Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

NCAA women's water polo championship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromNCAA Women's Water Polo Championship)
Annual college water polo tournament
NCAA women's water polo championship
AssociationNCAA
SportCollegiate Water polo
Founded2001; 24 years ago (2001)
DivisionDivision I andDivision II
No. of teams9
Most recent
champion
Stanford (10th)
Most titlesStanford (10)
Official websiteNCAA.com

TheNCAA women's water polo championship is the annual tournament hosted by theNCAA to determine the team national champion of women'scollegiate water polo among its members in theUnited States, held each year since 2001.[1]

Unlike most NCAA sports, only oneNational Collegiate championship is held each season with teams fromDivision I andDivision II.Division III received their own in 2022.

Stanford has been the most successful program, with 10 championships;UCLA has the second most (8), followed byUSC (6). One of these threeCalifornia schools has won the championship every year since the tournament began in 2001.[2]

While the tournament often includes teams from around the country, most programs are located within the state of California, and no school from outside California has ever surpassed third place or participated in the NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship game. Indeed, only twice has a school other than Stanford, UCLA, or USC participated in the championship game:Loyola Marymount who lost to USC in 2004 andCalifornia (the other California-based Pac-12 school) who lost to Stanford in 2011.[2]

Format

[edit]

Seven conferences have teams competing in women's water polo: theBig West Conference, theCollegiate Water Polo Association (CWPA), the single-sportGolden Coast Conference, theMetro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC), theMountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF), theSouthern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) and theWestern Water Polo Association (WWPA). Some teams compete at Division III, either as members of theSouthern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference or as an independent. Teams qualify by either winning their respective conference tournament or receiving one of the few at large bids available.

Champions

[edit]
YearNational ChampionScoreRunner-upHost or site
2001UCLA5–4StanfordStanford University, Avery Aquatic Center,Stanford, California
2002Stanford8–4UCLAUSC,McDonald's Swim Stadium,Los Angeles, California
2003UCLA(2)4–3StanfordUC San Diego,Canyonview Pool,La Jolla, California
2004USC10–8Loyola MarymountStanford University, Avery Aquatic Center, Stanford, California
2005UCLA(3)3–2StanfordUniversity of Michigan,Canham Natatorium,Ann Arbor, Michigan
2006UCLA(4)9–8USCUC Davis, Schaal Aquatics Center,Davis, California
2007UCLA(5)5–4StanfordLong Beach State, Joint Forces Training Base,Los Alamitos, California
2008UCLA(6)6–3USCStanford University, Avery Aquatic Center, Stanford, California
2009UCLA(7)5–4USCUniversity of Maryland, Eppley Recreation Center Natatorium,College Park, Maryland
2010USC(2)10–9StanfordSan Diego State, Aztec Aquaplex, San Diego, California
2011Stanford(2)9–5CaliforniaUniversity of Michigan, Canham Natatorium, Ann Arbor, Michigan
2012Stanford(3)6–4USCSan Diego State, Aztec Aquaplex, San Diego, California
2013USC(3)10–95OTStanfordHarvard University, Blodgett Pool,Cambridge, Massachusetts
2014Stanford(4)9–5UCLAUSC,Uytengsu Aquatics Center, Los Angeles, California
2015Stanford(5)7–6UCLAStanford University, Avery Aquatic Center, Stanford, California
2016USC(4)8–7StanfordUCLA,Spieker Aquatics Center, Los Angeles, California
2017Stanford(6)8–7UCLAIUPUI,Indiana University Natatorium,Indianapolis,Indiana
2018USC(5)5–4StanfordUSC, Uytengsu Aquatics Center, Los Angeles, California
2019Stanford(7)9–8USCStanford, Avery Aquatic Center, Stanford, California
2020Cancelled due to thecoronavirus pandemicUniversity of the Pacific, Chris Kjeldsen Pool Complex, Stockton, California
2021USC(6)18–9UCLAUCLA, Spieker Aquatics Center, Los Angeles, California
2022Stanford(8)10–7USCMichigan, Canham Natatorium, Ann Arbor, Michigan
2023Stanford(9)11–9USCUniversity of the Pacific, Chris Kjeldsen Pool Complex, Stockton, California
2024UCLA (8)7–4CaliforniaCalifornia, Spieker Aquatics Complex, Berkeley, CA
2025Stanford (10)11-7USCIUPUI, Indiana University Natatorium, Indianapolis, Indiana
2026UC San Diego, Canyonview Aquatic Center, La Jolla, CA

[3]

Team titles

[edit]
NCAA women's water polo championship is located in California
឴឴឵UCLA
឴឴឵UCLA
Stanford
Stanford
USC
USC
Schools that have won the NCAA Championship
10, 8, 6
Team#Years
Stanford102002, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2022, 2023, 2025
UCLA82001, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2024
USC62004, 2010, 2013, 2016, 2018, 2021

Result by school and year

[edit]

28 teams have appeared in the NCAA Tournament in at least one year starting with 2001 (the initial year that the post-season tournament was under the auspices of the NCAA). The results for all years are shown in this table below.

The code in each cell represents the furthest the team made it in the respective tournament:

  •  •  Opening/Play-in Round (since 2014)
  •  QF  Quarterfinals (since 2005)
  •  SF  Semifinals
  •  RU  National Runner-up
  •  CH  National Champion
SchoolConference#SFCGCH010203040506070809101112131415161718192122232425

StanfordMPSF24241810RUCHRUSFRUSFRUSFSFRUCHCHRUCHCHRUCHRUCHSFCHCHSFCH
UCLAMPSF2322138CHRUCHCHCHCHCHCHQFSFSFSFRURUSFRUSFSFRUSFSFCHSF
USCMPSF2120146CHSFRUSFRURUCHSFRUCHSFSFCHSFCHRUCHRURUQFRU
CaliforniaMPSF1192-SFRUSFSFSFSFSFSFQFRUQF
Loyola MarymountGCC1051-SFSFSFRUQFQFQFSFQFQF
HawaiiBig West96--SFSFSFSFQFQFQFSFSF
MichiganCWPA112--SFQFQFQFQFSFQFQFQFQFQF
UC IrvineBig West81--QFSFQFQFQFQFQFQF
PrincetonCWPA51--QFQFQFSFQF
IndianaMPSF31--SFQFQF
Hartwickdefunct31--SFQFQF
San Diego StateGCC31--SFQFQF
Arizona StateMPSF31--QFQFSF
UC DavisBig West21--QFSF
BrownCWPA11--SF
WagnerMAAC11---QFQFQFQFQFQFQF
Pomona–PitzerSCIAC8---QFQFQFQFQF
UC San DiegoBig West8---QFQFQFQFQFQF
MaristMAAC5---QFQFQFQFQF
Fresno StateGCC4---QFQFQFQF
Cal LutheranSCIAC3---QF
IonaMAAC3---QFQFQF
PacificGCC3---QFQFQF
WhittierSCIAC2---
Salem (WV)WWPA2---
BiolaWWPA2---
RedlandsSCIAC1---QF
Claremont-Mudd-ScrippsSCIAC1---QF
UC Santa BarbaraBig West1---QF
LIUMAAC1---QF
HarvardCWPA1---QF
McKendreeWWPA1---

Tournaments

[edit]
TheUniversity of California-Los Angeles Bruins are honored at theWhite House byPresident of the United StatesGeorge W. Bush in June 2008 for their winning the2008 Division I national championship.

2025

[edit]
Main article:2025 NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship

2024

[edit]
Main article:2024 NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship

2023

[edit]
Main article:2023 NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship

2022

[edit]
Main article:2022 NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship

2021

[edit]
Main article:2021 NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship

2019

[edit]
Main article:2019 NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship

2018

[edit]

The NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship was held on May 8–13, 2018 at the USC Uytengsu Aquatics Center, Los Angeles, California. Ten teams were selected to participate in the annual event. Conference champions from the Big West, CWPA, Golden Coast Conference, MAAC, MPSF, SCIAC and WWPA are represented with the seven automatic bids. They were joined by three at-large teams, with play-in games ahead of the tournament.

Conference Champions:

  • Big West - UC-Irvine
  • CWPA - Michigan
  • Golden Coast - Pacific
  • MAAC - Wagner
  • MPSF - USC
  • SCIAC -Pomona-Pitzer
  • WWPA - UC-San Diego
  • at-large teams - Stanford, UCLA, California

Opening Round (May 8):Wagner def. UC-San Diego 10–7,UC Irvine def. Pomona-Pitzer 16–2

First Round (May 11): No. 1USC def. Wagner 12–5; No. 4UCLA def. Pacific 8–4; No. 2Stanford def. UC Irvine 14–8; No. 3California def. Michigan 13–6

Semi-finals (May 12): No. 1USC def. No. 4 UCLA 10–6; No. 2Stanford def. No. 3 California 11–7

Championship (May 13): No. 1USC def. No. 2 Stanford 5-4

2017

[edit]

The NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship was held on May 12–14, 2017 at the IU Natatorium; Indianapolis, IN. Ten teams were selected to participate in the annual event. Conference champions from the Big West, CWPA, Golden Coast Conference, MAAC, MPSF, SCIAC and WWPA are represented with the seven automatic bids. They are joined by three at-large teams, with play-in games ahead of the tournament.

Conference Champions:

  • Big West - UC-Irvine
  • CWPA - Michigan
  • Golden Coast - Pacific
  • MAAC - Wagner
  • MPSF - UCLA
  • SCIAC - Pomona-Pitzer
  • WWPA - UC-San Diego

Opening Round (May 6):Wagner def. UC-San Diego 6–5,Pacific def. Pomona-Pitzer 11–5

First Round (May 12): No. 1UCLA def. Wagner 17–2;California def. No. 4 UC Irvine 9–7; No. 2Stanford def. Pacific 13–6; No. 3USC def. Michigan 12–6

Semi-finals (May 13): No. 1UCLA def. Cal 14–11; No. 2Stanford def. No. 3 USC 11–10

Championship (May 14, 3:00 PM ET): No. 2 Stanford def. No. 1 UCLA 8-7

Maggie Steffens of Stanford, who scored the winning goal against UCLA with 9 seconds left, was named the tournament's most valuable player.[4]

2016

[edit]

The NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship was held on May 13–15, 2016 withUCLA,Los Angeles hosting. Eight teams were selected to participate in the annual event. Conference champions from the Big West, CWPA, Golden Coast Conference, MAAC, MPSF, SCIAC and WWPA were represented with the seven automatic bids. They were joined by three at-large teams, with play-in games conducted on May 10, 2016.

Play-in games (May 10, 2016,Canyonview Aquatic Center at the University of California, San Diego):San Diego State def. Wagner 7–4,UC San Diego def. Whitter 11–7

Tournament First Round games (May 13, 2016):UCLA def. UC San Diego 17–4,Stanford def. UC Santa Barbara 12–5,Southern California def. San Diego State 12–3,Michigan def. Arizona State 5-4

Semi-finals (May 14, 2016):Southern California def. Michigan 9–6,Stanford def. UCLA 7-4

Championship (May 15, 2016):Southern California def. Stanford 8–7

2015

[edit]

The NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship was held on May 8–10, 2015 withStanford,Stanford, CA hosting. Eight teams participated in the event. As has been the case since 2011, conference champions from the MPSF, WWPA, SCIAC, CWPA, MAAC, and Big West represented the six automatic bids. They were joined by four at-large teams, with play-in games being conducted on May 2:UC San Diego (18-18) def. Whittier (21-14) 17–11,Princeton (29-3) def. Wagner (25-8) 12–2.

Tournament First Round games (May 8, 2015):UCLA (24-2) def. UC San Diego 9–2,California (19-7) def. UCI (19-8) 6–5, Southern Cal (22-5) def. Hawaii (18-9) 14–7,Stanford (23-2) def. Princeton (30-4) 7–2.

Semi-finals (May 9, 2015):UCLA def. California 9–5,Stanford def. Southern Cal 9–8

Championship (May 10, 2015):Stanford def. UCLA, 7–6

2014

[edit]

The NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship was held on May 9–11, 2014 withUSC,Los Angeles hosting. Eight teams participated. Play-in games among four at-large teams were conducted May 3 on the campuses of the higher-seeded teams, with No. 8 seed Indiana defeating No. 9 seed Wagner 11–6, and No. 7 seed UC San Diego defeating No. 10 seed Pomona Pitzer 13–9.

Tournament First Round games (May 9, 2014): No. 1 seed Stanford def. No. 8 seed Indiana 18–2, No. 2 seed UCLA def. No. 7 seed UC San Diego 12–8, No. 3 seed USC def. No. 6 seed UCI 14–11, No. 4 seed Cal def. No. 5 seed ASU 7–4

Semi-finals (May 10, 2014): [1] Stanford def. [4] California 12–8, [2] UCLA def. [3] USC 5–3

Championship (May 11, 2014): [1] Stanford def. [2] UCLA 9–5

Annika Dries of Stanford was named the tournament's most outstanding player.

2013

[edit]

The NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship was held on May 10–12, 2013 withHarvard University,Cambridge, MA hosting. Eight teams participated. Conference champions from the MPSF, WWPA, SCIAC, CWPA, MAAC, and Big West were joined by two at-large teams.

Tournament First Round games (May 10, 2013): No. 2 seed Stanford (27-2) def. No. 7 seed Iona (21-8) 20–3; No. 3 seed UCLA (26-6) def. No. 6 seed Princeton (26-5) 8–6; No. 1 seed Southern California (24-1) def. Pomona-Pitzer (18-16) 27–1; No. 4 seed Hawaii (21-9) def. No. 5 seed UC San Diego (25-13) 13–6

Semi-finals (May 11, 2013): No. 2 seed Stanford def. No. 3 seed UCLA 5–3; No. 1 seed Southern California def. No. 4 seed Hawaii 16–9

Championship (May 12, 2013): No. 1 seed Southern California def. No. 2 seed Stanford, 10-95OT

2012

[edit]

The tournament was held at theSDSU'sAztec Aquaplex inSan Diego, California with automatic bids for the MPSF, CWPA,Big West, MAAC,WWPA and SCIAC conferences. The three-day championships on May 11–13, 2012, also had two at-large teams.

Tournament First Round games (May 11, 2012): No. 1 Stanford (23-2) def. No. 8 Pomona-Pitzer (21-16) 17–5; No. 2UCLA (21-3) def. No. 7 Iona (24-11) 14–3; No. 3 Southern California (21-5) def. No. 6 Princeton (28-4) 14–2; No. 4 UC Irvine (24-6) def. No. 5 Loyola Marymount (20-9) 8–6.

Semi-finals (May 12, 2012: No. 1 Stanford def. No. 4 UC Irvine 12–3; No. 3 Southern California def. No. 2UCLA 12–10.

Championship (May 13, 2012): No. 1 Stanford def. No. 3 Southern California 6–4.

2011

[edit]

The tournament was held at theUniversity of Michigan's Canham Natatorium inAnn Arbor, Michigan with automatic bids for the MPSF (Stanford), CWPA (Indiana),Big West (UCI), MAAC (Iona),WWPA (UC San Diego) and SCIAC (Redlands). The three-day championships on May 13–15, 2011, also had two at-large teams.

Tournament First Round games: No. 1Stanford (25-1) def. No. 8Iona College/University of Redlands (play-in winner) 22–7; No. 4USC (18-6) def. No. 5UCI (21-8) 14–9; No. 3UCLA (24-6) def. No. 6Indiana (21-8) 8–5; No. 2California (24-4) def. No. 7UC San Diego (17-18) 13–5.

Semi-finals: No. 2 California def. No. 3 UCLA 7–4; No. 1 Stanford def. No. 4 Southern California 8–4.

Championship: No. 1 Stanford defeated No. 2 California 9-5 for its second national title.

All Tournament First Team: Amber Oland, Stanford; Annika Dries, Stanford; Emily Csikos, Cal; Kim Krueger, Stanford; Patricia Jancso, USC; Melissa Seidemann, Stanford; Dana Ochsner, Cal; Priscilla Orozco, UCLA

All Tournament Second Team: Stephane Peckham, Cal; Jakie Kohli, Indiana; Joelle Bekhazi, USC; KK Clark, UCLA; Cortney Collyer, UC Irvine; Jessy Cardey, UC Irvine; Maggie Wood, Iona; Kelly Easterday, UCLA

Tournament MVP: Annika Dries, Stanford

2010

[edit]

The tournament field was announced on Monday, May 3, 2010, with the championship tournament on May 14–16 atSan Diego State University's Aztec Aquaplex. Teams that received automatic bids were UCLA (MPSF), Michigan (CWPA), Marist (MAAC), Loyola Marymount (WWPA) and Pomona-Pitzer (SCIAC). Stanford, Cal and USC of MPSF received at-large bids.

Tournament Bracket: #1 Stanford (24-2) def. #8 Pomona-Pitzer (18-14) 23–3; #2 USC (22-3) def. #7 Marist (18-14) 20–5; #6 Loyola Marymount (27-4) def. #3 UCLA (20-7) 5–4; #4 Cal (24-8) def. #5 Michigan (32-6) 12–8.

Semi-finals: #1 Stanford def. #4 Cal 6–3; #2 USC def. #6 Loyola Marymount 10–6.

Southern California defeated Stanford in the title game 10-9 for its second national title in school history.

2009

[edit]

The following conferences and institutions received automatic qualification for the 2009 championships, which were played on May 8–10: Collegiate Water Polo Association,Michigan; Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference,Marist; Mountain Pacific Sports Federation,USC; Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference,Cal Lutheran; and Western Water Polo Association,Loyola Marymount. The following institutions received at-large bids to the championship field: Stanford,UCLA, andHawaii.

The first-round games: #1 seed USC (24-1) def. #8 Cal Lutheran (19-12) 22–2; #2 Stanford (24-3) def. #7 Marist (18-13) 21–5; #3 UCLA (22-6) def. #6 Michigan (33-8) 13–6; and #4 Hawaii (18-8) def. # 5 Loyola Marymount (24-7) 11–7.

Semi-finals: #1 USC def. #4 Hawaii 17–5; #3 UCLA def. #2 Stanford 12–11.

TheUCLA Bruins women's team (3rd seeded) battled the #1 ratedUSC Trojans for the national championship on Sunday, May 10, 2009, atCollege Park, Maryland. With two goals fromTanya Gandy in the first minute of the game, UCLA won a record fifth consecutive crown, 11th national title and 7th NCAA crown, by a score of 5–4.[3] Gandy earned the NCAA Tournament's most valuable player honor.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"NATIONAL COLLEGIATE WOMEN'S WATER POLO CHAMPIONSHIPS RECORDS BOOK"(PDF).ncaa.org. NCAA. Retrieved5 January 2025.
  2. ^ab"Women's Water Polo Championship History".National Collegiate Athletic Association. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2021.
  3. ^abUCLA defeats USC, claims NCAA women's water polo titleArchived 2011-06-03 at theWayback Machine,Los Angeles Daily News, May 10, 2009
  4. ^Women's water polo: Stanford wins sixth national title, defeating UCLA 8-7, May 14, 2017

External links

[edit]
Tournaments
NCAA
Division I
Division II
Division III
Single-division or
National Collegiate sports
and championships
Litigation
Related topics
Emerging Sports
NCAA Sports
Dropped Sports
National teams
Competitions
Awards
Categories
Leagues
by sport
Basketball
Ice hockey
Soccer
Softball
Gridiron
football
WNFC
WFA
USWFL
MWFL
WWCFL
X League
AFWL (defunct)
IWFL (defunct)
LFL (defunct)
LFL Canada (defunct)
NWFA (defunct)
WAFL (defunct)
WFA (defunct)
WFL (defunct)
WPFL (defunct)
Rugby union
Lacrosse
UWLX (defunct)
WPLL (defunct)
Athletes Unlimited (defunct)
WLL
Volleyball
Other sports
Leagues
by association
NCAA
NAIA
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=NCAA_women%27s_water_polo_championship&oldid=1290757761"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp