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词条 2014 UCF Knights football team
释义

  1. Personnel

     Coaching staff  Roster 

  2. Schedule

  3. Game summaries

     Penn State  Missouri  Bethune-Cookman  Houston  BYU  Tulane  Temple  Connecticut  Tulsa  SMU  South Florida  East Carolina  St. Petersburg Bowl  

  4. Awards and milestones

     Conference awards  All-American Teams  All-Conference Teams  American offensive player of the week  American defensive player of the week  American special teams player of the week  School records 

  5. Offseason

     NFL Draft 

  6. References

{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2014}}{{Infobox NCAA team season
|Year = 2014
|Team = UCF Knights
|sport = football
|Image = UCF Knights logo.svg
|ImageSize = 115px
|Conference = American Athletic Conference
|ShortConference = The American
|Record = 9–4
|ConfRecord = 7–1
|CoachRank =
|APRank =
|CFPRank =
|HeadCoach = George O'Leary
|HCYear = 11th
|OffCoach = Charlie Taaffe
|OCYear = 6th
|DefCoach = Tyson Summers
|DCYear = 1st
|OScheme = Pro Style, Option
|DScheme = 4–3
|StadiumArena = Bright House Networks Stadium {{small|(Capacity: 45,323)}}
|Champion = The American co–champion
|BowlTourney = St. Petersburg Bowl vs. NC State
|BowlTourneyResult = L 27–34
}}{{2014 American Athletic Conference football standings}}

The 2014 UCF Knights football team represented the University of Central Florida in the 2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Knights were members of the American Athletic Conference (The American), and played their home games at Bright House Networks Stadium on UCF's main campus in Orlando, Florida. The Knights were led by head coach George O'Leary, who was in his eleventh season with the team.

The 2014 season was UCF's second as a member of The American. UCF set a program mark with its first undefeated home record since moving into Bright House Networks Stadium in 2007. On November 1, Connecticut snapped UCF's 11-game undefeated conference winning streak. The Knights were 8–0 in American Athletic Conference play in 2013, and won their first three conference games in 2014 to sit at 11–0 up to that point.

After a last-second loss to Penn State in the Croke Park Classic on opening day, the Knights lost to Missouri, eventual winners of the Southeastern Conference's Eastern Division. The Knights won nine of their next ten games, and became bowl eligible in mid-November. UCF clinched a share of the conference title on December 4 by virtue of a 51-yard Hail Mary touchdown as time expired at East Carolina. Over two years, UCF is 15–1 in American Conference play. The Knights finished the regular season unranked, but received votes in both the AP and Coaches polls. They finished their season against NC State in the St. Petersburg Bowl, where they lost 34–27.

Personnel

Coaching staff

2014 UCF Knights coaching staff
Head Coaches
  • Head Coach – George O'Leary
  • Asst. Head Coach/Offensive Line – Brent Key
Offensive Coaches
  • Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks – Charlie Taaffe
  • Running Backs – Danny Barrett
  • Wide Receivers – Sean Beckton
  • Tight Ends – Allen Mogridge
Defensive Coaches
  • Defensive Coordinator/Linebackers – Tyson Summers
  • Defensive Backs – Kirk Callahan
  • Defensive Line – Lorenzo Costantini
 Special Teams
  • Special Teams Coordinator – Mike Buscemi
Supporting Strength & Conditioning Coach
  • S&C Support – Stefan Liskiewicz
Administrative Staff
  • Athletic Director (A.D.) – Todd Stansbury
  • Asst. A.D. for Football Operations – Marty O'Leary
  • Director of Player Development – Kristy Belden
  • Director of Player Personnel – Keegan Kennedy

Roster

2014 UCF Knights roster
Quarterbacks
  • 2 Nick Patti – Sophomore
  • 8 Tyler Harris – Freshman
  • 13 Justin Holman – Sophomore
  • 14 Pete DiNovo – Freshman
Halfbacks
  • 32 Mario Mathis – Freshman
  • 39 Joseph Puopolo – Junior
  • 43 Justin Rae – Freshman
Fullbacks
  • 44 Mark Messeguer – Freshman
Runningbacks
  • 4 Micah Reed – Sophomore
  • 7 Dontravious Wilson – Sophomore
  • 17 Cedric Thompson – Junior
  • 22 Michael Willett – Freshman
  • 24 Blake Tiralosi – Sophomore
  • 28 William Stanback – Sophomore
  • 29 CJ Jones – Freshman
  • 45 Daron Humphrey – Sophomore
Wide Receivers
  • 3 Jackie Williams – Senior
  • 6 Rannell Hall – Senior
  • 9 J.J. Worton – Senior
  • 10 Kyle Coltrain – Freshman
  • 11 Breshad Perriman – Junior
  • 19 Joshua Reese – Senior
  • 20 Taylor Oldham – Sophomore
  • 23 Jonathan Boone – Freshman
  • 27 Tristan Reaves – Freshman
  • 30 Trace Ryan – Freshman
  • 80 Tre'Quan Smith – Freshman
  • 81 Chris Johnson – Freshman
  • 82 Jamari Fye – Freshman
  • 86 Michael Colubiale – Freshman
  • 88 Jordan Akins – Freshman
  • 89 Hayden Jones – Sophomore
 Tight Ends
  • 46 Zack Laurinaitis – Freshman
  • 84 Justin Tukes – Senior
  • 85 Kevin Miller – Junior
  • 87 Cal Bloom – Sophomore
Offensive Line
  • 51 Chris Larsen – Freshman
  • 55 Joey Grant – Junior
  • 60 Collin Mills – Freshman
  • 61 Tarik Cook – Junior
  • 62 Micah Anderson – Sophomore
  • 63 Tarik Milner – Senior
  • 66 Aaron Evans – Freshman
  • 67 Jared Warren – Freshman
  • 68 Charles Sprenkel – Freshman
  • 70 Luke Palmer – Freshman
  • 71 Chester Brown – Sophomore
  • 72 Torrian Wilson – Senior
  • 73 Jason Rae – Sophomore
  • 74 Michael Campbell – Sophomore
  • 75 Tate Hernly – Freshman
  • 76 Colby Watson – Sophomore
  • 78 Wyatt Miller – Freshman
  • 79 Chavis Dickey – Freshman
Linebackers
  • 15 Michael Easton – Senior
  • 23 Willie Mitchell – Senior
  • 34 Justin McDonald – Sophomore
  • 40 Chequan Burkett – Freshman
  • 41 Terrance Plummer – Senior
  • 46 Jordan Franks – Freshman
  • 50 Domenic Spencer – Junior
  • 51 Errol Clarke – Junior
  • 52 Maurice Russell – Sophomore
  • 53 Tyler Linde – Sophomore
  • 57 Troy Gray – Senior
  • 58 Caleb Perez – Freshman
  • 59 Demeitre Brim – Sophomore
 Defensive Line
  • 42 Stanley Sylverain – Sophomore
  • 43 Deondre Bennett – Sophomore
  • 44 Miles Pace – Junior
  • 47 Deion Green – Junior
  • 49 Seyvon Lowry – Sophomore
  • 69 Thomas Niles – Junior
  • 90 Lance McDowdell – Junior
  • 91 Joey Connors – Freshman
  • 92 Luke Adams – Sophomore
  • 93 Tony Guerad – Freshman
  • 94 Demetris Anderson – Junior
  • 95 Jamiyus Pittman – Freshman
  • 96 A.J. Wooten – Freshman
  • 97 Jock Petree – Freshman
  • 98 Rob Sauvao – Senior
  • 99 Jaryl Mamea – Senior
Defensive Backs
  • 10 Shaquill Griffin – Sophomore
  • 12 Jacoby Glenn – Sophomore
  • 16 Mark Rucker – Sophomore
  • 18 Shaquem Griffin – Freshman
  • 21 Drico Johnson – Sophomore
  • 22 Jared Henry – Sophomore
  • 24 D.J. Killings – Sophomore
  • 25 Kyle Gibson – Freshman
  • 26 Clayton Geathers – Senior
  • 27 Sean Beckton – Senior
  • 30 Brendin Straubel – Junior
  • 31 Chris Williams – Freshman
  • 33 Tre Neal – Freshman
  • 37 Brandon Alexander – Senior
  • 38 Jordan Ozerites – Senior
 Punters/Kickers
  • 18 Rodrigo Quirarte – Senior
  • 35 Sean Galvin – Senior
  • 36 Caleb Houston – Sophomore
  • 47 Connor O'Sullivan – Freshman
  • 48 Mac Loudermilk – Freshman
  • 49 Matthew Wright – Freshman
  • 83 Shawn Moffitt – Senior
Snappers
  • 54 Gage Marsil – Sophomore
  • 56 Scott Teal – Senior
  • 59 Mario Elliott – Freshman
Terms:
  • Freshman – A player in his first year.
  • Sophomore – A player in his second year.
  • Junior – A player in his third year.
  • Senior – A player in his fourth year.
  • Redshirt – A player who sat out a previous season.
{{cite web |title=2014 Football Roster|url=http://ucfknights.com/roster.aspx?path=football&roster=14|publisher=UCF Athletics Association|accessdate=31 August 2016}}

