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WE ARE
NEW HAMPSHIRE Nestled in New Hampshire’s seacoast region, the UNH campus offers a pleasing mix of classic and modern buldings and college greens that gradually gives way to 2,600 acres of woods, fields, and farms.
The University prides itself as being a Top-10 entrepreneurial campus (Forbes.com and The Princeton Review). The Whittemore School of Business and Economics was recently selected second among all business schools in a nationwide pool of business school deans.
Students who choose UNH often do so because of the seemingly endless options offered through an accessible system of schools and colleges. UNH offers literally thousands of courses in more than 100 majors. UNH is one of the leading research schools on the East coast. A land-, sea- and space grant university, our University engages under graduates in the intellectual excitement of research.
The Wildcat sculpture, commissioned by the UNH alumni association, was created by Matthew Grey Palmer and is displayed on Main Street in front of the Whittemore Center and Memorial Field.
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WELCOME TO
WILDCAT COUNTRY
UNH Basketball Quick Facts/Directions.................................. 6 Media Information.......................................................................... 7
The University of New Hampshire
University Profile..........................................................................8-9 Administration ........................................................................10-12 Support Staff............................................................................13-14
Coaching Staff
Head Coach Bill Herrion.......................................................16-17 Assistant Coaches...................................................................18-19 Associate Head Coach Ken Dempsey..............................18 Assistant Coach Chris Mohr.................................................18 Assistant Coach Marc Kuntz................................................19 Director of Basketball Operations Scott Weitzell.........20 Video Coordinator/Player Dev. Ryan Herrion................20
Season Outlook
2013-14 Roster...............................................................................22 2013-14 Outlook.....................................................................23-24
Players
Chris Pelcher..............................................................................26 Jordon Bronner.........................................................................27 Patrick Konan............................................................................28 Scott Morris................................................................................29 Tommy McDonnell..................................................................30 Logan Mortenson....................................................................31 Frank Okeke...............................................................................32 Joe Bramanti..............................................................................33 Jacoby Armstrong...................................................................33 Daniel Dion................................................................................34 John Edwards............................................................................35 Williams Gabriel.......................................................................35 Jaleen Smith..............................................................................35 Matt Miller..................................................................................36
America East, 2012-13 Season Review, History, & Records America East 2012-13 Review..................................................38 America East Profile.....................................................................39 2012-13 Final Statistics...............................................................40 Single Game Records/All-Time Record vs. Opponents..........41 Individual Season Records.........................................................42 Individual Career Records....................................................43-44 Top Five Team Single-Season Efforts ....................................45 Year-by-Year Records...................................................................46 Year-by-Year Results...............................................................47-50 Alumni Roster...........................................................................51-52 Wildcat Honor Roll........................................................................53
Back Cover/2013-14 Schedule
Credits: The 2013-14 University of New Hampshire Men’s Basketball Media Guide was written, edited and designed by the UNH Athletic Media Relations Office. An iMac using Adobe InDesign CS2 and Adobe Photoshop CS2 was used for the design and layout. Editor: Connor Meiselman Cover Designs: Connor Meiselman Action Photography: Gil Talbot, Greg Greene, Michelle Bronner Headshot Photos: Gil Talbot (Athletic Department Photographer) Region Photography: Carrie Doyle, the White Mountains Attractions Association and NHDTTD/Dave Shafer Select Archives Photos: Tom Maguire and Bob Homer
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WELCOME
TO
WILDCAT C OUNTRY Scott Morris was named to the 2012-13 America East All-Academic Team. Morris was also tabbed for the National Association of Basketball Coaches Association Honor Court last year.
Head coach Bill Herrion is the all-time winningest coach in the America East tournament with 21 wins. He ranks first among active coaches with 155 career conference wins, and is second all-time as he needs just two victories for most in league history.
UNH ranked 1st nationally in 3-point defense last season, holding opponents to 28.1 percent shooting from deep, and ranked in the 70th percentile in scoring defense, limiting foes to 62.7 points per game.
