2018 NCAA Division I FBS football season


The 2018 NCAA Division I FBS football season was the highest level college football competition in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association in 2018.
The regular season began on August 25, 2018 and ended on December 8, 2018. The postseason concluded on January 7, 2019 with the 2019 College Football Playoff National Championship at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California. The Clemson Tigers won the title game over the Alabama Crimson Tide, the school's third national title and second in three years.

Rule changes

Game rules

The following rule changes were approved by the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel for the 2018 season:
Major changes to redshirt rules in Division I football took effect from this season forward after having been approved by the NCAA Division I Council on June 13, 2018. Players can now participate in as many as four games in a season while still retaining redshirt status. This new rule does not apply to players who enroll at a school midyear and participate in postseason competition taking place during or before their first academic term at that school.

Conference realignment

Membership changes

New Mexico State left the Sun Belt Conference following the 2017 season and will compete as an FBS independent. Idaho also left the Sun Belt, dropping its football program from the FBS to FCS level, where it will compete in the Big Sky Conference.
Liberty began a two-year transition from FCS in 2017. The Flames will be counted as an FBS independent for scheduling purposes in 2018, but will not be fully bowl-eligible until the 2019 season. However, they may participate in a bowl in 2018 if they have at least six eligible wins and there are not enough bowl-eligible teams to fill all the spots.

Other headlines

Colorado State announced on April 19, 2018 that an area financial institution, Public Service Credit Union, had paid $37.7 million over 15 years to place its name on the venue then known as Colorado State Stadium. The new stadium name was not revealed at that time because PSCU was in the process of changing its name, with the new name expected to be announced in June 2018. The deal did not affect the playing surface, which continues to be named after former Rams head coach Sonny Lubick. On June 5, the former PSCU announced its new name of Canvas Credit Union, with the CSU venue becoming Canvas Stadium.
Kansas renamed their stadium to David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium in honor of alumnus David Booth who donated $50 million to the school for renovations to the stadium.
As noted above, Louisville removed the Papa John's name from Cardinal Stadium in the wake of the controversy over founder John Schnatter.

Kickoff games

"Week Zero"

The regular season began with four Week 0 games on Saturday, August 25:
The vast majority of FBS teams opened the season on Labor Day weekend. Five neutral-site "kickoff" games were held :
Rankings reflect the AP Poll. Rankings for Week 10 and beyond will list College Football Playoff Rankings first and AP Poll second. Teams that fail to be a top 10 team for one poll or the other will be noted.

Week 1

Two games were cancelled due to thunderstorms:
Three of these four teams later found replacement games to fill out their schedule.

Week 3

Five games were cancelled due to Hurricane Florence:
Five of the ten teams that lost games due to Florence scheduled tentative replacement games for Week 14, which is normally reserved for conference championship games.
Four games were moved forward in anticipation of Florence:
One game was moved forward and to the visiting team's stadium in anticipation of Florence:
One game was moved to a neutral site in anticipation of Florence:
One game was rescheduled in anticipation of Florence:
Normally reserved for conference championship games, several games were added to the schedule to replace earlier, cancelled games. All of these games were contingent upon both teams being available.
The 2018 First Responder Bowl on December 26 between Boston College and Boise State was canceled after severe weather hit the Dallas area. The game was stopped due to lightning in the area shortly after BC had taken a 7–0 lead in the first quarter, and was canceled about 90 minutes later. Lightning continued in the vicinity of the stadium for an additional 90 minutes, and further severe weather was expected for later that night. According to an NCAA spokesperson, this was believed to be the first bowl game ever called off due to weather conditions.

