The Big East The Big East Conference was founded in 1979 as a basketball conference and included the colleges of
Providence,
St. John's,
Georgetown, and
Syracuse, which in turn invited
Connecticut (UConn),
Holy Cross,
Rutgers, and
Boston College to be members. UConn and Boston College would accept the invitation, while Holy Cross soon thereafter declined the invitation, and Rutgers eventually declined and remained in the
Atlantic 10 Conference (then known as the Eastern 8 Conference).
Seton Hall was then invited as a replacement and the conference started play with seven members. The conference remained largely unchanged until 1991, when it began to sponsor football, adding
Miami as a full member, and Rutgers,
Temple,
Virginia Tech, and
West Virginia as football-only members. Rutgers and West Virginia were offered full all-sports membership in 1995, while Virginia Tech waited until 2000 for the same offer. Temple football was kicked out after the 2004 season, but rejoined in 2012 and intended to become a full member in 2013. The unusual structure of the Big East, with the "football" and "non-football" schools, led to instability in the conference. The waves of defection and replacement brought about by the conference realignments of
2005 and
the early 2010s revealed tension between the football-sponsoring and non-football schools that eventually led to the split of the conference in 2013.
Realignment and reorganization The conference was reorganized following the tumultuous period of realignment that hobbled the Big East between 2010 and 2013. The Big East was one of the most severely impacted conferences during the early-2010s conference realignment period. In all, 14 member schools announced their departure for other conferences, and 15 other schools announced plans to join the conference (eight as all-sports members, and four for football only). Three of the latter group later backed out of their plans to join (one for all sports, and the other two for football only). On December 15, 2012, the Big East's seven remaining non-FBS schools,
Catholic institutions consisting of
DePaul,
Georgetown,
Marquette,
Providence,
St. John's,
Seton Hall, and
Villanova announced that they voted unanimously to leave the Big East Conference effective June 30, 2015. The "Catholic 7", by leaving, were looking for a more lucrative television deal than the one they would receive by remaining with the football schools. In March 2013, representatives of the Catholic 7 announced they would leave the conference effective June 30, 2013, retaining the Big East name, $10 million, and the right to hold the
conference's basketball tournament at
Madison Square Garden. Following the announcement of the departure of the Catholic 7 universities, the remaining ten football-playing members started the process of selecting a new name for the conference and choosing a new site to hold its basketball tournament. Various names were considered, with the "America 12" conference reportedly one of the finalists until rejected by college presidents sensitive of adding a number to the end of the conference name. On April 3, 2013, the conference announced that it had chosen a new name: American Athletic Conference. Louisville and Rutgers spent one season in the newly renamed conference. On July 1, 2014, Louisville joined the ACC and Rutgers joined the
Big Ten Conference. On that same day,
East Carolina,
Tulane, and
Tulsa joined the American for all sports, while
Sacramento State and
San Diego State joined as affiliate members for women's rowing. Navy joined as an affiliate member in football on July 1, 2015. By the end of that month, it was reported that talks between the American and Wichita State had advanced to the point that the two sides were discussing a timeline for membership, with the possibility of the
Shockers joining as a full but non-football member as early as the 2017–18 school year. The report indicated that a final decision would be made in April. The conference's board of directors voted unanimously on April 7 to add Wichita State effective in July 2017, making the Shockers the league's first full non-football member since the Big East split.
