Frontier Conference
The Frontier Conference is a collegiate athletic conference affiliated with the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), consisting of 12 full member institutions located across Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraska, and sponsoring intercollegiate competition in sports such as football, men's and women's basketball, women's volleyball, cross country, golf, indoor and outdoor track and field, baseball, and softball.[1][2] Its motto, "Promoting Academic and Athletic Excellence," underscores its commitment to integrating athletics within the broader educational mission of its member colleges.[1] Established in 1934 as the Montana Small College Conference with five charter members—Montana State School of Mines (now Montana Technological University), Billings Polytechnic Institute (now Rocky Mountain College), Carroll College, Montana State Normal College (now University of Montana Western), and Montana Collegiate Institute (now University of Providence)—the conference initially focused on promoting athletic competition among small institutions in Montana.[1] It was renamed the Montana Collegiate Conference in 1936 and adopted its current name, Frontier Conference, in 1966 to reflect its expanding regional scope.[3] Over the decades, the conference has grown through strategic expansions, reaching 11 full members by the 2024-25 academic year with the addition of Bellevue University, Dakota State University, Mayville State University, and Valley City State University, and further expanding to 12 in fall 2025 by incorporating Bismarck State College.[4][2] The current full members are Bismarck State College, Carroll College, Dakota State University, Dickinson State University, Mayville State University, Montana State University-Northern, Montana Technological University, Rocky Mountain College, University of Montana Western, University of Providence, Valley City State University, and Bellevue University.[2] The conference's member institutions span public and private colleges, emphasizing competitive balance and student-athlete development within the NAIA framework.[1] It also maintains five associate members for football—Eastern Oregon University, Oregon Tech, Southern Oregon University, Montana State University Billings, and Simpson University—to bolster competition in that sport.[2][5] Dr. Scott Crawford has served as commissioner since 2023, overseeing operations from the conference office in Helena, Montana.[1][6] The Frontier Conference has a storied tradition of success, with its teams claiming 10 NAIA national team championships as of 2017, including seven in football (six by Carroll College and one by Southern Oregon University), two in women's basketball (by the University of Montana Western and Montana State University–Northern), and one in men's basketball (by Rocky Mountain College), plus individual titles in track and field.[1] In recent years, it has been recognized for academic excellence, earning the NAIA Champions of Character Five-Star Conference Award for 2024-25, and continues to host postseason championships across multiple disciplines to foster regional rivalries and pathways to national competition.[7]History
Formation and early development
The Frontier Conference traces its origins to 1934, when it was established as the Montana Small College Conference (MSCC) to promote intercollegiate athletics among smaller institutions in Montana. The charter members included five schools: Montana State School of Mines in Butte (now Montana Technological University), Montana State Normal College in Dillon (now University of Montana Western), Northern Montana College in Havre (now Montana State University–Northern), Intermountain Union College in Helena, and Billings Polytechnic Institute in Billings.[1][8] This founding reflected a regional emphasis on fostering competitive sports for student-athletes at normal schools and polytechnic institutes, with an initial focus on basketball and track events.[9] In 1936, the conference underwent a rebranding to the Montana Collegiate Conference, signaling a broader scope while maintaining its Montana-centric identity.[3] Early expansion included the addition of Eastern Montana Normal College (now Montana State University Billings) in 1939, alongside Carroll College, enhancing the league's competitive depth.[8] That same year, Intermountain Union College and Billings Polytechnic Institute merged to form Rocky Mountain College in Billings, consolidating resources and preserving institutional legacies within the conference.[8] Football was introduced as a sponsored sport starting in the inaugural 1934 season, complementing basketball, which crowned its first conference champion—Montana State Normal College—in the 1933–34 academic year just prior to formal organization.