Indiana Collegiate Conference

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Indiana Collegiate Conference
Established1950
Dissolved1978
AssociationNCAA
DivisionDivision II
Members8 (final), 13 (total)
Sports fielded
  • 9
RegionWabash-Ohio River Valley
HeadquartersTerre Haute, Indiana
CommissionerJim Hinga (1970–1978)[1]
Don Ping (1965–1970)[2]

The Indiana Collegiate Conference (ICC) was a college athletic conference in the United States from 1951 to 1978. It consisted solely of schools in Indiana.

The charter members of the conference were Indiana State University, Butler University, Valparaiso University, the University of Evansville, Ball State University, Saint Joseph's College (Indiana), and in 1953 DePauw University.

History[]

Early years[]

The conference was an offshoot of the older, larger Indiana Intercollegiate Conference;[3] and was established for the 1950-51 academic year. It took a couple of years before all members were able to play full conference schedules. While the membership was limited to Indiana-based colleges, their profiles varied from the larger, public colleges (Indiana State and Ball State) to the smaller, secular schools such as the Roman Catholic-affiliated Saint Joseph's, to the Methodist-chartered Evansville and Lutheran-established Valparaiso. Independent schools such as Butler and DePauw were also members, Butler having recently been a member of the Mid-American Conference. The ICC would be guided by various commissioners during the early years, the first full-time commissioner Jim Hinga, was not hired until 1968; prior to Hinga's selection, the position was filled by part-time commissioners, like LeRoy Heminger of Franklin College. In addition, the conference maintained a rotating presidency, filled by long-time educational administrators such as Dr. Joseph Nygaard of Indianapolis[4] and S.T. "Cy" Proffitt of Terre Haute.[5]

In addition to the varied affiliations of the schools themselves, the athletic programs were a mixture of NCAA and NAIA member schools; some (Indiana State and Ball State notably) were simultaneous members of both collegiate athletic associations. Indiana State continued as an NAIA power in men's basketball; their dominance had begun while an Indiana Intercollegiate Conference member; participating in 5 NAIA tournaments and finishing 3rd Nationally in 1953.

Football[]

The conference celebrated its football-centric glory years in the 1950s and 1960s. Butler won fourteen conference titles; Saint Joseph's won a share of the 1956 NAIA Football National Championship, playing to a 0-0 tie with Montana State. Valparaiso participated in the 1951 Cigar Bowl, following an undefeated season. The Crusaders would win the conference three seasons later, anchored by NFL great Fuzzy Thurston. Jim Wacker, long-time college football coach was a member of the Valparaiso football team from 1955–59; leading them to a record of 21-12-2; he was named 2nd team All-Conference following the 1959 season.

Future Coach Bill Lynch was a star at Butler and would later coach them and former members, the DePauw Tigers and the Ball State Cardinals. One of the Ball State Cardinals' all-time greats Timmy Brown[6] starred in the ICC before moving on to a ten-year career in the NFL. Future basketball coach, Norm Ellenberger was an All-ICC football player at Butler for Coach Tony Hinkle. Bill Doba, former Head Coach for Washington State is also a conference alumnus.

The "football-side" of the conference also became known as the Heartland Collegiate Conference, as Ashland University of Ohio became a member for football only in 1978.

Basketball[]

The 1960s were the pinnacle of ICC basketball, especially the University of Evansville Purple Aces; who under legendary coach Arad McCutchan won NCAA College Division (now Div II) National Titles in 1959, 1960, 1964, 1965 and 1971. McCutchan was named the National College Division Coach of the Year in 1964 and 1965.

The 1967-68 season was memorable as the Indiana State Sycamores were the College Division National Finalists. In addition, 4 ICC players were named All-American; Jerry Newsom (Indiana State) - 1st team, Tom Niemeier (Evansville) - 2nd team, Dick Jones (Valparaiso) & Howie Pratt (Evansville) - 3rd team.[7]

The ICC also had many legendary players and coaches over the years; the most well-known were Tony Hinkle, Arad McCutchan, John Longfellow, Gene Bartow, and Duane Klueh all served as head coaches in the conference.

