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The first tier of intercollegiate sports in the United States includes sports that are sanctioned by one of the collegiate sport governing bodies. The major sanctioning organization is the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Before mid-1981, women's top-tier intercollegiate sports were solely governed by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW). Smaller colleges are governed by the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA). Two-year colleges are governed by the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) in most of the country, except for the unaffiliated California Community College Athletic Association (CCCAA) and Northwest Athletic Conference (NWAC).
The second tier consists of competition between student clubs from different colleges, not organized by and therefore not formally representing the institutions or their faculties. This tier is also considered to be "intercollegiate" sports. Many of these sports have governing bodies that operate only at the collegiate level, such as the NCRHA. Other sports are governed by their national governing body, for example, USA Ultimate. College sports originated as student activities.
Intercollegiate Team Champions of Non-NCAA and Non-AIAW Sports in the United States:
- The championships below were bestowed by the governing bodies of specific collegiate sports in years when the sport lacked official varsity status in the NCAA (which many still lack) or in the AIAW (and the DGWS that preceded it).
- Women's rugby and equestrian are currently on the NCAA list of "Emerging Sports."[1][2]
- Some sports (particularly women's sports) championships that are currently sanctioned by the NCAA were previously administered by a single-sport governing body (e.g., rifle, women's ice hockey, women's water polo).
- At some colleges, some of these sports operate at a club level outside of any athletic department. On the other hand, some teams have been accorded varsity status within their schools' athletic programs. Generally, there is no strict separation during competition, but there are exceptions (e.g., Varsity Equestrian since 2006, as it seeks official NCAA status).
- This list is reserved for champions of sports in which the NCAA did not also recognize a champion in a given year. Thus, non-varsity and/or club-level champions are excluded for sports that had a contemporary NCAA champion (e.g., men's ice hockey, alpine skiing) or other collegiate varsity-level champion (e.g., IRA rowing).
- Two exceptions are (1) women's fencing (the NCAA has not offered a women-only team championship since 1989) and (2) women's bowling (the long-established US Bowling Congress championship has co-eminence).
Key to initialism Some schools in this list are more commonly known by their initials.
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Key to location The locations of some schools in this list are not obvious from their names.
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Adventure Racing
editUnited States Adventure Racing Association
Mixed teams unless indicated otherwise.
Year | Champion[3] |
2007 | Garrett College (MD)[4] (men's) |
2009 | University of Miami (FL)[5] |
2012 | The Citadel |
2013 | Texas A&M |
2014 | Garrett College |
2015 | n/a |
2016 | n/a (no entries)[6] |
[7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15]
USA Archery
edit
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Overall Team | |
Year | Champion |
2015 | Texas A&M |
2016 | Texas A&M |
2017 |
US Collegiate Archery
edit(preceded by National Archery Association)
The inaugural U.S. intercollegiate archery championships were held in November 1967 at Arizona State University with individual competition only.[20] The second such event was in May 1969. Team titles were not bestowed, although team scores were kept.
Outdoor Target
editYear | Recurve, Women | Recurve, Men | Recurve, Mixed | Year | Recurve, Women | Recurve, Men | Recurve, Mixed | |
1969 | Arizona State (unofficial) | Arizona State (unofficial) | Arizona State (unofficial) | 1982 | James Madison[21] | Arizona State | Arizona State[22] | |
1970 | Arizona State | Los Angeles Pierce College | Arizona | 1983 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1971 | Arizona State | San Bernardino Valley College | Arizona State | 1984 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1972 | Arizona State | San Bernardino Valley College | Palomar CC (CA) | 1985 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1973 | Riverside City College (CA) | San Bernardino Valley College | San Bernardino Valley College | 1986 | Arizona State | Arizona State[23] | Arizona State | |
1974[24] | San Bernardino Valley College | Arizona State | Arizona State | 1987 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1975[25] | Arizona State | San Bernardino Valley College | East Stroudsburg State | 1988 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1976 | Arizona State | East Stroudsburg State | Arizona State | 1989 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1977 | Arizona State | East Stroudsburg State | Washington | 1990 | James Madison[21][26] | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1978 | Arizona State | Akron | Arizona State | 1991 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1979 | Arizona State | Cal State Los Angeles[27] | Arizona State | 1992 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1980 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 1993 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | |
1981 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 1994 | Arizona State[28] | James Madison (inferred)[29] | ? |
Junior College and 2-Year College Division (discontinued before 1985)
Year | Recurve, Women | Recurve, Men | Recurve, Mixed |
1977 | Glendale CC (AZ) | Colorado Northwestern | Atlantic CC (NJ) |
1978 | Glendale CC | Colorado Northwestern | Atlantic CC |
1979 | Glendale CC | Palomar College (CA)[30] | Cypress College (CA) |
1980 | Phoenix College | Atlantic CC | Phoenix College |
1981 | Pima CC (AZ)[31] | Palomar College | Palomar College |
1982 | Palomar College | Colorado Northwestern | ?[22] |
1983 # | ? | ? | ? |
1984 # | ? | ? | ? |
# News reports of USIAC results in 1983 and 1984 mention only four-year schools. In 1985, two- and four-year schools are combined in the reported USIAC standings.
Recurve and Compound Bow
Year | Recurve, Women | Recurve, Men | Recurve, Mixed | Year | Compound, Women | Compound, Men | Compound, Mixed | |
1995[28][32][33] | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 1995 | James Madison ‡[28][34] | Texas A&M | James Madison †[34] | |
1996[33] | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 1996 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | |
1997[35] | James Madison | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 1997 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | |
1998 | Michigan State | Texas A&M | Michigan State | 1998 | James Madison | Penn College | James Madison[36] | |
1999[37] | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 1999 | James Madison | Penn College[38] | Texas A&M | |
2000[14] | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M † | 2000 | Texas A&M | James Madison | James Madison | |
2001[39] | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M † | 2001 | Texas A&M | James Madison | Texas A&M † | |
2002[40] | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 2002 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | |
2003[41][42] | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 2003 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | |
2004 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 2004 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | |
2005 | Columbia | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 2005 | Texas A&M | James Madison | Texas A&M | |
2006 | Stanford | Atlantic Cape CC (NJ) | Texas A&M † | 2006 | James Madison | James Madison | James Madison †[21] | |
2007 | Stanford | James Madison | James Madison | 2007 | Texas A&M | James Madison | James Madison | |
2008 | Columbia | James Madison | Texas A&M | 2008 | James Madison | Penn College | James Madison | |
2009[43][44] | Texas A&M | Penn College | Texas A&M | 2009 | Penn College | Atlantic Cape Community Coll. | Penn College | |
2010[45] | Texas A&M | Penn College | Texas A&M | 2010 | Penn State | Penn College | Penn State | |
2011[46] | Columbia | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 2011 | Diné College∗ | Texas A&M | James Madison | |
2012[47] | Texas A&M | Penn College | Arizona | 2012 | Texas A&M | Penn College | Texas A&M | |
2013[48] | Columbia | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | 2013 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | |
2014[49] | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Atlantic Cape CC (NJ) | 2014 | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | |
2015[50] | Florida | Northern Arizona | Long Beach State | 2015 | Cumberlands (KY) | Michigan State | Florida | |
2016[51] | UC Irvine | UC Irvine | UC Irvine | 2016 | Cumberlands (KY) | Northern Arizona | Cumberlands (KY) |
† There being a lack of specific citations for this mixed team title, the result was calculated based on the raw FITA round scores. (It appears that by 1995[28] the competition format added bracketed elimination rounds after the initial FITA rounds to determine the men's and women's champions, but not the mixed team titles.)
‡ Based on a news account, it appears that James Madison was the only team eligible for the women's compound bow team title, a new discipline in the 1995 USIAC.
∗ This is believed to be the first time a tribal college team has won the top-level intercollegiate national championship event in any sport.
Bow Hunter
In 2012 the USIAC began team competition in bow hunting.
Year | Bow Hunter, Women | Bow Hunter, Men | Bow Hunter, Mixed |
2012 | Penn. Coll. of Technology | Penn. Coll. of Technology | Penn. Coll. of Technology |
2013 | Penn. Coll. of Technology | Texas A&M | Penn. Coll. of Technology |
2014 | Michigan State | Michigan State | James Madison |
2015 | University of the Cumberlands | University of the Cumberlands | University of the Cumberlands |
2016 | University of the Cumberlands | University of the Cumberlands | University of the Cumberlands |
Basic Bow
Year | Basic Bow, Women | Basic Bow, Men | Basic Bow, Mixed |
2013 | n/a | Georgia Southern | n/a |
2014 | n/a | U of California–Irvine | Georgia Southern |
2015 | Georgia Southern | U of California–Irvine | Georgia Southern |
2016 | U of California–Irvine | U of California–Irvine | U of California–Irvine |
3D Target
edit
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Bowhunter | |||
Year | Men | Women | Mixed |
2014 | n/a | n/a | Southeastern Illinois College |
2015 | Univ. of the Cumberlands | Univ. of the Cumberlands | Mississippi College |
2016 | Univ. of the Cumberlands | Southeastern Illinois College | Union College |
Compound | |||
Year | Men | Women | Mixed |
2014 | n/a | n/a | Univ. of the Cumberlands |
2015 | Union College (KY) | Univ. of the Cumberlands | Union College |
2016[54] | Madisonville Comm. College (KY) | Univ. of the Cumberlands | Union College |
National Archery Association
editTelegraphic or Mail Tournament (Women Recurve)[55]
National Archery Association (1930 - at least 1973)
|
[65][66][67][68][69][70][71][72][73][74][75][76]
Women's championships administered by DGWS (1970-72) / AIAW (1973-82) are included for completeness.
All others administered by American Badminton Association (later named U.S. Badminton Assn., now USA Badminton).
Year | Men | Women | Mixed Team | Year | Men | Women | Mixed Team | Year | Men | Women | Mixed Team | ||
1970 | Long Beach State | 1991 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2012 | |||||||
1971 | Arizona State | 1992 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2013 | UC Berkeley[77] | ||||||
1972 | Pasadena City College | 1993 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2014 | |||||||
1973 | Pasadena City College | 1994 | ? | ? | ? | 2015 | UC Berkeley[78] | ||||||
1974 | Long Beach State | 1995 | ? | ? | Howard[79] | 2016 | USC[80] | ||||||
1975 | Cal State–Dominguez Hills[81] | Arizona State | 1996 | George Washington | Bryn Mawr College | Bryn Mawr College (PA) | 2017 | ||||||
1976 | San Diego State[82] | Arizona State | 1997[83] | Stanford[84] | 2018 | ||||||||
1977 | UCLA | UCLA | 1998 | Stanford[85] | 2019 | UC Berkeley[86] | |||||||
1978 | Arizona State | Arizona State | 1999[87] | Stanford | Stanford | Stanford[88] | 2020 | ||||||
1979 | Cal State–Dominguez Hills[89] | Arizona State | 2000 | ? | ? | UC Berkeley[90] | 2021 | ||||||
1980 | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2001 | Howard University (DC) | UC San Diego | UC San Diego[91] | 2022 | ||||||
1981 | UCLA[92] | Arizona State | 2002 | ? | ? | Howard[93] | 2023 | ||||||
1982 | UCLA[92] | Northern Illinois | 2003[94] | UC San Diego | UC San Diego | UC San Diego | 2024 | ||||||
1983 | Arizona State | Wisconsin | Arizona State | 2004 | ? | ? | UC Irvine[95][96] | 2025 | |||||
1984 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2005[94] | UC San Diego | UC San Diego | UC San Diego | 2026 | |||||
1985 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2006[94] | UC San Diego | UC San Diego | UC San Diego | 2027 | |||||
1986 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2007 | UC Irvine[97] | ? | UC Irvine[96] | 2028 | |||||
1987 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2008[97] | UC Irvine | UC Berkeley | UC Irvine[96] | 2029 | |||||
1988 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2009 | ? | ? | UC Berkeley | 2030 | |||||
1989 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2010[98] | UC Berkeley | UC Berkeley | not awarded | 2031 | |||||
1990 | Arizona State | Arizona State | Arizona State | 2011[99] | Purdue | Illinois-Urbana | not awarded | 2032 |
Intercollegiate Badminton Association, a league founded in 2007, held a few competitions starting in 2008 and faded for lack of members.[100][101]
Year | Men | Women | Mixed Team |
2008 | Purdue | Bryn Mawr College | ? |
2009 | Illinois-Chicago | Pennsylvania | Pennsylvania |
Association of College Unions International
(ACUI) has conducted intercollegiate billiards tournaments since 1933.[102] See the ACUI website[103] for the list of men's and women's individual champions since 1937.
(1936–38 telegraphic)
Year | Straight rail | Three-cushion | |
1936[59] | Michigan | Purdue | Cornell |
1937[60] | Wisconsin | Cornell | Iowa State |
1938[61] | Florida | Cornell | Wisconsin |
19?? | ? | ? | ? |
United States Bowling Congress (American Bowling Congress 1975–1977, ABC/WIBC 1977–2005, USBC 2005–)
Men[104] | ||||||||||
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||||
1975 Wisconsin–La Crosse | 1984 Buffalo State | 1993 Wichita State | 2002 Western Illinois | 2011 Fresno State[105] | 2021 Wichita State[106] | |||||
1976 South Carolina | 1985 Wisconsin–La Crosse | 1994 Wichita State | 2003 Wichita State | 2012 Webber International (Florida)[107] | 2022 Wisconsin–Whitewater[108] | |||||
1977 West Liberty (West Virginia) | 1986 Erie Community College (NY) | 1995 Wichita State | 2004 Kansas | 2013 Robert Morris–Illinois[109] | 2023 Wichita State[110] | |||||
1978 Minnesota | 1987 Wichita State | 1996 Nebraska | 2005 Lindenwood (Missouri) | 2014 Lindenwood[111] | 2024 Webber International[112] | |||||
1979 California | 1988 Erie Community College | 1997 Saginaw Valley State | 2006 Saginaw Valley State | 2015 Wichita State[113] | ||||||
1980 Wichita State | 1989 Cal State-Fullerton | 1998 Wichita State | 2007 Saginaw Valley State | 2016 McKendree (IL)[114] | ||||||
1981 Arizona State | 1990 Nebraska | 1999 Western Illinois | 2008 Wichita State | 2017 Webber International[115] | ||||||
1982 Washington State | 1991 Saginaw Valley State (Michigan) | 2000 West Texas A&M | 2009 Wichita State | 2018 McKendree[116] | ||||||
1983 Vincennes (Indiana) | 1992 William Paterson (NJ) | 2001 Western Illinois | 2010 Wichita State[117] | 2019 Webber International[118] |
2017 title won by Webber International was vacated due to use of a player who was ineligible for competition.
United States Bowling Congress (Women's International Bowling Congress 1975–1977, ABC/WIBC 1977–2005, USBC 2005– )
Women[104] | ||||||||||
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||||
1975 Wichita State | 1984 Indiana State | 1993 William Paterson (NJ) | 2002 Morehead State | 2011 Maryland Eastern Shore[105] | 2021 Wichita State[106] | |||||
1976 San Jose State | 1985 West Texas State | 1994 Wichita State | 2003 Central Missouri State | 2012 Webber International[107] | 2022 Stephen F. Austin (Texas)[108] | |||||
1977 Wichita State | 1986 Wichita State | 1995 Nebraska | 2004 Pikeville (Kentucky) | 2013 Maryland Eastern Shore[109] | 2023 McKendree[110] | |||||
1978 Wichita State | 1987 West Texas State | 1996 West Texas State | 2005 Wichita State | 2014 Robert Morris–Illinois[111] | 2024 Wichita State[112] | |||||
1979 Penn State | 1988 West Texas State | 1997 Nebraska | 2006 Lindenwood (Missouri) | 2015 North Carolina A&T[113] | ||||||
1980 Erie Community College (NY) | 1989 Morehead State (Kentucky) | 1998 Morehead State | 2007 Wichita State | 2016 Webber International[114] | ||||||
1981 Arizona State | 1990 Wichita State | 1999 Nebraska | 2008 Pikeville | 2017 McKendree (IL)[119] | ||||||
1982 Erie Community College | 1991 Nebraska | 2000 Morehead State | 2009 Wichita State | 2018 Lindenwood[116] | ||||||
1983 West Texas State | 1992 West Texas State | 2001 Nebraska | 2010 Webber International (Florida)[117] | 2019 Robert Morris–Illinois[118] |
Starting in 2004, the NCAA has sponsored a women's team championship, apart from the USBC national championships.
2020 edition was canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic.[120]
[121][122]
National Collegiate Boxing Association
Preceded by NCAA championships, 1932–1960
Men
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||||
1976 Nevada | 1985 US Air Force Academy | 1994 US Air Force Academy | 2003 US Air Force Academy | 2012 US Military Academy | 2021∗ No tournament held | |||||
1977 West Chester State College (PA) | 1986 US Air Force Academy | 1995 US Air Force Academy | 2004 US Air Force Academy | 2013 US Military Academy | 2022 US Military Academy | |||||
1978 Nevada | 1987 US Naval Academy | 1996 US Naval Academy | 2005 US Naval Academy | 2014 US Military Academy | 2023 US Air Force Academy | |||||
1979 West Chester State College | 1988 US Air Force Academy | 1997 US Naval Academy | 2006 Nevada-Las Vegas | 2015 Nevada | 2024 US Naval Academy | |||||
1980 US Air Force Academy | 1989 US Air Force Academy | 1998 US Naval Academy | 2007 Lock Haven University (PA) | 2016 US Military Academy | ||||||
1981 US Air Force Academy | 1990 US Air Force Academy | 1999 US Air Force Academy | 2008 US Military Academy | 2017 US Military Academy | ||||||
1982 West Chester University | 1991 Nevada | 2000 US Air Force Academy | 2009 US Military Academy | 2018 US Military Academy | ||||||
1983 US Air Force Academy | 1992 US Air Force Academy | 2001 US Air Force Academy | 2010 US Military Academy | 2019 US Military Academy | ||||||
1984 US Air Force Academy | 1993 Nevada | 2002 US Air Force Academy | 2011 US Military Academy | 2020∗ No tournament held |
Women
Year | Champion |
2014 | Washington[123] |
2015 | Washington[124] |
2016 | Washington[125] |
2017 | US Military Academy[126] |
2018 | US Military Academy[127] |
2019 | US Naval Academy[128] |
2020 | No tournament held∗ |
2021 | |
2022 | US Naval Academy |
2023 | US Military Academy |
2024 | US Military Academy |
United States Intercollegiate Boxing Association
Year | Men | Women |
2013[129] | UC Davis | US Military Academy |
2014[130][131] | Michigan | US Military Academy |
2015[132] | Virginia Military Institute | Michigan |
2016[133] | Olivet College (MI) | Michigan |
2017[133] | Michigan | Michigan |
2018[133] | Illinois | Michigan |
2019[134] | Illinois | Georgetown |
2020 | No tournament held∗ | |
2021 | ||
2022 | Virginia Military Institute[135] | Illinois[136] |
2023 | Illinois[137] | UC Riverside[138] |
2024[139] | Washington | Washington |
Flatwater
editUSA Canoe/Kayak
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | ||||
1978 St. Mary's College (Maryland)[141] | 2004 Stanford | 2008 Georgia Tech | 2012 Oklahoma City University[142][143] | 2016 ? | ||||
2001 Georgia Tech[144][145] | 2005 Stanford[146] | 2009 Georgia Tech | 2013 North Georgia[147] | 2017 | ||||
2002 Stanford[148] | 2006 Georgia Tech[149] | 2010 Georgia Tech[150] | 2014 North Georgia[151] | 2018 | ||||
2003 Stanford[152] | 2007 Georgia Tech | 2011 Georgia Tech[153][154] | 2015 ? | 2019 |
Downriver
editAmerican Canoe Association
Year | Men | Women |
2007[155] | Albion College (MI)† | |
2008 | Albion College[156] | |
2009 | Albion College | |
2010 | Albion College[157] | |
shifted from fall 2011 to spring 2012 | ||
2012 | Albion College[158] | |
2013 | Warren Wilson (NC)[159] | |
2014 | Warren Wilson | Warren Wilson |
shifted from spring (2015) to fall (2014 and thereafter) | ||
2014[160] | Warren Wilson | Albion College |
2015 | Penn State[155] | Warren Wilson[161] |
2016 | Penn State | Warren Wilson |
† In 2007 all other competitors withdrew because of rough river conditions.
