NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision

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NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2021 NCAA Division I FBS football season
NCAA football icon logo.svg
SportAmerican football
Founded1978
No. of teams130
CountryUnited States
TV partner(s)Various
Official websitewww.ncaa.com/sports/football/fbs

The NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), formerly known as Division I-A, is the top level of college football in the United States. The FBS is the most competitive subdivision of NCAA Division I, which itself consists of the largest and most competitive schools in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). As of 2020, there are 10 conferences and 130 schools in FBS.

College football is one of the most popular spectator sports throughout much of the United States, and the top schools generate tens of millions of dollars in yearly revenue.[1][2] Top FBS teams draw tens of thousands of fans to games, and the ten largest American stadiums by capacity all host FBS teams or games. Starting July 1, 2021 college athletes are now able to get paid for the use of their image and likeness. Prior to this date colleges were only allowed to provide players with non-monetary compensation such as athletic scholarships that provide for tuition, housing, and books.

Unlike other NCAA divisions and subdivisions, the NCAA does not officially award an FBS football national championship, nor does it sanction a playoff tournament to determine such a champion on the field. Instead, organizations such as the Associated Press and AFCA have historically sought to rank the teams and crown a national champion, by taking a vote of sports writers and coaches, respectively. In place of such a playoff, various cities across the United States hold their own post-season contests, called bowl games, in which they traditionally invite teams to participate in them. Historically, these bowl games were mostly considered to be exhibition games involving a payout to participating teams. However, in the modern era they are considered the de facto post-season. There have been agreements in recent decades (such as the Bowl Coalition from 1992 to 1994, the Bowl Alliance from 1995 to 1997, the Bowl Championship Series from 1998 to 2013, and the College Football Playoff from 2014 to the present) by the premier FBS conferences and bowl games to organize matchups so that the FBS national championship is decided on the field.

Overview[]

Number of FBS teams per state/territory as of 2014:[3]
  Six or more FBS schools in the state
  Five
  Four
  Three
  Two
  One
  No FBS schools

The FBS is the highest level of college football in the United States, and FBS players make up the vast majority of the players picked in the NFL Draft.[4] For every sport but football, the NCAA divides schools into three major divisions: NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, and NCAA Division III. However, in football, Division I is further divided into two sub-divisions: the Bowl Subdivision, abbreviated as the FBS, and the Championship Subdivision, abbreviated as the FCS.[5] Divisions are themselves further divided up into conferences, which are groupings of schools that play each other in contention for a conference championship. The FBS currently has ten conferences, which are often divided into the "Power Five conferences" and the less prominent "Group of Five".

Although FCS programs can draw thousands of fans per game, many FCS schools attempt to join the FBS in hopes of increased revenue, corporate sponsorship, alumni donations, prestige, and national exposure.[6] However, FBS programs also face increased expenses in regards to staff salaries, facility improvements, and scholarships.[6] The athletic departments of many FBS schools lose money every year, and these athletic departments must rely on subsidies from the rest of the university.[7] In many states, the highest-paid public employee is the head coach of an FBS team.[8] FBS schools are limited to a total of 85 football players receiving financial assistance.[9] Nearly all FBS schools that are not on NCAA probation give 85 full scholarships.[citation needed]

In order to retain FBS membership, schools must meet several requirements.[10] FBS schools must have an average home attendance of at least 15,000 (over a rolling two-year period).[10] An FBS school must sponsor a minimum of 16 varsity intercollegiate teams (including football), with at least six men's or coeducational teams and at least eight all-female teams.[10] Across all sports, each FBS school must offer at least 200 athletic scholarships (or spend at least $4 million on athletic scholarships) per year, and FBS football teams must provide at least 90% of the maximum number of football scholarships (which is currently 85).[10]

Scheduling[]

The FBS season begins in late August or early September and ends in January with the College Football Playoff National Championship game. Most FBS teams play 12 regular season games per year, with eight or nine of those games coming against conference opponents.[11] All ten FBS conferences hold a conference championship game to determine the winner of the conference.[12] Between conference games, non-conference games, a conference championship game, and up to two bowl games if ranked among the top four college teams in the country by the College Football Playoff Committee. Only the four Playoff teams are eligible to participate in two bowl games in one post-season, and only the winners of the two playoff semifinal bowl games will play a 15th game when they meet in the College Football Playoff National Championship. The Hawaii Rainbow Warriors[13] and teams that play at Hawaii[14] get a special exemption and are allowed to play a thirteenth regular season game in order to defray travel costs,[11] so an FBS team that plays 13 regular season games, a conference championship game, a semifinal bowl game, and in the national championship game could theoretically play 16 games in a season. No team has played a 16th game in one season, due to the unlikelihood of a team playing Hawaii at some point, finishing the season ranked in the top four, opting in to a 13th regular season game, and then winning a Playoff semifinal game. It should be noted the theoretical 16th game has only been possible since the beginning of the College Football Playoff era in 2015.

Number of bowl games[15]
Year Bowls Teams in bowls[16]
1968 11 N/A
1984 18 ~30%
1997 20 ~35%
2017 40[a] 60.5%[b]

For non-conference regular season games, FBS teams are free to schedule match-ups against any other FBS team, regardless of conference. A small number of FBS teams are independent, and have total control over their own schedule. Non-conference games are scheduled by mutual agreement and often involve "home and homes" (where teams alternate as hosts) and long-established rivalries. A 2014 study found that teams from the stronger conferences frequently play non-conference games against teams from the weaker conferences or, occasionally, against FCS teams.[17] FBS teams are free to schedule up to forty percent of their games against FCS teams,[10] but FBS teams can only use one win per season against an FCS team for the purposes of bowl eligibility. Additionally, the FCS opponent must have averaged at least 90% of the FCS limit of 63 scholarship equivalents over a rolling two-year period.[18][c] An FBS team must schedule a total of five home games per year; for the purposes of scheduling, a "home game" must take place at a venue in which the team plays 50% of its "home games", although a team is allowed to count one neutral-site game against an FBS team toward the "home game" requirement.[20] FBS-FCS games, known as "money games," are often home games for the FBS team, and victories by FCS teams are usually considered to be upsets.[21] FCS teams receive hundreds of thousands of dollars for their participation in these games.[21]

New Year's Six Bowls
Bowl Location Est.
Rose Bowl Pasadena, CA
Durham, NC (1942)
Arlington, TX (2021)
1902
Orange Bowl Miami Gardens, FL 1935
Sugar Bowl New Orleans, LA
Atlanta, GA (2006)
1935
Cotton Bowl Arlington, TX 1937
Peach Bowl Atlanta, GA 1968
Fiesta Bowl Glendale, AZ 1971

The Football Bowl Subdivision gets its name from the bowl games that many FBS teams play at the end of the year, although other college divisions also have their own bowl games. FBS bowl games are played at the end of the season in December or January, and collectively generate over $400 million per year as of 2012.[22] For the 2017–18 bowl season, there were 40 bowl games. In order to be bowl eligible, an FBS team must have a winning record. In certain cases, 5–7 and 6–7 teams can also be selected to bowls, usually to fill bowl vacancies.[23]

Many bowls have an established conference tie-in; for example, the Cheez-It Bowl provides a match-up between teams from ACC and the Big 12. A small number of long-established bowls played a major role in the Bowl Championship Series, which was used to select the national champion until 2015, and these bowls continue to play a major role in the College Football Playoff. Under the playoff, there are six major bowls, known as the New Year's Six, with automatic bids going to the conference champions of the Power Five conferences and the top-ranked member of the "Group of Five." Two of these bowls serve as semi-final games to the College Football Playoff National Championship game. Conferences receive millions of dollars for each school that appears in the playoff, and appearances in other bowls are also quite lucrative.[24] In addition to the regular bowls, some post-season bowls, such as the NFLPA Collegiate Bowl, match up teams of all-stars and NFL Draft entrants.

