1955 college football season

The 1955 college football season finished with two teams recognized as a national champion:

Other teams compiling perfect seasons in 1955 included Miami (OH) (9–0, AP No. 15 under Ara Parseghian); Hillsdale (declined Tangerine Bowl bid after being told national scoring champion and African-American Nate Clark must stay home); Trinity (CT) (consecutive perfect seasons); and Whitworth (part of 21-game winning streak).

Ohio State halfback Howard Cassady won the Heisman Trophy and the Maxwell Award. Individual statistical leaders in major college football in 1955 included Navy quarterback George Welsh with 1,348 yards of total offense and 1,319 passing yards; Arizona tailback Art Luppino with 1,313 rushing yards; Missouri end Hank Burnine with 594 receiving yards; and TCU halfback Jim Swink with 125 points scored.

Conference and program changes

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Conference changes

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Membership changes

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School1954 conference1955 conference
Fordham RamsIndependentDropped program
Western Reserve Red CatsMid-American ConferencePresidents' Athletic Conference

September

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In the preseason poll released on September 12, 1955, the UCLA Bruins, 1954's co-champions, received 33 first place votes, while Oklahoma had 32. Michigan had 34 votes, but the third most points overall. Other teams nominated for the top spot were defending AP champ Ohio State, Maryland, Notre Dame, Navy, Miami, Georgia Tech, Iowa, USC, Duke, West Virginia, and Purdue.[2] As the regular season progressed, a new poll would be issued on the Monday following the weekend's games. The preseason Top Five were No. 1 UCLA, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Ohio State, and No. 5 Maryland.

On Friday, September 16, No. 1 UCLA opened in Los Angeles with a 21–0 win over visiting Texas A&M. September 17, Oklahoma, Michigan and Ohio State were idle, but No. 5 Maryland edged Missouri on the road, 13–12. No. 10 Georgia Tech, which had beaten No. 9 Miami 14–6 in Atlanta, rose to 2nd place in the next poll: No. 1 UCLA, No. 2 Georgia Tech, No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 4 Michigan, and No. 5 Maryland.

On September 24, No. 1 UCLA and No. 5 Maryland met at College Park, before a record crowd. UCLA's Doug Peters plunged into the end zone in the first half, but fumbled the ball before crossing the goal line. In the second half, the home team Terrapins had the ball 17 yards from goal, on fourth down. Rather than kicking a field goal, Ed Vereb ran for the winning touchdown, giving Maryland a 7–0 win.[3] No. 2 Georgia Tech won at No. 19 Florida, 14–7. No. 3 Oklahoma won at North Carolina 13–6. No. 4 Michigan beat Missouri 42–7. Maryland took over the top spot, while UCLA fell to 7th. No. 11 Notre Dame, which had beaten SMU 17–0, moved into the Top 5: No. 1 Maryland, No. 2 Michigan, No. 3 Georgia Tech, No. 4 Notre Dame, and No. 5 Oklahoma.

October

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October 1, No. 1 Maryland won 20–6 at No. 20 Baylor in Texas.No. 2 Michigan beat Michigan State 14–7 before a crowd of 97,239 at home in Ann Arbor. MSU had tied the score 7–7 after an errant punt by Michigan gave them the ball 39 yards from goal. Minutes later, Earl Morrall's punt was blocked to give Michigan the ball on the MSU 21, from which the winning score was made. No. 3 Georgia Tech beat SMU 20–7 in Atlanta.No. 4 Notre Dame defeated Indiana 19–0.No. 5 Oklahoma beat No. 12 Pittsburgh 26–14, marking its 21st consecutive win. The next poll: No. 1 Maryland, No. 2 Michigan, No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 4 Georgia Tech, and No. 5 Notre Dame.

October 8No. 1 Maryland beat Wake Forest 28–7, and No. 2 Michigan defeated visiting No. 6 Army, 26–2. Both stayed unbeaten, but Michigan took the top spot in the next poll. No. 3 Oklahoma defeated Texas 20–0 in Dallas.No. 4 Georgia Tech won 7–0 at LSU.No. 5 Notre Dame won 14–0 at No. 15 Miami, with both touchdowns coming on fourth down passes from Paul Hornung, before an Orange Bowl record crowd of 75,685.[4] In a game that would eventually decide the Pacific Coast Conference title, No. 7 UCLA beat Oregon State 38–0. The next poll: No. 1 Michigan, No. 2 Maryland, No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 4 Notre Dame, and No. 5 Georgia Tech.

October 15 No. 1 Michigan defeated Northwestern, 14–2. No. 2 Maryland won at North Carolina, 25–7. No. 3 Oklahoma beat Kansas 44–6. However, No. 5 Georgia Tech lost to visiting No. 17 Auburn 14–12, and No. 4 Notre Dame lost 21–7 when it hosted No. 13 Michigan State. They dropped from the top five and were replaced by No. 8 Navy (which had won 34–14 at Penn State) and No. 11 Duke (which had won at No. 14 Ohio State, 20–14). The poll: No. 1 Michigan, No. 2 Maryland, No. 3 Oklahoma, No. 4 Navy, and No. 5 Duke.

