NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament

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 has been formally held since 1959, when it was an eight-team tournament. Since then, the tournament has expanded to 48 teams, in which every Division I conference tournament champion is allocated a berth. Among the most successful programs, Saint Louis won 10 titles during dynasty years between 1959 and 1973. Indiana has won 8 titles beginning in 1982, whereas Virginia has won 7 titles beginning in 1989.

Men's Division I Soccer Tournament
Founded1959
Number of teams48
Current championsGeorgetown
(1st title)
Most successful club(s)Saint Louis
(10 titles)
Television broadcastersESPNU
ESPN Deportes
WebsiteNCAA.com
2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament

While the tournament is frequently referenced as the College Cup, the NCAA applies the title only to the semifinal and championship rounds of the tournament proper. Since the tournament began, the semifinal and final fixtures have been held at a neutral site predetermined by the NCAA prior to the start of the regular season.

Format

The NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament is a 48-team, single-elimination tournament. Currently, 24 spots are reserved for the winners of automatic bids.

Conferences granted automatic qualification are:

Each conference determines the format for their conference championship, which determines the school who receives the automatic bid. Many use conference tournaments, although three conferences award the championship and automatic bid to the regular season champion. The remaining 24 teams have received at-large bids. The at-large teams are selected by a committee consisting of representatives from each of the eight regions the NCAA has divided the country into. The committee uses a number of criteria, the most influential supposedly being the Ratings Percentage Index, a mathematical formula designed to objectively compare the results and strength of schedule of all Division I teams.[1]

The top 16 teams are seeded into the bracket and receive first round byes. The other 32 are grouped by geographical proximity. The first four rounds are played on campus sites, with matches being hosted by the higher seed. The College Cup, comprising the semifinal and final matches, is played at a predetermined site.

  • Georgetown are the current champions, defeating Virginia 7-6 on penalties after a 3-3 draw in the 2019 final.

