(Redirected from 1957 NAIA football season)
American college football season
The 1957 college football season was the 89th season of intercollegiate football in the United States. It concluded with two teams having claim to the major college national championship:
- Auburn compiled a 10–0 record and was ranked No. 1 in the final Associated Press (AP) writers poll and No. 2 in the final United Press International (UPI) coaches poll. Auburn has also been recognized as national champion by Billingsley Report, College Football Researchers Association, Helms Athletic Foundation, National Championship Foundation, Poling System, Sagarin Ratings, and Williamson System. Auburn was ineligible for a bowl game, however, having been placed on probation by the Southeastern Conference, after having paid two high school players $500 apiece.
- Ohio State compiled an 8–1 regular season record and was ranked No. 1 in the final UPI coaches poll. They would go on to defeat Oregon in the Rose Bowl, and after the bowls were given the Grantland Rice Award representative of the national championship by the Football Writers Association of America.
Other notable teams from the 1957 season include: Florida A&M (9–0, black college national champion); Pittsburg State (11–0, NAIA national champion); Arizona State (10–0, top-ranked offense outscored opponents, 397 to 66); and Middle Tennesse (10–0, Ohio Valley champion).
John David Crow of Texas A&M won the Heisman Trophy, and Bob Reifsnyder of Navy won the Maxwell Award. The statistical leaders among the major college teams included Washington State quarterback Bob Newman with 1,444 yards of total offense, Utah quarterback Lee Grosscup with 1,398 passing yards, and Arizona State halfback Leon Burton with 1,126 rushing yards and 96 points scored.
Conference and program changes
Conference changes
- One conference began play in 1957:
- One conference played its final season in 1957:
Membership changes
Season chronology
September
In the preseason poll released on September 16, the defending champion Sooners of the University of Oklahoma—who had won 40 consecutive games dating back to 1953—were the first place choice for 127 of 174 writers casting votes, followed by Texas A&M, Michigan State, Minnesota, and Tennessee. As the regular season progressed, a new poll would be issued on the Monday following the weekend's games.
September 20 - Abner Haynes and Leon King suited up for North Texas State College against Texas Western at Kidd Field in El Paso, marking the first time a major college football team based in Texas fielded African-American players. King scored a 33-yard touchdown, while Haynes had a long touchdown run called back "despite never stepping out of bounds and the whistle not blowing until he crossed the goal line." Texas Western escaped with a 14–13 win.
September 20–21 - The U.S. Air Force Academy, founded two years earlier played its first major college schedule in 1957. The Falcons made their debut at UCLA on Friday night and lost 47–0. They would finish their first season 3–6–1, but were undefeated the following year. On Saturday, No. 1 Oklahoma won at No. 8 Pittsburgh 26–0, breaking the all-time record for consecutive wins. No. 2 Texas A&M beat Maryland 21–13 in a game at Dallas. No. 3 Michigan State, No. 4 Minnesota, and No. 5 Tennessee had not yet begun their seasons. No. 11 Georgia Tech beat Kentucky 13–0 and rose to third, while No. 12 Navy won 46–6 at Boston College and rose to fifth. The first AP poll was No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Texas A&M, No. 3 Georgia Tech, No. 4 Michigan State, and No. 5 Navy.
September 28 - No. 1 Oklahoma was idle. No. 2 Texas A&M won at Texas Tech 21–0 and No. 3 Georgia Tech played to a scoreless tie with No. 15 SMU. No. 4 Michigan State beat Indiana 54–0. No. 5 Navy beat visiting William & Mary 33–6. No. 6 Minnesota, which beat Washington 46–7, and No. 7 Duke, which had beaten Virginia 40–0, rose into the top five. The next poll was No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 Minnesota, No. 4 Duke, and No. 5 Texas A&M.
