1991 College Football All-America Team

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The 1991 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and publications that chose College Football All-America Teams in 1991. It is an honor given annually to the best American college football players at their respective positions.

The

World Almanac
.

Nine players were unanimously selected by all five official selectors. They are: running back Vaughn Dunbar of Indiana; wide receiver Desmond Howard of Michigan; center Jay Leeuwenburg of Colorado; tackle Greg Skrepenak of Michigan; defensive ends Santana Dotson of Baylor and Steve Emtman of Washington; linebacker Robert Jones of East Carolina; defensive back Terrell Buckley of Florida State; and punter Mark Bounds of Texas Tech.[1] Desmond Howard also won the 1991 Heisman Trophy.

Consensus All-Americans

The following charts identify the NCAA-recognized consensus All-Americans for the year 1991 and display which first-team designations they received.

Full selections - offense

Quarterback

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight end

Tackles

Guards

Center

Full selections - defense

Linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Full selections - special teams

Placekicker

Punter

  • Mark Bounds, Texas Tech (AFCA, AP-1, FWAA, UPI-1, WCFF, FN, NEA, SH, TSN)
  • Jason Christ, Air Force (AP-2, UPI-2)
  • Pete Raether, Arkansas (AP-3)

All-purpose / kick returners

  • Kevin Williams, Miami (Fla.) (FWAA [punt returner], TSN)
  • Qadry Ismail, Syracuse (AP-3 [all purpose], FWAA [kickoff returner])
  • Ryan Benjamin, Pacific (AP-1 [return specialist])
  • Dion Johnson, East Carolina (AP-2 [all purpose])

Key

  • Bold – Used for (1) consensus All-American[1] and (2) first-team selections by an official selector
  • CFHOF - Inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame
  • -1 – First-team selection
  • -2 – Second-team selection
  • -3 – Third-team selection

Official selectors

Other selectors

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. pp. 3, 14. Retrieved December 11, 2017.
  2. ^
    Newspapers.com
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  3. ^
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  4. ^
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  5. ^ a b "Walter Camp All-America team". The Hartford Courant. November 28, 1991. p. C4.
  6. ^
    Newspapers.com
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