Schedule

The 2014 schedule was officially released by The American on February 12, 2014.[1] The 2014 schedule was developed as a "bridge" schedule, until a permanent system was developed by the conference to address expanded membership and the creation of divisions by 2015. UCF faced eight conference opponents: Connecticut, East Carolina, Houston, SMU, South Florida, Temple, Tulane, and Tulsa.

The Knights played four non-conference games: Penn State (Big Ten), Missouri (SEC), Bethune-Cookman (FCS), and BYU (IND).[2] UCF had three bye weeks in the 2014 season: their first during week two, before facing Missouri, the second during week five, before facing Houston, and the third during week nine, before facing Tulsa. UCF's opener in Dublin, Ireland marked the first time that the team played outside the United States.

{{CFB schedule
| rankyear = 2014
| poll = AP
| timezone = Eastern
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = August 30
| time = 8:30 AM
| w/l = l
| nonconf = y
| neutral = y
| opponent = Penn State
| gamename = Croke Park Classic
| site_stadium = Croke Park
| site_cityst = Dublin, IRE
| tv = ESPN2
| score = 24–26
| attend = 53,304
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 13
| time = 12:00 PM
| w/l = l
| nonconf = y
| away = y
| opponent = Missouri
| opprank = 20
| site_stadium = Faurot Field
| site_cityst = Columbia, MO
| tv = SECN
| score = 10–38
| attend = 60,348
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 20
| time = 6:00 PM
| w/l = w
| nonconf = y
| opponent = Bethune–Cookman
| opprank = 12 (FCS)
| site_stadium = Bright House Networks Stadium
| site_cityst = Orlando, FL
| tv = ESPN3
| score = 41–7
| attend = 44,510
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 2
| time = 7:00 PM
| w/l = w
| away = y
| opponent = Houston
| site_stadium = TDECU Stadium
| site_cityst = Houston, TX
| tv = ESPN
| score = 17–12
| attend = 26,685
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 9
| time = 7:30 PM
| w/l = w
| nonconf = y
| opponent = BYU
| site_stadium = Bright House Networks Stadium
| site_cityst = Orlando, FL
| tv = ESPN
| score = 31–24
| overtime = OT
| attend = 41,547
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 18
| time = 12:00 PM
| w/l = w
| opponent = Tulane
| site_stadium = Bright House Networks Stadium
| site_cityst = Orlando, FL
| tv = ESPNU
| score = 20–13
| attend = 35,015
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 25
| time = 5:00 PM
| w/l = w
| homecoming = y
| opponent = Temple
| site_stadium = Bright House Networks Stadium
| site_cityst = Orlando, FL
| tv = CBSSN
| score = 34–14
| attend = 39,554
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 1
| time = 12:00 PM
| w/l = l
| away = y
| opponent = Connecticut
| site_stadium = Rentschler Field
| site_cityst = East Hartford, CT
| tv = CBSSN
| score = 29–37
| attend = 28,751
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 14
| time = 8:00 PM
| w/l = w
| opponent = Tulsa
| site_stadium = Bright House Networks Stadium
| site_cityst = Orlando, FL
| tv = ESPN2
| score = 31–7
| attend = 35,323
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 22
| time = 12:00 PM
| w/l = w
| opponent = SMU
| site_stadium = Bright House Networks Stadium
| site_cityst = Orlando, FL
| tv = ESPNews
| score = 53–7
| attend = 30,920
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 28
| time = 12:00 PM
| w/l = w
| away = y
| opponent = South Florida
| gamename = War on I-4
| site_stadium = Raymond James Stadium
| site_cityst = Tampa, FL
| tv = ESPN2
| score = 16–0
| attend = 36,963
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = December 4
| time = 7:30 PM
| w/l = w
| away = y
| opponent = East Carolina
| gamename = Rivalry
| site_stadium = Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium
| site_cityst = Greenville, NC
| tv = ESPN
| score = 32–30
| attend = 41,259
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = December 26
| time = 8:00 PM
| w/l = l
| nonconf = y
| neutral = y
| opponent = NC State
| gamename = St. Petersburg Bowl
| site_stadium = Tropicana Field
| site_cityst = St. Petersburg, FL
| tv = ESPN
| score = 27–34
| attend = 26,675
}}
}}

