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The '''Big 12 Conference''' is a [[list of college athletic conferences|college athletic conference]] of twelve schools located mostly in the central United States. It is a member of the [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]]'s [[Division I (NCAA)|Division I]] for all sports; its [[American football|football]] teams compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS; formerly Division I-A), the higher of two levels of NCAA Division I football competition. Member schools are located in [[Colorado]], [[Iowa]], [[Kansas]], [[Missouri]], [[Nebraska]], [[Oklahoma]] and [[Texas]].
The '''Big 12 Conference''' is a [[list of college athletic conferences|college athletic conference]] of twelve schools located mostly in the central United States. It is a member of the [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]]'s [[Division I (NCAA)|Division I]] for all sports; its [[American football|football]] teams compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS; formerly Division I-A), the higher of two levels of NCAA Division I football competition. Member schools are located in [[Colorado]], [[Iowa]], [[Kansas]], [[Missouri]], [[Nebraska]], [[Oklahoma]] and [[Texas]].


The conference was officially formed on February 25, 1994, when the former [[Big Eight Conference]] joined with four Texas schools that had been members of the [[Southwest Conference]], which had just disbanded.<ref>http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/MYSA081405_3N_SWCbaylor_tech_1ca3e1c_html8528.html</ref> Athletic competition in the conference commenced on August 31, 1996. Big 12 headquarters is located in [[Irving, Texas]], which is a suburb of [[Dallas]]. According to the Big 12 Conference'sDIIIIIICCCCCCKKKKKK of the alternate names "Big Twelve" and "Big XII" are incorrect; the trademarked name of the conference is "Big 12 Conference" (notwithstanding the Roman numeral XII featured on the conference logo).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.big12sports.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=10410&KEY=&ATCLID=1514841|title=The Big 12 Conference - Outstanding Success|publisher=Big 12 Conference|accessdate=2009-02-17}}</ref>
The conference was officially formed on February 25, 1994, when the former [[Big Eight Conference]] joined with four Texas schools that had been members of the [[Southwest Conference]], which had just disbanded.<ref>http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/MYSA081405_3N_SWCbaylor_tech_1ca3e1c_html8528.html</ref> Athletic competition in the conference commenced on August 31, 1996. Big 12 headquarters is located in [[Irving, Texas]], which is a suburb of [[Dallas]]. According to the Big 12 Conference's website, the use of the alternate names "Big Twelve" and "Big XII" are incorrect; the trademarked name of the conference is "Big 12 Conference" (notwithstanding the Roman numeral XII featured on the conference logo).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.big12sports.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=10410&KEY=&ATCLID=1514841|title=The Big 12 Conference - Outstanding Success|publisher=Big 12 Conference|accessdate=2009-02-17}}</ref>


The conference is split into two divisions for most major sports—a South Division consisting of the Oklahoma and Texas schools, and a North Division consisting of the other six former Big Eight schools.
The conference is split into two divisions for most major sports—a South Division consisting of the Oklahoma and Texas schools, and a North Division consisting of the other six former Big Eight schools.

Revision as of 01:07, 27 April 2010

Big 12 Conference
AssociationNCAA
CommissionerDan Beebe (since 2007)
Sports fielded
  • 21
    • men's: 10
    • women's: 11
DivisionDivision I
SubdivisionFBS
RegionCentral United States
Official websitehttp://www.big12sports.com/
Locations
Location of teams in {{{title}}}

The Big 12 Conference is a college athletic conference of twelve schools located mostly in the central United States. It is a member of the NCAA's Division I for all sports; 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. Member schools are located in Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Texas.

The conference was officially formed on February 25, 1994, when the former Big Eight Conference joined with four Texas schools that had been members of the Southwest Conference, which had just disbanded.[1] Athletic competition in the conference commenced on August 31, 1996. Big 12 headquarters is located in Irving, Texas, which is a suburb of Dallas. According to the Big 12 Conference's website, the use of the alternate names "Big Twelve" and "Big XII" are incorrect; the trademarked name of the conference is "Big 12 Conference" (notwithstanding the Roman numeral XII featured on the conference logo).[2]

The conference is split into two divisions for most major sports—a South Division consisting of the Oklahoma and Texas schools, and a North Division consisting of the other six former Big Eight schools.

