Summit League

(Redirected from The Summit League)

The Summit League, or The Summit, is an NCAA Division I intercollegiate athletic conference with its membership mostly located in the Midwestern United States, from Minnesota in the east, to the Dakotas, Nebraska and Colorado to the West, and Missouri and Oklahoma to the South. Founded as the Association of Mid-Continent Universities in 1982,[1] it rebranded as the Mid-Continent Conference in 1989,[3] then again as the Summit League on June 1, 2007.[4] The league headquarters are in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

Summit League
FormerlyAssociation of Mid-Continent Universities (1982–1989)
Mid-Continent Conference (1989–2007)
AssociationNCAA
FoundedJune 18, 1982;
42 years ago
 (1982-06-18)[1]
CommissionerJosh Fenton[2] (since 2021)
Sports fielded
  • 19
    • men's: 9
    • women's: 10
DivisionDivision I
Subdivisionnon-football
No. of teams9 full (7 associates)
HeadquartersSioux Falls, South Dakota
Region
Official websitethesummitleague.org
Locations
Location of teams in {{{title}}}

The membership currently consists of 9 full members plus 7 associate members. The most recent change in the core conference membership is the 2021 arrival of the University of St. Thomas, which began an unprecedented transition from NCAA Division III to Division I.[5] A year earlier, the University of Missouri–Kansas City returned as a full member after a seven-year absence with the new athletic identity of the Kansas City Roos,[6] while Purdue University Fort Wayne left for the Horizon League.[7] A total of 32 schools have been full members; the last charter member remaining in the league, Western Illinois University, left for the Ohio Valley Conference on July 1, 2023, though it will remain in the Summit men's soccer league through the fall 2023 season.[8]

History

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Summit League
200km
125miles
Denver
Southern Indiana
Northern Colorado
Illinois State
Drake
Eastern Illinois
St. Thomas
South Dakota State
South Dakota
Oral Roberts
North Dakota State
North Dakota
Omaha
Kansas City
Location of Summit League members:
full member
affiliate member
Not shown: future affiliate members Delaware and Weber State

Early Days

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The conference can trace its roots back to 1978, when the Mid-Continent Athletic Association was founded as a football-only conference playing in Division II at the time.[9] Its inaugural members were the University of Akron, Eastern Illinois University, University of Northern Iowa, Northern Michigan University, Western Illinois University, and Youngstown State University; Wayne State University had also expressed interest in joining, but ultimately never did.[10] Akron left after the 1979 season, while Northern Michigan and Youngstown State left the following year; they were replaced by Southwest Missouri State (now known as Missouri State University) in 1981. The 1981 season also saw the conference as a whole move from Division II to Division I-AA; this would be the conference's final season under the name of the Mid-Continent Athletic Association.

Foundation

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The new association was officially created on June 18, 1982, at the O'Hare Hilton Hotel in Chicago, Illinois[1] as the Association of Mid-Continent Universities (or AMCU or AMCU-8, pronounced Am-cue), which it was known as until 1989.[11] Covering all men's sports now in addition to football, the new conference consisted of current MCAA members Northern Iowa, Eastern Illinois, Western Illinois, and Southwest Missouri State, along with non-football sponsoring Cleveland State University, University of Illinois-Chicago, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay and Valparaiso University. The conference continued to sponsor football at the Division I-AA level, now under the new AMCU name, from 1982 until 1984, when the football sponsoring members of the Missouri Valley Conference joined with the football sponsoring members of the AMCU to form the beginnings of what is now the Missouri Valley Football Conference; current members North Dakota, North Dakota State, South Dakota, and South Dakota State continue to house their FCS football programs there to this day.

Mid-Continent Conference logo, 1982–2007

Changes and the addition of women's sports

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The conference saw its first changes in the early 1990s. Southwest Missouri State departed for membership in the Missouri Valley Conference as the University of Akron and Northern Illinois University joined in 1990. Then Wright State University joined in 1991 as Northern Iowa followed Southwest Missouri State to the MVC.

Major changes came to the conference in 1992. First, Akron left for the Mid-American Conference (MAC) and another Ohio school, Youngstown State University, replaced it. More significantly, the Mid-Continent added women's sports by absorbing the North Star Conference (NSC), a women's-only league whose final seven members were in the Mid-Continent. All of the final NSC members except for Akron moved their women's sports into the Mid-Continent. At the same time, Eastern Illinois and Western Illinois moved their women's sports into the Mid-Continent when their former women's sports home, the Gateway Conference, merged into the Missouri Valley Conference. The University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee joined the Mid-Continent a year later.

Horizon and ECC transitions

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In 1994, charter members Cleveland State, UIC, and Green Bay, as well as newer members Wisconsin–Milwaukee, Northern Illinois, and Wright State left the conference to join the Midwestern Collegiate Conference, now known as the Horizon League.

