Heisman Trophy
Ticket Museum
This site is dedicated to the history of college football and its most coveted award...
The Heisman Memorial Trophy
which is presented annually to college football's most outstanding player.
The purpose of this site is to chronicle the college football season of every Heisman Memorial Trophy winner as illustrated through the beauty and artistry of game ticket stubs.
My goal is to collect a ticket stub, press pass, sideline pass, or any other form of entry to every regular season football game played during each Heisman Trophy winners Heisman Trophy winning season.
While I do prefer game ticket stubs over all other forms of entry, I will include others when I cannot find a ticket stub. I do add Bowl games and Playoff games, but they are not mandatory to the collection.
I am continually searching for the missing ticket stubs for this collection.
Please let me know if you have any of my needs available for sale or trade.
These missing tickets can be seen on each page identified with a "wanted" icon.
They can also be found in list form by clicking on the on the "TICKETS NEEDED" tab.
To date, I have acquired 834 of the 937 tickets (89%) necessary
to complete the collection between the years of 1935-2019.
Tickets beginning with the COVID-19 year of 2020 are very difficult to obtain as most schools and venues stopped printing tickets, instead going to digital formats.
I do not include any ticket from the COVID-19 year (2020) and going forward in the total
required for completion, unless I have obtained one and it as part of the collection.
That being said, on most occasion's they do exist in box office form.
I still try to obtain them when I am able to do so.
Please use the tabs below to view this collection by decade.
(for best viewing, I recommend using the desktop version, but a mobile version is also available)
I hope you enjoy this site as much as enjoy bringing it to you!
2010 Cam Newton - Auburn
Newton was a highly-rated recruit out of Atlanta’s Westlake High in 2006 with a scholarship offer list that included Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Oklahoma and Georgia Tech, among others. Newton decided to attend Florida, where he joined a roster that included 2007 Heisman winner Tim Tebow.
Newton backed up Tebow in 2007 but redshirted in 2008 due to an ankle injury. He then left Florida and enrolled at Blinn Junior College, where he played the 2009 season. He led Blinn to the national JC championship in 2009, throwing for 2,833 yards and 22 touchdowns with 655 rushing yards.
Auburn won the battle for Newton’s services the following spring and by the fall, he was the starting quarterback for the Tigers. Newton threw for 2,589 yards and 28 touchdowns with just six interceptions while rushing for 1,409 yards and 20 scores as the Tigers went undefeated and won the SEC championship.
On December 11, 2010, Cam Newton was awarded the Heisman Trophy. Newton was named the 2010 SEC Offensive Player of the Year as well as the 2010 AP Player of the year before winning the Heisman in a landslide. Cam Newton became the third Auburn Tiger to win the Heisman, joining Pat Sullivan (’71) and Bo Jackson (’85). The 6-foot 6-inches and 250-pounds Newton wasn’t on many radars at the start of the 2010 season, but he ended up becoming the first double-transfer to win the Heisman and the first junior-college transfer to do so since Mike Rozier in 1983. He then led the Tigers to a victory over Oregon in the BCS title game as Auburn won its first national title since 1957. Following the season, Newton declared for the NFL draft and was selected as the first pick overall by the Carolina Panthers. He was named the NFL Rookie of the Year for 2011.
Cameron Jerrell Newton (May 11, 1989)
9/4/2010 vs. Arkansas State
(full ticket)
(52-26)
9/18/2010 vs. Clemson
(full ticket)
(W 27-24)
9/9/2010 at Mississippi State
(full ticket)
(W 17-14)
9/25/2010 vs. South Carolina
(full ticket)
(W 35-27)
10/2/2010 vs. Louisiana-Monroe
(full ticket)
(W 52-3)
10/9/2010 at Kentucky
(full ticket)
(W 37-34)
10/16/2010 vs. Arkansas
(full ticket)
(W 65-43)
10/23/2010 vs. L.S.U.