Year | Champion |
2009 | Central Florida |
2010 | Central Florida |
2011 | Central Florida[162] |
2012 | Texas[163] |
2013 | Texas[164] |
2014 | Texas[165] |
2015 | Colorado State[166] |
2016 | Colorado State[167] |
2017 | |
2018 | |
2019 | |
2020 | |
2021 | |
2022 | Utah[168] |
2023 | Utah[169] |
2024 | Utah[170] |
Intercollegiate Cricket Association (1881–1924)
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | ||||
1881[171] | no award[172][173] | 1890 | Pennsylvania, Haverford, Harvard[174][175] | 1899 | Harvard[176] | 1908 | Pennsylvania[177] | 1917 | not played (WWI)[178] | ||||
1882 | Pennsylvania[179] | 1891 | Pennsylvania[180] | 1900 | Pennsylvania[173][181] | 1909 | Pennsylvania[182][183] | 1918 | not played (WWI)[184] | ||||
1883 | Pennsylvania[185] | 1892 | Pennsylvania, Haverford, Harvard[180] | 1901 | Pennsylvania[186][187] | 1910 | Haverford[188] | 1919 | Haverford[189] | ||||
1884 | Haverford[172][185] | 1893 | Haverford[173][190] | 1902 | Haverford[191] | 1911 | Pennsylvania[192] | 1920 | Pennsylvania[193] | ||||
1885 | Pennsylvania[173][194] | 1894 | Harvard[195] | 1903 | Pennsylvania, Haverford, Harvard[196] | 1912 | Pennsylvania[197] | 1921 | not played[198][199] | ||||
1886 | Pennsylvania | 1895 | Haverford[195] | 1904 | Haverford[173][200][201][202][203] | 1913 | Pennsylvania[204] | 1922 | Pennsylvania, Haverford[205] | ||||
1887 | Pennsylvania | 1896 | Haverford[173][206] | 1905 | Haverford[173][207][208][209] | 1914 | Pennsylvania[210] | 1923 | Haverford[211][212] | ||||
1888 | Pennsylvania | 1897 | Harvard[213] | 1906 | Pennsylvania, Haverford, Cornell[173][209] | 1915 | Haverford[214][215] | 1924[216] | Haverford[217][218] | ||||
1889 | Pennsylvania | 1898 | Haverford[219] | 1907 | Pennsylvania[220] | 1916 | Haverford[214] |
Twenty20
editAmerican College Cricket
Year | Champion |
2009[221] | Montgomery College (MD)[222] |
2010 | York University (Toronto)[223] |
2011 | George Mason (VA)[224] |
2012 | York College (NY) |
2013 | Maryland–Baltimore County |
2014 | South Florida[225] |
2015 | University of Texas at Dallas[226] |
2016 | South Florida[227] |
2017 | Ryerson[228] |
2018 | Virginia Tech |
2019 | West Virginia |
[229][230][231][232][233][234][235][236][237][238][239]
United States Croquet Association
American Rules (Six-Wicket)
Golf Croquet
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US College Curling National Championship
Prior to 2013, the championship was set up into "Experience" Divisions (Division I most experienced, Division V least experienced) with schools permitted entries in more than one division. Entry into the championship tournament was open to any team until the division bracket was full. Starting in 2013 there is a single national champion; entry is by invitation to the top sixteen schools in the country based on Merit Points earned in competition during the year.[257] In all cases there is no gender breakdown; teams can consist of any combination of men and women players.
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | |
1992 | Wisconsin–Eau Claire | |||
1993 | ? | 1999 | ? | |
1994 | ? | 2000 | ? | |
1995 | ? | 2001 | ? | |
1996 | ? | 2002 | ? | |
1997 | ? | 2003 | ? | |
1998 | ? | 2004 | ? |
Year | Division I | Division II | Division III | Division IV | Division V |
2005 | Green Bay | Marquette | Marquette | Oakland | Lawrence Tech |
2006 | Washington | Boston University | Minnesota–Duluth | Oakland | Purdue |
2007 | Multi-school team | Boston University | Wisconsin–Stevens Point | RIT | Hamilton (NY) |
2008 | Wisconsin–Eau Claire | Northwestern | Hamilton (NY) | Hamilton (NY) | |
2009 | Minnesota | Hamilton (NY) | Tennessee | Northwestern | |
2010 | Wisconsin–Oshkosh | Northwestern | Northwestern | Carroll (WI) | |
2011 | MIT | Villanova | Northwestern | Bowdoin | |
2012 | Not contested[258] |
Year | Champion | Runner-up | Third | Fourth | Fifth |
2013 | Minnesota | St. Benedict/St. John's (MN) | MIT | Boston University | |
2014 | Green Bay | Villanova | Carroll (WI) | MIT | |
2015 | Wisconsin–Stevens Point | Penn | MIT | RIT | Boston University |
2016[259] | Penn | Minnesota | MIT | Colgate | Hamilton (NY) |
2017 | Minnesota | Nebraska | Wisconsin–Stevens Point | Penn | St. Norbert |
2018 | Wisconsin–Stevens Point | Nebraska | Yale | Penn | RIT |
2019 | North Dakota State | SUNY Poly | MIT | Yale | Syracuse |
2020 | Not Contested | ||||
2021 | Not Contested | ||||
2022 | Wisconsin - Stevens Point | University of Pennsylvania | Wisconsin - Superior | Harvard | North Dakota State University |
2023 | University of Pennsylvania[260] | Princeton | North Dakota State University |
National Collegiate Disc Golf Union
Year | Men's Champion | Women's Champions |
2007 | Georgia[261] | |
2008 | Georgia | |
2009 | Mississippi State | |
2010 | Augusta State† | |
2011 | Oregon | |
2012 | Colorado State | Mississippi State |
2013 | Tennessee Tech | Mississippi State |
2014 | Georgia Regents† | Humboldt State |
2015 | Ferris State | Cal State Monterey Bay |
2016 | Augusta† | Cal State Monterey Bay |
2017 | ||
2018 | ||
2019 | ||
2020 | Not contested | |
2021 | Georgia[262] | Ferris State[263] |
2022 | Missouri[264] | Missouri[265] |
2023 | Cincinnati[266] | Missouri[267] |
2024 | Charlotte[268] | Liberty[269] |
† different names for same school
National Collegiate Dodgeball Association
Year | Champion |
2005 | Ohio State University[270] |
2006 | Ohio State University |
2007 | Grand Valley State |
2008 | Grand Valley State |
2009 | Grand Valley State[271] |
2010 | Grand Valley State[272] |
2011 | Central Michigan[273] |
2012 | Saginaw Valley State |
2013 | Grand Valley State[274] |
2014 | Grand Valley State |
2015 | Grand Valley State |
2016 | Grand Valley State[275] |
2017 | Grand Valley State |
2018 | Grand Valley State |
2019 | Towson University |
2020 | Canceled Due to COVID-19 Pandemic |
2021 | Canceled Due to COVID-19 Pandemic |
2022 | Grand Valley State |
2023 | Michigan State University |
Equestrian became an NCAA Emerging Sports for Women in 2002.
Sources:[276][277][278][279][280][281][282][283][284][285][286][287][288][289][290][291][292][293][294][295][296]
English
editYear and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||
1971 Stony Brook | 1985 Southern Seminary College | 1999 Skidmore College | 2013 Tie: St. Lawrence University and Skidmore College | |||
1972 Connecticut | 1986 Mount Holyoke College (MA) | 2000 Mount Holyoke College | 2014 Centenary College[297] | |||
1973 St. Lawrence University (NY) | 1987 Southern Seminary College | 2001 University of Findlay (OH) | 2015 Savannah College of Art and Design (GA)[298] | |||
1974 Bennett College (NY) | 1988 Southern Seminary College | 2002 Ohio University | 2016 Savannah College of Art and Design[299] | |||
1975 Massachusetts | 1989 Tie: Colby-Sawyer College (NH) and Penn State | 2003 Stonehill College (MA) | 2017 Savannah College of Art and Design | |||
1976 St. Lawrence University | 1990 Skidmore College (NY) | 2004 Virginia Intermont | 2018 Skidmore College | |||
1977 St. Lawrence University | 1991 Skidmore College | 2005 Virginia Intermont | 2019 Emory & Henry College (Va.) | |||
1978 Centenary College (NJ) | 1992 Virginia | 2006 Mount Holyoke College | 2020 - Championship not held (COVID-19) - | |||
1979 Centenary College | 1993 Hollins College (VA) | 2007 Virginia Intermont | 2021 - Championship not held (COVID-19) - | |||
1980 Stony Brook | 1994 Colby-Sawyer College | 2008 Kentucky | 2022 Emory & Henry College (Va.)[300] | |||
1981 Southern Seminary College (VA) | 1995 Skidmore College | 2009 Centenary College | 2023 | |||
1982 Southern Seminary College | 1996 Skidmore College | 2010 Skidmore College | 2024 | |||
1983 Southern Seminary College | 1997 Delaware | 2011 Centenary College | 2025 | |||
1984 Southern Seminary College | 1998 Hollins College | 2012 St. Lawrence University | 2026 |
Note: Emory & Henry College absorbed Virginia Intermont College's equestrian program when it closed at the end of the 2013–14 academic year. All championships from both colleges are credited to the program as "Intermont Equestrian at Emory & Henry College."
The championship showcases the American Forward Riding System and the sporting horse. Judged on equitation as a three-phase competition, competitors complete a dressage sportif ride, an outdoor hunter trials course and a USEF Medal-type hunter seat equitation course. Riders ride the same horse throughout the competition, and jumps do not exceed 3 feet in height.
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | ||||
1978 - Sweet Briar College (VA) | 1987 - Sweet Briar College | 1996 - St. Andrews Presbyterian College (NC) | 2005 - Savannah College of Art and Design (GA) | 2014 - Savannah College of Art and Design[301] | ||||
1979 - Sweet Briar College | 1988 - Sweet Briar College | 1997 - St. Andrews Presbyterian College | 2006 - Savannah College of Art and Design | 2015 - Savannah College of Art and Design[302] | ||||
1980 - Sweet Briar College | 1989 - Sweet Briar College | 1998 - St. Lawrence University (NY) | 2007 - St. Andrews Presbyterian College | 2016 - Centenary College[303] | ||||
1981 - Virginia | 1990 - Sweet Briar College | 1999 - Sweet Briar College | 2008 - Savannah College of Art and Design | 2017 - | ||||
1982 - Virginia | 1991 - Virginia | 2000 - St. Andrews Presbyterian College | 2009 - Savannah College of Art and Design | 2018 - | ||||
1983 - Virginia | 1992 - Virginia | 2001 - St. Andrew's Presbyterian College | 2010 - Savannah College of Art and Design[304] | 2019 - | ||||
1984 - Virginia | 1993 - Virginia | 2002 - St. Andrew's Presbyterian College | 2011 - Savannah College of Art and Design[305] | 2020 - | ||||
1985 - Virginia | 1994 - Virginia | 2003 - Savannah College of Art and Design | 2012 - Savannah College of Art and Design | 2021 - | ||||
1986 - Sweet Briar College | 1995 - Virginia | 2004 - Virginia Intermont College | 2013 - Centenary College (NJ) | 2022 - |
Note: Emory & Henry College absorbed Virginia Intermont College's equestrian program when it closed at the end of the 2013–14 academic year. All championships from both colleges are credited to the program as "Intermont Equestrian at Emory & Henry College."
Dressage
editIntercollegiate Dressage Association Archived 2013-12-09 at the Wayback Machine
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||
2002 Mount Holyoke College (MA) | 2007 Virginia Intermont College | 2012 Johnson & Wales University (RI)[306] | 2017 Averett University | |||
2003 Mount Holyoke College | 2008 Mount Holyoke College | 2013 Mount Holyoke College[307] | 2018 Emory & Henry College | |||
2004 Mount Holyoke College | 2009 New Hampshire | 2014 Virginia Intermont College[308] | 2019 Otterbein University | |||
2005 Lake Erie College (OH) | 2010 Virginia Intermont College[309] | 2015 Emory & Henry College (Va.)[310] | 2020 - Championship not held (COVID-19) - | |||
2006 Virginia Intermont College | 2011 Lake Erie College[311] | 2016 Emory & Henry College[312] | 2021 - Championship not held (COVID-19) - |
Note: Emory & Henry College absorbed Virginia Intermont College's equestrian program when it closed at the end of the 2013–14 academic year. All championships from both colleges are credited to the program as "Intermont Equestrian at Emory & Henry College."
Western
editAmerican Quarter Horse Association
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | ||||
1979 & 1980 Miami University (OH) | 1989 Michigan State | 1996 Ohio State | 2005 University of Findlay (OH) | 2014 Ohio State[297] | ||||
1981 Murray State (KY) | 1990 Western Kentucky (tie) | 1997 Ohio State | 2006 Ohio State | 2015 Berry College[298] | ||||
1982 Miami University | 1990 Michigan State (tie) | 1998 New Mexico State | 2007 University of Findlay | 2016 St. Andrews University (NC)[299] | ||||
1983 Ball State (IN) | 1991 Ohio State | 1999 Ohio State | 2008 Ohio State | 2017 | ||||
1984 Morehead State (KY) | 1992 Ohio State | 2000 Oklahoma State | 2009 University of Findlay | 2018 | ||||
1985 Murray State | 1993 Ohio State | 2001 University of Findlay | 2010 University of Findlay | 2019 | ||||
1986 Otterbein College (OH) | 1994 Colorado State (tie) | 2002 Texas A&M and Ohio State (tie)[313][314] | 2011 Berry College (GA)[314] | 2020 | ||||
1987 Midway College (KY) | 1994 Texas A&M (tie) | 2003 Texas A&M and West Texas A&M (tie)[315] | 2012 Oregon State | 2021 | ||||
1988 Ball State | 1995 New Mexico State | 2004 Texas A&M | 2013 West Texas A&M | 2022 |
Multidisciplinary
edit- National Collegiate Equestrian Association
A Varsity Equestrian championship is held each year among colleges and universities competing at the varsity level. Because equestrian has two unique disciplines, through 2013 this event crowned a national champion in each of three areas: Western, Hunter Seat and Overall.
Year | Western | Hunter Seat | Overall | Year | Western | Hunter Seat | Overall | |
2002 | West Texas A&M | Georgia | Texas A&M | 2014 | N/A | N/A | Georgia | |
2003 | Oklahoma State | Georgia and Stonehill (MA) | Georgia | 2015 | N/A | N/A | South Carolina | |
2004 | Oklahoma State | Georgia | Georgia | 2016 | N/A | N/A | Auburn[316] | |
2005 | Texas A&M | South Carolina | South Carolina | 2017 | N/A | N/A | Texas A&M | |
2006 | Oklahoma State | South Carolina | Auburn | 2018 | Auburn | Auburn | Auburn | |
2007 | Texas A&M | South Carolina | South Carolina | 2019 | Auburn | Auburn | Georgia | |
2008 | TCU | Auburn | Georgia | 2020 | cancelled (pandemic) | |||
2009 | Texas A&M | Georgia | Georgia | |||||
2010[317] | Texas A&M | Georgia | Georgia | |||||
2011[318] | Texas A&M | Auburn | Auburn | |||||
2012 | Texas A&M | Baylor | Texas A&M | |||||
2013 | Oklahoma State | Auburn | Auburn |
Year | Dual Discipline | Single Discipline Jumping Seat |
2021 | Georgia | Sweet Briar |
2022 | Oklahoma State | Lynchburg |
2023 | SMU | Lynchburg |
2024 |
National Intercollegiate Women's Fencing Association (NIWFA), (IWFA 1929-63)
Team Foil
NIWFA title competition was held in addition to the AIAW championship from 1980 to 1982 and the NCAA women's championship from 1982 to 1989. Starting in 1990, the NCAA has sponsored a combined men's and women's team championship, declaring one overall combined champion. NIWFA membership in 2018 consisted of 20 schools. There were 41 schools with women's varsity programs in all divisions of the NCAA, as of 9/1/09. Most, if not all, NIWFA member schools are members of the NCAA.
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||||
1964[319] Paterson State College (NJ) | 1974 Cal State-Fullerton | 1984 St. John's * (NY) | 1994 Princeton | 2004 Temple (PA) | 2014 Temple | |||||
1965 Paterson State College | 1975 San Jose State | 1985 St. John's * | 1995 Princeton | 2005 Temple | 2015 Temple | |||||
1966 Paterson State College | 1976 San Jose State | 1986 Temple * | 1996 Rutgers (NJ) | 2006 Temple | 2016 Temple | |||||
1967 Cornell | 1977 San Jose State | 1987 Temple * | 1997 Temple | 2007 Temple | 2017 Temple | |||||
1968 Cornell | 1978 San Jose State | 1988 Temple * | 1998 Fairleigh Dickinson (NJ) | 2008 Temple | 2018 Temple | |||||
1969 Cornell | 1979 San Jose State | 1989 Temple * | 1999 Temple | 2009 Temple | 2019 Temple | |||||
1970 Hunter College (NY) | 1980 Penn State (also won AIAW) | 1990 Paterson State College | 2000 Temple | 2010 Temple | 2020 Temple | |||||
1971 New York University | 1981 St. John's (AIAW: Penn State) | 1991 Temple | 2001 Temple | 2011 Temple | 2021 cancelled | |||||
1972 Cornell University | 1982 Yale * (also won AIAW) | 1992 Cornell | 2002 Temple | 2012 Temple | 2022 Temple | |||||
1973 Cornell | 1983 Yale * | 1993 Cornell | 2003 Temple | 2013 Temple | 2023 |
* did not win NCAA women’s championship (held 1982-89)
Team Épée, Team Sabre, Combined Weapon
Year | Team Épée | Team Sabre | Combined (Foil, Épée, Sabre) |
1995 | Princeton | -- | |
1996 | James Madison (VA) | Temple (PA) † | |
1997 | Johns Hopkins (MD) | Temple † | |
1998 | Temple | Temple † | |
1999 | Temple | Temple † | |
2000 | Temple | Tufts (MA) | Temple |
2001 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
Div III: US Military Academy | |||
2002 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
Div III: Johns Hopkins | |||
2003 | Temple | Tufts | Temple |
2004 | Temple | US Military Academy | Temple |
2005 | Fairleigh Dickinson (NJ) | Drew (NJ) | Temple |
2006 | Drew | Tufts | Temple |
2007 | Stevens Institute of Technology (NJ) | Temple | Temple |
2008 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
2009 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
2010 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
2011 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
2012 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
2013 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
2014 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
2015 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
2016 | Stevens Institute | Temple | Temple |
2017 | Temple | Johns Hopkins | Temple |
2018 | Stevens Institute | Johns Hopkins | Temple |
2019 | Temple | Johns Hopkins | Temple |
Div III: Johns Hopkins | |||
2020 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
2021 | cancelled (pandemic) | ||
2022 | Temple | Temple | Temple |
† Foil and Épée only
US Figure Skating[320]
Year | Champion |
2000 | Miami University |
2001 | Miami University |
2002 | University of Delaware |
2003 | Cornell University |
2004 | Dartmouth College |
2005 | Dartmouth College |
2006 | Dartmouth College |
2007 | Dartmouth College |
2008 | Dartmouth College |
2009 | Boston University |
2010 | Boston University |
2011 | University of Delaware |
2012 | Dartmouth College |
2013 | University of Delaware |
2014 | University of Delaware |
2015 | University of Delaware |
2016 | University of Delaware |
2017 | Boston University |
2018 | Boston University |
2019 | Boston University |
2022 | Boston University |
2023 | Boston University |
Bass Fishing (two-person team)
FLW Outdoors College Series
Year | Champion |
2010 | University of Florida[321] |
2011 | University of Florida[322] |
2012 | Kansas State University[323] |
2013 | University of Louisiana-Monroe[324] |
2014 | University of Minnesota[325] |
2015 | University of South Carolina |
2016 | University of South Carolina |
2017 | Kansas State University |
2018 | University of Louisiana-Monroe[326] |
2019 | Murray State University[327] |
2020 | Stephen F. Austin[328] |
2021 | Drury University[329] |
2022 | East Texas Baptist University[330] |
2023 | University of Montevallo[331] |
2024 | Adrian College[332] |
Bassmaster College Bass Fishing Series
Year | Champion |
2005 | Stephen F. Austin |
2006 | Arkansas Tech |
2007 | Virginia Tech |
2008 | Arkansas Little Rock |
2009 | North Carolina State |
2010 | Eastern Kentucky |
2011 | Stephen F. Austin |
2012 | Oklahoma State |
2013 | Auburn Montgomery (AUM) |
2014 | UNC Charlotte |
2015 | Texas A&M |
2016 | Kansas State |
2017 | Bryan College (TN) |
2018 | Bethel University[333] |
2019 | Bethel University[334] |
2020 | Bryan College[335] |
2021 | Adrian College[336] |
2022 | Coastal Carolina[337] |
2023 | Auburn[338] |
2024 | Lander University[339] |
Association of Collegiate Anglers, Cabela's Collegiate Bass Fishing Series[340]
Year | Champion |
2006 | North Carolina State |
2007 | Texas A&M |
2008 | Arkansas |
2009 | Murray State |
2010 | Georgia |
2011 | UCF |
2012 | North Carolina State |
2013 | Bethel (TN) |
2014 | Georgia |
2015 | Northern Kentucky |
2016 | Auburn |
2017 | North Alabama |
2018 | Bethel |
2019 | Bethel[341] |
2020 | Bryan College[342] |
2021 | Texas Christian[343] |
2022 | Wallace State[344] |
2023 | Auburn[345] |
2024 | North Alabama[346] |
Saltwater Fishing
An intercollegiate deep-sea fishing championship was held from 1956 through 1975 off of Wedgeport, Nova Scotia. Yale University won in 1956.[347][348][349][350] Beginning in 1974, Coastal Carolina University has hosted an annual intercollegiate invitational fishing tournament.[351]
American Collegiate Intramural Sports and Fitness
Year | Men | Women | Co-Rec |
1979 | Central Florida[352] | ||
1980 | Louisiana State | Southeastern Louisiana | |
1981 | New Orleans | Louisiana State | |
1982 | New Orleans | Texas - Austin | |
1983 | New Orleans | Texas - Austin | |
1984 | Southeastern Louisiana | New Orleans | |
1985 | New Orleans | Texas - Austin | Northeast Louisiana |
1986 | New Orleans | Georgia Tech | West Virginia |
1987 | Southeastern Louisiana | New Orleans | Southwestern Louisiana |
1988 | Southern Mississippi | Georgia Tech | New Orleans |
1989 | Florida | Georgia Tech | Southeastern Louisiana |
1990 | Southeastern Louisiana | Georgia Southern | North Carolina State |
1991 | Southeastern Louisiana | New Orleans | North Carolina State |
1992 | Delgado Community College | Georgia Southern | Northeast Louisiana |
1993 | West Florida | Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico | Northeast Louisiana |
1994 | South Florida | Florida | Louisiana State |
1995 | Southern University - New Orleans | Alabama | Northeast Louisiana |
1996 | Ohio State | Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico | Nebraska |
1997 | Ohio State | Instituto Politecnico Nacional | Northeast Louisiana |
1998 | Delgado Community College | Instituto Politecnico Nacional | North Carolina State |
1999 | Nunez Community College | Instituto Politecnico Nacional | North Florida |
2000 | Nunez Community College | Instituto Politecnico Nacional | North Florida |
2001 | South Florida | Instituto Politecnico Nacional | Florida |
2002 | Southern University - Baton Rouge | Instituto Politecnico Nacional | Florida |
2003 | Nunez Community College | Stephen F. Austin State | Connecticut |
2004 | Georgia Southern | Southern University - Baton Rouge | Central Florida |
2005 | Pensacola Junior College | Sam Houston State | Tarleton State |
2006 | Iowa | West Florida | Louisiana - Monroe |
2007 | Florida | Florida A&M | North Carolina - Chapel Hill |
2008 | North Florida | West Florida | North Texas |
2009 | Central Florida | Florida A&M | North Carolina - Charlotte |
2010 | Kentucky | Florida A&M | Angelo State |
2011 | Florida | Florida A&M | Central Florida |
2012 | Kennesaw State | Florida A&M | Angelo State[352] or Nebraska[353] |
National Intramural-Recreational Sports Association
Year | Men | Women | Co-Rec |
2006-07[354] | Texas-Pan American[355] | Sam Houston State (TX) | University of West Florida |
2007-08 | North Carolina - Charlotte | Florida A&M | North Carolina - Charlotte |
2008-09 | Central Florida | Central Florida | Angelo State (TX) |
2009-10 | North Carolina A&T | Florida A&M | Central Florida |
2010-11 | North Carolina A&T | Florida A&M | Central Florida |
2011-12[353] | Central Florida | Florida A&M[356] | Central Florida |
2012-13 | Nebraska | Florida A&M | Angelo State |
2013-14 | Kennesaw State (GA) | Central Florida | Angelo State |
2014-15 | Valdosta State (GA) | Central Florida | Valdosta State |
2015-16[357] | Valdosta State | Central Florida | Angelo State |
These competitions were part of the CBS Sports "Collegiate Nationals " and "Alt Games" presentations.
