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Western Collegiate Lacrosse League

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Western Collegiate Lacrosse League
FormerlyCalifornia Collegiate Lacrosse Association (1980-1983)
AssociationMen's Collegiate Lacrosse Association
Founded1980, 44 years ago
PresidentMike Gillespie
Sports fielded
No. of teams14
Most recent
champion(s)
Division 1: UC Santa Barbara (10th Title)
Division 2: Chico State (3rd Title)
(2024)
Most titlesDivision 1: Whittier & UC Santa Barbara (Tied at 10 Titles)
Division 2: San Diego & Saint Mary’s (Tied at 5 Titles)
Official websitehttp://mcla.us/WCLL/

The Western Collegiate Lacrosse League (WCLL) is a conference that participates in the Men's Collegiate Lacrosse Association (MCLA). The WCLL operates in California, Nevada, and Oregon and is split into two divisions, Division I and Division II.[1] The conference is governed by an executive board and the teams that win the conference's divisional playoffs receive automatic bids to the MCLA National Tournament.

History

[edit]

California Lacrosse Association Era (1959–1979)

[edit]

The roots of the WCLL go back to 1959 when the California Lacrosse Association (CLA) was created. This was a hybrid organization that included both college and men's club teams in Southern California. Similarly, the teams in Northern California participated in the Northern California Lacrosse Association (NCLA). The founding members of the CLA included Claremont, Los Angeles Lacrosse Club, Orange County Lacrosse Club, San Fernando Valley Lacrosse Club, OMBAC, San Marino Lacrosse Club and others. In 1969, UCLA joined the league, followed by UCSB in 1970.

In 1976, the CLA expanded with the addition of Southern California. On occasion the CLA Champion would face the NCLA Champion at the end of the season to determine a conference or "California State Champion". UCSB captured the final state championship played under this arrangement defeating their northern counterparts in 1978. In 1979, at the urging of CLA VP and San Diego State alum Mitch Fenton, a separate organization for the collegiate teams in both the CLA and NCLA was brainstormed.

California Collegiate Lacrosse Association Era (1980–1982)

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The union that would eventually become the WCLL was founded on Super Bowl Sunday, January 20, 1980, as the California Collegiate Lacrosse Association (CCLA). A select few gathered at the house of then UCLA Head Coach Mayer Davidson's house in West Los Angeles. Co-founders also included Stanford Head Coach Sam Sadtler, the Claremont Head Coach and Mitch Fenton. The original 9 members were: California, Claremont, San Diego State, Santa Clara, Southern California, Stanford, UC Davis, UCLA and UCSB. Fenton served as the first president of the association. In the inaugural championship, the UCSB Gauchos defeated the Stanford Cardinal. One year later, Whittier College joined the league. In 1982, the University of Arizona, Arizona State and Northern Arizona joined the CCLA. That same year the Stanford Cardinal took home the championship defeating UCLA at Stanford.

WCLL Expansion Era (1982–2008)

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In 1983, the CCLA renamed itself the Western Collegiate Lacrosse League. That same year Cal Poly SLO joined the conference. Arizona Head Coach and WCLL co-founder Mickey-Miles Felton, who was instrumental in the addition of the Arizona schools the year before, served as the league's first president. The WCLL Championship Trophy is named in his honor.[2]

In 1985, Loyola Marymount University was admitted to the conference. In 1987, Chico State was admitted as a full member of the conference.

In 1988, the WCLL split into A and B divisions (later I and II). That same year Chapman University and San Jose State University joined the WCLL as Division II members.[3] In 1989, Sonoma State joined the WCLL.

In 1997, the WCLL, was one of the charter conferences in the US Lacrosse Intercollegiate Associates (USLIA). Prior to the 2000 season, Whittier College departed joining the NCAA Division III as an independent. Following the 2002 season, Division II member Cal State San Marcos left the conference. Following the 2004 season, Division II member Cal State Hayward (now Cal State East Bay) left the conference.

