Football Records - West Virginia Mountaineers

Hall of Famers................................................................. 150 Consensus All-Americans................................................ 152 All-Americans.................................................................. 153 Top Plays......................................................................... 155 Top Games...................................................................... 156 Top Seasons.................................................................... 157 Top Careers...................................................................... 160 Class Rankings................................................................. 162 Individual Records........................................................... 164 Defensive Records........................................................... 166 Team Records.................................................................. 168 Coaching Records............................................................ 169 Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar Stadium Records............................................................. 170 Year-by-Year Results....................................................... 172 All-Time Scores............................................................... 174 Series Records................................................................. 182 Bowl Recaps.................................................................... 183 All-Time Lettermen.......................................................... 189 Mountaineers in the Pros................................................ 197

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WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY

NATIONAL HALL OF FAME SELECTIONS

BRUCE LEE

BOSLEY

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1982 AS A PLAYER

West Virginia's second-ever consensus All-American in 1955, Bruce Bosley was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1982. A native of Fresno, Calif., who grew up in Green Bank, W.Va., Bosley played on the 1954 Sugar Bowl team for the Mountaineers. That squad finished as the 10thranked team in the nation. He went on to a long and prosperous NFL career with the San Francisco 49ers and Atlanta Falcons for 13 seasons. A four-time Pro Bowl pick in 1960, 1965, 1966 and 1967, Bosley is a member of the San Francisco 49ers all-time team. The 6-2, 240-lb., center retired in 1969. He died April 25, 1995, in San Francisco, Calif.

ROBERT CLECKER

"BOBBY" BOWDEN

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 2006 AS A COACH

Bobby Bowden, the No. 2 all-time win leader among college football coaches had an impressive 44-year coaching career which included two national championship. He served as head coach at West Virginia University from 1970-75, compiling a record of 42-26 with two Peach Bowl appearances. The Birmingham, Ala., native graduated from Howard College (now Samford) in 1953 and began his coaching career as an assistant coach from 1954-55. He moved on to South Georgia Junior as head coach between 1956-58, before returning to his alma mater as head coach from 1959-62, posting a 31-6 record. His first stint at Florida State came in 1963 when he coached the wide receivers. He came to Morgantown in 1966 as offensive coordinator under Jim Carlen, before becoming the head coach in 1970. He left Morgantown in 1976 to become the head coach at Florida State and compiled a 316-97-4 record for an overall career mark of 389-129-4. He is the only coach in Division I-A football history to have enjoyed 14-straight 10-win seasons. His FSU teams finished an unprecedented 14-straight seasons in the Top 5 of the Associated Press College Football Poll, won the College Football National Championship in 1993 and 1999 and is 21-8-1 in bowl games.

MAJOR CLAYBOURNE

HARRIS

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 2009 AS A PLAYER

A three-year starter at quarterback, the dynamic Major Harris became the first player in NCAA history to rush for more than 2,000 yards and pass for more than 5,000 yards in his career. As a freshman, Harris led the Mountaineers to the 1987 Sun Bowl. The following season, the quarterback led West Virginia to an undefeated season and a match-up with Notre Dame for the national championship in the 1988 Fiesta Bowl. He accounted

for 20 touchdowns that season, while earning ECAC Player of the Year honors and finishing fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting. During his junior campaign, Harris threw for 17 touchdowns and ran for six, while setting school records for most total offense and quarterback rushing yards. He was a voted first-team All-America, named the ECAC Player of the Year and finished third in the Heisman Trophy voting. Drafted by the Los Angeles Raiders in the 1990 NFL Draft, Harris spent several seasons playing in the Canadian Football League, Arena Football League and other semi-pro leagues. In 1999, he was inducted into the WVU Sports Hall of Fame.

