2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season












































2013 NCAA Division I FBS season
2014 BCS Championship.JPG
Number of teams 124 full members + 1 transitional
Duration August 29 – December 14
Preseason AP No. 1 Alabama Crimson Tide
Post-season
Duration December 21, 2013 – January 6, 2014
Bowl games 35
Heisman Trophy
Jameis Winston, Florida State
Bowl Championship Series
2014 BCS Championship Game
Site
Rose Bowl Stadium
Pasadena, California
Winner Florida State Seminoles
Division I FBS football seasons

← 2012

2014 →


The 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season was the highest level college football competition in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).


The regular season began on August 29, 2013 and ended on December 14, 2013. The postseason concluded on January 6, 2014 with the final BCS National Championship Game, played at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.


The Florida State Seminoles beat the Auburn Tigers in the BCS National Championship Game to become the consensus national champion of the 2013 season. This was the final season in which the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) was used to determine the national champion of the Football Bowl Subdivision; the BCS was replaced by the College Football Playoff system starting with the 2014 season.




Contents






  • 1 Rule changes


  • 2 Conference realignment


    • 2.1 Membership changes




  • 3 Other headlines


  • 4 Updated stadiums


  • 5 Conference standings


  • 6 Conference champions


  • 7 Final BCS rankings


  • 8 Bowl games


    • 8.1 Bowl record by conference




  • 9 Awards and honors


    • 9.1 Heisman Trophy


    • 9.2 Other major awards


    • 9.3 Special awards


    • 9.4 Offense


    • 9.5 Defense


    • 9.6 Special teams


    • 9.7 Coaches


      • 9.7.1 Assistants




    • 9.8 All-Americans




  • 10 Coaching changes


  • 11 Television viewers and ratings


    • 11.1 Most watched regular season games


    • 11.2 Kickoff games


    • 11.3 Conference championship games




  • 12 See also


  • 13 References


  • 14 External links





Rule changes


The following rule changes were made by the NCAA Football Rules Committee for the 2013 season:[1]



  • Players who intentionally deliver a blow above the shoulders of a defenseless player (targeting) will now be automatically ejected from the game in addition to the 15-yard penalty assessed. If the ejection occurs in the first half, it is for the remainder of the game. If the ejection occurs in the second half or in overtime, it is for the remainder of the game plus the first half of the next scheduled game. The ejection penalty is automatically reviewed to determine if the hit was intentional; however, the yardage penalty is not reviewable (this rule was later changed for the 2014 season to overturn the yardage penalty if the ejection was overturned).[2]

  • Blocking below the waist is now legal if done from the front side of the defender anywhere on the field, while blocks below the waist delivered from the side or back are fouls, simplifying rule changes from the 2011 and 2012 seasons.

  • In the final minute of each half, if the clock is stopped solely for an injured player, there will be an option for a 10-second runoff before the ball is put in play to cut down on teams faking injuries to stop the clock. If the clock is stopped for another reason (first down, incomplete pass, etc.) or if players from both teams are injured on the same play no runoff will occur.

  • Establishing three seconds as the minimum time required to be on the game clock to spike the ball to stop the clock and get an additional play. If one or two seconds remain on the game clock when the ball is spiked, the half or game will end.

  • Permitting the use of electronic equipment such as wireless headsets for game officials to communicate with each other.

  • Two players at the same position on the same team may not wear the same uniform number (example, two quarterbacks on the same team cannot wear #12).

  • Players that change numbers during a game must report to the referee, who will announce it via wireless microphone. Failure to report is a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty.

  • Instant replay will be permitted to adjust the game clock at the end of each quarter. Previously, instant replay could only adjust the game clock at the end of each half.

