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UL Monroe plays Arkansas State on 3-game road skid

UL Monroe plays Arkansas State on 3-game road skid

Washington Post21-02-2025
UL Monroe Warhawks (7-21, 3-12 Sun Belt) at Arkansas State Red Wolves (19-9, 10-5 Sun Belt)
Jonesboro, Arkansas; Saturday, 3 p.m. EST
BOTTOM LINE: UL Monroe travels to Arkansas State looking to break its three-game road skid.
The Red Wolves are 12-2 on their home court. Arkansas State ranks seventh in the Sun Belt with 13.5 assists per game led by Terrance Ford Jr. averaging 4.7.
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From a 70-7 loss to FBS: Why Missouri State jumped to college football's highest level
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Although the thought of moving up to the highest level of college football had long percolated at Missouri State, it didn't start to formalize until the run-up to a game at Arkansas State in 2015. The Sun Belt Conference had just invited Coastal Carolina from the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), and member Arkansas State liked the idea of adding a peer only 200 miles away in Missouri's third-largest city (Springfield) to the conference too. There was enough mutual interest between Missouri State and the conference for preliminary talks. The matchup wasn't supposed to be a trial run for the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), exactly, but it quickly became a four-quarter feasibility study into the Bears' immediate potential in the highest subdivision. Advertisement They lost 70-7. 'We just got the hell beat out of us,' said Clif Smart, then Missouri State's president. 'It was a humiliating, awful game. We went home from that going, 'We're not anywhere close to being ready.'' 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The Lady Bears have made 17 of the past 33 NCAA Tournaments, led the nation in attendance in 1993 and made the Final Four in 1992 and 2001. Jackie Stiles was Caitlin Clark before Caitlin Clark, becoming the first woman to score 1,000 points in a season and graduating as the NCAA's all-time leading scorer (3,393 points, which still ranks fifth). Football flashed with back-to-back FCS playoff appearances in 1989-90 … then lost 191 of its next 320 games. The 70-7 debacle at Arkansas State was the program's worst loss in 94 years and showed the FCS/FBS gap in facilities, talent, commitment and everything else. As losing seasons mounted, fans weren't the only ones questioning the program's existence. School officials considered cutting it. 'Forget about FBS,' said Kyle Moats, who was Missouri State's athletic director from 2009-24 before going to Eastern Kentucky. 'We had a serious thought as to, are we going to continue to keep going this route.' 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