NCAA_Division_III_Conferences

List of NCAA conferences

List of NCAA conferences

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The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is divided into three divisions based on scholarship allocation. Each division is made up of several conferences for regional league competition. Unless otherwise noted, changes in conference affiliation will occur on July 1 of the given year.

Division I

Under NCAA regulations, all Division I conferences defined as "multisport conferences" must meet the following criteria:[1]

  • A total of at least seven active Division I members.
  • Separate from the above, at least seven active Division I members that sponsor both men's and women's basketball.
  • Sponsorship of at least 12 NCAA Division I sports.
  • Minimum of six men's sports, with the following additional restrictions:
    • Men's basketball is a mandatory sport, and at least seven members must sponsor that sport.
    • Non-football conferences must sponsor at least two men's team sports other than basketball.
    • At least six members must sponsor five men's sports other than basketball, including either football or two other team sports.
  • Minimum of six women's sports, with the following additional restrictions:
    • Women's basketball is a mandatory sport, with at least seven members sponsoring that sport.
    • At least two other women's team sports must be sponsored.
    • At least six members must sponsor five women's sports other than basketball, including two other team sports. If a conference officially sponsors an NCAA "emerging sport" for women (as of 2023, acrobatics & tumbling, equestrianism, rugby union, stunt, triathlon, or wrestling), that sport will be counted if five members (instead of six) sponsor it.

Schools in all divisions that sponsor athletic programs for only one sex/gender need only meet the sports sponsorship requirements for that sex/gender.[2]

Football Bowl Subdivision

Conferences in the Football Bowl Subdivision must meet a more stringent set of NCAA requirements than other conferences. Among these additional NCAA regulations, institutions in the Football Bowl Subdivision must be "multisport conferences" and participate in conference play in at least six men's and eight women's sports, including football, men's and women's basketball, and at least two other women's team sports. Each school may count one men's and one women's sport not sponsored by its primary conference toward the above limits, as long as that sport competes in another Division I conference. The men's and women's sports so counted need not be the same sport.[3][4]

  1. Known as Big East Conference prior to 2013. The American operates under the original 1979 Big East charter, but considers its competitive history to have started in 2013.
  2. 14 full members with Wichita State as a non-football member; 14 football members with Navy as a football-only affiliate.
    • 13 full members and 14 football members in 2024 with loss of SMU and addition of Army in football.
  3. 15 members, 14 football members. Notre Dame football is an FBS independent, but has a substantial cross-scheduling agreement with the ACC.
    • 18 full members and 17 football members in 2024 with addition of California, SMU, and Stanford.
  4. 27 sports by NCAA count. The ACC sponsors separate championships for men's and women's fencing, which the NCAA considers to be a single sport.
  5. 18 members in 2024 with addition of Oregon, UCLA, USC, and Washington.
  6. 16 members in 2024 with addition of Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado, and Utah and loss of Oklahoma and Texas.
  7. 25 sports in 2024 with addition of beach volleyball and women's lacrosse.
  8. 10 members in 2024 with addition of Kennesaw State.
    • 11 members in 2025 with addition of Delaware.
  9. Note that "independents" is not a conference; it is simply a designation used for schools whose football programs do not play in any conference. All of these schools have conference memberships for other sports.
  10. 3 FBS independent schools in 2024 with Army joining The American.
    • 2 FBS independents in 2025 with UMass joining the Mid-American Conference.
  11. 13 members in 2025 with addition of UMass.
  12. 22 sports in 2024, with sponsorship of men's swimming & diving transferring to the Missouri Valley Conference.
  13. 11 members (12 football) with Hawaii as a football-only affiliate.
  14. Pacific Coast Conference chartered in 1915; current charter formed 1959 by five former PCC members, with three others joining by 1964.
  15. 2 members in 2024 with loss of Arizona, Arizona State, California, Colorado, Oregon, Stanford, UCLA, Utah, USC, and Washington.
  16. 23 NCAA-sanctioned sports plus men's rowing; the NCAA governs women's rowing but not men's.
  17. 16 members in 2024 with addition of Oklahoma and Texas.
  18. Possibility of 21 sports with the potential addition of field hockey at an indeterminate date.

