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NCAA fencing championships
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The stage is set for an elite college fencing tournament dominated by Penn State since the inception of the co-ed championships in 1990. This time, Notre Dame looks to solidify itself as the new dynasty at the 2024 NCAA fencing championships. 

French Field House in Columbus, Ohio will host the tournament from March 21 to March 24. The entire men's and women’s events, from the opening rounds to the semifinal and championship bouts, will air on ESPN+. 

Notre Dame won three straight championships from 2021 to 2023 following the canceled COVID-19 2020 event. Before that, coach Gia Kvaratskhelia's Irish also won in 2017 and 2018, while Columbia took the title in 2019. The former looks to be the first school to win four straight since Penn State won six in a row from 1995 to 2000. 

Here's all you need to know about the NCAA fencing championships, from channel, time, schedule, and more. 

NCAA fencing championships 2024 schedule

  • Date: Thursday, March 21 - Sunday, March 24

The NCAA fencing championships start on March 21 from the French Field House in Columbus, Ohio.

Date Time Event Channel + Live Stream
Thursday, March 21 9 a.m. ET Women's Epee rounds 1-3 ESPN+
  11 a.m. ET Women's Foil rounds 1-3 ESPN+
  1:30 p.m. ET Women's Sabre rounds 1-3 ESPN+
Friday, March 22 9 a.m. ET Women's Epee rounds 4-5 ESPN+
  9 a.m. ET Women's Foil rounds 4-5 ESPN+
  9 a.m. ET Women's Sabre rounds 4-5 ESPN+
  1 p.m. ET Women's Semifinal and Championship Bouts ESPN+
Saturday, March 23 9 a.m. ET Men's Epee rounds 1-3 ESPN+
  11 a.m. ET Men's Foil rounds 1-3 ESPN+
  1 p.m. ET Men's Sabre rounds 1-3 ESPN+
Sunday, March 24 9 a.m. ET Men's Epee rounds 4-5 ESPN+
  9 a.m. ET Men's Foil rounds 4-5 ESPN+
  9 a.m. ET Men's Sabre rounds 4-5 ESPN+
  1:30 p.m. ET Men's Semifinal and Championship Bouts ESPN+
Wednesday, April 3 4:30 p.m. Highlights rebroadcast ESPNU, Fubo

Where to watch NCAA fencing championships 2024: TV channel, live stream

The 2024 NCAA fencing championships will be live on ESPN+ in the U.S.

A recap show featuring highlights from the semifinals and finals will be broadcast on ESPNU at 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 3. That broadcast can be streamed on Fubo

NCAA fencing championships 2024 tickets

All sessions for the NCAA fencing championships are available via StubHub. Fencing fans can buy tickets for one or all four days. 

  • Tickets to attend the March 21 event are $24
  • Tickets to attend the March 22 event are $24
  • Tickets to attend the March 23 event are $24
  • Tickets to attend the March 24 event are $24

NCAA fencing championships selections 2024

The NCAA men’s and women’s fencing committee announced the following participants to compete in the championships:

Men's Epee

  • Levi Hughes (Boston College)
  • Jesse Ndjeka (Cleveland State)
  • Justin Haddad (Columbia)
  • Skyler Liverant (Columbia)
  • Allen Marakov (Duke)
  • Henry Lawson (Harvard)
  • Mihir Kumashi (Harvard)
  • Jorge Gana (Johns Hopkins)
  • Wilson Zhu (MIT)
  • Valentin Matveev (Notre Dame) 
  • Jonathan Hamilton-Meikle (Notre Dame)
  • Paul Veltrup (Ohio State)
  • Miles Weiss (Ohio State)
  • Tingwei Xu (Penn State)
  • Devin Tafoya (Penn State)
  • Joey Wu (Pennsylvania)
  • Tristan Szapary (Princeton)
  • Alec Brooke (Princeton)
  • Paul Fortin (St. John’s - New York)
  • Daniil Mazur  (St. John’s - New York)  
  • Rico Braun (University of the Incarnate Word)
  • Julian Spier (University of the Incarnate Word)  
  • Thomas Whelan (Yale)  
  • Theodore Vinnitchouk (Yale)

Men's Foil

  • Jack Griffith (Air Force)
  • Jaewon Jang (Air Force)
  • Elijah Onik (Boston College)
  • Zach Binder (Columbia)
  • Sam Kumbla (Columbia)
  • Daniel Zhang (Harvard)
  • James Chen (Harvard)
  • Alan Zheng (Johns Hopkins)
  • Andy Zhang (MIT)
  • Henry Zhang (MIT)
  • Adam Wong (New York University)
  • Farr Dickson (New York University)
  • Marcello Olivares (Notre Dame)
  • Ziyuan Chen (Notre Dame)
  • Edriss Ndiaye (Ohio State)
  • Justin Vogler (Ohio State)
  • Tit Nam Cheng (Penn State)
  • Arwen Borowiak (Penn State)
  • Bryce Louie (Pennsylvania)
  • Blake Broszus (Pennsylvania)
  • David Prilutsky (Princeton)
  • Ethan Um (Princeton)
  • Jan Jurkiewicz (St. John’s - New York)
  • Sanjay Kasi (Stanford)

