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Revision as of 17:31, 10 June 2010

Pacific-10 Conference
109x116
AssociationNCAA
CommissionerLarry Scott (since 2009)
Sports fielded
  • 22
    • men's: 11
    • women's: 11
DivisionDivision I
SubdivisionFBS
RegionPacific Coast
Official websitewww.pac-10.org
Locations
Location of teams in {{{title}}}

The Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10) is a college athletic conference which operates in the western United States. It participates in the NCAA's Division I; its football teams compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS; formerly Division I-A), the higher of two levels of NCAA Division I football competition. The conference's 10 members (which are primarily flagship research universities in their respective regions, well-regarded academically, and with relatively large student enrollment) compete in 22 NCAA sports. It was founded as the Athletic Association of Western Universities or AAWU in 1959, and went by the names Big Five, Big Six, and Pacific-8, becoming the Pacific-10 in 1978.

The self-proclaimed Conference of Champions, the Pac-10 has won more NCAA National Team Championships than any other conference in history. In fact, the top three schools with the most NCAA championships belong to the Pac-10 (UCLA, Stanford and the University of Southern California); while UCLA holds the most, winning a combined 106 team championships in men's and women's sports.

During the 2008-09 school year, the Pac-10 conference captured 11 NCAA titles, outstripping any other conference. It was followed by the ACC and Big Ten with five championships, and by the Big 12 and SEC conferences with four each.[14]

The current commissioner of the conference is Larry Scott who replaced Thomas C. Hansen, who retired in July 2009 after 26 years in that position.[1] Prior to joining the Pac-10, Scott was Chairman and CEO of the Women's Tennis Association.[2]

Membership

Full members

Institution Location Founded Affiliation Enrollment Nickname NCAA Championships
(through June 8th, 2010)[3]
University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona
(541,811)
1885 Public (Arizona Board of Regents) 38,800 Wildcats 17
Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona
(169,712)
1885 Public (Arizona Board of Regents) 64,394 Sun Devils 22
University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California
(102,743)
1868 Public (University of California system) 35,409 Golden Bears 28
University of Colorado at Boulder Boulder, Colorado
(94,171)
1876 Public (University of Colorado System) 30,196 Buffaloes 22
University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon
(153,690)
1876 Public (Oregon University System) 22,386 Ducks 17
Oregon State University Corvallis, Oregon
(53,900)
1868 Public (Oregon University System) 21,969 Beavers 3
Stanford University Stanford, California
(13,315)
1891 Private/Non-sectarian 14,945 Cardinal 99
University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles, California
(3,849,378)
1919 Public (University of California system) 38,000 Bruins 106
University of Southern California Los Angeles, California
(3,849,378)
1880 Private/Non-sectarian 32,160 Trojans 91
University of Washington Seattle, Washington
(602,000)
1861 Public 42,708 Huskies 6
Washington State University Pullman, Washington
(27,150)
1890 Public 25,135 Cougars 2

On June 10, 2010 the University of Colorado at Boulder announced that they would be joining the Pac-10.

Locations of Pacific-10 Conference full member institutions.

Endowments

  1. Stanford University - $17.2 billion [4]
  2. University of Southern California - $3.6 billion [5]
  3. University of California, Berkeley - $3.1 billion[6]
  4. University of California, Los Angeles - $2.6 billion [7]
  5. University of Washington - $2.2 billion[8]
  6. Washington State University - $678 million [9]
  7. University of Colorado at Boulder - $593 million
  8. The University of Arizona - $519 million [10]
  9. University of Oregon - $498 million [11]
  10. Arizona State University - $494 million [12]
  11. Oregon State University - $476 million [13]

Associate members (men's soccer)

Associate members (wrestling)

History

Pacific Coast Conference

The roots of the Pac-10 Conference go back to December 2, 1915, when the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) was founded at a meeting at the Imperial Hotel in Portland, Oregon[14]. Charter members were the University of California (now University of California, Berkeley), the University of Washington, the University of Oregon, and Oregon Agricultural College (now Oregon State University). The conference began play in 1916.

One year later, Washington State College (now Washington State University) joined the league, followed by Stanford University in 1918.

In 1922, the PCC expanded to eight teams with the admission of USC and Idaho. Montana joined the Conference in 1924, and in 1928, the PCC grew to 10 members with the addition of UCLA.

For many years, the conference split into two divisions for basketball—a Southern Division comprising the four California schools and a Northern Division comprising the six schools in the Pacific Northwest.

In 1950, Montana departed to join the Mountain States Conference. The PCC continued as a nine-team league through 1958.

AAWU (Big Five and Big Six)

Following a "pay-for-play" scandal at several PCC institutions (specifically Cal, USC, UCLA and Washington), the PCC disbanded in 1959. When those four and Stanford started talking about forming a new conference, retired Admiral Thomas J. Hamilton interceded and suggested the schools consider creating a "power conference." Nicknamed the "Airplane Conference", the five PCC schools would have played with other big schools including Army, Navy, Air Force, Notre Dame, Penn, Penn State, Duke, and Georgia Tech among others. The effort fell through when a Pentagon official vetoed the idea and the service academies backed out.[15]

On July 1, 1959 the new Athletic Association of Western Universities was formed, with Cal, Stanford, UCLA, USC, and Washington as charter members. The conference also was popularly known as the Big Five from 1960-62;[16] when Washington State joined in 1962, the conference was then informally known as the Big Six.[16]

Pacific-8

Oregon and Oregon State joined in 1964, the term "Pacific-8" became informally used (as there already was a Big Eight Conference). Idaho was never invited to join the AAWU; the Vandals were independent for four years until the formation of the Big Sky Conference in 1963.