Past champions

NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament[2]
Year Final Third Place Match/Semifinalists Host City Host Stadium
Champion Score Runner-up 3rd Place Score 4th Place
1959
Details
Saint Louis 5–2 Bridgeport CCNY, West Chester Storrs, Connecticut Memorial Stadium
1960
Details
Saint Louis (2) 3–2 Maryland West Chester, Connecticut Brooklyn, New York Brooklyn College Field
1961
Details
West Chester 2–0 Saint Louis Bridgeport, Rutgers St. Louis, Missouri Public Schools Stadium
1962
Details
Saint Louis (3) 4–3 Maryland Springfield College, Michigan State St. Louis, Missouri Francis Field
1963
Details
Saint Louis (4) 3–0 Navy Maryland, Army Piscataway, New Jersey Rutgers Stadium
1964
Details
Navy 1–0 Michigan State Saint Louis, Army Providence, Rhode Island Brown Stadium
1965
Details
Saint Louis (5) 1–0 Michigan State Navy, Army St. Louis, Missouri Francis Field
1966
Details
San Francisco 5–2 LIU Michigan State, Army Berkeley, California California Memorial Stadium
1967
Details
Michigan State
Saint Louis (6)
0–0 † Navy, Long Island–Brooklyn St. Louis, Missouri Francis Field
1968
Details
Maryland
Michigan State (2)
2–2 (2OT) ‡ Brown, San Jose State Atlanta Grant Field
1969
Details
Saint Louis (7) 4–0 San Francisco Maryland, Harvard San Jose, California Spartan Stadium
1970
Details
Saint Louis (8) 1–0 UCLA Hartwick, Howard # Edwardsville, Illinois Cougar Field, SIUE
1971
Details
Howard # 3–2 Saint Louis Harvard, San Francisco Miami Miami Orange Bowl
1972
Details
Saint Louis (9) 4–2 UCLA Howard, Cornell Miami Miami Orange Bowl
1973
Details
Saint Louis (10) 3–2 (OT) UCLA Brown, Clemson Miami Miami Orange Bowl
1974
Details
Howard 2–1 (4OT) Saint Louis Hartwick 3–1 UCLA St. Louis, Missouri Busch Memorial Stadium
1975
Details
San Francisco (2) 4–0 SIU Edwardsville Brown 2–0 Howard Edwardsville, Illinois Cougar Field, SIUE
1976
Details
San Francisco (3) 1–0 Indiana Hartwick 4–3 Clemson Philadelphia Franklin Field
1977
Details
Hartwick 2–1 San Francisco SIU Edwardsville 3–2 Brown Berkeley, California California Memorial Stadium
1978
Details
San Francisco # 2–0 Indiana Clemson 6–2 Philadelphia U. Tampa, Florida Tampa Stadium
1979
Details
SIU Edwardsville 3–2 Clemson Penn State 2–1 Columbia Tampa, Florida Tampa Stadium
1980
Details
San Francisco (4) 4–3 (OT) Indiana Hartwick, Alabama A&M Tampa, Florida Tampa Stadium
1981
Details
Connecticut 2–1 (OT) Alabama A&M Eastern Illinois #, Philadelphia U. Palo Alto, California Stanford Stadium
1982
Details
Indiana 2–1 (8OT) Duke Connecticut, SIU Edwardsville Fort Lauderdale, Florida Lockhart Stadium
1983
Details
Indiana (2) 1–0 (2OT) Columbia Connecticut, Virginia Fort Lauderdale, Florida Lockhart Stadium
1984
Details
Clemson 2–1 Indiana Hartwick, UCLA Seattle Kingdome
1985
Details
UCLA 1–0 (8OT) American Hartwick, Evansville Seattle, Washington Kingdome
1986
Details
Duke 1–0 Akron Harvard, Fresno State Tacoma, Washington Tacoma Dome
1987
Details
Clemson (2) 2–0 San Diego State Harvard, North Carolina Clemson, South Carolina Riggs Field
1988
Details
Indiana (3) 1–0 Howard Portland, South Carolina Bloomington, Indiana Bill Armstrong Stadium
1989
Details
Santa Clara
Virginia
1–1 (4OT) ‡ Indiana, Rutgers Piscataway, New Jersey Rutgers Stadium
1990
Details
UCLA (2) 0–0 (4OT)
(4–3 pen)
Rutgers Evansville, NC State Tampa, Florida USF Soccer Stadium
1991
Details
Virginia (2) 0–0 (4OT)
(3–1 pen)
Santa Clara Indiana, Saint Louis Tampa, Florida USF Soccer Stadium
1992
Details
Virginia (3) 2–0 San Diego Duke, Davidson Davidson, North Carolina Richardson Stadium
1993
Details
Virginia (4) 2–0 South Carolina Cal State–Fullerton, Princeton Davidson, North Carolina Richardson Stadium
1994
Details
Virginia (5) 1–0 Indiana UCLA, Rutgers Davidson, North Carolina Richardson Stadium
1995
Details
Wisconsin 2–0 Duke Virginia, Portland Richmond, Virginia Richmond Stadium
1996
Details
St. John's 4–1 FIU Creighton, Charlotte Richmond, Virginia Richmond Stadium
1997
Details
UCLA (3) 2–0 Virginia Indiana, Saint Louis Richmond, Virginia Richmond Stadium
1998
Details
Indiana (4) 3–1 Stanford Maryland, Santa Clara Richmond, Virginia Richmond Stadium
1999
Details
Indiana (5) 1–0 Santa Clara Connecticut, UCLA Charlotte, North Carolina Ericsson Stadium
2000
Details
Connecticut (2) 2–0 Creighton Indiana, SMU Charlotte, North Carolina Ericsson Stadium
2001
Details
North Carolina 2–0 Indiana Stanford, St. John's Columbus, Ohio Columbus Crew Stadium
2002
Details
UCLA (4) 1–0 Stanford Maryland, Creighton University Park, Texas Gerald J. Ford Stadium
2003
Details
Indiana (6) 2–1 St. John's Maryland, Santa Clara Columbus, Ohio Columbus Crew Stadium
2004
Details
Indiana (7) 1–1 (2OT)
(3–2 pen)
UC Santa Barbara Maryland, Duke Carson, California Home Depot Center
2005
Details
Maryland (2) 1–0 New Mexico SMU, Clemson Cary, North Carolina SAS Soccer Park
2006
Details
UC Santa Barbara 2–1 UCLA Wake Forest, Virginia St. Louis, Missouri Hermann Stadium
2007
Details
Wake Forest 2–1 Ohio State Virginia Tech, Massachusetts Cary, North Carolina SAS Soccer Park
2008
Details
Maryland (3) 1–0 North Carolina St. John's, Wake Forest Frisco, Texas Pizza Hut Park
2009
Details
Virginia (6) 0–0 (2OT)
(3–2 pen)
Akron Wake Forest, North Carolina Cary, North Carolina WakeMed Soccer Park
2010
Details
Akron 1–0 Louisville North Carolina, Michigan Santa Barbara, California Harder Stadium
2011
Details
North Carolina (2) 1–0 Charlotte UCLA, Creighton Hoover, Alabama Regions Park
2012
Details
Indiana (8) 1–0 Georgetown Maryland, Creighton Hoover, Alabama Regions Park
2013
Details
Notre Dame 2–1 Maryland New Mexico, Virginia Chester, Pennsylvania PPL Park
2014
Details
Virginia (7) 0–0 (2OT)
(4–2 pen)
UCLA Providence, UMBC Cary, North Carolina WakeMed Soccer Park
2015
Details
Stanford 4–0 Clemson Akron, Syracuse Kansas City, Kansas Children's Mercy Park
2016
Details
Stanford (2) 0–0 (2OT)
(5–4 pen)
Wake Forest Denver, North Carolina Houston, Texas BBVA Compass Stadium
2017
Details
Stanford (3) 1–0 (2OT) Indiana North Carolina, Akron Chester, Pennsylvania Talen Energy Stadium
2018
Details
Maryland (4) 1–0 Akron Indiana, Michigan State Santa Barbara, California Harder Stadium
2019
Details
Georgetown 3–3 (2OT)
(7–6 pen)
Virginia Stanford, Wake Forest Cary, North Carolina WakeMed Soccer Park
2020
Details
Santa Barbara, California Harder Stadium
2021
Details
Cary, North Carolina WakeMed Soccer Park

