Horizon League
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Horizon League | |
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Data | |
Established | 1979 |
Members | 9 |
Sports fielded | 19 (9 men's, 10 women's) |
Region | Midwestern United States |
States | 5 - Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin |
Past names | Midwestern City Conference (MCC), 1979-1985, Midwestern Collegiate Conference (MCC), 1985-2001 |
Headquarters | Indianapolis, Indiana |
Commissioner | Jonathan B. LeCrone |
Locations | |
The Horizon League is a nine school, NCAA Division I college athletic conference, whose members are located in five of the Midwestern United States. The Horizon League is best known for its men's basketball, and is one of the top performing NCAA Division I conferences in the country. Current Horizon League members have made several Sweet 16, Elite Eight, and Final Four appearances, including National Championship's for Butler in 1924 and 1929[1] and Loyola in the 1963 NCAA Tournament. The Horizon League currently holds the best winning percentage among non-BCS conferences in the men's NCAA basketball Tournament (.472, 7th overall amongst the 31 Division I conferences).[2]
Although the league does not sponsor football, Youngstown State plays in the Gateway Football Conference, and Butler and future member Valparaiso in the Pioneer League. Men's volleyball is also not sponsored, although Loyola competes in the Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association.
Contents |
[edit] Membership
Institution | Location | Founded | Affiliation | Enrollment | Joined | Nickname |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Butler University | Indianapolis, Indiana | 1855 | Private/Non-sectarian | 4,415 | 1979 | Bulldogs |
Cleveland State University | Cleveland, Ohio | 1870 | Public | 16,245 | 1994 | Vikings |
University of Detroit Mercy | Detroit, Michigan | 1877 | Private/Catholic | 6,000 | 1980 | Titans |
University of Illinois at Chicago | Chicago, Illinois | 1896 | Public | 24,541 | 1994 | Flames |
Loyola University Chicago | Chicago, Illinois | 1870 | Private/Catholic | 15,000 | 1979 | Ramblers |
University of Wisconsin-Green Bay | Green Bay, Wisconsin | 1965 | Public | 5,800 | 1994 | Phoenix |
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | 1885 | Public | 28,000 | 1994 | Panthers |
Wright State University | Dayton, Ohio | 1964 | Public | 17,074 | 1994 | Raiders |
Youngstown State University | Youngstown, Ohio | 1908 | Public | 13,101 | 2001 | Penguins |
[edit] Future members
Institution | Location | Founded | Affiliation | Enrollment | Joining | Nickname |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Valparaiso University | Valparaiso, Indiana | 1859 | Private/Lutheran | 4,000 | 2007 | Crusaders |
[edit] Former members
Institution | Current Conference | Years |
---|---|---|
University of Dayton | Atlantic 10 | 1987-1993 |
Duquesne University | Atlantic 10 | 1992-1993 |
University of Evansville | Missouri Valley | 1979-1994 |
La Salle University | Atlantic 10 | 1992-1995 |
Marquette University | Big East | 1988-1991 (89-91 for men's basketball) |
Northern Illinois University | MAC | 1994-1997 |
University of Notre Dame | Big East | 1982-1986, 1987-1995 (excluding men's basketball) |
Oklahoma City University | NAIA | 1979-1985 |
Oral Roberts University | Mid-Con | 1979-1987 |
Saint Louis University | Atlantic 10 | 1981-1991 (82-91 for men's basketball) |
Xavier University | Atlantic 10 | 1979-1995 |
[edit] History
[edit] Foundation
In May of 1978, DePaul University hosted a meeting with Bradley, Dayton, Detroit, Illinois State, Loyola, Air Force and Xavier in which all agreed in principle that a conference was needed. Further progress was made through a series of early 1979 meetings in San Francisco, Chicago, and St. Louis that included participation by Butler, Creighton, Marquette and Oral Roberts. On June 16, 1979, the Midwestern City Conference (nicknamed the MCC or Midwestern City 6) was formed by charter members Butler, Evansville, Loyola, Oklahoma City, Oral Roberts and Xavier.[3]
[edit] Maturity
In 1980, Detroit joined the conference and headquarters were established in Champaign, Illinois. The MCC gained an automatic bid to the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship in 1981, followed by the announcement that St. Louis University would be joining the following season. The University of Notre Dame joined the conference for all sports except basketball and football in 1982. Automatic qualification for the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship was attained in 1984, and the conference moved its base to Indianapolis. In 1985, the name was altered slightly to Midwestern Collegiate Conference, the conference brought women's athletics into the fold (which triggered Notre Dame's protest withdrawal), and Oklahoma City dropped out of the NCAA altogether. ESPN began televising the MCC Championship game in 1986, and in 1987 Oral Roberts left the conference while Dayton joined and Notre Dame rejoined. 1989 saw the conference receive its first at-large bid to the men's basketball tournament and automatic qualification to the NCAA Men's Soccer Championship. An automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship was won in 1991, and the conference lost members Marquette and St. Louis. Duquesne and La Salle joined the MCC in 1992, the same year an automatic berth to the NCAA Women's Volleyball Championship is won. Duquesne and Dayton left the conference in 1993.
