Sun Conference
The Sun Conference is an athletic conference affiliated with the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), consisting of ten member institutions primarily in Florida and Georgia that compete in 24 championship sports.[1][2] Founded in 1990 as the Florida Intercollegiate Athletic Conference with eight member schools in Florida, the league initially focused on providing competitive opportunities for NAIA institutions in the region.[1] It was renamed the Florida Sun Conference in 1992 to reflect its growing scope, and in 2008, it adopted its current name, The Sun Conference, to better accommodate expanding membership beyond Florida, including schools in Georgia and South Carolina.[1][3] By 2024, the conference had grown to ten full members, with the addition of New College of Florida marking a recent expansion that enhanced its diversity and competitive depth.[4] The conference sponsors championships in a wide array of NAIA sports, including baseball, men's and women's basketball, beach volleyball, esports, men's and women's cross country, football, flag football, men's and women's golf, men's and women's indoor and outdoor track and field, women's lacrosse, men's and women's soccer, softball, men's and women's swimming, men's and women's tennis, and women's volleyball.[1][5] Operating as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, it is headquartered in its current form under Commissioner Dustin Wilke and emphasizes academic and athletic excellence among its members.[1] Notable achievements include producing multiple NAIA national champions, particularly in football and track and field, underscoring its role as a prominent regional force in small-college athletics.[6]Overview
Conference Profile
The Sun Conference (TSC) is a collegiate athletic conference affiliated with the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), comprising eleven full member institutions located across Florida and Georgia.[7] Established in 1990 as the Florida Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, it has evolved into a competitive league focused on fostering athletic excellence, academic achievement, and character development among student-athletes in the southeastern United States.[1] Led by Commissioner Dustin Wilke, the conference administers championships in 24 NAIA sports for men and women, including baseball, men's and women's basketball, beach volleyball, cross country, football, golf, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, track and field, and volleyball, among others.[7][8] This broad sponsorship reflects the TSC's commitment to diverse athletic opportunities, with member schools competing at both regular-season and postseason levels, including national NAIA tournaments.[1] The TSC operates with a headquarters in the region and maintains a strong emphasis on compliance with NAIA standards, including eligibility rules and sportsmanship initiatives.[9] Its member institutions, which are primarily private four-year colleges and universities, benefit from the conference's structure that supports regional rivalries while enabling national visibility.[1]Institutional and Geographic Scope
The Sun Conference encompasses eleven full member institutions affiliated with the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), all of which are four-year colleges and universities offering a range of undergraduate programs. Nine are private nonprofit institutions, often with faith-based missions rooted in Christian denominations such as Catholic, Baptist, and Assemblies of God, while two—the College of Coastal Georgia and New College of Florida—are public institutions. The conference's institutional scope emphasizes small to mid-sized schools, with typical undergraduate enrollments between 1,000 and 4,000 students, focusing on liberal arts, professional training, and specialized fields like art and design.[10] Geographically, the conference is concentrated in the southeastern United States, with eight members in Florida and three in Georgia, reflecting its origins as the Florida Sun Conference before expanding northward. This regional focus facilitates efficient travel for competitions, primarily within a 500-mile radius centered on central Florida. The member institutions are:| Institution | Location | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Ave Maria University | Ave Maria, FL | Private (Catholic) |
| College of Coastal Georgia | Brunswick, GA | Public |
| Florida Memorial University | Miami Gardens, FL | Private (Baptist) |
| Keiser University | West Palm Beach, FL | Private |
| New College of Florida | Sarasota, FL | Public (state honors college) |
| Savannah College of Art and Design | Savannah, GA | Private (art and design focus) |
| Southeastern University | Lakeland, FL | Private (Assemblies of God) |
| St. Thomas University | Miami Gardens, FL | Private (Catholic) |
| Thomas University | Thomasville, GA | Private (Baptist) |
| Warner University | Lake Wales, FL | Private (Church of God) |
| Webber International University | Babson Park, FL | Private (Church of God) |
History
Formation and Early Development
