ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE

'Atlantic Coast Conference'

Acc.jpg

'Data'
Classification NCAA Division I
Established 1953
Members 12
Region East Coast
Sports fielded 20
NCAA
championships
97
NCAA men's titles 116
NCAA women's titles 57
Commissioner John Swofford
'Locations'

The 'Atlantic Coast Conference' ('ACC') is a collegiate athletic league in the United States. Founded in 1953, the ACC's twelve member universities compete in twenty sports in the NCAA's Division I. Its football teams participate in the Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS; formerly Division I-A), the higher of two levels of Division I college football.

Contents
History
Commissioners
Members
Member Map
Sports
2006-2007 ACC Champions
Baseball
Basketball
History
Today
Football
Divisions
National Championships
Bowl Games
Lacrosse
Soccer
Facilities
Rivalries
Intra-conference rivalries
Extra-conference rivalries
See also
External links

History


'Charter members' of the ACC were Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina, and Wake Forest. The seven ACC charter members had been aligned with the Southern Conference, but left primarily due to the league's ban on postseason play. After drafting a set of bylaws for the creation of a new league, they formally withdrew from the Southern Conference at the Spring Meeting on the morning of May 8, 1953. The bylaws were ratified and the ACC officially came into existence on June 14, 1953. On December 4, 1953, officials convened in Greensboro, North Carolina, and admitted Virginia into the conference.
In 1971, the ACC lost a member in the University of South Carolina, now a member of the Southeastern Conference. The ACC operated with seven members until the addition of former Southeastern Conference member Georgia Tech from the Metro Conference on April 3, 1978. The addition of Florida State, also from the Metro Conference, on July 1, 1991, brought the total to nine. The ACC added three members from the Big East during the 2003 cycle of conference realignment: Miami and Virginia Tech joined on July 1, 2004, and Boston College joined on July 1, 2005, as the league's twelfth member and first from New England. The expansion was not without controversy, as Connecticut, Rutgers, Pittsburgh, and West Virginia (and, initially, Virginia Tech) filed lawsuits against the ACC and against Miami and Boston College for conspiring to weaken the Big East.
Commissioners


★ James H. Weaver 1954-1970

★ Robert James 1971-1987

★ Eugene F. Corrigan 1987-1997

★ John Swofford 1997-present

Members


InstitutionNicknameLocationEstablishedJoined ACCSchool typeUndergraduate EnrollmentVarsity sportsNCAA championships
(excludes football
★ )
Boston CollegeEaglesChestnut Hill, Massachusetts 1863 2005 Private 9,019 31 2
Clemson UniversityTigersClemson, South Carolina 1889 1953 Public 13,959 19 3
Duke UniversityBlue DevilsDurham, North Carolina 1838 1953 Private 6,259 26 9
Florida State UniversitySeminolesTallahassee, Florida 1851 1991 Public 30,206 19 5
Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)Yellow JacketsAtlanta, Georgia 1885 1979 Public 12,360 17 1
University of MarylandTerrapinsCollege Park, Maryland 1856 1953 Public 24,876 27 21
University of MiamiHurricanesCoral Gables, Florida 1925 2004 Private 10,132 17 5
University of North CarolinaTar HeelsChapel Hill, North Carolina 1789 1953 Public 16,278 28 32
North Carolina State UniversityWolfpackRaleigh, North Carolina 1887 1953 Public 22,879 25 2
University of VirginiaCavaliersCharlottesville, Virginia 1819 1953 Public 13,387 25 15
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech)HokiesBlacksburg, Virginia 1872 2004 Public 21,937 21 0
Wake Forest UniversityDemon DeaconsWinston-Salem, North Carolina 1834 1953 Private 4,231 18 7


Division I Bowl Subdivision (formerly Division I-A) football is the only sport for which the NCAA does not sponsor a championship. Instead, major-college football championships are sponsored by various third parties, such as the Bowl Championship Series and the Associated Press. The championship totals presented in this table do not include football championships.
Member Map

