2023 NCAA Division I FBS football season

The 2023 NCAA Division I FBS football season was the 154th season of college football in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at its highest level of competition, the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). The regular season began on August 26 and ended on December 9. The postseason began on December 15, and, aside from any all-star games that are scheduled, ended on January 8, 2024, with the College Football Playoff National Championship at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas. The Michigan Wolverines defeated the Washington Huskies by a score of 34–13 to claim the program's first national championship in the College Football Playoff (CFP) era, and their 12th overall. This was the tenth and final season of using the four team College Football Playoff (CFP) system, with the bracket being expanded to 12 teams for the 2024 season.[1]

2023 NCAA Division I FBS season
Number of teams133
DurationAugust 26, 2023 – December 9, 2023
Preseason AP No. 1Georgia
Post-season
DurationDecember 15, 2023 – January 8, 2024
Bowl games42[a]
AP Poll No. 1Michigan
Coaches Poll No. 1Michigan
Heisman TrophyJayden Daniels, QB, LSU
College Football Playoff
2024 College Football Playoff National Championship
SiteNRG Stadium
Houston, Texas
Champion(s)Michigan
NCAA Division I FBS football seasons
← 2022
2024 →

Rule changes edit

The following rules changes were approved by the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Committee for the 2023 season:[2]

  • Mirroring the NFL rule adopted in the 2005 NFL season, teams may not call consecutive timeouts during a single dead ball period.
  • Accepted penalties committed on the last play of the first or third quarter will no longer result in an untimed down before the period ends. The penalty enforcement will be marked off and the second or fourth quarter will begin with the ball at the new spot. This modifies the rule adopted in the 1983 season.
  • Modifying a rule adopted in the 1968 season, the game clock will no longer be stopped for first downs on offense except inside of the final two minutes of each half. This is similar to a rule used in the current incarnation of the UFL, as well as its predecessors, the USFL and XFL. The NFL does not stop the game clock for first downs at any time in the game. This rule was adopted for all NCAA Football divisions except Division III, who will still use the previous rule of clock stoppages on first down for the entire game.
  • When there is not a replay official in the booth, the on-field officials will have optional replay available in the event of a coaches' challenge. This rule was trialed in the Division II Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association in its 2022 conference season.
  • Establishing guidelines for second-half warmup activities, including requiring teams to wait until the field is made available to return and having designated areas of the field to warm up.
  • When teams are on the field, drones are not allowed over the playing surface or the team area.
  • If a player receives a third targeting penalty in the same season (which requires a one-game suspension) and the penalty is overturned by the National Coordinator of Officials upon appeal, the suspension will be vacated.
  • The area where "roughing/running into the kicker" protection ends was expanded to include when the kicker retreats more than five yards behind the spot the kicker was initially lined up to receive the snap. Previously the protection ended only when the kicker ran outside the tackle box before kicking the ball. The rule change was the result of a controversial play in the 2022 game between Missouri and Kentucky, where roughing was called after the Kentucky punter was hit while attempting a rushed kick following a botched snap which sailed more than 20 yards over his head.

Points of Emphasis for the 2023 season include:[3]

  • Continued emphasis on targeting, sideline control, concussions, feigning injuries and acts of taunting.
  • Pre-snap actions by the offense designed to cause the defense to jump into the neutral zone (abrupt, quick, or jerky motions by the quarterback) and disconcerting signals by the defense designed to cause a false start or snap issues on offense (simulating cadence and other sounds or motions similar to the offense's snap signals, including the use of the "clap" on defense designed to be similar to the offense).
  • Rules regarding illegal hits to the quarterback/passer will be more strictly enforced.

Other headlines edit

  • August 15 – Fresno State announced that the Bulldogs' home opener against Eastern Washington on September 9 would be the first-ever FBS game to be broadcast over linear television exclusively in Spanish. The city of Fresno is roughly 60% Hispanic, and the majority of Fresno State's enrollment is Hispanic. The game would be broadcast on UniMás in the Fresno and Bakersfield markets. English-language coverage was exclusively via streaming, with audio by Fresno State's radio broadcast team.[4]
  • August 29 – Arizona State announced a self imposed bowl ban for the 2023 season. The ban stems from allegations that Arizona State hosted high school recruits during the COVID-19 dead period. At the time of announcement, an NCAA infractions case was ongoing.[5]
  • October 4 – The NCAA announced several major changes to Division I football recruiting and governance rules:[6]
    • The window for athletes to enter the transfer portal was reduced. For FBS players, the portal now opens on the Monday after conference championship games are played and stays open for 30 days. For players participating in the postseason (i.e., bowl games, including the College Football Playoff), there is an additional 5-day window after the players' final game.
    • The limit on "initial counters"—i.e., players who are receiving athletically related financial aid for the first time—was permanently eliminated. The previous limit of 25 had been suspended due to COVID-19 impacts.
    • Football attendance requirements for FBS membership were eliminated, effective immediately.
    • The application fee for transitioning from FCS to FBS increased from $5,000 to $5 million, effective immediately.
    • Starting with the 2027–28 school year, FBS members must fund the equivalent of 210 full scholarships across all sports, and spend at least $6 million annually on such aid.
    • Also starting in 2027–28, FBS members must provide at least 90% of the total number of allowed scholarships across 16 sports, including football. Schools that start FBS transitions in 2024–25 or later must meet both of the aforementioned limits by the end of their two-year transition.
  • November 28 – Conference USA announced that Delaware, currently a member of the Coastal Athletic Association and its technically separate football arm of CAA Football, would start a transition from FCS to FBS in 2024 and join CUSA in 2025.[7]
  • December 1 – The two schools left behind by the effective demise of the Pac-12 Conference, Oregon State and Washington State, entered into a scheduling agreement with the Mountain West Conference (MW) for at least the 2024 season. Each MW team will play one game against either of the so-called "Pac-2" schools. These games will not count in the MW standings, and the Pac-2 will not be eligible for the MW championship.[8]

