Southern Conference

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Southern Conference
Southern Conference
Data
Classification NCAA Division I-AA
Established 1921
Members 11
Sports fielded 19 (10 men's, 9 women's)
Region East Coast
States 4 - Georgia, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Tennessee
Headquarters Spartanburg, South Carolina
Locations

The Southern Conference (or SoCon) is a college athletic conference affiliated with the NCAA's Division I-AA for football and Division I for all other sports. Member institutions are located in the states of Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee. Formed in 1921 as a result of a split from the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association, the Southern Conference ranks as the fourth oldest major college athletic conference in the United States.

Charter members included Alabama, Auburn, Clemson, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Maryland, Mississippi State, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Tennessee, Virginia, Virginia Tech, and Washington & Lee.

The SoCon is particularly notable for having spawned two other major conferences. In 1933, 13 schools located south and west of the Appalachians (Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, LSU, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Sewanee, Tennessee, Tulane, and Vanderbilt) departed the SoCon to form the Southeastern Conference. In 1953, seven schools (Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, NC State, South Carolina, and Wake Forest) withdrew from the SoCon to form the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Other former members (in addition to those listed above) include East Carolina (1964-1976), ETSU (1979-2005), George Washington (1936-1970), Marshall (1977-1996), Richmond (1936-1976), Virginia (1921-1937), Virginia Military Institute (1925-2003), Virginia Tech (1921-1964), Washington & Lee (1921-1953), William & Mary (1936-1976), and West Virginia (1950-1967).

Contents

[edit] Current members

There are eleven full member schools:

Institution Location Founded Affiliation Enrollment Joined
Appalachian State University Boone, North Carolina 1899 Public 14,653 1972
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Chattanooga, Tennessee 1886 Public 8,689 1977
The Citadel Charleston, South Carolina 1842 Public 3,138 1936
College of Charleston Charleston, South Carolina 1770 Public 11,320 1998
Davidson College[1] Davidson, North Carolina 1837 Private 1,700 1936
Elon University Elon, North Carolina 1889 Private/United Church of Christ 5,230 2003
Furman University Greenville, South Carolina 1826 Private/Non-sectarian 3,100 1936
Georgia Southern University Statesboro, Georgia 1906 Public 16,500 1992
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro Greensboro, North Carolina 1891 Public 15,347 1997
Western Carolina University Cullowhee, North Carolina 1889 Public 8,396 1977
Wofford College Spartanburg, South Carolina 1854 Private/Methodist 1,133 1997

There is one associate member school:

[edit] Conference facilities

School Football Stadium Capacity Basketball Arena Capacity
Appalachian State Kidd Brewer Stadium 16,650 Holmes Center 8,325
Chattanooga Finley Stadium 20,668 McKenzie Arena 11,218
The Citadel Johnson Hagood Stadium 21,000 McAlister Field House 6,000
College of Charleston Non-football School N/A John Kresse Arena 3,500
Davidson Smith Field at Richardson Stadium[1] 5,000 Belk Arena 5,700
Elon Rhodes Stadium 11,250 Alumni Gym 1,585
Furman Paladin Stadium 16,000 Timmons Arena 5,000
Georgia Southern Paulson Stadium 18,000 Hanner Fieldhouse 4,358
UNCG Non-football School N/A Fleming Gymnasium 2,320
Western Carolina Whitmire Stadium 13,742 Ramsey Center 7,826
Wofford Gibbs Stadium 13,000 Benjamin Johnson Arena 3,500

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Davidson does not compete in the SoCon for football. Instead, it competes in the Pioneer Football League.

[edit] External links


NCAA Division I-AA Football Conferences
Atlantic Ten ConferenceBig Sky ConferenceBig South ConferenceGateway Football ConferenceGreat West Football ConferenceIvy League
Metro Atlantic Athletic ConferenceMid-Eastern Athletic ConferenceNortheast ConferenceOhio Valley ConferencePatriot League
Pioneer Football LeagueSouthern ConferenceSouthland ConferenceSouthwestern Athletic ConferenceIndependents