Atlantic Sun Conference
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) is an NCAA Division I collegiate athletic conference consisting of 12 member institutions primarily located in the southeastern United States, sponsoring championships in 22 sports for both men and women.[1][2] Founded in 1978 as the Trans America Athletic Conference, the organization adopted its current name in 2001 and is headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida, following a relocation from Atlanta in the fall of 2024.[3][3] The conference's current full members include Austin Peay State University, Bellarmine University, Central Arkansas University, Eastern Kentucky University, Florida Gulf Coast University, Jacksonville University, Lipscomb University, North Alabama University, North Florida University, Queens University of Charlotte, Stetson University, and the University of West Georgia.[1] The ASUN emphasizes destination-based athletics, with member schools offering competitive programs in sports such as men's and women's basketball, baseball, softball, soccer, and track and field, among others.[2] In June 2025, the conference announced a strategic alliance with the Western Athletic Conference (WAC), effective July 2026, which will realign membership: seven non-football schools (Bellarmine, Florida Gulf Coast, Jacksonville, Lipscomb, North Florida, Queens, and Stetson) will remain in the ASUN, while five football-sponsoring members (Austin Peay, Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky, North Alabama, and West Georgia) will join the rebranded WAC as the United Athletic Conference (UAC).[4][4] This partnership aims to enhance scheduling, resource sharing, and competitive opportunities across NCAA Division I athletics.[5]History
Formation
The Trans America Athletic Conference (TAAC) was established on September 19, 1978, as a new NCAA Division I athletic conference with eight charter members, all regional institutions primarily from the Southwest: Centenary College of Louisiana, Hardin-Simmons University, Houston Baptist University, University of Louisiana at Monroe (formerly Northeast Louisiana University), Mercer University, Oklahoma City University, Pan American University (now the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), and Samford University.[6][7] The conference was created to sponsor championships exclusively in men's sports, specifically basketball, baseball, and golf, reflecting the limited scope of its initial operations as a small, regionally focused league.[8][9] This emphasis on a narrow set of sports allowed the TAAC to build competitive structures without overextending its resources amid a modest membership base. The first commissioner, Bob Vanatta, served from 1979 to 1983 and played a pivotal role in organizing the conference's early administrative framework and scheduling. Note that Bill Bibb served as commissioner from 1991 to 2001.[10][7] Early challenges included the small number of members, which limited the conference's national visibility and required careful coordination among Southwest-based schools to sustain operations and attract competitive talent.[7]Expansion, contraction, and rebranding
Following its formation, the Trans America Athletic Conference (TAAC) underwent notable expansions in the early 1980s to bolster its membership and geographic footprint. In 1981, the University of Arkansas at Little Rock joined as a full member, transitioning from the Arkansas Intercollegiate Conference and contributing to the league's growing presence in the South Central region.[11] Additional institutions, such as Georgia Southern University and Northwestern State University, were added around the same period, helping the conference expand beyond its initial eight charter members. The TAAC reached a peak of 10 full members by the mid-1990s through strategic additions that emphasized southeastern institutions, reflecting a gradual eastward orientation. Key expansions in the 1990s included the University of Central Florida in 1992, followed by Florida Atlantic University in 1993 and Jacksonville University in 1998, which enhanced competition in multiple sports and aligned the league more closely with Atlantic Coast states.[12][13] These moves not only increased the total membership but also facilitated the merger with the New South Women's Athletic Conference in 1992, integrating additional women's programs.[14] Contractions occurred amid realignments and financial pressures, leading to several departures during the 1980s. Centenary College left the TAAC after the 1983–84 season to join the NAIA, citing prohibitive travel costs associated with the conference's dispersed membership. Similarly, Oral Roberts University departed in 1987 for the Missouri Valley Conference, seeking stronger regional competition and reduced travel expenses.[15] Other exits, including those of Sam Houston State (which joined in 1987), stemmed from broader NCAA realignments and institutional priorities, temporarily reducing the league's size before subsequent growth.[7] In response to its evolving membership, particularly the influx of Florida-based schools, the TAAC rebranded as the Atlantic Sun Conference on June 28, 2001, to better capture its coastal and eastern focus.[16] The name change, approved by the conference's presidents, emphasized the league's shift away from its original transcontinental identity toward a more compact Atlantic seaboard alignment.[17] These membership fluctuations paralleled developments in sponsored sports, with the addition of women's championships beginning in 1985 to comply with Title IX requirements and expand opportunities.[18] By 2001, the conference had grown to sponsor 17 varsity sports, including both men's and women's programs in basketball, soccer, tennis, and track and field, fostering balanced competition across genders.[19]Failed CCSA merger
In the early 2010s, the Atlantic Sun Conference experienced membership instability, losing full members such as Mercer University to the Southern Conference in 2013, which impacted its ability to sponsor certain sports like swimming and diving.[20] The Coastal Collegiate Sports Association (CCSA), formed in 2007 as a collaborative affiliate conference for swimming and diving among several Division I leagues including the ASUN, Big South, MEAC, and SoCon, served as a partial affiliate group for ASUN institutions seeking competition in those sports.[21] To strengthen its offerings and integrate swimming and diving more fully, the ASUN and CCSA announced an agreement in July 2013 to combine into a new entity operating under the ASUN branding.[22] ASUN Commissioner Ted Gumbart, who had served in a dual role as CCSA president since the league's inception, was positioned to lead both organizations during the transition.[23] The proposed merger ultimately failed due to legal and logistical challenges, including difficulties in aligning governance structures and membership transitions. Its dissolution was announced in 2014, with the ASUN retaining limited oversight of affiliate arrangements but no full integration occurring.[24] Following the failure, the ASUN and CCSA temporarily continued separate operations, allowing ASUN schools to compete in CCSA championships for swimming and diving while the ASUN focused on stabilizing its core membership.[24]Addition of football