Football Championship Subdivision

In addition to competing in football, multisport conferences in the Football Championship Subdivision must still meet the general NCAA Division I requirements regarding the minimum number of men's and women's sports (see above).[1]

  1. 10 full members and 12 football members with Cal Poly and UC Davis as football-only affiliates.
  2. 9 full members and 4 football members.
    • All football members play in the Big South–OVC Football Association, an alliance between the Big South and the Ohio Valley Conference which shares a single automatic berth in the FCS playoffs.
    • 2 football members in 2024 with loss of associate members Bryant and Robert Morris.
  3. While CAA Football was formally founded in 2007, its history can be traced back decades earlier.
    • The earliest predecessor is the New England Conference, which existed from 1938–1947. However, CAA Football does not recognize this league as part of its history.
    • In 1947, four New England Conference members joined with other schools to form the Yankee Conference under a new charter. CAA Football considers its history to have started with the Yankee Conference.
    • The Yankee Conference, by then a football-only league, was taken over by the Atlantic 10 Conference after the 1996 football season.
    • The all-sports CAA took over A-10 football in 2007, forming CAA Football as a separate entity.
  4. CAA Football is a separate entity from the multi-sports CAA.
  5. 16 members in 2024 with addition of Bryant.
    • 15 members in 2025 with loss of Delaware.
  6. Note that "Independents" is not a conference; it is simply a designation used for schools whose football programs do not play in any conference. These schools have conference memberships for other sports.
  7. Kennesaw State started an FBS transition in 2023 and is not participating in the United Athletic Conference.
    • 2 independents in 2024 with Kennesaw State joining Conference USA, plus addition of Merrimack and Sacred Heart.
  8. While the Ivy League considers its athletic conference to have been established in 1954, the history of the athletic league can be traced back decades earlier:
    • In 1901, the Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League (EIBL) was formed by five schools that would later become part of the current Ivy League; the EIBL membership eventually became identical to that of the future all-sports league. The EIBL was directly absorbed into the all-sports Ivy League, which considers the EIBL to be part of its history.
    • In 1945, the Ivy Group Agreement, which governed competition and policies among the Ivy schools in football, was signed by all eight schools that eventually formed the all-sports league.
    • The official formation of the athletic Ivy League came in 1954, when the Ivy Group Agreement was extended to cover all sports.
    For more details, see the section on the history of the athletic Ivy League.
  9. The Ivy League, by NCAA count, sponsors 28 NCAA-sanctioned sports. The Ivy League awards separate men's and women's fencing championships, while the NCAA considers fencing a single coeducational sport. Additionally, the Ivy League sponsors championships in the non-NCAA sports of men's rowing plus men's and women's squash.
  10. 8 full members, 6 football members.
  11. While the MVFC began football competition in 1985, the conference charter dates to 1982. See History of the Missouri Valley Football Conference for more details.
  12. 11 members in 2024 with loss of Western Illinois.
  13. 9 full members, 8 football members with Fairleigh Dickinson and Le Moyne as non-football members and with Duquesne as a football-only affiliate.
    • 9 full members and 7 football members in 2024 with the following changes:
  14. 25 sports in 2024 with reinstatement of men's lacrosse.
  15. 11 full members, 6 football members (full members Morehead State and Western Illinois respectively play football in the Pioneer Football League and Missouri Valley Football Conference).
    • All current OVC football members (i.e., not counting Morehead State and Western Illinois) play that sport in the Big South–OVC Football Association.
    • 7 football members in 2024 with Western Illinois joining the Big South–OVC alliance.
  16. 10 full members and 7 football members with Army, Navy, American, Boston, and Loyola (MD) as non-football members (Army and Navy both compete in FBS football) and with Fordham and Georgetown as football-only affiliates.
  17. 10 full members, 9 football members.
  18. 10 full members, 8 football members.
    • 11 full members in 2024 with addition of UTRGV, which will play an exhibition-only football season in that year.
    • 9 football members in 2025 with elevation of UTRGV football to varsity status.
  19. Not an officially recognized NCAA conference; that body treats the UAC as the continuation of a preexisting football-only alliance between the Atlantic Sun Conference and Western Athletic Conference.
  20. 10 members in 2024 with addition of West Georgia.

