Mountain East Conference


The Mountain East Conference is a collegiate athletic conference that competes in the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II level and officially began competition on September 1, 2013. It consists of 12 schools, mostly in West Virginia with other members in Maryland and Ohio.

Formation and history

The conference is an offshoot of the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, another Division II conference that had operated primarily in West Virginia since 1924. In June 2012, the nine football-playing schools in that conference announced plans to break away and form a new all-sports conference. The schools that made the initial announcement were the University of Charleston, Concord University, Fairmont State University, Glenville State College, Seton Hill University, Shepherd University, West Liberty University, West Virginia State University, and West Virginia Wesleyan College. All of these schools were in West Virginia, except for Seton Hill, located in Pennsylvania. According to regional media, the split was "supposedly rooted in different philosophies of progressivism", and also was partially driven by a desire to expand the new conference's footprint outside West Virginia. The divisions in the WVIAC were also rooted in the split between public and private schools, although the departing schools included institutions of both types.
At the time of the original announcement, the nine schools planned to expand to at least 12 members. Before the official launch of the conference on August 20, 2012, the MEC sought to add the WVIAC's other Pennsylvania member, the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown; however, both Seton Hill and Pittsburgh–Johnstown chose to join the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference. The MEC filled out its charter membership with another West Virginia school, Wheeling Jesuit University, today known as Wheeling University; two Ohio schools, Notre Dame College and Urbana University; and the University of Virginia's College at Wise, located in Southwest Virginia. Wheeling Jesuit was a WVIAC member that had been left out of the original WVIAC split. Urbana and UVA–Wise were members of the Great Midwest Athletic Conference in 2012–13, while Notre Dame was a Division II independent that had housed five of its 22 sports in the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. UVA–Wise, which had previously been turned down for WVIAC membership, was transitioning from the NAIA and did not officially become an active D-II member until 2015-16; all of the other charter members were already full D-II members.
At its launch, the MEC had 11 football members, with Wheeling being the only non-football school. On February 15, 2013, the NCAA accepted the MEC as its 25th D2 conference. The 2015–16 school year was the first in which MEC teams were eligible for automatic bids to NCAA Division II championships; before then, they were eligible only for at-large bids.
In 2018 UVA–Wise and the South Atlantic Conference jointly announced on April 13 that UVA–Wise would leave the MEC to join the SAC for 2019–20 and beyond. Next, Shepherd and the PSAC jointly announced on June 7 that Shepherd would join the PSAC in 2019, becoming that league's first full member outside of Pennsylvania. The MEC would replace both members in the ensuing months. On July 5, the Mountain East Conference announced that Frostburg State University had accepted an offer of membership beginning with the 2019–20 academic year, contingent upon Frostburg State achieving active membership status in NCAA Division II. Finally, on August 30, the MEC announced two additional new members effective in 2019–20. Davis & Elkins College would become a full member, and the University of North Carolina at Pembroke would join in five sports. UNC Pembroke began MEC competition in men's and women's indoor track & field, women's swimming & diving, and wrestling in 2019, with football following in 2020.
The most recent MEC membership changes were announced in 2020. On April 16, multi-sport associate member UNC Pembroke announced it would join Conference Carolinas effective in 2021–22. Because CC sponsors all of the non-football sports that UNCP currently houses in the MEC, the school's only remaining MEC sport will be football. Five days later, charter member Urbana announced it would close at the end of the 2019–20 school year. Finally, on June 9, Alderson Broaddus University, a West Virginia school left out of the WVIAC split, announced that it would leave the G-MAC to join the MEC the following month.

Members

Current members

Associate member

Membership timeline


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ImageSize = width:800 height:auto barincrement:20
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id:Full value:rgb # all sports
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bar:1 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:Charleston
bar:2 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:Concord
bar:3 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:Fairmont State
bar:4 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:Glenville State
bar:5 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:Notre Dame
bar:6 color:Full from:2013 till:2019 text:Shepherd
bar:7 color:Full from:2013 till:2020 text:Urbana
bar:8 color:Full from:2013 till:2019 text:Virginia–Wise
bar:9 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:West Liberty
bar:10 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:West Virginia State
bar:11 color:Full from:2013 till:end text:West Virginia Wesleyan
bar:12 color:FullxF from:2013 till:2019 text:Wheeling
bar:12 color:Full from:2019 till:end
bar:13 color:FullxF from:2019 till:end text:Davis & Elkins
bar:14 color:Full from:2019 till:end text:Frostburg State
bar:15 color:AssocOS from:2019 till:2021 text:UNC Pembroke, swimming
bar:15 color:AssocF from:2021 till:end
bar:16 color:Full from:2020 till:end text:Alderson Broaddus
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Sports

The MEC sponsored 16 sports in all, eight each for men and women, at its formation. Women's lacrosse became the 17th conference sport for the 2014–15 school year. Men's and women's swimming and diving were added as the 18th and 19th conference sports for 2017–18, with the MEC and Great Midwest Athletic Conference forming a swimming and diving alliance that conducts a joint conference championship meet. The MEC added men's and women's indoor track & field and wrestling to its sports roster in 2019–20.
SportMen'sWomen's
Baseball
Basketball
Cross country
Football
Golf
Lacrosse
Soccer
Softball
Swimming & Diving
Tennis
Track & field
Track & field
Volleyball
Wrestling

Men's sponsored sports by school

Women's sponsored sports by school

Other sponsored sports by school