Awarded for | Best interior lineman in college football |
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Country | United States |
Presented by | Football Writers Association of America |
History | |
First award | 1946 |
Most recent | T'Vondre Sweat, Texas |
Website | sportswriters.net |
The Outland Trophy is awarded to the best college football interior lineman in the United States as adjudged by the Football Writers Association of America. It is named after John H. Outland. One of only a few players ever to be named an All-American at two positions, Outland garnered consensus All-America honors in 1898 as a tackle and consensus honors as a halfback in 1899. Outland had always contended that football tackles and guards deserved greater recognition and conceived the Outland Trophy as a means of providing this recognition.[1] In 1988, Jimmy Ridlon was commissioned to design and sculpt the Outland Trophy. A member of the National College Football Awards Association, the award has become one of college football's most prestigious.[2]
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).