Bowdoin Polar Bears

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Bowdoin Polar Bears
Logo
UniversityBowdoin College
ConferenceNew England Small College Athletic Conference (primary)
NEISA (sailing)
EISA (nordic skiing)
NCAADivision III
Athletic directorTim Ryan
LocationBrunswick, Maine
Varsity teams30
Football stadiumWhittier Field[1]
Basketball arenaMorrell Gymnasium
Ice hockey arenaSidney J. Watson Arena
Baseball stadiumPickard Field
Other venuesLeighton Sailing Center
Brunswick Golf Course
Howard F. Ryan Field
LeRoy Greason Pool
William Farley Field House
MascotPolar Bear
NicknamePolar Bears
ColorsBlack and white[2]
   
Websiteathletics.bowdoin.edu
File:Bowdoin athletis wmark.png

The Bowdoin Polar Bears are the intercollegiate athletic teams that represent Bowdoin College, located in Brunswick, Maine. The Polar Bears compete in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC). Bowdoin College currently fields teams in fourteen men's sports and sixteen women's sports. The polar bear team name was selected to honor Robert Peary of the class of 1877 who led the first expedition that reached the North Pole.[3]

All Bowdoin Polar Bears sports teams compete in NCAA Division III, and 25 of 30 teams compete in the NESCAC. Bowdoin College was one of the eleven charter members who joined together to form the new New England Small College Athletic Conference in 1971.

Most Bowdoin Polar Bears teams have on-campus facilities, and most are located on the south side of campus, including Sidney J. Watson Arena for ice hockey; Howard F. Ryan Field for field hockey and lacrosse; Pickard Field for baseball, soccer, softball, and rugby; Lubin Family Squash Center for squash; LeRoy Greason Pool for swimming and diving; and Farley Field House for indoor track and field. Whittier Field is located on the east side of campus. Morrell Gymnasium is located at the center of campus. Brunswick Golf Course, Leighton Sailing Center, and Pineland Nordic Skiing Center are all located away from the main campus.

Tim Ryan has been the athletic director since 2013.[4]

The Athletic Department also supports three club sports: rowing, rugby, and ultimate Frisbee.

Sports sponsored

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The Bowdoin College Athletic Department sponsors teams in 14 men's and 16 women's NCAA sanctioned sports.

Men's sports Women's sports
Baseball Basketball
Basketball Cross Country
Cross country Field Hockey
Football Golf
Golf Ice Hockey
Ice Hockey Lacrosse
Lacrosse Nordic Skiing
Nordic skiing Rowing (Club)
Rowing (Club) Rugby
Rugby (Club) Sailing
Sailing Soccer
Soccer Softball
Squash Squash
Swimming & Diving Swimming & Diving
Tennis Tennis
Track & Field1 Track & Field1
Volleyball
1 – Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor.

Baseball

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Bowdoin College first fielded a varsity baseball team in 1867. Seven Bowdoin College alumnus have played in Major League Baseball. Since 1966, four players have been selected in the Major League Baseball draft.[5]

The Polar Bears have advanced to two NCAA tournaments in 2006 and 2012.[6]

The Polar Bears baseball team plays its home games at Pickard Baseball Diamond.[7] Mike Connolly is the current head coach of the Bowdoin Polar Bears baseball.

Women's Basketball

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The women's basketball team at Bowdoin College has won nine NESCAC championships, including seven in a row from 2001 to 2007. The Polar Bears have historically been competitive in the NCAA tournament.[8]

Field Hockey

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The field hockey team at Bowdoin College has won 11 conference championships (8 since competing in the NESCAC) and 4 national championships.[9]

Football

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Bowdoin College fielded an official varsity football team for the first time in 1899, losing to Tufts 8–4 in its first game. Bowdoin football achieved its first win in the following game in a 42–0 win over the Boston Latin School.[10]

The Polar Bears' most prominent current football rivals are in-state NESCAC foes Bates and Colby. Bowdoin has historically shared rivalries with Maine, too, but those games are no longer played annually and have lessened in intensity. Since 1965, Bowdoin, Bates, and Colby compete annually in the Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Championship to be the best NESCAC school in Maine; Bowdoin has won the CBB championship 20 times, the most of all three schools. Prior to the CBB Championship, the three schools competed with Maine for the State Championship. Bowdoin won the State Championship nine times. The State Championship seasons were: 1935, 1936, 1937, 1940, 1942, 1949, 1952, 1960 and 1963.[11]

The Polar Bears football team plays its home games at Whittier Field, the team's home field since the program began.[12] B. J. Hammer is the current head coach of the Bowdoin Polar Bears football.

