St. Mary's Rattlers | |
---|---|
University | St. Mary's University |
Conference | Heartland Conference |
NCAA | Division II |
Athletic director | Elizabeth Dalton |
Location | San Antonio, Texas |
Varsity teams | 11 |
Basketball arena | Bill Greehey Arena |
Baseball stadium | Dickson Stadium |
Softball stadium | The Park at St. Mary's |
Soccer stadium | Sigma Beta Chi Field |
Nickname | Rattlers |
Colors | Blue and Gold |
Website | rattlerathletics |
The St. Mary's Rattlers are the athletic teams that represent St. Mary's University, Texas, located in San Antonio, Texas, in NCAA Division II intercollegiate sporting competitions. The Rattlers compete as members of the Heartland Conference for all 11 varsity sports. St. Mary's has been a member of the Heartland since 1999.
Interscholastic athletics competition began with baseball in 1902. Before St. Mary’s was recognized as a senior college in 1925, there was no formal conference competition, so the rivalry between the downtown and Woodlawn campuses was fierce. The colorful history of St. Mary’s athletics includes a stellar 1910 baseball team, which lost only to Ty Cobb’s Detroit Tigers in an exhibition game, and a stint by future President Eisenhower as coach of the 1916 football team.
St. Mary’s was an all-male school for more than a century. In 1939, both Collier's and Life magazines feature full-page spreads on the St. Mary's football team and their cross country trips in a ragged bus, the "Blue Goose". The team was disbanded due to World War II.
Records show the 1902 baseball team went 6–0, and the 1910 squad also went undefeated except for the aforementioned game against the Tigers. With the onset of the Depression, intercollegiate baseball disappeared only to be resurrected in 1947 by then-athletics director Brother Bill Siemer, S.M. Over the years, St. Mary’s baseball has won local, regional and national fame. Accomplishments include 24 conference championships, four NAIA College World Series appearances and, most recently, the 2001 NCAA Division II conference, regional and national championships. St. Mary's men's basketball program also has enjoyed success over many years. In 1926, the school’s first intercollegiate basketball team posted a 12–7 record.
Women's intercollegiate athletics, begun in 1968, have enjoyed many triumphs. The softball team has led the way, winning several conference titles, playing in the NAIA and NCAA Division II national tournaments, and winning the 1986 NAIA National Championship and the 2002 Division-II National Championship.
St. Mary's first individual national championship came in 2006, when Jamie Amoretti won the NCAA Division II Men's Golf title. The Men's Golf team would be named the Golf Coaches Association of America 2008–2009 Academic National Champions, a title which St. Mary's treats as a fifth team national championship.
Following the end of intercollegiate football at the start of World War II, there have been at least three attempts to revive full-contact sports on campus: a club football team in the early 1970s, a club rugby team in the early 1990s, and a Texas Rugby Union Collegiate Division III team formed in Fall 2010. The school hosted the NCAA Women's Division II Basketball Championship at the Bill Greehey Arena in 2009 and 2012.