Mid-American Conference


The Mid-American Conference is a National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I collegiate athletic conference with a membership base in the Great Lakes region that stretches from Western New York to Illinois. Nine of the twelve full member schools are in Ohio and Michigan, with single members located in Illinois, Indiana, and New York. For football, the MAC participates in the NCAA's Football Bowl Subdivision.
The MAC is headquartered in the Public Square district in downtown Cleveland, Ohio, and has two members in the nearby Akron area. The MAC has been referred to as the "Conference of Quarterbacks" because of the accomplishments of numerous former players in the National Football League. The conference also ranks highest among all ten NCAA Division I FBS conferences for graduation rates.

History

The five charter members of the Mid-American Conference were Ohio University, Butler University, the University of Cincinnati, Wayne University, and Western Reserve University, one of the predecessors to today's Case Western Reserve University. Wayne University left after the first year. Miami University and Western Michigan University took the place of those charter members for the 1948 season. The MAC added the University of Toledo, Kent State University, and Bowling Green State University. The University of Cincinnati resigned its membership February 18, 1953, with an effective date of June 1, 1953. Cincinnati's decision was based on a new requirement that at least 5 conference football games would have to be scheduled each season, University President Raymond Walters saying they "...regretfully resign...as the university could not continue under the present setup..."
The membership was steady for the next two decades except for the addition of Marshall University in 1954 and the departure of Western Reserve in 1955. Marshall was expelled from the conference in 1969 due to NCAA violations. The first major expansion since the 1950s took place in the mid-1970s with the addition of Central Michigan University and Eastern Michigan University in 1972 and Ball State University and Northern Illinois University in 1973. NIU left after the 1985–86 season. The University of Akron joined the conference in 1992. The conference became the largest in Division I-A with the re-admittance of Marshall and NIU in 1997 and addition of the Bulls from the University at Buffalo in 1998. The University of Central Florida, a non-football all-sports member in the Atlantic Sun Conference at the time, joined for football only in 2002, becoming the first football-only member in conference history. Marshall and Central Florida left after the 2004–05 academic year, both joining Conference USA in all sports.
In May 2005, the Temple Owls in Philadelphia signed a six-year contract with the MAC as a football-only school and began play in the East Division in 2007.
The Louisville Cardinals were a MAC affiliate for field hockey for a number of years when Louisville was a member of the Metro Conference and Conference USA, winning two MAC tourney titles in 2003 and 2004.
The Missouri State Bears, Evansville Purple Aces, and Southern Illinois Salukis participate in the MAC for men's swimming and diving. In 2012, the West Virginia Mountaineers joined the Florida Atlantic Owls and Hartwick College Hawks as men's soccer affiliates. Florida Atlantic departed upon joining Conference USA in 2013. Hartwick's contract was not renewed by the MAC in 2015. Nine schools are wrestling affiliates; most became affiliates when the MAC absorbed the former Eastern Wrestling League in 2019. Appalachian State University and Longwood University are associates in field hockey; Missouri State had also been a member in that sport from 2005 until dropping field hockey after the 2016 season. Binghamton University is an affiliate in men's tennis. In June 2017, SIU Edwardsville was invited to become an affiliate member in both men's soccer and wrestling in 2018. When Buffalo suddenly dropped four sports, including men's soccer, SIUE's move in that sport was made immediately.
The UMass Minutemen joined the MAC as a football-only member in July 2012; the university announced that the team would leave the MAC at the end of the 2015 season due to contractual issues. Meanwhile, Temple ended its affiliation with the MAC in football and joined the Big East for football in July 2012. Following the split of the Big East into football-sponsoring and non-football conferences in July 2013, Temple became a full member of the football-sponsoring portion, the American Athletic Conference, ending its membership in the Atlantic 10 at that time. The Chicago State Cougars were an affiliate for men's tennis until joining the Western Athletic Conference, which sponsors that sport, in July 2013.
The conference unveiled the addition of women's lacrosse to its sport sponsorship in November 2019. Lacrosse will begin competing under the MAC banner with six teams in the 2021 season with MAC members Akron, Central Michigan and Kent State joined by associate members Detroit Mercy, Robert Morris, and Youngstown State. Eastern Michigan will bring the league up to seven members once it adds women's lacrosse for the 2022 season.

