Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bowdoin College fielded an official varsity football team for the first time in 1899, losing to Tufts 8–4 in its first game. Bowdoin football achieved its first win in the following game in a 42–0 win over the Boston Latin School. [10] The Polar Bears' most prominent current football rivals are in-state NESCAC foes Bates and Colby.
Bowdoin Polar Bears men's basketball coaches (1 P) P. Bowdoin Polar Bears men's basketball players (5 P) ... Statistics; Cookie statement; Mobile view ...
She coached the Bowdoin Polar Bears women's basketball team to a 281-68 (.805) record, two New England Small College Athletic Conference championships, 11 NCAA Tournament appearances, and back-to-back NCAA Division III title game appearances. Shibles stepped down in May of 2021 and left Bowdoin as the winningest coach in the programs history.
Lillian Tetreault, diving, Bowdoin College Payton Trilling, cheerleading, Hofstra University Garrett taking over CR North football: Council Rock North names new head football coach
Williams began its inaugural football season in 1881 and its rivalry with Amherst College is one of the longest at any level of college football. [1] Bates and Bowdoin have competed against each other athletically since the 1870s and subsequently share one of the ten oldest NCAA Division III football rivalries, in the United States, there is a long history of athletic competition between the ...
Bowdoin College, c. 1845 (Lithograph by Fitz Hugh Lane). Bowdoin College was chartered in 1794 by the Massachusetts State Legislature and was later redirected under the jurisdiction of the Maine Legislature. [13] It was named for former Massachusetts governor James Bowdoin, whose son James Bowdoin III was an early benefactor. [14]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
The 2004 NCAA Division III women's basketball tournament was the 23rd annual tournament hosted by the NCAA to determine the national champion of Division III women's collegiate basketball in the United States. [1] Wilmington defeated Bowdoin in the championship game, 59–53, to claim the Quakers' first Division III national title.