Game summaries

Penn State

{{see also|2014 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Croke Park Classic}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=Penn State vs. UCF – Game Summary
|date=August 30, 2014
|time=8:30 AM EDT (1:30 PM IST)
|road=Nittany Lions
|R1=7 |R2=3 |R3=10 |R4=6
|home=Knights
|H1=0 |H2=3 |H3=7 |H4=14
|stadium=Croke Park, Dublin, Ireland
|attendance=53,304
|weather= {{convert|60|°F|°C}}, Cloudy
|referee=Todd LaPenta (The American)
|TV=ESPN2
|TVAnnouncers= Mike Patrick (play-by-play), Ed Cunningham (color commentator),
Jeannine Edwards (sideline reporter), and Kenny Mayne (reporter)
|reference= Recap
|scoring=
First quarter
  • PSU – Zach Zwinak 1-yard run, 8:20 (PSU 7–0)
Second quarter
  • UCF – Shawn Moffitt 36-yard field goal, 12:26 (PSU 7–3)
  • PSU – Sam Ficken 22-yard field goal, 6:20 (PSU 10–3)
Third quarter
  • PSU – Sam Ficken 33-yard field goal, 6:56 (PSU 13–3)
  • UCF – Justin Holman 1-yard run, 2:39 (PSU 13–10)
  • PSU – Geno Lewis 79-yard pass from Christian Hackenberg, 0:55 (PSU 20–10)
Fourth quarter
  • UCF – Joshua Reese 10-yard pass from Justin Holman, 11:31 (PSU 20–17)
  • PSU – Sam Ficken 24-yard field goal, 3:30 (PSU 23–17)
  • UCF – Justin Holman 6-yard run, 1:13 (UCF 24–23)
  • PSU – Sam Ficken 36-yard field goal, 0:00 (PSU 26–24)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 9/14, 204 YDS, TD
Top Rusher
  • Dontravious Wilson – 21 CAR, 34 YDS
Top Receiver
  • J.J. Worton – 5 REC, 83 YDS

}}

This was the fourth meeting between the Knights and Nittany Lions, with Penn State now holding a 3–1 record. UCF won the last meeting in 2013, 34–31. With both teams experiencing significant changes from the prior season, including both Blake Bortles and Storm Johnson who entered the 2014 NFL Draft, the two teams started slow. The Knights offense was anemic in the first half behind redshirt freshman Pete DiNovo. Once DiNovo was replaced by sophomore quarterback Justin Holman in the third quarter, UCF's offense quickly gained traction, starting with a 70-yard drive which culminated with a quarterback sneak into the end zone. The Knights and Nittany Lions traded scores, and down by six points with 3:30 remaining, Holman led the Knights on a 75-yard touchdown drive capped off by a six-yard run by the quarterback. Unfortunately, the quick scoring drive left enough time on the clock for Penn State quarterback Christian Hackenberg to get the Nittany Lions in field goal range. As time expired, Sam Ficken hit a 36-yard field goal which gave Penn State the 26–24 win.[3]

The loss snapped UCF's nine game winning streak dating back to October 5, 2013 – the third longest active streak amongst FBS schools at the time. It was also the Knights first loss to an unranked team since December 1, 2012. For Penn State, the victory marked the first for new head coach James Franklin.[4] This was also UCF's first game played outside the United States, and the 2014 Croke Park Classic became the highest-attended college football game ever played in Ireland.[5]

{{Clear}}

Missouri

{{see also|2014 Missouri Tigers football team}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=UCF vs. #20 Missouri – Game Summary
|date=September 13, 2014
|time=12:00 PM EDT
|road=Knights
|R1=3 |R2=7 |R3=0 |R4=0
|home=#20 Tigers
|H1=7 |H2=7 |H3=7 |H4=17
|stadium=Faurot Field, Columbia, Missouri
|attendance=60,348
|weather={{convert|52|°F|°C}}, Sunny
|referee= John McDaid (The American)
|TV=SEC Network
|TVAnnouncers=Dave Neal (play-by-play), Andre Ware (color commentator),
and Laura Rutledge (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First Quarter
  • MIZZ – Jimmie Hunt 11-yard pass from Maty Mauk, 10:11 (MIZZ 7–0)
  • UCF – Shawn Moffitt 19-yard field goal, 3:30 (MIZZ 7–3)
Second Quarter
  • UCF – William Stanback 2-yard pass from Justin Holman, 12:17 (UCF 10–7)
  • MIZZ – Jimmie Hunt 10-yard pass from Maty Mauk, 6:12 (MIZZ 14–10)
Third Quarter
  • MIZZ – Bud Sasser 21-yard pass from Maty Mauk, 1:43 (MIZZ 21–10)
Fourth Quarter
  • MIZZ – Bud Sasser 22-yard pass from Maty Mauk, 11:32 (MIZZ 28–10)
  • MIZZ – Andrew Baggett 26-yard field goal, 4:13 (MIZZ 31–10)
  • MIZZ – Singleton 60-yard fumble recovery, 0:13 (MIZZ 38–10)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 22/36, 209 YDS, TD, 2 INT
Top Rusher
  • William Stanback – 15 CAR, 33 YDS
Top Receiver
  • Rannell Hall – 8 REC, 73 YDS

}}

After trailing 10–7 midway through the second quarter, the Tigers took control and scored 31 unanswered points to win 38–10. Mizzou quarterback Maty Mauk threw four touchdowns and one pick for 144 yards. UCF QB Justin Holman, earning his first career start, threw 209 yards and one touchdown. The Knights defense surrendered 322 yards of offense, 144 through the air and 178 on the ground. RB William Stanback had 33 yards on 15 carries, and WR Rannell Hall had 73 yards on 8 receptions. UCF and Mizzou had met once previously, a 2012 match-up in Orlando that Mizzou won 21–16. The loss marked UCF's first against a ranked team in its last three chances, and led to UCF's first 0–2 start since 2005.

