Canada West Universities Athletic Association
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The Canada West Universities Athletic Association (CWUAA) is a regional membership association for Canadian universities which assists in co-ordinating competition between their university level athletic programs and providing contact information, schedules, results, and releases about those programs and events to the public and the media. This is similar to what would be called a "college athletic conference" in the United States. The CWUAA, which covers Western Canada, is one of four such bodies that are members of the country's governing body for university athletics, Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS). The other three regional associations coordinating University level sports in Canada are Ontario University Athletics, Atlantic University Sport, and the Quebec Student Sports Federation.
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[edit] History
The Canada West Universities Athletic Association was founded as the Western Intercollegiate Athletic Association (WIAA) in 1920, but regular competition between schools at the time were often unfeasible due to the high costs of travel and existing rivalries with American colleges.
In 1971, the WIAA was split into the Canada West Universities Athletic Association and the Great Plains Athletic Association, the latter consisting of schools primarily from Manitoba. In 1988, the GPAA (also known as the GPAC or Great Plains Athletic Conference) was absorbed into Canada West.
In 2005, Thompson Rivers University, based in Kamloops, BC began competition in the conference.
In 2006, the University College of the Fraser Valley, based in Abbotsford and Chilliwack, BC started competition in the conference. The school has since changed its name to the University of the Fraser Valley.
[edit] Member schools
| Institution | Team | City | Province | Founded | Affiliation | Enrollment | Endowment | Division |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of British Columbia | Thunderbirds | Vancouver | BC | 1908 | Public | 43,579 | $1.01B | Pacific |
| Trinity Western University | Spartans | Langley | BC | 1962 | Private-Christian | 2700 | --- | Pacific |
| University of Victoria | Vikes | Victoria | BC | 1903 | Public | 19,500 | $155.4M | Pacific |
| Simon Fraser University | Clan | Burnaby | BC | 1965 | Public | 28,207 | $176.9M | Pacific |
| University of the Fraser Valley | Cascades | Abbotsford | BC | 1974 | Public | 21,500 | --- | Pacific |
| Thompson Rivers University | WolfPack | Kamloops | BC | 1970 | Public | 13,072 | --- | Pacific |
| University of Calgary | Dinos | Calgary | AB | 1966 | Public | 28,196 | $444M | Central |
| University of Alberta | Golden Bears | Edmonton | AB | 1908 | Public | 36,435 | $751M | Central |
| University of Saskatchewan | Huskies | Saskatoon | SK | 1907 | Public | 19,082 | $136.7M | Central |
| University of Lethbridge | Pronghorns | Lethbridge | AB | 1907 | Public | 8000+ | $24.5M | Central |
| Brandon University | Bobcats | Brandon | MB | 1890 | Public | 3383 | --- | Great Plains |
| University of Regina | Rams | Regina | SK | 1911 | Public | 12,800 | $25.9M | Great Plains |
| University of Winnipeg | Wesmen | Winnipeg | MB | 1871 | Public | 9219 | --- | Great Plains |
| University of Manitoba | Bisons | Winnipeg | MB | 1877 | Public | 27,599 | $303M | Great Plains |
[edit] Scholarships, UBC, Simon Fraser University, and the NAIA
In May 2005, UBC made a formal bid to join the NCAA. The NCAA has not yet made a decision on whether to admit UBC. See the UBC article for more details.
Simon Fraser (previously known as the SFU Clan) did not compete in CIAU/CIS until 2002, after a failed attempt to join the U.S. NCAA.
From its inception in 1965, Simon Fraser competed in the NAIA to allow "full ride" scholarships. Canadian Schools did not allow any form of scholarships until the late-1980s. SFU was forced to leave the NAIA in many sports due to schools in the Northwest US shifting to the NCAA. The NCAA limits membership to schools based in the U.S.. Some Simon Fraser teams still compete in the U.S., and their men's wrestling program competes in both organizations.
UBC also has their men's baseball program compete in the NAIA.
[edit] Facilities
Canadian athletic facilities are often listed by their "maximum capacity", which is often an estimate of their largest recorded crowd in the facility. These maximum capacities can and often do include standing room patrons and attendees seated on grass surrounding a playing field. Seated Capacity is the actual number of permanent seats, be they grandstands or permanently in use bleachers. This is why you will sometimes see larger capacities listed for these sites when searching for them on line. When capacity numbers have mismatched on source sites, unless the larger capacity could be confirmed as a seated capacity, the smaller capacity number has been listed here.
Please update with verified "seated capacities" only when the institutions release more accurate official seated capacities.
Thompson River University only plays basketball and volleyball at the CIS level. Soccer, badminton, and men's baseball are also played, but currently not at the CIS level.
The University of Manitoba is deep in negotations with David Asper in a convoluted deal that will build a new 30,000 seat football stadium (expandable to 45,000) at the intersection of University Crescent and Chancellor Matheson Drive at the University of Manitoba, Fort Garry Campus. Asper will assume ownership of the community-owned Winnipeg Blue Bombers as part of the deal and the Bisons will play in this new stadium. [1]
(Data mined from the CIS homepage's member directory[2] and WorldStadiums.com[3]. The members directory numbers seem to be ballpark figures in some cases.)
[edit] Future Expansion
The media has reported that the following institutions are building their athletic programs for potential admission into the association.
- University of Northern British Columbia
- University of British Columbia-Okanagan
- Capilano University
- Vancouver Island University