ACC-Map.png

Sports


Member universities compete in the following sports:

Baseball

Men's Basketball

Women's Basketball

Cross Country

Field Hockey

Football

Men's Golf

Women's Golf

Men's Lacrosse

Women's Lacrosse

Rowing

Men's Soccer

Women's Soccer

Softball

Swimming & Diving

Men's Tennis

Women's Tennis

Track & Field

Volleyball

Wrestling
2006-2007 ACC Champions

'Fall Sports'

★ 'Men's Cross Country: NC State'

★ 'Women's Cross County: NC State'

★ 'Field Hockey: Wake Forest'

★ 'Football: Wake Forest'

★ 'Men's Soccer: Duke'

★ 'Women's Soccer: North Carolina'

★ 'Volleyball: Duke'
'Winter Sports'

★ 'Men's Basketball: North Carolina'

★ 'Women's Basketball: North Carolina '

★ 'Men's Swimming: Florida State'

★ 'Women's Swimming: North Carolina'

★ 'Men's Indoor Track & Field: Florida State'

★ 'Women's Indoor Track & Field: Virginia Tech'

★ 'Wrestling: NC State'
'Spring Sports'

★ 'Baseball: North Carolina'

★ 'Men's Golf: Georgia Tech & Virginia Tech'

★ 'Women's Golf: Duke'

★ 'Men's Lacrosse: Duke'

★ 'Women's Lacrosse: Virginia'

★ 'Rowing: Virginia'

★ 'Softball: Virginia Tech'

★ 'Men's Tennis: Virginia'

★ 'Women's Tennis: Georgia Tech'

★ 'Men's Track & Field: Florida State'

★ 'Women's Track & Field: Virginia Tech'
Baseball

''See Main Article: ACC Baseball Tournament''
Basketball

History

Historically, the ACC has been considered one of the most successful conferences in men's basketball. The early roots of ACC basketball began primarily thanks to two men: Everett Case and Frank McGuire.
North Carolina State coach Everett Case had been a successful high school coach in Indiana who ironically accepted the Wolfpack's head coaching job at a time that the school decided to focus on competing in football with Duke University, then a national power in college football. Case immediately started winning and became the fastest college basketball coach to reach many win milestones; records that are still relevant today as coaches like Roy Williams and Bruce Pearl chase Case's "first coach to win x amount of games" milestones.
Case became known as “the grandfather of ACC basketball." Despite his success on the court, he may have been even a better promoter off the court. Case realized the need to sell his program and university. That is why he organized the funding and construction of Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh as the new home court for his team. At the time, Reynolds was the largest on-campus arena in America, and it was therefore used as the host site for many Southern Conference Tournaments, ACC Tournaments, and the “Dixie Classic”, an annual event involving the four ACC teams from North Carolina as well as four other prominent programs from across the nation. The Dixie Classic brought in huge revenues for all schools involved and soon became one of the premier sporting events in the south.
At the University of North Carolina, Frank McGuire was hired as the men’s basketball coach to counter Case's personality, as well as the dominant success of his program. McGuire began recruiting in his home area of New York. McGuire knew that basketball was the major high school athletic event of the region, unlike football in the south. Case and McGuire literally “invented” a rivalry. Both men realized the benefits created through a rivalry between them. It brought more national attention to both of their programs and increased fan support on both sides. For this reason, they often exchanged verbal jabs at each other in public, while maintaining a secret working relationship in private.
In 1957, when McGuire’s North Carolina team won the national championship, an entrepreneur from Greensboro named Castleman D. Chesley noticed the popularity it generated. He developed a five-station television network which began broadcasting regular season ACC games the following season. From that point on, ACC basketball gained immense popularity.
Over the course of its existence, ACC schools have captured 10 NCAA championships. North Carolina has won four (1957, 1982, 1993, 2005), Duke has won three (1991, 1992, 2001), N.C. State has won two (1974, 1983) and Maryland has won one (2002). In addition, 8 of the 12 members have advanced to the Final Four at least once. The ACC has been home to many legendary coaches, including Terry Holland, Everett Case, Frank McGuire, Vic Bubas, Dean Smith, Norm Sloan, Bones McKinney, Al Skinner, Lefty Driesell, Jim Valvano, Mike Krzyzewski, Bobby Cremins, Rick Barnes, Gary Williams, and Roy Williams.
In women's basketball, the ACC has won two national championships: North Carolina in 1994 and Maryland in 2006. In 2006, Duke, Maryland, and North Carolina all advanced to the Final Four, the first time a conference placed three teams in the women's Final Four. Both 2006 NCAA women's finalists were from the ACC, with Maryland defeating Duke for the title.
Today

