Mike Malave
Chris Selva Ryan Rielly
Tyler Begley
2015 MEN’S LACROSSE GUIDE
Brian von Bargen
Finn Sullivan
Korey Hendrickson
Sam Llinares
The Hofstra University Men’s Lacrosse family suffered a tragic loss in January when sophomore defender Joe Ferriso was killed in an automobile accident. The 2015 season and this team guide are dedicated to Joe’s memory. The Joseph A. Ferriso Memorial Fund has been established at Hofstra University in and will be utilized to enhance the Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse student-athlete experience in a way that best exemplifies the qualities Joe possessed. For more information on the Joseph A. Ferriso Memorial Fund, contact the Hofstra Athletics Development Office at (516) 463-1944.
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Hofstra Director of Athletics..........................................................................56 Athletics Administrative Staff and Head Coaches......................................58 Hofstra Lacrosse Academic Plan....................................................................60 A Day in the Life of a Hofstra Lacrosse Player..............................................61 Margiotta Hall....................................................................................................62 James M. Shuart Stadium/Hofstra Indoor Practice Facility......................64 Howdy Myers Pavilion......................................................................................65 Academic Support............................................................................................66 Athletic Training................................................................................................67 Long Island and New York City.......................................................................68 The Program......................................................................................................69 The Colonial Athletic Association..................................................................70 2014 Statistics and Results..............................................................................71 2014 Colonial Athletic Association Review...................................................72 All-Time Letterwinners....................................................................................74 Hofstra Record Book........................................................................................78 Hofstra Annual Leaders....................................................................................82 Hofstra Lacrosse Award Winners...................................................................84 Hofstra Players in the Pro’s............................................................................88 National Team Alumni......................................................................................90 Coaching Alumni...............................................................................................91 Series Records...................................................................................................92 Yearly Records/Coaches Records..................................................................93 All-Time Hofstra Lacrosse Results..................................................................94 Media Information..........................................................................................104 Media Outlets...................................................................................................106 Campus Map....................................................................................................107 Warrior..............................................................................................................108
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Table of Contents................................................................................................1 Director of Athletics Welcome.........................................................................2 Quick Facts...........................................................................................................3 Hofstra Highlights...............................................................................................4 Game Day..............................................................................................................6 Hofstra in the Community................................................................................7 HEADstrong..........................................................................................................8 Nick Colleluori Tribute.......................................................................................9 Alumni Reflections...........................................................................................10 Head Coach Seth Tierney.................................................................................12 Assistant Coach Kevin Unterstein..................................................................14 Assistant Coach J. P. Brazel.............................................................................15 Assistant Coach John Gorman........................................................................16 Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach Jimmy Prendergast...........17 Assistant Athletic Trainer Robert Sullivan....................................................18 Associate Dean for University Advisement Rachel Peel-Macandrew......19 The Hofstra Hundred Club..............................................................................19 2015 Numerical Roster.....................................................................................20 2015 Alphabetical Roster.................................................................................21 2015 Outlook......................................................................................................22 Player Profiles....................................................................................................26 2015 Opponents................................................................................................46 2015 Composite Schedule...............................................................................48 NCAA Lacrosse...................................................................................................50 NCAA Quarterfinals at Hofstra........................................................................51 This is Hofstra University.................................................................................52 Hofstra President..............................................................................................54 University Senior Administration...................................................................55
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WELCOME
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A MESSAGE FROM THE VICE PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
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I would like to welcome you to the 2015 Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse season, the 67th in the rich history of the Pride. We look forward to another exciting season under Head Coach Seth Tierney, but we do so with heavy hearts following the tragic passing of sophomore defender Joe Ferriso in January. Joe was a fine young man and a credit to the team, the department of athletics and Hofstra University. He will truly be missed and the team has dedicated the 2015 season to his memory. Coming off an 11-win season and a regular season Colonial Athletic Association title in 2014, our team welcomes back many key players from that squad including All-American attackman Sam Llinares and All-CAA selections Finn Sullivan, Ryan Rielly, Chris Selva, and Kris Clarke.
As Hofstra enters its 67th season of lacrosse, we look back fondly on all of our previous achievements; 541 victories (one of only 15 programs in the nation with 500 or more wins); 17 conference championships; 17 trips to the NCAA Tournament, including four quarterfinal appearances; 46 times ranked in the Top 20 nationally in the final poll; and the many All-Americans, scholarathletes, all-conference selections and NorthSouth All-Star Game participants.
The beginning of a new season is always cause for excitement and I Jeff Hathaway (left) and Hofstra Athletics Pride Club President E. would like to thank all our David Woycik (right) with honorees Drs. Arno and Mindy Fried at former student-athletes, the 2014 HPC Golf Classic and Auction Hofstra students, alumni, parents and friends for Contending for a CAA title will not be an easy task as the their support of Hofstra Lacrosse. Our mission and goals Pride play a challenging schedule that includes two 2014 remain consistent - to provide our student-athletes with NCAA Division I Championship participants in Cornell and the resources to be successful in the classroom and on the Drexel as well as road games at Princeton, Georgetown, Ohio field. My best wishes to Coach Tierney, his staff and the 2015 State, Delaware, Towson and CAA newcomer Fairfield. The Pride team for a successful season. contest at Princeton will be nationally televised on ESPN. The team hosts seven games at James M. Shuart Stadium with Enjoy the season, Marquette, Providence, St. John’s, Drexel and Massachusetts highlighting the home slate. In addition to the team’s 11 wins and regular season championship, there were many other aspects of the
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program that were sources of great pride. The men’s lacrosse team continued to be leaders in the community through their involvement with the HEADstrong Foundation, the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation and Holiday Magic of Long Island. The team also participated in a number of other community service projects this past year and continues their meaningful relationship with Dylan Beach through the Friends of Jaclyn Foundation. Nine student-athletes earned postseason recognition and the team continued its strong work in the classroom with 20 team members earning the CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award.
Jeffrey A. Hathaway Vice President and Director of Athletics
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Associate Director of Athletics/Communications: Stephen Gorchov Office Phone: (516) 463-4933 Senior Sports Information Director/Lacrosse Contact: Jim Sheehan Office Phone: (516) 463-6764 Cell Phone: (516) 523-6692 Fax: (516) 463-5033 Email Address: Jim.B.Sheehan@Hofstra.edu
Sam Llinares* Mike Malave* Korey Hendrickson* Ryan Rielly Kris Clarke Finn Sullivan* Chris Selva*
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LACROSSE INFORMATION
Head Coach: Seth Tierney (Johns Hopkins, 1991) Record at Hofstra: 73-46/Eight seasons Overall Record: Same Email: Seth.Tierney@Hofstra.edu Head Coach’s Phone: (516) 463-6484 Lacrosse Office Fax: (516) 463-3818 Associate Head Coach: Kevin Unterstein (Hofstra, 2008) Office Phone: (516) 463-6629 Email: Kevin.A.Unterstein@Hofstra.edu Assistant Coach: J.P. Brazel (Hofstra, 2000) Office Phone: (516) 463-6617 Email: John.P.Brazel@Hofstra.edu Assistant Coach: John Gorman (Hofstra, 2007) Office Phone: (516) 463-6484 Senior Assistant to the Men’s Lacrosse Coach: Cathy Aull E-mail Address: Cathy.A.Aull@Hofstra.edu Office Phone: (516) 463-6484 Fax: (516) 463-3818
2015 LACROSSE INFORMATION
Players Returning/Lost: 26/15 Starters Returning: 5 (Sam Llinares-A, Mike Malave-M, Korey Hendrickson-M, Finn Sullivan-D, Chris Selva-G) Starters Lost: 5 (Torin Varn-A, Lance Yapor-A, Drew Coholan-M, Corey Caputo-D, Stephen Satterthwaite-D) 2015 Team Captains: Mike Malave, John Reicherter, Ryan Rielly, Chris Selva 2014 Record: 11-5 2014 CAA Record: 4-1 (First place/regular season)
2014 STATS Cl. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Sr.
GP 15 16 16 16 16 16 16
G - A - Pts. GB FOW-Att Pct. 21-32-53 18 26-7-33 11 17-9-26 27 3-1-4 49 1-0-1 86 189-340 .556 1-1-2 30 16 GS, 8.29 GAA, 133 Svs., .498 Sv. Pct., 11-5 W-L
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KEY RETURNEES
Head Athletic Trainer: Evan Malings Athletic Trainer - Men’s Lacrosse: Rob Sullivan Equipment Managers: Kathy Theiling, Dave Walsh and John Considine (MLAX) Photographers: Zachary Lane, Brian Ballweg, Kathy Kmonicek
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President: Stuart Rabinowitz Vice President and Director of Athletics: Jeffrey A. Hathaway Deputy Director of Athletics: Dino Mattessich Senior Associate Director of Athletics: Cindy Lewis Senior Associate Director of Athletics/Facilities: Jay Artinian Associate Director of Athletics/Communications: Stephen Gorchov Associate Director of Athletics/External Relations: Dino Megaloudis Associate Director of Athletics/NCAA Education and Compliance Services: Ariel Pesante Assistant Director of Athletics/Ticket Operations: Maria Corvino Assistant Director of Athletics/Marketing and Promotions: Chrissy Arnone Assistant Director of Athletics/ NCAA Education and Compliance Services: Alyssa Morales Assistant Director of Athletics/Administration: Rachel August Assistant Director of Athletics/Student-Athlete Services and Life Skills Development: James Lally Director of Athletic Development: Jim Furlong Director of Ticket Sales: Chris Stellato Athletic Department Phone: (516) 463-3800
Assistant Director of Athletic Communications: Brian Bohl Office Phone: (516) 463-6759 Director of Athletic Publications: Len Skoros Office Phone: (516) 463-4602 Hofstra Lacrosse on the Web: GoHofstra.com
H O F S T R A
Location: Hempstead, New York 11549 Founded: 1935 Enrollment: 11,090 Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: Colonial Athletic Association Nickname: Pride Colors: Gold, White and Blue Home Stadium (Capacity): James M. Shuart Stadium (13,000)
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QUICK FACTS
* Returning starter
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One of Long Island’s favorite annual events, the Hofstra Dutch Festival, celebrated its 31st anniversary on Sunday, May 4, 2014.
Hofstra University is a nationally and internationally recognized institution that has been cited on the Best College lists of U.S. News & World Report, Princeton Review, Fiske, Washington Monthly and Forbes.
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The 18th Annual Hofstra Gala marked the establishment of the School of Engineering and Applied Science and the School of Health Sciences and Human Services. This is the most prestigious event the University hosts each year and raises more than $1 million for student scholarships.
Pop singer Ke$ha headlined Vibe Live during the 2013 Fall Festival.
Singer Janelle Monae headlined Vibe Live during the 2014 Fall Festival.
The Honorable Joseph Lieberman, former Democratic vice-presidential candidate and U.S. Senator from Connecticut, was a featured speaker at the 2014 Donald Sutherland Lecture sponsored by Hofstra College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Department of Political Science and the Peter S. Kalikow Center for the Study of the American Presidency.
The Hempstead For Hofstra/Hofstra For Hempstead Scholarship Dinner honored five individuals, including NBA legend and Long Island native Julius “Dr. J.” Erving, and one organization for their long records of service to the Hempstead community.
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WRHU, Hofstra’s student-run radio station was named the top College Radio Station in the country in 2014 by the Princeton Review and also earned the National Association of Broadcasters Marconi Award as the 2014 Non-Commercial Station of the Year.
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Sixty-one Hofstra students were inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society in 2014. The nation’s oldest academic honor society, Phi Beta Kappa recognizes excellence in the liberal arts and sciences.
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Hofstra hosted its seventh annual Relay For Life on April 26 to raise money for cancer research. The 2014 event raised $83K, the most of any college or university on Long Island that participated in the fundraiser, which benefits the American Cancer Society.
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World renowned soccer star Pele was awarded an honorary degree during Hofstra’s Soccer As The Beautiful Game conference in April 2014.
Hofstra University students and staff raised more than $35,000 for childhood cancer research by taking part in the annual St. Baldrick’s Day.
2014 Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse
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The team also raises money for the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation by competing in the Tunnel to Towers Run/Walk in honor of Firefighter Stephen Siller, who lost his life September 11, 2001. The team frequently conducts lacrosse clinics for special needs children, as well as participating in events to aid the homeless, including the Have a Heart for the Homeless Candlelight Vigil sponsored by the Long Island Coalition for the Homeless (LICH). The Pride has
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The team has also joined with the Friends of Jaclyn Foundation and has “adopted” Dylan Beach. Team members and coaches spend time with Dylan and welcome him to home games. The team is also involved with a variety of initiatives with Hofstra’s StudentAthlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), including reading programs at local schools, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Long Island clothing drives, the Special Olympics, Shake-A-Rake and Long Island Cares Holiday food drives.
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Each holiday season, the Pride participates in Holiday Magic, a program that Coach Tierney initiated while he was at Johns Hopkins and brought with him to Hofstra. The team helps collect, wrap and distribute toys to underprivileged children, providing a bit of joy to those in need.
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Hofstra is actively involved in the fight against blood cancer through the HEADstrong Foundation, which was founded by Nick Colleluori before his passing due to NonHodgkin’s Lymphoma. The team has raised awareness and a great deal of funds through the sales of “Relentless” t-shirts and lime green shoelaces. Each year the team participates in the Nick Colleluori Classic at Ridley High School in Pennsylvania, which serves as the organization’s biggest fundraiser. The team also competed in the first-ever Relentless Cup game in 2013 to benefit HEADstrong. The all-day event took place at Ridley (PA) High School and featured youth and high school games during the day and a matchup of Hofstra and Saint Joseph’s in the evening.
helped set-up, sort and pack clothes and goods for both individuals and homeless shelters.
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The Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse team lends a great deal of time to the Long Island community.
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NICK COLLELUORI HEADSTRONG FOUNDATION
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Nick Colleluori, who would have been part of the class of 2008, fought a “relentless” battle against NonHodgkin’s Lymphoma, and while Nick lost his battle on November 28, 2006, his vision had just begun. The HEADstrong Foundation is dedicated to Nick’s life. During his 14-month battle, which included chemotherapy, a stem-cell transplant and extensive radiation treatment, it was Nick’s vision to establish this foundation to raise awareness and help others affected by this disease. He drew the logo as he was waiting to go into the operating room for a procedure. Because lacrosse was his passion and he can no longer carry the ball, his family and friends will carry the ball for him.
HEADstrong Foundation Nick Colleluori Memorial Classic The Pride compete in the annual HEADstrong Foundation Nick Colleluori Memorial Classic at Ridley High School in Folsom, Pennsylvania. The underlying thread of the tournament is lacrosse, but the real theme is helping those in need. Since the event started in 2007, nearly two million dollars has been raised for the Foundation. For more information on Nick Colleluori and the HEADstrong Foundation, please visit www.HEADstrongfoundation.org
“Make use of the time you have & don’t stress the little things. Have a smile and enjoy what you can get out of life.” - Nick Colleluori
THE RELENTLESS CUP The Inaugural Relentless Cup was held in April 2013 at Ridley High School in Folsom, Pennsylvania. The event combined interstate youth games, high school games and was highlighted by Hofstra taking on St. Joseph’s University under the lights at 7 p.m. The event is now in its third year with proceeds from The Relentless Cup support Nick’s House™, the Nicholas E. Colleluori Lymphoma Research Fund and quality of life services offered by the HEADstrong Foundation.
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PREVIOUS #27 JERSEY RECIPIENTS 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Adam Swarsen Steven DeNapoli Cole Koesterer John Antoniades Anthony Zappone
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“It’s an honor to receive the Nick Colleluori Memorial Award. This award is given to a player who plays with the same heart and tenacity, and with the same relentless effort that Nick played with. The fact that my coaches selected me to wear the number 27 is a great honor and I will do my best to honor Nick’s memory and legacy.”
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Rather than retire the jersey of Nick Colleluori, the Men’s Lacrosse program decided to honor Nick by assigning the number to a deserving senior each year. Hofstra is determined to keep Nick’s memory and his mission alive by educating new players on his life and the inspiration he provided to the team.
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NICK COLLELUORI TRIBUTE
-Ryan Rielly
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When Coach Tierney asked me to write this reflection, my initial reaction was “I’m too busy.” But after I started thinking about my time as a Hofstra lacrosse player, I realized this was something that I really wanted to do. I begin by offering my condolences on the tragic and unfortunate passing of Joe Ferriso to all his teammates and the entire current Hofstra Lacrosse family. Over the years, the program has lost many former players. I personally experienced the loss of three teammates, roommates and best of friends who were taken from us way too early in their lives. I know that the memory of Bengt Barbaccia, Rudy Fiorvanti and Joe Taylor inspire me on a daily basis; and I hope that the memory of Joe Ferriso can inspire you in the same way this spring.
and the character of the guys I played with helped influence me and form a foundation from which I approach life on an everyday basis, whether in my business career in sales marketing or in my role as a parent. Another source of Hofstra pride is the aggressive style of play, both then and now. Over the years, coaches and players have changed; but Hofstra Lacrosse teams have always been known for this tough, physical, relentless style of play. It is a time honored tradition; one that we can all be proud to be a part of. I considered it a privilege 40 years ago to play at Hofstra, and I hope you take advantage of this special opportunity every day that you take the field. I wish you all the very best of success this spring!
BOB
HILLER CLASS OF 1976
I played in the 1970’s, which was a long time ago. To offer you some perspective …during my last year in high school, I played with a wooden stick; and by spring of 1973, my freshman year, the entire lacrosse world (except the native Americans) were playing with plastic sticks. In 1971 the NCAA instituted the Men’s National Lacrosse playoffs. The first championship game was played at Hofstra Stadium, which was one of the first original Astroturf fields in the country. Surrounding the turf and in between the track were small white pebbles. Every Hofstra Lacrosse player in this era became experienced at playing with pebbles in their cleats. I was very fortunate to have played for a Hall of Fame coach and with several Hall of Fame and All-American athletes during my tenure at Hofstra. Some of those exceptional players included Phil Marino, Billy Reid, Doug Nastro, Joe Zaffuto, Tom Calder, Kevin Huff, Ray Mills, Rich Lewton, Gary White, Rich Stoecker and many more. I have so many great memories from the time I played at Hofstra. Certainly playing on four top-10 nationally ranked teams and making the playoffs in three out of four years were stand out highlights. Being voted team captain by my teammates in my senior year was one of my proudest accomplishments. Another favorite memory is when the team would leave the field house and run out onto the field with music blaring. The surge of adrenaline and the excitement I felt entering the stadium was a phenomenal feeling. To this day I still get excited seeing the team come on the field prior to games. The team I played on was a close-knit group. We enjoyed great camaraderie both on and off the field. Forty years later, I still value these lifelong friendships that were forged on the lacrosse field at Hofstra University. The experiences I had
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Looking back on my graduation in 2001 it is hard to believe it has been 15 years already! Hofstra is where I became a man. The lessons I learned to teach my children, love my wife, Beverley, and coach my lacrosse teams in Florida were all inspired by my time at Hofstra and still exist in the fabric of my being today. There were many games won on the gridiron and lacrosse field, and some lost. Memories of those practices and games come to the forefront of my memory from time to time. My reflection of Hofstra is one of “Pride” in the work of my teams and accomplishments as a player. What I carry with me on a daily basis is the impact it made on my life, as I use it to further those lessons in both teaching and coaching.
DOUG
SHANAHAN
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Hofstra’s football and lacrosse program engrained in me many of the life skills that had sprouted at Sachem North High school. These were cultivated further during my years at Hofstra that were well spent scraping it out on the “turnpike.” Coach Gardi, bless his soul, and Coach Danowski, provided
an environment that enabled their teams to succeed by establishing a sense of family. The relationships that blossomed at Hofstra and that still exist today are the true essence of “once a Dutchman always a Dutchman”.
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Hofstra University to me is home, a place of comfort and leadership, both in the classroom and on the athletic field. Being able to compete in two sports, football and lacrosse, was a life changing experience for me that exceeded wildest dreams.
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SETH
TIERNEY Seth Tierney became the fifth head coach in the history of the Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse program when he was hired for the position in August 2006. Entering his ninth season in 2015, Tierney has led the Pride to 73 victories, the 2008 Colonial Athletic Association championship, the 2009, 2011 and 2014 CAA regular season titles and berths in four consecutive NCAA Championships from 2008 through 2011. Tierney served as an assistant coach at Hofstra from 1995 through 2000 before leaving for a similar position at his alma mater Johns Hopkins University. During his six-year tenure with the Pride, Hofstra recorded six consecutive winning seasons with a combined overall record of 61-28 and a conference mark of 29-2, captured five league titles, received five top 15 final national rankings, and played in four NCAA Championship tournaments. Tierney also coached seven All-Americans and nearly twodozen all-conference players during his first tenure at Hofstra. Among them was midfielder Doug Shanahan, who would receive the inaugural Tewaaraton Trophy as College Lacrosse Player of the Year, the Lt. Ray Enners Award as the Division I Player of the Year, and the Lt. Donald McLaughlin Award as the Division I Midfielder of the Year in 2001. Last season, Hofstra recorded its fourth double-digit victory season during his tenure, posting an 11-5 record and placing
14th in the final coaches poll. The Pride also captured the CAA regular season title with a 4-1 mark and advanced to the conference tournament championship game where they fell to Drexel in triple-overtime, 11-10. Hofstra ranked eighth in the nation in defense, allowing 8.44 goals per outing behind junior goalie Chris Selva, who ranked sixth in the country in goals against average. Eight Hofstra players earned All-CAA honors led by junior Ryan Rielly and sophomores Sam Llinares and Finn Sullivan, who were CAA first team selections. Llinares also earned USILA All-America honorable mention accolades as well. For his hard work, Tierney earned CAA Coach of the Year honors for the second time during his Pride tenure. In 2013 the Pride possessed one of the top defenses in the country, ranking third in goals against average (7.79) and climbing as high as sixth in the national media rankings and seventh in the coaches’ rankings. Included were victories at second-ranked Notre Dame and 13th-ranked Fairfield during their 7-7 season. While Hofstra had three USILA North-South Senior All-Star Game participants in John Antoniades, Cody Solaja and Adrian Sorichetti and classmate Mark Mullen was an All-CAA first team selection and was named to the USILA Scholar All-America Team, several young players emerged as stars in All-CAA second team pick sophomore goalie Chris Selva, who ranked fourth in the nation in save percentage and fifth in goals against average, and CAA All-Rookie Team selections Sam Llinares, who led the team in assists and was tied for team honors in points, and Brian von Bargen, who tallied eight goals. In 2012 Hofstra battled through some key injuries on the offensive side and was involved in eight games decided by two goals or less during a 6-8 season. The Pride enjoyed great success, both on the field and in the classroom. Andrew Gvozden was named a USILA Scholar-All-American and the CAA Men’s Lacrosse ScholarAthlete of the Year and six players were named to the All-CAA Team led by first team selection Adrian Sorichetti. In 2011 Hofstra recorded a 13-3 record, captured the CAA regular season title and earned its school recordbreaking fourth consecutive bid to the NCAA
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The 2008 season saw Hofstra make a 2013 7-7 return to the NCAA Tournament after 2014 11-5 a one-year hiatus. The team posted a Career 73-46 10-6 record and won the CAA title in a thrilling overtime win over Drexel. Leading scorer Anthony Muscarella was named an honorable mention All-American, while Kevin Unterstein was the CAA Defensive Player of the Year and Jay Card earned CAA Rookie of the Year accolades. In addition, seven players received AllCAA honors and the Unterstein brothers, Kevin and Michael, were named North-South Game All-Stars and were both selected in the Major League Lacrosse Draft. In his first year at the helm of the Hofstra program, Tierney took over a team that returned one starter from 2006’s NCAA Quarterfinal squad and led them to a 6-8 record that saw seven losses decided by one goal. The team qualified for the CAA Championship, saw one of its star players - Kevin Unterstein - earn honorable mention All-America honors and had seven players named to All-CAA teams, including three All-Rookie selections.
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Tierney played for the Blue Jays from 1988 through 1991 and served as team captain as a senior. He helped lead Hopkins to the NCAA Tournament in each of his four seasons, including an appearance in the 1989 NCAA title game. He received Hopkins’ Turnbull-Reynolds Award as a senior as the player most exemplifying leadership and sportsmanship. Tierney was also selected to play in the North-South game as a senior. After graduating from Johns Hopkins, Tierney continued his playing career by playing three seasons of indoor lacrosse for the New York Saints before serving as an assistant coach for the Saints for two seasons. Tierney and his wife, Maureen, have two children - a son, Ryan (16), and a daughter, Erin (14). The Tierney family resides in Massapequa, New York.
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In Tierney’s final season at Hopkins the Blue Jays posted a 9-5 record, advanced to the NCAA Championship quarterfinals, and ranked in the top 15 in the country in four statistical categories. With an emphasis on a balanced attack that puts pressure on the opposition at every position, individual awards were plentiful at Hopkins. A total of 21 Blue Jay midfielders and attackmen earned All-America honors during Tierney’s tenure in Homewood. Among them was Kyle Harrison, a two-time first team All-America, who received the Tewaaraton Trophy and the Lt. Enners Award in 2005 and the McLaughlin Award in 2004 and 2005.
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In 2010 the Pride made its third consecutive trip to the NCAA Championship and finished the year with a 9-5 record. Hofstra had two players named to the USILA All-America team, five named to the All-CAA team and two more named to the CAA Erin and Ryan Tierney All-Rookie Team. In 2009, Tierney directed the Pride to an 11-4 overall, a 6-0 mark during the CAA regular season and his second NCAA Championship bid. Five Hofstra players were named to the All-CAA Teams, including first team selection Jay Card, SETH TIERNEY AT who was voted the CAA Player of the Year. In addition, four Pride players HOFSTRA were named to the USILA All-America 2007 6-8 2008 10-6 CAA Champions; team and one was voted to the USILA NCAA Tournament Scholar-Athlete All-America Team. For 2009 11-4 NCAA Tournament his efforts, Tierney was named the CAA 2010 9-5 NCAA Tournament co-Coach of the Year.
Tierney returned to Hofstra after a six-year tenure at John Hopkins, with the final two seasons as associate head coach. As the Blue Jays offensive coordinator, he was the architect of one of the most potent and explosive offenses in the nation in recent years. Tierney directed the Blue Jays attack that finished second in the nation in scoring margin, sixth in scoring offense and 16th in man-up offense during Hopkins’ NCAA title run in 2005. The Blue Jays led the nation in scoring offense and manup offense in 2003 and finished fifth in both categories in 2004.
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Championship. In addition, the Pride had four players, Jay Card, Mike Skudin, Andrew Gvozden and John Antoniades, earn USILA AllAmerica honors. Card, Skudin, Antoniades, Ian Braddish and Adam Mojica were named to the All-CAA first team while Gvozden, Steven DeNapoli and Jamie Lincoln were voted to the second team. Skudin, who was selected the CAA Defensive Player of the Year, also earned USILA Scholar All-American and CAA Men’s Lacrosse Scholar-Athlete of the Year honors. To close out the year, Skudin, DeNapoli and Card were named to the North-South Senior All-Star Game with DeNapoli leading all goal scorers in the contest with three.
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KEVIN
UNTERSTEIN Kevin Unterstein is entering his fifth season on the Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse staff and his second year as associate head coach in 2014-15. During his coaching tenure at Hofstra, he has worked with the defense, the face-off specialists and the man-down unit. In 2011, the Pride led the nation in scoring defense (6.56 gpga) and ranked sixth in face-off winning percentage (.622) and turnover average (13.69). Hofstra was also sixth in man-down percentage (.760) in 2012. In 2013, the Pride ranked first in turnovers per game (11.36), third in scoring defense (7.79 gpga) and 28th in man-down defense (.667). Last season, Hofstra led the CAA and was eighth in the nation in scoring defense (8.44) and was second in the conference and sixth in the country in turnovers per contest (12.1) A 2008 graduate of Hofstra with a degree in sociology, Unterstein enjoyed a stellar playing career as a short-stick defensive midfielder from 2005 through 2008. As a senior he recorded a team-leading 70 ground balls while helping to guide the Pride to the Colonial Athletic Association title and the NCAA Tournament. For his efforts, he was an All-CAA first team selection, and was named the CAA Defensive Player of the Year, and the CAA Championship Tournament Most Valuable Player.
In 2007 as a junior, Unterstein earned USILA All-American honorable mention honors, and was named to the All-CAA second team as well as the All-CAA Tournament team. As a sophomore in 2006, Kevin, his twin brother Mike, and their older brother Chris combined to help lead Hofstra to a 17-2 record, a No. 2 national ranking and a No. 3 seed in the NCAA tournament. He was also named to the All-CAA Rookie Team as a freshman. Following graduation in 2008, he became an assistant under Bill Tierney at Princeton in 2009, working with the defense and face-off specialists. He would follow Tierney to Denver in 2010 to help coordinate the Pioneers’ man-down unit and work specifically with the defensive midfielders and work with assistant coach Trevor Tierney with the defense and the overall face-off game. Unterstein has also played professionally in Major League Lacrosse, playing for the Long Island/New York Lizards in 2009, and 2012 through the present, and the Denver Outlaws in 2010 and 2011. In 2013 and 2014 he was involved with Team USA tryouts and was a member of the 2013 U.S. National Training team and in 2014 he played on the U.S. National Blue Team during the Champions Challenge. A native of Shoreham, New York, he was a high school AllAmerican at Shoreham-Wading River High, where he was part of four Suffolk County championships and one state championship. Unterstein and his wife, Melissa, reside in Massapequa, New York.
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ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH
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A former goalie at Hofstra during the 2001 and 2002 seasons, Brazel returned to Hofstra in 2011 after serving as an assistant coach under head coach Bob Shillinglaw at Colonial Athletic Association-foe Delaware during the 201011 academic year. While with the Blue Hens, he served as an offensive assistant coach, and coached the Delaware goalies as well as the team’s attack unit. He coached four All-CAA players and one USILA All-America selection as the Blue Hens won the CAA Championship and advanced to the NCAA Championship Tournament. Prior to coaching at Delaware, Brazel spent three seasons (2007-10) at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut. While at Sacred Heart, Brazel’s duties included coaching goaltenders, coordinating the team’s defense and mandown unit, recruiting, monitoring academic progress and assisting head coach Tom Mariano with all other day-to-day lacrosse operations. During his tenure at Sacred Heart, Brazel coached three All-Colonial Athletic Association defenders in addition to coaching the programs goaltenders to top 15 national rankings in save percentage and top two national rankings in saves per game in 2009 and 2010. Brazel began his Division I coaching career during the 2006-07 year at Manhattan College in Riverdale, New York. He served as offensive coordinator and goalie coach at Manhattan under Head Lacrosse Coach Tim McIntee.
2014 Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
Brazel began his college coaching career as an assistant coach under Rich Speckmann from 2003 to 2006 at Nassau Community College. While at Nassau, Brazel guided the development of the team’s goaltenders and defensive units as well as working with the team’s face-off specialists. He helped lead the school to the NJCAA semifinals and regional championship in both 2003 and 2004. During his tenure at Nassau, Brazel coached seven NJCAA All-American defenders as well as a two-time All-American goalie. Nassau was also the start of Brazel’s college academic and athletic career. In 1999, Brazel earned National Junior College Athletic Association All-American and NJCAA Goalie of the Year while helping the Lions to NJCAA national title. As a freshman in 1998, he was a member of Nassau’s NJCAA semifinal team. Brazel then moved on to Hofstra and was part of the Pride’s NCAA Tournament appearances in 2000 and 2001and was a member of the second highest ranked team in Hofstra history in 2002. Brazel holds a degree in psychology from Hofstra University and has presented at both the U.S. Intercollegiate Men’s Lacrosse Coaches Association and Connecticut High School Coaches conventions in recent years. Brazel and his wife, Jenna, are the proud parents of a son, Eamon (1). The Brazel family resides in Massapequa, New York.
L A C R O S S E
During his short tenure at Hofstra he has directed goalies, in Andrew Gvozden and Chris Selva, who have ranked in the Top 12 in the nation while the team defense has been among the Top 13.
Under his assistance, the Jaspers made a jump of more than three goals per game during the 2007 season.
M E N ’ S
Hofstra alumnus J.P. Brazel is in his fourth season on the Pride Men’s Lacrosse staff in 2015. He is entering his third season as offensive coordinator and fourth season as goalies coach and recruiting coordinator.
H O F S T R A
BRAZEL
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J.P.
2014 LACROSSE
ASSISTANT COACH
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JOHN
GORMAN Hofstra alumnus John Gorman is in his third season as an assistant coach on the Pride Men’s Lacrosse staff in 2015. The three-year Pride letterman returned to Hofstra in 2013 after serving as a teacher and coach since 2007. Gorman has served as assistant varsity lacrosse coach at South Side High School on Long Island from the fall of 2007 through 2012, and assistant varsity and junior varsity head wrestling coach from November, 2010 through 2012. The Lindenhurst, New York, native was a midfielder for the Pride from 2005 through the 2007 seasons. During that time, he played in a total of 40 games, starting 15, and picked up 30 ground balls and one assist.
As a senior captain in 2007, Gorman started all 14 games, picked up 20 ground balls and received the Bengt Barbaccia Award for the second consecutive year. He was part of Hofstra’s 2006 team that posted a school record 17 wins, won the Colonial Athletic Association championship, advanced to the NCAA Division I Men’s Lacrosse Championship quarterfinals and received his first Barbaccia Award. He also tallied one assist and picked up seven ground balls on the season. Gorman played in 10 games as a sophomore in 2005, picking up three ground balls and receiving the David McCartney Memorial Endowed Scholarship Award. Gorman came to Hofstra after two years and one playing season at Nassau Community College in Garden City, New York, where he was a NJCAA All-America second team selection, team captain and helped lead the Lions to the division championship and the NJCAA national semifinals. A three-sport athlete at Lindenhurst (NY) High School, Gorman lettered in lacrosse, football and wrestling and was a two-time All-Suffolk County selection in wrestling and an honorable mention all-county pick in football. Gorman, who has served as a lifeguard for the Town of Babylon since 1999, has also taught in the Rockville Centre School District from 2008 through 2014. He currently serves as a health and physical education instructor at Joseph Barry Technical School in Westbury, New York. Gorman has a degree in physical education from Hofstra and resides in Lindenhurst, New York.
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M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
ASSISTANT COACH
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PRENDERGAST James Prendergast is in his sixth year on the strength and conditioning staff and his first as associate head strength and conditioning coach at Hofstra University. Prendergast began his career at Hofstra as an intern on the strength and conditioning staff and moved into his current role in July, 2014. Prendergast works with the Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse, Women’s Lacrosse and Wrestling teams. In his day-to-day work with the Pride Lacrosse teams, Prendergast administers drills for speed, agility and flexibility in addition to instructing the student-athletes on proper technique and form during weight training.
A certified strength and conditioning specialist, Prendergast is also certified by USA Weightlifting and is a member of the National Strength and Conditioning and Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Associations. He also holds American Red Cross CPR and AED certification. A 2009 graduate of Hofstra, Prendergast was an exercise specialist major and minored in community health and psychology. He resides in Syosset, New York
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H O F S T R A
Prior to joining the Hofstra staff, Prendergast served as a student personal trainer through the Hofstra Recreation Center during the 2008-09 academic year. In 2007-08 he completed a 200-hour internship at Institute 3E, an elite sports performance facility, in Huntington, New York.
Prendergast has also been a private strength coach to numerous athletes on Long Island.
M E N ’ S
JAMES
L A C R O S S E
ASSOCIATE HEAD STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING COACH
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ROBERT
SULLIVAN Robert Sullivan came to Hofstra University as an assistant athletic trainer in September 2004. He oversees the Margiotta Hall Athletic Training Room and the athletic training needs for the Pride men’s lacrosse and golf teams. Sullivan attended Frostburg State University from 1988 through 1992 and earned a degree in health and physical education with a concentration in athletic training. From 1991 through 1994 he served as a seasonal assistant athletic trainer for the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League.
September 1999 through February 2004, which also included a two-year stint (1999-2001) as head athletic trainer at Northport (NY) High School. During that time Sullivan also completed an advanced master’s degree in athletic training at LIU Brooklyn in 2003. In February 2004 Sullivan accepted a position as assistant athletic trainer for the Berlin Thunder of the NFL-Europe League. The Thunder captured the NFL-E World Bowl Championship that season. Sullivan, a native of Port Jefferson Station on Long Island, currently resides in Roslyn, New York.
Sullivan served as head athletic trainer at the Spagnoli Physical Therapy Clinic in Centereach, New York, from April 1995 through August 1999. He then went on to serve as head athletic trainer at Kings Park (NY) Physical Therapy from
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M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
ATHLETIC TRAINER
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Peel-Macandrew supervisors and directs the student-athlete advisement program, helping to develop a comprehensive advisement center for all student-athletes while ensuring compliance with the NCAA. She also coordinates registration efforts and develops graduation plans. She serves as a liaison to the Office of the Provost to resolve academic questions and monitors the academic progress of student-athletes while paying special attention to atrisk students. In her role, she submits NCAA academic performance data, including APR and graduation success rates, to the compliance office.
Before coming to Hofstra, Peel-Macandrew was an associate vice president for Credit Suisse First Boston Corp from 1999 to 2003. In that role, which featured time in New York City and Melbourne, Australia, she managed a team that was responsible for all equity and debt. Her staff traded and stabilized companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ. Peel-Macandrew started her full-time financial career as an analyst for Salomon Smith Barney in London, working in equity capital markets from 1995 to 1999. She coordinated intern and external agency systems and worked on multi-departmental initiatives that encompassed the operations, financial and technology departments. Peel-Macandrew earned her undergraduate degree in social policy and economics from Leeds University in Yorkshire, England, graduating with honors in 1993. She also holds two master’s degrees from Hofstra, earning one in physical education in 2005 and another in educational leadership and policy studies in 2012.
HOFSTRA HUNDRED CLUB The “Hofstra Hundred Club” is a fund-raising initiative for the men’s lacrosse program under the umbrella of the Hofstra Pride Club. Each member of this elite club is asked to donate $100 for each victory earned. All contributors to this program will be recognized as Hofstra Pride Club members and will receive all benefits afforded to them through the Hofstra Pride Club. Besides supporting the members of the Pride Lacrosse team both on and off the field, these generous donations will allow Hofstra Lacrosse the opportunity to continue to operate in a first-class manner, while setting a new standard for a Division I lacrosse program. The Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse program would like to thank the Hofstra Hundred Club members and our generous contributors. With your support we have the resources and ability to do the ‘little things’ that make a big difference for our lacrosse program. A special thanks to the following 2014 Hofstra Hundred Club members: Larry and Mary Kay Altmann Jay Artinian Bob Bernstein P. J. Bjorneby Carl & Jeanne Caputo Joe Carrello Mary & Dan Clarke Lou DiBlasi Paulette & Chuck Dotson Doug Edmonds Gerry Fay Ed Finegan Shari & Rick Fleury Joe Fowler
Mindy & Arno Fried Jeff Froccaro Adam Gelcich Girardi Family Mike Greco Marty Greenberg Ryan Grimes Doug Hall Chris Hein Greg Hein Cynthia & Mike Hendrickson Steve Iglio Sue & Rick Llinares Tony & Carole Mazzarella
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
James C. Metzger Ryan Miller Bill Miller Donna & Scott Nowak Tom & Sue Nunziata Robert Parrinelli Tony Perettine Kathleen & John Puckhaber Bob Quinlan Michael & Kathleen Reilly Mike Ricigliano Steve & Kristen Rielly Romano Family Satterthwaite Family
Sharon & Kirk Schilling Judi & Manny Selva James M. Shuart John & Diane Skudin Adam Snyder Bill & Kathleen Stanley Jay Sullivan Chris & Barbara Sweeney Mary & Brent Voelkel Mary & Eric Von Bargen Dave Woycik Allen Zagoren Anthony & Diane Zappone
M E N ’ S
Rachel Peel-Macandrew is an Associate Dean for the Center for University Advisement. She has worked at Hofstra since 2003, first serving as an assistant dean before being promoted to an associate dean in 2007.
H O F S T R A
PEEL-MACANDREW
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RACHEL
L A C R O S S E
ASSOCIATE DEAN OF UNIVERSITY ADVISEMENT
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
NUMERICAL ROSTER
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No.
Name
Pos.
Ht.
Wt.
Cl.
Hometown (High School/Previous College)
1
Tyler Begley
A
6-2
198
Sr.
East Islip, NY (East Islip)
2
Alex Moeser
M
6-1
190
RFr. Greenwich, CT (Greenwich)
4
Steve Romano
M
6-1
190
Sr.
5
Sam Llinares
A
5-9
155
Jr.
Hauppauge, NY (Hauppauge)
6
Luke Gomez
M
6-1
180
Fr.
Ambler, PA (Wissahickon)
7
Mike Malave
M
5-11
183
Sr.
Wading River, NY (Shoreham-Wading River)
8
Vinny Colatriano
M
6-3
222
Jr.
Bridgewater, NJ (Bridgewater-Raritan)
Massapequa, NY (Massapequa)
9
Brier Davis
A
5-11
176
So.
Caledon, ON, Canada (The McCallie School (TN)
11
Tanner Griffin
D
6-2
180
Fr.
Loveland, OH (Loveland)
12
Seth Miller
A
5-8
165
So.
Potomac Falls, VA (St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes)
13
Matthew Perettine
A
5-10
153
Fr.
West Islip, NY (West Islip)
14
Jack Concannon
G
6-2
170
Fr.
Lindenhurst, NY (St. Anthony’s)
15
Michael Diener
D
6-1
210
So.
Boca Raton, FL (Pine Crest School)
16
Kris Clarke
M/FO
5-10
170
So.
Bellmore, NY (Chaminade)
17
Tim Golden
M
6-0
180
Fr.
Rockville, MD (Georgetown Prep/Wootton)
18
Trevor Kupecky
A
6-0
165
So.
King of Prussia, PA (Upper Merion)
20
Matthew Boyer
G
6-1
165
So.
Pottstown, PA (Owen J. Roberts)
21
Korey Hendrickson
M
5-8
180
Jr.
Farmingdale, NY (Farmingdale)
22
John Reicherter
M
6-2
189
Sr.
Wantagh, NY (Wantagh) Downingtown, PA (Bishop Shanahan)
23
Dylan Alderman
M
5-9
170
Fr.
24
John Puckhaber
M
6-0
180
RFr. Wantagh, NY (St. Anthony’s)
25
Mitch Kingsley
A
5-11
180
Fr.
Coto de Caza, CA (Junipero Serra)
27
Ryan Rielly
LSM
5-11
189
Sr.
East Northport, NY (John Glenn)
28
Brian von Bargen
M
6-2
200
Jr.
Wantagh, NY (Wantagh)
29
Jack Moorehead
D
6-0
235
Sr.
East Northport, NY (John Glenn)
30
Tim Nowak
A/M
6-0
180
RFr. Oakdale, NY (St. John the Baptist)
31
Brendan Kavanagh
A
5-8
160
Fr.
Rockville Centre, NY (Kellenberg)
32
Cole Considine
M/A
5-11
180
RFr. Rockville Centre, NY (South Side)
33
Chris Selva
G
5-9
158
Sr.
Parkland, FL (St. Thomas Aquinas)
35
Nate Schilling
D
6-2
200
So.
Gambrills, MD (Archbishop Spalding)
36
Joe Ferriso
D
6-0
195
So.
Copiague, NY (Kellenberg)
37
Brandon Standard
M
5-9
175
Fr.
White Plains, NY (Iona Prep)
38
Christian Durkota
M
5-11
155
Fr.
Lancaster, PA (Hempfield)
39
Jeremiah LaClair
LSM
6-1
175
Fr.
Greensboro, MD (North Caroline)
40
Joseph Serrecchia
D/LSM 5-9
170
Fr.
Brewster, NY (Brewster)
41
Tommy Voelkel
M
6-0
170
RFr. Chapel Hill, NC (Chapel Hill)
42
Brenden Lynch
M
5-8
150
Fr.
Lake Forest, CA (Junipero Serra)
43
Pat Joy
D
6-1
215
So.
West Islip, NY (St. John the Baptist)
44
Finn Sullivan
D
6-3
200
Jr.
West Roxbury, MA (Avon Old Farms)
45
Tyler Fleury
D
6-1
190
RFr. Edmonton, AL, Canada (The Hill Academy)
47
Zachary Franco
M
6-2
185
So.
Arnold, MD (Broadneck)
66
Connor Horl
M
6-0
240
Sr.
Garden City, NY (Garden City)
Head Coach:
Seth Tierney (Johns Hopkins, 1991), eighth season
Associate Head Coach:
Kevin Unterstein (Hofstra, 2008)
Assistant Coaches:
J.P. Brazel (Hofstra, 2002)
John Gorman (Hofstra, 2007)
www. G oHof str a . co m
Ht.
Wt.
Cl.
Hometown (High School/Previous College)
5-9
170
Fr.
Downingtown, PA (Bishop Shanahan)
1
Tyler Begley
A
6-2
198
Sr.
East Islip, NY (East Islip)
20
Matthew Boyer
G
6-1
165
So.
Pottstown, PA (Owen J. Roberts)
16
Kris Clarke
M/FO
5-10
170
So.
