Men's Collegiate Lacrosse Association

Men's Collegiate Lacrosse Association
Sport Field lacrosse
Founded 2006
President Ken Lovic (2013–present)
No. of teams 200+
Country United States, Canada
Most recent
champion(s)
Chapman (DI), St. Thomas (DII)
Official website http://mcla.us

The Men's Collegiate Lacrosse Association (MCLA) is a national organization of non-NCAA, men's college lacrosse programs. The MCLA oversees game play and conducts national championships for over 200 teams in ten conferences throughout the United States and Canada. The MCLA provides a governing structure much like the NCAA, with eligibility rules, All-Americans and a national tournament to decide national champions in both Divisions I and II.

The MCLA exists to provide a quality college lacrosse experience where varsity NCAA lacrosse does not exist. On an individual scale, the MCLA provides rules and a structure that promotes "virtual varsity" lacrosse, or an experience paralleling that of NCAA programs. While the MCLA provides a high level of athletic competition, it is one of the few governing bodies that does not have a national GPA requirement for its athletes. On a national scale, the MCLA provides the infrastructure to support a level playing field through eligibility rules and enforcement and the use of NCAA rules of play. The MCLA, an organization governing a mere 70 teams in 1997, has seen a rapid growth in affiliation as national interest in the sport of lacrosse continues to increase. As of the 2014 season, participation has increased to 210 teams.

History

The MCLA was formerly known as the US Lacrosse Men’s Division of Intercollegiate Associates (USL MDIA). The MCLA was created by the MDIA Board of Directors and its creation was announced by US Lacrosse on August 24, 2006.

MCLA President John Paul was interviewed in a podcast on August 31, 2006. Information obtained from this interview includes:

Media coverage

The MCLA receives significant print coverage from US Lacrosse's Lacrosse Magazine and Inside Lacrosse. Inside Lacrosse acquired the license agreement from The Lax Mag in 2012 and devoted further coverage with weekly web editorial and podcasts. In efforts to promote the sport, the MCLA has also made strides to make lacrosse games available to a larger audience. In partnership with The Lacrosse Network (TLN) select games are available to viewers with streaming live feed. In the 2012 National Championship, 26 games from the tournament were broadcast live, exclusively on the MCLA tournament website while the Division II Finals, Division I Semifinals and Division I Championship were televised nationally on Fox College Sports. Additional coverage is occasionally featured on ESPN, LaxPower.com, various blogs and other news websites. The MCLA mobile app is also available for purchase, featuring headlines, standings, and updated player statistics.

Milestones

Colorado State University holds the record for most MCLA championships won with six (1999, 2001, 2003, 2006, 2012 and 2013). The Rams also hold the distinction of sending the first MCLA player into Major League Lacrosse when goaltender Alex Smith made the roster of Denver Outlaws from 2006-2010. Brigham Young (1997, 2000, 2007, 2011) is second in MCLA history with four national titles.

The University of Michigan Varsity Club Lacrosse Team became the first team in MCLA history to complete a perfect season by defeating Chapman University in the national championship game on May 17, 2008. The Wolverines were able to repeat their success the following season by once again going undefeated and beating Chapman University in the national championship game on May 16, 2009.

In 2008, Brekan Kohlitz of the University of Michigan became the first MCLA player drafted to the MLL by the Washington Bayhawks.[1]

In 2010, Connor Martin of Chapman University, a two-time All American and Offensive Player of the Year, was drafted by the Denver Outlaws. [2] In his debut for the Outlaws, he scored a hat-trick and recorded an assist, earning him MLL Rookie of the Week.[3]In 2014 Cam Holding became the second player ever to play in the MCLA to get drafted into the MLL by the Chesapeake Bayhawks. He currently plays for the Denver Outlaws and recently won a Gold medal in the 2014 FIL World Lacrosse Championship with team Canada.

