NCAA Division I FBS 축구 프로그램 목록 - List of NCAA Division I FBS football programs
다음은 미국 NCAA ( National Collegiate Athletic Association ) 의 Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) 에있는 130 개 학교 목록 입니다. 정의에 따라이 그룹의 모든 학교에는 대표팀 축구 팀이 있습니다.
Division I FBS의 학교 는 장학금 지원 을 제공 할 수 있다는 점 에서 Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS)의 학교와 구별됩니다.총 85 명의 선수에게 총 85 명의 선수에게 전액 장학금을 지급 할 수 있습니다. FCS 학교는 최대 63 개의 전액 장학금에 해당하는 재정 지원으로 제한되지만 일부 회의에서는 운동 지원에 대한 추가 제한을 자발적으로 적용합니다. NCAA는 FBS 축구를 "인원수"스포츠로 분류합니다. 즉, 학교에서 운동 관련 지원을받는 각 선수는 85 명의 선수 제한에 완전히 반대됩니다. 대조적으로 FCS 축구는 "동등한"스포츠로 분류됩니다. 즉, 장학금 지원은 지정된 수의 전체 장학금에 해당하는 금액으로 제한됩니다. 즉, FCS 학교는 부분 장학금을 자유롭게 지급 할 수 있지만 지원을받는 총 85 명의 선수로 제한됩니다. 또 다른 NCAA 규칙은 축구를하고 운동 보조를받는 모든 멀티 스포츠 선수를 축구 한도에 포함하도록 규정하고 있습니다. 단, 다른 스포츠에서 도움을받는 비 장학 FCS 프로그램의 선수는 예외입니다. 세Division I FBS ( 공군 , 육군 및 해군) 에서 활동하는 서비스 아카데미 는 이론적으로이 규칙의 적용을 받지만 해당 학교의 모든 학생이 연방 정부로부터 전액 장학금을 받기 때문에 실제로 면제됩니다.
FBS는 2014 년부터 4 팀 토너먼트를 시작하여 내셔널 챔피언십 게임 에서 절정에 달하며 , 게임 방송사 인 ESPN 과의 계약을 통해 2014 ~ 2025 시즌부터 시행 될 시스템 인 내셔널 챔피언 을 결정합니다 . 그러나 College Football Playoff는 NCAA의 승인을받지 않았기 때문에 FBS 축구는 NCAA 승인 챔피언이없는 유일한 스포츠입니다. FCS는 챔피언을 결정하기 위해 NCAA가 승인 한 플레이 오프 토너먼트를 개최하는 대학 축구에서 가장 높은 부문입니다.
이전에는 사단 I FBS 축구는 FBS 학교 대신 포스트 시즌 시리즈에서 재생과 확실한 국가 챔피언을 결정하는 공식 대회가없는 유일한 NCAA 스포츠이었다 그릇 게임 에서 남중, BCS 내셔널 챔피언십 게임 하나의 왕관을 시도, 전국 챔피언. 다른 조직, 특히 Associated Press 는 투표를 통해 자체 챔피언으로 선정되었습니다. BCS와 AP는 항상 단일 챔피언에 동의하지는 않았습니다. BCS 이전에는 AP가 챔피언을 결정하는 결정 기관으로 간주되었지만 BCS 이전의 다른 모든 조직과 마찬가지로 지역 투표 기관으로 시작되었습니다. BCS 시대 이전의 대부분의 기간 동안 챔피언십은 여러 학교에서 주장했습니다.
컨퍼런스 제휴는 다가오는 2020 시즌을 위해 현재 진행 중입니다 .
FBS 프로그램
- Notes
- ^ a b When FBS was created in 1978 as Division I-A, the Southern Conference was designated as a I-A conference. The SoCon was downgraded to FCS (then Division I-AA) level beginning in the 1982 season. This school competed in SoCon football during the league's 1978–81 tenure as a I-A conference.
