Horizon League

The Horizon League is a collegiate athletic conference in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I. Headquartered in Indianapolis, the league's eleven member schools are located in and near the Great Lakes region.

Horizon League
FormerlyMidwestern City Conference (1979–1985)
Midwestern Collegiate Conference (1985–2001)
AssociationNCAA
Founded1979; 45 years ago (1979)
CommissionerJulie Roe Lach (since 2021)
Sports fielded
  • 19
    • men's: 9
    • women's: 10
DivisionDivision I
Subdivisionnon-football
No. of teams11 + 7 affiliate members
HeadquartersIndianapolis, Indiana
Region
Official websitehorizonleague.org
Locations
Location of teams in

The Horizon League founded in 1979 as the Midwestern City Conference. The conference changed its name to Midwestern Collegiate Conference in 1985 and then the Horizon League in 2001. The conference started with a membership of six teams and has fluctuated in size with 24 different schools as members at different times. The league currently has 11 members.

The Horizon League currently sponsors 19 sports and is a non-football conference.

History

Foundation (1978–1979)

In May 1978, DePaul University hosted a meeting with representatives from Bradley, Dayton, Detroit, Illinois State, Loyola–Chicago, Air Force, and Xavier who all agreed in principle that a new athletic conference was needed. Further progress was made through a series of early 1979 meetings in San Francisco, Chicago, and St. Louis that included participation by Butler, Creighton, Marquette, and Oral Roberts. On June 16, 1979, the Midwestern City Conference (nicknamed the MCC or Midwestern City 6) was formed by charter members Butler, Evansville, Loyola, Oklahoma City, Oral Roberts, and Xavier, with Detroit joining the following year.[1] As of the 2023–24 academic year, Detroit, now known as Detroit Mercy, is the only remaining member from the league's original members.

Midwestern Collegiate Conference logo from 1985 to 2001

Maturity (1980–1992)

In 1980, the league established its headquarters in Champaign, Illinois. The MCC gained an automatic bid to the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament in 1981, followed by the announcement that Saint Louis University would be joining the following season. The University of Notre Dame joined the conference for all sports except basketball and football in 1982. The conference attained automatic qualification for the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship in 1984 and the conference moved its headquarters to Indianapolis. Three changes occurred in the summer of 1985: Oklahoma City dropped out of the NCAA altogether; the conference name was altered slightly to Midwestern Collegiate Conference; and the conference began sponsoring women's athletics. The latter triggered Notre Dame's temporary withdrawal from the league as its women's teams were contracted to the North Star Conference. ESPN began televising the MCC Championship game[clarification needed] in 1986. In 1987, Oral Roberts left the conference while Dayton joined and Notre Dame rejoined. The conference earned its first at-large bid to the men's basketball tournament and automatic qualification to the NCAA Men's Soccer Championship in 1989. In 1991, the conference received an automatic bid to the NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament and lost members Marquette and Saint Louis. Duquesne and La Salle joined the MCC in 1992, the same year the conference gained an automatic berth to the NCAA Women's Volleyball Championship. Duquesne and Dayton left the conference in 1993.

Modern era (1990–present)

The largest non-merger conference expansion in NCAA history occurred on December 9, 1993, when Cleveland State, UIC, Northern Illinois, Wisconsin–Green Bay, Wisconsin–Milwaukee, and Wright State left the Mid-Continent Conference to join the Midwestern Collegiate Conference beginning with the 1994–95 academic year.[1] With Evansville's departure to the Missouri Valley Conference (MVC), there were 12 league members. Xavier, Notre Dame, and La Salle withdrew the following summer of 1995, followed by Northern Illinois in 1997. The conference changed its name to the Horizon League on June 4, 2001, in part due to the initials causing confusion between the MCC and the Mid-Continent Conference, who also used the initials. That year, Youngstown State University joined from the Mid-Con, and on May 17, 2006, Valparaiso University announced it would do the same in 2007.[2]

In April 2013, the split of the original Big East Conference caused a ripple effect that fell to the Horizon League; Loyola announced that it would leave the Horizon League effective July 1 to join the Missouri Valley Conference, who itself lost Creighton to the reconfigured Big East.[3]

Butler also left the Horizon League. They spent a season in the Atlantic 10 before joining the Big East.

The Horizon announced that Oakland University, formerly of the Summit League, would immediately replace Loyola within a month.[4]

The next change in the Horizon League's membership came in 2015 with the arrival of Northern Kentucky University from the Atlantic Sun Conference.[5]

Two more membership changes were announced near the end of the 2016–17 school year. First, Valparaiso announced on May 25, 2017, that it would leave for the MVC effective July 1. The Crusaders replaced Wichita State, who announced that it would leave the MVC for the American Athletic Conference.[6] Three days before Valparaiso's departure, the Horizon League Board of Directors unanimously approved the membership of Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) to replace Valparaiso, also effective July 1.[7]

The start of the 2020s set further membership changes into motion, with the arrivals of Purdue Fort Wayne and Robert Morris from the Summit League and the Northeast Conference (NEC), respectively, announced on August 5, 2019[8] and June 15, 2020.[9] This brought the Horizon League up to 12 full-time members for the first time since the 1994-95 season. It was short-lived, however, as the UIC Flames were reported to be following many of their former conference colleagues to the MVC effective July 1, 2022.[10]

On July 6, 2022, the Horizon League and Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) jointly announced that they would merge their men's tennis leagues under the Horizon banner, effective immediately. The five OVC members that sponsored the sport became Horizon associates. At the same time, the Horizon announced that Belmont, which had just left the OVC for the Missouri Valley Conference (which sponsors tennis only for women), would become a men's tennis associate,[11] and Chicago State, which became a D-I independent after leaving the Western Athletic Conference days earlier, would become an associate in both men's and women's tennis.[12] Two tennis associates left after the 2023–24 season. Men's and women's associate Chicago State joined the NEC, which sponsors the sport for both sexes,[13] and men's associate Lindenwood dropped nine NCAA sports, including men's tennis.[14]

Prior to the 2023–24 academic year, the conference announced a brand refresh with the introduction of a new secondary logo. The logo is a gold stylized H that incorporates the arch of the conference's primary logo and a number one to symbolize unity.[15]

As of the 2023–24 academic year, eight of the 11 full Horizon League members are former members of the Mid-Con (now known as the Summit League), with the exceptions being Detroit Mercy, Northern Kentucky, and Robert Morris.

Member schools

Current full members

InstitutionLocationFoundedJoinedTypeEnrollmentEndowment
(millions)
NicknameColors
Cleveland State UniversityCleveland, Ohio19641994Public16,418$89.8Vikings   
University of Detroit MercyDetroit, Michigan18771980Private (Jesuit)5,700$94.0Titans     
University of Wisconsin–Green BayGreen Bay, Wisconsin19651994Public8,873$130.0Phoenix   
Indiana University Indianapolis (IU Indy)[a]Indianapolis, Indiana1969[b]2017Public30,105$1,150Jaguars     
University of Wisconsin–MilwaukeeMilwaukee, Wisconsin19561994Public33,502$262.0Panthers   
Northern Kentucky UniversityHighland Heights, Kentucky19682015Public15,405$119.2Norse     
Oakland UniversityRochester, Michigan[c]19572013Public20,519$102.1Golden Grizzlies   
Purdue University Fort WayneFort Wayne, Indiana1964[d]2020Public10,208$79.5Mastodons   
Robert Morris UniversityMoon Township, Pennsylvania19212020Private (non-sectarian)4,895$38.2Colonials     
Wright State UniversityFairborn, Ohio[e]19641994Public17,074$95.5Raiders   
Youngstown State UniversityYoungstown, Ohio19082001Public15,058$321.5Penguins   
Notes

Associate members

InstitutionLocationFoundedJoinedTypeEnrollmentNicknameSport(s)Primary conference
Belmont UniversityNashville, Tennessee18902022Private (Christian)8,700BruinsMen's tennisMVC
Eastern Illinois UniversityCharleston, Illinois18952022Public8,857PanthersMen's tennisOVC
University of Southern IndianaEvansville, Indiana[a]19652022Public9,758Screaming EaglesMen's tennisOVC
Tennessee State UniversityNashville, Tennessee19122022Public
(HBCU)
8,775TigersMen's tennisOVC
Tennessee Technological UniversityCookeville, Tennessee19152022Public10,492Golden EaglesMen's tennisOVC

Former full members

Nicknames and school names reflect those used in the last school year of conference membership.

