May 27, 2020
St. Scholastica joining the MIAC
St. Scholastica will join the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) beginning in 2021-22, the conference and St. Scholastica announced on Wednesday.
“We were approached by MIAC leadership recently about the possibility of membership,” said St. Scholastica President Barbara McDonald. “We did an extensive internal assessment on what the move would mean for not only our athletics department and student-athletes, but the College as a whole. This is a very good fit with our institutional identity, and with the aspirations of Saints coaches, student-athletes and fans. We look forward to joining our Minnesota private college peers in the MIAC.”
The Saints will be the 13th full-time member of the MIAC in 2021, joining other Minnesota private undergraduate colleges Augsburg University, Bethel University, Carleton College, Concordia College-Moorhead, Gustavus Adolphus College, Hamline University, Macalester College, the College of Saint Benedict (women only), St. Catherine University (women only), Saint John’s University (men only), Saint Mary’s University and St. Olaf College.
“This is an exciting day as we welcome St. Scholastica to the MIAC,” said Rebecca Bergman, Gustavus Adolphus College president and chair of the MIAC Presidents’ Council. “St. Scholastica has a strong commitment to the NCAA Division III philosophy and shares the vision of quality athletics, academics, student-athlete well-being, and integrity that we value in the MIAC. The Saints have been a familiar opponent for many years and it is with great pleasure that we now welcome them as a conference member to begin this new chapter in MIAC history.”
St. Scholastica, which sponsors 22 varsity sports, will be part of the MIAC in 20 of those sports as the men’s and women’s nordic skiing programs will remain a part of the Central Collegiate Ski Association (CCSA).
St. Scholastica’s men’s and women’s hockey programs will be moving to the MIAC from the Northern Collegiate Hockey Association (NCHA), marking the first time the hockey programs have been under the same conference affiliation as the rest of the CSS athletics department.
“Our pursuit of athletic excellence is in line with the core values of the MIAC,” St. Scholastica Director of Athletics Franco Bari said, “and we have a strong commitment to enhancing various areas for competitive success as we prepare for the transition. In addition, we have an extremely experienced and dedicated staff who are heavily invested in our programs and while this move will provide us with a different type of challenge, I am confident in our ability to rise to the occasion.”
The move to the MIAC will end membership in the Upper Midwest Athletic Conference (UMAC) for 18 of St. Scholastica’s varsity programs. St. Scholastica has been part of the UMAC since 1995, with some programs connected to the league since the mid-1980s. Since the mid-1990s, the Saints have won the conference’s Jerome Kruse All-Sports Award 16 times, including the last 11 consecutive. The programs have won 210 UMAC Regular Season Championships and 106 UMAC Postseason titles.
“We have been grateful for the opportunity to compete in the Upper Midwest Athletic Conference throughout the years and we are proud of our many memorable achievements,” Bari said. “I have the utmost respect for the UMAC leadership and member institutions, which made this a very challenging decision. The conference has enabled athletic departments like CSS to gain a footprint at a national level and we will miss the relationships formed over the years as a UMAC member. We hope to continue our rivalries in the non-conference.”
St. Scholastica’s men’s hockey program has been part of the new NCHA since the beginning of the 2013 season and was part of the original NCHA from 1983-91 and 1994-2013. The women’s hockey program has been part of the NCHA since it moved to varsity status in 2010. The men’s program has appeared in two NCHA Championship games, while the women’s program has appeared in the NCHA Championship game each of the last two seasons.
“Our hockey programs clearly have a deep history with the Northern Collegiate Hockey Association,” said Bari. “While we truly appreciate our experience as members of NCHA, we look forward to the opportunity of aligning our hockey programs with the other CSS sports competing in the MIAC.”
The Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference is celebrating its 100th year as a league. Founded in 1920, the MIAC sponsors championships in 22 sports; 11 for men and 11 for women. It is recognized as one of the most competitive NCAA Division III intercollegiate athletic conferences in the country.
The MIAC offers championships in the following sports each year:Men: Baseball, Basketball, Football, Soccer, Cross Country, Golf, Hockey, Swimming, Indoor Track & Field, Tennis, Outdoor Track & Field.Women: Basketball, Soccer, Cross Country, Golf, Hockey, Softball, Swimming, Indoor Track & Field, Tennis, Outdoor Track & Field, Volleyball.
St. Scholastica will participate in 20 of those 22 championships as it does not sponsor men’s and women’s swimming teams.
MIAC Football Realignment for 2021
Along with St. Scholastica joining the conference in 2021, Macalester College will be re-joining the league in football as the conference transitions to a 10-team, two-division format. One division will consist of St. Scholastica, Carleton, Gustavus Adolphus, Saint John’s and St. Olaf. The other division will consist of Augsburg, Bethel, Concordia-Moorhead, Hamline and Macalester.
Each MIAC team will play eight conference games, including four “in-division” games, three “crossover” games, and one “playoff” game. The final week of the regular season will function as “Championship Week,” wherein teams will be ranked 1-5 in each division based on the current season’s in-division games only. Each team will then match up with the corresponding seed in the other division for a “playoff” game. The winner of the contest between the two divisional leaders will receive the MIAC’s automatic qualifier to the NCAA Division III Football Playoffs.
“The MIAC has a long and storied tradition in the sport of football,” MIAC Commissioner Dan McKane said. “This divisional model will usher in a new era in MIAC football history and we look forward to the excitement that will bring to our institutions, rivalries, student-athletes, and fans.”
The announcement that St. Scholastica will join the MIAC attracted the attention of media both locally and around the state, including the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the St. Paul Pioneer Press, the Duluth News Tribune, and local television stations WDIO-TV Channel 10, KBJR-TV Channel 6, and FOX-TV Channel 21.