Eastern Kentucky Colonels football explained

Teamname:Eastern Kentucky Colonels football
Currentseason:2024 Eastern Kentucky Colonels football team
Firstyear:1891
Athleticdirector:Matt Roan
Headcoach:Walt Wells
Headcoachyear:3rd
Hcwins:17
Hclosses:14
Stadium:Roy Kidd Stadium
Fieldname:CG Bank Field
Stadiumbuilt:1969
Stadcapacity:20,000
Stadsurface:SF II Synthetic Turf
Location:Richmond, Kentucky
Ncaadivision:I FCS
Conference:United Athletic Conference
Atwins:602
Atlosses:386
Atties:38
Bowlwins:4
Bowllosses:3
Playoffapps:22
Natltitles:2
Conftitles:22
Allamericans:46
Fightsong:Hail, Hail and Yea, Eastern
Mascotdisplay:The Colonel
Marchingband:Eastern Kentucky University Marching Colonels
Pagfreelabel:Outfitter
Pagfreevalue:Nike
Rivalries:Western Kentucky (rivalry)
Morehead State (rivalry)
Websitename:EKUSports
Websiteurl:https://ekusports.com/sports/football

The Eastern Kentucky Colonels football program represents Eastern Kentucky University (EKU) in college football, competing at the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level as a member of the United Athletic Conference (UAC). The school has traditionally had much success on the football field, having won 21 OVC conference titles and two Division I FCS National Championships (then called Division I-AA) in 1979 and 1982, and reaching the finals in 1980 and 1981. Much of the success came during the long tenure of head coach Roy Kidd from 1964 to 2002. In 1990, Eastern honored Kidd by naming the school's football stadium Roy Kidd Stadium. Eastern Kentucky's football team was able to secure 31 consecutive winning seasons before finally posting a losing season record in 2009.

In September 2013, the Lexington Herald-Leader, the daily newspaper of nearby Lexington, reported that EKU was considering moving its program to the top-level Football Bowl Subdivision. However, under NCAA rules, such a move would require that EKU receive an invitation from an existing FBS conference.[1] In the end, no such move was made.

EKU left the OVC for the Atlantic Sun Conference, then officially known as the ASUN Conference, in July 2021. At the time, the ASUN did not sponsor football, but had committed to launching an FCS football league in the near future.[2] During the 2021 season, EKU competed as a de facto associate member of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) in a football partnership between the two leagues officially branded as the "ASUN–WAC Challenge".[3] While the ASUN launched its own football league in 2022, it maintained its partnership with the WAC for the 2022 season. Shortly after that season, the two conferences fully merged their football leagues,[4] [5] announcing the new branding of United Athletic Conference in April 2023.[6]

Conference affiliation

Championships

National championships

Eastern Kentucky went to four consecutive national championship games, winning twice in 1979 and 1982 while finishing as runner-up in 1980 and 1981 to Boise State and Idaho State, respectively.

11–2 W 30–7
1982 Roy Kidd NCAA I-AA Playoff 13–0 W 17–14

Conference championships

Eastern Kentucky has won 22 conference championships, 16 outright and 6 shared.[7]

1954 8–1–1 5–0
1962 Glenn Presnell 6–3 4–2
1967 8–1–2 5–0–2
1968 Roy Kidd 8–2 7–0
1974 Roy Kidd 8-2 6–1
1976 Roy Kidd8–3 6–1
1981 Roy Kidd 12–2 8–0
1982 Roy Kidd 13–0 7–0
1983 Roy Kidd 7–3-1 6–1
1984 Roy Kidd 8–4 6–1
1986† Roy Kidd10–3–1 6–1
1987† Roy Kidd9–3 5–1
1988 Roy Kidd 11–3 6–0
1990† Roy Kidd 10–2 5–1
1991 Roy Kidd 12–2 7–0
1993 Roy Kidd8–4 8–0
1994 Roy Kidd 10–3 8–0
1997 Roy Kidd 8–4 7–0
2007 9–3 8–0
2008 8–4 7–1
2011Dean Hood 7–5 6–2
2022 Atlantic Sun Walt Wells 7–5 3–2
† Co-champion

Bowl games

Eastern Kentucky has participated in six bowl games. Four of these bowl games served as a sort of championship game, whether as a regional championship game or as the NCAA Division I Football Championship. The EKU Colonels played in the inaugural Opportunity Bowl presented by Raising Cane's, and in memory of Dr. Sheila Pressley, on Nov. 21, 2020. Eastern Kentucky University hosted the second annual Opportunity Bowl presented by Dinsmore & Shohl on Nov. 20, 2021. The game was matchup EKU and Jacksonville State University.

