The University of Central Florida in Orlando, Florida features a large variety of intercollegiate athletics teams known as the UCF Knights
that competes in NCAA's Division I. Part of the Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly I-A), it is a member of Conference USA.
Men's sports include Baseball, Basketball, Cross Country Running, Football, Golf, Soccer, and Tennis.
Women's sports include Basketball, Cross Country Running, Golf, Rowing, Soccer, Softball, Tennis, Track and field, and Volleyball. Co-ed sports include Cheerleading.
Unlike some NCAA programs, women's sports programs at UCF do not have a gender-specific modifier in their mascot name. They are simply referred to as Knights just like the men's teams.
UCF has a radio contract with ISP Sports, which airs football, basketball, baseball and select other events through flagship station WYGM "740 The Game".
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UCF KNIGHTS TICKETS
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History
The UCF varsity athletic program was a charter member of the
Sunshine State Conference in
1975. The school moved up to Division I in 1984. In its first years in D-I, UCF was a member of the
American South Conference, merging into the
Sun Belt Conference in 1991. Women's sports in Division I played in the New South Women's Athletic Conference until 1990, when the American South began organizing women's sports. In 1992, UCF joined the
Trans-American Athletic Conference (TAAC) in all D-I sports except football, which remained independent.
[1] In 1996, UCF was advanced to I-A (FBS) in football, and initially remained independent in football until becoming a football-only member of the
Mid-American Conference in 2001, the same year the TAAC became the Atlantic Sun Conference. UCF joined
Conference USA in all sports in 2005.
The sports teams were originally known as the "Knights of the Pegasus" since their first intercollegiate competitions in 1970. They switched to "Golden Knights" in 1993 as a solution to poor merchandise sales.
[2] The mascot of the athletic teams is
Knightro, a black knight with gold armor. The university has asked to be identified as UCF when being referenced as opposed to Central Florida. Television networks and other media outlets, most notably
ESPN, have been slow to adopt this policy.
In 2007, UCF made major changes to its athletic program. A new "athletic village" on the north end of campus known as
Knights Plaza
was developed. It included new sports facilities such as a new arena connected to the existing
UCF Arena and a new 45,000 seat football stadium known as the
Bright House Networks Stadium, a new softball complex, and the only Division I indoor football practice facility in the state. This made UCF the first school to ever open a new stadium and arena at the same time, for the 2007-08 season.
[3] It also includes
Jay Bergman Field and
UCF Track and Soccer Complex. The area was built in a downtown style with four towers of student housing including approximately 1000 beds, retail and restaurant areas, and a new pedestrian mall connecting the front of the new arena to the student union. To mark the start of the new era, the teams were renamed from the "Golden Knights" on
May 4,
2007 to the Knights and new logos and football helmets were unveiled.
On
April 26,
2006, UCF hired
Keith R. Tribble, the Chief Executive Officer of the Orange Bowl Committee, to replace departed
Athletic Director Steve Orsini, who took the same job at the
Southern Methodist University, a C-USA rival. Before leading the Orange Bowl Committee, Tribble had been an associate AD at the
University of Florida and the
University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
Varsity Sports
Football
UCF has had some measure of success in football in its short NCAA history. It is the alma mater for NFL stars
Daunte Culpepper and
Asante Samuel, among others. The Knights first fielded an NCAA football team in
Division III in 1979, moving up to
Division II in 1982 and
Division I-AA in 1990, finally matching the rest of its sports programs.
Don Jonas was the first head coach of the football team, initially hired on a volunteer basis in 1979.
Gene McDowell took over as head coach and athletic director in 1985. During his tenure, the program was a I-AA playoff team in 1990 and 1993. In 1996, the program made its foray into Division I-A. After a cell phone scandal caused the resignation of McDowell, offensive coordinator
Mike Kruczek was named head coach in 1998.
In 1998, Culpepper led UCF to its best season ever with a 9-2 record (with losses only coming to
Purdue and
Auburn). Culpepper finished 6th in the Heisman Trophy voting and set the NCAA record for completion percentage that year (73.4%).
In 2003, following a string of disappointments on and off the field, UCF relieved coach Mike Kruczek of his duties. Assistant coach and former player
Alan Gooch finished out the dismal 3-9 season with losses to Mid-American Conference rivals
Marshall and
Miami (OH). The Marshall game marked UCF's first nationally televised home football game as it was aired on ESPN2.
