The teams ranked highest in the final [[1940 NCAA football rankings|Associated Press poll]] in December 1940 were:
The teams ranked highest in the final [[1940 NCAA football rankings|Associated Press poll]] in December 1940 were:
# [[1940 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team]] - Led by head coach [[Bernie Bierman]], the Golden Gophers compiled an 8–0 record, won the Big Ten championship, and outscored opponents by a total of 154 to 71. Halfback [[George Franck]] was a first-team All-American and placed third in the [[Heisman Trophy]] voting. Quarterback [[Bob Paffrath]] was selected as the team's most valuable player.
# [[1940 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team]] - Led by head coach [[Bernie Bierman]], the Golden Gophers compiled an 8–0 record, won the Big Ten championship, and outscored opponents by a total of 154 to 71. Halfback [[George Franck]] was a first-team All-American and placed third in the [[Heisman Trophy]] voting. Quarterback [[Bob Paffrath]] was selected as the team's most valuable player.
# [[1940 Stanford Indians football team]] - Led by head coach [[Clark Shaughnessy]], the Indians compiled a perfect 10–0 record, including a victory over No. 7 Nebraska in the [[1941 Rose Bowl]]. The final AP poll was conducted before the Rose Bowl with Stanford receiving 44 first place votes, narrowly trailing Minnesota's 65 votes. Stanford has been retrospectively selected as the national champion by the [[Billingsley Report]], [[Helms Athletic Foundation]], and [[Poling System]].
# [[1940 Stanford Indians football team]] - Led by head coach [[Clark Shaughnessy]], the Indians compiled a perfect 10–0 record, including a victory over No. 7 Nebraska in the [[1941 Rose Bowl]]. The final AP poll was conducted before the Rose Bowl with Stanford receiving 44 first place votes, narrowly trailing Minnesota's 65 votes. Stanford was retrospectively selected as the national champion by the [[Billingsley Report]], [[Helms Athletic Foundation]], and [[Poling System]].
# [[1940 Michigan Wolverines football team]] - Led by head coach [[Fritz Crisler]], the Wolverines compiled a 7–1 record with its only loss coming against national champion Minnesota by a 7–6 score. Halfback [[tom Harmon]] won the [[Heisman Trophy]] and the [[Maxwell Award]] and shared the backfield with quarterback [[Forest Evashevski]] and fullback [[Bob Westfall]].
# [[1940 Michigan Wolverines football team]] - Led by head coach [[Fritz Crisler]], the Wolverines compiled a 7–1 record with its only loss coming against national champion Minnesota by a 7–6 score. Halfback [[tom Harmon]] won the [[Heisman Trophy]] and the [[Maxwell Award]] and shared the backfield with quarterback [[Forest Evashevski]] and fullback [[Bob Westfall]].
# [[1940 Tennessee Volunteers football team]] - Led by head coach [[Robert Neyland]], the Volunteers compiled a 10–0 record in the regular season but lost to Boston College in the [[1941 Sugar Bowl]].
# [[1940 Tennessee Volunteers football team]] - Led by head coach [[Robert Neyland]], the Volunteers compiled a 10–0 record in the regular season but lost to Boston College in the [[1941 Sugar Bowl]]. Tennessee was retrospectively selected as the national champion by the [[Dunkel System|Dunkel]] and [[Williamson System]]s.
# [[1940 Boston College Eagles football team]] - In their final season under head coach [[Frank Leahy]], the Eagles compiled a perfect 11–0, including a 19–13 victory over No. 4 Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl.
# [[1940 Boston College Eagles football team]] - In their final season under head coach [[Frank Leahy]], the Eagles compiled a perfect 11–0, including a 19–13 victory over No. 4 Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl.
The year's statistical leaders included Johnny Knolla of Creighton with 1,420 yards of total offense, Al Ghesquiere of Detroit with 957 rushing yards, Johnny Supulski of Manhattan with 1,190 passing yards, Hank Stanton of Arizona with 820 receiving yards, and Tom Harmon with 117 points scored.
Conference and program changes
Conference changes
One conference began play during 1940:
New Mexico Intercollegiate Conference – an NCAA College Division and NAIA conference active through the 1962 season; later known as the Frontier Conference
September 28 Defending champion Texas A&M beat Texas A&I (later the university's Kingsville campus), 26–0. Tennessee beat Mercer 49–0. USC and Washington State played to a 14–14 tie. Tulane lost to Boston College 27–7. Michigan won at California 41–0. Minnesota defeated Washington 19–14 in Minneapolis.
