Football Bowl Subdivision
Football Championship Subdivision
Non-football, multi-sport conferences (including the Big East)
A frenzy of realignment has transformed college athletics: about one in four major football programs has switched conferences since 2010. The effects are only starting to play out as programs build new infrastructure to televise and market their programs, especially in up-and-coming conferences. As conferences have become essential to stay competitive, the number of unaffiliated major schools has declined sharply. Here, how major college football programs have shifted since 1965.
How many programs do you think changed conferences in the BCS era? Think about it: The BCS lasted from 1998 to 2013—that’s 16 seasons in an FBS that began the era with 112 members.
Would you guess 25, 30 or even 50? Well, how about 78? That’s right, 78 programs moved conferences in the BCS era — some more than once — a tribute to the skyrocketing popularity of college football and the ever-increasing pot of money at the center of the sport. Take a look at the astonishing volume of change that occurred in the 16 years the BCS ruled the world.
1997
FBS Programs: 112
Number of Conferences: 10
Number of Independents: 9
Here’s a quick look at how the FBS conferences looked the year before the BCS kicked off in 1998:
Big East (eight members): Boston College, Miami (Fla.), Pittsburgh, Rutgers, Syracuse, Temple, Virginia Tech and West Virginia.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The 2005 NCAA conference realignment was initiated by the movement of three Big East Conference teams (Boston College, University of Miami, and Virginia Tech) to the Atlantic Coast Conference set into motion events that created a realignment in college football, as 23 teams changed conferences and Army became an independent.
From 1975 to 1982, the ECAC organized annual regional end-of-season men's basketball tournaments for independent Division I ECAC member colleges and universities in the Northeastern United States. The winner of each regional tournament was declared the ECAC regional champion for the season and received an automatic bid in the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.
Before 1975, the ECAC had not organized such tournaments for Division I schools; the NCAA Tournament invited only one team per Division I conference and accommodated independents with a limited number of at-large bids. In 1975, however, the NCAA Tournament's field expanded to 32 teams, including the champions of end-of-season conference tournaments, who received automatic bids.
Although a number of at-large bids still existed, the process for selecting the field for the 1975 NCAA Tournament included many second-place conference teams and threatened to exclude independent schools in the northeastern United States, which had no end-of-season conference tournament to play in and therefore no automatic bids. With no conventional athletic conferences yet in existence in the Northeast, the ECAC began to organize its Division I basketball tournaments in 1975, allowing Northeastern independents to retain their independent status while still having an opportunity to play in an end-of-season tournament offering an automatic bid. The ECAC Division I tournaments thus assured that at least some Northeastern colleges and universities would receive NCAA Tournament bids.
The Big East, often referred to as the Classic Big East, was founded in 1979 after new NCAA basketball scheduling requirements caused the athletic directors of independent schools Providence, St. John's, Georgetown, and Syracuse to discuss the creation of a conference centered in the Northeast.
Other schools invited were Seton Hall, Connecticut, Holy Cross, Rutgers, and Boston College, with Rutgers and Holy Cross declining to join.
Villanova joined a year later in 1980, with Marquette and DePaul joining the Big East in 2005.
Before the formation of the conference, many of these schools participated in the ECAC Men's Basketball Tournament in order to receive an automatic bid for the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship.
Established: 1923
Dissolved: 1947
Association: NCAA
Division: Division I
Region: Northeastern United States
The conference had five members - four of them public land-grant institutions, and the other the private Northeastern University. Specifically, the four public schools in the conference were what are now known as the Universities of Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. When Northeastern left the conference in 1945, the four remaining members plus New England's two other major public land-grant institutions, the University of Massachusetts and the University of Vermont, formed the Yankee Conference under a new charter, officially beginning play in 1947.
Members:
• Connecticut State College (now University of Connecticut)
• University of Maine
• University of New Hampshire
• Northeastern University
• Rhode Island State College (now University of Rhode Island)
Established: 1946
Dissolved: 1997
Association: NCAA
Division: Division I
Region: Northeastern United States
The Yankee Conference was a collegiate sports conference in the eastern United States. It once sponsored competition in many sports, but eventually became a football-only league. It is essentially an ancestor of today's Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) football conference.
In 1945, Northeastern University, the only private school in the New England Conference, announced its departure. This led the remaining four members, all land-grant universities in New England, to form a committee to explore the formation of a new conference. The committee recommended that the four current members join with two New England land-grant institutions, the University of Massachusetts and the University of Vermont. This led to the formation of the Yankee Conference in 1946, with athletic competition beginning in the 1947–48 school year. In 1971, the College of the Holy Cross joined the conference in football for only a year, and in 1974, Vermont dropped its football program.
