America's
Oldest
Collegiate Conference
Founded March 24, 1888
Updated through 2008-09 season
The Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA) is America's
oldest collegiate athletic conference.
The 2008-09 school year will mark the 122nd consecutive year of operation
for the NCAA Division III affiliated conference. The MIAA was founded
March 24, 1888. From the very beginning, the MIAA has conducted full-season
championships in multiple sports. There have been changes in some of
the sports (bicycle racing and Indian club juggling have long since
disappeared, and basketball did not even exist in 1888), but these
changes have served to develop the MIAA into one of America's finest
NCAA Division III conferences, today offering 18 sports for men and
women.
The MIAA's continuity is noteworthy. Of the 12 schools that have
had full membership, eight are still members -- Adrian, Albion, Alma,
Calvin, Hope, Kalamazoo Olivet, and Saint Mary's. Significantly, not
one of these eight colleges has ever belonged to any other formal league.
Albion and Olivet were charter members although Albion is the only
member to hold continuous membership. Ex-members were Michigan State
University (1888-1907), Eastern Michigan University (1892-1926), Hillsdale
College (1888- 1960), and Defiance College (1997-2000).
The MIAA's membership list went unchanged from 1954 until 1997 when
the Defiance College of Ohio and Saint Mary's College of Indiana were
invited to join. It also marked the first time that the league added
members outside the State of Michigan. The league stipulated, however,
that the name of the conference would not change. The inaugural year
of current members are: Adrian (1908), Albion (1888), Alma (1902),
Calvin (1953), Hope (1926), Kalamazoo (1896), Olivet (1888), Saint
Mary's (1997) and Trine (2004).
The MIAA marked a historic note in 2002 when the league accepted
Wisconsin Lutheran College of Milwaukee, Wisc. as an associate member
for the purpose of competing in football. Wisconsin Lutheran left the MIAA after the 2007 season to join another
conference.
Tri-State University became a conference member in 2004-05 upon its
acceptance as a provisional NCAA member. Tri-State became a full member of the NCAA on August 1, 2007. On
August 1, 2008 Tri-State changed its name to Trine University.
* * *
James Heckman of Hillsdale is considered the "Father of the MIAA." After
several schools had sponsored successful track and field days from
1884 to 1887, Heckman promoted the idea of a permanent league. The
snow was deep in Michigan when the first delegates met in Jackson on
March 17, 1888, to organize the MIAA. During the train ride to the
meeting place, the delegates might have read the weekly newspapers
and observed that the snow was nothing compared to the great blizzard
which had just devastated the Atlantic coast -- one of the most damaging
snowfalls in our country's history.
They might also have read of the death a week earlier of Kaiser William
I in Germany and the speculation that his grandson, William II, might
become emperor, since the Kaiser's son, Frederick William, was already
mortally ill. William II did become emperor -- and as Kaiser Wilhelm
led the world into chaos a quarter-century later. Thus, in 1888, the
seed was sown for World War I, a tragedy indeed, but an event that
was followed by the emergence of college athletics into major American
activity.
Grover Cleveland was president then, but later lost to Benjamin Harrison
in the 1888 election. College debating societies in 1888 argued on
the topic of protective tariffs, a topic timely in the 1980s.
Our delegates in March 1888, though informed of the day's major topics,
could hardly have been aware of the tremendous impact on collegiate
athletics which was to be caused by a birth which took place on March
4 at Voss, Norway. Had they been able to see into the future, they
might have attached interest to the fact that the carriagemaker of
Voss, Lewis Rockne, named his newborn son Knute Kenneth.
In Michigan, the state population was two million and 13 schools
were offering classes on a college level. Of the schools which were
to figure in MIAA history, Eastern Michigan was the largest with 714
students. Albion's enrollment was listed as 451, Hillsdale 450, Michigan
State 314, Olivet 277, Adrian 150, Hope 148, Kalamazoo 143 and Alma
95. The University of Michigan had grown to giant proportions in 1888
with 93 instructors and 1,671 students.
Among the denominational schools, the enrollment figures included
many students taking work on a high school level; at Kalamazoo, for
example, 98 of the 143 were preparatory students, and only 45 were
taking college work. As a result, athletic teams of those years included
both high school and college students, and five or six years of participation
on one school's teams was not unusual.
A week after this historic meeting, delegates from Albion, Hillsdale,
Michigan and Olivet drew up the MIAA's first constitution.