Non-football, multi-sport conferences

Multisport conferences that do not compete in football must still meet the general NCAA Division I requirements regarding the minimum number of men's and women's sports (see above).[1]

  1. 12 members in 2024 with loss of Kennesaw State and addition of West Georgia.
  2. 14 members in 2025 with loss of UMass.
  3. Although the charter of the current Big East dates only to the 2013 split of the original Big East, both the current Big East and the American Athletic Conference claim 1979 as their founding dates. The current Big East maintains the pre-split history of the original conference in all sports that it sponsors. In football and rowing, the two sports that are sponsored by The American but not the current Big East, neither conference recognizes the history of the original Big East.
  4. 22 NCAA-sanctioned sports, plus the non-NCAA and fully coeducational esports.
  5. 21 sports in 2024 with addition of men's and women's swimming & diving.
  6. The CAA Football Conference is a separate entity from the all-sports CAA.
  7. Chicago State.
  8. 13 members in 2024 with addition of Merrimack and Sacred Heart.
  9. 23 NCAA-sanctioned sports plus two non-NCAA sports—men's rowing, and Esports, which are fully coeducational.
  10. 18 sports in 2024, with sponsorship of men's swimming & diving transferring from the Mid-American Conference to the MVC.
  11. No more than 10 schools are competing in any one of the MPSF's sports in 2023–24.
    • 38 members in 2024 with the following changes:
      • Departure of Bakersfield, Cal Poly, and UC Santa Barbara, members only in swimming & diving, due to the addition of men's and women's swimming & diving by their primary home of the Big West Conference.
      • Return of former members Oregon and Washington for the newly sponsored beach volleyball.
      • Addition of Jessup, Menlo, and Vanguard in men's volleyball.
  12. Sponsors 10 NCAA sports and 1 non-NCAA sport, artistic swimming.
    • 11 NCAA sports and 12 total sports in 2024 with addition of beach volleyball.

Ice hockey conferences

Division I ice hockey has a different conference structure than the above multisport conferences. These schools have memberships in other conferences for other sports.

  1. The Atlantic Hockey Association and College Hockey America merged in 2024 to form Atlantic Hockey America. Atlantic Hockey was founded (as the MAAC) in 1997 and the CHA in 1999.
  2. 15 members (11/7) in 2025 with the addition of Delaware to the women's side.
  3. Founded in 2020, with play starting in 2021, as the revival of an earlier CCHA that existed from 1971 to 2013; the current CCHA considers itself a continuation of the original. Bowling Green, which was a member of the original CCHA for its entire existence and is a charter member of the revived conference, maintained rights to the league name.
  4. 5 members in 2024 with Arizona State joining the National Collegiate Hockey Conference.
  5. Established as a scheduling alliance in 2017, officially organized as a conference in 2018, and officially recognized by the NCAA in 2019.
  6. Although founded in 2011, the NCHC did not begin play until 2013.
  7. 9 members in 2024 with addition of Arizona State.
  8. Founded in 1951 as a men's-only conference; women's play began in 1999. The men's side of the WCHA folded after the 2020–21 season, with most of its members forming the revived CCHA.

Other single-sport conferences

This list includes conferences in sports that the NCAA does not fully split into divisions, such as men's volleyball and rifle. Sports in which the NCAA sponsors separate championships for men and women are officially treated by the NCAA as two separate sports.

More information Conference, Nickname ...
  1. There are 7 NCAA varsity members; the conference also has one junior college member.
  2. 9 schools have both men's & women's varsity teams, 9 have men's varsity teams only, 8 have women's varsity teams only; additionally, there are 136 men's and 86 women's club teams.
  3. 7 members in 2024 with return of Sacred Heart.
  4. Women only. The GCC was founded in 2013 as a women's-only conference; a men's division was added in 2016 and shut down in 2023.
  5. There are 2 varsity members; the conference also has 7 college club members.
  6. There are 8 varsity members; the conference also has 7 college club members.
  7. There are 7 varsity members; the conference also has 6 college club members.
  8. There are 6 varsity members; the conference also has 13 college club members.
  9. 6 members in 2025 with loss of Lewis, McKendree, and Quincy.
  10. There are 10 varsity members; the conference also has 10 college club members.
  11. There are 8 varsity members; the conference also has 13 college club members.
  12. There are 8 varsity members; the conference also has 5 college club members.
  13. There are 6 varsity members; the conference also has 4 college club members.

Division II

Among the NCAA regulations, Division II institutions have to sponsor at least five sports for men and five for women (or four for men and six for women), with two team sports for each sex, and each playing season represented by each sex. Teams that consist of both men and women are counted as men's teams for sports sponsorship purposes.[5]

Current conferences

Conferences that sponsor football are highlighted in yellow.