October
October 5 - No. 1 Oklahoma beat Iowa State 40–14. No. 2 Michigan State won at California 19–0. No. 3 Minnesota beat visiting Purdue 21–17, No. 4 Duke beat Maryland 14–0, and No. 5 Texas A&M won at Missouri 28–0. The next poll was No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 Texas A&M, No. 4 Minnesota, and No. 5 Duke.
October 12 - A crowd of 75,504 watched in Dallas as No. 1 Oklahoma had a difficult time with unranked Texas; the Longhorns picked off four passes and the score was 7–7 at the half before the Sooners preserved their winning streak 21–7 in a game that wasn't pretty. At the same time, No. 2 Michigan State won 35–6 at No. 6 Michigan, leading the AP voters to re-evaluate. No. 3 Texas A&M won 28–6 over Houston. No. 4 Minnesota won 41–6 at Northwestern. No. 5 Duke narrowly beat No. 15 Rice in Houston, 7–6. The Spartans took over the top spot in the next poll: No. 1 Michigan State, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Texas A&M, No. 4 Minnesota, and No. 5 Duke.
October 19 - No. 1 Michigan State lost 20–13 to Purdue and fell out of the top five, while No. 2 Oklahoma beat Kansas 47–0 and reclaimed the top spot. No. 3 Texas A&M won 7–0 at TCU and No. 4 Minnesota lost at Illinois 34–14. No. 5 Duke beat Wake Forest 34–7, and No. 6 Iowa beat No. 13 Wisconsin 21–7, while No. 9 Auburn beat Georgia Tech 3–0 in Atlanta and rose to fifth place in the polls. The next poll: No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Texas A&M, No. 3 Iowa, No. 4 Duke, and No. 5 Auburn.
October 26 - No. 1 Oklahoma edged Colorado 14–13, and lost the top spot again, despite being 5–0. No. 2 Texas A&M beat Baylor 14–0 and replaced the Sooners in the next poll. No. 3 Iowa won 6–0 at Northwestern and rose to third. No. 4 Duke went to neighboring Raleigh to play No. 11 North Carolina State and ended with a 14–14 tie. No. 5 Auburn won at Houston 48–7. No. 7 Notre Dame beat Pittsburgh 13–7 and rose to fifth. The next poll: No. 1 Texas A&M, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Iowa, No. 4 Auburn, and No. 5 Notre Dame.
November
November 2 - No. 1 Texas A&M got past No. 11 Arkansas 7–6 in Fayetteville, and No. 2 Oklahoma won at Kansas State 13–0. No. 3 Iowa played No. 12 Michigan to a 21–21 tie, and No. 4 Auburn beat No. 19 Florida 13–0. No. 5 Notre Dame lost 20–6 to visiting No. 16 Navy, and No. 6 Michigan State won 21–7 at Wisconsin to rise into the top five. The next poll: No. 1 Texas A&M, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Auburn, No. 4 Michigan State, and No. 5 Iowa.
November 9 - No. 1 Texas A&M beat SMU 19–6 and No. 2 Oklahoma won at Missouri 39–14. No. 3 Auburn beat No. 17 Mississippi State 15–7 in Birmingham, No. 4 Michigan State beat No. 15 Notre Dame 34–6, and No. 5 Iowa beat Minnesota 44–20. The poll remained unchanged.
November 16 - No. 1 Texas A&M lost 7–6 to No. 20 Rice in Houston. No. 2 Oklahoma had won a record 47 consecutive games when they hosted Notre Dame. The Irish, 4–2 and on a losing streak, were an 18–point underdog coming into Norman. The Sooners, who had scored in 123 consecutive games dating back to 1945, were unable to reach the end zone, but had held off the Irish on two goal line stands. In the final minutes, Notre Dame was on the 3–yard line on fourth down, when Dick Lynch "crossed up the Sooners" and ran around right end for a touchdown. Oklahoma's desperate passing drive at game's end was stopped by a Notre Dame interception, and the crowd of 62,000 was stunned into silence... and then stood up and applauded for both the Sooners and the Irish. Oklahoma's previous defeat, more than four years earlier, had been at the hands of Notre Dame as well. Final score: Notre Dame 7, Oklahoma 0. No. 3 Auburn beat Georgia 6–0 at Columbus, Georgia while No. 4 Michigan State beat Minnesota 42–13. No. 5 Iowa lost 17–13 at No. 6 Ohio State; the 7–1 Buckeyes rose to third, while the 6–1–1 Hawkeyes fell to eighth. No. 8 Mississippi, which beat No. 7 Tennessee 14–7 in Memphis, rose to fifth. The next poll: No. 1 Michigan State, No. 2 Auburn, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Texas A&M, and No. 5 Mississippi.