[3][9] The conference's early momentum was interrupted by World War II, with football play suspended from 1942 to 1945 and basketball competition halted from 1944 to 1946 due to enlistments and resource shortages.[3][9] Postwar resumption in 1946 marked a period of stabilization, as schools like Montana State Normal College resumed participation and rebuilt programs, leading to consistent annual championships in core sports by the late 1940s.[3][9] Throughout this era, the Montana Collegiate Conference emphasized small college athletics, aligning with the emerging National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) framework established in 1937 as a precursor organization for non-NCAA institutions.[1] By 1966, reflecting its enduring regional footprint, the conference adopted its current name, the Frontier Conference.[3]Expansion beyond Montana
In November 1966, the Montana Collegiate Conference rebranded itself as the Frontier Conference to signal its ambitions for broader regional influence beyond its Montana roots.[1] This name change marked a pivotal moment in the league's evolution, emphasizing expansion while maintaining its core identity as a competitive NAIA entity in the American West.[1] The conference's first venture outside Montana occurred in 1998 with the addition of Lewis–Clark State College from Lewiston, Idaho, and Westminster College from Salt Lake City, Utah, both as full members.[1] These inclusions introduced inter-state rivalries and diversified the league's footprint, though Lewis–Clark State departed after the 1999–2000 academic year before rejoining later. Westminster remained until 2015, when it transitioned to NCAA Division II membership in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.[1] Further growth in the 2000s and 2010s solidified the Frontier's multi-state presence, particularly in football. Eastern Oregon University joined as a football-only associate member in 2008, followed by Southern Oregon University in 2012 for the same sport.[1] In a bid to bolster membership amid the dissolution of the Dakota Athletic Conference, the Frontier pursued expansions around 2010, successfully adding Dickinson State University (North Dakota) as a full member in 2012—though it left after the 2013–14 season—and The College of Idaho (Idaho) as a football-only affiliate in 2014.[10] These moves, including targeted affiliations with out-of-state programs, transformed the conference from a Montana-centric league into a prominent NAIA powerhouse spanning Idaho, Oregon, Utah, and North Dakota, enhancing competitive depth and postseason opportunities across the region.[1]Recent membership growth
In December 2023, the Frontier Conference announced the addition of Dickinson State University as a full member, effective for the 2025-26 academic year, marking the first expansion step in recent years.[11] This move brought the conference closer to broadening its regional footprint in the NAIA.[11] Building on this momentum, the conference accepted four institutions from the North Star Athletic Association—Bellevue University, Dakota State University, Mayville State University, and Valley City State University—as full members in May 2024, also effective for 2025-26, increasing the total to 11 full members.[4] These additions were part of a strategic response to the North Star Athletic Association's decision to cease operations after the 2024-25 season, allowing the Frontier to absorb key programs and maintain competitive balance in the Midwest.[4] Further growth occurred in October 2024 when Bismarck State College was unanimously accepted as a full member by the Frontier Conference Council of Presidents, joining for the 2025-26 year and elevating the total to 12 full members.[2] This expansion strengthened the conference's presence in North Dakota and supported Bismarck State's transition to NAIA competition across multiple sports.[12] On the affiliate front, the conference added Arizona Christian University as a football-only associate member in 2023, enhancing its western reach.[13] In May 2024, Simpson University joined as another football affiliate, effective for 2025, bringing the total to five football-playing affiliates including College of Idaho, Eastern Oregon, and Southern Oregon.[5][14] These changes collectively aimed to bolster the Frontier's NAIA footprint across the Midwest and West while addressing regional conference instability.[4]Membership
Current full members