The Mid-Continent absorbed Central Connecticut State University, Chicago State University, the University at Buffalo, Troy State University (now Troy University), and Northeastern Illinois University from the collapsed East Coast Conference in response. None of these institutions remain in the league.

Missouri-Kansas City, formerly an independent, also joined the Mid-Continent Conference in 1994.

Declining membership

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Eastern Illinois moved to the Ohio Valley Conference in 1996, reducing membership to nine programs. Troy State departed for the Trans America Athletic Conference while Central Connecticut joined the Northeast Conference in 1997. Buffalo joined the MAC in 1998 while Northeastern Illinois ceased intercollegiate athletics at that time. Oral Roberts University and Southern Utah University replaced the former pair while Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) and Oakland University moved into the latter duo's spots a year later.

Youngstown State switched to the Horizon League in 2001, and Centenary College replaced it in 2003. Chicago State University announced in the spring of 2006 that it would withdraw from the conference to compete as an independent starting in the 2006–07 school year. Charter member Valparaiso then moved to the Horizon in 2007.

Renewed expansion and contraction

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Conference expansion was discussed at length at the Mid-Continent Conference annual Presidents Council meeting in 2006, and Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne (IPFW, now Purdue Fort Wayne), North Dakota State, and South Dakota State were approved for site visits. On August 30, 2006, IPFW accepted an invitation to join the Mid-Continent Conference as a full member starting July 1, 2007.[12] Both North Dakota State and South Dakota State also accepted invitations to join the conference the next day.[13][14]

The Summit League continued its renewed expansion push with the admission of the University of South Dakota. The Coyotes began conference play in the 2011–12 academic year and become eligible for all championships the following season.[15] Centenary College subsequently announced that it would leave the Summit League following the 2010–2011 campaign.[16]

The University of North Dakota had also been openly rumored to have been courted by the Summit League, but controversy over the Fighting Sioux nickname in all likelihood prevented UND's admission at that time. Expectations that UND would join the Summit League came to an end on November 1, 2010, when North Dakota instead accepted an invitation to join the Big Sky Conference. The University of South Dakota entered into very brief negotiations to join the Big Sky as well, rather than continuing their plans to join the Summit. However, South Dakota chose instead to remain with the more compact Summit League (along with other Dakota schools, NDSU and SDSU). As the University of Nebraska Omaha began the transition to Division I athletics in all sports, it joined the Summit League on July 1, 2012. With the departures of Centenary to Division III at the end of the 2010–11 athletic year, and Southern Utah and Oral Roberts for other Division I conferences at the end of the 2011–12 athletic year, the Summit League continued with nine institutions, all within the Midwest geographical region.[17]

The conference unveiled the University of Denver (DU) as its 10th member on November 27, 2012, and the Pioneers joined in July 2013.[18] While Denver is slightly outside The Summit's current Midwestern base, the city's status as a major air hub seemingly minimized travel issues for the other members.[18] With Denver among the eight of ten WAC members switching to other conferences, that league searched for new members. UMKC announced on February 7, 2013, that it would be one of six schools joining the WAC for the 2013–14 season,[19] dropping the Summit league back to nine member schools. Membership fell to eight schools on May 7, 2013, when Oakland announced that it was joining the Horizon League.[20] Eight of the nine then-current Horizon League programs were former Summit League members with Oakland's move (the Horizon has since added two more members that were never in The Summit League, Northern Kentucky and Robert Morris, as well as another former Summit member in Purdue Fort Wayne).

In December 2013, The Summit League office announced that Oral Roberts University returned to the conference in all sports, effective July 1, 2014.[21]

The next changes to the conference's core membership were announced in 2017. First, on January 26, North Dakota, which had resolved its controversy by selecting the new nickname Fighting Hawks, unveiled as a new member beginning in 2018.[22] Then, on June 28, IUPUI announced it would leave the conference to join the Horizon League effective July 1, 2017.[23]

For much of 2018, speculation involving further league expansion focused on Augustana University, a Division II school located in the Summit's headquarters city of Sioux Falls. Many of the school's boosters have ties to Sanford Health, a hospital company that has long been a major league sponsor and also owns the office complex that houses the league headquarters.[24][25] The university announced on December 14 that it would start a transition to Division I, though stating at the time that no such move would take place until at least 2021.[26] However, on May 22, 2020, the Summit League commissioner, Tom Douple, informed Augustana president Stephanie Herseth Sandlin that the conference would not be adding more new teams "at this time."[27] The conference expanded anyway, announcing in June 2019 that UMKC would return in 2020 after a seven-year absence.[28] However, shortly thereafter, Purdue Fort Wayne announced its 2020 departure for the Horizon League, maintaining the full-time conference membership at nine schools.[7] Then, on October 4, 2019, the University of St. Thomas, a Minnesota school that was set to be expelled from its longtime athletic home of the NCAA Division III Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) in 2021, announced that it received an invitation to join the Summit upon its MIAC departure.[29] St. Thomas eventually received a waiver of an NCAA rule mandating that Division III schools can only transition to Division II, allowing the school to move directly to D-I on the originally announced schedule.[30]