History[]

NCAA Football Average Attendance
Conf. 1983[25] 1993[25] 2003[26] 2014[27]
SEC 64,842 62,789 74,059 77,694
Big Ten 67,471 63,535 70,198 66,869
Big 12 56,362 58,102
Pac-12 47,248 47,919 51,608 52,702
ACC 42,608 44,056 51,938 50,291
AAC[d] 38,039 46,870 29,193
MW 32,809 25,254
C-USA 32,346 20,455
Sun Belt 14,352 18,294
MAC 17,351 14,252 17,820 15,431
FBS 42,162 41,281 44,877 44,603
FCS 10,844 8,599 7,739 8,310

College football has been played for over one hundred years, but the game and the organizational structure of college football have evolved significantly during that time. The first college football game was played in 1869, but the game continued to develop during the late 19th and early 20th century. During this period, Walter Camp pioneered the concept of a line of scrimmage, the system of downs, and the College Football All-America Team.[28] The 1902 Rose Bowl was the first bowl game in college football history, and the event began to be held annually starting with the 1916 Rose Bowl. In the 1930s, other bowl games came into existence, including the Sugar Bowl, the Cotton Bowl Classic, and the Orange Bowl. The 1906 college football season was the first season played under the IAAUS (which would later change its name to the NCAA) and the first season in which the forward pass was legal. The IAAUS had formed after President Theodore Roosevelt, responding to several deaths that had occurred during football games, requested that colleges find ways to make football a safer sport.[29] In 1935, the Heisman Trophy was presented for the first time; the award is generally considered to be college football's most prestigious individual award.[30] In 1965, the NCAA voted to allow the platoon system, in which different players played on offense and defense; teams had previously experimented with the concept in the 1940s.[31] In 1968, the NCAA began allowing freshmen to compete in games; freshmen had previously been required to take a redshirt year.[32] In 1975, after a growth of "grants-in-aid" (scholarships given for athletic rather than academic or need-based reasons), the NCAA voted to limit the number of athletic scholarships each school could offer.[33] In 1968, the NCAA required all teams to identify as members of either the University Division (for larger schools) or the College Division (for smaller schools), and in 1973, the NCAA divided into three divisions.[34] At the urging of several larger schools seeking increased autonomy and commonality, Division I-A was formed prior to the 1978 season; the remaining teams in Division I formed the Football Championship Subdivision or FCS (then known as Division I-AA).[35] In 1981, members of the College Football Association attempted to create a fourth division consisting solely of the most competitive schools, but this effort was defeated.[36] In the 1992 season, the SEC split into divisions and played the first FBS conference championship game. The Big 12 and Western Athletic Conference did the same for the 1996 season, and most conferences eventually adopted divisions and championship games.

The NCAA does not officially award an FBS football championship,[37] but several teams have claimed national championships. Other organizations have also sought to rank the teams and crown a national champion. The Dickinson System and other methods were formed in the early 20th century to select the best team in the country, and the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll began rankings teams in the middle of the 20th century. In many seasons, selectors such as the AP and the Coaches Poll designated different teams as national champions. Often, more than one team would finish undefeated, as the top teams were not guaranteed to play each other during the regular season or in bowl games. In 1992, five major conferences established the Bowl Coalition in order to determine the FBS champion. In 1998, the two remaining major conferences joined with the other five conferences to form the Bowl Championship Series. The BCS used a rankings system to match up the top two teams in the BCS National Championship Game.[38] However, even the BCS era saw split national championships, as in 2003 the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll selected different national champions. The College Football Playoff, with a four-team field, replaced the BCS starting with the 2014 season.

Currently as of March 2020, there is no unified system to provide FBS football players with financial compensation aside from collegiate scholarships. Leading the forefront of the movement on compensation is California governor Gavin Newsom. Newsom stated, "Collegiate student athletes put everything on the line — their physical health, future career prospects and years of their lives to compete. Colleges reap billions from these student athletes' sacrifices and success but, in the same breath, block them from earning a single dollar," he said in a statement. "That's a bankrupt model — one that puts institutions ahead of the students they are supposed to serve. It needs to be disrupted." Newsom passed a law in California called the "Fair Play to Pay Act" making it the first state to allow student athletes to profit off their name, image and likeness. The law is scheduled to go in effect on January 1, 2023.[39]

Television[]

College football was first broadcast on radio in 1921, and first broadcast on television in 1939.[40] Television became profitable for both schools and the NCAA, which tightly controlled the airing of games in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s.[41] The NCAA limited each football team to six television appearances over a two-year period.[41] The 1981 Supreme Court case NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma & University of Georgia granted television rights to individual schools as opposed to the NCAA and allowed teams to televise all of their games.[42] After a period during which FBS schools negotiated collectively under the College Football Association, Notre Dame's 1991 television contract ushered in an era in which schools and conferences negotiate their own television contracts.[35][43] This new era of television led to several waves of conference realignment, most notably in 1996, 2005, and the early 2010s.[44] FBS games continue to be a major draw on television, as over 26 million people watched the 2014 BCS National Championship Game.[45]

National networks such as CBS, ABC, NBC, several ESPN networks, several Fox networks have all covered the FBS, as have several regional and local networks. As conferences negotiate their own television deals, each conference is affiliated with a network that airs its home games. In the mid-2000s, college and conferences began to create their own television networks;[46] such networks include the Big Ten Network, BYUtv, the Longhorn Network, and the Pac-12 Network. In 2012, college football games drew over 400 million viewers.[47]

Teams and conferences[]

Conferences[]

FBS teams and conferences
Year Conferences Teams
1980 13[48] 138
1990 9[49] 107
2000 11[50] 116
2010 11[51] 120
2021 10 130

History[]

The Big Ten (then popularly known as the Western Conference) was founded in 1896, after which several other schools joined together to form conferences, including the Pacific Coast Conference, the MVIAA, the Southwest Conference, the Southern Conference, the Mountain States Conference (also known as the Skyline Conference), and the Border Conference. In 1928, six schools seceded from the MVIAA to form the Big Six Conference, which later expanded to the Big Eight in 1957; the remaining schools formed the Missouri Valley Conference. In 1932, several Southern schools formed the SEC after breaking away from the Southern Conference, and in 1953 several more schools seceded from the Southern Conference to form the ACC. In 1946, several Midwestern schools formed the MAC. Several elite Northeastern schools had formed the Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League in 1901, and its members (plus Brown University, not an EIBL member at the time) signed the Ivy Group Agreement, which governed football competition between the signatories, in 1945; the Ivy League was formally founded in 1954, when the agreement was extended to cover all sports. In 1959, the Pacific Coast Conference dissolved, and most of its former members formed the new Athletic Association of Western Universities, which became the Pac-8 when more former PCC members joined. In 1962, several schools from the Mountain States Conference and the Border Conference formed the Western Athletic Conference. In 1969, the Pacific Coast Athletic Association (PCAA), later known as the Big West Conference, was formed by several Division II California schools that sought to join Division I.