Head coach Bill Herrion enters the 2013-14 season ranked 70th among active head coaches with 329 career victories, and is the only coach in America East history to earn four Coach of the Year awards.
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STATE-OF-THE-ART S E I IT
L I C A F
In 1995, construction of the $27 million recreation and sport complex reached completion. The Whittemore Center includes a state-of-the-art 6,500 to 7,500 seat arena for hockey, concerts and convocations, as well a new three-level recreation sports facility.
Lundholm Gymnasium, the home to UNH basketball, has received a complete facelift in recent years. Since 2001, the gym floor has been replaced and new lighting and sound systems were installed. Most recently, new scoreboards were installed and the bleachers were replaced in the summer of 2007.
In 2008, the men’s basketball locker room underwent a renovation. The locker room features 16 wooden lockers, a large-screen television and a lounge area.
The Jerry Azumah Performance Center opened its doors in the summer of 2003 to UNH student-athletes. A generous donation by Azumah, a former cornerback with the Chicago Bears and the 1999 recipient of the Walter Payton Award, allowed for a new state-of-the-art strength and conditioning center.
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School University of New Hampshire Location Durham, NH 03824 Enrollment 12,811 President Dr. Mark Huddleston Athletic Director Marty Scarano Nickname Wildcats Colors Blue and White Conference America East First Season 1903 Arena Lundholm Gymnasium Capacity 3,000 Affiliation America East Head coach Bill Herrion Alma Mater Merrimack College (1981)
DIRECTIONS TO LUNDHOLM GYMNASIUM
Career Record/Years 329-313/22 Years Record at School/Years 92-144/Eight Years America East Record/Years 259-215/16 years
WWW.UNHWILDCATS.COM .
Video highlights Game notes Rosters Schedules Statistics Scores Live Stats Merchandise Auctions
From the South: Take 95 North to 84 East. Follow 84 East through Connecticut to the Massachusetts Turnpike (Route 90). Stay on the Mass Pike for 10 miles before taking the exit for Auburn/Worcester and 290 East. Proceed east on 290 until it ends and merges with 495 North -- stay in the left lanes to exit to 495 North. Continue on 495 North -- it will end and merge with 95 North. Proceed on 95 North into New Hampshire and continue on to the toll booth. From the toll, go approximately seven miles and look for signs that read “NH Lakes and White Mountains,” and “Dover/Concord.” Exit to the left for the Spaulding Turnpike (Route 4 West). Go about four miles and take the last exit before the toll (Exit 6W) for Concord and Durham. At this point, you are still on Route 4 West. Go approximately four miles and continue straight through a traffic light (Madbury Road), and proceed another 1 1/2 miles to the Route 155A exit, marked University of New Hampshire.” Take a left turn off the ramp and proceed one mile to Field House, which is on the right at the top of the hill. From Maine: Follow 95 South to Spaulding Turnpike (Route 4 West) and continue as above. From the West (Vermont, Concord): Take 89 South to 93 North. Follow 93 North, approximately four miles to 393 East, which will merge with Route 4 East. Follow Route 4 to Route 155A exit for “University of New Hampshire.” Make a right off the ramp and proceed as above. From the West (Manchester, Nashua): Take 93 North to Route 101 East. Follow 101 to Exit 7 (Route 125). Exit and take a left onto 125 and follow straight to Lee Traffic Circle. First right at circle is Route 4 East. Continue as above. For parking: From ramp off of Route 4, proceed 3/4 mile, make a left turn opposite tennis courts -- Green sign “Field House Parking” -- follow road and turn right at fork. Parking Lot “A” is one-quarter mile ahead on the left. Department of Intercollegiate Athletics Field House 145 Main St. Durham, New Hampshire 03824
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The University of New Hampshire Office of Athletic Communications welcomes members of the media covering Wildcat men’s basketball during the 2013-14 season. 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 UNH and while covering the Wildcats on the road.
