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2024 NCAA Division I FCS football season

The 2024 NCAA Division I FCS football season, part of college football in the United States, was organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level. The regular season began on August 24 and ended in November. The postseason began in November and, aside from any scheduled all-star games, ended on January 6, 2025 with the 2025 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas.

Due to the structure of the calendar in 2024, FCS teams were allowed to play 12 regular-season games instead of the usual 11.

Conference changes and new programs

Notable headlines

  • April 19 - The NCAA approved numerous technology rules such as teams having the option of using tablets to view in-game video for the 2024 season. Seven of the final eight playoff teams leveraged GameStrat's in-game video technology.
  • April 25 – The NCAA approved an increase in the number of seeded teams in the FCS playoff bracket from 8 to 16, effective for the 2024 season. The number of qualifying teams and the bracket format will remain otherwise unchanged.
  • May 29 – Stephen F. Austin announced it would leave the United Athletic Conference (UAC) on July 1 to rejoin the Southland Conference (SLC) after a three-year absence.
  • August 27:
  • The oversight committees for FBS and FCS recommended that the transfer portal be open only for a 30-day period, starting on the Monday after conference championship games. This did not affect the previously existing exceptions for participants in postseason games, which allows players to enter the portal within a 5-day window after their team's final game, or players undergoing a coaching change. The Division I Council voted on the change in October.
  • Both oversight committees also approved a change to redshirt rules. Effective immediately, the participation limit of four games for redshirting players no longer includes postseason games. Relevant to FCS, this includes the SWAC championship game, the Celebration Bowl, and FCS playoff games.
  • October 9:
  • The NCAA Division I Council approved the recommended reduction of the FBS and FCS transfer portal to 30 days, though with a different schedule than recommended. The fall window, which opens on the Monday after the FBS conference championship games, will be open only for 20 days. A 10-day spring portal will open in mid-April.
  • The Council also abolished the National Letter of Intent program effective immediately. Written offers of athletics aid replaced the NLI.
  • The Council introduced a proposal that would shorten the transition periods for schools wishing to reclassify from Division II or Division III to Division I. The Council would approve this proposal at its January 2025 meeting, thereby reducing the transition periods for D-II and D-III schools by a year, respectively to three and four years.
  • November 7 – Texas A&M University–Commerce announced a name change to East Texas A&M University, effective immediately.
  • December 18 - The Ivy League announced starting in the 2025 season, the league champion would participate in the NCAA Division I Championship.

Conference standings

Playoff qualifiers

Automatic berths for conference champions

At-large qualifiers

Abstentions

Postseason

The FCS again features a 24-team postseason bracket: 10 teams decided via automatic bids issued to conference champions, and 14 at-large bids (see above). Where previously the top eight teams were seeded, the top 16 teams were seeded this year, a change from the 2023 season.

Bowl game

NCAA Division I playoff bracket

Hosted despite being the unseeded team (Illinois State unable to host due to facilities conflicts)

Source:

Rankings

The top 25 from the Stats Perform and AFCA Coaches Polls.

Pre-season polls

STATS source:<br> AFCA source:

Final rankings

STATS source: AFCA source:

Kickoff games

The regular season began on Saturday, August 24 with four games in Week 0:

Regular season top 10 matchups

Rankings reflect the Stats Perform Poll.

Upsets

This section lists instances of unranked teams defeating ranked teams during the season.

Regular season

During the regular season, thirty-four unranked teams defeated ranked teams.

Postseason

FCS team wins over FBS teams

Coaching changes

Preseason and in-season

This is restricted to coaching changes that took place on or after May 1, 2024, and will include any changes announced after a team's last regularly scheduled games but before its playoff games. For coaching changes that occurred earlier in 2024, see 2023 NCAA Division I FCS end-of-season coaching changes.

End of season

This list includes coaching changes announced during the season that did not take effect until the end of the season.

Attendances

The top 30 NCAA Division I FCS football teams by average home attendance:

See also

References