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{{Short description|SMU college football team}}
{{Multiple issues|{{More citations needed|date=July 2013}}{{Peacock|date=September 2017}}}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2019}}
{{Infobox NCAA football school
{{Infobox NCAA football school
| TeamName = SMU Mustangs
| TeamName = SMU Mustangs football
| CurrentSeason = 2010 SMU Mustangs football team
| CurrentSeason = 2024 SMU Mustangs football team
| FirstYear =
| Image = SMU Mustang logo.svg
| Image = SMU Mustangs football.PNG
| ImageSize = 150
| AthleticDirector = Rick Hart
| ImageSize = 255
| Helmet =
| HeadCoach = [[Rhett Lashlee]]
| AthlDirectorDisp = Steve Orsini
| AthlDirectorLink = Steve Orsini
| HeadCoachDisplay = June Jones
| HeadCoachLink = June Jones
| HeadCoachYear = 3rd
| HeadCoachYear = 3rd
| HCWins = 16
| HCWins = 29
| HCLosses = 22
| HCLosses = 11
| OtherStaff =
| Stadium = [[Gerald J. Ford Stadium]]
| Stadium = Gerald J. Ford Stadium
| StadiumBuilt = 2000
| FieldName =
| StadiumBuilt = 1999
| StadCapacity = 32,000
| StadCapacity = 32,000
| StadSurface = [[FieldTurf]]
| StadSurface = [[FieldTurf]]
| Location = [[Dallas, Texas]]
| Location = [[University Park, Texas]]
| League = Division I
| NCAAdivision = I FBS
| Conference = [[Atlantic Coast Conference|ACC]]
| ConferenceDisplay= Conference USA
| ConfDivision =
| ConferenceLink = Conference USA
| PastAffiliations = [[Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association|TIAA]] {{small|(1915–1917)}}<br />[[Southwest Conference|SWC]] {{small|(1918–1995)}}<br />[[Western Athletic Conference|WAC]] {{small|(1996–2004)}}<br />[[Conference USA|C-USA]] {{small|(2005–2012)}}<br /> [[American Athletic Conference|American]] {{small|(2013–2023)}}
| ConfDivision = West
| FirstYear = 1915
| FirstYear = [[1915 SMU Mustangs football team|1915]]; {{Years or months ago|1915}}
| ATWins = 544
| PastAffiliations = [[Southwest Conference]]<br>[[Western Athletic Conference]]
| ATWins = 439
| ATLosses = 562
| ATLosses = 477
| ATTies = 54
| ATTies = 54
| BowlWins = 5
| BowlWins = 7
| BowlLosses = 6
| BowlLosses = 11
| BowlTies = 1
| BowlTies = 1
| PlayoffApps = 1 ([[2024 SMU Mustangs football team|2024]])
| NatlTitles = 3
| ConfTitles = 11
| Playoffs =
| NatlTitles = 3 ([[1935 SMU Mustangs football team|1935]], [[1981 SMU Mustangs football team|1981]], [[1982 SMU Mustangs football team|1982]])
| DivTitles =
| ConfTitles = 12 (11 [[Southwest Conference|SWC]], 1 [[American Athletic Conference|AAC]])
| Heismans =
| DivTitles = 2 ([[Conference USA|C-USA]] West Division)
| AllAmericans =
| uniform = File:C-USA-Uniform-SMU.PNG
| Heismans = [[Doak Walker]] – 1948
| Color1 = Harvard Red
| AllAmericans = 17
| uniform = [[File:Smu mustangs football unif.png|250px]]
| Color1Hex = B10000
| Rivalries = [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] ([[SMU–TCU football rivalry|rivalry]])<br />[[Houston Cougars football|Houston]] ([[Houston–SMU rivalry#Football|rivalry]])<br>[[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas]] ([[Safeway Bowl|rivalry]])<br />[[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy]] ([[Gansz Trophy|rivalry]])<br />[[Rice Owls football|Rice]] ([[Rice–SMU football rivalry|rivalry]])
| Color2 = Yale Blue
| Color2Hex = 032B66
| FightSong = Pony Battle Cry
| FightSong =
| MascotDisplay = [[Peruna]]
| MascotDisplay = [[Peruna]]
| MarchingBand =
| MarchingBand = [[Southern Methodist University Mustang Band|Mustang Band]]
| WebsiteName = SMUMustangs.com
| PagFreeLabel2 = Outfitter
| PagFreeValue2 = [[Nike, Inc.|Nike]]
| WebsiteURL = http://smumustangs.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/smu-m-footbl-body.html
| WebsiteName = smumustangs.com
| WebsiteURL = https://smumustangs.com/sports/football
}}
}}
The '''[[SMU Mustangs]] football''' program is a [[college football]] team that represents [[Southern Methodist University]] (more commonly "SMU"). The team competes in the [[NCAA Division I FBS National Football Championship|NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision]] (FBS) as a member [[Conference USA]]. The Mustangs have competed in the West Division of Conference USA since 2005.
The '''SMU Mustangs football''' team is a [[college football]] team representing [[Southern Methodist University]] (SMU) in [[University Park, Texas|University Park]] in [[Dallas County, Texas]]. The Mustangs compete in the [[NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision|NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision]] (FBS) as a member of the [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] (ACC). SMU joined the ACC in July 2024 after eleven years as a member of the [[American Athletic Conference]] (AAC).


== History ==
==History==
{{See also|SMU Mustangs#History|List of SMU Mustangs football seasons}}
===1910s: "The Parsons"===
[[Image:Ray Morrison.jpg|thumb|Coach Ray Morrison, "Father of the Forward Pass"]]
On the morning of September 14, 1915, coach [[Ray Morrison]] held his first practice, thus marking the birth of the SMU football program. Morrison came to the school in June to coach the University’s football, basketball, baseball and track teams, as well as an instructor of Mathematics. A former All-Southern quarterback at [[Vanderbilt Commodores football|Vanderbilt]], Morrison immediately installed the passing game at SMU. Morrison would later become known as “the father of the forward pass” because of his preferential use of the passing game on first and second downs instead of as a last resort. SMU had no football stadium in 1915 but only a field (later called Armstrong Field) laid out where the current-day [[Westcott Field]] is located. The team was primarily composed of theology students from the school, causing Dallas sportswriters to nickname the team “The Parsons”. SMU became a member of the Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association, in which neither graduate nor transfer students were eligible to play. Therefore, the first SMU team consisted entirely of freshmen.


===Early history (1915–1917)===
SMU played its first game October 10, 1915, dropping a 43-0 decision to [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] in Fort Worth. Before the second game against [[Hendrix College|Hendrix]], their first at home, SMU got its fight song "[[Peruna]]" when students changed the words from [[She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain|"She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain"]] to "She'll Be Loaded With Peruna". [[Peruna\\ was an early-day [[Hadacol]] elixir advertised as a cure for sore throat with drainage. It also contained a good deal of alcohol "kick" and was known at the time as a "good-time" tonic. SMU bounced back to beat [[Hendrix College]] 13-2 but would manage just one touchdown after that game, beating [[Dallas University]] 7-0, also the SMU's first shutout. SMU was outscored 86-7 in their final 5 games, earning SMU a 2-5 record in 1915. SMU's struggles would continue into the 1916 season were they finished the season 0-8-2 and suffered their worst loss ever, a 146-3 drubbing by [[Rice Owls football|Rice]]. Although managing ties against [[Austin College]] (0-0) and [[Southwestern University]] (9-9), SMU was outscored 455-27 by their opponents at season's end. Ray Morrison left SMU in order to work with the Army YMCA at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., as Director of Sports and Recreation.
In June 1915, [[Ray Morrison]] became [[SMU Mustangs|SMU]]'s football, baseball, basketball, and track coach, in addition to being a math instructor. The football team was initially a member of the [[Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association|Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association (TIAA)]] and played at [[Armstrong Field]]. Due to rules of the TIAA that prohibited graduate and transfer students from playing, the first season was played with only freshmen. During this time, the football team was known as "the Parsons", due to the large number of theology students on the team. <ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Ray Morrison, Southern Methodist&#039;s first football coach, died the... - UPI Archives |url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1982/11/20/Ray-Morrison-Southern-Methodists-first-football-coach-died-the/5264406616400/ |access-date=2024-10-26 |website=UPI |language=en}}</ref>


SMU's first football game was a 43-0 loss against future rival TCU on October 9, 1915. SMU won their first game on October 14, 1915, with a 13–2 victory over [[Hendrix College]]. SMU finished its first season 2-5. After winning two games in a span of two seasons, Morrison left SMU for service in the United States Army upon the United States’ entry into World War I.<ref name=":0" />
[[J. Burton Rix]] became the second head football coach in 1917 would guide SMU to two straight season-opening wins, 20-7 against Meridian and 20-0 against [[Austin College]]. It soon became apparent that SMU would need an official mascot and the entire SMU community was asked to offer their suggestions for a new name. They submitted names such as the Bulls, Rams, Comanches, Pioneers and Rattlers but finally the list was narrowed down to three finalists. At a pep assembly on October 17, 1917, the name "Mustangs" was selected over the Bison or Greyhounds. The winning name was suggested by SMU President [[Robert Stewart Hyer|Robert Hyer's]] secretary, [[Dorothy Amann]]. She was struck by the idea while watching the team practice from her office in [[Dallas Hall]]: "Why, out there, on the football field, it looks just like a bunch of wild Mustangs!" The newly named Mustangs would lose that game to TCU 0-21 but would on to lose just one of its next five games thereafter, earning SMU its first winning season at 3-2-3.


On October 17, 1917, the name "Mustangs" was selected as the school's mascot. For the 1917 season, Morrison was replaced by [[J. Burton Rix]], who led the Mustangs to a 3–2–3 record in their final season in the [[Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association|TIAA]]. <ref name=":0" />
In 1918, SMU became a member of the Southwest Conference, joining [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]], [[Rice Owls football|Rice]], [[Texas Longhorns football|Texas]], [[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]], [[Arkansas Razorbacks football|Arkansas]], [[Oklahoma Sooners football|Oklahoma]] and [[Oklahoma State Cowboys football|Oklahoma A&M]] (which later became [[Oklahoma State Cowboys football|Oklahoma State]]). The Mustangs closed out the decade with three consecutive winning seasons, 1917-1919.


===Joining the Southwest Conference (1918–1921)===
===1920s: "The Aerial Circus"===
In 1918, the Mustangs joined the [[Southwest Conference]] alongside [[Baylor University]], [[Rice University]], the [[University of Texas]], [[Texas A&M University]], the [[University of Arkansas]], and [[Oklahoma State University|Oklahoma A&M University]]. The Mustangs’ first season in the conference ended with a 4–2 record. [[J. Burton Rix]] continued to coach the team in the 1921 season, but after two games, Rix resigned and E. William (Bill) Cunningham took over as interim head coach for the remainder of the season. The team went on to finish with a 1-6-1 record.<ref>{{cite news|title=Cunningham in Charge of S.M.U. Eleven, Following Resignation of Rix|newspaper=The Dallas Morning News|date=October 18, 1921|page=16|via=[[Newsbank]] {{Open access}} }}</ref>
Although [[J. Burton Rix]] finished the last decade strong, he opened the next with consecutive losing seasons and was asked to leave following a 1-6-1 season in 1921. [[Ray Morrison]] returned to SMU as coach and guided the Mustangs to the first of ten consecutive winning seasons. In 1922, end [[Gene Bedford]] and back [[Logan Stollenwerck]] were named first-team All-Southwest Conference, becoming the first Mustang players to achieve that honor. Bedford would also go on to became the first player from SMU to play professionally when he played for the [[Rochester Jeffersons]] in 1925.


===The return of Morrison (1922–1934)===
In 1923, the Mustangs rattled off four straight dominating wins to open the season. The true test came on October 26th when they traveled to College Station to play the heavily favored Texas A&M. Up until that point, [[1923 Texas A&M Aggies football team|Texas A&M]] had never lost a game at [[Kyle Field]], but SMU outplayed the Aggies, intercepting four passes on the way to a 10-0 victory. Two weeks later, [[1923 Arkansas Razorbacks football team |Arkansas]] would scored the only touchdown of the season against the Mustangs as they jumped out to a 6-0 lead. SMU had never scored against Arkansas in their first three meetings but behind the passing of Stollenwerck, the Mustangs scored two touchdowns en route to a 13-6 win. Finally, on November 29th, the Mustangs hosted [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]], looking to close out a perfect season. Baylor knew they did not stand a chance. SMU kicked off to the Bears, only to have them punt it right back on the very same play with the ball dying at the SMU 4. Stollenwerck immediately threw a 50 yard pass to [[Blink Bedford]], demoralizing Baylor. SMU went on to win 16-0, securing their perfect 9-0 mark and won the school’s first conference title. The team scored 207 points, while only allowing opponents 9 points on the entire season. Sportswriters billed the Mustangs the “Aerial Circus,” in reference to Morrison’s passing offense for, during a time when most teams threw the ball five or six times per game, SMU passed between 30 and 40 times.
[[Ray Morrison]] returned to SMU in 1920 to work in the department of physical education before co-coaching the team starting in 1922 with former [[Vanderbilt Commodores football|Vanderbilt]] teammate [[Ewing Y. Freeland]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Matt |title=College football coaching carousel by the numbers: How a wild cycle made history |url=https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/3317161/2022/05/18/college-football-coaching-carousel-history/ |access-date=2024-10-26 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> For the 1922 and 1923 seasons, Morrison focused on the backfield and ends while Freeland focused on the linemen.{{Citation needed|date=October 2024}} The team earned the nickname "Aerial Circus" from sportswriters for its unconventional strategy of frequently passing on first and second downs rather than reserving the play as a last resort. While most teams of the era used the forward pass only five to six times per game, SMU executed it up to 30 to 40 times per game.<ref name=":1" />


In the 1922 season, the Mustangs compiled a 6–3–1 record. Furthermore, end [[Gene Bedford]] and back Logan Stollenwerck were named first-team All-Southwest Conference, becoming the first SMU football players to receive that honor. Bedford was the first player to play in the [[National Football League]], for the [[Rochester Jeffersons]].
[[Texas Longhorns football|Texas]] had also finished the 1923 season undefeated but the Mustangs and Longhorns happened not to play during the 1923 season. The [[Texas Longhorns football|Longhorns]] felt that they had been robbed of a chance for the conference title and strongly believed they were the best team in the state. Both teams started the 1924 season the same way they had finished the 1923 season, by winning every game they played. The two schools finally met on October 18, 1924 in [[Dallas]] to settle the score. Texas came into the game very confident having not lost a game since November 30, 1922. In the first three meetings between the Mustangs and the Longhorns, Texas had won all three by a combined score of 127-3. However, the Mustangs also had also not lost game since November 30, 1922 and SMU believed that a victory against Texas would validate them as one of the premier teams West of the Mississippi River. It was a fierce game as both teams relied on their defenses to shutdown potent offenses. Neither team was able to find the end zone until SMU running back [[Logan Stollenwreck]] took a toss around left end for a couple yards and the only touchdown of the game midway through the third quarter. SMU held off a late charge by the Longhorns]] to win 10-6. The win put SMU's unbeaten streak at 14 games. The Mustangs would extend that streak to 19 games with a 5-0-4 mark at the end of the season. Due to this success the [[1924 SMU football team]] was invited to play in the [[1925 Dixie Classic]] at [[Fair Park Stadium]] in [[Dallas]] on New Year’s Day. The Mustangs faced [[West Virginia Wesleyan]] and the game was a low-scoring affair, with both teams fighting for field position. After a scoreless first half, SMU’s George Watters blocked a punt in the third quarter, which he recovered in the end zone to give SMU a 7-0 lead. But WVW battled back and answered with a 40-yard field goal to pull to 7-3. The game turned dramatically the fourth quarter when WVW quarterback DeLong lofted a long pass which SMU's [[Logan Stollenwerck]] batted down. Unfortunately for the Mustangs, he knocked the ball directly to WVW's [[Gale Bullman]], who raced into the end zone for a 66-yard score. [[Dallas Morning News]] would call it a "luck pass" and although the PAT was missed, it proved to be the winning score. SMU battled back and had a field goal try in the game's final minute for the win. [[Lawrence Reisor|Lawrence Reisor's]] 30-yard try was no good, however, and Wesleyan prevailed 9-7, handing SMU its first loss in two years in its first ever bowl game.
In the 1923 season, the SMU Mustangs achieved a perfect 9–0 record, winning their first conference football title in school history. After this season, Freeland left the SMU football team, later becoming [[head coach]] for the [[Texas Tech Red Raiders football|Texas Technological College]] football team, leaving Morrison as the sole head coach for SMU. SMU played in their first bowl game in 1924, in the [[1925 Dixie Classic|Dixie Classic]] against [[West Virginia Wesleyan College]], but lost that game 7–9.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |last=Hybl |first=Dean |title=SMU Football: Death Has Lost Its Sting |url=https://bleacherreport.com/articles/312078-smu-football-death-has-lost-its-sting |access-date=2024-10-26 |website=Bleacher Report |language=en}}</ref>


By 1926, the team began playing their home games at [[Ownby Stadium]]. In their first game at Ownby Stadium, the Mustangs defeated [[North Texas State Teachers College]] 42–0, led by quarterback [[Gerald Mann]]. The first Homecoming game was also played in 1926, resulting in a 14–13 victory over [[Texas Christian University]]. <ref>{{Cite news |last=Lemire |first=Christy |date=November 6, 1998 |title=SMU demolishes 72-year-old stadium to build new home |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/abilene-reporter-news/108594117/ |access-date=October 26, 2024 |work=Abilene Reporter-News}}</ref>
In 1926, [[Ownby Stadium]] was built and named after [[Southern Methodist University|SMU]] alumnus and strong supporter of athletics [[Jordan C. Ownby]]. Quarterback [[Gerald Mann]], known as “The Little Red Arrow” because of his strong, accurate passing, was a member of the first Mustang team to play in [[Ownby Stadium]] and part of his scholarship duties included helping plant the grass on the stadium playing field. Before the season, Morrison had decided that it would be important to find a left-handed quarterback for the upcoming [[Southwest Conference]] schedule. [[Gerald Mann|Mann]], who was right-handed, told Morrison that he would have his left-handed quarterback before the season began. Eager not to lose his starting position, [[Gerald Mann|Mann]] reported to fall practice ready to make every throw left-handed. [[1926 SMU Mustangs football team|SMU]] defeated [[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas State Teachers College]], 42-0, September 24, 1926, in the first game at [[Ownby Stadium]] and [[1926 SMU Mustangs football team|SMU]] continued that momentum by steamrolling its first three opponents that year, shutting out [[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas State]], [[Trinity Tigers|Trinity]] and [[Centenary College of Louisiana|Centenary]] by a combined score of 127-0. [[Missouri Tigers football]] managed a 7-7 tie but was the only blemish for the Mustangs in their 8-0-1 1926 season. On November 25th, 1926, the [[1926 TCU Horned Frogs football team|TCU]] came into the game 6-0-2, led by star end [[Rags Matthews|Raymond "Rags" Matthews]] and then [[1926 TCU Horned Frogs football team|TCU]] head coach [[Matty Bell]]. [[Gerald Mann|Mann] threw a pair of touchdown passes for the Mustangs. [[Rags Matthews|Matthews]] countered by catching eight passes for 110 yards and two touchdown passes for [[1926 TCU Horned Frogs football team|TCU]]. The difference in the score came in the third quarter when [[Rags Matthews|Matthews']] second extra point attempt sailed wide. The score stood for the remainder of the game and SMU won 14-13. The game was SMU's first ever Homecoming Game, clinched SMU's second Southwest Conference title and its second undefeated season in a four years.


The team continued to have winning seasons until the 1932 season. The Mustangs won their second conference title in 1926, compiling an 8–0–1 record, and a third conference title in 1931, compiling a 9–0–1 record. In 1928, guard [[Choc Sanders]] became SMU's first [[All-American]], as well the first All-American from the Southwest Conference. In 1929, tackle Marion Hammon became SMU's second All-American. After a winning 1934 season, Morrison left SMU to take over the [[Vanderbilt Commodores football]] team after the retirement of [[Dan McGugin]].<ref name=":2" />
In 1927, [[Henry "Choc" Sanders]] enrolled at SMU to play for the Mustangs. A star athlete at nearby [[Garland High School]] and [[Wesley Junior College]] in [[Greenville (Texas)|Greenville]], Morrison was impressed with Choc's size and agility, something Morrison wanted on his offensive line. Over the next three seasons, Choc became one of the most dominant guards in all of football. Guard [[Choc Sanders]] became SMU’s and the Southwest Conference's first All-America player in 1928. In three years on the Hilltop, Choc helped lead the Mustangs to an impressive record of 19-5-5.


===A national championship (1935–1941)===
During the 1928 season, SMU played at Army on October 26th. Prior to making the trip to New York, the furthest away an SMU team had traveled was to play at Missouri. The trip was made by train and and because they were bring twenty-five players, captained by guard [[Earl Baccus]] and including [[Redman Hume]] and [[Willis Tate]], coaches, and 700 supporters along, four special trains had to be set aside for SMU's five-day trip--each way. When the dust had settled, the Cadets had managed to survive, 14-13, but the exciting performance of the SMU team stamped SWC football as first class. In fact, 25 years later in 1953, Texas sportswriters covering the Southwest Conference voted the game at West Point in 1928 as the most important out of a list of 10 games which gained the most national recognition for the conference. Despite Army's strength, Kern Tips of the Houston Chronicle would later write. "the East was shocked by the Mustangs passing on first and second down--a bold break with the book. Army only threw four passes. SMU's [[Redman Hume]] and [[Sammy Reed]] threw 30." A line came across the news wire from the Associated Press that stated, "Passes such as Eastern football never saw before flew from the hands of [[Redman Hume]], a Texas version of what [[Red Grange]] should have been." [[Ray Morrison]] made it a goal to get on the scoreboard early to let Army know SMU was there to play. Horace McCoy wrote, "[[Redman Hume|Hume]] rushed far back and passed to [[Charlton Fincher]]. He caught the ball on the 10-yard line and stumbled across the goal. It was football at its highest point. A small school from two thousand miles away had scored in four minutes on one of the strongest teams in the nation." Army, being the powerhouse that it was, battled back to take the lead 14-7. When Army was starting to mount another drive, the Mustangs forced a fumble. [[Redman Hume|Hume]] took a swipe at the ball and in an instant had it under his left arm, racing towards the end zone. Unfortunately, after the score [[Redman Hume|Hume]] missed the extra point. Several reporters claim that an Army defender tipped it at the line. There would be no more scoring on the day, and Army escaped, 14-13. Having seen SMU dazzle Army with its aerial capabilities, New York Times reporter Allison Danzig called SMU "a spectacular display of forward, double, and triple laterals." But it was not only offensive genius that impressed the masses, it was SMU's heart. The Mustangs stood toe-to-toe with Army at the SMU one yard line. The Mustangs did not give an inch and kept the Cadets out of the end zone on four straight downs. Horace McCoy noted that, "One of the New York writers said the Mustangs stopped the Army there with nothing but supreme, dying courage, and that is quite correct. There is no doubt that the game was quite as thrilling as any one ever played." Even the Mustang Band drew national raves for its double-time, Broadway showmanship in contrast to most bands' stiff military marching. Even in defeat, Ray Morrison's Mustangs had shocked the football world.
Morrison was replaced by [[Matty Bell]] in 1935. In his first season, Bell led the Mustangs to a 12–1 record. During this season, the Mustangs were crowned national champions by [[Dickinson System|Frank Dickinson]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.library.illinois.edu/archives/archon/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=5263 |title=Frank G. Dickinson Papers, 1932–67 &#124; University of Illinois Archives |publisher=Library.illinois.edu |date=December 8, 1992 |access-date=August 5, 2015}}</ref> and [[Houlgate System|Deke Houlgate]], two of seven contemporaneous selectors, all math systems, that chose five different national champions that year.<ref name="ncaabook">{{cite book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2020/FBS.pdf |title=2020 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records |date=July 2020 |publisher=The National Collegiate Athletic Association |location=Indianapolis |pages=112-114 |access-date=January 12, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201101032438/http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2020/FBS.pdf |archive-date=November 1, 2020 |url-status=live}}</ref> To play in the [[Rose Bowl Game|Rose Bowl]] against the [[Stanford Indians football]] team for the unofficial national championship, SMU faced off against the [[TCU Horned Frogs]], who featured two time all-american quarterback [[Sammy Baugh]].


