| Florida Atlantic Owls football | |||
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| First season | 2001 | ||
| Staff | |||
| Athletic director | Craig Angelos | ||
| Head coach | Howard Schnellenberger | ||
| 8th year, 48–48–0 | |||
| Stadium | |||
| Home stadium | Lockhart Stadium | ||
| Stadium capacity | 20,000 | ||
| Stadium surface | Grass | ||
| Location | Ft. Lauderdale (stadium) Boca Raton (campus) |
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| League/Conference | |||
| Conference | Sun Belt | ||
| Team records | |||
| All-time record | 48–48–0 (.500) | ||
| Postseason bowl record | 2–0–0 | ||
| Awards | |||
| Conference titles | 1 | ||
| Pageantry | |||
| Colors | Blue and Red | ||
| Fight song | Florida Atlantic Fight Song | ||
| Mascot | Owsley the Owl | ||
| Marching band | Florida Atlantic Marching Owls | ||
| Rivals | FIU Golden Panthers Troy Trojans |
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| Website | FAUSports.com | ||
The Florida Atlantic Owls football team represents Florida Atlantic University, a mid-major NCAA Division I-A college football team, that currently competes in the Sun Belt Conference.
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Florida Atlantic University football began play in 2001 and has had only one head coach, Howard Schnellenberger. After competing their first four years as an NCAA Division I-AA independent, the Owls moved to Division I-A and the Sun Belt Conference.
In 1998, Florida Atlantic University announced it was pursuing the creation of an NCAA football program and that Howard Schnellenberger was going to lead the charge, as director of football operations and head coach. After his success in rebuilding programs at the University of Miami and the University of Louisville, Coach Schnellenberger now undertook the role of building a program from scratch. Much like his time at Miami and Louisville, Coach Schnellenberger did not shy from placing lofty expectations and high goals on his newly-created program. Even before FAU would play an intercollegiate game, Coach Schnellenberger explained the goal of FAU football would be to play the best teams it can schedule, in order for the program to aim for a National Championship in Division I-A football. These extreme goals were not unusual from a man like Coach Schnellenberger. At Lousiville, facing threats from the administration that the football team would be terminated, Schnellenberger made the bold (and now famous) prediction, "[We are] on a collision course with the national championship. The only variable is time.” [1]
On August 29, 2000, the first practice was held at the Boca Raton campus of FAU, and 164 students showed up to try out for the team. Florida Atlantic joined the NCAA Division I-AA as an Independent team for the 2001 season. Its first-ever intercollegiate competition was against Slippery Rock University, which the Owls lost 40-7 in front of 25,632 fans at Pro Player Stadium. [2]
The team finished its inaugural season at 4-6 and followed the next season at 2-9. Major accomplishments in its first two seasons include the program's first win, which came in its second game, against Bethune Cookman, 31-28, and won in the first meeting with newly-created South Florida rival, Florida International University, 31-21.
On September 15th, 2007 FAU defeated its first Big Ten opponent with a 42-39 victory over the University of Minnesota. [3] Furthermore FAU beat Troy University in the final game of the 2007 season to become Sun Belt Conference champions and received an invitation to the 2007 New Orleans Bowl, its first ever bowl bid. As a result, in just the seventh year of the football program's history, and the third year playing in Division I, Florida Atlantic set an NCAA record by becoming the youngest program ever to receive an invitation to a bowl game.
Conference affiliations:
Head coaches
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