Athletes and sports teams from North Carolina compete across an array of professional and amateur levels of competition, along with athletes who compete at the World and Olympic levels in their respective sport. Major league professional teams based in North Carolina include teams that compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA), National Football League (NFL), National Hockey League (NHL), Major League Soccer (MLS), and National Women's Soccer League (NWSL). The state is also home to NASCAR Cup Series races. At the collegiate and university level, there are several North Carolina schools in various conferences across an array of divisions. North Carolina also has many minor league baseball teams. There are also a number of indoor football, indoor soccer, minor league basketball, and minor league ice hockey teams based throughout the state.

Major league professional teams

TeamLeagueMetro areaStadiumFounded
Charlotte HornetsNational Basketball Association CharlotteSpectrum Center1988
Carolina PanthersNational Football League CharlotteBank of America Stadium1995
Carolina HurricanesNational Hockey League RaleighPNC Arena1972 (based in North Carolina since 1997)
North Carolina CourageNational Women's Soccer League Cary/RaleighSahlen’s Stadium at WakeMed Soccer Park2017
Charlotte FCMajor League Soccer CharlotteBank of America Stadium2019 (joined in 2022)
Carolina ChaosPremier Lacrosse League CharlotteAmerican Legion Memorial Stadium2019 (based in North Carolina since 2024)

Baseball

Though it has never been home to a Major League Baseball club, North Carolina is home to numerous minor league and collegiate summer league teams. Many colleges with athletic programs also field baseball teams.

TeamCityLevelLeagueFoundedMLB affiliation
Charlotte KnightsCharlotteAAAInternational League1976[lower-alpha 1]Chicago White Sox
Durham BullsDurhamAAAInternational League1902[lower-alpha 2]Tampa Bay Rays
Asheville TouristsAshevilleASouth Atlantic League1976[lower-alpha 3]Houston Astros
Greensboro GrasshoppersGreensboroASouth Atlantic League1979Pittsburgh Pirates
Hickory CrawdadsHickoryASouth Atlantic League1977[lower-alpha 4]Texas Rangers
Winston-Salem DashWinston-SalemASouth Atlantic League1945[lower-alpha 5]Chicago White Sox
Carolina MudcatsZebulonACarolina League1978[lower-alpha 6]Milwaukee Brewers
Down East Wood DucksKinstonACarolina League2017[lower-alpha 7]Texas Rangers
Fayetteville WoodpeckersFayettevilleACarolina League2017[lower-alpha 8]Houston Astros
Kannapolis Cannon BallersKannapolisACarolina League1995Chicago White Sox
Gastonia Honey HuntersGastoniaIndependentAtlantic League2021
High Point RockersHigh PointIndependentAtlantic League2018
Burlington Sock PuppetsBurlingtonCollegiateAppalachian League2021
Asheboro ZooKeepersAsheboroCollegiateCoastal Plain League1999
Edenton SteamersEdentonCollegiateTidewater Summer League1998
Forest City OwlsForest CityCollegiateCoastal Plain League2007[lower-alpha 9]
Gastonia GrizzliesGastoniaCollegiateCoastal Plain League2002
Holly Springs SalamandersHolly SpringsCollegiateCoastal Plain League2015
Morehead City MarlinsMorehead CityCollegiateCoastal Plain League2010
High Point-Thomasville HiTomsThomasvilleCollegiateCoastal Plain League1999
Wilmington SharksWilmingtonCollegiateCoastal Plain League1997
Wilson TobsWilsonCollegiateCoastal Plain League1997

Notes

  1. Founded as the AA Charlotte Orioles, which moved to Charlotte from Asheville. The Knights have been part of the AAA International League (known in the 2021 season as Triple-A East) since 1993. From 1989 to 2013, the team played just across the state border in Fort Mill, South Carolina.
  2. The Durham Bulls trace their history to the 1902 Durham Tobacconists. Numerous league and name changes have occurred over the years; the current incarnation of the Bulls has played in the AAA International League since 1998.
  3. Numerous teams in Asheville have been known as the Tourists; the previous team moved to Charlotte in 1976 and is now the Charlotte Knights. The current team replaced them in 1976.
  4. Prior to 1993, the Crawdads were located in Gastonia and played under a variety of nicknames.
  5. The Dash trace their history to the 1945 Winston-Salem Cardinals. The current team has been a member of Class A since 1961, and has had their current name since 2009.
  6. The current incarnation of the Mudcats trace their history to the Kinston Indians, who moved to Zebulon to assume the Mudcats name in 2012. The previous team known as the Mudcats are currently the Pensacola Blue Wahoos, which became a Class AA team in the 2021 Minor League Baseball reorganization.
  7. Created when the Carolina League expanded by two teams, replacing two teams that had been contracted by the California League.
  8. Created when the Carolina League expanded by two teams, replacing two teams that had been contracted by the California League. The team played its first two seasons of 2017 and 2018 in Buies Creek as the Buies Creek Astros.
  9. The Owls moved to Forest City in 2008. For the previous season, they played in Spartanburg, South Carolina, as the Spartanburg Stingers.