* * *
Less than three months later, the first MIAA track and field meet
was held at East Lansing with competition on May 31, June 1-2, 1888,
in baseball, track and tennis.
The spectators at a college event in 1888 were sure to include some
Civil War veterans, since the Grand Army of the Republic was at its
zenith in that era. A college student group was almost certain to include
graduates of a log schoolhouse, since 442 such buildings were still
in use at that time.
Hillsdale was the MIAA's first track champion. Other competing colleges
included Albion, Michigan State, and Olivet.
Track and field events in that first meet included the 100-yard dash,
200-yard dash, 880-yard run, high jump, long jump, shot put, hammer
throw and mile relay. Other events included at the first Field Day
included lawn tennis, wrestling, Indian club swing, horizonal and parallel
bar performing, bicycle racing, sparring, and tug-of-war.
1888 FIELD DAY WINNERS
| 110-yard dash |
Charles VanFleet, Hillsdale |
:10.7 |
| 220-yard dash |
Charles VanFleet, Hillsdale |
:23.7 |
| 880-yard run |
Edward Ward, Hillsdale |
2:12.0 |
| High Jump |
Charles Carnahan, Michigan State   |
5-0 |
| Long Jump |
Thomas Gale, Albion |
19-6 |
| Hammer Throw   |
John Hooper, Michigan State |
68-10-1/2 |
| Shot Put |
John Hooper, Michigan State |
32-2 |
| Mile Relay |
Hillsdale |
3:35.0 |
The 440-yard dash, mile run, high hurdles and pole vault were introduced
in 1889. The two mile run and discus became league events in 1912 and
the javelin replaced the hammer throw in 1913.
In 1889, at the second annual MIAA Field Day, Albion and Olivet engaged
in an exhibition "football match." In 1891 Albion defeated Hillsdale
at Hillsdale 36-4 in the first intercollegiate football game in the
MIAA, but it wasn't until 1894 that football was recognized as an official
league sport.
Basketball became a league sport in 1911, followed by cross country
(1922), golf (1934), wrestling (1969-1981), soccer (1970) and swimming
(1971).
In 1978-79, the league combined into a single structure the administration
of the men's and women's athletic programs of the member schools.
A book written to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the MIAA, "Celebrating
A Century of the Student Athlete," was the first place winner in a
national competition sponsored by the College Sports Information Directors
Association.
In 2009-10, the MIAA will sponsor championships in nine sports for
men -- football, cross country, soccer, and golf in the fall; basketball
and swimming in the winter; and baseball, tennis and track in the spring,
and nine sports for women -- cross country, golf, soccer and volleyball
in the fall; basketball and swimming in the winter; and softball, tennis,
and track in the spring.
* * *
Intercollegiate sports for women at MIAA schools have roots that
go much deeper than the 1978-79 implementation of a common governance.
Six years after the league was founded the first Albion College tennis
tournament, held in May 1894, was a coed event.
By February 1899, the Albion College student newspaper reported: "Interest
in basketball has not been confined to the men this year, but has extended
to the ladies of the institution. After about two more weeks of practice,
the ladies will be ready to receive challenges from our sister colleges."
In 1910 Albion's defeat of Hillsdale in women's basketball by a 36-7
score caused this editorial comment: "Of course, the score was very
gratifying to us, but the important question is what these games mean
to do in the way of skill, coolness and presence of mind under trying
circumstances, but they also develop physical and moral course, self-control
and ability to meet success or failure with dignity."
The first attempt to organize a women's athletic program for MIAA
members occurred in 1936 when Albion invited all of the MIAA schools
to a play day and convention. Approximately 100 women from Adrian,
Albion, Hillsdale, Kalamazoo, and Olivet colleges participated in archery,
tennis, volleyball, basketball, badminton, tennis, softball, and swimming.
This began an informal association of the women. Activities added in
later years included chinese checkers, darts, and ping pong.
The first formal organization for women in college athletics in Michigan
occurred in 1941 with the drafting of a constitution for what was to
be known as the Athletic Federation of Michigan College Women (AFMCW).
While the MIAA suspended play during World War II there was some
competition among the women. In 1940, Albion defeated Alma 4-1 in a
field hockey game which replaced the cancelled homecoming football
game between the schools.
By 1946, two separate athletic organizations for women had been organized
in Michigan, creating some confusion. Members of the original group
changed their name to the Women's Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic
Association (WMIAA) while promoters of the new state organization,
mostly the larger universities, remained known as the AFMCW.
