Meeting Scheduled for Jan. 4, 2008 (Updated)
The Bring Back Titan Football Committee is scheduled to meet on January 4, 2008 at 4 p.m. on the campus of Cal State Fullerton. The location of the meeting will be held at the Titan House, which is located near the athletic fields. The Bring Back Titan Football Committee will be joined by Brian Quinn, CSUF Director of Athletics, and Allison Rich, CSUF Senior Associate Athletic Director, to answer questions.
The committee plans to present a number of questions to both Dir. Quinn and Assoc. Dir. Rich. These questions are aimed to gain more clarity and understanding of the tasks that need to be taken first in order to get the Titan Football program reinstated.
This meeting will not address the reasons why the Titan Football program was dropped in 1992. The purpose of this meeting is geared towards moving forward and discovering the best way to get the Titans playing football once again in the future.
If you can not attend the meeting in person but do have questions you would like raised, feel free to ask those questions here. Use the “Leave a Reply” box below to submit your questions you would like answered. Your questions will be included in the meeting’s discussion.
Upon completion of the meeting, a synopsis of what was discussed will be published here on BringBackTitanFootball.com.


Getting the Cal State Fullerton Football Team back on the field in any capacity will be a long and bumpy road. One of the main obstacles to fielding a team again is obviously funding. Many might argue that we should focus our limited resources on our existing basketball program instead of trying to resurrect a dormant football team. Although I would agree our basketball team could use more support, research shows that fielding a football team increases alumni donations and student applications. If this is true, could bringing back Titan Football increase alumni donations and increase revenue across all sections of the University?
Whenever the question of why Cal State Fullerton no longer fields an NCAA football team is raised, many explanations abound. Fan apathy, a poor win/loss record, lack of support from the administration, exorbitant costs to maintain the program and inevitably, Title IX are some of the reasons offered. The truth is there is not just one reason why the Cal State Fullerton Football program was dropped. Now that the climate is warming to the idea of bringing back the Titan Football Team in some capacity, one of the main obstacles will be Title IX compliance. For those that are unfamiliar with with Title IX, known as the Patsy T. Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act or the “Gender Equity Law,” here are some resources to help understand the history and the potential pitfalls resurrecting the Titan Football team faces.