NCAA Division I Football Championship

The NCAA Division I Football Championship is an annual post-season college football game, played since 2006, used to determine a national champion of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). From 1978 to 2005, the game was called the NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship, during the period when the FCS was known as NCAA Division I-AA.

NCAA Division I
Football Championship
StadiumFirstBank Stadium (2026–future)
LocationNashville, Tennessee (2026–future)
Previous stadiumsToyota Stadium (2010–2025)
Finley Stadium (1997–2009)
Marshall University Stadium (1992–1996)
various (1978–1991)
Previous locationsFrisco, Texas (2010–2025)
Chattanooga, Tennessee (1997–2009)
Huntington, West Virginia (1992–1996)
various (1978–1991)
Operated2006–present
Preceded byNCAA Division I-AA Football Championship (1978–2005)

The game serves as the final match of an annual postseason bracket tournament between top teams in FCS. Since 2013, 24 teams normally participate in the tournament, with some teams receiving automatic bids upon winning their conference championship, and other teams determined by a selection committee. The reigning national champions are the North Dakota State Bison, who have won 10 championships since the 2011 season.

The FCS is the highest division in college football to hold a playoff tournament sanctioned by the NCAA to determine its champion, as the College Football Playoff currently used by the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) is not NCAA-sanctioned.

History

Playoff format

In the inaugural season of Division I-AA, the 1978 postseason included just four teams; three regional champions (East, West, and South) plus an at-large selection. The field doubled to eight teams in 1981, with champions of five conferences—Big Sky, Mid-Eastern, Ohio Valley, Southwestern, and Yankee—receiving automatic bids. The top four teams were seeded, and then matched against the four remaining teams based on geographical proximity. The tournament was expanded to 12 teams in 1982, with each of the top four seeds receiving a first-round bye and a home game in the quarterfinals. Champions of the Southern and Southland conferences also received automatic bids.

The number of automatic bids has varied over time, due to changes in the number and size of conferences, with an automatic bid typically granted only to champions of conferences with at least six teams. Initially, the tournament was played in December; since the expansion to twelve teams in 1982, earlier rounds have been held in late November.

The playoffs expanded to a 16-team format in 1986, requiring four postseason victories to win the title. Initially, only the top four teams were seeded, with other teams geographically placed in the bracket. From 1995 through 2000, all 16 teams were seeded, independent of geography. In 2001, the number of seeded teams was reduced to four, with the seeded teams assured of home games in early tournament rounds, and other teams once again placed in the bracket to minimize travel. Home team designation in games between unseeded teams is determined based on several factors, including attendance history and revenue potential.

In April 2008, the NCAA announced that the playoff field would expand to 20 teams in 2010, with the Big South and Northeast Conference earning automatic bids for the first time. That bracket structure included seeding of the top five teams. Twelve teams received first-round byes; the remaining eight teams played first-round games, with the four winners advancing to face the top four seeds. The playoffs expanded to 24 teams beginning in 2013, with the champion of the Pioneer Football League receiving an automatic bid for the first time. The number of seeded teams was increased to eight, with the 16 unseeded teams playing in first-round games. The unseeded teams continue to be paired according to geographic proximity and then placed in the bracket according to geographic proximity to the top eight seeds. Teams cannot travel more than 400 miles via ground, and teams from the same conference that played each other during the regular season are not paired for first-round games. For the 2020 season, affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, the bracket was reduced to 16 teams. The bracket returned to 24 teams for the 2021 season.

The field is traditionally set the Sunday before Thanksgiving and play begins that weekend.

Playoff format
Season(s) Bracket
size
Seeded
teams
1st round
byes
1978–1980 4
1981 8 4
1982–1985 12 4 4
1986–1994 16 4
1995–2000 16
2001–2009 4
2010–2012 20 5 12
2013–2019 24 8 8
2020 16 4
2021–2023 24 8 8
2024–present 16

Team selection

At-large selections and seeding within the bracket are determined by the FCS Playoff Selection Committee, which consists of one athletic director from each conference with an automatic bid. As of the 2018 season, there were 10 conferences with automatic bids and the selection committee made 14 at-large selections. An 11th automatic bid was added as of the 2021 season, reducing the number of at-large selections to 13. The number of automatic bids was reduced back to 10 in 2022 (due to the Big South Conference and Ohio Valley Conference, which both previously sent their champions, merging their football operations into the OVC–Big South Football Association), but restored to 11 in 2025 following the Ivy League's decision to enter the FCS Playoff for the first time.

Championship final

The tournament culminates with the national final, played between the two remaining teams from the playoff bracket. Unlike earlier round games in each year's playoff, which are played at campus sites, the title game is played at a site predetermined by the NCAA, akin to how the NFL predetermines the site for each Super Bowl. Originally played in December, with the 2010 expansion to a 20-team field, the final moved to January, with two or three weeks between the semifinals and final.