The executive board of the WMIAA in 1951 reaffirmed the value of
its activities, noting that the new state group could not supply the
same needs. A new WMIAA constitution was ratified in 1952. In May 1961,
it was decided that the play days would be discontinued and the archery
and tennis tournaments became the only formal activity of the women's
association.
In May 1977, the MIAA Presidents adopted a policy favoring the bringing
together of men's and women's athletics at their institutions into
a single organization. The single league structure was implemented
in the 1978-79 school year.
Cross country was added as an MIAA sport for women in 1981-82 as
archery was dropped, and soccer was added in 1989-90. Field hockey
ended as a women's sport after the 1990 season. Golf was added as a
women's sport in 1991-92.
* * *
Since 1934-35, the MIAA has presented an All-Sports Award to the
member school with the best cumulative performance in all conference
sports during a school year. Since 1981-82, the award winner has been
determined on the basis of both men's and women's sports. Beginning
in the 1998-99 school year, the MIAA began presenting awards for the
best cumulative finish in men's and women's sports as well as the All-Sports
Award, now known as the Commissioner's Cup.
For the first time in league history, there was a tie in the Commissioner's
Cup standings in 2007-08 as Calvin and Hope each accumulated 202 points.
Hope won the 07-08 Men's
All-Sports
Award
while Calvin won the 07-08 Women's
All-Sports
Award, each by a seven-point margin which caused the Commissioner's
Cup tie. Hope has
won
the
All-Sports honor 31 times while Albion has captured the award 14 times,
followed by Kalamazoo 13, Calvin 8 and Alma 5.
* * *
The Kalamazoo College men's tennis team has a winning streak that
is unparalleled by any amateur, high school, college, or professional
team in America.
The Hornets have won or shared every MIAA men's tennis championship
since 1936 -- a string of 71 consecutive titles! The only blemishes
were in 1962 and 2003 when Kalamazoo had to share the crown with Hope
after the Dutchmen won the dual meet showdown between the schools,
4-3 in 1962 and 7-2 in 2003, while the Hornets took the season-ending
tournament to cause the co-championship.
From April 15, 1935, to April 22, 1962, Kalamazoo won 155 straight
MIAA dual meets. From 1962 to the April 15, 2003 loss to Hope, the
Hornets won 241 in-a-row. Since 1935, Kalamazoo has a conference dual
match record of 438-2.
Current multiple-year outright league champions thru the 2008-09
season are: men's cross country, Calvin, 22 years; women's track and
field, Calvin, 18 years; women's swimming and
diving, Calvin, five years; men's track and field, Calvin, five years;
women's cross country, Calvin, four years; women's golf, Olivet, three
years; women's soccer, Calvin, three years; women's basketball, Hope, two years; men's swimming and diving, Hope, two years; softball, Trine, two years.
* * *
MIAA member schools are active in Division III of the NCAA, both
as participants and tournament hosts, as well as being involved in
the governance of the Association.
MIAA member colleges have won 18 NCAA Division III
championships. Division III history was made in 1991-92 when the
MIAA claimed two national championships in basketball -- Calvin the
men's title and Alma the women's. The league has had 84 individual
NCAA national championship performances since 1978.
The best team finishes by MIAA schools in NCAA Division III championship
events are: baseball, Adrian, fourth in 2008; men's basketball, Calvin, first in 1992 and 2000; men's
cross country, Calvin, first in 2000, 2003 and 2004; football, Albion,
first in 1994; men's golf, Olivet, seventh in 1998; men's swimming,
Hope, second in 1995; men's tennis, Kalamazoo, first in 1976, 1978,
1986, 1987, 1991, 1992 and 1993; men's track, Calvin, second in 2002;
wrestling, Olivet, ninth in 1984; women's basketball, Hope, first in
1990 and 2006 and Alma, first in 1992; women's cross country, Calvin,
first in 1998 and 1999; women's golf, Saint Mary's, fourth in 2003; softball, Hope third in 1991 and Alma third
in 1999 and 2000; women's swimming, Hope second in 1994; women's tennis, Kalamazoo, third in 1986; women's track,
Calvin, second in 2001 and 2004; and volleyball, Calvin second in 1986.
MIAA members have been selected to host NCAA national championship
events in baseball, men's and women's basketball, men's and women's
cross country, men's golf, men's and women's swimming/diving, men's
and women's tennis and men's track.
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