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Big Sky Conference

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American collegiate athletic conference

Big Sky Conference
AssociationNCAA
FoundedJuly 1, 1963; 62 years ago (1963-07-01)
CommissionerTom Wistrcill (since November 16, 2018)
Sports fielded
  • 16
    • men's: 7
    • women's: 9
DivisionDivision I
SubdivisionFCS
No. of teams10 (11 in 2026) (+2 football affiliates)
HeadquartersFarmington, Utah
RegionWestern United States
BroadcastersESPN
Scripps Sports (Montana schools only)
Official websitebigskyconf.com
Locations
Location of teams in

TheBig Sky Conference is acollegiate athletic conference, affiliated with theNCAA'sDivision I withfootball competing in theFootball Championship Subdivision. As of 2024[update], ten full member institutions are located in the states ofArizona,California,Colorado,Idaho,Montana,Oregon,Utah, andWashington. Two affiliate members from California are football–only participants, and aSouth Carolina school joined for men's golf in July 2025. Sacramento State will leave at the end of the 2025–26 school year, withSouthern Utah andUtah Tech joining.[a]

History

[edit]
Big Sky Conference
Map
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
220km
137miles
Eastern
Washington
UC Davis
Cal Poly
Utah Tech
Southern
Utah
Weber
State
Sacramento
State
Portland
State
Northern
Colorado
Northern
Arizona
Montana
State
Montana
Idaho
State
Idaho
Location of Big Sky members:
Full member
Departing members
Future members
Affiliate member, football
Not pictured: men's golf affiliate Francis Marion

Initially conceived forbasketball,[1][2][3] the Big Sky was founded 62 years ago on July 1, 1963, with six members infour states;[4][5] four of the charter members have been in the league from its founding, and a fifth returned in 2014 after an 18-year absence.

The name "Big Sky" came from the popular1947 western novel byA. B. Guthrie Jr.; it was proposed by Harry Missildine, a sports columnist of theSpokesman-Review just prior to the founding meetings of the conference inSpokane in February 1963,[6][7] and was adopted with the announcement of the new conference five days later.[4][5]

Starting in 1968, the conference competed at the highest level (university division) in all sports except football (college division). The sole exception wasIdaho, in the university division for football through1977 (except1967,1968).[8] Football moved to the new Division I-AA in1978, which was renamed Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) in2006.

In 1974, half of the Big Sky's ten included sports were dropped (baseball,skiing,swimming,golf, andtennis), leaving football, basketball, wrestling, track, and cross country skiing.[9][10]

Women's sports were added 37 years ago in 1988, moving from the women's-onlyMountain West Athletic Conference (1982–88).

Fiftieth anniversary

[edit]

The 2012–13 season marked the completion of a half century of athletic competition and a quarter century sponsoring women's collegiate athletics. Before the season the league introduced a new logo to celebrate this.

The 25th season of women's athletics also marked a first for the league, as Portland State won the league's inaugural softball championship. From 1982 to 1988, women's sports were conducted in theMountain West Athletic Conference.

The Big Sky sponsors championships in sixteen sports, including men's and women's cross country, indoor and outdoor track and field, basketball, and tennis. There are also championships in football, and in women's volleyball, golf, soccer, and softball. Men's golf will be reinstated in 2025–26 after having been discontinued in 2024.[11] It is one of two Division I all-sports conferences to not sponsor baseball, the other being theMid-Eastern Athletic Conference.

Member schools

[edit]

  Members departing for theBig West Conference on July 1, 2026.

Current full members

[edit]
InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentEndowment
(millions)
NicknameJoinedColors
Eastern Washington UniversityCheney, Washington1882Public10,915$32.1Eagles1987   
University of IdahoMoscow, Idaho188912,286$465Vandals1963;
  2014[b]
   
Idaho State UniversityPocatello, Idaho190112,301$75Bengals1963   
University of MontanaMissoula, Montana189311,064$241.6Grizzlies[c]1963   
Montana State UniversityBozeman, Montana189317,165$264Bobcats1963   
Northern Arizona UniversityFlagstaff, Arizona189928,194$198.2Lumberjacks1970   
University of Northern ColoradoGreeley, Colorado18899,881$100.5Bears2006   
Portland State UniversityPortland, Oregon194626,012$98Vikings1996     
California State University, SacramentoSacramento, California1947Public31,181$92.9Hornets1996   
Weber State UniversityOgden, Utah1889Public29,914$219.5Wildcats1963   
Notes
  1. ^Southern Utah was previously a member from 2012 to 2022.
  2. ^Idaho was a charter member but departed in 1996 to join theBig West Conference; they rejoined the Big Sky for all sports butfootball in 2014, which rejoined in2018.
  3. ^The Montana women's basketball team is known as theLady Griz, but all other women's teams are known as Grizzlies.[12]

Future members

[edit]
InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentEndowment
(millions)
NicknameJoiningColorsCurrent
conference
Southern Utah UniversityCedar City, Utah1897Public15,444$29.9Thunderbirds2026[a]  WAC
Utah Tech UniversitySt. George, Utah1911Public12,556$16.3Trailblazers2026   
Notes
  1. ^Southern Utah was previously a full member of the Big Sky from 2012–13 until 2021–22.