The Mustangs had three more winning seasons from 1936 to 1939. SMU failed to win the Southwest Conference title in 1940, despite having the same conference record as the [[Texas A&M Aggies]]. After a 5–5 season in 1941, Bell left SMU to serve in the [[United States Navy]] during World War II.
In 1929, the Mustangs again went undefeated at 6-0-4. SMU tackle [[Marion Hammon]] became the Mustangs' second All- American.


===The war years (1942–1944)===
===1930s: "Matty's Boys" & SMU's First National Championship===
With Bell in the Navy, [[Jimmy Stewart (American football)|Jimmy Stewart]] took his place as head coach. In his three seasons as head coach, Stewart compiled an overall record of 10–18–2. Bell returned as head coach for the 1945 season.
[[Image:Iron_Man_Wetsel.jpg‎|thumb|J.C. "Iron Man" Wetsel was a consensus All-American Guard in 1935.]]
SMU won its third Southwest Conference championship in 1931 after finishing the season with a 9-1-1 mark. But the Mustangs struggled the next two seasons, posting a 3-7-2 record in 1932 and a 4-7-1 record in 1933. On November 4, 1932, SMU debuted a live mascot, [[Peruna]] (later called Peruna I) a four-year old, 150 pound black [[Shetland pony]] donated be T.E. Jones, the owner of [[Arlington Downs]] racetrack. [[Ray Morrison]] left SMU after the 1934 season to coach for his alma mater [[Vanderbilt]], posting a 8-2-2 record in his final season.


===Doak Walker era (1945–1949)===
SMU won its first national championship in 1935 after posting a 12-win season under the guidance of first-year head coach [[Matty Bell]]. Prior to becoming the head coach at SMU in 1935, [[Matty Bell]] served as the head coach at [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] (1923-1928) and [[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]] (1929-33), where coincidentallu he relieved for his inability to beat SMU. Bell had arrived at SMU in 1934 and served one season as the line coach. Known as a player’s coach, Bell brought discipline to his team, and he spent time listening and talking to his players. Fullback [[Harry Shuford]] and tackle [[Truman Spain|Truman “Big Dog” Spain]] were two prominent players on the national championship team. A tri-captain, Shuford was the Mustangs’ best running back during the 1935 season, but injury forced him to miss the season’s most critical contest. The Mustangs, ranked No. 1 in the country, played second-ranked TCU and its star quarterback, [[Sammy Baugh]], for the unofficial national championship and the right to play in the [[1936 Rose Bowl]]. Both schools held pep rallies the week of the game with cheers of "On to the Rose Bowl" echoing across campus. On game day, nearly 37,000 fans made their way to TCU. The stadium only held 25,000 but that did not stop all 37,000 from making their way into the game one way or another. SMU's [[Bob Finley]] recalled, "Fans were all over everything, the hillside and the grass. They crawled over fences, pushed gatekeepers out of the way." Prior to the game, SMU's coach [[Matty Bell]] had told [[Dallas News]] sports editor [[George White]], "Now don't change your selection, but we're going to win this game." However, SMU was going to have to do it shorthanded as [[Harry Shuford]] was sidelined with an injury. [[Bob Finley|Finley]] was given the play calling duties and [[Bob Wilson (American football)|Bobby Wilson]] scored two touchdowns to give SMU a 14-0 lead. Baugh fought hard and rallied the [[TCU Horned Frogs football|Horned Frogs]] to a 14-14 tie by the fourth quarter. With a little more than eight minutes left in the game, Matty Bell sent in [[Jack Rabbit Smith]] to take over play calling duties, but left Finley in the game. On fourth and four at the TCU 39, Finley, the team's normal punter, broke the huddle and headed to line up in formation when Wilson grabbed him and said, "Throw it as far as you can. I'll be there." Finley recalls, "Wilson was out wide. I made as if to kick the ball, and the line slowed down. Then I backed up and threw it, and I was buried. I heard the people scream, and when I got up, I saw Wilson in the end zone, jumping up and down." Finley's pass had sailed more than 45 yards in the air and came down to Wilson inside the five, where he caught it between a couple of TCU defenders, and dove into the end zone for the touchdown giving SMU a 20-14 lead. Baugh tried valiantly to bring the Horned Frogs back, but was denied by the Mustang defense. SMU won the game, the conference, the national championship and earned a trip to the [[1936 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] to play [[Stanford Cardinal football|Stanford's]] so-called "Vow Boys". But despite entering the game as heavy favorites, the Ponies were upset by Stanford, 7-0, with [[Stanford Cardinal football|Indian]] quarterback [[Bill Paulman]] scoring the game’s only touchdown on a first-quarter run. While the loss constituted the only blemish on a 12-1 season, SMU was able to pay off its 10-year debt on [[Ownby Stadium]] with the $85,000 check the University received from competing in the [[1936 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]]. Three SMU players earned All-America status in 1935: tackle [[Truman Spain]], guard [[J.C. Wetsel]] and back [[Bob Wilson (American football)|Bobby Wilson]]. Wilson, who scored all three Mustang touchdowns in the dramatic 20-14 win over TCU, went on to play one year of pro football for the [[Brooklyn Dodgers]] in 1936. [[Harry Shuford]], a tri-captain and fullback on the 1935 team, was drafted by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]] in 1936 but despite the team’s efforts to sign him to a contract, opted instead to attend law school at SMU. Shuford finished first in his class in 1939.
Upon Bell's return as SMU's head coach, the team also gained halfback and placekicker [[Doak Walker]]. Walker won All-Southwest Conference honors his freshman year in 1945 and played in the [[East–West Shrine Game]] in San Francisco. Walker did not play for the 1946 season due to serving in the [[United States Army]], yet re-enrolled at SMU and rejoined the football team for the 1947 season.


The Mustangs posted a 9–0–2 record in 1947, winning their sixth Southwest Conference title. In the same season, the team played against the [[Penn State Nittany Lions]] in the [[Cotton Bowl Classic]], resulting in a 13–13 tie. Walker threw a 53-yard touchdown pass and scored on a two-yard run in this game. Walker earned the [[Maxwell Award]] during this season.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Maxwell Award Winners |url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/awards/maxwell.html |access-date=2024-10-26 |website=College Football at Sports-Reference.com |language=en}}</ref>
'''1936 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Truman Spain]], Tackle [[1936 NFL Draft|(30th Pick, 4th Round)]] by the [[Pittsburg Steelers|Pittsburg Pirates]]
*[[Harry Shuford]], Back [[1936 NFL Draft|(37th Pick, 5th Round)]] by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]
*[[Bob Wilson (American football)|Bobby Wilson]], Back [[1936 NFL Draft|(40th Pick, 5th Round)]] by the [[Brooklyn Dodgers (NFL)|Brooklyn Dodgers]]
*[[Maurice Orr]], Tackle [[1936 NFL Draft|(48th Pick, 6th Round)]] by the [[Pittsburg Steelers|Pittsburg Pirates]]
*[[J.C. Wetsel]], Guard [[1936 NFL Draft|(79th Pick, 9th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]


During the 1948 season, the Mustangs won their seventh conference title, posting a 9–1–1 record. The team played in the Cotton Bowl Classic once more, defeating the [[Oregon Webfoots]], who were led by quarterback [[Norm Van Brocklin]], 21–13, making it their first victory in a bowl game in school history. Doak Walker, winning All-American honors, also won the [[Heisman Trophy]], the only Mustang ever to do so. Additionally, the Mustangs permanently moved to the [[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|Cotton Bowl]] for their home games this season, after playing only limited numbers of games in that stadium in years previous. In their final game at [[Ownby Stadium]], the Mustangs defeated [[Texas Tech]] 41–6. Due to Doak Walker's popularity and gate draw—also as an allusion to 1923 Yankee Stadium's "House that Ruth Built″<ref>{{Cite web |date=10 August 2024 |title=Yankee Stadium History - New York Yankees |url=http://newyork.yankees.mlb.com/nyy/ballpark/stadium_history.jsp |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080629183719/http://newyork.yankees.mlb.com/nyy/ballpark/stadium_history.jsp |archive-date=29 June 2008 |website=newyork.yankees.mlb.com}}</ref> moniker referring to that stadium's likewise excess of capacity—the Cotton Bowl became regionally known as "The House that Doak Built".<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Weller |first=Robert |date=28 September 1998 |title=His college's only Heisman winner; played for Detroit Lions |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=bNBRAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mG8DAAAAIBAJ&pg=6846%2C6519461 |journal=[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]] |volume= |issue= |pages=p.A14 |via=Associated Press}}</ref>
'''1937 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Bob Finley]], Guard [[1937 NFL Draft|(15th Pick, 2nd Round)]] by the [[Pittsburg Steelers|Pittsburg Pirates]]
*John Sprague, Back [[1937 NFL Draft|(67th Pick, 7th Round)]] by the [[Detroit Lions]]


The 1949 season was both Doak Walker's and coach [[Matty Bell]]'s last as part of SMU's varsity football team and program. The team posted a 5–4–1 record. Walker won All-American honors a third time, the most for any football player in SMU's history. Bell continued to serve SMU as the athletic director; Walker played in the [[National Football League|NFL]] for the [[Detroit Lions]]. Over the course of his career at SMU, Walker rushed for 1,954 yards, passed for 1,638 yards, scored 288 points, punted for a 39.4 average and kicked field goals and extra points. He is also the Mustangs' all-time leader in punt return yards with 750—that was during an "era" of NCAA [[One-platoon system|single-platoon substitution rules]]. Bell left the head coaching position at SMU with a 79–40–8 record, including three Southwest Conference titles, a bowl game victory, and a national championship.
'''1939 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Billy Dewell]], End [[1939 NFL Draft|(29th Pick; 4th Round)]] by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]
*[[Charley Sprague]], End [[1939 NFL Draft|(99th Pick, 11th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]
*[[Jack Sanders]], Tackle [[1939 NFL Draft|(160th Pick, 17th Round)]] by the [[New York Giants]]


===1940s: "The House that Doak Built"===
===Russell, Woodard, and Meek eras (1950–1961)===
Bell was replaced by [[Rusty Russell (American football coach)|Rusty Russell]] in 1950. Russell previously served as quarterbacks and running backs coach from 1945 to 1949, and is credited with luring Doak Walker away from the [[University of Texas]]. In three seasons as head coach, Russell compiled a 13–15–2 record. After a strong first season, in which the Mustangs were ranked number one in the nation, the team suffered two losing seasons. Increasingly under fire, Russell resigned as head coach after the 1952 season.
A conference co-championship in 1940 served as a solid beginning to the new decade, but was followed by six consecutive losing seasons from 1941 through 1946. World War II resulted in the loss of Bell for three years (1942-45) when he left the Hilltop to join the Navy reserves. Bell returned to SMU in 1945 and took on an additional role as the University’s Athletic Director. On October 27, 1945, the Mustangs played [[Tulane]] in [[New Orleans]] in a midseason non-conference match-up. SMU was thoroughly outplayed in the game, eventually losing 19-7, but in the audience were [[Doak Walker]] and his best friend and high school teammate [[Bobby Lane]]. Both had just been released from maritime service, Layne was trying to convince Walker to return to Austin with him and sign with the Texas Longhorns. After the SMU-Tulane game, Layne took Walker to a hotel to meet Texas coach [[Blair Cherry]], who was in town to scout the game. Walker and Layne went up one elevator to get to Cherry's room while Cherry came down to the lobby in another to check out, which he did, so when there was no one to meet. Walker decided instead to catch a ride back home to [[Dallas]] on the train that was also bringing home the Mustangs. Four days later, Walker enrolled at SMU. Walker helped the team finish the 1995 season with three straight shutout victories and despite his shortened season, he was named to the 1945 All-Southwest Conference team. Walker then spent a year in the Army, but returned for his sophomore season in 1947 and powered the Mustangs to a perfect 5-0 before facing Texas. The game was a showdown of two top-10 undefeated teams: SMU ranked No. 8 in the nation while Texas ranked No. 3. This was also the last meeting of Doak Walker and Bobby Layne, former high school and future pro teammates with the [[Detriot Lions]]. The game drew a standing room only crowd of 50,000 to the 46,000 seat [[Cotton Bowl (Sadium)|Cotton Bowl]], setting the wheels in motion to enlarge the stadium as soon as possible. Before the game, Walker got up and said, "Fellows, I've been sweating this game out since we lost to Texas in 1945, and we've just got to win this time." SMU struck in the first three minutes to take a 7-0 lead following an 81-yard kickoff return. Walker hit Dick McKissack inside the Texas 5 on a crucial fourth down play to keep SMU moving. Paul Page scored on a reverse one play later as the Texas defense focused on Walker. Bobby Layne, however, brought the Longhorns back. He engineered a scoring drive capped off by an 11-yard touchdown run by Tom Landry. The game stayed tied until just before halftime when Walker set SMU up for another touchdown. Gil Johnson hit Walker for a gain of 37, putting the Mustangs at the Texas one yard line. McKissack rammed through the line on the next play for the score. Walker added the extra point and SMU led 14-7. Texas surged back and had a chance to tie the score late in the fourth quarter. Layne went to the air and hit [[Byron Gillory]] for a long touchdown pass. However, kicker [[Frank Guess]] pushed the extra-point attempt wide of the uprights, allowing SMU to hang on to the narrow lead. SMU spoiled the Longhorn's bid for its first national championship with the thrilling 14-13 victory. Walker later recalled, "During the years that I have been on football, baseball, basketball, track, and swimming teams either in high school or college, or the army, I have had lots of thrills. But I guess my highlight in sports was that game against Texas." SMU closed out the 1947 season with a game against TCU. Right out the gate, TCU was able to jump out to a 12-0 lead. Late in the first half, with the ball on the SMU 35, Walker dropped back to pass, but decided to pull the ball down and take off for the end zone, running for a 65-yard score. He added the extra point to cut the TCU lead to 12-7 and added another score (missed extra point) to lead 13-12. As the last few minutes of the fourth quarter began to tick away, TCU quarterback [[Lindy Berry]] threw a bomb from his own 10-yard line to [[Morris Bailey]] who slipped past defenders and scampered to the SMU 15, then throwing a lateral to TCU wingback Charlie Jackson, who threw a second lateral to fullback [[Pete Stout]] to score. TCU seemed to have pulled off a stunning upset as they made the extra point with only 1:30 left to play. Legend has it that TCU tackle [[Harold Kilman]] looked at Walker and said, "Now what are you gonna do, Doak?" and Walker responded very confidently, "We're going to score again." On the ensuing kickoff, Walker took the ball inside his 10 and took off down the sideline all the way to the TCU 35. SMU's [[Gil Johnson]] reentered the game as quaterback as Walker moved to wingback. Johnson hit walker with a pass at the 10-yard line, despite being blanketed by double-coverage. Without time to huddle, SMU lined up and Johnson threw to Sid Halliday for a touchdown to tied the score with only 20 seconds remaining. However, the drive had exhausted the entire team, and Walker missed the extra point. Nonetheless, TCU was stunned and SMU's season ended still-perfect at 9-0-1. After playing all their home games since 1926 at Ownby Stadium, the Mustangs moved to the Cotton Bowl in 1948, where they would remain for 31 years. The last game played at Ownby was Oct. 2, 1948, when SMU defeated Texas Tech, 41-6. During that 1948 season, Walker led the Mustangs to an 8-1-1 record and a No. 10 ranking in the country and the Mustangs had claimed their second straight Southwest Conference title. Walker ran 108 times for 532 yards and eight touchdowns, completed 26 of 46 passes for 304 yards and five touchdowns, and caught 15 passes for 278 yards and two touchdowns. On the defensive side of the ball, he intercepted three passes and ran them back for 75 yards. As a special teams player, Walker returned 10 punts for 169 yards and a touchdown, returned five kickoffs for 161 yards, kicked 22 of 29 extra points, and averaged 42.1 yards per punt in 35 attempts which was tops in the SWC and fifth in the nation. He also led the SWC and was sixth in the country in scoring with 88 points. For the second year in a row, Walker was named All-SWC and unanimous All-America. He was the Sporting News Player of the Year, the Sport Magazine football honoree, and he would have collected another Maxwell Award except that previous winners were not allowed to repeat. Instead, the club decided that since Walker could not receive the award, no one would win it in 1948. And finally, Walker became the first and only Heisman Trophy winner in school history. Over the course of his career at SMU, Walker rushed for 1,954 yards, passed for 1,638 yards, scored 288 points, punted for a 39.4 average and kicked field goals and extra points. Walker’s exploits led to his number, 37, being retired at SMU. Because of his immense popularity, the [[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|Cotton Bowl]] became known as [[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|“The House That Doak Built.”]] Following the 1947 and 1948 seasons, SMU played in back-to-back Cotton Bowls. The Mustangs were matched against [[1948 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Penn State]] in the [[1948 Cotton Bowl|1948]] game, tying the [[1948 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Nittany Lions]], 13-13. Walker threw a 53-yard touchdown pass and scored on a two-yard run, but Penn State’s [[Elwood Petchel]] matched Walker by tossing scoring passes of 38 and six yards. The [[1949 Cotton Bowl]] paired SMU with [[Oregon Ducks football|Oregon]] and its star quarterback [[Norm Van Brocklin]]. The Mustangs won 21-13.


[[Kyle Rote]], who filled Doak Walker's place on the team, led the Southwest Conference with 777 yards rushing in 1949, and was named an All-American following the 1950 season. Quarterback [[Fred Benners]] led the Mustangs to perhaps their greatest win of the decade when he completed 22 of 42 passes for 336 yards to beat Notre Dame, 27–20, in Notre Dame, Indiana on October 13, 1951. Benners connected on TD passes of 57, 37, 31 and four yards to four different receivers as the Mustangs beat the Fighting Irish in what was one of the highlights in a 3–6–1 season. Furthermore, [[Forrest Gregg]] became part of the team in 1952, and became a two-time All-Southwest Conference player by 1955, later moving on to the [[National Football League|NFL]]. Moreover, David Powell became SMU's first Academic All-American winner in the 1952 season.
'''1941 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Johnny Clement]], Back [[1941 NFL Draft|(28th Pick, 4th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]
*[[Ray Mallouf]], Back [[1941 NFL Draft|(83th Pick, 10th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]
*Fred Harris, Tackle [[1941 NFL Draft|(163rd Pick, 18th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]


[[Woody Woodard]] took Russell's place as head coach in 1953. Woodard compiled a 19–20–1 record in his four seasons as head coach for SMU, resigning after two consecutive losing seasons. During the 1954 season, wide receiver [[Raymond Berry]] was elected as a co-captain, despite only catching 11 passes for 144 yards, winning All-Southwest Conference and Academic All-American honors, and later played in the NFL for the [[Baltimore Colts]].
'''1942 NFL Draftees'''
*Preston Johnston, Back [[1942 NFL Draft|(59th Pick, 7th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]
*Horace "Deacon" Young, Back [[1942 NFL Draft|(189th Pick, 20th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]


Woodard was replaced by [[Bill Meek]] in 1957, who was coming off a [[Missouri Valley Conference]] title-winning season with the [[Houston Cougars football|Houston Cougars]]. In five seasons with SMU, Meek compiled a 17–29–4 record. During Meek's time as head coach, quarterback [[Don Meredith]] earned All-American honors in 1958 and 1959, his .610 career completion percentage the best in SMU history, along with a tremendous running ability that increased the pressure on opposing defenses. The 1960 season, though, proved particularly bad for the Mustangs, as they went 0–9–1, losing every game by more than 10 points with the exception of a game against [[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]] in which neither team scored.
'''1943 NFL Draftees'''
*Ray Rason, Guard [[1943 NFL Draft|(74th Pick, 9th Round)]] by the [[Brooklyn Dodgers (NFL)|Brooklyn Dodgers]]
*[[Clarence Booth]], Tackle [[1943 NFL Draft|(164th Pick, 18th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]
*Orville Johnson, Guard [[1943 NFL Draft|(209th Pick, 22nd Round)]] by the [[Chicago Bears]]


===Hayden Fry era (1962–1972)===
'''1944 NFL Draftees'''
In 1962, [[Hayden Fry]] became SMU's eighth head coach. The Mustangs hosted the fourth-ranked [[Navy Midshipmen]] (including quarterback [[Roger Staubach]]) on October 11, 1963, at the [[Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl]]. SMU, on its way to a 4–7 season, was given little chance of beating the Midshipmen. Little-known sophomore [[John Roderick (American football)|John Roderick]] rushed for 146 yards on 11 carries and scored on touchdown runs of 45 yards and two yards for the Mustangs. The SMU defence, led by Bob Oyler, Martin Cude, Bill Harlan, Harold Magers and Doug January, sent Staubach to the bench twice with a dislocated left shoulder. Trailing 28–26 with 2:52 remaining in the game, SMU had a chance to pull off an upset. Quarterback Danny Thomas threw to Billy Gannon, who ran to the Navy 46. On the next play, Roderick took a pitchout 23 yards to the 23. After a pass interference penalty against Navy put the ball on the one-yard line, Gannon ploughed over the right tackle for the winning touchdown with 2:05 left. The SMU defense held off Staubach's effort to rally his team for one last score, as the Mustangs pulled off the 32–28 upset. Despite a losing record in 1963, the Mustangs played in the [[Sun Bowl]], their first since the 1948 season, against the [[Oregon Webfoots]], losing 14–21.
*Abe Croft, End [[1944 NFL Draft|(40th Pick, 5th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Bears]]
*Jim Wright, Center [[1944 NFL Draft|( 122nd Pick, 13th Round)]] by the [[Brooklyn Tigers]]
*Howard "Red" Maley, Back [[1944 NFL Draft|(166th Pick, 17th Round)]] by the [[Brooklyn Tigers]]
*Abel "Frito" Gonzales, Back [[1944 NFL Draft|(325th Pick, 32nd Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]


When Fry took the job at SMU, he was promised that he would be allowed to recruit black athletes. [[Jerry LeVias]] became the first black player signed to a football scholarship in the Southwest Conference, and played his first game for SMU in 1966, one week after John Hill Westbrook of [[Baylor Bears|Baylor]] became the first black player to play for a conference team. Fry received abuse for recruiting a black player to SMU in the form of hate mail and threatening phone calls, but he downplayed the treatment because of the much, much worse harassment LeVias himself was subjected to.
'''1945 NFL Draftees'''
*Tom Dean,Tackle [[1945 NFL Draft|(15th Pick, 2nd Round)]] by the [[Boston Yanks]]
*Charley Allen,Back [[1945 NFL Draft|( 22nd Pick, 3rd Round)]] by the [[Chicago Bears]]
*Wayne Shaw, Back [[1945 NFL Draft|(50th Pick, Round 6)]] by the [[Chicago Bears]]
*Sid Halliday, Tackle [[1945 NFL Draft|(216th Pick, 21st Round)]] by the [[Washington Redskins]]
*Gabby Martin ,End [[1945 NFL Draft|(236th Pick, 23rd Round)]] by the [[Washington Redskins]]
*[[Lloyd Baxter]], Center [[1945 NFL Draft|(252nd Pick, 24th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]


