List of Pac-12 Conference champions

This is a list of conference champions in sports sponsored by the Pac-12 Conference.

Current members

InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentEndowmentNicknameNCAA Team
Championships
(through March 2, 2017)[1]
University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona 1885 Public 38,057 [2] $1.038 Billion [3] Wildcats 18
Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona 1885 Public 55,552 [4] $441 million [5] Sun Devils 23
University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California 1868 Public 35,843 [6] $2.34×10^9 [3][7] Golden Bears 33
University of Colorado at Boulder Boulder, Colorado 1876 Public 29,952 [8] $665,442,000 [3] Buffaloes 28
University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon 1876 Public 23,389 [9] $386,500,000 [3] Ducks 33
Oregon State University Corvallis, Oregon 1868 Public 23,671 [10] $329,200,000 [3] Beavers 3
Stanford University Stanford, California 1891 Private 19,535 [11] $1.262×10^10 [3] Cardinal 108
University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles, California 1919 Public 39,984 [12] $1.88×10^9 [3][7] Bruins 113
University of Southern California Los Angeles, California 1880 Private 33,747 [13] $2.67×10^9 [3] Trojans 100
University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah 1850 Public 29,284[14] $1.02 billion [3] Utes 17
University of Washington Seattle, Washington 1861 Public 47,361[15] $1.65×10^9 [3] Huskies 6
Washington State University Pullman, Washington 1890 Public 26,101[16] $619,700,000 [3] Cougars 2

Affiliate members

InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentNicknameCurrent ConferencePac-12 Sports
University of Arkansas at Little Rock Little Rock, Arkansas 1927 Public 11,845 Trojans Sun Belt Wrestling
California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo, California 1901 Public 19,777 Mustangs Big West Wrestling
California State University, Bakersfield Bakersfield, California 1965 Public 7,493 Roadrunners WAC Wrestling
San Diego State University San Diego, California 1897 Public 34,500 Aztecs Mountain West Men's Soccer

Former members

No school has left the Pac-12 since its founding as the AAWU in 1959. Two members of the PCC never joined the AAWU.

InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentNicknameConference MembershipCurrent Conference
University of Idaho Moscow, Idaho 1889 Public 11,957 Vandals 1922–1959 Big Sky
(Sun Belt for football)
University of Montana Missoula, Montana 1893 Public 14,921 Grizzlies 1924–1950 Big Sky

Football

Men's basketball

The Pacific Coast Conference began playing basketball in the 1915-16 season. The PCC was split into North and South Divisions for basketball beginning with the 1922-23 season. The winners of the two divisions would play a best of three series of games to determine the PCC basketball champion. If two division teams tied, they would have a one-game playoff to produce the division representative. Starting with the first NCAA Men's Basketball Championship in 1939, the winner of the PCC divisional playoff was given the automatic berth in the NCAA tournament. Oregon, the 1939 PCC champion, won the championship game in the 1939 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.

The last divisional playoff was in the 1954-55 season. After that, there was no divisional play and all teams played each other in a round robin competition. From the 1955-56 season through the 1958-59 season, the regular season conference champion was awarded the NCAA tournament berth from the PCC. In the case of a tie, a tie breaker rule was used to determine the NCAA tournament representative.

Beginning with the 1975 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, the Pac-10 would usually place at least one other at-large team in the tournament.

By the 1985-86 season, the Pac-10 was one of three remaining conferences that gave their automatic NCAA tournament bid to the regular season round-robin champion. The other two conferences were the Ivy League and the Big Ten Conference.