Conference standings

Conference summaries

Rankings reflect the Week 14 AP Poll before the conference championship games were played.
ConferenceChampionRunner-upScoreOffensive Player of the YearDefensive Player of the YearCoach of the Year
ACC#2 ClemsonCFPPittsburgh42–10Travis Etienne Clelin Ferrell Dabo Swinney
American#7 UCFMemphis56–41McKenzie Milton Nate Harvey Luke Fickell
Big 12#5 OklahomaCFP#9 Texas39–27Kyler Murray David Long Jr. Lincoln Riley
Matt Campbell
Big Ten#6 Ohio State#21 Northwestern45–24Dwayne Haskins Devin Bush Jr. Pat Fitzgerald
C–USAUABMiddle Tennessee27–25Mason Fine Jaylon Ferguson Rick Stockstill
MACNorthern IllinoisBuffalo30–29Tyree Jackson Sutton Smith Lance Leipold
MW#25 Fresno State#19 Boise StateBrett Rypien Jeff Allison Matt Wells
Pac-12#10 Washington#17 Utah10–3Gardner Minshew Ben Burr-Kirven Mike Leach
SEC#1 AlabamaCFP#4 Georgia35–28Tua Tagovailoa Josh Allen Mark Stoops
Sun BeltAppalachian StateLouisiana30–19Zac Thomas Ronheen Bingham Scott Satterfield

CFP College Football Playoff participant

Postseason

Bowl selections

There were 39 team-competitive post-season bowl games, with two teams advancing to a 40th - 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. If there are not enough winning teams to fulfill all open bowl slots, teams with losing records may be chosen to fill all 78 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.

Bowl–eligible teams

Number of bowl berths available: 78
Number of bowl-eligible teams: 82

Bowl-eligible teams that were not invited

Number of bowl-ineligible teams: 48
* Liberty was not bowl-eligible until 2019 due to their transition from FCS to FBS. If Liberty had at least six wins and there were not enough bowl-eligible teams, they could have requested an NCAA waiver to participate in a bowl; Liberty did reach six wins, but there were more than enough bowl-eligible teams to fill the available bids.
** Ole Miss, who finished their regular season with a 5–7 record, was under a self-imposed two-year bowl ban that applied for the 2017 and 2018 seasons.

College Football Playoff

Since the 2014–15 postseason, six College Football Playoff bowl games have hosted two semifinal playoff games on a rotating basis. For this season, the Cotton Bowl and the Orange Bowl hosted the semifinal games, with the winners advancing to the 2019 College Football Playoff National Championship at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California.

Conference performance in bowl games

ConferenceTotal gamesWinsLossesPct.
SEC12 65
ACC1266
Big Ten954
Pac-12734
Big 12743
MW6 32
The American725
C-USA642
MAC615
Independents321
Sun Belt532

Awards and honors

Heisman Trophy

The Heisman Trophy is given to the year's most outstanding player.
Quarterback
Running back
Wide receiver
Tight end
Lineman:
Defensive front
Defensive back

Rankings

CFB Playoff final rankings

On December 2, 2018, the College Football Playoff selection committee announced its final team rankings for the year.
RankTeamW–LConference and standingBowl game
1
Alabama
13–0
SEC ChampionsOrange Bowl
2
Clemson
13–0
ACC ChampionsCotton Bowl
3
Notre Dame
12–0
IndependentCotton Bowl
4
Oklahoma
12–1
Big 12 ChampionsOrange Bowl
5
Georgia
11–2
SEC East Division championsSugar Bowl
6
Ohio State
12–1
Big Ten ChampionsRose Bowl
7
Michigan10–2Big Ten East Division co-championsPeach Bowl
8
UCF12–0AAC ChampionsFiesta Bowl
9
Washington10–3Pac-12 ChampionsRose Bowl
10
Florida9–3SEC East Division second place Peach Bowl
11
LSU9–3SEC West Division second place Fiesta Bowl
12
Penn State9–3Big Ten East Division third placeCitrus Bowl
13
Washington State10–2Pac-12 North Division co-championsAlamo Bowl
14
Kentucky9–3SEC East Division second place Citrus Bowl
15
Texas9–4Big 12 second placeSugar Bowl
16
West Virginia8–3Big 12 third place Camping World Bowl
17
Utah9–4Pac-12 South Division championsHoliday Bowl
18
Mississippi State8–4SEC fourth placeOutback Bowl
19
Texas A&M8–4SEC second place Gator Bowl
20
Syracuse9–3ACC Atlantic Division second placeCamping World Bowl
21
Fresno State11–2MW championsLas Vegas Bowl
22
Northwestern8–5Big Ten West Division championsHoliday Bowl
23
Missouri8–4SEC East Division fourth place Liberty Bowl
24
Iowa State8–4Big 12 third place Alamo Bowl
25
Boise State10–3MW Mountain Division championsFirst Responder Bowl