Member schools

Current members

There are twelve public schools with full membership:

Current affiliate members

Nineteen schools have MAC affiliate membership status. On July 1, 2012, Temple joined the Big East Conference for football only, and Massachusetts replaced Temple as a football-only member in the MAC East Division. On September 19, 2012, the MAC announced Missouri, Northern Iowa and Old Dominion would join as wrestling affiliates; as the Southeastern and Missouri Valley Conferences do not sponsor wrestling. Missouri and Northern Iowa participated only in the conference tournament in the 2012–13 school year, and began full conference play in 2013–14. Old Dominion did not begin MAC competition until 2013–14, when it left the Colonial Athletic Association for Conference USA. Old Dominion discontinued wrestling in April 2020.
On July 1, 2013, Florida Atlantic's men's soccer program moved with the rest of its athletic program to Conference USA, and Chicago State's men's tennis team followed the rest of its sports to the Western Athletic Conference.
The 2014–15 school year saw one affiliate member leave for another conference and two new affiliates join. The Hartwick men's soccer team left the MAC for the Sun Belt Conference, which had announced in February 2014 that it would reinstate men's soccer, a sport that it last sponsored in 1995, for the 2014 season. The new affiliates for 2014–15 were Binghamton in men's tennis and Longwood in field hockey.
On July 1, 2017, one associate member left the MAC, another associate member dropped one of its two MAC sports, and two new schools became associate members. Northern Iowa wrestling moved from the MAC to the Big 12 Conference. Missouri State dropped field hockey, but remained a MAC member in men's swimming & diving. Appalachian State joined MAC field hockey, and SIU Edwardsville joined in men's soccer. SIUE was initially announced as joining in both men's soccer and wrestling in 2018, but less than a week after the initial announcement, the conference indicated that SIUE men's soccer would immediately join. SIUE wrestling joined on its originally announced schedule.
On March 5, 2019 the conference announced that it would be adding the seven former members of the Eastern Wrestling League as affiliate members in wrestling, making the MAC the second largest wrestling conference for academic year 2019-2020.
With the addition of women's lacrosse, the MAC added affiliate members Detroit Mercy, Robert Morris, and Youngstown State in the 2020–21 academic year. UDM and YSU, all-sports members of the Horizon League, were announced as incoming associates at the same time the MAC announced the addition of lacrosse. RMU was announced as an incoming associate in late June 2020, shortly after the school announced it would join the Horizon League in July 2020.
In June 2020, SIUE announced that it would leave the MAC men's soccer league in 2021 to rejoin its previous men's soccer home of the Missouri Valley Conference. It will remain in MAC wrestling.
InstitutionLocationFoundedJoinedTypeEnrollmentNicknameColorsPrimary
Conference
MAC Sport
Appalachian State UniversityBoone, North Carolina18992017Public19,089MountaineersSun BeltField hockey
Binghamton UniversityVestal, New York19462014Public16,098BearcatsAmerica EastMen's tennis
Evansville, Indiana18542009Private3,050Purple AcesMissouri ValleyMen's swimming
Longwood UniversityFarmville, Virginia18392014Public4,800LancersBig SouthField hockey
Columbia, Missouri18392012Public34,255TigersSECWrestling
Springfield, Missouri19052009Public21,425BearsMissouri ValleyMen's swimming
Southern Illinois University CarbondaleCarbondale, Illinois18692009Public17,964SalukisMissouri ValleyMen's swimming
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville Edwardsville, Illinois19572017
2018
Public14,142CougarsOhio ValleyMen's soccer
Wrestling
West Virginia UniversityMorgantown, West Virginia18672012Public29,616MountaineersBig 12Men's soccer
Rider UniversityLawrenceville, New Jersey18652019Private5,400BroncsMAACWrestling
George Mason UniversityFairfax County, Virginia19572019Public35,047PatriotsAtlantic 10Wrestling
Cleveland State UniversityCleveland, Ohio19642019Public17,260VikingsHorizon LeagueWrestling
Bloomsburg University of PennsylvaniaBloomsburg, Pennsylvania18392019Public9,950HuskiesPSAC
Wrestling
Clarion University of PennsylvaniaClarion, Pennsylvania18672019Public5,225Golden EaglesPSAC
Wrestling
Edinboro University of PennsylvaniaEdinboro, Pennsylvania18572019Public4,834Fighting ScotsPSAC
Wrestling
Lock Haven University of PennsylvaniaLock Haven, Pennsylvania18702019Public4,607Bald EaglesPSAC
Wrestling
Detroit, Michigan18772020Private5,700TitansHorizon LeagueWomen's lacrosse
Robert Morris UniversityMoon Township, Pennsylvania19212020Private4,895ColonialsHorizon LeagueWomen's lacrosse
Youngstown State UniversityYoungstown, Ohio19082020Public15,058PenguinsHorizon LeagueWomen's lacrosse

