| California Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA) |
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| Established: 1938 | |
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| NCAA | Division II |
|---|---|
| Members | 12 |
| Sports fielded | 13 (men's: 6; women's: 7) |
| Region | Pacific Coast (California-only conference) |
| Headquarters | Walnut Creek, California |
| Commissioner | Robert Hiegert |
| Website | http://www.goccaa.org/ |
| Locations | |
The California Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA) is an intercollegiate athletic conference in the Division II[1] of the NCAA. All of its current members are public universities, and all except for UC San Diego are members of the California State University system.[2]
It was founded in December 1938 and began competition in 1939. The commissioner of the CCAA is Robert Hiegert. CCAA offices are located in Walnut Creek, California.[3] The CCAA is the most storied conference in NCAA Division II history as its former and current members boast a combined number of 146 National Championships.[4]
Contents |
Membership
Full members
- Chico State Wildcats
- Cal State Dominguez Hills Toros
- Cal State East Bay Pioneers
- Cal State Los Angeles Golden Eagles
- Cal State Monterey Bay Otters
- Cal Poly Pomona Broncos
- Cal State San Bernardino Coyotes
- Cal State Stanislaus Warriors
- Humboldt State Lumberjacks
- San Francisco State Gators
- Sonoma State Seawolves
- UC San Diego Tritons
Charter members
- Cal State Bakersfield - Now a provisional member of the Big West Conference
- Fresno State University - Now in the Western Athletic Conference
- San Diego State University - Now in the Mountain West Conference
- San Jose State University - Now in the Western Athletic Conference
- UC Santa Barbara - Now in the Big West Conference
Former members
(School, Last year in CCAA, Current Conference)
- University of the Pacific (1950, Big West)
- Pepperdine University (1954, WCC)
- Fresno State (1969, WAC)
- Long Beach State (1969, Big West)
- San Diego State (1969, Mountain West)
- San Jose State (1969, WAC)
- UC Santa Barbara (1969, Big West)
- Cal State Fullerton (1974, Big West)
- Cal State Northridge (1990, Big West)
- Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo (1993, Big West)
- Chapman University (1993, Division III Independent)
- UC Riverside (2000, Big West)
- Grand Canyon University (2003, PacWest)
- UC Davis (2003, Big West)
- Cal State Bakersfield (2006, Transitioning to Division I)
Sports sponsored
The CCAA sponsors seven sports for women and six sports for men. The CCAA sponsors cross country, soccer, volleyball, basketball, tennis, outdoor track & field, and softball for women. For men, the CCAA sponsors cross country, soccer, basketball, golf, outdoor track and field, and baseball. Cross country, soccer and volleyball are autumn sports, basketball is a winter sport, and tennis, golf, outdoor track & field, softball, and baseball are spring sports. Throughout the years, CCAA teams have won 145 NCAA championships in their sports, which is best among all Division II conferences.
The CCAA has a Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, which is made up of student-athletes from each of the eleven member institutions.
Conference facilities
| School | Baseball Stadium | Capacity | Basketball Arena | Capacity | Soccer/Track & Field Stadium | Capacity | Tennis | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cal Poly Pomona | John Scolino Stadium | 1,000[11] | Kellogg Gymnasium & Darlene May Gymnasium |
5,000[12] 1,000[13] |
Kellogg Field | 2,500[14] | Kellogg Tennis Center | 500[15] |
| Cal State Dominguez Hills |
Toro Field | 300[16] | Torodome | 4,200[17] | Toro Stadium | 8,000[18] | ? | ? |
| Cal State East Bay |
? | ? | CSUEB Physical Education Complex | 3,500 | University Stadium | ? | ? | ? |
| Cal State LA |
Reeder Field | 500[19] | Eagle's Nest | 5,000[20] | Jesse Owens Track | 5,000[21] | Cal State L.A. Tennis Complex | 250[22] |
| Cal State Monterey Bay |
CSUMB Baseball/Softball Complex | ? | Otter Sports Center | 1,500[23] | CSUMB Soccer Complex | ? | ? | ? |
| Cal State San Bernardino |
Fiscalini Field & Arrowhead Credit Union Park |
2,000[24] 5,500[25] |
Coussoulis Arena | 4,140[26] | Coyote Premier Field | 300[27] | Coyote Court | 50[28] |
| Cal State Stanislaus |
Warrior Baseball Field | ?[29] | Warrior Arena | 2,000[30] | Warrior Soccer Field | 2,000[31] | ? | ? |
| Chico State | Nettleton Stadium | 4,200[32] | Acker Gymnasium | 1,997[33] | University Soccer Stadium & Chico State Stadium |
3,800[34] 6,000[35] |
? | ? |
| Humboldt State | ? | ? | East Gym | 1,400[36] | Redwood Bowl & HSU Soccer Field |
7,000[37] ? |
? | ? |
| SF State | Maloney Field | 100[38] | SFSU Main Gymnasium | 2,000[39] | Cox Stadium | 5,000[40] | ? | ? |
| Sonoma State | Seawolf Diamond | ? | Seawolf Gymnasium | 1,800[41] | Seawolf Soccer Field | 1,200[42] | ? | ? |
| UC San Diego | Triton Baseball Field | 1,000[43] | RIMAC Arena | 5,000[44] | Triton Soccer Stadium & Triton Track & Field Stadium |
1,250[45] 2,000[46] |
Northview Tennis Courts | ? |
Facility capacities taken from conference website unless otherwise noted. (See External Links section.)
