Southwestern_Athletic_Conference

Southwestern Athletic Conference

Southwestern Athletic Conference

Collegiate athletic conference made up of historically black colleges and universities


The Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) is a collegiate athletic conference headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, which is made up of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in the Southern United States. It participates in the NCAA's Division I for most sports; in football, it participates in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), formerly referred to as Division I-AA.

Quick Facts Association, Founded ...

The SWAC is considered the premier HBCU conference and ranks among the elite in the nation in terms of alumni affiliated with professional sports teams, particularly in football.[1] On the gridiron, the conference has been the biggest draw on the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level of the NCAA, leading the nation in average home attendance every year except one since FCS has been in existence.[2][3] In 1994, the SWAC fell just 40,000 fans short of becoming the first non-Football Bowl Subdivision conference to attract one million fans to its home games.

History

Location of SWAC members
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Alabama A&M
Texas Southern
Southern
Prairie View A&M
Grambling
State
Arkansas–Pine Bluff
Alcorn State
Mississippi
Valley State
Jackson
State
Florida A&M
Bethune-Cookman
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Alabama State
Location of SWAC members: East Division, West Division

In 1920, athletic officials from six Texas HBCUs C. H. Fuller of Bishop College, Red Randolph and C. H. Patterson of Paul Quinn College, E. G. Evans, H. J. Evans and H. J. Starns of Prairie View A&M, D. C. Fuller of Texas College and G. Whitte Jordan of Wiley University met in Houston to discuss common interests. At this meeting, they agreed to form a new league, the SWAC.[citation needed]

Paul Quinn became the first of the original members to withdraw from the league in 1929. When Langston University of Oklahoma was admitted into the conference two years later, it began the migration of state-supported institutions into the SWAC. Southern University entered the ranks in 1934, followed by Arkansas AM&N (now the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff) in 1936 and Texas Southern University in 1954.[citation needed]

Rapid growth in enrollment of the state-supported schools made it difficult for the church-supported schools to finance their athletics programs and one by one they fell victim to the growing prowess of the state-supported colleges. Huston–Tillotson (formerly Samuel Huston) withdrew from the conference in 1954,[4] Bishop in 1956, and Langston in 1957—one year before the admittance of two more state-supported schools: Grambling College and Jackson State College. The enter-exit cycle continued in 1962 when Texas College withdrew,[5] followed by the admittance of Alcorn A&M (now Alcorn State University) that same year. Wiley left in 1968, the same year Mississippi Valley State College entered. Arkansas AM&N exited in 1970 and Alabama State University entered in 1982. Arkansas–Pine Bluff (formerly Arkansas AM&N) rejoined the SWAC on July 1, 1997, regaining full-member status one year later. Alabama A&M University became the conference's tenth member when it became a full member in September 1999 after a one-year period as an affiliate SWAC member.[6] Most of the former SWAC members that have left the conference are currently a part of the Red River Athletic Conference of the NAIA.

On 3 September 2020, the SWAC had announced that there would be a division realignment with the additions of Florida A&M University and Bethune-Cookman University beginning with the 2021–22 academic year; which both would compete in the SWAC East, while Alcorn State would be moving to the SWAC West.[7]

Chronological timeline

Competitions

The SWAC is one of three FCS conferences the others being the Ivy League and the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference whose conference champion does not participate in the FCS playoffs, opting instead to play in the Celebration Bowl against the champion of the MEAC. However, SWAC teams can still be invited via an at-large invitation, as was the case in 2021 when SWAC member Florida A&M University was invited over SWAC conference football champion Jackson State, who was obligated via contract to play in the 2021 Celebration Bowl. The SWAC instead splits its schools into two divisions, and plays a conference championship game. Three of the SWAC's teams, Alabama State in the Turkey Day Classic and Grambling and Southern in the Bayou Classic, play their last games of the regular season on Thanksgiving weekend, preventing the SWAC Championship from being decided until the first weekend of December, long after the tournament is underway.

Current championship competition offered by the SWAC includes competition for men in baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, indoor track, outdoor track & field and tennis. Women's competition is offered in the sports of basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, indoor track, outdoor track & field, soccer, softball, tennis and volleyball.[6]

Member schools

Current full members

The SWAC currently has 12 full members, all but one are public schools:

More information Institution, Location ...
Notes
  1. MVSU has an Itta Bena mailing address, but is located in unincorporated Leflore County and is designated by the U.S. Census Bureau as Mississippi Valley State, Mississippi.
  2. Alcorn State has a Lorman mailing address, but is located in an unincorporated area of Claiborne County that is designated by the U.S. Census Bureau as Alcorn State, Mississippi.
  3. Arkansas–Pine Bluff left the SWAC after the 1969–70 school year as Arkansas AM&N; before re-joining in the 1997–98 school year as an affiliate, and to gain full member status the following season (1998–99).