The inaugural title game was played in 1978 in Wichita Falls, Texas. The 1979 and 1980 games were held in Orlando, Florida, and Sacramento, California, respectively, and the game returned to Wichita Falls for 1981 and 1982. The games played in Wichita Falls were known as the Pioneer Bowl, while the game played in Sacramento was known as the Camellia Bowl—both names were used for various NCAA playoff games played in those locations, and were not specific to the I-AA championship. In 1983 and 1984, the game was played in Charleston, South Carolina. In 1985 and 1986, Tacoma, Washington, hosted the game, which the NCAA branded as the "Diamond Bowl".

The 1987 and 1988 games were played in Pocatello, Idaho; and from 1989 through 1991, in Statesboro, Georgia. The 1992 through 1996 games were held in Huntington, West Virginia; and from 1997 through 2009, the title game was played in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

From 2010 through the 2024 season, the title game was played in Frisco, Texas, a suburb north of Dallas, at Toyota Stadium, a multi-purpose stadium primarily used by FC Dallas of Major League Soccer. The stadium was known as Pizza Hut Park until the day after the final of the 2011 season, and then as FC Dallas Stadium until September 2013. The original contract with Frisco began in the 2010 season and ran through the 2012 season. The contract was extended three times; first through the 2015 season, then through the 2019 season, and finally through the 2024 season with an option for the 2025 season.

For at least 2026 and 2027, the title game will be played at FirstBank Stadium in Nashville, Tennessee, home of the Vanderbilt Commodores, due to renovations beginning at Toyota Stadium following the 2025 title game.

Details

Season(s) Venue Location Tenant NCAA team Title games by tenant
1978 Memorial Stadium Wichita Falls, Texas none N/A
1979 Orlando Stadium Orlando, Florida UCF Knights (D-III) N/A
1980 Hughes Stadium Sacramento, California none N/A
1981–1982 Memorial Stadium Wichita Falls, Texas none N/A
1983–1984 Johnson Hagood Stadium Charleston, South Carolina The Citadel Bulldogs none
1985–1986 Tacoma Dome Tacoma, Washington none N/A
1987 Minidome Pocatello, Idaho Idaho State Bengals none
1988 Holt Arena
1989–1991 Paulson Stadium Statesboro, Georgia Georgia Southern Eagles 2: 1989, 1990
1992–1996 Marshall University Stadium Huntington, West Virginia Marshall Thundering Herd 4: 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996
1997–2009 Finley Stadium Chattanooga, Tennessee Chattanooga Mocs none
2010–2011 Pizza Hut Park Frisco, Texas none N/A
2012 FC Dallas Stadium
2013–2025 Toyota Stadium
2026–future FirstBank Stadium Nashville, Tennessee Vanderbilt Commodores N/A
Notes
  1. at the time games were played
  2. Earlier name of the same venue.

There have been six instances where a team whose venue was predetermined to host the final game advanced to play for the championship on its own field. Georgia Southern won both title games it played at Paulson Stadium, while Marshall had a 2–2 record in four title games it played at Marshall University Stadium (now known as Joan C. Edwards Stadium).

Non-participants

As of the 2025 season, two FCS conferences usually do not participate in the tournament: the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) and Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC).

The Ivy League has been at the FCS level since 1982 and prohibits its members from awarding athletic scholarships in any sport and plays a strict ten-game regular season. Through the 2024 season, it did not participate in any postseason football, citing academic concerns. The Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (consisting of student-athletes at all sports, including those who participated in the NCAA tournament in their respective sport) recommended the change be reversed, and on December 18, 2024, the Ivy League announced starting with the 2025 season, the league champion will participate in the tournament.

The MEAC and SWAC, two conferences consisting of historically black colleges and universities, opt to play the Celebration Bowl (which was established in 2015) instead of the FCS tournament. MEAC gave up its automatic spot in the tournament prior to the 2015 season, while the SWAC's regular season extends through the Turkey Day Classic and Bayou Classic at the end of November and the SWAC Championship Game is played in December. Teams from the MEAC and SWAC may accept at-large bids, so long as they aren't committed to other postseason games that would conflict with the tournament. The most recent MEAC and SWAC teams to accept bids were the 2023 North Carolina Central Eagles and 2021 Florida A&M Rattlers, respectively.

Historically, conferences in FCS that did not offer athletic scholarships were not granted automatic bids into the tournament and, although in theory were eligible for at-large bids, never received any. The last non-scholarship conference in the subdivision, the Pioneer Football League, now receives a tournament bid, which was initiated with the 2013 postseason.

FCS conferences

Membership numbers reflect the 2025 FCS season.