Year | Champion |
2007 | individual |
2008 | Mesa College (CA)[358] |
2009 | Mesa College[359] |
2010 | ? |
2011 | San Diego State[360] |
National Intercollegiate Flying Association
- Aircraft type certificated as Airplane-Single Engine Land only.
- No more than four (4) place.
- Maximum horsepower-250 bhp.
- May not be equipped with an after-market short take-off and landing modification.
- Contestants acting as pilot-in-command in flying events must possess at least a Private Pilot certificate with appropriate category and class ratings.
- Contestants who hold or have ever held an Airline Transport Pilot certificate or have accumulated more than 1500 total flight hours are not eligible to compete.
Flying events:
- Power Off Landing
- Short Field Approach and Landing
- Navigation
- Message Drop
- IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) Precision Flight
- IFR Simulated Flight
- CRM/LOFT (Crew Resource Management/Line Oriented Flight Training)
SAFECON Championship Trophy
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | |||||
1966 | San Jose State | 1976 | Northeastern | 1986 | North Dakota | 1996 | North Dakota | 2006 | North Dakota | 2016 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott)[363] | |||||
1967 | Parks College of Saint Louis University | 1977 | Southern Illinois | 1987 | North Dakota | 1997 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott) | 2007 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott) | 2017 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott)[364] | |||||
1968 | San Jose State | 1978 | Southern Illinois | 1988 | North Dakota | 1998 | Western Michigan | 2008 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott) | 2018 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott)[365] | |||||
1969 | San Jose State | 1979 | Southern Illinois | 1989 | North Dakota | 1999 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott) | 2009 | North Dakota | 2019 | North Dakota[366] | |||||
1970 | Iowa State | 1980 | ? | 1990 | North Dakota | 2000 | North Dakota | 2010 | North Dakota | 2020 | Cancelled[367] | |||||
1971 | Oklahoma State | 1981 | Southern Illinois | 1991 | North Dakota | 2001 | North Dakota | 2011 | Southern Illinois | 2021 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott)[368] | |||||
1972 | Broward Junior College | 1982 | Southern Illinois | 1992 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Daytona) | 2002 | Western Michigan | 2012 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott) | 2022 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott)[369] | |||||
1973 | Louisiana Tech | 1983 | Western Michigan | 1993 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott) | 2003 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott) | 2013 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott) | 2023 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott)[370] | |||||
1974 | Southwest Missouri State | 1984 | Southern Illinois | 1994 | North Dakota | 2004 | North Dakota | 2014 | Southern Illinois | 2024 | North Dakota[371] | |||||
1975 | Oklahoma State | 1985 | North Dakota | 1995 | North Dakota | 2005 | Embry Riddle Aeronautical (Prescott) | 2015 | Southern Illinois | 2025 |
[372][373][374][375][376][377][378][379][380]
US Handball Association
From 1953 to 1980 only a men's title was awarded. Women participated in a non-scoring method in 1980. From 1981 through 1986 women contributed to a combined team championship, the only title given. In 1987 two championships — a men's and a women's — were established. In 1988, the current men-women-combined championships were established.
Year | Men | Women | Overall |
1953 | Illinois-Navy Pier, University of Detroit (tie) | ||
1954 | University of Detroit | ||
1955 | University of Texas | ||
1956 | University of Texas | ||
1957 | University of Texas | ||
1958 | Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Notre Dame (tie) | ||
1959 | Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute | ||
1960 | University of Texas | ||
1961 | Michigan State | ||
1962 | University of Minnesota | ||
1963 | University of Texas | ||
1964 | University of Texas | ||
1965 | University of Texas | ||
1966 | University of Texas | ||
1967[381] | University of Texas | ||
1968 | University of Texas | ||
1969 | University of Miami (FL) | ||
1970 | University of Texas | ||
1971 | University of Texas, Lake Forest College (tie) | ||
1972 | University of Texas | ||
1973 | Montana | ||
1974 | Lake Forest College (IL) | ||
1975 | Lake Forest College | ||
1976 | Lake Forest College | ||
1977 | Memphis State | ||
1978 | Lake Forest College | ||
1979 | Lake Forest College | ||
1980 | Lake Forest College | ||
1981 | Lake Forest College, University of Texas (tie) | ||
1982 | Lake Forest College | ||
1983 | Lake Forest College | ||
1984 | Lake Forest College | ||
1985 | Texas A&M | ||
1986 | Memphis State | ||
1987[382] | Memphis State | University of Texas | -- |
1988 | Memphis State | Texas A&M | Lake Forest College |
1989 | Memphis State | Texas A&M | Texas A&M |
1990 | Memphis State | Texas A&M | Texas A&M |
1991 | Memphis State | Texas A&M | Texas A&M |
1992 | Memphis State | Texas A&M | Texas A&M |
1993 | Memphis State | Southwest Missouri State | Southwest Missouri State |
1994 | Southwest Missouri State | Texas A&M | Southwest Missouri State |
1995 | Southwest Missouri State | Southwest Missouri State | Southwest Missouri State |
1996 | Southwest Missouri State | Southwest Missouri State | Southwest Missouri State |
1997 | Southwest Missouri State | Southwest Missouri State | Southwest Missouri State |
1998 | Lake Forest College | Southwest Missouri State | Southwest Missouri State |
1999 | Lake Forest College | Southwest Missouri State | Southwest Missouri State |
2000 | Lake Forest College | Southwest Missouri State | Lake Forest College |
2001 | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College |
2002 | Texas A&M | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College |
Year | Men | Women | Overall | Division II |
2003 | Texas A&M | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Hardin Simmons |
2004 | Dublin Institute of Technology | Lake Forest College | Southwest Missouri State | -- |
2005 | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Hardin Simmons |
2006 | Lake Forest College | Missouri State | Missouri State | Florida |
2007 | Missouri State | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Southwestern University |
2008 | Missouri State | Missouri State | Missouri State | Florida |
2009 | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Florida |
2010[383] | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Minnesota State |
2011[384] | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Minnesota State |
2012[384] | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Angelo State |
2013 | Lake Forest College | Missouri State | Lake Forest College | Pacific University |
Division I | Division II | Division III | |||||||
Year | Men | Women | Combined | Men | Women | Combined | Men | ||
2014 | Lake Forest College | Missouri State | Lake Forest College | Michigan State | Western Washington | Pacific University (OR) | n/a | ||
2015[385] | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Lake Forest College | Stony Brook University | Angelo State | Texas A&M | Dublin City University | ||
Open Division | A Division | B Division | |||||||
Year | Men | Women | Combined | Men | Women | Combined | Men | ||
2016[386] | University of Limerick (Ireland) | Texas | Lake Forest College | Texas A&M | Pacific University | Pacific University | Colorado School of Mines | ||
2017 | University of Limerick (Ireland) | Missouri State | Missouri State | Stony Brook University | Pacific University | Pacific University | Michigan State | ||
2018 | Lake Forest College | Missouri State | Missouri State | Pacific University | Pacific University | Pacific University | Minnesota | ||
2019 | Minnesota State | Missouri State | Missouri State | Minnesota | Texas A&M | ||||
2020 | Missouri State | Missouri State | Missouri State | Arizona State | Pacific University | ||||
2021 | Cancelled | Cancelled | Cancelled | ||||||
2022 | Minnesota State | Missouri State | Minnesota State | Utah State | Utah State | Texas A&M | Angelo State | ||
2023 | Minnesota State | Missouri State | Minnesota State | Wisconsin-Milwaukee | Texas A&M | Utah State | Utah State | ||
2024 | Minnesota State | Minnesota State | Minnesota State | Texas A&M | Angelo State | Angelo State[387] |
National Collegiate Gaelic Athletic Association
Year | Champion |
2011 | Indiana[388][389] |
2012 | Purdue[390][391] |
2013 | UC–Berkeley[392] |
2014 | Montana–Missoula[393] |
2015 | Montana–Missoula[394] |
2016 | Connecticut |
National Collegiate Karate Association
Year | Kata | Kumite (Men) | Kumite (Women) |
1980 | New Orleans | New Orleans | |
1981 | Temple (PA) | Arizona State | |
1982 | Temple | Temple | |
1983 | Temple | Temple | |
1984 | Temple | U.C. Riverside | |
1985 | Temple | Temple | |
1986 | Temple | Temple | |
1987 | Temple | U.C. Riverside | |
1988 | Temple | Drexel (PA) | |
1989 | Drexel | Ohio State | |
1990 | Drexel | Arizona | |
1991 | Drexel | Mankato State (MN) | |
1992 | Alaska | Illinois | |
1993 | Delta State (MS) | Delta State | |
1994 | South Florida | Temple | |
1995 | South Florida | William & Mary (VA) | |
1996 | Temple | Temple | |
1997 | Northern Colorado | Drexel | |
1998 | Drexel | Drexel | Drexel |
1999 | Louisiana State | Louisiana State † | No women's team title |
2000 | Louisiana State | Louisiana State † | Tulane † |
2001 | Tulane (LA) | Drexel † | Penn State† |
2002 | Drexel | Louisiana State | Tulane |
2003 | Penn State | Tulane | Penn State |
2004 | Penn State | Louisiana State | Drexel |
2005 ∗ | No tournament held | ||
2006 | Alaska | Alaska | No women's team title |
2007[397] | Penn State | Penn State | Penn State[398] |
2008[399] | Drexel | Drexel | Drexel |
2009[400] | Drexel | Drexel | Drexel |
2010[401] | Drexel | Ohio State | Minnesota |
2011[402] | Colorado | Ohio State | not held |
2012[403] | Drexel | ¶ | ¶ |
2013[404] | Ohio State | Penn State[405] | Brown |
2014[406] | Mesa Community College | Mesa Community College | Salve Regina |
2015[407] | Drexel | Mesa Community College (AZ)‡ | |
2016[408] | Drexel | Brown | Salve Regina |
2017 |
† In 1999, 2000 and 2001, the kumite competition included brown belts in addition to black belts.
∗ Hurricane Katrina caused cancellation.
¶ 2012 results do not mention team titles for kumite.
‡ Official results state that the championship title was for "Collegiate Team Kumite."
Schools that follow the ITF standards typically use the Chang Hon forms.
Year | Champion |
1983 | |
1985 | Wake Forest (NC) |
1987 |
US Orienteering Federation
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | ||||||
1973[409] Indiana Univ. of Pennsylvania | 1981 US Military Academy | 1989 US Military Academy | 1997 US Military Academy | 2005 US Military Academy | 2013 US Military Academy | 2021 Championship not held (COVID-19) | ||||||
1974 Ohio University | 1982 US Military Academy | 1990 US Military Academy | 1998 US Military Academy | 2006 US Military Academy | 2014 US Military Academy | 2022 US Military Academy | ||||||
1975 Indiana Univ. of Pennsylvania | 1983 Kansas | 1991 Bates College (ME) | 1999 US Military Academy | 2007 US Military Academy | 2015 US Military Academy | 2023 Washington | ||||||
1976 Indiana Univ. of Pennsylvania | 1984 Kansas | 1992 US Military Academy | 2000 US Military Academy | 2008 US Military Academy | 2016 US Military Academy | 2024 Montana | ||||||
1977 Lake Superior State University (MI) | 1985 US Military Academy | 1993 Washington | 2001 New Hampshire | 2009 US Military Academy | 2017 US Military Academy | 2025 | ||||||
1978 US Military Academy | 1986 US Military Academy | 1994 Washington | 2002 Washington | 2010 US Military Academy | 2018 US Military Academy | 2026 | ||||||
1979 US Military Academy | 1987 US Military Academy | 1995 US Military Academy | 2003 US Military Academy | 2011 US Military Academy[410] | 2019 US Military Academy | 2027 | ||||||
1980 US Military Academy | 1988 US Military Academy | 1996 US Military Academy | 2004 US Military Academy | 2012 US Military Academy | 2020 Championship not held (COVID-19) | 2028 |
[411][412][413][414][415][416][417][418]
Beginning with the 2011 championship, the Division AA competition switched to the Race To-2 format. Division A format is X-Ball.[419]
National Collegiate Paintball Association
Year | Division A | Division AA |
2000 | Illinois | |
2001 | Illinois | |
2002 | Illinois | |
2003 | Illinois | |
2004 | Purdue | |
2005 | Illinois | Arizona State |
2006 | Connecticut | UC Irvine |
2007 | Connecticut | Eastern Illinois |
2008 | Illinois State | Long Beach State |
2009 | Purdue | Wisconsin–Whitewater |
2010[420] | Drexel | East Tennessee State |
2011[421] | Tennessee | SUNY–Buffalo |
2012 | Long Beach State[422][423] | Florida Gulf Coast[424] |
2013 | Florida Gulf Coast[425] | Wisconsin–Platteville[426] |
2014 | Central Florida[427][428] | North Carolina State[429] |
2015 | Florida Atlantic[430] | East Carolina |
2016 | Texas A&M[431] | Wisconsin–Platteville[432] |
2017 | Central Florida[433] | South Florida[434] |
2018 | Liberty[435] | South Florida[434] |
2019 | Drexel[436] | Wisconsin-Milwaukee[437] |
US Parachute Association
The USPA National Collegiate Parachute Championships consist of both individual and team events. Individual events are classic accuracy, sport accuracy and freefall style. The team events are classic accuracy and formation diving (and before 2007, 2-person freefly diving). Schools other than the service academies have been competitive only in sport accuracy and freefly diving. In the Team Accuracy and Formation Skydiving events, multiple yearly entrants from the service academies have dominated. For example, in 2008, 6 USMA and 4 USAFA teams placed in the top 10 in team accuracy.