Former members

The SWAC had six former full members, all but one were private schools:

More information Institution, Location ...
Notes
  1. Bishop was originally at Marshall, Texas, during its tenure with the SWAC until 1961, when the college was moved to Dallas, Texas, until the school's closing in 1988
  2. Bishop was closed in 1988. Upon its closure, Paul Quinn College relocated from Waco to Dallas and re-established itself at the Bishop College campus.
  3. Formerly known as Samuel Huston College until its merger with Tillotson College on October 24, 1952.
  4. Formerly known as Wiley College from 1929 to November 3, 2023.

Divisional realignment

Alcorn State moved to the West Division with the additions of both Bethune–Cookman and Florida A&M in 2021.

More information East Division, West Division ...

Membership timeline

Bethune–Cookman UniversityFlorida A&M UniversityAlabama A&M UniversityAlabama State UniversityMississippi Valley State UniversityAlcorn State UniversityJackson State UniversityGrambling State UniversityTexas Southern UniversityUniversity of Arkansas at Pine BluffUniversity of Arkansas at Pine BluffSouthern UniversityLangston UniversityWiley UniversityTexas CollegeHuston–Tillotson UniversityHuston–Tillotson UniversityPrairie View A&M UniversityPaul Quinn CollegeBishop College

Full members Full members (non-football)

Sports

The SWAC sponsors championship competitions in eight men's and ten women's NCAA sanctioned sports:[8]

More information Sport, Men's ...

Men's sponsored sports by school

More information School, Baseball ...

    Women's sponsored sports by school

    More information School, Basketball ...

      Facilities

      School Football stadium Capacity Basketball arena Capacity Baseball stadium Capacity
      Alabama A&M Louis Crews Stadium 21,000 Alabama A&M Events Center 6,000 Bulldog Field 500
      Alabama State Hornet Stadium 26,500 ASU Acadome 7,400 Wheeler–Watkins Baseball Complex 500
      Alcorn State Spinks-Casem Stadium 22,500 Davey Whitney Complex 7,000 Foster Baseball Field at McGowan Stadium
      Arkansas–Pine Bluff Golden Lion Stadium 16,000 K. L. Johnson Complex 4,500 Torii Hunter Baseball/Softball Complex 1,000
      Bethune–Cookman Daytona Stadium 10,000 Moore Gymnasium 3,000 Jackie Robinson Ballpark 4,200[9]
      Florida A&M Bragg Memorial Stadium 19,633[10] Al Lawson Teaching Gym 9,639[11] Moore–Kittles Field 500[12]
      Grambling State Eddie G. Robinson Memorial Stadium 19,600 Fredrick C. Hobdy Assembly Center 7,500 Wilbert Ellis Field at Ralph Waldo Emerson Jones Park 1,100
      Jackson State Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium 60,492 Williams Assembly Center 8,000 Braddy Field 800
      Mississippi Valley State Rice–Totten Stadium 10,000 Harrison HPER Complex 5,000 Magnolia Field 120
      Prairie View A&M Panther Stadium at Blackshear Field 15,000 William Nicks Building 6,500 John W. Tankersley Field 512[13]
      Southern Ace W. Mumford Stadium 29,000 F. G. Clark Center 7,500 Lee–Hines Field 1,500
      Texas Southern Shell Energy Stadium 22,000 Health and Physical Education Arena 8,100 MacGregor Park

      SWAC championships

      A medal podium at the 2021 SWAC Outdoor Track and Field Championship

      Football

      Prior to splitting into divisions and using a postseason championship game to decide its overall champion, the SWAC determined its champions by winning-percentage against conference opponents in regular season play.

      In 1933 Langston appeared to win the title outright with a 4–0 conference record after the regular season, while Wiley finished 4–1, and Prairie View A&M finished 3–1. Langston was invited to the Prairie View Bowl, which was won by Prairie View. The Panthers subsequently declared themselves SWAC champions even though their claim was based on a postseason game. The SWAC seems to acknowledge both schools' claims to the title in the conference's football media guide,[14] although some other sources[15] including Michael Hurd's Black College Football, 1892–1992: One Hundred Years of History, Education, and Pride (1993) also list Wiley as an additional co-champion, apparently since all three schools had 4–1 records against conference opponents if the postseason game is incorporated into the regular season conference standings.

      Prairie View vacated[15] its 1941 championship.[16] No championship was awarded in 1943 due to World War II.[15] Grambling vacated its 1975 championship due to a violation of SWAC rules for scheduling opponents.

      Games from 1999 to 2012 were played at Legion Field in Birmingham, Alabama. The conference moved the game in 2013 to NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas. Starting in 2019, the game will officially be played at the first place team's home Since 2015, the winner of the SWAC plays the winner of the MEAC conference in an overall HBCU championship bowl game called the Celebration Bowl in Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The MEAC gave up its automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs for this game.

      Texas Southern vacated its 2010 championship due to violations of NCAA rules.[17]

      The 2020–21 football season was played during Spring 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

      More information Year, Champion ...

