NCAA Division III women's lacrosse tournament
Appearance
Sport | Women's college lacrosse |
---|---|
Founded | 1985 |
No. of teams | 40 |
Country | United States |
Most recent champion(s) | Middlebury |
TV partner(s) | ESPNU |
Official website | www |
The annual NCAA Division III Women's Lacrosse Championship tournament has determined the top women's lacrosse team in the NCAA Division III since 1985.[1]
The current champions are Middlebury College. The College of New Jersey, previously known as Trenton State, is the most successful program with 12 total titles, the most recent coming in 2006.[2]
Champions
See Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Champions for the 1981 and 1982 Division III women's lacrosse champions.
NCAA Division III Women's Lacrosse Championship | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Site (Host Team) |
Championship | Semifinalists | |||||||
Champion | Score | Runner-up | ||||||||
1985 | Philadelphia, PA (Penn) |
Trenton State | 7–4 | Ursinus | Drew and Lynchburg | |||||
1986 | College Park, MD (Maryland) |
Ursinus | 12–10 | Trenton State | Lynchburg and Wheaton (IL) | |||||
1987 | Trenton State | 8–7 (OT) |
Ursinus | Western Maryland and William Smith | ||||||
1988 | Haverford, PA (Haverford) |
Trenton State | 14–11 | William Smith | Johns Hopkins and Ursinus | |||||
1989 | West Chester, PA (West Chester) |
Ursinus | 8–6 | Trenton State | St. Lawrence and William Smith | |||||
1990 | Princeton, NJ (Princeton) |
Ursinus | 7–6 | St. Lawrence | Roanoke and Trenton State | |||||
1991 | Ewing Township, NJ (Trenton State) |
Trenton State | 7–6 | Ursinus | Franklin & Marshall and William Smith | |||||
1992 | Bethlehem, PA (Lehigh) |
Trenton State † | 5-3 | William Smith | Roanoke and Ursinus | |||||
1993 | College Park, MD (Maryland) |
Trenton State | 10–9 | William Smith | Franklin & Marshall and Johns Hopkins | |||||
1994 | Trenton State | 29–11 | William Smith | Johns Hopkins and Middlebury | ||||||
1995 | Ewing Township, NJ (Trenton State) |
Trenton State | 15–14 | William Smith | Johns Hopkins and Middlebury | |||||
1996 | Bethlehem, PA (Lehigh) |
TCNJ | 15–8 | Middlebury | Goucher and Ursinus | |||||
1997 | Middlebury | 14–9 | TCNJ | Johns Hopkins and William Smith | ||||||
1998 | Baltimore, MD (UMBC) |
TCNJ | 12–11 (OT) |
Williams | Hartwick and Middlebury | |||||
1999 | Baltimore, MD (Johns Hopkins) |
Middlebury | 10–9 | Amherst | TCNJ and William Smith | |||||
2000 | Ewing Township, NJ (TCNJ) |
TCNJ | 14–8 | Williams | Middlebury and Salisbury State | |||||
2001 | Baltimore, MD (Johns Hopkins) |
Middlebury | 11–10 (2OT) |
Amherst | Mary Washington and TCNJ | |||||
2002 | Glassboro, NJ (Rowan) |
Middlebury | 12–6 | TCNJ | Amherst and Mary Washington | |||||
2003 | Rochester, NY (St. John Fisher) |
Amherst | 11–9 | Middlebury | TCNJ and William Smith | |||||
2004 | Middlebury | 13–11 (OT) |
TCNJ | Amherst and Salisbury | ||||||
2005 | Ewing Township, NJ (TCNJ) |
TCNJ | 9–7 | Salisbury | Colorado College and Middlebury | |||||
2006 | Hoboken, NJ (Stevens) |
TCNJ | 10–4 | Gettysburg | Cortland and Middlebury | |||||
2007 | Geneva, NY (William Smith) |
Franklin & Marshall | 11–8 | Salisbury | Gettysburg and Middlebury | |||||
2008 | Salem, VA (Roanoke) |
Hamilton | 13–6 | Franklin & Marshall | TCNJ and Salisbury | |||||
2009 | Franklin & Marshall | 11–10 (OT) |
Salisbury | Gettysburg and Hamilton | ||||||
2010 | Gettysburg, PA (Gettysburg) |
Salisbury | 7–6 | Hamilton | Franklin & Marshall and Gettysburg | |||||
2011 | Garden City, NY (Adelphi) |
Gettysburg | 16–5 | Bowdoin | Cortland and TCNJ | |||||
2012 | Montclair, NJ (Montclair State) |
Trinity (CT) | 8–7 | Salisbury | Cortland and Middlebury | |||||
2013 | Stevenson, MD (Stevenson) |
Salisbury | 12–5 | Trinity (CT) | Cortland and Middlebury | |||||
2014 | Gettysburg, PA (Gettysburg) |
Salisbury | 9–6 | Trinity (CT) | Amherst and Cortland | |||||
2015 | Philadelphia, PA | SUNY Cortland | 17-6 | Trinity (CT) | Middlebury and Franklin & Marshall | |||||
2016 | Philadelphia, PA | Middlebury | 9-5 | Trinity (CT) | SUNY Cortland and Franklin & Marshall | |||||
2017 | Salem, VA (Roanoke) |
Gettysburg | 6-5 | TCNJ | Trinity (CT) and Washington & Lee | |||||
2018 | Salem, VA (Roanoke) |
Gettysburg | 11-9 | Middlebury | Salisbury and TCNJ | |||||
2019 | Ashland, VA (Randolph–Macon) |
Middlebury | 14–9 | Salisbury | Tufts and Wesleyan |
† NCAA vacated the 1992 Trenton State title due to use of an ineligible player during the tournament
Championship Records
Team | Championship Record | Winning years |
---|---|---|
Trenton State/TCNJ | 12-6 † | 1985, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2005, 2006 |
Middlebury | 7–3 | 1997, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2016, 2019 |
Gettysburg | 3–1 | 2011, 2017, 2018 |
Salisbury | 3–5 | 2010, 2013, 2014 |
Ursinus | 3–3 | 1986, 1989, 1990 |
Franklin & Marshall | 2–1 | 2007, 2009 |
SUNY Cortland | 1-0 | 2015 |
Trinity | 1–4 | 2012 |
Hamilton | 1–1 | 2008 |
Amherst | 1–2 | 2003 |
William Smith | 0–5 | |
Williams | 0–2 | |
St. Lawrence | 0–1 | |
Bowdoin | 0–1 |
† NCAA vacated the 1992 Trenton State title due to use of an ineligible player during the tournament
See also
- AIAW Intercollegiate Women's Lacrosse Champions
- NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship
- NCAA Division II Women's Lacrosse Championship
- NCAA Division III Men's Lacrosse Championship
References
- ^ "Division III Women's Lacrosse Championship Results" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved January 13, 2016.
- ^ "DIII Women's College Lacrosse - History". NCAA.