Basketball

The first successful major professional sports team to be created in North Carolina were the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA), which began play in the 198889 season.

In 2004, the NBA added the Charlotte Bobcats franchise, two years after the city lost the Hornets to New Orleans. The Charlotte team plays its home games at the Spectrum Center. The Bobcats assumed the Hornets nickname after the conclusion of the 2013–14 season; the New Orleans team had changed its name to the New Orleans Pelicans at the start of that season. By agreement between the NBA, Hornets, and Pelicans, the history and records of the 1988–2002 Hornets were assumed by the current Hornets franchise.

Prior to that, the Carolina Cougars of the American Basketball Association (ABA) played in various North Carolina cites (playing in the ABA for five seasons, 1969–1974). Former Charlotte Bobcats coach Larry Brown started his coaching career as head coach of the Cougars.

Professional

North Carolina's first professional basketball team was the American Basketball Association's Carolina Cougars. The Cougars played in North Carolina between 1969 and 1974 and split their games between the Greensboro Coliseum, the original Charlotte Coliseum and Raleigh's Dorton Arena.

Following the Cougars' move to St. Louis it would be fourteen years before professional basketball would return to the Old North State when Charlotte was awarded the NBA's 24th franchise, the Charlotte Hornets. The Hornets played at the Charlotte Coliseum before moving to New Orleans following a bitter dispute between team ownership and the city over funding for a new arena. Two years after the Hornets decamped the Queen City was named as the home of the expansion Charlotte Bobcats who would play two seasons at the Coliseum before taking up residence at a new venue now known as Spectrum Center in Uptown. After the 2012–13 NBA season, New Orleans changed their franchise name to the New Orleans Pelicans. The franchise rights to the Hornets name and logo, plus the history of the original Charlotte Hornets, were given back to the city of Charlotte after the 2013–14 NBA season, at the same time the Charlotte Bobcats became the Charlotte Hornets. North Carolina Tar Heels legend Michael Jordan is the majority owner of the Hornets.

In 2016, Greensboro was awarded the Hornets' NBA G League team, the Greensboro Swarm.

College

North Carolina is home to what some consider the best rivalry in American sports, North Carolina vs. Duke. Chapel Hill (UNC) and Durham (Duke) are only 8 miles apart. This rivalry reaches its climax in basketball but often spills over to other sports. North Carolina State and Wake Forest are also considered major rivals of the Blue Devils and Tar Heels, for more on the four-way rivalry see Tobacco Road.

Other Division I teams in the state include the Appalachian State Mountaineers, Campbell Fighting Camels, Charlotte 49ers, Davidson Wildcats, East Carolina Pirates, Elon Phoenix, Gardner–Webb Runnin' Bulldogs, High Point Panthers, North Carolina A&T Aggies, North Carolina Central Eagles, Queens Royals, UNC Asheville Bulldogs, UNC Greensboro Spartans, UNC Wilmington Seahawks, and Western Carolina Catamounts.

Although North Carolina did not have a major-league professional sports franchise until the 1980s, the state has long been known as a hotbed of college basketball. Since the formation of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) in 1953, the conference's North Carolina member schools have excelled in conference play. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), Duke University, and North Carolina State University are all located within 25 miles (40 km) of one another, creating fierce rivalries. Wake Forest University, another ACC member, was located in the town of Wake Forest, also within the Raleigh–Durham area, until its 1956 move to Winston-Salem, less than 100 miles (160 km) to the west of these schools. UNC has won six NCAA national championships in men's basketball (1957, 1982, 1993, 2005, 2009, 2017) and one in women's basketball (1994). Duke has won five NCAA men's championships (1991, 1992, 2001, 2010, 2015), and NC State has won two (1974 and 1983). The Duke-UNC basketball rivalry has been called one of the best rivalries in sports and the two schools are often contenders for the national title. In addition to the ACC schools, the University of North Carolina at Charlotte went to the NCAA's Final Four in 1977, and Davidson College near Charlotte went to the NCAA's "Elite Eight" in 1968, 1969, and 2008.

