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Florida State Seminoles football

The Florida State Seminoles football team represents Florida State University (variously Florida State or FSU) in the sport of American football. The Seminoles compete in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). The team is currently coached by Mike Norvell, and plays home games at Doak Campbell Stadium, the 15th largest stadium in college football, located on-campus in Tallahassee, Florida. The Seminoles previously competed as part of the ACC Atlantic Division.

Florida State Seminoles football
First season1902[a]
Head coachMike Norvell
4th season, 31–17 (.646)
StadiumDoak Campbell Stadium
(capacity: 79,560)
FieldBobby Bowden Field
LocationTallahassee, Florida
NCAA divisionDivision I FBS
ConferenceAtlantic Coast Conference (1992–present)
DivisionAtlantic Division (2005–2022)
Past conferencesSouthern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (1902–1904)
Independent (1947, 1951–1991)
Dixie Conference (1948–1950)
All-time record588–287–18 (.669)
Bowl record29–18–3 (.610)
Playoff appearances1 (2014)
Playoff record0–1
Claimed national titles3 (1993, 1999, 2013)
Unclaimed national titles6 (1980, 1987, 1989, 1992, 1994, 1996)
National finalist6 (1993, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2013)
Conference titles19 (1948, 1949, 1950, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2023)
Division titles6 (2005, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014)
RivalriesFlorida (rivalry)
Miami (rivalry)
Clemson (rivalry)
Virginia (rivalry)
Heisman winnersCharlie Ward – 1993
Chris Weinke – 2000
Jameis Winston – 2013
Consensus All-Americans45
Current uniform
ColorsGarnet and gold[1]
   
Fight songFSU Fight Song
MascotOsceola and Renegade[2]
Marching bandMarching Chiefs
OutfitterNike
WebsiteSeminoles.com

Florida State has won three national championships, nineteen conference titles (three Dixie, sixteen ACC), and six division titles and have made one playoff appearance; the Seminoles have achieved three undefeated seasons, in 1950, 1999, and 2013. Other accomplishments include finishing ranked in the top four of the AP Poll for 14 straight years from 1987 through 2000, completing 41 straight winning seasons from 1977 through 2017, winning 29 consecutive games from 2012 through 2014, tied for the ninth-longest winning streak in college football and tied for the longest winning streak in ACC history, and also winning 29 consecutive conference games from 1992 through 1995, the longest winning streak in ACC history. The 1999 team was recognized by ESPN as one of the top teams in college football history.[3]

The team has produced three Heisman Trophy winners: quarterbacks Charlie Ward in 1993, Chris Weinke in 2000 and Jameis Winston in 2013. The program has produced 222 All-Americans (45 consensus and 15 unanimous) and 294 professional players, including two Super Bowl MVPs. Florida State has had nine members inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, two members inducted into the College Football Coaches Hall of Fame and five members inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The Biletnikoff Award, presented annually to the top receiver in college football, is named for Florida State hall of fame player Fred Biletnikoff and the Bobby Bowden Award, presented by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, is named after Florida State hall of fame coach Bobby Bowden.

The Florida State Seminoles have the tenth-highest winning percentage among all college football programs in Division I FBS history with over 500 victories and twenty-six ten win seasons. Florida State has appeared in over 50 postseason bowl games, ranking ninth nationally for bowl winning percentage and fourth for bowl wins with five Orange Bowl victories.

History edit

Florida State's football program was first established in 1902, resuming play and adopting the 'Seminole' nickname in 1947, after forty-six years. The Seminoles joined the Atlantic Coast Conference in 1992, following a long history of competing independently.

Early history (1902–1975) edit

 
Florida State has had a football team since as early as the 1890s.

Florida State University traces the start of its athletic program to 1902, when Florida State College played the first of its three seasons.[4] From 1902 to 1904, the institution then known as Florida State College fielded a varsity football team called "The Eleven" that played other teams.[5] The Florida State players wore gold uniforms with a large purple F on the front. Their pants were lightly padded, but their upper bodies were largely unprotected. Leather helmets with ear guards covered their heads, and shoehorn-shaped metal nose guards were strapped across their faces.[6]

 
Florida State College football in 1902

W. W. Hughes, professor of Latin and the head of men's sports at the school, served as the first coach.[7] They played their first game against the Bainbridge Giants, a city team from Bainbridge, Georgia, defeating them 5–0. The team then played back-to-back matches against Florida Agricultural College (which later merged into what is now the University of Florida) one week apart, winning the first 6–0 and losing the second 0–6. The following season student enthusiasm grew even more, and the Eleven arranged a full schedule of six games. They competed against teams such as the University of Florida in Lake City (as Florida Agricultural College was then called), Georgia Tech, and the East Florida Seminary (another school that merged into the University of Florida), and finished the season by competing against Stetson College in Jacksonville for The Florida Times-Union's Championship Cup.[8] The following year Jack Forsythe, later the first head coach of the Florida Gators, replaced Hughes as coach, and the Eleven won the unofficial "state championship" by defeating Stetson in Tallahassee.[9] Jock Hanvey assisted Forsythe.

 
Florida State College football in 1904

This would be The Eleven's last season, however, as the Florida State Legislature passed the Buckman Act, which reorganized Florida's six colleges into three institutions segregated by gender and race: a school for white males, a school for white females, and a school for African Americans. Florida State College became Florida Female College until 1909, when it became Florida State College for Women.[10] Four other institutions (including the University of Florida in Lake City and the East Florida Seminary) were merged into the new white men's-only University of the State of Florida in Gainesville.[11] Males who formerly attended Florida State College were required to transfer to the Gainesville campus,[10] although several former FSC players transferred to Grant University (now the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga), with five joining Grant's football team. In 1909 several veterans of the FSC Eleven founded a city team named the Tallahassee Athletics, but this folded after one season. Except for this, until 1947, Tallahassee's only organized or collegiate football team were the team from the Florida Agricultural and Mechanical College for Negroes (now Florida A&M University).[11]

 
The inaugural Florida State University football team

The end of World War II brought enormous pressure on the university system in Florida, which saw an influx of veterans applying for college under the GI Bill. The Florida Legislature responded by renaming the Florida State College for Women to Florida State University and allowing men to attend the university for the first time since 1905; football then returned to the university, beginning with the 1947 season. From 1948 through 1959, the Seminole football program achieved much success under coaches Don Veller and Tom Nugent. Ed Williamson, who introduced football to the school, served as the first coach of the Florida State Seminoles. In his first and only season with Florida State, the Seminoles posted an 0–5 record. Williamson has the worst record out of all the head coaches at Florida State and is the only coach to have a winless mark. As the second coach at Florida State, Don Veller coached at Florida State for five years and compiled a record of 31–12–1. Veller was the first coach to find success coaching the Seminoles. In 1950, Veller led the Seminoles to an 8–0 record, the first unbeaten season in school history. Once Veller left the school, Tom Nugent became the third coach at Florida State. He stayed at Florida State for six years and compiled a record of 34–28–1. In one of his most notable accomplishments, Nugent gave the Seminoles their first win over an SEC opponent with a 10–0 victory against Tennessee in 1958. The fourth coach at Florida State was Perry Moss who coached the Seminoles for one year after compiling a 4–6 record. He became the second Florida State coach to leave the school with a losing record and the second to coach at the school for only one season after leaving to coach in the CFL.

 
Under Peterson, the Seminoles defeated the Gators for the first time.

With the arrival of head coach Bill Peterson in 1960, the Seminoles began their move to national prominence. Under Peterson's direction, the Seminoles beat the Florida Gators for the first time in 1964 and earned their first major bowl bid. Peterson also led the Seminoles to their first ever top ten ranking. During his tenure as head coach, Peterson also gave a young assistant by the name of Bobby Bowden his first major college coaching opportunity.[12] Although not widely known, the Seminoles achieved their first ever number one ranking during this period. In October 1964, the Dunkel College Football Index, a popular power index of that era, placed the Seminoles at the top of their poll after a stunning 48–6 win over highly ranked Kentucky (AP No. 5, Dunkel No. 3). Peterson would be named UPI national coach of the week after this program changing victory.[13][14] In an era of very few bowl games, Peterson's innovative offensive system helped earn the Seminoles four bowl bids from 1964 through 1968. During this time, only Alabama and Mississippi appeared in more bowl games than did Peterson's Seminoles. Receiving a football scholarship, famed actor Robert Urich was a back up center on the Seminoles from 1964 to 1967. In 1968, Peterson's eighth year at the helm, the Seminoles claimed their third straight bowl bid as Florida State became the first major college in the state of Florida to earn such a distinction. The Seminoles would not repeat this feat again until the ninth season of the Bobby Bowden era.[15] In the summer of 1967, Peterson also engineered another first for the Seminole program when he decided to begin the recruitment of African American football players.[16] Apparently, he did so without approval from either the school president or its athletic director. On December 16, 1967, the Seminoles signed Ernest Cook, a fullback from Daytona Beach. Several months later, the Seminoles would sign running back Calvin Patterson from Dade County. Ultimately, Cook decided to switch his allegiance to Minnesota where he would become an All-Big Ten running back. In the fall of 1968, Patterson would become the first African American student to play for the Seminoles as a starter for the Florida State freshmen football team. In the fall of 1970, J. T. Thomas would become the first African American to play in a varsity game for the Seminoles.[17][18]

 
Darrell Mudra was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

Following Peterson's successful run, the next two coaches had disappointing tenures. Larry Jones was appointed as the sixth head coach at Florida State. Jones coached for three years from 1971 to 1973 and compiled a record of 15–19, becoming the third Florida State coach to have a losing record. Darrell Mudra was then hired to be the seventh coach of the Seminoles. Mudra lasted just two years from 1974 to 1975 and compiled a record of 4–18. He became the fourth head coach to have a losing record at Florida State.

Bobby Bowden era (1976–2009) edit

 
Bowden is credited with Florida State's rise to prominence.

Under head coach Bobby Bowden, who came to Florida State from West Virginia,[19][20] the Seminoles became one of the nation's most competitive programs, greatly expanding the tradition of football at Florida State. The Seminoles played in five national championship games between 1993 and 2000, and claimed the championship twice, in 1993 and 1999. The FSU football team was the most successful team in college football during the 1990s, boasting an 89% winning percentage. FSU also set an NCAA record for most consecutive Top 5 finishes in the AP football poll – receiving placement 14 years in a row, from 1987 to 2000. The Seminoles under Bowden were the first college football team in history to be ranked first place wire-to-wire (i.e., from preseason to postseason) since the AP began releasing preseason rankings in 1936.

In the Bowden era, prior to a 1989 game against long-standing rival Miami, University of Miami mascot Sebastian the Ibis was tackled by a group of police officers at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee as the mascot attempted to put out Chief Osceola's flaming spear. Sebastian was wearing a fireman's helmet and yellow raincoat and holding a fire extinguisher. When a police officer attempted to grab the fire extinguisher, the officer was sprayed in the chest. Sebastian was handcuffed by four officers but ultimately released. University of Miami quarterback Gino Torretta told ESPN, "Even if we weren't bad boys, it added to the mystique that, 'Man, look, even their mascot's getting arrested.'"[21] In the late 1980s and throughout the 1990s, the Seminoles had 14 consecutive seasons with 10 or more wins and a top four finish, with a record of 152–19–1 between these years (11 of their 19 losses were decided by seven points or less), and one of the best home records of the era. FSU's accomplishments in these 14 seasons included eleven bowl wins, nine ACC championships, two Heisman Trophy winners, and two national championships.

On December 1, 2009, Bowden announced that he would retire from coaching after the Seminoles' game on New Year's Day 2010 against West Virginia, Bowden's former team, in the Gator Bowl. His legacy has led to the creation of two awards in his honor, the Bobby Bowden Award, an award presented to college football players, and the Bobby Bowden National Collegiate Coach of the Year Award, an award presented to college football coaches. In the spring of 2007, several FSU athletes including football players were accused of cheating in an online music history class. The NCAA ruled that Florida State was guilty of major violations, announced that it would reduce scholarship limits in 10 sports and force Florida State to vacate all of the victories in 2006 and 2007 in which the implicated athletes participated and placed the university on probation for four years.[22] FSU vacated 12 football victories from the 2006 and 2007 seasons and Bowden finished his career with 377 career wins.[23]

Post-Bowden years (2010–2020) edit

 
Coach Fisher led the Seminoles to the 2013 national title.

On January 5, 2010, Jimbo Fisher officially became the ninth head football coach in Florida State history. Fisher had been a member of the Florida State staff for three years, serving as offensive coordinator. He was named head coach-in waiting during the 2008 season. In his first season as head coach, Florida State went 10–4 with a 6–2 record in ACC conference play. The Seminoles went to their first ACC Championship Game since 2005, losing to Virginia Tech 44–33, and had their first ten win season since 2003. Fisher's first Florida State team notably beat both of its in-state rivals, the Miami Hurricanes and the Florida Gators, for the first time since 1999. Florida State would go on to the Chick-fil-A Bowl, where they would beat Steve Spurrier's South Carolina team. In his second season, Florida State went 9–4 with a 5–3 record in ACC conference play. For the second year in a row, the Seminoles defeated both of their in-state rivals. Fisher's second Florida State team also defeated Notre Dame in the Champs Sports Bowl. In his third season, he led the Seminoles to their first conference title in seven years and defeated Northern Illinois to win the Orange Bowl. In the 2013 season, Jimbo Fisher guided his team to a perfect 14–0 record and a national championship with a comeback win against Auburn. In 2014, he guided Florida State to another undefeated regular season, only to be defeated by Oregon 59–20 in the Rose Bowl, the most points the Seminoles had ever surrendered in a bowl game. Florida State had victories over both in-state rivals, Florida and Miami, in six of Jimbo Fisher's first seven seasons as head coach and won ten or more games in six of his eight seasons. While the Seminoles would win at least 10 games in the next two seasons and even finished eighth in the final 2016 poll, they lost five games in ACC play–one fewer than they had lost in Fisher's first five seasons. One of those losses was a 63–20 rout at the hands of Louisville, the most points Florida State had ever surrendered at the time. In 2017, the Seminoles were ranked third in preseason polls, but a 24–7 drubbing by Alabama and a close loss to NC State knocked them out of the polls altogether for the first time since the middle of the 2011 season, and ultimately finished with their first losing on-field record in ACC play since joining the league.

Fisher resigned as FSU head coach on December 1, 2017, to accept a record ten-year, $75 million contract to become head coach at Texas A&M. Defensive line coach and former defensive lineman Odell Haggins was named interim head coach, becoming Florida State's first African-American head coach, and coached in his first game the next day against Louisiana-Monroe. The Seminoles won, extending their bowl streak to an NCAA record 36 seasons. He went on to coach the Seminoles in the bowl game, leading them to a win and their 41st consecutive winning season.

On December 5, 2017, Willie Taggart left Oregon to become the new head coach at Florida State.[24] In his first season, the Seminoles finished with a losing record for the first time since 1976 and missed a bowl game for the first time in 36 years.[25] On November 3, 2019, Taggart was fired following a loss to Miami and a 4–5 record throughout the first nine games of the season.[26] Haggins was once again named interim head coach to finish out the season.[27]

Mike Norvell era (2020–present) edit

 
Current head coach, Mike Norvell

On December 8, 2019, Memphis head coach Mike Norvell was named the new head coach at Florida State.[28] On September 11, 2021, the Seminoles lost to Jacksonville State; it was the first time Florida State had lost to a non-FBS opponent since 1959.[29] In 2022, Mike Norvell led the Seminoles to a 9–3 regular season record and a berth in the 2022 Cheez-It Bowl to play against Oklahoma. Florida State moved up in the AP Poll during the season for the first time since 2016, peaking at #13 prior to the bowl game and winning the most regular season games for the first time since that season as well. The Seminoles would go on to defeat the Sooners to finish with ten wins for the first time in six years. In his fourth season, Norvell guided the Seminoles to an undefeated regular season and a conference championship.

The 2023 team was excluded from the College Football Playoff despite finishing the regular season as undefeated ACC champions. This made the Seminoles the first Power 5 champions of the playoff era to go undefeated but not be selected for the playoff bracket. Coach Mike Norvell said he was "disgusted" by the committee's decision.[30] University Vice President and Athletic Director Michael Alford called the decision "unforgiveable".[31]

Conference affiliations edit

In the first year of the program, Florida State competed as an independent program without conference affiliation. They were members of the Dixie Conference for three years before returning to independence. They would remain this way until 1992 when, after being courted by several conferences including the Southeastern Conference, they opted to join the Atlantic Coast Conference which is the same conference that they compete in today.