Shortly before St. Thomas' future conference membership was confirmed, the University of Northern Colorado was announced as a baseball-only member effective in 2021–22.[31] The most recent change to the affiliate membership was announced on May 11, 2022, when Lindenwood University and the University of Southern Indiana were announced as new affiliates in men's soccer plus men's and women's swimming & diving effective in 2022–23. Both institutions began transitions from Division II as new members of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC), which at the time did not sponsor any of these schools' Summit League sports, in July 2022. Southern Indiana started its swimming & diving program for both sexes in 2022–23.[32] In late March 2023, the OVC announced that it would begin sponsoring men's soccer that fall, leading to Eastern Illinois, Lindenwood, and Southern Indiana moving that sport to their full-time home.[33] All three remain swimming & diving affiliates.

In early May 2023, it was announced that founding member, Western Illinois would be leaving the Summit League in all sports and would join the Ohio Valley Conference beginning in Fall 2023.[34] In mid-June, Western Illinois announced that their men's soccer team would remain in the Summit League for the Fall 2023 season, and depart for the OVC after that.[35]

On April 4, 2024, both entities announced that Delaware would be joining the conference as an associate member in men's soccer starting in 2025.[36]

On May 7, 2024, the league announced that Northern Colorado, who is also an affiliate in baseball, and Weber State would be joining the league for men's golf starting in the Fall of 2024.[37]

Member schools

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Current full members

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InstitutionLocationFoundedJoinedTypeEnrollmentEndowment[38]NicknameColors
University of DenverDenver, Colorado18642013Private14,130$900,300,000Pioneers   
University of Missouri–Kansas CityKansas City, Missouri19331994;
2020[a]
Public16,017$152,800,000Roos[b]   
University of Nebraska OmahaOmaha, Nebraska19082012Public15,328$110,000,000Mavericks   
University of North DakotaGrand Forks, North Dakota18832018Public14,172$352,100,000Fighting Hawks   
North Dakota State UniversityFargo, North Dakota18902007Public11,952$457,000,000Bison   
Oral Roberts UniversityTulsa, Oklahoma19631997;
2014[c]
Private

(Evangelical)

5,051$45,000,000Golden Eagles     
University of St. ThomasSaint Paul, Minnesota18852021[5]Private

(Catholic)

9,347$653,300,000Tommies   
University of South DakotaVermillion, South Dakota18622011Public9,464$328,500,000Coyotes   
South Dakota State UniversityBrookings, South Dakota18812007Public11,465$213,000,000Jackrabbits   
Notes
  1. ^ Kansas City, a previous member of the conference from 1994–95 to 2012–13 under its former athletic identity of the UMKC Kangaroos, rejoined the Summit effective the 2020–21 school year.
  2. ^ Since July 1, 2019, UMKC has branded its athletic program, previously the UMKC Kangaroos, as the Kansas City Roos.[6][28]
  3. ^ Oral Roberts, a previous member of the conference from 1997–98 to 2011–12, rejoined the Summit effective the 2014–15 school year.

Current associate members

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InstitutionLocationFoundedJoinedTypeEnrollmentNicknamePrimary
conference
Summit
sport(s)
Drake UniversityDes Moines, Iowa18812017Private4,875BulldogsMVCMen's tennis[39]
Eastern Illinois UniversityCharleston, Illinois18952005Public8,608PanthersOVCSwimming & diving[40]
Illinois State UniversityNormal, Illinois18572017Public20,233RedbirdsMVCMen's tennis[39]
Lindenwood UniversitySt. Charles, Missouri18272022Private7,003LionsOVCSwimming & diving
University of Northern ColoradoGreeley, Colorado18892021Public10,348BearsBig SkyBaseball[31]
Men's golf (2024)[37]
University of Southern IndianaEvansville, Indiana19652022Public7,938Screaming EaglesOVCSwimming & diving

Future associate members

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InstitutionLocationFoundedJoiningTypeEnrollmentNicknamePrimary
conference
Summit
sport(s)
Weber State UniversityOgden, Utah18892024Public29,914WildcatsBig SkyMen's golf[37]
University of DelawareNewark, Delaware17432025Public[a]23,774[41]Blue HensCAA
(CUSA in 2025)
Men's soccer[42]


  1. ^ Delaware is officially chartered as a "privately-governed, state-assisted" institution. This status is broadly similar to that of New York State's statutory colleges, most of which are housed at Cornell University, or institutions in Pennsylvania's Commonwealth System of Higher Education.

Former members

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All institutional names and nicknames used reflect those in the final school year of conference membership.

