* – Appalachian State and Georgia Southern ineligible for postseason play due to FCS-to-FBS transition rules ** – Idaho ineligible for postseason play due to
APR penalties *** – Louisiana–Lafayette vacated 2 wins due to NCAA violations
The conference title was won by Georgia Southern, in its first year as both a Sun Belt member and an
FBS program. The Eagles became only the third team to win a conference championship in their first FBS season. The other two schools to accomplish this feat were
Nevada,
Big West Conference champions in 1992, and
Marshall, which won the
Mid-American Conference crown in
1997. Georgia Southern also became the first team ever to go unbeaten in conference play in its first FBS season (both the 1992 Nevada and 1997 Marshall teams lost once in conference play).[2]
Previous season
The
Louisiana-Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns and the
Arkansas State Red Wolves both finished 5-2 and were co-champions of the
Sun Belt Conference. The Ragin' Cajuns earned the conference's first bowl spot in the
R+L Carrier New Orleans Bowl, as Louisiana-Lafayette defeated
Tulane 24–21 to win their 3rd straight New Orleans Bowl. Arkansas State earned the second and final Sun Belt bowl, as they played in the
GoDaddy Bowl. Arkansas State scored a late touchdown in the fourth quarter to upset
Ball State, who entered the game with a 10–2 record, and win their second straight GoDaddy Bowl.
The Sun Belt had seven teams eligible for bowl games, but only two received bids (Louisiana-Lafayette and ASU). Western Kentucky had the third best record at 8–4, while ULM, South Alabama, Texas State, and Troy had records of 6-6. The only team that was not eligible for a bowl game was Georgia State.[3]
Preseason
This section is empty. You can help by
adding to it. (January 2014)
Award watch lists
The following Sun Belt players were named to preseason award watch lists:
All dates, times, and TV are tentative and subject to change.
Start times for non-conference games are local for the Sun Belt team; for conference games, starting times are local for the home team. The following list are the teams in their respective time zones: Arkansas State, Louisiana–Monroe, Louisiana–Lafayette, South Alabama, Texas State and Troy are located in the
Central Time Zone; Appalachian State, Georgia State, Georgia Southern is in the
Eastern Time Zone; New Mexico State is in the
Mountain Time Zone and Idaho is in the
Pacific Time Zone.
Rankings reflect that of the USA Today Coaches poll for that week until week eight when the BCS poll will be used.
In 2014, the SBC placed three teams in bowl games through their tie-ins: Louisiana–Lafayette, Arkansas State, and South Alabama. Texas State was also bowl-eligible but did not receive a bowl invitation.[29] Georgia Southern and Appalachian State, despite having bowl-eligible records (9-3 and 7–5, respectively) and the former winning the conference championship, were not bowl-eligible due to FCS-to-FBS transition rules, since 81 full FBS members became bowl-eligible for the 76 bowl slots available.
Honorable Mention:Appalachian State: Drew Bailey, Parker Collins, Kennan Gilchrist, Joel Ross; Arkansas State: Tres Houston, Chris Stone, Andrew Tyron, Xavier Woodson; Georgia Southern: Logan Daves, Deion Stanley, Jay Ellison, Antwione Williams; Georgia State: Nick Arbuckle, Tim Wynn, LynQuez Blair, Robert Davis; Idaho: Marc Millan, Quinton Bradley, Matt Linehan,
Elijhaa Penny; Louisiana-Lafayette: Tominique Tovell, Larry Pettis, Terrance Broadway, Terry Johnson; Louisiana-Monroe: Trey Caldwell, Kenzee Jackson, Michael Johnson, Ray Stovall; New Mexico State: Rodney Butler,
Winston Rose,
Larry Rose III, Derek Ibekwe; South Alabama Chris May, Melvin Meggs, Jesse Kelley, Montell Garner; Texas State: Will Johnson, Tyler Jones, Robert Lowe, Ryan Melton; Troy: Dalton Bennett, Brandon Burks, Tyler Roberts, Bryan Holmes.
