Australia Colleges at the University of Adelaide compete across multiple sports for the
High Table Cup, also known as the Douglas-Irving Cup. Intercollegiate sports are also played between the colleges of the
University of Sydney for the Rosebowl (women) and the
Rawson Cup (men). Other universities with intercollegiate sports programs include the
University of Melbourne, the
University of New England, the
University of New South Wales and the
University of Western Australia.
Canada The Canadian Intramural Recreation Association was established in 1977 to share information and facilitate professional development in secondary and tertiary institutions in Canada, but became inactive in the 1990s. The Western Canadian Campus Recreation Association was established in 2009 and became the Canadian Campus Recreation Association in 2012. In 2013, they opened discussions with the US NIRSA about establishing a Canadian chapter within NIRSA, and in 2017 NIRSA established a Canada region. The Ontario Intramural Recreation Association was established in 1969. After the formation of CIRA, this became CIRA Ontario in 1989. At many Canadian universities, intramural sports competitions are for teams formed by students. There are inter-college sports at
York University, where the colleges compete for the "York Torch", although students can also form their own teams in open intramural competitions. At the
University of Toronto, the upper divisions of the intramural leagues are restricted to teams representing colleges, faculties or residences, while the lower divisions are open to student-formed teams.
United Kingdom competing in an intercollegiate
bumps race at the
University of Cambridge Just under three quarters of
universities in the United Kingdom offer recreational sports within the university. At the
collegiate universities of
Cambridge,
Durham,
Oxford,
Lancaster and
York, recreational sport takes place between colleges and is known as college sport, inter-college sport, or inter-collegiate sport. More generally, recreational sport within a university in the United Kingdom is often called intramural sport, and teams may represent halls of residence, academic departments, university sports clubs from other sports, other societies or simply groups of friends. Recreational sport exists alongside
varsity matches with rival universities and inter-university competitions organized by
British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS). In terms of participation,
Durham University's college sports is the largest intramural program in the UK and one of the largest the world, with over 75% of students (i.e., over 16,000 students based on the 2023–24 student population of 21,750) taking part in sports and more than 550 college teams across 18 sports.
Collingwood College Association Football Club is said to be the largest amateur football club in the UK. The largest program in Scotland is at the
University of Edinburgh. Matches between representative intramural teams at different universities are sometimes arranged, such as the intramural varsities between
Loughborough intramural sports teams and Durham college teams and between Loughborough intramural sports teams and
Nottingham intramural sports teams, and the college varsity between college teams from Durham and York. College teams also participate in the
Roses Tournament between York and
Lancaster In the past, a men's and women's intercollegiate boat race was part of the
Henley Boat Races between Oxford and Cambridge. College boat clubs from Oxford, Cambridge and Durham often compete in external events such as the
Head of the River Race. One particular form of intramural competition is between medical schools and the rest of the university. This is found at places like
Imperial College London, where
Imperial Medics play the rest of Imperial College in the Imperial Varsity, and
King's College London, where
Guy’s, King’s College and St Thomas medical school play the rest of King's for the
Macadam Cup. Research by
British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS) in association with the
Complete University Guide has found that institutions with a higher BUCS rank (for inter-university sport) are more likely to provide intramural sport. In 2022–23, all of the top-20 ranked institutions had intramural programs, falling to 79% for institutions ranked 21 to 60, 71% for institutions ranked 61 to 100, and only 39% for institutions outside of the top 100. Overall, 73% of institutions had intramural sports, with the most commonly offered sport for men being association football (in 72% of institutions) and for women being netball (also in 72% of institutions). The average number of intramural teams per institution was 87 in 2022–23, up from 79 the year before but still down on the pre-pandemic average of 113 teams in 2018–19 and 2019–20. Membership of sports clubs and societies was around 12% of the student population in 2022–23, down from around 14% in 2019–20; in top-20 institutions it was just over 20%, down from around 23% pre-pandemic. While most intramural sport is played at university facilities, the colleges of collegiate universities sometimes have their own facilities, often funded by college alumni. In Oxford, the
Christ Church Ground hosted 37
first-class cricket matches played by the university between 1878 and 1961 and the
New College Ground also hosted three first-class matches for the university, in 1906, 1907 and 1927. Some Cambridge colleges also have extensive supporting facilities. In Durham,
Collingwood College's new multi-purpose pitch was opened by then-
Newcastle United manager
Rafa Benítez in 2017.
United States NIRSA provides a national network of nearly 4,500 highly trained professionals, students and associate members in field of recreational sports. As in the UK, intramural sports at universities where all students belong to a
residential college may be organized along college lines, e.g., at Harvard and Yale. At others, such as Rice University, there is a distinction between college sports and intramural sports more generally. A third option, such as at the University of California, San Diego, is that intramural sports are separate from the residential college organization. Some residential universities, such as Notre Dame, run specific interhall competitions alongside open intramural competitions. At some universities, such as
Missouri State University and
Georgia Southern University, there are inter-fraternity or fraternity and sorority life sports competitions between the
fraternities and sororities at the university. A house–college rowing race was held between Harvard houses and Yale colleges from 1932 to at least 1958. The champions of the Yale colleges intramural competition and the Harvard houses intramural competition have competed annually for the Harkness Cup since 1935, ==See also==