November 23 - No. 1 Michigan State closed its season with a 27–0 win over Kansas State, but fell to third. No. 2 Auburn won at Florida State 29–7. As the only unbeaten (9–0) school among the majors, Auburn was voted No. 1 in the AP poll. No. 3 Ohio State wrapped up its season with a win 31–14 at No. 19 Michigan and was first in the UPI poll. No. 4 Texas A&M and No. 5 Mississippi were idle, while No. 6 Oklahoma won 53–6 at Nebraska and returned to the top five. The poll: No. 1 Auburn, No. 2 Ohio State, No. 3 Michigan State, No. 4 Texas A&M, and No. 5 Oklahoma.
November 28–30 - Thanksgiving Day saw Bear Bryant's No. 4 Texas A&M team lose 9–7 to Texas. On Saturday, No. 1 Auburn shut out rival Alabama 40–0 at their annual meeting in Birmingham to close its season 10–0, while the Crimson Tide finished at 2–7–1. Bryant, who had transformed the Aggies from a 1–9 team in 1953 to a contender (Texas A&M was undefeated in 1956, and their two losses in 1957 were by a total of three points), would accept the job as head coach at his alma mater Alabama at season's end. No. 2 Ohio State and No. 3 Michigan State were both 8–1 in the regular season, but Ohio State was 7–0 in Big Ten play, compared to the 5–1 Spartans, and got the Rose Bowl bid against unranked Oregon. No. 5 Oklahoma beat Oklahoma State 53–6 and prepared for the Orange Bowl. No. 8 Navy, which won the Army-Navy game 14–0 in Philadelphia, finished with an 8–1–1 record, a bid to meet SWC champion Rice in the Cotton Bowl, and a fifth-place finish in the final poll.
The services were split as to the national champion. The AP Trophy went to Auburn, the choice of a majority of writers for No. 1, and the only major college program to finish unbeaten (Arizona State, then a lesser power, also finished 10–0). Auburn, however, was on probation and was ineligible for a bowl (conference runner-up Mississippi received the SEC's automatic slot in the Sugar Bowl), and the UPI coaches poll awarded No. 1 to the Ohio State Buckeyes (8–1). Both Auburn and Ohio State are recognized in the NCAA Football Guidebook as unofficial national champions for 1957. The final AP poll was: No. 1 Auburn, No. 2 Ohio State, No. 3 Michigan State, No. 4 Oklahoma, and No. 5 Navy, while the UPI poll was No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Auburn, No. 3 Michigan State, No. 4 Oklahoma, and No. 5 Iowa.
