THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION P.O. Box 6222 .

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THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATIONP.O. Box 6222, Indianapolis, Indiana 46206-6222317/917-6222www.ncaa.orgSeptember 2004Statistical Compilation By:J.D. Hamilton, Assistant Director of Statisics.This is the first of three annual publications recording the history of NCAAChampionships. The winter book will be released in December, the spring book inFebruary.Men’s and women’s summaries in all three publications are current through thespring 2004 championships. Updated summary information can be found aftereach championship season via the NCAA Online Web site at www.ncaa.org. Toaccess those summaries, select "More Association News," "NCAA Publications,"and “Record Books,” then select the championships records book and summary ofyour choice.NCAA, NCAA logo and National Collegiate Athletic Association are registeredmarks of the Association and use in any manner is prohibited unless prior approvalis obtained from the Association.Copyright, 2004, by the National Collegiate Athletic Association.Printed in the United States of America.ISBN 0735-5475NCAA 19322003-04 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS

ForewordIt has been 123 years since the start of National Collegiate Championships sponsored by the nation’s colleges and universities.This historic series began in the spring of 1883 when Joseph Clark of Harvardcaptured the first singles title of the National Collegiate Tennis Championships.The NCAA, now with more than 1,000 member institutions eligible for competition, began to administer collegiate athletics championships in 1921, whenthe Association sponsored its first outdoor track and field championships. TheNational Collegiate Tennis Championships became a part of the NCAA seriesin 1938.This book chronicles the results of the fall 2003 men’s and women’s championships. In the 2004-05 academic year, championship anniversaries includeDivision III Baseball (30th), Division I Men’s Lacrosse (35th), Division III Men’sTennis (30th), Division II Men’s Indoor Track and Field (20th), Division IWrestling (75th), National Collegiate Women’s Ice Hockey (5th), Division IIWomen’s Lacrosse (5th), Division II Women’s Indoor Track and Field (20th),and National Collegiate Women’s Water Polo (5th).National Collegiate Championships competition has a rich tradition of excellence.Each of the championships serves as a stimulus for the development of the particular sport, and the series itself highlights the overall intercollegiate athleticsprograms of the nation’s colleges and universities.FOREWORD3

ContentsHISTORY AND RECORDS OF THE NCAA.6SCHOOL NAME CHANGE/ABBREVIATION KEY .7THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES.8MEN’S FALL CHAMPIONSHIPS (2003 Champion).9Division I Cross Country (Stanford) .Division II Cross Country (Adams State) .Division III Cross Country (Calvin) .101826Division I-AA Football (Delaware).Division II Football (Grand Valley State).Division III Football (St. John’s [Minn.]).324457Division I Soccer (Indiana).Division II Soccer (Lynn).Division III Soccer (Trinity [Tex.]).768794Water Polo (Southern California) . 104WOMEN’S FALL CHAMPIONSHIPS (2003 Champion) . 109Division I Cross Country (Stanford) . 110Division II Cross Country (Adams State) . 115Division III Cross Country (Middlebury) . 120Division I Field Hockey (Wake Forest). 125Division II Field Hockey (Bloomsburg) . 137Division III Field Hockey (Salisbury) . 141Division I Soccer (North Carolina). 155Division II Soccer (Kennesaw State) . 165Division III Soccer (Oneonta State) . 171Division I Volleyball (Southern California). 179Division II Volleyball (North Alabama) . 219Division III Volleyball (Washington-St. Louis) . 249CHAMPIONSHIP WINNING STREAKS . 281Consecutive Men’s National Titles.Consecutive Women’s National Titles.Streaks of Discontinued Sports .Longest Streaks .Longest Active Streaks.4CONTENTS282282283283283

COACHING RECORDS. 284Division I Team Titles.Division I Consecutive Team Titles .Division II Team Titles.Division II Consecutive Team Titles.Division III Team Titles .Division III Consecutive Team Titles.285285286286286287MEN’S SUMMARIES. 288Division I . 289Division II. 296Division III. 304WOMEN’S SUMMARIES. 309Division I . 310Division II. 314Division III. 318CONTENTS5

