2016 American Athletic Conference football season
The 2016 American Athletic Conference football season was the 25th NCAA Division I FBS football season of the American Athletic Conference. The season was the third since the breakup of the former Big East Conference, and the third season with the College Football Playoff in place. The American was considered a member of the "Group of Five" with Conference USA, the Mid-American Conference, Mountain West Conference, and the Sun Belt Conference. Whereas under the previous system the champion of the conference was guaranteed an automatic berth to a BCS bowl game, the highest-ranked champion member of the G5 received a bid to one of the six major bowls.
The American consisted of 12 members: Cincinnati, East Carolina, Houston, Memphis, SMU, South Florida, Temple, Tulane, Tulsa, UCF, UConn, Navy. In June 2015, the Collegiate Commissioner's Association announced that it would postpone final rankings until after the annual Army–Navy Game if Navy or Army are in contention for a spot in the semifinals or a New Years Six bowl. If Navy was the highest-ranked Group of 5 champion and loses to Army, it would be replaced by next highest-ranked Group of 5 champion in the New Years Six Bowl.
In the 2016 season, the American had four new coaches. Willie Fritz, formerly the head coach at Georgia Southern, was hired by Tulane to replace Curtis Johnson. After beginning the 2013 season, Johnson lost 22 of his final 27 games against FBS opponents. He finished at Tulane with a 15–4 record through four full seasons. He compiled a 7–9 conference record in the C-USA, and a 3–13 conference record in the American Athletic Conference. On December 1, 2015, UCF hired Oregon offensive coordinator Scott Frost. Frost replaced longtime UCF head coach George O'Leary and interim head coach Danny Barrett, who took over the Knights when O'Leary resigned following an 0–8 start. On December 3, 2015, Memphis hired Arizona State offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Mike Norvell, replacing Justin Fuente who took the job at Virginia Tech. On December 13, 2015 East Carolina hired Duke Scottie Montgomery. replacing Ruffin McNeill who was relieved of his duties as ECU head coach after finishing the season with a record of 5–7.
American Athletic Conference Media Day
The American Athletic Conference Media Day took place August 12 in Newport, Rhode Island.Preseason poll
East Division- 1. USF, 164 pts
- 2. Temple, 144 pts
- 3. Cincinnati, 130 pts
- 4. UConn, 89 pts
- 5. East Carolina, 55 pts
- 6. UCF, 48 pts
- 1. Houston, 180 pts
- 2. Navy, 128 pts
- 3. Memphis, 124 pts
- 4. Tulsa, 92 pts
- 5. SMU, 65 pts
- 6. Tulane, 41 pts
- Predicted American Championship Game Winner: Houston was picked to win the American Championship. Others receiving votes were USF, Temple
Head coaches
- Tommy Tuberville, Cincinnati – 4th year
- Bob Diaco, Connecticut – 3rd year
- Scottie Montgomery, East Carolina – 1st year
- Willie Taggart, South Florida – 4th year
- Matt Rhule, Temple – 4th year
- Scott Frost, UCF – 1st year
- Tom Herman, Houston – 2nd year
- Mike Norvell, Memphis – 1st year
- Ken Niumatalolo, Navy – 9th year
- Chad Morris, SMU – 2nd year
- Willie Fritz, Tulane – 1st year
- Philip Montgomery, Tulsa – 2nd year
Recruiting classes
Rankings
Schedule
All Times and Dates are Tentative, The 2016 conference football schedule was released February 9Index to colors and formatting |
American member won |
American member loss |
American teams in bold |
Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Week 6
The October 7th game in Orlando between Tulane and UCF was postponed due to Hurricane Matthew and rescheduled for November 5, a date which both teams had open.Week 7
The October 13th game in Greenville, NC between Navy and East Carolina was postponed due because of flooding associated with Hurricane Matthew, the game will be rescheduled for November 19, a date which both teams had open.Week 8
Week 9
Week 10
Week 11
Week 12
Week 13
American Athletic Conference Championship Game
Week 15
Bowl games
American Athletic Conference bowl games for the 2016 season are:Bowl game | Date | Site | Television | Time | AAC team | Opponent | Score | Attendance |
Las Vegas Bowl | December 17 | Sam Boyd Stadium • Whitney, NV | ABC | 3:30 PM | Houston | San Diego State | 10–34 | 29,286 |
AutoNation Cure Bowl | December 17 | Camping World Stadium • Orlando, FL | CBSSN | 5:30 PM | UCF | Arkansas State | 13–31 | 27,213 |
Miami Beach Bowl | December 19 | Marlins Park • Miami, FL | ESPN | 2:30 PM | Tulsa | Central Michigan | 55–10 | 15,262 |
Marmot Boca Raton Bowl | December 20 | FAU Stadium • Boca Raton, FL | ESPN | 7:00 PM | Memphis | WKU | 31–51 | 24,726 |
Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl | December 23 | Amon G. Carter Stadium • Fort Worth, TX | ESPN | 4:30 PM | #25 Navy | Louisiana Tech | 45–48 | 40,542 |
Military Bowl | December 27 | Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium • Annapolis, MD | ESPN | 3:30 PM | #24 Temple | Wake Forest | 26–34 | 26,656 |
Birmingham Bowl | December 29 | Legion Field • Birmingham, Alabama | ESPN | 2:00 PM | South Florida | South Carolina | 46–39 OT | 31,229 |
Rankings are from CFP Poll. All times Eastern Time Zone.
