Campbell Fighting Camels and Lady Camels


The Campbell Fighting Camels and Campbell Lady Camels represent Campbell University and are the nicknames of the school's 19 teams that compete at the Division I level of the NCAA.

Teams

A member of the Big South Conference, Campbell sponsors teams in nine men's and ten women's NCAA sanctioned sports:
Men's Intercollegiate SportsTeam ArticleHead CoachWomen's Intercollegiate SportsTeam ArticleHead Coach
BaseballFighting Camels baseballJustin HaireBasketballLady Camels basketballRonny Fisher
BasketballFighting Camels basketballKevin McGeehanCross CountryMichael Kelly
Cross CountryMichael KellyGolfJohn Crooks
FootballFighting Camels footballMike MinterLacrosseDawn Easley
GolfJohn CrooksSoccerSamar Azem
SoccerDustin FonderSoftballSharonda McDonald
TennisDavid JohnsonSwimming & Diving Pascal Molinard
Track & Field Michael KellyTennisMike Stevens
Wrestling Fighting Camels wrestlingScotti SentesTrack & Field Michael Kelly
VolleyballGreg Goral

;Notes

Conference history

The Fighting Camels and Lady Camels are full members of the Big South Conference. The University, however, fields teams as associate members of other conferences for sports the Big South doesn't sponsor. Campbell is an associate member of the Southern Conference for wrestling. The women's swimming and diving team was formerly an associate member of the Northeast Conference until 2007 when Campbell became a charter member of the Coastal Collegiate Swimming Association along with 11 other women's swimming programs as well as six men's swimming teams. Campbell does not currently field a men's swimming team. The Fighting Camels football team began play in 2008 and is a member of the Big South Conference. Campbell launched a varsity women's lacrosse team in 2012-13.
Campbell University became a four-year college in 1961 and began competing athletically in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics. In 1977, the Fighting Camels program joined the NCAA Division I level. Campbell was a charter member of the Big South Conference in 1983, before leaving to join the Trans-America Athletic Conference, which is now the Atlantic Sun Conference, in 1994. Campbell returned to the Big South on July 1, 2011 and competes in all sports, except for wrestling and women's swimming and diving.

Men's basketball

Campbell's basketball teams play their home games in the newly constructed, 3,100-seat John W. Pope, Jr. Convocation Center which opened in 2008 and replaced Carter Gymnasium. Campbell's only conference championship at the Division I level occurred in 1992 when the Fighting Camels won the Big South Conference tournament held that year at the Civic Center of Anderson in Anderson, South Carolina. This win placed Campbell in the 1992 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament and 1992 is still the school's only NCAA appearance. The 16th seeded Fighting Camels were defeated by the top-seeded Duke Blue Devils in Greensboro, North Carolina 82-56.

Women's basketball

The Lady Camels have two conference championship seasons. Campbell won the Big South Conference tournament in 1989 defeating Radford University 58-53 in Radford, Virginia. Campbell also won the 2000 Atlantic Sun Conference championship, held in Pelham, Alabama by defeating Georgia State University 66-49, which earned the Lady Camels a 15th seed in the 2000 NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship East Regional. However, Campbell lost in the opening round to the 2nd seeded Duke Blue Devils at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, North Carolina. Ronny Fisher is in his fourth season as the head coach of the Lady Camels in 2019-20, having taken over after Wanda Watkins' 35-year tenure on April 5, 2016.

Baseball

The Fighting Camels baseball team plays its home games at the on-campus Jim Perry Stadium, which was known until 2012 as Taylor Field. Jim Perry was a baseball and basketball player at Campbell prior to playing in Major League Baseball and earning the 1970 American League Cy Young Award. Campbell won the Big South Conference titles in 1988, 1990, 2014, 2018 and 2019. The last appearance by the Fighting Camels in the NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament was also in 2019 when the team played in the Greenville Regional in Greenville, North Carolina. Former Major League Baseball pitcher Jim Perry played college ball for the Fighting Camels from 1955 to 1956. Jim's Hall of Fame brother, Gaylord, also went to Campbell from 1958 to 1960 but didn't play baseball. Karl Herrmann played for the Camels in the 1982-83 season then later went on to a New York Mets farm club. The Fighting Camels are now coached by Justin Haire.

Men's wrestling

The Fighting Camels wrestling team is an associate member of the Southern Conference. Wrestling was founded at Campbell in 1968 under the guidance of Gerald Brown. There have been 10 different coaches that directed the Camels over the past 40 years. The most notable coach would have to be Dave Auble. Auble was a former U.S. Olympic wrestling coach. The most successful coach was Jerry Hartman. Hartman had a record of 80-39 in his career as a head coach. The team was coached by former U.S. Olympian Cary Kolat from 2016 to 2020. His successor is Scotti Sentes, a two-time All-American for Central Michigan University. In 2017, the team achieved career highs with its first Southern Conference title, five NCAA qualifiers, and the school's first All-American in Nathan Kraisser.

Football

Campbell announced in April 2006 that the university would be restarting its football program for 2008. The Fighting Camels compete at the NCAA Division I FCS level as a member of the Big South Conference beginning in the 2018 season. Dale Steele was the first head coach of the Camels and coached from the 2008 season to the 2012 season. His best season was the 2011 season in which the Camels finished 6-5. On November 27, 2012, Campbell University announced former University of Nebraska and Carolina Panthers standout, Mike Minter, as their new Head Football Coach.

Track and field

The team has had some successful athletes and has had seven athletes earn All-America status:
In addition to its track and field All-Americans, Campbell has also had three cross country All-Americans in program history:

Mascot

Before 1934 Campbell's athletic teams were known as the "Hornets." Other early known nicknames for the program were simply reflective of the school name, like "Campbells" or "Campbellites." The origin of the name "Fighting Camels" is popularly believed to be derived from a statement by early school patron Zachary Taylor Kivett, who approached school founder James Archibald Campbell after a fire had destroyed the three then existing school buildings in 1900 and said, "Your name's Campbell; then get a hump on you! We've got work to do." Campbell thought Kivett said, "you're a camel, then get a hump on you!"