2016 Conference USA football season

2016 Conference USA football season
League NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision
Sport Football
Duration September 1, 2016
through January 2017
Number of teams 13
East champions WKU
  East runners-up Old Dominion
West champions Louisiana Tech
  West runners-up UTSA
CUSA Championship Game
2016 Conference USA football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
East Division
WKU xy$   7 1         10 3  
Old Dominion x   7 1         9 3  
Middle Tennessee   5 3         8 4  
FIU   4 4         4 8  
Charlotte   3 5         4 8  
Marshall   2 6         3 9  
Florida Atlantic   2 6         3 9  
West Division
Louisiana Tech xy   6 2         8 5  
UTSA   5 3         6 6  
Southern Miss   4 4         6 6  
North Texas   3 5         5 7  
Rice   2 6         3 9  
UTEP   2 6         4 8  
Championship: Western Kentucky 58, Louisiana Tech 44
  • $ Conference champion
  • x Division champion/co-champions
As of December 4, 2016; Rankings from AP Poll

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

CUSA consists of 14 members: Charlotte, FIU, Florida Atlantic, Louisiana Tech, Marshall, Middle Tennessee, North Texas, Old Dominion, Rice, Southern Miss, UAB, UTEP, UTSA, and Western Kentucky; and is split up into the East and West divisions, with the champion of each division meeting at the home field at the team with the best conference record to compete for the Conference USA Championship on December 3. UAB is continually undergoing reinstating its football program during the 2016 season and will begin play for the 2017 season.[2]

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

Preseason

2016 predictions

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

The twelve annual championship game will be held on December 3, 2016, which is predicted to pit Southern Miss and Middle Tennessee.

West Division

  • 1. Southern Miss
  • 2. Louisiana Tech
  • 3. Rice
  • 4. UTEP
  • 5. UTSA
  • 6. North Texas

East Division

  • 1. Middle Tennessee
  • 2. WKU
  • 3. Marshall
  • 4. Florida Atlantic
  • 5. FIU
  • 6. Old Dominion
  • 7. Charlotte

References:[4]

Head Coaches

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

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

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

C-USA vs other Conferences

C-USA vs Power Conference matchups

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

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

Date Visitor Home Site Score
September 1 Charlotte #19 Louisville Papa John's Cardinal StadiumLouisville, KY 14–70
September 1 Indiana FIU FIU StadiumMiami, FL 34–13
September 3 Louisiana Tech Arkansas Donald W. Reynolds Razorback StadiumFayetteville, AR 20–21
September 3 Southern Miss Kentucky Commonwealth StadiumLexington, KY 44–35
September 9 Maryland FIU FIU Stadium • Miami, FL 41–14
September 10 Florida Atlantic #25 Miami Hard Rock Stadium • Miami Gardens, FL 10–38
September 10 Middle Tennessee Vanderbilt Vanderbilt StadiumNashville, TN 24–47
September 10 UTEP #11 Texas Darrell K. Royal–Texas Memorial StadiumAustin, TX 7–41
September 10 WKU #1 Alabama Bryant–Denny StadiumTuscaloosa, AL 10–38
September 16 Baylor Rice Rice StadiumHouston, TX 38–10
September 16 Arizona State UTSA AlamodomeSan Antonio, TX 32–28
September 17 Florida Atlantic Kansas St. Bill Snyder Family Football StadiumManhattan, KS 7–63
September 17 Louisiana Tech Texas Tech Jones AT&T StadiumLubbock, TX 45–59
September 17 North Texas Florida Ben Hill Griffin StadiumGainesville, FL 0–32
September 17 Old Dominion NC State Carter–Finley StadiumRaleigh, NC 22–49
September 24 Vanderbilt WKU Houchens Industries–L. T. Smith StadiumBowling Green, KY 31–30 OT
September 24 Louisville Marshall Joan C. Edwards StadiumHuntington, WV 59–28
October 1 Marshall Pittsburgh Heinz FieldPittsburgh, PA 27–43
October 15 Southern Miss LSU Tiger StadiumBaton Rouge, LA 10–45
October 22 Middle Tennessee Missouri Faurot FieldColumbia, MO 51–45
November 19 UTSA Texas A&M Kyle FieldCollege Station, TX 10-23
November 26 Rice Stanford Stanford StadiumStanford, CA 17-41

2016 records against non-conference opponents

Regular Season

Power 5 Conferences Record
ACC 0–5
Big Ten 0–2
Big 12 0–4
Pac-12 0–2
SEC 2–7
Power 5 Total 2–20
Other FBS Conferences Record
American 0–3
Independents 3–3
MAC 2–3
Mountain West 0–1
Sun Belt 1–2
Other FBS Total 6–12
FCS Opponents Record
Football Championship Subdivision 11–0
Total Non-Conference Record 19–32

