The NJIT Highlanders, formerly the New Jersey Tech Highlanders, are the varsity sport members of the Division I NCAA-affiliated sports teams of New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT). There are ten men's teams, seven women's teams, and three club teams along with a variety of intramural teams. The school's primary conference is the Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN). In November, 2017 NJIT opened the Wellness and Events Center (WEC) which incorporates upgraded facilities for most Division 1 sports including a 3,500 seat arena for Basketball and Volleyball.
Video NJIT Highlanders
Behind the Highlander name and logo
NJIT is located in an area of Newark presently known as University Heights, and formerly known as the Newark Highlands. In addition, NJIT's mailing address used to be High Street until the street was renamed in memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. These various references to 'High' are, in large measure, what led the school's students to choose The Highlander as its mascot. Upon moving up to NCAA Division I in 2006 -07, NJIT athletics updated its graphics. This included a new logo which depicts a stylized Scottish Highlander warrior in traditional garb.
Maps NJIT Highlanders
Sports sponsored
A member of the Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN), NJIT sponsors teams in ten men's, seven women's, and one coed NCAA sanctioned sports.
Move to Division I
NJIT athletics moved to the top level of college athletics, NCAA Division I, in 2006.
Prior to the entire reclassification of the athletics program, all programs competed in the Division II level. In the process of reclassification, both men's and women's soccer programs are taking the big leap into Division I faster than the other programs. They have a unique opportunity that allows lower division schools to elevate one sport in each gender to Division I in a process that takes two years to complete. NJIT men's soccer became a full member of NCAA Division I at the start of the 2005 season, when the Highlanders arrived at championship eligibility. The men's journey to the top level began in 2003. NJIT women's soccer began a similar two-year process in 2005, with full Division I status and championship eligibility arriving with the 2007 season.
Advancing the entire program however takes four years to complete and the process includes application, a detailed strategic plan and in-depth annual review of the institution's progress in moving toward its goal of complying with NCAA Division I rules and building a strong, broad-based athletics program.
Along the way, scholarship and operating budgets have been enhanced, with expanded coaching staffs, increased scholarship dollars and upgraded facilities for competition and practice.
NJIT athletics officially gained across-the-board active membership in NCAA Division I, beginning September 1, 2009.
NJIT was left behind in the early-2010s conference realignment cycle, not being invited to join any D-I conference as an all-sports member following the 2013 demise of the Great West Conference. The Highlanders then became the only Division I basketball independent, a status it maintained until being invited to join the Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) effective with the 2015-16 school year.
Between the demise of the Great West and NJIT's July 2015 arrival in the ASUN, the Highlanders competed as an associate member in several Division I conferences for the following sports:
- Men's Soccer: Competed as an independent in the 2013 season, then became a single-sport member of the Sun Belt Conference in the 2014 and 2015 seasons before joining the ASUN in 2016.
- Men's Swimming & Diving (Coastal Collegiate Swimming Association, known as Coastal Collegiate Sports Association since October 2015) (CCSA)
- Women's Tennis: America East Conference
- Men's Volleyball: Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association (EIVA)
- Men's Cross Country, Indoor Track & Outdoor Track: Intercollegiate Association of Amateur Athletes of America (IC4A)
- Women's Cross Country, Indoor Track & Outdoor Track Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC)
The track and cross country teams for both sexes, plus the women's tennis team, joined the ASUN along with the rest of the athletic program. The men's soccer team remained in the Sun Belt Conference for the 2015 season until joining the ASUN in 2016. NJIT chose to maintain its IC4A and ECAC affiliations.
Men's lacrosse, which was elevated from club to full varsity status for the 2015 season (2014-15 school year), competed as an independent in that season. While the ASUN announcement made no mention of NJIT's future lacrosse affiliation, it is likely that the lacrosse team will join the Southern Conference (SoCon) at some future time. The ASUN and SoCon have a lacrosse alliance under which the two leagues divide lacrosse sponsorship, with men's in the SoCon and women's in the ASUN.
Facilities
The Estelle and Zoom Fleisher Athletic Center, the home gymnasium for the NJIT Highlanders, underwent renovations in the summer of 2006 which included installation of a new floor and baskets, new lighting, new sound system and new scoreboards, along with entirely new seating for approximately 1,500 spectators after the first phase of renovation.
The home field for the Highlanders' soccer program is Lubetkin Field and is a first-class venue for college soccer. Outfitted with SprinTurf artificial grass in the summer of 2004, Lubetkin Field also includes lighting for night contests, bleacher seating for more than 1,000 spectators, a press box and scoreboard. NJIT just recently hosted a Youth International Soccer Invitational on Lubetkin Field in which Mexico took the championship.
A six-lane 25-yard Olympic Swimming Pool within the athletics center is home to NJIT's division I varsity men's swimming team, while the two varsity tennis squads utilize the newly built Naimoli Family Athletic and Recreational Facility, which includes 4 indoor tennis courts.
While baseball and basketball are important aspects to NJIT's athletic program, their home matches are mainly played off campus at local sports hotspots. In a joint press conference in December 2005, former New York Yankees manager Joe Torre was a featured speaker as NJIT and the professional Newark Bears announced a 10-year partnership that secured the downtown stadium as the site of all Highlanders' baseball home games.
NJIT basketball will also be a tenant of a major sports arena, the new downtown Prudential Center, the state-of-the-art home of the National Hockey League New Jersey Devils. The Highlanders hosted six games on four dates in 2007-08 at The Rock and NJIT plans to increase its presence in 2008-09. An expansion/extension to the existing athletic facilities has already been planned.
Conference history
Most of the Highlanders' programs competed Independently until 2009, when the Highlanders became a part of the newly expanded Great West Conference. In the summer of 2008 the Highlanders were one of six athletic programs to announce they had joined the expansion of the Great West Conference to form a Division I all-sports league that will begin full conference scheduling and championships in 2009-10.
The Great West Conference was formerly a football-only league but has expanded into an all-sports league with the addition of NJIT, University of Texas-Pan American, Utah Valley, Houston Baptist University, University of North Dakota and University of South Dakota. Chicago State University joined the conference in October 2008 making the total full-sports members to 7. The Highlander programs that participated in the Great West were men's and women's basketball; baseball; women's volleyball; women's tennis; men's and women's cross country; men's and women's indoor track and field; and men's and women's outdoor track and field.
The newly expanded conference was not eligible for automatic Division I championship postseason qualification, but the Great West Conference men's basketball tournament champion was granted an automatic bid to CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (CIT).
During the 2012-13 basketball season, the NCAA underwent major changes in conference realignment. The Western Athletic Conference lost all but two members, Idaho and New Mexico State, which ultimately led to the league dropping football. The WAC responded by adding seven more schools, including three of the five Great West schools: Chicago State, University of Texas-Pan America, and Utah Valley. Houston Baptist accepted an invitation to the Southland Conference. With only NJIT left, the conference folded.
Although the Northeast Conference and Atlantic Sun Conference were discussed as likely destinations as of May 2013, it was not offered a spot in either for the 2013-2014 season.
However, some teams do compete in single-sport conferences. The Men's volleyball team competes in Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association (EIVA). In 2013-14 the NJIT men's swimming and diving team began competing in the Coastal Collegiate Swimming Association (CCSA). In 2014 NJIT women's tennis became an associate member of the America East Conference and in 2014-15 NJIT men's soccer will begin play in the Sun Belt Conference as an associate member as well.
After two years as an independent, it was reported on June 11, 2015 that NJIT would finally be joining a conference, replacing Northern Kentucky in the Atlantic Sun Conference.
Club and intramural teams
NJIT, which offers a growing list of club sports, also has a robust intramural program, which makes use of the numerous athletic facilities.
Club sport teams
- Ice Hockey (affiliated conference : Colonial States College Hockey Conference (ACHA Division II club hockey))
- Bowling (reinstated in 2008-2009)
- Rugby (Established 2013 by Alumni: Edison Jakupi, Ryan Finch, Intouch Loomcharoen, & Sal Sorace. (affiliated conference : Tri-State Conference for Collegiate Rugby))
Intramural sport teams
- Badminton
- Basketball
- Cricket
- Fencing
- Football
- Soccer
- Volleyball
Recognitions
Men's Soccer In 1960, NJIT was NAIA co-champions with Elizabethtown College. The game went into four overtimes. The game ended in a 2-2 draw.
NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Recognitions for futility
NJIT's Men's basketball program set the record of the most winless team in D-I history (see 2007-08 NJIT Highlanders men's basketball team) in the 2007-2008 season with a losing streak of 51 games, breaking Sacramento State's old D-I record. This acknowledgment has given NJIT's athletic program national recognition for futility. The unofficial NCAA record was set during its second NCAA Division I transitional season. It came despite a promising debut 5-24 Division 1 transitional season (2006-2007) whereby the rookie team won its first two matches (away and home). With a new head coach (Jim Engles), an entire new team of coaching staffs and additional new recruits, the NJIT Men's basketball team ended a 51-game losing streak on January 21, 2009 with a 61-51 win over the Bryant University Bulldogs ending the 2008-2009 season with a 1-30 record. The Highlanders improved the following season (2009-2010) and ended with a 10-21 record during its first official NCAA Division 1 season.
It currently holds 3 NCAA Division I Men's basketball reclassifying records: Defeats in a winless Season (29 games), Consecutive Defeats in a Season (29 games) and Consecutive Defeats (51 games).
NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Recognitions for best performances
Despite performing way below Division I standard during its reclassifying seasons from Division II to Division I, the Highlanders till this day still hold several Division III Men's Basketball records more than a decade after elevation from Division III. These records include:
- All-time best 3-pt field-goal percentage in one season (67% by Reggie James in 1989 ).
- All-time 2nd best 3-pt field-goal percentage in one season (63.1% by Chris Miles in 1987).
- All-time 3rd best 3-pt field-goal percentage in one season (61.3% by Chris Miles in 1989).
- All-time highest number of block-shots in one season (198 by Tory Black in 1997).
- All-time highest number of block-shots per game in one season (7.62 by Tory Black in 1997).
- All-time highest 3-pt field-goal percentage (min 100 made) by a team in one season (62% on 124 of 200 shootings in 1989).
As of the end of 2009-2010 season, the NJIT Men's Basketball team records stood as follows:
- Division I basketball : 13/104 (12.5% winning percentage)
- Division I, II & III composite records since 1924 : 810/1544 (52.46% winning percentage)
The NJIT Men's Basketball team had a good rebounding year in the 2010-2011 season breaking-even with a 15-15 (D1: 11/26) record to finish second (D1: 9-3) in the Great West Conference Regular Season. The records stood as follows at the end of the 2010-2011 season:
- Division I basketball : 24/130 (18.46% winning percentage)
- Division I, II & III composite records since 1924 : 825/1574 (52.41% winning percentage)
Noteworthy accomplishments since joining Division I in all sports in September 2009
- Senior captain Sabrina Baby led the nation in women's volleyball "Digs per set" in year 2009. She was also selected as an Academic All-American (third-team) by College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).
- The women's volleyball team led the nation in "Digs per set" in year 2009.
- Christian Baumbach won the 101st annual IC4A Cross Country 'University Event' race in 2009.
- The NJIT (club level) Ice Hockey Team captured its first Great Northeast Collegiate Hockey Conference Championship title (Division II) in 2011 by defeating Muhlenberg College 3-2 in overtime.
- The NJIT Women's Tennis Team captured its first Great West Conference title beating North Dakota by a score of 4-2.
- The NJIT Men's Basketball Team defeated the 17th ranked Michigan Wolverines 72-70 on the road in their first match against a ranked opponent.
Notable Highlanders
- Raymond E. Blum (speed skating, class of 1950) member of the United States Olympic Team participating in the 1948 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz, Switzerland.
- Hernan (Chico) Borja (men's soccer, 1977-1980), NCAA Division I First Team All-American.
See also
List of NCAA Division I schools that have never sponsored football
References
External links
- Official website
Source of article : Wikipedia