Colonial Athletic Association


The Colonial Athletic Association is a collegiate athletic conference affiliated with the NCAA's Division I whose full members are located in East Coast states from Massachusetts to South Carolina. Most of its members are public universities, and the conference is headquartered in Richmond. The CAA was historically a Southern conference until the addition of four schools in the Northeast after the turn of the 21st century, which added balance to the conference.
The CAA was founded in 1979 as the ECAC South basketball league. It was renamed the Colonial Athletic Association in 1985 when it added championships in other sports. As of 2006, it organizes championships in 21 men's and women's sports. The addition of Northeastern University in 2005 gave the conference the NCAA minimum of six football programs needed to sponsor football. For the 2007 football season, all of the Atlantic 10 Conference's football programs joined the CAA football conference, as agreed in May 2005.

History

The CAA has expanded in recent years, following the exits of longtime members such as the United States Naval Academy, the University of Richmond, East Carolina University, and American University. In 2001, the six-member conference added four additional universities: Towson University, Drexel University, Hofstra University, and the University of Delaware. Four years later the league expanded again when Georgia State University and Northeastern University joined, further enlarging the conference footprint. Virginia Commonwealth University left for the Atlantic 10 Conference in July 2012. More changes came in 2013: Old Dominion University left for Conference USA, Georgia State joined the Sun Belt Conference, and the College of Charleston joined the CAA from the Southern Conference.
On the playing field, the CAA has produced 16 national team champions in six different sports, 33 individual national champions, 11 national coaches of the year, 11 national players of the year and 12 Honda Award winners. In 2006, George Mason became the first CAA team to reach the Final Four. In 2011, the VCU Rams became the second CAA team to reach the Final Four, as well as the first team to win five games en route, due to their participation in the First Four round.
On March 25, 2013, George Mason University left the CAA to join the Atlantic 10 Conference. Shortly after, the CAA ceased sponsorship of wrestling due to the lack of teams.
The 2015–16 basketball season saw the conference RPI reach its highest rating when it finished the season ranked 9th in the nation.

Commissioners

NameYearsNotes
Tom Yeager1979–2016Retired July 1, 2016
Joe D’Antonio2016–July 1, 2016

Member schools

Full members

Current full members

; Notes:
‡ – Towson joined the league as a charter member in 1979, left in 1981 to join the ECAC-Metro Conference, and re-joined the CAA in 2001.

Former full members

Associate members

Current associate members

Former associate members

;Notes

Membership timeline


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ImageSize = width:1000 height:auto barincrement:20
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TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal
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Colors = id:barcolor value:rgb
id:line value:black
id:bg value:white
id:Full value:rgb # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in all sports
id:FullxF value:rgb # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in all sports except for football
id:AssocF value:rgb # Use this color to denote a team that is a member for football only
id:AssocOS value:rgb # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in some sports, but not all
id:OtherC1 value:rgb # Use this color to denote a team that has moved to another conference
id:OtherC2 value:rgb # Use this color to denote a team that has moved to another conference where OtherC1 has already been used, to distinguish the two
PlotData=
width:15 textcolor:black shift: anchor:from fontsize:s
bar:1 color:FullxF from:1979 till:1981 text:Baltimore
bar:1 shift: color:OtherC1 from:1981 till:1983 text:ECAC-Metro, then dropped athletics
bar:2 color:FullxF from:1979 till:1981 text:Catholic
bar:2 color:OtherC1 from:1981 till:1982
bar:2 shift: color:OtherC2 from:1982 till:1984 text:ODAC
bar:2 color:OtherC1 from:1984 till:1989
bar:2 color:OtherC2 from:1989 till:2007 text:CAC
bar:2 color:OtherC1 from:2007 till:end text:Landmark
bar:3 color:FullxF from:1979 till:1981 text:St. Francis
bar:3 shift: color:OtherC1 from:1981 till:1988 text:ECAC-Metro
bar:3 color:OtherC2 from:1988 till:end text:NEC

