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The 1985 Southwest Missouri State Bears football team represented Southwest Missouri State University (now known as Missouri State University) as a member of the Gateway Collegiate Athletic Conference (GCAC) during the 1985 NCAA Division I-AA football season.
Missouri State has appeared in the NCAA Division I FCS playoffs four times. Under head coach Jesse Branch, the Bears made two straight trips in 1989 and 1990. In 1989 they drew a first round matchup with Maine. Missouri State won 38–35 and advanced to play Stephen F. Austin in the quarterfinals where they lost 55–25. Missouri State made it ...
Missouri State Bears and Lady Bears: Missouri State University: Springfield: Missouri Valley: FCS [c] Saint Louis Billikens: Saint Louis University: St. Louis: Atlantic 10: Southeast Missouri State Redhawks: Southeast Missouri State University: Cape Girardeau: Ohio Valley: FCS
Missouri State will play at North Dakota State on Nov. 16. The winner of that game clinches at least a share of the Missouri Valley regular-season title. North Dakota State is ranked No. 1 in FCS.
The Missouri State Bears and Lady Bears are the athletic teams representing Missouri State University (formerly Southwest Missouri State University). Missouri State's athletics programs date back to 1908. Missouri State competes in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision, but started a transition to the Football Bowl Subdivision ...
The College Football Report Card breaks down the best and worst of Week 4. ... while failing grades went to the Kent State athletic department for taking a ... With the score tied at 10 and ...
Here is what Alabama’s players and coaching staff said about Missouri football before Saturday’s game: More: ‘Eliminating thinking’: Missouri football adopting simple mindset for Alabama ...
The schools off the field are constantly competing for state funds in the same market ever since Missouri Western expanded from a junior college to a four-year college in 1969 fulfilling a Missouri governor Warren Hearnes campaign promise to build the school St. Joseph, Missouri (2000 population 73,912).