* – Appalachian State and Georgia Southern ineligible for postseason play due to FCS-to-FBS transition rules ** – Idaho ineligible for postseason play due to
APR penalties *** – Louisiana–Lafayette vacated 2 wins due to NCAA violations
The conference title was won by Georgia Southern, in its first year as both a Sun Belt member and an
FBS program. The Eagles became only the third team to win a conference championship in their first FBS season. The other two schools to accomplish this feat were
Nevada,
Big West Conference champions in 1992, and
Marshall, which won the
Mid-American Conference crown in
1997. Georgia Southern also became the first team ever to go unbeaten in conference play in its first FBS season (both the 1992 Nevada and 1997 Marshall teams lost once in conference play).[2]
Previous season
The
Louisiana-Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns and the
Arkansas State Red Wolves both finished 5-2 and were co-champions of the
Sun Belt Conference. The Ragin' Cajuns earned the conference's first bowl spot in the
R+L Carrier New Orleans Bowl, as Louisiana-Lafayette defeated
Tulane 24–21 to win their 3rd straight New Orleans Bowl. Arkansas State earned the second and final Sun Belt bowl, as they played in the
GoDaddy Bowl. Arkansas State scored a late touchdown in the fourth quarter to upset
Ball State, who entered the game with a 10–2 record, and win their second straight GoDaddy Bowl.
The Sun Belt had seven teams eligible for bowl games, but only two received bids (Louisiana-Lafayette and ASU). Western Kentucky had the third best record at 8–4, while ULM, South Alabama, Texas State, and Troy had records of 6-6. The only team that was not eligible for a bowl game was Georgia State.[3]
Preseason
This section is empty. You can help by
adding to it. (January 2014)
Award watch lists
The following Sun Belt players were named to preseason award watch lists:
All dates, times, and TV are tentative and subject to change.
Start times for non-conference games are local for the Sun Belt team; for conference games, starting times are local for the home team. The following list are the teams in their respective time zones: Arkansas State, Louisiana–Monroe, Louisiana–Lafayette, South Alabama, Texas State and Troy are located in the
Central Time Zone; Appalachian State, Georgia State, Georgia Southern is in the
Eastern Time Zone; New Mexico State is in the
Mountain Time Zone and Idaho is in the
Pacific Time Zone.
Rankings reflect that of the USA Today Coaches poll for that week until week eight when the BCS poll will be used.
In 2014, the SBC placed three teams in bowl games through their tie-ins: Louisiana–Lafayette, Arkansas State, and South Alabama. Texas State was also bowl-eligible but did not receive a bowl invitation.[29] Georgia Southern and Appalachian State, despite having bowl-eligible records (9-3 and 7–5, respectively) and the former winning the conference championship, were not bowl-eligible due to FCS-to-FBS transition rules, since 81 full FBS members became bowl-eligible for the 76 bowl slots available.
Honorable Mention:Appalachian State: Drew Bailey, Parker Collins, Kennan Gilchrist, Joel Ross; Arkansas State: Tres Houston, Chris Stone, Andrew Tyron, Xavier Woodson; Georgia Southern: Logan Daves, Deion Stanley, Jay Ellison, Antwione Williams; Georgia State: Nick Arbuckle, Tim Wynn, LynQuez Blair, Robert Davis; Idaho: Marc Millan, Quinton Bradley, Matt Linehan,
Elijhaa Penny; Louisiana-Lafayette: Tominique Tovell, Larry Pettis, Terrance Broadway, Terry Johnson; Louisiana-Monroe: Trey Caldwell, Kenzee Jackson, Michael Johnson, Ray Stovall; New Mexico State: Rodney Butler,
Winston Rose,
Larry Rose III, Derek Ibekwe; South Alabama Chris May, Melvin Meggs, Jesse Kelley, Montell Garner; Texas State: Will Johnson, Tyler Jones, Robert Lowe, Ryan Melton; Troy: Dalton Bennett, Brandon Burks, Tyler Roberts, Bryan Holmes.