Grit over glamor: the tranquil excellence of D-III college football

5Mind. The Meme Platform

Under the direction of veteran hall-of-fame broadcaster Jim Doyle, when Penn State began competing in the Big Ten in football in 1993, I made my initial trek to Beaver Stadium for their annual football media day for Doyle’s longtime and popular Sunday Morning Quarterback show.

Over the next 32 years, I covered the collegiate gridiron gospel from State College to Bloomsburg to Bucknell. Not once did I find myself in Selinsgrove taking in a Susquehanna University football game.

That changed this past Saturday and let’s just say the differences weren’t subtle.

They were audible, edible, and existential.

No one was inching toward Lot 36 like at Penn State in a mile-long convoy, while your forgotten $45 parking pass lounges on your kitchen table awaiting its new role as an overpriced bookmark. Lot 36’s impending $80 penalty fee hits harder than a fourth-quarter pick-six for Ohio State. The parking quagmire is nothing short of a fiscal penalty flag. The only thing worse than the outrageous cost is realizing you are still three lots away from Beaver Stadium and the game kicked off five minutes ago.

There are no orange-vested rent-a-cops waving you into a dust bowl that doubles as a game day parking lot choreographed by an army of undergrads armed with walkie-talkies who will earn a minor in traffic theater at the end of the seven-home game Penn State football season.

At Susquehanna, you won’t find yourself rerouted through a cow pasture that has been temporarily rebranded as Lot 36 that is now closed to livestock until Monday morning.

At this tucked away Division-III enclave, parking was in a paved lot, perhaps next to an anthropology professor’s minivan or public address announcer Mike Ferlazzo’s pickup truck. It was the kind of game atmosphere where showing up is enough and no one is charging you a second mortgage for the privilege. 

Division-III doesn’t do extortion by blacktop or cow pasture. 

There are little to no NIL deals for the players. No multi-millionaire head-phoned coaches roaming the sidelines looking like they just jumped out of an Adidas catalog. There are no hyped-up choreographed videos set to obnoxious music tracks that are at least four decades old. And best of all, there are no extended media timeouts that last longer than the line at the Berkey Creamery that makes you forget what quarter the game is in.

The stadium crowd is not a sea of strangers, but your roommate, your professor, and perhaps your local optometrist. Such intimacy creates a communal heartbeat that can’t be replicated in cavernous stadiums. Home games feel less like ESPN primetime and more like a borough council meeting with plenty of Gatorade. 

Every Saturday in quiet corners across our fruited American plain, Division-III players suit up not for sizeable payouts and television look-at-me pose time, but for the sheer joy of playing the game in its most authentic form. It is where the press box roster not only includes the names, class and hometown of the players but also the cheerleaders.

There is plenty of raw grit that is unfiltered, and often unglamorous. Players hold summer jobs, lift weights in basements and garages and play through pain without the headlines and never-ending press conferences and social media updates. 

In an age when college athletics often moonlights as minor league professional franchises replete with billion-dollar television contracts, blockbuster NIL deals and nonstop transfer dramas, Division-III football hums along as the quiet counter-narrative. It is football stripped of its commercial costume, played by true student-athletes who juggle homework with lab times, internships, and practice not out of obligation, but out of a true love for the game.

There are no postgame press conferences sponsored by energy drinks and internet service providers. There are, however, a fair number of mechanical engineering majors who possess respectable size and speed that compliments a decent spin move with a modest goal of making it to chow after practice before the campus dining hall closes.

Division-III football attracts a unique breed: the intellectual athlete. These are players who might quote Thoreau, Burke and Friedman in the locker room or debate the growing national deficit between reps.

Football plays a role in their academic journey, but it’s not the whole map and it is certainly no Faustian trade-off. Football becomes a lifelong metaphor and fosters a culture where curiosity is as valued as competitiveness. Coaches often double as mentors more than recruiters. These players are more likely to have a group chat for their Econ 302 project than a legion of Instagram followers. 

