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Ivy League Joining FCS Playoffs in 2025

As someone else mentioned, gonna be fun when Harvard/Yale/Dartmouth/etc. come West and are obliged to play Eastern on the red carpet.
 
Harvard ended the year in the Top 25, I think. There have been seasons where the end of season Top 25 included more than one Ivy.
Did you read the article in the first post? It says this.

"This season, Harvard was ranked No. 25 in the last FCS Top 25 Media Poll.

And in previous years, some Ivy teams have been ranked in the final Top 25 media poll:

2021:
No. 24 Princeton
No. 20 Dartmouth

2019:
No. 25 Yale
No. 22 Dartmouth

2018:
No. 11 Princeton
No. 18 Dartmouth"
 
The Ivies are small. Only 1 school, Cornell ( 15,503,) over 10,000. Penn is just under 10,000. The other 6 range from 4566 (Dartmouth) to 7349 (Brown). Cornell's "college", which is high academics, is much smaller. Cornell has other schools like Hotel Management/Hospitality and Ag, with lower academic standards, so they can admit lower academic student. Source: Wiki.

The schools really try to limit the "slots" given to football and other sports. These allow athletics to make a recruit list and then have an easier time persuading the admissions office to admit some amount of players at lower academic standards. I believe the Ivies still have an Academic Index, which sets limits for each school as to how many lower academic kids can be admitted each year, based on reductions from the average academic level of the schools. This is a sliding scale for each school.

At most Ivies, and certainly Dartmouth, almost all football players graduate. Some hang around 99%. I suppose this now be changing a bit with the Portal. I don't know any football player from my era who didn't graduate.
 
"Most are unaware that this most popular American sport was created by the teams that now make up the Ivy League. From the day Princeton played the first intercollegiate game in 1869, these major schools of the northeast—Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton, and Yale—shaped football as we now know it. Almost every facet of the game still bears their imprint: they created the All-America team, produced the first coaches, devised the basic rules, invented many of the strategies, developed much of the equipment, and even named the positions. Both the Heisman and Outland trophies are named for Ivy League players.

Crowds of 80,000 no longer attend Ivy League games as they did seventy years ago, and Ivy teams are not the powerhouses they once were, but at times they can still be a step ahead of the rest of football, as in 1973 when Brown and Penn started the first black quarterbacks to face each other in major college history.

In this rich history, Bernstein shows that much of the culture that surrounds American football, both good and bad, has its roots in the Ivy League. The college fight song is an Ivy League creation (Yale's was written by Cole Porter), as are the marching bands that play them. With their long winning streaks and impressive victories, Ivy teams started a national obsession with football in the first decades of the twentieth century that remains alive today. But football was almost abolished early on because of violence in Ivy games, and it took President Theodore Roosevelt to mediate disagreements about rough play in order for football to remain a college sport. Gambling and ticket scalping were as commonplace then as now, as well as payoffs and recruiting abuses, fueled by the tremendous amount of money generated by the games, revenue that was oftentimes greater than that collected by the rest of the university. But the Ivy teams confronted those abuses, and in so doing helped develop our ideals about the role of athletics in college life. Although Ivy League football and its ancient rivalries have disappeared from big-time sports by their own accord, their legacy remains with every snap of the ball."

Source: An Amazon review of a book on the Ivies.
 
Some famous Ivy players. Bob Kraft, owner of Patriots, Columba. Tommy Lee Jones, Harvard, all-Ivy. Sid Luckman. Calvin Hill, Yale, father of Grant Hill. John Heisman: "He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1954. The son of a German immigrant and a native of Cleveland, Ohio, John William Heisman was born on October 23, 1869. Heisman attended Brown University in Rhode Island (1887-89) and the University of Pennsylvania (1890-91), playing football at both schools." Brian Denehy, actor, Columbia, all-Ivy. Jason Garrett. Joe Paterno, Brown. John Kennedy, Harvard. John Carney, Dartmouth, Gov. of DE. Ed Marinaro. Chuck Bednarick, Penn. Lou Gehrig, Columbia (okay, just baseball). CEO's of many corporations.
 
Some famous Ivy players. Bob Kraft, owner of Patriots, Columba. Tommy Lee Jones, Harvard, all-Ivy. Sid Luckman. Calvin Hill, Yale, father of Grant Hill. John Heisman: "He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1954. The son of a German immigrant and a native of Cleveland, Ohio, John William Heisman was born on October 23, 1869. Heisman attended Brown University in Rhode Island (1887-89) and the University of Pennsylvania (1890-91), playing football at both schools." Brian Denehy, actor, Columbia, all-Ivy. Jason Garrett. Joe Paterno, Brown. John Kennedy, Harvard. John Carney, Dartmouth, Gov. of DE. Ed Marinaro. Chuck Bednarick, Penn. Lou Gehrig, Columbia (okay, just baseball). CEO's of many corporations.
Don’t forget mthoopsfan!

He played for Dartmouth and knows lots of famous people!
 
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18 Ivy League players have at least one Super Bowl ring. A dozen were on NFL rosters in the past few years. The Ivy League is not a football backwater and I'm excited to see some possible matchups with our conference. in the years to come
 
18 Ivy League players have at least one Super Bowl ring. A dozen were on NFL rosters in the past few years. The Ivy League is not a football backwater and I'm excited to see some possible matchups with our conference. in the years to come
Couldn’t agree more. This isn’t the NCAABB Tournament where they have to play the top of DI. The best of the Ivy will be a welcome addition that I think will increase the overall strength of the FCS bracket. I think it’s pretty cool.
 
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