1950 college football season

{{Short description|American college football season}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}

{{Infobox college football season

| year = 1950

| image =

| image_caption =

| number_of_teams =

| preseason_ap = Notre Dame{{Cite web |url=http://collegepollarchive.com/football/ap/seasons.cfm?appollid=120 |title=1950 Preseason AP Football Poll |access-date=November 7, 2021 |website=CollegePollArchive.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120302191710/http://collegepollarchive.com/football/ap/seasons.cfm?appollid=120 |archive-date=March 2, 2012 |url-status=live }}

| regular_season =

| number_of_bowls = 9

| bowl_start =

| bowl_end =

| champion = Oklahoma (AP, Coaches)

| heisman = Vic Janowicz (halfback, Ohio State)

}}

The 1950 college football season was the 82nd season of intercollegiate football in the United States. It concluded with four teams having a claim to the national championship:

Florida A&M (8–1–1) and Southern (10–0–1) were each recognized as black college national champions by at least one selector. In addition to Princeton, 16 other teams finished the season undefeated and untied, including Abilene Christian (11–0, Texas Conference and Refrigerator Bowl champion), Wyoming (10–0, AP No. 12 and Gator Bowl champion), Morris Harvey (10–0, Tangerine Bowl champion), Lehigh (9–0, Middle Three champion), Florida State (8–0, Dixie Conference champion), New Hampshire (8–0, Yankee Conference champion), and Maryland State (8–0 Furniture Bowl champion).

Ohio State halfback Vic Janowicz won the Heisman Trophy, and Penn halfback Reds Bagnell won the Maxwell Award. Individual statistical leaders in major college football included Johnny Bright of Drake (2,400 yards of total offense), Don Heinrich of Washington (1,846 passing yards), Wilford White of Arizona State (1,501 rushing yards), and Bobby Reynolds of Nebraska (157 points scored).

Conference and program changes

=Conference changes=

  • One conference began play during 1950:
  • Oregon Collegiate Conference – a conference active through the 1965 season; also known as the Oregon Intercollegiate Conference

=Membership changes=

class="wikitable sortable"
School1949 conference1950 conference
style="text-align:center;"

| Butler Bulldogs

MACIndependent
style="text-align:center;"

| Idaho State Bengals

IndependentRocky Mountain
style="text-align:center;"

| Montana Grizzlies

PCCIndependent
style="text-align:center;"

| Portland Pilots

IndependentDropped Program
style="text-align:center;"

| Saint Louis Billikens

Missouri ValleyDropped Program
style="text-align:center;"

| West Virginia Mountaineers

IndependentSoCon

Season chronology

=September=

In the preseason AP poll released on September 25, 1950, the defending champion Fighting Irish of Notre Dame were the overwhelming choice for first, with 101 of 123 first place votes. Far behind were No. 2 Army, No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Tennessee and No. 5 Texas (which had won at Texas Tech 28–14). As the regular season progressed, a new poll would be issued on the Monday following the weekend's games.

On September 30

No. 1 Notre Dame beat No. 20 North Carolina 14–7. No. 2 Army beat Colgate 28–0, No. 3 Michigan lost to No. 19 Michigan State 14–7. No. 4 Tennessee lost at Mississippi State, 7–0. No. 5 Texas beat Purdue, 34–26, but fell to 7th. No. 6 Oklahoma beat Boston College 28–0. No. 10 SMU, which had already beaten Georgia Tech 33–13, defeated No. 11 Ohio State 32–27. The next AP Poll featured No. 1 Notre Dame, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 SMU, No. 4 Army, and No. 5 Oklahoma.

=October=

October 7

No. 1 Notre Dame lost to Purdue, 28–14, and eventually finished with a 4–4–1 record. No. 2 Michigan State lost to Maryland, 34–7. No. 3 SMU won at Missouri 21–0. No. 4 Army beat Penn State 41–7 and was elevated to the first spot in the next poll. No. 5 Oklahoma beat Texas A&M 34–28. No. 6 Kentucky registered a fourth shutout and a 4–0 record, with a 40–0 win against Dayton. No. 7 Texas, which was idle, rose to 4th place behind Army, SMU, and Oklahoma and ahead of Kentucky.