In 2004, Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator
George O'Leary was named UCF's head coach. This was a controversial hire on several fronts. O'Leary had previously been named head coach of the
University of Notre Dame, but was relieved of his duties five days into his tenure after inconsistencies were found on his resume. UCF also paid O'Leary a hefty salary which upset many UCF professors who were in contract negotiations with the university administration at the time. O'Leary cleaned house, and in that rebuilding season, UCF did not record a single win as they went 0-11 in the worst season in school history.
In 2005, the team's luck changed when they defeated Marshall 23-13 to end the school's 17 game losing steak. UCF fans celebrated by storming the field and tearing down the goal posts. Students came back to the campus and celebrated further by jumping into UCF's Reflection Pond (a practice normally reserved for Spirit Splash), which is regarded as the central point on campus. UCF then went on to win eight out of the remaining nine games on their schedule, beating
Memphis,
Tulane, and
Houston at home and
Louisiana-Lafayette,
East Carolina,
UAB, and
Rice on the road. Only
Southern Miss defeated UCF in regular-season conference play in 2005. Their 7-1 conference record enabled UCF to win the 2005
Conference USA East Division championship. UCF progressed to the inaugural
Conference USA Championship Game at their home stadium on
December 3,
2005 where they suffered a 44-27 defeat against western division champion
Tulsa. UCF accepted a bid to play in the
Sheraton Hawaiʻi Bowl in
Honolulu,
Hawaii on
December 24,
2005 against the
University of Nevada Wolf Pack. The Golden Knights ended up losing the game 49-48 in overtime due to a missed PAT that would have tied the game. UCF finished the season 8-5.
On
May 24,
2006, UCF extended the contract for 10 years and increased his pay to $1M plus incentives per year after O'Leary, having engineered the third-largest turnaround in college football history, was targeted by larger programs. In 2005 O'Leary was chosen by
SportsIllustrated.com
for the coach of the year award and received votes for the larger Bobby Dodd National Coach of the Year award.
O'Leary and the Knights followed up a surprising and successful 2005 season with a disappointing 4-8 year in 2006.
Fortunes seemed to have changed as the Knights moved into new facilities. In 2007, home games moved from downtown Orlando's
Citrus Bowl to
Bright House Networks Stadium, a new on-campus facility. The new stadium was inaugurated with a surprisingly close game as UCF gave the then-#6-ranked
University of Texas Longhorns a scare, ultimately losing, 35-32, after leading early in the 4th quarter.
[4] On
December 1,
2007, following a 6 game winning streak that allowed UCF to grab the
Conference USA East Division Championship, UCF defeated Tulsa in a near-reversal of the 2005
Conference USA Championship Game 44-25, thereby gaining UCF's first ever Conference Championship title. Kevin Smith led the UCF Knights to a 10-4 record that season (including a 10-3 loss in the Liberty Bowl to Mississippi State). He gained 2,567 rushing yards, second only to Barry Sanders in Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly Division 1-A) history. Surprisingly, he was not nominated for the Doak Walker Award for most outstanding running back. He also was the only running back in the 2007 season to rush for more than 100 yards against the Texas Longhorns. He was a fan favorite, especially with student section at Brighthouse Networks Stadium. He is also a favorite among teammates, where his team-oriented attitude gains him much respect. On September 1, 2007 he scored an 80-yard touchdown on the first play from scrimmage against the NC State Wolfpack. He also broke his own record for longest play from scrimmage (87 yards) by a UCF player on 11/3/2007 against the Thundering Herd of Marshall. Smith originally stated that he would return for his senior season at UCF. . However, he later changed his mind, announcing on
January 6 2008 that he would declare for the
NFL Draft.
[5] He went with the first pick in the third round, to the
Detroit Lions.
Talks have begun for Bright House Network Stadium to host a possible bowl game beginning in December 2010.
Basketball
Men's basketball
UCF played its first intercollegiate basketball game before the team even had a nickname. In the Division II era, under Torchy Clark, UCF found great success including a DII Final Four appearance.
UCF has been a member of Division I since 1985, and has advanced to the NCAA tournament 4 times (94, 96, 04, 05), all under coach
Kirk Speraw. UCF competed in the
Atlantic Sun Conference (formerly called the Trans-American Athletic Conference) from 1992 until 2005 when all sports joined
Conference USA, and plays in the
UCF Arena. UCF made their debut in the Conference USA Championship Tournament in the 2006 season, falling to Houston in the second round and closing out the season with the program's first losing record (14-15) since 2000-2001. The Knights made a huge turnaround in the 2006-07 season, finishing 2nd in conference play to
Memphis with an overall record of 22-9.