ROBERT LEE

"SAM" HUFF

PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1982 AS A PLAYER COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1980 AS A PLAYER

A name synonymous with West Virginia football, Robert Lee "Sam" Huff ranks among the all-time great NFL linebackers. At West Virginia, Huff was a 6-1, 230-lb. tackle before being drafted in the third round by the New York Giants in 1956. Shortly thereafter, the Farmington, W.Va., native became one of the greatest and most publicized linebackers in pro football history and the first defensive football player to make the cover of Time magazine. CBS produced a half-hour pro football documentary entitled "The Violent World of Sam Huff." A fierce competitor and a great rival of Green Bay Packers linebacker Ray Nitsche, Huff earned Pro Bowl status five times, first as a Giant, and then as a Washington Redskin, where he finished his career in 1969. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1980 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1982.

ALFRED EARLE

"GREASY" NEALE

PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1969 AS A COACH COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1967 AS A COACH

A noted player and coach, "Greasy" Neale's affiliation with West Virginia lasted three years as head football coach from 1931-34. Prior to his stay in Morgantown, Greasy (a nickname he had carried since childhood), was a three-sport standout at West Virginia Wesleyan before embarking on an eight-year major league baseball career with the Cincinnati Reds. While a baseball player, Neale also found time to play professional football in the fall. Upon his retirement as an athlete, Neale became a college coaching gypsy, guiding some of the nation's finest football programs before taking the NFL Philadelphia Eagles coaching job in 1941. Introducing the "naked reverse", man-to-man shifting defenses, the stutter series and a primitive form of the 4-3 defense during his pro football coaching tenure, Neale guided the Eagles to the 1949 NFL title. The Parkersburg native was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1967 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1969. He died November 2, 1973, in Lake Worth, Fla.

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coaching staff player profiles Preseason notes

MOUNTAINEER FOOTBALL

opponents

DONALD EUGENE

"DON" NEHLEN

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 2005 AS A COACH

The winningest coach in WVU history with a 149-93-4 record, Don Nehlen served as Mountaineer head man from 1980-2000. During his 21 years as head coach in Morgantown, Nehlen guided the Mountaineers to 13 bowl games and two bids for national titles playing Notre Dame in the 1989 Fiesta Bowl and Florida in the 1994 Sugar Bowl. He coached 15 firstteam AllAmericans, 82 allconference players and 51 players that went on to play professional football. His resume included coaching stints in the BlueGray, EastWest Shrine and Hula Bowl allstar games, and he served as president of the 10,000member American Football Coaches Association in 1997. Nehlen, a twotime national coach of the year in 1988 and 1993, is a member of the MidAmerican Conference, Bowling Green, Gator Bowl, Chick-Fil-A Bowl and WVU Sports Halls of Fame. He also served as head coach of his alma mater, Bowling Green, from 1968-76, posting a 53-35-4 mark. The native of Canton, Ohio, was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2005.

IRA ERRETT

"RAT" RODGERS

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1953 AS A PLAYER

West Virginia's preeminent all-around athlete, Ira Errett "Rat" Rodgers gained fame as a hard-charging fullback from 1917-19. Called one of "the finest football players in the land" by syndicated columnist Grantland Rice, Rodgers is unanimously considered West Virginia's finest pre-World War II football player. A consensus All-American in 1919, Rodgers gained national notoriety after a 25-0 whipping of Princeton, against which he passed for 162 yards and two touchdowns. For the season Rodgers accounted for 147 points. Later an amateur state golf champion, the Bethany, W.Va., native remained at West Virginia as football (1920-25, 1943-45), baseball (1921-42) and golf coach (1949). Rodgers was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1953. He died February 22, 1963, in Morgantown.

FLOYD

"BEN" SCHWARTZWALDER

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1982 AS A COACH

A two-sport letterman at West Virginia in football and wrestling from 1930-32, he achieved great success as a head coach on the prep and collegiate level. He coached high school football for six seasons in West Virginia and Ohio, winning two state championships at Parkersburg (W.Va.), prior to enlisting in the U.S. Army during World War II. Following his discharge, he was the head coach at Muhlenberg (N.J.) College from 1946-48, compiling a 25-5 record. He left there to become head coach at Syracuse, serving as head man there from 1949-73. His teams were an impressive 153-91-3, went to seven bowls, winning the national championship in 1959, and captured four Lambert Trophies (1952, 1956, 1959 and 1966). He was National Coach of the Year in 1959 and was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1982. He died in 1993 at age 83.

