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Northwestern State Demons football

Intercollegiate American football team


Intercollegiate American football team

FieldValue
CurrentSeason2025 Northwestern State Demons football team
TeamNameNorthwestern State Demons football
ImageNorthwestern State Demons wordmark.svg
ImageSize250
HeadCoachBlaine McCorkle
HeadCoachYear2nd
HCWins1
HCLosses23
StadiumHarry Turpin Stadium
StadCapacity15,971
LocationNatchitoches, Louisiana
NCAAdivisionI FCS
ConferenceSouthland
FirstYear
AthleticDirectorKevin Bostian
ATWins632
ATLosses409
ATTies40
ConfTitlesSIAA: 1939Gulf States: 1953, 1957, 1958, 1962, 1966, 1972Gulf Star: 1984SLC: 1988, 1997, 1998, 2004
FightSongNorthwestern Fight
MascotDisplayVic the Demon
MarchingBandSpirit of Northwestern
RivalriesMcNeese State (rivalry)
Nicholls (rivalry)
Southeastern Louisiana (rivalry)
Louisiana–Monroe (rivalry) Stephen F. Austin (rivalry)
WebsiteNameNSUDemons.com
WebsiteURLhttps://nsudemons.com/sports/football

Nicholls (rivalry) Southeastern Louisiana (rivalry) Louisiana–Monroe (rivalry) Stephen F. Austin (rivalry)

The Northwestern State Demons football program is the intercollegiate American football team for Northwestern State University located in the U.S. state of Louisiana. The team competes in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) and is a member of the Southland Conference. Northwestern State's first football team was fielded in 1907. The team plays its home games at the 15,971 seat Harry Turpin Stadium in Natchitoches, Louisiana.

History

Northwestern State football has the distinction of being the only NCAA division IAA/FCS member to have 2 NFL rookies of the year. In 1981, Joe Delaney, running back for the Kansas City Chiefs, was awarded the AFC Rookie of the year by UPI. In 1988, John Stephens, running back for the New England Patriots, was named Offensive/AFC Rookie of the year.

Conference affiliations

  • Independent (1907–1913, 1926–1927, 1971, 1976–1977)
  • Louisiana Intercollegiate Athletic Association (1914–1925)
  • SIAA (1928–1941)
  • Louisiana Intercollegiate Conference (1942–1947)
  • Gulf States Conference (1948–1970)
  • Gulf South Conference (1972–1974)
  • Division II Independent (1975)
  • Division I-AA Independent (1978–1983)
  • Gulf Star Conference (1984–1986)
  • Southland Conference (1987–present)

Championships

Conference championships

Northwestern State has 12 conference championships.

2004Scott Stoker8–44–1

† Co-champions

Division I-AA/FCS Playoffs results

The Demons have appeared in the I-AA/FCS playoffs six times with an overall record of 3–6.

2004L 7–56

Rivalries

McNeese State

Main article: McNeese State–Northwestern State football rivalry

McNeese State leads the series 45–22–1 through the 2018 season.

Nicholls

Main article: NSU Challenge

Northwestern State leads the series with Nicholls 28–18 through the 2018 season.

Southeastern Louisiana

Main article: Northwestern State–Southeastern Louisiana football rivalry

Southeastern Louisiana leads the series 28–22 through the 2018 season.

Stephen F. Austin

Battle for Chief Caddo Main article: Chief Caddo

Each season, Stephen F. Austin State University of Nacogdoches, Texas and Northwestern State play for the country's largest football trophy. In 1961, longtime rivals SFA and Northwestern State decided to award the winner of the game a trophy, the game was won by Northwestern State University. According to the stipulations of that particular match, the loser would have to present the winner with a tree chopped down from a nearby forest.