With the expansion to 12 teams in the 2004-2005 season, the ACC schedule could no longer accommodate a home-and-away series between every pair of teams each season. In the new scheduling model, each team is assigned two permanent partners and nine rotating partners over a three-year period. Teams play their permanent partners in a home-and-away series each year. The rotating partners are split into three groups: three teams who are played in a home-and-away series, three teams who are played at home, and three teams who are played on the road. The rotating partner groups are rotated over the three-year period.
Football

Divisions

In 2005 the ACC began divisional play in football. Division leaders compete in a playoff game to determine the ACC championship. The inaugural ACC Championship Game was played on December 3, 2005, in Jacksonville, Florida, at the stadium then known as Alltel Stadium. Florida State defeated Virginia Tech to capture their 12th championship since they joined the league in 1992. This division structure leads to each team playing the following games:

★ Five games within its division (one against each opponent)

★ One game against a "permanent rival" from the other division

★ Two rotating games against teams in the other division
In the table below, each column represents one division. Each team's "permanent rival" is listed immediately to the left or right in the other column. (These are not necessarily the school's closest traditional rival).
Atlantic DivisionCoastal Division
Boston CollegeVirginia Tech
ClemsonGeorgia Tech
Florida StateMiami
MarylandVirginia
N.C. StateNorth Carolina
Wake ForestDuke

National Championships

Though the NCAA does not determine an official "national champion" for Division I FBS football, several ACC members have achieved a national championship through the Associated Press, the Coaches Poll or the Bowl Championship Series. Schools that have won national championships in this manner as ACC members include:

★ Associated Press National Champions:


★ Clemson: 1981


★ Florida State: 1993, 1999


★ Maryland: 1953

★ Coaches Poll National Champions:


★ Clemson: 1981


★ Florida State: 1993, 1999


★ Georgia Tech: 1990


★ Maryland: 1953

★ Bowl Championship Series National Champions


★ Florida State: 1999
Bowl Games


★ 1 – BCS (exclusive partnership with the FedEx Orange Bowl [1])

★ 2 – Chick-fil-A Bowl (formerly Peach Bowl) in Atlanta, Georgia (vs SEC)

★ 3 – Gator Bowl in Jacksonville, Florida (vs Big East, the Big 12 or Notre Dame)

★ 4 – Champs Sports Bowl in Orlando, Florida (vs Big 10)

★ 5 – Music City Bowl in Nashville, Tennessee (vs SEC)

★ 6 – Meineke Car Care Bowl in Charlotte, North Carolina (vs Big East or Navy)

★ 7 – Emerald Bowl in San Francisco, California (vs Pac-10)

★ 8 – MPC Computers Bowl in Boise, Idaho (vs WAC)
Within the Bowl Championship Series, the FedEx Orange Bowl serves as the home of the ACC champion against another BCS at-large selection unless the conference's champion is selected for the national championship game.
The other bowls pick ACC teams in the order listed above, generally adhering to the overall order of the conference standings. Under ACC rules as of the 2006 season, the ACC championship game loser cannot fall below the Music City Bowl (5th pick); furthermore, a bowl game can bypass a team in the selection process only if the two teams in question are within one game of each other in the overall ACC standings. This rule was instituted in response to concerns over the 2005 ACC bowl season, in which Atlantic Division co-champion Boston College fell to the last-pick MPC Computers Bowl.
Lacrosse