{{Clear}}

Bethune-Cookman

{{see also|2014 Bethune–Cookman Wildcats football team}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=Bethune-Cookman vs. UCF – Game Summary
|date=September 20, 2014
|time=6:00 PM EDT
|road=Wildcats
|R1=7 |R2=0 |R3=0 |R4=0
|home=Knights
|H1=3 |H2=17 |H3=14 |H4=7
|stadium=Bright House Networks Stadium, Orlando, Florida
|attendance=44,510
|weather={{convert|80|°F|°C}}, Cloudy
|referee=Jonah Monroe (The American)
|TV=ESPN3
|TVAnnouncers=Mark Neely (play-by-play), Jay Walker (color commentator),
and Tiffany Greene (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First quarter
  • UCF – Rodrigo Quirarte 37-yard field goal, 5:26 (UCF 3–0)
  • BCU – Anthony Jordan 1-yard field run, 1:40 (BCU 7–3)
Second quarter
  • UCF – J.J. Worton 35-yard pass from Justin Holman, 11:57 (UCF 10–7)
  • UCF – Breshad Perriman 61-yard pass from Justin Holman, 9:37 (UCF 17–7)
  • UCF – Rodrigo Quirarte 37-yard field goal, 6:19 (UCF 20–7)
Third quarter
  • UCF – William Stanback 9-yard field run, 13:28 (UCF 27–7)
  • UCF – Cedric Thompson 1-yard field run, 5:29 (UCF 24–7)
Fourth quarter
  • UCF – William Stanback 2-yard field run, 5:09 (UCF 41–7)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 6/11, 135 YDS, 2 TD
Top Rusher
  • William Stanback – 15 CAR, 104 YDS, 2 TD
Top Receiver
  • Breshad Perriman – 3 REC, 98 YDS, TD

}}

The Knights started slow, trailing the Wildcats late in the first-quarter before UCF answered with 41 unanswered points. UCF had won the last game against Bethune-Cookman in 1995 with a score of 38–7. This victory marked the first win for the Knights this season, and the Knights now have an 11–5 winning record against the Wildcats. Quarterback Justin Holman 6-for-11 for 145 yards and two touchdowns. RB William Stanback rushed for a then-season-high 104 yards and two scores. Senior WR Breshad Perriman had 3 receptions for 98 yards and a touchdown. UCF's defense held BCU to 173 total yards of offense behind five first-half sacks.

{{Clear}}

Houston

{{see also|2014 Houston Cougars football team}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=UCF vs. Houston – Game Summary
|date=October 2, 2014
|time=7:00 PM EDT
|road=Knights
|R1=0 |R2=7 |R3=10 |R4=0
|home=Cougars
|H1=3 |H2=3 |H3=0 |H4=6
|stadium=TDECU Stadium, Houston Texas
|attendance=26,685
|weather={{convert|90|°F|°C}}, Mostly Sunny
|referee=Todd LaPenta
|TV=ESPN
|TVAnnouncers=Ray Bentley (play-by-play), Dave LaMont (color commentator),
and Kayce Smith (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First Quarter
  • HOU – Kyle Bullard 39-yard field goal, 9:50 (HOU 3–0)
Second Quarter
  • UCF – Jackie Williams 52-yard pass from Justin Holman, 9:27 (UCF 7–3)
  • HOU – Kyle Bullard 42-yard field goal, 1:58 (MIZZ 7–6)
Third Quarter
  • UCF – Breshad Perriman 6-yard pass from Justin Holman, 10:27 (UCF 14–6)
  • UCF – Shawn Moffit 42-yard field goal, 8:25 (UCF 17–6)
Fourth Quarter
  • HOU – Kyle Bullard 51-yard field goal, 11:06 (UCF 17–9)
  • HOU – Kyle Bullard 49-yard field goal, 4:46 (UCF 17–12)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 6/18, 101 YDS, 2 TD
Top Rusher
  • William Stanback – 14 CAR, 44 YDS
Top Receiver
  • Breshad Perriman – 1 REC, 52 YDS, TD

}}

For the second consecutive year, the Knights won a close contest against the Cougars. UCF and Houston played five times previously, with UCF winning four games, including a 19–14 homecoming contest in 2013 that helped to secure UCF's first BCS bid. The Knights took a 7–6 lead into halftime, and scored two more times to take a 17–6 lead into the third quarter. Houston responded with two field goals to narrow the score to 17–12. After holding the Cougars to four field goals, UCF prevailed 17–12, capped off by a remarkable goal line stand in the final seconds. Brandon Alexander saved the game for the Knights when he hit Houston quarterback Greg Ward Jr.'s arm and knocked the ball loss for a touchback as he dove and stretched for the end-zone pylon with 24 seconds left in the game. Holman was 6-of-8 for 101 yards and two scores, Stanback had 44 yards on 14 carries, and Perriman had one touchdown reception for 52 yards.

{{Clear}}

BYU

{{see also|2014 BYU Cougars football team}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=BYU vs. UCF – Game Summary
|date=October 9, 2014
|time=7:30 PM EDT
|road=Cougars
|R1=0 |R2=3 |R3=21 |R4=0 |R5=0
|home=Knights
|H1=10 |H2=0 |H3=7 |H4=7 |H5=7
|stadium=Bright House Networks Stadium, Orlando, Florida
|attendance=41,547
|weather={{convert|81|°F|°C}}, Partly Cloudy
|referee=Kevin Mar (Big 12)
|TV=ESPN
|TVAnnouncers=Rece Davis (play-by-play), David Pollack (color commentator), Jesse Palmer,
Samantha Ponder (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First quarter
  • UCF – Justin Holman 5-yard run, 8:54 (UCF 7–0)
  • UCF – Shawn Moffit 42-yard field goal, 4:37 (UCF 10–0)
Second quarter
  • BYU – Trevor Samson 32-yard field goal, 4:37 (UCF 10–3)
Third quarter
  • BYU – Colby Pearson 4-yard pass from Christian Stewart, 11:56 (TIE 10–10)
  • BYU – Devin Mahina 15-yard pass from Christian Stewart, 9:30 (BYU 17–10)
  • BYU – Devin Mahina 14-yard pass from Christian Stewart, 9:05 (BYU 24–10)
  • UCF – William Stanback 2-yard run, 5:37 (BYU 24–17)
Fourth quarter
  • BYU – Josh Reese 37-yard pass from Justin Holman, 10:17 (TIE 24–24)
Overtime
  • UCF – William Stanback 4-yard pass from Justin Holman (UCF 31–24)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 30/51, 326 YDS, 2 TD, RUSH TD, 2 INT
Top Rusher
  • William Stanback – 22 CAR, 44 YDS
Top Receiver
  • Josh Reese – 5 REC, 87 YDS

}}

This was the second meeting between the programs, with the Cougars winning the only prior game 24–17 in 2011. After the injury to Taysom Hill in the previous game against Utah State, Christian Stewart started his first game for BYU at QB. The Knights defense proved tough as UCF sacked Stewart twice, forcing one fumble, and intercepting one of his passes. After the Knights opened a 10–3 lead going into the half, the Cougar's defense stopped UCF's offense from scoring on 8 consecutive possessions. The defense picked off two UCF passes and forced two UCF fumbles, allowing BYU to have the short field and take the lead in the third quarter. The defensive stand led to 21 unanswered points by BYU. Down 24–10 late in the third quarter, Holman led the Knights on two late drives to tie the game. With 10 minutes left, and after BYU jumped into the neutral zone, Holman found Josh Reese for a 37-yard touchdown pass to tie the game. With the opportunity to take the lead, UCF missed two late field goals in the fourth, forcing the game into overtime.

