Peach_Belt_Conference

Peach Belt Conference

Peach Belt Conference

College athletic conference


The Peach Belt Conference (PBC) is a college athletic conference affiliated with the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division II level. The 10 member institutions are located in the South Atlantic states of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. In addition, seven affiliate members participate in one sport each; namely sports not sponsored by their home conferences.

Quick Facts Association, Founded ...

Since its inception came in the 1990–91 school year, the Peach Belt has, across all sanctioned sports, produced 30 national champions and an additional 27 national finalists. Starting with only two championships in 1991, in men's and women's basketball, the conference has expanded to 18 championship sports with the addition of men's lacrosse in the summer of 2020 and men's and women's indoor track and field in 2023.

History

Peach Belt Conference
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Augusta
Middle Georgia State
USC Beaufort
USC Aiken
North Georgia
Lander
Georgia Southwestern State
Georgia College
Flagler
Columbus State
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Clayton State
Location of Peach Belt Conference members: full, future

The conference traces its roots November 1988 when 11 schools first met in Greenville, S.C. to form a Division II conference. Following a second meeting on Dec. 3, 1989, five of those 11 schools, plus two others, formed the Peach Belt Athletic Conference and began play in the fall of 1990.

The seven charter members of the conference were Armstrong Atlantic State University (now Armstrong State University), Columbus State University, Francis Marion University, Georgia College (now Georgia College & State University), Lander University, USC Aiken, and USC Upstate. The name Peach Belt Athletic Conference was adopted in January 1990 and modified to Peach Belt Conference in May 2000.

Augusta State University joined the conference as the eighth member in 1991 and UNC Pembroke became the ninth member on July 1, 1992. They were followed by Kennesaw State University on July 1, 1994, Clayton State University on July 1, 1995 and the University of North Florida on July 1, 1997. Kennesaw State and North Florida departed for the Division I ranks in 2005, USC Upstate did the same in 2007, and the conference welcomed in North Georgia College & State University in 2005 and Georgia Southwestern State University in 2006. In 2009–10, the University of Montevallo and Flagler College were added, returning a league presence to Florida and breaking new ground in Alabama. In 2012–13, the Peach Belt expanded to 14 members, the most the league has ever had, with the addition of Young Harris College. On January 8, 2013, the University System of Georgia finalized the mergers of two conference members into new institutions. Augusta State was merged into Georgia Regents University, which was renamed in 2015 as Augusta University, and NGCSU was merged into the University of North Georgia.[1][2] In both cases, the new institutions inherited the Peach Belt memberships of the older schools.

The Peach Belt was less than a year old before capturing its first of many national championships. The Columbus State men's golf team took the honor by winning the 1992 national crown, the first of three golf championships the Cougars own. One year later, the Lander men's tennis team began their record-breaking run of eight straight national titles, the first PBC dynasty. Since then, USCA men's golf won three straight national titles from 2004 to 2006 while AASU women's tennis captured four titles overall.

The 2010–11 season was one of the most memorable the league has ever had. Clayton State became the first PBC women's basketball team to capture a national championship. Montevallo watched their men's basketball team reach the Elite Eight, eventually competing in the National Championship Game. Unfortunately, their run came to an end with a loss to Western Washington University. The Columbus State men's tennis team reached the national semifinals while the Clayton State and Armstrong Atlantic State women's tennis teams also played in the national semifinals. The North Georgia softball team made an unprecedented third straight appearance in the NCAA Women's College World Series, while Columbus State's Meshack Koyiaki registered a runner-up finish at the Men's Cross Country National Championships. In all, 46 Peach Belt teams made appearances in the NCAA postseason, including seven men's tennis teams and six each in the sports of men's golf and women's tennis.

David Brunk was named the second PBC commissioner in May 2007, replacing Marvin Vanover, who was the first PBC commissioner from 1991 to 2007. Brunk is charged with continuing the strong growth of the conference as its second era begins.

Dr. Kendall Blanchard, president of Georgia Southwestern State University, began the second of his two-year term as the league president in July 2011.

In April 2020, Francis Marion University and the University of North Carolina at Pembroke announced that they would leave the Peach Belt Conference starting in 2021–22, both joining Conference Carolinas.[3]

On April 14, 2021, the conference invited the NAIA's University of South Carolina Beaufort to join in 2022–23 after applying for membership in Division II and gaining acceptance into the NCAA.[4] By July 14, 2022, USCB was accepted into the NAIA's Continental Athletic Conference for its first year of provisional membership while still playing a Peach Belt schedule as part of the Sand Sharks' dual NAIA-NCAA membership. USCB is ineligible for a Peach Belt or NCAA postseason during the three-year transition.[5]

The conference currently holds championships in 16 sports, eight for men and eight for women. The championship sports are men's and women's cross country, men's and women's soccer, volleyball, men's and women's basketball, men's and women's tennis, baseball, softball, men's and women's track & field, and men's and women's golf.[6] Men's lacrosse was added on July 10, 2020, with its first season was in spring 2021, and men's and women's indoor track and field was added on August 11, 2023.[7][8]

Chronological timeline

Member schools

Current members

The PBC currently has 10 full members, with all but one being public schools. Reclassifying members listed in yellow.

