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    Old Dominion: Nine Monarchs Named to Phil Steele Preseason All-Independent Team

    05-23-2013 10:16 AM
    CLEVELAND, Ohio - Old Dominion University football has nine players on the 2013 Phil Steele Preseason FBS All-Independent Team,

    FCS RSS Today, 01:22 PM Go to last post
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    San Diego: Pioneer/Torero Football Reunion set for September 20-21

    05-23-2013 09:30 AM
    The Pioneer/Torero Football reunion will be held the weekend of September 20-21, 2013 for all who have played or coached at

    FCS RSS Today, 01:22 PM Go to last post
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    Yale: Final “Get in the Game. Save a Life.” Results In; Yale Drive Leads Nation Again

    05-22-2013 11:00 PM
    With the final numbers now in from across the country, Yale has officially led the nation in potential life-saving marrow donors

    FCS RSS Today, 01:22 PM Go to last post
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    Colonial: Elon University Accepts Invitation To Join The CAA In 2014-15

    05-23-2013 02:00 PM
    Elon University has accepted an invitation of membership to join the Colonial Athletic Association beginning July 1, 2014, CAA

    FCS RSS Today, 01:07 PM Go to last post
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    Montana St: Bobcats by the Numbers: 99

    05-23-2013 03:31 AM


    With 99 days until kickoff, a look back at MSU's #99s...

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    FCS RSS Today, 10:33 AM Go to last post
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    Abilene Christian: ACU announces Class of 2013 Sports Hall of Fame class

    05-17-2013 09:24 AM


    ABILENE – ACU's first academic all-America and the first female student-athlete to earn an athletic

    FCS RSS Today, 09:50 AM Go to last post
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    Mercer: Mercer Football Displays Continued Academic Success

    05-22-2013 11:00 PM
    MACON, Ga. – The Mercer football team continued a trend of academic success in the 2013 spring semester, registering a cumulative

    FCS RSS Today, 09:15 AM Go to last post
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    Colgate: Raiders’ Defense Confident Exiting Spring

    05-22-2013 07:33 AM


    Colgate took advantage of its 15 allowable spring practice dates to establish depth that has been missing on the

    FCS RSS Yesterday, 09:37 PM Go to last post
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    W. Illinois: Terriun Crump Signs with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers

    05-22-2013 05:18 PM
    Leatherneck All-MVFC wide receiver originally joined the Bucs rookie mini-camp on a tryout.

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    FCS RSS Yesterday, 06:04 PM Go to last post
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    New Hampshire: Wildcat Football Camp Set for July 14-18 (5:30-8 p.m.)

    05-21-2013 11:00 PM
    DURHAM, N.H. – The UNH football program announces the 2013 Wildcat Football Camp will take place Sunday, July 14-Thursday, July

    FCS RSS Yesterday, 06:04 PM Go to last post
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    Kennesaw St: Kennesaw State’s Brian Bohannon Names Tim Glanton Assistant Football Coach



    Tim Glanton, who has spent the previous seven seasons as head football coach at South Paulding High School (Douglasville, Ga.) has been

    FCS RSS Yesterday, 04:21 PM Go to last post
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    Cornell: Big Red Football Announces Class of 2017

    05-22-2013 11:00 AM


    ITHACA, N.Y. – Cornell Head Football Coach David Archer '05 and his staff are excited to announce the

    FCS RSS Yesterday, 03:47 PM Go to last post
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    Stephen F. Austin: All-Access With A.T.

    05-22-2013 09:31 AM
    Take a look at this week's SFA All-Access with A.T. Sophomore receiver Aaron Thomas provides a closer look at SFA Lumberjack

    FCS RSS Yesterday, 01:56 PM Go to last post
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    Furman: Revisit The 2013 Western Carolina Football Game

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    FCS RSS Yesterday, 12:18 PM Go to last post
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    Colgate: Raiders’ Defense Confident Exiting Spring

    05-22-2013 07:33 AM


    Colgate took advantage of its 15 allowable spring practice dates to establish depth that has been missing on the

    FCS RSS Yesterday, 12:18 PM Go to last post
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    Furman: Pearce-Horton Furman Football Complex Construction Update 5.15.2013

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    FCS RSS Yesterday, 10:04 AM Go to last post
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    Old Dominion: Monarch Football Update: Senior Class Breakdown

    05-22-2013 08:09 AM
    NORFOLK, Va. - With the spring semester over, the 2013 regular-season opener at East Carolina is just 101 days away. With that

    FCS RSS Yesterday, 08:57 AM Go to last post
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    Columbia: Update on Columbia Football - May 21, 2013

    05-21-2013 07:37 PM
    There will be an update on Columbia Football on gocolumbialions.com released on Tuesday evenings in 2013.

