No. 2 and Oklahoma (12–1) No. 3, Oklahoma surpassed both USC and LSU on several BCS computer factors. Oklahoma's schedule strength was ranked 11th to LSU's 29th and USC's 37th. Oklahoma's schedule rank was 0.44 to LSU's 1.16 and USC's 1.48. As such, although the timing of Oklahoma's loss affected the human voters, the computers kept Oklahoma at No. 1 in the BCS poll. LSU was ranked No. 2 by the BCS based on its No. 2 ranking in the AP Poll, Coaches' Poll, six of seven computer rankings (with the remaining one ranking them No. 1), and strength-of-schedule calculations. USC's No. 3 BCS ranking resulted from its No. 1 AP ranking, No. 1 Coaches' Poll ranking, and No. 3 ranking in five of seven computer rankings (with the two remaining computer rankings at No. 1 and No. 4), and schedule strength, though separated by only 0.16 points.

Ted Waitt, CEO of Gateway Computers, offered the NCAA $31 million for a national championship game between USC and Louisiana State.

Rules changes

The NCAA Rules Committee adopted the following rules changes for the 2003 season:

  • The "Halo Rule" (two-yard restricted area around the kick/punt returner) is abolished. The penalty for kick-catch interference remains at 15 yards if the returner is contacted before he has a chance to catch the punt/kick.
  • Backs not positioned within the "tackle box" are prohibited from blocking below the waist anywhere behind the scrimmage line, and up to a point 10 yards downfield.
  • The game clock will start on all kickoffs once touched in the field of play, repealing a rule change adopted in the 1997 season where the clock started on the kick (except during the final 2:00 of each half).
  • Giving the offended team the option to enforce all personal fouls committed during and after a touchdown play either on the PAT or on the ensuing kickoff.

Conference and program changes

No teams upgraded from Division I-AA, leaving the number of Division I-A schools fixed at 117.

  • Two Independent schools joined conferences in 2003. South Florida joined Conference USA as its 11th member, while Utah State joined the Sun Belt Conference as its 8th member.
School2002 Conference2003 Conference
South Florida BullsI-A IndependentConference USA
Utah State AggiesI-A IndependentSun Belt

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 1
    • No. 8 USC defeated No. 6 Auburn, 23–0 (Jordan-Hare Stadium, Auburn, Alabama)
  • Week 6
    • No. 2 Miami defeated No. 5 Florida State, 22–14 (Doak Campbell Stadium, Tallahassee, Florida)
  • Week 7
    • No. 8 Ohio State defeated No. 9 Iowa, 19–10 (Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio)
  • Week 9
    • No. 4/3 USC defeated No. 8/6 Washington State, 43–16 (Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, California)
    • No. 16/10 Virginia Tech defeated No. 2/2 Miami, 31–7 (Lane Stadium, Blacksburg, Virginia)
  • Week 12
    • No. 9/5 Michigan defeated No. 2/4 Ohio State, 35–21 (Michigan Stadium, Ann Arbor, Michigan)
  • 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 = | w/l = | w/l = | w/l = | w/l =

Bowl Championship Series rankings

Main article: 2003 NCAA Division I-A football rankings

WEEKNo. 1No. 2EVENT
OCT 20[Oklahoma](2003-oklahoma-sooners-football-team)[Miami](2003-miami-hurricanes-football-team)
OCT 27OklahomaMiami[Virginia Tech](2003-virginia-tech-hokies-football-team) 31, Miami 7
NOV 3Oklahoma[USC](2003-usc-trojans-football-team)
NOV 10OklahomaUSC
NOV 17Oklahoma[Ohio State](2003-ohio-state-buckeyes-football-team)[Michigan](2003-michigan-wolverines-football-team) 35, Ohio State 21
NOV 24OklahomaUSC
DEC 1OklahomaUSC[LSU](2003-lsu-tigers-football-team) 34, [Georgia](2003-georgia-bulldogs-football-team) 13
FINALOklahomaLSU

