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1993 NCAA Division I-AA football season

American college football season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1993 NCAA Division I-AA football season
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The 1993 NCAA Division I-AA football season, part of college football in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association at the Division I-AA level, began in August 1993, and concluded with the 1993 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game on December 18, 1993, at Marshall University Stadium in Huntington, West Virginia. The Youngstown State Penguins won their second I-AA championship, defeating the Marshall Thundering Herd by a score of 17−5.[1] It was the third consecutive year that Marshall and Youngstown State faced off in the I-AA title game.

Quick Facts Regular season, Number of teams ...
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Conference changes and new programs

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  • A 1991 NCAA rule change required athletic programs to maintain all of their sports at the same division level by the 1993 season. In order to comply, 28 Division I programs with football teams at the Division II and Division III levels were forced to upgrade their programs to the Division I level, and all of them (at least initially) chose Division I-AA as their new football home.
  • The rule change led directly to the establishment of the Pioneer Football League, a non-scholarship football conference at the Division I-AA level with six founding members, all of which had played in Division II or III: Butler, Dayton, Drake, Evansville, San Diego, and Valparaiso.
  • It also led to the creation of the American West Conference, initially a football-only conference at the Division I-AA level with five founding members, all formerly in Division II: UC Davis, Cal Poly, Cal State Northridge, Sacramento State, and Southern Utah.[2]
  • The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, an existing Division I conference, also began sponsoring football in order to accommodate these new I-AA football programs.

+ The UC Davis Aggies, although a member of the new American West Conference, were listed in Division II polls,[3] and participated in the Division II postseason.[4]

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Conference standings

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Conference champions

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Postseason

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NCAA Division I-AA playoff bracket

Only the top four teams in the field were seeded, with the NCAA placing others teams in the bracket to avoid early round matchups between teams from the same conference.[5] This was the first season that the NCAA did not use an in-house poll process for I-AA ranking purposes; independent polling by The Sports Network wire service was used.[6] The site of the title game, Marshall University Stadium, had been predetermined months earlier.[7]

First Round
November 27
Campus sites
Quarterfinals
December 4
Campus sites
Semifinals
December 11
Campus sites
National Championship Game
December 18
Marshall University Stadium
Huntington, WV
        
Eastern Kentucky 12
(1) Georgia Southern* 14
(1) Georgia Southern 14
Youngstown State* 34
UCF 30
Youngstown State* 56
Youngstown State* 35
Idaho 16
Northern Iowa 21
(4) Boston University* 27**
(4) Boston University 14
Idaho* 21
Idaho 34'
Northeast Louisiana* 31
Youngstown State 17
Marshall 5
Delaware 49
(2) Montana* 48
Delaware 31
Marshall* 34
Howard 14
Marshall* 28*
Marshall* 24
Troy State 21
William & Mary 28
(3) McNeese State* 34
(3) McNeese State* 28
Troy State 35
Stephen F. Austin 20
Troy State* 42

* Next to team name denotes host institution
* Next to score denotes overtime period
Source:[8]

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References

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