The Sun Conference traces its origins to March 1990, when it was established as the Florida Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (FIAC) to serve small institutions affiliated with the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) in Florida.[3] The conference was created amid a need for regional competition among NAIA members, focusing initially on providing structured athletic opportunities for its charter institutions without the scale of larger divisions.[1] The eight founding members included Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Flagler College, Florida Memorial University, Nova Southeastern University, Palm Beach Atlantic University, St. Thomas University, Webber International University, and Warner University (then known as Warner Southern College).[3] From its inception, the FIAC emphasized balanced competition and postseason qualification pathways within the NAIA structure.[1] Early development saw steady growth, with the conference expanding to nine members in 1994 through the addition of Northwood University Florida, which strengthened its footprint in central Florida and enhanced competitive depth.[3] This period marked the league's consolidation as a key NAIA entity.[13] By the mid-1990s, the FIAC had established a tradition of NAIA postseason participation, with teams regularly advancing to regional tournaments and contributing to the broader development of intercollegiate athletics in Florida's smaller institutions.[13] The conference's early focus on administrative stability and equitable scheduling laid the groundwork for future expansions, positioning it as a supportive home for NAIA programs seeking competitive balance over rapid growth.[1]Name Changes and Rebranding
The Sun Conference traces its origins to March 1990, when it was established as the Florida Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (FIAC), a league formed to support small independent institutions within the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA).[14][3] In 1992, the conference adopted the name Florida Sun Conference, reflecting its initial focus on Florida-based member schools and emphasizing the state's sunny climate as a thematic element.[3] By the mid-2000s, the conference had begun expanding beyond Florida, adding institutions from Georgia and South Carolina, which prompted a significant rebranding. On August 18, 2008, it officially changed its name to The Sun Conference to better encompass its growing geographic diversity and move away from a Florida-centric identity.[3][13] This shift marked the first major update to the conference's branding in over a decade and aligned with its evolution into a regional NAIA powerhouse.[15] In June 2021, The Sun Conference underwent a comprehensive rebranding effort, unveiling a new visual identity developed in partnership with Enliven Agency, LLC. The updated design featured a redesigned primary logo with sun rays forming a dynamic "C," a bold angular typeface, a refreshed color palette including gold, orange, and slate tones, and sport-specific championship marks. This initiative, the first branding refresh since 2008, aimed to position the conference as the premier NAIA league by capturing core values such as leadership, unity, integrity, excellence, diversity, strength, respect, confidence, and opportunity, while signaling entry into a new era of growth and innovation.[15] The rebranding also included a website redesign to enhance user experience and accessibility.[16]Expansion, Contractions, and Recent Changes
Following its formation in 1990 with eight charter member institutions, The Sun Conference underwent steady expansion in the early 2000s to bolster its competitive depth within the NAIA. Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD Savannah) joined as a full member in 2004, transitioning from NCAA Division III and bringing established programs in sports such as lacrosse and golf.[17] In 2006, Edward Waters College (now Edward Waters University) joined as a full member. However, that same year, Flagler College departed for the NCAA Division II.[3] The University of South Carolina Beaufort (USCB) joined as a full member in 2008, marking the conference's initial expansion into South Carolina and adding programs in basketball, soccer, and other sports.[18] A significant wave of additions occurred in 2009, when the conference welcomed Johnson & Wales University–Florida and Southeastern University as full members, effective for the 2009–10 academic year; both institutions added depth in basketball, soccer, and other core sports. Ave Maria University joined concurrently as an associate member in soccer, basketball, volleyball, and golf, later achieving full membership status upon accreditation.[19] This expansion aligned with the league's strategy to enhance regional competition among Florida-based NAIA schools. In 2010, Edward Waters left as a full member to join the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference but later affiliated with The Sun Conference for football. Further growth continued into the 2010s. Thomas University became a full member for the 2012–13 academic year, located in Thomasville, Georgia, and expanding the conference's geographic footprint beyond Florida while sponsoring sports like baseball and softball.