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1946 college football rankings

One human poll comprised the 1946 college football rankings. Unlike most sports, college football's governing body, the NCAA, does not bestow a national championship, instead that title is bestowed by one or more different polling agencies. There are two main weekly polls that begin in the preseason—the AP Poll and the Coaches' Poll. The Coaches' Poll began operation in 1950; in addition, the AP Poll did not begin conducting preseason polls until that same year.

Legend

AP Poll

The final AP Poll was released on December 2, at the end of the 1946 regular season, weeks before the major bowls. The AP would not release a post-bowl season final poll regularly until 1968.

Litkenhous Ratings

The final Litkenhous Ratings released in December 1946 provided numerical rankings to more than 500 college and military football programs. The top 100 ranked teams were:

1. Notre Dame (8–0–1)<br> 2. Army (9–0–1)<br> 3. Michigan (6–2–1)<br> 4. Georgia (11–0)<br> 5. Rice (9–2)<br> 6. Illinois (8–2)<br> 7. Texas (8–2)<br> 8. Penn (6–2)<br> 9. LSU (9–1–1)<br> 10. Mississippi State (8–2)<br> 11. Georgia Tech (9–2) <br> 12. Tennessee (9–2)<br> 13. North Carolina (8–2–1)<br> 14. Kentucky (7–3)<br> 15. Oklahoma (8–3)<br> 16. UCLA (10–1)<br> 17. Northwestern (4–4–1)<br> 18. Iowa (5–4)<br> 19. Indiana (6–3)<br> 20. Duke (4–5)<br> 21. Yale (7–1–1)<br> 22. Alabama (7–4)<br> 23. Tulsa (9–1)<br> 24. Penn State (6–2)<br> 25. Ohio State (4–3–2)<br> 26. Vanderbilt (5–4)<br> 27. Minnesota (5–4)<br> 28. Arkansas (6–3–2)<br> 29. Wisconsin (4–5)<br> 30. William & Mary (8–2)<br> 31. Oklahoma City (10–1)<br> 32. Navy (1–8)<br> 33. Tulane (3–7)<br> 34. Wake Forest (6–3)<br> 35. NC State (8–3)<br> 36. Columbia (6–3)<br> 37. USC (6–4)<br> 38. Cornell (5–3–1)<br> 39. Miami (FL) (8–2)<br> 40. Texas A&M (4–6)<br> 41. SMU (4–5–1)<br> 42. Cincinnati (9–2)<br> 43. Pittsburgh (3–5–1)<br> 44. Boston College (6–3)<br> 45. Ole Miss (2–7)<br> 46. Harvard (7–2)<br> 47. Villanova (6–4)<br> 48. Purdue (2–6–1)<br> 49. Rutgers (7–2)<br> 50. Miami (OH) (7–3)<br> 51. Michigan State (5–3–1)<br> 52. TCU (2–7–1)<br> 53. Colgate (4–4)<br> 54. Stanford (6–3–1)<br> 55. Holy Cross<br> 56. Hardin-Simmons (11–0)<br> 57. Princeton (3–5)<br> 58. Texas Tech<br> 59. Nevada (7–2)<br> 60. Oklahoma A&M (3–7–1)<br> 61. Detroit (6–4)<br> 62. Oregon State (7–1–1)<br> 63. Syracuse (4–5)<br> 64. Mississippi Southern (7–3)<br> 65. Chattanooga (5–5)<br> 66. Temple (2–4–2)<br> 67. Nebraska<br> 68. Marquette (4–5)<br> 69. Auburn (4–6)<br> 70. Washington (5–4)<br> 71. West Virginia (5–5)<br> 72. Saint Mary's (6–3)<br> 73. Ohio (6–3)<br> 74. Virginia (4–4–1)<br> 75. Baylor (1–8)<br> 76. Kansas (7–2–1)<br> 77. Missouri (5–4–1)<br> 78. Louisiana Tech (7–3)<br> 79. California (2–7)<br> 80. Clemson (4–5)<br> 81. Dartmouth<br> 82. Delaware (10–0)<br> 83. Virginia Tech (3–4–3)<br> 84. Florida (0–9)<br> 85. Iowa State Teachers (4–1–2)<br> 86. San Francisco (3–6)<br> 87. Southwestern Louisiana (6–4)<br> 88. St. Bonaventure (6–2)<br> 89. Washington State (1–6–1)<br> 90. Central Michigan (6–2)<br> 91. Utah State (7–2–1)<br> 92. Northwestern Louisiana<br> 93. Utah (8–3)<br> 94. Arizona (4–4–2)<br> 95. Georgetown (5–3)<br> 96. Dayton (6–3)<br> 97. Western Michigan (5–2–1)<br> 98. Bowling Green (5–3)<br> 99. Oregon (4–4–1)<br> 100. Southwestern (TX) (5–4–1)<br> 101. Brown (3–5–1)<br> 102. Muhlenberg (9–1)<br> 103. George Washington (4–3)<br> 104. Missouri Valley (10–0)<br> 105. Richmond (6–2–2)<br> 106. Baldwin-Wallace (4–2–2)<br> 107. VMI (4–5–1)<br> 108. Maryland (3–6)<br> 109. San Jose State (9–1–1)<br> 110. South Carolina (2–4–3)<br> 111. Washington & Lee (2–6)<br> 112. Denver (5–5–1)<br> 113. Wichita (5–5)<br> 114. Boston University (5–2–1)<br> 115. Hawaii (8–2)<br> 116. Saint Louis (4–6)<br> 117. Bucknell (3–6)<br> 118. Minot<br> 119. Otterbein (7–1)<br> 120. Santa Clara (2–5–1)<br> 121. Morehead (KY)<br> 122. Canisius (4–3–1)<br> 123. New Hampshire (6–1–1)<br> 124. California (PA) (9–0)<br> 125. Southwestern Louisiana (6–4)<br> 126. Bradley (7–2)<br> 127. Connecticut (4–3–1)<br> 128. Toledo (6–2–2)<br> 129. Western Reserve (4–3–2)<br> 130. Ohio Wesleyan<br> 131. Youngstown (7–1)<br> 132. Abilene Christian (8–1–1)<br> 133. Butler (7–1)<br> 134. Catawba (10–2)<br> 135. St. Norbert (8–0)<br> 136. Murray (KY)<br> 137. Wesleyan (7–0)<br> 138. Clarkson<br> 139. Eastern Kentucky<br> 140. Colorado (5–4–1)<br> 141. Kent State (6–2)<br> 142. Davidson (4–5)<br> 143. Niagara (6–2)<br> 144. Furman (2–8)<br> 145. Lawrence (6–1–1)<br> 146. Cape Girardeau<br> 147. Wayne (4–5)<br> 148. Santa Monica<br> 149. Compton<br> 150. Ottawa (7–1–1)<br>

Pittsburgh Courier

The Pittsburgh Courier, a leading African American newspaper, ranked the top 1946 teams from historically black colleges and universities using the Dickinson System in an era when college football was largely segregated. The rankings were published on December 7.

See also

References