UGA Finished 8th In Learfield Directors’ Cup Competition

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UGA Finished 8th In Learfield Directors’ Cup Competition

Flags at UGA's Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall fly at half-staff

 

The University of Georgia finished No. 8 in the 2017-18 edition of the Learfield NACDA Directors’ Cup, the all-sports competition ranking collegiate athletic programs. The final rankings were released Saturday following the completion of the College World Series.

Georgia posted its 21st-consecutive top-20 effort, making UGA one of only six Division I schools to finish in the top 20 every year since 1997-98. The other schools to do so are Florida, North Carolina, Stanford, Texas and UCLA.

“I’m very happy for our student-athletes, coaches and support staff for this top-10 finish,” said Greg McGarity, UGA’s J. Reid Parker Director of Athletics. “We shared so many memorable experiences across the board this year in NCAA competition, and the Cup is an indicator of our commitment to a broad-based athletic program.”

 

During 2017-18, 16 of Georgia’s 20 sports included in the Directors’ Cup scored points for UGA. Nine programs posted top-10 efforts.

The women’s indoor track & field and men’s outdoor track & field teams led the way by capturing national championships. Also scoring in the top 10 were football (2nd), women’s outdoor track & field (2nd), men’s indoor track & field (3rd), women’s tennis (5th), gymnastics (7th), softball (7th) and men’s swimming & diving (10th). Additional teams adding points included women’s swimming & diving (11th), baseball (17th), women’s basketball (17th), women’s cross country (17th), men’s tennis (33rd), women’s golf (30th) and men’s golf (62nd).

The National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) and USA Today began the Directors’ Cup competition during the 1993-94 academic year. Points are awarded based on each institution’s finish in up to 20 sports in Division I – 10 men’s and 10 women’s. UGA’s highest finish was No. 2 in 1998-99, one of 10 top-10 rankings for the Bulldogs. Within the SEC, Georgia is one of five schools with double-digit top-20 NACDA finishes over the past 21 years, joined by Florida (21), LSU (16), Texas A&M (13) and Tennessee (10).

 

 

 

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