[edit] Expansion
In 1994, six Mid-Continent Conference members, Cleveland State, Northern Illinois, UIC, UW-Green Bay, UW-Milwaukee and Wright State left to join the Horizon League, which remains today the largest non-merger conference expansion in NCAA history.[4][5] Xavier, Notre Dame, and La Salle all withdrew the following summer of 1995, as did Northern Illinois in 1997. The conference changed its name to the Horizon League on June 4, 2001, in part due to its acronym (MCC) being commonly confused with the Mid-Continent Conference. That year, Youngstown State University came to the Horizon League from the Mid-Con, and on May 17, 2006, Valparaiso University announced it will do the same in 2007.[6] As of 2007, seven of the ten Horizon League members will be former members of the Mid-Con.
[edit] Horizon League Network
In 2006, the Horizon League Network (HLN) was launched as the centerpiece of a revamped web portal.[7] In partnership with CSTV, the broadband network airs over 200 live events for free on the League's official website. Events include regular season basketball games, tournament matches, archived championships, The Horizon League Report, and other programming from the array of athletics the league sponsors. Its coverage complements events televised on ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, and members' local sports networks.
[edit] Athletic accomplishments
[edit] Men's Basketball
[edit] Historic
The Horizon League has sent 19 teams to the NCAA Tournament from 1995 to 2007. Those clubs have produced ten wins in the last decade, including three "Sweet 16" appearances, making the Horizon League one of only two non-BCS conferences with Sweet 16 participants in at least three of the last five tournaments (2003, 2005, & 2007). The Horizon League has been a multiple-bid NCAA conference eight times, including a conference-best three NCAA Tournament teams in 1998. Five teams from the conference have made Sweet 16 appearances - Detroit (1977), Loyola (1985), Cleveland St. (1986), Butler (2003 & 2007) and Milwaukee (2005). The addition of Valparaiso (1998) to the league in 2007 will give it six members who have been to at least the Sweet 16. The League has hosted the men's Final Four in 1991, 1997, 2000 and 2006, and will host again in 2009 and 2010. It also hosted the women's Final Four in 2005 and will again in 2007. Horizon League commissioner Jonathan B. LeCrone, who is in his 15th year as league commissioner, is also in the middle of a five-year term on the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Committee.[8]
[edit] Recent
In the men's 2005 NCAA Basketball Tournament, the Horizon League enjoyed one of its best showings ever as 12th seeded Milwaukee marched to the Sweet 16 with victories over #19 Alabama and #7 Boston College before falling to then-#1 and eventual tournament runner-up Illinois. Milwaukee finished the year ranked 23rd in the final ESPN/USA Today Top 25 Poll.
In the 2006 NCAA Basketball Tournament, 11th seeded Milwaukee once again advanced in the Tournament by upsetting the sixth-seeded, #20 Oklahoma Sooners 82-74. For the second straight year and third time in the last four years, the league had a team advance past the first round. The Panthers fell to eventual national champion Florida in the second round of the tournament.
In the 2006-2007 basketball season, Butler won the Preseason NIT tournament in Madison Square Garden with wins over in-state rivals Notre Dame and Indiana in the NIT's Midwest regional bracket and then #21 Tennessee and #23 Gonzaga in the NIT Final Four. During the 2006-07 season, Butler University became the first school in Horizon League history to be ranked in the Top 10 of the national college basketball polls, as the Bulldogs reached No. 8 and No. 10, respectively. [1]
As stated on their official website, the recent success of Horizon League athletic teams on the national stage has heightened the visibility of the league and its member schools, and has quickly moved it closer toward its stated goal of becoming one of the nation's top 10 athletics conferences.
[edit] Other sports
The Milwaukee baseball team made national headlines during the 1999 College World Series by upsetting #1 ranked Rice in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. In the 2004-2005 academic year, Milwaukee's men's soccer team defeated 16th-ranked San Francisco, while Detroit upset Michigan in women's soccer in their respective NCAA tournaments. Also that year, Butler's men's cross country team finished fourth in the nation at the NCAA Cross-Country Championships, and their own Victoria Mitchell became the first Horizon League athlete to win an individual national title when she captured the 3,000 Meter Steeplechase at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. UW-Green Bay also upset 6th-ranked Oregon State in the opening round of the NCAA softball tournament.
