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NIRSA National Soccer Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

NIRSA National Soccer
Championships
LeagueNIRSA
Number of teams24
Founded1994; 30 years ago (1994)
WebsiteOfficial website
Men's Championship Division
Current ChampionBYU
(12th title)
Most Successful Club(s)BYU
(12 titles)
Women's Championship Division
Current ChampionUCLA
(1st title)
Most Successful Club(s)UC Santa Barbara
(8 titles)
Men's Open Division
Current ChampionMiami (OH)
(1st title)
Most Successful Club(s)JMU
(3 titles)
Women's Open Division
Current ChampionSan Diego State
(2nd title)
Most Successful Club(s)UCLA, JMU
(3 titles)
Current season (2023)

The NIRSA National Soccer Championships is an annual collegiate club competition organized by the National Intramural and Recreational Sports Association (NIRSA), deciding the competition winners through a round robin group stage to qualify for a single-elimination knockout format.[1]

The tournament is unique because it is limited to teams representing a university on a non-varsity level. Due to collegiate clubs receiving little to no funding from the university they represent, their ability to travel is limited and why the tournament takes place over a single weekend; typically in late November to early December.[2]

History

Beginnings

In 1994, on the tail of the United States hosting its first World Cup and advancing out of the group stage for the first time in 60 years, NIRSA made the decision to stage its first national soccer championship in Austin, Texas. To separate itself from other collegiate club competitions, NIRSA decided to focus on three main aspects: being run by entities with collegiate program affiliation, creating a serious and competitive atmosphere, and developing the women's game.

The tournament started slow with only 15 teams competing in the first iteration: seven in the men's and eight in the women's. Despite a start lower than anticipated, NIRSA believed in the potential growth of the tournament and split the tournament into two divisions: a championship division for the best teams in the country and an open division for teams interested in competing but were unable to qualify for the championship division. This not only made the championship more desirable by limiting the teams that could participate but also ensured NIRSA knew of teams with a general interest in competing. This decision led to a 133% growth in the number of teams in just the second iteration of the tournament, increasing to 35 participating teams.

To ensure the best teams were selected for the championship division, NIRSA appointed regional coordinators in 1995 that would be able to select the teams most deserving of a bid. However, the first regional tournaments were run by outside entities and assisted the NIRSA-affiliated coordinators, as opposed to themselves being NIRSA-affiliated.[3][4]

Fall of the NCSA and first 10 years

With its origins pre-dating those of the NIRSA soccer championships, the National Collegiate Soccer Association (NCSA) was considered to have the highest level of club soccer competition in the nation. However, when NIRSA developed their own rival competition, more and more teams began choosing NIRSA over the NCSA. NCSA began falling apart and eventually was dismantled in 1999, with the 1998 national championship being its last held tournament.[5][6]

The fall of the NCSA meant that now NIRSA, unarguably, had the highest competition level of any national collegiate club soccer tournament. This fall also meant that teams no longer had to chose which tournament they believed was better to join, which further contributed to the growth of the league. After the last NCSA national tournament, the NIRSA national soccer championship grew by 33% in three years from 54 participants in 1998 to 72 participants in 2001.[7]

Despite this rise in competition, the first 10 years of the men's championship bracket was dominated by a single team: BYU. BYU won 5 championships in the first 8 years of the tournament, which included a 29-game club national championship win streak from 1996-2000. This streak is the longest of any team across all four divisions. The streak was ended in the 2000 championships by eventual champions Penn State via a penalty shootout in the semi-finals.[8] The following year, BYU once again dominated the tournament, winning all six of their games and not only claiming their fifth title, but significantly outscoring their opponents with 26 goals for and only 5 goals against.[9] In 2002, looking to defend their title, BYU once again made its way to the finals where the title defenders would lose their crown via a 2-0 loss to their in-state rival Weber State.[10] After this loss, BYU left NIRSA after establishing a franchise in the Premier Development League (later renamed to USL League Two), leaving the national tournament without its most successful team and opening up the tournament to other competitors.[11][12]