The Frontier Conference consists of 12 full member institutions as of the 2025-26 academic year, all competing in NAIA athletics across multiple sports including football, basketball, volleyball, and track and field.[2] Six of these members are located in Montana, forming the conference's historical core, while the remaining six are recent additions from Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota, expanding the league's footprint in the northern Plains region.[4] These schools typically have enrollments ranging from 800 to 4,500 students, with a focus on undergraduate education and strong athletic programs that contribute to the conference's competitive balance in football and other team sports.[2]| Institution | Location | Nickname | Enrollment (Fall 2025) | Joining Year | Flagship Sport(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bellevue University | Bellevue, NE | Bruins | 18,000 (total; ~1,800 campus-based) | 2025-26 | Football, men's basketball |
| Bismarck State College | Bismarck, ND | Mystics | 4,549 | 2025-26 | Women's basketball (football starts 2027) |
| Carroll College | Helena, MT | Fighting Saints | 1,167 | 1936 | Football |
| Dakota State University | Madison, SD | Trojans | 3,842 | 2025-26 | Football, esports |
| Dickinson State University | Dickinson, ND | Blue Hawks | 1,374 | 2025-26 (rejoined) | Football, rodeo |
| Mayville State University | Mayville, ND | Comets | 1,215 | 2025-26 | Football, track and field |
| Montana State University–Northern | Havre, MT | Lights (men) / Skylights (women) | ~1,000 | 1934 (charter) | Basketball, cross country |
| Montana Technological University | Butte, MT | Orediggers | 2,516 | 1934 (charter) | Football, mining-themed athletics |
| Rocky Mountain College | Billings, MT | Battlin' Bears | ~1,000 | 1939 | Football, volleyball |
| University of Montana Western | Dillon, MT | Bulldogs | 1,458 | 1934 (charter) | Football, rodeo |
| University of Providence | Great Falls, MT | Argonauts | ~800 | 1999 (rejoined) | Men's basketball, golf |
| Valley City State University | Valley City, ND | Vikings | 1,827 | 2025-26 | Football, softball |
Affiliate members
The Frontier Conference maintains five affiliate members that participate exclusively in football as of the 2025 season, enhancing regional competition without full multi-sport affiliation. These institutions, all members of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), include Arizona Christian University in Glendale, Arizona (joined 2023); the College of Idaho in Caldwell, Idaho (joined 2014); Eastern Oregon University in La Grande, Oregon (joined 2008); Simpson University in Redding, California (joined 2025); and Southern Oregon University in Ashland, Oregon (joined 2012).[34][35][1][5][1] These affiliates primarily joined due to geographic considerations and the need for stable, competitive football scheduling in the NAIA, as their primary conferences—such as the Golden State Athletic Conference for Arizona Christian or the Cascade Collegiate Conference for Eastern Oregon and Southern Oregon—do not sponsor football.[34][36][37] For instance, Southern Oregon's affiliation has been particularly impactful, highlighted by the Raiders' 2014 NAIA national championship victory, which elevated the conference's profile in postseason play.[38] Collectively, these affiliates expand the conference's football roster to 14 teams, allowing for a balanced East-West division structure starting in 2025 with seven teams per side to optimize travel and rivalries.[39] This setup fosters stronger regional matchups, such as those involving West Division affiliates like Simpson and Arizona Christian against full members like Carroll College.[39][40]Former members
The Frontier Conference has seen three institutions depart as full members since its founding. Montana State University Billings, originally known as Eastern Montana College, was a charter member when the conference formed in 1934 as the Montana Small College Conference. It remained a key participant until 1988, when it transitioned to NAIA independent status before joining the NCAA Division II Pacific West Conference the following year.[1] Lewis–Clark State College in Lewiston, Idaho, joined the Frontier as a full member in 1998, expanding the conference's footprint beyond Montana for the first time. The Warriors competed across multiple sports until after the 2019–20 academic year, when they departed to become a full member of the Cascade Collegiate Conference, another NAIA league, seeking closer geographic alignment with Pacific Northwest institutions.[1][41] Westminster College in Salt Lake City, Utah, also entered the Frontier in 1998 alongside Lewis–Clark State, further broadening the conference's regional scope. The Griffins participated until after the 2014–15 season, at which point they began transitioning to NCAA Division II membership in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference to align with their growing enrollment and athletic ambitions.[1][42] These departures represented significant losses for the Frontier, particularly the erosion of longstanding regional rivalries that had defined much of the conference's identity, such as those involving Montana State University Billings. In response, the league pursued strategic expansions, including the addition of Eastern Oregon University as a football affiliate in 2008 and recent incorporations of institutions from the former North Star Athletic Association in 2024, to maintain competitive balance and geographic cohesion.[1][4]Membership timeline