More information Institution, Location ...
Notes

    Future member

    The PBC will have one new full member, also a public school.

    More information Institution, Location ...
    Notes
    1. Middle Georgia State's main campus is in Macon, where the women's cross-country and volleyball teams and men's and women's tennis teams are housed; the other intercollegiate athletics teams compete on the Cochran campus.
    2. Currently an NAIA athletic conference.

    Affiliate members

    The PBC currently has seven affiliate members, four being private schools and three being public.

    More information Institution, Location ...
    Notes
    1. Alabama–Huntsville and Shorter were affiliates of the Peach Belt for men's and women's outdoor track & field from the 2013 to 2016 spring seasons (2012–13 to 2015–16 school years).
    2. Montevallo was a full member of the Peach Belt from 2009–10 to 2016–17.

    Former members

    The PBC has eight former full members, all but one are public schools:

    Notes
    1. Armstrong State was merged into Georgia Southern University since 2017.
    2. Currently an NCAA Division I athletic conference.
    3. Kennesaw State is joining Conference USA (CUSA) in 2024.
    4. Montevallo remains in the Peach Belt as an affiliate member for men's lacrosse.

    Former affiliate members

    The PBC has three former affiliate members, one was a public school, while two were private schools:

    More information Institution, Location ...
    Notes
    1. Alabama–Huntsville and Shorter re-joined the Peach Belt as affiliate members for men's lacrosse.

    Membership timeline

    Middle Georgia State UniversityCentral State UniversityUniversity of South Carolina BeaufortClaflin UniversityAlbany State UniversityEmbry–Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona BeachFlorida Institute of TechnologyShorter UniversityNova Southeastern UniversityUniversity of Alabama in HuntsvilleYoung Harris CollegeUniversity of MontevalloFlagler CollegeGeorgia Southwestern State UniversityUniversity of North GeorgiaUniversity of North FloridaClayton State UniversityKennesaw State UniversityUniversity of North Carolina at PembrokeAugusta UniversityUniversity of South Carolina UpstateUniversity of South Carolina AikenLander UniversityGeorgia College %26 State UniversityFrancis Marion UniversityColumbus State UniversityGeorgia Southern University–Armstrong Campus

     Full member (all sports)   Full member (non-football)   Associate member (football-only)   Associate member (sport) 

    Sports

    A divisional format was used for basketball (M / W) until 2020–21.
    East
    • Augusta
    • Flagler
    • Francis Marion
    • Lander
    • UNC Pembroke
    • USC Aiken
    West
    • Clayton State
    • Columbus State
    • Georgia College
    • Georgia Southwestern State
    • North Georgia
    • Young Harris
    More information Sport, Men's ...

    Men's sponsored sports by school

    Departing members/teams in pink.

    More information School, Baseball ...
    Notes

      Women's sponsored sports by school

      Departing members/teams in pink.

      More information School, Basketball ...
      Notes

        Other sponsored sports by school

        More information School, Men ...
        Notes
        1. The NCAA holds a single rifle championship event open to schools in all three divisions. Rifle schools in Divisions I and II operate under the same rules, including scholarship limits.
        2. The NCAA sponsors Division II men's and women's golf championships, but the Augusta men's and women's golf teams compete as Division I members.

        Championships


        References

        1. "Board of Regents finalizes consolidations, approves presidents" (Press release). University System of Georgia. Retrieved January 8, 2013.
        2. "Another New Name". Inside Higher Ed. September 16, 2015.
        3. "Conference Carolinas Announces Addition of Francis Marion and UNC Pembroke" (Press release). Conference Carolinas. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
        4. "Peach Belt Accepts USCB as Newest League Member". University of South Carolina Beaufort Athletics. April 14, 2021. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
        5. "USC Beaufort Approved for NCAA DII Membership". USCB Athletics (Press release). July 14, 2022. Retrieved July 16, 2022.
        6. "Peach Belt Conference History". Peach Belt Conference. Retrieved May 6, 2012.
        7. "Peach Belt Conference to Add Men's Lacrosse as Championship Sport" (Press release). July 10, 2020. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
        8. "Sunshine State Conference Adds Beach Volleyball and Outdoor Track" (Press release). Sunshine State Conference. December 13, 2023. Retrieved January 9, 2024.
        9. "Peach Belt Extends Invitation To Middle Georgia State University For Conference Membership" (Press release). Peach Belt Conference. January 10, 2024. Retrieved January 10, 2024.

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