TheWest Coast Conference (WCC) — known as theCalifornia Basketball Association from 1952 to 1956 and then as theWest Coast Athletic Conference until 1989 — is a collegiateathletic conference affiliated withNCAA Division I consisting of nine member schools across the states ofCalifornia,Oregon, andWashington.
All of the current full members are private, faith-based institutions. Seven members areCatholic Church affiliates, with five of these schools beingJesuit institutions, including the newest member of the conference,Seattle.Pepperdine is an affiliate of theChurches of Christ. The conference's second-newest member, theUniversity of the Pacific (which rejoined in 2013 after a 42-year absence), is affiliated with theUnited Methodist Church, although it has been financially independent of the church since 1969.[1]
The league was chartered by five northern California institutions, four from theSan Francisco Bay Area (San Francisco,Saint Mary's,Santa Clara,San Jose State) and one,Pacific, fromStockton. It began as the California Basketball Association, playing its first game on January 2, 1953. After two seasons under that name, the conference expanded to include Los Angeles-area schools Loyola (nowLoyola Marymount) andPepperdine in 1955 and became the "West Coast Athletic Conference" in 1956. After more than three decades as the WCAC, the name was shortened in the summer of 1989, dropping the word "Athletic".[2][3][4]
During the massive upheaval of conference affiliations in the 1990s, the WCC remained very stable. Before the2010 realignment that eventually led to Brigham Young joining the conference, the last change of membership was in 1980, whenSeattle University left the conference. At the time, only theIvy League and Pacific-10 Conference (now thePac-12 Conference) had remained unchanged for a longer period.
The WCC participates at theNCAA Division I level and is considered to be amid-major athletic conference. The conference sponsors 15 sports but does not includefootball as one of them.San Diego (Pioneer Football League) is the only school fielding a football team. The rest have all dropped the sport, some as early as the 1940s, before the conference existed (Gonzaga andPortland), and one as late as 2003 (Saint Mary's).
Historically, the WCC's strongest sports have been soccer (nine national champions, including back-to-back women's soccer titles in 2001 and 2002) and tennis (five individual champions and one team champion). The conference has also made its presence felt nationally in men's basketball. San Francisco won two consecutive national titles in the 1950s with all-time greatBill Russell. Although the WCAC's stature declined in the 1960s, San Francisco was reckoned as a "major" basketball power until the early 1980s. Also of note was Loyola Marymount's inspired run to the Elite Eight in1990 following the death ofHank Gathers during that season's WCC championship tournament.
West Coast Conference logo from 2011 to 2019
More recently,Gonzaga's rise to national prominence after being invited to the NCAA tournament every year since their Cinderella run to the "Elite Eight" in1999 has helped make the WCC a household name. As San Francisco was from the 1940s to the early 1980s, Gonzaga has gained recognition as a major basketball power, despite the WCC being a mid-major conference. Gonzaga has been to 23 consecutive NCAA tournaments—the longest streak for any school in the Western United States, the third-longest active streak, and the sixth-longest streak in history. They have also been to all but one WCC tournament final since 1995, and have played for the conference title every year since 1998. In 2016–17, theBulldogs advanced all the way to thenational championship game—the deepest run by a conference team since San Francisco went to three consecutive Final Fours from 1955 to 1957. The Bulldogs reached the title game again in2021, this time entering the gameunbeaten, but again losing, this time toBaylor.
Saint Mary's has also made marks for the conference as the Gaels appeared in the NCAA Tournament in 2005, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2017, 2019, and 2021 (making the "Sweet Sixteen" in 2010).
Eventually, with the 2010 realignment opening up new avenues for expansion, the WCC decided to revisit expansion plans. The conference decided that it would only seek out private schools, but would not limit its search to faith-based institutions. Even so, the two additions,Brigham Young University andUniversity of the Pacific are both faith-based institutions, although Pacific has not been financially sponsored by theUnited Methodist Church since 1969.
On August 31, 2010, BYU announced plans to join the WCC for the 2011–12 season in all sports the conference offers. BYU joined the conference on July 1, 2011.[5][6] BYU's arrival gave the WCC another school with a rich basketball tradition. The Cougars made the NCAA Tournament six straight times before failing to do so in 2013, and had made 26 NCAA Tournament appearances before joining the conference.
On March 27, 2012, theUniversity of the Pacific (UOP), a charter member of the conference in 1952, accepted an invitation to rejoin the WCC, effective July 1, 2013. The move removed Pacific from theBig West Conference back to the WCC, which Pacific left in 1971 in order to pursue its interests in football that it later abandoned in 1995.[7]
The WCC became the first Division I conference to adopt a conference-wide diversity hiring commitment, announcing the "Russell Rule", based on theNFL'sRooney Rule and named afterBasketball Hall of Famer and social activistBill Russell, a graduate of charter and current conference member San Francisco, on August 2, 2020. In its announcement, the WCC stated:[8]
The "Russell Rule" requires each member institution to include a member of a traditionally underrepresented community in the pool of final candidates for every athletic director, senior administrator, head coach and full-time assistant coach position in the athletic department.