The modern Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament format began in 1987. It was dropped after 1990 upon opposition from coaches and poor revenue and attendance.[17]

The tournament was restarted by an 8-2 vote of the athletic directors of the conference in 2000 after determining that a tournament would help increase exposure of the conference and help the seeding of the schools in the NCAA tournament.[18]

UCLA basketball game at Pauley Pavilion
Cal versus San Diego State at Haas Pavilion
UCLA celebrating 2014 Pac-12 tournament championship
Season
Champion
Regular season(#) Conference tournament (#)
1915–16California (1)
Oregon State (1)
1916–17Washington State[lower-roman 1]
1917–18No official conference competition
1918–19Oregon (1)
1919–20Stanford (1)
1920–21California (2)
Stanford (2)
1921–22Idaho (1)
1922–23Idaho (2)
1923–24California (3)
1924–25California (4)
1925–26California (5)
1926–27California (6)
1927–28USC (1)
1928–29California (7)
1929–30USC (2)
1930–31Washington (1)
1931–32California (8)
1932–33Oregon State (2)
1933–34Washington (2)
1934–35USC (3)
1935–36Stanford (3)
1936–37Stanford (4)
1937–38Stanford (5)
1938–39Oregon (2)
1939–40USC (4)
1940–41Washington State (2)
1941–42Stanford (6)
1942–43Washington (3)
1943–44California (9)[lower-roman 2]
Washington (4)
1944–45Oregon (3)
UCLA (1)
1945–46California (10)
1946–47Oregon State (3)
1947–48Washington (5)
1948–49Oregon State (4)
1949–50UCLA (2)
1950–51Washington (6)
1951–52UCLA (3)
1952–53Washington (7)
1953–54USC (5)
1954–55Oregon State (5)
1955–56UCLA (4)
1956–57California (11)
1957–58California (12)
Oregon State (6)
1958–59California (13)
1959–60California (14)
1960–61USC (6)
1961–62UCLA (5)
1962–63Stanford (7)
UCLA (6)
1963–64UCLA (7)
1964–65UCLA (8)
1965–66Oregon State (7)
1966–67UCLA (9)
1967–68UCLA (10)
1968–69UCLA (11)
1969–70UCLA (12)
1970–71UCLA (13)
1971–72UCLA (14)
1972–73UCLA (15)
1973–74UCLA (16)
1974–75UCLA (17)
1975–76UCLA (18)
1976–77UCLA (19)
1977–78UCLA (20)
1978–79UCLA (21)
1979–80Oregon State (8)
1980–81Oregon State (9)
1981–82Oregon State (10)
1982–83UCLA (22)
1983–84Oregon State (11)
Washington (8)
1984–85USC (7)
Washington (9)
1985–86Arizona (1)
1986–87UCLA (23)UCLA (1)
1987–88Arizona (2)Arizona (1)
1988–89Arizona (3)Arizona (2)
1989–90Arizona (4)Arizona (3)
Oregon State (12)
1990–91Arizona (5)
1991–92UCLA (24)
1992–93Arizona (6)
1993–94Arizona (7)
1994–95UCLA (25)
1995–96UCLA (26)
1996–97UCLA (27)[lower-roman 3]
1997–98Arizona (8)
1998–99Stanford (8)
1999–00Arizona (9)
Stanford (9)
2000–01Stanford (10)
2001–02Oregon (4)Arizona (4)
2002–03Arizona (10)Oregon (1)
2003–04Stanford (11)Stanford (1)
2004–05Arizona (11)Washington (1)
2005–06UCLA (28)UCLA (2)
2006–07UCLA (29)Oregon (2)
2007–08UCLA (30)UCLA (3)
2008–09Washington (10)USC (1)
2009–10California (15)Washington (2)
2010–11Arizona (12)Washington (3)
2011–12Washington (11)Colorado (1)
2012–13UCLA (31)Oregon (3)
2013–14Arizona (13)UCLA (4)
2014–15Arizona (14)Arizona (5)
2015–16Oregon (5)Oregon (4)
2016–17Arizona (15)Arizona (6)
Oregon (6)
2017–18Arizona (16)Arizona (7)
2018–19Washington (12)Oregon (5)
2019–20Oregon (7)-
Bold text denotes National Champion.
  1. Though the first national championship tournament was not held until 1939, the Helms Athletic Foundation retroactively selected national champions for prior years, including Washington State for 1917.[19]
  2. Utah was National Champion in 1944, prior to its joining the Pac-12 in 2011.[20]
  3. Arizona was National Champion in 1997, though it did not win the conference.

