SEC women's soccer tournament Collegiate soccer tournament
The SEC women's soccer tournament is the conference championship tournament in college soccer for the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The tournament has been held every year since 1993. It is a single-elimination tournament with seeding based on conference records and the regular-season champion hosting the semifinal and final matches. The field expanded from four to six teams in its second season, 1994, and then to eight teams in 1996. The tournament expanded again to 10 teams in 2012 and then further to twelve teams after the SEC expanded in 2024. The winner, declared conference champion, receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I women's soccer championship .
Champions
Key
(2)
Title number
*
Match went to extra time
†
Match decided by a penalty shootout after extra time
Bold
Winning team won regular season
By Year
Source:[ 2]
Year
Champion
Score
Runner-up
Site
MVP
Reference
1993
Vanderbilt (1)
3–2*(OT)
Arkansas
Purdy Field • Nashville, TN
Honey Marsh, Arkansas
1994
Vanderbilt (2)
3–0
Auburn
LadyBack Field • Fayetteville, AR
Christine Watson, Vanderbilt
1995
Kentucky (1)
2–1
Alabama
Auburn Soccer Complex • Auburn, AL
Carrie Landrum, Kentucky
1996
Florida (1)
3–2*(2OT)
Arkansas
UK Soccer Complex • Lexington, KY
Danielle Fotopoulos, Florida
1997
Florida (2)
4–2
Vanderbilt
James G. Pressly Stadium • Gainesville, FL
Sarah Yohe, Florida
1998
Florida (3)
2–0
Vanderbilt
Alabama Varsity Soccer Field • Tuscaloosa, AL
Erin Baxter, Florida
1999
Florida (4)
3–0
Ole Miss
Vanderbilt Soccer Field • Nashville, TN
Angie Olson, Florida
2000
Florida (5)
2–0
Georgia
Georgia Soccer Stadium • Athens, GA
Abby Wambach , Florida
2001
Florida (6)
2–1
Auburn
LSU Soccer Complex • Baton Rouge, LA
2002
Tennessee (1)
2–1*(2OT)
Florida
Ole Miss Soccer Stadium • Oxford, MS
Jordan Kellgren, Florida
2003
Tennessee (2)
1–1†(7–6 pen.)
Florida
Orange Beach Sportsplex • Orange Beach, AL
Robin Fulton, Florida
2004
Florida (7)
2–1*(2OT)
Tennessee
Auburn University Soccer Complex • Auburn, AL
Stephanie Freeman, Florida
2005
Tennessee (3)
1–0
Auburn
Orange Beach Sportsplex , Orange Beach, AL
Ronda Brooks, Auburn
2006
Kentucky (2)
2–1
Florida
Anne Ogundele, Kentucky
2007
Florida (8)
4–1
Georgia
Stacy Bishop, Florida
2008
Tennessee (4)
1–0
Georgia
Jaimel Johnson, Tennessee
2009
South Carolina (1)
1–1†(8–7 pen.)
LSU
Blakely Mattern, South Carolina
2010
Florida (9)
1–0
South Carolina
Erika Tymrak , Florida
2011
Auburn (1)
3–2
Florida
Katy Frierson, Auburn
2012
Florida (10)
3–0
Auburn
Erika Tymrak, Florida
2013
Texas A&M (1)
2–1
Florida
Liz Keester, Texas A&M
2014
Texas A&M (2)
1–0
Kentucky
Bianca Brinson, Texas A&M
2015
Florida (11)
2–1
Texas A&M
Christen Westphal , Florida
2016
Florida (12)
2–1*(2OT)
Arkansas
Meggie Dougherty Howard , Florida
2017
Texas A&M (3)
2–1
Arkansas
Mikaela Harvey, Texas A&M
[ 3]
2018
LSU (1)
1–1†(4–1 pen.)
