Talk:Mid-major

Latest comment: 4 years ago by PhanChavez in topic Proposed Split

Why is football not included in this article? edit

The term "mid-major" is widely used in reference to non-BCS conference FBS football teams. This entire article is weak and needs to be overhauled.

Why is "Issues mid-major programs face" only listed under basketball? edit

Why is "Issues mid-major programs face" only listed under basketball? It is a larger problem for college football teams. Basketball "mid-majors" can still find a route to the NCAA playoffs. A college football team that cannot find at least two BCS opponents has little or no chance of receiving any significant ranking.

Mention should also be made of BCS teams deliberate avoidance of scheduling "mid-majors", the cancelling of games and feeble excuses for not playing (e.g. Miami is willing to play Hawaii at home in 2008, but then claims Hawaii is too far for the Hurricanes to travel in 2009 or 2010). Also worth adding is the issue of "mid-majors" gaining credibility by playing BCS teams, and the possible collusion of BCS teams to avoid such games to prevent sharing of revenues.

Before the 2007 season, Hawaii attempted to schedule *six* BCS teams and only one - Washington State - showed up to play. One of those who avoided Hawaii was Michigan State, which paid Hawaii US$250,000 to get out of the contract. Other teams which avoided Hawaii included USC. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 118.168.68.187 (talk) 19:26, 5 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Also the issue section seems to be slanted to that all major teams are scared of loosing to a minor time, while I am sure the would rather not. Their is little incentive to add a team with a week strength of schedule and is generally unknown is just as an opponent. Also schedules are often made in advance and over multiple years, and by the time they play team strength can have large changes. With one point being totally left out about generally the 'major' teams have higher attendance and higher capacity facilities leading to making more money at home, many of the smaller schools use them to get the money to pay toward the scholarship and other costs of running the program. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.94.144.44 (talk) 22:43, 21 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

The answer to your question is that the term "mid-major" is essentially never used except in connection with basketball. Nobody speaks of a "mid-major" football conference (the term "non-BCS" is used instead.) 12.77.141.75 (talk) 02:50, 13 March 2010 (UTC)Guest userReply

I respectfuly disagree. IME the term is used quite a bit by both the general public and the sports media with respect to football. In recent years the terms "mid-major" and "non-BCS" have become more or less interchangeable, when used in the football context. Johnsonkurtis (talk) 20:14, 21 August 2010 (UTC)Reply

Oversight in article edit

This article discusses "mid-major" as if it were an official term in intercollegiate athletics. In fact, it was invented by the sports media and was later taken up in fan and coaching circles, but is not recognized by the NCAA. Given that, I added a minor qualifier to the first paragraph of the article.

70.251.247.184 01:35, 23 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

I also agree with the above statement. I also feel that this article should not list the conferences that are labeled "mid-major". It is a subjective categorization that has no place in an encyclopedia. Truthfully, I do not believe this article belongs on Wikipedia at all. X96lee15 02:08, 23 March 2007 (UTC)Reply
The earliest use of the term "mid-major" in the New York Times archives is this article from 1991, which quotes Jim Delaney, who was the head of the tournament selection committee that year, using it to describe Northern Illinois, who was in the Mid-Continent Conference (now the Summit League) at the time. While this doesn't necessarily disprove the claim that the term was invented by the sports media and is unofficial, it shows that it was apparently used in official circles several years before it became commonly used by the media, coaches and fans. A search on Google Groups also shows 1991 as the earliest date for the use of the term on Usenet, with only a handful of other uses up until the late 1990s. Maybe someone with access to more resources (e.g. LexisNexis) can try to further pinpoint the origin of "mid-major".Ezclee4050 (talk) 17:24, 27 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
To be an official term, it would take more than just some official of the NCAA using it. It would need to be defined in NCAA documents. "Bowl Championship Series" and its abreviation "BCS" are official terms and there is no question about what conferences are BCS conferences, although there may be discussion about which conferences should be BCS. But there is no official definition of "Mid-major" and hence considerable discussion on what conferences should be included in this description. 69.29.207.109 (talk) 20:10, 30 October 2009 (UTC)Reply
I agree that the term is subjective, but surely that alone does not make it inappropriate for an encyclopedia entry. The fact that the NCAA doesn't recognize it as an official classification doesn't change the fact that people who encounter the term would want to know what it means. And I don't think there is anything wrong with listing schools or conferences that are "commonly considered mid-major" so long as the list includes appropriate cites, and makes clear that it is an unofficial subjective classification, and is subject to dispute. Johnsonkurtis (talk) 20:14, 21 August 2010 (UTC)Reply