Women's basketball

Conf Ovrl
Year Team W L Pct W L Pct
1986–87USC1530.8332280.733
1987–88Washington1620.8892550.833
1988–89Stanford1801.0002830.903
1989–90Stanford1710.9443210.970
Washington1710.9442830.903
1990–91Stanford1620.8892660.813
1991–92Stanford1530.8333030.909
1992–93Stanford1530.8332660.813
1993–94USC1620.8872640.867
1994–95Stanford1710.9443030.909
1995–96Stanford1801.0002930.906
1996–97Stanford1801.0003420.944
1997–98Stanford1710.9442160.778
1998–99Oregon1530.8332560.806
UCLA1530.8332680.765
1999–00Oregon1440.7782380.742
2000–01Arizona State1260.66720110.645
Stanford1260.66719110.633
Washington1260.66722100.688
2001–02Stanford1801.0003230.914
2002–03Stanford1530.8332750.844
2003–04Arizona1440.7782490.727
Stanford1440.7782770.794
2004–05Stanford1710.9443230.914
2005–06Stanford1530.8332680.765
2006–07Stanford1710.9442840.875
2007–08Stanford1620.8893540.897
2008–09Stanford1710.9412640.867
2009–10Stanford1801.0003110.969
2010–11Stanford1801.0002920.935
2011–12Stanford1801.0003110.969
2012–13California1710.9442830.903
Stanford1710.9443120.939
2013–14Stanford1710.9443230.914
2014–15Oregon State1620.8892750.844
2015–16Oregon State1620.8893250.865
Arizona State1620.8892760.818
2016-17 Oregon State 16 2 0.889 31 5 0.861
2017-18 Oregon 16 2 0.889 33 5 0.868
2018-19 Oregon 16 2 0.889 33 5 0.868
2019-20 Oregon 17 1 0.944 31 2 0.939

Baseball

Season Conference
1916 California
1917 California
1918 Oregon
1919 Washington
1920 California
1921 California
1922 Washington
Season North South
1923 Washington California
Season Conference
1924 California
Season North South
1925 Oregon State Stanford
1926 Washington California
Season North CIBA
1927 Washington State, Oregon State St. Mary's
1928 Oregon, Washington State St. Mary's
1929 Washington California
1930 Washington USC
1931 Washington Stanford
1932 Washington USC
1933 Washington State California
1934 Oregon California
1935 Oregon California, USC
1936 Washington State USC
1937 Oregon California
1938 Oregon State, Washington State California
1939 Oregon St. Mary's, USC
1940 Oregon State St. Mary's
1941 Oregon California, St. Mary's
1942 Oregon USC
1943 Oregon, Oregon State California†, USC†
1944 Washington State UCLA
1945 Washington State California
1946 Oregon USC
1947 Washington State California, USC
1948 Washington State USC*
1949 Washington State USC*
1950 Washington State* Stanford
1951 Oregon State USC*
1952 Oregon State* USC
1953 Oregon Stanford*
1954 Oregon* USC
1955 Oregon USC*
1956 Washington State* USC
1957 Oregon California*, USC
1958 Oregon State USC*
1959 Washington USC*
Season AAWU
1960 Washington State California, USC
1961 Washington State USC
1962 Oregon State Santa Clara
1963 Oregon State USC
1964 Oregon USC
1965 Washington State Stanford
1966 Washington State USC
Season Pac-8
1967 Stanford
1968 USC
1969 UCLA
Season North CIBA
1970 Washington State USC**
1971 Washington State USC**
1972 Washington State, Oregon USC**
1973 Washington State USC**
1974 Oregon, Washington State USC**
1975 Oregon State USC**
1976 Washington State** UCLA
Season North South
1977 Washington State USC**
1978 Washington State USC**
1979 Washington State UCLA
1980 Washington State Arizona, California
1981 Washington Arizona State
1982 Oregon State Arizona State
1983 Oregon State Stanford
1984 Portland State, Washington State Arizona State
1985 Washington State Stanford
1986 Oregon State UCLA
1987 Washington State Stanford
1988 Washington State Arizona State
1989 Washington State Arizona
1990 Washington State Stanford
1991 Washington State USC
1992 Washington Arizona
1993 Washington Arizona State
1994 Oregon State Stanford
1995 Washington State USC
1996 Washington USC
1997 Washington Stanford
1998 Washington Stanford
Season Pac-10 Record
1999 Stanford 50-15 (19-5)
2000 Arizona State‡, Stanford, UCLA (17-7)
2001 USC 45-19 (18-6)
2002 USC 37-24 (17-7)
2003 Stanford 51-18 (18-6)
2004 Stanford 46-14 (16-8)
2005 Oregon State 46-12 (19-5)
2006 Oregon State 50-16 (16-7)
2007 Arizona State 49-15 (19-5)
2008 Arizona State 49-13 (16-8)
2009 Arizona State 51-14 (21-6)
2010 Arizona State 52-10 (20-7)
2011 UCLA 35-24 (18-9)
Season Pac-12 Record
2012 UCLA‡, Arizona 42-14 (20-10), 38-17 (20-10)
2013 Oregon State 52-13 (24-6)
2014 Oregon State 45-14 (23-7)
2015 UCLA 45-16 (22-8)
2016 Utah 25-27 (19-11)
2017 Oregon State 56-6 (27-3)
2018 Stanford 46-12 (22-8)

