Mountain West Conference

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Mountain West Conference
150pxMountain West Conference
Data
Established 1999
Members 9
Sports fielded 14
Region Western United States
States 7 - California, Colorado, Nevada,
New Mexico, Texas, Utah, and
Wyoming
Headquarters Colorado Springs, Colorado
Locations

The Mountain West Conference (or MWC), the youngest of the college athletic conferences affiliated with the NCAA’s Division I-A, officially began operations in July 1999. Geographically, the MWC covers a broad expanse of the western United States, with member institutions located in California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming.

Charter members included Air Force, Brigham Young University, Colorado State, New Mexico, San Diego State, UNLV, Utah, and Wyoming. Prior to banding together to form the Mountain West Conference, all of the charter members had been aligned with the Western Athletic Conference. Texas Christian University joined the Mountain West in 2005 from Conference USA.

A former conference also known as the "Mountain West Conference" existed from 1982-88, sponsoring championships for women’s sports at the same institutions with which Big Sky Conference had men’s programs. The Big Sky merged with the former Mountain West in 1988, forming one league (the present Big Sky Conference) for both men and women.

Contents

[edit] Members

Institution Nickname Links Location Affiliation Enrollment Year Joined
United States Air Force Academy Falcons Football Colorado Springs, Colorado Public/Federal 4,000 1999
Brigham Young University Cougars Football
Basketball
Soccer
Provo, Utah Private 32,400 1999
Colorado State University Rams Fort Collins, Colorado Public/State 26,418 1999
University of New Mexico Lobos Basketball Albuquerque, New Mexico Public/State 24,092 1999
San Diego State University Aztecs SDSU Aztecs San Diego, California Public/State 34,500 1999
Texas Christian University Horned Frogs TCU Horned Frogs Fort Worth, Texas Private 8,749 2005
University of Nevada, Las Vegas Rebels Football Las Vegas, Nevada Public/State 29,000 1999
University of Utah Utes Utah Utes Salt Lake City, Utah Public/State 29,192 1999
University of Wyoming Cowboys Basketball Laramie, Wyoming Public/State 13,162 1999

[edit] Sports

The MWC sponsors championships in baseball, men's and women's basketball, men's and women's golf, skiing, women's soccer, swimming and diving, men's and women's tennis, women's volleyball, football, softball, outdoor track and cross country. Many of its member schools participate in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation for sports not sponsored by the Mountain West Conference (interestingly, for men's soccer, BYU fields a semi-professional team {see BYU Cougars soccer}, and San Diego State competes as a member of the Pacific Ten Conference).

[edit] Television network

MountainWest Sports Network logo

In 2006, the MWC elected to discontinue affiliation with ESPN, due to a poor contract offer. ESPN wanted the MWC to play games on unusual nights (including Tuesdays and Wednesdays), and with an offer for less money[citation needed]. Instead, the MWC created its own network, the mtn., half owned by the cable giant Comcast, and under the umbrella of CBS owned CSTV. the mtn. was not picked up by satellite companies. Although many MWC games are played on sister CBS broadcasting companies, like Versus and CSTV, the majority of the games are only available on the mtn., which at first was only viewable in parts of Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. To this day, the mtn. is only available through Comcast service in the Salt Lake City market, and that provider is not available in all areas of the market, leaving many traditionally loyal conference fans out of options to see their teams play. After four months, cable viewers in San Diego and Las Vegas were able to order the mtn.; it is still largely unavailable in the Mountain West's largest television market, Dallas-Fort Worth.

Despite promises from Commissioner Craig Thompson, the mtn. network is still not available on any of the satellite television providers.

Further driving the criticism of the television deal is the convoluted and confusing relationship between the mtn., CSTV, and Versus, and Comcast's bundling strategy around these stations. The Mountain West Conference football and basketball games are divided between the three networks, however, Comcast only offers these three stations together on a high-priced package, leaving fans to pay much higher prices to see their teams play.

The television deal has been especially contentious in Salt Lake City, the conference's most important market. Fans and schools originally thought the deal would simply replace games traditionally broadcast by ESPN, leaving the remaining schedule available for local network pickup. This, however, was not the case, and fans in that market, used to seeing all football and basketball games on network television, are left scrambling to change television service providers to Comcast, often finding that service is not available in their neighborhood, or that their game of interest isn't televised, event on the mtn.

