The Citadel Football: Parents’ Weekend 2023

Western Carolina at The Citadel, to be played at historic Johnson Hagood Stadium in Charleston, South Carolina, with kickoff at 2:00 pm ET on September 30, 2023.

The game will be streamed on ESPN+. Dave Weinstein will handle play-by-play, while Jason Kempf supplies the analysis. The sideline reporter is Taylor Wall.

The contest can be heard on radio via The Citadel Sports Network. WQNT-1450 AM [audio link], originating in Charleston, will be the flagship station. Other stations carrying the game include WQXL in Columbia (100.7 FM/1470 AM) and WDXY in Sumter (105.9 FM/1240 AM).

Brian Giffin will call the action alongside analyst Lee Glaze.

Before starting with the nuts and bolts of this preview, I need to briefly note the obvious, which is that the last couple of days have been very difficult ones for many people associated with The Citadel, and the football program in particular.

The sudden passing of Stanley Myers on Wednesday has cast a pall over this weekend’s events on campus. I have little to add to what has already been said, and will continue to be said, about Myers’ exemplary life. I’ll just include a few quotes about him here.

Deon Jackson:

[Stanley Myers] is everything you think about when you think about a Citadel graduate. He represents the best of all of us. We lost one of our great leaders.

Jack Douglas:

The best way I can define Stan is a quintessential Citadel man. He fought for our country, became one of the top defense lawyers in the country and a judge advocate general. He just ticked off accomplishment after accomplishment after accomplishment. And he exuded Citadel excellence.

Jason Barley:

It’s a sad day for Citadel football. QB1 was the best. He represented the best of what cadet student-athletes at The Citadel are all about. He was the epitome of a Citadel alum on and off the field and in life. Everyone looked up to Stanley.

Stanley Myers was 47 years old. Condolences to his family.

Links of interest:

– SoCon weekly release

Western Carolina game notes and depth chart

– The Citadel game notes [when available]

– Maurice Drayton’s Monday press conference

Season statistics for The Citadel (four games)

– Box score for The Citadel-South Carolina State

Catamount Football Weekly with Kerwin Bell

Box score for Western Carolina-Arkansas (WCU lost, 56-13)

– Box score for Samford-Western Carolina (the Catamounts won, 30-7)

– Box score for Western Carolina-Eastern Kentucky (a road win for WCU, 27-24)

Box score for Charleston Southern-Western Carolina (WCU won, 77-21)

– Season statistics for Western Carolina (four games)

Roster review:

– Of the 110 players on The Citadel’s online roster, 58 are from South Carolina. Other states represented: Florida (14 players), Georgia (11), North Carolina (11), Virginia (5), Alabama (2), Ohio (2), New York (2), Texas (2), and one each from Maryland, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.

– Western Carolina has 123 players on its online roster. Of those, 44 are from North Carolina and 43 are from Florida. Other states represented: Georgia (13 players), South Carolina (13), Alabama (3), Tennessee (3), Texas (2), and one each from Nebraska and Virginia.

– WCU has 30 redshirt freshmen and 29 “true” freshmen. Of those two groups, 27 are from Florida, including 17 from the Miami/Ft. Lauderdale area.

– There are 13 Palmetto State products on the Catamounts’ roster, representing 11 different South Carolina high schools: Lakewood (2 players), Northwestern (2 players), A.C. Flora, Byrnes, Clover, Fairfield Central, Fox Creek, Hartsville, Hillcrest, Seneca, and Thomas Heyward Academy.

As sharp-eyed readers will immediately notice, there are no graduates of Orangeburg-Wilkinson High School on WCU’s squad. The failure to recruit any stalwarts of the famed maroon and orange is a sad blot on Kerwin Bell’s record. Ronnie Carr, who made history in Cullowhee, cannot be pleased.

– Seven of the Catamounts are junior college transfers, while 24 members of the roster originally began their respective college careers at other four-year institutions. Among those FBS schools from which players have matriculated to WCU: Akron, Alabama, Coastal Carolina, Massachusetts, North Carolina, South Florida, Toledo, UAB, and Virginia Tech.

According to Western Carolina’s game notes, 12 of those transfers are new to the program this season.

Redshirt junior defensive lineman C.J. Fann, Jr. started his intercollegiate career at Florida State before transferring to Akron. He is now in his first season at Western Carolina.

Odds and ends:

– The weather forecast for Saturday in Charleston, per the National Weather Service, includes a 20% chance of showers after kickoff. The projected high is 81°, with a low that night of 65°.

– As I’ve previous mentioned, it is highly unlikely that a line for this game will be posted anywhere before Saturday morning.

– Massey Ratings: Western Carolina is ranked 26th in FCS, up one spot from last week. The Citadel is 109th (a 13-place drop).

Massey projects Western Carolina to win the game by a predicted score of 35-19. The Citadel is given a 17% chance of winning.

Meanwhile, SP+ ranks Western Carolina 41st (32nd on offense, 57th on defense) and The Citadel 119th (125th on offense, 88th on D).

A selected list of SP+ FCS rankings entering Week 5:

  • South Dakota State (1st)
  • North Dakota State (2nd)
  • Montana State (3rd)
  • William and Mary (6th)
  • Furman (8th)
  • Chattanooga (16th)
  • Jackson State (28th)
  • Campbell (33rd)
  • Austin Peay (37th)
  • Mercer (42nd)
  • Samford (46th)
  • Kennesaw State (51st)
  • Eastern Kentucky (52nd)
  • Davidson (53rd)
  • East Tennessee State (81st)
  • Wofford (87th)
  • VMI (92nd)
  • Charleston Southern (95th)
  • Bucknell (107th)
  • Morehead State (123rd)
  • Presbyterian (126th)
  • Drake (128th and last)

In other FCS ratings systems, The Citadel ranks 122nd in the Congrove Computer Rankings (a drop of 5 spots), 125th in the Laz Index (a decline of 4 places), and 120th in the DCI (down 9 spots).

– Games involving SoCon teams this week [projected score per SP+ in brackets]:

  • Saturday at 1:00 pm ET: East Tennessee State at Samford [Samford 35.0, ETSU 20.9]
  • Saturday at 2:00 pm ET: Western Carolina at The Citadel [WCU 36.1, The Citadel 14.4]
  • Saturday at 4:00 pm ET: VMI at Mercer [Mercer 31.7, VMI 12.6]
  • Saturday at 6:00 pm ET: Chattanooga at Wofford [UTC 34.2, Wofford 13.2]

Furman is off this week.

– Among Western Carolina’s notable alumni: actor Sean Bridgers, composer Sarah Hutchings, and former major league infielder Wayne Tolleson.

– The Citadel has an all-time record of 6-6 for games played on September 30. The Bulldogs are 4-0 at home on that date, and 2-2 in league play.

