Denver won the first NCAA championship in 1954 at Reno with 384 points,[1] 34.4 points ahead of runner-up Seattle University.[2][3] The scoring system has been modified over the years; in 2012, Vermont scored a record 832 points, with a record margin of 161 points over second-place Utah.[4]
The 2020 edition started on schedule, but was canceled in progress due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5]
Team champions
^The 2021 championships were originally scheduled for Middlebury College Snow Bowl in Hancock, Vermont, hosted by Middlebury College. The site was changed after Middlebury opted out of all athletic competition in 2020–21 due to continued COVID-19 concerns.[12]
8 sweeps (GS and SL in same year): Bente Dahlum (1984), Anke Friedrich (1990), Lucie Zikova (2008), Kristine Gjelsten Haugen (2013), Amelia Smart (2018), and Laurence St. Germain (2019), Madison HOffman (2023), Magdalena Luczak (2024).
Alpine Sweep (9): Chiharu Igaya (1955), Marvin Melville (1959), Joch Clough (1964), Otto Tschudi (1971), Stephen Heinzsch (1977), John Skajem (1987), Adam Cole (2007), John Buchar (2008), David Ketterer (2017)
Men's Nordic
4 Wins - Thorodd Bakken, Vermont (1996–98) Nordic Sweeps: Egil Nilssen (1982), John Aalberg (1984), Hans Martin Sjulstad (1986), Osmund Driveness (1987), Per Kare Jakobsen (1988), Thorod Bakken (1998), Pietro Broggini (2000), Ola Berger (2002), Henning Dybendel (2004), Rene Reisshauer (2005), Mads Stroem (2016), Martin Bergstrom (2017), Magnus Boee (2021), Ben Ogden (2022)
Women's Nordic
4 Wins - Laura Wilson (1990–91), Katerina Hanusova, 2000–02), Antje Maempel (2009-10) Nordic Sweeps: Brenda White (1988), Sari Argillander (1989), Laura Wilson (1990, 1991), Heidi Selnes (1995), Lisbeth Johnson (1996), Line Selnes (1998), Katerina Hanusova (2000), Mandy Kaempf (2005), Jana Rehemaa (2006), Maria Grevsgaard (2008), Antje Maempel (2009, 2010), Petra Hyncicova (2017), Katharine Ogden (2018), Sydney Palmer-Leger (2021), Novie McCabe (2023)
Men's combined
All four events (cross country, downhill, jumping, slalom)
^"2020 NCAA Championship Results FINAL (PDF)" (PDF). University of Colorado Athletics.
^"1972 roster (PDF)" (PDF). University of Colorado Athletics.
^"1977schedule1976record" (PDF).
^"Colorado rallies to claim NCAA skiing title". USA Today.
^"Utah to Host 2014 NCAA Skiing Championships - the Official Athletic Site of the University of Utah". Archived from the original on 2012-11-19. Retrieved 2013-05-30.
^ a b c"2014-18 NCAA Championship Sites | NCAA.com". www.ncaa.com.
^ a b c d e"RMISASkiing.com". www.rmisaskiing.com.
^"UNH to Host 2021 NCAA Ski Championships" (Press release). New Hampshire Wildcats. March 1, 2021. Retrieved May 1, 2021.
^ a b c d"Host Sites 2022-2026" (PDF). ncaa.org. NCAA. 2020.
^"NCAA News" (PDF). Denver Takes Second Crown In NCAA Skiing Championships. Franconia, New Hampshire. 1970.
^National Collegiate Skiing Championships Records Book (PDF). NCAA. 2016.