October 22 In Minneapolis, No. 1 Michigan faced a 1–3–0 Minnesota team and was stunned when the Gophers racked up two touchdowns in the first quarter. Michigan's Terry Barr blocked the extra point attempt on the second touchdown, but the nation's No. 1 team was losing 13–0. Still down 13–7 at the half, the Wolverines fought back. Jim Van Pelt passed to Tom Maentz for a touchdown, and Van Pelt added the extra point to save Michigan, 14–13.[5] Minnesota would go on to a 3–6–0 finish. Meanwhile, No. 2 Maryland won more convincingly at Syracuse, 34–13, to regain the top spot. No. 3 Oklahoma beat No. 14 Colorado, 56–21. No. 4 Navy won at Penn, 33–0. No. 5 Duke lost to Pitt, 26–7, and was replaced in the top five by No. 6 Michigan State, which beat Illinois 21–7. The next poll: No. 1 Maryland, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Navy, and No. 5 Michigan State.

October 29 Back at the top, No. 1 Maryland beat South Carolina 27–0, while No. 2 Oklahoma won at Kansas State, 40–7. No. 3 Michigan beat Iowa 33–21. No. 4 Navy lost at No. 9 Notre Dame, 21–7. No. 5 Michigan State won at Wisconsin, 27–0. UCLA returned to the Top Five from No. 6 after a 47–0 win over California. The next poll: No. 1 Maryland, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Michigan State, and No. 5 UCLA.

November

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November 5 As both stayed undefeated, No. 1 Maryland beat LSU 13–0 and No. 2 Oklahoma won at Missouri, 20–0. No. 3 Michigan lost at Illinois 25–6, while No. 4 Michigan State won at Purdue, 27–0. No. 5 UCLA won at Pacific, 34–0. No. 6 Notre Dame, which had won at Penn 46–14, returned to the top five. The next poll: No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Maryland, No. 3 Michigan State, No. 4 UCLA, and No. 5.Notre Dame.

November 12 Back at No. 1, Oklahoma beat Iowa State 52–0. No. 2 Maryland won at Clemson, 25–12. No. 3 Michigan State beat Minnesota 42–14. No. 4 UCLA was trailing Washington 17–16 in the closing seconds, but Jim Decker kicked a field goal for a 19–17 victory.[6] The game is referenced in Back to the Future Part II. No. 5 Notre Dame won at North Carolina, 27–7. The next poll: No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Maryland, No. 3 Michigan State, No. 4 Notre Dame, and No. 5 UCLA. The UCLA game and its unlikely winning field goal was used by an elderly Biff Tannen from 2015 to demonstrate the fact that his Gray's Sports Almanac can predict the winning outcome of any major sports game between 1950 and 2000 to his younger self from 1955. He listens in to a live radio commentary of the game when the score was 17-16. Old Biff bets on UCLA winning, with his younger self pointing out the fact that the game is essentially over. The winning field goal is then kicked, proving that the almanac is accurate. The other games of the day were later heard over the same radio, with young Biff further testing out the almanac's capabilities.

November 19 Although No. 1 Oklahoma was 8–0–0 and host Nebraska was 5–4–0, both had 5–0–0 records in Big 7 conference play when they met at Lincoln. The Sooners rolled, 41–0, to get the Orange Bowl bid. No. 2 Maryland closed its season with a 19–0 win over George Washington University and accepted the invitation to meet Oklahoma, but what would have been a No. 1 vs. No. 2 meeting changed when the Terrapins were dropped to third by the AP voters. No. 3 Michigan State, which had a 5–1 record in Big Ten play, beat Marquette 33–0 in a non-conference game. No. 6 Michigan's 17–0 loss to No. 9 Ohio State gave the Wolverines a 5–2 conference mark and knocked them out of contention for the Rose Bowl. Ohio State had the best record in the Big Ten, 6–0 overall, but had gone to the Rose Bowl the year before, so Michigan State got the bid. The Spartans' opponent would be No. 5 UCLA, which beat USC 17–7. No. 4 Notre Dame beat Iowa 17–14. Though Maryland, like Oklahoma, was unbeaten, the voters put once-beaten Michigan State in the second spot instead. The next poll: No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 Maryland, No. 4 UCLA, and No. 5 Notre Dame.

On November 26, No. 5 Notre Dame lost in Los Angeles to USC, 42–20, and dropped to 6th in the final AP poll, where it would be replaced at No. 5 by Ohio State. The top four teams (Oklahoma, Michigan State, Maryland, and UCLA) had finished their seasons and were ranked in the same order in the final poll.

Conference standings

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Major conference standings

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For this article, major conferences defined as those including at least one state flagship public university and the Ivy League.