Affiliate members

[edit]
InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentNicknameJoinedColorsBig Sky
sport(s)
Primary
conference
California Polytechnic State UniversitySan Luis Obispo, California1901Public21,812Mustangs2012     FootballBig West
Francis Marion UniversityFlorence, South Carolina19704,187Patriots2025     Men's golfCarolinas[a]
University of California, DavisDavis, California190538,369Aggies2012   FootballBig West
(Mountain West
in 2026)
  1. ^Currently anNCAA Division II athletic conference.

Former full members

[edit]
InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentNicknameJoinedLeftColorsSubsequent
conference
Current
conference
Boise State UniversityBoise, Idaho1932Public26,155Broncos19701996   Big West
(1996–2001)
WAC
(2001–11)
Mountain West
(2011–2026)
Pac-12
(2026–future)
California State University, NorthridgeNorthridge, California195838,511Matadors19962001     Big West
(2001–present)
Gonzaga University[a]Spokane, Washington1887Private
(Jesuit)
7,421Bulldogs19631979     West Coast
(1979–2026)
Pac-12
(2026–future)
University of NevadaReno, Nevada1874Public21,034Wolf Pack19791992   Big West
(1992–2000)
WAC
(2000–12)
Mountain West
(2012–present)
University of North DakotaGrand Forks, North Dakota188313,772Fighting Hawks20122018   Summit
(2018–present)
Southern Utah UniversityCedar City, Utah189714,330Thunderbirds20122022   WAC
(2022–2026)
Big Sky
(2026–future)
Notes
  1. ^Gonzaga was a charter member in 1963, but has not fielded afootball team since1941.

Former affiliate members

[edit]
InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentNicknameJoinedLeftColorsBig Sky
sport(s)
Primary
conference
Conference
in former
Big Sky sport
Binghamton University, SUNYVestal, New York[a]1946Public17,768Bearcats20142023     men's golfAmerica EastNortheast (NEC)
University of HartfordWest Hartford, Connecticut1877Nonsectarian6,792Hawks20142023   men's golfNew England (CNE)[b]
Notes
  1. ^The campus mailing address isBinghamton.
  2. ^Currently anNCAA Division III athletic conference.

Membership timeline

[edit]

Full members Assoc. members (football only) Full members (except football) Assoc. members (other sports) Other conference Other conference 

NCAA championships

[edit]
See also:List of NCAA schools with the most NCAA Division I championships

NCAA Division I national championships as of 2021.

SchoolTeamIndividual
Men'sWomen'sTotalMen'sWomen'sTotal
Eastern Washington101000
Idaho000404
Idaho State101202
Montana202303
Montana State101112
Northern Arizona4046814
Northern Colorado000000
Portland State000000
Sacramento State000000
Southern Utah000000
Weber State000314
Conference total909191029

† Northern Arizona is the only Big Sky program to win D1 team national titles outside of theFootball Championship Subdivision (FCS).

Sports

[edit]

As of the 2025–26 school year, the Big Sky sponsors championships in seven men's and nine women's NCAA-sanctioned sports.[13] Each core member institution is required to participate in all of the 13 core sports.

Men's core sports are basketball, cross country, football, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, and tennis. Women's core sports are basketball, cross country, golf, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, tennis, and volleyball.

Affiliates

[edit]
Cal Poly quarterback Sam Huard looks downfield during a Big Sky Conference football game against Northern Colorado on Oct. 21, 2023.
Cal Poly quarterback Sam Huard looks downfield during a Big Sky Conference football game against Northern Colorado on Oct. 21, 2023.

Cal Poly andUC Davis participate as football-only affiliates, otherwise participating in theBig West Conference. TheMustangs andAggies were welcomed by the BSC in September 2010 in response to both nationwide conference realignment[14] and an expansion of theFCS playoff bracket at the time, according to then-commissioner Doug Fullerton.[15]

BothBinghamton andHartford of theAmerica East Conference were affiliates in men's golf only from 2014 to 2023. Before the 2014–15 school year, the latter two schools had participated in men's golf alongside five full Big Sky members in the single-sport America Sky Conference.[16] The return of Idaho brought the number of members participating in men's golf to six, which led to the Big Sky adding men's golf and absorbing the America Sky Conference. Both schools left after the 2022–23 athletic season, after Binghamton moved their program to theNortheast Conference and Hartford reclassified toDivision III and joined theCommonwealth Coast Conference. By this time the number of full Big Sky members that sponsored men's golf had dropped to 4, below the 6 member minimum necessary for the conference champion to receive an autobid to theNCAA Division I men's golf championship, so with the departure of the two affiliates, the Big Sky ceased sponsoring men's golf again after the 2024 season.[17] However, the reinstatement of Eastern Washington men's golf effective in 2025–26 gave the Big Sky five full members that sponsored the sport,[18] and Big Sky men's golf returned at that time withFrancis Marion, aDivision II member that plays Division I men's golf, as the needed sixth member.[19]

