2025 NCAA D2 Football Playoff Watch: Early Field of 32 Projections
2025 NCAA D2 Football Playoff Watch: Early Field of 32 Projections
Get a way-too-early look at the 2025 D2 football playoff field. Explore top teams, bold predictions, and potential at-large bids for the 32-team bracket.

The winds of change have hit NCAA D2 football, and with it, the drama of the playoff race has only been amplified.
In addition to a new conference and a reorganization of the Super Regions, automatic bids have officially hit the D-II postseason as the winners of all 16 football-sponsoring conferences will receive automatic bids to the expanded bracket later on this year.
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And in another wrinkle, the playoff field has been increased from 28 to 32 teams, meaning that 16 bids are up for grabs in the at-large pool after conference champions have been crowned.
It’s a long season with a lot of football left to be played, but it’s also never too early to evaluate where the pretenders and contenders stand. And if you can’t get enough of D-II football, FloCollege is your exclusive home for games, highlights, coverage, and more.
Through the one-month mark, here’s an early look ahead at where the D2 football playoff field stands:
NOTE: Teams listed in alphabetical order.
NCAA D2 Football Playoff Watch: Way-Too-Early Projections for the Field of 32
Super Region 1
Assumption
Two massive opportunities opened up for the teams in the Northeast-10 Conference this offseason. First, back-to-back conference champion New Haven moved up to the D-I level. Second, the D-II playoffs’ implementation of the automatic bid for conference champions meant that whoever took the Chargers' place in 2025 would be rewarded with postseason football. So far, it’s Assumption who has stepped up as the league’s new team to beat. The Greyhounds’ only blemish so far has been to a white-hot Kutztown team, and while Franklin Pierce gave them a scare last weekend in a 28-26 nail-biter, the door is open for Assumption to return to the playoffs for the first time since 2022.
California (Pennsylvania)
Though the Vulcans made the national quarterfinals a year ago, a Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference Championship Game victory — which Cal hasn’t obtained since 2016 — might be the bigger signal that they’ve arrived on the national stage, and they’ve taken some major steps already toward doing just that. Holding arguably the most impressive resume in D-II to this point, undefeated Cal toppled a then-No. 12 Charleston (West Virginia) to open the year before going on the road to then-No. 4 Slippery Rock this past weekend and escaping with a 45-38 win in a massive tilt in the PSAC West Division race. Shipping six touchdowns past The Rock is no easy feat, and the Vulcans’ rushing attack that piled on 260 rushing yards last week did much of the damage.
East Stroudsburg
Is this season a case of how the more things change in Super Region 1, the more things stay the same in the PSAC? As of right now, we’re projecting all four PSAC squads that made the playoff field last season to also earn their way into the bracket this time around, but East Stroudsburg and the rest of its conference mates have shown us little reason to believe otherwise. The Warriors did slip up in their season opener against Edinboro, which means that there’s less room for error for ESU the rest of the way than some of the other teams competing for Super Region 1 bids, but the remainder of PSAC play — especially in matchups against West Chester (Saturday) and Kutztown (Nov. 1) — offers plenty of opportunities for the Warriors to make their claim for a spot in the bracket.
Frostburg State
Yet to qualify for the D-II playoffs since moving up from D-III in 2019, Frostburg State has started the season 4-0 in an encouraging development toward what could be a historic season to come for the Bobcats. Major tests against Charleston (West Virginia) and West Virginia State in the Mountain East Conference and California (Pennsylvania) in nonconference play are still to come, but FSU has taken care of the football with just three turnovers in four games and made enough winning plays to be the MEC’s early favorites. There have been shuffles under center as three different quarterbacks have thrown a touchdown pass (led by seven scores through the air from redshirt junior Myles Fulton), but limiting mistakes has been a major factor for the Bobcats’ early success.
