SCHOOL NAME

2022 presentation college football.

  • Subscribe With... Subscribe with... Download (iOS / Win) Import (iOS / WIN) Google Calendar RSS Feed
  • Choose A Season: 2022 Presentation College Football 2021 Presentation College Football 2020 Presentation College Football 2019 Presentation College Football 2018 Presentation College Football 2017 Presentation College Football 2016 Presentation College Football 2015 Presentation College Football 2014 Presentation College Football 2013 Presentation College Football

Schedule/Results

  • Twitter Facebook Pinterest
  • Virtual Tour
  • Applications
  • Entering Class Stats
  • Accreditation
  • Faculty Composition
  • Distance Learning
  • International
  • Tuition And Fees
  • Room And Board
  • Financial Aid
  • Graduation & Retention
  • Return On Investment

Presentation College Sports Information

If you want to know more about the Presentation College sports programs, you’ve come to the right place. Here we present data on the program as a whole as well as information about each varsity sport offered at the school.

  • Athletics Overview

The Presentation College Athletics Program

What division is presentation college in.

As a member of the NAIA Division II, Presentation College competes in the North Star Athletic Association conference.

Presentation College Sports-Related Financial Aid

There are 285 athletes who take part in at least one sport at the school, 202 men and 83 women. On average, these students receive around $4,314 in sports-related student aid, which can help defray a lot of college costs. Breaking it down by gender, the average amount of sports aid awarded to men is $4,154 and the average awarded to women is $4,704.

undefined

Presentation College Coaches

Of the 8 head coaches at Presentation College, 4 are leaders of men’s teams and 4 lead women’s teams. Women’s team head coaches make an average of $38,000 and men’s team head coaches make about $46,890 each year.

In addition to the head coaches of Presentation College sports, there are 7 assistant coaches of men’s teams and 2 assitant coaches of women’s teams. The average salary is $34,067 a year for assistant coaches of men’s teams and $44,057 for assistant coaches of women’s teams. Note, the individual salary of coaches is often dependent on the team they coach.

Gain Exposure & Get Discovered by College Coaches

Did the presentation college athletics program make money.

Presentation College sports teams made $3,586,711 in revenue, but they did have to spend $3,098,624 for expenses. This means the team turned a profit of $488,087, which is great since many schools have to declare a loss.

undefined

Likewise, money made for women’s athletics can vary quite a bit by sport. Here’s what the comparison looks like for women’s sports at Presentation College.

undefined

A Note About Presentation College Sports Rankings

Below we give a summary of the data we have for each sport at Presentation College, including rankings when the school made it to one of our Best Schools for a Sport lists . In order to place in College Factual’s sports rankings, you have to have more than a good sports team. You need to offer a quality education as well. We believe it’s important to get a great education, whether you participate in sports or not.

Popular Sports at Presentation College

Presentation college men’s baseball.

The 34 players of the Presentation College men’s baseball team are led by a head coach and an assistant coach.

On the money side of things, the Presentation College baseball program brought home $490,591 in revenue and paid out $323,285 in total expenses. So, the program was a moneymaker for the school, bringing in $167,306 in net profit. Mark this down as a good thing.

undefined

Presentation College Women’s Basketball

The head coach and assistant coach train and lead the 17 players of the Presentation College women’s basketball team.

In terms of financials, the Presentation College women’s basketball program paid out $241,233 in expenses and made $131,583 in total revenue. This is a bit of a downer since it means that the program lost money, $-109,650 to be exact.

undefined

Presentation College Men’s Football

There are 105 players on the Presentation College men’s football team, and they are led by one head coach and 5 assistant coaches.

On the money side of things, the Presentation College football program brought home $1,444,245 in revenue and paid out $936,577 in total expenses. That is, the program raked in a net profit of $507,668 for the school. Not all college sports teams can say that.

undefined

Presentation College Soccer

Presentation college men’s soccer.

The Presentation College men’s soccer team is made up of 26 players who, in turn, are trained and guided by a head coach and an assistant coach.

The men’s soccer program at Presentation College made $334,456 in revenue and spent $166,645 in expenses. That is, the program raked in a net profit of $167,811 for the school. Not all college sports teams can say that.

undefined

Presentation College Women’s Soccer

The Presentation College women’s soccer team is made up of 24 players who, in turn, are trained and guided by a head coach and an assistant coach.

In terms of financials, the Presentation College women’s soccer program paid out $200,614 in expenses and made $288,291 in total revenue. This equates to a net profit of $87,677 for the program. That’s definitely a big plus.

undefined

Presentation College Women’s Softball

The head coach and assistant coach train and lead the 16 players of the Presentation College women’s softball team.

In terms of financials, the Presentation College women’s softball program paid out $189,966 in expenses and made $199,250 in total revenue. So, the program was a moneymaker for the school, bringing in $9,284 in net profit. Mark this down as a good thing.

undefined

Presentation College Volleyball

Presentation college women’s volleyball.

The 26-member women’s volleyball team at Presentation College is kept in shape by one head coach and one assistant coach.

In terms of financials, the Presentation College women’s volleyball program paid out $257,320 in expenses and made $207,077 in total revenue. That’s not such good news since it means the program lost money to the tune of $-50,243.

undefined

Get your FREE recruiting profile, assessment & game plan!

Notes & references.

It’s possible that you may not find your favorite sport on this page, since we only include those sports on which we have data.

Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System

National Center for Education Statistics

U.S. Department of Education’s Equity in Athletics Data Analysis (EADA)

The academic progress rate (APR) of each team was made available by the NCAA .

Image Credit: By User:Orderinchaos under License

More about our data sources and methodologies .

Popular Reports

Compare your school options.

what division is presentation college football

2022-2023 Catalog

  • VOL. LXVII: Accreditation
  • The President's Message
  • The College
  • Financial Aid & Financial Information
  • Student Interests

Intercollegiate Athletics – Men’s and Women’s

  • Student Support Services
  • Immunizations
  • On-Campus Housing
  • Dining Services
  • Student Welfare
  • Sexual Harassment Policies and Procedures
  • Drug-Free Workplace
  • Tobacco-Free Campus
  • Student Appeal/Grievance Process
  • Academic Policies
  • Graduate Studies
  • Division of Pre-Professional Studies
  • Division of Nursing
  • Course Descriptions
  • College Administration & Faculty
  • Disclaimer, Nondiscrimination, and Compliance
  • Academic Calendar
  • Sponsored by the Presentation Sisters
  • Addenda to 2022-2023 Catalog
  • Catalog Home
  • All Catalogs

Up one level

Campus Life

{{title}}

Original Saints have left mark on Presentation College team

Fifteen pc seniors have been with team since beginning.

They took a leap of faith, and now it’s paying dividends.

Presentation College played its first season of football in fall 2011. The Saints faced many ups and downs that first season, they were without a conference for another year and transitioned from NCAA Division III to NAIA last season. However, the players and the coaches stayed the course and they will finish with their first winning season this fall.

“(There was) a lot of blood, sweat and tears that we sacrificed for each other to get to this point,” PC senior linebacker Wyatt Sumption said.

Sumption is one of 15 seniors that have been with the team since the program’s inception. The other original 15 Saints are linebacker Dillon Wasko, quarterback Stephen Braswell, kicker/punter Gavin Voss, wide receiver Matt James, defensive back Gemechu Anderson, linebacker Derek Buthe, defensive back Austin Lake, running back Eric Schueth, running back Sam Desai, defensive lineman Corrie Smith-Dennis, linebacker Wade Brandner, offensive lineman Tate Rinehart, wide receiver Jered Tarrell and defensive lineman Kyle Woodward.

Andy Carr, who has been the only head coach in program history, said they call the original 15 seniors the “founding fathers.”

“They are guys that bought into a vision that we would build a foundation for a college football program together,” Carr said.

Carr was named the program’s head coach in April 2010. The program made a goal of 65 players for that first season. So they immediately began recruiting. 

What’s it like being recruited by a program with no prior games under their belts?

“It was kind of a leap of faith, so to speak, because you never know what you are kind of getting into when the program doesn’t have any history whatsoever,” said Braswell, a human, health and performance major set to finish school in December. “You really don’t know what you are getting yourself into.”

The coaching staff turned over a lot of rocks in order to find hidden gems on the recruiting trail. The Saints brought in players from such states as Alaska, Arizona, Washington, Nevada, Montana, Florida and California that first season.

For players like James, who is from Orlando, Fla., he had never heard of Presentation College. His high school coach previously knew Carr and he informed James about the startup program 1,800 miles away in South Dakota. James came on a visit the summer before the first season and knew he wanted to help build the program.

“I felt like I belonged here and I just stayed here all four years,” James said. “This is the place I need to be. Everybody was welcoming. It was comfortable for me to be here.”