Conference Nickname Founded Football members Sports Headquarters
Big Sky Conference Big Sky 1963 12 15 Farmington, Utah
Big South Conference Big South 1983 2 19 Charlotte, North Carolina
CAA Football CAA 1946 14 1 Richmond, Virginia
Ivy League 1954 8 33 Princeton, New Jersey
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference MEAC 1970 6 16 Norfolk, Virginia
Missouri Valley Football Conference MVFC 1982 10 1 St. Louis, Missouri
Northeast Conference NEC 1981 8 22 Somerset, New Jersey
Ohio Valley Conference OVC 1948 7 18 Brentwood, Tennessee
Patriot League 1986 8 24 Center Valley, Pennsylvania
Pioneer Football League PFL 1991 11 1 St. Louis, Missouri
Southern Conference SoCon 1921 9 20 Spartanburg, South Carolina
Southland Conference 1963 10 17 Frisco, Texas
Southwestern Athletic Conference SWAC 1920 12 18 Birmingham, Alabama
United Athletic Conference UAC 2022 9 1 Englewood, Colorado
Notes
  1. The Big South and Ohio Valley Conference effectively merged their football leagues in 2023. Both leagues share a single automatic playoff berth.
  2. CAA Football is administered by the multi-sports Coastal Athletic Association but is a separate legal entity.
  3. Although CAA Football did not exist in its current form until 2007, it claims the football histories of the Yankee Conference (formed in 1946, played football from 1947 to 1995) and Atlantic 10 Conference (football from 1996 to 2006). It does not claim the history of the New England Conference (1938–1946), even though four of the six charter Yankee Conference members were NEC members in its final season.
  4. The Ivy League abstained from the championship tournament and all postseason play until the end of the 2024 season. Starting in 2025, the Ivy League champion will participate in the NCAA tournament.
  5. The MEAC champion, since 2015, forgoes its automatic bid to allow its champion to participate in the Celebration Bowl. Non-champions are eligible for at-large bids (an example being the 2016 North Carolina A&T Aggies football team, which now plays in CAA Football.).
  6. The SWAC abstains from the championship tournament to allow for a longer regular season, a conference final, and participation in the Celebration Bowl against the MEAC champion since 2015.
  7. Formed in 2022 as a joint venture of the Atlantic Sun Conference and Western Athletic Conference football playing members; first season in 2023.

Champions

Championship game history

For each season since the inaugural year of Division I-AA play, 1978, the following table lists the date of each title game and the champion. The score and runner-up are also noted, along with the host city, game attendance, and head coach of the championship team.

Ed. Season Date Champion Score Runner-up Location Attendance Winning
head coach
1
1978 December 16, 1978 Florida A&M 35–28 Massachusetts Wichita Falls, TX 13,604 Rudy Hubbard
2
1979 December 15, 1979 Eastern Kentucky 30–7 Lehigh Orlando, FL 5,200 Roy Kidd
3
1980 December 20, 1980 Boise State 31–29 Eastern Kentucky Sacramento, CA 8,157 Jim Criner
4
1981 December 19, 1981 Idaho State 34–23 Eastern Kentucky Wichita Falls, TX 11,002 Dave Kragthorpe
5
1982 December 18, 1982 Eastern Kentucky (2) 17–14 Delaware Wichita Falls, TX 11,257 Roy Kidd (2)
6
1983 December 17, 1983 Southern Illinois 43–7 Western Carolina Charleston, SC 15,950 Rey Dempsey
7
1984 December 15, 1984 Montana State 19–6 Louisiana Tech Charleston, SC 9,125 Dave Arnold
8
1985 December 21, 1985 Georgia Southern 44–42 Furman Tacoma, WA 5,306 Erk Russell
9
1986 December 19, 1986 Georgia Southern (2) 48–21 Arkansas State Tacoma, WA 4,419 Erk Russell (2)
10
1987 December 19, 1987 Northeast Louisiana 43–42 Marshall Pocatello, ID 11,513 Pat Collins