In overtime, William Stanback caught a 4-yard pass from Holman to give the Knights a 31–24 lead. The Knights defense stood strong, and for the second consecutive game won the match-up on a goal-line stand after stopping the Cougars on fourth down in the redzone.

{{Clear}}

Tulane

{{see also|2014 Tulane Green Wave football team}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=Tulane vs. UCF – Game Summary
|date=October 18, 2014
|time=12:00 PM EDT
|road=Green Wave
|R1=3 |R2=0 |R3=3 |R4=7
|home=Knights
|H1=0 |H2=13 |H3=7 |H4=0
|stadium=Bright House Networks Stadium, Orlando, Florida
|attendance=35,015
|weather={{convert|80|°F|°C}}, Sunny
|referee=Ed Ardito
|TV=ESPNU
|TVAnnouncers=Adam Amin (play-by-play) and John Congemi (color commentator)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First quarter
  • TLN – Andrew DiRocco 21-yard field goal, 5:12 (TLN 3–0)
Second quarter
  • UCF – Shawn Moffit 47-yard field goal, 13:33 (TIE 3–3)
  • UCF – William Stanback 1-yard run, 4:20 (UCF 10–3)
  • UCF – Shawn Moffit 30-yard field goal, 2:18 (UCF 13–3)
Third quarter
  • TLN – Andrew DiRocco 42-yard field goal, 11:14 (UCF 13–6)
  • UCF – Breshad Perriman 45-yard pass from Justin Holman, 9:35 (UCF 20–6)
Fourth quarter
  • TLN – Lazedrick Thompson 9-yard run, 11:36 (UCF 20–13)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 9/17, 113 YDS, INT
Top Rusher
  • Dontravious Wilson – 13 CAR, 51 YDS
Top Receiver
  • Rannell Hall – 6 REC, 68 YDS

}}

This was the first meeting of Knights and Green Wave as members of The American. The two programs had met five times previously as members of C-USA, with UCF winning four including a 61–14 blowout in 2010. The Knights survived four turnovers – two fumbles and two interceptions – and 67 penalty yards to win the match-up. The game was a test of defenses, with the first score being a 21-yard field goal for Tulane by Andrew DiRocco with five minutes remaining in the first. The Knights responded with a 47-yard field goal by Shawn Moffit seven minutes later. UCF tacked on ten more points before the half, a rushing TD by RB William Stanback and a 30-yard field goal by Moffit. After the half, the Green Wave answered with a field goal. After being replaced in the second quarter by backup QB Nick Patti, Holman reentered the game in the second half and led UCF on a three-play 49-yard drive including a 45-yard touchdown pass to Breshad Perriman. Tulane scored the last points of the game with 11 minutes left in the fourth quarter on a 9-yard rushing touchdown by Lazedrick Thompson.

{{Clear}}

Temple

{{see also|2014 Temple Owls football team}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=Temple vs. UCF – Game Summary
|date=October 25, 2014
|time=5:00 PM EDT
|road=Owls
|R1=0 |R2=14 |R3=0 |R4=0
|home=Knights
|H1=17 |H2=10 |H3=7 |H4=0
|stadium=Bright House Networks Stadium, Orlando, Florida
|attendance=39,554
|weather={{convert|82|°F|°C}}, Sunny
|referee=Tracy Jones
|TV=CBS Sports Network
|TVAnnouncers=Dave Ryan (play-by-play), Corey Chavous (color commentator),
Lauren Gardner (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First quarter
  • UCF – JJ Worton 25-yard pass from Justin Holman, 10:21 (UCF 7–0)
  • UCF – Shawn Moffit 23-yard field goal, 8:31 (UCF 10–0)
  • UCF – William Stanback 1-yard run, 0:44 (UCF 17–0)
Second quarter
  • TEM – Romond Deloatch 3-yard pass from PJ Walker, 13:24 (UCF 17–7)
  • UCF – Breshad Perriman 54-yard pass from Justin Holman, 10:00 (UCF 24–7)
  • TEM – Samuel Benjamin 6-yard blocked punt return, 7:45 (UCF 24–14)
  • UCF – Shawn Moffit 19-yard field goal, 0:03 (UCF 27–14)
Third quarter
  • UCF – William Stanback 2-yard run, 0:14 (UCF 34–14)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 25/39, 336 YDS, 2 TD
Top Rusher
  • William Stanback – 27 CAR, 94 YDS, 2 TD
Top Receiver
  • Breshad Perriman – 7 REC, 146 YDS, TD

}}

The Knights dominated both facets of the game, outgaining Temple 466 to 182 yards. UCF had won the only previous meeting between the two programs in a dramatic 39–36 victory in 2013. The Knights scored quickly on a 25-yard pass from Justin Holman to JJ Worton and never looked back, taking a 17–0 lead on their first three drives. Holman was 25-of-39 for a season-high 336 yards and three touchdowns. William Stanback had two touchdowns on 94 yards, and senior WR Breshad Perriman had seven receptions for 146 yards. The Knights 446 yards were the most since the 556 yards gained against Baylor in the Fiesta Bowl.