The PC coaching staff also made an emphasis, and still does, on recruiting kids from South Dakota, North Dakota and Minnesota. For players like Sumption, who is from Frederick, playing college football close to home appealed to him and it was an easy decision to join the startup program 27 miles down the road.

“I walked into Coach Carr’s office and we probably had about a half an hour conversation,” said Sumption, who is a business major set to graduate in December. “He just made the words sound really good and, ‘This is what we are doing. This is what we’ve got planned.’ He convinced me right off the bat and I was like, ‘I want to play for Presentation College.’ ”

Initially, Presentation College did not have a field to practice on, but now the Saints have a 110,000-square-foot practice field located on campus. The athletic department is also currently in the process building a winter dome on the practice field. The college has also made other improvements to the facilities in recent years.

“It is growing. The school is growing. The program is growing,” said James, who is a sports administration major set to graduate in May.

The football program went through their ups and downs before getting to this point. The Saints lost their first three games in program history and went 3-7 in the first season, which included a 70-20 drubbing vs. St. Scholastica. PC then went through a six-game losing streak in another 3-7 campaign during the 2012 season. Presentation College was also an NCAA Division III independent during the 2012-13 athletic season.

“They knew success wasn’t going to happen immediately and we were all very happy we were able to achieve some levels of success very early that hadn’t been achieved with Division III startup programs,” Carr said. “A lot of that is due to the effort they have and they did to start our program.”

The original 15 kept grinding and they kept coming back year after year and did not leave the program like some of their fellow incoming recruits did.

“It is awesome that 15 guys can stick with the program and really put their hearts in it to build this program,” said Voss, who is from Groton. “We weren’t promised anything coming in. To see where we are at now is just really awesome.”

Presentation College made the transition from Division III to NAIA last season. It joined the North Star Athletic Association last season as well. The Saints had an up-and-down 2013 season, which saw them start 3-1 and finish the season with a three game losing streak. PC went 5-5 last season. The Saints are currently 6-3 and they are guaranteed a winning season.

“To see where we were the first year and where we are now, it’s light-years of where we are at now,” said Voss, who is a business major set to graduate in May. “I wouldn’t have expected to have a first winning season maybe in the first four years, but we’ve managed to do that this year.”

The Saints will host Valley City State at 6 p.m. Saturday at Swisher Field in their regular-season finale. The seniors will be recognized prior to the game.

Presentation College was in contention for a conference title, but its loss against Dickinson State this past Saturday dashed that. However, contending for conference titles are what the program envisioned four years ago.

“It is awesome to say that we are here, that we started this program and we are kind of seeing it be built to what it is now,” said Braswell, who hails from Huachuca City, Ariz. “It is really exciting to see.”

Follow @RyanDeal_AAN on Twitter

Campus Curiosity

Campus Curiosity

College and University Life Made Simple

A football field with a divisional structure overlay

Understanding College Football Divisions: A Comprehensive Guide

In the world of college football, understanding the structure and dynamics of the different divisions is crucial for players, coaches, and fans alike. College football divisions provide a framework for organizing teams based on factors such as competitiveness, resources, and academic priorities. In this comprehensive guide, we will explore the various aspects of college football divisions and shed light on their history, significance, and impact on the game.

Also related, learn  how does college work .

Introduction to College Football Divisions

College football divisions serve as the backbone of the sport, providing a hierarchical structure that categorizes teams based on their resources, competitive level, and geographical distribution. These divisions not only help in organizing competitions but also ensure a level playing field by allowing teams to compete against others with similar characteristics.

Each division has its own set of rules and regulations, eligibility requirements, and postseason opportunities. Understanding the different divisions is crucial for athletes who aspire to play college football, as it helps them navigate the recruitment process, choose the right program, and make informed decisions about their future.

There are currently three main divisions in college football: Division I, Division II, and Division III. Division I is further divided into two subdivisions: the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) and the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). The FBS is known for its high level of competition and includes well-known teams from major conferences, while the FCS consists of smaller schools and conferences.

Division II is considered a middle ground between Division I and Division III, offering a competitive level of play with fewer resources and scholarships compared to Division I. Division III, on the other hand, focuses on the student-athlete experience and does not offer athletic scholarships.

Each division has its own unique characteristics and opportunities, allowing student-athletes to find the right fit based on their goals, abilities, and priorities. It is important for aspiring college football players to research and understand the different divisions to make informed decisions about their athletic and academic future.

History and Evolution of College Football Divisions

The concept of divisions in college football dates back to the late 19th century when college sports began to gain popularity. The initial divisions were primarily based on geographical regions and did not have strict criteria for membership. However, as the sport grew, the need for a more organized system became evident.

In 1973, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) introduced a three-division structure to bring order to college football. This included Division I, Division II, and Division III, each catering to different types of institutions and their athletic programs. Since then, college football divisions have continued to evolve, with several changes implemented to enhance competitiveness and align teams more effectively.

One significant change in college football divisions occurred in 2006 when the NCAA introduced the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) and the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). The FBS, formerly known as Division I-A, consists of larger, more prominent schools that compete for bowl game berths and the national championship. On the other hand, the FCS, formerly known as Division I-AA, includes smaller schools that compete for a separate national championship in a playoff format.

Another notable development in college football divisions is the creation of conference realignment. Over the years, conferences have undergone changes in membership, with schools switching conferences to align themselves with institutions of similar size, geographic location, or competitive level. Conference realignment has had a significant impact on the landscape of college football, leading to the formation of new conferences and the dissolution of others.

The Importance of College Football Divisions

College football divisions play a crucial role in maintaining competitive balance and providing equal opportunities for all participating institutions. By grouping teams with similar resources and commitment to athletics together, divisions ensure that every program has a fair chance of success. This allows colleges of all sizes and profiles to develop a football program that aligns with their institutional mission and objectives.

Moreover, college football divisions facilitate the governance of the sport, enabling administrative bodies such as the NCAA to enforce rules and regulations tailored to each division. These regulations cover various aspects, including recruiting, eligibility, financial aid, and competition guidelines, to ensure a level playing field and uphold the integrity of the game.

Additionally, college football divisions also contribute to the overall excitement and fan engagement of the sport. Divisions create rivalries and intense competition between teams within the same division, leading to highly anticipated matchups and thrilling games. This not only generates enthusiasm among the fans but also boosts ticket sales, television ratings, and overall revenue for the participating institutions.

NCAA Division I: The Premier Level of College Football

At the pinnacle of college football, NCAA Division I stands as the premier level of competition. Division I institutions typically have larger student populations, significant financial resources, and greater media exposure compared to other divisions. Schools within Division I are also classified further into two subdivisions: Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) and Football Championship Subdivision (FCS).

The Football Bowl Subdivision consists of top-tier programs, often referred to as “Power Five” conferences, which include the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), Big Ten Conference, Big 12 Conference, Pacific-12 Conference (Pac-12), and Southeastern Conference (SEC). These conferences are known for their high-profile football programs, extensive resources, and participation in bowl games that showcase the best teams in the nation.

The Football Championship Subdivision, on the other hand, comprises programs that may have fewer resources but are highly competitive nonetheless. FCS schools compete in their own playoff system to determine a national champion, providing a platform for teams with smaller budgets to shine on a national stage.

Within the Football Bowl Subdivision, there is a hierarchy of bowl games that teams strive to qualify for. The most prestigious of these bowl games is the College Football Playoff, which features the top four teams in the nation competing for the national championship. The other bowl games, such as the Rose Bowl, Sugar Bowl, and Orange Bowl, also hold significant importance and are highly sought after by teams.

Exploring the Subdivisions within NCAA Division I

Within the FBS and FCS subdivisions, college football programs consist of a diverse range of institutions, each with its own objectives and approach to athletics. While some universities prioritize football as a means to drive revenue and enhance their national reputation, others place a stronger emphasis on academics, community engagement, or student-athlete experience.

Conference affiliation plays a vital role in shaping the competition landscape within NCAA Division I. Schools within the same conference face each other in regular season play, with conference championships determining postseason opportunities. For example, the SEC, known for its fierce competition and passionate fan base, boasts some of the most storied football programs in college football history.

Another factor that influences the landscape of NCAA Division I football is the size and resources of the institutions. Some universities have large budgets and state-of-the-art facilities, allowing them to attract top-tier coaches and recruit highly talented athletes. These schools often have a competitive advantage and consistently perform well in their respective conferences.

In contrast, smaller schools with limited resources may face challenges in recruiting and maintaining a competitive program. However, these institutions often focus on developing a strong sense of community and providing a supportive environment for their student-athletes. They may prioritize the overall student experience and prioritize academic success alongside athletic achievement.