October 14

No. 1 Army beat No. 18 Michigan 27–6 at Yankee Stadium. No. 2 SMU beat Oklahoma A&M 56–0. No. 3 Oklahoma and No. 4 Texas met in Dallas, with Oklahoma winning narrowly, 14–13. No. 5 Kentucky beat Cincinnati 41–7. No. 7 California, which had beaten USC 13–7, rose to 5th in the next poll behind Army, Oklahoma, SMU, and Kentucky.

October 21

All of the top five teams stayed undefeated with blowout victories. No. 1 Army won at Harvard 49–0. No. 2 Oklahoma beat Kansas State 58–0. In Houston, No. 3 SMU beat No. 15 Rice 42–21. In Philadelphia, No. 4 Kentucky beat Villanova 34–7. No. 5 California beat Oregon State in Portland 27–0. With their victory over a ranked opponent, SMU jumped to No. 1 in the next poll, ahead of Army, Oklahoma, Kentucky, and California.

October 28

No. 1 SMU was idle. No. 2 Army won at Columbia 34–0. No. 3 Oklahoma won at Iowa State 20–7. In Atlanta, No. 4 Kentucky beat Georgia Tech 28–14.

No. 5 California beat St. Mary's 40–25, but still dropped in the next poll. They were replaced in the top five by No. 6 Ohio State, which had lost only to SMU and had just beaten Iowa 83–21; eventual Heisman winner Vic Janowicz accounted for six touchdowns and kicked eight extra points in the Iowa game.{{Cite web|url=https://www.heisman.com/heisman-winners/vic-janowicz/|title = Vic Janowicz}} The Buckeyes were elevated to No. 4 behind SMU, Army, and Oklahoma and ahead of Kentucky.

=November=

November 4 No. 1 SMU lost at No. 7 Texas, 23–20. No. 2 Army won at No. 15 Pennsylvania 28–13. No. 3 Oklahoma won at Colorado 27–18. No. 4 Ohio State won at Northwestern 32–0. No. 5 Kentucky beat No. 17 Florida 40–6. No. 7 Texas beat SMU 23–20, and returned to fifth place behind Army, Ohio State, Oklahoma, and Kentucky.

November 11 No. 1 Army beat New Mexico 51–0. No. 2 Ohio State beat No. 15 Wisconsin 19–14. No. 3 Oklahoma won at No. 19 Kansas, 33–13. No. 4 Kentucky won at Mississippi State, 48–21. No. 5 Texas beat Baylor 27–20. No. 6 California, moved to 7–0–0 after a 35–0 win against No. 19 UCLA. The next AP Poll elevated Ohio State to No. 1 and Oklahoma to No. 2, with Army falling to 3rd even though they received the largest number of first-place votes.{{Cite web|url=http://collegepollarchive.com/football/ap/seasons.cfm?appollid=127#.YdVkj2jMI2w|title = November 13, 1950 Football Polls - College Poll Archive - Historical College Football, Basketball, and Softball Polls and Rankings}} California moved up to No. 4, ahead of Kentucky and Texas.

November 18 No. 1 Ohio State lost at No. 8 Illinois, 14–7. No. 2 Oklahoma beat Missouri 41–7. No. 3 Army won at Stanford 7–0. No. 4 California defeated San Francisco 13–7. No. 5 Kentucky handed visiting North Dakota an 83–0 defeat to extend its record to 9–0–0, but still faced a final game against No. 9 Tennessee, whose only loss was by a single touchdown. No. 6 Texas won at TCU 21–7. The next poll featured No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Army, No. 3 Kentucky, No. 4 California, and No. 5 Texas.

November 25 No. 1 Oklahoma beat No. 16 Nebraska 49–35. No. 2 Army was idle as it prepared for the Army–Navy Game. No. 3 Kentucky lost at No. 9 Tennessee, 7–0. No. 4 California and unranked Stanford played to a 7–7 tie in Berkeley. No. 5 Texas beat Texas A&M 21–6. Michigan beat No. 8 Ohio State in the famous Snow Bowl 9–3 and earned a berth in the Rose Bowl against California. The final AP poll was released on November 27, although some colleges had not completed their schedules. Undefeated Oklahoma and Army were chosen as No. 1 and No. 2, with Texas (whose only loss was to Oklahoma by one point) at No. 3. Tennessee and California rounded out the top five, with undefeated Princeton at No. 6 and Kentucky moving down to No. 7 after their loss to Tennessee.