The Big 12 is the former Big Eight plus the four Texas schools, but considers itself a separate conference and does not claim the Big Eight's history.

Membership

Institution Location
(Population)
Founded Affiliation Enrollment Nickname Mascot Varsity Sports National Titles[3][4]*
North Division
Iowa State University Ames, Iowa
(51,557)
1858 Public 27,945 Cyclones Cy the Cardinal 18 19
Kansas State University Manhattan, Kansas
(51,707)
1863 Public 23,581[5] Wildcats Willie the Wildcat 16 0
University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado
(94,673)
1876 Public 30,128 Buffaloes Ralphie / Chip 16 23
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
(90,520)
1865 Public 30,004[6] Jayhawks Big Jay / Baby Jay 18 12
University of Missouri Columbia, Missouri
(100,733)
1839 Public 30,831[7] Tigers Truman the Tiger 20 3
University of Nebraska Lincoln, Nebraska
(225,581)
1869 Public 24,100[8] Cornhuskers Herbie Husker / Lil' Red 21 23
South Division
Baylor University Waco, Texas
(122,222)
1845 Private / Baptist 13,886 Bears Judge and Bruiser 18 2
Oklahoma State University Stillwater, Oklahoma
(46,976)
1890 Public 23,307 Cowboys Pistol Pete / Bullet 16 49
Texas A&M University College Station, Texas
(74,125)
1876 Public 48,039 Aggies Reveille 20 8
Texas Tech University Lubbock, Texas
(212,169)
1923 Public 30,049 Red Raiders Masked Rider / Raider Red 17 1
University of Oklahoma Norman, Oklahoma
(102,827)
1890 Public 29,721 Sooners Sooner Schooner / Boomer and Sooner 16 25
University of Texas Austin, Texas
(743,074)
1883 Public 49,696 Longhorns Bevo / Hook 'em 18 48
*See section on National championships below.

Endowment

  • Baylor - $1 billion [9]
  • Colorado - $870 million [9]
  • Iowa State - $569 million [9]
  • Kansas - $1.2 billion [9]
  • Kansas State - $346 million [9]
  • Missouri - $1 billion [9]
  • Nebraska - $1.2 billion [9]
  • Oklahoma - $1.1 billion [9]
  • Oklahoma State - $617 million [9]
  • Texas - $16.1 billion [9]
  • Texas A&M - $6.6 billion [9]
  • Texas Tech - $792 million [9]

Conference facilities

School Football stadium Capacity Basketball arena Capacity Baseball stadium Capacity
North Division
Colorado Folsom Field 53,750 Coors Events Center 11,064 N/A N/A
Iowa State Jack Trice Stadium 55,000 Hilton Coliseum 14,356 Cap Timm Field (Club Baseball) 3,000
Kansas Memorial Stadium 50,071 Allen Fieldhouse 16,300 Hoglund Ballpark 2,500
Kansas State Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium 52,200 Bramlage Coliseum 12,528 Tointon Family Stadium 2,000
Missouri Faurot Field 71,004* Mizzou Arena 15,061 Taylor Stadium 3,000
Nebraska Memorial Stadium 81,067* Bob Devaney Sports Center 13,595 Haymarket Park 8,500**
South Division
Baylor Floyd Casey Stadium 50,000 Ferrell Center 10,284 Baylor Ballpark 5,000
Oklahoma Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium 82,112* Lloyd Noble Center 12,000 L. Dale Mitchell Baseball Park 2,700
Oklahoma State Boone Pickens Stadium 60,218 Gallagher-Iba Arena 13,611 Allie P. Reynolds Stadium 3,821
Texas Darrell K. Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium 100,119* Frank Erwin Center 16,755 UFCU Disch-Falk Field 6,649
Texas A&M Kyle Field 83,002* Reed Arena 12,989 Olsen Field 7,053
Texas Tech Jones AT&T Stadium 61,000 United Spirit Arena 15,091 Dan Law Field 6,000
*Note the official capacities are listed on the respective schools' websites. Due to temporary seating, the attendance records are often more than the official capacity. The record attendance for Faurot Field is 75,298, The record attendance at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium is 85,313, the record for Darrell K. Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium is 101,357, the record attendance at Kyle Field is 88,253, the record attendance at Nebraska's Memorial Stadium is 86,304.

