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This is a list of schools who field women's volleyball teams in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in the United States. As of the 2024 season, 346 of the 364 Division I member institutions sponsor women's volleyball. [a] Conference affiliations and venues represent those for the 2025 NCAA women's volleyball ...
Team School City Conference Sport sponsorship Foot-ball Basketball Base-ball Soft-ball Soccer M W M W Ashland Eagles: Ashland University: Ashland: Great Midwest
Eureka College: Eureka, Illinois: 1855 Disciples of Christ: 559 Red Devils: 16 2006 Fontbonne University: Clayton, Missouri: 1923 Catholic : 944 Griffins: 10 1989 [a] Greenville University: Greenville, Illinois: 1892 Free Methodist: 1,088 Panthers: 14 1995 Lyon College: Batesville, Arkansas: 1872 Presbyterian (PCUSA) 496 Scots: 21 2023 ...
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The Lyon Scots football team represents Lyon College in college football at the NCAA Division III level. The Scots are members of the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference (SCAC) after transitioning from the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and participating as an independent for a year in 2023.
It was renamed Lyon College in 1994, after the Lyon family of Arkansas. [15] [16] Frank Lyon Sr. served on the board of trustees from 1946 to 1988, including as chairman from 1977 to 1987. [17] Frank Lyon Jr. served on the board for more than 30 years, until his death in 2015. [18] He served as chair of the board for four years. [16]
The NCAA began sponsoring women's college volleyball championships in 1981, replacing the AIAW as the highest-level governing body for the sport. The 1981 tournament consisted of 20 teams. In the first few years, the NCAA field was composed largely of teams from the southwest and west coast , but the sport grew in nationwide popularity in the ...
The founder of the Lyons College was Rev. John Covert, who was also identified with other similar institutions in Ohio and Indiana, and who had an impracticable idea of uniting them and the Lyons College into one system, with a central university at Chicago, Illinois or St. Louis, Missouri. The first prospectus of the institution made high ...