Championships edit

National championships edit

Florida State has been selected national champions in nine seasons by NCAA-designated major selectors.[34][35]: 114–115  Florida State claims the 1993, 1999 and 2013 national championships[36] after winning a postseason bowl national championship game and being named the national champion by all four major consensus selectors (AP, Coaches, FWAA, and NFF).[37]

Claimed national championships edit

Year[36] Coach Major Selectors Record Bowl Final AP Final Coaches
1993 Bobby Bowden AP, Coaches, FWAA, NFF 12–1 Won Orange (Bowl Coalition National Championship Game) No. 1 No. 1
1999 BCS, AP, Coaches, FWAA, NFF 12–0 Won Sugar (BCS National Championship Game)
2013 Jimbo Fisher 14–0 Won BCS National Championship Game

Unclaimed national championships edit

Year Coach Major Selector Record Bowl Opponent Result Final AP Final Coaches
1980 Bobby Bowden FACT 10–2 Orange Oklahoma L 17–18 No. 5 No. 5
1987 Bobby Bowden Berryman 11–1 Fiesta Nebraska W 31–28 No. 2 No. 2
1989 Bobby Bowden Billingsley Report[38] 10–2 Fiesta Nebraska W 41–17 No. 3 No. 2
1992 Bobby Bowden Sagarin 11–1 Orange Nebraska W 27–14 No. 2 No. 2
1994 Bobby Bowden Dunkel 10–1–1 Sugar Florida W 23–17 No. 4 No. 5
1996 Bobby Bowden Alderson System 11–1 Sugar Florida L 20–52 No. 3 No. 3

1993 season edit

 
Florida State's 1993 and 1999 national championship trophies

The Seminoles entered 1993 with a number one ranking and were led by quarterback and eventual Heisman Trophy winner Charlie Ward.

Florida State cruised to a 9–0 record with their closest game being an 18-point win over Miami. The only loss of the season came at second-ranked and undefeated Notre Dame by a score of 31–24, in one of the greatest games in college football history. Despite the loss, Florida State still went on to play for the national title, beating Nebraska in the Orange Bowl with a field goal in the final seconds to claim the school's first national title.

1999 season edit

After falling short in the national title game against Tennessee in 1998, the Seminoles began the 1999 season ranked first in the country.

Florida State would go on to complete just the second undefeated season in school history and became the first team in history to be ranked number one for an entire season. The Noles would clinch their second national title with a victory over Virginia Tech in the Sugar Bowl.

2013 season edit

 
Florida State's 2013 national championship trophy

After the 2012 season, FSU lost six coaches including defensive coordinator Mark Stoops. Despite the numerous coaching changes and off the field incidents, Florida State would go on to become the highest scoring team in FBS history by scoring 723 points in a single season en route to their third national championship. The record has since been broken by the 2019 LSU Tigers, with a new lead of 726 points.

 
During the 2013 season, quarterback Jameis Winston became the third Florida State player to win the Heisman.

The 2013 Seminoles would hand then third ranked Clemson their worst home loss, set a new attendance record at Doak Campbell Stadium of 84,409 against the seventh ranked Miami Hurricanes, and set a school scoring record of 80 points in a game against the University of Idaho behind freshman quarterback and eventual Heisman Trophy winner Jameis Winston.

Conference championships edit

 
ACC Title trophies
Season Conference Coach Overall Conference
1948 Dixie Don Veller 7–1 4–0
1949 9–1 4–0
1950 8–0 2–0
1992 ACC Bobby Bowden 11–1 8–0
1993 12–1 8–0
1994 10–1–1 8–0
1995 10–2 7–1
1996 11–1 8–0
1997 11–1 8–0
1998 11–2 7–1
1999 12–0 8–0
2000 11–2 8–0
2002 9–5 7–1
2003 10–3 7–1
2005 8–5 5–3
2012 Jimbo Fisher 12–2 7–1
2013 14–0 8–0
2014 13–1 8–0
2023 Mike Norvell 13–1 8–0

† Co-champions

Division championships edit

 
Florida State has appeared in the ACC Championship Game on six occasions, winning five times.
Year Division Coach Opponent ACC CG Result
2005 ACC Atlantic Bobby Bowden Virginia Tech W 27–22
2008 Lost tiebreaker to Boston College
2010 Jimbo Fisher Virginia Tech L 33–44
2012 Georgia Tech W 21–15
2013 Duke W 45–7
2014 Georgia Tech W 37–35

† Co-champions

Bowl games edit

This is a partial list of the ten most recent bowl games Florida State has competed in.

 
FSU in the 1967 Gator Bowl vs. Penn State

Florida State has played in 50 bowl games in its history and has a 29–18–3 record, with one win vacated, in those games. The Seminoles are the ninth most successful bowl team in history and played in a record 36 consecutive bowl games from 1982 to 2017, although the NCAA doesn't recognize this because their 2006 Emerald Bowl win and appearance were both vacated as a result of the 2007 academic scandal.

Season Date Bowl Opponent Result
2011 December 29, 2011 Champs Sports Bowl Notre Dame W 18–14
2012 January 1, 2013 Orange Bowl Northern Illinois W 31–10
2013 January 6, 2014 BCS National Championship Game Auburn W 34–31
2014 January 1, 2015 Rose Bowl (College Football Playoff) Oregon L 20–59
2015 December 31, 2015 Peach Bowl Houston L 24–38
2016 December 30, 2016 Orange Bowl Michigan W 33–32
2017 December 27, 2017 Independence Bowl Southern Mississippi W 42–13
2019 December 31, 2019 Sun Bowl Arizona State L 14–20
2022 December 29, 2022 Cheez-It Bowl Oklahoma W 35–32
2023 December 30, 2023 Orange Bowl Georgia L 3–63

Head coaches edit

 
Bowden is the winningest coach in school history.

Florida State has had 14 head coaches since organized football began in 1902.[39][40][41] Bobby Bowden, who spent 34 years at Florida State, is the winningest coach in school history and has been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. During his tenure, Bobby Bowden won two national championships with the Seminoles, while Jimbo Fisher won one. Fisher and Bowden also have the second and third best ACC winning percentages in conference history.

Tenure Coach Years Record Pct. Bowl Games
1902–1903 W. W. Hughes 2 5–3–1 .611 0–0–1
1904 Jack Forsythe 1 2–3 .400
1947 Ed Williamson 1 0–5 .000
1948–1952 Don Veller 5 31–12–1 .716 1–0
1953–1958 Tom Nugent 6 34–28–1 .548 0–2
1959 Perry Moss 1 4–6 .400
1960–1970 Bill Peterson 11 62–42–11 .587 1–2–1
1971–1973 Larry Jones 3 15–19 .441 0–1
1974–1975 Darrell Mudra 2 4–18 .182
1976–2009 Bobby Bowden 34 304–97–4 .756 20–9–1
2010–2017 Jimbo Fisher 8 83–23 .783 5–2
2017, 2019 Odell Haggins 2 4–2 .667 1–1
2018–2019 Willie Taggart 2 9–12 .429
2020–present Mike Norvell 4 31–17 .646 1–1

† Interim head coach

‡ Bobby Bowden's record omits 12 vacated victories including 1 bowl victory, that would otherwise make his record 316–97–4.

Doak S. Campbell Stadium edit

 
Doak Campbell Stadium has a current capacity of 79,560.

The Florida State Seminoles originally played their home games at Centennial Field until 1950. The Seminoles had an 8–4 record at Centennial, including two undefeated home records. The team play their home games at Doak Cambell Stadium, which has a capacity of 79,560. Florida State is 320–105–4 in 429 games played at Doak Campbell.

The stadium, named after former school president Doak Sheridan Campbell,[42] hosted its first game against the Randolph-Macon College Yellowjackets on October 7, 1950, with the Seminoles winning the game 40–7. At that time the facility had a seating capacity of 15,000. Doak Campbell Stadium, with its original capacity of 15,000 in 1950, was built at a cost of $250,000. In 1954, the stadium grew to a capacity of 19,000. Six thousand more seats were added in 1961. During the Bill Peterson era (1960–70), the stadium was expanded to 40,500 seats, and it remained at that capacity for the next 14 years. Since that time, the stadium has expanded to almost 83,000, largely due to the success of the football team under head coach Bobby Bowden coupled with the ever-growing student body. It now is the second largest football stadium in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).

 
Doak Campbell Stadium hosted its first game in 1950.

Aesthetically, a brick facade surrounding the stadium matches the architectural design of most of the buildings on the university's campus. In addition to the obvious recreational uses, The University Center surrounds the stadium and houses many of the university's offices as well as The College of Motion Picture Arts, The Dedman School of Hospitality, and The College of Social Work. The field was officially named Bobby Bowden field on November 20, 2004, as Florida State hosted intrastate rival Florida. Florida State has been recognized as having one of the best gameday atmospheres in the country, and Doak Campbell Stadium has been named one of the top stadiums in college sports.[43]

Doak Campbell Stadium has been a great home field advantage for the Noles. Florida State is one of only three schools that can boast a decade home field unbeaten streak. The Seminoles never lost a home game from 1992 to 2001, a total of 54 games, and have completed 24 undefeated seasons at their home stadiums, including 22 at Doak Campbell.

The record crowd for the stadium is 84,431; set during a game against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish on October 18, 2014.

Rivalries edit

The Seminoles' archrivals are Florida, whom they meet annually in the last game of the regular season, and Miami; both games are considered among the greatest rivalries in college football.[44] A rivalry with Clemson has developed and grown due to both teams competing yearly for the Atlantic division.

Florida edit

 
Florida State and Florida have played each year since 1958.
 
The Seminoles and Gators have met as ranked opponents on twenty-four occasions.

The Florida Gators are the main rival of the Florida State Seminoles. Florida State and Florida have played each other 67 times, with the Gators holding a 37–28–2 advantage.[45] After the arrival of Bobby Bowden in 1976, the Seminoles have compiled a record of 26–22–1. The game alternates between Florida's home stadium, Steve Spurrier-Florida Field at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville, Florida and Florida State's home stadium, Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida.

Miami edit

 
Florida State and Miami first met in 1951 and have played each year since 1966.

The rivalry dates to 1951, when the Miami Hurricanes defeated the Seminoles 35–13 in their inaugural meeting. The schools have played uninterrupted since 1966, with Miami leading the series 35–33, as of the 2023 season.[46]

 
The Seminoles and Hurricanes have met as ranked opponents on twenty-six occasions.

During the 1980s and 90s, the series emerged as one of the premier rivalries in college football. Between 1983 and 2013, the Hurricanes and Seminoles combined to win 8 national championships (5 for Miami, 3 for Florida State) and played in 15 national championship games (1983, 85, 86, 87, 89, 91, 92, 93, 96, 98, 99, 2000, 01, 02, 13). The rivalry has been popular not only because of its profound national championship implications and the competitiveness of the games but also because of the immense NFL-caliber talent typically present on the field when the two teams meet. The famous 1987 matchup featured over 50 future NFL players on both rosters combined.

The rivalry is a television ratings bonanza, accounting for the two highest rated college football telecasts in ESPN history. The 2006 game between Miami and FSU was the second most-viewed college football game, regular season or bowl, in the history of ESPN, averaging 6.33 million households in viewership (a 6.9 rating). It trailed only the 1994 game between Miami and FSU, which notched a 7.7 rating.[47]

Florida Cup
 
Bill Peterson coached the Seminoles to their first win over the Gators in the rivalry.

The Florida Cup is the trophy sponsored by the state of Florida given to either the Florida State University Seminoles, the University of Florida Gators, or the University of Miami Hurricanes for winning a round-robin against the other two teams in the same season (including bowl games if necessary).[48]

It was created in 2002 by the Florida Sports Foundation, the official sports promotion and development organization of the state of Florida, and the Florida Championships Awards, Inc. The idea of finally having a trophy for the round robin winner between the three schools was enthusiastically endorsed by then governor Jeb Bush. Along with the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy (given to the winner of the round robin between Army, Navy and Air Force), the Florida Cup is one of the very few three way rivalries that presents a trophy to the winner.

The Florida Cup was awarded to the Florida State Seminoles in 2013, as Florida and Miami played in the regular season. The Makala Trophy is awarded to the winner of the Florida–Florida State game at the winning team's spring scrimmage.[49]

Clemson edit

 
The Noles and Tigers competed for the Atlantic division title.

Florida State has a rivalry with conference foe, the Clemson Tigers. Florida State leads the all-time series 21–15.[50] The Seminoles dominated the contests through most of the 1990s but 1999 marked a milestone as the hire of Bobby Bowden's son Tommy led to the first meeting, in 1999, which was the first time in Division I-A history that a father and a son met as opposing head coaches in a football game. During the time Tommy coached at Clemson, the game was known as the "Bowden Bowl"; Bobby won the series in the 9 years it was played before Tommy's resignation, taking 5 of those games with all four losses within the last five seasons.

One sticking point in the rivalry remains that a proud Clemson Tiger program that was strong in the 1980s had won 6 of the past 11 ACC titles from 1981 to 1991. 1991 would be the last ACC Championship the Tigers would win until 2011 as Florida State entered the ACC in 1992 and proceeded to win the next 9 ACC Championships in a row, and 12 of the next 14 in the series.

Virginia edit

The Seminoles also have a rivalry with the Virginia Cavaliers.[51][52][53] Florida State and Virginia compete for the Jefferson–Eppes Trophy. The two schools have played for the trophy since its creation in 1995. It has been awarded a total of 19 times, with FSU receiving it 14 times (FSU vacated its 2006 win). The Seminoles hold the all-time advantage 14–4.[54] Because of conference expansion, the teams no longer play annually; the teams last met in 2019.

The Jefferson–Eppes Trophy is awarded to the winner of the Florida State–Virginia game. This game was played annually from 1992 through 2005, but since the conference split into divisions, the teams meet twice every six years. Florida State has been awarded the trophy 15 times.