The Atlantic Sun Conference announced on January 29, 2021, that it would sponsor football as its 20th varsity sport at the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level, marking a significant expansion in its athletic offerings. This decision accompanied the addition of three new full members—University of Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky University, and Jacksonville State University—effective for the 2021–22 academic year, bringing the conference's total to 11 institutions.[25] The introduction of football was strategically designed to bolster the conference's appeal to southern-based universities with established programs, fostering regional growth and elevating overall visibility in a high-profile sport. By sponsoring FCS football, the ASUN aimed to secure an automatic qualifier bid to the NCAA playoffs, enhancing competitive opportunities and media exposure for its members.[26][27] The initial football membership consisted of the three new additions alongside existing full members Kennesaw State University and University of North Alabama, which completed their transition from the Big South Conference for the sport. For the 2021 fall season, the ASUN established a scheduling alliance with the Western Athletic Conference to field seven teams collectively, ensuring a full slate of games and playoff eligibility while building toward independent sponsorship.[28] The conference's first standalone football championship occurred in 2022, following the addition of Austin Peay State University as a full member and the completion of Kennesaw State and North Alabama's move to ASUN competition. Eastern Kentucky University claimed the inaugural title with a perfect 5–0 conference record, highlighted by key victories that showcased the league's emerging competitiveness at the FCS level. Subsequent seasons saw further development, with Central Arkansas and Jacksonville State emerging as consistent contenders, underscoring football's role in solidifying the ASUN's presence in southern collegiate athletics.[29]Return of Atlantic Sun name
The Atlantic Sun Conference, established in 1978 as the Trans America Athletic Conference, underwent a name change in 2001 to the Atlantic Sun Conference to better represent its membership in the eastern and southern United States.[19] From 2016 to 2023, the conference shifted to using the ASUN acronym as its primary brand identity, introducing a new logo and visual elements unveiled by student-athletes on social media in April 2016.[30] In 2023, the conference reinstated the full "Atlantic Sun Conference" name as its official designation, while continuing to use ASUN as the abbreviation, in a move to revive its traditional identity and boost overall recognition.[31] This reversion was part of broader efforts to emphasize the league's heritage amid evolving conference dynamics. The decision came during a turbulent period of membership changes in the 2010s, including the addition of NJIT in 2015, compounded by a failed merger attempt with the Coastal Collegiate Sports Association that highlighted the era's instability. The return to the full name has supported improved marketing strategies and reinforced historical ties, contributing to greater visibility as the conference pursued further growth and partnerships.[31]Addition of swimming and diving
Following the dissolution of the Coastal Collegiate Sports Association (CCSA) as a sponsoring body for swimming and diving after the 2022–23 season, the Atlantic Sun Conference fully incorporated men's and women's swimming and diving as sponsored sports beginning with the 2023–24 academic year. This integration absorbed programs from former CCSA affiliates, with initial women's participants including Bellarmine University, Florida Gulf Coast University (FGCU), Liberty University, University of North Florida, University of North Carolina at Asheville, and Queens University of Charlotte. On the men's side, the inaugural competitors were Bellarmine, Florida Atlantic University, Gardner–Webb University, Old Dominion University, Southern Methodist University (SMU), and Queens.[32] The conference's swimming and diving offerings expanded rapidly post-integration, incorporating additional associate members and full participants by the 2024–25 season, such as the University of Delaware for both genders. ASUN championships for the sport commenced in February 2024, hosted at the Allan Jones Aquatic Center in Knoxville, Tennessee, with Liberty claiming the women's title and Queens the men's crown—results that carried over from their prior CCSA successes.[32][33] Governance of the sport transitioned seamlessly under ASUN oversight, building on a prior arrangement where the conference commissioner, Ted Gumbart, had served dually as CCSA president since the organization's founding in 2007. This structure ensured continuity until the full merger of operations in 2023.[23] By filling a longstanding gap in Olympic sports sponsorship, the addition bolstered the Atlantic Sun Conference's alignment with NCAA Division I requirements for gender equity and competitive balance, while enhancing its attractiveness to prospective members seeking comprehensive multisport opportunities.[34]Strategic alliance with WAC and football developments
In response to ongoing challenges in sustaining a competitive football league following the conference's initial addition of the sport in 2021, the Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) partnered with the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) in December 2022 to establish a joint football-only entity. On December 9, 2022, the conferences announced the formation of a 10-member single-sport league comprising ASUN football affiliates Austin Peay State University, University of Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky University, and University of North Alabama, alongside WAC members Abilene Christian University, Southern Utah University, Stephen F. Austin State University, Tarleton State University, and Utah Tech University, with the goal of enhancing viability and exploring a potential transition to the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) level.