Charter Members:
• University of Connecticut
• University of Maine
• University of Massachusetts Amherst (then Massachusetts State College)
• University of New Hampshire
• University of Rhode Island (then Rhode Island State College)
• University of Vermont
Established: 1976
Association: NCAA
Division: Division I non-football
Region: Eastern United States, Midwestern United States
Former Names:
• Eastern Collegiate Basketball League (1976–77)
• Eastern Athletic Association (1977–82)
• Eastern 8 (unofficial, 1976–82)
The Atlantic 10 Conference was founded in 1975 as the Eastern Collegiate Basketball League (ECBL) and began conference play in 1976. At that time, basketball was its only sport. After its first season, it added sports other than basketball and changed its name to the Eastern Athletic Association. However, despite its official names, it was popularly known as the Eastern 8, as it then had eight members (Villanova, Duquesne, Penn State, West Virginia, George Washington, Massachusetts, Pittsburgh, and Rutgers). Charter members Villanova and Pittsburgh left in 1980 and 1982, respectively.
gosports1 wrote:
Actually Villanova was invited and accepted in year one. They wanted to wait a year to give their conference at the time some notice they were leaving (Eastern 8 I believe). Nova technically was the 5th/6th school to AGREE to join to the BE (along with Seton Hall).
Wikipedia wrote:
Other schools invited were Seton Hall, Connecticut, Holy Cross, Rutgers, and Boston College, with Rutgers and Holy Cross declining to join.
gosports1 wrote:
... these two were replacements when Temple and Rutgers said "no" ...
The Big East is in discussions to add Temple for all sports as early as the next school year, according to a person briefed on the talks. Temple belongs to the Mid-American Conference and the Atlantic 10 in various sports, and there are legal issues that have to be settled before the Owls would be able to leave. A resolution is expected this month.
Within the next month, Temple will also have to inform the new conference formed by the merger of the Mountain West and Conference USA of its intentions. Temple has been asked to join that league. Temple is a former member of the Big East in football. It was thrown out in 2004 for consistently underperforming.
Glory Days
Once upon a time, Holy Cross (my alma mater) - a small Jesuit college located in Worcester, Mass., with undergraduate enrollment around 2,700 - was the best team in the country. In 1947, the Crusaders, behind coach Doggie Julian, NCAA tournament MVP George Kaftan and a freshman point guard named Bob Cousy beat Oklahoma at Madison Square Garden to win the NCAA Championship. The Crusaders finished third in the tournament the following year, and were ranked No. 1 in the 1949-1950 campaign as they won 26 straight games to start the season.
In 1954, Holy Cross won the NIT back in the days when that meant something. Heinsohn and Cousy, below, are Hall of Famers, two key players in the Boston Celtics dynasty of the late 50's and 60's. As late as 1977, Holy Cross was still considered a national power. That year, HC knocked off a good Providence team twice on last-second shots by forward Chris Potter, and led top-ranked Michigan at the half in the first round of the NCAA tournament before running out of gas down the stretch.
Holy Cross and the Big East
When the Big East was founded in 1979, Holy Cross could have been a charter member. Providence, St. John’s, Georgetown, Syracuse and Seton Hall, all teams that Holy Cross once played on a regular basis, agreed to start the Big East, but the league needed more New England representation
However, athletic directors at Holy Cross, Boston College, Rhode Island, and Connecticut agreed all four schools would remain a block. Take `em all or get none. If they couldn’t be separated, and the conference wanted the Boston market, which, of course, it needed, there would be a big league.
“Connecticut had been very good in the Yankee Conference. Boston College and Holy Cross was a toss up; actually, Holy Cross had the better basketball tradition. But their president couldn’t be convinced,” said the first Big East commissioner, Dave Gavitt, about the league’s founding. “He felt academics would be compromised.” Former St. John’s coach Lou Carnesecca spoke to me about these inside Big East formative dealings during a talk at the 2007 East Regionals at the Meadowlands. He told me that Holy Cross was supposed to join the Big East, but the school’s president, the Rev. John E. Brooks, S.J., vetoed the move for academic reasons.
Eventually, both Boston College and UConn agreed to join, making the Big East a seven-team league in the inaugural 1979-80 campaign.
Holy Cross remained independent for several seasons, but eventually joined the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) to start the 1983-84 season. Seven years later, Holy Cross joined the Patriot League.
Established: May 31, 1979
Association: NCAA
Division: Division I FBS
Members: 12
Regions: Too many to list
Former Name: Big East (1979–2013)
Headquarters: Providence, Rhode Island
The American Athletic Conference (also known as The American and sometimes abbreviated AAC) is an American collegiate athletic conference, featuring 12 member universities and three associate member universities that compete in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) Division I, with its football teams competing in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). Member universities represent a range of private and public universities of various enrollment sizes located primarily in urban metropolitan areas in the Northeastern, Midwestern, Western, and Southern regions of the United States.
The American's legal predecessor, the original Big East Conference, was considered one of the six collegiate power conferences of the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) era in college football, and The American inherited that status in the BCS's final season. With the advent of the College Football Playoff in 2014, The American became a "Group of Five" conference, which shares one automatic spot in the New Year's Six bowl games.
The league is the product of substantial turmoil in the old Big East during the 2010–14 conference realignment period. It is one of two conferences to emerge from the all-sports Big East in 2013. While the other successor, which does not sponsor football, purchased the Big East Conference name, The American inherited the old Big East's structure and is that conference's legal successor. However, both conferences claim 1979 as their founding date, and the same history up to 2013.
