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Football program representing Lenoir–Rhyne University in North Carolina, U.S.A. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Lenoir–Rhyne Bears football program is the intercollegiate American football team for Lenoir–Rhyne University located in the U.S. state of North Carolina. The team competes in the NCAA Division II and are members of the South Atlantic Conference. Lenoir–Rhyne's first football team was fielded in 1907. The team plays its home games at the 10,000 seat Moretz Stadium in Hickory, North Carolina.
Lenoir–Rhyne Bears football | |
---|---|
First season | 1907 |
Head coach | Doug Socha 1st season, 0–0 (–) |
Stadium | Moretz Stadium (capacity: 8,200) |
Location | Hickory, North Carolina |
NCAA division | Division II |
Conference | South Atlantic Conference |
All-time record | 546–467–34 (.538) |
Claimed national titles | NAIA: 1 (1960) |
Conference titles | 23 (10 SAC, 8 NSC, 5 CC) |
Rivalries | Newberry, Wingate, Catawba |
Colors | Cardinal and black[1] |
Mascot | Joe and Josie Bear |
Marching band | Spirit of Lenoir-Rhyne |
Website | LRBears.com |
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2012) |
The Bears had no team from 1912–1920 and 1942–1945.
The Bears have participated in five postseason bowl games, compiling a 3–2 record.[2]
Season | Game | Date | Opponent | Result | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1951 | Pythian Bowl | December 8, 1951 | California (PA) | W 13–7 | Salisbury, North Carolina |
1952 | Cigar Bowl | December 13, 1952 | Tampa | L 12–21 | Tampa, Florida |
1955 | Palmetto Shrine | December 10, 1955 | Newberry | W 14–13 | Columbia, South Carolina |
1959 | Holiday Bowl (NAIA) | December 19, 1959 | Texas A&I | L 20–7 | St. Petersburg, Florida |
1960 | Holiday Bowl (NAIA) | December 10, 1960 | Humboldt State | W 15–14 | St. Petersburg, Florida |
Clarence Stasavich has the most victories as coach of the Bears.
Year W-L-T 1907 (0-3), 1908 (5-2-1), 1909 (3-5), 1910 (1-2), 1911 (3-3), —-NO TEAM 1912-1920—- 1921 (2-3), 1922 (1-5), 1923 (0-5), 1924 (5-4), 1925 (6-3), 1926 (7-2), 1927 (3-6-1), 1928 (2-6-1), 1929 (4-5-1), 1930 (3-6-1),
1939* (6–1–3), 1951 (10–1), 1952 (8–1), 1955 (9–0–1), 1956 (10–0), 1958 (9–1), 1959 (10–1), 1960 (12–0), 1961 (8–1–1), 1962 (11–1), 1965 (7–3), 1966* (6–3), 1967 (8–1), 1975 (7–3–1), 1988* (7–4), 1994* (8–2), 2005 (5–5), 2006 (3–8), 2007 (2–9), 2008 (3–8), 2009 (5–6), 2010 (7–4), 2011* (7–3), 2012 (9–3), 2013* (13–2), 2014* (11–1), 2015 (5–5), 2016 (3–8), 2017 (3–7), 2018* (12–2), 2019* (13–1), Spring 2020 (3-1)
The Bears made three appearances in the NAIA championship game during their tenure, winning in 1960, and appeared in the NCAA Division II championship game in 2013.
Year | Division | Coach | Opponent | Record | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1959 | NAIA Playoffs | Clarence Stasavich | Texas A&I Javelinas | 10–1 | L 7–20 |
1960 | NAIA Playoffs | Clarence Stasavich | Humboldt State | 12–0 | W 15–14 |
1962 | NAIA Playoffs | Hanley Painter | Central State (OK) | 11–1 | L 13–28 |
2013 | NCAA Division II Playoffs | Mike Houston | Northwest Missouri State | 13–2 | L 28–43 |
1939* (6–1–3), 1951 (10–1), 1952 (8–1), 1955 (9–0–1), 1956 (10–0), 1958 (9–1), 1959 (10–1), 1960 (12–0), 1961 (8–1–1), 1962 (11–1), 1965 (7–3), 1966* (6–3), 1967 (8–1), 1975 (7–3–1), 1988* (7–4), 1994* (8–2), 2011* (7–3), 2012 (9–3), 2013 (13–2), 2014 (11–1), 2018 (12–2), 2019 (13–1)
*denotes co-championship. The Bears won 8 titles in the North State Conference, 5 in the Carolinas Conference, and 9 in the South Atlantic Conference.
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