Big sky, big skills for Big Sky Conference on FCS football stage

As of earlier this week, seven Big Sky Conference teams were ranked in a Football Championship Subdivision coaches’ poll.

One of those teams was Weber State, which of course is Northern Colorado’s opponent Saturday afternoon at Nottingham Field.

Weber State was No. 14 in the Sept. 24 poll and the Wildcats were the highest ranked team with a .500 record. Weber (0-1 Big Sky, 2-2 overall) earned the ranking after losing 40-0 a day before to No. 3 Montana State, which is also in the Big Sky Conference and the highest-ranked conference team in the poll.

Other Big Sky teams in the poll were No. 6 Idaho, No. 9 Sacramento State, No. 16 Montana, No. 20 UC Davis and No. 25 Eastern Washington. UC Davis and Eastern Washington are also 2-2.

So what makes the conference so tough in football?

“It’s the SEC of FCS football,” UNC offensive coordinator Blair Peterson said. “Missouri Valley is a great conference, so you can put that up there. Those are the premier conferences in FCS.”

The now 12-team Missouri Valley Conference was started in 1985 and has an FCS-best 12 national championships with nine from North Dakota State. Last season, the conference extended its record of 12-straight title game appearances with North Dakota State and South Dakota State playing for a title.

Longtime Weber State Director of Athletic Communications Paul Grua said seven teams in the top 25 is a lot for the Big Sky.

First-year Weber State coach Mickey Mental said the conference’s strength lies in the member schools.

“All the programs in the Big Sky have outstanding coaching and run great programs that are supported by their institutions,” Mental said in an email. “From top to bottom everyone plays hard and there is a lot of talent.”

First-year UNC coach Ed Lamb coached Southern Utah for four years when the Thunderbirds were members of the Big Sky.

While football recruiting has a national component, and guys go all over the country to play, the majority of realistic opportunities and offers for players remain regional, Lamb said. The Big Sky is the third-highest league in the West behind the Pac-12 and Mountain West conferences, he added, so if athletes don’t go to those leagues, the BSC is the next level for quality players.

“There’s been great continuity in the Big Sky,” Lamb said. “I think there’s outstanding resources. At Northern Colorado, we’re one of the schools trying to keep up on the resource front.”

Lamb said there are football programs in the Big Sky that have resources “scratching the surface” of resources and facilities of Football Bowl Subdivision schools. FBS is the top level of Division I football.

“All those things put together, I think, it’s really a quality brand of football,” Lamb said. “We also have some flagship state institutions that have large fan bases and great game-day environments, and that sure helps with recruiting as well.”

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)

The Trust Project Logo

  • Policies
  • Report an Error
  • Contact Us
  • Submit a News Tip
  • 2023
  • September
  • 30

Most Popular

  • 40,000 drivers caught on camera cutting illegally in and out of Colorado highway express lanes

    40,000 drivers caught on camera cutting illegally in and out of Colorado highway express lanes

  • Terrell Davis pays $3.3M for Cherry Hills mansion

    Terrell Davis pays $3.3M for Cherry Hills mansion

  • Everything you need to know about the solar eclipse at Mesa Verde National Park

    Everything you need to know about the solar eclipse at Mesa Verde National Park

  • Lauren Boebert escorted out of “Beetlejuice” musical in Denver after “causing a disturbance”

    Lauren Boebert escorted out of "Beetlejuice" musical in Denver after "causing a disturbance"

  • Construction starts on $125M, 81-acre technology park in Broomfield

    Construction starts on $125M, 81-acre technology park in Broomfield

  • Kiszla: Have 0-3 Broncos hit rock bottom? Frank Clark says: “This is going to be a season of grit. We’re going to have to take some (bleep).”

    Kiszla: Have 0-3 Broncos hit rock bottom? Frank Clark says: "This is going to be a season of grit. We're going to have to take some (bleep)."

  • Gov. Jared Polis orders plan to keep Colorado’s national parks open in a federal shutdown

    Gov. Jared Polis orders plan to keep Colorado's national parks open in a federal shutdown

  • Discovery of Suzanne Morphew’s body raises new legal questions in 3-year-old case

    Discovery of Suzanne Morphew's body raises new legal questions in 3-year-old case

  • Bustang canceled 51 Colorado rides over past two weeks

    Bustang canceled 51 Colorado rides over past two weeks

  • “Super El Niño” likely this winter, NCAR experimental prediction system says

    "Super El Niño" likely this winter, NCAR experimental prediction system says

Trending Nationally

  • What services and benefits are at risk if Congress fails to fund the government? Here’s what you should know
  • Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s career: From San Francisco mayor to U.S. senator
  • California has 6 of the most-valuable housing markets in US
  • Discovery of Suzanne Morphew’s body raises new legal questions in 3-year-old case
  • PHOTOS: New York City pummeled by torrential downpours, flash floods

Source: Read Full Article