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Nebraska began 1996 21–0–0, winning the Big 12 regular season and tournament and advancing to the NCAA Division I quarterfinals; NU has since won five more conference tournaments. In fifteen years of Big 12 competition, the Cornhuskers compiled a league-best record of 106–47–15. The program has been led by John Walker since its inception.
Conference Sport sponsorship Foot-ball Basketball Base-ball Soft-ball Ice hockey Soccer M W M W M W Creighton Bluejays: Creighton University: Omaha: Big East: Nebraska Cornhuskers: University of Nebraska–Lincoln: Lincoln: Big Ten: FBS: Omaha Mavericks: University of Nebraska Omaha: Omaha: Summit [a
Nebraska's soccer program was established in 1994, making NU the first school in the Big Eight Conference to sponsor a varsity women's soccer program. Until 2014, the program played its home games at the Ed Weir Track & Soccer Stadium, located along the northeast corner of Memorial Stadium. The soccer field at the Weir complex, built in 1975 ...
Meet this year's ALL-USA Central Indiana girls soccer Super Team, ... The Northern Kentucky commit assisted on goals vs. Brownsburg and Noblesville, then scored the game-winner in a 1-0 win over ...
The Orlando Pride’s 1-0 victory over the Washington Spirit to clinch the 2024 National Women’s Soccer League Championship capped a season of double- and triple-digit gains for the league in TV ...
The Big Sky Conference women's soccer tournament is the conference championship tournament in soccer for the Big Sky Conference. The tournament has been held every year since 1997. It is played under a single-elimination format and seeding is based on regular season records.
While 91,648 at a soccer game in Barcelona, Spain has been widely acknowledged as the previous women’s sports attendance record, at least one match at the unofficial 1971 Women’s World Cup in ...
Starting in 2018, a third football-only division, D-6, was established to play 6-man football (a version of the sport invented in Nebraska). This is a revival of Class D-3, which the NSAA governed from 1987 to 1998; from 1999 to 2017, 6-man football in Nebraska was organized by associations other than the NSAA.