During the 1966 season, Hayden Fry lifted SMU back to national prominence; SMU was ranked ninth in the nation and won its first conference championship in 18 years, its seventh overall. Fry also won Conference Coach of the Year. SMU lost in the [[Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl]] to the [[Georgia Bulldogs]] 9–24. [[John LaGrone]], who earned conference honors from 1964 to 1966, was the first Mustang player to be selected as both an All-American and Academic All-American when he was honored following the 1966 season.
'''1946 NFL Draftees'''
*Jesse Herschbarger, End [[1946 NFL Draft|(251st, 27th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]


During the 1968 season, combined with quarterback [[Chuck Hixson]], Levias helped lead the Mustangs to a 28–27 win over Oklahoma in the [[1968 Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl]], giving SMU its first bowl victory since the 1949 Cotton Bowl. SMU and Oklahoma combined to score 35 points in the fourth quarter. SMU stopped Oklahoma short of a potential game-winning two-point conversion with 1:16 left to play. LeVias was selected as an all-conference player as a senior for the third time.
'''1947 NFL Draftees'''
*Gene Wilson, End [[1946 NFL Draft|(40th Pick, 6th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers ]]
*John Hamberger, Tackle [[1946 NFL Draft|(110th Pick, 13th Round)]] by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]
*Frank Pulattie, Back [[1946 NFL Draft|(154th Pick, 17th Round)]] by the [[New York Giants]]


Fry's Mustangs had a 12-20 record over the next three years, from 1969 to 1971. That led to uncertainty about his leadership, and rumors began to swirl after the Mustangs started the 1972 season with a 4–4 record. The three-game winning streak that followed was not enough to save Fry's job. After a 7-4 season in 1972, Fry was fired, which robbed the Mustangs of a bowl berth. In his 11 seasons at SMU, Fry compiled a 49-66-1 record.
'''1948 NFL Draftees'''
*Earl Cook, Guard [[1946 NFL Draft|(17th Pick, 3rd Round)]] by the [[Boston Yanks]]
*Gil Johnson, Quarterback [[1946 NFL Draft|(93rd Pick, 11th Round)]] by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]
*Bob Ramsey,Back [[1946 NFL Draft|(244th Pick, 26th Round)]] by the [[Pittsburgh Steelers]]


===Dave Smith era (1973–1975)===
'''1949 NFL Draftees'''
After Fry's departure, [[Dave Smith (American football coach)|Dave Smith]], a former assistant coach under Fry, took his place as head coach. Coming off a 7-4 season with [[Oklahoma State]], Smith had two consecutive 6-4-1 seasons with SMU, with his final season resulting in a 4-7 record. In three seasons with SMU, Smith compiled a 16–15–2 record. Smith was replaced by [[Ron Meyer]] in 1976.
*[[Doak Walker]] ,Halfback [[1946 NFL Draft|(3rd Pick, 1st Round)]] by the [[Boston Yanks]]
*Paul Page, Halfback [[1946 NFL Draft|(4th Pick,, 1st Round)]] by the [[New York Giants]]
*Dick McKissack, Back [[1946 NFL Draft|(21st Pick, 2nd Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]
*[[Joe Ethridge]], Tackle [[1946 NFL Draft|(54th Pick, 6th Round )]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]
*Dave Moon, Back [[1946 NFL Draft|(136th Pick, 14th Round)]] by the [[Pittsburgh Steelers]]
*Floyd Lewis, Guard [[1946 NFL Draft|(174th Pick, 18th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]
*Bobby Folsom, End [[1946 NFL Draft|(183rd Pick, 19th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]


===Ron Meyer-Bobby Collins era (1976–1986)===
===1950s: Rote, Benners, then "Dandy" Don===
Coach [[Ron Meyer]] came to SMU in 1976 from the [[Dallas Cowboys]] in the 1970s (including a [[Super Bowl]] win) and a stint with [[UNLV]]. Coach Meyer was notable for his recruiting tactics, including visits each year to the homes of 70 or more of the top recruits per year. His most notable recruits were future [[National Football League|NFL]] running backs [[Eric Dickerson]] and [[Craig James (running back)|Craig James]] before the 1979 season, as both their high school teams went 15-0 and won state championships. Combined with blue chip running back Charles Waggoner, the three backs were nicknamed the "Pony Express" running attack and shredded opposing defenses in the option offense led by quarterback [[Lance McIlhenny]]. In 1981, the Mustangs' performance earned them recognition by the [[National Championship Foundation]] as one of its five co-national champions.<ref name="ncaabook"/>{{rp|112–114}} The final Associated Press poll ranked SMU No. 5, placing Clemson at No. 1. The team was not ranked in the coaches' poll at all due to a rule forbidding teams on probation from consideration.<ref name="ncaa.com">{{cite web|url=https://www.ncaa.com/history/football/fbs|title=FBS Football|website=NCAA.com}}</ref>
The 1950 season was one full of questions at its outset. Doak Walker, the greatest player in the history of the Southwest Conference, was gone and coach Matty Bell had moved on to become full-time the Athletic Director at SMU. Senior [[Kyle Rote]] was given his chance to be the featured back in 1950. In their second game of the season, the Mustangs headed up to Columbus, Ohio to take on [[Ohio State]]. Ohio State had finished 1949 ranked No. 6 in the country and several sportswriters ranked them the No.1 in the country when the Mustangs came there to play. With 81,000 roaring Ohio State Buckeyes watching, SMU came out flat and despite a Ray Checkler 55-yard interception return for a touchdown, the Mustangs quickly found themselves behind 24-6. First-year coach [[Rusty Russell (American football)|H.N. “Rusty” Russell]] decided to make a change and sent in [[Fred Benners]] to quarterback. Benners drove the Mustangs 92 yards, capping the drive off with a strike to Jimmy Hawn in the end zone. The Buckeyes responded by marching into field goal range on their next possession. Heisman Trophy winner [[Vic Janowicz|Vic Janowicz's]] kick was true, and Ohio State led 27-13 with three minutes left in the third quarter. Because SMU was so far behind, the Buckeye defense decided to focus [[Kyle Rote]], leaving Benners no choice but to continue to pass through the air. Benners hit Johnny Champion deep for a 65-yard scoring strike but unfortunately, the extra point went wide. Still trailing 27-19, [[Val Joe Walker]] forced and recovered a Buckeye fumble, giving SMU great field position. Benners found Rusty Russell, Jr. in the end zone, bringing SMU to within two at 27-25. Ohio State's defense again thwarted SMU's point after attempt with only a couple of minutes remaining in the game. The Mustang defense held the Buckeye's to negative yardage on the next three downs, forcing them to punt it back to the Mustangs for a shot at the win. Benners proceeded to move the team 66 yards, hitting Ben White for the winning score, eventually leaving [[Columbus, Ohio]] victorious, at 32-27. It was the first 300-yard passing day in school history and he headline in a Columbus newspaper proclaimed, "Bucks Become Has-Benners." SMU eventually made it to 5-0, Rote's photo was placed on the cover of the 1950's November [[Life Magazine]] and the Mustangs were ranked No. 1 for the first time since 1935. However, a close loss to Texas and then Texas A&M pushed them from their top ranking, and SMU eventually finished the 1950 season 6-4. Rote was named an All-American and become SMU's first and only No.1 NFL Draft pick when selected in the Spring of 1951 by the [[New York Giants]].


Coach Meyer left to become the head coach of the [[New England Patriots]] in 1982, and SMU hired Coach [[Bobby Collins (American football coach)|Bobby Collins]], then head coach at the [[University of Southern Mississippi]]. Dickerson finished 3rd in the Heisman Trophy voting in 1982, and the team claimed a share of its second consecutive national championship, being selected by Bill Schroeder of the [[Helms Athletic Foundation]] as his last ever selection,<ref>{{citation | last = Jenkins| first = Dan | title = This Year The Fight Will Be in the Open | magazine = Sports Illustrated | date = September 11, 1967 | page=33 | volume = 27 | issue = 11 | publisher = Time Inc. | location=Chicago, IL | url=https://www.si.com/vault/1967/09/11/614180/this-year-the-fight-will-be-in-the-open | access-date=March 16, 2016|quote=In 1948, the Helms Athletic Foundation decided to name a national champion … and name past champions. The director of Helms since its beginning, Bill Schroeder, did the work, and he now heads the committee that selects No. 1 after the bowl games. 'A committee of one – me,' he says.}}</ref> in addition to consensus champion [[Penn State]]; the Mustangs did, however, finish second in both the AP and coaches' polls.<ref name="ncaa.com"/>
With the emergence of Benners, SMU was becoming a team that would live or die by its passing game. [[Ohio State]] avenged its loss to SMU in 1950 with a 7-0 victory in SMU's second came. For their fourth game, the Mustangs faced [[Notre Dame]] with 58,240 fans looking on in Notre Dame Stadium. Benners hit Benton Musslewhite for a 57-yard bomb to give SMU a 7-0 lead. When Notre Dame came back to tie the score, Benners struck again, this time hooking up with Rusty Russell, Jr. for 37 yards and a touchdown. As the game went back and forth, Notre Dame tied the score at 14, and it appeared that they had finally found their groove. However, Benners, once again, threw a bullet to [[Ben White]] who was able to weave his way 31 yards for a touchdown. The extra point attempt was missed, but SMU still led 20-14. The Irish marched back down the field to tie the game, failed to convert the extra point but regained possession again and moved towards a winning score. SMU All-America Dick Hightower forced and recovered a fumble to give SMU back the ball with a chance to win. Benners dumped the ball to Pat Knight who followed a wall of blockers into the end zone. It was a thrilling 27-20 victory for the Mustangs and defeated the legendary Fighting Irish before a national television audience. SMU's first 26 plays were passes. When Benners finally did call a running play, it was such a shock that [[Jerry Norton]] was able to gain 36 yards. Benners had accounted for nearly the entire offensive output as he completed 22 of 42 passes for 336 yards and four touchdowns. It was the third time in his career that he had a four touchdown day, and to this day he remains the only SMU player ever to throw four touchdowns in a game three times. An associate of Irish coach [[Frank Leahy]] said after the game, "Hell, coach, all that Benners could do was pass." Leahy responded by saying, "Yes, and the only thing [[Enrico Caruso|Caruso]] could do was sing." Benners finished the 1951 season the ninth ranked passer in the country but the Mustangs team struggled, earning just a 3-6-1 record and going 4-5-1 in 1952. [[Rusty Russell (American football)|H.N. “Rusty” Russell]] resigned after the 1952 season and was replaced by [[Woody Woodard|Chalmer “Woody” Woodard]], but the Mustang's continued to slide. In 1953 SMU climbed to a 5-5 record and, led by future NFL Hall of Famers [[Raymond Berry]] and [[Forrest Gregg]], achieved a 6-3-1 record and finished 4-1-1, behind only [[1954 Arkansas Razorbacks football team|Arkansas]] (5-1-0), who they had beaten earlier that year, 21-14. It was SMU best season since 1948 but the success would not linger. SMU finished 6-4 in 1955 and 6-4 again in 1956. Despite beating [[1956 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team|Notre Dame]] 19-13 earlier that year, [[Woody Woodard|Chalmer “Woody” Woodard]] resigned under pressure in 1956 and was replaced by [[Bill Meek|William "Bill" Meek]]. Coach Meek implemented one of the earliest versions of the run and shoot offense to complement a kid from [[Mount Vernon, Texas]] with a rocket arm would be the next great quarterback to come out of the SMU: [[Don Meredith|"Dandy" Don Meredith]]. After spending his freshman season as the captain of the Mustang freshman team (the Varsity would finish 4-6), Meredith earned the starting job at quarterback his sophomore year in 1957. Despite earning a 4-5-1 record, Meredith would beat Texas and lead the conference in passing yards, and touchdowns and set the SWC record with .696 completion percentage. He would become a two-time All-American in 1958 and 1959 with big wins over [[Texas Longhorns football|Texas]] ([[1957 Texas Longhorns football team|1957]], [[1958 Texas Longhorns football team|1958]]), [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] (1958) and [[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy]] (1959) under his belt and his .610 career completion percentage is the greatest of any passer in Mustang history. Meredith also returned kickoffs, punted and kicked. One of his greatest attributes was his running ability, which increased the pressure on opposing defenses.


SMU posted a 49-9-1 record from 1980 to 1984, which was the highest win percentage (.839) in Division I-A over that span.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/southern-methodist/ | title=SMU Mustangs College Football History, Stats, Records }}</ref>
'''1950 NFL Draftees'''
*Jack Halliday, Guard [[1950 NFL Draft|(54th Pick, 5th Round)]] by the [[Baltimore Colts]]
*Dick McKissack, Back [[1950 NFL Draft|(64th Pick, 5th Round)]] by the [[Los Angeles Rams]]
*Bobby Collier, Tackle [[1950 NFL Draft|(233rd Pick, 18th Round)]] by the [[Los Angeles Rams]]
*[[Ray Mallouf]], Back [[1950 NFL Draft|(381st Pick, 30th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]


==="Death Penalty" and decades of rebuilding (1987–2007)===
'''1951 NFL Draftees'''
{{Main|Southern Methodist University football scandal}}
*[[Kyle Rote]], Halfback [[1951 NFL Draft|( 1st Pick, 1st Round)]] by the [[New York Giants]]
In 1987, SMU became the first and only football program in collegiate athletic history to receive the "[[death penalty (NCAA)|death penalty]]" for repeated serious violations of NCAA rules. The NCAA forced SMU to cancel its football program for the 1987 season because the university had been paying some of the players—approximately $61,000 was paid from 1985 until 1986. It later emerged that SMU had been keeping a [[slush fund]] to pay players since as early as the mid-1970s and that athletic officials had known about it as early as 1981.{{Citation needed|date=October 2021}}
*[[Fred Benners]], Back [[1951 NFL Draft|( 97th Pick, 8th Round)]] by the [[New York Giants]]
*Neal Franklin, Tackle [[1951 NFL Draft|(249th Pick, 21st Round)]] by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]
*Johnny Champion, Back [[1951 NFL Draft|(279th Pick, 23rd Round)]] by the [[Cleveland Browns]]
*Hal Quinn, Guard [[1951 NFL Draft|(338th Pick, 28th Round)]] by the [[New York Giants]]


SMU was eligible for the "death penalty" because it had already violated recruiting rules, and as a result had been placed on probation in 1985. Since many potential student-athletes were poor, boosters had been inducing them to sign with SMU by offering them payments and expense coverage. Several key boosters and SMU officials had determined that it would be unethical to cut off those payments after having started them, but also potentially problematic, as some boosters had signed contracts agreeing to pay certain athletes for the duration of their time at SMU. There was also the potential of disgruntled football players "blowing the whistle" on SMU should the payments be discontinued. When the sanctions were handed down, SMU had three players – all seniors about to graduate – receiving payments. Not long afterward, SMU announced that football was canceled for the 1988 season as well, after school officials received indications that there would be too few experienced players at the school to field a viable team,<ref>{{cite news| title='88 football season canceled by SMU| work=[[New York Times]]| last=Frank| first=Peter| date=April 11, 1987}}</ref> as most of the team had left the university and transferred to other institutions. [[Forrest Gregg]], an SMU alumnus who had been the head coach of the [[Green Bay Packers]], was hired in 1988 to help rebuild the team. The two-year gap in the program meant that Gregg had to begin with an undersized and underweight lineup.
'''1952 NFL Draftees'''
*Dick Hightower, Center [[1952 NFL Draft|(43rd Pick, 4th Round)]] by the [[Washington Redskins]]
*[[Val Joe Walker]], Back [[1952 NFL Draft|(83rd Pick, 7th Round)]] by the [[New York Giants]]
*[[Herschel Forester]], Guard [[1952 NFL Draft|(96th Pick, 8th Round)]] by the [[Cleveland Browns]]
*Pat Knight, End [[1952 NFL Draft|(119th Pick, 10th Round)]] by the [[New York Giants]]
*I.D. Russell, Back [[1952 NFL Draft|(316th Pick, 27th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]
*Ben White, End [[1952 NFL Draft|(319th Pick, 27th Round)]] by the [[Washington Redskins]]


The Mustangs struggled for 20 years to recover from the effects of the penalty and the scandal. Coach Gregg compiled a 3–19 record in his two seasons. He moved on to be SMU's athletic director from 1990 through 1994. The program's chances of ever recovering were likely ruined by the collapse of the Southwest Conference after the 1995 season; SMU wound up in the [[Western Athletic Conference|WAC]] and later in [[Conference USA]].
'''1953 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Bill Forester]], Tackle [[1953 NFL Draft|(31st Pick, 3rd Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]


The Mustangs had three more head coaches, and only one winning season, through the completion of the 2007 season.
'''1954 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Jerry Norton]], Back [[1954 NFL Draft|(81st Pick, 7th Round)]] by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]
*Don Miller, Back [[1954 NFL Draft|(84th Pick, 7th Round)]] by the [[Cleveland Browns]]
*Don Goss, Guard [[1954 NFL Draft|(119th Pick, 10th Round)]] by the [[Cleveland Browns]]
*Jerry Clem, Guard [[1954 NFL Draft|(225th Pick, 19th Round)]] by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]
*[[Raymond Berry]], Wide Receiver [[1954 NFL Draft|(232nd Pick, 20th Round)]] by the [[Baltimore Colts]]


===C-USA era (2008–2014)===
'''1955 NFL Draftees'''
[[File:Shawnbrey McNeal stiffarm.jpg|thumb|SMU in action versus [[UTEP Miners#Football|UTEP]] in 2009]]
*[[Ed Bernet]], End [[1955 NFL Draft|(30th Pick, 3rd Round)]] by the [[Pittsburgh Steelers]]
In 2008 SMU hired Steve Orsini away from the [[UCF|University of Central Florida]] (UCF) to be SMU's athletic director. Orsini then hired [[June Jones]] from the [[Hawaii Warriors football|University of Hawai'i]] as head football coach – the team's fifth coach since 1989. In Jones' first season at SMU, they had a 1–11 record.
*Frank Eidom, Back [[1955 NFL Draft|(33rd Pick, 3rd Round)]] by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]
In 2009, Coach Jones' second season at SMU, the Mustangs made a turnaround, with a regular season record of 7–5. Despite finishing unranked in the [[2009 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings]], SMU was invited to its first bowl game in 25 years, and defeated the unranked [[2009 Nevada Wolf Pack football team|Nevada Wolf Pack]] with a final score of 45–10 in the [[2009 Hawai'i Bowl]], the team's first bowl win since 1984.
*Eric Knebel,Tackle [[1955 NFL Draft|(133rd Pick, 11th Round)]] by the [[Cleveland Browns]]
*[[Doyle Nix]], Back [[1955 NFL Draft|(209th Pick, 18th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]
*Duane Nutt, Back [[1955 NFL Draft|(214th Pick, 18th Round)]] by the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]


In 2010, the Mustangs again compiled a regular season record of 7–5, with a 6–2 in-conference record to earn their first chance at winning a conference title in 26 years, securing a berth in the [[2010 Conference USA Football Championship Game|Conference USA Championship]] game. SMU lost the conference title game, 17–7, against [[2010 UCF Knights football team|UCF]]. Once again unranked in the [[2010 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings]], SMU was invited to its second consecutive bowl game, the [[2010 Armed Forces Bowl]], where it lost against the unranked [[2010 Army Black Knights football team|Army Black Knights]].
'''1956 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Forrest Gregg]], Tackle [[1956 NFL Draft|(20th Pick, 2nd Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]
*[[Don McIlhenny]], Back [[1956 NFL Draft|(27th Pick, 3rd Round)]] by the [[Detroit Lions]]
*[[John Roach (American football)|John Roach]], Quarterback [[1956 NFL Draft|(31st Pick, 3rd Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]
*John Marshall, Back [[1956 NFL Draft|(35th Pick, 3rd Round)]] by the [[Los Angeles Rams]]
*Hal O'Brien, Back [[1956 NFL Draft|(248th Pick, 21st Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]


Following [[Texas A&M Football|Texas A&M]]'s move to the [[Southeastern Conference|SEC]] in August and September 2011, SMU made it known that they would like to replace Texas A&M in the [[Big 12 Conference|Big 12]].<ref>[http://www.star-telegram.com/2011/09/03/3335791/smu-reaches-out-to-the-big-12.html SMU reachers out to the Big 12] star-telegram.com September 3, 2011 {{dead link|date=December 2023}}</ref> SMU's interest in the Big 12 was never reciprocated, and the Big 12 instead added [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] and [[West Virginia University]].
'''1957 NFL Draftees'''
*Bill Livingston, Center [[1957 NFL Draft|(178th Pick, 15th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]
*Charlie Leyendecker, Tackle [[1957 NFL Draft|(279th Pick, 24th Round)]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]


SMU went on to win back-to-back bowl games in the [[2012 BBVA Compass Bowl]] (for the 2011 season) and [[2012 Hawaii Bowl]]. SMU ended the Jones era in 2014 the way it began: with a 1–11 season. The Mustangs won the last game of the season against the [[University of Connecticut]] on December 6, 2014.
'''1958 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Willard Dewveall]], Wide Receiver [[1958 NFL Draft|(18th Pick, 2nd Round)]] by the [[Chicago Bears]]
*Charlie Jackson, Back [[1958 NFL Draft|(146th Pick, 13th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]
*[[Jerry Cornelison]], Tackle [[1958 NFL Draft|(192nd Pick, 16th Round)]] by the [[Cleveland Browns]]
*Ray Masters, Back [[1958 NFL Draft|(303rd Pick, 26th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]


===Chad Morris (2015–2017)===
'''1959 NFL Draftees'''
SMU hired [[Clemson Tigers football|Clemson]] offensive coordinator [[Chad Morris]] as head coach and announced his placement on December 1, 2014.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.smu.edu/News/2014/Chad-Morris-announcement-01dec2014|title=Chad Morris named head football coach at SMU – SMU|website=www.smu.edu}}</ref> His first season resulted in a 2–10 record, a slight improvement from the 2014 season. SMU continued to improve in Morris' second season, finishing 5–7.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://sportsday.dallasnews.com/college-sports/smumustangs/2016/11/26/five-takeaways-smu-embarrassed-navy-misses-bowl-eligibility-wake-morris-rumors|title=Five takeaways: SMU embarrassed by Navy, misses on bowl eligibility in wake of Morris rumors {{!}} SportsDay|date=November 26, 2016|work=SportsDay|access-date=April 20, 2017|language=en}}</ref> In his 3rd season, Morris was able to lead the Mustangs to bowl eligibility and a 7–5 record in 2017.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/team/_/id/2567/smu-mustangs|title=Smu Mustangs College Football - Smu News, Scores, Stats, Rumors & More - ESPN|website=ESPN.com}}</ref> However, Morris accepted the head coaching position at Arkansas in the weeks prior to the bowl game, and SMU was forced to move quickly to hire a new football coach in light of the approaching bowl game.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/ncaaf/2017/12/06/ap-source-arkansas-morris-agree-to-6-year-contract/108364224/|title=Arkansas hires SMU's Chad Morris as new football coach|website=USA TODAY}}</ref>
*[[Dave Sherer]], End [[1959 NFL Draft|(24th Pick, 2nd Round)]] by the [[Baltimore Colts]]
*Gary Ferguson, Tackle [[1959 NFL Draft|(98th Pick, 9th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]
*Don Stewart, End [[1959 NFL Draft|(120th Pick, 10th Round)]] by the [[Baltimore Colts]]
*Dave Wilemon, Tackle [[1959 NFL Draft|(200th Pick, 17th Round)]] by the [[Los Angeles Rams]]
*Billy Dunn, Back [[1959 NFL Draft|(218th Pick, 19th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Cardinals]]
*Henry Christopher, End [[1959 NFL Draft|(347th Pick, 29th Round)]] by the [[New York Giants]]


