West Coast Conference History

West Coast Conference History

The West Coast Conference was formed in 1952 to provide a convenient venue for five San Francisco Bay Area schools to compete in basketball. Since that modest beginning, the Conference has evolved and grown to become a nationally recognized and competitive force in intercollegiate athletics, with 16 league-sponsored sports: baseball; both men's and women's basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, and tennis; and beach volleyball, softball, women's volleyball, women's rowing and men's water polo.

The league began in 1952-53 as the California Basketball Association, and included College of the Pacific, Saint Mary's College, University of San Francisco, San Jose State University, and Santa Clara University. It remained five teams until 1956-57, when Loyola Marymount, Pepperdine, and Fresno State joined the conference, giving it eight teams. At that time, the conference's name was changed to the West Coast Athletic Conference (WCAC).

After just one season, Fresno State departed and the WCAC remained a seven-member conference until welcoming UC Santa Barbara in 1965-66. Four years later UC Santa Barbara and San Jose State left the WCAC, and were replaced by Nevada-Reno and Nevada-Las Vegas - expanding the conference's footprint to a second state.

Pacific announced its departure in 1971, and was replaced by Seattle University for the 1971-72 school year. Four years later, UNLV announced its independence after winning a WCAC men's basketball crown. The WCAC was left with seven member institutions for two years, before welcoming the University of Portland prior to the 1977-78 school year.

Nevada left the WCAC in 1979, and the conference welcomed Gonzaga University and the University of San Diego to the mix beginning in 1979-80. One year later, Seattle U ended its participation at the Division I level, reducing the number of schools in the WCAC from nine to eight.

The WCAC shortened its name to West Coast Conference in 1989, and developed a new logo in 1995 that lasted until 2011. Thirty years later, the conference welcomed its ninth member by extending an invitation to Brigham Young University in September of 2010. BYU officially joined the West Coast Conference on July 1, 2011, followed by the return of University of the Pacific on July 1, 2013. BYU departed the Conference on June 30, 2023. 

Seattle University re-joined the conference on July 1, 2025, giving the West Coast Conference its current membership of 10 institutions. 

The confernece has already announced the additions of the University of Denver, who will begin as a competing member on July 1, 2026, and UC San Diego, who will begin as a competing member July 1, 2027. 

Conference membership span the western coast of the United States from Canada to Mexico, and will further stretch 1,200 miles east to Denver. 

The Conference recognizes champions in each of its sports, has hosted NCAA championship events, and produced 26 NCAA Division I individual or team champions. And, many outstanding conference student-athletes have gone on to excel in professional sports.

The long and rich history of the West Coast Confrence demonstrates that success in intercollegiate athletics can be built on the foundation of values, character, and academics.

We Rise in the West!

All-Time Membership
Saint Mary's 1952-Present
Santa Clara 1952-Present
San Francisco 1952-Present
LMU 1955-Present
Pepperdine 1955-Present
Portland 1976-Present
Gonzaga 1979-Present
San Diego 1979-Present
Pacific 1952-71, 2013-Present
Seattle U 1971-80, 2025-Present
BYU 2011-23
San Jose State 1952-69
Nevada-Reno 1969-79
UNLV 1969-75
UC Santa Barbara 1965-69
Fresno State 1955-1957

Student Population
Institution Location Enrollment
Gonzaga Spokane, WA 7,275
LMU Los Angeles, CA 9,015
Pacific Stockton, CA 6,196
Pepperdine Malibu, CA 7,170
Portland Portland, CA 3,670
Saint Mary's Moraga, CA 3,810
San Diego San Diego, CA 7,835
San Francisco San Francisco, CA 8,775
Santa Clara  Santa Clara, CA 7,990
Seattle U     Seattle, WA 4,103
WCC Overall Student Population 65,839

Sponsored Sports
Men's Sports Women's Sports
Baseball
Basketball Basketball
Cross Country Cross Country
Golf Golf
Beach Volleyball
Rowing
Soccer Soccer
Softball
Tennis Tennis
Volleyball
Water Polo