Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following is a list of the 78 schools who field men's lacrosse teams and the 133 schools who field women's lacrosse teams in NCAA Division I competition, plus two schools that have planned to begin fielding Division I women's lacrosse teams in 2026. Conference affiliations are current for the next 2025 NCAA lacrosse season.
The following is a list of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college lacrosse teams that have qualified for the NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship, with teams listed by number of appearances and their tournament won-loss records.
The Southern Men's Lacrosse League (SMLL) is a league for non-NCAA, college men's lacrosse programs. It was founded in 2023 and current consists of nine teams: Mississippi State, Samford University, Western Kentucky, South Alabama, UT Chattanooga, Western Carolina, Morehouse College, Georgia College & State University, and Emory University.
As of 2023, 52 NCAA tournaments have been held (not held in 2020). In that span twelve teams — Johns Hopkins , Syracuse , Princeton , North Carolina , Virginia , Cornell , Duke , Maryland , Loyola University (Maryland) , Denver , Yale and Notre Dame — have won the national title, with Syracuse leading with ten titles (plus one vacated by ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
The 2023 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship was the 52nd annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national championship for NCAA Division I men's college lacrosse. The tournament was hosted by Drexel University and held at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. [1]
This is a list of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) schools in the United States and Canada that play lacrosse as a varsity sport at the Division II level. In the 2024 NCAA lacrosse season, there are 77 men's and 121 women's Division II lacrosse programs.
The Wolverine–Hoosier Athletic Conference (WHAC) was the first NAIA lacrosse conference to offer a championship for both men and women. [ 1 ] During the summer of 2015, the NAIA approved men's and women's lacrosse to move from emerging sport status to national invitational .