In September 2021, BYU announced that it would leave the WCC in 2023 for theBig 12 Conference.[9] The WCC announced on July 19, 2022 that it would add men's water polo starting in 2023–24. Full members Loyola Marymount, Pacific, Pepperdine, and Santa Clara were joined by affiliatesAir Force,California Baptist, andSan Jose State.[10]
On December 22, 2023, the WCC announced thatOregon State University andWashington State University, the two schools left behind by thecollapse of thePac-12 Conference, would become affiliate members in all sports apart from football and baseball through 2025–26.[11] This was followed in May 2024 with the announcement thatGrand Canyon University andSeattle University would join in July 2025, with Seattle rejoining after a 45-year absence.[12] On October 1, 2024, Gonzaga announced it would be leaving the conference to join thePac-12 as a full member.[13] On November 1, 2024, Grand Canyon announced it was declining the WCC's invitation to join the conference in 2025, instead accepting an invitation to join theMountain West Conference no later than 2026.[14] On September 2, 2025, after coming off their firstNCAA March Madness appearance in their first year of eligibility, the WCC extended an offer to theUniversity of California, San Diego to join in 2027.[15] The school will be the first public school since 1979, when theUniversity of Nevada, Reno (Nevada) left to join theBig Sky Conference. On October 31, 2025, theUniversity of Denver (DU) announced it would join the West Coast Conference in 2026.[16] This will be the first university in the Rocky Mountain Region to join the conference since BYU left in 2023. DU will also be the first secular institution to be a full conference member since Nevada's departure; although the school was founded by Methodists, it has been nonsectarian from its founding.
The WCC is made up entirely ofprivate,Christian institutions with all but two beingCatholic. Pacific is affiliated with theUnited Methodist Church while Pepperdine is affiliated with theChurches of Christ. This will change in July 2026 when the Methodist-founded but nonsectarian Denver joins, followed in 2027 by the arrival of the public UC San Diego.
^Pacific left the WCC after the 1970–71 school year to join thePacific Coast Athletic Association (now known as the Big West Conference); and rejoined the WCC, effective with the 2013–14 school year.
^The Pepperdine campus has a Malibu mailing address but lies entirely within unincorporatedLos Angeles County.
^Seattle was previously a member of the WCC from 1971 to 1980.
WCC affiliate member locations – Affiliate member – Departing affiliate member – Future affiliate member Not pictured: Affiliate members Augusta and Creighton
^Oregon State competes as an associate member in men's and women's basketball, men's and women's soccer, volleyball, softball, men's and women's golf, women's cross country and women's rowing. Sport affiliations that will remain in the WCC after July 1, 2026 are yet to be announced.
^Includes only enrollment at the main Pullman campus. Washington State has four other physical campuses.
^Washington State competes as an associate member in men's and women's basketball, women's soccer, volleyball, men's and women's golf, women's tennis, men's and women's cross country and women's rowing. Sport affiliations that will remain in the WCC after July 1, 2026 are yet to be announced.
^The UCSB campus has a Santa Barbara mailing address, but is outside the city limits in the unincorporated community ofIsla Vista.
^The UNLV campus lies outside theLas Vegas city limits in the unincorporated community ofParadise. The U.S. Postal Service considers all unincorporated areas within the Las Vegas Valley to have a Las Vegas address.
Full members Associate member (basketball)Associate member (other sports)Other Conference Other Conference
Due to space limitations, the following affiliations are not linked within the timeline:
Fresno State had dual membership with theCalifornia Collegiate Athletic Association during their tenure in the WCAC before committing full-time with the CCAA from 1957 to 1969:
Pepperdine was an independent school for the 1954–55 season.
UC Santa Barbara joined what was then theBig West Conference in 1969. It left in 1974 to become independent and returned in 1976.
USIU was a full independent after departing the WCC conference before dropping all collegiate athletics in 1991.
Oregon State and Washington State have a two-year agreement with the WCC for associate memberships in various sports. It has not been announced which conference the associate sports will join in 2026.
The West Coast Conference sponsors championship competition in seven men's and nine women's NCAA sanctioned sports, with the newest addition being men's water polo in 2023–24.[20]
^Denver has not announced a future affiliation in this sport.
^abSaint Mary's will add both women's swimming and diving, and women's water polo in 2026-27. Women's swimming and diving will join theMPSF, and women's water polo will join theGolden Coast[21]
^abcUC San Diego has not announced a future affiliation in this sport.
^Seattle has not announced a future affiliation in this sport.
^abAt the time Oregon State and Washington State were announced as incoming associate members for 2024–25 and 2025–26, they had a 30-day window to potentially add baseball to their membership. The window expired on January 26, 2024 with no announcement from the WCC or either school.[24] Washington State later joined theMountain West Conference for baseball, while Oregon State opted to compete as anindependent.[25][26]
^Seattle also uses the on-campusRedhawk Center (capacity 999) for home games.