Rarely will anyone play professionally but they will be professionals of the first-degree in life. The discipline, teamwork, and resilience forged on these fields of play translate into boardrooms, classrooms, and operating rooms. The game teaches time management like no seminar ever could where players learn to prioritize, sacrifice, and lead.

Division-III football is not a steppingstone: it’s a destination. It is where the sport returns to its roots: community, character, and competition without corruption. In a landscape increasingly dominated by spectacle, their dogged, no frills play offers substance.

In the grand American sports narrative, Division-III is the quiet subplot, the kind that does not get a Netflix docu-series or a primetime viewing slot. It is where the post-game meal is courtesy of the local alumni who owns the nearby Subway franchise.

You won’t spot any future Heisman Trophy winners or witness any College GameDay cameos, but you will catch the future of leadership, love and sportsmanship for the game, the kind that seems benched elsewhere.

These are the players who show up early, stay late, and still make it to their 8 a.m. class. It is the heart and hustle of football without the filters.

It is the kind of grit that doesn’t trend on social media but endures.

It is certainly not the loudest story in collegiate athletics, but it might be the most honest.

Division-III football is where walk-ons become captains, and undersized linemen become legends. The next time you pass a small college stadium on a crisp, autumn Saturday afternoon, stop in.

You won’t be disappointed.

Contact Your Elected Officials
Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca is a New York City native and U.S. Marine Corps veteran who writes for TTC. He resides in the Pennsylvania Coal Region. His work can also be found in The American Spectator, NewsBreak, Daily Item, Republican Herald, Standard Speaker, The Remnant Newspaper, Gettysburg Times, Daily Review, The News-Item, Standard Journal and more.

From legacy to liability

"When the Washington Post cut a third of its shrinking staff, leaders called it 'strategic restructuring'—like calling an iceberg a 'necessary pivot.'!"

The SCOTUS Trump Tariff Test

There is an old expression that goes "If you're...

SCOTUS Strikes Down Tariffs, Judgment Fund, Citizens Will Pay

Trump tariffs ruled illegal; taxpayers pay twice—higher prices in stores, then again through Judgment Fund payouts for mismanagement.

The Poisoning of the Mind: How Public Education Stopped Educating

The most disturbing part of our failing educational system is how few care. Failing to educate children is failing the present and abandoning the future.

MSM’s “Debunked” Big Lie of the 2020 Election

Today, it seems, the news media is being controlled by dark forces whether its the “The Deep State”, the "Intelligence Community" or "Globalist Elites".

Trump Approves DC Emergency Declaration for Potomac Sewage Spill

President Trump approved an emergency declaration for the DC following a massive raw sewage spill into the Potomac River, the FEMA announced.

Student ICE Protests Lead to Lockdowns, Debate Over Discipline in Pennsylvania Schools

A pair of Pennsylvania school districts are the latest to grapple with after effects from student walkouts to protest ICE.

MAHA Proponents React to Trump’s Executive Order on Glyphosate

Invoking the Defense Production Act, Trump signed an EO propelling the domestic production of elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicides.

Alysa Liu Wins Olympic Figure Skating Gold, First for US Women in 24 Years

American figure skater Alysa Liu emerged victorious in the Olympics, winning the US’ first Olympic gold medal in women’s figure skating since 2002.

Supreme Court Ruling on Tariffs Won’t Change US–China Trade Relations, Analysts

After the Supreme Court ruled Trump’s IEEPA tariffs unlawful, analysts say U.S.-China trade likely won’t change, as other legal levy options remain.

Trump Raises Global Tariff to 15 Percent After Supreme Court Ruling

Trump raised tariffs on all countries to 15% one day after the Supreme Court ruled against the global tariffs his admin imposed last year under the IEEPA.

USTR Will Launch New Trade Probes Covering Major Trading Partners, Greer Says

U.S. Trade Rep Jamieson Greer will launch Section 301 probes targeting major trading partners, signaling broader trade enforcement.

Trump Signs Order to Impose 10 Percent Global Tariffs After Supreme Court Ruling

Trump signed an order to impose a 10% global tariff in response to the Supreme Court striking down sweeping levies issued under an emergency powers law.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central