2019 Pac-12 Conference football season
The 2019 Pac-12 Conference football season was the 41st season of Pac–12 football taking place during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The season began on August 29, 2019, and end with the 2019 Pac–12 Championship Game on December 6, 2019, at Levi Stadium in Santa Clara, California. The Pac-12 is a Power Five Conference under the College Football Playoff format along with the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Big 12 Conference, Big Ten Conference, and the Southeastern Conference, For the 2019 season, the Pac-12 is the ninth for the twelve teams divided into two divisions of six teams each, named North and South. The entire schedule was released on December 4, 2018.
Previous season
The Washington Huskies defeated Utah Utes 10–3 in the Pac-12 Football Championship Game.Seven teams participated in bowl games. Arizona State lost to Fresno State 20–31 in the Las Vegas Bowl. California lost to TCU 7–10 in the Cheez-It Bowl. Washington State defeated Iowa State 28–26 in the Alamo Bowl. Utah lost to Northwestern 20–31 in the Holiday Bowl. Stanford defeated Pitt 14–13 Sun Bowl. Oregon defeated Michigan State 7–6 in the Redbox Bowl. Washington lost to Ohio State by a score of 23–28 in the Rose Bowl Game.
Preseason
2019 Pac-12 Spring Football and number of signees on signing day:North Division
- California – 24
- Oregon – 27
- Oregon State – 19
- Stanford – 23
- Washington – 23
- Washington State – 20
- Arizona – 19
- Arizona State – 21
- Colorado – 25
- UCLA – 19
- USC – 25
- Utah – 18
Recruiting classes
Pac-12 Media Days
The Pac-12 will conduct its 2019 Pac-12 media days at the Loews Hollywood Hotel, in Hollywood, California, on July 24 on the Pac-12 Network.The teams and representatives in respective order were as follows:
- Pac-12 Commissioner – Larry Scott
- Arizona – Kevin Sumlin, Khalil Tate and J.J. Taylor
- Arizona State – Herm Edwards, Eno Benjamin, Cohal Cabral
- California – Justin Wilcox, Evan Weaver, Camryn Bynum
- Colorado – Mel Tucker, Laviska Shenault, Nate Landman
- Oregon – Mario Cristobal, Justin Herbert, Troy Dye
- Oregon State – Jonathan Smith, Jermar Jefferson, Isaiah Hodgins
- Stanford – David Shaw, K.J. Costello, LB Casey Toohill
- UCLA – Chip Kelly, Joshua Kelley, Krys Barnes
- USC – Clay Helton, Michael Pittman Jr., DE Christian Rector
- Utah – Kyle Whittingham, Zack Moss, Bradlee Anae
- Washington – Chris Petersen, Nick Harris, Myles Bryant
- Washington State – Mike Leach, Liam Ryan, Jahad Woods
Preseason Media polls
Media poll |
Preseason awards
Preseason All Pac-12
First TeamSecond Team
Head coaches
Coaching changes
There was only one coaching change following the 2019 season including Mel Tucker with Colorado.Coaches
Rankings
Schedules
All times Pacific time. Pac-12 teams in bold.Rankings reflect those of the AP poll for that week.
Regular season
The regular season began on August 24, 2019, and will end on November 30, 2019.Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
Week 9
Week 10
Week 11
Week 12
Week 13
Week 14
Pac-12 Championship Game
The Pac-12 Championship Game was played on December 6, 2019 at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, CA. It featured the teams with the best conference records from each division, the North and the South. This was the ninth championship game.Pac-12 records vs Other Conferences
2019–2020 records against non-conference foes:Regular Season
Post Season
Pac-12 vs Power Five matchups
This is a list of the power conference teams that the Pac-12 plays in the non-conference games. Although the NCAA does not consider BYU a "Power Five" school, the Pac-12 considers games against BYU as satisfying its "Power Five" scheduling requirement. All rankings are from the AP Poll at the time of the game.Date | Visitor | Home | Site | Significance | Score |
August 29 | No. 14 Utah | BYU | LaVell Edwards Stadium • Provo, Utah | Holy War | W 30–12 |
August 30 | Oklahoma State | Oregon State | Reser Stadium • Corvallis, Oregon | L 36–52 | |
August 31 | No. 16 Auburn | No. 11 Oregon | AT&T Stadium • Arlington, Texas | L 21–27 | |
August 31 | Northwestern | No. 25 Stanford | Stanford Stadium • Stanford, California | W 17–7 | |
September 7 | No. 25 Nebraska | Colorado | Folsom Field • Boulder, Colorado | Colorado–Nebraska football rivalry | W 34–31OT |
September 14 | Arizona State | No. 18 Michigan State | Spartan Stadium • East Lansing, Michigan | W 10–7 | |
September 14 | No. 5 Oklahoma | UCLA | Rose Bowl • Pasadena, California | L 14–48 | |
September 14 | Texas Tech | Arizona | Arizona Stadium • Tucson, Arizona | W 28–14 | |
September 14 | No. 24 USC | BYU | LaVell Edwards Stadium • Provo, Utah | L 27–30OT | |
September 21 | No. 23 California | Ole Miss | Vaught–Hemingway Stadium • Oxford, Mississippi | W 28–20 | |
