Summit League
The Summit League is an NCAA Division I intercollegiate athletic conference comprising ten full-time member institutions primarily situated in the Midwestern United States, sponsoring championships in 19 sports without football.[1][2] Founded in 1982 as the Association of Mid-Continent Universities and later known as the Mid-Continent Conference, it rebranded to The Summit League in 2007 to reflect its competitive aspirations.[3][4] Headquartered in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, the conference is led by commissioner Josh Fenton and oversees a combined student enrollment approaching 100,000 across its members.[1][5] Its member schools have achieved 15 NCAA national championships, over 140 All-America honors, and notable postseason successes, including a Men's College World Series appearance by Oral Roberts in 2023 and multiple NCAA Tournament basketball victories.[3] The league emphasizes academic excellence, with 30 teams recently posting perfect NCAA Academic Progress Rates.[3]History
Founding and Early Development
The Association of Mid-Continent Universities (AMCU) was founded on June 18, 1982, as an all-sports athletic conference for NCAA Division I institutions primarily located in the Midwestern United States, distinct from prior football-only arrangements in the region.[6] The conference emerged to provide scheduling stability and competitive opportunities for its members, many of which were transitioning from Division II or independents, with an initial focus on non-revenue sports such as men's basketball, baseball, and track and field.[4] F.L. "Frosty" Ferzacca was appointed as the inaugural commissioner, overseeing operations from 1982 to 1988 and earning recognition as the league's "founding father" for establishing its administrative framework.[7] The eight charter members were Cleveland State University, Eastern Illinois University, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Northern Iowa, Southwest Missouri State University (now Missouri State University), Valparaiso University, Western Illinois University, and University of Wisconsin–Green Bay.[4] These institutions, spanning states like Illinois, Missouri, Wisconsin, and others, competed in a geographic footprint centered on the upper Midwest, facilitating regional rivalries without the inclusion of football, which some members did not sponsor at the Division I level. Early competition emphasized men's sports, with the first AMCU men's basketball tournament held in 1984, won by Wisconsin–Green Bay.[8] During its formative years, the AMCU navigated membership transitions as institutions sought alignment with larger conferences, but it achieved initial successes, including national tournament appearances in basketball and individual track achievements. By 1989, reflecting maturation and broader recognition, the conference rebranded as the Mid-Continent Conference to better encapsulate its scope and shed the acronym-heavy original name.[6] This period laid the groundwork for sustained Division I operations, producing early All-Americans and setting precedents for academic and athletic standards among mid-major programs.[3]Rebranding to Summit League and Initial Expansion
On May 15, 2007, the Mid-Continent Conference announced its rebranding to The Summit League, effective June 1, 2007, accompanied by a new logo and website at www.thesummitleague.org.[](https://gojacks.com/news/2007/5/15/927159) This transition marked the conference's third name change since its founding in 1982 as the Association of Mid-Continent Universities, followed by adoption of the Mid-Continent name in 1989.[3] The rebranding formed part of "The Summit Plan," a strategic initiative to position the league as a leading mid-major conference by prioritizing student-athlete welfare, academic success measured via Academic Progress Rate (APR) scores, increased home attendance, and elevated competitive performance, including targeted improvements in scheduling, staffing, budgeting, and ratings percentage index (RPI) rankings across sports.[6] Coinciding with the name change, the league expanded to ten full members effective July 1, 2007, with the addition of Indiana University–Purdue University Fort Wayne (IPFW), which accepted an invitation on August 30, 2006, to join for the 2007–08 academic year; this offset the prior departure of Valparaiso University to the Horizon League after the 2006–07 season.[6] The expanded membership included Centenary College, IPFW, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI), the University of Denver, the University of Missouri–Kansas City (UMKC), North Dakota State University, Oral Roberts University, the University of Nebraska Omaha, and Valparaiso (through June 30, 2007).[6] This adjustment aimed to stabilize and strengthen the conference's footprint primarily in the upper Midwest and Great Plains regions while fostering broader competitive depth.[3]Membership Instability and Contractions
