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2004 NCAA Division I-A football season

American college football season


American college football season

FieldValue
year2004
imageMatt Leinart's Heisman Trophy.jpg
image_captionHeisman Trophy won by Matt Leinart for the 2004 season
number_of_teams117 full members + 2 transitional
preseason_ap[USC](2004-usc-trojans-football-team)
number_of_bowls28
bowl_startDecember 14, 2004
bowl_end
January 4, 2005
championship_systemBowl Championship Series
championship_bowl[2005 Orange Bowl](2005-orange-bowl)
championship_locationDolphin Stadium,
Miami Gardens, Florida
championsNone
heismanMatt Leinart (quarterback, [USC](2004-usc-trojans-football-team))

January 4, 2005 Miami Gardens, Florida

The 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season was the highest level of college football competition in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The regular season began on August 28, 2004 and ended on December 4, 2004. The postseason concluded on January 4, 2005 with the Orange Bowl, which served as the season's Bowl Championship Series (BCS) National Championship Game.

USC defeated Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl by a score of 55–19, which earned the Trojans their second consecutive AP title and first-ever BCS title. The Orange Bowl win and accompanying BCS title were later vacated as part of the sanctions levied against USC following an NCAA investigation. The Coaches Poll and FWAA titles were also vacated. USC appealed the decision but was denied by the NCAA, and the 2004 BCS title was officially vacated on June 6, 2011. 2004 is the only season in the BCS era not to have a national champion.

Rule changes

The NCAA Rules Committee adopted the following rule changes for the 2004 season:

  • Instant replay would make its debut in college football, as the Big Ten Conference began to use it on a one-year experimental basis.
  • Officials are allowed to announce the number of a player committing a penalty, similar to the NFL.
  • Modifying the rule regarding offensive substitutions made and rushing to snap the ball before the defense can make their changes; eliminating the five yard penalty for the first offense (but stopping play and warning the offensive team), but maintaining the 15 yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for further violations.
  • Allowing the head coach to request a time-out.
  • Allowing the receiving team the option to enforce encroachment penalties on punts/kickoffs either from the end of the return or from the previous line of scrimmage, requiring a re-kick.
  • Leaping on PAT/Field Goal attempts is prohibited.
  • Defensive pass interference will not be called when a kicker throws a ball high and downfield to simulate a pass.
  • Roughing the passer will not be called if a defensive player is blocked into the passer.

Conference changes

Main article: 2005 NCAA conference realignment

Prior to the 2004 season, Miami (FL) and Virginia Tech left the Big East Conference to join the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), giving the ACC 11 members. Connecticut joined the Big East after having been an Independent since ascending to Division I-A in 2000. Troy State also left their Independent status and joined the Sun Belt Conference. Florida Atlantic University and Florida International University moved up from Division I-AA and became I-A Independents. Florida A&M also briefly attempted to move up to Division I-A and become the only HBCU at college football's highest level, but the team was forced to abort its bid.

School2003 Conference2004 Conference
Connecticut HuskiesI-A IndependentBig East
Florida Atlantic OwlsI-AA IndependentI-A Independent
Florida International PanthersI-AA IndependentI-A Independent
Miami HurricanesBig EastACC
Troy State TrojansI-A IndependentSun Belt
Virginia Tech HokiesBig EastACC

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 2
    • No. 5 Miami defeated No. 4 Florida State, 16–10 OT (Miami Orange Bowl, Miami, Florida)
  • Week 5
    • No. 8 Auburn defeated No. 10 Tennessee, 34–10 (Neyland Stadium, Knoxville, Tennessee)
  • Week 6
    • No. 1 USC defeated No. 7 California, 23–17 (Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, California)
    • No. 2 Oklahoma defeated No. 5 Texas, 12–0 (Cotton Bowl, Dallas, Texas)
  • Week 7
    • No. 7 Florida State defeated No. 6 Virginia, 36–3 (Doak Campbell Stadium, Tallahassee, Florida)
    • No. 10 Wisconsin defeated No. 5 Purdue, 20–17 (Ross-Ade Stadium, West Lafayette, Indiana)
  • Week 11
    • No. 3/3 Auburn defeated No. 8/8 Georgia, 24–6 (Jordan-Hare Stadium, Auburn, Alabama)
  • Week 14
    • No. 12/10 Virginia Tech defeated No. 10/9 Miami, 16–10 (Miami Orange Bowl, Miami, Florida)

BCS Controversy

Undefeated teams

In the 2003 season, no team finished the regular season unbeaten, and five teams finished the season with one loss. In 2004, the situation became even more complicated, as five teams went without losing, a record in the BCS era (later tied in 2009). USC of the Pac-10, Oklahoma of the Big 12, Auburn of the SEC, Utah of the MWC, and Boise State of the WAC all finished the regular season undefeated. USC and Oklahoma were ranked No. 1 and No. 2, respectively, in the preseason by both the AP and Coaches Polls, but the other three undefeated teams were handicapped by starting the season out of the top 15. Thus USC and OU played for the BCS National Championship in the Orange Bowl, while Auburn, Utah, and Boise State had to settle for other bowl games.

