The Carleton Ravens are the athletic teams that represent Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario. The most notable sports team for Carleton is the men's basketball team. In men's basketball, the Ravens have won 16 of the last 19 national men's championships, which is more than any top division college in Canada or the United States.[1] The Ravens went on an 87-game winning streak from 2003 to 2006. They also had a 54-game home winning streak. The Ravens finished 2nd in the World University Basketball Championships in 2004.
Outside basketball, the Ravens won the silver medal at the 2015 Winter Universiade in Granada.[2] They are also the Men's Water Polo and Men's Fencing provincial champions. The Men's Hockey team also placed 3rd in the province and made an appearance at nationals. Carleton participates in the Ontario University Athletics (OUA) Conference for all varsity sports, except the Women's Hockey and Rugby teams who play in Quebec Student Sport Federation (RSEQ).
Carleton's biggest rivals are the Gee-Gees of the University of Ottawa. An annual football game known as the Panda Game is played between the cross-town rivals. It is the most well known rivalry game in Canadian collegiate football [citation needed]. Since its inception in 1955, the Gee-Gees have won 33 to Carleton's 13. From 1998 to 2012, Carleton did not have a football program so the Panda Game was not held.
Today, the rivalry has extended to the schools' basketball teams, as both universities have men's and women's teams that finish near the top of the standings. On January 23, 2007, the two men's basketball teams faced off at Scotiabank Place, now known as Canadian Tire Centre, in front of nearly 9,720 spectators, which was a record crowd for a regular season U Sports basketball game. The Ottawa Gee-Gees won the inaugural event 64–62. The event, now known as the Capital Hoops Classic, has been expanded to include the women's teams as well, with the Classic featuring a doubleheader of both teams. The January 28, 2009 edition of the game broke the 2007 record with 10,523 fans attending the two games, with both of Carleton's teams posting victories over Ottawa.[3] In the 2013–14 season the teams faced each other both in the provincial and national finals, with uOttawa winning the OUA championship and Carleton winning the national title. In 2014–15, the two teams met again in the national championship game, with Carleton once again winning.
The rivalry also extends to Men's Rugby where the two teams play annually around Halloween for the Pumpkin Bowl Trophy. Started in 2015, the two teams have played this match almost every year since, taking turns hosting, but Carleton has never won this trophy.
The Ravens have won 17 of the last 20 national championships (2003 to 2007, 2009, 2011 to 2017, 2019, 2020, 2022 and 2023). Below is their regular season record since 1996–97. Of note, they have captured the Wilson Cup 12 times.
Carleton's women's basketball program has become one of the most competitive in Canada, winning their first national championship in 2018.[5] They won a second national title in 2023.
The Carleton fencing team competes on the Ontario University Athletics circuit and has won four women's championships and six men's championships. The most recent women's championship came in 2013, while the most recent men's championship came in 2015.[7] The team's head coach is Kyle Girard.
Women's Results
Season
Place
2011-12
1st
2012-13
1st
2013-14
2nd
2014-15
3rd
2015-16
6th
2016-17
5th
2017-18
6th
2018-19
4th
2019-20
9th
2020-21
N/A
2021-22
7th
2022-23
4th
2023-24
3rd
Men's Results
Season
Place
2013-14
1st
2014-15
1st
2015-16
2nd
2016-17
2nd
2017-18
3rd
2018-19
2nd
2019-20
7th
2020-21
N/A
2021-22
9th
2022-23
11th
2023-24
11th
Women's field hockey
Season
W
L
T
PF
PA
Pts
Finish
2002
2
9
1
14
32
7
3rd, OUA East
2003
1
12
1
3
66
4
7th, OUA
2004
3
8
3
12
38
12
7th, OUA
2005
5
8
1
9
23
16
6th, OUA
2006
2
10
2
18
42
8
7th, OUA
2007
3
10
1
6
55
10
6th, OUA
2008
2
9
3
4
49
9
7th, OUA
2009
0
14
0
7
57
0
8th, OUA
2010
0
14
0
6
82
0
8th, OUA
The women's field hockey team has not participated in U Sports since 2010.
The Carleton Ravens football team returned to the Ontario University Athletics football conference in 2013 after a 15-year absence.[8] Upon their return, the team was led by head coachSteve Sumarah from 2013 to 2021.[9] In 2013, Sumarah predicted his team would play in the semi-finals within four years, and in 2016 the team accomplished that goal.[10] After Sumarah was dismissed with a losing record over eight seasons, Corey Grant was hired as the team's head coach for the 2022 season.[11] The football team plays at Keith Harris Stadium.
Historically, the Ravens football team first began play just after the Second World War in 1945 and was in continuous operation until the program was dropped in 1998.[12] While the team had some success in the mid-1980s, poor performances and a plan by the Carleton Athletic department to invest more funds in other sports led to the sport being cut after the 1998 season.[13][14] In their history, the Ravens won one Dunsmore Cup conference championship in 1985, but lost in the following Western Bowl to the Calgary Dinos 56 to 14.[15]
Former NHL hockey player Shaun Van Allen has led Carleton as head coach since the fall of 2017, when he took the program over from previous head coach Marty Johnston. Under Van Allen, the Ravens program has continued to be a consistently-.500 team into a perennial threat in the OUA's Eastern Conference. Despite a plethora of regular-season success, the program has repeatedly been handed early playoff exits by the arch-rival UQTR Patriotes. The Ravens overcame the Patriotes in the 2019 playoffs en route to winning the OUA Bronze medal.
Carleton also has a soccer team. In 2002, the team lost the finals 1–0 in OT to the Brock Badgers. They were OUA champions again in 2005, but lost in the quarter-finals of the national championships. In 2012, the Ravens men's soccer team advanced to CIS (now U Sports) Nationals and finished in 6th place at the CIS Championship Finals.
Men's golf has had a long history at Carleton. Despite many strong individual performances, the Ravens have struggled to find team success at the OUA stage.