Metro Conference
The Metro Conference was an NCAA Division I collegiate athletic conference that operated from 1975 to 1995, consisting of universities primarily from major urban areas in the eastern and southern United States, and it did not sponsor football but focused on other sports, especially basketball.[1][2] Founded on July 13, 1975, in Atlanta by the universities of Cincinnati, Georgia Tech, Louisville, Memphis State, St. Louis, and Tulane—with Dayton declining membership at the last minute—the conference appointed Larry Albus as its first commissioner.[1] Its inaugural basketball tournament was held March 3–5, 1976, and won by Cincinnati.[1] The league expanded over time, adding Florida State in 1976, replacing Georgia Tech with Virginia Tech in 1978, substituting Southern Miss for St. Louis in 1982, and incorporating South Carolina in 1983 to reach eight members; Tulane was readmitted in 1989 after a suspension due to a point-shaving scandal that led it to temporarily drop men's basketball in 1985.[1] By the early 1990s, membership had dwindled to four core schools—Louisville, Virginia Tech, Tulane, and Southern Miss—following departures of other members to conferences like the Big East and Southeastern Conference amid realignment pressures.[1] The conference gained prominence in men's basketball, becoming one of the nation's strongest leagues, highlighted by Louisville's NCAA championships in 1980 and 1986 under coach Denny Crum, as well as frequent tournament appearances by members like Memphis State.[1][3] In 1995, the Metro Conference and Great Midwest Conference merged, along with the addition of Houston, to form Conference USA, which began sponsoring football and marked the end of the Metro as an independent entity.[4][2][5]History
Formation and Charter Era
The Metro Conference was established in 1975 as a response to evolving NCAA regulations and the need for urban institutions without major football programs to form a regionally competitive alliance focused on basketball and Olympic sports. On July 13, 1975, university presidents from six institutions announced the league's creation during a meeting in Atlanta, Georgia, emphasizing geographical proximity and shared interests in non-revenue sports to achieve competitive balance.[1] The conference operated as an NCAA Division I affiliate from its inception, deliberately excluding football sponsorship to prioritize resources for other athletics. The charter members included the University of Cincinnati (Cincinnati, Ohio), Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, Georgia), University of Louisville (Louisville, Kentucky), Memphis State University (Memphis, Tennessee), Saint Louis University (St. Louis, Missouri), and Tulane University (New Orleans, Louisiana).[6] These public and private urban universities committed initially to men's basketball, baseball, cross country, golf, tennis, track and field, and wrestling, alongside women's basketball, tennis, and track and field, reflecting the era's emphasis on Title IX compliance and balanced athletic programs.[1] The league's headquarters were based in Louisville, Kentucky, to leverage the city's central location and strong basketball infrastructure.[7] Larry Albus, then athletic director at Saint Louis University, was appointed as the first commissioner, serving from 1975 to 1982 and playing a pivotal role in organizing the conference's governance and scheduling.[8] The inaugural 1975–76 season marked the start of operations, with the first conference basketball tournament held March 3–5, 1976, at Louisville's Freedom Hall; Cincinnati defeated Memphis State 103–95 in the final to claim the title and earn the league's automatic NCAA bid.[1] Early successes included Georgia Tech's victory in the first cross-country championship on November 1, 1975, and the conference securing automatic NCAA qualification for its basketball champion on September 22, 1975.[1] Member institutions quickly made impacts in the NCAA Tournament, with Cincinnati advancing to the second round in 1976 and 1977 as conference champions, and Louisville reaching the Elite Eight in 1978, building the league's reputation for competitive basketball despite its recent formation.[9] These achievements, alongside pre-conference highlights like Louisville's 1975 Final Four appearance, underscored the conference's potential as a hub for urban athletic excellence through 1979.Expansion, Departures, and Mid-Period Developments
Following the initial formation of the Metro Conference in 1975, the league experienced its first significant expansion in 1976 with the addition of Florida State University as the inaugural non-charter member, enhancing regional alignment among southern institutions and bolstering competitive depth in non-football sports. This move was motivated by the need to maintain balance after early discussions of growth, with Florida State seeking a stable conference home for basketball and other sports while remaining independent in football. The conference further stabilized in 1978 by admitting Virginia Tech to fill the vacancy left by Georgia Tech's departure to the Atlantic Coast Conference at the end of the 1977-78 academic year, a shift driven by Georgia Tech's desire for a stronger football affiliation.[1][10] In the early 1980s, the Metro navigated departures that tested its cohesion, including Saint Louis University's exit in 1982 to join the Midwestern Collegiate Conference, prompted by geographic and competitive mismatches as a non-football school amid the league's growing emphasis on institutions with Division I-A football programs.[11] To offset this, Southern Mississippi was added in 1982, restoring membership to seven and reinforcing the conference's southeastern footprint for better travel efficiency and rivalry development.[12] South Carolina followed in 1983, bringing the total to eight members and addressing the Gamecocks' need for affiliation after leaving the ACC in 1971, particularly to elevate basketball and Olympic sports competitiveness.[13] Tulane's temporary departure in 1985 due to a point-shaving scandal that led it to drop men's basketball briefly reduced numbers, but its return in 1989 helped sustain mid-period balance amid ongoing realignment pressures.[12] The 1980s marked a period of internal stability for the Metro, establishing it as a basketball powerhouse with consistent NCAA Tournament representation; for instance, member institutions earned multiple bids annually, exemplified by Louisville's 1986 NCAA championship victory, which elevated the conference's national prestige.[12] In response to Title IX requirements, the league introduced women's basketball in 1979 as its first sponsored women's sport, expanding to additional women's competitions throughout the decade to promote gender equity and broaden athletic offerings.[1] Revenue-sharing models evolved to support these initiatives, with television deals and tournament hosting—such as the annual men's basketball event rotating among key venues—providing financial stability. Rivalries like Louisville-Memphis intensified during this era, driving fan engagement and competitive excellence without the disruptions of major exits until the early 1990s. By 1991, further expansions included VCU, Charlotte, and South Florida for the 1991-92 season, though VCU's tenure proved brief as it later departed for the Colonial Athletic Association, setting the stage for later contractions.[12]Dissolution and Merger into Conference USA
The Metro Conference's dissolution in the mid-1990s was precipitated by the broader wave of NCAA realignment, particularly the drive to form football-sponsoring alliances amid escalating television revenues following the 1984 Supreme Court decision in NCAA v. Board of Regents, which dismantled NCAA control over broadcasting rights.[14] Non-football conferences like the Metro faced instability as members sought stronger affiliations to share in football-generated income, with schools such as Memphis and Southern Miss—both operating Football Bowl Subdivision programs as independents—pushing for a unified conference structure to enhance scheduling, revenue distribution, and competitive viability.[14] The Big East Conference's expansions, including the addition of football-playing members like Rutgers and Temple in the early 1990s, intensified this pressure by consolidating power in all-sports leagues and marginalizing basketball-only entities.[15] In response, the Metro Conference merged with the Great Midwest Conference, a fellow non-football league formed in 1991, to create Conference USA (C-USA). The merger was officially announced on April 24, 1995, in Chicago, with former Metro commissioner Mike Slive appointed as C-USA's first leader, and it took effect for the 1995–96 academic year, dissolving both predecessor conferences.[16] The new 12-member entity comprised contributors from the Metro (Louisville, Southern Miss, South Florida, Tulane), the Great Midwest (Charlotte, Cincinnati, DePaul, Marquette, Memphis, Saint Louis, UAB), and Houston (from the collapsing Southwest Conference); it aimed to sponsor 19 sports, including football starting in 1996, to attract broader media deals estimated to exceed $1 million annually per school initially.[16][14] The merger absorbed the Metro's basketball-centric legacy into C-USA, fostering immediate competitive success; for instance, Cincinnati captured the inaugural C-USA men's basketball tournament title in 1996, defeating Marquette 85–83 in overtime and earning an NCAA Tournament berth.[17] Football sponsorship provided stability for programs like Southern Miss and Memphis, enabling bowl eligibility and revenue growth, while the conference's structure emphasized mid-major parity in non-revenue sports.[14] C-USA's formation influenced the modern landscape of mid-major athletics, establishing a model for hybrid conferences that balanced basketball prowess with football expansion and contributing to greater NCAA Tournament access for non-power programs during the 1990s and early 2000s.[15] Former Metro members maintained strong alumni networks and rivalries within C-USA, such as Louisville-Memphis, which bolstered fan engagement; however, the league underwent further transitions in the 2000s, with key departures like Cincinnati and Louisville to the Big East in 2005 prompting additions like Marshall and Rice to sustain its footprint.[14] No major unresolved assets or disputes arose from the merger, as both conferences' operations were seamlessly integrated under C-USA governance.[16]Membership
Charter Members
The Metro Conference, established in 1975, began with six charter member institutions, all urban public and private universities seeking competitive balance in non-football sports amid shifting national alignments. These schools—located in major Midwestern and Southern cities—shared a focus on basketball as the marquee sport, alongside baseball, track and field, and other Olympic disciplines, reflecting the conference's emphasis on metropolitan accessibility and academic compatibility rather than geographic sprawl. The founding emphasized proximity for travel efficiency and a commitment to elevating regional rivalries without the resource drain of football programs.[1] University of Cincinnati, located in Cincinnati, Ohio, was founded in 1819 as the first municipal university in the United States. With an enrollment of approximately 35,000 students around 1975, its athletic teams were known as the Bearcats. Cincinnati brought strong basketball traditions to the Metro, leveraging its history of national contention in the sport during the 1960s to anchor early conference play.[18] Georgia Institute of Technology, based in Atlanta, Georgia, was established in 1885 to advance technical education in the post-Civil War South. Enrollment stood at about 8,205 in 1975, and its teams competed as the Yellow Jackets. Georgia Tech contributed robust programs in basketball and baseball, drawing on its engineering prestige to foster competitive depth in individual sports like track.[19][6] University of Louisville, situated in Louisville, Kentucky, traces its origins to 1798 as Jefferson Seminary, evolving into a public research university. It had approximately 15,400 students in 1975-76, with athletic squads nicknamed the Cardinals. Louisville's primary strength lay in basketball, where coach Denny Crum's arrival in 1971 positioned it as an immediate powerhouse, emphasizing fast-paced offense and defensive intensity.[20][18] Memphis State University (now the University of Memphis), in Memphis, Tennessee, was founded in 1912 as a teacher-training institution. Its teams were the Tigers. The university excelled in basketball, building on Mid-South recruiting pipelines to challenge for early Metro titles with a physical, rebounding-oriented style.[18] Saint Louis University, a Jesuit institution in St. Louis, Missouri, was established in 1818 as the first university west of the Mississippi River. It enrolled about 10,000 students in 1975, with athletics under the Billikens moniker. Saint Louis offered solid basketball contributions, rooted in its Midwest heritage and emphasis on disciplined team play.[18] Tulane University, located in New Orleans, Louisiana, was chartered in 1834 through a bequest from philanthropist Paul Tulane. With an enrollment of approximately 8,000 in 1975, its teams were called the Green Wave. Tulane provided depth in basketball and baseball, capitalizing on its Southern location for recruiting and infusing the conference with Gulf Coast flair.[18] The charter members' decisions to form the Metro stemmed from a desire for stable, urban-centric competition following the dissolution of prior affiliations like the Missouri Valley Conference. Leaders prioritized non-football sports to align with institutional resources, enabling cost-effective scheduling among proximate cities such as Cincinnati, Louisville, and St. Louis. This urban focus facilitated fan engagement and media coverage without the logistical burdens of cross-country travel.[1] Among the charter group, two institutions departed early: Georgia Tech announced its exit at the end of the 1977-78 academic year to join the Atlantic Coast Conference, seeking expanded television exposure in the Atlanta market and integration of its football program into a major league structure. Saint Louis left in 1982 for the Midwestern Collegiate Conference (now Horizon League), driven by a preference for more regionally aligned competition that better suited its Midwest identity and reduced travel costs.[1][21]Later Members
Florida State University (Seminoles), located in Tallahassee, Florida, with an enrollment of approximately 21,600 students at the time, joined the Metro Conference in June 1976 as its seventh member. The addition came shortly after the conference's formation, providing Florida State—a public research university with a growing emphasis on intercollegiate athletics, particularly basketball and other non-football sports—with a stable competitive home while its football program remained independent. This move aligned with the conference's focus on regional southern institutions seeking enhanced visibility and scheduling stability in NCAA Division I competition. Florida State departed in September 1990 to join the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), seeking greater national exposure and football affiliation amid the era's conference realignments.[22][1][23] Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Hokies), based in Blacksburg, Virginia, and enrolling about 19,000 students in 1978, was admitted to the Metro Conference on May 3, 1978, to replace Georgia Tech and maintain the league's seven-member structure. As a land-grant institution with strong engineering and agriculture programs, Virginia Tech sought to end its 13-year stint as a major independent, gaining structured competition in basketball, baseball, and other sports to bolster its athletic profile and recruitment in the mid-Atlantic region. The Hokies' military heritage and rural setting added a distinct academic and cultural dimension to the conference's predominantly urban membership. Virginia Tech was voted out of the Metro in January 1995 by a majority of remaining members during the lead-up to the conference's merger, prompting its move to the Big East Conference later that year.[24][21][25] The University of Southern Mississippi (Golden Eagles), situated in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, with roughly 18,000 students upon joining, entered the Metro Conference on July 27, 1982, to fill the vacancy left by Saint Louis University's departure and preserve the seven-member balance. This public research university, known for its programs in education, health sciences, and performing arts, aimed to elevate its athletic presence in a conference that offered competitive opportunities in basketball and track without the demands of football affiliation, fitting well with Southern Miss's regional southern identity. The Golden Eagles remained until the conference's 1995 dissolution, participating in the merger that formed Conference USA (C-USA).