2003 College Football All-America Team

The 2003 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, Sports Illustrated, ESPN, 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.

Eighteen players were recognized as consensus All-Americans for 2003, 12 of them unanimously. Unanimous selections are followed by an asterisk (*)

2003 Consensus All-Americans
NamePositionYearUniversity
Jason White*QuarterbackSeniorOklahoma
Kevin JonesRunning backJuniorVirginia Tech
Chris PerrySeniorMichigan
Larry Fitzgerald*Wide receiverSophomorePittsburgh
Kellen Winslow II*Tight endJuniorMiami (FL)
Jake Grove*CenterSeniorVirginia Tech
Shawn Andrews*Offensive lineJuniorArkansas
Robert Gallery*SeniorIowa
Jacob RogersSeniorUSC
Dave Ball*Defensive endSeniorUCLA
Tommie Harris*Defensive tackleJuniorOklahoma
Chad LavalaisSeniorLSU
Teddy Lehman*LinebackerSeniorOklahoma
Keiwan RatliffCornerbackSeniorFlorida
Derrick Strait*SeniorOklahoma
Sean Taylor*SafetyJuniorMiami (FL)
Dustin ColquittPunterJuniorTennessee
Antonio Perkins*Return specialistJuniorOklahoma

Offense

Quarterback

  • Jason White, Oklahoma (AP, AFCA-Coaches, Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers, TSN, PFW, SI, ESPN, Rivals)

Running back

Wide receiver

Tight end

Tackle

  • Shawn Andrews, Arkansas (AP, AFCA-Coaches, Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers, TSN, PFW, SI, ESPN, Rivals)
  • Robert Gallery, Iowa (AP, AFCA-Coaches, Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers, TSN, PFW, SI, ESPN, Rivals)
  • Jacob Rogers, Southern California (AP, AFCA-Coaches, Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers, SI)
  • Alex Barron, Florida State (AP, Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers, Rivals)
  • Jammal Brown, Oklahoma (AFCA-Coaches, SI)

Guard

Center

  • Jake Grove, Virginia Tech (AP, AFCA-Coaches, Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers, TSN, Rivals)
  • Nick Leckey, Kansas State (ESPN)

Defense

Ends

  • Dave Ball, UCLA (AFCA-Coaches, Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers, AP, TSN, SI, ESPN, Rivals)
  • Kenechi Udeze, Southern California (FWAA-Writers, AP, TSN, PFW, SI, ESPN, Rivals)
  • Will Smith, Ohio State (AFCA-Coaches, Walter Camp, PFW, SI, Rivals)
  • David Pollack, Georgia (AFCA-Coaches)

Tackle

Linebacker

  • Teddy Lehman, Oklahoma (AP, AFCA-Coaches, Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers, TSN, PFW, SI, ESPN)
  • Derrick Johnson, Texas (AP, Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers, SI, ESPN, Rivals)
  • Grant Wiley, West Virginia (AP, FWAA-Writers, TSN, SI, Rivals)
  • Jonathan Vilma, Miami (Fla.) (AFCA-Coaches, Walter Camp, PFW, Rivals)
  • Karlos Dansby, Auburn (AFCA-Coaches, ESPN)
  • Josh Buhl, Kansas State (TSN)
  • Keyaron Fox, Georgia Tech (PFW)

Cornerback

Safety

Special teams

Kicker

  • Nate Kaeding, Iowa (AP, AFCA-Coaches, PFW, SI, ESPN)
  • Nick Browne, TCU (Walter Camp, FWAA-Writers)
  • Drew Dunning, Washington State (TSN, Rivals)

Punter

All-purpose player / return specialist

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.