The most notable ICC players included Jerry Sloan, Bobby Plump, , Ed Smallwood, Don Buse, Larry Humes, Jerry Newsom, Butch Wade, Billy Shepherd, Don Bielke and Steve Newton. Longtime NCAA basketball officials Ted Hillary and Steve "Whale" Welmer; are conference alumni of St Joseph's Pumas and Evansville Purple Aces, respectively. Seven ICC players would be awarded the NCAA College Division MVP/MOP Award between the 1957-58 & 1970-71 seasons; Ed Smallwood (1958, 1960), Hugh Ahlering (1959), Jerry Sloan (1964, 1965), Jerry Newsom (1968) & Don Buse (1971). Cal Luther played at Valparaiso before beginning a long and successful college coaching career. St. Joseph College's Jim Thordsen was the conference MVP in 1973, 1974 and 1975; Thordsen was also named a Division II All-American.[8]

The ICC posted of 88 "1,000+ career scorers," in men's basketball. The leading scorer in the history of the conference is Evansville's legendary, Larry Humes of Madison, Indiana. Humes finished his outstanding career with 2,236.

Baseball[]

Well-known college basketball coach, Norm Ellenberger was an All-ICC pitcher and was the baseball MVP in 1954;[9] Future college basketball coach, , was the baseball MVP in 1964, he would spend 4 seasons in the St. Louis Cardinals farm system before beginning a college basketball coaching career.[10] Merv Rettenmund would star in the ICC before moving to the Major Leagues, where he was a steady performer for the Baltimore Orioles and Cincinnati Reds. He played in 4 World Series; winning titles with the 1969 Orioles and 1975 Reds. He and teammate Steve Hargan were well-established stars under Ray Louthen.

Future college coach, Dick Tomey was a baseball star at DePauw,[11] 3x letterman, All-ICC (Honorable Mention), and would forge a 29-year career as a FBS Head Coach (Hawai'i, Arizona and San Jose State), recording an overall record of 183-145-7, a 5-3 bowl record and a Pac-10 title (Arizona - 1993). He was twice Conference Coach of the Year (WAC-1981, Pac 10-1992).

The Valparaiso Crusaders won 17 ICCs titles, with 15 coming under the leadership of long-time baseball coach Emory G. Bauer. He coached the Crusaders to 11 NCAA tournament appearances, with 5 coming in the NCAA Division I tournament. The Indiana State Sycamores were also dominant in ICC baseball, winning titles in 1957, 1958, 1964, 1966 under Coach . Wolf was named the ICC Coach of the Year in 1958, 1963, 1966 and 1967, he also sent players such as Jeff James and Danny Lazar to the Major Leagues.

Other sports[]

Golf[]

Future Vice President of the United States Dan Quayle was a 3-time letterman (1967–69) on the varsity golf team at DePauw,[12] finishing 10th in the conference match as a Sophomore. The Indiana State Sycamores won the ICC in 1953, 1966, 1967 and 1968. Indiana State also won an NAIA Regional in 1962, advancing to the NAIA National Tournament. This was the Sycamores' 2nd trip to NAIA Nationals, as they also competed in 1953. The St Joseph's Pumas finished 2nd in the NAIA National Tournament.

Ball State University hosted the NAIA National Championships during the 1957–58, 1958–59 and 1959–60 seasons; they placed 5th in the NCAA National Tournament in 1968.

Swimming and Diving[]

Indiana State's program featured 5 NAIA individual champions during the 1962–63, 1963–64 and 1964–65 seasons.

Valparaiso won the 1969-70 ICC team title; Indiana State won the 1963–64, 1965–66 and 1967–68 titles. Evansville won the 1964-65 title.

Swim/Dive Champions by season[]

Season Champions
1959 Indiana State-Muncee
1960 DePauw
1961 Indiana State-Muncee
1962 Indiana State-Muncee
1963 Indiana State-Muncee
1964 Indiana State
1965 Evansville
1966 Evansville
1967 Evansville
1968 Indiana State
1969 Evansville
1970 Valparaiso
1971 Evansville
1972 Evansville
1973 Evansville
1974 Evansville
1975 Wabash
1976 Wabash
1977 Valparaiso[13]
Track and field[]

The Indiana State Mile Relay Team participated in the NCAA Finals; the team was undefeated during the season; winning the Conference title, the 'Big State' Meet (all Indiana colleges), placed first at the IU relays, won the Mason-Dixon Games (Louisville, KY) title and the 'Central Collegiate Conference' meet. Relay team members were: Peter Howe, Tom Walters, Rich Rardin, Errol White[14]

Wrestling[]

Indiana State produced 12 NAIA All-Americans, finishing in the Top Ten at the NAIA National Championships 3 times in 6 seasons of NAIA affiliation before being re-classified as an NCAA University program. The Sycamores hosted the NAIA National meet in 1964-65. The Sycamores subsequently produced 2 NCAA All-Americans and participated in the NCAA National Championships before withdrawing from the conference following the 1967-68 season.

