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NCAA | Names to Know | Other Figures

The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is the primary organization for college level athletics in the United States. Founded in 1906 as the Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States, as a result of a plea by President Theodore Roosevelt to reform college football, the organization now organizes and regulates events, scholarships, and recruiting in a number of sports in the US (as well as Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, BC, Canada)note at all levels.
Sports Officially Sanctioned by the NCAA
These sports have official NCAA championship events. The organization divides the academic year into three distinct "seasons"; these sports are organized by the seasons in which the bulk of competition takes place.*Unless otherwise indicated, all sports have separate championships for men and women, with separate championships for each of the NCAA's divisions (I, II, III—see "Structure" below for the difference).
Fall
- Cross country
- Field hockey (women's)
- Football (men's)
- Note that the top level of college football, Division I FBS, does not have an NCAA-sanctioned championship. The second-level Division I FCS, on the other hand, does have one, as do Divisions II and III (see "Structure" below).
- Soccer
- The current decade saw a strong move by the men's soccer community to adopt a "split season" model in which the number of matches would not change, but the season would be split between the fall and spring, with the championship in the spring. Pending final approval by the Division I governing board, the D-I split season model will start in 2027–28. Roughly two-thirds of regular-season games will be in fall, with the season resuming in February and the championship held in late spring. This change would only apply to D-I men's soccer—the men's sport will remain fall-only in D-II and D-III for the time being, and women's soccer remains strictly a fall sport. The U.S. Soccer Federationnote has been pushing not only this change, but also even more radical ones
—regionalized leagues that would override current conference affiliations, and multiple tiers within those regions, all with promotion and relegation. Due to differences in the men's and women's soccer ecosystems, US Soccer is not pushing for as many changes to the college women's game.
- The current decade saw a strong move by the men's soccer community to adopt a "split season" model in which the number of matches would not change, but the season would be split between the fall and spring, with the championship in the spring. Pending final approval by the Division I governing board, the D-I split season model will start in 2027–28. Roughly two-thirds of regular-season games will be in fall, with the season resuming in February and the championship held in late spring. This change would only apply to D-I men's soccer—the men's sport will remain fall-only in D-II and D-III for the time being, and women's soccer remains strictly a fall sport. The U.S. Soccer Federationnote has been pushing not only this change, but also even more radical ones
- Tennis – Division I singles and doubles championships only
- Through 2023–24, D-I held its singles, doubles, and team championships in spring. Starting in 2024–25, the singles and doubles championships were moved to fall on a trial basis, and the move was made permanent after 2025–26. The D-I team championships, plus all D-II and D-III championships, continue to be held in spring.
- Volleyball – i.e., indoor volleyball (women's)
- Indoor volleyball is one of only two NCAA sports in which men and women compete in different seasons. Presumably, this is done to minimize schedule conflicts with basketball. A large majority of NCAA schools hold their volleyball matches in the same venues they use for basketball.
- Water polo (men's) – single championship for all three divisions
- This is the other NCAA sport in which men and women compete in different seasons, for much the same reasons as indoor volleyball (in this case, to minimize conflict with swimming & diving).
Winter
- Basketball
- Bowling (women's) – single championship for all three divisions
- Division II approved the establishment of its own championship at the 2026 NCAA convention, with the first edition taking place in spring 2028.
- Fencing — single men's and women's team championships for all three divisions
- When the NCAA introduced women's sports in 1981–82, a women's fencing team championship was added alongside the men's championship. Men's and women's team championships were held through 1988–89, after which the two were combined into a single coeducational team championship. Separate men's and women's championships resumed in 2025–26.
- Gymnastics – single men's and women's championships for all three divisionsnote
- Ice hockey – two championships for each sex, with one combined D-I/D-II and the other D-III
- Rifle (coeducational) – single championship for all three divisions. Though a niche sport, it has several aspects of particular note:
- It's the only NCAA sport in which men and women compete alongside and against one another as equals.
- As a result, it's also the only NCAA sport in which an all-female team can win a national title while competing against men's (or coed) teams. While skiing has a single coed team championship, the entry rules of that championship make it impossible for a single-sex team to win a team title. The same situation applied in fencing from 1990–2025.
- It's also the only NCAA sport in which two teams from the same school can directly compete against one another; schools may field any combination of men-only, women-only, and mixed-sex teams (only one of each type; no NCAA rifle school currently fields more than two teams).