(full ticket)
(W 24-17)
10/30/2010 at Mississippi
(full ticket)
(W 51-31)
11/6/2010 vs. UT-Chattanooga
(full ticket)
(W 62-24)
11/13/2010 vs. Georgia
(full ticket)
(W 49-31)
11/26/2010 at Alabama
(full ticket)
(W 28-27)
12/4/2010 vs. South Carolina
(SEC Championship game - full ticket)
(W 56-17)
12/11/2010 Heisman Trophy
VIP Announcement Credential
12/13/2010 Heisman Trophy Presentation ticket
12/13/2010 Heisman Trophy Presentation Reception & Photo Opportunity ticket
1/10/2011 vs. Oregon (BCS National Championship game - full ticket)
(W 22-19)
2011 Robert Griffin III - Baylor
The 6-2, 220-pound son of two Army sargeants, he prepped at Copperas Cove (Texas) High, where he proved himself an elite hurdler in track as well as a promising dual-threat quarterback. As a 2007 junior, he recorded the nation’s top prep time in the 400m hurdles (49.56) while on the gridiron, he led his team to a 13-2 record and an appearance in the state championship game.
Griffin’s high school accomplishments drew the attention of the University of Houston’s Art Briles, one of the few college coaches who wanted to keep him at the quarterback position. When Briles was tapped to lead the Baylor football program, Griffin decided enroll there early after graduating high school in December. Griffin III made an immediate impact on the gridiron for the Bears in the fall of 2008, throwing for 2,901 yards and 15 touchdowns while rushing for 843 yards and 13 scores.
He missed most of 2009 due to a knee injury, but he returned in 2010 to throw for 3,501 yards and 22 touchdowns.
But it was his junior year when it all came together for Griffin III. Nicknamed RGIII, he threw for 3,998 yards and 36 touchdowns and added 644 yards and nine scores on the ground to lead Baylor to a 9-3 regular-season record and a top 15 ranking, its best since 1986. His pass efficiency mark of 192.31 was the best in Heisman history. He earned 2011 national Player of the Year honors by multiple outlets, plus the Davey O’Brien and Manning Awards before becoming the 76th Heisman winner on December 10, 2011. Griffin III graduated early from Baylor with a degree in political science. He declared for the NFL draft following the 2011 season and was drafted by the Washington Redskins with the 2nd pick overall. He was the NFL’s Rookie of the Year in 2012.
Robert Lee Griffin III (February 12, 1990)
9/2/2011 vs. T.C.U.
(W 50-48)
9/17/2011 vs. Stephen F. Austin
(full ticket)
(W 48-0)
10/1/2011 at Kansas State
(full ticket)
(L 35-36)
10/15/2011 at Baylor
(full ticket)
(L 28-55)
10/29/2011 at Oklahoma State
(full ticket)
(L 24-59)
9/24/2011 vs. Rice
(full ticket)
(W 56-31)
10/8/2011 vs. Iowa State
(full ticket)
(W 49-26)
11/5/2011 vs. Missouri
(full ticket)
(W 42-39)
11/12/2011 at Kansas
(full ticket)
(W 31-30)
11/19/2011 vs. Oklahoma
(full ticket)
(W 45-38)
11/26/2011 vs. Texas Tech
(W 66-42)
12/3/2011 vs. Texas
(full ticket)
(W 48-24)
12/10/2011 Heisman Trophy
Announcement Credential
12/12/2011 Heisman Trophy
Presentation ticket
12/12/2011 Heisman Trophy Presentation Reception & Photo Opportunity ticket
12/29/2011 vs. Washington
Alamo Bowl - San Antonio, TX
(W 67-56)
2012 Johnny Manziel - Texas A&M
Manziel was born in Tyler, Texas, but prepped at Kerrville’s Tivy High. An exciting all-around athlete, Manziel’s dual-threat quarterbacking skills were highly coveted by several schools including Baylor, Louisiana Tech, Iowa State, Stanford, and Oregon, where he originally committed (along with 2014 Heisman winner Marcus Mariota) in the summer of 2010. But Manziel switched allegiances to A&M on Sept. 20, 2010, and signed with the Aggies the following February. After redshirting in 2011, he burst on to the scene in 2012, piling up an SEC-record 4,600 yards of total offense while leading A&M to a 10-2 regular season record in its first season in the fable league. Nicknamed "Johnny Football", Manziel threw for 3,419 yards and 24 touchdowns while adding 1,181 yards with 19 scores on the ground. The key game in his Heisman resume came when he led the Aggies to a 29-24 upset of No. 1 Alabama in Tuscaloosa, totaling 345 yards of total offense while ripping off several highlight-reel plays.