National Rifle Association
Year | Free Pistol | Standard Pistol | Air Pistol | Air Pistol (W) | Sport Pistol (W) | Aggregate-Open | Aggregate (W) |
1981[441] | Navy | Army | Army | ||||
1982 | Navy | Air Force | Air Force | ||||
1983 | Navy | Navy | Air Force | ||||
1984 | Navy | Texas–Arlington | Texas–Arlington | ||||
1985 | Navy | Army | Navy | ||||
1986 | Army | MIT | MIT | Army | |||
1987 | Navy | The Citadel | Navy | individual | Navy | ||
1988 | MIT | Navy | Navy | individual | Navy | ||
1989 | Air Force | Army | Navy | individual | Army | ||
1990 | Navy | Navy | Oregon State | individual | Navy | ||
1991 | Army | Navy | Navy | individual | Army | ||
1992 | Navy | Navy | Navy | individual | Navy | ||
1993 | Navy | Navy | Navy | individual | individual | Navy | |
1994 | Army | Air Force | The Citadel | Coast Guard | Coast Guard | Air Force | |
1995 | Navy | Navy | Navy | Navy | Navy | Navy | |
1996 | Navy | Navy | Army | MIT | MIT | Navy | |
1997 | Army | Navy | Navy | Army | Coast Guard | Army | |
1998 | Army | Navy | Army | MIT | Navy | Army | |
1999 | Air Force | Ohio State | Navy | MIT | Ohio State | Army | |
2000 | Ohio State | Ohio State | Navy | Ohio State | Ohio State | Ohio State | |
2001 | Ohio State | Navy | Army | Coast Guard | Coast Guard | Navy | Coast Guard |
2002 | Navy | Coast Guard | Coast Guard | MIT | Ohio State | Navy | Coast Guard |
2003 | The Citadel | Navy | Navy | Navy | Navy | Navy | Navy |
2004 | Navy | Army | Navy | Ohio State | Ohio State | Navy | Ohio State |
2005 | MIT | Ohio State | MIT | Ohio State | Ohio State | MIT | Ohio State |
2006 | Army | Utah | Army | Army | MIT | Army | Coast Guard |
2007 | Army | Navy | MIT | Ohio State | Navy | MIT | Navy |
2008 | Navy | Navy | Navy | Ohio State | Army | Navy | Army |
2009 | MIT | Army | Ohio State | Ohio State | Ohio State | Army | Ohio State |
2010 | Army | Army | Army | Navy | Navy | Army | Navy |
2011 | Ohio State | Army | Army | Navy | Navy | Army | Navy |
2012 | Navy | Army | Navy | Navy | Navy | Navy | Navy |
2013 | Navy | The Citadel | Army | Army | Navy | Army | Navy |
2014 | Navy | Ohio State | Army | MIT | Ohio State | Ohio State | MIT |
2015 | Utah | Ohio State | Utah | North Dakota State | MIT | Ohio State | MIT |
2016 | Ohio State | Ohio State | The Citadel | MIT | MIT | Ohio State | MIT |
US Polo Association
Year | Men | Year | Men | Year | Men | Year | Men | Year | Men | Women | Year | Men | Women | Year | Men | Women | Year | Men | Women | |||||||
19?? | ? | 1932 | Yale[447] | 1951 | Miami | 1963 | Cornell | 1975 | UC Davis[448] | ? | 1987 | Virginia[449] | Cornell | 1999 | Colorado State | Virginia[450] | 2011 | Virginia[451] | Cornell[452] | |||||||
1921 | Princeton[453] | 1933 | Harvard[56] | 1952 | New Mexico Military Institute [citation needed] | 1964 | 1976 | Xavier University[448] | Yale[450] | 1988 | Virginia | Cornell | 2000 | Texas A&M[449] | Cornell | 2012 | Virginia | Virginia[450][454] | ||||||||
1922 | Princeton[453] | 1934 | Princeton[57] | 1953 | 1965 | 1977 | Xavier University[448] | 1989 | Skidmore | 2001 | Texas A&M[449] | Cornell | 2013 | Westmont College (CA) | Virginia[450] | |||||||||||
1923 | Yale[455] | 1935 | US Military Academy[58] | 1954 | New Mexico Military Institute [citation needed] | 1966 | Cornell | 1978 | 1990 | Colorado State | Virginia[450] | 2002 | Virginia | Cornell | 2014[456] | Westmont College | Virginia[450] | |||||||||
1924 | Yale | 1936 | US Military Academy[59] | 1955 | Cornell | 1967 | 1979 | UC Davis[449] | Cornell[457] | 1991 | Colorado State | Cornell | 2003 | Virginia | Cornell | 2015[458] | Colorado State | Cornell | ||||||||
1925 | Yale[459] | 1937 | Cornell[60] | 1956 | Cornell | 1968 | 1980 | 1992 | Cornell | Virginia[450] | 2004 | Virginia | Cornell | 2016[460] | Texas A&M | Cornell | ||||||||||
1926 | Yale[461] | 1938 | Yale[61] | 1957 | Yale[449] | 1969 | 1981 | 1993 | Virginia | Virginia[450] | 2005 | Cornell | Connecticut | 2017 | Roger Williams[462] | Virginia | ||||||||||
1927 | Yale[463] | 19?? | ? | 1958 | Cornell | 1970 | 1982 | 1994 | Virginia | Texas A&M | 2006 | Texas Tech | Connecticut | 2018 | Texas A&M[464] | Texas A&M | ||||||||||
1928 | Pennsylvania Military College[465] | 1947 | ? | 1959 | Cornell | 1971 | Yale[449] | 1983 | 1995 | Virginia | Texas A&M | 2007 | Texas A&M | Connecticut | 2019[466] | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | |||||||||
1929 | Harvard[467] | 1948 | Miami (FL)[468] | 1960 | 1972 | Connecticut | 1984 | Cornell | 1996 | Texas A&M | Connecticut | 2008 | Texas A&M | Connecticut | 2020 | |||||||||||
1930 | Princeton[469] | 1949 | Miami | 1961 | Cornell | 1973 | Connecticut | 1985 | Cornell | 1997 | Texas A&M | Connecticut | 2009 | Virginia | Virginia[450] | 2021 | ||||||||||
1931 | Yale[470] | 1950 | Miami | 1962 | Cornell | 1974 | Connecticut | 1986 | Yale[449] | Cornell | 1998 | Texas A&M | Connecticut | 2010 | Texas A&M | Virginia[450] | 2022 | Virginia | Virginia |
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | |
1930 | Colgate[469] | 1935 | Yale[58] | |
1931 | Dartmouth[470] | 1936 | Dartmouth[59] | |
1932 | Yale (Eastern), Occidental (Pacific Coast)[447] | 1937 | Princeton[60] | |
1933 | Rutgers[56] | 1938 | Princeton[61] | |
1934 | Rutgers[57] | 19?? | ? |
Earlier national collegiate powerlifting championships are known to have been held during 1969 (at Florida State) and 1976 (at Ohio University).[471]
USA Powerlifting/American Drug Free Powerlifting Association
Year[472][473] | Men | Year | Women | Year | Combined | ||
1978 AAU | Louisiana Tech | ||||||
1979 AAU | ? | ||||||
1980 AAU | ? | ||||||
1981 | Kutztown | ||||||
1982 | Kutztown | ||||||
1983 | Texas A&M[474] | 1983 | ? | 1983 | ? | ||
1984 USPF | ? | 1984 | Louisiana Tech | 1984 | ? | ||
1985 USPF | Louisiana Tech | 1985 | Louisiana Tech | 1985 | Louisiana Tech | ||
1986 USPF | Louisiana Tech | 1986 | Louisiana Tech | 1986 | Louisiana Tech | ||
1987 | ? | 1987 | ? | 1987 | ? | ||
1988 | ? | 1988 | ? | 1988 | ? | ||
1989 | ? | 1989 | ? | 1989 | ? | ||
1990 | ? | 1990 | ? | 1990 | ? | ||
1991 ADFPA | Purdue | 1991 | Purdue | 1991 | Texas A&M | ||
1992 ADFPA | Texas | 1992 | Texas | 1992 | Texas A&M | ||
1993 ADFPA | East Stroudsburg | 1993 | East Stroudsburg | 1993 | Texas A&M | ||
1994 ADFPA | Evansville | 1994 (A) | Texas | 1994 (A) | Texas | ||
1994 USPF | Louisiana Tech | 1994 (U) | Louisiana Tech | 1994 (U) | Louisiana Tech | ||
1995 ADFPA | Evansville | 1995 (A) | Texas | 1995 (A) | Texas | ||
1995 USPF | Louisiana Tech | 1995 (U) | Louisiana Tech | 1995 (U) | Louisiana Tech | ||
1996 | Louisiana Tech | 1996 | Louisiana Tech | 1996 | Louisiana Tech | ||
1997[475] | Louisiana Tech | 1997 | Louisiana Tech | 1997 | Louisiana Tech | ||
1998 | Louisiana Tech | 1998 | Louisiana Tech | 1998 | Louisiana Tech | ||
1999 | Louisiana Tech | 1999 | Louisiana Tech | 1999 | Louisiana Tech | ||
2000 | Louisiana Tech | 2000 | Louisiana Tech | 2000 | Louisiana Tech | ||
2001 | Louisiana Tech | 2001 | Louisiana Tech | 2001 | Louisiana Tech | ||
2002 | Louisiana Tech | 2002 | Louisiana Tech | 2002 | Louisiana Tech | ||
2003 | Louisiana Tech | 2003 | Louisiana Tech | 2003 | Louisiana Tech | ||
2004 | Louisiana Tech | 2004 | Nicholls State | 2004 | Louisiana Tech[476][477] | ||
2005 | Louisiana Tech | 2005 | Nicholls State[478] | 2005 | Louisiana Tech | ||
2006[479] | Louisiana Tech | 2006 | Louisiana Tech | 2006 | Louisiana Tech | ||
2007[480][481] | LSU | 2007 | Louisiana Tech | 2007 | LSU | ||
2008 | Louisiana Tech | 2008 | LSU | 2008 | Louisiana Tech | ||
2009 | Louisiana–Lafayette | 2009 | LSU | 2009 | LSU | ||
2010[482] | Louisiana Tech | 2010 | Texas A&M[483] | 2010 | LSU[484] | ||
2011[485] | Louisiana–Lafayette | 2011 | LSU | 2011 | Official results after 2010 do not show combined titles. [486][487][488][489][490][491] | ||
2012 | LSU[492] | 2012 | Louisiana–Lafayette | 2012 | |||
2013 | Texas | 2013 | LSU | 2013 | |||
2014 | Texas | 2014 | UTSA | 2014 | |||
2015 | Texas A&M[474][466] | 2015 | UTSA | 2015 | |||
2016 * | UTSA (open) U.S. Military Academy (raw) |
2016 | Texas (open) Northeastern (raw) |
2016 | |||
2017 | Louisiana Tech (equipped) Texas A&M Kingsville (raw) |
2017 | UTSA (equipped) Rutgers (raw) |
2017 | |||
2018 | UTSA (equipped) Midland (raw) |
2018 | Texas (equipped) Rutgers (raw) |
2018 | |||
2019 | UTSA (equipped) Midland (raw)[493] |
2019 | Texas A&M (equipped)[466] Midland (raw)[493] |
2019 | |||
2020[493] | Midland (equipped) Midland (raw) |
2020 | Midland (equipped) Midland (raw) |
2020 | |||
2021[493] | Midland (equipped) Midland (raw) |
2021 | Midland (equipped) Midland (raw) |
2021 |
* In addition to the traditional equipped divisions, raw divisions were inaugurated for both men and women in 2016, with 12 women's and 14 men's teams entering the raw team competition.[494]
World Association of Benchers and Deadlifters
Year | Champion |
2008 | University of Houston-Downtown[495] |
2009 | University of Houston-Downtown[496] |
2010 | University of Houston-Downtown[497] |
US Racquetball Association
Division I and II championship competitions were separated in 2005.
Year | Men | Women | Year | Men | Women | Year | Men | Women | Overall | ||
1973[498] | Illinois | 1989 | Memphis State | Sacramento State | 2004 | Colorado State–Pueblo | Utah | Alabama[499] | |||
1974 | Tennessee | 1990 | Memphis State | Memphis State | 2005 | Colorado State–Pueblo | Alabama | Alabama[500] | |||
1975 | Memphis State[a] | Memphis State | 1991 | SW Missouri State | SW Missouri State | 2006 | Colorado State–Pueblo | Oregon State | Oregon State[501] | ||
1976 | Illinois | Memphis State | 1992 | SW Missouri State | SW Missouri State | 2007 | Colorado State–Pueblo | Arizona State | Alabama[502] | ||
1977 | Memphis State | Memphis State | 1993 | SW Missouri State | SW Missouri State | 2008[503] | Colorado State–Pueblo[504] | BYU | Oregon State[505] | ||
1978 | Memphis State | Memphis State | 1994 | SW Missouri State | Memphis State | 2009 | Colorado State–Pueblo | Oregon State | Oregon State[506] | ||
1979 | Memphis State | Memphis State | 1995 | Nichols (MA) | BYU | 2010[507] | Colorado State–Pueblo | Oregon State | Oregon State | ||
1980 | Memphis State | Memphis State | 1996 | Southern Colorado[b] | BYU | 2011[508] | Colorado State–Pueblo | Oregon State[509] | Oregon State | ||
1981 | Memphis State (team II) | Memphis State | 1997 | Florida | BYU | 2012 | Colorado State–Pueblo[510] | Oregon State[511] | Oregon State | ||
1982 | Memphis State | Florida | 1998 | Southern Colorado | BYU | 2013 | Oregon State | Oregon State | Oregon State | ||
1983 | Memphis State | Memphis State | 1999 | Southern Colorado | BYU | 2014[512] | Colorado State–Pueblo | Oregon State | Oregon State | ||
1984 | Memphis State | Memphis State | 2000 | Memphis | BYU | 2015 | Oregon State | Missouri | Oregon State[513] | ||
1985 | Memphis State | Memphis State | 2001 | Baldwin–Wallace | Texas | 2016 | Baldwin–Wallace | Oregon State | Oregon State[514] | ||
1986 | Memphis State | Sacramento State | 2002 | Baldwin–Wallace | BYU | 2017 | Baldwin-Wallace | Oregon State | Oregon State | ||
1987 | Memphis State | Sacramento State | 2003 | Memphis | BYU | 2018 | |||||
1988 | Memphis State | Sacramento State | 2019 | ||||||||
2023 | Oregon State | Baldwin-Wallace | Oregon State |
Division II
Year | Men | Women | Overall |
2005 | Utah Valley State | Clarkson | Clarkson[515] |
2006[516] | Clarkson | Baldwin–Wallace | Baldwin–Wallace |
2007 | Baldwin–Wallace | Baldwin–Wallace | Baldwin–Wallace |
2008 | Bryant[517] | ||
2009 | Clarkson[518] | ||
2010 | RPI | ||
2011 | Baldwin–Wallace | Clarkson | Clarkson[519] |
2012 | Baldwin–Wallace | Baldwin–Wallace | Baldwin–Wallace[520] |
2013 | Baldwin–Wallace | Shenandoah | Baldwin–Wallace[521] |
2014 | Baldwin–Wallace | Baldwin–Wallace | Baldwin–Wallace[522] |
2015 | Western Health Sciences | Baldwin–Wallace | RPI |
2016 | RIT | Baldwin–Wallace | RPI |
[523][524][525][526][527][528][529]
National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association
During 1960, the NIRA split into two organizations: the American Collegiate Rodeo Association (ACRA) with 13 member schools and the parent NIRA. The two reunited in 1961.
Men
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | ||||||
1949 Sul Ross State College (TX) | 1960 California Poly, San Luis Obispo | 1971 Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo | 1982 Sul Ross State | 1993 Southwestern Oklahoma State | 2004 Oklahoma Panhandle State | 2015 Tarleton State[530] | ||||||
1950 Sul Ross State College | 1961 Wyoming | 1972 Montana State | 1983 Sul Ross State | 1994 Vernon Regional Jr. College (TX) | 2005 Tarleton State | 2016 Feather River College (CA)[531] | ||||||
1951 Sul Ross State College | 1962 Sul Ross State College | 1973 Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo | 1984 Southwest Texas State | 1995 Montana State | 2006 West Texas A&M | 2017 Oklahoma Panhandle State[532] | ||||||
1952 Sul Ross State College | 1963 Casper College (WY) | 1974 Eastern New Mexico | 1985 Southwestern Oklahoma State | 1996 College of Southern Idaho | 2007 Ranger College (TX) | 2018 Oklahoma Panhandle State | ||||||
1953 Hardin-Simmons (TX) | 1964 Casper College | 1975 Montana State | 1986 Western Texas College | 1997 Oklahoma Panhandle State | 2008 Walla Walla Community College (WA) | 2019 Panola College (TX) | ||||||
1954 Colorado A&M | 1965 Casper College | 1976 Southeastern Oklahoma State | 1987 Blue Mountain Community College (OR) | 1998 Oklahoma Panhandle State | 2009 Western Texas College | 2020 No CNFR (COVID-19 restrictions) | ||||||
1955 Texas Tech | 1966 Casper College | 1977 Southeastern Oklahoma State | 1988 Montana State-Bozeman | 1999 Southwestern Oklahoma State | 2010 Vernon College | 2021 Clarendon College (TX) | ||||||
1956 Sam Houston State College (TX) | 1967 Tarleton State College (TX) | 1978 Southeastern Oklahoma State | 1989 Odessa College (TX) | 2000 Oklahoma Panhandle State | 2011 Sam Houston State | 2022 Tarleton State | ||||||
1957 McNeese State College (LA) | 1968 Sam Houston State College | 1979 Southeastern Oklahoma State | 1990 Montana State-Bozeman | 2001 College of Southern Idaho | 2012 Walla Walla Community College[533] | 2023 Clarendon College | ||||||
1958 McNeese State College | 1969 Eastern New Mexico | 1980 Southeastern Oklahoma State | 1991 Montana State-Bozeman | 2002 College of Southern Idaho | 2013 Oklahoma Panhandle State[534] | 2024 | ||||||
1959 McNeese State College | 1970 Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo | 1981 Dawson Community College (MT) | 1992 Southwestern Oklahoma State | 2003 Vernon College | 2014 Tennessee-Martin[530] | 2025 |
Women
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||||||
1961 Sam Houston St. Teacher’s College (TX) | 1970 Tarleton State College (TX) | 1979 Central Arizona College | 1988 Southwestern Oklahoma State | 1997 Weber State (UT) | 2006 Weber State | 2015 Blue Mountain Community College (OR)[530] | 2024 | |||||||
1962 Sul Ross State College (TX) | 1971 Tarleton State College | 1980 Southeastern Oklahoma State | 1989 Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo | 1998 Lewis-Clark State College (ID) | 2007 Wyoming | 2016 Blue Mountain Community College[535] | 2025 | |||||||
1963 Colorado State | 1972 Eastern New Mexico | 1981 Eastern New Mexico | 1990 Wyoming | 1999 Nevada-Las Vegas | 2008 Nevada-Las Vegas | 2017 Sam Houston State | 2026 | |||||||
1964 Colorado State | 1973 Arizona | 1982 Southeastern Oklahoma State | 1991 Wyoming | 2000 Western Texas College | 2009 Wyoming | 2018 McNeese State | 2027 | |||||||
1965 Sam Houston State College | 1974 Sam Houston State | 1983 Eastern New Mexico | 1992 Walla Walla Community College (WA) | 2001 Oklahoma State | 2010 Gillette College (WY) | 2019 McNeese State | 2028 | |||||||
1966 Arizona State | 1975 New Mexico State | 1984 Sam Houston State | 1993 Wyoming | 2002 Texas A&M | 2011 Montana State | 2020 No CNFR (COVID-19 restrictions) | 2029 | |||||||
1967 Eastern New Mexico | 1976 New Mexico State | 1985 Sul Ross State | 1994 Southwestern Oklahoma State | 2003 Vernon College (TX) | 2012 Texas Tech - Lubbock[536] | 2021 Montana State | 2030 | |||||||
1968 Sam Houston State College | 1977 Utah State | 1986 Montana State | 1995 Southeastern Oklahoma State | 2004 Oklahoma State | 2013 Idaho State[534] | 2022 Weatherford College | 2031 | |||||||
1969 Tarleton State College (TX) | 1978 Central Arizona College | 1987 Scottsdale Community College (AZ) | 1996 Southeastern Oklahoma State | 2005 Tarleton State | 2014 Central Arizona[530] | 2023 University of West Alabama | 2032 |
National Collegiate Inline Hockey Association (1996–98)
Collegiate Roller Hockey League (1999 through 7/31/2003)
National Collegiate Roller Hockey Association (8/1/2003 - )
Year | Champion | Year | Division II Champion | Year | Division III Champion | Year | Junior College Champion | |||
1996 | El Camino College (CA) | |||||||||
1997 | Saddleback College (CA) | |||||||||
1998 | Missouri-St. Louis | |||||||||
Division I | ||||||||||
1999 | Michigan State | 1999 | Grossmont College (CA) | |||||||
2000 | Michigan State | 2000 | St. Charles Comm. College (MO) | |||||||
2001 | Rochester IT | 2001 | Eastern Michigan | 2001 | St. Charles CC | |||||
2002 | Lindenwood (MO) | 2002 | Illinois State | 2002 | St. Charles CC | |||||
2003 | Lindenwood (Premier Div.) Cal Poly Pomona (Competitive Div.) |
2003 | SUNY Binghamton | 2003 | St. Charles CC | |||||
2004 | Lindenwood | 2004 | Missouri - St. Louis | 2004 | Lindenwood | 2004 | St. Charles CC | |||
2005 | Lindenwood | 2005 | Nevada | 2005 | Lindenwood | 2005 | St. Charles CC | |||
2006 | Lindenwood | 2006 | Neumann College (PA) | 2006 | Lindenwood | 2006 | Riverside CC (CA) | |||
2007 | Lindenwood | 2007 | Stony Brook | 2007 | Lindenwood | 2007 | St. Charles CC | |||
2008 | Lindenwood | 2008 | Neumann College (PA) | 2008 | Lindenwood | 2008 | Broward CC (FL) | |||
2009 | Missouri-St. Louis | 2009 | Grand Valley State (MI) | 2009 | Lindenwood | 2009 | St. Charles CC | |||
2010 | Lindenwood | 2010 | West Chester (PA) | 2010 | Penn State[537] | 2010 | St. Charles CC | |||
2011 | Long Beach State (CA) | 2011 | Miami (FL) | 2011 | Lindenwood | 2011 | St. Charles CC | |||
2012 | Bethel (TN) | 2012 | Central Michigan | 2012 | Lindenwood | 2012 | St. Charles CC | |||
2013 | Lindenwood | 2013 | Colorado at Colorado Springs | 2013 | Lindenwood | 2013 | St. Charles CC | |||
2014 | Lindenwood | 2014 | California State University, Fullerton | 2014 | Lindenwood | 2014 | St. Charles CC | |||
2015 | Neumann University | 2015 | Farmingdale State College | 2015 | Lindenwood | 2015 | St. Charles CC | |||
2016 | Neumann University | 2016 | Massachusetts | 2016 | Lindenwood[537] | 2016 | St. Charles CC | |||
2017 | 2017 | 2017 | 2017 |
[538][539][540][541][542][543][544][545][546][547][548][549][550]
Varsity Openweight Eights
editMen
Rowing Association of American Colleges
The RAAC was the first collegiate athletic organization in the United States.[551]
Year | Champion | Event | Year | Champion | Event | Year | Champion | Event | Year | Champion | Event | |||
1871 | Mass. Agricultural College | 6s | 1877 | 1883 | Cornell | 4s | 1889 | Cornell | 8s | |||||
1872 | Amherst | 6s | 1878 | 1884 | Pennsylvania | 4s | 1890 | Cornell | 8s | |||||
1873 | Yale | 6s | 1879 | Columbia | 4s | 1885 | Cornell | 4s | 1891 | Cornell | 8s | |||
1874 | Columbia | 6s | 1880 | Cornell | 4s | 1886 | Bowdoin | 4s | 1892 | Cornell | 8s | |||
1875 | Cornell | 6s | 1881 | 1887 | Cornell | 4s | 1893 | Cornell | 8s | |||||
1876 | Cornell | 6s | 1882 | Pennsylvania | 4s | 1888 | Yale | 8s | 1894 | Cornell | 8s |
Intercollegiate Rowing Association [552]
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | ||||||
1895 Columbia | 1913 Syracuse | 1932 California | 1951 Wisconsin | 1970 Washington | 1989 Pennsylvania | 2008 Wisconsin | ||||||
1896 Cornell | 1914 Columbia | 1933 not held * | 1952 Navy | 1971 Cornell | 1990 Wisconsin | 2009 Washington | ||||||
1897 (a) Cornell | 1915 Cornell | 1934 California | 1953 Navy | 1972 Pennsylvania | 1991 Northeastern | 2010 California | ||||||
1897 (b) Cornell | 1916 Syracuse | 1935 California | 1954 Winner disqualified † | 1973 Wisconsin | 1992 Dartmouth, Navy, Penn (tie)[553] | 2011 Washington | ||||||
1898 Pennsylvania | 1917 - not held | 1936 Washington | 1955 Cornell | 1974 Wisconsin | 1993 Brown | 2012 Washington | ||||||
1899 Pennsylvania | 1918 - not held | 1937 Washington | 1956 Cornell | 1975 Wisconsin | 1994 Brown | 2013 Washington | ||||||
1900 Pennsylvania | 1919 - not held | 1938 Navy | 1957 Cornell | 1976 California | 1995 Brown | 2014 Washington | ||||||
1901 Cornell | 1920 Syracuse | 1939 California | 1958 Cornell | 1977 Cornell | 1996 Princeton | 2015 Washington | ||||||
1902 Cornell | 1921 Navy | 1940 Washington | 1959 Wisconsin | 1978 Syracuse | 1997 Washington | 2016 California[554] | ||||||
1903 Cornell | 1922 Navy | 1941 Washington | 1960 California | 1979 Brown | 1998 Princeton | 2017 Yale | ||||||
1904 Syracuse | 1923 Washington | 1942 - not held | 1961 California | 1980 Navy | 1999 California | 2018 Yale[555] | ||||||
1905 Cornell | 1924 Washington | 1943 - not held | 1962 Cornell | 1981 Cornell | 2000 California | 2019 Yale | ||||||
1906 Cornell | 1925 Navy | 1944 - not held | 1963 Cornell | 1982 Cornell | 2001 California | 2020 cancelled (pandemic) | ||||||
1907 Cornell | 1926 Washington | 1945 - not held | 1964 California | 1983 Brown | 2002 California | 2021 Washington | ||||||
1908 Syracuse | 1927 Columbia | 1946 - not held | 1965 Navy | 1984 Navy | 2003 Harvard | 2022 California | ||||||
1909 Cornell | 1928 California | 1947 Navy | 1966 Wisconsin | 1985 Princeton | 2004 Harvard | 2023 California | ||||||
1910 Cornell | 1929 Columbia | 1948 Washington | 1967 Pennsylvania | 1986 Brown | 2005 Harvard | 2024 | ||||||
1911 Cornell | 1930 Cornell | 1949 California | 1968 Pennsylvania | 1987 Brown | 2006 California | 2025 | ||||||
1912 Cornell | 1931 Navy | 1950 Washington | 1969 Pennsylvania | 1988 Northeastern | 2007 Washington | 2026 |
* Not held in 1933 due to the Depression. However, the first college 2000-meter national championship ever held was conducted by local businessmen on the Olympic course in Long Beach, California, as a substitute. Washington raced both Harvard and Yale for the first time at this event and defeated Yale by eight feet to win the championship.[556] Washington counts this victory among its string of Men’s National Varsity Eight Championships.[557]
† Navy was disqualified from the IRA Regatta for use of an ineligible coxswain. Trophies won by Navy were forfeited and not awarded. Cornell finished second.[558]
Women
(Results for 2V8 and Novice 8 are included for completeness due to the paucity of events conducted.)
