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Sport sponsorship Foot-ball Basketball Base-ball Soft-ball Soccer M W M W Coppin State Eagles: Coppin State University: Baltimore: MEAC [a] Loyola Greyhounds: Loyola University Maryland: Baltimore: Patriot: Maryland Terrapins: University of Maryland, College Park: College Park: Big Ten: FBS: Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks: University of Maryland ...
Maryland sports team stubs (123 P) Pages in category "Sports clubs and teams in Maryland" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.
The University of Maryland, College Park sports teams participate in NCAA Division I as a member of the Big Ten Conference. Prior to 2014, the school participated in Division I as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference, of which it was a founding member. Its teams are called the Terrapins, and its mascot is a diamondback terrapin named Testudo.
Category: College sports teams in Maryland. 2 languages. ... Morgan State Bears and Lady Bears (9 C, 6 P) Mount St. Mary's Mountaineers (11 C, 2 P) N.
Maryland sports-related lists (5 C, 26 P) C. Sports clubs and teams in Maryland (12 C, ... Maryland Stadium Authority; Maryland State Athletic Hall of Fame
Public (State University of New York) 1913 State University of New York at New Paltz: Hawks: New Paltz: NY: Public (State University of New York) 1936 State University of New York at Oswego: Lakers: Oswego: NY: Public (State University of New York) 1976 State University of New York at Plattsburgh: Cardinals: Plattsburgh: NY: Public (State ...
Several teams in the club football circuits are from colleges that belong to the NJCAA, the equivalent sanctioning body for two-year institutions; four club teams in Canada belong to The Atlantic Football League in the Maritime Provinces of Canada; and there is at least one independent amateur squad, the Southwestern Connecticut Grizzlies, that ...
The University of Maryland, College Park was established in 1856 as Maryland Agricultural College. Baseball and football were played on the campus as early as the Civil War era. [6] It was renamed Maryland State College in 1916, and in 1920, merged with the state's professional schools in Baltimore to become the University of Maryland.