NCAA Division II: A Competitive Level for Student-Athletes

NCAA Division II offers a competitive level of college football that provides opportunities for student-athletes to excel both on the field and in the classroom. Division II institutions typically have a moderate level of financial resources and focus on a more comprehensive student-athlete experience, emphasizing the balance between academics and athletics.

Division II football programs often attract student-athletes who excel both athletically and academically, as these institutions offer scholarship opportunities and a supportive environment that fosters growth in multiple areas. It’s worth noting that some Division II institutions also possess rich football histories and regularly compete for conference championships and postseason honors.

One of the advantages of competing in NCAA Division II football is the opportunity for student-athletes to receive a well-rounded education. Division II institutions prioritize the academic success of their athletes, providing resources such as tutoring, study halls, and academic advising to ensure that they excel in their coursework. This emphasis on academics helps student-athletes develop important time management and organizational skills that will benefit them beyond their college years.

In addition to the focus on academics, Division II football programs also prioritize the personal and leadership development of their athletes. Many institutions offer leadership programs, community service opportunities, and mentorship programs to help student-athletes grow as individuals and become well-rounded leaders in their communities. These experiences not only enhance the student-athlete’s college experience but also prepare them for success in their future careers.

NCAA Division III: Balancing Academics and Athletics

NCAA Division III represents colleges and universities that prioritize the integration of athletics and academics, ensuring that student-athletes have the opportunity to excel in both areas. Division III programs do not offer athletic scholarships, and athletes are admitted based on their academic qualifications, just like their non-athlete peers.

In Division III, the focus is on the overall development of the student-athlete, with an emphasis on the educational experience. The division encourages participation in multiple sports and promotes a healthy balance between academics and athletics. Division III football programs may not receive as much media attention as their Division I counterparts, but they offer high-quality football and an opportunity to compete at a high level while pursuing a well-rounded education.

One of the key benefits of NCAA Division III is the flexibility it offers student-athletes. Unlike Division I and Division II, Division III athletes have more control over their schedules and can prioritize their academics without sacrificing their athletic commitments. This allows them to fully immerse themselves in their studies and take advantage of the academic resources available to them.

Additionally, Division III institutions often have smaller class sizes, which can lead to more personalized attention from professors. Student-athletes in Division III have the opportunity to build strong relationships with their professors, who understand the demands of being a student-athlete and are supportive of their commitments. This level of support and individualized attention can greatly contribute to the academic success of Division III student-athletes.

NAIA: An Alternative Path for College Football Players

In addition to the NCAA divisions, the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) offers an alternative path for college football players. The NAIA consists of smaller colleges and universities that may have fewer financial resources but provide opportunities for student-athletes to compete at the college level.

NAIA football programs provide an alternative avenue for athletes who may not meet NCAA eligibility requirements or seek a different college experience. NAIA institutions often emphasize the development of well-rounded individuals and provide a supportive environment where student-athletes can excel both academically and athletically.

One advantage of playing football in the NAIA is the opportunity for more playing time. With smaller rosters and less competition, student-athletes in the NAIA often have a greater chance of seeing significant playing time on the field. This can be beneficial for players who are looking to gain experience and showcase their skills to potentially move on to higher levels of competition.

Additionally, NAIA football programs often have a strong sense of community and camaraderie. With smaller student populations, athletes in the NAIA have the opportunity to form close bonds with their teammates and coaches. This tight-knit community can provide a supportive and encouraging environment for student-athletes, both on and off the field.

Related Posts:

A basketball court with four quarters marked out

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

  • Advertising
  • Contributors
  • Latest Posts

Wired868 Wired868 for smart sport news and opinion

  • Vaneisa: Clutter of the mind—why I’m not a hoarder
  • T&T Women’s Team set for friendlies against Curaçao and Aruba
  • Demming: What criteria were used to measure Erla’s performance?
  • Woodley, Poon-Angeron strike as T&T down Guyana 2-0 in closing friendly
  • Dear Editor: Women’s groups should lead push to improve neonatal wards
  • Woodley, Kesar get debut goals as T&T edge Guyana in friendly
  • RBNYFL 24: Upsets galore as favorites tumble out; AIA, Evolution, Union Hall among survivors
  • Noble: The battering of Lady Justice—the controversial backdrop to Dana’s assassination
  • Legendary All-Star Cyat in Bag purchase: Tana reviews trumpeted exhibition affair
  • Open letter to Scyld Berry: does plucking feathers from Lara’s wing float your boat?

Intercol 23: “Pres Lions” book final spot after controversial late winner against Arima

Editor Friday 1 December 2023 Volley , Youth Football 6 Comments

what division is presentation college football

Presentation College (San Fernando) will contest their second National Intercol final in three seasons, after a last gasp 1-0 win over Arima North Secondary yesterday evening at the Mahaica Sporting Complex in Point Fortin.

Goalless after 90 minutes, both sets of coaches might have been pondering the order of their penalty kickers when Presentation flanker Kaielle Elliott swung a deep free kick into the opposing area.

Dial Dynamos goalkeeper Isaiah Diaz got both hands on the ball but fell back into his own goalmouth and across the line. Elliott claimed the goal. Diaz and his teammates complained bitterly that he was pushed over the line by opponents. And referee CJ O’Brien presumably tallied the decisive item as an own goal.

And hundreds of spectators at Mahaica asked: where is SportsMax when you need them?

(SportsMax, Wired868 understands, do not have fibre cables laid down at Mahaica and face a sizable bill to move infrastructure there for matches. So they deemed yesterday’s Intercol semifinal as too costly to pursue. And Diaz, replays showed, was not pushed into his goal; but simply misjudged his catch.)

Emotions spilled over at the final whistle, as Arima North defender Akil Henry was ejected for dissent while a Presentation supporter accosted Dial Dynamos defender Ezekiel Ramdialsingh, which prompted angry objections from the visiting bench—led by head coach Wayne Sheppard.

By the end of the night, Arima players accepted an offer for doubles by the Presentation Alumni Tailgate crew and the two opposing head coaches, Presentation’s Shawn Cooper and Sheppard, were on friendly terms.

But it was a tense affair—spoiled, one way or the other, by a controversial late goal.

Arima North, who spent the last 12 years in the second and third division of the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL), faced the “Pres Lions” on their return to the Premier Division on Wednesday 12 September 2023. That match finished goalless at the Arima Velodrome.

Yesterday in Point Fortin, the football was better between the two sides, but the result looked destined to be the same.

The East Zone Intercol champions held on to the ball better and forced Presentation to abandon their early attempts at a high press. However, this rarely led to penetration with their front three of Jemaul Ashing, Tyrell Stapleton and Mark Thomas effectively kept at bay.

At the other end, Presentation had more attempts at goal and were the more aggressive team in the offensive third. But forward Adah Barclay and company lacked the guile to outwit the Arima defence, which was well marshalled by central defender Ability Hazel.

Penalties appeared inevitable and after 15 converted spot kicks in the East Zone final against San Juan North Secondary—with their lone miss coming from goalkeeper Diaz—Sheppard would not have been especially worried about that mode of deciding which team advanced to the final.

But Elliott had other ideas in stoppage time. Or maybe it was Diaz who decided things, whether as martyr or malefactor.

Perhaps it was the fault of the referee and assistant Roshan Balliram.

It is history now. Another footnote in Arima’s unhappy trips to south Trinidad, like their infamous contest against St Benedict’s College at Skinner Park in 1991—when the east team were penalised for a crowd invasion in an away match that they were leading at the time.

Arima’s 2023 season ended in Point Fortin. Presentation have a date with destiny at the Hasely Crawford Stadium in Port of Spain next Thursday.

Presentation College (San F’do) (4-2-3-1): 1.Kanye Lazarus ( GK ) ( captain ); 16.Micah Brathwaite, 5.Cody Cooper, 25.Tyrel Pemberton, 12.Duhrell Young; 6.Levi Jones, 3.Abayomi George; 7.Kaielle Elliott, 8.Nkosi Foncette (11.Isaiah Jacob 67), 10.Vaughn Clement; 15.Adah Barclay.

Unused substitutes : 28.Jerelle Thorne ( GK ), 2.Terrance Worrell, 9.Caleb Boyce, 14.Maliq Brathwaite, 17.Djibril Felix, 18.Josiah Bain, 19.Kwesi Seales, 20.Chaz Forde, 23.Gabriel Collins.

Coach : Shawn Cooper

Arima North Secondary (4-3-3): 1.Isaiah Diaz ( GK ); 3.Criston Gomez (33.Dimitre Jones 90), 22.Stephen Ollivierie, 16.Ability Hazel, 5.Akil Henry; 15.Darren De Four (30.Tyler Ayers 80), 13.Theron O’Brien, 11.Stephano Christopher; 17.Jemaul Ashing ( captain ), 9.Tyrell Stapleton (18.Zion Metivier 80), 7.Mark Thomas (29.Jaydon Critchlow 69).