InstitutionLocationFoundedJoinedLeftTypeNicknameLeft forCurrent
conference
Butler UniversityIndianapolis, Indiana185519792012PrivateBulldogsAtlantic 10Big East
University of DaytonDayton, Ohio185019871993PrivateFlyersGreat MidwestAtlantic 10
Duquesne UniversityPittsburgh, Pennsylvania187819921993PrivateDukesAtlantic 10
University of EvansvilleEvansville, Indiana185419791994PrivatePurple AcesMissouri Valley
University of Illinois ChicagoChicago, Illinois194619942022PublicFlamesMissouri Valley
La Salle UniversityPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania186319921995PrivateExplorersAtlantic 10
Loyola University ChicagoChicago, Illinois187019792013[3]PrivateRamblersMissouri ValleyAtlantic 10
Marquette UniversityMilwaukee, Wisconsin18811988[a]1991PrivateWarriors[b]Great MidwestBig East
Northern Illinois UniversityDeKalb, Illinois189519941997PublicHuskiesMid-American
University of Notre DameNotre Dame, Indiana184219821986PrivateFighting IrishBig EastACC
1987[c]1995
Oklahoma City UniversityOklahoma City, Oklahoma190419791985PrivateChiefs[d]Sooner[e]
Oral Roberts UniversityTulsa, Oklahoma196319791987PrivateTitans[f]IndependentSummit
Saint Louis UniversitySt. Louis, Missouri18181981[g]1991PrivateBillikensGreat MidwestAtlantic 10
Valparaiso UniversityValparaiso, Indiana185920072017PrivateCrusaders[h]Missouri Valley
Xavier UniversityCincinnati, Ohio183119791995PrivateMusketeersAtlantic 10Big East
Notes

Membership timeline

Horizon LeagueHorizon LeagueHorizon LeagueRobert Morris UniversityNortheast ConferenceNortheast ConferenceNCAA Division I independent schoolsPurdue University Fort WayneSummit LeagueNCAA Division I independent schoolsGreat Lakes Valley ConferenceNCAA Division II independent schoolsNCAA Division III independent schoolsIndiana University IndianapolisIndiana University – Purdue University IndianapolisSummit LeagueSummit LeagueNCAA Division II independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsNorthern Kentucky UniversityASUN ConferenceGreat Lakes Valley ConferenceNCAA Division II independent schoolsOakland UniversitySummit LeagueSummit LeagueGreat Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceMissouri Valley ConferenceValparaiso UniversitySummit LeagueSummit LeagueNCAA Division I independent schoolsYoungstown State UniversitySummit LeagueNCAA Division I FCS independent schoolsOhio Valley ConferenceNCAA Division II independent schoolsWright State UniversitySummit LeagueNCAA Division I independent schoolsNCAA Division II independent schoolsUniversity of Wisconsin–MilwaukeeSummit LeagueNCAA Division I independent schoolsNCAA Division I independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsNCAA Division III independent schoolsNCAA Division I independent schoolsUniversity of Wisconsin–Green BaySummit LeagueSummit LeagueNCAA Division I independent schoolsNAIA Division I independent schoolsMissouri Valley ConferenceUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoSummit LeagueSummit LeagueChicagoland Collegiate Athletic ConferenceCleveland State UniversitySummit LeagueSummit LeagueNCAA Division I independent schoolsMid-American ConferenceNorthern Illinois UniversitySummit LeagueNCAA Division I FBS independent schoolsMid-American ConferenceAtlantic 10 ConferenceLa Salle UniversityMetro Atlantic Athletic ConferenceEast Coast Conference (Division I)Atlantic 10 ConferenceDuquesne UniversityAtlantic 10 ConferenceBig East ConferenceBig East Conference (1979–2013)Conference USAGreat Midwest ConferenceMarquette UniversityNCAA Division I independent schoolsAtlantic 10 ConferenceGreat Midwest ConferenceUniversity of DaytonNCAA Division I independent schoolsAtlantic Coast ConferenceBig East Conference (1979–2013)University of Notre DameNCAA Division I FBS independent schoolsAtlantic 10 ConferenceConference USAGreat Midwest ConferenceSaint Louis UniversityMetro ConferenceUniversity of Detroit MercyUniversity of Detroit MercyNCAA Division I independent schoolsAtlantic 10 ConferenceMissouri Valley ConferenceLoyola University ChicagoBig East ConferenceAtlantic 10 ConferenceButler UniversityBig East ConferenceAtlantic 10 ConferenceXavier UniversityMissouri Valley ConferenceUniversity of EvansvilleSummit LeagueSouthland ConferenceSummit LeagueSummit LeagueNCAA Division I independent schoolsNAIA independent schoolsNCAA Division I independent schoolsOral Roberts UniversitySooner Athletic ConferenceOklahoma City University

Full members  Affiliate members  Other Conference  Other Conference 

The Horizon League sponsors championship competition in nine men's and ten women's NCAA sanctioned sports:[18]

For 2020–21, Detroit Mercy, Wright State and Green Bay announced eliminating men’s and women’s tennis, while Youngstown State reinstated men's swimming & diving.