Kutztown
So far, so good for the Golden Bears, who have cruised through their first four games of the season and are the only team in D-II to currently rank both in the top five nationally in scoring offense (45.0 points per game) and scoring defense (7.75 points allowed per game). Redshirt junior quarterback Judd Novak has erupted into one of the country’s most efficient throwers, throwing eight touchdowns to no interceptions with a 169.2 passer rating, and even without reigning PSAC East Defensive Athlete of the Year Freddie Retter — who hasn’t played since Week 1 — patrolling the D-line, KU has only allowed 78 rushing yards per game to this point.
Slippery Rock
The Rock is once again, well, rock-steady. Sure, they weren’t able to get the job done in a massive top-10 showdown last weekend against California (Pennsylvania), in which Slippery Rock came back from 21 points down to take a fourth-quarter lead before falling late, but this is a program that hasn’t missed the playoffs since 2018 and made the national semifinals a year ago, after all. Featuring a punishing defense that has already recorded 15 sacks and the recent emergence of the spectacularly-named DaOne Owens (505 passing yards, nine total touchdowns in his past two games), The Rock will be a force yet again throughout the rest of the PSAC slate and beyond.
Virginia Union
Virginia Union had a major question mark entering the 2025 season: How was it ever going to replace superstar running back Jada Byers, who ran for over 2,000 yards last year and signed with the UFL’s Memphis Showboats? It turns out that the Panthers didn’t need to look very far for his successor. Senior Curtis Allen has been dynamite since earning the bellcow-back role, currently ranking second in the country with 738 rushing yards and 10 touchdowns, as VUU will once again look to pound the rock all the way to the postseason after last year’s run to the quarterfinals. The Panthers will be big favorites to take the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association’s auto-bid, of which the journey started according to plan with a 59-7 blowout over Shaw in league play this past weekend.
West Virginia State
Let’s get bold. The Yellow Jackets have never qualified for the D-II playoffs, but if you’re looking for an under-the-radar program to follow, look no further. At 3-1 with a loss to Carson-Newman, WVSU has scored a combined 105 points in its first two wins in MEC play and has a stretch of winnable games before two massive late-season road trips, first at West Florida on Oct. 25 followed by Frostburg State on Nov. 8. It’ll probably have to win one — ideally both — of those games (along with everything else) to be considered for an at-large berth should it not win its league, but the Yellow Jackets are right on FSU’s heels in what could be a fight to the finish for the auto-bid. Junior quarterback Kaleb Jackson has 10 total touchdowns compared to just one interception, completing 63% of his passes.
Super Region 2
Benedict
Two years ago, Benedict finished the regular season unbeaten and earned Super Region 2’s top seed. Is a similar story being written right now for the Tigers? There are encouraging signs that point toward yes for BC, which has started 4-0 — including back-to-back shutout victories to start the season — with a 3-0 mark in Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference play to come back strongly from an underwhelming under-.500 campaign last season. It helps that Benedict’s defense at 12 points allowed per game (tied-sixth in D-II) is straight up nasty, led by one of the best internal disruptors in the country this season in senior Israel Nwokocha and his 8.5 tackles for loss, which currently places him third nationally.
Carson-Newman
An overtime loss to Mars Hill on Sept. 13 threatened to derail the Eagles’ season, but ranked conference wins in consecutive weeks over Lenoir-Rhyne and Wingate has pushed Carson-Newman back toward the top of the pile in the South Atlantic Conference and given it a pair of victories to hang its hat on as the midseason stretch gets underway. A run-first offense that averages 267.8 yards on the ground per game (sixth in D-II) with five different players who have already found paydirt running the football this year, the Eagles’ smashmouth style and many weapons to turn to make them difficult to contain. Carson-Newman definitely has at-large bid potential, but a first SAC title since 2009 would make for a great way to ensure a return to the playoffs for the second straight season.