=== Sonny Dykes (2017–2021) ===
===1960s: The Hixon, LaGrone, LeVias Era===
[[Sonny Dykes]] was hired as the new football coach of SMU on December 11, 2017.<ref>{{Cite magazine|url=https://www.si.com/college/2017/12/11/smu-mustangs-coaching-search-sonny-dykes-cal|title=Sonny Dykes agrees to become next SMU coach|first=Bruce|last=Feldman|magazine=Sports Illustrated}}</ref> The Mustangs were defeated by [[Louisiana Tech]] 51–10 in the DXL [[Frisco Bowl]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/recap?gameId=400954523|title=Louisiana Tech vs. SMU - Game Recap - December 20, 2017 - ESPN|website=ESPN.com}}</ref>
The first two years of the decade found the Mustangs shackled with mounting losses and sagging attendance. In 1960, SMU finished 0-9-1and average home attendance fell below 30,000 for the first time since 1946. Following a 2-7-1 season in 1961, SMU introduced [[Hayden Fry]] as the Mustangs’ eighth head coach. Fry finished his first season at 2-8 in 1962 but earned this first signiture win in the third game of the 1963 season when the No. 4 Navy Midshipman came to the [[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|Cotton Bowl]] to play the Mustangs on October 11, 1963. The game was played the Friday before the Texas-OU game and 37,000 fans packed the stadium to catch a glimpse of Navy's All-American quarterback [[Roger Staubach]]. After the Midshipmen got out to a 10-0 lead, sophomore quarterback Mac White took a sweep 22 yards for a touchdown. However, Staubach brought Navy right back to extend the lead to 18-7. Danny Thomas then came in to the game and hit Thomas Hillary for a touchdown with five seconds in the first half, bringing the Mustangs to within five at 18-13 at the intermission. Late in the third quarter, Staubach threw a touchdown pass for a 25-13 lead. But on the third play after the kickoff, Roderick ignited the Cotton Bowl as he took a pitch from White and cut all the way across the field and raced 45 yards into the end zone to cut the Navy lead to six at 25-19. Dave Corder intercepted Staubach allowing the offense to come back on the field to go for the lead. SMU drove inside the Navy 10 and gave the ball to Roderick for the final surge into the end zone and give the Mustangs the lead, 26-25. But Staubach moved his team down the field setting up a field to give Navy a two-point lead with 2:52 remaining in the game but it took the Mustangs only four plays and 47 seconds to take the lead back. On the next play, Roderick took a pitch-out 23 yards to the 23. After a pass interference penalty against Navy put the ball on the one-yard line, Billy Gannon plowed over right tackle for the winning touchdown with 2:05 left. But back came Staubach, and it appeared that the game was going to be won by Navy who had the ball last. But Donald Campbell and Tommy Caughran broke up two passes in the end zone in the last seconds, and the Mustangs held on to win. Coach Fry was named national Coach of the Week and the win helped propel the Mustangs into the [[1963 Sun Bowl|Sun Bowl]] despite the fact that they finished 1963 with 4-6 record and tied for fifth in the Southwest Conference.
[[File:IX8A3827 (42917293690).jpg|thumb|right|A Mustangs player scores a touchdown against [[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan]] in [[2018 SMU Mustangs football team|2018]]]]
In the 2019 season, the Mustangs got off to an 8–0 start. On September 21, they defeated cross-town rival TCU. On September 29, the Mustangs were ranked in the AP top 25 for the first time since October 25, 1986.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dallasnews.com/sports/smu-mustangs/2019/09/29/lost-in-the-historic-nature-of-smu-s-first-ap-top-25-ranking-in-over-30-years-is-this-fitting-irony-that-accompanies-it/|title=Lost in the historic nature of SMU's first AP Top 25 ranking in over 30 years is this fitting irony that accompanies it|date=September 29, 2019|website=Dallas News}}</ref>


=== Rhett Lashlee (2021–present) ===
SMU again slumped in 1964 (1-9) and the 1965 turned out to be a season filled with ups and downs. The season started out with a hard fought win over the [[1965 Miami Hurricanes football team|Miami]], 7-3, followed by a tumultuous defeat at the hands of [[1965 Illinois Fighting Illini football team|Illinois]], 0-42. The Mustangs then welcomed the No. 1 team in the land, the [[1965 Purdue Boilermakers football team|Purdue]], to the [[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|Cotton Bowl]] on October 2nd, 1965. Purdue jumped out to a 14-0 halftime lead before sophomore quarterback [[Mike Livingston]] was given the ability to showcase his running abilities to set up two Mustang scores for the tie, 14-14. SMU was elated but at 3-5-1 entering its last Homecoming game against [[1965 Texas Longhorns football team|Texas]], the Purdue game looked like it would be the highest moment of the 1965 season. The Longhorns were coming in ranked No. 9 and had won six straight games over the Mustangs; But in each of the last three meetings, the games where close with Texas' largest margin of victory just six points. Mac White led the Mustang offense to a pair of touchdowns and a field goal while [[Mike Livingston]] heaved a 32-yard touchdown pass to John Roderick in the last 50 seconds of the first half, and then in the fourth period tossed another strike to Roderick for the finishing touches on the win. SMU back Jim Hagle bust the game open with a memorable 96-yard run and when the final seconds ticked off the clock, Mustangs held a 31-14 victory and finished the 1965 season 4-5-1. The Mustangs again had to be accounted for and coach Fry carried on the momentum from the 1965 season into the 1966 season and lifted SMU back to national prominence.
[[Rhett Lashlee]] returned to SMU as Head Football Coach on November 29th, 2021. Lashlee previously served as offensive coordinator for the Mustangs, including during the record-setting 2019 season.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lashlee Named SMU Head Football Coach |url=https://smumustangs.com/news/2021/11/29/lashlee-named-smu-head-football-coach.aspx |website=SMU Athletics |language=en}}</ref>


==Conference affiliations==
In 1966, the Mustangs had their revenge against [[1966 Illinois Fighting Illini football team|Illinois]], 26-14 but[[1966 Purdue Boilermaker football team|Purdue]] had theirs, 35-23. Then SMU rattled off a 3-game winning streak, including a 13-12 win against [[1966 Texas Longhorns football team|Texas]], to enter their November 5th game against [[1966 Texas A&M Aggies football team|Texas A&M]] 5-1.
Years listed here are football seasons. Conference changes take effect in the summer after a school's last football season in a conference.
* [[Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association]] (1915–1917)
* [[Southwest Conference]] (1918–1995)
* [[Western Athletic Conference]] (1996–2004)
* [[Conference USA]] (2005–2012)
* [[American Athletic Conference]] (2013–2023)
* [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] (2024-)


==Championships==
A&M's Ed Hargett hit end Tommy Maxwell with two touchdown passes for a 14-0 lead. The Aggies controlled the game for the first 29 minutes until Mac White was able to find the end zone from a yard out. The Mustangs went into halftime having cut the lead in half, 14-7.
===National championships===
SMU has won three National Championships from NCAA-designated major selectors.<ref name="Walsh2007">{{cite book|author=Christopher J. Walsh|title=Who's #1?: 100-Plus Years of Controversial National Champions in College Football|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=580XAQAAMAAJ|year=2007|publisher=Taylor Trade Pub.|isbn=978-1-58979-337-8|pages=88–89}}</ref><ref name="2018ncaabook">{{cite book | url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2018/FBS.pdf | title=2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records | publisher=National Collegiate Athletic Association | date=August 2018 | location=Indianapolis| access-date=October 29, 2018}}</ref>{{rp|112–114}} SMU claims all three Championships.<ref name=":0">{{cite book |url=http://issuu.com/smumustangs.com/docs/complete_mg_7df6333459cc93/0 |title=2014 SMU Football Media Guide |publisher=Southern Methodist University Department of Athletics |year=2014 |editor1-last=Sutton |editor1-first=Brad |pages=1, 80–82, 120-125 |access-date=May 5, 2015 |editor2-last=Hudson |editor2-first=Herman |editor3-last=Balside |editor3-first=Zach |editor4-last=Olsen |editor4-first=Lindsey |display-editors=3}}</ref>


{| class="wikitable"
The SMU offense was never able to get on track the entire day. Luckily for the Mustangs, Wayne Rape picked off a Hargett pass and returned it for a touchdown to tie the score at 14. The score remained tied until Jerry LeVias scored the winning touchdown for the Mustangs on one of the most exciting punt returns in school history.
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|Year|Coach|Selector|Record|Bowl|Opponent|Result|Final AP|Final Coaches}}
|-
| [[1935 SMU Mustangs football team|1935]] || [[Matty Bell]] || [[Berryman (QPRS)]], [[Dickinson System]], [[Houlgate System]], [[Jeff Sagarin|Sagarin Ratings]], Sagarin (ELO-Chess) || 12–1 || [[1936 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] || [[1935 Stanford Indians football team|Stanford]] || L 0–7 || – || –
|-
| [[1981 SMU Mustangs football team|1981]] || [[Ron Meyer]] || [[National Championship Foundation]] || 10–1 || – || – || – || No. 5 || –
|-
| [[1982 SMU Mustangs football team|1982]] || {{nowrap|[[Bobby Collins (American football coach)|Bobby Collins]]}} || [[Helms Athletic Foundation]] || 11–0–1 || {{nowrap|[[1983 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl]]}} || [[1982 Pittsburgh Panthers football team|Pittsburgh]] || '''W''' 7–3 || No. 2 || No. 2
|}


===Conference championships===
The Mustang defense had found new life in the second half, keeping the Aggie offense from getting any real scoring threats. After forcing the Aggies to punt, LeVias went in to return the upcoming punt. He caught it at the SMU 17-yard line and was off to the races. He made the first wave of A&M defenders miss and found his way to the left sideline. Once he made it to the sideline, no one was going to catch him in the open field. He sprinted all the way to end zone as his teammates went wild as he ran by. LeVias had scored on an 83-yard punt return to give SMU a 21-14 victory.
SMU has won twelve conference championships, winning ten outright and two being shared.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/conferences/swc/|title=Southwest Conference Index - College Football at Sports-Reference.com|website=College Football at Sports-Reference.com}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable"
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|Year|Conference|Coach|Record|Conference Record}}
|-
| [[1923 SMU Mustangs football team|1923]] || rowspan="11"|[[Southwest Conference]] || rowspan="3"|[[Ray Morrison]] || 9–0 || 5–0
|-
| [[1926 SMU Mustangs football team|1926]] || 8–0–1 || 5–0
|-
| [[1931 SMU Mustangs football team|1931]] || 9–1–1 ||5–0–1
|-
| [[1935 SMU Mustangs football team|1935]] || rowspan="4"|[[Matty Bell]] || 12–1 || 6–0
|-
| [[1940 SMU Mustangs football team|1940]]† || 8–1–1 || 5–1
|-
| [[1947 SMU Mustangs football team|1947]] || 9–0–2 || 5–0–1
|-
| [[1948 SMU Mustangs football team|1948]] || 9–1–1 || 5–0–1
|-
| [[1966 SMU Mustangs football team|1966]] || [[Hayden Fry]] || 8–3 || 6–1
|-
| [[1981 SMU Mustangs football team|1981]] || [[Ron Meyer]] || 10–1 || 7–1
|-
| [[1982 SMU Mustangs football team|1982]] || rowspan="2"|[[Bobby Collins (American football coach)|Bobby Collins]] || 11–0–1 || 7–0–1
|-
| [[1984 SMU Mustangs football team|1984]]† || 10–2 || 6–2
|-
| [[2023 SMU Mustangs football team|2023]] || [[American Athletic Conference]] || [[Rhett Lashlee]] || 11–2 || 8–0
|}
† Co-champions


===Division championships===
Harold Ratliff of the associated press noted that, "Jerry LeVias was in only 66 plays in 1966, but accomplished more than any other player in the Southwest Conference." In his first season, LeVias made a name for himself as one of the greatest players ever to wear a Mustang uniform. Texas Tech coach J.T. King praised LeVias by saying, "He's the greatest big-play man that's been in this league for years and years, maybe since Doak Walker."
SMU has won two division championships.


{| class="wikitable"
In 1966, LeVias broke Doak Walker's school record with 393 yards on 15 kickoff returns, one for 100 yards against Baylor to tie Kyle Rote's
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|Year|Division|Coach|Opponent|CG result}}
|-
| [[2009 SMU Mustangs football team|2009]]† || rowspan="2"|Conference USA - West || rowspan="2"|[[June Jones]] || colspan="2"| ''N/A lost tie-breaker to [[2009 Houston Cougars football team|Houston]]''
|-
| [[2010 SMU Mustangs football team|2010]]† || [[2010 UCF Knights football team|UCF]] || L 7–17
|}
† Co-champions


==Bowl games==
SMU has participated in 21 bowl games. The Mustangs have a record of 7–11–1 in these games.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/southern-methodist/|title=SMU Mustangs Bowls|website=College Football at Sports-Reference.com}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable"
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|Season|Coach|Bowl|Opponent|Result}}
|-
| [[1924 SMU Mustangs football team|1924]] || [[Ray Morrison]] || [[1925 Dixie Classic|Dixie Classic]] || [[West Virginia Wesleyan College|West Virginia Wesleyan]] || L 7–9
|-
| [[1935 SMU Mustangs football team|1935]] ||rowspan="3"| [[Matty Bell]] || [[1936 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] || [[1935 Stanford Indians football team|Stanford]] || L 0–7
|-
| [[1947 SMU Mustangs football team|1947]] || [[1948 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1947 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Penn State]] || '''T''' 13–13
|-
| [[1948 SMU Mustangs football team|1948]] || [[1949 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1948 Oregon Webfoots football team|Oregon]] || '''W''' 21–13
|-
| [[1963 SMU Mustangs football team|1963]] ||rowspan="3"| [[Hayden Fry]] || [[1963 Sun Bowl|Sun Bowl]] || [[1963 Oregon Webfoots football team|Oregon]] || L 14–21
|-
| [[1966 SMU Mustangs football team|1966]] ||[[1966 Cotton Bowl Classic (December)|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1966 Georgia Bulldogs football team|Georgia]] || L 9–24
|-
| [[1968 SMU Mustangs football team|1968]] || [[1968 Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl|Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl]] || [[1968 Oklahoma Sooners football team|Oklahoma]] || '''W''' 28–27
|-
| [[1980 SMU Mustangs football team|1980]] || [[Ron Meyer]] || [[1980 Holiday Bowl|Holiday Bowl]] || [[1980 BYU Cougars football team|BYU]] || L 45–46
|-
| [[1982 SMU Mustangs football team|1982]] ||rowspan="3"| [[Bobby Collins (American football coach)|Bobby Collins]] || [[1983 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1982 Pittsburgh Panthers football team|Pittsburgh]] || '''W''' 7–3
|-
| [[1983 SMU Mustangs football team|1983]] || [[1983 Sun Bowl|Sun Bowl]] || [[1983 Alabama Crimson Tide football team|Alabama]] || L 7–28
|-
| [[1984 SMU Mustangs football team|1984]] || [[1984 Aloha Bowl|Aloha Bowl]] || [[1984 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team|Notre Dame]] || '''W''' 27–20
|-
| [[2009 SMU Mustangs football team|2009]] ||rowspan="4"| [[June Jones]] || [[2009 Hawai'i Bowl|Hawai{{okina}}i Bowl]] || [[2009 Nevada Wolf Pack football team|Nevada]] || '''W''' 45–10
|-
| [[2010 SMU Mustangs football team|2010]] || [[2010 Armed Forces Bowl|Armed Forces Bowl]] || [[2010 Army Black Knights football team|Army]] || L 14–16
|-
| [[2011 SMU Mustangs football team|2011]] || [[2012 BBVA Compass Bowl|BBVA Compass Bowl]] || [[2011 Pittsburgh Panthers football team|Pittsburgh]] || '''W''' 28–6
|-
| [[2012 SMU Mustangs football team|2012]] || [[2012 Hawai'i Bowl|Hawai{{okina}}i Bowl]] || [[2012 Fresno State Bulldogs football team|Fresno State]] || '''W''' 43–10
|-
| [[2017 SMU Mustangs football team|2017]] ||rowspan="4"| [[Sonny Dykes]] || [[2017 Frisco Bowl|Frisco Bowl]] || [[2017 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team|Louisiana Tech]] || L 10–51
|-
| [[2019 SMU Mustangs football team|2019]] || [[2019 Boca Raton Bowl|Boca Raton Bowl]] || [[2019 Florida Atlantic Owls football team|Florida Atlantic]] || L 28–52
|-
| [[2020 SMU Mustangs football team|2020]] || [[2020 Frisco Bowl|Frisco Bowl]] || [[2020 UTSA Roadrunners football team|UTSA]] || Canceled
|-
| [[2021 SMU Mustangs football team|2021]] || [[Fenway Bowl]] || [[2021 Virginia Cavaliers football team|Virginia]] || Canceled
|-
| [[2022 SMU Mustangs football team|2022]] || rowspan="2"| [[Rhett Lashlee]] || [[New Mexico Bowl]] || [[2022 BYU Cougars football team|BYU]] || L 23–24
|-
| [[2023 SMU Mustangs football team|2023]] || [[Fenway Bowl]] || [[2023 Boston College Eagles football team|Boston College]]|| L 14–23
|}


=== Playoffs ===
[[Jerry LeVias]] became the first African-American player in the Southwest Conference to receive an athletic scholarship in 1965 after choosing SMU largely because of its accounting program. As a senior in 1968, LeVias caught 80 passes for a school-record 1,131 yards when he was selected both an All-American and Academic All-American. Combined with quarterback [[Chuck Hixson]], LeVias helped lead the Mustangs to a 28-27 win over Oklahoma in the 1968 Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl, giving SMU its first bowl victory since the [[1949 Cotton Bowl]]. Hixson was just a sophomore in 1968, but he finished the season as the nation’s leading passer by completing 265 of 468 attempts for 3,103 yards. October 11, 1963, provided the SMU football program with perhaps its most memorable game when the Mustangs hosted #4 ranked Navy and its heralded quarterback, [[Roger Staubach]] at the [[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|Coton Bowl]]. On its way to a 4-7 season, SMU was given little chance to beat the Midshipmen. Little-known sophomore [[John Roderick]] rushed for 146 yards on 11 carries and scored on touchdown runs of 45 and two yards for the Mustangs. The SMU defense, led by [[Bob Oyler]], [[Martin Cude]], [[Bill Harlan]], [[Harold Magers]] and [[Doug January]], sent Staubach to the bench twice with a dislocated left shoulder. Trailing, 28-26, with 2:52 remaining in the game, SMU had one last chance to pull off the upset. Quarterback Danny Thomas threw to [[Billy Gannon]], who ran to the Navy 46. On the next play, Roderick took a pitchout 23 yards to the 23. After a pass interference penalty against Navy put the ball on the one-yard line, Gannon plowed over right tackle for the winning touchdown with 2:05 left. The SMU defense held off Staubach’s valiant effort to rally his team for one last score, as the Mustangs pulled off the 32-28 upset.
SMU was selected as the 11th seed in the [[College Football Playoff]] following the 2024 season.


{| class="wikitable"
• Jerry LeVias and [[John LaGrone]] were the only three-time All-SWC selections of the decade. LaGrone was also the first Mustang player to be selected as both an All-American and Academic All-American when he was honored following the 1966 season.
|-
• Led by LeVias and Chuck Hixson, the 1968 Mustangs eclipsed the 300-point barrier for the fi rst time in school history, scoring 311 points. In addition to his 1,131 receiving yards, LeVias set school records for receptions in a game (15 vs. Ohio State) and receiving yards in a game
{{CollegeSecondaryHeader|border=2|team=SMU Mustangs|Year|Seed|Opponent|Round|Result}}
(213 vs. N.C. State).
|-
|[[2024 SMU Mustangs football team|2024]] || 11 || No. 6 [[2024 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Penn State]] || First Round || [[2024–25 College Football Playoff|TBD]]
|}


==Head coaches==
'''1960 NFL Draftees'''
List of SMU head coaches.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/southern-methodist/coaches.html|title = SMU Mustangs Coaches}}</ref>
*[[Don Meredith]], Quarterback [[1960 NFL Draft|(32nd Pick, 4th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Bears]]
{| class="wikitable"
*[[Jim Welch]], Defensive Back [[1960 NFL Draft|(34th Pick, 4th Round)]] by the [[Baltimore Colts]]
|-
*James Jones, End [[1960 NFL Draft|(145th Pick, 13th Round)]] by the [[Los Angeles Rams]]
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|Coach|Tenure|Record|Winning %}}
|-
| [[Ray Morrison]] || 1915–1916 || 2–13–2 || {{winpct|2|13|2}}
|-
| [[J. Burton Rix]] || 1917–1921 || 16–19–7 || {{winpct|16|19|7}}
|-
| [[Ray Morrison]] || 1922–1934 || 82–31–20 || {{winpct|82|31|20}}
|-
| [[Matty Bell]] || 1935–1941, 1945–1949 || 79–40–8 || {{winpct|79|40|8}}
|-
| [[Jimmy Stewart (American football)|Jimmy Stewart]] || 1942–1944 || 10–18–2 || {{winpct|10|18|2}}
|-
| [[Rusty Russell (American football coach)|Rusty Russell]] || 1950–1952 || 13–15–2 || {{winpct|13|15|2}}
|-
| [[Woody Woodard]] || 1953–1956 || 19–20–1 || {{winpct|19|20|1}}
|-
| [[Bill Meek]] || 1957–1961 || 17–29–4 || {{winpct|17|29|4}}
|-
| [[Hayden Fry]] || 1962–1972 || 49–66–1 || {{winpct|49|66|1}}
|-
| [[Dave Smith (American football coach)|Dave Smith]] || 1973–1975 || 16–15–2 || {{winpct|16|15|2}}
|-
| [[Ron Meyer]] || 1976–1981 || 34–32–1 || {{winpct|34|32|1}}
|-
| [[Bobby Collins (American football coach)|Bobby Collins]] || 1982–1986 || 43–14–1 || {{winpct|43|14|1}}
|-
| [[Forrest Gregg]] || 1989–1990 || 3–19 || {{winpct|3|19|0}}
|-
| [[Tom Rossley]] || 1991–1996 || 15–48–3 || {{winpct|15|48|3}}
|-
| [[Mike Cavan]] || 1997–2001 || 22–34 || {{winpct|22|34}}
|-
| [[Phil Bennett (American football)|Phil Bennett]] || 2002–2007 || 18–52 || {{winpct|18|52}}
|-
| [[June Jones]] || 2008–2014 || 36–43 || {{winpct|36|43}}
|-
| [[Tom Mason (American football)|Tom Mason]] (Interim) || 2014 || 1–9 || {{winpct|1|9}}
|-
| [[Chad Morris]] || 2015–2017 || 14–22 || {{winpct|14|22}}
|-
| [[Sonny Dykes]] || 2017–2021 || 30–17 ||{{winpct|30|17}}
|-
| [[Rhett Lashlee]] || 2022–present || 27–10 ||{{winpct|27|10}}
|}


==Rivalries==
'''1961 NFL Draftees'''
===TCU===
*Glynn Gregory, Back [[1961 NFL Draft|(114th Pick, 9th Round)]] by the [[Dallas Cowboys]]
{{Main|SMU–TCU football rivalry}}
*[[Jerry Mays (defensive lineman)|Jerry Mays]], Tackle [[1961 NFL Draft|(141th Pick 11th Round)]] by the [[Minnesota Vikings]], played for the [[Kansas City Chiefs|AFL Dallas Texans]]
The respective campuses are located 40 miles apart in the [[Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex]]. The SMU–TCU rivalries go for all sports as well as recruiting students from the DFW area, as SMU and TCU are the two top schools in the region in academics and sports. The teams have played all but seven years since their first meeting in 1915. They did not face each other in 1919, 1920, 1925, 1987, 1988, 2006, or 2020.
*Bob Hunt, Tackle [[1961 NFL Draft|(189th Pick, 14th Round)]] by the [[Baltimore Colts]]


TCU and SMU fans began the tradition back in 1946. During pre-game festivities, an SMU fan was frying frog legs as a joke before the game. A TCU fan, seeing this desecration of the "frog", went over and told him that eating the frog legs was going well beyond the rivalry and that they should let the game decide who would get the skillet and the frog legs. TCU won the game, and the skillet and frog legs went to TCU. The tradition eventually spilled over into the actual game, and the Iron Skillet is now passed to the winner.
'''1961 AFL Draftees'''
*[[Jerry Mays (defensive lineman)|Jerry Mays]], Tackle [[1961 American Football League Draft|(38th Pick, 5th Round)]] by the [[Kansas City Chiefs|AFL Dallas Texans]]
*Glynn Gregory, Back [[1961 American Football League Draft|(102th Pick, 13th Round)]] by the [[Kansas City Chiefs|Dallas Texans]], played for the [[Dallas Cowboys|NFL Dallas Cowboys]]
*[[Frank Jackson (American football)|Frank Jackson]], Back [[1961 American Football League Draft|(150th Pick, 19th Round )]] by the [[Kansas City Chiefs|Dallas Texans]]


SMU and TCU have agreed to play each season through 2025 on an alternating home-and-home format; however, citing a desire to schedule as many out-of-conference games in Fort Worth as possible, TCU has decided to end the rivalry after the 2025 game.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kelley |first=Kevin |date=2023-08-16 |title=TCU, SMU indefinitely "pausing" football series after 2025, per report |url=https://fbschedules.com/tcu-smu-indefinitely-pausing-football-series-after-2025-per-report/ |access-date=2024-10-30 |website=FBSchedules.com |language=en-US}}</ref>
'''1962 NFL Draftees'''
*Guy Reese, Tackle [[1962 NFL Draft|(200th Pick, 15th Round) ]] by the [[Dallas Cowboys]]


SMU won the 2024 game and thus currently holds the Iron Skillet.
'''1962 AFL Draftees'''
*Guy Reese, Tackle [[1962 American Football League Draft|(83rd Pick, 11th Round)]] by the [[Kansas City Chiefs|Dallas Texans]]


TCU leads the series 53–43–7 through the 2024 season.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.winsipedia.com/smu/vs/tcu|title=Winsipedia - SMU Mustangs vs. TCU Horned Frogs football series history|website=Winsipedia}}</ref>
'''1963 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Ray Schoenke]], Center [[1963 NFL Draft|(146th Pick, 11th Round)]] by the [[Dallas Cowboys]]
'''1963 AFL Draftees'''
*[[Ray Schoenke]], Center [[1963 American Football League Draft|(73rd Pick, 10th Round]] by the [[Oakland Raiders]], played for the [[Dallas Cowboys|NFL Dallas Cowboys]]
*John Hughes, Guard [[1963 American Football League Draft|(200th Pick, 25th Round)]] by the [[Kansas City Chiefs]]


===Rice===
'''1964 NFL Draftees'''
{{Main|Rice–SMU football rivalry}}
*John Hughes, Linebacker [[1964 NFL Draft|(269th Pick, 20th Round)]] by the [[Dallas Cowboys]]
The Rice–SMU rivalry is a secondary one for both SMU (after TCU) and Rice (after Houston). However, it is a storied one since SMU is located inside the city of Dallas and Rice is located in Houston, the anchors of Texas's two largest metropolitan areas. Notably, SMU and Rice are two of the smaller universities in [[NCAA Division I FBS]]. Adding fuel to the fire is the fact that Rice and SMU are consistently ranked the best two private universities in Texas.