Facilities

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File:Bowdoin-watsonarena.jpg
Sidney J. Watson Arena during an ice hockey game in 2011
Venue Sport Capacity Opened
Brunswick Golf Course Golf N/A 1888
Sidney J. Watson Arena Ice hockey 1,900 2009
Howard F. Ryan Field Field Hockey, Lacrosse (women's) N/A 2001
Leighton Sailing Center Sailing N/A 2014
LeRoy Greason Pool Swimming and diving 350 N/A
Lubin Family Squash Center Squash N/A N/A
Magee-Samuelson Track Outdoor track and field 9,000 1970
Morrell Gymnasium Basketball
Volleyball
1,500 1965
Pickard Baseball Diamond Baseball N/A N/A
Pickard Cross Country Course Cross country N/A N/A
Pickard Men's Soccer Field Soccer 2,000 N/A
Pickard Rugby Field Rugby union N/A N/A
Pickard Softball Field Softball N/A N/A
Pickard Tennis Courts Tennis N/A N/A
Pineland Nordic Skiing Center Nordic skiing N/A N/A
Smith Boathouse Rowing N/A 2002
William Farley Field House Indoor track & field 1,000 N/A
Whittier Field Football
Lacrosse (men's)
9,000 1896

Championships

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NCAA team championships

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Bowdoin has won 5 NCAA team titles.[13]

  • Men's (1)
    • Tennis (1): 2016
  • Women's (4)
    • Field Hockey (4): 2007, 2008, 2010, 2013

Other national team championships

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Below are 3 national team titles that were not bestowed by the NCAA:

  • Men's (3)
    • Ice Hockey (3):[a] 1971, 1975, 1976
  • Women's (3)
    • Rugby (3): 2016, 2019, 2021 (NIRA)
  1. ^ Bowdoin College has been named the de facto Division II champions 3 times prior to the NCAA sponsoring a Division II tournament

Conference championships

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Bowdoin has won 46 conference titles.[14] The men's ice hockey team competed in the ECAC until 1999 when the NESCAC teams formed their own conference tournament.[15]

  • Men's (16)
    • Cross Country (3): 1991, 2001, 2002
    • Ice Hockey (8): 1971,[a] 1975,[a] 1976,[a] 1978,[a] 1986,[a] 1993,[a] 2013, 2014[15]
    • Soccer (2): 2014, 2015
    • Tennis (3): 2008, 2017, 2018
  • Women's (32)
    • Basketball (11): 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2020, 2024, 2025
    • Cross Country (2): 1992, 1995
    • Field Hockey (11): 1976,[b] 1977,[b] 1995,[a] 2000, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2015
    • Ice Hockey (3): 2002, 2004, 2013
    • Track & Field (2): 1992, 1993
    • Volleyball (3): 2011, 2015, 2018, 2021
  1. ^ a b c d e f g ECAC
  2. ^ a b Maine Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women

Rivalries

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The college's biggest rival is Colby College.[citation needed] Bates College is another big in-state conference rival. Historically, the University of Maine was a football rival during the Maine State Series era. Currently, Bowdoin, Bates, and Colby have competed for the CBB Championship since the 1960s.[16] The college's rowing club competes in the Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Chase Regatta annually.

Bates

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Bates and Bowdoin have been traditional rivals in football since they first met in 1889. As of 2021, Bowdoin and Bates have competed in 123 football games, making it the 10th longest NCAA Division III rivalry. The Polar Bears lead the Bobcats 67-49-7 all-time.[17]

Colby

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The Bowdoin–Colby football rivalry is the third oldest in Division III.[18]

Additionally, the Bowdoin men's hockey team has a historic rivalry with Colby. The inaugural ice hockey match between the two schools occurred in 1922.[19]

Notable athletes

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Polar Bears in the Olympic Games

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Bowdoin College has a long history of athletes who have competed in the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games. Bowdoin has produced three gold medalists.[20]

The list of notable Polar Bear Olympians and Paralympians includes Fred Tootell, Geoffrey Mason, Bernard Lucas, Joan Benoit Samuelson, Jake Adicoff, and Emilie Grand'Pierre.

See also

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References

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