Bold text indicates National Champion
* Pacific Coast Conference playoff champion
** North-South playoff champion
† California won the CIBA Division 1 and USC won Division 2. Cal defeated USC in a playoff for the CIBA title.
‡ Won the tiebreaker and the automatic post-season bid
Arizona State won the 1969 and 1977 National Championships as a member of the Western Athletic Conference. The Sun Devils' first baseball season in the Pac-12 was 1979.
Arizona won the 1976 National Championship as a member of the WAC. The Wildcats also joined the Pac-10 for the 1979 baseball season.
Arizona won the 1986 National Championship but did not win the South Division
Stanford won the 1988 National Championship but did not win the South Division. The Cardinal defeated South Division champion Arizona State in the final
USC won the 1998 National Championship, defeating Arizona State in the final. Neither won the South Division
Oregon State won the 2007 National Championship but did not win the conference championship
UCLA won the 2013 National Championship but did not win the conference championship.

Softball

Year Team Conf Ovrl
W L T Pct W L T Pct
1987California8200.800341500.694
1988UCLA15300.83353800.869
1989UCLA18200.90048400.923
1990UCLA16200.88962700.899
1991UCLA16400.80050500.909
1992Arizona16200.88958700.892
1993UCLA25100.96250500.909
1994Arizona23100.95864300.955
1995UCLA23400.85743600.878
1996Washington23400.85259900.868
1997Arizona26100.96361500.924
1998Arizona27100.96467400.944
1999UCLA22600.78663600.913
2000Washington17400.81062900.873
2001Arizona19200.90565400.942
2002UCLA18300.85755900.859
2003Arizona19200.90554500.915
2004Arizona17300.85055600.902
2005California
Arizona
Oregon State
Stanford
13
13
13
13
8
8
8
8
0
0
0
0
0.619
0.619
0.619
0.619
52
45
43
43
15
12
16
16
0
0
0
0
0.776
0.789
0.729
0.729
2006Arizona15510.738441210.773
2007Arizona15510.738501410.777
2008Arizona State18300.85764500.928
2009UCLA16500.762451100.804
2010Washington17400.81044600.880
2011Arizona State17400.81060600.909
Season Pac-12 Record
2012California21300.86558700.892
2013Oregon19500.792501100.820
2014Oregon19210.88648610.882
2015Oregon21300.87551800.864
2016Oregon20400.83347800.855
2017Arizona18600.75052900.852
2018Oregon2130.875531000.841
2019UCLA
Washington
20
20
4
4
0
0
0.833
0.833
46
45
5
7
0
0
0.902
0.865

Note: UCLA won the 1992, 1995 (vacated), 2003, 2004 and 2010 National Championship but did not win the conference championship
Note: Arizona won the 1991, 1993, and 1996 National Championship but did not win the conference championship
Note: California won the 2002 National Championship but did not win the conference championship
Note: Washington won the 2009 National Championship but did not win the conference championship
Note: Washington State and USC do not field softball teams
Bold text indicates National Champion