Division I separated into Division I-A (the predecessor to the FBS) and I-AA (predecessor of the FCS) prior to the 1978 season. At that time, there were several independent I-A schools and twelve Division I-A conferences: the Southeastern Conference (SEC), Big 10, Pacific-10 (Pac-10), Big 8, Southwest Conference (SWC), Western Athletic Conference (WAC), PCAA (which later changed its name to the Big West), Missouri Valley Conference, Southern Conference, Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), Mid-American Conference (MAC), and the Ivy League. The Ivy League and the Southern Conference left for Division I-AA prior to the 1982 season, while the Missouri Valley Conference stopped sponsoring football prior to the 1985 season. In 1991, the Big East recruited several independents and began sponsoring football, becoming a major conference. In 1996, Conference USA (C-USA), formed the previous year by the merger of the non-football Metro and Great Midwest Conferences, also began sponsoring football. That same year, the Southwest Conference dissolved, and four of its former members joined with the Big 8 to form the Big 12 Conference. In 1999, eight schools broke away from the WAC to form the Mountain West Conference (MW). Prior to the 2000 season, the Big West stopped sponsoring football. The Sun Belt Conference began sponsoring football in 2001. After periods of conference realignment in 2005 and the early 2010s that saw the expansion of the ACC, Big 10, SEC, and Pac-10 (which changed its name to the Pac-12), the WAC reorganized as a non-football conference and the Big East split into the American Athletic Conference and a new non-football conference that retained the Big East name.[52]

Current conferences[]

Most of the 130 FBS schools are members of an FBS conference, but there are also a small number of independent schools. Since the Western Athletic Conference discontinued football sponsorship prior to the 2013 season, there have been ten conferences in the FBS. All of the FBS conferences have between ten and fourteen members, although independent Notre Dame has a scheduling agreement with the fourteen-member ACC. The ten conferences are split into two groups for the purposes of the College Football Playoff. The "Power Five conferences" consist of most of the largest and best-known college athletic programs in the country. A school from one of the Power Five conferences won every BCS National Championship Game (which operated from 1999 to 2014), and has won every College Football Playoff National Championship. The remaining five conferences are known as the "Group of Five."[53] Any conference may split its teams into two divisions,[54] and only the American Athletic Conference and Big 12 Conference do not use divisions. The American had used divisions before UConn left the league in July 2020, while the Big 12 has not used divisions since the early-2010s conference realignment left it with 10 members. As of the 2018 season, all conferences hold a championship game that determines the conference champion. The Sun Belt was the last conference to launch a championship game, as well as the most recent to split into divisions for football, with both the title game and the divisional alignment debuting in 2018. That conference chose to form football divisions despite having only 10 football members.[12]

Conference Nickname Founded Football
Members
Sports Headquarters
American Athletic Conference The American (official)
AAC (informal)
1979[e] 11[f] 22 Irving, Texas
Atlantic Coast Conference ACC 1953 14[g] 27 Greensboro, North Carolina
Big 12 Conference Big 12 1996 10 21 Irving, Texas
Big Ten Conference Big Ten, B1G 1896 14 28 Rosemont, Illinois
Conference USA C-USA 1995[h] 14 19 Irving, Texas
Division I FBS Independents[i] 7
Mid-American Conference MAC 1946 12 24 Cleveland, Ohio
Mountain West Conference MW (official)
MWC (informal)
1999 12[j] 19 Colorado Springs, Colorado
Pac-12 Conference Pac-12 1915[k] 12 24 San Francisco, California
Southeastern Conference SEC 1932 14 20 Birmingham, Alabama
Sun Belt Conference Sun Belt (official)
SBC (informal)
1976 10[l] 18 New Orleans, Louisiana

† "Big Five" or "Power Five" conferences with guaranteed berths in the "access bowls" associated with the College Football Playoff

Notes
  1. ^ Includes the College Football Playoff National Championship, which involves the winners of two semifinal bowl games.
  2. ^ Based on 78 teams qualifying for bowl games.
  3. ^ While the Ivy League prohibits athletic scholarships across all sports, the Pioneer Football League prohibits scholarships only in football, and Georgetown chooses not to offer football scholarships, wins against such schools may potentially count toward bowl eligibility. NCAA rules interpretations allow academic aid to count toward the 90% requirement. This issue came up in the 2017 season when Florida State was thought to be bowl-ineligible because one of its six wins that season was over Delaware State, a school that did not meet the 90% requirement with football-related aid. However, once academic aid was counted, Delaware State met the threshold and FSU played in its bowl game.[19]
  4. ^ Includes numbers for the Big East in 1993 and 2003.
  5. ^ The conference was founded in 1979 as the original Big East Conference. It renamed itself the American Athletic Conference following a 2013 split along football lines. The non-FBS schools of the original conference left to form a new conference that purchased the Big East name, while the FBS schools continued to operate under the old Big East's charter and structure. The American also inherited the old Big East's Bowl Championship Series berth for the 2013 season, the last for the BCS.
  6. ^ Navy is a football-only member, and Wichita State is a full member that does not sponsor football.
  7. ^ Notre Dame is a full member except in football, in which it remains independent. It has committed to play at least five games each season against ACC opponents, and to play each other ACC member at least once every three years.
  8. ^ The conference was founded in 1995, with football competition starting in 1996.
  9. ^ Note that "Independents" is not a conference; it is simply a designation used for schools whose football programs do not play in any conference. All of these schools have conference memberships for other sports.
  10. ^ Since 2012, Hawaii has been a football-only associate member, with most of its remaining teams in the non-football Big West Conference.
  11. ^ The charter of the Pac-12 dates only to the formation of the Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU) in 1959. However, the Pac-12 claims the history of the Pacific Coast Conference, which was founded in 1915 and began competition in 1916, as its own. Of the nine members of the PCC at the time of its demise in June 1959, five were charter members of the AAWU, and three of the four others joined the AAWU by 1964; only Idaho never joined the Pac-12. The PCC's berth in the Rose Bowl passed to the AAWU.
  12. ^ The Sun Belt has 12 full members, but two of them, Little Rock and UT Arlington, do not sponsor football.