Meanwhile, during the same first 10 years of the competition in the women's championship division, the tournament saw several teams trading titles. By the 2003 tournament, the women's championship had four teams that had won multiple championships: Miami of Ohio, Colorado, Colorado State, and Michigan. Despite this fact, no team had gone back-to-back until the 2004 championships which saw rain cancelling the semi-finals, and subsequently naming four co-champions, one of which being defending champion Colorado. Three of these co-champions were repeat winners (Colorado, Colorado State, and Michigan) and the only co-champion without a previous title being a team that would go on to become the most successful team in the women's championship: UC Santa Barbara.[1]

UC Santa Barbara's women's championship dominance

Three years after being named co-champion in the 2004 tournament, UC Santa Barbara's women's team won its first outright championship tournament over reigning champions San Diego State in a penalty shoot-out.[13] UCSB would then win the next four tournaments, giving them the longest streak of tournament championships across all four divisions with 5-straight titles, a record they still hold. That 2011 championship for UCSB also meant they had the most total titles for a single team across all four divisions (6), overtaking BYU who had 5 titles in the men's championship division. During this time, UCSB gained the longest women's national championship win streak with 21-straight wins from 2009 to 2012. The streak was ended in the finals of the 2012 championships in extra time to Michigan State.[14] This is the second longest national championship win streak, only behind BYU's 29-game win streak in the men's championship division from 1996-2000. The following year, the 2013 tournament saw the first time no champion was crowned for all four divisions due to rain cancelling play on the last day of the tournament. Following titles from Ohio State and Michigan State in 2014 and 2015 respectively, UCSB continued their winning ways by winning two straight titles once again in 2016 and 2017, giving them their seventh and eighth titles.[1]

Meanwhile, in the men's championship, it was discovered that in 2003, Illinois used ineligible players during their championship run, resulting in the first, and only, instance where a championship was forfeited and awarded to the runners-up, Utah Valley State.[15] In 2007, the first penalty shootout was used to determine the men's national championship when UC Santa Barbara defeated Texas Tech 4-1 following a 0-0 game. This gave Texas Tech their fourth finals defeat in their four total finals appearances.[13] The 2009 tournament saw Weber State win their second championship, only the second team to do so in the men's championship.[16] Colorado would become the third, and most recent, team to do so the next year.[17]

Return of BYU's men's team

In 2017, BYU's men's soccer club left the PDL after 15 years to rejoin NIRSA. Despite missing 14 of the last 23 tournaments, BYU was still the men's most successful men's championship club with 5 national championships in just the first eight iterations of the competition. As if they had never left, BYU immediately continued its winning ways by winning the 2017 tournament. It has continued that dominance by winning four of the last five tournaments. In 2022, BYU would retake sole possession of most total titles for a single team across all four divisions with its ninth championship, overtaking UC Santa Barbara's women's team who had 8 championship titles and would then become the first team with 10 titles in the 2023 tournament.[12]

During this time, the women's championship would see, for only its second team, a back-to-back champion in Ohio State who won in 2018 and 2019.[1]

Regions

Current regional alignment

As the national tournament grew, a regional system was necessary to assist with national rankings, tournament seedings, and player eligibility. Regional tournaments did not start under the NIRSA umbrella, instead outside entities ran many of the initial tournaments. However, as the seasons progressed, NIRSA increased their direct supervision of tournaments and now all tournaments have NIRSA representation, including direct management from the NIRSA-appointed regional coordinators.[3][4]