The addition of the University of Nevada, Reno and St. Mary's College to the WCLL Division I at the annual conference meeting in 2004 lead to a massive realignment of the conference. The 20 Division I teams were split into 4 geographic divisions (North, Central, Los Angeles and South) for the 2005 season. In 2005, the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and UC Santa Cruz joined the league, followed by Cal State Fullerton and the readmittance of San Jose State in 2006. That same year, the USLIA reorganized into the Men's Collegiate Lacrosse Association (MCLA).[4]

Departure of Southern Teams (2009)

[edit]

The league grew into the largest MCLA conferences but saw big changes in 2009.[5] The University of California, Merced joined the league for the 2009 season but the league lost its entire Central Division, made up of Chapman, UC Santa Barbara, Claremont, Loyola Marymount, USC, and UCLA; and lost the majority of its Southern Division, including: Arizona State, San Diego State, Arizona, San Diego, UC San Diego. The WCLL also lost six of ten Division II members, including: Biola, Cal Lutheran, Cal State Fullerton, Occidental, Pepperdine, UC Irvine, and UNLV. The departing teams formed the Southwestern Lacrosse Conference (SLC).[5][6]

Modern Era (since 2009)

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After the departure of its southern teams, the WCLL entered a period which would see several teams join, only to cease operations shortly thereafter. This included UC Merced (2009-2012), Cal-State Monterey Bay (2013-2014), the University of San Francisco (2015-2016), and culminated in one of the league's oldest members, University of the Pacific, folding in 2017.

In 2014, Sierra Nevada College joined the conference, they would go on to win four back-to-back division II championships from 2015 to 2018. The team ultimately folded in 2022 after their school was sold to the University of Nevada at Reno, which closed all of its sports teams.

In 2020, UC Santa Barbara returned to the WCLL after 11 years (2009-2019) in the SLC.[5]

In 2023, the WCLL expanded to include its first team from Oregon, Southern Oregon University, moving over from the Pacific Northwest Collegiate Lacrosse League (PNCLL). At the conclusion of the 2023 season, Dominican University announced that it would be departing the WCLL, joining the NCAA Division II as an independent in 2024.[7]

Teams

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Institution Location Enrollment Nickname Tenure Conference Championships
Division I
California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo San Luis Obispo, California 22,287 Mustangs 1983 - Present 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2022
Santa Clara University Santa Clara, California 9,015 Broncos 1980 - Present
Sonoma State University Rohnert Park, California 7,807 Seawolves 1989 - Present 2001, 2002, 2006
Stanford University Palo Alto, California 17,246 Cardinal 1980 - Present 1982, 2013, 2015
University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California 45,307 Golden Bears 1980 - Present 1981, 1994, 1995, 1998, 2000, 2018, 2019
University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara, California 26,179 Gauchos 1980 - 2009, 2019 - Present 1980, 1983, 1984, 1987, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2023, 2024
University of Nevada, Reno Reno, Nevada 20,718 Wolf Pack 2004 - Present
Division II
California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt Arcata, California 6,431 Hogsa 1985 - 1999, 2010 - Present
California State University, Chico Chico, California 16,630 Wildcats 1987 - Present 1988, 1989, 2024
Saint Mary's College of California Moraga, California 3,761 Gaels 1989 - Present 1991, 2000, 2010, 2011, 2012
San José State University San Jose, California 35,751 Spartans 1988 - 1992, 2006 - Present
Southern Oregon University Ashland, Oregon 6,114 Raiders 2023 - Present
University of California, Davis Davis, California 40,031 Aggies 1980 - Present 2019, 2022, 2023
University of California, Santa Cruz Santa Cruz, California 19,161 Banana Slugs 2005 - 2019, 2022 - Present 1993, 2009, 2013

^a Despite the official mascot of Cal Poly Humboldt being the Lumberjacks, the lacrosse team is referred to as the Hogs due to an initial lack of support from the University.[8]