bar:4 color:FullxF from:1979 till:1981 text:Towson
bar:4 shift: color:OtherC1 from:1981 till:1982 text:ECAC-Metro
bar:4 shift: color:OtherC2 from:1982 till:1992 text:ECC
bar:4 color:OtherC1 from:1992 till:1995 text:Big South
bar:4 color:OtherC2 from:1995 till:2001 text:America East
bar:4 color:FullxF from:2001 till:2007 text:
bar:4 color:Full from:2007 till:end
bar:5 color:FullxF from:1979 till:1982 text:Old Dominion
bar:5 shift: color:OtherC1 from:1982 till:1991 text:Sun Belt
bar:5 color:FullxF from:1991 till:2011 text:
bar:5 color:Full from:2011 till:2013
bar:5 color:OtherC1 from:2013 till:end text:C-USA
bar:6 color:FullxF from:1979 till:1991 text:Navy
bar:6 color:OtherC1 from:1991 till:end text:Patriot League
bar:7 color:FullxF from:1979 till:2013 text:George Mason
bar:7 color:OtherC1 from:2013 till:end text:A-10
bar:8 color:FullxF from:1979 till:2007 text:James Madison
bar:8 color:Full from:2007 till:end
bar:9 color:FullxF from:1979 till:2001 text:Richmond
bar:9 color:OtherC1 from:2001 till:2002 text:A10
bar:9 color:AssocOS from:2002 till:2007 text:A–10,
bar:9 color:AssocF from:2007 till:end
bar:10 color:FullxF from:1979 till:2007 text:William & Mary
bar:10 color:Full from:2007 till:end
bar:11 color:FullxF from:1981 till:2001 text:East Carolina
bar:11 color:OtherC1 from:2001 till:2014 text: C-USA
bar:11 color:OtherC2 from:2014 till:end text: AAC
bar:12 color:FullxF from:1984 till:2001 text:American
bar:12 color:OtherC1 from:2001 till:end text:Patriot League
bar:13 color:FullxF from:1984 till:end text:UNC Wilmington
bar:14 color:FullxF from:1995 till:2012 text:VCU
bar:14 color:OtherC1 from:2012 till:end text:A10
bar:15 color:AssocOS from:2001 till:2013 text:Boston University
bar:16 color:FullxF from:2001 till:2007 text:Delaware
bar:16 color:Full from:2007 till:end
bar:17 color:FullxF from:2001 till:end text:Drexel
bar:18 color:FullxF from:2001 till:2009 text:Hofstra
bar:18 color:Full from:2007 till:2010
bar:18 color:FullxF from:2010 till:end
bar:19 color:AssocOS from:2001 till:2002 text:Boston College
bar:20 color:AssocOS from:2001 till:2002 text:Loyola
bar:21 color:AssocOS from:2001 till:2010 text:Sacred Heart
bar:22 color:AssocOS from:2001 till:2013 text:Binghamton
bar:23 color:AssocOS from:2001 till:2007 text:Villanova
bar:23 shift: color:AssocF from:2007 till:end
bar:24 color:AssocOS from:2002 till:2013 text:Rider
bar:25 color:AssocOS from:2002 till:2013 text:Xavier
bar:26 color:AssocOS from:2002 till:end text:Dayton
bar:27 color:FullxF from:2005 till:2012 text:Georgia State
bar:27 color:Full from:2012 till:2013
bar:27 color:OtherC1 from:2013 till:end text:Sun Belt
bar:28 color:FullxF from:2005 till:2007 text:Northeastern
bar:28 color:Full from:2007 till:2010
bar:28 color:FullxF from:2010 till:end
bar:29 color:AssocOS from:2006 till:2009 text:Robert Morris
bar:30 color:AssocF from:2007 till:end text:Maine
bar:31 color:AssocF from:2007 till:2012 text:Massachusetts
bar:31 color:AssocOS from:2012 till:end
bar:32 color:AssocF from:2007 till:end text:New Hampshire
bar:33 color:AssocF from:2007 till:end text:Rhode Island
bar:34 color:AssocOS from:2009 till:2017 text:Buffalo
bar:35 color:AssocOS from:2010 till:2014 text:Penn State
bar:36 color:AssocOS from:2011 till:2013 text:Saint Joseph's
bar:37 color:AssocOS from:2011 till:end text:Eastern Michigan
bar:38 color:AssocF from:2013 till:end text:Albany
bar:39 color:AssocF from:2013 till:end text:Stony Brook
bar:40 color:FullxF from:2013 till:end text:Charleston