Former full members

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The Summit League has 23 former members.

InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentJoinedLeftNicknameSubsequent
conference
Current
conference
University of AkronAkron, Ohio1870Public29,25119901992ZipsMid-American (MAC)
University at BuffaloBuffalo, New York1846Public28,60119941998BullsMid-American (MAC)
Centenary College of LouisianaShreveport, Louisiana1825Private

(UMC)

78720032011Gentlemen (men's)
Ladies (women's)
American Southwest[a]SCAC[a]
Central Connecticut State UniversityNew Britain, Connecticut1849Public11,36019941997Blue DevilsNortheast (NEC)
Chicago State UniversityChicago, Illinois1867Public3,57819942006CougarsNCAA D-I Independent (NEC in 2024)
Cleveland State UniversityCleveland, Ohio1964Public17,2041982[b]1994VikingsHorizon
Eastern Illinois UniversityCharleston, Illinois1895Public11,6511982[c]1996PanthersOVC
University of Illinois ChicagoChicago, Illinois1858Public28,0911982[b]1994FlamesHorizonMissouri Valley
Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis[d]Indianapolis, Indiana1969Public27,18419982017JaguarsHorizon
Northeastern Illinois UniversityChicago, Illinois1867Public11,14919941998Golden EaglesDiscontinued intercollegiate athletics
Northern Illinois UniversityDeKalb, Illinois1895Public25,3131990[b]1994HuskiesHorizonMid-American (MAC)
University of Northern IowaCedar Falls, Iowa1876Public11,14719821991PanthersMissouri Valley
Oakland University[20]Rochester, Michigan1957Public19,37919982013Golden GrizzliesHorizon
Purdue University Fort WayneFort Wayne, Indiana1964[e]Public10,13920072020MastodonsHorizon
Southern Utah UniversityCedar City, Utah1897Public8,29719972012ThunderbirdsBig SkyWAC
Southwest Missouri State University[f]Springfield, Missouri1905Public21,05919821990Bears (men's)
Lady Bears (women's)
Missouri Valley (CUSA in 2025)
Troy State University[g]Troy, Alabama1887Public29,68919941997TrojansTAACSun Belt
University of Wisconsin–Green BayGreen Bay, Wisconsin1965Public6,7001982[b]1994PhoenixHorizon
University of Wisconsin–MilwaukeeMilwaukee, Wisconsin1885Public30,50219931994PanthersHorizon
Valparaiso UniversityValparaiso, Indiana1859Private

(Lutheran)

4,0611982[b]2007Crusaders[h]HorizonMissouri Valley
Western Illinois UniversityMacomb, Illinois1899Public7,6431982[i]2023[j]LeathernecksOVC
Wright State UniversityFairborn, Ohio1967Public17,7891991[b]1994RaidersHorizon
Youngstown State UniversityYoungstown, Ohio1908Public15,19419922001PenguinsHorizon
Notes
  1. ^ a b Currently an NCAA Division III athletic conference.
  2. ^ a b c d e f This school joined the then-Mid-Continent Conference before the league began sponsoring women's sports in the 1992–93 school year. It had previously been a member of the women's sports-only North Star Conference, which was absorbed by the Mid-Con after the 1991–92 school year.
  3. ^ Before the Mid-Con began sponsoring women's sports in the 1992–93 school year, Eastern Illinois had been a member of the Gateway Collegiate Athletic Conference, which began as a women's-only conference and added football in the 1985 fall season (1985–86 school year); EIU was a member of both sides of the conference. When the Gateway merged its women's side into the Missouri Valley Conference (MVC), EIU moved its women's sports into the Mid-Con, but kept its football team in the Gateway until it moved its entire athletic program into the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC), effective with the 1996–97 school year.
  4. ^ The Indiana University and Purdue University systems will dissolve IUPUI at the end of the 2023–24 school year, replacing it with separate IU- and Purdue-affiliated institutions. The new IU Indianapolis, which will take over the vast majority of IUPUI academic programs, will inherit the athletic program.[43]
  5. ^ Purdue Fort Wayne (PFW) did not begin operation until 2018, but inherited its athletic program from Indiana University – Purdue University Fort Wayne (IPFW), founded in 1964. IPFW dissolved in 2018, and the Purdue University and Indiana University systems each established a new Fort Wayne campus.[44]
  6. ^ Known since 2005 as Missouri State University.
  7. ^ Known since 2005 as Troy University.
  8. ^ Dropped nickname of Crusaders in February 2021; adopted new nickname of Beacons that August.
  9. ^ The Mid-Con did not sponsor women's sports until the 1992–93 school year. Before that time, Western Illinois had been a member of the Gateway Collegiate Athletic Conference, which began as a women's-only conference and added football in the 1985–86 school year; WIU was a member of both sides of the conference. When the Gateway merged its women's side into the Missouri Valley Conference, WIU moved its women's sports into the Mid-Con, but kept its football team in the Gateway (now known as the Missouri Valley Football Conference) through the 2023 season.
  10. ^ Western Illinois departed the Summit League as its full-time conference on July 1, 2023, but elected to keep its men's soccer team in the league until the conclusion of the Fall 2023 season.