  • Permitting the Big 12 Conference to experiment with an eighth official during conference games, positioned in the offensive backfield opposite the Referee (similar to the positioning of the umpire in the NFL) to assist in detecting infractions (such as holding, chop blocks, blindside hits on the quarterback, etc.) on the offensive line as well as spotting the ball and monitoring substitutions. This official will be referred to as an "alternate referee" and wear an "A" on the back of the uniform. Use of eight-man officiating crews was expanded to all FBS conferences in the 2014 season.[3]


A rule that would have required the colors of uniform jerseys and pants to contrast to the field was recommended by the Rules Committee but was denied by the Playing Rules Oversight Panel. This rule was proposed to prevent teams (such as Boise State) from wearing uniforms that matched the color of their field. Another recommended rule would have switched the side of the field on which the line-to-gain and down markers are displayed in each half but was also denied.[4]


The NCAA Legislative Council also approved a new rule that allows any FBS team with a 6–6 record entering a conference championship game to be bowl-eligible regardless of the result of the title game. Previously, such teams (for example, Georgia Tech last season and UCLA in 2011) had to seek an NCAA waiver if they lost in their conference championship.[5]



Conference realignment



On April 3, 2013, the schools remaining in the original Big East Conference, which had sold the "Big East" name to the seven Catholic schools that would later leave the league to form the new Big East in July 2013, announced that they would operate as the American Athletic Conference (shortened to AAC or "The American).[6] The AAC filled its membership by adding schools from Conference USA, which replaced its losses with former Sun Belt and Western Athletic Conference (WAC) members.


The WAC discontinued football as a sponsored sport after the 2012 season when most of its football-playing members announced their departures for other conferences, primarily the Mountain West, in the preceding years. The WAC became the first FBS (formerly Division I-A) conference to drop football since the Big West Conference did so after the 2000 season. Idaho and New Mexico State, the two WAC football members who remained for 2013 season, temporarily became FBS independents in football.



Membership changes


































































































School
Former conference
New conference

Florida Atlantic

Sun Belt

Conference USA

FIU

Sun Belt

Conference USA

Georgia State

CAA (FCS)

Sun Belt

Houston

Conference USA

The American

Idaho

WAC

FBS independent

Louisiana Tech

WAC

Conference USA

Memphis

Conference USA

The American

Middle Tennessee

Sun Belt

Conference USA

New Mexico State

WAC

FBS independent

North Texas

Sun Belt

Conference USA

Pittsburgh

Big East

ACC

San Jose State

WAC

Mountain West

SMU

Conference USA

The American

Syracuse

Big East

ACC

Texas State

WAC

Sun Belt

UCF

Conference USA

The American

Utah State

WAC

Mountain West

UTSA

WAC

Conference USA


Other headlines



  • May 14 – The University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa announced that effective July 1, all of the school's men's sports teams would use the nickname Rainbow Warriors, a combination of the school's historic name of "Rainbows" and the "Warriors" nickname used by some teams since 2000. This reversed a plan announced by UH in February 2013, under which all men's teams would use "Warriors", previously used by football, men's golf, and men's volleyball. UH had allowed men's teams to choose their own nicknames in 2000, which resulted in the baseball team using "Rainbows", the three aforementioned teams using "Warriors", and other men's teams using "Rainbow Warriors". The change did not affect UH women's sports, which continue to be known as Rainbow Wahine.[7]

  • May 20 – The organizers of the Military Bowl announced that the game, previously held at RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C., would be moved to Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland effective with the upcoming 2013 edition.[8]

  • September 7 – The 2013 Michigan–Notre Dame game set a NCAA record for attendance in a game with 115,109 fans attending the game at Michigan Stadium (also known as the Big House).[9] Michigan won the game 41–30.[9]

  • October 10 – Minnesota and its head coach Jerry Kill jointly announced that Kill would take an indefinite leave of absence, effective immediately, to focus on treatment and management of his epilepsy. Kill had missed the second half of the Golden Gophers' win over Western Illinois on September 14 due to a seizure, and was unable to travel with the team to Michigan on October 5 due to his condition.[10] Minnesota named defensive coordinator Tracy Claeys as interim head coach; Kill returned to the team for the Northwestern game on October 19, but remained in the press box, allowing Claeys to direct the team from the sidelines[11] until resuming on-field duties in the second half of the Texas Bowl.[12]

  • November 30 – In a game whose winner would clinch the SEC West division and a berth in the 2013 SEC Championship Game,[13][14] the No. 4-ranked Auburn Tigers upset the No. 1 Alabama Crimson Tide in the 2013 Iron Bowl by a score of 34–28. Auburn's Chris Davis returned a missed Alabama field goal attempt for a touchdown on the final play of the game, which was dubbed the "Kick Six." The Iron Bowl was one of the most-watched games of the 2013 season, and the play was widely considered to be one of the greatest moments in the history of college football.[15][16][17][18][19]



Updated stadiums




  • Nebraska's Memorial Stadium was expanded.