Baseball

[edit]

The Big Sky is unusual among Division I all-sports conferences in not sponsoringbaseball, a distinction that it shares only with theMid-Eastern Athletic Conference, and which it held alone prior to the 2022–23 school year. The conference originally sponsored baseball in 1964, with all members participating. WhenBoise State and Northern Arizona arrived for the 1971 season, competition was split into two divisions of four teams each, with the winners in a best-of-three championship series.[20][21] Montana State[22] and Montana soon dropped the sport and by the 1973 season, only six teams remained but the divisions were kept, and Boise State moved over to the North Division fortwo years.[23]

In May 1974, the Big Sky announced its intention to discontinue five of its ten sponsored sports. It retained football, basketball, cross-country, track, and wrestling, and dropped conference competition in baseball, golf, tennis, swimming, and skiing.[9][10] Of the eleven Big Sky baseball titles, four each went toIdaho[24] andGonzaga, and three toWeber State.[25] Gonzaga won the final title in 1974 over Idaho State in three games, after losing the first game in Pocatello.[26] Southern division champion Idaho State chose to end its baseball program weeks following the conference's announcement,[27] and Gonzaga, Idaho, and Boise State joined the newNorthern Pacific Conference (NorPac) for baseballin 1975.[28] Boise State and Idaho competed in the NorPac for six seasons, then discontinued baseball after the1980 season.[29][30]

  • Idaho (4) 1964, 1966, 1967, 1969
  • Gonzaga (4) 1965, 1971, 1973, 1974
  • Weber State (3) 1968, 1970, 1972

In 2016,North Dakota announced in April that it was their last baseball season.[31] Since then, onlyNorthern Colorado andSacramento State have competed in the sport, both as affiliate members in theWestern Athletic Conference (WAC) until Northern Colorado baseball moved to theSummit League after the 2021 season.

Wrestling

[edit]

Through the 1987 season, the conference sponsored wrestling.Boise State andIdaho State dominated in most years, winning ten and eight conference titles, respectively. BSU won seven consecutive from 1974 to 1980. Montana State and Weber State also had some good years; Montana won their only conference title in the last year Big Sky sponsored the sport.

  • Montana State (3) 1964, 1965, 1966
  • Idaho State (8) 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1984
  • Boise State (10) 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1985, 1986
  • Weber State (2) 1981, 1983
  • Montana (1) 1987

Boise State continued its wrestling program as anaffiliate member of thePac-10 (now Pac-12) Conference.

Teams in Big Sky Conference competition
SportMen'sWomen's
Basketball
11
11
Cross country
11
11
Football
13
Golf
6
11
Soccer
10
Softball
7
Tennis
10
10
Track and field (Indoor)
11
11
Track and field (Outdoor)
11
11
Volleyball
11

Men's sponsored sports by school

[edit]
SchoolBasketballCross
country
FootballGolfTennisTrack and field
(indoor)
Track and field
(outdoor)
Total
Sports
Eastern WashingtonYesYesYesYesNoYesYes6
IdahoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes7
Idaho StateYesYesYesNoYesYesYes6
MontanaYesYesYesNoYesYesYes6
Montana StateYesYesYesNoYesYesYes6
Northern ArizonaYesYesYesNoYesYesYes6
Northern ColoradoYesYesYesYesNoYesYes6
Portland StateYesYesYesNoYesYesYes6
Sacramento StateYesYesYesYesYesYesYes7
Weber StateYesYesYesYesYesYesYes7
Totals101010+2[a]5+1[b]8101057+3
Future Members
Southern UtahYesYesYesYesNoYesYes6
Utah TechYesYesYesYesNoYes[c]Yes[c]6
  1. ^Affiliates Cal Poly and UC Davis.
  2. ^Affiliate Francis Marion.
  3. ^abUtah Tech does not currently sponsor men's track & field, but will add both indoor and outdoor teams when it joins the Big Sky in 2026–27.