Former members

School names, nicknames, and colors listed here reflect those used during each school's MAC tenure. Wayne University became Wayne State University in 1956, with athletic teams changing from Tartars to Warriors in 1999. The University of Central Florida, known as the Golden Knights during their MAC tenure, dropped "Golden" from the athletic nickname in 2007 as part of their rebrand to the UCF Knights. Western Reserve University, whose teams were known as the Red Cats during their time in the MAC, merged with Case Institute of Technology in 1967 to form Case Western Reserve University, with the athletic programs merging in 1971. With the athletic merger, Case Western abandoned the nicknames of both former institutions and adopted Spartans. Indiana University – Purdue University Fort Wayne, known as the IPFW Mastodons during their affiliation with the MAC for men's soccer and men's tennis, rebranded their athletic program as the Fort Wayne Mastodons in 2016. Following IPFW's split into two separate institutions in July 2018, the Fort Wayne athletic program transferred to the larger of the two new institutions, Purdue University Fort Wayne, and the athletic program rebranded again as the Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons. The school colors changed to the old gold and black used by the other members of the Purdue system, most notably the main campus.

Former full members

Former affiliate members

;Notes

Membership timeline


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bar:2 color:Full from:1946 till:1949 text:Butler
bar:3 color:Full from:1946 till:1953 text:Cincinnati
bar:4 color:Full from:1946 till:1955 text:Western Reserve
bar:5 color:Full from:1946 till:End text:Ohio
bar:6 color:Full from:1947 till:End text:Miami
bar:7 color:Full from:1947 till:End text:Western Michigan
bar:8 color:Full from:1950 till:End text:Toledo
bar:9 color:Full from:1951 till:End text:Kent State
bar:10 color:Full from:1952 till:End text:Bowling Green
bar:11 color:Full from:1954 till:1969 text:Marshall
bar:11 color:Full from:1997 till:2005 text:
bar:12 color:Full from:1971 till:End text:Central Michigan
bar:13 color:Full from:1971 till:End text:Eastern Michigan
bar:14 color:Full from:1973 till:End text:Ball State
bar:15 color:Full from:1975 till:1986 text:Northern Illinois
bar:15 color:Full from:1997 till:End text:
bar:16 color:Full from:1992 till:End text:Akron
bar:17 color:Full from:1998 till:End text:Buffalo
bar:18 color:AssocF from:2002 till:2005 text:Central Florida
bar:19 color:AssocF from:2007 till:2012 text:Temple
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    Academics

One of the current full member schools, the University at Buffalo, is a member of the Association of American Universities, an organization of 62 leading research universities in the United States and Canada. All members are considered "high research activity," by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching except for the University at Buffalo which is considered "very high research activity," the highest classification given. Member schools are also ranked nationally and globally by various groups, including U.S. News & World Report and Times Higher Education.
UniversityLocationAffiliationCarnegieEndowmentUSN Nat.URAP Global
Akron, OhioPublicResearch $236,000,000293-381763
Muncie, IndianaPublicResearch $212,800,0001921437
Bowling Green State UniversityBowling Green, OhioPublicResearch $138,000,0002461443
Buffalo, New YorkPublicResearch $795,000,00079279
Mount Pleasant, MichiganPublicResearch $156,400,0002401,335
Ypsilanti, MichiganPublicResearch $67,200,000293-3812,187
Kent State UniversityKent, OhioPublicResearch $138,000,000211675
Miami UniversityOxford, OhioPublicResearch $535,000,000911,061
Northern Illinois UniversityDeKalb, IllinoisPublicResearch $74,700,000293-3811,078
Athens, OhioPublicResearch $598,900,000185742
University of ToledoToledo, OhioPublicResearch $454,100,000293-381745
Western Michigan UniversityKalamazoo, MichiganPublicResearch $405,200,0002461,292