[26][1] The University of South Carolina (Gamecocks), a flagship public university in Columbia, South Carolina, with an enrollment of about 17,000 students in 1983, joined the Metro on April 14, 1983, expanding the league to eight members for the first time. After leaving the ACC in 1971 and operating as an independent, South Carolina targeted the Metro to strengthen its non-football sports, especially basketball, where it sought consistent regional rivalries and postseason access to rebuild competitiveness following probation issues. Its large alumni base and emphasis on liberal arts complemented the conference's academic diversity. South Carolina exited in September 1990 to rejoin the Southeastern Conference (SEC), prioritizing football integration and southern prestige.[27][13][28][29] Virginia Commonwealth University (Rams), located in Richmond, Virginia, and enrolling approximately 21,800 students in 1991, was one of three Sun Belt Conference schools added to the Metro on April 3, 1991, effective for the 1991-92 academic year. This urban public research university, with strengths in health professions, arts, and business, joined amid the Metro's urgent expansion needs following the loss of four members (Florida State, South Carolina, Cincinnati, and Memphis State) to other leagues, aiming to secure Division I stability and enhanced basketball exposure in a larger market. VCU's innovative programs and diverse student body provided a modern urban fit to the conference. Like Virginia Tech, VCU was voted out in January 1995 during merger negotiations and subsequently joined the Colonial Athletic Association.[30][31][32][33][25] The University of South Florida (Bulls), a public research university in Tampa, Florida, with around 32,000 students in 1991, also transitioned from the Sun Belt to the Metro Conference in April 1991 to help stabilize the league after significant departures. USF, emphasizing innovation in marine science, engineering, and health, sought the move to advance its emerging athletic programs, particularly basketball and baseball, in a conference offering better television exposure and regional competition without immediate football pressures. Its proximity to growing Florida markets enhanced the Metro's southern footprint. USF participated in the 1995 merger into C-USA, continuing there until further realignments.[34][35][31][36] The University of North Carolina at Charlotte (49ers), based in Charlotte, North Carolina, and enrolling about 11,000 students in 1991, completed the 1991 expansion trio by leaving the Sun Belt for the Metro to address the conference's membership crisis. As a commuter-focused public research university strong in engineering, business, and energy studies, UNC Charlotte joined to gain access to higher-profile non-football sports competition, leveraging its location in a burgeoning economic hub to attract talent and visibility. The addition helped the Metro meet NCAA minimums for Division I status. UNC Charlotte was included in the 1995 formation of C-USA.[37][31][38][39]Membership Timeline
The Metro Conference, active from 1975 to 1995, experienced several membership fluctuations that shaped its composition over two decades. The conference began with six charter institutions and grew to a peak of eight full members in the mid-1980s before significant departures in the early 1990s led to its eventual merger. The timeline below details all major changes, including effective academic years for joins and departures.| Year | Joining Institutions | Leaving Institutions | Subsequent Conferences for Departing Institutions | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1975 | University of Cincinnati Georgia Institute of Technology University of Louisville Memphis State University Saint Louis University Tulane University | None | N/A | Charter members; conference founded as the Metropolitan Collegiate Athletic Conference, initially known as the "Metro 6."[13] |
| 1976 | Florida State University | None | N/A | First expansion, bringing membership to seven.[40] |
| 1978 | Virginia Tech | Georgia Institute of Technology | Atlantic Coast Conference | Replacement for Georgia Tech; membership remains at seven.[1] |
| 1982 | University of Southern Mississippi | Saint Louis University | Midwestern Collegiate Conference | Replacement for Saint Louis; membership remains at seven.[1][26][11] |
| 1983 | University of South Carolina | None | N/A | Expansion to eight members, the conference's peak full membership.[13] |
| 1985 | None | Tulane University | Independent (temporary) | Departure due to point-shaving scandal and suspension of men's basketball program. Membership drops to seven.[1] |
| 1989 | Tulane University | None | N/A | Readmission after resolution of scandal; membership returns to eight.[1] |
| 1991 | University of North Carolina at Charlotte University of South Florida Virginia Commonwealth University | Florida State University University of South Carolina University of Cincinnati Memphis State University | Florida State: Atlantic Coast Conference South Carolina: Southeastern Conference Cincinnati: Great Midwest Conference Memphis State: Great Midwest Conference | Net gain of one member (to eight total); changes effective for 1991–92 academic year, driven by football realignments.[31][41] |
| 1995 | None | Virginia Tech Virginia Commonwealth University | Virginia Tech: Big East Conference (non-football; football affiliation since 1991) Virginia Commonwealth University: Colonial Athletic Association | Institutions voted out prior to merger; conference dissolves, with remaining members (Charlotte, Louisville, Southern Miss, Tulane, South Florida) merging with Great Midwest Conference schools to form Conference USA.[25][42] |