In 1918 both schools joined the [[Southwest Conference]], and from 1926 they played every year except for 1987 and 1988, after the NCAA gave SMU's football program the "[[death penalty (NCAA)|death penalty]]" following a [[Southern Methodist University football scandal|cheating scandal]]. They played in the same conference until 2013, beginning with the Southwest (1918–1996), then the [[Western Athletic Conference]] (1996–2005) and [[Conference USA]] (2005–2012). In that time, they had met 90 times, with SMU leading 48–41–1.
'''1965 AFL Draftees'''
*Danny Thomas, Quarterback [[1965 American Football League Draft|(61st Pick, 8th Round)]] by the [[Kansas City Chiefs]]


In 1998 a traveling trophy, the "Mayor's Cup", was introduced to the series, and had been awarded to the winner each year through 2012. SMU left Conference USA for The American for the 2013 season, and no games were played after 2012 meeting until Rice joined the [[American Athletic Conference]] in 2023. However, with SMU joining the [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] in 2024, the rivalry has become dormant again.
'''1966 NFL Draftees'''
*John Roderick, Wide Receiver [[1966 NFL Draft|(62nd Pick, 4th Round) ]] by the [[Green Bay Packers]]
'''1967 NFL Draftees'''
*Ron Medlen, Defensive End [[1967 NFL Draft|(154th Pick, 6th Round)]] by the [[Boston Patriots]]
*George Gaiser, Tackle [[1967 NFL Draft|(181st Pick, 7th Round)]] by the [[Buffalo Bills]]
*Jerry Griffin, Linebacker [[1967 NFL Draft|(200th Pick, 8th Round)]] by the [[Chicago Bears]]
*Billy Bob Stewart, Linebacker [[1967 NFL Draft|(438th Pick, 17th Round)]] by the [[New Orleans Saints]]


SMU won the 2023 game and thus currently holds the Mayor's Cup.
'''1968 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Mike Livingston]], Quarterback [[1968 NFL Draft|(48th Pick, 2nd Round)]] by the [[Kansas City Chiefs]]
*Jim Hagle, Running Back [[1968 NFL Draft|(140th Pick, 6th Round)]] by the [[Atlanta Falcons]]
*[[Dennis Partee]], Kicker [[1968 NFL Draft|(291st Pick, 11th Round)]] by the [[San Diego Chargers]]


SMU leads the series 49–41–1 through the 2023 season.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.winsipedia.com/smu/vs/rice|title=Winsipedia - SMU Mustangs vs. Rice Owls football series history|website=Winsipedia}}</ref>
'''1969 NFL Draftees'''
*[[Jerry LeVias]], Wide Receiver [[1969 NFL Draft|(40th Pick, 2nd Round)]] by the [[Houston Oilers]]
*Mike Richardson, Running Back [[1969 NFL Draft|(171st Pick, 7th Round)]] by the [[Houston Oilers]]
*Terry May, Center [[1969 NFL Draft|(274th Pick, 11th Round)]] by the [[Houston Oilers]]


===1970s: Mustang Mania===
===North Texas===
{{Main|Safeway Bowl}}
Chuck Hixson ended his SMU career in 1970 as the Mustangs’ career leader in total offense with 7,179 yards. Alvin Maxson helped fill the void left by Hixson’s absence by becoming the first Mustang to rush for 1,000 yards in consecutive seasons when he rushed for 1,012 in 1971 and 1,005
Nicknamed the "Safeway Bowl", the rivalry between SMU and North Texas is the most one-sided rivalry for the Mustangs. Its name is derived from a challenge from then North Texas head coach [[Matt Simon (American football, born 1953)|Matt Simon]] issued in 1994 after a two-year break in the series, stating "I'd like to play because I think we could beat them, and my players feel the same way. If they'd like to play on a Safeway parking lot ... just give us a date and time." North Texas generally considers SMU its biggest rival, but SMU downplays North Texas as a real rival. SMU and North Texas are located about 40 miles apart in the [[Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex]].
in 1972. In the process, he helped the Mustangs to back-to-back winning seasons for the first time since 1958-59.
Defensively, Robert Popelka, Louie Kelcher and Putt Choate starred for the Mustangs in the 1970s. All three were two-time All-Southwest Conference performers during their careers at SMU. Ron Meyer was hired as SMU’s 10th head coach in January of 1976 and was given the responsibility of establishing a championship reign on the Hilltop. His ability to recruit players such as Mike Ford and Emanuel Tolbert helped build the foundation of “Mustang Mania.” A highly-touted quarterback recruit from Mesquite High School, Ford was the nation’s second-ranked passer in 1978, when he threw for 3,007 yards. His main target was Tolbert, an All-American with blazing speed. Home attendance jumped from 26,000 to 52,000 in 1978 and “Mustang Mania” ushered a new era in SMU football the following season, when the Mustangs began playing all of their home games at Texas Stadium. Accompanying the move to a new stadium in 1979 was a freshman class which would lift SMU football to new heights. Freshmen Eric Dickerson and Craig James combined to rush for 1,239 yards in 1979, and the “Pony Express” was born.


The schools have played on and off 42 times dating back to 1922 with three major hiatuses, from 1943 to 1973, from 1993 to 2005, and from 2008 to 2013.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/game?gameId=401114253|title=North Texas vs. SMU - Game Summary - September 7, 2019 - ESPN|website=ESPN.com}}</ref>
• Tailback Arthur Whittington finished second in the nation in all-purpose running to Pittsburgh’s Tony Dorsett in 1976 with 167.5 yards a game. Whittington finished his SMU career in 1977 as the Mustangs’ all-time leader in kickoff return yards with 1,649.


North Texas joined the [[American Athletic Conference]] in 2023, making this a conference game for the first time. However, with SMU joining the [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] in 2024, the rivalry has become dormant again.
• A four-year starter from 1973-76, Ricky Wesson became the first Mustang quarterback to accumulate more yards rushing than passing in a single season in 1974. Wesson rushed for 885 yards while passing for 688. He became the fourth player in SMU history to lead the Mustangs in rushing and passing in the same season.


SMU leads the series 36–6–1 through the 2023 season.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.winsipedia.com/smu/vs/north-texas|title=Winsipedia - SMU Mustangs vs. North Texas Mean Green football series history|website=Winsipedia}}</ref>
• Putt Choate became the first Mustang defender to record more than 200 tackles in a season when he made 253 in 1978. Choate finished his career with 649 stops.


===Navy===
• Despite coming from different backgrounds, Eric Dickerson and Craig James shared similar success before arriving at SMU. Both led their high schools to undefeated 15-0 seasons and state championships as seniors. In three years at Sealy High School, Dickerson rushed for 5,875 yards and 84 touchdowns. James collected 2,411 yards and 35 TDs during his senior season at Stratford High School in Houston.
{{Main|Gansz Trophy}}
SMU and Navy have played each other 25 times, with Navy leading the series 13–12. In 2009, the athletic departments of the United States Naval Academy and Southern Methodist University created the Gansz Trophy in honor of [[Frank Gansz]] who played linebacker at the Naval Academy from 1957 through 1959, was on the Navy coaching staff from 1969 through 1972, and the coaching staff at SMU for the 2008 season before his spring 2009 death. The traveling trophy series has been a useful one for both schools because they both recruit students, even non-student athletes, heavily from the each other's region.


Navy joined the [[American Athletic Conference]] in 2015 which allowed for the rivalry to become a yearly conference game. However, with SMU joining the [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] in 2024, the rivalry has become dormant.
===1980s: The Pony Express===
There was a great deal of optimism surrounding the SMU football program in 1980. [[Eric Dickerson]] and [[Craig James]] gave the Mustangs one of the nation’s top backfield duos and Mike Ford returned to the team after a knee injury limited him to just two starts in 1979. Leading the defense
were future All-Americans John Simmons and Harvey Armstrong. The Mustangs parlayed their talent into an 8-4 record and the school’s first national ranking (20th) since 1968. A 10-1 record the following season vaulted the Ponies to their second national championship and their first conference title in 16 years, as a new quarterback took over the reigns of the Pony Express.


SMU won the 2023 game and thus currently holds the Gansz Trophy.
Lance McIlhenny was the perfect leader for SMU’s option attack, using his running ability and leadership capabilities to guide the Mustangs to a 34-5-1 record after taking over as the starting quarterback in the seventh game of his freshman season in 1980. After Ron Meyer was named head coach of the New England Patriots prior to the 1982 season, Southern Mississippi coach [[Bobby Collins]] was named the Mustangs’ new head coach. Dickerson, James and McIlhenny led SMU to an 11-0-1 record and its second-consecutive National Championship in 1982, highlighted by a victory over Pittsburgh and its star quarterback, Dan Marino, in the Cotton Bowl.


Navy leads the series 13–12 through the 2023 season.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.winsipedia.com/smu/vs/navy|title=Winsipedia - SMU Mustangs vs. Navy Midshipmen football series history|website=Winsipedia}}</ref>
With the loss of Dickerson and James to the National Football League in 1983, the Mustangs found a capable replacement in Reggie Dupard, a tailback from New Orleans whose blazing speed made him the first SMU running back to gain over 1,000 yards in three consecutive seasons. Dupard was the nation’s eighth-leading rusher in 1985 with 1,278 yards, and he became a first-round draft choice by the New England Patriots the following spring. After NCAA sanctions forced the cancellation of the 1987 season and university officials canceled the 1988 campaign, SMU welcomed one of its former gridiron greats back to lead the resurrection of the Mustang football program. [[Forrest Gregg]] returned to accept what he called “the ultimate challenge” when he was named as the Ponies’ head coach Jan. 14, 1988, after having coached the Green Bay Packers since 1984. He was given the responsibility of guiding a team consisting of 74 freshmen, 16 of whom were starters. One of those freshmen was quarterback Mike Romo who, on Feb. 10, 1988, became the Mustangs’ first signee since 1985. Romo engineered one of the most exciting wins in Mustang history when he led SMU from a 17-point deficit in the final five minutes to defeat Connecticut, 31-30, in just the second game of the 1989 season. He completed a four-yard pass to Michael Bowen on the game’s final play to give the Ponies their first win since 1986 in a game that came to be known as the "Miracle on Mockingbird."


=== All-time record vs. frequent opponents ===
• One of the most memorable plays in SMU football history took place Nov. 13, 1982, when Bobby Leach took a cross-field lateral on a kickoff with 17 seconds left and raced untouched for a 91-yard touchdown to give the Mustangs a 34-27 win over Texas Tech. The play helped preserve the
Ponies’ undefeated season and forever branded Leach with the nickname of “Miracle Man.”


• As a freshman in 1989, Mike Romo broke four school passing records which had stood for over 20 years. Romo set SMU records for yards passing in a game (450), passes completed in a game (40), passes completed in a season (282) and passes attempted in a season (503).


{| class="wikitable sortable"
• Jason Wolf set an NCAA freshman record when he caught 61 passes in 1989.
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|Opponent|Meetings|Won|Lost|Tied}}

|-
• After playing their home games in Ownby Stadium from 1926-48, the Mustangs returned their home games to the on-campus facility in 1989. SMU hosted Rice in the season opener on Sept. 2, marking the return of Mustang football to Ownby exactly 40 years and 11 months after SMU’s last game there.
| [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] || 103 || 43 || 53 || 7

|-
===1990s: Aftermath of the Death Penalty===
| [[Rice Owls football|Rice]] || 91 || 49 || 41 || 1
Forrest Gregg assumed the role of athletic director April 11, 1990, while announcing that he would relinquish his coaching duties following the 1990 season. Tom Rossley, who served as offensive coordinator at SMU from 1988-89, became the 13th head coach in Mustang history in December 1991. The orchestrator of the Mustangs’ Run-and-Shoot offense, Rossley returned to the Hilltop after one season as the quarterbacks coach of the Atlanta Falcons. The Mustangs went 5-6 in 1992 and Rossley
|-
was named Southwest Conference Co-Coach of the Year. Another significant accomplishment occurred that season when Jason Wolf ended his career with 235 receptions, making him the Southwest Conference’s career leader in that category.
| [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]] || 82 || 36 || 39 || 7

|-
Mick Rossley then emerged as the Mustangs’ top receiving threat. A sure-handed receiver, Rossley broke Jerry LeVias’ school record for receptions in a season when he hauled in 83 passes in 1994. Following the 1994 season SMU announced that it would accept an invitation to join the Western Athletic Conference beginning in 1996. As SMU prepared to begin its 77th and final season of play in the Southwest Conference the decision was also made to return SMU football to the Cotton Bowl. After playing most of its home games the previous six seasons at Ownby Stadium, SMU made “The House That Doak Built” its home stadium again in 1995. The Mustangs made their return a memorable one when, in the season opener against eventual SEC Western Division champion Arkansas, Wilbert Mitchell recovered a Razorback fumble on the SMU two-yard line in the game’s final minute to preserve a 17-14 win.
| [[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]] || 81 || 29 || 45 || 7

|-
The Mustangs showed they could compete in the Western Athletic Conference by fashioning a 4-4 record in their new league in 1996, highlight by a 30-0 victory at UTEP, which marked the Ponies' first shutout win since 1984. The Mustangs also won at Arkansas, exploded for 52 points against New Mexico and upended crosstown rival TCU, 27-24, before a national television (ESPN) audience in the 1996 season finale at the Cotton Bowl.
| [[Texas Longhorns football|Texas]] || 73 || 22 || 47 || 4

|-
Mike Cavan was named the 14th head coach of the Mustangs on December 20, 1996. Cavan led SMU to a 6-5 overall record in 1997, marking the first winning season for the Mustangs since 1986. After a 1-4 start, SMU won five consecutive games, marking its longest winning streak in 12 years. Cavan was named the WAC Coach of the Year by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram for his efforts in 1997. Among SMU's victims in 1998 was Metroplex rival and bowl-bound TCU on "Doak Walker Day" at the Cotton Bowl. The game was played in memory of the Mustangs' greatest player, who passed away September 27, 1998, at the age of 71. SMU dedicated its season to Walker, who won the 1948 Heisman Trophy.
| [[Arkansas Razorbacks football|Arkansas]] || 73 || 31 || 37 || 5

|-
• John Stewart became the first SMU All-America selection since
| [[Texas Tech Red Raiders football|Texas Tech]] || 49 || 16 || 33 || 0
Reggie Dupard in 1985 when the Mustang kicker was honored following
|-
the 1993 season. A former walk-on who never had attempted a field goal
| [[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas]] || 43 || 36 || 6 || 1
or extra point prior to his senior season in 1993, Stewart converted on all
|-
23 of his extra point attempts, as well as 13 of his 17 field goal attempts,
| [[Houston Cougars football|Houston]] || 37 || 14 || 22 || 1
including a 55-yarder.
|-
• Quarterback Ramon Flanigan became SMU's all-time leader in total
| [[Tulane Green Wave football|Tulane]] || 30 || 16 || 14 || 0
offense (7,437 yards) and touchdowns responsible for (57) with a solid
|-
senior season in 1997. He was granted a sixth year of eligibility prior to
| [[Tulsa Golden Hurricane football|Tulsa]] || 30 || 17 || 13 || 0
1997 by the NCAA.
|-
• Linebacker Chris Bordano was named the 1997 WAC Mountain
| [[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy]] || 25 || 12 || 13 || 0
Division Defensive Player of the Year after leading the team in tackles with
120. Bordano became just the 10th player in SMU history to be named
all-conference three times.
• In 1999, SMU great Eric Dickerson was inducted into the Professional
Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, becoming the fifth Mustang
to be enshrined.
• Defensive end Luke Johnson recorded 11.5 sacks in 1999 while
helping lead SMU to a 4-6 record, and concluded his career as the
program's all-time sack leader with 23.5 sacks from 1996-99.
• In 1999, the Ponies closed another chapter of Mustang football at
the Cotton Bowl and prepared to move into their new on campus home,
Gerald J. Ford Stadium, in 2000.

===2000s===
Sept. 2, 2000, may stand out as the most signifi cant day in the history
of the storied SMU football program. That was the date that Mustang
football returned to campus with the inaugural game in $56-million Gerald
J. Ford Stadium. SMU christened the facility by whipping Big 12 foe
Kansas, 31-17, before a sellout crowd of 32,267. It was the fi rst capacity
home crowd for Mustang football since 1990.
Former Kansas State defensive coordinator Phil Bennett was named
the 15th head coach in school history Dec. 5, 2001. Bennett's fi rst season
on the Hilltop saw one of the greatest statistical rushing seasons ever
produced at SMU, as junior back Keylon Kincade rushed 327 times
for 1,279 yards with eight 100-yard rushing games. Kincade's attempts
number was a school season record while his yardage total and number
of 100-yard games ranked third on the SMU season lists.The 2002 campaign was also the last for two of the best players in
recent SMU history: tight end John Hampton and linebacker Vic Viloria.
Hampton concluded his career as the program's all-time leader in receptions
at his position with 114. Viloria was SMU's leading tackler during his
fi nal three seasons and fi nished his career ranked eighth on the school's
all-time tackles list with 372. He earned All-WAC honors three times.
The 2005 season brought a new highlight to SMU football history as
the Mustangs stampeded into Conference USA. SMU fi nished the 2005
season with a 5-6 mark, its highest win total in eight seasons. The year
was full of highlights like SMU’s fi rst win over a ranked team since 1986,
a 3-1 record against Bowl teams, and a three-game win streak to end the
season - SMU’s longest since 1999.
The 2006 season showcased a bright future for SMU football.
The Mustangs increased their win total for the third straight season,
posted their highest win total in a decade and reached bowl-eligibility.
SMU student-athletes fi lled a Conference USA-high six spots on the
All-Freshman team and SMU also placed the record-setting pair of
quarterback Justin Willis and wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders on The
Sporting News’ Freshman All-America squad. SMU continued to win
off the fi eld as well, as the Mustangs received the American Football
Coaches Association’s 2006 Academic Achievement Award after the
school recorded a 100 percent graduation rate.
After a disappointing 1-11 season in 2007, Bennett was dismissed
as head coach. Former National Coach of the Year June Jones was
then lured away from Hawaii to coach the Mustangs, creating a sense
of excitement not seen on the Hilltop in decades.
Jones' fi rst season was a record-setting one, with the Mustangs
setting numerous passing and receiving marks.
The 2009 season was a true breakthrough. SMU went 8-5, posting
the biggest turnaround in the nation, won the Conference USA Western
Division Co-Championship and were Sheraton Hawaii Bowl Champions.
It marked SMU's first bowl berth and win in 25 years.

===1976-1986: A Winning Record===
Coach [[Ron Meyer]] came to SMU in 1976 after his success as an assistant with the Dallas Cowboys in the 1970's (including a [[Super Bowl]] win) and a stint with [[UNLV]]. Coach Meyer was infamous for his recruiting tactics, including visits each year to the homes of an unprecedented 70 or more of the top recruits homes per year. His most notable recruits were future [[NFL]] runningbacks [[Eric Dickerson]] and [[Craig James (American football)|Craig James]] before the 1979 season, as both their high school teams went 15-0 and won state championships. Combined with blue chip runningback Charles Waggoner, the three backs were nicknamed the "Pony Express" running attack and shredded opposing defenses in the option offense lead by quarterback Lance McIlhenny. This team claimed a share of the 1981 college football Division 1-A national championship, based on the determination of the National Championship Foundation.

Coach Meyer left to become the head coach of the New England Patriots in 1982, and SMU hired Coach [[Bobby Collins (American football)|Bobby Collins]], then head coach at [[University of Southern Mississippi]]. Dickerson finished 3rd in the Heisman Trophy voting in 1982, and the team claimed a share of its second consecutive national championship, based on the determination of the [[Helms Athletic Foundation]].

SMU posted a record of 45-5-1 from 1980-1984, which was the highest win percentage (0.892) in Division 1-A over that span.

===1987-2007: NCAA "Death Penalty" and decades of rebuilding===
{{main|Southern Methodist University football scandal}}
In 1987, SMU football became the first, and currently only, football program in collegiate athletic history to receive the [[National College Athletic Association]] (NCAA) "[[death penalty (NCAA)|Death Penalty]]" for repeat violation of NCAA rules, that is, having a sports program fully terminated for a determined amount of time. SMU's football program was terminated for the 1987 season because the University was making approximately $61,000 in booster payments from 1985 to 1986. It later emerged that a "slush fund" had been used to pay players as early as the mid-1970s, and athletic officials had known about it as early as 1981.