Unused substitutes : 12.Josiah Thomas ( GK ), 6.Jeremy Joseph, 8.Armani Ceres, 19.O’Neil Dyer, 21.Ezekiel Ramdialsingh, 27.Agyei Des Vignes.

Coach : Wayne Sheppard

Referee : CJ O’Brien

National Intercol semifinals

(Thursday 30 November)

Presentation College (San F’do) 1 (Kaielle Elliott 90), Arima North Sec 0 at Mahaica Sporting Complex;

(Friday 1 December)

St Anthony’s College v Speyside High , 4pm, Hasely Crawford Stadium;

National Intercol finals

(Thursday 7 December)

Presentation College (San Fernando) v St Anthony’s/Speyside , 5.30pm, Hasely Crawford Stadium.

what division is presentation college football

“Put in the work when you train and even on your off days, put in the work!” Presentation College (San Read more

what division is presentation college football

Like clockwork, St Anthony’s College recorded their second thumping win over Chaguanas North Secondary for the season, this time in Read more

what division is presentation college football

“[…] To be honest, what really motivates me is that my uncle, Aalon Ashing, passed away on my birthday and Read more

what division is presentation college football

“[…] Well, I would say when I do something I try to be the best at it. I am a Read more

what division is presentation college football

The following is written in my capacity as Arima North Secondary football representative and team manager and serves as a Read more

what division is presentation college football

Arima North Secondary overcame persistent rainfall and fading light to secure the Secondary Schools Football League (SSFL) East Zone Intercol Read more

what division is presentation college football

Tags 2023 Intercol Ability Hazel Akil Henry Arima North Secondary CJ O'Brien Isaiah Diaz Kaielle Elliott Presentation College San Fernando Roshan Balliram

About Editor

' src=

RBNYFL 24: Webb, Fraser, O’Brien, Archer and Mariah among all-star standouts

Seventeen-year-old Premier Sports Club forward Malachi Webb had another chance to show his worth on …

' src=

TTT live online posted the goal on Facebook. Nobody touched the keeper. So the only controversy is in some people imagination.

' src=

First, you need to understand what the word “controversy” means.

You still salty lol. And J never tried to insult your intelligence in my comment. Be an adult now. You can comment without trying to insult ppl. In your other article, Wayne said he spoke to 2 trusted sources immediately after the game who said the goal was legit. Yet you wrote this article questioning the goal. Then Wayne said another two people, Cyrus and Brian Williams who he both consider reliable said the goal was good. So I don’t know what my understanding of the word controversy has to do with anything. Basically your keeper lied because he was ashamed of his mistake. Anyway, I hope you enjoyed the southern hospitality and the doubles.

' src=

Go Pres!!!!!

Sounds more like an unfortunate goal than controversial goal unless there is evidence to support a claim that the referees and the assistant referees conspired to rob Arima or there was an issue with fading light that impacted their ability to adequately perform their tasks. Now if fading light was an issue then this should have been communicated at the point of occurrence and not after conceding a late goal to lose the game.

Based on reading a couple of game reports, it seems like Pres had the better of the exchanges and deserved to win based on their overall play. However, Arima North was definitely competitive and it is a tough way to lose a game especially conceding a goal that late with little time to get an equalizer.

Arima should be proud of their achievements this season after being out of the premier division for a few years. Based on the few Arima games I saw this season they have an extremely solid defense like their main competitors Pres, Fatima, and St Benedict’s. Attacking wise they were not as fluent as Fatima and St Benedict’s and probably their strategy was to play for penalties yesterday which there is no guarantee despite their 15-14 success over San Juan.

The Arima players should feel proud being a top 5 or 6 teams this season and assuming the coaching staff remains intact and have access to talented players they can be one of the top contenders next season.

Congrats to Pres. Shawn Cooper continues to show his coaching ability at the youth level and this season he is pulling off more 1-0 wins than Mourinho lol.

Controversial means giving rise to debate. And the goal sparked heated debate on the field and in the stands. Controversial does not mean that the complaining party was necessarily correct.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Notify me of follow-up comments by email.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed .

Home

Trinidad and Tobago Secondary Schools Football League

Proud sponsors.

Sponsor

News | Events

2023 PRIZE DISTRIBUTION CEREMONY 11th April 2023

Boys Big 5 Competition

2023 Competitions

View Premiership

Premiership Matches

Ssfl highlights.

St Benedict's College vs Presentation College | Coca Cola Boys South Zone Final

SSFL Live: San Juan North Secondary vs Arima North Secondary | Coca Cola Boys East Zone Final

Coca Cola Boys Intercol

Tobago Sports Live Games

Tobago boys intercol quarter finals | speyside vs goodwood secondary | 3:00pm.

S.S.F.L Championship Girls Big 5 Semi-Finals

Sportsmax live games.

SSFL Live: Naparima College vs Fatima College | T&T SSFL Premiership Round 14

SSFL Live: Presentation College vs St. Anthony's College | T&T SSFL Premiership Round 13

SSFL Live: East Mucurapo Secondary vs Pleasantville Secondary | T&T SSFL Premiership Round 12

SSFL Live: Naparima College vs Presentation College | T&T SSFL Premiership Round 11

SSFL Live: Queen's Royal College vs East Mucurapo Secondary | T&T SSFL Premiership Round 10

SSFL Live: Fatima College vs Queen's Royal College | T&T SSFL Premiership Round 9

SSFL Live: San Juan North Secondary vs Bishops Highschool | T&T SSFL Premiership Round 8

SSFL Live: Naparima College vs St. Benedict's College | T&T SSFL Premiership Round 7

SSFL Live: East Mucurapo Secondary vs Fatima College | T&T SSFL Premiership Round 3

St. Benedict's beat Fatima 4-3 in EXCITING SSFL Super Cup matchup! SSFL

SSFL LIVE: San Juan North Secondary vs St. Benedict's College | SSFL Premiership Round 1

November 2023

Our Sponsors

coke

2023 SSFL LAUNCH

SSFL Prize Giving Ceremony 2022

Intercol East Zone Final Highlight Moments

316319733_5806063116104273_1040250715780688889_n

Prize Giving

2023-06-01 09_30_00-Mail - Ashford Lalchan - Outlook

Gridiron Heroics

  • Fantasy Football
  • College Football
  • REPORT: The Atlanta Falcons Announce Devastating News Regarding Their Former 5th-Round Pick.
  • Buffalo Bills Star Defensive Player Says He Is Either Playing For Bills Or Retiring In 2024
  • Massive News Regarding EA Sports College Football 25
  • REPORT: The Jacksonville Jaguars Have Signed a Former 1st Round Defensive Back to a Contract.
  • New York Giants Former Star Reveals Brutal Take On 2024 Season
  • BREAKING: Former Green Bay Packers Tight End Signs For 3rd NFC North Team
  • Buffalo Bills: Amazing Reason Why Marquez Valdes-Scantling Decided to Sign as a Free Agent Revealed
  • BREAKING: New England Patriots Sign 7 x Team Captain To A Contract Extension Through 2025

Gridiron Heroics

College Football 80-Team Super League: Breaking Down the Perfect 10-Team Conferences

Adam Gibby

The landscape of college football is as stable as trying to play Jenga in the middle of an earthquake. It seems just as something starts to seem stable; another block falls, causing a domino effect again. For some perspective, just five years ago, more than 30 teams were in a different conference than they will be this upcoming season, including 12 teams already in P5 leagues.

For a while, it felt like the SEC and Big 10 were destined for a two-conference Super League, with the rest of college football getting left behind. We may still end up there, but earlier this week, a new model was released with 80 teams in the top college football division, including all of the current P4 teams and ten current G5 teams.

A few different models have been released on how this could look. Some favor tradition , others geography, and others try to spread out the TV revenue. Everyone will have a different opinion on this, but I believe that the main emphasis should be rivalries and geography. Here are the conferences I believe should be created:

AAC (G5 Schools)

USATSI 22123333 scaled

Teams: Varying

The AAC or American Conference would feature the top ten Group of Five Schools. This conference would also use relegation to maintain and keep the top ten schools competitive with the other seven conferences. The tough part would be how the relegation would work. For example, if Utah State were to be dropped down and Coastal Carolina were to rise up, it doesn’t make sense to send the Aggies to a conference that would be East Coast-based.

Maybe the answer to fix this is to have no G5 conferences. G5 conferences can essentially be Independent scheduling whichever other G5 schools they want.

college football

Teams: Central Florida, Clemson, Florida State, Duke, Miami, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina, Virginia, and Wake Forest

The ACC is a tough conference to create because, similar to what you will see in the Pac 10, the current geographic conference stretches from the most northern team (Boston College) to the most southern team (Miami) in the P4. However, by recreating the Big East conference, the dividing line came down to either cutting out Virginia and keeping Georgia Tech or letting Georgia Tech into the SEC and keeping Virginia, which fits the ACC culture much more.