Following the 2007 rebranding, the Summit League faced ongoing membership challenges amid broader collegiate realignment pressures. Oral Roberts University departed for the Southland Conference on July 1, 2012, after 15 years in the league, primarily to access different competitive landscapes and regional affiliations, though it returned on July 1, 2014, following an unsuccessful fit in the Southland.[9][10] A more permanent contraction occurred in 2017 when Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) announced its exit on June 28, effective July 1, citing geographic proximity to Horizon League schools as the primary driver to reduce travel and enhance rivalries.[11] This reduced full membership to eight institutions for the 2017–18 academic year, prompting league officials to express concerns over scheduling imbalances and long-term viability, particularly in non-revenue sports.[12] The departure highlighted vulnerabilities in retaining urban Midwest programs amid competition from conferences with stronger media exposure and basketball histories. The most recent contraction came on May 12, 2023, when founding member Western Illinois University announced its withdrawal, effective June 30, 2023, for all non-football sports, to join the Ohio Valley Conference for better geographic alignment, lower travel expenses, and enhanced regional competition.[13][14] Western Illinois, which had competed in the league since its 1982 inception as the Association of Mid-Continent Universities, cited data from prior exits showing the benefits of consolidated footprints.[15] This move dropped full membership to nine and underscored persistent instability, as the league navigated odd-numbered rosters and uneven sport sponsorships without immediate replacements.[16] These exits, driven by pragmatic factors like logistics and competition rather than financial windfalls, contrasted with the league's expansion efforts but reflected systemic realignment dynamics favoring proximity and established rivalries over dispersed memberships.[17]Stabilization and Recent Growth Initiatives
Following a period of membership contractions in the early 2010s, including the departures of institutions such as Oakland University to the Horizon League in 2011 and the University of Missouri–Kansas City to the Western Athletic Conference in 2013, the Summit League stabilized its core by emphasizing long-term commitments from regional public universities in the upper Midwest, particularly North Dakota State University, South Dakota State University, the University of South Dakota, and the University of North Dakota, which provided geographic cohesion and consistent participation across multiple sports.[18] The league further bolstered stability in 2014 by readmitting the University of Missouri–Kansas City as a full member after its one-year stint elsewhere, restoring membership to eight institutions and enabling sustained sponsorship of 19 championship sports.[3] Recent growth initiatives have included the addition of the University of St. Thomas (Minnesota) as a full member effective July 1, 2021, expanding the conference to 10 institutions temporarily and introducing a competitive program transitioning from NCAA Division III, with St. Thomas achieving full Division I postseason eligibility for the 2025–26 academic year.[19] In February 2024, the league unveiled a new strategic plan titled "On The Rise," which prioritizes elevating competitive excellence through enhanced student-athlete opportunities, increased engagement, and operational improvements to support long-term viability amid broader NCAA realignment pressures.[20] Complementary efforts involved expanding media rights agreements in August 2023 with CBS Sports and Midco for broader national distribution of games, and enlarging the men's and women's basketball postseason tournaments to 10 teams starting in 2023 to accommodate growth and boost visibility.[21][22] To address football operations, where the league sponsors a non-scholarship program among select members, the Summit League entered a joint management partnership with the Missouri Valley Football Conference in May 2025, creating unified governance and operational efficiencies to enhance stability and resource allocation without altering membership structures.[23] Internal enhancements, such as a revamped office structure and addition of key staff including a director of sport and championship operations in September 2025, further support these initiatives by streamlining administration and championships hosting.[24] These measures have maintained membership at nine full-time institutions as of 2025, with a combined enrollment nearing 100,000 students, positioning the conference for sustained competitiveness in Division I athletics.[3]Membership
Current Full Members
The Summit League comprises nine full member institutions as of the 2025–26 academic year, each participating in the majority of the conference's 19 sponsored sports.[25] These universities are primarily public institutions located across the Midwestern United States and Great Plains, with a focus on NCAA Division I competition.[26]
The University of St. Thomas achieved full NCAA Division I membership status in June 2025, completing its transition period after joining the league in July 2021.[19][27] All full members maintain eligibility for conference championships and NCAA postseason opportunities in sponsored sports.[2]
Current Associate Members
The Summit League includes associate members that compete exclusively in designated sponsored sports rather than across the full slate of conference offerings. These affiliations enable the league to field competitive fields in niche programs while accommodating institutions affiliated primarily with other conferences. As of the 2025–26 academic year, associate memberships total seven institutions across sports including men's tennis, men's golf, men's soccer, and swimming and diving.[25]| Institution | Location | Primary Conference Affiliation | Sports in Summit League | Year Joined |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drake University | Des Moines, Iowa | Missouri Valley Conference | Men's tennis | 2017 |
