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The answer to this question is tricky. There are several different 'titles' that have been won since universities began competing in sports. There are NCAA titles which go back several decades (sorry, I do not know the history of the NCAA, but they have a website: ncaa.com). The NCAA gives out 'titles' to teams and to individuals. There have been other institutions before the NCAA that gave out 'titles' to universities. The only definitive answer that I know of, is based on NCAA team titles. UCLA has won 104 team titles with Stanford and USC in second and third with fifteen-to-twenty less team titles.
ohio state
12
2005 - Texas
Ucla (UCLA)
Texas has won 112 NCAA titles. HOOK 'EM HORNS.
Sport is called Athletics in colleges, universities and university-preporatory schools. There are many subsets of athletics, including varsity athletics and College Football.
look up the standings for sports in D-II
The NCAA is the National Collegiate Athletic Association - the association which regulates athletes of 1281 institutions, conferences and organizations, including many colleges and universities in the United States and Canada.
yes
The NCAA is the National Collegiate Athletic Association. They organize several athletic programs for colleges and universities in the US and Canada. NCAA sports include baseball, football, basketball, gymnastics, bowling, golf, softball, lacrosse, tennis, track and field, wrestling, water polo, cross country, fencing, rowing, skiing, ice and field hockey, soccer, swimming and diving.
According to their respective websites: Harvard has 39 sports Ohio State has 36 teamsPrinceton has 36 teamsStanford has 35 teams