bar:41 color:Full from:2014 till:end text:Elon

bar:42 color:AssocOS from:2014 till:end text:Fairfield
bar:N color:powderblue from:1979 till:1985 text:ECAC South
bar:N color:blue from:1985 till:2007 text:CAA
bar:N color:powderblue from:2007 till:end text:CAA
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    Sports

The CAA sponsors championship competitions in ten men's and twelve women's NCAA sanctioned sports. Eleven schools are associate members in three sports.
SportMen'sWomen's
Baseball
9
-
Basketball
10
10
Cross Country
6
8
Field Hockey
-
7
Football
12
-
Golf
9
8
Lacrosse
6
7
Rowing
-
5
Soccer
9
10
Softball
-
7
Swimming & Diving
5
7
Tennis
8
9
Track and Field
3
8
Volleyball
-
9

Men's sponsored sports by school

Men's varsity sports not sponsored by the CAA which are played by CAA schools:
SchoolIce hockeySailingSquashTrack & field
CharlestonIndependent
DelawareESCHL
DrexelESCHLIndependent
NortheasternHockey EastECAC
William & MaryECAC

;Notes

Women's sponsored sports by school

Women's varsity sports not sponsored by the CAA which are played by CAA schools:
SchoolBeach
volleyball
EquestrianGymnasticsIce hockeySailingSquashTrack &
field
CharlestonCCSAIndependentIndependentECAC
DelawareACHAECAC
DrexelIndependent
ElonECAC
James MadisonECAC
UNC WilmingtonCCSAECAC
NortheasternHockey EastIndependent
TowsonEAGLECAC
William & MaryECACECAC

;Notes
In addition to the above, Charleston counts its female cheerleaders and all-female dance team as varsity teams. Neither cheerleading nor dance team competitions are sponsored by the NCAA.

Current champions

RS = regular-season champion; T = tournament champion
SeasonSportMen's
champion
Women's
champion
Fall 2019Cross CountryWilliam & MaryElon
Fall 2019Field HockeyDelaware
Fall 2019FootballJames Madison
Fall 2019SoccerUNCW
James Madison
Hofstra
Fall 2019VolleyballTowson
Winter 2019–20BasketballHofstra
Northeastern
James Madison
Towson
Winter 2019–20Swimming & DivingWilliam & MaryJames Madison
Spring 2020BaseballElon
UNCW
Spring 2020GolfUNCWUNCW
Spring 2020LacrosseTowson & UMass
Towson
James Madison
Spring 2020RowingNortheastern
Spring 2020SoftballJames Madison
Spring 2020TennisElonJames Madison
Spring 2020Track & Field NortheasternDelaware

Men's basketball

*Denotes a tie for regular season conference title
Denotes game went into overtime

Regular season champions

Note: The conference was known as the ECAC South from 1979 to 1985.
SeasonRegular Season ChampionConference Record
1980Old Dominion
1981James Madison
1982James Madison
1983William & Mary
1984Richmond
1985Navy11–3
1986Navy13–1
1987Navy13–1
1988Richmond11–3
1989Richmond13–1
1990James Madison11–3
1991James Madison12–2
1992Richmond12–2
1993James Madison11–3
1994Old Dominion10–4
1995Old Dominion12–2
1996VCU14–2
1997Old Dominion10–6
1998*William & Mary
UNC Wilmington
13–3
1999George Mason13–3
2000*George Mason
James Madison
12–4
2001Richmond12–4
2002UNC Wilmington14–4
2003UNC Wilmington15–3
2004VCU14–4
2005Old Dominion15–3
2006*George Mason
UNC Wilmington
15–3
2007VCU16–2
2008VCU15–3
2009VCU14–4
2010Old Dominion15–3
2011George Mason16–2
2012Drexel16–2
2013Northeastern14–4
2014Delaware14–2
2015*William & Mary
UNC Wilmington
Northeastern
James Madison
12–6
2016*Hofstra
UNC Wilmington
14–4
2017UNC Wilmington15–3
2018*CollegeofCharleston
Northeastern
14–4
2019Hofstra15–3
2020Hofstra14-4

