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orangefan Offline
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Post: #1
Realignment Timeline
12/15/09 The Big Ten announces its intent to explore expansion https://www.espn.com/college-sports/news...id=4745381
12/27/09 Frank the Tank posts The Big Ten Expansion Index blog http://frankthetank.me/2009/12/27/the-bi...of-orange/
2/9/10 The Pac-10 announces that it is looking "very seriously" at expansion
6/3/10 Chip Brown reports that the Pac-10 is prepared to invite Texas, Texas A&M, OU, OSU, TTU and Colorado to join
6/10/10 Colorado joins the Pac-10
6/11/10 Boise St. joins the MWC
6/12/10 Nebraska joins the Big Ten
6/14/10 Texas announces it will remain in the Big 12 http://www.texassports.com/news/2010/6/1...a_233.aspx
6/17/10 Utah joins the Pac-12
8/18/10 Fresno St. and Nevada join the MWC
8/31/10 BYU withdraws from the MWC
11/30/10 TCU joins the Big East
12/10/10 Hawaii joins the MWC (football only)
5/4/11 The Pac 12 announces a new TV deal with FOX and ESPN that will pay each school $20.8 million per year over 12 years, more than the $17 million and $13 million received by SEC and ACC schools, respectively, and that will allow the creation of a Pac 12 TV network
5/26/11 The Big East turns down a TV deal that would pay its football playing members each $11 million per year https://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Dail...-East.aspx
7/1/11 Nebraska to the Big Ten, Utah and Colorado to the Pac 12, BYU going Independent, and Boise St. to the MWC all become effective

Summer, 2011 Rumors circulate that Texas A&M will join the SEC http://collegefootballtalk.nbcsports.com...d-for-now/
8/27/11 Pete Thamel reports that Texas A&M is close to joining the SEC, with BYU or Pitt listed as possible replacements for the Big 12 http://thequad.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/08...ng-big-12/
8/31/11 Texas A&M officially notifies the Big 12 that it will be leaving the conference http://www.statesman.com/news/sports/col...-12/nRd4T/
9/2/11 OU President Boren announces that Oklahoma is exploring all options, including a possible move to the Pac-12 http://www.sbnation.com/ncaa-football/20...ealignment
9/18/11 Syracuse and Pitt join the ACC
9/20/11 The Pac-12 announces its decision to stay at 12 schools http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/21/sports...ig-12.html
9/26/11 Texas A&M joins the SEC
10/10/11 TCU joins the Big 12
10/28/11 WVU joins the Big 12
11/6/11 Missouri joins the SEC
12/6/11 Boise St. (football only), San Diego St. (football only), Houston, UCF and SMU join the Big East
1/24/12 Navy joins the Big East (football only)
2/8/12 Memphis joins the Big East
2/14/12 WVU reaches a settlement with the Big East to join the Big 12 in July, 2012
3/7/12 Temple joins the Big East
5/4/12 Utah St. and San Jose St. join the MWC
7/1/12 TAMU and Mizzou to the SEC, TCU and WVU to the Big 12, Temple to the Big East (football only for 2012-13), and Nevada, Fresno St. and Hawaii to the MWC all become effective.

9/7/12 The Big 12 announces a Grant of Rights agreement as part of its new TV deal with ESPN
9/12/12 Notre Dame joins the ACC
11/20/12 Maryland joins the Big Ten
11/21/12 Rutgers joins the Big Ten
11/27/12 ECU (initially football only) and Tulane join the Big East
11/28/12 Louisville joins the ACC
12/15/12 Georgetown, St. John's, Villanova, Providence, Seton Hall, Marquette and DePaul (the "Catholic 7") announce their intent to leave the Big East
12/31/12 Boise St. rejoins the MWC
1/16/13 San Diego St. rejoins the MWC
3/8/13 The Catholic 7 reach agreement to leave the Big East and to keep the Big East name
3/20/13 Butler, Xavier and Creighton join the Big East
4/3/13 The conference formerly known as the Big East announces its new name as the American Athletic Conference ("AAC")
4/4/13 Tulsa joins the AAC
4/22/13 The ACC approves a Grant of Rights agreement, arguably ending the current round of realignment
7/1/13 Syracuse, Pitt and Notre Dame to the ACC, the Big East/AAC Split, UCF, Memphis, Houston and SMU to the AAC, Temple to the AAC for all sports, Xavier, Butler and Creighton to the Big East, and USU and SJSU to the MWC all become effective
7/1/14 Rutgers and Maryland to Big Ten, Louisville to the ACC, and ECU, Tulane and Tulsa to the AAC all become effective
7/1/15 Navy to the AAC becomes effective

7/18/16 Brett McMurphy reports that the ACC and ESPN will launch the ACC Network in 2019 and that the ACC's television rights deal with ESPN and its Grant of Rights agreement will be extended through the 2035-36 season
7/19/16 The Big 12 announces that it will actively explore expansion
7/21/16 The ACC and ESPN officially announce the launch of the ACC Network
10/17/16 The Big 12 announces its decision to stay at 10 members
4/7/17 Wichita St. joins the AAC (non-football)
7/1/17 Wichita St. to the AAC becomes effective

6/26/19 UConn joins the Big East and announces it will become independent in football
7/1/20 UConn to the Big East and its move to football independence become effective

7/30/21 Texas and Oklahoma join the SEC
8/12/21 The Pac-12 announces that it will not be expanding at this time
9/10/21 BYU, Cincinnati, Houston and UCF join the Big 12
10/1/21 Air Force and Colorado State decline invitations to join the AAC
10/21/21 Charlotte, Florida Atlantic, North Texas, Rice, UAB and UTSA join the AAC
6/30/22 USC and UCLA join the Big Ten

10/30/22 The Big 12 reaches $2.28 billion, 6 year extension of its television deal with ESPN and FOX
7/1/23 BYU, Cincinnati, Houston and UCF to the Big 12, and Charlotte, Florida Atlantic, North Texas, Rice, UAB and UTSA to the AAC become effective

7/27/23 Colorado rejoins the Big 12
8/4/23 Doomsday for the Pac-12: After the Pac-12 receives disappointing bids for its new TV package, Washington and Oregon join the Big Ten, and Arizona, Arizona St., and Utah join the Big 12
9/1/23 Stanford, Cal, and SMU join the ACC
10/25/23 Army joins the AAC as a football only member
12/1/23 The MWC announces a football scheduling agreement with Oregon St. and Washington St. for the 2024 season
12/22/23 Florida State sues the ACC over GOR and exit fee
(This post was last modified: 12-22-2023 01:52 PM by orangefan.)
02-28-2014 02:37 PM
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Hokie Mark Offline
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Post: #2
RE: Realignment Timeline
Good stuff. Reminds us the order of events.
02-28-2014 02:44 PM
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bigblueblindness Offline
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Post: #3
RE: Realignment Timeline
Nice summary, orangefan. That reminds me of why it feels like forever that we have heard any solid realignment news... we were used to getting something significant almost every quarter for a several years in a row.
02-28-2014 02:50 PM
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IHAVETRIED Offline
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Post: #4
RE: Realignment Timeline
(02-28-2014 02:50 PM)bigblueblindness Wrote:  Nice summary, orangefan. That reminds me of why it feels like forever that we have heard any solid realignment news... we were used to getting something significant almost every quarter for a several years in a row.

Eight Months without something happening is unusual in this new world of ours.

G-O-R.
02-28-2014 03:39 PM
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bullet Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
Impressive work.

Now if someone could do the CUSA/SB/MAC additions the FBS timeline would be complete.
02-28-2014 03:45 PM
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jdgaucho Online
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RE: Realignment Timeline
small thing but Hawaii's, SDSU's and Boise's moves were football-onlies to the MW and former BE.
02-28-2014 04:35 PM
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ken d Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
Somehow in my memory I thought Mizzou's decision to go to the SEC came before the invitation to West Virginia by the Big 12.
02-28-2014 04:47 PM
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Native Georgian Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
(02-28-2014 02:37 PM)orangefan Wrote:  11/27/12 ECU and Tulane join the Big East
4/4/13 Tulsa joins the AAC
The November 2012 announcement was football-only for ECU. The all-sports angle happened in spring 2013 -- IIRC, the same time as the Tulsa announcement.
02-28-2014 04:56 PM
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Native Georgian Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
I wish someone would come up with a timeline going back to 2003 and including all the drama with Miami, BC, VT, not to mention the collapse of C-USA 1.0
(This post was last modified: 02-28-2014 04:58 PM by Native Georgian.)
02-28-2014 04:57 PM
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BewareThePhog Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
(02-28-2014 04:47 PM)ken d Wrote:  Somehow in my memory I thought Mizzou's decision to go to the SEC came before the invitation to West Virginia by the Big 12.
If memory serves, there was a lot of smoke about the Missouri move before it became official. Who knows for sure when backdoor conversations began, but after the leak of the OU consideration of the PAC 12, Missouri ran with that threat as their primary motivating force for considering SEC membership. That may well have been the case - after all, many scenarios floating around at that time which had the Big 12 imploding had Missouri in a raft along with KU, KSU, ISU and others.

