From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Toronto Varsity Blues
Intercollegiate sports teams of the University of Toronto, Canada
Intercollegiate sports teams of the University of Toronto, Canada
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Toronto Varsity Blues |
| logo | Varsity Blues Logo.svg |
| logo_width | 150 |
| university | University of Toronto |
| conference | OUA |
| association | U Sports, CUFLA |
| director | Dalton Myers |
| location | Toronto, Ontario |
| teams | 42 |
| mens_teams | 21 |
| womens_teams | 21 |
| stadium | Varsity Stadium |
| basketballarena | Goldring Centre for High Performance Sport |
| icehockeyarena | Varsity Arena |
| baseballfield | Dan Lang Field |
| nickname | Varsity Blues |
| fightsong | The Blue and White |
| mascot | True Blue the Beaver |
| colour1 | U of T Blue |
| colour2 | white |
| hex1 | 1E3765 |
| hex2 | FFFFFF |
| pageurl | https://varsityblues.ca/ |
| altlogo | 200px |
The Toronto Varsity Blues (nicknamed the Blues) are the intercollegiate sports teams at the University of Toronto. Its 43 athletic teams regularly participate in competitions held by Ontario University Athletics and U Sports. The Varsity Blues trace their founding to 1877, with the formation of the men's football team. Since 1908, the program has expanded across the university's three campuses and Varsity Blues athletes have won numerous medals in Olympic and Paralympic Games and have also long competed in International University Sports Federation championships, Commonwealth Games, and Pan American Games.
Varsity sports
| Toronto Varsity Blues | border=1 | color= white }}" | Men's sports | Toronto Varsity Blues | border=1 | color= white }}" | Women's sports |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Badminton | Badminton | ||||||
| Baseball | Basketball | ||||||
| Basketball | Cross country | ||||||
| Cross country | Curling | ||||||
| Curling | Fencing | ||||||
| Fencing | Field hockey | ||||||
| Figure skating | Figure skating | ||||||
| Football | Golf | ||||||
| Golf | Ice hockey | ||||||
| Ice hockey | Lacrosse | ||||||
| Lacrosse | Rowing | ||||||
| Rowing | Rugby | ||||||
| Rugby | Soccer | ||||||
| Soccer | Softball | ||||||
| Squash | Squash | ||||||
| Swimming | Swimming | ||||||
| Tennis | Tennis | ||||||
| Track and field | Track and field | ||||||
| Volleyball | Volleyball | ||||||
| Water polo | Water polo | ||||||
| Wrestling | Wrestling |
Men's basketball
The Varsity Blues men's basketball team competes in the 18-team Ontario University Athletics conference, in the Central division. The team has won 14 Wilson Cup conference championships, second only to the Western Mustangs, including the first ever awarded for the 1908–09 season. The team most recently won the Wilson Cup in 1995.
Women's basketball

The Varsity Blues women's basketball team competes in the 18-team Ontario University Athletics conference, in the Central division. The team has won nine Critelli Cup conference championships, most recently in 2002. The team won a national championship in 1986 and also won silver medals in 1994 and 1996.
Football
Main article: Toronto Varsity Blues football
The Varsity Blues football team was first organized in 1877 and hold the distinction of winning the first Grey Cup in 1909 and the first Vanier Cup in 1965. The team also won the first Yates Cup conference championship in 1898 and has won 25 overall, which are the second-most in U Sports, but have not won since 1993, when they also won the 29th Vanier Cup.
Men's ice hockey
Main article: Toronto Varsity Blues men's ice hockey

The Varsity Blues men's ice hockey team plays in the Ontario University Athletics conference and is coached by Ryan Medel. The team is based at Varsity Arena. The current Varsity Blues have won ten U Sports Championships. The men's ice hockey team was founded in 1891. The Varsity Blues senior team won the Allan Cup in 1921 and 1927 and won the gold medal at the 1928 Winter Olympics. Conn Smythe (U of T 1920), the principal owner of the NHL Toronto Maple Leafs (1927–61) and builder of Maple Leaf Gardens (1931), chose Royal Blue and White as his team's colours to honour his alma mater. The Maple Leafs are popularly known as "The Blue and White" by many of their older fans.