Conference realignment edit

Two schools played their first FBS seasons in 2023. Sam Houston (from the Western Athletic Conference) and Jacksonville State (from the ASUN Conference) began transitions from Division I FCS in 2022 and joined Conference USA (CUSA) in July 2023.[9]

Two other Independent schools, Liberty and New Mexico State, joined CUSA in 2023; those schools had respectively been full members of the ASUN and WAC.[9]

Six schools from CUSA joined the American Athletic Conference for the 2023 season—Charlotte, Florida Atlantic, North Texas, Rice, UAB, and UTSA.[10] This followed the departure of Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF from The American for the Big 12 Conference in 2023. In addition, BYU, previously an FBS independent, joined the Big 12.[11]

TeamConference in 2022Conference in 2023
BYUIndependent (FBS)Big 12
CharlotteCUSAAmerican
CincinnatiAmericanBig 12
Florida AtlanticCUSAAmerican
HoustonAmericanBig 12
Jacksonville StateASUN (FCS)CUSA
LibertyIndependent (FBS)CUSA
New Mexico StateIndependent (FBS)CUSA
North TexasCUSAAmerican
RiceCUSAAmerican
Sam HoustonWAC (FCS)CUSA
UABCUSAAmerican
UCFAmericanBig 12
UTSACUSAAmerican

The 2023 season was the last for 13 FBS teams in their current conferences, and was also the last for Army as an FBS independent.

SchoolCurrent conferenceFuture conference
ArizonaPac-12Big 12
Arizona StatePac-12Big 12
ArmyIndependent (FBS)American
CaliforniaPac-12ACC
ColoradoPac-12Big 12
Kennesaw StateIndependent (FCS)CUSA
OklahomaBig 12SEC
OregonPac-12Big Ten
SMUAmericanACC
StanfordPac-12ACC
TexasBig 12SEC
UCLAPac-12Big Ten
USCPac-12Big Ten
UtahPac-12Big 12
WashingtonPac-12Big Ten

One FCS school, Kennesaw State, started the transition of its program to FBS in the 2023 season by leaving the ASUN Conference and playing the 2023 season as an FCS independent. It will join CUSA in 2024.[12]

Stadiums edit

Kickoff games edit

FirstBank Stadium during the Vanderbilt vs. Hawaii week zero game

Rankings reflect the AP Poll entering each week.

"Week 0" edit

The regular season began on Saturday, August 26 with seven games in Week 0.

Week 1 edit

Week 2 edit

Top 10 matchups edit

Rankings through Week 9 reflect the AP Poll. Rankings for Week 10 and beyond will list College Football Playoff Rankings first and AP Poll second. Teams that failed to be a top 10 team for one poll or the other will be noted.

Regular season edit

Conference championship games edit

Bowl games edit

FCS team wins over FBS teams edit

DateTimeVisiting teamHome teamSiteTVResultAttendance
September 93:30 p.m.No. 24 (FCS) Southern IllinoisNorthern IllinoisHuskie StadiumDeKalb, IllinoisESPN+ 14–11  13,114
September 96:00 p.m.(FCS) FordhamBuffaloUB StadiumAmherst, New YorkESPN+ 40–37  15,854
September 97:00 p.m.No. 7 (FCS) IdahoNevadaMackay StadiumReno, NevadaMWN 33–6[b]  19,852
September 165:00 p.m.No. 8 (FCS) Sacramento StateStanfordStanford StadiumStanford, CaliforniaP12N 30–23  23,848
#Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game.
  1. ^ Bowl count includes the National Championship game.
  2. ^ Idaho was a 5.5-point favorite at kickoff.[15]

Upsets edit

This section lists instances of unranked teams defeating AP Poll-ranked teams during the season.

Regular season edit

Bowl games edit

Rankings in this section are based on the final CFP rankings released on December 3, 2023.