Even if their final primary motivation wasn't fear of being left behind in a severely diminished conference and the surprise opportunity to join the SEC was simply too good to pass up, there was some genuine conflict in views in the MU community as to the right move. Since they could fit well in the SEC (or Big 12, or even the B1G), all political and public relations considerations aside, it probably took some time for a critical mass of consensus to coalesce for the SEC move. In the meantime, talks were proceeding with West Virginia and Louisville, and the official invitation was tendered to WVU.
(This post was last modified: 02-28-2014 05:13 PM by BewareThePhog.)
02-28-2014 05:12 PM
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TexanMark Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
Nice thread...admin this ought to be thumb-tacked above for reference.
02-28-2014 05:20 PM
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westwolf Offline
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Post: #12
RE: Realignment Timeline
A very nice recap of the third and final wave of expansion/realignment. I consider the first to have been 1992-1994, encompassing the moves of:
Arkansas & S. Carolina to the SEC
Penn State to the Big 10
Baylor, Texas, A&M and Tech to the Big 12

The second included the 2004-2005 moves of:
Miami, Va Tech and BC to the ACC
The resulting additions of Connecticut, Louisville, USF to the Big East
Temple too ? (in and out)

The P5 is now set for years to come.
The Little 2 (AAC, MWC) await only Navy in 2015
The Worst 3 (CUSA, MAC, SB) will likely have changes as wannabes move up from FCS, but for most CFB fans it's settled.
02-28-2014 07:20 PM
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NJ2MDTerp Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
6/11/2010 - Teddy Greenstein, the Chicago Tribune's Big Ten beat reporter, discloses the Big Ten's interest in the University of Maryland.


http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2010-...ka-big-ten
02-28-2014 07:23 PM
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lumberpack4 Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
(02-28-2014 07:20 PM)westwolf Wrote:  A very nice recap of the third and final wave of expansion/realignment. I consider the first to have been 1992-1994, encompassing the moves of:
Arkansas & S. Carolina to the SEC
Penn State to the Big 10
Baylor, Texas, A&M and Tech to the Big 12

The second included the 2004-2005 moves of:
Miami, Va Tech and BC to the ACC
The resulting additions of Connecticut, Louisville, USF to the Big East
Temple too ? (in and out)

The P5 is now set for years to come.
The Little 2 (AAC, MWC) await only Navy in 2015
The Worst 3 (CUSA, MAC, SB) will likely have changes as wannabes move up from FCS, but for most CFB fans it's settled.

Actually the ACC time line on 2003 is this:

June 1998 John Swofford and Mike Tranghese meet in Atlanta to discuss Big East football teams to the ACC and establish an all basketball Big East http://jacksonville.com/tu-online/storie...4915.shtml

May 2003, Virginia Governor finds out that UNC and Duke will vote against ACC expansion putting UVa under the gun regarding VT and Va Governor puts the screws to UVa.

June 25, 2003 ACC votes 7-2 to add Miami and VT

June 25, 2003 ACC votes 9-0 to establish feelers toward Notre Dame

October 13, 2003 ACC votes 9-0 to add BC

July 1, 2004 Miami and VT enter ACC

July 1, 205 BC enters ACC
(This post was last modified: 02-28-2014 07:49 PM by lumberpack4.)
02-28-2014 07:42 PM
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Wedge Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
(02-28-2014 07:20 PM)westwolf Wrote:  A very nice recap of the third and final wave of expansion/realignment. I consider the first to have been 1992-1994, encompassing the moves of:
Arkansas & S. Carolina to the SEC
Penn State to the Big 10
Baylor, Texas, A&M and Tech to the Big 12

The second included the 2004-2005 moves of:
Miami, Va Tech and BC to the ACC
The resulting additions of Connecticut, Louisville, USF to the Big East
Temple too ? (in and out)

The P5 is now set for years to come.
The Little 2 (AAC, MWC) await only Navy in 2015
The Worst 3 (CUSA, MAC, SB) will likely have changes as wannabes move up from FCS, but for most CFB fans it's settled.

Penn State was invited to join the Big Ten in December 1989. Their first Big Ten football season was 1993. http://www.nytimes.com/1989/12/16/sports...rence.html

Florida State was invited to join the ACC in September 1990. Their first ACC football season was 1992. http://articles.latimes.com/1990-09-14/s...rida-state
02-28-2014 07:49 PM
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ken d Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
(02-28-2014 05:12 PM)BewareThePhog Wrote:  
(02-28-2014 04:47 PM)ken d Wrote:  Somehow in my memory I thought Mizzou's decision to go to the SEC came before the invitation to West Virginia by the Big 12.
If memory serves, there was a lot of smoke about the Missouri move before it became official. Who knows for sure when backdoor conversations began, but after the leak of the OU consideration of the PAC 12, Missouri ran with that threat as their primary motivating force for considering SEC membership. That may well have been the case - after all, many scenarios floating around at that time which had the Big 12 imploding had Missouri in a raft along with KU, KSU, ISU and others.

Even if their final primary motivation wasn't fear of being left behind in a severely diminished conference and the surprise opportunity to join the SEC was simply too good to pass up, there was some genuine conflict in views in the MU community as to the right move. Since they could fit well in the SEC (or Big 12, or even the B1G), all political and public relations considerations aside, it probably took some time for a critical mass of consensus to coalesce for the SEC move. In the meantime, talks were proceeding with West Virginia and Louisville, and the official invitation was tendered to WVU.

There was some public discussion in September about Auburn's willingness to move into the SEC East to accommodate putting A&M and Mizzou in the west. At that point, a formal offer had been extended. There was also an inadvertent leak of a press release to be dated 11/6 that got into the press on 10/28, the same day WVU's admittance to the Big 12 was announced. I expect the Big 12 already knew Missouri's intentions at that point.
02-28-2014 08:02 PM
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RE: Realignment Timeline
(02-28-2014 07:42 PM)lumberpack4 Wrote:  June 1998 John Swofford and Mike Tranghese meet in Atlanta to discuss Big East football teams to the ACC and establish an all basketball Big East http://jacksonville.com/tu-online/storie...4915.shtml

Quote from that article:

Quote:...a meeting was held in Atlanta in 1998, in which Tranghese talked with ACC commissioner John Swofford -- among others -- about the possibility of forming an all-basketball Big East Conference.

In order to do that, the Big East would have allowed Miami, Syracuse and Boston College to join the nine-member ACC.

"From those talks, we considered the three [schools]," Robinson said. "But the ACC ain't getting that large. It's too big and too large....

This was the big mistake made by the ACC - not to go to 12 as soon as the SEC and Big 12 did it. If the ACC ever collapses it can all be traced to this one mistake, IMHO.
02-28-2014 09:07 PM
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Native Georgian Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
(02-28-2014 07:49 PM)Wedge Wrote:  Penn State was invited to join the Big Ten in December 1989. Their first Big Ten football season was 1993. http://www.nytimes.com/1989/12/16/sports...rence.html

Choice passage from that NYT article:
Quote:There is considerable doubt, however, about whether Paterno will ever coach a full Big Ten schedule. He has said that he plans to retire when he turns 65, after the 1991 season, and Penn State's integration into the conference is expected to take much longer. Although competition in some other sports could begin next season, football schedules have already been completed through the 1992 season and some games have been set for as far ahead as 1996.
03-01-2014 09:23 AM
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Chappy Offline
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RE: Realignment Timeline
(02-28-2014 07:23 PM)NJ2MDTerp Wrote:  6/11/2010 - Teddy Greenstein, the Chicago Tribune's Big Ten beat reporter, discloses the Big Ten's interest in the University of Maryland.


http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2010-...ka-big-ten

Good find.