Since 1971, when the first men's national champion was determined by the NCAA, the ACC has won 10 national championships (as of 2006). The University of Virginia has won four national championships (1972, 1999, 2003, and 2006), the University of North Carolina has also won four (1981, 1982, 1986, and 1991), and the University of Maryland has won two (1973, and 1975).
Women's Lacrosse, a sport in which the national champion has only been determined since 1982, has seen much dominance by the ACC, specifically by The University of Maryland. In all, the ACC has won 12 women's national championships. The University of Maryland accounts for nine of those championships (1986, 1992, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001), and the University of Virginia won the other three (1991, 1993, and 2004).
Soccer

In men's soccer, the ACC has won 11 national championships, including 10 in the 22 seasons between 1984 and 2005 . Five have been won by Virginia (1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994). The remaining six have been won by Maryland (1968, 2005), Clemson (1984, 1987), Duke (1986), and North Carolina (2001). During the 2006 season, each of the nine ACC men's soccer teams was in the top 25. Seven teams were selected for the NCAA Tournament. Virginia and Wake Forest advanced to the College Cup - the "Final Four" of Men's soccer.
In women's soccer, North Carolina has won 18 of the 25 NCAA titles since the NCAA crowned its first champion (1982–1984, 1986–1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2003, and 2006), as well as the only AIAW soccer championship in 1981. The Tar Heels have also won 18 of the 20 ACC tournaments, losing only to NC State in 1988 and UVA in 2004, both times by penalty kicks.

Facilities


SchoolBaseball stadiumCapacityBasketball arenaCapacityFootball stadiumCapacitySoccer/Lacrosse stadiumCapacity
Boston CollegeShea Field1,000Silvio O. Conte Forum8,606Alumni Stadium44,500Newton Soccer ComplexN/A
ClemsonTiger Field at Doug Kingsmore Stadium6,000J.C. Littlejohn Coliseum10,980Frank Howard Field at Memorial Stadium81,473Riggs Field7,000
DukeJack Coombs Field2,000Coach K Court at Cameron Indoor Stadium9,314Wallace Wade Stadium33,941Koskinen Stadium7,000
Florida StateMike Martin Field at Dick Howser Stadium6,700Donald L. Tucker Center12,200Bobby Bowden Field at Doak Campbell Stadium82,300Seminole Soccer Complex1,600
Georgia TechRuss Chandler Stadium4,157Bobby Cremins Court at Alexander Memorial Coliseum9,191Bobby Dodd Stadium at Historic Grant Field55,000N/AN/A
MarylandShipley Field2,500Comcast Center17,950Chevy Chase Bank Field at Byrd Stadium51,500Ludwig Field4,000
MiamiMark Light Field5,000BankUnited Center7,900Miami Orange Bowl72,319Cobb Stadium500
North CarolinaBoshamer Stadium2,000Dean Smith Center (men)
Carmichael Auditorium (women)
21,750
10,180
Kenan Stadium60,000Fetzer Field5,025
NC StateDoak Field at Dail Park2,500RBC Center (men)
Coach Kay Yow Court at Reynolds Coliseum (women)
19,722
8,400
Carter-Finley Stadium57,583Method Road Soccer Stadium3,000
VirginiaDavenport Field2,000John Paul Jones Arena15,219Carl Smith Center, Home to David A. Harrison III Field at Scott Stadium61,500Klöckner Stadium7,100
Virginia TechEnglish Field1,033Cassell Coliseum9,847Lane Stadium66,233Virginia Tech Lacrosse and Soccer Stadium2,500
Wake ForestGene Hooks Stadium1,500Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum14,407Groves Stadium31,500Spry Stadium3,000