Year | Varsity 8 John Murphy Trophy |
Second Varsity 8 | Novice 8 |
1997[559] | Boston University | Boston College | Radcliffe |
1998[560] | Wisconsin | Wisconsin | Cornell |
1999[561] | Kansas | Yale | not held |
Varsity Fours
editYear | Varsity 4 with cox |
Varsity 4 without cox |
Year | Varsity 4 with cox |
Varsity 4 without cox |
Year | Varsity 4 with cox |
Varsity 4 without cox |
Year | Varsity 4 with cox | |||
1968 | Cornell | 1981 | Syracuse | Cornell | 1995 | Temple | Brown | 2009 | California | ||||
1982 | Wisconsin | Pennsylvania | 1996 | Minnesota | Navy | 2010 | Washington | ||||||
1969 | Rutgers | 1983 | Wisconsin | Wisconsin | 1997 | Minnesota | Brown | 2011 | Washington | ||||
1970 | Rutgers | 1984 | Temple | Princeton | 1998 | Minnesota | Wisconsin | 2012 | Washington | ||||
1971 | Navy | 1985 | Princeton | Navy | 1999 | Wisconsin | Wisconsin | 2013 | Washington | ||||
1972 | UCLA | 1986 | Wisconsin | Princeton | 2000 | Wisconsin | Wisconsin | 2014 | Washington | ||||
1973 | UCLA | 1987 | Wisconsin | Navy | 2001 | California | Wisconsin | 2015 | Washington | ||||
1974 | Coast Guard | Coast Guard | 1988 | Brown | Navy | 2002 | California | Wisconsin | 2016 | Washington | |||
1975 | Oregon State | Wisconsin | 1989 | Navy | Pennsylvania | 2003 | Washington | Wisconsin | 2017 | Washington | |||
1976 | Navy | Wisconsin | 1990 | Wisconsin | not awarded | 2004 | Washington | Colgate | 2018 | Not contested due to weather | |||
1977 | Princeton | Pennsylvania | 1991 | Georgetown | Navy | 2005 | Stanford | Army | 2019 | Washington | |||
1978 | Coast Guard | Oregon State | 1992 | Navy | Georgetown | 2006 | Stanford | Harvard | 2020 | cancelled (pandemic) | |||
1979 | Washington State | Pennsylvania | 1993 | Georgetown | Navy | 2007 | California | Navy | 2021 | Washington | |||
1980 | Wisconsin | Dartmouth | 1994 | Brown | Brown | 2008 | Washington | Yale | 2022 |
Varsity Lightweight Eights
editIntercollegiate Rowing Association
Men
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||||
1987 Yale[562] | 1995 Harvard | 2002 Yale | 2009 Princeton | 2016 Columbia | 2023 Princeton | |||||
1988/1989 Princeton[563] | 1996 Princeton | 2003 Harvard | 2010 Princeton | 2017 Cornell | ||||||
1990 Yale[564] | 1997 Harvard | 2004 Navy | 2011 Yale | 2018 Columbia | ||||||
1991 Harvard | 1998 Princeton | 2005 Yale | 2012 Harvard | 2019 Cornell | ||||||
1992 Cornell | 1999 Harvard | 2006 Cornell | 2013 Harvard | 2020 cancelled (pandemic) | ||||||
1993 Harvard | 2000 Yale | 2007 Cornell | 2014 Cornell | 2021 Navy | ||||||
1994 Princeton | 2001 Harvard | 2008 Cornell | 2015 Cornell | 2022 Columbia |
Women
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||||
1997 Radcliffe (MA) | 2002 Princeton | 2007 Bucknell (PA) | 2012 Stanford | 2017 Stanford | 2022 | |||||
1998 Villanova (PA) | 2003 Princeton | 2008 Wisconsin | 2013 Stanford | 2018 Stanford | 2023 | |||||
1999 Princeton | 2004 Wisconsin | 2009 Wisconsin | 2014 Radcliffe | 2019 Stanford | 2024 | |||||
2000 Princeton | 2005 Wisconsin | 2010 Stanford | 2015 Stanford | 2020 cancelled (pandemic) | 2025 | |||||
2001 Princeton[565] | 2006 Wisconsin | 2011 Stanford | 2016 Stanford | 2021 Princeton | 2026 |
Lightweight Four/Double
editIntercollegiate Rowing Association
Men's Varsity Lightweight Four
Year | Champion (with coxswain) |
Champion (without coxswain, "straight four") |
2011 | Harvard | |
2012 | Navy | |
2013 | Harvard | |
2014 | Columbia | |
2015 | Yale | Princeton |
2016 | Georgetown | Cornell |
2017 | Navy | Harvard |
2018 (cancelled) | best in heats: Georgetown | best in heats: Navy |
2019[555] | Navy | Navy |
2020 | cancelled | (pandemic) |
2021 | not held | Navy |
2022 | Navy | |
2023 | Georgetown | |
2024 | Georgetown |
Women's Varsity
|
|
Overall Points
editIntercollegiate Rowing Association
Men
The IRA awards the Jim Ten Eyck Trophy, named in honor of Syracuse's rowing coach (1903–1938), to the team that accumulates the most points during the IRA Championship Regatta in a system based on the finishing places of three eights crews. From 1952 through 1973, the winning team was the one with the most points in the varsity, junior varsity and freshman eights. Starting in 1974, all races counted in the scoring under a system adopted by the coaches of the Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges. More recently, the scoring system was revised to include only three of the four possible eights from each school in the points standings.[567]
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||||||
1952 Navy | 1962 Cornell | 1972 Wisconsin | 1982 Navy | 1992 Wisconsin[553] | 2002 Wisconsin | 2012 Washington | 2022 Yale | |||||||
1953 Washington | 1963 Navy | 1973 Wisconsin | 1983 Navy | 1993 Navy | 2003 Harvard | 2013 Washington | 2023 California | |||||||
1954 † | 1964 Washington | 1974 Wisconsin | 1984 Navy | 1994 Brown | 2004 Harvard | 2014 Washington | 2024 | |||||||
1955 Cornell | 1965 Navy | 1975 Wisconsin | 1985 Princeton | 1995 Navy | 2005 Harvard | 2015 Washington | 2025 | |||||||
1956 Cornell | 1966 Pennsylvania | 1976 Pennsylvania | 1986 Wisconsin | 1996 Wisconsin | 2006 California | 2016 California | 2026 | |||||||
1957 Cornell | 1967 Pennsylvania | 1977 Pennsylvania | 1987 Wisconsin | 1997 Wisconsin | 2007 Washington | 2017 Washington | 2027 | |||||||
1958 Cornell | 1968 Pennsylvania | 1978 Pennsylvania | 1988 Wisconsin | 1998 Princeton | 2008 Washington | 2018 Washington[555] | 2028 | |||||||
1959 Washington | 1969 Pennsylvania | 1979 Wisconsin | 1989 Pennsylvania | 1999 Wisconsin | 2009 Washington | 2019 Washington | 2029 | |||||||
1960 Navy | 1970 Washington | 1980 Wisconsin | 1990 Navy | 2000 Wisconsin | 2010 Washington[568] | 2020 cancelled (pandemic) | 2030 | |||||||
1961 Cornell | 1971 Cornell | 1981 Cornell | 1991 Pennsylvania | 2001 Wisconsin | 2011 Washington | 2021 Washington | 2031 |
† Navy was disqualified from the IRA Regatta for use of an ineligible coxswain. Trophies won by Navy were forfeited and not awarded.[558]
Women and Combined
Year | Women Camden County Freeholders Trophy |
Combined Men & Women Robert Mulcahy III Trophy |
1997[569] | Wisconsin | Wisconsin |
1998[570] | Wisconsin | Wisconsin |
1999[571] | University of Miami | Princeton |
2000[572] | Princeton | Wisconsin |
Smaller Colleges
editThe Aberdeen Dad Vail Regatta, which is held in Philadelphia and is sponsored by the Dad Vail Rowing Association,[573] is a national championship caliber regatta for lower level college teams. It is the largest collegiate regatta in the nation.
Men's Openweight Team (1982–96)
editThe now defunct National Collegiate Rowing Championship was a quasi-official national championship (as nothing until that time could be called "official" rather than de facto) for men's collegiate rowing held in Cincinnati, Ohio between 1982 and 1996. During these years Harvard, Yale and Washington, three of the sport's powers, did not participate in the IRAs. In 1982, a Harvard alumnus decided to remedy this perceived problem by establishing a heavyweight varsity National Collegiate Rowing Championship race in Cincinnati, Ohio.[574] It paid for the winners of the Pac-10 Championship, the Eastern Sprints, the IRA and the Harvard-Yale race to attend. It was a finals-only event, and other crews could attend if they paid their own way and there was room in the field. After 1996 the race was discontinued.
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | ||
1982 | Yale | 1987 | Harvard | 1992 | Harvard | ||
1983 | Harvard | 1988 | Harvard | 1993 | Brown | ||
1984 | Washington | 1989 | Harvard | 1994 | Brown | ||
1985 | Harvard | 1990 | Wisconsin | 1995 | Brown | ||
1986 | Wisconsin | 1991 | Pennsylvania | 1996 | Princeton |
Women's Varsity Eights (1971–96)
editThe National Women's Rowing Association (NWRA) sponsored an annual open eights national championship from 1971 to 1979, among college and non-college teams. (There were no eights prior to 1971.) During this period, only in 1973 and 1975 did a college team win the national eights championship outright. According to US Rowing Association, contemporary news reports in 1976 and 1977 do not mention a national collegiate title. Beginning in 1980, the NWRA sponsored the Women's Collegiate National Championship, including varsity eights. In 1986 the NWRA dissolved after recognizing US Rowing's assuming of responsibility as the national governing body for women's rowing.
NWRA Open National Championship
Eights top college finishers, 1971–1979 (champion in parentheses) :
- 1971 Washington (first place - Vesper Boat Club)
- 1972 Washington (first place - College Boat Club)
- 1973 Radcliffe College (NWRA open champion)
- 1974 Radcliffe College (first place - Vesper Boat Club)
- 1975 Wisconsin (NWRA open champion)
- 1976 Wisconsin (first place - College Boat Club)
- 1977 Wisconsin (first place - Vesper Boat Club)
- 1978 Wisconsin (first place - Burnaby Boat Club)
- 1979 Yale (first place - Burnaby BC)
NWRA / US Rowing Women's Collegiate National Championship, Varsity eights :
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||
1980 California | 1985 Washington | 1989 Cornell | 1993 Princeton | |||
1981 Washington | 1986 Wisconsin | 1990 Princeton | 1994 Princeton | |||
1982 Washington * | 1987 Washington | 1991 Boston University | 1995 Princeton | |||
1983 Washington | 1988 Washington | 1992 Boston University | 1996 Brown | |||
1984 Washington |
* simultaneous AIAW championship, the only one conducted
The above Women's Varsity 8 results are included for completeness, even though women's rowing is now an NCAA sport and has had annual NCAA women's championships from 1997, in which women currently compete in a Varsity 8, a Second Varsity 8, and a Varsity Four.
Other
editUSRowing announced that an inaugural USRowing Collegiate National Championship regatta was to be held May 21–23, 2010, at Mercer Lake in West Windsor, N.J. The regatta was to be open to all athletes enrolled in a college or university. Events were to include both small and large boats, from single sculls to eights. The regatta was to be open to all collegiate programs, club or varsity, across all divisions and was to include both lightweight and open weight boat classes. USRowing stated that it hoped to provide a chance for varsity and club programs to compete head-to-head on a 2000-meter course and an opportunity for collegiate athletes to compete in small boats and sculling events.
Rugby became an NCAA Emerging Sports for Women in 2003.
Rugby 7s
editOrganized by National Collegiate Rugby from 2021 under license for name and logo.[575]
Men[576]
|
Women
|
In the first three years, strong teams that won bids declined to participate.[586][587][588]
Men[589]
|
Women
|
Division II
|
Division II
|
Small College
|
Small College
|
Year | D1 Champion | D2 Champion |
2014 | Norwich[613] | Notre Dame College (Ohio) |
2015 | Army[614] | Davenport |
2016[615] | Davenport[616] | Winona State[617][618] |
2017 | Davenport[616] (10-team invitational) | |
2018–2021 | no championship tournaments conducted | |
2022 | ACRA aligned as D2 | Coast Guard |
National Intercollegiate Rugby Association (Women)
Year | Champion |
2016[619] | Army[620][621] |
2017 | Dartmouth[622] |
2018 | Dartmouth[623] |
2019 | not held |
2020 | cancelled (pandemic) |
2021 | cancelled (pandemic) |
2022 | Dartmouth |
Rugby Union
editThe governance of collegiate rugby was split and diverged in 2021. The umbrella of the USA Rugby Collegiate Council includes College Rugby Association of America (CRAA), American Collegiate Rugby Association (ACRA), American College Rugby (ACR), and independent conferences.[624] National Collegiate Rugby (NCR), formerly NSCRO, expanded beyond small colleges to include the higher divisions. Men's and women's conferences each chose as individual conferences (in some cases, schools within conferences also chose[624]) to align with USA Rugby or NCR.
