This article is missing information about which day(s) this event was held.(December 2020) |
The 2002 NCAA Skiing Championships were contested at the Alyeska Resort in Girdwood, Alaska as part of the 49th annual NCAA-sanctioned ski tournament to determine the individual and team national champions of men's and women's collegiate slalom and cross-country skiing in the United States.[1]
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Sport | College skiing |
Location | Girdwood, Alaska |
Administrator | NCAA |
Host(s) | University of Alaska Anchorage |
Venue(s) | Alyeska Resort |
Teams | 23 |
Number of events | 8 |
Final positions | |
Champions | Denver (17th overall, 3rd co-ed) |
1st runners-up | Colorado |
2nd runners-up | Utah |
Two-time defending champions Denver, coached by Kurt Smitz, again won the team championship, the Pioneers' third co-ed title and seventeenth overall.
Venue
editThe championships were hosted at the Alyeska Resort in Girdwood, Alaska, with the University of Alaska Anchorage as hosts.
These were the second championships held in Alaska (1987 and 2002).
Program
editTeam scoring
editRank | Team | Points |
---|---|---|
Denver (DC) | 656 | |
Colorado | 612 | |
Utah | 6091⁄2 | |
4 | New Mexico | 569 |
5 | Vermont | 5211⁄2 |
6 | Nevada | 444 |
7 | Dartmouth | 4121⁄2 |
8 | Northern Michigan | 327 |
9 | New Hampshire | 3101⁄2 |
10 | Alaska Anchorage | 310 |
11 | Middlebury | 296 |
12 | Williams | 175 |
13 | Alaska Fairbanks | 1631⁄2 |
14 | Western State | 154 |
15 | Bates | 116 |
16 | Montana State | 82 |
17 | Colby | 601⁄2 |
18 | St. Lawrence | 60 |
19 | St. Olaf | 59 |
20 | Harvard | 39 |
21 | Saint Michael's | 25 |
22 | Michigan Tech | 20 |
23 | Bowdoin | 19 |
- DC – Defending champions
- Debut team appearance
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "NCAA Skiing Championships Results" (PDF). NCAA. NCAA.org. Retrieved 30 December 2020.