A College Football All-America Team is selected annually by various organizations to recognize each season's most outstanding players at each position. Certain organizations are recognized by the NCAA as "official" selectors, whose teams are used to determine consensus and unanimous All-Americans. The LSU Tigers football team has had 37 players recognized as consensus All-Americans, with 11 of those being unanimous selections.[1] Gaynell Tinsley was LSU's first consensus (1935) and unanimous All-American (1936).
Five LSU players have been recognized as consensus All-Americans twice: Tinsley, Billy Cannon, Tommy Casanova, Charles Alexander, and Grant Delpit. Cannon is the only LSU player to be unanimously selected twice, doing so in 1958 and 1959. Casanova is LSU's only three-time All-American; he was named a first-team All-American by at least one selector in 1969, 1970, and 1971.[2]
Key
edit† | Consensus selection | ||||
‡ | Unanimous selection |
Selectors
editAFCA | American Football Coaches Association | AP | Associated Press | CBS | CBS Sports | CW | Collier's Weekly |
CNNSI | CNN/Sports Illustrated | CP | Central Press Association | GNS | Gannett News Service | FN | Football News |
FWAA | Football Writers Association of America | NBC | NBC Sports | NEA | Newspaper Enterprise Association | PFW | Pro Football Weekly |
Rivals | Rivals.com | Scout | Scout.com | SH | Scripps Howard | SN | The Sporting News |
SI | Sports Illustrated | Time | Time magazine | UPI | United Press International | WC | Walter Camp Football Foundation |
Selections
editYear | Name | Position | Selector(s) | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|
1935 | Jesse Fatherree | HB | NEA-3 | [3] |
Osborne Helveston | G | CP | [4] | |
Abe Mickal | FB | LIB-2 | [5] | |
Gaynell Tinsley | End | AP, UP, LIB, COL, NEA, INS, NANA-2, CP-3, NYS, PTH, CNS | [6][7][5][8][9][10][11][4][12][13][14] | |
1936 | Gaynell Tinsley | End | AAB; AP, COL, INS, LIB, NANA, NEA, SN, UP, CP, WC | |
1937 | Eddie Gatto | T | AP-3 | |
Pinky Rohm | FB | INS-3 | ||
1938 | Eddie Gatto | T | ID-2 | |
1939 | Ken Kavanaugh | End | AP-2, INS, NW, LIB, SN, UP, BL, CP-2, CW, LIFE | [1] |
1940 | John W. Goree | G | CP-4 | |
1943 | Steve Van Buren | HB | AP-3 | |
1946 | Walt Barnes | T | FWAA-2, NEA-3 | [15] |
Clyde Lindsey | End | CP-2 | ||
1951 | George Tarasovic | C | NEA | |
1953 | Sid Fournet | T | AP-2 | |
1954 | Sid Fournet | T | AFCA, AP-2, FWAA, INS, NEA, UP, CP-2, WC | [15] |
1955 | Joe Tuminello | End | AP-3, NEA-3 | |
1957 | Jim Taylor | FB | FWAA, AP-3 | [15] |
1958 | Billy Cannon | HB | AFCA, AP, FWAA, NEA, SN, UPI, CP, Time, WC | [15] |
Max Fugler | C | AP-3, FWAA, NEA-3, UPI-2 | [15] | |
1959 | Billy Cannon | HB | AP, UPI, NEA, CP, WC, AFCA, FWAA, SN, Time | [15] |
Max Fugler | C | UPI-3, CP-3 | ||
1961 | Roy Winston | G | AFCA, AP, FWAA, NEA, SN, UPI, CP, Time, WC | [15] |
1962 | Fred Miller | T | AFCA-3, AP-3, FWAA, NEA-2, SN-2 | [15][16] |
Jerry Stovall | HB | AFCA, AP, FWAA, NEA, SN, UPI, Time, WC | [15] | |
1964 | Richard Granier | C | AP-2 | |
Remi Prudhumme | DT | NEA, FN | ||
1965 | Doug Moreau | End | FN | |
George Rice | DT | CP-2, Time, SN | [16] | |
1967 | John Garlington | DE | AFCA, UPI-2 | |
Barry Wilson | G | NEA-2 | ||
1969 | George Bevan | LB | AFCA, AP-2, CP-2, FWAA, NEA-2 | [15] |
Tommy Casanova | DB | FN | ||
1970 | Mike Anderson | LB | AFCA, AP, CP, FWAA, NEA-2, UPI, FN | [15] |
Tommy Casanova | DB | AFCA, AP, CP-2, UPI-2 | ||
John Sage | T | AP-2 | ||
1971 | Tommy Casanova | DB | FWAA, UPI, FN, Time, WC | [15] |
Ron Estay | DT | AFCA, AP-2, NEA-2, UPI-2 | ||
1972 | Warren Capone | LB | FWAA | [15] |
Bert Jones | QB | AFCA, NEA, UPI, FN, Time, SN | [16] | |
1973 | Warren Capone | LB | AFCA, FWAA | [15] |
