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List of NCAA Division I FCS football programs

Map of the FCS football programs, 2024

This is a list of schools in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) that play football in the United States as a varsity sport and are members of the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), known as Division I-AA from 1978 through 2005. There will be 129 FCS programs in the 2024 season.[1] Conference affiliations are current for the 2024 season. The teams in this subdivision compete in a 24-team playoff for the NCAA Division I Football Championship. All leagues allow scholarships with the exception of the Ivy League and Pioneer Football League.

FCS programs

  1. ^ 12 states (Alaska, Hawaii, Kansas, Michigan, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming) do not currently have FCS programs.
  2. ^ According to conferences in football, not necessarily a team's primary conference.
  3. ^ The campus mailing address is Huntsville; Normal is a Huntsville neighborhood that encompasses the AAMU campus.
  4. ^ The first fielded team only played three seasons (1922–1924), from 1925 through 1969 Albany did not have a football program. The modern era of Albany football began in 1970, when the school restored football as a club sport. The team was upgraded to full varsity status in 1973.
  5. ^ The Alcorn State campus has a Lorman mailing address, but is in unincorporated Claiborne County and is designated by the US Census Bureau as Alcorn State, Mississippi.
  6. ^ Delaware will move to the FBS's Conference USA in 2025.
  7. ^ Although the academic core of the Harvard campus, including the university administration, is located in Cambridge, the school's athletic complex, including the football stadium, is within the city limits of Boston.
  8. ^ This is Idaho's second stint in the grouping now known as FCS; it had been a member of what was then known as Division I-AA from the group's creation in 1978 through 1995, after which it moved to the league then known as the Pacific Coast Athletic Association (now the Big West Conference). At that time, the PCAA sponsored FBS (then Division I-A) football.
  9. ^ Effective in 2019–20, Long Island University merged its two athletic programs the Division I non-football LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds and Division II football-sponsoring LIU Post Pioneers into a single D-I athletic program under the Sharks name. The LIU Post football team became the new LIU football team, playing at its current home on the Post campus and joining the Northeast Conference. LIU was immediately eligible for the playoffs, as it was treated as a new football program of an existing D-I institution, but lost all its Division I games in the 2019 season and failed to qualify.
  10. ^ First season of the LIU Post program that became the LIU program in 2019. The Brooklyn campus first played football in 1928, but dropped the sport in 1940, before the Post campus existed; LIU traces the history of its current football program through Post.
  11. ^ The MVSU campus has an Itta Bena mailing address, but is in unincorporated Leflore County and is designated by the US Census Bureau as Mississippi Valley State, Mississippi.
  12. ^ Missouri State will move to the FBS's Conference USA in 2025.
  13. ^ Portland State's campus is in the city of Portland, but it plays its home football games in the suburb of Hillsboro.
  14. ^ Richmond will join the Patriot League as a football affiliate in 2025.

Transitioning from Division II

The following programs are transitioning from NCAA Division II to FCS, or have announced definitive plans to do so. Under current NCAA rules, they must have an invitation from a Division I conference to begin the transition. During the four-year transition period, they are ineligible for the FCS playoffs.

  1. ^ A football-only partnership between the Big South Conference and Ohio Valley Conference; officially treated by the NCAA as an alliance between the two leagues instead of a fully formed conference.
  2. ^ Lindenwood began a transition from Division II to Division I in 2022, joining the Ohio Valley Conference as a full member, including football.
  3. ^ Mercyhurst has a Northeast Conference invitation. They are scheduled to start a transition from Division II to Division I in 2024, pending NCAA approval.
  4. ^ Stonehill began a transition from Division II to Division I in 2022, joining the Northeast Conference as a full member, including football.
  5. ^ Texas A&M–Commerce began a transition from Division II to Division I in 2022, joining the Southland Conference as a full member, including football.
  6. ^ West Georgia has a ASUN Conference/UAC invitation. They are scheduled to start a transition from Division II to Division I in 2024, pending NCAA approval.

Transitioning from Division III

Normally, under current NCAA rules, teams are not allowed to reclassify directly from NCAA Division III to Division I. However, after St. Thomas was involuntarily removed from the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, they and their future primary conference home, the Summit League, worked with the NCAA to move directly to Division I. On July 15, 2020, it was announced that the NCAA had approved this transition, and St. Thomas has played in Division I starting with the 2021 season.[4]

Programs moving to FCS

  1. ^ While UTRGV has multiple campuses within its service area, its athletic program is based at the Edinburg campus, which it inherited from its athletic predecessor, the University of Texas–Pan American. The football team plans to play home games in both Brownsville (home to a UTRGV campus inherited from the University of Texas at Brownsville) and Edinburg; when UTRGV confirmed the addition of football in late 2022, it committed to establishing separate marching bands and spirit programs for the two campuses.[5]
  2. ^ UTRGV will move their athletics program from the WAC to the Southland in 2024, and their football team is expected to play there once they begin varsity play in 2025.
  3. ^ The former UTPA played football while it was a junior college, but never had a football program as a four-year institution.

Former Division I FCS football programs

  1. ^ Nickname changed to Red Wolves in 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h 8 of the 10 schools in the MAC at the time were reclassified from Division I-A to Division I-AA prior to the 1982 season. However, following appeals from Bowling Green, Miami (OH), Northern Illinois, and Western Michigan, the conference as a whole was permitted to remain in I-A beginning in the 1983 season.
  3. ^ Nickname changed to Knights in 2007.
  4. ^ UCF's campus has an Orlando mailing address, but is located entirely within unincorporated Orange County.
  5. ^ Cincinnati was initially reclassified from Division I-A to Division I-AA prior to the 1982 season. However, the university filed an injunction to postpone their demotion to after the 1982 season, and was ultimately successful in remaining in I-A.
  6. ^ UConn currently plays its home games in East Hartford, Connecticut.
  7. ^ Nickname changed to Eagles in 1991.
  8. ^ FIU's campus has a Miami mailing address, but is located entirely within unincorporated Miami-Dade County.
  9. ^ Kennesaw State's campus has a Kennesaw mailing address, but is located entirely within unincorporated Cobb County.
  10. ^ Nickname changed to RedHawks in 1996.
  11. ^ University of Louisiana at Monroe (ULM) since 1999.
  12. ^ Nickname changed to Warhawks in 2006.
  13. ^ Texas State University since 2013.
  14. ^ Troy University since 2004.
  15. ^ West Texas A&M University since 1993.

See also

References

  1. ^ "NCAA Directory - Directory - Member Listing".
  2. ^ "Mercyhurst University marks new era in athletics with move to Division I". Mercyhurst University. April 4, 2024.
  3. ^ "UWG Athletics to Transition to NCAA Division I". West Georgia Athletics. Retrieved September 8, 2023.
  4. ^ "St. Thomas gets approval from NCAA to go Division I". Star Tribune. July 16, 2020. Retrieved July 16, 2020.
  5. ^ "UTRGV announces approval of football, women's aquatics, band, spirit programs" (Press release). UTRGV Vaqueros. November 18, 2022. Retrieved March 11, 2023.

External links