Great Midwest Conference
The Great Midwest Conference was an NCAA Division I athletic conference that existed from 1991 to 1995, primarily sponsoring basketball and other non-football sports for its member institutions located across the Midwest and South.[1][2] Formed in 1990 amid widespread conference realignment in college athletics, the conference began operations in the 1991–92 academic year with six charter members: the University of Cincinnati and Memphis State University (now the University of Memphis) from the Metro Conference, Saint Louis University from the Midwestern Collegiate Conference, Marquette University as an independent, the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) from the Sun Belt Conference, and DePaul University from the Midwestern Collegiate Conference.[1] The addition of the University of Dayton in 1993–94 expanded the league to seven members, enhancing its competitive depth in basketball and other sports such as baseball, soccer, and women's basketball.[1][3] The conference quickly established itself as a powerhouse in men's basketball, with its teams compiling a 483–312 overall record over four seasons and making 13 NCAA Tournament appearances, including a Final Four berth by Cincinnati in 1992 and an Elite Eight run by Memphis in the same year.[2] Notable rivalries emerged, particularly between Cincinnati and Memphis, which produced high-stakes games that highlighted the conference's intensity.[1] Cincinnati dominated the league, winning all four conference tournament titles and producing standout players who earned national recognition.[1] By 1995, ongoing realignment pressures—driven by the need for stronger football affiliations and broader media markets—led to the Great Midwest's merger with the Metro Conference, creating Conference USA as a new all-sports entity effective for the 1995–96 season.[4][5] Most members transitioned to the new conference, though Dayton opted to join the Atlantic 10 instead, marking the end of the Great Midwest's brief but influential run in Division I athletics.[1]History
Formation
The Great Midwest Conference was announced on November 16, 1990, during a press conference at the Downtown Athletic Club in Chicago, marking the establishment of a new NCAA Division I athletic conference comprising six charter institutions: the University of Cincinnati, DePaul University, Marquette University, Memphis State University (now the University of Memphis), Saint Louis University, and the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).[6] These schools, drawn from various existing affiliations—including Cincinnati and Memphis State from the Metro Conference, UAB from the Sun Belt Conference, and DePaul, Marquette, and Saint Louis from independent status or the Midwestern Collegiate Conference—sought to create a unified regional league spanning the Midwest and South amid widespread conference realignments in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[7] The formation was driven primarily by a desire for geographic cohesion and enhanced competition, particularly in basketball, which served as the flagship sport and attracted national attention through potential television partnerships.[8] This move responded to the instability in Division I athletics, where independents and smaller conferences faced challenges in scheduling, revenue sharing, and postseason access, prompting these institutions to band together for mutual stability and regional rivalries. The conference's Chicago-based headquarters further emphasized its Midwestern orientation, facilitating administrative operations and media outreach.[7] Michael L. Slive was appointed as the inaugural commissioner in 1991, bringing legal and administrative expertise to guide the league's launch.[9] Operations commenced in the 1991-92 academic year, with the conference initially sponsoring seven sports: men's and women's basketball, baseball, softball, men's soccer, women's volleyball, and cross country.[10] This selective array allowed focus on high-profile and Olympic sports while building infrastructure for broader athletic competition.Expansion and Dissolution
In July 1993, the Great Midwest Conference expanded by adding the University of Dayton as its seventh member, effective for the 1993–94 academic year, which broadened the league's footprint across the Midwest.[11] This move came after Dayton departed the Midwestern Collegiate Conference, aiming to align with stronger basketball programs in the region. The conference demonstrated competitive vitality during this period, particularly in men's basketball, where the University of Cincinnati achieved an 8–2 regular-season record in 1991–92, securing a share of the title and advancing to the NCAA Final Four.[12] Cincinnati's dominance highlighted the league's potential as a basketball powerhouse amid its growth. As conference realignments intensified in the mid-1990s, the Great Midwest faced pressures to evolve, leading to the announcement in 1994 of a merger with the Metro Conference to create Conference USA, effective for the 1995–96 academic year.