Johnathon Paul Manziel (December 6, 1992)
For his efforts, he was named the SEC Freshman of the Year, the Davey O’Brien winner and on December 8, 2012, the 77th recipient of the Heisman Trophy.
Manziel is the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy, capturing the award in his redshirt year on the strength of remarkable performances on the ground and in the air. He joined John David Crow as one of two Texas A&M Aggies to win the Heisman.
He later led Texas A&M to a 41-13 smashing of Oklahoma in the Cotton Bowl, as he produced 516 yards of offense and four touchdowns. Manziel returned to school in 2013 and threw for 4,114 yards and 37 touchdowns while rushing for 759 yards and nine scores. His two-year total offense and touchdown total: A remarkable 9,989 yards and 93 scores. He was once again voted to the Heisman ceremony as a finalist, finishing fifth behind Jameis Winston. Following the 2013 season, Manziel made himself available to the NFL draft. He was selected in the first round, 22nd overall, by the Cleveland Browns.
8/30/2012 at Louisiana Tech
(game postponed until 10/13/12)
(W 59-57)
9/8/2012 vs. Florida
(full ticket)
(W 17-20)
9/15/2012 at Southern Methodist
(full ticket)
(W 48-3)
9/22/2012 vs. South Carolina
(full ticket)
(W 70-14)
9/29/2012 vs. Arkansas
(full ticket)
(W 58-10)
10/6/2012 at Mississippi
(full ticket)
(W 30-27)
10/13/2012 at Louisiana Tech
(make-up game from 8/30/12)
(W 59-57)
10/20/2012 vs. L.S.U.
(full ticket)
(L 19-24)
10/27/2012 at Auburn
(full ticket)
(W 63-21)
10/6/2012 at Mississippi
(full ticket)
(W 38-13)
11/10/2012 at Alabama
(full ticket)
(W 29-24)
11/17/2012 vs. Sam Houston State
(full ticket)
(W 47-28)
11/24/2012 vs. Missouri
(full ticket)
(W 59-29)
12/8/2012 Heisman Trophy
Announcement Credential
1/4/2013 vs. Oklahoma
(Cotton Bowl - Dallas, TX)
(W 41-13)
1/4/2013 vs. Oklahoma
(Cotton Bowl - Dallas, TX - Standing Room Only ticket)
(W 41-13)
2013 Jameis Winston - Florida State
Winston was born in Bessemer, Alabama on January 6, 1994. He attended Hueytown High School, where he played both football and baseball. Winston was considered among the best quarterback recruits in the nation in 2011 and he earned the Gatorade Player of the Year recognition for the state of Alabama. He led Hueytown to a state championship during his junior year.
Winston committed to attend FSU on February 3, 2012. The Texas Rangers selected Winston in the 15th round of the 2012 Major League Baseball Draft out of high school. Though the Rangers proposed allowing him to play for the Florida State Seminoles football team while working out with their baseball organization, Winston decided not to sign.
After redshirting his first season, Winston won the starting job for the Seminoles and promptly led his team to an undefeated campaign and a BCS title, becoming the first redshirt freshman to win a
Jameis Lanaed Winston (January 6, 1994)
Heisman and a national championship in the same season.Winston threw for 3,820 yards and 38 touchdowns with 10 interceptions. On December 14, 2013, Jameis Winston was awarded the Heisman Trophy. His pass efficiency rating of 190.04 (at the time of the ceremony) was second-best among Heisman winners.
Winston edged out Mark Ingram as the youngest player to win the Heisman Trophy when he captured the 79th award at age 19 years and 342 days.
Winston followed up his Heisman-winning season with a stellar sophomore year, throwing for 3,907 yards and 25 touchdowns while leading FSU to a school-record 26-straight wins and a berth in the inaugural college football playoff. He finished his two-year career with a record of 26-1 as a starter, throwing for 7,964 yards and 65 touchdowns.
