Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference

Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference
Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference
(RMAC)
Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference logo
Established 1909
Association NCAA
Division Division II
Members 14
Sports fielded 21 (men's: 11; women's: 10)
Region Mountain States
Former names Colorado Faculty Athletic Conference (1909–1910)
Rocky Mountain Faculty Athletic Conference (1910–1967)
Headquarters Colorado Springs, Colorado
Website rmacsports.org
Locations
Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference locations

The Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference (RMAC) is a college athletic conference which operates in the western United States, mostly in Colorado with some members in Nebraska and New Mexico. It participates in the NCAA's Division II.

Founded in 1909, the RMAC is the fifth oldest college athletic conference in the United States (oldest in Division II), surpassed only by the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association, the Big Ten Conference, the Ohio Athletic Conference, and the Missouri Valley Conference. For its first thirty years, the RMAC was considered a major conference equivalent to today's Division I, before 7 larger members left and formed the Mountain States Conference (also called the Skyline Conference).

The Colorado Faculty Athletic Conference changed its name to the Rocky Mountain Faculty Athletic Conference (RMFAC) on May 7, 1910. Continued until 1967 when the name of the conference changed to the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference. The RMAC merged with the Colorado Athletic Conference in 1996.[citation needed]

Contents

Charter members

Other members

Member schools

Institution Location Nickname Founded Type Enrollment
Adams State College Alamosa, Colorado Grizzlies 1925 Public 2,486
Chadron State College Chadron, Nebraska Eagles 1911 Public 3,000
Colorado Christian University* Lakewood, Colorado Cougars 1914 Private 1,500
University of Colorado Colorado Springs* Colorado Springs, Colorado Mountain Lions 1965 Public 7,400
Colorado Mesa University Grand Junction, Colorado Mavericks 1925 Public 8,042
Colorado School of Mines Golden, Colorado Orediggers 1873 Public 3,338
Colorado State University–Pueblo Pueblo, Colorado ThunderWolves 1933 Public 5,145
Fort Lewis College Durango, Colorado Skyhawks 1911 Public 4,000
Metropolitan State College of Denver* Denver, Colorado Roadrunners 1965 Public 24,000
University of Nebraska at Kearney Kearney, Nebraska Lopers 1903 Public 6,379
New Mexico Highlands University Las Vegas, New Mexico Cowboys/Cowgirls 1893 Public 3,500
Regis University* Denver, Colorado Rangers 1877 Private 6,123
Western New Mexico University Silver City, New Mexico Mustangs 1893 Public 2,500
Western State College of Colorado Gunnison, Colorado Mountaineers 1901 Public 2,400

Membership timeline

There have been 39 different schools associated with the RMAC either through full or associate membership. Of those schools only the Colorado School of Mines has been with the conference every year since it was founded in 1909.

Current member (powder blue)
Affiliate or sssociate member only* (yellow)
Past member (orange)
Future member (green)