Total revenue includes ticket sales, contributions and donations, rights and licensing, student fees, school funds and all other sources including TV income, camp income, concessions, and novelties.
Total expenses includes coach and staff salaries, scholarships, buildings and grounds, maintenance, utilities and rental fees, recruiting, team travel, equipment and uniforms, conference dues, and insurance.
Dan Dickau, former NBA player (2002-2008) (Gonzaga)
Brandon Davies, former NBA player who currently plays in theLiga ACB. During his sophomore year, he helped BYU rise as high as #3 in the national polls before being suspended for an honor code violation. He was reinstated for his junior and senior seasons and named to the All West Coast Conference team. (2009-2013) (BYU)
Rick Adelman, former NBA head coach (Loyola Marymount)
Dennis Awtrey, former NBA player (1970-1982) (Santa Clara)
Richie Frahm, former NBA player (2003-2008) (Gonzaga)
Hank Gathers, college player who led the nation in scoring and rebounding in 1990 before collapsing and dying during the WCC tournament (Loyola Marymount)
Dennis Johnson, Basketball Hall of Famer, former NBA player (1976-1990) 1979 NBA Finals MVP and 5-Time NBA All-Star. Coached the Los Angeles Clippers for one season (2003) (Pepperdine)
Adam Morrison, former NBA player known for being the 3rd overall pick in the2006 NBA draft by theCharlotte Bobcats and the 2005-06 National College Co-Player of the Year (Gonzaga)
Austin Daye, former NBA player, also with European professional experience. Selected with the 15th pick of the 2009 NBA Draft (Gonzaga)
Filip Petrušev, NBA draft 2021, Philadelphia 76ers; currently plays forCrvena zvezda of the Adriatic League and EuroLeague (Gonzaga)
Kurt Rambis, former NBA player (1981-1995) and NBA head coach (1999 and 2009-2011) (Santa Clara)
Bill Russell, Basketball Hall of Fame Player (12-Time All-Star, 5-Time NBA MVP, and 11-Time NBA Champion) and coach, 1956 College Player of the Year (San Francisco)
Theo Epstein, former president of theChicago Cubs and former general manager of theBoston Red Sox (San Diego – School of Law only; earned bachelor's degree at Yale)
Ken Dayley, former major league pitcher, 1980 1st round draft pick, 3rd overall, pitched in both the '85 and '87 World Series for the St. Louis Cardinals (Portland)
Bill Krueger, former major league pitcher (Portland)
Pat Casey, former Oregon State baseball head coach, his team winning the 2006, 2007, and 2018 College World Series (Portland)
Von Hayes, former major league outfielder/first baseman (Saint Mary's)
Terry Schroeder – former NCAA player, two-time Olympic silver medal winner (1984 and 1988), and Head Coach of silver medal winning men's water polo team at the2008 Summer Olympics (Pepperdine)[28][29]
Mike Whitmarsh – winner of 28AVP beach volleyball events, as well as a silver medal in the sport at the1996 Summer Olympics (San Diego – volleyball and basketball; however, men's volleyball is not a WCC sport)
Taylor Sander – member of the American US Indoor Volleyball team and a player for Blu Volleyball Verona. Led US national team to an upset of Brazil to win the FIVB World League 2014. Was named best outside spiker and tournament MVP. He holds the BYU all-time single-match record for service aces (nine) and career service aces (182). In the rally-scoring era ranks No. 1 at BYU in career kills (1,743), career attempts (3,464), career service aces (182), season attempts (1,021 in 2014), season service aces (55 in 2014) and aces in a match (nine).[30] (BYU – volleyball; however Men's Indoor volleyball isn't a WCC sport)
Tom Fears –wide receiver anddefensive back;Los Angeles Rams (1948–1956). The first Mexican-born player to be drafted into the National Football League. Broke theNFL's single-season record in 1949 with 77 receptions for 1013 yards, and again in 1950 with 84 receptions for 1116 yards. Career totals include 400 receptions for 5,397 yards and 38 touchdowns.Pro Football Hall of Fame (1970). (Santa Clara)
Pete Carroll – current coach of the Las Vegas Raiders, former coach of the Seattle Seahawks of the NFL, former head coach of USC Trojans of the NCAA. Led Seattle toSuper Bowl XLVIII, where they defeated the Denver Broncos. Led the USC Trojans to 6 BCS Bowl victories.[31] (Pacific)
Ted Leland – a first team PCAA selection as a defensive end in 1969. Current athletic director at Pacific. Served as athletic director at Stanford University for 12 years, leading them to the NACDA Directors' Cup from 1995 to 2005.[32] (Pacific)
John Fassel – special teams coordinator for the Tennessee Titans of the NFL.[33] (Pacific)
Hue Jackson – former head coach of the Cleveland Browns, former offensive coordinator for the Cincinnati Bengals, former head coach of the Oakland Raiders.[34] (Pacific)