Men's varsity sports not sponsored by the Big Sky Conference which are played by Big Sky schools:

SchoolBaseballSkiingSoccerWrestling
Montana StateNoRMISANoNo
Northern ColoradoSummitNoNoBig 12
Sacramento StateWACNoBig WestNo
Utah TechMWNoMWNo

Women's sponsored sports by school

[edit]
SchoolBasketballCross
country
GolfSoccerSoftballTennisTrack and field
(indoor)
Track and field
(outdoor)
VolleyballTotal
Sports
Eastern WashingtonYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYesYes8
IdahoYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYesYes8
Idaho StateYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
MontanaYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
Montana StateYesYesYesNoNoYesYesYesYes7
Northern ArizonaYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYesYes8
Northern ColoradoYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYes8
Portland StateYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
Sacramento StateYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
Weber StateYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9
Totals10101096910101092
Future Members
Southern UtahYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYes8
Utah TechYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes9

Women's varsity sports not sponsored by the Big Sky Conference which are played by Big Sky schools:

SchoolBeach volleyballGymnasticsRowingSkiingSwimming
IdahoNoNoNoNoMPSF
Montana StateNoNoNoRMISANo
Northern ArizonaNoNoNoNoMPSF
Northern ColoradoNoNoNoNoMPSF
Sacramento StateBig WestMPSFWCCNoNo
Southern UtahNoPac-12[a]NoNoNo
Utah TechNoNoNoNoMPSF
  1. ^SUU women's gymnastics currently competes in the MPSF, but will join the Pac-12 at the same time the overall athletic program rejoins the Big Sky.

Facilities

[edit]
SchoolFootball stadiumCapacityBasketball arenaCapacity
Cal PolyMustang Memorial Field11,075Football-only member
Eastern WashingtonRoos Field8,600Reese Court6,000
IdahoKibbie Dome16,000Idaho Central Credit Union Arena4,200
Idaho StateICCU Dome12,000Reed Gym3,040
MontanaWashington–Grizzly Stadium25,203Dahlberg Arena7,321
Montana StateBobcat Stadium20,767Brick Breeden Fieldhouse7,250
Northern ArizonaWalkup Skydome10,000Walkup Skydome7,000
Northern ColoradoNottingham Field8,533[32]Bank of Colorado Arena2,992
Portland StateHillsboro Stadium7,600Viking Pavilion3,094
Sacramento StateHornet Stadium21,195Hornets Nest1,012[33]
Southern UtahEccles Coliseum8,500America First Event Center5,300
UC DavisUC Davis Health Stadium10,367Football-only member
Utah TechGreater Zion Stadium10,000[34]Burns Arena4,779[35]
Weber StateStewart Stadium17,500Dee Events Center11,500

Basketball

[edit]

Current NBA players

[edit]

Conference rivalries

[edit]

Non-conference rivalries

[edit]

2021–22 home game attendance averages

[edit]
School[37]Total Games

(Includes Away Games)

Total Home

Game Attendance

Average Home

Game Attendance

Weber State3267,6784,511
Montana3253,9173,171
Montana State3442,6343,045
Southern Utah3224,7121,647
Idaho3119,8041,320
Eastern Washington3414,3921,199
Idaho State3015,1531,165
Northern Colorado3514,7751,136
Portland State3113,256946
Northern Arizona318,465604
Sacramento State297,846603

Rivalries

[edit]

Protected football rivalries

[edit]

Because there are 12 teams in the conference, but each team only plays eight conference football games per year, the conference has set two "protected rivalry" games for each team. These rivalry match-ups are played every season, while football games against other conference teams are played twice every three years. Many of the protected rivalries are traditional, due to the teams either being in the same state or within close geographical proximity. With the departure of Southern Utah from the conference, new protected rivalries were announced for 2022–2024.[38][39][40] These rivalries were extended through 2027,[41] and have not yet been updated following the announcement of conference membership changes that will occur in 2026.

SchoolRival 1Rival 2
UC DavisCal PolySacramento State
Cal PolyUC DavisSacramento State
Eastern WashingtonIdahoMontana State
IdahoIdaho StateEastern Washington
Idaho StateIdahoWeber State
MontanaMontana StatePortland State
Montana StateMontanaEastern Washington
Northern ArizonaWeber StateNorthern Colorado
Northern ColoradoNorthern ArizonaPortland State
Portland StateMontanaNorthern Colorado
Sacramento StateUC DavisCal Poly
Weber StateIdaho StateNorthern Arizona

Conference

[edit]
SchoolsFirst
Meeting
GameWinner
(Last Meeting)
All-time Record
Cal PolyUC Davis1939Battle for the Golden HorseshoeUC DavisUC Davis leads 22–20–2
Eastern WashingtonMontana1938EWU-UM Governor's CupEastern WashingtonMontana leads 27–17–1
Eastern WashingtonPortland State1968Dam CupPortland StatePortland State leads 21–20–1
IdahoIdaho State1916Battle of the DomesIdahoIdaho leads 30–13
IdahoMontana1903Little Brown SteinMontanaIdaho leads 55–28–2
MontanaMontana State1897Brawl of the WildMontanaMontana leads 72–40–5
UC DavisSacramento State1954Causeway ClassicSacramento StateUC Davis leads 46–21