Jameis declared for the NFL draft following his sophomore season and was the first overall selection by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
9/2/2013 at Pittsburgh
(full ticket)
(W 41-13)
9/14/2013 vs. Nevada
(full ticket)
(W 62-7)
9/21/2013 vs. Bethune Cookman
(full ticket)
(W 54-6)
9/28/2013 at Boston College
(full ticket)
(W 48-34)
10/19/2013 at Clemson
(full ticket)
(W 51-14)
10/5/2013 vs. Maryland
(full ticket)
(W 63-0)
10/26/2013 vs. North Carolina State
(full ticket)
(W 49-17)
11/2/2013 vs. Miami
(full ticket)
(W 41-14)
11/16/2013 vs. Syracuse
(full ticket)
(W 59-3)
11/23/2013 vs. Idaho
(full ticket)
(W 80-14)
11/9/2013 at Wake Forest
(W 59-3)
11/30/2013 at Florida
(full ticket)
(W 37-7)
12/7/2013 vs. Duke
(ACC Championship - full ticket)
(W 45-7)
12/14/2013 Heisman Trophy
Announcement Credential
12/16/2013 Heisman Trophy Presentation ticket
12/16/2013 Heisman Trophy Post-Presentation Private Reception ticket
1/6/2014 vs. Auburn
(BCS National Championship - full ticket)
(W 34-31)
2014 Marcus Mariota - Oregon
Mariota was born in Honolulu and attended St. Louis High School, where he was a two-sport star in football and track. In football, he was relatively unknown late in his high school career due to not starting until his senior season. During that senior year, he led St. Louis to an 11-1 record and the state title while being named the Interscholastic League of Honolulu’s Offensive Player of the Year and the 2010 Hawaii Gatorade Player of the Year.
Despite being ranked the No. 2 player in the state, he was offered just two scholarshps from FBS programs. He chose Oregon over Memphis. He was briefly committed to the Ducks along with 2012 Heisman winner Johnny Manziel before Manziel decided to attend Texas A&M.
After redshirting the 2011 season, Mariota became the first freshman to start a season opener for the Ducks in 22 seasons. He led Oregon to a 12-1 record in 2012 while earning All-Pac-12 first-team
honors.
He had another fine year in 2013 as he led the Ducks to an 11-2 record while once again being named first-team All-Pac-12.
His junior season was even more spectacular. He threw for 3,783 yards and 38 touchdowns with just two interceptions while also rushing for 669 yards and 14 scores (he also caught a TD pass) as the Ducks finished the regular season with a 12-1 record. His 53 total touchdowns tied Sam Bradford for the most in Heisman history. Mariota led the nation in touchdowns, passing efficiency (186.33) and total offense (4,452 yards). He was awarded the Heisman Trophy on December 13, 2014. His winning Heisman vote was the third-highest vote total in Heisman history and he appeared on a record 95.16% of ballots. Mariota bypassed his senior season to make himself available to the 2015 NFL draft. He was drafted as the second overall pick by the Tennessee Titans.
Marcus Ardel Taulauniu Mariota (October 30, 1993)
8/30/2014 vs. South Dakota
(full ticket)
(W 62-13)
9/13/2014 vs. Wyoming
(full ticket)
(W 48-14)
9/6/2014 vs. Michigan State
(full Suite ticket)
(W 46-27)
10/2/2014 vs. Arizona
(full ticket)
(L 24-31)
10/11/2014 at U.C.L.A.