North Carolina schools have also won multiple NCAA Division II basketball national championships. In 1967, Winston-Salem State University, led by future NBA star Earl Monroe and coached by the legendary Clarence "Big House" Gaines, was the first school in the state to win the Division II championship. In 1989, North Carolina Central University, which is now a Division I member, brought the title to the state a second time; winning the championship game by 27 points, which remains the largest margin of victory in its history. And in 2007, Barton College in Wilson returned the title to the state a third time.

North Carolina has a large number of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) with long athletic traditions and deep fan bases as well. Ten HBCUs participate in NCAA college sports in North Carolina, with all but North Carolina A&T State University (the largest HBCU in the U.S.) playing in either the Division II Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) or the Division I Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC). A&T had long been a MEAC member, but changed conferences twice in the 2020s, first to the Big South Conference in 2021 and then the Colonial Athletic Association in 2022 (though the football team did not join the CAA's football conference[lower-alpha 1] until 2023). Both the CIAA Men's Basketball Tournament and MEAC men's basketball tournament have been held numerous times in cities across North Carolina. The Aggie-Eagle rivalry between A&T and North Carolina Central University (the state's second-largest HBCU) remains a fierce rivalry across numerous sports and has followed the teams through many decades and across several league moves.

Football

History of North Carolina football

The first major professional sports league football team in North Carolina came in 1974, when the New York Stars of the World Football League was relocated to Charlotte in the middle of the season and renamed to the Charlotte Hornets (although the team was referred to as the Charlotte Stars for the first game in Charlotte). The National Football League (NFL) is represented by the Carolina Panthers, who began play in 1995, and call Charlotte's Bank of America Stadium home. North Carolina was also home to the Charlotte Rage and the Carolina Cobras of the Arena Football League.

College

Appalachian State Football National Championship trophies
Carter–Finley Stadium, home football stadium for the NC State Wolfpack football team

College football is very popular in North Carolina, with many colleges fielding teams. Only two states have more universities fielding teams at the NCAA's highest level, Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). North Carolina has seven FBS teams in all—the North Carolina Tar Heels, NC State Wolfpack, Duke Blue Devils, Wake Forest Demon Deacons, East Carolina Pirates, Appalachian State Mountaineers, and Charlotte 49ers. An additional seven field teams in Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), as well as many schools at the Division II and III levels. Before moving to FBS and the Sun Belt Conference in 2014, Appalachian State won FCS national titles in 2005, 2006 and 2007.

Although basketball remains the dominant college sport in North Carolina, several schools have also enjoyed success in football and other sports. Wake Forest has also enjoyed substantial success in football; in 2006 they won the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) football championship and participated in the 2007 Orange Bowl in Miami. This was the first major bowl berth for a North Carolina–based ACC team since Duke defeated Arkansas in the 1961 Cotton Bowl Classic. East Carolina University also enjoys much success in football. Located in Greenville the Pirates won both the 2008 and 2009 Conference USA Football Championship and have a large and passionate fan base. The East Carolina Pirates were the first back-to-back C-USA champions since divisional play was started in 2005. The Pirates played in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl for a second consecutive year on January 2, 2010. As part of the early-2010s NCAA conference realignment, East Carolina joined the American Athletic Conference in 2014. Elon University made 4 trips to the NAIA National Championship in football game winning back to back championships in 1980 and 1981, and has since moved to the NCAA's second-tier Division I FCS and the Colonial Athletic Association. Lenoir-Rhyne University won the 1960 NAIA National Championship in football, and were losing finalists in the NCAA Division II championship in 2013. The Charlotte 49ers, which are the sports teams affiliated with the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, first fielded a football team and joined Division I FBS for Conference USA in 2015, participated in their first bowl game in 2019. Charlotte will join East Carolina in The American in 2023. Appalachian State University, Elon University, Western Carolina University and North Carolina A&T State University have all made trips to the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision championship playoffs. Appalachian State has since moved to Division I FBS and the Sun Belt Conference. Western Carolina has made one trip to this championship game, while Appalachian State became the first school to win the championship three years in a row (2005–2007). After moving to FBS, Appalachian State won bowl games in each of its first six seasons of bowl eligibility (2015–2020), the most successful such run by any ream that made the jump from FCS to FBS.

Charlotte is also host to the ACC Championship Game and the Duke's Mayo Bowl; both are FBS postseason games.

