Flag Football Moves Closer to NCAA Championship
Recommendation must now be approved by all three divisions; championship could start in 2028
Posted On: May 20, 2026 By :Flag football has moved to the goal line in its effort the become an NCAA championship.
The sport has received a formal recommendation to become the next major collegiate championship, with the first event expected as soon as spring 2028.
The NCAA Committee on Access, Opportunity and Impact voted at its spring meeting to recommend all three NCAA divisions add a National Collegiate Flag Football Championship. The committee oversees the Emerging Sports for Women program, which aims to grow participation and competitive opportunities for women’s sports across the NCAA.
“Girls want to play. Whenever you give access and opportunity to an easier way to play, the better the success and numbers in participation you see,” said Jacqie McWilliams Parker, chair of the NCAA committee and commissioner of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association. “The young women who are currently playing at our institutions, some never even thought about being able to play in college. Now they have their opportunity. As we hit the next steps to becoming an NCAA championship, I’m excited we’re providing access and opportunity.”
“Today is a landmark day for collegiate athletics, as flag football officially becomes an NCAA championship sport,” said Marion Terenzio, chair of the emerging sport subcommittee and president at SUNY Cobleskill. “This step recognizes a sport whose growth, competitiveness and national momentum have been impossible to ignore. Elevating flag football to championship status affirms that progress and opens new doors for women to compete at the highest level. Today we celebrate a milestone, and we look ahead to a future of championships, rivalries and remarkable student-athletes who will define this new era.”
Flag Football Comes Out Strong
Flag football is relatively new in the world of emerging sports but has risen quickly. Before the committee can recommend that an emerging sport become a championship, 40 schools must sponsor it at a varsity level and meet the sport’s minimum competition and participant requirements. In a short period, flag football has shattered those numbers, a process that can take years for other emerging sports. More than 100 schools plan to compete during the next academic year.

Earlier this year, event organizer RCX Sports and USA Football submitted the application to the NCAA for the sport to even enter the emerging sports program.
“Women’s flag football is experiencing extraordinary growth at the collegiate level, and this recommendation is another major step toward achieving NCAA championship status,” said Izell Reese, founder and CEO of RCX Sports, the official operator of NFL FLAG. “The momentum behind the game reflects the passion of athletes, coaches, administrators and partners across the country who have embraced flag football and invested in creating more opportunities for female athletes.”
“This is great news for flag football,” USA Football CEO Scott Hallenbeck said. “Growing the game is central to our mission, and the potential for women’s flag football to have a fully recognized NCAA championship does exactly that. It also strengthens the talent pipeline as flag football prepares for its Olympic debut in 2028. It’s going to be a massive year for flag football — the sport’s debut in Los Angeles and now potentially a full NCAA championship structure in place.”
Timeline to a Championship
From here, each division is expected to review the recommendation and potentially sponsor a proposal by July 1. If proposals are sponsored, the divisions will likely take a formal vote in January 2027 at the annual NCAA Convention, with all three divisions needing to approve the legislation to establish a championship.
The recommendation also includes establishing an NCAA Women’s Flag Football Committee, which would begin its work in January 2027.
If adopted on that timeline, the first flag football championship would be staged in spring 2028.
If approved, flag football would join the following recent sports to earn NCAA championship status through the Emerging Sports for Women program: rowing (1996), ice hockey (2000), water polo (2000), bowling (2003), beach volleyball (2015), wrestling (2025), acrobatics and tumbling (2026) and stunt (2026).
The NCAA will hold its first acrobatics and tumbling and stunt championships during the 2026–2027 school year, and the first National Collegiate Women’s Wrestling Championships were held in March.
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