Women
Twelve women's conferences that played historically in DII left the oversight of USA Rugby to join NCR. Beginning in 2021, women's college rugby within NCR is split between Small College and an Open Division. The Open Division, which NCR now refers to as its DI, is made up of teams from these 12 conferences.[624]
According to Goff Rugby Report, the DI Elite women's teams are part of College Rugby Association of America, and so are the vast majority of women's DI conferences (eight conferences) and the independents. There are also a couple of DII or hybrid conferences within CRAA.[624][625]
The American Collegiate Rugby Association is a group of four DII-level women's conferences remaining under the aegis of USA Rugby, which included 62 teams as of June, 2020.[625][626]
The NCAA women's varsity programs in the National Intercollegiate Rugby Association run their own competition and have a sanctioning agreement with USA Rugby.[624]
Men
In 2021, most DII men's rugby conferences aligned with NCR.[624]
Two men's conferences that played DIA in 2019 joined NCR in 2021, as have three DIAA conferences. Under NCR, they competed in fall 2021 as DI and DIAA, with separate postseasons.[624]
Men's DIAA was dramatically split in 2021, with both NCR and CRAA-run postseasons in the fall. There will likely be a CRAA-run postseason in spring 2022. According to Goff Rugby Report, there is no way to have a men's DIAA national champion in 2021–2022.[624]
In 2021, there are five men's DIA conferences plus independents under USA Rugby/CRAA.[624]
Men, Division I
editNational Invitational Championship
- 1972[627] – Palmer College of Chiropractic 28–17 Navy[628][629]
- 1973[627] – Palmer College of Chiropractic 13–4 Illinois[630]
- 1974[627] – Texas A&M 12–0 LSU[631]
- 1975 – Not held[632]
- 1976 – (moved from spring to fall) LSU 21–3 Palmer College of Chiropractic[633]
- 1977 – (moved from fall to following spring)
- 1978[634] – Palmer College of Chiropractic 19–4 LSU[635]
- 1979[636] – Palmer College of Chiropractic 24–6 Navy[637]
USA Rugby, Men, Division I | ||||||||
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion (Div IA) | Champion (Div IAA) | ||
1980 | California | 1996 | California[638][639] | 2011 | California (Premier)[640] | Davenport (Div I)[641] | ||
1981 | California | 1997 | California | 2012 | BYU | Davenport | ||
1982 | California | 1998 | California | 2013 | Life | UCF | ||
1983 | California | 1999 | California | 2014 | Saint Mary's | UCF | ||
1984 | Harvard | 2000[642] | California | 2015 | Saint Mary's | UC Davis | ||
1985 | California | 2001 | California | 2016 | Life | UC Davis[643] | ||
1986 | California | 2002 | California | 2017 | Saint Mary's[644] | Notre Dame (OH)[645] | ||
1987 | San Diego State | 2003 | Air Force | 2018 | Life | 2017 (fall) Mary Washington[646]
2018 (spring) Dartmouth[647] | ||
1988 | California | 2004 | California | 2019 | Life | 2018 (fall) Bowling Green[648] | ||
1989 | Air Force | 2005 | California | 2020 | canceled | 2019 (fall) Iowa Central CC[650]
2020 (spring) canceled | ||
1990 | Air Force | 2006 | California | 2021 | canceled | 2020–21 canceled | ||
1991 | California[651] | 2007 | California | 2022 | Army (CRAA)[652] | 2021 (fall) Tennessee (CRAA)[653]
2022 (spring) Fresno State (ACR)[647][654] | ||
1992 | California | 2008 | California | 2023 | Navy (CRAA) | San Diego (ACR) | ||
1993 | California[655] | 2009 | BYU[656] | 2024 | Saint Mary's (CRAA) | San Diego (ACR/CRAA) | ||
1994 | California | 2010 | California | 2025 | ||||
1995 | California | 2026 |
Year | Varsity Cup Championship Result[657] |
2013 | BYU 27, California 24 |
2014 | BYU 43, California 33 |
2015 | BYU 30,[a] California 27 |
2016 | California 40, BYU 29 |
2017 | California 43, Arkansas State 13 |
National Collegiate Rugby[659]
Year | Champion | Score | Runner-up | Location | Date |
2021 | St. Bonaventure | 19 - 18 | Penn State | Dec 2021 | |
2022 | Brown | 21 - 5 | Queens | Houston TX | 10 Dec 2022 |
2023 | Notre Dame College | 33 - 10 | St. Bonaventure | Houston TX | 9 Dec 2023 |
Year | Champion | Score | Runner-up | Location | Date |
2021 | Virginia Tech | 34 - 22 | West Chester | Dec 2021 | |
2022 | Virginia Tech | 24 - 22 | Louisville | Houston TX | 10 Dec 2022 |
2023 | Kentucky | 43 - 28 | Louisville | Houston TX | 9 Dec 2023 |
2024 | Kentucky | 57 - 12 | Bowling Green | Houston TX | 14 Dec 2024 |
Women, Division I
editYear | Women, Division I Elite Result |
2016 | Penn State 15, BYU 5[660] |
2017 | Penn State 28, Lindenwood 25[661] |
2018 | Lindenwood 36, Life 9[646] |
2019 | Lindenwood 36, Life 19 |
2020 | cancelled (pandemic) |
2021 | Lindenwood 54, Life 12 |
2022 | Lindenwood 21, Life 0 |
As of fall 2021, according to Goff Rugby Report, "The vast majority of women's DI conferences are playing as part of College Rugby Association of America" (USA Rugby).[625]
Women, Division I [662] | ||||||||
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | ||||
1991 Air Force | 1998 Harvard-Radcliffe | 2005 Stanford | 2012 Penn State | 2018-19 fall – Air Force[648] spring – BYU[649] | ||||
1992 Boston College | 1999 Stanford | 2006 Stanford | 2013 Penn State | 2019-20 fall – Air Force[663] spring – canceled | ||||
1993 Connecticut | 2000 Penn State | 2007 Penn State | 2014 Penn State | 2020-21 fall – canceled spring – canceled | ||||
1994 Air Force | 2001 Chico State | 2008 Stanford | 2015 Penn State | 2021-22 fall – Navy (CRAA)[664] spring – BYU (CRAA) | ||||
1995 Princeton | 2002 Air Force | 2009 Penn State | 2015-16 fall – Connecticut[665] spring – UC Davis[666] |
2022-23 fall – spring – | ||||
1996 Princeton | 2003 Air Force | 2010 Penn State | 2016-17 fall – Air Force[667] spring – UC Davis[668] |
2023-24 fall – spring – | ||||
1997 Penn State | 2004 Penn State | 2011 Army[669] | 2017-18 fall – Davenport[670] spring – Chico State[646] |
2024-25 fall – spring – |
- Women, Division I
According to Goff Rugby Report, the vast majority of women's teams and conferences that switched to working with NCR for fall 2021 previously competed in USA Rugby's DII women's competition. NCR refers to this division as its DI.[625] In 2021, Life University fielded a largely freshman and sophomore team.[625]
- 2021 (fall) – Life University 87, Northern Iowa 3
Division II
editMen, Division II | Women, Division II [671] | |
1994 Lock Haven[672] | ||
1995 Lock Haven[647] | ||
1996 Salisbury | ||
1997 Salisbury | ||
1998 UC San Diego | ||
1999 UC San Diego | ||
2000 Sacramento State | 2000 Plymouth State (NH) | |
2001 Baylor | 2001 Northern Iowa | |
2002 Stanford | 2002 Northern Iowa | |
2003 Radford | 2003 Dayton | |
2004 Salisbury | 2004 Temple | |
2005 Northern Colorado | 2005 Providence | |
2006 Coast Guard | 2006 UC Santa Cruz | |
2007 Middlebury | 2007 Iowa State | |
2008 Radford | 2008 Shippensburg | |
2009 Middlebury | 2009 Shippensburg | |
2010 Claremont | 2010 Washington State | |
2011 Wisconsin–Whitewater[673] | 2011 Harvard-Radcliffe[674] | |
2012 Lindenwood | 2012 Norwich | |
2013 (spring) Salisbury | 2013 Washington State | |
2013 (moved to fall) Minnesota–Duluth | 2014 Mary Washington | |
2014 (fall) Minnesota–Duluth | 2015 Notre Dame (OH) | |
2015 (fall) Minnesota–Duluth | 2016 Davenport[675] | |
2016 (fall) Wisconsin–Whitewater[676] | 2017 Davenport[677] | |
2017 Wisconsin–Whitewater | 2017-18 fall – Winona State[678] spring – Tulane[646] | |
2018 North Carolina State[679] | 2018-19 fall – Vassar[680] spring – Fresno State[649] | |
2019 Queens University (NC)[650] | 2019-20 fall – Winona State[663] spring – canceled | |
2020 canceled (pandemic) | 2020-21 canceled | |
2021 Auburn (CRAA)[681] | 2021-22 fall – Vassar (ACRA)[682] spring – Claremont (CRAA) |
- Men, Division II
- 2021 (fall) – Thomas More
Other D1/D2
editAmerican Collegiate Rugby Association (Women)
ACRA formed in 2013 as a group committed to fall 15s and spring 7s. As of 2021, the American Collegiate Rugby Association is a group of DII-level women's conferences — Tri-State, MARC, Rugby Northeast, NEWCRC. In 2021, they invited the Rocky Mountain Conference to send teams to the ACRA playoffs, which are held in the fall; five conferences sent eight teams.[625] According to Goff Rugby Report, "ACRA's championship isn't technically a [national] women's DII championship, but it's pretty close, [as] there are teams that play DII-level rugby and will play in the spring [2022]. They won't be ACRA."[625]
Year | DII Champion |
2013 | Winona[683] (ACRA also held a DI tournament, winner: Norwich[684]) |
2014 | ACRA organized the USA Rugby DI and DII fall championships.[685] |
2015 | Davenport[686] (qualified for USA Rugby D2 championship final in May, 2016) (Note: ACRA permanently withdrew as DI tournament organizer for USA Rugby.)[685] |
2016–2019 | No tournaments conducted |
2020 | Association re-formed and planned a fall season, later canceled (pandemic). |
2021 | Vassar[682] |
National Intercollegiate Rugby Association (Women)
The NCAA women's varsity programs in the National Intercollegiate Rugby Association run their own competition and have a sanctioning agreement with USA Rugby.[624] It began play in 2015.[687]
Year | D1 Champion |
2015 | Quinnipiac[688] |
2016 | Quinnipiac |
2017 | Quinnipiac[689] |
2018 | Dartmouth |
2019 | Harvard[690] |
2020 | canceled (pandemic) |
2021 | Dartmouth |
2022 | Dartmouth |
2023 | Harvard |
2024 |
Small College Championship
editNational Collegiate Rugby Organization
From 2002 to 2006 for Men's Division III and from 2003 to 2006 for Women's Division III, event name was "East Coast Division III Collegiate Championship." In 2007, events were renamed to "National Men's Collegiate Division III Championship", "National Women's Collegiate Division III Championship" and "National Women's Collegiate Division IV Championship". Effective August 2012, Small College Championship nomenclature replaced Division III.
Men Division III / Small College |
Women Division III / Small College |
Women Division IV | ||
2002 Western Carolina | ||||
2003 Furman | 2003 College of New Jersey | |||
2004 Furman | 2004 Fordham | |||
2005 Furman | 2005 Castleton State | |||
2006 Bentley | 2006 Babson | |||
2007 Bentley | 2007 (spring) Stonehill (fall) Stonehill |
2007 (spring) Rhode Island (fall) Roger Williams | ||
2008 Plymouth State | 2008 Bryant | 2008 Holy Cross | ||
2009 Coastal Carolina[691] | 2009 MIT | 2009 Drexel | ||
2010 Penn State Berks[692] | 2010 Bentley[693] | 2010 Lock Haven[693] | ||
2011 Longwood[694] | 2011 Carleton[695] | 2011 Johnson State | ||
2012 Salve Regina | 2012 Wayne State (NE) | |||
2013 Saint John's (MN) | 2013 Wayne State (NE) | |||
2014 Saint John's (MN) | 2014 Roger Williams | |||
2015 New England College | 2015 Minn. State–Moorhead[696] | |||
2016 Mount St. Mary's[697] | 2016 Wayne State (NE)[698] | |||
2017 Claremont Colleges[699] | 2017 Wayne State (NE) | |||
2018 Iowa Central Community College | 2018 Wayne State (NE)[700] | |||
2019 Claremont Colleges[701] | 2019 Wayne State (NE)[663] | |||
2020 canceled | 2020 canceled | |||
2021 (moved to fall) Christendom College | 2021 Wayne State (NE)[702] |
Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association Championship
editThe Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association (ICSA; Inter-Collegiate Yacht Racing Association prior to 2001) holds National Championships in six different events. Since intercollegiate sailing is a fall and spring sport, three of these championships are held in the fall and three are held in the spring.
The Fall Championships are for single-handed men and women and sloops. The Sloop Championships take place in mid-November using small keelboats supplied by the venue. Each sloop team sails with a crew of three. In the fall of 2010, the sloop championship was converted to a match racing format.[707]
The ICSA National Championship Regatta is held once each year in May and is actually composed of three different regattas: a Team Racing Championship, a Women's Championship and a Coed Dinghy Championship. The most prestigious of these events is the Coed Dinghy Championship.
The title for best overall performance (Leonard M. Fowle Trophy winner) includes the six National Championships: Men's Singlehanded, Women's Singlehanded, Match Racing Championship (previously Sloop), Women's Dinghy, Team Race, and Coed Dinghy.
Dinghy (1937–1966) | ||||||||
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | ||||
1937 MIT | 1943 MIT | 1949 Yale | 1955 MIT | 1961 MIT | ||||
1938 MIT | 1944 Coast Guard | 1950 Yale | 1956 Navy | 1962 Coast Guard | ||||
1939 MIT | 1945 MIT | 1951 MIT | 1957 Navy | 1963 Princeton | ||||
1940 Princeton | 1946 MIT | 1952 Harvard | 1958 MIT | 1964 British Columbia | ||||
1941 Princeton | 1947 Yale | 1953 Harvard | 1959 Harvard | 1965 Rhode Island | ||||
1942 Brown | 1948 Brown | 1954 MIT | 1960 Coast Guard | 1966 Coast Guard |
Year | Coed Dinghy | Women's Dinghy | Sloops[708](Match racing from 2010) | Team Race | Overall Performance[709] |
1967 | USC | Wilson (PA) | |||
1968 | San Diego State | Radcliffe | |||
1969 | San Diego State | Radcliffe | |||
1970 | USC | Radcliffe | |||
1971 | USC | MIT | |||
1971-72 | UC Irvine | Radcliffe | Michigan | SUNY Maritime | |
1972-73 | Tulane | MIT | SUNY Maritime | SUNY Maritime | |
1973-74 | Harvard | Princeton | Tulane | Tulane | |
1974-75 | Yale | Princeton | USC | Tufts | |
1975-76 | Tufts | Princeton | UC Santa Cruz | Tufts | |
1976-77 | Rhode Island | Princeton | Navy | Rhode Island | Navy |
1977-78 | UCLA | California | Navy | Navy | Navy |
1978-79 | Merchant Marine | Navy | Texas | Navy | Navy |
1979-80 | Tufts | Navy | UC Irvine | Boston University | Navy |
1980-81 | Tufts | Navy | Texas | Long Beach State | Navy |
1981-82 | Boston University | Old Dominion | Boston University | Boston University | Navy |
1982-83 | Merchant Marine | Navy | Navy | Merchant Marine | Navy |
1983-84 | Merchant Marine | Tufts | UC Santa Barbara | Tufts | Tufts |
1984-85 | Boston University | Brown | Washington | USC | Boston University |
1985-86 | College of Charleston | Tufts | Spring Hill | Tulane | College of Charleston |
1986-87 | Merchant Marine | Old Dominion | Navy | Navy | Navy |
1987-88 | UC Irvine | Brown | Connecticut College | UC Irvine | College of Charleston |
1988-89 | Old Dominion | Tufts | Old Dominion | Navy | Old Dominion |
1989-90 | UC Irvine | Tufts | Old Dominion | Old Dominion | Old Dominion |
1990-91 | Navy | Navy | College of Charleston | Navy | Brown |
1991-92 | Dartmouth | Dartmouth | College of Charleston | Navy | Navy |
1992-93 | Navy | Tufts | Old Dominion | Tufts | Tufts |
1993-94 | Navy | Tufts | St. Mary's (MD) | Tufts | Tufts |
1994-95 | Navy | St. Mary's (MD) | Navy | Tufts | Tufts |
1995-96 | Merchant Marine | Tufts | Navy | Tufts | Tufts |
1996-97 | Tufts | Navy | Boston University | Stanford | Navy |
1997-98 | Old Dominion | Brown | Merchant Marine | Old Dominion | College of Charleston |
1998-99 | Boston University | Tufts | College of Charleston | St. Mary's (MD) | Tufts |
1999–2000 | St. Mary's (MD) | Dartmouth | Merchant Marine | St. Mary's (MD) | St. Mary's (MD) |
2000-01 | Tufts | Hawaii | Harvard | Georgetown | Harvard |
2001-02 | St. Mary's (MD) | Old Dominion | Harvard | Harvard | Harvard |
2002-03 | Harvard | Tufts | College of Charleston | Harvard | Harvard |
2003-04 | Hawaii | Yale | Merchant Marine[710] | St. Mary's (MD) | Harvard |
2004-05 | Hobart and William Smith | Harvard | Texas A&M Galveston[711] | Hobart and William Smith | Harvard |
2005-06 | College of Charleston | College of Charleston | UC Irvine | Georgetown | Georgetown |
2006-07 | College of Charleston | St. Mary's (MD) | College of Charleston | St. Mary's (MD) | College of Charleston |
2007-08 | Georgetown | Boston College | St. Mary's (MD) | Boston College | Boston College |
2008-09 | St. Mary's (MD) | Yale | South Florida | Boston College | Yale |
2009-10 | Boston College | College of Charleston | Boston College | St. Mary's (MD) | Boston College |
2010-11 | Boston College | Rhode Island | Boston College[712] | Roger Williams | Boston College |
2011-12[713] | Georgetown | Boston College | Navy | College of Charleston | College of Charleston |
2012-13 | College of Charleston[714] | Dartmouth[715] | Tufts | Yale[716] | Yale |
2013-14 | Yale[717] | Dartmouth[718] | Georgetown[719] | Yale[720] | Yale |
2014-15 | Yale[721] | Yale[722] | Georgetown[723] | Yale[724] | Charleston |
2015-16 | Georgetown | Coast Guard | Charleston[725] | Yale | Yale |
2016-17 | Charleston | Yale | Georgetown | Charleston | Charleston |
2017-18 | MIT | Boston College | Boston College | Charleston | Charleston |
2018-19 | Charleston | Brown | Boston College | Yale | Yale |
2019-20 | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic | Stanford | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic |
2020-21 | Navy | Charleston | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic | Navy | Charleston |
2021-22 | Tulane | Boston College | Yale | Yale | Yale |
2022-23 | Stanford | Stanford | Yale | Harvard | Stanford |
2023-24 | Harvard | Stanford | Brown | Roger Williams | Brown |
Collegiate Offshore Large Boats Championship
editKennedy Cup, boat class: Navy 44
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | ||||
1965[726] | Harvard | 1977 | Navy | 1989 | Navy | 2001 | Massachusetts Maritime[727] | 2012-13 | Navy[728] | ||||
1966 | Navy[729] | 1978 | Tennessee | 1990 | Navy | 2002 | College of Charleston[730] | 2013-14 | California Maritime[731] | ||||
1967 | Stanford | 1979 | Tufts | 1991 | Rhode Island | 2003 | College of Charleston[732] | 2014-15 | Charleston[733] | ||||
1968 | Stanford | 1980 | Navy | 1992 | Rhode Island | 2004 | Rhode Island[734] | 2015-16 | California Maritime[735] | ||||
1969 | Cornell[736] | 1981 | Navy | 1993 | Navy[729] | 2005 | Merchant Marine[737] | 2016-17 | South Florida[738] | ||||
1970 | Tulane | 1982 | Navy | 1994 | USC | 2006 | Navy[739] | 2017-18 | South Florida[740] | ||||
1971 | Tulane | 1983 | SUNY Maritime[741] | 1995 | Navy | 2006-07 | Rhode Island[742] | 2018-19 | New York Maritime[743] | ||||
1972 | Merchant Marine | 1984 | UC-Santa Barbara | 1996 | Rhode Island | 2007-08 | Navy[744] | 2019-20 | Charleston[745] | ||||
1973 | Michigan | 1985 | Texas A&M Galveston[746] | 1997 | Navy | 2008-09 | Rhode Island[747] | 2020-21 | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic | ||||
1974 | Dartmouth | 1986 | Rhode Island[748] | 1998 | Rhode Island | 2009-10 | California Maritime[749][750] | 2021-22 | California Maritime[751] | ||||
1975 | Texas | 1987 | Rhode Island | 1999 | College of Charleston[752] | 2010-11 | Maine Maritime[753] | 2022-23 | California Maritime[754] | ||||
1976 | Yale | 1988 | Navy | 2000 | College of Charleston[755] | 2011-12 | Navy[756] | 2023-24 | Merchant Marine[757] |
Collegiate Match Racing Championship
editDouglas Cup
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | |||
1966 | Long Beach State[758] | 1973 | Hawaii[759] | 1980 | ? | 1987 | College of Charleston[760] | |||
1967 | British Columbia[761][762][763] | 1974 | USC[764] | 1981 | ? | 1988 | ? | |||
1968 | USC[765][766] | 1975 | California[767] | 1982 | Long Beach State[768] | 1989 | Tulane[769] | |||
1969 | Tulane[766][770] | 1976 | Navy[771][772] | 1983 | ? | 1990 | SUNY Maritime[773] | |||
1970 | Tulane[774] | 1977 | Washington[775] | 1984 | Texas[776] | 1991 | ? | |||
1971 | USC[777] | 1978[778] | ? | 1985 | Texas[779] | 199? | [a] | |||
1972 | Washington[781] | 1979 | UC Irvine[782] | 1986 | College of Charleston (?)[783][784] |
[785][786][787][788][789][790][791][792][793][794][795][796][797][798]
United States Collegiate Ski and Snowboard Association
In 2009, events included Giant Slalom, Slalom, Cross-Country Sprints, Cross-Country Relays, Cross-Country Distance, Halfpipe, Slopestyle, SkierCross, and Snowboard Cross. NCAA championship alpine events likewise include slalom and GS. However, the NCAA Nordic program is limited to 2 events. Because the USCSA Nordic competition occurs in 4 or more events each for men and women, the Nordic winners are included here.
Year | Nordic (M) | Nordic (W) | Snowboard (M) | Snowboard (W) | Freestyle (M) | Freestyle (W) | Overall (M) | Overall (W) |
1979 | ? | ? | ||||||
... | ? | ? | ||||||
1994 | ? | College of Idaho | ||||||
1995 | ? | College of Idaho | ||||||
1996 | Cornell University | ? | ||||||
1997 | Whitman College (WA) | ? | ||||||
1998 | ? | ? | ||||||
1999 | ? | ? | Simon Fraser University (B.C.) | Simon Fraser University (B.C.) | ||||
2000 | ? | ? | Simon Fraser University (B.C.) | Simon Fraser University (B.C.) | ||||
2001 | ? | ? | Whitman College | ? | ||||
2002 | ? | ? | Whitman College | ? | ||||
2003 | ? | Wyoming | Whitman College | ? | ||||
2004 | ? | Wyoming | ? | ? | ||||
2005 | St. Olaf (MN) | St. Olaf (MN) | Western Michigan | Western Michigan | ||||
2006 | Wyoming | St. Olaf (MN) | Sierra Nevada College | Weber State (UT) | ||||
2007[799] | Cornell | Wyoming | Sierra Nevada College | U of Idaho | ||||
2008[800] | St. Olaf (MN) | St. Olaf (MN) | Sierra Nevada College | U of Idaho | Colorado (invitational) | Colorado (invitational) | ||
2009[801] | Wyoming | Wyoming | Sierra Nevada College | Westminster College (UT) | Southern California | Colorado | ||
2010[802] | Wyoming[803] | Wyoming | Sierra Nevada College | Westminster College | Southern California | "under review" | ||
2011[804] | Western State College | St. Olaf | Sierra Nevada College | Westminster College | College of Idaho | College of Idaho | ||
2012[805][806] | Clarkson[803] | Clarkson | Sierra Nevada College | Westminster College | Colorado | Sierra Nevada College | ||
2013 | Wyoming[807] | St. Olaf[807] | Sierra Nevada College[808] | Westminster College[808] | Colorado[808] | Colorado[808] | ||
2014[809] | St. Olaf | Wyoming | Sierra Nevada College | Sierra Nevada College | Sierra Nevada College | Sierra Nevada College | St. Olaf | St. Olaf |
2015[810] | Wyoming[810][811] | St. Olaf[810][811] | Westminster College[812] | Westminster College[812] | Sierra Nevada College[812] | Sierra Nevada College[812] | St. Olaf | St. Olaf |
2016[813][814] | Wyoming | Clarkson | Sierra Nevada College | Westminster College | Colorado | Sierra Nevada College | Clarkson | St. Olaf |
2017 |
After the last AIAW competition in 1982, college championships were conducted by the Amateur Softball Association in 1983 and 1984.[815][816] It appears that most of the college women's slow-pitch teams at that time were from Florida and North Carolina. After 1984, the highest level of collegiate national championship was conducted by the National Junior College Athletic Association, whose slow-pitch tournament was held from 1983 through 2000.[817]
Year and Champion |
1983 University of South Florida |
1984 University of South Florida |
1985 Palm Beach Community College[a] |
1986 Lake City Community College (now Florida Gateway College)[b] |
1987 Lake City Community College |
1988 Pensacola Junior College |
1989 Lake City Community College |
1990 Lake City Community College |
1991 Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College (Georgia) |
1992 Lake City Community College |
1993 Lake City Community College |
1994 Tallahassee Community College |
1995 Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College |
1996 Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College |
1997 Meridian Community College (Mississippi) |
1998 Calhoun Community College (Alabama) |
1999 Calhoun Community College |
2000 Calhoun Community College |
College Squash Association
National nine-player team champions: From 1942 to 1988, the title was based on dual-match records, with the team with the best record becoming the national champion. Since 1989, the title has been based on performance in the National Team Championships, with the team winning the “A” division becoming the national champion.