National Football League

North Carolina is home to the Carolina Panthers of the National Football League (NFL) who play their home games at the 75,000-seat Bank of America Stadium in Uptown Charlotte. The Panthers played their first season in 1995 at Memorial Stadium on the campus of Clemson University in neighboring South Carolina. On February 1, 2004, the Panthers played in Super Bowl XXXVIII, and on February 7, 2016, they played in Super Bowl 50. The Panthers were not North Carolina's first foray into professional football though; in the mid-1970s, the Hornets of the World Football League called American Legion Memorial Stadium in Charlotte home.

Bank of America Stadium, home stadium for the NFL's Carolina Panthers, opened in 1996 and has been the home site for the Panthers since. Since the Panthers first season in 1995, they have won six division championships, two National Football Conference championships and made two Super Bowl appearances. In 2015, quarterback Cam Newton became the first Carolina Panther to win the NFL Most Valuable Player Award. Along with the New England Patriots, it is one of two NFL teams to represent multiple states.

Golf

Pinehurst Resort, a world-famous golf resort, is located in the Sandhills and has played host to several major golf championships including the United States Open Championship, the PGA Championship, and the Ryder Cup Matches. In 2014 Pinehurst's most famous course, No. 2, made history by becoming the first course to host both the men's and women's U.S. Opens in the same year.

Several professional tours make stops in North Carolina every year, including the EGolf Professional Tour (formerly the Tarheel Tour) which is based in Charlotte. Annual PGA Tour stops in the state are the Wells Fargo Championship at the Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, and the Wyndham Championship which has alternated between several course in Greensboro. The second-tier Korn Ferry Tour visits Raleigh every year for the Rex Hospital Open.

Ice hockey

Carolina Hurricanes Stanley Cup awards ceremony at the RBC Center

In 1997, the Carolina Hurricanes of the National Hockey League (NHL) moved from Hartford, Connecticut (as the Hartford Whalers) to the state. The team played their games at the Greensboro Coliseum for their first two seasons in North Carolina before moving to their current home at the Entertainment and Sports Arena, later RBC Center and now PNC Arena, in Raleigh. The Hurricanes won the 2006 Stanley Cup, becoming the first major professional sports team from North Carolina to win their sport's highest championship. After a decade without post-season appearances, and a lack of success, the Hurricanes began to turn around under new ownership. The franchise, working with the NHL, will host the team's first outdoor game in Carter-Finley Stadium on February 18, 2023, as a part of the NHL Stadium Series.

In 2010, the Albany River Rats, the American Hockey League affiliate of the Hurricanes, relocated to Charlotte and became the Charlotte Checkers, assuming the name from the former ECHL team that had played in the city since 1995. The Charlotte Checkers play their home games at Bojangles' Coliseum in uptown Charlotte. The Checkers' affiliation with the Hurricanes ended in 2020, and the team became the affiliate of the Florida Panthers.

Fayetteville also has an ice hockey team, the Fayetteville Marksmen of the Southern Professional Hockey League.

Winston-Salem became the home of a new Carolina Thunderbirds team in the Federal Prospects Hockey League in the 2017–18 season. The new team is named after the former Carolina Thunderbirds of the ECHL.

Motorsports

North Carolina is a center in American motorsports, with more than 80% of NASCAR racing teams and related industries located in the Piedmont region. Stock car racing is the official sport of the state.[1]

A new drag strip, called Zmax Dragway, has been built on the same grounds as the speedway. It is currently the only drag strip in the U.S. to hold 4-wide drag racing events (as opposed to the traditional 2-wide drag races held at other tracks). The NHRA holds one to two national events there each year.

In off-road motorcycle racing, the Grand National Cross Country series makes three stops in North Carolina, Morganton, Wilkesboro and Yadkinville; the only other state to host two GNCC events is Ohio.

Although no races of this category are presently being held in North Carolina, it is home to the only current American Formula One team Haas F1 Team, founded and owned by Gene Haas, based out of Kannapolis.

Stars

The NASCAR Hall of Fame, located in Charlotte, opened on May 11, 2010. Many of NASCAR's most famous driver dynasties, the Pettys, Earnhardts, Allisons, Jarretts and Waltrips all live within an hour's drive of Charlotte.

Two families from North Carolina, the Pettys and the Earnhardts, have had several members that achieved varying levels of success in NASCAR competitions and are a source of pride for Carolinians and Southerners in general.

Lee Petty of Randleman started his family's association with the sport. His son, Richard of Level Cross holds the all time record for wins (200) in the NASCAR Cup Series and was the first person to win 7 Cup championships. Richard's son Kyle (born in Randleman) and grandson Adam (born in High Point) were also drivers. Adam Petty was killed when his car crashed during a practice at New Hampshire International Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire.