Former associate members

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InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentJoinedLeftNicknamePrimary
conference
during associate
membership
Current
conference
in former
Summit sport[a]
Summit
sport
University of AkronAkron, Ohio1870Public10,37819781980ZipsD-II IndependentMid-American (MAC)football
DePaul UniversityChicago, Illinois1898Private24,41419921999Blue DemonsGreat Midwest,
CUSA[b]
Big Eastsoftball
Howard UniversityWashington, D.C.1867Private10,00019961999BisonMid-Eastern (MEAC)Northeast (NEC)[c]men's soccer
C.W. Post of Long Island UniversityBrookville, New York1954Public8,47219941998PioneersEast Coast (ECC)[d]Northeast (NEC)[e]baseball
New York Institute of TechnologyNew York, New York1955Private13,00019941998BearsEast Coast (ECC)[d][f]TBA[g]baseball
Northern Michigan UniversityMarquette, Michigan1899Public6,76419781981WildcatsD-II IndependentGreat Lakes (GLIAC)[d]football
Oral Roberts UniversityTulsa, Oklahoma1963Private3,41720122014Golden EaglesSouthland[h]Summitmen's soccer
Pace UniversityNew York, New York1906Private12,77219941998SettersEast Coast (ECC)[d]
Northeast-10 (NE-10)[d][i]
Northeast-10 (NE-10)baseball
Quincy UniversityQuincy, Illinois1860Private1,26919941996HawksGreat Lakes (GLVC)[d]men's soccer
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
(SIU Edwardsville or SIUE)
Edwardsville, Illinois1957Public13,85019941996CougarsGreat Lakes (GLVC)[d]Ohio Valley (OVC)men's soccer
University of South DakotaVermillion, South Dakota1862Public10,15120092011CoyotesGreat West (GWC)Summitmen's swimming & diving
women's swimming & diving
South Dakota State UniversityBrookings, South Dakota1881Public12,85120052007JackrabbitsD-I IndependentSummitmen's swimming & diving
women's swimming & diving
State University of New York at OneontaOneonta, New York1889Public5,85219961998Red DragonsNew York State (SUNYAC)[j]men's soccer
Valparaiso UniversityValparaiso, Indiana1859Private4,50020172020CrusadersMissouri Valley (MVC)[k][l]men's tennis
20172021Mid-American (MAC)[l][47]men's swimming
Youngstown State UniversityYoungstown, Ohio1908Public11,29819781981PenguinsD-II IndependentMissouri Valley (MVFC)football
Notes
  1. ^ Except as noted, this matches each school's current primary conference.
  2. ^ When DePaul joined for softball, it was a member of the Great Midwest Conference. In 1995, that conference merged with the Metro Conference to form Conference USA.
  3. ^ Howard remains a full member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, which does not sponsor soccer for either men or women.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Currently an NCAA Division II athletic conference.
  5. ^ After the 2018–19 school year, Long Island University merged the LIU Post athletic program with the program of its other principal campus, LIU Brooklyn, creating a new Division I program that now competes as the LIU Sharks. The unified athletic program, which maintains Brooklyn's memberships in Division I and the Northeast Conference, now fields a single baseball team that plays on the Post campus in Brookville.[45]
  6. ^ NYIT remained in Division I baseball through the 2017 spring season (2016–17 school year), after which it downgraded baseball to Division II and added that sport to its existing ECC membership.
  7. ^ NYIT shut down its athletic program after the 2019–20 school year due to COVID-19 impacts. It was expected to resume athletics in 2022–23, but has yet to do so by far or announce a future conference affiliation.
  8. ^ Between Oral Roberts' 2012 departure for the Southland Conference and 2014 return to the Summit League, it maintained Summit associate membership in men's soccer.
  9. ^ When Pace joined for baseball, it was a member of the ECC (then known as the New York Collegiate Athletic Conference (NYCAC). In 1997, it joined the Northeast-10.
  10. ^ Currently an NCAA Division III athletic conference.
  11. ^ Valparaiso dropped men's tennis after the 2019–20 school year.[46]
  12. ^ a b Valparaiso remains a full member of the Missouri Valley Conference.