Conference standings edit

2023 American Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
No. 22 SMU y$ 80  113 
Tulane y 80  113 
UTSA 71  94 
Memphis 62  103 
South Florida 44  76 
Rice 44  67 
Navy 44  57 
North Texas 35  57 
UAB 35  48 
Florida Atlantic 35  48 
Charlotte 26  39 
Tulsa 26  48 
Temple 17  39 
East Carolina 17  210 
Championship: SMU 26, Tulane 14
  • $ – Conference champion
  • y – Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll
2023 Atlantic Coast Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
No. 6 Florida State y$ 80  131 
No. 19 Louisville y 71  104 
No. 21 NC State 62  94 
Georgia Tech 53  76 
Virginia Tech 53  76 
North Carolina 44  85 
No. 20 Clemson 44  94 
Duke 44  85 
Miami (FL) 35  76 
Boston College 35  76 
Syracuse 26  67 
Virginia 26  39 
Pittsburgh 26  39 
Wake Forest 17  48 
Championship: Florida State 16, Louisville 6
  • $ – Conference champion
  • y – Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll
2023 Big Ten Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
East Division
No. 1 Michigan xy$#^ 90  150 
No. 10 Ohio State 81  112 
No. 13 Penn State 72  103 
Maryland 45  85 
Rutgers 36  76 
Michigan State 27  48 
Indiana 18  39 
West Division
No. 24 Iowa xy 72  104 
Northwestern 54  85 
Wisconsin 54  76 
Illinois 36  57 
Minnesota 36  67 
Nebraska 36  57 
Purdue 36  48 
Championship: Michigan 26, Iowa 0
  • # – College Football Playoff champion
  • ^ – College Football Playoff participant
  • $ – Conference champion
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
  • y – Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll
2023 Big 12 Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
No. 3 Texas y$^ 81  122 
No. 16 Oklahoma State y 72  104 
No. 15 Oklahoma 72  103 
Iowa State 63  76 
No. 18 Kansas State 63  94 
West Virginia 63  94 
Texas Tech 54  76 
No. 23 Kansas 54  94 
UCF 36  67 
TCU 36  57 
Houston 27  48 
BYU 27  57 
Baylor 27  39 
Cincinnati 18  39 
Championship: Texas 49, Oklahoma State 21
  • ^ – College Football Playoff participant
  • $ – Conference champion
  • y – Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll
2023 Conference USA football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
No. 25 Liberty y$ 80  131 
New Mexico State y 71  105 
Jacksonville State* 62  94 
Western Kentucky 53  85 
Middle Tennessee 35  48 
UTEP 26  39 
Sam Houston* 26  39 
Louisiana Tech 26  39 
FIU 17  48 
Championship: Liberty 49, New Mexico State 35
  • $ – Conference champion
  • y – Championship game participant
  • * – Ineligible for postseason play due to FCS-to-FBS transition rules
Rankings from AP Poll
2023 Mid-American Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
East Division
Miami (OH) xy$ 71  113 
Ohio 62  103 
Bowling Green 53  76 
Buffalo 35  39 
Akron 17  210 
Kent State 08  111 
West Division
Toledo xy 80  113 
Northern Illinois 53  76 
Eastern Michigan 44  67 
Central Michigan 35  57 
Ball State 35  48 
Western Michigan 35  48 
Championship: Miami (OH) 23, Toledo 14
  • $ – Conference champion
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
  • y – Championship game participant
2023 Mountain West Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
UNLV y 62  95 
Boise State y$ 62  86 
San Jose State 62  76 
Air Force 53  94 
Wyoming 53  94 
Fresno State 44  94 
Utah State 44  67 
Hawaii 35  58 
Colorado State 35  57 
Nevada 26  210 
New Mexico 26  48 
San Diego State 26  48 
Championship: Boise State 44, UNLV 20
  • $ – Conference champion
  • y – Championship game participant
2023 Pac-12 Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
No. 2 Washington y$^ 90  141 
No. 6 Oregon y 81  122 
No. 11 Arizona 72  103 
Oregon State 54  85 
Utah 54  85 
USC 54  85 
California 45  67 
UCLA 45  85 
Washington State 27  57 
Stanford 27  39 
Arizona State* 27  39 
Colorado 18  48 
Championship: Washington 34, Oregon 31
  • ^ – College Football Playoff participant
  • $ – Conference champion
  • y – Championship game participant
  • * – Ineligible for postseason play due to self-imposed ban for 2020 recruiting violations
Rankings from AP Poll
2023 Southeastern Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
East Division
No. 4 Georgia xy 80  131 
No. 8 Missouri 62  112 
No. 17 Tennessee 44  94 
Kentucky 35  76 
Florida 35  57 
South Carolina 35  57 
Vanderbilt 08  210 
West Division
No. 5 Alabama xy$^ 80  122 
No. 9 Ole Miss 62  112 
No. 12 LSU 62  103 
Texas A&M 44  76 
Auburn 35  67 
Mississippi State 17  57 
Arkansas 17  48 
Championship: Alabama 27, Georgia 24
  • ^ – College Football Playoff participant
  • $ – Conference champion
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
  • y – Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll
2023 Sun Belt Conference football standings
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
East Division
James Madison* x 71  112 
Appalachian State y 62  95 
Coastal Carolina 53  85 
Old Dominion 53  67 
Georgia State 35  76 
Marshall 35  67 
Georgia Southern 35  67 
West Division
Troy xy$ 71  113 
Texas State 44  85 
Arkansas State 44  67 
South Alabama 44  76 
Louisiana 35  67 
Southern Miss 26  39 
Louisiana–Monroe 08  210 
Championship: Troy 49, Appalachian State 23
  • $ – Conference champion
  • x – Division champion/co-champions
  • y – Championship game participant
  • * – Ineligible for postseason play due to FCS-to-FBS transition rules
2023 NCAA Division I FBS independents football records
ConfOverall
Team W L  W L 
No. 14 Notre Dame   103 
Army   66 
UConn   39 
UMass   39 
Rankings from AP Poll

Rankings edit

The top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls.[16][17]

Pre-season polls edit

AP
RankingTeam
1Georgia (60)
2Michigan (2)
3Ohio State (1)
4Alabama
5LSU
6USC
7Penn State
8Florida State
9Clemson
10Washington
11Texas
12Tennessee
13Notre Dame
14Utah
15Oregon
16Kansas State
17TCU
18Oregon State
19Wisconsin
20Oklahoma
21North Carolina
22Ole Miss
23Texas A&M
24Tulane
25Iowa
USA Today Coaches
RankingTeam
1Georgia (61)
2Michigan
3Alabama (4)
4Ohio State (1)
5LSU
6USC
7Penn State
8Florida State
9Clemson
10Tennessee
11Washington
12Texas
13Notre Dame
14Utah
15Oregon
16TCU
17Kansas State
18Oregon State
19Oklahoma
20North Carolina
21Wisconsin
22Ole Miss
23Tulane
24Texas Tech
25Texas A&M

CFB Playoff final rankings edit

On December 3, 2023, the College Football Playoff selection committee announced its final team rankings for the year. It was the tenth and final season of the CFP era under four teams. This was the first time that an undefeated Power Five conference champion (Florida State) was left out of the semifinals.[18]

RankTeamW–LConference and standingBowl game
1Michigan Wolverines13–0Big Ten championsRose Bowl (CFB playoff semifinal)
2Washington Huskies13–0Pac–12 championsSugar Bowl (CFB playoff semifinal)
3Texas Longhorns12–1Big 12 championsSugar Bowl (CFB playoff semifinal)
4Alabama Crimson Tide12–1SEC championsRose Bowl (CFB playoff semifinal)
5Florida State Seminoles13–0ACC championsOrange Bowl
6Georgia Bulldogs12–1SEC East Division championsOrange Bowl
7Ohio State Buckeyes11–1Big Ten East Division second placeCotton Bowl
8Oregon Ducks11–2Pac–12 second placeFiesta Bowl
9Missouri Tigers10–2SEC East Division second placeCotton Bowl
10Penn State Nittany Lions10–2Big Ten East Division third placePeach Bowl
11Ole Miss Rebels10–2SEC West Division second place (tie)Peach Bowl
12Oklahoma Sooners10–2Big 12 second place (tie)Alamo Bowl
13LSU Tigers9–3SEC West Division second place (tie)ReliaQuest Bowl
14Arizona Wildcats9–3Pac–12 third placeAlamo Bowl
15Louisville Cardinals10–3ACC second placeHoliday Bowl
16Notre Dame Fighting Irish9–3IndependentSun Bowl
17Iowa Hawkeyes10–3Big Ten West Division championsCitrus Bowl
18NC State Wolfpack9–3ACC third placePop-Tarts Bowl
19Oregon State Beavers8–4Pac–12 fourth place (tie)Sun Bowl
20Oklahoma State Cowboys9–4Big 12 second place (tie)Texas Bowl
21Tennessee Volunteers8–4SEC East Division third placeCitrus Bowl
22Clemson Tigers8–4ACC sixth place (tie)Gator Bowl
23Liberty Flames13–0CUSA championsFiesta Bowl
24SMU Mustangs11–2AAC championsFenway Bowl
25Kansas State Wildcats8–4Big 12 fourth place (tie)Pop-Tarts Bowl

