Charleston Southern Buccaneers football

{{Short description|College football team of Charleston Southern University}}

{{for|information on all Charleston Southern University sports|Charleston Southern Buccaneers}}{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2024}}{{more citations needed|date=November 2015}}

{{Infobox college football team

| CurrentSeason = 2025 Charleston Southern Buccaneers football team

| TeamName = Charleston Southern Buccaneers football

| Image = Charleston south wordmark 2019.png

| ImageSize = 250

| FirstYear = {{Start date and age|1991}}

| AthleticDirector = Jeff Barber

| HeadCoach = Gabe Giardina

| HeadCoachYear = 3rd

| HCWins = 5

| HCLosses = 18

| Stadium = Buccaneer Field

| StadCapacity = 4,500

| StadSurface = Artificial Turf

| Location = Charleston, South Carolina

| NCAAdivision = I FCS

| Conference = OVC–Big South

| ATWins = 128

| ATLosses = 186

| NatlTitles =

| ConfTitles = 3

| uniform =

| FightSong =

| MascotDisplay = Bucky the Buccaneer

| MarchingBand =

| Rivalries = {{ubl|Coastal Carolina|The Citadel}}

| WebsiteName = csusports.com

| WebsiteURL = http://www.csusports.com/sports/football

}}

The Charleston Southern Buccaneers football program is the intercollegiate American football team for Charleston Southern University located in the U.S. state of South Carolina. The team competes in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) and are members of the OVC–Big South Football Association. Charleston Southern's first football team was fielded in 1991. The team plays its home games at the 4,000 seat Buccaneer Field in North Charleston, South Carolina and are currently coached by Gabe Giardina.

History

{{See also|List of Charleston Southern Buccaneers football seasons}}

{{Expand section|date=June 2012}}

The Charleston Southern football team began as a club football team in 1989 before moving to NCAA Division III status in 1991, which is a non-scholarship division. After NCAA rule changes required all sports to be in the same division, the Buccaneers moved from Division III to Division I in 1993, as the other campus programs were Division I. This caused some challenges for the new program, as they faced off with more established and better funded programs. In 1996, the Bucs went 1–10 with a lone win versus West Virginia State. Wins were scarce, and in 1997, head coach David Dowd hired defensive coordinator Todd Knight from Gardner-Webb University. The two coaches oversaw a slow improvement that began with a large recruiting class in 1997 with 34 scholarships being offered. That team would struggle to a 1–9 record with a lone win over Tusculum College. The opening game was a 30–7 loss to top 10 ranked East Tennessee State, followed by a heart-breaking loss at then No. 22 ranked South Carolina State. In that game, the Buccaneers led 12–6 with less than 1:30 to play, with SC State driving inside the 40 yard line. On fourth and short, CSU hit the SC State QB to cause a fumble which the Bucs recovered and began to run with, only to then fumble the ball back, and SC State would score the game winning touchdown on the ensuing drive. The 1997 team struggled to recover from that loss. A tragic loss off the field was part of that season, as freshman running back Kevin Keyes was murdered near his hometown of Goose Creek, SC.

The 2000 Buccaneers team beat Liberty for the first time 25–0 and lost to Samford in overtime to finish the season at 5–6.

=Jay Mills era (2003–2012)=

Jay Mills came to Charleston Southern from Harvard University. He had previously spent time coaching at several other places, including Boise State, Notre Dame, and Minnesota-Morris. His system shifted from CSU's traditional power based, pro-style offense to a spread offense. Several starters were dismissed from the team for various situations, and most of the coaching staff was changed. His first season considered a disaster, as the Bucs stumbled to a 1–11 record, with a lone win over West Virginia State. The season included blowout losses to The Citadel, Gardner Webb, VMI, James Madison, and Coastal Carolina. However, Coach Mills used the 2003 season to break-in a freshman quarterback named Colin Drafts. While this was a difficult season of transition, it provided the groundwork for a remarkable turnaround, and the emergence of one of the most prolific offensive players in CSU and Big South Conference history. In 2004, CSU saw a game against The Citadel canceled due to a looming hurricane. The Bucs were able to post a 5–5 record, the first non-losing season in CSU history. Quarterback Colin Drafts began to emerge as a star player as did running back Travis Mays and linebacker Joshua Mitchell. Wideout Eddie Gadson would also progress from walk-on to All Big South Conference in one season.