Transition teams[]

Liberty University began the FBS transition process on July 1, 2017. The NCAA granted the school a waiver from its normal transition rules that require an invitation from an FBS conference before beginning the transition. The Flames played in the Big South Conference in 2017 but were not eligible for the FCS playoffs. For 2018 and beyond, the Flames became an FBS independent. The school initially intended to remain a Big South member in other sports until it received an invitation to an FBS conference,[55] but instead joined the non-football ASUN Conference in 2018.[56]

The most recent school to complete an FBS transition is Coastal Carolina University, which completed its FBS transition for the 2018 season. The Chanticleers' transition began with the school's move from the Big South to the Sun Belt Conference on July 1, 2016. Coastal competed as a non-football Sun Belt member in 2016–17, with the football team playing the 2016 season as an FCS independent. The school then joined Sun Belt football in 2017, playing a full conference schedule.[57]

Realignment[]

The FBS has experienced several realignments since its formation in 1978, with many teams changing conferences, dropping out of the FBS, or moving up from the FCS. In 1982, the size of the division was cut considerably, and the Southern Conference and the Ivy League were demoted to the FCS.[58] In 1985, the Missouri Valley Conference stopped sponsoring football.[59] In the 1980s and 1990s, several independents joined conferences, dropped football, or joined the FCS. In the 1996 NCAA conference realignment, the Southwest Conference dissolved, and four Texas teams from that conference joined with the Big 8 schools to form the Big 12 Conference. The Western Athletic Conference expanded to sixteen members, but half of the schools left in 1999 to form the Mountain West Conference. Conference USA (C-USA) formed from a merger of the Metro Conference and the Great Midwest Conference, two conferences which had not sponsored football. The Big West stopped sponsoring football after the 2000 season, and was essentially replaced by the Sun Belt Conference, which added former Big West members and began sponsoring football in 2001. In the mid-2000s, the Big East added former basketball-only member Connecticut, while Temple left the conference (before eventually returning in 2013). During another phase of realignment in 2005, three schools jumped from the Big East to the ACC. The Big East responded by adding schools from Conference USA.[59]

College football underwent another major conference realignment in the first half of the 2010s. Members of the Big East left the conference to join the Big 12 and ACC. The Big 12 lost members to the SEC, the Pac-12, and the Big Ten, while the Big Ten also gained one former ACC member. The remaining members of the Big East split into two conferences: the American Athletic Conference ("The American") and a new conference that assumed the Big East name but does not sponsor football. The American added several schools from C-USA, but lost one school each to the ACC and Big Ten after its first season. In turn, C-USA added FCS schools and schools from the Sun Belt Conference. The Sun Belt Conference replenished its membership by adding FCS schools and schools from the Western Athletic Conference. The Mountain West lost schools to the Big 12, Pac-12 and the FBS independent ranks, and added several schools from the WAC. After several defections, the WAC dropped its sponsorship of football.[59]

The early-2010s realignment cycle also affected the FBS independent ranks. BYU left the MW in 2011 for football independence and the non-football West Coast Conference. In 2013, Idaho and New Mexico State, the last two football-sponsoring schools in the WAC, became FBS independents, but would return to their former football home of the Sun Belt Conference as football-only members the following year. Also in 2013, Notre Dame became a full but non-football member of the ACC, entering into a scheduling agreement with that conference that calls for the Fighting Irish football team to play five games each season against ACC schools, and to play each other ACC school at least once every three years. Finally, in 2015, Navy became a football-only member of The American, ending more than a century of football independence.[59]

Realignment has continued to this day, though at a considerably lower level. The 2016 season saw FCS Coastal Carolina join the Sun Belt Conference for non-football sports while beginning a transition to FBS football; the football team joined the Sun Belt in 2017. That season was also the last for Idaho and New Mexico State as Sun Belt football members. After 2017, New Mexico State returned to independent status, while Idaho downgraded to FCS football—becoming the first program ever to voluntarily do so—and added football to its all-sports membership in the Big Sky Conference. Also in 2016, UMass went independent after turning down an offer of full membership in the Mid-American Conference. Most recently, UConn went independent in 2020 when the school left The American to rejoin many of its historic basketball rivals in the current Big East Conference.

Awards[]

Several awards are given each year to players and coaches in the FBS. Although all college football players are eligible for many of these awards (such as the Heisman Trophy), FBS players usually win these awards, and other awards (such as the Walter Payton Award) exist to honor players in other divisions and the FCS. In addition to the national awards listed below, FBS conferences also have their own awards, and several organizations release a yearly College Football All-America Team. In 1951, the National Football Foundation established the College Football Hall of Fame. Notable individual awards include:

  • Best/most valuable player: Heisman Trophy, Maxwell Award, Walter Camp Award, Archie Griffin Award, AP Player of the Year, SN Player of the Year, Lombardi Award (originally lineman/linebacker, but expanded to all players in 2016)
  • Defensive player of the year: Chuck Bednarik Award, Bronko Nagurski Trophy, Lott Trophy
  • Position awards: Dave Rimington Trophy (Center), Davey O'Brien Award and Manning Award (Quarterback), Dick Butkus Award (Linebacker), Doak Walker Award (Running back), Fred Biletnikoff Award (Wide receiver), Jim Thorpe Award (Defensive back), John Mackey Award (Tight end), Lou Groza Award (Placekicker), Outland Trophy (Interior lineman), Ray Guy Award (Punter), Ted Hendricks Award (Defensive end), Jet Award (Return Specialist)
  • Non-positional playing awards: Paul Hornung Award (most versatile player), Burlsworth Trophy (top player who began his college career as a walk-on), Jon Cornish Trophy (top Canadian player)
  • Coaching awards:
  • Other awards: William V. Campbell Trophy, Wuerffel Trophy, Rudy Award, Amos Alonzo Stagg Award, Walter Camp Man of the Year, Theodore Roosevelt Award

The NCAA does not officially name a national champion, but several other organizations name national champions and all conferences participate in the College Football Playoff in order to determine a champion. The winner of the College Football Playoff receives the College Football Playoff National Championship Trophy. The AP awards the AP National Championship Trophy, while the American Football Coaches Association awards the AFCA National Championship Trophy. The AFCA trophy was previously awarded to the winner of the BCS National Championship Game (a predecessor of the College Football Playoff National Championship game), which operated from 1999 to 2014. The Football Writers Association of America awarded the Grantland Rice Trophy until after the 2013 season, and the National Football Foundation awards the MacArthur Bowl. Since the disputed end of the 2003 season, the various organizations have been able to agree on a single national champion.

Maps of teams[]

1927[]

1927 Map of Teams
NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision is located in the United States
Penn State
Penn State
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Army
Army
Navy
Navy
Syracuse
Syracuse
Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh
Colgate
Colgate
Marquette
Marquette
Michigan State
Michigan State
Brown
Brown
Columbia
Columbia
Cornell
Cornell
Dartmouth
Dartmouth
Harvard
Harvard
Penn
Penn
Princeton
Princeton
Yale
Yale
Detroit
Detroit
Furman
Furman
West Virginia
West Virginia
Davidson
Davidson
Wake Forest
Wake Forest
Duke
Duke
Georgetown
Georgetown
W&J
W&J
Creighton
Creighton
NYU
NYU
Lafayette
Lafayette
Carnegie Tech
Carnegie Tech
Virginia Tech
Virginia Tech
VMI
VMI
W&L
W&L
Citadel
Citadel
Virginia
Virginia
NC State
NC State
North Carolina
North Carolina
Clemson
Clemson
Maryland
Maryland
South Carolina
South Carolina
Florida
Florida
Kentucky
Kentucky
Georgia
Georgia
Tennessee
Tennessee
Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt
Alabama
Alabama
Auburn
Auburn
LSU
LSU
Ole Miss
Ole Miss
Mississippi State
Mississippi State
Georgia Tech
Georgia Tech
Tulane
Tulane
Sewanee
Sewanee
BYU
BYU
Colorado State
Colorado State
Colorado
Colorado
Wyoming
Wyoming
Utah
Utah
Utah State
Utah State
Denver
Denver
Montana State
Montana State
Colorado College
Colorado College
Colorado Mines
Colorado Mines
Western State
Western State
Northern Colorado
Northern Colorado
Iowa State
Iowa State
Kansas
Kansas
Kansas State
Kansas State
Missouri
Missouri
Nebraska
Nebraska
Oklahoma
Oklahoma
Oklahoma State
Oklahoma State
Drake
Drake
WUSTL
WUSTL
Grinnell
Grinnell
California
California
UCLA
UCLA
Oregon
Oregon
Oregon State
Oregon State
USC
USC
Stanford
Stanford
Washington
Washington
Washington State
Washington State
Idaho
Idaho
Montana
Montana
SMU
SMU
Texas A&M
Texas A&M
Texas
Texas
Rice
Rice
Baylor
Baylor
TCU
TCU
Arkansas
Arkansas
Indiana
Indiana
Michigan
Michigan
Ohio State
Ohio State
Illinois
Illinois
Iowa
Iowa
Minnesota
Minnesota
Northwestern
Northwestern
Purdue
Purdue
Wisconsin
Wisconsin
Chicago
Chicago
College football teams in 1927, before six MVIAA teams formed the Big 6.[60]