Regional Alignment
Region Name States
I Region I Club Soccer Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont
II Southeast Collegiate Soccer Alliance Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia
III Midwest Alliance Soccer Conference Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin
IV Region IV Collegiate Club Soccer Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas
V Region V Soccer Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming
VI Region VI Collegiate Club Soccer Alaska, Arizona, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, California, Oregon, Utah, Washington
Titles by region
Men's Women's
Region Championship Open Championship Open
# Years # Years # Years # Years
Region I 1 2000 2 2016, 2021 2 2001, 2021 2 2002, 2007
Region II 3 2015, 2016, 2018 3 1999, 2000, 2009 0 - 8 1997, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2009, 2012, 2016, 2021
Region III 5 1994, 2003[a], 2006, 2008, 2012, 2014 3 1996, 2001, 2019, 2023 11 1994, 1996, 2000, 2002, 2004[b], 2005, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019 3 1995, 2010, 2014
Region IV 2 1995, 2004 5 1995, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2007 0 - 2 1996, 2011
Region V 2 2005, 2010 0 - 7 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2003, 2004[b], 2004[b] 2 1998, 2001
Region VI 14 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003[a], 2007, 2009, 2011, 2017, 2019, 2021, 2022,

2023

13 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018[c], 2018[c], 2022 10 2004[b], 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2016, 2017, 2022, 2023 8 2003, 2006, 2008, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2023

Notes:

  1. ^ a b Utah Valley State later named champions after it was discovered that Illinois used ineligible player
  2. ^ a b c d Due to rain canceling the semi-finals, all four semi-finalists named co-champions
  3. ^ a b Due to rain canceling the finals, both finalists named co-champions, both Region VI teams

Formats

Early formats

Despite changing frequently, the format consistently remained a two stage tournament beginning with a round-robin group stage followed by a single-elimination knockout stage where group play standings were determined by the three-point system.

In the men's championship division, after starting with seven and eleven teams in their first two years respectively, the division moved to a 16-team format. Teams were divided into four groups of four teams and the top two teams from each group advanced to an 8-team knockout-round. This format was used for 7 years. In 2003, the tournament expanded to 24 teams utilizing an unconventional format. Teams were divided into four groups, each of them consisting of two pools of three teams each. In each of the pools, one team played both teams in its pool while the other two teams played a team from the other pool of its group. The top four teams from each of the four pools advanced to a 16-team knockout-round.[15] Following this, the tournament implemented its current format. However, with rain cancelling the semi-finals, the tournament ended up continuing with a three-game group stage in Arizona a month later (UNC declined invitation to continue the tournament).[18] The men have not changed their format since the 2004 tournament.[7]

The women's championship division, like its male counterparts, began from humble beginnings with eight and twelve teams in its first two years respectively. The division moved to a 16-team format in 1996 with teams divided into four groups of four teams and the top two teams from each group advancing to an 8-team knockout-round.[19] This format was held until 2009 when the tournament expanded to 24 teams.[16] The current format was implemented and has remained with that format ever since.[7]

Just like the championship divisions, the open divisions started off slow beginning a year after the first iteration of the competition in 1995 with only 6 teams each. The number of teams fluctuated year to year, but starting in 2000 the aim was to have 16 teams in each division.[20] This was the case until 2004 when both open divisions expanded to have 20 teams divided into five groups of four advancing to an 8-team knockout-round.[21] In 2005, the open divisions decreased to 16 teams again, and divided teams into four groups of four advancing to a round of 8.[22] This was the format until 2012, when both open divisions implemented their current format.[14]

No changes in the format have been made for any division since 2012.[7]

Current format

Qualification and selections

Since 2009, each of the six regions were given three automatic bids to hand out amongst its members. Regions use their own intra-regional tournament to decide at least one of the bids they'll hand out. The remaining six bids are considered "at-large" and are given out by NIRSA once all regional play has concluded. The RPI system is favored when selecting at-large bids.[23]

