CONFERENCE USA

(Redirected from C-USA)
'Conference USA'
Conference USA
'Data'
Classification NCAA Division I FBS
Established 1995
Members 12 full-time, 3 part-time
Sports fielded 19 (9 men's, 10 women's)
Region Southern United States
States 12 – Alabama, Florida, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma,
Tennessee, Texas, West Virginia;
For men's soccer only, Kentucky
and South Carolina
For women's soccer only,
Colorado
Headquarters Irving, Texas

'Conference USA', officially abbreviated 'C-USA', is a college athletic conference whose member institutions are located within the Southern United States. The conference participates in the NCAA's Division I in all sports.
C-USA was founded in 1995 by the merger of the Metro Conference and Great Midwest Conference, two Division I conferences that did not sponsor football. The conference immediately started competition in all sports, including football.
C-USA's offices are located in the Dallas suburb of Irving, Texas, specifically in the Las Colinas business district.

Contents
Sports sponsored
Member schools
Former members
C-USA Football Divisions
Conference USA Soccer-only Members
Commissioners
Television
Conference facilities
Championships
Football Bowl Games
External links

Sports sponsored


Members participate in football, men's and women's basketball, volleyball, baseball, cross country, golf, men's and women's soccer, softball, women's swimming, tennis, and track and field.
Men's soccer is only sponsored by Marshall, Memphis, Southern Methodist, Tulsa, UAB, and UCF; three other schools—Florida International, and the two Southeastern Conference schools which sponsor the sport — Kentucky (which joined with its SEC mate in 2005), and the South Carolina (which rejoined C-USA for the sport in 2005) — compete as men's soccer only members.

Member schools


The conference saw radical changes for the 2005–06 academic year. The stage for these changes was set in 2003, when the Atlantic Coast Conference successfully lured Miami and Virginia Tech to make a move from the Big East Conference in 2004. Boston College would later make the same move, joining the ACC in 2005. In response to that series of moves, which depleted the Big East football conference, the Big East looked to Conference USA to attract replacements. Five C-USA members departed for the Big East, including three football-playing schools (Cincinnati, Louisville, and USF) and two non-football schools (DePaul and Marquette). Another two schools (Charlotte and Saint Louis) left for the Atlantic 10; TCU joined the Mountain West; and a ninth member, Army, which was C-USA football-only, opted to become an independent in that sport.
With the loss of these teams, C-USA lured six teams from other conferences: Central Florida and Marshall from the MAC, as well as Rice, SMU, Tulsa, and later UTEP from the WAC. Note that UCF played in the MAC for football only; for all other sports, it was a member of the Atlantic Sun Conference.
With C-USA's membership now consisting of 12 schools, all of which sponsor football, the conference has adopted a two-division alignment.
InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentJoined
University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB)Birmingham, Alabama1969Public17,6001995
University of Central Florida (UCF)Orlando, Florida1963Public45,0902005
East Carolina University (ECU)Greenville, North Carolina1907Public24,0751997
University of HoustonHouston, Texas1927Public35,1801995
Marshall UniversityHuntington, West Virginia1837Public16,4002005
University of MemphisMemphis, Tennessee1912Public20,6681995
Rice UniversityHouston, Texas1891Private/Non-sectarian4,8352005
Southern Methodist University (SMU)University Park, Texas1911Private/Methodist10,9012005
The University of Southern Mississippi (USM)Hattiesburg, Mississippi1910Public15,0501995
University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP)El Paso, Texas1914Public18,9182005
Tulane UniversityNew Orleans, Louisiana1834Private/Non-sectarian13,2141995
University of TulsaTulsa, Oklahoma1894Private/Presbyterian4,1742005

Former members


★ Big East:


University of Cincinnati (Cincinnati Bearcats), 1995-2005


DePaul University ''non-football member'' (DePaul Blue Demons), 1995-2005


University of Louisville (Louisville Cardinals), 1995-2005


Marquette University ''non-football member'' (Marquette Golden Eagles), 1995-2005