In 1968, the AAWU formally renamed itself the Pacific-8 Conference, or Pac-8 for short.

Pacific-10

In 1978, the conference added WAC powers Arizona and Arizona State, to create the Pacific-10 Conference or Pac-10 in its current form.

The Pac-10 claims the PCC's history as its own. It inherited the PCC's berth in the Rose Bowl, and the eight largest schools in the old PCC all eventually joined the new league. However, the older league had a separate charter.

The Pac-10 is one of the founding members of the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation, a conference organized to provide competition in non-revenue Olympic sports. All Pac-10 members participate in at least one MPSF sport (men's and women's indoor track and field both actually have enough participating Pac-10 schools for the conference to sponsor a championship, but the Pac-10 has opted not to do so), and for certain sports, the Pac-10 admits certain schools as Associate Members (which currently are San Diego State for men's soccer, and UC Davis, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, Boise State, Cal State Fullerton, Portland State, and Cal State Bakersfield for wrestling).

The conference expressed interest in admitting Texas after the collapse of the Southwest Conference. Texas expressed an interest in joining a strong academic conference, but joined three fellow SWC schools to combine with the Big Eight Conference to form the Big 12 Conference in 1996.[17]

Of Division I conferences, only the Ivy League has maintained its current membership for a longer time than the Pac-10. Pac-10 commissioner Larry Scott said on February 9, 2010, that the window for expansion by the conference is open for the next year as the conference begins negotiations for a new television deal. Speaking on a conference call to introduce former Big 12 commissioner Kevin Weiberg as his new deputy, Scott talked about possibly adding new teams to the conference and launching a new television network. Scott, the former head of the Women’s Tennis Association, took over the conference last July. In his less than eight months on the job, he has seen growing interest from the membership over the possibility of adding teams for the first time since Arizona and Arizona State joined the conference in 1978.

In June 2010, there have been published reports that the Pac-10 is considering adding from two to as many as six teams.[18][19]

On June 10, 2010, the University of Colorado officially joined the Pac-10 Conference.[20]

Membership timeline

Arizona State UniversityUniversity of ArizonaUniversity of California, Los AngelesUniversity of MontanaUniversity of IdahoUniversity of Southern CaliforniaStanford UniversityWashington State UniversityWashington State UniversityOregon State UniversityOregon State UniversityUniversity of OregonUniversity of OregonUniversity of WashingtonUniversity of California, Berkeley

NCAA national titles

NCAA National Championship trophies, rings, watches won by UCLA teams
School Team Individual
Men Women Total Men Women Total
Arizona 6 11 17 60 75 135
Arizona State 11 11 22 52 43 95
California 24 4 28 120 52 172
Oregon 13 3 16 67 15 82
Oregon State 3 0 3 32 7 39
Stanford 59 38 97 251 167 418
UCLA 71 35 106 162 96 258
USC 75 13 88 302 55 357
Washington 0 6 6 52 12 64
Washington State 2 0 2 78 6 84
Conference total 264 119 383 1176 528 1704
  • through 2008-09 season (updated at end of school year)[21]

Pac-10 football rivalries

Big Game, 2004 between Cal and Stanford

Each school within the conference has its own in-state, conference rivalry. One is an intracity rivalry (UCLA-USC), and another is within the same metropolitan area (Cal-Stanford). These rivalries (and the name given to the football forms) are:

There are other notable football rivalries within the Pac-10 conference.

All of the California schools consider each other major rivals, due to the culture clash between Northern and Southern California. For USC, the big game is UCLA. For Stanford, their big game is Cal. But for both Stanford and Cal, their second biggest game is USC.[22] Cal and UCLA have a rivalry rooted in their shared history as the top programs within the University of California system. Stanford and USC have a rivalry rooted in their shared history as the only private schools in the Pac-10. Cal and USC also have a long history, having played each other every year in football since 1916.

Oregon and Washington also have an unofficial rivalry (despite recent efforts to give it the name "The Cascade Clash"). All of the Northwest schools consider each other as rivals due to the proximity and long history.

Arizona and New Mexico have a recently renewed rivalry game, based upon when they were both members of the WAC and both states were longtime territories before being admitted as states in 1912. They played for the Kit Carson Rifle trophy, which was no longer used starting with their meeting in the 1997 Insight Bowl.[23][24]

USC and Notre Dame have an intersectional rivalry (See Notre Dame-USC rivalry). The games in odd-numbered years in Indiana are played in mid-October, while the games in even-numbered years in Los Angeles are usually played in late November.

With the NCAA permanently approving 12-game schedules in college football beginning in 2006, the Pac-10 — alone among major conferences in doing so — went to a full nine-game conference schedule. Previously, the schools did not play one non-rival opponent, resulting in an eight-game conference schedule (4 home games and 4 away). This round-robin schedule is only shared by the Big East among BCS conferences. The schedule consists of one home and away game against the two schools in each region, plus the game against the primary rival.

Rivalries in other sports

All of the intra-conference rivalries in football are carried over into other sports.

During the 1970s, UCLA and Notre Dame had an intense men's basketball rivalry. For several years, it was the only non-conference game in Division I basketball that was played twice a season (home-and-home). Unquestionably, the most famous game in the rivalry was on January 19, 1974, when Notre Dame scored the last 12 points of the game to nip UCLA and end the Bruins' record 88-game winning streak. This rivalry is now dormant, partly because Notre Dame is no longer independent in sports other than football (Big East).

In baseball, there are intense rivalries between the four southern schools. Arizona, Arizona State, USC, and UCLA have long and successful histories in baseball and all have won national titles in the sport. The most intense series is widely regarded to be the "Basebrawl" series between USC and Arizona State in 1990. Arizona State swept the series and in the final game a bench clearing brawl spread quickly to the stands and made national headlines. Several were injured and riot police were called to end the fracas.