October
October 5 In San Antonio, Texas A&M beat Tulsa 41–6. Tennessee beat Duke 13–0. Cornell beat Colgate 34–0. Northwestern won at Syracuse, 40–0. Minnesota beat Nebraska 13–7. Michigan beat Michigan State 21–14.
October 12 Cornell won at Army 45–0.
In Los Angeles, Texas A&M beat UCLA 7–0. Tennessee beat Chattanooga 53–0. Northwestern beat Ohio State 6–3. Michigan won at Harvard 26–0. The top five in the year's first AP Poll were No. 1 Cornell, No. 2 Texas A&M, No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Northwestern, and No. 5 Tennessee.
October 19No. 1 Cornell beat Syracuse 33–6. No. 2 Texas A&M beat TCU 21–7. No. 3 Michigan beat Illinois 28–0. In Birmingham, No. 5 Tennessee beat Alabama, 27–12. No. 6 Notre Dame beat Carnegie Tech 61–0. The resulting AP Poll was No. 1 Cornell, No. 2 Notre Dame, No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Texas A&M, and No. 5 Tennessee. Despite a 27–7 win at Wisconsin, Northwestern fell from 4th to 7th; previous No. 7 Minnesota moved up one spot with a 13-7 win over No. 15 Ohio State in Columbus.
October 26 No. 1 Cornell beat Ohio State 21–7. No. 2 Notre Dame won at Illinois 26–0. No. 3 Michigan beat Pennsylvania 14–0. No. 4 Texas A&M won at Baylor 14–7. No. 5 Tennessee beat Florida 14–0. No. 6 Minnesota beat Iowa 34–6. Cornell, Notre Dame, and Michigan remained as the top three, followed by Minnesota and Texas A&M.
November
November 2 No. 1 Cornell beat Columbia 27–0. No. 2 Notre Dame beat Army 7–0 at Yankee Stadium. No. 3 Michigan was idle. No. 4 Minnesota narrowly won at No. 8 Northwestern, 13–12. No. 5 Texas A&M beat Arkansas 17–0. No. 7 Tennessee beat LSU 28–0. The next AP Poll ranked Cornell, Minnesota, Michigan, Texas A&M, and Tennessee as the top five. Notre Dame fell from No. 2 to No. 7 after their close win over a weak Army team (the Cadets would finish 1-7-1).
November 9 No. 1 Cornell beat Yale 21–0, but dropped to second in the next poll. No. 2 Minnesota and No. 3 Michigan, both unbeaten (5–0–0), met in Minneapolis, with the Gophers winning by one point, 7–6. No. 4 Texas A&M won at No. 14 SMU 19–7. No. 5 Tennessee won at Rhodes College 41–0. No. 6 Stanford beat No. 11 Washington 20–10 to advance its record to 7–0–0. The resulting AP Poll was No. 1 Minnesota, No. 2 Cornell, No. 3 Texas A&M, No. 4 Stanford, and No. 5 Tennessee.
November 16No. 1 Minnesota beat Purdue 33–6. No. 2 Cornell lost at Dartmouth 3–0 in the famous "Fifth Down" game.[2]No. 3 Texas A&M beat Rice 25–0. No. 4 Stanford beat No. 19 Oregon State 28–14. No. 8 Boston College beat No. 9 Georgetown 19–18 to extend its record to 8–0–0. The next AP Poll featured No. 1 Minnesota, No. 2 Texas A&M, No. 3 Stanford, No. 4 Boston College, and No. 5 Cornell. Previous No. 5 Tennessee fell to No. 6 despite an 8-0-0 record and a 41–14 win over Virginia.
November 23 No. 1 Minnesota closed its season with a 22–13 win at Wisconsin. No. 2 Texas A&M and No. 3 Stanford were idle. No. 4 Boston College beat Auburn 33–7. No. 5 Cornell lost 22-20 to Pennsylvania. No. 7 Michigan won at Ohio State to close its season at 7–1–0 and moved into fifth place behind Minnesota, Texas A&M, Stanford, and Boston College.
On Thanksgiving Day No. 2 Texas A&M lost at Texas 7–0. On November 30No. 3 Stanford closed its season with a 13–7 win at California, No. 4 Boston College defeated Holy Cross 7–0, and No. 6 Tennessee beat Vanderbilt 20–0. The top five of the final AP Poll were No. 1 Minnesota, No. 2 Stanford, No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Tennessee, and No. 5 Boston College.