The culmination of this discontent was witnessed at LaVelle Edwards Stadium in Provo, Utah, November 25, 2006. MWC commissioner Craig Thompson was on site to deliver the BYU Cougars the conference champion trophy, and when introduced, fans greeted him with an overwhelming chorus of boos.

Launched on September 1, 2006 by the Mountain West Conference (MWC), College Sports TV (CSTV), and Comcast, the "mtn." (the MountainWest Sports Network) (pronounced and referred to as "the mountain") is a 24-hour channel devoted entirely to covering MWC games from all sports.

Additionally, Versus (formerly OLN) will televise selected men's football and basketball games.

[edit] Conference Champions

[edit] Men's Championship Winners

Football Men's Basketball Baseball Cross Country Golf Swimming & Diving Tennis Track & Field (Outdoors) Indoor Track
1999-2000 BYU
CSU
Utah
Regular Season
UNLV/Utah
Tournament
UNLV
Regular Season
New Mexico
Tournament
SDSU
BYU UNLV BYU Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
New Mexico
BYU BYU
2000-2001 CSU Regular Season
BYU/Utah/Wyoming
Tournament
BYU
Regular Season
and
Tournament
BYU
BYU BYU BYU Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
BYU
BYU BYU
2001-2002 BYU Regular Season
Wyoming
Tournament
SDSU
Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
BYU
BYU UNLV BYU Regular Season
and
Tournament
SDSU
BYU CSU
2002-2003 CSU Regular Season
BYU/Utah
Tournament
CSU
Regular Season
and
Tournament
UNLV
BYU New Mexico BYU Regular Season
and
Tournament
SDSU
BYU BYU
2003-2004 Utah Regular Season
Air Force
Tournament
Utah
Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
UNLV
Air Force New Mexico BYU Regular Season
and
Tournament
New Mexico
BYU BYU
2004-2005 Utah Regular Season
Utah
Tournament
New Mexico
Regular Season
and
Tournament
UNLV
BYU New Mexico UNLV Regular Season
and
Tournament
SDSU
BYU BYU
2005-2006 TCU Regular Season
and
Tournament
SDSU
Regular Season
and
Tournament
TCU
BYU New Mexico UNLV Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
TCU
BYU BYU
2006-2007 BYU Regular Season
BYU
Tournament
UNLV
BYU UNLV Regular Season

Tournament

Source:[1]

[edit] Women's Championship Winners

Women's Basketball Softball Soccer Volleyball Cross Country Golf Swimming & Diving Tennis Track & Field (Outdoors) Indoor Track
1999-2000 Regular Season
and
Tournament
Utah
Regular Season
and
Tournament
Utah
Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
BYU
Regular Season
BYU
Tournament
CSU
BYU New Mexico BYU Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
UNLV
BYU BYU
2000-2001 Regular Season
Utah
Tournament
CSU
Regular Season
and
Tournament
BYU
Regular Season
and
Tournament
BYU
Regular Season
CSU
Tournament
BYU
BYU New Mexico BYU Regular Season
and
Tournament
BYU
BYU BYU
2001-2002 Regular Season
CSU
Tournament
BYU
Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
Utah
Regular Season
and
Tournament
BYU
Regular Season
CSU
Tournament
Utah
BYU New Mexico BYU Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
UNLV
BYU BYU
2002-2003 Regular Season
Utah
Tournament
New Mexico
Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
CSU
Regular Season
and
Tournament
BYU
Regular Season
CSU
Tournament
Utah
BYU New Mexico BYU Regular Season
UNLV
Tournament
SDSU
BYU BYU
2003-2004 Regular Season
Utah
Tournament
New Mexico
Regular Season
CSU
Tournament
Utah
Regular Season
Utah
Tournament
BYU
Regular Season
and
Tournament
CSU
BYU UNLV BYU Regular Season
New Mexico
Tournament
BYU
BYU BYU
2004-2005 Regular Season
and
Tournament
New Mexico
Regular Season
and
Tournament
BYU
Regular Season
UNLV
Tournament
Utah
Regular Season
and
Tournament
CSU
BYU UNLV UNLV Regular Season
and
Tournament
BYU
BYU BYU
2005-2006 Regular Season
BYU
Tournament
Utah
Regular Season
SDSU
Tournament
Utah
Regular Season
Utah
Tournament
UNLV
Regular Season
BYU
Tournament
Utah
BYU UNLV Utah Regular Season
and
Tournament
TCU
BYU CSU
2006-2007 Regular Season
BYU
Tournament
New Mexico
Regular Season
Utah
Tournament
UNLV
Regular Season
and
Tournament
Utah
BYU

