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The 2025 East Texas A&M Lions football team represents East Texas A&M University as a member of the Southland Conference during the 2025 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Lions are led by third-year head coach Clint Dolezel and play their home games at the Ernest Hawkins Field at Memorial Stadium in Commerce, Texas .
This is the first season for the university under its then-current identity. On November 7, 2024, after the Lions had played their first two games of the 2024–25 season, [2] the Texas A&M University System Board of Regents approved the proposed change of the university's name to East Texas A&M University. The name change took effect immediately.
The postseason began in November and, aside from any scheduled all-star games, ended on January 6, 2025 with the 2025 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas. [1] Due to the structure of the calendar in 2024, FCS teams were allowed to play 12 regular-season games instead of the normal 11. [2]
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Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... East Division. ... The 2022 schedule was released on September 21, 2021. ...
Consistency has no place in the NFC East. The division has taken the league on a wild ride since 2004, refusing to let the same team repeat as champions. ... With an easier schedule down the ...
The NFC East teams have combined to be the most successful division in the Super Bowl era with 21 NFC championships and 13 Super Bowl victories, the highest marks of any division in the NFL. The division features a number of prominent rivalries such as the Cowboys–Eagles rivalry , Cowboys–Washington rivalry and Eagles–Giants rivalry ...
2006 - Texas–Permian Basin and Texas A&M–International left the RRAC and the NAIA to join the Division II ranks of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Heartland Conference after the 2005–06 academic year. 2006 - The University of Texas at Brownsville joined the RRAC in the 2006–07 academic year.