On December 2, with its champion status assured, No. 1 Oklahoma beat Oklahoma A&M 41–14. No. 2 Army (9–0–0) was heavily favored to beat unranked, and 2–6–0, Navy. Instead, the Philadelphia game turned into a 14–2 win for the Midshipmen. No. 3 Texas played a game on December 9, beating LSU 21–6. The Coaches Poll, which waited until the end of the regular season to release its final rankings, kept Oklahoma at No. 1 but dropped Army to No. 5 behind Texas, Tennessee, and California.

Conference standings

=Major conference standings=

cellpadding="5"

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Big Ten Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Big Seven Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Border Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Mid-American Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Middle Three Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Missouri Valley Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Pacific Coast Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Skyline Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Southeastern Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Southern Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Southwest Conference football standings}}

=Independents=

cellpadding="5"

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Eastern college football independents records}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Midwestern college football independents records}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Southern college football independents records}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Western college football independents records}}

=Minor conferences=

class="wikitable" width="60%"

!style="background:#0054B3; color:#FFFFFF;" |Conference

!style="background:#0054B3; color:#FFFFFF;" |Champion(s)

!style="background:#0054B3; color:#FFFFFF;" |Record

align="left"

|California Collegiate Athletic Association

| San Diego State

| 3–0–1

align="left""

| Central Intercollegiate Athletics Association

| North Carolina A&T

| 5–0–1

align="left"

| Central Intercollegiate Athletic Conference

| Kansas State Teachers

| 5–0

align="left"

| College Conference of Illinois

| Wheaton (IL)

| 5–0

align="left"

| Evergreen Conference

| Eastern Washington College

| 5–1

align="left"

| Far Western Conference

| San Francisco State

| 4–0

align="left"

| Gulf Coast Conference

| North Texas State
{{cfb link|year=1950|team=Midwestern State Indians|title=Midwestern State}}

| 1–0–1

align="left"

| Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference

| Saint Ambrose

| 5–0

align="left"

| Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference

| Ottawa

| 6–0

align="left"

| Lone Star Conference

| Sul Ross State College

| 3–0–1

align="left""

| Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association

| Alma

| 4–0–1

align="left""

| Mid-American Conference

| Miami (OH)

| 4–0

align="left"

| Midwest Collegiate Athletic Conference

| Coe
Knox
Ripon

| 5–1

align="left"

| Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference

| Gustavus Adolphus

| 6–0

align="left"

| Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association

| Missouri School of Mines

| 4–1

align="left"

| Nebraska College Conference

| Doane

| 4–1–1

align="left"

| New Mexico Intercollegiate Conference

| Eastern New Mexico

| 5–1

align="left"

| North Central Intercollegiate Athletic Conference

| South Dakota State

| 5–0–1

align="left"

| North Dakota College Athletic Conference

| Valley City State

| 4–0

align="left"

| Ohio Athletic Conference

| Muskingum

| 6–0

align="left"

| Ohio Valley Conference

| Murray State

| 5–0–1

align="left"

| Oklahoma Collegiate Athletic Conference

| Central State College (OK)
Southwestern State Teachers (OK)

| 4–1

align="left"

| Oregon Collegiate Conference

| Oregon College

| —

align="left"

| Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference

| West Chester State Teachers

| 4–0

align="left"

| Pacific Northwest Conference

| Lewis & Clark

| 5–0

align="left"

| Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference

| Colorado College

| 5–0

align="left"

| South Dakota Intercollegiate Conference

| Northern State Teachers (SD)

| 4–0

align="left"

| Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference

| Pomona-Pitzer
Redlands
Whittier

| 3–1

align="left"

| Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference

| Florida A&M College
Xavier (LA)

| 6–0

align="left"

| Southwestern Athletic Conference

| Southern

| 7–0

align="left"

| State Teacher's College Conference of Minnesota

| Bemidji State Teachers
Mankato State Teachers

| 3–0–1

align="left"

| Texas Collegiate Athletic Conference

| Abilene Christian

| 5–0

align="left"

| Upper Peninsula Conference

| Northern Michigan

| 4-3

align="left"

| Wisconsin State Teachers College Conference

| La Crosse State Teachers
Whitewater State Teachers

| 4–0
4–0

=Minor conference standings=

cellpadding="5"