Notable games edit

  • 1950First Game at Doak – Florida State played the first game at Doak Campbell Stadium, a 40–7 win over Randolph-Macon College.[55]
  • 1964FSU's First Win Over UF – Florida State had never beaten Florida, gaining only a 3–3 tie in six tries, all at Gainesville. Since 1947, when Florida State College for Women became Florida State University, its athletes have endured "girl school" taunts. During the week Florida players wore stickers on their helmets in practice reading "Never, FSU, Never." The thrust may have added considerable fuel to FSU's already blazing fire. FSU's aggressive defense helped force five Florida fumbles, and the Seminoles claimed four of them. The Tribe intercepted two passes. FSU lost two fumbles and had one pass intercepted. Steve Tensi connected on 11 of 22 throws for 190 yards. Fred Biletnikoff, a decoy much of the way and well covered by Florida, caught only two, for 78 yards and a touchdown. The 16–7 win ended six years of FSU frustration against the Gators and left Florida with a 5–3 record. FSU ended its regular season with an 8–1–1 chart, a showing exceeded only by an unbeaten 1950 season.[56]
  • 1988Puntrooskie – Florida State had a 4th down and 4 to go at its own 21-yard line with about a minute and a half to go in the 4th quarter at Clemson. They lined up to punt but the ball was snapped to an up back who handed it to Leroy Butler who ran down the left side of the field all the way to the Clemson 4-yard line. Florida State wound up kicking a field goal to win the game, 24–21.[57][58]
  • 1991Big Win at the Big House – In their first trip ever to Michigan Stadium, Florida State would beat the No. 3 Michigan Wolverines 51–31 behind quarterback Casey Weldon's 268 yards and 2 touchdowns and Amp Lee's 122 yards rushing. One of the most memorable plays in Florida State history occurred on Michigan's 1st play in the 1st quarter when cornerback Terrell Buckley returned an Elvis Grbac interception for a 40-yard touchdown.[59]
  • 1993Ward to Dunn – The Seminoles came into The Swamp ranked No. 1 and looking to play for the national championship. Florida had clinched the SEC East championship and were themselves ranked in the top five. Early on it looked to be a Florida State rout, as the Seminoles took a 27–7 lead into the fourth quarter. However, Florida scored two quick touchdowns to make the score 27–21. With six minutes remaining, the Seminoles faced third down at their own 21-yard-line. In what many people consider the greatest play in Florida State history, Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Charlie Ward hit freshman Warrick Dunn up the sideline for a 79-yard game-clinching touchdown run and a 33–21 FSU win.[60]
  • 1994FSU Wins First National Championship – This 60th edition of the Orange Bowl featured the Nebraska Cornhuskers and the Florida State Seminoles. Florida State came into the game 11–1, and ranked first in the nation. Nebraska came into the game undefeated at 11–0, and with a number 2 ranking. Late in 4th quarter, FSU's Heisman trophy winning quarterback Charlie Ward drove the Seminoles all the way to the Nebraska 3-yard line. The Huskers held and forced Scott Bentley to kick his fourth field goal of the night, which was good, and FSU led 18–16 with just 21 seconds remaining. Florida State players and coaches went wild on the sidelines, and were penalized for excessive celebration, costing them 15 yards on the ensuing kickoff. As a result, the Huskers were able to get a decent return and began their final possession at their own 43-yard line. As time ran down, Tommy Frazier hit tight end Trumane Bell for a 29-yard gain to the FSU 28-yard line. The clock ticked down to 0:00, setting off more chaos on the FSU sideline, complete with the compulsory Gatorade bath given to FSU coach Bobby Bowden. However, referee John Soffey ruled that Bell was down with 1 second left on the clock, and ordered the field cleared, allowing Nebraska placekicker Byron Bennett an opportunity to kick the game-winning field goal. But the 45-yard kick sailed wide left, preserving the 18–16 win for the Seminoles.[61][62]
  • 1994The Choke at Doak – In the greatest fourth-quarter comeback of the series, the Gators led the Seminoles 31–3 after three quarters. However, the Seminoles scored 28 points in the final 15 minutes to tie the game at 31–31.[63]
  • 1995The Fifth Quarter in the French Quarter – After the Choke at Doak game ended in a 31–31 tie both teams where selected to the 1995 Sugar Bowl. The game would become known as "The Fifth Quarter in the French Quarter." With 1:32 left in the game All-America linebacker Derrick Brooks intercepted a pass from Danny Wuerffel to seal FSU's victory 23–17.[64][65]
  • 1996No. 1 vs No. 2 – The No. 1–ranked and undefeated Gators came into Tallahassee favored against the second-ranked Seminoles. The 'Noles got off to a quick start when Peter Boulware blocked the Gator's first punt of the game, resulting in a touchdown. Florida's eventual Heisman Trophy winner quarterback Danny Wuerffel threw three interceptions in the first half, and FSU had a 17–0 lead after one quarter of play. Wuerffel got on track after that, throwing for three touchdowns. The last one (to WR Reidel Anthony) cut the Florida State lead to three points with just over a minute left to play. The ensuing onside kick went out of bounds, however, and the Seminoles held on for the 24–21 upset win.[66]
  • 1997Top Five Matchup in Chapel Hill – In the first ACC game between two teams ranked in the top five, Florida State dominated North Carolina 20–3, the Tar Heels' only defeat on the season.[67]
  • 2000FSU Wins Second National Championship – Florida State scored first and took advantage of a blocked punt for a touchdown, giving the Seminoles a 14–0 lead in the first quarter. Virginia Tech, led by QB Michael Vick, answered with a touchdown drive of its own before the end of the quarter, but Florida State scored two quick touchdowns to begin the second quarter. Virginia Tech scored a touchdown before halftime, but halfway through the game, Florida State held a 28–14 lead. In the third quarter, Virginia Tech's offense gave the Hokies a lead with a field goal and two touchdowns. Tech failed to convert two two-point conversions, but held a 29–28 lead at the end of the third quarter. Florida State answered in the fourth quarter, however, taking a 36–29 lead with a touchdown and successful two-point conversion early in the quarter. From this point, the Seminoles did not relinquish the lead, extending it to 46–29 with a field goal and another touchdown. With the win, Florida State clinched the 1999 BCS national championship, the team's second national championship in its history.[68]
  • 2005The Miami Muff – In 2005, the Florida State Seminoles finally gained some redemption for the past Wide Right heartbreaks. Miami kicker John Peattie missed two field goals in the 1st quarter, while FSU kicker Gary Cismesia was 1/2 for the game. Trailing 10–7 in the 4th, the Hurricanes drove down the field to set up a game-tying field goal with 2:16 left. When the ball was snapped, it was mishandled by holder Brian Monroe and the ball never reached the kicker's foot. Florida State took over on downs and ran out the clock to end Miami's six-game winning streak in the rivalry.[69]
  • 2005FSU Wins Inaugural ACC Championship Game – The Seminoles defeated Virginia Tech in the first ACC Championship Game.
  • 2010The Golden Toe – In the first-ever walk-off, game-winning kick in school history, Dustin Hopkins booted a 55-yard field goal as time expired to lift the Seminoles to a 16–13 victory over Clemson.[70]
  • 2013Top Five Matchup in Death Valley – In the second ACC game between two teams ranked in the top five, Florida State handed Clemson their worst home loss in school history.[71]
  • 2014FSU Wins Third National Championship – After Florida State scored a field goal on their first drive, Auburn responded with a touchdown in the first quarter and two in the second to storm out to a 21–3 lead. After a successful punt fake, the Seminoles managed a late touchdown before halftime to go into the locker room down, 21–10. Both teams dominated on defense in the third quarter with the Seminoles hitting a field goal to cut the lead to 8. In the fourth quarter, Florida State scored a touchdown early to make it a one-point game. After Auburn made a field goal, Levonte Whitfield returned the following kickoff 100 yards to give the Seminoles the lead, 27–24. Auburn answered with a touchdown to go up 31–27 with 1:19 remaining. On their final drive of 7 plays, Florida State scored a touchdown with 13 seconds remaining, benefiting from a pass interference by Auburn's Chris Davis Jr. on a crucial 3rd and 8. The Seminoles emerged victorious 34–31 to end the SEC's streak of 7 consecutive BCS titles.[72]
  • 2016 The Block at The Rock – Late in the fourth quarter against rival Miami, Florida State had a touchdown lead. Miami scored on an 11-yard reception by Stacey Coley with 1:38 left in the game to make the score 20–19 with an extra point attempt coming. Defensive end DeMarcus Walker blocked the extra point to give Florida State a one-point win.[73]
  • 20214th and 14 – The Seminoles came out hot, scoring 14 points and forcing three turnovers in the first quarter before taking a 20–7 lead into halftime. Miami would storm back with 21 unanswered points, taking a 28–20 lead with 11 minutes left. After a lengthy drive that resulted in a field goal by the Seminoles and an excellent defensive stop led by defensive end Jermaine Johnson II, the Seminoles had the ball with 2:09 left in the game down 28–23. After a 59-yard bomb caught by wide receiver Ja’Khi Douglas, the Florida State offense sputtered out to a 4th and 14 at the Miami 25 yard line. Florida State quarterback Jordan Travis would convert on a pass to wide receiver Andrew Parchment to the Miami 1 yard line before Travis would run it in himself on both a touchdown and the 2-point conversion to make it 31–28 with 26 seconds left. Miami's push to tie the game was stopped short when refs ruled the game over after an attempted spike by Miami QB Tyler Van Dyke with less than three seconds left, the minimum time needed according to NCAA rules.[74]

Individual accomplishments edit

Individual national award winners edit

Players

Heisman Trophy
Best Player
Maxwell Award
Best Player
Walter Camp Award
Best Player
Chic Harley Award
Best Player
Archie Griffin Award
Most Valuable Player
AP Player of the Year
1993Charlie Ward, QB
2000Chris Weinke, QB
2013Jameis Winston, QB
1993 – Charlie Ward, QB 1993 – Charlie Ward,QB
2013 – Jameis Winston, QB
1993 – Charlie Ward, QB 2013 – Jameis Winston, QB 2013 – Jameis Winston, QB
Davey O'Brien Award
Best Quarterback
Manning Award
Best Quarterback
Kellen Moore Award
Best Quarterback
Johhny Unitas Award
Best Senior Quarterback
Sammy Baugh Trophy
Best Passer
Jim Brown Award
Best Runningback
Paul Warfield Award
Best Wide Receiver
John Mackey Award
Best Tight End
Dave Remington Trophy
Best Center
1993 – Charlie Ward
2000 – Chris Weinke
2013 – Jameis Winston
2013 – Jameis Winston 1991Casey Weldon
1993 – Charlie Ward
1991 – Casey Weldon
1993 – Charlie Ward
2000 – Chris Weinke
2000 – Chris Weinke 2015Dalvin Cook 1999Peter Warrick 2014Nick O'Leary 2013Bryan Stork
Jim Thorpe Award
Best Defensive Back
Jack Tatum Trophy
Best Defensive Back
Lombardi Award
Best Lineman/Best Linebacker
Bill Willis Trophy
Best Defensive Lineman
Butkus Award
Best Linebacker
Jack Lambert Trophy
Best Linebacker
1988Deion Sanders
1991Terrell Buckley
1991 – Terrell Buckley
2016Tarvarus McFadden
1992Marvin Jones
2000Jamal Reynolds
1997Andre Wadsworth
2000 – Jamal Reynolds
1987Paul McGowan
1992 – Marvin Jones
1992 – Marvin Jones
1994Derrick Brooks
Lou Groza Award
Best Kicker
Vlade Award
Most Accurate Kicker
1998, 1999Sebastian Janikowski
2008Graham Gano
2013Roberto Aguayo
2013, 2014 – Roberto Aguayo
Bobby Bowden Award
Best Student Athlete
2010Christian Ponder
Wuerffel Trophy
Community Service, Athletic, and Academic Achievement
2022 – Dillan Gibbons

Coaches

Bobby Dodd Award
Coach of the Year
Walter Camp Award
Coach of the Year
Paul "Bear" Bryant Award
Coach of the Year
Home Depot Award
Coach of the Year
1980Bobby Bowden
2023Mike Norvell
1991 – Bobby Bowden 2023 – Mike Norvell 1994 – Bobby Bowden
Broyles Award
Best Assistant Coach
1996Mickey Andrews, DC
Paul "Bear" Bryant 'Lifetime Achievement' Award
Lifetime Achievement
Bobby Bowden Award
Lifetime Achievement
2010 – Bobby Bowden 2011 – Bobby Bowden

Individual conference awards edit

Players edit

Coaches edit

Heisman Trophy edit

Three Florida State players have been awarded the Heisman Trophy. Charlie Ward received the award in 1993, Chris Weinke in 2000 and Jameis Winston in 2013. Casey Weldon finished as runner-up in 1991.[75]

 
 
 
FSU's Heisman Trophy winners
Year Name Position Place Ref.
1967 Kim Hammond QB 5th
1979 Ron Simmons DT 9th
1984 Greg Allen RB 7th
1988 Deion Sanders DB 8th
1991 Casey Weldon QB 2nd
1992 Marvin Jones
Charlie Ward
LB
QB
4th
6th
1993 Charlie Ward QB 1st
1995 Warrick Dunn RB 9th
1996 Warrick Dunn RB 5th
1999 Peter Warrick WR 6th
2000 Chris Weinke QB 1st
2013 Jameis Winston QB 1st
2014 Jameis Winston QB 6th
2015 Dalvin Cook RB 7th
2016 Dalvin Cook RB T-10th
2023 Jordan Travis QB 5th [76]

Consensus All-Americans edit

 
The Biletnikoff Award is named in honor of FSU All-American wide receiver Fred Biletnikoff.

222 Florida State players have been honored as All-American players with 38 being awarded as consensus All-Americans.[citation needed][when?] Seven Florida State players have been two-time consensus All-Americans.

Year(s) Name Number Position
1964 Fred Biletnikoff 25 WR
1967–1968 Ron Sellers 34 WR
1979–1980 Ron Simmons 51 DL
1983 Greg Allen 26 RB
1985 Jamie Dukes 64 OL
1987–1988 Deion Sanders 2 CB
1989 LeRoy Butler 6 CB
1991–1992 Marvin Jones 55 LB
1991 Terrell Buckley 27 CB
1993 Charlie Ward 17 QB
1993–1994 Derrick Brooks 10 LB
1993 Corey Sawyer 8 CB
1994 Clifton Abraham 2 CB
1995 Clay Shiver 53 C
1996 Peter Boulware 58 DE
1996 Reinard Wilson 55 DE
1997 Sam Cowart 1 LB
1997 Andre Wadsworth 85 DE
1998–1999 Sebastian Janikowski 38 K
1998–1999 Peter Warrick 9 WR
1999 Corey Simon 53 DL
1999 Jason Whitaker 68 OL
2000 Tay Cody 27 CB
2000 Snoop Minnis 13 WR
2000 Jamal Reynolds 58 DE
2003–2004 Alex Barron 70 OL
2010 Rodney Hudson 62 OL
2011 Shawn Powell 45 P
2012 Björn Werner 95 DL
2013 Lamarcus Joyner 20 S
2013 Bryan Stork 52 C
2013 Jameis Winston 5 QB
2014 Roberto Aguayo 19 K
2014 Tre' Jackson 54 OL
2014 Nick O'Leary 35 TE
2015 Jalen Ramsey 8 CB
2016 Dalvin Cook 4 RB
2016 DeMarcus Walker 44 DE

Unanimous All-Americans edit

 
Running back Dalvin Cook is one of fifteen Seminoles to have been named unanimous All-American players.

15 Florida State players have been selected as unanimous All-Americans. Deion Sanders is the only Seminole to have been honored as a two-time unanimous selection.[77]

Year(s) Name Number Position
1987–1988 Deion Sanders 2 CB
1991 Terrell Buckley 27 CB
1992 Marvin Jones 55 LB
1993 Charlie Ward 17 QB
1993 Derrick Brooks 10 LB
1999 Sebastian Janikowski 38 K
1999 Peter Warrick 9 WR
2000 Jamal Reynolds 58 DE
2004 Alex Barron 70 OL
2010 Rodney Hudson 62 OL
2012 Björn Werner 95 DL
2013 Lamarcus Joyner 20 S
2014 Tre' Jackson 54 OL
2016 Dalvin Cook 4 RB

Honored jersey numbers edit

 
Deion Sanders is one of twelve Seminoles whose numbers have been honored by the school.
No. Name Position Career Ref.
2 Deion Sanders CB 1985–88 [78]
5 Jameis Winston QB 2012-2014 [79]
9 Peter Warrick WR 1995–1999 [80]
10 Derrick Brooks LB 1991–1994 [78]
16 Chris Weinke QB 1997–2000 [78]
17 Charlie Ward QB 1989–1993 [78]
25 Fred Biletnikoff WR 1962–1964 [78]
27 Terrell Buckley CB 1989–1991 [78]
28 Warrick Dunn RB 1993–1996 [78]
34 Ron Sellers WR 1966–1968 [78]
50 Ron Simmons DT 1977–1980 [78]
55 Marvin Jones LB 1990–1992 [78]

Hall of Fame inductees edit

College Football Hall of Fame edit

 
Ron Sellers was the first Seminole player to be inducted into the hall of fame.

Nine FSU players and two coaches have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. In addition, one former player, Mack Brown, has been inducted into the Hall as a coach.

Name Position Career Inducted Ref.
Ron Sellers WR 1966–1968 1988 [81]
Fred Biletnikoff WR 1962–1964 1991 [81]
Darrell Mudra Coach 1974–1975 2000 [81]
Bobby Bowden Coach 1976–2009 2006 [81]
Charlie Ward QB 1989, 1991–1993 2006 [81]
Ron Simmons DT 1977–1980 2009 [81]
Deion Sanders CB 1985–1988 2011 [81]
Derrick Brooks LB 1992–1994 2016 [82]
Terrell Buckley CB 1989–1991 2019 [83]
Marvin Jones LB 1990–1992 2022 [84]
Warrick Dunn RB 1993–1996 2024 [85]

Pro Football Hall of Fame edit

Five former Seminoles have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.[86]

Name Position Career Inducted
Fred Biletnikoff WR 1965–1978 1988
Deion Sanders CB 1989–2000, 2004–2005 2011
Derrick Brooks LB 1995–2008 2014
Walter Jones OL 1997–2008 2014
LeRoy Butler S 1990–2001 2022

Canadian Football Hall of Fame edit

One former Seminole has been inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame.[87]

Name Position Career Inducted
Danny McManus QB 1984–1987 2011

Records and results edit

Playoffs edit

The Seminoles have made one appearance in the College Football Playoff.

