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The following is a list of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college soccer team statistics through the 2017 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship, including all-time number of wins, losses, and draws; number of tournaments played; and percent of games won. [1]
The following is a list of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college soccer individual statistics and records through the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship as of 2012. [1]
The NCAA Division I men's soccer tournament, sometimes known as the College Cup, is an American intercollegiate soccer tournament conducted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), and determines the Division I men's national champion. The tournament was formally held in 1959, when it was an eight-team tournament.
(Top) 1 1970–1983. 2 1983 ... The Division I First-Team All-Americans are the best eleven Division I U.S. college soccer players as selected by United Soccer ...
This category includes those men's soccer players who were first-team, second-team or third-team for one or more Division I NCAA Men's Soccer All-Americans teams that contribute to consensus All-American status for a given year (see List of NCAA Division I men's soccer First-Team All-America teams for a list of contributing teams by year).
In association football, or soccer, scoring a goal is the only method of scoring. In National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I soccer, where a player's career is at most four seasons long, it is considered a notable achievement to reach the 60-goal threshold. In even rarer instances, players have reached the 80 and 100-goal ...
The most recent men's soccer player to win the all-sports honor is Stephen Lunney of the University of Tennessee Southern (then Martin Methodist College), who received the College Division awards for the 2013–14 academic year. [4] In 2011, the Academic All-America program was expanded from two to four divisions.
Biogenesis baseball scandal (2013) – more than a dozen MLB players were found to have received PEDs, mainly human growth hormone, from a now-defunct anti-aging clinic in the Miami area. In all, 13 players received suspensions of 50 or more games, with the longest being given to Alex Rodriguez (162 games) and Ryan Braun (65 games). The number ...