[35] This collaboration addressed instability in ASUN football by pooling resources and scheduling, with the new structure debuting a limited six-game conference slate in the 2023 season. The partnership evolved further in April 2023 when it was officially rebranded as the United Athletic Conference (UAC), solidifying the ASUN-WAC football alignment under a unified banner while allowing the schools to retain their primary conference affiliations for other sports. The UAC's inaugural 2023 season featured the nine core members (excluding Utah Tech's initial transition), marking a temporary stabilization amid broader FCS realignment pressures, though it highlighted the ASUN's reliance on external collaboration for football continuity.[36] By 2024, the league expanded to a full eight-game round-robin schedule, but faced setbacks with the departure of Stephen F. Austin to the Southland Conference, reducing membership to eight teams including Abilene Christian, Austin Peay, Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky, North Alabama, Southern Utah, Tarleton State, Utah Tech, and newcomer University of West Georgia.[37][38] These developments culminated in a broader strategic alliance between the ASUN and WAC, announced on June 26, 2025, and set to take effect on July 1, 2026, aimed at long-term stability across multiple sports. Under the agreement, the WAC will rebrand as the UAC with an expanded eight-member core including its current football affiliates, while five ASUN institutions—Austin Peay, Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky, North Alabama, and West Georgia—will transition their full athletic programs to the UAC, effectively departing the ASUN and representing significant membership losses for the conference's football and overall structure.[4] The alliance fosters cooperation in 15 non-football sports between the remaining ASUN members and the new UAC, overseen by ASUN Commissioner Jeff Bacon and WAC Commissioner John Johnson, to optimize scheduling, championships, and resource sharing without full merger.[4][39] Supporting these football advancements, the ASUN undertook operational enhancements in 2024 and 2025. The conference relocated its headquarters from Atlanta, Georgia, to Jacksonville, Florida, effective for the 2024-25 academic year, positioning it closer to key member institutions like Jacksonville University and enhancing administrative efficiency.[40] Additionally, on August 11, 2025, the ASUN extended its media rights agreement with ESPN through the 2025-26 season, incorporating expanded linear television coverage on networks like ESPNU and SEC Network for select events, including football, to boost visibility amid the alliance transition.[41] Additionally, on September 24, 2025, the ASUN announced a partnership with Echo East Coast Transportation as its official transportation provider, supporting member institutions' travel needs.[1] As of the 2025 football season, the UAC continues operations with its restructured membership, providing a platform for ASUN-affiliated programs to compete at the FCS level while the broader alliance shapes future non-football collaborations.Governance
Commissioners
The commissioners of the Atlantic Sun Conference are appointed by the conference's Presidents Council, the governing body composed of the presidents of member institutions. This process ensures leadership alignment with the strategic goals of the league's diverse membership. Commissioners often hold dual roles, such as serving as president of affiliated organizations like the Coastal Collegiate Sports Association (CCSA), to streamline operations across related sports leagues.[42] The conference has had five full-time commissioners since its founding in 1978, with the position evolving from part-time to full-time leadership as the league grew. The historical list of full-time commissioners is as follows:| Commissioner | Tenure |
|---|---|
| Bob Vanatta | 1978–1983 |
| Lou McCullough | 1983–1991 |
| Bill Bibb | 1991–2007 |
| Ted Gumbart | 2007–2023 |
| Jeff Bacon | 2023–present |
Headquarters
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN), originally founded as the Trans America Athletic Conference in 1978, established its headquarters in Macon, Georgia, where the office operated for over four decades.[46][47] The Macon location served as the central hub for conference administration during this period, supporting the league's growth from its initial eight members to a broader NCAA Division I entity.[46] In 2019, the conference relocated its headquarters to Atlanta, Georgia, to enhance operational efficiency amid the league's rebranding and expansion efforts.[48] This move positioned the office closer to major media markets and transportation infrastructure in the Southeast. The Atlanta office, located at 3301 Windy Ridge Parkway SE, functioned until 2024, overseeing daily governance and event coordination.[49] On May 8, 2024, ASUN Commissioner Jeff Bacon announced the relocation of the headquarters to Jacksonville, Florida, effective fall 2024, with the new address at 10752 Deerwood Park Blvd., Suite 110.[3][50] The decision was driven by Jacksonville's central geographic position relative to the conference's membership, which spans the Southeast and Midwest, as well as lower operational costs compared to Atlanta and access to modern facilities for hosting events.[51] This shift aligns the office more closely with the league's footprint, including full members like Jacksonville University, and supports enhanced collaboration with local sports organizations.[51] The ASUN headquarters employs approximately 22 staff members, including roles dedicated to championships coordination, compliance administration, finance, and governance. Key functions include managing postseason tournaments across 22 sponsored sports, ensuring NCAA rules compliance for member institutions, and facilitating strategic initiatives such as media rights and membership services.[52][53] The office plays a pivotal role in championship logistics, from site selection to execution, while providing resources for academic and athletic eligibility monitoring.[54]Membership
Current full members
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) consists of twelve full member institutions as of the 2025–26 academic year, all participating in the majority of the conference's sponsored sports. These universities are primarily located across the southeastern United States and represent a mix of public and private institutions transitioning from or established within NCAA Division I competition. Full membership entitles these schools to compete in all non-football sports under ASUN governance, with five of them (Austin Peay, Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky, North Alabama, and West Georgia) also affiliated with the United Athletic Conference (UAC) for football as part of a strategic alliance effective for the 2025 season. Recent expansions include Queens University of Charlotte in 2023, marking its full transition from Division II, and the University of West Georgia in 2024, elevating from Division II status.[4][55][56] The following table provides key details for each full member, including enrollment figures (full-time undergraduates for the 2024–25 academic year), team nicknames, primary colors, and current athletic directors.| Institution | Location | Joined ASUN | Enrollment | Nickname | Colors | Athletic Director |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Austin Peay State University | Clarksville, Tennessee | 2022 | 9,539 | Governors | Red & White | Gerald Harrison |