A lot of people around here (heart of old-school ACC country) act like the Maryland move came out of the blue, but I remember vividly Maryland fans talking about a move to the B10 while sitting in the stands at the Military Bowl in December of 2010.
03-01-2014 09:26 AM
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RE: Realignment Timeline
this reminds me of a post on a different message board by a poster named Aum-Ni. He didn't do proposed moves, near moves or rumors, but it was still an incredible amount of work and goes all the way back to 36'

*the list is not 100% perfect and has errors here & there, but the vast majority of it checks out
=================================
1936


Conferences looked like this in 1936:

Big 6 Conference (6 teams)
Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma

Border Conference (7 teams)
Arizona, Arizona State, Northern Arizona, New Mexico, New Mexico State, Texas-El Paso, Texas Tech

Independents (43 teams)
Army, Brown, Bucknell, Carnegie Tech, Centenary, Colgate, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Detroit Mercy, Duquesne, Erskine, Fordham, George Washington, Georgetown, Gonzaga, Harvard, Holy Cross, Loyola Marymount, Loyola-New Orleans, Manhattan, Marquette, Mercer, Miami (FL), Michigan State, Navy, New York University, Notre Dame, Pennsylvania, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Presbyterian, Princeton, San Francisco, Santa Clara, St. Louis, St. Mary's, Syracuse, Temple, Villanova, West Virginia, Wofford, Yale

Missouri Valley Conference (7 teams)
Creighton, Drake, Grinnell, Oklahoma State, Tulsa, Washburn, Washington (MO)

Pacific Coast Conference (10 teams)
California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Washington, Washington State

Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference (12 teams)
Brigham Young, Colorado, Colorado College, Colorado School of Mines, Colorado State, Denver, Montana State, Northern Colorado, Utah, Utah State, Western State, Wyoming

Southeastern Conference (13 teams)
Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Sewanee, Tennessee, Tulane, Vanderbilt

Southern Conference (16 teams)
Citadel, Clemson, Davidson, Duke, Furman, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Richmond, South Carolina, Virginia, Virginia Military Institute, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest, Washington & Lee, William & Mary

Southwest Conference (7 teams)
Arkansas, Baylor, Rice, Southern Methodist, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Christian

Western Conference (10 teams)
Chicago, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Purdue, Wisconsin

- There are 131 members of Division I football at this time.

=========================================================

1937


- Erskine, Loyola-New Orleans, Mercer, Presbyterian, St. Louis, and Wofford leaves Independents. Outside of St. Louis the remaining schools quit playing a heavy schedule of Division I football.

- Boston College joins Independents and begins playing a schedule featuring mostly Division I opponents, there are now 38 Independents

- Grinnell leaves the Missouri Valley Conference and is replaced by St. Louis, keeping membership at seven teams. Grinnell drops down to a lower level of competition.

- There are now a total of 126 members of Division I football at this time

=========================================================

1938


- Virginia leaves the Southern Conference to play as an independent. Also Hampden-Sydney joins up as an independent giving that group 40 members. The Southern Conference is left with 15 members.

- The seven major schools in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference withdrew to form their own league. Brigham Young, Colorado, Colorado State, Denver, Utah, Utah State and Wyoming formed the Mountain States Conference. The Mountain States Conference was often referred to as the Big Seven Conference for the next eight years. Colorado College, Colorado School of Mines, Montana State, Northern Colorado and Western State remained in the RMAC and now played at a lower level of college football.

- At this time there are 121 members of major Division I football.

=========================================================

1939


- Two more schools join the Independents: Southwestern (Texas) and Hardin-Simmons, giving that group 42 members.

- Division I membership is now at 123 members.

=========================================================

1940


- Sewanee leaves the SEC to become an Independent, dropping membership there to 12 teams.

- The University of Chicago leaves the Western Conference, dropping their membership to nine teams.

- There are now 41 Independent teams. Besides the addition of Sewanee, Bucknell and Southwestern (TX) drop out of Division I.

- This leaves a total of 120 teams in Division I.

=========================================================

1941


- Hardin-Simmons joins the Border Conference, from the Independents, while West Texas A&M joins the league, moving up to Division I. The Border Conference now has nine members.

- George Washington leaves the Independents to join the Southern Conference giving that league 16 members.

- Hampden-Sydney and Carnegie Tech drops out of Division I football and leaves the Independents. New York University joins as an Independent. There are now 38 Independents.

- Washburn drops out of Division I football by leaving the Missouri Valley Conference, the MVC now has six members.

- There are now 119 Division I football members.

=========================================================

1942


- The following teams join the Independent ranks: Georgia Pre-Flight, North Carolina Pre-Flight, Jacksonville NAS, Great Lakes Navy, Iowa Pre-Flight, St. Mary's Pre-Flight. Independents Gonzaga, Centenary, New York University and Sewanee drop out of Division I football. There are now 38 Independents.

- Washington University of Missouri of the Missouri Valley Conference drops out of Division I.

- There are now 118 Division I football members.

=========================================================

1943


- Due to World War II, the following schools did not field football teams this year. A school with a year in parentheses shows the year the school brought football back, no year means the school resumed in 1944: Alabama, Auburn, Baylor (1945), Boston College, Citadel (1946), Davidson (1946), Detroit Mercy (1945), Drake (played a non-Division I schedule in 1943), Duquesne (1947), Florida, Fordham (1946), Furman (1946), Georgetown (1946), George Washington (1946), Harvard (1945), Idaho (1945), Kentucky, Loyola Marymount (1949), Miami (FL), Michigan State, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Montana (1946), Oregon (1945), Oregon State (1945), Santa Clara (1946), St. Louis (1945), Stanford (1946), Syracuse, Tennessee, Vanderbilt (1945), Virginia Tech (1945), Washington (played non-Division I schedule in 1944), Washington State (1945), Washington & Lee (1946) and William & Mary did not field teams this year due to World War II.

- The entire Border Conference and Mountain States Conference did not compete due to World War II.

- Creighton University and Manhattan College discontinued football entirely.

- Colorado College, March Field, Del Monte Pre-Flight, Pacific, Fort Riley, Alameda Coast Guard, Texas Tech, Camp Grant join the Independents. Jacksonville NAS quits football. There are 34 Independents for this year.

- Due to World War II, only 73 schools fielded teams in 1943

=========================================================

1944


- There are 39 Independents this year. Joining as new Independents are Amarillo Field, Norman NAS, Randolph Field, Bucknell (rejoins Division I), Second Air Force (CO), Coast Guard, Lubbock Field, Fort Warren, Idaho State, New York University and Presbyterian. Dropping out were Del Monte Flight, Georgia Pre-Flight, Pacific (dropped until 1950), Fort Riley, North Carolina Pre-Flight, Camp Grant, St. Mary's (rejoined in 1945), Princeton (rejoined in 1945), and San Francisco (rejoined in 1946)

- Texas Tech leaves the Independents and rejoins the Border Conference which has three members at this time: Texas Tech, West Texas A&M and New Mexico.

- The Missouri Valley Conference suspends play in 1944 due to World War II.

- The Mountain States Conference resumes play with four teams: Colorado, Denver, Utah and Utah State

- There are 91 schools competing in Division I football this year

=========================================================

1945


- There are 35 Independents playing this season. Nearly all of the military teams (Pre-Flight schools, forts, etc.) quit playing football this season. Lafayette and Tennessee-Chattanooga are new Independents.

- Most of the members of the Pacific Coast Conference resume playing football: USC, Washington, Washington State, Oregon, Oregon State, UCLA, California, and Idaho.

- The Missouri Valley Conference resumes football with five members: Drake, Oklahoma State, St. Louis, Tulsa and Wichita State

- Colorado State resumes football and rejoins the Mountain States Conference as the fifth member

- Vanderbilt resumes football and brings the SEC back to 12 teams

- There are 101 Division I football teams this year.

=========================================================

1946


- Stanford and Montana resume football and bring the Pacific Coast Conference back to 10 teams

- Arizona, Arizona State, Northern Arizona, Hardin-Simmons, New Mexico State and UTEP rejoin the Border Conference after resuming football, bringing membership back up to nine

- Brigham Young and Wyoming resume football and become the sixth and seventh members of the Mountain States Conference

- The following teams rejoin the Southern Conference after resuming football after WWII: George Washington, Washington & Lee, Furman, Davidson, and The Citadel. The Southern Conference now is back to 16 teams

- There are 39 Independents this season. New Independents are Nevada, Rutgers, Montana State, San Francisco (resumes football), Santa Clara (resumes football), Portland and Fordham (resumes football). Great Lakes Navy and Coast Guard stops playing football while Colorado College and Presbyterian drop out of Division I

- With most schools now having resumed football after World War II, Division I membership is back up to 120 teams.

=========================================================

1947


- Boston University joins the Independents and Duquesne resumes football while Bucknell and Lafayette drop out of the group and Division I football. The number of Independents remain at 39 and the total number of Division I football teams remains at 120.