Delta State
The Gulf South Conference could realistically be a three-bid league despite only having four teams, though the Statesmen likely have a little bit of work to do right now on their end. A strong win to open the year against a ranked Central Missouri team was muted a bit after UNC Pembroke took DSU down in mid-September, but a three-game onslaught against the rest of the GSC — that is, West Alabama, West Florida and Valdosta State in that order in back-to-back-to-back weeks — is still to come, which will make or break the Statesmen’s season. Redshirt freshman running back Nick Clark, who scored three touchdowns in a dominant win over Erskine last weekend, and his development could be the key for DSU’s trajectory this year.
Emory & Henry
The Wasps were the surprise team of the SAC last season when they surged to a 9-2 record and led the country in interceptions. This time around, no one is taking E&H likely — but so far, it hasn’t mattered. A narrow three-point defeat to Lenoir-Rhyne on Sept. 13 is the Wasps’ lone loss to date, and while the ball hawks in the E&H are still getting after it with five picks, the defensive line has stepped up with 11 sacks, 5.5 of which have come courtesy of junior Ean Rhea. The Wasps’ offense is fairly balanced yardage-wise but has found the most success scoring on the ground with 13 rushing touchdowns, all of which have come from dynamic quarterback Charles Mutter III (seven) and backfield running mate Jordan Jackson (six). E&H’s clash this weekend against Carson-Newman should be a good litmus test for if the Wasps are ready to make their first playoff appearance since coming up from D-III in 2022.
UNC Pembroke
The early favorite to take the first Conference Carolinas title since the league last sponsored football in 1974, the Braves have made noise nationally by picking up a pair of ranked Super Region 2 victories over Delta State and Valdosta State, giving them crucial strong notches on their resume should they have to rely on an at-large bid. Of course, the revamped D-II playoff qualification system may mean that simply winning the Conference Carolinas is enough, with sophomore dual-threat quarterback Tre Robinson often the difference-maker as he’s up to 13 total touchdowns (nine passing, four rushing) as the Braves’ leading passer and rusher.
West Alabama
The Scott Cochran era has arrived in Livingston. The former staffer at D-I blue-bloods LSU, Alabama, and Georgia and longtime assistant under Nick Saban with the Tigers and Crimson Tide has thrived in his first season as a college head coach, leading UWA to a 5-0 record with 52-point outbursts in their past two games against Barton and North Greenville. Senior quarterback Spencer Arceneaux has been a human highlight film in that stretch — throwing 12 touchdowns and running for seven more with just a single interception — as part of a breakout season under center, but he and the rest of the Tigers might be on the sidelines for awhile; Lincoln (California) postponed its scheduled game against UWA this weekend due to excessive injuries, and unless the Tigers can find a replacement in the next two weeks, their next game will be their GSC opener Oct. 18 in a huge tilt against West Florida.
West Florida
The 2019 national champions are yet to taste a title since that magical run to the trophy in their fourth year as a program, but this may be the best Argonauts team to step foot on a football field since that season. UWF had a 27-point statement victory to open the year against a ranked Lenoir-Rhyne team, and has since largely cruised to a 4-0 start since as it’ll have a few more tuneups before the GSC gauntlet later in the season. Quarterback Marcus Stokes, once a four-star recruit, has showcased plenty of his potential thus far with 13 total touchdowns (10 passing, three rushing) and 1,156 passing yards, with Corey Scott (18 catches, 352 yards, one touchdown) emerging as his top target for a team averaging an even 300 yards per game through the air — and allowing a national-low 39.8 yards on the ground per game with it.
Wingate
It’s hard to count out Wingate, even when it dropped a game to Carson-Newman over the weekend. Case in point: the Bulldogs also lost an early-season game to the Eagles last season, then proceeded to win their next seven games — including getting revenge against C-N in the SAC Championship Game — before bowing out in the first round of the playoffs. The SAC is always a grind, but with a win over another playoff-chasing team in UNC Pembroke already in its back pocket, Wingate is still in good shape a month into the 2025 season. The Bulldogs are at their best when redshirt sophomore tailback Xavier Pugh is firing on all cylinders; he averaged 103.6 rushing yards per game with six total touchdowns in Wingate’s 3-0 start, but was held to just 59 yards and out of the endzone against Carson-Newman.