1955 Atlantic Coast Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 3 Maryland +4001010
Duke +400721
Clemson310730
Wake Forest331541
North Carolina330370
NC State021451
South Carolina150360
Virginia040190
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll[7]
1955 Big Seven Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 1 Oklahoma $6001100
Nebraska510550
Colorado330640
Kansas State330460
Kansas141361
Iowa State141171
Missouri150190
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Big Ten Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 5 Ohio State $600720
No. 2 Michigan State510910
No. 12 Michigan520720
Purdue421531
Illinois331531
Wisconsin340450
Iowa231351
Minnesota250360
Indiana150360
Northwestern061081
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Border Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Texas Tech $301731
Arizona State410821
Hardin–Simmons320550
Texas Western321622
Arizona121541
West Texas State141441
New Mexico A&M040370
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Far Western Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Chico State500720
Cal Aggies311531
San Francisco State320550
Humboldt State221731
Nevada140250
Sacramento State050260
  • No conference champion was named for the 1955 season.
1955 Ivy League football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Princeton610720
Yale510720
Dartmouth330360
Cornell330440
Harvard240341
Brown240260
Columbia150180
Penn010080
  • The Ivy League did not crown an official champion until 1956 when full league play began.
1955 Mid-American Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 15 Miami (OH) $500900
Bowling Green411711
Kent State411621
Ohio330540
Toledo240351
Marshall150360
Western Michigan050171
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Middle Three Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Lafayette $200620
Lehigh110450
Rutgers020350
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 North Central Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
South Dakota State $501621
Iowa State Teachers510810
Morningside321431
North Dakota330630
South Dakota330440
Augustana (SD)150261
North Dakota State060090
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Pacific Coast Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 4 UCLA $600920
Oregon State520630
No. 16 Stanford321631
Oregon430640
Washington431541
No. 13 USC330640
California151271
Washington State151172
Idaho040270
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Skyline Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Colorado A&M $610820
Utah410630
Denver520820
Wyoming520830
Utah State340460
Montana240370
New Mexico150280
BYU070190
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Southeastern Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 10 Ole Miss $5101010
No. 8 Auburn521821
No. 7 Georgia Tech411911
Tennessee321631
Vanderbilt430830
Mississippi State440640
Kentucky331631
Tulane331541
LSU231352
Florida350460
Georgia250460
Alabama0700100
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Southern Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 19 West Virginia $400820
VPI211631
Davidson320540
George Washington320540
Richmond322432
The Citadel220540
Furman110190
William & Mary131171
VMI160190
Washington and Lee010070
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Southwest Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 6 TCU $510920
No. 17 Texas A&M411721
Texas420550
Arkansas321541
Baylor240550
SMU240460
Rice060271
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Yankee Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Rhode Island $401612
Maine211511
Connecticut220440
New Hampshire112242
UMass130440
Vermont030331
  • $ – Conference champion

Independents

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1955 Eastern college football independents records
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Alfred  800
Drexel  800
Trinity (CT)  700
Juniata  801
Carnegie Tech  511
Tufts  520
Boston College  521
No. 20 Army  630
Colgate  630
No. 11 Pittsburgh  740
Holy Cross  640
Syracuse  530
Penn State  540
Buffalo  441
Hofstra  360
Bucknell  261
Boston University  260
Franklin & Marshall  260
Villanova  190
Temple  080
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Midwestern college football independents records
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Ferris Institute  610
No. 9 Notre Dame  820
Xavier  720
Carthage  620
Wabash  531
Michigan Tech  430
Washington University  540
Drake  440
Youngstown  450
Dayton  360
Marquette  261
Baldwin–Wallace  260
Cincinnati  162
Rose Poly  161
Northern Michigan  070
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Southern college football independents records
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Centre  800
Mississippi Southern  910
Delaware  810
Louisville  720
Tampa  720
No. 18 Navy  621
Arkansas State  630
No. 14 Miami (FL)  630
Chattanooga  541
Florida State  550
Memphis State  270
Howard (AL)  180
Sewanee  180
Rankings from AP Poll
1955 Western college football independents records
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Long Beach State  520
Hawaii  740
San Jose State  531
Cal Poly San Dimas  430
La Verne  540
Pacific (CA)  540
Air Force  440
Pepperdine  550
UC Riverside  131

Minor conferences

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ConferenceChampion(s)Record
California Collegiate Athletic AssociationNo champion
Central Church College ConferenceConcordia (NE)3–0
Central Intercollegiate Athletics AssociationMaryland State7–0
Central Intercollegiate Athletic ConferencePittsburg State5–0
College Conference of IllinoisWheaton (IL)5–0–1
Evergreen ConferenceWhitworth6–0
Far Western ConferenceChico State College5–0
Frontier Conference (Montana and Idaho)Rocky Mountain4–0
Gulf Coast ConferenceAbilene Christian
North Texas State
2–1
Frontier Conference (New Mexico)Adams State College
New Mexico Military Institute
4–1
Indiana Collegiate ConferenceSt. Joseph's
Evansville
5–1
Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceParsons6–0
Kansas Collegiate Athletic ConferenceCollege of Emporia7–0
Lone Star ConferenceEast Texas State Teachers
Sam Houston State Teachers
Southwest Texas State Teachers
5–1
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationHillsdale6–0
Midwest Collegiate Athletic ConferenceCoe7–0
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceGustavus Adolphus5–1
Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationSoutheast Missouri State5–0
Nebraska College ConferenceNebraska State Teachers (UN–Kearney)7–0
North Central Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceSouth Dakota State College5–0–1
North Dakota College Athletic ConferenceJamestown College
Dickinson State College
5–1
Ohio Athletic ConferenceMuskingum7–0
Ohio Valley ConferenceTennessee Tech5–0
Oklahoma Collegiate Athletic ConferenceCentral State College (OK)
Northeastern State Teachers (OK)
Southwestern State College (OK)
4–1
Oregon Collegiate ConferenceUnknown
Pacific Northwest ConferenceCollege of Idaho
Lewis & Clark
4–1
Pennsylvania State Athletic ConferenceBloomsburg State Teachers3–0–1
Presidents' Athletic ConferenceWestern Reserve3–0
Rocky Mountain Athletic ConferenceIdaho State College6–0
Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic ConferencePomona-Claremont4–0
South Dakota Intercollegiate ConferenceNorthern State Teachers7–0
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceFlorida A&M6–0
Southwestern Athletic ConferenceSouthern6–1
State Teacher's College Conference of MinnesotaSt. Cloud State Teachers4–0
Texas Collegiate Athletic ConferenceMcMurry2–0
Wisconsin State College ConferenceWisconsin State–Stevens Point6–0