- ^ At that time, the school was a two-year college known as Boise Junior College. The school did not become a four-year institution until 1965, and only began playing football against four-year schools in 1968.
- ^ a b c Houston, Memphis, and SMU had originally planned to join the Big East Conference in 2013. However, the conference split along football lines in July 2013, with the seven non-FBS schools of the original conference buying the "Big East" name and reorganizing as a new, non-football Big East Conference. The FBS schools that did not leave at that time for the ACC joined with the three newcomers, remaining in the original conference structure under the new name of American Athletic Conference.
- ^ Miami currently plays its home games in Miami Gardens, Florida.
- ^ UConn currently plays its home games in East Hartford, Connecticut.
- ^ The UNLV campus is not within the City of Las Vegas, but is instead in the unincorporated community of Paradise. Through the 2019 season, the football team played its home games in another unincorporated Las Vegas suburb, Whitney; it will move to the new Allegiant Stadium in Paradise in 2020.
Former programs
- Notes
- ^ Long Beach State rebranded its athletic program as "The Beach" effective in 2020–21, long after football was discontinued.
- ^ Marquette also used the nickname of Golden Avalanche in the period when it sponsored football.
- ^ The school now brands itself in both athletics and academics as UT Arlington or UTA, although the university's formal name has not changed.
Notes
- Several schools have different athletic nicknames for men's and women's teams. Usually, this is a matter of preceding the main nickname with "Lady", such as LSU Lady Tigers and Tennessee Lady Vols. The two FBS schools nicknamed Cowboys, Oklahoma State and Wyoming, use Cowgirls for women's teams. However, in some cases, the women's team nickname has a completely different form, as in Hawaii Rainbow Wahine and Louisiana Tech Lady Techsters. Because this is a list of American football programs, which are traditionally all-male, only the men's form is given.
- The Pac-12 considers the Pacific Coast Conference or PCC as part of its own history, even though the PCC was established with different charter members and was disbanded due to major crisis and scandal. There is considerable continuity between the two leagues. The Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU), which would eventually become the Pac-12, was founded by five former PCC members, and by 1964 all of the final PCC members except for Idaho had been reunited in the AAWU.
- Texas leads the nation with 12 FBS programs based in the state.
References
- ^ 9 states (Alaska, Delaware, Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont) and Washington, D.C. do not currently have FBS programs.
- ^ http://www.hurricanesports.com/ViewArticle.dbml?ATCLID=205820405
- ^ https://tulsahurricane.com/news/2019/11/8/tulsa-football-to-host-oklahoma-in-2023-as-part-of-new-3-game-series.aspx
- ^ http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/index.php
- ^ Idaho Vandals [@Idaho_Vandals] (28 April 2016). "President Staben - "The University of Idaho Vandal football team will accept an invitation to join the Big Sky Conference" beginning in '18" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ https://www.nytimes.com/1981/12/05/sports/ivy-league-is-forced-to-lose-major-team-football-status.html
- ^ http://www.marquette.edu/magazine/recent.php?subaction=showfull&id=1329850800
- ^ https://www.nytimes.com/1981/12/05/sports/ivy-league-is-forced-to-lose-major-team-football-status.html
- ^ Santa Clara Broncos football
- ^ https://www.nytimes.com/1981/12/05/sports/ivy-league-is-forced-to-lose-major-team-football-status.html
- NCAA Sports Sponsorship: Football Bowl Subdivision
- Map of NCAA Division I FBS football teams[permanent dead link]
See also
- List of NCAA Division I institutions
- List of NCAA Division II institutions
- List of NCAA Division III institutions
- List of NCAA Division I FCS football programs
- List of NCAA Division I non-football programs
- List of NCAA Division II football programs
- List of NCAA Division III football programs
- List of NAIA football programs
- List of community college football programs
- List of NCAA Institutions with club football teams
- List of Division I schools that have never sponsored football
- List of defunct college football teams
- List of undefeated Division I football teams