  • Kansas State's Bill Snyder Family Stadium was renovated.


  • Arizona's Arizona Stadium was renovated.


  • Washington returned to Husky Stadium following a $280 million renovation that began during the 2011 season.


  • UCLA's Rose Bowl was renovated.


  • Houston's Robertson Stadium was closed after the 2012 season; a new venue that ultimately became TDECU Stadium opened on the former stadium's site in 2014. The Cougars used Reliant Stadium (home to the Houston Texans) for five of their seven home games in 2013 and two games at BBVA Compass Stadium (home to the Houston Dynamo of MLS).


  • Massachusetts' Warren McGuirk Alumni Stadium was renovated, maintaining its previous capacity of 17,000, and was planned to be ready by the 2014 season. The Minutemen were to use Gillette Stadium (home to the New England Patriots and New England Revolution) for their entire 2013 home schedule, however the school was also contracted to play at least four home games at Gillette Stadium in each season from 2014 to 2016.


  • Missouri's Faurot Field underwent renovation, and its seating was temporarily cut from 71,004 to 67,124 for 2013, in preparation for an expansion to 77,000 in 2014.[20]


  • Texas Tech's Jones AT&T Stadium was renovated with an upgraded video board and colonnade.



Conference standings









































































































































































































2013 American Athletic Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
No. 10 UCF $
  8
0
        12
1
 
No. 15 Louisville
  7
1
        12
1
 

Cincinnati
  6
2
        9
4
 

Houston
  5
3
        8
5
 

SMU
  4
4
        5
7
 

Rutgers
  3
5
        6
7
 

Connecticut
  3
5
        3
9
 

South Florida
  2
6
        2
10
 

Memphis
  1
7
        3
9
 

Temple
  1
7
        2
10
 


  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

















































































































































































































































2013 ACC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  

Atlantic Division
No. 1 Florida State x$#
  8
0
        14
0
 
No. 8 Clemson %
  7
1
        11
2
 

Boston College
  4
4
        7
6
 

Syracuse
  4
4
        7
6
 

Maryland
  3
5
        7
6
 

Wake Forest
  2
6
        4
8
 

NC State
  0
8
        3
9
 

Coastal Division
No. 23 Duke x
  6
2
        10
4
 

Miami
  5
3
        9
4
 

Virginia Tech
  5
3
        8
5
 

Georgia Tech
  5
3
        7
6
 

North Carolina
  4
4
        7
6
 

Pittsburgh
  3
5
        7
6
 

Virginia
  0
8
        2
10
 

Championship: Florida State 45, Duke 7


  • # – BCS National Champion

  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion

  • % – BCS at-large representative

  • x – Division champion/co-champions

Rankings from AP Poll



















































































































































































































2013 Big Ten football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  

Legends Division
No. 3 Michigan State x$
  8
0
        13
1
 

Iowa
  5
3
        8
5
 

Nebraska
  5
3
        9
4
 

Minnesota
  4
4
        8
5
 

Michigan
  3
5
        7
6
 

Northwestern
  1
7
        5
7
 

Leaders Division
No. 12 Ohio State x%
  8
0
        12
2
 
No. 22 Wisconsin
  6
2
        9
4
 

Penn State*
  4
4
        7
5
 

Indiana
  3
5
        5
7
 

Illinois
  1
7
        4
8
 

Purdue
  0
8
        1
11
 

Championship: Michigan State 34, Ohio State 24


  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion

  • % – BCS at-large representative

  • x – Division champion/co-champions

  • Penn State ineligible for conference championship game and post-season bowl games due to NCAA sanctions