CLARENCE WILEY

"DOC" SPEARS

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1955 AS A COACH

A coach at West Virginia from 1921-24, Clarence "Doc" Spears was responsible for developing West Virginia's great football fortunes of the early 1920s. During his coaching tenure in Morgantown, the school played in its first bowl game (EastWest) in 1922, produced its first unbeaten team (also 1922), defeated Pitt, 9-6 that 1922 season (considered among the greatest wins in school history) and helped build a football stadium. A cordial and delightful man off the field,

Spears was the opposite on it, evoking confrontations with sportswriters, alumni and fans alike. After his brief tenure in Morgantown where he also doubled as a practicing medical doctor, thus earning the nickname "Doc," Spears also coached at Minnesota and Oregon among others, until retiring in 1935 to devote his full time to medicine, practicing in Ypsilanti, Mich. Spears was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1955. He died February 1, 1964, in Jupiter, Fla.

JOSEPH LEE

"JUMBO JOE" STYDAHAR

PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1967 AS A PLAYER COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1956 AS A PLAYER

A brilliant, but under-recognized two-sport athlete at West Virginia until his graduation in 1936, "Jumbo Joe" Stydahar lost that distinction after surprisingly being the first player taken by the Chicago Bears in the 1936 NFL draft -- the first player ever selected by the organization. Born in Kaylor, Pa., and later a standout at Shinnston High (W.Va.), Stydahar was a giant of a man (6-4, 245-lbs.) who became a perennial NFL all-star at tackle. A sixty-minute performer with the "Monsters of the Midway," Stydahar played without a helmet, one of the last performers to do so. He participated on three NFL championship teams with the Bears and was named to the official all-NFL team from 1937-40. He sandwiched a two-year stint in the Navy (1943-44) in the middle of his pro career, which finished in 1946. Following his playing career, Stydahar coached the 1951 Los Angeles Rams to the NFL championship, the organization's first and only title. Stydahar was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1956 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1967. He died March 23, 1977, in Beckley, W.Va.

FIELDING HARRIS

"HURRY UP" YOST

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 1951 AS A COACH

Always in a hurry, thus the nickname "Hurry Up," Fielding Harris Yost gained national acclaim as a college football coach at Michigan at the turn of the century. Yost's travels included a stop at West Virginia, where he earned a law degree and played football in 1895-96. After his two years at WVU, the Fairview, W.Va., native took the Michigan coaching job at age 30 in 1900. Four years later, he showed his appreciation for his alma mater at West Virginia by beating the Mountaineers 130-0, a score that didn't endear him to the West Virginia faithful. That 1904 Michigan squad was called the "PointA-Minute" team. Later the athletic director at Michigan, he was singularly instrumental in building the nation's largest football stadium at Michigan. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1951. He died August 20, 1946, in Ann Arbor, Mich.

DARRYL VICTOR

TALLEY

COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME / INDUCTED: 2011 AS A PLAYER

The 12th Mountaineer to be inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, 1982 consensus All-American Darryl Talley was one of the most dominant defenders in West Virginia University and Buffalo Bills history. A four-year starter at linebacker for the Mountaineers from 1979-82, Talley amassed 484 career tackles ? the most by any WVU player when his playing career ended. His five tackles for loss in 1980 versus Penn State still stand as a WVU singlegame record. For his career, Talley had 282 unassisted tackles , 202 assisted tackles, 28 tackles for loss and 19 quarterback sacks from 1979-82. The native of East Cleveland, Ohio, went on to stardom in Buffalo as a starter for 12 outstanding seasons at linebacker from 1983-94, never missing a game while playing for the Bills. Talley is the Bills' all-time leading tackler with 1,137 career takedowns. He also recorded 38 ? sacks and 11 interceptions as a Bill. Talley spent the 1995 campaign with the Atlanta Falcons and played one more year with the Minnesota Vikings in 1996 before retiring.