(full ticket)
(W 42-30)
9/20/2014 at Washington State
(full ticket)
(W 38-31)
10/24/2014 at California
(Levi Stadium - Santa Clara, CA - full ticket)
(W 59-41)
10/18/2014 vs. Washington
(full ticket)
(W 45-20)
11/1/2014 vs. Stanford
(full Suite ticket)
(W 45-16)
11/8/2014 at Utah
(full ticket)
(W 51-27)
11/22/2014 vs. Colorado
(full ticket)
(W 44-10)
11/29/2014 at Oregon State
(full ticket)
(W 47-19)
12/5/2014 vs. Arizona
PAC-12 Championship - Levi Stadium - Santa Clara, CA - full ticket)
(W 51-13)
12/13/2014 Heisman Trophy
Announcement Credential
12/15/2014 Heisman Trophy Presentation ticket
12/15/2014 Heisman Trophy Presentation
Sponsor Reception & Photo Opportunity ticket
1/2/2015 vs. Florida State
(FBS Playoff Semi-Final - Rose Bowl Game - Pasadena, CA - full ticket)
(W 59-20)
1/12/2015 vs. Ohio State
(FBS National Championship - AT&T Stadium - Dallas, TX) (Gold Variety full ticket)
(L 20-42)
1/12/2015 vs. Ohio State
(FBS National Championship - AT&T Stadium - Dallas, TX) (Black Variety full ticket)
(L 20-42)
2015 Derrick Henry - Alabama
Henry was born in Yulee, Fla. and attended Yulee High, where he was a three-sport star in football, basketball and track. He set the national high school career rushing mark with 12,124 yards, breaking Ken Hall’s 59-year-old record. He had 4,261 yards and 55 touchdowns as a 2012 senior and was considered one of the top players in the recruiting class of 2013. The 6-3, 242-pounder was offered dozens of scholarships from schools all across the country, but he committed to attend the University of Alabama on Sept. 28, 2012. As a 2013 freshman, Henry made an impact for the Tide as part of a deep corps of running backs, rushing for 382 yards and three touchdowns on just 35 carries (including 100 yards on eight carries against Oklahoma in the Cotton Bowl).
He followed up with a strong 2014 sophomore season, rushing for
990 yards and 11 touchdowns as he shared carries with T.J. Yeldon.
Henry came into his own as a junior, setting the SEC single-season rushing record with 1,986 rushing yards. He also tied the conference mark for rushing touchdowns with 23. His rushing yardage total led the nation, as did his number of rushing attempts (339). He was just the third running back in SEC history (Herschel Walker and Bo Jackson being the others) to have four 200-yard games in a single season. As a result, Derrick Henry was awarded the Heisman Trophy on December 12, 2015 beating out Stanford’s Christian McCaffrey for the award. He would also win the Maxwell, Doak Walker, Walter Camp, and SEC Offensive Player of the Year award for 2015. He then led the Crimson Tide to the national title with 158 yards and three touchdowns against Clemson. Henry bypassed his senior season for the NFL and was selected in the 2nd round by the Tennessee Titans.
Derrick Lamar Henry Jr. (January 4, 1994)
9/5/2015 vs. Wisconsin
(AdvoCare Kickoff Classic - AT&T Stadium - Dallas, TX)
(W 35-17)
9/12/2015 vs. Middle Tennessee
(full ticket)
(W 37-10)
9/19/2015 vs. Mississippi
(full ticket)
(L 37-43)
9/26/2015 vs. Louisiana-Monroe
(full ticket)
(W 34-0)
10/3/2015 at Georgia
(full ticket)
(W 38-10)
10/17/2015 at Texas A&M
(full ticket)
(W 41-23)
10/10/2015 vs. Arkansas
(full ticket)
(W 27-14)
10/24/2015 vs. Tennessee
(full ticket)
(W 19-14)
11/7/2015 vs. L.S.U.
