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Georgia Southern and Georgia State have only competed against each other in football since 2014. They played annually in basketball from the 1971–72 to 1980–81 seasons, 1995–96 and 1996–97, and 2009–10 to 2013–14 out-of-conference and as conference mates from the 1985–86 to 1991–92 seasons in the Trans America Athletic Conference (which is now the ASUN Conference) and since the ...
The Appalachian State–Georgia Southern football rivalry, also known as Deeper Than Hate, is a college rivalry between the Mountaineers of Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina, and the Eagles of Georgia Southern University in Statesboro, Georgia.
The 2009 Georgia Southern Eagles team represented Georgia Southern University in the 2009 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Eagles were led by third-year head coach Chris Hatcher, who was fired following the conclusion of the season, and played their home games at Paulson Stadium. They were a member of the Southern Conference. They ...
Georgia Teachers College/Georgia Southern College did not field a football team for the 1942–81 seasons Georgia Southern Eagles: 1982: Erk Russell: Independent — — 7 3 1 — — — 1983 — — 6 5 0 — — — 1984 — — 8 3 0 — — — 1985 † * — — 13 2 0 Won FCS National Championship Game against Furman Paladins, 44–42
In 2015, Georgia State beat Georgia Southern 34–7, the worst home defeat for Georgia Southern in school history. [32] Currently, Georgia State holds a 3–1 lead in the football series. In October 2015, it was announced that Georgia State and Georgia Southern would begin a rivalry series spanning all of the sports played between the two ...
The Georgia Southern Eagles football program represents Georgia Southern University in football as part of the Sun Belt Conference. The current head coach is Clay Helton . The Eagles have won six FCS (I-AA) national championships and have produced two Walter Payton Award winners.
Georgia State claims the GSU title being that it became a university in 1969, more than 20 years before Georgia Southern (and therefore becoming GSU far in advance of Georgia Southern). [ citation needed ] Georgia Southern, on the other hand, has a more extensive history of football than Georgia State, restarting its program in 1981 and winning ...
Georgia Southern finished their regular season with a 9–2 record (7–1 in conference); one of their losses had been to Georgia of Division I-A. The Eagles, seeded third, defeated 14-seed McNeese State, 11-seed Hofstra, and second-seed Delaware to reach the final. This was the eighth appearance for Georgia Southern in a Division I-AA ...