More information Conference, Nickname ...
  1. 13 members in 2025 with addition of UC Merced.
  2. 13 full members; 12 football members.
  3. 15 members in 2024 with addition of Shorter.
    • 16 members in 2025 with addition of Ferrum.
  4. 26 sports in 2025 with addition of football.
  5. 10 competing full members, 7 football members. Roosevelt joined for administrative purposes in 2023 but does not start GLIAC competition until 2024.
    • 11 total members and 8 football members in 2024 once Roosevelt starts GLIAC competition.
  6. 14 full members, 8 football members.
    • 15 full members, 9 football members in 2024 with addition of Lincoln (MO).
  7. 25 sports in 2025 with addition of men's volleyball.
  8. 14 full members, 10 football members.
  9. Emerging sport wrestling included.
  10. 13 full members, 10 football members.
    • 12 full members, 9 football members in 2024 with addition of Erskine as a football-only affiliate and Trevecca Nazarene, and loss of Shorter and West Georgia.
    • 6 football members in 2025 with loss of Chowan, Erskine, and North Greenville.
  11. 4 all-sports independents, plus Post, a full member of a non-football conference, as a football independent.
    • 1 football independent in 2024 with addition of Shorter and loss of Post.
    • No football football independents in 2025 with loss of Shorter.
  12. 17 full members, 9 football members with Central Washington and Western Oregon as football-only affiliates.
  13. 14 full members, 12 football members.
    • 14 full members, 11 football members with loss of Lincoln (MO) and addition of Arkansas–Fort Smith.
  14. 11 full members with Davis & Elkins as a non-football member; 11 football members with UNC Pembroke as a football affiliate.
    • 11 full members and 11 football members in 2024 with addition of non-football Point Park and closure of non-football Notre Dame (OH).
    • 10 full members and 10 football members in 2025 with loss of football-only member UNC Pembroke.
  15. 12 full members, 8 football members.
    • 11 full members and 9 football members in 2024 with closure of non-football Saint Rose and addition of Post as a football-only affiliate.
  16. 15 full members, 13 football members.
    • 16 members, 14 football members in 2025 with addition of Jamestown.
  17. 14 members in 2024 with additions of Jessup, Menlo, and Vanguard, once they are scheduled to start PacWest competition.
  18. 11 members in 2025 with addition of Middle Georgia.
  19. 18 full members, 16 football members.
    • 17 full members, 15 football members in 2024 with loss of Mercyhurst.
  20. 15 full members, 10 football members.
  21. 13 full members, with Anderson (SC), Coker, and Lincoln Memorial as non-football members; 12 football members with Barton and Erskine as football affiliates.
    • 12 football members no later than 2024 with addition of football by current full member Anderson (SC) and loss of Erskine.
  22. 15 full members, 13 football members.

Single-sport conferences

More information Conference, Nickname ...

    Other sports

    These all-sports conferences sponsor sports which do not have D-II championships. One of these conferences will add a second such sport in 2025.

    1. Number reflects membership in the sport that lacks a D-II championship, not the number of full members.
    2. Expected men's volleyball membership.
    3. To be added in 2025 (2026 season).
    4. 7 members in 2024 with addition of men's volleyball by full conference member LeMoyne–Owen.

    Division III

    Unlike the other two divisions, Division III institutions cannot offer athletic scholarships. Among the other NCAA Division III requirements, schools have sports sponsorship requirements set by the NCAA. All institutions, regardless of enrollment, must sponsor at least three team sports for each sex/gender, and each playing season represented by each sex/gender.[6]

    A sports sponsorship rule unique to Division III is that the total number of sports that must be sponsored differs by a school's full-time undergraduate enrollment. Schools with an enrollment of 1,000 or fewer must sponsor at least five sports for men and five for women; those with larger enrollments must sponsor six men's and six women's sports. As in the other divisions, teams that include both men and women are treated as men's sports for the purpose of these regulations.[7]

    Current conferences

    Conferences that sponsor football highlighted in yellow.

