List of Heisman Trophy winners - Biblioteka.sk

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List of Heisman Trophy winners
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Heisman Trophy
Awarded forThe outstanding college football player whose performance best exhibits the pursuit of excellence with integrity. Winners epitomize great ability combined with diligence, perseverance, and hard work.
Presented by
History
First award1935 to Jay Berwanger
Most recentJayden Daniels
Websitehttp://www.heisman.com/

The Heisman Trophy, one of the highest individual awards in American college football, has been awarded annually since its creation in 1935. The trophy is given to the most outstanding college football player in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), and is awarded by the Heisman Trust, successors of the awards from the Downtown Athletic Club at an annual ceremony.

History

In 1935, the award, then known as the DAC Trophy, was created by New York City's Downtown Athletic Club to recognize the best college football player "east of the Mississippi River".[1] In that inaugural year, the award went to Jay Berwanger from the University of Chicago. Berwanger was later drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League but declined to sign with them. He never played professional football for any team, instead choosing to pursue a career in business.[2] In 1936, the club's athletic director, football pioneer John Heisman, died and the trophy was renamed in his honor. Larry Kelley, the second winner of the award, was the first to win it as the "Heisman Trophy".[3] In addition to the name change, the award also became a nationwide achievement. With the new name, players west of the Mississippi became eligible; the first player from the western United States was selected in 1938, TCU quarterback Davey O'Brien.[1]

On June 10, 2010, following several years of investigation, the NCAA announced that USC running back Reggie Bush, the 2005 Heisman trophy winner, received gifts from agents while still in college. The university received major sanctions,[4][5] and there were reports that the Heisman Trophy Trust would strip his award.[6] In September of that year, Bush voluntarily forfeited his title as the 2005 winner. The Heisman Trust decided to leave the award vacated with no new winner to be announced for the season.[7] Eventually, on April 24, 2024, the Heisman Trust announced the reinstatement of Bush's trophy due to 2021 rule changes regarding player compensation.[8]

A school has had a Heisman winner in back-to-back years six times (Yale 1936–37, Army 1945–46, Ohio State 1974–75, USC 2004–05, Oklahoma 2017–18 and Alabama 2020–21). Only one player, Ohio State's Archie Griffin, has won the award twice.[9] Oklahoma is the only school to have two players win the award in back-to-back years playing the same position (quarterbacks Baker Mayfield followed by Kyler Murray).

Between 1936 and 2001, the award was given at an annual gala ceremony at the Downtown Athletic Club in New York City. The Downtown Athletic Club's facilities were damaged during the September 11, 2001 attacks. Due to financial difficulties stemming from the damage, the DAC declared bankruptcy in 2002, turning over its building to creditors. Following the club's bankruptcy and the loss of the original Downtown Athletic Club building,[10] the Yale Club of New York City assumed presenting honors in 2002 and 2003.[11][12] The ceremony was moved to the New York Marriott Marquis in Times Square for the 2002, 2003, and 2004 presentations. Between 2005 and 2019, the event was held at PlayStation Theater in Times Square.[13] The move to the PlayStation Theater allowed the Downtown Athletic Club (and ultimately, the award's successor, The Heisman Trust) to resume full control of the event (the most prominent example of which was the return of the official portraits of past winners), despite the loss of the original presentation hall.[14] Shortly after the 2019 ceremony was held, the PlayStation Theater was permanently closed; as a result, the Heisman Trust began searching for a new location to conduct the trophy presentation. The 2020 ceremony would ultimately be held at the studios of ESPN in Bristol, Connecticut due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with the ceremony being held on January 5, 2021.[15]

In terms of balloting, the fifty states of the U.S. are split into six regions (Far West, Mid Atlantic, Mid West, North East, South, South West), and six regional representatives are selected to appoint voters in their states.[16] Each region has 145 media votes, for a total of 870 votes. In addition, all previous Heisman winners may vote, and one final vote is counted through public balloting. The Heisman ballots contain a 3–2–1 point system, in which each ballot ranks the voter's top three players and awards them three points for a first-place vote, two points for a second-place vote, and one point for a third-place vote. The points are tabulated, and the player with the highest total of points across all ballots wins the Heisman Trophy.[17]

