2011 NCAA Division I FCS football season

The 2011 NCAA Division I FCS football season, part of college football in the United States, was organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level. The season began on September 1, 2011, and concluded with the 2012 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game on January 7, 2012, at Pizza Hut Park in Frisco, Texas. North Dakota State won their first FCS championship, defeating Sam Houston State by a final score of 17–6.

2011 NCAA Division I FCS season
Regular season
Number of teams126
DurationSeptember – November
Payton AwardBo Levi Mitchell, Eastern Washington
Buchanan AwardMatt Evans, New Hampshire
Playoff
DurationNovember 26 – December 17
Championship dateJanuary 7, 2012
Championship sitePizza Hut Park, Frisco, TX
ChampionNorth Dakota State
NCAA Division I FCS football seasons

Conference changes and new programs

edit
School2010 conference2011 conference
LamarFCS IndependentSouthland
Old DominionCAA
Savannah StateMEAC
South AlabamaNew program+FCS Independent
UTSANew program
Texas StateSouthland

+ "unclassified" for 2009 (partial season) and 2010 (full season)

FCS team wins over FBS teams

edit

September 3: Richmond 23, Duke 21
September 3: Sacramento State 29, Oregon State 28OT
September 17: Indiana State 44, Western Kentucky 16
September 24: North Dakota State 37, Minnesota 24
September 24: Sam Houston State 48, New Mexico 45 OT
September 24: Southern Utah 41, UNLV 16

Conference standings

edit
2011 Big Sky Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 7 Montana State $^ 71  103 
No. 5 Montana† ^ 51  62 
Portland State 53  74 
Eastern Washington 53  65 
Weber State 53  56 
Northern Arizona 35  47 
Sacramento State 35  47 
Idaho State* 17  29 
Northern Colorado 08  011 
  • $ Conference champion
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
  • † Montana vacated two conference wins, five total wins, their conference co-championship, and playoff participation (three games, including two of the five total wins) in 2011
    * Idaho State ineligible for FCS playoffs due to APR violations
Rankings from The Sports Network poll, using Montana's later-diminished W–L record
2011 Big South Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 18 Stony Brook $^ 60  94 
No. 25 Liberty 51  74 
Coastal Carolina 33  74 
Presbyterian 33  47 
Gardner–Webb 24  47 
VMI 24  29 
Charleston Southern 06  011 
  • $ Conference champion
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Colonial Athletic Association football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 9 Towson $^ 71  93 
No. 10 Old Dominion ^ 62  103 
No. 8 Maine ^ 62  94 
No. 11 New Hampshire ^ 62  84 
No. 17 Delaware 53  74 
No. 15 James Madison ^ 53  85 
William & Mary 35  56 
Rhode Island 26  38 
Villanova 17  29 
Richmond 08  38 
UMass * 00  56 
  • $ Conference champion
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
  • * – UMass' conference record was 0–0 because they were transitioning to FBS.
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Great West Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 23 North Dakota + 31  83 
Cal Poly + 31  65 
South Dakota 22  65 
Southern Utah 13  65 
UC Davis 13  47 
  • + Conference co-champions
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Ivy League football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 16 Harvard $ 70  91 
Brown 43  73 
Dartmouth 43  55 
Penn 43  55 
Yale 43  55 
Cornell 34  55 
Columbia 16  19 
Princeton 16  19 
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 19 Norfolk State $^ 71  93 
Bethune–Cookman 62  83 
South Carolina State 62  74 
Florida A&M 53  74 
Hampton 53  74 
Howard 44  56 
Morgan State 44  56 
North Carolina A&T 44  56 
Delaware State 17  38 
North Carolina Central 17  29 
Savannah State 17  110 
  • $ Conference champion
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Missouri Valley Football Conference standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 1 North Dakota State +^ 71  141 
No. 6 Northern Iowa +^ 71  103 
No. 20 Illinois State 53  74 
Indiana State 44  65 
Youngstown State 44  65 
South Dakota State 44  56 
Southern Illinois 26  47 
Missouri State 26  29 
Western Illinois 17  29 
  • + Conference co-champions
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Northeast Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
Duquesne + 71  92 
Albany +^ 71  84 
Bryant 53  74 
Monmouth 44  56 
Wagner 44  47 
Sacred Heart 35  56 
Central Connecticut 35  47 
Robert Morris 26  29 
Saint Francis (PA) 17  29 
  • + Conference co-champions
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
2011 Ohio Valley Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 21 Tennessee Tech +^ 62  74 
Eastern Kentucky +^ 62  75 
Jacksonville State + 62  74 
Murray State 53  74 
Tennessee State 44  56 
UT Martin 44  56 
Austin Peay 26  38 
Southeast Missouri State 26  38 
Eastern Illinois 17  29 
  • + Conference co-champions
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Patriot League football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 6 Lehigh $^ 60  112 
Georgetown 42  83 
Holy Cross 42  65 
Bucknell 33  65 
Colgate 24  56 
Lafayette 24  47 
Fordham 06  110 
  • $ Conference champion
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
  • Fordham was ineligible for conference title because they offered football scholarships while other Patriot League members did not.
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Pioneer Football League standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
San Diego + 71  92 
Drake + 71  92 
Jacksonville 62  74 
Campbell 53  65 
Dayton 44  65 
Marist 35  47 
Butler 35  56 
Davidson 26  47 
Morehead State 26  38 
Valparaiso 17  110 
  • + Conference co-champions
2011 Southern Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 3 Georgia Southern $^ 71  113 
No. 12 Wofford ^ 62  84 
No. 9 Appalachian State ^ 62  84 
Furman 53  65 
Samford 44  65 
Chattanooga 35  56 
Elon 35  56 
The Citadel 26  47 
Western Carolina 08  110 
  • $ Conference champion
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Southland Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
No. 2 Sam Houston State $^ 70  141 
No. 14 Central Arkansas ^ 61  94 
Stephen F. Austin 52  65 
McNeese State 43  65 
Northwestern State 34  56 
Lamar 25  47 
Southeastern Louisiana 16  38 
Nicholls State 07  110 
  • $ Conference champion
  • ^ FCS playoff participant
Rankings from The Sports Network poll
2011 Southwestern Athletic Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
East Division
No. 21 Jackson State x 72  92 
Alabama State x 72  83 
Alabama A&M xy 72  84 
Alcorn State 18  28 
Mississippi Valley State 18  110 
West Division
Grambling State xy$ 63  84 
Arkansas–Pine Bluff 54  65 
Prairie View A&M 54  56 
Southern 45  47 
Texas Southern 27  47 
Championship: Grambling State 16, Alabama A&M 15
  • $ Conference champion
  • x Division champion/co-champions
  • y Championship game participant
  • Jackson State and Southern were ineligible to participate in the SWAC Championship Game due to low APR scores.
Rankings from The Sports Network Poll
2011 NCAA Division I FCS independents football standings
Conf.Overall
Team W L  W L 
South Alabama   64 
Texas State   66 
UTSA   46 
Georgia State   38 