Conference standings
Major conference standings
Minor conference standings
NAIA standings
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1957 West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings
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Conf |
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Overall
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Team |
W |
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L |
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T |
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W |
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L |
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T
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Fairmont State $
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7
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– |
0
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– |
0 |
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7
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– |
0
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– |
0
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]
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3
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– |
1
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– |
1 |
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4
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– |
4
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– |
1
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]
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2
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– |
1
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– |
1 |
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2
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– |
4
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– |
2
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]
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3
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– |
2
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– |
1 |
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3
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– |
2
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– |
1
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]
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2
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– |
2
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– |
1 |
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2
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– |
4
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– |
1
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]
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2
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– |
2
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0 |
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3
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– |
4
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0
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]
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2
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– |
3
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1 |
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2
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6
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– |
1
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]
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2
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– |
3
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1 |
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2
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– |
4
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– |
1
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]
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2
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– |
5
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0 |
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2
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– |
5
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– |
0
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]
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1
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– |
4
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– |
0 |
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1
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– |
6
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– |
0
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]
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0
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– |
5
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– |
0 |
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2
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– |
5
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– |
0
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Bluefield State *
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1
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– |
0
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– |
0 |
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6
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– |
2
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– |
0
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] *
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1
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0
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0 |
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5
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3
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0
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- $ – Conference champion
- * – Did not qualify for conference standings
Conference standings based on power ratings
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Bowl games
Main article: 1957–58 NCAA football bowl games
Major bowls
Wednesday, January 1, 1958
Other bowls
Small college
NAIA postseason
The 1957 NAIA football season was the second season of college football sponsored by the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics. The season culminated in the second annual NAIA Football National Championship, played in 1957 at Stewart Field in St. Petersburg, Florida. During its four years in St. Petersburg, the game was also called the Holiday Bowl.
Final polls
Main article: 1957 NCAA University Division football rankings
Final polls were released in the first week of December.
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UP poll
Rank
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Team
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1st
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Points
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1
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Ohio State
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14
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307
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2
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Auburn
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11
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290
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3
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Michigan State
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8
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283
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4
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Oklahoma
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-
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195
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5
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Iowa
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-
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192
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6
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Navy
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-
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177
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7
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Rice
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-
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117
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8
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Ole Miss
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-
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81
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9
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Notre Dame
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-
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60
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10
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Texas A&M
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-
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58
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11
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Texas
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-
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36
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12
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Arizona State
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2
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32
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13
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Army
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-
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19
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13
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Duke
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-
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19
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13
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Wisconsin
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-
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19
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16
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Tennessee
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-
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8
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17
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Oregon
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-
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7
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18
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Clemson
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-
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6
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18
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UCLA
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-
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6
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20
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NC State
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-
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5
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Undefeated teams
Thirteen college football teams finished the 1957 season with unbeaten and untied records:
Team
|
Record
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Points for
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Points against
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Notes
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Arlington State |
12–0 |
425 |
62 |
Pioneer Conference and Junior Rose Bowl champion
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Pittsburg |
11–0 |
347 |
79 |
Central Intercollegiate, Holiday Bowl, and NAIA national champion
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Arizona State |
10–0 |
397 |
66 |
Border Conference champion, AP/UP No. 12
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Auburn |
10–0 |
207 |
28 |
SEC and AP poll national champion
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Middle Tennessee |
10–0 |
241 |
40 |
Ohio Valley Conference champion
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Florida A&M |
9–0 |
343 |
42 |
SIAC and black college national champion
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Idaho State |
9–0 |
280 |
85 |
Rocky Mountain Conference champion
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Ripon |
8–0 |
270 |
77 |
Midwest Conference champion
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St. Norbert |
8–0 |
250 |
84 |
Independent
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West Chester |
8–0 |
326 |
40 |
PSTCC champion
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Fairmont State |
7–0 |
147 |
42 |
WVIAC champion
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Juniata |
7–0 |
253 |
27 |
Independent
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Hobart |
6–0 |
141 |
50 |
Independent
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Heisman Trophy voting
The Heisman Trophy is given to the year's most outstanding player
Source:
Statistical leaders
Individual
Total offense
The following players were the individual leaders in total offense during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Rank
|
Player
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Team
|
Games
|
Plays
|
Total Yds
|
1 |
Stan Jackson |
Cal Poly Pomona |
9 |
301 |
2145
|
2 |
Terry Stevens |
Upper Iowa |
9 |
271 |
1914
|
3 |
Norm Jarock |
St. Ambrose |
8 |
187 |
1558
|
4 |
Jack Redwine |
Florence State |
10 |
189 |
1438
|
5 |
Bowlen |
Oregon College of Education |
8 |
156 |
1428
|
6 |
Brad Hustad |
Luther |
9 |
219 |
1401
|
6 |
Webb |
St. Ambrose |
8 |
228 |
1401
|
8 |
Fields |
Whittier |
9 |
148 |
1355
|
9 |
Lenny Lyles |
Louisville |
9 |
132 |
1346
|
10 |
Larry Magilligan |
Hofstra |
10 |
220 |
1343
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Passing
The following players were the individual leaders in pass completions during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Rank
|
Player
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Team
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Games
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Compl.