Final rankings edit

RankAssociated PressCoaches' Poll
1Michigan (61)Michigan (63)
2WashingtonWashington
3TexasGeorgia
4GeorgiaTexas
5AlabamaAlabama
6OregonFlorida State
7Florida StateOregon
8MissouriMissouri
9Ole MissOle Miss
10Ohio StateOhio State
11ArizonaArizona
12LSULSU
13Penn StatePenn State
14Notre DameNotre Dame
15OklahomaOklahoma
16Oklahoma StateOklahoma State
17TennesseeTennessee
18Kansas StateLouisville
19LouisvilleKansas State
20ClemsonClemson
21NC StateNC State
22SMUIowa
23KansasKansas
24IowaSMU
25LibertyWest Virginia

Postseason edit

There are 41 team-competitive FBS post-season bowl games, with two teams advancing to a 42nd – the CFP National Championship game. Normally, a team is required to have a .500 minimum winning percentage during the regular season to become bowl-eligible (six wins for an 11- or 12-game schedule, and seven wins for a 13-game schedule). If there are not enough winning teams to fulfill all open bowl slots, teams with losing records may be chosen to fill all 82 bowl slots. Additionally, on the rare occasion in which a conference champion does not meet eligibility requirements, they are usually still chosen for bowl games via tie-ins for their conference.

Conference summaries edit

Rankings in this section are based on CFP rankings released prior to the games.

ConferenceChampionship gameOverall Player of the Year/MVPOffensive Player of the YearDefensive Player of the YearSpecial Teams Player of the YearCoach of the Year
DateVenue (Location)MatchupResult
ACCDec. 2, 2023Bank of America Stadium (Charlotte, North Carolina)No. 4 Florida State vs. No. 14 LouisvilleFlorida State 16–6Jordan Travis, QB, Florida State[19]Jordan Travis, QB, Florida State[19]Payton Wilson, LB, NC State[19]Mike Norvell, Florida State[19]
AmericanDec. 2, 2023Yulman Stadium (New Orleans, Louisiana)SMU at No. 22 TulaneSMU 26–14Michael Pratt, QB, Tulane[20]Trey Moore, LB, UTSA[20]LaJohntay Wester, WR/RS, Florida Atlantic[20]Willie Fritz, Tulane[20]
Big TenDec. 2, 2023Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis, Indiana)No. 2 Michigan vs. No. 16 IowaMichigan 26–0Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State[21]Jer'Zhan Newton, DL, Illinois[21]Dragan Kesich, PK, Minnesota; Tory Taylor, P, Iowa; & Cooper DeJean, RS, Iowa[21]David Braun, Northwestern (coaches & media)[21]
Big 12Dec. 2, 2023AT&T Stadium (Arlington, Texas)No. 7 Texas vs. No. 18 Oklahoma StateTexas 49–21Ollie Gordon II, RB, Oklahoma State[22]T'Vondre Sweat, DL, Texas[22]Austin McNamara, P, Texas Tech[22]Mike Gundy, Oklahoma State[22]
CUSADec. 1, 2023Williams Stadium (Lynchburg, Virginia)New Mexico State at No. 24 LibertyLiberty 49–35Kaidon Salter, QB, LibertyDiego Pavia, QB, New Mexico StateTyren Dupree, LB, LibertyEthan Albertson, PK, New Mexico StateJamey Chadwell, Liberty
Jerry Kill, New Mexico.[23]
MACDec. 2, 2023Ford Field (Detroit, Michigan)Miami (OH) vs. ToledoMiami (OH) 23–14Peny Boone, RB, Toledo[24]Matt Salopek, LB, Miami (OH)[24]Graham Nicholson, PK, Miami (OH)[24]Jason Candle, Toledo[24]
MWDec. 2, 2023Allegiant Stadium (Paradise, Nevada)Boise State at UNLVBoise State 44–20Ashton Jeanty, RB, Boise State[25]Mohamed Kamara, DE, Colorado State[25]Jose Pizano, PK, UNLV[25]Barry Odom, UNLV[25]
Pac-12Dec. 1, 2023No. 3 Washington vs. No. 5 OregonWashington 34–31Bo Nix, QB, Oregon[26]Laiatu Latu, DE, UCLA[26]Kalen DeBoer, Washington[26]
SECDec. 2, 2023Mercedes-Benz Stadium (Atlanta, Georgia)No. 1 Georgia vs. No. 8 AlabamaAlabama 27–24Jayden Daniels, QB, LSUDallas Turner, LB, AlabamaWill Reichard, PK/P, AlabamaEliah Drinkwitz, Missouri.[27]
Sun BeltDec. 2, 2023Veterans Memorial Stadium (Troy, Alabama)Appalachian State at TroyTroy 49–23Jordan McCloud, QB, James Madison[28]Kimani Vidal, RB, Troy[28]Jalen Green, DE, James Madison[28]Curt Cignetti, James Madison[28]

Conference champions' bowl games edit

Ranks are per the final CFP rankings, released in December 2023, with win–loss records at that time.