Ultimately, Virginia staying and getting rid of Georiga Tech makes more sense since it would give Georgia another rivalry, as well as put another ‘less dominant’ team in the SEC.

New York Giants Michael Penix Jr.

Teams: Cincinnati, Indiana, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Michigan State, Northwestern, Ohio State,  Purdue, and Wisconsin

The Big 10 would continue to be the most top-heavy conference in the nation, with Michigan and Ohio State dominating the league for the foreseeable future, but with teams like Indiana, Illinois, and Purdue still in the league, in addition to the addition to Maryland, this conference would certainly still be considered a fair league competitively.

Losing Penn State seems odd, especially with the addition of Cincinnati, but competitively, the Big East needs a more competitive team, and the Big 10 would be too strong with Penn State.

BYU football qb jake retzlaff

Teams: BYU, Colorado, Kansas, Kansas State, Iowa, Iowa State, Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Utah

The Big 12 certainly would be the oddest league in the country because it covers a lot of land and certainly lacks teams with multiple rivalries. Yes, BYU vs. Utah, Iowa vs. Iowa State, and Kansas vs. Kansas State would be great rivalries, but the cross-country games would be less intriguing with not as much history as the Pac 10, the only other conference with a huge geographical area.

Also, it is important to point out that Minnesota would clearly stick out in this conference, but without a spot in the Big 10, it’s the only realistic landing spot.

Tackett Curtis

Teams: Boston College, Lousiville, Kentucky, Notre Dame, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, Syracuse, Virginia Tech, and West Virginia

Many people are talking about how Notre Dame feels like a Big 10 school, but if this Big East were to be established, looking at this group of schools, the Fighting Irish would feel more like a Big East school. This conference would be a true ‘rust belt, blue-collar’ kind of conference that would be a ton of fun to watch.

This conference also has many great rivalries, including Kentucky vs. Lousiville, Pitt vs. West Virginia, and Notre Dame vs. Penn State, which feels like an instant classic.

Bucky Irving from the University of Oregon.

Teams: Arizona, Arizona State, California, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Washington and Washington State

Reason:  The traditional Pac 10 is a perfect conference that should go back to being what it once was. Some will argue that geographically, Arizona is further to Washington than it is to half of the current SEC schools, but the other schools that geographically would make this conference closer to the Washington schools are BYU and Utah, which will fit better into the Big 12.

The Pac 10/12 traditionally was a great conference. If they had had the season they had last year just a year earlier, perhaps the TV networks would have put up enough money to keep the conference from falling apart.

USATSI 22206628 168400517 lowres e1711420135192

Teams:  Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Georgia Tech, LSU, Miss State, Ole Miss, Tenessee, and Vanderbilt

Breaking apart the SEC was very difficult because it’s tough to validate getting rid of some teams while also not loading up the conference too much. Losing Kentucky and South Carolina are tough, while keeping Vanderbilt and adding Georgia Tech seems to be a step in the wrong direction, but when looking for geographical fits and conferences that make sense while also not loading up the SEC to be a powerhouse, that is significantly better than any other conference.

LSU is the one school that seems a bit out of the way in this conference, but with rivalries against Alabama and Florida, they made more sense than throwing them in the SWC.

Could the Buffalo Bills take the speedster out of Texas?

Teams: Arkansas, Baylor, Houston, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, SMU, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, and TCU

If there is any conference I would enjoy watching week to week, it would be the old SWC, which has been basically renewed. This conference appears to be loaded with talent, but with all of the Texas schools back in one conference, the talent would distribute itself to make this a very competitive conference compared to the others.

Every single week, this conference would have must-watch games for most of the teams.

Here’s our breakdown of an 80-Team Super League! Thoughts?! https://t.co/o7BbInpgDM pic.twitter.com/uIf455mKK8 — Heartland College Sports (@Heartland_CS) April 6, 2024

College Football Conclusion

For fans of college football who don’t want to see the sport essentially turn into an NFL-lite with 32-40 teams primarily in the current Big 10/SEC footprint, the 80-team Super League feels like the best option. People will differ on who they believe should be in each conference, but if push comes to shove, most Arizona, BYU, Boston College, and Oklahoma State fans will take any conference if it means not being relegated to a second-tier conference.

Which college football teams did we get right? What would you change? Let us know in the comments!

Get More NFL and College Football Content

Check out more of my stories, or leave a comment below! For more of the biggest storylines of College Football, the transfer portal, or the NFL,  click here  or follow me on  Twitter/X.

Avatar photo

With six years of professional experience, Adam Gibby is a dedicated sports writer specializing in college football and the NFL, particularly focused on the dynamic landscape of the Big 12. His articles have been prominently featured on respected platforms including Gridiron Heroics, ESPN, SEO.co, KSL Sports, Fansided, Yardbarker, MSN, Lawless Republic, and Blue Brigham. For inquiries, please contact via email at [email protected] or follow X @AGibbySports.

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

what division is presentation college football

NCAAF

How an 80-team, 8-division college football ‘Super League’ would’ve looked last season

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JANUARY 08: Colston Loveland #18 of the Michigan Wolverines runs with the ball in the fourth quarter against the Washington Huskies during the 2024 CFP National Championship game at NRG Stadium on January 08, 2024 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

A college football “Super League”? It may not be as far-fetched — or far away — as once thought. But what would it look like if it materialized?

Using the basic outline discussed by the 20-member group touting a plan to someday revamp college football’s top level , we decided to see how such a setup would have played out if it was already implemented, using the 2023 season as a test case.

Advertisement

We organized the former Power 5 schools, plus independent Notre Dame and soon-to-be ACC member SMU , into seven 10-team divisions for the permanent 70 teams envisioned within College Sports Tomorrow ’s plan. For the eighth 10-team division that would be subject to promotion and relegation, we took the Group of 5 leagues’ 2022 conference championship game participants and “promoted” them for 2023.

The 10-team division size constraint required us to take some liberties, so be prepared for some unique and maybe awkward fits. But it also allowed us to bring back some old rivalries. (Welcome back, Southwest Conference and Big East!)

We used teams’ 2023 regular season records, before conference championship games were played, to seed them for the proposed 16-team playoff. The eight division winners took the top eight seeds, and the eight wild cards took the remaining seeds. Where there was ambiguity, we defaulted to the penultimate 2023 College Football Playoff rankings (which is why Georgia is the No. 1 seed and Michigan is No. 2).

The Pulse Newsletter

Free, daily sports updates direct to your inbox. Sign up

Below is the result of our hypothetical 2023 college football super league.

We kept eight current ACC teams in this division, brought back former member Maryland and added South Carolina , which was a charter member of the ACC until departing in 1971 to become independent. Florida State gets the rightful playoff berth it was denied by the College Football Playoff selection committee, but no wild cards emerge from this group.

Notre Dame has fiercely held onto independent status amid the current wave of realignment changes, but to be a part of this Super League vision, the Fighting Irish would have to play within a division. We place them in the revived Big East, where they were basketball members from 1995 to 2013. They join a host of former Big East members that return, and ’23 ACC runner-up Louisville takes the automatic playoff berth.

Reconstituting the Big Ten posed a dilemma: return to the original 10 members (without Penn State ) or boot one of them in favor of the Nittany Lions? Knowing that college football’s decision-makers usually side with money over history, Penn State gets to stay while Northwestern , unfortunately, is the odd team out. The conference is loaded, with four teams making the 2023 field.

It wouldn’t be college football without a division that possesses awkward geography. Behold the FFD — I couldn’t come up with a better name — which has six former Big 8 members but includes schools that were left out of other geographically appropriate divisions: BYU , Utah and UCF . Missouri wins the league while racking up plenty of miles.

Remember that storied western college football conference that was a lot of fun and produced one of the two teams to play for the national championship last year? We put it back together, although in a smaller version, the old Pac-10. Washington takes the automatic berth and the No. 3 seed, while Oregon earns a spot as the highest-ranked wild card team.

Although many want to be in the SEC, to fit this exercise, we returned to the 10 founding members who still remain in the league. Unsurprisingly, it sends multiple teams to the postseason: Georgia, Alabama and Ole Miss.

Long live the defunct Southwest Conference . Eight of the nine SWC teams are back together, missing only Rice , which would compete in the 50-team second division. To fill out the other two spots, we stole from the old Big 8 by taking Oklahoma and Oklahoma State .

This division provided two predicaments. By moving SMU — the AAC champion that will join the ACC in 2024 — here, we have two 2023 conference champions in the league. We gave the nod to Texas given the team’s overall talent advantage.