SMU was eligible for the "death penalty" because it had been placed on probation in 1985 for recruiting violations. Since many players were poor, boosters would pay for rent or other bills for the parents of the athletes, and several key boosters and administration officials felt it would be unethical to cut off payments. When the sanctions were handed down, SMU had only three players - all seniors about to graduate - receiving payments.

Not long afterward, SMU announced that its football team would stay shuttered for the 1988 season as well after school officials received indications that they wouldn't have enough experienced players to field a viable team.<ref>{{cite news| title='88 football season canceled by SMU| work=[[New York Times]]| last=Frank| first=Peter| date=1987-04-11}}</ref> As it turned out, new coach [[Forrest Gregg]] was left with an undersized and underweight lineup; he was taller and heavier than virtually all of his players.

The Mustangs struggled for 20 years to recover from the effects of the scandal. Coach Gregg compiled a 3-19 record in his two seasons. He moved on to be the SMU Athletic Director from 1990 through 1994.

The Mustangs had 3 more head coaches and only one winning season through the completion of the 2007 season.

===2008-present: Return to Success===
[[Image:Shawnbrey_McNeal_stiffarm.jpg|thumb|SMU in action versus [[UTEP Miners#Football|UTEP]] in 2009]]
In 2008 SMU hired Steve Orsini away from the [[UCF|University of Central Florida]] (UCF) to be the SMU Athletic Director. Orsini then hired [[June Jones]] from the [[Hawaii Warriors football|University of Hawai'i]] to be the team's new head coach at SMU and currently the 5th coach in the post death penalty time since 1989. In Jones' first season at SMU the team had a worst 1-11 record.
In 2009, Coach Jones' second season at SMU, the Mustangs had a turnaround season, compiling an improved regular season record of 7-5. Although finishing unranked in the [[2009 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings]], SMU was invited to its first bowl game in 25 years, defeating the unranked [[2009 Nevada Wolf Pack football team|Nevada Wolf Pack]] with a final score 45-10 in the [[2009 Hawai'i Bowl]], the team's first bowl win since 1984.

In 2010, the Mustangs again compiled a regular season record of 7-5, with a 6-2 in-conference record to earn their first chance at winning a conference title in 26 years, securing a berth in the [[2010 Conference USA Football Championship Game|Conference USA Championship]] game. SMU lost the conference title game, 17-7, against [[2010 UCF Knights football team|UCF]]. Once again unranked in the [[2010 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings]], SMU was invited to its second consecutive bowl game, the [[2010 Armed Forces Bowl]], where it will play against the unranked [[2010 Army Black Knights football team|Army Black Knights]].

==Achievements==
===Team achievements===
====National championships====
The NCAA's website states that "the NCAA does not conduct a national championship in Division I-A football and is not involved in the selection process." It goes on to say that "a number of polling organizations provide a final ranking of Division I-A football teams at the end of each season." SMU officially claims three national championships (1935, 1981 & 1982). (The NCAA officially changed the "I-A" designation to the Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) in 2006.)

{| border="0" width="100%"
| valign="top" |
{| cellpadding="1" border="1" cellspacing="0" width="80%"
!bgcolor="B10000"| <font color=white>Year
!bgcolor="B10000"| <font color=white>Coach
!bgcolor="B10000"| <font color=white>Selector
!bgcolor="B10000"| <font color=white>Record
!bgcolor="B10000"| <font color=white>Bowl
!bgcolor="B10000"| <font color=white>Result
|- align="center"
| [[1935 SMU Mustangs football team|1935]] || [[Matty Bell]] || Dickinson, Houlgate System, and Sagarin Ratings || 12-1 || [[Rose Bowl Game|Rose Bowl]] || SMU 0, '''Stanford''' 7
|-align="center"
| [[1981 SMU Mustangs football team|1981]] || [[Ron Meyer]] || National Championship Foundation || 10-1 || -- || --
|-align="center"
| [[1982 SMU Mustangs football team|1982]] || [[Bobby Collins (American football)|Bobby Collins]] || Helms Athletic Foundation
|| 11-0-1 || [[1982 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || '''SMU''' 7, Pittsburgh 3
|-align="center"
| colspan=4 bgcolor="032B66"| <font color=white>'''Total National Championships:'''
| colspan=2 bgcolor="032B66"| <font color=white>'''3'''
|}
|}
|}<ref>[http://smumustangs.cstv.com/auto_pdf/p_hotos/s_chools/smu/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/09-smu-mg-records]</ref>


==Appearances in the final Associated Press Poll==
====Conference championships====
SMU has made 192 appearances in the Associated Press poll over 103 seasons. SMU has been ranked in the top 10 for [https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/southern-methodist/polls.html 63 weeks].
{| border="0" width="100%"
| valign="top" |
{| cellpadding="1" border="1" cellspacing="0" width="80%"
!bgcolor=B10000| <font color=white>Year
!bgcolor=B10000| <font color=white>Conference
!bgcolor=B10000| <font color=white>Coach
!bgcolor=B10000| <font color=white>Record
|- align="center"
| [[1923 SMU Mustangs football team|1923]] || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Ray Morrison]] || 9–0-0
|- align="center"
| [[1926 SMU Mustangs football team|1926]] || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Ray Morrison]] || 8–0–1
|- align="center"
| [[1931 SMU Mustangs football team|1931]] || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Ray Morrison]] || 9–1–1
|- align="center"
| [[1935 SMU Mustangs football team|1935]] || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Matty Bell]] || 12–1–0
|- align="center"
| [[1940 SMU Mustangs football team|1940]] † || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Matty Bell]] || 8–1–1
|- align="center"
| [[1947 SMU Mustangs football team|1947]] || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Matty Bell]] || 9-0-2
|- align="center"
| [[1948 SMU Mustangs football team|1948]] || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Matty Bell]] || 9-1-1
|- align="center"
| [[1966 SMU Mustangs football team|1966]] || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Hayden Fry]] || 8–3–0
|- align="center"
| [[1981 SMU Mustangs football team|1981]] || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Ron Meyer]] || 10-1-0
|- align="center"
| [[1982 SMU Mustangs football team|1982]] || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Bobby Collins (American football)|Bobby Collins]] || 11-0-1
|- align="center"
| [[1984 SMU Mustangs football team|1984]] ‡ || [[Southwest Conference]] || [[Bobby Collins (American football)|Bobby Collins]] || 10–2–0
|- align="center"
| colspan=2 bgcolor="032B66"| <font color=white>'''Total Conference Championships'''
| colspan=2 bgcolor="032B66"| <font color=white>'''11'''
|}
† Co-Champion with the [[Texas A&M Aggies football, 1940–49|Texas A&M Aggies]]


==Home fields==
‡ Co-Champion with the [[Houston Cougars football|University of Houston Cougars]]
* [[Armstrong Field]] (1915–1925)
* [[Ownby Stadium]] (1926–1948, 1989–1994)
* [[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|Cotton Bowl]] (1932–1978, 1995–1999)
* [[Texas Stadium]] (1979–1986)
* [[Gerald J. Ford Stadium]] (2000–present)


==Individual achievements==
====Divisional championships====
{| border="0" width="100%"
| valign="top" |
{| cellpadding="1" border="1" cellspacing="0" width="80%"
!bgcolor=B10000| <font color=white>Year
!bgcolor=B10000| <font color=white>Conference
!bgcolor=B10000| <font color=white>Coach
!bgcolor=B10000| <font color=white>Record
|- align="center"
| [[2009 SMU Mustangs football team|2009]] † || [[Conference USA]] || [[June Jones]] || 8–5
|- align="center"
| [[2010 SMU Mustangs football team|2010]] ‡ || [[Conference USA]] || [[June Jones]] || 7–6
|- align="center"
| colspan=2 bgcolor="032B66"| <font color=white>'''Total Divisional Championships'''
| colspan=2 bgcolor="032B66"| <font color=white>'''2'''
|}
† Co-Divisional Champion with the [[2009 Houston Cougars football team|University of Houston Cougars]]

‡ Co-Divisional Champion with the [[2010 Tulsa Golden Hurricane football team|Tulsa Golden Hurricane]]

===Individual achievements===
'''[[Heisman Trophy]]'''
'''[[Heisman Trophy]]'''
*[[Doak Walker]] 1948
* [[Doak Walker]] 1948


'''[[Maxwell Award]]'''
'''[[Maxwell Award]]'''
*[[Doak Walker]] 1947
* [[Doak Walker]] 1947


'''[[Sammy Baugh Trophy]]'''
'''[[Sammy Baugh Trophy]]'''
*[[Chuck Hixson]] 1968
* [[Chuck Hixson]] 1968



'''College Football Hall of Fame Inductees'''
'''College Football Hall of Fame Inductees'''
{{seealso|College Football Hall of Fame}}
{{See also|College Football Hall of Fame}}
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
|-
! Name !! Position !! Years at SMU !! Year Inducted
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|Name|Position|Tenure at SMU|Year Inducted}}
|-
|-
| [[Ray Morrison]] || [[Coach]] || 1915-1916, 1922-1934 || 1954
| [[Ray Morrison]] || [[Coach (sport)|Coach]] || 1915–1916, 1922–1934 || 1954
|-
|-
| [[Gerald Mann|Gerald "Little Red Arrow" Mann]] || [[Quarterback]] || 1925-1927 || 1969
| [[Gerald Mann|Gerald "Little Red Arrow" Mann]] || [[Quarterback|QB]] || 1925–1927 || 1969
|-
|-
| [[Bob Wilson (American football)|Bobby Wilson]] || [[Halfback]] || 1933-1935 ||1973
| [[Bob Wilson (American football)|Bobby Wilson]] || [[halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1933–1935 ||1973
|-
|-
| [[Matty Bell|Matty "Moanin' Matty" Bell]] || [[Coach (sport)|Coach]] || 1935–1941, 1945–1949 || 1955
| [[Matty Bell|"Moanin'" Matty Bell]] || [[Coach (sport)|Coach]] || 1935–1941, 1945–1949 || 1955
|-
|-
| [[Doak Walker|Doak "The Doaker" Walker]] || [[Halfback]] || 1945, 1947-1949 || 1959
| [[Doak Walker|Doak "The Doaker" Walker]] || [[halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1945, 1947–1949 || 1959
|-
|-
| [[Kyle Rote|Kyle "The Mighty Mustang" Rote]] || [[Halfback]] || 1948-1950 || 1964
| [[Kyle Rote|Kyle "The Mighty Mustang" Rote]] || [[halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1948–1950 || 1964
|-
|-
| [[Don Meredith|Don "Dandy Don" Meredith]] || [[Quarterback]] || 1957-1959 || 1982
| [[Gerald Mann]] || [[Quarterback|QB]] || 1925–1927 || 1969
|-
|-
| [[Hayden Fry]] || [[Coach (sport)|Coach]] || 1962-1972 || 2003
| [[Don Meredith|"Dandy" Don Meredith]] || [[Quarterback|QB]] || 1957–1959 || 1982
|-
|-
| [[Jerry Rhome]] || [[Quarterback]] || 1961 || 1998
| [[Hayden Fry]] || [[Coach (sport)|Coach]] || 1962–1972 || 2003
|-
|-
| [[Jerry LeVias]] || [[Wide Receiver]] || 1966-1968 || 2003
| | [[Jerry LeVias]] || [[Wide receiver|WR]] || 1966–1968 || 2003
|-
| | [[Eric Dickerson]] || [[Running back|RB]] || 1979–1982 || 2020
|}
|}


'''All-Americans'''
'''All-Americans'''
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
|-
! Name !! Position !! Year
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|Name|Position|Year}}
|-
|-
| Choc Sanders || [[Guard (American football)|Guard]] || 1928
| Choc Sanders || [[Guard (American football)|G]] || 1928
|-
|-
| Marion Hammon || [[Tackle (American football)|Tackle]] || 1929
| Marion Hammon || [[Tackle (American football)|T]] || 1929
|-
|-
| Speedy Mason || [[Halfback]] || 1931
| Speedy Mason || [[halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1931
|-
|-
| Clyde Carter || [[Tackle (American football)|Tackle]] || 1934
| Clyde Carter || [[Tackle (American football)|T]] || 1934
|-
|-
| Harry Shuford <br/> [[Bob Wilson (American football)|Bobby Wilson]] || [[Fullback (American football)|Fullback]] <br/> [[Halfback]]|| 1934
| Harry Shuford<br />[[Bob Wilson (American football)|Bobby Wilson]] || [[Fullback (American football)|FB]]<br />[[halfback (American football)|HB]]|| 1934
|-
|-
| Harry Shuford <br/> [[Bob Wilson (American football)|Bobby Wilson]] <br/> [[Truman Spain|Truman "Big Dog" Spain]] <br/> [[J.C. Wetsel|J.C. "Iron Man" Wetsel]]|| [[Fullback (American football)|Fullback]] <br/> [[Halfback]] <br/> [[Tackle]] <br/> [[Guard]] || 1935
| Harry Shuford<br />[[Bob Wilson (American football)|Bobby Wilson]]<br />[[Truman Spain|Truman "Big Dog" Spain]]<br />[[J. C. Wetsel|J.C. "Iron Man" Wetsel]]|| [[Fullback (American football)|FB]]<br />[[halfback (American football)|HB]]<br />[[Tackle (American football)|T]]<br />[[Guard (American football)|G]] || 1935
|-
|-
| Kelly Simpson || [[End (American football)|End]] || 1941
| Kelly Simpson || [[End (American football)|End]] || 1941
|-
|-
| Tom Dean || [[Tackle (American football)|Tackle]] || 1945
| Tom Dean || [[Tackle (American football)|T]] || 1945
|-
|-
| [[Doak Walker|Doak "The Doaker" Walker]] || [[Halfback]] || 1947
| [[Doak Walker|Doak "The Doaker" Walker]] || [[halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1947
|-
|-
| [[Doak Walker|Doak "The Doaker" Walker]] || [[Halfback]] || 1948
| Doak Walker || [[halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1948
|-
|-
| [[Doak Walker|Doak "The Doaker" Walker]] || [[Halfback]] || 1949
| Doak Walker || [[halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1949
|-
|-
| [[Kyle Rote|Kyle "The Mighty Mustang" Rote]] || [[Halfback]] || 1950
| [[Kyle Rote|Kyle "The Mighty Mustang" Rote]] || [[halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1950
|-
|-
| Dick Hightower || [[Center (American football)|Center]] || 1951
| Dick Hightower || [[Center (American football)|C]] || 1951
|- [[Forrest Gregg]] || [[Tackle (American football)|T]] || 1955
|-
|-
| [[Don Meredith|Don "Dandy Don" Meredith]] || [[Quarterback]] || 1958
| [[Don Meredith|Don "Dandy Don" Meredith]] || [[Quarterback|QB]] || 1958
|-
|-
| [[Don Meredith|Don "Dandy Don" Meredith]] || [[Quarterback]] || 1959
| Don Meredith || [[Quarterback|QB]] || 1959
|-
|-
| [[John LaGrone]] || [[Guard (American football)|Guard]] || 1966
| [[John LaGrone]] || [[Guard (American football)|G]] || 1966
|-
|-
| [[Jerry LeVias]] || [[Wide Receiver]] || 1968
| [[Jerry LeVias]] || [[Wide receiver|WR]] || 1968
|-
|-
| Robert Popelka || [[Defensive End]] || 1972
| Robert Popelka || [[Defensive end|DE]] || 1972
|-
|-
| [[Louie Kelcher]] <br/> [[Oscar Roan]] || [[Guard (American football)|Guard]] <br/> [[Tight End]] || 1974
| [[Louie Kelcher]]<br />[[Oscar Roan]] || [[Guard (American football)|G]]<br />[[Tight end|TE]] || 1974
|-
|-
| [[Emanuel Tolbert]] || [[Wide Receiver]] || 1978
| [[Emanuel Tolbert]] || [[Wide receiver|WR]] || 1978
|-
|-
| [[John Simmons (American football)|John Simmons]] || [[Defensive Back]] || 1980
| [[John Simmons (American football)|John Simmons]] || [[Defensive back|DB]] || 1980
|-
|-
| [[Harvey Armstrong]] || [[Defensive Tackle]] || 1981
| [[Harvey Armstrong]] || [[Defensive tackle|DT]] || 1981
|-
|-
| [[Eric Dickerson]] || [[Running Back]] || 1982
| [[Eric Dickerson]] || [[Running back|RB]] || 1982
|-
|-
| [[Russell Carter]] || [[Defensive Back]] || 1983
| [[Russell Carter (American football)|Russell Carter]] || [[Defensive back|DB]] || 1983
|-
|-
| [[Reggie Dupard]] || [[Running Back]] || 1985
| [[Reggie Dupard]] || [[Running back|RB]] || 1985
|-
|-
| John Stewert || [[Placekicker]] || 1993
| John Stewert || [[Placekicker|K]] || 1993
|}
|}


'''Honored jerseys'''
==Honored jerseys==
SMU has honored six jerseys.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://smumustangs.com/documents/2017/8/26//07_History.pdf?id=9828|title=SMU Athletics|website=SMUMustangs.com|access-date=January 27, 2018}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|No.|Name|Position|Tenure}}
! Number !! Name
|-
|-
| 17 || [[Don Meredith|Don "Dandy Don" Meredith]]
| 17 || [[Don Meredith]] || QB || 1957–59
|-
|-
| 19 || [[Eric Dickerson]]
| 19 || [[Eric Dickerson]] || RB || 1979–1982
|-
|-
| 37 || [[Doak Walker|Doak "The Doaker" Walker]]
| 37 || [[Doak Walker]] || HB/K || 1945, 1947–1949
|-
|-
| 73 || [[Forrest Gregg]]
| 73 || [[Forrest Gregg]] || OT/DT || 1952–55
|-
|-
| 80 || [[Lamar Hunt]]
| 80 || [[Lamar Hunt]] || WR || 1952–55
|-
|-
| 87 || [[Raymond Berry]]
| 87 || [[Raymond Berry]] || End || 1951–54
|}
|}


==Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees==
==Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees==
{{seealso|List of Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees}}
{{See also|List of Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees}}
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
|-
! Name !! Position !! Team(s) !!Years !! Year Inducted
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=SMU Mustangs|Name|Position|Team(s)|Years in NFL|Year Inducted}}
|-
|-
| [[Lamar Hunt]] || League Founder, Owner || [[Kansas City Chiefs|Dallas Texans]] <br/> [[Kansas City Chiefs]] || 1960-1962 <br/> 1963-2006 || 1972
| [[Lamar Hunt]] || League founder, owner || [[Dallas Texans (AFL)|Dallas Texans]]<br />[[Kansas City Chiefs]] || 1960–1962<br />1963–2006 || 1972
|-
|-
| [[Raymond Berry]] || [[End (American football)|End]] || [[Indianapolis Colts|Baltimore Colts]] || 1955-1967 || 1973
| [[Raymond Berry]] || [[End (American football)|End]] || [[Baltimore Colts]] || 1955–1967 || 1973
|-
|-
| [[Forrest Gregg]] || [[Tackle (American football)|Offensive Tackle]] || [[Green Bay Packers]] <br/> [[Dallas Cowboys]] || 1956, 1958-1970 1971 || 1977
| [[Forrest Gregg]] || [[Tackle (American football)|T]] || [[Green Bay Packers]]<br />[[Dallas Cowboys]] || 1956, 1958–1970<br />1971 || 1977
|-
|-
| [[Doak Walker]] || [[Halfback (American football)|Halfback]] || [[Detroit Lions]] || 1950-1955 || 1986
| [[Doak Walker]] || [[Halfback (American football)|HB]] || [[Detroit Lions]] || 1950–1955 || 1986
|-
|-
| [[Eric Dickerson]] || [[Running Back]] || [[St. Louis Rams|Los Angeles Rams]] <br/> [[Indianapolis Colts]] <br/> [[Oakland Raiders|Los Angeles Raiders]] <br/> [[Atlanta Falcons]] || 1983&ndash;1987<br/>1987&ndash;1991<br/>1992<br/>1993 || 1999
| [[Eric Dickerson]] || [[Running back|RB]] || [[Los Angeles Rams]]<br />[[Indianapolis Colts]]<br />[[Los Angeles Raiders]]<br />[[Atlanta Falcons]] || 1983–1987<br />1987–1991<br />1992<br />1993 || 1999
|}
|}


==Future opponents==
== Bowl appearances ==

===Conference opponents===
On October 30, 2023, the [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] (ACC) announced the future conference schedules for SMU for the 2024 season to 2030.<ref name="2430acc">{{cite web|first=Andrea|last=Adelson|title=ACC unveils 7-year football slate for new 17-team league|publisher=ESPN| url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/38781798/acc-unveils-7-year-football-slate-new-17-team-league|date=2023-10-30|access-date=2023-11-01}}</ref> The 17-team ACC will play an eight-game conference schedule with just one division, with four non-conference contests. All 17 teams will play each other at least twice in 7 years, once at home and once on the road. The new scheduling includes SMU having two protected games each year with [[California Golden Bears football|California]] and [[Stanford Cardinal football|Stanford]], with the remaining 14 teams rotating each year.<ref name="2430smu">{{cite web|first=Stefan|last=Stevenson|title=SMU's ACC road map: Mustangs' conference football schedule laid out through 2030|publisher=The Dallas Morning News| url=https://www.dallasnews.com/sports/smu-mustangs/2023/10/30/smus-acc-road-map-mustangs-conference-football-schedule-laid-out-through-2030/|date=2023-10-30|access-date=2023-11-01}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
! Season !! Year !! Bowl Game !! Opponent !! W/L !! PF !! PA
|-
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=SMU Mustangs|'''2024'''|'''2025'''|'''2026'''|'''2027'''|'''2028'''|'''2029'''|'''2030'''}}
| [[1924 SMU Mustangs football team|1924]] || 1925 || [[1925 Dixie Classic|Dixie Classic]] || [[1924 West Virginia Wesleyan football team|West Virginia Wesleyan]] || '''L''' || 7 || 9
|-
|-
| [[Boston College Eagles football|Boston College]]
| [[1935 SMU Mustangs football team|1935]] || 1936 || [[1936 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] || [[1935 Stanford Indians Football team|Stanford]] || '''L''' || 0 || 7
| [[Louisville Cardinals football|Louisville]]
| [[Boston College Eagles football|Boston College]]
| [[Clemson Tigers football|Clemson]]
| [[California Golden Bears football|California]]
| [[Clemson Tigers football|Clemson]]
| [[California Golden Bears football|California]]
|-
|-
| [[California Golden Bears football|California]]
| [[1947 SMU Mustangs football team|1947]] || 1948 || [[1948 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1947 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Penn State]] || '''T''' || 13 || 13
| [[Miami Hurricanes football|Miami]]
| [[California Golden Bears football|California]]
| [[Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football|Georgia Tech]]
| [[Florida State Seminoles football|Florida State]]
| [[Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football|Georgia Tech]]
| [[Duke Blue Devils football|Duke]]
|-
|-
| [[Florida State Seminoles football|Florida State]]
| [[1948 SMU Mustangs football team|1948]] || 1949 || [[1949 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1948 Oregon Ducks football team|Oregon]] || '''W''' || 21 || 13
| [[Stanford Cardinal football|Stanford]]
| [[Virginia Cavaliers football|Virginia]]
| [[Stanford Cardinal football|Stanford]]
| [[Louisville Cardinals football|Louisville]]
| [[NC State Wolfpack football|NC State]]
| [[Miami Hurricanes football|Miami]]
|-
|-
| [[Pittsburgh Panthers football|Pittsburgh]]
| [[1963 SMU Mustangs football team|1963]] || 1963 || [[1963 Sun Bowl|Sun Bowl]] || [[1963 Oregon Ducks football team|Oregon]] || '''L'''|| 14 || 21
| [[Syracuse Orange football|Syracuse]]
| [[Wake Forest Demon Deacons football|Wake Forest]]
| [[Virginia Tech Hokies football|Virginia Tech]]
| [[North Carolina Tar Heels football|North Carolina]]
| [[Stanford Cardinal football|Stanford]]
| [[Syracuse Orange football|Syracuse]]
|-
|-
| at [[Duke Blue Devils football|Duke]]
| [[1966 SMU Mustangs football team|1966]] || 1966 || [[1966 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1966 Georgia Bulldogs football team|Georgia]] || '''L''' || 9 || 24
| at [[Boston College Eagles football|Boston College]]
| at [[Florida State Seminoles football|Florida State]]
| at [[California Golden Bears football|California]]
| at [[Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football|Georgia Tech]]
| at [[Boston College Eagles football|Boston College]]
| at [[Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football|Georgia Tech]]
|-
|-
| at [[Louisville Cardinals football|Louisville]]
| [[1968 SMU Mustangs football team|1968]]|| 1968 || [[1968 Bluebonnet Bowl|Bluebonnet Bowl]] || [[1968 Oklahoma Sooners football team|Oklahoma]] || '''W''' || 28 || 27
| at [[California Golden Bears football|California]]
| at [[Louisville Cardinals football|Louisville]]
| at [[Pittsburgh Panthers football|Pittsburgh]]
| at [[NC State Wolfpack football|NC State]]
| at [[California Golden Bears football|California]]
| at [[North Carolina Tar Heels football|North Carolina]]
|-
|-
| at [[Stanford Cardinal football|Stanford]]
| [[1980 SMU Mustangs football team|1980]] || 1980 || [[1980 Holiday Bowl|Holiday Bowl]] || [[1980 Brigham Young Cougars football team|BYU]] || '''L''' || 45 || 46
| at [[Clemson Tigers football|Clemson]]
| at [[Stanford Cardinal football|Stanford]]
| at [[Virginia Cavaliers football|Virginia]]
| at [[Stanford Cardinal football|Stanford]]
| at [[Miami Hurricanes football|Miami]]
| at [[Pittsburgh Panthers football|Pittsburgh]]
|-
|-
| at [[Virginia Cavaliers football|Virginia]]
| [[1982 SMU Mustangs football team|1982]] || 1983 || [[1983 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1982 Pittsburg Panthers football team|Pittsburgh]] || '''W''' || 7 || 3
| at [[Wake Forest Demon Deacons football|Wake Forest]]
|-
| at [[Syracuse Orange football|Syracuse]]
| [[1983 SMU Mustangs football team|1983]] || 1983 || [[1983 Sun Bowl|Sun Bowl]] || [[1983 Alabama Crimson Tide football team|Alabama]] || '''L''' || 7 || 28
| at [[Wake Forest Demon Deacons football|Wake Forest]]
|-
| at [[Virginia Tech Hokies football|Virginia Tech]]
| [[1984 SMU Mustangs football team|1984]] || 1984 || [[1984 Aloha Bowl|Aloha Bowl]] || [[1984 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team|Notre Dame]] || '''W''' || 27 || 20
| at [[Syracuse Orange football|Syracuse]]
|-
| at [[Stanford Cardinal football|Stanford]]
| [[2009 SMU Mustangs football team|2009]] || 2009 || [[2009 Hawai'i Bowl|Hawai{{okina}}i Bowl]] || [[2009 Nevada Wolf Pack football team|Nevada]] || '''W''' || 45 || 10
|-
| [[2010 SMU Mustangs football team|2010]] || 2010 || [[2010 Armed Forces Bowl|Armed Forces Bowl]] || [[2010 Army Black Knights football team|Army]] || || ||
|}
|}