History and Recordsof the NCAANATIONAL COLLEGIATE CHAMPIONSHIPSWomen’s BowlingMen’s and Women’s FencingMen’s GymnasticsWomen’s GymnasticsWomen’s Ice HockeyMen’s and Women’s RifleMen’s and Women’s SkiingMen’s VolleyballMen’s Water PoloWomen’s Water PoloDIVISION I CHAMPIONSHIPSBaseballMen’s BasketballWomen’s BasketballMen’s Cross CountryWomen’s Cross CountryField HockeyFootball (Division I-AA)Men’s GolfWomen’s GolfMen’s Ice HockeyMen’s LacrosseWomen’s LacrosseWomen’s RowingMen’s SoccerWomen’s SoccerWomen’s SoftballMen’s Swimming and DivingWomen’s Swimming and DivingMen’s TennisWomen’s TennisMen’s Indoor Track and FieldWomen’s Indoor Track and FieldMen’s Outdoor Track and FieldWomen’s Outdoor Track and FieldWomen’s VolleyballWrestlingDIVISION II CHAMPIONSHIPSBaseballMen’s BasketballWomen’s BasketballMen’s Cross CountryWomen’s Cross CountryField HockeyFootballMen’s GolfWomen’s GolfMen’s LacrosseWomen’s LacrosseWomen’s RowingMen’s SoccerWomen’s SoccerWomen’s SoftballMen’s Swimming and DivingWomen’s Swimming and DivingMen’s TennisWomen’s TennisMen’s Indoor Track and FieldWomen’s Indoor Track and FieldMen’s Outdoor Track and FieldWomen’s Outdoor Track and FieldWomen’s VolleyballWrestlingDIVISION III CHAMPIONSHIPSBaseballMen’s BasketballWomen’s BasketballMen’s Cross CountryWomen’s Cross CountryField HockeyFootballMen’s GolfWomen’s GolfMen’s Ice HockeyWomen’s Ice HockeyMen’s LacrosseWomen’s LacrosseWomen’s Rowing62003-04 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPSMen’s SoccerWomen’s SoccerWomen’s SoftballMen’s Swimming and DivingWomen’s Swimming and DivingMen’s TennisWomen’s TennisMen’s Indoor Track and FieldWomen’s Indoor Track and FieldMen’s Outdoor Track and FieldWomen’s Outdoor Track and FieldWomen’s VolleyballWrestling