**Haymarket Park has 4,500 seats. Its total capacity is listed as 8,500 because an additional 4,000 people can sit on berms along the outfield walls.

File:Big12locationsmap.png
Locations of Big 12 conference member institutions.

Commissioners

Commissioners of the Big 12 Conference[10]

  • 1995–1997 Steven J. Hatchell
  • 1998 Dave Martin (Interim)
  • 1998–2007 Kevin Weiberg
  • 2007–present Dan Beebe

Sports

The conference sponsors championships in the following sports: baseball (m), basketball (m,w), cross-country (m,w), football (m), golf (m,w), gymnastics (w), soccer (w), softball (w), swimming and diving (m,w), tennis (m,w), track and field (m,w), volleyball (w), wrestling (m) and awards unofficial championships in equestrian and rowing (w).

Among the sponsored sports, all twelve universities participate in 12 sports, while the following sports do not have full participation:

  • 11 schools participate in volleyball (Oklahoma State does not)
  • 11 schools participate in women's soccer (Kansas State does not)
  • 10 schools participate in baseball (Colorado and Iowa State do not)
  • 10 schools participate in softball (Colorado and Kansas State do not)
  • 7 schools participate in men's tennis (Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, and Missouri do not)
  • 6 schools participate in women's swimming and diving (Kansas, Iowa State, Missouri, Nebraska, Texas, and Texas A&M)
  • 5 schools participate in wrestling (Iowa State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Oklahoma State)
  • 4 schools participate in gymnastics (Iowa State, Missouri, Nebraska, and Oklahoma)
  • 3 schools participate in men's swimming and diving (Missouri, Texas, and Texas A&M)

Some member schools participate in the following varsity sports, unofficially recognized by the conference:

  • Kansas State, Baylor, Oklahoma State, and Texas A&M participate in equestrian.[11]
  • Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma, and Texas participate in rowing.

Some member schools participate in the following varsity sports, not recognized by the conference:

  • Nebraska participates in women's bowling and women's rifle.
  • Colorado participates in skiing.
  • Nebraska, Kansas State, Iowa State, Texas A&M, and Texas Tech participate in rodeo. (Rodeo is not sanctioned by the NCAA, but instead by the NIRA.)

Football

There are many national football powerhouses in the Big 12 Conference, and when the league was formed, it was decided that the top team from the South Division would play the top team from the North Division at the end of the season to determine the conference champion.

Teams play eight conference games a season, facing all five opponents within its own division and three teams from the opposite division. Inter-divisional play is a "three-on, three-off" system, where teams will play three teams from the other division on a home-and-home basis for two seasons, and then play the other three foes from the opposite side for a two-year home-and-home.

This format has come under considerable criticism, especially from fans at Nebraska and Oklahoma, who are denied a yearly matchup between two of college football's most storied programs. The Oklahoma–Nebraska rivalry was one of the most intense rivalries in college football history. (Until 2006, the teams had never met in the Big 12 Championship.) There has been talk of modifying the current format to allow each team to have one permanent opponent from the opposite division (as is the case in the Southeastern Conference and Atlantic Coast Conference), or for Nebraska and Oklahoma to play a non-conference game when the two teams are not scheduled to meet in conference play.

North Division South Division
Colorado Baylor
Iowa State Oklahoma
Kansas Oklahoma State
Kansas State Texas
Missouri Texas A&M
Nebraska Texas Tech

Championship Game

The Big 12 Championship Game is held by the Big 12 Conference each year. The championship game pits the Big 12 North Division champion against the Big 12 South Division champion in a game held after the regular season has been completed. The first championship game was held during the 1996 season. Since the 1996 season, the most football championships have been held at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. The 2008 Big 12 Championship Game was held at Arrowhead, while the 2009 game was played at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas with the Texas Longhorns defeating the Nebraska Cornhuskers 13-12.