Minor conference standings

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1955 Badger-Illini Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Mission House +510610
Northwestern (WI) +510610
Milton330330
Wisconsin Tech330340
Wisconsin–Extension240340
St. Procopius141141
Concordia (IL)141151
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 California Collegiate Athletic Association football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Fresno State200910
Cal Poly210730
Santa Barbara110360
Los Angeles State010360
San Diego State020280
  • No champion named for the 1955 season
1955 Central Church College Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Concordia (NE) $300620
Tarkio210530
Westmar120170
Dana030160
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Central Intercollegiate Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Pittsburg State $500730
Washburn410621
Fort Hays State221531
St. Benedict's230360
Southwestern (KS)131441
Emporia State0500100
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 2 Maryland State $700900
No. 12 Delaware State510710
No. 13 Morgan State510620
Winston-Salem State510620
No. 7 North Carolina A&T412413
No. 14 Virginia State413423
No. 9 North Carolina College312412
Shaw422432
Bluefield State521721
St. Augustine's350450
Hampton460460
Howard240360
Johnson C. Smith240340
Virginia Union350450
Saint Paul's (VA)150260
Lincoln (PA)160170
West Virginia State060170
Fayetteville State080090
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from the Pittsburgh Courier.[8]
1955 College Conference of Illinois football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Wheaton (IL) $501611
Illinois Wesleyan510630
Millikin420440
Lake Forest321332
Augustana (IL)240260
North Central (IL)140260
Elmhurst060080
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Evergreen Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Whitworth $600900
Pacific Lutheran510530
Puget Sound420620
Eastern Washington330440
Central Washington240260
UBC150???
Western Washington060170
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Gulf Coast Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
North Texas State +210541
Abilene Christian +210352
Trinity (TX)120540
Midwestern (TX)030280
  • + – Conference co-champions
  • North Texas State's loss to Chattanooga and Abilene Christian's loss to Mississippi Southern counted in the conference standings.
1955 Gulf States Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Louisiana Tech $600910
McNeese State510711
Southeastern Louisiana420550
Southwestern Louisiana330540
Northwestern State240450
Northeast Louisiana State150460
Louisiana College060280
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Hoosier Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Indiana Central $411531
Franklin (IN)420630
Hanover420540
Anderson (IN)330450
Earlham330360
Manchester (IN)141261
Taylor150260
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Indiana Collegiate Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Evansville +510630
Saint Joseph's (IN) +510630
Valparaiso420540
Butler330350
DePauw240540
Ball State150350
Indiana State150260
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Central Michigan +510810
Michigan State Normal +510720
Southern Illinois411442
Western Illinois231541
Illinois State Normal231342
Eastern Illinois150360
Northern Illinois State051081
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 Iowa Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Parsons $600800
Luther501901
Simpson520620
Buena Vista321531
Iowa Wesleyan231251
Dubuque240250
Upper Iowa151251
Central (IA)150350
Wartburg150260
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
College of Emporia $700900
Kansas Wesleyan520630
McPherson520530
Baker430450
Bethel (KS)430450
Ottawa250360
Bethany (KS)160180
Friends070080
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Lone Star Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Sam Houston State +510612
Southwest Texas State +510612
East Texas State +510541
Stephen F. Austin240540
Lamar Tech240460
Texas A&I240460
Sul Ross060280
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 Mason–Dixon Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Randolph–Macon $400621
Hampden–Sydney310810
Bridgewater120250
Gallaudet010140
Johns Hopkins020260
Western Maryland020260
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Hillsdale $600900
Kalamazoo420530
Alma330540
Hope330450
Albion330350
Adrian240450
Olivet060180
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Mid-Ohio League football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Ashland $500720
Findlay410620
Wilmington (OH)221531
Bluffton230360
Defiance131171
Ohio Northern050160
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Midwest Athletic Association football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 1 Grambling $2001000
No. 6 Tennessee A&I310720
No. 10 Lincoln (MO)310530
No. 11 Kentucky State220720
Jackson030540
Central State (OH)030440
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from Associated Negro Press[9]
1955 Midwest Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Coe $700800
St. Olaf610710
Carleton520530
Cornell (IA)430530
Grinnell340440
Ripon250251
Knox160260
Monmouth (IL)070070
Lawrence  131
  • $ – Conference champion
  • Lawrence's first three game were cancelled because of a polio epidemic; games against Lawrence were not counted in the conference standings.
1955 Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Gustavus Adolphus $510530
Saint John's (MN)420720
Concordia (MN)420620
Macalester420431
Augsburg330440
St. Thomas (MN)330440
Minnesota–Duluth150350
Hamline060070
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Minnesota Teachers College Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
St. Cloud State $400810
Mankato State310450
Bemidji State130431
Moorhead State130360
Winona State130260
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Missouri College Athletic Union football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Missouri Valley $100911
Tarkio210530
William Jewell210540
Culver–Stockton110243
Central (MO)030161
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
SE Missouri State $500900
Central Missouri State410540