Maurice Drayton, asked about how The Citadel can improve on third down:

You have to win first down. You have to win second down, so that your third downs are manageable…in order to stay on the field (after) third down, we have to win on first and second down.

I decided to take a quick statistical look at The Citadel’s results on both first down and third down this season.

On first down, the Bulldogs are averaging 4.74 yards per play. While an individual first-down gain of 4 or 5 yards is generally excellent, an average in that range is definitely not. For comparison, the 2016 team averaged 6.21 yards per play on first down.

The average would be considerably worse without the Bulldogs’ 75-yard touchdown pass against Campbell; without that, the mean would be 3.83 yards per play.

Now, that play does count — big plays are part of succeeding on first down, after all — but the bottom line is that far too often, the Bulldogs are not gaining enough yardage on first down to make eventual third down plays more manageable. In fact, exactly one-third of The Citadel’s first-down plays have resulted in a gain of less than two yards.

On third downs, the average distance the Bulldogs have needed to pick up a first down is 7.53 yards (the 2016 squad’s comparable number was 5.68, an enormous difference). For 31.9% of its third down plays this season, The Citadel has needed to gain at least 10 yards, which is obviously not conducive to sustaining long drives.

Perhaps even more frustrating is that the Bulldogs have not been adept at picking up first downs even in their limited short-yardage opportunities; on 3rd-and-1 and 3rd-and-2, The Citadel has only successfully converted on four of nine attempts.

Since 1953, The Citadel has a record of 37-32 on Parents’ Day. The college actually started hosting a celebration weekend for parents in 1934, but records are a bit scanty for the games played prior to 1953 (and they aren’t absolutely perfect post-1953, either).

One of my goals is to compile a complete record for Parents’ Day contests, much as I did for Homecoming games. I hope to do that sometime next year.

The Citadel is 3-0 when Western Carolina is the opponent on Parents’ Day.

Incidentally, the Catamounts have never been the visiting team on Homecoming at The Citadel, despite the two schools meeting on the gridiron 47 times. No other Bulldog opponent has played the military college as often without being a Homecoming guest at least once.

There is always hope for the Bulldogs, but this Saturday that commodity might not be as readily available. On the other hand, Western Carolina arrives in Charleston with a great deal of well-deserved confidence.

Its emphatic victory over Samford established WCU as a serious contender in the SoCon. Following that up with a solid road victory over Eastern Kentucky and last week’s demolition of Charleston Southern only enhanced the team’s overall profile, which is why the Catamounts are now ranked in both major FCS polls.

Starting quarterback Cole Gonzales was named the league’s offensive player of the week after throwing five touchdown passes against Charleston Southern. Nine different Catamounts scored touchdowns in that contest.

Also, I wouldn’t expect WCU to be looking past The Citadel, even with a high-stakes game at Chattanooga next week. Kerwin Bell will make sure of that.

During his coach’s show, the WCU boss expressed frustration over losing last year’s meeting between the two schools:

They ruined our Saturday, man, one of the worst games I’ve ever been in as a head coach, to see us get beat by them at home…

…We weren’t ready…we didn’t get them off the field…they had six plays that I remember that were 3rd and long, and that ain’t their cup of tea, we should have been off the field — they got all six. A lot of it was busted assignments, it’s not being well coached. That is our fault. That one still hurts me, probably of all the losses I’ve ever had as a head coach, because you shouldn’t lose to that.

The Citadel didn’t really convert six 3rd-and-long plays in that game, but what Bell is probably remembering is the first half, when the Bulldogs successfully converted third down plays of 7, 8, and 6 yards via the pass, and were 8 for 10 overall on 3rd down conversion attempts in the half (including a 32-yard TD toss to go up 24-0). For the game, The Citadel controlled the ball for 42 minutes and 49 seconds.

That type of statistical dominance for the Bulldogs is not likely this Saturday. Western Carolina is a better football team this season, and The Citadel is still finding its way on both sides of the ball.

The goal remains continued improvement. That will be the goal on every Saturday for the rest of this year. A victory would be a most welcome result of that improvement, no matter which Saturday.

The Citadel plays a football game in Orangeburg for the first time since 1959

The Citadel at South Carolina State, to be played at Oliver C. Dawson Stadium in Orangeburg, South Carolina, with kickoff at 6:00 pm ET on September 23, 2023.

The game will be streamed on ESPN+. Play-by-play will be handled by Tyler Cupp, while Demetrius Davis supplies the analysis.

The contest can be heard on radio via The Citadel Sports Network. WQNT-1450 AM [audio link], originating in Charleston, will be the flagship station. Other stations carrying the game include WQXL in Columbia (100.7 FM/1470 AM) and WDXY in Sumter (105.9 FM/1240 AM).

Brian Giffin will call the action alongside analyst Lee Glaze.

  • “Live Stats” for the game [link when available]

I usually don’t list the the opposing team’s radio personnel, but I’ll make an exception here, because the duo in the booth for SCSU are both institutions.

Play-by-play voice Ernest Robinson has been a continuous part of SCSU’s radio team since 1978. The host of ‘The Buddy Pough Show’ also was a presence on ESPN Radio Columbia for many years with the ‘Sports Hotline’ program.

Bill Hamilton is the radio analyst. He graduated from South Carolina State in 1973 and has been with the school ever since, including a four-decade run as the school’s SID. The press box at Oliver C. Dawson Stadium is named in his honor.

Links of interest:

– SoCon weekly release

– South Carolina State game notes [when available]

– The Citadel game notes

– Maurice Drayton’s Monday press conference

The bonds between Buddy Pough and Maurice Drayton run deep

– Box score for The Citadel-Chattanooga

– Buddy Pough’s press conference [when available]

MEAC video conference for its coaches, including Buddy Pough

The Buddy Pough Show

Box score for South Carolina State-Jackson State (SCSU lost 37-7 in a game played in Atlanta)

Box score for South Carolina State-Charlotte (SCSU lost, 24-3)

Box score for South Carolina State-Georgia Tech (SCSU lost, 48-13)

– Season statistics for South Carolina State (three games)

– Pough uses bye week to “refine playbook”

Roster review:

– Of the 110 players on The Citadel’s online roster as of September 14, 58 are from South Carolina. Other states represented: Florida (14 players), Georgia (11), North Carolina (11), Virginia (5), Alabama (2), Ohio (2), New York (2), Texas (2), and one each from Maryland, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.

– South Carolina State has 106 players on its online roster. Of those, 85 are from South Carolina. Other states represented: Florida (6 players), Georgia (6), North Carolina (5), and one each from Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, and Pennsylvania.

– Of the 85 (!) Palmetto State products on SCSU’s roster, two are graduates of Orangeburg-Wilkinson High School, perhaps fewer than would be expected. Of course, Buddy Pough himself played at O-W under the late Dick Sheridan, so he is well aware of the famed maroon and orange and its inherent greatness.

– Only seven of the Orangeburg Bulldogs are transfers from other post-secondary institutions. Three of them came from fellow FCS schools (Alcorn State, Bryant, and Delaware State); none are from P5/G5 universities.

Odds and ends:

– The weather forecast for Saturday in Orangeburg, per the National Weather Service, includes a 20% chance of showers. The projected high is 81°, with a low that night of 60°.

That sounds rather nice to me.

– If I get a line on the game before noon on Saturday, I’ll post it here. Given how lines and odds have been posted for FCS schools this season, however, that is unlikely.

– Massey Ratings: South Carolina State is ranked 101st in FCS, unchanged from last week. The Citadel is 96th (a 2-place drop).

Massey projects South Carolina State to win the game by a predicted score of 24-21. The Citadel is given a 44% chance of winning.

Meanwhile, SP+ ranks South Carolina State 116th (105th on offense, 101st on defense) and The Citadel 123rd (124th on offense, 103rd on D).

A selected list of SP+ FCS rankings entering Week 4:

  • South Dakota State (1st)
  • North Dakota State (2nd)
  • Montana State (3rd)
  • William and Mary (7th)
  • Furman (18th)
  • Chattanooga (22nd)
  • Campbell (23rd)
  • Jackson State (29th)
  • Mercer (30th)
  • Austin Peay (33rd)
  • Samford (41st)
  • Kennesaw State (44th)
  • Western Carolina (48th)
  • Davidson (52nd)
  • Eastern Kentucky (53rd)
  • Charleston Southern (80th)
  • East Tennessee State (81st)
  • Wofford (92nd)
  • VMI (97th)
  • Bucknell (101st)
  • Morehead State (121st)
  • Presbyterian (126th)
  • Marist (128th and last)

In other FCS preseason polls/rankings, The Citadel ranks 117th in the Congrove Computer Rankings (a drop of 10 spots), 121st in the Laz Index (a decline of 23 places), and 111th in the DCI (down 11 spots).

– Games involving SoCon teams this week [projected score per SP+ in brackets]:

  • Saturday at 1:00 pm ET: Mercer at Furman [Furman 29.3, Mercer 22.0]
  • Saturday at 1:30 pm ET: Wofford at VMI [VMI 19.8, Wofford 18.9]
  • Saturday at 2:30 pm ET: Charleston Southern at Western Carolina [WCU 28.6, ChSo 15.9]
  • Saturday at 3:00 pm ET: Chattanooga at Samford [UTC 28.8, Samford 22.9]
  • Saturday at 6:00 pm ET: The Citadel at South Carolina State [SCSU 26.7, The Citadel 20.4]

East Tennessee State is off this week.

– Among South Carolina State’s notable alumni: songwriter/arranger/producer Horace Ott, longtime congressman Jim Clyburn, and biophysicist Kandice Tanner.

– The Citadel has an all-time record of 3-7 for games played on September 23. The Bulldogs are 1-5 away from home.

The most notable game played by The Citadel on September 23 came in 1989. In the remnants of Hurricane Hugo, the Bulldogs defeated Navy in Annapolis, 14-10.

The following week, The Citadel played South Carolina State in a game that was subsequently dubbed the “Hurricane Bowl” or the “Hugo Bowl” (your choice). The contest was moved from Charleston to Columbia, and played at Williams-Brice Stadium.

I wrote about that matchup a few years ago, the first meeting on the gridiron between South Carolina State and The Citadel. Allow me to copy and paste this next section.

There would have been a certain kind of hype attached to the game, which explains why a reporter for The Nation was one of the 21,853 people in attendance. However, any sociopolitical context had already been effectively blown away by the winds that had done so much damage to the state the week before.

The Citadel had won its previous game at Navy, 14-10, but that victory had come at a cost. The starting quarterback for the Bulldogs, Brendon Potts, was lost for the season with a knee injury. His replacement was a redshirt freshman named Jack Douglas.

Douglas made his first career start for The Citadel against South Carolina State. He scored two touchdowns while passing for another (a 68-yard toss to Phillip Florence, one of two passes Douglas completed that afternoon).

Shannon Walker had a big game for the Bulldogs, returning a kickoff 64 yards to set up a field goal, and later intercepting a pass that, after a penalty, gave The Citadel possession at South Carolina State’s 6-yard line (Douglas scored his first TD two plays later).

Adrian Johnson scored the go-ahead touchdown in the third quarter on a 26-yard run. The Citadel had trailed South Carolina State at halftime, but held the Orangeburg Bulldogs scoreless in the second half.

The military college won the game, 31-20, and finished with 260 rushing yards — 137 of which were credited to one Tom Frooman (on 15 carries). The native of Cincinnati rushed for 118 yards in the second half, with a key 41-yard run that came on the play immediately preceding Johnson’s TD.

Frooman added 64 yards on an 80-yard drive that cemented the victory (Douglas capping that possession with a 3-yard touchdown in the game’s final minute of play).

In a way, it is hard to believe that was 34 years ago. In another way, it isn’t hard to believe at all.

The Citadel and SC State have faced each other three more times since then, in consecutive years from 1999 through 2001. The Bulldogs from Charleston came out on top on all three occasions, though the 1999 contest could have gone either way, with The Citadel very fortunate to prevail.

Buddy Pough on this Saturday’s game:

“I hope (this game) could develop into some sort of rivalry,” Pough said. “There are all kinds of kinships and relationships with their coaching staff, and this always has a chance to be one of those special, friendly rivalries.”

Pough said there is a large contingent of Citadel supporters around the Orangeburg area, and he knows they will be cheering for their team Saturday.

“We have all kinds of Citadel folks in town that are calling me about parking spots and tailgating spots,” Pough joked. “We have some big supporters in this town, and I told them it was OK to come … but they were going to have to pay. Hopefully, while they’re here, they will leave a few bucks.”

I completely agree with the coach. These two schools should play each other in football more often. They don’t necessarily have to meet every season (scheduling issues for both would more than likely preclude that from happening anyway), but a semi-regular series seems like a natural.

I think it would be more than appropriate for a player at The Citadel to make the trip to Orangeburg at least once during his career, and vice versa, so perhaps two games every four years (home and home) would be good.

After all, regular trips to Orangeburg for a football game are actually an old tradition at The Citadel…

While this is the first time The Citadel has played South Carolina State in Orangeburg, the school has a long (albeit dormant) history of playing in The Garden City.

The Citadel has played 38 times in Orangeburg in its history. All of those games were played in conjunction with the Orangeburg County Fair, usually in late October or early November.