=========================================================

1948


- The Mountain States Conference renames itself the Skyline Conference. Colorado drops out of the league leaving the conference with six members: BYU, Colorado State, Denver, Utah, Utah State and Wyoming.

- Colorado leaves the Mountain States to join the Big 6 as its seventh member, making the league now known as the Big 7 with membership of Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma.

There are 36 Independents in 1948. Merchant Marine, Montana State, and Portland all dropped out of Division I. There are now 117 football teams in Division I.

=========================================================

1949


- Detroit Mercy leaves the Independents and joins the Missouri Valley Conference as its sixth member. Bradley University also moves up to Division I football and joins the MVC as its seventh member.

- There are still 36 Independents. Detroit Mercy left for the MVC. Tennessee-Chattanooga leaves Division I. The two are replaced by Loyola Marymount (resumes football) and Houston who moved up. There are now 119 football schools in Division I.

=========================================================

1950


- Montana leaves the Pacific Coast Conference and becomes Independent.

- St. Louis drops out of Division I football and leaves the Missouri Valley Conference with six members.

- West Virginia leaves the Independents and joins the Southern Conference as their 17th member.

- Despite the one losses, the Independents gained three new schools to boost its number to 38: Pacific, San Jose State, Montana,

As of 1950 here are the rosters of the Division I conferences:

Big 7 Conference (7 teams)
Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma

Border Conference (9 teams)
Arizona, Arizona State, Hardin-Simmons, New Mexico, New Mexico State, Northern Arizona, Texas-El Paso, Texas Tech, West Texas A&M

Independents (38 teams)
Army, Boston College, Boston University, Brown, Colgate, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Duquesne, Fordham, Georgetown, Harvard, Holy Cross, Houston, Loyola Marymount, Marquette, Miami (FL), Michigan State, Montana, Navy, Nevada, New York University, Notre Dame, Pacific, Pennsylvania, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Princeton, Rutgers, San Francisco, San Jose State, Santa Clara, St. Mary's, Syracuse, Temple, Villanova, Virginia, Yale

Missouri Valley Conference (6 teams)
Bradley, Detroit Mercy, Drake, Oklahoma State, Tulsa, Wichita State

Pacific Coast Conference (9 teams)
California, Idaho, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Washington, Washington State

Skyline Conference (6 teams)
Brigham Young, Colorado State, Denver, Utah, Utah State, Wyoming

Southeastern Conference (12 teams)
Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Tennessee, Tulane, Vanderbilt

Southern Conference (17 teams)
Citadel, Clemson, Davidson, Duke, Furman, George Washington, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Richmond, South Carolina, Virginia Military Institute, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest, Washington & Lee, West Virginia, William & Mary

Southwest Conference (7 teams)
Arkansas, Baylor, Rice, Southern Methodist, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Christian

Western Conference (9 teams)
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Purdue, Wisconsin

- There are 120 teams in Division I at this time.

=========================================================

1951


- Houston leaves the Independents to join the Missouri Valley Conference as their seventh member.

- Montana leaves the Independents to join the Skyline Conference. New Mexico joins the Skyline Conference giving that league eight members now. New Mexico continues a membership with the Border Conference as well for 1951.

- The Independents have 32 members. Besides the losses of Montana and Houston the group also lost Duquesne (drops football), St. Mary's (drops out of Division I), Georgetown (dropped football) and Nevada (dropped out of Division I)

- That leaves 114 teams in Division I.

=========================================================

1952


- New Mexico leaves the Border Conference to become a full time member of the Skyline Conference, the Border Conference is left with eight members

- Drake leaves the Missouri Valley Conference and becomes an Independent. Bradley drops out of Division I and also leaves the Missouri Valley leaving that league with five members.

- Clemson and Maryland leave the Southern Conference to become Independent. The Southern Conference is left with 15 members.

- There are now 33 Independents. Drake, Clemson and Maryland join the group. Leaving the group are San Francisco and Loyola Marymount who both drop football.

- There are now 111 teams in Division I.

=========================================================

1953


- Clemson and Maryland leave the Independents and Duke, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina and Wake Forest leave the Southern Conference to form the Atlantic Coast Conference with seven charter members. The Southern Conference is left with 10 members.

- Michigan State leaves the Independents and joins the Western Conference as its 10th member. The league now is referred to as the Big Ten Conference.

- Northern Arizona leaves the Border Conference and drops out of Division I, leaving that league with seven members.

- There are 28 Independents. Besides the loss of Clemson, Maryland and Michigan State the group also lost New York University (dropped football), Santa Clara and Temple (both dropped out of Division I). North Texas moved up to Division I and became an Independent.

- There are now 109 teams in Division I.

=========================================================

1954


- Virginia leaves the Independents and joins the ACC as its eighth member

- Washington & Lee leaves the Southern Conference as they drop out of Division I, leaving that league with nine members

- There are now 29 Independents. Virginia left for the ACC. New additions to the group included Cincinnati and Florida State, both of which moved up into Division I.

- There are now 110 members in Division I.

=========================================================

1955


- For the first time since 1936 there are no conference changes.

- Membership in Division I remains at 110.

=========================================================

1956


- Texas Tech leaves the Border Conference and becomes an Independent, leaving that league with six teams.

- Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton and Yale leave the Independents and form the Ivy League with eight charter members.

- There are 22 Independents at this point. Besides the eight schools that left for the Ivy League the group gained Dayton who moved up to Division I status.

- There are now 111 Division I teams.

=========================================================

1957


- Oklahoma State and Detroit Mercy leave the Missouri Valley Conference to become Independent. Independent schools Cincinnati and North Texas move in to the Missouri Valley and that league remains at five members.

- There are 23 Independents. Oklahoma State and Detroit Mercy join the group while Cincinnati and North Texas leave and take their place in the MVC. Air Force starts football and joins the Independents.

- There are now 112 Division I teams.

=========================================================

1958


- There are no changes in conferences in 1958. Membership remains at 112.

=========================================================

1959


- Idaho, Oregon, Oregon State and Washington State leave the Pacific Coast Conference and become Independent, leaving the PCC with five members.

- There are now 27 Independent teams. Along with the addition of the four PCC schools, Xavier moves up to Division I and joins the Independents. Drake leaves the group, dropping out of Division I.

- Total membership remains at 112.

=========================================================

1960


- Oklahoma State leaves the Independents and joins the Big 7 as its eighth member. The conference renames itself as the Big 8 Conference.

- The Pacific Coast Conference was disbanded. The five members from that conference (California, Stanford, UCLA, USC and Washington) formed the Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU).

- Houston leaves the Missouri Valley Conference and becomes Independent. The MVC is left with four members.

- Texas Tech leaves the Independents and joins the Southwest Conference as its eighth member.

- There are 27 Independents in 1960. Oklahoma State and Texas Tech leave to join their respective leagues while Houston comes in from the MVC. Memphis moves up to Division I and joins the Independents.

- There are now 113 Division I teams.

The conference rosters as of 1960:

AAWU (5 teams)
California, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Washington

ACC (8 teams)
Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina, Virginia, Wake Forest

Big 8 (8 teams)
Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State

Big Ten (10 teams)
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Purdue, Wisconsin

Border Conference (6 teams)
Arizona, Arizona State, Hardin-Simmons, New Mexico State, Texas-El Paso, West Texas A&M

Independents (27 teams)
Air Force, Army, Boston College, Boston University, Colgate, Dayton, Detroit Mercy, Florida State, Holy Cross, Houston, Idaho, Marquette, Memphis, Miami (FL), Navy, Notre Dame, Oregon, Oregon State, Pacific, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, San Jose State, Syracuse, Villanova, Washington State, Xavier

Ivy League (8 teams)
Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Yale

Missouri Valley Conference (4 teams)
Cincinnati, North Texas, Tulsa, Wichita State

Skyline Conference (8 teams)
Brigham Young, Colorado State, Denver, Montana, New Mexico, Utah, Utah State, Wyoming

Southeastern Conference (12 teams)
Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Tennessee, Tulane, Vanderbilt

Southern Conference (9 teams)
Citadel, Davidson, Furman, George Washington, Richmond, Virginia Military Institute, Virginia Tech, West Virginia, William & Mary

Southwest Conference (8 teams)
Arkansas, Baylor, Rice, Southern Methodist, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Christian, Texas Tech

=========================================================

1961


- Arizona leaves the Border Conference and becomes Independent, leaving the Border Conference with five members

- Denver drops football and leaves the Skyline Conference with seven members

- There are 27 Independents. Arizona joined the group from the Border Conference while Marquette drops football and leaves the Independents.

- There are now 112 teams in Division I.

