1940 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team - Led by head coach Bernie Bierman, the Golden Gophers compiled an 8–0 record, won the Big Ten championship, and outscored opponents by a total of 154 to 71. Halfback George Franck was a consensus All-American and placed third in the Heisman Trophy voting. Quarterback Bob Paffrath was selected as the team's most valuable player. Minnesota was selected as national champions by the Associated Press (AP) poll.
The year's statistical leaders included Al Ghesquiere of Detroit with 958 rushing yards,[4]Johnny Knolla of Creighton with 1,420 yards of total offense,[5]Johnny Supulski of Manhattan with 1,190 passing yards,[6]Hank Stanton of Arizona with 820 receiving yards, and Tom Harmon with 117 points scored.[7][8]
^Poling, Richard R. (1941). "Top Teams of 1940". The 1940 Supplement of the Football Review. Mansfield, Ohio: Poling's Football Ratings. We predicted that STANFORD would beat NEBRASKA by from seven to ten points, and this game came home to us right – final score STANFORD 21 NEBRASKA 13. This game bore us out and thus made STANFORD NATIONAL FOOTBALL CHAMPIONS OF 1940. [...] No. 1 Stanford 45.06, No. 2 Minnesota 43.13, No 3. Boston College 43.0
^ESPN College Football Encyclopedia (2005), p. 1182.
^"West Texas State College Back Ranks 4th In Scoring". Pampa Daily News (Texas). December 2, 1940. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com. (Some contemporaneous sources list Jackie Hunt of Marshall College as the 1949 scoring champion. Hunt scored 162 points on 27 touchdowns in 1940. The ESPN College Football Encyclopedia excludes Madden, as Marshall College was not considered a major college in 1940. Accordingly, Hunt was selected for the Little All-America team in 1940.)