Missouri–Rolla230450
NW Missouri State230251
NE Missouri State140350
SW Missouri State140261
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Missouri Valley Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Wichita +310721
Detroit +310531
Houston220640
Tulsa130271
Oklahoma A&M130280
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 Nebraska College Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Kearney State $610820
Hastings511541
Peru State520720
Wayne State (NE)430441
Doane340341
Nebraska Wesleyan241271
Chadron State250350
Midland070080
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 North Dakota Intercollegiate Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Jamestown +510610
Dickinson State +510510
Wahpeton Science420420
Minot State420420
Mayville State330330
Ellendale231231
Bottineau141141
Valley City State150150
Bismarck JC150150
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 North State Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Lenoir Rhyne $6001000
Catawba *420640
East Carolina320450
Appalachian State330360
Elon240370
Western Carolina *140181
Guilford040071
  • $ – Conference champion
  • * – Western Carolina forfeited a win over Catawba.
1955 Northwest Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Lewis & Clark +410620
College of Idaho +410640
Pacific (OR)230440
Whitman230440
Linfield230360
Willamette140170
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 New Mexico Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
New Mexico Military +410530
Adams State +410640
Panhandle A&M320540
New Mexico Highlands320521
New Mexico Western140360
Arizona State–Flagstaff050090
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 Ohio Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Muskingum $700800
Heidelberg500900
Akron620620
Wooster520720
Hiram320530
Capital430530
Denison332432
Wittenberg332432
Ohio Wesleyan122342
Otterbein241251
Mount Union151152
Kenyon040070
Marietta050080
Oberlin050080
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Ohio Valley Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Tennessee Tech $500730
Middle Tennessee410721
Eastern Kentucky320541
Murray State230640
Western Kentucky140360
Morehead State050090
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Oklahoma Collegiate Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Central State (OK) +410810
Northeastern State +410710
SW Oklahoma State +410630
SE Oklahoma State140361
East Central140360
NW Oklahoma State140360
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 Oregon Collegiate Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Eastern Oregon +310530
Oregon College +310530
Southern Oregon +310450
Portland State130260
Oregon Tech040080
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 Pennsylvania State Teachers College Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Bloomsburg $301521
West Chester310630
Lock Haven521522
Indiana (PA)320350
Clarion311431
California (PA)430440
Shippensburg321422
East Stroudsburg320430
Slippery Rock220340
Millersville330431
Edinboro140180
Mansfield150160
Cheyney031151
Kutztown051152
  • $ – Conference champion
  • Conference standings were based on the Saylor system of ratings.
1955 Prairie College Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Illinois College +210411
Principia +210322
Eureka120161
Rose Poly120161
  • + – Conference co-champions
1955 Presidents' Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Western Reserve $300511
John Carroll221331
Case Tech230330
Wayne131151
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Rocky Mountain Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Idaho State $600810
Western State (CO)620730
Montana State321441
Colorado Mines242252
Colorado College260370
Colorado State–Greeley161171
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 South Dakota Intercollegiate Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Northern State $700910
Huron511521
Southern State520620
Dakota Wesleyan322432
Yankton341341
South Dakota Mines232242
Black Hills132142
General Beadle160160
Sioux Falls060070
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Pomona-Claremont $400710
Whittier310820
Occidental220620
Redlands130450
Caltech040160
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 3 Florida A&M $600711
No. 15 Morris Brown510630
Alabama State620720
Allen420620
Alabama A&M421521
Xavier (LA)420530
Bethune–Cookman420541
Knoxville330450
Lane110340
South Carolina State330360
Clark (GA)251251
Fort Valley State260360
Morehouse141341
Tuskegee152262
Benedict151261
Fisk150280
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from The Pittsburgh Courier.[10]
1955 Southwestern Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 5 Southern $610721
No. 10 Prairie View A&M511821
No. 8 Texas Southern511721
No. 6 Langston412612
Texas College250360
Wiley250370
Arkansas AM&N250280
Bishop0700100
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from the Pittsburgh Courier.[11]
1955 Texas Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
McMurry $200820
Howard Payne110622
Eastern New Mexico020540
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 Virginia Little Seven Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Hampden–Sydney +210810
Randolph–Macon +210621
Emory and Henry110631
Bridgewater020250
  • $ – Conference champion
1955 West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Shepherd $400800
Concord520540
West Virginia Tech320531
Fairmont State630630
West Liberty State330341
Potomac State440440
West Virginia Wesleyan340350
Salem340440
Glenville State170170
Davis & Elkins070070
Morris Harvey *200450
Bethany (WV) *200610
Bluefield State *100721
West Virginia State *010170
  • $ – Conference champion
  • * – Did not qualify for conference standings
    Conference standings based on power ratings
1955 Wisconsin State College Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Stevens Point State $600800
River Falls State410710
La Crosse State410441
Eau Claire State520530
[[{{{school}}}|Platteville State]]320520
[[{{{school}}}|Milwaukee State]]230260
[[{{{school}}}|Whitewater State]]131141
[[{{{school}}}|Stout State]]041251
[[{{{school}}}|Superior State]]041072
[[{{{school}}}|Oshkosh State]]051052
  • $ – Conference champion

