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Intercollegiate sports teams of Florida Atlantic University From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Florida Atlantic Owls are the athletics teams of Florida Atlantic University. The Owls participate in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)'s Division I as members of the American Athletic Conference. On October 21, 2021, Florida Atlantic accepted the invitation to join The American and became a full member on July 1, 2023.[2]
Florida Atlantic Owls | |
---|---|
University | Florida Atlantic University |
Conference | The American (primary) C-USA (beach volleyball) ASUN (men's swimming & diving) |
NCAA | Division I (FBS) |
Athletic director | Brian White |
Location | Boca Raton, Florida |
Varsity teams | 19 (8 men's, 11 women's) |
Football stadium | FAU Stadium |
Basketball arena | Eleanor R. Baldwin Arena |
Baseball stadium | FAU Baseball Stadium |
Softball stadium | FAU Softball Stadium |
Soccer stadium | FAU Soccer Stadium |
Mascot | Owlsley and Hoot |
Nickname | Owls |
Fight song | FAU Fight Song |
Colors | Blue and red[1] |
Website | fausports |
Florida Atlantic has attracted high-profile coaches in the past for various sports, including Howard Schnellenberger and Lane Kiffin for football and Mike Jarvis for basketball. Other former coaches include Matt Doherty, Rex Walters, and Sidney Green. As of March 2018, the Owls are led by athletic director Brian White.[3] The 2023 men's basketball team made school history by making the Final Four of the 2023 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.[4]
The logo and mascot of Florida Atlantic University's athletic teams is the burrowing owl. Owlsley and Hoot are the names of the mascots for Florida Atlantic University. The presence of this bird has been popular on the land of the university, even preceding the construction of FAU. At the dedication ceremony in 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson even made notice and reference to the popular presence of the bird.[5] In 1971, the National Audubon Society designated FAU's land an official owl sanctuary, honoring the tradition of the bird's presence and moving to protect the birds from attempts to expand construction of the university. Owls are still dominant in their presence on the Boca Raton campus to this day. With the addition of intercollegiate athletics in the mid-1980s, the university used the bird as its mascot - an animal that denotes wisdom, determination and cognizance.
Division | Years | Conference affiliation |
---|---|---|
NAIA District 25 | 1979–80 to 1982–83 | Independent |
NCAA Division II | 1983–84 to 1992–93 | |
NCAA Division I | 1993–94 to 2005–06 | Trans America Athletic Conference (now ASUN Conference) |
2006–07 to 2012–13 | Sun Belt Conference | |
2013–14 to 2022–23 | Conference USA | |
2023–24 to present | American Athletic Conference |
Men's sports | Women's sports |
---|---|
Baseball | Basketball |
Basketball | Beach volleyball[lower-alpha 1] |
Cross country | Cross country |
Football | Golf |
Golf | Soccer |
Soccer | Softball |
Swimming and diving[lower-alpha 2] | Swimming and diving |
Tennis | Tennis |
Track and field† | |
Volleyball | |
† – Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor |
Florida Atlantic University fielded its first football team in 2001, coached by former Miami and Louisville coach Howard Schnellenberger. Their first game was a 40–7 loss against Slippery Rock University on September 1, 2001. After just four seasons of existence, the Owls jumped from Division I-AA (now FCS) competition to Division I-A (now FBS), joining the Sun Belt Conference. Through the 2008 season, after eight years of competing in football, the Owls are 47–47 overall. In 2007 they competed in their first bowl game, the New Orleans Bowl, where they defeated the Memphis Tigers 44–27. In 2008, the Owls competed in their second straight bowl game, the Motor City Bowl, where they defeated the Central Michigan Chippewas by a score of 24–21.
In 2010, quarterback Rusty Smith became the first FAU player to be drafted.
The Owls opened their new on-campus FAU Stadium on October 15, 2011, against Western Kentucky.
The Owls' natural rivals are the FIU Panthers, located just 50 miles from Florida Atlantic; FIU will remain in Conference USA after FAU's 2023 move to The American. The rivals meet annually in a conference match up named the Shula Bowl, after Miami Dolphins coach Don Shula.[6] The first Shula Bowl was played in 2002 at the Miami Dolphins' Pro Player Stadium (later Sun Life Stadium and now Hard Rock Stadium), and since alternated between FAU at Sun Life Stadium and Riccardo Silva Stadium annually; the first game in the series at the Owls' new stadium was in 2012. FAU leads the all-time series thirteen games to four.
On December 5, 2011, the football program hired its second coach in its history; former University of Nebraska Defensive Coordinator, Carl Pelini. In 2013, the Owls joined Conference USA. On December 16, 2013, the program hired its third coach in its history; Charlie Partridge.
On December 12, 2016, the program hired the fourth coach in program history; Lane Kiffin. Kiffin was formerly the head coach for the Oakland Raiders of the NFL, the University of Tennessee Volunteers, and the University of Southern California as well as the former Offensive Coordinator for the University of Alabama under Nick Saban.[7] He led the Owls to two conference championships in 2017 and 2019, as well as a 2017 Boca Raton Bowl victory, where the Owls defeated the Akron Zips by a score of 50–3.