Post Season

Power 5 Conferences Record
ACC 0–0
Big Ten 0–0
Big 12 0–0
Pac-12 0–0
SEC 0–0
Power 5 Total 0–0
Other FBS Conferences Record
American 0–0
Independents 0–0
MAC 0–0
Mountain West 0–0
Sun Belt 0–0
Other FBS Total 0–0
Total Bowl Record 0–0

Postseason

Bowl games

Per conference regulations, all teams with seven or more wins shall be placed into conference bowls prior to any other bowl eligible teams without a winning record (i.e. 6-6 record). The rankings are from final CFP Poll and all game times are in Eastern. Old Dominion was the first team to accept a bowl bid on November 28.[10]

Date Time Bowl Game Site TV CUSA Team Opponent Result
December 27, 2016 12:00 PM Heart of Dallas Bowl Cotton BowlDallas, TX ESPN
December 24, 2016 8:00 PM Hawaii Bowl Aloha StadiumHonolulu, Hawaii ESPN
December 23, 2016 1:00 PM Bahamas Bowl Thomas Robinson StadiumNassau, Bahamas ESPN Old Dominion Eastern Michigan
December 20, 2016 7:00 PM Boca Raton Bowl FAU StadiumBoca Raton, FL ESPN
December 17, 2016 9:00 PM New Orleans Bowl Mercedes-Benz SuperdomeNew Orleans, LA ESPN
December 17, 2016 2:00 PM New Mexico Bowl University StadiumAlbuquerque, NM ESPN
December 26, 2016 6:00 PM Independence Bowl* Independence StadiumShreveport, LA ESPN2

Postseason Awards

All C-USA

Home game attendance

Team Stadium Capacity Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4 Game 5 Game 6 Game 7 Total Average % of Capacity
Charlotte Jerry Richardson Stadium 15,314 15,807 15,080 12,589 13,939 14,306 13,433 85,154 14,192 92.67%
FIU FIU Stadium 20,000 16,089 17,084 18,524† 16,164 17,061 14,413 15,054 114,389 16,341 81.70%
Florida Atlantic FAU Stadium 29,419 14,887† 13,846 7,401 9,338 9,122 5,843 60,437 10,072 34.24%
Louisiana Tech Joe Aillet Stadium 27,717 16,910 22,101 17,978 22,058 23,012† 102,059 20,411 73.64%
Marshall Joan C. Edwards Stadium 38,227 26,488 24,258 40,592 22,839 20,904 20,841 17,397 172,319 24,759 64.77%
Middle Tennessee Johnny "Red" Floyd Stadium 30,788 19,967 20,105 22,411† 13,505 10,227 86,215 17,243 56.00%
North Texas Apogee Stadium 30,850 24,718† 15,609 19,823 18,216 21,643 19,120 119,129 19,854 64.36%
Old Dominion Foreman Field 20,118 20,118 20,118 20,118 20,118 20,118 20,118 120,708 20,118 100.00%
Rice Rice Stadium 47,000 27,047† 20,792 20,134 21,538 19,892 19,148 121,151 20,258 43.10%
Southern Miss M. M. Roberts Stadium 36,000 29,509 27,905 28,325 31,275† 28,347 26,164 171,525 28,587 79.41%
UTEP Sun Bowl Stadium 51,500 30,119 37,893† 21,419 17,751 19,254 15,977 18,591 161,004 23,000 44.66%
UTSA Alamodome 65,000 22,380 29,035† 19,818 23,633 19,553 23,807 138,226 23,037 35.44%
WKU Houchens Industries–L. T. Smith Stadium 22,113 19,286 23,674 17,331 18,676 15,516 16,239 110,722 18,453 83.45%

Bold – Exceed capacity
†Season High

References

  1. "C-USA Announces 2016 Football Schedule". Conferenceusa.com. 2016-02-04. Retrieved 2016-05-21.
  2. "UAB to reinstate football for 2017 season". ESPN.com. July 21, 2015. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  3. "Doughty goes out on top: WKU rallies from early deficit to beat USF 45-35 in Miami Beach Bowl". U.S. News & World Report. Miami, Florida. Associated Press. December 21, 2015. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  4. "C-USA ANNOUNCES 2016 PRESEASON MEDIA FOOTBALL POLL". Conference USA. July 21, 2016. Retrieved July 27, 2016.
  5. Evans, Thayer (October 10, 2015). "North Texas fires head coach Dan McCarney after 0–5 start". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  6. McMurphy, Brett (December 5, 2015). "North Texas tabs UNC's Seth Littrell as new coach". ESPN.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  7. "Southern Miss coach Todd Monken leaves to become Buccaneers OC". ESPN.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. January 24, 2016. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  8. "Southern Miss hires Alcorn State's Jay Hopson as new head coach" Sun Herald. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
  9. Ching, David (January 14, 2016). "UTSA taps LSU assistant coach Frank Wilson as head coach". ESPN.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  10. Bowl invitation
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