Early history (1894–1921) The Bison fielded their first team in 1894 and were originally known as the NDAC Farmers. From the early 1900s to 1921, the nickname of the school then known as North Dakota Agricultural College was the Aggies. The first coach for the new NDAC football team was
Henry Bolley, who also fielded the first football program at Purdue University in 1887 and was their first Quarterback. He challenged the
University of North Dakota to a football match in 1890, but did not have enough players until 1894, the first official year of football at NDSU. In 1902,
Eddie Cochems, known as the father of the
forward pass was hired as head coach of the Bison where he experimented building an offense around his new technique; which subsequently became legal in the
1906 college football season; Cochems went 9–1 in his two-year stint as head coach. The college hired famed Michigan halfback
Paul Magoffin, the first player to ever catch a forward pass in 1907, as head coach, but he left for the head coaching position offered to him by
George Washington University a year later. The 1918 season was canceled due to the outbreak of the
Spanish Flu in conjunction with the first World War. The 1943 and 1944 seasons were also canceled due to World War II and the shortage of eligible players. Keeping with their Michigan favoritism, the NDAC hired
Stanley Borleske in 1919 to coach the football, basketball, and baseball teams. After six years of on and off coaching. and a 36–36–7 record, Borleske left for Fresno State but is largely credited with developing the Bison mascot. It was well known he was not a fan of the "Aggies" mascot, wanting something 'strong and fierce' he came up with the 'Bison' which remains the mascot today. He also coined the term "Thundering Herd" which is still a common reference to the NDSU Bison Football fanbase. The NDSU Bison are the only FCS program to ever be ranked higher than #34 in the AP National Football Poll. After the 2011 championship game, the Bison became only the third team in FCS history to receive votes in the final AP Top 25 with 2, putting them at #32 overall, an FCS record at the time; the others being
Appalachian State who receive 5 votes after their third consecutive FCS Championship in 2007 and ended at #34 and
James Madison University after their 2010 upset of then #13 Virginia Tech. After the 2012 season, the Bison again broke the barrier and became the first-ever FCS team to breach the poll twice by receiving 1 vote and ending at #36 in the nation. Due to the overwhelming support and attention NDSU got during this run, ESPN announced that it would host its
ESPN College GameDay program in downtown Fargo on September 21, 2013. The Bison ended up beating Delaware State 51–0 later that day.
2013 season The Bison finished the 2013 regular season with an undefeated 11–0 record, their first perfect season since 1990. The Bison became the first FCS team to ever finish the regular season ranked on the AP Poll at #34 with 1 vote. The 2013 team also had a perfect 15–0 season, becoming the first program to do that since Marshall in 1996. They won their third consecutive national championship, tying an FCS record. A majority of the starters played in all 3 national championship games and went 43–2 in their three-year stint, a number unrivaled in Division I FCS football. The Bison only lost 2 games in the three-year span by a combined 6 points. After the 2013 season, the Bison were ranked #29 in the National Division I AP Poll, tallying a massive 17 votes, far beyond what any other FCS team had ever received. They later outdid themselves when they defeated Iowa in 2016, putting the Bison 27th in the AP Poll with 74 votes, the highest ranking of any team in FCS history. Through 2013, the Bison outscored their opponents by a combined 581–169 (+412) on the season. Only two other teams in FCS history have had a larger point spread through a season, 1996 Marshall (+448) and 1999 Georgia Southern (+485). Unlike the Marshall and Georgia Southern teams, NDSU's defense held their opponents to just 127 points in the regular season (11.5 ppg) and just 11 points on average through the playoffs that year. NDSU won its playoff games with an average margin of victory of 32.75 points, which just falls behind the 1996 Marshall team, which averaged a 34-point spread. In 2013, the Bison tallied three shutouts, and held nine teams to 10 points or less, including a streak of nine consecutive quarters without allowing a point. The offense was known for a ground-and-pound strategy, which wore opponents down and controlled the time of possession. The team averaged over 34 minutes of possession per game, while allowing an average of just 250 yards of opposing offense. In the 12 playoff games they played from 2011 to 2013, they allowed an average of 9.3 points per game, an FCS record. The only playoff loss the seniors experienced in their four-year career was the 38–31 overtime loss at eventual champion Eastern Washington in 2010 in the FCS quarterfinals. The span of seasons that followed for NDSU in the years after that overtime loss are easily the best and most dominant years Division I football has seen from a single team. After the 2013 season, following three consecutive national titles Head Coach Craig Bohl was hired away to lead the Mountain West's
Wyoming Cowboys. Bohl finished his time at NDSU having successfully transitioned the program from Division II to Division I and built into the premier FCS powerhouse in the nation that continues today. He finished at NDSU with a career record of 104–32.
