The Skyline Conference was a college athletic conference based in the Western United States that was active from December 1937 to June 1962. The conference's formal name was the Mountain States Athletic Conference, although it was also known as the Mountain States Conference along with informal but popular nicknames. It is unrelated to the contemporary Skyline Conference that is active in NCAA Division III in the New York City area.

History

The conference began operating on December 3, 1937, when most of the larger schools in the Rocky Mountain Conference left to form a new conference. The seven charter members of the conference were: BYU, Colorado, Colorado A&M (now Colorado State), Denver, Utah, Utah State, and Wyoming. At the time of formation, the formal name of Mountain States Athletic Conference was adopted, although newspapers were already calling it the Big Seven at that time. The conference became popularly known as the Skyline Conference or Skyline Six after Colorado left in 1947. Colorado joined the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MVIAA), informally known as the Big Six Conference, which took over the Big Seven name and would later become the Big Eight Conference.

The conference became known as the Skyline Eight after New Mexico and Montana joined in 1951. The conference officially dissolved as of July 1, 1962, after four of its members (BYU, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming) departed to form the Western Athletic Conference (WAC). Montana operated as an independent for one football season in 1962 until the formation of the Big Sky Conference in 1963. Colorado State became independent until it joined the WAC in 1968. Utah State operated as an independent for fifteen seasons, until it joined the Pacific Coast Athletic Association (later named the Big West Conference) in 1977.

The conference first had a full-time commissioner in 1949, appointing Dick Romney, who had led the Utah State Aggies football program since 1919. He was succeeded in August 1960 by Paul Brechler, who had been athletic director at the University of Iowa. Brechler served as commissioner until the conference disbanded, and became the first commissioner of the WAC.

Member schools

Final members

InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentNicknameJoinedLeftSubsequent conference(s)Current conference(s)
Brigham Young UniversityProvo, Utah1875Private34,100Cougars19371962variousBig 12 (2023–present)
Colorado State UniversityFort Collins, Colorado1870Public34,166Rams19371962FBS Independent (1962–1968) Western (WAC) (1968–1999)Mountain West (MW) (1999–2026) (Pac-12 in 2026)
University of DenverDenver, Colorado1864Private11,952Pioneers19371962variousSummit (2013–26) (WCC in 2026)
University of MontanaMissoula, Montana1893Public10,104Grizzlies19511962FBS Independent (1962–1963)Big Sky (BSC) (1963–present)
University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, New Mexico1889Public25,441Lobos19511962Western (WAC) (1962–1999)Mountain West (MW) (1999–present)
University of UtahSalt Lake City, Utah1850Public33,000Utes19371962variousBig 12 (2024–present)
Utah State UniversityLogan, Utah1888Public27,691Aggies19371962variousMountain West (MW) (2013–26) (Pac-12 in 2026)
University of WyomingLaramie, Wyoming1886Public12,450Cowboys & Cowgirls19371962Western (WAC) (1962–1999)Mountain West (MW) (1999–present)

Notes

Former members

InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentJoinedLeftNicknameSubsequent conference(s)Current conference(s)
University of ColoradoBoulder, Colorado1876Public33,24619371947BuffaloesBig 8 (1947–1996) Pac-12 (2011–2024)Big 12 (1996–2011, 2024–present)

Notes

Membership timeline

List of champions

Football

Men's basketball

Pre-Skyline

  • 1910–11 – Colorado School of Mines
  • 1911–12 – Colorado School of Mines
  • 1912–13 – Colorado
  • 1913–14 – Colorado
  • 1914–15 – Denver
  • 1915–16 – Colorado, Colorado College
  • 1916–17 – Colorado College
  • 1917–18 – Colorado
  • 1918–19 – Colorado
  • 1919–20 – Colorado
  • 1920–21 – Colorado
  • 1921–22 – Colorado College
  • 1922–23 – Colorado College
  • 1923–24 – Colorado College (Colorado)
  • 1924–25 – Colorado College (Eastern), BYU (Western)
  • 1925–26 – Colorado State (Eastern), Northern Colorado (Eastern), Utah (Western), Utah State (Western)
  • 1926–27 – Colorado College (Eastern), Montana State (Western)
  • 1927–28 – Wyoming (Eastern), Montana State (Western)
  • 1928–29 – Colorado (Eastern), Montana State (Western)
  • 1929–30 – Colorado (Eastern), Montana State (Western), Utah State (Western)
  • 1930–31 – Wyoming (Eastern), Utah (Western)
  • 1931–32 – Wyoming (Eastern), BYU (Western), Utah (Western)
  • 1932–33 – Colorado State (Eastern), Wyoming (Eastern), BYU (Western), Utah (Western)
  • 1933–34 – Wyoming (Eastern), BYU (Western)
  • 1934–35 – Northern Colorado (Eastern), Utah State (Western)
  • 1935–36 – Wyoming (Eastern), Utah State (Western)
  • 1936–37 – Colorado (Eastern), Denver (Eastern), Montana State (Western), Utah (Western)
  • 1937–38 – Colorado, Utah

Skyline

  • 1938–39 – Colorado
  • 1939–40 – Colorado
  • 1940–41 – Wyoming
  • 1941–42 – Colorado
  • 1942–43 – Wyoming
  • 1943–44 – N/A
  • 1944–45 – Utah
  • 1945–46 – Wyoming
  • 1946–47 – Wyoming
  • 1947–48 – BYU
  • 1948–49 – Wyoming
  • 1949–50 – BYU
  • 1950–51 – BYU
  • 1951–52 – Wyoming
  • 1952–53 – Wyoming
  • 1953–54 – Colorado State
  • 1954–55 – Utah
  • 1955–56 – Utah
  • 1956–57 – BYU
  • 1957–58 – Wyoming
  • 1958–59 – Utah
  • 1959–60 – Utah
  • 1960–61 – Colorado State, Utah
  • 1961–62 – Utah

See also

External links

  • . Provo, Utah: L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Brigham Young University.