History of the Tournament Final

YearCAA ChampionsScoreRunner-UpTournament MVPVenue
1980Old Dominion62–51Navy, Old DominionHampton Coliseum
1981James Madison69–60Richmond, James MadisonHampton Coliseum
1982Old Dominion58–57James Madison, Old DominionNorfolk Scope
1983James Madison41–38William & Mary, James MadisonRobins Center
1984Richmond74–55Navy, RichmondConvocation Center
1985Navy85–76Richmond, NavyWilliam & Mary Hall
1986Navy72–61George Mason, NavyPatriot Center
1987Navy53–50James Madison, NavyHampton Coliseum
1988Richmond73–70George Mason, RichmondHampton Coliseum
1989George Mason78–72UNC Wilmington, George MasonHampton Coliseum
1990Richmond77–72James Madison, RichmondRichmond Coliseum
1991Richmond81–78George Mason, RichmondRichmond Coliseum
1992Old Dominion78–73James Madison, Old DominionRichmond Coliseum
1993East Carolina54–49James Madison, East CarolinaRichmond Coliseum
1994James Madison77–76Old Dominion, Old DominionRichmond Coliseum
1995Old Dominion80–75James Madison, Old DominionRichmond Coliseum
1996VCU46–43UNC Wilmington, VCURichmond Coliseum
1997Old Dominion62–58James Madison, Old DominionRichmond Coliseum
1998Richmond79–64UNC Wilmington, RichmondRichmond Coliseum
1999George Mason63–58Old Dominion, George MasonRichmond Coliseum
2000UNC Wilmington57–47Richmond, UNC WilmingtonRichmond Coliseum
2001George Mason35–33UNC Wilmington, George MasonRichmond Coliseum
2002UNC Wilmington66–51VCU, UNC WilmingtonRichmond Coliseum
2003UNC Wilmington70–62Drexel, UNC WilmingtonRichmond Coliseum
2004VCU55–54George Mason, VCURichmond Coliseum
2005Old Dominion73–66VCU, Old DominionRichmond Coliseum
2006UNC Wilmington78–67Hofstra, UNC WilmingtonRichmond Coliseum
2007VCU65–59George Mason, VCURichmond Coliseum
2008George Mason68–59William & Mary, George MasonRichmond Coliseum
2009VCU71–50George Mason, VCURichmond Coliseum
2010Old Dominion60–53William & Mary, Old DominionRichmond Coliseum
2011Old Dominion70–65VCU, Old DominionRichmond Coliseum
2012VCU59–56Drexel, VCURichmond Coliseum
2013James Madison70–57Northeastern, James MadisonRichmond Coliseum
2014Delaware75–74William & Mary, DelawareBaltimore Arena
2015Northeastern72–61William & Mary, NortheasternRoyal Farms Arena
2016UNC Wilmington80–73Hofstra, UNC WilmingtonRoyal Farms Arena
2017UNC Wilmington78–69Charleston, UNC WilmingtonNorth Charleston Coliseum
2018Charleston83–76Northeastern, CharlestonNorth Charleston Coliseum
2019Northeastern82–74Hofstra, NortheasternNorth Charleston Coliseum
2020Hofstra70–61Northeastern, HofstraEntertainment and Sports Arena