Chris Klieman era (2014–2018) Following Bohl's departure, defensive coordinator
Chris Klieman was promoted to head coach.
2014 season In 2014, after beating their 5th consecutive FBS team,
Iowa State, and their subsequent game against
Weber State; which was their 26th straight victory, ESPN again announced they would bring
College GameDay back to downtown Fargo on September 13, 2014, to cover the Bison's amazing run for the second straight year. The visit marked first time the show has ever visited the same FCS school twice and only the sixth time they have visited a non-FBS school since 1993. The Bison won an FCS record 33 straight games from 2012 to 2014, which is also the third longest in the history of Division I NCAA football. From 2010 to 2014, the Bison did not lose a single road game, a span of 22 games. They also had a winning streak of 26 home games (2012–2015) and have a record streak of 22 wins in the FCS playoffs. The Bison have won 16 straight home openers since their 1999 loss to Ferris State and are 21–1 in home openers since the Fargodome opened in 1992.
2015 season 2015 would start with a surprise loss to #13 Montana broadcast nationally on ESPN; however, the season would extend both the MVFC and National Championship runs to five consecutive titles, culminating in a 37–10 national title game against
Jacksonville State. After this season, quarterback
Carson Wentz was selected second overall by the
Philadelphia Eagles in the
2016 NFL draft.
2016 season 2016 brought about one of the high points in Bison football history when, in week three, NDSU defeated #13 ranked
Iowa on the road. Despite the impressive win, 2016 would be the worst season for the team since
2010. Not only would the team have the fewest wins since 2010 (12), they also lost the
Dakota Marker for the first time since 2009. Ultimately the season would bring about the end of the Bison's historic title run with a semifinal loss against the eventual champion
James Madison Dukes.
2017 season 2017 would be a return to form for NDSU, where only two games all season were decided by one possession, the best mark since the 2013 season. On December 15, NDSU became the only team in FCS history to make 7 consecutive semifinal appearances in the playoffs. In the title match, the Bison would get revenge for the previous season, defeating James Madison 17–13 in
Frisco.
2018 season The 2018 season would arguably top the 2013 season as the best in school history. NDSU went 15–0 for the second time in school history and had only one game all season decided by less than one touchdown (the Dakota Marker matchup against #3 South Dakota State). NDSU captured their seventh title in eight years, defeating Eastern Washington 38–24 on January 9, 2019. It was also Chris Klieman's fourth title in five years. The 2018 Bison defeated opponents by an average score of 41.5 – 12.6, good for a score differential of 28.9 points. The season saw quarterback
Easton Stick finish his college career with a record of 49–3, the highest win total for any quarterback in FCS history. Before the semifinal matchup against South Dakota State, Klieman was hired by former Bison athletic director
Gene Taylor to lead the
Kansas State Wildcats. He was allowed to finish the season with NDSU. On March 4, 2019, President
Donald Trump hosted the NDSU football team at the
White House. They were served fast food, as was FBS champion
Clemson. Easton Stick presented a number 45 NDSU football jersey to Trump. The visit was orchestrated by Senator
John Hoeven.
Matt Entz era (2019–2023) On December 13, 2018, NDSU announced defensive coordinator
Matt Entz would replace Chris Klieman as head coach.
2019 season The Bison started the 2019 season with 57–10 victory over
Butler in front of record-breaking "home" crowd of 34,544 at Minneapolis's
Target Field. 2019 saw the first game against in-state rival
North Dakota since 2015. The Bison were victorious over the Fighting Hawks 38–7 in front of the largest Fargodome crowd (18,923) since NDSU hosted Northern Iowa for Homecoming in 2015 (18,954). On October 20, 2019, it was announced that ESPN would be bringing their
College GameDay program to
Brookings, South Dakota to cover the Dakota Marker featuring #3 South Dakota State and #1 North Dakota State. The Bison defeated SDSU 23–16. On January 11, 2020, NDSU won another FCS title after defeating James Madison University 28–20, and also became the first Division I team since 1894 Yale to finish 16–0, their second undefeated season in a row.