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Badger-Illini Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 California Collegiate Athletic Association football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Central Intercollegiate Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 College Conference of Illinois football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Evergreen Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Far Western Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Gulf Coast Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Gulf States Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Hoosier Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Iowa Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Lone Star Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Mason–Dixon Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Mid-Ohio League football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Midlands Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Midwest Athletic Association football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Midwest Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Minnesota Teachers College Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Missouri College Athletic Union football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Montana Collegiate Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Nebraska College Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 New Mexico Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 North Central Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 North Dakota Intercollegiate Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 North State Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Northwest Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Ohio Valley Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Oklahoma Collegiate Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Oregon Collegiate Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Pennsylvania State Teachers College Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Rocky Mountain Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Smoky Mountain Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 South Carolina Little Four football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 South Dakota Intercollegiate Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Southwestern Athletic Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Texas Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Virginia Little Six Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Volunteer State Athletic Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Wisconsin State Teachers College Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1950 Yankee Conference football standings}}

Rankings

{{Main|1950 college football rankings}}

The final AP poll was released in late November and the final UP poll one week later.

{{col-begin|width=auto}}

{{col-break}}

class="wikitable"

|+ AP Poll{{cite news|title=Oklahoma Is Named Nation's Top Team; Army Drops To 2nd|newspaper=The Asheville Times|author=Joe Fall|date=November 28, 1950|page=14|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-asheville-times-final-ap-poll/149489123/|via=Newspapers.com}}

Rank

! Team

! 1st

! Points

1

|Oklahoma (10–1)

|213

|2,963

2

|Army (8–1)

|38

| 2,380

3

| Texas (9–2)

| 4

| 1,988

4

| Tennessee (11–1)

| 15

| 1,806

5

| California (9–1–1)

| 8

| 1,787

6

| Princeton (9–0)

| 6

| 1,420

7

| Kentucky (11–1)

| 7

| 1,167

8

| Michigan State (8–1)

| 3

| 864

9

| Michigan (6–3–1)

| -

| 493

10

| Clemson (9–0–1)

| 9

| 374

11

| Washington (8–2)

| 4

| 343

12

| Wyoming (10–0)

| 4

| 297

13

| Illinois (7–2)

| -

| 275

14

| Ohio State (6–3)

| -

| 243

15

| Miami (FL) (9–1–1)

| 1

| 225

16

| Alabama (9–2)

| 1

| 221

17

| Nebraska (6–2–1)

| 2

| 96

18

| Washington & Lee (8–3)

| 2

| 54

19

| Tulsa (9–1–1)

| -

| 54

20

| Tulane (6–2–1)

| -

| 48

{{col-break|gap=4em}}

class="wikitable"

|+ UP poll{{cite news|title=Oklahoma Remains Atop Final UP Grid Ratings|newspaper=Wilmington Morning News|author=Stan Opotowsky|agency=United Press|date=December 5, 1950|page=31|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-morning-news-final-up-poll/149489310/|via=Newspapers.com}}

Rank

! Team

! 1st

! Points

1

|Oklahoma

|32

|346

2

|Texas

| -

|250

3

|Tennessee

| -

|236

4

|California

| -

|233

5

|Army

| -

| 165

6

|Michigan

| -

|162

7

|Kentucky

| -

|154

8

|Princeton

| 1

| 117

9

|Michigan State

| 1

| 77

10

|Ohio State

| -

|70

11

|Illinois

|

| 55

12

|Clemson

|

|51

13

|Miami (FL)

|

|28

14

|Wyoming

|1

|16

14

|Baylor (7–3)

|

|16

14

|Washington

|

|16

17

|Alabama

|

|8

18

|Washington & Lee

|

|7

19

|Navy (3–6)

|

|3

19

|Cornell (7–2)

|

|3

19

|Nebraska

|

|3

19

|Wisconsin (6–3)

|

|3

23

|Maryland (7–2–1)

|

|1

23

|Georgia Tech (5–6)

|

|1

23

|Penn (6–3)

