NAIA Softball Championship

The NAIA Softball Championship is the annual tournament to determine the national champions of NAIA collegiate softball in the United States and formerly in Canada. It has been held annually since 1981.[1]

NAIA Softball Championship
SportSoftball
Founded1981
CountryUnited States
Most recent
champion(s)
Southern Oregon University (1)
Most titlesOklahoma City (10)
Official websiteNAIA.com

The current champions are Southern Oregon University. The Oklahoma City Stars are the most titled program, having collected 10 NAIA championship titles.

Results

YearChampionScoreDefeatedLocation
1981Sam Houston State (Texas)1-0Emporia State (Kan.)Conroe, Texas
1982Missouri Western5-0St. Francis (Ill.)Kearney, Nebraska
1983Emporia State (Kan.)9-2Kearney State (Neb.)Kearney, Nebraska
1984Emporia State (Kan.)1-0Quincy (Ill.)Indianapolis, Indiana
1985Quincy (Ill.)4-2Washburn (Kan.)Indianapolis, Indiana
1986St. Mary's, Texas2-1 (9 innings)Oklahoma CitySan Antonio, Texas
1987Kearney State (Neb.)1-0Francis Marion (S.C.)Kearney, Nebraska
1988Pacific Lutheran (Wash.)2-0 (10 innings)Minnesota-DuluthOklahoma City, Oklahoma
1989Saginaw Valley State (Mich.)3-0Kearney State (Neb.)Midland, Michigan
1990Kearney State (Neb.)6-3 (8 innings)Pacific Lutheran (Wash.)Pensacola, Florida
1991Hawaii Loa5-1Puget Sound (Wash.)Columbia, Missouri
1992Pacific Lutheran (Wash.)3-2Kennesaw State (Ga.)Pensacola, Florida
1993West Florida4-2Oklahoma CityColumbia, Missouri
1994Oklahoma City3-1Athens State (Ala.)Columbia, Missouri
1995Oklahoma City3-1Puget Sound (Wash.)Columbia, Missouri
1996Oklahoma City9-1Shawnee State (Ohio)Decatur, Alabama
1997Oklahoma City12-0Athens State (Ala.)Decatur, Alabama
1998Western Washington5-1Simon Fraser (B.C.)Tulsa, Oklahoma
1999Simon Fraser (B.C.)7-3Oklahoma CityJupiter, Florida
2000Oklahoma City5-1Azusa Pacific (Calif.)Decatur, Alabama
2001Oklahoma City5-3Simon Fraser (B.C.)Decatur, Alabama
2002Oklahoma City2-1 (8 innings)Point Loma Nazarene (Calif.)Decatur, Alabama
2003Simon Fraser (B.C.)3-1Mobile (Ala.)Decatur, Alabama
2004Thomas (Ga.)5-4Simon Fraser (B.C.)Decatur, Alabama
2005Simon Fraser (B.C.)7-0California BaptistDecatur, Alabama
2006Mobile (Ala.)4-1California BaptistDecatur, Alabama
2007Oklahoma City7-2Point Loma Nazarene (Calif.)Decatur, Alabama
2008Lubbock Christian2-1Mobile (Ala.)Decatur, Alabama
2009California Baptist3-2St. Gregory's (Ok.)Decatur, Alabama
2010Simon Fraser (B.C.)4-3Oklahoma CityDecatur, Alabama
2011Oregon Tech1-0California BaptistGulf Shores, Alabama
2012Shorter (Ga.)1–0Oklahoma CityGulf Shores, Alabama
2013Concordia Irvine8–3Spring Hill (Ala.)Columbus, Georgia
2014Auburn Montgomery10–6*William Carey (Miss.)Columbus, Georgia
2015Auburn Montgomery10–0 (6 innings)Lindsey Wilson (Ky.)Sioux City, Iowa
2016Oklahoma City5–0Saint Xavier (Ill.)Sioux City, Iowa
2017Oklahoma City4–1Corban (Ore.)Clermont, Florida
2018Science and Arts (Okla.)4–1Columbia (Mo.)Clermont, Florida
2019Southern Oregon8-3Oklahoma CitySpringfield, Missouri[2]
2020 No championship due to the coronavirus pandemic
  • * = 1st ever "if necessary" game after William Carey came out of losers' bracket to defeat Auburn Montgomery in first championship game of the double-elimination tournament.

See also

References

  1. "NAIA Softball Championship Results" (PDF). NAIA. NAIAHonors.com. Retrieved January 23, 2016.
  2. "NAIA 2019 Softball World Series Championship Recap". May 30, 2019.


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