Auburn played in the and beat Virginia Tech, the ACC champion and ranked No. 8 by the BCS. Utah became the first BCS Buster and beat Pittsburgh, the champion of the Big East and ranked No. 21, in the Fiesta Bowl. Boise State lost a close, high scoring game in the Liberty Bowl to Louisville, the No. 10 ranked Conference USA champion.

As with previous seasons, fans of successful teams left out of BCS bowls were disappointed. Auburn, Utah, and Boise State all went unbeaten but were not offered a chance to compete for the BCS championship. Auburn was especially the focus of national media attention on this topic, since Auburn managed to go undefeated in the traditionally tough SEC. Adding to the frustration with the BCS system was that Auburn and Utah, though both picked to play in BCS bowl games, would not be able to play each other as a match-up of highly ranked unbeatens. This confluence of events made 2004 a seminal year for serious momentum building behind a multi-team playoff system in college football, which would later be realized with the advent of the College Football Playoff in 2014.

USC was forced to vacate its BCS title win, along with its regular-season victory over rival UCLA, due to NCAA sanctions that stemmed from the USC athletics scandal. The AP title was not vacated, as the AP does not punish teams for violations. The severity of these sanctions has since been criticized by some pundits across college football.

Rose Bowl

Controversy also arose in selecting the second at-large team of the BCS after Utah. California expected to get the invitation, having been ranked fourth by the BCS entering the last week of the regular season. Texas, which had been left out of the BCS the previous season, was ranked fifth. Both teams finished with 10–1 records, but the Longhorns received a boost of support from poll voters in the final regular season rankings to overtake Cal and move into the fourth position, which ensured they would also receive the final at-large bid. Texas coach Mack Brown was criticized for publicly politicking voters to put Texas ahead of California, and Cal coach Jeff Tedford called for coaches' votes to be made public. Texas went on to defeat Michigan in the Rose Bowl, while California lost to Texas Tech in the Holiday Bowl. Much of the pre-bowl criticisms of Texas being given the spot vs. Michigan evaporated when the Longhorns and Wolverines produced an instant classic game that was marked by a breakthrough performance by Vince Young and a Texas FG as time expired to give them a 38–37 victory.

AP Poll

The Associated Press, as a result of two consecutive seasons of BCS controversy, prohibited the BCS from using their poll as part of its ranking formula following the 2004 season. The AP poll was replaced by the Harris Interactive poll starting in 2005, and the AP continues to award its own national championship trophy.

In another first, the LSU Tigers lost to the Iowa Hawkeyes on a last second Hail Mary pass in the Capital One Bowl, becoming the first school to lose a non-BCS bowl a year after winning the BCS National Championship Game.

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 =

  • Note: Florida Atlantic was transitioning from I-AA to I-A.

Final AP Poll

Main article: 2004 NCAA Division I-A football rankings

  1. USC (11–0)*
  2. Auburn (13–0)
  3. Oklahoma (12–1)
  4. Utah (12–0)
  5. Texas (11–1)
  6. Louisville (11–1)
  7. Georgia (10–2)
  8. Iowa (10–2)
  9. California (10–2)
  10. Virginia Tech (10–3)
  11. Miami (9–3)
  12. Boise State (11–1)
  13. Tennessee (10–3)
  14. Michigan (9–3)
  15. Florida State (9–3)
  16. LSU (9–3)
  17. Wisconsin (9–3)
  18. Texas Tech (8–4)
  19. Arizona State (9–3)
  20. Ohio State (8–4)
  21. Boston College (9–3)
  22. Fresno State (9–3)
  23. Virginia (8–4)
  24. Navy (10–2)
  25. Pittsburgh (8–4)
  • USC finished the season with a 13–0 record but was forced to vacate two wins in 2010 as a result of NCAA sanctions.