Bowl affiliates

Bowl name Teams involved
BCS National Championship Game BCS No. 1 vs. BCS No. 2
Fiesta Bowl Big 12 No. 1 vs. BCS At-Large
Cotton Bowl Classic Big 12 No. 2 vs. SEC No. 3/4/5
Alamo Bowl Big 12 No. 3 vs Pac-10 No. 2
Insight Bowl Big 12 No. 4 vs Big Ten No. 4/5
Holiday Bowl Big 12 No. 5 vs Pac-10 No. 3
Texas Bowl Big 12 No. 6 vs. Big Ten No. 6
Pinstripe Bowl Big 12 No. 7 vs Big East No. 4
Dallas Football Classic 2010, 2012 Conference USA vs Big Ten No. 8
EagleBank Bowl 2011, 2013 Big 12 No. 8 vs ACC No. 8

Rivalries

The Big 12 Conference has many rivalries among its member schools, primarily in football. Most of the rivalries existed before the Big 12 was established. The Kansas-Missouri rivalry is the longest running in the Big 12, being played for 118 years; however the Texas–Oklahoma rivalry is also unique, as it too was a major rivalry decades before the two schools were in the same conference. Some of the longstanding football rivalries between Big 12 schools include:

Rivalry Name Trophy Games
played
Began
Baylor - Texas A&M Battle of the Brazos 105 1899
Colorado - Nebraska 68 1898
Iowa State - Missouri Telephone Trophy[12] 101 1959
Kansas - Kansas State Sunflower Showdown Governor's Cup 107 1902
Kansas - Missouri Border War Indian War Drum[13]
Lamar Hunt Trophy[14]
118 1891
Missouri - Nebraska Victory Bell[15] 103 1892
Missouri - Oklahoma Peace Pipe 94 1929
Nebraska - Oklahoma 85 1912
Oklahoma - Oklahoma State Bedlam Series Bedlam Bell 103 1904
Oklahoma - Texas Red River Rivalry Golden Hat 103 1900
Texas - Texas A&M Lone Star Showdown Lone Star Showdown Trophy 116 1894
Texas - Texas Tech Silver Spurs 58 1928
Texas A&M - Texas Tech Raggie Clash 78 1927

Through 2008

Other notable series

  • Kansas v. Nebraska - The series began in 1892 and has been played 116 times, making it the second most-played series in the Big 12 and tied for second oldest. The series is also the longest uninterrupted series in Division I FBS, having been played each year since 1906[16] While longstanding, the series is not known as a rivalry due to Nebraska's dominance. Nebraska once won 36 games in a row (the second most consecutive wins over a team in college football history) and currently leads the series 89-23-3.[17]
  • Baylor v. Texas - The series began in 1901 and has been played 99 times, including annually since 1946. Although Texas maintains a dominating 73–22–4 lead in the series and holds the series' longest winning streaks of 16, 11, and 11 games, Baylor has at times been very competitive, such as from 1913 to 1942, 1951 to 1957, and 1974 to 1992.[18]

Men's basketball

Although standings in the conference are combined and not split among divisions, the schedule is structured as if the schools were split into two divisions. Teams play a home-and-home against teams within its division and a single game against teams from the opposite division for a total of 16 conference games. This denies Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, formerly in the Big Eight, two games a season against their opponents from that former conference, but does allow most of the other traditional rivalries to be played home-and-home.

North Division South Division
Colorado Baylor
Iowa State Oklahoma
Kansas Oklahoma State
Kansas State Texas
Missouri Texas A&M
Nebraska Texas Tech

Big 12 men's basketball champions

Season Regular-Season
Champion
Tournament
Champion
1997 Kansas
15-1
Kansas
1998 Kansas
15-1
Kansas
1999 Texas
13-3
Kansas
2000 Iowa State
14-2
Iowa State
2001 Iowa State
13-3
Oklahoma
2002 Kansas
16-0
Oklahoma
2003 Kansas
14-2
Oklahoma
2004 Oklahoma State
14-2
Oklahoma State
2005 Oklahoma
Kansas
12-4
Oklahoma State
2006 Texas
Kansas
13-3
Kansas
2007 Kansas
14-2
Kansas
2008 Texas
Kansas
13-3
Kansas
2009 Kansas
14-2
Missouri
2010 Kansas
15-1
Kansas