Bellmore, NY (Chaminade)
8
Vinny Colatriano
M
6-3
222
Jr.
Bridgewater, NJ (Bridgewater-Raritan) Lindenhurst, NY (St. Anthony’s)
14
Jack Concannon
G
6-2
170
Fr.
32
Cole Considine
M/A
5-11
180
RFr. Rockville Centre, NY (South Side)
9
Brier Davis
A
5-11
176
So.
Caledon, ON, Canada (The McCallie School (TN)
15
Michael Diener
D
6-1
210
So.
Boca Raton, FL (Pine Crest School)
38
Christian Durkota
M
5-11
155
Fr.
Lancaster, PA (Hempfield)
36
Joe Ferriso
D
6-0
195
So.
Copiague, NY (Kellenberg)
45
Tyler Fleury
D
6-1
190
RFr. Edmonton, AL, Canada (The Hill Academy)
47
Zachary Franco
M
6-2
185
So.
Arnold, MD (Broadneck)
17
Tim Golden
M
6-0
180
Fr.
Rockville, MD (Georgetown Prep/Wootton)
6
Luke Gomez
M
6-1
180
Fr.
Ambler, PA (Wissahickon)
11
Tanner Griffin
D
6-2
180
Fr.
Loveland, OH (Loveland)
21
Korey Hendrickson
M
5-8
180
Jr.
Farmingdale, NY (Farmingdale)
66
Connor Horl
M
6-0
240
Sr.
Garden City, NY (Garden City)
43
Pat Joy
D
6-1
215
So.
West Islip, NY (St. John the Baptist)
31
Brendan Kavanagh
A
5-8
160
Fr.
Rockville Centre, NY (Kellenberg)
25
Mitch Kingsley
A
5-11
180
Fr.
Coto de Caza, CA (Junipero Serra)
18
Trevor Kupecky
A
6-0
165
So.
King of Prussia, PA (Upper Merion)
39
Jeremiah LaClair
LSM
6-1
175
Fr.
Greensboro, MD (North Caroline)
5
Sam Llinares
A
5-9
155
Jr.
Hauppauge, NY (Hauppauge)
42
Brenden Lynch
M
5-8
150
Fr.
Lake Forest, CA (Junipero Serra)
7
Mike Malave
M
5-11
183
Sr.
Wading River, NY (Shoreham-Wading River)
12
Seth Miller
A
5-8
165
So.
Potomac Falls, VA (St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes)
2
Alex Moeser
M
6-1
190
RFr. Greenwich, CT (Greenwich)
29
Jack Moorehead
D
6-0
235
Sr.
East Northport, NY (John Glenn)
30
Tim Nowak
A/M
6-0
180
RFr. Oakdale, NY (St. John the Baptist)
13
Matthew Perettine
A
5-10
153
Fr.
West Islip, NY (West Islip)
24
John Puckhaber
M
6-0
180
RFr. Wantagh, NY (St. Anthony’s)
22
John Reicherter
M
6-2
189
Sr.
Wantagh, NY (Wantagh)
27
Ryan Rielly
LSM
5-11
189
Sr.
East Northport, NY (John Glenn)
4
Steve Romano
M
6-1
190
Sr.
Massapequa, NY (Massapequa)
35
Nate Schilling
D
6-2
200
So.
Gambrills, MD (Archbishop Spalding)
33
Chris Selva
G
5-9
158
Sr.
Parkland, FL (St. Thomas Aquinas)
40
Joseph Serrecchia
D/LSM 5-9
170
Fr.
Brewster, NY (Brewster)
37
Brandon Standard
M
175
Fr.
White Plains, NY (Iona Prep) West Roxbury, MA (Avon Old Farms)
5-9
44
Finn Sullivan
D
6-3
200
Jr.
41
Tommy Voelkel
M
6-0
170
RFr. Chapel Hill, NC (Chapel Hill)
28
Brian von Bargen
M
6-2
200
Jr.
Wantagh, NY (Wantagh)
Head Coach:
Seth Tierney (Johns Hopkins, 1991), eighth season
Associate Head Coach:
Kevin Unterstein (Hofstra, 2008)
Assistant Coaches:
J.P. Brazel (Hofstra, 2002)
John Gorman (Hofstra, 2007)
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
M E N ’ S
Pos. M
H O F S T R A
Name Dylan Alderman
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L A C R O S S E
2014 NUMERICAL ROSTER ALPHABETICAL ROSTER
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The sting lingered for many months for the Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse team. It began on an early May weekend last year. The Pride, who captured the Colonial Athletic Association regular season title, would advance in the CAA Championship semifinals and be within reach of two more of their goals with the conference title game in the friendly confines of James M. Shuart Stadium. With a win over second seed Drexel, Hofstra would take
“Overall, we thought it was a good year,” Hofstra Head Lacrosse Coach Seth Tierney said. “We wish we could have had a couple of those games back. It was bitter-sweet, maybe sweet-bitter would be a better way to characterize the season, especially how it ended.”
H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
While an 11-5 season and a conference regular season title are achievements to be proud of, several more were left on the table and the sting of that weekend stayed with the Pride staff and 26 returnees, including five starters, until the fall practice season began. Even through the fall, while the Hofstra staff was searching for the next starting line-up for 2015 and the Pride team worked hard to erase the memory of last May, the sting remained. Then, as the calendar year changed and the focus closed in on the preseason, the sting turned to immense sadness and pain. Sophomore Joe Ferriso, a walk-on who quickly endeared himself to the staff and his teammates with his personality, hard-work, enthusiasm and team-first attitude, passed away, less than two weeks before the start of preseason camp, from injuries sustained in a car accident.
Sam Llinares
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home their first CAA title since 2008 and would return to the NCAA Championship for the first time since 2011.
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a bullet when a Hofstra goal was called back, the Dragons finally captured that elusive CAA title to get their first NCAA Championship bid. The Pride, who had three losses by one goal and two by two goals, were left with a precarious spot on the NCAA Tournament bubble. The bubble burst the next day when Hofstra, by all reports, was the last team left out of the tournament, leaving the Pride to think about what could have been until 2015.
There was also the dangling carrot of possibly advancing to one of the two NCAA Championship quarterfinal doubleheaders - at Hofstra - in case there wasn’t enough incentive previously. On the Saturday night, a classic lacrosse game between two fine teams was played with the Dragons battling back from a fourth quarter deficit to send the game into overtime, then a second overtime and finally a third. After dodging
Rarely, has a new player on the team had the impact that Ferriso did in such a short time. While his presence on the team was short, his impact will not be forgotten for many years, maybe even decades, His passing left the team and the staff reeling and cast a pall over the early days of preseason camp. As the team laid their teammate to rest, Coach Seth Tierney, who is beginning his ninth season with the Pride, stated, “Joe was THAT guy. He tried out for the team and made . He did everything that you expected and then some. He did everything that you wanted and then some. He just handled himself so well and wanted to work and get better. He had such balance in his life. He will be sorely missed. So if we can’t play with Joe, we will play for Joe this season.” As the 2015 season approaches, the Pride team has not moved on but they have moved forward, as Ferriso would have wanted. The 26 returnees and the 15 newcomers are all dedicated to honoring the memory of Joe Ferriso this season by giving their best possible effort. Those 26 returnees include five starters who will be pushed by another talented class of newcomers. “The key to our success this season is that we have to stay healthy, stay focused and follow our game plan, “ Tierney said.
www. G oHof str a . co m
C R O S S E
L A C R O S S E
2014 OUTLOOK 2015 OUTLOOK
There was a fierce battle, between five players, for the two open starting spots left vacant by the graduation of Varn and Yapor. Three sophomores, Brier Davis, Trevor Kupecky and Zachary Franco, and two freshmen, Brendan Kavanagh and Mitch Kingsley, will battle it out. Davis received the most playing time of the bunch last season, playing in 11 games and scoring six goals and adding one assist. Kupecky and Franco each played in one game last year. Kingsley was a U.S. Lacrosse AllAmerican as a senior at Junipero Serra High School in California last year while Kavanagh was the CHSAA Attackman of the Year at Kellenberg Memorial High School on Long Island in 2014.
MIDFIELD
Both the offensive and defensive midfield units combine to give the Pride the most experience on the 2015 Hofstra team. The first midfield lost just one starter to graduation in Drew Coholan, who tallied a career-best 22 goals and 10 assists in 2014. But the Pride return senior captain Mike Malave, who is coming off a career-best 26 goals and seven assists last year and junior Korey Hendrickson, who also posted a career-best season a year ago with 17 goals and nine assists, to starting roles.
Mike Malave
The final spot on the first midfield will be another five-way battle that will go down to game week. Senior Tyler Begley played in 15 games last year and recorded two assists. Junior Brian von Bargen has played in 30 games over the past two
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Korey Hendrickson
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Hofstra lost two of three starters on attack to graduation in Torin Varn and Lance Yapor. Varn led the team in goals with 32 and added five assists while Yapor added 18 goals and six assists. The Pride return the team’s leading scorer in junior All-American honorable mention Sam Llinares. The All-CAA first team selection became the first Hofstra player to tally 50 points in a season since 2010 when he posted 21 goals and 32 assists. He finished first in the CAA and 10th in Division I in assists and was third in the conference and 29th in the country in points. Llinares, who takes over a leadership role on attack this season, was named the 2015 CAA Preseason Player of the Year by the conference coaches. “Sam is certainly a very talented player and will be the quarterback of our attack,” Tierney says “We look forward to more good things from him this season.”
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2015 OUTLOOK seasons and will be looking for a starting nod. Three newcomers could also figure into the equation here. Redshirt freshman Alex Moeser, who was not a member of the team as a true freshman last season, was a two-time All-Connecticut selection. Freshman Dylan Alderman was a U.S. Lacrosse All-American and the league Most Valuable Player at Bishop Shanahan High School in Downingtown, Pennsylvania after scoring 49 goals and adding 38 assists. Freshman Tim Golden, an all-county selection at Wootton High School in Maryland, tallied 28 goals and 12 assists in just 12 games as a senior. “We thought we were going to have an issue at midfield but I believe it will still work out to be alright,” Tierney says. “Offensively, Coach J.P. Brazel does a great job and I think if we keep our focus, keep our poise and play with some confidence we will be successful.” The defensive midfield - the rope unit - is the most experienced and one of the best in the country, according to many. Three seniors, captains John Reicherter and pole Ryan Rielly, and Steve Romano have been together since their arrival at Hofstra and form a lethal transitional line. Reicherter, who missed nine games with an injury last season, has played 33 games during his career. Romano has played in 43 career contests and is a “tremendous athlete” according to Tierney. Rielly, a first team All-CAA selection last year, has played in 44 career games and was selected as the Pride’s 2015 Nick Colleluori Memorial Award winner and will wear the number 27 this season. “These three guys have been starters on the rope unit since day one and have done a great job for Hofstra Lacrosse,” Tierney says. “They are angry because there have been times where they
Kris Clarke
thought they could have done more or motivated the team to have done more to be successful the past couple of years. We are thrilled to have them all back and they will be a key to our success.” At the face-off X, sophomore Kris Clarke is coming off an outstanding rookie season, winning 56 percent of his face-offs and earning CAA All-Rookie Team honors. “Chris had a great first year and a huge learning curve last season,” Tierney commented. “He has and will continue to play a huge role for us.” While Clarke took all but three face-offs last year, he will be challenged by senior Connor Horl, his back-up from a year ago, who has enjoyed a solid preseason.
DEFENSE
Steve Romano
The defense lost two starters in senior Corey Caputo and freshman Stephen Satterthwaite. But Hofstra returns junior starter Finn Sullivan, who earned All-CAA first team honors in 2014, who ranked 11th in the CAA in caused turnovers. After playing in just one game as a freshman, he started all 16 last season and earned All-CAA Preseason honors in 2015. “We knew that Finn had leadership abilities when we recruited him and they have now come out,” Tierney says. “He is a smart player and loves to compete. We are very happy that Finn has evolved into a leader on defense.”
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With a relatively young defense is good to have experience in front on the rope unit and behind in goal and Hofstra has that with the return of two-year starter Chris Selva. The Florida native has earned All-CAA second team honors the past two seasons and received preseason All-CAA accolades in 2015. Selva, another team captain this season, led the conference and was sixth in the nation in goals against average with an 8.29 mark. He has played in 32 games during his career and has a 7.99 career goals against Finn Sullivan average. Tierney believes that Selva will shine, once again this season in part to the arrival of freshman Jack Concannon, a CHSAA Goalie of the Year and All-Long Island selection from St. Anthony’s High School. “Jack will push Chris this season and I am confident that he will rise to the occasion in his final season,” Tierney said.
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Hofstra’s 14-game schedule is tough, from the start against Marquette, which stunned the Pride in the 2014 season opener, to the final three games all on the road, at Cornell, Towson and Fairfield, to close out the regular season. In addition to Marquette, the home schedule features a rematch against CAA champion Drexel as well as battles against UMass, Providence and local rivals St. John’s, Marist and Manhattan. The road slate includes Princeton, Georgetown, Ohio State and Delaware before the aforementioned final three. As if the CAA wasn’t tough enough already, the Stags of Fairfield, who have had some close battles with the Pride over the past five seasons, are now a conference member. Like it has the past couple of years, expect the CAA race for tournament positions to once again go down to the wire. “There are no lay-ups or easy games on the schedule,” Tierney says. “There is so much talent around the country that anybody and everybody can surprise you. We’ll play one game at a time and we will not look past anybody Chris Selva this season.”
H O F S T R A
Senior Jack Moorehead, who has played in 20 games during his career, leads a group of mostly younger players looking to crack the line-up. Sophomore Michael Diener, who played in one game last season, red-shirt freshman Tyler Fleury, who sat out last season after suffering a preseason injury, and newcomers, sophomore Pat Joy, a first year player with the Pride, and freshman Joe Serrecchia, an all-sectional player from Brewster (NY) High School, round out the defense.
SCHEDULE
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Like on attack, Sullivan’s two running mates on the starting back line will have been battling for the spots since the fall. Sophomore Nate Schilling appears to be a front-runner for a starting job after appearing in 13 games as a freshman in 2014. Freshman Tanner Griffin, a USILA All-America team selection and the Southern Ohio Player of the Year from Loveland High School, could get the other starting spot.
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MOOREHEAD Defense 6-0, 235, Senior (RS) East Northport, NY/John Glenn High School Coach: Kevin Lavey
Fifth year on the Hofstra Lacrosse roster…2014: Saw limited time in four games on defense as a junior…Played in games at Massachusetts and Penn State and at home against Delaware and Drexel…2013: Saw action in 11games on defense and on special team units…2012: Missed the entire 2012 season with an injury…2011: Played in five games as a freshman…Saw game time against Air Force, St. John’s, Towson, Manhattan and St. Joseph’s…Recorded ground balls against Air Force and St. John’s…High School: Played lacrosse and football and was a member of the wrestling team at John Glenn High School in East Northport, New York…Three-time team captain for the Knights… Named to all-division team as a sophomore…Standout in football being named to All-New York, All-Long Island and All-Suffolk County teams as a senior when the Knights posted a 10-1 mark…Two-time Blue Helmet Award, defensive most valuable player and Leadership Award recipient in football…Three-time allleague gridiron pick…Personal: Born February 10, 1992…Has three sisters…Enjoys movies and swimming…Also recruited by Virginia, Colgate and Delaware… Marketing major.
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Year 2011 2012 2013 2014 Career
GP Sht. 5 0 Red-shirt - Inj. 11 0 4 0 20 0
G 0
A 0
Pts. 0
GB 2
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 2
Attack 6-2, 198, Senior East Islip, NY/East Islip High School Coach: Joe Ancona
Fourth season on the Pride Lacrosse team…2014: Played in 15 games as a junior…Recorded two assists on the season… Dished out assists against Fairfield and Delaware…Took 11 shots including five on goal…Took a season-high three shots against Marist…Picked up his only ground ball of the year against Siena…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…2013: Played in 14 games and started two as a sophomore…Started against St. John’s and Drexel…Tied for seventh on the team with eight points…Was eighth on the team with four goals and fifth in assists…Tallied solo goals against Harvard, Notre Dame, Dartmouth and Towson…Posted solo assists in games against Delaware, St. John’s, Drexel and St. Joseph’s…Scored two man-up goals in games against Dartmouth and Towson…Picked up seven ground balls including two against St. John’s and North Carolina…Took 24 shots including 18 on goal… CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…2012: CAA AllRookie Team selection… Played in all 14 games
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Sht. 32 24 11 67
G 10 4 0 14
A 7 4 2 13
Pts. 17 8 2 27
GP 5 2 7
Sht. 0 0 0
G 0 0 0
A 0 0 0
Pts. 0 0 0
GB 0 0 0
GB 13 7 1 21
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Midfielder/Face-Off Specialist 6-0, 240, Senior Garden City, NY/Garden City/Bryant University High School Coach: Steve Finnell Third season on the Pride Lacrosse team…Came to Hofstra in the fall of 2012 after one year at Bryant University in Smithfield, Rhode Island…2014: Saw limited time in two games as a face-off specialist as a junior… Played against Ohio State and Marist…Took one face-off in each game…2013: Saw limited action in one game as a back-up to John Antoniades as a sophomore…Played in the Delaware contest…Took one face-off…Posted a
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Midfield 5-11, 183, Senior Wading River, NY/Shoreham-Wading River High School Coach: Tom Rotanz Fourth year on the Hofstra roster…2015 Preseason All-CAA team selection…One of four team captains in 2015…2014: CAA All-Tournament team selection…Started all 16 games at midfield as a junior…Was third on the team in scoring with 26 goals and a seven assists for 33 points… Ranked ninth in the CAA in goals per game…Posted multi-goal games seven times including a career-high five goals at Massachusetts…Tallied three goals against St. John’s, Marist and Cornell, including the overtime gamewinner, and two against Marquette, Siena and Drexel in the CAA title game…Scored five man-up goals…Dished out a career-high two assists at St. John’s…Recorded 10 multi-point contests including the last seven of the year… Posted five points against St. John’s and Massachusetts and four points against Marist…Led the team with 100 shots including 66 on goal…Took a season-high 13 shots at St. John’s…Picked up 11 ground balls including two against Marquette and Ohio State...CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…2013: Started 13 games at midfield
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GP 14 14 15 43
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0-1 face-off mark…At Bryant: 2012: Did not play for the Bulldogs in 2012…Post-Graduate: Was a varsity starter as a post-graduate at Choate Rosemary Hall in Wallingford, Connecticut in 2010-11…Played football, lacrosse and wrestled at Choate…Was the undefeated Class A wrestling champion…High School: Was a three-sport athlete at Garden City (NY) High School competing in lacrosse, football and wrestling…Played one season of varsity lacrosse…Four-year varsity letterwinner in wrestling and three-year member of the football team…Led the Trojans football team to the Long Island championship in 2010… Named to All-Nassau County, All-Long Island and All-New York State first teams in football…Received the Martone Award as the top lineman in the county…State finalist in wrestling as a senior…All-county and All-Long Island second team pick in wrestling…Personal: Born November 10, 1991…Has one brother and two sisters…Enjoys listening to the music of the 1990s…Marketing major.
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and started 12 as a freshman…Was fifth on the team in goals, assists and points…Tallied 10 goals including four multi-goal contests…Scored a season-high three goals against Delaware…Posted two goals against Harvard, Towson and St. Joseph’s…Was second on the team with four man-up goals…Dished out seven assists including three against Dartmouth and two at Massachusetts… Recorded a season-best four points (3-1) against Delaware and three points (0-3) against Dartmouth…Picked up 13 ground balls including three at Penn State and two against Dartmouth, St. Joseph’s and UNC…Took 32 shots with 20 on goal…Fired off four shots against Delaware… High School: Played five years of lacrosse, four years of basketball and one year of football at East Islip (NY) High School…Three-time All-Suffolk County selection in lacrosse…Named to the Suffolk County Rising junior and senior all-star teams…Earned Scholar-Athlete accolades in all three sports…Named to the Academic All-Suffolk County team in basketball…Matt Howard Award recipient by the Suffolk Basketball Coaches as a senior…Also earned East Islip Coaches Award for basketball…Member of the National Honor Society and Boys Leaders…2011 East Islip Athletic Booster Club and HIA-LI Scholarship recipient… Played on the New York State Empire Games lacrosse team in 2010…Member of the Long island Express Club team for five years that was ranked #1 by Inside Lacrosse Magazine…Personal: Born May 10, 1993…Has one brother…Lists O.A.R. as his favorite band and Tim Tebow as his favorite athlete…Management major.
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and listening to music…Lists Mikey Powell, Alexander Ovechkin and John Wall as his favorite athletes…Also recruited by Maryland, Albany, Bucknell and Fairfield… Finance major.
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Year 2012 2013 2014 Career
GP 13 13 16 42
Sht. 30 47 100 177
G 9 11 26 46
A 2 3 7 12
Pts. 11 14 33 58
GB 5 6 11 22
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REICHERTER as a sophomore... Ranked fifth on the team in goals with 11 and sixth in points with 14…Posted a season-high two goals against both Delaware and St. Joseph’s… Also scored against Sacred Heart, Princeton, Harvard, Notre Dame, St. John’s, Dartmouth and Massachusetts…Tallied a goal and an assist in contests against the Red Storm and the Big Green…Recorded six ground balls including a career-high three against Harvard…Took 47 shots including 28 on goal…Fired a career-high seven shots against the Irish, Red Storm and Drexel…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll member…2012: CAA All-Rookie Team selection…Played in 13 games and started eight as a true freshman…Was sixth on the team in goals with nine, and points with 11… Tallied a season-high of three goals against Massachusetts and UNC…Posted assists against St. John’s and St. Joseph’s…Notched three multi-point games including three points against Massachusetts and UNC and two against St. John’s…Picked up five ground balls including two at Penn State…Took 30 shots with 18 on goal…Fired five shots against Massachusetts…High School: Lettered in lacrosse, basketball, winter track and golf at ShorehamWading River High School…Member of Suffolk County championship team as a senior…All-Suffolk County selection as a senior after scoring 27 goals and adding 17 assists despite missing five games due to injury…Totaled 58 goals and 38 assists in his scholastic career…Two-time all-division selection…All-county selection in the long jump as a junior and senior…Personal: Born June 3, 1993… Has one sister…Cousin, David Malave, played lacrosse at Alfred University…Hobbies include surfing, snowboarding
Midfield 6-2, 189, Senior Wantagh, NY/Wantagh High School Coach: Gary Reh
Fourth year on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…One of four team captains in 2015…2014: Played in seven games as a short-stick defensive middie…Missed nine games with an injury…Returned for the CAA Championship tournament…Tallied two goals, against Princeton and Delaware in the CAA semifinals, on the season…Took just two shots…Picked up 18 ground balls including four against Princeton and Drexel in the CAA title game… Also scooped up three against Marquette and Fairfield… CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…2013: Played in all 14 games as a short-stick defensive midfielder as a sophomore…Recorded three goals and one assist…Tallied goals against Sacred Heart, Fairfield and Penn State… Also added an assist against the Pioneers of SHU…Took just five shots on the year with three on goal…Scooped up 20 ground balls including a career-high tying four at Fairfield…Picked up multiple ground balls in seven games including three at St. Joseph’s..Forced three turnovers including a career-high tying two at Fairfield... CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll member…2012: Played in 12 games as a defensive midfielder as a true freshman… Recorded 16 grounds balls on the season including a season-high four against Delaware…Also picked up three against Towson, Massachusetts and Penn State… Tallied five forced turnovers including two against the Blue Hens of Delaware…Took one shot against St. John’s on the year…High School: Lettered in lacrosse, football and basketball at Wantagh (NY) High School…Earned AllNassau County honors as a senior in all three sports… Member of the National Honor Society, the Foreign Language Honor Society and the Business Honor Society…
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Long Stick Midfielder 5-11, 189, Senior East Northport, NY/John Glenn High School Coach: Kevin Lavey
Personal: Born January 21, 1993…Has two sisters…Lists snowboarding, going to the beach and sports among his hobbies…Names O.A.R. as his favorite band and pizza as his favorite food…Also recruited by Lafayette and Connecticut College…Finance major. Year 2012 2013 2014 Career
GP 12 14 7 33
Sht. 1 5 2 8
G 0 3 2 3
A 0 1 0 1
Pts. 0 4 2 6
GB 16 20 18 54
Fourth season on the Pride Lacrosse team…2015 Preseason All-CAA team selection...One of four team captains in 2015…Received the Nicholas Colleluori Memorial Award and will wear the number 27 this season…2014: All-CAA first team selection…CAA AllTournament team selection…Played in all 16 games as longstick midfielder… Tallied three goals and one assist on the season… Scored all three goals against Delaware including twice in the CAA semifinals… Posted an assist against
Georgetown…Took nine shots including six on goal…Was second in the CAA and 37th in the nation in caused turnovers with 23 (1.44) and was third on the team and sixth in the CAA in
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ground balls with 49 (3.06)…Recorded 11 multi-ground ball games including a career-high nine against Marist… Posted multiple caused turnovers in seven games including three against Princeton, Fairfield and Marist… CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…2013: Played in all 14 games as a long-stick midfielder…Recorded two goals on the year…Scored in the season opener against Sacred Heart and against Dartmouth…Third on the team in ground balls with 37 including a season-high of five in win over Notre Dame…Scooped up multiple ground balls in 12 of the 14 contests…Ranked second on the team with 12 forced turnovers including two against both Harvard and Towson…Took just seven shots including four on goal…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient… Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll member…2012: CAA All-Rookie Team selection…Played in all 14 games as a long-stick midfielder as a true freshman…Scored his first collegiate goal at Harvard for his lone point of the season…Recorded 34 ground balls including a seasonhigh seven against St. John’s…Also scooped up five against Fairfield…Led the Pride with 13 caused turnovers including two against the Blue Hens of Delaware…Took three shots with one on goal…Also took two face-offs (02)…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and football at John Glenn High School in East Northport, New York… Member of Suffolk County championship lacrosse team in 2010…Earned honorable mention All-America honors as a senior…All-Suffolk County selection as a junior and senior…Named team Most Valuable Player…Recorded more than 200 ground balls in his career…Team captain as a senior…Member of the Rutgers Trophy winning football team in 2010…Football team was also Long Island and Suffolk County champions…Second team All-New York state selection at quarterback as a senior…Finalist for the Hansen Award (Suffolk Player of the Year) and Esiason Award (top QB)…MVP of the Suffolk County and Long Island championship games…Football team and Division IV Most Valuable Player…Set Long Island record for allpurpose yards with more than 3,400 while passing for 21 touchdowns and rushing for 20…Personal: Born August 5, 1993…Has one sister…Father, Jim, was an Academic AllAmerican football player at Bucknell University in 1985 and also played baseball…Finance major. Year 2012 2013 2014 Career
GP 14 14 16 44
Sht. 3 7 9 19
G 1 2 3 6
A 0 0 1 1
Pts. 1 2 4 7
GB 34 37 49 120
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ROMANO
Midfield (SS) 6-1, 190, Senior Massapequa, NY/Massapequa High School Coach: Tim Radomski Fourth year on the Hofstra Lacrosse squad…2014: Played in all 16 games as a junior shortstick defensive midfielder… Recorded one goal and one assist on the year…Scored his first collegiate goal against Delaware and picked up his first
college assist at Princeton…Took five shots on the season… Posted 11 multiple-ground ball games including four against Fairfield and three in games against Princeton, St. John’s, Towson and Marist…Was fourth on the team with 10 caused turnovers, including three in the CAA title game against Drexel…2013: Played in all 14 games as a short-stick defensive midfielder…Picked up 21 ground balls including a career-high five against Massachusetts…Scooped up three
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Sht. 1 3 5 9
G 0 0 1 1
A 0 0 1 1
Pts. 0 0 2 2
GB 23 21 32 76
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SELVA
Goalie 5-9, 158, Senior Parkland, FL/St. Thomas Aquinas High School Coach: Terry Crowley Fourth season on the Pride Lacrosse squad…2015 Preseason All-CAA team selection…One of four team captains in 2015…2014: All-CAA second team selection… Started all 16 games and posted an 11-5 record while playing in all but 4:31…Led the CAA and was sixth in the country with an 8.29 goals against average in 970:13 of action…Recorded 133 saves and a .498 save percentage… Posted double-digit saves in seven games including a season-high of 13 against #20 Drexel and Siena…Recorded 11 saves while facing a season-high 39 shots in the overtime victory over #6 Cornell…Picked up 48 ground balls including seven against seven against Siena and six against Georgetown…Recorded 11 multiple-ground ball games…Caused four turnovers…Named a 2014 Preseason All-American Honorable Mention by Inside Lacrosse Face-
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Year 2012 2013 2014 Career
GP 2 14 16 32
Min. 3:33 827:32 970:13 1801:15
GA 1 105 134 240
GAA 16.90 7.61 8.29 7.99
Svs. 0 159 133 292
Sv% .000 .602 .498 .549
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Off Yearbook…2013: All-CAA second team selection… Started all 14 games as a sophomore and played all but 21 minutes…Tallied 827:32 in goal and recorded a 7.61 goals against average with a .602 save percentage…Ranked second in the CAA and fourth in the nation in goals against average and second in the league and fourth in Division I in save percentage…Made 159 saves and allowed 105 goals...Was fourth in the CAA and 20th in the country in saves per game with a 11.36 mark… Tallied double-digit saves in 10 games including career-highs of 17 stops against North Carolina and Massachusetts…Posted 16 saves in a triple-overtime loss against Drexel…Allowed just one goal in almost 57 minutes against St. Joseph’s and two in 60 minutes against Fairfield…Named CAA Player of the Week after 11 saves in a win at #2 Notre Dame…Picked up 38 ground balls including career-highs of six against UNC and Fairfield…Recorded an assist on a Torin Varn goal off a midfield pass against Princeton...2012: Saw limited time in two games as a freshman back-up to Andrew Gvozden…Saw 3:33 of action…Played in games against Drexel and North Carolina…Played 1:59 against UNC and allowed one goal and 1:34 at Drexel without allowing a goal…Picked up one ground ball against the Tar Heels…Also forced a turnover against UNC…High School: Played four years of lacrosse at St. Thomas Aquinas High School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida… Named to high school All-America team as a junior and senior…Three-time all-district, all-county and all-league selection…2011 Sun Sentinel Player of the Year…Named first team All-Sun Sentinel and All-Miami Herald as a junior and senior…Personal: Born November 4, 1992…Has one brother and one sister…Lists Ed Reed as his favorite athlete and mahi-mahi as his favorite food…Started playing lacrosse at age 6…Sociology major.
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against both Sacred Heart and Fairfield…Tallied multiground balls in seven contests…Forced three turnovers including one against Sacred Heart, Notre Dame and North Carolina…Took three shots…2012: Played in 13 games as a defensive midfielder as a true freshman… Recorded 23 ground balls including season-highs of four against Notre Dame, Delaware and St. Joseph’s…Scooped up three loose balls against Harvard and Towson…Tallied six caused turnovers including a season-high two against the Blue Hens of Delaware…Took one shot on the year at Drexel…High School: Played lacrosse and football for three years at Massapequa (NY) High School…Part of two Nassau County runner-up teams as a junior and senior…Named to All-Nassau County team as a senior… Honorable mention all-county as a junior…Tallied 15 goals and 23 assists as a senior and 12 goals and 15 assists as a junior…Two-time all-county pick in football…Personal: Born December 8, 1992…Has one sister…Names Michael Jordan as his favorite athlete…Lists “Gangs of New York” as his favorite movie…Also recruited by Johns Hopkins, North Carolina and Ohio State…Plans to pursue a career in television or film…Film studies and production major.
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at Penn State…Picked up nine ground balls including a season-high five against Fairfield…Also scooped up two at Princeton…Forced one turnover against Sacred Heart… Took one shot…High School: Played lacrosse for four years at Farmingdale (NY) High School…Part of New York State and Long Island championship team as a senior and a Nassau County championship team as a junior…Named to All-Nassau County team as a junior and senior…Allconference selection as a sophomore…Personal: Born November 10, 1992…Has one brother, Zach, who plays ice hockey at Nichols College…Hobbies include playing hockey and surfing…Named Theo Fleury as his favorite athlete…Also recruited by Maryland, Georgetown and Stony Brook…Plans to pursue a career in business, as well as coach college lacrosse and youth hockey…Community health major.
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HENDRICKSON Midfield 5-8, 180, Junior (RS) Farmingdale, NY/Farmingdale High School Coach: Bob Hartranft
Year 2012 2013 2014 Career
GP Sht. 12 1 Red-shirt 16 73 28 74
G 1
A 0
Pts. 1
GB 9
17 18
9 9
26 27
27 36
Third season on the Hofstra Lacrosse roster…2014: Started all 16 games at midfield as a sophomore… Was fifth on the team in scoring with careerhighs of 17 goals and nine assists for 26 points…Recorded five multi-goal games including a career-high four goals
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VINNY
COLATRIANO against Siena…Added two goals versus Princeton, Towson, Marist and Penn State… Scored three man-up goals…Tallied the gamewinning goal against Siena…Picked up 27 ground balls…Recorded multiple ground balls in eight games including a career-high six against Siena…Took 73 shots including 39 on goal…Fired eight shots in games against Marquette, Georgetown and Towson…2013: Did not play…2012: Played in six games as a freshman… Recorded one goal in the season finale
Midfield/Face-off Specialist 6-3, 222, Junior Bridgewater, NJ/Bridgewater-Raritan High School Coach: Chuck Apel
Third season on the Pride Lacrosse roster…2014: Did not see any game action due to injury…2013: Saw limited action in two games as a freshman…Played against Dartmouth and St. Joseph’s…Took one face-off in each contest…Posted a 0-2 face-off record…High School: Played four seasons of lacrosse at Bridgewater-Raritan High School in New Jersey...U.S. Lacrosse All-American as a senior…Tallied 14 goals, 5 assists and picked up 57 ground balls in 2012...Most Valuable Player of the Somerset County Tournament as a senior…Member of the Panthers’ 2011 and 2012 New Jersey State Championship team that posted a 20-2 record and was ranked eighth in the nation by LaxPower in 2011 and 21-0 and ranked first in the state and 13th in the country in 2012...Also a member of the Group 4 State Championship team in 2009...Won more than 70 percent of his face-offs in his scholastic career...Also played four seasons of football...Personal: Born October 20, 1993...Has two sisters including a twin… Also recruited by Massachusetts, Rutgers, Towson, North Carolina, Lehigh, Denver and Penn State...Served as president of Rachel’s Challenge at Bridgewater High
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Sht. 0 0 0
G 0 0 0
A 0 0 0
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5
SAM
LLINARES
Attack 5-9, 170, Junior Hauppauge, NY/Hauppauge High School Coach: Jim Konen Third season on the Hofstra Lacrosse roster…2015 CAA Preseason Player of the Year and All-CAA selection...Enters the 2015 season with a 29-game point scoring streak…2014: USILA AllAmerica honorable mention…All-CAA first team selection…Started and played in 15 games… Led the Pride in assists and points and was fourth in goals with 21 goals, 32 assists and 53 points…Led the CAA and was 10th in the nation in assists and was third in the conference and 29th in Division I in points as a sophomore…Tallied multiple goals in six games with a season-high three against Princeton and Ohio State…Had multi-assist games in 11 contests including a career-high four against Marist and Penn State… Recorded multiple points in 14 of 15 contests including five against Marquette, Princeton, Marist and Massachusetts…Had one manup goal vs. Marist…picked up 18 ground balls including a seasonhigh four against Marquette… Took 72 shots including 41 on goal... Fired eight shots against Marquette and Massachusetts…2014 All-CAA Preseason Team selection…CAA
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and 40 points as a freshman...All-county selection in soccer...Member of the National Honor Society…Personal: Born December 13, 1993...Has one sister...Enjoys golf, roller hockey and video games in his free time... Also recruited by Ohio State, Johns Hopkins, Maryland and Notre Dame...Participated in Headstrong Foundation fundraiser, Hauppauge Helps Haiti, Stay Strong Fundraiser for wrestler Nick Mauriello, and breast cancer walkathons… Management major Year 2013 2014 Career
GP 14 15 29
Sht. 71 72 143
G 19 21 40
A 13 32 45
Pts. 32 53 85
GB 26 18 44
M E N ’ S
GP 2 0 2
H O F S T R A
Year 2013 2014 Career
Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…2013: CAA AllRookie Team selection…Started all 14 games…Led the team in assists with 13 and was tied for the team-lead with Torin Varn with 32 points…Scored 19 goals including a season-high four in his collegiate debut against Sacred Heart…Added an assist against the Pioneers for a seasonhigh five points in the contest…Tallied multi-goal games four times…Notched two goals in games against Fairfield, St. John’s and Dartmouth…Recorded a season-high two assists in games against Princeton and Harvard…Credited with game-winning goals against Fairfield and #2 Notre Dame…Tallied man-up goals against the Red Storm, Drexel and Dartmouth and a man-down goal against Harvard… Tallied multi-point games 11 times…Picked up 26 ground balls on the season including a season-high six against the Crimson…Forced six turnovers including three against Harvard and two against Massachusetts…Took 71 shots including 43 on goal…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and two years of soccer at Hauppauge (NY) High School…Under Armour All-American…U.S. Lacrosse All-American…Warrior All-American…Ray Enners Award winner as a senior…Suffolk Country Player of the Year in 2012…Three-time All-Suffolk County selection... Ranked the 25th best incoming freshman by Inside Lacrosse… Lacrosse Scholar-Athlete Award winner in 2011 and 2012... Posted 39 goals and 26 assists as a senior and 38 goals and 26 assists as a junior...Recorded 65 points as a sophomore
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School...United Way volunteer…Criminology major.
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one sister…Enjoys fishing and listening to music in his free time…Volunteered at Books for Prisoners in Quincy, Massachusetts…Economics major. Year 2013 2014 Career
GP 1 16 17
Sht. 0 2 2
G 0 1 1
A 0 1 1
Pts. 0 2 2
GB 0 30 30
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FINN
SULLIVAN
Defense 6-3, 200, Junior West Roxbury, MA/Avon Old Farms High School Coach: Skip Flanagan Third season on the Hofstra Lacrosse roster…2015 AllCAA Preseason team selection…2014: All-CAA first team selection…Started all 16 games as a sophomore defender…Recorded one goal and one assist…Tallied his first collegiate goal at St. John’s…Picked up his first collegiate assist against Towson…Took just one shot on the season…Picked up 30 ground balls…Had eight multiple-ground ball games including a season-high four against Delaware and Drexel in the CAA tournament…Ranked 11th in the CAA in caused turnovers with 14 including four against Georgetown…2013: Saw limited action in one game as a freshman…Played in the St. Joseph’s contest... CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll member… High School: Played lacrosse and football at two high schools… Attended Roxbury Latin School in West Roxbury, Massachusetts for three years before spending his senior year and graduating from Avon Old Farms School in 2012…Named to All-Independent School League teams in both lacrosse and football at Roxbury Latin…Served as captain of both teams as well… Member of Avon Old Farms’ Founder’s League championship squad in 2012…Personal: Born December 21, 1992…Has
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BRIAN
VON BARGEN Midfield 6-2, 200, Junior Wantagh, NY/Wantagh High School Coach: Gary Reh
Third season on the Hofstra Lacrosse roster…2014: Played in 16 games at midfield as a sophomore…Took 21 shots including eight on goal…Fired three shots against Delaware…Picked up three ground balls on the season… Picked up a ground ball in games against Delaware twice and Marist…2013: CAA All-Rookie Team selection… Played in all 14 games and started one against Penn State in the season finale…Recorded eight goals on the year including a season-high two against both Delaware and Massachusetts…
Also tallied goals against Fairfield, Notre Dame, Towson and Penn State…Picked up four ground balls including two against the Nittany Lions…Took 40 shots including 21 on goal… Fired a season-high five shots against both Drexel and Massachusetts…
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KRIS
CLARKE
Midfield/Face-off Specialist 5-10, 172, Sophomore Bellmore, NY/Chaminade High School Coach: Jack Moran
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MATT
BOYER
Goalie 6-1, 165, Sophomore Pottstown, PA/Owen J. Roberts High School Coach: Jeff Neese Second season on the Hofstra Lacrosse roster…2014: Red-shirted and did not play…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and graduated from at Owen J. Roberts High School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania in 2012…Named to All-Pottstown Mercury All-Area first team as a senior… Also voted to All-Pac-10 first team…Recorded a .610 save percentage with 209 saves…Was a member of two PAC-10 championship teams in 2009 and 2010 and Wildcat teams that received district tournament berths all-four years… Personal: Born July 8, 1994…Has an older brother, Andrew, who has played for three years at St. John’s University… Hofstra Presidential Scholarship honoree…Graduate of the Pride Blue Leadership Program…Enjoys cooking and lacrosse in his free time…Aspires to be an accountant… Accounting major.
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
Second season on the Hofstra Lacrosse roster…2014: CAA All-Rookie Team selection…Played in all 16 games as the primary faceoff specialist…Took 340 face-offs and won 189 for a .556 winning percentage… Ranked fifth in the CAA and 25th in the nation in faceoff winning percentage… Won 19 faceoffs in 27 attempts against Marist…Won 15 face-offs at St. John’s (24) and at Massachusetts (21)…Won 14 of 18 face-off in the CAA semifinals…Won at least 50 percent of his face-offs in 11 of the 16 games…Led the team, was fifth in the CAA and 32nd in Division I in ground balls with 86… Scooped up nine ground balls against Towson, Marist, Massachusetts and Delaware…Picked up eight ground balls at St. John’s…Recorded his only goal of the year against Fairfield…Took one shot on the season… High School: Played four seasons of lacrosse, two seasons of football and was
M E N ’ S
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H O F S T R A
Year 2013 2014 Career
16
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High School: Played four years of lacrosse, football and basketball at Wantagh High School...All-Nassau County selection in 2012 and a honorable mention as a junior in 2011...Member of Wantagh Warrior teams that advanced to the county final in his sophomore and senior seasons and county semifinals in freshman and junior years... Received the Scott Deverna Memorial Award…Named Rising Sophomore in 2009, Rising Junior in 2010 and Rising Senior in 2011 at the Nassau County Showcase... Lacrosse team captain as a senior…Played four seasons of varsity football...All-county football selection and team Most Valuable Player as a junior…Named to the United Healthcare Empire Challenge All-Star Football Game in 2012…Selected Wantagh High School’s Most Outstanding Athlete for 2011-12…Personal: Born March 30, 1994...Has two brothers…Criminology major
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a member of the swim team for one year at Chaminade High School in Mineola, New York…Helped lead the Flyers of Chaminade to a 15-2 record, a number five national ranking by Inside Lacrosse, and the New York State Catholic High School AAA Championship as a senior… Voted NYCHSAA Face-Off Man of the Year in 2013…Won 203 of 271 face-offs for a .749 winning percentage…Picked up 87 ground balls…Team captain…All-CHSAA selection at midfield while helping to lead the Flyers to a 16-2 record and advancing to the CHSAA Championship game as a junior…won 222 of 31 face-offs for a .714 winning percentage…Also led the team with 90 ground balls... National Honor Society member…Personal: Born January 12, 1995…Has an older brother and sister…His brother Sean was a four-year member and a two-year captain of the Stony Brook Swim Team…Also recruited by Colgate, Brown and Loyola…Management major. Year 2014
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BRIER
DAVIS
as former Hofstra great Jay Card…Volunteered for Habitat for Humanity…Communications major. Year 2014
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Attack 5-11, 176, Sophomore Caledon, Ontario, Canada/ The McCallie School (TN) High School Coach: Troy Kemp Second season on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…2014: Played in 11 games on attack as a freshman…Recorded six goals and one assist…Tallied a season-high three goals against Georgetown and added two goals against Fairfield…Tallied one man-up goal against the Hoyas… Posted his first collegiate assist against Delaware…Took 19 shots including 10 on goal…Fired six shots against the Hoyas…Scooped up four ground balls…High School: Played four seasons of lacrosse at The McCallie School in Chattanooga, Tennessee…Two-time US Lacrosse AllAmerican in 2012 and 2013…Three-time all-region and All-Tennessee first team selections…Tallied 51 goals to lead the Tornadoes to a 21-3 record as a senior…Recorded 58 goals, 20 assists and 38 ground balls as a junior…Voted the Tornadoes’ Offensive Most Valuable Player…Received the Mr. Lacrosse Award…Tallied 37 goals, nine assists and 43 ground balls in 2011…Personal: Born July 24, 1994… Has one brother…Played Box Lacrosse for the Junior A Orangeville Northmen…Big NHL fan and enjoys video games in his free time…Hails from the same hometown
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MICHAEL
DIENER
Defense 6-1, 210, Sophomore Boca Raton, FL/Pine Crest School High School Coach: Doug Shanahan Second season on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…2014: Saw limited action in one game on defense as a freshman… Played against Marquette…CAA Commissioner’s Academic
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G 0
A 0
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ZACHARY
FRANCO
Midfield 6-2, 185, Sophomore Arnold, MD/Broadneck High School Coach: Clay White Second season on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…2014: Saw limited action in one game as a freshman…Played in the win over Marist…Picked up one ground ball… High School: Three-sport athlete who played four years of lacrosse, four years of football and three years of bowling at Broadneck High School in Annapolis, Maryland…Selected to Coaches’ All-Anne Arundel County first team as a senior…Named to the all-county lacrosse first team by the coaches association and the all-county lacrosse second team by The Capital as a junior…Named to the all-county lacrosse second team by the coaches association as a sophomore…All-county football first team selection by the coaches and second team by The Capital as a junior…Varsity football Unsung Hero Award winner as a junior… Personal: Born June 18, 1995…Has one brother… Likes to go crabbing and boating in his free time…Enjoys Italian food…Management major. GP 1
Sht. 0
G 0
A 0
Pts. 0
GB 1
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Year 2014
H O F S T R A
Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and two seasons of football at the Pine Crest School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida…Played lacrosse for former Hofstra great Doug Shanahan…Voted to All-Broward County Lacrosse First Teams by both the Miami Herald and the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel…Recorded seven goals and seven assists, 97 ground balls and won 62 percent of his face-off attempts…Two-time all-region and alldistrict first team selection…Two-time Academic Honor Roll member…Personal: Born July 28, 1994…Has a twin brother, Kyle, who played in all 11 games as a freshman linebacker at Colgate University…Favorite foods are steak, Chik-Fil-A and Chipotle…Accounting major.