11
1988 December 17, 1988 Furman 17–12 Georgia Southern Pocatello, ID 9,714 Jimmy Satterfield
12
1989 December 16, 1989 Georgia Southern (3) 37–34 Stephen F. Austin Statesboro, GA 25,725 Erk Russell (3)
13
1990 December 15, 1990 Georgia Southern (4) 36–13 Nevada Statesboro, GA 23,204 Tim Stowers
14
1991 December 21, 1991 Youngstown State 25–17 Marshall Statesboro, GA 12,667 Jim Tressel
15
1992 December 19, 1992 Marshall 31–28 Youngstown State Huntington, WV 31,304 Jim Donnan
16
1993 December 18, 1993 Youngstown State (2) 17–5 Marshall Huntington, WV 29,218 Jim Tressel (2)
17
1994 December 17, 1994 Youngstown State (3) 28–14 Boise State Huntington, WV 27,674 Jim Tressel (3)
18
1995 December 16, 1995 Montana 22–20 Marshall Huntington, WV 32,106 Don Read
19
1996 December 21, 1996 Marshall (2) 49–29 Montana Huntington, WV 30,052 Bob Pruett
20
1997 December 20, 1997 Youngstown State (4) 10–9 McNeese State Chattanooga, TN 14,771 Jim Tressel (4)
21
1998 December 19, 1998 Massachusetts 55–43 Georgia Southern Chattanooga, TN 17,501 Mark Whipple
22
1999 December 18, 1999 Georgia Southern (5) 59–24 Youngstown State Chattanooga, TN 20,052 Paul Johnson
23
2000 December 16, 2000 Georgia Southern (6) 27–25 Montana Chattanooga, TN 17,156 Paul Johnson (2)
24
2001 December 21, 2001 Montana (2) 13–6 Furman Chattanooga, TN 12,698 Joe Glenn
25
2002 December 20, 2002 Western Kentucky 34–14 McNeese State Chattanooga, TN 12,360 Jack Harbaugh
26
2003 December 19, 2003 Delaware 40–0 Colgate Chattanooga, TN 14,281 K. C. Keeler
27
2004 December 17, 2004 James Madison 31–21 Montana Chattanooga, TN 16,771 Mickey Matthews
28
2005 December 16, 2005 Appalachian State 21–16 Northern Iowa Chattanooga, TN 20,236 Jerry Moore
29
2006 December 15, 2006 Appalachian State (2) 28–17 Massachusetts Chattanooga, TN 22,808 Jerry Moore (2)
30
2007 December 14, 2007 Appalachian State (3) 49–21 Delaware Chattanooga, TN 23,010 Jerry Moore (3)
31
2008 December 19, 2008 Richmond 24–7 Montana Chattanooga, TN 17,823 Mike London
32
2009 December 18, 2009 Villanova 23–21 Montana Chattanooga, TN 14,328 Andy Talley
33
2010 January 7, 2011 Eastern Washington 20–19 Delaware Frisco, TX 13,027 Beau Baldwin
34
2011 January 7, 2012 North Dakota State 17–6 Sam Houston State Frisco, TX 20,586 Craig Bohl
35
2012 January 5, 2013 North Dakota State (2) 39–13 Sam Houston State Frisco, TX 21,411 Craig Bohl (2)
36
2013 January 4, 2014 North Dakota State (3) 35–7 Towson Frisco, TX 19,802 Craig Bohl (3)
37
2014 January 10, 2015 North Dakota State (4) 29–27 Illinois State Frisco, TX 20,918 Chris Klieman
38
2015 January 9, 2016 North Dakota State (5) 37–10 Jacksonville State Frisco, TX 21,836 Chris Klieman (2)
39
2016 January 7, 2017 James Madison (2) 28–14 Youngstown State Frisco, TX 14,423 Mike Houston
40
2017 January 6, 2018 North Dakota State (6) 17–13 James Madison Frisco, TX 19,090 Chris Klieman (3)
41
2018 January 5, 2019 North Dakota State (7) 38–24 Eastern Washington Frisco, TX 17,802 Chris Klieman (4)
42
2019 January 11, 2020 North Dakota State (8) 28–20 James Madison Frisco, TX 17,866 Matt Entz
43
2020 May 16, 2021 Sam Houston 23–21 South Dakota State Frisco, TX 7,840 K. C. Keeler (2)
44
2021 January 8, 2022 North Dakota State (9) 38–10 Montana State Frisco, TX 18,942 Matt Entz (2)
45
2022 January 8, 2023 South Dakota State 45–21 North Dakota State Frisco, TX 18,023 John Stiegelmeier
46
2023 January 7, 2024 South Dakota State (2) 23–3 Montana Frisco, TX 19,512 Jimmy Rogers
47
2024 January 6, 2025 North Dakota State (10) 35–32 Montana State Frisco, TX 18,005 Tim Polasek
48
2025 January 5, 2026 Nashville, TN
49
2026 January 2027 Nashville, TN