=========================================================

1962


- The Mid-American Conference (MAC) moves up to Division I for football and with it are seven new Division I teams: Bowling Green, Kent State, Marshall, Miami (OH), Ohio, Toledo, and Western Michigan

- Washington State leaves the Independents and joins the AAWU as its sixth member

- The Border Conference and Skyline Conference both dissolve. The Western Athletic Conference (WAC) is formed with charter members: Arizona, Arizona State, Brigham Young, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming

- There are new 34 Independents. Washington State left for the AAWU and Arizona left for the WAC. Colorado State, Hardin-Simmons, Montana, New Mexico State, Texas-El Paso, Utah State, and West Texas A&M join the group from the Border and Skyline Conferences. Louisville and Buffalo move up to Division I and join the group.

- There are now 121 teams in Division I.

=========================================================
1963


- Louisville and Dayton leave the Independents and join the Missouri Valley Conference giving that league six teams.

- There are 32 Independents. Dayton and Louisville left for the MVC. Lehigh and Southern Mississippi moved up to Division I and joined the group while Montana and Hardin-Simmons dropped out of Division I.

- Total membership remains at 121 teams.

=========================================================

1964


- Oregon and Oregon State leave the Independents and join the AAWU, giving them eight members.

- Georgia Tech leaves the SEC and becomes Independent. The SEC now has 11 members.

- There are 31 Independents in 1968. Oregon and Oregon State leave for the AAWU. Georgia Tech joins the group from the SEC.

- Membership in Division I remains at 121.

=========================================================

1965


- Virginia Tech leaves the Southern Conference and becomes Independent. They are replaced by East Carolina who moves up to Division I and takes their spot in the Southern Conference to keep membership in that league at nine.

- There are 31 Independents in 1965. Virginia Tech joined the group from the Southern Conference. Quantico Marines joined the group for one year. Detroit Mercy (dropped football) and Boston University (dropped out of Division I) left the group.

- Membership in Division I stays at 120.

=========================================================

1966


- Tulane leaves the SEC and becomes Independent, leaving the SEC with 10 members

- Dayton leaves the Missouri Valley Conference and becomes Independent. The MVC is left with five members

- There are 32 Independents. Tulane and Dayton join the group from their respective leagues. Also joining is Tampa who moved up to Division I. Leaving the group are Quantico Marines and and Lehigh, who dropped down to a lower division.

- Division I membership is at 119.

=========================================================

1967


- George Washington drops out of Division I and leaves the Southern Conference, taking their membership level down to eight

- No other changes occur in 1967 and membership remains at 118.

=========================================================

1968


- The American Association of Western Universities (AAWU) changes its name to the Pacific-8 Conference, more commonly referred to as the Pac-8

- Colorado State and Texas-El Paso leave the Independents and join the WAC, giving that conference eight members

- Memphis leaves the Independents and joins the Missouri Valley Conference as its sixth member

- There are now 30 Independents. Colorado State, UTEP and Memphis all left to join their respective leagues while Northern Illinois moved up to Division I and became an Independent.

- There are now 119 Division I football programs.

=========================================================

1969


- West Virginia leaves the Southern Conference and becomes Independent, leaving the Southern Conference with seven members

- The Pacific Coast Athletic Association (PCAA) is formed with seven charter members. Pacific and San Jose State joined from the Independents while Fresno State, Long Beach State, Los Angeles State, San Diego State and Santa Barbara moved up to Division I

- There are now 27 Independents. West Virginia joined the group while Pacific and San Jose State left to form the new PCAA. Holy Cross and Tampa dropped back out of Division I and left the group.

- There are now 122 members in Division I.

=========================================================

1970


- Marshall is kicked out of the MAC and becomes Independent, leaving the MAC with six members

- Cincinnati leaves the Missouri Valley and becomes Independent. The MVC is left with five members

- There are now 30 Independents with the addition of Cincinnati, Marshall and Holy Cross (rejoins Division I).

- There are now 123 Division I football teams.

The conference rosters as of 1970 are:

ACC (8 teams)
Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina, Virginia, Wake Forest

Big 8 (8 teams)
Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State

Big Ten (10 teams)
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Purdue, Wisconsin

Independents (30 teams)
Air Force, Army, Boston College, Buffalo, Cincinnati, Colgate, Dayton, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Holy Cross, Houston, Idaho, Marshall, Miami (FL), Navy, New Mexico State, Northern Illinois, Notre Dame, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, Southern Mississippi, Syracuse, Tulane, Utah State, Villanova, Virginia Tech, West Texas A&M, West Virginia, Xavier

Ivy League (8 teams)
Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Yale

MAC (6 teams)
Bowling Green, Kent State, Miami (OH), Ohio, Toledo, Western Michigan

Missouri Valley (5 teams)
Louisville, Memphis, North Texas, Tulsa, Wichita State

Pac-8 (8 teams)
California, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Washington, Washington State

PCAA (7 teams)
Fresno State, Long Beach State, Los Angeles State, Pacific, San Diego State, San Jose State, Santa Barbara

SEC (10 teams)
Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Tennessee, Vanderbilt

Southern Conference (7 teams)
Citadel, Davidson, East Carolina, Furman, Richmond, Virginia Military Institute, William & Mary

Southwest Conference (8 teams)
Arkansas, Baylor, Rice, Southern Methodist, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Christian, Texas Tech

WAC (8 teams)
Arizona, Arizona State, Brigham Young, Colorado State, New Mexico, Texas-El Paso, Utah, Wyoming

=========================================================

1971


- Drake moves back up to Division I and joins the Missouri Valley Conference, also West Texas A&M leaves the Independents to join the MVC, giving that conference seven members

- There are 33 Independent teams now with Hawaii, Tampa, Temple, Tennessee-Chattanooga and Texas-Arlington all moving up to Division I and joining this group. West Texas A&M left to join the MVC and Buffalo dropped down out of Division I.

- This pushes Division I membership to 128 teams.

=========================================================

1972


- South Carolina leaves the ACC and becomes Independent, leaving the ACC with seven teams

- New Mexico State leaves the Independents and joins the Missouri Valley as its eighth member

- Los Angeles State and Santa Barbara leave the PCAA as they drop out of Division I leaving the PCAA with five members

- Appalachian State moves up to Division I and joins the Southern Conference as its eighth member

- There are still 33 Independents. South Carolina joins from the ACC, New Mexico State left to join the Missouri Valley. Southern Illinois joins as a new Division I member while Hawaii drops back out as they drop out of Division I.

- Total membership falls to 127 schools

=========================================================

1973

- This is the year the NCAA split into Divisions I, II and III. Prior to this year, the NCAA members competed in either the "University Division" or the "College Division"

- Memphis leaves the Missouri Valley and rejoins the Independents, leaving the MVC with seven members

- There are now 36 Independent teams. Memphis joined from the MVC. Lamar and Louisiana-Lafayette also join after moving up to Division I status.

- There are now 129 Division I football schools

=========================================================

1974


- Davidson drops out of Division I and leaves the Southern Conference, leaving that league with seven teams

- There are now 37 Independent teams. Arkansas State and Hawaii moves up to Division I to join this group. Xavier drops football and leaves.

- Total membership remains at 129 schools.

=========================================================

1975


- The MAC added two new teams that moved up into Division I: Ball State and Central Michigan. The league also added Northern Illinois from the Independents to give them a total of nine members.

- Louisville and North Texas leave the Missouri Valley to become Independent, leaving the MVC with five members

- The PCAA adds a sixth member in Division I newcomer Cal State-Fullerton

- The Southland Conference is formed with six charter members. Arkansas State, Lamar, Louisiana-Lafayette, and Texas-Arlington come over from the Independents while Louisiana Tech and McNeese State move up to Division I and join the league.

- There are now 37 Independent teams. Northern Illinois, Arkansas State, Lamar, Louisiana-Lafayette and Texas-Arlington all left to join conferences. Louisville and North Texas left conferences to join this group while new Division I teams Akron, Eastern Michigan, Illinois State, Indiana State, and Louisiana-Monroe join. Tampa drops football and leaves and Idaho drops down out of Division I.

- There was a huge increase this year to 137 Division I teams.

=========================================================

1976


- Eastern Michigan leaves the Independents and joins the MAC as their 10th member

- San Diego State leaves the PCAA and becomes Independent. The PCAA is left with five members

- Houston leaves the Independents and joins the Southwest Conference as their ninth member

- There are 36 Independents in 1976. Eastern Michigan and Houston leave to join leagues while San Diego State comes in from the PCAA. Northwestern State joins as a new Division I member while Akron drops back out dropping out of Division I.