[13] The primary drivers included the addition of football sponsorship—lacking in both predecessor leagues—and pursuit of enhanced television exposure through larger media markets, as basketball-focused institutions sought stability in an era of football-driven shifts. The six charter members—Cincinnati, Memphis, Marquette, DePaul, Saint Louis, and Alabama–Birmingham—joined the new entity, while Dayton was excluded due to its non-football status and regional fit elsewhere. The 1994–95 season marked the Great Midwest's final year of operation, culminating in conference tournaments and championships across sponsored sports before the transition.[14] Dayton formally exited via an agreement signed in early February 1995, paving the way for its entry into the Atlantic 10 Conference that fall.[15] Though short-lived from 1991 to 1995, the conference served as a key transitional structure during the turbulent 1990s realignments, bridging Midwest basketball traditions into broader multisport alliances.[4]Membership
Final Member Institutions
The Great Midwest Conference concluded its existence in 1995 with seven member institutions, none of which sponsored Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) programs and all of which prioritized men's and women's basketball as flagship sports alongside other Olympic sports. These universities formed a geographic footprint centered in the Midwest—spanning Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Missouri—while extending southward to Tennessee and Alabama, fostering regional rivalries particularly in basketball. Enrollments varied, reflecting a mix of large public research universities and mid-sized private Catholic institutions, with student bodies ranging from approximately 10,000 to 28,000 around 1995. The following table summarizes the final members, including their primary locations, approximate enrollments circa 1995, athletic nicknames, and notable facilities relevant to conference competition:| Institution | Location | Enrollment (circa 1995) | Nickname | Notable Facilities | Athletic Profile |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Cincinnati | Cincinnati, OH | 28,373 | Bearcats | Myrl H. Shoemaker Center (basketball arena, capacity 13,176) | Public research university with strong basketball tradition under coach Bob Huggins; multiple NCAA tournament appearances in the early 1990s. |
| DePaul University | Chicago, IL | ~17,000 | Blue Demons | Alumni Hall (primary basketball venue) | Private Catholic university emphasizing urban athletics; known for competitive basketball in a major media market. |
| Marquette University | Milwaukee, WI | ~11,000 | Golden Eagles | Bradley Center (shared downtown arena, capacity 18,000) | Private Jesuit university with a storied basketball program; transitioned to Golden Eagles nickname in 1994 and hosted conference tournaments. |
| University of Dayton | Dayton, OH | ~10,000 | Flyers | University of Dayton Arena (basketball venue, capacity 13,409) | Private Catholic university joining in 1994; renowned for high-attendance basketball games and upset victories in national play. |
| University of Memphis (formerly Memphis State University) | Memphis, TN | 19,000 | Tigers | The Pyramid (arena, capacity 20,142; opened 1991) | Public research university with Southern flair; basketball powerhouse featuring fast-paced play and frequent NCAA bids. |
| Saint Louis University | St. Louis, MO | 13,847 | Billikens | Kiel Center (new arena in 1994, capacity 19,201) | Private Jesuit university with deep basketball roots; hosted conference events and competed intensely in the Gateway region. |
| University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) | Birmingham, AL | 22,604 | Blazers | UAB Arena (basketball facility, capacity 8,500) | Public research university extending the conference southward; emerging basketball program with growing regional impact. |
Membership Timeline
The Great Midwest Conference began competition in the 1991–92 academic year with six charter member institutions: the University of Cincinnati, DePaul University, Marquette University, the University of Memphis (then known as Memphis State University), Saint Louis University, and the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).[12] The University of Dayton joined as the seventh member effective July 1, 1993, for the 1993–94 academic year.[16] Following the 1994–95 academic year, the conference dissolved, with its six charter members—Cincinnati, DePaul, Marquette, Memphis, Saint Louis, and UAB—departing to form Conference USA alongside select institutions from the Metro Conference, while Dayton transferred to the Atlantic 10 Conference.[17] These shifts were part of widespread conference realignments in the mid-1990s, driven by institutions' efforts to secure better television revenue and regional rivalries.[1] The following table illustrates membership across the conference's four seasons of operation:| Institution | 1991–92 | 1992–93 | 1993–94 | 1994–95 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Cincinnati | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| DePaul University | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Marquette University | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| University of Memphis | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Saint Louis University | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| University of Alabama at Birmingham | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| University of Dayton | No | No | Yes | Yes |