Rankings from AP Poll



















































































































































































2013 Big 12 football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
No. 13 Baylor $
  8
1
        11
2
 
No. 6 Oklahoma %
  7
2
        11
2
 
No. 17 Oklahoma State
  7
2
        10
3
 

Texas
  7
2
        8
5
 

Kansas State
  5
4
        8
5
 

Texas Tech
  4
5
        8
5
 

TCU
  2
7
        4
8
 

West Virginia
  2
7
        4
8
 

Iowa State
  2
7
        3
9
 

Kansas
  1
8
        3
9
 



  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion

  • % – BCS at-large representative

Rankings from AP Poll

















































































































































































































































2013 Conference USA football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  

East Division

Marshall x
  7
1
        10
4
 

East Carolina
  6
2
        10
3
 

Middle Tennessee
  6
2
        8
5
 

Florida Atlantic
  4
4
        6
6
 

UAB
  1
7
        2
10
 

Southern Miss
  1
7
        1
11
 

FIU
  1
7
        1
11
 

West Division

Rice x$
  7
1
        10
4
 

UTSA
  6
2
        7
5
 

North Texas
  6
2
        9
4
 

Tulane
  5
3
        7
6
 

Louisiana Tech
  3
5
        4
8
 

Tulsa
  2
6
        3
9
 

UTEP
  1
7
        2
10
 

Championship: Rice 41, Marshall 24


  • $ – Conference champion

  • x – Division champion/co-champions

Rankings from AP Poll


































































































































































































































2013 Mid-American Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  

East Division

Bowling Green x$
  7
1
        10
4
 

Buffalo
  6
2
        8
5
 

Ohio
  4
4
        7
6
 

Akron
  4
4
        5
7
 

Kent State
  3
5
        4
8
 

UMass
  1
7
        1
11
 

Miami
  0
8
        0
12
 

West Division

Northern Illinois x
  8
0
        12
2
 

Ball State
  7
1
        10
3
 

Toledo
  5
3
        7
5
 

Central Michigan
  5
3
        6
6
 

Eastern Michigan
  1
7
        2
10
 

Western Michigan
  1
7
        1
11
 

Championship: Bowling Green 47, Northern Illinois 27



  • $ – Conference champion

  • x – Division champion/co-champions

Rankings from AP Poll



















































































































































































































2013 Mountain West football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  

Mountain Division

Utah State x
  7
1
        9
5
 

Boise State
  6
2
        8
5
 

Colorado State
  5
3
        8
6
 

Wyoming
  3
5
        5
7
 

New Mexico
  1
7
        3
9
 

Air Force
  0
8
        2
10
 

West Division

Fresno State x$
  7
1
        11
2
 

San Diego State
  6
2
        8
5
 

UNLV
  5
3
        7
6
 

San Jose State
  5
3
        6
6
 

Nevada
  3
5
        4
8
 

Hawaii
  0
8
        1
11
 

Championship: Fresno State 24, Utah State 17


  • $ – Conference champion

  • x – Division champion/co-champions

Rankings from AP Poll



















































































































































































































2013 Pac-12 football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  

North Division
No. 11 Stanford xy$
  7
2
        11
3
 
No. 9 Oregon x
  7
2
        11
2
 
No. 25 Washington
  5
4
        9
4
 

Oregon State
  4
5
        7
6
 

Washington State
  4
5
        6
7
 

California
  0
9
        1
11
 

South Division
No. 21 Arizona State x
  8
1
        10
4
 
No. 16 UCLA
  6
3
        10
3
 
No. 19 USC
  6
3
        10
4
 

Arizona
  4
5
        8
5
 

Utah
  2
7
        5
7
 

Colorado
  1
8
        4
8
 

Championship: Stanford 38, Arizona State 14


  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion

  • x – Division champion/co-champions

  • y – Championship game participant

Rankings from AP Poll

















































































































































































































































2013 SEC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  

Eastern Division
No. 5 Missouri x
  7
1
        12
2
 
No. 4 South Carolina
  6
2
        11
2
 

Georgia
  5
3
        8
5
 
No. 24 Vanderbilt
  4
4
        9
4
 

Florida
  3
5
        4
8
 

Tennessee
  2
6
        5
7
 

Kentucky
  0
8
        2
10
 

Western Division
No. 2 Auburn xy$
  7
1
        12
2
 
No. 7 Alabama x%
  7
1
        11
2
 
No. 14 LSU
  5
3
        10
3
 
No. 18 Texas A&M
  4
4
        9
4
 

Mississippi State
  3
5
        7
6
 

Ole Miss
  3
5
        8
5
 

Arkansas
  0
8
        3
9
 

Championship: Auburn 59, Missouri 42


  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion

  • % – BCS at-large representative

  • x – Division champion/co-champions

  • y – Championship game participant

Rankings from AP Poll[21]





















































































































































