2016 NAIA Football National Championship

The 2016 NAIA Football National Championship was a four-round, sixteen team tournament played between November 19 and December 17 of 2016. The tournament concluded on December 17 with a single game, played as the 61st Annual NAIA Football National Championship Presented by Waste Pro. Waste Pro became the newest title game sponsor in an announcement made October 31, 2015.[1] The game featured two teams that had never before won a national championship, the undefeated #2 Baker Wildcats facing the once-beaten #4 Saint Francis Cougars.

The championship game was played at Municipal Stadium in Daytona Beach, Florida. This was the 3rd time the championship game was played at this venue after the prior six games were played at Barron Stadium in Rome, Georgia. A total of sixteen teams were been selected to participate in the single-elimination tournament from across the country. The field included ten conference champions who received automatic bids. The field was filled with at-large selections that were awarded to the highest ranked teams that were not conference champions. First-round seeding was based on the final edition of the 2016 NAIA Coaches' Poll, with certain minor modifications given based on geographic considerations. Each subsequent round was re-seeded based on the rankings of all teams advancing to that round.

Quarterfinal pairings were announced by the NAIA on November 20, a day after the first round results were known.[2]

Semifinal pairings were confirmed by the NAIA on November 26, soon after completion of the day's quarterfinal games.[3]

Junior quarterback Logan Brettell of Baker was awarded the Rawlings Award for most valuable player in the NAIA prior to the championship. The St. Francis Cougars won the NAIA national championship, defeating Baker 38-17.

Postseason

Playoff bracket

2016 Waste Pro NAIA Football National Championship
1234 Total
Saint Francis 107714 38
Baker 3077 17
DateDecember 17, 2016
Season2016
StadiumMunicipal Stadium
LocationDaytona Beach, Florida
MVPSeth Coate (WR, Saint Francis) (Offensive)
Lucas Sparks (DE, Saint Francis) (Defensive)
RefereeDavid White
Attendance2,500
United States TV coverage
NetworkESPN3[4]
AnnouncersDrew Fellios
Forrest Conoly
1st Round
November 19
Quarterfinals
November 26
Semifinals
December 3
Championship
December 17
            
2 Baker (KS) (110) 44
13 Sterling (KS) (82) 21
2 Baker (KS) (120) 42
8 Lindsey Wilson (KY) (111) 27
8 Lindsey Wilson (KY) (101) 34*
10 Grand View (IA) (92) 27
2 Baker (KS) (130) 45
9 Eastern Oregon (102) 41
1 Marian (IN) (100) 32
15 Robert Morris (IL) (73) 7
1 Marian (IN) (110) 0
9 Eastern Oregon (92) 17
7 Doane (NE) (91) 28
9 Eastern Oregon (82) 34
2 Baker (KS) (140) 17
4 Saint Francis (IN) (121) 38
3 Reinhardt (GA) (110) 52
20 Southeastern (FL) (62) 22
3 Reinhardt (GA) (120) 27
6 Montana Tech (101) 0
6 Montana Tech (91) 28
14 Dickinson State (ND) (92) 21
3 Reinhardt (GA) (130) 24
4 Saint Francis (IN) (111) 42
4 Saint Francis (IN) (91) 79
11 Missouri Valley (MO) (92) 20
4 Saint Francis (IN) (101) 42
5 Morningside (IA) (101) 28
5 Morningside (IA) (91) 65
12 Tabor (KS) (82) 17
* denotes OT

Bowl games

Game Date Location Winning Team
(Record)
Losing Team
(Record)
Score Note
Victory Bowl December 3 N/A Warner
8-2 (4-1)
None N/A The NCCAA could not find a second team available to play
gollark: --remind 2s apioform
gollark: ... oh, right.
gollark: ++remind 10s apioform
gollark: That did *not* work.
gollark: ++remind 2s apioform

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.