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Carleton Knights baseball

Carleton Knights
Logo
University Carleton College
Conference MIAC
NCAA Division III
Athletic director Gerald Young
Location Northfield, Minnesota
Varsity teams 18
Football stadium Laird Stadium
Basketball arena West Gymnasium
Nickname Knights
Colors Blue and Maize
         
Website apps.carleton.edu/athletics/

The Carleton Knights are the sports teams of Carleton College, located in Northfield, Minnesota. They participate in the NCAA's Division III and in the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC), re-joining the conference in 1983. Carleton was a founding member of the MIAC in 1920, but left in 1925.

Men's Sports

Women's sports

In 1958 Carole Pushing won the women's individual intercollegiate golf championship (an event conducted by the Division of Girls' and Women's Sports (DGWS) — which later evolved into the current NCAA women's golf championship).

The official mascot of the Carleton Athletic teams is the Knights.

The student-run Ultimate frisbee clubs have had the most competitive success; most notably, the school's top men's team, Carleton Ultimate Team (CUT), and women's team, Syzygy, are perennial national contenders in the USA Ultimate College Division. CUT has qualified annually for nationals since 1989, and won the National Championship in 2001, 2009, and 2011. Syzygy has qualified for women's nationals all but one year since 1987, and won the National Championship in 2000. The other men's Ultimate team, the Gods of Plastic, won the 2009, 2010, and 2012 Division III National Championship tournaments, and the second women's Ultimate team, Eclipse, won Division III nationals in 2011.

In the fall of 2011, the women's rugby team was undefeated in their league and region. This led them on to win Division 3 national playoffs. After winning their league, the team continues to regularly dominate their region, as well as compete at state and national levels every year.

The spring intramural softball league is known as Rotblatt, in honor of baseball player Marvin Rotblatt. Once a year a day-long game, also known as Rotblatt, lasts the same number of innings as the number of years since Carleton's founding. In 1997, Sports Illustrated honored Rotblatt in its "Best of Everything" section with the award, "Longest Intramural Event."


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