The Earnhardt family of Kannapolis began its association with NASCAR with Ralph Earnhardt. His son Dale would become a major star in the sport, winning 76 Cup series races and tying Richard Petty's record of 7 championships before his death in the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. Dale's son Dale Jr. was also highly successful and was considered the face of NASCAR until his retirement from racing after the 2017 season. Kerry Earnhardt, another son of the elder Dale Earnhardt, and his sons Bobby and Jeffrey have also competed in various NASCAR series.

Outside of the Earnhardt and Petty clans North Carolina is home to many other current and former NASCAR drivers such as Junior Johnson (Wilkes County), Richard Childress (Winston-Salem), Ned and Dale Jarrett (both Newton), Andy Petree (Hickory), Rick Hendrick (Warrenton), Brian Vickers (Thomasville), and Scott Riggs (Durham)

Tracks

Once a major part of the NASCAR circuit, North Carolina now only has one track on the schedule, Charlotte. The 167,000-seat Charlotte track is arguably the heart and soul of NASCAR. The track, actually in Concord, hosts three Cup Series events every season, including the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race (formerly The Winston). Charlotte also hosts NASCAR's longest and most grueling race, the Coca-Cola 600, every May. The winner of the race earns tremendous respect among peers and fans due to the distance and the weather (North Carolina is known for extremely humid and hot summers). During race weeks Concord is said to balloon from its normal population of just under 56,000 to over 300,000.

Tracks that formerly hosted Cup Series events include North Wilkesboro Speedway, Rockingham Speedway, and Metrolina Speedway.

Soccer

Charlotte was awarded a Major League Soccer franchise in 2019, and the team began play as Charlotte FC in 2022.[2] The state is also home to the North Carolina Courage of the National Women's Soccer League, who play in Cary. The owner of North Carolina FC, then a member of the men's Division II North American Soccer League but now in the third-level USL League One, bought the NWSL franchise rights of the Western New York Flash after the 2016 season. The NWSL team was then relocated from Rochester, New York, to Cary, moving to NCFC's home of WakeMed Soccer Park. The Courage won the 2022 NWSL Challenge Cup.

The Tar Heels with the 2006 Women's College Cup

North Carolina is also home to several lower-division professional teams. The Charlotte Independence play in the USL Championship, as did North Carolina FC (formerly the Carolina RailHawks)[3] before that club's voluntary drop to USL League One prior to the 2021 season. Two North Carolina-based teams will start play in MLS Next Pro in the near future. The first, an as-yet-unnamed reserve side for Charlotte FC, starts play in 2023, The High Point-based Carolina Core FC, one of Next Pro's few clubs without an MLS affiliation, is scheduled to start play in 2024. Asheville City SC play in the National Premier Soccer League. Additionally the Charlotte Eagles, the North Carolina Fusion U23 of Greensboro, and Tobacco Road FC of Durham play in USL League Two (formerly the Premier Development League, or PDL). The Eagles played in the USL Championship when it was called the USL Professional Division, but chose to relegate themselves to the PDL after the 2014 season, transferring their franchise rights to local interests that launched the Independence for the 2015 season. The Hammerheads relegated themselves from the USL to the PDL after the 2016 season. Charlotte and Greensboro both have women's teams in the USL W-League.

As with other sports, college soccer is important in North Carolina. The North Carolina Tar Heels have dominated women's college soccer on a national level, laying claim to the lion's share of all Division I national championships in the sport. The Heels have also been successful in men's soccer, winning national and conference champions. Duke and Wake Forest have also won national soccer championships. In 2011, UNC topped the Charlotte 49ers in an all-North Carolina affair to claim the men's national championship.

Charlotte has also hosted several CONCACAF Gold Cup matches at Bank of America Stadium.

Swimming

Over the last two decades, North Carolina has become a rising power in the world of professional and amateur swimming. As with many other components of North Carolina's sport culture, this rise began on the college campuses of the Old North State. North Carolina State University, Duke University, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill all field varsity swimming and diving teams at the Division I level. The men's program at NC State has enjoyed the most success, bringing home 25 Atlantic Coast Conference Championships, more than any other ACC team.

NC State's men have also boasted 75 All-Americans and 9 Olympians, including Cullen Jones, the first African-American world record holder in swimming and gold medalist at the 2008 Beijing Games in the men's 4 × 100 meter freestyle relay. The women's team has won two ACC Championships and sent one athlete to the Olympics. Recently, Wolfpack Diver Kristen Davies won the NCAA title in platform diving. The Wolfpack program did not perform as well as in the past during the 2000s; however, the arrival of new head coach Braden Holloway has made an immediate impact on the program. In two seasons, Holloway has guided the Pack back to top 25 national rankings and relevance in the ACC. The Tar Heels, meanwhile, have won several conference titles as well. The University of North Carolina at Wilmington has won several Colonial Athletic Association titles.