Rankings

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Final AP Poll

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The final rankings were made on November 28, after the regular season and without consideration of the postseason bowl games:

1. Oklahoma(10–0–0)Big 7
2. Michigan State(8–1–0)Big 10
3. Maryland(10–0–0)ACC
4. UCLA(9–1–0)PCC
5. Ohio State(7–2–0)Big 10
6. TCU(9–1–0)SWC
7. Georgia Tech(8–1–1)SEC
8. Auburn(8–1–1)SEC
9. Notre Dame(8–2–0)Indep.
10. Mississippi(9–1–0)SEC
11. Pittsburgh(7–3–0)Indep.
12. Michigan(7–2–0)Big 10
13. USC(6–4–0)PCC
14. Miami (Florida)(6–3–0)Indep.
15. Miami (Ohio)(9–0–0)MAC
16. Stanford(6–3–1)PCC
17. Texas A&M(7–2–1)SWC
18. Navy(6–2–1)Indep.
19. West Virginia(8–2–0)Southern
20. Army(6–3–0)Indep.

Final Coaches Poll

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RankingTeam
1Oklahoma
2Michigan State
3Maryland
4UCLA
5Ohio State
6Texas Christian
7Georgia Tech
8Auburn
9Mississippi
10Notre Dame
11Pittsburgh
12USC
13Michigan
14Texas A&M
15Army
16Duke
17West Virginia
18Miami (Fla.)
19Iowa
20 (t)Navy
20 (t)Stanford
20 (t)Miami (Ohio)

Other champions

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Orange Blossom Classic

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Prior to the integration of sports teams, Miami Orange Bowl stadium hosted the New Year's Day game of the same name, and a December game for historically black colleges, the Orange Blossom Classic. Grambling (9–0) and Florida A&M (8–0–1) met to determine the best Negro college football team in the nation, with Grambling winning, 28–21.

Undefeated seasons

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TeamRecordNotes
Oklahoma11–0Consensus national champion, Orange Bowl champion
Grambling 10–0Black college national champion, winner of Orange Blossom Classic
Miami (OH)9–0MAC champion, No. 15 in final AP Poll
Heidelberg9–0OAC second place
Hillsdale9–0MIAA champion, part of 32-game winning streak, Nate Clark national scoring leader
Southeast Missouri State9–0MIAA champion
Whitworth9–0Evergreen champion, 18-game winning streak
College of Emporia9–0KCAC champion
Maryland State9–0CIAA champion
Alfred8–0Consecutive perfect seasons 1955-1956
1955 Centre Colonels football team8–0Independent
Drexel8–0Independent
Muskingum8–0Ohio Athletic Conference champion
Shepherd8–0WVIAC champion, led country with 33.9 points per game
Stevens Point State8–0WSCC champion
Juniata8–0–1Tied with Missouri Valley in Tangerine Bowl
Trinity (CT7–0Independent

Others included [[{{{school}}}|Albany State]], Coe, Parsons. [12]

Bowl games

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Major bowls

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Monday, January 2, 1956

Bowl gameWinning teamLosing team
Orange BowlNo. 1 Oklahoma20No. 3 Maryland6
Rose BowlNo. 2 Michigan State17No. 4 UCLA14
Cotton Bowl ClassicNo. 10 Ole Miss14No. 6 TCU13
Sugar BowlNo. 7 Georgia Tech7No. 11 Pittsburgh0

Other bowls

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Bowl gameLocationDateWinning teamScoreLosing team
Gator BowlJacksonville, FLDecember 31Vanderbilt25–13No. 8 Auburn
Sun BowlEl Paso, TXJanuary 2Wyoming21–14Texas Tech

Statistical leaders

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  • Player scoring most points: Jim Swink, TCU, 125.

Heisman Trophy voting

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

PlayerSchoolPosition1st2nd3rdTotal
Howard CassadyOhio StateHB594179792,219
Jim SwinkTCUHB128120118742
George WelshNavyQB567075383
Earl MorrallMichigan StateQB239760323
Paul HornungNotre DameQB337278321
Bob PellegriniMarylandC386452294
Ron BeagleNavyE214461212
Ron KramerMichiganE125056192
Bo BolingerOklahomaG143242148
Cal JonesIowaG144016138

Statistical leaders

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Individual

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Total offense

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Major college
The following players were the individual leaders in total offense among major college football players during the 1955 season:
1. George Welsh, Navy, 1,348 yards
2. Art Luppino, Arizona, 1,313 yards
3. Jim Swink, TCU, 1,283 yards
4. Paul Hornung, Notre Dame, 1,215 yards
5. Johnny Majors, Tennessee, 1,133 yards
6. John Roach, SMU, 1,126 yards
7. Jerry Reichow, Iowa, 1,091 yards
8. Earl Morrall, Michigan State, 1,047 yards
9. John Brodie, Stanford, 1,044 yards
10. Jim Haluska, Wisconsin, 1,012 yards
[13]

Small college
The following players were the individual leaders in total offense among small college football players during the 1955 season:
1. Jim Stehlin, Brandeis, 1,455 yards
2. Bill Engelhardt, Omaha, 1,416 yards
3. William "Brub" Hamilton, Florence State, 1,369 yards
4. Dick Zahn, Hiram, 1,293 yards
5. Bill Rhodes, Colorado Western, 1,153 yards
6. Edward "Bo" Murray, Grambling, 1,151 yards
7. Gene Scott, Centre, 1,138 yards
8. Pat Tarquinio, Juniata, 1,115 yards
9. Tom Dingle, Wooster, 1,100
10. Bernie Raterink, Central Michigan, 1,044 yards
[14]

Passing

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Major college
The following players were the individual leaders in pass completions among major college football players during the 1955 season:
1. George Welsh, Navy, 94 of 150 (.627), 1,319 yards, 6 interceptions, 8 touchdowns
2. Claude Benham, Columbia, 89 of 188 (.473), 999 yards, 15 interceptions, 7 touchdowns
3. Len Dawson, Purdue, 87 of 155 (.561), 1,005 yards, 14 interceptions, 7 touchdowns
4. John Brodie, Stanford, 76 of 133 (.571), 1,024 yards, 7 interceptions, 5 touchdowns
5. Bill Beagle, Dartmouth, 75 of 155 (.484), 812 yards, 12 interceptions, 6 touchdowns
6. Ken Ford, Hardin-Simmons, 73 of 135 (.541), 854 yards, 10 interceptions, 8 touchdowns
7. Jim Haluska, Wisconsin, 71 of 132 (.538), 1,036 yards, 10 interceptions, 6 touchdowns
8. Nick Consoles, Wake Forest, 66 of 123 (.537), 787 yards, 8 interceptions, 6 touchdowns
9. Joe Clements, Texas, 65 of 128 (.508), 818 yards, 13 interceptions, 6 touchdowns
10. John Roach, SMU, 64 of 141 (.454), 907 yards, 14 interceptions, 6 touchdowns
[15]