Washington and California have a longstanding rivalry in men's crew as the two traditionally dominant programs on the West Coast.

The isolated rural campuses of Washington State and Idaho are eight miles (13 km) apart on the Palouse, creating a natural border war. Idaho rejoined FBS in 1996; the football rivalry has been dubbed Battle of the Palouse.

Due to the unique geographic nature of the Pac-10 teams, the teams travel in pairs for road basketball games. For example, on Thursday, February 28, 2008, USC played Arizona and UCLA played Arizona State. Two nights later the teams switched and USC played Arizona State and UCLA played Arizona. The teams are paired as followed: USC and UCLA (the L.A. teams), Arizona and Arizona State (the Arizona teams), Cal and Stanford (the Bay Area teams), Washington and Washington State (the Washington teams), and Oregon and Oregon State (the Oregon teams). Usually, the games are played on Thursdays and Saturdays with a game or occasionally two on Sundays for television purposes. This pairing formula is also used in women's volleyball. To make scheduling simpler for men and women's basketball, the schedule for women's basketball is the opposite of the men's schedule. For example, when the Oregon schools are hosting the men's teams from the Arizona schools, the Arizona schools host the women's teams from Oregon schools the same weekend.

This formula has made a tradition in conference play to keep track of how a team does against a particular region; and stats are kept at to how successful a team is against, for example, "the Bay Area schools" at home or away. At any given week, four regions are playing against each other, while the remaining one has their rivalry game, usually on the weekend. Those teams get the Thursday off unless they schedule a non-conference game.

Conference facilities

School Football stadium Capacity Basketball arena Capacity Baseball stadium Capacity
Arizona Arizona Stadium 57,803 McKale Center 14,545 [25] Kindall Field 6,500
Arizona State Sun Devil Stadium at Frank Kush Field 71,706 [26] Wells Fargo Arena 14,198 Packard Stadium over 4,000 [27]
California California Memorial Stadium 71,799 [28] Haas Pavilion 11,877 [29] Evans Diamond 2,500 [30]
Colorado Folsom Field 53,750 [31] Coors Event Center 11,064 No baseball stadium N/A
Oregon Autzen Stadium at Rich Brooks Field 54,000 [32] McArthur Court 9,087 [33] PK Park 4,000
Oregon State Reser Stadium 45,674 Gill Coliseum 10,400 [34] Goss Stadium at Coleman Field 3,248
Stanford Stanford Stadium 50,000 [35] Maples Pavilion 7,233 [36] Sunken Diamond 4,000 [37]
UCLA Rose Bowl 91,936 [38] Pauley Pavilion 12,819 [39] Jackie Robinson Stadium 2,000 [40]
USC Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 93,607 [41] Galen Center 10,258 [42] Dedeaux Field 2,500 [43]
Washington Husky Stadium 72,500 [44] Bank of America Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion 10,000 [45] Husky Ballpark at Chaffey Field 1,500
Washington State Martin Stadium 40,000 [46] Beasley Coliseum 12,058 [47] Bailey-Brayton Field 3,500 [48]

Past conference champions

Men's basketball

The Pacific Coast Conference began playing basketball in the 1915-16 season. The PCC was split into North and South Divisions for basketball beginning with the 1922-23 season. The winners of the two divisions would play a best of three series of games to determine the PCC basketball champion. If two division teams tied, they would have a one game playoff to produce the division representative. Starting with the first NCAA Men's Basketball Championship in 1939, the winner of the PCC divisional playoff was given the automatic berth in the NCAA tournament. Oregon, the 1939 PCC champion, won the championship game in the 1939 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.

The last divisional playoff was in the 1954-55 season. After that, there was no divisional play and all teams played each other in a round robin competition. From the 1955-56 season through the 1958-59 season, the regular season conference champion was awarded the NCAA tournament berth from the PCC. In the case of a tie, a tie breaker rule was used to determine the NCAA tournament representative.

Beginning with the 1975 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, the Pac-10 would usually place at least one other at-large team in the tournament.

By the 1985-86 season, the Pac-10 was one of three remaining conferences that gave their automatic NCAA tournament bid to the regular season round-robin champion. The other two conferences were the Ivy League and the Big Ten Conference.

The modern Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament format began in 1987. It was dropped after 1990 upon opposition from coaches and poor revenue and attendance.[49]

The tournament was restarted by a 8-2 vote of the athletic directors of the conference in 2000 after determining that a tournament would help increase exposure of the conference and help the seeding of the schools in the NCAA tournament.[50]