Source:[1]

[edit] Football Rivalries

[edit] Conference

Schools First
Meeting
Game Trophy Reigning Champion
Utah BYU 1922 The Holy War Beehive Boot BYU
Wyoming BYU 1922 BYU
New Mexico Utah 1945 New Mexico
Colorado State Wyoming 1968 Border War Bronze Boot Wyoming
Air Force Colorado State 1980 Ram-Falcon Trophy Air Force

[edit] Non-Conference

Schools First
Meeting
Game Trophy Reigning Champion
(Last Meeting)
Next
Meeting
Utah Utah State 1892 Battle of the Brothers Beehive Boot Utah (2006) 2007
Colorado State Colorado 1893 Rocky Mountain Showdown Centennial Cup Colorado State (2006) 2007
New Mexico New Mexico State 1894 Battle of I-25 Maloof Trophy New Mexico (2006) 2007
New Mexico Arizona 1908 Kit Carson Rifle Arizona (1990) 2007
TCU SMU 1915 Battle for the Iron Skillet Iron Skillet SMU (2005) 2007
New Mexico UTEP 1919 Rio Grande Championship New Mexico (2006) 2007
BYU Hawai'i 1930 BYU (2002)
San Diego State San Jose State 1935 San Jose State (2006)
UNLV Nevada 1969 Battle for Nevada Fremont Cannon Nevada (2006) 2007
Air Force, Army & Navy 1972 Commander in Chief's Trophy Navy (2006) 2007

[edit] Postseason Records

Football Bowl Games
School Record Winning
Percentage
Utah 9-3 .750
TCU 9-13-1 .391
Air Force 8-8-1 .471
BYU 8-16-1 .320
Wyoming 5-6 .455
Colorado State 4-8 .333
UNLV 3-0 1.000
San Diego State 3-4 .429
New Mexico 2-7-1 .200
Men's NCAA Basketball Tournament
School Appearances Record Wins Per
Appearance
Utah 26 35-29 1.346
UNLV 15 32-14 2.133
BYU 22 11-25 .500
Wyoming 14 9-19 .643
New Mexico 11 6-12 .545
TCU 7 5-7 .714
Colorado State 8 3-9 .375
San Diego State 5 0-5 .000
Air Force 4 0-4 .000

[edit] Conference Facilities

School Football Stadia Capacity Basketball Arenas Capacity Baseball Stadia Capacity
Air Force Falcon Stadium 52,123 Clune Arena 5,939 Falcon Baseball Field 1,000
BYU LaVell Edwards Stadium 65,524 Marriott Center 22,700 Larry H. Miller Field 2,300
Colorado State Hughes Stadium 35,000 Moby Arena 8,745 No baseball team
New Mexico University Stadium 42,000 University Arena 18,018 Isotopes Park 11,124
San Diego State Qualcomm Stadium 71,294 Cox Arena 12,414 Tony Gwynn Stadium 3,000
TCU Amon G. Carter Stadium 46,083 Daniel-Meyer Coliseum 7,200 Lupton Stadium 3,500
UNLV Sam Boyd Stadium 40,000 Thomas & Mack Center (men)
Cox Pavilion (women)
18,776
2,472
Earl Wilson Stadium 3,000
Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium 45,017 Jon M. Huntsman Center 15,000 Franklin Covey Field 15,500
Wyoming War Memorial Stadium 33,500 Arena-Auditorium 15,028 No baseball team

[edit] External link


NCAA Division I Bowl Subdivision 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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