Binghamton Bearcats

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Binghamton Bearcats
Binghamton Bearcats logo.svg
University Binghamton University
Conference America East (primary)
NEC (men's tennis, women's tennis, men's golf)
EIWA (wrestling)
NCAA Division I
Athletic directorEugene Marshall Jr.
Location Vestal, New York
Varsity teams21
Basketball arena Binghamton University Events Center
MascotBaxter the Bearcat
NicknameBearcats
ColorsDark green, white, and black [1]
     
Website bubearcats.com

The Binghamton Bearcats are the NCAA Division I athletics teams at Binghamton University located in Binghamton, New York. United States. [2] [3] They are one of four Division I programs in the SUNY system. A member of the America East Conference, [4] Binghamton University, SUNY sponsors teams in eleven men's and ten women's NCAA sanctioned sports. The men's golf, men's tennis, and women's tennis teams are affiliate members of the Northeast Conference, and the wrestling team is a member of the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association. [5]

Contents

History

America East Conference logo in Binghamton's colors America East logo in Binghamton colors.svg
America East Conference logo in Binghamton's colors

Binghamton has competed in the NCAA since joining the SUNY system in 1950. During the 1946–1950 era, there were no particular affiliations or mascots. When, in fact, they joined SUNY and adopted the new name Harpur College, the school also adopted their first mascot: a donkey named Harpo. In transitioning to SUNY Binghamton, they also developed their athletics program further, adopting the new school nickname and mascot: The red, white, and blue Colonials. With the impending move to Division I, the school adopted the new nickname, the Bearcats, beginning with the 1999–2000 school year.[ citation needed ] The mascot, Baxter the Bearcat, was unveiled in the fall of 1999.[ citation needed ]

In the fall of 2001, Binghamton athletics formally entered the NCAA Division I and also became a member of the America East Conference in all sports other than wrestling and golf, which is not sponsored by the America East Conference. The wrestling program actually preceded the jump to Division I by becoming a provisional member of the now-defunct East Coast Wrestling Association [6] beginning with the 1999–2000 season. They made the transition from a Division III school to Division II for three years and then entered Division I.[ citation needed ] Binghamton has 21 intercollegiate sports. Binghamton's wrestling team is a member of the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association since the America East does not sponsor wrestling.

Former Director of Health, Physical Education, and Athletics, Dr. Joel Thirer oversaw the transition from NCAA Division III to NCAA Division II to NCAA Division I. Hired in 1989, Dr. Thirer resigned on September 30, 2009, amid controversy surrounding the Men's Basketball program. [7]

More recently, the university has hosted a number of conference championships, including the 2005, 2006 and 2008 men's basketball championships, as well as, other championships from other sports.

In a Sept. 29, 2009 statement, Jim Norris had been named Interim Athletic Director. The Director of Athletics reports directly to the then-interim President McGrath. [8]

Patrick Elliott was introduced as Binghamton's director of athletics on October 6, 2011, and began his appointment on November 14.

Following a national search led by Parker Executive Search, Binghamton University's President Harvey Stenger announced on November 22, 2022, the hiring of Hampton University's athletics director, Eugene Marshall Jr. as the Bearcats’ new director of athletics. Marshall began his appointment on January 5, 2023. [9]

Teams sponsored

Men's sportsWomen's sports
Baseball Basketball
Basketball Cross country
Cross countryLacrosse
GolfSoccer
Lacrosse Softball
SoccerSwimming & diving
Swimming & divingTennis
TennisTrack and field
Track and fieldVolleyball
Wrestling
† – Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor.

Basketball

The women's team has made no Division I Tournament appearances, but they made the Division III Tournament from 1995 to 1998 and Division II in 1999.

Baseball

Binghamton en route to winning the 2014 America East Conference baseball tournament America East Baseball Championship (14261745484).jpg
Binghamton en route to winning the 2014 America East Conference baseball tournament

Rugby

Binghamton University Rugby

The men's rugby team was founded by an exchange student from London. He began promoting the idea of founding a college club in the spring of 1979 and began organizing and establishing the Club in earnest in the fall of 1979. The Binghamton Devils Rugby Club currently competes at the highest level of collegiate rugby, D1A. The program has won numerous conference championships and is widely acknowledged as the best looking program on campus.

Other programs

A Binghamton wrestler (left) tosses a North Dakota State wrestler during a match in 2017 Paul Bianchi vs Steven Bulzomi 8255 (43115510424).jpg
A Binghamton wrestler (left) tosses a North Dakota State wrestler during a match in 2017

Binghamton has 20 other successful Division I program sports, although the media focuses primarily on men's basketball. They include women's basketball, golf, baseball, softball, men's lacrosse, women's lacrosse, men's soccer, women's soccer, men's cross country, women's cross country, men's swimming & diving, women's swimming & diving, men's tennis, women's tennis, women's volleyball, wrestling, men's indoor track, women's indoor track, men's outdoor track and women's outdoor track. The program posted an overall 3.1 APR for all 21 sports and has been recognized for its scholar athletes. The men's tennis program posted an overall 3.69 GPA for the 2010 spring semester.