Women's gymnastics

Season Team Champion (#) Runner Up All-Around Champion
1987UCLA (1)ArizonaTanya Service, UCLA; Yumi Modre, Washington
1988UCLA (2)Arizona StateJill Andrews, UCLA
1989UCLA (3)Oregon StateJoy Selig, Oregon State
1990UCLA (4)ArizonaJill Andrews, UCLA
1991Oregon State (1)UCLAJoy Selig, Oregon State
1992Oregon State (2)ArizonaChari Knight, Oregon State
1993UCLA (5)Oregon StateKareema Marrow, UCLA
1994Oregon State (3)UCLALeah Homma, UCLA
1995UCLA (6)Arizona StateStella Umeh, UCLA
1996Oregon State (4)Arizona StateHeidi Hornbeek, Arizona
1997UCLA (7)StanfordLeah Homma, UCLA
1998Stanford (1)Oregon StateStella Umeh, UCLA
1999UCLA (8)Oregon StateHeidi Moneymaker, UCLA
2000UCLA (9)Oregon StateMohini Bhardwaj, UCLA
2001Stanford (2)UCLAMohini Bhardwaj, UCLA
2002UCLA (10)ArizonaOnnie Willis, UCLA
2003UCLA (11)StanfordKate Richardson, UCLA
2004Stanford (3)UCLANatalie Foley, Stanford
2005UCLA (12)ArizonaKristen Maloney, UCLA; Tasha Schwikert, UCLA
2006Stanford (4)UCLATabitha Yim, Stanford
2007UCLA (13)StanfordTasha Schwikert, UCLA
2008Stanford (5)Oregon StateTabitha Yim, Stanford
2009UCLA (14)Oregon StateCarly Janiga, Stanford
2010UCLA (15)StanfordVanessa Zamarripa, UCLA
2011Oregon State (5)UCLALeslie Mak, Oregon State
2012UCLA (16)UtahCorrie Lothrop, Utah
2013Oregon State (6)UCLAVanessa Zamarripa, UCLA
2014Utah (1)StanfordTory Wilson, Utah
2015Utah (2)UCLAGeorgia Dabritz, Utah
2016UCLA (17)Oregon State & Utah (tie)Breanna Hughes, Utah
2017Utah (3)Oregon StateMyKayla Skinner, Utah
2018UCLA (18)UtahKyla Ross, UCLA
MyKayla Skinner, Utah
2019UCLA (19)UtahKyla Ross, UCLA
2020Canceled due to the coronavirus outbreak in the USA [21]

Note: Bold denotes NCAA team or all-around champion.
Note: The Pac-10 added gymnastics in the 1987 season. Prior to the Pac-10 fielding gymnastics championships, Jackie Brummer from Arizona State won the NCAA gymnastics championship.
Note: The following gymnasts won the NCAA all-around title without winning the Pac-10 all-around title: 2001: Onnie Willis, UCLA; 2002: Jamie Dantzscher, UCLA; 2008: Tasha Schwikert, UCLA; 2015: Samantha Peszek, UCLA

Men's soccer

The conference established men's soccer as a sponsored sport beginning in the 2000 academic year. Prior to then, most members who fielded a men's collegiate soccer team competed in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation.

Conf Ovrl Conf Ovrl
Season Champion W-L-T W-L-T Runner-Up W-L-T W-L-T
2000 Washington 7-1-0 14-6 Stanford 6-2-0 18-3-1
2001 Stanford 6-1-1 19-2-1 UCLA 5-2-1 12-7-4
2002 UCLA 8-2-0 16-3-3 California 6-3-1 14-6-2
2003 UCLA 10-0-0 20-2-1 Oregon State 7-3-0 13-7-0
2004 UCLA 6-2-0 14-4-2 California 4-3-1 13-4-3
2005 UCLA 7-1-2 12-5-3 California 6-3-1 14-4-3
2006 California 7-3-0 13-6-1 San Diego State 5-2-3 9-6-4
2007 California 6-3-1 12-6-2 San Diego State
Stanford
UCLA
4-4-2 8-7-4
7-6-5
9-9-3
2008 UCLA 7-1-2 10-5-6 California 5-2-3 12-4-5
2009 UCLA 5-1-4 12-4-4 Oregon State 5-4-1 19-6-3
2010 California 8-1-1 14-2-4 UCLA 8-2-0 16-5-1
2011 UCLA 10-0-0 18-4-2 Washington 7-3-0 12-4-2
2012 UCLA 8-1-1 13-3-3 Washington 7-1-2 13-5-3
2013 Washington 7-1-2 16-2-4 UCLA 6-1-3 12-3-5
2014 Stanford 6-1-3 13-3-3 UCLA 6-2-2 14-4-6
2015 Stanford 7-1-2 18-2-3 UCLA 5-4-1 11-9-1
2016 Stanford 8-1-1 14-3-4 Washington 6-4-0 14-7-0
2016 Stanford 8-1-1 14-3-4 Washington 6-4-0 14-7-0
2017 Stanford 9-0-1 19-2-2 California 6-4-0 11-7-0

