![]() ![]() ![]() All Pac-10 members participate in at least one MPSF sport.Ĭollege Football Rivalries involving Pac-10 Teams The Pac-10 is one of the founding members of the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation, a conference organized to provide competition in non-revenue Olympic sports. In 1959, the PCC was dissolved and the Athletic Association of Western Universities was formed. The PCC continued as a nine-team Conference through 1958. In 1950, Montana resigned from the Conference and joined the Mountain States Conference. The Pacific Coast Conference competed as a 10-team league until 1950, with the exception of 1943-45, when World War II curtailed intercollegiate athletic competition to a minimum. The University of Montana joined the Conference in 1924, and in 1928, the PCC grew to 10 members with the addition of UCLA. In 1922, the PCC expanded to eight teams with the admission of the University of Southern California and the University of Idaho. One year later, Washington State College (now Washington State University), was accepted into the Conference, and Stanford University joined in 1918. The Pacific Coast Conference play began in 1916. Original membership consisted of four schools: the University of California-Berkeley, the University of Washington, the University of Oregon, and Oregon State College (now Oregon State University). The roots of the Pacific-10 Conference go back to December 15, 1915, when the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) was founded at a meeting at the Oregon Hotel in Portland, Oregon. In 1978, Arizona and Arizona State joined, creating the Pac-10 in its current form. In 1968, the name Pacific-8 Conference was adopted. Washington State joined in 1962 Oregon and Oregon State joined in 1964. The Pac-10 was founded on Jas the Athletic Association of Western Universities, with Cal, Stanford, UCLA, USC, and Washington as charter members. University of Southern California (USC).University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).University of California, Berkeley (Cal). ![]()
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