Sam Houston Bearkats football explained

Currentseason:2024 Sam Houston Bearkats football team
Teamname:Sam Houston Bearkats football
Firstyear:1912;
Athleticdirector:Bobby Williams
Headcoach:K. C. Keeler
Headcoachyear:11th
Hcwins:88
Hclosses:36
Stadium:Bowers Stadium
Stadcapacity:14,000
Stadsurface:Real Grass Pro Artificial Surface
Location:Huntsville, Texas
Ncaadivision:I FBS
Conference:Conference USA
Websitename:GoBearkats.com
Websiteurl:http://www.gobearkats.com/
Atwins:550
Atlosses:472
Atties:35
Bowlwins:3
Bowllosses:1
Bowlties:1
Playoffs:24–12
Natltitles:2
(NAIA): 1964
(Div. I FCS): 2020
Conftitles:15
Fightsong:Bearkat Fight Song
Mascotdisplay:Sammy Bearkat
Marchingband:Bearkat Marching Band
Pagfreelabel:Outfitter
Pagfreevalue:Under Armour
Rivalries:Stephen F. Austin (rivalry)
Texas State (rivalry)

The Sam Houston Bearkats football program is the intercollegiate American football team for Sam Houston State University located in the U.S. state of Texas. The team competes in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) as a member of the Conference USA. Sam Houston's first football team was fielded in 1912. The team plays its home games at the 12,593-seat Bowers Stadium in Huntsville, Texas. On January 23, 2014, K. C. Keeler was named the 15th head coach in Sam Houston program history.[1]

In July 2021, the Bearkats left the Southland Conference to join the Western Athletic Conference, which relaunched its football league at the FCS level at that time.[2] Just a few months later, on November 5, 2021, the school accepted an invitation to join Conference USA at the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) level beginning in the 2023–24 season.[3]

History

Sam Houston has fielded a football team since 1912 and have played continuously since 1946 following World War II. The only times the Bearkats did not field a football team were in 1918 for World War I, from 1943 to 1945 for World War II, and 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic (although they did get a make-up season in the spring of 2021). The Bearkats competed independently from 1912 through 1923, in the Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association (TIAA) from 1924 to 1931, in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) from 1932 to 1981, in NCAA Division II from 1982 to 1985 and in the Southland Conference of the NCAA Division I FCS from 1986 to 2021. In July 2021, The Bearkats left the Southland Conference to join the Western Athletic Conference, which relaunched its football league at the FCS level at that time.[2] Just a few months later, on November 5, 2021, the school accepted an invitation to join FBS Conference USA beginning in the 2023–24 season.

The Bearkats won their first FCS National Championship in the 2020–21 college football season, beating South Dakota State 23–21.[4]

The Bearkats have 15 conference championships, and have seen postseason NCAA playoff action in 13 seasons, with back-to-back NCAA Division I Championship game appearances in 2011–2012.[5] Sam Houston State also has 3 bowl victories in four games, and one claimed National Championship from NAIA in the 1964 season.[6]

Head coaches

Ron Randleman is Sam Houston's and the Southland Conference's all-time winningest coach with 132 wins over a span of 23 years. Randleman also won conference Coach of the Year honors on four occasions, in the Gulf Star Conference in 1985 and 1986, and in the Southland Conference in 1991, and 2001.[7]

Paul Pierce coached the Bearkats to its only National Championship as a member of NAIA, and also won the 1965 Knute Rockne Little All-American Coach of the Year award.[8]

Willie Fritz coached Sam Houston to back-to-back conference championships and back-to-back national title game appearances in only three years, while being awarded the 2011 AFCA National Coach of the Year award and the 2012 Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year award. He was also named the 2012 AFCA Regional Coach of the Year.[9] [10] [11]

On January 23, 2014, former Delaware head coach K. C. Keeler was named the 15th head coach in Sam Houston program history. So far, he has arguably had the most success as a Sam Houston head coach boasting a .777 overall win percentage and a .736 playoff win percentage, in addition to winning a conference title four out of his eight seasons as head coach, and a Division I national championship in 2020. Sidenote: Keeler has only lost a home playoff game once in his entire career as a head coach.