Non-conference

[edit]
SchoolsFirst
Meeting
TrophyWinner
(Last Meeting)
All-time RecordNote
IdahoBoise State1971Governor's CupBoise StateBoise State leads 22–17-1Last competed for in 2010
IdahoWashington State1894Battle of the PalouseWashington StateWashington State leads 73-16-3Last played in 2022
Southern UtahNorthern Arizona1983Grand Canyon RivalryNorthern ArizonaNorthern Arizona leads 13–9Last played in 2021
Southern UtahWeber State1984Beehive BowlWeber StateWeber State leads 19–8Last played in 2021

Commissioners

[edit]

Headquarters

[edit]

Big Sky championships

[edit]

Men's basketball

[edit]
See also:Big Sky Conference men's basketball tournament
SeasonRegular-season
champion(s)
Tournament
champion
NCAA
seed
RegionWinsAdvancement
1964Montana Stateno tournament
1965Weber State
1966Weber State,Gonzaga
1967Gonzaga, Montana State
1968Weber StateWest0
1969Weber StateWest1Round of 16
1970Weber StateWest0
1971Weber StateWest0
1972Weber StateWest1Round of 16
1973Weber StateWest0
1974Idaho State  (playoff overMontana)West0
1975MontanaWest1Round of 16
1976Weber State,Boise State,Idaho StateBoise StateWest0
1977Idaho StateIdaho StateWest2Round of 8
1978MontanaWeber StateWest0
1979Weber StateWeber State7Midwest1Round of 32
1980Weber StateWeber State7West0
1981IdahoIdaho7West0
1982IdahoIdaho3West1Round of 16
1983Nevada,Weber StateWeber State9West0
1984Weber StateNevada11West0
1985NevadaNevada14West0
1986Northern Arizona, MontanaMontana State16West0
1987Montana StateIdaho State16West0
1988Boise StateBoise State14West0
1989Boise StateIdaho13West0
1990IdahoIdaho13West0
1991MontanaMontana16West0
1992MontanaMontana14West0
1993IdahoBoise State14West0
1994Weber State, Idaho StateBoise State14West0
1995Weber State, MontanaWeber State14Southeast1Round of 32
1996Montana StateMontana State13West0
1997Northern ArizonaMontana16West0
1998Northern ArizonaNorthern Arizona15West0
1999Weber StateWeber State14West1Round of 32
2000Montana, Eastern WashingtonNorthern Arizona15West0
2001Cal State NorthridgeCal State Northridge13Midwest0
2002Montana StateMontana15Midwest0
2003Weber StateWeber State12Midwest0
2004Eastern WashingtonEastern Washington15East0
2005Portland StateMontana16West0
2006Northern ArizonaMontana12Midwest1Round of 32
2007Weber State, Northern ArizonaWeber State15West0
2008Portland StatePortland State16Midwest0
2009Weber StatePortland State13East0
2010Weber StateMontana14East0
2011Northern ColoradoNorthern Colorado15West0
2012MontanaMontana13East0
2013MontanaMontana13East0
2014Weber StateWeber State16West0
2015Montana,Eastern WashingtonEastern Washington13South0
2016Weber StateWeber State15East0
2017North DakotaNorth Dakota15West0
2018MontanaMontana14West0
2019MontanaMontana15West0
2020Eastern Washingtoncanceledcanceled
2021Southern UtahEastern Washington14West0
2022Montana StateMontana State14West0
2023Eastern WashingtonMontana State14East0
2024Eastern WashingtonMontana State16First Four0
2025Northern Colorado,MontanaMontana14East0
  • Prior to 1976, each NCAA regional had athird place game (won 1969; lost 1972, 1975)
  • The only Big Sky team to reach the Elite Eight in the NCAA tournament wasIdaho State in1977
  • The only Big Sky team to earn a bye in the NCAA tournament wasIdaho in1982
  • Through 2025, the Big Sky has yet to have an at-large team in the NCAA tournament

Championships (by school)

[edit]
SchoolMember yearsConference
titles
Tournament
titles
Last won
Weber State1963–present22102016
Montana1963–present13122025
Montana State1963–present652024
Eastern Washington1987–present632024
Northern Arizona1970–present522007
Idaho1963–96, 2014–present441993
Idaho State1963–present421994
Boise State1970–96341989
Nevada1979–92221985
Portland State1996–present222009
Gonzaga1963–79201967
Northern Colorado2006–present212025
Cal State Northridge1996–2001112001
North Dakota2012–18112017
Southern Utah2012–22102021
Sacramento State1996–present00

NCAA tournament

[edit]

Since1968, the Big Sky champion has received a berth in theNCAA tournament; theconference tournament winner has been the representative since its introduction in1976.

The best finish by a Big Sky team came in1977, when theIdaho State Bengals ofJim Killingsworth advanced to theElite Eight, with a one-point upset ofUCLA in the Sweet Sixteen inProvo, Utah. Two days later, the Bengals ledUNLV by a point at halftime, but lost by seventeen and finished at25–5.