Teams in Horizon League competition
SportMen'sWomen's
Baseball6
Basketball1212
Cross country1112
Golf109
Soccer1112
Softball10
Swimming and diving77
Tennis117
Track and field (indoor)811
Track and field (outdoor)811
Volleyball11

Men's sponsored sports by school

Departing members in pink.

SchoolBaseballBasketballCross CountryGolfSoccerSwimming & DivingTennisTrack & Field
(Indoor)
Track & Field
(Outdoor)
Total Horizon Sports
Cleveland StateNoYesNoYesYesYesYesNoNo5
Detroit MercyNoYesYesYesYesNoNoYesYes6
Green BayNoYesYesYesYesYesNoNoNo5
IU IndyNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes8
MilwaukeeYesYesYesNoYesYesNoYesYes7
Northern KentuckyYesYesYesYesYesNo[a]YesYesYes8
OaklandYesYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYes8
Purdue Fort WayneYesYesYesYesYesNoNoYesYes7
Robert MorrisNoYesYesYesYesNoNoNoNo3
Wright StateYesYesYesYesYesNoNoYesYes7
Youngstown StateYesYesYesYesNoYesYesYesYes8
Associate members
BelmontYes1
Eastern IllinoisYes1
Southern IndianaYes1
Tennessee StateYes1
Tennessee TechYes1
Totals611101010697778

Men's varsity sports not sponsored by the Horizon League which are played by Horizon schools:

SchoolFencing[a]FootballIce hockeyLacrosseSkiing[b]VolleyballWrestling
Cleveland StateIndependentNoNoNECNoNoMAC
Detroit MercyIndependentNoNoNECNoNoNo
Green BayNoNoNoNoCCSA[c]NoNo
Northern KentuckyNoNoNoNoNoNo[d]No
Purdue Fort WayneNoNoNoNoNoMIVANo
Robert MorrisNoNECAHANECNoNoNo
Youngstown StateNoMVFCNoNoNoNoNo

In addition to the above sports, Northern Kentucky will add men's triathlon, which has no NCAA recognition of any kind, as a varsity sport in 2024–25.[19]

Women's sponsored sports by school

Departing member in pink.

SchoolBasketballCross CountryGolfSoccerSoftballSwimming & DivingTennisTrack & Field
(Indoor)
Track & Field
(Outdoor)
VolleyballTotal Horizon Sports
Cleveland StateYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes10
Detroit MercyYesYesYesYesYesNoNoYesYesNo7
Green BayYesYesYesYesYesYesNoNoNoYes7
IU IndyYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes10
MilwaukeeYesYesNoYesNoYesYesYesYesYes8
Northern KentuckyYesYesYesYesYesNo[a]YesYesYesYes9
OaklandYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes10
Purdue Fort WayneYesYesYesYesYesNoNoYesYesYes8
Robert MorrisYesYesNoYesYesNoNoYesYesYes7
Wright StateYesYesNoYesNoNoNoYesYesYes6
Youngstown StateYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYes10
Totals111181196710101081


Women's varsity sports not sponsored by the Horizon League which are played by Horizon schools:

SchoolBowlingFencing[a]Ice hockeyLacrosseRowingSkiing[b]Stunt[c]Triathlon[c]
Cleveland StateNoIndependentNoNoNoNoNoNo
Detroit MercyNoIndependentNoMACNoNoNoNo
Green BayNoNoNoNoNoCCSA[d]NoNo
Northern KentuckyNoNoNoNoNoNoNo[e]No[e]
Robert MorrisNoNoAHAMACMAACNoNoNo
Wright StateIndependentNoNoNoNoNoNoNo
Youngstown StateCUSANoNoMACNoNoNoNo

Broadcasting rights

In 2006, the conference launched the Horizon League Network (HLN) as the centerpiece of a revamped web portal.[20] The digital network aired over 200 live events free on the league's official website at the time.