September 21 | No. 22 Washington | BYU | LaVell Edwards Stadium • Provo, Utah | W 45–19 | |
October 12 | USC | No. 9 Notre Dame | Notre Dame Stadium • South Bend, Indiana | Jeweled Shillelagh | L 27–30 |
November 30 | No. 16 Notre Dame | Stanford | Stanford Stadium • Stanford, California | Legends Trophy | L 24–45 |
Pac-12 vs Group of Five matchups
The following games include Pac-12 teams competing against teams from the American, C-USA, MAC, Mountain West or Sun Belt.Date | Conference | Visitor | Home | Site | Score |
August 24 | Mountain West | Arizona | Hawaii | Aloha Stadium • Honolulu, HI | L 38–45 |
August 29 | American | UCLA | Cincinnati | Nippert Stadium • Cincinnati, OH | L 14–24 |
August 29 | MAC | Kent State | Arizona State | Sun Devils Stadium • Tempe, AZ | W 30–7 |
August 30 | Mountain West | Colorado | Colorado State | Broncos Stadium at Mile High • Denver, CO | W 52–31 |
August 31 | Mountain West | Fresno State | USC | United Airlines Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA | W 31–23 |
September 7 | MAC | Northern Illinois | No. 14 Utah | Rice–Eccles Stadium • Salt Lake City, UT | W 35–17 |
September 7 | Mountain West | San Diego State | UCLA | Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA | L 14–23 |
September 7 | Mountain West | Nevada | No. 16 Oregon | Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR | W 77–6 |
September 7 | Mountain West | Oregon State | Hawaii | Aloha Stadium • Honolulu, HI | L 28–31 |
September 13 | American | No. 20 Washington State | Houston | NRG Stadium • Houston, TX | W 31-24 |
September 14 | Mountain West | Air Force | Colorado | Folsom Field • Boulder, CO | L 23–30OT |
September 14 | American | Stanford | No. 17 UCF | Spectrum Stadium • Orlando, FL | L 27–45 |
September 14 | C-USA | North Texas | California | California Memorial Stadium • Berkeley, CA | W 23–17 |
September 14 | Mountain West | Hawaii | No. 23 Washington | Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA | W 52–20 |
Pac-12 vs FBS independents matchups
The following games include Pac-12 teams competing against FBS Independents, which includes Army, Liberty, New Mexico State, or UMass.Date | Visitor | Home | Site | Score |
August 31 | New Mexico State | No. 23 Washington State | Martin Stadium • Pullman, WA | W 58–7 |
Pac-12 vs FCS matchups
Date | Visitor | Home | Site | Score |
August 31 | Eastern Washington | No. 13 Washington | Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA | W 47–14 |
August 31 | UC Davis | California | California Memorial Stadium • Berkeley, CA | W 27–13 |
September 6 | Sacramento State | Arizona State | Sun Devils Stadium • Tempe, AZ | W 19–7 |
September 7 | Northern Colorado | No. 22 Washington State | Martin Stadium • Pullman, WA | W 59–17 |
September 7 | Northern Arizona | Arizona | Arizona Stadium • Tucson, AZ | W 65–41 |
September 14 | Cal Poly | Oregon State | Reser Stadium • Corvallis, OR | W 45–7 |
September 14 | Idaho State | No. 11 Utah | Rice–Eccles Stadium • Salt Lake City, UT | W 31–0 |
September 14 | Montana | No. 15 Oregon | Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR | W 35–3 |
Postseason
Bowl games
Rankings are from CFP rankings. All times Pacific Time Zone. Pac-12 teams shown in bold.Selection of teams
- Bowl eligible: Arizona State, California, Oregon, USC, Utah, Washington, Washington State
- Bowl-ineligible: Arizona, Colorado, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA
Awards and honors
Player of the week honors
Pac-12 Individual Awards
The following individuals received postseason honors as voted by the Pac-12 Conference football coaches at the end of the seasonAward | Player | School |
Offensive Player of the Year | Zack Moss, RB, Sr. | Utah |
Defensive Player of the Year | Evan Weaver, LB, Sr. | California |
Offensive Freshman of the Year | Kedon Slovis, QB, Fr. | USC |
Defensive Freshman of the Year | Kayvon Thibodeaux, DE, Fr. | Oregon |
Scholar Athlete of the Year | Justin Herbert, QB, Sr. | Oregon |
Coach of the Year | Kyle Whittingham | Utah |
All-conference teams
The following players earned All-Pac-12 honors. Any teams showing following their name are indicating the number of All-Pac-12 Conference Honors awarded to that university for 1st team and 2nd team respectively. Utah leads the Pac-12 with 8 First team and 2 Second team, followed by Washington with 5 First team and 4 Second team, USC with 3 First team and 5 Second team, Arizona State with 5 First team and 1 Second team, Oregon with 2 First team and 3 Second team, Washington State and Stanford with 1 First team and 3 Second team, Colorado and California with 1 First team and 2 Second team, Oregon State with 3 Second team, UCLA with 1 Second team and Arizona receiving none for either teamFirst Team
Second Team
Honorable mentions
- ARIZONA: DB Lorenzo Burns, RJr.; OL Cody Creason, RSr.; LB Colin Schooler, Jr.; RB J.J. Taylor, RJr.; Jace Whittaker, RSr.