Final years[]

The 1970s saw many of the conference's athletic programs depart for other conferences, as Ball State and Indiana State became Division I programs in the late 1960s. Despite the addition of Indianapolis (formerly Indiana Central) and Wabash in 1970, the conference officially disbanded in 1978.[15]

Despite the ICC disbanding for all other sports, the HCC continued to sponsor Division II football until 1989 when Butler, Valparaiso, Indianapolis, St. Joseph's, and Ashland all joined the Midwest Intercollegiate Football Conference (now part of the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference). Butler and Valparaiso moved to the Division I Pioneer Football League in 1993.

In 1997 the official records of the conference from 1950 to 1979 were moved from Terre Haute, Indiana onto the campus of DePauw University, becoming part of the Indiana Collegiate Conference/Special Collections Library. The archive also contains an extensive assortment of images and memorabilia from each member university.

Members[]

Membership timeline[]

Wabash CollegeUniversity of IndianapolisDePauw UniversityButler UniversitySaint Joseph's (Indiana)Valparaiso UniversityUniversity of EvansvilleBall State UniversityIndiana State University

Subsequent conference affiliations[]

Team Left for Current conference Current affiliation
Ball State Midwestern Conference Mid-American Conference NCAA Div I
Butler Midwestern Collegiate Conference Big East Conference NCAA Div I
DePauw Indiana Collegiate Athletic Conference North Coast Athletic Conference NCAA Div III
Evansville Midwestern Collegiate Conference Missouri Valley Conference NCAA Div I
Indianapolis Great Lakes Valley Conference NCAA Div II
Indiana State Midwestern Conference Missouri Valley Conference NCAA Div I
Valparaiso Mid-Continent Conference Missouri Valley Conference NCAA Div I
Saint Joseph's (IN) Great Lakes Valley Conference N/A Closed
Wabash Indiana Collegiate Athletic Conference North Coast Athletic Conference NCAA Div III

Conference champions[]

Men's basketball[]

Conference champions by school[]

School (year joined) Winners Years
Evansville (1951) 16 1954, 1955, 1956, 1958, 1960, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966-co, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1973-co, 1974, 1976, 1977-co
Butler (1951) 9 1952, 1953, 1959, 1961, 1962, 1970-co, 1973- co, 1977- co, 1978
Indiana State (1951) 4 1951, 1966-co, 1967, 1968-co
DePauw (1953) 2 1957, 1968-co
St Joseph's (1951) 2 1970-co, 1975

MVP winners by school[]

Season Winners School
1951 Jim Ove[17] Valparaiso
1952 Roger Adkins Indiana State
1953 Don Bielke Valparaiso
1954 unk unk
1955 Jerry Clayton Evansville
1956 John Harrawood Evansville
1957 John Harrawood Evansville
1958 Ed Smallwood Evansville
1959 Bob "Biscuit" Williams[18] St Joseph's
1960 Ed Smallwood Evansville
1961 Dale Wise Evansville
1962 Tom Bowman Butler
1963 Jerry Sloan Evansville
1964 Ed Butler Indiana State-Muncee
1965 Jerry Sloan Evansville
1966 Larry Humes Evansville
1967 Butch Wade Indiana State
1968 Jerry Newsom Indiana State
1969 Tom McCormick DePauw
1970 Bruce Linder Valparaiso
1971 Don Buse Evansville
1972 Don Buse Evansville
1973 Jim Thordsen St Joseph's
1974 Jim Thordsen St Joseph's
1975 Jim Thordsen St Joseph's[19]
1976 Gerry Klamrowski St Joseph's[20]
1977 Wayne Burris Butler
1978 Tom Orner Butler

Coach of the year winners by school[]

Season Winners School
1951 unk unk
1952 St Joseph's[21]
1953 unk unk
1954 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1955 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1956 Tony Hinkle
Arad McCutchan
Butler
Evansville
1957 Jim Hinga Ball State
1958 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1959 Duane Klueh Indiana State
1960 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1961 Tony Hinkle Butler
1962 Tony Hinkle Butler
1963 Duane Klueh Indiana State
1964 Jim Hinga Ball State
1965 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1966 Duane Klueh
Arad McCutchan
Indiana State
Evansville
1967 Duane Klueh Indiana State
1968 Elmer McCall DePauw
1969 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1970 unk unk
1971 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1972 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1973 George Theofanis Butler
1974 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1975 John Weinert St Joseph's[22]
1976 Arad McCutchan Evansville
1977 George Theofanis Butler
1978 Joe Sexson Butler