ConferenceChampionW–LRankBowl game
AmericanSMU11–224Fenway Bowl
ACCFlorida State13–05Orange Bowl
Big TenMichiganCFP13–01Rose Bowl
Big 12TexasCFP12–13Sugar Bowl
CUSALiberty13–023Fiesta Bowl
MACMiami (OH)11–2Cure Bowl
Mountain WestBoise State8–5LA Bowl
Pac-12WashingtonCFP13–02Sugar Bowl
SECAlabamaCFP12–14Rose Bowl
Sun BeltTroy11–2Birmingham Bowl

CFP College Football Playoff participant

Bowl-eligible teams edit

Number of bowl berths available: 82
Number of bowl-eligible teams: 79
Number of conditional bowl-eligible teams: 2 (Jacksonville State and James Madison)
Number of teams qualified by APR: 1 (Minnesota)

Bowl-ineligible teams edit

Number of bowl-ineligible teams: 51

Conference performance in bowl games edit

Division I FBS
ConferenceGamesRecordBowls
WLPct.WonLost
ACC1156.455Gasparilla, Birmingham, Military, Fenway, GatorBoca Raton, Duke's Mayo, Holiday, Pinstripe
Pop-Tarts, Orange
American633.500Frisco, Boca Raton, LibertyFirst Responder, Military, Fenway
Big 12954.556Independence, Guaranteed Rate, Duke's Mayo
Texas, Pop-Tarts
Gasparilla, Alamo, Liberty, Sugar
Big Ten1064.600Las Vegas, Quick Lane, Pinstripe, Music City, Rose, ChampionshipCotton, Peach, ReliaQuest, Citrus
C-USA422.500New Orleans, Famous ToasteryNew Mexico, Fiesta
MAC624.333Myrtle Beach, CamelliaCure, 68 Ventures, Quick Lane, Arizona
Mountain West734.429New Mexico, Armed Forces, ArizonaLA, Famous Idaho Potato, Hawaii, Guaranteed Rate
Pac-12954.556LA, Holiday, Alamo, Fiesta, SugarIndependence, Las Vegas, Sun, Championship
SEC954.556Cotton, Peach, Orange, ReliaQuest, CitrusTexas, Gator, Music City, Rose
Sun Belt1257.417Cure, Famous Idaho Potato, 68 Ventures,
Hawaii, First Responder
Myrtle Beach, New Orleans, Famous Toastery, Frisco,
Birmingham, Camellia, Armed Forces
Independent1101.000Sun

Source:[30]

Note: The only independent team that played in an FBS bowl game was Notre Dame.

College Football Playoff edit

SemifinalsChampionship
January 1 – Rose Bowl
Rose Bowl, Pasadena
  1  Michigan (OT)27 
  4  Alabama20 January 8 – National Championship
NRG Stadium, Houston
 
    1  Michigan34
January 1 – Sugar Bowl
Caesars Superdome, New Orleans
   2  Washington13
 
  2  Washington37
  3  Texas31 

All-star games edit

Each of these games features college seniors, or players whose college football eligibility is ending, who are individually invited by game organizers. These games are scheduled to follow the team-competitive bowls, to allow players selected from bowl teams to participate. The all-star games may include some players from non-FBS programs.

The NFLPA Collegiate Bowl, which debuted in 2012 and was played 12 times through January 2023, was discontinued. The East–West Shrine Bowl relocated from Nevada (where its prior two editions had been played) to Texas.

DateTime (EST)GameSiteTelevisionParticipantsResultsRef.
Jan. 1312:00 p.m.Hula BowlFBC Mortgage Stadium
Orlando, Florida
CBS Sports NetworkTeam Kai
Team Aina
Kai 24
Aina 17
[31]
Jan. 2011:00 a.m.Tropical BowlCamping World Stadium
Orlando, Florida
Varsity Sports NetworkAmerican Team
National Team
American 17
National 17
[32]
Feb. 18:00 p.m.East-West Shrine BowlFord Center at The Star
Frisco, Texas
NFL NetworkWest Team
East Team
West 26
East 11
[33]
Feb. 31:00 p.m.Senior BowlHancock Whitney Stadium
Mobile, Alabama
National Team
American Team
National 16
American 7
[34]
Feb. 244:00 p.m.HBCU Legacy BowlYulman Stadium
New Orleans, Louisiana
Team Gaither
Team Robinson
Gaither 10
Robinson 6
[35]

Awards and honors edit

Heisman Trophy voting edit

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

PlayerSchoolPosition1st2nd3rdTotal
Jayden DanielsLSUQB503217862,029
Michael Penix Jr.WashingtonQB2923411431,701
Bo NixOregonQB51205322885
Marvin Harrison Jr.Ohio StateWR2078136352
Jordan TravisFlorida StateQB8192385
Jalen MilroeAlabamaQB484573
Ollie Gordon IIOklahoma StateRB122431
Cody SchraderMissouriRB122229
Blake CorumMichiganRB321528
J. J. McCarthyMichiganQB17421

Other overall edit

AwardWinnerPositionSchool
AP Player of the YearJayden DanielsQBLSU
SN Player of the Year
Walter Camp Award
Maxwell AwardMichael Penix Jr.Washington
Lombardi AwardLaiatu LatuDEUCLA

Special overall edit

AwardWinnerPositionSchool
Burlsworth Trophy (top player who began as walk-on)Cody SchraderRBMissouri
Paul Hornung Award (most versatile player)[36]Travis HunterWR/CBColorado
Jon Cornish Trophy (top Canadian player)[37]Elic AyomanorWRStanford
Campbell Trophy ("academic Heisman")Bo NixQBOregon
Academic All-American of the Year[38]Rome OdunzeWRWashington
Wuerffel Trophy (humanitarian-athlete)Ladd McConkeyGeorgia

Offense edit

Quarterback

AwardWinnerSchool
Davey O'Brien AwardJayden DanielsLSU
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award
Manning Award

Running back

AwardWinnerSchool
Doak Walker Award[39]Ollie Gordon IIOklahoma State

Wide receiver

AwardWinnerSchool
Fred Biletnikoff Award[40]Marvin Harrison Jr.Ohio State

Tight end

AwardWinnerSchool
John Mackey Award[41]Brock BowersGeorgia

Lineman

AwardWinnerPositionSchool
Rimington Trophy (center)Jackson Powers-JohnsonCOregon
Outland Trophy (interior lineman on offense or defense)[42]T'Vondre SweatDTTexas
Joe Moore AwardN/AOLWashington

