Stony Brook University is one of only two public colleges in the Association of American Universities (AAU), an organization of the top research universities in the United States, that sponsors football at the Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level, widely regarded as inferior to the top-tier Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS).
The message is simple: state universities whose academics are as renowned as Stony Brook University traditionally also play football at the highest tier. So why don’t we?
The “small school” label associated with FCS universities is misleading and damaging to Stony Brook’s reputation. With 27,000 current students and over 200,000 total alumni, including names such as Joy Behar, Joe Nathan and Jef Raskin, the developer of the Mac, the university is by no means “small”.
A decade ago, Stony Brook football played in the Big South Conference alongside current FBS teams Coastal Carolina and Liberty. During its time in the Big South, Stony Brook earned bragging rights on the field and went a combined 7-3 against the Chanticleers and the Flames.
In the present day, however, it is them who are laughing. Coastal Carolina and Liberty were both regularly ranked during the 2020 season in the AP Top 25 at the FBS level, with the former reaching as high as No. 9. The two schools faced off in the Cure Bowl, which was broadcast on ESPN to 2.6 million viewers, the most-watched bowl game among teams in the Group of Five, the non-power FBS conferences, since 2017.
Meanwhile, Stony Brook, who regularly beat both schools from 2008 to 2012, was left languishing in the FCS despite being more successful than them a decade ago and boasting vastly superior academics.
The Chanticleers joined the Sun Belt from the Big South beginning in 2016, needing to expand their football stadium’s capacity from 9,124 in order to reach the FBS minimum of 15,000. By 2017, Brooks Stadium seated 15,500 with the $38 million expansion fully completed in 2019, seating 20,000.
Meanwhile, Liberty was able to get a waiver that allowed it to advance to the FBS as an independent without being a member of a conference. Since a 2010 expansion, Williams Stadium has been above the FBS capacity standard.
Stony Brook was dealt a devastating blow in 2015 when disgraced former New York governor Andrew Cuomo vetoed $22.2 million allocated for the expansion of Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium, which currently has a capacity of 12,300. Stony Brook had partnered with Populous, the architectural firm which designed Citi Field, Gillette Stadium and Prudential Center, among other stadiums, for the potential project.
It is difficult to understate the long-lasting damage that Cuomo’s veto did to Stony Brook University.
Having FBS-level facilities would have made the Seawolves a more attractive commodity in this wave of conference realignment and reinforce the legitimacy of Stony Brook’s investment into ascension. Instead, to this day, LaValle Stadium remains below FBS standards and contrasting it with what Stony Brook should have had is a painful reminder of Cuomo’s negative legacy.
In 2019, Stony Brook’s athletic budget stood at $36.5 million, the fourth-largest among FCS schools and more than nearly two dozen FBS schools. Only James Madison, Delaware and UC Davis trump Stony Brook in both expenses and revenue. Attendance at football games, which has been trending downward since 2017 and is far below FBS expectations, would undoubtedly rise with the added prestige of playing FBS opponents.
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