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TREVOR
SETH
Attack 6-0, 165, Sophomore King of Prussia, PA/Upper Merion
Attack 5-8, 165, Sophomore Potomac Falls, VA/St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes High School Coach: Andrew Taibl
KUPECKY
MILLER
High School Coach: Brady McCormick Second year on the Hofstra Lacrosse roster…2014: Saw limited action in one game as a freshman…Played in the victory over Marist…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and three years of soccer at Upper Merion High School in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania…Four-year starter on attack… Recorded 132 goals and 242 assists in 70 games during his high school career…Named to Times-Herald All-Area first team and All-Suburban One League first team as a senior... Set single season points mark of 106 and single season assist mark of 70 in 18 games in 2013…Also picked up 111 ground balls as a senior…Named to Inside Lacrosse’s Top 40 on Attack at number 30 in their 2013 recruiting issue… Served as team captain in 2012 and 2013…Four-time Upper Merion Offensive Most Valuable Player...Two-time allleague and all-area first team selection…Tallied 31 goals and 44 assists and named to FCA National High School team as a junior…Posted 34 goals and 61 assists and named to 2011 Under Armour Philadelphia Team, the Brine National Lacrosse Classic Philadelphia Team and the Top 50 Rising Juniors by both ESPN and Inside Lacrosse…Named to all-league and all-area second teams after posting 27 goals and 68 assists as a freshman…Three-year starter at center back in soccer and was named team captain and Most Valuable Player as a junior…Four-time Distinguished Academic Honors recipient…Personal: Born March 18, 1995…Has two brothers…His brother, Heath, was an allleague lacrosse player at Messiah College from 2009-2013 while his father, Roman, played on three Elite Eight teams at midfield for Washington and Lee in 1977, 1978 and 1980…Enjoys hanging out with friends in his free time… Aspires to a career in business…Mathematic business economics major.
Second season on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…2014: Saw limited action in one game as a freshman…Played in the victory over Marist…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and soccer at St. Stephen’s and St. Agnes School in Alexandria, Virginia…Played on VISAA Division I State Championship teams in 2012 and 2013…US Lacrosse AllAmerican as a senior after recording 69 goals and 21 assists…All-Virginia first team selection…Named to All-IAC first team and the All-Met Team by The Washington Post… Helped lead the Saints to an 18-6 record and was selected the Saints’ Offensive Player of the Year as a senior…Was part of St. Stephen’s and St. Agnes team that recorded a cumulative 44-21 record over his final three seasons… Personal: Born April 25, 1994…Has one brother and one sister…Enjoys bass fishing in his free time…Business major.
Year 2014
SCHILLING
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NATE
Defense 6-2, 200, Sophomore Gambrills, MD/Archbishop Spalding High School Coach: Kenneth Davis Second year on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…2014: Played
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COLE
CONSIDINE
FLEURY
Defense 6-1, 190, Freshman (RS) Edmonton, Alberta, Canada/The Hill Academy High School Coach: Brodie Merrill/ Merrick Thomson Second season on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…2014: Redshirted due to an injury…High School: Played four years of lacrosse at The Hill Academy in Vaughan, Ontario… Played for Team Alberta in outdoor lacrosse…Selected 2012 Team Alberta National Captain…Also named 2012 Ontario Scholar-Athlete Award…Named to 2011 Reebok Top 100 All-Star Team…Played on NALI championship team in 2011 and the 2011 Newport Cup Post-Graduate Championship teams at The Hill Academy…Coached by two-time Georgetown All-American Brodie Merrill and four-time Albany All-America East selection Merrick Thomson…Personal: Born April 22, 1994…Has one sister… Enjoys playing golf, hockey and box lacrosse and camping in his free time…Recruited by Massachusetts, Albany, Hartford and Detroit Mercy…English major
Midfield/Attack 5-11, 180, Freshman (RS) Rockville Centre, NY/South Side High School Coach: Steve DiPietro Second season on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…2014: Red-shirted and did not play…High School: Played three years of lacrosse and two years of football at South Side High School in Rockville Centre, New York…Two-time allconference lacrosse selection as a junior and a senior… Recorded 19 goals and 14 assists as a senior and 13 goals and 13 assists as a junior…Selected Offensive Most Valuable Player as South Side as a senior…Also received Athletic Ability and Citizenship Award at South Side… All-conference football selection and Offensive Most Valuable Player as a senior…Personal: Born August 31, 1994…Has one brother and three sisters…Comes from an athletic family…His father, John, played lacrosse at Hofstra in the early 1980s…His sister, Emily, played on the Hofstra Women’s Lacrosse team and two cousins played at Marist and Hartwick…Aspires to be a physical therapist… Volunteered in Long Beach, New York, after Hurricane Sandy…Exercise science major.
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TIMOTHY
NOWAK Attack/Midfield
6-0, 180, Freshman (RS) Oakdale, NY/St. John the Baptist High School Coach: Larry Collins Second year on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…2014: Redshirted and did not play…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and two years of basketball at St. John the Baptist High School in West Islip, New York…Two-time
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in 15 games on defense as a freshman…Recorded two caused turnovers…Forced the miscues against St. John’s and Siena…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and two years of both football and hockey at Archbishop Spalding High School in Severn, Maryland…Three-year starter… Two-year All-Anne Arundel County selection including a first team pick as a senior…Helped lead Archbishop Spalding to a 12-9 record as a senior…Team captain as a senior…Personal: Born February 28, 1995…Enjoys swimming, listening to music and watching movies in his free time…Also recruited by Delaware, Dartmouth and Brown…Served as a volunteer for the Sarah’s House Program for the Homeless…Aspires to a career as an athletic trainer or a physical therapist…Exercise science major.
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All-CHSAA team selection as a junior in 2012 and a senior in 2013…Recorded 25 goals and 12 assists as a senior despite missing five games due to injury…Also two-time St. John the Baptist’s Offensive Most Valuable Player… Team Offensive Captain…Helped lead the Cougars to the CHSAA semifinals in 2012…Played in the Philadelphia Showcase in 2011…Was an All-CHSAA Academic Team selection…Personal: Born April 1, 1995…Has one sister… Enjoys playing basketball in his free time…Favorite food is Buffalo Wings…Entrepreneurship major.
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TOMMY
VOELKEL
24
JOHN
PUCKHABER Midfield 6-0, 180, Freshman (RS) Wantagh, NY/St. Anthony’s High School Coach: Keith Wieczorek
Second year on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…2014: Redshirted and did not play…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and four years of football at St. Anthony’s High School in South Huntington, New York…Named to all-league team as a senior…Played on the Friars varsity lacrosse championship team in 2011 and junior varsity championship lacrosse team in 2009 and 2010…Played in Adrenaline Blackcard Showcase, Summer Slam All-Star Team and Brine National Lacrosse Classic…Was a member of St. Anthony’s 13-2 football championship team in 2011…Four-year Honor Roll student…Personal: Born May 18, 1995…Has one brother and three sisters…Enjoys fishing and playing football in his free time…Finance major.
Midfield 6-0, 170, Freshman (RS) Chapel Hill, NC/Chapel Hill High School Coach: Brent Voelkel Second year on the Pride Lacrosse team…2014: Redshirted and did not play…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Named to Hofstra Athletics Academic Honor Roll…High School: Played four year of lacrosse at Chapel Hill (NC) High School…Two-time All-North Carolina third team selection…Named to all-conference first team, all-region second team and third team allstate after recording 11 goals and 14 assists as a senior… All-conference and all-region second team and all-state third team pick after posting 25 goals and 20 assists as a junior…Posted 10 goals and four assists as a sophomore and 12 goals and six assists as a freshman…Four-year Academic All-Conference selection…Personal: Born August 17, 1994...His high school coach was his father, Brent, who played on two NCAA Championship teams at North Carolina in 1981 and 1982…Has one brother and one sister…Volunteered with special needs students…Finance major.
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ALDERMAN
Midfield 5-9, 170, Freshman Downingtown, PA/Bishop Shanahan High School Coach: Jon Heisman
High School: Played four years of lacrosse and basketball and one year of soccer at Bishop Shanahan High School in Downingtown, Pennsylvania…US Lacrosse All-American, AllEPLCA first team, All-Southeastern Pennsylvania, All-Area first team, Ches-Mont League Most Valuable Player, All-Ches-Mont first team…Tallied 49 goals and 38 assists in 2014…Captain of the Bishop Shanahan team that won the Ches-Mont League title and advanced to the state playoffs…Named to All-Area first team and All-Ches-Mont first team as a junior after posting 34 goals and 18 assists…Voted to All-Area and All-Ches-Mont second teams after recording 32 goals and 12 assists as a sophomore…Tallied 28 goals and eight assists as a freshman…Two-time All-Ches-Mont League second team selection and team captain in basketball…Three-year varsity basketball starter…Personal: Born June 12, 1995…Has two brothers…His brother, Ryan, was a four-year letterman in football at Temple…Enjoys golf in his free time…Undecided major.
14
JACK
CONCANNON
Goalie 6-2, 170, Freshman Lindenhurst, NY/St. Anthony’s High School Coach: Keith Wieczorek
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CHRISTIAN
DURKOTA
Midfield 5-11, 155, Freshman Lancaster, PA/Hempfield High School Coach: Dave Ondrusek
High School: Played four years of lacrosse at Hempfield High School in Landisville, Pennsylvania…Named Honorable Mention All-Star as a senior…Recorded 31 goals and 15 assists in 2014…Tallied five goals and two assists against Conestoga Valley High School as a senior…Played on the Black Knights’ team that advanced to the Lancaster-Lebanon League championship game in 2014…Recorded eight goals and six assists as a junior…Also was a member of the Hempfield football and basketball teams for one season…Personal: Born September 5, 1995…Has three sisters…Enjoys listening to music and lists Pink Floyd as his favorite band…Undecided major.
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DYLAN
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NEWCOMERS
High School: Played four years of lacrosse at St. Anthony’s High School in South Huntington, New York…Was a member of two varsity teams that were CHSAA 3A finalists in 2013 and 2014…Named CHSAA Goalie of the Year, All-Long Island second team and All-Metro honorable mention as a senior… Also served as team captain and was voted St. Anthony’s Most Valuable Player in 2014…Named to the Under Armour Underclassmen All-America team in 2013…Junior varsity captain and was named to the New England Tournament allstar team in 2012…Played on the Friars’ CHSAA junior varsity championship team in 2011…Personal: Born January 20, 1996…Has one brother…Enjoys snowboarding, fishing and going to the beach in his free time…Undecided major.
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17
JOE
TIM
Defense 6-0, 195, Sophomore Copiague, NY/Kellenberg High School Coach: Mike Schwalje
Midfield 6-0, 180, Freshman Rockville, MD/Georgetown Prep/Wootton High School Coach: Kevin Giblin/Colin Thomson
FERRISO
Member of the 2015 Hofstra Lacrosse team who passed away in January 2015. High School: Played four years of lacrosse and soccer at Kellenberg Memorial High School in Uniondale, New York… Member of the Firebirds’ CHSAA Division AA Championship team in 2012 and finalist team in 2013…Named to the ESPN High School Top 25 on Long Island in 2013…Selected team captain as a junior…Picked up 46 ground balls and tallied seven assists as a senior…Posted 14 ground balls and two assists for Kellenberg as a junior…Recorded three goals and eight assists for the Firebirds soccer team as a senior team captain…Scored six goals as a junior…Received Kellenberg’s Mac Most Committed Soccer Award in 2011…Four-time Honor Roll student…Personal: Born March 16, 1995...His sister, Amy, played on the Hofstra soccer team from 2004 through 2008…Also recruited by Georgia Tech and Western New England…2013 Eagle Scout…Completed an internship with Celtic Sheetmetal Company last summer…Mechanical engineering major.
GOLDEN
High School: Played three years of lacrosse and football at Georgetown Preparatory School in North Bethesda, Maryland and one year of lacrosse and golf at Wootton High School in Rockville, Maryland…Named to all-county and All-Rockville Gazette Team as a senior at Wootton…Tallied 28 goals and 12 assists in 12 games for the Patriots in 2014…Member of Wootton’s county and district championship squad in lacrosse and the Patriots’ state championship golf team …Received the Iron Man Award and the Scholar-Athlete Award in all four quarters as a senior…Recorded four goals and five assists in a win over Bethesda-Chevy Chase…Recorded 20 goals and eight assists and was a member of Georgetown Prep’s IAC championship team in 2013…Tallied five goals and three assists as a sophomore member of the varsity at Georgetown Prep in 2012…Personal: Born August 17, 1995…Has one sister…His father, Brian, is a former golf professional…Enjoys golf, skiing and snowboarding in his free time…Also recruited by Denver, Georgetown, Drexel and Villanova…Served on a camp staff for inner city kids…Undecided major.
6
LUKE
GOMEZ
Midfield 6-1, 180, Freshman Ambler, PA/Wissahickon High School Coach: Tom Walsh
High School: Played four years of lacrosse at Wissahickon
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JOY
11
TANNER
GRIFFIN
Defense 6-2, 180, Freshman Loveland, OH/Loveland High School Coach: Mike Pritz
High School: Played four years of lacrosse and football at Loveland (OH) High School…Named to the USILA All-America team and voted Southern Ohio Player of the Year as a senior… Also an all-region first team pick in 2014…Picked up 93 ground balls and tallied three goals and two assists in 2014…Earned Under Armour Underclassmen All-America honors as a junior after scooping up 108 ground balls and notching three goals and three assists…Two-time All-ECC selection and all-region pick in 2012 and 2013…Was a three-year varsity starter at safety for the Loveland football team and played on the Ohio Division 2 State Championship team in 2013…Personal: Born October 27, 1995…Has three brothers…His brother, Dakota, plays lacrosse at Division I Mount Union…Spends his free time working out, staying in shape and spending time with family and friends…Volunteered for Shoes for the Homeless and Christmas for the Homeless drives…Criminology major.
Defense 6-1, 215, Sophomore West Islip, NY/St. John the Baptist High School Coach: Larry Collins
First year on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…High School: Played four years of lacrosse and three years of football at St. John the Baptist High School in West Islip, New York…Three-time all-league selection for the Cougars…Voted the league’s Long-Stick Midfielder of the Year as a senior in 2013…Picked up 96 ground balls and tallied two goals and seven assists as a senior…Received the Coaches Award as a freshman lacrosse player at St. John the Baptist…Personal: Born March 14, 1995… Has three brothers…His brother, Colin, played football at Army from 2010 through 2013…Enjoys going to the beach, fishing, cooking and building things in his free time…Volunteers at a cooking school for the less fortunate…Civil engineering major.
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KAVANAGH
Attack 5-8, 160, Freshman Rockville Centre, NY/Kellenberg Memorial High School Coach: Mike Schwalje
High School: Played four years of lacrosse at Kellenberg Memorial High School in Uniondale, New York…Voted CHSAA Attackman of the Year after recording 34 goals and 36 assists for the Firebirds…Team Most Valuable Player…Was a key part of Kellenberg’s first CHSAA Intersectional State Championship in 2014…Recorded 30 goals and 20 assists as a junior in 2013… Personal: Born April 12, 1996…Has four brothers and one sister…His brother, Matt, plays lacrosse at Notre Dame; sister, Colleen, plays soccer at Manhattan College; and brother, Kevin, plays hockey at Stony Brook…Undecided major.
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M E N ’ S
PATRICK
H O F S T R A
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High School in Ambler, Pennsylvania…Four -time All-Suburban One American selection including first team honors in his final three years...All-Times-Herald first team selection three times…Served as team captain as a junior and senior and was team Most Valuable Player as a senior and Offensive MVP as a sophomore…Selected Varsity Rookie of the Year as a freshman…Senior class treasurer in 2014 and Student Council Treasurer as a junior…Personal: Born June 12, 1996… His brother, Beau, plays lacrosse at the U.S. Naval Academy while twin sister, Zoe, plays on the Hofstra Women’s Lacrosse team…His mother, Amy, ran on the Connecticut track team… Enjoys coaching youth teams in his free time…Organized a dodgeball fundraiser for the Edward T. Coombs Foundation… Undecided major.
L A C R O S S E
MEET THE PRIDE
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M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
MEET THE PRIDE up 49 ground balls and added three goals and six assists as a freshman…Played four years on the varsity lacrosse and soccer teams…Four-year Honor Roll member…Personal: Born September 22, 1996…Has one brother and one sister…Enjoys wakeboarding, snowboarding and hunting in his free time… Aspires to a career with an engineering firm…Engineering major.
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MITCH
KINGSLEY
Attack 5-11, 180, Freshman Coto de Caza, CA/Junipero Serra High School Coach: Kyle Harrison
High School: Played four years of lacrosse at Junipero Serra High School in San Juan Capistrano, California…U.S. Lacrosse All-American and Adrenaline All-American as a senior… Named to all-county and all-league first teams after scoring 48 goals and 37 assists and picking up 62 ground balls… Serra’s Offensive Most Valuable Player…Voted to all-league first team in 2011 and 2011…Member of three Trinity League Championship squads from 2012 to 2014…Personal: Born August 3, 1995…Has one brother…Volunteered for Operation Help A Hero, a program that supports military personnel and their families for deployment and return…Aspires to a career in finance…Interned for a wealth management company… Finance major.
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JEREMIAH
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LACLAIR
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Long-Stick Midfielder 6-1, 175, Freshman Denton, MD/North Caroline High School Coach: Ben Bradner
High School: Played four years of lacrosse and soccer at North Caroline High School in Ridgley, Maryland…Twice selected Most Valuable Player as a junior and a senior...Recorded 19 goals and 23 assists with 63 ground balls as a senior… Selected to the 2013 Bayside Conference North All-Star second team…Posted five goals, nine assists and 60 ground balls in 2013…Had 61 grounders and two goals and four assists as a sophomore…Named 2011 Rookie of the Year…Scooped
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BRENDEN
LYNCH
Midfield 5-8, 150, Freshman Lake Forest, CA/Junipero Serra High School Coach: Kyle Harrison
High School: Played four years of lacrosse and soccer at Junipero Serra High School in San Juan Capistrano, California... Played on Serra’s CIF runner-up team in 2014…All-county selection as a senior…Two-time Trinity League first team selection as a junior and senior…Team captain as a senior... Four-year starter…Personal: Born July 21, 1995...Has one brother and one sister…His brother, Nolan, played lacrosse at Gettysburg College...Enjoys surfing and golf in his free time… Served as a youth coach last summer…Undecided major.
2
ALEX
MOESER
Midfield 6-1, 190, Freshman (RS) Greenwich, CT/Greenwich High School Coach: Scott Bulkley
First year on the Hofstra Lacrosse team…High School: Played four years of lacrosse at Greenwich (CT) High School…Twice named to All-Connecticut Lacrosse team…Voted to all-state second team as a junior in 2012 and all-state first team as a senior in 2013…Three-time All-Fairfield County Interscholastic
www. G oHof str a . co m
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MATTHEW
BRANDON
Attack 5-10, 153, Freshman West Islip, NY/West Islip High School Coach: Scott Craig
Midfield 5-9, 175, Freshman White Plains, NY/Iona Prep High School Coach: Rick Trizano
PERETTINE High School: Played four years of lacrosse, two years of basketball and one year of soccer at West Islip (NY) High School…Recorded six goals and 20 assists as a senior… Received the West Islip Scholar-Athlete Award as a junior and a senior…Did not play as a junior dues to an injury…Tallied 15 goals and 20 assists as a freshman and was selected West Islip’s Offensive Most Valuable Player…Personal: Born October 14, 1996…Has one brother and one sister…Enjoys reading, watching movies and hanging out with friends in his free time…Aspires to a career in the dentistry field…Biology major.
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STANDARD
High School: Played four years of lacrosse and two years of soccer at Iona Preparatory School in New Rochelle, New York…Was a three-year member of the Gaels varsity lacrosse squad…Played on the Iona Prep soccer team that advanced to the 2012 Catholic High School Athletic Association semifinals in 2012…Personal: Born April 27, 1997…Has two brothers… Enjoys playing video games and working on his lacrosse game in his free time…Worked at a mini-golf course last summer… Has volunteered in food kitchens and as a clean-up crew following Hurricane Sandy…Undecided major.
M E N ’ S
Member of Brewster’s league championship team in 2012… Three-year starter in football who was a team captain and an all-league selection…Member of Brewster’s undefeated and league championship football team in 2012…Personal: Born December 9, 1995…Has one brother and one sister…Lists Blink 182 as his favorite band…Criminology major.
H O F S T R A
Athletic Conference (FCIAC) pick including first team as a senior and second team as a junior…Selected MSG Varsity Newcomer of the Year in 2010…Was a member of Greenwich’s FCIAC championship team as a freshman…Personal: Born October 11, 1994…Has one sister…Was also recruited by Maryland, Albany, Fairfield and Syracuse…Undecided major.
L A C R O S S E
MEET THE PRIDE
SERRECCHIA Defense/Long-Stick Midfielder 5-9, 170, Freshman Brewster, NY/Brewster High School Coach: Michael Honey
High School: Played four year of lacrosse and four years of football at Brewster (NY) High School…Named to allsection and all-league teams in lacrosse…Led the Bears of Brewster in ground balls and takeaways in both his junior and senior seasons…Three-year starter and team captain…
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JOE
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M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
2014 OPPONENTS 2015
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MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY
PRINCETON UNIVERSTIY
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY
PROVIDENCE COLLEGE
Location: Milwaukee, WI Nickname: Golden Eagles Director of Athletics: Bill Scholl Lacrosse Stadium: Hart Park (5,500) Head Lacrosse Coach: Joe Amplo Record at School/Years: 11-18/2 years Overall Record: Same Coach’s Office Phone: (414) 288-5387 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Mike Wittliff Office Phone: (414) 288-7447 E-mail: michael.wittliff@marquette.edu 2014 Record: 6-10/4-2 Big East Series Record: Marquette leads, 1-0 Last Meeting: 2014-Marquette won, 11-9 Athletic Website: GoMarquette.com
Location: Princeton, NJ Nickname: Tigers Director of Athletics: Mollie Marcoux Lacrosse Stadium: Class of 1952 Stadium (6,000) Press Box Phone: (609) 258-2401/2472 Head Lacrosse Coach: Chris Bates Record at School/Years: 42-30/5 years Overall Record: 112-101/15 years Coach’s Office Phone: (609) 258-4978 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Jerry Price Office Phone: (609) 258-3569 E-mail: jprice@princeton.edu 2014 Record: 7-6/2-4 Ivy Series Record: Princeton leads, 14-13 Last Meeting: 2014-Princeton won, 12-10 Athletic Web Site: GoPrincetonTigers.com
Location: Washington, DC Nickname: Hoyas Director of Athletics: Lee Reed Lacrosse Stadium: Multi-Sport Facility (4,652) Head Lacrosse Coach: Kevin Warne Record at School/Years: 10-19/2 years Overall Record: Same Coach’s Office Phone: (202) 687-5415 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Ryan Sakamoto Office Phone: (202) 687-5241 E-mail: ras228@georgetown.edu 2014 Record: 4-10/1-5 Big East Series Record: Georgetown leads, 3-2 Last Meeting: 2014-Hofstra won, 9-8 (OT) Athletic Web Site: GUHoyas.com
Location: Providence, RI Nickname: Friars Director of Athletics: Robert Driscoll, Jr. Lacrosse Stadium: Lennon Family Field Head Lacrosse Coach: Chris Gabrielli Record at School/Years: 12-19/2 years Overall Record: Same Coach’s Office Phone: (401) 865-2007 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Jill Mullany Office Phone: (401) 865-2272 E-mail: jmullany.ga@friars.providence. edu 2014 Record: 4-11/1-5 Big East Series Record: Hofstra leads, 4-0 Last Meeting: 2006-Hofstra won, 14-8 Athletic Web Site: Friars.com
MANHATTAN COLLEGE
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
ST. JOHN’S UNIVERSITY
Location: Riverdale, NY Nickname: Jaspers Director of Athletics: Noah LeFevre Lacrosse Stadium: Gaelic Park Head Lacrosse Coach: Steve Manitta Record at School/Years: 9-21/2 years Overall Record: 31-41/5 years Coach’s Office Phone: (718) 862-7841 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Joe Hutter Office Phone: (718) 862-7728 E-mail: jhutter01@manhattan.edu 2014 Record: 5-10/3-3 MAAC Series Record: Hofstra leads, 2-0 Last Meeting: 2011-Hofstra won, 13-8 Athletic Website: GoJaspers.com
Location: Columbus, OH Nickname: Buckeyes Director of Athletics: Eugene Smith Lacrosse Stadium: Ohio Stadium Head Lacrosse Coach: Nick Myers Record at School/Years: 50-43/6 years Overall Record: Same Coach’s Office Phone: (614) 292-9017 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Leann Parker Office Phone: (614) 688-0294 E-mail: parker.387@osu.edu 2014 Record: 6-8/3-1 ECAC Series Record: Hofstra leads, 3-0 Last Meeting: 2014-Hofstra won, 7-5 Athletic Web Site: OhioStateBuckeyes.com
Location: Queens, NY Nickname: Red Storm Director of Athletics: Chris Monasch Lacrosse Stadium: DaSilva Memorial Field (1,200) Press Box Phone: (718) 990-2725 Head Lacrosse Coach: Jason Miller Record at School/Years: 45-65/8 years Overall Record: Same Coach’s Office Phone: (718) 990-6305 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Ed Boulat Office Phone: (718) 990-1523 E-mail: edouard.boulat13@stjohns.edu 2014 Record: 7-7/3-3 Big East Series Record: Hofstra leads, 12-4 Last Meeting: 2014-St. John’s won, 11-10 (OT) Athletic Web Site: RedStormSports.com
Saturday, February 14 at Hofstra
Friday, February 20 at Princeton
Tuesday, February 24 at Hofstra
Saturday, February 28 at Georgetown
Saturday, March 7 at Ohio State
Saturday, March 14 at Hofstra
Tuesday, March 17 at Hofstra
www.GoHofstra.com www. G oHof str a . co m
FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY
Location: Amherst, MA Nickname: Minutemen Director of Athletics: John F. McCutcheon Lacrosse Stadium: Richard F. Garber Field (5,000) Press Box Phone: (845) 750-4225 Head Lacrosse Coach: Greg Cannella Record at School/Years: 178-110/20 years Overall Record: Same Coach’s Office Phone: (413) 545-3782 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Cody Lahl Office Phone: (845) 750-4225 E-mail: clahl@admin.umass.edu 2014 Record: 7-6/1-4 CAA Series Record: Massachusetts leads, 21-18 Last Meeting: 2014-Hofstra won, 11-6 Athletic Web Site: UMassAthletics.com
Location: Philadelphia, PA Nickname: Dragons Director of Athletics: Dr. Eric Zillmer Lacrosse Stadium: Vidas Field Head Lacrosse Coach: Brian Voelker Record at School/Years: 50-28/5 years Overall Record: 92-79/10 years Coach’s Office Phone: (215) 895-1859 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Mike Tuberosa Office Phone: (215) 895-1591 E-mail: tuberosa@drexel.edu 2014 Record: 13-5/4-1 CAA Series Record: Hofstra leads, 22-6 Last Meeting: 2014-Drexel won, 11-10 (3 OT) Athletic Web Site: DrexelDragons.com
Location: Ithaca, NY Nickname: Big Red Director of Athletics: J. Andrew Noel Jr. Lacrosse Stadium: Schoellkopf Field (25,597) Press Box Phone: (607) 255-3535 Head Lacrosse Coach: Matt Kerwick Record at School/Years: 11-5/1 year Overall Record: 120-106/16 years Coach’s Office Phone: (607) 255-4718 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Julie Greco Office Phone: (607) 255-4688 E-mail: jag235@cornell.edu 2014 Record: 11-5/5-1 Ivy Series Record: Cornell leads, 6-2 Last Meeting: 2014-Hofstra won, 10-9 (OT) Athletic Web Site: CornellBigRed.com
Location: Fairfield, CT Nickname: Stags Director of Athletics: Eugene P. Doris Lacrosse Stadium: Lessing Field (600) Head Lacrosse Coach: Andrew Copelan Record at School/Years: 55-36/6 years Overall Record: 73-50/8 years Coach’s Office Phone: (203) 254-4000 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Drew Kingsley Office Phone: (203) 254-4000 ext. 2877 E-mail: dkingsley@fairfield.edu 2014 Record: 12-4/3-1 ECAC Series Record: Hofstra leads, 4-1 Last Meeting: 2014-Hofstra won, 9-7 Athletic Web Site: FairfieldStags.com
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE Saturday, March 28 at Delaware
MARIST COLLEGE
Tuesday, April 7 at Hofstra
TOWSON UNIVERSITY
Location: Newark, DE Nickname: Fightin’ Blue Hens Director of Athletics: Eric Ziady Lacrosse Stadium: Rullo Stadium (2,000) Press Box Phone: (302) 831-3526 Head Lacrosse Coach: Bob Shillinglaw Record at School/Years: 293-274/36 years Overall Record: 317-290/38 years Coach’s Office Phone: (302) 831-8661 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Scott Selheimer Office Phone: (302) 831-2186 E-mail: selheime@udel.edu 2014 Record: 7-9/1-4 CAA Series Record: Hofstra leads, 27-12 Last Meeting: 2014-Hofstra won, 8-6 Athletic Web Site: BlueHens.com
Location: Poughkeepsie, NY Nickname: Red Foxes Director of Athletics: Tim Murray Lacrosse Stadium: Tenney Stadium at Leonidoff Field Head Lacrosse Coach: Keegan Wilkinson Record at School/Years: 22-21/3 years Overall Record: Same Coach’s Office Phone: (845) 575-3699 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Kevin McCall Office Phone: (845) 575-3000, ext. 6047 E-mail: kevin.mccall1@marist.edu 2014 Record: 6-9/3-3 MAAC Series Record: Hofstra leads, 1-0 Last Meeting: 2014-Hofstra won, 15-10 Athletic Web Site: GoRedFoxes.com
Location: Towson, MD Nickname: Tigers Director of Athletics: Tim Leonard Lacrosse Stadium: Johnny Unitas Stadium (11,198) Press Box Phone: (410) 704-3102 Head Lacrosse Coach: Shawn Nadelen Record at School/Years: 25-23/3 years Overall Record: Same Coach’s Office Phone: (410) 704-4968 Men’s Lacrosse SID: Dustin Semonavick Office Phone: (410) 704-4571 E-mail: dsemonavick@towson.edu 2014 Record: 8-7/2-3 CAA Series Record: Hofstra leads, 25-20 Last Meeting: 2014-Hofstra won, 9-7 Athletic Web Site: TowsonTigers.com
Saturday, March 21 at Hofstra
Saturday, April 4 at Hofstra
H2014o fHofstra str aMen’s U niLacrosse vers i t y
Saturday, April 11 at Cornell
Saturday, April 18 at Towson
Friday, April 24 at Fairfield
M E N ’ S
CORNELL UNIVERSITY
H O F S T R A
DREXEL UNIVERSITY
2 0 1 5
UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS
L A C R O S S E
Click on logo to go to opponent’s web site in your browser
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L A C R O S S E
2015 NCAA MEN’S LACROSSE FEB. 1
Delaware at High Point, 12 p.m.
VMI at Army, 3 p.m.
Lafayette at Colgate, 12 p.m. Towson at Georgetown, 12 p.m. Sacred Heart at High Point, 12 p.m. Bucknell at Navy, 12 p.m. Dartmouth at Ohio State, 12 p.m. Marist at Binghamton, 1 p.m. Hartford at Bryant, 1 p.m. Furman vs. Canisius in Denver, 1 p.m. Robert Morris vs. Detroit in Pontiac, MI, 1 p.m. Cornell at Hobart, 1 p.m. Boston University at Lehigh, 1 p.m. Fairfield at Manhattan, 1 p.m. Notre Dame at Michigan, 1 p.m. UMBC at Monmouth, 1 p.m. Vermont at Providence, 1 p.m. Virginia at Rutgers, 1 p.m. Siena at UMass Lowell, 1 p.m. Penn State at Villanova, 1 p.m. Saint Joseph’s at VMI, 1 p.m. Johns Hopkins at North Carolina, 2 p.m. Albany at Drexel, 2:30 p.m. Massachusetts at Harvard, 3 p.m. Air Force at Denver, 3:30 p.m. St. John’s at Jacksonville, 7 p.m. Holy Cross at Loyola, TBA Maryland at Yale, TBA
FEB. 10
FEB. 22
FEB. 7
Duke at High Point, 12 p.m. Marquette at Lehigh, 12 p.m. Furman at North Carolina, 12 p.m. Vermont at Penn State, 12 p.m. Mercer at Boston University, 1 p.m. Colgate at Bryant, 1 p.m. Bucknell at Delaware, 1 p.m. Ohio State vs. Detroit in Pontiac, MI, 1 p.m. UMBC at Johns Hopkins, 1 p.m. Virginia at Loyola, 1 p.m. Army at Massachusetts, 1 p.m. Bellarmine at Michigan, 1 p.m. Saint Joseph’s at Richmond, 1 p.m. Rutgers at St. John’s, 1 p.m. Manhattan at Stony Brook, 1 p.m. Siena at Syracuse, 4 p.m.
FEB. 8
Air Force at Duke, 12 p.m. VMI at Navy, 12 p.m.
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
FEB. 9
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FEB. 21
High Point at North Carolina, 4 p.m. Johns Hopkins at Towson, 6 p.m. Robert Morris at Ohio State, 7 p.m. Lafayette at Wagner, 3 p.m.
Quinnipiac at Brown, 12 p.m. Duke at Stony Brook, 12 p.m. Canisius vs. Air Force in Denver, CO, 1 p.m. Marquette at Richmond, 1 p.m. Furman at Denver, 3:30 p.m. Army at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
FEB. 14
FEB. 23
FEB. 13
Lehigh at Furman, 11 a.m. Bellarmine at Robert Morris, 11 a.m. Holy Cross at Fairfield, 12 p.m. Marquette at Hofstra, 12 p.m. Penn State at Loyola, 12 p.m. Maryland at Navy, 12 p.m. Massachusetts at North Carolina, 12 p.m. Georgetown at Notre Dame, 12 p.m. Delaware at Ohio State, 12 p.m. Rutgers at Richmond, 12 p.m. Mount St. Mary’s at VMI, 12 p.m. Sacred Heart at Binghamton, 1 p.m. Bryant at Bucknell, 1 p.m. Boston University at Canisius, 1 p.m. UMBC at Penn, 1 p.m. Manhattan at Princeton, 1 p.m. Stony Brook at St. John’s, 1 p.m. Colgate at Vermont, 1 p.m. Johns Hopkins at Villanova, 1 p.m. Marist at Air Force, 2 p.m. Denver vs. Duke in Kennesaw, GA, 3 p.m. High Point at Saint Joseph’s, 3 p.m. Drexel at Virginia, 5:30 p.m. Detroit at Michigan, 7 p.m. UMass Lowell at Yale, TBA
FEB. 15
Army at Jacksonville, 12 p.m. Hobart at Siena, 1 p.m. Duke at Mercer, 2 p.m. Cornell at Syracuse, 4 p.m.
FEB. 17
Wagner at Monmouth, 3 p.m. Fairfield at Providence, 3 p.m. Penn at Saint Joseph’s, 4 p.m. Loyola at Towson, 6 p.m.
FEB. 20
Hofstra at Princeton, 3 p.m. NJIT at Stony Brook, 3 p.m. Delaware at Mount St. Mary’s, 4 p.m.
Harvard at Holy Cross, 4 p.m.
FEB. 24
Wagner at Rutgers, 3 p.m. Albany at Bryant, 4 p.m. Manhattan at Hofstra, 4 p.m. Boston University at Providence, 4 p.m. Siena at Mercer, 4:30 p.m. Villanova at Drexel, 7 p.m. Binghamton at Cornell, TBA Penn at Maryland, TBA
FEB. 27
Towson at Mount St. Mary’s, 4 p.m. Denver at North Carolina, 4 p.m. Marquette vs. Detroit in Louisville, KY, 5 p.m. Ohio State at Bellarmine, 7 p.m.
FEB. 28
Robert Morris at High Point, 11 a.m. Lafayette at Army, 12 p.m. Harvard at Duke, 12 p.m. Hofstra at Georgetown, 12 p.m. Air Force at Furman, 12 p.m. Drexel at Maryland, 12 p.m. Quinnipiac at NJIT, 12 p.m. Penn at Penn State, 12 p.m. Monmouth at Rutgers, 12 p.m. Fairfield at Stony Brook, 12 p.m. Delaware at Villanova, 12 p.m. Hobart at Binghamton, 1 p.m. Colgate at Bucknell, 1 p.m. Manhattan at Hartford, 1 p.m. Princeton at Johns Hopkins, 1 p.m. Brown at Massachusetts, 1 p.m. Canisius at Michigan, 1 p.m. Dartmouth at Notre Dame, 1 p.m. UMBC at Richmond, 1 p.m. St. John’s at Siena, 1 p.m. Wagner at UMass Lowell, 1 p.m. Bryant at Yale, 1 p.m. Boston University at Vermont, 1:30 p.m. Lehigh at Loyola, 2 p.m. Navy at Holy Cross, 3 p.m. Albany vs. Cornell in Dallas, TX, TBA
MARCH 1
Virginia at Syracuse, 12 p.m. Marquette vs. Ohio State in Louisville, KY, 1 p.m. Detroit at Bellarmine, 3:30 p.m. Providence at Duke, 5 p.m.
MARCH 3
Yale at St. John’s, 3 p.m. Holy Cross at Delaware, 3:30 p.m. Quinnipiac at Harvard, 4 p.m. Colgate at Hobart, 4 p.m. Vermont at NJIT, 4 p.m. Saint Joseph’s at Drexel, 5 p.m. Army at Rutgers, 6 p.m. Michigan at Jacksonville, 7 p.m. Stony Brook at Marist, 7 p.m. Towson at Navy, 7 p.m. Penn at Lafayette, 7:35 p.m.
MARCH 4
Mercer vs. Detroit in Pontiac, MI, 11 a.m. Sacred Heart at Dartmouth, 3 p.m. Brown at Hartford, 3:30 p.m. Georgetown at Mount St. Mary’s, 4 p.m.
MARCH 6
Marquette at Jacksonville, 7 p.m.
MARCH 7
Hobart at Georgetown, 12 p.m. Penn State at Harvard, 12 p.m. Navy at Johns Hopkins, 12 p.m. High Point at Marist, 12 p.m. Princeton at Maryland, 12 p.m. UMass Lowell at NJIT, 12 p.m. Manhattan at North Carolina, 12 p.m. Hartford at Quinnipiac, 12 p.m. Binghamton at Delaware, 1 p.m. Loyola at Duke, 1 p.m. Bryant at Drexel, 1 p.m. Mount St. Mary’s vs. Furman in Myrtle Beach, SC, 1 p.m. Bucknell at Lehigh, 1 p.m. Hofstra at Ohio State, 1 p.m. Villanova at Penn, 1 p.m. Sacred Heart at Providence, 1 p.m. VMI at Richmond, 1 p.m. Siena at Robert Morris, 1 p.m. St. John’s vs. Syracuse in Kennesaw, GA, 1 p.m. Towson at UMBC, 1 p.m. Air Force vs. Vermont in Bethesda, MD, 1 p.m. Cornell at Virginia, 1 p.m. Fairfield at Yale, 1 p.m. Boston University at Colgate, 2 p.m. Massachusetts at Albany, 3 p.m. Notre Dame at Denver, 3 p.m. Monmouth at Saint Joseph’s, 3 p.m. Army at Holy Cross, TBA Dartmouth at Wagner, TBA
MARCH 8
Air Force vs. VMI in Alexandria, VA, 1 p.m. Stony Brook at Rutgers, 2 p.m. Marquette at Mercer, 2 p.m. Brown at Michigan, 3 p.m.
MARCH 10
Fairfield at Bucknell, 3 p.m. Vermont at Georgetown, 3 p.m. Quinnipiac at Massachusetts, 3 p.m. Providence at UMass Lowell, 4 p.m. Bryant at North Carolina, 4 p.m. Canisius at Hobart, 7 p.m. Marist vs. Penn State in Boston, MA, 7 p.m. Lehigh at Villanova, 7 p.m. Saint Joseph’s at Virginia, 7 p.m. Navy at Lafayette, 7:35 p.m.
MARCH 11
Robert Morris at Jacksonville, 3 p.m. Richmond at Mount St. Mary’s, 4 p.m.
MARCH 14
Loyola at Army, 12 p.m. Rutgers at Delaware, 12 p.m. Duke at Georgetown, 12 p.m. Providence at Hofstra, 12 p.m. Penn State at Massachusetts, 12 p.m. Hobart at Towson, 12 p.m. Notre Dame at Virginia, 12 p.m. Jacksonville at VMI, 12 p.m. Lafayette at Boston University, 1 p.m. Holy Cross at Bucknell, 1 p.m. Colgate at Fairfield, 1 p.m. UMass Lowell at Hartford, 1 p.m. Canisius at Manhattan, 1 p.m. Monmouth at Marist, 1 p.m. High Point at Mercer, 1 p.m. Denver at Ohio State, 1 p.m. Princeton at Penn, 1 p.m. North Carolina at Richmond, 1 p.m. Drexel at St. John’s, 1 p.m. Michigan at Saint Joseph’s, 1 p.m. Quinnipiac at Siena, 1 p.m. Albany at Stony Brook, 1 p.m. Maryland at Villanova, 1 p.m. Bellarmine at Furman, 2 p.m. Detroit at Air Force, 2 p.m. Johns Hopkins at Syracuse, 2 p.m. Binghamton at UMBC, 2 p.m. Lehigh at Navy, 2:30 p.m. Harvard at Brown, 3 p.m. Vermont at Sacred Heart, 3 p.m. Cornell at Yale, TBA
MARCH 17
Bucknell at Brown, 4 p.m. Colgate at Cornell, 4 p.m. Albany at Canisius, 4 p.m. Hartford at Holy Cross, 4 p.m. Fairfield at UMass Lowell, 4 p.m. Princeton at Rutgers, 6 p.m. St. John’s at Hofstra, 7 p.m. Denver at Lehigh, 7 p.m. Monmouth at NJIT, 7 p.m. Harvard at North Carolina, 7 p.m. Lafayette at Sacred Heart, 7 p.m. Ohio State at Towson, 7 p.m. VMI at Wagner, TBA
MARCH 18
Manhattan at Delaware, 3 p.m. Georgetown at Loyola, 7 p.m.
MARCH 20 NJIT at Rutgers, 6 p.m.
MARCH 21
Navy at Colgate, 12 p.m. Marquette at Georgetown, 12 p.m. Air Force at High Point, 12 p.m. Massachusetts at Hofstra, 12 p.m. Army at Lehigh, 12 p.m. Detroit at Quinnipiac, 12 p.m. Hartford at Albany, 1 p.m. VMI at Bellarmine, 1 p.m. Towson at Binghamton, 1 p.m. Manhattan at Brown, 1 p.m. Marist at Canisius, 1 p.m. Harvard at Dartmouth, 1 p.m. Bryant at Hobart, 1 p.m. St. John’s at Holy Cross, 1 p.m. Richmond at Jacksonville, 1 p.m. Drexel at Michigan, 1 p.m. Siena at Monmouth, 1 p.m. Yale at Princeton, 1 p.m. Robert Morris at Sacred Heart, 1 p.m. UMBC at Stony Brook, 1 p.m. Mount St. Mary’s at Wagner, 1 p.m. Bucknell at Boston University, 2:30 p.m. Penn at Cornell, 3 p.m. Saint Joseph’s at Delaware, 3 p.m. Denver vs. Penn State in Hempstead, NY, 3 p.m. Vermont at UMass Lowell, 3 p.m. Ohio State at Notre Dame, 3:30 p.m.
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MARCH 23 NJIT at Richmond, 4 p.m.