      Since splitting into western and eastern divisions and using a postseason championship game to decide its overall champion, the SWAC determines its division champions by winning-percentage against conference opponents in regular season play. For the 1999 season only, inter-divisional conference games did not count in the conference standings. Each division's outright champion or top-seeded co-champion advances to the championship game.[14]

      Texas Southern vacated its 2010 division championship due to violations of NCAA rules.[17]

      Note: an asterisk denotes the division's top-seeded co-champion and representative in the SWAC Championship Game; a double-asterisk denotes that the division's co-champion was ineligible for the SWAC Championship Game due to a violation of SWAC rules that were in effect from 2011 to 2014 concerning Academic Progress Rate (APR) scores.[19][20]

      Starting with the 2021 season with the additions of both Bethune-Cookman and Florida A&M, the football schedule is as follows:

      • Each school plays eight conference games (five divisional, three non-divisional) and rotates three teams from the opposite division every two years.
      • The best team in the SWAC gets to host the SWAC championship game.
      • The SWAC champion advances to the Celebration Bowl versus the MEAC champion. The loser ends its season.

      Celebration Bowl results

      More information Year, MEAC team ...

      Men's basketball

      The 1977–78 season was the SWAC's first as an NCAA Division I basketball conference.[21]

      The semi-final and championship SWAC Basketball Tournament games are held at the Bill Harris Arena in Birmingham, Alabama.[22] As of the 2017 tournaments,[23] they feature an eight-team three-day layout with the quarterfinal rounds hosted on campus sites. This changes the previous 10-team, five-day tournament format. The higher seeded teams will host a combined eight games leaving two days for travel and practice rounds. The tournament concludes with the semi-finals and championship rounds inside Birmingham's Bill Harris Arena. Winners of the tournaments earn automatic bids to their respective NCAA Division I Tournaments. The championship games are nationally televised live annually on an ESPN network.

      More information Year, Regular season ...

      Men's basketball tournament performance by school

      More information School, Championships ...

      Women's basketball

      More information Year, Regular season ...

      Baseball

      This is a list of the last ten SWAC baseball champions; for the full history, see the list of Southwestern Athletic Conference baseball champions. In recent decades, the conference tournament has determined the overall champions; for specifics concerning the tournament in particular, see the Southwestern Athletic Conference baseball tournament.

      SWAC marching bands

      Marching bands have a rich tradition being a centerpiece of pride and school spirit for each institution in the conference. Furthermore, the competitiveness, prestige, pageantry, and showmanship of SWAC marching bands significantly add to the unique identity and culture of the conference.

      More information School, Band ...

      References

      1. "Y-E-A promotes SWAC Championship at Texas Black Expo - SWAC - Southwestern Athletic Conference". SWAC. Retrieved July 20, 2015.
      2. HBCU Sports May 19, 2015 Football 2 Comments (May 19, 2015). "SWAC Ranks No.1 In FCS Football Attendance". HBCU Sports. Retrieved July 20, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
      3. "H–T Plans To Resume Grid Sport". Austin American (p. 23). September 21, 1955.
      4. "Grambling Grid Slate Announced". Shreveport Times (sec. D, p. 5). June 24, 1962.
      5. Archived July 4, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
      6. "Southwestern Athletic Conference". SWAC. Retrieved July 20, 2015.
      7. "Radiology Associates Field". Daytona Tortugas. Minor League Baseball. Archived from the original on December 1, 2017. Retrieved November 19, 2017.
      8. "Bragg Memorial Stadium". Florida A&M University. Archived from the original on July 30, 2017. Retrieved November 19, 2017.
      9. "Al Lawson Center". Florida A&M University. Archived from the original on November 9, 2017. Retrieved November 19, 2017.
      10. "Moore-Kittles Field". FAMUAthletics.com. Archived from the original on May 8, 2013. Retrieved November 19, 2017.
      11. "Tankersley Field". Prairie View A&M University Athletics. Retrieved November 21, 2014.
      12. "2015 SWAC Football Media Day by SWAC". Issuu.com. July 20, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
      13. "Grambling State University Tigers" (PDF). Gsutigers.com. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
      14. "The Afro American - Google News Archive Search". News.google.com. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
      15. TheMatadorSports (October 9, 2012). "Texas Southern Faces 2013 & 2014 Postseason Ban". Business Insider. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
      16. "Turnovers kill Grambling as Alcorn captures SWAC title". Thenewsstar.com. December 6, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
      17. "Ineligible Jackson St predicted to win SWAC East". USA Today. July 19, 2011. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
      18. Murrell, I.C. (May 14, 2014). "Despite APR, Golden Lions still eligible for SWAC football title | Pine Bluff Commercial". Pbcommercial.com. Archived from the original on April 25, 2016. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
      19. "SWAC concludes Spring Meetings". Swac.org. Retrieved June 15, 2016.

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