 

1956[]

1956 Map of Teams
NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision is located in the United States
Florida State
Florida State
Penn State
Penn State
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Louisville
Louisville
Army
Army
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
North Texas
North Texas
Navy
Navy
Syracuse
Syracuse
Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh
Miami
Miami
Pacific
Pacific
Holy Cross
Holy Cross
Boston College
Boston College
Villanova
Villanova
Colgate
Colgate
Dayton
Dayton
Drake
Drake
Rutgers
Rutgers
Texas Tech
Texas Tech
Boston University
Boston University
San Jose State
San Jose State
Marquette
Marquette
Brown
Brown
Columbia
Columbia
Cornell
Cornell
Dartmouth
Dartmouth
Harvard
Harvard
Penn
Penn
Princeton
Princeton
Yale
Yale
Colorado
Colorado
Iowa State
Iowa State
Kansas
Kansas
Kansas State
Kansas State
Missouri
Missouri
Nebraska
Nebraska
Oklahoma
Oklahoma
Wake Forest
Wake Forest
Virginia
Virginia
NC State
NC State
North Carolina
North Carolina
Duke
Duke
Clemson
Clemson
Maryland
Maryland
South Carolina
South Carolina
BYU
BYU
Colorado State
Colorado State
Wyoming
Wyoming
New Mexico
New Mexico
Utah
Utah
Utah State
Utah State
Denver
Denver
Montana
Montana
West Virginia
West Virginia
Virginia Tech
Virginia Tech
GW
GW
Furman
Furman
VMI
VMI
Davidson
Davidson
Richmond
Richmond
Citadel
Citadel
W&M
W&M
Houston
Houston
Tulsa
Tulsa
Oklahoma State
Oklahoma State
Wichita State
Wichita State
Detroit
Detroit
Arizona
Arizona
Arizona State
Arizona State
New Mexico State
New Mexico State
UTEP
UTEP
Hardin–Simmons
Hardin–Simmons
West Texas A&M
West Texas A&M
California
California
UCLA
UCLA
Oregon
Oregon
Oregon State
Oregon State
USC
USC
Stanford
Stanford
Washington
Washington
Washington State
Washington State
Idaho
Idaho
SMU
SMU
Texas A&M
Texas A&M
Texas
Texas
Rice
Rice
Baylor
Baylor
TCU
TCU
Arkansas
Arkansas
Florida
Florida
Kentucky
Kentucky
Georgia
Georgia
Tennessee
Tennessee
Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt
Alabama
Alabama
Auburn
Auburn
LSU
LSU
Ole Miss
Ole Miss
Mississippi State
Mississippi State
Georgia Tech
Georgia Tech
Tulane
Tulane
Indiana
Indiana
Michigan
Michigan
Michigan State
Michigan State
Ohio State
Ohio State
Illinois
Illinois
Iowa
Iowa
Minnesota
Minnesota
Northwestern
Northwestern
Purdue
Purdue
Wisconsin
Wisconsin
The "University Division" in 1956.[61]

 

1991[]

1991 Map of Teams
NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision is located in the United States
South Carolina
South Carolina
Florida State
Florida State
Penn State
Penn State
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Louisville
Louisville
Tulsa
Tulsa
East Carolina
East Carolina
Louisiana Tech
Louisiana Tech
Akron
Akron
Memphis
Memphis
Army
Army
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Southern Miss
Southern Miss
Southwestern Louisiana
Southwestern Louisiana
Northern Illinois
Northern Illinois
Arkansas State
Arkansas State
Navy
Navy
Tulane
Tulane
Houston
Houston
Texas Tech
Texas Tech
SMU
SMU
Texas A&M
Texas A&M
Texas
Texas
Rice
Rice
Baylor
Baylor
TCU
TCU
Arkansas
Arkansas
Arizona
Arizona
Arizona State
Arizona State
California
California
UCLA
UCLA
Oregon
Oregon
Oregon State
Oregon State
USC
USC
Stanford
Stanford
Washington
Washington
Washington State
Washington State
Florida
Florida
Kentucky
Kentucky
Georgia
Georgia
Tennessee
Tennessee
Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt
Alabama
Alabama
Auburn
Auburn
LSU
LSU
Ole Miss
Ole Miss
Mississippi State
Mississippi State
Boston College
Boston College
Syracuse
Syracuse
Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh
Miami (FL)
Miami (FL)
Rutgers
Rutgers
West Virginia
West Virginia
Virginia Tech
Virginia Tech
Temple
Temple
Indiana
Indiana
Michigan
Michigan
Michigan State
Michigan State
Ohio State
Ohio State
Illinois
Illinois
Iowa
Iowa
Minnesota
Minnesota
Northwestern
Northwestern
Purdue
Purdue
Wisconsin
Wisconsin
Colorado
Colorado
Iowa State
Iowa State
Kansas
Kansas
Kansas State
Kansas State
Missouri
Missouri
Nebraska
Nebraska
Oklahoma
Oklahoma
Oklahoma State
Oklahoma State
Georgia Tech
Georgia Tech
Wake Forest
Wake Forest
Virginia
Virginia
NC State
NC State
North Carolina
North Carolina
Duke
Duke
Clemson
Clemson
Maryland
Maryland
BYU
BYU
San Diego State
San Diego State
Air Force
Air Force
Utah
Utah
Wyoming
Wyoming
UTEP
UTEP
Colorado State
Colorado State
New Mexico
New Mexico
Fresno State
Fresno State
San Jose State
San Jose State
Utah State
Utah State
Pacific
Pacific
UNLV
UNLV
Long Beach State
Long Beach State
New Mexico State
New Mexico State
Cal State Fullerton
Cal State Fullerton
BGSU
BGSU
Central Michigan
Central Michigan
Miami (OH)
Miami (OH)
Toledo
Toledo
Western Michigan
Western Michigan
Ball State
Ball State
Eastern Michigan
Eastern Michigan
Ohio
Ohio
Kent State
Kent State
This map shows Division I-A in 1991, when the Big East was formed and one year before the start of the Bowl Coalition. Hawaii (a member of the WAC) is not shown. Independents that joined an AQ conference by the BCS's inaugural 1998 season (plus Notre Dame, which also automatically qualified for the BCS under certain conditions) are represented by black circles, while the remaining independents are represented by silver pogs.