How bids are given out to championship teams
Region First bid Second bid Third bid
Region I Regional Tournament Co-Champion Regional Tournament Co-Champion Highest Power Ranked Team
Region II Winner of Regional Tournament Highest ranked team in Region II after regional tournament[a] 2nd highest ranked team in Region II after Regional Tournament[a]
Region III (Men) Regional Tournament Co-Champion Regional Tournament Co-Champion Highest Power Ranked Team
Region III (Women) Winner of Regional Tournament Highest Power Ranked Team after regional tournament 2nd highest Power Ranked Team after regional tournament
Region IV South Bid Game 1 Champion South Bid Game 2 Champion Bid Game 3 Champion
Region V Pool Play Winner Pool Play Winner Bracket Play Winner
Region VI North Tournament Winner South Tournament Winner South Tournament Runner-up

Notes:

  1. ^ a b The RPI ranking upon completion of the tournament with special consideration paid to tournament performance.

Prior to the 2014 tournament, the open division was decided on a first come, first serve basis. However, due to the growing popularity, the open division has utilized a lottery system to select it's participating teams since 2014. The lottery is run prior to championship teams receiving a bid and 24 teams are initially selected: 4 teams from each region. After this, the remaining teams in each region are placed, in order, on the waitlist in the event one of the 24 teams is promoted to the championship division or if a team drops. If a region didn't have 4 teams apply for the lottery, other regions would have their waitlist teams fill those spots. To enter a name in the lottery, a team must have a membership in a NIRSA-affiliated league or have played at least four games against NIRSA-affiliated teams prior to the lottery selection.[24][25][26]

Rules of play

The current format is a two stage tournament: a round-robin group stage followed by a single-elimination knockout stage

For the championship division group stage, the 24 teams are split into eight groups of three teams each. Each team plays every other team in their group. A total of 3 games are played within a group. The top two teams from each group advance to the round of 16 while the third placed team advances to a consolation bracket; both brackets become knockout competitions.

For the open division group stage, the 24 teams are split into six groups of four teams each. Each team plays every other team in their group. This means that a total of 6 games are played within a group. The six group winners, six runners-up, and the four best third placed teams advance to the round of 16 which becomes a knockout competition. The remaining teams are eliminated.

To determine group standings, the three-point system (three points for a win, one point for a draw, no points for a loss) is used. In the event two teams are tied on points after the group stage, ranking is determined as follows:

  1. Winner in head-to-head competition in group play
  2. Greatest goal differential (Max ±5 from any one match)
  3. Greatest number of goals scored in group play
  4. Greatest number of shutouts
  5. NCAA kicks from the mark thirty minutes prior to next scheduled match

In the event all three teams are tied, steps 2-4 are once again used. If one team beats the other two teams in a tie breaker, they are ranked highest, then the remaining two teams restart the tie-breaking procedure. In the event all three teams are still tied after all 4 steps, a coin flip is conducted for each team. If one team gets a different result from both other teams, the two teams that tied compete in NCAA kicks from the mark where the winner then competes with the remaining team in NCAA kicks from the mark.

The knockout stage is a single-elimination tournament, in which each team plays in a one-off match. In the event of a tie, two periods of extra time are used to decide the winner, with penalty shootouts being the final tie-breaker if one is still needed. The 16 advancing teams are seeded such that a group winner plays the runner-up of another group and where teams from the same group are placed on opposite ends of the bracket.

Games consist of two 40-minute halves. For pool play, round of 16, and quarterfinals halves are separated by a seven-minute halftime while the halves for the semifinals and finals are separated by a ten-minute halftime.[27]

Results

Men's championship division

Below is a complete list of known finals held:[28]

Key
Match was won during extra time
Match was won on a penalty shoot-out
List of men's soccer championships
Year Winner Score Runner up Venue Location Ref.
1994 Purdue 2-1 Washington State University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][29]
1995 Texas 5-1 Kansas State University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][30][31]
1996 BYU 1-0 Baylor University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][32]
1997 BYU (2) 1-0
(a.e.t.)
Texas Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7][30]
1998 BYU (3) 4-0 Texas Tech Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7][33]
1999 BYU (4) 1-0 Texas Tech Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7][34][35]
2000 Penn State 2-0 Texas Tech University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][20][36][37]
2001 BYU (5) 4-0 Illinois University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[7][38]
2002 Weber State 2-0 BYU Kern County Soccer Complex Bakersfield,
California
[7][39][40]
2003 Illinois[a] 2-0 Utah Valley State University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[7][15][41]
2004 Texas A&M [b] Colorado State (2nd)