Sports and Championships
Sponsored Sports
The Great Midwest Conference, operating from 1991 to 1995, sponsored seven non-revenue sports without football, reflecting the athletic priorities of its member institutions, which emphasized basketball and Olympic-style competitions. These included men's and women's basketball as the flagship offerings, with all seven final members—University of Cincinnati, DePaul University, University of Dayton, Marquette University, University of Memphis, Saint Louis University, and University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB)—competing in both genders' basketball seasons throughout the conference's tenure.[2] The sponsorship remained consistent, with no major additions or subtractions during the four-year period, allowing for stable competition aligned with NCAA Division I standards. In addition to basketball, the conference supported baseball, where members like Cincinnati and Memphis fielded teams and competed for titles, as seen in the 1992 season summary and subsequent tournaments.[18] Softball was also sponsored, particularly in the later years following Dayton's 1993 entry, enabling participation from institutions like Dayton and DePaul, though not all members maintained programs.[19] Men's soccer drew full involvement from core members such as Saint Louis and UAB (initially), culminating in annual tournaments, including Saint Louis's back-to-back titles in 1991 and 1992.[20][21] Women's volleyball provided another key competitive outlet, with UAB claiming the 1991 regular-season championship in the conference's inaugural year and DePaul hosting the 1993 tournament.[22][23] Cross country for both men and women rounded out the core offerings, featuring championships like UAB's 1992 women's title and Marquette's selections of all-conference performers from 1991 to 1993.[24][25] Participation in these non-basketball sports varied, as smaller programs like UAB focused primarily on basketball, while larger members like Memphis and Cincinnati contributed across multiple disciplines. The conference's balanced sponsorship—four women's sports (basketball, volleyball, softball, cross country) and five counting both genders for cross country, alongside three men's (basketball, baseball, soccer)—supported Title IX compliance by promoting gender equity in athletic opportunities. Historical records also indicate additional sponsorships, such as men's and women's tennis, with Marquette securing the 1991–92 women's title, and indoor/outdoor track and field, evidenced by Marquette's 1995 outdoor championships.[26][27] These offerings emphasized competitive balance over expansion, fostering regional rivalries without overextending resources.Conference Championships
The Great Midwest Conference sponsored annual postseason tournaments for men's and women's basketball and baseball, with winners receiving automatic bids to the NCAA Division I tournaments. These tournaments typically featured all conference members or a subset based on regular-season performance, culminating in single-elimination formats hosted at campus sites or neutral venues. All-conference honors, including selections for first and second teams, were determined annually by a vote of the league's head coaches, recognizing outstanding individual performances without ties in voting procedures. In men's basketball, the University of Cincinnati dominated the postseason, capturing all four conference tournament titles from 1992 to 1995 under coach Bob Huggins. Cincinnati defeated Memphis State 75-63 in the 1992 final at Chicago Stadium in Chicago, Illinois, earning an NCAA bid after sharing the regular-season title with DePaul (both 8-2 in conference play).[12] The Bearcats repeated as tournament champions in 1993 with a 77-72 victory over Memphis State at The Pyramid in Memphis, Tennessee, following a sole possession of the regular-season crown (8-2). In 1994, Cincinnati overcame Memphis 68-47 in the final at Shoemaker Center, securing the title despite Marquette's regular-season dominance (10-2). The 1995 tournament ended with Cincinnati's 67-65 win over Saint Louis at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, after Memphis claimed the regular season (9-3). Cincinnati's tournament success provided consistent NCAA access, though regular-season honors varied: co-champions with DePaul in 1991–92, sole champion in 1992–93, Marquette in 1993–94, and Memphis in 1994–95.| Year | Regular Season Champion(s) | Tournament Champion |
|---|---|---|
| 1991–92 | Cincinnati, DePaul (8–2) | Cincinnati |
| 1992–93 | Cincinnati (8–2) | Cincinnati |
| 1993–94 | Marquette (10–2) | Cincinnati |
| 1994–95 | Memphis (9–3) | Cincinnati |
| Year | Regular Season Champion(s) | Tournament Champion |
|---|---|---|
| 1991–92 | DePaul, UAB (8–2) | DePaul |
| 1992–93 | Marquette (10–0) | DePaul |
| 1993–94 | UAB (12–0) | UAB |
| 1994–95 | Memphis (9–2) | Marquette |