UCLA basketball game at Pauley Pavilion
Cal versus San Diego State at Haas Pavilion
Season Conference Champion (#) Tournament Champion (#)
1915-16 California (1)
Oregon State (1)
1916-17 Washington State (1)
1918-19 Oregon (1)
1919-20 Stanford (1)
1920-21 California (2)
Stanford (2)
1921-22 Idaho (1)
1922-23 Idaho (2)
1923-24 California (3)
1924-25 California (4)
1925-26 California (5)
1926-27 California (6)
1927-28 USC (1)
1928-29 California (7)
1929-30 USC (2)
1930-31 Washington (1)
1931-32 California (8)
1932-33 Oregon State (2)
1933-34 Washington (2)
1934-35 USC (3)
1935-36 Stanford (3)
1936-37 Stanford (4)
1937-38 Stanford (5)
1938-39 Oregon (2)
1939-40 USC (4)
1940-41 Washington State (2)
1941-42 Stanford (6)
1942-43 Washington (3)
1943-44 California (9)
Washington (4)
1944-45 Oregon (3)
UCLA (1)
1945-46 California (10)
1946-47 Oregon State (3)
1947-48 Washington (5)
1948-49 Oregon State (4)
1949-50 UCLA (2)
1950-51 Washington (6)
1951-52 UCLA (3)
1952-53 Washington (7)
1953-54 USC (5)
1954-55 Oregon State (5)
1955-56 UCLA (4)
1956-57 California (11)
1957-58 California (12)
Oregon State (6)
1958-59 California (13)
1959-60 California (14)
1960-61 USC (6)
1961-62 UCLA (5)
1962-63 Stanford (7)
UCLA (6)
1963-64 UCLA (7)
1964-65 UCLA (8)
1965-66 Oregon State (7)
1966-67 UCLA (9)
1967-68 UCLA (10)
1968-69 UCLA (11)
1969-70 UCLA (12)
1970-71 UCLA (13)
1971-72 UCLA (14)
1972-73 UCLA (15)
1973-74 UCLA (16)
1974-75 UCLA (17)
1975-76 UCLA (18)
1976-77 UCLA (19)
1977-78 UCLA (20)
1978-79 UCLA (21)
1979-80 Oregon State (8)
1980-81 Oregon State (9)
1981-82 Oregon State (10)
1982-83 UCLA (22)
1983-84 Oregon State (11)
Washington (8)
1984-85 USC (7)
Washington (9)
1985-86 Arizona (1)
1986-87 UCLA (23) UCLA (1)
1987-88 Arizona (2) Arizona (1)
1988-89 Arizona (3) Arizona (2)
1989-90 Arizona (4)
Oregon State (12)
Arizona (3)
1990-91 Arizona (5)
1991-92 UCLA (24)
1992-93 Arizona (6)
1993-94 Arizona (7)
1994-95 UCLA (25)
1995-96 UCLA (26)
1996-97 UCLA (27)
1997-98 Arizona (8)
1998-99 Stanford (8)
1999-00 Arizona (9)
Stanford (9)
2000-01 Stanford (10)
2001-02 Oregon (4) Arizona (4)
2002-03 Arizona (10) Oregon (1)
2003-04 Stanford (11) Stanford (1)
2004-05 Arizona (11) Washington (1)
2005-06 UCLA (28) UCLA (2)
2006-07 UCLA (29) Oregon (2)
2007-08 UCLA (30) UCLA (3)
2008-09 Washington (10) USC (1)
2009-10 California (15) Washington (2)

See also

  • Bold text denotes National Champion. (Arizona was National Champion in 1997, but not Conference Champion.)
  • Pac-10 Tournament

Women's basketball

Conf Ovrl
Year Team W L Pct W L Pct
1986-87 USC 15 3 0.833 22 8 0.733
1987-88 Washington 16 2 0.889 25 5 0.833
1988-89 Stanford 18 0 1.000 28 3 0.903
1989-90 Stanford 17 1 0.944 32 1 0.970
Washington 17 1 0.944 28 3 0.903
1990-91 Stanford 16 2 0.889 26 6 0.813
1991-92 Stanford 15 3 0.833 30 3 0.909
1992-93 Stanford 15 3 0.833 26 6 0.812
1993-94 USC 16 2 0.887 26 4 0.867
1994-95 Stanford 17 1 0.944 30 3 0.909
1995-96 Stanford 18 0 1.000 29 3 0.906
1996-97 Stanford 18 0 1.000 34 2 0.944
1997-98 Stanford 17 1 0.944 21 6 0.778
1998-99 Oregon 15 3 0.833 25 6 0.806
UCLA 15 3 0.833 26 8 0.765
1999-00 Oregon 14 4 0.778 23 8 0.742
2000-01 Arizona State 12 6 0.667 20 11 0.645
Stanford 12 6 0.667 19 11 0.633
Washington 12 6 0.667 22 10 0.688
2001-02 Stanford 18 0 1.000 32 3 0.914
2002-03 Stanford 15 3 0.833 27 5 0.844
2003-04 Arizona 14 4 0.778 24 9 0.727
Stanford 14 4 0.778 27 7 0.813
2004-05 Stanford 17 1 0.944 32 3 0.914
2005-06 Stanford 15 3 0.833 26 8 0.765
2006-07 Stanford 17 1 0.944 28 4 0.875
2007-08 Stanford 16 2 0.889 35 4 0.897
2008-09 Stanford 17 1 0.941 26 4 0.862
2009-10 Stanford 18 0 1.000 31 1 0.969