Also, Oklahoma State beat Oklahoma head-to-head, but the teams had identical conference records and Oklahoma had the better overall record and higher CFP ranking. How would the Super League address wild card tiebreakers in that scenario? In the NFL — which seems to be the model this plan follows most closely — overall record reigns, so for this exercise, the Sooners get the nod.

For those of us who love Group of 5 ball, this is an entertaining, competitive division with high stakes. Tulane wins the division and playoff berth. A key question: Would stakeholders allow wild cards from this division, or would those eight playoff spots come from the permanent 70 only? That’s an unknown. Let’s again follow typical college sports power broker behavior and assume only the division winner gets a nod here — an unfortunate break for Toledo . Here’s hoping we’re wrong and wild cards from this division get equal consideration.

Details on how many teams would be subject to relegation are scant, so let’s assume teams with losing records get the boot. That means Navy and North Texas would get sent down. Which two teams get promoted into their spots? The teams with the best 2023 regular season records who aren’t part of this group are Liberty (12-0), James Madison (11-1), Miami-Ohio (10-2), New Mexico State (10-3) and Memphis (9-3). Liberty and JMU get the call up to the big show.

go-deeper

Inside the CFB 'Super League' pitch some execs see as a way to save the sport

The new playoffs

Here’s how the seeding would have fallen with the above setup, with the eight division winners getting the top eight seeds and the wild cards filling out the field. In the absence of a full tiebreaker structure, we seeded based on the penultimate CFP rankings (before conference championship weekend). Although SMU beat Tulane in the AAC title game, they don’t get a top-eight seed because they’re no longer in the same division as the Green Wave.

First round

(1) Georgia over (16) SMU (9) Oregon over (8) Tulane (5) Texas over (12) Penn State (13) Ole Miss over (4) Florida State (11) Alabama over (6) Missouri (3) Washington over (14) Oklahoma (10) Ohio State over (7) Louisville (2) Michigan over (15) Iowa

Quarterfinals

We get some juggernaut games here, including a Michigan-Ohio State rematch.

(1) Georgia over (9) Oregon (5) Texas over (13) Ole Miss (3) Washington over (11) Alabama (2) Michigan over (10) Ohio State

We get the actual 2023 national title matchup in one semi … and we’re calling the upset in the other.

(5) Texas over (1) Georgia (2) Michigan over (3) Washington

National championship

(2) Michigan over (5) Texas

We still end up with the Wolverines hoisting the trophy, with a longer but not completely unfamiliar postseason path to get there, facing three teams they toppled on their way to the actual 2023 title.

(Photo: Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

Get all-access to exclusive stories.

Subscribe to The Athletic for in-depth coverage of your favorite players, teams, leagues and clubs. Try a week on us.

Sam Khan Jr.

Sam Khan Jr. is a senior writer for The Athletic covering college football and recruiting primarily in Texas. Previously, he spent eight years covering college sports at ESPN.com and seven years as a sports reporter at the Houston Chronicle. A native Houstonian, Sam graduated from the University of Houston. Follow Sam on Twitter @ skhanjr

what division is presentation college football

Peru State College Athletics

  • Full Schedule
  • Upcoming Events
  • Show Results

Sport social icons

Top stories, contentstream.

Site logo

Thanks for visiting !

The use of software that blocks ads hinders our ability to serve you the content you came here to enjoy.

We ask that you consider turning off your ad blocker so we can deliver you the best experience possible while you are here.

Thank you for your support!

  • KSAT Insider
  • KSAT Connect
  • Entertainment

WEATHER ALERT

2 air quality alerts in effect for 10 regions in the area

Utsa, texas state football ranked in cbs sports’ first group of five power rankings for 2024, rivals to play again sept. 7 in san marcos; last year utsa won 20-13 in alamodome.

Ben Spicer , Digital Journalist

SAN ANTONIO – Two San Antonio-area college football teams and rivals have both made the inaugural CBS Sports’ Group of Five Power Rankings for the 2024 season.

The University of Texas at San Antonio Roadrunners of The American Athletic Conference and the Texas State Bobcats of the Sun Belt Conference came in at sixth and 12th in the power rankings, respectively, according to the report.

Recommended Videos

“(UTSA Football Head Coach Jeff) Traylor’s program is about more than just a single player and this schedule sets up nicely. UTSA misses Tulane and South Florida and gets Memphis at home,” the article states.

The power rankings also had nice things to say about the Bobcats, indicating another strong season could be in the works.

“G.J. Kinne worked wonders in his first season by guiding Texas State to its first-ever bowl game. Don’t be surprised if the Bobcats take another step forward and compete for the Sun Belt title,” CBS Sports says.

Both teams finished their 2023 seasons strong, with the Roadrunners finishing 9-4 and a victory over Marshall in the Scooter’s Coffee Frisco Bowl. The Bobcats had arguably their best year ever, finishing 8-5 and with a win over Rice in the ServPro First Responder Bowl.

Last year, UTSA defeated Texas State 20-13 on Sept. 9 in the Alamodome. The win increased the Roadrunners’ dominance in the series, as they’ve yet to lose (5-0) to the Bobcats in their football history. The two teams square off again on Sept. 7 in San Marcos and are scheduled to play in a non-conference game for the next eight seasons.

UTSA will have a new look on offense, however, as they will have a new starting quarterback under center for the first time in seven years. Frank Harris, who set multiple school records, has finally exhausted his eligibility. The team returns 51 lettermen, including 16 starters.

Texas State made a major splash this offseason by acquiring former James Madison star quarterback Jordan McCloud in the transfer portal and also returns a team with 17 starters from a year ago. Their newcomer class ranks as best in the Sun Belt Conference, according to 247Sports.

The teams at the top of the inaugural power rankings include Boise State at No. 1, Liberty at No. 2 and Memphis at No. 3. Boise State won the 2023 Mountain West title after a late-season coaching change, Liberty’s Kaidon Salter returns after winning C-USA Most Valuable Player in 2023 and quarterback Seth Henigan is back for his fourth season for Memphis after guiding the Tigers to a 10-3 mark.

  • UTSA Football invites San Antonio kids to help design 2024 season tickets
  • Judson alum Treylin Payne is transferring to Texas State
  • Texas State football showcases resilience and growth in 2024 spring game

Copyright 2024 by KSAT - All rights reserved.

About the Author

Ben Spicer is a digital journalist who works the early morning shift for KSAT.

  • Election 2024
  • Entertainment
  • Newsletters
  • Photography
  • Personal Finance
  • AP Investigations
  • AP Buyline Personal Finance
  • AP Buyline Shopping
  • Press Releases
  • Israel-Hamas War
  • Russia-Ukraine War
  • Global elections
  • Asia Pacific
  • Latin America
  • Middle East
  • Election Results
  • Delegate Tracker
  • AP & Elections
  • Auto Racing
  • 2024 Paris Olympic Games
  • Movie reviews
  • Book reviews
  • Personal finance
  • Financial Markets
  • Business Highlights
  • Financial wellness
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Social Media

Missouri State moves up to Conference USA in 2025 from FCS, becoming 12th football member

FILE - Fans hold Missouri State flags during a tournament in Fayetteville, Ark., Sunday, June 7, 2015. Missouri State is moving up to the highest tier of Division I college football and joining Conference USA in 2025. (AP Photo/Danny Johnston, File)

FILE - Fans hold Missouri State flags during a tournament in Fayetteville, Ark., Sunday, June 7, 2015. Missouri State is moving up to the highest tier of Division I college football and joining Conference USA in 2025. (AP Photo/Danny Johnston, File)

  • Copy Link copied

Missouri State will move up to the highest tier of Division I college football and join Conference USA in 2025, the league announced Friday.

Missouri State will become the 12th full member of CUSA and the third school to move up from the Championship Subdivision to the Bowl Subdivision and join the league over the next two seasons.

Conference USA is adding Kennesaw State this season and Delaware is set to join in 2025. Both schools are also moving up in Division I from FCS to FBS.

Missouri State is a longtime member of the Missouri Valley Conference and has been competing in FCS/I-AA since 1981. The Bears have reached the NCAA playoffs four times, including most recently in 2020 and ’21 under then-coach Bobby Petrino.

“The institution boasts a great tradition in athletics and academics that will strengthen and further position our membership for long term success in the national landscape,” CUSA Commissioner Judy MacLeod said.

Conference USA lost six members to the American Athletic Conference and have rebuilt by adding former independents such as Liberty and New Mexico State and former FCS schools Sam Houston State and Jacksonville State last year.

The rest of Conference USA includes Louisiana Tech, Western Kentucky, Middle Tennessee State, UTEP and Florida International

AP Sports https://apnews.com/sports

what division is presentation college football

Your Web Browser is no longer supported

To experience everything that ESPN.com has to offer, we recommend that you upgrade to a newer version of your web browser. Click the upgrade button to the right or learn more .

