(Redirected from Atlantic Ten)
The 'Atlantic 10 Conference' (A10) is a college athletic conference which operates mostly on the United States' eastern seaboard. It also has two member schools in
Ohio:
Dayton and
Xavier, located in
Dayton and
Cincinnati, respectively. Another member,
Saint Louis is located in
St. Louis, Missouri. Although some of its members are state-funded, it is largely made up of private, Catholic institutions. The Atlantic 10 Conference was originally known as the Eastern 8 Conference. Despite the name, there are 15 partial or full-time members: 14 basketball and other sports, and one affiliate member participates in women's
field hockey only.
Members
Full Members
The following is a list of the full members of the conference and the year they joined:
| Institution | Location | Founded | Affiliation | Enrollment (2006-07) | Year Joined | Nickname |
|---|
| University of North Carolina at Charlotte | Charlotte, North Carolina | 1946 | Public | 21,519 | 2005 | 49ers |
| University of Dayton | Dayton, Ohio | 1850 | Private/Catholic | 9,175 | 1995 | Flyers |
| Duquesne University | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | 1878 | Private/Catholic | 9,617 | 1976 | Dukes |
| Fordham University | Bronx, New York | 1841 | Private/Catholic | 17,661 | 1995 | Rams |
| George Washington University | Washington, D.C. | 1821 | Private/Non-sectarian | 23,082 | 1976 | Colonials |
| La Salle University | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 1863 | Private/Catholic | 6,221 | 1995 | Explorers |
| University of Massachusetts | Amherst, Massachusetts | 1863 | Public | 25,633 | 1976 | Minutemen / Minutewomen |
| University of Rhode Island | Kingston, Rhode Island | 1892 | Public | 15,095 | 1980 | Rams |
| University of Richmond | Richmond, Virginia | 1830 | Private/Non-sectarian | 4,215 | 2001 | Spiders |
| St. Bonaventure University | Olean, New York | 1856 | Private/Catholic | 2,700 | 1979 | Bonnies |
| Saint Joseph's University | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 1851 | Private/Catholic | 7,020 | 1982 | Hawks |
| Saint Louis University | St. Louis, Missouri | 1818 | Private/Catholic | 11,823 | 2005 | Billikens |
| Temple University | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 1884 | Semi-Public | 33,693 | 1982 | Owls |
| Xavier University | Cincinnati, Ohio | 1831 | Private/Catholic | 6,500 | 1995 | Musketeers |
Associate Members
The following is a list of the associate members and the sport to which they belong to the conference:
'Women's field hockey only'
★
West Chester (1996)
Past members
★
University of Delaware (football only) (1986-2006)â€
★
Hofstra University (football only) (2001-2006)
★
James Madison University (football only) (1993-2006)â€
★
University of Maine (football only) (1947-2006)â€
★
University of New Hampshire (football only) (1947-2006)â€
★
Northeastern University (football only) (1993-2006)â€
★
Pennsylvania State University (1976-1979; 1982-1991)
★
University of Pittsburgh (1976-1982)
★
Rutgers University (1976-1995)
★
Towson University (2004-2006)
★
Villanova University (1976-1980; 1988-2006 football only)â€
★
Virginia Tech (1995-2000)
★
West Virginia University (1976-1995)
★
The College of William & Mary (1993-2006)
†Includes time in
Yankee Conference, which merged with the Atlantic 10 for football in 1997.