Men, 9-player team | ||||||
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||
1942: Princeton[818] | 1967: US Naval Academy | 1989: Yale | 2011: Trinity College[819] | |||
1943: Yale | 1968: Harvard | 1990: Yale | 2012: Princeton | |||
1947: Yale | 1969: Harvard | 1991: Harvard | 2013: Trinity College | |||
1948: Yale | 1970: Harvard | 1992: Harvard | 2014: Harvard | |||
1949: Yale | 1971: Harvard | 1993: Harvard | 2015: Trinity College | |||
1950: Yale | 1972: Harvard | 1994: Harvard | 2016: Yale | |||
1951: Harvard | 1973: Harvard | 1995: Harvard | 2017: Trinity College | |||
1952: Yale | 1974: Princeton | 1996: Harvard | 2018: Trinity College | |||
1953: Harvard and Yale | 1975: Princeton | 1997: Harvard | 2019: Harvard | |||
1954: Harvard | 1976: Harvard | 1998: Harvard | 2020: Harvard | |||
1955: Princeton | 1977: Princeton | 1999: Trinity College (CT) | 2021: Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic | |||
1956: Harvard | 1978: Princeton | 2000: Trinity College | 2022: Harvard | |||
1957: US Naval Academy | 1979: Princeton | 2001: Trinity College | 2023: | |||
1958: Yale | 1980: Harvard | 2002: Trinity College | 2024: | |||
1959: US Naval Academy | 1981: Princeton | 2003: Trinity College | 2025: | |||
1960: Harvard | 1982: Princeton | 2004: Trinity College | 2026: | |||
1961: Yale | 1983: Harvard | 2005: Trinity College | 2027: | |||
1962: Yale | 1984: Harvard | 2006: Trinity College | 2028: | |||
1963: Harvard | 1985: Harvard | 2007: Trinity College | 2029: | |||
1964: Harvard | 1986: Harvard | 2008: Trinity College | 2030: | |||
1965: Harvard | 1987: Harvard | 2009: Trinity College[820] | 2031: | |||
1966: Harvard | 1988: Harvard | 2010: Trinity College | 2032: |
Between 1956 and 1988, the National Intercollegiate Squash Racquets Association awarded an additional team trophy based on players’ performances in the national individual tournament. From 1956 to 1968, teams competed with four players, and from 1969 to 1988, they competed with six players.
Year | Men 4-player team champion |
Year | Men 6-player team champion |
Year | Men 6-player team champion | ||
1956 | Harvard | 1969 | Harvard[821] | 1982 | Harvard | ||
1957 | Harvard | 1970 | Harvard | 1983 | Harvard | ||
1958 | Williams College (MA) | 1971 | Pennsylvania | 1984 | Harvard | ||
1959 | Princeton | 1972 | Harvard | 1985 | Harvard | ||
1960 | Princeton | 1973 | Pennsylvania | 1986 | Harvard | ||
1961 | Yale | 1974 | Pennsylvania | 1987 | Harvard | ||
1962 | Yale | 1975 | Harvard | 1988 | Princeton | ||
1963 | Yale | 1976 | Princeton | ||||
1964 | Harvard | 1977 | Western Ontario | ||||
1965 | Princeton | 1978 | Princeton | ||||
1966 | Harvard | 1979 | Princeton | ||||
1967 | Harvard | 1980 | Western Ontario | ||||
1968 | Harvard | 1981 | Harvard |
Women | ||||||
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||
1973: Princeton[822] | 1986: Yale | 1999: Princeton | 2012: Harvard | |||
1974: Princeton | 1987: Harvard | 2000: Pennsylvania | 2013: Harvard | |||
1975: Princeton | 1988: Harvard | 2001: Harvard | 2014: Trinity College | |||
1976: Princeton | 1989: Princeton | 2002: Trinity College | 2015: Harvard | |||
1977: Yale | 1990: Harvard | 2003: Trinity College | 2016: Harvard | |||
1978: Princeton | 1991: Princeton | 2004: Yale | 2017: Harvard | |||
1979: Princeton | 1992: Yale | 2005: Yale | 2018: Harvard | |||
1980: Princeton | 1993: Harvard | 2006: Yale | 2019: Harvard | |||
1981: Princeton | 1994: Harvard | 2007: Princeton | 2020: Harvard | |||
1982: Harvard | 1995: Harvard | 2008: Princeton | 2021: Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic | |||
1983: Princeton | 1996: Harvard | 2009: Princeton | 2022: Harvard | |||
1984: Princeton | 1997: Harvard | 2010: Harvard | 2023: | |||
1985: Harvard | 1998: Princeton | 2011: Yale | 2024: |
National Scholastic Surfing Association (1978 - )[823]
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | |||
1970 UC San Diego[824] | 1989 Point Loma Nazarene College[825] | 2002 UC Santa Barbara[826] | 2015 Point Loma Nazarene University | |||
1976 & 1977 Orange Coast College[827] | 1990 UC San Diego[828] | 2003 UC San Diego | 2016 Point Loma Nazarene University | |||
1978 Orange Coast College[824] | 1991 UC Santa Barbara[829] | 2004 MiraCosta College | 2017 Point Loma Nazarene University | |||
1979 No team award[823][830] | 1992 UC Santa Barbara | 2005 UC Santa Barbara | 2018 Point Loma Nazarene University | |||
1980 Orange Coast College[831] | 1993 UC San Diego | 2006 Saddleback College[832] | 2019 California State, San Marcos | |||
1981 Orange Coast College[833] | 1994 UC Santa Barbara | 2007 San Diego State | 2020 cancelled | |||
1982 Orange Coast College[834] | 1995 UC San Diego | 2008 UC Santa Barbara | 2021 | |||
1983 UC San Diego | 1996 UC Santa Barbara | 2009 California State, San Marcos | 2022 Saddleback College[835] | |||
1984 UC Santa Barbara[836][837] | 1997 UC San Diego | 2010 UC Santa Barbara[838] | 2023 Point Loma Nazarene University[839] | |||
1985 UC Santa Barbara[840] | 1998 UC Santa Barbara | 2011 MiraCosta College | 2024 Point Loma Nazarene University[841] | |||
1986 UC Santa Barbara | 1999 Point Loma Nazarene University[842] | 2012 MiraCosta College[843] | 2025 | |||
1987 San Diego State | 2000 MiraCosta College[844] | 2013 San Diego State[845] | 2026 | |||
1988 UC Santa Barbara | 2001 California State, Long Beach[846] | 2014 Saddleback College[847] | 2027 |
US Figure Skating
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion | ||||
1997 Miami (OH) | 2002 Miami (OH)[848] | 2007 Miami (OH)[849] | 2012 Miami (OH)[850] | 2017 | ||||
1998 Miami (OH) | 2003 Miami (OH)[851] | 2008 Miami (OH) | 2013 Miami (OH)[852] | 2018 | ||||
1999 Michigan[853] | 2004 Western Michigan[854] | 2009 Miami (OH)[855] | 2014 Miami (OH)[856] | 2019 | ||||
2000 Miami (OH)[857] | 2005 Miami (OH)[858] | 2010 Miami (OH)[859] | 2015 Miami (OH) | 2020 | ||||
2001 Miami (OH) | 2006 Miami (OH)[860] | 2011 Miami (OH)[861] | 2016 Miami (OH)[862] | 2021 |
United States Synchronized Swimming
Preceded by AIAW tournament 1977-82
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | |||||
1983 | Ohio State | 1990 | Ohio State | 1997 | Ohio State | 2004 | Ohio State | 2011 | Ohio State | 2018 | Ohio State | |||||
1984 | Arizona | 1991 | Ohio State | 1998 | Stanford | 2005 | Stanford | 2012 | Ohio State | 2019 | Ohio State | |||||
1985 | Ohio State | 1992 | Ohio State | 1999 | Stanford | 2006 | Stanford | 2013 | Stanford | 2020 | cancelled (pandemic) | |||||
1986 | Ohio State | 1993 | Ohio State | 2000 | Ohio State | 2007 | Stanford | 2014 | Lindenwood[863] | 2021 | Stanford[864] | |||||
1987 | Ohio State | 1994 | Ohio State | 2001 | Ohio State | 2008 | Stanford | 2015 | Ohio State | 2022 | Ohio State | |||||
1988 | Ohio State | 1995 | Ohio State | 2002 | Ohio State | 2009 | Ohio State | 2016 | Stanford | 2023 | Ohio State | |||||
1989 | Ohio State | 1996 | Ohio State | 2003 | Ohio State | 2010 | Ohio State | 2017 | Ohio State | 2024 | Incarnate Word[865] |
National Collegiate Table Tennis Association[866]
Year | Men | Year | Men | Year | Coed | Women | Year | Coed | Women | Year | Coed | Women | ||||
1993 | Stony Brook | 2000 | Johns Hopkins | 2005 | Texas Wesleyan | Virginia Tech | 2012 | Texas Wesleyan | Lindenwood | 2019 | Texas Wesleyan[867] | Texas Wesleyan[868] | ||||
1994 | Brown | 2001 | Bradley | 2006 | Texas Wesleyan | Stanford | 2013 | Texas Wesleyan | Texas Wesleyan | 2020 | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic | ||||
1995 | Penn | 2002 | Illinois | 2007 | Texas Wesleyan | Texas Wesleyan | 2014[869] | Texas Wesleyan | Princeton | 2021 | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic | Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic | ||||
1996 | not held | 2003 | Illinois | 2008 | Texas Wesleyan | Texas Wesleyan | 2015 | Mississippi College[870] | Princeton | 2022 | New York University[871] | Texas Wesleyan[872] | ||||
1997 | RPI | 2004 | Texas Wesleyan | 2009[873] | Texas Wesleyan | Texas Wesleyan | 2016 | Texas Wesleyan[874] | Texas Wesleyan[875] | 2023 | New York University[876] | UCLA[877] | ||||
1998 | Johns Hopkins | 2005 | n/a | 2010[878] | Texas Wesleyan | Lindenwood | 2017 | Texas Wesleyan[879] | Texas Wesleyan[880] | 2024 | Texas Wesleyan[881] | Texas Wesleyan[882] | ||||
1999 | not held | 2006 | n/a | 2011[883] | Texas Wesleyan | Texas Wesleyan | 2018 | New York University[884] | Texas Wesleyan[885] | 2025 |
National Collegiate Taekwondo Association
Year[886] | Men[887] | Women[887] | Year | Overall | Year | Overall | Year | "Championship Div." | Year | "Championship Div." | Year | "Championship Div." | |||||
1976 | California[888] | California | 1985 | Iowa State | 1994 | California | 2003 | Iowa State | 2012 | California | 2021 | cancelled | |||||
1977 | California | Howard | 1986 | California | 1995 | California | 2004 | California | 2013 | Stanford | 2022 | MIT | |||||
1978 | Howard | Howard | 1987 | Iowa State | 1996 | California | 2005 | California | 2014 | California | 2023 | California | |||||
1979 | Howard | Howard | 1988 | Iowa State | 1997‡ | California | 2006 | California | 2015 | California | 2024 | ||||||
1980 | Howard | Howard | 1989 | Iowa State | 1998 | California | 2007 | California | 2016 | California | 2025 | ||||||
1981 | Howard | Howard | 1990 | California | 1999 | California | 2008 | California | 2017 | California | 2026 | ||||||
1982 | California | Howard | 1991 | California | 2000 | California | 2009 | California | 2018 | California & Stanford (tie) | 2027 | ||||||
1983 | Howard | Howard | 1992 | California | 2001 | California | 2010 | California[889] | 2019 | MIT[890] | 2028 | ||||||
1984† | Howard | Howard | 1993 | California | 2002 | California | 2011 | California[891] | 2020 | cancelled | 2029 |
† 1984 was the final year of separate men's and women's team competitions.[892]
‡ Beginning in 1997, the black belt competition has been conducted in a "championship division." Separate team awards were added for other belt colors and novices.
[893][894][895][896][897][898][899][900][901][902][903]
The following clubs won a national title in an open (adult) category (in these tournaments not all players were current students of the university):
- Men's Open Division (until 1999 the highest tier in the USA):
- Adelphi University: 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974
- Air Force: 1978, 2004
- UCLA: 1979
- University of Utah: 2005
- West Point: 2006
- Men's Elite Division (highest tier since 2000):
- No team has won the title. West Point has one silver and two bronze medals.
- Women's Open Division (highest tier in the USA):
- Kansas State University: 1975
- Ohio State: 1978
- University of Minnesota: 1990
Team Tennis, Co-ed (WTT format)
editUSTA Tennis on Campus, club-level only
Year and Champion[933] |
2000 North Carolina |
2001 North Carolina |
2002 Texas A&M |
2003 Florida |
2004 Texas A&M |
2005 Texas A&M |
2006 Texas A&M |
2007 Texas A&M |
2008 Texas |
2009 Duke |
2010 California |
2011 UCLA[934] |
2012 California |
2013 Georgia |
2014 California |
2015 California[935] |
2016 Auburn[936] |
2017 Michigan |
2018 Ohio State |
2019 UCLA |
2020 cancelled |
2021 cancelled |
2022 UCLA |
2023 Virginia |
2024 California |
Intercollegiate Tennis Association (1973–present)
Division I
|
Division III (2001 - present)
|
Division II (2020 - present)
Year | Men | Women |
2020 | Columbus State | Barry |
2021 | Columbus State | Indianapolis |
2022 | Barry | Barry |
Trap & skeet shooting
edit[15][940][941][942][943][944][945]
Association of College Unions International annually sponsors the National Intercollegiate Trap and Skeet Championships. The championships are the only national tournament in which shooters may compete in five different clay target games in the same program: American Trap, International Trap, American Skeet, International Skeet and Sporting Clays. The 2011 championship event is "the 43rd of the championship's history."[946]
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | |
1969 | ? | 1976 | Trinity University | |
1970 | ? | 1977 | Trinity University | |
1971 | ? | 1978 | Texas A&M[947] | |
1972 | ? | 1979 | ? | |
1973 | ? | 1980 | Trinity University | |
1974 | ? | 1981 | ? | |
1975 | Trinity University (San Antonio)[948] | 1982 | Texas A&M |
1983–1995: ?
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | Year | Champion | |||
1996 | Purdue | 2002 | Purdue | 2008 | Lindenwood | 2014 | Lindenwood | |||
1997 | Purdue | 2003 | Purdue | 2009 | Lindenwood | 2015 | Lindenwood[949] | |||
1998 | Purdue | 2004 | Lindenwood | 2010 | Lindenwood[950] | 2016 | Lindenwood[951] | |||
1999 | Purdue | 2005 | Lindenwood | 2011 | Lindenwood[952] | 2017 | ||||
2000[953] | Purdue | 2006 | Lindenwood | 2012 | Lindenwood | 2018 | ||||
2001 | Trinity Univ. (TX) | 2007 | Lindenwood | 2013 | Lindenwood | 2019 | Texas A&M[466] |
Division II
2015: Texas A&M[466]
Triathlon became an NCAA Emerging Sports for Women in 2014.
USA Triathlon
Year | Men | Women | Combined | Ref. |
1992 | ? | ? | ? | |
1993 | ? | ? | ? | |
1994 | ? | ? | Colorado | [954] |
1995 | ? | ? | Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo | [954] |
1996 | ? | ? | Colorado | [954] |
1997 | ? | ? | Colorado | [954] |
1998 | ? | ? | Colorado | [954] |
1999 | ? | ? | Colorado | [955] |
2000 | ? | ? | Colorado | [954][956] |
2001 | ? | ? | Montana | [954] |
2002 | US Naval Academy | Colorado | Colorado | [957] |
2003 | US Naval Academy | Colorado | Colorado | [958] |
2004 | UC Berkeley | Colorado | Colorado | [959] |
2005 | Colorado | Colorado | Colorado | [960] |
2006 * | UC Berkeley | Montana | Montana | |
2007 | US Naval Academy | US Naval Academy | US Naval Academy | [961] |
2008 | UC Berkeley | UC San Diego | UC Berkeley | [962][963][964] |
2009 | UC Berkeley | UC San Diego | US Naval Academy | [965][966] |
2010 | Colorado | US Military Academy | Colorado | [962] |
2011 | Colorado | US Naval Academy | Colorado | [962] |
2012 | Colorado | Colorado | Colorado | [962] |
2013 | Colorado | UC Berkeley | Colorado | [962] |
2014 | Colorado | UCLA | Colorado | [962] |
2015 | US Naval Academy | UCLA | Colorado | [962] |
2016 | Colorado | UCLA | Colorado | [962] |
2017 | US Naval Academy | Colorado | Colorado | [962] |
2018 | US Naval Academy | UC Berkeley | US Naval Academy | [967] |
2019 | Queens University | UC Berkeley | Queens University | [968] |
2020 | Not contested | |||
2021 | UC Berkeley | UC Berkeley | UC Berkeley | [969] |
2022 | Queens University | UC Berkeley | Queens University | |
2023 | Queens University | UC Berkeley | Queens University | [970][971][972] |
2024 | Queens University | Colorado | Queens University | [973] |
* 2006 event was a duathlon (water temperature too cold for swim), with 5K run, 40K bike and 10K run segments.[974]
Intercollegiate Association of Amateur Athletes of America
Conducted at the annual track and field championship meet.
Year | Champion | Year | Champion | |
1880[975] | Columbia | 1886 | Harvard | |
1881 | Princeton | 1887 | Columbia | |
1882 | Columbia | 1888 | Harvard | |
1883 | Lafayette (PA) | 1889 | Columbia | |
1884 | Harvard | 1890 | Columbia | |
1885 | Harvard | 1891 | Columbia |
Ultimate Players Association (1979-2010), USA Ultimate (2010–present)
Division I
Year | Open Champion | Year | Open Champion | Year | Open Champion | Year | Open Champion | Year | Women's Champion | Year | Women's Champion | Year | Women's Champion | Year | Women's Champion | |||||||
1984[976] | Stanford | 1996 | UC Santa Barbara | 2008 | Wisconsin | 2020 | Cancelled due to COVID-19[977] | 1996 | UNC Wilmington | 2008 | British Columbia | 2020 | Cancelled due to COVID-19[977] | |||||||||
1985 | Pennsylvania | 1997 | UC Santa Barbara | 2009 | Carleton College (MN) | 2021 | North Carolina - Chapel Hill | 1997 | Stanford | 2009 | UC Santa Barbara | 2021 | North Carolina - Chapel Hill | |||||||||
1986 | Massachusetts | 1998 | UC Santa Barbara | 2010 | Florida | 2022 | North Carolina - Chapel Hill | 1998 | Stanford | 2010 | Oregon | 2022 | North Carolina - Chapel Hill | |||||||||
1987 | Chabot CC (CA) | 1999 | NC State | 2011 | Carleton College | 2023 | 1987 | Kansas | 1999 | Stanford | 2011 | UC Santa Barbara | 2023 | |||||||||
1988 | UC Santa Barbara | 2000 | Brown | 2012 | Pittsburgh | 2024 | 1988 | UC Santa Barbara | 2000 | Carleton College | 2012 | Washington | 2024 | |||||||||
1989 | UC Santa Barbara | 2001 | Carleton College | 2013 | Pittsburgh | 2025 | 1989 | UC Davis | 2001 | Georgia | 2013 | Oregon | 2025 | |||||||||
1990 | UC Santa Barbara | 2002 | Stanford | 2014 | Colorado | 2026 | 1990 | UC Santa Barbara | 2002 | UC San Diego | 2014 | Ohio State | 2026 | |||||||||
1991 | UC Santa Cruz | 2003 | Wisconsin | 2015 | North Carolina - Chapel Hill | 2027 | 1991 | UC Santa Barbara | 2003 | Stanford | 2015 | Oregon | 2027 | |||||||||
1992 | Oregon | 2004 | Colorado | 2016 | Minnesota | 2028 | 1992 | UNC Wilmington | 2004 | UC Davis | 2016 | Stanford | 2028 | |||||||||
1993 | UNC Wilmington | 2005 | Brown | 2017 | Carleton College | 2029 | 1993 | UC Berkeley | 2005 | Stanford | 2017 | Dartmouth | 2029 | |||||||||
1994 | East Carolina | 2006 | Florida | 2018 | North Carolina - Chapel Hill | 2030 | 1994 | UC Santa Cruz | 2006 | Stanford | 2018 | Dartmouth | 2030 | |||||||||
1995 | East Carolina | 2007 | Wisconsin | 2019 | Brown | 2031 | 1995 | UC Santa Cruz | 2007 | Stanford | 2019 | UC San Diego | 2031 |
Division III
Year | Open Champion[978] | Year | Women's Champion[979] | |
2010 | Carleton | 2010 | Pacific Lutheran | |
2011 | Claremont | 2011 | Carleton | |
2012 | Carleton | 2012 | Claremont | |
2013 | Middlebury | 2013 | Bowdoin | |
2014 | Bentley | 2014 | Rice | |
2015 | Franciscan | 2015 | Rice | |
2016 | Georgia College | 2016 | Carleton | |
2017 | Richmond | 2017 | Carleton | |
2018 | Bryant | 2018 | St. Olaf | |
2019 | Middlebury | 2019 | Oberlin |
American Wakeboard Association (2001-2004[980]), USA Wakeboard (2005–present), College Wake (2010–present)
Year | Champion | Year | USA Wakeboard Champion | College Wake Champion | |
2001 | Wisconsin–La Crosse[981][982] | 2010 | CSU - Chico | Texas[983] | |
2002 | Florida Southern[984] | 2011 | Tennessee | South Florida[983] | |
2003 | Florida Southern[985] | 2012 | CSU - Chico[986] | CSU - Chico[983] | |
2004 | Central Florida | 2013 | Central Washington[987] | Arizona State[983][988] | |
2005 | Central Florida | 2014 | Arizona State[989] | Arizona State[988] | |
2006[a] | Florida (spring),[990] Central Florida (fall)[991] | 2015 | Florida[992] | Texas A&M[993] | |
2007 | Central Florida[994] | 2016 | Florida[995] | Florida[996] | |
2008 | Florida[997] | 2017 | (fall) | ||
2009 | Florida[998][999] | 2018 |
- ^ The spring 2006–2012 USA Wakeboard events were part of the CBS Sports "Collegiate Nationals " and "Alt Games" presentations.