- Membership remains at 137

=========================================================

1977


- Southern Illinois leaves the Independents and joins the Missouri Valley as their sixth member

- The Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) is moved up to Division I as a conference with seven members: Alcorn State, Grambling State, Jackson State, Mississippi Valley State, Prairie View A&M, Southern, and Texas Southern

- East Carolina, Richmond, and William & Mary leave the Southern Conference and become Independent. Marshall and Tennessee-Chattanooga join the conference from the Independents and Western Carolina moves up to Division I and joins the league to keep membership at seven teams

- There are 36 Independents. Southern Illinois, Marshall and Tennessee-Chattanooga leave to join conferences. East Carolina, Richmond and William & Mary join this group from the Southern Conference. Tennessee State joins as a new Division I member while Dayton drops out of Division I and leaves the group.

- There are now 145 Division I football members.

=========================================================

1978


- 1978 was the year that the NCAA split Division I into two separate groups: I-A (FBS) and I-AA (FCS). Schools had until the 1982 season to decide which subdivision they wanted to play in.

- Arizona and Arizona State leave the WAC and join the Pac-8 giving that league 10 members. The conference changes its name to the Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10)

- San Diego State joins the WAC from the Independents giving the WAC seven members

- Indiana State joins the Missouri Valley from the Independents giving the MVC seven members

- Utah State joins the PCAA from the Independents giving the PCAA six members

- The SWAC leaves Division I-A and competes in Division I-AA

- There are 34 Independent teams. San Diego State, Indiana State and Utah State all left to join leagues. UNLV moves up to Division I and joins the Independents.

- There are now 139 Division I-A members

=========================================================

1979


- Hawaii joins the WAC from the Independents giving that league eight members

- East Tennessee State moves up to Division I-A and joins the Southern Conference as its eighth member

- There are 34 Independent teams. Hawaii left to join the WAC while Connecticut joins as a new I-A member.

- There are now 141 Division I-A teams

=========================================================

1980


- Air Force leaves the Independents and joins the WAC as its ninth member

- There are now 31 Independent teams. Hawaii left to join the WAC. Connecticut and Northwestern State dropped back down to I-AA

- This leaves 139 teams in Division I-A

The Division I-A conference rosters as of 1980 are:

ACC (7 teams)
Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Virginia, Wake Forest

Big 8 (8 teams)
Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State

Big Ten (10 teams)
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Purdue, Wisconsin

Independents (31 teams)
Army, Boston College, Cincinnati, Colgate, East Carolina, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Holy Cross, Illinois State, Louisiana-Monroe, Louisville, Memphis, Miami (FL), Navy, North Texas, Notre Dame, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Richmond, Rutgers, South Carolina, Southern Mississippi, Syracuse, Temple, Tennessee State, Tulane, UNLV, Villanova, Virginia Tech, West Virginia, William & Mary

Ivy League (8 teams)
Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Yale

MAC (10 teams)
Ball State, Bowling Green, Central Michigan, Eastern Michigan, Kent State, Miami (OH), Northern Illinois, Ohio, Toledo, Western Michigan

Missouri Valley (7 teams)
Drake, Indiana State, New Mexico State, Southern Illinois, Tulsa, West Texas A&M, Wichita State

Pac-10 (10 teams)
Arizona, Arizona State, California, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Washington, Washington State

PCAA (6 teams)
Cal State-Fullerton, Fresno State, Long Beach State, Pacific, San Jose State, Utah State

SEC (10 teams)
Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Tennessee, Vanderbilt

Southern Conference (8 teams)
Appalachian State, Citadel, East Tennessee State, Furman, Marshall, Tennessee-Chattanooga, Virginia Military Institute, Western Carolina

Southland Conference (6 teams)
Arkansas State, Lamar, Louisiana-Lafayette, Louisiana Tech, McNeese State, Texas-Arlington

Southwest Conference (9 teams)
Arkansas, Baylor, Houston, Rice, Southern Methodist, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Christian, Texas Tech

WAC (9 teams)
Air Force, Brigham Young, Colorado State, Hawaii, New Mexico, San Diego State, Texas-El Paso, Utah, Wyoming

=========================================================

1981


- Illinois State joins the Missouri Valley from the Independents. Drake and West Texas A&M drop down to I-AA leaving the MVC with six I-A members.

- There are 28 Independents in 1981. Besides Illinois State leaving for the MVC, Villanova dropped football and left the group and Tennessee State dropped down to I-AA.

- There are now 135 teams in Division I-A

=========================================================

1982

- The Ivy League, MAC, Southern Conference and Southland Conference (among other schools) all dropped down to Division I-AA either by choice or NCAA decree. The schools that left included: Appalachian State, Arkansas State, Ball State, Bowling Green, Brown, Central Michigan, Citadel, Colgate, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, East Tennessee State, Eastern Michigan, Furman, Harvard, Holy Cross, Illinois State, Indiana State, Kent State, Lamar, Louisiana-Monroe, Louisiana Tech, Marshall, McNeese State, Miami (OH), North Texas, Northern Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Richmond, Southern Illinois, Tennessee-Chattanooga, Texas-Arlington, Toledo, Virginia Military Institute, Western Carolina, Western Michigan, William & Mary, and Yale

- Half of the remaining Missouri Valley schools dropped to I-AA (Illinois State, Indiana State and Southern Illinois). New Mexico State, Tulsa, and Wichita State remained in I-A and the MVC remained a "major conference" with a mix of I-A and I-AA schools in its membership.

- UNLV left the Independents and joined the PCAA as its seventh member

- There are now 22 Independents. Louisiana-Lafayette left the Southland Conference when it dropped to I-AA and joined the Independents. UNLV left and joined the PCAA. Colgate, Holy Cross, Louisiana-Monroe, North Texas, Richmond and William & Mary dropped to I-AA.

- Division I-A membership is now at 95 schools.

=========================================================
1983


- Georgia Tech leaves the Independents and joins the ACC as their eighth member

- The MAC resumes membership as a I-A conference with all ten schools returning

- There are 21 Independents. Georgia Tech left to join the ACC

- There are now 105 Division I-A football teams

=========================================================

1984


- New Mexico State leaves the Missouri Valley to join the PCAA as its eighth member, leaving the MVC with two members in I-A (Tulsa and Wichita State)

- There are still 21 Independents

- There are still 105 members of Division I-A

=========================================================

1985


- For just the third time since 1936, there are no conference changes for a football season

- Membership remains at 105 in Division I-A.

=========================================================

1986


- Northern Illinois leaves the MAC and becomes an Independent. The MAC now has nine members.

- The Missouri Valley Conference stopped sponsoring football. Members Tulsa and Wichita State remained in Division I-A by becoming Independents.

- There are now 24 Independents.

- There are now 105 Division I-A football teams.

=========================================================

1987


- Southern Methodist is given the death penalty. As a result the Southwest Conference competes with just eight members for the next two years

- There are 24 Independents. Wichita State leaves the group as the school drops football entirely. Akron moves up to Division I-A and joins the Independents.

- Membership remains at 104 schools.

=========================================================

1988


- The Pacific Coast Athletic Association changes its name to the Big West Conference. Membership remains the same with eight schools: Cal State-Fullerton, Fresno State, Long Beach State, New Mexico State, Pacific, San Jose State, UNLV, and Utah State

- There are 25 Independents in 1988 as Louisiana Tech moves back up to Division I-A and joins the group.

- Division I-A membership is at 105 schools.

=========================================================

1989


- Southern Methodist rejoins the Southwest Conference as its ninth member after coming off the death penalty

- There are no other conference changes and membership is now at 106 schools

=========================================================

1990


- There are 26 Independents in 1990 as Arkansas State moves up to Division I-A and joins the group

- There are a total of 107 Division I-A schools in 1990

ACC (8 teams)
Clemson, Duke, Georgia Tech, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Virginia, and Wake Forest

Big Ten (10 teams)
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Purdue, and Wisconsin

Big 8 (8 teams)
Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State

Big West (8 teams)
Cal State-Fullerton, Fresno State, Long Beach State, New Mexico State, Pacific, San Jose State, UNLV, and Utah State

MAC (9 teams)
Ball State, Bowling Green, Central Michigan, Eastern Michigan, Kent State, Miami (OH), Ohio, Toledo, and Western Michigan

Pac-10 (10 teams)
Arizona, Arizona State, California, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Washington and Washington State

SEC (10 teams)
Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Tennessee and Vanderbilt

Southwest Conference (9 teams)
Arkansas, Baylor, Houston, Rice, Southern Methodist, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Christian and Texas Tech

WAC (9 teams)
Air Force, Brigham Young, Colorado State, Hawaii, New Mexico, San Diego State, Texas-El Paso, Utah, and Wyoming

Independents (26 teams)
Akron, Arkansas State, Army, Boston College, Cincinnati, East Carolina, Florida State, Louisiana Tech, Louisville, Memphis, Miami (FL), Navy, Northern Illinois, Notre Dame, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, South Carolina, Southern Mississippi, Southwestern Louisiana (Louisiana-Lafayette), Syracuse, Temple, Tulane, Tulsa, Virginia Tech, West Virginia

=========================================================

1991


- Independents Boston College, Miami (FL), Pittsburgh, Rutgers, Syracuse, Temple, Virginia Tech, and West Virginia establish the football playing portion of the Big East Conference with eight members.