Seeding was introduced in1979 when it expanded to forty teams, and the highest seed granted a Big Sky team was in1982 in a 48-team bracket: ranked eighth in thefinal polls with a26–2 record, theIdaho Vandals underDon Monson were seeded third in theWest regional. After a first round bye, they beatLute Olson'sIowa Hawkeyes in nearbyPullman in overtime, but lost to second-seeded (and fourth-ranked)Oregon State in the regional semifinals (Sweet Sixteen), also played in Provo. (Idaho had defeated OSU by 22 points in December in the Far West Classic atPortland.)

Other Big Sky teams that advanced to regional semifinals (Sweet Sixteen) include theWeber State Wildcats in1969 and1972, when the total field was 25 teams, and theMontana Grizzlies underJud Heathcote in the 32-team field in1975. The Griz fell to heavily-favoredUCLA by just three points, who went on to win another title inJohn Wooden's final year as head coach. (A year later, Heathcote was hired atMichigan State with Monson as an assistant for the first two years; in his third season, the Spartans won the national title in1979.)

Since 1982, only three teams from the Big Sky have advanced within the NCAA tournament, and none past the round of 32. Weber State won in1995 and1999, coached byRon Abegglen, and Montana in2006, led by alumnusLarry Krystkowiak. Prior to Idaho in 1982, the Big Sky had been seeded seventh (Weber State, 1979 & 1980; andIdaho, 1981); the highest seed for the conference since 1982 is ninth (Weber State,1983), and the highest since expanding to 64 teams in1985 is twelfth (Weber State in2003; Montana in 2006).

Through 2025, the Big Sky has yet to receive an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament. The firstNIT appearance for the conference wasIdaho in1983; two Big Sky teams advanced to the NIT's round of 16: Weber State (1984) andBoise State (1987).

Women's basketball

[edit]
See also:Big Sky Conference women's basketball tournament
SeasonTournament championTournament runner-up
1983MontanaWeber State
1984MontanaEastern Washington
1985IdahoMontana
1986MontanaEastern Washington
1987Eastern WashingtonMontana
1988MontanaEastern Washington
1989MontanaIdaho
1990MontanaIdaho
1991MontanaMontana State
1992MontanaBoise State
1993Montana StateMontana
1994MontanaBoise State
1995MontanaMontana State
1996MontanaWeber State
1997MontanaMontana State
1998MontanaNorthern Arizona
1999Cal State NorthridgePortland State
2000MontanaCal State Northridge
2001Idaho StateMontana
2002Weber StateMontana State
2003Weber StateMontana State
2004MontanaIdaho State
2005MontanaWeber State
2006Northern ArizonaWeber State
2007Idaho StateNorthern Arizona
2008MontanaMontana State
2009MontanaPortland State
2010Portland StateMontana State
2011MontanaPortland State
2012Idaho StateNorthern Colorado
2013MontanaNorthern Colorado
2014North DakotaMontana
2015MontanaNorthern Colorado
2016IdahoIdaho State
2017Montana StateIdaho State
2018Northern ColoradoIdaho
2019Portland StateEastern Washington
2020Canceled (final): Montana State / Idaho
2021Idaho StateIdaho
2022Montana StateNorthern Arizona
2023Sacramento StateNorthern Arizona
2024Eastern WashingtonNorthern Arizona
2025Montana StateMontana

Football titles

[edit]

Bold = National Champions

SeasonChampionsRecord (Conf.)
1963Idaho State3–1
1964Montana State3–0
1965Weber State,Idaho3–1
1966Montana State4–0
1967Montana State3–1
1968Weber State,Montana State,Idaho3–1
1969Montana4–0
1970Montana5–0
1971Idaho4–1
1972Montana State5–1
1973Boise State6–0
1974Boise State6–0
1975Boise State5–0–1
1976Montana State6–0
1977Boise State6–0
1978Northern Arizona6–0
1979Montana State6–1
1980Boise State6–1
1981Idaho State6–1
1982Idaho,Montana,Montana State5–2
1983Nevada6–1
1984Montana State6–1
1985Idaho6–1
1986Nevada7–0
1987Idaho7–1
1988Idaho7–1
1989Idaho8–0
1990Nevada7–1
1991Nevada8–0
1992Idaho,Eastern Washington6–1
1993Montana7–0
1994Boise State6–1
1995Montana6–1
1996Montana8–0
1997Eastern Washington7–1
1998Montana6–2
1999Montana7–1
2000Montana8–0
2001Montana7–0
2002Montana State,Montana,Idaho State5–2
2003Montana State,Montana,Northern Arizona5–2
2004Montana,Eastern Washington6–1
2005Eastern Washington,Montana State,Montana5–2
2006Montana8–0
2007Montana8–0
2008Montana,Weber State7–1
2009Montana8–0
2010Eastern Washington,Montana State7–1
2011Montana State7–1
2012Eastern Washington,Montana State,Cal Poly7–1
2013Eastern Washington8–0
2014Eastern Washington7–1
2015Southern Utah7–1
2016Eastern Washington,North Dakota8–0
2017Southern Utah,Weber State7–1
2018Weber State,Eastern Washington,UC Davis7–1
2019Weber State,Sacramento State7–1
2020Weber State5–1
2021Sacramento State8–0
2022Sacramento State,Montana State8–0
2023Montana7–1
2024Montana State8–0
2025Montana State8-0

