Football Football is the most popular sport at WVU. The West Virginia Mountaineers football team represents West Virginia University in the NCAA
Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of
college football. West Virginia plays its home games at
Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar Stadium on the campus of West Virginia University in
Morgantown, West Virginia. The Mountaineers compete in the
Big 12 Conference. With a 787–533–45 record as of the conclusion of the 2024 season, WVU ranks 23rd in
victories among NCAA FBS programs. WVU received
Division I classification in 1973, becoming a
Division I-A program from 1978 to 2006 and an FBS program from 2006 to the present. The Mountaineers have registered 80 winning seasons in their history, including one unbeaten season (10–0–1 in
1922) and five 11-win seasons (
1988,
1993,
2005,
2006,
2007). The Mountaineers have won a total of 15 conference championships, including eight
Southern Conference titles and seven
Big East Conference titles. WVU has had two undefeated regular seasons; they went 11–0 in 1988 and 1993. However, West Virginia lost both bowl games, 34‑21 to Notre Dame in the National Championship, and 41–7 to Florida. The
2005 season and the
2006 season produced the first consecutive 11-win seasons in school history. In the
2007 season, the Mountaineers started the season as the #3-ranked team, the highest preseason ranking in school history. That team eventually was ranked #1 in the Coaches Poll and finished the season with a third consecutive 11-win season after their
Fiesta Bowl victory. :Stadium:
Milan Puskar Stadium at Mountaineer Field :Head coach:
Rich Rodriguez :Conference:
Big 12 :All-time record: 701–456–45 (.583) :Bowl record: 14-17 :Conference titles: 15 (8 Southern Conference, 7 Big East Conference) :Consensus All-Americans: 11 :
BCS Bowl Game record: (3-0) :Highest Coaches Poll ranking: #1 (2007) :Highest AP Poll ranking: #2 (2007) :Highest final top 25 ranking: #5 (1988 & 2005)
Baseball :Playing facility:
Kendrick Family Ballpark (3,500 plus hillside seating) :Head coach:
Steve Sabins :Most victories: 44 (2025) :NCAA Tournament appearances: 16 :Last NCAA appearance: 2025 :All-Americans: 17 :Players in the Majors: 26
Men's basketball West Virginia men's basketball has competed in three basketball championship final matches: the
1959 NCAA final, the 1942
NIT final (at that time, the NIT was considered more prestigious than the NCAA), and the
2007 NIT Championship. They lost to
California in the 1959 NCAA finals, while the Mountaineers won the
1942 NIT Championship over
Western Kentucky, and the 2007
NIT contest over
Clemson. In 1949 future Mountaineers head coach
Fred Schaus became the first player in NCAA history to record 1,000 points. Recently, West Virginia reached the Final Four of the
2010 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, led by West Virginia coach and former WVU player
Bob Huggins. The Mountaineers won the
2010 Big East men's basketball tournament and received a #2 seed in the East Region of the
2010 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. In 2015, West Virginia reached the Sweet Sixteen of the
2015 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. They were eliminated from the tournament after losing to Kentucky. In 2018, West Virginia again reached the Sweet Sixteen of the
2018 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. They were eliminated from the tournament after losing in the fourth round to #1 seed and eventual champion Villanova. :Playing facility:
Hope Coliseum (14,000) :Head coach:
Ross Hodge :Most victories: 31 in 2010 :Big East Conference Champion:
2010 :NCAA Tournament appearances: 31 :Last NCAA appearance: 2021 :NCAA Final Four: 1959, 2010 :NIT appearances: 15 :Last NIT appearance: 2014 :NIT Championships: 2 (
1942,
2007) :All-Americans: 13 :Drafted players: 28 :Players in the
NBA: 14
Women's basketball :Playing facility:
Hope Coliseum (14,000) :Head coach: Mark Kellogg :Most victories: 30 in 2014 :Big 12 Conference Champion: 2017 :NCAA Tournament appearances: 11 :WNIT appearances: 2 :Last NCAA appearance: 2017 :All-Americans: 4 :Drafted players: 3 :Players in the WNBA: 2
Cross Country :Head Coach: Sean Cleary :World Cross Country qualifiers: 13 :BIG EAST Conference Champions: 2007 :NCAA Regional Champions: 2004, 2008, 2024, 2025 :NCAA appearances: 16 :NCAA Top 10 finishes: 7: 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2014, 2024, 2025 :NCAA Elite 8 finishes: 5 2008, 2009, 2011, 2014, 2024, :NCAA Final 4 finishes: 2: 2008, 2024 :Highest NCAA finish: 2nd 2024 :Last NCAA appearance: 2025 :All-Americans: 22 :Elite 89 winners: Ahna Lewis-2009, Kelly Williams 2014 :NACAC Champions, Metcalfe, Grandt, Harrison :NACAC Silver Medals Asselin, Forsey, Wood. Simpson :National team members: World Cross Country team members 14 NACAC Championship team members 10
Men's golf WVU sponsored men's golf from 1933 until dropping the sport in 1982. On July 1, 2013, then-WVU athletic director
Oliver Luck announced that the sport would be reinstated in the 2015–16 school year. :* Two courses at Lakeview Golf Resort,
Cheat Lake – Lakeview and Mountainview :* Two courses at
Nemacolin Woodlands Resort,
Farmington, Pennsylvania – The Links and
Mystic Rock. In addition, the Mountaineers will use the Nemacolin Golf Academy at the resort as a practice facility. :*
Pete Dye Golf Club,
Bridgeport :* The Pines Country Club, Morgantown. To be used for both competition and practice. :* Stonewall Jackson Resort, Arnold Palmer Signature Course,
Roanoke :Head coach: Sean Covich The Mountaineer golf program reached their first ever top 25 ranking back in the fall semester in 2019 with their top 5 finish at the Gopher invitational hosted by the University of Minnesota. In April 2021, they were ranked in 76th place. In 2021, the Mountaineers claimed their third straight Mountaineer Invitational victory on April 13. During that same event, Mark Goetz won the individual tournament with a score of -12 (70-69-65).