Defense edit

AwardWinnerPositionSchool
Bronko Nagurski Trophy (defensive player)Xavier WattsSNotre Dame
Chuck Bednarik Award (defensive player)[43]Payton WilsonLBNC State
Lott Trophy (defensive impact)Junior ColsonMichigan

Defensive front

AwardWinnerSchool
Dick Butkus Award (linebacker)Payton WilsonNC State
Ted Hendricks Award (defensive end)Laiatu LatuUCLA

Defensive back

AwardWinnerPositionSchool
Jim Thorpe Award[44]Trey TaylorSAir Force

Special teams edit

AwardWinnerSchool
Lou Groza Award (placekicker)[45]Graham NicholsonMiami (OH)
Ray Guy Award (punter)[46]Tory TaylorIowa
Jet Award (return specialist)[47]Zachariah BranchUSC
Patrick Mannelly Award (long snapper)Joe ShimkoNC State
Peter Mortell Holder of the Year Award

Coaches edit

AwardWinnerSchool
Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year[48]Mike NorvellFlorida State
Paul "Bear" Bryant Award
AFCA Coach of the Year[49]Kalen DeBoerWashington
AP Coach of the Year[50]
Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year[51]
Home Depot Coach of the Year[52]
Sporting News Coach of the Year[53]
Walter Camp Coach of the Year[54]
George Munger Award

Assistants edit

AwardWinnerCoordinatorSchool
AFCA Assistant Coach of the Year[55]Phil ParkerDefensive coordinatorIowa
Broyles Award[56]

All-Americans edit

The following players were recognized as consensus All-Americans for 2023. Unanimous selections are followed by an asterisk (*).

2023 Consensus All-Americans
NamePositionYearSchool
Jayden DanielsQuarterbackSeniorLSU
Ollie Gordon II*Running backSophomoreOklahoma State
Cody SchraderSeniorMissouri
Marvin Harrison Jr.*Wide receiverJuniorOhio State
Malik Nabers*LSU
Rome OdunzeWashington
Brock Bowers*Tight endGeorgia
Joe Alt*Offensive lineNotre Dame
Jackson Powers-Johnson*Oregon
Olu FashanuPenn State
Cooper Beebe*SeniorKansas State
Zak Zinter*Michigan
Jonah EllissDefensive lineJuniorUtah
Jer'Zhan NewtonIllinois
Laiatu Latu*SeniorUCLA
T'Vondre Sweat*Texas
Edgerrin CooperLinebackerJuniorTexas A&M
Dallas TurnerAlabama
Payton Wilson*SeniorNC State
Beanie BishopDefensive backWest Virginia
Cooper DeJean*JuniorIowa
Kool-Aid McKinstryAlabama
Malaki StarksSophomoreGeorgia
Xavier Watts*JuniorNotre Dame
Graham NicholsonKickerMiami (OH)
Tory Taylor*PunterSeniorIowa
Travis HunterAll-Purpose/Return SpecialistSophomoreColorado

Coaching changes edit

Preseason and in-season edit

This is restricted to coaching changes taking place on or after May 1, 2023, and will include any changes announced after a team's last regularly scheduled game but before its bowl game. For coaching changes that occurred earlier in 2023, see 2022 NCAA Division I FBS end-of-season coaching changes.

SchoolOutgoing coachDateReasonReplacement
NorthwesternPat FitzgeraldJuly 10, 2023Fired after hazing allegations[57]David Braun (named full-time on November 15)
Michigan StateMel TuckerSeptember 27, 2023Fired for sexual misconduct[58]Harlon Barnett (interim)
Texas A&MJimbo FisherNovember 12, 2023Fired[59]Elijah Robinson (interim)
Boise StateAndy AvalosNovember 12, 2023Hired as Defensive Coordinator by TCU[60]Spencer Danielson (named full-time on December 3)[61]
Mississippi StateZach ArnettNovember 13, 2023Hired as Analyst by Ole Miss[62]Greg Knox (interim)
SyracuseDino BabersNovember 19, 2023Hired as Offensive Coordinator by Arizona[63]Nunzio Campanile (interim)
Oregon StateJonathan SmithNovember 25, 2023Hired by Michigan State[64]Kefense Hynson (interim, bowl)
DukeMike ElkoNovember 27, 2023Hired by Texas A&M[65]Trooper Taylor (interim, bowl)
James MadisonCurt CignettiNovember 30, 2023Hired by Indiana[66]Damian Wroblewski (interim, bowl)
TulaneWillie FritzDecember 3, 2023Hired by Houston[67]Slade Nagle (interim, bowl)
TroyJon SumrallDecember 8, 2023Hired by Tulane[68]Greg Gasparato (interim, bowl)

End of season edit

The list includes coaching changes announced during the season that did not take effect until the end of season.

