Bear Bryant's 1950 Kentucky Wildcats football team compiled an 11–1 record and defeated Oklahoma in the Sugar Bowl. Kentucky claims the 1950 national championship based on its No. 1 ranking in computer rankings released in 1990 by Jeff Sagarin. Kentucky quarterback Babe Parilli tallied 1,627 passing yards and finished fourth in voting for the 1950 Heisman Trophy.
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).
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 30No. 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 7No. 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 14No. 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 28No. 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.[2] The Buckeyes were elevated to No. 4 behind SMU, Army, and Oklahoma and ahead of Kentucky.
November
November 4No. 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 11No. 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.[3] California moved up to No. 4, ahead of Kentucky and Texas.
November 18No. 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 25No. 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
For this article, major conferences defined as those including at least one state flagship public university or a team ranked in the AP Poll.
The following players were the individual leaders in total offense among major college football players during the 1950 season:
1. Johnny Bright, Drake, 2,400 yards (broke [[Frank Sinkwich's prior major college record of 2,187 yards)
2. Billy Cox, Duke, 1,995 yards
3. Don Heinrich, Washington, 1,807 yards
4. Gil Bartosh, TCU, 1,733 yards
5. John Ford, Hardin-Simmons, 1,720 yards
6. Babe Parilli, Kentucky, 1,681 yards
7. Bill Weeks, Iowa State, 1,673 yards
8. Reds Bagnell, Penn, 1,603 yards
9. Bill Wade, Vanderbilt, 1,595 yards
10. Wilford White, Arizona State, 1,589 yards [10]
Passing
The following players were the individual leaders in pass completions among major college football players during the 1950 season:
1. Don Heinrich, Washington, 134 of 221, 60.9%, 1,846 yards, 9 interceptions, 14 touchdowns
2. Cunningham, Utah, 119 of 217, 54.8%, 1,146 yards, 12 interceptions, 13 touchdowns
3. Bill Weeks, Iowa State, 116 of 220, 52.7%, 1,552 yards, 16 interceptions, 9 touchdowns
4. Babe Parilli, Kentucky, 114 of 204, 56.2%, 1,627 yards, 12 interceptions, 23 touchdowns
5. Don Klosterman, Loyola-Los Angeles, 113 of 207, 54.6%, 1,582 yards, 11 interceptions, 19 touchdowns
6. John Ford, Hardin-Simmons, 111 of 199, 55.8%, 1,777 yards, 7 interceptions, 12 touchdowns
7. Fred Benners, SMU, 109 of 192, 56.8%, 1,361 yards, 13 interceptions, 9 touchdowns
8. Billy Cox, Duke, 108 of 206, 52.4%, 1,428 yards, 15 interceptions, 8 touchdowns
9. Chuck Maloy, Holy Cross, 104 of 242, 43.0%, 1,572 yards, 19 interceptions, 14 touchdowns
10. Bob Williams, Notre Dame, 99 of 210, 47.1%, 1,035 yards, 15 interceptions, 10 touchdowns [11]
Rushing
The following players were the individual leaders in rushing yards among major college football players during the 1950 season:
1. Wilford White, Arizona State, 1,501 yards on 199 carries (7.55 average)
2. Bobby Reynolds, Nebraska, 1,342 yards on 193 carries (6.95 average)
3. Bob Smith, Texas A&M, 1,302 yards on 199 carries (6.54 average)
4. Johnny Bright, Drake, 1,232 yards on 183 carries (6.73 average)
5. Wade Stinson, Kansas, 1,129 yards on 167 carries (6.76 average)
6. Hugh McElhenny, Washington, 1,107 yards on 179 carries (6.18 average)
7. Sonny Grandelius, Michigan State, 1,023 yards on 163 carries (6.28 average)
8. Kayo Dottley, Ole Miss, 1,007 yards on 191 carries (5.27 average)
9. Steve Wadiak, South Carolina, 998 yards on 162 carries (6.16 average)
10. J. Roberts, Tulsa, 954 yards on 138 carries (6.91 average) [12]
Receiving
The following players were the individual leaders in receptions among major college football players during the 1950 season:
1. Gordon Cooper, Denver, 46 receptions, 569 yards, 8 touchdowns
2. Tom Bienemann, Drake, 45 receptions, 615 yards, 2 touchdowns
3. Jim Doran, Iowa State, 42 receptions, 652 yards, 6 touchdowns
4. Don Stonesifer, Northwestern, 42 receptions, 560 yards, 5 touchdowns
5. Ceep Youmans, Duke, 40 receptions, 446 yards, 1 touchdowns
6. Bill McColl, Stanford, 39 receptions, 671 yards, 4 touchdowns
7. Sy Wilhelmi, Iowa State, 38 receptions, 442 yards, 2 touchdowns
8. Herman Fisher, Nevada, 38 receptions, 434 yards, 1 touchdown
9. Fred Snyder, Loyola-Los Angeles, 36 receptions, 596 yards, 9 touchdowns
10. Thomas, Oregon State, 36 receptions, 350 yards, 1 touchdown
11. Al Lary, Alabama, 35 receptions, 756 yards, 10 touchdowns [13]
Scoring
The following players were the individual leaders in scoring among major college football players during the 1950 season:
1. Bobby Reynolds, Nebraska, 157 points (22 TD, 25 PAT)
2. Wilford White, Arizona State, 136 points (22 TD, 1 PAT, 1 FG)
3. Eddie Talboom, Wyoming, 130 points (15 TD, 40 PAT)
4. Johnny Bright, Drake, 108 points (18 TD)
5. Johnny Turco, Holy Cross, 102 points (16 TD)
6. Bob Shemonski, Maryland, 97 points (16 TD, 1 PAT)
7. Max Clark, Houston, 90 points (11 TD, 24 PAT)
7. Merwin Hodel, Colorado, 90 points (15 TD)
7. Billy Vessels, Oklahoma, 90 points (15 TD)
10. Fred Cone, Clemson, 86 points (14 TD, 2 PAT) [14]
Team
Total offense
The following teams were the leaders in total offense in major college football during the 1950 season:
1. Arizona State, 470.4 yards per game
2. Princeton, 433.7 yards per game
3. Tulsa, 431.5 yards per game
4. Clemson, 431.2 yards per game
5. Loyola (CA), 420.1 yards per game
6. Alabama, 416.0 yards per game
7. Oklahoma, 415.4 yards per game
8. Washington, 411.6 yards per game
9. Nebraska, 407.3 yards per game
10. Pacific, 399.9 yards per game [15]
Total defense
The following teams were the leaders in total defense in major college football during the 1950 season:
1. Wake Forest, 163.2 yards per game
2. Kentucky, 172.3 yards per game
3. Wyoming, 173.2 yards per game
4. Army, 189.4 yards per game
5. Miami (FL), 196.8 yards per game
6. Cornell, 198.7 yards per game
7. Tennessee, 200.7 yards per game
8. Tulane, 200.8 yards per game
9. Mississippi State, 203.1 yard per game
10. San Francisco, 203.6 yards per game [16]