INTERVIEWS Post-game interviews will take place in the conference room located just outside of the Lundholm Gymnasium. For non-game day interviews, please make request through the communications office by contacting Alex Comeau.
WILDCATS ON THE RADIO
In its 14th year of covering University of New Hampshire sporting events, the Wildcat Sports Network will once again broadcast Wildcat men’s basketball games during the regular season and through the playoffs. The Wildcat Network is scheduled to cover selected regular season games and the America East playoffs. Veteran play-by-play announcer Jim Jeannotte, who has been broadcasting Wildcat Athletics since 1973, will continue to anchor men’s basketball coverage. He’ll be joined courtside for color-commentary by Mike Murphy. Murphy also works as the Associate Director of Athletic Media & Public Relations for the University of New Hampshire. The flagship stations will be WGIR 610 AM in Manchester, The Sports Animal 930 AM in Rochester and The Wave 96.7 FM in Portsmouth. Also picking up the Wildcat Sports Network signal will be WNTK 99.7 FM in New London. For the complete broadcast schedule go to www. unhwildcats.com/TVradio, or check out the “On the Air” page on the homepage of the website.
Doug Poole
Mike Murphy
doug.poole@unh.edu
mike.murphy@unh.edu
Jared Fieldsend
jared.fieldsend@unh.edu
Jon Luszcz
Alex Comeau
jon.luszcz@unh.edu
alex.comeau@unh.edu
Connor Meiselman
connor.meiselman@unh.edu
CREDENTIALS
Please make all requests for game passes in advance with the Athletic Communications Office. All credentials not picked up at the Media and Public Relations Office or mailed may be picked up at Will Call prior to the game.
BROADCAST ACCOMODATIONS
Visiting radio phone lines at Lundholm Gymnasium will be provided by the Athletic Communications at no cost. Space is available for up to two visiting radio stations. Stations intending to broadcast a game should notify the Athletic Communications Office as far in advance of the contest as possible.
Associated Press P.O. Box 1296 Concord, NH 03301 (603) 224-3327 (603) 226-0883 FAX
Foster’s Daily Democrat 333 Central Ave. Dover, NH 03820 (603) 742-4455 (603) 749-7079 FAX
Manchester Union Leader P.O. Box 9555 Manchester, NH 03105 (603) 668-4321 (603) 668-0382 FAX
Boston Globe 135 Morrissey Blvd. Boston, MA 02107 (617) 929-2860 (617) 929-2872 FAX
Keene Sentinel 60 West St. Keene, NH 03431 (603) 352-1234 (603) 352-0437 FAX
Nashua Telegraph P.O. Box 1008 Nashua, NH 03061 (603) 594-6467 (603) 882-2681 FAX
Boston Herald One Herald Square Boston, MA 02106 (617) 462-3005 (617) 542-1314 FAX
Laconia Citizen 171 Fair St. Laconia, NH 03246 (603) 524-3800 (603) 527-3593 FAX
Concord Monitor P.O. Box 1177 Concord, NH 03302-1177 (603) 224-5301 (603) 224-8120 FAX
Lawrence Eagle Tribune 100 Turnpike St. North Andover, MA 01845 (508) 685-1000 (508) 687-6045 FAX
The New Hampshire Memorial Union Building Durham, NH 03824 Sports Editor (603) 862-1490 (603) 862-3952 FAX Portsmouth Herald 111 Maplewood Ave. Portsmouth, NH 03801 (603) 463-1800 (603) 433-5760 FAX
Radio & Television
Newspapers/Wire Services
NEW HAMPSHIRE PRIMARY BASKETBALL MEDIA WERZ-FM 11 Downing Ct. Exeter, N.H. 03833 (603) 772-4757 (603) 772-8464 FAX WHEB-FM P.O. BOX 120 Portsmouth, NH 03802 (603) 463-7300 or 431-ROCK (603) 430-9415 FAX WTPL-FM P.O. Box 875 Concord, NH 03301 (603) 225-5521 (603) 224-6404 FAX
WUNH-FM Memorial Union Building Durham, NH 03824 (603) 862-2541 WMUR-TV (ABC, Channel 9) P.O. Box 9 Manchester, NH 03015 (603) 641-9007 (603) 641-9005 FAX NHPTV (Channel 11) 268 Mast Rd. Durham, N.H. 03824 (603) 868-4320 (603) 868-7552 FAX
WTSN-AM 101 Back Road Dover, NH 03820 (603) 742-1270 (603) 742-0448 FAX