SeasonCoachBowlOpponentResult
1954 OmahaL 7–6
1967 W 27–13
1980 L 29–31
1981 L 23–34
1982 W 17–14
2020 Walt WellsOpportunity BowlWestern CarolinaW 49–17
2021 Walt WellsOpportunity BowlJacksonville StateW 39–31

Playoff appearances

NCAA Division I-AA/FCS

Eastern Kentucky University football is considered the first dynasty in FCS football. Including a four-year run to the championship game from 1979 to 1982. During this time period they went 46–7 under legendary coach Roy Kidd. Eastern Kentucky is third all time in the FCS for playoff appearances with 21 total appearances (Montana 26/UNI 22). Below is a list of all playoff appearances.

bgcolor=lightyellow Nevada
Lehigh
W 33–30 2OT
W 30–7
Lehigh
Boise State
W 23–20
L 29–31
Delaware
Boise State
Idaho State
W 35–28
W 23–17
L 23–34
bgcolor=lightyellow Idaho
Tennessee State
Delaware
W 38–30
W 13–7
W 17–14
First Round Boston University L 20–24
First Round Middle Tennessee L 10–27
First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Furman
Eastern Illinois
Arkansas State
W 23–10
W 24–22
L 10–24
First Round
Quarterfinals
Western Kentucky
Northeast Louisiana
W 40–17
L 32–33
First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
UMass
Western Kentucky
Georgia Southern
W 28–17
W 41–24
L 17–21
First Round Youngstown State L 24–28
First Round Furman L 17–45
First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Appalachian State
Middle Tennessee
Marshall
W 14–3
W 23–13
L 7–14
First Round Marshall L 0–44
First Round Georgia Southern L 12–14
First Round
Quarterfinals
Boston University
Youngstown State
W 30–23
L 15–18
First Round Montana L 0–48
First Round Western Kentucky L 14–42
First Round Richmond L 14–31
First Round Richmond L 10–38
First Round James Madison L 17–20
First Round Indiana State L 16–36
First Round Gardner–Webb L 41–52

NCAA Division II

The Colonels made one appearance in the Division II playoffs, with a record of 0–1.

1976QuarterfinalsNorth Dakota StateL, 7–10

Head coaches

1909 0–0–4 0
1910–1911 2–7–1 0
1912 3–4–1 0
1913–1916 8–13–2 0
1919–1921 3–6–1 0
1922–1928 21–29–4 0
1929–1934 8–29–6 0
1935–1946 56–24–6 0
1947–1953 41–24–2 0
1954–1963 42–49–3 2
1964–2002 315–123–8 16
2003–2007 35–22 1
2008–2015 55–38 2
2016-2019 21–24 0
2020-current 17-14 1

Rivalries

Western Kentucky

The Battle of the Bluegrass is the name given to the Eastern Kentucky–Western Kentucky football rivalry. Both schools were formerly members of the Ohio Valley Conference, and played against each other regularly until Western Kentucky's transition from the NCAA's FCS to FBS in 2008. The two teams have met 84 times on the football field, with Western Kentucky currently holding a 47–35–3 edge in the all-time series. This rivalry has been known to be particularly competitive with neither team gaining an edge until recent history with Western moving up to the FBS level. It is known as the oldest and most fierce rivalry the commonwealth of Kentucky has, even more so than larger schools of the University of Kentucky and University of Louisville's Governors Cup game because of how many times the teams met, the longevity of the rivalry, and the important conference implications the annual game used to hold.

After a nearly nine year pause, the series resumed again in 2017, when Western Kentucky hosted Eastern Kentucky in a game played at Houchens Industries–L. T. Smith Stadium. The two teams will meet again on September 7, 2024

See main article: Battle of the Bluegrass.

Morehead State

The Old Hawg Rifle is the name of the rivalry trophy between the Eastern Kentucky Colonels and the Morehead State Eagles. This rivalry was important because the schools are in such close proximity and are serving the same general Eastern Kentucky region. The gun is an antique, pre-Revolutionary War muzzleloader that is rumored to have once been used in Kentucky's Rowan County War. The rifle has not been actively used in the rivalry since 1962, though the two teams have continued to play against each other since then. The rifle is currently kept on display in the Morehead State student center. The two teams have met 73 times on the football field, with Eastern Kentucky currently holding a 53–16–4 edge in the all-time series. Eastern Kentucky has won 28 out of the last 29 matchups.

See main article: Old Hawg Rifle.

Program records

Team records

Individual records

Future non-conference opponents

Announced schedules as of June 9, 2024.[8]

at Mississippi Stateat LouisvilleChattanoogaat Vanderbilt
at Western KentuckyHouston ChristianDaytonat Chattanooga
Morehead Stateat Appalachian Stateat Ole Miss
Robert Morrisat Western Illinois

Notes and References

  1. News: Mark Story: EKU is 'discussing' moving its football program up to the FBS . Mark . Story . Lexington Herald-Leader . September 14, 2013 . September 18, 2013.
  2. ASUN Conference Announces Three New Institutions; Adds Football as 20th Sport . ASUN Conference . January 29, 2021 . January 29, 2021 . January 29, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210129160022/https://www.asunsports.org/general/2020-21/releases/20210126nthmsg . dead .
  3. ASUN, WAC Conferences Announce Football Partnership for 2021 . ASUN Conference . February 23, 2021 . February 23, 2021.
  4. @ASUN_Football and WAC Release 2023 Schedule . ASUN Conference . December 20, 2022 . December 22, 2022.
  5. ASUN And WAC Unveil 2023 Football Schedule . Western Athletic Conference . December 20, 2022 . December 22, 2022.
  6. ASUN-WAC Football Partnership Formally Rebrands As The United Athletic Conference . ASUN Conference . April 17, 2023 . April 19, 2023.
  7. Web site: Ohio Valley Conference. ovcsports.com.
  8. Web site: Eastern Kentucky Colonels Football Future Schedules . FBSchedules.com . June 9, 2024.