Side Notes:

  • † Co-champions—Game called due to weather
  • ‡ Co-champions—Game was declared a draw
  • # Disqualified (DQ) at a later time

Most successful schools

Team titles

Team Number Years won
St. Louis 10 1959, 1960, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1967 †, 1969, 1970, 1972, 1973
Indiana 8 1982, 1983, 1988, 1998, 1999, 2003, 2004, 2012
Virginia 7 1989 ‡, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 2009, 2014
Maryland 4 1968 ‡, 2005, 2008, 2018
UCLA 4 1985, 1990, 1997, 2002
San Francisco 4 1966, 1975, 1976, 1980
Stanford 3 2015, 2016, 2017
North Carolina 2 2001, 2011
Connecticut 2 1981, 2000
Clemson 2 1984, 1987
Michigan State 2 1967 †, 1968 ‡
Georgetown 1 2019
Notre Dame 1 2013
Akron 1 2010
Wake Forest 1 2007
UC Santa Barbara 1 2006
St. John's 1 1996
Wisconsin 1 1995
Santa Clara 1 1989 ‡
Duke 1 1986
SIU Edwardsville 1 1979
Hartwick 1 1977
Howard 1 1974
Navy 1 1964
West Chester 1 1961

Side notes:

  • † Co-champions—Game called due to weather
  • ‡ Co-champions—Game was declared a draw

Appearances

This list consists of the top twenty-five men's college soccer teams in terms of appearances in the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship.

Top 25 rankings as of 10 December 2017[3]
RankLogoTeamAppearances
1 Saint Louis48
2 UCLA44
3 Indiana42
4 Virginia39
5 UConn35
5 Maryland35
7 Penn State32
8 Clemson31
8 San Francisco31
8 SMU31
11 Akron28
12 Brown27
13 Duke26
14 Hartwick25
14 North Carolina25
16 Creighton24
17 Washington23
18 South Carolina22
19 Wake Forest21
20 Notre Dame20
20 Santa Clara20
20 South Florida20
20 St. John's20
24 California19
24 Michigan State19
gollark: > what procedures are those, again?Well, I think there are general kicking-related ones.
gollark: Hmm, perhaps.
gollark: And also appears to be ignoring the procedures regarding kicking bots?
gollark: Palaiologos (jokingly?) threatened to demote me.
gollark: Done.

See also

Highest attendances

The highest recorded attendance for championship games are listed below:[4]

  • 22,512 – St. Louis (5) vs. SIU Edwardsville (1), Busch Stadium, St. Louis Oct. 30 1980
  • 21,319 – Wisconsin (1) vs. Portland (0) / Duke (3) vs. Virginia (2), Richmond, Virginia (NCAA semifinals) Dec. 8, 1995
  • 20,874 – St. John's (NY) (4) vs. FIU (1), Richmond, Virginia (NCAA final) Dec. 15, 1996
  • 20,703 – Wisconsin (2) vs. Duke (0), Richmond, Virginia (NCAA final) Dec. 10, 1995
  • 20,269 – St. John's (NY) (2) vs. Creighton (1) / FIU (4) vs. Charlotte (0), Richmond, Virginia (NCAA semifinals) Dec. 13, 1996
  • 20,143 – UCLA (2) vs. Virginia (0), Richmond, Virginia (NCAA final) Dec. 14, 1997
  • 20,112 – St. Louis (1) vs. SIU Edwardsville (0), Busch Stadium, St. Louis Nov. 9, 1973

Numbers in parenthesis indicate goals scored by participating teams.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.