The Jackal wrote: ↑Mon Dec 16, 2019 9:38 pm
gman wrote: ↑Mon Dec 16, 2019 5:35 pm
soconjohn wrote: ↑Mon Dec 16, 2019 5:12 pm
To me the disparity and the power of the FCS is in states where the lone Division I schools are FCS....It’s more of a demographics disparity....When you’re not competing against the SEC or ACC or even Sun Belt for recruits it’s not a fair fight...There are far less football conferences west of the Mississippi
Aren’t there less potential recruits to choose from in those states? If so, wouldn’t that even things out?
There are, I think, 11 D1 football programs in California with approximately 35 million people. There are 9 D1 programs in South Carolina with around 4 million people.
It complicates things, but Furman has a strong product to sell.
It doesn't just complicate things, it's made it extremely tough for the eastern teams not named James Madison (which has an enrollment of over 21K) to even remotely compete. I just went back and looked at which state the semifinal teams since 2013 (the year after GSU/ASU left FCS) reside in. 17 out of 28 come from west of the Mississippi (9 of 12 since 2017). The only close comparison to Furman size wise I found is Richmond, which still has about 1500 more students than Furman. And they've made only 1 semi in that time period and aren't very good now. I don't know what the answer is. Ideally we would start recruiting more nationally (NDSU has players from Florida), but that's virtually impossible with the small budget.
Semis by state:
2019 - North Dakota, Utah, Montana, Virginia
2018 - North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, Maine
2017 - North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, Virginia
2016 - North Dakota, Washington, Ohio, Virginia
2015 - North Dakota, Texas, Alabama, Virginia
2014 - North Dakota, Texas, Illinois, New Hampshire
2013 - North Dakota, Washington, Maryland, New Hampshire
PS: How remarkable/annoying/dumb is it that NDSU has made every semi since 2011? Lost in OT in the quarters in 2010 or they would have gone every year this decade.