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But you know who else noticed what Delany and Slive had to say last week? Guys like Charlie Cobb.
Cobb is the athletic director at Appalachian State University, one of the very best programs in Division I-AA (due to public confusion over the labels, we don't use the official NCAA designations FBS and FCS). The Mountaineers of Jerry Moore won three straight national championships from 2005-2007 and have led the nation in Division I-AA attendance (at 28,000-plus) three times in the last four years.
In case you are wondering, in 2010 a total of 32 of the 120 Division I-A teams averaged less in home attendance than Appalachian State. In fact, 23 Division I-A schools averaged less than 20,000 in attendance last season.
"When we look at the WAC, the MAC, the Sun Belt and the others we compare very favorably to what they are doing," Cobb said. "So we decided that if things change dramatically we need to be prepared."
So when all the smoke clears your divisions in college football for the 2014 regular season would be:
The College Football Association (CFA): ACC, SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, Big East, Pac-12, Army, Navy, Notre Dame, and BYU.
Division I-A: Mountain West, WAC, Mid-American, Conference USA, Sun Belt, Big Sky, CAA, Missouri Valley, Ohio Valley, Southern, Southland, Charlotte (Independent)
Division I-AA: Big South, Ivy, MEAC, Northeast, Patriot, Pioneer, SWAC, Fordham (Independent)
Division II
Division III
I think this guy may be onto something....as I posted on egriz, as a Griz fan I like the concept. We move up a level as a conference (much less disruptive), gain significantly more Western U.S. opponents (Idaho, BSU, Utah State, Wyoming, Colorado State, SJS, Fresno State, Nevada, Air Force, San Diego State, UNLV) and still have a playoff to determine the eventual champion.