The Horizon League and WebStream Productions launched a completely redesigned HLN website in September 2009. The site serves as a portal to hundreds of live and on-demand videos while giving its users the ability to interact on an array of social media platforms.

The Horizon League Network migrated to ESPN3 in 2014, and over 700 events streamed live in 2015–16. Horizon League coverage was absorbed into ESPN+, along with other mid-major conferences, in 2018.[21] The conference extended its deal with ESPN in 2021. Over 500 events are aired on ESPN+ annually, along with select men's basketball games airing on ESPN2 and ESPNU and the men's and women's basketball championships airing on ESPN and ESPNU.[22]

Basketball games not selected for broadcast on national linear television are often televised by regional sports networks and over-the-air channels within the teams’ home markets. In recent years, WMYD Detroit, Marquee Sports Network, Bally Sports Ohio, Bally Sports Great Lakes, Bally Sports Wisconsin, and SportsNet Pittsburgh have broadcast multiple men’s and women’s basketball contests.

Men's basketball

Horizon League men's basketball tournament champions

Historic

From 1995 to 2011, the Horizon League sent an impressive 24 qualifiers (7 At-Large berths) to the Men's NCAA basketball tournament, making the Horizon League one of the most prolific mid-major (non-power 6) conferences in all of college basketball. Even more impressively, those 24 clubs produced 22 wins in that span, including five "Sweet 16" appearances, making the Horizon League the only non-BCS conference to have Sweet 16 participants in five NCAA tournaments during that span (2003, 2005, 2007, 2010 and 2011). Four schools from the conference have produced "modern-day" Sweet 16 appearances – Loyola (1985), Xavier (1990), Butler (2003, 2007, 2010 and 2011), and Milwaukee (2005). The Horizon League also compiled a 19–12 record in the NCAA tournament from 2003-2011, ranking tops among all 32 NCAA Division I conferences for winning percentage (.613) in March Madness during that span. This historic stretch of conference dominance was thanks to NCAA Tournament wins from Butler (15), Milwaukee (3), and Cleveland State (1) . Butler appeared in the men's national championship game in both 2010 and 2011. Since the NCAA began seeding teams in 1979, Loyola's 4 seed in the 1985 tournament is the best for a Horizon League team. The Horizon League currently holds the best winning percentage among non-BCS conferences in the men's NCAA basketball Tournament (.488, 7th overall amongst the 32 Division I conferences).[23]

One former Horizon League member claims a national championship from the era before the league's creation. In the 1963 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, Loyola defeated two-time defending champ Cincinnati. Before post-season tournaments determined champions, former Horizon member Butler claimed national titles in 1924 and 1929.[24]

The League hosted the men's Final Four in 1991, 1997, 2000, 2006, 2009 and 2010. It also hosted the women's Final Four in 2005 and 2007. Horizon League commissioner Jonathan B. LeCrone, who is in his 17th year as league commissioner, just finished a five-year term on the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Committee.[25]

2000s

As stated on their official website, the recent success of Horizon League athletic teams on the national stage heightened the visibility of the league and its member schools and quickly moved it closer toward its stated goal of becoming one of the nation's top 10 Division I NCAA athletic conferences.

2002–03

In the 2003 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, the Horizon League entered two teams for the first time since 1998. Milwaukee, who earned a 12 seed in its first bid to the tournament since joining the conference, lost by one point to Notre Dame in the first round. Butler, who earned both an at-large bid and a 12 seed, made its fifth tournament appearance in seven years. The Bulldogs made it to the Sweet 16 with victories over No. 20 (5 seed) Mississippi State and No. 14 (4 seed) Louisville before falling to No. 3 (1 seed) Oklahoma in the East Regional. The Bulldogs finished the year ranked No. 21 in the final ESPN/USA Today Top 25 Poll.

2004–05

In the men's 2005 NCAA basketball tournament, the Horizon League enjoyed one of its best showings ever as 12 seed Milwaukee marched to the Sweet 16 with victories over No. 19 (5 seed) Alabama and No. 14 (4 seed) Boston College before they fell to then-No. 1 and eventual tournament runner-up Illinois. Milwaukee ranked as high as No. 23 in the March 7 ESPN/USA Today Top 25 Poll.[26]

2005–06

In the 2006 NCAA basketball tournament, 11 seed Milwaukee once again advanced in the Tournament by upsetting the No. 20 (6 seed) Oklahoma 82–74. The Panthers, led by first year head coach Rob Jeter, fell to eventual national champion No. 11 (AP)/No. 10 (ESPN) (3 seed) Florida in the second round of the tournament. The league had a team advance past the first round for the second straight year and third time in the last four years.