Conference summaries

edit

Championship games

edit
Conference Champion Runner-up Score Offensive Player of the Year Defensive Player of the Year
SWAC Grambling State Alabama A&M 16–15[1] Casey Therriault (QB, Jackson State) Adrian Hamilton (DE, Prairie View A&M)
Cliff Exama (Grambling State)

Other conference winners

edit

Note: Records are regular-season only, and do not include playoff games.

Conference Champion Record Offensive Player of the Year Defensive Player of the Year Coach of the Year
Big Sky Montana State 9–2 (7–1) Bo Levi Mitchell (Eastern Washington) Caleb McSurdy (Montana) Robin Pflugrad (Montana)
Big South Stony Brook 8–3 (6–0) Miguel Maysonet (Stony Brook) Justin Bethel (Presbyterian) Chuck Priore (Stony Brook)
CAA Towson 9–2 (7–1) Kevin Decker (New Hampshire) Ronnie Cameron (Old Dominion) Rob Ambrose (Towson)
Great West North Dakota
Cal Poly
8–3 (3–1)
6–5 (3–1)
Brad Sorensen (Southern Utah) Tyler Osborne (Southern Utah) Chris Mussman (North Dakota)
Ivy Harvard 9–1 (7–0) Jeff Mathews (Cornell) Josue Ortiz (Harvard)
MEAC Norfolk State 9–2 (7–1) Mike Mayhew (North Carolina A&T)
Chris Walley (Norfolk State)
Ryan Davis (Bethune–Cookman) Pete Adrian (Norfolk State)
MVFC North Dakota State
Northern Iowa
10–1 (7–1)
9–2 (7–1)
Shakir Bell (Indiana State) L. J. Fort (Northern Iowa) Craig Bohl (North Dakota State)
NEC Duquesne
Albany
9–2 (7–1)
8–3 (7–1)
Jordan Brown (Bryant) Serge Kona (Duquesne) Bob Ford (Albany)
OVC Tennessee Tech
Eastern Kentucky
Jacksonville State
7–3 (6–2)
7–4 (6–2)
7–4 (6–2)
Tim Benford (Tennessee Tech) Rico Council (Tennessee State) Watson Brown (Tennessee Tech)
Patriot Lehigh 10–1 (6–0) Chris Lum (Lehigh) Andrew Schaetzke (Georgetown) Kevin Kelly (Georgetown)
Pioneer San Diego
Drake
9–2 (7–1) Mike Piatkowski (Drake) Blake Oliaro (San Diego) Ron Caragher (San Diego)
Southern Georgia Southern 9–2 (7–1) Eric Breitenstein (Wofford) Brent Russell (Georgia Southern) Jeff Monken (Georgia Southern)
Southland Sam Houston State 11–0 (7–0) Richard Sincere (Sam Houston State) Darnell Taylor (Sam Houston State) Willie Fritz (Sam Houston State)

