Quebec Student Sport Federation
Quebec Student Sport Federation (Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec) (RSEQ) | |
---|---|
Established | 1971 |
Association | U Sports |
Members | 8 |
Region | Quebec |
Former names |
Quebec Universities Athletic Association Quebec Student Sports Federation |
Headquarters | Montréal, Quebec |
Commissioner | Alain Roy |
Website | sportetudiant.com/ |
The Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec (RSEQ; literal translation: Quebec Student Sports Network) is the current name for the organisation formerly known as the Quebec Student Sports Federation (QSSF) in English. RSEQ is the governing body of primary and secondary school, collegiate and university sport in Quebec. It also serves as 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 RSEQ, which covers Quebec, is one of four such bodies that are members of the country's governing body for university athletics, U Sports. The other three regional associations coordinating university-level sports in Canada are Ontario University Athletics (OUA), Atlantic University Sport (AUS), and the Canada West Universities Athletic Association (CWUAA).
The RSEQ was initially known as the Quebec Universities Athletic Association (QUAA) when it was founded in 1971 with the reformulations of three university athletic associations spanning the universities of Ontario and Quebec. After the merger between the university, collegiate and high school governing bodies in 1989, the amalgamated association was named to the QSSF and then renamed RSEQ in November 2010.
As with all of Canada's provincial high school athletics associations, the RSEQ is an affiliate member of the United States-based National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS).
Member schools
U Sports member schools
Institution | Nickname | Location (Quebec) |
Founded | Type | Enrollment | Endowment | Joined |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bishop's University | Gaiters | Lennoxville | 1843 | Public | 2,724 | $32.5M | |
Concordia University | Stingers | Montreal | 1896 | Public | 45,954 | $120.4M | 1974 |
Université Laval | Rouge et Or | Quebec City | 1663 | Public | 37,591 | $108.3M | |
McGill University | Redmen | Montreal | 1821 | Public | 34,819 | $1.27B | 1974 |
Université de Montréal | Carabins | Montreal | 1878 | Public | 58,482 | $189.2M | 1971 |
Université du Québec à Montréal | Citadins | Montreal | 1969 | Public | 41,325 | --- | 1971 |
Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières | Patriotes | Trois-Rivières | 1969 | Public | 12,500 | --- | 1971 |
Université de Sherbrooke | Vert et Or | Sherbrooke | 1954 | Public | 35,000 | --- | 1971 |
Non-U Sports member schools
Note: The following universities below are not members of U Sports, and are solely RSEQ members and participate in certain sports.
Institution | Nickname | Location (Quebec) |
Founded | Type | Enrollment | Endowment | Joined |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
École de technologie supérieure | Piranhas | Montreal | 1974 | Public | 6,300 | ||
Université du Québec à Chicoutimi | Inuk | Chicoutimi | 1959 | Public | 6,583 | ||
Université du Québec en Outaouais | Torrents | Gatineau | 1981 | Public | 6,017 | ||
Université du Québec à Rimouski | Nordets | Rimouski | 1969 | Public | ~5,400 |
CCAA member schools
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.
Facilities | ||||||||
Institution | Football Stadium | Seated Capacity | Basketball Arena | Seated Capacity | Hockey Arena | Seated Capacity | Soccer Stadium | Seated Capacity |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Concordia | Concordia Stadium | 4000 | Concordia Gymnasium | 750 | Ed Meagher Arena | 1000 | Concordia Stadium | 4000 |
Laval | PEPS stade extérieur | 12,257* | PEPS gymnase | 2500 | No Hockey | -- | PEPS soccer fields | -- |
UQAM | No Football | -- | UQAM Centre sportif | 600 | No Hockey | -- | terrain # 2 of Complexe sportif Claude-Robillard | 1000 |
McGill | Molson Stadium | 25,012 | Love Competition Hall | 1500 | McConnell Arena | 950 | Molson Stadium | 25,012 |
Bishop's | Coulter Field | 2200 | John H. Price Sports Centre | 1400 | W.B. Scott Arena | 1200 | Coulter Field | 2200 |
Montréal | CEPSUM Stadium | 5100 | No Basketball | -- | Aréna du CEPSUM | 2460 | CEPSUM Stadium | 5100 |
UQTR | No Football | -- | No Basketball | -- | Colisée de Trois-Rivières | 2700 | Stade de l'UQTR | 1500 |
Sherbrooke | Stade de l'UdeS | 3359 | No Basketball | -- | No Hockey | -- | Stade de l'Université de Sherbrooke | 3359 |
(*Laval's PEPS stade extérieur has an official seated capacity of 12,257 although it has held a standing room crowd of over 18,000 and as such is often listed as having a maxiumum capacity of 18,000.)
(Data mined from the U Sports homepage's member directory[1] and WorldStadiums.com.[2] The members directory numbers seem to be ballpark figures in some cases.)
See also
Associations
Leagues
- Quebec University Football League
- Hockey collégial féminin RSEQ
- U Sports football
- Canadian Interuniversity Sport women's ice hockey
- Canadian Interuniversity Sport men's soccer
- Canadian Interuniversity Sport women's soccer
References
- ↑ CIS directory Archived July 27, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ World Stadiums.com
External links
- (French) Official website