2016 Conference USA football season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

DurationSeptember 1, 2016
through December 27, 2016
Teams13
2016 Conference USA football season
LeagueNCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision
SportFootball
DurationSeptember 1, 2016
through December 27, 2016
Teams13
TV partner(s)ESPN, CBS Sports Network, American Sports Network, beIN Sports, Campus Insiders, CUSA.tv
2017 NFL Draft
Top draft pickG Forrest Lamp, WKU
Picked byLos Angeles Chargers, 38th overall
Regular season
Season MVPQB Ryan Higgins, La. Tech
East championsWestern Kentucky & Old Dominion (co-champions)
West championsLouisiana Tech
Championship Game
ChampionsWestern Kentucky
  Runners-upLouisiana Tech
Finals MVPRB Anthony Wales, WKU
Football seasons
2016 Conference USA football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
East Division
Western Kentucky xy$ 71  113 
Old Dominion x 71  103 
Middle Tennessee 53  85 
FIU 44  48 
Charlotte 35  48 
Marshall 26  39 
Florida Atlantic 26  39 
West Division
Louisiana Tech xy 62  95 
UTSA 53  67 
Southern Miss 44  76 
North Texas 35  58 
Rice 26  39 
UTEP 26  48 
Championship: Western Kentucky 58, Louisiana Tech 44
  • $ Conference champion
  • x Division champion/co-champions
  • y Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2016 Conference USA football season was the 21st season of Conference USA football and part of the 2016 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The season began on September 1 with Charlotte facing Louisville.[1] This season was the second season for the C-USA under realignment that took place in 2014, which added the 14th member Charlotte from the Atlantic 10 Conference. The C-USA is a "Group of Five" conference under the College Football Playoff format along with the American Athletic Conference, the Mid-American Conference, the Mountain West Conference, and the Sun Belt Conference.

C-USA consists of 14 members: Charlotte, FIU, Florida Atlantic, Louisiana Tech, Marshall, Middle Tennessee, North Texas, Old Dominion, Rice, Southern Miss, UAB, UTEP, UTSA, and Western Kentucky; and is split up into the East and West divisions. West champion Louisiana Tech played at East champion Western Kentucky's Houchens Industries-L. T. Smith Stadium for the Conference USA Championship on December 3, which Western Kentucky won 58–44. UAB continued to undergo reinstatement of its football program during the 2016 season and will begin play for the 2017 season.[2]

Western Kentucky entered the season as defending Conference USA champions, defeating Southern Miss in the previous year's championship game. The Hilltoppers would then go on to defeat South Florida in the Miami Beach Bowl 45–35.[3]

2016 predictions

The 2016 preseason media predictions were released on July 21, 2016 with the vote conducted by media members that cover the conference schools. Middle Tennessee was picked to win the East division for the first time in school history. After coming second in the East last year, which resulted a trip to the Bahamas Bowl, the Blue Raiders returned 13 starters for the upcoming season. In the West division, the media predicted Southern Miss to overcome the other 5 teams in the division. Southern Miss has been in the C-USA championship more than any team in the conference, with 3 appearances including an appearance last season against Western Kentucky. The Golden Eagles brought back seven starters on offense and six starters on defense. Western Kentucky, defending C-USA champion, was predicted to finish second in the East division, instead of returning to the title game.

The championship game was held on December 3, 2016, where the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers bested the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs 58-44.

References:[4]

Head coaches

Three Conference USA teams hired new head coaches for the 2016 season. All three were in the West Division, and all three were replacing coaches who had spent at least 3 seasons at their respective schools.