[edit] Men's Basketball Champions
Season | Season Champion | Tournament Champion (seed) |
NCAA Bids (seed), advancement |
NIT Bids (seed), advancement |
---|---|---|---|---|
1980 | Loyola | Oral Roberts (2) | - | Loyola |
1981 | Xavier | Oklahoma City (3) | - | - |
1982 | Evansville | Evansville (1) | Evansville (10) | Oral Roberts |
1983 | Loyola | Xavier (2) | Xavier (12) | - |
1984 | Oral Roberts | Oral Roberts (1) | Oral Roberts (11) | Xavier |
1985 | Loyola | Loyola (1) | Loyola (4), Sweet 16 | Butler |
1986 | Xavier | Xavier (1) | Xavier (12) | - |
1987 | Evansville Loyola |
Xavier (3) | Xavier (13), 2nd rnd | St. Louis |
1988 | Xavier | Xavier (1) | Xavier (11) | Evansville |
1989 | Evansville | Xavier (3) | Evansville (11), 2nd rnd Xavier (14) |
St. Louis, Championship game |
1990 | Xavier | Dayton (2) | Xavier (6), Sweet 16 Dayton (12), 2nd rnd |
St. Louis, Championship game Marquette |
1991 | Xavier | Xavier (1) | Xavier (14), 2nd rnd | Butler |
1992 | Evansville | Evansville (2) | Evansville (8) | Butler |
1993 | Evansville Xavier |
Evansville (1) | Xavier (9), 2nd rnd Evansville (14) |
- |
1994 | Xavier | Detroit (4) | - | Xavier Evansville |
1995 | Xavier | UW-Green Bay (3) | UW-Green Bay (11) Xavier (14) |
- |
1996 | UW-Green Bay | Northern Illinois (3) | UW-Green Bay (8) Northern Illinois (14) |
- |
1997 | Butler | Butler (1) | Butler (14) | - |
1998 | Detroit UIC |
Butler (3) | UIC (9) Detroit (10), 2nd rnd Butler (13) |
- |
1999 | Detroit | Detroit (1) | Detroit (12), 2nd rnd | Butler, Quarterfinals |
2000 | Butler | Butler (1) | Butler (12) | - |
2001 | Butler | Butler (1) | Butler (10), 2nd rnd | Detroit, Semifinals |
2002 | Butler | UIC (6) | UIC (15) | Butler Detroit |
2003 | Butler | Milwaukee (2) | Butler (12), Sweet 16 Milwaukee (12) |
UIC |
2004 | Milwaukee | UIC (2) | UIC (13) | Milwaukee |
2005 | Milwaukee | Milwaukee (1) | Milwaukee (12), Sweet 16 | - |
2006 | Milwaukee | Milwaukee (1) | Milwaukee (11), 2nd rnd | Butler (8) |
2007 | Butler Wright State |
Wright State (1) | Butler (5) Sweet 16 Wright State (14) |
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- Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament Locations
- Game-by-Game NCAA Tournament results for current Horizon League members
[edit] Conference facilities
School | Arena | Capacity | Year Opened | Soccer Stadium | Capacity | Year Opened |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Butler | Hinkle Fieldhouse | 11,043 | 1928 | Butler Bowl | 20,000 | N/A |
Cleveland State | Wolstein Center | 13,610 | 1991 | Krenzler Field | 1,680 | 1985 |
Detroit | Calihan Hall | 8,295 | 1952 | Titan Soccer Field | N/A | N/A |
Loyola | Joseph J. Gentile Center | 5,200 | 1996 | Loyola Soccer Park | ~500 | 1996 |
Milwaukee | U.S. Cellular Arena (men) J. Martin Klotsche Center(women) |
10,783 5,000 |
1950 1977 |
Engelmann Field | 2,200 | 1973 |
UIC | UIC Pavilion | 8,000 | 1982 | Flames Field | 1,000 | 1996 |
Wisconsin-Green Bay | Resch Center | 9,729 | 2002 | Aldo Santaga Stadium | 3,500 | N/A |
Wright State | Nutter Center | 11,019 | 1990 | Alumni Field | 1,000 | 1999 |
Youngstown State | Beeghly Center | 6,500 | 1972 | Stambaugh Stadium | 20,630 | 1982 |
[edit] Notes
- ^ http://butlersports.cstv.com/genrel/072103aaa.html
- ^ http://www.hoopstournament.net/StandardReports/By_Current_Conference.pdf NCAA tournament records by conference, through 2006
- ^ http://horizonleague.cstv.com/school-bio/hori-about-history.html
- ^ http://horizonleague.cstv.com/ot/hori-record-book.html
- ^ http://www.mid-con.com/about/
- ^ Press Release. Valpo to Join Horizon League in 2007-2008 May 17, 2006.
- ^ http://horizonleague.cstv.com/genrel/102306aab.html
- ^ http://horizonleague.cstv.com/genrel/blecrone_jonathan00.html
[edit] External links
Horizon League |
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Butler (Butler Bulldogs) • Cleveland State (Cleveland State Vikings) • Detroit • UIC • Loyola • Milwaukee (Milwaukee Panthers) • UW-Green Bay • Wright State • Youngstown State |
Current basketball arenas in the Horizon League |
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Beeghly Center (Youngstown State) • Callihan Hall (Detroit) • Joseph J. Gentile Center (Loyola) • Hinkle Fieldhouse (Butler) • J. Martin Klotsche Center (Milwaukee women) • Nutter Center (Wright State) • Resch Center (Wisconsin-Green Bay) • UIC Pavilion (UIC) • U.S. Cellular Arena (Milwaukee men) • Wolstein Center (Cleveland State) |