The Atlantic 10 Conference (A10) is a college athletic conference which operates mostly in the eastern United States; 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.
Despite the name, there are 24 partial or full-time members; 12 schools play football, 14 basketball and other sports, and one affiliate member participates in women's field hockey only. Only three schools—UMass, Rhode Island, and Richmond—are members in both football and basketball. This odd conference construction is because the A-10 Football Conference was created in 1997 by a takeover of the football-only Yankee Conference, due to NCAA rules changes that significantly diminished the legislative input of single-sport conferences. The members of the Yankee Conference narrowly chose the A-10's merger proposal over that of the Colonial Athletic Association; this decision was later revisited by the football-playing members of the A-10, as explained below.
Broken down by who plays what, that's:
Football
Basketball and Olympic sports
Women's field hockey only
| Season | Regular Season Champion | Tournament Champion | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1977 | Rutgers/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 | Rutgers/St. Bonaventure/West Virginia | West Virginia | |
| 1984 | Temple | West Virginia | |
| 1985 | West Virginia | Temple | |
| 1986 | St. Joseph's | St. 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 | Massachusetts/West Virginia/George Washington | Massachusetts | |
| 1997 | St. Joseph's/Xavier | St. Joseph's | |
| 1998 | Temple/Xavier | Xavier | |
| 1999 | Temple/George Washington | Rhode Island | |
| 2000 | Temple/Dayton | Temple | |
| 2001 | St. Joseph's | Temple | |
| 2002 | Xavier/Temple/St. Joseph's | Xavier | |
| 2003 | Xavier/St. Joseph's | Dayton | |
| 2004 | St. Joseph's/Dayton | Xavier | |
| 2005 | St. Joseph's/George Washington | George Washington | |
| 2006 | George Washington | Xavier |
| School | Football stadium | Stadium capacity | Basketball arena | Arena capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charlotte | Non-Football School | N/A | Dale F. Halton Arena | 9,105 |
| Dayton | Welcome Stadium | 11,000 | University of Dayton Arena | 13,409 |
| Duquesne | Arthur J. Rooney Athletic Field | 4,500 | A.J. Palumbo Center | 6,200 |
| Fordham | Coffey Field | 7,000 | Rose Hill Gym | 3,470 |
| George Washington | Non-football School | N/A | Smith Center | 5,000 |
| La Salle | McCarthy Stadium | 7,500 | Tom Gola Arena | 4,000 |
| Massachusetts | Warren McGuirk Alumni Stadium | 17,000 | Mullins Center | 9,349 |
| Rhode Island | Meade Stadium | 6,580 | Ryan Center | 7,657 |
| Richmond | University of Richmond Stadium | 22,000 | Robins Center | 9,171 |
| St. Bonaventure | Non-Football School | N/A | Reilly Center | 6,000 |
| Saint Joseph's | Non-Football School | N/A | Alumni Memorial Fieldhouse | 3,200 |
| Saint Louis | Non-Football School | N/A | Savvis Center | 21,000 |
| Temple | Lincoln Financial Field | 66,000 | Liacouras Center | 10,224 |
| Xavier | Non-Football School | N/A | Cintas Center | 10,250 |
College athletics conferences | Atlantic 10 Conference | Atlantic 10 Football Conference
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Atlantic Ten Conference".
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