- The Independents are left with 18 schools

- Division I-A membership remains at 107

=========================================================

1992


- The SEC expands to 12 by adding Arkansas from the Southwest Conference and Independent South Carolina. With 12 members, the SEC is the first Division I-A conference to split into two divisions and hold a conference championship game.

- The Southwest Conference stands at eight members following the loss of Arkansas

- Independent Florida State joins the ACC, giving that league nine members

- Independent Akron joins the MAC, giving that league 10 members

- Big West member Fresno State leaves to join the WAC as its 10th member.

- Big West member Long Beach State stops playing football entirely. Nevada moves up from Division I-AA and joins the Big West as its seventh member, replacing Fresno State.

- There are now 15 Independent schools

- Division I-A membership remains at 107

=========================================================

1993


- Independent Penn State joins the Big Ten, giving that league 11 members

- Independents Arkansas State, Louisiana Tech, Northern Illinois and Southwestern Louisiana (Louisiana-Lafayette) join the Big West as football-only members, while fellow Big West member Cal State-Fullerton announced it was dropping football. This left membership in the Big West at 10 schools.

- There are now just 10 independent schools

- Division I-A membership drops to 106

=========================================================

1994


- Northeast Louisiana University (Louisiana-Monroe) moved up from Division I-AA and played as an independent, bringing the number of independents up to 11 and bringing Division I-A membership back up to 107

=========================================================

1995


- The University of North Texas moved up from Division I-AA and played as an independent. The number of Independents now stands at 12, and the total Division I-A membership his at 108 schools.

=========================================================

1996


- The Southwest Conference dissolves

- Former Southwest Conference members Baylor, Texas, Texas A&M and Texas Tech merge with the Big 8 Conference to form the Big 12 Conference. With 12 members the Big 12 splits into two divisions and stages a conference championship game, becoming the second conference to do so.

- Former Southwest Conference member Houston joins with Independents Cincinnati, Louisville, Memphis, Southern Mississippi and Tulane to form Conference USA with six members

- The WAC expands to a 16-member conference by adding Rice, Southern Methodist, and Texas Christian from the Southwest Conference; UNLV and San Jose State from the Big West Conference and Independent member Tulsa. The WAC would hold a conference championship game for the next three seasons.

- Arkansas State, Louisiana Tech, Northern Illinois and Southwestern Louisiana leave the Big West to become Independents. Pacific also leaves the Big West as it announces it is dropping football. North Texas joins the Big West from the Independent ranks and Boise State University and the University of Idaho move up from Division I-AA and join the Big West. Big West membership now stands at six schools.

- Along with Boise State and Idaho, the University of Alabama at Birmingham and the University of Central Florida also move up from Division I-AA and play as Independents. There are now 11 Independent schools.

- Total Division I-A membership now stands at 111

=========================================================

1997


- Independent East Carolina joins Conference USA as its seventh member

- Independent Northern Illinois joins the MAC. Marshall University moves up from Division I-AA and also joins the MAC, giving that league 12 members. The MAC then splits into two divisions and holds a conference championship game.

- There are now nine Independents at the Division I-A level

- Division I-A membership stands at 112 schools

=========================================================

1998


- Army breaks away from nearly 100 years of tradition as an Independent to join Conference USA as its eighth member

- The Independents are left with eight schools

- Membership in Division I-A remains at 112

=========================================================

1999


- Air Force, Brigham Young, Colorado State, New Mexico, San Diego State, UNLV, Utah and Wyoming leave the 16-team WAC and form a new eight-team league, the Mountain West Conference.

- The WAC is left with eight remaining members

- Arkansas State leaves the Independents and joins the Big West, giving them seven members

- Independent Alabama-Birmingham joins Conference USA as its ninth member

- Buffalo moves up from Division I-AA and joins the MAC as that league's 13th member.

- Middle Tennessee State moves up from Division I-AA and plays as an Independent, giving that group a total of seven members

- Northeast Louisiana and Southwestern Louisiana change their names to Louisiana-Monroe and Louisiana-Lafayette, respectively

- Division I-A membership now stands at 114

=========================================================

2000


- Nevada leaves the Big West to join the WAC as its ninth member

- The Big West drops back down to six members

- Two more schools make the move up from Division I-AA: the University of Connecticut and the University of South Florida, who both play as Independents. There are now nine Independent football members of Division I-A

- The total membership of Division I-A now sits at 116

Division I-A conference rosters as of 2000:

ACC (9 teams)
Clemson, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Virginia, Wake Forest

Big 12 (12 teams)
Baylor, Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech

Big East (8 teams)
Boston College, Miami (FL), Pittsburgh, Rutgers, Syracuse, Temple, Virginia Tech, West Virginia

Big Ten (11 teams)
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue, Wisconsin

Big West (6 teams)
Arkansas State, Boise State, Idaho, New Mexico State, North Texas, Utah State

C-USA (9 teams)
Alabama-Birmingham, Army, Cincinnati, East Carolina, Houston, Louisville, Memphis, Southern Mississippi, Tulane

Independents (9 teams)
Central Florida, Connecticut, Louisiana-Lafayette, Louisiana-Monroe, Louisiana Tech, Middle Tennessee State, Navy, Notre Dame, South Florida

MAC (13 teams)
Akron, Ball State, Bowling Green, Buffalo, Central Michigan, Eastern Michigan, Kent State, Marshall, Miami (OH), Northern Illinois, Ohio, Toledo, Western Michigan

Mountain West (8 teams)
Air Force, Brigham Young, Colorado State, New Mexico, San Diego State, UNLV, Utah, Wyoming

Pac-10 (10 teams)
Arizona, Arizona State, California, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Washington, Washington State

SEC (12 teams)
Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vanderbilt

WAC (9 teams)
Fresno State, Hawaii, Nevada, Rice, San Jose State, Southern Methodist, Texas Christian, Texas-El Paso, Tulsa

=========================================================

2001


- Arkansas State, Idaho, New Mexico State and North Texas from the Big West join with Independents Louisiana-Lafayette, Louisiana-Monroe and Middle Tennessee State to form the seven-member Sun Belt Conference

- Texas Christian leaves the WAC to join Conference USA as its 10th member

- Big West member Boise State and Independent Louisiana Tech join the WAC. The WAC now stands at 10 member schools.

- With Utah State the only remaining football-playing member of the Big West, the Big West Conference stops sponsoring football. The Aggies become an Independent in football.

- Troy State moves up from Division I-AA and plays as an Independent. There are now seven Independent football schools.

- There are now 117 members of Division I-A

=========================================================

2002


- Independent Central Florida joins the MAC as its 14th member. The number of Independents drops to six.

- Membership in Division I-A remains at 117.

=========================================================

2003


- Independent South Florida joins Conference USA as its 11th member

- Independent Utah State joins the Sun Belt Conference as its 8th member

- The number of Independents now stands at four

- Membership in Division I-A remains at 117

=========================================================

2004


- Miami (FL) and Virginia Tech leave the Big East to join the ACC, giving the ACC 11 members

- Independent Connecticut moves to the Big East, leaving the Big East with seven members

- Independent Troy State joins the Sun Belt Conference as that league's 9th member

- Florida Atlantic University moves up to Division I-A, bringing the total membership to 118. They play as an Independent, bringing that grouping to three members

=========================================================

2005


- The ACC completes its "raid" of the Big East when Boston College leaves the Big East to become the ACC's 12th member. The ACC then splits into two divisions and stages their own conference championship game.

- Cincinnati, Louisville and South Florida leave Conference USA and join the Big East

- Army leaves Conference USA to become an Independent once again. Temple also becomes an Independent after being voted out of the Big East.