2006–07

In the 2006–07 basketball season, Butler won the Preseason NIT tournament in Madison Square Garden with wins over in-state rivals Notre Dame and Indiana in the NIT's Midwest regional bracket, followed by wins over No. 21 Tennessee and No. 23 Gonzaga in the NIT Final Four in Madison Square Garden. Later, the Bulldogs claimed victory over Purdue in the Wooden Tradition. On February 5, 2007, Butler became the first school in Horizon League history to rank in the Top 10 of the national college basketball polls, as the Bulldogs reached No. 9 and No. 10 in the ESPN/USA Today and AP polls, respectively.[27] The Bulldogs ended their season with a No. 21 ranking in the final AP poll, a 5 seed in the NCAA tournament and a Sweet 16 berth by beating Old Dominion and Maryland before losing to eventual national champion Florida. Wright State also qualified for the NCAA tournament as the winner of the Horizon League tournament championship and tying Butler for the regular season championship. As a 14 seed, the Raiders fell to No. 13 (AP)/No. 11 (ESPN) (3 seed) Pittsburgh in the first round.

2007–08

During the 2007–08 basketball season, Butler won the Great Alaska Shootout with wins over Michigan, Virginia Tech and Texas Tech, and also claimed wins over Ohio State and Florida State, who extended their record against BCS schools to 10–1 since the start of the 2006–07 season. As a 7 seed in the 2008 NCAA basketball tournament, the Bulldogs beat 10 seed South Alabama before falling in overtime to No. 5 (AP)/No. 4 (ESPN) (2 seed) Tennessee. Butler finished the season ranked No. 11 in the AP poll and No. 14 in the ESPN/USA Today poll. Cleveland State also earned a 6 seed in the NIT, losing in the first round to Dayton.

2008–09

Starting in 2009, regional convenience store and gas station chain Speedway served as the title sponsor of the conference tournament that Cleveland State won and earned the Horizon League's automatic bid to the NCAA Tourney while Butler earned an at-large bid. Butler, a 9 seed, lost in the first round to LSU while 13 seed Cleveland State upset No. 8 (AP)/No. 9 (ESPN) (4 seed) Wake Forest 84–69 (and achieved the third biggest upset in NCAA history winning by 15 points) and shocked the nation in the first round of play before falling to 12 seed Arizona in the second round of tournament play. Butler finished the season ranked No. 22 in the final AP poll and No. 25 in the final ESPN/USA Today poll.

2009–10

After defeating No. 25 (12 seed) UTEP, 13 seed Murray State and No. 4 (1 seed) Syracuse, the No. 8 (ESPN)/No. 11 (AP) (5 seed) Butler men's team defeated No. 7 Kansas State, the 2 seed in the West, by a score of 63–56 to advance to their first Final Four. After beating the No. 12 (ESPN)/No. 13 (AP) (5 seed) Michigan State Spartans 52–50 in the national semifinals, Butler played in Indianapolis against the South Regional Champions, No. 3 (1 seed) Duke for the NCAA Division I National Championship. Butler lost what many call the most thrilling college basketball game in a generation, losing 61–59 in a game that came down to the final play. This is the farthest any team has reached in the tournament while a member of the Horizon League. Butler was the first Division I men's team to play in the Final Four in its hometown since UCLA in 1972, and the first of either sex since Texas played in the 1987 Women's Final Four on its home court.

Also of note, former Milwaukee head coach Bruce Pearl coached the Tennessee Volunteers to the Elite Eight and narrowly lost the opportunity to play Butler by losing to Michigan State, who Butler beat in the Final Four.

2010–11

Butler once again represented the Horizon League in the tournament with another very strong showing. As an 8 seed, Butler defeated (9 seed) Old Dominion, narrowly upset Pittsburgh (who was No. 1 ranked and seeded), Wisconsin (4 seed) and Florida (2 seed) to return to the Final Four. Butler faced VCU, an 11 seed Cinderella team who unexpectedly reached the Final Four as the first team to play five tournament games to reach the Final Four, due to VCU's participation in the inaugural First Four Round. After Butler defeated VCU 70–62, the Bulldogs were in the national championship game for the second consecutive season. This time they faced Connecticut at Reliant Stadium in Houston. The Huskies were too much for the Butler Bulldogs to handle, as Butler lost the game 53–41 in an unusually low-scoring national championship game. This made Butler national runner-up for the second straight season.