(full ticket)
(W 30-16)
11/21/2015 vs. Charleston Southern
(full ticket)
(W 56-6)
11/14/2015 at Mississippi State
(full ticket)
(W 31-6)
12/5/2015 vs. Florida
(SEC Championship game - Atlanta, GA -full ticket)
(W 29-15)
11/28/2015 at Auburn
(full ticket)
(W 29-13)
12/12/2015 Heisman Trophy
Announcement Credential
12/14/2015 Heisman Trophy Presentation ticket
12/14/2015 Heisman Trophy Presentation
Sponsors Reception & VIP Photo Opportunity ticket
12/31/2015 vs. Michigan State
(FBS Playoff Semi-Final - Cotton Bowl - Dallas, TX- full Club Level ticket)
(W 38-0)
12/31/2015 vs. Michigan State
(FBS Playoff Semi-Final - Cotton Bowl - Dallas, TX- full ticket)
(W 38-0)
12/31/2015 vs. Michigan State
(FBS Playoff Semi-Final - Cotton Bowl - Dallas, TX- full Standing Room Only ticket)
(W 38-0)
1/11/2016 vs. Clemson
(FBS Playoff National Championship game - Glendale, AZ - full ticket)
(W 45-40)
2016 Lamar Jackson - Louisville
Born in Pompano Beach, Fla., Jackson starred as a dual-threat quarterback for Boynton Beach (Fla.) High in South Florida. As a 2014 senior, he was named to the 6A all-state first team as a utility player after throwing for 1,293 passing yards and 20 touchdowns with 1,039 rushing yards and 19 touchdowns. He committed to Louisville over Florida and Nebraska, among others.
Jackson earned the starting quarterback job for Louisville as a 2015 true freshman and performed admirably, passing for 1,840 yards and 12 touchdowns and rushing for 960 yards and 11 scores. He flashed signs of what was to come in a 27-21 victory over Texas A&M in the Music City Bowl, passing for 227 yards, rushing for 226 and totaling four touchdowns. He exploded out of the gate as a 2016 sophomore, piling up yards and touchdowns at an unprecedented rate. Among the highlights: Eight touchdowns in the first half against Charlotte, 610 yards of total offense (411 passing, 199 rushing) against Syracuse and 5 total touchdowns in a 63-20 thrashing of Florida State.
Lamar Demeatrice Jackson Jr. (January 7, 1997)
By season’s end, Jackson’s yardage and touchdown totals were among the best in college football history. Accordingly, he won the Heisman Trophy on December 10, 2016, winning all six voting regions. He is the youngest player to win the Heisman, at just 19 years, 337 days — five days younger than the previous youngest winner, Jameis Winston. The fourth sophomore to win the award, he led the Cardinals to a 9-3 record, a No. 15 national ranking and a berth in the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl. The 6-3, 218-pounder accumulated 4,928 yards of total offense, second in Heisman history behind Ty Detmer’s 5,022 in 1990. His 51 touchdowns running and passing ties him with Tim Tebow for third on the all-time Heisman chart. He’s the first player to win the Heisman with at least 30 touchdown passes and at least 21 rushing touchdowns. His 1,538 rushing yards are the most-ever by a Heisman-winning quarterback. Jackson was drafted by the Baltimore Ravens in the first round with the 32nd overall pick in the 2018 NFL draft,
9/1/2016 vs. Charlotte
(full ticket)
(W 70-14)
9/17/2016 vs, Florida State
(full ticket)
(W 63-20)
9/9/2016 at Syracuse
(full ticket)
(W 62-28)
9/24/2016 at Marshall
(full ticket)
(W 59-28)
10/1/2016 at Clemson
(full ticket)
(L 36-42)
10/29/2016 at Virginia
(full ticket)
(W 32-25)
10/14/2016 vs, Duke
(full ticket)
(W 24-14)
10/22/2016 vs. North Carolina State
(full ticket)
(W 54-13)
11/5/2016 at Boston College
(full box office ticket)
(W 52-7)
11/5/2016 at Boston College
(full ticket)
(W 52-7)
11/12/2016 vs. Wake Forest
(full ticket)
(W 44-12)
11/17/2016 at Houston
(full ticket)
(L 10-36)
11/26/2016 vs. Kentucky
(full ticket)
(L 38-41)
12/31/2016 vs. L.S.U.
(Citrus Bowl - Orlando, FL - full ticket)
(L 9-29)
2017 Baker Mayfield - Oklahoma
Mayfield was born on April 14, 1995, in Austin, Texas. He starred at Lake Travis High in Austin, leading his team to a 25-2 record as a starter while winning the 2011 4A State Championship. He finished his prep career with 6,255 passing yards and 67 touchdown passes. The 6-foot-1, 220-pound dual-threat quarterback was passed over by almost every BCS school for a scholarship, so Mayfield chose to walk on at Texas Tech in 2013, where he immediately won the starting quarterback position. In his first start, he passed for 413 yards and four touchdowns. He finished his freshman season with 2,315 yards and 12 touchdown passes. Mayfield then chose to transfer to Oklahoma, where he sat out the 2014 season due to transfer rules.