2020 season On May 2, 2021, the NDSU Bison, under Entz, ended a three-championship win streak by losing 24–20 to Sam Houston State University in the quarterfinals of the 2020 FCS playoffs. This is the first time since 2010 that the NDSU Bison did not make the semifinals. On May 13, 2021, former Bison QB
Trey Lance was drafted with the 3rd overall pick in the
2021 NFL draft by the
San Francisco 49ers after leaving the team before the Spring season began.
2021 season On October 2, 2021, the NDSU Bison played in-state rival
North Dakota (UND) in Grand Forks for the first time since 2003, with NDSU and UND, respectively, ranked 5th and 10th at the time. The Bison won this matchup, 16–10. On November 6, 2021, the 22nd edition of the battle for the
Dakota Marker ended with a SDSU victory, 27–19. NDSU was ranked 2nd at the time and SDSU ranked 9th. This marked the first time SDSU had won multiple games in a row in the Marker series since 2016–17 when the Jacks won back-to-back marker games against the Bison. On January 8, 2022, the Bison played the Montana State Bobcats for the FCS championship. They ended up winning, 38–10, as fullback Hunter Luepke ran for three touchdowns in the first half.
2022 season On January 8, 2023, the Bison lost the
2023 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game to rival South Dakota State, 21–45. This was NDSU's first loss in a Division I championship game, and only their third at any level.
2023 season On September 2, 2023, the Bison hosted
Eastern Washington in
Minneapolis, Minnesota for the first ever college football game to be played at
US Bank Stadium. NDSU would go on to win the game, 35–10. On October 15, 2023, the Bison fell to their in-state rival UND for the first time in over two decades. The 2023 season was the first fall season since 2010 that the Bison were unseeded heading in to the playoffs. They then became just the fourth unseeded team to reach the FCS semifinals since the playoffs added byes. On December 10, 2023, North Dakota State announced that Entz would be leaving Fargo for the vacant
USC linebackers position coach job. He was allowed to finish the 2023 playoff run at NDSU. The Bison would fall at Montana later in the week in double overtime.
Tim Polasek era (2024–present) On December 17, 2023, North Dakota State announced that
Wyoming offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach
Tim Polasek would take over as the next head coach of the Bison. Polasek had previously coached for the team from 2006 to 2012 and 2014 to 2016.
2024 season Around the beginning of the 2024 season, North Dakota State was rumored to have had conversations with the
Mountain West Conference, a conference that competes in the
NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, about the Bison moving into the conference. However, those conversations seemingly went cold for the time being, as both sides would distance themselves from the conversation publicly. This wasn't the first time NDSU had been mentioned as a school that could make a move to the FBS, but it was certainly the most noise that had been heard on the topic up to this point. On October 19, 2024, the Bison defeated the top-ranked, arch-rival,
South Dakota State Jackrabbits to reclaim the
Dakota Marker for the first time since 2019. This ended NDSU's losing streak to SDSU, as well as protected their
Missouri Valley Football Conference league game winning streak record at 19. On November 23, 2024, the Bison fell to fellow Dakota school,
South Dakota, in consecutive regular seasons for the first time in the Division I era. On December 21, 2024, North Dakota State defeated arch rival South Dakota State in the FCS semifinals to start their first winning streak over the Jacks since they strung three wins together in 2018 and 2019. They also clinched their 11th appearance in the
NCAA Division I Football Championship Game. On January 6, 2025, the Bison defeated
Montana State, 35–32 to win their 10th FCS national championship and 18th national title at any level. Tim Polasek also continued a streak of three NDSU coaches in row to win the national championship in their first season coaching at North Dakota State.
2025 season On October 25, 2025, the Bison defeated arch-rival South Dakota State in a 38–7 rout to keep the Dakota Marker for the second season in a row, and match their longest streak in the series since 2019. It was also the largest win for either team in the series since 1992. On November 8, 2025, North Dakota State defeated in-state rival North Dakota to claim their 7th outright
Missouri Valley Football Conference title, and 12th overall title. It was also their first outright conference title since 2021. On December 6, 2025, the Bison lost to
Illinois State in the
2025 NCAA Division I Second Round to be eliminated from the playoffs. It was their earliest exit from the postseason in the Division I era. It was also their first loss at home since 2023, and only their second ever postseason loss in the Fargodome. On February 6, 2026, reports emerged that North Dakota State and the
Mountain West Conference were negotiating a football-only invitation to the conference in time for the start of the 2026 football season.
Division I-FBS (2026–present) On February 9, 2026, North Dakota State announced they would be leaving for the
Mountain West Conference of the
NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision effective July 1, 2026, and in time for the 2026 college football season.
2026 season ==Championships==