In 2008, former Auburn University head swim coach David Marsh arrived to take the helm of USA Swimming's first center of excellence at SwimMAC Carolina (formerly Mecklenburg Aquatic Club) in Charlotte. Under his guidance, SwimMAC has been named USA Swimming's club of the year and is widely regarded as one of the best programs in the country. In 2012, SwimMAC's "Team Elite", personally coached by Marsh, produced five Olympians: Nick Thoman, Micah Lawrence, Kara Lynn Joyce, Davis Tarwater, and Cullen Jones. Many other Team Elite members have made the US National team. Winston-Salem native Kathleen Baker won silver in the Women's 100 meter backstroke and gold in the Women's 4 × 100 meter medley relay at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.[4]

The Greensboro Coliseum Complex opened the 78,000 square-foot Greensboro Aquatic Center in August 2011, with seating for 2,500 people.[5][6][7] The venue hosted the 2012 U.S. Masters Swimming Spring National Championship.[8]

In addition to the Greensboro Aquatic Center, North Carolina boasts a large variety of competition swimming & diving centers. This includes the Triangle Aquatic Center, Koury Natatorium, Taishoff Aquatics Pavilion, Mecklenberg County Aquatic Center, and the Willis R. Casey Aquatic Center. In 2014, USA swimming ranked Raleigh & Durham as the 3rd best swimming city in the United States. [9]

Other sports

Carmichael Arena; home of UNC women's basketball, volleyball, gymnastics, and men's wrestling

In recent years lacrosse has experienced a period of steady growth in North Carolina that has seen high schools in the three main metropolitan areas add the sport to their programs, this growth culminated in Charlotte being awarded a Major League Lacrosse expansion team named the Charlotte Hounds, the first professional outdoor lacrosse team in the South. An indoor lacrosse team, Charlotte Copperheads, played in the Professional Lacrosse League's only season in 2012. Duke and North Carolina field lacrosse teams for both sexes; both of the schools' men's teams have won national championships—North Carolina had been the westernmost school to win the men's national championship until Denver won the 2015 title—and the North Carolina women have also won national championships. The Tar Heels won both the men's and women's titles in 2016. Full Division I member High Point, transitional D-I member Queens, and five schools in the Division II Conference Carolinas also play lacrosse.

Rugby union is seeing a major increase in popularity in North Carolina and the Southeastern United States, with the NCYRU's JV and Varsity all-star squads winning the regional southeast RAST (Rugby All Star Tournament) in 2014, with both teams undefeated in the tournament.

Softball is popular at the collegiate, scholastic, and recreational levels. North Carolina and NC State field women's gymnastics teams in the East Atlantic Gymnastics League, which both have each won four times. The state is home to nine NCAA Women's Field Hockey Championship titles with North Carolina winning six and Wake Forest winning three.

From the 1930s to the early 1990s, the Mid Atlantic Championship Wrestling professional wrestling promotion, under the Crockett family, operated almost entirely out of Charlotte. Mid Atlantic was a long-time member of the National Wrestling Alliance and many of their top stars appeared on national television on NWA and later WCW events. Many retired or still-current wrestlers live in the Charlotte/Lake Norman area, including Ric Flair, his daughter Ashley (who performs as Charlotte Flair), Ricky Steamboat, Matt and Jeff Hardy, Stan Lane, Shannon Moore and R-Truth. Also, the chairman of WWE, Vince McMahon, was born in Pinehurst, attended East Carolina University, and was married in New Bern.

North Carolina has become a hotbed for professional bull riding (PBR). It is home to several professional stock contractors and bull owners. The Southern Extreme Bull Riding Association SEBRA headquarters are located in Archdale.

Volleyball is a very popular sport at the recreational level and most colleges field women's teams while a few, notably schools in Conference Carolinas, field men's teams.

Ultimate in North Carolina is increasingly popular with youth, collegiate, club, and professional teams all competitive at the national level.

Miscellany

The North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame was established in February 1963, with the support of the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce, "to honor those persons who by excellence of their activities in or connected with the world of sports have brought recognition and esteem to themselves and to the State of North Carolina." The Hall of Fame inducted its first five members in December of that year.