The 2009-2011 MCLA Championships were held at Dick's Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City, Colorado.[4]

In 2011, with the conclusion of the agreement between the MCLA and Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, the MCLA selected a new home for the National Championships. The 2012, 2013 MCLA Championships were relocated to a new venue; Sirrine Stadium in Greenville, South Carolina.[5]

The 2014, MCLA National Championships were held in Southern California. The opening two rounds were played at UC Irvine in Orange County and the semifinals and finals at Chapman University in Orange, CA. Two first-time champions were crowned, Colorado (DI) and Grand Valley State (DII).

MCLA Conferences

The MCLA separates teams into divisions (I or II) based upon performance history, and regional conferences.

For a full list of teams, see List of MCLA teams.

National Championship

The National Championships are held in May, featuring 16 qualifying teams from each division in a single-elimination contest to decide the National Champions. Each of the ten conference champions of the regular season receives an automatic bid to the National Tournament. The remaining six teams to qualify for the tournament are selected by an at large process by the MCLA tournament committee.[6]

MCLA Division I Championship history

(called Division A thru 2007)

YearChampionScoreDefeatedLocation
1997Brigham Young University 15-13UC Santa Barbara St. Louis, Missouri
1998Cal16-15 OTBrigham Young University St. Louis, Missouri
1999Colorado St. 15-11 Simon Fraser St. Louis, Missouri
2000Brigham Young University 17-13 Colorado St. St. Louis, Missouri
2001Colorado St. 16-7Stanford St. Louis, Missouri
2002 Sonoma State 13-10 Colorado St. St. Louis, Missouri
2003Colorado St. 6-4 UC Santa Barbara St. Louis, Missouri
2004UCSB 8-7 Colorado St. St. Louis, Missouri
2005UCSB 8-7Sonoma State Blaine, Minnesota
2006Colorado St. 8-7 Colorado Plano, Texas
2007Brigham Young University 16-9Oregon Frisco, Texas
2008Michigan 14-11Chapman Irving, Texas
2009Michigan 12-11Champan Denver, Colorado
2010Michigan 12-11Arizona State Denver, Colorado
2011Brigham Young University 10-8Arizona State Denver, Colorado
2012Colorado St. 7-5Cal Poly Greenville, South Carolina
2013Colorado St. 7-2Colorado Greenville, South Carolina
2014Colorado 13-12ASU Irvine, California
2015Grand Canyon 9-8Colorado Irvine, California
2016Chapman 9-5Cal Poly Irvine, California
Team Championships Winning years
Colorado State 6 1999, 2001, 2003, 2006, 2012, 2013
Brigham Young 4 1997, 2000, 2007, 2011
Michigan 3 2008, 2009, 2010
UCSB 2 2004, 2005
California 1 1998
Chapman 1 2016
Colorado 1 2014
Grand Canyon 1 2015
Sonoma State 1 2002

MCLA Division II Championship history

(called Division B thru 2007)

YearChampionScoreDefeatedLocation
2005 San Diego 9-6 UVSC Blaine, Minnesota
2006 San Diego 10-3 St. John's (MN) Plano, Texas
2007 Montana 15-5 St. John's (MN) Frisco, Texas
2008 Westminster College 17-10 Grand Valley State Irving, Texas
2009 St. Thomas (MN) 16-11 Dayton Denver, Colorado
2010 St. Thomas (MN) 12-9 Utah Valley Denver, Colorado
2011Davenport University (MI) 14-9 St. Thomas (MN) Denver, Colorado
2012 St. Thomas (MN) 9-8 Grand Valley State Greenville, South Carolina
2013 St. Thomas (MN) 9-7 Westminster College Greenville, South Carolina
2014 Grand Valley State 12-11 St. John's (MN) Irvine, California
2015 Dayton 12-11 Concordia Irvine, California
2016 St. Thomas (MN) 10-7 Grand Valley State Irvine, California
Team Championships Winning years
St. Thomas (MN) 5 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2016
San Diego 2 2005, 2006
Davenport University 1 2011
Dayton 1 2015
Grand Valley State 1 2014
Montana 1 2007
Westminster College 1 2008

Executive board

Executive Board Members[7]

Resources for developing teams

How to Start a Collegiate Lacrosse Club[8]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.