{{Clear}}

Connecticut

{{see also|2014 Connecticut Huskies football team|Civil Conflict (college football game)}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=UCF vs. Connecticut – Game Summary
|date=November 1, 2014
|time=12:00 PM EDT
|road=Knights
|R1=7 |R2=7 |R3=7 |R4=8
|home=Huskies
|H1=0 |H2=17 |H3=14 |H4=6
|stadium=Rentschler Field, East Hartford, Connecticut
|attendance=28,751
|weather={{convert|43|°F|°C}}, Cool
|referee=John McDaid
|TV=CBS Sports Network
|TVAnnouncers=Dave Ryan (play-by-play), Corey Chavous (color commentator),
Dana Jacobson (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First quarter
  • UCF – William Stanback 3-yard run, 7:38 (UCF 7–0)
Second quarter
  • CON – Deshon Foxx 68-yard run, 12:22 (TIE 7–7)
  • UCF – William Stanback 1-yard run, 4:59 (UCF 14–7)
  • CON – Noel Thomas 38-yard pass from Chandler Whitmer, 1:12 (TIE 14–14)
  • CON – Bobby Puyol 43-yard field goal, 0:00 (CON 17–14)
Third quarter
  • UCF – JJ Worton 73-yard pass from Justin Holman, 9:39 (UCF 21–17)
  • CON – Ron Johnson 1-yard run, 4:17 (CON 24–21)
  • CON – Noel Thomas 22-yard pass from Chandler Whitmer, 1:21 (CON 31–21)
Fourth quarter
  • CON – Ron Johnson 2-yard run (kicked blocked), 12:28 (CON 37–21)
  • UCF – Breshad Perriman 16-yard pass from Justin Holman (2-pt. conv. good), 5:07 (UCF 37–29)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 22/42, 284 YDS, 2 TD, 4 INT
Top Rusher
  • William Stanback – 28 CAR, 141 YDS, 2 TD
Top Receiver
  • JJ Worton – 11 REC, 178 YDS, TD

}}

UConn ended UCF's American conference win-streak at eleven games, handing the Knights their first regular season conference loss since November 2012 against Tulsa. This loss was also UCF's first to a team that finished the season not bowl eligible since September 2012 against Missouri. The Knights had won the only previous meeting between the two programs in a blowout 62–17 home victory in 2013. The victory was UConn's first against an FBS opponent in 2014. Justin Holman's four interceptions coupled with special team troubles spelled doom for UCF's effort to remain unbeaten in conference play for a second straight year. William Stanback had a season-high 141 rushing yards and two touchdowns. JJ Worton had eleven receptions for 178 yards, including a 73-yard touchdown pass from Holman in the third quarter – the Knights longest play from scrimmage this season.

{{Clear}}

Tulsa

{{see also|2014 Tulsa Golden Hurricane football team}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=Tulsa vs. UCF – Game Summary
|date=November 14, 2014
|time=8:00 PM EST
|road=Golden Hurricane
|R1=0 |R2=7 |R3=0 |R4=0
|home=Knights
|H1=3 |H2=14 |H3=14 |H4=0
|stadium=Bright House Networks Stadium, Orlando, Florida
|attendance=35,323
|weather={{convert|58|°F|°C}}, Clear
|referee=Jonah Monroe
|TV=ESPN2
|TVAnnouncers=Eamon McAnaney (play-by-play), Danny Kanell (color commentator),
and Allison Williams (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First quarter
  • UCF – Rodrigo Quirarte 27-yard field goal, 0:39 (UCF 3–0)
Second quarter
  • UCF – J.J. Worton 5-yard pass from Justin Holman, 11:08 (UCF 10–0)
  • UCF – Josh Reese 77-yard pass from Justin Holman, 7:57 (UCF 17–0)
  • TLS – Keevan Lucas 8-yard pass from Dane Evans, 5:41 (UCF 17–7)
Third quarter
  • UCF – Breshad Perriman 25-yard pass from Justin Holman, 9:27 (UCF 24–7)
  • UCF – Dontravious Wilson 1-yard run, 1:09 (UCF 31–7)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 16/27, 291 YDS, 3 TD
Top Rusher
  • Dontravious Wilson – 17 CAR, 87 YDS, TD
Top Receiver
  • Josh Reese – 4 REC, 104 YDS, TD

}}

This game marked the Knights' 50th at Bright House Networks Stadium. The Knights and Golden Hurricane had met seven previous times, all as members of Conference USA. The Golden Hurricane won five including the last game for the 2012 conference championship 33–27 in overtime. The Knights gained 501 yards of total offense and held the Golden Hurricane to 201 total yards. UCF also controlled the time of possession, 37 minutes to 23 minutes for Tulsa. Justin Holman was sixteen-of-twenty-seven for 291 yards and Dontravious Wilson rushed for 87 yards on 17 carries. Kickers Shawn Moffit and Sean Galvin were suspended for the game, with Rodrigo Quirarte taking over kicking duties and going one-for-three.

{{Clear}}

SMU

{{see also|2014 SMU Mustangs football team}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=SMU vs. UCF – Game Summary
|date=November 22, 2014
|time=12:00PM EST
|road=Mustangs
|R1=0 |R2=7 |R3=0 |R4=0
|home=Knights
|H1=27 |H2=10 |H3=6 |H4=10
|stadium=Bright House Networks Stadium, Orlando, Florida
|attendance=30,920
|weather={{convert|71|°F|°C}}, Light rain
|referee=Ed Ardito
|TV=ESPNews
|TVAnnouncers=Jason Benetti (play-by-play) and Rocky Boiman (color commentator)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First quarter
  • UCF – Dontravious Wilson 1-yard run (2-pt. conv. no good), 10:10 (UCF 6–0)
  • UCF – Dontravious Wilson 11-yard run, 7:05 (UCF 13–0)
  • UCF – JJ Worton 58-yard pass from Justin Holman, 2:08 (UCF 20–0)
  • UCF – Breshad Perriman 18-yard pass from Justin Holman, 1:09 (UCF 27–0)
Second quarter
  • SMU – Matt Davis 5-yard run, 14:24 (UCF 27–7)
  • UCF – Michael Easton 96-yard kick return, 14:09 (UCF 34–7)
  • UCF – Rodrigo Quirarte 31-yard field goal, 0:12 (UCF 37–7)
Third quarter
  • UCF – Shawn Moffitt 34-yard field goal, 5:15 (UCF 40–7)
  • UCF – Shawn Moffitt 38-yard field goal, 2:28 (UCF 43–7)
Fourth quarter
  • UCF – Shawn Moffitt 20-yard field goal, 11:28 (UCF 46–7)
  • UCF – Nick Patti 1-yard run, 3:18 (UCF 53–7)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 15/22, 228 YDS, 2 TD, 2 INT
Top Rusher
  • Micah Reed – 26 CAR, 112 YDS
Top Receiver
  • J.J. Worton – 2 REC, 64 YDS, TD

}}

UCF dominated both sides of the ball in a 53–7 win. The victory marked the first time in over a decade that the Knights went a perfect 6–0 at home. UCF and SMU previously met six time, with UCF winning five including the last game which clinched The American's 2013 conference championship 17–13 in Dallas. The Knights defense held the Mustangs to four first downs and 116 total yards. The four touchdowns are the least UCF has ever allowed against an FBS opponent. QB Justin Holman was fifteen-of-twenty-two for 228 yards and two touchdowns. Senior LB Michael Easton had the Knights first kick return of the year in the second quarter, and senior WR JJ Worton had two receptions for 64 yards and a touchdown. UCF's defense forced five turnovers.

