Northern Iowa Panthers football
College football team of the University of Northern Iowa
The Northern Iowa Panthers football program represents the University of Northern Iowa in college football at the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level as member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference (MVFC). The program began in 1895 and has fielded a team every year since with the exceptions of 1906–1907 and 1943–1944. The Panthers play their home games at the UNI-Dome on the campus of the University of Northern Iowa, in Cedar Falls, Iowa .
History
Classifications
NCAA College Division (1956–1972)
NCAA Division II (1973–1980)
NCAA Division I-AA/FCS (1981–present)
Conference memberships
Championship and postseason history
Conference championships
UNI's offense against the St. Francis Red Flash September 19, 2009
Northern Iowa has won thirty-three conference titles,[ 3] the most out of the four Iowa Division I institutions. The Panthers have won two Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championships, twelve North Central Conference championships, three Association of Mid-Continent Universities football championships and sixteen Missouri Valley Football Conference championships.
College Division bowl games
Northern Iowa played in the NCAA's College Division from 1937–1972.[ 4] Twice in those years they qualified for a College Division bowl game.[ 5]
FCS playoff games
The Panthers have reached the NCAA Division I Football Championship playoffs 22 times, with a record of 24–22.
Year
Round
Opponent
Result
1985
Quarterfinal Semifinal
Middle Tennessee Georgia Southern
W 28–21 L 33–40
1987
First round Quarterfinal Semifinal
Youngstown State Arkansas State Northeast Louisiana
W 31–28W 49–28 L 41–44
1990
First round
Boise State
L 3–20
1991
First round Quarterfinal
Weber State Marshall
W 38–21 L 13–41
1992
First round Quarterfinal Semifinal
Eastern Washington McNeese State Youngstown State
W 17–14W 29–7 L 7–19
1993
First round
Boston University
L 21–27
1993
First round
Montana
L 23–29
1995
First round Quarterfinal
Murray State Marshall
W 35–34 L 24–41
1996
Quarterfinal Semifinal
William & Mary Marshall
W 38–35 L 14–31
2001
First round Quarterfinal Semifinal
Eastern Illinois Maine Montana
W 49–43W 56–28 L 10–38
2003
First round Quarterfinal
Montana State Delaware
W 35–14 L 7–37
2005
Quarterfinal SemifinalNational Championship
New Hampshire Texas State Appalachian State
W 24–21W 40–37 L 16–21
2007
First round Quarterfinal
New Hampshire Delaware
W 38–35 L 27–39
2008
First round Quarterfinal
Maine New Hampshire Richmond
W 40–15W 36–34 L 20–21
2010
First round
Lehigh
L 7–14
2011
Second round Quarterfinal
Wofford Montana
W 28–21 L 10–48
2014
First round Second round
Stephen F. Austin Illinois State
W 44–10 L 21–41
2015
First round Second round Quarterfinal
Eastern Illinois Portland State North Dakota State
W 53–17W 29–17 L 13–23
2017
First round Second round
Monmouth South Dakota State
W 46–7 L 22–37
2018
First round Second round
Lamar UC Davis
W 16–3 L 16–23
2019
First round Second round Quarterfinal
San Diego South Dakota State James Madison
W 17–3W 13–10 L 0–17
2021
First round
Eastern Washington
L 9–19
FCS National Championship games
UNI-Dome
The UNI-Dome opened in 1976, as the home of the UNI Panthers football team. The facility's capacity for football is 16,324.[ 6]
At football games, where cold temperatures are frequently an issue for fans, the UNI-Dome announcers will announce "conditions at game time" prior to each game. The announcers will announce the weather in the town where the visiting team is from, the current weather conditions outside the Dome, and then say "Inside - 72 degrees, no wind, welcome to the Dome!" to emphasize the fact that a domed stadium is not affected by the weather. Heading into the 2021 Fall season, the Panthers have a home record of 221-59-1 in the UNI-Dome, having won nearly 80 percent of their games in the UNI-Dome.
All-Americans
First Team Selections [ 8] [ 9] [ 10] [ 11] [ 12]
Paul Jones, E, 1937 (WR)
Paul DeVan, HB, 1949 (AP)
Lou Bohnsack, C, 1952 (AP)
LeRoy Dunn, T, 1955 (WR)
Dick Formanek, T, 1956 (WR)
George Asleson, G, 1960 (AP)
Jerry Morgan, QB, 1960 (WR)
Wendell Williams, G, 1961 (AP)
Dan Boals, FB, 1962 (WR)
Randy Schultz , FB, 1964 and 1965 (AP)
Ray Pedersen, G, 1967 (AP)
Mike Timmermans, T, 1975 (AP)
Brian Mitchell , PK, 1990 and 1991 (AP)
Kenny Shedd , AP, 1992 (AP)
William Freeney, LB, 1992 (AP)
Andre Allen , LB, 1994 (AP)
Dedric Ward , WR, 1995 and 1996 (AP)
Eric Harris, LB, 1999 (AP)
Brad Meester , C, 1999 (AP)
Adam Vogt, LB, 2001 (AP)
Mackenzie Hoambrecker, PK, 2002 (AP)
Dre Dokes, DB, 2006 (AP)
Brannon Carter, LB, 2007 (AP)
Chad Rinehart , OL, 2007 (AP)
James Ruffin , DL, 2009 (AP)
Ben Boothby, DL, 2011 (AP)
Michael Schmadeke, PK, 2014 (AP)
Jack Rummells, OL, 2014 (AP)
Deiondre' Hall , DB, 2015 (AP)
Karter Schult, DL, 2016 (AP)
Jared Brinkman, DL, 2020-21c and 2021 (AP)
Trevor Penning , OL, 2021 (AP)
Matthew Cook, 2023, K (AP)
WR=Williamson Ratings; AP=Associated Press;
c - 2020-21 selections include players who played Fall 2020 and teams (such as Northern Iowa) which moved their schedule to Spring 2021 due to COVID
Notable players
Dave Schratz
References
^ "Northern Iowa gets okay to shift to new athletic conference for 1978" . Iowa City, Iowa: The Telegraph-Herald. June 19, 1977. Retrieved July 13, 2013 .
^ University of Northern Iowa Athletics Style Guide (PDF) . January 25, 2021. Retrieved February 26, 2023 .
^ "UNI Championship Seasons" . Archived from the original on September 26, 2009. Retrieved July 16, 2012 .
^ "Northern Iowa Panthers" . College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on August 6, 2009. Retrieved July 16, 2012 .
^ "Northern Iowa Bowl History" . College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on September 26, 2009. Retrieved July 16, 2012 .
^ "University of Northern Iowa UNI-Dome General Information Web Page" .
^ "2016 Northern Iowa Football Media Guide" . Retrieved July 25, 2017 .
^ "FCS Football: AP releases 2016 FCS All-America Team" . Retrieved July 25, 2017 .
^ "2020-21 Associated Press FCS All-America Team" . Retrieved September 18, 2021 .
^ "Jared Brinkman, Trevor Penning earn 2021 AP All-America Football Team honors" . Retrieved December 20, 2021 .
^ "South Dakota State QB Mark Gronowski and Monmouth RB Jaden Shirden lead AP FCS All-America team" . Retrieved November 12, 2024 .
External links
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Teams Championships & awards Seasons