 

2021[]

2021 Map of Teams
NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision is located in the United States
Notre Dame
Notre Dame
Army
Army
BYU
BYU
Liberty
Liberty
New Mexico State
New Mexico State
UMass
UMass
Louisiana Tech
Louisiana Tech
Southern Miss
Southern
Miss
Rice
Rice
UTEP
UTEP
Charlotte
Charlotte
FIU
FIU
FAU
FAU
Marshall
Marshall
MTSU
MTSU
North Texas
North Texas
Old Dominion
Old Dominion
UAB
UAB
UTSA
UTSA
Western Kentucky
Western Kentucky
Louisiana
Louisiana
Arkansas State
Arkansas
State
App. St.
App. St.
Coastal Carolina
Coastal Carolina
Georgia Southern
Georgia Southern
Georgia State
Georgia State
Louisiana–Monroe
Louisiana–Monroe
South Alabama
South Alabama
Texas State
Texas
State
Troy
Troy
Akron
Akron
NIU
NIU
BGSU
BGSU
Central Michigan
Central Michigan
Miami (OH)
Miami (OH)
Toledo
Toledo
WMU
WMU
Ball St.
Ball St.
EMU
EMU
Ohio
Ohio
Kent State
Kent State
Buffalo
Buffalo
Temple
Temple
SMU
SMU
Houston
Houston
Navy
Navy
Tulane
Tulane
Memphis
Memphis
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Tulsa
Tulsa
East Carolina
East
Carolina
UCF
UCF
South Florida
South Florida
UConn
UConn
Arizona
Arizona
Arizona State
Arizona State
California
California
UCLA
UCLA
Oregon
Oregon
Oregon State
Oregon State
USC
USC
Stanford
Stanford
Washington
Washington
Washington State
Washington State
Colorado
Colorado
Utah
Utah
Texas A&M
Texas A&M
Arkansas
Arkansas
Florida
Florida
Kentucky
Kentucky
Georgia
Georgia
Tennessee
Tennessee
Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt
Alabama
Alabama
Auburn
Auburn
LSU
LSU
Ole Miss
Ole Miss
Mississippi State
Mississippi State
Missouri
Missouri
South Carolina
South
Carolina
Penn State
Penn State
Rutgers
Rutgers
Nebraska
Nebraska
Indiana
Indiana
Michigan
Michigan
Michigan State
Michigan State
Ohio St.
Ohio St.
Illinois
Illinois
Iowa
Iowa
Minnesota
Minnesota
Northwestern
Northwestern
Purdue
Purdue
Wisconsin
Wisconsin
Maryland
Maryland
Iowa State
Iowa State
Kansas
Kansas
Kansas State
Kansas State
Oklahoma
Oklahoma
Oklahoma State
Oklahoma State
Texas Tech
Texas Tech
Texas
Texas
Baylor
Baylor
TCU
TCU
West Virginia
West
Virginia
Georgia Tech
Georgia Tech
WFU
WFU
Virginia
Virginia
NCSU
NCSU
UNC
UNC
Duke
Duke
Clemson
Clemson
Boston College
Boston College
Syracuse
Syracuse
Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh
Miami (FL)
Miami (FL)
Virginia Tech
Virginia Tech
Florida State
Florida State
Louisville
Louisville
San Diego State
San Diego State
Air Force
Air Force
Wyoming
Wyoming
Colorado State
Colorado State
New Mexico
New Mexico
Fresno State
Fresno State
San Jose State
San Jose State
Utah State
Utah State
UNLV
UNLV
Boise State
Boise State
Nevada
Nevada
This map shows Division I FBS during the 2021 season. Not shown: Hawaii (Mountain West)

 

Transitioned schools[]

Schools that have transitioned to the FBS
NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision is located in the United States
Louisiana Tech
Louisiana Tech
Akron
Akron
UNLV
UNLV
Arkansas State
Arkansas State
Nevada
Nevada
Louisiana–Monroe
Louisiana–Monroe
North Texas
North Texas
Boise State
Boise State
Buffalo
Buffalo
UCF
UCF
Marshall
Marshall
Middle Tennessee
Middle Tennessee
South Florida
South Florida
UConn
UConn
Troy
Troy
Florida Atlantic
Florida Atlantic
FIU
FIU
Western Kentucky
Western Kentucky
UMass
UMass
Charlotte
Charlotte
Liberty
Liberty
Old Dominion
Old Dominion
UTSA
UTSA
Appalachian State
Appalachian State
Georgia Southern
Georgia Southern
Georgia State
Georgia State
South Alabama
South Alabama
Texas State
Texas State
Coastal Carolina
Coastal Carolina
Idaho
Idaho
This map shows schools that have transitioned to the FBS since 1978. Green pogs indicate schools that transitioned before 1990, red pogs indicate schools that transitioned between 1990 and 1999, blue pogs indicate schools that transitioned between 2000 and 2009, and orange pogs indicate schools that transitioned after 2010. White pog denotes Idaho, a school that has transitioned from FCS to FBS (1997) and back to FCS (2018).

 

Programs by state[]

Alabama[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Alabama Crimson Tide Tuscaloosa Bryant–Denny Stadium SEC 1892
Auburn Tigers Auburn Jordan–Hare Stadium SEC 1892
South Alabama Jaguars Mobile Hancock Whitney Stadium Sun Belt 2009
Troy Trojans Troy Veterans Memorial Stadium Sun Belt 1909
UAB Blazers Birmingham Protective Stadium[a] C-USA 1991
  1. ^ Replaces UAB's former home of Legion Field, also in Birmingham, in 2021.

Arizona[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Arizona Wildcats Tucson Arizona Stadium Pac-12 1899
Arizona State Sun Devils Tempe Sun Devil Stadium Pac-12 1897

Arkansas[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Arkansas Razorbacks Fayetteville Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium[a] SEC 1894
Arkansas State Red Wolves Jonesboro Centennial Bank Stadium Sun Belt 1911
  1. ^ Arkansas also plays select home games at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock.

California[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
California Golden Bears Berkeley California Memorial Stadium Pac-12 1886
Fresno State Bulldogs Fresno Bulldog Stadium MW 1921
San Diego State Aztecs San Diego Dignity Health Sports Park (Carson)[a] MW 1921
San Jose State Spartans San José CEFCU Stadium MW 1893
Stanford Cardinal Stanford Stanford Stadium Pac-12 1891
UCLA Bruins Los Angeles Rose Bowl (Pasadena) Pac-12 1919
USC Trojans Los Angeles Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Pac-12 1888
  1. ^ Temporary stadium during the demolition of San Diego State's former home of San Diego Stadium and its replacement by Aztec Stadium, expected to open in 2022.