Super Region 3
Augustana (South Dakota)
Never heard of Gunnar Hensley? Here’s your official introduction. The junior quarterback and second-year starter has been true to his first name thus far this season by slinging the pigskin for 1,419 yards and 13 touchdowns with no interceptions through five Vikings games, all wins. Six different receivers have already been the recipients of a Hensley touchdown throw, as well, meaning that there isn’t just one weapon that secondaries can hone in on as they try to slow down an Augustana offense that’s pelted opponents for an average of 420 yards per game. A flawless 4-0 start in Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference play also helps for the hunt toward an automatic bid, though the Vikings must make sure they don’t let teams hang around too long (see: a narrow 21-20 win over UMary on Sept. 13).
Ferris State
No surprise here. Even after losing superstar quarterback Trinidad Chambliss — who is in Heisman conversations this season as Ole Miss’ signal-caller — in the offseason, the winner of three of the past four national championships is once again the favorite to hold the D-II football throne. The Bulldogs began the year with a statement win over Pittsburg State, then got past a shaky performance against Tiffin to roll into conference play this weekend unbeaten. No one in the country is averaging more points per game (53.5) than FSU, which as a team is up to 27 total offensive touchdowns in just four games.
Grand Valley State
Also, no surprise here, the Lakers haven’t finished their season earlier than in the second round of the D-II playoffs since 2019, and while they probably would’ve liked to get a three-point loss on the road to Pittsburg State on Sept. 13 back, you’d be foolish to count GVSU out of the national title race this early in the season. Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference play starts this weekend for the Lakers against Davenport, where they’ll be looking to snatch the league title — and the GLIAC’s automatic bid — away from the grasp of hated rival Ferris State. It helps that first-year starting quarterback Andrew Schuster looks right at home under center, throwing for an average of 264 yards per game across three starts.
Indianapolis
It’s hard to call the tenure of coach Chris Keevers a disappointment, especially as UIndy has made the playoffs in four of a possible five seasons since he was hired in 2019. But will the day come that the Greyhounds can finally be considered a serious threat to take Super Region 3? Time will tell if UIndy can finally escape past the first round of the playoffs since Keevers was brought on, but a 4-1 run to begin 2025 with a defeat to Findlay being the only hiccup is a good place to start. Gavin Sukup is doing Gavin Sukup things as one of the best quarterbacks in D-II, being already up to 1,399 yards to rank in the top-10 nationally, while linebacker Jalen Wilson (42 total tackles) and defensive back Eli Liapis (36 total tackles) are both heat-seeking missiles in the open field on the defensive end.
Michigan Tech
The Huskies have only made the D-II playoffs twice in their history, but if there’s going to be a third team to break through in the GLIAC and (most likely) join Ferris State and Grand Valley State in the field, consider Michigan Tech to be your dark horse. Beating then-No. 16 Bemidji State to start the year was a great momentum boost for the Huskies, though nonconference play ended on a sour note when Tech dropped a 21-14 decision to Upper Iowa. Getting the best out of redshirt sophomore quarterback Alex Bueno might be the key moving forward; against Bemidji State, he threw for 207 yards and two touchdowns while running for 102 yards and another score — exactly the type of performance Tech needs on a frequent basis if it wants to beat the GLIAC’s big dogs.
Minnesota Duluth
Once the winner of two national championships in a three-season stretch (2008 and 2010), Minnesota Duluth is simply looking for a return to the postseason at this point, having been kept out of the playoffs every year since 2021. The Bulldogs might get that opportunity — and then some — if they keep their current mojo going. Despite having faced the nation’s leading receiver in Minnesota State wideout TreShawn Watson and the country’s second-leading passer in Minnesota State Moorhead quarterback Jack Strand, Duluth has aced every test thus far on the defensive front and held opponents to just 11.8 points per game — the fifth-best mark in the country — through five games. And the scariest part? Quarterback Kyle Walljasper probably hasn’t hit his stride yet, with the former Harlon Hill Trophy finalist still under 1,000 yards on the year.