Mayfield took over the starting job for the Sooners in 2015 and made an immediate impact, passing for 3,700 yards and 37 touchdowns while rushing for another 405 yards and seven scores on the ground. He finished fourth in that year’s Heisman race.
Baker Reagan Mayfield (April 14, 1995)
He came back in 2016 with another fine season, setting the NCAA record with a passer rating of 196.38, with 3,965 yards through the air and 40 touchdowns. Mayfield saved his best season for last, throwing for 4,340 yards with 41 touchdowns and just 5 interceptions while leading the Sooners to a 12-1 record and a berth in the College Football Playoff. He once again set the NCAA record for passing efficiency with a rating of 203.76. He won the Heisman trophy on Decemebr 9, 2019. He is the first Heisman winner to begin his career as a walk-on athlete since the NCAA instituted athletic scholarships in the 1950s. He joined Billy Vessels (’52), Steve Owens (’69), Billy Sims (’78), Jason White (’03) and Sam Bradford (’08) as Sooner Heisman winners. He is the first player to win the Heisman after transferring directly from another FBS program since Doc Blanchard did so in 1945. The Cleveland Browns selected Mayfield with the first overall pick in the 2018 NFL Draft
9/2/2017 vs. UTEP
(full ticket)
(W 56-7)
9/9/2017 at Ohio State
(full ticket)
(W 31-16)
9/16/2017 vs. Tulane
(full ticket)
(W 56-14)
9/23/2017 at Baylor
(full ticket)
(W 49-41)
10/7/2017 vs. Iowa State
(full ticket)
(L 31-38)
10/14/2017 at Texas
(Red River Showdown game - Cotton Bowl - Dallas, TX - full ticket)
(W 29-24
10/21/2017 at Kansas State
(full ticket)
(W 42-35)
10/28/2017 vs. Texas Tech
(full ticket)
(W 49-27)
11/4/2017 at Oklahoma State
(full ticket)
(W 62-52)
11/11/2017 vs. T. C.U.
(full ticket)
(W 38-20)
11/25/2017 vs. West Virginia
(full ticket)
(W 59-31)
11/18/2017 at Kansas
(full ticket)
(W 41-3)
12/2/2017 vs. T. C.U.
(BIG-12 Championship game -
AT&T Stadium - Dallas, TX - full ticket)
(W 41-17)
12/9/2017 Heisman Trophy
Announcement Credential
12/10/2017 Heisman Trophy Presentation ticket
12/10/2017 Heisman Trophy Dinner Gala Raffle ticket
12/10/2017 Heisman Trophy
Presentation Private Post Reception ticket
2018 Kyler Murray - Oklahoma
Murray was born August 7, 1997, in Bedford, Texas. The 5-10, 195-pounder attended Allen (Texas) High and was named the Gatorade Player of the Year for his football exploits, but he was also renowned as a star on the baseball diamond (he was considered a major prospect for the 2015 MLB draft).
Murray signed with Texas A&M and appeared in eight games as a true freshman in 2015 but, like Mayfield before him, he eventually found his way to Norman as a transfer. After sitting out a year, he served as a backup to Mayfield and then won the job outright in 2018. He more than filled the big shoes of the reigning Heisman winner, passing for 4,054 yards and 40 touchdowns, with another 892 yards and 11 scores on the ground while leading the Sooners to a 12-1 record, the Big 12 title and a berth in the College Football Playoff. His passer rating of 205.72 was the best in Heisman history, eclipsing the mark of 203.76 set by Mayfield in 2017.
