• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
The biggest names in sports media. All in one room. Get your ticket now!

Sacramento State ‘Full Steam Ahead’ for FBS Despite Not Receiving NCAA Waiver

University president Luke Wood said Sacramento State still plans to play FBS football in 2026.

Sep 16, 2023; Stanford, California, USA; Sacramento State Hornets running back Elijah Tau-Tolliver (25) celebrates after a touchdown during the fourth quarter against the Stanford Cardinal at Stanford Stadium.
Sergio Estrada-Imagn Images

In the fall of 2024, Sacramento State launched a highly public campaign to jump from the FCS level to the FBS. The Hornets’ efforts, however, were not enough for the members of the NCAA Division I council, who on Tuesday voted not to offer the football team a waiver to compete at the FBS level as independents.

Sacramento State University president, Dr. Luke Wood, posted a short statement on X criticizing the decision Wednesday morning. “Sacramento State has met every meaningful benchmark for FBS membership, and we believe our university, our students, and the entire Sacramento region deserve major college football,” he wrote.

In his statement, Wood pledged: “We still plan to be playing FBS football in 2026.” Wood did not elaborate on his plans for propelling his football program into the FBS level by 2026. But there are some options, including potentially suing the university.

The Hornets campaign began in earnest in the middle of the latest round of realignment, when the Pac-12 announced it would add five Mountain West schools in 2026. Sacramento State announced it was jockeying for a bid to an FBS conference, and that a group of local politicians and business leaders had created a group called the “Sac-12,” tasked with raising the requisite funds to earn a bid into the Pac-12. The Hornets would have also been interested in another FBS conference like the Mountain West.

The Hornets announced plans for a new, 25,000-seat football stadium. They also announced a partnership with the Sacramento Kings for the men’s and women’s basketball teams to play in their arena, and $35 million in NIL (name, image, and likeness) collective commitments—though both were contingent upon them securing FBS membership. 

The Hornets weren’t able to secure an offer from an FBS league this past year, however—one of the key requirements in an application with the NCAA to jump levels. (James Madison, for example, made a wildly successful move from FCS to FBS in 2022; but the Dukes enjoyed an invitation from the Sun Belt Conference to support them.)

In early April, the Hornets decided they wouldn’t wait: they filed a petition with the NCAA for their football team to compete at the FBS level as an independent. 

The Hornets continued to make  headlines while the NCAA committees mulled the request. In late April, they announced that Shaquille O’Neal would serve as a high-profile basketball general manager. Then, last week, the program announced a move from the Big Sky to the Big West Conference in 2026 for all sports except football.

After Tuesday’s decision, though, Sacramento State is looking at a future in which their football team is an FCS independent while the rest of their programs compete in the Big West.

To get to the next level, the Hornets could potentially sue on antitrust grounds, arguing that the requirements for FBS membership—and the attempt by an NCAA committee to bar them from it—constitutes an illegal restriction, and would cause financial harm. “Forcing a school to rely on the whims of conferences [to] let them compete for the economic benefits of a higher division is just the sort of arbitrary gatekeeping that draws harsh antitrust scrutiny,” Boise State law professor Sam Ehrlich wrote on X last week.

They could also continue vying for an FBS conference slot, and re-submit their application at a later date. The Pac-12 needs at least one more current FBS playing member. Sacramento State doesn’t appear to be in the cards for the Pac-12 at this point, but another conference might be looking for a replacement team if they lose a program to the Pac-12 in the future. 

Either way, Sacramento State isn’t giving up. “We’re full steam ahead,” Wood wrote.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Aug 30, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Vanderbilt Commodores linebacker Langston Patterson (10) looks over the defense against the Charleston Southern Buccaneers during the first half at FirstBank Stadium.

Latest Class Action Eligibility Lawsuit Challenges NCAA’s ‘Redshirt’ Rule

It’s the latest lawsuit challenging the NCAA’s core eligibility requirements.
opinion

Bill and Jordon’s Excellent Adventure Already Unraveling

Belichick’s debut was a humiliation rather than a coronation.
The cast of ESPN College GameDay begins their show prior to the NCAA football game between the Ohio State Buckeyes and the Texas Longhorns at Ohio Stadium on Aug. 30, 2025. The show is the final one for Lee Corso.

OSU Sophomore Wins $250K in McAfee ‘GameDay’ Kicking Contest

The former NFL punter started offering prize money for kicks in 2023.
Aug 30, 2025; Columbus, Ohio, USA; Texas Longhorns quarterback Arch Manning (16) drops back to pass against the Ohio State Buckeyes in the first half at Ohio Stadium.

On This Year’s CFB Rosters, Even Backup QBs Make Six Figures

The going rate for backup quarterbacks is in the mid-six-figures.

Featured Today

Oct 13, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts (1) and wide receiver A.J. Brown (11) celebrate their touchdown pass during the second quarter against the Cleveland Browns at Lincoln Financial Field.

TV Ratings Just Changed Again. The NFL Will Be the Big Winner

Nielsen’s new viewership system will have a big impact on sports.
Ohio State Buckeyes wide receiver Jeremiah Smith (4) celebrates with offensive lineman Donovan Jackson (74) after a touchdown catch against Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first quarter during the College Football Playoff National Championship at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on January 20, 2025.
August 30, 2025

The Most Expensive Roster Year in College Football History

The House settlement created revenue-sharing—and a big NIL loophole.
August 26, 2025

‘You’re Going to Get Beat Up’: The Liberty’s All-Male Practice Squad

A select group suits up weekly to take on the defending champs.
August 24, 2025

The Honey Deuce Effect: How Tennis Perfected the Signature Cocktail

Sold every 1.5 seconds, they total more than $12 million in sales.
Mike Gundy

OSU’s Gundy, Oregon’s Lanning Trade Barbs Over Alleged $30 Million Gap

Lanning ripped Gundy’s “excuse” and said “we spend to win.”
September 2, 2025

Less Belichick Hype Could Mean Bad News for CFB Stakeholders

UNC had never begun a football season with so much hype.
FSU
September 2, 2025

ACC Hits Florida State With First $50K Storming Fine Under New Rule

The ACC announced a new fine system in July.
Sponsored

Gareth Bale on MLS vs EPL, Retirement & Buying Cardiff City

Gareth Bale shares his post-soccer business playbook.
September 1, 2025

Bill Belichick’s Star-Studded UNC Coaching Debut Turns Ugly

Michael Jordan highlighted a long list of celebrities in attendance.
August 30, 2025

5 of 10 Highest-Paid CFB Coaches Lose in Week 1

Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer was the biggest surprise of the Week 1 losers.
August 29, 2025

Cody Campbell Asks Congress to Allow National College Sports TV Package

The billionaire’s ad will air on ESPN and Fox this weekend.
Ohio State mascot Brutus interacts with Lee Corso on the set of ESPN College GameDay prior to the College Football Playoff first round game between the Ohio State Buckeyes and Tennessee Volunteers in Columbus on Dec. 21, 2024.
August 29, 2025

End of an Era: Lee Corso Makes His Final ‘College GameDay’ Appearance

After 431 iconic headgear picks, the iconic coach bids farewell.