NCAAF | 09/26 23:00 | 1 | Stephen F. Austin v SMU | W | 7-50 | |
NCAAF | 09/19 22:00 | 1 | SMU v North Texas | W | 65-35 | |
NCAAF | 09/05 20:30 | 1 | [68] SMU v Texas State [37] | W | 31-24 | |
NCAAF | 12/21 20:30 | 296 | SMU v Florida Atlantic | L | 28-52 | |
NCAAF | 11/30 21:00 | 1 | Tulane v SMU | W | 20-37 | |
NCAAF | 11/23 20:30 | 1 | SMU v Navy | L | 28-35 | |
NCAAF | 11/09 17:00 | 1 | [109] East Carolina v SMU [11] | W | 51-59 | |
NCAAF | 11/02 23:30 | 1 | [8] SMU v Memphis [9] | L | 48-54 | |
NCAAF | 10/24 23:30 | 1 | [9] SMU v Houston [83] | W | 34-31 | |
NCAAF | 10/19 19:30 | 1 | [16] Temple v SMU [10] | W | 21-45 | |
NCAAF | 10/05 23:30 | 1 | [84] Tulsa v SMU [11] | W | 37-43 | |
NCAAF | 09/28 20:00 | 1 | [15] SMU v South Florida [108] | W | 48-21 | |
NCAAF | 09/21 19:30 | 1 | [15] SMU v TCU [34] | W | 41-38 | |
NCAAF | 09/14 23:00 | 1 | Texas State v SMU | W | 17-47 | |
NCAAF | 09/07 23:00 | 1 | [42] North Texas v SMU [61] | W | 27-49 | |
NCAAF | 08/31 23:00 | 1 | SMU v Arkansas State | W | 37-30 | |
NCAAF | 11/24 20:30 | 1 | SMU v Tulsa | L | 24-27 | |
NCAAF | 11/17 02:00 | 1 | Memphis v SMU | L | 28-18 | |
NCAAF | 11/10 17:00 | 1 | SMU v Connecticut | W | 62-50 | |
NCAAF | 11/03 23:00 | 1 | Houston v SMU | W | 31-45 | |
NCAAF | 10/27 19:30 | 1 | Cincinnati v SMU | L | 26-20 | |
NCAAF | 10/20 19:30 | 1 | SMU v Tulane | W | 27-23 | |
NCAAF | 10/06 23:00 | 1 | SMU v Central Florida | L | 20-48 | |
NCAAF | 09/29 23:00 | 1 | Houston Baptist v SMU | W | 27-63 | |
NCAAF | 09/22 16:00 | 1 | Navy v SMU | W | 30-31 | |
NCAAF | 09/15 19:30 | 1 | SMU v Michigan | L | 20-45 | |
NCAAF | 09/08 02:00 | - | TCU v SMU | L | 42-12 | |
NCAAF | 09/08 00:00 | 1 | SMU v TCU | L | 12-42 | |
NCAAF | 09/01 23:30 | 1 | SMU v North Texas | L | 23-46 | |
NCAAF | 12/21 01:00 | 330 | Louisiana Tech v SMU | L | 51-10 |
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).
In June 1915, Ray Morrison became SMU's football, baseball, basketball, and track coach, in addition to being a math instructor. Initially, the football team initially was a member of the Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association, 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.
The first game played by SMU's football team was a 43-0 loss against future rival TCU. The first win by SMU was 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 Fort Oglethorpe upon the United States’ entry into World War I.
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.
The 1918 season was the first of many seasons for the SMU Mustangs as a member of the Southwest Conference, joining 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.
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. For the 1922 and 1923 seasons, Morrison focused on the backfield and ends while Freeland focused on the linemen.[] The team became known as the "Aerial Circus" by sportswriters due to the team's use of passing on first and second downs, instead of as a play of last resort. At the time, most teams utilized the forward pass five to six times in one game, while SMU did so between 30 and 40 times.
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.
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.
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.
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 and Deke Houlgate, two of seven contemporaneous selectors, all math systems, that chose five different national champions that year. 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 star 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.
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.
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.
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″ moniker referring to that stadium's likewise excess of capacity—the Cotton Bowl became regionally known as "The House that Doak Built".
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.
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.
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 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 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 plowed 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.
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.
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. 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.
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, in addition to consensus champion Penn State; the Mustangs did, however, finish second in both the AP and coaches' polls.
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.
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.[]
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, 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.
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. 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.
SMU hired Clemson offensive coordinator Chad Morris as head coach and announced his placement on December 1, 2014. 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. In his 3rd season, Morris was able to lead the Mustangs to bowl eligibility and a 7–5 record in 2017. 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.
Sonny Dykes was hired as the new football coach of SMU on December 11, 2017. The Mustangs were defeated by Louisiana Tech 51–10 in the DXL Frisco Bowl.
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.
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.