| Bellarmine University | Louisville, Kentucky | 2020 | 2,970 | Knights | Red, White & Blue | Matt Dunn |
| University of Central Arkansas | Conway, Arkansas | 2021 | 8,785 | Bears | Maroon & Gray | Jeff Purinton |
| Eastern Kentucky University | Richmond, Kentucky | 2021 | 11,778 | Colonels | Maroon & White | William Leone |
| Florida Gulf Coast University | Fort Myers, Florida | 2007 | 15,214 | Eagles | Seafoam Green & Blue | Jim McLaughlin |
| Jacksonville University | Jacksonville, Florida | 1991 | 3,995 | Dolphins | Green & White | Alex Ricker |
| Lipscomb University | Nashville, Tennessee | 1996 | 4,717 | Bisons | Purple & Gold | Jon Summey |
| University of North Alabama | Florence, Alabama | 2022 | 7,361 | Lions | Purple & Gold | Josh Kerby |
| University of North Florida | Jacksonville, Florida | 2009 | 13,148 | Ospreys | Blue & Gray | Lee Moon |
| Queens University of Charlotte | Charlotte, North Carolina | 2023 | 1,987 | Royals | Royal Blue & Black | Cherie Kiper |
| Stetson University | DeLand, Florida | 1985 | 3,475 | Hatters | Green & White | Peter Dazeley |
| University of West Georgia | Carrollton, Georgia | 2024 | 10,963 | Wolves | Blue & Red | Chattah Callens |
Associate members
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) features associate members in select sports, with the primary focus on football through a collaborative partnership with the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) known as the United Athletic Conference (UAC). This arrangement enables non-full ASUN institutions to compete in conference football championships and postseason play without comprehensive membership across all sports. As of the 2025 season, the ASUN's football associate members include Abilene Christian University, Southern Utah University, Tarleton State University, and Utah Tech University, all originating from the WAC. Abilene Christian and Tarleton State joined the partnership in 2021, Southern Utah in 2022, and Utah Tech in 2023, following the initial formation of the UAC in 2021 to consolidate FCS football competition amid realignment challenges. These schools participate exclusively in ASUN football scheduling, standings, and the automatic NCAA playoff bid, providing competitive balance and geographic diversity to the league.[59] This associate structure emerged post the early UAC iterations, allowing WAC football programs limited access to ASUN resources and governance in football only, while the full ASUN maintains its core non-football membership. No associate members were active in other ASUN sports during the 2025 academic year.[60]Former full members
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN), originally founded as the Trans America Athletic Conference (TAAC) in 1978, has undergone numerous membership shifts, with full members departing primarily due to conference realignment opportunities that offered greater stability, geographic alignment, or access to FBS football. These exits have occasionally impacted the league's sport sponsorships, such as reducing the number of football programs and prompting strategic partnerships like the one with the Western Athletic Conference for football. Below is a catalog of select former full members, focusing on key departures since the conference's early years. Centenary College of Louisiana joined the TAAC as a charter member in 1978 and remained a full member until 1999, when it transitioned to independent status before joining the Mid-Continent Conference (now Summit League); the departure was influenced by financial pressures and travel costs associated with Division I competition, leading to eventual reclassification to NAIA and later NCAA Division III.[6][61] Oral Roberts University was a founding member of the TAAC in 1978 and competed as a full member until 1987, when it departed for the Mid-Continent Conference (a precursor to the modern Missouri Valley Conference in some sports); the move sought a stronger mid-major basketball alignment and reduced travel burdens.[62] University of Central Florida (UCF) became a full member of the TAAC (renamed Atlantic Sun in 2001) in 1992 and left after the 2004–05 season to join Conference USA, driven by ambitions to compete in a league with established FBS football programs.[19][63] Florida Atlantic University (FAU) joined as a full member in the 1993–94 academic year and departed after the 2005–06 season for the Sun Belt Conference (and later Conference USA in 2013), motivated by realignment to conferences with broader football opportunities and regional rivals.[64][65] Kennesaw State University entered as a transitional member in 2005 and achieved full status by 2006, remaining until the end of the 2023–24 season before transitioning to Conference USA on July 1, 2024; the move elevated the program from FCS to FBS football, reflecting growth in enrollment and facilities but leaving the ASUN without one of its newer football sponsors.[66][67] Liberty University joined as a full member on July 1, 2021, after departing the Big South, and left after the 2022–23 season to become a full member of Conference USA starting July 1, 2023; the realignment aligned with Liberty's rapid athletic expansion, including FBS football independence prior to joining, and strengthened C-USA's membership base.[68][69][70] Other notable former full members include Jacksonville State University (2003–2021, to Conference USA for FBS transition) and institutions from the TAAC era like Arkansas–Little Rock (1980–1991, to Sun Belt), whose departures contributed to the conference's evolution from a basketball-focused league to one incorporating football in 2021.[62]Former associate members