===Non-conference opponents===
==Head coaches==
Announced opponents as of November 6, 2024.<ref name="nonconfopp">{{cite web |title=SMU Mustangs Football Future Schedules |url=https://fbschedules.com/ncaa/smu/ |access-date=November 6, 2024 |publisher=FBSchedules.com}}</ref>

{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=SMU Mustangs|2024|2025|2026|2027|2028|2029|2030|2031}}
! Name !! Years !! W-L-T
|-
| [[Ray Morrison]] || 1915-1916 || 2-13-2
|-
| [[J. Burton Rix]] || 1917-1921 || 16-19-7
|-
| [[Ray Morrison]] || 1922-1934 || 82-31-20
|-
| [[Matty Bell|Madison "Matty" Bell]] || 1935-1941 || 47-24-3
|-
|-
| at [[Nevada Wolfpack football|Nevada]]
| [[Jimmy Stewart (American football)|James "Jimmy" Stewart]] || 1942-1944 || 10-18-2
| [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]]
| at [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]]
| [[Oklahoma Sooners football|Oklahoma]]
| at [[Vanderbilt Commodores football|Vanderbilt]]
| [[Vanderbilt Commodores football|Vanderbilt]]
| at [[Colorado Buffaloes football|Colorado]]
| [[Colorado Buffaloes football|Colorado]]
|-
|-
| [[Houston Christian Huskies football|Houston Christian]]
| [[Matty Bell|Madison "Matty" Bell]] || 1945-1949 || 32-16-5
| at [[Missouri State Bears football|Missouri State]]
| [[Missouri State Bears football|Missouri State]]
|
| [[Nevada Wolf Pack football|Nevada]]
|
|
| at [[BYU Cougars football|BYU]]
|-
|-
| [[BYU Cougars football|BYU]]
| [[Rusty Russell (American football)|Harvey “Rusty” Russell]] || 1950-1952 || 13-15-2
| at [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]]
| at [[Notre Dame Fighting Irish football|Notre Dame]]
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]]
| [[Chalmer Woodard|Chalmer “Woody” Woodard]] || 1953-1956 || 19-20-1
|-
|
|
| [[Bill Meek|William "Bill" Meek]] || 1957-1961 || 17-29-4
|-
|
|
| [[Hayden Fry]] || 1962-1972 || 49-66-1
|-
|
|
| [[Dave Smith (American football coach)|Dave Smith]] || 1973-1975 || 16-15-2
|-
|
| [[Ron Meyer]] || 1976-1981 || 34-32-1
|-
| [[Bobby Collins (American football)|Bobby Collins]] || 1982-1986 || 43-14-1
|-
| [[Forrest Gregg]] || 1989-1990 || 3-19-0
|-
| [[Tom Rossley]] || 1991-1996 || 15-48-3
|-
| [[Mike Cavan]] || 1997-2001 || 22-34-0
|-
| [[Phil Bennett (American football)|Phil Bennett]] || 2002-2007 || 18-52-0
|-
| [[June Jones]] || 2008-2010 || 16-22-0
|}
|}


==References==
==Future non-conference opponents==
{{Reflist}}
SMU has released a partial list of non-conference opponents for the near future:
{| class="wikitable"
|-style="background:#B10000" align=center
|<font color=white> '''2011''' ||<font color=white> '''2012''' ||<font color=white> '''2013''' ||<font color=white> '''2014''' ||<font color=white> '''2015''' ||<font color=white> '''2016''' ||<font color=white> '''2017''' ||<font color=white> '''2018'''
|-
|Sep. 3 at [[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]]||Sep. 1 at [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]]||Aug. 31 vs. [[Texas Tech Red Raiders football|Texas Tech]]||Aug. 30 at [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]]||Sep. 5 vs. [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]]||Sep. 3 at [[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas]]||at. [[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy]]||vs. [[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy]]
|-
|Sep. 17 vs. [[Northwestern State Demons|Northwestern State]]||Sep. 8 vs. [[Stephen F. Austin State University|Stephen F. Austin]]||Sep. 14 vs. [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]] ||Sep. 6 at [[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas]] ||Sep. 12 vs. [[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas]]||Sep. 10 vs. [[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy]]||vs. [[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas]]
|-
|Oct. 01 at [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]]||Sep. 15 vs. [[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]]||Sep. 21 at [[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]]||Sep. 13 vs. [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] ||Sep. 19 at [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]]||Sep. 17 at. [[Baylor Bears football|Baylor]]||at. [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]]
|-
|Nov. 05 vs. [[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy]]||Sep. 29 vs. [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]]||Sep. 28 at [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] ||Sep. 20 vs. [[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]]||Sep. 26 at [[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy]]||Sep. 24 vs. [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]]
|}

==Rivalries==
*[[Rice Owls football|Rice Owls]], in the [[Battle for the Mayor's Cup]].
*[[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU Horned Frogs]], in the [[Battle for the Iron Skillet]].
*[[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas Mean Green]], in the [[Safeway Bowl]].
*[[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy Midshipmen]], for the [[Gansz Trophy]].

==Home fields==
*[[Ownby Stadium]], 1926-1948
*[[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|Cotton Bowl]], 1932-1978
*[[Texas Stadium]], 1979–1986
*Ownby Stadium, 1989-1994
* Cotton Bowl, 1995-2000
*[[Gerald J. Ford Stadium]], 2000-Present

== References ==
{{reflist}}
*[http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_ia/conferenceusa/southern_methodist/index.php Southern Methodist Historical Data], College Football Data Warehouse.


== External links ==
==External links==
{{Commons category}}
* [http://smumustangs.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/smu-m-footbl-body.html SMUMustangs.com]
* {{Official website}}


{{Southern Methodist University}}
{{C-USA football}}
{{SMU Mustangs football navbox}}
{{SMUMustangsFootballNavbox}}
{{Atlantic Coast Conference football navbox}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:SMU Mustangs football|*]]
[[Category:SMU Mustangs football| ]]
[[Category:Sports clubs established in 1915]]
[[Category:American football teams established in 1915]]
[[Category:1915 establishments in Texas]]
Seifried, C.S., & Tutka, P. (2016). Southern Methodist University Football and the Stadia: Moving toward Modernization. Sport History Review, 47, 172-192.

Latest revision as of 16:46, 13 December 2024

SMU Mustangs football
2024 SMU Mustangs football team
First season1915; 109 years ago
Athletic directorRick Hart
Head coachRhett Lashlee
3rd season, 29–11 (.725)
StadiumGerald J. Ford Stadium
(capacity: 32,000)
Year built2000
Field surfaceFieldTurf
LocationUniversity Park, Texas
NCAA divisionDivision I FBS
ConferenceACC
Past conferencesTIAA (1915–1917)
SWC (1918–1995)
WAC (1996–2004)
C-USA (2005–2012)
American (2013–2023)
All-time record544–562–54 (.492)
Bowl record7–11–1 (.395)
Playoff appearances1 (2024)
Claimed national titles3 (1935, 1981, 1982)
Conference titles12 (11 SWC, 1 AAC)
Division titles2 (C-USA West Division)
RivalriesTCU (rivalry)
Houston (rivalry)
North Texas (rivalry)
Navy (rivalry)
Rice (rivalry)
Heisman winnersDoak Walker – 1948
Consensus All-Americans17
Current uniform
ColorsRed and blue[1]
   
Fight songPony Battle Cry
MascotPeruna
Marching bandMustang Band
OutfitterNike
Websitesmumustangs.com

The SMU Mustangs football team is a college football team representing Southern Methodist University (SMU) in University Park in Dallas County, Texas. The Mustangs compete in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). SMU joined the ACC in July 2024 after eleven years as a member of the American Athletic Conference (AAC).

History

[edit]

Early history (1915–1917)

[edit]

In June 1915, Ray Morrison became SMU's football, baseball, basketball, and track coach, in addition to being a math instructor. The football team was initially a member of the Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association (TIAA) and played at Armstrong Field. Due to rules of the TIAA that prohibited graduate and transfer students from playing, the first season was played with only freshmen. During this time, the football team was known as "the Parsons", due to the large number of theology students on the team. [2][3]

SMU's first football game was a 43-0 loss against future rival TCU on October 9, 1915. SMU won their first game on October 14, 1915, with a 13–2 victory over Hendrix College. SMU finished its first season 2-5. After winning two games in a span of two seasons, Morrison left SMU for service in the United States Army upon the United States’ entry into World War I.[2]

On October 17, 1917, the name "Mustangs" was selected as the school's mascot. For the 1917 season, Morrison was replaced by J. Burton Rix, who led the Mustangs to a 3–2–3 record in their final season in the TIAA. [2]

Joining the Southwest Conference (1918–1921)

[edit]

In 1918, the Mustangs joined the Southwest Conference alongside Baylor University, Rice University, the University of Texas, Texas A&M University, the University of Arkansas, and Oklahoma A&M University. The Mustangs’ first season in the conference ended with a 4–2 record. J. Burton Rix continued to coach the team in the 1921 season, but after two games, Rix resigned and E. William (Bill) Cunningham took over as interim head coach for the remainder of the season. The team went on to finish with a 1-6-1 record.[4]

The return of Morrison (1922–1934)

[edit]

Ray Morrison returned to SMU in 1920 to work in the department of physical education before co-coaching the team starting in 1922 with former Vanderbilt teammate Ewing Y. Freeland.[5] For the 1922 and 1923 seasons, Morrison focused on the backfield and ends while Freeland focused on the linemen.[citation needed] The team earned the nickname "Aerial Circus" from sportswriters for its unconventional strategy of frequently passing on first and second downs rather than reserving the play as a last resort. While most teams of the era used the forward pass only five to six times per game, SMU executed it up to 30 to 40 times per game.[3]

In the 1922 season, the Mustangs compiled a 6–3–1 record. Furthermore, end Gene Bedford and back Logan Stollenwerck were named first-team All-Southwest Conference, becoming the first SMU football players to receive that honor. Bedford was the first player to play in the National Football League, for the Rochester Jeffersons. In the 1923 season, the SMU Mustangs achieved a perfect 9–0 record, winning their first conference football title in school history. After this season, Freeland left the SMU football team, later becoming head coach for the Texas Technological College football team, leaving Morrison as the sole head coach for SMU. SMU played in their first bowl game in 1924, in the Dixie Classic against West Virginia Wesleyan College, but lost that game 7–9.[6]

By 1926, the team began playing their home games at Ownby Stadium. In their first game at Ownby Stadium, the Mustangs defeated North Texas State Teachers College 42–0, led by quarterback Gerald Mann. The first Homecoming game was also played in 1926, resulting in a 14–13 victory over Texas Christian University. [7]

The team continued to have winning seasons until the 1932 season. The Mustangs won their second conference title in 1926, compiling an 8–0–1 record, and a third conference title in 1931, compiling a 9–0–1 record. In 1928, guard Choc Sanders became SMU's first All-American, as well the first All-American from the Southwest Conference. In 1929, tackle Marion Hammon became SMU's second All-American. After a winning 1934 season, Morrison left SMU to take over the Vanderbilt Commodores football team after the retirement of Dan McGugin.[6]

A national championship (1935–1941)

[edit]

Morrison was replaced by Matty Bell in 1935. In his first season, Bell led the Mustangs to a 12–1 record. During this season, the Mustangs were crowned national champions by Frank Dickinson[8] and Deke Houlgate, two of seven contemporaneous selectors, all math systems, that chose five different national champions that year.[9] To play in the Rose Bowl against the Stanford Indians football team for the unofficial national championship, SMU faced off against the TCU Horned Frogs, who featured two time all-american quarterback Sammy Baugh.

The Mustangs had three more winning seasons from 1936 to 1939. SMU failed to win the Southwest Conference title in 1940, despite having the same conference record as the Texas A&M Aggies. After a 5–5 season in 1941, Bell left SMU to serve in the United States Navy during World War II.

The war years (1942–1944)

[edit]

With Bell in the Navy, Jimmy Stewart took his place as head coach. In his three seasons as head coach, Stewart compiled an overall record of 10–18–2. Bell returned as head coach for the 1945 season.

Doak Walker era (1945–1949)

[edit]

Upon Bell's return as SMU's head coach, the team also gained halfback and placekicker Doak Walker. Walker won All-Southwest Conference honors his freshman year in 1945 and played in the East–West Shrine Game in San Francisco. Walker did not play for the 1946 season due to serving in the United States Army, yet re-enrolled at SMU and rejoined the football team for the 1947 season.

The Mustangs posted a 9–0–2 record in 1947, winning their sixth Southwest Conference title. In the same season, the team played against the Penn State Nittany Lions in the Cotton Bowl Classic, resulting in a 13–13 tie. Walker threw a 53-yard touchdown pass and scored on a two-yard run in this game. Walker earned the Maxwell Award during this season.[10]

During the 1948 season, the Mustangs won their seventh conference title, posting a 9–1–1 record. The team played in the Cotton Bowl Classic once more, defeating the Oregon Webfoots, who were led by quarterback Norm Van Brocklin, 21–13, making it their first victory in a bowl game in school history. Doak Walker, winning All-American honors, also won the Heisman Trophy, the only Mustang ever to do so. Additionally, the Mustangs permanently moved to the Cotton Bowl for their home games this season, after playing only limited numbers of games in that stadium in years previous. In their final game at Ownby Stadium, the Mustangs defeated Texas Tech 41–6. Due to Doak Walker's popularity and gate draw—also as an allusion to 1923 Yankee Stadium's "House that Ruth Built″[11] moniker referring to that stadium's likewise excess of capacity—the Cotton Bowl became regionally known as "The House that Doak Built".[12]

The 1949 season was both Doak Walker's and coach Matty Bell's last as part of SMU's varsity football team and program. The team posted a 5–4–1 record. Walker won All-American honors a third time, the most for any football player in SMU's history. Bell continued to serve SMU as the athletic director; Walker played in the NFL for the Detroit Lions. Over the course of his career at SMU, Walker rushed for 1,954 yards, passed for 1,638 yards, scored 288 points, punted for a 39.4 average and kicked field goals and extra points. He is also the Mustangs' all-time leader in punt return yards with 750—that was during an "era" of NCAA single-platoon substitution rules. Bell left the head coaching position at SMU with a 79–40–8 record, including three Southwest Conference titles, a bowl game victory, and a national championship.

Russell, Woodard, and Meek eras (1950–1961)

[edit]

Bell was replaced by Rusty Russell in 1950. Russell previously served as quarterbacks and running backs coach from 1945 to 1949, and is credited with luring Doak Walker away from the University of Texas. In three seasons as head coach, Russell compiled a 13–15–2 record. After a strong first season, in which the Mustangs were ranked number one in the nation, the team suffered two losing seasons. Increasingly under fire, Russell resigned as head coach after the 1952 season.

Kyle Rote, who filled Doak Walker's place on the team, led the Southwest Conference with 777 yards rushing in 1949, and was named an All-American following the 1950 season. Quarterback Fred Benners led the Mustangs to perhaps their greatest win of the decade when he completed 22 of 42 passes for 336 yards to beat Notre Dame, 27–20, in Notre Dame, Indiana on October 13, 1951. Benners connected on TD passes of 57, 37, 31 and four yards to four different receivers as the Mustangs beat the Fighting Irish in what was one of the highlights in a 3–6–1 season. Furthermore, Forrest Gregg became part of the team in 1952, and became a two-time All-Southwest Conference player by 1955, later moving on to the NFL. Moreover, David Powell became SMU's first Academic All-American winner in the 1952 season.

Woody Woodard took Russell's place as head coach in 1953. Woodard compiled a 19–20–1 record in his four seasons as head coach for SMU, resigning after two consecutive losing seasons. During the 1954 season, wide receiver Raymond Berry was elected as a co-captain, despite only catching 11 passes for 144 yards, winning All-Southwest Conference and Academic All-American honors, and later played in the NFL for the Baltimore Colts.

Woodard was replaced by Bill Meek in 1957, who was coming off a Missouri Valley Conference title-winning season with the Houston Cougars. In five seasons with SMU, Meek compiled a 17–29–4 record. During Meek's time as head coach, quarterback Don Meredith earned All-American honors in 1958 and 1959, his .610 career completion percentage the best in SMU history, along with a tremendous running ability that increased the pressure on opposing defenses. The 1960 season, though, proved particularly bad for the Mustangs, as they went 0–9–1, losing every game by more than 10 points with the exception of a game against Texas A&M in which neither team scored.

Hayden Fry era (1962–1972)

[edit]

In 1962, Hayden Fry became SMU's eighth head coach. The Mustangs hosted the fourth-ranked Navy Midshipmen (including quarterback Roger Staubach) on October 11, 1963, at the Cotton Bowl. SMU, on its way to a 4–7 season, was given little chance of beating the Midshipmen. Little-known sophomore John Roderick rushed for 146 yards on 11 carries and scored on touchdown runs of 45 yards and two yards for the Mustangs. The SMU defence, led by Bob Oyler, Martin Cude, Bill Harlan, Harold Magers and Doug January, sent Staubach to the bench twice with a dislocated left shoulder. Trailing 28–26 with 2:52 remaining in the game, SMU had a chance to pull off an upset. Quarterback Danny Thomas threw to Billy Gannon, who ran to the Navy 46. On the next play, Roderick took a pitchout 23 yards to the 23. After a pass interference penalty against Navy put the ball on the one-yard line, Gannon ploughed over the right tackle for the winning touchdown with 2:05 left. The SMU defense held off Staubach's effort to rally his team for one last score, as the Mustangs pulled off the 32–28 upset. Despite a losing record in 1963, the Mustangs played in the Sun Bowl, their first since the 1948 season, against the Oregon Webfoots, losing 14–21.

When Fry took the job at SMU, he was promised that he would be allowed to recruit black athletes. Jerry LeVias became the first black player signed to a football scholarship in the Southwest Conference, and played his first game for SMU in 1966, one week after John Hill Westbrook of Baylor became the first black player to play for a conference team. Fry received abuse for recruiting a black player to SMU in the form of hate mail and threatening phone calls, but he downplayed the treatment because of the much, much worse harassment LeVias himself was subjected to.

During the 1966 season, Hayden Fry lifted SMU back to national prominence; SMU was ranked ninth in the nation and won its first conference championship in 18 years, its seventh overall. Fry also won Conference Coach of the Year. SMU lost in the Cotton Bowl to the Georgia Bulldogs 9–24. John LaGrone, who earned conference honors from 1964 to 1966, was the first Mustang player to be selected as both an All-American and Academic All-American when he was honored following the 1966 season.

During the 1968 season, combined with quarterback Chuck Hixson, Levias helped lead the Mustangs to a 28–27 win over Oklahoma in the 1968 Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl, giving SMU its first bowl victory since the 1949 Cotton Bowl. SMU and Oklahoma combined to score 35 points in the fourth quarter. SMU stopped Oklahoma short of a potential game-winning two-point conversion with 1:16 left to play. LeVias was selected as an all-conference player as a senior for the third time.

Fry's Mustangs had a 12-20 record over the next three years, from 1969 to 1971. That led to uncertainty about his leadership, and rumors began to swirl after the Mustangs started the 1972 season with a 4–4 record. The three-game winning streak that followed was not enough to save Fry's job. After a 7-4 season in 1972, Fry was fired, which robbed the Mustangs of a bowl berth. In his 11 seasons at SMU, Fry compiled a 49-66-1 record.

Dave Smith era (1973–1975)

[edit]

After Fry's departure, Dave Smith, a former assistant coach under Fry, took his place as head coach. Coming off a 7-4 season with Oklahoma State, Smith had two consecutive 6-4-1 seasons with SMU, with his final season resulting in a 4-7 record. In three seasons with SMU, Smith compiled a 16–15–2 record. Smith was replaced by Ron Meyer in 1976.