Notes:

  • 1987 champion Northeast Louisiana has been known as the University of Louisiana at Monroe (Louisiana–Monroe) since 1999.
  • The 2020–21 school year was the first in which Sam Houston State University called its athletic program "Sam Houston", without the word "State".
  • Attendance at the 2020 championship game (played in May 2021) was limited due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Appearances by team

Updated through the January 2024 championship game, following the 2023 football season.

Key

  •  CH  National champion
  •  RU  National runner-up
  •  SF  Semifinals
  •  QF  Quarterfinals
  •  12   16  Round of 12 (1982 through 1985), Round of 16 (1986 to present)
  •  ✖  First Round (2010 to present, except for 2020)

Beginning in 1981, the NCAA seeded the top 4 teams. This expanded to the top 5 in 2010, the top 8 in 2013, and the top 16 in 2024. In all of these years, the team's seed is shown in superscript next to the result.

School Conference
(as of 2025)
# QF SF CG CH 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25

North Dakota State    
MVFC 16 15 13 11 10 QF ²CH ¹CH ¹CH ²CH ³CH ¹SF ²CH ¹CH ¹CH QF ²CH ³RU SF ²CH ¹16
Georgia Southern    
FBS 19 17 13 8 6 CH ⁴CH QF ²RU ¹CH ³CH ¹QF QF QF ¹RU ²CH ³CH ²SF ³SF ⁴16 16 SF ³SF ⁵SF
Youngstown State    
MVFC 14 9 8 7 4 16 QF ²16 CH RU CH ¹CH CH RU 16 ⁴SF RU 16 ¹⁵✖
Appalachian State    
FBS 20 12 6 3 3 16 ¹SF 16 16 16 QF ²QF QF ⁴16 SF QF 16 ²CH ¹CH CH ²QF SF ¹QF 16 16
Montana    
Big Sky 30 16 12 8 2 12 16 SF ²16 SF CH ¹RU 16 16 16 ¹RU ¹CH QF 16 RU 16 ²SF ³16 ⁴RU ¹RU ⁴SF ⁸16 16 16 ⁶QF ⁶QF 16 ²RU ¹⁴16 ³QF
Marshall    
FBS 8 8 7 6 2 RU QF RU CH RU ²SF RU ²CH
Eastern Kentucky    
UAC 23 9 7 4 2 CH RU ¹RU ¹CH 12 12 SF QF SF 16 16 ²SF 16 16 QF 16 16 16 16
James Madison    
FBS 18 9 7 4 2 16 QF QF 16 16 CH 16 16 ¹SF 16 ⁵16 ⁴CH ¹RU 16 ²RU ³SF ³SF
South Dakota State    
MVFC 15 8 7 3 2 16 16 16 16 ⁸QF ⁵SF ⁵SF ⁷16 ¹RU SF ¹CH ¹CH ³SF ¹⁴16
Delaware    
FBS 19 13 8 4 1 QF ³RU QF 16 ⁴16 SF QF QF 16 ⁴SF ²SF ²CH QF RU ³RU SF 16 16
Sam Houston    
FBS 13 10 7 3 1 16 16 QF SF ¹RU ²RU 16 SF SF ⁵QF ⁶SF ²CH ¹QF
Furman    
SoCon 20 10 6 3 1 12 ³SF ³RU 16 ⁴CH ²SF QF QF 16 16 ³RU 16 ²QF SF 16 16 16 16 ⁷QF
Montana State    
Big Sky 15 9 5 3 1 ³CH ¹16 16 QF ⁴16 QF ³QF 16 ⁵SF ⁸RU ⁴SF ⁶16 ¹RU ²QF
UMass    
FBS 8 5 3 3 1 RU 16 16 CH QF 16 ³RU QF
Eastern Washington    
Big Sky 15 10 6 2 1 QF 16 ³SF QF 16 QF 16 ⁵CH SF ³SF ⁴QF ²SF ³RU 16 16
Boise State    
FBS 5 4 4 2 1 CH ⁴SF 16 SF ³RU
Villanova    
CAA 17 9 3 1 1 16 16 16 16 ¹QF SF QF ²CH SF ⁶QF 16 ⁵QF ⁸QF ¹¹16 ¹²QF
Richmond    
Patriot 14 8 3 1 1 QF 16 ³16 QF QF SF CH ⁴QF 16 ⁷SF QF 16 16 ⁹✖
Southern Illinois    
MVFC 11 6 2 1 1 ¹CH 16 ¹16 QF QF ⁴SF 16 QF QF 16 16
Florida A&M    
SWAC 8 3 2 1 1 CH 16 16 QF SF 16 16
Western Kentucky    
FBS 8 5 1 1 1 16 QF QF QF 16 CH QF 16
Louisiana–Monroe    
FBS 4 2 1 1 1 ²CH 16 ¹QF 16
Idaho State    
Big Sky 2 1 1 1 1 ²CH 12
McNeese    
Southland 16 6 3 2 - 16 QF ³QF ⁴QF ¹SF RU 16 16 16 RU ¹16 16 ²16 16 ⁶16 ⁴16
Northern Iowa    
MVFC 22 14 7 1 - ⁴SF ³SF 16 ³QF ³SF 16 16 QF ³SF SF QF RU ¹QF ³SF ⁵QF 16 QF 16 16 QF
Nevada    
FBS 7 7 6 1 - SF SF SF ²SF ¹SF ⁴RU ¹QF
Illinois State    
MVFC 10 7 2 1 - 16 SF QF QF ⁵RU ²QF QF ¹²16 QF
Lehigh    
Patriot 13 6 2 1 - RU SF QF 16 QF QF 16 16 QF 16 ⁵16
Stephen F. Austin    
Southland 9 5 2 1 - QF ³RU 16 SF QF 16 ⁷QF
Louisiana Tech    
FBS 2 2 2 1 - ²SF RU
Colgate    
Patriot 11 4 1 1 - QF 12 16 16 16 ⁴RU 16 16 QF ⁸QF
FBS 4 4 1 1 - QF QF ²RU QF
Jacksonville State    
FBS 10 3 1 1 - 16 16 16 QF ³16 ¹RU ³16 ³16 16 ⁴QF
Towson    
CAA 3 1 1 1 - 16 ⁷RU
Western Carolina    
SoCon 1 1 1 1 - RU
New Hampshire    
CAA 19 9 2 - - 16 16 QF ¹QF QF 16 QF QF QF 16 16 SF ¹SF 16 QF 16 ¹⁶✖
Idaho    