  • North Texas hired Seth Littrell to replace Dan McCarney, who was fired after the Mean Green lost to Portland State on October 10, 2015.[5] Mike Canales was promoted as interim head coach after the fire until the hire of Littrell. Seth is coming from being an assistant head coach for offense and tight ends coach at North Carolina. Littrell was hired on December 5, 2015.[6]
  • Southern Miss hired Jay Hopson to replace Todd Monken, who resigned to become the new Offensive Coordinator for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers after the 2015 season.[7] Jay spent has spent four years prior to Southern Miss at Alcorn State and help bring the Braves to two SWAC Championship Titles. Hopson was hired on January 30, 2016.[8]
  • UTSA hired Frank Wilson to replace Larry Coker, who resigned on January 5, 2016. Wilson is come from being a running backs coach and a recruiting coordinator at LSU for 7 seasons. Frank was hired on January 14, 2016.[9]

Note: All stats shown are before the beginning of the season.

Team Head coach Years at school Overall record Record at school CUSA record
Charlotte Brad Lambert 4 12–22 12–22 0–8
FIU Ron Turner 4 55–82 10–26 7–17
Florida Atlantic Charlie Partridge 3 6–18 6–18 5–11
Louisiana Tech Skip Holtz 4 110–88 22–17 16–8
Marshall Doc Holliday 7 50–28 50–28 33–15
Middle Tennessee Rick Stockstill 11 64–61 64–61 17–7
North Texas Seth Littrell 1 0–0 0–0 0–0
Old Dominion Bobby Wilder 8 57–27 57–27 7–9
Rice David Bailiff 10 74–75 53–60 37–35
Southern Miss Jay Hopson 1 32–17 0–0 0–0
UTEP Sean Kugler 4 14–23 14–23 9–15
UTSA Frank Wilson 1 0–0 0–0 0–0
Western Kentucky Jeff Brohm 3 20–7 20–7 12–4

C-USA vs other conferences

C-USA vs power conferences

Index to colors and formatting
Conference USA member won
Conference USA member lost
Conference USA teams in bold

This is a list of the power conference teams (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12, SEC) C-USA plays in non-conference (Rankings from the AP Poll):

DateVisitorHomeSiteScore
September 1Charlotte#19 LouisvillePapa John's Cardinal StadiumLouisville, Kentucky14–70
September 1IndianaFIUFIU StadiumMiami34–13
September 3Louisiana TechArkansasDonald W. Reynolds Razorback StadiumFayetteville, Arkansas20–21
September 3Southern MissKentuckyCommonwealth StadiumLexington, Kentucky44–35
September 9MarylandFIUFIU Stadium • Miami, Florida41–14
September 10Florida Atlantic#25 MiamiHard Rock StadiumMiami Gardens, Florida10–38
September 10Middle TennesseeVanderbiltVanderbilt StadiumNashville, Tennessee24–47
September 10UTEP#11 TexasDarrell K Royal–Texas Memorial StadiumAustin, Texas7–41
September 10WKU#1 AlabamaBryant–Denny StadiumTuscaloosa, Alabama10–38
September 16BaylorRiceRice StadiumHouston38–10
September 16Arizona StateUTSAAlamodomeSan Antonio, Texas32–28
September 17Florida AtlanticKansas St.Bill Snyder Family Football StadiumManhattan, Kansas7–63
September 17Louisiana TechTexas TechJones AT&T StadiumLubbock, Texas45–59
September 17North TexasFloridaBen Hill Griffin StadiumGainesville, Florida0–32
September 17Old DominionNC StateCarter–Finley StadiumRaleigh, North Carolina22–49
September 24VanderbiltWKUHouchens Industries–L. T. Smith StadiumBowling Green, Kentucky31–30 OT
September 24LouisvilleMarshallJoan C. Edwards StadiumHuntington, West Virginia59–28
October 1MarshallPittsburghHeinz FieldPittsburgh27–43
October 15Southern MissLSUTiger StadiumBaton Rouge, Louisiana10–45
October 22Middle TennesseeMissouriFaurot FieldColumbia, Missouri51–45
November 19UTSATexas A&MKyle FieldCollege Station, Texas10–23
November 26RiceStanfordStanford StadiumStanford, California17–41

2016 records against non-conference opponents

Postseason

Home game attendance

References

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