UC Berkeley (3rd)

University of Texas→Red Mountain Complex Austin, TX
Mesa, AZ
[18][42]
2005 Colorado 2-1
(a.e.t.)
Vanderbilt University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[22]
2006 Michigan 1-0 Illinois Arizona State University Tempe,
Arizona
[43][44]
2007 UC Santa Barbara 0-0 (a.e.t.)
(4–1 p)
Texas Tech University of West Florida Pensacola,
Florida
[13]
2008 Indiana 1-0 Colorado State University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[45]
2009 Weber State (2) 0-0 (a.e.t.)
(3–2 p)
Florida Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[16][46]
2010 Colorado (2) 3-1 Missouri Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[17]
2011 Weber State (3) 0-0 (a.e.t.)
(4–3 p)
Missouri Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[47]
2012 Michigan State 0-0 (a.e.t.)
(4–2 p)
Weber State Mike Rose Soccer Complex Memphis,
Tennessee
[14][48]
2013 Cancelled due to rain Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[49]
2014 Ohio State 1-0
(a.e.t.)
San Diego State Mike Rose Soccer Complex Memphis,
Tennessee
[50]
2015 North Carolina 2-0 Penn State Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[51]
2016 Virginia 3-2 Ohio State Foley Sports Tourism Complex Foley,
Alabama
[52]
2017 BYU (6) 4-1 Cal Poly Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[53]
2018 Florida 1-0[c]
(a.e.t.)
North Carolina Foley Sports Complex → Charlotte Rec Fields Foley, AL
 Charlotte, NC
[54][55]
2019 BYU (7) 3-1 Ohio State Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas
[56]
2020 Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic. N/A [57]
2021 BYU (8) 3-1 Texas Foley Sports Tourism Complex Foley,
Alabama
[58]
2022 BYU (9) 2-1 Minnesota Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock, Texas [59]
2023 BYU (10) 2-0 Virginia Tech Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock, Texas

Notes

  1. ^ Utah Valley State later named champions after it was discovered that Illinois used ineligible player
  2. ^ Semifinals cancelled due to rain. A continuation was held Jan. 8th, 2005 in Mesa, AZ. North Carolina declined the invitation, meaning a three team round robin would occur. Colorado State beat UC-Berkeley 2-0, Texas A&M beat Colorado State 1-0, and Texas A&M beat UC-Berkeley 2-0 making Texas A&M champions, Colorado State runners-up, UC-Berkeley third place, and North Carolina fourth place
  3. ^ Semifinals were cancelled due to rain. A continuation was held Jan. 26th, 2019 at UNC-Charlotte's Rec Fields. Also included a third place match where Ohio State beat Virginia Tech 3-1

Women's championship division

Below is a complete list of known finals held:[28]