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) has utilized associate memberships to bolster competition in select sports, particularly men's lacrosse during its relaunch as a sponsored sport in 2022. These affiliations enabled the conference to field a viable league of seven teams initially, fostering growth and NCAA tournament eligibility without necessitating full all-sports commitments from participating institutions. Associate members contributed to the development of the sport within the ASUN by providing regional balance and competitive depth, culminating in annual conference tournaments and automatic bids to the NCAA Championship. However, several programs transitioned to other conferences after the 2024 season to align with more geographically convenient affiliations or institutional priorities. The following table lists institutions that served as former associate members in the ASUN, including the sports sponsored, years of affiliation, and reasons for departure where documented:| Institution | Location | Sport Sponsored | Affiliation Years | Reason for Leaving |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cleveland State University | Cleveland, OH | Men's lacrosse | 2022–2024 | Joined Northeast Conference (NEC) as associate member for 2025 to align with Horizon League peers and improve regional scheduling.[71] |
| University of Detroit Mercy | Detroit, MI | Men's lacrosse | 2022–2024 | Joined NEC as associate member starting 2025 for enhanced competition and proximity to other Michigan programs.[72] |
| Robert Morris University | Moon Township, PA | Men's lacrosse | 2022–2024 | Rejoined NEC as associate member in 2025, returning to a prior affiliation for better alignment with the university's primary conference footprint.[73] |
Membership timeline
The Atlantic Sun Conference, originally founded as the Trans America Athletic Conference (TAAC) in 1978, has experienced numerous membership fluctuations driven by realignments, expansions, and departures to other conferences. The timeline below highlights key membership changes for full members, organized by year, with notes on major eras such as the 1978 founding with eight charter institutions, growth in the 1990s through additions like Central Florida and College of Charleston, the 2001 rebranding to Atlantic Sun accompanied by further expansion, and 2020s transitions including football partnerships and the 2023 split leading to the formation of the United Athletic Conference (UAC) in 2026.[7][4]| Year | Key Changes |
|---|---|
| 1978 | Founding as TAAC with eight charter full members: Arkansas State University, Centenary College, Houston Baptist University, Northeast Louisiana University, Oklahoma City University, Pan American University, Samford University, and Southeastern Louisiana University.[7][6] |
| 1980 | Arkansas–Little Rock joins as full member.[75] |
| 1985 | Oklahoma City departs; Stetson University joins as full member.[75] |
| 1986 | Arkansas State departs to join Sun Belt Conference.[7] |
| 1990 | University of Central Florida joins as full member (1990s growth era).[75] |
| 1992 | College of Charleston joins as full member.[75] |
| 1994 | Campbell University joins as full member.[75] |
| 1998 | Florida Atlantic University joins as full member.[75] |
| 1999 | Centenary departs to become independent.[75] |
| 2001 | Rebranding to Atlantic Sun Conference; Belmont University joins as full member (2000s rebranding and expansion era).[3][75] |
| 2002 | Gardner–Webb University joins; Houston Baptist departs to become independent.[75] |
| 2003 | Jacksonville State University joins; Samford departs to join Ohio Valley Conference.[75] |
| 2005 | East Tennessee State University and Kennesaw State University join; Central Florida departs to join Conference USA; Campbell departs to join Big South Conference.[75] |
| 2007 | Florida Gulf Coast University joins as full member.[58] |
| 2008 | Gardner–Webb departs to join Big South Conference.[75] |
| 2011 | Belmont departs to join Ohio Valley Conference; Campbell returns as full member (but departs again in 2018 to Big South).[75] |
| 2012 | Northern Kentucky University joins but transitions out in 2015 to Horizon League.[75] |
| 2013 | College of Charleston departs to join Colonial Athletic Association.[75] |
| 2014 | Mercer University and East Tennessee State depart to join Southern Conference.[76] |
| 2020 | Bellarmine University joins as full member. |
| 2021 | University of Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky University, Jacksonville State University, and Liberty University join as full members; ASUN begins sponsoring football.[70] |
| 2022 | Austin Peay State University and University of North Alabama join as full members. |
| 2023 | Jacksonville State departs to join Conference USA; ASUN forms football alliance with WAC, leading to 2023 football split and expansion to 20 members across non-football and football leagues (2020s transitions era).[36] |
| 2024 | Kennesaw State University departs to join Conference USA; University of West Georgia joins as full member. |
| 2025 | No changes. |
| 2026 | Major realignment with WAC: effective July 2026, WAC rebrands as UAC and becomes all-sports conference; ASUN retains seven non-football full members (Bellarmine, Florida Gulf Coast, Jacksonville, Lipscomb, North Florida, Queens, Stetson); five football-sponsoring ASUN members (Austin Peay, Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky, North Alabama, West Georgia) join UAC, which will have nine members including Abilene Christian, Arkansas-Little Rock, Tarleton State, and UT Arlington.[4][77] |
Sports
Men's sports
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) sponsors 10 men's sports as of 2025, providing competitive opportunities for student-athletes across its full membership while incorporating associate programs in select disciplines. These sports emphasize a balance of traditional team competitions and individual events, with championships determined through formats such as round-robin schedules, tournaments, or scoring aggregates. Participation varies by sport, reflecting the diverse athletic offerings of member institutions, and the conference prioritizes equitable competition and development.[58] Baseball is one of the ASUN's flagship sports, featuring 10 teams in a 30-game conference schedule culminating in a six-team double-elimination tournament hosted at a predetermined campus site. The format allows for high-stakes matchups that determine the automatic NCAA Tournament qualifier, with emphasis on pitching depth and offensive consistency in the competitive southeastern landscape.[78] Basketball involves all 12 full members in an 18-game conference schedule, fostering intense rivalries and balanced play leading to a postseason tournament where all 12 teams advance and higher seeds host games at campus sites for the championship. This structure highlights fast-paced play and defensive strategies, with the winner earning an NCAA Tournament berth.[79][80] Cross country fields 12 teams, competing in regional meets during the fall season, with individual and team scoring based on 5K and 8K distances for championships that qualify participants for the NCAA regionals. The sport underscores endurance training and team strategy in varied terrains.