Ohio Athletic Conference

Ohio Athletic Conference
(OAC)
Established 1902
Association NCAA
Division Division III
Members 10
Sports fielded 23 (men's: 12; women's: 11)
Region Ohio
Headquarters Twinsburg, Ohio
Commissioner Tim Gleason (since 1991)
Website oac.org
Locations

The Ohio Athletic Conference (OAC) was formed in 1902 and is the third oldest athletic conference in the United States. Its current commissioner is Tim Gleason. Former commissioners include Mike Cleary, who was the first General Manager of a professional basketball team to hire an African American head coach, and would later run the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA). The Ohio Athletic Conference competes in the NCAA's Division III. Through the years, 31 schools have been members of the OAC. The enrollments of the current ten member institutions range from around 1,000 to 4,500. Member teams are located in Ohio.

Members

Current members

The OAC currently has 10 members.

Institution Location
(all in Ohio)
Nickname Founded Type Enrollment Joined Colors
Baldwin Wallace University Berea Yellow Jackets 1845 Private/Methodist 4,177 1915[a 1] Brown and Yellow
         
Capital University Bexley Crusaders 1830 Private/Lutheran 3,628 1927 Purple and White
         
Heidelberg University Tiffin Student Princes 1850 Private/United Church of Christ 1,500 1907 Red, Orange, & Black
              
John Carroll University University Heights Blue Streaks 1886 Private/Catholic 3,700 1932[a 2] Blue and Gold
         
Marietta College Marietta Pioneers 1835 Private/Non-sectarian 1,430 1926 Navy Blue and White
         
University of Mount Union Alliance Purple Raiders 1846 Private/Methodist 2,223 1914 Purple and White
         
Muskingum University New Concord Fighting Muskies 1837 Private/Presbyterian 1,779 1922 Magenta and Black
         
Ohio Northern University Ada Polar Bears 1871 Private/Methodist 3,577 1916[a 3] Orange, Black, & White
              
Otterbein University Westerville Cardinals 1847 Private/Methodist 3,080 1921 Tan and Cardinal
         
Wilmington College Wilmington Fighting Quakers 1870 Private/Quaker 990 2000 Green and White
         
Notes
  1. Baldwin-Wallace left the OAC after the 1918–19 season, but re-joined for the 1923–24 season. The school left again after the 1947–48 season, but returned yet again for the 1961–62 season.
  2. John Carroll left the OAC after the 1948–49 season, but returned for the 1989–90 season.
  3. Ohio Northern left the OAC after the 1948–49 season, but returned for the 1973–74 season.

Associate members

Institution Location Nickname Founded Type Enrollment Joined Primary Conference OAC Sports
Defiance College Defiance, Ohio Yellow Jackets 1850 Private/United Church of Christ 1,000 2011 HCAC men's swimming & diving
women's swimming & diving
Transylvania University Lexington, Kentucky Pioneers 1780 Private/Disciples of Christ 1,120 2012 HCAC men's swimming & diving
women's swimming & diving
Manchester University North Manchester, Indiana Spartans 1860 Private/Church of the Brethren 1,250 2015 HCAC men's swimming & diving
women's swimming & diving