Membership timeline

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University of St. Thomas (Minnesota)Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceUniversity of North DakotaBig Sky ConferenceGreat West ConferenceNorth Central ConferenceUniversity of DenverWestern Athletic ConferenceSun Belt ConferenceNCAA Division I independent schoolsNCAA Division II independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsNCAA Division I independent schoolsUniversity of Nebraska OmahaNCAA Division I independent schoolsMid-America Intercollegiate Athletics AssociationNorth Central ConferenceUniversity of South DakotaGreat West ConferenceNorth Central ConferenceHorizon LeaguePurdue University Fort WaynePurdue University Fort WayneNCAA Division I independent schoolsGreat Lakes Valley ConferenceNCAA Division II independent schoolsNCAA Division III independent schoolsNorth Dakota State UniversityNCAA Division I independent schoolsNorth Central ConferenceSouth Dakota State UniversityNCAA Division I independent schoolsNorth Central ConferenceSouthern Collegiate Athletic ConferenceNCAA Division III independent schoolsCentenary College of LouisianaNCAA Division I independent schoolsASUN ConferenceHorizon LeagueOakland UniversityNCAA Division II independent schoolsGreat Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceHorizon LeagueIndiana University – Purdue University IndianapolisNCAA Division II independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsOral Roberts UniversityNCAA Division I independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsNCAA Division I independent schoolsHorizon LeagueNCAA Division I independent schoolsWestern Athletic ConferenceBig Sky ConferenceSouthern Utah UniversityNCAA Division I FCS independent schoolsAmerican West ConferenceNCAA Division I FCS independent schoolsNCAA Division II independent schoolsRocky Mountain Athletic ConferenceUniversity of Missouri–Kansas CityWestern Athletic ConferenceUniversity of Missouri–Kansas CityNCAA Division I independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsNortheast ConferenceNCAA Division I independent schoolsWestern Athletic ConferenceGreat West ConferenceNCAA Division I independent schoolsChicago State UniversityEast Coast Conference (Division I)NCAA Division I independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsChicagoland Collegiate Athletic ConferenceNortheastern Illinois UniversityEast Coast Conference (Division I)NCAA Division I independent schoolsNCAA Division II independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsMid-American ConferenceUniversity at BuffaloEast Coast Conference (Division I)NCAA Division I independent schoolsState University of New York Athletic ConferenceSun Belt ConferenceASUN ConferenceTroy UniversityEast Coast Conference (Division I)NCAA Division II independent schoolsGulf South ConferenceNortheast ConferenceCentral Connecticut State UniversityEast Coast Conference (Division I)East Coast Conference (Division I)Horizon LeagueHorizon LeagueUniversity of Wisconsin–MilwaukeeNCAA Division I independent schoolsNCAA Division I independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsNCAA Division III independent schoolsNCAA Division I independent schoolsHorizon LeagueHorizon LeagueWright State UniversityNCAA Division I independent schoolsNCAA Division II independent schoolsMid-American ConferenceNorthern Illinois UniversityNCAA Division I FBS independent schoolsMid-American ConferenceMissouri Valley ConferenceHorizon LeagueValparaiso UniversityHorizon LeagueHorizon LeagueUniversity of Wisconsin–Green BayMissouri Valley ConferenceHorizon LeagueHorizon LeagueUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoChicagoland Collegiate Athletic ConferenceHorizon LeagueHorizon LeagueCleveland State UniversityNCAA Division I independent schoolsMissouri Valley ConferenceMissouri State UniversityMid-America Intercollegiate Athletics AssociationHorizon LeagueNCAA Division I FCS independent schoolsOhio Valley ConferenceYoungstown State UniversityWestern Illinois UniversityNorthern Michigan UniversityMissouri Valley ConferenceUniversity of Northern IowaOhio Valley ConferenceEastern Illinois UniversityMid-American ConferenceNCAA Division I FBS independent schoolsOhio Valley ConferenceUniversity of Akron

Full members  Full members (non-football)  Associate members (football only)  Associate member (baseball, men's soccer, softball, swimming and diving, or men's tennis)  Other Conference  Other Conference 

  • Purdue Fort Wayne joined the league as IPFW. The athletic branding was changed to "Fort Wayne" in 2016, and to Purdue Fort Wayne shortly before the dissolution of IPFW on July 1, 2018.
  • Southwest Missouri State adopted its current name of Missouri State University in 2005.
  • The two former members that are part of the University of Wisconsin System, namely UW–Green Bay and UW–Milwaukee, now brand themselves for athletic purposes as "Green Bay" and "Milwaukee".
  • Troy State adopted its current name of Troy University in 2004.
  • UMKC rebranded its athletic program as "Kansas City" in 2019, a year before its return to the league.[6]
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The Summit League sponsors championship competition in nine men's and ten women's NCAA sanctioned sports.[48] Former full member Eastern Illinois is an associate member for men's and women's swimming and diving and men's soccer. Drake and Illinois State became associate members in men's tennis starting in 2017–18, and former full member Valparaiso rejoined for men's swimming and men's tennis at the same time. Valparaiso dropped men's tennis after the 2019–20 season; it remained a swimming associate until moving that sport to the Mid-American Conference in 2021. Northern Colorado became a baseball associate starting in the 2022 season (2021–22 school year), and Lindenwood and Southern Indiana became associates in men's soccer plus men's and women's swimming & diving in the 2022–23 school year. Eastern Illinois, Lindenwood, and Southern Indiana moved men's soccer to their primary home of the Ohio Valley Conference in 2023–24 while remaining Summit affiliates in swimming & diving. Western Illinois elected to leave the league full time in 2023, but its men's soccer team remained in the Summit through the fall 2023 season.