Note: Not all Pac-12 schools field a men's soccer team. For example, USC.

Bold text indicates National Champion

Women's soccer

The conference established women's soccer as a sponsored sport beginning in the 1995 academic year.

Conf Ovrl Conf Ovrl
Season Champion W–L–T W–L–T Runner–Up W–L–T W–L–T
1993 Stanford 3-1-0 18-3-1 UCLA 2-1-0 10-6-1
1995 Stanford 7-0-0 16-4-0 UCLA 5-2-0 14-4-2
1996 Stanford 6-1-0 12-9-0 California
Washington
5-2-0 13–3–2
12–8–0
1997 UCLA 9-0-0 19-3-0 USC 7-2-0 16-3-1
1998 California
UCLA
USC
7-2-0 13-8-0
17-4-1
14-7-1
Washington 6-3-0 10-9-1
1999 Stanford 7-1-1 15-5-1 USC 7-2-0 14-6-0
2000 Washington 8-1-0 18-3-0 California 7-2-0 17-3-1
2001 UCLA 8-1-0 20-3-0 Stanford 6-2-1 15-4-2
2002 Stanford 9-0-0 21-2-0 UCLA 8-1-0 18-4-0
2003 UCLA 8–0–1 20–2–3 Arizona State 6–2–1 13–5–3
2004 UCLA
Arizona
6–3–0
6–3–0
17–6–0
15–6–0
Washington 5–3–1 17–5–1
2005 UCLA 7–0–2 22–2–2 California 7–1–1 16–4–2
2006 UCLA 8–1–0 17–3–0 Oregon 6–1–2 12–6–2
2007 UCLA 9–0–0 18–1–2 USC 6–2–1 16–3–2
2008 UCLA 9–0–0 22–0–2 Stanford 8–1–0 22–1–1
2009 Stanford 9–0–0 22–0–0 UCLA 8–1–0 19–2–1
2010 Stanford 9–0–0 22–0–2 Oregon 3–5–1 7–10–3
2011 Stanford 11–0–0 25–0–1 UCLA 8–1–2 16–1–4
2012 Stanford 11–0–0 21–2–1 UCLA 8–2–1 18–3–2
2013 UCLA 9–0–2 22–1–3 Washington State 7–3–1 14–3–4
2014 UCLA 10–0–1 21–1–2 Stanford 9–1–1 20–2–2
2015 Stanford 10–0–1 19–2–2 USC 9–2–0 15–5–2
2016 Stanford 10–1–0 18–2–1 USC 8–2–1 18–4–2
2017 Stanford 11–0–0 24–1–0 UCLA 8–2–1 20–3–2