=Jamey Chadwell era (2013–2016)=

Jamey Chadwell became head coach after the retirement of Jay Mills following the 2012 season. The program reached new heights with the most wins in a season (10) in 2013, a win over national FCS power Appalachian State, back-to-back conference championships in 2015 and 2016, four straight wins over The Citadel, and two home wins over Coastal Carolina. In 2016, the Buccaneers took five-time reigning FCS champion North Dakota State into overtime, but eventually succumbed in a tough 24–17 loss. While the loss was hard on the team, it showed the progress and maturity of a once-small football program. In 2017, Jamey Chadwell accepted a position at Coastal Carolina which resulted in Mark Tucker taking over the head coaching position. CSU had been consistently ranked in the FCS top 25 under Chadwell's tenure.

=Mark Tucker era (2017–2018)=

Former quarterbacks coach Mark Tucker took over the football program in January 2017 after the departure of head coach Jamey Chadwell. Following several coaching changes and a strong recruiting class, Tucker hoped to have continued success with the Buccaneers. CSU followed up the 2016 campaign with a 6–5 record in 2017. Following a 5–6 season in 2018, Mark Tucker resigned as the head coach on December 7, 2018. He compiled an 11–11 overall record.

=Autry Denson era (2019–2022)=

Notre Dame running backs coach Autry Denson was named head coach in January 2019.{{Cite web|url=https://www.onefootdown.com/2019/1/14/18181956/autry-denson-is-officially-announced-as-the-new-head-coach-for-charleston-southern-notre-dame|title=Notre Dame Football: Autry Denson is officially announced as the new head coach for Charleston Southern|last=Vowles|first=Joshua|date=January 14, 2019|website=One Foot Down|access-date=August 28, 2019}} He was relieved of his duties following the 2022 season, after a 2–8 finish.{{cite news |last1=Brice |first1=John |title=Sources: Charleston Southern, former Notre Dame great Autry Denson parting ways |url=https://footballscoop.com/news/sources-charleston-southern-former-notre-dame-great-autry-denson-parting-ways |access-date=November 14, 2022 |work=footballscoop.com |publisher=Football Scoop |date=November 14, 2022}}

=Gabe Giardina era (2023–present)=

After finishing a five-season stint at Albany State with an overall record of 37–17, Gabe Giardina was named Charleston Southern's sixth head football coach in program history in November 2022. In his first year, he led the Buccaneers to a 4–7 record.

Conferences

=Classifications=

  • 1991–1992: NCAA Division III
  • 1992–present: NCAA Division I-AA/FCS

Notable former players

Championships

=Conference championships=

class="wikitable"

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Charleston Southern Buccaneers|Year|Coach|Conference|Overall record|Conference record}}

2005Jay Millsrowspan="3"|Big South Conference7–43–1
2015rowspan="2"|Jamey Chadwell10–36–0
20167–44–1
align="center"

| colspan=3 style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Charleston Southern Buccaneers|border=0|color=white}}" | Conference Championships

| colspan=3 style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Charleston Southern Buccaneers|border=0|color=white}}" | 3

† Co-champions

NCAA Division I-AA/FCS playoffs results

The Buccaneers have appeared in the NCAA Division I Football Championship playoffs two times. Their record is 1–2.

class="wikitable"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Charleston Southern Buccaneers|Year|Round|Opponent|Result}}
align="center"

| 2015

Second Round
Quarterfinals
The Citadel
Jacksonville State
W, 14–6
L, 38–58
align="center"

| 2016

First RoundWoffordL, 14–15

Rivalries

=The Citadel=

These two schools first met on the football field in 2002 and became a rivalry under former head coach, Jamey Chadwell. The Buccaneers won four in a row under Chadwell including two wins in 2015, as CSU took down The Citadel in the NCAA Division I Second Round Playoffs at Buccaneer Field. Under head coaches Mark Tucker and Autry Denson, the Bucs won once and lost twice to the Bulldogs.

