Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 2011, Maryville added wrestling to its athletic program. Head Coach Mike Denney previously led the University of Nebraska-Omaha (UNO) to Division II dominance with seven NCAA Division II titles before the program was eliminated just before UNO's transition to Division I. With the majority of the wrestlers having transferred from the UNO ...
Drury and Bellarmine started wrestling programs for the 2016–17 season, enabling the conference to add wrestling as its 21st championship sport. [13] The initial seven-team GLVC wrestling lineup also included Indianapolis, Maryville, McKendree, Truman State, and Wisconsin–Parkside, all former Division II wrestling independents.
Maryville Saints: Maryville University: Town and Country: Great Lakes Valley: Missouri S&T Miners: Missouri University of Science and Technology: Rolla: Great Lakes Valley: Missouri Southern Lions: Missouri Southern State University: Joplin: MIAA: Missouri Western Griffons: Missouri Western State University: St. Joseph: MIAA: Northwest Missouri ...
The Southern Athletic Association announced Thursday that Maryville College will join its conference. The football and women's golf programs will join starting in the 2025-26 academic year, while ...
Maryville University of St. Louis is a ... swimming and diving, tennis, track and field (indoor and outdoor), volleyball, and wrestling; and women's basketball, cross ...
The Northwest Missouri State Bearcats are the athletic teams for Northwest Missouri State University, located in Maryville, Missouri. The Bearcats play in the NCAA Division II. Northwest is a founding member of the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association in 1912 and has remained in the conference ever since.
This is a list of the schools in Division II of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in the United States and Canada that have wrestling as a varsity sport. In the current 2024–25 season, there are a total of 70 Division II wrestling programs.
The conference was created during a March 1962 meeting at Armstrong's Restaurant in Maryville, Missouri and took effect in the 1962-63 school year. The original five schools were four schools from St. Joseph, Missouri (Benton, Christian Brothers (which would fold into LeBlond), and Lafayette) and two other schools from northwest Missouri ...