Men's CAA Tournament championships and finalists

SchoolChampionshipsFinals AppearancesYears
Old Dominion8101980, 1982, 1992, 1995, 1997, 2005, 2010, 2011
UNC Wilmington6102000, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2016, 2017
Richmond581984, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1998
VCU581996, 2004, 2007, 2009, 2012
James Madison4111981, 1983, 1994, 2013
George Mason4101989, 1999, 2001, 2008
Navy351985, 1986, 1987
Northeastern252015, 2019
Hofstra142020
Charleston122018
Delaware112014
East Carolina111993
William & Mary05
Drexel02
Elon00
Towson00

Former member of the CAA

Broadcasters

Women's basketball

Regular season champions

*Denotes a tie for regular season conference title
Denotes game went into overtime

History of the Tournament Finals

Women's CAA Tournament Championships and finalists

SchoolChampionshipsFinals AppearancesYears
Old Dominion17181992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000,
2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
James Madison9171986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 2010, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2016
Delaware262012, 2013
East Carolina261984, 1985
Richmond241990, 1991
Elon222017, 2018
Drexel162009
Towson112019
American02
George Mason03
UNC Wilmington02
William & Mary01
VCU01
Northeastern00

Former member of the CAA

Football

The CAA Football Conference was formed in 2005, although it did not begin play until 2007, as a separate conference independent of the CAA, but administered by the CAA front office. For this reason, there are no true "football associate members" as every member of CAA Football is a full-member of the football-only conference. In the 2004–05 academic year, the CAA had five member schools that sponsored football, all of them as football-only members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. In 2005, as previously noted, Northeastern accepted the CAA's offer of membership, giving the CAA the six football-playing members it needed under NCAA rules to organize a football conference. At that time, the CAA announced it would launch its new football conference in 2007. Next, the CAA invited the University of Richmond to become a football-only member effective in 2007. Once UR accepted the offer, this left the A10 football conference with only five members, less than the six required under NCAA rules. As a result, the remaining A10 football programs all decided to join the CAA on a football-only basis, spelling the end of A10 football, at least under that conference's banner. Since the CAA football conference had the same members as the A10 the previous year, it can be said that the CAA football conference is the A10 football conference under new management.
The CAA football conference's earliest roots are in the New England Conference, founded in 1938 by four state-supported universities in that region plus Northeastern; three of the public schools are currently in the CAA football conference. After the departure of Northeastern in 1945, the remaining members joined New England's other land-grant colleges, Massachusetts State College and the University of Vermont, to form the Yankee Conference under a new charter in 1946, with competition starting in 1947. That conference eventually dropped all sports other than football in 1975. Starting in the 1980s, it expanded to include many schools outside its original New England base. After the NCAA voted to limit the influence of single-sport conferences, the Yankee merged with the A10 in 1997. As mentioned above, the A10 football conference effectively became the CAA Football Conference in 2007.
The CAA Football Conference does not claim the legacy of the A10 Football Conference or the Yankee Conference. However, every school that was in the Yankee Conference at the time of the A10 merger and still fields an FCS-level football team is in the CAA football conference. As further proof of the continuity between conferences, the CAA inherited the A10's automatic bid to the FCS playoffs, which in turn was inherited from the Yankee.
On May 31, 2006, Old Dominion University announced that it would start a football team to begin play in 2009. ODU joined the CAA football conference in 2011. On April 17, 2008, Georgia State University announced that it would start a football team to begin play in 2010 and join the CAA football conference in 2012. The team is playing in the 70,000 seat Georgia Dome, but is restricting ticket sales to just over 28,000 for virtually all its games. However, GSU played only the 2012 season in the CAA, and was not eligible for the conference title, as it began an FBS transition in advance of its 2013 move to the Sun Belt Conference.
Since the CAA began play as a football conference in 2007, a member team has played in the FCS Championship game seven times, with Delaware making it in 2007 and 2010, Richmond in winning in 2008, Villanova winning in 2009, Towson appearing in 2013, and James Madison winning in 2016 and appearing in 2017. In 2007, the CAA set records with 15 national player of the week honorees and by sending five teams to the national championship playoffs. The very next season, in 2008, they broke that record with 19 national player of the week honorees and tied their own record by again sending five teams to the national championship playoffs for the second straight year. At the end of the 2008 season, the CAA had six Top 25 teams with four placing in the Top Ten. Players from the CAA received 78 All-America honors.
In the opening weekend of the 2009 season, CAA teams defeated three Division I FBS teams. William & Mary and Richmond took down teams from the ACC, respectively Virginia and Duke, while Villanova defeated Temple from the MAC. The following weekend saw New Hampshire defeat another MAC team, Ball State. All four of the CAA teams to defeat FBS teams qualified for the 2009 FCS playoffs and won their first-round games; Villanova and William & Mary reached the semifinals, and Villanova won the FCS championship.
Northeastern—the school whose 2005 move to the CAA enabled the creation of the CAA football conference—dropped football after the 2009 season. President Joseph E. Aoun and the board of trustees endorsed the move after an extensive, two-year review of the athletic program by its director, Peter Roby. The decision to eliminate football followed six straight losing seasons and sparse game attendance at a school whose ice rink often sells out for hockey.
On December 3, 2009, Hofstra announced that the university would no longer be sponsoring football. The decision follows a two-year review of sports spending at Hofstra. School officials stated there are no plans to cut any other sports at the Long Island school. Hofstra cited costs and low student interest—only 500 students would attend home games despite free tickets—as reasons to drop the program. Due to the reduction of the conference, the CAA did not use the division format for the 2010 season. Even though Old Dominion began conference play in 2011 and Georgia State did the same in 2012, the divisional format is not likely to return in the immediate future, as the CAA lost football members in both 2012 and 2013. UMass departed for FBS and the Mid-American Conference in 2012 followed by Georgia State's departure for the Sun Belt and Old Dominion for Conference USA.
The 2010 season started with the biggest non-conference win of the CAA's short history, when James Madison defeated nationally ranked Virginia Tech of the ACC. JMU won 21-16 on September 11, at Virginia Tech's Lane Stadium.

Current members

The CAA football conference has the following members:
  • Albany
  • Delaware
  • Elon
  • James Madison
  • Maine
  • New Hampshire
  • Richmond
  • Rhode Island
  • Stony Brook
  • Towson
  • Villanova
  • William & Mary

    Former members

The former members of the CAA football conference are:
  • Northeastern: 2007–2009, dropped football
  • Georgia State: 2012, moved to the FBS-level Sun Belt Conference
  • Hofstra: 2007–2009, dropped football
  • UMass: 2007–2011, moved to the FBS-level Mid-American Conference for football only, now an FBS Independent
  • Old Dominion: 2011–2012, competed as an FCS independent in 2013 before joining Conference USA, an FBS conference, for the sport in 2014
Northeastern also played in the Yankee and Atlantic 10 Football Conferences from 1993 to 2006, as did Massachusetts from 1947 to 2006 and Hofstra from 2001 to 2006.
Additionally, former members of its ancestor conferences include:
  • Boston U.: 1971–1997, dropped football
  • Northeastern: 1938–1945
  • Holy Cross: 1971, became independent, now in Patriot League
  • UConn: 1938–1999, moved up to Division I-A and joined the Big East Conference for football in 2004. When the original Big East split in 2013, UConn remained with most of the FBS Big East schools in the reorganized American Athletic Conference. In July 2020, UConn joined the current non-football Big East Conference, with football becoming an FBS independent.
  • Vermont: 1938–1973, dropped football