Bowl games

Main article: 2004–05 NCAA football bowl games

BCS bowls

Rankings given are AP rankings going into bowl games

Other New Years Day bowls

December bowl games

UCLA vs. Wyoming in the [[2004 Las Vegas Bowl

Heisman Trophy voting

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

PlayerSchoolPosition1st2nd3rdTotal
**Matt Leinart****[USC](2004-usc-trojans-football-team)****QB****267****211****102****1,325**
Adrian Peterson[Oklahoma](2004-oklahoma-sooners-football-team)RB154180175997
Jason WhiteOklahomaQB171149146957
Alex Smith[Utah](2004-utah-utes-football-team)QB98112117635
Reggie BushUSCRB1188083597
Cedric Benson[Texas](2004-texas-longhorns-football-team)RB124169187
Jason Campbell[Auburn](2004-auburn-tigers-football-team)QB212451162
J. J. Arrington[California](2004-california-golden-bears-football-team)RB103319115
Aaron RodgersCaliforniaQB8141567
Braylon Edwards[Michigan](2004-michigan-wolverines-football-team)WR3132762

Other major awards

  • Walter Camp Award (top player): Matt Leinart, USC
  • Maxwell Award (top player): Jason White, Oklahoma
  • AP Player of the Year: Matt Leinart, USC
  • Lombardi Award (top linebacker): David Pollack, Georgia
  • John Mackey Award (tight end): Heath Miller, Virginia
  • Doak Walker Award (running back): Cedric Benson, Texas
  • Chuck Bednarik Award (defensive player): David Pollack, Georgia
  • Outland Trophy (interior lineman): Jammal Brown, Oklahoma
  • Davey O'Brien Award (quarterback): Jason White, Oklahoma
  • Johnny Unitas Award (Sr. quarterback): Jason White, Oklahoma
  • Fred Biletnikoff Award (wide receiver): Braylon Edwards, Michigan
  • Jim Thorpe Award (defensive back): Carlos Rogers, Auburn
  • Lou Groza Award (placekicker): Mike Nugent, Ohio State
  • Ray Guy Award (punter): Daniel Sepulveda, Baylor
  • Paul "Bear" Bryant Award (Coach of the Year): Tommy Tuberville, Auburn
  • The Home Depot Coach of the Year Award: Urban Meyer, Utah
  • Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award: Paul Johnson, Navy

Attendances

#TeamGamesTotalAverage
1Michigan6666,149111,025
2Tennessee7746,507106,644
3Ohio State6629,257104,876
4Penn State6618,665103,111
5Georgia6556,47692,746
6LSU7638,46291,209
7Florida6530,45388,409
8Southern California6511,37385,229
9Oklahoma6507,18984,532
10Texas6498,56683,094
11Auburn7581,59783,085
12Florida State6497,04782,841
13Wisconsin6494,20982,368
14Alabama7573,09281,870
15Notre Dame6484,77080,795
16South Carolina6482,20080,367
17Clemson6478,00079,667
18Nebraska6466,15377,692
19Texas A&M6446,98874,498
20Michigan State6441,61373,602
21Iowa6422,38270,397
22Arkansas6409,27568,213
23Virginia Tech7455,80565,115
24Washington6388,42364,737
25California5320,09564,019
26Purdue6381,29263,549
27Arizona State6375,84662,641
28Kentucky6374,00262,334
29Virginia6368,96361,494
30UCLA6363,09260,515
31Missouri6357,42459,571
32Miami Hurricanes6354,80359,134
33BYU6350,84958,475
34Mississippi6350,23758,373
35Oregon6348,35258,059
36West Virginia6339,26956,545
37North Carolina State6337,20056,200
38Texas Tech5264,11652,823
39North Carolina6314,75052,458
40Maryland6308,46351,411
41Arizona7350,77450,111
42Illinois7340,38148,626
43Kansas State7338,83348,405
44Colorado6287,36847,895
45Minnesota6285,43847,573
46Georgia Tech6280,90246,817
47Oklahoma State6280,83246,805
48Utah6264,67044,112
49Mississippi State7306,54543,792
50Boston College5215,95243,190
51Pittsburgh6249,59941,600
52Iowa State6249,10641,518
53UTEP6247,25641,209
54Memphis5205,87441,175
55Kansas6246,39941,067
56Louisville5202,65740,531
57Fresno State5198,88539,777
58Connecticut7275,12939,304
59Air Force7266,30238,043
60New Mexico5186,40837,282
61Syracuse5185,34137,068
62Hawaii8294,40436,801
63Oregon State5181,67236,334
64San Diego State5179,97635,995
65Stanford6215,65035,942
66Washington State4139,53134,883
67Army5159,81631,963
68Navy6186,09931,017
69Rutgers6185,96630,994
70Wake Forest6184,57530,763
71East Carolina5153,41830,684
72Baylor6183,51830,586
73Boise State7213,49330,499
74TCU6176,47729,413
75Southern Miss5144,82128,964
76Vanderbilt6170,83228,472
77Northwestern6170,44928,408
78Indiana5141,88728,377
79Colorado State6163,77627,296
80USF6162,36127,060
81Northern Illinois5135,26027,052
82Marshall5129,66425,933
83Toledo5120,12424,025
84Tulane6136,97622,829
85Duke5112,52422,505
86UNLV5109,35221,870
87Louisiana-Lafayette5107,00621,401
88Cincinnati5106,27521,255
89Troy5106,14021,228
90Houston5105,83421,167
91UAB5103,03220,606
92UCF599,76119,952
93Utah State478,00019,500
94New Mexico State591,50618,301
95SMU588,53017,706
96Louisiana Tech587,74017,548
97Bowling Green587,11417,423
98Nevada6103,88217,314
99Tulsa6101,43416,906
100Idaho466,47816,620
101Temple698,73616,456
102Wyoming698,47716,413
103Western Michigan579,98315,997
104Ohio579,89315,979
105Akron579,24315,849
106Rice578,92615,785
107Miami RedHawks578,71215,742
108Arkansas State461,30715,327
109North Texas575,92115,184
110Central Michigan575,21615,043
111Louisiana-Monroe458,86914,717
112Eastern Michigan571,93714,387
113Ball State571,49814,300
114Middle Tennessee566,93813,388
115Kent State564,38412,877
116Buffalo560,92312,185
117FAU553,92110,784
118San Jose State532,3956,479