Bowl games

Main article: 2003–04 NCAA football bowl games

Rankings given are AP poll positions at time of game

BCS bowls

Other January bowls

December Bowl games

Final AP Poll

TeamFinal RecordPoints
1. [USC](2003-usc-trojans-football-team) (48)
2. [LSU](2003-lsu-tigers-football-team) (17)
3. [Oklahoma](2003-oklahoma-sooners-football-team)
4. [Ohio State](2003-ohio-state-buckeyes-football-team)
5. [Miami (FL)](2003-miami-hurricanes-football-team)
6. [Michigan](2003-michigan-wolverines-football-team)
7. [Georgia](2003-georgia-bulldogs-football-team)
8. [Iowa](2003-iowa-hawkeyes-football-team)
9. [Washington State](2003-washington-state-cougars-football-team)
10. [Miami (OH)](2003-miami-redhawks-football-team)
11. [Florida State](2003-florida-state-seminoles-football-team)
12. [Texas](2003-texas-longhorns-football-team)
13. [Mississippi](2003-ole-miss-rebels-football-team)
14. [Kansas State](2003-kansas-state-wildcats-football-team)
15. [Tennessee](2003-tennessee-volunteers-football-team)
16. [Boise State](2003-boise-state-broncos-football-team)
17. [Maryland](2003-maryland-terrapins-football-team)
18. [Purdue](2003-purdue-boilermakers-football-team)
19. [Nebraska](2003-nebraska-cornhuskers-football-team)
20. [Minnesota](2003-minnesota-golden-gophers-football-team)
21. [Utah](2003-utah-utes-football-team)
22. [Clemson](2003-clemson-tigers-football-team)
23. [Bowling Green](2003-bowling-green-falcons-football-team)
24. [Florida](2003-florida-gators-football-team)
25. [Texas Christian](2003-tcu-horned-frogs-football-team)

Others receiving votes: 26. Oklahoma State 109, 27. Arkansas 73, 28. Virginia 36, 29. Northern Illinois 30, 30. Auburn 8, 30. Oregon State 8, 32. Pittsburgh 7, 32. N.C. State 7, 34. West Virginia 4, 35. Connecticut 2.

Final Coaches Poll

Three coaches voted for USC as the No. 1 team, even though the polled coaches are required to vote the BCS champion as No. 1. Because the votes were not public, it is not known which three coaches placed those votes. However, it is known that USC coach Pete Carroll could not have voted for his own team since he was not a voting coach that season.

TeamFinal RecordPoints
1. [LSU](2003-lsu-tigers-football-team) (60)
2. [USC](2003-usc-trojans-football-team) (3)
3. [Oklahoma](2003-oklahoma-sooners-football-team)
4. [Ohio State](2003-ohio-state-buckeyes-football-team)
5. [Miami (FL)](2003-miami-hurricanes-football-team)
6. [Georgia](2003-georgia-bulldogs-football-team)
7. [Michigan](2003-michigan-wolverines-football-team)
8. [Iowa](2003-iowa-hawkeyes-football-team)
9. [Washington State](2003-washington-state-cougars-football-team)
10. [Florida State](2003-florida-state-seminoles-football-team)
11. [Texas](2003-texas-longhorns-football-team)
12. [Miami (OH)](2003-miami-redhawks-football-team)
13. [Kansas State](2003-kansas-state-wildcats-football-team)
14. [Mississippi](2003-ole-miss-rebels-football-team)
15. [Boise State](2003-boise-state-broncos-football-team)
16. [Tennessee](2003-tennessee-volunteers-football-team)
17. [Minnesota](2003-minnesota-golden-gophers-football-team)
18. [Nebraska](2003-nebraska-cornhuskers-football-team)
19. [Purdue](2003-purdue-boilermakers-football-team)
20. [Maryland](2003-maryland-terrapins-football-team)
21. [Utah](2003-utah-utes-football-team)
22. [Clemson](2003-clemson-tigers-football-team)
23. [Bowling Green](2003-bowling-green-falcons-football-team)
24. [TCU](2003-tcu-horned-frogs-football-team)
25. [Florida](2003-florida-gators-football-team)

