NCAA FCS Football Championship Information
The NCAA Division I FCS ranks second in prominence only to the Football Bowl Subdivision among collegiate football, once referred to as Division I-AA. For the 2023 season, 128 teams competed at the FCS level among 14 leagues, all sanctioned by the NCAA. Each school's non-football athletic programs typically compete in NCAA Division I, and the FCS classification is only associated with football.
The NCAA did not divide its member institutions into divisions between 1906 and 1955. Before the 1956 football season, there was a University Division and a College Division within the NCAA.
The University Division transitioned to Division I in the summer of 1973. Still, by 1976, there was a push to further divide the more financially successful football teams from the less so while letting their other sports compete at the highest level.
Since its establishment in 1978, the FCS has conducted a postseason playoff to confer an NCAA-sanctioned national title. The number of teams in the playoffs rose from four in 1978 to twenty-four in 2020. Because of this, the FCS is now the only college football level with a national title recognized by the NCAA.
Thirteen different FCS Division I leagues remain in play for the 2023 season. The Big South and Ohio Valley Conferences joined in 2023 to form an alliance that would share a single automatic spot in the FCS playoffs. The NCAA does not recognize it as a complete league but as an association.
How to Buy NCAA FCS Football Championship Tickets
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