
226 team wins. 224 individual wins. 111 programs. 149 players. That's what #TeamClippd programs did in 2025/26. The make up of who those schools are, may surprise you...
450 Wins. That's the combined total of team and individual tournament wins recorded by #TeamClippd (programs subscribed to the Clippd performance platform) college programs across the 2025/26 season. It's a big number, we’re proud of it. But it's not the most interesting thing about it.
The most interesting thing is the make up of the list.
The top school in the entire Clippd network this season isn't a DI powerhouse. It's Keiser University, an NAIA program with 11 combined wins across their men's and women's teams. The third-most wins in the whole network belongs to a Division III school. This is a data story. But it's also something else: proof that preparation, consistently applied, works at every level of the game.

The teams
111 #TeamClippd programs won at least one tournament this season. That's 111 coaching setups with Clippd in their corner and came out the other side with something to show for it.
The breakdown by division tells its own story.

The players
For a team to win, it becomes about the individuals and there were some standouts last year amongst #TeamClippd.
Chiara Bothe of Mount Mercy University won six times in 11 events on the NAIA women's circuit. Six wins. From 11 starts.
Preston Stout of Oklahoma State, the recently crowned DI Individual National Champion, won five times.
Ella Cheek of Dallas Baptist (DII Women's), Iver Sokhan-Sanj of Keiser (NAIA Men's), Pinky Chaisilprungruang of UNC Charlotte (DI Women's), and Rasmus Ditzinger of Fairfield (DI Men's) all claimed four wins each.
The top six individual winners in the entire Clippd network span three divisions and both genders. There's no pattern here except one, these players prepared, showed up and kept winning.

The leaderboard
Here's where it gets interesting. These are the programs with the most wins in the entire Clippd network this season, split by men's and women's.
Looking at that list it shows that data-led performance isn’t just for the top DI schools, Keiser at the top, Dallas Baptist 2nd and Washington and Jefferson at sitting 5th. Three of the top five aren't DI programs.

What every level looks like
NCAA DI: Stanford's women's program won eight times including the NCAA DI National Championship (making it four consecutive #TeamClippd National Champions for Women's golf). Texas A&M's women's won five, the men's three. Oklahoma State's men's won four including the Big 12 Championship and the women's three. Howard and NC A&T, both HBCUs competing at the DI level, each won five times across both programs. The University of Texas men's claimed four.
NCAA DII: Dallas Baptist's women's program was dominant. Eight wins across the season. Miles College, a HBCU in Birmingham, Alabama, won four times on the men's side. Simon Fraser won twice in both the men's and women's competitions. Cal State, San Bernardino men's added three more.
NCAA DII: Washington and Jefferson College sit fifth amongst all #TeamClippd programs with seven wins total split between two men's and five women's. Emory University's women's program won five times. Kenyon College women's won three, Transylvania men's won three. You don't need a DI budget to run a winning program. W&J and Emory are making that case every week.
NAIA: Keiser University topped the whole #TeamClippd network. Six wins for the men's program, five for the women's, 11 in total, more than any DI, DII, or DIII school in the country. Mount Mercy's women's program won five times and produced the season's top individual player in Chiara Bothe. The men's added one more. The NAIA's 17 team wins this season aren't a surprise once you understand how Clippd is being used at these programs. The data doesn't care what division you're in.
What comes next
226 team wins. 224 individual wins. 111 programs. 149 players. The numbers are good. But what they represent is better.
They represent coaching staffs across all divisions leaning into data and players using their practice time differently. Programs that decided the information gap between them and the competition was worth closing.
We’re immensely proud of all the teams with #TeamClippd. If you’re not part of #TeamClippd yet, whatever your level and whatever your budget, we’re here for you.