    Membership timeline


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bar:2 color:Full from:2007 till:end text:New Hampshire
bar:3 color:Full from:2007 till:2009 text:Northeastern
bar:3 color:OtherC1 from:2009 till:end text:Dropped Football
bar:4 color:Full from:2007 till:end text:Rhode Island
bar:5 color:Full from:2007 till:2011 text:UMass
bar:5 color:OtherC1 from:2011 till:end text: Mid-American
bar:6 color:Full from:2007 till:end text:Delaware
bar:7 color:Full from:2007 till:end text:Richmond
bar:8 color:Full from:2007 till:end text:Villanova
bar:9 color:Full from:2007 till:end text:James Madison
bar:10 color:Full from:2007 till:end text:William & Mary
bar:11 color:Full from:2007 till:2009 text:Hofstra
bar:11 color:OtherC1 from:2009 till:end text:Dropped Football
bar:12 color:Full from:2007 till:end text:Towson
bar:13 shift: color:Full from:2011 till:2012 text:Old Dominion
bar:13 shift: color:OtherC1 from:2012 till:2013 text:FCS Independent
bar:13 shift: color:OtherC2 from:2013 till:end text:C-USA
bar:14 shift: color:Full from:2012 till:2013 text:Georgia State
bar:14 color:OtherC1 from:2013 till:end text:Sun Belt
bar:15 color:OtherC1 from:2007 till:2013 text: Northeast Conference
bar:15 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:Albany
bar:16 color:OtherC1 from:2007 till:2008 text: FCS Ind.
bar:16 color:OtherC2 from:2008 till:2013 text:Big South Conference
bar:16 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:Stony Brook
bar:17 color:OtherC1 from:2007 till:2014 text: Southern Conference
bar:17 color:Full from:2014 till:end text:Elon
bar:N color:blue from:2007 till:end text:CAA Football
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    Conference champions

YearTeamConference RecordOverall RecordHead Coach
2007*Massachusetts
Richmond
7–110–3
11–3
Don Brown
Dave Clawson
2008James Madison8–012–2Mickey Matthews
2009*Richmond
Villanova
7–111–2
14–1
Mike London
Andy Talley
2010*Delaware
William & Mary
6–212–3
8–4
K. C. Keeler
Jimmye Laycock
2011Towson7–19–3Rob Ambrose
2012*New Hampshire
Richmond†
Villanova
Towson†
6–28–3
8–3
8–3
7–4
Sean McDonnell
Danny Rocco
Andy Talley
Rob Ambrose
2013Maine7–110–3Jack Cosgrove
2014New Hampshire8–010–1Sean McDonnell
2015*James Madison
Richmond
William & Mary
6–29–2
8–3
8–3
Everett Withers
Danny Rocco
Jimmye Laycock
2016James Madison8–014–1
2017James Madison8–011–0
2018Maine7–110–4
2019James Madison7–010-1

All-time conference championships

Co-championships are designated by italics.
BOLD denotes the team won the National Championship
Former member of CAA Football

NCAA FCS National Championships by School

†Delaware was an NCAA FCS Independent in the 1982 season.
*Won as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference.
^UMass became a football-only member in the MAC in 2013, and an independent football member of FBS beginning with the 2016 season.

All-time NFL Draft selections

Men's soccer

Regular season champions

Note: The conference was known as the ECAC South from 1983 to 1985.
List of CAA regular season champions.
SeasonRegular Season ChampionConference Record
1983George Mason4–1–0
1984American5–0–2
1985American6–1–0
1986George Mason5–0–2
1987William & Mary6–1–0
1988Navy5–1–1
1989George Mason6–0–1
1990George Mason6–1–0
1991James Madison6–1–0
1992William & Mary5–0–2
1993James Madison7–0–0
1994James Madison6–0–1
1995William & Mary6–2–0
1996William & Mary8–0–0
1997American6–0–2
1998VCU7–0–1
1999Old Dominion7–1–0
2000James Madison7–1–0
2001Old Dominion3–0–2
2002VCU7–1–1
2003VCU8–1–0
2004VCU7–1–1
2005Old Dominion9–1–1
2006Towson10–0–1
2007Drexel8–2–1
2008UNC Wilmington7–4–0
2009UNC Wilmington8–0–3
2010William & Mary8–1–2
2011James Madison8–3–0
2012Drexel8–1–1
2013Drexel4–1–2
2014Delaware, Hofstra & UNCW5–2–1
2015Elon & Hofstra6–2–0
2016Hofstra7–1–0
2017James Madison5–1–2
2018James Madison6–2
2019UNC Wilmington7–0–1

All-time conference championships

Facilities