Playoff qualifiers

edit

Automatic berths for conference champions

edit

At large qualifiers

edit

Abstains

edit

Postseason

edit

NCAA Division I playoff bracket

edit
First Round
November 26
Campus sites
Second Round
December 3
Campus sites
Quarterfinals
December 9 and December 10
Campus sites
Semifinals
December 16 and December 17
Campus sites
National Championship Game

January 7
Pizza Hut Park,
Frisco, Texas

Stony Brook 27
Albany 28 1 Sam Houston State* 34
Stony Brook* 31 1 Sam Houston State* 49
Montana State 13
New Hampshire 25
Montana State* 26
1 Sam Houston State* 31
4 Montana 28
Central Arkansas 14
Central Arkansas 34 4 Montana* 41
Tennessee Tech* 14 4 Montana* 48
5 Northern Iowa 10
Wofford 21
5 Northern Iowa* 28
1 Sam Houston State 6
2 North Dakota State 17
James Madison 14
James Madison 20 2 North Dakota State* 26
Eastern Kentucky* 17 2 North Dakota State* 24
Lehigh 0
Lehigh 40
Towson* 38
2 North Dakota State* 35
3 Georgia Southern 7
Old Dominion 48
Norfolk State 18 3 Georgia Southern* 55
Old Dominion* 35 3 Georgia Southern* 35
Maine 23
Maine 34
Appalachian State* 12

* Host institution

SWAC Championship Game

edit
DateLocationVenueWest Div. ChampionEast Div. ChampionResult
December 10 Birmingham, Alabama Legion Field Grambling State Alabama A&M GSU 16 – AAMU 15[1]

Conference summaries

edit

Championship games

edit
Conference Champion Runner-up Score Offensive Player of the Year Defensive Player of the Year
SWAC Grambling State Alabama A&M 16–15[1] Casey Therriault (QB, Jackson State) Adrian Hamilton (DE, Prairie View A&M)
Cliff Exama (Grambling State)

Other conference winners

edit

Note: Records are regular-season only, and do not include playoff games.

Conference Champion Record Offensive Player of the Year Defensive Player of the Year Coach of the Year
Big Sky Montana State 9–2 (7–1) Bo Levi Mitchell (Eastern Washington) Caleb McSurdy (Montana) Robin Pflugrad (Montana)
Big South Stony Brook 8–3 (6–0) Miguel Maysonet (Stony Brook) Justin Bethel (Presbyterian) Chuck Priore (Stony Brook)
CAA Towson 9–2 (7–1) Kevin Decker (New Hampshire) Ronnie Cameron (Old Dominion) Rob Ambrose (Towson)
Great West North Dakota
Cal Poly
8–3 (3–1)
6–5 (3–1)
Brad Sorensen (Southern Utah) Tyler Osborne (Southern Utah) Chris Mussman (North Dakota)
Ivy Harvard 7–0 (9–1) Jeff Mathews (Cornell) Josue Ortiz (Harvard)
MEAC Norfolk State 9–2 (7–1) Mike Mayhew (North Carolina A&T)
Chris Walley (Norfolk State)
Ryan Davis (Bethune–Cookman) Pete Adrian (Norfolk State)
MVFC North Dakota State
Northern Iowa
10–1 (7–1)
9–2 (7–1)
Shakir Bell (Indiana State) L. J. Fort (Northern Iowa) Craig Bohl (North Dakota State)
NEC Duquesne
Albany
9–2 (7–1)
8–3 (7–1)
Jordan Brown (Bryant) Serge Kona (Duquesne) Bob Ford (Albany)
OVC Tennessee Tech
Eastern Kentucky
Jacksonville State
7–3 (6–2)
7–4 (6–2)
7–4 (6–2)
Tim Benford (Tennessee Tech) Rico Council (Tennessee State) Watson Brown (Tennessee Tech)
Patriot Lehigh 10–1 (6–0) Chris Lum (Lehigh) Andrew Schaetzke (Georgetown) Kevin Kelly (Georgetown)
Pioneer San Diego
Drake
9–2 (7–1) Mike Piatkowski (Drake) Blake Oliaro (San Diego) Ron Caragher (San Diego)
Southern Georgia Southern 9–2 (7–1) Eric Breitenstein (Wofford) Brent Russell (Georgia Southern) Jeff Monken (Georgia Southern)
Southland Sam Houston State 11–0 (7–0) Richard Sincere (Sam Houston State) Darnell Taylor (Sam Houston State) Willie Fritz (Sam Houston State)

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. 1 2 3 Benson, Reggie (December 10, 2011). "Bulldogs come up short again against Tigers". The Huntsville Times. Retrieved December 10, 2011.