In March 1962, the Lumberjacks of SFA in Nacogdoches, Texas, presented NSU with a black gum tree trunk from the SFA campus from which a statue was to be carved. The black gum tree weighed over a ton and was thirty inches in diameter. An Indian statue, Chief Caddo, was chosen because of the historic founding of Natchitoches, Louisiana and Nacogdoches, Texas by Indian tribes. Natchitoches means chinquapin eaters and Nacogdoches means persimmon eaters. It was carved by Harold Greene in Logansport and required over 200 hours of labor. The name “Chief Indian Caddo” was selected in honor of the ancient federation of Caddo Indian tribes, which once inhabited the northern Louisiana area. The final painting of the statue was done at Northwestern. The finished product stands around 7.6 feet tall and weighs about 320 pounds. The first game for Chief Caddo was September 15, 1962. Northwestern won 23–6. Tradition has it that the winner of the annual NSU and SFA football game keeps Chief Caddo on their respective campus. Currently, Chief Caddo is the largest college football trophy in the nation.

Louisiana–Monroe

Main article: Louisiana–Monroe–Northwestern State football rivalry

In the 1992 edition of the rivalry game, the teams' mascots Vic the Demon and Chief Brave Spirit got involved in a fight that distracted television cameras to the point that the entire altercation is caught on video. In the scuffle, Vic the Demon's head is ripped off as the two crashed to the ground behind one of the end zones, which according to the video clip breaks a "cardinal rule" of being a mascot. The melee was broken up by college police without further incident. The game was last played in 2005. Northwestern State leads the series with Louisiana–Monroe 28–19–1.

Notable former players

Notable alumni include:

  • Demetress Bell - Buffalo Bills and Philadelphia Eagles
  • Mark Duper – Miami Dolphins
  • Ed Eagan - Buffalo Bills and New York Giants
  • Shelton Eppler - Aalborg 89ers, Fundidores de Monterrey, Vienna Vikings.
  • Jermaine Jones - New York Jets, Chicago Bears, Dallas Cowboys
  • Joe Delaney – Inductee of College Football Hall of Fame - Kansas City Chiefs
  • Al Edwards - Buffalo Bills
  • Mike Green - Chicago Bears, Seattle Seahawks, Washington Redskins
  • Adrian Hardy - San Francisco 49ers and Cincinnati Bengals
  • Bobby Hebert – New Orleans Saints and Atlanta Falcons
  • Jamall Johnson - BC Lions and Hamilton Tiger Cats
  • Jeremy Lane – Seattle Seahawks
  • Monte Ledbetter – Houston Oilers, Buffalo Bills, Atlanta Falcons
  • Terrence McGee - Buffalo Bills
  • Craig Nall - Green Bay Packers, Buffalo Bills, Houston Texans
  • Ed Orgeron – former LSU Tigers Head Coach
  • Petey Perot - Philadelphia Eagles and New Orleans Saints
  • David Pittman - Baltimore Ravens
  • T-Dre Player – BC Lions
  • Gary Reasons – Inductee of College Football Hall of Fame - New York Giants and Cincinnati Bengals
  • Barry Rubin (born 1957) - Head Strength and Conditioning Coach of the Kansas City Chiefs in the National Football League
  • Deon Simon - New York Jets
  • Jackie Smith - Inductee of Pro Football Hall of Fame - St. Louis Cardinals and Dallas Cowboys
  • Marcus Spears - Chicago Bears, Kansas City Chiefs, Houston Texans
  • John Stephens – New England Patriots
  • Keith Thibodeaux - Washington Redskins, Minnesota Vikings, Green Bay Packers
  • Sidney Thornton - Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Charlie Tolar - Houston Oilers
  • Floyd Turner - New Orleans Saints, Indianapolis Colts, Baltimore Ravens
  • Odessa Turner - New York Giants and San Francisco 49ers
  • Kenny Wright - Minnesota Vikings, Houston Texans, Jacksonville Jaguars, Washington Redskins

Future non-conference opponents

Announced non-conference opponents as of December 15, 2025.

at Weber State

References

References

  1. [http://demonband.nsula.edu/assets/fightsong.mp3 Fight song]
  2. [http://demonband.nsula.edu/ Spirit of Northwestern]
  3. "Northwestern State Historical Data". [[College Football Data Warehouse]].
  4. [http://www.nsudemons.com/news/2013/11/23/FB_1123135635.aspx 2013 Chief Caddo 2013]
  5. "A history of bizarre mascot incidents". CNN.
  6. "Northwestern State Demons Football Schedules and Future Schedules". fbschedules.com.
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