College Football Conferences

Fbs (division i-a conferences).

what division is presentation college football

Conference USA

what division is presentation college football

FBS Independents

what division is presentation college football

Mid-American

what division is presentation college football

Mountain West

what division is presentation college football

FCS (Division I-AA Conferences)

Big south-ovc, fcs independents, missouri valley, ohio valley, patriot league.

  • College Football
  • College Basketball
  • Olympic Sports
  • Horse Racing
  • Streak for the Cash

SPORTSNATION

  • Most Recent
  • Corrections

ESPN THE MAGAZINE

Sportscenter, espn front row.

  • SI SWIMSUIT
  • SI SPORTSBOOK
  • MEN'S BASKETBALL
  • WOMEN'S BASKETBALL

Arkansas Tailback Considered One Of Best Returnees In SEC

Jacob davis | 6 hours ago.

Arkansas Razorbacks running back Ja'Quinden Jackson celebrates a score in the Red-White Game at Razorback Stadium on Saturday in Fayetteville, Ark. / Michael Morrison-allHOGS Images

  • Arkansas Razorbacks

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. -- The Razorbacks have at least one returning tailback who ranks in the Top 10. Utah transfer Ja'Quinden Jackson has garnered praise from Pro Football Focus-College's grading system. He joins the Hogs' tied for fourth with Georgia's Trevor Etienne as PFF's highest graded returning running backs list.

Highest Graded Returning SEC Running Backs💨 pic.twitter.com/jHvHSBrRGp — PFF College (@PFF_College) May 17, 2024

Jackson was good as advertised during Arkansas' spring game in April. He was the team's leading rusher with nine carries for 65 yards and a pair of touchdowns. He also caught a 15-yard pass for a score. After the scrimmage, he received high marks from teammates on the defensive side.

"You’re going to need more than one person to tackle him that’s for sure,” defensive tackle Cam Ball said. “He’s just a solid dude, a better person. Runs behind his pads, overall a great player and a very good addition to our team.”

While at Utah under coach Kyle Whittingham, Jackson flourished as he continued to convert from dual threat quarterback when he began his career at Texas. While he developed over the past three seasons, Jackson shared snaps in a loaded Utes backfield. He rushed for 1,358 yards and 14 touchdowns.

Coach Sam Pittman is high on Jackson who is projected to be one of the Hogs' top tailbacks this fall. He is viewed as one of the best pick-ups of the cycle for Arkansas this spring.

“He’s a guy that’s probably even better when it’s live," Pittman said during the spring game. "He looks better because he bounces off of people. He uses that stiff arm a little more. He’s got a violent stiff arm, but always seems to be moving forward. When he gets hit hard, he grins and gets up. He’s a tough kid, a really good get out of the portal.”

The 6-foot-2, 235 pound tailback wasn't much of a surprise entrant during the winter transfer portal window. Jackson struggled with an ankle injury in 2023 which hampered his production, but still managed to lead his team with 161 carries for 797 yards and four touchdowns. He signed with the Razorbacks as the No. 57 transfer, per 247sports portal ranking .

Texas signed him out of high school during the 2020 cycle. 247sports ranked Jackson as the No. 46 player in the country out of football factory Duncanville, Texas. He was the nation's No. 3 dual threat quarterback and the No. 7 prospect out of the Lone Star State.

Here is a deep film study breakdown of Jackson's college career so far by Carter Bryant of SEC Power Hour.

• Pitcher comes off bench for nearly six innings of perfection to save Razorbacks' bacon

• Arkansas asks Wood to step into new role to clinch division over Aggies

•   Gauging Razorbacks Offensive Morale Heading Into Critical Season

• Subscribe and follow us on  YouTube • Follow allHOGS on  X   and  Facebook

Jacob Davis

JACOB DAVIS

More From Forbes

Ea college football 25 full feature revealed, including huge return.

  • Share to Facebook
  • Share to Twitter
  • Share to Linkedin

College Football 25

On Friday, May 17, EA unveiled the trailer and full feature set for EA College Football 25 via press release.

While there's a plethora of features to explore, the one that truly captured the attention of countless fans of the NCAA Football series and me is the return of the 'Team Builder' feature.

We'll get into that in more detail, but here's what we learned from the press release. The game will be released on July 19 and available exclusively on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S.

Here is a look at the trailer, and I’ll be honest. it’s pretty fantastic:

what division is presentation college football

Best Nintendo Switch Games: It’s Mario’s World, We’re Just Visiting

Ea college football 25 - campus iq.

College Football 25 will introduce Campus IQ. The concept is described as “a suite of features that brings to life the true depth of college football through wide open, fast-paced gameplay across all 134 FBS schools in all areas of the game.”

That broad description leaves us wanting more specifics, but there is enough to keep us excited.

EA College Football 25 Brings Back Dynasty Mode, Road to Glory and Team Builder

College Football 25 will feature the return of Dynasty and Road to Glory. Dynasty mode is the college football version of franchise mode, and it sounds like it has received a decent level of attention.

The Dynasty mode has you create a coach tasked with taking over a program. You’ll have to hire a coaching staff and recruit athletes from high school or through the transfer portal.

The recruiting engine in NCAA Football was amazing, and the way this process works in College Football 25 will be scrutinized.

There are coaching archetypes that are handled via skill trees that sound similar to the staff management options in Madden’s franchise mode. Ultimately, you want to guide your team into the new 12-team CFP.

EA College Football 25

The best new piece of information on Dynasty mode is the return of the Team Builder website, which allows you to create your own football program.

I wanted to see it return, and I didn’t expect EA to oblige. We’ll have to see if it is as layered as before, but seeing the feature return is excellent. I’m hoping for an early look at the site before launch that previews the options available.

Road to Glory is the single-player career mode. It allows users to take control of a single player and guide him through his college career with the hope of winning the Heisman trophy.

You’ll have to manage your player’s GPA, earn your coach’s trust, and attempt to win the Heisman on your journey. You can also put your created player into the transfer portal if you want to change schools.

New Mode: Road to the College Football Playoff

We’ll also see a new mode called Road to the College Football Playoff. Based on the description, it sounds like a cross-platform, ranked, online head-to-head competitive mode. The press release describes it as follows:

“Experience a new way to play competitively across consoles in the Road to the College Football Playoff. Will you represent your university, or take a power school to climb the polls? Earn rank by upsetting the toughest opponents and securing the votes you need to progress and level up divisions. Play your way into the playoffs and battle for the National Championship.”

College Football Ultimate Team

Ultimate Team returns to the college football video game world. NCAA Football had the collector mode before the series was canceled. However, EA has built out the format exponentially over the past decade.

We know the mode will feature current college football stars and legends, and it makes sense to expect various challenges, themed packs, and more in this iteration of the proven collector mode concept.

How Will EA College Football Gameplay and Presentation Differ From Madden?

From a pure gameplay standpoint, College Football 25 will undoubtedly have some similarities to Madden, but there are some obvious reasons to expect some differences. College Football 25 will feature many school-specific offenses and playbooks.

Player ratings will “fluctuate throughout each game,” and EA says teams are tiered. The in-game passing mechanics have been custom-fitted for college football.

One new gameplay concept that excites me is the “Wear & Tear system.”

EA describes it as follows:

“As the hits add up, players wear down with the Wear & Tear System. Manage your players’ health, limit fatigue, assess risk of injury, and avoid on-field mistakes by using strategic substitutions to ensure your players are at their best with it counts the most.”

I hope this functions as described and that if it does, it makes its way into Madden 25. Fatigue and managing injury risk are difficult to master in sports video games, so it will be interesting to see what modes this is present.

Pre-snap recognition is another key feature. It sounds as if it is designed to separate experienced heady players from young, inexperienced guys. I hope this feature or concept makes its way into Madden.

The Homefield Advantage concept sounds like a carryover from Madden’s M-Factors. I love it in franchise mode, and it is a logical fit in College Football 25. You could argue that the effects should be even stronger on collegiate players.

The atmosphere is a massive part of the immersion associated with College Football 25. According to EA, chants, fight songs, and mascots will be used for the top programs.

There will be two commentary teams in the game. Rece Davis, Jesse Palmer, and David Pollack will commentate on most games. However, Chris Fowler and Kirk Herbstreit will man the mic for “all marquee matchups.”

Be on the lookout for more detailed information in the coming weeks.

Brian Mazique

  • Editorial Standards
  • Reprints & Permissions

Join The Conversation

One Community. Many Voices. Create a free account to share your thoughts. 

Forbes Community Guidelines

Our community is about connecting people through open and thoughtful conversations. We want our readers to share their views and exchange ideas and facts in a safe space.

In order to do so, please follow the posting rules in our site's  Terms of Service.   We've summarized some of those key rules below. Simply put, keep it civil.