Citadel leads the series 8–6.

  • 2024 – Citadel @ CSU – L, 21–22
  • 2021 - CSU @ Citadel - W, 38–21
  • 2019 - CSU @ Citadel - L, 13–22
  • 2018 - CSU @ Citadel - L, 14–43
  • 2015 – Citadel @ CSU – W, 14–6 (NCAA Division I FCS Playoffs [Second Round])
  • 2015 – CSU @ Citadel – W, 33–20
  • 2014 – Citadel @ CSU – W, 20–18
  • 2013 – CSU @ Citadel – W, 32–29
  • 2012 – CSU @ Citadel – L, 14–49
  • 2007 – CSU @ Citadel – L, 14–35
  • 2006 – CSU @ Citadel – W, 38–35
  • 2005 – CSU @ Citadel – L, 14–28
  • 2003 – CSU @ Citadel – L, 10–64
  • 2002 – CSU @ Citadel – L, 19–53 (First Meeting)

=Coastal Carolina=

These two schools first met on the football field in 2003 and it has been a rivalry since Charleston Southern defeated Coastal Carolina 34–27 in 2005 to win a share of the Big South Championship that Coastal had already clinched. CSU got the first shutout of the series with their 24–0 win in 2008. In 2015, Coastal Carolina, then ranked No. 1 nationally, were defeated by the No. 19 ranked Buccaneers 33–25, giving Charleston Southern the sole lead in the Big South Conference.

Coastal Carolina leads the series 8–6.

  • 2016 – CSU @ Coastal – W, 59–58 {{sup|2OT}}
  • 2015 – Coastal @ CSU – W, 33–25
  • 2014 – CSU @ Coastal – L, 22–43
  • 2013 – Coastal @ CSU – W, 31–26
  • 2012 – CSU @ Coastal – L, 20–41
  • 2011 – Coastal @ CSU – L, 38–45
  • 2010 – CSU @ Coastal – L, 3–70{{cite web|url=http://www.csusports.com/article.asp?articleID%3D4822 |title=CSU Football Season Ends with 70-3 Loss at Coastal Carolina :: CSUsports.com |access-date=June 11, 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120317145326/http://www.csusports.com/article.asp?articleID=4822 |archive-date=March 17, 2012 }}
  • 2009 – Coastal @ CSU – W, 30–23
  • 2008 – CSU @ Coastal – W, 24–0
  • 2007 – Coastal @ CSU – L, 2–41
  • 2006 – CSU @ Coastal – L, 17–31
  • 2005 – Coastal @ CSU – W, 34–27 {{sup|2OT}}
  • 2004 – CSU @ Coastal – L, 28–56
  • 2003 – Coastal @ CSU – L, 14–48 (First Meeting)

Charleston Southern vs In-State NCAA Division I schools

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | School

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | Record

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | Percentage

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | Streak

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | First Meeting

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | Last Meeting

align="center"

| Clemson Tigers

0–1{{Winning percentage|0|1}}Lost 120232023
align="center"

| Coastal Carolina Chanticleers

6–8{{Winning percentage|6|8}}Won 220032016
align="center"

| Furman Paladins

1–2{{Winning percentage|1|2}}Won 120192024
align="center"

| Presbyterian Blue Hose

13–14{{Winning percentage|13|14}}Won 519932019
align="center"

| South Carolina Gamecocks

0–1{{Winning percentage|0|1}}Lost 120192019
align="center"

| South Carolina State Bulldogs

0–7{{Winning percentage|0|7}}Lost 719911999
align="center"

| The Citadel Bulldogs

6–8{{Winning percentage|6|8}}Lost 120022024
align="center"

| Wofford Terriers

0–14{{Winning percentage|0|14}}Lost 1419932016
align="center"

| colspan=6 bgcolor="#FFFFF"| Charleston Southern 26 – In-State NCAA Division I Schools 55

