Not to be confused with Conference South, Conference League South, or Southern Conference.
Big South Conference
Established
1983; 35 years ago (1983)
Association
NCAA
Division
Division I
Subdivision
FCS
Members
11
Sports fielded
19
men's: 9
women's: 10
Region
South Atlantic States
Headquarters
Charlotte, North Carolina
Commissioner
Kyle Kallander (since 1996)
Website
www.bigsouthsports.com
Locations
The Big South Conference is a collegiate athletic conference affiliated with the NCAA's Division I. Originally a non-football conference, the Big South began sponsoring football in 2002. Its football teams are part of the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). The Big South, founded in 1983, is firmly rooted in the South Atlantic region of the United States, with full member institutions located in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia with affiliates in Georgia and New Jersey.[1]
Contents
1History
2Member schools
2.1Current full members
2.2Current associate members
2.3Future associate member
2.4Divisional realignment, 2012–2014
2.5Former members
2.6Former associate members
2.7Membership timeline
3Sports
3.1Men's sponsored sports by school
3.2Women's sponsored sports by school
3.3Football – players drafted to the NFL
4Conference champions
4.1Men's basketball
4.2Basketball Tournament Championships by school
4.3Football
4.4Women's basketball
4.5Men's Soccer
5Broadcasters (Big South Network)
6National Champions
7Facilities
8References
9External links
History
Charter members included Armstrong State (later Armstrong Atlantic State University and now merged into Georgia Southern University) (1983–1987), Augusta (later Augusta State University and now merged into Augusta University) (1983–1990), Campbell University (1983–1994; 2011–present), Baptist College (now Charleston Southern University) (1983–present), Coastal Carolina University (1983–2016), Radford University (1983–present) and Winthrop University (1983–present).
The expansion of membership occurred during the 1980s and '90s. Some of those members are the University of North Carolina at Asheville (1984–present), Davidson College (1990–1992), Liberty University (1991–2018), the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (1992–1998), the University of North Carolina at Greensboro (1992–1997), Towson University (1992–1995), Elon University (1999–2003), High Point University (1999–present) and Birmingham–Southern College (2000–2006).
The Big South Conference began sponsoring football in 2002, with Charleston Southern, Elon (at the time) and Liberty (Gardner–Webb University also joined as a football-only member) fielding teams; Coastal Carolina and Virginia Military Institute (VMI) joined the conference as football-only members in 2003. In that same athletic year, VMI also joined the conference for all sports, but left to re-join the Southern Conference in 2014. Presbyterian College joined the conference in 2007, moving up from Division II, and became eligible for regular-season championships and conference honors during the 2008–09 athletic year.[2] Gardner–Webb, which had been a football-only member since 2002, joined the conference for all sports on July 1, 2008.[2] Campbell rejoined the Big South for all sports except football in the 2011–12 athletic year. Longwood University accepted an invitation to join the Big South on January 23, 2012, and membership formally began July 1 of that year; Longwood had been independent since 2004, during their transition to Division I.[3] In 2014, following the departure of VMI, the conference returned to a single-division structure.[4] On September 1, 2015, Coastal Carolina announced they would leave the conference following the 2015–16 school year to transition to FBS-level football and the Sun Belt Conference.[5] On June 30, 2016, the day before the school joined the Sun Belt, Coastal Carolina won the 2016 College World Series in baseball. This was the first time in conference history that a team won an NCAA championship in any sport.
In September 2016, the Big South and the Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) announced a football partnership that effectively combined the two conferences in that sport. Under its terms, any members of either conference that add or upgrade to scholarship football, provided they fall within the current geographic footprint of the two leagues, automatically join Big South football. At the time of announcement, the only ASUN member that played scholarship football, Kennesaw State, was already a Big South football member. The partnership also provides a guaranteed football home to the leagues' non-scholarship football programs (at that time, Campbell from the Big South, and Jacksonville and Stetson from the ASUN) should they upgrade to scholarship status.[6]
In November 2016, Campbell announced that it would begin offering scholarships and move its football program from the Pioneer Football League to the Big South in 2018.[7]
In December 2016, the University of North Alabama, ASUN, and the Big South Conference announced that, effective in 2018, the school will leave the Division II Gulf South Conference and will join ASUN in non-football sports and the Big South in football. UNA has won three Division II NCAA national championships in football and has won at least a share of the Gulf South Conference football championship for four consecutive seasons through 2016.