2013 Sun Belt football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  

Arkansas State +
  5
2
        8
5
 

WKU
  4
3
        8
4
 

Louisiana–Monroe
  4
3
        6
6
 

South Alabama
  4
3
        6
6
 

Troy
  4
3
        6
6
 

Texas State
  2
5
        6
6
 

Louisiana–Lafayette**
  0
2
        1
4
 

Georgia State*
  0
7
        0
12
 



  • + – Conference co-champions

  • **ULL vacated 8 games and co-championship due to major NCAA violations.
    Georgia State ineligible for post-season bowl games due to FBS transition and ineligible for Sun Belt Conference championship due to Sun Belt Conference decision.

Rankings from AP Poll























































































































2013 Division I FBS independents football records
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  

Navy
   
 
        9
4
 

BYU
   
 
        8
5
 

Army
   
 
        3
9
 

New Mexico State
   
 
        2
10
 

Idaho
   
 
        1
11
 
No. 20 Notre Dame
   
 
        0*
4
 


  • *All wins for Notre Dame (9–4) in the 2013 season are vacated
Rankings from AP Poll




Conference champions


Rankings reflect the Week 15 AP Poll before the conference championship games were played.






































































































Conference
Champion
Runner-up
Championship Game Score

Offensive Player of the Year

Defensive Player of the Year

Coach of the Year

American
#15 UCF
N/A
N/A

Blake Bortles, UCF

Marcus Smith, Louisville

George O'Leary, UCF

ACC
#1 Florida State
#20 Duke

45–7

Jameis Winston, Florida State[22]

Aaron Donald, Pittsburgh

David Cutcliffe, Duke

Big 12
#9 Baylor
N/A
N/A

Bryce Petty, Baylor

Jackson Jeffcoat, Texas & Jason Verrett, TCU

Art Briles, Baylor

Big Ten
#10 Michigan State
#2 Ohio State

34–24

Braxton Miller, Ohio State[23]

Chris Borland, Wisconsin

Mark Dantonio, Michigan State

C-USA

Rice

Marshall

41–24

Rakeem Cato, Marshall

Shawn Jackson, Tulsa

David Bailiff, Rice

MAC

Bowling Green
#16 Northern Illinois

47–27

Jordan Lynch, Northern Illinois[24]

Khalil Mack, Buffalo

Rod Carey, Northern Illinois

MW
#24 Fresno State

Utah State

24-17

Derek Carr, Fresno State

Shaquil Barrett, Colorado State

Matt Wells, Utah State

Pac-12
#7 Stanford
#11 Arizona State

38–14

Ka’Deem Carey, Arizona

Will Sutton, Arizona State

Todd Graham, Arizona State

SEC
#3 Auburn
#5 Missouri

59–42

Tre Mason, Auburn

Michael Sam, Missouri & C.J. Mosley, Alabama

Gus Malzahn, Auburn

Sun Belt

Arkansas State*

Louisiana–Lafayette* (vacated)


N/A
N/A

Antonio Andrews, Western Kentucky

Xavius Boyd, Western Kentucky

Joey Jones, South Alabama

  • Louisiana–Lafayette vacated its shared Sun Belt Conference title due to NCAA penalties levied in 2016.[25]




