Loyola Marymount Lions Explained

Loyola Marymount Lions
University:Loyola Marymount University
Association:NCAA
Conference:West Coast Conference (primary)
Western Water Polo Association (men's)
GCC (women's water polo)
Division:Division I
Director:Craig Pintens
Location:Los Angeles, California
Teams:18
Basketballarena:Gersten Pavilion
Baseballfield:George C. Page Stadium
Softballstadium:Smith Field
Soccerstadium:Sullivan Field
Arena2:Burns Aquatics Center
Jane Browne Bove Boathouse
LMU Tennis Center
Mascot:Iggy the Lion
Nickname:Lions
Fightsong:"Fight on Loyola"
Pageurl:http://www.lmulions.com

The Loyola Marymount Lions are the athletic teams that represent Loyola Marymount University, a Jesuit institution in Los Angeles, California. The school competes in NCAA Division I and the West Coast Conference.

In January 2024, the university announced that it would cut six athletic programs at the end of the 202324 season: men’s cross-country, men’s rowing, men’s track and field, women’s rowing, women’s swimming, and women’s track and field.[1]

Sports sponsored

Basketball
Beach volleyball
Cross country Cross country
Golf Rowing
Rowing Soccer
Soccer Softball
Tennis Swimming and diving
Track and field Tennis
Water polo Track and field
Volleyball
Water polo

Baseball

See main article: Loyola Marymount Lions baseball.

The Lions have produced 30 future Major Leaguers,[2] including Billy Bean, MLB's Vice President and Special Assistant to the Commissioner, First-Team All-American and West Coast Conference Player of the Year Billy Traber, two-time Major League Baseball All-Star CJ Wilson, and David Fletcher.

The Lions have been to the College World Series once, in 1986, and also recorded 9 NCAA appearances, and 10 West Coast Conference Championships (three Championship Series and seven regular season).The Lions play home games at George C. Page Stadium, a 1,200 seat stadium which has been home to the program since 1983.

Men's basketball

See main article: Loyola Marymount Lions men's basketball.

The Lions burst onto the national basketball scene in the late 1980s under coach Paul Westhead. His teams led Division I in scoring in 1988 (110.3 points per game), 1989 (112.5) and 1990 (122.4).[3] LMU's 122.4 point per game in 1990 was still a record as of October 2010.[4] As of October 2010, Loyola Marymount held the five highest combined scoring games in Division I history. Four of the five occurred during Westhead's career, including a record 331 in the 181–150 win over United States International University on January 31, 1989.[5]

The team's last appearance in the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament was in 1990, where they advanced to the Elite Eight. They would lose to eventual national champion UNLV. Prior to the tournament, Lions star player Hank Gathers died during the WCC conference tournament from a heart condition.

LMU's current men's head coach is Stan Johnson.

Women's basketball

See main article: Loyola Marymount Lions women's basketball.

The Lions won their first ever West Coast Conference title in 2004, going 24-6 (13-1) while beating Gonzaga to go to the NCAA tournament.

Men's soccer

Michael Erush was a Loyola Marymount University Lions men's soccer standout, a four-time All-West Coast Conference (WCC) selection (2000, 2001, 2002), was named First Team in 2003, and served as team captain during his junior and senior seasons. He was named First Team National Soccer Coaches Association of America All Far West Selection in 2002, and was named First Team All-America by the Jewish Sports Review in 2003.[6] [7] During his last three years, he helped the Lions advance to the NCAA Tournament, and in 2003 finished in a first-round bye and national seeding (#13) in the postseason. He was inducted into the Loyola Marymount Athletics Hall of Fame in 2017.[8]

Beach volleyball

The Lions fielded their first beach volleyball team during the 2012 season. The Lions won their first WCC Championship in 2019, which they defended in 2021 and 2022 (championships were not held in 2020 due to COVID-19).[9] [10] In 2021, the Lions were selected for their first NCAA Beach Volleyball Championship in Gulf Shores, Alabama, where they became the first team since the inaugural season to win its first two matches.[11] The team entered the field of eight as the number five seed and finished the 2021 NCAA Beach Volleyball Championship in third place.[12]

Water polo

The women's water polo team was the WWPA Champion in 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2007.

At the conclusion the 2004 season, Loyola Marymount's women's water polo team lost to the University of Southern California, 10-8, in the NCAA Women's Water Polo Championship game at Stanford University's Avery Aquatic Center.

Former varsity sports team

In January 2024, Loyola Marymount announced that it would cut six athletic programs after the 2023–24 season: men's cross-country, men's rowing, men's track and field, women's rowing, women's swimming, and women's track and field.

Athletic facilities

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Moody . Josh . January 25, 2024 . Loyola Marymount to Cut 6 Sports . 2024-01-25 . Inside Higher Ed . en.
  2. Web site: Lions in Major League Baseball. 2020-08-21. Loyola Marymount University Athletics. en.
  3. [#ncaa2010|NCAA 2010, p.39]
  4. [#ncaa2010|NCAA 2010, p.5]
  5. [#ncaa2010|NCAA 2010, pp.28–29]
  6. Web site: Michael Erush - Men's Soccer. Loyola Marymount University Athletics.
  7. Web site: Michael Erush to Head PDL, USA Teams. Loyola Marymount University Athletics.
  8. Web site: Michael Erush (2017) - Hall of Fame. Loyola Marymount University Athletics.
  9. Web site: Lions Win Back to Back WCC Championships. 2021-10-21. Loyola Marymount University Athletics. en.
  10. Web site: LMU Takes Third-Straight WCC Beach Title . 2022-05-09 . wccsports.com . en.
  11. Web site: Lions Upset No.1 UCLA To Advance to NCAA Beach Finals. 2021-10-21. Loyola Marymount University Athletics. en.
  12. Web site: Lions Historic Season Comes to a Close in Gulf Shores. 2021-10-21. Loyola Marymount University Athletics. en.