Houston Chronicle

UH and TSU are in discussion­s to play a non-conference game in 2018.

- By Joseph Duarte joseph.duarte@chron.com twitter.com/joseph_duarte

The University of Houston and Texas Southern are in talks to play a nonconfere­nce football game in 2018.

UH vice president for intercolle­giate athletics Hunter Yurachek and TSU athletic director Dr. Charles McClelland have been in discussion­s for several months about the game, which would be held at TDECU Stadium. The payout to TSU would be part of the compensati­on package for UH’s men’s and women’s basketball teams playing some home games next season on the TSU campus while renovation­s are underway on what will become the Fertitta Center.

While not finalized, the current plan is for the UH men to play most of their non-conference schedule at TSU’s H&PE Arena — site of Wednesday night’s National Invitation Tournament opener against Akron — and the majority of its American Athletic Conference schedule at Toyota Center. The UH women would play their entire home schedule at TSU.

Yurachek said TSU has been “very accommodat­ing” in sharing its facility and meeting on the football field would be a “win-win situation.”

The schools are separated by just a few blocks but have only met once in football, a 59-6 win by UH in 2007.

“It’d be great for TSU,” Yurachek said. “It’d be great for the University of Houston to keep that money in the city and allow TSU and Houston to create a one-year rivalry, per se.”

McClelland echoed Yurachek’s enthusiasm.

“I know one thing, it will be sold out,” McClelland said. “If it gets done, you’d better get your ticket early.”

It’s not uncommon for an FBS school, college football’s top division, to pay for so-called “guarantee” games, which compensate smaller budget schools, usually from FCS, to travel for a game without the stipulatio­n of a return game to play at their stadium. Those payouts can range anywhere from $100,000 to upward of $1.25 million.

UH’s current non-conference for 2018 includes road games against Rice (Sept. 1) and Texas Tech (Sept. 15) and a home date with Arizona (Sept. 8).

Yurachek said filling the remaining date has been difficult with few teams willing to play on the road.

“Scheduling is like putting a big puzzle together,” Yurachek said. “In 2018, the puzzle is missing one home game. We have searched high and low for that home game. I believe at this point, we have exhausted all available options.”

UH had planned to not schedule any FCS opponents after 2016, but unforeseen difficulti­es finding an opponent and the unique situation with TSU opened the door for a onetime exception.

“It’s not a different approach,” Yurachek said. “Our schedule model is to play two Power Five schools, home and away, and that’s been the model we want to retain for years to come.

“As Charles and I sat down and talked about the use of their basketball venue in 2017-18, and some of the fees associated with that, it started to make sense that TSU would be a viable option to play a one-time guarantee game, to help us from a scheduling standpoint in 2018 and help them as well.”

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