The 50-year-old WAC would be
the first Division I conference to give up on football since the
Southwest Conference dissolved in 1995, and it might go the way of the
SWC, too, and cease to exist altogether.
"It doesn't mean we've
given up on the idea of football for the future, but it's apparent we
don't have enough members in 2013 to play football," Jeff Hurd told The
Associated Press.
That means New Mexico State would have to join
Idaho and play as an FBS independent next year. The WAC's five other
football members — Louisiana Tech, San Jose State, Texas State, Utah
State and Texas-San Antonio — leave the league after this year.
San
Jose State and Utah State are joining the Mountain West. Louisiana Tech
and Texas-San Antonio will join Conference USA, and Texas State will go
to the Sun Belt in 2013.
So, the WAC would have to add six FBS programs to continue playing football.
"The
bottom line is those numbers are not out there," Hurd said. "So, my
goal is to add enough schools to maintain the conference in all other
sports, but football would not be one of them."
The league must
still add two or three members to maintain its Division I status as a
non-football league, and there is no guarantees that will happen.
The
WAC has been around for half a century but found itself irrelevant in
the rapidly changing landscape of conference realignment. It has
recently lost Boise State, Nevada, Fresno State and Hawaii while adding
Denver and Seattle as non-football playing members.
The league was
formed in 1962 with six schools — Arizona, Arizona State, BYU, New
Mexico, Utah and Wyoming — that jumped ship long ago. Colorado State and
Texas-El Paso were also long-time members that left, leaving the league
with a hodgepodge of smaller schools.
The high mark of the WAC's
football existence was BYU's national title in 1984 under coach LaVell
Edwards. Cougars quarterback Ty Detmer won the league's only Heisman
Trophy winner six years later, and Boise State had two unbeaten seasons
(2006, '09) in its nine-year stint as the league's heavyweight.
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