Teamname: | Lindenwood Lions football |
Currentseason: | 2024 Lindenwood Lions football team |
Headcoach: | Jed Stugart |
Headcoachyear: | 5th |
Hcwins: | 33 |
Hclosses: | 24 |
Stadium: | Harlen C. Hunter Stadium |
Stadiumbuilt: | 1976 |
Stadcapacity: | 7,450 |
Stadsurface: | Enviroturf |
Location: | St. Charles, Missouri |
Ncaadivision: | I FCS |
Conference: | Big South–OVC |
Atwins: | 155 |
Atlosses: | 162 |
Atties: | 2 |
Bowlwins: | 5 |
Bowllosses: | 7 |
Conftitles: | 3 |
Allamericans: | 4[1] |
Marchingband: | Golden Lion Marching Band |
Pagfreelabel: | Outfitter |
Pagfreevalue: | Under Armour |
Websiteurl: | https://lindenwoodlions.com/sports/football |
The Lindenwood Lions football team represents Lindenwood University in football. Lindenwood is a member of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC). The Lions were provisional members of the NCAA Division I FCS for the 2022 season before becoming an active member during the 2023–2024 academic year.[2]
Lindenwood was previously a member of the NAIA and played in the Heart of America Athletic Conference (HAAC) from 1996 to 2010. The Lions play in Harlen C. Hunter Stadium on the campus of Lindenwood University in St. Charles, Missouri, which has a seating capacity of 7,450.
See also: List of Lindenwood Lions football seasons.
Lindenwood University football began in 1990 under head coach David Schroeder. LU competed as an independent for the first four seasons. The program's first win came in the first ever football for the university on September 8, 1990, when the Lions defeated Dana College.[3] The Lions finished the inaugural season with a record of 6–4.[3]
Despite a 3–5–0 start to the first half of the 1991 season, a program highlight came on October 12, 1991, when Lindenwood tied 17–17 on the road in Birmingham, Alabama with NCAA Division III Alabama-Birmingham before the UAB program upgraded to NCAA Division I.[3] Following that game, the Lions lost the following game to Benedictine College but finished the season with a three-game win streak to finish the season 5–4–1.[3] During the next several years of the football program, bright spots began to emerge, a couple of the original players from the first team ever at the school were named to the All American team. Hoyt Gregory made all American in 1992 and two players from the original football class Steve Pinkerton and Jim Paddock were signed and drafted into professional football. This gave the program the status that it could recruit and maintain top level athletes.
Jeff Driskill became the second coach in program history in 1992.[3] In 1994 Lindenwood became one of the founding members of the Mid-States Football Association along with five schools from Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. After three 2-win seasons Dan Kratzer took over the program and lead the Lions to a 4–7–0 season in 1995.
In 1996 the program became a member of the Heart of America Athletic Conference.[4] The Lions recorded back-to-back 4–6–0 seasons in 1996 and 1997. In 1998 the program saw drastic improvement when Kratzer lead the lions to an 8–2–0 regular season.[4] Including a 34–33 win against NCAA Division I-AA Butler.[4] The win marked the first and only win over an NCAA DI-AA opponent, as LU lost 16–27 to Butler in 1997 and 6–27 to Valparaiso University in 2002.[4] [5] The 1996 also marked the first time Lindenwood football received a bid to the NAIA Playoffs before losing in the first round 10–12 to Southwestern College.[4] In 2000 Kratzer lead the Lions to their first of two bowl appearances, when the Lions received a bid to the Wheat Bowl – NAIA Kickoff Classic against Concordia University (Nebraska).[5]
Rick Gorzynski became the fourth coach in program history in 2001 and after three sub .500 season in which the Lions recorded two 3–8–0 seasons and a 1–10–0 season, Patrick Ross became the fifth football coach in Lindenwood history.[5] Ross quickly turned the program around from a 3–8–0 season in 2003 to an 11–1–0 season in his first as LU head coach in 2004.[5] The Lions also won their first HAAC Championship after an 11–0–0 regular season, the only loss, a 19–20 loss in the opening round of the NAIA Playoffs to Hastings College.[5]
Under Ross the Lions recorded their first playoff win in program history in the 2008 when the Lions defeated Lambuth University 65–48.[6] That same season Lindenwood advanced to the NAIA Semifinal Game with a quarterfinal 34–31 win over Morningside College.[6] Lindenwood would eventually be defeated by the defending NAIA national championsCarroll College in the semifinal game 37–38.[6]
In 2009, Ross lead to become the HAAC Champions for the third-straight season. The Lions entered the 2009 NAIA Playoffs and won 42–14 over Langston University. In the second-round game Lindenwood defeated Ottawa University (KS) to reach the semifinal game where LU again faced Carroll College.