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    FCS RSS 05-21-2013, 06:53 PM Go to last post
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    Mercer: Lamb Announces Second Recruiting Class

    05-15-2013 11:00 PM
    MACON, Ga. – Moving onto the next stage in the rebuilding process, Mercer football head coach Bobby Lamb recently announced

    FCS RSS 05-21-2013, 05:31 PM Go to last post
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    Norfolk St: 28 Spartans Earn Degrees at Spring Commencent

    05-21-2013 08:59 AM


    Twenty-eight Norfolk State University student-athletes received their bachelor's degrees at the university's spring

    FCS RSS 05-21-2013, 04:47 PM Go to last post
  • What UMass' Departure Means for FCS

    The decision of the Minutemen to move to FBS puts additional pressure on the state of football in the northeast and leaves questions for the CAA to answer

    By Chuck Burton
    Associate Editor
    College Sporting News

    PHILADELPHIA — With the departure of Massachusetts to the Mid-American Conference in football now official, it's time to look at the state of the Football Championship Subdivision in its wake.

    Unsurprisingly, it offers one or more conferences a golden opportunity to establish — or re-establish — a vibrant, cost-containment model for football in the northeast that is separate from the profits-at-any-cost model that is the Football Bowl Subdivision. *

    It is a model that can compete and sometimes beat the Syracuse's, the Pitt's, the Rutgers - all while spending a fraction of the money and competing for a true national championship instead of a crystal trophy in a bogus poll-driven bowl game.

    That once-in-a-generation opportunity comes with a whole host of uncomfortable questions that need to be answered by the four northeast football conferences.

    UMass, which will be competing in its final year in the Colonial Athletic Association (or CAA), causes an imminent problem in the conference it leaves behind.

    Just two seasons ago, the CAA had 12 teams. It was such a large conference that they had to split into north and south divisions.

    Without a conference championship game, due to the fact that it competes in the NCAA Division I football playoffs, the CAA was the largest Division I conference without one.

    The fact that there was no way to determine the conference champion was breezily brushed off by fans, saying that the FCS Playoffs were the way they determined their "conference champion", as a CAA team was either winning a national title (Richmond, Villanova) or reaching (Delaware, UMass) the national championship game every year between 2006 and 2010.

    The main discussion point back then was how the CAA was going to be able to accommodate Old Dominion and Georgia State in this powerhouse conference to get to 14 teams — and how many at-large bids they might have in the future.

    How things have changed since then.

    Northeastern, and then, suddenly, Hofstra, dropped their programs immediately after the 2009 season.

    Six months later, Rhode Island announced it was actively thinking about moving to the limited-scholarship Northeast Conference in 2013.

    Longtime member Villanova was offered a second opportunity to join the Big East in football, a move the Wildcats are still actively considering.

    And now UMass, lured by the delights of playing in Ypsilanti, MI in November, will be leaving in 2012.

    While it may seem that the affected conference, the CAA, would be mortally wounded from these defections, in truth it looks like the conference will survive the moves just fine, even if Villanova decides to join the Big East.

    Old Dominion joins in 2011, and Georgia State will be ready to compete in CAA football in 2012.

    Rumors that Virginia Commonwealth will be starting up football are getting hotter every day, and even George Mason, a longtime opponent to FCS-level football, may be forced to look into it again with all their Virgina leaguemates adopting the sport.

    GEOGRAPHY CLASS

    CAA football will be fine. *The problem is one of geography ...

    Just listing the schools that will comprise the CAA in 2012 illustrates the problem: Delaware, Towson, Richmond, William & Mary, Old Dominion, James Madison,*Georgia State, Villanova New Hampshire and*Maine.

    The CAA, more than ever, has become a conference whose center of gravity is heading southward or, more accurately, 11 hours and 38 minutes away from Durham, N.H. and 13 hours and 53 minutes from Orono, ME.

    New Hampshire and Maine have seen all the schools they've competed with over the years do something different with their programs, and it's an open question as to what they do next.

    Do they stay, and hope they accumulate enough frequent flyer miles for CAA membership to be worth it? Or do they explore other options, which are fraught with uncertainty at best and risk at worst?