Selection of teams
- Bowl eligible: Houston, Memphis, Navy, South Florida, Temple, Tulsa, UCF
- Bowl-ineligible: Cincinnati, Connecticut, East Carolina, Tulane, SMU
Records against FBS conferences
Through Dec 29, 2016
Conference | Record |
ACC | 4–6 |
Big Ten | 1–4 |
Big 12 | 2–2 |
C-USA | 3–2 |
Independents | 2–3 |
MAC | 4–0 |
Mountain West | 2–2 |
SEC | 1–2 |
Sun Belt | 2–1 |
Total | 21–22 |
The American vs. Power Conferences
Date | Visitor | Home | Winning Team | Opponent Conference |
September 1 | Tulane | Wake Forest | Wake Forest | ACC |
September 3‡ | #3 Oklahoma | #15 Houston | Houston | Big 12 |
September 10 | Cincinnati | Purdue | Cincinnati | Big Ten |
September 10 | UCF | #5 Michigan | Michigan | Big Ten |
September 10 | NC State | East Carolina | East Carolina | ACC |
September 10 | SMU | #23 Baylor | Baylor | Big 12 |
September 10 | Tulsa | #4 Ohio State | Ohio State | Big Ten |
September 17 | Maryland | UCF | Maryland | Big Ten |
September 17 | Virginia | Connecticut | Connecticut | ACC |
September 17 | East Carolina | South Carolina | South Carolina | SEC |
September 17 | Kansas | Memphis | Memphis | Big 12 |
September 17 | South Florida | Syracuse | South Florida | ACC |
September 17 | Temple | Penn State | Penn State | Big Ten |
September 24 | Syracuse | Connecticut | Syracuse | ACC |
September 24 | East Carolina | Virginia Tech | Virginia Tech | ACC |
September 24 | TCU | SMU | TCU | Big 12 |
September 24 | #13 Florida State | South Florida | Florida State | ACC |
October 1 | Memphis | #16 Ole Miss | Ole Miss | SEC |
November 5‡ | Notre Dame | Navy | Navy | IND |
November 17 | #3 Louisville | Houston | Houston | ACC |
November 19 | Connecticut | Boston College | Boston College | ACC |
December 27‡ | Wake Forest | #23 Temple | Wake Forest | ACC |
December 29‡ | South Carolina | #25 South Florida | South Florida | SEC |
‡This game was played at a neutral site
Players of the Week
Awards and honors
Conference awards
The following individuals received postseason honors as voted by the American Athletic Conference football coaches at the end of the seasonNFL Draft
The American had a conference-record 15 players selected in the 2017 NFL draft, which placed it as the fifth most prolific conference in the draft. The American made headlines by having more selections than the Big 12 Conference, a Power 5 Conference.The following list includes all AAC players who were drafted in the 2017 NFL draft.
