Yes I think they can if they work hard and stay as a team and don't argue. This school has a lot of talent and I think they have a very good chance in 2010.
Frostburg State, McDaniel College, Salisbury State, and Johns Hopkins are the D3 football schools in Maryland.
Alaska has 0 NCAA D-1 football schools.
Florida and Alabama
There are no division 1-AA schools in the state of Alaska. no
Millennium Edition
Michigan State University is a Morrell Land Grant College and is a public institution. Schools with the word STATE in their name are going to be public schools.
There are two two-year schools in the state of Georgia that compete in the NJCAA.
The only two Division 1-A football schools in Georgia are Georgia and Georgia Tech. There are two D1-AA schools: Georgia Southern and Savannah State.
No, through the 2009 season the two schools have not played each other in football.
big BCS Schools, USC, Ohio State, Penn State, Florida, Miami U etc
most top schools like Texas, USC, and Alabama, but also some other schools like Virginia, Florida State, and Ohio State
There are many non-football schools with less than 10,000 students. But larger non-football schools include - University of Alaska (30,000 students) Boston University (32,000) California - Santa Barbara (20,000) Cal State - Fullerton (36,000) Cal State - Long Beach (35,000) Cal State - Northridge (36,000) George Washington (24,000) Marquette (11,000) Maryland - Baltimore County (12,000) Northeastern (15,000) *dropped football in 2009* Texas - Arlington (31,000) Texas - San Antonio (28,000) *but will start football in 2011* Vermont (11,000) University of California, San Diego (31,000) Wichita State (15,000)