Final BCS rankings






























































































































































BCS

School

Record

Bowl Game
1

Florida State
13–0

BCS Championship
2

Auburn
12–1
3

Alabama
11–1

Sugar Bowl
4

Michigan State
12–1

Rose Bowl Game
5

Stanford
11–2
6

Baylor
11–1

Fiesta Bowl
7

Ohio State
12–1

Orange Bowl
8

Missouri
11–2

Cotton Bowl
9

South Carolina
10–2

Capital One Bowl
10

Oregon
10–2

Alamo Bowl
11

Oklahoma
10–2
Sugar Bowl
12

Clemson
10–2
Orange Bowl
13

Oklahoma State
10–2
Cotton Bowl
14

Arizona State
10–3

Holiday Bowl
15

UCF
11–1
Fiesta Bowl
16

LSU
9–3

Outback Bowl
17

UCLA
9–3

Sun Bowl
18

Louisville
11–1

Russell Athletic Bowl
19

Wisconsin
9–3
Capital One Bowl
20

Fresno State
12–1

Las Vegas Bowl
21

Texas A&M
8–4

Chick-fil-A Bowl
22

Georgia
8–4

Gator Bowl
23

Northern Illinois
12–1

Poinsettia Bowl
24

Duke
10–3
Chick-fil-A Bowl
25

USC
9–4
Las Vegas Bowl


Bowl games




Bowl record by conference























































































Conference Total games Wins Losses Pct.
Sun Belt 2 2 0 1.000
SEC 10 7 3 .700
Pac-12 9 6 3 .667
Independents 3 2 1 .667
C-USA 6 3 3 .500
MW 6 3 3 .500
American 5 2 3 .400
Big 12 6 3 3 .500
ACC 11 5 6 .455
Big Ten 7 2 5 .286
MAC 5 0 5 .000


Awards and honors



Heisman Trophy


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











































































Player School Position 1st 2nd 3rd Total
Jameis Winston Florida State QB 668 84 33
2,205
AJ McCarron Alabama QB 79 162 143 704
Jordan Lynch Northern Illinois QB 40 149 140 558
Andre Williams Boston College RB 29 127 129 470
Johnny Manziel Texas A&M QB 30 103 125 421
Tre Mason Auburn RB 31 121 169 404
Bryce Petty Baylor QB 15 30 70 127


Other major awards




  • Archie Griffin Award (MVP): Jameis Winston, Florida State


  • AP Player of the Year: Jameis Winston, Florida State


  • Chic Harley Award (Player of the Year): Jordan Lynch, Northern Illinois


  • Maxwell Award (top player): AJ McCarron, Alabama


  • SN Player of the Year: Jameis Winston, Florida State


  • Walter Camp Award (top player): Jameis Winston, Florida State



Special awards




  • Burlsworth Trophy (top player who began as walk-on): Jared Abbrederis, Wisconsin


