Akron Zips football

Akron Zips football
2025 Akron Zips football team
First season1891; 134 years ago
Athletic directorCharles Guthrie
Head coachJoe Moorhead
4th season, 8–28 (.222)
StadiumInfoCision Stadium
(capacity: 30,000)
Year built2009
Field surfaceProGrass
LocationAkron, Ohio
NCAA divisionDivision I FBS
ConferenceMid-American Conference
Past conferencesOhio Athletic Conference (1915–1936, 1946–1965)
Mid-Continent Conference (1978–1979)
Ohio Valley Conference (1980–1987)
All-time record53460236 (.471)
Bowl record12 (.333)
Conference titles1
Division titles3
RivalriesKent State (rivalry)
Youngstown State (rivalry)
Consensus All-Americans1
Current uniform
ColorsBlue and gold
   
Fight songAkron Blue and Gold
MascotZippy
Marching bandOhio's Pride
OutfitterNike
WebsiteGoZips.com

The Akron Zips football team is a college football program representing the University of Akron in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Akron plays its home games at InfoCision Stadium on the campus of the University of Akron in Akron, Ohio. The Zips compete in the Mid-American Conference (MAC); it had been in the conference's East Division before the MAC eliminated its football divisions in 2024.

The team was established in 1891 when the school was known as Buchtel College; it became the University of Akron in 1913. In 1926, the athletic teams were named the Zippers, after rubber boots manufactured by the B.F. Goodrich Company, which was headquartered in Akron at the time. The name was shortened to "Zips" in 1950. Akron was originally classified as a Small College school in the 1937 season until 1972. Akron received Division II classification in 1973, before becoming a Division I-AA program in 1980 and a Division I-A (now FBS) program in 1987. The Zips were the first team to move from Division I-AA to Division I-A. In 2005, the Zips won the Mid-American Conference championship for the first time in the program's history. Through the 2023 season, the Zips have an overall record of 528–584–36.