Tyler Lafauci | G | AFCA, AP, NEA | ||
1974 | Mike Williams | DB | AFCA, SN, Time | [16] |
1977 | Charles Alexander | RB | AFCA, AP-2, FWAA, UPI, NEA-2, WC | [15] |
1978 | John Adams | DE | AP-3 | |
Charles Alexander | RB | AFCA, AP-2, FWAA, UPI-2, NEA, SN, WC | [15][16] | |
Robert Dugas | T | AP-2, NEA-2 | ||
1979 | John Adams | DE | UPI-2 | |
Willie Teal | DB | NEA-2 | ||
1980 | Lyman White | DE | NEA-2 | |
1982 | James Britt | DB | NEA | |
Al Richardson | LB | AP-2, UPI-2 | ||
1983 | Eric Martin | WR | GNS-2, SN | [16] |
1984 | Dalton Hilliard | RB | NEA-2 | |
Lance Smith | G | AFCA, UPI, NEA | ||
1984 | Michael Brooks | LB | AP, GNS, HS | |
1986 | Eric Andolsek | G | FN-3 | |
Wendell Davis | WR | AP-2, FWAA, UPI-2, FN-2, SN | [16][15] | |
Henry Thomas | DT | AP-3, FN-3 | ||
1987 | Nacho Albergamo | C | AP, UPI, WC, AFCA, FWAA, SH, SN | [16][15] |
Eric Andolsek | G | AP-3 | ||
Wendell Davis | WR | AFCA, FWAA, SH, SN | [16][15] | |
1988 | Greg Jackson | DB | GNS | |
1989 | David Browndyke | K | GNS | |
1996 | Kevin Faulk | All-purpose | AP | |
David LaFleur | TE | AP-3, WC | ||
1997 | Alan Faneca | G | AP, FWAA, WC, FN | [15] |
Kevin Faulk | All-purpose | AP-3 | ||
Chad Kessler | P | AP, WC, SN, FN | [16] | |
1998 | Kevin Faulk | All-purpose | AP-3 | |
Anthony McFarland | DT | AP, FN | ||
Todd McClure | C | AFCA | ||
2001 | Trev Faulk | LB | AP-2 | |
Josh Reed | WR | WC, FWAA, AP, SN, PFW, SI | [16][15] | |
2002 | Bradie James | LB | AP-2, SN, AFCA | [16] |
2003 | Skyler Green | RS | SI, ESPN | |
Chad Lavalais | T | WC, FWAA, AP, SN, SI, ESPN, Rivals | [16][15] | |
Stephen Peterman | G | SN, SI, ESPN, Rivals | [16] | |
Corey Webster | CB | AFCA | ||
Ben Wilkerson | C | AP-2, SN-2 | [16] | |
2004 | Marcus Spears | DE | AP, AFCA, WC, CFN | |
Corey Webster | CB | AFCA, AP-2, SN | [16] | |
Ben Wilkerson | C | AFCA, AP-3, SN, WC-2 | [16] | |
2005 | Skyler Green | RS | Rivals | |
Kyle Williams | DT | PFW, Rivals | ||
Claude Wroten | DT | CFN | ||
2006 | Glenn Dorsey | DT | AP, AFCA, SI, PFW, CBS, Rivals | |
LaRon Landry | S | AP, AFCA, PFW, ESPN | ||
2007 | Glenn Dorsey | DT | AP, AFCA, FWAA, WC, SN, SI, PFW, CFN, Rivals, Scout | [16][15] |
Ali Highsmith | LB | CBS | ||
Craig Steltz | S | AP, FWAA, WC, SI, ESPN, CBS, CFN, Rivals, Scout | [15] | |
2008 | Herman Johnson | G | AP, WC-2 | |
2009 | Patrick Peterson | CB | PFW, ESPN | |
2010 | Josh Jasper | K | FWAA, SN | [15] |
Drake Nevis | DT | CBS | ||
Patrick Peterson | CB | AFCA, AP, FWAA, SN, WC, CBS, CFN, ESPN, PFW, Rivals, Scout, SI | [16][15] | |
2011 | Will Blackwell | G | AP-2, SN, ESPN, Scout, Yahoo | |
Morris Claiborne | CB | AFCA, AP, FWAA, SN, WC, CBS, ESPN, PFW, Scout, SI, Yahoo | [16][15] | |
Tyrann Mathieu | CB | AP, FWAA, SN, WC, CBS, ESPN, Scout, SI, Yahoo | [16][15] | |
Sam Montgomery | DE | AP-3, FWAA, PFW, Scout | [15] | |
Brad Wing | P | AP, CBS, Scout, SI | ||
2012 | J. C. Copeland | FB | PFW | |
Bennie Logan | DT | PFW | ||
Kevin Minter | LB | AP-2, SI | ||
Sam Montgomery | DE | AP-3 | ||
Eric Reid | S | AFCA, FWAA, ESPN, Scout | [15] | |
2013 | Odell Beckham Jr. | All-purpose | FWAA, CBS | [15] |
2014 | La'el Collins | T | AP-2 | |
2015 | Vadal Alexander | T | AP-3, SI-2, WC-2, SN-2 | [16] |
Leonard Fournette | RB | AP, WC, FWAA, CBS, ESPN, SI-2 | [15] | |
Jalen Mills | CB | CBS | ||
2016 | Jamal Adams | S | AP-2, CBS, USAT, Athlon, SI-2 | |
Kendell Beckwith | LB | AP-3, WC-2, SN-2, SI-2 | [16] | |
Ethan Pocic | C | FWAA, AP-3, WC-2, SN-2 | [16] | |
Tre'Davious White | CB | AFCA, WC, SN-2 | [16] | |
2017 | Will Clapp | C | Athlon-2, CFN-2 | |
Donte Jackson | CB | SN-2 | ||
Devin White | LB | FWAA-2, Athlon-2, USAT-2 | ||
Greedy Williams | CB | AP-3, Athlon-3 | ||
2018 | Grant Delpit | S | AP, WC, SN, FWAA, AFCA, SI | |