  • Paul Hornung Award (most versatile player): Odell Beckham Jr., LSU


  • Campbell Trophy ("academic Heisman"): John Urschel, Penn State


  • Wuerffel Trophy (humanitarian-athlete): Gabe Ikard, Oklahoma



Offense


Quarterback




  • Davey O'Brien Award (quarterback): Jameis Winston, Florida State


  • Johnny Unitas Award (senior/4th year quarterback): AJ McCarron, Alabama


  • Kellen Moore Award (quarterback): AJ McCarron, Alabama


  • Manning Award (quarterback): Jameis Winston, Florida State


  • Sammy Baugh Trophy (passing quarterback): Derek Carr, Fresno State


Running back




  • Doak Walker Award (running back): Andre Williams, Boston College


  • Jim Brown Trophy (running back): Andre Williams, Boston College


Wide receiver




  • Fred Biletnikoff Award (wide receiver): Brandin Cooks, Oregon State


  • Paul Warfield Trophy (wide receiver): Davante Adams, Fresno State


Tight end




  • John Mackey Award (tight end): Austin Seferian-Jenkins, Washington


  • Ozzie Newsome Award (tight end): Jace Amaro, Texas Tech


Lineman




  • Dave Rimington Trophy (center): Bryan Stork, Florida State


  • Outland Trophy (interior lineman): Aaron Donald, Pittsburgh


  • Jim Parker Trophy (offensive lineman): Cyril Richardson, Baylor



Defense




  • Bronko Nagurski Trophy (defensive player): Aaron Donald, Pittsburgh


  • Chuck Bednarik Award (defensive player): Aaron Donald, Pittsburgh


  • Lott Trophy (defensive impact): Anthony Barr, UCLA


Defensive line




  • Bill Willis Award (defensive lineman): Aaron Donald, Pittsburgh


  • Dick Butkus Award (linebacker): C.J. Mosley, Alabama


  • Jack Lambert Trophy (linebacker): Khalil Mack, Buffalo


  • Rotary Lombardi Award (defensive lineman): Aaron Donald, Pittsburgh


  • Ted Hendricks Award (defensive end): Jackson Jeffcoat, Texas


Defensive back




  • Jim Thorpe Award (defensive back): Darqueze Dennard, Michigan State


  • Jack Tatum Trophy (defensive back): Darqueze Dennard, Michigan State



Special teams




  • Lou Groza Award (placekicker): Roberto Aguayo, Florida State


  • Vlade Award (placekicker): Roberto Aguayo, Florida State


  • Ray Guy Award (punter): Tom Hornsey, Memphis



Coaches




  • AFCA Coach of the Year: David Cutcliffe, Duke


  • AP Coach of the Year: Gus Malzahn, Auburn


  • Bobby Bowden National Collegiate Coach of the Year Award: Gus Malzahn, Auburn


  • Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award: David Cutcliffe, Duke


  • Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year: Gus Malzahn, Auburn

  • Maxwell Coach of the Year: David Cutcliffe, Duke


  • Paul "Bear" Bryant Award: Gus Malzahn, Auburn


  • SN Coach of the Year: Gus Malzahn, Auburn and David Cutcliffe, Duke


  • The Home Depot Coach of the Year Award: Gus Malzahn, Auburn


  • Woody Hayes Trophy: Gus Malzahn, Auburn


  • Walter Camp Coach of the Year: David Cutcliffe, Duke



Assistants




  • AFCA Assistant Coach of the Year: Chad Morris, offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach, Clemson


  • Broyles Award: Pat Narduzzi, defensive coordinator, Michigan State



All-Americans




Coaching changes


This is restricted to coaching changes that took place on or after May 1, 2013. For coaching changes that occurred earlier in 2013, see 2012 NCAA Division I FBS end-of-season coaching changes.













































































































































































































School
Outgoing coach
Date
Reason
Replacement

USC

Lane Kiffin
September 29
Fired[26]

Ed Orgeron (interim)

Connecticut

Paul Pasqualoni
September 30
Fired[27]

T. J. Weist (interim)

Miami (OH)

Don Treadwell
October 6
Fired[28]

Mike Bath (interim)[29]

FAU

Carl Pelini
October 30
Fired[30]
Brian Wright (interim)

Eastern Michigan

Ron English
November 8
Fired[31]

Stan Parrish (interim)[31]

Wyoming

Dave Christensen
December 1
Fired[32]

Craig Bohl[33]

Wake Forest

Jim Grobe
December 2
Resigned[34]

Dave Clawson[35]

USC

Ed Orgeron
Resigned

Clay Helton (interim)

USC

Clay Helton
Permanent replacement

Steve Sarkisian[36]

Washington

Steve Sarkisian
Hired by USC

Marques Tuiasosopo (interim)

Miami (OH)

Mike Bath
December 3
Permanent replacement

Chuck Martin[37]

Washington

Marques Tuiasosopo
December 6
Permanent replacement

Chris Petersen[38]

Boise State

Chris Petersen
Hired by Washington[38]
Bob Gregory (interim)

Bowling Green

Dave Clawson
December 10
Hired by Wake Forest[35]
Adam Scheier (interim)[39]

Boise State
Bob Gregory
December 11
Permanent replacement

Bryan Harsin[40]

Arkansas State

Bryan Harsin
Hired by Boise State[40]

John Thompson (interim)[41]

Eastern Michigan

Stan Parrish
Permanent replacement

Chris Creighton[42]

Connecticut

T. J. Weist
December 12
Permanent replacement

Bob Diaco[43]

Texas

Mack Brown
December 14
Resigned[44]

Charlie Strong[45]

Army

Rich Ellerson
December 15
Fired[46]

Jeff Monken

FAU
Brian Wright
December 17
Permanent replacement

Charlie Partridge [47]

Bowling Green
Adam Scheier
December 18
Permanent replacement

Dino Babers[48]

Arkansas State

John Thompson
December 19
Permanent replacement

Blake Anderson[49]

Massachusetts

Charley Molnar
December 26
Fired

Mark Whipple

Penn State

Bill O'Brien
January 2, 2014
Hired by the Houston Texans[50]

James Franklin

Louisville

Charlie Strong
January 5, 2014
Hired by Texas[45]

Bobby Petrino[51]

Western Kentucky

Bobby Petrino
January 9, 2014
Hired by Louisville[51]

