Incarnate Word Cardinals football

The Incarnate Word Cardinals football program is the intercollegiate American football team for the University of the Incarnate Word (UIW) located in San Antonio, Texas. The program began in 2009 and originally competed in NCAA Division II as members of the Lone Star Conference. In 2013, the school moved to Division I. For the 2013 season, UIW competed as a member of the Southland Conference for all sports except football. Football competed with an 11-game schedule as an Independent. UIW began playing Southland football in the 2014 season. The team plays its home games at the 6,000 seat Gayle and Tom Benson Stadium.

Incarnate Word Cardinals football
2020 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team
First season2009
Athletic directorRichard Duran
Head coachEric Morris
3rd season, 11–12 (.478)
StadiumGayle and Tom Benson Stadium
(Capacity: 6,000)
Year built2008
Field surfaceFieldTurf Classic HD
LocationSan Antonio, Texas
NCAA divisionDivision I FCS
ConferenceSouthland Conference
Past conferencesLone Star Conference
All-time record4179 (.342)
Playoff record0–1
Conference titles1 (2018)
RivalriesAbilene Christian
ColorsRed, White, and Black[1]
              
MascotRed Cardinal
Marching bandMarching Cardinals
OutfitterAdidas
WebsiteUIWCardinals.com

History

UIW held its first team practice on August 27, 2008, and began competing as an NCAA Division II independent on August 29, 2009.

Conference Affiliations

Coaches

NameSeasonsRecordPct.
Mike Santiago 2009–2011 10–18 .357
Todd Ivicic 2011* 0–3 .000
Larry Kennan 2012–2017 20–46 .303
Eric Morris 2018–present 11–12 .478

*Ivicic served as interim head coach for the final three games of 2011, completing Santiago's third season as coach

Conference Championships

Year Conference Coach Overall Record Conference Record
2018Southland ConferenceEric Morris6–56–2
Total Conference Championships 1

FCS Playoffs results

The Cardinals qualified for the FCS Playoffs for the first time in 2018.

Year Round Opponent Result
2018First RoundMontana StateL 14–35

Year-by-year results

Year Subdivision Conference Division Overall Conference Coach
GPWinLossPct. GPWinLossPct.Standing
2009IIIndependentN/A1055.500000.000N/AMike Santiago
2010IILone StarSouth1138.2731037.30012thMike Santiago
2011IILone StarN/A1028.200725.2866thMike Santiago
2012IILone StarN/A1129.182817.1259thLarry Kennan
2013FCSIndependentN/A1165.545000.000N/ALarry Kennan
2014FCSSouthlandN/A1129.182826.2509thLarry Kennan
2015FCSSouthlandN/A1165.545954.5564thLarry Kennan
2016FCSSouthlandN/A1138.273936.3338thLarry Kennan
2017FCSSouthlandN/A11110.091817.1259thLarry Kennan
2018FCSSouthlandN/A1165.545862.750T–1stEric Morris
2019FCSSouthlandN/A1257.417945.444T–6thEric Morris
2020FCSSouthlandN/A000000Eric Morris
Totals 120 41 79 .342 75 27 48 .360

[2]

Stadium

UIW home football games are played on campus at Gayle and Tom Benson Stadium. Benson Stadium was dedicated on September 1, 2008 and currently seats 6,000 people. It is named after Tom Benson and his wife Gayle, whose generous monetary donations helped start up the UIW football program. Record stadium attendance of 6,498 was recorded in a game against Houston Baptist on November 17, 2016.[3] UIW currently has an overall home record at the stadium of 27–32.

All-time record vs. Southland teams

Official record (including any NCAA imposed vacates and forfeits) against all current Southland opponents:

Opponent Won Lost Percentage Streak First Last
Abilene Christian47.364Won 220102019
Central Arkansas13.250Lost 120132019
Houston Baptist501.000Won 520132019
Lamar34.429Won 120112019
McNeese State14.200Won 120142018
Nicholls24.333Lost 420142019
Northwestern State22.500Lost 120142019
Sam Houston State17.125Lost 120122019
Southeastern Louisiana34.429Won 220132019
Stephen F. Austin15.167Lost 120142019
Totals 23 40 .365

Record against FBS competition

Overall (0–7)

Season Opponent Division Result Score Record
2015UTEPC-USAL17–270–1
2016Texas StateSun BeltL17–480–2
2017Fresno StateMountain WestL0–660–3
2018New MexicoMountain WestL30–620–4
2018North TexasC-USAL16–580–5
2019UTSAC-USAL7–350–6
2019New Mexico StateFBS IndependentL28–410–7
2021Texas StateSun BeltTBDTBDTBD
2022NevadaMountain WestTBDTBDTBD
2023UTEPC-USATBDTBDTBD
Total 0–7

Individual Awards

The following Cardinals were named to the Associated Press FCS All-American team.

All-Americans

YearNamePosition
2015 Myke Tavarres LB
2017 Joe Zema P

[4]

Players in the NFL

Player Name Position Years at UIW Years in NFL NFL Team
Justin AlexandreDE2017–20182019Jets
Alex JenkinsDE2013–20162017–2019Saints, Giants
Silas StewartLB2017–20182019Ravens
Myke TavarresLB2014–20152016Eagles
Cole WickTE2012–20152016–presentLions, 49ers, Titans, Raiders, Saints
National Football League (NFL)

[5] [6]

Players in the CFL

Player Name Position Years at UIW Years in CFL CFL Team
Jamari GilbertDB2013–20172019–presentCalgary Stampeders
Canadian Football League (CFL)

[7]

Future non-conference opponents

2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027
at Youngstown State Southern Illinois at UTEP Northern Colorado at Samford Samford Northern Arizona
Prairie View A&M at Nevada at Northern Colorado at Southern Illinois Southern Utah at Northern Arizona at Southern Utah
at Texas State at Prairie View A&M Robert Morris Northern Arizona at Northern Arizona

[8]

References

  1. 2019 UIW Athletics Style Guide (PDF). April 8, 2019. Retrieved April 26, 2019.
  2. "Incarnate Word Cardinals Football Statistics". University of the Incarnate Word. 2016. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  3. http://uiwcardinals.com/boxscore.aspx?id=3174&path=football
  4. "UIW Football's Zema Selected to AP All-America First Team". uiwcardinals.com. University of the Incarnate Word. Retrieved 2017-12-13.
  5. "Momentous Day for UIW Football". UIW Athletics. April 30, 2016. Retrieved May 2, 2016.
  6. "Jenkins Promoted from UIW Cardinal to New Orleans Saint". UIW Athletics. May 25, 2017. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
  7. https://www.cfl.ca/players/jamari-gilbert/164711/
  8. "Football announces non-conference opponents through 2027". UIW Athletics. February 6, 2020. Retrieved February 6, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.