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Mizzou Turns in Another Solid Performance in the Learfield Director's Cup

COLUMBIA, Mo. – With 15 teams or individuals representing Mizzou Athletics in the postseason, Mizzou placed 51st in the final 2018-19 Learfield IMG Directors' Cup standings, five spots higher than its average finish over the award's first 25 years (56.12), but down from its back-to-back school-record 33rd-place finishes the past two years. Mizzou tallied 488.75 points, 22.25 points behind 50th-place Colorado, as 11 Tiger teams scored Directors' Cup points.

COLUMBIA, Mo. – With 15 teams or individuals representing Mizzou Athletics in the postseason, Mizzou placed 51st in the final 2018-19 Learfield IMG Directors' Cup standings, five spots higher than its average finish over the award's first 25 years (56.12), but down from its back-to-back school-record 33rd-place finishes the past two years. Mizzou tallied 488.75 points, 22.25 points behind 50th-place Colorado, as 11 Tiger teams scored Directors' Cup points.

"Our student-athletes turned in a record-setting year in the classroom, producing the two highest semester grade-point averages on record, and we had some strong performances in competition, too, so there were several positives across the board for Mizzou in 2018-19," said Mizzou Director of Athletics Jim Sterk. "Our vision is to be a consistent Top 25 finisher in the Directors' Cup standings, and I am confident that we can achieve that goal in the coming years with the outstanding group of student-athletes, coaches and staff we have in place at Mizzou."

After totaling 75.00 points during the fall season, Mizzou tallied 326.25 points during the winter sports season and earned 87.50 points from its spring sports to finish with 488.75 Directors' Cup points for the year.

One of the ultimate measuring sticks is the number of teams that qualify for the postseason and Mizzou had 15 of its 20 programs represent it in the postseason either as teams or individuals. Mizzou Softball earned its 13th-straight NCAA Tournament bid, the longest active streak of any team on campus, while Mizzou Wrestling has claimed eight-straight conference titles and has earned a Top 10 finish NCAA Championship finish in five consecutive seasons with its sixth-place showing in 2019. Tiger Style is one of just five programs nationally to finish in the Top 10 in the team standings and produce at least three All-Americans in each of the last five years.

Mizzou Men's Swimming & Diving registered its fourth Top 11 finish in program history, all of which have come in the last five seasons, as it tied for 11th place at the 2019 NCAA Championship. Mizzou Gymnastics placed 17th in the final poll, while Women's Swimming was 22nd at the NCAA Championships. Mizzou Football was 23rd in the final 2018 College Football Playoff ranking en route to back-to-back bowl appearances, while Volleyball was No. 23 in the season-ending AVCA poll after playing in its fourth-straight NCAA Tournament. In addition, Tiger Women's Basketball and Baseball both appeared in the Top 25 at various points during the year to give Mizzou eight Top 25 programs over the course of the academic year.

Individually, 35 Mizzou student-athletes from seven different programs garnered 64 All-America honors and the Tigers produced 10 individual conference champions with Wrestling earning six league gold medals, Men's Swimming two and Men's and Women's Outdoor Track & Field claiming one each. Mizzou had 47 All-SEC performers and three student-athletes earned season-ending conference awards, with Cierra Porter earning the SEC's Sixth Woman of the Year in basketball, and Jaydin Eierman receiving the Mid-American Conference Wrestler of the Year honor and teammate Brock Mauller garnering MAC Freshman of the Year honors.

In the classroom, the 550 men and women who donned the Black & Gold in 2018-19 produced the top two overall grade-point averages in school history for any semester, registering a record 3.125 for the fall term and a 3.11 spring semester mark. Fourteen teams produced a GPA above a 3.00 for the fall, while 13 teams accomplished that in the spring. In addition, 357 Mizzou student-athletes earned University Dean's List honors for at least one term, 265 received SEC Academic Honor Roll recognition, including 69 SEC First-Year Freshman Honor Roll members, and 101 earned their Mizzou degree.

Mizzou's NCAA academic metrics remain strong, too, as five teams lead the SEC in Graduation Success Rate (GSR) with perfect 100s—Baseball, Women's Basketball, Women's Golf, Tennis and Soccer, and Mizzou's overall GSR of 91 matched its school-record for the second-straight year and ranked No. 3 in the SEC behind Vanderbilt (97) and South Carolina (94). No other SEC program scored higher than an 89 in the GSR. Every Mizzou program registered an Academic Progress Rate (APR) multi-year score of at least 949, 14 had marks above 983, and two, Women's Basketball and Women's Tennis, received NCAA Public Recognition Awards with perfect scores of 1,000.

Mizzou student-athletes, coaches and staff continued to give back, as they spent nearly 3,500 hours through their volunteer efforts at some 70 organizations in Mid-Missouri.

Stanford won the Directors' Cup for the 25th consecutive year, followed by Michigan, Florida, Texas and USC. Every SEC member placed among the nation's top 56 in the final standings with eight ending the year in the Top 25.

The Learfield IMG Directors' Cup was developed as a joint effort between the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) and USA Today. Points are awarded based on each institution's finish in 20 NCAA Championships, 10 men's and 10 women's.

Mizzou's All-Time Directors' Cup Finishes

Year                             Place                                        Points
1993-94                         50th                                           245.00
1994-95                         105th                                         119.50
1995-96                         133rd                                         88.50
1996-97                         119th                                         115.50
1997-98                         85th                                           80.00
1998-99                         70th                                           120.00
1999-2000                     52nd                                           320.50
2000-01                         49th                                           365.50
2001-02                         53rd                                           344.50
2002-03                         37th                                           483.50
2003-04                         46th                                           411.00
2004-05                         41st                                           462.25
2005-06                         48th                                           379.625
2006-07                         53rd                                           391.33
2007-08                         38th                                           560.50
2008-09                         36th                                           585.30
2009-10                         49th                                           454.00
2010-11                         41st                                           535.80
2011-12                         49th                                           458.50
2012-13                         53rd                                           432.00
2013-14                         46th                                           492.20
2014-15                         42nd                                           544.75
2015-16                         43rd                                           501.75
2016-17                         33rd                                           662.75
2017-18                         33rd                                          660.75
2018-19                         51st                                           488.75