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This is a list of college swimming and diving teams that compete in the NCAA or NAIA men's and/or women's swimming and diving championships. NCAA Division I [ edit ]
The Metropolitan Swimming Conference (METS) is one of the largest intercollegiate swimming and diving conferences in the United States. It includes NCAA division I, II, & III teams from the New York metropolitan region. Teams compete at an annual 3-day conference championship held at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey in February ...
New York City (Staten Island) East Coast ^ a b St. Thomas Aquinas and Molloy compete in sprint football , a weight-restricted form of the sport not governed by the NCAA, as a member of the Collegiate Sprint Football League.
The Skyline Conference is an intercollegiate athletic conference based in the New York City area that competes in the NCAA's Division III.. The league was originally chartered on May 16, 1989, as a men's basketball conference and now sponsors 17 sports (nine for men and 8 for women).
The center is 80,000 square feet with a 68m pool and three moveable bulkheads to accommodate SCM, SCY, and LCM competition. [3] In 2002, Natalie Coughlin set multiple world records during the FINA World Cup at the center. [1] In 2002 it was reported that the pool had lost millions of dollars. [1]
MIT is the all-time Division III leader in producing Academic All-Americans (302) and ranks second across all NCAA Divisions. [2] MIT athletes have won 13 Elite 90 awards, ranking MIT first among NCAA Division III programs and third among all divisions. [ 3 ]
The review included an inflation-adjusted analysis of financial reports provided to the NCAA by 201 public universities competing in Division I, information that was obtained through public records requests. The average athletic subsidy these colleges and their students have paid to their athletics departments increased 16 percent during that time.
1978 - The CUNYAC was founded as the CUNY Athletic Directions Association (CUNYADA). Charter members included Baruch College, Brooklyn College, the City College of New York (CCNY), Hunter College, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Lehman College, Medgar Evers College, Queens College, the College of Staten Island and York College, effective beginning the 1978–79 academic year.