Most, if not all, of the games were attended by the corps of cadets, which as a group took the train to Orangeburg. That was back when there were railroad tracks on campus.

In 1916, The Citadel made its debut on the gridiron in Orangeburg by defeating Clemson, 3-0. The last game the Bulldogs played there (before this Saturday) was a 40-8 victory over Wofford in 1959.

From 1916 through 1959, The Citadel played in Orangeburg every season except for 1938 and 1939 (more on that later), the war years of 1943-45 (when the school did not field a team), and in 1953.

Many of those games were against South Carolina — 20 of them, in fact, with generally excellent attendance that occasionally exceeded 10,000 fans (a very good number before World War II). The Citadel also played at the county fair against Wofford (8 times), Clemson (5), Furman (3), and once each versus Presbyterian and Erskine.

While The Citadel opened its account in Orangeburg with a win over Clemson, and closed it with a victory over Wofford, most of the games at the fair didn’t end that way. The Citadel’s record in Orangeburg is 7-27-4.

Only one of those games against the Gamecocks resulted in a victory (1926, which along with 1916 is one of two years in which The Citadel defeated both South Carolina and Clemson during the season). There were two ties among those twenty matchups.

Then there was the 1937 game, in which the final score (21-6 in favor of the Gamecocks) was but a footnote.

South Carolina halfback Jack Lyons was returning a punt and in the open field when he “was tackled by a spectator who was watching the game from the sideline. It was a man dressed in a brown business suit. He slashed in on the ball carrier with a perfect tackle.”

The individual in question, William R. Milligan, became known as ‘The Man in the Brown Suit’, which might have been a play on an Agatha Christie novel of that title which had been published a few years earlier. (I’m just guessing on that; incidentally, it’s not a terrible book but not one of her best, either).

Anyway, his effort on behalf of the Bulldogs led to an on-field fracas featuring spectators from both sides (including the corps of cadets), the football players, and assorted other individuals that only ended when:

“the Bulldog and Gamecock bands began playing ‘The Star Spangled Banner.’

Everybody stopped fighting and stood at attention, with the uniformed cadets of The Citadel leading the way.

The band music returned peace to the stadium and the game resumed with the Bulldogs scoring a touchdown before it was over.”

While peace was eventually restored, it is possible that the folks in Orangeburg decided that the two teams could take a break from meeting at the county fair for a few years.

In 1938, South Carolina played Villanova in Orangeburg instead of The Citadel. In 1939, the Gamecocks again returned to the county fair, this time playing West Virginia.

The Citadel played Wofford in 1940 in Orangeburg. Then, in 1941, the Gamecocks and Bulldogs returned to face each other again at the fair.

Oh, I have to quote the coda to the story of the 1937 game, written a few years ago in The Times and Democrat:

William R. Milligan, “the man in brown,” was hauled away by the Orangeburg Police Department.

He stood around with local policemen and listened to the play-by-play account of the remainder of the game on Columbia’s WIS radio. At the end of the game, he was released to return to Charleston…

…In later years, during fair week, Milligan, a poultry enthusiast, would be a mainstay at the county fair’s poultry barn.

Eventually, South Carolina quit playing in Orangeburg. The Citadel continued to do so, however, against other competition, maintaining the tradition through most of the 1950s.

The exception was 1953, when instead of playing in Orangeburg, the Bulldogs traveled to Roanoke, Virginia, and played Virginia Tech at Victory Stadium (where the Hokies used to play two or three games every season).

That year, the good citizens in Orangeburg settled for a matchup between Newberry and Guilford (though South Carolina and The Citadel’s freshman teams played a game there as well that weekend).

The Citadel’s final game at the Orangeburg County Fair came in 1959 and featured some hard feelings.

The contest drew 8,000 spectators, not a bad turnout, but perhaps not enough for The Citadel to continue to play games in Orangeburg. The Bulldogs won easily, breaking a Wofford winning streak in the series of four games.

Wofford and The Citadel would not meet again until 1967, in part because of a post-game disagreement between the two coaches, Eddie Teague of The Citadel and Wofford’s Conley Snidow. The Terriers’ boss accused Teague of running up the score, a charge heatedly denied by the Bulldogs’ coach.

Snidow complained about a late touchdown scored by The Citadel (though the TD came after Wofford had fumbled the ball away on its own five-yard-line), and he also belittled the Bulldogs’ victory, saying it came against one of his lesser squads.

There might have been some previous bad blood between the two men, as The Citadel had already announced it was suspending the series. My general impression is that Teague, who by this time was piloting a very good team which he had patiently developed over several years, had much better things to do than worry about whatever Wofford’s coach was whining about at any given moment.

The Citadel would only play Wofford once between 1959 and 1975.

College football at the Orangeburg County Fair wasn’t quite done once The Citadel left the scene; Wofford and Newberry played each other there in 1960 and 1961. After that, though, the gridiron action was limited to high school teams.

For anyone interested, I’ve compiled The Citadel’s games at the Orangeburg County Fair into a spreadsheet that can be accessed here: Link

The media guide doesn’t always list the games as having been played in Orangeburg (the matchup versus Erskine, for example). I’ve confirmed all the county fair contests via newspaper reports.

I’ll be in Orangeburg on Saturday. It might be a little late in the day to also make a trip to get some quality BBQ (and hash!), but we’ll see. That’s why coolers were invented.

I am hopeful for a competitive contest. I suspect both fan bases feel that way, actually.

Nothing further to add. Let’s play some football.

The Citadel Football: 2023 SoCon play begins

The Citadel at Chattanooga, to be played at Finley Stadium/Davenport Field in Chattanooga, Tennessee, with kickoff at 6:00 pm ET on September 16, 2023.

The game will be televised via Nexstar and streamed on ESPN+. Pete Yanity will handle play-by-play, while Jay Sonnhalter supplies the analysis.

According to the SoCon’s website:

Nexstar affiliates with the opportunity to air games are: ECBD (Charleston), WMYT (Charlotte), WWCW (Lynchburg/Roanoke) and WYCW (Greenville/Spartanburg/Asheville). Although not a Nexstar station, WMUB (Macon), Mercer University Broadcasting, will also air select contests.

That doesn’t necessarily mean all of those stations will be televising Saturday’s matchup.

The contest can be heard on radio via The Citadel Sports Network. WQNT-1450 AM [audio link], originating in Charleston, will be the flagship station. Other stations carrying the game include WQXL in Columbia (100.7 FM/1470 AM) and WDXY in Sumter (105.9 FM/1240 AM).

Brian Giffin will call the action alongside analyst Lee Glaze. 