|

|1

{{col-end}}

Bowl games

=Major bowls=

class="wikitable"
Bowl game

! colspan="2" | Winning team

! colspan="2" | Losing team

align=center|Sugar Bowl

| No. 7 Kentucky

| 13

| No. 1 Oklahoma

| align=right|7

align=center|Cotton Bowl

| No. 4 Tennessee

| 20

| No. 3 Texas

| 14

align=center|Rose Bowl

| No. 9 Michigan

| 14

| No. 5 California

| align=right|6

align=center|Orange Bowl

| No. 10 Clemson

| 15

| No. 15 Miami (FL)

| 14

=Other bowls=

class="wikitable"
Bowl game

! colspan="2" | Winning team

! colspan="2" | Losing team

align=center|Gator Bowl

| No. 12 Wyoming

| 20

| No. 18 Washington & Lee

| align=right|7

align=center|Sun Bowl

| West Texas State

| 14

| Cincinnati

| 13

align=center|Salad Bowl

| Miami (OH)

| 34

| Arizona State

| 21

align=center|Pineapple Bowl

| Hawaii

| 28

| Denver

| 27

align=center|Presidential Cup

| Texas A&M

| 40

| Georgia

| 20

Heisman Trophy voting

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

class="wikitable"

! Player !! School !! Position !! Total

Vic JanowiczOhio StateHB633
Kyle RoteSMUHB280
Reds BagnellPennHB231
Babe ParilliKentuckyQB214
Bobby ReynoldsNebraskaHB174
Bob WilliamsNotre DameQB159
Leon HeathOklahomaFB125
Dan FoldbergArmyE103

Source: {{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=A-pOAAAAIBAJ&sjid=NQAEAAAAIBAJ&pg=1260%2C2978492 |work=Toledo Blade |location=(Ohio) |agency=Associated Press |title=Janowicz to get Heisman award |date=December 6, 1950 |page=50}}{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=q3gbAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ak0EAAAAIBAJ&pg=4353%2C2776975 |work=Pittsburgh Press |agency=United Press |title=Janowicz awarded Heisman Trophy |date=December 6, 1950 |page=46}}{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=RtdYAAAAIBAJ&sjid=6vUDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4198%2C1812411 |work=Spokane Daily Chronicle |location=(Washington) |agency=Associated Press |title=Janowicz chosen Heisman winner |date=December 6, 1950 |page=25}}

Statistical leaders

=Individual=

==Total offense==

The following players were the individual leaders in total offense during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

!Player

!Team

!Games

!Attempts

!Total Yds

!TdR

1Johnny BrightDrake93202,400Bright broke Frank Sinkwich's prior major college record of 2,187 yards.30
2Billy CoxDuke103971,99511
3Don HeinrichWashington102711,80717
4Gil BartoshTCU93211,7339
5John FordHardin-Simmons102451,72015
6Babe ParilliKentucky112341,68128
7Bill WeeksIowa State102781,67315
8Reds BagnellPenn92821,60316
9Bill WadeVanderbilt112241,59518
10Wilford WhiteArizona State102071,58925
11Charles MaloyHoly Cross102971,56020
12Don KlostermanLoyola (CA)92391,54220
13Jimmy ColeyVMI112411,48013
14Bobby ReynoldsNebraska92031,41722
15Dick KazmaierPrinceton91911,37222
16Ed "Scooter" MooneyNC State103641,3546
17Andy DavisGeorge Washington92531,3455
18Claude ArnoldOklahoma102071,33915
19Tom KingsfordMontana102541,31816
20Bob SmithTexas A&M102001,30214

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=27}}

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

!Player

!Team

!Games

!Attempts

!Total Yds

1Bob HeimerdingerNorthern Illinois State92861782
2Ted MarchibrodaSt. Bonaventure92621693
3Eddie HaddoxBaldwin-Wallace82851650
4Gil GeorgeffCentral (MO)92061644
5James MacholtzAnderson (IN)92941605
6Gene MayfieldWest Texas State102131566
7Andy MacDonaldCentral Michigan102621466
8Eddie LeBaronQuantico111931387
9Joe ArenasOmaha92091274
10Meriel MichelsonEastern Washington101801234
11Joe RabbLouisiana Tech102911228
12JohnsonStetson101781220
13Tom GreenanSt. Ambrose131591207
14Dick DoyneLehigh91641206
15Eddie HydukePepperdine92111204
16Charlie WrightWest Texas State102061203
17Billy CrossWest Texas State101301197
18Carl TaseffJohn Carroll102121186
19Meriel MichelsonEastern Washington91701171
20Brad RowlandMcMurry92231170

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=40}}

==Passing==

The following players were the individual leaders in pass completions during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

!Player

!Team

!Games

!Compl.

