NCAA Women's Soccer Championships are divided into three divisions. This article lists NCAA Women's soccer championships.[1]
Contents |
Division I
2009 Tournament
The 2009 Division I Soccer Championship was taken by the University of North Carolina in a 1-0 victory over Stanford on Sunday, December 6.
Regional winners after first two rounds:
- Stanford, Santa Clara, Wisconsin, Boston College
- Portland, Virgina Tech, Virginia, UCLA
- North Carolina, Maryland, Wake Forest, South Carolina
- Notre Dame, Oregon State, Texas A&M, Florida State
Third round winners:
Quarter Finals scores (November 27-29 at campus sites):
- Stanford 3, Boston College 1
- UCLA 2, Portland 1
- North Carolina 5, Wake Forest 2
- Notre Dame 2, Florida St. 0
Semifinals (December 4 at Texas A&M):
- Stanford 2, UCLA 1
- North Carolina 1, Notre Dame 0
National Championship (December 6, 1 pm ET, ESPN2/ESPN360.com, Aggie Stadium, College Station, Texas):
- North Carolina 1, Stanford 0
Champions
- 1982 North Carolina 1-0 Central Florida
- 1983 North Carolina(2) 4-0 George Mason
- 1984 North Carolina(3) 2-0 UConn
- 1985 George Mason 2-0 North Carolina
- 1986 North Carolina(4) 2-0 Colorado College
- 1987 North Carolina(5) 1-0 UMass
- 1988 North Carolina(6) 4-1 North Carolina State
- 1989 North Carolina(7) 2-0 Colorado College
- 1990 North Carolina(8) 6-0 UConn
- 1991 North Carolina(9) 3-1 Wisconsin
- 1992 North Carolina(10) 9-1 Duke
- 1993 North Carolina(11) 6-0 George Mason
- 1994 North Carolina(12) 5-0 Notre Dame
- 1995 Notre Dame 1-0 Portland (3 OT)
- 1996 North Carolina(13) 1-0 Notre Dame (2 OT)
- 1997 North Carolina(14) 2-0 UConn
- 1998 Florida 1-0 North Carolina
- 1999 North Carolina(15) 2-0 Notre Dame
- 2000 North Carolina(16) 2-1 UCLA
- 2001 Santa Clara 1-0 North Carolina
- 2002 Portland 2-1 Santa Clara (OT)
- 2003 North Carolina(17) 6-0 UConn
- 2004 Notre Dame(2) 1-1 UCLA (4-3 pen)
- 2005 Portland(2) 4-0 UCLA
- 2006 North Carolina(18) 2-1 Notre Dame
- 2007 USC 2-0 Florida State
- 2008 North Carolina(19) 2-1 Notre Dame
- 2009 North Carolina(20) 1-0 Stanford
Division II
- 1988 Cal State Hayward 1-0 Barry
- 1989 Barry 4-0 Keene State
- 1990 Sonoma State 2-0 Keene State
- 1991 Cal State Dominguez Hills 2-1 Sonoma State
- 1992 Barry 3-2 Adelphi
- 1993 Barry 2-0 Cal Poly SLO
- 1994 Franklin Pierce 2-0 Regis
- 1995 Franklin Pierce 5-0 Barry
- 1996 Franklin Pierce 1-0 Lynn
- 1997 Franklin Pierce 3-0 WV Wesleyan
- 1998 Lynn 3-1 Sonoma State
- 1999 Franklin Pierce 3-1 Cal Poly Pomona
- 2000 UCSD 3-1 Northern Kentucky
- 2001 UCSD 2-0 Christian Brothers
- 2002 Christian Brothers 2-1 Nebraska-Omaha
- 2003 Kennesaw State 2-0 Franklin Pierce
- 2004 Metro State 3-2 Adelphi
- 2005 Nebraska-Omaha 2-1 Seattle Pacific (aet)
- 2006 Metro State 1-0 Grand Valley State (OT)
- 2007 Tampa 3–1 Franklin Pierce
- 2008 Seattle Pacific 1-0 West Florida (2OT)
Division III
- 1986 Rochester 1-0 Plymouth State
- 1987 Rochester 1-0 Hobart and William Smith
- 1988 Hobart and William Smith 1-0 UCSD
- 1989 UCSD 3-2 Ithaca (3 OT)
- 1990 Ithaca 1-0 Cortland State (4 OT)
- 1991 Ithaca 2-0 Rochester
- 1992 Cortland State 1-0 UMass Dartmouth
- 1993 Trenton State[2] 4-0 Plymouth State
- 1994 Trenton State[2] 4-3 UCSD (3 OT)
- 1995 UCSD 3-0 Methodist
- 1996 UCSD 2-1 College of NJ
- 1997 UCSD 1-0 Hobart and William Smith
- 1998 Macalester 1-0 College of NJ (4 OT)
- 1999 UCSD 1-0 Macalester
- 2000 College of NJ 2-1 Tufts
- 2001 Ohio Wesleyan 1-0 Amherst
- 2002 Ohio Wesleyan 1-0 Messiah
- 2003 SUNY Oneonta 2-1 Chicago (OT)
- 2004 Wheaton (Ill.) 1-1 Puget Sound (aet, 5-4 pen)
- 2005 Messiah 1-0 College of NJ
- 2006 Wheaton (Ill.) 2-0 College of NJ
- 2007 Wheaton (Ill.) 1-0 Messiah
- 2008 Messiah 5-0 Wheaton (Ill.)
See also
- AIAW Intercollegiate Women's Soccer Championship
- NCAA Men's Division I Soccer Championship
- NCAA Men's Division II Soccer Championship
- NCAA Men's Division III Soccer Championship
- NAIA national men's soccer championship
- Intercollegiate Soccer Football Association
Notes and references
- ^ NCAA Women's Soccer Championships Statistics and Records, NCAA.org
- ^ a b Became The College of New Jersey in 1996.
External links
|
||||||||||||||
|
|||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