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Att.
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Pct. Compl.
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Yds.
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Int.
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TDs
|
1 |
Jay Roelen |
Pepperdine |
9 |
106 |
214 |
.495 |
1428 |
16 |
13
|
2 |
Stan Jackson |
Cal Poly Pomona |
9 |
105 |
231 |
.455 |
1869 |
8 |
18
|
3 |
Ken Fujii |
Nevada |
9 |
102 |
205 |
498 |
1116 |
7 |
6
|
4 |
Larry Magilligan |
Hofstra |
10 |
93 |
189 |
.492 |
1303 |
12 |
15
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5 |
Webb |
St. Ambrose |
8 |
88 |
168 |
.524 |
1433 |
6 |
13
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6 |
Green |
Chattanooga |
10 |
87 |
175 |
497 |
1191 |
19 |
7
|
7 |
Ayling |
Alma |
9 |
81 |
158 |
.513 |
1091 |
8 |
11
|
8 |
Vick |
Evansville |
7 |
79 |
152 |
.520 |
1180 |
12 |
7
|
9 |
Parrish |
Linfield |
9 |
76 |
160 |
.475 |
1102 |
12 |
17
|
10 |
Sochor |
San Francisco State |
10 |
72 |
124 |
.581 |
1050 |
11 |
15
|
17 |
Bobby Beathard |
Cal Poly |
9 |
63 |
126 |
.500 |
884 |
8 |
3
|
18 |
Goodnight |
DePauw |
8 |
62 |
99 |
.626 |
946 |
4 |
11
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Rushing
The following players were the individual leaders in rushing yards during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Rank
|
Player
|
Team
|
Games
|
Yds
|
Rushes
|
Avg
|
1 |
Brad Hustad |
Luther |
9 |
1401 |
219 |
6.40
|
2 |
Fields |
Whittier |
9 |
1355 |
148 |
9.16
|
3 |
Norm Jarock |
St. Norbert |
8 |
1306 |
148 |
8.82
|
4 |
Lenny Lyles |
Louisville |
9 |
1201 |
123 |
9.76
|
5 |
Walter Beach |
Central Michigan |
10 |
1084 |
140 |
7.74
|
6 |
Dick Maggard |
College of Idaho |
10 |
1049 |
176 |
5.96
|
7 |
Tom Dingle |
Wooster |
9 |
1022 |
179 |
5.71
|
8 |
Polkinghorne |
Washington U. |
8 |
1009 |
156 |
6.47
|
9 |
Smith |
Denison |
9 |
996 |
151 |
6.60
|
10 |
Fingerhut |
Saint Joseph's |
9 |
982 |
133 |
7.38
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Receiving
The following players were the individual leaders in receptions during the 1957 season:
Major college
Rank
|
Player
|
Team
|
Games
|
Receptions
|
Receiving Yards
|
Touchdowns
|
1 |
Stuart Vaughan |
Utah |
10 |
53 |
756 |
5
|
2 |
Gary Kapp |
Utah State |
10 |
45 |
633 |
4
|
3 |
Don Ellingsen |
Washington State |
10 |
45 |
559 |
4
|
4 |
Fred Dugan |
Dayton |
10 |
37 |
546 |
3
|
5 |
Jim Gibbons |
Iowa |
9 |
36 |
587 |
4
|
6 |
Al Jamison |
Colgate |
9 |
33 |
420 |
6
|
7 |
Jerry Mertens |
Drake |
8 |
29 |
509 |
6
|
8 |
Gene Leek |
Arizona |
10 |
29 |
310 |
1
|
9 |
Chuck Chatfield |
Pacific |
10 |
28 |
404 |
1
|
10 |
Pete Jokanovich |
Navy |
28 |
339 |
9
|
Small college
Rank
|
Player
|
Team
|
Games
|
Receptions
|
Receiving Yards
|
Touchdowns
|
1 |
Jim Whitaker |
Nevada |
9 |
40 |
527 |
4
|
2 |
Donald Baldwin |
Hofstra |
10 |
39 |
479 |
6
|
3 |
Lawson Persley |
Mississippi Vocational |
8 |
36 |
667 |
7
|
4 |
Ron Crecco |
Marietta |
8 |
36 |
580 |