In 2005, Oklahoma won the post-season tournament seeding tiebreaker over Kansas based on their 71-63 home victory over the Jayhawks.[19]

In 2006, Texas won the post-season tournament seeding tiebreaker over Kansas based on their 80-55 home victory over the Jayhawks.[20]

In 2008, Texas won the post-season tournament seeding tiebreaker over Kansas based on their 72-69 home victory over the Jayhawks.[21]

Big 12 in the NCAA tournament

School Appearances Final Fours Championships
Baylor 5 2 0
Colorado 10 2 0
Iowa State 13 1 0
Kansas 38 13 3
Kansas State 23 4 0
Missouri 23* 0 0
Nebraska 6 0 0
Oklahoma 28 4 0
Oklahoma State 23 6 2
Texas 27 3 0
Texas A&M 10 0 0
Texas Tech 8 0 0

*Includes Missouri's 1994 NCAA tournament Elite 8 run that was later vacated by the NCAA.

Big 12 men's basketball programs all time

School Year Started All Time Wins All Time Winning Percentage
Baylor 1907 1,113 .469
Colorado 1902 1,113 .509
Iowa State 1908 1,163 .493
Kansas 1899 2,002 .716
Kansas State 1903 1,434 .580
Missouri 1907 1,453 .588
Nebraska 1897 1,354 .530
Oklahoma 1908 1,499 .614
Oklahoma State 1908 1,475 .589
Texas 1906 1,586 .627
Texas A&M 1913 1,225 .518
Texas Tech 1926 1,250 .568
  • Through the end of the 2008-09 season

Baseball

The top 8 teams compete in the Big 12 Baseball Tournament at the conclusion of each season. Colorado and Iowa State do not sponsor baseball.

In the 2008 Big 12 Baseball Tournament, The Texas Longhorns edged The Kansas State Wildcats, 15-7.

Tournament champions by year

Year School Site MOP
1997 Oklahoma All Sports Stadium, Oklahoma City Brian Shackelford (Oklahoma)
1998 Texas Tech AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Josh Bard (Texas Tech)
1999 Nebraska AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Jason Jennings (Baylor)
2000 Nebraska AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Adam Shabala (Nebraska)
2001 Nebraska AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Dan Johnson (Nebraska)
2002 Texas The Ballpark in Arlington, Arlington Dustin Majewski (Texas)
2003 Texas AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Dustin Majewski (Texas)
2004 Oklahoma State Ameriquest Field in Arlington, Arlington Cody Ehlers (Missouri)
2005 Nebraska AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Curtis Ledbetter (Nebraska)
2006 Kansas AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Matt Baty (Kansas)
2007 Texas A&M AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Craig Stinson (Texas A&M)
2008 Texas AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Brandon Belt (Texas)
2009 Texas AT&T Bricktown Ballpark, Oklahoma City Brandon Loy (Texas)

By School

School Appearances W-L Pct Tourney Titles Title Years
Baylor 12 20-18 .526 0
Iowa State 1 1-2 .333 0
Kansas 3 4-4 .500 1 2006
Kansas State 3 3-4 .429 0
Missouri 10 13-16 .448 0
Nebraska 10 28-10 .737 4 1999, 2000, 2001, 2005
Oklahoma 12 17-20 .459 1 1997
Oklahoma State 12 10-22 .313 1 2004
Texas 11 23-15 .605 4 2002, 2003, 2008, 2009
Texas A&M 10 15-16 .484 1 2007
Texas Tech 9 12-17 .414 1 1998

National championships

The following is a list of all national championships won by member schools in NCAA-recognized sports.[3][4] Only championships 1996 and later should be counted towards the Big 12 total itself (48).

* Champion selected retroactively by the Helms Athletic Foundation
^ AIAW Championship, prior to NCAA sponsorship of women's athletics in 1982