NCAA Women's Volleyball Championship

NCAA Women's Volleyball Championship

The NCAA has contested team championships in women's volleyball since 1981. The following is a list of the champions of each division with their record for the year in which they won the championship, and the runner up, city, site and other final four participants for division I. From 1971 through 1982, before the NCAA governed women's collegiate athletics, the AIAW held the AIAW volleyball championship tournaments.

In the NCAA Women's Volleyball Championship, separate tournaments are conducted for Division I, Division II, and Division III institutions. In the NCAA Men's Volleyball Championship, there is no official divisional structure. All teams, regardless of their divisional affiliation, are eligible to compete for the men's NCAA championship. This is different mainly because there are far more NCAA member schools offering women's volleyball than the men's game.

Contents

Division I

Year National Champion Score Runner-Up City and venue Semifinalists
1981 Southern California (27–10) 3–2 UCLA Los Angeles, CA Pauley Pavilion San Diego State, Pacific
1982 Hawaiʻi (33–1) 3–2 Southern California Stockton, CA Alex G. Spanos Center San Diego State, Stanford
1983 Hawaiʻi (2) (34–2) 3–0 UCLA Lexington, KY Memorial Coliseum Stanford, Pacific
1984 UCLA (33–6) 3–2 Stanford Los Angeles, CA (2) Pauley Pavilion Pacific, San Jose State
1985 Pacific (36–3) 3–1 Stanford Kalamazoo, MI Read Fieldhouse Southern California, UCLA
1986 Pacific (2) (39–3) 3–0 Nebraska Stockton, CA (2) Alex G. Spanos Center Texas, Stanford
1987 Hawaiʻi (3) (37–2) 3–1 Stanford Indianapolis, IN Market Square Arena Illinois, Texas
1988 Texas (34–5) 3–0 Hawaiʻi Minneapolis, MN Williams Arena Illinois, UCLA
1989 Long Beach St. (32–5) 3–0 Nebraska Honolulu, HI Neal S. Blaisdell Center Texas-Arlington, UCLA
1990 UCLA (2) (36–1) 3–0 Pacific College Park, MD Cole Field House LSU, Nebraska
1991 UCLA (3) (31–5) 3–2 Long Beach St. Los Angeles, CA (3) Pauley Pavilion LSU, Ohio State
1992 Stanford (31–2) 3–1 UCLA Albuquerque, NM University Arena (The Pit) Long Beach State, Florida
1993 Long Beach St. (2) (32–2) 3–1 Penn State Madison, WI UW Field House BYU, Florida
1994 Stanford (2) (32–1) 3–1 UCLA Austin, TX Frank Erwin Center Penn State, Ohio State
1995 Nebraska (32–1) 3–1 Texas Amherst, MA Mullins Center Stanford, Michigan State
1996 Stanford (3) (31–2) 3–0 Hawaiʻi Cleveland, OH CSU Conv. Center Nebraska, Florida
1997 Stanford (4) (33–2) 3–2 Penn State Spokane, WA Spokane Arena Long Beach State, Florida
1998 Long Beach St. (3) (36–0) 3–2 Penn State Madison, WI (2) Kohl Center Nebraska, Florida
1999 Penn State (36–1) 3–0 Stanford Honolulu, HI (2) Stan Sheriff Center Long Beach State, Pacific
2000 Nebraska (2) (34–0) 3–2 Wisconsin Richmond, VA Richmond Coliseum Hawaiʻi, Southern California
2001 Stanford (5) (33–2) 3–0 Long Beach St. San Diego, CA Cox Arena Arizona, Nebraska
2002 Southern California (2) (31–1) 3–1 Stanford New Orleans, LA New Orleans Arena Hawaiʻi, Florida
2003 Southern California (3) (35–0) 3–1 Florida Dallas, TX Reunion Arena Hawaiʻi, Minnesota
2004 Stanford (6) (30–6) 3–0 Minnesota Long Beach, CA Long Beach Arena Southern California, Washington
2005 Washington (32–1) 3–0 Nebraska San Antonio, TX Alamodome Santa Clara, Tennessee
2006 Nebraska (3) (33–1) 3–1 Stanford Omaha, NE Qwest Center UCLA, Washington
2007 Penn State (2) (34–2) 3–2 Stanford Sacramento, CA ARCO Arena California, Southern California
2008 Penn State (3) (38–0) 3–0 Stanford Omaha, NE (2) Qwest Center Nebraska, Texas
2009 Penn State (4) (38–0) 3–2 Texas Tampa, FL St. Pete Times Forum Hawaiʻi, Minnesota
2010 Penn State (5) (32–5) 3–0 California Kansas City, MO Sprint Center Texas, Southern California
2011 San Antonio, TX (2) Alamodome
2012 Louisville, KY KFC Yum! Center
2013 Seattle, WA KeyArena
2014 Oklahoma City, OK Chesapeake Energy Arena

