1985 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship

1985 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship
Country USA
Teams 23
Champions UCLA (1st title)
Runners-up American (1st title game)
Matches played 22
Goals scored 64 (2.91 per match)
Top goal scorer(s) Dale Ervine, UCLA (4)

The 1985 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship was the 26th organized men's college soccer tournament by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, to determine the top college soccer team in the United States. The UCLA Bruins won their first national title by defeating the American Eagles in the championship game, 1-0, after eight overtime periods. The final match was played on December 14, 1985 in Seattle, Washington at the Kingdome for the second straight year.[1][2]

Early rounds

  First round Second round Third round Semifinals Championship
Kingdome
Seattle, Washington
                                               
        
     Hartwick College 2  
       Columbia 0  
   LIU Brooklyn 1
   Columbia (OT) 3  
     Hartwick College 1  
     Boston U. 0  
        
        
     Connecticut 1
       Boston U. (OT/PK) 2  
      
        
     Hartwick College 0  
     American 1  
   Clemson 5  
   NC State 2  
     Clemson 0
       South Carolina (OT/PK) 1  
   Duke 0
   South Carolina 3  
     South Carolina 0
     American 2  
        
        
     American 3
       George Mason 1  
   George Mason 1
   Virginia 0  
     American 0
     UCLA (8OT) 1
        
     Evansville 3  
       Indiana 0  
   Akron 0
   Indiana 2  
     Evansville 1  
     Penn State 0  
        
        
     Temple 5
       Penn State (OT/PK) 6  
      
        
     Evansville 1
     UCLA 3  
   UCLA 3  
   California 1  
     UCLA (OT) 1
       UNLV 0  
   Fresno State 1
   UNLV 2  
     UCLA 2
     SMU 0  
        
        
     SMU 2
       Air Force 1  
      

Final

14 December 1985
American 0–1 (8OT) UCLA
Kingdome, Seattle, Washington
Attendance: 5,986

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 09, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.