MARCH 24
Vermont at Dartmouth, 3 p.m. Lehigh at Monmouth, 3 p.m. Maryland at Robert Morris, 4 p.m. Binghamton at Drexel, 4:30 p.m. Marist at Brown, 7 p.m. Providence at Bryant, 7 p.m. Albany at Harvard, 7 p.m. Mount St. Mary’s at UMBC, 7 p.m. Virginia at VMI, 7 p.m.
MARCH 27 Lafayette at UMBC, 7 p.m.
MARCH 28
Manhattan at Detroit, 12 p.m. Furman at High Point, 12 p.m. Sacred Heart at Mount St. Mary’s, 12 p.m. Boston University at Navy, 12 p.m. Wagner at NJIT, 12 p.m. Syracuse at Notre Dame, 12 p.m. Marist at Quinnipiac, 12 p.m. Massachusetts at Towson, 12 p.m. Hartford at Binghamton, 1 p.m. Army at Bucknell, 1 p.m. Dartmouth at Cornell, 1 p.m. Hofstra at Delaware, 1 p.m. Lehigh at Holy Cross, 1 p.m. Bellarmine at Mercer, 1 p.m. Hobart at Robert Morris, 1 p.m. Providence at St. John’s, 1 p.m. Marquette at Villanova, 1 p.m. Richmond at Virginia, 1 p.m. Stony Brook at Vermont, 1:30 p.m. Jacksonville at Air Force, 2 p.m. Rutgers at Johns Hopkins, 2 p.m. Colgate at Loyola, 2:30 p.m. UMass Lowell at Albany, 3 p.m. Saint Joseph’s at Bryant, 3 p.m. Georgetown at Denver, 3 p.m. Yale at Penn, 3 p.m. Fairfield at Drexel, 4 p.m. Siena at Canisius, TBA
MARCH 29
Brown at Princeton, 11 a.m. Duke at North Carolina, 1 p.m. Ohio State at Penn State, 3 p.m. Michigan at Maryland, TBA
MARCH 31
Hartford at Siena, 3 p.m. NJIT at Manhattan, 7 p.m. Quinnipiac at Stony Brook, 7 p.m. Sacred Heart at Yale, 7 p.m. Monmouth at Lafayette, 7:35 p.m. Marquette at Bellarmine, TBA
APRIL 2
Albany at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
APRIL 3
North Carolina at Virginia, 7 p.m. Villanova at Denver, 9 p.m.
APRIL 5
Rutgers at Michigan, 12 p.m. Johns Hopkins at Ohio State, TBA
APRIL 7
Marquette at Notre Dame, 4 p.m. Harvard at Boston University, 7 p.m. Sacred Heart at Bryant, 7 p.m. Marist at Hofstra, 7 p.m. Wagner at Saint Joseph’s, 7 p.m. NJIT at Lafayette, 7:35 p.m. Canisius at Cornell, TBA
APRIL 8
Mount St. Mary’s at Robert Morris, 4 p.m. Princeton at Lehigh, 7 p.m. Loyola at Maryland, 8 p.m.
APRIL 10
Stony Brook at UMass Lowell, 6:30 p.m.
APRIL 11
Monmouth at Detroit, 11 a.m. Hofstra at Cornell, 12 p.m. Penn at Harvard, 12 p.m. Richmond at High Point, 12 p.m. Saint Joseph’s at Mount St. Mary’s, 12 p.m. Manhattan at Siena, 12 p.m. Vermont at UMBC, 12 p.m. Jacksonville at Bellarmine, 1 p.m. Loyola at Boston University, 1 p.m. Robert Morris at Bryant, 1 p.m. Quinnipiac at Canisius, 1 p.m. Princeton at Dartmouth, 1 p.m. Wagner at Hobart, 1 p.m. Colgate at Holy Cross, 1 p.m. Air Force at Mercer, 1 p.m. Army at Navy, 1 p.m. Marquette at Providence, 1 p.m. Denver at St. John’s, 1 p.m. Brown at Yale, 1 p.m. Towson at Fairfield, 2 p.m. Massachusetts at Hartford, 2 p.m. VMI at Furman, 2:30 p.m. Villanova at Georgetown, 3 p.m. Delaware at Drexel, 4 p.m. Syracuse at North Carolina, 4 p.m. Penn State at Johns Hopkins, 6 p.m. Albany at Binghamton, 7 p.m. Bucknell vs. Lafayette in Ridley, PA, 7 p.m. NJIT at Marist, 7 p.m. Ohio State at Michigan, TBA
H2014o fHofstra str aMen’s U niLacrosse vers i t y
APRIL 12
Virginia at Duke, 12 p.m. Lehigh at Stony Brook, 3 p.m. Maryland at Rutgers, TBA
APRIL 14
Dartmouth at NJIT, 4 p.m. Sacred Heart at Hartford, 7 p.m. Brown at Providence, 7 p.m. Hobart at Syracuse, 7 p.m. Binghamton at Canisius, TBA
APRIL 17
Harvard at Princeton, 6 p.m. Colgate at Army, 7 p.m. Holy Cross at Boston University, 7 p.m. Loyola at Bucknell, 7 p.m. Lafayette at Lehigh, 7 p.m. High Point at VMI, 7 p.m.
APRIL 18
Maryland at Ohio State, 11 a.m. Jacksonville at Mercer, 12 p.m. Bryant at Mount St. Mary’s, 12 p.m. Dartmouth at Penn, 12 p.m. Monmouth at Quinnipiac, 12 p.m. Hofstra at Towson, 12 p.m. Robert Morris at Air Force, 1 p.m. Richmond at Bellarmine, 1 p.m. Delaware at Fairfield, 1 p.m. Marist at Manhattan, 1 p.m. Duke at Marquette, 1 p.m. Hobart at Saint Joseph’s, 1 p.m. Detroit at Siena, 1 p.m. UMass Lowell at UMBC, 1 p.m. Hartford at Vermont, 1 p.m. Georgetown at Virginia, 1 p.m. Sacred Heart at Wagner, 1 p.m. Michigan at Johns Hopkins, 2 p.m. Cornell at Brown, 3 p.m. Providence at Denver, 3 p.m. Drexel at Massachusetts, 4 p.m. North Carolina at Notre Dame, 4 p.m. Yale at Albany, 7 p.m. Binghamton at Stony Brook, 7 p.m. St. John’s at Villanova, 7 p.m.
APRIL 19
Canisius at VMI, 12 p.m. Rutgers at Penn State, TBA
APRIL 21
Albany at Siena, 4 p.m. Brown at Bryant, 7 p.m. UMass Lowell at Dartmouth, 7 p.m. Patriot League first round at campus sites
APRIL 23
Quinnipiac at Air Force, 9 p.m.
APRIL 24
Patriot League semifinals at regular-season champion, 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. ACC semifinals in Chester, PA, 5 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Hofstra at Fairfield, 7 p.m. Stony Brook at Hartford, 7 p.m. Delaware at Massachusetts, 7 p.m.
APRIL 25
St. John’s at Georgetown, 12 p.m. Bellarmine at High Point, 12 p.m. Ohio State at Rutgers, 12 p.m. Vermont at Binghamton, 1 p.m. Princeton at Cornell, 1 p.m. Brown at Dartmouth, 1 p.m. Towson at Drexel, 1 p.m. Mount St. Mary’s at Hobart, 1 p.m. Furman at Jacksonville, 1 p.m. Penn State at Michigan, 1 p.m. Manhattan at Monmouth, 1 p.m. Villanova at Providence, 1 p.m. Mercer at Richmond, 1 p.m. Wagner at Robert Morris, 1 p.m.
Saint Joseph’s at Sacred Heart, 1 p.m. Canisius at Detroit, 2 p.m. Denver at Marquette, 2 p.m. UMBC at Albany, 3 p.m. Yale at Harvard, 4 p.m. Siena at Marist, 7 p.m. ACC fifth-place team vs. Penn in Chester, PA, 7:30 p.m.
APRIL 26
VMI vs. UMass Lowell in Scranton, PA, 1 p.m. Patriot League final at regular-season champion, 1 p.m. ACC final in Chester, PA, 3:30 p.m. Johns Hopkins at Maryland, TBA
APRIL 29
Colonial semifinals at higher seeds
APRIL 30
America East semifinals at regular-season champion Big East semifinals in Villanova, PA, TBA Big Ten semifinals in College Park, MD, TBA Northeast semifinals at regular-season champion Southern semifinals at regular-season champion
MAY 1
Ivy League semifinals at regular-season champion Metro Atlantic semifinals at regular-season champion
MAY 2
Notre Dame at Army, 1 p.m. Navy at Air Force, 2 p.m. Syracuse at Colgate, 3:30 p.m. America East final at regular-season champion Big East final in Villanova, PA, TBA Big Ten final in College Park, MD, TBA Colonial final at highest remaining seed Northeast final at regular-season champion Southern final at regular-season champion
M E N ’ S
Duke at Syracuse, 12:30 p.m. Loyola vs. Lafayette in New York, 2:30 p.m.
Boston University at Army, 12 p.m. Penn State at Maryland, 12 p.m. Bucknell at Mount St. Mary’s, 12 p.m. Mercer at VMI, 12 p.m. Air Force vs. Bellarmine in Highland Park, TX, 1 p.m. Penn at Brown, 1 p.m. UMBC at Hartford, 1 p.m. Cornell at Harvard, 1 p.m. Drexel at Hofstra, 1 p.m. Quinnipiac at Manhattan, 1 p.m. Detroit at Marist, 1 p.m. St. John’s at Marquette, 1 p.m. Fairfield at Massachusetts, 1 p.m. Georgetown at Providence, 1 p.m. Hobart at Sacred Heart, 1 p.m. Robert Morris at Saint Joseph’s, 1 p.m. Binghamton at UMass Lowell, 1 p.m. Albany at Vermont, 1 p.m. Bryant at Wagner, 1 p.m. Holy Cross at Lafayette, 1:05 p.m. Furman at Richmond, 1:30 p.m. Lehigh at Colgate, 2 p.m. High Point at Jacksonville, 2 p.m. Navy at Loyola, 2:30 p.m. Canisius at Monmouth, 3 p.m. Princeton at Stony Brook, 3 p.m. Notre Dame at Duke, 5 p.m. Towson at Delaware, 7 p.m. Dartmouth at Yale, TBA
MAY 3
Boston University at Duke, 12 p.m. Ivy League final at regular-season champion Metro Atlantic final at regular-season champion
MAY 6
NCAA tournament play-in games
MAY 9
NCAA tournament first round at campus sites
MAY 10
NCAA tournament first round at campus sites
MAY 16
NCAA quarterfinals in Denver, CO
MAY 17
NCAA quarterfinals in Annapolis, MD
MAY 23
NCAA semifinals in Philadelphia, PA
H O F S T R A
MARCH 22
APRIL 4
MAY 25
NCAA final in Philadelphia, PA
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Villanova at Fairfield, 5:30 p.m. Virginia at Johns Hopkins, 6 p.m. Mercer at Furman, 7 p.m. Maryland vs. North Carolina in Costa Mesa, CA, TBA
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COMPOSITE SCHEDULE
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NCAA TOURNAMENT INFORMATION NCAA DIVISION I MEN’S LACROSSE CHAMPIONS
2014 NCAA NCAA TOURNAMENT TOURNAMENT RECAP: APPEARANCES First Round (May 10-11):
1971 - Cornell 1972 - Virginia 1973 - Maryland 1974 - Johns Hopkins 1975 - Maryland 1976 - Cornell 1977 - Cornell 1978 - Johns Hopkins 1979 - Johns Hopkins 1980 - Johns Hopkins 1981 - North Carolina 1982 - North Carolina 1983 - Syracuse 1984 - Johns Hopkins 1985 - Johns Hopkins 1986 - North Carolina 1987 - Johns Hopkins 1988 - Syracuse 1989 - Syracuse 1990 - Title vacated (by Syracuse) 1991 - North Carolina 1992 - Princeton 1993 - Syracuse 1994 - Princeton 1995 - Syracuse 1996 - Princeton 1997 - Princeton 1998 - Princeton 1999 - Virginia 2000 - Syracuse 2001 - Princeton 2002 - Syracuse 2003 - Virginia 2004 - Syracuse 2005 - Johns Hopkins 2006 - Virginia 2007 - Johns Hopkins 2008 - Syracuse 2009 - Syracuse 2010 - Duke 2011 - Virginia 2012 - Loyola 2013 - Duke 2014 - Duke
Home Team #1 Duke 20 #2 Syracuse 9 #3 Loyola 6 #4 Pennsylvania 11 #5 Denver 9 #6 Notre Dame 13 #7 Maryland 8 #8 Virginia 8
Visitor Air Force 9 Bryant 10 Albany 13 Drexel 16 North Carolina 5 Harvard 5 Cornell 7 Johns Hopkins 14
1971 - Army 19, #5 Hofstra 3 1973 - Virginia 12, #3 Hofstra 5 1974 - Johns Hopkins 18, #7 Hofstra 10 1975 - Maryland 19, #6 Hofstra 7 1978 - Johns Hopkins 20, #7 Hofstra 8 1993 - #6 Hofstra 9, Massachusetts 8 Syracuse 20, #6 Hofstra 8 1996 - Harvard 15, #6 Hofstra 12 1997 - Massachusetts 6, Hofstra 4 1999 - Hofstra 15, Navy 7 Johns Hopkins 11, Hofstra 7
2000 Maryland 14, Hofstra 12 2001 - Hofstra 15, Virginia 14 (OT) Syracuse 18, Hofstra 13 2003 - Massachusetts 9, Hofstra 6 2006 - #3 Hofstra 14, Providence 8 Massachusetts 11, #3 Hofstra 10 (OT) 2008 - Johns Hopkins 10, Hofstra 4 2009 - Cornell 11, Hofstra 8 2010 - Maryland 11, Hofstra 8 2011 - Johns Hopkins 12, Hofstra 5
QUARTERFINALS
at Hempstead, New York May 17:
#7 Maryland 16 #6 Notre Dame 14
Bryant 8 Albany 13
at Newark, Delaware May 18:
#1 Duke 19 #5 Denver 15
Johns Hopkins 11 Drexel 6
SEMIFINALS
at Baltimore, Maryland May 24:
#1 Duke 15 #6 Notre Dame 11
#5 Denver 12 #7 Maryland 6
CHAMPIONSHIP
at Baltimore, Maryland May 26: #1 Duke 11
Notre Dame 9
HOFSTRA IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT
Team Johns Hopkins Maryland Virginia Syracuse North Carolina Cornell Navy Princeton Loyola Massachusetts Notre Dame Duke Hofstra Army Brown Pennsylvania Georgetown Towson Rutgers Wash. & Lee Denver Delaware Albany Harvard UMBC Yale Ohio State Adelphi Stony Brook Penn State Michigan State Hobart Providence Air Force Bryant Colgate Fairfield Siena Canisius Villanova Mt. St. Mary’s Bucknell Lehigh Drexel Cortland State Detroit LIU-C.W. Post New Hampshire No. Carolina St. Butler Manhattan Dartmouth Marist Hartford
Yrs. 42 37 36 33 29 26 26 20 20 19 19 18 17 16 12 12 11 11 9 8 7 6 6 6 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Won 67 49 48 62 28 32 16 30 13 9 15 32 4 4 5 2 10 7 2 3 7 3 2 2 1 3 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lost Last 33 2014 35 2014 31 2014 23 2014 25 2014 23 2014 26 2009 14 2012 19 2014 19 2012 19 2014 15 2014 17 2011 16 2010 12 2009 12 2014 11 2007 11 2013 9 2004 8 1980 7 2014 6 2011 6 2014 6 2014 5 2009 5 2013 4 2013 4 1989 3 2012 3 2013 3 1991 3 2004 3 2007 3 2014 2 2014 2 2012 2 2005 2 2011 2 2012 2 2011 2 2010 2 2011 2 2013 1 2014 1 1972 1 2013 1 1986 1 1986 1 1979 1 1998 1 2002 1 2003 1 2005 1 2011
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James M. Shuart Stadium is the largest outdoor sports complex on Long Island. Opened in 1963, Shuart Stadium has served as the site for NCAA Championships, New York State High School Championships, world championships, and professional contests. Shuart Stadium has been an important venue in NCAA Lacrosse history as it served as the site of the first-ever NCAA Lacrosse Championship game in 1971, which saw Cornell post a 12-6 victory over Maryland. Since then the stadium has hosted first round NCAA Tournament games in 1973, 1993 and 2006, and NCAA Quarterfinals in 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2009, 2011 and 2014. The four largest crowds in Shuart Stadium history occurred during the hosting of the NCAA Lacrosse Quarterfinals. In addition to the record Shuart Stadium record crowd, the largest-ever lacrosse crowd on Long Island, the 2014 NCAA Quarterfinal crowd in 2014 is the third largest attendance in NCAA Division I history, In 2011, 13,447 watched the NCAA Quarterfinals at Hofstra. In that doubleheader, Virginia, on their way to their third national title in the past nine years, defeated Cornell and Denver downed Johns Hopkins. In 1999, a then-NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championship Quarterfinal record of 12,292 witnessed Johns Hopkins defeat the Pride and Georgetown upend Duke. Two years later, 10,510 fans attended the 2001 quarterfinals to see Princeton, on the road to a national title, edge Loyola and Syracuse downed Hofstra. The eventual national champion has come through the NCAA Quarterfinal at Hofstra in six of the eight quarterfinals at Shuart Stadium.
PREVIOUS NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP QUARTERFINALS AT HOFSTRA 1997 Princeton*-11, Massachusetts-9 Syracuse-13 vs. Loyola-12
1998 Princeton*-11, Duke-9 Syracuse-17, Virginia-14
1999 Johns Hopkins-11, Hofstra-7 Georgetown-17, Duke-14
2001 Syracuse-18, Hofstra-13 Princeton*-8, Loyola-7
2002 Syracuse*-10, Duke-9 Princeton-14, Georgetown-13
2009 Cornell 6, Princeton 4 Syracuse* 11, Maryland 6
M E N ’ S
On Saturday, May 17, 2014, Hofstra University hosted one of the two 2014 NCAA Division I Men’s Lacrosse Championship Quarterfinal doubleheaders at James M. Shuart Stadium. It was the eighth time in program history that Hofstra hosted the NCAA Championship Quarterfinals. A standing room only, Shuart Stadium record crowd of 13,519 watched the 2014 doubleheader
L A C R O S S E
NCAA DIVISION I LACROSSE QUARTERFINALS AT HOFSTRA
Virginia* 13, Cornell 9 Denver 14, Johns Hopkins 9
2014 Maryland 15, Bryant 8 Notre Dame 14, Albany 13
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* National Champion
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2011
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THIS IS HOFSTRA UN Hofstra University provides a dynamic college experience tailored for engaged and ambitious individuals. Students find pride and purpose at Hofstra, through small classes, a faculty whose primary concern is teaching, cutting edge technology, extensive library resources, internships, and active and compelling educational programs that appeal to their interests and abilities. The Hofstra community is driven, dynamic and energetic, helping students find and focus their strengths to prepare them for a successful future. In its relatively short 79-year history, Hofstra has established itself as a world-class institution of higher education and cultural enterprise. Each academic year, the Hofstra campus and the programs offered grow and change to meet the demands of our students and our community. Hofstra opened in 1935 as a commuter school with all classes and offices housed in one building. Since those early days, Hofstra has evolved into an international institution with a
student body hailing from 48 states and 69 countries around the world. The beautiful campus is an accredited arboretum with 115 buildings on 240 acres. There are approximately 3,800 students living on campus, and Hofstra offers them, and all students, an extensive array of academic and social activities. Additionally, Hofstra’s close proximity to Manhattan means that students have easy access to the wondrous cultural, social and career offerings of the city. While the campus and its offerings have changed, what has remained consistent throughout the years is the sense of community on campus, the eagerness of our students to learn and the commitment of the Hofstra faculty and administration to provide a challenging education that encourages the pursuit of lifelong learning. The Colleges and Schools of the University are: Hofstra College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Honors College, Frank G. Zarb School of Business, Herbert School of Communication, School
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of Education, School of Engineering and Applied Science, School of Health Sciences and Human Services, Maurice A. Deane School of Law, Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine at Hofstra University, School for University Studies and Hofstra University Continuing Education. Hofstra offers six undergraduate degrees in 140 different areas of study. Thirteen graduate degrees are also offered with 155 programs of study to choose from. The University offers three first professional degrees and 16 dual degrees as well. Hofstra joined with North Shore-LIJ Health System in establishing a medical school on the University campus in October 2007. The new school, which welcomed its first class in July 2011, is the first allopathic (MD) medical school in Nassau County and the first in New York State since 19 63. On October 16, 2012, Hofstra hosted its second Presidential Debate, held in the “town hall” format, between President Barack Obama and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney. Hofstra also hosted the third and final presidential debate of the 2008 election cycle, between then Senator Barack Obama and Senator John McCain, on October 15, 2008. The debate was a transformational moment for the University, highlighting the achievements of our students and faculty and their engagement in the political process. Leading up to the first debate, students and the entire community were engaged by the year-long Educate ’08 program - almost 150 lectures, conferences, and events focused on the issues, history and politics of the presidency - followed by Define ’09, which looked at the first year of the Obama presidency. The University continues to host important political events, such as the New York State Gubernatorial Debate in 2010 and a visit from Newark, NJ, Mayor Cory Booker to kick of the Debate 2012 - Pride, Politics & Policy program. Hofstra opened its School of Engineering and Applied Science in September 2012. The new school features a co-op education program that will partner with a network of industry leaders to offer students substantial work experience before they graduate. The School of Engineering and Applied Science will combine and expand the University’s existing Engineering and Computer Science departments to develop a curriculum that emphasizes high-tech research, practical work experience and inter-disciplinary study, integrating resources and faculty from other parts of the institution, including the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine and the Frank G. Zarb School of Business. Hofstra’s Lawrence Herbert School of Communication is one of the largest, most advanced non-commercial television facilities in the East. Students take classes and work in a sophisticated television production/post-production facility with two broadcast-quality studios and control rooms; two advanced online video edit suites; two Avid non-linear digital editing systems and several cuts-only video work stations. Two satellite dishes are available with one dish providing special news feeds for the broadcast journalism room, which also has access to Associated Press, Lexis-Nexis and Dow Jones services. In addition, the facility is capable of broadcasting student-produced programming to the entire campus on our own cable channels. Also located here is the University’s radio station (WRHU/88.7FM), audio production studios, a film/video screening room, film
www. G oHof str a . co m
Hofstra hosts more than 500 cultural events annually, bringing thousands of scholars, dignitaries and other participants to campus. More than 200 musical and dramatic performances take place on campus each year. The Hofstra Museum, which houses one of the largest art collections in the metropolitan area, coordinates approximately eight exhibitions annually and offers exhibition areas and an extensive outdoor sculpture collection. The Hofstra Museum is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums and has a collection of more than 5,000 works of art. Hofstra also has six theaters, a student newspaper, a lively student center, a recently renovated recreation center and numerous athletic facilities, including the 13,000-seat James M. Shuart Stadium and the 5,023-seat David S. Mack Sports and Exhibition Complex. Hofstra also has an indoor, Olympic-sized (eight lane, 50-meter) swimming pool, one of the largest such facilities in the New York metropolitan area.
The Hofstra athletics program competes on the NCAA Division I level and is a member of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) and the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association (EIWA). The University sponsors 17 intercollegiate programs - eight men’s sports and nine women’s sports. Hofstra has men’s teams in basketball, baseball, lacrosse, golf, tennis, wrestling, soccer and cross country. Women’s sports include basketball, volleyball, softball, tennis, soccer, field hockey, lacrosse, cross country and golf. Hofstra’s academic programs are accredited by numerous national agencies and the University is one of only 280 schools, out of more than 3,600 colleges and universities nationwide, with a chapter of the national honor society Phi Beta Kappa. Of Hofstra’s 1,123 faculty members, 495 are full time and 92 percent hold the highest degree in their fields. The average undergraduate class size is 21 students, while student-faculty ratio is 14-to-1. Hofstra University is 100-percent program accessible to persons with disabilities, and has been cited as a national model for this achievement.
National Recognition
Hofstra University is a nationally and internationally recognized institution that has been cited on the Best College lists of U.S. News & World Report, Princeton Review, Fiske, Washington Monthly and Forbes. Hofstra is also one of only two universities chosen to host consecutive U.S. Presidential Debates (2008 and 2012).
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Hofstra’s growing computer facilities offer extensive high-tech training opportunities. There are computer terminals throughout the campus for student and faculty use, with more than 750 PC, Macintosh and UNIX workstations available in labs and classrooms.
M E N ’ S
Hofstra’s C.V. Starr Hall offers academic facilities that are among the most technologically advanced in the nation. Every seat in every classroom allows students direct access to the Internet and Hofstra network, including the resources of Hofstra’s Axinn Library.
• Ranked by Affordable Colleges Online (affordablecollegesonline. org) in Top 25 colleges and universities in New York state for return on investment. (2013) • Hofstra is in the top 10 percent of colleges and universities nationwide for return on investment, based on starting and mid-career salaries for graduates with a bachelor’s degree, according to the Payscale.com 2014 College Education ROI Rankings. • Hofstra named among “Great Colleges to Work For” (Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008-2014) • Diversity and inclusiveness has also earned Hofstra 4.5 out of 5 stars for fostering a LGBT (lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, transgender)-friendly campus environment. (LGBT-Friendly Campus Climate Index 20092012) • Hofstra University is among only three schools in the New York metropolitan area with colleges of Law, Medicine, and Engineering. • Hofstra University was named to the 2014 Military Friendly School list by Victory Media, a datadriven survey that recognizes the top 20 percent of colleges and universities that are providing support and services to veterans, active military and their families. • The book College Success for Students with Physical Disabilities (2012) recognized Hofstra as a leading institution for students with disabilities. Hofstra was one of the first universities in the nation to have a fully accessible campus. • Princeton Review has recognized Hofstra for the 3rd year in its “Guide to Green Colleges”, which profiles colleges and universities committed to sustainability inside and outside the classroom. (2011-13) • President’s Higher Education & Community Service Honor Roll (2012)
H O F S T R A
editing rooms, a computer laboratory, a speech performance studio and a large dance studio.
University Distinctions
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HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT
STUART
RABINOWITZ Stuart Rabinowitz was chosen by the Hofstra University Board of Trustees to serve as the eighth president of the University on December 20, 2000. Prior to his appointment, he served as dean of Hofstra University School of Law from September 1989 through June 2001. He joined the faculty of the Law School in 1972. President Rabinowitz currently holds the Andrew M. Boas and Mark L. Claster Distinguished Professor of Law. President Rabinowitz has held positions with a number of important government and community organizations, including the Judicial Advisory Council of the State of New York Unified Court System, County of Nassau. He currently serves as a member of the board of directors for the Long Island Association, and as co-vice chair of the Long Island Regional Economic Development Committee. He has also served as a trustee of the Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities and on the board of directors the Long Island Technology Network. President Rabinowitz is a former member of the Nassau County Blue Ribbon Financial Review Panel and a former chair of the Nassau County Local Advisory Board. Additionally, President Rabinowitz served as a member of the Nassau County Commission on Government Revision, which was charged with drafting a new charter and a new form of government for the County. He is the recipient of the Martin Luther King Living the Dream Award, EOC; Distinguished Service in the Cause of Justice, Legal Aid Society; UJA Federation Leadership Award; the Bar Association of Nassau County Proclamation for Outstanding Service to both the legal profession and the community; the Community Service Award from the Conference of Jewish Organizations of Nassau County; and the Alumni Association of the City College of New York 2005 Townsend Harris Medal. President Rabinowitz has also been honored by the Long Island Software and Technology Network (LISTnet) and was the recipient of Networking magazine’s David Award. In 2009, he received
the Chief Executive Leadership Award from the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE), District II. Claflin University presented President Rabinowitz with the degree of Doctor of Laws, honoris causa in November 2009. President Rabinowitz received a juris doctor, magna cum laude, from Columbia University School of Law, where he was a member of the board of editors of the Columbia Law Review and a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar. He graduated from the City College of New York with honors, and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and the American Law Institute.
President Rabinowitz, Hofstra Pride Club Board Member James C. Metzger ’83 and Hofstra Pride Club President E. David Woycik ’77
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Stephanie Bushey Vice President for Institutional Research and Assessment
Planning and Administration
Melissa Connolly
W. Houston Dougharty
Jessica Eads
Dolores Fredrich, Esq.
Richard V. Guardino, Jr., Esq.
Vice President for University Relations
Vice President for Student Affairs
Vice President for Enrollment Services
Vice President for Legal Affairs and General Counsel
Vice President for Business Development
Jeffrey A. Hathaway
Catherine Hennessy
Robert W. Juckiewicz
Alan J. Kelly
Vice President and Director of Athletics
Vice President for Financial Affairs and Treasurer
Vice President for Information Technology
Vice President for Development
Trustees of Hofstra University (as of October 2014) OFFICERS
Alan J. Bernon,* Chair Karen L. Lutz, Vice Chair David S. Mack,* Vice Chair Robert D. Rosenthal,* Vice Chair Peter G. Schiff, Secretary Stuart Rabinowitz, President
MEMBERS Tejinder Bindra Kenneth Brodlieb James D’Addario* Robert F. Dall* Helene Fortunoff Steven J. Freiberg* Arno H. Fried Martin B. Greenberg* Leo A. Guthart Peter S. Kalikow* Arthur J. Kremer Diana E. Lake* Elizabeth McCaul Janis M. Meyer*
John D. Miller* Marilyn B. Monter* Martha S. Pope Julio A. Portalatin* James E. Quinn* Edwin C. Reed Michael Roberge* Betty Saks Debra A. Sandler* Thomas J. Sanzone* Michael Seiman* Leonard H. Shapiro Joseph Sparacio* Frank G. Zarb*
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DELEGATES
Stuart L. Bass,* Chair, University Senate Executive Committee Andrew F. Corrado,* President, Alumni Organization William F. Nirode, Speaker of the Faculty Mark Atkinson, President, Student Government Association Nicole Olson, Vice President, Student Government Association Eugene Maccarrone,* Chair, University Senate Planning and Budget Committee
TRUSTEES EMERITI
James M. Shuart,* President Emeritus Wilbur Breslin, Trustee Emeritus Emil V. Cianciulli,* Chair Emeritus John J. Conefry, Jr., Chair Emeritus Maurice A. Deane,* Chair Emeritus George G. Dempster,* Chair Emeritus Joseph L. Dionne,* Trustee Emeritus Lawrence Herbert,* Trustee Emeritus Florence Kaufman, Trustee Emerita Walter B. Kissinger, Trustee Emeritus Ann M. Mallouk,* Chair Emerita Thomas H. O’Brien, Trustee Emeritus Norman R. Tengstrom,* Trustee Emeritus * Hofstra Alumni
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Dr. Herman Berliner Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs
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Joseph M. Barkwill Vice President for Facilities and Operations
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M. Patricia Adamski Senior Vice President for
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SENIOR ADMINISTRATION/ TRUSTEES
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VICE PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
JEFFREY A.
HATHAWAY Jeffrey A. Hathaway is in his third year as the Vice President and Director of Athletics at Hofstra University in 2014-15. Hofstra University President Stuart Rabinowitz introduced Hathaway, formerly the Director of Athletics at the University of Connecticut and the chairman of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee, on May 15, 2012. In his first year at Hofstra, Hathaway oversaw a department that produced four Colonial Athletic Association championship and NCAA Tournament teams, as well as two other teams that reached the conference championship game. In addition, Hofstra Athletics saw three student-athletes earn Academic All-America accolades and five garner CAA Scholar-Athlete of the Year honors. One of those Academic All-Americans, Joe Burg, also was a finalist for a Rhodes Scholarship in 2012, becoming just the second Hofstra student to ever earn the distinction. In 2013-14 Hofstra made two NCAA Tournament appearances (wrestling and softball), two Academic All-District selections, two CAA Players of the Year and two CAA Defensive Players of the Year. During his two years, more than 500 student-athletes have earned 3.0 grade point averages or better and 26 have posted a perfect 4.0 GPA. The Pride has not only flourished on the fields and in the classroom, but also in the area of athletic development under Hathaway. The Hofstra Pride Club has enjoyed banner years with more than $1.1 million in cash funds raised in each of the past two years. Hathaway has also overseen areas of capital improvement with the completion of the Hofstra Basketball Practice Facility this past July as well as the replacement of turf at James M. Shuart Stadium, the Hofstra Soccer Stadium and University Field. Hofstra student-athletes have also participated in more community service endeavors over the past two seasons, earning a pair of awards from Hofstra’s Office of Student Leadership and Activities in 2014 for their service initiatives. Hofstra student-athletes have increased their community service efforts during Hathaway’s tenure, earning a pair of awards from Hofstra’s Office of Student Leadership and Activities in 2013-14. Pride student-athletes received the Good
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Neighbor Award for their work during this year’s Shake-A-Rake initiative, as well as the Community Service Event of the Year for the annual Reading With Pride project. In 2013 Hathaway was named to the NCAA Division I Leadership Council and in 2014 he was elected to serve on the board of directors of the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC), continuing his long tradition of service on a national level. He served a five-year term as a member of the prestigious NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee, representing the BIG EAST Conference, and was chair of the committee in 2011-12. As a member of the 10-person committee, Hathaway took part in the selection and administration of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship and the administration of the CBS/Turner television contract. During his tenure at both Colorado State and UConn, he was a member of the NCAA Division I Championships/Competition Cabinet. On the conference level, Hathaway was the chair of the BIG EAST Athletic Directors Executive Committee through November of 2009. He is also past chairman of the BIG EAST Championship and Competition Committee as well as the league’s Finance Committee, and also served on the Television Committee. Hathaway is a past member of the Division I-A Athletic Directors Association Board of Trustees and the Executive Committee of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA). In 2004 The Sporting News named Hathaway to its “Power 100 List” - comprised of the 100 most powerful people in sports. Hathaway guided the University of Connecticut (UConn) Division of Athletics through an unprecedented period of academic and athletic achievement during his eight years as director of athletics from 2003 to 2011. At the same time, he became an influential leader for college athletics on both the national and conference level. Hathaway played a vital role in UConn’s success story for nearly 20 years as he was the executive associate director of athletics at the school from 1990 to 2001. In his two years away from the Storrs campus, Hathaway enjoyed a successful tenure as the director of athletics at Colorado State University from 2001 to 2003. During Hathaway’s career, he has always made the academic
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Hathaway originally came to Connecticut in November of 1990 as senior associate athletic director. In that role, he oversaw the day-to-day operations of the division of athletics and served as a program administrator for several sports. During Hathaway’s tenure at Colorado State, he oversaw a 15-sport program - nine women’s teams and six men’s. Hathaway was an extremely successful fundraiser during his time in Fort Collins. The school drew national attention for a $15.2 million gift for football stadium renovations and expansion.
Hathaway led a head coaching staff that is one of the most experienced in the country. At the conclusion of Hathaway’s tenure, UConn had 12 head coaches that had been in their current position 10 or more years as of the 2010-11 academic year.
Jeff Hathaway, Deputy Director of Athletics Dino Mattesich and Head Basketball Coach Joe Mihalich with NBA Hall of Famer Julius “Dr. J.” Erving
Jeff Hathaway and Pelé unveil a plaque commemorating the soccer legend’s visit to Hofstra for the Soccer As the Beautiful Game Conference in April 2014
Jeff Hathaway and New York Yankees Vice President and General Manager Brian Cashman, who was the keynote speaker at the 2013 CAA SAAC Leadership Summit at Hofstra University
In Hathaway’s final year with UConn, the Huskies experienced great athletic success. The men’s basketball team won its third NCAA Division I Championship while the football team played in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. In addition, the women’s basketball team played in the NCAA Final Four for the fourth consecutive season and set a college basketball record for most consecutive wins with 90. The UConn baseball team made history with its first-ever appearance in NCAA Super Regional play. The men’s soccer, women’s soccer and field hockey teams participated
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Prior to joining UConn, Hathaway served in a number of capacities at his alma mater, the University of Maryland, from 1982 to 1990, including assistant athletics director for marketing and communications, acting assistant athletics director for business affairs, athletics business manager and men’s basketball trainer.
Hathaway earned his degree in athletic administration from Maryland in 1981. He later received a master’s degree in general administration from Maryland and is currently continuing work on a PhD in the department of educational leadership at the University of Connecticut. Hathaway and his wife, Paula, have two children - Meghan (23) and Michael (19).
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During his time at Connecticut, private fundraising averaged more than $13 million a year. Hathaway was also responsible negotiating several key revenue and partnership agreements, securing major gifts, and guiding the building of two LEED certified athletic facilities, UConn’s first, which received recognition from the University and from the Connecticut Real Estate Exchange.
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The National Consortium for Academics and Sports (NCAS) saluted Connecticut three times under Hathaway’s watch for its community service efforts. UConn was also honored by the NCAS in 2006 and 2007 for its efforts to assist former student-athletes in earning their college degree.
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in NCAA tournaments while representatives from men and women’s track and field and women’s diving also took part in NCAA action.
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success of student-athletes a top priority. In the classroom, more than 50% of UConn’s 650 student-athletes achieved a 3.0 “B-or better” semester grade point average during the spring and/or fall semesters of the 2010 calendar year, including 16 who earned a perfect 4.0 grade point average. In addition, the Division of Athletics consistently maintained a 99 percent academic retention rate among its student-athletes.
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Larissa Anderson
Chrissy Arnone
Jay Artinian
Rachel August
Cathy Aull
Ann Baller
Softball Coach
Assistant Director of Athletics/Marketing and Promotions
Senior Associate Director of Athletics/Facilities
Assistant Director of Athletics/Administration
Athletic Department Secretary
Associate Director of Athletic Facilities
Dr. Michael Barnes
James Barone
Brooke Bendernagel
Brian Bohl
John Considine
Tara Coppola
Faculty Athletics Representative
Assistant Director of Athletic Development
Athletic Facilities Coordinator
Senior Assistant Director of Athletic Communications
Assistant Equipment Manager
Assistant Director of Athletic Facilities
Maria Corvino
Courtney Crews
Assistant Director of Assistant Director of Athletic Athletics/Ticket Operations Development
Maren Crowley
Chris Dale
Kathy De Angelis
Joe Elliott
Women’s Golf Coach
Athletic Facilities Coordinator
Field Hockey Coach
Men’s Golf Coach
Emily Esselman
David Fernandez
Jim Furlong
Vincent Giambanco
Doug Gillies
Stephen Gorchov
Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach
Assistant Director of Athletic Facilities
Director of Athletic Development
Cross Country Coach
Athletic Facilities Coordinator
Associate Director of Athletics/Communications
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ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION & HEAD
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Dan Graves
Colm Kennedy
Krista Kilburn-Steveskey
James Lally
Lauren Leo
Athletic Facilities Coordinator
Associate Director of Athletic Facilities
Women’s Basketball Coach
Assistant Director of Athletics/Student-Athlete Services and Life Skills Development
Director of Tennis
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Emily Mansur
Dino Mattessich
Dino Megaloudis
Joe Mihalich
Volleyball Coach
Deputy Director of Athletics
Associate Director of Athletics/Development
Men’s Basketball Coach
Rachel Peel
Ariel Pesante
Alyssa Morales
Richard Nuttall
Jeanne O’Keefe
Dennis Papadatos
Associate Director of Athletics/NCAA Education and Compliance Services
Men’s Soccer Coach
Athletic Department Secretary
Wrestling Coach
Associate Dean of University Associate Director of Advisement Athletics/NCAA Education and Compliance Services
Simon Riddiough
John Russo
David Salomon
Jim Sheehan
Len Skoros
Women’s Soccer Coach
Baseball Coach
Athletic Facilities Coordinator
Senior Sports Information Director
Director of Athletic Publications
Clarice Smith
Shannon Smith
Michelle Spaterella
Joe Staub
Chris Stellato
Harriet Teitle
Athletic Department Secretary
Women’s Lacrosse Coach
Assistant Dean of Advisement
Head Strength and Conditioning Coach
Director of Ticket Sales
Athletic Department Secretary
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James Prendergast Associate Strength and Conditioning Coach
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Evan Malings Head Athletic Trainer
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Cindy Lewis Senior Associate Director of Athletics
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D COACHES
Kathy Theiling
Seth Tierney
Dave Walsh
Ryan Watson
Irene Wymes
Winnie Wymes
Equipment Manager
Men’s Lacrosse Coach
Assistant Equipment Manager
Assistant Director of Athletic Facilities
Ticket Office Graduate Assistant
Athletic Department Secretary
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MEN’S LACROSSE ACADEMIC PLAN The Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse program firmly believes that academic success is as important as success on the field of play. To reinforce the Hofstra Athletics academic program, the men’s lacrosse team has implemented an academic plan of their own to insure that each men’s lacrosse player reaches his full potential in the classroom.
MISSION: Create an environment where players and
coaches know and understand each other on a very strong interpersonal level, allowing coaches the opportunity to provide student-athletes with support and mentoring, and to help them recognize and master the intellectual tools necessary for success. Also, create a standard and set level of accountability with expectations and support systems that, when utilized, will provide our student-athletes the tools necessary to be successful. By working and living in this environment throughout their careers, our goal is to have a sustained positive influence on how our student-athletes think, act and feel.
OUR RESPONSIBILITY: Set a high standard for our student-athletes and be more accountable for academic success. Teach them what is right, and provide the guidance needed to bring to light their strengths and improve on their weaknesses so they can attain their full potential. THE PROGRAM: This is a counseling based
program that will focus on developing relationships first and then provide mentoring and guidance in various ways. While academic success is at the core of this program, this is not strictly an academic initiative. We will focus on life skills, study skills, career planning and other intellectual tools that all individuals should be proficient in. Our team will be divided into different groups based on the intensity of the integration determined. We will focus heavily on the first-year student experience, as they are the most vulnerable group and will make up the foundation for future successes. Listed below (section I) are the different levels of integration with characteristics of each. The primary technique utilized throughout this program will be individual meetings with members of the coaching staff based on the level of integration necessary. It is during these meetings where relationships will be further developed and skills will be discussed. Understanding that time management is one of the most important tools needed, all of our student-athletes will utilize a daily planner that will be discussed in our scheduled meetings. Working closely with the office of Academic Advisement and utilizing Assistant Dean of Advisement Rachel Peel as a supplement to our meeting schedule, we will offer all the resources provided by the University to each of our student-athletes. The Career Center will be both a group and individual activity for our entire team, as career planning and networking will be topics discussed throughout our meeting schedule. A large component of the program is the rules that are in place for each student’s daily academic life. These rules, which are listed after section I, must be adhered to by each member of the team.
SECTION I - LEVELS OF INTEGRATION
These levels will be determined by the coaching staff at the end of each semester or prior to a student’s matriculation at Hofstra University.
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TRANSITION PHASE - ALL FIRSTYEAR STUDENT-ATHLETES: • Meet once per week with assigned coach and have an additional meeting with Rachel Peel • Develop rapport • Help develop intellectual and academic competence • Encourage student-athletes to set a high standard for themselves in: academic achievement, interpersonal relationships, self-image, athletic achievement and life long goals • Familiarize student-athletes with campus community, academic resources and social threats
LEVEL I INTEGRATION CONTINUING STUDENT-ATHLETES WHO NEED EXTRA SUPPORT: • Meet bi-weekly with assigned coach and once per week with Rachel Peel • Further enhance academic and intellectual competence • Proactively approach academic shortcomings • Focus student’s goals in terms of major
LEVEL II INTEGRATION CONTINUING STUDENTS WHO NEED MODERATE SUPPORT:
• Meet bi-weekly with Rachel Peel and once per month with assigned coach. • Safeguard against academic risks • Begin career search process • Start networking for career placement
LEVEL III INTEGRATION STUDENTS WHO HAVE TAKEN OWNERSHIP OF THEIR LEARNING AND WHO HAVE LEARNED THE NECESSARY INTELLECTUAL SKILLS NEEDED FOR SUCCESS: • Meet at beginning and end of semester with Coaching Staff. • Certify graduation progress with Rachel Peel • Finalize career goals and make necessary interview • appointments for internships or employment
RULES FOR THE CLASSROOM:
• Attend every class that is scheduled • Be five minutes early. Lateness to class qualifies as an absence • Sit in one of the first three rows of the classroom. • Do not sit next to a teammate. • No hats are to be worn in any building.
ACADEMIC RESOURCES FOR STUDENT-ATHLETES
Advising - Advisement Dean and Faculty Advisor Tutoring Services - Three courses per semester at no charge Study Hall - Eight hours per week professionally monitored Mid-semester academic progress reports Academic Labs Writing Center Tracking progress towards graduation against both University and NCAA standards Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) Guest speakers regarding personal and professional development Professional mentoring program through the Hofstra Career Assistance Network and Corporate Development Council
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Wake up
8:15 a.m.
Breakfast, Student Center Cafeteria
8:45-9:45 a.m.
Study Hall - Rieily Theater in Margiotta Hall
10-11:20 a.m.
“Legal Studies” class with Professor Bass, Roosevelt Hall
11:45 a.m.-12:15 p.m.
Defensive film session with Coach Brazel, coaches office
12:30 p.m.
Lunch
1-2:20 p.m.
“Art History” class with Professor Cohen, Breslin Hall
2:30-5 p.m.