- ARIZONA STATE: WR Frank Darby, RJr.; DB Jack Jones, RJr.; LB Khaylan Kearse-Thomas, RSr.; DL Jermayne Lole, So.; OL Dohnovan West, Fr.; DB Kobe Williams, Sr.
- CALIFORNIA: OL Jake Curhan, Jr.; LB Kuony Deng, Jr.; LB Cameron Goode, Jr.; DB Jaylinn Hawkins, Sr.; DL Zeandae Johnson, Sr.
- COLORADO: WR Tony Brown, Sr.; OL Arlington Hambright, Grad.; LB Davion Taylor, Sr.
- OREGON: DB Thomas Graham Jr., Jr.; OL Jake Hanson, Sr.; QB Justin Herbert, Sr.; DB Jevon Holland, So.; DB Deommodore Lenoir, Jr.; DL Jordon Scott, Jr.; DL Kayvon Thibodeaux, Fr.; OL Calvin Throckmorton, Sr.; RS Mykael Wright, Fr.
- OREGON STATE: OL Brandon Kipper, RSo.; QB Jake Luton, RSr.; TE Noah Togiai, RSr.
- STANFORD: DL Thomas Booker, So.; LB Curtis Robinson, Sr.; OL Foster Sarell, Jr.; RS Connor Wedington, Jr.
- UCLA: TE Devin Asiasi, Jr.; LB Krys Barnes, Sr.; DB Darnay Holmes, Jr.; P Wade Lees, Grad.,
- USC: DB Olaijah Griffin, So.; LB John Houston Jr., RSr.; PK Chase McGrath, RSo.; WR Amon-Ra St. Brown, So.; QB Kedon Slovis, Fr.; WR Tyler Vaughns, RJr.
- UTAH: DB Terrell Burgess, Sr.; OL Nick Ford; DB Javelin Guidry, Jr.; LB Devin Lloyd, So.; OL Simi Moala, RFr.; DL Mika Tafua, So.; OL Orlando Umana, Jr.
- WASHINGTON: RB Salvon Ahmed, Jr.; DB Kyler Gordon, RFr.; P Joel Whitford, Sr.
- WASHINGTON STATE: RB Max Borghi, So.; OL Josh Watson, RJr.; WR Easop Winston, Sr.; LB Jahad Woods, RJr.