- Most notably, it's the first NCAA sport to be open to women. While the NCAA didn't sponsor women's sports championships until the 1981–82 school year, the rifle championship has been open to women since its first edition in March 1980.
- It's the only NCAA sport in which men and women compete alongside and against one another as equals.
- Skiing (coeducational – teams have separate men's and women's squads, with all races involving only a single sex) – single team championship for all three divisions
- The NCAA championships include both Alpine and Nordic skiing, but only a subset of the Olympic events. Specifically, only slalom and giant slalom in Alpine, and individual cross-country races in Nordic.
- Swimming & diving – The NCAA combines these two Pool Sports into one.
- Indoor track & field
- Wrestling (separate men's championships for each division, plus a single women's championship for all divisions)note
- Even before the first official NCAA championship was held, Division III proposed the establishment of its own championship. Of the 111 schools that have NCAA-recognized teams in 2025–26, 66 are D-III—more than enough for its own championship. (At least six more D-III schools will add the sport in 2026–27.) The new championship was approved at the 2026 NCAA convention, with the first D-III championship to take place in spring 2028.
Spring
- Acrobatics & tumbling (women's) – A combination of the internationally recognized gymnastic disciplines of acrobatic gymnastics and tumbling. Single championship for all three divisions, starting in 2026–27,
- Baseball (men's)
- Beach volleyball (women) – single championship for all three divisions
- Golf
- Lacrosse
- Rowing (women's)
- Softball (women's)
- Stunt (women's) – A cheerleading discipline that heavily emphasizes acrobatics. Single championship for all three divisions, starting in 2026–27.
- Tennis – Division I team championships, and all D-II and D-III championships
- Outdoor track & field
- Volleyball (men's) – two championships, one combined D-I/D-II and the other D-III
- Water polo (women's) – single championship for all three divisions
An aside on scholarships in cross country and track: While the NCAA considers cross country, indoor track, and outdoor track to be separate sports, it combines all three for purposes of scholarship limits in Divisions I and II. In other words, schools are limited to a certain number of scholarships for track and cross country combined.note In 2025–26, Division I scholarship limits have been replaced by hard roster limits in all sports; see more below.
But Wait, There's More! In addition to these, the NCAA also recognizes certain sports as "emerging sports" for women. Unlike the sports listed above, these do not have NCAA-organized championship events. (They do have championship events run by other bodies.)
- Equestrianismnote – An "emerging sport" only in Divisions I and II. The Division III membership has voted down two separate attempts to bring its equestrian programs under the NCAA umbrella.
- Flag football – A limited-contact form of American football, with players wearing a flagged belt and ruled down once a flag is removed. The newest "emerging sport", having entered that program for all three divisions in January 2026. That May, the committee that oversees the Emerging Sports program recommended that all divisions sponsor legislation to elevate flag football to official championship status. The first NCAA championship, which would be open to all divisions, is likely to take place in spring 2028.
- Rugby
- Triathlon
On top of that, two other sports once had NCAA championship events, but both were discontinued well before the organization ventured into women's sports.
- Boxing – The NCAA held a boxing championship meet from 1932 to 1960. However, many schools stopped sponsoring the sport in the 1950s, The final straw came when a boxer died during the 1960 tournament.
- Trampoline – Before 1969, it was one of the events in the men's gymnastics championship. It was given its own national championship in 1969, but was dropped completely after the 1970 championship.
Structure
The NCAA membership is organized into three "Divisions" which denote level of play. Most NCAA sports have separate championships for each division, although as noted above some sports have only one championship open to all members, and others have a combined championship for the top two levels and a separate one for the lowest. See the page on the NCAA- Division I — The highest level, with the greatest numbers of scholarships.note Football is subdivided into FBS (top level) and FCS; see our pages on college football conferences (located at the glossary at the top) or The Other Wiki for more details.
- Division II — Mostly smaller schools that still wish to award athletic scholarships, but in considerably smaller numbers than in Division I. The flip side is that D-II sports have no hard-and-fast roster size limits, a concept introduced in D-I in 2025 in the wake of the House v. NCAA settlement (see below).
- Division III — Does not allow athletic scholarships, periodnote ... with an exception noted farther down the page. Generally, these schools strongly emphasize academics over athletics, and treat athletics as just another student activity. Also, D-III very much promotes participation and also has no roster size limits, meaning that roster sizes in relation to the student body are often far greater than in the other divisions.
