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The College Football Researchers Association (CFRA) was founded in 1982 by Anthony Cusher of
Reeder, North Dakota Reeder is a city in Adams County, North Dakota, United States. The population was 125 at the 2020 census. Reeder was founded in 1907 along the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad and named after E. O. Reeder, the railroad's assis ...
, and Robert Kirlin of
Spokane, Washington Spokane ( ) is the largest city and county seat of Spokane County, Washington, United States. It is in eastern Washington, along the Spokane River, adjacent to the Selkirk Mountains, and west of the Rocky Mountain foothills, south of the Canada ...
. The CFRA took a vote of its members from 1982 to 1992 to select an annual
college football College football (french: Football universitaire) refers to gridiron football played by teams of student athletes. It was through college football play that American football rules first gained popularity in the United States. Unlike most ...
national champion. Members were asked to rank the top 10 teams, and a point system was used to determine a national champion based on the members' votes. The CFRA also conducted a retroactive poll to determine historical national champions for each year from 1919 to 1981. The CFRA is listed by the
National Collegiate Athletic Association The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is a nonprofit organization that regulates student athletics among about 1,100 schools in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico. It also organizes the athletic programs of colleges an ...
(NCAA) as one of 40 former and current selectors of college football national champions, and the CFRA selections are included in the NCAA's Football Bowl Subdivision record book. In the fall of 2009, under the coordination of Brad Matthews of Wilmington, North Carolina, and with the involvement of past members, the College Football Researchers Association was reorganized, and a group of both new and original CFRA voters was assembled to recreate this poll. The CFRA then retroactively crowned champions from 1993 to 2008, thus covering the period of time when the CFRA was dormant and did not recognize a national champion. According to NCAA records, the College Football Researchers Association has elected more national champions than any other multi-voter poll in the country. In its current form, the College Football Researchers Association releases four rankings each year, rather than on a weekly basis like more traditional polls: a preseason ranking, a mid-season ranking, an end of regular season ranking, and a final postseason ranking. The CFRA also recognizes one player annually as the CFRA Player of the Year. This player is recognized based on votes submitted by each member of the CFRA. The rankings and awards are published on cfrapoll.com


CFRA national champions

The following list identifies the college football national champions as selected by the College Football Researchers Association. 1869- Princeton 1870- Princeton 1871- no college games 1872- Princeton 1873- Princeton 1874- Yale 1875- Princeton 1876- Yale 1877- Yale 1878- Princeton 1879- Princeton 1880- Yale 1881- Yale 1882- Yale 1883- Yale 1884- Yale 1885- Princeton 1886- Yale 1887- Yale 1888- Yale 1889- Princeton 1890- Harvard 1891- Yale 1892- Yale 1893- Princeton 1894- Yale 1895- Penn 1896- Princeton 1897- Penn 1898- Harvard 1899- Princeton 1900- Yale 1901- Harvard 1902- Michigan 1903- Princeton 1904- Penn 1905- Chicago 1906- Princeton 1907- Yale 1908- Penn 1909- Yale 1910- Harvard 1911- Princeton 1912- Harvard 1913- Harvard 1914- Army 1915- Cornell 1916- Pittsburgh 1917- Georgia Tech 1918- Pittsburgh 1919- Harvard/Illinois (tie) 1920- California 1921- California 1922- Princeton 1923- Illinois 1924- Notre Dame 1925- Alabama 1926- Alabama 1927- Yale 1928- Georgia Tech 1929- Notre Dame 1930- Alabama 1931- Southern California 1932- Southern California 1933- Michigan 1934- Minnesota 1935- Minnesota 1936- Pittsburgh 1937- Pittsburgh 1938- Tennessee 1939- Texas A & M 1940- Minnesota 1941- Minnesota 1942- Ohio State 1943- Notre Dame 1944- Army 1945- Army 1946- Army 1947- Michigan 1948- Michigan 1949- Oklahoma 1950- Tennessee 1951- Maryland 1952- Michigan State 1953- Oklahoma 1954- Ohio State 1955- Oklahoma 1956- Iowa 1957- Auburn 1958- LSU 1959- Syracuse 1960- Ole Miss 1961- Alabama 1962- Southern California 1963- Texas 1964- Arkansas 1965- Alabama 1966- Michigan State 1967- Southern California 1968- Ohio State 1969- Texas 1970- Nebraska 1971- Nebraska 1972- Southern California 1973- Oklahoma 1974- Oklahoma 1975- Oklahoma 1976- Southern California 1977- Notre Dame/Alabama (tie) 1978- Alabama 1979- Southern California 1980- Pittsburgh 1981- Clemson 1982- Penn State 1983- Auburn 1984- Brigham Young 1985- Oklahoma 1986- Oklahoma 1987- Miami (FL) 1988- Notre Dame 1989- Miami (FL) 1990- Colorado 1991- Miami (FL) 1992- Alabama 1993- Florida State 1994- Nebraska 1995- Nebraska 1996- Florida 1997- Michigan 1998- Tennessee 1999- Florida State 2000- Oklahoma 2001- Miami (FL) 2002- Ohio State 2003- LSU 2004- Southern California 2005- Texas 2006- Florida 2007- LSU 2008- Florida 2009- Alabama 2010- Auburn 2011- Alabama 2012- Alabama 2013- Florida State 2014- Ohio State 2015- Alabama 2016- Clemson 2017- Alabama 2018- Clemson 2019- LSU


See also

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NCAA Division I FBS national football championship A national championship in the highest level of college football in the United States, currently the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), is a designation awarded annually by various organizations to their selection of the best coll ...


References

{{reflist College football championships