Arkansas
Caroline Brockmeier, LSU
[ 4]
2019
South Carolina (2)
1–0
Arkansas
Grace Fisk , South Carolina
[ 5] [ 6]
2020
Vanderbilt (3)
3–1
Arkansas
Myra Konte, Vanderbilt
[ 7]
2021
Tennessee (5)
3–0
Arkansas
Abbey Burdette, Tennessee
[ 8]
2022
South Carolina (3)
1–0
Alabama
Ashton Brosnaham Soccer Complex , Pensacola, Florida
Catherine Barry, South Carolina
[ 9] [ 10]
2023
Georgia (1)
1–0
Arkansas
Croix Bethune , Georgia
[ 11] [ 12]
2024
Texas (1)
1–0
South Carolina
Mia Justus , Texas
[ 13] [ 14]
By school
Source:[ 2]
As of 2024 tournament
School
W
L
T
PCT
Finals
Championships
Title Years
Alabama
17
7
16
1
.313
2
0
—
Arkansas
18
19
15
5
.551
8
0
—
Auburn
29
16
25
5
.402
5
1
2011
Florida
26
51
12
6
.783
17
12
1996–2001, 2004, 2007, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2016
Georgia
23
15
20
4
.436
4
1
2023
Kentucky
24
14
20
3
.419
3
2
1995, 2006
LSU
20
12
13
9
.485
2
1
2018
Mississippi State
7
2
7
1
.250
0
0
—
Missouri
8
3
7
1
.318
0
0
—
Oklahoma
0
0
0
0
–
0
0
—
Ole Miss
23
8
23
1
.266
1
0
—
South Carolina
23
16
19
6
.463
5
3
2009, 2019, 2022
Tennessee
25
19
18
6
.512
6
5
2002, 2003, 2005, 2008, 2021
Texas
1
3
0
0
1.000
1
1
2024
Texas A&M
12
15
9
0
.625
4
3
2013, 2014, 2017
Vanderbilt
24
18
16
6
.525
5
3
1993, 1994, 2020
References
^ "SEC Soccer Tournament moves to Pensacola" .
^ a b "Soccer Record Book" . secsports.com . Southeastern Conference . Retrieved January 10, 2025 .
^ "2017 SEC Soccer Championship" . Southeastern Conference . Retrieved 5 November 2017 .
^ "2018 SEC Soccer Championship" . Southeastern Conference . Retrieved 27 December 2018 .
^ "Gamecock Women's Soccer Win 2019 SEC Tournament Championship" . ABC News . November 10, 2019. Retrieved February 4, 2020 .
^ "South Carolina Gamecocks win 2019 SEC Soccer Tournament" . Southeastern Conference . Retrieved February 4, 2020 .
^ "SEC Championships - Soccer 2020" . www.secsports.com . Archived from the original on 2021-10-27. Retrieved 2021-10-26 .
^ "SEC Championships - Soccer 2021" . www.secsports.com . Archived from the original on 2015-09-05. Retrieved 2021-10-26 .
^ "SEC Championships - Soccer 2022" . www.secsports.com . Archived from the original on 2023-01-31. Retrieved 2023-05-25 .
^ Holloway, Jeremiah (November 7, 2022). "SEC champs! South Carolina women's soccer wins tournament title" . The State . Retrieved May 25, 2023 .
^ "SEC Championships - Soccer 2023" . www.secsports.com . Southeastern Conference . Retrieved 2024-01-03 .
^ Grieco, Ben (November 5, 2023). "SEC Soccer Tournament: Georgia wins first championship after shutting out Arkansas" . Pensacola News Journal . Retrieved January 3, 2024 .
^ Gates, Billy (November 10, 2024). "Texas claims first SEC title with women's soccer win over South Carolina" . KXAN-TV . Retrieved January 10, 2025 .
^ Bonifay, Anna (November 10, 2024). "Blog: 3-seed Texas claims its first-ever SEC Championship title" . secsports.com . Southeastern Conference . Retrieved January 10, 2025 .
NCAA women's college soccer tournaments
Division I
Conference postseason Postseason
Division II
Division III