Teams in Summit League competition
SportMen'sWomen's
Baseball6
Basketball99
Cross country78
Golf9 (11 in 2024)9
Soccer5 (6 in 2025)9
Softball7
Swimming and diving88
Tennis88
Track and field (indoor)78
Track and field (outdoor)78
Volleyball9

Men's sponsored sports by school

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SchoolBaseballBasketballCross
Country
Golf Soccer Swimming
& Diving
Tennis Indoor
Track & Field
Outdoor
Track & Field
Total
Summit League
Sports
DenverNoYesNoYesYesYesYesNoNo5
Kansas CityNoYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYes7
North DakotaNoYesYesYesNoNoYesYesYes6
North Dakota StateYesYesYesYesNoNoNoYesYes6
OmahaYesYesNoYesYesYesYesNoNo6
Oral RobertsYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYes8
St. ThomasYesYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYes8
South DakotaNoYesYesYesNoYesNoYesYes6
South Dakota StateYesYesYesYesNoYesNoYesYes7
Associate members
DrakeYes1
Eastern IllinoisYes1
Illinois StateYes1
LindenwoodYes1
Northern ColoradoYesYes in 20242
Southern IndianaYes1
Future member
Delaware in 2025Yes1
Weber State in 2024Yes1
Totals697116887769

Men's varsity sports not sponsored by The Summit League which are played by member schools:

SchoolFootballIce HockeyLacrosseSkiingWrestling
DenverNCHCBig EastRMISA
North DakotaMVFCNCHC
North Dakota StateMVFCBig 12
OmahaNCHC
St. ThomasPioneerCCHA[a]
South DakotaMVFC
South Dakota StateMVFCBig 12
  1. ^ St. Thomas will move its men's hockey program to the NCHC in 2026.

Women's sponsored sports by school

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School BasketballCross
Country
GolfSoccer Softball Swimming
& Diving
Tennis Indoor
Track & Field
Outdoor
Track & Field
VolleyballTotal
Summit League
Sports
DenverYesNoYesYesNoYesYesNoNoYes6
Kansas CityYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYesYes9
North DakotaYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYesYes9
North Dakota StateYesYesYesYesYesNoNoYesYesYes8
OmahaYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes10
Oral RobertsYesYesYesYesNoNoYesYesYesYes8
St. ThomasYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes10
South DakotaYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes10
South Dakota StateYesYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYes9
Associate members
Eastern IllinoisYes1
LindenwoodYes1
Southern IndianaYes1
Totals989978888985
Notes

Women's varsity sports not sponsored by The Summit League which are played by member schools:

SchoolEquestrianGymnasticsIce HockeyLacrosseSkiing
DenverBig 12Big EastRMISA
St. ThomasWCHA
South Dakota StateUnited Equestrian Conference &
National Collegiate Equestrian Association

Football

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Men's basketball

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Men's basketball in the NCAA tournament

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YearTeamSeedResults
1983none
1984none
1985none
1986Cleveland State14*defeated Indiana
defeated Saint Joseph's
lost to Navy
1987Southwest Missouri State[49]13defeated Clemson
lost to Kansas
1988Southwest Missouri State13lost to UNLV
1989Southwest Missouri State14lost to Seton Hall
1990Southwest Missouri State9*lost to North Carolina
Northern Iowa14defeated Missouri
lost to Minnesota
1991Green Bay12lost to Michigan State
Northern Illinois13*lost to St. John's
1992Eastern Illinois15lost to Indiana
1993Wright State16lost to Indiana
1994Green Bay12defeated California
lost to Syracuse
1995none
1996Valparaiso14lost to Arizona
1997Valparaiso12lost to Boston College
1998Valparaiso13defeated Ole Miss
defeated Florida State
lost to Rhode Island
1999Valparaiso15lost to Maryland
2000Valparaiso16lost to Michigan State
2001Southern Utah14lost to Boston College
2002Valparaiso13lost to Kentucky
2003IUPUI16lost to Kentucky
2004Valparaiso15lost to Gonzaga
2005Oakland16defeated Alabama A&M**
Lost to North Carolina
2006Oral Roberts16lost to Memphis
2007Oral Roberts14lost to Washington State
2008Oral Roberts13lost to Pittsburgh
2009North Dakota State14lost to Kansas
2010Oakland14lost to Pittsburgh
2011Oakland13lost to Texas
2012South Dakota State14lost to Baylor
2013South Dakota State13lost to Michigan
2014North Dakota State12defeated Oklahoma
lost to San Diego State
2015North Dakota State15lost to Gonzaga
2016South Dakota State12lost to Maryland
2017South Dakota State16lost to Gonzaga
2018South Dakota State12lost to Ohio State
2019North Dakota State16defeated NCCU**
lost to Duke
2021Oral Roberts15defeated Ohio State
defeated Florida
lost to Arkansas
2022South Dakota State13lost to Providence
2023Oral Roberts12lost to Duke