See also

Football

Rose Bowl, Pasadena, California
ASU quarterback Rudy Carpenter hands off to tailback Dimitri Nance in the 2008 game at Cal
Oregon State Beavers players get ready for action on the road
Conf Ovrl
Year Conference Champion (#) W L T Pts Opp W L T
1916 Washington (1) 3 0 1 62 10 6 0 1
1917 Washington State (1) 3 0 0 46 3 6 0 0
1918 California (1) 2 0 0 72 0 7 2 0
1919 *Oregon (1) 2 1 0 33 20 5 1 3
Washington (2) 2 1 0 33 31 5 1 0
1920 California (2) 3 0 0 104 7 9 0 0
1921 California (3) 4 0 0 167 10 9 0 1
1922 California (4) 4 0 0 146 7 9 0 0
1923 California (5) 5 0 0 66 7 9 0 1
1924 Stanford (1) 3 0 1 92 36 7 1 1
1925 Washington (3) 5 0 0 88 24 10 1 1
1926 Stanford (2) 4 0 0 112 40 10 0 1
1927 *Stanford (3) 4 0 1 78 32 8 2 1
USC (1) 4 0 1 99 38 8 1 1
1928 USC (2) 4 0 1 84 20 9 0 1
1929 USC (3) 6 1 0 258 29 10 2 0
1930 Washington State (2) 6 0 0 134 20 9 1 0
1931 USC (4) 7 0 0 259 13 10 1 0
1932 USC (5) 6 0 0 112 13 10 0 0
1933 Oregon (2) 4 1 0 45 29 9 1 0
*Stanford (4) 4 1 0 56 23 8 2 1
1934 Stanford (5) 5 0 0 93 7 9 1 1
1935 California (6) 4 1 0 55 22 9 1 0
*Stanford (6) 4 1 0 60 7 8 1 0
UCLA (1) 4 1 0 75 39 8 2 0
1936 Washington (4) 7 0 1 141 21 7 2 1
1937 California (7) 6 0 1 137 26 10 0 1
1938 California (8) 6 1 0 107 37 10 1 0
*USC (6) 6 1 0 131 36 9 2 0
1939 USC (7) 5 0 2 121 21 8 0 2
1940 Stanford (7) 7 0 0 141 66 10 0 0
1941 Oregon State (1) 7 2 0 123 33 8 2 0
1942 UCLA (2) 6 1 0 146 58 7 4 0
1943 USC (8) 5 0 0 95 13 8 2 0
1944 USC (9) 3 0 2 129 39 8 0 2
1945 USC (10) 5 1 0 107 43 7 4 0
1946 UCLA (3) 7 0 0 216 45 10 1 0
1947 USC (11) 6 0 0 147 20 7 2 1
1948 *California (9) 6 0 0 155 40 10 1 0
Oregon (3) 7 0 0 125 48 9 2 0
1949 California (10) 7 0 0 220 80 10 1 0
1950 California (11) 5 0 1 124 28 9 1 1
1951 Stanford (8) 6 1 0 152 101 9 2 0
1952 USC (12) 6 0 0 174 32 10 1 0
1953 UCLA (4) 6 1 0 172 41 8 2 0
1954 UCLA (5) 6 0 0 256 26 9 0 0
1955 UCLA (6) 6 0 0 197 37 9 2 0
1956 Oregon State (2) 6 1 1 152 104 7 3 1
1957 *Oregon (4) 6 2 0 124 81 7 4 0
Oregon State (3) 6 2 0 147 110 8 2 0
1958 California (12) 6 1 0 127 85 7 4 0
1959 UCLA (7) 3 1 0 91 51 5 4 1
USC (13) 3 1 0 69 60 8 2 0
*Washington (5) 3 1 0 68 29 10 1 0
1960 Washington (6) 4 0 0 100 25 10 1 0
1961 UCLA (8) 3 1 0 78 39 7 4 0
1962 USC (14) 4 0 0 99 23 11 0 0
1963 Washington (7) 4 1 0 96 58 6 5 0
1964 *Oregon State (4) 3 1 0 74 36 8 3 0
USC (15) 3 1 0 88 58 7 3 0
1965 UCLA (9) 4 0 0 134 56 8 2 1
1966 USC (16) 4 1 0 101 44 7 4 0
1967 USC (17) 6 1 0 182 47 10 1 0
1968 USC (18) 6 0 0 114 90 9 1 1
1969 USC (19) 6 0 0 129 66 10 0 1
1970 Stanford (9) 6 1 0 220 101 9 3 0
1971 Stanford (10) 6 1 0 162 98 9 3 0
1972 USC (20) 7 0 0 243 59 12 0 0
1973 USC (21) 7 0 0 240 124 9 2 1
1974 USC (22) 6 0 1 226 69 10 1 1
1975 California (13) 6 1 0 235 132 8 3 0
*UCLA (10) 6 1 0 215 123 9 2 1
1976 USC (23) 7 0 0 234 81 11 1 0
1977 Washington (8) 6 1 0 238 103 8 4 0
1978 USC (24) 6 1 0 182 81 12 1 0
1979 USC (25) 6 0 1 244 99 11 0 1
1980 Washington (9) 6 1 0 198 119 9 3 0
1981 Washington (10) 6 2 0 185 147 10 2 0
1982 UCLA (11) 5 1 1 218 148 10 1 1
1983 UCLA (12) 6 1 1 211 158 7 4 1
1984 USC (26) 7 1 0 148 107 9 3 0
1985 UCLA (13) 6 2 0 231 120 9 2 1
1986 Arizona State (1) 5 1 1 203 122 10 1 1
1987 UCLA (14) 7 1 0 309 123 10 2 0
*USC (27) 7 1 0 253 139 8 4 0
1988 USC (28) 8 0 0 289 121 10 2 0
1989 USC (29) 6 0 1 174 67 9 2 1
1990 Washington (11) 7 1 0 340 99 10 2 0
1991 Washington (12) 8 0 0 321 77 12 0 0
1992 Stanford (11) 6 2 0 184 130 10 3 0
*Washington (13) 6 2 0 219 117 9 3 0
1993 Arizona (1) 6 2 0 209 128 10 2 0
*UCLA (15) 6 2 0 217 168 8 4 0
USC (30) 6 2 0 229 141 8 5 0
1994 Oregon (5) 7 1 0 199 108 9 4 0
1995 *USC (31) 6 1 1 214 130 9 2 1
Washington (14) 6 1 1 232 170 7 4 1
1996 Arizona State (2) 8 0 0 346 182 11 1 0
1997 UCLA (16) 7 1 0 292 181 10 2 0
*Washington State (3) 7 1 0 297 246 10 2 0
1998 UCLA (17) 8 0 0 309 198 10 2 0
1999 Stanford (12) 7 1 0 313 197 8 4 0
2000 Oregon (6) 7 1 0 215 172 10 2 0
Oregon State (5) 7 1 0 275 161 11 1 0
*Washington (15) 7 1 0 258 183 11 1 0
2001 Oregon (7) 7 1 0 281 181 11 1 0
2002 USC (32) 7 1 0 299 163 11 1 0
*Washington State (4) 7 1 0 285 188 10 3 0
2003 USC (33) 7 1 0 342 161 12 1 0
2004 California (14) 7 0 0 10 1 0
2005 USC (34) 8 0 0 383 149 12 1 0
2006 California (15) 7 2 0 280 173 10 3 0
*USC (35) 7 2 0 242 131 11 2 0
2007 Arizona State (3) 7 2 0 274 211 10 2 0
*USC (36) 7 2 0 250 150 10 2 0
2008 USC (37) 8 1 0 450 93 11 1 0
2009 Oregon (8) 8 1 0 375 204 10 2 0