Women's ice hockey
Main article: Toronto Varsity Blues women's ice hockey
The Varsity Blues women's ice hockey team competes in the 18-team Ontario University Athletics conference, in the OUA East division. The team has won 19 McCaw Cup conference championships, most recently in 2023. The team won a national championship in 2001 and also won silver medals in 1998 and 2003.
Nordic skiing
The Nordic skiing team competes against Ontario universities each year at the OUA Championships in February after qualifying races earlier in the season. The team has steadily grown in size and experience since Hans Fischer stepped up to the position of coach in the 2005–06 season.
Rowing
Main article: University of Toronto Rowing Club
The University of Toronto Rowing Club represents the Varsity Blues at local and international regattas. The UTRC was founded on February 10, 1897, and throughout the years has had many successes, including Royal Canadian Henley Regatta victories, OUA titles, and a silver medal at the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris.
Men's soccer
Main article: Toronto Varsity Blues men's soccer
The Varsity Blues men's soccer team competes in the 18-team Ontario University Athletics conference, in the East division. The team has won 50 Blackwood Cup conference championships, including seasons where they were co-champions and division champions. The team won a national championship in 1988.
Women's soccer
The Varsity Blues women's soccer team competes in the 18-team Ontario University Athletics conference, in the East division. The team has yet to win a conference championship or a national championship. The team is led by associate head coach Angelo Cavalluzzo.
Women's track & field
Middle and long-distance runner Sasha Gollish was named 2015 Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS) Female Athlete of the Year (track events) for her performance at the CIS Championships, winning three gold medals in the 1000m, 3000m, and 4 × 800 m relay events and two silver medals in the 600m and 1500m events, the most individual medals ever won by a distance athlete. She was also named MVP of the 2015 Ontario University Athletics (OUA) Championships after winning three individual gold medals in the 600m, 1500m, and 3000m events.
Men's volleyball
The Varsity Blues men's volleyball team competes in the 13-team Ontario University Athletics conference. The team has won 15 Forsyth Cup conference championships, most recently in 2004. The team most recently won the Wilson Cup in 1995. The team has been led by head coach John Barrett since the 2011–12 season.
Women's volleyball

The Varsity Blues women's volleyball team competes in the 14-team Ontario University Athletics conference. The team has won 12 Quigley Cup conference championships, most recently in 2020. The team won a national championship in 2016, becoming the first OUA team to win since 1976, and also won a silver medal in 1971. Kristine Drakich has served as the team's head coach since the 1989–90 season and was named U Sports coach of the year in 2015.
Awards and honours
Lieutenant Governor Athletic Awards
Five Varsity Blues athletes have won Lois and Doug Mitchell U Sports Athletes of the Year Awards.
- 1996: Justine Ellison (Basketball)
- 1998: Foy Williams (Track & Field)
- 2002: Elizabeth Warden (Swimming)
- 2016: Kylie Masse (Swimming)
- 2023: Gabriel Mastromatteo (Swimming)
Frank Pindar Athlete of the Year
Presented annually to a male/female varsity athlete competing in a sport whose official season concludes with either an OUA or other university recognized championship event, who exhibits the highest degree of excellence while representing the University of Toronto at competitions during the team's intercollegiate schedule for the current academic year.
