The state of Minnesota was brimming with college football success last season, when the Gophers went 11-2, Minnesota State Mankato reached the Division II championship game and Division III powers St. Thomas and St. John's combined to go 20-4.
With the COVID-19 pandemic, nobody knows when the next chance to build on that momentum will be.
Forecasting when college football will return is as much of an inexact science at the Division II and III levels as it is for the Gophers and powerhouse Power Five programs like defending national champion Louisiana State.
"This is uncharted territory with no road map," MSU Mankato athletic director Kevin Buisman said.
The Division II schedule already is shrinking. The NCAA passed a rule this week that caps the number of regular-season games each D-II football team can play at 10, down from 11 for several schools. The new rules also state that teams can qualify for the postseason with as few as seven regular-season games. These cuts also are being considered at the D-III level.
"The question becomes, what is a meaningful season?" said Cory Sauter, the coach at Division II Southwest Minnesota State. "As you dip below eight, I don't know if that would be considered a season. That's hard to imagine."
Any best-case scenario for college football first requires a target date for actual returning to on-campus learning, then practice. It's about creating a safe environment. It's about figuring out how much time is needed to prepare for a season — and then how many games teams can actually play.
Before practices and games, bringing students safely back to campus is the first step toward avoiding the worst-case scenario: no fall sports, period.