Links of interest:

– SoCon weekly release

– Chattanooga game notes

– The Citadel game notes

– Maurice Drayton’s Monday press conference

– Things to avoid, per the coach: Self-Inflicted Negatives

– Box score for Campbell-The Citadel

– Rusty Wright’s press conference (video does not seem to work in all browsers; I managed to get it to work in Firefox)

Box score for Kennesaw State-Chattanooga (won by UTC, 27-20)

Box score for Chattanooga-North Alabama (a 41-27 loss for the Mocs)

– Season statistics for Chattanooga (two games)

Roster review:

– Of the 110 players on The Citadel’s online roster as of September 14, 58 are from South Carolina. Other states represented: Florida (14 players), Georgia (11), North Carolina (11), Virginia (5), Alabama (2), Ohio (2), New York (2), Texas (2), and one each from Maryland, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.

– Chattanooga has 103 players on its online roster. Of those, 35 are from Georgia, and 34 are from Tennessee. Other states represented on the Mocs’ squad: Alabama (14 players), Pennsylvania (4), Ohio (3), South Carolina (3), Florida (2), and one each from Arizona, California, Illinois, Mississippi, New Jersey, North Carolina, and Virginia.

Freshman offensive tackle Lukas Majer is from Cologne, Germany. He played high school football in Rabun Gap, Georgia.

– The Mocs have three players who hail from the Palmetto State, as noted. Star running back Ailym Ford went to West Florence High School. Redshirt freshman defensive lineman Ky Tayo (a transfer from Georgia Southern) graduated from Spring Valley High School in Columbia, while punter Clayton Crile (a grad transfer from Catawba) went to Byrnes High School in Duncan.

There are no Mocs who wore the famed maroon and orange of Orangeburg-Wilkinson High School, unquestionably a key reason why Chattanooga has been unable to capture the SoCon title in recent years. The absence of such players, with their innate gridiron knowledge and superior clutch performance, has been an obvious detriment to Chattanooga’s program.

– Chattanooga has one player who transferred in directly from junior college and 37 players who arrived via other four-year institutions, including “power five” schools Alabama, Auburn, Cincinnati, Florida, Georgia Tech, Houston, Indiana (two players), Louisville, Purdue, Tennessee, UCLA, Virginia Tech, and Washington State.

In its game versus Kennesaw State, five of those P5 transfers started, including quarterback Chase Artopoeus (a grad transfer from UCLA) and three of the Mocs’ offensive linemen.

Through two games, UTC’s offensive play-calling has been almost perfectly balanced between the run and the pass (73 rushes, 74 pass attempts). However, almost two-thirds (66.2%) of Chattanooga’s total offense has come via the air. 

The Mocs are averaging 6.03 yards per play, including 7.93 yards per pass attempt and 4.11 yards per rush. Chattanooga has not yet allowed a sack.

Opponents are averaging 6.96 yards per play versus the Mocs’ defense — 8.14 yards per pass attempt and 6.02 via the rush (all numbers sack-adjusted). North Alabama and Kennesaw State gained 56.2% of their total yards by passing.

Rusty Wright’s press conference (linked above) included a question about the future of college football. His answer — which began with a long sigh — was realistic and sensible. It starts around the 12-minute mark of the video.

Odds and ends:

– The weather forecast for Saturday in Chattanooga, per the National Weather Service, includes a 50% chance of showers and thunderstorms. It will be partly sunny, with a high near 81°. There is a 40% chance of showers on Saturday night.

– If I get a line on the game before noon on Saturday, I’ll post it here. However, FCS odds and lines have been very hard to come by so far this year.

– Massey Ratings: Chattanooga is ranked 46th in FCS, moving up 3 spots from last week. The Citadel is 94th (a 28-place drop).

Massey projects Chattanooga to win the game by a predicted score of 35-14. The Bulldogs are given a 9% chance of winning. 

– SP+ FCS rankings: The Citadel is 109th out of 128 teams, falling 39 spots, the largest drop of the week in the entire subdivision. The Bulldogs are ranked 108th in offensive SP+, and 82nd in defensive SP+.

Chattanooga is 31st in SP+ among FCS squads, 37th on offense and 30th on D.

A selected list of SP+ FCS rankings entering Week 3:

  • North Dakota State (1st)
  • South Dakota State (2nd)
  • Montana State (3rd)
  • William and Mary (8th)
  • Furman (12th)
  • Samford (25th)
  • Campbell (26th)
  • Mercer (30th)
  • Western Carolina (43rd)
  • Kennesaw State (50th)
  • East Tennessee State (51st)
  • Eastern Kentucky (52nd)
  • Austin Peay (54th)
  • Davidson (66th)
  • Wofford (79th)
  • Charleston Southern (85th)
  • VMI (90th)
  • Bucknell (108th)
  • South Carolina State (121st)
  • Morehead State (125th)
  • Presbyterian (128th and last)

– In other FCS preseason polls/rankings, The Citadel ranks 107th in the Congrove Computer Rankings (a drop of 28 spots), 98th in the Laz Index (a decline of 20 places), and 100th in the DCI (down 14 spots).

– Games involving SoCon teams this week [projected score per SP+ in brackets]:

  • Saturday at 2:00 pm ET: VMI at North Carolina State [NCSU 43, VMI 0]
  • Saturday at 5:00 pm ET: Furman at Kennesaw State [Furman 33.6, Kenn. St. 21.7]
  • Saturday at 6:00 pm ET: Western Carolina at Eastern Kentucky [EKU 30.3, WCU 30.0]
  • Saturday at 6:00 pm ET: The Citadel at Chattanooga [UTC 36.5, The Citadel 11.8]
  • Saturday at 6:00 pm ET: Presbyterian at Wofford [Wofford 37.2, PC 12.0]
  • Saturday at 7:00 pm ET: East Tennessee State at Austin Peay [APSU 28.9, ETSU 28.6]
  • Saturday at 7:30 pm ET: Samford at Auburn [Auburn 42, Samford 9]

Mercer is off this week. So is South Carolina State, The Citadel’s opponent next week.

– Among Chattanooga’s notable alumni: actor Dennis “Mr. Belding” Haskins, retired general Burwell Bell, and chemist Irvine Grote.

– The Citadel has an all-time record of 5-4 for games played on September 16. The Bulldogs are 2-3 away from home. 

The Citadel is 4-0 in SoCon play on September 16, including the most recent game played by the Bulldogs on that date, a 31-25 win at East Tennessee State in 2017. The other victory for The Citadel on September 16 was a 56-0 triumph over the Parris Island Marines in 1950.

You will notice I haven’t really said anything about the game at Johnson Hagood Stadium last Saturday. That is because the action on the field spoke for itself.

I wasn’t completely surprised by the fact the Bulldogs struggled, but I did not fully anticipate how vast the gulf in talent was between the two teams. 