* Denotes Pac-10 representative in Rose Bowl
Co-champions vs Rose Bowl See page 137 of Pac-10 Handbook for explanation

Bold denotes unofficial National Champion recognition

See also

Bowl games

The following is the current bowl selection order and the teams involved in each bowl:

Bowl game Matchup Latest
BCS National Championship Game BCS No. 1 vs. BCS No. 2 No Pac-10 school participation
Rose Bowl Pac-10 No. 1 vs. Big Ten No. 1 Oregon Ducks vs. Ohio State Buckeyes
Alamo Bowl Pac-10 No. 2 vs. Big 12 No. 3 Arizona Wildcats vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers
Holiday Bowl Pac-10 No. 3 vs. Big 12 No. 5 Arizona Wildcats vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers
Sun Bowl Pac-10 No. 4 vs. Big East OR Big 12 No. 4 Stanford Cardinal vs. Oklahoma Sooners
Maaco Bowl Las Vegas Pac-10 No. 5 vs. Mountain West No. 1 Oregon State Beavers vs. BYU Cougars
Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl Pac-10 No. 6 vs. WAC No. 1/2/3 (2010 & 2013), Army (2011) & Navy (2012) USC Trojans vs. Boston College

Baseball

Season Conference
1916 CAL
1917 CAL
1918 ORE
1919 WASH
1920 CAL
1921 CAL
1922 WASH
Season North South
1923 WASH CAL
Season Conference
1924 CAL
Season North South
1925 WASH STAN
1926 WASH CAL
Season North CIBA
1927 WSU STM
1928 ORE/WSU STM
1929 WASH CAL
1930 WASH USC
1931 WASH STAN
1932 WASH USC
1933 WSU CAL
1934 ORE CAL
1935 ORE CAL/USC
1936 WSU USC
1937 ORE CAL
1938 OSU/WSU CAL
1939 ORE USC/STM
1940 OSU STM
1941 ORE CAL/STM
1942 ORE USC
1943 ORE ****CAL/USC
1944 WSU UCLA
1945 WSU CAL
1946 ORE USC
1947 WSU CAL/USC
1948 WSU USC***
1949 WSU USC***
1950 WSU*** STAN
1951 OSU USC***
1952 OSU*** USC
1953 ORE STAN***
1954 ORE*** USC
1955 ORE USC***
1956 WSU*** USC
1957 ORE CAL***/USC
1958 OSU USC***
1959 WASH USC***
Season AAWU
1960 WSU CAL/USC
1961 WSU USC
1962 OSU SC
1963 OSU USC
1964 ORE USC
1965 WSU STAN
1966 WSU USC
Season Pac-8
1967 STAN
1968 USC
1969 UCLA
Season North CIBA
1970 WSU USC**
1971 WSU USC**
1972 WSU/ORE USC**
1973 WSU USC**
1974 ORE/WSU USC**
1975 WSU USC**
1976 WSU** UCLA
Season North South
1977 WSU USC**
1978 WSU USC**
1979 WSU UCLA
1980 WSU ARIZ/CAL
1981 WASH ASU
1982 OSU/WSU ASU
1983 OSU STAN
1984 WSU/PSU ASU
1985 WSU STAN
1986 OSU UCLA
1987 WSU STAN
1988 WSU ASU
1989 WSU ARIZ
1990 WSU STAN
1991 WSU USC
1992 WASH ARIZ
1993 WASH ASU
1994 OSU STAN
1995 WSU USC*
1996 WASH USC*
1997 WASH* STAN
1998 WASH* STAN
Season Pac-10 Record
1999 STAN 50-15 (19-5)
2000 ASU¤/STAN/UCLA (17-7)
2001 USC 45-19 (18-6)
2002 USC 37-24 (17-7)
2003 STAN 51-18 (18-6)
2004 STAN 46-14 (16-8)
2005 OSU 46-12 (19-5)
2006 OSU 50-16 (16-7)
2007 ASU 49-15 (19-5)
2008 ASU 49-13 (16-8)
2009 ASU 51-14 (21-6)

Note: Oregon had dropped its baseball program following the 1981 season but has reinstated it in 2009
Note: Oregon State won the National Championship in 2007 despite not winning the Conference Championship
*denotes North-South playoff champion
**denotes Pac-8 playoff champion
***denotes Pacific Coast Conference playoff champion
****California won the CIBA Division 1 and USC won Division
2. Cal defeated USC in a playfoff for the CIBA title.
¤In 2000, ASU won the tiebreaker and the Pac-10 automatic post-season bid, having won both series against UCLA and Stanford.
LEGEND: PSU = Portland State, SC = Santa Clara
Bold text indicates National Champion

