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The York athletic teams are called the Panthers. The university is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference since the 2016–17 academic year. [8]
Nebraska Cornhuskers. The Nebraska Cornhuskers (often abbreviated to Huskers) are the intercollegiate athletic teams that represent the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. The university is a member of the Big Ten Conference and competes in NCAA Division I, fielding twenty-four varsity teams (ten men's, fourteen women's) in fifteen sports.
Kansas. Heart of America Athletic Conference. Bellevue University. Bruins. Bellevue. Nebraska. North Star Athletic Association. ( Frontier Conference in 2025) Benedictine College.
This is a list of college athletics programs in the U.S. state of Nebraska. Notes: This list is in a tabular format, with columns arranged in the following order, from left to right: Athletic team description (short school name and nickname), with a link to the school's athletic program article if it exists.
York's current newspaper is the York News-Times. York has two radio stations that have been locally owned since they went on the air in 1954: KAWL (AM 1370) and KTMX (FM 1970), providing news, sports, music and entertainment to York and adjacent counties. Notable people. Doug Bereuter - U.S. Representative from Nebraska, 1979–2004
Athletic director Fred Leuhring arranged for Nebraska to play its home basketball games in 1921 at the State Fairgrounds Coliseum, which had a wider court and more seating capacity than Grant Hall. Nebraska's first game at the Fairgrounds was a 31–10 win over Grinnell on January 14, 1921, with a crowd of 1,500 in attendance.
The York Dukes were a minor league baseball team based in York, Nebraska. Between 1911 and 1931, York teams played exclusively as members of the Class D level Nebraska State League . The York Prohibitionists preceded the Dukes, playing in the Nebraska State League from 1911 to 1915.
Bob Cerv became Nebraska's first baseball All-American in 1950; Cerv also played basketball and was the school's first four-year varsity letterwinner in multiple sports. Richard Geier threw the first perfect game in Nebraska baseball history on April 20, 1954.