Your post will be rejected if we notice that it seems to contain:

  • False or intentionally out-of-context or misleading information
  • Insults, profanity, incoherent, obscene or inflammatory language or threats of any kind
  • Attacks on the identity of other commenters or the article's author
  • Content that otherwise violates our site's  terms.

User accounts will be blocked if we notice or believe that users are engaged in:

  • Continuous attempts to re-post comments that have been previously moderated/rejected
  • Racist, sexist, homophobic or other discriminatory comments
  • Attempts or tactics that put the site security at risk
  • Actions that otherwise violate our site's  terms.

So, how can you be a power user?

  • Stay on topic and share your insights
  • Feel free to be clear and thoughtful to get your point across
  • ‘Like’ or ‘Dislike’ to show your point of view.
  • Protect your community.
  • Use the report tool to alert us when someone breaks the rules.

Thanks for reading our community guidelines. Please read the full list of posting rules found in our site's  Terms of Service.

DI softball regionals

DIII men's lax quarters

⚾️ DII baseball regionals

⛳️ DI Women's golf finals

2023 Division I FCS Football

2023 Division I FCS Football

First round, second round, quarterfinals.

Championship Logo

Championship

National champion, latest fcs football news.

what division is presentation college football

FCS Football

Here's when the 2024 college football season starts.

what division is presentation college football

Making sense of FCS conference realignment

what division is presentation college football

What the past FCS playoffs might've looked like under 2024's new 16 seeded teams change

what division is presentation college football

Here's every 2024 HBCU football homecoming and classic in the FCS

what division is presentation college football

11 FCS players, zero HBCU players taken in the 2024 NFL draft

what division is presentation college football

Colleges with the most players drafted in the 2024 NFL draft

what division is presentation college football

FCS and HBCU football prospects to know in the 2024 NFL draft

what division is presentation college football

Breaking down the 2024 HBCU Legacy Bowl rosters, how to watch and more

COMMENTS

  1. Presentation Scores, Stats and Highlights

    Visit ESPN for Presentation live scores, video highlights, and latest news. Find standings and the full 2024 season schedule.

  2. 2022 Presentation College Football

    Mayville State University. W 21-0. 11/5/2022. at Valley City State University. L 10-21. 11/12/2022. at Dickinson State University. L 16-73. The official 2022 Football schedule for North Star Athletic Association.

  3. Presentation College Athletics Programs

    As a member of the NAIA Division II, Presentation College competes in the North Star Athletic Association conference. ... On the money side of things, the Presentation College football program brought home $1,444,245 in revenue and paid out $936,577 in total expenses. That is, the program raked in a net profit of $507,668 for the school.

  4. Presentation College Presentation 2022 Regular Season NCAAF Schedule

    ESPN has the full 2022 Presentation College Presentation Regular Season NCAAF schedule. Includes game times, TV listings and ticket information for all Presentation games.

  5. PC football releases 2021 season schedule

    Presentation College is set to open the 2021 football season with a home game and a pair of non-conference games featuring an opponent from NCAA Division III and one from the Great Plains Athletic ...

  6. The Presentation College football team nearly upset Dakota State

    The Saints' final effort is a great testament to the players — especially the seniors, the coaching staff and Presentation's young football program that played its 11th season this fall.

  7. Presentation College, South Dakota

    Presentation College (PC) was a private Roman Catholic college ... of the NCAA Division III ranks from 2002-03 to 2011-12. Presentation competed in ten intercollegiate varsity sports: Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, football and soccer; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, soccer, softball (fast ...

  8. Presentation College

    Presentation College sports news and features, including conference, nickname, location and official social media handles.

  9. 2021-22 Football Statistics

    THE OFFICIAL STATISTICS SITE OF THE NAIA. Continue to NAIA.org; Search

  10. Presentation College

    Intercollegiate Athletics - Men's and Women's. Presentation College is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and North Star Athletic Association (NSAA). The athletic program at Presentation College offers ten sports in which men and women may participate: Men's and Women's Basketball, Men's and Women's ...

  11. 2022 Football

    L 10-21. Valley City, ND. Satellite, Nov 12. Playing. @ 18 Dickinson State University. L 16-73. Dickinson, ND. The 2022 Playing team of that Presentation University. View the official roster and schedule of of 2022 Football team.

  12. Original Saints have left mark on Presentation College team

    Presentation College played its first season of football in fall 2011. The Saints faced many ups and downs that first season, they were without a conference for another year and transitioned f

  13. Understanding College Football Divisions: A Comprehensive Guide

    NCAA Division II offers a competitive level of college football that provides opportunities for student-athletes to excel both on the field and in the classroom. Division II institutions typically have a moderate level of financial resources and focus on a more comprehensive student-athlete experience, emphasizing the balance between academics ...

  14. NCAA College Football FBS Standings

    College football national championship history. Find the official NCAA Football FBS standings, filtered by Conference or Division.

  15. Intercol 23: "Pres Lions" book final spot after controversial late

    Yesterday in Point Fortin, the football was better between the two sides, but the result looked destined to be the same. Presentation College (San Fernando) full back Duhrell Young (left) tries to hold off Arima North Secondary winger Jemaul Ashing during SSFL Premier Division action on 13 September 2023. Photo: Brian Miller/ Arima Araucans Academy

  16. 2020 NCAA Division I FBS football season

    The 2020 NCAA Division I FBS football season was the 151st season of college football games in the United States. Organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at its highest level of competition, the Football Bowl Subdivision, it began on September 3, 2020.. The season was heavily impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States; all of the Power Five conferences ...

  17. SSFL

    Chaguanas North Secondary vs San Juan North Secondary. November 3, 2023.

  18. ESPN College Football

    ESPN College Football at Philips Arena for the 2018 College Football Playoff National Championship media day. ESPN College Football is the branding used for broadcasts of NCAA Division I FBS college football across ESPN properties, including ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN3, ESPN+, ABC, ESPN Classic, ESPNU, ESPN Deportes, ESPNews and ESPN Radio. ESPN College Football debuted in 1982.

  19. College Football 80-Team Super League: Breaking Down The Perfect 10

    For a while, it felt like the SEC and Big 10 were destined for a two-conference Super League, with the rest of college football getting left behind. We may still end up there, but earlier this week, a new model was released with 80 teams in the top college football division, including all of the current P4 teams and ten current G5 teams.

  20. How an 80-team, 8-division college football 'Super League' would've

    We organized the former Power 5 schools, plus independent Notre Dame and soon-to-be ACC member SMU, into seven 10-team divisions for the permanent 70 teams envisioned within College Sports ...

  21. Football

    Aug 31. 6:00 p.m. Football. at Hastings College (Neb.) Sep 7. 6:00 p.m. Football. vs Central Methodist University (Mo.) The Official Athletics Website of the Peru State College Bobcats.

  22. UTSA, Texas State football ranked in CBS Sports' first Group of Five

    SAN ANTONIO - Two San Antonio-area college football teams and rivals have both made the inaugural CBS Sports' Group of Five Power Rankings for the 2024 season. The University of Texas at San ...

  23. Missouri State moves up to Conference USA in 2025 from FCS, becoming

    Updated 8:42 AM PDT, May 10, 2024. Missouri State will move up to the highest tier of Division I college football and join Conference USA in 2025, the league announced Friday. Missouri State will become the 12th full member of CUSA and the third school to move up from the Championship Subdivision to the Bowl Subdivision and join the league over ...

  24. 2024 NCAA DII baseball championship: Bracket, schedule, scores

    2024 NCAA baseball bracket: Men's College World Series scores, schedule The 2024 DI baseball championship is set to begin with regionals on Friday, May 31. Here is the full tournament schedule.

  25. NCAA College Football Conferences

    FCS (Division I-AA Conferences) Check out all the scores, standings and stats from every Division I college football conference.

  26. 5 traditions Gophers fans should want to see in EA Sports's College

    But with other pre-game traditions such as Notre Dame's "Play Like a Champion Today" sign and LSU's "Win Bar" in the game, there's a chance it could be part of Minnesota's pregame presentation. 4 ...

  27. Arkansas Razorbacks' running back room boosted by highly graded transfer

    Utah Utes. FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. -- The Razorbacks have at least one returning tailback who ranks in the Top 10. Utah transfer Ja'Quinden Jackson has garnered praise from Pro Football Focus-College's ...

  28. EA College Football 25 Full Feature Revealed, Including Huge ...

    College Football 25. Credit: EA. On Friday, May 17, EA unveiled the trailer and full feature set for EA College Football 25 via press release. While there's a plethora of features to explore, the ...

  29. 2023 FCS Football Official Bracket

    The official 2023 College Football Bracket for FCS. Includes a printable bracket and links to buy NCAA championship tickets.