List of NCAA Division I schools

Institution Nickname Location Established Conference School type Undergraduate
Enrollment
Varsity sports
Appalachian State Mountaineers Boone 1899 Sun Belt[lower-alpha 2] Public (UNC) 13,447 18
Campbell Fighting Camels and Lady Camels Buies Creek 1887 CAA[lower-alpha 3][lower-alpha 4] Private (Baptist) 2,843 19
Davidson Wildcats Davidson 1837 A-10[lower-alpha 5] Private (Presbyterian) 1,700 21
Duke Blue Devils Durham 1838 ACC Private 6,244 26
East Carolina Pirates Greenville 1907 The American Public (UNC) 17,728 19
Elon Phoenix Elon 1889 CAA[lower-alpha 3] Private (United Church of Christ) 4,849 16
Gardner–Webb Runnin' Bulldogs Boiling Springs 1905 Big South[lower-alpha 6] Private (Baptist) ~4,000 19
High Point Panthers High Point 1924 Big South[lower-alpha 7] Private (Methodist) 2,699 14
North Carolina A&T Aggies Greensboro 1891 CAA[lower-alpha 3] Public (UNC) 9,735 11
North Carolina Central Eagles Durham 1910 MEAC Public (UNC) 8,600 16
North Carolina State Wolfpack Raleigh 1887 ACC[lower-alpha 8] Public (UNC) 23,730 26
Queens Royals Charlotte 1857 ASUN Private (Presbyterian) 2,463 30[lower-alpha 9]
UNC Chapel Hill (North Carolina) Tar Heels Chapel Hill 1789 ACC[lower-alpha 10] Public (UNC) 16,764 28
UNC Charlotte (Charlotte) 49ers Charlotte 1946 The American Public (UNC) 16,584 12
UNC Greensboro Spartans Greensboro 1891 SoCon Public (UNC) 12,291 16
UNC Wilmington (UNCW) Seahawks Wilmington 1947 CAA[lower-alpha 11] Public (UNC) 10,581 19
Wake Forest Demon Deacons Winston-Salem 1834 ACC Private (Baptist) 4,231 18
Western Carolina Catamounts Cullowhee 1889 SoCon Public (UNC) 8,891 13

Notes:

  1. The CAA football conference, branded as CAA Football, is administered by the multi-sports CAA but is a legally separate entity.
  2. Appalachian State competes in the Southern Conference in wrestling and the Mid-American Conference in field hockey.
  3. 1 2 3 The CAA football league, branded as CAA Football, is legally a separate entity from the all-sports CAA.
  4. Campbell men's wrestling competes in the Southern Conference.
  5. Davidson football competes in the Pioneer Football League, and the school's men's wrestling program competes in the Southern Conference.
  6. Gardner–Webb is a member of the Coastal Collegiate Sports Association for men's and women's swimming.
  7. High Point is a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference for men's lacrosse.
  8. NC State has affiliations outside the ACC in two non-ACC sports—women's gymnastics in the East Atlantic Gymnastics League and rifle in the Great America Rifle Conference. The ACC will start sponsoring women's gymnastics in the 2023–24 school year.
  9. Includes the following sports not recognized by the NCAA: cheerleading (coed), dance team (all-female), men's rugby, and men's triathlon.
  10. North Carolina competes in the East Atlantic Gymnastics League in women's gymnastics. The ACC will start sponsoring women's gymnastics in the 2023–24 school year.
  11. Beach volleyball competes in the ASUN Conference.