Established: 1907
Association: NCAA
Division: Division I non-football
Members: 10
Region: Midwestern United States
Headquarters: St. Louis, Missouri
The Missouri Valley Conference is the second-oldest collegiate athletic conference in the United States. The MVC was founded in 1907 as the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MVIAA), 12 years after the Big Ten, the only Division I conference that is older. However, some consider the MVC to have been formed from a split of the MVIAA in 1928. Most of the larger schools formed a conference that retained the MVIAA name and ultimately became the Big Eight Conference. The smaller schools, plus Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State University, which joined the Big Eight in 1957), formed the MVC.
During the Big Eight's existence, both conferences claimed 1907 as their founding date, as well as the same history through 1927. It was never definitively established which conference was the original, but given that the Big Eight merged with four Texas schools of the Southwest Conference to form the Big 12 Conference in 1996, only the MVC continues to have a claim to the original heritage.
Charter Members:
• Drake University (1907-Present*)
• University of Iowa (1907-1908)
• Iowa State University (1907-1928)
• University of Kansas (1907-1928)
• University of Missouri (1907-1928)
• University of Nebraska (1907-1928)
• Washington University - St. Louis (1907-1942)
* Drake withdrew from the MVC during the 1951–52 academic year in protest over the Johnny Bright incident, a racially motivated on-field attack by an Oklahoma A&M football player against Drake player Johnny Bright in a 1951 game. Drake returned to the MVC for non-football sports in the 1956–57 school year and Drake did not return for football until 1971.
Former Members:
• Butler University (1932-1934)
• University of Cincinnati (1957-1969)
• Creighton University (1928-1948 and 1976-2013)
• University of Detroit-Mercy (1949-1956)
• Grinnell College (1918-1939)
• University of Houston (1951-1959)
• Kansas State University (1913-1928)
• University of Louisville (1963-1974)
• University of Memphis (1968-1973)
• New Mexico State University (1970-1983)
• University of North Texas (1957-1974)
• University of Oklahoma (1919-1928)
• Oklahoma A&M University (1925-1956)
• Saint Louis University (1937-1974)
• University of Tulsa (1935-1996)
• Washburn University (1935-1942)
• West Texas A&M University (1972-1985)
• Wichita State University (1949-2017)
Established: 1979
Association: NCAA
Division: Division I non-football
Members: 10
Region: Great Lakes and Ohio Valley
Headquarters: Indianapolis, Indiana
Former Names:
• Midwestern City Conference (1979–1985)
• Midwestern Collegiate Conference (1985–2001)
The Horizon League was founded in 1979 as the Midwestern City Conference. In 1985, the conference changed its name to Midwestern Collegiate Conference and then the Horizon League in 2001. The conference started with a membership of six teams and has fluctuated in size with 24 different schools as members at different times. Currently, the League has 10 members, following Valparaiso leaving to join the Missouri Valley Conference and IUPUI joining the league on July 1, 2017. The Horizon League does not sponsor football.
In May 1978, DePaul University hosted a meeting with representatives from Bradley, Dayton, Detroit, Illinois State, Loyola-Chicago, Air Force, and Xavier in which all agreed in principle that a new athletic conference was needed. Further progress was made through a series of early 1979 meetings in San Francisco, Chicago, and St. Louis that included participation by Butler, Creighton, Marquette, and Oral Roberts. On June 16, 1979, the Midwestern City Conference (nicknamed the MCC or Midwestern City 6) was formed by charter members Butler, Evansville, Loyola, Oklahoma City, Oral Roberts, and Xavier, with Detroit joining the following year.
In 1980 the league established its headquarters in Champaign, Illinois. The MCC gained an automatic bid to the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship in 1981, followed by the announcement that Saint Louis University would be joining the following season. The University of Notre Dame joined the conference for all sports except basketball and football in 1982. The conference moved its headquarters to Indianapolis. In the summer of 1985, three changes occurred: Oklahoma City dropped out of the NCAA altogether; the name was altered slightly to Midwestern Collegiate Conference; and the conference brought women's athletics into the fold. The latter triggered Notre Dame's temporary withdrawal from the league as its women's teams were contracted to the North Star Conference. ESPN began televising the MCC Championship game in 1986 and in 1987 Oral Roberts left the conference while Dayton joined and Notre Dame rejoined.
Former Members:
• Butler University (1979-2012)
• University of Dayton (1987-1993)
• Duquesne University (1992-1993)
• University of Evansville (1979-1994)
• La Salle University (1992-1995)
• Loyola University Chicago (1979-2013)
• Marquette University (1988/1989 -1991)
• Northern Illinois University (1994-1997)
• University of Notre Dame (1982-1986 and 1987/1988-1995*)
• Oklahoma City University (1979-1985)
• Oral Roberts University (1979-1987)
• Saint Louis University (1981/1982-1991)
• Valparaiso University (2007-2017)
• Xavier University (1979-1995)
* Notre Dame rejoined the Horizon League for all men's sports except basketball after a season as an Independent. Its women's sports, which had been in the North Star Conference since the 1983–84 school year, moved to the Horizon League beginning the following season (1988–89).
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