Jeff Brohm[52]

UAB

Garrick McGee
Hired as offensive coordinator at Louisville[53]

Bill Clark[54]

Vanderbilt

James Franklin
Hired by Penn State

Derek Mason


Television viewers and ratings



Most watched regular season games


Excludes Conference Championships (see chart below)
































































































































Rank Date Matchup Channel Viewers TV Rating [1]
Significance
1
November 30, 3:30 ET

#1 Alabama
28

#4 Auburn
34

CBS
13.78 Million
8.2

Kick Six
2
September 14, 3:30 ET

#1 Alabama
49

#6 Texas A&M
42
13.59 Million
8.5

3
November 9, 8:00 ET

#13 LSU
17

#1 Alabama
38
11.90 Million
6.9

Alabama–LSU rivalry
4
November 30, 12:00 ET

#3 Ohio State
42

Michigan
41

ABC
9.5 Million
5.8

The Game
5
September 7, 8:00 ET

#14 Notre Dame
30

#17 Michigan
41

ESPN
8.65 Million
5.3

Michigan–Notre Dame rivalry/Under the Lights II
6
November 2, 8:00 ET

#7 Miami
14

#2 Florida State
41

ABC
8.35 Million
5.1

Florida State–Miami rivalry
7
August 31, 8:00 ET

#5 Georgia
35

#8 Clemson
38
8.14 Million
4.8

Clemson–Georgia rivalry
8
November 23, 3:30 ET

#12 Texas A&M
10

#22 LSU
34

CBS
7.51 Million
4.7

LSU–Texas A&M rivalry
9
September 28, 3:30 ET

#6 LSU
41

#9 Georgia
44
7.39 Million
4.6

10
October 5, 8:00 ET

#4 Ohio State
40

#16 Northwestern
30

ABC
7.36 Million
4.4



Kickoff games




















































Rank Date Matchup Channel Viewers TV Rating Game Location
1
August 31, 5:30 ET

#1 Alabama
35

Virginia Tech
10

ESPN
5.17 Million
3.0

Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game

Georgia Dome, Atlanta
2
August 31, 3:30 ET

Mississippi State
3

#13 Oklahoma State
21
Regional ABC
3.67 Million
2.4

Texas Kickoff

Reliant Stadium, Houston, Texas
3
August 31, 9:00 ET

#12 LSU
37

#20 TCU
27

ESPN
3.17 Million
1.9

Cowboys Classic

AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas


Conference championship games








































































































Rank Date Matchup Channel Viewers TV Rating Conference Location
1
December 7, 4:00 ET

#5 Missouri
42

#3 Auburn
59

CBS
14.35 Million
8.6

SEC

Georgia Dome, Atlanta
2
December 7, 8:17 ET

#2 Ohio State
24

#10 Michigan State
34

Fox
13.90 Million
7.9

Big Ten

Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis
3
December 7, 8:00 ET

#20 Duke
7

#1 Florida State
45

ABC
5.66 Million
3.4

ACC

Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, North Carolina
4
December 6, 8:00 ET

Bowling Green
47

#14 Northern Illinois
27

ESPN2
1.87 Million
1.2

MAC

Ford Field, Detroit
5
December 7, 10:00 ET

Utah State
17

#23 Fresno State
24

CBS
1.70 Million
1.1

MW

Bulldog Stadium, Fresno, California
6
December 7, 7:45 ET

#7 Stanford
38

#11 Arizona State
14

ESPN
1.45 Million
0.9

Pac-12

Sun Devil Stadium, Tempe, Arizona
7
December 7, 12:00 ET

Marshall
24

Rice
41

ESPN2
449K
0.3

C-USA

Rice Stadium, Houston, Texas


See also




  • 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings

  • 2013–14 NCAA football bowl games



References





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  21. ^ Link to the AP Poll


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  45. ^ ab "Charlie Strong named Texas Football head coach" (Press release). Texas Longhorns Athletics. January 5, 2014. Retrieved January 5, 2014.


  46. ^ "Army Announces Football Coaching Change" (Press release). Army Black Knights. December 15, 2013. Retrieved December 17, 2013.


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External links



  • Media related to 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season at Wikimedia Commons









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