
Fernando Mendoza, Diego Pavia, Jeremiah Smith Headline 2025 CFB AP All-America Teams
Fresh on the heels of his Heisman Trophy landslide, Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza got the better of Vanderbilt's Diego Pavia once again.
Mendoza was voted on the Associated Press' All-American first team, with Pavia getting a second-team nod. Fellow Heisman finalist Jeremiyah Love was also a first-teamer.
Ohio State came up short against the Hoosiers in the Big Ten title game, but the Buckeyes had four first-team All-Americans, including wide receiver Jeremiah Smith.
2025 AP All-American Team
First-Team Offense
- Quarterback: Fernando Mendoza, Indiana
- Running Back: Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame; Ahmad Hardy, Missouri
- Wide Receiver: Makai Lemon, USC; Jeremiah Smith, Ohio State; Skylar Bell, UConn
- Tight End: Eli Stowers, Vanderbilt
- Tackle: Francis Mauigoa, Miami; Spencer Fano, Utah
- Guard: Emmanuel Pregnon, Oregon; Beau Stephens, Iowa
- Center: Logan Jones, Iowa
First-Team Defense
- Edge-Rusher: David Bailey, Texas Tech; Cashius Howell, Texas A&M
- Interior Lineman: Kayden McDonald, Ohio State; Landon Robinson, Navy
- Linebacker: Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech; Arvell Reese, Ohio State; CJ Allen, Georgia
- Cornerback: Leonard Moore, Notre Dame; Mansoor Delane, LSU
- Safety: Caleb Downs, Ohio State; Bishop Fitzgerald, USC
- Defensive Back: Jakari Foster, Louisiana Tech
First-Team Special Teams
- Kicker: Kansei Matsuzawa, Hawaii
- Punter: Cole Maynard, Western Kentucky
- All-Purpose: KC Concepcion, Texas A&M
Indiana finished the year as the clear No. 1 team. It went 13-0 during the regular season, having previously beaten Illinois by 53 points and going on the road to take down Oregon before the conference championship.
The Hoosiers didn't have a lot of individual standouts, though. Mendoza is their only first-team All-American honoree, while offensive tackle Carter Smith, cornerback D'Angelo Ponds and safety Louis Moore were second-teamers. Interior lineman Tyrique Tucker and linebacker Aiden Fisher cracked the third-team defense.
Curt Cignetti's squad, nonetheless, is the favorite heading into the College Football Playoff.
The SEC is generally considered the toughest conference in college football, but the Big Ten claimed bragging rights in the All-American category. The B1G had 10 players in the first team, four more than in the SEC. The Big 12 was next on the list with three honorees.




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