- The Big East now sits at eight members

- Texas Christian leaves Conference USA to join the Mountain West Conference as its ninth member

- Conference USA adds Central Florida and Marshall from the MAC and Rice, Southern Methodist, UTEP and Tulsa from the WAC to get up to 12 members. C-USA then splits into two divisions and stages a conference championship game

- The MAC is left with 12 members

- The WAC adds Idaho, New Mexico State and Utah State from the Sun Belt Conference to get back to nine members

- Florida Atlantic leaves the Independent ranks and Florida International moves up from Division I-AA as both schools join the Sun Belt Conference to give that school eight members

- There are now four Independent teams

- Troy State University changes its name to Troy University

- Division I-A membership sits at 119 schools

=========================================================

2006


- A rarity....there are no conference changes in 2006.

- Division I-A membership remains at 119 schools

=========================================================

2007


- Temple leaves the Independent ranks and joins the Mid-American Conference. The MAC now has 13 members. Independents' membership shrinks to three

- Division I-A membership remains at 119

=========================================================

2008


- Western Kentucky University transitions from Division I-AA and moves up to I-A and plays as the fourth Independent.

- Division I-A membership now stands at 120 schools

=========================================================

2009


- Western Kentucky University leaves its Independent status and joins the Sun Belt Conference as that league's ninth member

- There are now only three Independents playing football

- Division I-A membership now stands at 120 schools

=========================================================

2010


- There were no conference changes in 2010

- Division I-A membership remains at 120 schools

The conference rosters in 2010 are:

ACC (12 teams)
Boston College, Clemson, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Maryland, Miami (FL), North Carolina, North Carolina State, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest

Big 12 (12 teams)
Baylor, Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech

Big East (8 teams)
Cincinnati, Connecticut, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, South Florida, Syracuse, West Virginia

Big Ten (11 teams)
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue, Wisconsin

C-USA (12 teams)
Alabama-Birmingham, Central Florida, East Carolina, Houston, Marshall, Memphis, Rice, Southern Methodist, Southern Mississippi, Texas-El Paso, Tulane, Tulsa

Independents (3 teams)
Army, Navy, Notre Dame

MAC (13 teams)
Akron, Ball State, Bowling Green, Buffalo, Central Michigan, Eastern Michigan, Kent State, Miami (OH), Northern Illinois, Ohio, Temple, Toledo, Western Michigan

Mountain West (9 teams)
Air Force, Brigham Young, Colorado State, New Mexico, San Diego State, Texas Christian, UNLV, Utah, Wyoming

Pac-10 (10 teams)
Arizona, Arizona State, California, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Washington, Washington State

SEC (12 teams)
Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vanderbilt

Sun Belt (9 teams)
Arkansas State, Florida Atlantic, Florida International, Louisiana-Lafayette, Louisiana-Monroe, Middle Tennessee State, North Texas, Troy, Western Kentucky

WAC (9 teams)
Boise State, Fresno State, Hawaii, Idaho, Louisiana Tech, Nevada, New Mexico State, San Jose State, Utah State

=========================================================

2011


- Nebraska left the Big 12 Conference to join the Big Ten Conference. This gave the Big Ten 12 members and they then split into two divisions and staged a conference championship game for the first time

- Colorado left the Big 12 to join the Pac-10 and Utah left the Mountain West Conference to join the Pac-10 to give that league 12 members. The Pac-10 renames itself the Pac-12 and splits into two divisions and holds a conference championship game for the first time

- The Big 12 is left with 10 members

- Brigham Young University leaves the Mountain West to become an Independent. There are now four Independent football schools

- Boise State leaves the WAC to join the Mountain West, bringing membership in the Mountain West back up to eight

- The WAC is now left with eight members

- Division I-A membership remains at 120 schools

=========================================================

2012


- Texas A&M and Missouri announce plans to leave the Big 12 to join the SEC. This gives the SEC 14 members

- TCU originally was set to leave the Mountain West for the Big East, but backed out of that move and instead joined the Big 12.

- West Virginia left the Big East Conference to become a member of the Big 12. This gives the Big 12 10 members.

- Massachusetts is moving up from Division I-AA to Division I-A to become the 13th member of the MAC, replacing Temple who is leaving to rejoin the Big East, moving their membership back to eight

- The University of South Alabama is moving up from Division I-AA to I-A and will become the 10th member of the Sun Belt Conference

- Fresno State, Nevada and Hawaii left the WAC to join the Mountain West Conference, to give that league 10 members.

- Texas-San Antonio and Texas State joined the WAC from Division I-AA to give that league seven football playing members

- There are now I-A 124 football members in Division I-A

=========================================================

2013

- The non-football playing members of the Big East left to form their own conference and took the "Big East" name with them. The teams left over that are playing football in the old Big East have renamed their conference the American Athletic Conference.

- Pittsburgh and Syracuse are leaving the American Athletic Conference to join the ACC, giving the ACC 14 members.

- Houston, Southern Methodist, Central Florida and Memphis will leave C-USA to also join the American Athletic Conference. This will give the AAC 10 football members for 2013.

- Florida Atlantic, Florida International, Middle Tennessee State and North Texas are leaving the Sun Belt Conference, and Louisiana Tech and Texas-San Antonio are leaving the WAC to join Conference USA to bump that league up to 14 football members.

- Georgia State will join the Sun Belt from the FCS ranks and Texas State will join from the WAC to keep the Sun Belt at eight teams.

- Boise State and San Diego State were scheduled to leave the Mountain West for the AAC but backed out of those plans and decided to stay in the Mountain West. San Jose State and Utah State will leave the WAC to join the Mountain West bumping membership up to 12 schools. The league will split into two six-team divisions and stage a conference championship game.

- With only two members left in the WAC, the WAC stops sponsoring football and Idaho and New Mexico State become Independents.

- There will now be six independents with the addition of Idaho and New Mexico State to the group. Total FBS membership will now be 125.

=========================================================

2014

- Maryland leaves the ACC and Rutgers leaves the American Athletic Conference to join the Big Ten, giving the Big Ten 14 members. Louisville leaves the American Athletic Conference for the ACC, to keep ACC membership at 14 schools.

- The American Athletic Conference adds East Carolina, Tulsa and Tulane from the Conference USA to bump their membership up to 11 schools.

- Conference USA, after losing those three members, is adding Old Dominion from FCS ranks and Charlotte, who is starting a football program along with Western Kentucky who is leaving the Sun Belt, to bring their membership to 14 schools.

- Appalachian State and Georgia Southern are moving up from FCS to join the Sun Belt Conference and independents Idaho and New Mexico State are also joining the Sun Belt to give that conference 11 football members following the loss of Western Kentucky

- Independents drop to four with Army, BYU, Navy, and Notre Dame

- There are now 129 FBS football schools *(Although by my calculations the number is 128)

=========================================================

2015

- Navy will leave the Independent ranks and join the "Big East" as the 12th football playing member. This will leave three independent teams.

- FBS membership will remain at 129.

- By 2015, conferences will look as follows:

ACC (14 teams)
Boston College, Clemson, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Louisville, Miami (FL), North Carolina, North Carolina State, Pittsburgh, Syracuse, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest

American Athletic Conference (12 teams)
Central Florida, Cincinnati, Connecticut, East Carolina, Houston, Memphis, Navy, South Florida, Southern Methodist, Temple, Tulane, Tulsa

Big 12 (10 teams)
Baylor, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas, Texas Christian, Texas Tech, West Virginia

Big Ten (14 teams)
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska, Northwestern, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue, Rutgers, Wisconsin

Conference USA (14 teams)
Alabama-Birmingham, Charlotte, Florida Atlantic, Florida International, Louisiana Tech, Marshall, Middle Tennessee State, North Texas, Old Dominion, Rice, Southern Mississippi, Texas-El Paso, Texas-San Antonio, Western Kentucky

Independents (3 teams)
Army, Brigham Young, Notre Dame

MAC (13 teams)
Akron, Ball State, Bowling Green, Buffalo, Central Michigan, Eastern Michigan, Kent State, Massachusetts, Miami (OH), Northern Illinois, Ohio, Toledo, Western Michigan

Mountain West (12 members)
Air Force, Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico, San Diego State, San Jose State, UNLV, Utah State, Wyoming

Pac-12 (12 members)
Arizona, Arizona State, California, Colorado, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, USC, Utah, Washington, Washington State

SEC (14 members)
Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, Missouri, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas A&M, Vanderbilt

Sun Belt (11 teams)
Appalachian State, Arkansas State, Georgia Southern, Georgia State, Idaho, Louisiana-Lafayette, Louisiana-Monroe, New Mexico State, South Alabama, Texas State, Troy
(This post was last modified: 12-21-2015 03:37 AM by john01992.)
03-01-2014 09:31 AM
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