The membership timeline of the Frontier Conference is presented below in tabular form, documenting key changes from its founding through 2025.| Year | Institution | Action | Scope |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1934 | Billings Polytechnic Institute | Joined (founding member) | Full |
| 1934 | Intermountain Union College | Joined (founding member) | Full |
| 1934 | Montana State Normal College (now University of Montana Western) | Joined (founding member) | Full |
| 1934 | Montana State School of Mines (now Montana Technological University) | Joined (founding member) | Full |
| 1934 | Northern Montana College (now Montana State University-Northern) | Joined (founding member) | Full |
| 1936 | Carroll College | Joined | Full |
| 1936 | Eastern Montana Normal College (later Eastern Montana College, now Montana State University Billings) | Joined | Full |
| 1939 | Rocky Mountain College | Formed by merger of Billings Polytechnic Institute and Intermountain Union College | Full |
| 1974 | University of Great Falls (now University of Providence) | Began competing | Full |
| 1984 | University of Great Falls (now University of Providence) | Ceased competing | Full |
| 1988 | Eastern Montana College (now Montana State University Billings) | Left (transitioned to NCAA Division II) | Full |
| 1998 | Lewis-Clark State College | Joined | Full (non-football initially) |
| 1998 | Westminster College (now Westminster University) | Joined | Full |
| 1999 | University of Great Falls (now University of Providence) | Rejoined | Full |
| 2008 | Eastern Oregon University | Joined | Football affiliate |
| 2012 | Dickinson State University | Joined | Full |
| 2012 | Southern Oregon University | Joined | Football affiliate |
| 2013 | Dickinson State University | Left (to North Star Athletic Association) | Full |
| 2014 | The College of Idaho | Joined | Football affiliate |
| 2015 | Westminster College (now Westminster University) | Left (transitioned to NCAA Division II) | Full |
| 2020 | Lewis-Clark State College | Left (to Cascade Collegiate Conference) | Full |
| 2022 | Arizona Christian University | Joined (effective 2023) | Football affiliate |
| 2023 | Dickinson State University | Announced rejoining (effective 2025-26) | Full |
| 2024 | Bellevue University | Joined (effective 2025-26) | Full |
| 2024 | Dakota State University | Joined (effective 2025-26) | Full |
| 2024 | Mayville State University | Joined (effective 2025-26) | Full |
| 2024 | Valley City State University | Joined (effective 2025-26) | Full |
| 2024 | Simpson University | Joined (effective 2025) | Football affiliate |
| 2024 | Bismarck State College | Joined (effective 2025-26; football from 2027) | Full |
Sports and competition
Sponsored sports
The Frontier Conference sponsors a variety of athletic programs aligned with the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), focusing on both traditional and emerging sports to promote broad student participation. For men's sports, the conference offers baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, and wrestling. Women's sports include basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, and volleyball. Additionally, competitive cheer and dance are provided as co-educational opportunities.[46][47] Participation levels vary by sport, with most programs drawing from the conference's 12 full member institutions, fostering competitive balance across disciplines. Football stands out with involvement from 14 teams, incorporating affiliate members to expand the competitive field. Overall, these programs engage approximately 2,000 student-athletes annually, supporting the NAIA's emphasis on holistic development through athletics.[48][49] As an NAIA conference, all sponsored sports provide pathways to national tournaments, with conference champions earning automatic qualification bids where applicable. This structure particularly highlights non-revenue sports such as wrestling and bowling, which receive dedicated support for regional and national competition despite lower financial profiles compared to revenue generators like football and basketball.[50][51]Conference structure and scheduling
