5 college football teams that do not deserve their stadium sizes

Arden Barnes-USA TODAY Sports
Arden Barnes-USA TODAY Sports /
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The bigger and better a college football team is, the bigger and better their stadium will most likely be. This unspoken law applies to the majority of the college football landscape. For example, the Michigan Wolverines are one of the more elite powers in the sport’s history, and their “Big House” holds over 100,000 people.

On the opposite end of the Power Five spectrum, there are the Wake Forest Demon Deacons.

Unlike the Wolverines, their timeline has not treated them well and has, as a result, presented them with one of the most lackluster winning percentages of all time. As a consequence of perennial struggling, their home field capacity is currently the smallest of those in the Power Five with a limit of under 35,000 attendees.

Some teams, however, have managed to get away with breaking this rule. Because of this, they may play terrible football in front of an abundance of bleachers that they rarely appear to have deserved in the first place.

I have taken the duty of gathering some of these schools, and intend to subsequently call them out on their coliseums being built upon lies. In ascending order of capacity, here are five stadiums that belong to undeserving programs.