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Team School City Conference Sport sponsorship Basketball Football Ice hockey M W M W Alaska Nanooks: University of Alaska Fairbanks: Fairbanks: Great Northwest [a] Alaska Anchorage Seawolves: University of Alaska Anchorage: Anchorage: Great Northwest [b
Team School City Conference Bryant & Stratton Bobcats: Bryant & Stratton College: Solon: Ohio CC: Clark State Eagles: Clark State Community College: Springfield: Ohio CC: Cuyahoga Triceratops (formerly Challengers) Cuyahoga Community College: Cleveland: Ohio CC: Edison Chargers: Edison Community College: Piqua: Ohio CC: Hocking Hawks: Hocking ...
Alberta Golden Bears and Pandas: University of Alberta: Edmonton, Alberta: Independent, Canada West-Central Division British Columbia Thunderbirds: University of British Columbia ...
The 2024–25 Cleveland State Vikings men's basketball team represents Cleveland State University during the 2024–25 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Vikings, led by third-year head coach Daniyal Robinson, will play their home games at the Wolstein Center in Cleveland, Ohio as members of the Horizon League.
[2] [3] As part of a gradual rebranding of the SportsChannel networks that began that month, SportsChannel Ohio was rebranded as Fox Sports Ohio in January 1998. The channel was then rebranded as Fox Sports Net Ohio in 2000, as part of a collective brand modification of the FSN networks under the "Fox Sports Net" banner; subsequently in 2004 ...
The Alaska Anchorage Seawolves are the 13 varsity athletic teams that represent the University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA), in Anchorage, Alaska, United States, in NCAA intercollegiate sports. The vast majority of UAA's athletic teams are in NCAA Division II , with the exception of the women's gymnastics and men's ice hockey teams, which are ...
The 2022 team finished the season again as the National Runner-Up, this time losing to another UAA foe, University of Chicago. [7] In tournament play, the team defeated Ohio Northern, Wisconsin–Whitewater, Williams, and Middlebury. [8] James Hopper and Jonathan Powell won the NCAA men's doubles national title.
Cleveland Tigers (NFL) APFA (1920), originally named as the Tigers in 1916 [1] in the Ohio League; renamed Indians in 1921; Cleveland Indians (NFL 1931), league-sponsored team that only played on the road; Cleveland Bulldogs NFL (1924–1925) (1927), named as the Cleveland Indians in 1923; Cleveland Panthers AFL (1926)