ECU announces football schedule through 2013
Beginning in 2006, East Carolina University will initiate an unprecedented eight-year, 25-game non-conference football scheduling agreement with a number of Bowl Championship Series’ opponents according to an announcement from athletics director Terry Holland Thursday.
Coupled with the Pirates’ Conference USA membership, which will generate eight contests per year, the bowl-caliber non-conference commitments will also enable ECU to near completion of its scheduling efforts until 2013 after the NCAA officially introduces a 12-game regular season next fall. Of East Carolina’s 32 non-conference openings over the next eight years, Thursday’s announcement identifies 25.
“Our goal was to renew ties with our regional rivals, be in a position to annually compete against bowl opponents during the regular season and to complement eight competitive Conference USA games each year,” Holland said. “When you consider six potential home games, including those against bowl-caliber opponents from the Atlantic Coast Conference, Big East Conference, Conference USA and the independent ranks, the economic impact for eastern North Carolina and Greenville is tremendous.”
An eight-game series with Virginia Tech headlines the historic agreement as the Pirates and Hokies will renew a regional rivalry which peaked with seven meetings during a nine-year span from 1990 to 1998. The two programs, which have met 12 overall times dating back to 1956, will face off each season beginning in 2006 with four contests taking place in Blacksburg, three in Greenville and one at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte (2007).
In addition to Virginia Tech, the Pirates will also square off against ACC members North Carolina, North Carolina State and Virginia in future years while continuing its long relationship with Big East Conference affiliate West Virginia and kicking off a new series against consecutive bowl participant Navy.
East Carolina has agreed to four meetings each against North Carolina (2007, 2009, 2010, 2011), West Virginia (2006, 2007, 2008, 2009) and Navy (2006, 2010, 2011, 2012), three vs. N.C. State (2007, 2010, 2013) and two against Virginia (2006, 2008).
“It certainly presents our program with an incredible opportunity and a great challenge,” said first-year head coach Skip Holtz, who accepted the top football position at ECU last Dec. 3. “It has been my opinion that the only way to reach a championship level is to play a championship or bowl-level schedule. Between our divisional play in Conference USA and games against six programs rich in tradition and stature, we certainly have our work cut out for us.”
Nearly half of ECU’s future 25-game non-conference schedule will take place at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium, beginning with visits by Virginia and West Virginia in 2006. The Mountaineers will also return to Greenville two years later in 2008. The Tar Heels (2007, 2011) and Midshipmen (2010, 2012) will face the Pirates at Dowdy-Ficklen twice while the Wolfpack will play at East Carolina in 2010, marking only their second-ever visit to Greenville and first since 1999.
Holland’s announcement closely coincides with another historic event for East Carolina’s athletic program, one which played a significant role in the development of the Pirates’ future football schedules. On July 1, Conference USA will officially kick off its realignment phase which welcomes new members Marshall, Rice, SMU, UTEP, Tulsa and UCF into the 10-year-old league.