
Rebuilding Pac-12 gets its needed 8th football school with addition of Texas State
SAN MARCOS, Texas (AP) — Texas State is joining the Pac-12, giving the rebuilding conference the eighth football-playing school it needed to maintain its status as an FBS conference.
The Pac-12 and Texas State announced Monday that the Bobcats from the Sun Belt Conference will join holdovers Oregon State and Washington State, along with private school Gonzaga and Mountain West-departing schools Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State San Diego State and Utah State as the nine foundational members of the new Pac-12. The reconfigured league's official launch is set for July 1, 2026.
Since Gonzaga doesn't field a football team, the Pac-12 needed one more to remain eligible as a Football Bowl Subdivision league. Only Oregon State and Washington State had remained in the Pac-12 after the departures of 10 teams to the three other power conferences: the ACC, Big Ten and Big 12.
Texas State will be an all-sports member in the Pac-12 after being in the Sun Belt since 2013. The Bobcats, one of 14 football teams in the Sun Belt, made their FBS debut with one season in the WAC in 2012.
The Bobcats were 8-5 each of the past two seasons since G.J. Kinne took over as coach, and won the First Responders Bowl both years. Before that, they had never been to a bowl game and had only one winning season their previous 11 playing FBS football, a 7-5 record in 2014 under coach Dennis Franchione.
With the Texas State campus in San Marcos, only about 35 miles south of the University of Texas in Austin, it will be the farthest from the West Coast the Pac-12 has had an all-sports member. Arkansas-Little Rock is now an affiliate member for wrestling.
When the 10 former Pac-12 teams officially departed last year, that created coast-to-coast conferences. Oregon and Washington went to the Big Ten; Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado and Utah joined the Big 12; and Stanford and California became ACC members.
"We are extremely excited to welcome Texas State as a foundational member of the new Pac-12,' Commissioner Teresa Gould said. 'It is a new day in college sports and the most opportune time to launch a new league that is positioned to succeed in today's landscape with student-athletes in mind. ... Texas State has shown a commitment to competing and winning at the highest level as well as to providing student-athletes with a well-rounded college experience academically, athletically and socially. We look forward to seeing the Bobcats' future trajectory continue to shine big and bright.'
The Pac-12 last week struck a media-rights deal with CBS that sets up the network to broadcast a minimum of four football and men's basketball games per season on its main network and provide a cable and streaming presence for the league from 2026-31.
Sun Belt Commissioner Keith Gill in a statement thanked the Texas State staff for its 'collaboration and leadership through a transformative era in college athletics' from the COVID-19 pandemic to NIL and the most recent round of realignment. He also touted the league's recent football success, including the Bobcats being among the 12 SBC teams in bowl games in 2023, and one of the seven last year.
'I will continue to update our stakeholders on developments whenever possible as we work to ensure the sustained rise of the Sun Belt Conference, a collection of like-minded, regional rivals with winning football traditions, passionate fanbases and enduring commitments to excellence in all sports,' Gill said. 'The Sun Belt Conference is rising, and our best days are ahead.'
Texas State is a national research university with more than 40,000 students, and is among the 25 largest undergraduate enrollments among public universities in the United States. Kelly Damphousse, the president of Texas State, called joining the Pac-12 a historic moment.
'Joining the Pac-12 is more than an athletic move. It is a declaration of our rising national profile, our commitment to excellence, and our readiness to compete and collaborate with some of the most respected institutions in the country,' Damphousse said. 'Our acceptance into the Pac-12 affirms the strength of our academic vision, our commitment to providing access to a Texas State degree, the momentum of our athletic programs, and the ambition that defines this institution.'
___
AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
recommended
in this topic

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hugh Freeze Makes Concerning Admission on Auburn's NIL Budget
Hugh Freeze Makes Concerning Admission on Auburn's NIL Budget originally appeared on Athlon Sports. It has not been a good week to be an Auburn Tigers fan. On Wednesday, five-star recruits Earnest Rankins and Cederian Morgan committed to the Florida State Seminoles and the Alabama Crimson Tide, respectively, with each prospect having Auburn on their shortlist heading into the week. Advertisement Auburn is not only struggling to land commitments, but they are also failing to keep those who had previously pledged their allegiance to The Plains. With 2026 four-stars Denarius Gray and Shadarius Toodle denouncing their commitments from Auburn in the past week, the Tigers are now ranked 89th regarding the 2026 recruiting class, per 247Sports. Auburn Tigers head coach Hugh Freeze.© Jake Crandall/ Advertiser / USA TODAY NETWORK Auburn houses just six hard commits, highlighted by four-star edge rusher Hezekiah Harris and four-star quarterback and former Penn State Nittany Lions commit Peyton Falzone. For head coach Hugh Freeze, who finds himself in the crosshairs of fans after the program's latest setbacks, he believes the NIL era is to blame. According to Justin Hokanson of On3, Freeze says Auburn is "really low" on NIL funds compared to other top programs that are in play for their recruits. Advertisement Freeze also emphasized that his staff continues to operate under the rules and guidelines presented by the NCAA and Congress, which he feels other teams may not be as law-abiding. Nevertheless, Freeze has a belief in the program's direction, with a top-ten recruiting class in 2026 not out of the picture. Auburn AD John Cohen hints that August 1 — the first day players can sign NIL deals — as a chance for the Tigers to flip recruits. Related: Auburn Lands Former 5-Star Recruit Out of Transfer Portal This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 3, 2025, where it first appeared.