School Name Change/Abbreviation KeySCHOOL name changesCurrent school name:Changed from:Albertson .Col. of IdahoAlcorn St. .Alcorn A&MAlliant Int’l .U.S. Int’l; Cal WesternArcadia .BeaverArk.-Pine Bluff .Arkansas AM&NArmstrong Atlantic .Armstrong St.Auburn .Alabama PolyAugusta St. .AugustaBemidji St. .Bemidji TeachersBenedictine (Ill.) .Ill. BenedictineBradley .Bradley TechUC Davis .California AggiesCal St. Fullerton .Orange County State College; Orange St.Cal St. L.A.Cal St. Los AngelesCal St. Northridge .San Fernando Valley St.Case Reserve .Case Institute of TechnologyCentral Okla. .Central St. (Okla.)Charleston So. .Baptist (S.C.)Charleston (W.V.) .Morris HarveyCharlotte .UNC CharlotteChattanooga.Tenn.-Chatt.Cleveland St. .FennColorado St. .Colorado A&MColorado St.-Pueblo.Southern Colo.Columbus St. .ColumbusConcordia (Calif.) .Christ College-IrvineConcordia (Ill.) .Concordia TeachersCrown .St. Paul BibleDeSales .AllentownDetroit .Detroit Mercy; Detroit TechDist. of Columbia .D.C. Teachers; Federal CityDominican .RosaryDrexel.Drexel TechDuke .Trinity (N.C.)Eastern Mich.Michigan NormalEmporia St. .Kansas St. NormalFDU-Florham .FDU-MadisonFresno St. .Fresno PacificGa. Southern .Georgia TeachersIll.-Chicago .Ill.-Chicago CircleIllinois St. .Illinois St. Normal; Illinois NormalIndiana (Pa.) .Indiana St. (Pa.)Indianapolis.Indiana CentralIowa .State University of IowaIowa St. .AmesJames Madison .MadisonKansas St. .Kansas AggiesKent St.KentLa Sierra .Loma LindaLamar .Lamar TechLiberty.Lynchburg Baptist; Liberty BaptistLa.-Lafayette .Southwestern La.La.-Monroe .Northeast La.Loyola Marymount .Loyola U. of L.A.Lynn .College of Boca RatonLyon .Arkansas CollegeMaine-Farmington .Farmington St.Maritime (N.Y.) .N.Y. MaritimeMartin Luther .Northwestern (Wis.)Marycrest Int’l .Teikyo MarycrestMd.-East. Shore .Maryland St.Massachusetts .Massachusetts St.; Massachusetts Agriculture Col.Mass. Liberal Arts .North Adams St.Mass.-Dartmouth .Southeastern Mass.Mass.-Lowell .Lowell; Lowell St.; Lowell TechMcDaniel .Western Md.Memphis .Memphis St.Minn. St. Mankato .Mankato Teachers; Mankato St.Minn. St. Moorhead.Moorhead St.; Moorhead TeachersMont. St.-Billings.Eastern MontanaMontana St.-Northern.Northern MontanaMurray St. .Murray TeachersNeb.-Kearney .Kearney St.Neb.-Omaha .OmahaNew England U. .St. Francis (Me.)TCNJ .Col. of New Jersey; Trenton St.New Jersey City .Jersey City St.N.J. Inst. of Tech. .Newark EngineeringNew Mexico St. .New Mexico A&MNew Orleans.Louisiana St. (N.O.)North Ala. .Florence St.N.C. Central .North Caro. CollegeUNC Pembroke .Pembroke St.North Central (Ill.) .North CentralNorth Central Texas .Cooke CountyCurrent school name:Changed from:North Texas .North Tex. St.Northeastern St. .Northeastern Okla. St.Northern Ariz.Arizona St.-Flagstaff; Flagstaff TeachersNorthern Colo. .Colorado St. CollegeNorthern Iowa .Iowa TeachersOklahoma St. .Oklahoma A&MOld Dominion .William & Mary (Norfolk)Pepperdine .George PepperdinePhiladelphia U. .Philadelphia TextilePolytechnic (N.Y.) .New York Poly; Brooklyn PolyRhodes .Southwestern (Tenn.)Rice .Rice InstituteRichard Stockton .Stockton St.Rochester Inst. .Mechanics InstituteRowan .Glassboro St.Southern Ind. .Indiana St.-EvansvilleSouthern Me. .Maine Portland-Gorham; Gorham St. (Me.)Southern N.H. .New Hamp. Col.Southern U. .Southern B.R.Southwest Minn. St. .Southwest St.Stevens Institute .Stevens TechTaylor-Ft. Wayne .Summit ChristianTex. A&M-Commerce .East Texas St.Tex. A&M-Kingsville .Texas A&ITex.-Pan American .Pan AmericanTexas St. .Southwest Tex. St.Towson .Towson St.Truman .Northeast Mo. St.; Truman St.Tulsa .Henry KendallWashburn .Lincoln CollegeWashington-St. Louis.Washington (Mo.)Washington St. .Washington Agricultural CollegeWest Ala. .LivingstonWest Tex. A&M .West Texas St.Western Mich. .Western State TeachersWestern N.M. .New Mexico WesternWestern Ore. .Oregon Tech; Oregon College of EducationWestern St. .Colo. Western; Colorado NormalWestmar.Western Union College; Teikyo WestmarWichita St. .FairmountWidener .Pennsylvania Military CollegeWm. Paterson .Paterson St.Wis.-Eau Claire .Eau Claire TeachersWis.-La Crosse .La Crosse TeachersWis.-River Falls .River Falls TeachersWis.-Superior.Superior Normal; Superior St. TeachersXavier .St. XavierSCHOOLS also known asCurrent school name:Also known as:Air Force.U.S. Air Force AcademyApprentice School .Newport NewsArmy .U.S. Military Academy; West PointBaruch .Bernard M. BaruchCase Reserve .Case Western ReserveCCNY .City College of New YorkCity Tech .NYCCT; New York City TechCoast Guard .U.S. Coast Guard AcademyGC&SU .Georgia College & StateHawthorne .Nathaniel HawthorneIPFW.Indiana/Purdue-Ft. WayneIUPUI .Indiana/Purdue-IndianapolisLehman.Herbert H. LehmanLipscomb.David LipscombLong Island .LIU-BrooklynLSU .Louisiana St.Merchant Marine .King’s Point; U.S. Merchant Marine AcademyMIT .Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyNavy .U.S. Naval AcademyNYIT .New York Institute of Technology; New York TechRochester Inst. .RITSewanee .University of the SouthTCU.Texas ChristianUAB .Ala.-BirminghamUCF.Central Fla. (was Florida Tech)UCLA.University of California, Los AngelesUMBC .Md.-Balt. CountyUMKC .Mo.-Kansas CityUNLV .Nevada-Las Vegas (was Nevada Southern)UTEP .Texas-El Paso (was Texas Western)VMI .Va. MilitaryWPI .Worcester Poly Inst.NAME CHANGE KEY7