Departure of UConn On June 21, 2019, a Boston-area sports news website,
Digital Sports Desk, revealed that UConn was expected to announce by the end of the month that it would leave the American for the
Big East Conference in 2020. The story was picked up by multiple national media outlets the next day. The main issue that reportedly had to be resolved prior to any official announcement was the future of UConn football, as the Big East does not sponsor that sport, and sources indicated that the American had no interest in retaining UConn as a football-only member. Reportedly, American Athletic Conference insiders were not surprised by UConn's prospective move, as that school had been vigorously opposed to that league's most recently announced television deal. National media believed that should UConn leave the American, the conference's likeliest response would be to bring in two new schools—one for football only and a second in non-football sports, similar to the American's sequential additions of Navy and Wichita State. The most likely prospects for football-only membership were seen as
Army (then an FBS independent, with most of its other sports in the
Patriot League), and
Air Force (currently an all-sports member of the
Mountain West Conference). Any of several schools could potentially fill the non-football slot, with
Pete Thamel of
Yahoo Sports considering
VCU to be "the most logical target there." Thamel dismissed the prospect of the American adding a new all-sports member, saying "there's no obvious candidate who could add value in both basketball and football." On June 26, 2019, the UConn Board of Trustees accepted the invitation. On July 26, media reports indicated that UConn and the American had reached a buyout agreement that confirmed UConn's Big East arrival date as July 1, 2020, paying the American a $17 million exit fee. It was widely reported that UConn was "rejoining" the Big East, given that the Huskies would be reunited with many of the schools against which it played for three decades in the original Big East. Indeed, UConn was the last charter member of the old Big East still playing in the American.
Added stability The American took a number of steps to stabilize the conference after the departure of UConn. The first move was the addition of
Old Dominion University as an affiliate member in
women's lacrosse for the 2020–21 season. Old Dominion was previously added to the American for
women's rowing beginning in the 2018–19 season. The American moved its headquarters from
Providence, Rhode Island to
Irving, Texas. This was a planned move, to better centralize the conference offices with the member schools. Irving is in the
Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, which is also home to the headquarters of the
Big 12 Conference,
College Football Playoff, and the
National Football Foundation. The conference also moved the
men's basketball tournament to the region, to be played at the new
Dickies Arena until 2022. In the wake of the
COVID-19 pandemic, some member schools have eliminated sports due to budget constraints. The
University of Cincinnati eliminated its
men's soccer program while
East Carolina University canceled men and women's swimming and diving teams and tennis teams. Women's rowing member
San Diego State University dropped that sport effective with the end of the 2020–21 season.
Big 12 raid and subsequent invitations to the conference In late July 2021, founding Big 12 members
Oklahoma and
Texas jointly announced that they planned to leave the conference no later than 2025, and formally requested an invitation from the
Southeastern Conference (SEC). Shortly thereafter, the American became a peripheral player in this saga when the Big 12 sent a
cease and desist letter to current broadcast partner ESPN, charging the network with
conspiring to damage the league by luring Oklahoma and Texas to the SEC, and also alleging that the network encouraged an unnamed conference to raid the Big 12 to pave the way for an earlier departure by Oklahoma and Texas. A later media report identified that other conference as the American. ESPN issued an official denial of the Big 12 charges, and officials from the American declined to comment. On September 3,
Sports Illustrated reported that the
Big 12 Conference was on the verge of inviting four schools— including American Athletic Conference members
Cincinnati,
Houston, and
UCF. Later that month, all three schools received and accepted membership offers on the date of the presidents' meeting, with the official announcement stating only that they would join the Big 12 no later than 2024–25. On June 10, 2022, the American and the three departing schools announced a buyout agreement had been reached, confirming those schools' 2023 departure date. At the time, it was possible that Cincinnati and UCF could remain in the conference as affiliate members for women's lacrosse and men's soccer, respectively, as the Big 12 does not sponsor those sports, though no formal announcement was made. UCF would later accept an offer of men's soccer membership from the
Sun Belt Conference effective in 2023, aligning its men's soccer program with that of
West Virginia, the only pre-2023 Big 12 member sponsoring men's soccer. Cincinnati would remain in The American as a women's lacrosse affiliate, but left after the 2024 season when the Big 12 added that sport.
Subsequent moves In late September 2021, several national media outlets reported that
Mountain West Conference (MW) members
Air Force and
Colorado State had approached the American regarding a possible move to that league. However, on October 1, the MW announced that its current membership would remain intact for the foreseeable future, removing its 12 football members (including football-only member
Hawaii) from the list of potential new members for the American. For its part, the American officially denied extending invitations to the two Colorado schools. Later that month on October 18, 2021,
Yahoo Sports reported that the American was preparing to receive applications from six of the 14 members of
Conference USA—
Charlotte,
Florida Atlantic,
North Texas,
Rice,
UAB, and
UTSA. This would make the American a 14-full-member conference. The next day,
ESPN reported that all six schools had submitted applications, and that each would receive a formal letter by the end of that week (October 22) detailing the terms of conference expansion. All six schools were accepted on October 21, and the conference confirmed their 2023 entry date on June 16, 2022.