Big Sky 14 6 2 - - QF 12 16 ⁴16 ¹SF ⁴16 QF 16 SF 16 16 ⁴QF ⁸QF
William & Mary    
CAA 11 5 2 - - 16 16 QF 16 QF 16 ³SF SF ²16 16 ⁵QF
Troy    
FBS 7 3 2 - - SF 16 ³16 ⁴SF 16 QF ⁴16
Wofford    
SoCon 10 6 1 - - ³SF QF 16 QF 16 QF QF ⁷QF 16
FBS 7 6 1 - - SF ¹QF QF ¹QF QF ⁴QF 16
Weber State    
Big Sky 10 5 1 - - QF 16 QF 16 QF ²QF ³SF 16 16
Western Illinois    
OVC–Big South 11 4 1 - - ³16 16 16 ²QF ⁴SF 16 ²QF QF 16 16
Maine    
CAA 8 4 1 - - 16 16 QF QF 16 QF ⁵16 ⁷SF
Tennessee State    
OVC–Big South 7 3 1 - - QF ⁴SF QF 16 ¹16 16
Rhode Island    
CAA 5 3 1 - - QF ²SF QF ¹⁰16 ⁹16
South Dakota    
MVFC 5 3 1 - - 16 ³QF ⁴SF ¹¹QF
Jackson State    
SWAC 12 2 1 - - SF QF 12 12 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16
MEAC 6 2 1 - - ³SF QF 16 16
Northwestern State    
Southland 6 2 1 - - QF 16 ²SF 16 16 16
Samford    
SoCon 6 2 1 - - SF 16 ⁶QF
Murray State    
MVFC 5 2 1 - - SF 16 ⁴16 QF 16
Incarnate Word    
Southland 4 2 1 - - 16 ⁷SF ⁶QF
Grambling State    
SWAC 3 1 1 - - SF 12 16
Albany    
CAA 3 1 1 - - 16 ⁵SF
UCF    
FBS 2 1 1 - - SF 16
Texas State    
FBS 2 1 1 - - ⁴SF 16
Florida Atlantic    
FBS 1 1 1 - - SF
Eastern Illinois    
OVC–Big South 16 4 - - - QF 12 ³QF QF 16 16 16 ⁴16 16 16 16 16 ³16 ²QF
UC Davis    
CAA 4 3 - - - ⁶QF ⁵QF ⁸QF
Holy Cross    
Patriot 6 2 - - - ²QF 16 16 16 ⁸QF
Coastal Carolina    
FBS 6 2 - - - 16 16 QF ⁷QF
Boston University    
defunct 5 2 - - - 12 QF 12 ⁴QF 16
Hofstra    
defunct 5 2 - - - 16 16 ³QF QF 16
Kennesaw State    
FBS 4 2 - - - QF ⁴QF 16 16
Indiana State    
MVFC 3 2 - - - QF ⁴QF 16
SoCon 3 2 - - - QF ⁷QF
Nicholls    
Southland 7 1 - - - QF 16 16 16 16
Northern Arizona    
Big Sky 7 1 - - - 16 16 16 QF
Fordham    
Patriot 6 1 - - - QF 16 16 16
Southeastern Louisiana    
Southland 6 1 - - - ⁴QF 16 16 16 ¹⁶✖
North Dakota    
MVFC 6 1 - - - ⁷16 QF 16
Chattanooga    
SoCon 5 1 - - - 12 ⁸QF 16 16 16
North Carolina A&T    
CAA 5 1 - - - 16 16 QF 16
The Citadel    
SoCon 5 1 - - - 16 16 ²QF 16 ⁶16
FBS 4 1 - - - ⁴QF 16 16 16
Missouri State    
FBS 4 1 - - - QF 16 16
Cal Poly    
CAA 4 1 - - - QF 16 16
Sacramento State    
Big Sky 4 1 - - - ⁴16 ⁴16 ²QF 16
Alcorn State    
SWAC 3 1 - - - ¹QF 16 16
Mercer    
SoCon 3 1 - - - 16 ⁷QF ⁶16
Old Dominion    
FBS 2 1 - - - 16 ⁴QF
Charleston Southern    
OVC–Big South 2 1 - - - ⁸QF
Austin Peay    
UAC 2 1 - - - QF
Tarleton State    
UAC 2 1 - - - ¹³16 ⁴QF
UConn    
FBS 1 1 - - - QF
Hampton    
CAA 5 - - - - 16 16 16 ³16 16
Bethune–Cookman    
SWAC 5 - - - - 16 16 16
Lafayette    
Patriot 5 - - - - 16 16 16
Southeast Missouri State    
OVC–Big South 5 - - - - 16 16
Central Arkansas    
UAC 5 - - - - 16 16 16 ⁴16 ⁸16
San Diego    
Pioneer 5 - - - - 16 16
Elon    
CAA 4 - - - - 16
Stony Brook    
CAA 4 - - - - 16 16 16
Sacred Heart    
Northeast 4 - - - - 16
Central Connecticut    
Northeast 4 - - - -
UT Martin    
OVC–Big South 3 - - - - 16 16 16
Southern Utah    
UAC 3 - - - - ⁸16
Duquesne    
Northeast 3 - - - - 16
Monmouth    
CAA 3 - - - - 16 16
Davidson    
Pioneer 3 - - - - 16
Drake    
Pioneer 3 - - - -
Portland State    
Big Sky 2 - - - - 16 ⁶16
OVC–Big South 2 - - - - ¹³✖
Northeast 2 - - - -
Lamar    
Southland 2 - - - -
Gardner–Webb    
OVC–Big South 2 - - - - 16
Abilene Christian    
UAC 2 - - - - ¹⁵16 ¹⁰16
SWAC 1 - - - - 12
Akron    
FBS 1 - - - - 12
Howard    
MEAC 1 - - - - 16
Northeastern    
defunct 1 - - - - ⁴16
Delaware State    
MEAC 1 - - - - 16
Robert Morris    
Northeast 1 - - - -
Norfolk State    
MEAC 1 - - - -
Wagner    
Northeast 1 - - - - 16
Butler    
Pioneer 1 - - - -
Liberty    
FBS 1 - - - - 16
Morgan State    
MEAC 1 - - - -
Dayton    
Pioneer 1 - - - -
VMI    
SoCon 1 - - - - 16
MEAC 1 - - - -
Yale    
Ivy League 1 - - - - 16
Harvard    
Ivy League 1 - - - -