Ron Meyer-Bobby Collins era (1976–1986)

[edit]

Coach Ron Meyer came to SMU in 1976 from the Dallas Cowboys in the 1970s (including a Super Bowl win) and a stint with UNLV. Coach Meyer was notable for his recruiting tactics, including visits each year to the homes of 70 or more of the top recruits per year. His most notable recruits were future NFL running backs Eric Dickerson and Craig James before the 1979 season, as both their high school teams went 15-0 and won state championships. Combined with blue chip running back Charles Waggoner, the three backs were nicknamed the "Pony Express" running attack and shredded opposing defenses in the option offense led by quarterback Lance McIlhenny. In 1981, the Mustangs' performance earned them recognition by the National Championship Foundation as one of its five co-national champions.[9]: 112–114  The final Associated Press poll ranked SMU No. 5, placing Clemson at No. 1. The team was not ranked in the coaches' poll at all due to a rule forbidding teams on probation from consideration.[13]

Coach Meyer left to become the head coach of the New England Patriots in 1982, and SMU hired Coach Bobby Collins, then head coach at the University of Southern Mississippi. Dickerson finished 3rd in the Heisman Trophy voting in 1982, and the team claimed a share of its second consecutive national championship, being selected by Bill Schroeder of the Helms Athletic Foundation as his last ever selection,[14] in addition to consensus champion Penn State; the Mustangs did, however, finish second in both the AP and coaches' polls.[13]

SMU posted a 49-9-1 record from 1980 to 1984, which was the highest win percentage (.839) in Division I-A over that span.[15]

"Death Penalty" and decades of rebuilding (1987–2007)

[edit]

In 1987, SMU became the first and only football program in collegiate athletic history to receive the "death penalty" for repeated serious violations of NCAA rules. The NCAA forced SMU to cancel its football program for the 1987 season because the university had been paying some of the players—approximately $61,000 was paid from 1985 until 1986. It later emerged that SMU had been keeping a slush fund to pay players since as early as the mid-1970s and that athletic officials had known about it as early as 1981.[citation needed]

SMU was eligible for the "death penalty" because it had already violated recruiting rules, and as a result had been placed on probation in 1985. Since many potential student-athletes were poor, boosters had been inducing them to sign with SMU by offering them payments and expense coverage. Several key boosters and SMU officials had determined that it would be unethical to cut off those payments after having started them, but also potentially problematic, as some boosters had signed contracts agreeing to pay certain athletes for the duration of their time at SMU. There was also the potential of disgruntled football players "blowing the whistle" on SMU should the payments be discontinued. When the sanctions were handed down, SMU had three players – all seniors about to graduate – receiving payments. Not long afterward, SMU announced that football was canceled for the 1988 season as well, after school officials received indications that there would be too few experienced players at the school to field a viable team,[16] as most of the team had left the university and transferred to other institutions. Forrest Gregg, an SMU alumnus who had been the head coach of the Green Bay Packers, was hired in 1988 to help rebuild the team. The two-year gap in the program meant that Gregg had to begin with an undersized and underweight lineup.

The Mustangs struggled for 20 years to recover from the effects of the penalty and the scandal. Coach Gregg compiled a 3–19 record in his two seasons. He moved on to be SMU's athletic director from 1990 through 1994. The program's chances of ever recovering were likely ruined by the collapse of the Southwest Conference after the 1995 season; SMU wound up in the WAC and later in Conference USA.

The Mustangs had three more head coaches, and only one winning season, through the completion of the 2007 season.

C-USA era (2008–2014)

[edit]
SMU in action versus UTEP in 2009

In 2008 SMU hired Steve Orsini away from the University of Central Florida (UCF) to be SMU's athletic director. Orsini then hired June Jones from the University of Hawai'i as head football coach – the team's fifth coach since 1989. In Jones' first season at SMU, they had a 1–11 record. In 2009, Coach Jones' second season at SMU, the Mustangs made a turnaround, with a regular season record of 7–5. Despite finishing unranked in the 2009 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings, SMU was invited to its first bowl game in 25 years, and defeated the unranked Nevada Wolf Pack with a final score of 45–10 in the 2009 Hawai'i Bowl, the team's first bowl win since 1984.

In 2010, the Mustangs again compiled a regular season record of 7–5, with a 6–2 in-conference record to earn their first chance at winning a conference title in 26 years, securing a berth in the Conference USA Championship game. SMU lost the conference title game, 17–7, against UCF. Once again unranked in the 2010 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings, SMU was invited to its second consecutive bowl game, the 2010 Armed Forces Bowl, where it lost against the unranked Army Black Knights.

Following Texas A&M's move to the SEC in August and September 2011, SMU made it known that they would like to replace Texas A&M in the Big 12.[17] SMU's interest in the Big 12 was never reciprocated, and the Big 12 instead added TCU and West Virginia University.

SMU went on to win back-to-back bowl games in the 2012 BBVA Compass Bowl (for the 2011 season) and 2012 Hawaii Bowl. SMU ended the Jones era in 2014 the way it began: with a 1–11 season. The Mustangs won the last game of the season against the University of Connecticut on December 6, 2014.

Chad Morris (2015–2017)

[edit]

SMU hired Clemson offensive coordinator Chad Morris as head coach and announced his placement on December 1, 2014.[18] His first season resulted in a 2–10 record, a slight improvement from the 2014 season. SMU continued to improve in Morris' second season, finishing 5–7.[19] In his 3rd season, Morris was able to lead the Mustangs to bowl eligibility and a 7–5 record in 2017.[20] However, Morris accepted the head coaching position at Arkansas in the weeks prior to the bowl game, and SMU was forced to move quickly to hire a new football coach in light of the approaching bowl game.[21]

Sonny Dykes (2017–2021)

[edit]

Sonny Dykes was hired as the new football coach of SMU on December 11, 2017.[22] The Mustangs were defeated by Louisiana Tech 51–10 in the DXL Frisco Bowl.[23]

A Mustangs player scores a touchdown against Michigan in 2018

In the 2019 season, the Mustangs got off to an 8–0 start. On September 21, they defeated cross-town rival TCU. On September 29, the Mustangs were ranked in the AP top 25 for the first time since October 25, 1986.[24]

Rhett Lashlee (2021–present)

[edit]

Rhett Lashlee returned to SMU as Head Football Coach on November 29th, 2021. Lashlee previously served as offensive coordinator for the Mustangs, including during the record-setting 2019 season.[25]

Conference affiliations

[edit]

Years listed here are football seasons. Conference changes take effect in the summer after a school's last football season in a conference.

Championships

[edit]

National championships

[edit]

SMU has won three National Championships from NCAA-designated major selectors.[26][27]: 112–114  SMU claims all three Championships.[2]

Year Coach Selector Record Bowl Opponent Result Final AP Final Coaches
1935 Matty Bell Berryman (QPRS), Dickinson System, Houlgate System, Sagarin Ratings, Sagarin (ELO-Chess) 12–1 Rose Bowl Stanford L 0–7
1981 Ron Meyer National Championship Foundation 10–1 No. 5
1982 Bobby Collins Helms Athletic Foundation 11–0–1 Cotton Bowl Pittsburgh W 7–3 No. 2 No. 2

Conference championships

[edit]

SMU has won twelve conference championships, winning ten outright and two being shared.[28]

Year Conference Coach Record Conference Record
1923 Southwest Conference Ray Morrison 9–0 5–0
1926 8–0–1 5–0
1931 9–1–1 5–0–1
1935 Matty Bell 12–1 6–0
1940 8–1–1 5–1
1947 9–0–2 5–0–1
1948 9–1–1 5–0–1
1966 Hayden Fry 8–3 6–1
1981 Ron Meyer 10–1 7–1
1982 Bobby Collins 11–0–1 7–0–1
1984 10–2 6–2
2023 American Athletic Conference Rhett Lashlee 11–2 8–0

† Co-champions

Division championships

[edit]

SMU has won two division championships.

Year Division Coach Opponent CG result
2009 Conference USA - West June Jones N/A lost tie-breaker to Houston
2010 UCF L 7–17

† Co-champions

Bowl games

[edit]

SMU has participated in 21 bowl games. The Mustangs have a record of 7–11–1 in these games.[29]

Season Coach Bowl Opponent Result
1924 Ray Morrison Dixie Classic West Virginia Wesleyan L 7–9
1935 Matty Bell Rose Bowl Stanford L 0–7
1947 Cotton Bowl Classic Penn State T 13–13
1948 Cotton Bowl Classic Oregon W 21–13
1963 Hayden Fry Sun Bowl Oregon L 14–21
1966 Cotton Bowl Classic Georgia L 9–24
1968 Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl Oklahoma W 28–27
1980 Ron Meyer Holiday Bowl BYU L 45–46
1982 Bobby Collins Cotton Bowl Classic Pittsburgh W 7–3
1983 Sun Bowl Alabama L 7–28
1984 Aloha Bowl Notre Dame W 27–20
2009 June Jones Hawaiʻi Bowl Nevada W 45–10
2010 Armed Forces Bowl Army L 14–16
2011 BBVA Compass Bowl Pittsburgh W 28–6
2012 Hawaiʻi Bowl Fresno State W 43–10
2017 Sonny Dykes Frisco Bowl Louisiana Tech L 10–51
2019 Boca Raton Bowl Florida Atlantic L 28–52
2020 Frisco Bowl UTSA Canceled
2021 Fenway Bowl Virginia Canceled
2022 Rhett Lashlee New Mexico Bowl BYU L 23–24
2023 Fenway Bowl Boston College L 14–23

Playoffs

[edit]

SMU was selected as the 11th seed in the College Football Playoff following the 2024 season.

Year Seed Opponent Round Result
2024 11 No. 6 Penn State First Round TBD

Head coaches

[edit]

List of SMU head coaches.[30]

Coach Tenure Record Winning %
Ray Morrison 1915–1916 2–13–2 .176
J. Burton Rix 1917–1921 16–19–7 .464
Ray Morrison 1922–1934 82–31–20 .692
Matty Bell 1935–1941, 1945–1949 79–40–8 .654
Jimmy Stewart 1942–1944 10–18–2 .367
Rusty Russell 1950–1952 13–15–2 .467
Woody Woodard 1953–1956 19–20–1 .488
Bill Meek 1957–1961 17–29–4 .380
Hayden Fry 1962–1972 49–66–1 .427
Dave Smith 1973–1975 16–15–2 .515
Ron Meyer 1976–1981 34–32–1 .515
Bobby Collins 1982–1986 43–14–1 .750
Forrest Gregg 1989–1990 3–19 .136
Tom Rossley 1991–1996 15–48–3 .250
Mike Cavan 1997–2001 22–34 .393
Phil Bennett 2002–2007 18–52 .257
June Jones 2008–2014 36–43 .456
Tom Mason (Interim) 2014 1–9 .100
Chad Morris 2015–2017 14–22 .389
Sonny Dykes 2017–2021 30–17 .638
Rhett Lashlee 2022–present 27–10 .730

Rivalries

[edit]

TCU

[edit]

The respective campuses are located 40 miles apart in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex. The SMU–TCU rivalries go for all sports as well as recruiting students from the DFW area, as SMU and TCU are the two top schools in the region in academics and sports. The teams have played all but seven years since their first meeting in 1915. They did not face each other in 1919, 1920, 1925, 1987, 1988, 2006, or 2020.

TCU and SMU fans began the tradition back in 1946. During pre-game festivities, an SMU fan was frying frog legs as a joke before the game. A TCU fan, seeing this desecration of the "frog", went over and told him that eating the frog legs was going well beyond the rivalry and that they should let the game decide who would get the skillet and the frog legs. TCU won the game, and the skillet and frog legs went to TCU. The tradition eventually spilled over into the actual game, and the Iron Skillet is now passed to the winner.

SMU and TCU have agreed to play each season through 2025 on an alternating home-and-home format; however, citing a desire to schedule as many out-of-conference games in Fort Worth as possible, TCU has decided to end the rivalry after the 2025 game.[31]

SMU won the 2024 game and thus currently holds the Iron Skillet.

TCU leads the series 53–43–7 through the 2024 season.[32]

Rice

[edit]

The Rice–SMU rivalry is a secondary one for both SMU (after TCU) and Rice (after Houston). However, it is a storied one since SMU is located inside the city of Dallas and Rice is located in Houston, the anchors of Texas's two largest metropolitan areas. Notably, SMU and Rice are two of the smaller universities in NCAA Division I FBS. Adding fuel to the fire is the fact that Rice and SMU are consistently ranked the best two private universities in Texas.

In 1918 both schools joined the Southwest Conference, and from 1926 they played every year except for 1987 and 1988, after the NCAA gave SMU's football program the "death penalty" following a cheating scandal. They played in the same conference until 2013, beginning with the Southwest (1918–1996), then the Western Athletic Conference (1996–2005) and Conference USA (2005–2012). In that time, they had met 90 times, with SMU leading 48–41–1.

In 1998 a traveling trophy, the "Mayor's Cup", was introduced to the series, and had been awarded to the winner each year through 2012. SMU left Conference USA for The American for the 2013 season, and no games were played after 2012 meeting until Rice joined the American Athletic Conference in 2023. However, with SMU joining the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2024, the rivalry has become dormant again.

SMU won the 2023 game and thus currently holds the Mayor's Cup.

SMU leads the series 49–41–1 through the 2023 season.[33]

North Texas

[edit]

Nicknamed the "Safeway Bowl", the rivalry between SMU and North Texas is the most one-sided rivalry for the Mustangs. Its name is derived from a challenge from then North Texas head coach Matt Simon issued in 1994 after a two-year break in the series, stating "I'd like to play because I think we could beat them, and my players feel the same way. If they'd like to play on a Safeway parking lot ... just give us a date and time." North Texas generally considers SMU its biggest rival, but SMU downplays North Texas as a real rival. SMU and North Texas are located about 40 miles apart in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.

The schools have played on and off 42 times dating back to 1922 with three major hiatuses, from 1943 to 1973, from 1993 to 2005, and from 2008 to 2013.[34]

North Texas joined the American Athletic Conference in 2023, making this a conference game for the first time. However, with SMU joining the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2024, the rivalry has become dormant again.

SMU leads the series 36–6–1 through the 2023 season.[35]

[edit]

SMU and Navy have played each other 25 times, with Navy leading the series 13–12. In 2009, the athletic departments of the United States Naval Academy and Southern Methodist University created the Gansz Trophy in honor of Frank Gansz who played linebacker at the Naval Academy from 1957 through 1959, was on the Navy coaching staff from 1969 through 1972, and the coaching staff at SMU for the 2008 season before his spring 2009 death. The traveling trophy series has been a useful one for both schools because they both recruit students, even non-student athletes, heavily from the each other's region.

Navy joined the American Athletic Conference in 2015 which allowed for the rivalry to become a yearly conference game. However, with SMU joining the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2024, the rivalry has become dormant.

SMU won the 2023 game and thus currently holds the Gansz Trophy.

Navy leads the series 13–12 through the 2023 season.[36]

All-time record vs. frequent opponents

[edit]
Opponent Meetings Won Lost Tied
TCU 103 43 53 7
Rice 91 49 41 1
Baylor 82 36 39 7
Texas A&M 81 29 45 7
Texas 73 22 47 4
Arkansas 73 31 37 5
Texas Tech 49 16 33 0
North Texas 43 36 6 1
Houston 37 14 22 1
Tulane 30 16 14 0
Tulsa 30 17 13 0
Navy 25 12 13 0

Appearances in the final Associated Press Poll

[edit]

SMU has made 192 appearances in the Associated Press poll over 103 seasons. SMU has been ranked in the top 10 for 63 weeks.

Home fields

[edit]

Individual achievements

[edit]

Heisman Trophy

Maxwell Award

Sammy Baugh Trophy

College Football Hall of Fame Inductees

Name Position Tenure at SMU Year Inducted
Ray Morrison Coach 1915–1916, 1922–1934 1954
Gerald "Little Red Arrow" Mann QB 1925–1927 1969
Bobby Wilson HB 1933–1935 1973
"Moanin'" Matty Bell Coach 1935–1941, 1945–1949 1955
Doak "The Doaker" Walker HB 1945, 1947–1949 1959
Kyle "The Mighty Mustang" Rote HB 1948–1950 1964
Gerald Mann QB 1925–1927 1969
"Dandy" Don Meredith QB 1957–1959 1982
Hayden Fry Coach 1962–1972 2003
Jerry LeVias WR 1966–1968 2003
Eric Dickerson RB 1979–1982 2020

All-Americans

Name Position Year
Choc Sanders G 1928
Marion Hammon T 1929
Speedy Mason HB 1931
Clyde Carter T 1934
Harry Shuford
Bobby Wilson
FB
HB
1934
Harry Shuford
Bobby Wilson
Truman "Big Dog" Spain
J.C. "Iron Man" Wetsel
FB
HB
T
G
1935
Kelly Simpson End 1941
Tom Dean T 1945
Doak "The Doaker" Walker HB 1947
Doak Walker HB 1948
Doak Walker HB 1949
Kyle "The Mighty Mustang" Rote HB 1950
Dick Hightower C 1951
Don "Dandy Don" Meredith QB 1958
Don Meredith QB 1959
John LaGrone G 1966
Jerry LeVias WR 1968
Robert Popelka DE 1972
Louie Kelcher
Oscar Roan
G
TE
1974
Emanuel Tolbert WR 1978
John Simmons DB 1980
Harvey Armstrong DT 1981
Eric Dickerson RB 1982
Russell Carter DB 1983
Reggie Dupard RB 1985
John Stewert K 1993

Honored jerseys

[edit]

SMU has honored six jerseys.[37]

No. Name Position Tenure
17 Don Meredith QB 1957–59
19 Eric Dickerson RB 1979–1982
37 Doak Walker HB/K 1945, 1947–1949
73 Forrest Gregg OT/DT 1952–55
80 Lamar Hunt WR 1952–55
87 Raymond Berry End 1951–54

Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees

[edit]
Name Position Team(s) Years in NFL Year Inducted
Lamar Hunt League founder, owner Dallas Texans
Kansas City Chiefs
1960–1962
1963–2006
1972
Raymond Berry End Baltimore Colts 1955–1967 1973
Forrest Gregg T Green Bay Packers
Dallas Cowboys
1956, 1958–1970
1971
1977
Doak Walker HB Detroit Lions 1950–1955 1986
Eric Dickerson RB Los Angeles Rams
Indianapolis Colts
Los Angeles Raiders
Atlanta Falcons
1983–1987
1987–1991
1992
1993
1999

Future opponents

[edit]

Conference opponents

[edit]

On October 30, 2023, the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) announced the future conference schedules for SMU for the 2024 season to 2030.[38] The 17-team ACC will play an eight-game conference schedule with just one division, with four non-conference contests. All 17 teams will play each other at least twice in 7 years, once at home and once on the road. The new scheduling includes SMU having two protected games each year with California and Stanford, with the remaining 14 teams rotating each year.[39]

2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030
Boston College Louisville Boston College Clemson California Clemson California
California Miami California Georgia Tech Florida State Georgia Tech Duke
Florida State Stanford Virginia Stanford Louisville NC State Miami
Pittsburgh Syracuse Wake Forest Virginia Tech North Carolina Stanford Syracuse
at Duke at Boston College at Florida State at California at Georgia Tech at Boston College at Georgia Tech
at Louisville at California at Louisville at Pittsburgh at NC State at California at North Carolina
at Stanford at Clemson at Stanford at Virginia at Stanford at Miami at Pittsburgh
at Virginia at Wake Forest at Syracuse at Wake Forest at Virginia Tech at Syracuse at Stanford

Non-conference opponents

[edit]

Announced opponents as of November 6, 2024.[40]

2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031
at Nevada Baylor at Baylor Oklahoma at Vanderbilt Vanderbilt at Colorado Colorado
Houston Christian at Missouri State Missouri State Nevada at BYU
BYU at TCU at Notre Dame
TCU

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ a b c d Sutton, Brad; Hudson, Herman; Balside, Zach; et al., eds. (2014). 2014 SMU Football Media Guide. Southern Methodist University Department of Athletics. pp. 1, 80–82, 120–125. Retrieved May 5, 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Ray Morrison, Southern Methodist's first football coach, died the... - UPI Archives". UPI. Retrieved October 26, 2024.
  4. ^ "Cunningham in Charge of S.M.U. Eleven, Following Resignation of Rix". The Dallas Morning News. October 18, 1921. p. 16 – via Newsbank Open access icon.
  5. ^ Brown, Matt. "College football coaching carousel by the numbers: How a wild cycle made history". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 26, 2024.
  6. ^ a b Hybl, Dean. "SMU Football: Death Has Lost Its Sting". Bleacher Report. Retrieved October 26, 2024.
  7. ^ Lemire, Christy (November 6, 1998). "SMU demolishes 72-year-old stadium to build new home". Abilene Reporter-News. Retrieved October 26, 2024.
  8. ^ "Frank G. Dickinson Papers, 1932–67 | University of Illinois Archives". Library.illinois.edu. December 8, 1992. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
  9. ^ a b 2020 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records (PDF). Indianapolis: The National Collegiate Athletic Association. July 2020. pp. 112–114. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 1, 2020. Retrieved January 12, 2021.
  10. ^ "Maxwell Award Winners". College Football at Sports-Reference.com. Retrieved October 26, 2024.
  11. ^ "Yankee Stadium History - New York Yankees". newyork.yankees.mlb.com. August 10, 2024. Archived from the original on June 29, 2008.
  12. ^ Weller, Robert (September 28, 1998). "His college's only Heisman winner; played for Detroit Lions". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: p.A14 – via Associated Press.
  13. ^ a b "FBS Football". NCAA.com.
  14. ^ Jenkins, Dan (September 11, 1967), "This Year The Fight Will Be in the Open", Sports Illustrated, vol. 27, no. 11, Chicago, IL: Time Inc., p. 33, retrieved March 16, 2016, In 1948, the Helms Athletic Foundation decided to name a national champion … and name past champions. The director of Helms since its beginning, Bill Schroeder, did the work, and he now heads the committee that selects No. 1 after the bowl games. 'A committee of one – me,' he says.
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  20. ^ "Smu Mustangs College Football - Smu News, Scores, Stats, Rumors & More - ESPN". ESPN.com.
  21. ^ "Arkansas hires SMU's Chad Morris as new football coach". USA TODAY.
  22. ^ Feldman, Bruce. "Sonny Dykes agrees to become next SMU coach". Sports Illustrated.
  23. ^ "Louisiana Tech vs. SMU - Game Recap - December 20, 2017 - ESPN". ESPN.com.
  24. ^ "Lost in the historic nature of SMU's first AP Top 25 ranking in over 30 years is this fitting irony that accompanies it". Dallas News. September 29, 2019.
  25. ^ "Lashlee Named SMU Head Football Coach". SMU Athletics.
  26. ^ Christopher J. Walsh (2007). Who's #1?: 100-Plus Years of Controversial National Champions in College Football. Taylor Trade Pub. pp. 88–89. ISBN 978-1-58979-337-8.
  27. ^ 2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records (PDF). Indianapolis: National Collegiate Athletic Association. August 2018. Retrieved October 29, 2018.
  28. ^ "Southwest Conference Index - College Football at Sports-Reference.com". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  29. ^ "SMU Mustangs Bowls". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  30. ^ "SMU Mustangs Coaches".
  31. ^ Kelley, Kevin (August 16, 2023). "TCU, SMU indefinitely "pausing" football series after 2025, per report". FBSchedules.com. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
  32. ^ "Winsipedia - SMU Mustangs vs. TCU Horned Frogs football series history". Winsipedia.
  33. ^ "Winsipedia - SMU Mustangs vs. Rice Owls football series history". Winsipedia.
  34. ^ "North Texas vs. SMU - Game Summary - September 7, 2019 - ESPN". ESPN.com.
  35. ^ "Winsipedia - SMU Mustangs vs. North Texas Mean Green football series history". Winsipedia.
  36. ^ "Winsipedia - SMU Mustangs vs. Navy Midshipmen football series history". Winsipedia.
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  38. ^ Adelson, Andrea (October 30, 2023). "ACC unveils 7-year football slate for new 17-team league". ESPN. Retrieved November 1, 2023.
  39. ^ Stevenson, Stefan (October 30, 2023). "SMU's ACC road map: Mustangs' conference football schedule laid out through 2030". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved November 1, 2023.
  40. ^ "SMU Mustangs Football Future Schedules". FBSchedules.com. Retrieved November 6, 2024.
[edit]

Seifried, C.S., & Tutka, P. (2016). Southern Methodist University Football and the Stadia: Moving toward Modernization. Sport History Review, 47, 172-192.