Cable Wakeboarding
Year | Champion |
2009 | Texas State[1000] |
2013 | Central Florida[1001] |
2014 | Central Florida[1002] |
2015 | Baylor[1003] |
2016 | Central Florida[1004] |
[1005][1006][1007][1008][1009][1010][1011][1012][1013][1014][1015][1016][1017][1018][1019][1020][1021]
National Collegiate Water Ski Association
Year and Champion | Year and Champion | Year and Champion (Division I) |
Year and Champion (Division II) |
Year and Champion (Division I) |
Year and Champion (Division II) | |||
1979 San Diego State[1022] | 1991 Central Florida | 2002 Louisiana-Monroe (Div I-A) | 2002 Rollins College (FL) (Div I)[1023] | 2014 Louisiana-Monroe | 2014 Clemson[1024] | |||
1980 Northeast Louisiana | 1992 Central Florida | 2003 Louisiana (formerly Southwestern Louisiana) |
2003 Rollins College | 2015 Louisiana | 2015 Western Washington[1025] | |||
1981 Northeast Louisiana | 1993 Northeast Louisiana | 2004 Louisiana-Monroe | 2004 UC San Diego | 2016 Louisiana-Monroe[1026] | 2016 Miami University (Ohio) | |||
1982 Northeast Louisiana | 1994 Northeast Louisiana | 2005 Louisiana | 2005 Texas A&M | 2017 Louisiana-Monroe | 2017 Miami of Ohio | |||
1983 Northeast Louisiana | 1995 Southwestern Louisiana | 2006 Louisiana-Monroe | 2006 San Diego State | 2018 Louisiana-Monroe | 2018 Cal Poly San Luis Obispo | |||
1984 Northeast Louisiana | 1996 Northeast Louisiana | 2007 Louisiana-Monroe | 2007 Texas State | 2019 Louisiana | 2019 Miami of Ohio | |||
1985 Northeast Louisiana | 1997 Southwestern Louisiana | 2008 Louisiana-Monroe | 2008 Cincinnati | 2020 Cancelled | 2020 Cancelled | |||
1986 Northeast Louisiana | 1998 Northeast Louisiana | 2009 Louisiana-Monroe | 2009 Wisconsin | 2021 Louisiana | 2021 Michigan | |||
1987 Northeast Louisiana | 1999 Louisiana-Monroe (formerly Northeast Louisiana) |
2010 Louisiana | 2010 Ohio State | 2022 Louisiana | 2022 Texas A&M | |||
1988 Northeast Louisiana | 2000 Louisiana-Monroe | 2011 Louisiana-Monroe | 2011 Texas State[1027] | 2023 Louisiana | 2023 | |||
1989 Rollins College | 2001 Arizona State | 2012 Louisiana-Monroe | 2012 Clemson[1028] | 2024 | 2024 | |||
1990 Northeast Louisiana | 2013 Louisiana-Monroe | 2013 UC Davis[1029] | 2025 | 2025 |
Barefoot Waterskiing
Year | Champion |
2004 | Wisconsin[1030] |
USA Weightlifting
Year | Men | Coed | Women |
19?? | |||
1953 | Notre Dame[1033] | ||
1957 | Louisiana[1034] | ||
19?? | |||
1963 | Louisiana[1035] | ||
1964 | Michigan State[1036] | ||
1965 | Louisiana[1037] | ||
1966 | Louisiana[1034] | ||
1967 | Louisiana[1034] | ||
1968 | Louisiana[1034] | ||
1969 | Louisiana[1034] | ||
1970 | Canceled[1034] | ||
1971 | Louisiana[1034] | ||
19?? | |||
1977 | Virginia Tech[1038][1039] | ||
1978 | Virginia Tech[1038] | ||
1979 | Virginia Tech[1040] | ||
1980 | ? | ||
1981 | ? | ||
1982 | ? | ||
1983 | Virginia Tech[1041] | ||
1984 | ? | ||
1985[1042] | ? | ||
1986 | ? | ||
1987 | Texas A&M[1043] | ||
19?? | |||
1993[1044] | ? | ? | |
1999 | Montana State[1045] | ||
2000 | |||
2001 | McNeese State (LA)[1046] | ? | |
200? | |||
2006[1047][1048] | LSU-Shreveport | ||
2007[1049] | LSU-Shreveport | Northern Michigan | no team entrants |
2008[1050] | LSU-Shreveport | LSU-Shreveport | Emory (GA) |
2009[1051] | LSU-Shreveport | LSU-Shreveport | LSU-Shreveport |
2010 | Northern Michigan | Northern Michigan | LSU-Shreveport |
2011[1052] | LSU-Shreveport | LSU-Shreveport | LSU-Shreveport |
2012[1053] | LSU-Shreveport | Northern Michigan | Northern Michigan |
2013[1054] | LSU-Shreveport | LSU-Shreveport | |
2014[1055][1056] | Georgia | Lindenwood | Georgia |
2015[1057] | Northern Michigan | Northern Michigan | Northern Michigan |
2016[1058] | Northern Michigan | Lindenwood | Northern Michigan |
2017 | |||
2018 | Lindenwood | East Tennessee State | |
2019 | |||
2020 | Northern Michigan[1059] | ||
2021 | Lenoir-Rhyne | Northern Michigan | East Tennessee State |
2022 | Lenoir-Rhyne | Lenoir-Rhyne | Florida |
2023 | Florida | Lindenwood | Lindenwood |
2024 | Florida | Lindenwood | Florida |
Women's Collegiate Wrestling Association
|
National Collegiate Wrestling Association
|
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics
#invitational tournament[1083] |
Women’s Collegiate Wrestling Coalition
|
Intercollegiate team champions of NCAA and AIAW sports
editMany team sports that are played at the collegiate level are currently, or at one time were, governed by multi-sport intercollegiate athletic associations that were organized to meet the needs of their member colleges and universities. The oldest of these is the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), founded in 1906 to address the rash of serious injuries and deaths arising in the collegiate sport of American football. It conducted its first team national championship events in the sport of track and field in 1921. Over the years, the NCAA has added championship events for a variety of sports, with divisions of competition based upon school size and enrollment, and now conducts over 90 championships. Before NCAA events were initiated in particular sports, national governing bodies for many of those sports typically conducted annual collegiate championship events.
The organization that is now the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) began in 1937 with the first collegiate men's basketball tournament, which led to the formation of the National Association of intercollegiate Basketball in 1940. It serves primarily small colleges. With the growth of organized women's intercollegiate sports, the Division for Girls' and Women's Sports first conducted women's championship events and later created the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) in 1972 to govern women's sports at the collegiate level, coinciding with the advent of Title IX federal legislation. The NCAA later usurped the mission of the AIAW by conducting its first women's championships in twelve sports directly head-to-head with the AIAW in a year of dual team championships in 1981–82. The AIAW was legally dissolved in 1983.
NCAA Team Champions: see NCAA Championships
Pre-NCAA Team Champions: see Pre-NCAA intercollegiate championships
AIAW Team Champions: see AIAW and DGWS Championships
NAIA Team Champions: see NAIA Championships
See also
editReferences
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- ^ "The Collegiate Nationals / Adventure Race / Results". Archived from the original on March 10, 2008. Retrieved 2016-06-06.
{{cite web}}
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Storrs, June 4.--(Special)--The University of Connecticut has won the national intercollegiate women's archery championship for the second straight year, Coach R. J. Guyer announced today.
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{{cite web}}
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Last spring at Eastern Illinois University, playing for the collegiate championship ... the Howard team topped all others including its arch-rival, Stanford.
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This is UCI's third national championship in the last five years.
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Berkeley won the men's as well as women's team competition.
- ^ "Congratulations to teams that won the national collegiate tournament!!". Facebook. Retrieved 2016-05-25.
- ^ "Congratulations to the 2009 Champions!". Retrieved 2009-08-29.
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- ^ "The History of ACUI". Retrieved 2011-04-07.
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- ^ a b "INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM CHAMPIONSHIPS PAST RESULTS". Retrieved 2021-01-09.
- ^ a b "Maryland Eastern Shore, Fresno State win USBC Intercollegiate Team Championships titles". Retrieved 2011-06-04.
- ^ a b "Champions determined at 2021 Intercollegiate Team and Singles Championships". Retrieved 2021-05-09.
- ^ a b "Webber International sweeps ITC titles". Retrieved 2013-04-23.
- ^ a b "Titles determined at 2022 Intercollegiate Team and Singles Championships". Retrieved 2022-04-24.
- ^ a b "College Bowling's Team Champions Decided". Retrieved 2017-04-20.
- ^ a b "Titles determined at 2023 Intercollegiate Team and Singles Championships". Retrieved 2023-04-23.
- ^ a b "Champions determined at 2014 XBowling ITC". Retrieved 2014-04-18.
- ^ a b bowl.com determined at 2024 Intercollegiate Team and Singles Championships https://bowl.com/news/titles-determined-at-2024-intercollegiate-team-and-singles-championshipstitle=Titles determined at 2024 Intercollegiate Team and Singles Championships. Retrieved 2024-04-21.
{{cite web}}
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value (help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ a b "Champions determined at 2015 XBowling ITC". Retrieved 2015-04-18.
- ^ a b "Champions determined at 2016 ITC". Retrieved 2016-04-24.
- ^ Bigham, Terry. "USBC Collegiate to Vacate Webber International Men's 2017 ITC Title". United States Bowling Congress. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
- ^ a b Bigham, Terry. "Helmer Cup Winners Decided at 2018 Intercollegiate Team Championships". United States Bowling Congress. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
- ^ a b "Wichita State men, Webber International women win Intercollegiate Team Championships". Retrieved 2010-05-30.
- ^ a b Bigham, Terry. "Titles decided at 2019 Intercollegiate Team Championships". United States Bowling Congress. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
- ^ "TWICE AS NICE! McKendree Women's Bowling Wins 2017 Intercollegiate Team Championships Title". McKendree University Athletics. 22 April 2017. Retrieved 17 February 2018.
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University of Michigan's men's team took home the team title, and the United States Military Academy at West Point women's team defended their 2013 national title and captured the repeat in 2014.
- ^ "2014 National Championships: Congratulations to our 2014 Champions!". 29 April 2014. Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 2016-06-03.
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- ^ a b c "Champions -- USIBA". Archived from the original on 2019-08-23. Retrieved 2019-08-21.
- ^ "USIBA 2019 National Tournament Finals 3/24/19". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21.
- ^ @collegeboxing (21 March 2022). "Congratulations to our First Place and Runner Up Men's team trophy recipients: 1.) @vmiboxing 2.) @terps_boxing" – via Instagram.
- ^ @collegeboxing (21 March 2022). "Congratulations to our First Place and Runner Up Women's team trophy recipients: 1.) @illiniboxing 2.) @michigan_college_boxing" – via Instagram.
- ^ @collegeboxing (26 March 2022). "Congratulations to our First Place and Runner-Up Men's team trophy recipients: 1.) @illiniboxing 2.) @huskyboxing" – via Instagram.
- ^ @collegeboxing (26 March 2022). "Congratulations to our First Place and Runner-Up Women's team trophy recipients: 1.) University of California—Riverside (@highlandergloves) 2.)University of Washington (@huskyboxing)" – via Instagram.
- ^ "2024 National Tournament - Day 3 - Ring 2". YouTube.
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Collegiate sprint championships were held this past Saturday on the Oklahoma River at the Boathouse district. OCU finished off the day winning the overall title.
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- ^ Harrison, Jane. "High water, top awards for local Paddlers at (2013) national collegiate regatta". Lakeside News. Archived from the original on 2016-08-07. Retrieved 2016-06-01.
UNG achieved three awards: best novice men's and women's teams and top collegiate team.
- ^ Griffin, Denis (28 April 2006). "Canoe and kayak: Now you know". The Stanford Daily. Vol. 229, no. 49.
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- ^ "USA Canoe/Kayak Collegiate National Championships May 14-16, 2010 Renton, WA" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-05-31.
- ^ "Saturday, May 10th, 2014 Collegiate Nationals/Spring Sprints" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-10-22. Retrieved 2016-06-01. Based on these reported results, North Georgia won first place in all 12 of the men's collegiate races and 6 of the 9 women's races that were conducted. North Georgia's boats accounted for 19 of the 27 men's boats that finished races and 11 of the 18 finishing women's boats (excluding the only finisher in the 200 m women's K4 race, a combined UNG/Georgia Tech quad). Georgia Tech had 10 finishing boats, and Georgia Perimeter College had two (excluding two second-place men's boats with combined GT/GPC paddlers).
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Stanford won the third annual USA Canoe Kayak Sprint National Championships ... Georgia Tech won the first championship while Stanford won the second.
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Georgia Tech won the [2011] team title with 137 points.
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- ^ "sunday, april 15, 2012 ACA Collegiate Race Series National Championships". 15 April 2012. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
- ^ "wednesday, april 3, 2013 Collegiate Canoe, Kayak & SUP National Championships". 3 April 2013. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
Over the weekend, the ACA hosted the 6th annual Collegiate National Canoe & Kayak Championships on the Tuckaseegee River in western North Carolina.
- ^ "saturday, november 1, 2014 Collegiate Race Series National Championships". November 2014. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
Yep-we're having 2 National Championships this year!
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- ^ Senior, Kirsten (1 Aug 2012). "UCF Rock Climbing at the CCS National Championship!!". Archived from the original on 2016-09-19. Retrieved 2016-06-09.
For the past 3 years the team has achieved first place at Nationals, and although extremely proud of the hard work that paid off in the second place award this year, is determined to reclaim their trophy in 2013.
- ^ Carls, Drew (3 May 2013). "Tower Orange for Three Sport Clubs". The University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved 2016-06-09.
The team also won the 2012 National Championship.
- ^ Bureau, Scott (18 Jun 2013). "Student rock-climbers reach new heights at 2013 National Championship". RIT University News. Rochester Institute of Technology. Retrieved 2016-06-09.
31 schools from across the country, including third-place Georgia Tech, second-place University of Colorado, Colorado Springs and first-place University of Texas.
{{cite news}}
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has generic name (help) - ^ "CCS Nationals 2014". Climbing (Miss)adventures. 24 Apr 2014. Retrieved 2016-06-09.
The University of Texas rock climbing team takes gold!
- ^ Dzakowic, Morgan (28 May 2016). "Angela Stroud speeds Colorado State University to second straight national climbing title". Denver Post. Retrieved 2016-06-09.
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- ^ "2023 Collegiate National Boulder, LeadTR, Speed Springs Climbing Center/Gripstone Climbing & Fitness". usacresults.org. Retrieved 7 October 2024.
- ^ "Collegiate National Boulder, LeadTR, Speed Alta Climbing & Fitness". usacresults.org.
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- ^ a b "Cricket Cup". The Crimson. 28 April 1900. Retrieved 2016-05-20.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Bushnell, Edward R., ed. (1909). The History of Athletics at the University of Pennsylvania Volume II, 1896–97—1907–08. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: The Athletic Association of the University of Pennsylvania. pp. 123–136.
- ^ "Harvard Beaten at Cricket". New York Times. New York, NY. 12 June 1890.
- ^ "Outing; Sport, Adventure, Travel, Fiction". 16. W. B. Holland. August 1890: 416.
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(help) - ^ "Outing; Sport, Adventure, Travel, Fiction". 34. W. B. Holland. August 1899: 539.
{{cite journal}}
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(help) - ^ University of Pennsylvania Record Yearbook - Class of 1909. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania. p. 255.
Besides winning the inter-collegiate championship from Cornell and Haverford, ... Pennsylvania, 133 and 107 (3 wickets); Haverford College, 64 and 79.
- ^ "OTHER MATCHES IN UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 1917". Retrieved 2016-05-21.
- ^ "Intercollegiate Cricket". New York Times. New York, NY. 14 April 1883.
- ^ a b "Intercollegiate Cricketers". New York Times. New York, NY. 11 March 1893.
- ^ "Harvard's Cricketers Beaten". New York Times. New York, NY. 27 May 1900.
- ^ "Haverford College v University of Pennsylvania (29th May 1909)". Retrieved 2016-05-21.
- ^ University of Pennsylvania Record Yearbook - Class of 1910. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania. pp. 284–285. Pennsylvania def. Haverford College, 145-112.
- ^ "OTHER MATCHES IN UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 1918". Retrieved 2016-05-21.
- ^ a b "Intercollegiate Cricket". New York Times. New York, NY. 12 April 1885.
- ^ "Harvard Won at Cricket". New York Times. New York, NY. 19 May 1901.
- ^ "Cricketers Beat K. A. C.". New York Times. New York, NY. 18 Jun 1901.
- ^ Haverford College Record Yearbook - Class of 1911. Haverford, PA: Haverford College. pp. 121–122.
Last year ... [t]he biggest feat of the year was the victory over Penn and the placing of the Intercollegiate cup once more in its proper cabinet in the trophy room.
- ^ Haverford College Record Yearbook - Class of 1919. Haverford, PA. p. 91. Haverford defeated Penn, 196-54
- ^ "Harvard College v Haverford College (26th May 1893)". Retrieved 2016-05-21.
- ^ "Cricket With Mohair C. C. Today". The Crimson. May 1904. Retrieved 2016-05-20.
- ^ The World Almanac and Encyclopedia 1912. New York, NY: The Press Publishing Co. 1911. p. 369.
- ^ University of Pennsylvania Record Yearbook - Class of 1921. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania. p. 347. Penn defeated Haverford, 169-164.
- ^ "Harvard Beaten at Cricket". New York Times. New York, NY. 23 June 1885.
- ^ a b "News of the Cricketers". New York Times. New York, NY. 7 June 1895.
- ^ The American Almanac, Year-book, Cyclopedia and Atlas. New York, NY: New York American and Journal. 1904. p. 700.
- ^ "The Alumni Register". 14 (4). University of Pennsylvania General Alumni Society. June 1912: 274.
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(help) Penn defeated Haverford, 168 (7 w)-130. - ^ Haverford College Record Yearbook - Class of 1922. Haverford, PA. p. 71. In 1921 Haverford "carried off the league cup."
- ^ Haverford College Athletics 1920-1921. Haverford, PA: Haverford College. 1922. p. 61. Haverford neither scheduled nor played any intercollegiate matches in 1921, playing instead in the Philadelphia Cricket League.
- ^ "CRICKET TEAM LOST TWICE Haverford Won Friday, 306 to 59; U. of P. Won Saturday, 187 to 78". The Crimson. 23 May 1904. Retrieved 2016-05-20.
- ^ Harvard College Class of 1904 (1905). Secretary's First Report. Cambridge, Mass.: The University Press. pp. 89–90.
{{cite book}}
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- ^ "Intercollegiate Championship 1904". Retrieved 2016-05-20.
- ^ The World Almanac and Book of Facts 1914. Press Publishing Company (The New York World). 1914. p. 375.
University of Pennsylvania won the Intercollegiate championship, 1913.
- ^ Haverford College Athletics 1921-1922. Haverford, PA: Haverford College. 1922. pp. 75–82. Penn defeated Haverford, 209-109, on May 10, 1922; Haverford defeated Penn, 190-63, on May 24, 1922.
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[S]ince its founding in 1976 [West Point has] won the collegiate national championship in 26 of our 34 years of existence. In the old days, the championship was determined from the highest standings for a college team at the national finals tournament. Since the Atlanta Olympics in 1996, the process of determining the College National Champion has been its own separate competition. In recent years, West Point, Air Force, and North Carolina have been the dominate [sic] college programs, with Army winning the last seven and 26 of the last 33 titles.
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