STANFORD, Calif. - The latest chapter was written on April 18, 2026, at 8:36 p.m. inside State Farm Center in Champaign, Illinois. And, as history has shown, it most likely won’t be the last.
Thanks to Stanford’s wire-to-wire victory at the NCAA Men’s Gymnastics Championship on Saturday night, the Cardinal extended one of the most recognizable streaks in the history of collegiate athletics.
Stanford has now captured at least one NCAA team championship for 50 consecutive years, a jaw-dropping streak that dates back to the 1976-77 campaign. The Cardinal has won 126 of its 138 overall NCAA team titles during the 50-year streak.
Never an off-year. Never a near-miss. Never a doubt.
Instead, at least one NCAA trophy has found its way back to The Farm every season for five decades, beginning on Nov. 28, 1976, when the men’s water polo program defeated UCLA 13-12 before a packed NCAA final at Belmont Plaza in Long Beach, California.
Securing its sixth NCAA crown in the last seven seasons and 11th in program history, the Cardinal men’s gymnastics program showcased its trademark depth across the board and produced two individual event champions as Cooper Kim won floor and Jun Iwai captured vault.
Stanford’s championship dominance and unprecedented longevity are even more impressive when compared to its peers. The nation’s all-time leader in NCAA team championships (138), Stanford remains comfortably ahead of UCLA (126), USC (115), Texas (65) and Penn State (56) to round out the top-five Division I collegiate programs.
Perhaps even more remarkable, the country’s next longest active NCAA title streak belongs to North Carolina … with 7.
Meanwhile, several other schools have produced double-digit annual title streaks in their history, led by USC’s 19 years in a row with a trophy from 1959-60 through 1977-78.
The Cardinal had already come close to extending the streak on two occasions during the 2025-26 campaign, with women’s soccer and women’s swimming and diving producing runner-up finishes in their respective NCAA events.
With the streak now extended to 50, Stanford’s next opportunity to pad its NCAA title count will be next weekend with women’s water polo. The defending NCAA champion Cardinal opens NCAA play on Friday in La Jolla as the top seed.
Other notable totals during Stanford’s 50-year NCAA championship streak …
- 19 different teams (10 men, 9 women) have won NCAA team titles.
- 9 different active head coaches have guided their team to an NCAA team title.
- Women’s tennis leads the way with 20 NCAA team titles, followed by men’s tennis (15), men’s gymnastics (11), men’s water polo (11), women’s swimming/diving (11) and women’s water polo (10).
- Dynasties have been a fixture, led by women’s tennis winning six in a row from 1986-91. Men’s gymnastics (2019-24) and women’s swimming/diving (1992-96) have each made it five consecutive years, men’s tennis (1995-98) reeled off four in a row while men’s soccer (2015-17), men’s swimming/diving (1985-87, 1992-94), women’s swimming/diving (2017-19) and men’s tennis (1988-90) have all produced three-peats.
- There have been 11 years in which one team single-handedly kept the streak alive (women’s tennis = 5, men’s tennis = 2, women’s water polo = 2, women’s cross country = 1, men’s swimming/diving = 1).
- The latest date Stanford has had to wait for an NCAA title streak-extender: May 25, 1978, when men’s tennis defeated UCLA 6-3 in Athens, Ga.
- The Cardinal kept its streak going without interruption during the COVID-19 global pandemic, winning three NCAA team titles in December 2019 (2019-20 campaign) before women’s basketball prevailed in the bubble on April 4, 2021, two weeks before men’s gymnastics repeated as champ (2020-21 campaign).
- On three occasions, Stanford has won multiple NCAA team titles on the same day: Dec. 8, 2019 (men’s water polo and women’s soccer), Nov. 24, 2003 (men’s cross country and women’s cross country) and Nov. 25, 1996 (men’s cross country and women’s cross country).
- The Cardinal’s school record for most NCAA team titles in an athletic campaign is 6, having accomplished the feat twice (2018-19 and 1996-97).