Football championships (by school)

[edit]
Schoolmember yearstotal titlesLast won
Montana1963–present192023
Montana State1963–present182025
Eastern Washington1987–present102018
Idaho1965–95
2018–present
81992
Boise State1970–9561994
Nevada1979–9241991
Weber State1963–present52019
Idaho State1963–present32002
Sacramento State1996–present32022
Northern Arizona1970–present22003
Southern Utah2012–present22017
Cal Poly2012–present12012
North Dakota2012–201712016
UC Davis2012–present12018
Cal State Northridge1996–20010
Portland State1996–present0
Northern Colorado2006–present0

All-time school records by wins for current teams

[edit]

This list goes through the 2020 season.

This list includes former member North Dakota and excludes current member Idaho. Records do not match NCAA record book.[52]

#TeamRecordsPct.Big Sky
Championships
National
Championships
1North Dakota622-383-30.61511
2Montana564-478-26.540182
3Eastern Washington503-404-23.553101
4UC Davis495-384-35.56110
5Cal Poly485-383-19.55711
6Montana State470-467-33.502163
7Idaho State449-488-21.48031
8Northern Arizona445-438-23.50420
9Northern Colorado425-450-26.48602
10Portland State331-354-10.48300
11Weber State266-294-3.47560
12Sacramento State263-351-8.42920
13Southern Utah261-319-13.45121

Overall Big Sky Conference champions

[edit]
Boise State Broncos (1970–1996)Cal State Northridge Matadors (1996–2001)Eastern Washington Eagles (1987– )Gonzaga Bulldogs (1963–1979)Idaho State Bengals (1963– )Montana State Bobcats (1963– )Northern Arizona Lumberjacks (1970– )Portland State Vikings (1996– )Sacramento State Hornets (1996– )Idaho Vandals (1963–1996)Nevada Wolf Pack (1979–1992)Northern Colorado Bears (2006– )Montana Grizzlies (1963– )Weber State Wildcats (1963– )
Football673172184197
Men's Basketball21122542411831
Women's Basketball (RS/Tourn)1/01/11/13/33/11/11/11/11/021/202/2
Men's Cross Country252182387
Women's Cross Country415124
Men's Indoor Track and Field25122115
Women's Indoor Track and Field631172114
Men's Outdoor Track and Field1121154219
Women's Outdoor Track and Field631173115
Men's Tennis512421010211
Women's Tennis21239110
Women's Soccer121144
Volleyball11531511323
Women's Golf11154111
Men's Golf11122617
Baseball (1963–74)443
Men's Swimming (1963–74)28
Wrestling (1963–87)107312
Men's Skiing (1963–74)1423
Total