NameFromToRecordPostseason
WLT
S. R. Warner19121913531
Gene Berry1914191914151
Mutt Gee19201922674
J. W. Jones19231935545391930 Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association champions
Henry O. Crawford193619377120
Puny Wilson1937195150496
Paul Pierce19521967945271955 Lone Star Conference co-champions, 1956 LSC champions, 1964 LSC, NAIA National co-champions, 3 bowl wins in 4 appearances
Tom Page1968197120193
Allen Boren197219737140
Billy Tidwell1974197711301
Melvin Brown1978198112290
Ron Randleman1982200413112531985 Gulf Star Conference co-champions, 1986 GSC champions, 2001 Southland Conference co-champions, 2004 SLC co-champions
Todd Whitten2005200925280
Willie Fritz20102014401502011 SLC champions, 2011 NCAA Division I Finalist, 2012 SLC co-champions 2012 NCAA Division I Finalist
K. C. Keeler2014present802302014 SLC co-champions, 2014 NCAA Division I Semifinalist, 2015 NCAA Division I Semifinalist, 2016 SLC champions, 2016 NCAA Division I Quarterfinalist, 2017 NCAA Division I Semifinalist, 2020 SLC champions, 2020 NCAA Division I National Champions, 2021 WAC champions, 2021 NCAA Division I Quarterfinalist
Composite record1912present56147434

Championships

National championships

Sam Houston has two national championships, with one during their tenure in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and the other coming in FCS. In their NAIA championship game, they played Concordia Cobbers for the championship, with the game resulting in a tie,[12] becoming co-champions with Moorhead.[13] In their third FCS championship game, they defeated South Dakota State to win their first FCS national championship.

1964 9–1–1 T 7–7 Concordia College
10–0 W 23–21 South Dakota State

Conference championships

Sam Houston has won 15 conference titles, seven shared and eight outright.

1930 9–1 5–0
1955† 6–1–2 5–1–1
1956 10–0 7–0
1961 8–1 7–0
1964†* 9–1–1 5–1
1985† 8–3 4–1
1986 9–3 4–1
2001† 10–3 5–1
2004† 8–3 4–1
2011 14–1 7–0
2012† 11–4 6–1
2014† 11–5 7–1
2016 12–1 9–0
2020 10–0 6–0
2021 11–1 5–0

† Denotes shared title.[14]

Conference affiliations

Bowl game appearances

Sam Houston appeared in five bowl games during their time in the NAIA, going 3–0–1 in these bowl games, with the final one notably being for the NAIA championship.

1952 Shrimp BowlW 41–20
1953 W 14–12
1956 Refrigerator Bowl W 27–13
1958 Christmas Festival Bowl L 11–18
1964 T 7–7

Playoff appearances

NCAA Division I-AA/FCS

The Bearkats have appeared in the I-AA/FCS playoffs 13 times with an overall record of 24–12. They were NCAA Division I National Champions in 2020.

First Round Arkansas State L 7–48
First Round Middle Tennessee State L 19–20 OT
First Round
Quarterfinals
Northern Arizona
Montana
W 34–31
L 24–49
First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
WKU
Eastern Washington
Montana
W 54–21
W 35–34
L 13–34
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
National Championship Game
Stony Brook
Montana State
Montana
North Dakota State
W 34–27
W 49–13
W 31–28
L 6–17
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
National Championship Game
Cal Poly
Montana State
Eastern Washington
North Dakota State
W 18–16
W 34–16
W 45–42
L 13–39
First Round
Second Round
Southern Utah
Southeastern Louisiana
W 51–20
L 29–30
First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Southeastern Louisiana
Jacksonville State
Villanova
North Dakota State
W 21–17
W 37–26
W 34–31
L 3–35
First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Southern Utah
McNeese State
Colgate
Jacksonville State
W 42–39
W 34–29
W 48–21
L 10–62
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Chattanooga
James Madison
W 41–36
L 7–65
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
South Dakota
Kennesaw State
North Dakota State
W 54–42
W 34–27
L 13–55
Monmouth
North Dakota State
James Madison
South Dakota State
W 21–15
W 24–20
W 38–35
W 23–21
Second Round
Quarterfinals
UIW
Montana State
W 49–42
L 19–42

NAIA

The Bearkats appeared in the NAIA playoffs one time, with a combined record of 1–0–1.

1964Semifinals
National Championship
Findlay
Concordia–Moorhead
W, 32–12
T, 7–7

Home stadiums

See main article: Bowers Stadium.

Pritchett Field (1912–1985)

The Bearkats' home for football was on Pritchett Field for 73 years (1912–1985) beginning with their first football game against Rice University in 1912. The field was named after Joseph Pritchett, brother of the university's fourth president Henry Carr Pritchett, and former owner of the land the field rests on.

