Ohio State and Pittsburgh each placed three players on The Associated Press All-Time All-America team announced Thursday as part of the news organization’s celebration of the 100th anniversary of the storied honor for the top players in college football.
Since 1925, nearly 2,000 men have been named AP first-team All-Americans, one of the most prestigious honors in the sport.
The Big Ten led all conferences with seven selections, two more than the Southeastern Conference.
Of the 25 players on the first team, five won the Heisman Trophy and 21 are in the College Football Hall of Fame, two are nominated for induction in 2026 and two are not eligible because they are not yet 10 years removed from their college careers.
A panel of 12 AP sports writers who cover college football selected the all-time team. It won’t be, and shouldn’t be, considered definitive. There have been far more great players over the last century than spots available.
For a player to qualify, he must have been an AP first-team All-American at least once. His professional career, if any, was not to be considered. Also, a member of the all-time team could only be listed on the side of the ball where he was named first-team All-America. All-purpose players could come from any position.
Florida’s Tim Tebow edged Texas’ Vince Young (2005) for all-time first-team quarterback. Tebow won the Heisman and made the AP All-America team as a sophomore in 2007, his first year as the starter.
He led the Gators to their second national championship in three years in 2008 and narrowly missed a chance at another when the 2009 team started 13-0 but lost to Alabama in the SEC championship game. He remains the SEC career leader in rushing touchdowns and touchdowns responsible for.
Oklahoma State’s Barry Sanders (1988) and Georgia’s Herschel Walker (1980-81-82), both Heisman winners, are the running backs. Marshall’s Randy Moss (1997) and Pittsburgh’s Larry Fitzgerald (2003) are the wide receivers.
The offensive line is made up of Ohio State’s Orlando Pace (1995-96) and Pitt’s Bill Fralic (1982-83-84) at tackle, Alabama’s John Hannah (1972) and Ohio State’s Jim Parker (1956) at guard and Penn’s Chuck Bednarik (1947-48) at center. The tight end is Georgia’s Brock Bowers (2023).
The all-purpose player is Heisman winner Johnny Rodgers of Nebraska (1972).
On defense, Pitt’s Hugh Green (1978-79-80) and Maryland’s Randy White (1974) are the ends and Nebraska’s Ndamukong Suh (2009) and Minnesota’s Bronko Nagurski (1929) are the tackles. The linebackers are Illinois’ Dick Butkus (1964), Alabama’s Derrick Thomas (1988) and Ohio State’s Chris Spielman (1986-87).
The secondary is made up of Heisman winner Charles Woodson of Michigan (1996-97) and Florida State’s Deion Sanders (1987-88) at cornerback and Southern California’s Ronnie Lott (1980) and Miami’s Ed Reed (2000-01) at safety.
The specialists are Florida State kicker Sebastian Janikowski (1998-99) and Iowa punter Tory Taylor (2023).
You can see more details of their first- and second-team picks here .
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