| Illinois State University | Normal, Illinois | Missouri Valley Conference | Men's tennis | 2017 |
| University of Northern Colorado | Greeley, Colorado | Big Sky Conference | Men's golf | 2024 |
| Weber State University | Ogden, Utah | Big Sky Conference | Men's golf | 2024 |
| University of Delaware | Newark, Delaware | Coastal Athletic Association | Men's soccer | 2025 |
| University of Massachusetts Amherst | Amherst, Massachusetts | Atlantic 10 Conference | Men's soccer | 2025 |
| Eastern Illinois University | Charleston, Illinois | Ohio Valley Conference | Swimming and diving | 2005 |
Former Full and Associate Members
The Summit League, originally established as the Association of Mid-Continent Universities in 1982 and rebranded from the Mid-Continent Conference in 2007, has seen multiple full member departures driven by factors including realignment to larger conferences, financial considerations, or transitions to other divisions. Notable former full members include Centenary College of Louisiana, which joined in 2003 and departed after the 2010–11 academic year to reclassify to NCAA Division III amid efforts to stabilize finances, subsequently affiliating with the American Southwest Conference effective July 1, 2011.[33] [34] Valparaiso University, a member since 1990 under the conference's prior identity, left after the 2016–17 season to join the Missouri Valley Conference, accepting an invitation announced on May 25, 2017, with membership effective July 1, 2017, as part of broader Midwestern realignment trends.[35] Western Illinois University, a charter member since 1982, withdrew effective after the 2022–23 season, announcing its departure on May 12, 2023, and transitioning to the Ohio Valley Conference for all sports starting July 1, 2023, primarily to align with regional institutions offering scholarship football.[13] [36] Chicago State University, which joined in 1994, departed after the 2005–06 season to compete as an independent, citing operational challenges including eligibility issues and conference championship participation disputes.[37]| Institution | Location | Membership Years | Reason for Departure / Next Affiliation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Centenary College | Shreveport, LA | 2003–2011 | Reclassification to NCAA Division III; American Southwest Conference[33] |
| Chicago State University | Chicago, IL | 1994–2006 | Operational and eligibility issues; independent status |
| Valparaiso University | Valparaiso, IN | 1990–2017 | Realignment; Missouri Valley Conference[35] |
| Western Illinois University | Macomb, IL | 1982–2023 | Regional alignment; Ohio Valley Conference[13] |
Membership Timeline and Geographic Footprint
The Summit League originated in 1982 as the Association of Mid-Continent Universities (AMCU), an NCAA Division I athletic conference comprising institutions primarily from the central United States. It transitioned to the Mid-Continent Conference name in 1989 before rebranding to the Summit League effective June 1, 2007, a change that aligned with strategic expansions aimed at enhancing competitive depth.[3][6] Membership evolution has featured periodic expansions and contractions to maintain viability amid realignments in Division I athletics. Notable additions post-rebranding include North Dakota State University and South Dakota State University in 2007, the University of South Dakota in 2011, the University of Nebraska at Omaha in 2012, the University of Denver (for non-hockey sports) in 2013, the University of North Dakota in 2018, and the University of St. Thomas (Minnesota) in 2021 following its transition from Division III. The University of Missouri–Kansas City rejoined in 2020 after departing in 2013, while Oral Roberts University returned to full membership in 2018 after a brief exit. Departures have included Western Illinois University, which transitioned to the Ohio Valley Conference in 2023, reflecting ongoing adjustments to stabilize the conference at nine full members.[1][39]| Year | Membership Change |
|---|---|
| 2007 | Added North Dakota State and South Dakota State |
| 2011 | Added South Dakota |
| 2012 | Added Omaha |
| 2013 | Added Denver (non-hockey); Kansas City departed |
| 2018 | Added North Dakota; Oral Roberts rejoined full |
| 2020 | Kansas City rejoined |
| 2021 | Added St. Thomas (non-hockey) |
| 2023 | Western Illinois departed |
Sponsored Sports
Overview of Sponsored Sports
The Summit League sponsors championships in 19 sports, nine for men and ten for women, with all full member institutions required to participate in at least basketball for both sexes.[2] Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, swimming and diving, tennis, and track and field (encompassing indoor and outdoor seasons).[2] Women's sports consist of basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, and volleyball.[2] These championships are held annually, with formats varying by sport—such as single-elimination tournaments for team sports like basketball and volleyball, or aggregate scoring meets for individual events like track and field.[41] The conference emphasizes competitive balance across disciplines, with automatic NCAA Tournament bids awarded to winners in eligible sports; for instance, the men's and women's basketball champions receive bids to the NCAA Division I tournament.[2] Track and field events are divided into indoor (typically February) and outdoor (May) championships, while swimming and diving culminates in a February meet.[42] The Summit League does not sponsor football or wrestling, leaving those programs at member schools to affiliate independently, such as through the Missouri Valley Football Conference for gridiron competition.[2] Associate members supplement participation in select sports like men's soccer or women's swimming where full members may not field teams.[2]Men's Sports Participation by Institution