Membership evolution

  • 1909: The Colorado Faculty Athletic Conference was formed on March 6 with four charter members: University of Colorado, Colorado A&M (now Colorado State University), Colorado College and Colorado School of Mines.
  • 1910: The league changed its name to the Rocky Mountain Faculty Athletic Conference (RFMAC). The University of Denver and University of Utah join the league, but Colorado College drops out after a fallout with Colorado School of Mines. Membership is at five schools.
  • 1914: Colorado College rejoins the RFMAC. Utah State University also joins the league to bring membership up to seven.
  • 1917: Montana State University joins the conference.
  • 1918: Brigham Young University joins the league as the ninth member.
  • 1921: The University of Wyoming joins the conference.
  • 1924: Western State College and the University of Northern Colorado join the league, giving the RFMAC 12 members.
  • 1937: Colorado, Colorado State, Brigham Young, Utah, Utah State, Wyoming and Denver leave the conference to form the Skyline Conference. The five remaining members of the RFMAC were Colorado College, Colorado Mines, Montana State, Northern Colorado and Western State.
  • 1948: Idaho State University joins as the sixth member.
  • 1956: Adams State College joins the conference as the seventh member.
  • 1958: Idaho State leaves the conference.
  • 1959: Montana State leaves the conference, membership is back down to five.
  • 1967: The RFMAC changes its name to the current Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference (RMAC). Eleven schools join the conference in 1967. They were: Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Fort Lewis College, the University of Nebraska at Omaha, Pittsburg State University, the University of Southern Colorado (now Colorado State-Pueblo), Southern Utah State University, Regis University, Washburn University, Western New Mexico University and Westminster College of Utah. Colorado College is not included in this new league. The new league divided into two divisions: Mountains and Plains.
  • 1968: New Mexico Highlands University joins the RMAC.
  • 1969: New Mexico Highlands leaves the RMAC due to financial aid restrictions.
  • 1972: For economic reasons, the two divisions were split into two separate conferences. The Mountain Division kept the RMAC name while the Plains Division became known as the Great Plains Athletic Conference. The two allied conferences worked under the name of the Mountain and Plains Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MPIAA). RMAC membership stood at eight with Adams State, Colorado Mines, Fort Lewis, Regis, Southern Utah State, Western New Mexico, Western State and Westminster. Northern Colorado ended up leaving the association to become an independent.
  • 1974: New Mexico Highlands rejoins the RMAC as the ninth member.
  • 1975: Mesa State College becomes the 10th member of the RMAC.
  • 1976: The MPIAA was dissolved for economic reasons and the two conferences went their separate ways. Colorado State-Pueblo switched conferences and joined the RMAC as its 11th member.
  • 1978: The RMAC beings sponsoring women's championships.
  • 1979: Westminster drops athletics and as a result leaves the RMAC, leaving the league with 10 members.
  • 1983: Regis leaves the RMAC to become an independent, leaving the league with nine teams.
  • 1986: Southern Utah State left the league, dropping membership to eight.
  • 1988: New Mexico Highlands withdraws from the conference to shrink the membership to seven schools.
  • 1989: Chadron State College, Fort Hays State University, Kearney State College (now University of Nebraska at Kearney) and Wayne State College announce intentions to join.
  • 1990: Wayne State College and Kearney State College withdraw their interest in joining the league. Western New Mexico and Colorado State-Pueblo announce that they are leaving the RMAC. Fort Lewis announces their intention to leave, however they stay on as an associate member of the conference. New Mexico Highlands rejoins the RMAC.
  • 1992: The RMAC becomes affiliated with the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division II level.
  • 1994: Fort Lewis once again became a full member of the RMAC. Nebraska-Kearney also was voted into membership.
  • 1996: Colorado Christian University and Metropolitan State College join the RMAC. Regis and Colorado State-Pueblo rejoin the league. All four are full members. Also, the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs and the University of Denver join the RMAC as affiliate and associate members, respectively. The RMAC, now comprising fourteen schools, splits into two seven-team divisions.
  • 1997: Denver leaves to move up to Division I. Colorado-Colorado Springs becomes a full member. San Francisco State joins the RMAC as an associate member in wrestling only.
  • 2006: Fort Hays State leaves the RMAC for the MIAA (FHSU does remain in the RMAC as an associate member in wrestling). Western New Mexico rejoins the conference, keeping membership at 14 schools.
  • 2007: Grand Canyon University joins the RMAC as an associate member only in wrestling. Montana State University-Billings joins the RMAC as an associate member for women's golf and men's and women's tennis.
  • 2008: Texas-Permian Basin and the University of the Incarnate Word join the RMAC as associate members for swimming only.
  • 2009: Northern State University and Minnesota State University-Moorhead join the RMAC as associate members in swimming.
  • 2012: Nebraska-Kearney will leave the RMAC to join the MIAA. Black Hills State University moves up from the NAIA to NCAA Division II and will join the RMAC to keep the number of full members at 14.

Football champions

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Mountain States Conference — Established 1938 Dissolved 1962 Association NCAA Division Division I Members 9 Region …   Wikipedia

  • Mountain West Conference — Mountain West redirects here. For the geographic region of the United States, see Mountain States. Mountain West Conference (MW) Established 1999 Association NCAA …   Wikipedia

  • Dakota Athletic Conference — (DAC) Established 2000 Association NAIA Members 4 …   Wikipedia

  • Rocky Mountain Rage — Pro hockey team text color = #CDB891 bg color = #800020 team = Rocky Mountain Rage logosize = 150px city = Broomfield, Colorado league = Central Hockey League conference = Northern Conference division = Northwest Division founded = 2006 arena =… …   Wikipedia

  • Rocky Mountain College — Infobox University name = Rocky Mountain College established = 1878 type = Private endowment = president = faculty = students = 898 undergrad = 848 postgrad = 50 campus = Suburban, 60 acres city = Billings state = Mont. country = USA free label …   Wikipedia

  • Conference Carolinas — Established 1930 Association NCAA Division …   Wikipedia

  • FSN Rocky Mountain — Infobox TV channel name = FSN Rocky Mountain logofile = FSN Rocky Mountain logo.png logosize = logoalt = FSN Rocky Mountain logo2 = launch = November 1988 (as Prime Sports Rocky Mountain) closed date = picture format = share = share as of = share …   Wikipedia

  • Pacific-12 Conference — (Pac 12) Established 1915 Association NCAA Division …   Wikipedia

  • List of college athletic conferences — This is a List of Athletic Conferences of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA).NCAA Division IDivision I Football Bowl SubdivisionFormerly known as Division I A *Atlantic …   Wikipedia

  • Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association — (CIAA) Established 1912 Association …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”