MVPs

Since 2009, a Most Outstanding Player has been named for each final.

Season Player Team Position
2009 Matt Szczur Villanova WR
2010 Bo Levi Mitchell Eastern Washington QB
2011 Travis Beck North Dakota State LB
2012 Brock Jensen North Dakota State QB
2013 Brock Jensen North Dakota State QB
2014 Carson Wentz North Dakota State QB
2015 Carson Wentz North Dakota State QB
2016 Khalid Abdullah James Madison RB
2017 Easton Stick North Dakota State QB
2018 Darrius Shepherd North Dakota State WR
2019 Trey Lance North Dakota State QB
2020 Jequez Ezzard Sam Houston WR
2021 Hunter Luepke North Dakota State FB
2022 Mark Gronowski South Dakota State QB
2023 Mark Gronowski South Dakota State QB
2024 Cam Miller North Dakota State QB

Note: starting with the 2010 season, the final game is played in the next calendar year.

Most appearances

The following table summarizes appearances in the final, by team, since the 1978 season, the first year of Division I-AA (the predecessor of FCS).

Updated through the January 2025 championship game (47 finals, 94 total appearances). Schools are listed by their current athletic brand names, which do not always match those used in a given season.

Team Record App.
Games W L Win % Won Lost
North Dakota State
11
10 1 .909 2011*, 2012*, 2013*, 2014*, 2015*,
2017*, 2018*, 2019*, 2021*, 2024*
2022*
Georgia Southern^
8
6 2 .750 1985, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1999, 2000 1988, 1998
Montana
8
2 6 .250 1995, 2001 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2023*
Youngstown State
7
4 3 .571 1991, 1993, 1994, 1997 1992, 1999, 2016*
Marshall^
6
2 4 .333 1992, 1996 1987, 1991, 1993, 1995
James Madison^
4
2 2 .500 2004, 2016* 2017*, 2019*
Eastern Kentucky
4
2 2 .500 1979, 1982 1980, 1981
Delaware^
4
1 3 .250 2003 1982, 2007, 2010*
Appalachian State^
3
3 0 1.000 2005, 2006, 2007
South Dakota State
3
2 1 .667 2022*, 2023* 2020*
Montana State
3
1 2 .333 1984 2021*, 2024*
Furman
3
1 2 .333 1988 1985, 2001
Sam Houston^
3
1 2 .333 2020* 2011*, 2012*
Massachusetts^
3
1 2 .333 1998 1978, 2006
Boise State^
2
1 1 .500 1980 1994
Eastern Washington
2
1 1 .500 2010* 2018*
McNeese
2
0 2 .000 1997, 2002
Florida A&M
1
1 0 1.000 1978
Idaho State
1
1 0 1.000 1981
Louisiana–Monroe^
1
1 0 1.000 1987
Richmond
1
1 0 1.000 2008
Southern Illinois
1
1 0 1.000 1983
Villanova
1
1 0 1.000 2009
Western Kentucky^
1
1 0 1.000 2002
Arkansas State^
1
0 1 .000 1986
Colgate
1
0 1 .000 2003
Illinois State
1
0 1 .000 2014*
Jacksonville State^
1
0 1 .000 2015*
Lehigh
1
0 1 .000 1979
Louisiana Tech^
1
0 1 .000 1984
Nevada^
1
0 1 .000 1990
Northern Iowa
1
0 1 .000 2005
Stephen F. Austin
1
0 1 .000 1989
Towson
1
0 1 .000 2013*
Western Carolina
1
0 1 .000 1983
* Denotes finals played in the following calendar year.
^ Team is now a member of the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS).

Appearances by conference

The following table summarizes appearances in the final, by conference, since the 1978 season, the first year of Division I-AA (the predecessor of FCS).

Updated through the January 2025 championship game (47 finals, 94 total appearances).