Practice, Shuart Stadium
Student Center Cafeteria
5-5:30 p.m
Team Meeting Opponent Scouting
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7:45 a.m.
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A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A HOFSTRA LACROSSE PLAYER
Report, Dinner, Student Center Cafeteria 7 p.m.
Class in Monroe Lecture Hall
• Students typically take 15-17 credits per semester, which equates to roughly 1517 hours of class time per week. This student’s day included about 3 hours of class time. • All Hofstra Lacrosse freshmen and any student-athlete who carries a cumulative GPA of less than 3.0 is required to complete 8 hours of study hall per week by the coaching staff. • This schedule reflects the daily planner of a Hofstra Lacrosse student-athlete for a Monday in April as the team prepared for a game that Saturday.
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Free time/Study time
Science Class
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6 p.m.
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Locker Room
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Opened in 1992, Margiotta Hall, a magnificent three-story, 22,500-square-foot building, is a centerpiece of the Hofstra University Athletics program. The state-of-the-art field house, combined with Hofstra’s 13,000-seat stadium, has created one of the finest facilities in the nation. The facility was named after Joseph M. Margiotta ’50, a former Pride student-athlete and long-time supporter. Margiotta, who founded and served as President of the Hofstra Pride Club for more than 20 years, passed away in November 2008
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the Hofstra Athletic program are held in this area. Located on this level are the offices for the men and women’s lacrosse coaching staffs. The lacrosse office was the benefit of a major renovation project in 2008. The offices are equipped with video equipment, a 12-seat theater with stadium seating for group film and meeting sessions, as well as a viewing room with hardwood flooring and a 50-inch flat screen television that overlooks the field. In 2010 Margiotta Hall was the recipient of a “Traditions Project” that provides a sense of history of the lacrosse programs. The walls of the second floor of Margiotta Hall contain pictures and brief text descriptions of the key moments and people in Hofstra Lacrosse history. The project was made possible through the generosity of former lacrosse AllAmerican James C. Metzger ’83.
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MARGIOTTA HALL
The lower level of Margiotta Hall contains a 178-seat theater, additional meeting rooms and an indoor golf training facility.
Margiotta Hall features a 3,500-square-foot weight room on the first floor. The building also contains locker rooms for men’s lacrosse and women’s lacrosse, all of which have undergone major renovations since 2008. The state-of-theart athletic training room, also located on the first floor, has hydrotherapy and electrotherapy areas, cardiovascular and isokinetic equipment, as well as taping areas, a rehabilitation area, an aerobics room, and athletic trainer and physician offices. On the second floor, an attractive multipurpose room, enclosed by a glass wall, provides a panoramic view of James M. Shuart Stadium. Meetings and receptions for alumni, parents and friends of
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JAMES M. SHUART STADIUM/ INDOOR PRACTICE FACILITY
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Originally opened in 1963 as Hofstra Stadium and renamed James M. Shuart Stadium in August 2002, the facility serves as the home to Hofstra’s lacrosse teams.
new scoreboards were installed in the north and south end zones. In 2012 the existing FieldTurf was replaced by the new FieldTurf Revolution playing surface.
Named after the former Hofstra President, who played football and lacrosse during his undergraduate days at Hofstra, James M. Shuart Stadium has served as the host for the NCAA Division I Men’s Lacrosse Championship Quarterfinals and first round games in the NCAA Men’s and Women’s Lacrosse Championships, numerous conference championship contests, the Long Island All-Star Football Game, the Fun City Bowl featuring the New York City Police and Fire Department teams, the Empire Challenge Football Game between Long Island and New York City, and various Long Island high school and New York state championship games. The stadium also served as a home for the Long Island Rough Riders of professional soccer’s A-League.
The largest crowds in James M. Shuart Stadium history occurred during the hosting of the NCAA Lacrosse Quarterfinals. A stadium record of 13,519 people, the largestever lacrosse crowd on Long Island, were in attendance for the 2014 NCAA Quarterfinals. A crowd of 13,447 people
In addition to Hofstra, the Long Island Lizards of Major League Lacrosse and the New York Cosmos of the North American Soccer League call James M. Shuart Stadium home. In 1968 the stadium became the third college facility in the nation to install an artificial playing surface. James M. Shuart Stadium underwent a major renovation and expansion that was completed in the fall of 1996, making the facility into one of the premier complexes in the Northeast. The project included the expansion of the seating capacity from 7,000 to 13,000; the creation of the Howdy Myers Pavilion in the southeast corner of the stadium; and the installation of scoreboards in both end zones. The renovation transformed James M. Shuart Stadium into the largest outdoor sports and entertainment complex on Long Island. In 2007 the artificial turf at James M. Shuart Stadium was replaced with FieldTurf, then in 2009
witnessed the 2011 NCAA Quarterfinals, while 12,292 fans witnessed the 1999 NCAA Quarterfinals featuring Hofstra versus Johns Hopkins. In 2009 11,292 fans were present and 10,510 fans attended the 2001 quarterfinals that featured Hofstra against Syracuse.
HOFSTRA LACROSSE VICTORY WALK
In 2004 Hofstra Athletics and the Pride men’s lacrosse program created a Victory Walk to commemorate the more than 500 victories achieved since the programs’ inception in 1949. The Victory Walk, spearheaded by then-Hofstra Head Lacrosse Coach John Danowski, is located at the field entrance to James M. Shuart Stadium and the Pride players walk on it as they enter the field from the locker room. The walkway consists of individual bricks showcasing all the victories of the Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse program. Each brick is inscribed with the year, the opponent and the score of the contest. Included in the project are several memorial gardens and benches. The project generated more than $70,000 in donations and had more than 220 contributors, of which more than half were former players.
HOFSTRA INDOOR PRACTICE FACILITY
The Pride has use of the Hofstra Indoor Practice Facility, that formerly was the property of the New York Jets of the National Football League. The 50yard turf field gives Hofstra a unique environment that many teams in the Northeast do not have. The practice bubble is located on the North Campus, behind the Mack Sports Complex.
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As Hofstra’s football coach for 25 years (1950-74), Coach Myers recorded 15 winning seasons and a 141-98-4 record. In 1959 he led the Flying Dutchmen to the first undefeated (9-0-0) season in Hofstra Football history. Dr. Shuart, who served as a team captain under Coach Myers in both football and lacrosse in the early 1950s, praised the coaching legend. “Howdy Myers had a huge impact on intercollegiate and scholastic sports,” Shuart said. “Renowned for his coaching abilities
A portrait sculpture of Howdy Myers, created by artist Peter Homestead, stands in front of the Pavilion facing the Shuart Stadium field. In creating the sculpture, Mr. Homestead worked from photographs and consultations with Coach Myers’ family and friends. The completed sculpture captures the spirit and strength of Howdy Myers. Alumni and friends of Coach Myers have joined together to establish the Howard M. Myers Jr. Endowed Athletic Scholarship in his honor. In 2002 Hofstra created the Howard “Howdy” Myers Award, which is presented to a male student-athlete in recognition of outstanding leadership and athletic performance.
HOWARD “HOWDY” MYERS AWARD RECIPIENTS 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Kahmal Roy, Football Arni Gunnarsson, Soccer Noel Thompson, Wrestling Jon Masa, Wrestling and Loren Stokes, Basketball Chris Unterstein, Lacrosse Loren Stokes, Basketball Antoine Agudio, Basketball and Charles Griffin, Wrestling Jay Card, Lacrosse and Charles Jenkins, Basketball Charles Jenkins, Basketball Charles Jenkins, Basketball Danny Poma, Baseball Shaun Foster, Soccer Chris Griebsch, Men’s Soccer
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As Hofstra lacrosse coach, Howdy Myers coached 26 seasons (1950-75) and recorded a 216-138-4 record. He coached Flying Dutchmen teams that captured eight divisional championships and made four NCAA Division I Championship Tournament appearances. In 1970 he received the F. Morris Touchstone Award as the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) Division I Coach of the Year. In 1971 Howdy Myers received the Governor’s Trophy for providing continuous and meaningful contributions to lacrosse. That same year he received lacrosse’s highest honor when he was inducted into the United States Lacrosse Hall of Fame.
Howard “Howdy” Myers passed away in 1980. In 2006 he was among the inaugural class inducted into the Hofstra University Athletics Hall of Fame. Hofstra’s connection to the Myers family includes his son, Howard Myers III, his daughter, Dorsey Donnelly, and his son-in-law, William Donnelly, who are all Hofstra alumni.
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Myers was personally credited with the tremendous growth of lacrosse on Long Island, through the creation of scholastic clinics and demonstrations in the 1950s, and leading the Hofstra Lacrosse program to national prominence. He was years ahead of the intercollegiate athletic world with his use of many coaching innovations in both lacrosse and football.
throughout collegiate sports, Coach Myers will always be a Hofstra legend.”
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In October 1998 Hofstra University President Emeritus Dr. James M. Shuart presided over the dedication ceremony for the Howdy Myers Pavilion in the south end zone of James M. Shuart Stadium. Howdy Myers served as Hofstra University’s director of athletics, head men’s lacrosse coach and head football coach for a quarter of a century. His extraordinary coaching talents in both lacrosse and football from 1950 to 1975 made Howdy Myers a legend in both sports.
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HOWDY MYERS PAVILION
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ACADEMIC SUPPORT Hofstra University is committed to the pursuit of academic and athletic excellence. The University views participation in intercollegiate athletics as benefiting the student-athlete in an educationally enhancing experience beyond any other opportunity available. Hofstra also realizes the time commitment made by student-athletes and has committed the facilities and resources to support all students. The University Tutorial Program (UTP) provides free tutoring in every subject area to any Hofstra student. Students are able to obtain up to 1 1/2 hours of individual tutorial assistance per week for up to three courses. They are also able to utilize the various help labs on campus, which specialize in providing assistance in writing, business and QM, and biology and chemistry. In addition to this service, studentathletes are assigned an academic advisor, through the Center for University Advisement, who helps address the various needs of student‑athletes. The academic advisor emphasizes four areas in their efforts to ensure the academic success of Hofstra’s studentathletes. Area one is academic counseling. Services are provided in the areas of academic planning, career planning, personal counseling, and campus and community referrals. The advisor also meets with prospective student‑athletes, at the coach’s request, to share the many benefits of a Hofstra University education.
monitoring. The advisor monitors the academic progress of student‑athletes to ensure compliance with Hofstra University, NCAA and conference regulations. The advisor’s regular communication with the faculty and coaches provide opportunities for early intervention should academic difficulties arise. Area four is study halls. The University Tutorial Program supports athletic study halls by providing tutors in various subjects as necessary. The academic advisors also assess the needs of individual student‑athletes to provide the most effective study environment. The assessment tool administered by the Center for University Advisement is also used to provide various enrichment seminars for the student‑athletes such as time management, writing skills, campus resources, and surviving the college transition. In 2010 The Fried Family StudentAthlete Development Center was opened on the second level of the James M. Shuart Stadium Building. The center houses the offices of the academic advisors as well as the student-athlete services staff. A large computer lab with printer access for use by Hofstra studentathletes, a quiet study area with wireless internet access and two group study/tutor rooms with power point access and white boards are also available.
Area two is academic advising. The academic advisor serves as the primary advisor for first-year and undecided student-athletes, and also assists upperclassmen who have declared a major. Area three is academic
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University studentathletes have direct access to a myriad of health care services. Managing the coverage of every practice and competition event is Hofstra University’s Athletic Training staff, which is led by Head Athletic Trainer Evan Malings and features six full-time athletic trainers and numerous student athletic trainers. The athletic trainers provide injury management,
their team at Pro Health Care, Inc. Physical therapists Roger Gerland and Brian Krebs of STARS of North Shore-LIJ Health System also aid in Hofstra’s student-athlete care. Hofstra University sponsors a fully accredited, highly competitive undergraduate degree program for athletic training majors, in which Hofstra student athletic trainers participate in all aspects of the health care system.
Evan Malings
Head Athletic Trainer
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Robert Sullivan
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Supporting the athletic trainers is team physician Dr. Deena Casiero and team orthopedist Dr. Michael Schwartz and
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rehabilitation and treatment to the entire Athletic program. Utilizing three state-of-the-art athletic training rooms, these professionals work tirelessly to ensure the safe participation of Hofstra’s student-athletes and to return injured athletes to play quickly and safely.
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Through a comprehensive athletic training program, Hofstra University student-athletes are provided excellent health care during their time at the University. A coordinated effort between the University Health and Wellness Center, the Athletic Department and outside health care providers ensures every student-athlete the best medical attention possible.
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ATHLETIC TRAINING
Men’s Lacrosse Athletic Trainer
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LONG ISLAND/NEW YORK CITY
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ABOUT LONG ISLAND…
Long Island has a rich history as an active, vibrant community, a summer playground, and home to some of New York’s most prominent families. Five distinct regions make up Long Island: • North Shore, otherwise known as the Gold Coast, with dozens of historic sites dating back to colonial days and Gatsby-era mansions. • South Shore, the Island’s spectator sports and entertainment center, with world-famous Jones and Fire Island Beaches, and home to the New York Islanders. • Central Suffolk, with beautiful forests and natural inlets, the world’s largest factory outlet center and a huge water park. • North Fork, with an array of vineyards, waterfront ports and farm stands. • South Fork, widely known as “The Hamptons,” with its pristine beaches and exclusive villages. You can catch a Hofstra shuttle bus to Jones Beach - a state park with six miles of gorgeous coastline, a
boardwalk, swimming pools, golf and outdoor concerts. With everything from museums, historical sites and lighthouses, to sophisticated malls,
designer outlets and shopping villages, to wineries and farm stands, to family fun parks, aquariums and zoos, there is plenty to do on Long Island.
NEW YORK ABOUT NEW YORK CITY…
Hofstra is located only 25 miles from New York City - the capital of culture and finance. You can visit Carnegie Hall, South Street Seaport, Hard Rock Café, Grand Central Station, Central Park, NBC Studios in Rockefeller Center, Little Italy or Chinatown.
Study the world’s finest sculptures and paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Go and cheer along with the crowd at a Yankees, Mets, Rangers, Nets or Knicks game. Wave at the TV cameras in the street-level studios of FOX, CNN, NBC, CBS or ABC. Walk through the financial capital of the world at the New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street.
Take the subway to Coney Island for a Nathan’s hot dog and a ride on the Cyclone, the last of the great wooden rollercoasters. Get half-priced tickets to Broadway’s finest shows at the TKTS booth in Times Square.
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
THE PROGRAM
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THE COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
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The Colonial Athletic Association, which has built a reputation as one of the nation’s top collegiate conferences both athletically and academically, celebrates its 30th anniversary in 2014-15. The CAA encompasses many of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas with a geographic footprint that stretches from Boston to Charleston, S.C. The conference has produced 16 national team champions in five different sports, 33 individual national champions, 13 national players of the year, 12 national coaches of the year and 13 Honda Award winners. Just as impressive, however, are the honors accumulated away from competition, which include five Rhodes Scholars and 24 NCAA post-graduate scholars. In 2013-14, nearly 2,000 of the league’s 4,000 student-athletes received the Commissioner’s Academic Award after posting at least a 3.2 grade point average while lettering in a varsity sport. The conference had 30 teams in 18 different sports receive NCAA Public Recognition Awards based on the latest Academic Progress Report released in 2014. The landscape of the conference stretches along the majority of the East Coast, and includes several of the nation’s top media markets - New York (1), Philadelphia (4), Boston (7), Washington, D.C. (8) and Baltimore (27). The number of television homes in the CAA market exceeds 19 million. The CAA conducts championships in 22 sports. Male athletes compete for championships in baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis and track & field. Female athletes battle for conference titles in basketball, cross country, field hockey, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. In 2013-14, 22 teams earned NCAA Tournament berths and 40 student-athletes received AllAmerica honors in 14 different sports.
The conference also excels in many other sports. Three men’s soccer teams earned NCAA Tournament berths last season and each current member of the conference has reached the NCAA Tournament since 2006. A pair of CAA softball teams (Hofstra and James Madison) reached the NCAA’s for the second year in a row and the Pride advanced to the NCAA Super Regionals in 2012. In baseball, College of Charleston became just the fourth No. 4 seed to advance to the NCAA Super Regionals and was the first CAA squad to accomplish that feat since 2001. CAA squads have combined to win 10 field hockey national titles since the championship began in 1981. At least two women’s soccer teams have reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament three times in the past seven years. William & Mary’s women’s cross country squad finished 12th in the 2013 NCAA Championship, while the Tribe men’s team has made the NCAA’s in 12 of the past 15 years. Delaware and Towson have each reached the Final Four of the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championship and Drexel advanced to the quarterfinals in 2014. The CAA has had at least 11 players selected in 10 of the last 12 Major League Baseball drafts. The conference also had individuals earn All-America honors in volleyball, track and field and swimming & diving last season and had players nationally ranked in tennis and golf. CAA member institutions are committed to excellence in the classroom. The Colonial Academic Alliance was created in 2002 by the league’s presidents with a goal of expanding their partnership to all aspects of university education and life outside of intercollegiate athletics. Programs established include an undergraduate research conference, coordination of study abroad programs, visiting faculty programs and a recent partnership with NBC Learn to provide educational videos to over 8,500 public schools across the United States.
CAA schools are also very active in community service projects. The CAA Blood Challenge, which is The conference has made its presence held each fall, has raised nearly 40,000 units of blood known nationally in men’s over the past 12 years. The CAA basketball with two teams Food Drive Challenge last winter CAA MEMBERSHIP HISTORY - George Mason (2006) and resulted in over 9,500 pounds of VCU (2011) - advancing to the donated food and $2,700 in cash. CURRENT MEMBERSHIP NCAA Final Four over the past College of Charleston (2013-present) Commissioner Thomas E. Yeager eight years. CAA teams have University of Delaware (2001-present) has guided the CAA since its combined to win 43 games in Drexel University (2001-present) inception. The conference postseason play since 2006, Elon University (2014-present) traces its roots back to 1983 including 14 victories in the Hofstra University (2001-present) when two of its current NCAA Tournament. The CAA James Madison University (1983-present) members- James Madison has posted at least one NCAA University of North Carolina-Wilmington University and the College of Tournament win in six of the (1985-present) William and Mary - were aligned past nine years, including four Northeastern University (2005-present) with East Carolina University, of the last five. The conference Towson University (2001-present) George Mason University, the has seen five or more teams College of William and Mary (1983-present) United States Naval Academy reach postseason play in four and the University of Richmond of the last six seasons. PAST MEMBERS as a basketball league (ECAC In women’s basketball, CAA American University (1985-2001) South). During the next two champion James Madison East Carolina University (1983-2001) years, the league added 11 made its ninth consecutive George Mason University (1983-2013) sports, acquired two new postseason appearance and Georgia State University (2005-2013) members (the University of knocked off Gonzaga in the United States Naval Academy (1983-1991) North Carolina at Wilmington first round of last year’s NCAA Old Dominion University (1991-2013) and American University) Tournament. In 2013, Delaware University of Richmond (1983-2001) and decided to form a new became the 12th CAA team conference. The transformation to reach the Sweet 16 of the from ECAC South to CAA took NCAA Tournament and Drexel place on June 6, 1985. captured the WNIT championship with a 46-43 victory over Old Dominion University joined the CAA in 1991 and was Utah. CAA teams have gone 23-12 in postseason play over the followed by Virginia Commonwealth University in 1995. past three years. The conference added the University of Delaware, Drexel
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GOALKEEPER STATISTICS
NO PLAYER 33 Selva, Chris 88 Collins, Eddie Total Opponents
GP-GS 16-16 3-0 16 16
2/15 Marquette 2/22 at Princeton 2/25 #17 Fairfield 3/1 Georgetown 3/8 Ohio State 3/15 Delaware* 3/18 at St. John’s 3/22 at #20 Drexel* 3/29 Towson* 4/5 Siena 4/8 Marist 4/12 #6 Cornell 4/19 at Massachusetts* 4/26 at Penn State 4/30 Delaware# 5/3 #16 Drexel%
SOG 41 61 66 40 39 32 10 6 6 2 2 2 1 5 1 8 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 324 270
MINUTES 970:13 4:31 974:44 974:44
2014 RESULTS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
SH 72 99 100 70 73 50 19 9 7 2 5 3 1 11 1 21 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 549 470
9-11 L 10-12 L 9-7 W 9-8 W (OT) 7-5 W 11-9 W 10-11 L (OT) 11-9 W 9-7 W 7-6 W 15-10 W 10-9 W (OT) 11-6 W 7-8 L 8-6 W 10-11 L (3OT)
UP 1 7 5 3 3 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 21
GA 134 1 135 153
DN 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
GB 18 16 11 12 27 36 4 49 3 18 32 39 30 1 86 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 5 48 0 0 16 0 3 0 459 443
GAA 8.29 13.28 8.31 9.42
SAVES 133 2 135 171
TEAM STATISTICS GOALS BY PERIOD HOFSTRA Opponents
1st 34 32
T/O 23 10 15 18 14 17 7 4 5 3 9 12 7 8 4 8 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 0 0 1 0 0 0 193 211
2nd 44 34
CT 2 3 1 1 1 5 0 23 0 0 10 12 14 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 6 4 0 0 9 0 1 0 96 80
W-L PCT 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 189-340 .556 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-2 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-1 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 189-343 .551 154-343 .449
PEN-MIN 0-0.0 1-0.5 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 1-1.0 0-0.0 5-4.0 0-0.0 3-2.5 9-7.0 9-7.5 11-8.5 0-0.0 2-1.5 1-1.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 1-0.5 5-4.5 2-1.5 0-0.0 0-0.0 4-4.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 0-0.0 55-44.5 67-60.0
SV.PCT .498 .667 .500 .528
W 11 0 11 5
L T SHOTS 5 0 468 0 0 3 5 0 471 11 0 549
3rd 42 28
OT 2 1
OT2 0 0
4th 31 39
OT3 0 1
TOTAL 153 135
SHOTS BY PERIOD 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT HOFSTRA 140 146 141 111 9 Opponents 100 124 105 135 4
OT2 OT3 Total 2 0 549 1 1 470
SHOTS ON GOAL BY PRD HOFSTRA Opponents
1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT 78 92 83 66 4 68 70 56 72 3
OT2 OT3 Total 1 0 324 0 1 270
SAVES BY PERIOD 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT HOFSTRA 36 36 28 33 2 Opponents 44 48 41 35 2
OT2 OT3 Total 0 0 135 1 0 171
CLEARS: HOFSTRA -- 224-258 .868, Opponents -- 232-258 .899. MAN-UP OPPS: HOFSTRA -- 23-61 .377, Opponents -- 21-50 .420. CLEARS: Hofstra--234-268 .873, Opponents--220-243 .905. MAN-UP OPPS: Hofstra--23-61 .377, Opponents--21-63 .333.
M E N ’ S
PTS 53 37 33 32 26 24 7 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 230 215
H O F S T R A
G A 21 32 32 5 26 7 22 10 17 9 18 6 6 1 3 1 2 1 2 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 153 77 135 80
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NO PLAYER GP-GS 5 Llinares, Sam 15-15 17 Varn, Torin 16-16 7 Malave, Mike 16-16 12 Coholan, Drew 16-16 21 Hendrickson, Korey 16-16 2 Yapor, Lance 16-16 9 Davis, Brier 12-0 6 Rielly, Ryan 16-0 3 Altmann, Nick 10-0 22 Reicherter, John 7-0 4 Romano, Steve 16-0 27 Zappone, Anthony 16-0 44 Sullivan, Finn 16-16 14 Begley, Tyler 15-0 42 Clarke, Kris 16-0 28 von Bargen, Brian 16-0 11 O’Connell, Brandyn 6-1 15 Diener, Michael 1-0 88 Collins, Eddie 3-0 66 Horl, Connor 2-0 47 Franco, Zachary 1-0 43 Reilly, Peter 1-0 35 Schilling, Nate 13-0 34 Satterthwaite, Steve 16-16 33 Selva, Chris 16-16 31 Miller, Seth 1-0 29 Moorehead, Jack 4-0 23 Caputo, Corey 16-16 18 Kupecky, Trevor 1-0 16 Howell, Chris 15-0 13 Stockstill, Steele 1-0 Total............... 16 Opponents........... 16
L A C R O S S E
2014 STATISTICS AND RESULTS
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2013 CAA MEN’S 2014 CAA LACROSSE REVIEW REVIEW STANDINGS
CAA 4-1 4-1 3-2 2-3 1-4 1-4
Hofstra Drexel Penn State Towson Massachusetts Delaware
Pct. .800 .800 .600 .400 .200 .200
GF 49 57 44 32 35 45
GA Overall 39 11-5 46 13-5 35 7-6 43 8-7 51 7-6 48 7-9
Pct. .688 .722 .538 .533 .538 .438
GF 153 209 134 127 119 146
GA 135 186 116 146 126 144
TEAM STATISTICS GOALS/GAME
GP 1. Drexel 18 2. Penn State 13 3. Hofstra 16 4. Massachusetts 13 5. Delaware 16 6. Towson 15
No. 209 134 153 119 146 127
Avg/G 11.61 10.31 9.56 9.15 9.12 8.47
ASSISTS/GAME
GP 1. Drexel 18 2. Massachusetts 13 3. Delaware 16 4. Penn State 13 5. Hofstra 16 6. Towson 15
No. 116 70 83 65 77 68
GROUND BALLS/ GAME
Avg/G 6.44 5.38 5.19 5.00 4.81 4.53
GP 1. Drexel 18 2. Penn State 13 3. Delaware 16 4. Hofstra 16 5. Massachusetts 13 6. Towson 15
No. 572 392 475 459 346 367
Avg/G 31.78 30.15 29.69 28.69 26.62 24.47
2014 ALL-CAA MEN’S LACROSSE TEAM FIRST TEAM ALL-CAA:
Ryan Belka, Drexel; James Connelly, Delaware; Matt Dusek, Drexel; Austin Kaut, Penn State; Brian Kormondy, Delaware; Sam Llinares, Hofstra; Ben McIntosh, Drexel; JoJo Ostrander, Towson; Ryan Rielly, Hofstra; Nick Saputo, Drexel; Shane Sturgis, Penn State; Finn Sullivan, Hofstra; Nick Trizano, Drexel
SECOND TEAM ALL-CAA:
Tyler Barbarich, Delaware; James Burke, Penn State; Drew Coholan, Hofstra; Thomas DeNapoli, Towson; John Fennessy, Towson; Kyle Karaska, Massachusetts; Justin Mabus, Towson; Nick Mariano, Massachusetts; Connor Mooney, Massachusetts; Chris Selva, Hofstra; Tyler Travis, Penn State; Torin Varn, Hofstra
CAA ALL-ROOKIE TEAM:
Kris Clarke, Hofstra; Steve DeLargy, Delaware; Ryan Drenner, Towson; Drake Kreinz, Penn State; Nick Mariano, Massachusetts; Markel Nelson, Drexel; Stephen Satterthwaite, Hofstra; Joe Seider, Towson; Cole Shafer, Drexel; Mike Sutton, Penn State
CAA ALL-ACADEMIC TEAM:
2014 CAA MEN’S LACROSSE CHAMPIONSHIP Wednesday, April 30 - Semifinals at Hempstead, N.Y. #1 Hofstra 8, #4 Delaware 6 Thursday, May 1 - Semifinals at Philadelphia, Pa. #2 Drexel 11, #3 Towson 10 (OT) Saturday, May 3 - Championship at Hempstead, N.Y. #2 Drexel 11, #1 Hofstra 10 (3OT)
Joe Calvello, Massachusetts; Thomas DeNapoli, Towson; Will Gabrielsen, Drexel; Chris Herbert, Delaware; Austin Kaut, Penn State; Lance Yapor, Ryan Belka, Drexel; James Connelly, Hofstra Delaware; Greg Cuccinello, Towson; John Fennessy, Towson; Dan Kean, Delaware; Mike Malave, Hofstra; Ben McIntosh, Drexel; Ryan Rielly, Hofstra; Cole Shafer, Drexel; Nick Trizano, Drexel; Torin Varn, Hofstra
CAA ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM:
CAA TOURNAMENT MOP: Ben McIntosh, Drexel
CAA MEN’S LACROSSE PLAYER OF THE YEAR:
CAA MEN’S LACROSSE ROOKIE OF THE YEAR:
Ben McIntosh, Drexel
Nick Mariano, Massachusetts
CAA MEN’S LACROSSE COACH OF THE YEAR:
CAA MEN’S LACROSSE DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR:
Seth Tierney, Hofstra
Austin Kaut, Penn State
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C R O S S E
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No. 27 23 18 16 14 13
Avg/G 1.50 1.44 1.38 1.07 1.08 0.81
MAN-UP SCORING PCT
GP 1. Drexel 18 2. Hofstra 16 3. Massachusetts 13 4. Penn State 13 5. Towson 15 6. Delaware 16
No. 27 23 18 14 16 13
Att. Pct. 71 .380 61 .377 50 .360 41 .341 52 .308 45 .289
PENALTY-KILLING PCT
SAVES/GAME
TURNOVERS/GAME
SAVE PERCENTAGE
GP 1. Massachusetts 13 2. Towson 15 3. Penn State 13 4. Delaware 16 5. Hofstra 16 6. Drexel 18
GA 14 14 12 19 21 27
GP 1. Towson 15 2. Hofstra 16 3. Massachusetts 13 4. Penn State 13 5. Drexel 18 6. Delaware 16
Att.PK Pct. 54 .741 53 .736 36 .667 56 .661 50 .580 64 .578
No. 180 193 162 182 265 237
Avg/G 12.00 12.06 12.46 14.00 14.72 14.81
CAUSED TURNOVER/ GAME GP 1. Penn State 13 2. Delaware 16 3. Massachusetts 13 4. Drexel 18 5. Hofstra 16 6. Towson 15
No. 99 110 89 113 96 87
GOALS AGAINST AVERAGE GP 1. Hofstra 16 2. Penn State 13 3. Delaware 16 4. Massachusetts 13 5. Towson 15 6. Drexel 18
GA 135 116 144 126 146 186
GP 1. Drexel 18 2. Penn State 13 3. Delaware 16 4. Massachusetts 13 5. Towson 15 6. Hofstra 16
Saves Avg/G 203 11.28 138 10.62 169 10.56 137 10.54 144 9.60 135 8.44
GP GA Saves Save% 1. Penn State 13 116 138 .543 2. Delaware 16 144 169 .540 3. Drexel 18 186 203 .522 4. Massachusetts 13 126 137 .521 5. Hofstra 16 135 135 .500 6. Towson 15 146 144 .497
FACEOFF PERCENTAGE
Avg/G 7.62 6.88 6.85 6.28 6.00 5.80
GP 1. Drexel 18 2. Penn State 13 3. Delaware 16 4. Massachusetts 13 5. Hofstra 16 6. Towson 15
Won Lost Pct. 277 180 .606 177 118 .600 202 137 .596 156 127 .551 189 154 .551 127 189 .402
Min. Avg. 974:44 8.31 791:33 8.79 960:00 9.00 783:53 9.64 904:00 9.69 1108:03 10.07
2014 CAA INDIVIDUAL STATS
To be ranked, a player must appear in at least 25.0% of their team’s games. GOALS PER GAME ASSISTS PER GAME
POINTS PER GAME
1. Sturgis, Shane-PSU 2. McIntosh, Ben-DREXEL 3. Llinares, Sam-HOFSTRA 4. Trizano, Nick-DREXEL Mariano, Nick-UMASS 6. Shafer, Cole-DREXEL 7. Mooney, Connor-UMASS 8. Belka, Ryan-DREXEL 9. DeNapoli, Thomas-TOWSON 10. Varn, Torin-HOFSTRA
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
No. 48 33 29 40 32 35 23 27 26 23 GP 13 18 15 18 13 18 13 18 15 16
Avg/G 2.67 2.54 2.23 2.22 2.00 1.94 1.77 1.69 1.62 1.53
GP No. Avg/G 1. Llinares, Sam-HOFSTRA 15 32 2.13 2. Mooney, Connor-UMASS 13 20 1.54 3. Sturgis, Shane-PSU 13 17 1.31 4. DeNapoli, Thomas-TOWSON 15 19 1.27 5. Belka, Ryan-DREXEL 18 21 1.17 6. Jones, Beau-DELAWARE 13 15 1.15 7. Mabus, Justin-TOWSON 15 17 1.13 8. Shafer, Cole-DREXEL 18 18 1.00 9. McIntosh, Ben-DREXEL 18 17 0.94 10. VanThof, Kyle-PSU 13 12 0.92
Goals 33 48 21 40 29 35 18 25 17 32
Assists 17 17 32 14 10 18 20 21 19 5
Points 50 65 53 54 39 53 38 46 36 37
Avg/G 3.85 3.61 3.53 3.00 3.00 2.94 2.92 2.56 2.40 2.31
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GP 1. McIntosh, Ben-DREXEL 18 2. Sturgis, Shane-PSU 13 3. Mariano, Nick-UMASS 13 4. Trizano, Nick-DREXEL 18 5. Varn, Torin-HOFSTRA 16 6. Shafer, Cole-DREXEL 18 7. Sanders, TJ-PSU 13 8. Keane, Dan-DELAWARE 16 9. Malave, Mike-HOFSTRA 16 10. Seider, Joe-TOWSON 15
L A C R O S S E
GP 1. Drexel 18 2. Hofstra 16 3. Massachusetts 13 4. Towson 15 5. Penn State 13 6. Delaware 16
Avg/G 18.06 15.31 14.54 14.38 14.31 13.00
M E N ’ S
MAN-UP GOALS
No. 325 199 189 230 229 195
H O F S T R A
GP 1. Drexel 18 2. Penn State 13 3. Massachusetts 13 4. Hofstra 16 5. Delaware 16 6. Towson 15
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POINTS/GAME
H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A
L A C R O S S E
2014 CAA REVIEW INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS GAME-WINNING GOALS 1. Sturgis, Shane-PSU McIntosh, Ben-DREXEL Boudreau, Jared-DREXEL 4. Mariano, Nick-UMASS Seider, Joe-TOWSON Siskind, Max-TOWSON Yapor, Lance-HOFSTRA Malave, Mike-HOFSTRA Varn, Torin-HOFSTRA Coholan, Drew-HOFSTRA Trizano, Nick-DREXEL Shafer, Cole-DREXEL
GP 13 18 18 13 15 15 16 16 16 16 18 18
No. 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
Avg/G 0.23 0.17 0.17 0.15 0.13 0.13 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.11 0.11
GP 18 13 14 13 16
No. 166 98 83 70 86
Avg/G 9.22 7.54 5.93 5.38 5.38
GP 15 17 18 15 18 15 15 17 17 10
No. 114 127 127 102 119 96 96 108 101 57
Avg/G 7.60 7.47 7.06 6.80 6.61 6.40 6.40 6.35 5.94 5.70
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M E N ’ S
GROUND BALLS PER GAME
74
1. Saputo, Nick-DREXEL 2. Calvello, Joe-UMASS 3. Barbarich, Tyler-DELAWARE 4. Kreinz, Drake-PSU 5. Clarke, Kris-HOFSTRA
SHOTS PER GAME 1. McIntosh, Ben-DU 2. Forster, Jack-PSU 3. DeNapoli, Thomas-TU 4. Church, Robert-DU 5. Hodgson, Andrew-TU 6. Smith, Kyle-UM Diachenko, Nick-UD 8. Sanders, TJ-PSU 9. Sturgis, Shane-PSU 10. Fleming, Colin-UM
MAN-UP GOALS PER GAME 1. Sutton, Mike-PSU 2. Mariano, Nick-UMASS 3. Trizano, Nick-DREXEL 4. Varn, Torin-HOFSTRA McIntosh, Ben-DREXEL
GP 6 13 18 16 18
No. 3 6 8 7 7
GA 134 111 135 118 143 171
Min. GA Avg 970:13 8.29 770:07 8.65 896:03 9.04 739:40 9.57 890:45 9.63 1044:57 9.82
Saves 134 160 133 188 144 133
GA 111 135 118 171 143 134
Save Pct. .547 .542 .530 .524 .502 .498
GP 18 13 13 16 15 16
No. 188 134 133 160 144 133
Avg/G 10.44 10.31 10.23 10.00 9.60 8.31
GOALS AGAINST AVG
1. Selva, Chris-HOFSTRA 2. Kaut, Austin-PSU 3. Peaks, Conor-DELAWARE 4. Oliveri, Zach-UMASS 5. White, Tyler-TOWSON 6. Gabrielsen, Will-DREXEL
GP 16 13 16 13 15 18
SAVE PERCENTAGE
GP 1. Kaut, Austin-PSU 13 2. Peaks, Conor-DELAWARE 16 3. Oliveri, Zach-UMASS 13 4. Gabrielsen, Will-DREXEL 18 5. White, Tyler-TOWSON 15 6. Selva, Chris-HOFSTRA 16
SAVES PER GAME 1. Gabrielsen, Will-DREXEL 2. Kaut, Austin-PSU 3. Oliveri, Zach-UMASS 4. Peaks, Conor-DELAWARE 5. White, Tyler-TOWSON 6. Selva, Chris-HOFSTRA
FACEOFF PERCENT
1. Barbarich, Tyler-DELAWARE 2. Saputo, Nick-DREXEL 3. Kreinz, Drake-PSU 4. Calvello, Joe-UMASS 5. Clarke, Kris-HOFSTRA 6. Conroy, Patrick-TOWSON
GP 14 18 13 13 16 12
Won 153 255 140 147 189 14
Avg/G 0.50 0.46 0.44 0.44 0.39
Lost 87 156 89 112 151 19
Pct. .637 .620 .611 .568 .556 .424
Torin Varn
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1994
William Adams
1999
Daniel Agostino
1980
Jack Alaimo
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Anthony Alexander
1998
Michael Allain
2003
Douglas Altmansberger
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Ernest Angiulo
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Michael Antino
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John Antoniades
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Scott Apgar
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Richard Aquino
1986
Paul Arena
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Gary Arnold Gary Arnold
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Mark Arthus
1979
Jay Artinian
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Joseph Astarita
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William Atkins
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Lewis Augusta
1966
Robert Auguste
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Aaron Auster
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Philip Avillo
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Peter Axel
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John Azzariti
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Richard Baer
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Walter Bagley
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Joe Baker
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Stace Balitsos
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Steven Banalett
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Joseph Barile
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James Barnett
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Joseph Barra
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Kevin Barry
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Nicholas Baudo
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Kevin Baudo
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Matthew Cady
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Bruce Cahill
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David Bellia
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Michael Bennett
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Robert Bensen
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Robert Benson
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Martin Berg
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Christopher Bergersen
1996
Kevin Bergin
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Arnold Berman
1960
Clark Bernales
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Seth Berrin
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Michael Besio
1997
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Thomas Calder
1975
Ramon Conchado
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Hugh Blisard
1972
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Dennis Condon
1980
Edward Boccuzzi
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Theodore Caplan
1954
Timothy Connors
1967
Ronald Bohlert
1996
Corey Caputo
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Kevin Conroy
1980
Sean Bolger
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Jay Card
2011
John Conroy
1987
Robert Bonaguro
2007
Peter Carew
1962
Frank Constantino
1967
Dennis Bonn
1989
Andrew Carlson
1994
John Cooper
1987
Jake Born
2009
Joseph Carrello
1991
Jonathan Cooper
1989
Richard Bouwman
1985
Ryan Carter
2009
Christopher Cooper
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Richard Bowman
1969
Glenn Caruso
1969
Peter Coots
1959
Ian Braddish
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Vincent Caruso
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William Corbett
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John Brais
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Brian Casey
1978
Joseph Corcoran
1982
Ryan Brant
2013
Cullen Cassidy
2011
Tyler Corcoran
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Tyler Brant
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Michael Castro
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Robert Cordes
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William Braun
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Michael Castro
1992
William Corkhill
1954
John Brazel
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Raymond Cavaliere
1974
Reynold Corn
1955
Terrance Brennan
1977
Robert Cavaliero
1974
Robert Corwin
1951
Michael Brereton
1968
Joseph Caven
2009
Frank Costantino
1973
John Bresnan
1970
Richard Cestaro
1966
Clifford Coughlin
1956
Henry Brill
1967
Nicholas Christakis
1999
Mark Cox
1992
Mitchell Brill
1972
Robert Churchill
2005
John Coyle
1965
Timothy Brink
1991
Frank Cirillo
1965
Frank Cozart
1962
Charles Bromm
1950
Ramar Clash
2002
Brian Crichlow
2007
Jordan Bronstein
2006
Rocky Cocchiola
1987
Donald Cummings
1965
Douglas Brosky
1971
Harvey Cohen
1969
Paul Cutrone
1983
Steven Buck
1987
David Cohen
1992
Stephen Buck
1991
Allan Cohen
1994
Carl Buehler
1981
Martin Cohn
1981
Michael Burke
2011
Drew Coholan
2014
Richard Burke
1971
Jeffrey Cole
1994
Gary Burton
1978
Matthew Coleman
1997
Francis Busso
2003
Ciro Buttacavoli
1959
Thomas Byrne
1983
Thomas Byrne
1989
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
Michael Colleluori
Thomas Calder
D
Julius D’Agostino
1962
Chris Dale
2010
Robert Dall
1955
Michael D’Amato
1968
Peter Damone
1956
Barry Danels
1961
Vincent Daniels
1991
Edward Danowski
1963
M E N ’ S
1957
1985
Gary Beker
H O F S T R A
Arthur Abbey
C
1965
James Bauer
2 0 1 5
B
Bruce Bauer
L A C R O S S E
ALL-TIME ALUMNI 1949-2014
75
2 0 1 5
H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
ALL-TIME ALUMNI ALUMNI ALL-TIME
76
Stephen Darby
1954
Gerald Donaghy
2002
Brian Ferrara
2005
Ed Gazich
1957
Raymond Dattwyler
1967
William Donahoe
1977
Joseph Ferrucci
1999
Marco Gazich
1957
Stephen Dauses
1970
David Donatello
1995
Tom Ferry
2011
Edward Gebhardt
1976
Stuart Davis
1954
William Donnelly
1953
John Fetzer
1956
Rudolph Gebig
1967
William Dawes
1995
Michael Dooley
1983
Jeffrey Fine
1969
Adam Gelcich
1994
Thomas DeCurtis
2008
Scott Dooley
2004
Edward Finegan
1966
Charles Gennario
1977
Christopher Deeks
1974
Erik Fitez
2000
David Giannone
1992
Michael Deem
1997
Thomas FitzGerald
1956
John Giannoni
1966
Paul Defendini
2002
Sean Fitzpatrick
1999
Jacob Gidich
2005
Paul Delle
1980
Thomas Fitzsimons
1987
Thomas Gill
2001
Robert Demarco
1970
John Flaherty
1969
Robert Gilmartin
1961
Robert Demarco
1972
Gregory Fleming
1958
Robert Gilmartin
1979
Michael Demeo
2002
Frank Flocco
2001
Giovanni Girardi
2014
Jeffrey Dena
1977
Jason Fluger
2006
Robert Gleckler
2006
Michael DeNapoli
2012
Craig Flynn
1997
Edward Goldstein
1954
Steven DeNapoli
2011
Kevin Ford
2011
Norman Goldstein
1959
Robert DeNeef
1961
Brian Foresta
1997
Thomas Gordon
1973
Michael Denino
1965
James Forster
1981
John Gorman
2008
Christopher Depaolo
1996
William Fowler
1974
William Gould
1972
Robert DePasquale
2005
Paul Fowler
1977
Robert Graebe
1972
Robert DePoto
1950
Tom Dooley
2009
Michael Fowler
1979
John Graham
1953
David Depp
1948
Thomas Dorman
1970
William Green
1967
Edward Devereaux
1966
Kevin Dougherty
2003
Martin Greenberg
1960
Arthur Diamond
1978
James Downing
1986
Ryan Grimes
1997
Louis DiBlasi
1961
George Dragonetti
1956
William Groom
1962
Louis DiBlasi
1961
Dennis Driscoll
1990
Catherine Guerriere
2006
Donald DiBlasi
1970
James Dubovick
1966
Robert Guido
1976
Thomas Dicicco
1981
Vincent Dugan
1960
Andrew Gvozden
2012
Brian Dunn
1996
Michael Dunne
1997
Tom Dooley
E
Stephen DiGiovanni
Douglas Edmonds
1990
Jonathan Edwards
2005
William Effingham
1972
Steven Effingham
1976
Jude Ehrbar
1996
Michael Elflein
2001
Martin Enright
1979
Stephen Espey
1979
William Etherson
1979
Richard Euler
1957
Stephen DiGiovanni
2012
Andris Dikmanis
2003
Kyle Dillon
2010
Vito Dimatteo
2007
John Fahey
1956
Domenic Dinardo
1995
Aloysius Falussy
1987
Raymond DiScala
1964
Anthony Fama
1999
Francis Discala
1967
James Farrell
1960
Robert Dixon
1954
Brian Farrell
2001
Ronald Dobelstein
1969
Philip Faust
1981
Robert Dolphin
1972
Gerard Fay
2001
Brian Donaghy
1996
Alex Fedoroff
1954
F
H Joseph Fowler Joseph Fowler
1980
Gunther Franz
1963
Robert Franz
1967
Richard Frazer
1969
Robert Freidah
1952
Howard Fried
1974
Jordan Fried
2013
Mark Friedman
1966
G
Connor Hagans
2008
Matthew Haines
2011
John Hall
1995
Michael Hamilton
2013
Kenneth Hammer
1981
Adam Hananel
2002
Donald Hanington
1963
Daniel Hanley
1993
Vincent Hannigan
1996
Ronald Hansen
1965
Richard Harinsky
2000
Richard Haunss
1970
Thomas Hayes
1953
Karl Hedstrom
1997
John Heins
1959
Walton Gagel
1955
Peter Heinz
1960
Vincent Gagliardo
1981
William Heiser
1962
Dominic Gallina
1999
Jack Heller
1976
Joseph Gallina
2005
Greg Heller
1991
Timothy Gannon
1963
Korey Hendrickson
2012
Robert Gannon
1982
Gregory Hennessey
1987
Richard Garguilo
1996
Andrew Henry
1996
John Garofalo
1972
Phillip Hersh
2005
www. G oHof str a . co m
Kevin Hill
1976
Peter Kaspar
2007
John Hill
1977
Richard Kates
1974
John Hiller
1965
Ari Katz
2006
Robert Hiller
1976
William Kay
1952
Robert Hillman
1955
George Kay
1966
Brian Hogan
2012
Ryan Kelaher
2007
P.J. Hogan
2010
Lee Kellerman
1952
Graham Horvath
2012
Francis Kelly
1967
Martin Kelly
1990
David Kennedy
1983
Thomas Kessler
2002
Robert Keys
1981
John Keysor
2007
Douglas Kiernan
1973
Patrick Killikelly
1959
Saul Kimmel
1965
Mitchell Kirschbaum
1970
Eric Kitt
1977
David Knaus
1972
Robert Kobel
1985
David Koehler
1987
Cole Koesterer
2012
Brian Holland Brian Holland
1993
Walter Kohanowich
1952
Tim Holman
2011
Nicholas Kolb
2006
Chris Howell
2014
Jack Kort
1963
Travis Howell
2004
Christopher Korzonkiewicz 2000
I
L
Michael La Crosse
1991
Evan La Penna
2002
Albert Lahood
1956
William Laky
1959
Hogan Lam
1980
Renzie Lamb
1959
Michael Lambrecht
1982
William Lampe
1955
Brian Langtry
1998
Robert Lankenau
1956
Bernard Larkin
1960
Rolf Larson
1956
Michael Laudenslager
1991
Michael Laurano
1999
Lionel Lauture
2005
Jack Lawrence
1971
Thomas Leanos
1970
A.J. Leary
2012
Ian Leary
2014
Kevin Leary
2012
Alfred Lettera
1968
Richard Lewton
1978
Jamie Lincoln
2011
Robert Linker
1978
Louis Liotti
1970
Charles Lipp
1962
Gerald Lipps
1954
Athan Iannucci
2006
Joseph Lobiondo
1987
Steven Iglio
1994
Brad Loizeaux
2013
Takashi Ikeda
2007
James Lollo
2008
Michael Infantino
2003
Robert Lombardo
1976
Tom Interlicchio
2010
Thomas Lonergan
1982
Vincent Intini
1996
George Loros
1956
Steven Izzo
2005
Barry Lublin
1965
Ryan Lucas
2005
Sean Lucas
2010
Howard Ludecker
1965
John Lundie
1964
John Lupetin
1975
John Lynch
1972
Lawrence Lynch
1976
J
Michael Manzer
1960
Anthony Manzione
1985
Frank Marcinowski
1968
Mike Marich
1995
Philip Marino
1976
Michael Marino
1977
Joseph Markanthony
1965
Robert Martin
1970
Joseph Mascaretti
2007
Joseph Masone
1955
Joseph Massaro
2005
John Matthews
1952
James Mau
1996
Frank Mauro
1960
James Mayer
1970
James Mayer
1976
Christopher Mayo
2007
Anthony Mazzarella
1972
Kevin McDonough
2007
Martin McCarthy
1982
Sean McCarthy
2006
Daniel McCauley
1954
David McCulloch
1986
Francis McDermott
2003
Gerard McDermott
1977
Michael McGinley
1989
Richard McGrath
2007
James McGunnigle
1962
Michael McHugh
1979
Alexander McIlwraith
1957
Daniel McMahone
1993
Ryan McPherson
2008
Thomas McShane
1965
Thomas McShane
1980
William Meddis
1975
Kevin Jacobs
1996
Eric Jarry
2008
Peter Johnson
1960
Joe Kostolansky
2003
Kevin Johnson
1992
Josip Kostovic
1998
Kevin Johnson
1996
Aaron Kozlowski
2003
Tyler Johnston
2013
William Kramer
1953
Aaron Jones
2013
Larry Kramer
1989
Walter Jones
1952
Lawrence Kramer
1998
Vincent Macchio
1982
Richard Kranzler
1954
William Macgregor
1962
Stanley Krause
1991
Douglas Machen
2004
Chet Krinsky
1982
William Maddock
1993
Keith Mekeel
2003
Joseph Krupinski
1958
Michael Magee
1988
Richard Mekeel
2004
Robert Kuhlke
1979
Michael Magro
2005
Garry Merkle
1990
James Kuhner
1973
John Manning
1961
Hanford Merritt
1958
K
Kenneth Kaiser
1985
Gregory Kalafatic
2004
Jack Kaley
1961
Jeffrey Karp
1968
Joe Kostolansky
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
M
Keith Mekeel
L A C R O S S E
1967
M E N ’ S
James Kaspar
H O F S T R A
1978
2 0 1 5
Thomas Hess
77
2 0 1 5
H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
ALL-TIME ALUMNI
78 78
James Merryman
1973
Richard Northorn
1997
Kyle Pratte
2011
James Raveret
2011
Ryan Mertins
2008
Thomas Nunziata
1955
Larry Price
1970
Bryan Read
2006
Kevin Metkiff
2008
Mikawato Red Arrow
1985
James Metzger
1980
Kevin Reich
1994
Jackson Meyers
2012
Lawrence Reid
1968
John Michielini
1990
Edward Reilly
1955
Francis Miller
1983
Keith Reilly
2003
Joseph Miller
1997
Andrew Reinesch
1950
Ryan Miller
2007
Michael Renga
1998
Ray Mills
1981
Christopher Resch
1998
Ramon Mills
1981
Marc Riccio
1989
Adam Minella
1984
James Richards
1964
Michael Minisini
1987
Michael Ricigliano
1995
Barry Minkin
1962
Stephen Rielly
1987
Robert Mino
1997
Jonathan Rifenburg
2007
Adam Mojica
2011
Michael Rigney
2004
Rolf Moller
1954
Joe Montemurro
2009
James Moore
1991
Rob Moore
2012
David Padgett
Kevin Moran
1994
John Moran
O
Brad Obloj
1999
Daniel O’Brien
1953
Terrance O’Connor
1973
Wesley O’Donnell
1985
John O’Donnell
1995
Ryan O’Leary
2013
John Oliva
1971
Alan Olsen
1961
Chet O’Neill
1960
Carl Orent
1955
Danny Orlando
2009
John Orsen
2006
Chris Prifte Chris Prifte
1979
Gary Rinaldi
1993
Keith Prifte
2009
William Risberg
1978
Steve Prifte
2009
John Rispoli
1952
1965
David Provenzano
1957
Joseph Ristuccia
1954
Zachary Pall
2012
James Pugh
1973
Brian Robinson
1986
2000
Ralph Palma
1970
James Pugh
1974
Andrew Rodnite
1956
Philip Mordente
1966
Leonard Panarelli
2006
Jack Rogan
2010
Stephen Morea
1970
John Panarese
1965
Charles Rogener
1979
Frank Moretti
1958
Chris Panos
1996
Jacob Rogers
2000
Thomas Moriarty
1950
L Parcher
1958
Chris Rogler
2001
Arthur Morr
1951
Gregory Parisi
1983
Jacob Rooney
2013
Edward Morr
1953
Steven Parker
1972
Dennis Rosa
1978
John Morris
1982
Robert Parrinelli
2000
Jordan Rosen
2009
Brett Moyer
2008
Thomas Passantino
1971
Sylvan Rosenbaum
1950
Nicholas Mucciacciaro
2000
Thomas Passenant
2013
Jeffrey Rosenberg
1968
Mark Mullen
2013
Michael Passuello
2006
Jason Rosenzweig
2013
George Muller
1982
Joseph Pavek
1981
Jeffrey Rosten
1980
Malachy Mulligan
1980
Jason Pearl
2003
Louis Rosten
1981
Thomas Mulrooney
1970
John Pedranghelu
1978
Ronald Roth
1969
Timothy Mulvihill
1988
Anthony Perettine
1987
Nate Roy
2011
William Munck
1987
Christopher Pergola
2008
Harry Royle
1970
Richard Murphy
1962
Martin Peters
2002
Daniel Royle
2003
David Murphy
1987
William Peters, IV
2007
John Rudenauer
2008
Liam Murphy
2001
Frederick Peterson
1961
William Ruggiero
1977
Anthony Muscarella
2009
Anthony Petillo
1978
Nicholas Ruocco
2000
Andrew Mustapich
1950
Richard Petillo
1983
Michael Russo
1958
Brian Myers
1981
Lewis Petta
1956
Robert Russo
1971
Howard Myers
1967
James Pezza
2010
Dan Pezzolla
2012
Frank Pigula
1983
David Pike
2004
Ronald Pimental
N
Doug Nastro
1974
Steven Nastro
1980
Henry Natterer
1959
Isaac Neal
2010
David Neidhart
2001
Jerry Nobile
2011
P
Q
Michael Quagerelli
1992
Bob Quinlan Bob Quinlan
1983
Bruce Quinlan
1987
James Quinn
2006
Ryan Quinn
2013
S
R
James Rafferty
1952
1987
Richard Raganella
2000
Armondo Polanco
1999
Peter Rainis
1986
Nick Polanco
2002
Rich Rambo
2011
William Pollock
1964
Robert Rao
1991
Eddie Poreba
1982
James Raucci
1999
George Pratt
1958
Bruce Rauch
1969
Michael Sajkoski
1978
Peter Salit
1958
Joseph Sampieri
2001
Patricia Sanders
1971
Ronald Sandler
1968
Frederick Sandler
1970
Robert Santimays
1979
www. G oHof str a . co m
Ryan Willey
2008
Stephen Satterthwaite
2014
Samuel Trachtenberg
1952
Hayden Wilson
2013
Thomas Savio
1990
James Trainor
1972
Debra Wolther
1981
William Sayrafe
1986
Stephen Trentacoste
1972
Edward Woycik
1977
Raymond Schaefer
1958
Timothy Treubig
2006
Edward Wozniak
1968
George Scharnikow
1997
Peter Trizzino
1962
Austin Wright
2011
L Scheer
1956
Nicholas Turchiano
1963
Shane Wynn
2009
Michael Scheno
1978
William Turley
1953
Brian Schneider
2009
Sal Tuttle
2012
Mark Schnellinger
1995
Richard Schrage
1962
Martin Schumacher
1967
David Schwartzberg
2007
Thomas Schwender
1962
Vince Sombrotto
1982
Anthony Sciortino
2008
Adrian Sorichetti
2013
Donald Scott
2004
Steven Sorrillo
2006
Christian Scuderi
2010
Steven Souhrada
1990
Warren Seaman
1958
Edward Southard
1999
James Seifert
1986
Matthew Southard
2006
U
Vince Sombrotto
Ross Uhlfelder
1969
Chris Unterstein
2006
Kevin Unterstein
2008
Mike Unterstein
2008
V
Mike Vaccaro
2011
Alfred Vadnais
1958
John Van Gelder
2000
Richard Van Wickler
1988
Gerald Vance
1964
Philip Vangeli
1994
Torin Varn
2014
James Vaughan
1977
Robert Veit
1956
Richard Verne
1960
Peter Verne
1964
Vincent Vieten
1953
Joseph Zaffuto
1980
Ryan Vilar
2005
Allen Zagoren
1969
Americus Vitale
1963
Anthony Zappone
2914
2009
Ronald Zoia
1963
Harold Seikel
1950
Dean Spadaro
1995
Steve Serling
2012
Eric Spallina
1998
Richard Sesnewicz
1966
Brian Spallina
2000
Lee Sewell
1973
Mark Spruyt
1997
Gerard Sewell
1981
Collin Stabler
2008
Scott Shafranek
2002
Jeremy Stambovsky
2005
Doug Shanahan
2002
William Stanley
1991
Thomas Shea
1971
Dan Stein
2010
Jesse Sherer
2003
Michael Stencel
2001
James Sheridan
1961
Robert Stewart
1972
John Sherlock
1978
Charles Stile
1960
James Shirley
1982
Steele Stockstill
2014
James Shuart
1953
Richard Stoecker
1978
Tom Shuey
2009
John Stranahan
1966
Jack Vivonetto
Alexander Silenok
1975
Paul Sullivan
1958
Matthew Silver
2006
Richard Sullivan
2001
Jerry Simandl
1955
Douglas Swanson
1981
W
Robert Sinclair
1986
Steven Walakovits
1994
Adam Swarsen
2010
Michael Skudin
2011
Edward Wallace
1980
David Sweeney
2003
Gary Smalls
1972
Owen Walsh
1952
Gerard Sweet
2006
William Smith
1952
Peter Walther
1987
Marc Szyluk
1997
Richard Smith
1961
Joseph Wamser
1958
Richard Smith
1976
Kevin Warne
2000
Ryan Smith
2009
James Watson
1982
Cody Solaja
2013
Patrick Watson
2009
Julian Watts
2008
Steven Wax
2007
Gary Weller
1974
Gary White
1977
Jonathan Wicker
2005
George Wiemer
1958
John Wilkinson
1973
Charles Wilkinson
1978
James Wilkinson
1981
T
Richard Tamaro
1966
Joseph Taylor
1987
Lorel Teolis
1955
John Tenet
2008
Roger Testa
1973
Jared Testa
1998
Brett Tietjen
2003
Michael Tolkach
2008
James Toone
1968
Sam Toperoff
1960
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
Y
Lance Yapor Lance Yapor
2014
Christopher Yeager
1988
Dennis Yeagle
2001
Z
Brian Zuchelli Brian Zuchelli
2004
Brian Zusi
2002
L A C R O S S E
1972
M E N ’ S
John Tortora
H O F S T R A
2004
2 0 1 5
Tomar Sarvis
79
L A C R O S S E
LACROSSE RECORD BOOK
INDIVIDUAL RECORDS GOALS
BEST GOALS PER GAME AVERAGE, SEASON No. 1 2 3 4 4 4
Player Year Michael Fowler 1979 Michael LaCrosse 1989 Athan Iannucci 2006 Tom Kessler 2000 Tom Kessler 2001 Bob Hiller 1974
GP 12 15 19 16 17 12
Goals 40 49 62 48 51 36
No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Player Year Athan Iannucci 2006 Tom Kessler 2001 Michael LaCrosse 1989 Tom Kessler 2000 Chris Unterstein 2006 Jerry Simandl 1955 Doug Shanahan 2001 Billy Reid 1971 Michael Fowler 1979
GP 19 17 15 16 19 16 17 15 12
ASSISTS
Game: 9 - Joe Masone vs. Trinity, 1953 Season: 58 - Jerry Simandl, 1955 Career: 119 - Jerry Simandl, 1952-55
Jerry Simandi
2 0 1 5
H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
MOST GOALS, SEASON
Michael LaCrosse
80
MOST GOALS, CAREER
Game: 10 - Michael LaCrosse vs. Virginia, 1989 Season: 62 - Athan Iannucci, 2006 Career: 140 - Tom Kessler, 1999-2002
Goals 62 51 49 48 45 44 43 41 40
PPG 3.33 3.27 3.26 3.00 3.00 3.00
No. 1 2 3 4 5 5 7 8 9 10
Player Tom Kessler Jay Card Jerry Simandl Bob Hiller Tom Dooley Andy Carlson Phil Mordente Athan Iannucci Doug Shanahan Scott Dooley
Year 1999-2001 2008-2011 1952-1955 1973-1976 2006-2009 1991-1994 1964-1966 2004-2006 1998-2001 1999-2002
Goals 140 122 119 109 107 107 105 104 95 88
BEST ASSISTS PER GAME AVERAGE No. Player 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Paul Sullivan Joe Masone Jerry Simandl Steve Dauses Gary Rinaldi Steve Walakovits Kevin Jacobs James Metzger
Year 1958 1953 1955 1970 1991 1989 1995 1980
GP 11 14 16 16 14 15 14 10
Assists 52 52 58 49 42 43 40 28
APG 4.73 3.71 3.63 3.06 3.00 2.87 2.86 2.80
TEAM RECORDS
Most Games Won, Season - (17) 2006 (17-2) Most Games Lost, Season - (11) 1963 (5-11); 1972 (5-11); 1985 (3-11) Most Consecutive Wins - (17) 2006 Most Consecutive Losses - (7) 1951 Highest Winning Percentage - (.895) 2006 (17-2) Lowest Winning Percentage - (.214) 1985 (3-11) Most Goals Scored, Season (247) 1955 (16 games) Most Goals Allowed, Season (196) 1986 (13 games) Highest Goals per Game Average, Season - (15.4) 1955 Fewest Goals Allowed per Game Average, Season - (3.4) 1955 (55 in 16 games) Most Shutouts, Season - (2) 1952 (Cortland and Western Maryland) Most Shutouts Against, Season - (1) three times - Last time in 1969 vs. Navy Longest Game - (73:47) at Towson, 4/15/90 (4OT) Hofstra 10, Towson 9 Most Goals Scored, Game - (27) vs. CCNY, 1970 Most Goals Allowed, Game - (30) at Syracuse, 1991
Doug Shanahan
www. G oHof str a . co m
MOST ASSISTS, CAREER
No. Player 1 Jerry Simandl 2 Kevin Jacobs 3 Phil Mordente 4 Chris Unterstein 5 Steve Dauses 6 Scott Dooley 7 Gary Rinaldi 8 Steve Walakovits 9 Tom Kessler 10 Mike Magee 10 Phil Marino
Year Assists 1952-1955 119 1992-1995 112 1964-1966 106 2003-2006 79 1969-1970 71 1999-2002 69 1990-1991 68 1988-1989 68 1999-2002 67 1987-1989 62 1973-1975 62
POINTS
Game: 12 - Jerry Simandl vs. Cortland State and Union, 1955 Season: 102 - Jerry Simandl, 1955 Career: 238 - Jerry Simandl, 1952-55
MOST POINTS, SEASON
No. Player Year GP 1 Jerry Simandl 1955 16 2 Steve Dauses 1970 16 3 Chris Unterstein 2006 19 4 Athan Iannucci 2006 19 5 Phil Mordente 1966 17 5 Tom Kessler 2001 17
G-A Pts. 44-58 102 35-49 84 45-36 81 62-18 80 29-45 74 51-23 74
No.Player Year 1 Jerry Simandl 1955 2 Steve Dauses 1970 3 Brian Langtry 1998 4 Kevin Jacobs 1995 5 James Metzger 1980 6 Michael Lacrosse 1989 7 Phil Marino 1975 8 Phil Mordente 1966 9 Tom Kessler 2001 10 Michael Fowler 1979 11 Chris Unterstein 2006 12 Athan Iannucci 2006 13 Vince Sombrotto 1980 14 Rich Stoecker 1976 15 Jay Card 2010
GP Pts 16 102 16 84 14 72 14 69 10 49 15 67 13 57 17 74 17 74 12 52 19 81 19 80 13 54 12 49 13 53
PPG 6.38 5.25 5.14 4.93 4.90 4.46 4.38 4.35 4.35 4.33 4.26 4.21 4.15 4.08 4.08
SAVES
Game: 36 - Joe Fowler at Navy, 1980 Season: 278 - James Toone, 1966 Career: 843 - Dave Giannone, 1987-90
MOST POINTS, CAREER
No.Player 1 Jerry Simandl 2 Phil Mordente 3 Tom Kessler 4 Kevin Jacobs 5 Jay Card 6 Chris Unterstein 7 Andy Carlson 8 Scott Dooley 9 Athan Iannucci 10 Brian Foresta 10 Brian Langtry
Year 1952-1955 1964-1966 1999-2002 1992-1995 2008-2011 2003-2006 1991-1994 1999-2002 2004-2006 1987-1990 1995-1998
Points 238 211 207 192 182 166 163 157 146 142 142
No. Player Year 1 Andrew Gvozden 2011 2 Matt Southard 2006 3 Mark Spruyt 1997 4 Jack Alaimo 2002 5 Danny Orlando 2007
MOST SAVES, SEASON
No. Player 1 James Toone 2 Dave Giannone 3 Joe Romeo 4 Kevin Johnson 5 Kevin Barry
MOST SAVES, CAREER No. Player 1 Dave Giannone 2 Joe Zaffuto 3 Dick Vielanowitz 4 Mark Spruyt 5 Matt Southard
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
GAA 6.00 6.38 6.77 7.02 7.21
GP 17 15 15 14 14
Saves 278 268 234 232 224
Year Saves 1987-1990 843 1971-1974 777 1958-1960 604 1995-1998 574 2003-2006 572
Gary Rinaldi
Dave Giannone
James Metzger
Year 1966 1988 1993 1996 1991
GP 16 19 15 14 14
L A C R O S S E
GP Assists 16 58 11 52 14 52 16 49 17 45 15 43 14 42 14 40
M E N ’ S
Year 1955 1958 1953 1970 1966 1989 1991 1995
BEST GOALS AGAINST AVERAGE, SEASON
H O F S T R A
No. Player 1 Jerry Simandl 2 Paul Sullivan 2 Joe Masone 4 Steve Dauses 5 Phil Mordente 6 Steve Walakovits 7 Gary Rinaldi 8 Kevin Jacobs
BEST POINTS PER GAME AVERAGE
2 0 1 5
MOST ASSISTS, SEASON
Kevin Jacobs
81
L A C R O S S E
LACROSSE RECORD BOOK
2 0 1 5
H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
Phil Mordente
82
MOST GOALS IN ONE GAME
10 - Michael LaCrosse vs. Virginia, 1989 8 - Dave Donatello vs. Massachusetts, 1993 8 - Owen Walsh vs. Lafayette, 1949 7 - Adrian Sorichetti vs. St. John’s, 2012 7 - Jim Femminella vs. Notre Dame, 2003 7 - Brian Langtry vs. Hartford, 1998 7 - Jerry Simandl vs. Cortland State, 1955 7 - Bruce Yancey vs. Brown, 1983 7 - Billy Reid vs. Morgan State, 1971 6 - Torin Varn vs. Marist, 2014 6 - Anthony Muscarella at Stony Brook, 2008 6 - Athan Iannucci at Stony Brook, 2006 6 - Athan Iannucci vs. Sacred Heart, 2006 6 - Tom Dooley vs. Sacred Heart, 2006 6 - Tom Kessler at Delaware, 2002 6 - Tom Kessler vs. Army, 2000 6 - Tom Kessler vs. Towson, 2000 6 - Blake Miller vs. Delaware, 1996 6 - Chris Panos vs. Delaware, 1996 6 - Chris Panos vs. Delaware, 1995 6 - Andy Carlson vs. Towson State, 1991 6 - Gary Rinaldi vs. Lehigh, 1990 6 - Michael LaCrosse at Delaware, 1990 6 - Jon Cooper vs. UMBC, 1988 6 - Ken Curry vs. Hobart, 1988 6 - Vinnie Sombrotto vs. New Hampshire, 1980 6 - Mike Fowler vs. Brown, 1979 6 - Mike Fowler vs. LIU-C.W. Post, 1979 6 - Kevin Huff vs. NY Tech, 1978 6 - Bill Hanlon vs. MIT, 1969 6 - Mike D’Amato vs. MIT, 1968 6 - Phil Avillo vs. Rutgers, 1963 6 - Joe Krupinski vs. New Hampshire, 1958 6 - Joe Krupinski vs. MIT, 1958 6 - Alex Fedoroff vs. Trinity, 1953 5 - Mike Malave at Massachusetts, 2014 5 - Drew Coholan at Drexel 5 - Toring Varn vs. Sacred Heart, 2013 5 - Kevin Ford vs. Delaware, 2011 5 - Jamie Lincoln at Towson, 2011 5 - Jamie Lincoln vs. Harvard, 2011 5 - Stephen Bentz vs. Towson, 2010
5 - Jay Card vs. Army, 2010 5 - Stephen Bentz vs. Sacred Heart, 2010 5 - Jamie Lincoln vs. Johns Hopkins, 2010 5 - Jay Card vs. Delaware, 2009 5 - Kevin Ford vs. Stony Brook, 2009 5 - Jay Card vs. Sacred Heart, 2008 5 - Tom Dooley vs. Sacred Heart, 2008 5 - Anthony Muscarella vs. Towson, 2008 5 - Athan Iannucci vs. Providence*, 2006 5 - Athan Iannucci at Robert Morris, 2006 5 - Tom Dooley at Villanova, 2006 5 - Athan Iannucci vs. Brown, 2006 5 - Scott Dooley vs. Army, 2002 5 - Tom Kessler vs. Air Force, 2001 5 - Tom Kessler vs. Hartford, 2001 5 - Tom Kessler vs. Towson, 2001 5 - Tom Kessler vs. Virginia*, 2001 5 - Doug Shanahan vs. Drexel, 2001 5 - Doug Shanahan vs. Delaware, 2001 5 - Tom Kessler vs. Air Force, 2000 5 - Joe Kostolansky vs. Towson, 2000 5 - Doug Shanahan vs. Brown, 1998 5 - Jarred Testa vs. Towson, 1997 5 - Anthony Alexander vs. Rutgers, 1996 5 - Kevin Jacobs vs. New Hampshire, 1995 5 - Andy Carlson vs. Rutgers, 1994 5 - Andy Carlson vs. Air Force, 1994 5 - Andy Carlson vs. Providence, 1993 5 - Dave Donatello vs. Loyola, 1993 5 - Joe Barra vs. UMBC, 1992 5 - Dom DiNardo vs. St. John’s, 1991 5 - Dom DiNardo vs. Virginia, 1991 5 - Joe Barra vs. Drexel, 1991 5 - Michael Ricigliano at LIU-C.W. Post, 1990 5 - Michael Laudenslager vs. Cornell, 1990 5 - Michael Laudenslager vs. Penn State, 1990 5 - Jon Cooper vs. Drexel, 1988 5 - Brian Foresta vs. Lehigh, 1988 5 - Brian Foresta vs. Lafayette, 1987 5 - Tony Perettine vs. St. John’s, 1984 5 - Tony Perettine vs Towson, 1984 5 - Bruce Yancey vs. Baltimore, 1983 5 - Dave McCulloch vs. Navy, 1983 5 - Vinnie Sombrotto vs. Penn State, 1980 5 - Vinnie Sombrotto vs. Army, 1980 5 - Vinnie Sombrotto at Brown, 1980 5 - Mike Fowler vs. Boston College, 1979 5 - Mike Fowler vs. Dartmouth, 1979 5 - Mike Fowler vs. Washington & Lee, 1979 5 - Vinnie Sombrotto vs. Massachusetts, 1978 5 - Jim Kuhner vs. LIU-C.W. Post, 1972 5 - Steve Dauses vs. Air Force, 1970 5 - Alfred Lettera vs. New Hampshire, 1966 5 - Phil Mordente vs. Bowdoin, 1966 5 - Phil Mordente vs. Washington, 1966 5 - Alex Fedoroff vs. CCNY, 1953 5 - Alex Fedoroff vs. Milburn LC, 1953
MOST ASSISTS IN ONE GAME
9 - Joseph Masone vs. Trinity, 1953 8 - Phil Mordente vs. Adelphi, 1964 8 - Paul Sullivan vs. MIT, 1958 8 - Jerry Simandl vs. Union, 1955 8 - Jerry Simandl vs. Middlebury, 1955 7 - Kevin Jacobs vs. Delaware, 1995
7 - Steve Walakovits vs. Army, 1989 7 - Steve Dauses vs. CCNY, 1970 7 - Phil Mordente vs. Adelphi, 1966 6 - Brian Langtry vs. Towson, 1998 6 - Kevin Jacobs vs. New Hampshire, 1995 6 - Jim Metzger vs. Towson, 1980 6 - Jim Metzger vs. Penn State, 1980 5 - Chris Unterstein at Robert Morris, 2006 5 - Brian Langtry vs. Army, 1998 5 - Kevin Jacobs vs. St. John’s, 1995 5 - Andy Carlson vs. Army, 1994 5 - Kevin Jacobs vs. Michigan State, 1994 5 - Kevin Jacobs vs. Lafayette, 1993 5 - Steve Walakovits vs. Delaware, 1989 5 - Steve Walakovits vs. St. John’s, 1989 5 - Jim Metzger vs. North Carolina State, 1980 5 - Vinnie Sombrotto vs. Baltimore, 1980 5 - Kevin Huff vs. NY Tech, 1978 5 - Doug Nastro vs. Baltimore, 1974 5 - Mike D’Amato vs. Bowdoin, 1968 5 - Paul Sullivan vs. Washington College, 1958 5 - Jerry Simandl vs Cortland State, 1955
MOST POINTS IN ONE GAME
12 - Jerry Simandl vs. Cortland State, 1955 (7-5) 12 - Jerry Simandl vs. Union, 1955 (4-8) 11 - Kevin Jacobs vs. New Hampshire, 1995 (5-6) 11 - Michael LaCrosse vs. Virginia, 1989 (10-1) 11 - Kevin Huff vs. NY Tech, 1978 (6-5) 11 - Phil Mordente vs. Adelphi, 1964 (3-8) 10 - Adrian Sorichetti vs. St. John’s, 2012 (7-3) 10 - Steve Walakovits vs. Army, 1989 (3-7) 10 - Steve Dauses vs. CCNY, 1970 (3-7) 10 - Paul Sullivan vs. MIT, 1958 (2-8) 10 - Jerry Simandl vs. Middlebury, 1955 (2-8) 10 - Joseph Masone vs. CCNY, 1953 (4-6) 10 - Joseph Masone vs. Trinity, 1953 (1-9) 9 - Chris Unterstein at Robert Morris, 2006 (4-5) 9 - Dave Donatello vs. Massachusetts, 1993 (8-1) 9 - Gary Rinaldi vs. Lehigh, 1990 (6-3) 9 - Michael LaCrosse vs. Army, 1989 (5-4) 9 - Dave McCulloch vs. Navy, 1983 (5-4) 9 - Billy Reid vs. Morgan State, 1971 (7-2) 9 - Mike D’Amato vs. Bowdoin, 1968 (4-5) 9 - Phil Mordente vs. Adelphi, 1966 (2-7) 9 - Doug Nastro vs. Baltimore, 1974 (4-5) 8 - Jay Card vs. Army, 2010 (5-3) 8 - Jamie Lincoln at St. John’s, 2010 (4-4) 8 - Jamie Lincoln vs. Johns Hopkins, 2010 (5-3) 8 - Athan Iannucci vs. Providence*, 2006 (5-3) 8 - Athan Iannucci at Villanova, 2006 (4-4) 8 - Tom Kessler vs. Hartford, 2001 (5-3) 8 - Tom Kessler vs. Towson, 2001 (5-3) 8 - Tom Kessler vs. Army, 2000 (6-2) 8 - Kevin Jacobs vs. St. John’s, 1995 (3-5) 8 - Kevin Jacobs vs. Delaware, 1995 (1-7) 8 - Andy Carlson vs. Army, 1994 (3-5) 8 - Gary Rinaldi vs. Drexel, 1991 (4-4)
www. G oHof str a . co m
Athan Iannucci
MOST POINTS IN ONE SEASON 102 - Jerry Simandl, 1955 (44-58) (1) 84 - Steve Dauses, 1970 (35-49) (1) 81 - Chris Unterstein, 2006 (45-36) (2) 80 - Athan Iannucci, 2006 (62-18) (3) 74 - Phil Mordente, 1966 (29-45) (3) 74 - Tom Kessler, 2001 (51-23) (8) 72 - Brian Langtry, 1998 (37-35) (3) 72 - Paul Sullivan, 1958 (20-52) 71 - Phil Mordente, 1965 (32-39) (3) 70 - Joseph Masone, 1953 (18-52) 69 - Kevin Jacobs, 1995 (29-40) 67 - Michael LaCrosse, 1989 (49-18) 64 - Phil Mordente, 1964 (5) 61 - Tom Kessler, 2000 (48-13) (17) 60 - Joe Kostolansky, 2000 (37-23) (17) 58 - Steve Walakovits, 1989 (15-43) 57 - Phil Marino, 1975 (26-31) (13) 56 - Sean Bolger, 1988 (38-18) 56 - Jerry Simandl, 1954 (22-34) 56 - Doug Shanahan, 2001 (43-13) 54 - Vinnie Sombrotto, 1980 (37-17) 54 - Gary Boyle, 1955 (34-20) 53 - Sam Llinares, 2014 (21-32) 53 - Jay Card, 2010 (31-22) 53 - Jamie Lincoln, 2010 (33-20) 53 - Blake Miller, 1996 (36-17) 53 - Steve Walakovits, 1988 (28-25) 53 - Phil Marino, 1975 (25-28) 53 - Billy Reid, 1971 (41-12) 52 - Michael Fowler, 1979 (40-12) 52 - Joseph Masone, 1952 (22-30) 51 - Tom Dooley, 2006 (38-13) 51 - Kevin Jacobs, 1993 (18-33) 51 - Gary Rinaldi, 1990 (25-26) 51 - Kevin Huff, 1978 (32-19) 50 - Joe Kostolansky, 2003 (29-21)
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
50 - Andy Carlson, 1994 (30-20) 50 - Gary Rinaldi, 1991 (8-42) 50 - Steve Dauses, 1969 (28-22) 50 - Mike D’Amato, 1967 (32-18)
MOST SAVES IN ONE SEASON 278 - James Toone, 1966 (2) 268 - Dave Giannone, 1988 234 - Joe Romeo, 1993 232 - Kevin Johnson, 1996 229 - Joe Zaffuto, 1972 224 - Kevin Barry, 1991 213 - Dick Vielkanowitz, 1960 (4) 210 - James Toone, 1967 (4) 202 - Dave Giannone, 1989 202 - Ross Uhlfelder, 1969 202 - Dick Vielkanowitz, 1958 (6) 195 - Mark Spruyt, 1998 (3) 195 - Mark Spruyt, 1997 195 - Joe Zaffuto, 1973 (4) 194 - Dick Vielkanowitz, 1959 (3) 192 - Dave Giannone, 1990 188 - Mark Anthony, 1984 183 - Mark Spruyt, 1995 181 - Matt Southard, 2003 181 - Dave Giannone, 1987 181 - Ross Uhlfelder, 1968 179 - Mike Demeo, 2000 179 - Joe Romeo, 1994 177 - Joe Zaffuto, 1971
L A C R O S S E
Joe Zaffuto
M E N ’ S
62 - Athan Iannucci, 2006 (1) 51 - Tom Kessler, 2001 (6) 49 - Michael LaCrosse, 1989 48 - Tom Kessler, 2000 (5) 45 - Chris Unterstein, 2006 (10) 44 - Jerry Simandl, 1955 (2) 43 - Doug Shanahan, 2001 (20) 41 - Billy Reid, 1971 40 - Michael Fowler, 1979 (10) 39 - Phil Mordente, 1965 (4) 38 - Tom Dooley, 2006 38 - Sean Bolger, 1988 37 - Joe Kostolansky, 2000 37 - Brian Langtry, 1998 (22) 37 - Bruce Yancey, 1983 37 - Vinnie Sombrotto, 1980 37 - John Stranahan, 1954 (4) 36 - Bob Hiller, 1974 36 - Blake Miller, 1996 35 - Jay Card, 2009 (16) 35 - Jim Femminella, 2003 35 - Andy Carlson, 1991 35 - Steve Dauses, 1970 (7) 34 - Gary Boyle, 1955 34 - Mike D’Amato, 1968 34 - Alex Fedoroff, 1953 (7) 33 - Jamie Lincoln, 2010 (21) 33 - Dave Donatello, 1993 33 - Joe Krupinski, 1958 (7) 33 - John Stranahan, 1955 33 - Jerry Simandl, 1953 (9)
Most Assists in One Season 58 - Jerry Simandl, 1955 (1) 52 - Paul Sullivan, 1958 52 - Joseph Masone, 1953 (2) 49 - Steve Dauses, 1970 (1) 45 - Phil Mordente, 1966 (2) 43 - Steve Walakovits, 1989 42 - Gary Rinaldi, 1991 40 - Kevin Jacobs, 1995 40 - Paul Sullivan, 1958 36 - Chris Unterstein, 2006 (2) 35 - Brian Langtry, 1998 (4) 34 - Jerry Simandl, 1954 (6) 33 - Kevin Jacobs, 1993 32 - Sam Llinares, 2014 32 - Phil Mordente, 1965 (8) 31 - Tim Goldstein, 1985 31 - Rich Stoecker, 1976 31 - Phil Marino, 1975 (8) 30 - Joseph Masone, 1952 (7)
H O F S T R A
MOST GOALS IN ONE SEASON
32 - Torin Varn, 2014 32 - Mike D’Amato, 1967 (10) 32 - Bob Hiller, 1976 31 - Jay Card, 2010 (19) 31 - Scott Dooley, 2002 31 - Bob Hiller, 1973 30 - Torin Varn, 2013 30 - Andy Carlson, 1994 30 - Bob Hiller, 1975
Number in bold () is national ranking The records included in this section are the only Men’s Lacrosse records that are documented in the Hofstra Athletic Communications Office. That office welcomes documented additions or corrections to the record book from media, alumni or boosters. A hearty thanks is extended to Hofstra alumni who contributed to the development of this record section.
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8 - Vinnie Sombrotto vs. New Hampshire, 1980 (6-2) 8 - Vinnie Sombrotto vs. Baltimore, 1980 (3-5) 8 - Jim Metzger vs. Penn State, 1980 (2-6) 8 - Jim Metzger vs. Towson, 1980 (2-6) 8 - Jim Metzger vs. North Carolina State, 1980 (3-5)
83
GOALS
ASSISTS
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
ANNUAL LACROSSE LEADERS
84
Phil Marino
www. G oHof str a . co m
L A C R O S S E
GOALS AGAINST AVERAGE
Kevin Huff
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
POINTS
Andrew Gvozden
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
85
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
HOFSTRA AWARD WINNERS
86
NATIONAL LACROSSE HALL OF FAME Al Brisotti - Elected 1959 Howdy Myers - Elected 1973 Vin Sombrotto - Elected 1997
LONG ISLAND LACROSSE HALL OF FAME Howdy Myers - Elected 1986 Jim Condon - Elected 1986 Al Brisotti - Elected 1987 Jack Kaley - Elected 1987 Phil Marino - Elected 1990 Jim Garvey - Elected 1993 Vin Sombrotto - Elected 1994 Carl Orent - Elected 1996 Joe Kovar - Elected 1996 Ray Buckley - Elected 1998 John Danowski - Elected 2000 Tim Goldstein - Elected 2003 Kevin Huff - Elected 2010 Dave McCulloch - Elected 2011 Jerry Simandl - Elected 2011 Blake Miller - Elected 2012 Doug Shanahan - Elected 2013 Nick Polanco - Elected 2014 Brian Spallina - Elected 2014
UNITED STATES WORLD TEAM MEMBERS Jack Kaley - 1974 (Assistant Coach) Phil Marino - 1978 Vin Sombrotto - 1982, 1986, 1990, 1994 Rich Garguilo - 1992 (Under 19) Kevin Jacobs - 1992 (Under 19) Blake Miller - 1998, 2006 Evan Kostewka - 1998 (Under 19) Doug Shanahan - 2002 (MVP), 2006 Nicky Polanco - 2002 (Alternate), 2006 Brett Moyer - 2003 (Under 19)
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS HALL OF FAME
Walt Kohanowich - Hofstra College & Class of 2006 Owen Walsh - Hofstra College & Class of 2006 Howdy Myers - Class of 2006 Carl Orent - Class of 2006 Dr. James M. Shuart - Class of 2006 Jerry Simandl - Class of 2007 Phil Marino - Class of 2008 Bob Hiller - Class of 2009 Al LaHood - Class of 2009 Phil Mordente - Class of 2009 Harry Royle - Class of 2009 Mike D’Amato - Class of 2011 Rudy Fiorvanti - Class of 2011 Doug Shanahan - Class of 2013
RETIRED UNIFORMS Jerry Simandl Doug Shanahan
#10 #26
Howdy Myers
HOFSTRA LACROSSE ALL-AMERICANS Year Name Position 1952 Joe Masone Attack Vincent Vieten Defense Owen Walsh Midfield 1953 William Donnolly Midfield Vincent Vieten Defense Joe Masone Attack 1954 Carl Orent Defense Albert Lahood Defense 1955 Carl Orent Defense Jerry Simandl Attack John Stranahan Midfield John Fahey Midfield Al Lahood Defense Lorel Teolis Defense Gary Boyle Attack 1956 John Stranahan Midfield Gary Boyle Attack Peter Salit Attack 1957 Marco Gazich Defense 1958 Paul Sullivan Attack Richard Vielkanowitz Goal George Wiemer Midfield 1959 Richard Vielkanowitz Goal 1960 Richard Vielkanowitz Goal Frank Cozart Attack William Heiser Defense Frank Mauro Midfield 1961 Frank Cozart Attack William Heiser Defense 1965 Ronald Hansen Defense Phil Mordente Midfield 1966 Phil Mordente Attack 1967 Frank Marcinowski Defense 1968 Frank Marcinowski Defense Mike D’Amato Attack Dick Swanson Defense 1970 Steve Dauses Attack 1971 John Overs Defense William Hanlon Midfield
Team H.M. H.M. H.M. 1st 3rd H.M. 3rd H.M. 1st 2nd 3rd H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. 3rd H.M. H.M. 3rd H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. 2nd H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. 3rd H.M. 1st 2nd 3rd 3rd 1st H.M.
1972 Joseph Zaffuto Goal 1973 Phil Marino Midfield Joseph Zaffuto Goal Doug Nastro Attack 1974 Tom Calder Midfield Bob Rullan Defense Joseph Zaffuto Goal 1975 Tom Calder Midfield Ray Mills Defense Phil Marino Attack 1976 Bob Hiller Attack Richard Lewton Defense 1977 Kevin Huff Midfield Richard Lewton Defense 1978 Kevin Huff Midfield Richard Lewton Defense 1979 Michael Fowler Attack 1980 Vin Sombrotto Midfield Ed Wallace Defense James Metzger Attack 1983 Joseph Fowler Defense Bob Quinlan Midfield 1984 Dave McCulloch Midfield Mikko Red Arrow Midfield 1985 Dave McCulloch Midfield Ed Geiger Defense 1989 Michael LaCrosse Attack 1990 Michael Laudenslager Midfield 1991 Michael Laudenslager Midfield 1993 Dave Heumann Defense Dave Donatello Attack Michael Ricigliano Midfield 1994 Dom DiNardo Midfield Dave Heumann Defense 1995 Kevin Jacobs Midfield 1996 Anthony Alexander Midfield Blake Miller Attack 1997 Mark Spruyt Goal 1998 Mark Spruyt Goal Brian Langtry Attack
H.M. 1st 3rd H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. 2nd 3rd H.M. 3rd H.M. 3rd H.M. 2nd H.M. 3rd 2nd 2nd H.M. H.M. H.M. 3rd H.M. 3rd H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. 3rd H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. 3rd H.M. 3rd 3rd H.M.
Jay Card
1999 Doug Shanahan Brain Spallina Kevin Warne 2000 Brian Spallina Doug Shanahan 2001 Doug Shanahan Tom Kessler Nicky Polanco 2002 Nicky Polanco Tom Kessler Paul Rao 2003 Brian Zuchelli 2004 Brett Moyer 2005 Brett Moyer 2006 Chris Unterstein Brett Moyer Athan Iannucci John Keysor Sean McCarthy John Orsen 2007 Kevin Unterstein 2008 Anthony Muscarella 2009 Jay Card Michael Colleluori Christian Scuderi 2010 Jay Card Jamie Lincoln 2011 John Antoniades Jay Card Andrew Gvozden Michael Skudin 2014 Sam Llinares
Midfield Midfield Defense Midfield Midfield Midfield Attack Defense Defense Attack Midfield Defense Defense Defense Attack Defense Attack Midfield Defense Midfield Midfield Midfield Attack Midfield Defense Attack Attack Midfield Attack Goal Defense Attack
H.M. H.M. H.M. 1st 2nd 1st 3rd H.M. 1st 2nd H.M. H.M. H.M. 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 2nd H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M. H.M.
www. G oHof str a . co m
1965 1966 1967
Defense Attack Midfield Defense Midfield Midfield Defense Attack Defense Attack Attack Attack Attack Midfield Defense Defense Defense
EAST COAST CONFERENCE ALL-STARS
1986 1987 1988
1989
1990 1991 1992
Dave McCulloch Midfield Mike Minisini Midfield Dave Giannone Goalie (MVP) Steve Walakovits Attack Mike McGinley Midfield Mike Magee Midfield Sean Bolger Attack Tom Byrne Defense Michael LaCrosse Attack (MVP) Steve Walakovits Attack Michael Laudenslager Midfield Mike Magee Midfield Tom Byrne Defense Michael Laudenslager Midfield (MVP) Gary Rinaldi Attack Matt Cady Defense Joe Barra Midfield Michael Laudenslager Midfield Gary Rinaldi Attack Joe Barra Midfield Anthony Bellomo Defense Andy Carlson Attack Dom DiNardo Attack Kevin Johnson Goalie
NORTH ATLANTIC CONFERENCE ALL-STARS 1995
1996
Kevin Jacobs Doug Altmansberger Dave Heumann Brian Holland Mark Spruyt Blake Miller Anthony Alexander Craig Flynn Chris Panos
Attack (MVP) Defense Defense Midfield Goalie Attack (MVP) Midfield Defense Attack - 2nd
AMERICA EAST ALL-STARS 1997
Paul Judge Ryan Grimes Jarred Testa Rich Langtry Jamie Delgado Mark Spruyt 1998 Brian Langtry Doug Shanahan Kevin Warne Mark Spruyt Joe Ghedina 1999 Brad Obloj Doug Shanahan Joe Ghedina Kevin Warne Joe Amplo
Midfield Defense Attack - 2nd Midfield - 2nd Defense - 2nd Goalie - 2nd Attack - 1st (MVP) Midfield - 1st (Rookie) Defense - 1st Goalie -1st Midfield - 2nd Attack - 1st Midfield - 1st Midfield - 1st Defense - 1st Defense - 1st
COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ALL-STARS 2002
Nicky Polanco Defense - 1st (Player of the Year & Defensive Player of the Year) Tom Kessler Attack - 1st Scott Dooley Attack - 2nd Evan LaPenna Defense - 2nd Jack Alaimo Goalie - 2nd 2003 Joe Kostolansky Attack - 1st Mike Morrison Midfield - 1st Brian Zuchelli Defense - 1st Brett Moyer Defense - 2nd (Rookie of the Year) Jim Femminella Attack - 2nd Michael Allain Midfield - 2nd Matthew Southard Goalie - 2nd 2004 Brett Moyer Defense - 1st Chris Unterstein Attack - 1st Ryan Vilar Midfield - 2nd 2005 Brett Moyer Defense - 1st (Defensive Player of the Year) Athan Iannucci Attack - 1st Chris Unterstein Attack - 2nd Mike Unterstein Midfield (Rookie (Rookie of the Year) Kevin Unterstein Midfielder Rookie James Tuohy Goalie - Rookie 2006 Chris Unterstein Attack - 1st (Player of the Year) Brett Moyer Defense - 1st (Defensive Player of the Year) Sean McCarthy Defense - 1st Athan Iannucci Attack - 1st John Keysor Midfield - 1st John Orsen Midfield - 1st Matt Southard Goal - 1st Tom Dooley Attack (Rookie of the Year) 2007 Tom Dooley Attack - 2nd Adam Swarsen Defense - 2nd Kevin Unterstein Midfield - 2nd Michael Unterstein Midfield - 2nd 2008 Kevin Unterstein Midfield - 1st (Defensive Player of the Year) Anthony Muscarella Midfield - 1st Jay Card Attack - 2nd (Rookie of the Year) Michael Unterstein Midfield - 2nd Steve Prifte Midfield - 2nd 2009 Jay Card Attack - 1st (Player of the Year) Michael Colleluori Midfield - 1st Christian Scuderi Defense - 1st Steven DeNapoli Midfield - 2nd Steve Prifte Defense - 2nd 2010 Jay Card Attack - 1st Brad Loizeaux Midfield - 1st Jamie Lincoln Attack - 2nd Adam Mojica Midfield - 2nd Michael Skudin Defense - 2nd 2011 Michael Skudin Defense - 1st (Defensive Player of the Year) John Antoniades Midfield - 1st
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
2012 2013 2014
Ian Braddish Jay Card Adam Mojica Steve DeNapoli Andrew Gvozden Jamie Lincoln Adrian Sorichetti John Antoniades Mark Mullen Mark Mullen Chris Selva Sam Llinares Finn Sullivan Ryan Rielly Drew Coholan Torin Varn Chris Selva
Midfield - 1st Attack - 1st Midfield - 1st Midfield - 2nd Goal - 2nd Attack - 2nd Midfield - 1st Midfield - 2nd Defense -2nd Defense - 1st Goal - 2nd Attack - 1st Defense - 1st LSM - 1st Midfield - 2nd Attack - 2nd Goal - 2nd
COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ALLTOURNAMENT TEAM 2003 2004 2005 2006
2007 2008
2009 2011 2014
Joe Kostolansky Attack Brian Zuchelli Defense Bryan Walker Midfield Athan Ianucci Attack Chris Unterstein Attack Jon Edwards Defense Len Panarelli Midfield Athan Iannucci Attack (Most Valuable Player) Tim Treubig Midfield Ryan Kelaher Defense Matt Southard Goal Kevin Unterstein Midfield Julian Watts Defense Kevin Unterstein Midfield (Most Valuable Player) Collin Stabler Defense Jack Vivonetto Defense Joe Montemurro Midfield Steve DeNapoli Midfield Michael Skudin Defense Steve DeNapoli Midfield Torin Varn Attack Mike Malave Midfield Ryan Rielly Defense
COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ALL-ROOKIE TEAM 2007 2008 2009 2010 2012 2013 2014
Tom Interlicchio Midfield Danny Orlando Goal Dan Stein Attack Jay Card Attack (Rookie of the Year) Steve DeNapoli Midfield Andrew Gvozden Goalie Kevin Ford Attack John Antoniades Midfield Cody Solaja Defense Adrian Sorichetti Midfield Tyler Begley Attack Mike Malave Midfield Ryan Rielly Defense Sam Llinares Attack Brian von Bargen Midfield Kris Clarke Midfield Stephen Satterthwaite Defense
COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ALLACADEMIC TEAM 2014 - Lance Yapor
M E N ’ S
1961 1963 1964
Carl Orent Jerry Simandl John Stranahan Lorel Teolis William Heiser William Heiser Charles Menagh Phil Mordente Ron Hansen Phil Mordente Howard Myers III Phil Mordente Mike D’Amato Art Konopacki Frank Marcinowski Larry Reid Ed Wozniak
Goalie - 1st Midfield - 2nd Midfield - 2nd (Rookie) Attack - 1st Attack - 1st Midfield - 1st Goalie - 1st Midfield - 2nd Midfield - 2nd Midfield - 1st (MVP) Attack - 1st Midfield - 2nd Defense - 2nd
H O F S T R A
1955
Mike Demeo Brian Spallina Scott Dooley 2000 Tom Kessler Joe Kostolansky Brian Spallina Mike Demeo Doug Shanahan Evan Kostewka 2001 Doug Shanahan Tom Kessler Mike Tierney Nick Polanco
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LAURIE COX DIVISION ALL-STARS
L A C R O S S E
HOFSTRA AWARD WINNERS
Attack
87
L A C R O S S E
HOFSTRA AWARD WINNERS UNITED STATES WORLD TEAM MEMBERS Jack Kaley - 1974 (Assistant Coach) Phil Marino - 1978 Vin Sombrotto - 1982, 1986, 1990, 1994 Rich Garguilo - 1992 (Under 19) Kevin Jacobs - 1992 (Under 19) Blake Miller - 1998, 2006 Evan Kostewka - 1998 (Under 19) Doug Shanahan - 2002 (MVP), 2006 Nicky Polanco - 2002 (Alternate), 2006 Brett Moyer - 2003 (Under 19)
M E N ’ S H O F S T R A
Mark Spruyt Brian Spallina Michael Allain Jon Edwards Ryan Vilar Chris Unterstein Michael Colleluori Michael Skudin Andrew Gvozden Mark Mullen
Goalie Midfield Midfield Defense Midfield Attack Midfield Defense Goalie Defense
CONFERENCE COACH OF THE YEAR AWARD 1995 - John Danowski - North Atlantic Conference 1996 - John Danowski - North Atlantic Conference 2002 - John Danowski - Colonial Athletic Association 2006 - John Danowski - Colonial Athletic Association 2009 - Seth Tierney - Colonial Athletic Association 2014 - Seth Tierney - Colonial Athletic Association
AMERICA EAST CONFERENCE THE JAMES ADAMS SCHOLARSPORTSMANSHIP AWARD ATHLETE OF THE (Presented by National Intercollegiate Lacrosse Officials Association) YEAR AWARD 1994 - Hofstra University - Coach John
Jim Dobreff - 2002 (Sweden Coach) Gerry Donaghy - 2002 (Scotland) Michael Tierney - 2002 (Ireland) Jack Kaley - 2002 (Germany Coach) Jay Card - 2008 (Canada - Under 19)
2001
Lance Yeagle Defense
Danowski
F. MORRIS TOUCHSTONE AWARD WINNER
THE JOSEPH “FRENCHY” COLONIAL ATHLETIC JULIEN SPORTSMANSHIP ASSOCIATION SCHOLAR-ATHLETE OF THE AWARD (Presented by the Metropolitan New York YEAR AWARD Officials Association)
(USILA Division I Coach of the Year) 1970 - Howdy Myers 1993 - John Danowski
2003 2011 2012
LT. RAY ENNERS AWARD WINNER
HOFSTRA NORTH-SOUTH ALL-STAR GAME COACHES
(College Lacrosse Player of the Year) Doug Shanahan - 2001
(USILA Division I Player of the Year) Doug Shanahan - 2001
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1998 2000 2003 2005 2005 2006 2009 2011 2012 2013
INTERNATIONAL WORLD TEAM MEMBERS
TEWAARATON TROPHY
88
USILA SCHOLAR-ATHLETE ALL-AMERICA TEAM
LT. DONALD MCLAUGHLIN AWARD WINNER (USILA Division I Midfielder of the Year) Doug Shanahan - 2001
Aaron Kozlowski Michael Skudin Andrew Gvozden
Defense Defense Goalie
Howdy Myers - North Head Coach 1957, North Assistant Coach 1953, 1962, 1974 Harry Royle - North Assistant Coach 1984 John Danowski - North Assistant Coach 1990
USILA NORTH-SOUTH GAME MOST VALUABLE PLAYER 1975 - Phil Marino 2001 - Doug Shanahan 2006 - Brett Moyer
CONFERENCE SPECIAL AWARD WINNERS
1988 1989 1990 1995 1996 1998
Dave Giannone Goalie ECC Michael LaCrosse Attack ECC Michael Laudenslager Midfield ECC Kevin Jacobs Attack NAC Blake Miller Attack NAC Brian Langtry Attack AEC Doug Shanahan Midfield AEC 1999 Scott Dooley Midfield AEC 2001 Doug Shanahan Midfield AEC 2002 Nicky Polanco Defense CAA 2003 Brett Moyer Defense CAA 2005 Brett Moyer Defense CAA Mike Unterstein Midfield CAA 2006 Chris Unterstein Attack CAA Brett Moyer Defense CAA Tom Dooley Attack CAA 2008 Kevin Unterstein Defense CAA Jay Card Attack CAA 2009 Jay Card Attack CAA 2011 Michael Skudin Defense CAA
Most Valuable Player Most Valuable Player Most Valuable Player Most Valuable Player Most Valuable Player Most Valuable Player Rookie of the Year Rookie of the Year Most Valuable Player Player of the Year Defensive Player of the Year Rookie of the Year Defensive Player of the Year Rookie of the Year Player of the Year Defensive Player of the Year Rookie of the Year Defensive Player of the Year Rookie of the Year Player of the Year Defensive Player of the Year
1988 - Hofstra University - Coach John Danowski 1989 - Hofstra University - Coach John Danowski 1994 - Hofstra University - Coach John Danowski
NCAA DIVISION I TOURNAMENT TEAMS 1971 - First Round 1973 - First Round 1974 - First Round 1975 - First Round 1978 - First Round 1993 - Quarterfinals 1996 - First Round 1997 - First Round 1999 - Quarterfinals
2000 - First Round 2001 - Quarterfinals 2003 - First Round 2006 - Quarterfinals 2008 - First Round 2009 - First Round 2010 - First Round 2011 - First Round
FINAL NATIONAL RANKINGS
www. G oHof str a . co m
1953 1954 1955 1956 1957
Vincent Vieten William Donnelly Bob Rupp Joseph Masone Carl Orent Al Lahood Jerry Simandl Gary Boyle John Stranahan Marco Gazich
Defense Midfield Attack Attack Defense Defense Attack Attack Midfield Defense
2006 first team All-Americans Chris Unterstein and Brett Moyer (Game MVP) after the North-South Senior All-Star Game
2003 - James Morgan - Attack 2004 - John Orsen - Midfield 2005 - John Gorman - Defense 2006 - Collin Stabler - Defense 2007 - Kevin Unterstein - Midfield 2008 - Michael Unterstein - Midfield 2009 - Steven DeNapoli - Midfield 2010 - Sean Lucas - Midfield 2011 - Michael Skudin - Defense 2012 - Michael DeNapoli - Attack 2013 - John Antoniades - Midfield 2014 - Torin Varn - Attack
Sam Llinares
1958
Torin Varn
THE JAMES C. METZGER OUTSTANDING SOPHOMORE AWARD
Awarded annually to the sophomore who best transitions from freshman year to sophomore year and performs at a high level on the field while excelling in the classroom. 2012 - Lance Yapor - Attack 2013 - Chris Selva - Goal Keeper 2014 - Sam Llinares - Attack
Paul Sullivan Attack George Wiemer Midfield Al Vadnais Defense 1960 Jack Kaley Midfield Richard Vielkanowitz Goal Frank Mauro Defense 1961 Frank Cozart Attack William Heiser Midfield 1962 Tim Gannon Midfield Peter Trizzino Goal Rich Schrage Defense 1963 Phil Avillo Midfield 1966 Phil Mordente Attack 1968 Frank Marcinowski Defense Mike D’Amato Attack 1970 Don DiBlasi Defense Tom Leonas Midfield 1971 Bill Hanlon Midfield 1973 Bill Reid Midfield Bob Auguste Midfield 1974 Doug Nastro Attack Bob Rullan Defense Chris Deeks Defense 1975 Phil Marino Attack (MVP) Tom Calder Midfield 1976 Robert Guido Midfield 1977 Joe Taylor Midfield
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
Drew Coholan
THE DAVID MCCARTNEY MEMORIAL ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP
Anthony Zappone
USILA NORTH-SOUTH GAME ALL-STARS
L A C R O S S E
1989 - Matt Cady - Defense 1990 - Joe Carrello - Midfield 1991 - Brian Donaghy - Defense 1992 - Scott Apgar - Midfield 1993 - Brian Holland - Midfield 1994 - Doug Altmansberger - Defense 1995 - Chris Bergersen - Midfield 1996 - Jude Ehrbar - Defense 1997 - Karl Hedstrom - Goalie 1998 - Larry Kramer - Defense 1999 - Chris Korzonkiewicz - Midfield 2000 - Ed Hilbert - Midfield 2001 - Gerry Donaghy - Midfield 2002 - Scott Dooley - Attack 2003 - Dave Sweeney - Midfield 2004 - Len Panarelli - Midfield 2005 - James Morgan - Midfield 2006 - Joe Mascaretti - Midfield 2007 - Julian Watts - Defense 2008 - Michael Unterstein - Midfield 2009 - Ryan Carter - Midfield 2010 - Isaac Neal - Defense 2011 - Tim Holman - Midfield 2012 - Cole Koesterer - Midfield 2013 - Jordan Fried - Attack 2014 - Anthony Zappone - Midfield
1994 - Andy Carlson - Attack 1995 - Doug Altmansberger - Defense 1996 - Blake Miller - Attack 1997 - Rich Langtry - Midfield 1998 - Armando Polanco - Defense 1999 - Jay Artinian - Midfield 2000 - David Neidhart - Goalie 2001 - Ed Hilbert - Midfield 2002 - Dave Sweeny - Defense 2003 - Steve Izzo - Goalie 2004 - Jon Edwards - Defense 2005 - Len Panarelli - Midfield 2006 - John Gorman - Midfield 2007 - John Gorman - Midfield 2008 - Anthony Muscarella - Midfield 2009 - Jack Vivonetto - Defense 2010 - Tom Interlicchio - Midfield 2011 - Steve DeNapoli - Midfield 2012 - Andrew Gvozden - Goalie 2013 - Cody Solaja - Defense 2014 - Drew Coholan - Midfield
1978 1979 1980 1983 1984 1986 1989 1990 1991 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Kevin Huff Midfield Bob Gilmartin Midfield Ed Wallace Defense Bob Quinlan Midfield Mikko Red Arrow Midfield Dave McCulloch Midfield Steve Walakovits Attack Michael Magee Midfield Dave Giannone Goal Michael Laudenslager Midfield Gary Rinaldi Attack Michael Ricigliano Midfield Anthony Bellomo Defense Andy Carlson Attack Doug Altmansberger Defense Kevin Jacobs Midfield Vince Hannigan Midfield Kevin Johnson Goal Blake Miller Attack Rich Langtry Midfield Ryan Grimes Defense Mark Spruyt Goal Brian Langtry Attack Brad Obloj Attack Joe Ghedina Midfield Bob Parrinelli Defense Brian Spallina Midfield Doug Shanahan Midfield
Michael Tierney 2002 Tom Kessler Nicky Polanco 2003 Michael Allain Jim Femminella 2005 Jon Edwards Ryan Vilar 2006 Brett Moyer Chris Unterstein 2008 Kevin Unterstein Michael Unterstein 2009 Michael Colleluori Anthony Muscarella 2010 Christian Scuderi Dan Stein 2011 Jay Card Steve DeNapoli Michael Skudin 2013 John Antoniades Cody Solaja Adrian Sorichetti 2014 Drew Coholan Torin Varn
(MVP) Midfield Attack Defense Midfield Attack Defense Midfield Defense (MVP) Attack Midfield Midfield Midfield Midfield Defense Midfield Attack Midfield Defense Midfield Defense Midfield Midfield Attack
M E N ’ S
THE STEVE CARLIN UNSUNG HERO AWARD
THE BENGT BARBACCIA AWARD
H O F S T R A
1955 - Laurie Cox Division 1960 - Laurie Cox Division - Northwest 1961 - Laurie Cox Division - Northwest 1965 - Laurie Cox Division 1969 - Metropolitan Division 1970 - Metropolitan Division 1971 - Metropolitan Division 1973 - Metropolitan Division 1988 - East Coast Conference 1989 - East Coast Conference 1995 - North Atlantic Conference 1996 - North Atlantic Conference 1997 - America East 1998 - America East 2000 - America East 2006 - Colonial Athletic Association 2008 - Colonial Athletic Association
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HOFSTRA LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIPS
89
INDOOR PLAYERS ALL-TIME PLAYERS
Tony Alexander - New York Saints Michael Burke - Edmonton Rush Ramar Clash - New York Saints Joe Ghedina - New York Saints, Anaheim Storm, New York Titans Kevin Huff - New York Saints Athan Iannucci - Philadelphia Wings (2008 NLL Most Valuable Player) Brian Langtry - New York Saints, Colorado Mammoth (2003 NLL Rookie of the Year) Michael Laurano - New Jersey Storm, Anaheim Storm Dave McCulloch - New York Saints Mike McGinley - New York Saints Blake Miller - New York Saints, New Jersey Storm, Anaheim Storm, Rochester Knighthawks, New York Titans Brett Moyer - Philadelphia Wings John Orsen - New York Titans Chris Panos - Boston Blazers, Baltimore Thunder, New York Saints, Buffalo Bandits, Philadelphia Wings, Calgary Roughnecks, Anaheim Storm, Arizona Sting, Colorado Mammoth, Chicago Shamrox Armondo Polanco - New York Saints Nicky Polanco - New York Saints, New York Titans Mikko Red Arrow - New York Saints Christian Scuderi - Philadelphia Wings Doug Shanahan - New York Saints Vinnie Sombrotto - New York Saints Adrian Sorichetti - Edmonton Rush Brian Spallina - New York Saints Jarred Testa - New York Saints, Washington Power Kevin Unterstein - Colorado Mammoth Michael Unterstein - Kentucky Stick Horse’s (NALL)
Brian Langtry
Chris Panos
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
HOFSTRA PLAYER IN THE PROS
Blake Miller
90
Athan Iannucci
www. G oHof str a . co m
Brian Spallina
Chris Rogler
Doug Shanahan
H O F S T R A
Tony Alexander - Long Island Lizards John Antoniades - New York Lizards Joe Astarita - Long Island Lizards Rob Bonaguro - Long Island Lizards Joe Ghedina Jay Card - Long Island Lizards, Rochester Rattlers Ramar Clash - Long Island Lizards Steven DeNapoli - Chesapeake Bayhawks, Rochester Rattlers Scott Dooley - New Jersey Pride, Chicago Machine Jim Femminella - Boston Canons Joe Ghedina - Long Island Lizards, New Jersey Pride Athan Iannucci - Toronto Nationals, Chicago Machine Tom Kessler - Baltimore Bayhawks, Bridgeport Barrage, Philadelphia Barrage, Long Island Lizards John Keysor - San Francisco Dragons, Baltimore Bayhawks Joe Kostolansky - Rochester Rattlers, Boston Canons, San Steven DeNapoli Francisco Dragons Brian Langtry - Long Island Lizards, Baltimore Bayhawks, Bridgeport Barrage, Denver Outlaws Evan LaPenna - Bridgeport Barrage Joe Mascaretti - Long Island Lizards Sean McCarthy - Denver Outlaws Blake Miller - Bridgeport Barrage, Philadelphia Barrage, Long Island Lizards Brett Moyer - Philadelphia Barrage Mark Mullen - New York Lizards Anthony Muscarella - Long Island Lizards John Orsen - Long Island Lizards, Chesapeake Bayhawks Armondo Polanco - Philadelphia Barrage Chris Unterstein Nicky Polanco - Bridgeport Barrage, Philadelphia Barrage, Long Island Lizards, Chesapeake Bayhawks Paul Rao - Bridgeport Barrage, Long Island Lizards Chris Rogler - Bridgeport Barrage, Philadelphia Barrage Christian Scuderi - Long Island Lizards Doug Shanahan - Bridgeport Barrage, Philadelphia Barrage, Chicago Machine, Long Island Lizards Michael Skudin - Long Island Lizards Vinnie Sombrotto - Long Island Lizards Adrian Sorichetti - Chesapeake Bayhawks Brian Spallina - Long Island Lizards, Nicky Polanco Philadelphia Barrage, Chesapeake Bayhawks Mark Spruyt - Bridgeport Barrage, Rochester Rattlers Jarred Testa - Baltimore Bay Hawks, Denver Outlaws (Head Coach), John Orsen Washington Bayhawks (Head Coach) Tim Treubig - San Francisco Dragons, New Jersey Pride Chris Unterstein - Boston Canons, Denver Outlaws, New Jersey Pride, Rochester Rattlers, Long Island Lizards Kevin Unterstein - New Jersey Pride, Long Island Lizards Michael Unterstein - Denver Outlaws, Long Island Lizards Julian Watts - Los Angeles RipTide, Long Island Lizards
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ALL-TIME PLAYERS
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
OUTDOOR PLAYERS
Joe Kostolansky
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
91
Hofstra has had 10 alumni play or coach on a United States National Team. In 2006 three former Pride lacrosse players were members of the United States National Lacrosse Team at the International Lacrosse Federation World Championship in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Attackman Blake Miller ’96, midfielder Doug Shanahan ’01 and defenseman Nicky Polanco ’02 all played key roles in the United States’ silver medal finish. Shanahan scored eight goals, added three assists and scooped up a team-high 27 ground balls in seven games at the World Championship, while Miller added four goals and two assists, and Polanco, the team’s key defender, picked up 10 ground balls. Miller and Shanahan were making their second appearance on the U.S. National Team, while Polanco was a first-time selection after serving as an alternate in 2002.
Nicky Polanco
Members of the 2006 National Lacrosse Team
John Orsen Brian Langtry Chris Panos
Doug Shanahan
Blake Miller
92
The complete list of Hofstra’s U.S. Team members is as follows: Jack Kaley - 1974 (Assistant Coach) Phil Marino - 1978 Vin Sombrotto - 1982, 1986, 1990, 1994 Rich Garguilo - 1992 (Under 19) Kevin Jacobs - 1992 (Under 19) Blake Miller - 1998, 2006 Evan Kostewka - 1998 (Under 19) Doug Shanahan - 2002 (MVP), 2006 Nicky Polanco - 2002 (Alternate), 2006, 2012 Brett Moyer - 2003 (Under 19) Kevin Unterstein - 2014 (National Training Team) The Pride had three players named to the United States National Indoor Team, which competed in the 2011 World Indoor Lacrosse Championship in May. The World Indoor Lacrosse Championship took place at Telsa Arena in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 2128, 2011. Australia, Canada, Czech Republic, England, Finland, Ireland and the Iroquois Nationals joined the United States in the oneweek tournament with the U.S. placing third behind Canada and the Iroquois Nationals. Hofstra’s representatives were:
Vin Sombrotto
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
NATIONAL TEAM ALUMNI
In addition to Hofstra’s connection with the U.S. World and National Teams, the Pride has been well represented as coach or player for foreign teams. The most recent is Jay Card, who was named to Canada’s U-19 National Team in 2008. The complete list as follows: Jim Dobreff - 2002 (Sweden Coach) Gerry Donaghy - 2002 (Scotland) Michael Tierney - 2002 (Ireland) Jack Kaley - 2002 (Germany Coach) Jay Card - 2008 (Canada Under 19)
www. G oHof str a . co m
Jared Testa Vinny Sombrotto
Washington Bayhawks (MLL), Denver Outlaws LI Lizards
COLLEGE
Jared Testa
Pat Debolt
HIGH SCHOOL VARSITY Michael Bennett Chris Bergersen Dennis Bonn Brian Casey Bob Cavaliero Ed Danowski Steve Dauses Chris Deeks Steven DeNapoli Mike Demeo Don DiBlasi Lou DiBlasi Dom Dinardo Scott Dooley Jon Edwards Gerry Fay Jim Femminella Craig Flynn Joe Fowler Rich Garguilo
Chaminade MacArthur Cold Spring Harbor School of the Cathedral Trinity Catholic, Greenwich, King Seaford Perry Hall Floral Park Hewlitt Chaminade Our Lady of Mt. Carmel HHHE Corning East Rye Calvert Hall Chaminade Bellmore-JFK Billerica (MA) NYC Empire Baldwin
John Gorman Adam Hananel Karl Hedstrom Kevin Huff
Tom Kessler Jack Kort Joe Kostolansky Aaron Kozlowski Larry Kramer Bill Laky Mike Lambrecht Brian Langtry Rich Langtry Ryan Lucas Hank Lunde Jay Lupetin Mike Magee Mike Marich Sean McCarthy Keith Mekeel
South Side East Meadow Garden City EastportSouth Manor, Smithtown East and West, Syosset Bergen Catholic Walt Whitman Marin Catholic (CA) North Shore Severna Park (MD) Uniondale Monte Vista (CA) Cherry Creek (CO) MacArthur Oceanside Hempstead Mepham Hicksville The Gunnery (CT) Heritage (CO) Wantagh
Blake Miller Ray Mills Brad Obloj Terry O’Connor Len Panarelli Jason Pearl Rich Petillo Tony Petillo Bob Quinlan Bob Rao Chris Rogler Dan Royle Paul Sanit Doug Shanahan Mike Skudin Eric Spallina Mark Spruyt Joe Taylor Mike Tierney Bryan Walker Gary Allen Wellner Ron Zoia
Greenwich, Darien Wyandanch Floral Park Mepham Farmingdale Long Beach Sachem North Bellport Levittown Division Island Trees Plainview-JFK Babylon Poway (CA) Pine Crest (FLA) Hicksville Uniondale East Islip Westhampton Beach Deer Park Garden City Ledyard MacArthur, Division
HIGH SCHOOL JUNIOR VARSITY
George Kay Tommy Shuey Phil Vangeli Brian Zuchelli
Tom Shuey
John Gorman
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
Port Washington East Meadow Farmingdale Grosse Point South, Detroit Country Day William Floyd Highland Park River Hill Half Hollow Hills
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Kevin Baudo Matt Cady Paul Defendini Jim Dobreff
M E N ’ S
PROFESSIONAL
H O F S T R A
The Hofstra Lacrosse program has produced more than 75 players who have gone on to coach the sport at the professional, collegiate and scholastic level. Here is a list of Hofstra alumni that have pursued careers in the coaching ranks.
L A C R O S S E
COACHING ALUMNI
Mark Spruyt Joe Amplo
93
LACROSSE SERIES RECORDS
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
1949-2014
94
Opponent Adelphi Air Force Army Baltimore Binghamton Boston College Bowdoin Brown Bucknell CCNY CCNY (LC) Colgate Cornell Cortland State Dartmouth Delaware Denison Drexel Duke Fairfield Fairleigh Dickinson Georgetown Gettysburg Hartford Harvard Hobart Jacksonville Johns Hopkins Lafayette Lehigh LIU-C.W. Post Loyola Manhasset Manhattan Marist Marquette Maryland Maryland-Balt. Co. Massachusetts MIT Michigan State Middlebury Milburn (LC) Montclair State Mt. Washington (LC) Morgan State Navy New England (LC) New Hampshire New York Tech North Carolina North Carolina State Notre Dame Ohio State Penn State Pennsylvania Philadelphia (LC) Princeton Providence Radford Robert Morris R.P.I. Rutgers Sacred Heart St. John’s St. Joseph’s (PA) Siena Stevens Tech Stony Brook Syracuse Towson Trinity Tufts Union Vermont Villanova Virginia Washington (MD) Washington & Lee Western Maryland Williams Yale
Won-Lost 16-14 8-0 17-37 10-15 3-0 1-0 4-0 13-11 3-1 7-0 1-0 3-0 2-6 7-0 7-2 27-12 0-1 22-6 6-0 4-1 5-0 2-3 1-0 6-0 11-8 9-8 1-0 5-19 17-0 5-0 15-8 14-12 1-1 2-0 1-0 0-1 1-9 3-1 18-21 12-1 2-0 2-0 3-0 0-2 0-7 2-0 6-13 1-0 17-2 5-0 6-5 1-0 8-7 2-0 9-8 5-13 1-0 13-14 4-0 1-0 4-0 7-2-1 14-15 12-0 12-4 3-0 1-0 2-0 4-2 4-12 25-20 4-0 2-0 2-2 8-0 8-5 4-11 9-10 15-4 2-1 6-3 4-8
First Meeting 1963 1970 1955 1952 2003 1979 1965 1976 1987 1950 1952 1960 1972 1951 1951 1951 1963 1986 1956 2002 1969 1994 1959 1995 1951 1959 2010 1974 1949 1986 1963 1956 1951 2010 2014 2014 1949 1988 1974 1958 1988 1955 1952 1950 1953 1971 1965 1949 1955 1974 1978 1980 1991 1987 1955 1970 1953 1972 1993 1992 2006 1956 1955 2002 1983 2011 2014 1951 2004 1960 1961 1950 1953 1951 1993 1988 1957 1949 1956 1949 1953 1952
Last Hofstra Win 1983 - 12-6 2011 - 11-6 2010 - 17-2 1983 - 15-6 2005 - 7-5 1979 - 13-6 1968 - 18-6 2010 - 15-12 1990 - 15-11 1971 - 1-0 1952 - 10-1 2011 - 6-3 2014 - 10-9 (OT) 1972 - 5-4 2013 - 11-9 2014 - 8-6 None 2014 -11-6 2003 - 9-8 2014 - 9-7 1973 - 15-3 2014 - 9-8 (OT) 1959 - 19-2 2001 - 21-9 2013 - 10-5 1973 - 13-9 2010 - 14-10 2010 -14-6 2007 - 9-3 1990 - 22-7 1990 - 14-5 2004 - 9-8 1952 - 14-6 2011 - 13-8 2014 - 15-10 None 1984 - 10-7 1991 - 12-8 2014 - 111-6 1973 - 24-3 1994 - 14-5 1967 - 9-2 1954 - 11-1 None None 1972 - 10-4 1999 - 15-7 1949 - 7-3 1997 - 10-3 1978 - 23-4 2006 - 6-5 1980 - 17-15 2013 - 8-7 2014 - 7-5 2011 - 9-4 1976 - 10-9 1953 - 12-3 2011 - 11-9 2006 - 14-8 1992 - 17-7 2009 - 11-5 1965 - 15-6 1999 - 15-6 2013 - 14-9 2012 - 14-10 2013 - 13-1 2014 - 7-6 1952 - 8-2 2009 - 12-11 2003 - 8-6 2014 - 9-7 1953 - 20-1 1955 - 21-1 1955 - 20-2 2001 - 16-7 2009 - 10-3 2001 - 15-14 (OT) 1973 - 13-5 1980 - 7-6 (OT) 1952 - 16-0 1964 - 14-7 1995 - 10-9
Last Opponent Win 1989 - 10-15 None 2008 - 7-8 1972 - 2-4 None None None 2007 - 6-7 1987 - 13-15 None None None 2009 - 8-11 None 1953 - 4-6 2011 - 9-10 1963 - 2-4 2014 - 10-11 (3OT) None 2012 - 9-10 (3OT) None 1997 - 5-18 None None 1996 - 12-15 1988 - 10-15 None 2011 - 5-12 None None 1987 - 7-8 2003 - 4-10 1951 - 3-4 None None 2014 - 9-11 2010 - 8-11 1992 - 12-15 2013 - 8-9 1967 - 8-11 None None None 1951 - 4-6 1961 - 0-7 None 1985 - 9-20 None 1978 - 10-11 None 2013 - 5-14 None 2012 - 5-6 (OT) None 2014 - 7-8 1987 - 5-13 None 2014 - 10-12 None None None 1961 - 4-5 1995 - 11-14 None 2014 - 10-11 (OT) None None None 2007 - 12-13 (OT) 2001 - 13-18 2013 - 6-7 None None 1954 - 6-7 None 2009 - 7-9 1992 - 5-17 1972 - 5-9 1982 - 10-19 1949 - 8-17 1965 - 5-11 1994 - 5-8
www. G oHof str a . co m
YEAR-BY-YEAR TEAM STATISTICS GPGF 6.3 6.3 5.5 10.7 12.8 10.4 15.4 8.9 9.1 11.5 7.8 8.1 8.0 7.3 3.9 7.0 9.5 7.1 7.8 9.1 8.9 10.1 10.2 6.6 12.6 11.5 11.7 10.4 8.8 9.8 12.1 11.5 8.4 9.3 11.6 9.7 10.5 9.8 9.6 12.7 13.6 13.6 12.1 8.4 10.5 11.3 11.7 12.1 7.7 13.1 11.6 13.3 13.5 12.7 9.3 8.4 8.6 12.5 7.9 9.2 9.3 12.9 9.9 9.4 8.6 9.4
GA 67 52 73 56 52 68 55 89 87 94 106 68 126 59 91 107 144 145 129 87 97 68 107 97 95 98 125 108 88 121 140 151 116 168 115 117 191 196 175 135 142 141 195 143 152 129 136 161 104 118 124 145 190 107 161 147 131 125 101 138 129 126 105 123 109 135
GPGA 11.1 7.4 6.6 3.7 4.0 5.2 3.4 6.4 6.7 8.5 8.8 6.2 9.0 5.9 5.7 7.1 9.6 8.5 8.6 6.7 6.9 4.3 7.1 6.1 6.8 8.2 9.6 9.8 7.3 9.3 11.7 11.6 10.5 12.9 8.2 8.4 13.6 15.1 10.9 9.0 9.5 10.1 13.9 11.0 9.5 9.9 9.7 11.5 6.9 8.4 7.8 9.1 11.2 7.6 9.4 10.5 8.1 6.5 7.2 8.4 8.5 8.9 6.6 8.8 7.8 8.3
COACH Al Brisotti Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Howdy Myers Harry Royle Harry Royle Harry Royle Harry Royle Harry Royle Harry Royle Harry Royle Harry Royle Harry Royle Harry Royle John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski Seth Tierney Seth Tierney Seth Tierney Seth Tierney Seth Tierney Seth Tierney Seth Tierney Seth Tierney
HOFSTRA ALL-TIME COACHING RECORDS (1949-2014)
Coach 1) Seth Tierney 2) John Danowski 3) Howdy Myers 4) Harry Royle 5) Al Brisotti Total
Years 2007-pres. 1986-06 1950-75 1976-85 1949 66 years
Gms. 119 315 359 113 6 912
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
Won 73 192 216 58 2 541
Lost 46 123 139 55 4 367
Tied 0 0 4 0 0 4
Pct. .613 .610 .607 .513 .333 .595
M E N ’ S
GF 38 44 61 160 167 134 247 125 118 126 93 89 112 73 62 105 142 121 117 118 125 162 153 105 176 138 152 114 105 128 145 150 92 121 163 136 147 127 154 191 204 191 169 109 168 147 164 169 115 184 185 212 229 178 159 117 138 239 110 150 142 181 159 131 121 153
H O F S T R A
Record 2-4 3-4 4-7 12-2-1 11-3 9-4 14-2 8-5-1 8-5 8-3 5-7 7-4 7-7 10-3 5-11 6-9 9-6 7-9-1 7-8 7-5-1 8-6 12-5 12-4 5-11 12-2 9-3 10-3 7-4 7-5 8-5 6-6 7-6 3-8 3-10 9-5 8-6 3-11 4-9 7-9 12-3 11-4 9-5 7-7 4-9 10-6 6-7 9-5 9-5 9-6 10-4 13-3 11-5 10-7 11-3 11-6 4-10 8-8 17-2 6-8 10-6 11-4 9-5 13-3 6-8 7-7 11-5
2 0 1 5
Year 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
L A C R O S S E
1949-2014
95
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
ALL-TIME RESULTS ALL-TIME RESULTS (1949-2013)
96
1952
1949
Coach: Al Brisotti Record: 2-4 Washington(MD) Western Maryland Maryland New England Lafayette Adelphi
1-16 8-17 1-17 8-3 17-6 3-8
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 12-2-1 L (15th ranked)
L L W W L
Manhasset Harvard CCNY L.C. CCNY Baltimore Western Maryland Delaware Union Cortland Trinity CCNY Yale Milburn L.C. Stevens Tech. Lafayette
14-6 4-4 10-1 6-2 6-8 16-0 8-5 5-4 23-0 7-1 14-2 4-10 11-7 8-2 24-4
1954
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 9-4 (11th ranked)
W Mt. Washington L.C. 3-15 T Dartmouth 7-6 W Baltimore 4-7 W New Hampshire 14-5 L Washington 5-8 W 4/17 Rutgers 8-7 W CCNY 17-2 W Yale 10-5 W Cortland 18-2 W Delaware 19-3 W Williams 13-0 L Union 6-7 W Milburn L.C. 11-1 W W
1956
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 8-5-1 (11th ranked) L W L W 4/3 L W W W W W W L 5/5 W
Dartmouth 6-4 W New Hampshire 6-3 W Harvard 13-7 W Penn State 3-9 L Washington & Lee 9-6 W Duke 11-1 W Washington(MD) 14-16 L(2 OT) Yale 6-8 L Loyola(MD) 8-3 W RPI 7-7 T Williams 17-2 W Army 4-8 L Cortland 14-3 W Baltimore 13-18 L
1950
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 3-4
CCNY Lafayette Western Maryland Montclair Adelphi Cortland Trinity
5-15 14-2 6-3 4-11 4-14 4-6 7-1
L W W L L L W
1955
1953
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 11-3 (13th ranked) Philadelphia L.C. Mt. Washington L.C. Dartmouth Washington(MD) Tufts Coach: Howdy Myers Delaware Yale Record: 4-7 Union Montclair 4-6 L Cortland Delaware 3-7 L CCNY Washington(MD) 2-10 L Baltimore Harvard 3-10 L Trinity Dartmouth 4-7 L Williams Manhasset 3-4 L Milburn L.C. CCNY 4-5 L Stevens Tech 4-1 W Union 9-12 L(OT) Trinity 11-1 W Cortland 5-4 W Lafayette 9-6 W
1951
12-3 4-17 4-6 10-4 19-4 19-0 2-9 20-11 10-2 24-1 5-4 20-1 4-3 17-4
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 14-2 (3rd ranked) Mt. Washington L.C. 7-13 W Ohio State 20-1 L Dartmouth 19-5 L Middlebury 20-1 W Tufts 21-1 W New Hampshire 12-0 W 7-8 L 4/9 Army 13-3 W 4/11 Penn St. Washington Coll. 16-2 W Yale 6-3 W Delaware 19-1 W Union 20-2 W Williams 16-1 W Baltimore 15-4 W Cortland 20-4 5/20 Rutgers 16-6
1957
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 8-5 (13th ranked)
L Swathmore 7-5 W MIT 20-1 W Dartmouth 16-10 W New Hampshire 6-3 W Washington & Lee 9-4 W Washington(MD) 8-10 L 4/18 Penn State 11-7 W 4/20 Virginia 5-8 W RPI 3-10 W 5/4 Army 2-14 W Loyola(MD) 13-0 W Baltimore 6-13 W Duke 12-2 W W W
W W W W W L W L L L W L W
www. G oHof str a . co m
1959
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 5-7 (14th ranked) New Hampshire 4-3 4/2 Harvard 4-5 Washington & Lee 5-6 Mt. Washington L.C. 4-11 RPI 11-10 Baltimore 1-13 Washington(MD) 7-8 Hobart 10-5 Loyola(MD) 15-1 Williams 9-15 Gettysburg 19-2 5/20 Army 4-27
W Hobart 6-1 W Washington & Lee 11-4 W New Hampshire 13-4 W Colgate 9-6 W Mt. Washington L.C. 1-12 L 4/16 Syracuse 9-11 W Washington(MD) 7-5 W 4/30 Army 2-11 L Baltimore 6-8 W Loyola(MD) 11-5 L RPI 14-1
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 10-3 (13th ranked) W MIT W Washington & Lee W 4/2 Harvard W New Hampshire L Loyola(MD) L Baltimore W 4/21 at Rutgers L Williams L Towson State W RPI Adelphi W Washington(MD) 5/19 Army
1963
1961
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 5-11
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 7-7 (15th ranked) W Baltimore L.C. 4-16 L Mt. Washington L.C. 8-21 L Washington & Lee 13-8 L New Hampshire 9-4 W 4/5 Harvard 6-18 L Colgate 7-4 L 4/15 at Syracuse 7-6 W Baltimore 2-20 W Washington(MD) 0-7 L 4/29 Army 2-10 W Loyola(MD) 19-2 L Towson State 14-2 RPI 4-5 Adelphi 17-3
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
8-4 6-3 4-10 6-4 8-4 7-9 10-9 8-2 12-2 11-2 7-3 6-5 0-17
L L W W L W W L L L W W L W
MIT Washington & Lee 4/1 Harvard Denison Baltimore New Hampshire Washington(MD) Hobart 4/20 Rutgers 4/25 Towson State LIU-C.W. Post Loyola(MD) RPI Adelphi 5/15 Army Williams
5-3 12-1 1-5 2-4 3-12 2-3 2-4 7-2 8-13 3-6 4-3 3-4 7-4 2-7 2-10 2-10
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 6-9
W W L W W L W W W W W W L
Washington & Lee New Hampshire MIT 4/4 Army Adelphi 4/10 at Syracuse Hobart 4/18 at Rutgers Washington(MD) 5/13 Towson State LIU-C.W. Post Williams RPI Baltimore Loyola(MD)
4-8 4-2 7-0 1-8 10-3 6-12 7-10 4-12 6-8 14-1 4-6 14-7 11-9 9-12 4-9
L W W L W L L L L W L W W L L
1965
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 9-6 W W (18th ranked)
L Bowdoin 12-0 L MIT 12-3 L 4/3 Army 4-20 L New Hampshire 10-4 L 4/10 Syracuse 10-9 W Loyola(MD) 5-6 L 4/17 Rutgers 8-16 L LIU-C.W. Post 17-6 W Hobart 8-7 L Washington & Lee 17-11 W 5/1 Navy 2-19 L Washington(MD) 4-15 L Williams 5-11 L Adelphi 13-11 RPI 15-6
W W L W W L L W W W L L L W W
L A C R O S S E
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 7-4 (14th ranked)
1964
M E N ’ S
MIT 25-2 4/2 Harvard 16-5 Washington & Lee 10-9 4/7 Penn State 13-2 New Hampshire 7-5 Mt. Washington L.C. 6-15 RPI 11-7 Washington(MD) 11-10 5/3 Army 1-15 Loyola(MD) 17-3 Baltimore 8-21
1962
H O F S T R A
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 8-3 (9th ranked)
1960
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1958
97
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H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
ALL-TIME RESULTS
98
1968
1966
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 7-9-1
3/21 Virginia 6-3 Washington & Lee 11-3 Bowdoin 11-2 MIT 9-8 4/2 Army 3-14 4/4 Harvard 7-14 New Hampshire 11-11 4/8 at Syracuse 6-10 Hobart 5-10 4/16 at Rutgers 5-15 Adelphi 10-5 Baltimore 4-8 4/29 at Navy 2-11 Loyola(MD) 9-7 Washington(MD) 9-10 Delaware 6-9 LIU-C.W. Post 10-5
1967
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 7-8 Washington & Lee13-5
Bowdoin New Hampshire MIT 4/3 Harvard Middlebury Hobart 4/15 Rutgers 4/22 Army Adelphi 4/29 Syracuse Baltimore Washington(MD) Loyola(MD) LIU-C.W. Post
15-4 11-3 8-11 5-9 9-2 7-6 3-13 4-19 12-9 3-6 7-8 3-16 9-7 8-11
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 7-5-1 W Bowdoin 18-6 W MIT 18-1 W Washington & Lee 6-2 W Hobart 12-5 L New Hampshire 9-2 L 4/13 at Rutgers 2-11 T 4/20 Army 4-12 L Adelphi 9-4 L 4/27 at Syracuse 6-10 L Washington(MD) 8-8 W Baltimore 5-7 L Loyola(MD) 13-8 L LIU-C.W. Post 8-11 W L L W
1969
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 8-6 W (14th ranked) W W L L W W L L W L L L L L
MIT 15-8 Hobart 9-10 New Hampshire 9-2 4/12 Rutgers 8-6 Baltimore 3-9 4/19 Army 2-15 Adelphi 20-5 4/26 Syracuse 4-9 Fairleigh Dickinson 6-5 5/3 at Navy 0-11 Washington(MD) 6-5 LIU-C.W. Post 6-8 CCNY 15-1 Loyola(MD) 22-3
1970
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 12-5 W (10th ranked) W 3/21 Loyola(MD) 13-4 W 3/28 Pennsylvania 5-3 W 4/1 New Hampshire 12-4 W 4/4 MIT 11-4 L Hobart 16-2 L CCNY 27-0 W 4/11 at Rutgers 9-10 L 4/15 Yale 3-6 T 4/18 Army 2-9 L 4/25 Adelphi 10-2 L 4/29 Air Force 9-3 L Fairleigh Dickinson 8-3 5/2 Navy 4-9 5/6 Washington(MD) 1-0 5/9 Baltimore 11-3 5/13 LIU-C.W. Post 16-2 5/16 Virginia 3-14 **forfeit
1971
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 12-4 (10th ranked)
1972
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 5-11 (20th ranked)
W 3/23 Cornell 3-5 W 3/25 Pennsylvania 3-6 W 3/28 Washington(MD) 5-9 W MIT 21-4 W Hobart 3-4 W LIU-C.W. Post 14-3 L 4/8 at Rutgers 3-4 L 4/8 Towson State 6-11 L 4/15 Army 8-9 W Princeton 5-8 W Cortland 5-4 W Fairleigh Dickinson 8-4 L Adelphi 6-10 W** Baltimore 2-4 W 5/6 Navy 3-8 W Morgan State 10-4 L
L L L W L W L L L(OT) L W W L L L W
1973
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 12-2 (5th ranked)
6-2 W 3/24 at Pennsylvania W 3/27 at Pennsylvania 8-7 23-3 W 3/28 MIT L 4/1 MIT 24-3 11-7 W 3/31 Hobart W 4/3 Hobart 13-9 1-0 W** 4/7 Baltimore W 4/7 CCNY 16-6 15-3 W 4/11 Washington(MD) 13-5 L 4/10 Rutgers 9-5 W 4/14 Princeton L 4/14 Yale 9-5 10-15 L 4/18 Army W 4/17 Army 6-8 W 4/21 Fairleigh Dickinson 15-3 L 4/21 Washington(MD) 13-2 W 4/28 at Navy W 4/24 Fairleigh Dickinson 8-4 10-9 16-7 W 5/2 Towson State L 4/30 Morgan State 9-7 5-8 L 5/5 Rutgers W 5/1 at Navy 12-8 9-4 W 5/12 Adelphi L 5/8 Baltimore 10-9 7-6 W 5/16 Air Force W 5/12 Adelphi 16-4 6-12 L 5/19 Virginia(NCAA) W 5/15 Virginia 5-12 5/19 LIU-C.W. Post 12-11 W(OT) 5/22 Army(NCAA) 3-19 L **forfeit
W W W W W W L W W W W W W L
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3/23 Pennsylvania 3/27 Baltimore 3/30 Massachusetts 4/3 at Princeton 4/6 Navy 4/13 Army 4/20 NY Tech 4/27 at Adelphi 5/1 at Towson State 5/4 at Rutgers 5/11 LIU-C.W. Post 5/18 Johns Hopkins(NCAA)
Coach Harry Royle Record: 7-4 (10th ranked)
11-9 15-9 7-6 16-13 6-17 12-5 21-3 11-3 11-15 6-5 12-5
W 3/20 Pennsylvania 10-9 W 3/27 Massachusetts 11-9 W 4/3 Harvard 11-7 W 4/6 at Brown 7-14 L 4/10 Army 7-8 W 4/13 Washington & Lee 10-7 W 4/17 Navy 13-17 W 4/24 Adelphi 10-8 L 4/28 NY Tech 12-7 W 5/1 at Rutgers 7-13 W 5/8 LIU-C.W. Post 13-9
10-18
L
1981
Coach: Harry Royle Record: 3-8
3/21 Virginia 3/28 Brown 4/4 at Army 4/8 Lafayette 4/15 Maryland 4/18 Adelphi 4/22 Massachusetts 4/25 Penn State 4/29 Towson State 5/2 at Pennsylvania 5/9 Baltimore
1975
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 10-3 (6th ranked)
1977
Coach: Harry Royle Record: 7-5 (13th ranked)
3/22 at Pennsylvania 3-18 L 3/19 at Pennsylvania 3/26 Syracuse 15-3 W 3/23 Dartmouth 3/29 Massachusetts 14-10 W 3/26 Massachusetts 4/2 Princeton 17-5 W 3/30 Brown 4/5 Towson State 15-10 W 4/2 Harvard 4/9 Washington & Lee 14-13 W 4/6 Washington & Lee 4/12 Army 9-8 W(OT) 4/9 at Army 4/19 at Navy 10-15 L 4/16 at Navy 4/26 Adelphi 11-8 W 4/23 Adelphi 4/30 NY Tech 13-3 W 4/27 at NY Tech 5/3 Rutgers 14-10 W 4/30 Rutgers 5/10 LIU-C.W. Post 10-3 W 5/4 at LIU-C.W. Post 5/21 Maryland(NCAA) 11-19 L
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
3-10 13-6 10-8 9-7 14-4 13-9 2-7 7-15 6-7 16-6 5-6 6-3
11-18 10-7 6-10 10-3 3-10 11-16 8-14 5-10 7-14 8-10 13-4
L W L W L L L L L L W
1979
Coach: Harry Royle Record: 6-6
3/17 Boston College 13-6 3/21 Dartmouth 12-10 L 3/24 Virginia 5-13 W 3/31 Brown 10-15 W 4/7 Army 8-10 W 4/11 Navy 12-19 W 4/20 Adelphi 12-11 W 4/25 Massachusetts 11-10 L 4/28 Penn State 18-10 L 5/2 LIU-C.W. Post 23-11 L 5/5 at Pennsylvania 12-13 W 5/9 Washington & Lee 9-12 L W
W W L L L L W W W Coach: Harry Royle W L Record: 3-10 10-7 W L 3/13 Baltimore 3/20 Virginia 8-16 L 3/24 Maryland 12-13 L(OT) 3/27 at Brown 3-9 L 4/3 Army 6-12 L 4/10 Penn State 10-16 L 4/14 Lafayette 10-7 W 4/17 Adelphi 10-17 L 4/21 Massachusetts 10-18 L 4/28 Towson State 18-10 W 5/1 Pennsylvania 8-11 L 5/6 at Rutgers 6-13 L 5/8 Washington & Lee 10-19 L
1982
L A C R O S S E
Coach: Howdy Myers Record: 9-3 (7th ranked)
1978
1976
M E N ’ S
1974
3/15 New Hampshire 15-10 W 3/19 Baltimore 15-9 W 3/22 Virginia 5-10 L 3/29 at Brown 10-22 L 4/5 Army 11-9 W 4/12 at Navy 9-14 L 4/19 at Adelphi 9-13 L Coach: Harry Royle 4/23 at Massachusetts 8-16 L Record: 8-5 4/26 Penn State 20-9 W 4/30 Towson State 16-8 W (7th ranked) 5/3 Pennsylvania 8-10 L 3/18 Pennsylvania 11-12 L W 5/9 North 3/25 Virginia 11-15 L W Carolina State 17-15 W L 5/17 Washington & Lee 7-6 W(OT) W 3/29 New Hampshire 10-11 10-9 W L 4/1 Harvard 4-8 L L 4/8 Army 10-9 W(OT) W 4/16 North Carolina 23-4 W L 4/19 NY Tech 14-9 W W 4/23 Adelphi W W 4/26 at Massachusetts 14-11 14-11 W L 4/29 Penn State 11-7 W W 5/6 LIU-C.W. Post 5/13 Washington & Lee 12-6 W 5/17 Johns Hopkins (NCAA-QF) 8-20 L
H O F S T R A
Coach: Harry Royle Record: 7-6
2 0 1 5
1980
99
1983
Coach: Harry Royle Record: 9-5 (9th ranked)
3/12 Baltimore 3/16 Navy 3/19 Brown 3/26 Maryland 4/2 at Army 4/6 LIU-C.W. Post 4/9 at Penn State 4/13 Lafayette 4/16 Adelphi 4/20 Massachusetts 4/23 Towson State 4/27 St. John’s 4/30 Pennsylvania 5/4 at Rutgers
15-6 14-10 15-11 7-9 3-9 8-9 9-3 25-9 12-6 10-8 8-9 12-4 10-11 15-11
2 0 1 5
H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
ALL-TIME RESULTS
100
1984
Coach: Harry Royle Record: 8-6 (11th ranked)
W W W L L L W W W W L W L(OT) W
1985
Coach: Harry Royle Record: 3-11
3/9 at Princeton 3/16 Brown 3/23 at Maryland 3/30 at Army 4/3 at LIU-C.W. Post 4/6 at Penn State 4/10 Lafayette 4/13 Adelphi 4/17 Massachusetts 4/20 at Towson State 4/24 St. John’s 4/27 Pennsylvania 5/4 Rutgers 4/11 Navy
12-14 13-14 9-14 12-14 6-16 14-13 15-1 7-12 8-13 12-19 9-14 11-19 10-9 9-20
1986
1987
1989
Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Record: 7-9, 3-3 Record: 11-4, 5-0 L 3/7 at Princeton 9-7 W L 3/13 Duke 12-11 W (14th ranked)
L 3/15 Brown 5-11 L 3/21 Maryland 1-15 L 3/25 Ohio State 15-4 W 3/28 Bucknell* 13-15 W 4/4 Delaware* 8-9 L 4/8 Lafayette* 18-6 L 4/11 Adelphi 7-15 L 4/18 at Towson State* 4-15 L 4/25 Pennsylvania 5-13 L 4/27 Air Force 12-5 W 4/29 at Lehigh* 15-11 L 5/2 at Hobart 9-21 5/6 at Drexel* 14-9 5/9 at LIU-C.W. Post 7-8 *East Coast Conference game
16-14 W L 3/11 Virginia 17-4 W L 3/18 Bucknell 17-11 W W 3/22 at St. John’s 10-15 L L 3/25 Adelphi 16-10 W L 3/29 Army 15-13 W W 4/1 Delaware* 20-2 W L 4/5 Lafayette* 7-16 L L 4/8 at Syracuse L 4/15 at Towson State* 10-9 W(4 OT) 9-12 L W 4/22 Villanova 18-8 W W 4/25 at Lehigh* 6-14 L L 4/29 at Hobart 17-7 W W 5/3 at Drexel* 16-4 W L 5/6 UMBC 5/13 Princeton 10-3 W *East Coast Conference game
1990
1988
Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Record: 9-5, 4-1 Record: 4-9 Record: 12-3, 5-0 3/8 Princeton 9-8 W (19th ranked) 3/15 at Brown 3-20 L (13th ranked)
3/10 at Princeton 13-7 W 3/22 Maryland 3/17 at Brown 9-8 W(OT) 3/29 Army 3/24 Maryland 10-7 W 4/5 at Delaware 3/31 Army 7-11 L 4/9 at Lafayette 4/4 LIU-C.W. Post 10-6 W 4/12 at Adelphi 4/7 Penn State 10-11 L(OT) 4/19 Towson State 4/11 at Lafayette 16-3 W 4/26 Pennsylvania 4/14 at Adelphi 5-6 L 4/30 Lehigh 4/18 at Massachusetts 5-12 L 5/3 Hobart 4/21 Towson State 12-8 W 5/7 Drexel 4/25 at St. John’s 13-8 W 5/10 LIU-C.W. Post 4/28 Pennsylvania 5-6 L(OT) 5/5 at Rutgers 7-11 L 5/12 at Navy 14-13 W
2-16 6-18 6-15 16-11 10-20 6-8 9-15 15-9 10-24 23-13 12-19
14-6 L 3/12 St. John’s 14-7 L 3/19 at Bucknell 10-3 L 3/25 Michigan State 12-13 W 3/27 at Adelphi 14-8 L 4/2 at Delaware* 17-9 L 4/6 at Lafayette* 5-18 L 4/9 Syracuse 10-9 W 4/16 Towson State* 13-8 L 4/23 at Villanova 21-13 W 4/27 Lehigh* 10-15 L 4/30 Hobart 5/4 Drexel* 20-6 5/7 at UMBC 15-9 5/11 LIU-C.W. Post 9-8 5/14 Princeton 7-3 *East Coast Conference game
17-6 W 3/10 Penn State 15-11 W 3/17 Bucknell 14-8 W 3/21 St. John’s 14-15 L 3/24 Cornell 13-15 W 3/27 at Army 15-5 W 3/31 at Delaware* 5-18 L 4/4 at Yale 9-20 W 4/7 Syracuse 11-14 W 4/14 Towson State* 22-7 W 4/25 Lehigh* 13-7 L 4/28 at Lafayette* 22-4 W 5/2 Drexel* 14-5 W 5/5 at LIU-C.W. Post 7-6 W 5/11 Princeton W *East Coast Conference game
W W W L L W L L L W W W W W
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Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Record: 7-7, 2-2 Record: 10-6 Record: 9-6, 6-0 Record: 9-5, 5-0 (16th ranked) (11th ranked) (12th ranked) (17th ranked)
3/9 Notre Dame 10-5 W 3/7 Notre Dame 8-9 L 3/11 #17 Delaware* 15-6 W 3/16 at UMBC* 12-8 W 3/21 Vermont 12-10 W 3/18 #8 Brown 10-9 W(OT) 3/20 at St. John’s 13-12 W 3/28 Providence 19-6 W 3/25 Vermont* 11-10 W 3/23 at #9 Cornell 4-9 L 4/3 #10 Massachusetts 16-8 W 3/31 #13 Massachusetts 5-11 L 3/30 #20 Delaware* 9-10 L 4/4 Harvard 12-7 W 4/2 New Hampshire* 21-9 W 4/3 Lafayette 24-14 W 4/9 #5 Loyola(MD) 13-12 W 4/7 #6 Loyola 7-15 L 4/6 at #8 Syracuse 10-30 L 4/14 at St. John’s 9-8 W 4/11 at Hartford* 10-5 W 4/13 at #9 Towson State* 8-20 L 4/17 #5 Virginia 7-6 W(OT) 4/12 at St. John’s 19-3 W 4/20 #4 Virginia 10-18 L 4/21 Lafayette 21-3 W 4/15 at #12 Georgetown 6-17 L 4/23 at Drexel* 21-11 W 4/24 at #12 Army 11-10 W 4/21 at Army 12-8 W 4/27 at #11 Army 14-13 W(OT) 4/28 #4 Johns Hopkins 5-11 L 4/25 #1 Johns Hopkins 11-15 L 5/1 #7 Johns Hopkins 11-20 L 5/1 #20 Yale 6-9 L 4/29 Yale 10-9 W 5/4 #15 Yale 12-10 W 5/4 at #16 Rutgers 6-16 L 5/2 Drexel* 16-5 W 5/11 at #4 Princeton 11-15 L 5/8 #2 Princeton 6-9 L 5/6 at #19 Rutgers 11-14 L 5/15 Massachusetts *North Atlantic Conference game (NCAA) 9-8 W 5/22 at Syracuse (NCAA-QF) 8-20 L
3/1 #10 Towson State* 13-10 W 3/8 Delaware* 12-7 W 3/15 #9 Brown 9-4 W 3/22 #15 Massachusetts 7-6 W(2 OT) 3/29 at New Hampshire*^10-3 W 4/4 at #13 Notre Dame 9-10 L 4/6 Vermont* 7-6 W 4/8 at #14 Hartford* 7-2 W 4/12 at #6 Georgetown 5-18 L 4/19 at Army 2-6 L 4/22 #4 Johns Hopkins 5-8 L 4/25 Drexel* 16-4 W 4/29 at Rutgers 5-4 W 5/3 #16 North Carolina 4-10 L 5/10 Massachusetts (NCAA)** 4-6 L *America East game ^at Holy Cross **at Army
\
1992
1994
1996
1998
Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Record: 10-4, 5-0 Record: 9-5, 5-0 Record: 4-9 Record: 6-7 3/7 Rutgers 13-9 W (12th ranked) (12th ranked) 3/10 Radford 17-7 W (20th ranked)
3/14 UMBC 12-15 3/21 Cornell 7-9 3/28 at Notre Dame 9-12 4/1 at Massachusetts 4-17 4/11 Towson State 10-9 4/15 St. John’s 7-9 4/18 at Virginia 5-17 4/21 Lafayette 12-5 4/24 Army 5-9 4/29 at Johns Hopkins 4-15 5/2 at Yale 4-10
L L L L W L L W L L L
3/5 St. John’s 15-3 3/12 Michigan State 14-5 3/20 #10 Brown 10-9 3/23 Air Force 13-5 4/1 #13 Massachusetts+ 8-11 4/2 at #14 Brown+ 6-15 4/9 at #2 Loyola 10-13 4/16 #13 Georgetown 13-10 4/17 Providence 17-4 4/22 #20 Army 14-15 4/26 #6 Johns Hopkins 7-15 4/30 at #18 Yale 5-8 5/7 Rutgers 15-16 +Fleet Classic at Brown
6-8 W 3/3 at #14 Towson State*^13-12 W 2/28 #5 Loyola W 3/7 at #20 Delaware* 13-11 W 3/10 at #19 Delaware*# 19-13 18-2 8-17 L 3/10 Providence W 3/13 at #8 Loyola 20-11 7-16 L 3/14 #17 Brown W 3/17 #6 Brown L 3/22 #12 Massachusetts 15-14 W(OT) 3/22 at #10 Massachusetts 6-7 22-8 W 3/27 Hartford* L 3/30 New Hampshire* 12-6 15-11 17-11 W 4/1 at #17 Towson* L 4/6 at Vermont* 22-5 W 4/13 #17 Georgetown 15-16 L(OT) 4/4 Vermont* 9-8 10-14 L 4/10 #17 Navy W 4/19 #20 Army 13-9 9-7 W 4/17 Army L(OT) 4/23 #5 Johns Hopkins 10-7 W 4/22 at #3 Johns Hopkins10-16 L 4/27 at Drexel* 13-5 12-4 W 4/25 at #19 Drexel* L 4/30 #20 Rutgers 13-9 W 4/28 #19 Rutgers L(OT) 5/5 #2 North Carolina 10-9 4-8 5/11 Harvard(NCAA)*** 12-15 L 5/2 at Notre Dame *America East game *North Atlantic Conference game ^at Johns Hopkins #at Loyola ***at Cornell
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
L W W W L W W W W W L W W L
L A C R O S S E
1997
M E N ’ S
1995
H O F S T R A
1993
2 0 1 5
1991
101
2 0 1 5
H O F S T R A
M E N ’ S
L A C R O S S E
ALL-TIME RESULTS
102
1999
2001
2003
2005
Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Record: 13-3, 4-1 Record: 10-7, 4-1 Record: 11-6, 4-1 Record: 8-8, 3-2 (7th ranked) (11th ranked) (10th ranked) (20th ranked)
3/6 #3 Loyola ^ 4-10 L 2/24 #19 Massachusetts 13-17 L 3/1 at #12 Loyola 4-10 L 2/26 #15 Massachusetts 7-12 L 3/13 #14 Delaware* 7-13 L 3/3 at #8 Loyola 12-17 L 3/4 Binghamton 15-5 W 3/5 at #20 Brown 2-10 L 3/20 at Brown 11-9 W 3/10 at #8 Johns Hopkins 6-7 L 3/8 #14 Cornell 13-5 W 3/12 at #1 Johns Hopkins 5-11 L 3/22 Air Force 19-5 W 3/17 #2 Princeton 5-10 L 3/15 #7 Princeton 5-18 L 3/16 #15 North Carolina 12-8 W 3/27 #20 Massachusetts 8-7 W 3/24 #2 Notre Dame 11-10 W(OT) 3/21 #11 Notre Dame 9-8 W 3/19 #11 Princeton 9-8 W 3/31 at Hartford* 15-6 W 3/28 Air Force 22-8 W 3/23 #6 Massachusetts 7-14 L 3/21 Binghamton 7-5 W 4/3 #13 Notre Dame 10-9 W 3/31 Hartford*^ 21-9 W 3/26 at Army 12-11 W 3/26 #9 Notre Dame 8-9 L(2 OT) 4/7 #15 Towson* 9-6 W 4/4 Drexel* 18-7 W 3/29 Drexel* 14-8 W 3/29 at #5 Army 10-11 L 4/10 Vermont* 14-4 W 4/7 #11 Towson* 12-16 L 4/4 at #13 Towson* 8-15 L 4/1 Villanova* 5-11 L 4/16 #10 Navy 8-7 W 4/10 at Army 17-9 W 4/11 Delaware* 11-9 W 4/6 at Sacred Heart* 14-10 W 4/24 at Army 16-9 W 4/14 Delaware* 11-10 W 4/17 #7 Syracuse 8-6 W 4/9 at #17 Delaware* 13-3 W 4/28 Drexel* 18-7 W 4/21 at Vermont* 16-7 W 4/19 at Sacred Heart* 9-8 W(OT) 4/15 Drexel* 11-5 W 5/4 at Rutgers 15-6 W 4/28 #9 Duke 15-10 W 4/23 Villanova* 9-5 W 4/23 at #14 Towson* 6-10 L 5/8 #2 Johns Hopkins 9-8 W(OT) 5/2 Delaware# 11-8 W 4/26 #11 Duke 9-8 W 4/26 #17 Stony Brook 13-5 W 5/15 Navy(NCAA)** 15-7 W 5/5 at #9 Towson# 11-13 L 4/30 Villanova# 9-6 W 4/30 Harvard 11-5 W 5/22 #2 Johns Hopkins 5/13 #8 Virginia(NCAA)! 15-14 W(OT) 5/3 at #11 Towson# 11-16 L 5/4 at #16 Delaware# 5-8 L (NCAA-QF) 7-11 L 5/19 #1 Syracuse 5/11 at #5 Massachusetts *Colonial Athletic Association game *America East game (NCAA-QF)$ 13-18 L (NCAA) 6-9 L #CAA Tournament game ^at Navy *America East game *Colonial Athletic Association game **at Brown ^at Springfield, Massachusetts #CAA Tournament #America East Tournament !at West Point, New York $at Hofstra Stadium
2000
2002
2004
2006
Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Coach: John Danowski Record: 11-5, 4-1 Record: 4-10, 2-3 Record: 11-3, 5-1 Record: 17-2, 6-0 2/28 #12 Cornell 12-14 L (10th ranked) (6th ranked) 3/6 #7 Loyola 9-8 W (2nd ranked)
2/26 at #15 Massachusetts10-7 3/4 #3 Loyola 12-16 3/11 #7 Johns Hopkins 6-12 3/19 at #5 Princeton 8-11 3/26 at #13 Notre Dame 8-7 3/27 Air Force 21-4 4/7 Vermont* 12-8 4/9 Hartford* 17-5 4/14 at Delaware* 7-8 4/16 at Towson* 18-11 4/20 at Drexel* 13-6 4/22 #19 Army 18-10 4/29 #11 North Carolina 20-12 5/3 Towson# 18-10 5/6 Delaware# 14-4 5/14 #6 Maryland (NCAA)! 12-14 *America East game #America East Tournament
W 2/23 at #12 Massachusetts12-11 W(OT) 3/8 Binghamton L 14-9 W 2/26 at #9 Massachusetts 7-11 L 3/2 #8 Loyola* 7-8 L 3/13 #1 Johns Hopkins 6-13 14-4 W L 3/4 Brown L 3/5 Villanova* 12-5 W 3/20 at #6 Princeton W 5-10 L 3/11 #11 Johns Hopkins 11-6 L 3/9 #2 Johns Hopkins 8-9 L 3/24 at #15 Notre Dame 11-19 6-5 W L 3/15 North Carolina W 3/16 at #8 Princeton 4-12 L 3/28 at Massachusetts 9-5 W 3-6 L 3/18 at #6 Princeton W 3/19 Fairfield 11-8 W 4/3 at #18 Delaware* 10-12 13-5 W L 3/25 #11 Notre Dame W 3/23 at #18 Notre Dame 15-5 W 4/7 Sacred Heart* 11-6 W 12-11 W 3/28 #20 Army W 3/26 at Drexel* 18-10 W 4/10 at Drexel* 10-9 W(OT) 8-7 W 3/31 #12 Towson* L 3/30 Army 16-9 W 4/17 #18 Towson* 19-8 W 6-12 L 4/5 Sacred Heart* W 4/6 at #14 Towson* 13-7 W 4/24 at Villanova* 13-4 W 10-13 L 4/8 at Villanova* W 4/13 at Delaware* 17-5 W 4/27 at Stony Brook W 6-9 L 4/12 at Robert Morris* 21-2 W 4/19 Sacred Heart 19-5 W 5/5 at #11 Towson# 12-10 W 5-6 L 4/14 Delaware* W 4/26 #7 Duke 14-6 W *Colonial Athletic Association game 4/22 at Drexel* 12-4 W W 5/1 #12 North Carolina 12-7 W #CAA Tournament game 4/25 at #19 Stony Brook 18-8 W W *Colonial Athletic Association game 4/29 #16 Harvard 13-6 W 5/3 Villanova# 14-7 W L 5/6 #19 Delaware# 12-6 W 5/14 Providence (NCAA1) 14-8 W 5/20 Massachusetts (NCAA-QF) 10-11 L(OT) *Colonial Athletic Association game #CAA Tournament game NCAA1-Opening round at Hofstra NCAA-QF-Quarterfinal at Stony Brook
www. G oHof str a . co m
Coach: Seth Tierney Record: 13-3, 5-1 (13th ranked)
2013
Coach: Seth Tierney Record: 7-7, 2-4
2/16 Sacred Heart 14-9 W 2/23 #13 Princeton 7-10 L 2/21 #20 Massachusetts 11-10 W 2/15 Colgate 6-3 W 2/26 at #13 Fairfield 9-2 W 3/10 at #5 Johns Hopkins 8-9 L 2/28 at #15 Brown 11-10 W(2OT) 2/19 at Sacred Heart 10-6 W 3/2 Harvard 10-5 W 3/18 #12 Princeton 4-5 L 3/7 at #10 Johns Hopkins7-12 L 2/26 #8 Princeton 11-9 W 3/9 at #2 Notre Dame 8-7 W 3/24 at #14 Delaware* 5-6 L 3/14 #3 Princeton 9-7 W 3/5 Harvard 15-9 W 3/16 at Delaware* 10-5 W 3/27 at #9 Army 5-3 W 3/21 at Sacred Heart* 6-5 W 3/13 Air Force 11-6 W 3/19 at St. John’s 6-7 L 3/30 Villanova* 8-9 L 3/24 at Army 9-8 W(2OT) 3/19 at Delaware* 6-7 L 3/23 #19 Drexel* 7-8 L(3OT) 4/7 Robert Morris* 14-5 W 3/28 Robert Morris* 11-5 W 3/22 St. John’s 8-5 W 3/26 Dartmouth 11-9 W 4/11 at Sacred Heart* 10-8 W 4/4 Delaware *+ 10-8 W 3/26 Drexel* 11-6 W 3/30 at Towson* 6-7 L 4/14 at #14 Towson* 9-8 W(OT) 4/8 Drexel* 12-7 W 4/2 at Towson* 12-5 W 4/6 vs. St. Joseph’s*+ 13-1 W 4/20 Lafayette 9-3 W 4/11 at Towson* 11-10 W 4/5 Manhattan 13-8 W 4/13 #3 North Carolina 5-14 L 4/24 Stony Brook 12-13 L(OT) 4/18 #10 North Carolina 8-13 L 4/9 at St. Joseph’s* 11-3 W 4/20 Massachusetts* 8-9 L 4/28 #17 Drexel* 7-8 L 4/21 Stony Brook 12-11 W 4/16 at Fairfield 8-7 W 4/27 #8 Penn State* 7-16 L 5/2 at #14 Towson# 5-11 L 4/25 Villanova* 10-3 W 4/23 #15 Massachusetts*+14-5 W *Colonial Athletic Association game 4/29 Villanova # 7-9 L 4/30 #20 Penn State* 9-4 W *Colonial Athletic Association game #CAA Tournament game 5/9 at #7 Cornell(NCAA1)8-11 L 5/4 Delaware# 9-10 L + at HEADStrong Foundation Relent*Colonial Athletic Association game 5/14 at Johns Hopkins less Cup, Ridley, PA #CAA Tournament game (NCAA1) 5-12 L NCAA1-Opening round at Cornell *Colonial Athletic Association game +ESPNU Warrior Classic at UConn #CAA Tournament game NCAA1-Opening round at JHU
2008
Coach: Seth Tierney Record: 10-6, 5-1 (16th ranked)
2/23 at Massachusetts 4-8 3/1 Brown 7-6 3/8 #1 Johns Hopkins 8-7 3/15 at #13 Princeton 6-11 3/21 Towson* 13-8 3/25 #16 Army 7-8 3/29 at #11 Drexel* 8-9 4/5 Sacred Heart* 20-3 4/9 at Villanova* 7-6 4/12 Delaware* 11-8 4/19 at #13 North Carolina9-13 4/22 at Stony Brook 14-13 4/26 at Robert Morris* 13-12 4/30 Delaware% 9-7 5/3 at #11 Drexel& 10-9 5/11 at #4 Johns Hopkins (NCAA1) 4-10 *CAA game %CAA Semifinals &CAA Championship NCAA1-Opening Round at Johns Hopkins
2010
Coach: Seth Tierney Record: 9-5, 2-3 (4th ranked
2012
Coach: Seth Tierney Record: 6-8, 2-4
2014
Coach: Seth Tierney Record: 11-5, 4-1
9-11 L 2/18 Sacred Heart 11-9 W 2/15 Marquette 2/22 at Princeton 10-12 L 2/25 at Princeton 6-12 L L L 2/27 at #9 Princeton 14-17 9-7 W 9-10 L(3OT) 2/25 #17 Fairfield 15-12 W 2/28 #20 Fairfield W 3/6 #19 Brown 3/1 Georgetown 9-8 W (OT) 3/3 at Harvard 7-6 W W W 3/13 #7 Johns Hopkins 14-6 7-5 W 5-6 L(OT) 3/8 Ohio State 14-6 W 3/10 #7 Notre Dame L 3/20 Sacred Heart* 11-9 W 3/17 #20 Delaware* 13-5 W 3/15 Delaware* 3/23 at St. John’s 13-4 W W 10-11 L (OT) 14-10 W 3/18 at St. John’s L 3/20 St. John’s L 3/27 at #18 Massachusetts*9-11 11-9 W 3/24 at Drexel* 5-6 L 3/22 at #20 Drexel* 3/30 Army 17-2 W L 9-7 W 3/31 Towson* 9-10 L(2OT) 3/29 Towson* 4/3 at #11 Drexel* 11-13 L W 7-6 W 9-5 W 4/5 Siena 18-2 W 4/3 Dartmouth W 4/6 Manhattan 4/8 Marist 15-10 W 4/7 St. Joseph’s* 13-9 W 12-11 W W 4/10 Delaware* + 10-9 W (OT) L 4/12 #6 Cornell 10-11 L(OT) 4/14 #8 North Carolina+ 9-12 L 4/17 at Penn State* W 4/21 at #1 Massachusetts*13-14 L 4/19 at Massachusetts* 11-6 4/24 Jacksonville 14-10 W W 7-8 L 4/28 at #14 Penn State* 8-9 L(2OT) 4/26 at Penn State 5/1 #11 Towson* 12-10 W W 4/30 Delaware # 8-6 W *Colonial Athletic Association game 5/15 at #3 Maryland W 5/3 #16 Drexel ## 10-11 L (3OT) (NCAA1) 8-11 L +ESPNU Warrior Classic at Charlotte, W NC *Colonial Athletic Association game *Colonial Athletic Association game L #CAA Tournament game # CAA Semifinals NCAA1-Opening round at Maryland ## CAA Championship
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
L A C R O S S E
2011
M E N ’ S
Coach: Seth Tierney Coach: Seth Tierney Record: 11-4, 6-0 Record: 6-8, 3-3 2/24 #9 Massachusetts 8-6 W (10th ranked) 3/3 at Brown 6-7 L
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2015 MEDIA INFORMATION
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The Hofstra University Office of Athletic Communications welcomes the members of the media covering the 2015 Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse team. If we can be of any assistance to you throughout the year, please do not hesitate to contact us. We hope the following items will help you during your visits to Hofstra University. Enjoy the season. Stephen Gorchov Associate Director of Athletics for Communications
Press Box: The James M. Shuart Stadium press box, located on the fourth floor of the Shuart Stadium Building, is intended for working media and scouts. All media members, including radio and television stations, will be seated on the fourth floor while video and television camera locations are on the roof. All press box guests must have a pass, issued by the Hofstra Office of Athletic Communications, to gain entrance. Spouses, dates and non-workers are not permitted in the press box.
Jim Sheehan Senior Sports Information Director/Lacrosse Contact Hofstra University Swim Center - Suite 262 Hempstead, NY 11549
Credentials: All members of the press should contact the Office of Athletic Communications at least 48 hours before each game for press box space and credentials. Press passes will be left at the media entrance (Gate A) on the west side of the stadium on Meadowbrook Place.
(516) 463-6764 - Office (516) 523-6692 - Cell (516) 463-5033 - Fax (516) 463-5274 - Shuart Stadium Press Box Phone
Press Parking: Media parking passes should be requested at the same time press box/sideline passes are requested. The Reserved-Media parking lot is located across the street from the Stadium Building, which houses the press box, on the corner of Belmont Place and Meadowbrook Place. To enter the lot off of Hempstead Turnpike, go south (turn left if coming from the east) on California Avenue. Go 20 yards on California Avenue to Belmont Place and turn left. Go down the block to the last lot on the left, which is on the corner of Meadowbrook Place. Parking is limited and on a firstcome, first-serve basis in the Reserved-Media lot. Once that lot is filled, media will be directed to the general public parking areas around Shuart Stadium.
Len Skoros Director of Athletic Publications Brian Bohl Senior Assistant Director of Athletic Communications Communications About Your Host: Jim Sheehan is in his 35th year in the sports public relations profession Stephen and in his 27th year Gorchov at Hofstra University. Associate Director Sheehan came to of Athletics for Hofstra in 1988 after Communications serving as assistant Communications commissioner of the I-AA Gateway Collegiate Athletic Conference in St. Louis, Missouri, from Len 1985 through 1988. Skoros Prior to his Gateway Director of stint, he served Athletic as coordinator of Publications media relations for the Houston Gamblers of the United States Football League in 1984-85. Sheehan has also served as director of sports information at the University of Tampa from 1982 through 1984; assistant to the commissioner/information director of the Sunshine State Conference from 1980 through 1984 and director of sports information at his alma mater, Biscayne College, in 1981-82. Jim and his wife, Maureen, have a daughter, Jillian (22). The Sheehan family resides in Middle Village, New York.
Jim Sheehan Senior Sports Information Director/ Lacrosse Contact
Brian Bohl Senior Assistant Director of Athletic Communications Communications
Photographers: Photographers who intend to shoot from the field should request a sideline photo pass. Only press and staff photographers will be allowed on the sidelines. All members of the press photo corps are reminded to stay out of the bench areas and stand five yards behind the sideline during the course of the game. Photo sideline passes should always be visible when on the field. Freelance photographers are not allowed on the James M. Shuart Stadium field.
Game Services: Members of the media are asked to pick up their game information packets consisting of media guides, programs, releases and notes on the tables behind the first row of press seating. A quickie statistics sheet will be distributed at halftime. In-game stats can be accessed on your laptop at Hofstrastats.com. Complete game statistical books will be available in the press box and in the interview room (theater) 20 minutes after each game.
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Player Interviews: All requests for player interviews during the week should be made at least one day in advance with the Office of Athletic Communications. If you are requesting a phone interview, we will either put you through to the player requested or have the player return your call at a mutually convenient time. Player home phone numbers will not be distributed. In-person interviews may be conducted in a number of locations in and around Margiotta Hall. However, interviews may not be conducted in the locker room or the athletic training room.
L A C R O S S E
Postgame Interviews: Hofstra players and coaches will be available for postgame interviews in the Hofstra Theater on the lower level of Margiotta Hall. Media with credentials should enter Margiotta Hall at the north side door facing the field and take the elevator down. Please contact the visiting publicist concerning the visiting team’s post-game policy in their locker room on the east side of Shuart Stadium.
M E N ’ S
Radio: The Hofstra Office of Athletic Communications will provide a touchtone digital phone line for the opponent’s commercial and student radio stations. Visiting teams will need to give the Athletic Communications Office two weeks notice of their intention to broadcast. All calls must be made collect or direct dial from the radio station to James M. Shuart Stadium.
Hofstra Lacrosse on the Web: Visit GoHofstra.com for the latest information on Hofstra Men’s Lacrosse or any of the University’s 17 athletic teams.
H O F S T R A
Telephones: Hofstra University provides several telephone lines for use by the media in the press box. Please indicate your telephone needs when you request your credentials.
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2015 MEDIA OUTLETS
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WPIX-TV 11
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEWS 12 LONG ISLAND
NEWSDAY
WLNY-TV 10/55 524 West 57th Street New York, NY 10019 (800) 242-6397- Office (212) 975-9387 - Fax
Hofstra University Herbert Hall Hempstead, NY 11549 (516) 463-5001 - Office (516) 463-5668 - Fax
NEW YORK TIMES
MSG NETWORK
WCBS-AM 880
2 Penn Plaza New York, NY 10001 (212) 465-5955 - Office (212) 465-5944 - Fax
345 Hudson Street New York, NY 10014 (212) 314-9200 - Office (212) 975-5539 - Fax
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
SPORTSNET NY
WINS-AM 1010
110 West 51st Street New York, NY 10020 (212) 485-4900 - Office (212) 485-4975 - Fax
345 Hudson Street New York, NY 10014 (212) 315-7090 - Office (212) 489-7034 - Fax
WCBS-TV 2
ESPN RADIO 98.7 FM
524 West 57th Street New York, NY 10019 (212) 975-1741 - Office (212) 975-9387 - Fax
2 Penn Plaza New York, NY 10121 (212) 613-3800 - Office (212) 613-3861 - Fax
WNBC-TV 4
WFAN RADIO 660 AM/101.9 FM
450 West 33rd Street New York, NY 10001 (212) 621-1630 - Office (212) 621-1639 - Fax
235 Pinelawn Road Melville, NY 11747 (631) 843-2820 - Office (631) 454-6892 - Fax
620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018 (212) 556-7384 - Office (646) 428-6147 - Fax
4 New York Plaza New York, NY 10004 (212) 210-1692 - Office (212) 643-7845 - Fax
NEW YORK POST
1211 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10036 (212) 930-8700 - Office (212) 930-8727 - Fax
NEW YORK 1 NEWS 75 Ninth Avenue New York, NY 10011 (212) 379-3311 - Office (212) 379-3575 - Fax
LONG ISLAND HERALD
2 Endo Boulevard Garden City, NY 11553 (516) 569-4000 - Office (516) 469-4942 - Fax
HOFSTRA CHRONICLE
Mack Student Center Hempstead, NY 11550 (516) 463-6965 - Office (516) 463-6977 - Fax
One Media Crossways Woodbury, NY 11797 (516) 393-3740 - Office (516) 393-1269 - Fax
30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10020 (212) 664-5313 - Office (212) 664-2994 - Fax
WNYW-TV 5
220 East 42nd Street New York, NY 10017 (212) 210-2513 - Office (212) 210-2591 - Fax
WRHU-FM 88.7
345 Hudson Street New York, NY 10014 (212) 314-9200 - Office (646) 792-4152 - Fax
205 East 67th Street, New York, NY 10021 (212) 452-3786 - Office (212) 452-5517 - Fax
WABC-TV 7
7 Lincoln Square New York, NY 10023 (212) 456-3125 - Office (212) 456-2930 - Fax
WWOR-TV 9
9 Broadcast Plaza Secaucus, NJ 07094 (201) 330-2245 - Office (201) 330-3844 - Fax
www. G oHof str a . co m
Campus Map
CAMPUS MAP
N E
W S
Map Legend Adams Hall.....................................................25 Adams Playhouse..........................................12 Admission Center/Bernon Hall ................27 Axinn Hall (Law)...........................................66 Axinn Library ...................................................3 Barnard Hall ..................................................10 Baseball Field................................................72 Berliner Hall ...................................................61 Bird Sanctuary ..............................................76 Breslin Hall.....................................................23 Brower Hall......................................................11 Butler Annex .................................................65 Café on the Quad.........................................15 Calkins Hall ....................................................14 Career Center/ M. Robert Lowe Hall................................64 C.V. Starr Hall...............................................60 Davison Hall.....................................................8 Deli, Hofstra ...................................................18 Dempster Hall ..............................................20 Field Hockey Stadium.................................77 Fitness Center ..............................................47
Gittleson Hall................................................63 Hagedorn Hall ..............................................55 Hauser Hall ......................................................2 Health and Wellness Center ....................42 Heger Hall........................................................4 Hofstra Dome ...............................................48 Hofstra Hall......................................................7 Hofstra USA .................................................40 Human Resources Center..........................52 Kushner Hall ..................................................22 Law, School of................................................21 Library Technical Services and Resource Center .................................3 Lowe Hall..........................................................9 Margiotta Hall ..............................................57 Mason Hall/Gallon Wing..............................5 McEwen Hall...................................................17 Memorial Hall...................................................1 Monroe Lecture Center .............................62 New Academic Building .............................73 Pedestrian Bridges...............................69, 70 Phillips Hall ......................................................6
H o f str a U ni vers i t y
Physical Education Building/Swim Center....49 Physical Plant................................................59 Public Safety and Information Center, David S. Mack ..........................................54 Republic Hall .................................................42 Roosevelt Hall................................................19 Saltzman Community Services Center ........................................28 School of Medicine. ....................................50 Shapiro Alumni House ................................58 Soccer Field....................................................71 Softball Field.................................................75 Spiegel Theater.............................................13 Sports and Exhibition Complex, David S. Mack.............................................51 Stadium, James M. Shuart ........................56 Student Center, Sondra and David S. Mack.............................................31 Unispan ..........................................................30 University Club/Mack Hall ........................53 University College Hall/Skodnek Business Development Center...............................43
Weed Hall.......................................................26 Weller Hall ......................................................16 West Library Wing.......................................29
Residence Halls Alliance Hall..................................................34 Bill of Rights Hall .........................................35 Colonial Square ...........................................46 Constitution Hall..........................................36 Enterprise Hall..............................................39 Estabrook Hall ..............................................37 Graduate Residence ...................................74 Liberty Hall.....................................................41 Nassau Hall ...................................................44 Republic Hall .................................................42 Suffolk Hall....................................................45 Stuyvesant Hall.............................................32 The Netherlands ..........................................33 Vander Poel Hall ..........................................38
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2015 Hofstra University Men’s Lacrosse Schedule FEBRUARY
14 20 24 28
SAT. Fri. TUE. Sat.
MARQUETTE at Princeton MANHATTAN at Georgetown
12 P.M. 3 p.m. 4 P.M. 12 p.m.
MARCH 7 14 17 21 28
Sat. SAT. Tue. SAT. Sat.
at Ohio State PROVIDENCE St. John’s MASSACHUSETTS* at Delaware*
1 p.m. 12 P.M. 7 p.m. 12 P.M. 1 p.m.
29 Wed.
APRIL SAT. TUE. Sat. Sat. Fri.
DREXEL* MARIST at Cornell at Towson* at Fairfield*
1 P.M. 7 P.M. 12 p.m. 12 p.m. 7 p.m.
TBA
MAY 2 Sat. Colonial Athletic Association Championship Game (at highest seed) 9-10 Sat.-Sun. NCAA Championship First Round 16-17 Sat.-Sun. NCAA Championship-Quarterfinals 23 Sat. NCAA Championship-Semifinals 25
4 7 11 18 24
Colonial Athletic Association Semifinals (at higher seed)
Mon.
NCAA Championship-Finals
*Colonial Athletic Association Game Home games in BOLD. Dates and times subject to change.
TBA
TBA TBA TBA TBA
John Reicherter
Jack Moorehead Steve Romano