2
|
5 |
Don Hogan |
Cal Poly Pomona |
9 |
35 |
660 |
7
|
6 |
Larry Gates |
Evansville |
7 |
33 |
556 |
4
|
7 |
Bob Herrick |
North Dakota |
8 |
33 |
542 |
6
|
8 |
Walker |
San Diego |
9 |
33 |
452 |
6
|
9 |
Rudy Osuna |
Pepperdine |
9 |
33 |
346 |
3
|
10 |
Clint Westemeyer |
St. Ambrose |
8 |
31 |
553 |
4
|
Scoring
The following players were the individual leaders in scoring during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Rank
|
Player
|
Team
|
Pts
|
TD
|
PAT
|
FG
|
1 |
Lenny Lyles |
Louisville |
132 |
21 |
6 |
0
|
2 |
Bill Groman |
Heidelberg |
114 |
19 |
0 |
0
|
3 |
Mohlman |
St. Benedict's |
109 |
16 |
13 |
0
|
4 |
Bullard |
Lenoir Rhyne |
102 |
17 |
0 |
0
|
4 |
Jarock |
St. Norbert |
102 |
17 |
0 |
0
|
4 |
Herakovich |
Rose Poly |
102 |
17 |
0 |
0
|
7 |
Iglehart |
Wiley |
97 |
12 |
25 |
0
|
8 |
Henley |
Huron |
96 |
16 |
0 |
0
|
9 |
Philpott |
Fresno State |
94 |
14 |
10 |
0
|
10 |
Abrahamian |
Tufts |
92 |
14 |
8 |
0
|
Team
Total offense
The following teams were the leaders in total offense during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Rank
|
Team
|
Games played
|
Total plays
|
Yards gained
|
Yards per game
|
1 |
Denison |
9 |
631 |
3877 |
430.8
|
2 |
Ripon |
8 |
485 |
3418 |
427.3
|
3 |
Florida A&M |
7 |
399 |
2913 |
416.1
|
4 |
Saint Joseph's |
9 |
620 |
3700 |
411.1
|
5 |
St. Norbert |
8 |
547 |
3242 |
405.3
|
6 |
Lincoln (MO) |
9 |
564 |
3523 |
391.4
|
7 |
Amherst |
8 |
594 |
3120 |
390.0
|
8 |
Williams |
7 |
459 |
2712 |
387.4
|
9 |
William Jewell |
9 |
574 |
3482 |
386.9
|
10 |
Tufts |
8 |
540 |
3033 |
379.1
|
Rushing offense
The following teams were the leaders in rushing offense during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Rank
|
Team
|
Yards per game
|
1 |
Denison |
372.1
|
2 |
Florida A&M |
359.7
|
3 |
Lincoln (MO) |
351.8
|
4 |
Saint Joseph's |
350.9
|
5 |
Tufts |
339.3
|
6 |
Luther |
329.4
|
7 |
St. Norbert |
310.6
|
8 |
Whittier |
304.1
|
9 |
William Jewell |
302.9
|
10 |
Louisville |
298.9
|
Passing offense
The following teams were the leaders in passing offense during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Total defense
The following teams were the leaders in total defense during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Rank
|
Team
|
Games played
|
Total plays
|
Yards gained
|
Yards per game
|
1 |
West Chester |
9 |
462 |
812 |
90.2
|
2 |
Florida A&M |
7 |
319 |
739 |
105.6
|
3 |
Livingstone |
9 |
428 |
1059 |
117.7
|
4 |
Saint Joseph's |
9 |
463 |
1073 |
119.2
|
5 |
Susquehanna |
6 |
284 |
724 |
120.7
|
6 |
Norfolk State |
6 |
250 |
751 |
125.2
|
7 |
Juniata |
7 |
378 |
905 |
129.3
|
8 |
Shaw |
8 |
399 |
1077 |
134.6
|
9 |
St. Augustine's |
7 |
299 |
976 |
139.4
|
10 |
North Carolina A&T |
8 |
414 |
1154 |
144.3
|
Rushing defense
The following teams were the leaders in rushing defense during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Passing defense
The following teams were the leaders in passing defense during the 1957 season:
Major college
Small college
