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160th Regiment State Armory (Los Angeles); Alameda County Fairgrounds (); Anaheim Convention Center; Bill Graham Civic Auditorium (San Francisco); Bren Events Center (); Business Expo Center ()
CUSA (abbreviated "C-USA" before 2023) was founded in 1995 by the merger of the Metro Conference and Great Midwest Conference, two Division I conferences that did not sponsor football. However, the merger did not include either Great Midwest member Dayton or Metro members VCU and Virginia Tech . [ 22 ]
Ridgecrest Conference Center, Ridgecrest, North Carolina: August 2, 2003 – August 7, 2003: 908 2004: NOAC [72] 28 th: Iowa State University: Chosen to serve, Inspired to lead July 31, 2004 – August 5, 2004: 6504 [70] [73] 2005: Jamboree Services [74] Fort A.P. Hill, Virginia: Contributions: OA Service Corps, American Indian Village, TOAP ...
List of Allied World War II conferences; List of Axis World War II conferences; List of bisexuality-related organizations and conferences; List of LGBT-related organizations and conferences; List of linguistics conferences; List of model United Nations conferences; List of skeptical conferences; List of writers' conferences; List of women's ...
Conference USA Football Championship Game; Sport: College football: Conference: Conference USA: Current stadium: Hosted at school site by team with best conference winning percentage: Played: 2005–present: Last contest: 2024: Current champion: Jacksonville State: Most championships: East Carolina, Florida Atlantic, Tulsa, UAB, UCF, UTSA ...
However, after Memphis' decision to leave Conference USA for what ultimately became the American Athletic Conference in 2013–14, the league decided to move the tournament to a site near a school remaining in the conference, ultimately selecting the BOK Center in Tulsa. The tournament returned to the Haskins Center in El Paso in 2014.
The conference has an economic impact on Indianapolis of about $35 to US$40 million. [3] The conference was cancelled in 2020 due to COVID-19. It returned to the Indiana Convention Center and Lucas Oil Stadium in August 2021 with attendance down between 25% and 30%. [4] It is scheduled to be held in Indianapolis through 2028. [5]
The first post-regular season conference championship game played in Division I-A football (what is now Division I FBS) was the 1992 SEC Championship Game, won by Alabama over Florida. [2] The SEC had gone from being a 10-team conference in 1991, to being a 12-team conference—divided into two six-team divisions—in 1992. [3]