Key

* First overall draft pick in the NFL Draft
Inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame
First overall draft pick and inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame

List of Heisman Trophy winners

Heisman Winners
Year Image Name School Position Points % of points possible[18] Class Draft position[19][note 1]
1935 Jay Berwanger* Chicago HB 84 43.08% Senior 1st
1936 Larry Kelley Yale End 219 36.41% Senior 87th
1937 Clint Frank Yale (2) HB 524 32.89% Senior 106th
1938 Davey O'Brien Davey O'Brien TCU QB 519 29.62% Senior 4th
1939 A picture of Nile Kinnick posing. Nile Kinnick Iowa HB/QB 651 31.00% Senior 14th
1940 Tom Harmon Tom Harmon* Michigan HB 1,303 54.29% Senior 1st
1941 Bruce Smith Minnesota HB 554 49.99% Senior 119th
1942 Frank Sinkwich Frank Sinkwich* Georgia HB 1,059 56.15% Senior 1st
1943 Angelo Bertelli* Notre Dame QB 648 64.80% Senior 1st
1944 Les Horvath Ohio State HB/QB 412 18.31% Senior 45th (1943)
1945 Doc Blanchard Doc Blanchard Army FB 860 33.81% Junior 3rd
1946 A picture of Glenn Davis posing. Glenn Davis Army (2) HB 792 79.20% Senior 2nd
1947 A picture of John Lujack Johnny Lujack Notre Dame (2) QB 742 74.20% Senior 4th (1946)
1948 A picture of Doak Walker. Doak Walker SMU HB 778 28.56% Junior 3rd
1949 Leon Hart* Notre Dame (3) End 995 36.53% Senior 1st
1950 Vic Janowicz Ohio State (2) HB/P 633 22.03% Junior 79th
1951
Dick Kazmaier Princeton HB 1,777 60.01% Senior 176th
1952 Billy Vessels Oklahoma HB 525 14.32% Senior 2nd
1953 A picture of Johnny Lattner posing. Johnny Lattner Notre Dame (4) HB 1,850 49.14% Senior 7th
1954 Alan Ameche Alan Ameche Wisconsin FB 1,068 27.01% Senior 3rd
1955 A picture of Howard Cassady posing. Howard Cassady Ohio State (3) HB 2,219 55.87% Senior 3rd
1956 Top 1961 playing card of Paul Hornung. Paul Hornung Notre Dame (5) QB 1,066 26.96% Senior 1st
1957 A picture of John David Crow posing. John David Crow Texas A&M HB 1,183 31.12% Senior 2nd
1958 A picture of Pete Dawkins posing. Pete Dawkins Army (3) HB 1,394 39.01% Senior Undrafted[note 2]
1959 Billy Cannon* LSU HB 1,929 53.72% Senior 1st
1960 Joe Bellino Joe Bellino Navy HB 1,793 52.89% Senior 146th (AFL)
1961 Davis on Topps trading card Ernie Davis* Syracuse HB/LB/FB 824 25.18% Senior 1st
1962 Terry Baker* Oregon State QB 707 21.25% Senior 1st
1963 Roger Staubach Navy (2) QB 1,860 55.21% Junior 129th
1964
John Huarte Notre Dame (6) QB 1,026 30.98% Senior 12th (AFL)
1965 A picture of Mike Garrett speaking. Mike Garrett USC HB 926 26.61% Senior 18th
1966 Steve Spurrier Steve Spurrier Florida QB 1,679 48.25% Senior 3rd
1967
Gary Beban UCLA QB 1,968 63.50% Senior 30th
1968 A picture of O.J. Simpson posing. O. J. Simpson USC (2) HB 2,853 80.64% Senior 1st
1969
Steve Owens Oklahoma (2) FB 1,488 40.92% Senior 19th
1970 A picture of Jim Plunkett on a phone. Jim Plunkett* Stanford QB 2,229 58.78% Senior 1st
1971
Pat Sullivan Auburn QB 1,597 42.25% Senior 40th
1972
Johnny Rodgers Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=List_of_Heisman_Trophy_winners
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