New Mexico St Staying FBS in Football

Las Cruces Sun-News

LAS CRUCES – New Mexico State football will look to remain in the top tier of college athletics in 2018, according to Board of Regents Chair Debra Hicks.

The future of the program has been in doubt after the Sun Belt Conference informed NMSU it would not renew the school’s football-only membership after the 2017 season. In April, NMSU formed an 18-member Athletic Review Committee to look at the school’s options — staying in the Football Bowl Subdivision as an independent, or joining a league in the Football Championship Subdivision, still Division I, but considered a competitive level below FBS.

“In May of 2013, the Board of Regents passed a resolution to stay the course with FBS,” said Hicks, who is part of  the review committee. “The committee will continue their work to come up with their proposal in what we should do in regards to conference alignment but we are staying the course with FBS for the foreseeable future.”

Hicks said the issue will not be an action item in front of the regents, but rather the board will reaffirm the 2013 resolution. Hicks said the 2013 resolution and financial considerations were the determining factors in the committee’s consensus to move forward as an independent football program.

“I came on the board a year ago so I was not aware that the resolution was in place,” Hicks said. “We are back to that same point.”

NMSU’s decision to remain at the FBS level comes after Idaho’s announcement last week that the Vandals were dropping to FCS football and joining the Big Sky Conference in 2018 after their football-only membership in the Sun Belt expires.

“Idaho just happened and that has created a firestorm,” Hicks said. “We have student-athletes who are very interested in what they are playing in the next few years. That was a critical decision that needed to be made so that everyone has a confident feeling about that while we really look at conference alignment.”

Football to remain FBS

Based on the committee’s findings, a move to FCS football in 2018 would cost the university an estimated $2.38 million, mostly stemming from the loss of guaranteed football games (NMSU is set to receive $2.8 million from guaranteed games in 2016 at Texas A&M and Kentucky). The committee’s financial estimates for staying in FBS included two money games but Hicks said there was an option for a third.

Committee chairman Mickey Clute will present the committee’s complete findings at the May 13 Board of Regents regular meeting.

“We tried to address things that could make a substantive difference and ultimately FBS was the choice from a revenue standpoint,” Clute said. “In comparison, the savings in FCS were not dramatic enough to offset the travel costs that those teams would have had. … Idaho probably looked at it and saw a huge gain in travel costs but that was not the case for us.”

Idaho is geographically closer to the teams in the Big Sky Conference than NMSU would be to teams in any FCS conference.

Clute said the committee considered travel costs, guarantee games, ticket sales and the socioeconomic value of keeping rivalry games against UTEP and New Mexico on the schedule, and NCAA distribution and sponsorship agreements with Learfield Sports and Under Armor.

“It was necessary in FBS vs. FCS to not get caught up in conference alignment because we have no control over that right now, but our options are greater in FBS and they (the Big Sky) have not told us they would take us,” Clute said. “If there is movement, it creates opportunities for us.”

Universities who are playing an independent football schedule in 2016 include Notre Dame, BYU, Army and Massachusetts. The Aggies played an independent football schedule in 2013 before joining the Sun Belt as a football-only member in 2014.

“Football has a foundation with (head football coach Doug Martin) and Chancellor (Garrey) Carruthers, who has improved facilities and all of those things trump the previous 50 years that people go back to because the college football landscape is different than it was then,” Clute said.

“We are deferring conversations with the Big Sky,” Hicks said. “It is not appropriate to have those conversations. The university needs to be focusing on budget, sources and uses. The committee will continue to work on their proposal for what we should do in conference alignment.”

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