The final football game played on Pritchett Field was a victory for the Bearkats with a score of 51–7, defeating Washburn University. Sam Houston Football began playing games at Bowers Stadium following the 1985 season. The complex is currently home to Sam Houston Women's Soccer and Club Lacrosse.[15]

On April 18, 2013,[16] football was played on Pritchett Field for the first time since 1985 for the annual Orange-White spring game. The event also included the presentation of the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award to head coach Willie Fritz.[17]

Bowers Stadium (1986–present)

Bowers Stadium, formerly Bearkat Stadium (1986–1989), is currently home to both Sam Houston Football and the Track and Field programs beginning with the 1986 season. Bowers Stadium has a capacity of 14,000. However, 16,148 fans packed Bowers Stadium in 1994 to watch Alcorn State led by NFL bound quarterback Steve McNair in a 48–23 SAM HOUSTON victory on regional ABC-TV.[18] [19]

Rivalries

Stephen F. Austin

See main article: Battle of the Piney Woods.

The Sam Houston/Stephen F. Austin rivalry game, also known as the Battle of the Piney Woods, is a yearly rivalry held at NRG Stadium in Houston. The two teams have met 91 times with Sam Houston leading the series 60–34–2. The Battle of the Piney Woods is Texas' second longest FCS rivalry. The most recent meeting ending with the Bearkats defeating the Lumberjacks 21–20 and clinching their 10th win in a row. However, the rivalry is now in question as Sam Houston left the Western Athletic Conference for Conference USA in 2023.

Texas State

Sam Houston's second longest rivalry (dating back to 1915) is Texas State University. The two teams held annual rivalry games in mainly football and basketball with Texas State boasting a 50–37–5 record in football (last game in 2011) and a 64–51 record in men’s basketball (last game in 2012). The two universities are in the same university system (sharing many similarities) and competed in the same athletic conferences until Texas State left the Southland Conference for the Western Athletic Conference in 2012, eventually ending up in the Sun Belt Conference only a year later in 2013. The football rivalry has since been renewed beginning in the 2024 season.

Notable former players

Bearkats in the National Football League

Sam Houston has had 37 alumni play in the National Football League, with 19 players selected in the Draft.[20] [21] During the 2018 NFL draft, the Oakland Raiders selected defensive lineman P. J. Hall in the second round. This represents the highest a Bearkat player has been drafted by an NFL team.

Individual awards

National awards

Sam Houston has had a total of 88 players selected into the College Football All-America Team, including 58 NCAA All-Americans and 30 NAIA All-Americans. A number of these players have also been considered for major national awards.[22] In 2016, quarterback Jeremiah Briscoe became the first Bearkat to win the Payton Award. In 2017 he became the first Bearkat to win two Payton Awards and only the second FCS player to win multiple Payton Awards after former Appalachian State quarterback Armanti Edwards became the first in 2009.

Major honors

Chris Chaloupka, QB, 1999 – 13th

Josh McCown, QB, 2001 – 7th

Dustin Long, QB, 2004 – 2nd

D. D. Terry, RB, 2006 – 16th

Timothy Flanders, RB, 2011 – 7th, 2012 – 13th

Jeremiah Briscoe, QB, 2016 – Winner, 2017 Winner

Keith Davis, DB, 2001 – 7th

Darnell Taylor, S, 2012 – 14th

P. J. Hall, DE, 2016 – 3rd

Derick Roberson, DE, 2018 – 2nd

Willie Fritz, National, 2011

Willie Fritz, Regional, 2011 & 2012

K. C. Keeler – 2016

Conference awards

Sam Houston has had 407 All-Conference selections and honorable mentions, including 202 in the Southland Conference, 25 in the Gulf Star Conference, 173 in the Lone Star Conference, and 7 in the Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association.[23]

Lanny Dycus, QB, Gulf Star (1985)

Chris Chaloupka, QB, Southland (1999)

Josh McCown, QB, Southland (2001)

Dustin Long, QB, Southland (2004)

Timothy Flanders, RB, Southland (2011 & 2012)

Jeremiah Briscoe, QB, Southland (2016)

Chris Chaloupka, QB, Southland (1999)

D. D. Terry, RB, Southland (2006)

Richard Sincere, WR, Southland (2011)

Jared Johnson, QB, Southland (2015)

Yedidiah Louis, WR, Southland (2016)

Davion Davis, WR, Southland (2017)

Keith Davis, DB, Southland (2000)

Darnell Taylor, S, Southland (2011 & 2012)

P.J. Hall, DE, Southland (2016)

Bart Bradley, P, Gulf Star (1986)

Victor McKnight, C, Southland (1996)

Matt Dominguez, WR, Southland (1997)

P.J. Hall, DE, Southland (2014)