Softball

Year Team Conf Ovrl
W L T Pct W L T Pct
1987 California 8 2 0 0.800 34 15 0 0.694
1988 UCLA 15 3 0 0.833 53 8 0 0.869
1989 UCLA 18 2 0 0.900 48 4 0 0.923
1990 UCLA 16 2 0 0.889 62 7 0 0.899
1991 UCLA 16 4 0 0.800 50 5 0 0.909
1992 Arizona 16 2 0 0.889 58 7 0 0.892
1993 UCLA 25 1 0 0.962 50 5 0 0.909
1994 Arizona 23 1 0 0.958 64 3 0 0.955
1995 Arizona 24 4 0 0.857 66 6 0 0.917
1996 Washington 23 4 0 0.852 59 9 0 0.868
1997 Arizona 26 1 0 0.963 61 5 0 0.924
1998 Arizona 27 1 0 0.964 67 4 0 0.944
1999 UCLA 22 6 0 0.786 63 6 0 0.913
2000 Washington 17 4 0 0.810 62 9 0 0.873
2001 Arizona 19 2 0 0.905 65 4 0 0.942
2002 UCLA 18 3 0 0.857 55 9 0 0.859
2003 Arizona 19 2 0 0.905 54 5 0 0.915
2004 Arizona 17 3 0 0.850 55 6 0 0.902
2005 California
Arizona
Oregon State
Stanford
13
13
13
13
8
8
8
8
0
0
0
0
0.619
0.619
0.619
0.619
52
45
43
43
15
12
16
16
0
0
0
0
0.776
0.789
0.729
0.729
2006 Arizona 15 5 1 0.738 44 12 1 0.781
2007 Arizona 15 5 1 0.738 50 14 1 0.777
2008 Arizona State 18 3 0 0.857 64 5 0 0.927
2009 UCLA 16 5 0 0.762 45 11 0 0.804
2010 Washington 17 4 0 0.810 44 6 0 0.880

Note: UCLA won the 1992, 1995 (vacated), 2003, and 2004 National Championship but did not win the conference championship
Note: Arizona won the 1991, 1993, and 1996 National Championship but did not win the conference championship
Note: California won the 2002 National Championship but did not win the conference championship
Note: Washington won the 2009 National Championship but did not win the conference championship
Note: Washington State and USC do not field softball teams
Bold text indicates National Champion

Men's soccer

The conference established men's soccer as a sponsored sport beginning in the 2000 academic year. Prior to then, most members who fielded a men's collegiate soccer team competed in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation.

Conf Ovrl Conf Ovrl
Season Champion W-L-T W-L-T Runner-Up W-L-T W-L-T
2000 Washington
2001 Stanford
2002 UCLA 8-2-0 16-3-3 California 6-3-1 14-6-2
2003 UCLA 10-0-0 20-2-1 Oregon State 7-3-0 13-7-0
2004 UCLA 6-2-0 14-4-2 California 4-3-1 13-4-3
2005 UCLA 7-1-2 12-5-3 California 6-3-1 14-4-3
2006 California 7-3-0 12-5-1 San Diego State 5-2-3 9-5-4
2007 California 6-3-1 11-5-2 San Diego State
Stanford
UCLA
4-4-2 8-7-4
7-6-5
8-8-3
2008 UCLA 7-1-2 10-5-6 California 5-2-3 12-4-5
2009 UCLA 5-1-4 10-3-4 Oregon State 5-4-1 9-6-3

Note: Not all PAC-10 schools field a men's soccer team.

Women's soccer

The conference established women's soccer as a sponsored sport beginning in the 1995 academic year.

Conf Ovrl Conf Ovrl
Season Champion W-L-T W-L-T Runner-Up W-L-T W-L-T
1995 Stanford
1996 Stanford
1997 UCLA
1998 California
UCLA
USC
1999 Stanford
2000 Washington
2001 UCLA
2002 Stanford
2003 UCLA 8-0-1 20-2-3 Arizona State 6-2-1 13-5-3
2004 UCLA
Arizona
6-3-0
6-3-0
17-6-0
15-6-0
Washington 5-3-1 17-5-1
2005 UCLA 7-0-2 22-2-2 California 7-1-1 16-4-2
2006 UCLA 8-1-0 17-3-0 Oregon 6-1-2 12-6-2
2007 UCLA 9-0-0 18-1-2 USC 6-2-1 16-3-2
2008 UCLA 9-0-0 22-0-2 Stanford 8-1-0 22-1-1
2009 Stanford 9-0-0 22-0-0 UCLA 8-1-0 19-2-1

Women's Volleyball

Year Team Conf Ovrl Runner-up
W L Pct W L Pct
1986 UCLA 17 1 0.944 31 10 0.756 Stanford
1987 Stanford 17 1 0.944 29 7 0.806 UCLA
1988 UCLA 18 0 1.000 34 1 0.971 Stanford
1989 UCLA 18 0 1.000 30 3 0.909 Washington
Stanford
1990 UCLA 18 0 1.000 36 1 0.973 Stanford
1991 Stanford 18 0 1.000 30 2 0.938 UCLA
1992 UCLA 18 0 1.000 33 1 0.971 Stanford
1993 UCLA 17 1 0.944 30 2 0.938 Stanford
ASU
1994 Stanford 17 1 0.944 32 1 0.970 UCLA
1995 Stanford 18 0 1.000 29 3 0.906 WSU
UCLA
1996 Stanford 17 1 0.944 31 2 0.935 WSU
1997 Stanford 18 0 1.000 33 2 0.942 USC
Washington
1998 Stanford 17 1 0.944 27 4 0.871 USC
1999 Stanford
UCLA
17 1 0.944 31
28
3
4
0.912
0.875
N/A
2000 USC
Arizona
16 2 0.889 29
28
3
5
0.906
0.848
N/A
2001 Stanford 17 1 0.944 33 2 0.943 USC
2002 USC 17 1 0.944 31 1 0.969 Stanford
2003 USC 18 0 1.000 35 0 1.000 Stanford
2004 Washington 16 2 0.889 28 3 0.903 Stanford
2005 Washington 17 1 0.944 32 1 0.903 Stanford
Arizona
2006 Stanford 16 2 0.889 30 4 0.882 UCLA
Washington
2007 Stanford 16 2 0.889 32 3 0.914 Washington
2008 Stanford 17 1 0.944 31 4 0.886 Washington
2009 Stanford 14 4 0.778 23 8 0.742 Washington
UCLA