Records

  • Highest attendance to watch an NCAA championships match - 2008 Semifinals (17,430)
  • Lowest attendance to watch an NCAA Championship match - 1983 (2,000)[citation needed]
  • Number 1 seed wins NCAA championship†- 2002,[1] 2003,[2] 2006, 2008, 2009
  • Lowest seed to win NCAA Championship - 11 (Stanford, 2004)[citation needed]
  • #1 seed defeat #2 seed in NCAA Championship†- 2002, 2006, 2008, 2009
  • Most championships by team: Stanford (6), Penn State (5)
  • Most championships by conference: Pac-10 (13)
  • Most appearances in final: Stanford 14 (6 win/8 lost); Penn State 8 (5/3); UCLA 7 (3/4)
  • Most final fours: Stanford 18 (6 NCs/8 finals/4 semis); UCLA 11 (3/4/4); Nebraska 11 (3/3/5)
  • Most final fours without a championship: Florida 7 (1 runner up/6 semis)
  • Undefeated seasons: Long Beach St (1998), Nebraska (2000), USC (2003), Penn State (2008), Penn State (2009)

† - Since 2001, when current seeding field began.

Most Outstanding Player

In 1991 and now annually since 1996, the NCAA has awarded the most outstanding player(s) of the NCAA championship.

Year Most Outstanding Player School
1991 Natalie Williams
Antoinnette White
UCLA
Long Beach State
1996 Kerri Walsh Stanford
1997 Terri Zemaitis Penn State
1998 Misty May
Lauren Cacciamani
Long Beach State (2)
Penn State (2)
1999 Lauren Cacciamani Penn State (3)
2000 Greichaly Cepero Nebraska
2001 Logan Tom Stanford (2)
2002 Keao Burdine Southern California
2003 Keao Burdine Southern California (2)
2004 Ogonna Nnamani Stanford (3)
2005 Christal Morrison Washington
2006 Sarah Pavan Nebraska (2)
2007 Megan Hodge Penn State (4)
2008 Megan Hodge Penn State (5)
2009 Destinee Hooker Texas
2010 Deja McClendon Penn State (6)

Division II

  • 1996 Nebraska-Omaha (35-2)
  • 1997 West Texas A&M (37-3)
  • 1998 Hawaii Pacific (31-5)
  • 1999 BYU-Hawaii (30-2)
  • 2000 Hawaii Pacific (28-0)
  • 2001 Barry (32-2)
  • 2002 BYU-Hawaii (27-2)
  • 2003 North Alabama (33-7)
  • 2004 Barry (34-1)
  • 2005 Grand Valley State (32-6)
  • 2006 Tampa (35-1)
  • 2007 Concordia-St. Paul (30-4)
  • 2008 Concordia-St. Paul (37-1)
  • 2009 Concordia-St. Paul (37-0)
  • 2010 Concordia-St. Paul (32-4)

Records

  • Most championships: Concordia-St. Paul (4), Portland St. (4)
  • Undefeated Seasons: Hawaii Pacific (2000), Concordia-St. Paul (2009)

Division III

  • 1981 University of California, San Diego (36-8)
  • 1982 University of La Verne (30-10)
  • 1983 Elmhurst College (57-4)
  • 1984 University of California, San Diego (23-12)
  • 1985 Elmhurst College (40-9)
  • 1986 University of California, San Diego (42-6)
  • 1987 University of California, San Diego (31-4)
  • 1988 University of California, San Diego (34-8)
  • 1989 Washington University in St. Louis (39-6)
  • 1990 University of California, San Diego (37-8)
  • 1991 Washington University in St. Louis (42-4)
  • 1992 Washington University in St. Louis (40-0)
  • 1993 Washington University in St. Louis (44-2)
  • 1994 Washington University in St. Louis (42-2)
  • 1995 Washington University in St. Louis (42-3)
  • 1996 Washington University in St. Louis (43-6)
  • 1997 University of California, San Diego (27-5)
  • 1998 Central College (37-2)
  • 1999 Central College (41-0)
  • 2000 Central College (40-2)
  • 2001 University of La Verne (27-1)
  • 2002 University of Wisconsin–Whitewater (36-4)
  • 2003 Washington University in St. Louis (38-3)
  • 2004 Juniata College (37-3)
  • 2005 University of Wisconsin–Whitewater (40-4)
  • 2006 Juniata College (41-1)
  • 2007 Washington University in St. Louis (33-5)
  • 2008 Emory University (35-6)
  • 2009 Washington University in St. Louis (34-4)
  • 2010 Calvin College (32-4)

Records

  • Most championships: Washington University (10), UC-San Diego (8)
  • Undefeated Seasons: Washington University (1992), Central College (1999)

References

External links

See also


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