UW–Platteville is a member of the
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference in 14 sports, including football and basketball. The teams are nicknamed "the Pioneers". Men's sports include basketball, football, indoor and outdoor track and field, cross country, wrestling, soccer, and baseball. Women's sports include basketball, soccer, indoor and outdoor track and field, volleyball, cross country, golf, softball, and cheerleading. All teams compete in NCAA Division III and Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. There are also a number of club sports teams such as hockey and lacrosse which are partially funded through the university. The
Ralph E. Davis Pioneer Stadium is home to the football team, lacrosse team, and soccer team.
Williams Fieldhouse is home to the men's and women's basketball teams. The men's basketball team won NCAA Division III championships in 1991, 1995, 1998, and 1999. The Pioneers qualified for the Division III men's basketball tournament from 1991-1999 and returned 10 years later in 2009.
Bo Ryan, who later became head coach of the
Wisconsin Badgers, guided the Pioneers to a 353-76 record and the best winning percentage in NCAA Division III basketball. Ryan established one of the best home court advantages of all time as the Pioneers only lost 5 games at home in a decade. The team averaged 26 wins a season in the 1990s, when the Division III men's regular season schedule only allowed 25 games per year. The university named the basketball floor "Bo Ryan Court" in January 2007. ==Notable people== The following have attended or held positions at University of Wisconsin–Platteville:
Athletics •
Dan Arnold – professional football player •
Geep Chryst – college and professional football coach •
Greg Gard – college basketball player and coach •
Rob Jeter – college basketball player and coach •
Saul Phillips – college basketball player and coach •
Chester J. Roberts – college basketball and college football coach •
Bo Ryan – college basketball coach •
Emily Ryan – college soccer coach
Alumni •
James N. Azim, Jr. – Wisconsin State Representative •
Taylor G. Brown – Wisconsin State Senator •
Joseph L. Bull (B.S. 1992) – biomedical engineer, first Native American dean of a U.S. engineering college. •
James R. Charneski – Wisconsin State Representative •
Lee Croft – professional football player •
Glenn Robert Davis – U.S. Representative •
Tom Davis – college basketball coach •
George Engebretson – Wisconsin State Senator •
Charles E. Estabrook –
Wisconsin Attorney General •
Greg Gard – college basketball coach •
Gary J. Goldberg – President and Chief Executive Officer,
Newmont Mining Corporation •
William H. Goldthorpe – Wisconsin State Representative •
Mike Hintz – professional football player •
William A. Jones – Wisconsin State Representative •
Arthur W. Kopp – Wisconsin politician and jurist •
Dennis R. Larsen –
U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General •
James B. McCoy – Wisconsin State Representative •
Phil Micech – professional football player •
James William Murphy – U.S. Representative •
David Ott –
classical music composer •
John F. Reynolds – Wisconsin State Representative and Senator •
Elmer Lloyd Rundell – Wisconsin State Representative •
Edward H. Sprague – Wisconsin State Representative •
Barbara Thompson –
Wisconsin Superintendent of Public Instruction •
Jerome Van Sistine – Wisconsin State Senator •
A. V. Wells – Wisconsin State Representative •
T. Harry Williams – historian •
James Wright – historian and president of
Dartmouth College Faculty •
Charles Herman Allen – founding principal of the Platteville Normal School •
Duncan McGregor – Wisconsin State Representative •
Kathryn Morrison – Wisconsin State Senator == See also ==