Sources:

References

References

  1. Lingard, Michael. (April 24, 2024). "USC Still Frosty Despite Reggie Bush Getting Heisman Back". Fox Sports Radio.
  2. Pointer, Michael. (2004-08-04). "Big Ten reveals instant replay details". Usatoday.Com.
  3. (October 9, 2004). "Florida A&M Tries to Recover From Failed Bid". New York Times.
  4. Jay Bilas, [https://web.archive.org/web/20100703231221/http://insider.espn.go.com/mens-college-basketball/blog?name=bilas_jay&id=5345541&action=login&appRedirect=http%3A%2F%2Finsider.espn.go.com%2Fmens-college-basketball%2Fblog%3Fname%3Dbilas_jay%26id%3D5345541 "Anyone know what NCAA's standards are?"], ''[[ESPN.com]]'', July 1, 2010.
  5. Bryant Gumbel, [http://www.hbo.com/real-sports-with-bryant-gumbel/index.html#/real-sports-with-bryant-gumbel/episodes/0/162-september-21-2010/video/gumbel-commentary-student-athlete-behavior.html/eNrjcmbO0CzLTEnNd8xLzKksyUx2zs8rSa0oUc-PSYEJBSSmp-ol5qYyFzLnszECoXRiaUl+QU5ipW1JUWkqJyMjAG2-Fzg= "Student/Athlete Behavior"], ''[[Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel]]'', September 21, 2010.
  6. Bryan Fischer, [http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/story/15168891/trojans-never-stood-a-chance-after-taking-ncaas-best-shot " Trojans never stood a chance after taking NCAA's best shot"] {{webarchive. link. (2012-01-21, ''[[CBSSports.com]]'', May 26, 2011.)
  7. Pete Fiutak, [http://msn.foxsports.com/collegefootball/story/usc-football-hit-harshly-by-inconsistent-ncaa-penalty-052611 "USC paying for NCAA's inconsistency?"], ''[[FoxSports.com]]'', May 26, 2011.
  8. Stewart Mandel, [https://web.archive.org/web/20110430030816/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/stewart_mandel/04/27/ncaa-ohio-state/index.html "What USC's sanctions mean for Ohio State"], ''[[SportsIllustrated.com]]'', April 27, 2011.
  9. (September 7, 2025). "FCS wins vs. FBS teams: All-time victories, upsets, wins vs. ranked teams".
  10. https://s3.amazonaws.com/fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/Attend.pdf {{Bare URL PDF. (December 2025)
  11. "NCAA Football Attendance – kenn.com blog".
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