Boston Globe
8 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Suspended game's conclusion makes for a short, strange trip at Fenway Park
In a snappy 1 hour, 20 minutes, the Sox sealed Advertisement 'Definitely a weird one,' Story said. 'Resuming play is always kind of a weird vibe. It was a little bit quiet out there, which is weird for Fenway. But as the offense got going, the crowd picked up, and it was fun.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up With Tuesday's original starters shelved, the teams took different approaches to handling their pitching staffs for the de facto doubleheader. Boston pushed up Bello, originally slated to start Wednesday night, while Cincinnati went with a bullpen game in the afternoon and kept starter Nick Martinez available for the nightcap. Technically making his first relief appearance since 2022, Bello quickly gave up a two-run homer to Spencer Steer to put Cincinnati ahead, 3-2, in the fourth, but held the Reds scoreless the next four innings. Advertisement 'That was a good learning experience for him, because every pitch mattered,' said Sox manager Alex Cora. 'As a starter, you give up three runs in six innings, you're [usually] happy. But there, he needed to make pitches the whole game.' Bello had gone at least six innings in five straight starts entering Wednesday, and with just 62 pitches through five, he likely would've done it again if not for the Sox taking the lead going into the ninth. 'I treated it like a regular start,' Bello said through a translator. 'I just wanted to keep the game close.' Nick Burns held down the famed red seat in the bleachers for Wednesday's resumption of Tuesday's suspended game. Matty Wasserman The announced attendance was 32,355, but only a portion of Tuesday's crowd made it back on short notice during a work day. One fan who returned was Nick Burns, 25, who had scored the iconic Ted Williams 'I felt I had to at least sit in it once in my career of going to Red Sox games,' he said. Determined to maximize his time there, Burns got off work and sat alone in the mostly-empty bleachers. 'It worked out perfectly,' Burns said. 'What is better than this?' The oddities of the fan experience were evident beyond just the small crowd and short concession lines. For one, the eighth-inning rendition of 'Sweet Caroline' came just 1 hour and 1 minute after play resumed. Even NESN's retro broadcast in Advertisement Closer Aroldis Chapman set aside the Reds 1-2-3 to earn his 350th career save. 'It was quick, but I was ready for it,' Chapman said through a translator. 'I knew that the game was close enough, so I was expecting to get the call in the ninth or any other moment to pitch.' Related : The time of the game was 2:09, officially tied for the Sox' second-shortest of the season. Though in reality, it was 20 hours and 41 minutes between the first pitch and last. After the game, Cora likened it to the seven-inning doubleheaders used during the COVID-impacted seasons in 2020 and 2021. 'I think that was the greatest thing ever in '21. The game is sharper. The fans are into it. And the decision making, you have to be on point,' Cora said. The Sox were, leading to a series-clinching win that felt like it flew by. 'You had to put it in play, steal a base, put it in play [again], and the game was over,' Cora said. Matty Wasserman can be reached at
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Ohio State Star Jeremiah Smith Signs Notable NIL Deal
Ohio State Star Jeremiah Smith Signs Notable NIL Deal originally appeared on The Spun. The Ohio State Buckeyes may be Nike through and through but one of their biggest stars just inked an NIL deal with the swoosh's biggest rival. Advertisement On Wednesday, All-American wideout Jeremiah Smith reportedly signed on with adidas Football as the latest athlete to join the three stripes. Putting himself in a similar situation to former Duke star Cooper Flagg when he partnered with New Balance while attending a Nike-branded school. "One of the most memorable moments from last season was losing my black stripe and officially becoming a Buckeye," Smith said in a statement. "Fast forward a year and I'm blessed to be adding three, joining the fastest brand in football." "It's crazy to be partnering with a brand that has such a talented roster of players and that I've been wearing since I was a young kid. We're not done yet." Smith took the nation by storm last season catching 76 passes for 1,315 yards and 15 touchdowns on the way to winning a national championship as a true freshman. Advertisement But even though he helped bring OSU its first national title under Ryan Day, he still vowed to make sure the Buckeyes never lose to Michigan again as long as he's on campus. "I'm not a sore loser, but I hate losing, and losing to that team up north was pretty crazy," Smith admitted to The Athletic. "In the end, I think it really helped us play the way we did in the playoffs. But I didn't want to go to Ohio State and lose to that team up north." ATLANTA, GEORGIA - JANUARY 20: Jeremiah Smith #4 of the Ohio State Buckeyes celebrates after scoring a touchdown against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish during the second quarter in the 2025 CFP National Championship at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium on January 20, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by)"I just hate them. Just something about them. For the next two years, I promise you, I will not lose to them. I can't lose to them in the next two years." Advertisement It's been a big year for Smith who also landed on the cover of EA Sports' "College Football 26" alongside Alabama's Ryan Williams. Many feel if he was eligible he would've been a top-five pick in the 2025 NFL Draft. Related: Former NFL Veteran Dead Suddenly At 53 Ohio State Star Jeremiah Smith Signs Notable NIL Deal first appeared on The Spun on Jul 2, 2025 This story was originally reported by The Spun on Jul 2, 2025, where it first appeared.