Commissioners

The Mid-American Conference sponsors championship competition in 11 men's and 13 women's NCAA sanctioned sports, with women's lacrosse becoming the newest sport in 2020–21. As of the 2020–21 school year, 19 schools are associate members for six sports.
As the MAC is an FBS conference, its full members are subject to the NCAA requirement that FBS members field teams in at least 16 NCAA-recognized sports. However, the MAC itself requires sponsorship of only four sports: football, men's and women's basketball, and women's volleyball.
SportMen'sWomen's
Baseball11
Basketball1212
Cross country812
Field hockey7
Football12
Golf810
Gymnastics7
Lacrosse6
Soccer612
Softball12
Swimming and diving78
Tennis67
Track and field 412
Track and field 512
Volleyball12
Wrestling14

Men's sponsored sports by school

Men's varsity sports not sponsored by the MAC

;Notes

Women's sponsored sports by school

Women's varsity sports not sponsored by the MAC

Notes:

Football

All-time results

MAC champions

Bowl games
In 2017, the MAC is contracted to provide a team for each of the four college football bowl games: the Bahamas Bowl, LendingTree Bowl, Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, and Camellia Bowl. The MAC also has secondary agreements with the Quick Lane Bowl and with several ESPN owned bowls.
NameLocationOpposing conference
Bahamas BowlNassau, BahamasC-USA
LendingTree BowlMobile, AlabamaSun Belt
Famous Idaho Potato BowlBoise, IdahoMountain West
Camellia BowlMontgomery, AlabamaSun Belt

;Notes
  • The MAC Champion is not contractually obligated to any specific bowl. The conference and the universities select which teams will play in which of the league's affiliated bowls.

    College Football Playoff

The MAC champion receives an automatic berth in one of the so-called "New Year's Six" bowl games associated with the College Football Playoff under either of the following circumstances::
  • Selected as one of the top four teams overall by the CFP selection committee, in which case the team will play in a CFP national semifinal.
  • Ranked by the committee as the top champion among the five conferences given access to one of the CFP bowls, in which case the team will play in the so-called "Access Bowl" as an at-large selection.
The first "Access Bowl" berth in 2014 went to Boise State ; the 2015 berth went to Houston. The MAC got its first berth in 2016 with Western Michigan.
During the era of the now-defunct Bowl Championship Series, one MAC team appeared in a BCS bowl game. In 2012, NIU qualified by being ranked in the top 16 in the season's final BCS standings, and also higher than at least one champion of a conference that received an automatic berth in a BCS game. In the 2012 season, two such conference champions were ranked below NIU: Big East champion Louisville, who was ranked 22nd, and Big Ten champion Wisconsin, who was unranked. NIU lost to Florida State in the Orange Bowl.

Rivalries

Football rivalries involving MAC teams include:
In addition, Central Michigan, Eastern Michigan, and Western Michigan compete for the Michigan MAC Trophy, which is awarded to the team with the best head-to-head record each year. Since the inception of the trophy in 2005, Western Michigan has won 6 times, Central Michigan has won 5 times, and Eastern Michigan has won the trophy 4 times. Western Michigan has won the trophy the past two years as well as 5 of the past 6 years.

Basketball

In August 2010, Commissioner Jon Steinbrecher and the Cleveland Cavaliers announced that the Mid-American Conference Men's and Women's Basketball Tournaments would remain in Cleveland at the venue then known as Quicken Loans Arena and now as Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse through 2017. Both tournaments have flourished since moving to Cleveland in 2000, with the men's semi-finals and championship regularly drawing large crowds at Quicken Loans Arena. In 2007, the MAC also announced a format change for both tournaments, bringing all twelve men's and women's teams to Cleveland. The MAC also co-hosted the 2007 Women's Final Four at Quicken Loans Arena after successfully hosting the 2006 NCAA Women's Basketball Regional at the same facility.
On May 12, 2020, Steinbrecher announced a suite of major changes to the conference's competitive format across multiple sports in response to fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic. Specific to men's and women's basketball, the following changes will take effect in 2020–21 and continue through at least 2023–24:
  • The conference will adopt a single league table, eliminating the divisional standings.
  • The conference schedule will increase from 18 to 20 games.
  • Only the top eight men's and women's teams will advance to their respective conference tournaments.

