Home Page | 2008 NCAA Division I FCS football season
The 2008 NCAA Division I FCS football season, the 2008 season of college football for teams in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), began on August 28, 2008, and concluded on December 19, 2008, in Chattanooga, Tennessee, at the 2008 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game, where the Richmond Spiders defeated the Montana Grizzlies to win the NCAA Division I Football Championship.
This was the first season in which a standard provision of NCAA rules allowed FCS teams to schedule 12 regular-season games (not counting conference championship games). In years when the period starting with the Thursday before Labor Day and ending with the final Saturday in November contains 14 Saturdays, FCS programs may play 12 games instead of the regular 11.
Conference changes and new programs
The Gateway Football Conference adopted its present-day name, Missouri Valley Football Conference (MVFC).
Following the 2007 season, the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference dropped its football sponsorship.
Semifinals December 12 and December 13 Campus sites
National Championship Game
December 19 Finley Stadium Chattanooga, Tennessee
Wofford
35
1
James Madison*
38
1
James Madison*
31
Villanova
27
Colgate
28
Villanova*
55
1
James Madison*
27
4
Montana
35
Texas State
13
4
Montana*
31
4
Montana*
24
Weber State
13
Weber State
49
Cal Poly*
35
4
Montana
7
7
Richmond
24
South Carolina State
21
2
Appalachian State*
37
2
Appalachian State*
13
Richmond
33
Eastern Kentucky
10
Richmond*
38
Richmond
21
3
Northern Iowa*
20
Maine
15
3
Northern Iowa*
40
3
Northern Iowa*
36
New Hampshire
34
New Hampshire
29
Southern Illinois*
20
* Host institution
SWAC Championship Game
Date
Location
Venue
West Div. Champion
East Div. Champion
Result
December 13
Birmingham, Alabama
Legion Field
Grambling State
Jackson State
Grambling State, 41–9
Gridiron Classic
The Gridiron Classic is an annual game between the champions of the Northeast Conference and the Pioneer Football League that has been held since December 2006.
Date
Location
Venue
NEC Champion
PFL Champion
Result
December 6
Albany, New York
University Field
Albany
Jacksonville
Albany, 28–0
Final poll standings
Standings are from The Sports Network final 2008 poll.
Rank
Team
Record
1
Richmond Spiders
13–3
2
Montana Grizzlies
14–2
3
James Madison Dukes
12–2
4
Northern Iowa Panthers
12–3
5
Appalachian State Mountaineers
11–3
6
Villanova Wildcats
10–3
7
Weber State Wildcats
10–4
8
New Hampshire Wildcats
10–3
9
Wofford Terriers
9–3
10
Cal Poly Mustangs
8–3
11
Southern Illinois Salukis
9–3
12
Central Arkansas Bears
10–2
13
South Carolina State Bulldogs
10–3
14
Liberty Flames
10–2
15
Harvard Crimson
9–1
16
Colgate Raiders
9–3
17
Elon Phoenix
8–4
18
Maine Black Bears
8–5
19
Eastern Kentucky Colonels
8–4
20
William & Mary Tribe
7–4
21
McNeese State Cowboys
7–4
22
Texas State Bobcats
8–5
23
Jacksonville State Gamecocks
8–3
24
Grambling State Tigers
11–2
25
Prairie View A&M Panthers
9–1
Rule changes for 2008
The NCAA football rules committee made several rule changes for 2008, and includes the following:
The 25-second play clock was replaced by a 40-second version similar to one that was used in the NFL until 2005.
The penalty for kicking the ball out of bounds on the kickoff is increased, placing the ball at the 40-yard line, similar to the NFL.
All face-mask penalties result in a 15-yard penalty. Incidental contact with the face mask is no longer penalized.
All horse-collar tackles are now subject to a 15-yard penalty.
If a coach challenges a play and they win the challenge, they are given a second challenge to use later in the game, and each coach has a maximum of two challenges per game even if both are decided in their favor.
Attendances
The top 30 NCAA Division I FCS football teams by average home attendance:
#
College football team
Average attendance
1
Appalachian State Mountaineers
25,161
2
Montana Grizzlies
23,923
3
Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens
21,609
4
Jackson State Tigers
21,263
5
Georgia Southern Eagles
18,168
6
North Dakota State Bison
18,032
7
Harvard Crimson
17,360
8
Southern Jaguars
16,323
9
Tennessee State Tigers
15,444
10
James Madison Dukes
15,362
11
Alabama State Hornets
15,218
12
Youngstown State Penguins
14,497
13
Florida A&M Rattlers
14,383
14
McNeese State Cowboys
13,829
15
Montana State Bobcats
13,406
16
South Carolina State Bulldogs
13,383
17
Liberty Flames
13,147
18
Massachusetts Minutemen
12,383
19
The Citadel Bulldogs
12,261
20
Northern Iowa Panthers
12,178
21
Penn Quakers
11,284
22
Jacksonville State Gamecocks
11,281
23
Texas State Bobcats
11,225
24
Grambling State Tigers
11,219
25
Yale Bulldogs
11,071
26
North Carolina A&T Aggies
10,764
27
Norfolk State Spartans
10,645
28
Illinois State Redbirds
10,591
29
Sam Houston State Bearkats
10,076
30
Furman Paladins
10,073
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