Midwestern Conference

Midwestern Conference
(CMU)
Established 1970
Dissolved 1972
Association NCAA
Division Division I non-football
Members 5
Sports fielded 9 (men's: 9)
Region Midwestern United States
Headquarters Indianapolis, Indiana
Commissioner Jack McClelland

The Midwestern Conference was a college athletic conference which operated in Illinois and Indiana from 1970 to 1972. It was composed of schools which had recently moved from Division II (then known as the College Division) to Division I (known as the University Division) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The conference sponsored only men's sports; awarding championships in baseball, basketball, cross-country, golf, swimming, indoor & outdoor track and field, tennis, and wrestling.

The first conference championship was in cross country in the fall of 1970. Southern Illinois won that championship and almost made a clean sweep by winning championships in basketball, wrestling, swimming, baseball, tennis, and both indoor and outdoor track. Only Ball State prevented a sweep by winning the golf championship that spring.

At that time (as is generally still the case now), in order to be recognized by the NCAA, a conference was required to have six or more member institutions. The Midwestern Conference had only five members and was unable to find a sixth, so it ceased operations after only two years. The five member schools eventually affiliated with other conferences.

The conference Commissioner was Jack McClelland, the former Drake Bulldogs basketball coach and athletic director, who had resigned as commissioner of the North Central Conference in order to accept the position with the Midwestern Conference.[1]

Member schools

The onetime members of the Midwestern Conference and the conferences they later joined are:

Conference champions

Baseball

Basketball

Cross country

Golf

Swimming

Indoor track & field

Outdoor track & field

Tennis

Wrestling

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, April 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.