!Att.

!Pct.
Compl.

!Yds.

!Int.

!TDs

1Don HeinrichWashington1013422160.9%1,846914
2Dave CunninghamUtah911921754.8%1,1461213
3Bill WeeksIowa State1011622052.7%1,552169
4Babe ParilliKentucky1111420456.2%1,6271223
5Don KlostermanLoyola (CA)911320754.6%1,5821119
6John FordHardin-Simmons1011119955.8%1,777712
7Fred BennersSMU1010919256.8%1,361139
8Billy CoxDuke1010820652.4%1,428158
9Charles MaloyHoly Cross1010424243.0%1,5721914
10Bob WilliamsNotre Dame99921047.1%1,0351510
11Dick FlowersNorthwestern99118349.7%1,0631110
11Larry IsbellBaylor109118748.7%1,220915
13Haywood SullivanFlorida108917052.4%1,13489
14ColeyVMI118919545.6%1,344149
15Tom KingsfordMontana108418445.7%1,3621310
16Johnny BrightDrake98113759.1%1,168912
17Gary KerkorianStanford108015153.0%1,14896
18Dick DohenyFordham97914355.2%1,252512
19Gil BartoshTCU107714951.7%1,02397
20Dale SamuelsPurdue97717244.81,1262110

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=28}}

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

!Player

!Team

!Games

!Compl.

!Att.

!Pct.
Compl.

!Yds.

!Int.

!TDs

1Andy MacDonaldCentral Michigan10109200.54515771215
2Bob HeimerdingerNorthern Illinois9102210.48615971813
3Ted MarchibrodaSt. Bonaventure995202.47015771513
4Sy KalmanCCNY894211.4451034155
5Bob AubryToledo991237.38411251811
6Eugene TraylorKentucky State1087181.4811085185
7Eddie HydukePepperdine986188.4571260811
8Chuck PaigeMichigan State Normal979185.4271031109
9Gene MayfieldWest Texas State1078153.5101359911
10Joe ZaleskiDayton977165.467967102
11Al MorhardWestern Reserve1075215.3491100268

==Rushing==

The following players were the individual leaders in rushing yards during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Player

! Team

! Games

! Yds

! Rushes

! Avg

1Wilford WhiteArizona State101,5011997.55
2Bobby ReynoldsNebraska91,3421936.95
3Bob SmithTexas A&M101,3021996.54
4Johnny BrightDrake91,2321836.73
5Wade StinsonKansas101,1291676.76
6Hugh McElhennyWashington101,1071796.18
7Sonny GrandeliusMichigan State91,0231636.28
8Kayo DottleyOle Miss101,0071915.27
9Steve WadiakSouth Carolina109981626.16
10Jake RobertsTulsa119541386.91
11Johnny OlszewskiCalifornia109501516.29
12John PapitVirginia109491675.68
13Charlie HoagKansas109401556.06
14Bobby MarlowAlabama118831187.47
15George BeanUtah98781635.39
16Billy VesselsOklahoma108701356.44
17George MusaccoLoyola (CA)98661874.63
18Max ClarkHouston108601296.67
19Byron TownsendTexas108412283.69
20Pete D'AlonzoVillanova98331455.74

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=29}}

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Player

! Team

! Games

! Yds

! Rushes

! Avg

1Meriel MichelsonEastern Washington1012341806.86
2Charlie WrightWest Texas State1012032065.84
3Billy CrossWest Texas State1011971309.21
4Carl TaseffJohn Carroll1011642105.54
5John YannesSt. Lawrence811221895.94
6Gil GeorgeffCentral (MO)910571278.32
7Paul YackeyHeidelberg910181636.25
7Brad RowlandMcMurry910181825.59
9Dick DoyneLehigh99941566.37
10Bobby GardnerOhio Wesleyan99611815.31