The Summit League sponsors championship competition in eight men's sports: baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, swimming and diving, tennis, and track and field (indoor and outdoor).[43] All nine full member institutions field teams in men's basketball and men's golf.[44] Participation varies in the other sports, with seven institutions competing in cross country and track and field, five in baseball and swimming and diving, three in soccer and tennis.[45][46]| Institution | Baseball | Basketball | Cross Country | Golf | Soccer | Swimming & Diving | Tennis | Track & Field |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Denver | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
| Kansas City | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
| North Dakota | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| North Dakota State | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | Yes |
| Omaha | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Oral Roberts | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | Yes |
| South Dakota | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| South Dakota State | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| St. Thomas | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes |
Women's Sports Participation by Institution
The Summit League sponsors women's basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, and volleyball, with varying levels of institutional participation among its nine full members.[2] All institutions field teams in basketball and volleyball.[51][52] Soccer features teams from all nine members.[53] Cross country and outdoor track and field each include eight institutions, excluding Denver.[45][46] Golf involves eight members, omitting Kansas City.[54] Softball and swimming and diving each have seven participants, excluding North Dakota State and Kansas City in both cases.[55][50] Tennis is limited to four institutions: Denver, North Dakota, Omaha, and Oral Roberts.[56]| Institution | Basketball | Cross Country | Golf | Soccer | Softball | Swimming & Diving | Tennis | Track & Field | Volleyball |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Denver | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Kansas City | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| North Dakota | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| North Dakota State | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Omaha | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Oral Roberts | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| South Dakota | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| South Dakota State | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| St. Thomas | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
Football
Football Conference Affiliation and Structure
The Summit League does not sponsor American football as a conference-administered sport, with member institutions instead affiliating their programs with external conferences for competition. Among its full members as of the 2025–26 academic year, five institutions field NCAA Division I football teams: North Dakota State University, South Dakota State University, the University of South Dakota, and the University of North Dakota compete in the Missouri Valley Football Conference (MVFC), an FCS-level league operated in partnership with the Missouri Valley Conference; the University of St. Thomas participates in the non-scholarship Pioneer Football League (PFL), also at the FCS level.[57][58] The remaining Summit League members—Denver, Kansas City, Omaha, and Oral Roberts—do not sponsor football programs.[58] On May 5, 2025, the Summit League entered a formal partnership with the MVFC, establishing a joint management model that integrates Summit institutions into the league's governance and operations alongside the Missouri Valley Conference. This structure addresses the longstanding overlap, as four Summit members already comprise a significant portion of MVFC rosters, and ensures streamlined administration for scheduling, championships, and playoffs. The agreement stipulates that any future Summit League member launching a football program will automatically join the MVFC, promoting alignment without requiring the Summit to independently sponsor the sport.[59][60] This model maintains the MVFC's 11-team format for the 2025 season while enhancing resource sharing, such as media rights coordination and facility support, amid regional competitive dynamics.[61][57]Football Championship History and Performance Metrics
