On Wednesday we took a look at the revenues FBS schools reported to the U.S. Department of Education for the 2018-19 academic year, and now it’s the FCS’s turn.

The FBS version sparked some questions, and this one will as well. There’s no standard reporting practice mandated by the Department of Education, so if one school counts donations that go toward football tickets as football-specific revenue and another puts that in the general athletic fund, there’s no way to account for that. All we know is the numbers the DoE spits out.

So, no, I can’t explain how North Dakota State comes in at No. 15 here.

1. James Madison — $10.7 million

2. Montana State — $8.7 million

3. Montana — $8.6 million

4. Delaware — $8.3 million

5. Fordham — $7.6 million

6. Furman — $7.4 million

7. William & Mary — $7.1 million

8. Richmond — $7 million

9. Lafayette — $6.8 million

10. Villanova — $6.76 million

11. Colgate — $6.74 million

12. Eastern Washington — $6.73 million

13. Alabama A&M — $6.5 million

14. Bucknell — $6.2 million

15. North Dakota State — $6.048 million

16. Elon — $6.043 million

17. Lehigh — $5.97 million

18. Samford — $5.94 million

19. UC Davis — $5.75 million

20. The Citadel — $5.73 million

21. North Carolina A&T — $5.61 million

22. Holy Cross — $5.6 million

23. Wofford — $5.53 million

24. Sacramento State — $5.52 million

25. Idaho — $5.52 million

Nos. 24 and 25 is not a typo. Sacramento State and Idaho actually reported a single, solitary dollar’s difference in revenue. Sacramento State says its football program brought in $5,515,779, while Idaho reported $5,515,778.