Former members

Institution Location
(all in Ohio)
Nickname Founded Type Enrollment Joined Left Current Conference
University of Akron[b 1] Akron Zips 1870 Public 24,704 1915 1966 Mid-American (MAC)
(NCAA Division I)
Ashland University Ashland Eagles 1878 Private/Brethren 5,701 1931 1948 GLIAC
(NCAA Division II)
Bowling Green State University Bowling Green Falcons 1910 Public 22,882 1933 1942 Mid-American (MAC)
(NCAA Division I)
Case Institute of Technology Cleveland Scientists (1918–19 to 1939–40)
Rough Riders (1940–41 to 1970–71)
1880 Private n/a[b 2] 1902 1948 UAA
Denison University[b 3] Granville Big Red 1831 Private/Non-sectarian 2,100 1907 1984 NCAC
Hiram College[b 4] Hiram Terriers 1850 Private/Disciples of Christ 1,200 1920 1999 NCAC
Kent State University Kent Golden Flashes 1910 Public 34,056 1932 1951 Mid-American (MAC)
(NCAA Division I)
Miami University Oxford RedHawks[b 5] 1809 Public 20,126 1911 1928 MAC
(NCAA Division I)
Kenyon College Gambier Lords (men's)
Ladies (women's)
1824 Private/Episcopal 1,640 1902 1984 NCAC
Oberlin College Oberlin Yeomen (men's)
Yeowomen (women's)
1833 Private/Non-sectarian 2,850 1902 1984 NCAC
Ohio State University Columbus Buckeyes 1870 Public 52,568 1902 1912 Big Ten
(NCAA Division I)
Ohio University Athens Bobcats 1804 Public 30,878 1910 1928 Mid-American (MAC)
(NCAA Division I)
Ohio Wesleyan University[b 6] Delaware Battlin' Bishops 1842 Private/Methodist 1,850 1902 1984 NCAC
University of Cincinnati Cincinnati Bearcats (after 1914) 1819 Public 39,667
(2009-10 academic year)
1910 1924 The American
(NCAA Division I)
University of Toledo Toledo Rockets 1872 Public 19,706 1932 1947 Mid-American (MAC)
(NCAA Division I)
Western Reserve University Cleveland Pioneers (1920–21 to 1927–28)
Red Cats (1928–29 to 1970–71)
1826 Private n/a[b 2] 1902 1932 UAA
Wittenberg University[b 7] Springfield Tigers 1845 Private/Lutheran 2,050 1909 1989 NCAC
The College of Wooster Wooster Fighting Scots 1866 Private/Presbyterian 1,827 1907 1984 NCAC
Xavier University Cincinnati Musketeers 1831 Private/Catholic 6,646 1921 1936 Big East
(NCAA Division I)
Notes
  1. Akron left the OAC after the 1935–36 season, but rejoined in the 1948–49 season before leaving for good after the 1965–66 season.
  2. 1 2 Case Tech and Western Reserve merged in 1967. The athletic programs continued to operate separately until 1971.
  3. Denison left the OAC after the 1927–28 season, but rejoined in the 1933–34 season before leaving for good after the 1983–84 season.
  4. Hiram first left the OAC after the 1934–35 season, rejoining in the 1951–52 season. It left the OAC again after the 1970–71 season, returning in the 1989–90 season before leaving for good after the 1998–99 season.
  5. During Miami's tenure in the OAC, the school had no established nickname; "Boys", "Big Reds", and "Red and White" were used interchangeably. "Redskins" made its first appearance in 1928; by 1931, that nickname became official. The current "RedHawks" nickname was adopted in 1997.
  6. Ohio Wesleyan left the OAC after the 1927–28 season, but rejoined in the 1947–48 season before leaving for good after the 1983–84 season.
  7. Wittenberg left the OAC after the 1927–28 season, but rejoined in the 1934–35 season before leaving for good after the 1988–89 season.

Membership timeline

Wilmington College (Ohio) Bowling Green State University University of Toledo Kent State University John Carroll University Ashland University Capital University Marietta College Muskingum University Xavier University Otterbein College Hiram College Ohio Northern University Baldwin Wallace University University of Akron University of Mount Union Miami University Ohio University University of Cincinnati Wittenberg University The College of Wooster Heidelberg University (Ohio) Denison University Western Reserve University Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio State University Oberlin College Kenyon College Case Institute of Technology
Historical membership of the OAC: current members in red and former members in black.

Sports

In 2013-14, the OAC will sponsor the following championships:

Conference sports
SportMen'sWomen's
Baseball
Green tick
Basketball
Green tick
Green tick
Cross Country
Green tick
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Football
Green tick
Golf
Green tick
Green tick
Lacrosse
Green tick
Green tick
Soccer
Green tick
Green tick
Softball
Green tick
Swimming
Green tick
Green tick
Tennis
Green tick
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Indoor Track
Green tick
Green tick
Outdoor Track
Green tick
Green tick
Volleyball
Green tick
Wrestling
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Facilities

School Football stadium Capacity Basketball arena Capacity Baseball field Capacity Softball field Capacity
Baldwin Wallace George Finnie Stadium 10,000 Rudolph Ursprung Gymnasium 2,800 Heritage Field Cuyahoga County Fairgrounds Field
Capital Bernlohr Stadium 3,000 Capital Center Clowson Field Clowson Field
Heidelberg Hoernemann Stadium 1,300 Seiberling Gymnasium Peaceful Valley Frann's Field
John Carroll Don Shula Stadium 5,416 Tony DeCarlo Varsity Center 2,500 Schweickert Field Bracken Outdoor Athletic Complex
Marietta Don Drumm Stadium 5,000 Ban Johnson Arena 1,457 Don Schaly Stadium 1,500 Marietta Field
Mount Union Mount Union Stadium 5,600 McPherson Academic and Athletic Complex 3,000 23rd Street Field 23rd Street Field
Muskingum McConagha Stadium 5,000 Performance Court 2,500 Mose Morehead Field Donna J. Newberry Field
Ohio Northern Dial-Roberson Stadium 3,500 ONU Sports Center Wander Field ONU Softball Field
Otterbein Memorial Stadium 2,400 Rike Center 3,100 Otterbein Baseball Field Otterbein Softball Field
Wilmington Williams Stadium 3,500 Fred Raizk Arena 3,500 Tewksbury-Delaney Field WC Softball Field

OAC Tournament Championship History

Men's Basketball

Women's Basketball

Football

Baseball

Men's Soccer

Women's Soccer

Women's Volleyball

Men's Golf

Men's Wrestling

Men's Cross Country

Women's Cross Country

Men's Lacrosse

Women's Lacrosse

References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.