Small college
The following players were the individual leaders in pass completions among small college football players during the 1955 season:
1. Foley, Hamline, 87 of 167 (.521), 1,034 yards, 8 interceptions, 6 touchdowns
2. Stehlin, Brandeis, 76 of 147 (.517), 1,226 yards, 13 interceptions, 10 tochddowns
3. Magee, San Diego State, 66 of 123 (.537), 792 yards, 12 interceptions, 4 touchdowns
4. Belton, Davidson, 60 of 130 (.462), 839 yards, 8 interceptions, 5 touchdowns
5. Webb, St. Ambrose, 60 of 132 (.455), 899 yards, 8 interceptions, 7 touchdowns
6. Arnecke, Trinity (TX), 58 of 115 (.504), 752 yards, 7 interceptions, 3 touchdowns
7. Palmer, Baldwin-Wallace, 58 of 121 (.479), 578 yards, 11 interceptions, 5 touchdowns
8. Karas, Geneva, 57 of 104 (.548), 616 yards, 6 interceptions, 4 touchdowns
9. Zahn, Hiram, 55 of 124 (.444), 1,214 yards, 9 interceptions, 10 touchdowns
10. Kessler, Capital, 54 of 117 (.462), 869 yards, 11 interceptions, 7 touchdowns
[16]

Rushing

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Major college
The following players were the individual leaders in rushing yards among major college football players during the 1955 season:
1. Art Luppino, Arizona, 1,313 yards on 209 carries (6.28 average)
2. Jim Swink, TCU, 1,283 on 157 carries (8.17 average)
3. Howard Cassady, Ohio State, 958 yards on 161 carries (5.95 average)
4. Fob James, Auburn, 879 yards on 123 carries (7.15 average)
5. Jim Brown, UCLA, 829 yards on 130 carries (6.38 average)
6. Bobby Moss, West Virginia, 807 yards on 98 carries (8.23 average)
7. Joel Wells, Clemson, 782 yards on 134 carries (5.79 average)
8. Jim Bakhtiar, Virginia, 733 yards on 158 carries (4.64 average)
9. Bob Pascal, Duke, 750 yards on 156 carries (4.81 average)
10. Jim Shanley, Oregon, 711 yards on 100 carries (7.11 average)
[17]

Small college
The following players were the individual leaders in rushing yards among small college football players during the 1955 season:
1. Scott, Centre, 1138 yards on 107 carries (10.64 average)
2. Bill Rhodes, Colorado Western, 1,112 yards on 142 carries (7.83 average)
3. Dingle, Wooster, 1,100 yards on 128 carries (8.59 average)
4. Raterink, Central Michigan, 1,044 yards on 128 carries (8.16 average)
5. Taylor, Florence State, 1,021 yards on 196 carries
6. Raab, Alma, 980 yards on 103 carries (9.51 average)
7. Nate Clark, Hillsdale, 949 yards on 153 carries (6.20 average)
8. Livingston, Heidelberg, 931 yards on 144 carries (6.47 average)
9. Murray, Grambling, 924 yards on 117 carries (7.90 average)
10. Boles, Sam Houston State, 906 yards on 133 carries (6.81 average)
[18]

Receiving

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Major college
The following players were the individual leaders in receptions among major college football players during the 1955 season:
1. Hank Burnine, Missouri, 44 receptions, 594 yards, 2 touchdowns
2. Johnny Bredice, Boston University, 35 receptions, 468 yards, 4 touchdowns
3. Barnes, Wake Forest, 31 receptions, 349 yards, 0 touchdowns
4. Ron Beagle, Navy, 30 receptions, 451 yards, 4 touchdowns
5. Hurley, Montana, 25 receptions, 431 yards, 2 touchdowns
6. Jimmy Orr, Georgia, 24 receptions, 443 yards, 3 touchdowns
6. Sanders, Colorado A&M, 24 receptions, 351 yards, 3 touchdowns
6. Pascoe, Dartmouth, 24 receptions, 331 yards, 3 touchdowns
6. Massegee, Hardin-Simmons, 24 receptions, 321 yards, 4 touchdowns
6. Seitz, Columbia, 24 receptions, 286 yards, 1 touchdown
[19]

Small college
The following players were the individual leaders in receptions among small college football players during the 1955 season:
1. Donlin, Hamline, 41 receptions, 480 yards, 2 touchdowns
2. Rogers, Fresno State, 33 receptions, 350 yards, 3 touchdowns
3. Cox, Cal Poly, 32 receptions, 613 yards, 8 touchdowns
4. Rychlec, American International, 30 receptions, 383 yards, 1 touchdown
5. Lashmet, Western Illinois, 29 receptions, 567 yards, 4 touchdowns
5. Hecker, Bowling Green, 29 receptions, 566 yards, 6 touchdowns
5. Joseph, Baldwin-Wallace, 29 receptions, 290 yards, 2 touchdowns
8. Davis, Arkansas Tech, 28 receptions, 521 yards, 4 touchdowns
9. Payne, William Jewell, 27 receptions, 413 yards, 1 touchdown
9. Price, Geneva, 27 receptions, 349 yards, 2 touchdowns
[20]

Scoring

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Major college
The following players were the individual leaders in scoring among major college football players during the 1955 season:
1. Jim Swink, TCU, 125 points (20 TD, 5 PAT)
2. Jon Arnett, USC, 108 points (15 TD, 18 PAT)
3. Tommy McDonald, Oklahoma, 96 points (16 TD)
3. Ed Vereb, Maryland, 96 points (16 TD)
3. Art Luppino, 96 points (13 TD, 18 PAT)
6. Howard Cassady, 90 points (15 TD)
7. Paige Cothren, Ole Miss, 74 points (6 TD, 20 PAT, 6 FG)
8. Charles Horton, Vanderbilt, 73 points (12 TD, 1 PAT)
9. Jim Brown, UCLA, 69 points (9 TD, 15 PAT)
10. Jack Morris, Oregon, 67 points (8 TD, 19 PAT)
[21]

Small college
The following players were the individual leaders in scoring among small college football players during the 1955 season:
1. Nate Clark, Hillsdale, 144 points (24 TD)
2. Lehman, St. John's (MN), 109 points (16 TD, 13 PAT)
3. Raterink, Central Michigan, 108 points (18 TD)
4. Livingston, Heidelberg, 102 points (17 TD)
5. Rosenberg, Coe, 93 points (11 TD, 27 PAT)
5. Dervin, Mississippi Vocational, 93 points (15 TD, 3 PAT)
7. Murray, Grambling, 92 points (13 TD, 14 PAT)
8. Bill Rhodes, Colorado Western, 91 points (14 TD, 7 PAT)
9. Lutterbach, Evansville, 90 points (15 TD)
10. Raab, Alma, 85 points (14 TD, 1 PAT)
[21]

Team

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Total offense

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Major college
The following teams were the leaders in total offense in major college football during the 1955 season:
1. Oklahoma, 410.7 yards per game
2. West Virginia, 384.5 yards per game
3. Denver, 368.9 yards per game
4. Michigan State, 364.4 yards per game
5. Navy, 358.6 yards per game
6. Notre Dame, 357.3 yards per game
7. Stanford, 355.1 yards per game
8. TCU, 353.1 yards per game
9. Miami (FL), 344.9 yards per game
10. Ole Miss, 339.6 yards per game
[22]

Small college
The following teams were the leaders in total offense in small college football during the 1955 season:
1. Centre, 431.0 yards per game
2. Arizona State, 417.1 per game
3. Central Michigan, 413.0 yards per game
4. Florida A&M, 379.9 yards per game
5. Coe, 379.0 yards per game
6. Grambling, 375.7 yards per game
7. College of Emporia, 373.6 yards per game
8. Southwestern (TN), 373.4 yards per game
9. Hillsdale, 370.2 yards per game
10. Muskingum, 366.4 yards per game
[23]

Total defense

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Major college
The following teams were the leaders in total defense in major college football during the 1955 season:
1. Army, 160.7 yards per game
2. Maryland, 169.1 yards per game
3. Navy, 181.7 yards per game
4. Auburn, 183.2 yards per game
5. Holy Cross, 183.5 yards per game
6. Oklahoma, 186.4 yards per game
7. Detroit, 194.1 yards per game
8. West Virginia, 194.8 yards per game
9. George Washington, 197.7 yards per game
10. Georgia Tech, 199.9 yards per game
[24]

Small college
The following teams were the leaders in total defense in small college football during the 1955 season:
1. College of Emporia, 102.0 yards per game
2. National Aggies, 117.6 yards per game
3. North Carolina A&T, 118.4 yards per game
4. Geneva, 121.8 yards per game
5. Mississippi Southern, 122.3 yards per game
6. Allen, 123.6 yards per game
7. Shaw, 126.8 yards per game
8. Moravian, 128.6 yards per game
9. Shippensberg State, 130.8 yards per game
10. Virginia State, 131.5 yards per game
[25]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "1955 Preseason AP Football Poll". CollegePollArchive.com. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved November 7, 2021.
  2. ^ Id.
  3. ^ Independent Press-Telegram, (Long Beach, CA), Sep. 25, 1955, pB-1
  4. ^ Sports Illustrated, Oct. 17, 1955, p6
  5. ^ "Michigan Fights Back to Nip Gophers, 14–13," San Antonio Light, Oct. 23, 1955, p5–D
  6. ^ "Knox Hurt-- UCLA Barely Beats Huskies", Oakland Tribune, Nov. 13, 1955, pA-51.
  7. ^ "1955 Atlantic Coast Conference Year Summary". sports-reference.com. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  8. ^ "Final National Football Rating". The Pittsburgh Courier. December 10, 1955. p. 30 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ "Pigskin Huddle". The Black Dispatch. December 8, 1955. p. 9 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ "Final National Football Rating". The Pittsburgh Courier. December 10, 1955. p. 30 – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ "Final National Football Rating". The Pittsburgh Courier. December 10, 1955. p. 30 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ "Twenty-One Finish Unbeaten-Untied," The Huronite and Daily Plainsman (Huron, SD), Nov. 22, 1955, p9
  13. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 61.
  14. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 70.
  15. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 63.
  16. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 71.
  17. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 63.
  18. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 70.
  19. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 63.
  20. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 71.
  21. ^ a b Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 62.
  22. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 67.
  23. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 72.
  24. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 67.
  25. ^ Official Collegiate Football Record Book. National Collegiate Athletic Association. 1956. p. 72.