See also
- Big West Conference, an all-California school conference that competes in Division I. Eight out of its nine members are former members of the CCAA.
- California Pacific Conference, an all-California school conference that competes in NAIA.
References
- ^ "NCAA Division II WebPages" (HTML). Southern Illinois University Edwardsville. http://www.siue.edu/ATHLETIC/d2/conf.html. Retrieved 2008-09-12.
- ^ "Quick Facts" (HTML). CCAA. http://www.goccaa.org/Sports/ccaa/2006/quickfacts.asp?nl=1&tab=ccaa. Retrieved 2008-09-12.
- ^ "Commissioner's Office" (HTML). CCAA. http://www.goccaa.org/Sports/ccaa/2006/adminhq.asp?nl=4&tab=ccaa. Retrieved 2008-09-12.
- ^ "NCAA Champions from the CCAA" (HTML). CCAA. http://www.goccaa.org/Sports/championships/2006/ncaa_champs_ccaa.asp?nl=11&tab=champs. Retrieved 2008-09-12.
- ^ [1]
- ^ "All-Time CCAA Champions" (HTML). CCAA. http://www.goccaa.org/Sports/championships/2006/alltime_ccaa_champs.asp?nl=10&tab=champs. Retrieved 2008-09-24.
- ^ "How many NCAA Division II championships has your school won?" (HTML). NCAA. http://www.ncaa.org/champadmin/champs_listing2.html. Retrieved 2008-09-24.
- ^ "Pomona, California" (HTML). U.S. Census Bureau. http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/SAFFPopulation?_event=Search&_name=Pomona&_state=04000US06&Submit.x=10&Submit.y=10&_county=Pomona&_cityTown=Pomona&_zip=&_sse=on&_lang=en&pctxt=fphl. Retrieved 2008-09-11.
- ^ "Cal Poly Pomona Campus History" (HTML). University Library Special Collections at Cal Poly Pomona. http://www.csupomona.edu/~library/specialcollections/history/sandimas.html. Retrieved 2008-08-27.
- ^ "Population and Housing Estimates, Zip Code 92037" (PDF). 2004 Estimates. http://cart.sandag.org/profiles/est/zip92037est.pdf. Retrieved 2006-10-15.
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=304&path=pomona
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=304&path=pomona
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=304&path=pomona
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=304&path=pomona
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=304&path=pomona
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=315&path=dominguez
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=315&path=dominguez
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=315&path=dominguez
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=320&path=losangeles
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=320&path=losangeles
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=320&path=losangeles
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=320&path=losangeles
- ^ http://www.d2hoops.net/arenas/calstatemontereybay/t257/
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=325&path=sanbernardino
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=325&path=sanbernardino
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=325&path=sanbernardino
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=325&path=sanbernardino
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=325&path=sanbernardino
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=330&path=stanislaus
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=330&path=stanislaus
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=330&path=stanislaus
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=335&path=chico
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=335&path=chico
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=335&path=chico
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=335&path=chico
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=340&path=humboldt
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=340&path=humboldt
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=343&path=sanfran
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=343&path=sanfran
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=343&path=sanfran
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=348&path=sonoma
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=348&path=sonoma
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=353&path=sandiego
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=353&path=sandiego
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=353&path=sandiego
- ^ http://www.goccaa.org/sidebar.asp?id=353&path=sandiego
External links
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