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Santa Ana College sponsors 18 sports programs. [4] The 9 men's sports programs are baseball, basketball, cross country, football, soccer, swimming, track and field, water polo and wrestling. The 9 women's programs are basketball, beach volleyball, cross country, soccer, softball, swimming, track and field, volleyball and water polo.
Santa Ana College held its centennial commencement at the stadium on the June 5, 2015. [4]Santa Ana Stadium was the site of an international soccer match between the Orange County Soccer Club and the German side Bayern Munich, one of the most popular sports clubs with an estimated 87 million fans worldwide, [5] on June 10, 1966, in which the clubs played to a 3-3 tie.
Santa Ana has highly competitive high school and collegiate sports teams playing at Santa Ana Stadium and the Santa Ana Unified School District Sports Complex Stadium. The Dons of Santa Ana College are one of the most successful soccer teams in the state of California, and is a frequent top finisher, statewide. [51]
The high school and junior college football community is mourning the death of Santa Ana College coach Anthony White. He was 42. He had been battling cancer, the school announced.
The Orange County Blue Star, affiliated with MLS's Los Angeles Galaxy, played soccer at Santa Ana Stadium (also known as Santa Ana Bowl) and Orange Coast College from 1997 to 2000. The Anaheim Splash was a soccer team that played in the Continental Indoor Soccer League from 1993 to 1997.
The SSC was formed in 1968 as a football-only conference with eight members: Fullerton College, Golden West College, Mt. San Antonio College, Orange Coast College, Rio Hondo College, San Diego City College, San Diego Mesa College, and Santa Ana College. [1]
The Eastern Conference was a junior college athletic conference with member schools located in Southern California that operated from 1932 to 1969. The conference's initial members included Fullerton Junior College—now known as Fullerton College—and Santa Ana College.
Santa Ana was rated as the No. 1 junior college football team in the country in the final rankings issued in December 1940 by the All-American Gridiron Index. Santa Ana received 509 points, edging Louisiana State University's Northeast Center Junior College and Kilgore College which received 499 and 492 points, respectively. [4]