| Year | Female Athlete | Sport | Male Athlete | Sport |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | Breanna Gadzosa | Water Polo | Michael Chapman | Water Polo |
| 2016 | Rachel Honderich | Badminton | Zain Manji | Tennis |
| 2017 | Bethany So | Badminton | Jonathan Lai | Badminton |
| 2018 | Laura Upenieks | Golf | William Kinney | Fencing |
| 2019 | Emily Principe | Fencing | Jonathan Lai | Badminton |
| 2020 | Rachael Jaffe | Water Polo | Jonathan Lai | Badminton |
| 2021 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 2022 | Chyna Hui | Figure Skating | Colin McCurdy | Fencing |
| 2023 | Winnie Choi | Tennis | Patrick Conn | Water Polo |
| 2024 | Anastasiya Dyadchenko | Tennis | Owen Taylor | Baseball |
T-Holders' Association Athletic Award Athletes of the year
| Year | Female athlete | Sport | Male athlete | Sport |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011–12 | Vanessa Treasure | Swimming | Mike Smerek | Swimming |
| 2012–13 | Zack Chetrat | Swimming | ||
| 2013–14 | Nicole Kesteris | Hockey | Zack Chetrat | Swimming |
| 2014–15 | Sasha Gollish | Track & Field | Eli Wall | Swimming |
| 2015–16 | Kylie Masse | Swimming | Sacha Smart | Track & Field |
| 2016–17 | Kylie Masse | Swimming | Rostam Turner | Track & Field |
| 2017–18 | Kylie Masse | Swimming | Eli Wall | Swimming |
| 2018–19 | Kylie Masse | Swimming | Ezana Debalkew | Track & Field |
| 2019–20 | Lucia Stafford | Cross country | David Thomson | Hockey |
References
References
- "Football History". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- [http://www.ac-fpeh.com/alumni/Olympians.php University of Toronto Olympians]
- "2023-24 OUA Men's Basketball Standings". [[Ontario University Athletics]].
- "Awards". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "Madhav Trivedi". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "2023-24 OUA Women's Basketball Standings". [[Ontario University Athletics]].
- "Awards". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "Tamara Tatham". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "Toronto Varsity Blues All-Time Game Results". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- [http://www.azhockey.com/Un.htm www.azhockey.com]
- [http://www.torontomarlboros.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=blogcategory&id=20&Itemid=36 Toronto Marlboros history]
- "2023-24 OUA Women's ice hockey standings". [[Ontario University Athletics]].
- "Awards". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "Vicky Sunohara". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "2023-24 OUA Men's Soccer Standings". [[Ontario University Athletics]].
- "Awards". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "Ilya Orlov". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "2023-24 OUA Women's Soccer Standings". [[Ontario University Athletics]].
- "Awards". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "Angelo Cavalluzzo". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- (3 July 2015). "Sasha Gollish".
- [http://runningmagazine.ca/sasha-gollish-wins-indianapolis-monumental-half-breaks-course-record/ "Sasha Gollish wins Indianapolis Monumental Half, breaks course record,"] ''Canadian Running Magazine''.
- [https://www.insidetoronto.com/news-story/5556675-distance-runner-sasha-gollish-33-recognized-as-athlete-of-the-year/ "Distance runner Sasha Gollish, 33, recognized as Athlete of the Year"], ''City Centre Mirror''.
- In November 2015, she was named one of the Top 8 Academic All-Canadians by Canadian Interuniversity Sport.[http://news.engineering.utoronto.ca/sasha-gollish-honoured-as-one-of-the-top-8-academic-all-canadians/ "Sasha Gollish honoured as one of the Top 8 Academic All-Canadians,"] ''U of T Engineering News''.
- "Men's Volleyball Standings". [[U Sports]].
- "Awards". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "CIS Championship Results". [[U Sports]].
- "John Barrett". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "Women's Volleyball Standings". [[U Sports]].
- "Awards". Toronto Varsity Blues.
- "Awards Athletes of the Year". [[U Sports]].
- "Hall of Fame: Elizabeth Warden".
- (2016-03-02). "24th Annual BLG Awards: Toronto's Masse, Calgary's Buckley named CIS athletes of the year".
- "Major Award Winners".
- Helen Picard. (2014-03-31). "Kesteris, Chetrat named Varsity Blues athletes of the year".
- Braden Keith. (2017-04-01). "KYLIE MASSE NAMED UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ATHLETE OF THE YEAR".
- (2020-04-08). "STAFFORD, THOMSON NAMED VARSITY BLUES ATHLETES OF THE YEAR".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Toronto Varsity Blues — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report