Rank
|
Team
|
Yards per game
|
1 |
Lake Forest |
25.0
|
2 |
North Carolina College |
29.7
|
3 |
Haverford |
31.7
|
4 |
Livingstone |
34.1
|
5 |
South Carolina State |
34.9
|
6 |
Vermont |
35.8
|
7 |
Howard |
36.6
|
8 |
Susquehanna |
37.5
|
9 |
Coe |
38.9
|
10 |
Wilkes |
40.1
|
See also
References
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on August 16, 2009. Retrieved January 11, 2009.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- 2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association. August 2018. pp. 113, 120. Retrieved January 4, 2019.
- "Auburn Barred From Bowl Games, Placed on Probation by S.E.C.," Charleston Gazette, February 14, 1956, p13
- "Auburn or Ohio State-Which Is Grid Champ?", Montana Standard (Butte, MT), December 3, 1957, p11
- Written at New York City. "Ohio State Is Winner Of Grantland Rice Award". The Buffalo News. Buffalo. International News Service. January 4, 1958. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
The Buckeyes received two of the five first-place votes in the balloting conducted by Look Magazine. In the voting by a five-man panel, Ohio State got eight points to five apiece for Auburn, Navy, and Michigan State.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 2, 2011. Retrieved January 11, 2009.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "The 1957 North Texas/Texas Western Game and the Integration of Texas College Football". The SWC Round-Up. Archived from the original on August 10, 2019.
- "Sooners Pressed in 21–7 Triumph," Oakland Tribune, October 13, 1957, p61
- "Irish Down Sooners In Stunning 7–0 Upset," Ada (Okla.) Evening News, November 17, 1957, p9
- "1957 Atlantic Coast Conference Year Summary". sports-reference.com. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
- "Fla. A&M Rattlers Top Nation". The Pittsburgh Courier. December 21, 1957. p. 25 – via Newspapers.com.
- "NAIA Championship History" (PDF). NAIA. pp. 1–2. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 15, 2015. Retrieved November 8, 2015.
- "1957 NAIA Football Playoffs". JonFMorse.com. Retrieved November 8, 2015.
- "16 Collegiate Elevens Enjoy Perfect Seasons", The New York Times. December 2, 1957. Page 44. Retrieved March 15, 2011.
- "Heisman vote goes to Crow by wide edge". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. December 4, 1957. p. 2D.
- "John David Crow". Heisman Trophy. 1957. Retrieved January 30, 2017.
- Touchdowns-for-which-responsible is player's total of touchdowns scored and touchdown passes thrown
- ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1958. p. 67.
- ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1958. p. 75.
- ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1958. p. 76.
- Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1958. p. 69.
- ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1958. p. 72.
- ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1958. p. 77.
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