Conference Record App
Games W L Win % Won Lost
MVFC 20 14 6 .700 1997, 2002, 2011*, 2012*, 2013*, 2014*, 2015*, 2017*, 2018*, 2019*, 2021*, 2022*, 2023*, 2024* 1999, 2005, 2014*, 2016*, 2020*, 2022*
Big Sky 17 6 11 .353 1980, 1981, 1984, 1995, 2001, 2010* 1990, 1994, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2018*, 2021*, 2023*, 2024*
SoCon 16 8 8 .500 1988, 1992, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2006, 2007 1983, 1985, 1987, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1998, 2001
Independent 11 7 4 .636 1985, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994 1979, 1982, 1988, 1992
Southland 9 2 7 .222 1987, 2020* 1984, 1986, 1989, 1997, 2002, 2011*, 2012*
CAA Football 8 3 5 .375 2008, 2009, 2016* 2007, 2010*, 2013*, 2017*, 2019*
OVC 5 2 3 .400 1979, 1982 1980, 1981, 2015*
A-10 4 3 1 .750 1998, 2003, 2004 2006
MVC 1 1 0 1.000 1983  
SIAC 1 1 0 1.000 1978  
Patriot League 1 0 1 .000   2003
Yankee 1 0 1 .000   1978
  • Games marked with an asterisk (*) were played in the following calendar year.
  • Records reflect conference affiliations at the time each game was played.
  • Conferences in italics are defunct or not currently active in FCS.
  • The Missouri Valley Conference (MVC) and Missouri Valley Football Conference (MVFC) are historically related but independently operating entities. MVFC was known as the Gateway Football Conference until June 2008.
  • The Yankee Conference, Atlantic 10 Conference (A-10), and CAA Football, although separately chartered, are effectively the same entity in football. The Yankee Conference, formerly an all-sports conference but a football-only league since 1976, was effectively merged into the A-10 after the 1996 season. In turn, the A-10 shut down its football league after the 2006 season, with the multi-sports Colonial Athletic Association (since renamed the Coastal Athletic Association) taking over administration of that league as the separate entity of CAA Football.
  • Teams from the same conference have met in the championship game following the 2014 and 2022 seasons. Both matchups involved MVFC teams.

Game records

This table lists records for the Championship Game.

Record Qty. Team Opponent Edition
Most points scored (one team) 59 Georgia Southern Youngstown State 1999
Most points scored (losing team) 43 Georgia Southern UMass 1998
Most points scored (both teams) 98 UMass (55) Georgia Southern (43)
Fewest points allowed 0 Delaware Colgate 2003
Largest margin of victory 40 Delaware (40) Colgate (0)
Attendance 32,106 Montana vs. Marshall 1995

Media coverage

The game has been televised on an ESPN affiliated network since 1995.

Season Network
1978–1981 ABC
1982 CBS Sports
1983 ABC
1984 Satellite Program Network
1985–1989 ESPN
1990–1994 CBS
1995–2001 ESPN
2002–2018 ESPN2
2019–2020 ABC
2021 ESPN2
2022–2023 ABC
2024–present ESPN

Note: starting with the 2010 season, the final game is played in the next calendar year.

Date Network Play-by-play announcers Color commentators Sideline reporter
January 6, 2025 ESPN Dave Flemming Brock Osweiler Stormy Buonatony
January 7, 2024 ABC Roy Philpott Roddy Jones Taylor McGregor
January 8, 2023 Jay Walker Paul Carcaterra
January 8, 2022 ESPN2 Dave Flemming Stormy Buonatony
May 16, 2021 ABC Dave Pasch Andre Ware Kris Budden
January 11, 2020 Mark Jones Dusty Dvoracek Olivia Dekker
January 5, 2019 ESPN2 Taylor Zarzour Matt Stinchcomb Kris Budden
January 6, 2018 Dave Neal Quint Kessenich
January 7, 2017 Anish Shroff Ahmad D. Brooks
January 9, 2016
January 10, 2015 Kelly Stouffer Cara Capuano
January 4, 2014
January 5, 2013 Dave Neal Jay Walker
January 7, 2012 David Diaz-Infante Allison Williams
January 7, 2011 Andre Ware Jon Berger
December 18, 2009 Eric Collins Brock Huard Cara Campuano
December 19, 2008 Bob Wischusen
December 14, 2007 Sean McDonough Chris Spielman Rob Stone
December 15, 2006 Dave Pasch Rod Gilmore and Trevor Matich Dave Ryan
December 16, 2005 Stacey Dales-Schuman
December 17, 2004 Rob Stone
December 19, 2003 Sean McDonough Mike Golic and Rod Gilmore Rob Stone
December 20, 2002 Ron Franklin Mike Gottfried Adrian Karsten
December 21, 2001 ESPN
December 16, 2000 Rich Waltz Rod Gilmore Dave Ryan
December 18, 1999 Don McPherson
December 19, 1998 Dave Barnett Bill Curry Dave Ryan
December 20, 1997
December 21, 1996 Brad Nessler Gary Danielson
December 16, 1995 Joel Meyers Todd Christensen Adrian Karsten
December 17, 1994 CBS Sean McDonough Steve Davis Dave Logan
December 18, 1993 Dan Jiggetts Jim Gray
December 19, 1992 Jim Nantz John Robinson
December 21, 1991 Brad Nessler Dan Jiggetts
December 15, 1990 Jim Nantz Tim Brant John Dockery
December 16, 1989 ESPN Barry Tompkins Stan White
December 17, 1988 Tim Brando
December 19, 1987 Denny Schreiner
December 19, 1986 Tim Brando Kevin Kiley
December 21, 1985 Mike Patrick Sam Adkins
December 15, 1984 Satellite Program Network Bill Flemming Steve Davis
December 17, 1983 ABC Keith Jackson Frank Broyles
December 18, 1982 CBS Lindsey Nelson Steve Davis
December 19, 1981 ABC Bill Flemming Frank Broyles
December 20, 1980
December 15, 1979
December 16, 1978

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