* At-large bid
** First Four game

Summit League championships won per school

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SchoolConferenceTournament
TitlesLast
Title
TitlesLast
Title
Valparaiso92003-0482004
South Dakota State82021–2262022
Oral Roberts72022–2352023
Missouri State41989-9021989
North Dakota State42019-2052020
Oakland32010-1132011
Cleveland State31992-9311986
Western Illinois22012-1311984
Green Bay21993-9421994
Purdue Fort Wayne12015-160N/A
South Dakota12016-170N/A
IUPUI12005-0612003
Illinois-Chicago11983-840N/A
Northern Illinois11990-910N/A
Southern Utah12000-0112001
Eastern Illinois0N/A21992
Wright State0N/A11993
Northern Iowa0N/A11990

Italics indicate a school no longer a part of the Summit League

Women's Basketball

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Summit League championships won per school

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SchoolConferenceTournament
TitlesLast
Title
TitlesLast
Title
South Dakota State92022–23102023
Western Illinois62016–1722017
South Dakota52021–2242022
Youngstown State51998-9932000
Oakland32006-0722006
Oral Roberts22010-1152008
Northern Illinois21993-9411993
Valparaiso22001-0222004
Troy11996-9711997
Buffalo11994-950N/A
Green Bay0N/A11994

Italics indicate a school no longer a part of the Summit League

Facilities

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Future members in gray.

SchoolSoccer stadiumCapacityBasketball arenaCapacityBaseball fieldCapacitySoftball fieldCapacity
DelawareStuart and Suzanne Grant Stadium1,400Men's soccer-only member (from 2025)
DenverCIBER Field at the University of Denver Soccer Stadium2,000Hamilton Gymnasium2,500Non-baseball schoolNon-softball school
Kansas CityDurwood Soccer Stadium850Swinney Recreation Center[50]1,500Non-baseball schoolUrban Youth Academy
North DakotaBronson FieldBetty Engelstad Sioux Center[a]3,300Non-baseball schoolApollo Sports Complex150
North Dakota StateDacotah Field[51]2,600[52]Scheels Center5,460[53]Newman Outdoor Field4,600Tharaldson Park[54]735
Northern ColoradoBaseball-only memberJackson Field1,500Baseball-only member
OmahaAl F. Caniglia Field[55]3,097Baxter Arena[56]7,898Tal Anderson Field1,500Connie Claussen Field650[57]
Oral RobertsCase Soccer Complex1,000Mabee Center10,575J. L. Johnson Stadium2,418Non-softball school
St. ThomasSouth Field800Schoenecker Arena[b]1,800[58]Koch Diamond250South Field150
South DakotaFirst Bank & Trust Soccer Complex800Sanford Coyote Sports Center6,000Non-baseball schoolNygard Field500[59]
South Dakota StateFishback Soccer Park1,500Frost Arena6,500Erv Huether Field600Jackrabbit Softball Stadium200
  1. ^ North Dakota also schedules basketball games at the Ralph Engelstad Arena.
  2. ^ Lee and Penny Anderson Arena is scheduled to open in fall 2025 as St. Thomas' new arena for basketball and ice hockey. The basketball capacity is expected to be 5,300.

Media Rights

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On August 10, 2023, the Summit League announced the signing of a new three-year media rights deal that would tie the league with CBS Sports Network and even closer ties with Midco Sports through the 2025-26 academic year.[60][61] The new deal transfers the Summit League's men's/women's basketball championship game rights over to CBS Sports Network from ESPN, and adds a guaranteed six regular season men's basketball games on the network with an option of six more men's or women's basketball games during the season. For the 2024 tournament, CBS Sports Network will also broadcast the women's basketball tournament semifinal. In 2025 and 2026 there will remain an option to have the men's and women's tournaments semifinals on CBS Sports Network if scheduling allows.

The Midco contract will now expand to the creation of a new all-league media platform called The Summit League Network. It will provide access to all nine member institutions' live streams of every home game, both non-conference and in-conference, as well as interviews and other league info. This expansion will preserve the local media rights given out at select institutions, as the provider for the university will supply Midco with that broadcast/live stream to be simulcast on the Summit League Network.

See also

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References

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