Men's Sabre

  • Luca Berman (Boston College)
  • Lev BenAvram (Brandeis)
  • Antonio Escueta (Brandeis)
  • Jackson McBride (Columbia)
  • Samir Travers (Duke)
  • Matthew Linsky (Harvard)
  • Kevin Sohn (Harvard)
  • Jerry Pan (New York University)
  • Kevin Zu (New York University)
  • Elden Wood (North Carolina)
  • Luke Linder (Notre Dame)
  • Alexandre Lacaze (Notre Dame)
  • Luca Fioretto (Ohio State)
  • Neil Lilov (Penn State)
  • Kamar Skeete (Penn State)
  • Gian Dhingra (Pennsylvania)
  • Andrew Johnson (Princeton)
  • Matthew Limb (Princeton)
  • Ahmed Ferjani (St. John’s - New York)
  • Hananiah So (UC San Diego)
  • Arnav Raja (UC San Diego)
  • Flavio Vinci (Wagner)
  • Eyad Marouf (Wayne State - Michigan)
  • Jordan Silberzweig (Yale)

Women's Epee

  • Christina Watrall (Air Force)
  • Jocelyn Ratzlaff (Air Force)
  • Tierna Oxenreider (Columbia)
  • Mina Yamanaka (Columbia)
  • Ketki Ketkar (Cornell)
  • Rachel Kowalsky (Duke)
  • Isabella Chin (Harvard)
  • Emily Vermeule (Harvard)
  • Karen Wang (Northwestern)
  • Amanda Pirkowski (Notre Dame)
  • Michaela Joyce (Notre Dame)
  • Montserrat Viveros (Ohio State)
  • Yeva Mazur (Ohio State)
  • Kateryna Chorniy (Penn State)
  • Jaclyn Khrol (Penn State)
  • Grace Hu (Pennsylvania)
  • Jessica Lin (Princeton)
  • Ariana Rausch (Princeton)
  • Nicole Feygin (St. John’s - New York)
  • Elisa Treglia (St. John’s - New York)
  • Irene Yeu (Stanford)
  • Renee Zuhars (UC San Diego)
  • Alexa Drovetsky (Yale)
  • Amanda O'Donnell (Yale)

Women's Foil

  • Anika Breker (Brown)
  • Rachael Kim (Columbia)
  • Evelyn Cheng (Columbia)
  • Charlotte Koenig (Duke)
  • Christina Ferrari (Duke)
  • Jessica Guo (Harvard)
  • Lauren Scruggs (Harvard)
  • Karina Vasile (Northwestern)
  • Josephina Conway (Notre Dame)
  • Rebeca Candescu (Notre Dame)
  • Alina Lee (Ohio State)
  • Dariia Myroniuk (Ohio State)
  • Samantha Catantan (Penn State)
  • Arianna Proietti (Penn State)
  • Katina Proestakis Ortiz (Pennsylvania)
  • Sabrina Cho (Pennsylvania)
  • Elizabeth He (Princeton)
  • Malwina Kołodziejczyk (St. John’s - New York)
  • Arrianna Cao (Stanford)
  • Crystal Qian (Stanford)
  • Anna Novoseltseva (Temple)
  • Ludovica Mancini (Wayne State - Michigan)
  • Kristina Petrova (Yale)
  • Helen Tan (Yale)

Women's Sabre

  • Maggie Shealy (Brandeis)
  • Alexandra Tzou (Brown)
  • Vera Kong (Columbia)
  • Tamar Gordon (Columbia)
  • Isabella Carvahlo (Cornell)
  • Stella Berman (Cornell)
  • Natalie Olsen (Duke)
  • Kunling Tong (Duke)
  • Zoe Kim (Harvard)
  • Chloe Williams (Harvard)
  • Sophia Kovacs (North Carolina)
  • Megumi Oishi (Northwestern)
  • Levi Hoogendoorn (Northwestern)
  • Jadeyn Williams (Notre Dame)
  • Atara Greenbaum (Notre Dame)
  • Aleksandra Strzalkowski (Penn State)
  • Ryan Jenkins (Princeton)
  • Alexandra Lee (Princeton)
  • Julia Cieslar (St. John’s - New York)
  • Catinca Dumitru (St. John’s - New York)
  • Joy Yun (Stanford)
  • Casey Chan (Stanford)
  • Lauren Johnson (Temple)
  • Sydney Hirsch (Yale)

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    Author(s)
    Daniel Yanofsky Photo

    Daniel Yanofsky is the Combat Sports Editor for The Sporting News since late 2021. Prior to working for TSN, Daniel provided insight on combat sports for Fightful, FIGHT SPORTS, and Wrestling Inc. A proud Ithaca College alum, when he isn’t working on his golf game, Daniel is advocating for three-minute rounds in women's boxing.

    You can follow him on Twitter via @DanYanofsky.