There will probably be more games like that this season, even assuming improvement. After all, opposing teams will also have a chance to get better. That said, I would like to think The Citadel isn’t going to lose by seven touchdowns every week, particularly in conference play.  

On the surface, this week could be similar to the first two games of the season. The opponent appears to have considerably more talent, and The Citadel is still trying to work out new offensive and defensive systems under a first-year coaching staff.

There are things the Bulldogs can control, however. They can tackle better (a noticeable failing against Campbell). They can avoid committing dumb penalties, such as the unsportsmanlike conduct foul that torpedoed the drive following The Citadel’s touchdown. They can be more careful with the football, and not put it on the ground during the QB/RB exchange.

That is primarily what I am looking for this week (although a win would also be very nice).

Football at The Citadel: Charleston’s only D1 football team gets ready for its home opener

Campbell at The Citadel, to be played at historic Johnson Hagood Stadium in Charleston, South Carolina, with kickoff at 3:00 pm ET on September 9, 2023.

The game will be streamed on ESPN+. Kendall Lewis will handle play-by-play, while Jack Delongchamps supplies the analysis. The sideline reporter is Taylor Wall.

The contest can be heard on radio via The Citadel Sports Network. WQNT-1450 AM [audio link], originating in Charleston, will be the flagship station. Other stations carrying the game include WQXL in Columbia (100.7 FM/1470 AM) and WDXY in Sumter (105.9 FM/1240 AM).

Brian Giffin will call the action alongside analyst Lee Glaze. 

Links of interest:

– SoCon weekly release

Campbell game notes

– The Citadel game notes

Maurice Drayton’s Monday press conference

Underwood to remain The Citadel’s starting QB

‘Camel Call’ with Mike Minter

Box score for The Citadel-Georgia Southern

Box score for William and Mary-Campbell

Quick hitters on the Bulldogs’ opening-game loss to Georgia Southern:

  • Your guess is as good as mine as to how many Bulldogs appeared in the game; one source lists 66 players, another 70, and both include at least one player who didn’t actually see action.
  • The Citadel was called for only 4 penalties, two on offense and two on D. One of the two offensive penalties was a delay of game to give the punter more room on a 4th-and-long in Eagles territory; the other was a false start.
  • Finishing drives was an issue. The Citadel did not score despite having moving the ball four times inside the Georgia Southern 40-yard line (on 11 possessions). One of those was the final drive of the game, but the other three ended in a lost fumble and two short punts (one near the end of the first half).
  • The Bulldogs’ offense averaged 4.16 yards per play. The Citadel averaged 5.41 yards per rush and 0.67 yards per pass attempt (those numbers are sack-adjusted). Georgia Southern’s defense had 6 tackles for loss and a havoc rate of 19.6%.
  • The Citadel had 4 plays from scrimmage of 20+ yards, all rushes. 
  • Six of the Bulldogs’ eleven possessions resulted in 3-and-outs.
  • The Citadel’s defense allowed 6.39 yards per play, 6.53 yards per rush and 6.29 yards per pass attempt (sack-adjusted). The Bulldogs had 5 tackles for loss, part of a havoc rate of 12.2%.
  • Georgia Southern had 3 plays from scrimmage of 20+ yards, all pass receptions. The Eagles’ longest rush of the day was 17 yards.
  • Not counting a one-play possession at the end of the first half, the Eagles had 10 possessions, two of which were 3-and-outs (technically one of those was a 2-play drive that ended in an interception).

For reference, statistics of note from last season’s game in Buies Creek against Campbell, won by the Camels 29-10:

  The Citadel Campbell
Field Position 25.33 39.22
Success Rate 32.08% 45.00%
Big plays (20+ yards) 2 3*
Finishing drives (average points) 3.33 4.14
Turnovers 3 1
Expected turnovers 1.94 0.72
Possessions 9 9
Points per possession 1.1 3.2
Offensive Plays 53 60
Yards/rush (sacks taken out) 4.04 5.53
Yards/pass attempt (including sacks) 5.33 7.41
Yards/play 4.19 6.22
3rd down conversions 4 of 13 6 of 13
4th down conversions 2 of 3 3 of 3
Red Zone TD% 50.0% 50.0%
Net punting 31.3 28.5
Time of possession 32:34 27:26
TOP/offensive play 36.87 sec 27.43 sec
Penalties 9 for 83 yards 9 for 85 yards
1st down passing 1-1, 19 yards, TD**
4-8, 36 yards, 1 sack against
3rd and long passing 1-2, 5 yards, 1 INT, 1 sack against 3-5, 42 yards, TD
4th down passing 1-1, 11 yards 2-2, 38 yards
1st down yards/play 5.11 5.32
3rd down average yards to go 7.31 8.31
Defensive 3-and-outs+ 1 4

*Not included: a 21-yard run for a would-be TD partly negated by a downfield holding penalty; the net gain on the play for the Camels was 11 yards
** An additional first down completion for 10 yards in the 2nd quarter for The Citadel was wiped out by a holding penalty

For Campbell, five of the players on offense who started against The Citadel last season were in the Camels’ starting lineup this past Saturday against William and Mary. They included fifth-year senior quarterback Hajj-Malik Williams, Ezeriah Anderson (CU’s leading receiver against the Bulldogs last year), and three of five offensive linemen.

One of the two linemen who didn’t start against The Citadel in 2022 actually started the final seven games of last season for Campbell. The other is a grad transfer from UCLA.

Those five o-line starters average 6’5″, 336 lbs.

One player who didn’t start but is worth monitoring is redshirt freshman wideout/kick returner V.J. Wilkins, who possesses outstanding speed. He had 4 receptions against William and Mary.

On defense, Campbell only returns two starters from the 2022 squad, though one is linebacker C.J. Tillman, the leading tackler from last year. Tillman, who had 11 tackles, a forced fumble, and a recovered fumble against The Citadel in last season’s matchup, opened his campaign this year with 19 tackles versus William and Mary.

Of the new starters on D for the Camels, six transferred in this year from other four-year schools, including Georgia State, Central Connecticut State, Colorado State, Florida State, Harvard, and Illinois. 

Roster review:

– Of the 110 players on The Citadel’s online roster as of September 7, 58 are from South Carolina. Other states represented: Florida (14 players), Georgia (11), North Carolina (11), Virginia (5), Alabama (2), Ohio (2), New York (2), Texas (2), and one each from Maryland, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.

– Campbell has 111 players on its online roster. Of those, 40 are from North Carolina. Other states represented on the Camels’ squad: Florida (19 players), California (12), Virginia (9), Georgia (6), South Carolina (5), Louisiana (2), New Jersey (2), New York (2), Pennsylvania (2), and one each from Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, South Dakota, Texas, and Wisconsin.