[81] Golf includes 9 teams in a schedule of multiple tournaments, where low team scores over 54 holes determine conference standings and the championship, which sends the top individual and team to NCAA regionals; notable for its focus on precision and mental resilience. Soccer engages 10 teams in a double-round-robin format over 18 matches, leading to an eight-team tournament at a campus venue, emphasizing tactical formations and set-piece execution to secure the NCAA automatic bid. North Florida won the 2025 championship.[82][83] Tennis features 8 teams in dual-match competitions, with conference play contributing to rankings for a postseason tournament that crowns the champion through singles and doubles formats, qualifying the winner for the NCAA Tournament. Track and field (indoor and outdoor) draws 9 teams, with athletes competing in events ranging from sprints to field throws across dual meets and invitationals, culminating in combined indoor and outdoor championships that score points for team titles and advance top performers to NCAA meets. Football operates as an associate sport through the ASUN's alliance with the Western Athletic Conference, forming the United Athletic Conference with 8 teams competing in a nine-game schedule and playoff system for the conference title and FCS playoff access; this partnership expands football opportunities without full sponsorship. Lacrosse has 4 associate members participating in a round-robin schedule and tournament format, focusing on fast transitions and defensive checks to determine the NCAA qualifier, with the conference providing a growing platform for the sport's expansion.[84] Volleyball, added as a sponsored sport in 2023, includes 5 teams in a competitive schedule of matches leading to a championship tournament that highlights serving accuracy and blocking efficiency, marking a recent enhancement to the ASUN's men's offerings.| Sport | Number of Teams | Championship Format |
|---|---|---|
| Baseball | 10 | 6-team double-elimination tournament |
| Basketball | 12 | All 12 teams advance; hosted at campus sites |
| Cross Country | 12 | Regional meet with team/individual scoring |
| Golf | 9 | Stroke-play tournaments and championship |
| Soccer | 10 | 8-team single-elimination tournament |
| Tennis | 8 | Dual matches leading to team tournament |
| Track & Field (Indoor/Outdoor) | 9 | Multi-event scoring at championships |
| Football (Associate) | 8 (via UAC alliance) | 9-game schedule with playoffs |
| Lacrosse (Associate) | 4 | Round-robin and tournament |
| Volleyball | 5 | Match schedule and championship tournament |
Women's sports
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) sponsors 12 women's sports as of the 2025–26 academic year, providing competitive opportunities for student-athletes across its member institutions. These sports include basketball, beach volleyball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, tennis, indoor and outdoor track and field, volleyball, and swimming and diving, with bowling offered as an associate membership sport. The conference emphasizes equitable competition through regular-season schedules and postseason tournaments, typically featuring single-elimination formats to determine automatic NCAA qualifiers.[58] Women's basketball features 12 teams competing in an 18-game conference schedule, culminating in a postseason tournament in early March where all 12 teams advance and games are hosted at campus sites of higher seeds, with semifinals and finals broadcast on ESPN platforms.[85][86] Beach volleyball, exclusive to women's competition in the ASUN, involves 6 teams in a round-robin regular season followed by a four-team championship tournament in April. Added as a sponsored sport in 2016 to align with NCAA emerging sport status, it has grown to include dual matches emphasizing two-person team play on sand courts.[87][88] Cross country fields 12 women's teams, with championships held in late October at a neutral course, scoring the top five runners per team plus a sixth displacer. The event awards points toward the ASUN All-Sports Trophy and selects individual NCAA regional qualifiers.[89][90] Golf includes 8 women's programs, conducting a regular season of multi-team tournaments before a championship in April at a host course, where the low four-team total score advances to NCAA regionals. Matches focus on stroke play over 54 holes.[91] Lacrosse has 7 women's teams, with a 12-game conference schedule leading to an eight-team tournament in early May, using a single-elimination bracket seeded by regular-season records.[92] Soccer boasts 10 women's squads in a double-round-robin format for 18 games per team, followed by an eight-team tournament in late October or early November to crown the conference champion.[93] Softball comprises 8 teams divided into East and West divisions for the 2025 season, playing a 24-game conference slate before a double-elimination tournament in mid-May at a neutral site.[94][95] Tennis involves 9 women's teams in an eight-match conference schedule, with the postseason tournament in early April featuring the top eight seeds in single-elimination play, including singles and doubles competition.[96] Track and field, both indoor and outdoor, supports 9 women's programs each, with indoor championships in February and outdoor in April or May. Events follow NCAA standards, scoring teams based on top-eight finishes per discipline to determine the title.[97] Volleyball includes 10 women's teams in a 20-game double-round-robin schedule, leading to an eight-team single-elimination tournament in mid-November.[98] Swimming and diving fields 7 women's teams, hosting a four-day championship in late February with prelims and finals for individual and relay events, elevated to full conference sponsorship in 2015 after prior associate status.[99][24] Bowling, as an associate sport with 5 participating teams, competes in a Baker-format schedule and a postseason tournament in early April, separate from full membership sports but contributing to NCAA Championship berths.[100]Facilities
Primary athletic venues
