
UVI Becomes Official Member of the GCAC
ST. THOMAS, U.S. Virgin Islands – The University of the Virgin Islands officially joined the the NAIA's Gulf Coast Athletic Conference (GCAC) today.
"This is a monumental day for the GCAC and University of Virgin Islands," says GCAC Commissioner Dr. Kiki Baker Barnes. "The addition of UVI is in line with our conference strategy to increase membership. I'm excited about increasing the GCAC footprint into the Carribean market. I believe that expansion is a great way to expose others to the excellent institutions that comprise the GCAC."
The Buccaneers become the GCAC's ninth member.
Joining the GCAC is another milestone for UVI athletics. The Buccaneers have a long history of intercollegiate athletics competing in the Liga Atlética Interuniversitaria in Puerto Rico; UVI joined the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics less than a decade ago.
"As UVI's Athletic Programs continue to grow, our new membership with the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference underscores our commitment to providing excellent opportunities for our student athletes to compete on a national level with teams from other distinguished schools," said UVI President Dr. David Hall. "We are proud to be affiliated with the GCAC, the only HBCU Conference in the NAIA, and to be a part of the gathering of such talented students and athletes."
A First for the Territories
UVI joining the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference will also be a notable footnote in the history of American intercollegiate athletics. No four-year institution in a U.S. territory has competed in an athletic conference affiliated with the NAIA or NCAA in more than a century.
Rudimentary research indicates that schools with intercollegiate athletics, prior to Hawai'i being admitted to the union in 1959, played as independents in either the NCAA or NAIA. Meanwhile, both four-year universities in Alaska began fielding intercollegiate athletics after statehood was granted in 1959.
Furthermore, major college athletics programs with long histories dating back to the 19th century played as independents prior to the U.S. granting statehood to Oklahoma (1907), Arizona, and New Mexico (1912).
A Perfect Fit