    More information Conference, Nickname ...
    1. 10 full members with Concordia Texas, LeTourneau, Ozarks, and UT Dallas as non-football members, 8 football members with Austin and Texas Lutheran as football-only affiliates.
      • 6 full members and 4 football members in 2024 with departure of full members Concordia Texas, McMurry, Ozarks, and Sul Ross State and football-only members Austin and Texas Lutheran.
      • 5 full members in 2025 with the departure of UT Dallas.
    2. 7 full members in 2024 with the closure of Cabrini and addition of Pratt.
    3. 11 full members, 7 football members.
    4. 6 full members in 2024 with departure of Pratt.
    5. 9 full members, 10 football members with Washington (MO) as a football-only affiliate.
    6. 9 members in 2024 with loss of Berea and addition of Asbury.
    7. 10 members, 6 football members.
    8. 3 members in 2024 with loss of Anna Maria and Vermont State Castleton.
    9. 9 full members with Elmira, Houghton, Keuka, Nazareth, and Russell Sage as non-football members; 7 football members with SUNY Brockport, SUNY Cortland, and SUNY Morrisville as football-only affiliates.
      • 11 full members and 8 football members in 2024 with addition of Hilbert in football and non-football SUNY Brockport and SUNY Geneseo.
    10. 14 members in 2024 with loss of Anna Maria and Johnson & Wales.
    11. 10 full members, 8 football members.
      • 10 full members and 7 football members in 2024 with addition of Berea and loss of Defiance.
    12. 3 all-sports independents (non-football), 2 football independents (which are members of non-football conferences).
      • 2 all-sports independents in 2024 with loss of Asbury.
    13. 10 members with Drew, Elizabethtown, Goucher, and Scranton as non-football members and 7 football with Keystone as a football-only affiliate.
    14. 12 full members, 7 football members with Buffalo State as a football-only affiliate.
    15. 8 full members with MCLA and Salem State as non-football members, 9 football members with Plymouth State, UMass–Dartmouth, and Western Connecticut State as football affiliates.
      • 9 full members and 11 football members in 2024 with addition of Anna Maria and football-only Castleton.
    16. 9 full members, 7 football members.
    17. The MAC is actually an umbrella organization of three conferences. Eight schools are members of the MAC Commonwealth and eight others are members of the MAC Freedom. Each league conducts competition in the same set of 14 sports, not including football. The third league, called the Middle Atlantic Conference, combines schools from the MAC Commonwealth and MAC Freedom for 13 other sports, including football.
    18. 16 full members (8 Commonwealth, 8 Freedom) and 10 football members.
    19. 9 full members, 10 football members with Chicago as a football affiliate.
    20. 13 full members, 10 football members.
    21. 11 full members, 10 football members.
    22. 12 full members and 8 football members.
    23. 10 full members with New Jersey City, Ramapo, Rutgers–Newark, Rutgers–Camden, and Stockton as non-football members; 7 football members with Christopher Newport and Salisbury as football affiliates.
    24. 12 full members in 2024 with loss of SUNY Canton, and SUNY Morrisville.
    25. 9 members in 2025 with loss of Hiram and addition of John Carroll.
    26. 14 full members, 9 football members with Eureka as a football-only affiliate.
    27. 9 full members, 8 football members.
    28. 9 members in 2025 with loss of John Carroll.
    29. 15 full members, 8 football members.
      • 14 full members, 8 football members in 2025 with addition of Roanoke football and loss of Ferrum.
    30. 26 sports in 2024 with addition of men's volleyball.
    31. 11 full members, 11 football members, with two full members not sponsoring football (Chatham and Franciscan) and two football affiliates (Carnegie Mellon and Case Western Reserve).
      • 12 full members and 12 football members in 2025 with addition of Hiram.
    32. 24 sports in 2024 with addition of men's volleyball.
    33. 8 full members, 9 football members with one full member not sponsoring football (Oglethorpe) and two football affiliates (Southwestern and Trinity [TX]).
      • 7 full members, 8 football members in 2024 with closure of Birmingham–Southern.
      • 9 full members in 2025 with Southwestern and Trinity (TX) moving all their other sports from the SCAC.
    34. 9 full members, 6 football members.
    35. 10 full members in 2024 with addition of McMurry and 5 football members planned for the reinstated football league in that year, with full members Austin, Centenary (LA), McMurry and Texas Lutheran joined by football-only affiliate Lyon.
      • 8 full members in 2025 with losses of Southwestern and Trinity (TX).
      • 6 football members no later than 2026, with addition of Schreiner's football.
    36. 19 sports in 2024 with reinstatement of football.
    37. 10 members in 2024 with loss of SUNY Brockport and SUNY Geneseo, and addition of SUNY Canton and SUNY Morrisville.
    38. 9 full members in 2025 with closure of Fontbonne.
    39. 18 full members in 2024 with addition of Penn State Brandywine.
    40. 8 full members with Bethany Lutheran, North Central, Northland, and Wisconsin–Superior as non-football members; 6 football members with Greenville, and Westminster (MO) as football-only affiliates.
    41. 10 full members with Mary Baldwin, Meredith, Pfeiffer, Salem College, and William Peace as non-football members; 9 football members with Belhaven, Huntingdon, LaGrange, and Maryville as football-affiliates.