The National Collegiate Championship SeriesA Brief Chronological History1883 First National Collegiate Tennis Championships hosted byTrinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, and sponsored by theU.S. Lawn Tennis Association.1897 First National Collegiate Golf Championships at ArdsleyCasino, New York; conducted by the Intercollegiate Golf Association of America.1906 MARCH 31. Formation of the Intercollegiate AthleticAssociation.1910 DECEMBER 29. Changed name to National Collegiate Athletic Association. Seven geographical districts created.1911 DECEMBER 28. Number of geographical districts expandedto eight.1916 DECEMBER 28. Number of geographical districts expandedto nine.1921 JUNE 17-18. First National Collegiate Outdoor Track andField Championships hosted by the University of Chicagounder the auspices of the NCAA.1924 Number of geographical districts reduced to eight.1939 JUNE 24-29. National Collegiate Golf Championships firstsponsored by the NCAA.1941 National Collegiate Tennis Championships sponsored solelyby the NCAA.1981 NOVEMBER 21. First women’s championships sponsored bythe NCAA included Division II women’s cross country hostedby Southeast Missouri State University, Cape Girardeau,Missouri; Division III women’s cross country hosted byCarthage College, Kenosha, Wisconsin; Division II field hockey hosted by Pfeiffer College, Misenheimer, North Carolina;and Division III field hockey hosted by WestfieldState College, Westfield, Massachusetts. The first women’sDivision I championship sponsored by the NCAA was for fieldhockey, hosted by University of Connecticut, Storrs,Connecticut, November 21-22.1985 Division I Men’s Basketball Championship bracket expandedto 64 teams.1991 Starting in the fall, Divisions II and III individual championswere no longer permitted to compete in Division I c h a m p ionships.1994 Division I Women’s Basketball Championship field expandedto 64 teams.1996 Abilene Christian University became first institution to win allfour track and field championships in any division.8CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY1997 Stanford became first school to win six team championships(sweeps of cross country, volleyball and tennis) in one year.JUNE 1. NCAA announced it would move its national officefrom Overland Park, Kansas, to Indianapolis in 1999.AUGUST 1. NCAA’s federated governance structure went intoeffect.Washington defeated Princeton in the inaugural NationalCollegiate Women’s Rowing Championship.1998 JANUARY 7. Midseason rules changes in the sport ofwrestling, caused by the deaths of three student-athletes duringweight-loss activities, took effect.1999 JULY 26. NCAA’s new national office opened in Indianapolis.NCAA adopted baseball standards relating to non-wood bats,putting limits on the diameter, weight and length differential.2001 MARCH 23-25. Minnesota Duluth defeats St. Lawrence, 4-2,in the inaugural National Collegiate Championship for women’s ice hockey, staged in Minneapolis.2001 MAY 19-20. UCLA defeated Stanford, 5-4, in the inauguralNational Collegiate Women’s Water Polo Championship,held at Stanford.2002 MARCH 29-31. The Women’s Final Four was played in adome for the first time, drawing a crowd of 29,619, thelargest ever to witness a women’s basketball game.MAY 31-JUNE 2. The inaugural Division II Women’s RowingChampionship and Division III Women’s Championship areheld at Indianapolis’ Eagle Creek Park. UC Davis was theDivision II champion and Williams won Division III.2003 Division I Softball Championship expanded its bracket from48 to 64 teams.Divisions I, II and III Men’s Lacrosse Championships wereplayed in the same stadium for the first time. The Division Ichampionship drew 37,944, the largest crowd to witness amen’s lacrosse game and the largest to witness any NCAAchampionship game other than Division I men’s basketball.The Division I bracket expanded from 12 to 16 teams.The Men’s College World Series changed its format so thatthe finals moved from a single game to a best-two-of-threegame series.2004 APRIL 8-10. Nebraska captured the first National CollegiateWomen’s Bowling Championship, edging top-seeded CentralMissouri State at Emerald Bowl in Houston.(Note: All championships before 1981 were men’s championships.)

Men’s FallChampionshipsCross Country. 10Football . 32Soccer . 76Water Polo . 104

10DIVISION ICross CountryDIVISION I2003 ChampionshipsHighlightsCardinal Produces Meet of Dreams: Iowa wasn't perfect for Stanford, but just like in themovies, it was heaven as the Cardinal scored the most lopsided team victory in the history of theDivision I Men's Cro

onships. In the 2004-05 academic year, championship anniversaries include Division III Baseball (30th), Division I Men's Lacrosse (35th), Division III Men's Tennis (30th), Division II Men's Indoor Track and Field (20th), Division I Wrestling (75th), National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey (5th), Division II

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