Marc Morehouse

Hi, I'm Marc Morehouse. I've covered sports for more than 15 years, mostly in Eastern Iowa. I've had Hayden Fry [...]
Updated: 13 February 2013 | 4:03 pm in Hawkeye Football, On Iowa by Marc Morehouse, UNI Panthers

Could be ‘devastating’ for UNI if B1G drops FCS

Northern Iowa made nearly $1 million from B1G games in '12


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Northern Iowa field goal kicker Billy Hallgren (36) reacts in front of holder Kyle Bernard (95) and Iowa's Tyler Sash (9) after his field goal was blocked on the final play of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Sept. 5, 2009, in Iowa City, Iowa. Iowa won 17-16. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Wisconsin athletics director Barry Alvarez said on his radio show Tuesday that Big Ten officials agreed to stop scheduling FCS opponents. That statement reverberated in Iowa, where the University of Iowa and University of Northern Iowa live and have contracts signed and games on the schedule in 2014 and 2018.

The immediate response was nothing has been finalized, but, yes, this would be a potentially “devastating” prestige hit and a “significant” budget hit for UNI.

“Nothing is a done deal, but those discussions have taken place,” UNI athletics director Troy Dannen said Wednesday, noting the possible addition of a strength of schedule component when FBS moves to a four-team playoff in 2014.

“I didn’t expect it to be a conference-wide thing, I thought it would be institution by institution,” Dannen said. “I think with television starting to drive things here, I think BCS vs. BCS has more interest than BCS vs. FCS and, frankly, BCS vs. MAC (Mid-American Conference), Sun Belt, that type of game.”

The Alvarez statement that rang out so loudly in Iowa was this: “The nonconference schedule in our league is ridiculous,” Alvarez said on WIBA-AM. “It’s not very appealing…So we’ve made an agreement that our future games will all be Division I schools. It will not be FCS schools.”

Next season, Iowa will play Missouri State on Sept. 7. The Hawkeyes open with Northern Iowa in 2014. In 2015, Iowa opens with Illinois State in ’16 it’s North Dakota State, where Iowa athletics director Gary Barta graduated from in 1987. It would be the 30th anniversary season of NDSU’s Division II NCAA 1986 national title, a team Barta played quarterback for.

Iowa also has UNI on the schedule for 2018.

“I like playing and have liked playing UNI on an occasional basis,” said Barta, who was at the same meeting of Big Ten athletics directors and football coaches with Alvarez this week. “What was talked about in the context of scheduling is you look at college football scheduling over the last 20 years, not just in the Big Ten but in college football, and when we added the 12th game, there’s just been a shift to these types of games we’re playing in our non-conference.

“There was a lot of discussion about wanting to re-strengthen for the good of college football, for the good of the Big Ten. One of the reasons why we’re talking about going from eight to nine or 10 games is to strengthen and improve the Big Ten college football game. Same in scheduling non-conference.”

Dannen said as of Wednesday, he’s still planning on the Iowa games for ’14 and ’18. “Frankly, I can’t believe the Big Ten would force its members to buy out current contracts,” Dannen said.

This winter was the first Big Four Classic at the Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines. It included Iowa, Iowa State, UNI and Drake. It also ended UNI and Drake playing host to Iowa and Iowa State every-other year.

“This is a lot different than the basketball series,” Dannen said. “We’re all members of conferences. We’re owned and operated by the state of Iowa.

“I would tell you the loss of the Big Ten schools will be devastating, to UNI and to a lot of our peers. Not just because we wouldn’t play Iowa and have the guarantee, if you think this will stop at the Big Ten…I look at things happening in the equity leagues in fives, and so I have to believe this might lead to additional dominoes.”

Dannen said he knew the Big 12 hadn’t discussed dropping FCS schools from schedules.

The financials of these “guarantee” games matter to UNI. The school received $300,000 from Iowa State during the 2010 season. Last year, Northern Iowa earned $950,000 in guarantees from Iowa and Wisconsin.

Dannen said this move by the Big Ten could be “significantly impactful” on FCS budgets.

“To me, it’s a $500,000 budget hit, and that is significant,” Dannen said. “It impacts our ability to generate money in football. It closes the ranks, it closes us out a little bit more. I understand why it’s happening, but at some point in time, the owners of these institutions — not just stakeholders, I’m talking owners, the state of Iowa — at what point in time do they step in and say, ‘You know what, the interests of a few as such a disservice to the whole that we have to start thinking about the whole again.’

“Money transferred between state institutions is different than money being paid to someone outside the state of Iowa.”

Nothing is finalized, a point Barta drove home Wednesday. The Big Ten will reveal the fate of FCS games likely the same time it does scheduling and divisions for 2014, which could be late spring/early summer.