Three months later, Liberty announced that it would begin a transition to FBS football in July 2017 and leave the Big South football league in 2018.[8] Liberty and the Big South agreed later in 2017 that the school would continue to house all of its non-football sports (except for field hockey and women's swimming, neither of which is sponsored by the Big South) in that conference for the immediate future. Once Liberty became a full FBS member at the start of the 2019–20 school year, it would have technically become a Big South associate member (barring the school joining an FBS conference).[9] However, Liberty's plans would change several months later, as it instead announced in May 2018 that it would move its non-football sports to the ASUN effective that July (except for the aforementioned field hockey and women's swimming, also not sponsored by the ASUN).[10]
In November 2017, the University of South Carolina Upstate and Hampton University announced that they would be leaving the ASUN and Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, respectively, to join the Big South, starting in the fall of 2018.[11][12]
On November 19, 2017, Presbyterian College announced that it would be moving its football program to the non-scholarship Pioneer Football League.[13] Presbyterian's last Big South football season will be 2019; the Blue Hose plan to play the 2020 season as an independent before joining the Pioneer League for 2021 and beyond.[14] The Blue Hose will remain a member of the Big South in all other sports.[15]
Member schools
Current full members
Institution
Location
Founded
Joined
Type
Enrollment
Nickname
Colors
Campbell University
Buies Creek, North Carolina
1887
1983, 2011[note 1]
Private (Baptist)
6,200
Fighting Camels
Charleston Southern University
North Charleston, South Carolina
1964
1983
Private (Southern Baptist)
3,269
Buccaneers
Gardner–Webb University
Boiling Springs, North Carolina
1905
2008
Private (Baptist)
4,617
Runnin' Bulldogs
Hampton University
Hampton, Virginia
1868
2018
Private
4,500
Pirates
High Point University
High Point, North Carolina
1924
1999
Private (United Methodist)
4,199
Panthers
Longwood University
Farmville, Virginia
1839
2012
Public
4,960
Lancers
Presbyterian College
Clinton, South Carolina
1880
2007
Private (PCUSA)
1,433
Blue Hose
Radford University
Radford, Virginia
1910
1983
Public
9,928
Highlanders
University of North Carolina at Asheville
Asheville, North Carolina
1927
1984
Public (UNC)
3,897
Bulldogs
University of South Carolina Upstate
Spartanburg, South Carolina
1967
2018
Public (USCS)
5,821
Spartans
Winthrop University
Rock Hill, South Carolina
1886
1983
Public
6,130
Eagles
Notes
^Campbell was a founding member of the Big South Conference in 1983. The Fighting Camels left in 1994 and rejoined in 2011 for all sports, except for their football program, which remained in the Pioneer Football League until joining Big South football in 2018.
Current associate members
Institution
Location
Founded
Joined
Type
Enrollment
Primary Conference
Nickname
Big South Sport(s)
Colors
Kennesaw State University
Kennesaw, Georgia
1963
2015[16]
Public
35,507
ASUN
Owls
Football
Monmouth University
West Long Branch, New Jersey
1933
2014
Private
7,440
Metro Atlantic (MAAC)
Hawks
Football
Future associate member
Institution
Location
Founded
Joining
Type
Enrollment
Primary Conference
Nickname
Big South Sport(s)
Colors
University of North Alabama
Florence, Alabama
1830
2019
Public
7,244
ASUN
Lions
Football
Divisional realignment, 2012–2014
With the additions of Campbell and Longwood to the Big South in 2011 and 2012, Big South commissioner Kyle Kallander stated the conference will break up into two divisions of six teams each beginning in 2012–2013.[17] He also said the Big South Basketball Tournaments will be held at a single, neutral location. The divisional setup was as follows:
North Division
Campbell
High Point
Liberty
Longwood
Radford
VMI
South Division
Charleston Southern
Coastal Carolina
Gardner–Webb
Presbyterian
UNC Asheville
Winthrop
In men's and women's basketball, teams played the five other divisional opponents twice, one home and one away (ten games). They played teams outside the division once each (six games). This cut the number of conference games to 16, as opposed to 18 both before and after the realignment.
Following the departure of VMI for the Southern Conference in 2014, the conference returned to a single-division structure, and the basketball conference schedule returned to 18 games.[4]
Former members
Institution
Location
Founded
Joined
Left
Type
Enrollment
Nickname
Current Conference
Armstrong State University
Savannah, Georgia
1935
1983
1987
Public
7,538
Pirates
Defunct (Merged with Georgia Southern Eagles in 2018)[n 1]
Augusta University[n 2]
Augusta, Georgia
1785
1983
1990
Public
6,919
Jaguars
Peach Belt (NCAA Division II)
Birmingham–Southern College
Birmingham, Alabama
1856
2000
2007
Private
1,600
Panthers
SAA (NCAA Division III)
Coastal Carolina University
Conway, South Carolina
1954
1983
2016
Public
10,263
Chanticleers
Sun Belt
Davidson College
Davidson, North Carolina
1837
1990
1992
Private
1,756
Wildcats
Atlantic 10
Elon University
Elon, North Carolina
1889
1999
2003
Private
6,720
Phoenix
CAA
Liberty University
Lynchburg, Virginia
1971
1991 [n 3]
2018
Private
110,000
Flames and Lady Flames
ASUN FBS independent
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Catonsville, Maryland
1966
1992
1998
Public
13,637
Retrievers
America East
University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Greensboro, North Carolina
1891
1992
1997
Public
18,502
Spartans
SoCon
Towson University
Towson, Maryland
1866
1992
1995
Public
21,950
Tigers
CAA
Virginia Military Institute
Lexington, Virginia
1839
2003
2014
Public
1,500
Keydets
SoCon
Former associate members
Institution
Location
Founded
Joined
Left
Type
Enrollment
Nickname
Sport
Primary Conference
Current Conference (former BSC Sport)
Davidson College
Davidson, North Carolina
1837
2012
2014
Private
1,756
Wildcats
Women's lacrosse
Atlantic 10
Stony Brook University
Stony Brook, New York
1957
2008
2013
Public
24,607
Seawolves
Football
America East
CAA
University of North Carolina at Wilmington
Wilmington, North Carolina
1947
2000
2004
Public
14,918
Seahawks
Women's golf
CAA
^Armstrong State, which was last a member of the NCAA Division II Peach Belt Conference, dropped intercollegiate athletics at the end of the 2016–17 school year due to its impending consolidation with Georgia Southern University.
^Formerly known as Augusta State University until January 2013, when it merged with another Augusta institution (Georgia Health Sciences University) to create Georgia Regents University. At the time of the merger, only GRU (as Augusta State) had an athletic program, and GRU's sports teams continued to compete as "Augusta State" through the end of the 2012–13 school year. The school changed its name again to the current Augusta University in 2015.
^Liberty was ineligible for the Big South football title in its final conference season of 2017 (2017–18 school year), as it had started a transition to FBS football in that season.
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