Men's Basketball Champions
| Season | Regular Season Champion(s) | Tournament Champion | |
|---|
| 1977 | East - Rutgers, West - West Virginia/Penn State | Duquesne |
| 1978 | Rutgers/Villanova | Villanova |
| 1979 | Villanova | Rutgers |
| 1980 | Villanova/Duquesne/Rutgers | Villanova |
| 1981 | Rhode Island/Duquesne | Pittsburgh |
| 1982 | West Virginia | Pittsburgh |
| 1983 | East - Rutgers, West - St. Bonaventure/West Virginia | West Virginia |
| 1984 | Temple | West Virginia |
| 1985 | West Virginia | Temple |
| 1986 | Saint Joseph's | Saint Joseph's |
| 1987 | Temple | Temple |
| 1988 | Temple | Temple |
| 1989 | West Virginia | Rutgers |
| 1990 | Temple | Temple |
| 1991 | Rutgers | Penn State |
| 1992 | Massachusetts | Massachusetts |
| 1993 | Massachusetts | Massachusetts |
| 1994 | Massachusetts | Massachusetts |
| 1995 | Massachusetts | Massachusetts |
| 1996 | East - Massachusetts, West - West Virginia/George Washington | Massachusetts |
| 1997 | East - Saint Joseph's, West - Xavier | Saint Joseph's |
| 1998 | East - Temple, West - Xavier | Xavier |
| 1999 | East - Temple, West - George Washington | Rhode Island |
| 2000 | East - Temple, West - Dayton | Temple |
| 2001 | Saint Joseph's | Temple |
| 2002 | East - Temple/Saint Joseph's, West - Xavier | Xavier |
| 2003 | East - Saint Joseph's, West - Xavier | Dayton |
| 2004 | East - Saint Joseph's, West - Dayton | Xavier |
| 2005 | East - Saint Joseph's, West - George Washington | George Washington |
| 2006 | George Washington | Xavier |
| 2007 | Xavier/Massachusetts | George Washington |
★
Atlantic Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Locations
Women's Basketball Champions
| Season | Regular Season Champion(s) | Tournament Champion | Tournament Location |
|---|
| 1983 | Penn State | Penn State | Louis Brown Athletic Center, Piscataway, New Jersey |
| 1984 | Rutgers | Penn State | Rec Hall, University Park, Pennsylvania |
| 1985 | Penn State/Saint Joseph's | Penn State | Alumni Memorial Fieldhouse, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
| 1986 | Rutgers | Penn State | WVU Coliseum, Morgantown, West Virginia |
| 1987 | Rutgers | Rutgers | First two rounds: Campus sites; Semifinals and finals: Louis Brown Athletic Center |
| 1988 | Rutgers | Rutgers | First two rounds: Campus sites; Semifinals and finals: Louis Brown Athletic Center |
| 1989 | Rutgers/Saint Joseph's | West Virginia | First two rounds: Campus sites; Semifinals and finals: Louis Brown Athletic Center |
| 1990 | Rutgers/Saint Joseph's | Penn State | First two rounds: Campus sites; Semifinals and finals: Rec Hall |
| 1991 | Penn State | Penn State | First two rounds: Campus sites; Semifinals and finals: Alumni Memorial Fieldhouse |
| 1992 | West Virginia | George Washington | Louis Brown Athletic Center |
| 1993 | Rutgers | Rutgers | Charles E. Smith Athletic Center, Washington, D.C. |
| 1994 | George Washington/Rutgers | Rutgers | Alumni Memorial Fieldhouse |
| 1995 | George Washington | George Washington | Alumni Memorial Fieldhouse |
| 1996 | East - Rhode Island, West - George Washington | George Washington | Cassell Coliseum, Blacksburg, Virginia |
| 1997 | East - Saint Joseph's, West - George Washington | Saint Joseph's | First two rounds: Campus sites; Semifinals and finals: Charles E. Smith Athletic Center |
| 1998 | East - Massachusetts, West - George Washington | Virginia Tech | First two rounds: Campus sites; Semifinals and finals: Mullins Center, Amherst, Massachusetts |
| 1999 | East - Saint Joseph's, West - Virginia Tech | Saint Joseph's | The Apollo of Temple, Philadelphia |
| 2000 | East - Saint Joseph's, West - George Washington | Xavier | Liacouras Center, Philadelphia |
| 2001 | Xavier | Xavier | Liacouras Center |
| 2002 | East - Temple, West - George Washington | Temple | Liacouras Center |
| 2003 | East - Saint Joseph's, West - George Washington | George Washington | First three rounds: Ryan Center, Kingston, Rhode Island; Finals: Charles E. Smith Athletic Center |