Minnesota State
It’s low-hanging fruit to call TreShawn Watson the next Adam Thielen, but with the start that Watson is having to his season, how can you not compare the current and former Minnesota State standouts? Watson became the first D-II receiver to crack the 600-yard barrier this season after an 11-catch, 149-yard explosion this past weekend against Sioux Falls, upping him to a nationally-leading 616 receiving yards on the year as the Mavericks improved to 4-1. Of course, it wouldn’t be fair to mention Watson without also shouting out his two quarterbacks this season, Maximus Sims and Mitchell Thompson, who have been firing away to both Watson and second option, Grant Guyett (308 receiving yards). An NSIC loss to rival Minnesota Duluth hurt, but all worries could be erased with more wins — especially against Augustana in November.
Findlay
Whichever Findlay team shows up in a given week, it’s a dangerous one. After getting a huge ranked win against Indianapolis to open the season in a 38-35 shootout, the Oilers then proceeded to get their second win the next week in a low-scoring dogfight against Wayne State (Michigan), prevailing 7-3. Regardless of how it’s done it, Findlay is 4-0 with an impressive mark of just 13 combined points allowed over its past three games, with the biggest games in Great Midwest Athletic Conference play coming this weekend against Walsh and in November against Ashland and Tiffin. A rushing defense that’s allowed a paltry 57.8 yards per game on the ground, fifth-best in the country, will likely be what drives the Oilers forward from week to week.
Super Region 4
Angelo State
Despite how heavily the state invests in its college football programs, Texas is fairly light on D-II football hardware, with East Texas A&M (2017) and Texas State (1981, 1982) being the only Lone Star State teams to hoist the top prize in the division. The Rams could be the state's next top contender to join the ranks, having won all four games played thus far by double digits, including both of its Lone Star Conference matchups to date against Eastern New Mexico and Western New Mexico. The big one, however, looms this weekend against Texas Permian Basin in a titanic top-10 matchup that could have major LSC auto-bid considerations. Watch for do-it-all defensive back Xavier Walton, who has 22 tackles, three interceptions, and a fumble recovery, to make an impact in the secondary.
Central Washington
In a stacked Super Region 4, CWU looks as dangerous as ever, which is saying something considering the Wildcats made the national quarterfinals two years ago. With the exception of a competitive loss on the road to a top-five FCS team (Montana), Central Washington has blown the doors off of everyone it's faced thus far, punctuated by a 91-31 shellacking of Western New Mexico this past weekend to make it a 2-0 record in Lone Star Conference. Also, get to know the name Beau Phillips: the sophomore tailback ran for a score, caught a touchdown, and took two kickoffs back to the house in a monster night against WNMU.
Colorado State Pueblo
Here’s a tip if you’re an opposing program reading this paragraph — don’t throw to the ThunderWolves. No team in D-II has intercepted more passes this season than CSU Pueblo’s 12, with both Peyton Shaw and Dre’Monti Jackson leading the way in the secondary with three picks apiece. Oh, and that’s on top of quarterback Roman Fuller and wide receiver Reggie Retzlaff being maybe the country’s most dangerous one-two punch in the passing game. Fuller already has 1,241 yards through the air with 13 touchdowns (plus two more with his legs), while Retzlaff, a Harlon Hill Trophy finalist last year, has already caught 24 balls for 313 yards and six scores. All of it has resulted in a 4-1 start and an early claim as the premier team in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.
Harding
The 2023 national champions are determined to take back the crown they lost, even if it means having to get through a brutal Super Region 4 field that is full of title contenders. The good news for the Bisons? They’re probably leading the pack in this region at the moment. Harding’s trademark wishbone option offense is already in midseason form at a national-best 419.8 rushing yards per game, while the Bisons’ elite defense — led by arguably the nation’s top linebacker in Clark Griffin — has only given up one touchdown on the ground through four games. Six different rushers have already hit 100 yards this season, led by 435 big ones from returning 1,000-yard rusher Andrew Miller.
Northwest Missouri State
Good to see you again, Bearcats. Once a powerhouse that made an incredible eight national championship games in 11 seasons from 2005-16 (winning four), Northwest Missouri State has finally earned its way back into the national spotlight — for now — after winning four straight following a season-opening loss to Minnesota State. The Bearcats’ most recent W, a 38-16 triumph against a then-No. 15 Central Oklahoma squad, was particularly impressive as the first-ranked win of the John McMenamin era, though the gauntlet that is the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association can turn NMSU’s season sideways in a hurry if it isn’t careful.
Pittsburg State
Did the Gorillas panic after starting the season 0-2? Nope, and it showed as despite a brutal opening trifecta to start the year, in which they began by losing to Ferris State before dropping another one to Central Oklahoma, Pittsburg State came back with a vengeance and got the marquee win it needed when it defeated then-No. 3 Grand Valley State in Week 3. That being said, the Gorillas still do have an MIAA loss on their record thanks to UCO, meaning that league games to come against the likes of Central Missouri and Northwest Missouri State will now be especially important to win. However, their three-headed rushing attack featuring tailbacks Cleo Chandler Jr. (317 yards, three touchdowns) and Zahmari Palode-Gary (270 yards, four touchdowns), plus tight end Luke Niggemann (92 yards, three touchdowns) for short-yardage situations, also gives them an important weapon that can be deployed against anybody.
Texas Permian Basin
This is perhaps the situation that the Falcons have dreamed of since they started their program less than a decade ago. UTPB has catapulted itself into the top-10 of the national rankings after a 4-0 start and a highlight win over then-No. 5 Central Oklahoma in its season opener, featuring one of the best passing offenses in the country (319.2 yards per game, eighth in the country) that had a breakout game last weekend against Midwestern State, throwing for 470 yards in a 37-15 win. Kanon Gibson had 331 of those yards under center with three touchdowns, as the West Texas A&M transfer has thrived in his new home, as he’s also tallied a team-high 193 yards on the ground. Angelo State awaits this weekend in one of the biggest LSC games in recent memory.
Western Colorado
Yet to really be tested, the Mountaineers have dumped 39.5 points per game on their opponents as they’ve rolled to an unbeaten start, letting it loose through the thin mountain air through quarterback Drew Nash (825 passing yards, 11 touchdowns), who’s also been capable of making a difference in games with his legs (five rushing touchdowns), too. But WCU’s ability on the defensive line is outstanding and undoubtedly the heartbeat of the team; its unit in the trenches has already accumulated 37 tackles for loss on the season (seventh in the country), led by the only returning Cliff Harris Award finalist in D-II football in Ricky Freymond (five tackles for loss) plus his supporting cast in linebackers Kade Musser and Ian Loomis. That group showed its stripes last weekend against New Mexico Highlands as the nation’s leading rusher, Jeffrey Jones, was held to a measly 57 yards.
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D2 College Football Week 6 Games
Saturday, October 4, 2025
- 12:00 p.m. ET – Pace vs. New Haven
- 12:00 p.m. ET – Northwood vs. Ohio Dominican
- 12:00 p.m. ET – Slippery Rock vs. Gannon
- 12:00 p.m. ET – Seton Hill vs. California (PA)
- 12:00 p.m. ET – Shippensburg vs. Kutztown
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Minnesota St. vs. Concordia-St. Paul
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Shorter vs. Ferrum
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Southwest Minn. St. vs. Minn. Duluth
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Findlay vs. Walsh
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Minot St. vs. MSU Moorhead
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Livingstone vs. Elizabeth City St.
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Concord vs. Frostburg St.
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Virginia Union vs. Winston-Salem
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Shaw vs. Bluefield St.