Player | Position | School | Draft Round | Round Pick | Overall Pick | Team |
Haason Reddick | LB | Temple | 1 | 13 | 13 | Arizona Cardinals |
Zay Jones | WR | East Carolina | 2 | 5 | 37 | Buffalo Bills |
Tyus Bowser | OLB | Houston | 2 | 15 | 47 | Baltimore Ravens |
Obi Melifonwu | S | UConn | 2 | 24 | 56 | Oakland Raiders |
Dion Dawkins | G | Temple | 2 | 31 | 63 | Buffalo Bills |
Shaquill Griffin | CB | Central Florida | 3 | 26 | 90 | Seattle Seahawks |
Howard Wilson | CB | Houston | 4 | 19 | 126 | Cleveland Browns |
Marlon Mack | RB | South Florida | 4 | 36 | 143 | Indianapolis Colts |
Jake Elliott | K | Memphis | 5 | 9 | 153 | Cincinnati Bengals |
Nate Hairston | CB | Temple | 5 | 14 | 158 | Indianapolis Colts |
Rodney Adams | WR | South Florida | 5 | 26 | 170 | Minnesota Vikings |
Michael Tyson | S | Cincinnati | 6 | 3 | 187 | Seattle Seahawks |
Tanzel Smart | DT | Tulane | 6 | 5 | 189 | Los Angeles Rams |
Brandon Wilson | CB | Houston | 6 | 23 | 207 | Cincinnati Bengals |
Kofi Amichia | OT | South Florida | 6 | 28 | 212 | Green Bay Packers |
Attendance
Team | Stadium | Capacity | Game 1 | Game 2 | Game 3 | Game 4 | Game 5 | Game 6 | Game 7 | Total | Average | % of Capacity |
Cincinnati | Nippert Stadium | 40,000 | 28,520 | 40,015† | 38,112 | 35,108 | 32,022 | 37,522 | 25,796 | 237,095 | 33,870 | 84.68% |
Connecticut | Pratt & Whitney Stadium at Rentschler Field | 40,642 | 29,377 | 31,036 | 31,899† | 24,169 | 28,008 | 22,316 | 20,764 | 187,569 | 26,795 | 65.93% |
East Carolina | Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium | 50,000 | 44,161 | 50,719† | 46,042 | 41,370 | 42,908 | 39,480 | 264,680 | 44,113 | 88.23% | |
Houston | TDECU Stadium | 40,000 | 39,402 | 40,873 | 38,221 | 35,846 | 36,552 | 42,822† | 233,716 | 38,953 | 97.38% | |
Memphis | Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium | 59,308 | 42,876† | 34,448 | 38,713 | 34,743 | 36,894 | 37,218 | 36,527 | 261,419 | 37,345 | 62.97% |
Navy | Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium | 34,000 | 28,238 | 31,501 | 34,531 | 35,943 | 36,397† | 166,610 | 33,322 | 98.01% | ||
SMU | Gerald J. Ford Stadium | 32,000 | 22,127 | 30,987† | 25,079 | 24,379 | 18,417 | 21,283 | 142,272 | 23,712 | 74.10% | |
South Florida | Raymond James Stadium | 65,890 | 35,976 | 36,557 | 61,665† | 30,397 | 30,297 | 31,824 | 36,056 | 262,772 | 37,538 | 56.97% |
Temple | Lincoln Financial Field | 69,176 | 34,005† | 22,296 | 27,786 | 22,401 | 25,950 | 29,763 | 28,373 | 190,574 | 27,225 | 39.36% |
Tulane | Yulman Stadium | 30,000 | 27,179† | 21,503 | 24,253 | 21,098 | 25,780 | 16,497 | 136,310 | 22,718 | 75.73% | |
Tulsa | H. A. Chapman Stadium | 30,000 | 18,748 | 16,111 | 20,089 | 22,349† | 17,557 | 18,550 | 113,404 | 18,900 | 63.00% | |
UCF | Bright House Networks Stadium | 44,206 | 36,260 | 43,197 | 38,299† | 31,571 | 30,346 | 35,141 | 214,814 | 35,802 | 80.99% |
- Games highlighted in green were sell-outs
- †Season High
Attendance for neutral site games
- September 3 – Houston vs. Oklahoma, NRG Stadium: 71,016
- November 5 – Navy vs. Notre Dame, EverBank Field: 50,867
- December 10 – Navy vs. Army, M&T Bank Stadium: 71,600