| 2004 | East - Temple, West - George Washington | Temple | Alumni Memorial Fieldhouse |
| 2005 | East - Temple, West - George Washington | Temple | Charles E. Smith Athletic Center |
| 2006 | Charlotte/George Washington | Temple | Alumni Memorial Fieldhouse |
| 2007 | George Washington | Xavier | Cintas Center, Cincinnati, Ohio |
Sports sponsored
There are 21
NCAA sports in the conference
★ baseball
★ men's basketball
★ women's basketball
★ men's cross country
★ women's cross country
★ field hockey
★ men's golf
★ women’s lacrosse
★ men's indoor track & field
★ women's indoor track & field
★ men's outdoor track & field
★ women's outdoor track & field
★ women's rowing
★ men's soccer
★ women's soccer
★ softball
★ men's swimming & diving
★ women's swimming & diving
★ men's tennis
★ women's tennis
★ women's volleyball
A-10 football
Origin
The A-10 began sponsoring
football in
1997 when it absorbed the
Yankee Conference, a Division I-AA (now known as Division I FCS) football-only conference. The move was triggered by a change in NCAA rules that reduced the influence of single-sport conference over NCAA legislation. The following schools were in the Yankee Conference at the time of its demise:
★
Boston University
★
Connecticut
★
Delaware
★
James Madison
★
Maine
★
Massachusetts
★
New Hampshire
★
Northeastern
★
Rhode Island
★
Richmond
★
Villanova
★
William & Mary
Boston University dropped football after the first season of A-10 football. After the 1999 season, UConn started a transition from Division I-AA to Division I-A football (now Division I FBS) that was completed in
2002. In
2004, UConn, already a member of the
Big East for other sports, became a football member of that conference. The other schools all remained in the A-10 football conference until its demise after the 2006 season.
Demise
The
2005 move of
Northeastern University, a football-only member of the A-10, to the
Colonial Athletic Association for basketball and Olympic sports began a chain of events that would lead to the demise of the A-10 football conference.
At that time, the CAA did not sponsor football, but five of its members in the 2004-05 academic year (Delaware, Hofstra, James Madison, Towson, and William & Mary) were football members of the A-10. The addition of Northeastern gave the CAA six schools with football programs, which under NCAA rules allows a conference to sponsor football. Northeastern agreed to join any future CAA football conference, which meant that the A-10 football conference would drop to six members once CAA football began operation.
With six football members in place, the CAA decided to start a football conference in 2007. The league then invited Richmond, which left the CAA in 2001, to rejoin for football only, because of UR's long-standing in-state rivalries with William & Mary and James Madison. UR accepted the invitation, taking the A-10 football conference below the NCAA minimum of six. Shortly after this, the A-10 football conference opted to disband, with all of its members becoming charter members of the CAA football conference.
Conference facilities
| School | Basketball arena | Capacity |
|---|
| Charlotte | Dale F. Halton Arena | 9,105 |
| Dayton | University of Dayton Arena | 13,409 |
| Duquesne | A.J. Palumbo Center | 6,200 |
| Fordham | Rose Hill Gym | 3,470 |
| George Washington | Smith Center | 5,000 |
| La Salle | Tom Gola Arena | 4,000 |
| Massachusetts | Mullins Center | 9,349 |
| Rhode Island | Ryan Center | 7,657 |
| Richmond | Robins Center | 9,171 |
| St. Bonaventure | Reilly Center | 6,000 |
| Saint Joseph's | Alumni Memorial Fieldhouse | 3,200 |
| Saint Louis | Men: Scottrade Center Women: Bauman-Eberhardt Center | 20,000 2,200 |
| Temple | Liacouras Center | 10,206 |
| Xavier | Cintas Center | 10,250 |
Saint Louis will move both of its basketball teams to the
Chaifetz Arena, capacity 10,600, when it opens in 2008.
External links
★
Atlantic 10 Conference