Aside from the divisional structure, NCAA teams are, in the vast majority of cases, members of athletic conferences. These conferences often act as member leagues of the NCAA, and usually organize their own meetings and tournaments, as well as their own rules for member schools. While there are a few schools that remain independent, the vast majority of schools join due to the added benefits (scheduling, scholarships, postseason and tournament play) that conferences bring. Additionally, for these reasons it is not uncommon for a school to be a member of a conference for one sport, but a member of a different one for another. This most often happens for one of two reasons, which sometimes overlap:
- A sport has a limited number of schools sponsoring it. For example, ice hockey is highly regionalized, with sponsoring schools almost all being in areas with cold winters. Because of this, the only Division I all-sports conferencenote that sponsors the sport for either sex is the Big Ten, which only runs a men's league.note As a result, hockey has its own set of conferences separate from the all-sports structure.
- A school sponsors a sport that its main conference does not. This is not just the case in ice hockey, but in many more widely sponsored NCAA sports. For example, as of the upcoming 2026 NCAA soccer season, four FBS conferences—the Big 12, Conference USA, MAC, and SEC—sponsor soccer for women but not for men. The schools in these conferences that have men's soccer teams house them in other all-sports conferences that do operate men's soccer leagues.note There are also a small number of conferences that exist only to serve this need. The largest are the Eastern College Athletic Conference note and the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation.note
Another structural note involves scholarships. As noted above, the key distinction between Division III and the other divisions is the prohibition of athletic scholarships. Not only that, D-III schools are not allowed to maintain endowments to support athletics, cannot use athletic ability as a criterion to award any form of financial aid, and are routinely monitored by the NCAA to ensure that the proportion of financial aid awarded to varsity athletes is closely proportional to their share of the student body.note
In the two higher divisions, each school is limited as to the number of scholarships it can award in each of its sports. Through 2024–25, Division I sports were divided into "head-count" and "equivalency" sports:
- In head-count sports, schools were restricted to a set number of students receiving aid for that sport, but each player could receive up to a full scholarship. Before the settlement of the House v. NCAA legal case (see below), which took full effect in 2025–26, two men's and four women's sports were head-count—basketball and FBS football for men, and basketball, gymnastics, tennis, and (indoor) volleyball for women.
- In equivalency sports, including FCS football, schools are restricted to providing athletic aid in each sport that's equivalent to a set number of full scholarships, with that number set well below the standard squad size for that sport. These "equivalents" may be (and are) split into partial scholarships as each program sees fit. It should be noted that all Division II sports are classified as equivalency sports; the House settlement only affected Division I (plus a small handful of lower-division programs that play select sports in D-I, and only in those specific sports).
In sports that do not have separate national championships for D-II or D-III, lower-division schools are allowed to compete alongside D-I members. D-II members may operate under D-I rules and scholarship limits in those sports. The sport most notably affected by this rule is ice hockey; the NCAA has never had a D-II women's championship in that sport, and abolished its D-II men's championship in the late '90s. While the NCAA previously allowed D-II schools to compete in D-I in sports other than football and basketball, even if D-II championships were available, it shut off that ability in 2011, though a grandfather clause allows a few D-II schools to "play up" despite the existence of D-II championships to this day.note
Another grandfather clause, dating from 2004, has allowed an even smaller number of D-III schools to compete as D-I members with scholarships in one men's sport and one women's sport. The most notable examples of programs covered by this clause are Johns Hopkins men's lacrosse and Colorado College men's ice hockey.note This rule changed in 2021, shortly after the NCAA gave each division the right to set its own rules without needing to go through approval by the entire membership. Not only can schools covered by the 2004 grandfather clause still offer scholarships in their D-I sports, but any D-III school that sponsors a sport that does not have a D-III championship can offer scholarships in that sport. (Nonetheless, most such schools do not.)
The settlement of House v. NCAA, a lawsuit challenging NCAA restrictions on revenue sharing with athletes, led to major changes in the Division I financial model. Not only was a formal revenue-sharing model adopted in 2025–26, but D-I scholarship limits were replaced by roster limits for all sports. This effectively turned all D-I sports into equivalency sports, although allowing all squad members to receive full scholarships if a school's budget and administration so allows.