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WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY

CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICANS

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AARON

BEASLEY

CORNERBACK, 1995

This Pottstown, Pa., native captured first team All-America honors from five different sources during a 1995 season in which he nabbed five interceptions. The year prior as a junior, Beasley led the nation with 10 picks. Of his 19 career interceptions (second all-time at WVU), three went for TDs. A Jim Thorpe and Football News defensive player of the year semifinalist as a senior, Beasley was a third-round selection of the Jacksonville Jaguars and played in the NFL for nine seasons with the Jaguars, New York Jets and Atlanta Falcons.

BRUCE

BOSLEY

TACKLE, 1955

This Green Bank, W.Va., resident earned consensus All-America honors as a tackle in 1955, ending a 36-year West Virginia consensus drought. A terrific all-around player, Bosley played on the 1954 Sugar Bowl team and helped WVU to a three-year 31-7 mark. A second-round selection by the San Francisco 49ers in 1956, the 1953 Academic All-American was a four-time all-pro as a member of the 49ers during his 13-year NFL career. Bosley was a member of the College Football Hall of Fame.

MIKE

COMPTON

CENTER, 1992

West Virginia's fifth consensus AllAmerican used equal amounts of brains and muscle to gain national acclaim. A native of Richlands, Va., Compton was cited by seven different sources for his consensus tag at center. One of four Rotary Lombardi Award finalists, he was a NCAA Today's Top Six winner and was selected to speak on behalf of all NCAA student-athletes at the 1993 NCAA Convention in Dallas. A third-round pick by the Detroit Lions in 1993, the Academic All-American was a fixture at guard and center for the Lions for eight seasons before moving on to New England, where he won two Super Bowl rings with the Patriots. He also played one season with the Jacksonville Jaguars.

CANUTE

CURTIS

LINEBACKER, 1996

One of West Virginia's most decorated defenders, linebacker Canute Curtis was the anchor of the nation's No. 1-rated defense in 1996. The BIG EAST defensive player of the year and the school's all-time sack leader with 342, the Amityville, N.Y., native was a finalist for the Butkus Award, the Football Writers Association Bronko Nagurski Award and the Football News defensive player of the year. He was a sixth-round draft pick of the Cincinnati Bengals.

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BRIAN

JOZWIAK

OFFENSIVE TACKLE, 1985

Mammoth offensive tackle Brian Jozwiak became Coach Don Nehlen's second consensus All-American in 1985. Jozwiak gained consensus status at offensive tackle by earning first team All-America honors from five different sources. The seventh player taken in the 1986 NFL draft by the Kansas City Chiefs, the Catonsville, Md., resident was just the fifth Mountaineer to be taken in the first round of the NFL draft. Jozwiak played three NFL seasons before injury forced him into early retirement.

DAN

MOZES

CENTER, 2006

Dan Mozes was named the Rimington Award winner, signifying the top center in the nation. He helped lead the Mountaineers to two 11-win seasons, two Top 10 final rankings and set the best four-year record in the school's history. Mozes finished with a complete sweep, earning both unanimous and consensus All-America honors. He was a leader on one of the most explosive offenses in college football, ranking No. 2 nationally in rushing, No. 3 in scoring, No. 5 in total offense and No. 6 in fewest sacks allowed. West Virginia averaged 303 yards per game rushing, 38.9 points a game and 461.4 yards per game of total offense. He signed a free agent contract with the Minnesota Vikings.

IRA ERRETT

"RAT" RODGERS

FULLBACK, 1919

Hailed as one of the nation's finest pre-World War II football players, Ira Errett Rodgers is considered by several historians to be West Virginia's finest all-round athlete. West Virginia's first consensus pick in 1919 at fullback, the Bethany, W.Va., native amassed the single greatest season of any West Virginia player in 1919, leading the nation in scoring with 147 points. National syndicated columnist Grantland Rice labelled Rodgers "the finest all-round football player in the land" that season. Rodgers was enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame in 1953.