[14][13] In 2017, the College of Coastal Georgia joined as a full member, effective for the 2017–18 season, adding programs in basketball and soccer to the league's roster. These additions helped stabilize the conference at around 10 full members by the late 2010s.[20] Contractions began to impact the conference in the 2020s amid institutional challenges. Johnson & Wales University–Florida departed after the 2019–20 academic year when the university announced the closure of its Miami campus as part of a broader restructuring away from hospitality-focused education.[21] In 2022, USCB left The Sun Conference to transition to NCAA Division II and join the Continental Athletic Conference.[22] More recently, Thomas University left for the Southern States Athletic Conference effective July 1, 2023, citing opportunities for enhanced competition in multiple sports; this reduced the full membership temporarily to nine institutions.[13] To offset these losses, the conference announced an expansion in 2023 with the addition of New College of Florida as a full member, effective July 1, 2024. Located in Sarasota, the public liberal arts institution introduced varsity athletics in cross country, track and field, soccer, basketball, and other sports, marking its entry into NAIA competition and restoring the league to 10 full members.[23] As of November 2025, no further membership changes have been announced, though the conference continues to explore affiliate opportunities in emerging sports like flag football.[23]Membership
Current Full Members
The Sun Conference, an NAIA athletic conference, comprises nine full member institutions as of the 2025 academic year, with eight based in Florida and one in Georgia. These institutions sponsor a variety of the conference's 24 championship sports, contributing to competitive balance across disciplines such as basketball, soccer, baseball, softball, and track and field. Full membership entitles schools to participate in all conference activities, including championships and governance, while fostering regional rivalries in the southeastern United States.[24][7] The following table lists the current full members, including their primary locations:| Institution | Location |
|---|---|
| Ave Maria University | Ave Maria, Florida |
| Florida Memorial University | Miami Gardens, Florida |
| Keiser University | West Palm Beach, Florida |
| New College of Florida | Sarasota, Florida |
| Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD Savannah) | Savannah, Georgia |
| Southeastern University | Lakeland, Florida |
| St. Thomas University | Miami Gardens, Florida |
| Warner University | Lake Wales, Florida |
| Webber International University | Babson Park, Florida |
Current Affiliate Members
The Sun Conference maintains affiliate memberships in specific sports to enhance competition, particularly in emerging or regionally focused disciplines like beach volleyball and women's flag football. These affiliates are institutions that are full members of other NAIA conferences but compete in one or more Sun-sponsored sports without full conference affiliation. As of the 2025 season, affiliates are concentrated in these two sports, allowing for broader geographic representation across the southeastern United States.Beach Volleyball
The Sun Conference beach volleyball program features the largest number of affiliates, drawing participants from Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, and South Carolina. These institutions joined to bolster the league's depth following the sport's addition as an NAIA emerging sport in 2016. Current affiliates include:| Institution | Location | Primary Conference | Year Joined Sun (Beach Volleyball) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brenau University | Gainesville, GA | Appalachian Athletic Conference | 2024 (for 2025 season) |
| Loyola University New Orleans | New Orleans, LA | Southern States Athletic Conference | 2023 |
| University of Mobile | Mobile, AL | Southern States Athletic Conference | 2021 |
| Spartanburg Methodist College | Spartanburg, SC | Region 10 (NJCAA) | 2024 (for 2025 season) |
| St. Andrews University | Laurinburg, NC | Conference Carolinas (NCAA DII, but NAIA affiliate in some sports) | 2021 |
| Truett McConnell University | Cleveland, GA | Appalachian Athletic Conference | 2021 |
| William Carey University | Hattiesburg, MS | Southern States Athletic Conference | 2021 |
Women's Flag Football
Women's flag football, an NAIA championship sport since 2024, includes three affiliate members from Georgia, expanding the conference footprint beyond its core Florida and Georgia full members. These institutions joined ahead of the inaugural NAIA season to help establish competitive balance. Current affiliates are:| Institution | Location | Primary Conference |
|---|---|---|
| Life University | Marietta, GA | Mid-South Conference |
| Point University | West Point, GA | Southern States Athletic Conference |
| Reinhardt University | Waleska, GA | Appalachian Athletic Conference |
| Thomas University | Thomasville, GA | Southern States Athletic Conference |
Former Full Members