Also receiving votes

Northern Illinois (10–2) 80; Arkansas (9–4) 74; Oklahoma State (9–4) 63; Auburn (8–5) 20; North Carolina State (8–5) 17; Oregon State (8–5) 15; West Virginia (8–5) 14; Southern Mississippi (9–4) 12; Fresno State (9–5) 6; Hawaii (9–5) 6; Pittsburgh (8–5) 5; Texas Tech (8–5) 4; Marshall (8–4) 3; Virginia (8–5) 3; Boston College (8–5) 2; California (8–6) 1; Connecticut (9–3) 1; Memphis (9–4) 1; Michigan State Spartans (8–5) 1; Missouri (8–5) 1; North Texas (9–4) 1.

Heisman Trophy voting

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

PlayerSchoolPosition1st2nd3rdTotal
**Jason White****[Oklahoma](2003-oklahoma-sooners-football-team)****QB****319****204****116****1,481**
Larry Fitzgerald[Pittsburgh](2003-pittsburgh-panthers-football-team)WR2532331281,353
Eli Manning[Ole Miss](2003-ole-miss-rebels-football-team)QB95132161710
Chris Perry[Michigan](2003-michigan-wolverines-football-team)RB2766128341
Darren Sproles[Kansas State](2003-kansas-state-wildcats-football-team)RB153029134
Matt Leinart[USC](2003-usc-trojans-football-team)QB52758127
Philip Rivers[NC State](2003-nc-state-wolfpack-football-team)QB182024118
Mike WilliamsUSCWR12121878
Ben Roethlisberger[Miami (OH)](2003-miami-redhawks-football-team)QB591447
B. J. Symons[Texas Tech](2003-texas-tech-red-raiders-football-team)QB172138

Other major awards

  • Maxwell Award (College Player of the Year): Eli Manning, Mississippi
  • Walter Camp Award (top back): Larry Fitzgerald, Pittsburgh
  • AP Player Of the Year: Jason White, Oklahoma
  • Davey O'Brien Award (quarterback): Jason White, Oklahoma
  • Johnny Unitas Award (Sr. quarterback): Eli Manning, Mississippi
  • Doak Walker Award (running back): Chris Perry, Michigan
  • Fred Biletnikoff Award (wide receiver): Larry Fitzgerald, Pittsburgh
  • John Mackey Award (tight end): Kellen Winslow, Miami, Florida
  • Lombardi Award (top lineman/linebacker): Tommie Harris, Oklahoma
  • Dave Rimington Trophy (center): Jake Grove, Virginia Tech
  • Outland Trophy (interior lineman): Robert Gallery, Iowa
  • Chuck Bednarik Award (defensive player): Teddy Lehman, Oklahoma
  • Dick Butkus Award (linebacker): Teddy Lehman, Oklahoma
  • Jim Thorpe Award (defensive back): Derrick Strait, Oklahoma
  • Lou Groza Award (placekicker): Jonathan Nichols, Mississippi
  • Ray Guy (punter): B.J. Sander, Ohio State
  • Paul "Bear" Bryant Award (Coach of the Year): Nick Saban, LSU
  • The Home Depot Coach of the Year Award: Pete Carroll, USC