– The Camels have five players who hail from the Palmetto State, as noted above, from the following high schools: First Baptist, Fort Dorchester, Carolina Forest, Catawba Ridge, and Strom Thurmond.

There are no Campbell players who competed for the famed maroon and orange of Orangeburg-Wilkinson High School, clearly a setback for Mike Minter’s recruiting operation. However, it should be noted that two of Minter’s assistants, Arturo Freeman and Deveron Harper, are O-W graduates, and thus have a stronger educational background than most coaches. That is particularly the case for Freeman, an alumnus of Marshall Elementary School.

– Campbell has two players who transferred in directly from junior colleges and 34 players who arrived via other four-year institutions, including two each from Charlotte, North Carolina State, and Virginia Tech. Other FBS originating schools for various Camels: Appalachian State, Bowling Green, Colorado State, Florida, Florida State, Georgia State, Illinois, Iowa State, LSU, Miami (OH), Old Dominion, Penn State, South Florida, Tennessee, UCLA, ULM, Wake Forest, and Western Michigan.

Odds and ends:

– The weather forecast for Saturday in Charleston, per the National Weather Service: a 50% chance of showers and thunderstorms; partly sunny, with a high near 85°.

Yuck. I don’t need any lightning delays in my life.

– If I get a line on the game before noon on Saturday, I’ll post it here. However, it looks like FCS odds and lines might be hard to come by this season, at least before gameday.

– Massey Ratings: Campbell is ranked 69th in FCS, a drop of 12 spots from last week. The Citadel is 66th (also a 12-place fall).

Despite those rankings, Massey projects Campbell to win the game by a predicted score of 28-27. 

– SP+ FCS rankings: The Citadel is 70th out of 128 teams. The Bulldogs are ranked 98th in offensive SP+, and 40th in defensive SP+.

Campbell is 52nd in SP+ among FCS squads, 33rd on offense and 79th on D.

A selected list of SP+ FCS rankings entering Week 2:

  • South Dakota State (1st)
  • Montana State (2nd)
  • North Dakota State (3rd)
  • UC Davis (4th)
  • Furman (5th)
  • William and Mary (10th)
  • Samford (14th)
  • Mercer (29th)
  • Chattanooga (35th)
  • Kennesaw State (47th)
  • East Tennessee State (53rd)
  • Western Carolina (58th)
  • Wofford (76th)
  • Davidson (79th)
  • Charleston Southern (86th)
  • VMI (89th)
  • South Carolina State (113th)
  • Bucknell (115th)
  • Morehead State (122nd)
  • Presbyterian (128th and last)

Incidentally, among D2 schools, Newberry ranks 30th in SP+ while North Greenville is 68th. Those two schools meet this Saturday.

– In other FCS preseason polls/rankings, The Citadel ranks 79th in the Congrove Computer Rankings (a drop of 10 spots), 78th in the Laz Index (a decline of 22 places), and 86th in the DCI (down 10 spots).

– Games involving SoCon teams this week [projected score per SP+ in brackets]:

  • Saturday at 2:30 pm ET: Samford at Western Carolina [Samford 37.4, WCU 22.5]
  • Saturday at 3:00 pm ET: Campbell at The Citadel [Campbell 27.2, The Citadel 23.6]
  • Saturday at 5:30 pm ET: Carson-Newman at ETSU [no projection]
  • Saturday at 6:00 pm ET: Kennesaw State at Chattanooga [UTC 31.7, Kenn. State 26.1]
  • Saturday at 6:00 pm ET: VMI at Bucknell [VMI 20.3, Bucknell 14.6]
  • Saturday at 6:00 pm ET: Wofford at William and Mary [W&M 38.9, Wofford 12.7]
  • Saturday at 7:00 pm ET: Morehead State at Mercer [Mercer 41.6, Morehead St. 8.3]
  • Saturday at 7:30 pm ET: Furman at South Carolina [South Carolina 32, Furman 23]

Furman’s win probability against the Gamecocks, according to SP+, is 31%. There are actually seven FCS-FBS matchups this week in which the FCS school has a higher win probability than that, including five at 50% or greater.

There were no FCS upsets of FBS teams in Week 1. I would be a bit surprised if there isn’t at least one in Week 2.

– South Carolina State is at Georgia Tech this week. The Yellow Jackets have a 98% win probability, per SP+, with a projected score of 44-7.

– Among Campbell’s notable alumni: Hall of Fame baseball pitcher Gaylord Perry, playwright Paul Green, and songwriter John D. Loudermilk.

– This is Campbell’s first season as a member of the CAA. Until recently, ‘CAA’ stood for Colonial Athletic Association. However, on July 20 the league formally changed its name to the Coastal Athletic Association.

– This is Hall of Fame weekend at The Citadel. The six new inductees are David Beckley, Jesse Jackson, Scooter Johnson, Sonny Meade, Demetrius Nelson, and Bill Ogburn.

– The Citadel has an all-time record of 4-3 for games played on September 9. The Bulldogs are 3-1 at home on that date. 

The most recent game played by The Citadel on September 9 was a 48-7 victory at Presbyterian in 2017, a game moved from Charleston to Clinton due to the threat of Hurricane Irma.

– This week’s presser for Maurice Drayton featured a microphone setup which enabled those watching to hear the questions fielded by the head coach. That was much appreciated.

For Saturday’s matchup, I am concerned about Campbell’s size and overall athleticism. That giant offensive line could be a problem, especially with an experienced quarterback operating behind it.

Campbell got off to a good start last week against William and Mary (a top 5 team in the FCS polls), but couldn’t sustain that momentum. The difference in the game was arguably a sequence in the second quarter, when Campbell fumbled inside the Tribe 10-yard line, and then muffed a punt deep in its own territory following the ensuing William and Mary possession.

Without those turnovers, the Camels could easily have won the game.

As for The Citadel, I expect to see significant improvement this Saturday, particularly on offense. The defense played better in the second half against Georgia Southern, and did succeed in preventing many “chunk” plays. That was a good sign.

What I don’t know (among the many things I don’t know) is whether or not The Citadel held back some of its offensive playbook last week. I tend to doubt that, but it’s not completely out of the question.

If the thunderstorms stay away, it should be a great day for football at Johnson Hagood Stadium. I’m looking forward to being on hand to watch the action. 

Nothing is collegiate about college athletics

collegiate, adjective & noun: of or belonging to a college.

Future conference games in FBS football over the next three to four years will include the following:

UCLA-Rutgers
Oregon-Northwestern
Southern California-Maryland
Washington-Purdue
Virginia Tech-Stanford
California-Miami (FL)
SMU-Boston College
Oklahoma-Vanderbilt
Texas-Kentucky
UTEP-Kennesaw State
Utah-West Virginia
Colorado-UCF

That doesn’t even include some of the ridiculous matchups that have been league games for a while now, like West Virginia-Texas Tech. Already, we have somehow become acclimated to this kind of stupidity.

