Jump to content

2000 College Football All-America Team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2000 College Football All-America Team is composed of the following All-American Teams: Associated Press, Football Writers Association of America, American Football Coaches Association, Walter Camp Foundation, The Sporting News, Pro Football Weekly, Football News, Sports Illustrated and Rivals.com.

The College Football All-America Team is an honor given annually to the best American college football players at their respective positions. The original usage of the term All-America seems to have been to such a list selected by football pioneer Walter Camp in the 1890s. The NCAA officially recognizes All-Americans selected by the AP, AFCA, FWAA, TSN, and the WCFF to determine Consensus All-Americans.

Offense

[edit]

Quarterback

[edit]

Running back

[edit]

Wide receiver

[edit]

Tight end

[edit]
  • Brian Natkin, UTEP (AP-1, Walter Camp, AFCA-Coaches, FWAA, TSN, FN, Rivals)
  • Todd Heap, Arizona State (AP-2, PFW, CNNSI)
  • Tracey Wistrom, Nebraska (AP-3)

Tackle

[edit]

Guard

[edit]

Center

[edit]
  • Dominic Raiola, Nebraska (AP-1, Walter Camp, AFCA-Coaches, FWAA, PFW, RN, CNNSI, Rivals)
  • Ben Hamilton, Minnesota (AP-2, Walter Camp, AFCA-Coaches, TSN, FN, Rivals)
  • Casey Rabach, Wisconsin (AP-3)

Defense

[edit]

End

[edit]

Tackle

[edit]

Linebacker

[edit]

Cornerback

[edit]

Safety

[edit]

Special teams

[edit]

Kicker

[edit]
  • Jonathan Ruffin, Cincinnati (AP-1, Walter Camp, FWAA, TSN, CNNSI)
  • Jamie Rheem, Kansas State (AP-2, AFCA-Coaches, FN)
  • Alex Walls, Tennessee (AP-3, Rivals)

Punter

[edit]

All-purpose player / return specialist

[edit]
  • Santana Moss, Miami (Florida) (AP-1, FWAA, TSN, Walter Camp-WR, AFCA-Coaches-WR, Rivals, PFW, CNNSI-AP)
  • André Davis, Virginia Tech (AFCA-Coaches, CNNSI-PR)
  • Julius Jones, Notre Dame (CNNSI-KR)
  • Aaron Lockett, Kansas State (AP-2)
  • Emmett White, Utah State (AP-3)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  • "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. pp. 16–17. Retrieved December 20, 2023.
  • Coaches AA[permanent dead link] – AFCA
  • Associated Press – AP
  • Writers AA Archived 2019-03-04 at the Wayback Machine – FWAA
  • Sporting News – TSN
  • Walter Camp – Walter Camp
  • PFW (Archived 2009-05-14) – Pro Football Weekly
  • FN – Football News
  • CNNSI (Archived 2009-05-14) – Sports Illustrated
  • Rivals.com- Rivals.com