The predecessor to the Summit League, the Association of Mid-Continent Universities (later renamed the Mid-Continent Conference), sponsored NCAA Division II football from 1978 to 1980 and transitioned to Division I-AA (now FCS) from 1981 to 1984.[62] During this period, the conference fielded competitive programs, with Eastern Illinois University claiming the inaugural title in 1978 en route to a perfect 13-0 season and the NCAA Division II national championship, defeating Delaware 10-9 in the title game.[63][64] Eastern Illinois repeated as conference champions in 1983, advancing to the I-AA playoffs before a first-round loss to Indiana State.[65] Performance metrics from the era reflect modest national impact, with conference teams posting a combined approximate .450 winning percentage in league play across the seven seasons and securing at least three NCAA playoff berths, including Eastern Illinois's deep 1978 run (semifinal win over Youngstown State) and 1980 appearance.[66] Youngstown State and Western Illinois emerged as other consistent performers, combining for multiple top finishes, though no additional national titles materialized.[62] The conference discontinued football sponsorship after 1984 amid realignment, as members like Western Illinois shifted to the Gateway Football Conference (a precursor to aspects of the modern MVFC).[67] Since 1985, the Summit League has not sponsored football championships, focusing instead on other sports while affiliate institutions maintain independent football affiliations.[59] Current full members with programs, such as the University of South Dakota and University of North Dakota, compete in the Missouri Valley Football Conference (MVFC), where USD won the 2024 title with an 11-2 overall record and FCS playoff appearance.[68] In May 2025, the Summit League and MVFC announced a joint governance model, enabling Summit members sponsoring scholarship football to affiliate with the MVFC without the league assuming direct championship oversight.[59] St. Thomas, another member, fields a non-scholarship team in the Pioneer Football League, posting a 7-4 record in 2024 but no conference title. Overall, Summit-affiliated football programs have averaged fewer than one FCS playoff berth per decade since the discontinuation, contrasting with the MVFC's dominance in national contention.[60]Basketball
Men's Basketball Dominance and Tournament Format
The Summit League men's basketball postseason tournament employs a single-elimination format contested over five days in early March at the Denny Sanford Premier Center in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.[69] Seeding is based on regular-season conference winning percentage, with tiebreakers including head-to-head results, winning percentage against shared opponents, and overall Division I winning percentage. For the nine-team league, the format typically features one opening-round game between the No. 8 and No. 9 seeds on Wednesday, followed by quarterfinal matchups on Thursday and Friday, semifinals on Saturday, and the championship on Sunday; higher seeds host earlier rounds in a bracket structure that advances winners to subsequent stages.[70] The tournament champion receives the conference's automatic berth to the NCAA Division I tournament, while all games are broadcast on Midco Sports Network or streamed via the Summit League Network.[69] Men's basketball stands out as the Summit League's most prominent sport, with the conference producing 40 NCAA Tournament teams across 43 seasons since its origins as the Mid-Continent Conference in 1982.[71] This output equates to nearly one bid per year, predominantly via the automatic qualifier, reflecting sustained internal competitiveness despite limited at-large selections.[71] However, the league's NCAA record stands at 12 wins against 40 losses, underscoring challenges against higher-major opponents while highlighting the value of tournament access for mid-major programs.[71] Success has been concentrated among a core group of institutions, particularly since the league's rebranding in 2007, where South Dakota State, Oral Roberts, and North Dakota State have claimed the majority of tournament titles and driven NCAA appearances through strong regular-season play and postseason execution.[72] For instance, South Dakota State captured the 2017 and 2018 championships, advancing to the NCAA field both years, while Oral Roberts reached the Sweet 16 as a No. 15 seed in 2021 after winning the 2021 title.[72] North Dakota State followed with titles in 2019 and 2020, securing bids each time.[72] This pattern of repeat contenders has fostered a high floor of talent but limited parity, with emerging programs like Omaha breaking through in 2025 by sweeping the regular season and tournament for their first title and NCAA bid, amassing 22 wins to set a Division I-era program record.[73] Such dominance by upper-Midwest institutions correlates with robust local recruiting pipelines and coaching stability, enabling consistent performance metrics like top-100 national rankings in offensive or defensive efficiency for title winners.[74]Men's Basketball NCAA Tournament Outcomes
