Boston University Terriers

Boston University Terriers
University Boston University
Conference Patriot League, Hockey East for ice hockey
NCAA Division I
Athletic director Drew Marrochello[1]
Location Boston, Massachusetts
Varsity teams 21 varsity teams (9 men, 12 women)
Football stadium Nickerson Field (1953–97)
Basketball arena Agganis Arena
Mascot Rhett the Boston Terrier
Nickname Terriers
Fight song GO B.U.
Colors Scarlet and White[2]
         
Website www.goterriers.com

The Boston University Terriers are the nine men's and twelve women's varsity athletic teams representing Boston University in NCAA Division I competition. The men compete in basketball, cross country, ice hockey, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, swimming, tennis, indoor and outdoor track, and wrestling. Women compete in basketball, cross country, golf, ice hockey, field hockey, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, swimming, tennis, indoor and outdoor track, and softball. There is no varsity baseball or football team.

Boston University's team nickname is the Terriers, and the official mascot is Rhett the Boston Terrier. The school colors are Scarlet and White. The mascot is named Rhett in a reference to Gone With the Wind, because "no one loves Scarlet more than Rhett."

The majority of BU's teams compete as members of the Patriot League, with the ice hockey team competing in Hockey East.

Sports

Here is a complete list of current varsity sports:

Men's Women's
Basketball Basketball
Cross country Cross Country
Ice Hockey Field Hockey
Lacrosse Golf
Rowing Ice hockey
Soccer Lacrosse
Swimming & diving Rowing
Tennis Soccer
Track & field Softball
Swimming & diving
Tennis
Track & field

Conference change

On July 1, 2013, Boston University left the America East Conference and joined the Patriot League.[3]

National team championships

Conference championships

Men's conference championships

Women's conference championships

Ice hockey

Boston University's ice hockey team is the most successful sports program at the school, with five national championships (1971, 1972, 1978, 1995, 2009) and 21 appearances in the Frozen Four. The Terriers have also been the national runners-up five times, and have won five ECAC tournament championships and seven Hockey East tournament championships. Many of BU's hockey players have gone on to successful careers in the NHL.

Since 1984 the Terriers have played in the Hockey East conference, along with crosstown arch-rivals Boston College (BC). The series with Boston College is known as the Green Line Rivalry or the Battle of Commonwealth Avenue. Under long-time coach and former player, Jack Parker, BU excelled in the 1990s, winning six Hockey East regular season titles, four Hockey East tournament titles, the 1995 National Championship and three National runner-up trophies. BU missed the Frozen Four for 11 consecutive seasons beginning in 1998 but returned to glory by winning the national championship in 2009.

BU has dominated the annual Beanpot tournament, which has been contested by the four Boston metro area-based collegiate teams – the others being BC, Northeastern and Harvard – since the 1952–53 season. The televised tourney is a local institution, played in front of annual sellouts at the TD Garden, and is a fierce battle for bragging rights. As of 2010, the Terriers have won 29 of 58 Beanpots and 12 of the last 16.

Other varsity sports

For most other sports, BU competes in the Patriot League. The men's basketball team earned post-season berths in the NCAA tournament or NIT four straight seasons between 2002 and 2005 and also in 2011. They are known to have a rivalry with the Albany Great Danes and the Vermont Catamounts.The program is notable for grooming big name college coaches such as Rick Pitino, Mike Jarvis, Patrick Chambers and Joseph Bianco.

The Terriers also have a history of national success in men's and women's soccer, field hockey, and women's lacrosse. The men's and women's rowing teams compete in the EARC and EAWRC respectively, the oldest and most competitive conference in collegiate rowing. In 1991 and 1992 the women's rowing team won back-to-back national championships.

Discontinued sports

Wrestling

In April 2013, Boston University announced the school would discontinue its wrestling program after the 2013–14 season, citing cost and a move to the non-wrestling Patriot League wrapping up its 45-year history as a Division I sport.[4] In 2013-14, the team competed its final season in the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association (EIWA). The program was largely shaped by wrestling legend Carl Adams, who had coached the team for more than three decades.

Football

Boston University terminated their Division I-AA football program on Homecoming Weekend 1997 during a one-win season in the Yankee Conference. The players at the time were allowed to keep their four-year scholarships or transfer without NCAA penalties.

New facilities

In 2005, Boston University opened Agganis Arena for Hockey and Basketball. The facility was designed as a hockey arena: a departure from BU's Walter Brown Arena which had the smallest playing ice in Division I. Agganis Arena seats six to seven thousand, and also serves the city of Boston as a mid-size venue for popular events that could not fill the 18,624 seat TD Garden (previously the Fleet Center). The arena is named after Harry Agganis, "The Golden Greek," BU alumnus, Terrier sports star, Boston Red Sox first baseman, and Boston native who died of a pulmonary embolism in 1955 at the age of 26.

Other facilities include the indoor Track and Tennis Center and the Fitness and Recreation Center, which includes a pool and diving well for the swim teams. The 200 meter indoor track is modelled on the previous high-banked Armory track, which attracted programs looking to run fast times. The turns, banked up to 18.5 degrees help runners push through turns at normal speed and rhythm, and can produce many personal indoor bests. The Track and Tennis Center hosts the annual BU Invitational.

Outdoor track and field, soccer, lacrosse, field hockey and other outdoor sports continue to be played on the artificial surface of Nickerson Field.

References

External links

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