NCAA Division III women's volleyball tournament

The NCAA Division III women's volleyball tournament is the annual event that decides the championships in women's volleyball from teams in Division III contested by the NCAA each winter since 1981 except in 2020, when all D-III championship events were canceled due to COVID-19.[1]

NCAA Division III women's volleyball tournament
SportCollege indoor volleyball
Founded1981
Country United States
Most recent
champion(s)
Juniata (4th)
Most titlesWashington St. Louis (10)
TV partner(s)ESPNU
Official websiteNCAA.com

Washington St. Louis is the most successful program, with ten national titles.

Juniata are the current champions, winning their fourth overall and second consecutive national title in 2023.

History

From 1970 through 1980, before the NCAA governed women's collegiate athletics, the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women alone conducted the women's collegiate volleyball championships.

Volleyball was one of twelve women's sports added to the NCAA championship program for the 1981-82 school year, as the NCAA engaged in battle with the AIAW for sole governance of women's collegiate sports. The AIAW continued to conduct its established championship program in the same twelve (and other) sports; however, after a year of dual women's championships, the NCAA conquered the AIAW and usurped its authority and membership.

The NCAA added a Division III men's championship in 2012, which at the time was the newest NCAA-sponsored championship. That distinction has since passed to the NCAA Beach Volleyball Championship, an all-divisions women-only championship launched in 2016.