Teams from the Summit League, formerly known as the Mid-Continent Conference, have earned automatic bids to the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament 44 times through the 2025 edition by winning the conference's postseason tournament, with zero at-large selections in league history.[71] The conference's representatives hold a combined tournament record of 10–44, reflecting consistent first-round exits in the majority of appearances.[71] This performance underscores the challenges faced by mid-major programs in advancing against higher-seeded power-conference opponents, with seeds typically ranging from 12 to 16.[71] The most successful outings include Cleveland State's 1986 run to the Sweet Sixteen as a 14 seed, where the Vikings defeated No. 3 Indiana State 83–82 and No. 6 Saint Joseph's 75–67 before losing 83–71 to No. 11 Navy. Oral Roberts replicated this feat in 2021 as a No. 15 seed, securing upsets over No. 2 Ohio (75–72 in overtime) and No. 6 Florida (81–78) en route to a 72–107 Sweet Sixteen defeat against No. 3 Arkansas. Valparaiso, during its Mid-Continent tenure, reached the second round in 1998 as a No. 13 seed after Bryce Drew's buzzer-beating three-pointer defeated No. 4 Ole Miss 70–69, followed by a 74–68 loss to No. 8 Rhode Island; the team also made four other first-round exits (1996, 2000, 2002, 2004). Additional second-round advances occurred for Northern Iowa (1990, 1–1), Oakland (2011, defeating Alabama State before losing to Texas), and North Dakota State (2019, 1–1).[71] South Dakota State leads active members with seven appearances (2012, 2016–2018, 2022–2024), yet holds a 0–7 record, including a 57–66 first-round loss to Providence in 2022.[75] Oral Roberts appeared five times (2006, 2021, 2023, and two others), achieving the conference's only multi-win tournament since 1986 in 2021. In 2025, Omaha made its first Division I appearance as a No. 15 seed, falling 53–83 to No. 2 Saint John's in the first round after clinching the league title.[76] No Summit League team has reached the Elite Eight or further, and the lack of at-large bids highlights the conference's limited success in national metrics like NET rankings and strength of schedule.[71]Women's Basketball Championships and Competitive Trends
The Summit League women's basketball tournament, conducted annually in early March at a predetermined host site such as the Denny Sanford PREMIER Center in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, determines the conference's automatic qualifier for the NCAA Division I tournament.[77] The event features all league members in a single-elimination format, with seeding based on regular-season performance.[78] South Dakota State has dominated the tournament landscape, securing 12 championships as of 2025, including a five-year streak from 2009 to 2013 and three consecutive titles from 2023 to 2025.[79][80] In the 2025 final, the top-seeded Jackrabbits defeated Oral Roberts 84-68, capping an undefeated 16-0 conference regular season and extending their overall winning streak to 18 games.[80][81] Earlier successes include Oral Roberts' multiple titles in the late 1990s and early 2000s, alongside wins by programs like Oakland and Youngstown State during the conference's Mid-Continent era prior to the 2007 rebranding. Competitive trends highlight South Dakota State's sustained excellence, with the Jackrabbits earning 11 NCAA Tournament bids and advancing to the Sweet Sixteen in 2019—the program's deepest postseason run.[82] League teams have collectively secured 35 NCAA appearances since the conference's Division I inception, though with a 9-35 overall record, reflecting reliable automatic qualification but limited advancement against higher-major opponents.[83] A milestone occurred in 2019 when two Summit League squads reached the NCAA field for the first time since 1994, underscoring occasional breakthroughs amid SDSU's hegemony.[3] Runners-up like Oral Roberts and South Dakota have mounted challenges, contributing to tighter semifinals and finals in recent years, while mid-tier teams such as Kansas City and North Dakota State have shown incremental progress in regular-season contention.[84][85]Facilities and Infrastructure
Primary Arenas and Stadiums
The primary arenas of Summit League institutions primarily host men's and women's basketball, volleyball, and wrestling, with on-campus facilities emphasizing fan proximity and functionality for NCAA Division I competition. Capacities vary from intimate settings under 2,000 seats to larger venues exceeding 10,000, reflecting the conference's regional footprint and resource differences among public and private members. These arenas underwent renovations or new constructions in recent years to enhance recruiting and game-day experiences, such as SDSU's 2024 upgrade and St. Thomas's 2025 opening.| Institution | Primary Arena | Capacity | Year Opened/Renovated | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Denver | Hamilton Gymnasium | ~3,500 | 1996 (within Ritchie Center complex) | Secondary use of Magness Arena for select events; focused on basketball since 2019.[86] |
| Drake University | Knapp Center | 7,000 | 1992 | Multi-purpose with basketball court configuration; hosts volleyball as well.[87] |
| Kansas City Roos (UMKC) | Swinney Recreation Center | 1,500 | 1975 (ongoing use) | Smallest in conference; multi-use rec center with competition court.[88] |
| North Dakota State | Scheels Center | 5,460 | 2016 (renovation) | Dedicated basketball and wrestling venue within Sanford Health Athletic Complex.[89] |
| University of North Dakota | Betty Engelstad Sioux Center | 3,300 | 2004 | Wood flooring; also for volleyball; adjacent to Ralph Engelstad Arena.[90] |
| Omaha | Baxter Arena | 7,500 | 2015 | Shared with hockey and volleyball; community event space.[91] |
| Oral Roberts University | Mabee Center | 10,154 | 1972 | Largest in conference; elliptical design optimized for basketball sightlines.[92] |
| South Dakota State | First Bank & Trust Arena | 5,000 | 2024 (renovation/expansion from Frost Arena, 1973) | Enhanced amenities including premium seating; hosts wrestling.[93] |
| University of South Dakota | Sanford Coyote Sports Center | 6,000 | 2016 | Includes practice courts and performance spaces; volleyball compatible.[94] |