Former members

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Institution Location Team Nickname Tenure Reason for Departure
Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona Sun Devils 1982–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
Biola University La Mirada, California Eagles 2001–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division II
Brigham Young University Provo, Utah Cougars c.1985–c.1991 Moved to MCLA - RMLC Division I
California Lutheran University Thousand Oaks, California Kingsmen 2005–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division II
California State University, East Bay Hayward, California Pioneers 1997–2004 ceased operations in 2004
California State University, Fullerton Fullerton, California Titans 2006–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division II
California State University, Monterey Bay Seaside, California Otters 2013-2014 ceased operations in 2014
California State University, Sacramento Sacramento, California Hornets 1986–1998 ceased operations in 1998
California State University, San Marcos San Marcos, California Cougars 2002-2002 ceased operations in 2002
Chapman University Orange, California Panthers 1988–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
Claremont Colleges Claremont, California Cougarsb 1980–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
Dominican University of California San Rafael, California Penguins 2015–2023 Moved to NCAA - Independent Division II
Loyola Marymount University Los Angeles, California Lions 1985–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
Northern Arizona University Flagstaff, Arizona Lumberjacks 1982–unknown Moved to MCLA - RMLC Division II
Occidental College Los Angeles, California Tigers 2006–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division II
Pepperdine University Malibu, California Waves unknown–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division II
San Diego State University San Diego, California Aztecs 1980–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
Sierra Nevada University Incline Village, Nevada Eagles 2014–2022 ceased operations in 2022
University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona Wildcats 1982–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
University of California, Irvine Irvine, California Anteaters 1988–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division II
University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles, California Bruins 1980–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
University of California, Merced Merced, California Golden Bobcats 2009-2012 ceased operations in 2012
University of California, San Diego San Diego, California Tritons 1988–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
University of Nevada, Las Vegas Las Vegas, Nevada Rebels 2005–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
University of the Pacific Stockton, California Tigers 1980–2017 ceased operations in 2017
University of San Diego San Diego, California Toreros 1987–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
University of San Francisco San Francisco, California Dons 2015–2016 ceased operations in 2016
University of Southern California Los Angeles, California Trojans 1980–1986, 1991–1996, 1998–2009 Moved to MCLA - SLC Division I
Whittier College Whittier, California The Poets 1981–1999 Moved to NCAA - Independent Division III

^b The Claremont Colleges team is referred to as the Cougars because the team is independent from any individual college, and instead represents the entirety of the Claremont College Consortium.[9]

Conference championship

[edit]

Division I

[edit]

When the conference was formed in 1980, it was determined that the top team of the Northern Division would play the top team of the Southern Division at the end of the season to determine the conference champion. This changed in 1985 when the conference championship was turned into a four team tournament among the top two teams in each division. The 2005 season introduced two new divisions to the WCLL, the Central Division and the Los Angeles Division, each of whom would send their top two teams to tournament. After many teams left in 2009, the conference dissolved all of its divisions and changed the tournament to be among the conference's top four teams. In 2019, the conference reintroduced its North Division and South Division, the champions of which would receive a bye round in a six-team tournament.

Division I Champions
Season Conference Champion Score Runner-up Citation
1980 UC Santa Barbara 16-12 Stanford [10]
1981 California 14-8 UC Santa Barbara [11]
1982 Stanford 11-8 UC Los Angeles [12]
1983 UC Santa Barbara 12-11 Arizona [13]
1984 UC Santa Barbara 10-9OT San Diego State [14]
1985 Whittier 18-7 Arizona [15]
1986 Whittier 12-11 UC Santa Barbara [16]
1987 UC Santa Barbara 13-8 Whittier [17]
1988 Whittier 18-15 Sonoma State [18]
1989 Whittier 16-12 Sonoma State [19]
1990 Arizona 6-5 UC Santa Barbara [20]
1991 Whittier 16-8 UC Santa Barbara [21]
1992 Whittier 13-9 Arizona [22]
1993 Whittier 14-10 California [23]
1994 California 14-10 UC San Diego [24]
1995 California 13-5 UC Santa Barbara [25]
1996 Whittier 17-9 Chapman [26]
1997 Whittier 29-10 Arizona [27]
1998 California 16-15OT Whittier [28]
1999 Whittier 11-8 Sonoma State [29]
2000 California 12-10 Sonoma State [30]
2001 Sonoma State 22-9 Arizona [31]
2002 Sonoma State 8-4 Stanford [32]
2003 UC Santa Barbara 14-9 Sonoma State [33]
2004 UC Santa Barbara 11-1 Arizona [34]
2005 UC Santa Barbara 8-7 Sonoma State [35]
2006 Sonoma State 7-3 Arizona [36]
2007 UC Santa Barbara 7-5 Arizona [37]
2008 Chapman 17-9 Arizona State [38]
2009 Cal Poly 17-9 Sonoma State [39]
2010 Cal Poly 13-7 California [40]
2011 Cal Poly 11-6 Stanford [41]
2012 Cal Poly 11-8 California [42]
2013 Stanford 8-7 Sonoma State [43]
2014 Cal Poly 16-5 California [44]
2015 Stanford 11-102OT Cal Poly [45]
2016 Cal Poly 9-8 California [46]
2017 Cal Poly 10-8 California [47]
2018 California 6-4 Cal Poly [48]
2019 California 17-9 Santa Clara [49]
2020 No Championship due to Covid-19 Pandemic [50]
2021 No Championship due to Covid-19 Pandemic [50]
2022 Cal Poly 12-11 California [51]
2023 UC Santa Barbara 11-5 Cal Poly [52]
2024 UC Santa Barbara 13-11 California [53]
Division I Records
Team Championships Winning years Runner-up Runner-up Years
Whittier 10 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1999 2 1987, 1998
UC Santa Barbara 10 1980, 1983, 1984, 1987, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2023, 2024 5 1981, 1986, 1990, 1991, 1995
Cal Poly 8 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2022 3 2015, 2018, 2023
California 7 1981, 1994, 1995, 1998, 2000, 2018, 2019 8 1993, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2022, 2024
Sonoma State 3 2001, 2002, 2006 8 1988, 1989, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2009, 2013
Stanford 3 1982, 2013, 2015 3 1980, 2002, 2011
Arizona 1 1990 8 1983, 1985, 1992, 1997, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2007
Chapman 1 2008 1 1996
UC Los Angeles 1 1982
San Diego State 1 1984
UC San Diego 1 1994
Arizona State 1 2008
Santa Clara 1 2019
  • Note: Bold text denotes MCLA National Champion
  • Note: Italic text denotes MCLA National Champion runner-up

