Belmont Bruins

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Belmont Bruins
Logo
University Belmont University
Conference Ohio Valley Conference
NCAA Division I
Athletic director Mike Strickland
Location Nashville, Tennessee
Varsity teams 17 (8 men's, 9 women's)
Arena Curb Event Center
Baseball stadium E.S. Rose Park
Softball stadium E.S. Rose Park
Soccer stadium E.S. Rose Park
Mascot Bruiser
Nickname Bruins
Website www.belmontbruins.com
BRUINS wordmark.png

The Belmont Bruins are the intercollegiate athletic teams of Belmont University located in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. The Bruins athletic program is a member of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC)[1] and competes at the NCAA Division I[2] level.

The program's mascot is Bruiser the Bruin, and the school colors are navy blue and red.[3][4] The Belmont teams had been known as the Rebels until 1995, when the name was changed for reasons of political correctness.[5]

Teams

A member of the Ohio Valley Conference, Belmont University sponsors teams in eight men's and nine women's NCAA sanctioned sports:[6]

Men's Intercollegiate Sports Team Article Head Coach Women's Intercollegiate Sports Team Article Head Coach
Baseball Bruins baseball Dave Jarvis Basketball Cameron Newbauer
Basketball Bruins men's basketball Rick Byrd Cross Country Jeff Langdon
Cross Country Jeff Langdon Golf Lissa Bradford
Golf Scott Flynn Soccer Heather Henson
Soccer Bruins men's soccer [v 1] Bryan Green Softball Chris Kuhlmeyer
Tennis Jim Madrigal Tennis Mark Srouji
Track & Field (Indoor & Outdoor) Jeff Langdon Track & Field (Indoor & Outdoor) Jeff Langdon
Volleyball Tony Howel
Notes

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Basketball

The school has a heated basketball rivalry with Lipscomb University, a similarly-sized private institution in Nashville. For much of both schools' athletic histories, Belmont and Lipscomb played one another at least twice per year on a home-and-home basis (even more frequently in some years) in both men's and women's basketball. These games are nicknamed the "Battle of the Boulevard", alluding to the road connecting the two schools.[7] In 2006, with both teams battling for their first-ever NCAA Tournament berths, Belmont defeated Lipscomb in overtime to win the Atlantic Sun championship 74–69.[8] The Belmont Bruins were seeded 15th in the 2006 NCAA Tournament, losing in the first round to the UCLA Bruins.[9] Even though the two schools are no longer in the same conference following Belmont's 2012 move to the OVC, the games are still played twice a year for both men and women.[10] (The only other non-conference basketball rivalry in Division I with two games each season is New Mexico–New Mexico State.)

In 2007, Belmont won the Atlantic Sun Conference Men's Basketball Tournament for the second year in a row, defeating East Tennessee State University in Johnson City 94–67.[11] The Bruins continued to the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive year, losing in the first round to the Georgetown Hoyas.[12]

In 2008, the Bruins advanced for the third straight year to the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, after winning the Atlantic Sun Regular Season as well as Atlantic Sun Tournament Championship, again earning a 15 seed, this time against the #2 seeded Duke Blue Devils. Belmont had their best tournament showing ever in this game, losing by a score of 71–70 to the Blue Devils.[13]

In 2009, the Bruins posted their first postseason men's basketball victory by beating Evansville in the CollegeInsider.com Post Season Tournament (CIT).[14]

In 2011, the Belmont Bruins Men's Basketball programm posted a 19–1 record in the Atlantic Sun Conference, won the regular season conference championship, and won the Atlantic Sun Conference Tournament Championship by the largest margin (41 points) in conference history. The Bruins entered the NCAA Tournament as a 13th seed, losing to Wisconsin 72–58. The Bruins' 30–5 record for the season set a new, NCAA era record for the program.[15][16]

In 2012, the team won the Atlantic Sun Regular Season Championship for the fifth time in six years, along with the Atlantic Sun Conference Tournament, thus reaching the NCAA Tournament for the fifth time in seven years.[17] Belmont received the fourteenth seed in the Midwest Regional, losing to Georgetown 74-59.[18]

Athletic facilities

Belmont's on-campus Curb Event Center is home for the volleyball and men's and women's basketball teams.[6]

The group of stadiums at Nashville's E. S. Rose Park, located near the campus, is home for Belmont's baseball, softball, men's and women's soccer, and men's and women's outdoor track and field teams.

Nashville's Percy Warner Park hosts Belmont's men's and women's cross country teams.

Belmont's men's and women's golf teams hold their home meets at The Little Course at Conner Lane in Franklin, Tennessee.

The on-campus Francis Bond Davis Tennis Complex is home to the Belmont men's and women's tennis teams.

References

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External links

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