Pacific Coast Softball Conference

The Pacific Coast Softball Conference (PCSC) was an NCAA Division I conference that only sponsored women's softball. It was founded in 2002, beginning play in spring 2003, with six members in the Western United States. The PCSC expanded to 12 members for the 2009–10 school year, and maintained that size for three seasons, but major conference realignment first decimated the conference and then led to its demise after the 2013 softball season.

Pacific Coast Softball Conference
PCSC
Established2002
Dissolved2013
AssociationNCAA
DivisionDivision I
Members6 (at formation)
12 (maximum)
7 (final)
Sports fielded
RegionWestern United States
CommissionerEllen Moore (at dissolution)[1]
Locations

History

Early years

The conference was founded in 2002 as a six-team league. Four of the charter members—Loyola Marymount University, Saint Mary's College of California, the University of San Diego, and Santa Clara University—were members of the West Coast Conference.[1][2] The other two founding members, Portland State University and California State University, Sacramento (Sacramento State), were full members of the Big Sky Conference.[3][1] The conference doubled in size in 2009 (2010 season), with California State University, Bakersfield (Cal State Bakersfield), Idaho State University, the University of Northern Colorado, Seattle University, Utah Valley University, and Weber State University joining.[1]

In 2010, members were split into two divisions: Coastal and Mountain. Members of the Coastal division were Cal State Bakersfield, Loyola Marymount, Sacramento State, San Diego, Santa Clara and Saint Mary’s.[1] Members of the Mountain division were Idaho State, Northern Colorado, Portland State, Seattle, Utah Valley and Weber State.[1] The division champions faced each other in a best-of-three series to determine the conference champion. The conference champion received an automatic bid to the NCAA Division I Softball Tournament. In the league's final season of 2013, after the conference dropped from 12 to 7 members, the divisional alignment was scrapped and the top team in the conference standings received the PCSC's automatic bid.

In 2007, the Loyola Marymount Lions advanced to the NCAA regional final, eventually losing to the Hawaii Rainbow Wahine.

Change in 2012

The conference saw major change after the 2012 season, with six members leaving and one new member joining.

Five of the departed members—Idaho State, Northern Colorado, Portland State, Sacramento State, and Weber State—were full Big Sky members.[3] With that conference adding two new softball-sponsoring schools in 2012, giving it the six softball members it needed to qualify for an automatic bid to the NCAA Division I Softball Championship, the Big Sky announced it would begin sponsoring the sport in the 2013 season.[4] The other departing member, Seattle, was an independent before joining the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) for all sports, including softball, in 2012.[5]

The new member was Brigham Young University (BYU). In 2011, BYU left its former all-sports league, the Mountain West Conference (which sponsors softball) for the WCC (which at the time did not sponsor the sport). After playing the 2012 season in the WAC, BYU moved its softball program to the PCSC.[6] BYU entered the PCSC with eight straight NCAA Tournament appearances under their belts. They also won four straight conference titles (MW 2008-2011, WAC 2012).

Demise in 2013

Further developments in conference realignment led to the demise of the PCSC after the 2013 season.

The University of the Pacific, a charter member of the WCC that departed in 1971, announced plans to rejoin the WCC in 2013. This gave that conference the six softball-sponsoring members it needed to sponsor the sport, and on September 13, 2012, the WCC announced that it would start softball competition in the 2013–14 school year.[7]

The two remaining schools, Utah Valley and Cal State Bakersfield, had been linked with moves to the WAC as softball affiliates. However, after a massive wave of departures from that conference set for 2013 placed its future existence in doubt, the WAC invited both to join as full members beginning in 2013–14, with both accepting.[8] Although the WAC sponsored softball, the aforementioned turnover left it with too few softball-sponsoring schools to qualify for an automatic bid to the NCAA championship. Originally both schools accepted associate membership in the WCC for softball effective in 2013–14,[9] while also maintaining softball membership in the WAC.[10] However the addition of Grand Canyon brought the WAC back up to the 6 teams needed to still sponsor softball, allowing Utah Valley and Cal State Bakersfield to join the WAC full-time for softball.

Members

All former members of the PCSC became full or associate members of softball-sponsoring all-sports conferences immediately after the PCSC's demise.

Note: Because NCAA softball is a spring sport, the first season in which each member competed in the PCSC occurred in the calendar year after it joined.

Institution Location Founded Type Joined Departed Nickname Primary conference while in PCSC Current primary conference
Brigham Young University Provo, Utah 1875 Private 2012 2013 Cougars West Coast West Coast
California State University, Bakersfield (CSU Bakersfield) Bakersfield, California 1965 Public 2009 2013 Roadrunners Independent WAC
Idaho State University Pocatello, Idaho 1901 Public 2009 2012 Bengals Big Sky Big Sky
Loyola Marymount University Los Angeles, California 1865 Private 2002 2013 Lions West Coast West Coast
University of Northern Colorado Greeley, Colorado 1889 Public 2009 2012 Bears Big Sky Big Sky
Portland State University Portland, Oregon 1946 Public 2002 2012 Vikings Big Sky Big Sky
California State University, Sacramento (Sacramento State) Sacramento, California 1947 Public 2002 2012 Hornets Big Sky Big Sky
Saint Mary's College of California Moraga, California 1863 Private 2002 2013 Gaels West Coast West Coast
University of San Diego San Diego, California 1949 7,548 2002 2013 Toreros West Coast West Coast
Santa Clara University Santa Clara, California 1851 Private 2002 2013 Broncos West Coast West Coast
Seattle University Seattle, Washington 1891 Private 2009 2012 Redhawks Independent WAC
Utah Valley University Orem, Utah 1941 Public 2009 2013 Wolverines Great West WAC
Weber State University Ogden, Utah 1889 Public 2009 2012 Wildcats Big Sky Big Sky

Championships

Year Champion
2003 Loyola Marymount
2004 Santa Clara
2005 Loyola Marymount
2006 Portland State
2007 Loyola Marymount
2008 Sacramento State
2009 Portland State
Year Coastal Mountain Overall
2010 Saint Mary’s Portland State Saint Mary’s
2011 Loyola Marymount Portland State Portland State
2012 Saint Mary's Portland State Portland State
Year Champion
2013 BYU

References

  1. "The Pacific Coast Softball Conference". Archived from the original on January 30, 2010. Retrieved 2011-07-26.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. West Coast Conference History, archived from the original on 2013-04-05
  3. Member Institutions
  4. "Big Sky Conference Adds Southern Utah & North Dakota, South Dakota Awaiting Finalization". NBC Montana. November 2, 2010. Archived from the original on November 10, 2013. Retrieved July 8, 2012.
  5. "WAC Announces Addition of Seattle" (Press release). Western Athletic Conference. June 14, 2011. Archived from the original on October 10, 2012. Retrieved July 8, 2012.
  6. "BYU softball to join PCSC" (Press release). BYU Athletics. December 12, 2011. Archived from the original on March 23, 2012. Retrieved July 8, 2012.
  7. "WCC Softball Begins Competition in 2014" (Press release). West Coast Conference. September 13, 2012. Archived from the original on June 4, 2013. Retrieved September 14, 2012.
  8. "WAC Adds CSUB and UVU To Its Membership" (Press release). Western Athletic Conference. October 9, 2012. Archived from the original on October 11, 2012. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
  9. Hiser, Kellen (January 4, 2013). "UVU softball: Wolverines to join WCC in 2014". Deseret News. Salt Lake City. Retrieved June 30, 2013.
  10. "WAC Softball Standings, 2013–14". Western Athletic Conference. Retrieved July 9, 2013.
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