Bold text indicates National Champion

Commissioners

PCC

  • Edwin N. Atherton 1940–44
  • Victor O. Schmidt 1944–59

AAWU

Pacific-8

Pacific-10

  • Wiles Hallock 1978–83
  • Thomas C. Hansen 1983–2009
  • Larry Scott 2009

References

  1. ^ Pacific-10 Commissioner to Announce His Retirement - NYTimes.com
  2. ^ Pacific-10 Conference Names Larry Scott Commissioner
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/stanford-ca/stanford-1305]
  5. ^ [2]
  6. ^ [3]
  7. ^ [4]
  8. ^ [5]
  9. ^ [6]
  10. ^ [7]
  11. ^ [8]
  12. ^ [9]
  13. ^ [10]
  14. ^ (Portland) Oregon Daily Journal, December 3, 1915. "Four Colleges Form Coast Conference at Very Secret Session"
  15. ^ Dunnavant, Keith. "The 50 Year Seduction." Thomas Dunne Books: New York, 2004
  16. ^ a b NCAA Men's Basketball Records - Division I conference alignment history (PDF copy available at NCAA.org)
  17. ^ Mark Wangrin - "Power brokers: How tagalong Baylor, Tech crashed the revolt". San Antonio Express, August 14, 2005
  18. ^ http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/02/09/SPTB1BUVCC.DTL
  19. ^ http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/06/03/SPQN1DPK0U.DTL
  20. ^ http://www.pac-10.org/genrel/061010aaa.html
  21. ^ Pac-10 Conference And The NCAA Championships
  22. ^ Beano Cook, Longstanding West Coast rivalry, ESPN Classic.com, Sept. 26, 2001, Accessed June 14, 2006
  23. ^ Lobos Meet Arizona for First Time in 10 Years. University of New Mexico Athletic Department, September 10, 2007. The Rifle: The two schools used to play for the Kit Carson rifle, although that custom was dropped many years ago. Kit Carson was a legendary scout in the territories of New Mexico and Arizona in the 1800s. The story goes that nearly 70 years ago former New Mexico director of athletics Roy Johnson and Arizona AD Pop McKale obtained a rifle in a trade with an Indian rumored to be Geronimo. It's not known what the administrators provided in return. McKale donated the rifle in 1938 and the score of each game was etched into the stock. The Lobos won 10 times, Arizona 21.
  24. ^ UA Sports UA Breakdown. Arizona Daily Star, September 15, 2007. Arizona and New Mexico will meet tonight for the first time since the 1997 Insight Bowl. That year, before the game was played, the presidents of the two universities decided to discontinue the Kit Carson Rifle trophy out of respect for both schools' Native American communities.
  25. ^ http://arizonaathletics.com/facilities/mckale.html
  26. ^ http://thesundevils.cstv.com/facilities/sun-devil-stadium.html
  27. ^ http://thesundevils.cstv.com/facilities/packard-stadium.html
  28. ^ http://calbears.cstv.com/facilities/memorial-stadium.html
  29. ^ http://calbears.cstv.com/facilities/haas-pavilion.html
  30. ^ http://calbears.cstv.com/facilities/evans-diamond.html
  31. ^ http://www.cubuffs.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=600&ATCLID=117805
  32. ^ https://admin.xosn.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=3802&SPID=252&DB_OEM_ID=500&ATCLID=22175
  33. ^ https://admin.xosn.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=3802&SPID=252&DB_OEM_ID=500&ATCLID=22185
  34. ^ http://www.osubeavers.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=4700&ATCLID=131120
  35. ^ http://gostanford.cstv.com/facilities/stan-stadium.html
  36. ^ http://gostanford.cstv.com/facilities/stan-maples.html
  37. ^ http://gostanford.cstv.com/facilities/stan-sunken.html
  38. ^ http://uclabruins.cstv.com/facilities/ucla-rose-bowl.html
  39. ^ http://uclabruins.cstv.com/facilities/ucla-pauley-pavilion.html
  40. ^ http://uclabruins.cstv.com/facilities/ucla-jrobinson.html
  41. ^ http://media-newswire.com/release_1072461.html
  42. ^ http://usctrojans.cstv.com/facilities/usc-galen-center.html
  43. ^ http://usctrojans.cstv.com/facilities/usc-dedeaux.html
  44. ^ http://gohuskies.cstv.com/facilities/husky-stadium.html
  45. ^ http://gohuskies.cstv.com/facilities/hec-edmundson.html
  46. ^ http://wsucougars.cstv.com/school-bio/facilities-martin-stadium.html
  47. ^ http://wsucougars.cstv.com/school-bio/facilities-friel-court.html
  48. ^ http://wsucougars.cstv.com/school-bio/facilities-bailey-brayton.html
  49. ^ Matt Duffy - Vote Today On Pac-10 Tournament. Daily Californian. Monday, October 23, 2000
  50. ^ Pac-10 News: PAC-10 APPROVES POST-SEASON BASKETBALL TOURNAMENTS YEAR-AROUND TRAINING TABLE ALSO APPROVED. Pac-10 site (www.pac-10.org). Monday, October 23, 2000

External links

Template:Bowl Challenge Cup winners

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