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The University of New Hampshire was originally founded as a land-grant college whose mission was to shape and educate citizenry among the state’s farmers, business people and engineers. Today, the University is a land-, sea-, and space-grant university serving a growing undergraduate student body of about 12,565 and a graduate population of 2,196 in addition to 596 full-time faculty members, 86% of which have earned their doctorate degree. The University has grown into a top public research university occupying 2,600 acres of classic living and learning space, while still maintaining the look and feel of a New England liberal arts college with a faculty dedicated to teaching. UNH’s student to faculty ratio registers at 20:1 with 85% of its classes having 50 students or less.
HISTORY
As one of the most prestigious institutions in the Northeast, the University of New Hampshire has always been recognized as a leader in education and research, spanning all fields of study and uniting them through interdisciplinary programs, labs, farms, theatres, research centers, and libraries. Founded in 1866 as the New Hampshire College of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts, UNH was among the early state institutions of higher education whose formation was made possible by federal government land grants. The purpose for the grants was to establish colleges that would serve the sons MILLS HALL and daughters of farming and laboring families. New Hampshire College was originally situated in Hanover, N.H. Here it was in connection with Dartmouth College before moving to Durham in 1893 after Benjamin Thompson bequeathed land and money to further the development of the college. The state legislature then granted its new charter as the University of New Hampshire in 1923. The University hosts 733 international students from more than 45 countries and boasts a population of students from all 50 states. Along with over 100 majors offered, UNH encompasses seven schools and colleges that undergraduates can choose from: the College of Liberal Arts, College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, School of Health and Human Services, College of Life Sciences and Agricultures, Whittemore School of Business and Economics, and the Thompson School of Applied Science. And at the very heart of the University’s undergraduate studies is the General Education Program. The GEP is a core program with a breadth of academic subjects that aims to acquaint the student with some of the major modes of thought necessary to understand oneself, others, society, and the world. Diversity Statement The University prides itself as being a top 10 entrepreneurial campus (Forbes.com and The University seeks excellence through diversity among its administraThe Princeton Review) and is among the top tors, faculty, staff, and students. The 30 universities nationally in science research university prohibits discrimination on the funding from NASA. basis of race, color, religion, sex, age, UNH is home to the NASA-recognized national origin, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, disability, veteran Space Science Center; the Institute for Study status, or marital status. for Earth, Oceans and Space; and the Institute The University of New Hampshire is of Marine Science and Engineering. The EngDIMOND LIBRARY committed to creating a more diverse community, knowing that “inclusion, diversity lish program is staffed by an inspiring faculty and equity are values inextricably linked to of winners of the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, the MacArthur Fellowship, the Edgar Allen Poe Award our mission of educational excellence.” This and the Young Poets Award. In addition, the Whittemore School of Business and Economics, established in 1962, diversity strengthens our ability to reach was recently selected second among all business schools in a nationwide pool of business school deans. UNH also our individual and collective potential and to provide better services and care for all graduates students who attend top-notch graduate schools, including Law School at Harvard and Cornell, Engineerfaculty, staff, and students. ing at Stanford, and Medical School at Dartmouth, Johns Hopkins, and Harvard.
