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Big Eight Conference football

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The Big Eight Conference is a defunct college athletic conference that was formerly affiliated with the NCAA's Division I-A (now known as FBS).

Contents

The Big Eight Conference was a successful football conference, with its member schools being recognized as consensus national champion on eleven occasions, including the last two football seasons the conference existed (1994 and 1995). Seven players from the Big Eight won the Heisman Trophy, the most prestigious national award for college football players.

History

The conference was formed in 1907 as the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MVIAA) by five charter schools: the University of Kansas, University of Missouri, University of Nebraska, University of Iowa, and Washington University in St. Louis. After the MVIAA grew to ten schools, six state schools split away on their own in 1928, becoming known as the "Big Six": Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma. The University of Colorado was added in 1948, and the conference became known as the "Big Seven Conference". Oklahoma State joined in 1958, becoming the eighth and final member. The conference broke up when its members joined the Big 12 Conference in 1996.

Due to its common history with the Missouri Valley Conference, Big Eight championships from 1907 through 1927 are also claimed by the MVC.

Bowl games

The first Big Eight conference team to attend a bowl game was Missouri, at the 1924 Los Angeles Christmas Festival. Following the 1938 season Oklahoma became the second to attend a bowl game, at the fifth-annual Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida. In 1951 and 1952 the conference had a brief ban on its members attending bowl games. When the conference resumed accepting invitations in 1953, its champion regularly thereafter attended the Orange Bowl. This tradition was broken only five times: 1964 (when Nebraska faced #2 Arkansas in the Cotton Bowl); 1966 (when Nebraska faced #3 Alabama in the Sugar Bowl); 1973 and 1974 (when undefeated Oklahoma was on probation and barred from bowl games); and 1995 (when #1 Nebraska played in the Bowl Alliance championship vs. #2 Florida at the Fiesta Bowl).

At the 1979 Orange Bowl, #6 Nebraska and #4 Oklahoma were paired against each other in a rematch of their conference game earlier in the season.

Rankings

In the 1971 college football season, Big Eight teams finished ranked #1 (Nebraska), #2 (Oklahoma) and #3 (Colorado) in the nation in the AP Poll – the only time in college football history teams from one conference have held the top three spots in the final poll. In the final AP Poll issued before the Big Eight became the Big 12, half of the conference's teams were ranked in the nation's top 10 (#1 Nebraska, #5 Colorado, #7 Kansas State, #9 Kansas).

Rivalries

The Nebraska–Oklahoma football rivalry was one of the most significant in the nation, with national title implications involved during many seasons. The 1971 Nebraska vs. Oklahoma football game is commonly referred to as "The Game of the Century."

With common histories dating back even before the 1907 formation of the conference, many of the Big Eight's rivalries were among the most-played in college football. At the time the Big Eight Conference dissolved in 1996, the conference had the two longest uninterrupted series in Division I-A football: KansasOklahoma (played annually since 1903) and KansasNebraska (played annually since 1906). Many of the conference's series began in the 19th century, including:

  • Kansas–Missouri, first played in 1891 (second-most played series in Division I-A in 1996)
  • NebraskaKansas, first played in 1892
  • NebraskaMissouri, first played in 1892
  • MissouriIowa State, first played in 1896
  • NebraskaIowa State, first played in 1896
  • Kansas–Iowa State, first played in 1898
  • Conference champions

    Following are the MVIAA/Big Eight football conference champions from 1907 to 1995 (shared championship years are shown in italics):

    * Kansas would have won the 1960 title, but after found to be using an ineligible player they were forced to forfeit their victories over Missouri and Colorado, which meant that Missouri was awarded the 1960 Big Eight title.
    ** Oklahoma would have won the 1972 title, but after found to be using an ineligible player they were forced to forfeit their victories over Missouri, Kansas, and Oklahoma State, which meant that Nebraska was awarded the 1972 Big Eight title.

    National championships

    Big Eight football teams were recognized as national champion on eleven occasions, including four times as back-to-back champions:

  • 1950 – Oklahoma
  • 1955 – Oklahoma
  • 1956 – Oklahoma
  • 1970 – Nebraska
  • 1971 – Nebraska
  • 1974 – Oklahoma
  • 1975 – Oklahoma
  • 1985 – Oklahoma
  • 1990 – Colorado
  • 1994 – Nebraska
  • 1995 – Nebraska
  • Accolades

    The Big Seven Conference established a Coach of the Year award in 1948. The conference began awarding a Player of the Year award in 1967, and began giving separate offensive and defensive awards in 1971. The final awards were given after the 1995 season, after which all of the Big Eight schools entered the Big 12 Conference.

    Conference Coach of the Year

    Repeat winner

    Conference Players of the Year

    Repeat winner

    All-time all-conference team

    After the final Big Eight season was completed in 1995, a panel of twelve longtime observers selected an all-time conference team:

    Heisman Trophy winners

    Seven players from the Big Eight won the Heisman Trophy, the most prestigious national award for college football players:

  • 1952: Billy Vessels (HB), Oklahoma
  • 1969: Steve Owens (FB), Oklahoma
  • 1972: Johnny Rodgers (WR/RB), Nebraska
  • 1978: Billy Sims (RB), Oklahoma
  • 1983: Mike Rozier (RB), Nebraska
  • 1988: Barry Sanders (RB), Oklahoma State
  • 1994: Rashaan Salaam (RB), Colorado
  • AFCA Coach of the Year

  • 1949: Bud Wilkinson, Oklahoma
  • 1989: Bill McCartney, Colorado
  • 1994: Tom Osborne, Nebraska
  • FWAA (Eddie Robinson) Coach of the Year

  • 1971: Bob Devaney, Nebraska
  • 1989: Bill McCartney, Colorado
  • References

    Big Eight Conference football Wikipedia


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