2011–12

In the 2012 postseason, the Detroit Titans won their first Horizon League Championship since 1999 under head coach Ray McCallum. They defeated top seeded Valparaiso 70–50. The tournament MVP was son Ray McCallum, Jr.

2012–13

Valparaiso was the regular season champion of the Horizon for the second straight year. It defeated Wright State 62–54 in the championship game under coach Bryce Drew for its first Horizon League Championship. This was the first season that the league was absent of Butler, who departed for the Atlantic 10.

2013–14

Green Bay won the regular season championship in 2014. It was upset by Milwaukee in the tournament semi-final. Milwaukee would go on to win the tournament, knocking off Wright State.

2014–15

Following a good outcome, finishing as the 2014 champions, the Milwaukee Panthers were banned from the 2015 NCAA Tournament and postseason play. Valparaiso won the regular and postseason championships. It entered the NCAA tournament as a 13th seed, although losing in the first round.

2015–16

The 2015 season ushered in the arrival of the Northern Kentucky Norse to the league, who departed from the Atlantic Sun Conference. Valparaiso won the regular season championship again but was defeated by Green Bay in the tournament championship 78–69.

Other sports

The Milwaukee baseball team made national headlines during the 1999 College World Series by upsetting No. 1 ranked Rice in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. In the 2004–05 academic year, Milwaukee's men's soccer team defeated 16th-ranked San Francisco, while Detroit upset Michigan in women's soccer in their respective NCAA tournaments. Also that year, Butler's men's cross country team finished fourth in the nation at the NCAA Cross-Country Championships, and their own Victoria Mitchell became the first Horizon League athlete to win an individual national title when she captured the 3,000 Meter Steeplechase at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. Green Bay also upset 6th-ranked Oregon State in the opening round of the NCAA softball tournament.

Although the league does not sponsor football, current members Robert Morris and Youngstown State play in Division I FCS. Youngstown State plays in the Missouri Valley Football Conference; Robert Morris originally planned to play the 2020–21 season as an independent and join Big South Conference football in July 2021,[28] but COVID-19 issues led the Big South to bring Robert Morris into its football league for its rescheduled spring 2021 season.[29]

Facilities

SchoolSoccer stadiumCapacityBasketball arenaCapacityBaseball fieldCapacitySoftball fieldCapacity
Cleveland StateKrenzler Field1,680Wolstein Center13,610[a]Non-baseball schoolViking Field500
Detroit MercyTitan Soccer Field500Calihan Hall8,295Non-baseball schoolBuysse Ballpark500
Green BayAldo Santaga Stadium3,500Resch Center (men)
Kress Events Center (women)
9,729
4,018
Non-baseball schoolPhoenix Softball Field500
IU IndyCarroll Stadium12,111Indiana Farmers Coliseum (men)
The Jungle (women)
6,800
1,215
Non-baseball schoolIU Indy Softball Complex500
MilwaukeeEngelmann Stadium2,200UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena (men)
Klotsche Center (women)
10,783
3,500
Franklin Field4,000Non-softball school
Northern KentuckyNKU Soccer Stadium1,000Truist Arena9,400Bill Aker Baseball Complex500Frank Ignatius Grein Softball Field500
OaklandOakland University Soccer Field1,000Athletics Center O'rena4,005Oakland University Baseball Field500OU Softball Field250
Purdue Fort WayneHefner Soccer Complex2,000Hilliard Gates Sports Center
Allen County War Memorial Coliseum (special events)
1,800
13,000
Mastodon Field200Purdue Fort Wayne Softball Field500
Robert MorrisNorth Athletic ComplexUPMC Events Center4,000Non-baseball schoolNorth Athletic Complex
Wright StateAlumni Field1,000Nutter Center10,449Nischwitz Stadium750WSU Softball Field
Youngstown StateFarmers National Bank Field200[30]Beeghly Center
Covelli Centre (special events)
6,300
5,900
Eastwood Field6,300[31]YSU Softball Complex100[32]
Notes

See also

References