In April 2023, Binghamton AD Gene Marshall announced that the school was planning to add both men's ice hockey and women's field hockey for the 2024-25 athletic season. [11]

Facilities

Events Center

The Events Center plays host to both men and women basketball games. It has a capacity of nearly ten thousand for non-sporting events and approximately 5,222 for basketball games. With recent capacity issues, the Athletic Department will be looking at various existent options for expanding capacity in the 2009–2010 season. The facilities has an indoor track where the track and field teams practice and compete, indoor tennis courts for both men and women tennis teams, as well as the primary weight and fitness equipment, sports medicine and uniform issuance facilities. The facility also includes a 150-person private lounge donated by a Binghamton University fraternity, Tau Alpha Upsilon (TAU). It is known as the TAU Bearcat Clubroom.

Bearcats Sports Complex

The main stands of the Bearcats Sports Complex during a soccer game Bearcats Sports Complex.jpg
The main stands of the Bearcats Sports Complex during a soccer game

Opened in the Fall of 2007, the Bearcat Sports Complex features two artificial turf fields for soccer and lacrosse. One field is intended primarily for competition and the other for practice. Additional features include night lighting, over 2,500 seats for the competition field and 1,000 for the practice field, a concession stand, and bathrooms. In 2009, the Tau Alpha Upsilon [TAU] fraternity sponsored the naming of both the press box and the scoreboard. A plaque was dedicated in their honor at the entrance of the new sports complex. A recent announcement unveiled plans to move the Softball competition field to the complex. A new field along with a modestly sized stadium and pressbox will be added immediately behind the current concession stand.

West Gym

The West Gym is an Athletic facility that hosts the weight, practice and competition facilities for the wrestling team. Also, the varsity pool is home to both men and women swim and diving teams. The gymnasium is used for volleyball, basketball practice, basesball practice( has batting cages on the inside) and wrestling matches.

Varsity Field

Home to the varsity baseball team, Varsity Field features a diamond with dugouts and bleachers. It was recently announced that Varsity field will undergo major renovations set for completion by the 2012 season. The project was supposed to be for an artificial turf field along with light and many other updates including bathrooms in the dugouts. However, the state would not allow them to get turf so the team did receive a new field but did not receive all of the promises they were originally told.

East Gym Field

Home to the softball team.

Alumni Stadium

A 2,000-seat stadium, athletic field, outdoor track and field facilities. While it has previously hosted the lacrosse teams, it is primarily used for the track and field teams. The track was resurfaced in 2007. The field has also hosted rugby games in the fall season. Although it has not been used recently due to fears of the rugby team destroying the field while playing. This is despite the fact that they are the only team to use the infield of the track in the fall or spring.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Northeast Conference</span> D-1 college athletic conference

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Binghamton University Events Center</span> Multipurpose arena in Binghamton, New York

Binghamton University Events Center is the premier Division I Athletics and multipurpose facility at Binghamton University. The arena opened in 2004 and is adjacent to the Bearcat Sports Complex. It is home to the Binghamton Bearcats Division I Intercollegiate Athletic Program and can seat 5,142 patrons for home games, and over 8,000 for other large-scale events. It has hosted the 2005, 2006, and 2008 America East Conference men's basketball tournaments; the 2007 American East women's tournament as well as the first round and quarterfinal of the 2018 WBI tournament. The Events Center was host to the 2009 America East Conference Championship game when the Bearcats defeated UMBC to make March Madness. The facility has also hosted commencements and concerts such as Bob Dylan, Green Day, Incubus, Ludacris, Foo Fighters, Drake and Harry Connick Jr. The arena contains 53000 square feet of space.

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The Binghamton University basketball scandal refers to a series of incidents that occurred as Binghamton University compromised its integrity in order to make the Bearcats men's basketball program more competitive in Division I. Numerous Binghamton players were arrested and dismissed from the team in the fall of 2009, continuing a troubling trend of misconduct from basketball players at the university. The arrests led to an investigation by the State University of New York (SUNY), Binghamton's parent institution, which found that Binghamton's administration had significantly lowered its admissions standards for prospective recruits under pressure from men's head coach Kevin Broadus and his staff. It also detailed several potential NCAA violations by Broadus and his staff. Numerous Binghamton professors admitted to academic fraud, having changed grades for basketball players upon pressure from members of the athletic department.

The Binghamton Bearcats men's basketball team represents Binghamton University and is located in Vestal, New York. The team currently competes in the America East Conference and plays its home games at the Binghamton University Events Center. Since becoming an NCAA Division I basketball program in 2001, the team has played in one NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament in 2009.

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References

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  3. "Binghamton University". NCAA & Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
  4. "America East Conference". America East Conference. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
  5. "EIWA Member Schools". Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
  6. "Wrestling Terriers To Join Colonial Athletic Association". Goterriers.com. Retrieved 2010-05-18.
  7. "Binghamton Bearcats AD Joel Thirer resigns after player dismissals from men's basketball". Sports.espn.go.com. 2009-09-30. Retrieved 2010-05-18.
  8. "Changes to athletics program". Sports.espn.go.com. 2009-09-29. Retrieved 2010-06-24.
  9. "Binghamton University Athletics - Official Athletics Website". Binghamton University Athletics. Retrieved 2023-01-08.
  10. Saginaw native Mark Macon appointed interim head basketball coach of Binghamton University
  11. "Binghamton 'aggressively' looking to add men's Division I college hockey in time for 2024-25 season". USCHO. April 13, 2023. Retrieved April 13, 2023.