Charleston Southern vs. FBS teams

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | Year

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | FBS Opponent

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | Result

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | Opponent's conference

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | Opponent's head coach

!style="background:#002855; color:#FFFFFF;" | Charleston Southern's head coach

align="center"

| 2026

Clemson Tigers???ACC??????
align="center"

| 2025

Coastal Carolina Chanticleers???Sun Belt??????
align="center"

| 2025

Vanderbilt Commodores???SEC??????
align="center"

| 2024

Florida State SeminolesL, 7–41ACCMike NorvellGabe Giardina
align="center"

| 2023

Clemson TigersL, 17–66ACCDabo SwinneyGabe Giardina
align="center"

| 2022

North Carolina State WolfpackL, 3–55ACCDave DoerenAutry Denson
align="center"

| 2021

Georgia BulldogsL, 7–56SECKirby SmartAutry Denson
align="center"

| 2021

East Carolina PiratesL, 28–31The AmericanMike HoustonAutry Denson
align="center"

| 2019

South Carolina GamecocksL, 10–72SECWill MuschampAutry Denson
align="center"

| 2018

Florida GatorsL, 6–53SECDan MullenMark Tucker
align="center"

| 2017

Indiana HoosiersL, 0–27Big 10Tom AllenMark Tucker
align="center"

| 2017

Mississippi State BulldogsL, 0–49SECDan MullenMark Tucker
align="center"

| 2016

Florida State SeminolesL, 8–52ACCJimbo FisherJamey Chadwell
align="center"

| 2015

Alabama Crimson TideL, 6–56SECNick SabanJamey Chadwell
align="center"

| 2015

Troy TrojansL, 16–44Sun BeltNeal BrownJamey Chadwell
align="center"

| 2014

Georgia BulldogsL, 9–55SECMark RichtJamey Chadwell
align="center"

| 2014

Vanderbilt CommodoresL, 20–21SECDerek MasonJamey Chadwell
align="center"

| 2013

Colorado BuffaloesL, 10–43Pac-12Mike MacIntyreJamey Chadwell
align="center"
align="center"

| 2012

Illinois Fighting IlliniL, 0–44Big 10Tim BeckmanJay Mills
align="center"

| 2011

UCF KnightsL, 0–62C-USAGeorge O'LearyJay Mills
align="center"

| 2011

Florida State SeminolesL, 10–62ACCJimbo FisherJay Mills
align="center"

| 2010

Kentucky WildcatsL, 21–49SECJoker PhillipsJay Mills
align="center"

| 2010

Hawaii WarriorsL, 7–66WACGreg McMackinJay Mills
align="center"

| 2009

South Florida BullsL, 0–59Big EastJim LeavittJay Mills
align="center"

| 2009

Florida GatorsL, 3–62SECUrban MeyerJay Mills
align="center"

| 2008

Miami (OH) RedhawksL, 27–38MACDon TreadwellJay Mills
align="center"

| 2008

Miami HurricanesL, 7–52ACCRandy ShannonJay Mills
align="center"

| 2007

Hawaii WarriorsL, 10–66WACJune JonesJay Mills
align="center"

| 2003

South Florida BullsL, 7–55C-USAJim LeavittJay Mills
align="center"

| 2002

South Florida BullsL, 6–56C-USAJim LeavittDavid Dowd
align="center"

| colspan=6 bgcolor="#FFFFF"| Charleston Southern 0 – FBS Schools 24

Future non-conference opponents

Announced schedules as of February 17, 2025.{{cite web |title=Charleston Southern Buccaneers Football Future Schedules |publisher=FBSchedules.com |url=https://fbschedules.com/ncaa/charleston-southern/ |access-date=February 17, 2025}}

class="wikitable"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Charleston Southern Buccaneers|2025|2026|2027|2028|2029}}
at Vanderbilt

| at The Citadel

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| at Charlotte

| at Georgia Southern

at Coastal Carolina

| at Clemson

|

| at East Carolina

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at William & Mary

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South Carolina State

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References

{{Reflist}}