Final rankings

Coaching changes

Preseason and in-season

This is restricted to coaching changes taking place on or after May 1, 2018. For coaching changes that occurred earlier in 2018, see 2017 NCAA Division I FBS end-of-season coaching changes.
SchoolOutgoing CoachDateReasonReplacement
Bowling GreenMike JinksOctober 14FiredCarl Pelini
MarylandD. J. DurkinOctober 31FiredMatt Canada
LouisvilleBobby PetrinoNovember 11FiredLorenzo Ward
ColoradoMike MacIntyreNovember 18FiredKurt Roper
Texas StateEverett WithersNovember 18FiredChris Woods
East CarolinaScottie MontgomeryNovember 29FiredDavid Blackwell
Utah StateMatt WellsNovember 29Hired as head coach by Texas TechFrank Maile
Appalachian StateScott SatterfieldDecember 4Hired as head coach by LouisvilleMark Ivey
TempleGeoff CollinsDecember 7Hired as head coach by Georgia TechEd Foley

End of season

This list includes coaching changes announced during the season that did not take effect until the end of the season.
SchoolConf.Outgoing CoachDateReasonReplacement
KansasBig 12David BeatyNovember 4Fired Les Miles
CharlotteC-USABrad LambertNovember 18Fired Will Healy
UMassIndependentMark WhippleNovember 20Agreed to part waysWalt Bell
Central MichiganMACJohn BonamegoNovember 23FiredJim McElwain
North CarolinaACCLarry FedoraNovember 25FiredMack Brown
Texas TechBig 12Kliff KingsburyNovember 25FiredMatt Wells
Western KentuckyC-USAMike SanfordNovember 25FiredTyson Helton
Bowling GreenMACCarl Pelini November 28Permanent replacementScot Loeffler
Georgia TechACCPaul JohnsonNovember 28Retired Geoff Collins
Texas StateSun BeltChris Woods November 28Permanent replacementJake Spavital
Kansas StateBig 12Bill SnyderDecember 2RetiredChris Klieman
AkronMACTerry BowdenDecember 2FiredTom Arth
East CarolinaAmericanDavid Blackwell December 3Permanent replacementMike Houston
LibertyIndependentTurner GillDecember 3RetiredHugh Freeze
Ohio StateBig TenUrban MeyerDecember 4Retired Ryan Day
LouisvilleACCLorenzo Ward December 4Permanent replacementScott Satterfield
MarylandBig TenMatt Canada December 4Permanent replacementMike Locksley
ColoradoPac-12Kurt Roper December 5Permanent replacementMel Tucker
Utah StateMWFrank Maile December 9Permanent replacementGary Andersen
Appalachian StateSun BeltMark Ivey December 13Permanent replacementEliah Drinkwitz
TempleAmericanEd Foley December 13Permanent replacementRod Carey
HoustonAmericanMajor ApplewhiteDecember 30FiredDana Holgorsen
MiamiACCMark RichtDecember 30RetiredManny Diaz
West VirginiaBig 12Dana HolgorsenJanuary 1Hired as head coach by HoustonNeal Brown
TroySun BeltNeal BrownJanuary 4Hired as head coach by West VirginiaChip Lindsey
Northern IllinoisMACRod CareyJanuary 10Hired as head coach by TempleThomas Hammock
Coastal CarolinaSun BeltJoe MogliaJanuary 18ResignedJamey Chadwell

Television viewers and ratings

Most watched regular-season games

  1. Rankings are from the AP Poll and CFP Rankings.

    Conference championship games

  2. Rankings are from the CFP Rankings.

    College Football Playoff