Year Seed Opponent Round Result
2014 3 No. 2 Oregon Semifinal – Rose Bowl L 20–59

All-time record vs. current ACC teams edit

[failed verification]

Opponent Won Lost Tied Pct. Streak First Last
Boston College 16 5 0 .762 Won 5 1957 2022[88]
California3 0 0 0
Clemson 21 15 0 .583 Won 1 1970 2023[89]
Duke 22 0 0 1.000 Won 22 1992 2023[90]
Georgia Tech 15 11 1 .574 Won 1 1903 2022[91]
Louisville 18 6 0 .750 Won 2 1952 2023[92]
Miami 33 35 0 .485 Won 3 1951 2023[93]
North Carolina 17 3 1 .833 Won 2 1983 2021[94]
NC State 27 16 0 .628 Lost 3 1952 2022[95]
Notre Dame* 6 5 0 .545 Lost 3 1981 2021[96]
Pittsburgh 5 6 0 .455 Won 1 1971 2023[97]
SMU3 0 0 0
Stanford3 0 0 0
Syracuse 14 2 0 .875 Won 4 1966 2023[98]
Virginia 15 4 0 .789 Lost 1 1992 2019[99]
Virginia Tech 24 13 1 .645 Won 1 1955 2023[100]
Wake Forest 31 9 1 .768 Won 1 1956 2023[101]
Totals 259 131 4 .662

*Notre Dame is an associate member of the ACC with a scheduling agreement in football
*1denotes one win vacated during the 2006 and 2007 seasons
*2denotes two wins vacated during the 2006 and 2007 seasons
*3beginning in the 2024–2025 season

All-time record vs. non-conference opponents edit

[102]

School Record First Last
Abilene Christian 1–2 1953 1957
Alabama 11–3–1 1965 2017
Alabama-Birmingham 21–0 2001 2007
Alabama State 1–0 2019 2019
Arizona State 3–2 1971 2019
Auburn 5–13–1 1954 2014
Baylor 1–2 1965 1974
Bethune-Cookman 1–0 2013 2013
Boise State 0–1 2019 2019
Brigham Young 4–0 1991 2010
Central Florida 1–0 1995 1995
Charleston Southern 2–0 2011 2016
Cincinnati 6–0 1977 1990
Citadel 6–0–1 1955 2014
Colorado 31–0 2003 2008
Colorado State 1–1 1972 1974
Cumberland 1–1 1947 1948
Delaware State 1–0 2017 2017
Delta State 1–0 1951 1951
Duquesne 1–0 2022 2022
East Carolina 7–0 1980 1990
Erskine 1–1 1948 1949
Florida 28–37–2 1958 2023
Furman 8–2 1952 1987
George Washington 1–0 1961 1961
Georgia 4–7–1 1954 2023
Georgia Southern 2–0 1988 1990
Houston 2–13–2 1960 2015
Idaho 1–0 2013 2013
Indiana 1–0 1986 1986
Iowa State 1–1 1975 2002
Jacksonville NAS 1–0 1951 1951
Jacksonville State 2–2 1947 2021
Kansas 5–2 1971 1993
Kansas State 3–0 1970 1977
School Record First Last
Kentucky 1–4–1 1960 2007
LSU 9–2 1968 2023
Louisiana-Lafayette 1–0 2022 2022
Louisiana-Monroe 3–0 2011 2019
Louisiana Tech 2–2 1952 1999
Maryland 211–2 1966 2013
Massachusetts 1–0 2021 2021
Memphis 10–7–1 1959 1990
Michigan 2–1 1986 2016
Michigan State 2–0 1987 1988
Middle Tennessee 1–0 1991 1991
Millsaps 2–0 1948 1949
Ole Miss 1–1 1961 2016
Mississippi College 3–0 1948 1950
Mississippi State 7–2 1966 1979
Murray State 1–0 2012 2012
Navy 1–0 1978 1978
Nebraska 6–2 1980 1994
Nevada 1–0 2013 2013
New Mexico State 1–0 1964 1964
Newberry 1–0 1950 1950
North Alabama 1–0 2023 2023
North Texas 2–0 1976 1977
Northern Illinois 2–0 2013 2018
Ohio 1–0 1956 1956
Ohio State 3–0 1981 1998
Oklahoma 2–6 1965 2022
Oklahoma State 4–1 1958 2014
Oregon 0–1 2015 2015
Penn State 1–1–1 1967 2006
Randolph-Macon 1–0 1950 1950
Rice 01–0 2006 2006
Richmond 3–0 1959 1961
Samford 3–0 1950 2018
San Diego State 0–2 1973 1977
Savannah State 1–0 2012 2012
School Record First Last
Sewanee 2–0 1949 1950
South Carolina 16–3 1966 2010
South Florida 3–1 2009 2016
Southern California 2–0 1997 1998
Southern Illinois 1–0 1982 1982
Southern Mississippi 15–8–1 1952 2023
Stetson 6–1–1 1947 1954
Sul Ross State 1–0 1951 1951
Tampa 9–2 1948 1959
Temple 1–0 1984 1984
Tennessee 1–1 1958 1999
Tennessee-Chattanooga 3–0 1984 2015
Tennessee Tech 1–1 1947 1958
Texas A&M 4–0 1967 1998
Texas Christian 1–2 1963 1965
Texas State 1–0 2015 2015
Texas-El Paso 0–1 1955 1955
Texas Tech 4–1 1966 1987
Toledo 1–0 1986 1986
Troy 5–1 1947 2006
Tulane 103–0 1983 1992
Tulsa 5–0 1969 1985
UCLA 01–0 2006 2006
Utah State 1–0 1975 1975
Villanova 3–1 1954 1957
Virginia Military Institute 2–1 1952 1954
West Alabama 1–1 1948 1949
West Virginia 3–0 1982 2010
Western Michigan 11–0 1991 2006
Whiting Field NAS 1–0 1949 1949
Wichita State 2–0 1969 1986
William & Mary 1–1 1959 1950
Wisconsin 1–0 2008 2008
Wofford 3–0 1950 1952
Wyoming 0–1 1966 1966

*1Denotes win vacated during the 2006 and 2007 seasons
*3Denotes win via forfeit

All-time record vs. rivals edit

Opponent Won Lost Tied Pct. Streak First Last
Florida 28 37 2 .433 Won 2 1958 2023
Miami 33 35 0 .485 Won 3 1951 2023
Clemson 21 15 0 .583 Won 1 1970 2023
Virginia 15 4 0 .789 Lost 1 1992 2019
Totals 97 91 2 .516

Polls edit

Florida State has ended their football season ranked 40 times in either the AP or Coaches Poll.[103][failed verification]
Top-10 finishes are colored ██

Traditions edit

 
The spear design has been used on FSU's helmets since 1976.

There are numerous Florida State traditions associated with athletics, particularly football. These include the mascots, Osceola and Renegade, the planting of the spear at midfield before football games, the FSU Fight Song, the FSU Hymns, the War Chant, the Tomahawk Chop, and the Legacy Walk. The team's uniforms pay respect to the Seminole culture using tribal influences with Native American symbols representing an arrow, a man on a horse, and fire.[104] Fans of the Florida State Seminoles are known as The Tribe, a nod to the nickname that the team carries.

Osceola and Renegade edit

 
Osceola and Renegade were introduced in the 1978 season.

Osceola and Renegade are the official symbols of the Florida State Seminoles. During home football games, Osceola, portraying the Seminole leader Osceola, charges down the field at Doak Campbell Stadium riding an appaloosa horse named Renegade, and hurls a burning spear at midfield to begin every game. The Seminole Tribe of Florida officially sanctions the use of the Seminole as Florida State University's nickname and of Osceola as FSU's symbol.[105]

Marching Chiefs edit

 
The Marching Chiefs were formed in 1949.

The Marching Chiefs is the official marching band of the Florida State Seminoles. The band plays at every home game as well as at some away games (Clemson, Miami, and Florida) as well as any Championship or Bowl game.

War Chant edit

 
The Marching Chiefs hold the distinction of being the world's largest collegiate marching band, with upwards of 400 members.

The Seminole War Chant was first used in a 1984 game against Auburn.[106] The chant was started in FSU's Marching Band – The Marching Chiefs, originally by members of the percussion section. The melody is based on the 1960s cheer, massacre.[107] The chant has also become associated with the tomahawk chop.

The War Chant would be adopted by the Atlanta Braves when FSU football alumnus Deion Sanders joined the team, and has been used ever since. Craig Day began the Chop at now-defunct Fulton County stadium in response to UF Gator fans doing the Gator Chomp every time Deion came up to the plate. It is also used by the NFL team the Kansas City Chiefs, Mexican soccer club Santos Laguna and the Turkish soccer club Galatasaray.

Sod Cemetery edit

 
Florida State Football's Sod Cemetery is the final resting place for over 100 Sod Games.

Florida State's Sod Cemetery is a rich part of the program's history. When FSU wins a difficult away game, a piece of turf is pulled from the field and buried in the cemetery. Florida State sod games represent the most difficult battles on the football field. The Sod Cemetery stands as a tribute to those triumphs. There are 111 pieces of sod in the cemetery.

In 1962, as the Seminoles completed their Thursday practice in preparation to face Georgia at Sanford Stadium, Dean Coyle Moore – a long-time professor and member of FSU's athletic board – issued a challenge: "Bring back some sod from between the hedges at Georgia." On Saturday, October 20, the Seminoles scored an 18–0 victory over the favored Bulldogs. Team captain Gene McDowell pulled a small piece of grass from the field, which was presented to Moore at the next football practice. Moore and FSU coach Bill Peterson had the sod buried on the practice field as a symbol of victory. A monument was placed to commemorate the triumph and the tradition of the sod game was born.

Before leaving for all road games in which Florida State is the underdog, all road games at the University of Florida and all ACC championship and bowl games, Seminole captains gather their teammates to explain the significance of the tradition. Victorious captains return with a piece of the opponent's turf to be buried in the Sod Cemetery inside the gates of the practice field.[108] In recent years, as the Florida State program has been successful, games of significance regardless of whether or not the Seminoles are the underdog, can be designated a "sod game."

Famous former players edit

 
Ron Simmons was a defensive tackle for the Seminoles before going on to have a career in the WWE.

Seminoles in the NFL edit

 
Former Florida State running back Warrick Dunn is one of three Seminoles to have received the NFL's Walter Payton Man of the Year Award.

Florida State has sent 294 players to the National Football League since 1951,[114] including 46 first-round draft picks. Florida State has had a player drafted in each draft since 1984.[115] Jameis Winston holds the record as the highest Seminole taken in the NFL Draft as he was selected with the first overall pick by Tampa Bay in the 2015 draft. Eleven players, a school record, were taken in the 2013 NFL Draft, a record tied in 2015.[116]

Seventy-four former players have gone on to play in the Super Bowl[117] with two, Fred Biletnikoff and Dexter Jackson, being named the Super Bowl MVP. Three former Seminoles (Derrick Brooks, Warrick Dunn and Anquan Boldin) have won the Walter Payton Award.

Future opponents edit

Conference edit

Permanent Conference Opponents
Clemson
Miami

[118]

Non-conference edit

[119] By decree of the Florida Board of Regents, Florida State and Florida must play each other every year.[120]

See also edit

Notes edit

^[a] The school played three seasons as Florida State College from 1902 to 1904 and resumed playing as Florida State University in 1947.[121]

References edit

  1. ^ "Florida State University Athletics Brand Guide" (PDF). Retrieved June 30, 2022.
  2. ^ Communications, University. "Relationship with the Seminole Tribe of Florida." Frequently Asked Questions | Relationship with the Seminole Tribe of Florida | Messages | University Communications. N.p., n.d. Web. November 24, 2016.
  3. ^ "Best college football teams of all-time". ESPN. Retrieved August 4, 2018.
  4. ^ Clark, James (September 23, 2014). A Concise History of Florida. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-62585-153-6.
  5. ^ Kabat, p. 23–24.
  6. ^ Kabat, Ric (July 1991). "Before the Seminoles: Football at Florida State College, 1902–1904". The Florida Historical Quarterly. 70 (1): 20–37. JSTOR 30148092.
  7. ^ Kabat, pp. 20–24.
  8. ^ Kabat, p. 34.
  9. ^ Kabat, p. 36.
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  • , Florida State University Athletics Department, Tallahassee, Florida
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External links edit

