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The Southern Athletic Association announced Thursday that Maryville College will join its conference. The football and women's golf programs will join starting in the 2025-26 academic year, while ...
The Maryville Scots football team was the second sponsored sport at Maryville, started in 1889 by Maryville Scots Athletics Hall of Fame member, Kin Takahashi, who served as team captain, quarterback, and head coach from 1892 to 1897.
The Maryville Scots football team represents Maryville College in college football. [2] The team competes at the NCAA Division III level as an affiliate member of the Southern Athletic Association. [3] The first football team was organized by Japanese student Kin Takahashi. [4] The Scots play at Lloyd L. Thornton Stadium, Honaker Field.
This is a list of college athletics programs in the U.S. state of Tennessee. NCAA. Division I ... Maryville Scots: Maryville College: Maryville: CCS [a] Rhodes Lynx:
The Maryville Saints are the athletic teams that represent Maryville University of St. Louis, located in Town and Country, Missouri, in NCAA Division II intercollegiate sports. The Saints compete as members of the West Division of the Great Lakes Valley Conference (GLVC) for 23 of their 24 varsity sports.
‘American Idol’ contestant Will Moseley's time at Maryville College. Before transferring to Georgia Southern, Moseley was a lineman for the Maryville College Scots, a Division III team, for ...
Piedmont College, [3] LaGrange College, [4] and Maryville College joined the Great South Athletic Conference on July 1, 2012. Shenandoah University left the USA South on the above date, to become a full member of the Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC), a league in which it held associate membership in several sports.
The Lloyd L. Thornton Stadium is located in Maryville, Tennessee, and serves as the home stadium for the Maryville College Fighting Scots’ football team. [1] The stadium has a maximum seating capacity of 3,000, and the field is called Honaker Field. [1] The stadium was dedicated in 1993. [2]