Colorado[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Air Force Falcons Colorado Springs Falcon Stadium MW 1955
Colorado Buffaloes Boulder Folsom Field Pac-12 1890
Colorado State Rams Fort Collins Canvas Stadium MW 1890

Connecticut[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
UConn Huskies Storrs Pratt & Whitney Stadium (East Hartford) Independent 1896

Florida[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
FIU Panthers University Park Riccardo Silva Stadium C-USA 2002
Florida Gators Gainesville Ben Hill Griffin Stadium SEC 1906
Florida Atlantic Owls Boca Raton FAU Stadium C-USA 2001
Florida State Seminoles Tallahassee Doak Campbell Stadium ACC 1902
Miami (FL) Hurricanes Coral Gables Hard Rock Stadium (Miami Gardens) ACC 1926
South Florida Bulls Tampa Raymond James Stadium The American 1997
UCF Knights Orlando Bounce House The American 1979

Georgia[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Georgia Bulldogs Athens Sanford Stadium SEC 1892
Georgia Southern Eagles Statesboro Paulson Stadium Sun Belt 1924
Georgia State Panthers Atlanta Center Parc Stadium Sun Belt 2010
Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets Atlanta Bobby Dodd Stadium ACC 1892

Hawaii[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Hawaii Rainbow Warriors Honolulu Ching Athletics Complex[a] MW 1909
  1. ^ Temporary stadium during the demolition of the current Aloha Stadium, also in Honolulu, and its replacement by a new stadium on part of that venue's site. The new Aloha Stadium is currently scheduled to open in 2024.

Idaho[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Boise State Broncos Boise Albertsons Stadium MW 1933

Illinois[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Illinois Fighting Illini ChampaignUrbana Memorial Stadium Big Ten 1890
Northern Illinois Huskies DeKalb Huskie Stadium MAC 1899
Northwestern Wildcats Evanston Ryan Field Big Ten 1876

Indiana[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Ball State Cardinals Muncie Scheumann Stadium MAC 1924
Indiana Hoosiers Bloomington Memorial Stadium Big Ten 1887
Notre Dame Fighting Irish Notre Dame Notre Dame Stadium Independent 1887
Purdue Boilermakers West Lafayette Ross–Ade Stadium Big Ten 1887

Iowa[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Iowa Hawkeyes Iowa City Kinnick Stadium Big Ten 1889
Iowa State Cyclones Ames Jack Trice Stadium Big 12 1891

Kansas[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Kansas Jayhawks Lawrence David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium Big 12 1890
Kansas State Wildcats Manhattan Bill Snyder Family Stadium Big 12 1896

Kentucky[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Kentucky Wildcats Lexington Kroger Field SEC 1881
Louisville Cardinals Louisville Cardinal Stadium ACC 1910
Western Kentucky Hilltoppers Bowling Green Houchens Industries–L. T. Smith Stadium C-USA 1908

Louisiana[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns Lafayette Cajun Field Sun Belt 1902
Louisiana Tech Bulldogs Ruston Joe Aillet Stadium C-USA 1901
LSU Tigers Baton Rouge Tiger Stadium SEC 1893
Tulane Green Wave New Orleans Yulman Stadium The American 1893
UL Monroe Warhawks Monroe Malone Stadium Sun Belt 1931

Maryland[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Maryland Terrapins College Park Maryland Stadium Big Ten 1888
Navy Midshipmen Annapolis Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium The American 1879

Massachusetts[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Boston College Eagles Chestnut Hill Alumni Stadium ACC 1893
UMass Minutemen Amherst Warren McGuirk Alumni Stadium Independent 1879

Michigan[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Central Michigan Chippewas Mount Pleasant Kelly/Shorts Stadium MAC 1896
Eastern Michigan Eagles Ypsilanti Rynearson Stadium MAC 1891
Michigan Wolverines Ann Arbor Michigan Stadium Big Ten 1879
Michigan State Spartans East Lansing Spartan Stadium Big Ten 1885
Western Michigan Broncos Kalamazoo Waldo Stadium MAC 1905

Minnesota[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Minnesota Golden Gophers MinneapolisSaint Paul TCF Bank Stadium Big Ten 1882

Mississippi[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Mississippi State Bulldogs Starkville[a] Davis Wade Stadium SEC 1895
Ole Miss Rebels Oxford Vaught–Hemingway Stadium SEC 1890
Southern Miss Golden Eagles Hattiesburg M. M. Roberts Stadium C-USA 1912
  1. ^ Almost all of the Mississippi State campus, including the university's athletic facilities, is located in a part of unincorporated Oktibbeha County that is designated by the United States Postal Service as Mississippi State, Mississippi.

Missouri[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Missouri Tigers Columbia Faurot Field SEC 1890

Nebraska[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Nebraska Cornhuskers Lincoln Memorial Stadium Big Ten 1890

Nevada[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Nevada Wolf Pack Reno Mackay Stadium MW 1896
UNLV Rebels Paradise Allegiant Stadium MW 1968

New Jersey[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Rutgers Scarlet Knights New BrunswickPiscataway SHI Stadium Big Ten 1869

New Mexico[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
New Mexico Lobos Albuquerque Dreamstyle Stadium MW 1892
New Mexico State Aggies Las Cruces Aggie Memorial Stadium Independent 1893

New York[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Army Black Knights West Point Michie Stadium Independent 1890
Buffalo Bulls BuffaloAmherst University at Buffalo Stadium MAC 1894
Syracuse Orange Syracuse Carrier Dome ACC 1889

North Carolina[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Appalachian State Mountaineers Boone Kidd Brewer Stadium Sun Belt 1928
Charlotte 49ers Charlotte Jerry Richardson Stadium C-USA 2013
Duke Blue Devils Durham Wallace Wade Stadium ACC 1888
East Carolina Pirates Greenville Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium The American 1932
NC State Wolfpack Raleigh Carter–Finley Stadium ACC 1892
North Carolina Tar Heels Chapel Hill Kenan Memorial Stadium ACC 1888
Wake Forest Demon Deacons Winston–Salem Truist Field ACC 1888

Ohio[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Akron Zips Akron InfoCision Stadium–Summa Field MAC 1891
Bowling Green Falcons Bowling Green Doyt Perry Stadium MAC 1919
Cincinnati Bearcats Cincinnati Nippert Stadium The American 1885
Kent State Golden Flashes Kent Dix Stadium MAC 1920
Miami (OH) RedHawks Oxford Yager Stadium MAC 1888
Ohio Bobcats Athens Peden Stadium MAC 1894
Ohio State Buckeyes Columbus Ohio Stadium Big Ten 1889
Toledo Rockets Toledo Glass Bowl MAC 1917

Oklahoma[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Oklahoma Sooners Norman Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium Big 12 1895
Oklahoma State Cowboys Stillwater Boone Pickens Stadium Big 12 1901
Tulsa Golden Hurricane Tulsa Skelly Field at H. A. Chapman Stadium The American 1895

Oregon[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Oregon Ducks Eugene Autzen Stadium Pac-12 1894
Oregon State Beavers Corvallis Reser Stadium Pac-12 1893

Pennsylvania[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Penn State Nittany Lions State College[a] Beaver Stadium Big Ten 1881
Pittsburgh Panthers Pittsburgh Heinz Field ACC 1890
Temple Owls Philadelphia Lincoln Financial Field The American 1895
  1. ^ Most of the Penn State campus, including the football stadium, lies outside the municipality of State College, instead lying in a portion of College Township designated by the U.S. Postal Service as University Park, Pennsylvania.