Division II

[edit]
Division II Champions
Season Conference Champion Score Runner-up Citation
1988 Chico State [citation needed]
1989 Chico State 24-4 Humboldt State [54]
1990 Cal Poly [citation needed]
1991 Saint Mary's [citation needed]
1992 Chapman 12-4 Cal Poly [55]
1993 UC Santa Cruz Arizona State [56]
1994 UC Irvine 6-4 Loyola Marymount [57]
1995 Arizona State 10-5 UC Irvine [58]
1996 Sacramento State 10-6 Cal Poly [59]
1997 Arizona State 9-4 Cal Poly [56]
1998 San Diego 11-3 UC San Diego [60]
1999 San Diego 8-7 Chico State [61]
2000 Saint Mary's 11-6 Claremont [62]
2001 Chapman 11-10 Saint Mary's [63]
2002 Southern California 10-6 Saint Mary's [64]
2003 Claremont 12-5 Saint Mary's [65]
2004 San Diego 11-8 Saint Mary's [66]
2005 San Diego 12-4 Claremont [67]
2006 San Diego 14-6 Claremont [68]
2007 UC Irvine 11-10 Pepperdine [69]
2008 Biola (Vacated)* 15-3 UC Santa Cruz [70]
2009 UC Santa Cruz 12-11 Saint Mary's [71]
2010 Saint Mary's 9-5 UC Santa Cruz [72]
2011 Saint Mary's 8-7 UC Santa Cruz [73]
2012 Saint Mary's 16-5 UC Santa Cruz [74]
2013 UC Santa Cruz 9-6 Nevada [75]
2014 Nevada 5-4 San José State [76]
2015 Sierra Nevada 14-6 Nevada [77]
2016 Sierra Nevada 18-3 UC Davis [78]
2017 Sierra Nevada 13-4 UC Davis [79]
2018 Sierra Nevada 7-4 UC Davis [80]
2019 UC Davis 11-2 Saint Mary's [81]
2020 No Championship due to Covid-19 Pandemic [50]
2021 No Championship due to Covid-19 Pandemic [50]
2022 UC Davis 10-6 UC Santa Cruz [82]
2023 UC Davis 8-6 Chico State [83]
2024 Chico State 10-7 Saint Mary’s [84]

*Despite winning the championship game, Biola were made to forfeit the title because they fielded ineligible players

Division II Records
Team Championships Winning years Runner-up Runner-up Years
San Diego 5 1998, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2006
Saint Mary's 5 1991, 2000, 2010, 2011, 2012 7 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2009, 2019, 2024
Sierra Nevada 4 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018
UC Santa Cruz 3 1993, 2009, 2013 5 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2022
UC Davis 3 2019, 2022, 2023 3 2016, 2017, 2018
Chico State 3 1988, 1989, 2024 2 1999, 2023
Arizona State 2 1995, 1997 1 1993
Chapman 2 1992, 2001
UC Irvine 2 1994, 2007 1 1995
Cal Poly 1 1990 3 1992, 1996, 1997
Sacramento State 1 1996
Southern California 1 2002
Claremont 1 2003 3 2000, 2005, 2006
Nevada 1 2014 2 2013, 2015
Cal Poly Humboldt 1 1989
Loyola Marymount 1 1994
UC San Diego 1 1998
Pepperdine 1 2007
San José State 1 2014
Biola 2008*
  • Note: Bold text denotes MCLA National Champion

References

[edit]
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