Champions

NCAA Division III Women's Volleyball Championship
YearSite
(Host Team)
ChampionshipThird Place Final / Semifinalists
ChampionGamesRunner-UpThird-placeGamesFourth-place
1981
Details
Maryville, TN
(Maryville)
UC San Diego3–2JuniataOccidental3–0Benedictine (IL)
1982
Details
La Jolla, CA
(UC San Diego)
La Verne3–1UC San DiegoSonoma State3–2Juniata
1983
Details
La Verne, CA
(La Verne)
Elmhurst3–1UC San DiegoLa Verne3–1MIT
1984
Details
Elmhurst, IL
(Elmhurst)
UC San Diego (2)3–0MITLa Verne3–0Calvin
1985
Details
Elmhurst (2)3–0JuniataLa Verne3–0UW–La Crosse
1986
Details
Grand Rapids, MI
(Calvin)
UC San Diego (3)3–2CalvinUW–La Crosse3–1Juniata
1987
Details
Elmhurst, IL
(Elmhurst)
UC San Diego (4)3–0ElmhurstBenedictine (IL)3–2Juniata
1988
Details
La Jolla, CA
(UC San Diego)
UC San Diego (5)3–2Benedictine (IL)Juniata3–2UW–Whitewater
1989
Details
St. Louis, MO
(WashU)
WashU3–0Ohio NorthernJuniata3–1Menlo
1990
Details
UC San Diego (6)3–2WashUSt. Benedict3–0Juniata
1991
Details
WashU (2)3–2UC San DiegoJuniata3–1UW–Oshkosh
1992
Details
WashU (3)3–0UC San DiegoStony Brook3–2Calvin
1993
Details
Huntingdon, PA
(Juniata)
WashU (4)3–0JuniataRIT3–2UC San Diego
1994
Details
Ithaca, NY
(Ithaca)
WashU (5)3–0UW–OshkoshJuniata3–2Ithaca
1995
Details
Whitewater, WI
(UW–Whitewater)
WashU (6)3–2Cal LutheranUW–Whitewater3–2Ithaca
1996
Details
Oshkosh, WI
(UW–Oshkosh)
WashU (7)3–0JuniataSt. Olaf3–1UW–Oshkosh
1997
Details
La Jolla, CA
(UC San Diego)
UC San Diego (7)3–2JuniataCentral (IA)3–0WashU
1998
Details
Huntingdon, PA
(Juniata)
Central (IA)3–2UC San DiegoJuniata and Wellesley
1999
Details
Central (IA) (2)3–0Trinity (TX)Muskingum3–0Juniata
2000
Details
Pella, IA
(Central)
Central (IA) (3)3–0UW–WhitewaterWashU3–2Juniata
2001
Details
Whitewater, WI
(UW–Whitewater)
La Verne (2)3–2UW–WhitewaterJuniata3–1Wellesley
2002
Details
UW–Whitewater3–0WashUTrinity (TX)3–0Juniata
2003
Details
La Verne, CA
(La Verne)
WashU (8)3–0NYULa Verne3–0Emory
2004
Details
Winona, MN
(St. Mary's (MN))
Juniata3–0WashULa Verne3–1NYU
2005
Details
Salem, VAUW–Whitewater (2)3–0JuniataLa Verne and Wittenberg
2006
Details
Juniata (2)3–2WashUUW–Whitewater and Wittenberg
2007
Details
Bloomington, IL
(Illinois Wesleyan)
WashU (9)3–2UW–WhitewaterJuniata and Wittenberg
2008
Details
Emory3–1La VerneJuniata and Ohio Northern
2009
Details
University Heights, OH
(John Carroll)
WashU (10)3–1JuniataHope and UW–Oshkosh
2010
Details
St. Louis, MO
(Washington)
Calvin3–1EmoryJuniata and WashU
2011
Details
Wittenberg3–0Christopher NewportCarthage and Eastern
2012
Details
Holland, MI
(Hope)
St. Thomas (MN)3–2CalvinChristopher Newport and Elmhurst
2013
Details
Calvin (2)3–2Cal LutheranEmory and UW–Stevens Point
2014
Details
Newport News, VA[2]
(Christopher Newport)
Hope3–2EmoryCalvin and UW–Stevens Point
2015
Details
Grand Rapids, MI
(Calvin)
Cal Lutheran3–0WittenbergCarthage and Hendrix
2016
Details
Oshkosh, WI
(UW–Oshkosh)
Calvin (3)3–0WashUNorthwestern (MN) and Southwestern (TX)
2017
Details
Grand Rapids, MI
(Calvin)
Claremont–Mudd–Scripps3–0WittenbergCalvin and Ithaca
2018
Details
Pittsburgh, PA
(Duquesne)
Emory (2)3–0CalvinJuniata and UW–Eau Claire
2019
Details
Cedar Rapids, IAJohns Hopkins3–0EmoryCarthage and Trinity (TX)
2020
Details
Canceled due to COVID-19.
2021
Details
Saint Louis, MO
(Washington)
UW–Eau Claire3–0CalvinClaremont–Mudd–Scripps and Juniata
2022
Details
Pittsburgh, PA
(Saint Vincent)
Juniata (3)3–0Trinity (TX)Northwestern (MN) and NYU
2023
Details
Claremont, CA
(Claremont–Mudd–Scripps)
Juniata (4)3–0HopeClaremont Scripps and NYU
2024
Details
Salem, VA
(ODAC)
2025
Details
Bloomington, IL
(Illinois Wesleyan)

Records

  • Most championships: Washington University in St. Louis (10), UC San Diego (8)
  • Undefeated Seasons: Washington University in St. Louis (1992), Central (IA) (1999), Johns Hopkins (2019), Juniata (2023)

Champions

TeamTitlesYears
Washington St. Louis101989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2003, 2007, 2009
Juniata42004, 2006, 2022, 2023
Calvin32010, 2013, 2016
Central (IA)1998, 1999, 2000
Emory22008, 2018
Wisconsin–Whitewater2002, 2005
La Verne1982, 2002
Elmhurst1983, 1985
Wisconsin–Eau Claire12021
Johns Hopkins2019
Claremont–Mudd–Scripps2017
Cal Lutheran2015
Hope2014
Wittenberg2011

Former programs

TeamTitlesYears
UC San Diego71981, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1997
St. Thomas (MN)12012

See also

References

External links