Texas State University is joining the Pac-12 Conference in 2026.
The decision follows a vote by the university’s board of regents on Monday to leave the Sun Belt Conference after a dozen years of competition.
University President Kelly Damphousse said in a statement Monday that the move to a new conference goes beyond athletics, calling it “a declaration of our rising national profile, our commitment to excellence, and our readiness to compete and collaborate with some of the most respected institutions in the country.”
The move is just the latest realignment in college athletic conferences. The University of Texas and University of Oklahoma are coming off their first year competing in the Southeastern Conference.
After a mass exodus to the Big 12, the Big 10 and the ACC, the Pac-12 was down to just two teams (Oregon State and Washington State) for the 2024-2025 season. The conference expects to expand to eight football-playing programs, the minimum number required to compete in the College Football Playoff, ahead of the 2026-2027 season.
“Texas State has shown a commitment to competing and winning at the highest level as well as to providing student-athletes with a well-rounded college experience academically, athletically and socially,” Commissioner Teresa Gould said in a statement today from the Pac-12. “We look forward to seeing the Bobcats’ future trajectory continue to shine big and bright.”
See here for the background. Still kind of boggles my mind that Texas State went from FCS to even a diminished PAC-12 in little more than a decade, but that’s college sports (mostly football) for you these days. The wheel is ever spinning, and it continues at smaller conferences and brand new ones as well. ESPN and The Athletic have more.