University of South Florida (USF Bulls) 1995-2005

★ Atlantic Ten:


University of North Carolina at Charlotte ''non-football member'' (Charlotte 49ers), 1995-2005


Saint Louis University ''non-football member'' (Saint Louis Billikens), 1995-2005

★ Mountain West:


Texas Christian University (TCU Horned Frogs), 2001-2005

★ Independent:


United States Military Academy ''football only'' (Army Black Knights), 1998-2004
C-USA Football Divisions

'East'
East Carolina Pirates
Marshall Thundering Herd
Memphis Tigers
Southern Miss Golden Eagles
UAB Blazers
UCF Knights
'West'
Houston Cougars
Rice Owls
SMU Mustangs
Tulane Green Wave
Tulsa Golden Hurricane
UTEP Miners

Conference USA Soccer-only Members

Because men's soccer is not sponsored by all NCAA Division I conferences, three schools from other conferences are C-USA members for men's soccer only:
Sun Belt Conference Members

Florida International University
Southeastern Conference Members
(Both members are the only SEC schools which play the sport.)

University of Kentucky

University of South Carolina
Additionally there is one women's soccer only member:
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference Members
(The SCAC is a NCAA Division 3 conference, however Colorado College sponsors women's soccer as a Division 1 sport.)

Colorado College

Commissioners



Michael Slive 1995-2002

Britton Banowsky 2002-present

Television


In 2005, C-USA began a long-term television contract with College Sports Television to carry a variety of sports. The deal largely replaced the one it had with ESPN and ESPN Plus, though some C-USA football and men's basketball games are still carried by the ESPN networks. The college basketball men's championship game can be seen on CBS Sports.

Conference facilities


SchoolFootball stadiumCapacityBasketball arenaCapacitySoccer stadiumCapacity
UABLegion Field71,594Bartow Arena8,508West Campus Field2,500
UCFBright House Networks Stadium45,301UCF Arena10,045UCF Track and Soccer Complex2,000
East CarolinaDowdy-Ficklen Stadium43,000Williams Arena at Minges Coliseum8,000Bunting Field>3,000
HoustonRobertson Stadium32,000Hofheinz Pavilion8,500Carl Lewis International Complexn/a
MarshallJoan C. Edwards Stadium38,019Cam Henderson Center9,600Sam Hood Field1,500
MemphisLiberty Bowl Memorial Stadium62,380FedExForum19,000Mike Rose Stadium2,500
RiceRice Stadium70,000Autry Court5,000Rice Track/Soccer Stadium5,000
SMUGerald J. Ford Stadium32,000Moody Coliseum8,998Westcott Field4,000
Southern MissM. M. Roberts Stadium33,000Reed Green Coliseum8,095USM Track & Soccer Complexn/a
UTEPSun Bowl Stadium51,500Don Haskins Center12,222University Field500
TulaneLouisiana Superdome69,703Avron B. Fogelman Arena3,600Westfeldt Facility1,500
TulsaSkelly Stadium35,542Reynolds Center8,355Hurricane Soccer & Track Stadium2,000
Kentucky
Plays in SECn/aPlays in SECn/aUK Soccer Complex1,500
South Carolina
Plays in SECn/aPlays in SECn/aStone Stadium5,700


- Men's soccer only member

Championships



Conference USA Football Championship

Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament
Football Bowl Games

Conference USA sends teams to seven different bowls throughout the country.

Liberty Bowl

GMAC Bowl

Papajohns.com Bowl

Armed Forces Bowl

New Orleans Bowl

Hawaii Bowl

Texas Bowl

External links



Conference USA official website

Largest C-USA Fan Forum at NCAAbbs

Conference USA football, basketball & baseball fan site

C-USA-Fans.com's Conference USA sports blog

Conference USA Message Boards

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