Attendances

#TeamGTotalAverage
1Michigan7776,429110,918
2Penn State7739,403105,629
3Tennessee7735,269105,038
4Ohio State8838,963104,870
5Georgia6552,34892,058
6LSU7636,81790,974
7Florida6541,06090,177
8Auburn7596,42285,203
9Texas6500,03483,339
10Oklahoma7582,41383,202
11Florida State6498,89583,149
12Alabama8659,10682,388
13South Carolina8646,75480,844
14Notre Dame6484,77080,795
15Wisconsin7549,40478,486
16Southern California6466,82477,804
17Nebraska7544,27677,754
18Texas A&M7533,70376,243
19Clemson7532,55176,079
20Michigan State7509,81172,830
21Washington7503,34171,906
22Iowa7460,58465,798
23Kentucky7454,45764,922
24Arkansas7445,11963,588
25Virginia Tech7434,21462,031
26Brigham Young6369,00361,501
27Virginia6362,54560,424
28Pittsburgh6355,18359,197
29Purdue7410,17658,597
30Miami Hurricanes7406,94658,135
31Oregon6346,20757,701
32UCLA6339,81356,636
33Mississippi7395,56156,509
34Arizona State6325,48854,248
35Missouri6319,72153,287
36North Carolina State7372,91953,274
37Georgia Tech6317,17252,862
38West Virginia7365,43652,205
39Maryland6307,41851,236
40Colorado6302,53850,423
41Texas Tech6297,65049,608
42Illinois6288,58148,097
43Mississippi State6286,00047,667
44North Carolina6282,80047,133
45Kansas State8376,87847,110
46Oklahoma State7314,10744,872
47Stanford6269,22144,870
48Iowa State7313,75744,822
49Minnesota7309,03844,148
50Arizona7299,35242,765
51Boston College6255,62242,604
52Syracuse7288,23841,177
53Hawaii7285,54040,791
54Louisville6240,27940,047
55Air Force6235,25939,210
56Kansas7271,25138,750
57Memphis7270,67338,668
58Fresno State6231,61838,603
59California6229,83138,305
60Connecticut6222,35637,059
61Army7255,60536,515
62TCU6216,93136,155
63Oregon State7252,99336,142
64Utah6210,80135,134
65Indiana6209,90034,983
66Washington State5166,65333,331
67New Mexico7232,73733,248
68East Carolina6198,07333,012
69Colorado State6183,78630,631
70South Florida6183,06930,512
71Navy5149,68229,936
72Baylor7208,96029,851
73Northwestern6172,57828,763
74Southern Miss6171,87028,645
75Vanderbilt7197,97728,282
76Wake Forest7197,91128,273
77Boise State6168,59028,098
78Marshall5139,18627,837
79Rutgers6164,03227,339
80Tulane6153,80825,635
81Miami RedHawks5125,66125,132
82Toledo6147,82024,637
83UNLV6146,19124,365
84UCF5121,57424,315
85Temple5120,68724,137
86Northern Illinois7165,02623,575
87UAB5116,19023,238
88San Diego State6135,66922,612
89Nevada6133,54622,258
90Tulsa6132,78922,132
91Cincinnati6131,76621,961
92Houston6130,84421,807
93Bowling Green7147,01321,002
94Troy State483,59620,899
95Louisiana Tech5103,89020,778
96Rice6123,07120,512
97Duke7140,18120,026
98UTEP7140,06520,009
99North Texas593,46918,694
100Western Michigan6110,87218,479
101Arkansas State587,43917,488
102Southern Methodist6104,60917,435
103New Mexico State580,34316,069
104Ohio694,94415,824
105Wyoming694,21415,702
106San Jose State575,39815,080
107Utah State574,60414,921
108Louisiana-Lafayette683,97013,995
109Central Michigan683,44213,907
110Akron682,86913,812
111Buffalo674,51312,419
112Ball State674,03412,339
113Idaho560,31912,064
114Louisiana-Monroe556,49211,298
115Eastern Michigan778,80811,258
116Middle Tennessee666,12711,021
117Kent State651,1448,524

Source:

References

References

  1. "2003 Bowl Championship Series Standings". Fox Sports.
  2. "2003 NCAA Football Rankings". ESPN.
  3. (2004-01-16). "Ted Waitt's $31 million football offer kicks off controversy". Sioux City Journal.
  4. (September 7, 2025). "FCS wins vs. FBS teams: All-time victories, upsets, wins vs. ranked teams".
  5. http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/Attendance/2003.pdf {{Bare URL PDF. (December 2025)
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