Team list

SportTeamLeague
Baseball Asheville TouristsMinor League Baseball (High-A); South Atlantic League
Carolina MudcatsMinor League Baseball (Low-A); Carolina League
Charlotte KnightsMinor League Baseball (AAA); International League
Down East Wood DucksMinor League Baseball (Low-A); Carolina League
Durham BullsMinor League Baseball (AAA); International League
Fayetteville WoodpeckersMinor League Baseball (Low-A); Carolina League
Greensboro GrasshoppersMinor League Baseball (High-A); South Atlantic League
Hickory CrawdadsMinor League Baseball (High-A); South Atlantic League
Kannapolis Cannon BallersMinor League Baseball (Low-A); Carolina League
Winston-Salem DashMinor League Baseball (High-A); South Atlantic League
Gastonia Honey HuntersIndependent; Atlantic League
High Point RockersIndependent; Atlantic League
Burlington Sock PuppetsWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Appalachian League
Edenton SteamersWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Coastal Plain League
Fayetteville SwampdogsWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Coastal Plain League
Morehead City MarlinsWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Coastal Plain League
Wilmington SharksWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Coastal Plain League
Wilson TobsWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Coastal Plain League
Asheboro CopperheadsWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Coastal Plain League
Forest City OwlsWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Coastal Plain League
Gastonia GrizzliesWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Coastal Plain League
Thomasville Hi-TomsWood-Bat Collegiate Summer League; Coastal Plain League
Basketball Charlotte HornetsNational Basketball Association
Greensboro SwarmNBA G League
Fayetteville FlightAmerican Basketball Association
Raleigh Rough RidersContinental Basketball League
Gastonia GamersWorld Basketball Association
Wilmington Sea DawgsTobacco Road Basketball League
Big TexasTobacco Road Basketball League
Carolina GladiatorsTobacco Road Basketball League
Cary InvasionTobacco Road Basketball League
Fayetteville CrossoverTobacco Road Basketball League
Greensboro CobrasTobacco Road Basketball League
Johnston County NighthawksTobacco Road Basketball League
Queen City ExpressTobacco Road Basketball League
Team HoopForLyfeTobacco Road Basketball League
Blue Ridge BisonTobacco Road Basketball League
Bull City LegacyTobacco Road Basketball League
Charlotte TribeMinor League Basketball; East Coast Basketball League
East Carolina CardinalsMinor League Basketball; East Coast Basketball League
Hickory HoyasMinor League Basketball; East Coast Basketball League
NC CoyotesMinor League Basketball; East Coast Basketball League
Rowan County BullsMinor League Basketball; East Coast Basketball League
Winston-Salem WolvesMinor League Basketball; East Coast Basketball League
Football Carolina PanthersNational Football League
Ice hockey Carolina HurricanesNational Hockey League
Carolina ThunderbirdsMinor league hockey; Federal Prospects Hockey League
Charlotte CheckersMinor league hockey; American Hockey League
Fayetteville MarksmenMinor league hockey; Southern Professional Hockey League
Lacrosse Charlotte CopperheadsNorth American Lacrosse League
Roller derby Carolina RollergirlsWFTDA
Rogue RollergirlsWFTDA Apprentice Program[10]
Rugby union Asheville RFC
Cape Fear RFC
Charlotte Barbarians
Charlotte Royals
Charlotte Valkyrie
Charlotte Rugby ClubRugby Super League
Clayton RFC
Eno River RFC
Gastonia RFC
Raleigh RFC
Triad RFC
Soccer Charlotte FCMajor League Soccer
North Carolina CourageNational Women's Soccer League
Charlotte IndependenceUSL Championship
Charlotte (from 2023)MLS Next Pro
Carolina Core FC (from 2024)MLS Next Pro
North Carolina FCUSL League One
Stumptown AthleticNational Independent Soccer Association
Charlotte EaglesUSL League Two
North Carolina Fusion U23USL League Two
Tobacco Road FCUSL League Two
Carolina Lady DynamoWomen's Premier Soccer League
Carolina RapidsWomen's Premier Soccer League
Lake Norman EclipseWomen's Premier Soccer League
Oak City UnitedWomen's Premier Soccer League

Venues

See List of sports venues in North Carolina

References

  1. Tovar, Sergio (June 27, 2011). "N.C. adopts stock car racing as official sport". The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved July 24, 2011.
  2. Newton, David (December 17, 2019). "Charlotte gets MLS' 30th franchise for record $325 mill ion". ESPN. Retrieved December 17, 2019.
  3. Brisendine, Steve (December 7, 2016). "Carolina Railhawks rebrand to North Carolina FC, set sights on MLS". MLSsoccer.com.
  4. Lowe, Kegan (August 9, 2016). "Winston-Salem's Kathleen Baker takes silver in 100m backstroke". Winston-Salem Journal. Retrieved August 17, 2016.
  5. Brown, Andrew (December 16, 2009). "Aquatic Center Coming to Coliseum Complex". Greensboro Coliseum Complex. Archived from the original on January 25, 2013. Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  6. Lehmert, Amanda (December 16, 2009). "Aquatics center could open in 2011". News & Record. Greensboro, North Carolina. Retrieved June 24, 2011.
  7. "Greensboro Aquatic Center" (PDF). Greensboro-NC.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 16, 2010. Retrieved July 24, 2011.
  8. Brown, Andrew (September 20, 2010). "Greensboro To Host 2012 U.S. Masters Swimming Spring National Championships". Greensboro-NC.gov. Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  9. "USA Swimming lists top 50 swim cities in U.S." July 14, 2014.
  10. Razorbomb, Roxi. "Fayetteville Roller Derby". Fayetteville Roller Derby. Retrieved October 3, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.