{{Clear}}

South Florida

{{see also|2014 South Florida Bulls football team|UCF–USF football rivalry}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=UCF vs. South Florida – Game summary
|date=November 28, 2014
|time=12:00 PM EST
|road=Knights
|R1=0 |R2=14 |R3=2 |R4=0
|home=Bulls
|H1=0 |H2=0 |H3=0 |H4=0
|stadium=Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, Florida
|attendance=36,963
|weather={{convert|59|°F|°C}}, sunny
|referee=Todd LaPenta
|TV=ESPN2
|TVAnnouncers=Clay Matvick (play-by-play), Anthony Becht (color commentator),
and Kayce Smith (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
Second quarter
  • UCF – Breshad Perriman 7-yard pass from Justin Holman, 10:38 (UCF 7–0)
  • UCF – Rannell Hall 21-yard run, 6:09 (UCF 14–0)
Third quarter
  • UCF – Mike White Safety by Thomas Niles, 5:07 (UCF 16–0)

|stats=
Top passer
  • Justin Holman – 20/29, 149 yds, TD, INT
Top rusher
  • Rannell Hall – 10 CAR, 65 yds, TD
Top receiver
  • Breshad Perriman – 6 REC, 55 yds, TD

}}

This was the sixth meeting of the I–4 Corridor Clash. South Florida won the first four games in the series, and UCF won the last meeting 23–20 in 2013. After a scoreless first quarter, Holman led the Knights on a 17-play, 80-yard scoring drive to open the second quarter. The Knights held the Bulls offense to a three-and-out on the next series, which was followed by an 8-play, 73-yard scoring drive by UCF capped off by a 21-yard run from Rannell Hall. UCF held South Florida to 200 yards of total offense, 5 yards rushing, and forced three turnovers on downs. The Bulls missed a field goal and were not able to convert on three UCF turnovers. With the victory, UCF needed one more win to clinch a share of their second consecutive American conference championship. This was UCF's 14th straight win in a non-Saturday game and the first time in the rivalry that a team was shut out. The game was also the first time that South Florida was held scoreless at home in program history, and the first ever road shutout in a conference game for UCF.

{{Clear}}

East Carolina

{{see also|2014 East Carolina Pirates football team|East Carolina–UCF football rivalry}}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=UCF vs. East Carolina – Game Summary
|date=December 4, 2014
|time=7:30PM EST
|road=Knights
|R1=6 |R2=17 |R3=3 |R4=6
|home=Pirates
|H1=6 |H2=3 |H3=0 |H4=21
|stadium=Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium, Greenville, North Carolina
|attendance=41,259
|weather= {{convert|45|°F|°C}}, Partly cloudy
|referee=John McDaid
|TV=ESPN
|TVAnnouncers=Rece Davis (play-by-play), David Pollack (color commentator), Jesse Palmer,
Samantha Ponder (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First quarter
  • UCF – Shawn Moffitt 43-yard field goal, 10:46 (UCF 3–0)
  • ECU – Marquez Grayson 6-yard run (XP blocked), 4:19 (ECU 6–3)
  • UCF – Shawn Moffitt 38-yard field goal, 0:45 (TIE 6–6)
Second quarter
  • UCF– William Stanback 2-yard run, 9:59 (UCF 13–6)
  • UCF – Shawn Moffitt 30-yard field goal, 6:35 (UCF 16–6)
  • UCF– William Stanback 1-yard run, 2:39 (UCF 23–6)
  • ECU– Warren Harvey 37-yard field goal, 0:00 (UCF 23–9)
Third quarter
  • UCF – Shawn Moffitt 31-yard field goal, 7:39 (UCF 26–9)
Fourth quarter
  • ECU – Cam Worthy 6-yard pass from Shane Carden, 13:16 (UCF 26–16)
  • ECU – Marquez Grayson 14-yard pass from Shane Carden, 10:33 (UCF 26–23)
  • ECU – Justin Hardy 13-yard pass from Shane Carden, 2:17 (ECU 30–26)
  • UCF – Breshad Perriman 51-yard pass from Justin Holman (No XP attempt), 0:00 (ECU 32–30)

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 18/33, 274 YDS
Top Rusher
  • William Stanback – 24 CAR, 101 YDS, 2 TD
Top Receiver
  • Breshad Perriman – 4 REC, 139 YDS

}}

UCF and East Carolina 12 games previously, with the Pirates holding 9–3 advantage in the series. UCF won the last meeting in 40–20 in 2012. Both teams entered with identical 8–3 records (UCF 6–1, ECU 5–2 American), with East Carolina looking to upset UCF's hope of winning a conference title. The Knight's defense proved strong, as East Carolina was held to fourteen rushing yards. After UCF took a 26–9 lead with 7:39 left in the third quarter, the Pirates scored 21 unanswered to take a 30–26 lead with 2:17 left in the game. The Knights turned the ball over on downs after failing to convert on 4th and 20 with 1:47 remaining. Poor clock management by the Pirates enabled the Knights to get the ball back at their own 35 with ten seconds left. UCF QB Justin Holman completed a 14-yard out route to WR Josh Reese with five seconds remaining. As time expired, Holman completed a 51-yard Hail Mary pass to WR Breshad Perriman for the score, giving the Knights a 32–30 win. Holman was eighteen-for-thirty-three for 274 yards and Stanback had 101 yards on 24 carries for two scores. With the victory, the Knights clinched a share of the American Athletic Conference title, earning the program's second consecutive conference championship, and fourth since 2007.