TODD

SAUERBRUN

PUNTER, 1994

Considered among the top punters in NCAA football history, Todd Sauerbrun established an NCAA standard 48.4 punting average in 1994 on the way to consensus All-America status. Sauerbrun also set NCAA marks in career punting average (46.1) and season punts traveling longer than 50 yards (32). The AT&T national Long Distance Award winner earned a clean sweep of All-America teams in 1994 and had one punt

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travel 90 yards against Nebraska in the Kickoff Classic. The Setauket, N.Y., native was the 56th player taken in the 1995 NFL draft by the Chicago Bears (second round), the highest specialist taken since 1979. He also played for the Kansas City Chiefs and was named to the Walter Camp Football Foundation All-Century College Football Team for the 1900's.

STEVE

SLATON

RUNNING BACK, 2006

This three-year starter was a quickfooted and speedy runner who ran for a school record 1,744 yards and 16 touchdowns in 2006, helping lead the Mountaineers to a second-straight 11-win season. He was second in the nation in all-purpose yards, fourth in rushing yards per game and tied for No. 12 in scoring. Slaton finished with a complete sweep, earning both unanimous and consensus All-America honors. He ran for over 1,000 yards all three years, helping the Mountaineers to three-straight 11-win seasons and Top 10 rankings. While he was at WVU, he finished his career among the Top 10 active players nationally in career rushing yards, career rushing yards per game, career rushing touchdowns, career yards per carry, scoring touchdowns, total points and points per game and all-purpose yards per game. He also was named the most valuable player of the 2006 Sugar Bowl, finishing with a bowl record 204 yards against Georgia.

DARRYL

TALLEY

LINEBACKER, 1982

Coach Don Nehlen's first consensus All-America pick in 1982 (third ever at WVU), linebacker Darryl Talley captured first team All-America status on nine teams that season. A vicious hitter who finished his career as the school's all-time leading tackler, Talley was among the first great Nehlen players that elevated West Virginia football nationally. Selected in the second round by the Buffalo Bills in 1983, the Cleveland, Ohio, native became a fixture on four Buffalo Super Bowl teams. Talley was a two-time NFL all-pro with the Bills.

GRANT

WILEY

LINEBACKER, 2003

Four-year starter who anchored the Mountaineer defense from his linebacker post. Surpassed fellow consensus All-American Darryl Talley to become the school's all-time leading tackler in 2003. Finished his career with 492 total tackles in becoming WVU's ninth consensus AllAmerican. The Trappe, Pa., native displayed the knack for making big plays for the Mountaineer defense and finished his career as WVUs career leader in tackles for loss with 47.5.

coaching staff player profiles Preseason notes

MOUNTAINEER FOOTBALL

opponents

FIRST TEAM

2012 Tavon Austin, all-purpose American Football Coaches Association, Associated Press, , , Pro Football Weekly, Phil Steele, Stedman Bailey, wide receiver Football Writers Association of America, , Phil Steele,

2011 Tavon Austin, all-purpose , Phil Steele

2010 Robert Sands, safety Sporting News

2008 Pat White, quarterback Playboy Pat McAfee, punter/kicker

2007 Ryan Stanchek, offensive tackle Football Writers Association of America Steve Slaton, running back Playboy

2006 Steve Slaton, running back Associated Press, Walter Camp, American Football Coaches Association, Football Writers Association of America and Sporting News Dan Mozes, center Playboy, American Football Coaches Association, Associated Press, Walter Camp, Football Writers Association of America, The Sporting News,

2004 Adam Jones, defensive back ,

2003 Grant Wiley, linebacker Associated Press, Football Writers Association of America, Southern Football Weekly, The Sporting News, , CSTV,

1998 John Thornton, defensive tackle Sports Network

1996 Canute Curtis, linebacker American Football Coaches Association, Associated Press, Football News, Football Writers Association of America, College Sports, Scripps-Howard, American Football Quarterly

1995 Aaron Beasley, defensive back American Football Coaches Association, Walter Camp, Football News, United Press International, College Sports

1994 Todd Sauerbrun, punter American Football Coaches Association, Walter Camp, Associated Press, Football News, United Press International, Football Writers Association of America, College Sports, College-Pro Football Weekly

1993 Rich Braham, offensive tackle Kodak, United Press International

1992 Mike Compton, center Playboy, Kodak, Walter Camp, Football News, Sporting News, Associated Press, United Press International

