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The Southern Wesleyan (SWU) athletics teams are called the Warriors. A new logo was introduced in 2013, but the Warrior nickname was retained. The university is a member of the NCAA Division II ranks, primarily competing in the Conference Carolinas since the 2014–15 academic year (with NCAA D-II full member status since 2016–17).
The 2024 NCAA Division III baseball tournament was the 48th edition of the NCAA Division III baseball tournament. The 60-team tournament began on Friday, May 17 and concluded with the 2024 Division III College World Series at Classic Park in Eastlake, Ohio , which started on May 31 and will end on June 6. [ 1 ]
Team Nickname City State Conference Stadium Capacity Adams State: Grizzlies: Alamosa: Colorado: RMAC: ASU Baseball Field: 500 Adelphi: Panthers: Garden City: New York
Southern Miss baseball will play six teams with a top 50 RPI from last season. See the full 2025 schedule here. ... Southern Miss baseball 2025 schedule. Feb. 14-16: vs. Lafayette (Saturday ...
The 2024 NAIA baseball tournament was the 67th edition of the NAIA baseball championship. The 46-team tournament began on May 13 with Opening Round games across ten different sites and concluded with the 2024 NAIA World Series in Lewiston, Idaho that began on May 24 and ended on May 31.
Encino Crespi scored four runs in the bottom of the seventh inning to beat West Covina South Hills 6-5 in the Southern Section Division 2 title game.
Nebraska Wesleyan University: Lincoln, Nebraska: 1877 United Methodist 1,600 Prairie Wolves: 2016–17 2016–17 women's bowling American Rivers (ARC) [b] Dropped sport [30] Oklahoma Baptist University: Shawnee, Oklahoma: 1909 Baptist: 2,097 Bison: 2019–20 2021–22 men's tennis Great American (GAC) Dropped sport Southern Nazarene University ...
The conference was formed with nine charter members (Augustana College, Carthage College, Elmhurst College, Illinois College, Illinois Wesleyan University, Lake Forest College, Millikin University, North Central College and Wheaton College) on April 26, 1946, in Jacksonville, Illinois, and opened competition in the 1946–47 academic year as the College Conference of Illinois.