Foothill Conference

{{Short description|Junior college athletic conference in Southern California}}

The Foothill Conference was a college athletic conference that is affiliated with the California Community College Athletic Association. Several community colleges were members until it was formally disbanded in Spring, 2016.{{cite news|url=http://www.sbsun.com/search/ci_9662073|title=Colleges out at home|last=Gardner|first=Michelle|date=2008-06-21|work=San Bernardino County Sun|accessdate=2008-06-22}}

History

The Foothill Conference was formed in 1988. However, the roots of the conference can be traced to 1981 when the football-only Foothill Conference was formed.

The Foothill Conference was an offshoot of the Southern California Athletic Conference (SCAC), which included many of the Los Angeles-based community colleges.{{cite news |last=Long |first=Jim |title=Tashima see progress in VVC rebuilding effort |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-san-bernardino-county-sun/151163276/ |newspaper=The Sun |location=San Bernardino, California |date=September 2, 1988 |page=AA23 |access-date=July 11, 2024 |via=Newspapers.com {{Open access}} }} Founding members of the Foothill Conference were Antelope Valley, Citrus, Chaffey, Desert, East Los Angeles, Mt. San Jacinto, Rio Hondo, San Bernardino Valley and Victor Valley colleges.

Two colleges, East Los Angeles College and Citrus College, eventually left the conference. Barstow College and Cerro Coso Community College joined later as full-time participants.

In Fall 2013, Mt. San Jacinto{{cite news |url=http://www.pe.com/sports/college/college-headlines/20121205-inland-colleges-mt.-san-jacinto-leaving-foothill-conference.ece |newspaper=Riverside Press-Enterprise}} and Antelope Valley were hosted into other athletic conferences. Mt. San Jacinto was accepted as a member of the Pacific Coast Conference while Antelope Valley moved to the Western State Conference South Division.{{cite web |url=http://gomarauders.avc.edu/email/eNews/eNews.html |publisher=Aantelope Valley Marauder Athletics |title=Marauder Athletics to move into Western State Conference |url-status=dead |accessdate=2012-12-27 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130212222259/http://gomarauders.avc.edu/email/eNews/eNews.html |archive-date=2013-02-12 }}

The departure of Mt. San Jacinto and Antelope Valley made the conference the smallest in the state, eventually leading to is demise.

Members

=Past members=

Yearly football standings

cellpadding="5"

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1981 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1982 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1983 Foothill Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1984 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1985 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1988 Foothill Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1990 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1991 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1992 Foothill Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1993 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1994 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1995 Foothill Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1996 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1997 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{1998 Foothill Conference football standings}}

valign="top" width=25em|{{1999 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{2000 Foothill Conference football standings}}

|valign="top" width=25em|{{2001 Foothill Conference football standings}}

References

{{Reflist}}