Lindenwood defeated the Carroll Fighting Saints 42–35 to reach the NAIA Football National Championship for the team's first and only appearance. LU became the NAIA national runner-up in 2009 after a 22–25 loss to University of Sioux Falls Cougars[7] and came into the 2010 season ranked #2 in the nation in 2010 NAIA Football Coaches' Top 25 Spring Poll.[8] [9]
In June 2010 LU applied to join the NCAA Division II Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association (MIAA), as part of the conference's expansion from 12 to 16 members for 2012.[10] Lindenwood was approved for membership into the MIAA on September 24, 2010, with the affiliation taking place in 2012–2013 school year.[11] [12]
Under Ross the Lions set a school offensive record with a 90–19 week 7 win over Culver-Stockton. Lindenwood also moved from fifth to first in average offensive points in all of college football with a 56.5 scoring average.[13] In the NAIA, Saint Xavier ranked second with 52.6[14] and the only NCAA program scoring over 50 is Oregon with 54.3.[15] In that win Lindenwood set school offensive records with 721 yards of total offense, second in program history, record 376 rushing yards, and record 8 rushing touchdowns.[16]
Despite only losing one close game in the regular season to MidAmerica Nazarene University 20–26 on September 25, 2010, Lindenwood Football suffered a 38–46 loss at home in the first round of the NAIA Football Championship Series to the University of Saint Francis.[17] LU finished the 2010 season 9–2 overall, ranked 1st in scoring with an average of 52.5 points per game and 1st in total offensive yards with an average of 551.5 yards per game.[18] Senior quarterback Philip Staback finished the season ranked 1st in pass efficiency and total passing yards per game.[19]
As part of the transition to Division II, the 2010 schedule would be the last NAIA schedule played by Lions Football, as it was announced the Lions will play an independent schedule of NCAA Division I FCS, Division II, and NAIA schools.[18] [20] Lindenwood opened the 2011 on the road at Northern Colorado when kicker, James Neal kicked a 21-yard fieldgoal as time expired to win the game.[21] The win was the programs first over a Division I football team since Lindenwood defeated NCAA Division I-AA (now FCS) Butler 34–33 in 1998. The team then returned the 2011 home opener that saw the Lions beat former conference and NAIA rival, Graceland 67–10.[22] The win marked the ninth straight home opener win and improved the program to a 16–6 all-time record on home openers.[23] In the third game of the season, saw Lindenwood play against its first Division II opponent; in which the Lions defeated Saint Joseph's (IN) 55–14.[24] After back-to-back losses, including 21st ranked Division I FCS South Dakota, Lindenwood rebounded with four straight wins.[22] The winning streak was the longest of the season and included a 41–35 win over perennial Division II power, Texas A&M–Kingsville.[22] The team finished the season splitting wins against two future MIAA rivals, when the team lost to Central Missouri 28–47 in the final home contest of the season; followed by a 48–14 win on the road to end the season at Central Oklahoma.[22]
Lindenwood played its first full NCAA Division II and MIAA schedule during the 2012 season. The Lions defeated Lincoln University 49–28 in its MIAA debut and followed with a 35–14 home-opening win in week two against Southwest Baptist.[25] [26] The team lost to Central Missouri,[27] but followed the loss with a three-game win streak that included a come-from-behind win versus non-conference opponent, Glenville State.[28] The Lions then lost back-to-back games to ranked opponents, Emporia State and Washburn.[28]
Senior Day versus Missouri Southern marked a big turning point in the season for the Lions. Down 14–0 early, Lindenwood rallied with 31 unanswered points to take a 31–14 lead. Missouri Southern State scored late in the half but Lindenwood continued to pull away in the second half, adding 14 points while holding MSSU to just 9 in the second half.[29] The 45–30 win snapped the team's losing streak but the win was not without a big loss. Late in the game, Lindenwood freshman cornerback Sterling Thomas suffered a severe spinal cord injury.[30] The team rallied around Thomas' injury and finished the regular season with back-to-back wins, including a 44–33 win against the defending national champion, Pittsburg State.[31]