    Single-sport conferences

    1. Operated as an all-sports conference from 2007–2023.
    2. 8 members in 2025 with loss of Lesley.
    3. Also organizes competition in the non-NCAA esports.

    Other sports

    These all-sports conferences sponsor sports which do not have D-III championships.

    1. Number reflects membership in the sport that lacks a D-III championship, not the total conference membership.

    Defunct NCAA conferences

    More information Conference, Division ...
    • * - Operated before the NCAA split into divisions in 1955.

    In addition to the above, three single-sport conferences that currently participate in NCAA National Collegiate sports (those whose championship events are open to members of more than one NCAA division) and previously operated both men's and women's divisions now operate as women-only leagues.

    More information Conference, Division ...

    See also


    References

    1. "Bylaw 20.02.5: Multisport Conference". 2020–21 NCAA Division I Manual (PDF). August 7, 2020. pp. 394–95. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 31, 2020. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
    2. "Bylaw 20.10.5.3: Sports Sponsorship, Single-Gender Institution Exception". 2021–22 NCAA Division I Manual. NCAA. August 1, 2021. p. 402. Archived from the original on April 28, 2023. Retrieved April 23, 2022. Identically numbered and worded bylaws exist in the Division II Archived 2022-04-23 at the Wayback Machine and Division III Archived 2020-11-01 at the Wayback Machine Manuals, though page numbering is different from that in the Division I Manual.
    3. "Bylaw 20.02.6: Football Bowl Subdivision Conference". 2020–21 NCAA Division I Manual (PDF). August 7, 2020. p. 395. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 31, 2020. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
    4. "Who We Are: Our Three Divisions". NCAA. Archived from the original on August 20, 2020. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
    5. "Bylaw 20.10.3 Sports Sponsorship". 2017–18 NCAA Division II Manual (PDF). p. 316. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 25, 2018. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
    6. "Divisional Differences and the History of Multidivision Classification". NCAA. Archived from the original on July 14, 2015. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
    7. "Bylaw 20.11.3: Sports Sponsorship". 2021–22 NCAA Division I Manual. NCAA. August 1, 2021. pp. 221–25. Archived from the original on November 1, 2020. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
    8. "USA South Announces Conference Restructuring". USA South Athletic Conference. February 18, 2022. Archived from the original on February 21, 2022. Retrieved February 26, 2022.
    9. Burton, Roy (June 4, 2014). "WSU joins friends/foes as Big Sky brings back men's golf". Standard-Examiner. Ogden, UT. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved June 13, 2014.
    10. "Miscellany". Los Angeles Times. April 9, 1991. Archived from the original on February 24, 2020. Retrieved August 7, 2014.
    11. "CCIW Announces the Addition of Women's Bowling as Its 25th Sport; Three Programs Added as Associate Members" (Press release). College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin. July 23, 2020. Archived from the original on March 22, 2022. Retrieved September 7, 2020.
    12. "United East Conference and Colonial States Athletic Conference Officially Merge". The Southern Maryland Chronicle. June 23, 2023. Archived from the original on July 7, 2023. Retrieved July 8, 2023.
    13. "MAC Announces Historic Wrestling Expansion" (Press release). Mid-American Conference. March 5, 2019. Archived from the original on March 6, 2019. Retrieved March 15, 2019.
    14. Coleman, Pat; McHugh, Dave (February 16, 2022). "USA South Athletic Conference to split in two". D3Sports.com. Archived from the original on February 17, 2022. Retrieved February 28, 2022.
    15. Mannis, Taylor (March 9, 2017). "Heartland Conference Looking to Expand". The Vantage. Wichita, KS. Archived from the original on December 22, 2017. Retrieved December 19, 2017.
    16. "Lone Star Conference to Add Eight Schools in 2019" (Press release). Lone Star Conference. August 30, 2017. Archived from the original on August 31, 2017. Retrieved August 31, 2017.
    17. "Hillcats to join MIAA Conference for 2019-2020 season" (Press release). Rogers State Hillcats. October 18, 2018. Archived from the original on October 19, 2018. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
    18. "Newman to Compete in MIAA as Associate Member in 2019-20" (Press release). Newman Jets. February 8, 2018. Archived from the original on February 9, 2018. Retrieved February 15, 2018.
    19. "New Southland Bowling League Established" (Press release). Southland Conference. January 20, 2015. Archived from the original on April 4, 2015. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
    20. "Conference USA to Add Bowling for 2023-24 Season" (Press release). Conference USA. May 10, 2023. Archived from the original on May 22, 2023. Retrieved May 15, 2023.

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