On December 11, 2019, FAU announced the hiring of former Florida State University head coach Willie Taggart as the next head coach.[8] On December 21, 2019, former interim head coach and current University of South Florida defensive coordinator Glenn Spencer led the Owls to their fourth bowl victory in the Boca Raton Bowl, where the Owls defeated the SMU Mustangs by a score of 52–28.
Florida Atlantic Baseball fielded its first squad in 1981. Since inception FAU has had only three coaches. Kevin Cooney, the most successful coach in school history, was the Florida Atlantic head baseball coach from 1988 through 2008. By many accounts, Cooney built a mid-major dynasty in the baseball world. University of Cincinnati head coach Brian Cleary called FAU "one of the country's best baseball programs," and added, "it's been an incredibly successful program over the last several years."[9] Coach Cooney won his 800th career game on March 15, 2006, when FAU played Columbia. At FAU, Cooney won more than 700 games.
The Owls baseball team plays its home games at FAU Baseball Stadium.[10]
Currently the Owls are coached by long-time assistant for Cooney, John McCormack. McCormack was an assistant under Cooney at FAU for 18 seasons.
40+ years of Florida Atlantic baseball:
FAU basketball began play in 1988 and in its 19+ seasons has experienced limited success, marred with frequent coaching changes. Along with the other FAU athletics teams, basketball entered the Sun Belt Conference in the 2006–2007 season, and has shown signs of maturing into a national competitor. The Owls competed on the Division II level from 1988 to 1993 before joining the Atlantic Sun Conference when moving to Division I in the 1993–1994 season.
The Owls were coached by Rex Walters in 2006–2008, a former standout at Kansas. Walters played a major role in the Jayhawks' run to the Final Four in 1993. Coach Walters became the 6th head coach of FAU basketball, after Matt Doherty left the university a year into his tenure to coach at SMU.
The Owls are currently coached by Dusty May, in his first head coaching opportunity.
The Owls play at Eleanor R. Baldwin Arena, formerly known as FAU Arena & RoofClaim.com Arena and commonly referred to as The Burrow.
In the 2023 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, the men's basketball team has advanced to the Final Four.[4]
In 2007, their first year as a member in the Sun Belt Conference, the FAU women's softball team became Sun Belt Conference champions winning both the Sun Belt regular-season and the Sun Belt tournament title. Florida Atlantic University is only the second Sun Belt champion in league history, knocking off defending champions Louisiana-Lafayette, which had won the first seven Sun Belt titles.[12] Additionally, the Lady Owls were only one of two teams to win their final post season game.[13] Coach Joan Joyce was named the Sun Belt's Coach of the Year after guiding the Owls to the top of the conference.[14] Prior to joining the Sun Belt Conference, FAU softball had won nine Atlantic Sun Conference titles in the previous 10 years.
The Florida Atlantic University Ice Hockey Club participates in Division II of the Collegiate Hockey Federation (CHF) and has been a member of the College Hockey South (CHS) since the 2019–2020 season. The Owls competed in the ACHA National Tournament in 2005 & 2011 and qualified for the Regional Tournament in the 2017-2018 and 2019–2020 seasons. Open tryouts are held at the beginning of the fall semester in preparation for the 25+ multi-conference season games, the CHS Playoffs, and the CHF Federation Cup.[15]
The rivalry between Florida Atlantic and Florida International started in 2002 when FIU's newly formed football program signed on to an annual matchup with FAU, alternating between home fields; the game has come to be called the Shula Bowl. FAU leads the football series 16–4 as of 2022. On the basketball court, FAU leads the series 21–18 as of 2023.
Sport | Facility | Capacity |
---|---|---|
Football | FAU Stadium | 29,571 |
Men's & Women's Basketball/Volleyball | Eleanor R. Baldwin Arena | 3,161 |
Baseball | FAU Baseball Stadium | 2,000 |
Softball | Joan Joyce Field | 700 |
Soccer | FAU Soccer Stadium | 1,000 |
Swimming and diving | FAU Aquatic Center | None listed |
Beach volleyball | FAU Beach Volleyball Complex | None listed |
Tennis | Kimberly V. Strauss Tennis Center | None listed |
Cross country/Track and field | FAU Track and Field Complex | None listed |
Golf | [16][17] | varies |
Source:[18]
Owlsley & Hoot are the official mascots of Florida Atlantic.[19]
Fight song: The Florida Atlantic University fight song was created in 2004, in response to the university's growing football program. FAU fielded its first marching band in the 2002 football season, collectively called the Florida Atlantic Marching Owls.
FAU Owls home and road games for football and basketball can be heard locally (the tri-county area of South Florida—Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade counties) on WMEN Fox Sports 640 AM South Florida (formerly known as "640 The Hurricane Sports Radio") on the radio, on the station's webstream, and thru their stream on the TuneIn application.[21] The voice of Owls football is part-time ESPN 106.3 West Palm 's Ken LaVicka. All football and basketball games can be heard live on FAU's website, as well.
Occasional FAU football and, as of 2019, all FAU men's basketball games are broadcast by ESPN+, the streaming service from ESPN. Other networks that have broadcast FAU games in recent years include FOX, ESPNU, NFL Network, CBS Sports Network, Stadium, and ABC.
For an alphabetical list of inductees, see footnote[22] The Florida Atlantic University Athletic Hall of Fame inducted its inaugural class of members in 2006.[22]
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