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Midlands Collegiate Athletic Conference

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Midlands Collegiate Athletic Conference
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The Midlands Collegiate Athletic Conference (MCAC) was an intercollegiate athletic conference that competed in National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics. Members of the conference were located in the Midwest United States and were located in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, Arkansas, and Oklahoma.

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History

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Commissioners

Since 1994 when MCAC was established, to the time it dissolved in 2015, the conference only had two commissioners.[1]

  1. Carl R. Clapp (1994–1995)
  2. Al Waller (1996–2015)

Conference presidents

The conference has board made up of representatives from the member institutions, and one person from a school is selected as the board's president for two years.[1]

  1. Larry Kramer, Avila College (1994–96)
  2. Paul Mills, Wesleyan College (1996–98)
  3. Sr. Tarcisia Roths, Newman University (1998–2000)
  4. Wayne Baker, York College (2000–02)
  5. Aidan Dunleavy, Newman University (2002–04)
  6. Ben Johnson, Peru State College (2004–06)
  7. Wayne Baker, York College (2006–08)
  8. Maryanne Stevens, College of Saint Mary (2008–10)
  9. Steve Eckman, York College (2010–12)
  10. Hal Hoxie Central Christian College (2012–15)

Chronological timeline

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Member schools

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Final members

The MCAC had nine full members in the conference's final season, most were private schools:

More information Institution, Location ...
Notes
  1. Represents the calendar year when fall sports competition begins.
  2. Represents the calendar year when spring sports competition ends.
  3. Currently known as Waldorf University since 2016.
  4. Formerly affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) until 2010.
  5. Currently known as York University since 2022.

Former members

The MCAC had six other full members during the conference's tenure, most were private schools:

More information Institution, Location ...
Notes
  1. Represents the calendar year when fall sports competition begins.
  2. Represents the calendar year when spring sports competition ends.
  3. Currently an NCAA Division II athletic conference.
  4. Park was a non-basketball member school on the men's and women's sides in their tenure in the MCAC.

Membership timeline

Great Plains Athletic ConferenceNorth Star Athletic AssociationWaldorf UniversityAmerican Midwest ConferenceCentral Baptist CollegeSooner Athletic ConferenceSouthwestern Christian UniversitySooner Athletic ConferenceNAIA independent schoolsCentral Christian College of KansasNAIA independent schoolsHaskell Indian Nations UniversityHeart of America Athletic ConferencePeru State CollegeMid-America Intercollegiate Athletics AssociationHeartland ConferenceNewman University (Kansas)Kansas Collegiate Athletic ConferenceNAIA independent schoolsYork University (Nebraska)Great Plains Athletic ConferenceCollege of Saint MaryKansas Collegiate Athletic ConferenceUniversity of Saint Mary (Kansas)Heart of America Athletic ConferenceAmerican Midwest ConferencePark UniversitySooner Athletic ConferenceNAIA independent schoolsNational Christian College Athletic AssociationNAIA independent schoolsCollege of the OzarksKansas Collegiate Athletic ConferenceOklahoma Wesleyan UniversityNorth Star Athletic AssociationBellevue UniversityKansas Collegiate Athletic ConferenceHeart of America Athletic ConferenceAvila University

 Full member (non-football) 

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Conference sports

The Midlands Collegiate Athletic Conference fielded 11 sports (5 men's and 6 women's), which includes:

More information Sport, Men's ...

References

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