The university has won 6 team and 49 individual national championships.[3] The combined teams have won the NSIC US Bank All-Sports Award 4 times.[4][5] Since 1993 the Mavericks have been awarded the most National Championships out of all sixteen colleges and universities in the Northern Sun Conference.[6] The Mavericks also participate in the Division II Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup national competition.[7][8]
† – Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor.
The Minnesota State Mavericks athletics program fields 8 men's sports and 10 women's sports teams. The men's sports teams include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, ice hockey, track and field and wrestling. The women's teams include basketball, cross country, golf, ice hockey, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, and volleyball. In addition, the athletics program includes the athletic marching band called the Maverick Machine, competitive dance and noncompetitive cheerleading.[9]
Baseball
The men's baseball team has had considerable success in recent years, reaching the College World Series in 2010, 2012, 2013, and 2014. The baseball team has finished the 2011–2014 seasons with average winning percentages points at 0.750 or above. Top players who helped lead the Mavericks to a second-place at the Division II Baseball World Series in 2013 in included righthanded pitcher Jason Hoppe who set the NCAA single-season record with 55 1/3 consecutive scoreless innings streak and righthanded pitcher Harvey Martin who was named national pitcher of the year by Rawlings/ABCA, Daktronics and the NCBWA and was named First Team All-American by those three organizations. Martin went 9–1 and had a 2.06 earned run average as a senior. In 2013 they finished as runners-up to the University of Tampa. The team is currently coached by Matt Magers.
The current head coach is Todd Hoffner,[10][11] who has led Minnesota State to NCAA playoff appearances (2008, 2009, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018 & 2019) including an appearance at the NCAA National Championship game in 2014 and 2019.
Minnesota State alumni who have gone on to the NFL include wide receiver Adam Thielen, offensive lineman Chris Reed, and tight end Bob Bruer.
Minnesota State is currently coached by Matt Margenthaler, the school's all-time winningest men's basketball coach who is a 1991 Western Illinois graduate that has guided the Mavericks to a 330–133 mark for a .713 winning percentage, seven conference championships and 11 NCAA tournament appearances in his 15 years with program. In 2024, they won the NCAA Division II tournament a day after the women's team won their championship, making them the first school in four decades to win the men's and women's Division II championships in the same year.[12]
Women's basketball
The women's basketball team won the 2009 NCAA Division II national championship with a 103–94 win over Franklin Pierce University on March 27, 2009, in San Antonio, Texas. The combined score of the game (197 points) established a championship tournament record for most points in a game by two teams.[13] In 2024, the Mavericks won their second national championship by defeating Texas Woman's University by a score of 89-73.[12]
Prior to 1996, the program competed in the NCAA Division II, during which time they won the 1980 NCAA Division II National Championship by defeating Elmira College 5–2 in the final. The Mavericks earned their first berth in the NCAA Division I Tournament in 2002–03. They lost to eventual East Regional champion Cornell University 5–2 in the opening round. In recent years, they have seen increased success, including two Frozen Four appearances. They were the national runner-up in 2022, losing the championship game to Denver, 1-5.
The hockey program is currently led by head coach Luke Strand, who replaced Mike Hastings in 2023. Before Hastings, the team was led by Troy Jutting, and long-time coach Don Brose. The Mavericks commenced play at the Division I level during the 1996–97 season.
David Backes became the first former Maverick to be selected to the U.S. Olympic Team for men's hockey and won a silver medal during the 2010 Winter Olympics.
Minnesota State's women's hockey team commenced play in 1998. Their current head coach is John Harrington. Prior to Harrington, they had several other head coaches including Eric Means and Jeff Vizenor.
Softball
Minnesota State's softball team is led by longtime head coach Lori Meyer, a member of the National Fastpitch Coaches Hall of Fame who has helmed the Mavericks since 1985. Under Meyer Minnesota State has won one DII national championship (2017), three North Central Conference titles (1987, 1989, 2007) and four Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference titles (2012, 2013, 2014, 2016), made 13 trips to the NCAA Division II National Tournament (1987, 1989, 1995, 1997, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016) and a pair of trips to the NCAA Championships (1987 and 2011). Minnesota State appeared in one Women's College World Series in 1975.[15]
Track and field
Junior pole vaulter Katelin Rains claimed her second NCAA Division II indoor pole vault championship and was named the USTFCCCA National Field Athlete of the Year. She hails from the same high school as former Maverick and U.S. Olympian David Backes, both attended Spring Lake Park High School in Spring Lake Park, Minnesota.
In 2010, senior Denise Mokaya won the Division II Indoor NCAA National Championship in the 800m, winning in 1:51.41
National championships
The Mavericks have won ten team national championships, eight at the NCAA College Division/Division II level and two at the NAIA level before the Mavericks joined the NCAA following the creation of the College Division. The Mavericks have also finished as runner-up on several occasions, including football in 2014 and 2019, baseball in 2013, and men's ice hockey in 2022.
Minnesota State University hosted the summer training camp[16] for the Minnesota Vikings from 1966 to 2017, before the team moved camp to the Minneapolis suburb of Eagan, Minnesota.[17][18]
^Plummer, William; Floyd, Larry C. (2013). A Series Of Their Own: History Of The Women's College World Series. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States: Turnkey Communications Inc. ISBN978-0-9893007-0-4.