Bold text indicates National Champion

Women's volleyball

Indoor

Year Team Conf Overall Runner-up
W L Pct W L Pct
1986UCLA1710.94431100.756Stanford
1987Stanford1710.9442970.806UCLA
1988UCLA1801.0003410.971Stanford
1989UCLA1801.0003030.909Washington
Stanford
1990UCLA1801.0003610.973Stanford
1991Stanford1801.0003020.938UCLA
1992UCLA1801.0003310.971Stanford
1993UCLA1710.9443020.938Stanford
ASU
1994Stanford1710.9443210.970UCLA
1995Stanford1801.0002930.906WSU
UCLA
1996Stanford1710.9443120.935WSU
1997Stanford1801.0003320.942USC
Washington
1998Stanford1710.9442740.871USC
1999Stanford
UCLA
1710.94431
28
3
4
0.912
0.875
N/A
2000USC
Arizona
1620.88929
28
3
5
0.906
0.848
N/A
2001Stanford1710.9443320.943USC
2002USC1710.9443110.969Stanford
2003USC1801.0003501.000Stanford
2004Washington1620.8892830.903Stanford
2005Washington1710.9443210.903Stanford
Arizona
2006Stanford1620.8893040.882UCLA
Washington
2007Stanford1620.8893230.914Washington
2008Stanford1710.9443140.886Washington
2009Stanford1440.7782380.742Washington
UCLA
2010California
Stanford
1530.83330
27
4
4
0.882
0.871
N/A
2011USC2020.9092950.853UCLA
2012Stanford1910.9503040.882Oregon
2013Washington1820.9003030.909Stanford
2014Stanford1910.9503310.971Washington
2015USC
Washington
1820.90033
31
3
3
0.917
0.912
N/A
2016Washington1640.8002950.853Stanford
2017Stanford1910.9503040.882Washington
2018Stanford2001.0003410.971California

Bold text indicates National Champion

Beach

The Pac-12 first sponsored beach volleyball in the 2016 season (2015–16 school year). According to the Pac-12, the conference "did not record official league standings during the inaugural season of Beach Volleyball." To this day, the conference has never recorded official league standings in the sport. The regular season is followed by a conference tournament, with championships held both for pairs and teams (consisting of five pairs).[22]

Year Team Conf Overall Runner-up Tournament winner
W L Pct W L Pct
2016USC701.000342.944ArizonaUSC
2017USC901.000381.974UCLAUSC
2018UCLA91.900404.909USCUCLA
2019UCLA101.909353.921USCUSC

Bold text indicates National Champion.

Wrestling

Year Team Conference Membership
1963Arizona StateFull Member
1964UCLAFull Member
1965Oregon StateFull Member
1966Oregon StateFull Member
1967Oregon StateFull Member
1968Oregon StateFull Member
1969Oregon StateFull Member
1970Oregon StateFull Member
1971WashingtonFull Member
1972Washington
Oregon State
Full Member
Full Member
1973Oregon StateFull Member
1974WashingtonFull Member
1975OregonFull Member
1976Oregon StateFull Member
1977Oregon StateFull Member
1978Oregon StateFull Member
1979Oregon StateFull Member
1980Arizona StateFull Member
1981OregonFull Member
1982OregonFull Member
1983Oregon StateFull Member
1984Oregon StateFull Member
1985Arizona StateFull Member
1986Arizona StateFull Member
1987Arizona StateFull Member
1988Arizona State (National Champions)Full Member
1989Arizona StateFull Member
1990Arizona StateFull Member
1991Arizona StateFull Member
1992Oregon StateFull Member
1993Arizona StateFull Member
1994Oregon StateFull Member
1995Arizona StateFull Member
1996Cal State BakersfieldAffiliate
1997Arizona StateFull Member
1998Arizona StateFull Member
1999Boise StateAffiliate
2000Boise StateAffiliate
2001Arizona StateFull Member
2002Boise StateAffiliate
2003Arizona StateFull Member
2004Boise StateAffiliate
2005Arizona StateFull Member
2006Arizona StateFull Member
2007Oregon StateFull Member
2008Boise StateAffiliate
2009Boise StateAffiliate
2010Oregon StateFull Member
2011Boise StateAffiliate
2012Oregon StateFull Member
2013Oregon StateFull Member
2014Oregon StateFull Member
2015Oregon StateFull Member
2016Oregon StateFull Member
2017Arizona StateFull Member
2018Arizona StateFull Member
2019StanfordFull Member
gollark: Anyway, `++fortune` has been "upgraded" with fortunes from:
gollark: I found Python nicer to work with because of the insane amount of libraries and looser typing.
gollark: It's in one global data file.
gollark: We can monitor your activity via ++list_deleted.
gollark: Why do you need a bot basically developed for esolangs on there?

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