West Coast Conference
college athletics conference of private parochial schools in the western United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The West Coast Conference (WCC) is a college sports conference (group of sports teams that play against each other) in the western United States. There are many sports in the conference. The conference does not have football, and only one of its current members has a football team.
The WCC began in 1952 when five schools in and around the San Francisco Bay Area formed the California Basketball Association. The league was then called the West Coast Athletic Conference from 1956 to 1989.
All nine of its current members were founded by churches. Seven of the colleges are Catholic schools. Only the University of the Pacific, which was started by Methodists, no longer gets money from a church.
Remove ads
Members
The WCC has 9 members, all located in West Coast states. Two other schools, one in a West Coast state and the other in the inland west, will join in 2025. Gonzaga will leave in 2026 for the Pac-12 Conference.
Future members
- Pepperdine's campus has a Malibu mailing address, but is outside the city limits in unincorporated Los Angeles County.
Associate members
The WCC has six "associate members", four of which play one sport in the conference. All are full members of other Division I conferences. The others are Oregon State and Washington State, which were left behind by the collapse of the Pac-12 Conference in 2024. They are housing most of their sports in the WCC through the 2025–26 school year. After that time, the Pac-12 will resume play with at least six new members, among them current WCC member Gonzaga.
Current
Remove ads
References
- "West Coast Conference". wccsports.com. Retrieved 2014-06-10.
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads