NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship

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Men's Division II Soccer Championship
Founded 1972
Number of teams 35
Current champions Pfeiffer
(1 title)
Most successful club(s) Southern Connecticut State
(6 titles)
Website [1]

The NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship has been played since 1972. Prior to 1972, all teams competed in a single class.

The 2013 tournament was a 35-team, single-elimination tournament.

The Division II tournament is structured around the eight NCAA regions (Atlantic, Central, East, Midwest, South, South Central, Southeast, and West). At least two and as many as six teams from each region are selected with no automatic qualifiers given. The selection criteria used is similar to that used in Division I, although one difference is that the RPI is replaced with the Quality of Winning Percentage Index, a more subjective measure.

The first two rounds are played on campus sites with the highest seed usually hosting the regional semis and finals. The winners of each region meet in the third round and/or quarterfinals, with the host being determined by specific criteria or, failing that, geographical rotation. The final two rounds are played at a predetermined site. The 2013 semifinals and final for both the men's and women's Division II tournaments were held at Blanchard Woods Park in Evans, Georgia and hosted by the Peach Belt Conference.[1]

Champions

References = [2][3]

NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship
Year Final Semifinalists/Third Place Match
Champion Score Runner-up 3rd Place Score 4th Place
1972 SIU Edwardsville 1–0 Oneonta State Cal State Chico & Baltimore
1973 Missouri–St. Louis 3–0 Cal State Fullerton Adelphi 1-0 Baltimore
1974 Adelphi 3–2 Seattle Pacific UDC 5-3 Eastern Illinois
1975 Baltimore 3–1 Seattle Pacific Adelphi 9-1 Green Bay
1976 Loyola (MD) 2–0 New Haven Cal State Chico 3-2 (2ot; PK) Missouri–St. Louis
1977 Alabama A&M 2–1 Seattle Pacific New Haven 3-2 (2ot; PK) Green Bay
1978 Seattle Pacific 1–0 (3OT) Alabama A&M Eastern Illinois 2-1 Southern Connecticut State
1979 Alabama A&M 2–0 Eastern Illinois Seattle Pacific 1-0 (2ot) Southern Connecticut State
1980 Lock Haven 1–0 (OT) FIU Cal State Chico 2-1 (ot, PK) Southern Connecticut State
1981 Tampa 1–0 (OT) Cal State Los Angeles Southern Connecticut State 3-1 Missouri-St. Louis
1982 FIU 2–1 Southern Connecticut State Southern Connecticut State & Oakland
1983 Seattle Pacific 1–0 Tampa Oakland & Southern Connecticut State
1984 FIU 1–0 (OT) Seattle Pacific New Haven & Missouri-St. Louis
1985 Seattle Pacific 3–2 FIU NYIT & Davis & Elkins
1986 Seattle Pacific 4–1 Oakland Bridgeport & Davis & Elkins
1987 Southern Connecticut State 2–0 Cal State Northridge Missouri-St. Louis & Tampa
1988 Florida Tech 3–2 Cal State Northridge Southern Connecticut State & Oakland
1989 Southern New Hampshire 3–1 UNC Greensboro Cal State East Bay & Gannon
1990 Southern Connecticut State 0–0 (4OT, PK) Seattle Pacific Gannon & Florida Tech
1991 Florida Tech 5–1 Sonoma State Cal Poly # & Franklin Pierce
1992 Southern Connecticut State 1–0 Tampa Oakland & Seattle Pacific
1993 Seattle Pacific 1–0 Southern Connecticut State Florida Tech & Gannon
1994 Tampa 3–0 (2OT) Oakland Seattle Pacific & Southern Connecticut State
1995 Southern Connecticut State 2–0 SC-Spartanburg Mercyhurst & Cal State Bakersfield
1996 Grand Canyon 3–1 Oakland Lynn & Southern Connecticut State
1997 Cal State Bakersfield 1–0 Lynn Truman State & Southern Connecticut State
1998 Southern Connecticut State 1–0 SC-Spartanburg Mercyhurst & Seattle Pacific
1999 Southern Connecticut State 2–1 (2OT) Fort Lewis Charleston (WV) & Barry
2000 Cal State Dominguez Hills 2–1 (4OT) Barry East Stroudsburg & Lewis
2001 Tampa 2–1 Cal State Dominguez Hills Dowling & SIU Edwardsville
2002 Sonoma State 4–3 Southern New Hampshire Central Arkansas & Mercyhurst
2003 Lynn 2–1 Cal State Chico Findlay & Dowling
2004 Seattle 2–1 SIU Edwardsville UNC Pembroke & Dowling
2005 Fort Lewis 3–1 Franklin Pierce Lynn & SIU Edwardsville
2006 Dowling 1–0 Fort Lewis Lincoln Memorial & West Florida
2007 Franklin Pierce 1–0 Lincoln Memorial Montevallo & Midwestern State
2008 Cal State Dominguez Hills 3–0 Dowling Tampa & Northern Kentucky
2009 Fort Lewis 1–0 Lees-McRae Le Moyne & Lewis
2010 Northern Kentucky 3–2 Rollins Dowling & Midwestern State
2011 Fort Lewis 3–2 Lynn Franklin Pierce & Millersville
2012 Lynn 3–2 Saginaw Valley State Simon Fraser & Mercyhurst
2013 Southern New Hampshire 2–1 Carson-Newman Rockhurst & Simon Fraser
2014 Lynn 3–2 University of Charleston Colorado Mesa & Quincy
2015 Pfeiffer 4–0 Cal Poly Pomona Charleston & Rockhurst

# = Later vacated by NCAA.

Schools ranked by titles

Rank School #
1 Southern Connecticut State 6
2 Seattle Pacific 5
3 Fort Lewis 3
Tampa 3
Lynn University 3
6 Alabama A&M 2
Cal State Dominguez Hills 2
Florida International 2
Florida Tech 2
Southern New Hampshire 2

Schools ranked by number of appearances

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Rank School Appearances
1 Seattle Pacific University
34
2 Southern Connecticut State University
31
3 University of Tampa
23
4 Southern New Hampshire University
21
5 East Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania
19
6 Franklin Pierce University
18
7 University of Missouri-St. Louis
17
8 Rollins College
15
9 Oakland University
14
Mercyhurst University
10 California State University, Dominguez Hills
13
Dowling College
Lynn University

Former Division II Champions now in Division I

Source=[4]

School Championship Year moved Current Conference
SIU Edwardsville 1972 1973, 2008[a 1] Missouri Valley Conference
Loyola (Maryland) 1976 between 1979 & 1985 Patriot League
Florida International 1982, 1984 between 1986 & 1991 Conference USA
Grand Canyon 1996 2013 Western Athletic Conference
CSU Bakersfield 1997 2006 Western Athletic Conference
Seattle 2004 2008 Western Athletic Conference
Northern Kentucky 2010 2012 Horizon League
  1. SIUE returned to Division II from 1996 through 2007.
  • In addition to the above schools, Alabama A&M moved to Division I after winning Division II titles in 1977 & 1979. However, it discontinued its men's soccer program after the 2010 season.[5]
  • Adelphi also moved to Division I in 1976, after winning the Division II title in 1974, but returned to Division II in 2013.[6]

See also

References

External links