Center Back · Updated 2026-05-20
The typical D1 starting center back in NCAA women's soccer is 5'7" to 5'11", with a working floor of 5'8" for most programs. The floor isn't an absolute rule — it's the height below which the aerial-duel math becomes hard to override without elite jumping, reading, or positioning. Below 5'8" requires the overrides to be on the profile.
| Division | Typical range | Working floor |
|---|---|---|
| D1 | 5'7" – 5'11" | 5'8" |
| D2 | 5'5" – 5'9" | 5'6" |
| D3 | 5'4" – 5'8" | 5'5" |
The typical range captures roughly the middle 70% of starting CBs at each division. The working floor is the height below which the recruiting conversation requires explicit override metrics on the profile.
The 5'8" working floor is not arbitrary. Below that height, the average ball-in-air contest against a 5'10" attacker has the CB at a 2-inch reach disadvantage before jumping is factored in. A 28-inch vertical leap closes the gap; a 22-inch vertical does not. The math is reach + jump = working ceiling, and the working ceiling has to clear the typical women's-soccer cross delivery height (around 8'6"–9'2" at the contact point).
The 5'8" floor is the height at which the typical jumper (22–26 inch vertical) still clears the typical cross. Below 5'8", the CB needs either elite jumping or elite reading (which gets her into position before the ball arrives, eliminating the contest).
A center back below typical range can stay in the D1 conversation if she clears one or more of these gates:
The floor is not uniform across D1. Physical conferences (SEC, ACC, Big 12) effectively run a 5'9" floor for most programs. Possession-first conferences (Ivy, Patriot, NEC, parts of WCC) routinely start CBs at 5'6"–5'7" because the system protects them — the team doesn't concede many crosses, so the aerial duels per 90 are low and the technical demands are high.
This is why "what division" is the wrong recruiting question. The right question is which programs within a division play a style that fits a particular CB's profile.
The floor drops by roughly an inch per division. At D2, 5'6" is the working floor; at D3, 5'5". NAIA varies more widely with regional talent pools. JUCO (NJCAA D1) effectively runs the D2 floor for incoming freshmen.
34% of Brava's center back submissions are below the 5'8" D1 working floor. The split outcome is sharp: among the sub-floor CBs who publish at least one override metric prominently (vertical, 30-meter sprint, or 85%+ pass completion), roughly 41% receive D1 offers — within striking distance of the taller-submission baseline. Among the sub-floor CBs who publish none of the overrides, the D1 offer rate falls to around 12%; most land at D2 or top-tier D3. The data Brava can put on the profile is, in this sample, more predictive of where she ends up than the height alone.
A Brava profile leads with the override metrics — vertical, sprint, pass completion, interception volume — before the listed height. Coaches see the defense profile before the inch and a half.
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