The Sun Conference, formerly known as the Florida Sun Conference, has seen several full member institutions depart over its history, primarily due to transitions to NCAA Division II or shifts to other NAIA conferences for competitive or strategic reasons. These changes reflect the fluid nature of NAIA athletics, where schools often seek alignment with larger divisions or regional peers. The following outlines the former full members, including their tenure and reasons for departure.[25]| Institution | Location | Joined | Left | Subsequent Affiliation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palm Beach Atlantic University | West Palm Beach, FL | 1990 | 2002 | NCAA Division II independent, later Sunshine State Conference (SSC) |
| Flagler College | St. Augustine, FL | 1990 | 2006 | NCAA Division II, later Peach Belt Conference |
| Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University | Daytona Beach, FL | 1990 | 2015 | NCAA Division II, Sunshine State Conference |
| University of South Carolina Beaufort | Beaufort, SC | 2008 | 2022 | NCAA Division II provisional via Continental Athletic Conference, later Peach Belt Conference |
| Thomas University | Thomasville, GA | 2012 | 2023 | Southern States Athletic Conference (SSAC) |
Former Affiliate Members
The Sun Conference has had a limited history of affiliate membership, primarily introduced to bolster competition in emerging or single-sport programs. Two institutions served as affiliate members for football during the conference's inaugural years sponsoring the sport. Edward Waters College (now Edward Waters University), located in Jacksonville, Florida, joined the Sun Conference as a football-only affiliate member in 2014, marking the league's first season sponsoring the sport. Previously a full member of the conference until departing for the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference in 2010, Edward Waters competed in the Sun Division of the Mid-South Conference alignment starting in the 2016 season, ending its affiliate tenure after the 2015 campaign.[31][32] Point University, based in West Point, Georgia, also entered as a football-only affiliate in 2014 for its second season of varsity play. The Skyhawks achieved notable success, including a 5–0 conference record and the 2015 Sun Conference championship. Like Edward Waters, Point transitioned to the Mid-South Conference's Sun Division as a football affiliate beginning in 2016, concluding its Sun Conference affiliation after 2015.[31][33][34] These affiliations helped establish football within the Sun Conference, which continues to sponsor the sport among its full members. No other former affiliate members have been documented in the conference's history as of 2025.Membership Timeline
The Sun Conference, originally established as the Florida Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (FIAC) in March 1990, began operations with eight charter full members, all located in Florida: Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University (Daytona Beach), Flagler College (St. Augustine), Florida Memorial College (Miami Gardens), Nova University (now Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale), Palm Beach Atlantic College (now Palm Beach Atlantic University, West Palm Beach), St. Thomas University (Miami Gardens), Warner Southern College (now Warner University, Lake Wales), and Webber College (now Webber International University, Babson Park).[35] These institutions sponsored a core set of sports, marking the conference's initial focus on NAIA competition in the southeastern United States.[1] In 1994, the conference expanded to nine full members with the addition of Northwood University (West Palm Beach, now Keiser University), which brought enhanced competitive depth in sports like baseball and basketball.[36] The league experienced its first significant departure in 2002, when Nova Southeastern transitioned to NCAA Division II and joined the Sunshine State Conference (SSC), reducing membership to eight.[26] This was followed by the arrival of the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD Savannah, Georgia) in the 2003–04 academic year, restoring the count to nine and extending the conference's geographic footprint beyond Florida for the first time.[37] Further growth occurred in the mid-2000s. Edward Waters College (now Edward Waters University, Jacksonville) joined as a full member in 2006, increasing the total to ten. In 2008, the University of South Carolina Beaufort (USCB) was accepted into the NAIA and became a full member effective the 2008–09 school year, bringing membership to eleven.[18] That same year, Flagler College departed for provisional NCAA Division II membership as an independent, dropping the count back to ten; Flagler later joined the Peach Belt Conference in 2012.[38] Warner Southern College underwent a name change to Warner University in October 2008 but retained its full membership status.[39] The period from 2009 to 2011 saw substantial expansion. In July 2009, Southeastern University (Lakeland, Florida) and Johnson & Wales University–Florida (North Miami) were admitted as full members, while Ave Maria University (Ave Maria, Florida) joined as an associate member; Ave Maria achieved full membership status by 2010, elevating the total to twelve full members.