- NCAA Division II National Football Championship
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The NCAA Division II National Football Championship began in 1973. Prior to 1973, four regional bowl games were played in order to provide postseason action for what was then called the NCAA College Division and a poll determined the final champion.
The National Championship game was held at Sacramento, California from 1973–1975. It was in Wichita Falls, Texas in 1976–1977. The game was played in Longview, Texas in 1978. For 1979 and 1980, Albuquerque, New Mexico hosted the game. McAllen, Texas hosted the championship games from 1981–1985. Since 1986 the Division II championship game has been played annually at Braly Municipal Stadium near the campus of the University of North Alabama in Florence, Alabama. Since 1998 the games have been broadcast on ESPN.
Contents
NCAA College Division Wire Service National Champions
From 1964 to 1972, four regional bowl games were played that led up to a wire service poll to determine the final champion of Division II's predecessor, the NCAA College Division.
Those games were:
- West: Camellia Bowl, in Sacramento, California 1964–1972
- Midwest: Pecan Bowl in Abilene, Texas 1964–1967 & Arlington, Texas 1968–1970, Pioneer Bowl in Wichita Falls, Texas, 1971–1972
- Mideast: Grantland Rice Bowl in Murfreesboro, Tennessee 1964–1968 & Baton Rouge, Louisiana 1969–1972
- East: Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, Florida 1964–1967, Boardwalk Bowl in Atlantic City, New Jersey 1968–1972
Winners of regional bowls
Year West Midwest Mideast East 1964 Montana State Northern Iowa Middle Tennessee State East Carolina 1965 Los Angeles State North Dakota State Ball State / Tenn State (tie game) East Carolina 1966 San Diego State North Dakota Tennessee State Morgan State 1967 San Diego State Texas-Arlington Eastern Kentucky Tennessee-Martin 1968 Humboldt State North Dakota State Louisiana Tech Delaware 1969 North Dakota State Arkansas State East Tennessee State Delaware 1970 North Dakota State Arkansas State Tennessee State Delaware 1971 Boise State Louisiana Tech Tennessee State Delaware 1972 North Dakota Tennessee State Louisiana Tech Massachusetts National champions by polling
Year Champion 1958 Southern Miss 1959 Bowling Green 1960 Ohio 1961 Pittsburg State 1962 Southern Miss (UPI), Florida A&M (AP) 1963 Delaware (UPI), Northern Illinois (AP) 1964 Los Angeles State (UPI), Wittenberg (AP) 1965 North Dakota State 1966 San Diego State 1967 San Diego State 1968 San Diego State (UPI), North Dakota State (AP) 1969 North Dakota State 1970 Arkansas State 1971 Delaware 1972 Delaware 1973 Tennessee State 1974 Louisiana Tech (UPI), Central Michigan (AP) National Championship games
A playoff series was started in 1973 to determine the Division II champion.
† Mississippi College's tournament participation, along with its championship, were vacated by the NCAA Committee on Infractions.
Most national championships
The teams that have won the most national championships since 1973 are:
Team Championships Winning years North Dakota State* 5 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1990 Grand Valley State 4 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006 North Alabama 3 1993, 1994, 1995 Northwest Missouri State 3 1998, 1999, 2009 Minnesota Duluth 2 2008, 2010 Northern Colorado* 2 1996, 1997 Troy State* 2 1984, 1987 Southwest Texas State* 2 1981, 1982 Valdosta State 2 2004, 2007 Cal Poly-SLO* 1 1980 Central Michigan* 1 1974 Delta State 1 2000 Delaware* 1 1979 Eastern Illinois* 1 1978 Jacksonville State* 1 1992 Lehigh* 1 1977 Louisiana Tech* 1 1973 Montana State* 1 1976 North Dakota* 1 2001 Northern Michigan 1 1975 Pittsburg State 1 1991 - * Inactive, see Teams that moved to Division I
Teams that moved to Division I
Most of the participants in early national championship games have moved into Division I, the main catalyst for their moves being the creation of Division I-AA, now the Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), in 1978. The following Division II title game participants later moved to Division I:
- Division I FBS (formerly I-A)
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- Akron (1976 runner-up)
- Central Michigan (1974 champion)
- Louisiana Tech (1973 champion)
- Troy (1984 and 1987 champion as Troy State)
- Western Kentucky (1973 and 1975 runner-up)
- Division I FCS (formerly I-AA)
- Cal Poly-SLO (1980 champion)
- Delaware (1979 champion;1974 and 1978 runner-up)
- Eastern Illinois (1978 champion;1980 runner-up)
- Jacksonville State (1992 champion; 1977, 1989 and 1991 runner-up)
- Lehigh (champion 1977)
- Montana State (champion 1976)
- North Dakota (champion 2001, runner-up 2003)
- North Dakota State (champion 1965, 1968, 1969, 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1990; runner-up 1981, 1984)
- Northern Colorado (champion 1996, 1997)
- Portland State (runner-up 1987, 1988)
- South Dakota (runner-up 1986)
- Texas State (champion 1981, 1982 as Southwest Texas State)
- UC Davis (runner-up 1982)
- Youngstown State (runner-up 1979)
See also
- College football national championships in NCAA Division I FBS
- NCAA Division I Football Championship
- NCAA Division I FCS Consensus Mid-Major Football National Championship
- NCAA Division III National Football Championship
- NAIA National Football Championship
- NJCAA National Football Championship
- List of college bowl games
External links
Systems used to determine college football national champions Division I-A/FBS Various Polling Systems (1869–present) • Bowl Coalition (1992–1995) • Bowl Alliance (1995–1998) • Bowl Championship Series (1998–present) Division I-AA/FCS Division I-AA/FCS Championship (1978–present) Other Divisions NCAA Division II National Football Championship (1973–present) • NCAA Division III National Football Championship (1973–present) • NAIA National Football Championship (1956–present) National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Awards • Hall of Champions • Conferences
Division I sports
and championshipsInstitutions • Athletic Directors • Baseball (Championship, CWS) • Basketball (Men, Women) • Women's Bowling • Boxing • Cross Country (Men, Women) • Fencing (Championship) • Women's Field Hockey • Football (FBS / BCS, FCS) • Golf (Men, Women) • Gymnastics (Men, Women) • Ice Hockey (Men, Women) • Lacrosse (Men, Women) • Rifle • Rowing (Women's Championship) • Skiing • Soccer (Men, Women) • Softball (Championship, CWS) • Swimming & Diving (Men, Women) • Tennis (Men, Women) • Track & Field (Men's Indoor & Outdoor, Women's Indoor & Outdoor) • Volleyball (Men, Women) • Water Polo (Men, Women) • Wrestling (Championship)
Division II Institutions • Baseball (CWS) • Basketball (Men, Women) • Football (Championship) • Soccer (Men) • Softball (CWS)
Division III Institutions • Baseball (CWS) • Basketball (Men, Women) • Football (Championship) • Soccer (Men) • Softball (CWS)
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