Pioneer Football League

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Pioneer Football League

Pioneer Football League


Data
Classification NCAA Division I-AA
Established 1991
Members 8
Sports fielded 1 (football)
Region Nationwide
States 7 – California, Florida, Indiana,
Iowa, Kentucky, North Carolina, Ohio
Headquarters St. Louis, Missouri
Commissioner Patty Viverito
Locations

The Pioneer Football League is a college athletic conference which operates literally from coast to coast in the United States. It has member schools that range from North Carolina and Florida in the east to California in the west. The conference participates in the NCAA's Division I-AA as a football-only conference. Unlike most other Division I-AA conferences, the Pioneer League consists of institutions which choose not to award athletic scholarships ("grants-in-aid") to football players. The Pioneer Football League, like its non-scholarship brethren the Ivy League, do not participate in the I-AA playoffs. In lieu of playoff participation, the league champion will, as of 2006, play the champion of the Northeast Conference in the Gridiron Classic.

Contents

[edit] Membership

Institution Location Founded Affiliation Enrollment Joined Nickname Primary Conference
Butler University Indianapolis, Indiana 1855 Private 4,415 1991 Bulldogs Horizon League
Davidson College Davidson, North Carolina 1837 Private 1,700 2001 Wildcats Southern Conference
University of Dayton Dayton, Ohio 1850 Private/Catholic 9,175 1991 Flyers Atlantic Ten Conference
Drake University Des Moines, Iowa 1881 Private 3,164 1991 Bulldogs Missouri Valley Conference
Jacksonville University Jacksonville, Florida 1934 Private 2,600 2001 Dolphins Atlantic Sun Conference
Morehead State University Morehead, Kentucky 1922 Public 7,921 2001 Eagles Ohio Valley Conference
University of San Diego San Diego, California 1949 Private/Catholic 4,904 1992 Toreros West Coast Conference
Valparaiso University Valparaiso, Indiana 1859 Private/Lutheran 4,000 1991 Crusaders Mid-Continent Conference

[edit] Former members

[edit] History

Following an NCAA rule change passed in January 1991, which required Division I schools to conduct all sports at the Division I level by 1993, the conference was formed by charter members Butler University, the University of Dayton, Drake University, the University of Evansville, and Valparaiso University. The University of San Diego joined in 1992, and the league played its first season in 1993. These six schools had previously sponsored football at the Division II and Division III levels. The league was narrowed back to five members after the University of Evansville dropped football in 1997.

However, in 2001, the conference nearly doubled in size and was reorganized with the five current members forming the North Division, and newcomers Austin Peay State University, Davidson College, Jacksonville University and Morehead State University forming the South Division. This reorganization also spawned a new championship system in which the best record holders from each division would play in a title game for the conference championship.

On April 8, 2005, Austin Peay announced that it would be leaving the Pioneer Football League after the 2005 season and returning to scholarship-granting competition in 2007 with the Ohio Valley Conference in which it competes in other sports. As a result, the conference was reverted to round-robin play and the divisions were removed. On April 7, 2006, Campbell University announced they would bring back football at the non-scholarship level for the 2008 season, with hopes of joining the PFL at that time. [1]

On May 16, 2006, the Pioneer Football League (PFL) and Northeast Conference (NEC) announced a two-year agreement to meet in the Gridiron Classic, an exempted postseason football game that will match the champions of the two I-AA football conferences. The inaugural Gridiron Classic will take place on Saturday, December 2 with the NEC champion serving as host. The PFL winner will host the 2007 event. If either champion had been chosen for the I-AA playoffs, the second place finisher in that conference would then play in the Gridiron classic.

[edit] Championships

[edit] Regular season

Season Champion Record
1993 Dayton 5-0-0
1994 Dayton 4-1-0
Butler 4-1-0
1995 Drake 5-0-0
1996 Dayton 5-0-0
1997 Dayton 5-0-0
1998 Drake 4-0
1999 Dayton 4-0
2000 Dayton 3-1
Drake 3-1
Valparaiso 3-1
2001 Dayton 4-0
2002 Dayton 4-0
2003 Valparaiso 3-1
2004 Drake 4-0
2005 San Diego 4-0
2006 San Diego 7-0

[edit] Championship Games

Date Champion Score Runner-Up Location
Nov. 17, 2001 Dayton 46-14 Jacksonville Dayton, OH
Nov. 23, 2002 Dayton 28-0 Morehead State Morehead, KY
Nov. 22, 2003 Valparaiso 54-42 Morehead State Valparaiso, IN
Nov. 20, 2004 Drake 20-17 Morehead State Morehead, KY
Nov. 19, 2005 San Diego 47-40 Morehead State San Diego, CA

[edit] Conference facilities

School Football Stadium Capacity
Butler Butler Bowl 7,500
Davidson Richardson Stadium 6,000
Dayton Welcome Stadium 11,000
Drake Drake Stadium 14,000
Jacksonville D.B. Milne Field 5,000
Morehead State Jayne Stadium 10,000
San Diego Torero Stadium 6,000
Valparaiso Brown Field 5,000

[edit] External link



NCAA Division I-AA Football Conferences
Atlantic Ten ConferenceBig Sky ConferenceBig South ConferenceGateway Football ConferenceGreat West Football ConferenceIvy League
Metro Atlantic Athletic ConferenceMid-Eastern Athletic ConferenceNortheast ConferenceOhio Valley ConferencePatriot League
Pioneer Football LeagueSouthern ConferenceSouthland ConferenceSouthwestern Athletic ConferenceIndependents