Gymnastics :Competition facility:
Hope Coliseum (14,000) :Head coach: Jason Butts :Most victories: 26 in 1992 :NCAA Tournament appearances: 3 (under former head coach
Linda Burdette) :AIAW appearances: 1 :Last NCAA appearance: 2000 :All-Americans: 4
Rifle With a total of 26 individual NCAA National Champions and 20 team NCAA National Championship titles, West Virginia University's rifle team is the most successful rifle program in the history of the NCAA. Their most recent National Championship as a team was won in 2017. The Mountaineers compete in the
Great America Rifle Conference where they have won 11 regular-season conference championships. The team's home matches take place at the WVU Rifle Range which opened in 2010. Virginia Thrasher, who won a gold medal in the
women's 10-meter air rifle at the
2016 Summer Olympics, was on the Mountaineers rifle team from 2015 to 2019. :Playing facility: WVU Shell Building :Head coach: Jon Hammond :Most victories: 19 in 1964 :NCAA appearances: 26 :NCAA Team Championships: 20 :NCAA Team runner up: 7 :National Individual Champions: 25 :NCAA All-Americans: 65 :Olympians: 13 : Gold medal:
Virginia "Ginny" Thrasher - Rio 2016 :Awards: CaptainU Coach of the Year
Women's rowing :Playing facility: WVU Boathouse :Head coach: Jimmy King
Men's soccer :Playing facility:
Dick Dlesk Soccer Stadium (1,600) :Head coach:
Daniel Stratford :Most victories: 15 in 2006 :NCAA tournament appearances: 15 :Last NCAA appearance: 2021 :All-Americans: 7 :Mountaineer professionals: 12
Women's soccer Since joining the
Big 12 Conference ahead of the 2012 season, West Virginia women's soccer has posted a 27–1–3 record in regular-season league games. In 2016, the Mountaineers claimed their fifth consecutive outright regular-season league championship, becoming the first team in Big 12 history to accomplish that feat. West Virginia also won back-to-back Big 12 tournament championships in 2013 and 2014, as well as two additional Big 12 tournament championships in 2016 and 2018. The Mountaineers are coached by Nikki Izzo-Brown, the program's only head coach. West Virginia men's soccer competes in the
Sun Belt Conference (since 2022). The team is 2024 double champion (regular season and tournament) of the Sun Belt, ending that year the 16th in the nationwide Uniter Soccer Coaches Ranking and the 21st in the NCAA DI Men's Soccer RPI ranking with 13-2-7. :Playing facility:
Dick Dlesk Soccer Stadium (1,600) :Head coach: Nikki Izzo-Brown :Most victories: 23 in 2016 :BIG EAST Conference Champions: 2007, 2010, 2011 :BIG 12 Conference Champions: 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2022 :NCAA tournament appearances: 21 (lost in finals 2016) :Last NCAA appearance: 2020 :All-Americans: 45 :Academic All-American: 4 :Mountaineer professionals: 28
Men's swimming :Playing facility: Mylan Park :Head coach: Vic Riggs :Most victories: 13 in 2007 :Big East Conference Champions: 2007 :NCAA qualifiers: 19 :NCAA All-Americans: 2 :Olympians: 1
Women's swimming :Playing facility: Mylan Park :Head coach: Vic Riggs :Most victories: 9 in 1990 :NCAA qualifiers: 14 :NCAA All-Americans: 4 :Olympians: 1
Women's tennis :Playing facility: Mountaineer Tennis Courts :Head coach: Miha Lisac :Most victories: 21 in 1990
Men's track Men's track was discontinued in 2003.
Women's track :Playing facility: Mylan Track, Shell Indoor Track :Head coach: Sean Cleary 2007-present - 108 All American’s for Cleary : Assistants: Shell Ann Galimore, Erin Oreilly, Clara Santucci, Amy Cashin, Jordan Hamric, Phil White :Olympians: 11 :NCAA National Champions: 4 Pat Itanyi Long Jump 1994, Kate Vermeulen 1999 Mile, Megan Metcalf 5000 2005, Ceili McCabe 3000m 2024, :NCAA Runner Up finishes: Marie Louise Asselin 2011-5000, Kate Harrison 10,000 2012 NCAA Top 10 finishes: 1 2010 NCAA Sweet 16 finishes: 1999, 2010, 2011 NCAA top 20 finishes: 5 1999, 2009, 2010, 2010, 2011, 2024
Women's volleyball :Playing facility:
Hope Coliseum (14,000) :Head coach: Jen Greeny :Most victories: 35 in 1979 :NCAA Tournament appearances: 1 :Last NCAA appearance: 2021 :NIT appearances: 1 :All-Americans: 0 :All-East: 2
Wrestling :Founded: 1921 :Dual meets and tournament facility:
Hope Coliseum (14,000) :Head coach: Tim Flynn :Most victories: 14 in 1976 and 1990 :NCAA individual appearances: 67 :Best NCAA finish: 6th in 1991 :All-Americans: 16 :National Champions: 3 :EWL Champions: 18 • Prior to joining the Big 12, West Virginia wrestled as a member of the
Eastern Wrestling League as the Big East was a non-wrestling conference. ==Championships==