As of August 2021, SAC member institutions have collected 109 National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) team championships – the most among NAIA conferences – since the league formed in 1978.
The SAC crowns league champions in 18 intercollegiate sports – nine for women and nine for men. Women's sports are basketball, softball, golf, tennis, cross country, soccer, volleyball, indoor track & field, outdoor track & field, and wrestling. Men's sports are football, basketball, baseball, golf, tennis, cross country, indoor track & field, outdoor track & field, soccer, and wrestling. The newest conference sport is women's wrestling, added for the 2019–20 season.
The conference is known for a rich basketball tradition. Member schools have won the
men's NAIA tournament 12 times and
women's NAIA tournament 16 times. SAC member schools also boast 14 NAIA national titles in men's golf, 13 in softball, 12 in women's indoor track and field, 10 in women's golf, 10 in men's cross country, 6 in men's tennis, 5 in women's outdoor track and field, 5 in men's indoor track and field, 4 in men's outdoor track and field, 2 in baseball, 2 in competitive cheer, and 1 in men's soccer for a total of 112.[1]
History
Sooner Athletic Conference
150km 100miles
USAO
College of the Ozarks
UNT Dallas
Langston
Oklahoma Panhandle
Central Christian
Texas Wesleyan
SCU
SAGU
MACU
Wayland Baptist
Oklahoma City
John Brown
Location of SAC members: current, future
Originally developed as a five-team conference of Oklahoma-based schools, the SAC now boasts 12 schools in a league that spans four states (Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas and Kansas). The league's newest addition is the University of North Texas Dallas, which entered the conference as an full member for 2021-22 and an associate member in 2020-21. The SAC added Central Christian College of Kansas and Oklahoma Panhandle State University to the fold for 2017-18, then dropped to 11 schools when St. Gregory's announced its closure in November 2017. The league added Langston University in 2018-19 as its first Historically Black College and University (HBCU) member, then dropped Bacone (Okla.) College after that same year.
Throughout the league's history, the SAC continues to be known as the conference "Where Champions Play". Various institutions have competed under the SAC banner over the years. Today only the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma remains from the original group that was formed when Bethany Nazarene (now Southern Nazarene), Oklahoma Baptist, Oklahoma Christian, and Phillips University withdrew from the Texoma Conference to form the SAC.
Membership has changed over the years with today's current members being admitted as follows: Oklahoma City (1986), Wayland Baptist (1994), John Brown (1995), Mid-America Christian (2007), Southwestern Assemblies of God (2013), Texas Wesleyan (2013), Southwestern Christian (2013), Bacone (2014), Central Christian (2017), Oklahoma Panhandle State (2017), and North Texas–Dallas (2020).
The league also includes associate members on a per-sport basis, with University of Houston–Victoria, University of the Southwest, and University of St. Thomas being part of the SAC in women's golf since 2017. Lyon College has been an associate member for women's wrestling since 2019.
Past members of the SAC include: Oklahoma Baptist, Oklahoma Christian, Southern Nazarene, Rogers State, Lubbock Christian, Northwestern Oklahoma State, Northwood, St. Gregory's and Bacone.
The league also includes associate members on a per-sport basis. Arizona Christian University, Lyon (Ark.) College, Ottawa University-Arizona and Texas College became SAC members for football in 2018-19 with Louisiana College joining for 2021–22.
2014 - Northwood–Texas left the Sooner as the school announced that it would close after the 2013-14 academic year.
2015 - Oklahoma Baptist left the Sooner and the NAIA to join the NCAA Division II ranks and the GAC after the 2014-15 academic year.
2015 -
Bacone College joined the Sooner in the 2015-16 academic year.
2017 - St. Gregory's (Okla.) left the Sooner as the school announced that it would close at the end of the fall 2017 semester during the 2017-18 academic year.
2019 - St. Thomas (Tex.) left the Sooner as an associate member for women's golf, as the school announced to move up to the
NCAA Division III ranks and the
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference (SCAC) after the 2019 spring season (2018-19 academic year).
2019 -
Cleary University joined the Sooner as an associate member for men's wrestling, while Lyon added women's wrestling to its Sooner associate membership, both effective in the 2019-20 academic year.
2020 - Cleary, Indiana Tech, Lourdes and Rochester left the Sooner as associate members for men's wrestling after the 2019-20 academic year.
2021 - North Texas–Dallas has upgraded to full membership within the Sooner in the 2021-22 academic year.
2021 -
Louisiana College (now Louisiana Christian University) joined the Sooner as an associate member for football in the 2021 fall season (2021-22 academic year).
2022 - Lyon announced that it will leave the Sooner and the NAIA as an associate member for football to join the
NCAA Division III ranks after the 2022 fall season (2022-23 academic year).
2022 - Arizona Christian announced that it will leave the Sooner as an associate member for football to join the
Frontier Conference for that sport after the 2022 fall season (2022-23 academic year).
^Represents the calendar year when fall sports competition begins.
^John Brown left the SAC after the 1982–83 school year; before re-joining in the 1995–96 school year.
^North Texas–Dallas joined the SAC as an associate during the 2020–21 school year (in transition); before becoming a full member in the SAC for all sports in the 2021–22 school year.
^USAO left the SAC after the 1993–94 school year; before re-joining in the 2000–01 school year.
^SAGU will be renamed as Nelson University beginning in the 2024-25 season.