Definition edit

This was a poor article that read more like a discussion board argument about which teams are or are not mid-majors. Wiki is an encyclopedia, not an editorial page. Listing or not listing a conference does nothing to help define the informal term 'mid-major'. 70.200.23.168 19:19, 18 March 2007 (UTC)Reply


Many of the so called definitions of what a mid-major is are purely opinion of one person. No college expert lists the major conference as just the BCS conferences. This article needs to refrain from opinions and stick to the facts. The facts are, the definition of what a mid major is constantly changes and there is no true way to define the term. The preceding unsigned comment was added by User:216.68.161.10 (talk • contribs) 15:32, 21 July 2006 (UTC)Reply


The term mid-major gets thrown around too loosely when you put the Ivy, Big Sky, and Colonial Leagues into the mix. If the Ivy League isn't lower than Mid-major than who is? FancyPants 04:15, 26 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

To list EVERY OTHER conference besides the BCS and the few "disputed" confences as mid-majors is confusing, unnecessary and, to put it bluntly, wrong. I agree with FancyPants here. Please open this up to discussion, but I'll chop a number of those conferences off the list in short time depending on what people say here. Enough with the vandalism and revert wars. Masonpatriot 14:24, 26 June 2006 (UTC)Reply
A few of the conferences currently listed as mid-major (Mid-Con, OVC, etc) are regularly rated in the bottom 1/3 of the 31 D-I conferences, so I am removing them. I also agree that listing all of the remaining 31 conferences as mid-major is wrong, as the term "mid", by definition, means middle. Which those are not. CollegeSportsGuy 13:01, 7 July 2006 (UTC)Reply


I am right, thankyou for finally seeing the light. There are indeed 7-11 Major conferences, 11 true mid-majors and 10-11 low Major conferences. It really is not a hard concept to understand. I am surprised it took you so long to see this truth. Better late than never I guess. The preceding unsigned comment was added by User:216.68.161.10 (talk • contribs) 12:55, 13 June 2006 (UTC)Reply


I disagree with your assertion that there are "11 true mid-majors" (why not 10 or 12?). You said there are "7-11" major conferences - if so then, doesn't the number of "true mid-majors" have to have a range of at least four also?!? Since the term is not officially defined, you cannot make such a claim. Every non-major conference claims to be a "mid-major conference", which is a legitimate claim, though why they would want to make it is not understandable. Why not say mid-major means not major, but also not Division II or Division III? Since there is no official definition, it means whatever you want it to mean! I agree with the others that the topic is pointless and that the page should be deleted from wikipedia. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 12.77.141.75 (talk) 02:58, 13 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

You know, after giving it some thought, you're right edit

A few of us were wrong and outdated in our thinking that conference's like C-USA and the A-10, which regularly recieve multiple NCAA bids, Elite Eight and Sweet Sixteen appearances, and even have "buy" games with "true" mid-major conference teams, could EVER be considered mid-major's themselves. Thank you for taking the time to finally convince all of us of the backwardness of our thinking, and for sharing your immense knowlegde on this complicated subject. In fact, if it weren't for you, I would have never realized that C-USA even existed in 1985, nor would I have known that the way in which a given conference and its schools' administrators, coaches, and players view their own league helps determine that league's status. In fact, I probably would have even continued believing that C-USA was somehow diminished when it lost 8 of its 14 schools to BCS conferences during last years realignment. I will correct this article immediately, and appropriatley move all conferences that fit your correct qualifications of a Major into the Major category, and also move the remaining "non-major" conferences accordingly. CollegeSportsGuy 20:34, 12 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

THANK YOU AGAIN, 216.68.161.10


It is not just me that decides, it is college basketball experts, coaches, players and administrators that all regard the A10 as above the mid-major level as well as CUSA. I am sorry if your belief system is stuck in 1985 on the subject but there have been 9-11 Major Conferences in basketball for a number of years now, regardless of an arbitrary line drawn by Wikipedia at BCS leagues. It is inccorect and outdated for college basketball. Sorry. The preceding unsigned comment was added by User:216.68.161.10 (talk • contribs) 12:49, 12 June 2006 (UTC)Reply


So only *YOU* get to decide which conferences are major and mid-major, based completely upon your one-sided arguments and cherry-picked "facts", all of which are historical in nature? edit

One or two years of success for the MVC? I understand you may be a Xavier University and A-10 Conference fan, but how in the world can you say this:

"If the MVC continues of (sic) sustains their recent success they could be considered a Major
conference as well. Two good years is a nice start but it is not long enough to judge it as a
whole."?

You are (blatantly) obviously biased towards the A-10 and an "old" C-USA that does not even exist anymore. Not only by your "propping up" of these two non-BCS conferences with historical data only, but also by choosing to ignore every shred of fact regarding the MVC's history, not to mention recent results in every manner of measure that has been mentioned by every person in this discussion. This includes your omission of the fact that the MVC does have teams that buy games today, just like A FEW of the teams in the A-10 and C-USA do, which was touched upon in one of the articles YOU YOURSELF posted below!!! Did you know that more teams in the A-10 *ARE BOUGHT* by BCS conferences than are teams in the MVC??? You really need to do your homework, and stop purpetuating myths and narrow-minded opinions on Wikipedia, especially when they fly in the face of current-day facts.

As you also may (or may not as your ignorance on this subject is quite astounding) know, the MVC has now had multiple bids to the NCAA's every year since 1998, something the A-10 has not. Picking and choosing historical facts to support your argument is fun, isn't it? Lets try some more. Loyola University of the Horizon League has won a NCAA D-I National Champioship in men's basketball in the 1960's, so that conference must be more of a "Major" now then the others, right? Or is there a magical cut-off date that only you know about for when facts like this become no longer pertinent?

Wikipedia is (or is supposed to be) an encyclopedia, which by definition speaks of what *IS*, not what "should be" or "needs to be", as you like to believe:

"What needs to be done is experts to refer to conference that at Major like the A10 and CUSA 
to be called NON BCS Majors. They may not be on the level of the ACC but they also are not on
the level with the true Mid-Majors."

So once again, please stop your vandalism of Wikipedia articles immediately, and take your unjustifiable ***opinions*** somewhere else. 143.81.160.51 08:44, 10 June 2006 (UTC)Reply


It is just an opinion and one that is quite outdated. Drawing the line at BCS is okay for football but certainly not basketball. What needs to be done is experts to refer to conference that at Major like the A10 and CUSA to be called NON BCS Majors. They may not be on the level of the ACC but they also are not on the level with the true Mid-Majors. There simply is nothing wrong with there being 7-10 Major conferences and most experts now see this even if you refuse to.

The merits of a conference are not defined by one attribute, rather a combination of many. RPI alone does not define a conference, nor does NCAA tourney success, TV package, facilities, players going to the NBA, etc.

Temple has been to 5 Elite 8's alone in the last 15 years. Rhode Island, SJU, UMASS and XU have been to the Elite 8 as well. The A10 produced back to back NATIONAL Players of the Year, a mid-major league they are not. By the way, UMASS of the A10 has a Final 4 just like George Mason. Has a CAA team been ranked Number 1 in the AP polls for numerous weeks like UMASS and SJU have been? Wake up!

Have the MVC, Horizon, CAA etc bought games like the A10 and CUSA? No. They ususally sell games, which is a huge indicator in whether a league is major or mid-major. If the MVC continues of sustains their recent success they could be considered a Major conference as well. Two good years is a nice start but it is not long enough to judge it as a whole. The preceding unsigned comment was added by User:216.68.161.10 (talk • contribs) 19:52, 9 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

It's not an opinion, it's just not accepted anymore that others outside of the BCS conferences are major edit

And it's most definately not accepted as to which ones are, as you said yourself here just today:

"Most college basketball experts agree that the A10, Conference USA and one of two others are
indeed Major Conferences."

I think the problem is, "Where do you draw the line?" The answer today is, you can't, except at BCS membership. This was also the determination that was come to by those of the Wiki before you started editting here. Every criteria stated in your previous discussion post below is THE VERY EXAMPLE of misinformed, antiquated, and biased criteria. Why? Because it is ALL opinion, and an outdated one at that. Today (not 1992, 1998, or even 2004), the Missouri Valley conference is regarded by nearly every person involved in college basketball as a much stronger conference than both the "new" C-USA and an A-10 conference that has only had 3 NCAA teams over the last two years (look it up). EVERY respected judge of college basketball agrees; I'm talking Lindy's, Athlon, Blue Ribbon Yearbook, respected rating & ranking services like Ken Pomeroy and Jerry Palm, the RPI, sports books, etc. That's also the same amount of NCAA bids for the A-10 that the Colonial Athletic Association has had during that time, but unlike the CAA, the A-10 doesn't have a Final Four to show for it.

You want to talk about today? It's TODAY, that the Horizon League has more Sweet 16 teams in the last four NCAA tournaments than the Mountain West Conference, the WAC, and the same exact amount as the A-10. And it's that same Horizon League that over the last 4 years has had a better winning % in the NCAA tournament than the A-10. It's today that other non-BCS conferences that are NOT named the A-10 and C-USA have signed a national TV deal with CBS to televise their conference's tournament. It's today that these conferences are opening, or have already opened, multi-million dollar facilities that 90% of the schools in the A-10 could only dream of (check out the MVC's facilities, and the two new ones that are being built for UNI and SIU right now). It's today that schools in the MVC, Horizon League, MAC and WAC now average more for attendance than 90% of the schools in C-USA and the A-10. And it's TODAY that the A-10 has finished behind the MVC in attendance average for over a decade. I understand their #'s used to be close (back in the 90's), but it's grown to over 2,000 people per game a year. All these factors, including 5 NCAA at-large bids for the Valley the last two years compared to the A-10's 1, add up to show that the MVC is a more dominant (or "major", if you prefer) league than the two conferences you repeatedly speak of. So I think it is you, sir, that needs to be welcomed to the new "millinium" (sic).

But you are right on one account: It's also today that independent polls, websites, newspaper articles, columnists, and reporters on TV list different conferences as being "major", or "mid-major", or "low-major", never including the same conferences as the guy before, or the guy after him. Take Andy Katz, the Mid-Majority, the Mid-Major Top 25, or any other sources you want and compare them, you will find different conferences making the cut almost every single time. This shows that no, most college basketball "experts" do not agree, as you claim.

So without writing a book about why it is that SOME college basketball talking heads on TV, sportswriters, independent unofficial polls, etc. choose to occasionally still list SOME of these conferences as "major" (while at the same time considering many of the teams in them to NOT be major), lets just say it is COMPLETELY BIASED AND SUBJECTIVE to only include one or two non-BCS conferences as "major" while not including several others, that are considered by every objective source, to be higher-rated conferences in every single quantifiable, assessable aspect of NCAA Division I college basketball. In the regular season, in the NCAA tournament, in the NIT, in the RPI, in the # of teams qualified for any postseason tournaments, in attendance figures, and on and on and on. You can cling to your subjective "some of these teams "buy" games in this league, while a few less teams do in this league" argument, but it's in no way worthy of being the reasoning for altering any encyclopedia, even this one.  ;)

Oh yeah, and as if to give a perfect example of your biased judgment here (in favor of the one or two conferences you keep speaking of), you say that this line of reasoning is only "wishful thinking by fans of BCS leagues". My team is not in a BCS conference, yet I could not see through you more. Your prejudicial attitude, comments, and edits to this article are so obvious, it's laughable. Please stop, before you discredit Wikipedia even more with your completely baseless and often times factually inaccurate edits to this article. And I also do not appreciate having my discussion comments on this Talk page completely deleted, as you already did once. CollegeSportsGuy 16:02, 9 June 2006 (UTC)Reply


The opinion and it is only an opinion that only the BCS conferences are Major is aniquated, misinformed and no where near correct. There are over 30 DI conferences and to think on the top 6 are Major is wishful thinking by those fans of the BCS Leagues. Most college basketball experts agree that the A10, Conference USA and one of two others are indeed Major Conferences. Teams from those leagues "buy" games from the Mid or low majors, have great TV deals, have had good NCAA tourney experience recently and historically and have far greater basketball budgets than the true mid-majors. Furthermore, A10 and Conference USA teams have never appeared in the ESPN Mid-Major top 25 despite having great teams in the AP Top 25 for the last decade. It is time for some to wake up and smell the new millinium. The preceding unsigned comment was added by User:216.68.161.10 (talk • contribs) 12:38, 9 June 2006 (UTC)Reply


