It’s safe to say that the MEAC is one of the more competitive mid-major basketball conferences in the country.
But what are the best jobs in the conference? And more importantly, why?
The college basketball website Field of 68 ranked the MEAC jobs based on an anonymous survey of votes from the league’s eight coaches to determine how much schools supported their programs.
Norfolk State sits in the top chair
Norfolk State claimed the No. 1 spot with 92 points and eight first-place votes, finishing just ahead of Howard’s 88 points and four first-place nods.
Voters cited the Spartans’ financial backing and infrastructure as the main separator, calling Norfolk State the program with “the most money, most NIL and the best facilities in the league.”

Those same respondents pointed to institutional advantages baked into geography and league politics.
The MEAC conference tournament is played in Norfolk, and the league offices are also based in the city, giving the Spartans unique visibility and a sense of stability that few peers can match.
Why Howard nearly claimed No. 1
Howard’s case for the top job in the league rests on prestige, reach and momentum.
One evaluator praised the school’s “outstanding reputation and history of notable alums, academic prowess, athletic success, Jordan Brand Sponsorship, facilities, alumni giving, geographic location and most recently NIL and collective deals.”
Another voter framed the appeal around “its location, academics and university culture, the brand,” noting that the same rigorous standards that enhance Howard’s profile can also narrow the candidate pool for both players and coaches.

Even so, the Bison’s blend of institutional clout, corporate alignment and an expanding NIL operation keeps them firmly in the MEAC’s top tier.
How the rest of the league stacks up
Behind the two headliners, the poll slotted Morgan State third at 68 points, followed by North Carolina Central with 54.
Delaware State checked in at 46, Coppin State at 34, Maryland Eastern Shore at 32 and South Carolina State at 18 to round out the eight-league table.
The spread between Norfolk State and Howard at the top and the rest of the conference underscores a widening gap in perceived job quality.
As NIL money, facilities upgrades and institutional investment continue to shape the coaching marketplace, the MEAC’s internal hierarchy could harden — or be disrupted by a program willing to close that resource gap.
What the rankings say about MEAC hoops
The results paint a picture of a league where off-court infrastructure weighs heavily in how insiders view coaching jobs.
Money, NIL support and facilities elevated Norfolk State, while brand power, academics and corporate partnerships pushed Howard into striking distance of the top spot.

For programs in the middle and lower half of the rankings, the message is clear: to climb, they must invest.
In a conference where the tournament and league offices already sit in one program’s backyard, the battle to upgrade resources and modernize operations will likely define who challenges Norfolk State and Howard for MEAC supremacy in the years ahead.