All-Americans
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All-Academic
National award winners
2019 College Football Award WinnersHome game attendance
Team | Stadium | Capacity | Game 1 | Game 2 | Game 3 | Game 4 | Game 5 | Game 6 | Game 7 | Total | Average | % of Capacity |
Arizona | Arizona Stadium | 55,675 | 40,741 | 37,307 | 38,283 | 47,933† | 36,939 | 35,991 | — | 237,194 | 39,533 | 71.01% |
Arizona State | Sun Devil Stadium | 57,078 | 47,413 | 42,286 | 45,786 | 48,536 | 54,191† | 51,875 | 54,074 | 344,161 | 49,166 | 86.14% |
California | California Memorial Stadium | 62,467 | 44,168 | 35,268 | 47,532† | 42,064 | 39,168 | 46,397 | — | 254,597 | 42,433 | 67.93% |
Colorado | Folsom Field | 50,183 | 52,829† | 49,282 | 52,569 | 48,913 | 49,224 | 44,618 | — | 297,435 | 49,573 | 98.78% |
Oregon | Autzen Stadium | 54,000 | 50,920 | 49,098 | 54,766 | 50,529 | 59,361† | 54,219 | 56,243 | 375,136 | 53,591 | 99.24% |
Oregon State | Reser Stadium | 43,363 | 31,681 | 33,585 | 32,326 | 31,730 | 34,244† | 30,980 | — | 194,546 | 32,425 | 74.78% |
Stanford | Stanford Stadium | 50,424 | 37,179 | 39,249 | 33,225 | 31,464 | 31,711 | 48,904† | 37,391 | 259,123 | 37,018 | 73.41% |
UCLA | Rose Bowl | 80,616 | 36,951 | 52,578† | 48,532 | 39,811 | 47,118 | 38,102 | — | 263,092 | 43,849 | 54.39% |
USC | Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum | 76,750 | 57,329 | 62,109 | 55,719 | 53,826 | 63,011 | 64,156† | — | 356,150 | 59,359 | 77.34% |
Utah | Rice-Eccles Stadium | 45,807 | 45,919 | 45,989 | 46,115 | 46,402 | 46,626 | 47,307† | 46,879 | 325,237 | 46,463 | 101.43% |
Washington | Husky Stadium | 70,083 | 65,709 | 66,327 | 67,589 | 66,975 | 70,867 | 69,270 | 70,931† | 477,668 | 68,239 | 97.37% |
Washington State | Martin Stadium | 32,952 | 27,228 | 27,585 | 32,952 | 28,514 | 32,952† | 22,016 | — | 149,231 | 28,542 | 86.62% |
Bold – Exceed capacity
†Season High
NFL Draft
The following list includes all Pac-12 players who were drafted in the 2020 NFL draft.Round # | Pick # | NFL Team | Player | Position | College |
1 | 6 | Los Angeles Chargers | Justin Herbert | QB | Oregon |
1 | 18 | Miami Dolphins | Austin Jackson | OT | USC |
1 | 25 | San Francisco 49ers | Brandon Aiyuk | WR | Arizona State |
2 | 34 | Indianapolis Colts | Michael Pittman Jr. | WR | USC |
2 | 42 | Jacksonville Jaguars | Laviska Shenault | WR | Colorado |
2 | 50 | Chicago Bears | Jaylon Johnson | CB | Utah |
3 | 68 | New York Jets | Ashtyn Davis | S | California |
3 | 85 | Indianapolis Colts | Julian Blackmon | S | Utah |
3 | 86 | Buffalo Bills | Zack Moss | RB | Utah |
3 | 91 | New England Patriots | Devin Asiasi | TE | UCLA |
3 | 103 | Philadelphia Eagles | Davion Taylor | OLB | Colorado |
3 | 104 | Los Angeles Rams | Terrell Burgess | S | Utah |
4 | 110 | New York Giants | Darnay Holmes | CB | UCLA |
4 | 112 | Los Angeles Chargers | Joshua Kelley | RB | UCLA |
4 | 114 | Arizona Cardinals | Leki Fotu | DT | Utah |
4 | 122 | Indianapolis Colts | Jacob Eason | QB | Washington |
4 | 132 | Minnesota Vikings | Troy Dye | LB | Oregon |
4 | 133 | Seattle Seahawks | Colby Parkinson | TE | Stanford |
4 | 134 | Atlanta Falcons | Jaylinn Hawkins | S | California |
5 | 150 | New York Giants | Shane Lemieux | G | Oregon |
5 | 160 | Cleveland Browns | Nick Harris | C | Washington |
5 | 179 | Dallas Cowboys | Bradlee Anae | DE | Utah |
6 | 189 | Jacksonville Jaguars | Jake Luton | QB | Oregon State |
6 | 197 | Detroit Lions | John Penisini | DT | Utah |
6 | 202 | Arizona Cardinals | Evan Weaver | LB | California |
6 | 203 | Minnesota Vikings | Blake Brandel | OT | Oregon State |
6 | 207 | Buffalo Bills | Isaiah Hodgins | WR | Oregon State |
6 | 208 | Green Bay Packers | Jake Hanson | C | Oregon |
6 | 212 | Indianapolis Colts | Dezmon Patmon | WR | Washington State |
7 | 222 | Arizona Cardinals | Eno Benjamin | RB | Arizona State |
7 | 226 | Chicago Bears | Arlington Hambright | G | Colorado |
7 | 233 | Philadelphia Eagles | Casey Toohill | OLB | Stanford |