Mid-American Conference

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The Mid-American Conference is a College Athletic Conference whose members are located mainly in the Midwestern United States; nine of the schools are in Ohio and Michigan alone. The conference participates in the NCAA's Division I-A. MAC Headquarters is located in downtown Cleveland, Ohio.

Contents

Member Schools

As of July 2005, there are 12 schools with full membership:

Institution Location Founded Affiliation Enrollment
University of Akron Akron, Ohio 1870 Public 23,292
Ball State University Muncie, Indiana 1918 Public 20,113
Bowling Green State University Bowling Green, Ohio 1910 Public 20,200
University at Buffalo Buffalo, New York 1846 Public 27,000
Central Michigan University Mount Pleasant, Michigan 1892 Public 27,836
Eastern Michigan University Ypsilanti, Michigan 1849 Public 25,000
Kent State University Kent, Ohio 1910 Public 35,458
Miami University Oxford, Ohio 1809 Public 15,300
Northern Illinois University DeKalb, Illinois 1895 Public 25,000
Ohio University Athens, Ohio 1804 Public 28,575
University of Toledo Toledo, Ohio 1872 Public 19,480
Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, Michigan 1903 Public 26,239

MAC

Membership History

The Mid American Conference charter members were Ohio University, Butler University, University of Cincinnati, Wayne State University and Western Reserve. Wayne State University never participated and quickly bowed out. Butler left after the 1st year. Miami University and Western Michigan University took the place of those charter members for the 1948 season. By the time the University of Cincinnati left after the 1952/53 season. The MAC had already added University of Toledo (1950), Kent State University (1951), and Bowling Green State University (1952).

The membership stayed steady for the next couple decades except for addition of Marshall University in 1954. Marshall was kicked out of the conference in 1969. The first major expansion since the 50's took place in the mid seventies with the addition of Northern Illinois University, Ball State University, Eastern Michigan University andCentral Michigan University. NIU left after the 1986 season. University of Akron joined the conference in 1992. The conference became the largest Division 1A with the re-admittance of Marshall and NIU and addition of University at Buffalo in 1997 and 1998 respectively. The University of Central Florida joined in the 2001 to become the MAC first Football Only school to join the conference.

Two schools left the conference after the 2004-05 academic year—Marshall University, an all-sports member, and the University of Central Florida (UCF), a football-only member. Both schools, which played in the MAC East Division, joined Conference USA in all sports.

In May 2005, Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania signed an initial six-year contract with the MAC as a football-only school which will eventually play in the East Division. Over the next three seasons, Temple's schedule of league games will gradually increase: 4 in 2005, 6 in 2006, 8 (a full schedule) in 2007. Due to Temple's partial league schedule in 2005 and 2006, the football program will have only associate membership in the league. According to the league's press release on the matter, Temple will be eligible for one of the league's two bowl tie-ins, and participate in the league's television arrangement, beginning immediately. Eligibility to compete in the MAC Championship Game, however, does not come until 2007. Presumably, this means they are also ineligible to win a Division Championship, although it is conceivable that, with a win percentage equal to or better than that of the best team in the division playing a full league schedule, they could be declared Divisional (co-)champions but ineligible to represent their Division in the Championship Game; the league has not made this distinction clear yet.

IPFW is an affiliate member in tennis and men's soccer.

Member schools participate in baseball, men's and women's basketball, men's and women's cross-country, field hockey, American football, men's and women's golf, women's gymnastics, men's and women's soccer, softball, men's and women's swimming, men's and women's tennis, men's and women's track, women's volleyball and wrestling.

The MAC is contracted to provide a team for two college football bowl games—the GMAC Bowl and Motor City Bowl. However they are working on a deal with the Big East Conference to create a new bowl game in Toronto.

Conference Stadia

School Football stadium Stadium capacity Basketball arena Arena capacity
Akron Rubber Bowl 31,000 James A. Rhodes Arena 5,500
Ball State Scheumann Stadium 23,500 John E. Worthen Arena 11,500
Bowling Green Doyt Perry Stadium 23,724 Anderson Arena 5,000
Buffalo University at Buffalo Stadium 31,000 Alumni Arena 6,100
Central Michigan Kelly/Shorts Stadium 30,199 Daniel P. Rose Center 5,200
Eastern Michigan Rynearson Stadium 30,200 Convocation Center 8,800
Kent State Dix Stadium 30,520 Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center 6,327
Miami University Yager Stadium 23,000 John D. Millett Hall 9,200
Northern Illinois Huskie Stadium 31,000 Convocation Center 10,000
Ohio Peden Stadium 24,000 Convocation Center 13,080
Temple Lincoln Financial Field 68,532 Liacouras Center 10,224
Toledo Glass Bowl 26,284 Savage Hall 9,000
Western Michigan Waldo Stadium 30,100 University Arena 5,800

Championships

External links

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