Kadeezy
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The university’s application to transition to an FBS football independent starting in 2026 was denied Wednesday by the NCAA Division I Council, making it clear that the climb toward national and even regional relevancy can’t just happen overnight.Sac State’s 2026 recruiting class is ranked just outside the top 50 nationally on 247Sports. Five-star quarterback Ryder Lyons, who grew up in nearby Folsom, took an unofficial visit there before committing to BYU. Top-10 receiver Xavier McDonald took official visits in June to LSU, Ole Miss … and Sac State.
Already on board is Jaden Rashada, the former four-star quarterback known for a massive NIL deal gone wrong at Florida, who spent his first two seasons at Arizona State and Georgia. So is running back Rodney Hammond Jr., who ran for 1,400 yards at Pittsburgh. And former Texas and Alabama receiver Agiye Hall. Marion and/or his assistants had relationships with most of the transfers they brought in.
“I love coach Marion’s offense, and I like what he’s building here,” says Rashada, a Northern California native, of the former UNLV offensive coordinator.
Fueling the transformation is an administration adamant about crashing the top level of college athletics and support from a group of willing donors dubbed the Sac12.
“There’s a lot of people in this community with real money … and they’re really all in on making this a top-tier football program,” Marion says. “If we’re announced FBS — when we’re announced FBS — the only schools on the West Coast that will have more than us financially when it comes to helping players in NIL will be USC and Oregon.”
But unlike those big-name recruits, no one in the FBS is interested in Sacramento State.
The denial came a week after the NCAA oversight committee recommended to the council that it deny Sacramento State a waiver to move up without a conference invitation, something it last approved for Liberty in 2017. An invite signals a university’s readiness to make such a drastic jump solo.
University president Dr. J. Luke Wood posted on social media Wednesday morning that Sacramento State remains undeterred:
Sacramento State has met every meaningful benchmark for FBS membership, and we believe our university, our students, and the entire Sacramento region deserve major college football. We’re full steam ahead and we still plan to be playing FBS football in 2026. pic.twitter.com/NoEcQ7EmyG
— Dr. Luke Wood (@DrLukeWood) June 25, 2025
Wood told The Athletic that the school plans to explore an appeals process and refuted recent reports that Sac State would play 2026 as an FCS independent.
The school has already announced it will withdraw from the Big Sky Conference next summer and join the Big West Conference for all sports except football.
Sacramento State has tried to pitch the Mountain West and Pac-12.
The Pac-12 has focused on active FBS programs and is expected to add Texas State as an eighth all-sports member. It does not have an interest in Sacramento State, according to sources briefed on the league’s stance. The Mountain West said in January, after adding Northern Illinois as a football-only member, that it would pause further expansion. The programs Sacramento State is competing with are generally more established and already playing at the FBS level.
In the wake of the denial, Marion says other schools have been trying to get the Hornets’ committed recruits to defect but predicted 90 percent of the class will still sign with Sac State. He also says FBS membership is still coming.
“(State) senators are involved, congressmen are involved — people are very serious about us going to FBS in this region,” he says. “Just me, personally, if I was on the NCAA Council, I don’t want to go against the state capital of California.”
Wood put it this way: “I’m glad that people get to see that these things aren’t easy. Because it’s going to make the victory even more sweet. Because we will be FBS.”