The NCAA’s Football Championship Subdivision is the second level of Division I football. The Pioneer Football League is located in FCS and gets a spot in the playoffs, yet there’s no secret the competition bears no resemblance to the competitive levels of that division.
Example: Drake went 8-0 to win the Pioneer in 2023, while also making the rash decision to schedule non-conference games with both South Dakota State and North Dakota. The Bulldogs were outscored 125-14.
Drake then received the traditional fate for a Pioneer champion: going on the road to face a potent program. In this case, it was to Fargo, N.D., to suffer a 66-3 loss to North Dakota State.
In the early ‘90s, the NCAA declared schools that were Division 1 (primarily basketball schools) could no longer compete in Division III football. That has made the Pioneer home to those schools that still want to offer football but are financially unable to handle the cost of full-service FCS — $7 million annually, at a minimum.
St. Thomas made the transition to Division 1 in 2021. The athletic department was taking on high scholarship costs for basketball, hockey, etc., and there was no chance to handle the financial burden of scholarship football.
“The Pioneer has worked well for us,” athletic director Phil Esten said Saturday. “The schedule puts us in contact with alums all over the country. And we now have 11 like-minded colleges that are committed to this approach.”
St. Thomas started the season with four non-conference games: splitting with Division II University of Sioux Falls (L) and Black Hills State (W) and losing narrowly to once-mighty Northern Iowa.
Then, on Sept. 21, the Tommies traveled to St. Charles, Mo. to take on Lindenwood, from the FCS Ohio Valley Conference. Final: Lindenwood 64, Tommies 0, with the final six points in being fourth-quarter field goals.