    HISTORY LESSON

    All the schools in question — Villanova, UMass, Hofstra, Rhode Island, and Northeastern — can trace their roots back to the Yankee Conference, which was an all-sports league complete with regional football, a growing basketball league, and a host of other sports.

    Founded in 1947 (according to the NCAA), its purpose was to allow its member schools to pursue big-time basketball while sponsoring football at a lower level than the "big-time" schools of Harvard, Yale, Pitt and Syracuse.

    It's in the Yankee Conference where football and basketball rivalries between the smaller state schools like Rhode Island, Connecticut, UMass, New Hampshire and Maine thrived.

    But the NCAA's mandate of organizing entire programs as Division I, II or III put serious pressure on the Yankee Conference, and the beginning of the end of this conference was nearly reached in 1975, because of basketball.

    That year, UMass announced it would leave the Yankee Conference in basketball to join the EICBL, a precursor to the Big East and Atlantic 10 boasting members such a Pitt, West Virginia, Penn State, Duquesne and Rutgers.

    That motion would prompt Rhode Island's then-president Frank Newman to make the disastrous decision to allow members to pick and choose the Yankee sports to participate in.

    Not wanting to get stuck in a dead basketball league, all its members would jump ship by the 1979 season (with, notably, UConn washing up on the shores of the Big East and URI ending up in the Atlantic 10).

    The NCAA's rules on Division I, II and III were particularly rough on constructs like the Yankee Conference that wanted to play top-flight basketball but also wanted to pursue Division II football.

    When the NCAA in effect forced teams to have to have a Division I program or a Division II program, many opted to play in Division I.

    When I-AA football, now called FCS, was born in 1978, it was the plight of conferences like the Yankee that the NCAA had in mind as it created cost-containment football.

    STILL TREADING IN MURKY WATERS

    Now 34 years after the formation of FCS, it seems like schools in the Northeast still don't know what they want to be, football-wise. *

    And individual schools are making hard decisions as to how they fit into a world of athletics that is becoming increasingly polarized.

    For an example, take Villanova.

    The Wildcats want to sponsor a football team, and they want to be a driving force inside their conference, not just an afterthought that gets in the spotlight come NCAA Tournament time.

    Villanova looks at their league-mates in basketball, Syracuse, UConn and Pitt, and say "We want to be on equal footing with them. To do that, we really ought to look seriously at playing in their football conference."

    But Villanova is a small, academically-selective, private school, with no place to really play FBS football games against Top 25 teams.

    Historically, the Wildcats have played cost-containment football, they were part of the final incarnations of the Yankee Conference before the A-10 took over operations.

    Ideally, FCS would be that vibrant, cost-containment solution that allows the Wildcats to pursue a great private school program and compete for championships without exposing themselves to the added costs and headaches of FBS.

    Next, take Northeastern.

    In 2009, the Huskies were a member of the CAA in all sports. *

    But they had — by all accounts — a tiny strip of concrete they called a stadium.

    Northeastern watched programs like William & Mary, James Madison, Delaware and Old Dominion make stadium improvements it could only dream of making.

    But Northeastern made the decision that it didn't want to be a school that sponsored football.

    The Huskies saw that the other programs in the CAA were not trying to contain costs at all, and at some point, president Joseph Aoun said that he wanted his basketball and hockey teams to compete for championships. *

    For better or worse, Aoun didn't feel like he could compete for championships without busting their athletics budget.

    (For the record, I feel, that*Huskies*could*sponsor football at the FCS level. *After all, they're a lot closer to Gillette Stadium than UMass is.)

    In a nutshell, the schools of the Northeast — always looking for some sort of middle way in terms of football — are finding themselves asking themselves uncomfortable questions.

    Do they actually think about dropping to Division II or III for football? *

    Not*realistically*— after all, that takes away their shot at the NCAA tournament in basketball.

    Do they think about playing in FBS? *

    Most of the time, not*realistically. *

    It costs a truckload of money to upgrade stadiums, and it can take decades to get into an FBS conference — if you're lucky. *

    More likely, it will be a large money sink and break up the regional rivalries that make football a great sport.

    So do they stay in FCS, as a "cost-containment" solution? *

    Well, the Mid-Atlantic Athletic Conference, once the home of the ultimate in cost-containment, Division I non-scholarship football, closed its doors when St. Peter's didn't want to rent a municipal stadium anymore to play games. *

    Another option, the NEC, once pursued a limited need-based aid model but finally acquiesced to allow their member schools to offer a limited number of scholarships.