Cole Tracy | K | AP-2, WC-2, SN-2, AFCA-2, SI-2 | ||
Devin White | LB | AP, WC, SN, AFCA, SI, FWAA-2 | ||
Greedy Williams | CB | WC, FWAA, AFCA, AP-2, SN-2, AFCA-2, SI-2 | ||
2019 | Joe Burrow | QB | AFCA, AP, CBS, FWAA, SI, SN, WC | [17][18][19][20] |
Ja'Marr Chase | WR | AFCA, AP, CBS, FWAA, SI, SN, WC | [17][18][19][20] | |
Lloyd Cushenberry | C | FWAA-2 | [18] | |
Grant Delpit | S | AFCA, CBS, SN, WC | [19][20] | |
Damien Lewis | G | Athletic | ||
Derek Stingley Jr. | CB | AFCA, AP, CBS, SI, SN | [17][18][20] | |
2020 | Derek Stingley Jr. | CB | AFCA | |
Cade York | K | ESPN, USAT | ||
Zach Von Rosenberg | P | Athletic | ||
2023 | Jayden Daniels | QB | AP, AFCA, FWAA, SN, Athlon, ESPN, CBS, Athletic, USAT, SI | |
Malik Nabers | WR | AP, AFCA, FWAA, SN, WC, ESPN, CBS, Athlon, Athletic, USAT, SI |
References
edit- ^ a b "LSU Fighting Tigers All-America Selections". Sports Reference. Retrieved September 10, 2017.
- ^ McEntegart, Pete (August 14, 2000). "Tommy Casanova, Two-way Star – September 13, 1971". Sports Illustrated. 93 (6): 29. Archived from the original on December 31, 2016. Retrieved September 10, 2017.
- ^ Bernard Bierman (December 12, 1935). "Here's NEA'S 1935 All-America Team". Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune.
- ^ a b Braucher, Bill (December 13, 1935). "Lutz Again Chosen For All-America Honors In Poll of Grid Captains". Berkeley Daily Gazette. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
- ^ a b "Bobby Wilson Named Liberty All-Players' All-America Eleven". Galveston Daily News. December 31, 1935.
- ^ Alan Gould (December 7, 1935). "Lutz, Grayson Only Coast Stars On A.P. All-American: Four Southern Aces Given Laurels". Oakland Tribune.
- ^ Stuart Cameron (November 11, 1935). "Grayson On U.P. All-American Team: Moscrip And Lutz Placed On Reserves". Oakland Tribune.
- ^ "Inwood Smith Selected For Collier's 'American: Ohio State Guard One of Three Middlewestern Players Honored; Year Termed 'Greatest'". Circleville Herald. December 12, 1935.
- ^ Bernard Bierman (December 2, 1935). "Here's NEA'S 1935 All-America Team". Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune.
- ^ Davis Walsh (December 5, 1935). "Walsh's National Eleven Leaves Ohio Out in Cold: Both Minnesota Tackles Chosen; Backfield Includes Smith, Berwanger, Wilson and Grayson". Circleville Herald.
- ^ "Four Coast Stars on All-America Elevens: Kerr, McGugin, Phelan and Dorais Select 1935 All-Star Teams; Moscrip, Grayson Named". Los Angeles Times. December 1, 1935.
- ^ "Reynolds Gets All-Star Post". Oakland Tribune. December 8, 1935.
- ^ "Inwood Smith On Pathe All-America". Mansfield News Journal. December 9, 1935.
- ^ Singer, Jack (December 22, 1935). "Real All-American of 1935 Season Selected". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Gangi, Ted. "FWAA All-America" (PDF). Sportswriters.net. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 27, 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "TSN All American Teams". The Sporting News. Archived from the original on February 27, 2009. Retrieved May 6, 2017.
- ^ a b c Patterson, Chip (December 16, 2019). "2019 AP All-America team: Joe Burrow, Chase Young lead college football's top stars". CBS Sports. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
- ^ a b c d West, Glen (December 21, 2019). "Four LSU Football Players Named FWAA All-Americans". Sports Illustrated.
- ^ a b c Doyle, Paul (December 12, 2019). "LSU's Joe Burrow leads the Walter Camp All-America team". New Haven Register. MSN. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
- ^ a b c d Bender, Bill (December 17, 2019). "Sporting News 2019 college football All-Americans". Sporting News. Retrieved January 24, 2020.