Key
Match was won during extra time
Match was won on a penalty shoot-out
List of women's soccer championships
Year Winner Score Runner up Venue Location Ref.
1994 Miami (OH) 2-0 Florida University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][60][61]
1995 Colorado Miami (OH) University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7]
1996 Miami (OH) (2) 1-0 Purdue University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][19]
1997 Colorado State 1-0 Penn State Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7][62]
1998 Colorado (2) Penn State Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7]
1999 Colorado State (2) 0-0 (a.e.t.)
(3–1 p)
Michigan Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7][63]
2000 Michigan 1-0
(a.e.t.)
Ohio State University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][64][37]
2001 Penn State 1-0 UC Santa Barbara University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[7][38][65]
2002 Michigan (2) 2-1 Colorado Kern County Soccer Complex Bakersfield,
California
[39]
2003 Colorado (3) 1-0 Miami (OH) University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[7][15][41]
2004 UC Santa Barbara, Colorado (4),
Colorado State (3), Michigan (3)[a]
University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[18][42]
2005 Michigan (4) 2-1
(a.e.t.)
Colorado State University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[22]
2006 San Diego State 2-1 Colorado Arizona State University Tempe,
Arizona
[66][43]
2007 UC Santa Barbara (2) 1-1 (a.e.t.)
(4–1 p)
San Diego State University of West Florida Pensacola,
Florida
[13]
2008 UC Santa Barbara (3) 4-1 Arizona University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[45]
2009 UC Santa Barbara (4) 2-0 Penn State Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[16]
2010 UC Santa Barbara (5) 1-1 (a.e.t.)
(5–4 p)
Texas Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[17]
2011 UC Santa Barbara (6) 1-0 Cal Poly Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[47]
2012 Michigan State 2-1
(a.e.t.)
UC Santa Barbara Mike Rose Soccer Complex Memphis,
Tennessee
[14][48]
2013 Cancelled due to rain Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[49]
2014 Ohio State 2-0 Miami (OH) Mike Rose Soccer Complex Memphis,
Tennessee
[50]
2015 Michigan State (2) 1-0
(a.e.t.)
Colorado State Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[51]
2016 UC Santa Barbara (7) 1-0 North Carolina Foley Sports Tourism Complex Foley,
Alabama
[52]
2017 UC Santa Barbara (8) 3-0 Texas Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[53]
2018 Ohio State (2) 2-0[b] UC Davis Foley Sports Complex → Natchez Trace Fields Foley, AL
Nashville, TN
[54]
2019 Ohio State (3) 2-1 Boston College Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas
[56]
2020 Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic. N/A [57]
2021 Penn State 1-0 North Carolina Foley Sports Tourism Complex Foley,
Alabama
[58]
2022 Cal Poly 1-0
(a.e.t.)
UConn Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas
[59]
2023 UCLA 1-0 Boston College Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas

Notes

  1. ^ Due to rain canceling the semi-finals, all four semi-finalists named co-champions
  2. ^ Semifinals were cancelled due to rain. A continuation was held Feb. 23, 2019 at Vanderbilt University's Rec Fields. Rain postponed the continuation, pushing the finals to early Feb. 24, 2019

Men's open division

Below is a complete list of known finals held:[28]

Key
Match was won during extra time
Match was won on a penalty shoot-out
List of men's open soccer championships
Year Winner Score Runner up Venue Location Ref.
1995 Texas "B" Texas Tech University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7]
1996 Toledo 2-0 Angelo State University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][67]
1997 Texas Tech 4-1 Texas "B" Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7]
1998 LSU Virginia Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7]
1999 JMU 2-0 Florida State Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7]
2000 JMU (2) 2-0 Oregon University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][68][37]
2001 Ohio State 3-2 Texas Tech University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[7][38]
2002 Texas A&M 4-0 Penn State Kern County Soccer Complex Bakersfield,
California
[7]
2003 UC-Santa Barbara 1-0 JMU University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[7][15][41]
2004 Cancelled due to rain University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[18][42]
2005 Oregon 2-0 UC Berkeley University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[22]
2006 Arizona State 3-1 Kansas Arizona State University Tempe,
Arizona
[43]
2007 Missouri 1-1 (a.e.t.)
(4–2 p)
Kansas University of West Florida Pensacola,
Florida
[13]
2008 UC Berkeley 5-0 Northern Iowa University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[45]
2009 JMU (3) 1-1 (a.e.t.)
(6-5 p)
San Diego State Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[16]
2010 Cal Poly "B" 2-1
(a.e.t.)
JMU Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[17]
2011 UC San Diego 5-0 Texas "B" Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[47]
2012 San Diego State 1-1 (a.e.t.)
(4–3 p)
UC Berkeley Mike Rose Soccer Complex Memphis,
Tennessee
[14]
2013 Cancelled due to rain Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[49]
2014 UC Berkeley (2) 2-1 UCF Mike Rose Soccer Complex Memphis,
Tennessee
[50]
2015 Oregon (2) 3-2 UC Davis Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[51]
2016 Penn State 2-1 Oregon Foley Sports Tourism Complex Foley,
Alabama
[52]
2017 Arizona 1-0 Texas Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[53]
2018 UCLA, Utah Valley[a] Foley Sports Tourism Complex Foley,
Alabama
[54][69]
2019 Purdue 2-0 UCLA Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas
[56]
2020 Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic. N/A [57]
2021 Boston College 1-0 Missouri Foley Sports Tourism Complex Foley,
Alabama
[58]
2022 UCLA (2) 3-0 Miami (OH) Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas
[59]
2023 Miami (OH) 3-1 Purdue Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas

Notes

  1. ^ Due to rain canceling the finals, both finalists named co-champions

Women's open division

Below is a complete list of known finals held:[28]

Key
Match was won during extra time
Match was won on a penalty shoot-out
List of women's open soccer championships
Year Winner Score Runner up Venue Location Ref.
1995 Ohio State Kansas University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7]
1996 Texas 9-0 Rice University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][70]
1997 Virginia Tech 3-2 Colorado State "Green" Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7]
1998 Colorado State "Green" Florida State Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7]
1999 Florida State 2-0 Utah Valley Georgia Southern Statesboro,
Georgia
[7]
2000 Virginia 1-0 Rice University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[7][71][37]
2001 Colorado "Black" 2-1
(a.e.t.)
Ohio State University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[7][38]
2002 Delaware 2-1
(a.e.t.)
Arizona Kern County Soccer Complex Bakersfield,
California
[7]
2003 Arizona 2-2 (a.e.t.)
(p)
Kansas University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[7][15][41]
2004 Cancelled due to rain University of Texas Austin,
Texas
[18][42]
2005 Virginia (2) 1-0 Virginia Tech University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[22]
2006 UC Santa Barbara 3-0 Colorado "Black" Arizona State University Tempe,
Arizona
[43]
2007 Villanova 3-1 UC-Berkeley University of West Florida Pensacola,
Florida
[13]
2008 UCLA 2-0 East Carolina University of Alabama Tuscaloosa,
Alabama
[45]
2009 JMU 2-0 Oregon Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[16]
2010 Illinois 1-0 Colorado "Black" Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[17]
2011 Missouri 2-0 UC Berkeley Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[47]
2012 JMU (2) 0-0 (a.e.t.)
(3–1 p)
Illinois Mike Rose Soccer Complex Memphis,
Tennessee
[14]
2013 Cancelled due to rain Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[49]
2014 Michigan 2-0 UCLA Mike Rose Soccer Complex Memphis,
Tennessee
[50]
2015 UCLA (2) 2-0 JMU Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[51]
2016 Virginia Tech (2) 2-1 Oregon Foley Sports Tourism Complex Foley,
Alabama
[52]
2017 Oregon 2-1 Colorado "Black" Reach 11 Sports Complex Phoenix,
Arizona
[53]
2018 San Diego State 3-1[a] USC Foley Sports Complex → UC-Irvine Rec Fields Foley, AL
Irvine, CA
[54]
2019 Oregon (2) 2-0 East Carolina Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas
[56]
2020 Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic. N/A [57]
2021 JMU (3) 3-2
(a.e.t.)
UConn Foley Sports Tourism Complex Foley,
Alabama
[58]
2022 UCLA (3) 1-0 Kansas Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas
[59]
2023 San Diego State (2) 2-1
(a.e.t.)
UC-Santa Barbara Round Rock Multipurpose Complex Round Rock,
Texas

Notes

  1. ^ Finals were cancelled due to rain. A continuation was held Feb. 23, 2019 at UC-Irvine's Rec Fields

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