  • Official website  

florida, state, seminoles, football, team, represents, florida, state, university, variously, florida, state, sport, american, football, seminoles, compete, ncaa, division, football, bowl, subdivision, national, collegiate, athletic, association, ncaa, atlanti. The Florida State Seminoles football team represents Florida State University variously Florida State or FSU in the sport of American football The Seminoles compete in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision FBS of the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA and the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC The team is currently coached by Mike Norvell and plays home games at Doak Campbell Stadium the 15th largest stadium in college football located on campus in Tallahassee Florida The Seminoles previously competed as part of the ACC Atlantic Division Florida State Seminoles football2024 Florida State Seminoles football teamFirst season1902 a Head coachMike Norvell 4th season 31 17 646 StadiumDoak Campbell Stadium capacity 79 560 FieldBobby Bowden FieldLocationTallahassee FloridaNCAA divisionDivision I FBSConferenceAtlantic Coast Conference 1992 present DivisionAtlantic Division 2005 2022 Past conferencesSouthern Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1902 1904 Independent 1947 1951 1991 Dixie Conference 1948 1950 All time record588 287 18 669 Bowl record29 18 3 610 Playoff appearances1 2014 Playoff record0 1Claimed national titles3 1993 1999 2013 Unclaimed national titles6 1980 1987 1989 1992 1994 1996 National finalist6 1993 1996 1998 1999 2000 2013 Conference titles19 1948 1949 1950 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2002 2003 2005 2012 2013 2014 2023 Division titles6 2005 2008 2010 2012 2013 2014 RivalriesFlorida rivalry Miami rivalry Clemson rivalry Virginia rivalry Heisman winnersCharlie Ward 1993Chris Weinke 2000Jameis Winston 2013Consensus All Americans45Current uniformColorsGarnet and gold 1 Fight songFSU Fight SongMascotOsceola and Renegade 2 Marching bandMarching ChiefsOutfitterNikeWebsiteSeminoles comFlorida State has won three national championships nineteen conference titles three Dixie sixteen ACC and six division titles and have made one playoff appearance the Seminoles have achieved three undefeated seasons in 1950 1999 and 2013 Other accomplishments include finishing ranked in the top four of the AP Poll for 14 straight years from 1987 through 2000 completing 41 straight winning seasons from 1977 through 2017 winning 29 consecutive games from 2012 through 2014 tied for the ninth longest winning streak in college football and tied for the longest winning streak in ACC history and also winning 29 consecutive conference games from 1992 through 1995 the longest winning streak in ACC history The 1999 team was recognized by ESPN as one of the top teams in college football history 3 The team has produced three Heisman Trophy winners quarterbacks Charlie Ward in 1993 Chris Weinke in 2000 and Jameis Winston in 2013 The program has produced 222 All Americans 45 consensus and 15 unanimous and 294 professional players including two Super Bowl MVPs Florida State has had nine members inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame two members inducted into the College Football Coaches Hall of Fame and five members inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame The Biletnikoff Award presented annually to the top receiver in college football is named for Florida State hall of fame player Fred Biletnikoff and the Bobby Bowden Award presented by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes is named after Florida State hall of fame coach Bobby Bowden The Florida State Seminoles have the tenth highest winning percentage among all college football programs in Division I FBS history with over 500 victories and twenty six ten win seasons Florida State has appeared in over 50 postseason bowl games ranking ninth nationally for bowl winning percentage and fourth for bowl wins with five Orange Bowl victories Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1902 1975 1 2 Bobby Bowden era 1976 2009 1 3 Post Bowden years 2010 2020 1 4 Mike Norvell era 2020 present 2 Conference affiliations 3 Championships 3 1 National championships 3 1 1 Claimed national championships 3 1 2 Unclaimed national championships 3 1 3 1993 season 3 1 4 1999 season 3 1 5 2013 season 3 2 Conference championships 3 3 Division championships 4 Bowl games 5 Head coaches 6 Doak S Campbell Stadium 7 Rivalries 7 1 Florida 7 2 Miami 7 3 Clemson 7 4 Virginia 8 Notable games 9 Individual accomplishments 9 1 Individual national award winners 9 2 Individual conference awards 9 2 1 Players 9 2 2 Coaches 9 3 Heisman Trophy 9 4 Consensus All Americans 9 5 Unanimous All Americans 9 6 Honored jersey numbers 10 Hall of Fame inductees 10 1 College Football Hall of Fame 10 2 Pro Football Hall of Fame 10 3 Canadian Football Hall of Fame 11 Records and results 11 1 Playoffs 11 2 All time record vs current ACC teams 11 3 All time record vs non conference opponents 11 4 All time record vs rivals 11 5 Polls 12 Traditions 12 1 Osceola and Renegade 12 2 Marching Chiefs 12 3 War Chant 12 4 Sod Cemetery 13 Famous former players 13 1 Seminoles in the NFL 14 Future opponents 14 1 Conference 14 2 Non conference 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 External linksHistory editSee also List of Florida State Seminoles football seasons Florida State s football program was first established in 1902 resuming play and adopting the Seminole nickname in 1947 after forty six years The Seminoles joined the Atlantic Coast Conference in 1992 following a long history of competing independently Early history 1902 1975 edit nbsp Florida State has had a football team since as early as the 1890s Florida State University traces the start of its athletic program to 1902 when Florida State College played the first of its three seasons 4 From 1902 to 1904 the institution then known as Florida State College fielded a varsity football team called The Eleven that played other teams 5 The Florida State players wore gold uniforms with a large purple F on the front Their pants were lightly padded but their upper bodies were largely unprotected Leather helmets with ear guards covered their heads and shoehorn shaped metal nose guards were strapped across their faces 6 nbsp Florida State College football in 1902W W Hughes professor of Latin and the head of men s sports at the school served as the first coach 7 They played their first game against the Bainbridge Giants a city team from Bainbridge Georgia defeating them 5 0 The team then played back to back matches against Florida Agricultural College which later merged into what is now the University of Florida one week apart winning the first 6 0 and losing the second 0 6 The following season student enthusiasm grew even more and the Eleven arranged a full schedule of six games They competed against teams such as the University of Florida in Lake City as Florida Agricultural College was then called Georgia Tech and the East Florida Seminary another school that merged into the University of Florida and finished the season by competing against Stetson College in Jacksonville for The Florida Times Union s Championship Cup 8 The following year Jack Forsythe later the first head coach of the Florida Gators replaced Hughes as coach and the Eleven won the unofficial state championship by defeating Stetson in Tallahassee 9 Jock Hanvey assisted Forsythe nbsp Florida State College football in 1904This would be The Eleven s last season however as the Florida State Legislature passed the Buckman Act which reorganized Florida s six colleges into three institutions segregated by gender and race a school for white males a school for white females and a school for African Americans Florida State College became Florida Female College until 1909 when it became Florida State College for Women 10 Four other institutions including the University of Florida in Lake City and the East Florida Seminary were merged into the new white men s only University of the State of Florida in Gainesville 11 Males who formerly attended Florida State College were required to transfer to the Gainesville campus 10 although several former FSC players transferred to Grant University now the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga with five joining Grant s football team In 1909 several veterans of the FSC Eleven founded a city team named the Tallahassee Athletics but this folded after one season Except for this until 1947 Tallahassee s only organized or collegiate football team were the team from the Florida Agricultural and Mechanical College for Negroes now Florida A amp M University 11 nbsp The inaugural Florida State University football teamThe end of World War II brought enormous pressure on the university system in Florida which saw an influx of veterans applying for college under the GI Bill The Florida Legislature responded by renaming the Florida State College for Women to Florida State University and allowing men to attend the university for the first time since 1905 football then returned to the university beginning with the 1947 season From 1948 through 1959 the Seminole football program achieved much success under coaches Don Veller and Tom Nugent Ed Williamson who introduced football to the school served as the first coach of the Florida State Seminoles In his first and only season with Florida State the Seminoles posted an 0 5 record Williamson has the worst record out of all the head coaches at Florida State and is the only coach to have a winless mark As the second coach at Florida State Don Veller coached at Florida State for five years and compiled a record of 31 12 1 Veller was the first coach to find success coaching the Seminoles In 1950 Veller led the Seminoles to an 8 0 record the first unbeaten season in school history Once Veller left the school Tom Nugent became the third coach at Florida State He stayed at Florida State for six years and compiled a record of 34 28 1 In one of his most notable accomplishments Nugent gave the Seminoles their first win over an SEC opponent with a 10 0 victory against Tennessee in 1958 The fourth coach at Florida State was Perry Moss who coached the Seminoles for one year after compiling a 4 6 record He became the second Florida State coach to leave the school with a losing record and the second to coach at the school for only one season after leaving to coach in the CFL nbsp Under Peterson the Seminoles defeated the Gators for the first time With the arrival of head coach Bill Peterson in 1960 the Seminoles began their move to national prominence Under Peterson s direction the Seminoles beat the Florida Gators for the first time in 1964 and earned their first major bowl bid Peterson also led the Seminoles to their first ever top ten ranking During his tenure as head coach Peterson also gave a young assistant by the name of Bobby Bowden his first major college coaching opportunity 12 Although not widely known the Seminoles achieved their first ever number one ranking during this period In October 1964 the Dunkel College Football Index a popular power index of that era placed the Seminoles at the top of their poll after a stunning 48 6 win over highly ranked Kentucky AP No 5 Dunkel No 3 Peterson would be named UPI national coach of the week after this program changing victory 13 14 In an era of very few bowl games Peterson s innovative offensive system helped earn the Seminoles four bowl bids from 1964 through 1968 During this time only Alabama and Mississippi appeared in more bowl games than did Peterson s Seminoles Receiving a football scholarship famed actor Robert Urich was a back up center on the Seminoles from 1964 to 1967 In 1968 Peterson s eighth year at the helm the Seminoles claimed their third straight bowl bid as Florida State became the first major college in the state of Florida to earn such a distinction The Seminoles would not repeat this feat again until the ninth season of the Bobby Bowden era 15 In the summer of 1967 Peterson also engineered another first for the Seminole program when he decided to begin the recruitment of African American football players 16 Apparently he did so without approval from either the school president or its athletic director On December 16 1967 the Seminoles signed Ernest Cook a fullback from Daytona Beach Several months later the Seminoles would sign running back Calvin Patterson from Dade County Ultimately Cook decided to switch his allegiance to Minnesota where he would become an All Big Ten running back In the fall of 1968 Patterson would become the first African American student to play for the Seminoles as a starter for the Florida State freshmen football team In the fall of 1970 J T Thomas would become the first African American to play in a varsity game for the Seminoles 17 18 nbsp Darrell Mudra was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame Following Peterson s successful run the next two coaches had disappointing tenures Larry Jones was appointed as the sixth head coach at Florida State Jones coached for three years from 1971 to 1973 and compiled a record of 15 19 becoming the third Florida State coach to have a losing record Darrell Mudra was then hired to be the seventh coach of the Seminoles Mudra lasted just two years from 1974 to 1975 and compiled a record of 4 18 He became the fourth head coach to have a losing record at Florida State Bobby Bowden era 1976 2009 edit nbsp Bowden is credited with Florida State s rise to prominence Under head coach Bobby Bowden who came to Florida State from West Virginia 19 20 the Seminoles became one of the nation s most competitive programs greatly expanding the tradition of football at Florida State The Seminoles played in five national championship games between 1993 and 2000 and claimed the championship twice in 1993 and 1999 The FSU football team was the most successful team in college football during the 1990s boasting an 89 winning percentage FSU also set an NCAA record for most consecutive Top 5 finishes in the AP football poll receiving placement 14 years in a row from 1987 to 2000 The Seminoles under Bowden were the first college football team in history to be ranked first place wire to wire i e from preseason to postseason since the AP began releasing preseason rankings in 1936 In the Bowden era prior to a 1989 game against long standing rival Miami University of Miami mascot Sebastian the Ibis was tackled by a group of police officers at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee as the mascot attempted to put out Chief Osceola s flaming spear Sebastian was wearing a fireman s helmet and yellow raincoat and holding a fire extinguisher When a police officer attempted to grab the fire extinguisher the officer was sprayed in the chest Sebastian was handcuffed by four officers but ultimately released University of Miami quarterback Gino Torretta told ESPN Even if we weren t bad boys it added to the mystique that Man look even their mascot s getting arrested 21 In the late 1980s and throughout the 1990s the Seminoles had 14 consecutive seasons with 10 or more wins and a top four finish with a record of 152 19 1 between these years 11 of their 19 losses were decided by seven points or less and one of the best home records of the era FSU s accomplishments in these 14 seasons included eleven bowl wins nine ACC championships two Heisman Trophy winners and two national championships On December 1 2009 Bowden announced that he would retire from coaching after the Seminoles game on New Year s Day 2010 against West Virginia Bowden s former team in the Gator Bowl His legacy has led to the creation of two awards in his honor the Bobby Bowden Award an award presented to college football players and the Bobby Bowden National Collegiate Coach of the Year Award an award presented to college football coaches In the spring of 2007 several FSU athletes including football players were accused of cheating in an online music history class The NCAA ruled that Florida State was guilty of major violations announced that it would reduce scholarship limits in 10 sports and force Florida State to vacate all of the victories in 2006 and 2007 in which the implicated athletes participated and placed the university on probation for four years 22 FSU vacated 12 football victories from the 2006 and 2007 seasons and Bowden finished his career with 377 career wins 23 Post Bowden years 2010 2020 edit nbsp Coach Fisher led the Seminoles to the 2013 national title On January 5 2010 Jimbo Fisher officially became the ninth head football coach in Florida State history Fisher had been a member of the Florida State staff for three years serving as offensive coordinator He was named head coach in waiting during the 2008 season In his first season as head coach Florida State went 10 4 with a 6 2 record in ACC conference play The Seminoles went to their first ACC Championship Game since 2005 losing to Virginia Tech 44 33 and had their first ten win season since 2003 Fisher s first Florida State team notably beat both of its in state rivals the Miami Hurricanes and the Florida Gators for the first time since 1999 Florida State would go on to the Chick fil A Bowl where they would beat Steve Spurrier s South Carolina team In his second season Florida State went 9 4 with a 5 3 record in ACC conference play For the second year in a row the Seminoles defeated both of their in state rivals Fisher s second Florida State team also defeated Notre Dame in the Champs Sports Bowl In his third season he led the Seminoles to their first conference title in seven years and defeated Northern Illinois to win the Orange Bowl In the 2013 season Jimbo Fisher guided his team to a perfect 14 0 record and a national championship with a comeback win against Auburn In 2014 he guided Florida State to another undefeated regular season only to be defeated by Oregon 59 20 in the Rose Bowl the most points the Seminoles had ever surrendered in a bowl game Florida State had victories over both in state rivals Florida and Miami in six of Jimbo Fisher s first seven seasons as head coach and won ten or more games in six of his eight seasons While the Seminoles would win at least 10 games in the next two seasons and even finished eighth in the final 2016 poll they lost five games in ACC play one fewer than they had lost in Fisher s first five seasons One of those losses was a 63 20 rout at the hands of Louisville the most points Florida State had ever surrendered at the time In 2017 the Seminoles were ranked third in preseason polls but a 24 7 drubbing by Alabama and a close loss to NC State knocked them out of the polls altogether for the first time since the middle of the 2011 season and ultimately finished with their first losing on field record in ACC play since joining the league Fisher resigned as FSU head coach on December 1 2017 to accept a record ten year 75 million contract to become head coach at Texas A amp M Defensive line coach and former defensive lineman Odell Haggins was named interim head coach becoming Florida State s first African American head coach and coached in his first game the next day against Louisiana Monroe The Seminoles won extending their bowl streak to an NCAA record 36 seasons He went on to coach the Seminoles in the bowl game leading them to a win and their 41st consecutive winning season On December 5 2017 Willie Taggart left Oregon to become the new head coach at Florida State 24 In his first season the Seminoles finished with a losing record for the first time since 1976 and missed a bowl game for the first time in 36 years 25 On November 3 2019 Taggart was fired following a loss to Miami and a 4 5 record throughout the first nine games of the season 26 Haggins was once again named interim head coach to finish out the season 27 Mike Norvell era 2020 present edit nbsp Current head coach Mike NorvellOn December 8 2019 Memphis head coach Mike Norvell was named the new head coach at Florida State 28 On September 11 2021 the Seminoles lost to Jacksonville State it was the first time Florida State had lost to a non FBS opponent since 1959 29 In 2022 Mike Norvell led the Seminoles to a 9 3 regular season record and a berth in the 2022 Cheez It Bowl to play against Oklahoma Florida State moved up in the AP Poll during the season for the first time since 2016 peaking at 13 prior to the bowl game and winning the most regular season games for the first time since that season as well The Seminoles would go on to defeat the Sooners to finish with ten wins for the first time in six years In his fourth season Norvell guided the Seminoles to an undefeated regular season and a conference championship The 2023 team was excluded from the College Football Playoff despite finishing the regular season as undefeated ACC champions This made the Seminoles the first Power 5 champions of the playoff era to go undefeated but not be selected for the playoff bracket Coach Mike Norvell said he was disgusted by the committee s decision 30 University Vice President and Athletic Director Michael Alford called the decision unforgiveable 31 Conference affiliations editIn the first year of the program Florida State competed as an independent program without conference affiliation They were members of the Dixie Conference for three years before returning to independence They would remain this way until 1992 when after being courted by several conferences including the Southeastern Conference they opted to join the Atlantic Coast Conference which is the same conference that they compete in today Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1902 1904 Independent 1947 Dixie Conference 1948 1950 Independent 1951 1991 Atlantic Coast Conference 1992 present 32 Atlantic Division 2005 2022 33 Championships editNational championships edit Florida State has been selected national champions in nine seasons by NCAA designated major selectors 34 35 114 115 Florida State claims the 1993 1999 and 2013 national championships 36 after winning a postseason bowl national championship game and being named the national champion by all four major consensus selectors AP Coaches FWAA and NFF 37 Claimed national championships edit Year 36 Coach Major Selectors Record Bowl Final AP Final Coaches1993 Bobby Bowden AP Coaches FWAA NFF 12 1 Won Orange Bowl Coalition National Championship Game No 1 No 11999 BCS AP Coaches FWAA NFF 12 0 Won Sugar BCS National Championship Game 2013 Jimbo Fisher 14 0 Won BCS National Championship GameUnclaimed national championships edit Year Coach Major Selector Record Bowl Opponent Result Final AP Final Coaches1980 Bobby Bowden FACT 10 2 Orange Oklahoma L 17 18 No 5 No 51987 Bobby Bowden Berryman 11 1 Fiesta Nebraska W 31 28 No 2 No 21989 Bobby Bowden Billingsley Report 38 10 2 Fiesta Nebraska W 41 17 No 3 No 21992 Bobby Bowden Sagarin 11 1 Orange Nebraska W 27 14 No 2 No 21994 Bobby Bowden Dunkel 10 1 1 Sugar Florida W 23 17 No 4 No 51996 Bobby Bowden Alderson System 11 1 Sugar Florida L 20 52 No 3 No 31993 season edit nbsp Florida State s 1993 and 1999 national championship trophiesMain article 1993 Florida State Seminoles football team The Seminoles entered 1993 with a number one ranking and were led by quarterback and eventual Heisman Trophy winner Charlie Ward Florida State cruised to a 9 0 record with their closest game being an 18 point win over Miami The only loss of the season came at second ranked and undefeated Notre Dame by a score of 31 24 in one of the greatest games in college football history Despite the loss Florida State still went on to play for the national title beating Nebraska in the Orange Bowl with a field goal in the final seconds to claim the school s first national title 1999 season edit Main article 1999 Florida State Seminoles football team After falling short in the national title game against Tennessee in 1998 the Seminoles began the 1999 season ranked first in the country Florida State would go on to complete just the second undefeated season in school history and became the first team in history to be ranked number one for an entire season The Noles would clinch their second national title with a victory over Virginia Tech in the Sugar Bowl 2013 season edit Main article 2013 Florida State Seminoles football team nbsp Florida State s 2013 national championship trophyAfter the 2012 season FSU lost six coaches including defensive coordinator Mark Stoops Despite the numerous coaching changes and off the field incidents Florida State would go on to become the highest scoring team in FBS history by scoring 723 points in a single season en route to their third national championship The record has since been broken by the 2019 LSU Tigers with a new lead of 726 points nbsp During the 2013 season quarterback Jameis Winston became the third Florida State player to win the Heisman The 2013 Seminoles would hand then third ranked Clemson their worst home loss set a new attendance record at Doak Campbell Stadium of 84 409 against the seventh ranked Miami Hurricanes and set a school scoring record of 80 points in a game against the University of Idaho behind freshman quarterback and eventual Heisman Trophy winner Jameis Winston Conference championships edit nbsp ACC Title trophiesSeason Conference Coach Overall Conference1948 Dixie Don Veller 7 1 4 01949 9 1 4 01950 8 0 2 01992 ACC Bobby Bowden 11 1 8 01993 12 1 8 01994 10 1 1 8 01995 10 2 7 11996 11 1 8 01997 11 1 8 01998 11 2 7 11999 12 0 8 02000 11 2 8 02002 9 5 7 12003 10 3 7 12005 8 5 5 32012 Jimbo Fisher 12 2 7 12013 14 0 8 02014 13 1 8 02023 Mike Norvell 13 1 8 0 Co champions Division championships edit nbsp Florida State has appeared in the ACC Championship Game on six occasions winning five times Year Division Coach Opponent ACC CG Result2005 ACC Atlantic Bobby Bowden Virginia Tech W 27 222008 Lost tiebreaker to Boston College2010 Jimbo Fisher Virginia Tech L 33 442012 Georgia Tech W 21 152013 Duke W 45 72014 Georgia Tech W 37 35 Co championsBowl games editMain article List of Florida State Seminoles bowl games This is a partial list of the ten most recent bowl games Florida State has competed in nbsp FSU in the 1967 Gator Bowl vs Penn StateFlorida State has played in 50 bowl games in its history and has a 29 18 3 record with one win vacated in those games The Seminoles are the ninth most successful bowl team in history and played in a record 36 consecutive bowl games from 1982 to 2017 although the NCAA doesn t recognize this because their 2006 Emerald Bowl win and appearance were both vacated as a result of the 2007 academic scandal Season Date Bowl Opponent Result2011 December 29 2011 Champs Sports Bowl Notre Dame W 18 142012 January 1 2013 Orange Bowl Northern Illinois W 31 102013 January 6 2014 BCS National Championship Game Auburn W 34 312014 January 1 2015 Rose Bowl College Football Playoff Oregon L 20 592015 December 31 2015 Peach Bowl Houston L 24 382016 December 30 2016 Orange Bowl Michigan W 33 322017 December 27 2017 Independence Bowl Southern Mississippi W 42 132019 December 31 2019 Sun Bowl Arizona State L 14 202022 December 29 2022 Cheez It Bowl Oklahoma W 35 322023 December 30 2023 Orange Bowl Georgia L 3 63Head coaches edit nbsp Bowden is the winningest coach in school history Florida State has had 14 head coaches since organized football began in 1902 39 40 41 Bobby Bowden who spent 34 years at Florida State is the winningest coach in school history and has been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame During his tenure Bobby Bowden won two national championships with the Seminoles while Jimbo Fisher won one Fisher and Bowden also have the second and third best ACC winning percentages in conference history Tenure Coach Years Record Pct Bowl Games1902 1903 W W Hughes 2 5 3 1 611 0 0 11904 Jack Forsythe 1 2 3 4001947 Ed Williamson 1 0 5 0001948 1952 Don Veller 5 31 12 1 716 1 01953 1958 Tom Nugent 6 34 28 1 548 0 21959 Perry Moss 1 4 6 4001960 1970 Bill Peterson 11 62 42 11 587 1 2 11971 1973 Larry Jones 3 15 19 441 0 11974 1975 Darrell Mudra 2 4 18 1821976 2009 Bobby Bowden 34 304 97 4 756 20 9 1 2010 2017 Jimbo Fisher 8 83 23 783 5 22017 2019 Odell Haggins 2 4 2 667 1 12018 2019 Willie Taggart 2 9 12 4292020 present Mike Norvell 4 31 17 646 1 1 Interim head coach Bobby Bowden s record omits 12 vacated victories including 1 bowl victory that would otherwise make his record 316 97 4 Doak S Campbell Stadium edit nbsp Doak Campbell Stadium has a current capacity of 79 560 Main article Doak Campbell Stadium The Florida State Seminoles originally played their home games at Centennial Field until 1950 The Seminoles had an 8 4 record at Centennial including two undefeated home records The team play their home games at Doak Cambell Stadium which has a capacity of 79 560 Florida State is 320 105 4 in 429 games played at Doak Campbell The stadium named after former school president Doak Sheridan Campbell 42 hosted its first game against the Randolph Macon College Yellowjackets on October 7 1950 with the Seminoles winning the game 40 7 At that time the facility had a seating capacity of 15 000 Doak Campbell Stadium with its original capacity of 15 000 in 1950 was built at a cost of 250 000 In 1954 the stadium grew to a capacity of 19 000 Six thousand more seats were added in 1961 During the Bill Peterson era 1960 70 the stadium was expanded to 40 500 seats and it remained at that capacity for the next 14 years Since that time the stadium has expanded to almost 83 000 largely due to the success of the football team under head coach Bobby Bowden coupled with the ever growing student body It now is the second largest football stadium in the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC nbsp Doak Campbell Stadium hosted its first game in 1950 Aesthetically a brick facade surrounding the stadium matches the architectural design of most of the buildings on the university s campus In addition to the obvious recreational uses The University Center surrounds the stadium and houses many of the university s offices as well as The College of Motion Picture Arts The Dedman School of Hospitality and The College of Social Work The field was officially named Bobby Bowden field on November 20 2004 as Florida State hosted intrastate rival Florida Florida State has been recognized as having one of the best gameday atmospheres in the country and Doak Campbell Stadium has been named one of the top stadiums in college sports 43 Doak Campbell Stadium has been a great home field advantage for the Noles Florida State is one of only three schools that can boast a decade home field unbeaten streak The Seminoles never lost a home game from 1992 to 2001 a total of 54 games and have completed 24 undefeated seasons at their home stadiums including 22 at Doak Campbell The record crowd for the stadium is 84 431 set during a game against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish on October 18 2014 Rivalries editThe Seminoles archrivals are Florida whom they meet annually in the last game of the regular season and Miami both games are considered among the greatest rivalries in college football 44 A rivalry with Clemson has developed and grown due to both teams competing yearly for the Atlantic division Florida edit Main article Florida Florida State football rivalry nbsp Florida State and Florida have played each year since 1958 nbsp The Seminoles and Gators have met as ranked opponents on twenty four occasions The Florida Gators are the main rival of the Florida State Seminoles Florida State and Florida have played each other 67 times with the Gators holding a 37 28 2 advantage 45 After the arrival of Bobby Bowden in 1976 the Seminoles have compiled a record of 26 22 1 The game alternates between Florida s home stadium Steve Spurrier Florida Field at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville Florida and Florida State s home stadium Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee Florida Miami edit Main article Florida State Miami football rivalry See also Wide Right I and Wide Right II nbsp Florida State and Miami first met in 1951 and have played each year since 1966 The rivalry dates to 1951 when the Miami Hurricanes defeated the Seminoles 35 13 in their inaugural meeting The schools have played uninterrupted since 1966 with Miami leading the series 35 33 as of the 2023 season 46 nbsp The Seminoles and Hurricanes have met as ranked opponents on twenty six occasions During the 1980s and 90s the series emerged as one of the premier rivalries in college football Between 1983 and 2013 the Hurricanes and Seminoles combined to win 8 national championships 5 for Miami 3 for Florida State and played in 15 national championship games 1983 85 86 87 89 91 92 93 96 98 99 2000 01 02 13 The rivalry has been popular not only because of its profound national championship implications and the competitiveness of the games but also because of the immense NFL caliber talent typically present on the field when the two teams meet The famous 1987 matchup featured over 50 future NFL players on both rosters combined The rivalry is a television ratings bonanza accounting for the two highest rated college football telecasts in ESPN history The 2006 game between Miami and FSU was the second most viewed college football game regular season or bowl in the history of ESPN averaging 6 33 million households in viewership a 6 9 rating It trailed only the 1994 game between Miami and FSU which notched a 7 7 rating 47 Florida CupMain article Florida Cup nbsp Bill Peterson coached the Seminoles to their first win over the Gators in the rivalry The Florida Cup is the trophy sponsored by the state of Florida given to either the Florida State University Seminoles the University of Florida Gators or the University of Miami Hurricanes for winning a round robin against the other two teams in the same season including bowl games if necessary 48 It was created in 2002 by the Florida Sports Foundation the official sports promotion and development organization of the state of Florida and the Florida Championships Awards Inc The idea of finally having a trophy for the round robin winner between the three schools was enthusiastically endorsed by then governor Jeb Bush Along with the Commander in Chief s Trophy given to the winner of the round robin between Army Navy and Air Force the Florida Cup is one of the very few three way rivalries that presents a trophy to the winner The Florida Cup was awarded to the Florida State Seminoles in 2013 as Florida and Miami played in the regular season The Makala Trophy is awarded to the winner of the Florida Florida State game at the winning team s spring scrimmage 49 Clemson edit Main article Clemson Florida State football rivalry nbsp The Noles and Tigers competed for the Atlantic division title Florida State has a rivalry with conference foe the Clemson Tigers Florida State leads the all time series 21 15 50 The Seminoles dominated the contests through most of the 1990s but 1999 marked a milestone as the hire of Bobby Bowden s son Tommy led to the first meeting in 1999 which was the first time in Division I A history that a father and a son met as opposing head coaches in a football game During the time Tommy coached at Clemson the game was known as the Bowden Bowl Bobby won the series in the 9 years it was played before Tommy s resignation taking 5 of those games with all four losses within the last five seasons One sticking point in the rivalry remains that a proud Clemson Tiger program that was strong in the 1980s had won 6 of the past 11 ACC titles from 1981 to 1991 1991 would be the last ACC Championship the Tigers would win until 2011 as Florida State entered the ACC in 1992 and proceeded to win the next 9 ACC Championships in a row and 12 of the next 14 in the series Virginia edit Main article Jefferson Eppes Trophy The Seminoles also have a rivalry with the Virginia Cavaliers 51 52 53 Florida State and Virginia compete for the Jefferson Eppes Trophy The two schools have played for the trophy since its creation in 1995 It has been awarded a total of 19 times with FSU receiving it 14 times FSU vacated its 2006 win The Seminoles hold the all time advantage 14 4 54 Because of conference expansion the teams no longer play annually the teams last met in 2019 The Jefferson Eppes Trophy is awarded to the winner of the Florida State Virginia game This game was played annually from 1992 through 2005 but since the conference split into divisions the teams meet twice every six years Florida State has been awarded the trophy 15 times Notable games edit1950 First Game at Doak Florida State played the first game at Doak Campbell Stadium a 40 7 win over Randolph Macon College 55 1964 FSU s First Win Over UF Florida State had never beaten Florida gaining only a 3 3 tie in six tries all at Gainesville Since 1947 when Florida State College for Women became Florida State University its athletes have endured girl school taunts During the week Florida players wore stickers on their helmets in practice reading Never FSU Never The thrust may have added considerable fuel to FSU s already blazing fire FSU s aggressive defense helped force five Florida fumbles and the Seminoles claimed four of them The Tribe intercepted two passes FSU lost two fumbles and had one pass intercepted Steve Tensi connected on 11 of 22 throws for 190 yards Fred Biletnikoff a decoy much of the way and well covered by Florida caught only two for 78 yards and a touchdown The 16 7 win ended six years of FSU frustration against the Gators and left Florida with a 5 3 record FSU ended its regular season with an 8 1 1 chart a showing exceeded only by an unbeaten 1950 season 56 1988 Puntrooskie Florida State had a 4th down and 4 to go at its own 21 yard line with about a minute and a half to go in the 4th quarter at Clemson They lined up to punt but the ball was snapped to an up back who handed it to Leroy Butler who ran down the left side of the field all the way to the Clemson 4 yard line Florida State wound up kicking a field goal to win the game 24 21 57 58 1991 Big Win at the Big House In their first trip ever to Michigan Stadium Florida State would beat the No 3 Michigan Wolverines 51 31 behind quarterback Casey Weldon s 268 yards and 2 touchdowns and Amp Lee s 122 yards rushing One of the most memorable plays in Florida State history occurred on Michigan s 1st play in the 1st quarter when cornerback Terrell Buckley returned an Elvis Grbac interception for a 40 yard touchdown 59 1993 Ward to Dunn The Seminoles came into The Swamp ranked No 1 and looking to play for the national championship Florida had clinched the SEC East championship and were themselves ranked in the top five Early on it looked to be a Florida State rout as the Seminoles took a 27 7 lead into the fourth quarter However Florida scored two quick touchdowns to make the score 27 21 With six minutes remaining the Seminoles faced third down at their own 21 yard line In what many people consider the greatest play in Florida State history Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Charlie Ward hit freshman Warrick Dunn up the sideline for a 79 yard game clinching touchdown run and a 33 21 FSU win 60 1994 FSU Wins First National Championship This 60th edition of the Orange Bowl featured the Nebraska Cornhuskers and the Florida State Seminoles Florida State came into the game 11 1 and ranked first in the nation Nebraska came into the game undefeated at 11 0 and with a number 2 ranking Late in 4th quarter FSU s Heisman trophy winning quarterback Charlie Ward drove the Seminoles all the way to the Nebraska 3 yard line The Huskers held and forced Scott Bentley to kick his fourth field goal of the night which was good and FSU led 18 16 with just 21 seconds remaining Florida State players and coaches went wild on the sidelines and were penalized for excessive celebration costing them 15 yards on the ensuing kickoff As a result the Huskers were able to get a decent return and began their final possession at their own 43 yard line As time ran down Tommy Frazier hit tight end Trumane Bell for a 29 yard gain to the FSU 28 yard line The clock ticked down to 0 00 setting off more chaos on the FSU sideline complete with the compulsory Gatorade bath given to FSU coach Bobby Bowden However referee John Soffey ruled that Bell was down with 1 second left on the clock and ordered the field cleared allowing Nebraska placekicker Byron Bennett an opportunity to kick the game winning field goal But the 45 yard kick sailed wide left preserving the 18 16 win for the Seminoles 61 62 1994 The Choke at Doak In the greatest fourth quarter comeback of the series the Gators led the Seminoles 31 3 after three quarters However the Seminoles scored 28 points in the final 15 minutes to tie the game at 31 31 63 1995 The Fifth Quarter in the French Quarter After the Choke at Doak game ended in a 31 31 tie both teams where selected to the 1995 Sugar Bowl The game would become known as The Fifth Quarter in the French Quarter With 1 32 left in the game All America linebacker Derrick Brooks intercepted a pass from Danny Wuerffel to seal FSU s victory 23 17 64 65 1996 No 1 vs No 2 The No 1 ranked and undefeated Gators came into Tallahassee favored against the second ranked Seminoles The Noles got off to a quick start when Peter Boulware blocked the Gator s first punt of the game resulting in a touchdown Florida s eventual Heisman Trophy winner quarterback Danny Wuerffel threw three interceptions in the first half and FSU had a 17 0 lead after one quarter of play Wuerffel got on track after that throwing for three touchdowns The last one to WR Reidel Anthony cut the Florida State lead to three points with just over a minute left to play The ensuing onside kick went out of bounds however and the Seminoles held on for the 24 21 upset win 66 1997 Top Five Matchup in Chapel Hill In the first ACC game between two teams ranked in the top five Florida State dominated North Carolina 20 3 the Tar Heels only defeat on the season 67 2000 FSU Wins Second National Championship Florida State scored first and took advantage of a blocked punt for a touchdown giving the Seminoles a 14 0 lead in the first quarter Virginia Tech led by QB Michael Vick answered with a touchdown drive of its own before the end of the quarter but Florida State scored two quick touchdowns to begin the second quarter Virginia Tech scored a touchdown before halftime but halfway through the game Florida State held a 28 14 lead In the third quarter Virginia Tech s offense gave the Hokies a lead with a field goal and two touchdowns Tech failed to convert two two point conversions but held a 29 28 lead at the end of the third quarter Florida State answered in the fourth quarter however taking a 36 29 lead with a touchdown and successful two point conversion early in the quarter From this point the Seminoles did not relinquish the lead extending it to 46 29 with a field goal and another touchdown With the win Florida State clinched the 1999 BCS national championship the team s second national championship in its history 68 2005 The Miami Muff In 2005 the Florida State Seminoles finally gained some redemption for the past Wide Right heartbreaks Miami kicker John Peattie missed two field goals in the 1st quarter while FSU kicker Gary Cismesia was 1 2 for the game Trailing 10 7 in the 4th the Hurricanes drove down the field to set up a game tying field goal with 2 16 left When the ball was snapped it was mishandled by holder Brian Monroe and the ball never reached the kicker s foot Florida State took over on downs and ran out the clock to end Miami s six game winning streak in the rivalry 69 2005 FSU Wins Inaugural ACC Championship Game The Seminoles defeated Virginia Tech in the first ACC Championship Game 2010 The Golden Toe In the first ever walk off game winning kick in school history Dustin Hopkins booted a 55 yard field goal as time expired to lift the Seminoles to a 16 13 victory over Clemson 70 2013 Top Five Matchup in Death Valley In the second ACC game between two teams ranked in the top five Florida State handed Clemson their worst home loss in school history 71 2014 FSU Wins Third National Championship After Florida State scored a field goal on their first drive Auburn responded with a touchdown in the first quarter and two in the second to storm out to a 21 3 lead After a successful punt fake the Seminoles managed a late touchdown before halftime to go into the locker room down 21 10 Both teams dominated on defense in the third quarter with the Seminoles hitting a field goal to cut the lead to 8 In the fourth quarter Florida State scored a touchdown early to make it a one point game After Auburn made a field goal Levonte Whitfield returned the following kickoff 100 yards to give the Seminoles the lead 27 24 Auburn answered with a touchdown to go up 31 27 with 1 19 remaining On their final drive of 7 plays Florida State scored a touchdown with 13 seconds remaining benefiting from a pass interference by Auburn s Chris Davis Jr on a crucial 3rd and 8 The Seminoles emerged victorious 34 31 to end the SEC s streak of 7 consecutive BCS titles 72 2016 The Block at The Rock Late in the fourth quarter against rival Miami Florida State had a touchdown lead Miami scored on an 11 yard reception by Stacey Coley with 1 38 left in the game to make the score 20 19 with an extra point attempt coming Defensive end DeMarcus Walker blocked the extra point to give Florida State a one point win 73 2021 4th and 14 The Seminoles came out hot scoring 14 points and forcing three turnovers in the first quarter before taking a 20 7 lead into halftime Miami would storm back with 21 unanswered points taking a 28 20 lead with 11 minutes left After a lengthy drive that resulted in a field goal by the Seminoles and an excellent defensive stop led by defensive end Jermaine Johnson II the Seminoles had the ball with 2 09 left in the game down 28 23 After a 59 yard bomb caught by wide receiver Ja Khi Douglas the Florida State offense sputtered out to a 4th and 14 at the Miami 25 yard line Florida State quarterback Jordan Travis would convert on a pass to wide receiver Andrew Parchment to the Miami 1 yard line before Travis would run it in himself on both a touchdown and the 2 point conversion to make it 31 28 with 26 seconds left Miami s push to tie the game was stopped short when refs ruled the game over after an attempted spike by Miami QB Tyler Van Dyke with less than three seconds left the minimum time needed according to NCAA rules 74 Individual accomplishments editSee also Florida State Seminoles football annual team awards Individual national award winners edit Players Heisman TrophyBest Player Maxwell AwardBest Player Walter Camp AwardBest Player Chic Harley AwardBest Player Archie Griffin AwardMost Valuable Player AP Player of the Year1993 Charlie Ward QB2000 Chris Weinke QB2013 Jameis Winston QB 1993 Charlie Ward QB 1993 Charlie Ward QB2013 Jameis Winston QB 1993 Charlie Ward QB 2013 Jameis Winston QB 2013 Jameis Winston QBDavey O Brien AwardBest Quarterback Manning AwardBest Quarterback Kellen Moore AwardBest Quarterback Johhny Unitas AwardBest Senior Quarterback Sammy Baugh TrophyBest Passer Jim Brown AwardBest Runningback Paul Warfield AwardBest Wide Receiver John Mackey AwardBest Tight End Dave Remington TrophyBest Center1993 Charlie Ward2000 Chris Weinke2013 Jameis Winston 2013 Jameis Winston 1991 Casey Weldon1993 Charlie Ward 1991 Casey Weldon1993 Charlie Ward2000 Chris Weinke 2000 Chris Weinke 2015 Dalvin Cook 1999 Peter Warrick 2014 Nick O Leary 2013 Bryan StorkJim Thorpe AwardBest Defensive Back Jack Tatum TrophyBest Defensive Back Lombardi AwardBest Lineman Best Linebacker Bill Willis TrophyBest Defensive Lineman Butkus AwardBest Linebacker Jack Lambert TrophyBest Linebacker1988 Deion Sanders1991 Terrell Buckley 1991 Terrell Buckley2016 Tarvarus McFadden 1992 Marvin Jones2000 Jamal Reynolds 1997 Andre Wadsworth2000 Jamal Reynolds 1987 Paul McGowan1992 Marvin Jones 1992 Marvin Jones1994 Derrick BrooksLou Groza AwardBest Kicker Vlade AwardMost Accurate Kicker1998 1999 Sebastian Janikowski2008 Graham Gano2013 Roberto Aguayo 2013 2014 Roberto AguayoBobby Bowden AwardBest Student Athlete2010 Christian PonderWuerffel TrophyCommunity Service Athletic and Academic Achievement2022 Dillan GibbonsCoaches Bobby Dodd AwardCoach of the Year Walter Camp AwardCoach of the Year Paul Bear Bryant AwardCoach of the Year Home Depot AwardCoach of the Year1980 Bobby Bowden2023 Mike Norvell 1991 Bobby Bowden 2023 Mike Norvell 1994 Bobby BowdenBroyles AwardBest Assistant Coach1996 Mickey Andrews DCPaul Bear Bryant Lifetime Achievement AwardLifetime Achievement Bobby Bowden AwardLifetime Achievement2010 Bobby Bowden 2011 Bobby BowdenIndividual conference awards edit Players edit ACC Player of the YearCharlie Ward 1992 1993 Danny Kanell 1995 Andre Wadsworth 1997 Chris Weinke 2000 Jameis Winston 2013 Jordan Travis 2023 ACC Rookie of the YearTamarick Vanover 1992 Travis Minor 1997 Chris Rix 2001 Jameis Winston 2013 Deondre Francois 2016 ACC Offensive Player of the YearCharlie Ward 1993 Danny Kanell 1995 Thad Busby 1997 Chris Weinke 2000 Jameis Winston 2013 Jordan Travis 2023 ACC Offensive Rookie of the YearJameis Winston 2013 Deondre Francois 2016 ACC Defensive Player of the YearDerrick Brooks 1993 Derrick Alexander 1994 Peter Boulware 1996 Andre Wadsworth 1997 Darnell Dockett 2003 Bjorn Werner 2012 DeMarcus Walker 2016 Jermaine Johnson II 2021 ACC Defensive Rookie of the YearMyron Rolle 2006 Xavier Rhodes 2010 Ronald Darby 2012 Patrick Payton 2022 Jacobs Blocking TrophyClay Shiver 1994 1995 Tra Thomas 1997 Tarlos Thomas 2000 Brett Williams 2001 2002 Rodney Hudson 2008 2009 Cameron Erving 2013 2014 Roderick Johnson 2015 2016 Brian Piccolo AwardDan Footman 1992 Sam Cowart 1997 Corey Simon 1998 Chris Weinke 1999 Anquan Boldin 2002 Chris Thompson 2012 McKenzie Milton 2021 Jim Tatum AwardDillan Gibbons 2022 Coaches edit ACC Coach of the YearBobby Bowden 1993 1997 Mike Norvell 2023 Heisman Trophy edit Three Florida State players have been awarded the Heisman Trophy Charlie Ward received the award in 1993 Chris Weinke in 2000 and Jameis Winston in 2013 Casey Weldon finished as runner up in 1991 75 nbsp nbsp nbsp FSU s Heisman Trophy winners Year Name Position Place Ref 1967 Kim Hammond QB 5th1979 Ron Simmons DT 9th1984 Greg Allen RB 7th1988 Deion Sanders DB 8th1991 Casey Weldon QB 2nd1992 Marvin JonesCharlie Ward LBQB 4th6th1993 Charlie Ward QB 1st1995 Warrick Dunn RB 9th1996 Warrick Dunn RB 5th1999 Peter Warrick WR 6th2000 Chris Weinke QB 1st2013 Jameis Winston QB 1st2014 Jameis Winston QB 6th2015 Dalvin Cook RB 7th2016 Dalvin Cook RB T 10th2023 Jordan Travis QB 5th 76 Consensus All Americans edit nbsp The Biletnikoff Award is named in honor of FSU All American wide receiver Fred Biletnikoff 222 Florida State players have been honored as All American players with 38 being awarded as consensus All Americans citation needed when Seven Florida State players have been two time consensus All Americans Year s Name Number Position1964 Fred Biletnikoff 25 WR1967 1968 Ron Sellers 34 WR1979 1980 Ron Simmons 51 DL1983 Greg Allen 26 RB1985 Jamie Dukes 64 OL1987 1988 Deion Sanders 2 CB1989 LeRoy Butler 6 CB1991 1992 Marvin Jones 55 LB1991 Terrell Buckley 27 CB1993 Charlie Ward 17 QB1993 1994 Derrick Brooks 10 LB1993 Corey Sawyer 8 CB1994 Clifton Abraham 2 CB1995 Clay Shiver 53 C1996 Peter Boulware 58 DE1996 Reinard Wilson 55 DE1997 Sam Cowart 1 LB1997 Andre Wadsworth 85 DE1998 1999 Sebastian Janikowski 38 K1998 1999 Peter Warrick 9 WR1999 Corey Simon 53 DL1999 Jason Whitaker 68 OL2000 Tay Cody 27 CB2000 Snoop Minnis 13 WR2000 Jamal Reynolds 58 DE2003 2004 Alex Barron 70 OL2010 Rodney Hudson 62 OL2011 Shawn Powell 45 P2012 Bjorn Werner 95 DL2013 Lamarcus Joyner 20 S2013 Bryan Stork 52 C2013 Jameis Winston 5 QB2014 Roberto Aguayo 19 K2014 Tre Jackson 54 OL2014 Nick O Leary 35 TE2015 Jalen Ramsey 8 CB2016 Dalvin Cook 4 RB2016 DeMarcus Walker 44 DEUnanimous All Americans edit nbsp Running back Dalvin Cook is one of fifteen Seminoles to have been named unanimous All American players 15 Florida State players have been selected as unanimous All Americans Deion Sanders is the only Seminole to have been honored as a two time unanimous selection 77 Year s Name Number Position1987 1988 Deion Sanders 2 CB1991 Terrell Buckley 27 CB1992 Marvin Jones 55 LB1993 Charlie Ward 17 QB1993 Derrick Brooks 10 LB1999 Sebastian Janikowski 38 K1999 Peter Warrick 9 WR2000 Jamal Reynolds 58 DE2004 Alex Barron 70 OL2010 Rodney Hudson 62 OL2012 Bjorn Werner 95 DL2013 Lamarcus Joyner 20 S2014 Tre Jackson 54 OL2016 Dalvin Cook 4 RBHonored jersey numbers edit nbsp Deion Sanders is one of twelve Seminoles whose numbers have been honored by the school No Name Position Career Ref 2 Deion Sanders CB 1985 88 78 5 Jameis Winston QB 2012 2014 79 9 Peter Warrick WR 1995 1999 80 10 Derrick Brooks LB 1991 1994 78 16 Chris Weinke QB 1997 2000 78 17 Charlie Ward QB 1989 1993 78 25 Fred Biletnikoff WR 1962 1964 78 27 Terrell Buckley CB 1989 1991 78 28 Warrick Dunn RB 1993 1996 78 34 Ron Sellers WR 1966 1968 78 50 Ron Simmons DT 1977 1980 78 55 Marvin Jones LB 1990 1992 78 Hall of Fame inductees editCollege Football Hall of Fame edit nbsp Ron Sellers was the first Seminole player to be inducted into the hall of fame Nine FSU players and two coaches have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame In addition one former player Mack Brown has been inducted into the Hall as a coach Name Position Career Inducted Ref Ron Sellers WR 1966 1968 1988 81 Fred Biletnikoff WR 1962 1964 1991 81 Darrell Mudra Coach 1974 1975 2000 81 Bobby Bowden Coach 1976 2009 2006 81 Charlie Ward QB 1989 1991 1993 2006 81 Ron Simmons DT 1977 1980 2009 81 Deion Sanders CB 1985 1988 2011 81 Derrick Brooks LB 1992 1994 2016 82 Terrell Buckley CB 1989 1991 2019 83 Marvin Jones LB 1990 1992 2022 84 Warrick Dunn RB 1993 1996 2024 85 Pro Football Hall of Fame edit Five former Seminoles have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame 86 Name Position Career InductedFred Biletnikoff WR 1965 1978 1988Deion Sanders CB 1989 2000 2004 2005 2011Derrick Brooks LB 1995 2008 2014Walter Jones OL 1997 2008 2014LeRoy Butler S 1990 2001 2022Canadian Football Hall of Fame edit One former Seminole has been inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame 87 Name Position Career InductedDanny McManus QB 1984 1987 2011Records and results editPlayoffs edit The Seminoles have made one appearance in the College Football Playoff Year Seed Opponent Round Result2014 3 No 2 Oregon Semifinal Rose Bowl L 20 59All time record vs current ACC teams edit failed verification Opponent Won Lost Tied Pct Streak First LastBoston College 16 5 0 762 Won 5 1957 2022 88 California3 0 0 0 Clemson 21 15 0 583 Won 1 1970 2023 89 Duke 22 0 0 1 000 Won 22 1992 2023 90 Georgia Tech 15 11 1 574 Won 1 1903 2022 91 Louisville 18 6 0 750 Won 2 1952 2023 92 Miami 33 35 0 485 Won 3 1951 2023 93 North Carolina 17 3 1 833 Won 2 1983 2021 94 NC State 27 16 0 628 Lost 3 1952 2022 95 Notre Dame 6 5 0 545 Lost 3 1981 2021 96 Pittsburgh 5 6 0 455 Won 1 1971 2023 97 SMU3 0 0 0 Stanford3 0 0 0 Syracuse 14 2 0 875 Won 4 1966 2023 98 Virginia 15 4 0 789 Lost 1 1992 2019 99 Virginia Tech 24 13 1 645 Won 1 1955 2023 100 Wake Forest 31 9 1 768 Won 1 1956 2023 101 Totals 259 131 4 662 Notre Dame is an associate member of the ACC with a scheduling agreement in football 1denotes one win vacated during the 2006 and 2007 seasons 2denotes two wins vacated during the 2006 and 2007 seasons 3beginning in the 2024 2025 season All time record vs non conference opponents edit 102 School Record First LastAbilene Christian 1 2 1953 1957Alabama 11 3 1 1965 2017Alabama Birmingham 21 0 2001 2007Alabama State 1 0 2019 2019Arizona State 3 2 1971 2019Auburn 5 13 1 1954 2014Baylor 1 2 1965 1974Bethune Cookman 1 0 2013 2013Boise State 0 1 2019 2019Brigham Young 4 0 1991 2010Central Florida 1 0 1995 1995Charleston Southern 2 0 2011 2016Cincinnati 6 0 1977 1990Citadel 6 0 1 1955 2014Colorado 31 0 2003 2008Colorado State 1 1 1972 1974Cumberland 1 1 1947 1948Delaware State 1 0 2017 2017Delta State 1 0 1951 1951Duquesne 1 0 2022 2022East Carolina 7 0 1980 1990Erskine 1 1 1948 1949Florida 28 37 2 1958 2023Furman 8 2 1952 1987George Washington 1 0 1961 1961Georgia 4 7 1 1954 2023Georgia Southern 2 0 1988 1990Houston 2 13 2 1960 2015Idaho 1 0 2013 2013Indiana 1 0 1986 1986Iowa State 1 1 1975 2002Jacksonville NAS 1 0 1951 1951Jacksonville State 2 2 1947 2021Kansas 5 2 1971 1993Kansas State 3 0 1970 1977 School Record First LastKentucky 1 4 1 1960 2007LSU 9 2 1968 2023Louisiana Lafayette 1 0 2022 2022Louisiana Monroe 3 0 2011 2019Louisiana Tech 2 2 1952 1999Maryland 211 2 1966 2013Massachusetts 1 0 2021 2021Memphis 10 7 1 1959 1990Michigan 2 1 1986 2016Michigan State 2 0 1987 1988Middle Tennessee 1 0 1991 1991Millsaps 2 0 1948 1949Ole Miss 1 1 1961 2016Mississippi College 3 0 1948 1950Mississippi State 7 2 1966 1979Murray State 1 0 2012 2012Navy 1 0 1978 1978Nebraska 6 2 1980 1994Nevada 1 0 2013 2013New Mexico State 1 0 1964 1964Newberry 1 0 1950 1950North Alabama 1 0 2023 2023North Texas 2 0 1976 1977Northern Illinois 2 0 2013 2018Ohio 1 0 1956 1956Ohio State 3 0 1981 1998Oklahoma 2 6 1965 2022Oklahoma State 4 1 1958 2014Oregon 0 1 2015 2015Penn State 1 1 1 1967 2006Randolph Macon 1 0 1950 1950Rice 01 0 2006 2006Richmond 3 0 1959 1961Samford 3 0 1950 2018San Diego State 0 2 1973 1977Savannah State 1 0 2012 2012 School Record First LastSewanee 2 0 1949 1950South Carolina 16 3 1966 2010South Florida 3 1 2009 2016Southern California 2 0 1997 1998Southern Illinois 1 0 1982 1982Southern Mississippi 15 8 1 1952 2023Stetson 6 1 1 1947 1954Sul Ross State 1 0 1951 1951Tampa 9 2 1948 1959Temple 1 0 1984 1984Tennessee 1 1 1958 1999Tennessee Chattanooga 3 0 1984 2015Tennessee Tech 1 1 1947 1958Texas A amp M 4 0 1967 1998Texas Christian 1 2 1963 1965Texas State 1 0 2015 2015Texas El Paso 0 1 1955 1955Texas Tech 4 1 1966 1987Toledo 1 0 1986 1986Troy 5 1 1947 2006Tulane 103 0 1983 1992Tulsa 5 0 1969 1985UCLA 01 0 2006 2006Utah State 1 0 1975 1975Villanova 3 1 1954 1957Virginia Military Institute 2 1 1952 1954West Alabama 1 1 1948 1949West Virginia 3 0 1982 2010Western Michigan 11 0 1991 2006Whiting Field NAS 1 0 1949 1949Wichita State 2 0 1969 1986William amp Mary 1 1 1959 1950Wisconsin 1 0 2008 2008Wofford 3 0 1950 1952Wyoming 0 1 1966 1966 1Denotes win vacated during the 2006 and 2007 seasons 3Denotes win via forfeit All time record vs rivals edit Opponent Won Lost Tied Pct Streak First LastFlorida 28 37 2 433 Won 2 1958 2023Miami 33 35 0 485 Won 3 1951 2023Clemson 21 15 0 583 Won 1 1970 2023Virginia 15 4 0 789 Lost 1 1992 2019Totals 97 91 2 516Polls edit Florida State has ended their football season ranked 40 times in either the AP or Coaches Poll 103 failed verification Top 10 finishes are colored Year Record AP Poll Coaches 1964 9 1 1 111967 7 2 2 151968 8 3 0 141971 8 4 0 191977 10 2 0 14 111979 11 1 0 6 81980 10 2 0 5 51982 9 3 0 13 101984 7 3 2 17 191985 9 3 0 15 131986 7 4 1 201987 11 1 0 2 21988 11 1 0 3 31989 10 2 0 3 21990 10 2 0 4 4 Year Record AP Poll Coaches 1991 11 2 0 4 41992 11 1 0 2 21993 12 1 0 1 11994 10 1 1 4 51995 10 2 0 4 51996 11 1 3 31997 11 1 3 31998 11 2 3 31999 12 0 1 12000 11 2 5 42001 8 4 15 152002 9 5 21 232003 10 3 11 102004 9 3 15 142005 8 5 23 23 Year Record AP Poll Coaches 2008 9 4 21 232010 10 4 17 162011 9 4 23 232012 12 2 10 82013 14 0 1 12014 13 1 5 62015 10 3 14 142016 10 3 8 82022 10 3 11 102023 13 1 6 6 AP Poll began selecting the nation s Top 20 teams in 1936 Only the Top 10 teams were recognized from 1962 to 1967 The AP Poll expanded back to the Top 20 teams in 1968 In 1989 it began recognizing the Top 25 teams UPI Coaches Poll began selecting its Top 20 teams on a weekly basis in 1950 before expanding to the nations s Top 25 teams in 1990 Traditions edit nbsp The spear design has been used on FSU s helmets since 1976 There are numerous Florida State traditions associated with athletics particularly football These include the mascots Osceola and Renegade the planting of the spear at midfield before football games the FSU Fight Song the FSU Hymns the War Chant the Tomahawk Chop and the Legacy Walk The team s uniforms pay respect to the Seminole culture using tribal influences with Native American symbols representing an arrow a man on a horse and fire 104 Fans of the Florida State Seminoles are known as The Tribe a nod to the nickname that the team carries Osceola and Renegade edit nbsp Osceola and Renegade were introduced in the 1978 season Osceola and Renegade are the official symbols of the Florida State Seminoles During home football games Osceola portraying the Seminole leader Osceola charges down the field at Doak Campbell Stadium riding an appaloosa horse named Renegade and hurls a burning spear at midfield to begin every game The Seminole Tribe of Florida officially sanctions the use of the Seminole as Florida State University s nickname and of Osceola as FSU s symbol 105 Marching Chiefs edit nbsp The Marching Chiefs were formed in 1949 The Marching Chiefs is the official marching band of the Florida State Seminoles The band plays at every home game as well as at some away games Clemson Miami and Florida as well as any Championship or Bowl game War Chant edit nbsp The Marching Chiefs hold the distinction of being the world s largest collegiate marching band with upwards of 400 members The Seminole War Chant was first used in a 1984 game against Auburn 106 The chant was started in FSU s Marching Band The Marching Chiefs originally by members of the percussion section The melody is based on the 1960s cheer massacre 107 The chant has also become associated with the tomahawk chop The War Chant would be adopted by the Atlanta Braves when FSU football alumnus Deion Sanders joined the team and has been used ever since Craig Day began the Chop at now defunct Fulton County stadium in response to UF Gator fans doing the Gator Chomp every time Deion came up to the plate It is also used by the NFL team the Kansas City Chiefs Mexican soccer club Santos Laguna and the Turkish soccer club Galatasaray Sod Cemetery edit nbsp Florida State Football s Sod Cemetery is the final resting place for over 100 Sod Games Florida State s Sod Cemetery is a rich part of the program s history When FSU wins a difficult away game a piece of turf is pulled from the field and buried in the cemetery Florida State sod games represent the most difficult battles on the football field The Sod Cemetery stands as a tribute to those triumphs There are 111 pieces of sod in the cemetery In 1962 as the Seminoles completed their Thursday practice in preparation to face Georgia at Sanford Stadium Dean Coyle Moore a long time professor and member of FSU s athletic board issued a challenge Bring back some sod from between the hedges at Georgia On Saturday October 20 the Seminoles scored an 18 0 victory over the favored Bulldogs Team captain Gene McDowell pulled a small piece of grass from the field which was presented to Moore at the next football practice Moore and FSU coach Bill Peterson had the sod buried on the practice field as a symbol of victory A monument was placed to commemorate the triumph and the tradition of the sod game was born Before leaving for all road games in which Florida State is the underdog all road games at the University of Florida and all ACC championship and bowl games Seminole captains gather their teammates to explain the significance of the tradition Victorious captains return with a piece of the opponent s turf to be buried in the Sod Cemetery inside the gates of the practice field 108 In recent years as the Florida State program has been successful games of significance regardless of whether or not the Seminoles are the underdog can be designated a sod game Famous former players edit nbsp Ron Simmons was a defensive tackle for the Seminoles before going on to have a career in the WWE Lee Corso Retired college football head coach College GameDay analyst 109 Burt Reynolds Actor 110 following Reynold s death in 2018 the song East Bound and Down from the film Smokey and the Bandit in which he starred is played at the start of the fourth quarter at home games as a tribute Ron Simmons former professional wrestler 111 Mack Brown Head coach of the North Carolina Tar Heels and former coach of the Texas Longhorns 112 T K Wetherell Former President of Florida State University from 2003 to 2009 113 Deion Sanders Hall of Fame NFL player head college football coach football analyst and celebrity personality is the only player to play in both the World Series and Super Bowl Robert Urich Actor and television producerSeminoles in the NFL edit See also List of Florida State Seminoles in the NFL Draft nbsp Former Florida State running back Warrick Dunn is one of three Seminoles to have received the NFL s Walter Payton Man of the Year Award Florida State has sent 294 players to the National Football League since 1951 114 including 46 first round draft picks Florida State has had a player drafted in each draft since 1984 115 Jameis Winston holds the record as the highest Seminole taken in the NFL Draft as he was selected with the first overall pick by Tampa Bay in the 2015 draft Eleven players a school record were taken in the 2013 NFL Draft a record tied in 2015 116 Seventy four former players have gone on to play in the Super Bowl 117 with two Fred Biletnikoff and Dexter Jackson being named the Super Bowl MVP Three former Seminoles Derrick Brooks Warrick Dunn and Anquan Boldin have won the Walter Payton Award Future opponents editConference edit Permanent Conference OpponentsClemsonMiami 118 Non conference edit 119 By decree of the Florida Board of Regents Florida State and Florida must play each other every year 120 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030Memphis Alabama at Alabama Georgia at Georgia Notre Dame at Notre Dameat Notre Dame Kent State Notre DameCharleston Southern Texas A amp M CommerceFlorida at Florida Florida at Florida Florida at Florida FloridaSee also editFlorida State Seminoles List of Florida State University professional athletesNotes edit a The school played three seasons as Florida State College from 1902 to 1904 and resumed playing as Florida State University in 1947 121 References edit Florida State University Athletics Brand Guide PDF Retrieved June 30 2022 Communications University Relationship with the Seminole Tribe of Florida Frequently Asked Questions Relationship with the Seminole Tribe of Florida Messages University Communications N p n d Web November 24 2016 Best college football teams of all time ESPN Retrieved August 4 2018 Clark James September 23 2014 A Concise History of Florida Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 62585 153 6 Kabat p 23 24 Kabat Ric July 1991 Before the Seminoles Football at Florida State College 1902 1904 The Florida Historical Quarterly 70 1 20 37 JSTOR 30148092 Kabat pp 20 24 Kabat p 34 Kabat p 36 a b May 15 1947 Florida State College for Women becomes FSU Retrieved January 8 2018 a b Kabat p 36 37 Florida State University Seminoles Com website for FSU Athletics FSU Hall of Fame Retrieved December 21 2010 Fla State Now 1st in Dunkel Index The Milwaukee Sentinel October 16 1964 Seminole Coach Lands Top Spot The Pittsburgh Press October 15 1964 College Football Data Warehouse Florida State Bowl History Archived from the original on November 13 2013 Retrieved March 7 2014 Retrieved March 7 2013 Florida Sports Hall of Fame Bill Peterson End Zone The Tragic Story of Calvin Patterson FSU s First Black Football Player Sun Sentinel January 1 1995 Retrieved December 21 2010 Scholarship honors FSU s first black football player Goliath Business News February 1 2004 Retrieved September 7 2010 Wednesday marks 46th anniversary of Bowden s hiring at FSU Timeline Remembering Bowden s influence the Osceola August 8 2021 The true story of Sebastian the Ibis a fire extinguisher and a near arrest October 30 2019 Zinser Lynn March 7 2009 N C A A Penalizes Florida State for Academic Fraud The New York Times Retrieved May 2 2010 Florida State officially vacating 12 wins from Bowden tenure usatoday com Taggart you re it Florida State hires Oregon s Willie Taggart as new head coach Tallahassee Democrat Florida State Loses to Florida Snaps 36 Year Bowl Streak Sports Illustrated How we got here What brought about Willie Taggart s downfall at Florida State Florida State fires Taggart after less than 2 years ESPN November 3 2019 Mike Norvell Named Head Football Coach Florida State University December 8 2019 BR CFB September 12 2021 Jacksonville State Beats Florida State on a Go Ahead TD FSU S first loss to a non FBS team since William amp Mary Tweet via Twitter Disgusted infuriated 13 0 FSU snubbed by CFP ESPN com December 3 2023 Retrieved December 4 2023 Statement from Michael Alford Vice President and Athletics Director Florida State University Florida State University Retrieved December 4 2023 Florida State joins ACC UPI September 14 1990 ACC to drop divisions for format with permanent rivalries in 2023 ESPN June 28 2022 Christopher J Walsh 2007 Who s No 1 100 Plus Years of Controversial National Champions in College Football Taylor Trade Pub pp 38 40 ISBN 978 1 58979 337 8 2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records PDF The National Collegiate Athletic Association Retrieved November 13 2018 a b Florida State Seminoles football National Champions 1993 1999 2013 Stadium Sign Doak Campbell Stadium Florida State University 2017 Retrieved March 13 2022 Football Bowl Subdivision Records PDF NCAA Retrieved August 31 2022 1995 NCAA Football Records Book National Collegiate Athletic Association 1995 pp 54 58 Retrieved July 15 2023 Florida State Seminoles Coaches College Football at Sports Reference com 2017 Florida State Media Guide PDF seminoles com Florida State Athletics p 152 Retrieved January 21 2018 2017 Florida State Media Guide PDF seminoles com Florida State Athletics pp 235 241 Retrieved January 21 2018 Who Was Doak Campbell Explaining FSU s Controversial Stadium Namesake October 12 2021 Top 25 college football stadiums CBSsports com July 4 2003 Retrieved November 10 2012 Coon John Top 25 Greatest College Football Rivalries Yahoo Sports Retrieved October 29 2013 Winsipedia Florida State Seminoles vs Florida Gators football series history Winsipedia Winsipedia Florida State Seminoles vs Miami FL Hurricanes football series history Winsipedia FSU Miami Game Grabs ESPN s Largest Audience TheACC com Associated Press September 6 2006 Archived from the original on September 26 2007 Retrieved November 29 2006 Scout com College and High School Football Basketball Recruiting NFL and MLB Front Page Miami scout com August 23 2002 Archived from the original on October 20 2013 Retrieved August 26 2014 Immortalizing football rivalries Gainesville Sun January 13 2008 Retrieved August 4 2018 Winsipedia Florida State Seminoles vs Clemson Tigers football series history Winsipedia From The Press Box For The Virginia Game Florida State University March 23 2001 Retrieved November 4 2019 FSU VIRGINIA RIVALRY GETS TROPHY South Florida Sentinel Retrieved November 4 2019 Beck amp Wilkinson Stan amp Jack 2013 College Sports Traditions Picking Up Butch Silent Night and Hundreds of Others The Scarecrow Prss p 278 ISBN 978 0810891203 Winsipedia Florida State Seminoles vs Virginia Cavaliers football series history Winsipedia From Centennial Field to Doak Campbell Stadium Retrieved August 5 2018 64 Days Until FSU Football 1964 FSU Team Changes Program Reputation The Daily Nole July 1 2018 Retrieved August 5 2018 FSU s Bobby Bowden fooled everyone with Puntrooskie September 18 2013 Retrieved August 5 2018 Florida State s Puntrooskie play still resonates October 17 2013 Retrieved August 5 2018 Moran Malcolm September 29 1991 College Football Florida State Is Much Too Mighty for Michigan The New York Times Retrieved August 5 2018 Kelly Ryan Flashback Friday Ward to Dunn helps cement FSU s first ever title Retrieved August 5 2018 First is the sweetest The 1993 National Champs Retrieved August 5 2018 20 years later a November to remember November 2013 Retrieved August 5 2018 FSU Football Choke At Doak Better Comeback Than Patriots At Super Bowl 51 February 7 2017 Retrieved August 5 2018 It s Fifth Quarter In French Quarter Retrieved August 5 2018 1995 Noles 23 UF 17 5th qrtr in French qrtr Retrieved August 5 2018 RealClearSports 1996 Florida vs Florida State dev realclearsports com Retrieved August 5 2018 Fla State sets Carolina on heels 20 3 November 9 1997 Retrieved August 11 2018 1999 National Championship From A To Z September 23 2009 Retrieved August 5 2018 Miami vs Florida State Game Summary September 5 2005 ESPN ESPN com Retrieved August 5 2018 Smits Garry Dustin Hopkins kicks 55 yard FG to lift FSU over Clemson Retrieved August 5 2018 No 3 Clemson handed worst Death Valley defeat by No 5 Florida State QB Winston Fox News October 20 2013 Retrieved August 5 2018 Florida State tops Auburn for BCS Championship on late TD USA Today Retrieved August 5 2018 Deen Safid October 11 2016 The Block at the Rock still sinking in for FSU s DeMarcus Walker Retrieved August 5 2018 Sonnone Brendan November 14 2021 Drives of Trust A stop don t drop it 4th amp 14 Heisman Trophy Voting Yahoo Sports October 27 2009 Retrieved November 22 2013 Jordan Travis Finishes 5th In Heisman Voting Florida State University Athletic Department December 9 2023 Retrieved December 12 2023 Sonnone Brendan December 14 2016 A Look at FSU s 15 Unanimous All Americans floridastate 247sports com Retrieved December 14 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Honored Numbers Jerseys seminoles com July 5 2017 Florida State To Honor Jameis Winston With Jersey Retirement Florida State University Athletics November 16 2023 Deen Safid March 30 2018 FSU Will Retire Peter Warrick s No 9 Jersey Name Odell Haggins to Hall of Fame Orlando Sentinel dead link a b c d e f g Ron Simmons To Be Inducted Into College Football Hall of Fame Florida State Seminoles May 1 2008 Buckley Named To College Football Hall Of Fame Florida State Seminoles January 7 2019 Fornelli Tom January 7 2019 2019 College Football Hall of Fame Vince Young Rocket Ismail Headline Star Studded Class CBS Sports McMurphy Brett January 7 2022 Sources Salaam Williams Pinkel Among 2022 College Football HOF Inductees Action Network Retrieved January 7 2022 Warrick Dunn Elected To College Football Hall Of Fame Seminoles com January 8 2024 Hall of Famers by College Hall of Famers Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site www profootballhof com Retrieved January 7 2022 Danny McManus cfhof ca College Football Data Warehouse 1 Archived September 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 2 Archived September 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 3 Archived September 6 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 4 Archived September 12 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 5 Archived September 6 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 6 Archived September 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 7 Archived September 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 8 Archived September 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 9 Archived September 12 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 10 Archived September 8 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 11 Archived September 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 12 Archived September 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 13 Archived September 8 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 College Football Data Warehouse 14 Archived September 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 3 2013 FSU Football Record www nolefan org Florida State in the Polls College Football Data Warehouse Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved September 6 2011 New logo and uniforms officially unveiled in leadup to spring game Florida State debuts Ignition Tradition FSUNews Archived from the original on October 20 2014 Retrieved April 13 2014 Wieberg Steve August 23 2005 NCAA allowing Florida State to use its Seminole mascot USAToday Retrieved December 6 2013 The Seminole War Chant PDF Traditions Archived from the original on April 15 2012 Sod Cemetery An FSU Tradition Humans of University October 10 2019 Retrieved October 10 2019 Lee Corso sports reference com Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved April 19 2014 Burt Reynolds Yahoo Retrieved April 19 2014 Ron Simmons seminoles com Archived from the original on November 12 2013 Retrieved April 19 2014 Mack Brown sports reference com Archived from the original on February 3 2014 Retrieved April 19 2014 T K Wetherell seminoles com Archived from the original on April 20 2014 Retrieved April 19 2014 Florida State All Time NFL Draft Picks Florida State University Athletics July 6 2017 Ehsan Kassim April 29 2023 Florida State has first player drafted in 2023 Jammie Robinson to Carolina Panthers Tallahassee Democrat Retrieved October 2 2023 Democrat Staff Report April 27 2013 FSU breaks school record with 11 NFL Draft picks Tallahassee Democrat Retrieved April 27 2013 Chris Nee February 1 2019 FSU s history in the NFL s biggest game CBS Sports ACC Announces Future Conference Football Schedule Model Atlantic Coast Conference October 30 2023 Florida State Seminoles Future Football Schedules FBSchedules com Retrieved September 19 2019 UF FSU Football Ordered Tallahassee Democrat November 18 1955 p 1 Retrieved November 14 2015 History FSU Retrieved January 8 2018 Florida State Seminoles Football Media Guide Florida State University Athletics Department Tallahassee Florida Kabat Ric A July 1991 Before the Seminoles Football at Florida State College 1902 1904 Florida Historical Quarterly Florida Historical Society 70 1 20 37 JSTOR 30148092 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Florida State Seminoles football Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Florida State Seminoles football amp oldid 1204728773, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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