The Frontier Conference is governed by the Council of Presidents and Chancellors (CoPC), which elects officers, approves bylaws, and oversees conference operations.[52][53] The current commissioner is Dr. Scott Crawford, who assumed the role on September 1, 2023.[6][54] In most sports, the conference employs a round-robin scheduling format, with teams playing each opponent once or twice depending on the sport and membership size; for example, the 2025-26 basketball season features a double round-robin schedule of 22 conference games per team.[56] Football deviates from this model due to its larger roster of 14 participating schools, divided into East and West divisions starting in 2025—the East comprising newer North Dakota and South Dakota members alongside Montana schools, and the West including Montana, Idaho, Oregon, and other western institutions.[39][57] Each football team plays six in-division games and two crossover games against opponents from the opposite division, with division winners earning automatic bids to the NAIA Football Championship Series.[56][58] Conference championships are held annually for each sponsored sport, hosted on a rotating basis by member institutions to promote geographic balance and facility utilization.[48] Winners receive automatic qualification to NAIA national tournaments.[39] For instance, the 2025 cross country championships, hosted by Rocky Mountain College at Amend Park in Billings, Montana, on November 7, were won by Rocky Mountain College in the men's race and Carroll College in the women's race.[59][48][60][61] Recent expansion to 12 full members has influenced scheduling, introducing divisional play in football to manage travel and competition balance while maintaining round-robin elements in other sports.[62] In May 2025, the conference announced host sites for 2025-26 and 2026-27 championships across multiple sports, including Billings for cross country in 2025 and 2026, to accommodate the growing footprint spanning multiple states.[48][63]Achievements
National championships
The Frontier Conference has a storied history of success at the NAIA national level, with member institutions collectively earning 16 team championships across multiple sports since the conference's inception. Football and wrestling stand out as areas of particular dominance, where teams from the conference have repeatedly claimed titles, contributing to the league's reputation for competitive excellence in small-college athletics. These achievements highlight the conference's emphasis on high-level performance and development of student-athletes capable of succeeding on the national stage.| Sport | Team | Years Won | Total Titles (for that team in sport) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Football | Carroll College | 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2010 | 6 |
| Football | Southern Oregon (affiliate) | 2014 | 1 |
| Men's Basketball | Rocky Mountain College | 2009 | 1 |
| Women's Basketball | University of Montana Western | 2019 | 1 |
| Women's Basketball | Montana State University-Northern | 1993 | 1 |
| Wrestling | Montana State University-Northern | 1991, 1992, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2004 | 6 |
| Bowling | University of Providence (then College of Great Falls) | 1973 (men's) | 1 |
Conference championships
The Frontier Conference, established in 1934 as the Montana Small College Conference, renamed the Montana Collegiate Conference in 1936, and rebranded as the Frontier Conference in 1966, has awarded championships in 14 sports over its 90-year history, emphasizing regular-season and tournament titles among its member institutions. These championships highlight the competitive balance and dominance of select programs, with Carroll College emerging as the all-time leader in football titles and Montana State University-Northern excelling in wrestling and women's basketball. Recent seasons have seen shifts in leadership, particularly in football with division-based formats introduced in 2021, and updates in cross country and other sports reflecting the conference's expansion to 12 full members by 2025.[1]| Sport | Leading Team | Total Titles | Recent Champions (2024-25 unless noted) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Football | Carroll College | 39 | Montana Tech (East Division), College of Idaho (West Division) |
| Men's Basketball | Montana Western | 22 | Montana Tech (regular season and tournament) |
| Women's Basketball | Montana State-Northern | 15 | University of Providence (tournament) |
| Volleyball | Carroll College | 15 | University of Providence (regular season and tournament) |
| Wrestling | Montana State-Northern | 20+ | Montana State-Northern (multiple weight class titles) |
| Baseball | Rocky Mountain College | 10 | Montana Tech (regular season) |
| Men's Cross Country | Rocky Mountain College | 8 | Rocky Mountain (team title) |
| Women's Cross Country | Carroll College | 7 | Bellevue (individual leader; team title: Rocky Mountain) |