The Lions finished the regular season with an 8–3 overall record and 7–3 conference record. The team ranked fourth in the conference after being selected 8th in the preseason polls.[32] With the top-four finish, the Lions were selected to play in the Mineral Water Bowl to play Winona State.[33] In the team's first NCAA bowl game, the Lions kept the game close through the first quarter and a half but WSU scored 24 unanswered points to stretch their lead.[34] Both teams exchanged touchdowns in the fourth quarter to hand Lindenwood its fourth loss of the season and bring the Lions overall record to 8–4.[35]
Colors = id:barcolor value:black id:line value:black id:bg value:white id:NAIA value:rgb(0.742,0.727,0.852) id:MSFA value:rgb(0.98,0.5,0.445) id:HAAC value:rgb(0.10,0.80,0.00) id:NCAA value:rgb(0.78,0.391,0.654) id:MIAA value:rgb(0.988,0.703,0.383) id:GLVC value:rgb(0.10,0.75,0.00) id:OVC value:rgb(0.98,0.3,0.445)
PlotData= width:15 textcolor:black shift:(3,-5) anchor:from fontsize:M
bar:1 color:NAIA from:1990 till:1994 text:NAIA Independent bar:2 color:MSFA from:1994 till:1996 text:Mid-States Football Association bar:3 color:HAAC from:1996 till:2011 text:Heart of America Athletic Conference bar:4 color:NCAA from:2011 till:2012 text:NCAA Division II Independent bar:5 color:MIAA from:2012 till:2019 text: Mid-America bar:6 color:GLVC from:2019 till:2022 text: GLVC bar:7 color:OVC from:2022 till:end text: Ohio Valley Conference
ScaleMajor = gridcolor:line unit:year increment:1 start:1990
TextData = fontsize:L textcolor:black pos:(300,25) # tabs:(0-center) text:"Lindenwood Conference membership history"
See main article: List of Lindenwood Lions head football coaches.
The current head football coach at Lindenwood is Jed Stugart, who was hired on December 5, 2016. Patrick Ross, Lindenwood's 15th head coach, held the position from 2004 to 2016.[36] The program began in 1990 under David Schroeder and has accumulated an overall record of 134 wins, 121 losses, and 2 ties.(as of conclusion of the 2012 season)[37]
David Schroeder | 1990 | 1991 | 11–8–1 | |
Jeff Driskill | 1992 | 1994 | 5–25–1 | |
Dan Kratzer | 1995 | 2000 | 29–35 | |
Rick Gorzynski | 2001 | 2003 | 7–27 | |
Patrick Ross | 2004 | 2016 | 93–57 | |
Jed Stugart | 2017 | present | 8–14 |
Lindenwood has won a conference championship three times. As of 2015, all in the Heart of America Athletic Conference:[38]
2004 | 11–1 | 10–0 | ||
2007 | 10–2 | 9–1 | ||
2009 | 13–1 | 10–0 | ||
Total conference championships | 3 |
The Lions have made two appearances in the NCAA Division II playoffs, with a combined record of 1–2.
2019 | First round Regional semifinals | Ouachita Baptist NW Missouri State | W 41–38 L 7–63 | |
2021 | First round | Grand Valley State | L 3–20 |
The Lions made six appearances in the NAIA playoffs, with a combined record of 5–6.
1998 | First round | Southwestern (KS) | L 10–12 | |
2004 | First round | Hastings | L 19–20 | |
2007 | First round | Saint Francis (IN) | L 14–35 | |
2008 | First round Quarterfinals Semifinals | Lambuth Morningside Carroll | W 65–48 W 34–31 L 37–38 | |
2009 | First round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | Langston Ottawa (KS) Carroll Sioux Falls | W 49–14 W, 64–26 W 42–35 L 22–25 | |
2010 | First round | Saint Francis (IN) | L 38–46 |
Lindenwood has participated in three bowl games with an overall record of 0 wins and 3 losses. In 2000, the Lions went to the first bowl game in school history, the Wheat Bowl, against Concordia University (Nebraska) and lost 14–31.[5] 2006 saw Lindenwood return to the Wheat Bowl, this time against Northwestern Oklahoma State University. NWOSU defeated the Lions in a close game 14–13.[39] Most recently, the Lions were defeated 41–21 by Winona State in the 2012 Mineral Water Bowl.[35]
Date | Result | Bowl | Opponent | Score | Head Coach |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Loss | 14–31 | Dan Kratzer | ||
2006 | 13–14 | Patrick Ross | |||
2012 | 21–41 |
Announced schedules as of August 17, 2023.[40]
vs Wisconsin–Stevens Point | at Kansas | vs Missouri State | at Eastern Michigan | at Kansas | ||
at Western Illinois | at Missouri State | at Miami (OH) | vs Western Illinois | |||
at Illinois State | ||||||
vs Austin Peay |
See also: List of Lindenwood Lions in the NFL draft.
Eight players have garnered All-American honors:[1]