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Idaho, six others study basketball league".Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. Associated Press. June 1, 1962. p. 8.
  2. ^"Six intermountain colleges move toward athletic ties".Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. Associated Press. October 30, 1962. p. 8.
  3. ^"Teams meet in basketball".Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. Associated Press. November 25, 1962. p. 6, sports.
  4. ^abMissildine, Harry (February 26, 1963)."Six western schools create Big Sky athletic conference".Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. p. 12.
  5. ^ab"Big Sky is ready for league action".Spokane Daily Chronicle. Washington. February 26, 1963. p. 13.
  6. ^Missildine, Harry (February 20, 1963)."The conference should band smoothly".Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. p. 12.
  7. ^"Officials view sports loop".Spokane Daily Chronicle. Washington. February 25, 1963. p. 13.
  8. ^"Big Sky steps up".Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. May 24, 1968. p. 12.
  9. ^ab"Idaho off probation, loop titles dwindle".Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. May 5, 1974. p. 13.
  10. ^ab"Baseball axed in Big Sky".Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. May 29, 1974. p. 15.
  11. ^"Big Sky Set to Celebrate Anniversaries".Big Sky Conference. RetrievedMarch 2, 2017.
  12. ^"Lady Griz Basketball Programs, 1979-1988 | University of Montana Publications | University of Montana".
  13. ^"Big Sky Conference".Big Sky Conference. RetrievedMarch 2, 2017.
  14. ^Voisinavoisin, Ailene (September 8, 2010). "Big Sky, horizons open for UCD".The Sacramento Bee. pp. C1.
  15. ^Aird, Donovan (September 8, 2010). "Big Sky felt it needed to make a statement in conference realignment".The Tribune (San Luis Obispo, CA). pp. S1.
  16. ^Burton, Roy (June 4, 2014)."WSU joins friends/foes as Big Sky brings back men's golf".Standard-Examiner. Ogden, Utah. RetrievedJune 13, 2014.
  17. ^Delaney, Anne (May 7, 2024)."Northern Colorado men's golf moving to The Summit League beginning July 1".Greeley Tribune. RetrievedMay 8, 2024.
  18. ^"Men's golf to return as EWU Athletics varsity program" (Press release). Eastern Washington Eagles. October 15, 2024. RetrievedNovember 26, 2024.
  19. ^"Big Sky Men's Golf Returns for 2025-26 Season" (Press release). Big Sky Conference. May 15, 2025. RetrievedJune 4, 2025.
  20. ^"Big Sky baseball: split loop planned".Spokane Daily Chronicle. Washington. May 19, 1970. p. 13.
  21. ^"Vandals list baseball play".Spokane Daily Chronicle. Washington. January 28, 1971. p. 22.
  22. ^"Big Sky baseball altered; MSU out, NAU in playoffs".Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. Associated Press. May 19, 1971. p. 13.
  23. ^"Key games: Big Sky Conference".Spokane Daily Chronicle. Washington. April 23, 1973. p. 17.
  24. ^"Vandals Arizona-bound".Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. May 29, 1969. p. 13.
  25. ^"Baseball champions".Big Sky Conference. RetrievedAugust 9, 2012.
  26. ^"Gonzaga blasts ISU for conference title".Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. May 22, 1974. p. 15.
  27. ^"Idaho (State) drops baseball".Ellensburg Daily Record. Washington. June 5, 1974. p. 9.
  28. ^"Idaho, Gonzaga join new baseball circuit".Spokane Daily Chronicle. Washington. Associated Press. June 24, 1974. p. 16.
  29. ^"Boise State drops baseball program".Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. Associated Press. May 6, 1980. p. C1.
  30. ^Goodwin, Dale (May 13, 1980)."Baseball's 'out' at Idaho".Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. p. 19.
  31. ^"UND to reduce number of sports after 2015-16 season". University of North Dakota.Archived from the original on June 30, 2016. RetrievedApril 12, 2016.
  32. ^"Gameday at Northern Colorado". University of Northern Colorado. RetrievedApril 4, 2015.Stadium Capacity: 8,533
  33. ^"The Nest-Basketball, Volleyball, Gymnastics". Sacramento State Athletics. RetrievedMarch 3, 2016.
  34. ^"University Quick Facts"(PDF).2018 Dixie State Men's Soccer Media Guide. Dixie State Trailblazers. p. 1. RetrievedJanuary 23, 2019.
  35. ^"Burns Arena". Dixie State Trailblazers. RetrievedJanuary 23, 2019.
  36. ^"Damian Lillard | Portland Trail Blazers | NBA.com".NBA.com. RetrievedMarch 18, 2022.
  37. ^"2021-2022 NCAA MBB Overall (PDF) – Big Sky Conference".Big Sky Conference. RetrievedMarch 18, 2022.
  38. ^"Big Sky Announces Future Football League Schedules for 2022-24".Big Sky Conference. July 24, 2021. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2022.
  39. ^"Big Sky shakes up protected football rivalries".Moscow-Pullman Daily News. August 5, 2021. RetrievedDecember 26, 2022.
  40. ^Gogola, Frank (July 31, 2021)."Montana, Montana State get new protected rivals in Big Sky Conference play for 2022-24 seasons".406 MT Sports. RetrievedDecember 22, 2022.
  41. ^"Big Sky Announces Future Football League Schedules for 2025-27".Big Sky Conference. January 27, 2022. RetrievedNovember 27, 2024.
  42. ^"Friel named Big Sky loop commissioner".Lewiston Morning Tribune. Associated Press. June 8, 1963. p. 2.
  43. ^"Frosh can play Sky frosh grid sport: but not Idaho".Spokane Daily Chronicle. Associated Press. November 25, 1970. p. 12.
  44. ^abcPayne, Bob (May 19, 1971)."New Big Sky commissioner Roning sees fine future".Spokesman-Review. p. 10.
  45. ^Newnham, Blaine (January 6, 1977)."A chance in the Sky".Eugene Register-Guard. p. 1C.
  46. ^"New Big Sky boss balks at expansion".Spokesman-Review. Associated Press. May 21, 1981. p. 26.
  47. ^ab"Changing Big Sky prepares for final fling".Moscow-Pullman Daily News. Associated Press. September 1, 1995. p. 1B.
  48. ^Staff, Missoulian (February 10, 2016)."Big Sky commissioner Doug Fullerton to retire in June".Missoulian.com. RetrievedMarch 2, 2017.
  49. ^"Big Sky announces new commissioner".Big Sky Conference. RetrievedApril 29, 2016.
  50. ^"Coaching Legend Would Have Loved Today's Basketball Team | CAHNRS Alumni & Development | Washington State University".
  51. ^"Big Sky Conference Moves League Office to Farmington".Big Sky Conference.
  52. ^"2020 NCAA Football Records (FCS Records)"(PDF).

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