On Friday, the ACC announced it was expanding again, this time adding Stanford, California, and SMU. USA Today columnist Dan Wolken very reasonably described the move as a “Ponzi scheme“. 

However, in these times a Ponzi scheme can be considered necessary for a college athletics conference to survive. Pat Forde of Sports Illustrated put it this way:

Viewed in a vacuum, the idea of California schools joining an East Coast conference is entirely nonsensical. But College Sports Inc. left the common-sense vacuum last year when USC and UCLA bailed for the Big Ten, then doubled down on it this summer with Oregon and Washington doing the same. We aren’t going back.

In other words, common sense no longer applies — which is why the Pac-12 is now the Pac-2. 

One of the more curious aspects of the ACC expansion is that SMU is essentially paying to join the league; the school will not receive media rights money from the conference for its first nine years of membership. That’s how desperate SMU’s administration and big-time boosters were to become members of a power conference, even a power conference that isn’t the SEC or Big 10.

SMU will become eligible for media payments after nine years, but the ACC’s deal with ESPN expires in 2036. There is a very good chance the conference won’t exist (at least in its current form) beyond that year. I can only assume that SMU is simply trying to position itself for a seat at the table in the next and presumably final round of conference realignment, the inevitable creation of the ‘Superleague’.

If SMU is willing to essentially join a league for free just to get in the same room with the big boys, then the next thing that could happen is a school paying to join a conference. The ACC has 18 schools now (including Notre Dame); why not an even 20?

I would not be surprised if Liberty, which is absolutely flush with cash at the moment, were to wind up in the ACC (or the Big XII). For those who think such a notion is completely ridiculous, perhaps it is — but what about the last few years in the big-picture world of college sports hasn’t been completely ridiculous?

After all, at this point everything is on the table, at least in terms of money. Florida State, which can’t wait to get out of the ACC but is currently stuck in the league thanks mostly because of the Grant of Rights agreement between the members, is considering private equity investment in its athletics program:

Florida State University is working with JPMorgan Chase to explore how the school’s athletic department could raise capital from institutional funds, such as private equity, according to multiple people familiar with the plans.

PE giant Sixth Street is in advanced talks to lead a possible investment, said the people, who were granted anonymity because the specifics are private. Institutional money has poured into professional sports in recent years, from the NBA and global soccer to F1 and golf, but this would break new ground by entering the multibillion-dollar world of college athletic departments.

It doesn’t have to be private equity, either, based on what is happening in professional golf and European soccer. Perhaps the sovereign wealth fund of the Saudi Arabian government (known as “PIF”) could invest in Florida State athletics and help the school exit the ACC.

Two or three home football games each season might be moved to Riyadh. The team could wear green alternate jerseys with ‘SAUDINOLES’ across the front. All in all, it would presumably be a small price to pay in order to avoid playing Virginia or Wake Forest.

It might come as a surprise to some, but the Superleague isn’t really a 21st-century notion. Variations of the concept have been bandied about since at least the late 1950s, after the dissolution of the major west coast conference of the time, the Pacific Coast Conference. The most well-known version of that era was the so-called ‘Airplane Conference’, an idea championed by respected athletics administrator Tom Hamilton, which would have included Air Force, Army, California, Navy, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, Penn State, Southern California, Stanford, Syracuse, UCLA, and Washington.

Other schools were reportedly in the mix as well, including Duke, Georgia Tech, and Penn, just to name a few. The participation of the service academies was ultimately vetoed by officials at the Pentagon, however, and then a new west coast league was created (which would become the Pac-5/8/10/12). That put an end to the Airplane Conference before it could take flight.

Well, now the nation’s major west coast conference has been decimated again, but this time the Pentagon is unlikely to be a factor in what comes next.

The modern version of the Superleague might form around the time the current TV contracts for the Big 10 and SEC expire (at the end of the 2029-2030 and 2033-2034 seasons, respectively). There has been occasional discussion about schools like Vanderbilt and Northwestern eventually getting kicked out of those two leagues, but what could happen instead is that the ‘big brands’ in each league simply leave the conferences to join a new entity, which will be the Superleague (undoubtedly to be called by a sponsor name).

As Dennis Dodd wrote last month:

The conversation — a notably preliminary one — took place in December 2022. Around a table were venture capitalists and private equity types. The super-rich don’t get that way sitting on their assets. They plan. They innovate. They create change; they don’t wait for it.

So, at some point in the conversation, the question was posed: What would it take to “buy” a conference, invest at the base level of college athletics itself?

After some noodling, they agreed: $1 billion.

There’s even a conference out there that would be available. You haven’t heard of it. Nobody has.

It resides in the mind of media consultant Patrick Crakes. He was the one speaking with those investors who are beginning to see great potential in reshaping college athletics.

“Take $1 billion and roll up all the best teams into a new conference,” said Crakes, who spent a quarter century as an executive at Fox Sports…

…Since pursuit of this story began, CBS Sports has learned that at least one major private equity firm has shown interest in funding a conference structure.

How will all of this eventually affect smaller college sports programs, like the one at The Citadel?

It’s hard to tell right now, although the end result almost certainly won’t be positive.

I don’t think there is much question that the days of football “money games” for the Bulldogs against Power 5 programs will be coming to an end in the near future, at least for significant monetary payouts. 

If The Citadel is playing a school like South Carolina after 2035 or so, it’s because South Carolina didn’t make the cut and isn’t in the Superleague — and if that is the case, then there isn’t going to be much money for the Gamecocks to hand out. Heck, the schools might wind up playing a home-and-home or a 2-for-1.

(Side note: South Carolina would probably be on the outside looking in for the Superleague, unless that entity consisted of at least 40 schools. My guess is that the number will ultimately be in the 20-36 range.)

Money from the NCAA basketball tournament could also be scarce, if the big-brand schools decide to leave the NCAA in that sport as well. I’m not as sure about that happening (there are multiple complicating factors), but it is a possibility. 

Of course, cash isn’t everything, and if after the dust settles The Citadel were to wind up in an all-sports conference with like-minded schools, similar to the situation that now exists in the Southern Conference, that would be fine. The college has managed to navigate an ever-changing NCAA landscape for decades as it is.

That’s why the school shouldn’t do anything dramatic right now, because nobody really knows what the future will look like, or what adjustments (if any) The Citadel will have to make because of the new world order in college sports.

I find the current state of college athletics to be rather depressing. I still mostly enjoy the games, but everything else is a total mess. The future doesn’t look good, either.

I’ll keep hoping for the best, though.