SchoolOutgoing coachDateReasonReplacementPrevious position
San Diego StateBrady HokeNovember 13, 2023Retired (effective at end of season)[69]Sean LewisColorado offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach
Michigan StateHarlon Barnett (interim)November 25, 2023Hired as Defensive Backs Coach by Northwestern[64]Jonathan SmithOregon State head coach
New MexicoDanny GonzalesNovember 25, 2023Hired As Linebackers Coach/Special Teams Coordinator by Arizona[70]Bronco Mendenhall[71]Virginia head coach
IndianaTom AllenNovember 26, 2023Hired As Defensive Coordinator/Linebackers Coach by Penn State[72]Curt Cignetti[66]James Madison head coach
HoustonDana HolgorsenNovember 26, 2023Fired[73]Willie Fritz[67]Tulane head coach
UTEPDana DimelNovember 26, 2023Fired[74]Scotty Walden[75]Austin Peay head coach
Louisiana–MonroeTerry BowdenNovember 26, 2023Fired[76]Bryant Vincent[77]New Mexico offensive coordinator
Mississippi StateGreg Knox (interim)November 26, 2023Permanent replacement[78]Jeff LebbyOklahoma offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach
Texas A&MElijah Robinson (interim)November 27, 2023Hired as Defensive Coordinator By Syracuse[65]Mike ElkoDuke head coach
Middle TennesseeRick StockstillNovember 27, 2023Hired as Offensive Analyst by Florida State[79]Derek Mason[80]Oklahoma State defensive coordinator
SyracuseNunzio Campanile (interim)November 28, 2023Permanent replacement[81]Fran BrownGeorgia defensive backs coach
Oregon StateKefense Hynson (interim)November 28, 2023Permanent replacement[82]Trent BrayOregon State defensive coordinator and linebackers coach
NevadaKen WilsonDecember 1, 2023Hired as Linebackers Coach by TCU[83]Jeff Choate[84]Texas co-defensive coordinator and inside linebackers coach
WyomingCraig BohlDecember 6, 2023Retired (effective at end of season)[85]Jay SawvelWyoming defensive coordinator and safeties coach
James MadisonDamian Wroblewski (interim)December 7, 2023Hired as Assistant Offensive Line Coach by Maryland[86]Bob ChesneyHoly Cross head coach
DukeTrooper Taylor (interim)December 7, 2023Hired as Associate Head Coach/Running Backs Coach by Texas A&M[87]Manny DiazPenn State defensive coordinator
TulaneSlade Nagle (interim)December 8, 2023Hired as Special teams/Tight Ends Coach by LSU[68]Jon SumrallTroy head coach
TroyGreg Gasparato (interim)December 18, 2023Hired as Defensive Coordinator by Tulane[88]Gerad ParkerNotre Dame offensive coordinator and tight ends coach
New Mexico StateJerry KillDecember 23, 2023Hired as Consultant by Vanderbilt[89]Tony SanchezNew Mexico State wide receivers coach
AlabamaNick SabanJanuary 10, 2024Retired[90]Kalen DeBoerWashington head coach
WashingtonKalen DeBoerJanuary 12, 2024Hired by AlabamaJedd FischArizona head coach
ArizonaJedd FischJanuary 14, 2024Hired by WashingtonBrent BrennanSan Jose State head coach
South AlabamaKane WommackJanuary 15, 2024Hired as co-defensive coordinator by Alabama[91]Major ApplewhiteSouth Alabama offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach
San Jose StateBrent BrennanJanuary 16, 2024Hired by ArizonaKen NiumataloloUCLA tight ends coach
BuffaloMaurice LinguistJanuary 16, 2024Hired as co-defensive coordinator by AlabamaPete LemboSouth Carolina associate head coach and special teams coordinator
MichiganJim HarbaughJanuary 24, 2024Hired by Los Angeles Chargers[92]Sherrone MooreMichigan offensive coordinator and offensive line coach
Boston CollegeJeff HafleyJanuary 31, 2024Hired as defensive coordinator by Green Bay Packers[93]Bill O'BrienNew England Patriots offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach
UCLAChip KellyFebruary 9, 2024Hired as offensive coordinator by Ohio State[94]DeShaun FosterUCLA running backs coach
Georgia StateShawn ElliottFebruary 15, 2024Hired as tight ends coach by South Carolina[95]Dell McGeeGeorgia running backs coach

Television viewers and ratings edit

Top 10 most watched regular season games edit

All times Eastern.Rankings are from the AP Poll (before 10/31) and CFP Rankings (thereafter).

RankDateTimeMatchupNetworkViewers (millions)TV ratings[96]Significance
1November 2512:00 p.m.No. 2 Ohio State24No. 3 Michigan30Fox19.079.0The Game, College GameDay, Big Noon Kickoff
2September 233:30 p.m.No. 19 Colorado6No. 10 Oregon42ABC10.035.2
3September 237:30 p.m.No. 6 Ohio State17No. 9 Notre Dame14NBC9.985.1College GameDay
4October 2112:00 p.m.No. 7 Penn State12No. 3 Ohio State20Fox9.965.3College GameDay, Big Noon Kickoff, rivalry
5September 1610:00 p.m.Colorado State35No. 18 Colorado43ESPN9.304.9College GameDay, Big Noon Kickoff, Rocky Mountain Showdown
6September 37:30 p.m.No. 5 LSU24No. 8 Florida State45ABC9.174.7Camping World Kickoff
7November 1112:00 p.m.No. 3 Michigan24No. 10 Penn State15Fox9.165.0Big Noon Kickoff, rivalry
8November 253:30 p.m.No. 8 Alabama27Auburn24CBS9.094.3Iron Bowl, SEC Nation
9November 47:45 p.m.No. 14 LSU28No. 8 Alabama42CBS8.824.6College GameDay, rivalry
10September 97:00 p.m.No. 11 Texas34No. 3 Alabama24ESPN/ESPN28.764.5Allstate Crossbar Classic, College GameDay

Conference championship games edit

All times Eastern.Rankings are from the CFP Rankings.

RankDateTimeMatchupNetworkViewers (millions)TV ratings[97]ConferenceLocation
1December 24:00 p.m.No. 8 Alabama27No. 1 Georgia24CBS17.528.9SECMercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, GA
2December 28:00 p.m.No. 2 Michigan26No. 16 Iowa0Fox10.025.1Big TenLucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, IN
3December 18:00 p.m.No. 5 Oregon31No. 3 Washington34ABC9.254.9Pac-12Allegiant Stadium, Las Vegas, NV
4December 212:00 p.m.No. 18 Oklahoma State21No. 7 Texas49ABC7.894.4Big 12AT&T Stadium, Arlington, TX
5December 28:00 p.m.No. 14 Louisville6No. 4 Florida State16ABC7.033.8ACCBank of America Stadium, Charlotte, NC
6December 24:00 p.m.SMU26No. 22 Tulane14ABC1.881.0AACYulman Stadium, New Orleans, LA
7December 212:00 p.m.Miami (OH)23Toledo14ESPN1.290.8MACFord Field, Detroit, MI
8December 23:00 p.m.Boise State45UNLV10Fox1.260.7MWAllegiant Stadium, Las Vegas, NV
9December 24:00 p.m.Appalachian State23Troy49ESPN0.3720.2Sun BeltVeterans Memorial Stadium, Troy, AL
December 17:00 p.m.New Mexico State35No. 24 Liberty49CBSSNn.a.[f]n.a.[f]C-USAWilliams Stadium, Lynchburg, VA