Maryland Reference edit

The article includes a section describing how major schools will play lower-ranked mid-majors to get easy wins and effectively bypass much better mid-majors, then it sites Maryland as a case in point. However, with their defeat to mid-major VCU, I think this should be removed, at least for now as this happened in the past month. Any objections? -Eaglescout1984 5:19, 14 December 2007 (GMT)

Notre Dame edit

Notre Dame is *NOT* a mid-major. In basketball they are in a "major" conference, and in football there is special criteria for them alone in the BCS, the so-called "Notre Dame clause." This ensures them a BCS bowl bid if they finish in the top-12. The article says they are in the BE in bb and then says they are "in the BCS" in football, but goes on immediately thereafter to include them in a list of "mid-major" independents (the two independent military academies). Strikehold (talk) 06:24, 7 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

I went ahead and made changes that clarify the situation for ND. Hope no one minds, should be a pretty uncontroversial edit. Strikehold (talk) 06:44, 7 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

A-Sun? edit

That's got to be a typo. I believe you meant Sun Belt, which has much larger attendance than the A-Sun and plays I-FBS football, along with C-USA, MAC, MW, and WAC. I have BOLDly changed it Purplebackpack89 03:41, 14 November 2010 (UTC)Reply

Don't count Final Fours unless you can count edit

I have a problem with this sentence: In the 2010 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, the Butler University Bulldogs reached the Final Four, becoming the 3rd mid-major to make the Final Four in the modern (1985–present) era. On April 3, they beat Michigan State of the Big Ten Conference to become the second mid-major to reach the national championship game.

I assume the person who wrote this was referring to George Mason in 2006, Memphis in 2008 and Butler.

UNLV 87, 90, 90, even won a title from the Big West - no mention. Utah made the final in 1998 - no mention. UMass in 96 (forfeited but still) - no mention. And Memphis State '85.

So unless your modern era is actually 2006-present, you're wrong. And why is 85 the start of the modern era?

90 and 90? You mean 90 and 91? You are correct, I made this change in the article. Should there be a mention of UNLV or any of the top MWC teams in there? YE Pacific Hurricane 02:05, 25 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

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Proposed Split edit

On 16 January 2020, User:Robert_McClenon rejected Draft:Group_of_Five_conferences, suggesting it was a split from this article.

The original intent behind Draft:Group_of_Five_conferences was to provide a conference/team listing and map similar to Power Five conferences.

However, after reviewing the existing content here at Mid-major, I understand the "split" designation. The Football subsection has some good information and history, but poorly written. There does not appear to be a "High-major" page counter to this Mid-major page. And the Group of Five conferences page is but a draft, except it now appears to link to Mid-major as a redirect.

This article, Mid-major, has numerous problems and issues which are noted at the top of the main article (weasel words, tone/style). I do not feel qualified to include more information before this page is cleaned-up. Adding more information where there are already issues might compound those issues.

In addition, my proposed "split," has only to do with College Football, and not with "Mid-Major" conferences across sports.

@Robert McClenon: Per your rejection. Explicit notification of creating a redirect to Mid-major would have been nice. PhanChavez (talk) 17:42, 19 January 2020 (UTC)Reply

PhanChavez (talk) 17:42, 19 January 2020 (UTC)Reply

User:PhanChavez - I did not reject the draft. I declined it. That means that it can be resubmitted. I said that discussion of whether to accept it should be at this talk page. I did not notify you of the redirect because the redirect was already there. This is the place to discuss whether to accept Group of Five as a stand-alone article. Robert McClenon (talk) 18:49, 19 January 2020 (UTC)Reply
Robert McClenon - First, my apologies for not differentiating or understanding the difference between rejection and the ability to resubmit. I'm new, I'm learning, I'll try to remember. Second, when was the redirect created, and by whom? And what other actions were taken by the other person after creating the redirect? Why was the draft with the same name not notified of the changes. And, again, apologies in advance: I just tagged you on my own talk page regarding this very issue. Third, given this additional knowledge and attention to detail (that the redirect was created after the draft, and has some spurious underpinnings) is this the place to discuss? Or is there unnecessary conflict and confusion in play, caused by another user with an agenda that doesn't include cleaning-up this already questionable Mid-major article, which also receives High-major designation (circa 2011)? Regards, P.C. PhanChavez (talk) 20:37, 19 January 2020 (UTC)Reply