Kyler Cole Murray (August 7, 1997)
Accordingly, Murray captured the attention of Heisman voters. He was awarded the Heisman Trophy on December 8, 2018. He polled 2,167 points to capture the award over Tua Tagovailoa of Alabama (1,871 points), and Ohio State quarterback Dwayne Haskins (783 points). Murray, who followed Baker Mayfield as quarterback at Oklahoma, is the first player to win the Heisman the year after taking over for another Heisman winner. His victory also marks just the fourth time a school has won consecutive Heisman's. He joined Billy Vessels (’52), Steve Owens (’69), Billy Sims (’78), Jason White (’03), Sam Bradford (’08) and Mayfield (’17) as Sooner Heisman winners. The seven trophies ties Notre Dame and Ohio State for most Heisman wins. Expected to bypass the NFL to become a Major League Baseball player, Murray instead chose football and was selected as the first overall pick in the 2019 NFL draft by the Arizona Cardinals.
9/1/2018 vs. Florida Atlantic
(full ticket)
(W 63-14)
9/15/2018 at Iowa State
(full ticket)
(W 37-27)
9/8/2018 vs. U.C.L.A.
(full ticket)
(W 49-21)
9/22/2018 vs. Army
(full ticket)
(W 28-21OT)
9/29/2018 vs. Baylor
(full ticket)
(W 66-33)
10/6/2018 vs. Texas
(Red River Showdown game full ticket)
(L 45-48)
10/20/2018 at T.C.U.
(full ticket)
(W 52-27)
10/27/2018 vs. Kansas State
(full ticket)
(W 51-14)
11/3/2018 at Texas Tech
(full box office ticket)
(W 51-46)
11/10/2018 vs. Oklahoma State
(full Suite ticket)
(W 48-47)
11/23/2018 at West Virginia
(full ticket)
(W 59-56)
11/17/2018 vs. Kansas
(full ticket)
(W 55-40)
12/1/2018 vs. Texas
(BIG-12 Championship game full ticket)
(W 39-27)
12/8/2018 Heisman Trophy
Announcement Credential
12/9/2018 Heisman Trophy Presentation ticket
12/9/2018 Heisman Trophy Presentation
Sponsors Reception & VIP Photo Opportunity ticket
12/9/2018 Heisman Trophy Presentation Dinner Gala Raffle ticket
12/29/2018 vs. Alabama
(FBS Playoff Semi-Final game
Orange Bowl - Miami, FL - full ticket
(L 34-45)
2019 Joe Burrow - LSU
After redshirting his first year at Ohio State in 2015, Burrow spent the next two years as a backup to J. T. Barrett, during which he played in 10 games, completing 29 of 39 passes for 287 yards and two touchdowns. During Ohio State's spring game in 2018, Burrow completed 15 of 22 pass attempts for 238 yards and two touchdowns. Following the game, Burrow told reporters "I didn't come here to sit on the bench for four years. I know I'm a pretty good quarterback. I want to play somewhere." Realizing that Haskins would be named starting quarterback at Ohio State, Burrow transferred to Louisiana State University on May 18, 2018. Burrow had graduated from Ohio State in three years with a degree in consumer and family financial services, and would be immediately eligible as a graduate transfer. In his first year at LSU, Burrow was named the starting quarterback as a redshirt junior in 2018. Burrow finished the season with 2,894 yards passing, 16 touchdowns, and five interceptions. He added 399 rushing yards and seven rushing touchdowns.
Joseph Lee Burrow (December 10, 1996)
The 6-4, 216-pounder from Athens, Ohio, had an extraordinary 2019 season, passing for 4,715 yards and 48 touchdowns (tying a Heisman record), while adding another 289 yard and three scores on the ground. He had a remarkable completion percentage of 77.9 percent, the best in Heisman history. On December 14, 2019, Burrow was awarded the 2019 Heisman Trophy, Burrow is the second LSU player to win the trophy and first since the late Billy Cannon did so in 1959. His Heisman triumph makes him the third-consecutive transfer player to win the award (and seventh overall), though he is the first to do so under the NCAA’s graduate transfer rule. As the field general for the nation’s top offense, he led No. 1 LSU to a 13-0 record, the SEC title (its first since 2011), and its first berth in the College Football Playoff and led the Tigers to the national championship.
Burrow was selected first overall in the 2020 NFL Draft by the Cincinnati Bengals. He was the third-consecutive Heisman-winning quarterback to be selected first overall.