Rivalries


As with most ACC traditions, the conference's classic rivalries began on the (men's) basketball court. Before the 2003 expansion, the ACC was able to maintain a full home-and-home double round-robin basketball schedule, meaning each team played each other team both at home and away each season. Coupled with the conference's geographic compactness (especially before Florida State joined in 1991), this enhanced conference cohesiveness and built a strong, interlocking web of rivalries, as each school could generally find something historical to be upset with each other school about. Some rivalries were, of course, stronger than others — notably those among the four "Tobacco Road" schools located in North Carolina.
Lesser-known are the ACC's football rivalries, with the exception of Florida State-Miami. With the recent expansion, intra-state rivalries in Florida and Virginia that have always been more significant in football than basketball are now under the conference banner. This gives them added meaning, as these games will have more direct impact on postseason bowl game invitations.
Intra-conference rivalries

Tipoff of UNC-Duke game


Boston College and Miami: These two former Big East colleges have a heated rivalry dating back to the "Hail Flutie" game in 1984, although BC has not beaten Miami since that game.

Clemson and Georgia Tech: In football, this series has been very close of late. Between 1996 and 2005, 9 of the 10 games were determined by fewer than 7 points. The schools also have a heated rivlary in baseball, as the two are consistently among the top teams in the ACC and national rankings. This rivalry is also born out of their proximity (approximately 100 miles).

Clemson and N.C. State: Known as the "Textile Bowl" in football.

Clemson and Florida State: Known as "the Bowden Bowl"; a newer rivalry in college football pitting head coaches/father and son, Bobby Bowden and Tommy Bowden against one another.

Duke and Maryland: Traditionally a lopsided men's basketball rivalry; reached heightened status in the 2000-01 season when the teams played four times in ESPN "Instant Classics." Each school won a national championship in 2001 (Duke) and 2002 (Maryland). As noted earlier, the school's women's basketball teams met for the 2006 national title, with Maryland winning.

Duke and North Carolina: Their men's basketball rivalry is widely considered the best in the country. ''(See UNC-Duke rivalry)'' The women's basketball rivalry is equally intense, though without the national profile of the men's matchup. Notably, when the two women's teams first met in the 2006-07 season, both were the last two Division I unbeatens; Duke won. In football, the two schools play for a trophy: "The victory bell". It is often colored in the shade of blue of the team who won it last.

Duke and N.C. State: In-state Tobacco Road rivals, also members of the Big Four

Duke and Wake Forest: The two private Big Four schools on Tobacco Road have shared a heated rivalry for decades. Wake Forest and Duke were the first colleges in North Carolina to have basketball teams in the early 1900s.

Florida State and Miami: Arguably the two most successful college football teams of the last 25 years.

Florida State and Virginia: Compete for the Jefferson-Eppes Trophy in football. This game resulted in Florida State's first-ever ACC loss in 1995, but Virginia has only won once since then.

Maryland and Virginia: A border rivalry with mid-Atlantic football recruiting implications.

Miami and Virginia Tech: Both schools were football powers in the Big East and the rivalry has continued with both of them moving to the ACC.

North Carolina and N.C. State: In-state rivals of long standing ''(See UNC-NCSU rivalry)''; formerly competed (with Duke and Wake Forest) in the annual "Dixie Classic" basketball tournament ending in 1961.

North Carolina and Virginia: In football, known as the Oldest Rivalry in the South.

North Carolina and Wake Forest: Another Tobacco Road rivalry, Wake and Carolina have been at it longer than any other two North Carolina schools. The schools first met on Oct. 18, 1888 when Wake Forest defeated North Carolina 6-4 in the first intercollegiate football game played in North Carolina. As with all Big Four rivalries--and each of the four hates the other three--Wake and Carolina have shared a colorful history.