{{Clear}}

St. Petersburg Bowl

{{see also|2014 NC State Wolfpack football team|2014 St. Petersburg Bowl }}{{Americanfootballbox
|bg=#fff
|bg2=#eee
|titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|UCF Knights|color=white}}; text-align:center;
|state=collapsed
|title=Bitcoin St. Petersburg Bowl – Game Summary
|date=December 26, 2014
|time=8:00PM EST
|road=Wolfpack
|R1=7 |R2=10 |R3=14 |R4=3
|home=Knights
|H1=3 |H2=7 |H3=3 |H4=14
|stadium=Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, Florida
|attendance=26,675
|weather=Domed stadium
|referee=Don Willard (MAC)
|TV=ESPN
|TVAnnouncers=Adam Amin (play-by-play), John Congemi (color commentator),
and Kaylee Hartung (sideline reporter)
|reference=Recap
|scoring=
First Quarter
Second Quarter
Third Quarter
Fourth Quarter

|stats=
Top Passer
  • Justin Holman – 23/53, 291 YDS, 3 TD, INT
Top Rusher
  • William Stanback – 12 CAR, 38 YDS
Top Receiver
  • Breshad Perriman – 9 REC, 138 YDS

}}

This will be UCF's third appearance in the St. Petersburg Bowl. The Knights were defeated by Rutgers in 2009, and beat Ball State in 2012. UCF and NC State last met in a 2010 match-up won by the Wolfpack 28–21. After a 10–7 start midway through the second quarter, NC State took the lead 17–10 by halftime. NC State scored a 14–3 run which turned the game into a commanding 31–13 lead by the end of the 3rd quarter. After NC State kicked a field goal to turn the lead to 34–13, Justin Holman led a 4th quarter drive that gave UCF two touchdowns, both to Josh Reese, shortening the lead to 34–27. After the last touchdown, UCF attempted an on-side kick, but failed, sealing the game for the Wolfpack. Justin Holman was 23-for-53 for 291 yards and 3 touchdowns. Josh Reese, who was the Knight's game MVP, had 6 receptions for 75 yards and 3 touchdowns.

This loss snapped UCF's three bowl game winning streak, as well as UCF's two 10-win season streak, finishing the season only 9–4 (7–1).

{{Clear}}

Awards and milestones

Conference awards

  • Jacoby Glenn — American Athletic Conference Co-Defensive Player of the Year[6]

All-American Teams

Each year several publications release lists of their ideal "team". The athletes on these lists are referred to as All-Americans. The NCAA recognizes five All-American lists. They are the Associated Press (AP), American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), Sporting News (TSN), and the Walter Camp Football Foundation (WCFF).

  • Jacoby Glenn (AP)[7]

All-Conference Teams

  • American Athletic Conference First Team: Clayton Geathers, Jacoby Glenn, Breshad Perriman, Terrance Plummer, William Stanback[6]
  • American Athletic Conference Second Team: Brandon Alexander, Jaryl Mamea, Thomas Niles, Torrian Wilson[6]

American offensive player of the week

  • October 13: Justin Holman
  • December 8: Breshad Perriman

American defensive player of the week

  • October 13: Terrance Plumer
  • October 27: Jacoby Glenn

American special teams player of the week

  • October 13: JJ Worton
  • November 24: Michael Easton
  • December 8: Shawn Moffit

School records

  • Tied-best regular season home record: 6–0[8]
  • Longest conference win steak: 11 games (2013–14)[9]
  • Most career points responsible for: Shawn Moffit, 304

Offseason

On January 11, 2015, wide receiver Breshad Perriman announced he would enter the NFL Draft after his junior year.[10] He would be followed by Jacoby Glenn on January 13.[11]

NFL Draft

Two former players were selected in the 2015 NFL Draft:

Round Pick Overall Name Position Team
1st 26 26 Breshad Perriman Wide receiver Baltimore Ravens
4th 10 109 Clayton Geathers Safety Indianapolis Colts

This was the first time in program history that a Knight was picked in the first round in two consecutive years.

Additionally, one player signed as an undrafted free agent:

Name Position Team
Rannell Hall Wide receiver Tampa Bay Buccaneers

References

1. ^{{cite web |title=American Athletic Conference Announces 2014 Football Intraconference Matchups|url=http://theamerican.org/news/2014/2/12/FB_0212140552.aspx|publisher=American Athletic Conference|date=February 12, 2014|accessdate=April 5, 2014}}
2. ^{{cite web |title=American Athletic Conference Announces 2014 Football Schedule|url=http://theamerican.org/news/2014/3/11/FB_0311142653.aspx|publisher=American Athletic Conference|date=March 11, 2014|accessdate=April 5, 2014}}
3. ^{{cite news |title=Heartbreak in Dublin: UCF Loses to Penn State 26–24 Despite 3 TDs from Backup QB Holman|url=http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2014/08/30/heartbreak-in-dublin-ucf-loses-to-penn-state-26-24-despite-3-tds-from-backup-qb/?&|work=FOX News|date=August 30, 2014|accessdate=August 31, 2014}}
4. ^{{cite news |title=UCF Rally Falls Short, Knights Suffer 26–24 Loss to Penn State in Ireland|first=Iliana|last=Limón Romero|url=http://www.orlandosentinel.com/sports/ucf-knights/os-ucf-penn-state-game-story-20140830,0,4023017.story|newspaper=Orlando Sentinel|date=August 30, 2014|accessdate=August 31, 2014}}
5. ^{{cite news |title=Penn State Football: Nittany Lion Defense Shows Versatility in Dublin|first=Travis|last=Johnson|url=http://www.centredaily.com/2014/08/30/4329840/penn-state-football-nittany-lion.html|newspaper=Centre Daily Times|location=State College|date=August 30, 2014|accessdate=August 31, 2014}}
6. ^{{cite web |title=Awards Season: UCF's Glenn Honored as the AAC's Co-Defensive Player of the Year |first=Brian|last=Ormiston |url=http://www.ucfknights.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/121014aab.html|publisher=UCF Knights|date=December 10, 2014|accessdate=December 10, 2014}}
7. ^{{cite web |title=2014 AP All-America Team, List |url=http://collegefootball.ap.org/article/2014-ap-all-america-team-list|publisher=Associated Press|date=December 16, 2014|accessdate=December 16, 2014}}
8. ^{{cite news |title=UCF Coach George O'Leary Laments Light Attendance for Seniors' Home Finale|first=Shannon|last=Owens–Green|url=http://www.orlandosentinel.com/sports/ucf-knights/os-ucf-football-1124-20141123-story.html|newspaper=Orlando Sentinel|date=November 23, 2014|accessdate=December 5, 2014}}
9. ^{{cite news |title=Old Foes Tulsa, UCF Meet for 1st Time in American|first=Kyle|last=Hightower|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/ncaaf/2014/11/13/old-foes-tulsa-ucf-meet-for-1st-time-in-american/18971523/|newspaper=USA Today|agency=Associated Press|date=November 13, 2014|accessdate=December 5, 2014}}
10. ^UCF receiver Breshad Perriman will enter the NFL Draft
11. ^UCF CB Jacoby Glenn will enter 2015 NFL draft
{{UCF Knights football navbox}}{{American Athletic Conference football champions}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2014 Ucf Knights Football Team}}

4 : 2014 American Athletic Conference football season|UCF Knights football seasons|American Athletic Conference football champion seasons|2014 in sports in Florida

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