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=39}}

==Receiving==

The following players were the individual leaders in receptions during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Player

! Team

! Receptions

! Receiving
yards

! TDs

1Gordon CooperDenver465698
2Tom BienemannDrake456152
3Jim DoranIowa State426526
4Don StonesiferNorthwestern425605
5Ceep YoumansDuke404461
6Bill McCollStanford396714
7Sy WilhelmiIowa State384422
8Herman FisherNevada384341
9Fred SnyderLoyola-Los Angeles365969
10John ThomasOregon State363501
11Al LaryAlabama3575610
11Paul BishoffWest Virginia355813
13Alan PfeferFordham355715
13Harold RileyBaylor355393
13Al BrunoKentucky3553210
13Herbert McLeanColumbia354921
13Jim MutschellerNotre Dame354267
18Tom McCannHoly Cross344382
18Fred SmithTulsa344334
20Gene SchroederVirginia335527

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=30}}

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Player

! Team

! Games

! Receptions

! Receiving
yards

! TDs

1Jack BigheadPepperdine9385516
2Bob McElroyQuantico11376869
3Wendell "Joe" SwannNorth Texas State10365853
4Norb HeckerBaldwin-Wallace8346147
5Chuck ToyFresno State9345879
6Dan O'ConnorNiagara8344626
7John SchueslerButler9324941
8Harvey SingletonKentucky State10324022
9John "Moose" McGrathAmherst8305367
10Giovanni "John" PartenioCentral Michigan10304305

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=41}}

==Scoring==

The following players were the individual leaders in scoring during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Player

! Team

! Pts

! TD

! PAT

! FG

1Bobby ReynoldsNebraska15722250
2Wilford WhiteArizona State1362211
3Eddie TalboomWyoming13015400
4Johnny BrightDrake1081800
5Johnny TurcoHoly Cross1021600
6Bob ShemonskiMaryland971610
7Max ClarkHouston9011240
7Merwin HodelColorado901500
7Billy VesselsOklahoma901500
10Fred ConeClemson861420
11Byron TownsendTexas841400
11Bob SmithTexas A&M841400
11Wade StinsonKansas841400
14Al PollardArmy838350
14Walt MichaelsWashington & Lee839290
16Dickie LewisWilliam & Mary8210220
17Ollie MatsonSan Francisco811330
18Kyle RoteSMU781300
18Hugh McElhennyWashington781300

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=32}}

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Player

! Team

! Pts

! TD

! PAT

! FG

1Carl TaseffJohn Carroll1382300
2Charlie WrightWest Texas State1202000
3Bob MillerEmory & Henry1141900
4Ace LoomisLa Crosse State1081800
5ClarkeSt. Augustine's1011650
6Tom CookWilliam Jewell971610
7Mark ThomsenDana9213140
8Gene PayneGustavus Adolphus911510
9Bobby GardnerOhio Wesleyan901500
9Odie PoseySouthern9012122

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=44}}

=Team=

==Total offense==

The following teams were the leaders in total offense during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Games
played

! Total
plays

! Yards
gained

! Yards
per game

1Arizona State10924704470.4
2Princeton96173903433.7
3Tulsa117834747431.5
4Clemson96303881431.2
5Loyola (CA)97753781420.1
6Alabama117734576416.0
7Oklahoma107064154415.4
8Washington106944116411.6
9Nebraska96183666407.3
10Pacific118004399399.9

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=35}}

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Games
played

! Total
plays

! Yards
gained

! Yards
per game

1West Texas State106804653463.5
2Miami (OH)95593747416.3
3John Carroll107014144414.4
4William Jewell95263675408.3
5St. Bonaventure96083625402.8
6St. Lawrence85723206400.8
7Western Illinois85853170396.3
8Lewis & Clark95753557395.2
9Morris Harvey95253521391.2
10North Texas State106603894389.4

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=43}}

==Rushing offense==

The following teams were the leaders in rushing offense during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Games
played