“Everybody agreed that we want to collectively make college football as good as it can be and we talked about several ideas,” Barta said, “but nothing was finalized.

“We don’t have any final direction. And we will have. We all agree we need to have something done probably before the summer because we all need direction. We all have contracts out. We’re scheduling into the future. We all need some direction where we’re headed. We talked about everything, including whether or not we play FCS.”

But you don’t want to be an athletics director and be using terms like “devastating” and “significant” in front of the word “budget.”

“It’s another shoe, but it’s like an octopus,” Dannen said. “It’s not just two shoes, it’s shoe after shoe that’s going to fall and continues to fall. You just don’t know what the next one is.”

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Could be ‘devastating’ for UNI if B1G drops FCS
  1. This is fine with me as long as Iowa replaces these games with any BCS conference team. Not another MAC team that plays us like it is their Super Bowl. Several of those MAC teams have been doing a better job recruiting than us for the last couple of years so it is going to hard for us to beat these guys moving forward anyway. Heck last year we were lucky to go 1-1 vs. MAC teams

    • I agree that Iowa was lucky to go 1-1 vs. the MAC last year and could very well lose the first game this year vs. Northern Illinois but I think it’s a bit of a stretch to say they out recruit Iowa or any Big Ten team. 9 times out of 10 if a kid has an offer from a bunch of MAC schools and Iowa they’re picking Iowa.

      • you are right I jumped the gun and over stated. This years senior class was rated below C Mich and it showed last year and I fear that it will again this year, but we have been rectuiting better than the MAC teams………of course is that worth 5 mill a season??

  2. I’m all for this. So often our Big Ten teams are finishing with less than a .500 record in conference and getting to go to a good bowl game based upon 3-4 preseason wins over patsies. Lets make these high paid coaches earn their money and have their record actually reflect their effectiveness against equivalent competition.

  3. If the Big Ten goes to a 9 game conference schedule (heck I’m hearing they’re considering 10) I wonder if that will effect the ISU series.
    I, for one, would hate to see that but it’s the way of the college football world now. I think it stays in a 9 conference game schedule but I would think that Iowa would want two “gimmes” if they went to a 10 team conference schedule.

    • ISU is a no win for Iowa. We have always had more talent, but have a losing record against them under KF (same with northwestrn). Now they are starting to close the talent gap, and this year both did better than we did. How do we have a chance against either team when the talent level tips in their favor AND they have the sideline talent to bury us year in and year out??? Dark times ahead, but at least we get to hear the same reapeated speeches from KF at 5 mill a season. Finally, to make sure that no one hires away anymore coaches from our staff, we are hireing coaches nobody wants, kind of like we go about recruiting

  4. And, as much as I hate to see this happen to UNI, the FCS games are getting old.
    Yes, I know Iowa had to block 2 FGs in 2009 and Appalachin State beat Michigan and all that but those games are few and far between.

  5. I would hate it for UNI. I’m not convinced a game against Kent State or Central Michigan would be any better.

    Wait, strike that part about Central Michigan. And, yes, I know, probably too soon.

    I definitely don’t want to see UNI football go out of business.

    • I agree. I would rather just play UNI every 3 years or so than a MAC team. BUT I’d much rather see two or three games against teams from the SEC, ACC, Big 12 or Pac 12. Yeah, I know. Dream on.

  6. UNI will have to step up or drop out. I like UNI and hope football continues there forever. But my concern is Iowa and the Big Ten. And Iowa and the Big Ten should be embarrassed to play the schedules they have recently, and that they have planned. I’ve never known a competitive athlete who wanted to play lesser competition. I’ve never known a team that improved from playing lesser competition. It may have won more games, but it didn’t develop its talents.

    UNI and the FCS have to look out for themselves. And so do Iowa and the Big Ten. How does the promo go? “Big stage, Big Ten”? Sure, so let’s go play football against Austin Peay, Missouri State, Tennessee Tech, UNI, and North Dakota State…

    Big Ten fans have been fleeced for years having to watch such farces. Big stage? OK, Big Ten. Then how about Iowa vs. Arkansas, Texas A&M, K-State, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Auburn and folks like that instead of the FCS. Sure, Iowa may not win as many games, but it will give the fans our money’s worth and the team will be better for it, even if its record may not be. Any coach or player worthy of association with the Big Ten should have been demanding such matchups all along, including Mr. Alvarez.

  7. You think the Big Ten is the only major conference scheduling cupcakes?

  8. Did I say the Big Ten is the only one? Just like your momma used to say: Just because somebody else is doing something stupid doesn’t mean you should, too.




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