From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Intermountain Collegiate Athletic Conference (ICAC) is a defunct U.S. junior college athletic conference for schools in the states of Colorado, Idaho, and Utah that existed from 1936 to 1984. The league was part of the National Junior College Athletic Association.

History

All historical members of the Intermountain Collegiate Athletic Conference.

Founded in 1936, ICAC initially consisted of six schools. The founding members were:

Over the years a number of schools entered and exited the league. In 1938, Mesa College joined the league. In 1939, the league saw its largest membership when Carbon Junior College (later College of Eastern Utah) and Snow College joined. In the early 1940s, the league saw disruption due to the outbreak of World War II – Ricks and Albion were forced to leave prior to the 1941 season, while Weber and Westminster were forced to leave prior to the 1942 season. The entire league suspended operations from 1943 to 1945. In 1946, the league resumed operations with Albion and Weber also re-joining the league. Prior to 1948, Mesa left the league, while Westminster and Ricks rejoined, and a new member also joined – Boise Junior College (later Boise College).

Following this expansion, the league would see a gradual reduction in teams. 1950 would be the final season for SICE as the school closed in 1951. Westminster left the league after the 1954 season. Weber left following the 1961 season, while Southern Utah left the following year. In 1963, Mesa returned, but Eastern Utah decided to depart the league following that season. Boise left after the 1967 season, and Mesa left after the 1974 season. The league reached its final configuration in 1979 when Eastern Utah re-joined. In 1983, member schools were Eastern Utah, Dixie, Ricks, Snow, UTCP, and CNCC. [1]

1984 would be the final season of league play for the ICAC. In 1985, the NJCAA realigned its regions in response to a large number of Oregon and Washington schools leaving the organization to form the Northwest Athletic Association of Community Colleges. NJCAA Region 18 was expanded to include schools in Utah, which resulted in all ICAC members being merged into the Scenic West Athletic Conference (Ricks had already been a member of the SWAC in non-football sports since 1968). For football, the league was merged with the Arizona Community College Conference to form the Western States Football League.

Former members

Institution Location Founded Nickname Colors Joined Left [2] Today
Boise College
(Boise Junior College)
Boise, Idaho 1932 Broncos 1948 1967 Now known as Boise State University. Member of NCAA Division I FBS Mountain West Conference.
Dixie Junior College St. George, Utah 1911 Trailblazers 1936 1984 Now known as Utah Tech University. Member of NCAA Division I FCS Western Athletic Conference.
College of Eastern Utah
(Carbon Junior College)
Price, Utah 1937 Eagles 1939, 1979 1963, 1984 Now known as Utah State University Eastern. Member of NJCAA Scenic West Athletic Conference.
Mesa College Grand Junction, Colorado 1925 Mavericks 1938, 1963 1947, 1974 Now known as Colorado Mesa University. Member of NCAA Division II Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.
Ricks College Rexburg, Idaho 1888 Vikings 1936, 1948 1940, 1984 Now known as Brigham Young University-Idaho. Dropped intercollegiate athletics in 2002.
Snow College Ephraim, Utah 1888 Badgers 1939 1984 Member of NJCAA Scenic West Athletic Conference (football independent).
Southern Idaho College of Education
(Albion State Normal School)
Albion, Idaho 1894 Panthers 1936, 1946 1940, 1950 Closed in 1951, academic programs transferred to Idaho State University.
College of Southern Utah
(Branch Agricultural College)
Cedar City, Utah 1897 Thunderbirds 1936 1962 Now known as Southern Utah University. Member of NCAA Division I FCS Western Athletic Conference.
Weber College Ogden, Utah 1889 Wildcats 1936, 1946 1941, 1961 Now known as Weber State University. Member of NCAA Division I FCS Big Sky Conference.
Westminster College Salt Lake City, Utah 1875 Griffins 1936, 1948 1941, 1954 Now known as Westminster University (Utah). Member of NCAA Division II Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.

Membership timeline

Boise State University Snow College Utah State University Eastern Colorado Mesa University Westminster University (Utah) Weber State University Southern Utah University Albion State Normal School Brigham Young University-Idaho Utah Tech University

 Full members   World War II (suspended operations) 

Championships

Football champions

Year Champion(s) Record
1936 Albion State N.S. 3-0
1937 Albion State N.S. 2-0
1938 Albion State N.S. 3-1
1939 Mesa College 5-1
1940 Dixie J.C.
Albion State N.S.
4-0
4-0
1941 Mesa College 4-0
1942 Carbon J.C. 3-0
1946 Mesa College 5-0
1947 Carbon J.C. 5-0
1948 Boise J.C. 3-0
1949 Boise J.C. 5-0
1950 Boise J.C. 5-0
1951 Boise J.C. 4-0
1952 Boise J.C. 3-0
1953 Boise J.C. 3-0
1954 Boise J.C. 3-0
1955 Boise J.C. 3-0
1956 Boise J.C.
Dixie J.C.
4-0
5-0
1957 Boise J.C. 5-0
1958 Boise J.C. 4-0
1959 Weber College 4-1
1960 Boise J.C. 5-0
1961 Boise J.C. 6-0
1962 Snow College 4-1
1963 Dixie J.C. 5-0
1964 Dixie J.C. 4-0
1965 Boise J.C. 4-0
1966 Boise J.C. 4-0
1967 Mesa College 4-0
1968 Mesa College
Ricks College
2-1
2-1
1969 Mesa College 3-0
1970 Mesa College 3-0
1971 Dixie J.C.
Ricks College
2-1
2-1
1972 Snow College 2-0-1
1973 Ricks College 3-0
1974 Ricks College 3-0
1975 Ricks College 2-1
1976 Snow College 2-0
1977 Snow College 3-1
1978 Snow College 3-1
1979 Dixie J.C. 4-1-1
1980 Ricks College 6-0
1981 Ricks College 6-0
1982 Ricks College
Snow College
4-2
4-2
1983 Dixie J.C.
Ricks College
4-2
4-2
1984 Ricks College 6-0

National Champions (football)

  • Boise Junior College won the NJCAA National Football Championship in 1958.

References

  1. ^ "ICAC Men's Basketball Final Report 1983". February 28, 1983.
  2. ^ ICAC suspended its operations for the 1943–1945 seasons due to World War II. Carbon, Dixie, Mesa, Snow, and Branch did not miss a season immediately before or after of this period, so their membership is considered uninterrupted.

External links