N.C. State and Wake Forest: Lesser known outside of North Carolina, but the original rivalry for both schools, as Wake Forest originally was located in the town of Wake Forest, NC, a few miles north of Raleigh. (The other charter members faced their rivals in their final games of the season: Duke and North Carolina, Maryland and Virginia, Clemson and South Carolina, and State and Wake.) The traditional college baseball game these two played on the Monday after Easter in the 1930s and the 1940s, and the fact so many state legislators attended it, was the reason North Carolina's General Assembly created an Easter Monday state holiday, which lasted until the late 1980s. For a time, the two schools also played one of the few trophy games in college basketball, for something called "The Chair," a chair painted in both State and Wake's colors. The Chair's whereabouts are unknown and the series no longer exists. NC State and Wake Forest have met 224 times in basketball, more than any other ACC schools. The two traditionaly meet as the last game of the regular season for both teams.

Virginia and Virginia Tech: Compete for the Commonwealth Cup in football, and for the Commonwealth Challenge across all sports.
Extra-conference rivalries


Boston College and Boston University (Hockey East): Hockey's "Green Line Rivalry"

Boston College, Boston University, Harvard, and Northeastern: Hockey's "Beanpot"

Boston College and the University of Massachusetts (Atlantic 10): Basketball's "Commonwealth Classic"

Boston College and Providence College (Big East): Former Big East basketball and current Hockey East rivals, they are two of the prominent Catholic New England colleges.

Boston College and Notre Dame (Independent): Football's "Holy War"

Clemson and South Carolina (SEC): Natural arch-rivals based in the state of South Carolina. Prior to 1971, this was an intra-conference rivalry in the ACC.

Clemson and Georgia (SEC): Born of proximity, as the schools are approximately 90 miles apart. This rivalry was intense at its peak in the 1980s.

Duke and Kentucky (SEC): Although they have met only 19 times, five meetings have come in the NCAA tournament. One such meeting was the 1992 NCAA Tournament East Regional Final, considered by many to be the greatest college basketball game ever played.

Florida State and Florida (SEC): a football rivalry with Florida Cup implications

Georgia Tech and Georgia (SEC): "Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate" Prior to 1964, this was an intra-conference rivalry in the SEC.

Georgia Tech and Auburn (SEC)

Maryland and Johns Hopkins: These schools have a long-held bitter rivalry in men's lacrosse.

Maryland and Navy (independent): An intra-state rivalry rich in history. Dating back to the late 19th century and dormant since the mid-1960s, the "Crab Bowl" was renewed and played again in 2005.

Maryland and Penn State (Big Ten): Dormant since the early 1990s because of expansion by the ACC and Big Ten, there have been talks to renew the series. Like the Maryland-Virginia rivalry, this also has recruiting implications.

Maryland and West Virginia (Big East): The football series was formerly the longest current continuous non-conference series for both schools, as they played every year since 1980. The game is not scheduled for 2008 or 2009, but will resume in 2010.

Miami and Florida (SEC): A now seldom scheduled game with Florida Cup implications. The game is seldom scheduled because teams were only allowed three non-conference games, and the Gators would have only one "true" non-conference game if they had to play both the Seminoles and Hurricanes in the same season. The rivalry is nearly non-existent nowadays due to Miami's move to the ACC and its near 23-year winning streak over Florida.

North Carolina and Kentucky (SEC): The two winningest programs in men's college basketball.

Virginia Tech and West Virginia (Big East): The teams used to play for the Black Diamond Trophy.

NC State and East Carolina (Conference USA): A rivalry that date to the 1980s
Since the 1999-2000 season, ACC teams have played Big Ten teams in the annual ACC - Big Ten Challenge men's basketball tournament; the ACC has "won" this tournament every year since its inception (ACC teams have won a majority of the games played in every season).

See also



ACC Athlete of the Year

ACC Men's Basketball Player of the Year

List of Atlantic Coast Conference football champions

List of Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball regular season champions

List of Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball tournament champions

List of Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball regular season champions

List of Atlantic Coast Conference women's basketball tournament champions

External links



Official ACC Athletic Site

ACC Basketball on Collegehoops.net

ACC Inter-institutional Academic Collaborative

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