The primary athletic venues for Atlantic Sun Conference full members consist primarily of on-campus multi-purpose arenas that host regular-season competitions in basketball, volleyball, and other indoor sports. These facilities vary in size and age, reflecting each institution's investment in its athletic programs. Austin Peay State University's F&M Bank Arena serves as the primary venue for men's and women's basketball and volleyball, with a basketball capacity of 5,500; it opened in 2023 as a state-of-the-art multi-purpose facility leased by the university.[101] Bellarmine University's Knights Hall is the main on-campus arena for basketball and volleyball, accommodating 2,283 spectators; constructed in 1960, it remains the central hub for indoor athletic events despite its age. University of Central Arkansas's Farris Center is the primary venue for men's and women's basketball and volleyball, with a capacity of 6,000; it opened in 1972 and continues to serve as the main arena as of November 2025, with plans announced in 2024 for future replacement.[102] Eastern Kentucky University's Baptist Health Arena at Alumni Coliseum hosts basketball and volleyball, seating 6,500; opened in 1963, it underwent major renovations completed in November 2025, including a new playing floor and upgraded amenities.[103][104] University of North Alabama's CB&S Bank Arena at Flowers Hall is the primary indoor venue for basketball and volleyball, with a capacity of 3,000; it opened in 1972 following a renaming in 2023.[105] Queens University of Charlotte's Curry Arena serves as the main arena for basketball and volleyball, accommodating 2,500 spectators; located in the Levine Center, it opened in 2017 as part of the university's transition to Division I athletics.[106] Florida Gulf Coast University's Alico Arena hosts basketball and volleyball competitions for up to 4,633 fans, including standing room; it opened on December 2, 2002, as a key component of the university's athletic infrastructure.[107] Jacksonville University's Swisher Gymnasium functions as the primary indoor venue for basketball and volleyball, with a seating capacity of 1,360; built in 1953, it has been renovated to support ongoing regular-season play. Lipscomb University's Allen Arena is the central facility for basketball, volleyball, and other indoor sports, seating 5,028 for basketball events; it debuted on October 28, 2001, and features modern amenities for conference competitions.[108] The University of North Florida's UNF Arena accommodates 5,400 spectators for basketball and volleyball; opened in 1993, it underwent significant renovations in fall 2022, including a new court surface, and further locker room upgrades in 2024 to enhance team facilities.[109][110] Stetson University's Edmunds Center (now Insight Credit Union Arena at Edmunds Center) is the primary site for basketball and volleyball, with a capacity of 5,000; it opened on December 5, 1974, and renovations began in 2024, incorporating upgraded seating, restrooms, and sound systems while maintaining its core structure.[111][112] University of West Georgia's The Coliseum is the primary venue for basketball and volleyball, with a capacity of 6,500; it opened in 2009 as a multi-purpose facility.[113]Championship and tournament sites
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) employs a mix of campus-based and neutral-site venues for its postseason tournaments and championships, with policies varying by sport to balance accessibility, logistics, and competitive equity. For many events, the conference rotates hosting duties among member institutions' facilities, while select championships utilize dedicated neutral venues to centralize competition and enhance fan experience. This approach has evolved alongside the conference's operational changes, including the relocation of its headquarters from Atlanta, Georgia, to Jacksonville, Florida, in the fall of 2024, which has influenced site selections for future events.[3] Basketball tournaments have historically rotated among campus sites, with early rounds often hosted at the higher-seeded teams' home arenas before advancing to a central location. For the 2024-25 season, the men's basketball championship utilized campus sites for all rounds, including venues such as F&M Bank Arena (Austin Peay State University), Knights Hall (Bellarmine University), and Baptist Health Arena (Eastern Kentucky University).[114] In a shift toward neutral-site hosting, the ASUN announced a multi-year agreement in March 2025 to stage the men's and women's basketball tournaments in Jacksonville starting with the 2025-26 season, with quarterfinals through finals at VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena to leverage proximity to the conference headquarters and improve broadcasting logistics under the ESPN media rights deal.[115] Prior to this, single-site formats were adopted during the COVID-19 era for safety, departing from multi-campus rotations used in earlier years.[116] Baseball championships are typically hosted at a single campus venue selected through a bidding process among members, emphasizing facilities capable of accommodating the tournament's unique double-elimination format across divisions. The 2025 ASUN Baseball Championship took place May 20-25 at Melching Field at Conrad Park on the Stetson University campus in DeLand, Florida, marking the third consecutive year Stetson hosted the event.[117] This site was retained for 2026 (May 19-23), reflecting the conference's preference for established, member-operated venues over permanent neutral locations.[118][119] Swimming and diving championships rotate among member institutions' aquatic centers to promote broad participation. The 2025 men's and women's event was held February 19-22 at the Allan Jones Aquatic Center on the University of Tennessee campus in Knoxville.[120] For 2026, both championships are scheduled February 18-21 at the Rosen Aquatic & Fitness Center in Orlando, Florida, a neutral facility shared with other conferences to accommodate the four-day meet format.[54][121] Although the ASUN does not sponsor football as a conference sport—with participating members competing through the separate United Athletic Conference—postseason games involving ASUN affiliates are hosted at individual member stadiums based on seeding and home-field advantage.Championships and awards
All-sports trophies
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) awards three annual all-sports trophies to honor institutions for superior overall performance in conference-sponsored sports. These include the Jesse C. Fletcher Trophy for the top men's athletic program, the Sherman Day Trophy for the leading women's program, and the Bill Bibb Trophy for the best combined men's and women's results. The Bill Bibb Trophy is named after Bill Bibb, the conference's longtime commissioner who served from 1991 to 2007.[122] Points for all three trophies are calculated using a system that awards credit based on finishes in conference championships across eligible sports. Points are distributed on a descending basis in three-point increments, with the first-place team in each sport receiving the maximum possible points for that competition. Only sports achieving at least 50 percent participation among full ASUN members qualify for inclusion in the standings, ensuring broad representation. The final standings reflect the percentage of total possible points earned, providing a normalized measure of success regardless of varying sport sponsorships.[123][124] In the 2020s, Lipscomb University has demonstrated particular dominance, sweeping all three trophies in the 2023–24 academic year by capturing 88.5 percent of possible points overall. Liberty University also achieved a clean sweep in 2022–23, earning 85.48 percent of available points in the men's category alone. For the 2024–25 season, Florida Gulf Coast University (FGCU) won the Bill Bibb Trophy with 81.74 percent of possible points (342.5 out of 419) and the Sherman Day Trophy with 90.08 percent (218 out of 242), while the University of North Alabama claimed the Jesse C. Fletcher Trophy for the first time in program history, finishing with 81.3 percent (124.5 out of 153 points).[125][126][127][128][129]Basketball championships