South Carolina[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Clemson Tigers Clemson Memorial Stadium ACC 1896
Coastal Carolina Chanticleers Conway Brooks Stadium Sun Belt 2003
South Carolina Gamecocks Columbia Williams-Brice Stadium SEC 1892

Tennessee[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Memphis Tigers Memphis Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium The American 1912
Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders Murfreesboro Johnny "Red" Floyd Stadium C-USA 1911
Tennessee Volunteers Knoxville Neyland Stadium SEC 1891
Vanderbilt Commodores Nashville Vanderbilt Stadium SEC 1890

Texas[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Baylor Bears Waco McLane Stadium Big 12 1899
Houston Cougars Houston TDECU Stadium The American 1946
North Texas Mean Green Denton Apogee Stadium C-USA 1913
Rice Owls Houston Rice Stadium C-USA 1912
SMU Mustangs Dallas[a] Gerald J. Ford Stadium The American 1915
TCU Horned Frogs Fort Worth Amon Carter Stadium Big 12 1896
Texas Longhorns Austin Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium Big 12 1893
Texas A&M Aggies College Station Kyle Field SEC 1894
Texas State Bobcats San Marcos Bobcat Stadium Sun Belt 1904
Texas Tech Red Raiders Lubbock Jones AT&T Stadium Big 12 1925
UTEP Miners El Paso Sun Bowl C-USA 1914
UTSA Roadrunners San Antonio Alamodome C-USA 2011
  1. ^ Virtually all of the SMU campus, including the football stadium, lies in University Park, a separate city contained within the Dallas city limits. The U.S. Postal Service considers all locations within University Park to have a Dallas mailing address.

Utah[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
BYU Cougars Provo LaVell Edwards Stadium Independent 1922
Utah Utes Salt Lake City Rice–Eccles Stadium Pac-12 1892
Utah State Aggies Logan Maverik Stadium MW 1892

Virginia[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Liberty Flames Lynchburg Williams Stadium Independent 1973
Old Dominion Monarchs Norfolk S. B. Ballard Stadium C-USA 2009
Virginia Cavaliers Charlottesville Scott Stadium ACC 1888
Virginia Tech Hokies Blacksburg Lane Stadium ACC 1892

Washington[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Washington Huskies Seattle Husky Stadium Pac-12 1889
Washington State Cougars Pullman Martin Stadium Pac-12 1893

West Virginia[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Marshall Thundering Herd Huntington Joan C. Edwards Stadium C-USA 1895
West Virginia Mountaineers Morgantown Milan Puskar Stadium Big 12 1891

Wisconsin[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Wisconsin Badgers Madison Camp Randall Stadium Big Ten 1889

Wyoming[]

Team Nickname City Stadium Current conference First played
Wyoming Cowboys Laramie War Memorial Stadium MW 1893
  • Nine states (Alaska, Delaware, Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont) and Washington, D.C. do not have FBS programs.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Rovell, Darren (January 26, 2014). "NFL most popular for 30th year in row". ESPN. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  2. ^ Dosh, Kristi. "Texas tops in football profit, revenue". Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  3. ^ Based on List of NCAA Division I FBS football programs
  4. ^ Huguenin, Mike (July 9, 2014). "14 for '14: Top small-school prospects". NFL.com. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  5. ^ BRIAN NIELSEN Sports Editorbnielsen@jg-tc.com (September 11, 2007). "So what's in a college football subdivision name?". JG-TC.com. Retrieved November 19, 2009.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Pennington, Bill (December 29, 2012). "Big Dream, Rude Awakening". The New York Times. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  7. ^ Berkowitz, Steve (July 1, 2013). "Most NCAA Division I athletic departments take subsidies". USA Today. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  8. ^ Fischer-Baum, Ruben. "Infographic: Is Your State's Highest-Paid Employee A Coach? (Probably)". Deadspin. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  9. ^ "College Football Scholarships. NCAA and NAIA Football Recruiting". Collegesportsscholarships.com. Retrieved November 19, 2009.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "2015-16 Football Bowl Subdivision Membership Requirements Certification" (PDF). NCAA. NCAA. Retrieved December 27, 2016.
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b Wischnowsky, Dave (February 16, 2013). "Wisch: Does College Football Need A 13-Game Regular Season?". CBS. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b Wilkerson, Brant (June 9, 2016). "Sun Belt to add football championship game in 2018". Winston-Salem Journal. Retrieved October 1, 2016.
  13. ^ "Bylaw 17.28.2: Alaska/Hawaii, Additional Football Contest" (PDF). 2016–17 NCAA Division I Manual. NCAA. p. 288. Retrieved December 24, 2016.
  14. ^ "Bylaw 17.10.5.2.1(g) Bowl Subdivision, Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Rico" (PDF). 2016–17 NCAA Division I Manual. NCAA. p. 248. Retrieved December 24, 2016.
  15. ^ Paine, Neil. "College Football's Bloated Bowl Season In 3 Charts". Retrieved December 25, 2014.
  16. ^ The percentage of FBS teams in bowl games
  17. ^ Fowler, Jeremy (August 6, 2014). "By the Numbers: Cupcakes still rule in College Football Playoff era". Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  18. ^ "Bylaw 18.7.2.2.1 Exception – Football Championship Subdivision Opponent" (PDF). 2016–17 NCAA Division I Manual. National Collegiate Athletic Association. p. 302. Retrieved December 24, 2016.
  19. ^ Patterson, Chip (December 23, 2017). "Florida State has confirmed it is bowl eligible, able to play in Independence Bowl". CBSSports.com. Retrieved January 14, 2018.
  20. ^ "Bylaw 20.9.9.2 Football Scheduling Requirement (FBS)" (PDF). 2016–17 NCAA Division I Manual. NCAA. p. 344. Retrieved December 27, 2016.
  21. ^ Jump up to: a b Staples, Andy. "THE GREATEST UPSET OF THEM ALL". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  22. ^ Schroeder, George (December 12, 2012). "College football playoff revenue distribution set". USA Today. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  23. ^ Johnson, Greg. "DI Board approves process to fill football bowls in case of shortfall". Archived from the original on August 3, 2012. Retrieved August 2, 2012.
  24. ^ Schroeder, George (July 16, 2014). "Power Five's College Football Playoff revenues will double what BCS paid". USA Today. Retrieved December 17, 2014.
  25. ^ Jump up to: a b "NCAA Football Attendance Records" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved November 21, 2015.
  26. ^ "2003 NCAA College Football Attendance" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved November 21, 2015.
  27. ^ "2014 NATIONAL COLLEGE FOOTBALL ATTENDANCE" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved November 21, 2015.
  28. ^ Bishop, LuAnn (November 18, 2013). "11 Historic Tidbits About The Game". Yale News. Retrieved November 19, 2013.
  29. ^ Crowley, Joseph (2006). The NCAA's First Century (PDF). p. 10.
  30. ^ "Oregon QB Marcus Mariota wins Heisman Trophy; Wisconsin's Gordon finishes 2nd in voting". December 13, 2014. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  31. ^ Crowley, Joseph (2006). The NCAA's First Century (PDF). p. 47.
  32. ^ Crowley, Joseph (2006). The NCAA's First Century (PDF). p. 46.
  33. ^ Crowley, Joseph (2006). The NCAA's First Century (PDF). p. 48.
  34. ^ Crowley, Joseph (2006). The NCAA's First Century (PDF). p. 42.
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