Expansion in men's soccer and women's swimming and diving A series of further realignment moves centering on the
Sun Belt Conference (SBC) led to the American's men's soccer league expanding earlier than planned. This sequence began in November 2021 when
James Madison announced its departure from the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA; since renamed the
Coastal Athletic Association) to join the SBC in 2023. The CAA responded by invoking a provision of its bylaws to ban JMU from further conference championship events. The SBC responded by pushing JMU's entry forward to 2022. Soon after this, the other three CUSA members set to move to the SBC in 2023 (
Marshall,
Old Dominion, and
Southern Miss, with Marshall and ODU sponsoring men's soccer) announced that they would instead leave in 2022. Following a brief legal dispute, CUSA and the three schools reached a settlement that allowed those schools to join the SBC in 2022. With three men's soccer schools now joining in 2022 instead of 2023, the SBC announced it would reinstate men's soccer at that time. The new full members were joined by three full SBC members and three new associate members.
Coastal Carolina played the 2021 season in CUSA. The other two full SBC members,
Georgia Southern and
Georgia State, played in the MAC. The new associates were
Kentucky and
South Carolina, which had been single-sport CUSA members since 2005; and
West Virginia, which had previously announced that it would move men's soccer from the
Mid-American Conference to CUSA in 2022. CUSA was then left with only four men's soccer programs for 2022 (
Charlotte,
FIU,
Florida Atlantic, and
UAB), with all but FIU set to become full American members in 2023. The American accordingly brought all four schools in as new men's soccer members for 2022, with FIU remaining an affiliate after the others fully joined the American. Similar changes came to women's swimming & diving, again due in part to SBC expansion. Of the schools leaving CUSA for the SBC in 2022, Marshall and Old Dominion sponsor that sport, and incoming American members Florida Atlantic, North Texas, and Rice also sponsor the sport (although Rice fields swimmers only, with no divers). The American brought the aforementioned future full members, plus FIU, into its women's swimming & diving league. As with men's soccer, FIU remained a women's swimming & diving affiliate after the other schools fully joined the conference. With this, the American was now down one team. On October 25, 2023,
Army announced it would be joining the conference as a football-only member beginning in 2024, joining fellow service academy Navy. The annual
Army–Navy Game, typically played at the conclusion of the regular season, continues to be played annually as a non-conference game and does not count towards conference standings. However, it is possible for the two teams to meet a second time in a season in the
American Conference Football Championship Game, should they finish as the top two teams in the conference.
Additional expansion in men's soccer and women's swimming & diving On October 25, 2024,
Missouri State announced it would become an associate member in men's soccer starting with the fall 2025 season. This was followed on December 12 by the announcement that current women's lacrosse associate
James Madison,
Liberty, and
Marshall would become associate members in women's swimming and diving beginning with the 2025–26 season.
Rebranding On July 21, 2025, ahead of its football media days, the conference announced that it would officially shorten its name to the American Conference, dropping the word "Athletic" and the "AAC" abbreviation (which was often confused with the
Atlantic Coast Conference). It also announced the new slogan "Built to Rise", and Soar the Eagle—a mascot it claimed was the first "brand ambassador" of a college athletic conference. Commissioner Tim Pernetti explained that the rebranding "prioritizes clarity, momentum, and the competitive advantage driving every part of our conference forward", and "defines who we are, service and mission -- driven institutions of higher learning with highly competitive athletics and deeply committed leaders."
Membership timeline ImageSize = width:1000 height:auto barincrement:20 Period = from:2012 till:2029 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal PlotArea = right:20 left:0 bottom:50 top:5 #> to display a count on left side of graph, use "left:20" to suppress the count, use "left:20" ==Member universities==