Football[]

Conference champions by school[]

School (year joined) Winners Years
Butler (1951) 14 1952, 1953, 1958–63, 1964-co, 1972-co, 1973–75, 1977-co
Evansville (1951) 6 1955-co, 1964-co, 1969-co, 1970, 1972-co, 1976-co
Saint Joseph's (Indiana) (1951) 6 1955-co, 1956–57, 1971, 1976-co,1977-co
Valparaiso (1951) 6 1951, 1952, 1954, 1964-co, 1968, 1969
Ball State (1953) 4 1964-co, 1965–67
Indiana State (1951) 1 1964-co
DePauw (1954) 0 n / a

ICC Back (offense) of the Year winners by school[]

Season Winners School
1951 unk unk
1952 unk unk
1953 unk unk
1954 Leroy Thompson Butler
1955 Ken Lutterbach Evansville
1956 Robert "Bud" George Evansville
1957 unk unk
1958 Timmy Brown Indiana State_Muncee
1959 unk unk

Baseball[]

Conference champions by school[]

School (year joined) Winners Years
Valparaiso (1951) 17 1952–1953, 1955–1956, 1959–1960, 1963, 1964-co, 1966-co, 1967–1968, 1969-co, 1970, 1971-co, 1972, 1974, 1977[23]
Indiana State (1951) 4 1957, 1958, 1964, 1966
Ball State (1953) 3 1961, 1962, 1965
Butler (1951) 2 1969, 1974
Evansville (1951) x
Saint Joseph's (Indiana) (1951) x

Notes[]

Indiana State won the All-Sports Trophy (best cumulative finish for all sports) 5 times, 4 consecutively; 1962–63 and 1964–65, 1965–66, 1966–67 and 1967-68.
The Sycamores then committed to transitioning their athletic program from NCAA Div II to NCAA Div I.[24]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Redirecting to Google Groups".
  2. ^ "PING, DON | Indiana Football Hall of Fame".
  3. ^ "INDIANA FORMS I.C.C.; All Hoosier Colleges but Wabash Enter New Athletic League". The New York Times. July 2, 1922.
  4. ^ https://books.google.com/books?id=cyU_fdnWhD8C&pg=PA22432&lpg=PA22432&dq=%22indiana+collegiate+conference%22&source=bl&ots=EX6ORCojBJ&sig=knGIGKcWubw8rDqsH_NDGGcHoJk&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiNm9ye8fPQAhWMMyYKHa-0CJI4ChDoAQguMAU#v=onepage&q=%22indiana%20collegiate%20conference%22&f=false
  5. ^ "PROFFITT, S. T. "CY" | Indiana Football Hall of Fame".
  6. ^ "Timmy Brown Stats". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  7. ^ "All-America - Division II (1960's) - NABC". Archived from the original on 2014-08-09.
  8. ^ "Cincinnati News, Sports and Things to do | Cincinnati Enquirer".
  9. ^ "Norman Dale Ellenberger".
  10. ^ "Wayne Boultinghouse Minor Leagues Statistics & History".
  11. ^ "DePauw University Hall of Fame Inductees".
  12. ^ "DePauw University Hall of Fame Inductees".
  13. ^ HCC record book PP 43,44.
  14. ^ https://gosycamores.com/news/2018/12/12/hall-of-fame-indiana-state-athletics-set-to-induct-27th-class-on-february-1.aspx
  15. ^ "View Image".
  16. ^ "Timeline: DePauw's conference history - Sports". Archived from the original on 2010-07-19.
  17. ^ "Hall of Fame Members | Official Website of Valpo Athletics".
  18. ^ "Robert "Biscuit" Williams III - Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame".
  19. ^ http://www.saintjoe.edu/saint-josephs-college-alumnus-receive-prestigious-award
  20. ^ "View Image".
  21. ^ "The Daily Banner 23 March 1953 — Hoosier State Chronicles: Indiana's Digital Historic Newspaper Program".
  22. ^ "John Weinert Obituary (2015) Herald Tribune". Legacy.com.
  23. ^ "Home | Official Website of Valpo Athletics".
  24. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 14, 2010. Retrieved July 20, 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Further reading[]

  • Porter, David (2005). Basketball: A Biographical Dictionary. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood & Publishing Group.
  • Ashe, Arthur (1988). A Hard Road To Glory: A History Of The African American Athlete: Basketball. New York: Amistad & Press Inc.
  • Edmonds, Anthony (2003). Ball State Men's Basketball: 1918–2003. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia & Publishing.
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