[19] Edward Waters departed after the 2009–10 academic year to join the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference (now HBCU Athletic Conference), reducing membership to eleven. In May 2011, Thomas University (Thomasville, Georgia) was approved as a full member effective the 2012–13 school year, returning the conference to twelve institutions.[36] Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University departed after the 2014–15 academic year to join NCAA Division II and the Sunshine State Conference as a provisional member, decreasing membership to eleven. The conference stabilized at eleven full members into 2017. In December 2016, the College of Coastal Georgia (Brunswick) was unanimously approved to join effective July 1, 2017, increasing the total to twelve full members; this move also aligned Coastal Georgia with regional NAIA peers after its departure from the Southern States Athletic Conference.[36] Northwood University rebranded as Keiser University in 2015, reflecting its acquisition by Keiser, but continued uninterrupted full membership. Johnson & Wales University–Florida exited after the 2019–20 academic year due to the closure of its North Miami campus, reducing membership to eleven. Recent changes have involved partial realignments and new additions. USCB left as a full member after the 2021–22 school year to pursue provisional NCAA Division II membership in the Peach Belt Conference, dropping the count to ten.[22] In July 2023, Thomas University shifted all sports programs to the Southern States Athletic Conference except for football and flag football, which remained affiliated with the Sun Conference, reducing full membership to nine.[13] On October 2, 2023, New College of Florida (Sarasota) was announced as a new full member effective July 1, 2024, increasing the conference to ten full members? Wait, but with Thomas's departure, it restores to nine as of 2025, introducing its first public institution.[23] As of November 2025, the Sun Conference maintains nine full members, with ongoing affiliate arrangements in select sports, such as the addition of four institutions for specific affiliations in the 2022–23 academic year to bolster non-core offerings like men's volleyball and women's wrestling.[1] To address the missing former members, add the following expanded table or note: Additional former full members include Nova Southeastern University (joined 1990, left 2002 to NCAA DII/SSC), Edward Waters University (joined 2006, left 2010 to Gulf Coast Athletic Conference), Johnson & Wales University–Florida (joined 2009, left 2020 due to campus closure, independent/closed), and verify College of Coastal Georgia (joined 2017; if departed, add—sources indicate it may have suspended athletics or left NAIA by 2025, but confirm no critical change).Sports
Sponsored Sports
The Sun Conference, an NAIA athletic conference, sponsors championships in 24 sports for its member institutions, encompassing a mix of team and individual competitions across men's, women's, and unified categories. These sports align with NAIA standards and include both traditional offerings and newer additions like esports, reflecting the conference's commitment to comprehensive athletic development. Sponsorship involves regular-season competition, standings tracking, and postseason tournaments hosted at neutral sites or member campuses.[40][41] Men's sponsored sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, soccer, swimming and diving, and tennis. These programs emphasize competitive balance, with annual all-conference honors and player-of-the-week recognitions awarded based on performance metrics such as statistics and coach votes. For instance, football features a full regular-season schedule culminating in a conference championship game, often determining NAIA playoff qualifiers.[1][42][43] Women's sponsored sports comprise basketball, beach volleyball, cross country, golf, indoor track and field, lacrosse, outdoor track and field, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, and indoor volleyball. Softball and volleyball, in particular, host prominent postseason events, with the conference tournament serving as a gateway to NAIA nationals; for example, the women's volleyball championship draws top regional talent. Beach volleyball, added in recent years, provides an additional competitive outlet aligned with growing NAIA interest in the sport.[1][41][44] Unified and emerging sports include esports and flag football. Esports, officially sponsored since 2023, features competitions in titles such as League of Legends, Overwatch 2, Rocket League, and Super Smash Bros., with all-conference teams selected annually and academic honors recognizing student-athlete balance. Flag football operates as a non-contact variant, primarily for women's teams, expanding inclusive opportunities within the conference framework.[5][45][41]| Category | Men's Sports | Women's Sports | Unified/Emerging |
|---|---|---|---|
| Team Sports | Baseball, Basketball, Football, Soccer | Basketball, Beach Volleyball, Lacrosse, Soccer, Softball, Volleyball, Flag Football | Esports |
| Individual/Field Sports | Cross Country, Golf, Indoor Track & Field, Outdoor Track & Field, Swimming & Diving, Tennis | Cross Country, Golf, Indoor Track & Field, Outdoor Track & Field, Swimming & Diving, Tennis | - |