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There are currently 431 American colleges and universities classified as Division III for NCAA competition, making it the largest division in the NCAA by school count. Schools from 34 of the 50 states and the District of Columbia are represented. All schools do not provide athletic scholarships to students.
This category contains college wrestling teams who compete in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division III level in the United States. Subcategories This category has the following 15 subcategories, out of 15 total.
D-III schools are not allowed to offer athletic scholarships, while D-II schools can. D-III is the NCAA's largest division with around 450 member institutions, which are 80% private and 20% public. The median undergraduate enrollment of D-III schools is about 2,750, although the range is from 418 to over 38,000.
Five Division III members are allowed to award athletic scholarships in their Division I sports—a practice otherwise not allowed for Division III schools. All of these schools sponsored a men's sport in the NCAA University Division, the predecessor to today's Division I, before the NCAA adopted its current three-division setup in 1974–75.
Team School City Conference Sport sponsorship Foot-ball Basketball Base-ball Soft-ball Soccer M W M W American Eagles: American University: Washington: Patriot
School Nickname City State/ province Current affiliation Conference Joins Bismarck State College: Mystics: Bismarck: North Dakota: Mon-Dak Conference : Frontier Conference: July 2025 [9] [10] Mount Mary University [a] Blue Angels: Milwaukee: Wisconsin: Coast to Coast Athletic Conference (NCAA Division III) Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference
Garfield’s Camron Lewicki and Sandy Valley’s Aiden Douglas wrestle in the 106-pound weight class at the 2023 Waterloo D3 Wrestling Classic.
The National Wrestling Coaches Association (or "NWCA") have a National Duals tournament for NCAA Division I, Division II, Division III, NAIA, NJCAA, and NCWA teams, but all do not tie into their respective National Championships point totals. Penn State University (NCAA D-I) won four straight National Championships from 2011 to 2014 – without ...