Sun Belt Conference

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Sun Belt Conference
Sun Belt Conference
Data
Classification NCAA Division I-A
Established 1976
Members 13
Sports fielded 19 (9 men's, 10 women's)
Region Southern United States
States 8 - Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado,
Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Tennessee, Texas
Headquarters New Orleans, Louisiana

The Sun Belt Conference is a college athletic conference that has been affiliated with the NCAA's Division I since 1976. The Sun Belt has member institutions distributed primarily across the southern United States.

After the 1990-91 basketball season all members of the Sun Belt except Western Kentucky, South Alabama, Jacksonville, and incoming member Arkansas-Little Rock departed for other conferences. The Sun Belt then merged with the American South Conference, made up of Arkansas State, Louisiana Tech, Southwestern Louisiana (now University of Louisiana at Lafayette), Texas-Pan American, New Orleans, Lamar, and Central Florida. Football was not sponsored by the Sun Belt Conference until 2001, when the league added New Mexico State, North Texas and Middle Tennessee State as full members and added Louisiana-Monroe and Idaho as football only members. ULM joined the league as a member in all sports on July 1, 2006. Western Kentucky will join the Sun Belt Conference for football in 2009 after its Board of Regents voted to upgrade the school's football program to Division I-A.[1]

It has one bowl tie-in, the New Orleans Bowl, which currently pits the Sun Belt champion against an agreed-upon school from Conference USA.

The conference office has been headquartered in downtown New Orleans since 2000, after moving from suburban Metairie, Louisiana where it had been based since 1991. Prior to moving to the “Big Easy” the league was based in Tampa, Florida from 1977-1991. The original conference office was located in Charlotte, North Carolina from 1976-77.

Contents

[edit] Current members

Institution Location Founded Affiliation Enrollment
University of Arkansas at Little Rock Little Rock, Arkansas 1927 Public 12,000
Arkansas State University Jonesboro, Arkansas 1909 Public 16,494
University of Denver Denver, Colorado 1864 Private/Non-sectarian 9,846
Florida Atlantic University Boca Raton, Florida 1961 Public 26,000
Florida International University Miami, Florida 1965 Public 37,000
University of Louisiana at Lafayette Lafayette, Louisiana 1900 Public 18,079
University of Louisiana at Monroe Monroe, Louisiana 1931 Public 10,100
Middle Tennessee State University Murfreesboro, Tennessee 1911 Public 22,554
University of New Orleans New Orleans, Louisiana 1958 Public/State (Louisiana State University System) 17,350
University of North Texas Denton, Texas 1890 Public 32,181
University of South Alabama Mobile, Alabama 1963 Public 13,500
Troy University Troy, Alabama 1887 Public 27,148
Western Kentucky University Bowling Green, Kentucky 1906 Public 18,391

[edit] Full Members

[edit] Conference facilities

School Football stadium Capacity Basketball arena Capacity
Arkansas Little-Rock Non-football school N/A Jack Stephens Center 5,600
Arkansas State Indian Stadium 33,410 Convocation Center 10,563
Denver Non-football school N/A Magness Arena 7,200
Florida Atlantic Lockhart Stadium 20,450 FAU Gymnasium 5,000
Florida International FIU Stadium 12,673 Pharmed Arena 5,000
Louisiana-Lafayette Cajun Field 31,000 Cajundome 11,550
Louisiana-Monroe Malone Stadium 30,427 Fant-Ewing Coliseum 7,085
Middle Tennessee Johnny "Red" Floyd Stadium 31,000 Murphy Center 11,520
New Orleans Non-football school N/A Human Performance Center 1,200
North Texas Fouts Field 30,500 Super Pit 10,040
South Alabama Non-football school N/A Mitchell Center 10,000
Troy Movie Gallery Stadium 30,000 Trojan Arena 4,000
Western Kentucky L.T. Smith Stadium* 17,500 E.A. Diddle Arena 8,300

Notes:

  • Arkansas-Little Rock normally plays its home games on campus, but occasionally plays at Alltel Arena.
  • New Orleans' normal home, Lakefront Arena, is unavailable due to damage from Hurricane Katrina.
  • *Western Kentucky is not a football member of the Sun Belt Conference, as it competes at the Division I-AA level in the Gateway Football Conference. The football team will join the conference in 2009; by that time, Smith Stadium's capacity will be expanded to at least 22,000 seats, possibly more.

[edit] Football Champions by Year

Season Champion Conference Record
2001 Middle Tennesse 5-1
North Texas* 5-1
2002 North Texas 6-0
2003 North Texas 7-0
2004 North Texas 7-0
2005 Arkansas State** 5-2
Louisiana-Lafayette 5-2
Louisiana-Monroe 5-2
2006 Middle Tennessee 6-1
Troy*** 6-1

* North Texas won the conference's automatic bowl bid because it won the head-to-head game against Middle Tennessee. Also, North Texas had a losing overall record in 2001 and was not technically bowl-eligible, but the NCAA granted the team an exemption because it had won the conference. This is similar to what is granted to a basketball or baseball team which has a losing overall record but wins its conference tournament.
** Arkansas State won the conference's automatic bowl bid through a three-way tiebreaker.
*** Troy won the conference's automatic bowl bid through a tiebreaker by virtue of its head-to-head victory against Middle Tennessee.

[edit] Basketball Tournament Champions by Year

Season Men's Champion Women's Champion
1977 UNC Charlotte No Tournament
1978 New Orleans No Tournament
1979 Jacksonville No Tournament
1980 Virginia Commonwealth No Tournament
1981 Virginia Commonwealth No Tournament
1982 UAB No Tournament
1983 UAB Old Dominion
1984 UAB Old Dominion
1985 Virginia Commonwealth Old Dominion
1986 Jacksonville Western Kentucky
1987 UAB Old Dominion
1988 UNC Charlotte Western Kentucky
1989 South Alabama Western Kentucky
1990 South Florida Old Dominion
1991 South Alabama Western Kentucky
1992 Southwestern Louisiana Western Kentucky
1993 Western Kentucky Western Kentucky
1994 Southwestern Louisiana Louisiana Tech
1995 Western Kentucky Western Kentucky
1996 New Orleans Louisiana Tech
1997 South Alabama Louisiana Tech
1998 South Alabama Louisiana Tech
1999 Arkansas State Louisiana Tech
2000 Louisiana-Lafayette Louisiana Tech
2001 Western Kentucky Louisiana Tech
2002 Western Kentucky Florida International
2003 Western Kentucky Western Kentucky
2004 Louisiana-Lafayette Middle Tennessee
2005 Louisiana-Lafayette Middle Tennessee
2006 South Alabama Middle Tennessee

[edit] Sports

The Sun Belt Conference sponsors intercollegiate competition in men’s baseball, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s cross country, men’s football, men’s and women’s golf, women’s soccer, women’s softball, women’s swimming and diving, men’s and women’s tennis, men’s and women’s indoor track and field, men’s and women’s outdoor track and field, and women’s volleyball.

[edit] External link

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ WKU Regents Approve Move To Division 1-A Football. Western Kentucky University (2006-11-02). Retrieved on 2006-11-03.


NCAA Division I-A Football Conferences:
Atlantic Coast Conference*Big 12 Conference*Big East Conference*Big Ten Conference*Conference USAMid-American ConferenceMountain West ConferencePacific Ten Conference*Southeastern Conference*Sun Belt ConferenceWestern Athletic ConferenceIndependents
* – BCS Conference
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