Most watched non-CFP bowl games edit

RankDateTimeMatchupNetworkViewers (millions)TV ratingsGameLocation
1January 1, 20231:00 p.m.No. 21 Tennessee35Iowa0ABC6.793.5CitrusCamping World Stadium, Orlando, FL
2January 1, 202312:00 p.m.No. 13 LSU35Wisconsin31ESPN24.612.4ReliaQuestRaymond James Stadium, Tampa, FL
3December 285:45 p.m.Kansas State28No. 19 NC State14ESPN4.312.3Pop-TartsCamping World Stadium, Orlando, FL
4December 289:15 p.m.No. 14 Arizona38Oklahoma24ESPN3.932.2AlamoAlamodome, San Antonio, TX
5December 275:30 p.m.West Virginia30North Carolina10ESPN3.842.0MayoBank of America Stadium, Charlotte, NC
6December 293:30 p.m.Memphis36Iowa State26ESPN3.601.9LibertySimmons Bank Liberty Stadium, Memphis, TN
7December 278:00 p.m.USC42No. 16 Louisville28FOX3.511.9HolidayPetco Park, San Diego, CA
8December 2912:00 p.m.Clemson38Kentucky35ESPN3.431.9GatorEverBank Stadium, Jacksonville, FL
9December 292:00 p.m.No. 16 Norte Dame40No. 19 Oregon State8CBS3.261.8SunSun Bowl, El Paso, TX
10December 237:30 p.m.Northwestern14Utah7ABC3.091.7Las VegasAllegiant Stadium, Paradise, NV

New Year's Six and College Football Playoff games edit

RankDateTime (ET)MatchupNetwork(s)Viewers
(millions)
TV ratingsGameLocation
1January 1, 20245:00 p.m.No. 1 Michigan27No. 4 Alabama20ESPN27.7613.0Rose Bowl
(CFP Semifinal)
Rose Bowl, Pasadena, CA
2January 8, 20247:30 p.m.No. 2 Washington13No. 1 Michigan3425.0512.3CFP National ChampionshipNRG Stadium, Houston, TX
3January 1, 20248:45 p.m.No. 2 Washington37No. 3 Texas3118.779.3Sugar Bowl
(CFP Semifinal)
Caesars Superdome, New Orleans, LA
4December 30, 20234:00 p.m.No. 5 Florida State3No. 6 Georgia6310.395.2Orange Bowl (NY6)Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, FL
5December 29, 20238:00 p.m.No. 7 Ohio State3No. 9 Missouri149.724.9Cotton Bowl (NY6)AT&T Stadium, Arlington, TX
6December 30, 202312:00 p.m.No. 11 Ole Miss38No. 10 Penn State257.774.3Peach Bowl (NY6)Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, GA
7January 1, 20241:00 p.m.No. 23 Liberty6No. 8 Oregon454.592.4Fiesta Bowl (NY6)State Farm Stadium, Glendale, AZ

Source:[98]

Television changes edit

This is the first year of television deals for the Big Ten Conference and Conference USA. The Big Ten's deal includes CBS, NBC/Peacock, Fox/FS1 and the Big Ten Network.[99][100] Conference USA's deal includes ESPN and CBS Sports Network.[101] Due to the bankruptcy of Diamond Sports Group, starting this season, a package of ACC games produced by Raycom Sports that were previously aired on Bally Sports moved to The CW.[102] The CW also acquired the rights to air the Barstool Sports produced broadcast of the Arizona Bowl.[103] Locally, Fresno State reached an agreement with TelevisaUnivision stations KTFF-DT and KBTF-CD to air the first ever exclusively Spanish-language television broadcast in FBS history on September 9.[4] This is also the final year of television deals for the Pac-12 Conference and the SEC. The SEC has signed a new deal with ESPN and the SEC Network, making 2023 the final year of the SEC on CBS. No new television deal was ever reached by the Pac-12.[104][105]

Noah Eagle, formerly at Fox Sports, and Todd Blackledge, formerly at ESPN, joined NBC Sports in 2023 as the lead commentary team on Big Ten Saturday Night.[106] Greg McElroy replaced Blackledge as ESPN's #2 college football color commentator. Derek Mason and Orlando Franklin also joined ESPN as color commentators.[107] Jeff Levering replaced Eagle at Fox Sports, while Mark Ingram II replaced Reggie Bush on Fox's Big Noon Kickoff.[108]

In November 2023, ESPN International reached agreements with Sky Sports NFL to carry packages of games and studio programs in college football and basketball (replacing TNT Sports, which had previously held rights to ESPN International content).[109][110]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Despite having a 5–7 record, Minnesota is bowl-eligible due to having the highest Academic Progress Rate among five-win teams.
  2. ^ a b As there were not be enough deserving bowl-eligible teams to fill the available spots, Jacksonville State and James Madison are conditionally bowl-eligible due to their records despite their transitions from FCS.
  3. ^ a b Army and Navy both have one game remaining on its schedule, but it is played after the bowl matchups are selected on December 3; Navy has not met the eligibility threshold before then. Since Army has 2 FCS teams on their schedule, they are bowl-ineligible because they have already reached 6 losses and can finish no better than 5–6 in countable games for qualifying as a deserving team.
  4. ^ Sam Houston is bowl-ineligible due to its transition from FCS. Sam Houston has assured itself of a losing season and would be bowl-ineligible regardless.
  5. ^ Arizona State has announced a self-imposed 2023 bowl game ban due to recruiting violations from the 2020 season.[29] Arizona State has assured itself of a losing season and would be bowl-ineligible regardless.
  6. ^ a b Viewership and ratings are not available for CBSSN because it is not Nielsen rated

References edit

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