1989 Major Harris, quarterback Kodak/AFCA, Playboy

1988 Rick Phillips, offensive tackle Scripps-Howard Bo Orlando, strong safety Newspaper Enterprise Association Chris Haering, linebacker Newspaper Enterprise Association

1985 Brian Jozwiak, offensive tackle Walter Camp, Associated Press, United Press International, Football News, Playboy

1984 Willie Drewrey, special teams Sporting News

1984 Rob Bennett, tight end Walter Camp Paul Woodside, place-kicker Playboy

1983 Paul Woodside, place-kicker Sporting News

1982 Darryl Talley, linebacker Associated Press, United Press International, Sporting News, Kodak, Football News, WTBS, Football Writers Association of America, Newspaper Enterprise Association

1974 Danny Buggs, wide receiver Time

1973 Danny Buggs, wide receiver American Football Coaches' Association (Kodak)

1970 Dale Farley, linebacker Sporting News Jim Braxton, tight end Associated Press

1969 Carl Crennel, middle guard Playboy

1955 Sam Huff, tackle NEA Service, Look, Jet, NBCTV Bruce Bosley, tackle Colliers, International News Service, United Press, Sporting News, New York News, Williamson Rating System, Hearst Newspapers, Paramount News, AllAmerica Board, Boston RecordAmerican, Gridiron Weekly, Players' (Norman Sper)

1953 Bob Orders, center NEA Service (Harry Wismer)

1952 Paul Bischoff, end Paramount News

1924 Walter "Red" Mahan, guard Midweek Pictorial, Metropolitan News

1924 Fred Graham, end Referee Tom Thorp

1922 Russ Meredith, tackle New York World

1919 Russ Bailey, center Sioux City Tribune, Philadelphia Press Ira Errett Rodgers, fullback Walter Camp, Frank G. Menke, The Knickerbocker, Chicago Tribune, Pittsburgh Post, Newark Sunday Call, St. Louis Star, New Haven Register, Troy (N.Y.) Record, Ohio State Journal, Philadelphia Press

1917 Ira Errett Rodgers, fullback Newark Sunday Call Russ Bailey, center Frank G. Menke, A.M. Weyland, Chicago Tribune, Pittsburgh Sun, Pittsburgh Press, New York Evening Journal

1916 Ira Errett Rodgers, fullback Frank Cavanaugh, New York Sun, Newark Sunday Call

SECOND TEAM

2012 Tavon Austin, wide receiver Walter Camp, , Phil Steele Stedman Bailey, wide receiver Walter Camp, Associated Press,

2011 Tavon Austin, all-purpose Yahoo! Sports

2010 Keith Tandy, cornerback

2008 Pat McAfee, punter Walter Camp Ryan Stanchek, offensive tackle Walter Camp

2007 Ryan Stanchek, offensive tackle Sporting News, Walter Camp

2005 Garin Justice, offensive tackle The Sporting News Dan Mozes, center Associated Press

1995 Aaron Beasley, defensive back Associated Press

1994 Aaron Beasley, defensive back Football News, United Press International, College Sports

1993 Rich Braham, offensive tackle Associated Press

1989 Major Harris, quarterback Associated Press, Football News

1988 Chris Parker, defensive tackle Associated Press Rick Phillips, offensive tackle Associated Press, United Press International Brian Smider, offensive tackle Sporting News

1985 Brian Jozwiak, offensive tackle Newspaper Enterprise Association

1984 Brian Jozwiak, offensive tackle Associated Press Fred Smalls, linebacker Newspaper Enterprise Association

1983 Paul Woodside, place-kicker United Press International

1982 Paul Woodside, place-kicker United Press International

1981 Mark Raugh, tight end United Press International

1973 Danny Buggs, wide receiver Associated Press, United Press International, Football News

1969 Carl Crennel, middle guard Associated Press

1967 Carl Crennel, middle guard Associated Press

1966 Garrett Ford, halfback Associated Press, United Press International

1963 Pete Goimarac, center Associated Press

1955 Bruce Bosley, tackle Associated Press

1953 Bruce Bosley, tackle International News Service

Gene "Beef" Lamone, guard Associated Press

Bob Orders, center Central Press

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