Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ASUN reveals its ’21 football plans

- MITCHELL GLADSTONE

Less than a month after expanding, the Atlantic Sun Conference took its next steps toward becoming a football league Tuesday morning.

The ASUN announced in a virtual news conference from Atlanta that it is partnering with the Western Athletic Conference for the 2021 football season to create the ASUN-WAC Challenge, a combined league that will qualify for an automatic bid to the FCS playoffs.

The University of Central Arkansas, which is departing the Southland Conference after this academic year, will link up with fellow ASUN additions Eastern Kentucky and Jacksonvil­le State as they combine with new WAC members Abilene Christian, Lamar, Sam Houston State and Stephen F. Austin — all of whom will also be leaving the Southland — to form the alliance.

Each of those schools will play a six-game, round-robin schedule with three home and three road matchups. UCA also will visit WAC member Tarleton State, which is still transition­ing to Division I so that game will not count toward the conference standings.

“The ASUN and WAC are proud to be building opportunit­ies for our student-athletes to compete at the highest level,” ASUN Commission­er Ted Gumbart said in a statement. “This partnershi­p provides teams in both leagues a path to an automatic bid and elevates the ASUN and WAC to a new level of competitio­n. We look forward to creating more innovative ways to promote ASUN Football as an NCAA FCS league in 2021 and beyond.”

Gumbart’s expectatio­n is that the ASUN will add to its five football-playing schools come fall 2022 in order for the conference to qualify for its own automatic bid that season. Current ASUN programs Kennesaw State and North Alabama will remain as Big South associate members for the 2021 football season before joining up with Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky and Jacksonvil­le State.

The ASUN also counts Liberty (FBS independen­t) and Stetson (FCS non-scholarshi­p Pioneer League) among its membership, but Gumbart noted the conference won’t compel either program to join its newly-formed football league.

UCA Athletic Director Brad Teague said last month that moving from the Southland to the ASUN will allow the Bears to expand their footprint while also securing their future as conference­s keep realigning in the near future.

“Athletics is a gateway. It’s the front porch of our institutio­n — it’s the way that we welcome the community to our institutio­ns,” UCA President Houston Davis said. “Knowing that we’ve got partners like this, we feel very confident about the hand we’ve been dealt.”

That growth could occur both within and outside the ASUN. The conference is working with Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and the Atlanta Sports Council to create the United Atlanta Classic, a multi-game series that could begin as early as this fall but no later than the 2022 season.

The ASUN is also in discussion­s with the Big South to create an annual series between the two leagues that would add one nonconfere­nce game to the final regular-season week, starting in 2022. Although those plans have yet to be finalized, the expectatio­n is that matchups would be determined during the season.

All of these developmen­ts are ones that excite UCA Coach Nathan Brown, who believes his Bears can be “trailblaze­rs” in this new venture for both the school and conference.

“When you look at the history of the programs [in this league], the competitio­n is going to be extremely high,” he said. “And when you look at the number of playoff appearance­s, past championsh­ips, conference championsh­ips, the opportunit­y to play in a league like [the ASUN] was a no-brainer for us.

“This is a trailblazi­ng moment for us at the University of Central Arkansas. … The way we spin it to our student-athletes is, ‘You’ve got an opportunit­y to blaze that trail and to set that point of history for our conference.’ ”

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