OBU Claims Third Consecutive Learfield Directors’ Cup as Top NAIA Athletics Program
June 11, 2015
The Learfield Sports Directors' Cup was developed as a joint effort between the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) and USA Today. Points are awarded based on each institution's finish in up to 12 sports -- six women's and six men's.
OBU, in its final season in the NAIA, won the Cup by one of the narrowest margins in the history of the award's standings.
"It's very gratifying to get this third Learfield Sports Directors' Cup in our final year of the NAIA," said OBU Director of Athletics Robert Davenport. "Our coaches overcame a lot of new wrinkles in this year of transition and our student-athletes again posted successful seasons while carrying a grade point average over 3.0 as a department. That determination will serve us well in NCAA Division II and the Great American Conference."
The Bison won by 31 points, which goes down as the fourth-closest finish in the NAIA standings and the closest since Azusa Pacific won by three points over Simon Fraser in 2010.
OBU finished with 854.5 points, followed by Lindsey Wilson with 823.5, Sooner Athletic Conference foes Oklahoma City at 802.75 and Wayland Baptist at 800, with Embry-Riddle at 787.25.
OBU scored 326 spring points, picking up 78 points in baseball to move ahead of Wayland Baptist and hold off Lindsey Wilson and Oklahoma City.
"Winning our third Learfield Sports Directors' Cup in the last week of the season was exciting to say the least," Davenport said.
OBU becomes the third NAIA school to win three consecutive Learfield Cups, joining Simon Fraser (1997-2001) and Azusa Pacific (2005-12).
OBU is one of only a handful of four-year colleges to win the award three consecutive seasons or more, joining Stanford (1995-2014) in Division I, Grand Valley State (2003-10) and California-Davis (2000-02) in Division II, and Williams (1999-2011 and again 2013-15) in Division III.
OBU won the award with just 11 scores, collecting points in six women's and five men's sports. Scoring teams for OBU included the national champion women's indoor track, women's swimming and diving and men's swimming and diving teams (100 points each), women's outdoor track and field (90), men's indoor track and field (85), men's outdoor track and field (80), baseball (78), women's cross country (73.5), women's basketball (70), women's tennis (53) and men's tennis (25). OBU also scored in women's soccer (25), but was not able to count those points with six higher scores in women's programs.