Nathan Stewart, WR, Southland (2016)

Tim Denton, DB, Southland (1995)

Chris Chaloupka, QB, Southland (1999)

Timothy Flanders, RB, Southland (2010)

Ron Randleman, Gulf Star (1986)

Ron Randleman, Southland (1991 & 2001)

Willie Fritz, Southland (2011)

K. C. Keeler, Southland (2016)

Individual program records

Rushing records

Passing records

Receiving records

Defensive records

Future non-conference opponents

Future non-conference opponents announced as of August 19, 2024.[28]

UNLVat Troyat Louisiana–Monroeat Colorado StateTroyGeorgia Southernat Tulsa
at HawaiiTulsaColorado Stateat Houstonat Georgia Southern
at Air Forceat Texas Techat TCULouisiana–Monroeat UNLV
at Texas

Notes and References

  1. News: Roepken. Corey. Sam Houston State hires K.C. Keeler as head football coach. Houston Chronicle. January 23, 2014.
  2. WAC Announces Expedited Entrance for Four Texas Institutions . Western Athletic Conference . January 21, 2021 . January 25, 2021.
  3. Web site: Sam Houston accepts invitation to join Conference USA . . November 5, 2021 . November 8, 2021.
  4. Web site: 2021 FCS Championship Game: Date, time, history. November 8, 2021. NCAA. 2021.
  5. Web site: Sam Houston Football Record Book. May 4, 2013. Sam Houston State Athletics. 2013.
  6. Web site: 1964 National Co-Champion team holds reunion. May 4, 2013. Sam Houston State Athletics. October 24, 2009.
  7. Web site: SHSU's Ron Randleman to Retire. May 4, 2013 . Southland Conference. December 12, 2004.
  8. Web site: Sam Houston State Coaching Records. May 4, 2013. College Football Data Warehouse. July 29, 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140729163337/http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_iaa/southland/sam_houston_state/coaching_records.php. dead.
  9. Web site: Sam Houston State gets second chance in FCS title game . May 4, 2013. Houston Chronicle. January 4, 2013.
  10. Web site: SHSU's Willie Fritz Named AFCA Coach of the Year. April 12, 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140305192557/http://www.kbtx.com/sports/headlines/SHSUs_Willie_Fritz_Named_AFCA_FCS_Coach_Of_Year_137042248.html. March 5, 2014.
  11. Web site: Willie Fritz earns AFCA Regional Coach of the Year. April 12, 2013.
  12. Web site: Archived copy . November 25, 2014 . July 15, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150715022933/http://www.naia.org/fls/27900/1NAIA/SportsInfo/Championships/FB_Championship.pdf?SPSID=640523 . dead .
  13. Web site: Sam Houston State Bearkat History . GoBearkats.com . August 7, 2009.
  14. Web site: Sam Houston State Conference Championships . April 9, 2013 . June 3, 2004 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040603162425/http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_iaa/southland/sam_houston_state/championships.php . dead .
  15. Web site: Joseph Pritchett Field . April 9, 2013.
  16. Web site: Orange-White Spring Scrimmage. April 19, 2013.
  17. Web site: Football Back At Pritchett Thursday Night. April 19, 2013.
  18. Web site: Sam Houston Bearkat Athletic History . July 17, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20050205193606/http://bearkats.shsu.edu/history.html . February 5, 2005 .
  19. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924201913/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-911277.html McNair Hurt As Alcorn St. Loses, 48–23
  20. Web site: NFL Players who attended Sam Houston State University . https://web.archive.org/web/20070919032402/http://www.databasefootball.com/players/bycollege.htm?sch=Sam+Houston+State+University . dead . September 19, 2007 . April 19, 2013 . DatabaseFootball.com .
  21. Web site: Sam Houston State Football Record Book. April 23, 2013. Sam Houston State Athletic Department.
  22. Book: Sam Houston State Football Records – National Awards. 38. Sam Houston State Athletics.
  23. Book: Sam Houston State Football Records – All Conference Players. 39–40. Sam Houston State Athletics.
  24. Book: Sam Houston State Football Records – Rushing. 8–11. Sam Houston State Athletics.
  25. Book: Sam Houston State Football Records – Passing. 12–14. Sam Houston State Athletics.
  26. Book: Sam Houston State Football Records – Receiving. 16–18. Sam Houston Athletics.
  27. Book: Sam Houston State Football Records – Defensive. 21–22. Sam Houston State Athletics.
  28. Web site: Sam Houston Bearkats Football Future Schedules. FBSchedules.com. August 19, 2024.