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) men's and women's basketball tournaments follow a 10-team single-elimination format, with the top 10 teams from the regular-season standings qualifying based on conference winning percentage.[130] Since the conference's expansion to 12 full members, the bottom two teams are excluded from postseason play, and all rounds feature reseeding after each game, with matchups hosted at the campus site of the higher seed. This campus-based model has been in place through the 2025 tournament, emphasizing home-court advantage while minimizing travel.[115] The men's basketball tournament began in 1979 under the conference's original name, the Trans America Athletic Conference, with Northeast Louisiana (now Louisiana-Monroe) claiming the inaugural title after defeating Hardin-Simmons in the championship game. Over the decades, the event has produced several competitive dynasties and standout performances, including Lipscomb's multiple tournament victories and deep NCAA Tournament runs in the late 2010s and 2025, when the Bisons defeated North Alabama 76-65 in the final to secure their second ASUN title. North Florida has also emerged as a consistent contender, winning four tournament championships since 2013 and earning three NCAA Tournament bids during that span, highlighted by back-to-back titles in 2016 and 2017.[131] In the 2024-25 regular season, Lipscomb and North Alabama shared the conference crown with identical 14-4 records, setting the stage for a tightly contested postseason.[130] The women's basketball tournament commenced in 1985, with early dominance by programs like Georgia Southern, which captured three titles between 1987 and 1990.[132] Florida Gulf Coast (FGCU) has since established itself as the preeminent force, winning 12 tournament championships overall, including eight consecutive from 2018 to 2025, with the latest coming via a 68-51 victory over Central Arkansas in the 2025 final.[133] Jacksonville broke through with a notable 2016 tournament win, defeating FGCU 56-54 in the championship to earn its first ASUN title and an NCAA bid.[134] The tournament champions in both men's and women's basketball receive automatic qualification to the NCAA Division I Tournament, known as March Madness for men and the Women's NCAA Tournament, providing mid-major programs like those in the ASUN a pathway to national competition. This bid has enabled ASUN winners to achieve occasional upsets, such as FGCU's multiple first-round victories in the women's tournament during its dominant era.[135]Baseball championship
The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) baseball championship includes a regular-season competition followed by a postseason tournament that crowns the conference champion and awards an automatic bid to the NCAA Division I baseball tournament regionals. The regular season operates as a partial round-robin with divisional alignment introduced in 2024, where each of the 12 teams plays 30 conference games across 10 three-game series—five home and five away—against opponents in their division (Gold or Graphite).[95] This structure emphasizes intra-division rivalries while maintaining competitive balance across the conference. The postseason tournament invites the top eight teams based on regular-season performance and unfolds in a double-elimination format at a neutral site, typically lasting five to six days in late May. Recent iterations feature an innovative pool-play setup: the top four seeds (by RPI) compete in Pool A via round-robin games with one loss allowed, while seeds 5–8 play single-elimination in Pool B; winners advance to semifinals and a final. The 2025 event, for instance, was hosted at Melching Field at Conrad Park in DeLand, Florida, from May 20–25.[117][136] The tournament traces its roots to the conference's origins as the Trans America Athletic Conference in 1978, with baseball competition beginning in the mid-1980s; the first postseason event occurred in 1985. Early success was dominated by programs that later departed the league, including UCF, which secured four tournament titles (1996, 1997, 2001, 2002) en route to multiple NCAA regional appearances before joining Conference USA in 2005, and Florida Atlantic, which claimed the 2004 crown and advanced to the NCAA tournament prior to its 1998 move to the Sun Belt Conference.[137] In more recent years, Stetson has emerged as the preeminent program, capturing nine tournament championships through 2024—the most in conference history—including back-to-back titles in 2016 and 2018, and a 5–3 victory over Kennesaw State in the 2024 final at Melching Field. Lipscomb has also excelled, winning three titles (2008, 2015, 2023), highlighted by a 12–6 triumph over Florida Gulf Coast in the 2023 championship game to complete a regular-season and postseason sweep. The 2025 final was suspended and ultimately canceled due to inclement weather, resulting in Stetson and Florida Gulf Coast being named co-champions; as the No. 1 seed, Stetson earned the NCAA automatic qualifier.[119][138][139] The automatic bid has propelled ASUN champions to notable NCAA success, including regional berths for 20 of the last 25 tournament winners. A standout example is Kennesaw State's 2023 campaign, where the Owls, as regular-season champions with a 26–4 conference record, earned an at-large bid despite an early tournament exit and advanced as the No. 3 seed in the Athens Regional, upsetting host Georgia before falling to Clemson and Georgia.[138] All-time records underscore the conference's competitive depth and growing prominence. Stetson leads with 10 tournament victories and holds the single-season conference win record (27 in 2018), while Lipscomb set the mark for tournament scoring output (12–6 final in 2023). Attendance has surged at neutral-site events, with the 2024 tournament drawing over 15,000 fans across six days at Melching Field, reflecting increased fan engagement in Florida-hosted championships.[119][140]| Year | Tournament Champion | Site | NCAA Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Lipscomb | Fort Myers, FL (Swanson Stadium) | Regional (lost to Cincinnati)[138] |
| 2024 | Stetson | DeLand, FL (Melching Field) | Regional (lost to UC Irvine)[140] |
| 2025 | Stetson & FGCU (co-champions; Stetson auto-bid) | DeLand, FL (Melching Field) | Auburn Regional (Stetson: def. NC State 11-2; lost to Auburn 5-8, NC State 12-17)[139][141][142] |