    Meanwhile, the schools that offer the full allotment of scholarships at the FCS level keep upping the ante financially.

    James Madison is spending nine figures to upgrade their stadium. Richmond just spent millions on their on-campus stadium.

    Delaware is in the middle of a costly upgrade to Tubby Raymond Field.

    All of a sudden FCS — once the unquestioned cost-containment option for Division I — is in the midst of an arms race. It doesn't seem much like cost-containment anymore. *

    And no schools feel that squeeze more than the Northeast-based schools formerly in the Yankee Conference.

    THE NORTHEAST ISLAND

    If Maine and New Hampshire wish to leave and still sponsor FCS football, they don't have a lot of options.

    The Black Bears and Wildcats can choose the path of Rhode Island and join the limited-scholarship Northeast Conference in football.

    In the NEC, they would still have good access to the FCS playoffs, thanks to their autobid, and they could play a schedule with their old rival and a host of local games that are bus trips.

    The NEC would certainly welcome them with open arms as well, giving the league 12 teams and allowing the schools to separate into divisions.

    But it would necessitate Maine and New Hampshire to cut the number of scholarships they have now to 40 — a competitive advantage that the Wildcats and Black Bears cannot give up — or for the NEC to increase its scholarship limits (a doubtful decision).

    It would also limit their ability to schedule FBS games, something that has electrified the fans of New Hampshire over the years after they upended teams like Rutgers, Northwestern and Marshall on the road.

    Maine and New Hampshire could mull over membership in the Patriot League, and join Holy Cross in a league with a more northern bent than the CAA. *(Something I've been advocating for a while, not only to help New Hampshire and Maine, but to save the Patriot League as well.)

    But they would have to subject their student-athletes to an academic index — a restriction they might not be able to live with — and would have to convert their aid to the need-limited model.

    A recent PL vote to allow schools to offer scholarships was recently tabled by the league presidents. *

    With a need-limited aid system, it seems like the Patriot League would be a non-starter for Maine and New Hampshire for the same reasons the NEC might be an issue — it would be more difficult to meet scholarship requirements to schedule FBS games.

    It's hard to escape the conclusion that the Patriot League had a chance to be in the running as potential destinations for UNH and Maine should they choose to leave — but dropped the ball last December.

    NEW SOLUTIONS?

    The final solution would be for Maine and New Hampshire to break off from the CAA and either spur their conference, America East, to sponsor football, or the riskiest proposition of all, sponsoring an all-new, all-sports conference that includes football.

    The advantage of both possibilities is that Maine and New Hampshire could set the rules for membership, and*participation*in football. *

    No academic index requirements, or scholarship limits. *FBS games continue as they have.

    The center of gravity of the conference would be safely above New York City, preserving and nurturing new northeast rivalries in the spirit of the original Yankee Conference.

    And there are plenty of schools that seem like they would leap at the chance of forming a Northeast-based full scholarship conference in football — Albany, Stony Brook, Fordham and Central Connecticut State leap to mind. *

    Perhaps Rhode Island might also come into the fold again as well to make a seven-team league.

    Along with New Hampshire and Maine, four of these six schools would be all-sports members of the America East conference already. *

    Unfortunately, none of the other existing America East schools — SUNY Binghamton, Vermont, Boston University, University of Hartford, or Maryland-Baltimore County — seem to have any desire to start or re-start dormant football programs.

    As a side note, Vermont is one of just two state flagship universities in the country (Alaska-Ancourage being the other) that doesn't sponsor football.

    But forming a new all-sports conference — or even just spurring America East to sponsor football — is not an easy task, to say the least. *

    Presidential politics with the schools, and the unwillingness of the NCAA to add new — especially a basketball minnow — are daunting challenges to overcome. *

    The America East had a golden opportunity to sponsor FCS football when the A-10 elected to get out of the business of running the Yankee Conference, but passed. *

    It's hard to see what's changed since then.

    Furthermore, they would start out ineligible for an at-large bit to the FCS playoffs for at least five years. All of those schools would be giving up a guaranteed shot at the playoffs to redefine a full-scholarship Northeast-based model.

    But creative solutions are there for the Wildcats and Black Bears — if they're willing to work for them. They need to figure out what they want to be — and how to achieve it.

    It won't be without risk.

    But it could be more risky for Maine and New Hampshire to remain in a conference that can't be considered a Yankee Conference anymore.