    Championships

Current MAC champions

The following are the most recent conference champions of each MAC sport. Champions from the previous academic year are indicated in italics.
In sports in which regular-season and tournament champions are recognized, "RS" indicates regular-season champion and "T" indicates tournament champion.
Fall 2019
SportSchool
FootballMiami
Soccer Akron
West Virginia
Soccer Bowling Green
Volleyball Miami
Ball State & Central Michigan
Eastern Michigan
Cross country Eastern Michigan
Cross country Eastern Michigan
Field hockey Kent State & Miami
Miami

Winter 2019–20
SportSchool
Basketball Buffalo
Toledo
Basketball Central Michigan
Ohio
Buffalo
Indoor track and field Akron
Indoor track and field Central Michigan
Swimming and diving Miami
Swimming and diving Akron
Gymnastics Northern Illinois
Wrestling Missouri

Spring 2020
SportSchool
BaseballCentral Michigan
SoftballMiami
Toledo
Outdoor track and field Akron
Outdoor track and field Akron
Golf Eastern Michigan
Kent State
Golf Kent State
Tennis Western Michigan
Tennis Miami

Facilities

Hall of Fame

The Mid-American Conference Hall of Fame was the first Division I conference Hall of Fame. It was established in 1987 and classes have been inducted in 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 2012 and 2013.
In order to be eligible, a person must have participated during the time the university was in the MAC and five years must have passed from the time the individual participated in athletics or worked in the athletic department.
The following is a list of the members of the MAC Hall of Fame, along with school affiliation, sport for which they were inducted, and year of induction.

Broadcasts

A number of MAC sports, including football, men's and women's basketball, baseball, soccer, wrestling and volleyball, are telecast on Spectrum Sports, replacing SportsTime Ohio and Fox Sports Ohio as the MAC TV partner. Along with Spectrum Sports, ESPN, as well as the American Sports Network, retain the "local and regional" syndication telecast rights to the MAC for football and basketball.
In 2000 ESPN began broadcasting MAC football games on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. The conference agreed to the unusual schedule to increase television ratings by not competing against other football. Fans nicknamed the midweek games MACtion. In 2014 the conference and ESPN agreed to a new contract for 13 years. Each school receives more than $800,000 annually, and plays most November games on weekday nights; 16 of 18 games in 2016 were not on Saturdays, for example. While MACtion decreases stadium attendance, games appear on an ESPN channel to a nationwide audience instead of a less-popular channel or streaming media.
Ball State produces its own comprehensive television package with Ball State Sports Link. Affiliate stations include WIPB in Muncie, WNDY in Indianapolis, WPTA in Fort Wayne, WHME in South Bend, WTVW in Evansville, WYIN in Merrillville and Comcast in Michigan. All Ball State Sports Link games are also broadcast on student radio station WCRD and on the Ball State Radio Network produced by WLBC-FM and Backyard Broadcasting.
NIU has multiple football and basketball games telecast by Comcast SportsNet Chicago. In addition, most NIU football and basketball games can be heard on WSCR-AM 670 "The Score" - Chicago's powerful 50,000-watt top-rated all-sports station, which reaches 38 states and Canada.

MAC Properties

MAC Properties is the sponsorship arm of the Mid-American Conference, and handles all forms of sponsorship and advertising for the MAC which includes managing and growing its stable of official corporate partners. As of 2010, the MAC has five official corporate partners: FirstEnergy, Marathon, PNC Bank, AutoTrader.com and Cleveland Clinic Sports Health. There are approximately 20 other companies engaged as sponsors of the conference at the non-official level. MAC Properties also assists with the management of the conference's television and radio contracts, including those with ESPN Regional, FOX Sports Ohio and ESPN 850 WKNR among others.