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Okla. Baptist vs. Ouachita Baptist
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Carson-Newman vs. Emory & Henry
- 1:00 p.m. ET – West Virginia St. vs. West Liberty
- 1:00 p.m. ET – American Int'l vs. Franklin Pierce
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Central St. (OH) vs. Fort Valley St.
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Michigan Tech vs. Wayne St. (MI)
- 1:00 p.m. ET – North Greenville vs. Chowan
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Fairmont St. vs. Glenville St.
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Fayetteville St. vs. Bowie St.
- 1:00 p.m. ET – Saint Anselm vs. Post
- 1:30 p.m. ET – Savannah St. vs. South Carolina St.
- 1:30 p.m. ET – UNC Pembroke vs. Erskine
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Allen vs. Benedict
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Northern Mich. vs. Saginaw Valley
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Mary vs. Jamestown
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Colorado Mesa vs. Colo. Sch. of Mines
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Fort Hays St. vs. Mo. Southern St.
- 2:00 p.m. ET – East Stroudsburg vs. West Chester
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Edinboro vs. Indiana (PA)
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Southwest Baptist vs. Lincoln (MO)
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Bentley vs. Southern Conn. St.
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Shepherd vs. Millersville
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Lock Haven vs. Bloomsburg
- 2:00 p.m. ET – UVA Wise vs. Anderson (SC)
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Chadron St. vs. Adams St.
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Ferris St. vs. Roosevelt
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Upper Iowa vs. Missouri S&T
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Wayne St. (NE) vs. Winona St.
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Johnson C. Smith vs. Virginia St.
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Augustana (SD) vs. Sioux Falls
- 2:00 p.m. ET – West Florida vs. Northeastern St.
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Delta St. vs. Barton
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Western Colo. vs. Fort Lewis
- 2:00 p.m. ET – Northern St. vs. Bemidji St.
- 3:00 p.m. ET – Albany St. (GA) vs. Lane
- 3:00 p.m. ET – CSU Pueblo vs. N.M. Highlands
- 3:00 p.m. ET – East Central vs. Harding
- 3:00 p.m. ET – Kentucky St. vs. Miles
- 3:00 p.m. ET – Neb.-Kearney vs. Pittsburg St.
- 3:00 p.m. ET – Southern Nazarene vs. Ark.-Monticello
- 3:00 p.m. ET – Southern Ark. vs. Northwestern Okla.
- 3:00 p.m. ET – Henderson St. vs. Southwestern Okla.
- 3:30 p.m. ET – West Va. Wesleyan vs. Wheeling
- 4:00 p.m. ET – Western N.M. vs. Western Ore.
- 4:00 p.m. ET – Lenoir-Rhyne vs. Valdosta St.
- 4:00 p.m. ET – Hillsdale vs. Tiffin
- 4:00 p.m. ET – Davenport vs. Grand Valley St.
- 4:00 p.m. ET – McKendree vs. Quincy
- 5:00 p.m. ET – Ashland vs. Ky. Wesleyan
- 6:00 p.m. ET – Tuskegee vs. Morehouse
- 6:00 p.m. ET – Mars Hill vs. Catawba
- 6:00 p.m. ET – William Jewell vs. UIndy
- 7:00 p.m. ET – Lincoln (CA) vs. West Ala.
- 7:00 p.m. ET – Wingate vs. Newberry
- 7:00 p.m. ET – UT Permian Basin vs. Angelo St.
- 7:00 p.m. ET – Southeastern Okla. vs. Arkansas Tech
- 7:00 p.m. ET – Tex. A&M-Kingsville vs. Midwestern St.
- 7:00 p.m. ET – Lake Erie vs. Thomas More
- 7:00 p.m. ET – Emporia St. vs. Missouri Western
- 8:00 p.m. ET – Central Mo. vs. Central Okla.
- 8:00 p.m. ET – South Dakota Mines vs. Black Hills St.
- 8:00 p.m. ET – Sul Ross St. vs. West Tex. A&M
- 9:00 p.m. ET – Eastern N.M. vs. Central Wash.
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