The UCF Men's Basketball team played its first exhibition game in the 10,000 seat New UCF Arena, with an 86-78 win over the
Saint Leo Lions, on
November 3,
2007. Their first regular-season game in the New UCF Arena was a 63-60 victory over the
Nevada on
November 11. Their first home C-USA game was against the
Tulsa Golden Hurricane on
January 11,
2008. The game was won by the Knights in triple overtime.
Women's basketball
UCF first joined the
AIAW for women's basketball in 1977-78. They won the Division II small college tournament in 1979-80. They were promoted to AIAW Division I in its last year of existence, 1981-82, and made it to that year's District I tournament quarterfinals, before joining the NCAA in 1982-83.
The women's basketball team made the NCAA Division I tournament in
1996 and
1999, and won the TAAC/Atlantic Sun regular-season title in 1999,
2003 and
2005, before joining C-USA. In 2009, UCF's women's basketball team shocked the C-USA by going 11-5 in conference play after going 2-11 in non-conference games and 10-20 the previous year, and swept through the
2009 Conference USA Women's Basketball Tournament, dominating Southern Miss in overtime to win the championship game, 65-54, and earn its
third Division I tournament appearance.
Baseball
The baseball team is led by head coach,
Terry Rooney who will enter his first season as head coach in 2009.
Jay Bergman had been head coach since 1976. He has had a large amount of success in this position, leading UCF to Atlantic Sun Championships in 93, 95, 96, 97, 00, 01, 02, 04 and NCAA Regional Appearances in 89, 93, 95, 96, 97, 00, 01, 02, 04, and brought UCF to a national ranking of #8 in 2001. In honor of his long term success with the Knights, on
February 3,
2001, UCF opened and dedicated
Jay Bergman Field. However, UCF fired Jay Bergman on May 1, 2008 for sexual harassment towards a male equipment coach. It is unknown at this time whether UCF will retain Jay Bergman's name on their baseball stadium.
Soccer
UCF has produced a number of soccer stars. Most notably,
Michelle Akers. Akers was a founding player on the
United States women's national soccer team from
1985-
2000, helping them win the
FIFA Women's World Cup in
1991 and
1999, and the
1996 Summer Olympics. Her career was so distinguished that
Pelé named her among only two female players (along with teammate
Mia Hamm) on the
FIFA 100 list of the greatest living soccer players in
2004.
The women's program made the Final of the first ever
NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Championship in
1982, losing 1-0 to
North Carolina.
The men's program has developed midfielder Eric Vasquez, who made his professional soccer debut with the
Columbus Crew Major League Soccer. Vasquez now plays for
Miami FC in the United Soccer Leagues' First Division and the
Orlando Sharks of the Major Indoor Soccer League. As well, former Knights Goalkeeper Ryan McIntosh initially signed a development deal with
D.C. United of MLS. After a year with the D.C. United Reserve team, McIntosh signed with the
Atlanta Silverbacks of USL Division One, where he lead the team to the league final. The Silverbacks ended up losing to the Seattle Sounders. Both players were a part of the 2004
Central Florida Kraze amateur soccer team that won the Premier Development League's championship by defeating the Boulder Rapids Resevers, 1-0 at the UCF soccer stadium.
Currently, Sean Johnson of the men's team is a member of the
United States U-20 men's national soccer team which qualified for the
2009 FIFA U-20 World Cup in
Egypt. On the women's team, Aline Reis, an All-American in her freshman year in 2008, was selected to the
Brazil women's national football team for the first time in 2009, playing in a friendly against a local Brazilian team in July.
[6]
Cheerleading
The UCF cheerleading squad has captured two national titles at the College Cheerleading and Dance Team Nationals, in 2003 and 2007. In 2008 WE Original weekly series Cheerleader U followed the UCF cheerleaders through an entire season.
UCF Fight Song
UCF charge onto the field
With our spirit we’ll never yield
Black and Gold - Charge right through the line
Victory is our cry, V-I-C-T-O-R-Y
Tonight our Knights will shine!
U! C! F! Knights!
UCF, Let's Go Knights!
See also
- University of Central Florida
- University of Central Florida Alumni
- University of Central Florida Faculty and Administrators
References
- Annual standings published in ''Official NCAA Football Records Book'', 1992-1996 editions
- 'Golden' era ends for Knights ''Orlando Sentinel''
- Convocation Center Update ''UCF Arena''
- (6) Texas 35, UCF 32 Play-by-play
- UCF's Smith turning pro, reversing decision from last month
- http://ucfathletics.cstv.com/sports/w-soccer/spec-rel/071309aaa.html