! Total
plays

! Yards
gained

! Yards
per game

1Arizona State106203470347.0
2Princeton95032929325.4
3Nebraska95102894321.6
4Kansas105243116311.6
5Tulsa11619|3384307.6
6Washington & Lee105782995299.5
7Pacific116193278298.0
8Clemson95042648294.2
9Oklahoma105622931293.1
10Army94772568285.3

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Yards
per game

1St. Lawrence356.1
2Lewis & Clark343.8
3West Texas State322.9
4New Hampshire303.0
5William Jewell302.3
6Morris Harvey298.9
7Heidelberg287.9
8New Mexico Western287.1
9John Carroll284.0
10Western Illinois282.1

==Passing offense==

The following teams were the leaders in passing offense during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Games
played

! Completions

! Attempts

! Pct

! Yards

! Yards
per game

! Int

! TD

1SMU10156296.5272146214.62414
2Hardin-Simmons10130228.5702061206.1815
3Washington10149260.5732041204.11214
4Loyola (CA)9122228.5351674186.01220
5George Washington9113228.4961475163.9177
6Duke10121236.5131639163.92110
7Holy Cross10105247.4251585158.52014
8Drake9101182.5551420157.81112
9Iowa State10117226.5181574157.4189
10Kentucky11125230.5431714155.81427'

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=37}}

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Yards
per game

1Northern Illinois187.0
2Central Michigan176.5
3Miami (OH)175.7
4St. Bonaventure174.8
5Scranton163.9
6Pepperdine158.6
7Baldwin-Wallace149.9
8Buffalo148.4
9Central (MO)146.6
10Butler144.6

==Total defense==

The following teams were the leaders in total defense during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Games
played

! Total
plays

! Yards
gained

! Yards
per game

1Wake Forest94911469163.2
2Kentucky116711895172.3
3Wyoming94931559173.2
4Army96371705189.4
5Miami (FL)106531968196.8
6Cornell95471788198.7
7Tennessee116732208200.7
8Tulane95571807200.8
9Mississippi State94701828203.1
10San Francisco116932240203.6

{{cite book|title=Official Collegiate Football Record Book|year=1951|publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association|page=38}}

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Games
played

! Total
plays

! Yards
gained

! Yards
per game

1New Haven State731565593.6
2Lewis & Clark9426933103.7
3Southern115801433130.3
4St. Lawrence83671059132.4
5Abilene Christian105331386138.6
6Gustavus Adolphus104531402140.2
7Springfield84351244155.5
8North Carolina A&T105681560156.0
9Rider84061253156.6
10Valparaiso95161417157.5

==Rushing defense==

The following teams were the leaders in rushing defense during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Games

! No.

! Yards

! Avg..

1Ohio State934157664.0
2Princeton932661167.9
3Wake Forest933062669.6
4San Francisco1143582074.5
5Wyoming934378887.6
6Tulane937382491.6
7Kentucky11482102192.8
8Michigan State934487497.1
9Maryland104211016101.6
10Loyola (CA)9348960106.7

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Yards
per game

1Lewis & Clark50.3
2New Haven State53.6
3St. Lawrence72.5
4Scranton76.4
5Southern78.9
6North Carolina AT&T79.5
7Abilene Christian81.3
8Gustavus Adolphus81.5
9William Jewell83.3
10Franklin & Marshall83.6

==Passing defense==

The following teams were the leaders in passing defense during the 1950 season:

Major college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Games

! Compl.

! Att.

! Pct

! Yards

! Yards
per game

! Int

! TD

1Tennessee1165149.43674367.5232
2Indiana951127.40262969.9123
3Tulsa1159181.32677070.0123
4Duke1067147.45670770.7173
5Montana948127.37866173.4194
6Iowa State1042113.37274174.194
7Penn State952141.36967174.6188
8Harvard835101.34759974.926
9Army959155.38167975.4181
10Mississippi State949102.48070378.177

Small college

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! Team

! Yards
per game

1Vermont34.4
2New Haven State40.0
3Southern51.4
4Lewis & Clark53.3
5Rider54.3
6Washington (MD)56.0
7Cortland State56.1
8Oberlin56.5
9Wilmington56.9
10Abilene Christian57.2

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

{{NCAA football season navbox}}

{{1950–51 NCAA championships navbox}}