University of New Hampshire Athletic Department Mission Statement The mission of the intercollegiate athletics program at the University of New Hampshire is to provide student-athletes a collegiate experience that is enriched by their participation in programs which are competitive at the NCAA Division I level both regionally and nationally. The intercollegiate athletics program also plays an important role by enhancing the quality of life for the University and statewide community by being a source of pride and identification with the University while always maintaining high standards of academic scholarship and integrity. To fulfill its mission, the intercollegiate program must: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
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Provide student-athletes every opportunity to meet academic and athletic demands with the goal of graduating every student-athlete. Provide resources necessary to field competitive teams with league affiliations, and to gain regional and national recognition. Provide equitable opportunities for all intercollegiate athletics by the active recruitment of minority athletes, and provide equitable opportunities for all women student-athletes commensurate with that of their male counterparts. Provide excellent facilities for all athletes to train, practice and play. Conduct all operations within state and federal law, University policies, rules of the NCAA, and athletics conferences in which the University competes.
CAMPUS In recent years, several of the athletic facilities have received major upgrades and improvements. In September of 2001, the University completed a new $2.15 million track and field facility. The Jerry Azumah Performance Center, a strength and conditioning facility located in the UNH Field House, was dedicated on July 8, 2003. Renovations to the Center included the addition of 5,000 pounds of Olympic weights, 7,000 pounds of dumbbells, 14 Powerlift platform stations, 12 Hammer strength machines and an additional 15,000 pounds of weights. UNH athletics also added two $1.5 million outdoor artificial fields, Memorial Field and Bremner Field. Lundholm Gymnasium has received some major overhauls, including a new playing surface, new lights, new sound system, new bleacher system, new backboards and new scoreboards. The Paul Sweet Oval was also renovated to include new surfaces, lighting, painting, infrastructure upgrades and the replacement of windows that existed in the original architecture. In the 2012 offseason, Cowell Stadium was fitted with a brand new scoreboard while the football locker rooms were renovated as well. In the locker rooms, a new lighting system was installed while a 55-inch flat-screen TV and Fathead-designed murals featuring former players and UNH historical were added to the walls. A memorial of Todd Walker was also added in HOLLOWAY COMMONS honor of the former Wildcat wide receiver. Walker suffered an untimely and heroic death March 18, 2011, in Boulder, Colo., when he stopped an attempted robbery and saved the life of a woman he was walking home. In November of 1995, construction of the $27 million Recreation and Sport Complex reached completion. The Whittemore Center includes a state-of-the-art 6,500 to 7,500 seat arena for hockey, concerts and convocations, as well as a new three-level recreational sports facility within the structure that had housed the old Snively Arena. In addition to the incredible improvements of its athletic facilities, the University has upgraded and renovated a large part of its academic campus as well. The latest addition to the expanding campus is the Paul College of Business and Economics, a 115,000 square foot academic building located on Garrison Avenue. The building opened in January 2013 and features 16 technology-rich classrooms, totaling 950 new instructional seats. There will also be 25 high-tech groups study rooms along with a two-story “Great Hall” for informal and special events. Outside of the facility, there will be a courtyard for outdoor activities and events. The building will be a LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Gold facility, maintaining the University’s commitment to sustainable programs and facilities. The University broke ground on the project in May 2011. Thompson Hall, one of the standing historical landmarks of the University, has also been beautifully refurbished and restored. The University completed a $52 million renovation of Kingsbury Hall in October of 2007, adding 6,000 square feet of student project space for students in the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, as well as a $4.5 million revamp of Hewitt Hall to expand the School of Health and Human Services. In addition, the 120,000 square foot Biological Sciences Building, Rudman Hall and the Spaulding Life Sciences Renovation project now provide state-of-the-art teaching and researching laboratories. The University also spent $15 million to complete Morse Hall, a new science and engineering building as well as $8.2 million to modernize the Memorial Union Building. The revision to the existing student union building consisted of several upgrades including top kitchen and dining facilities, two theaters, student mailboxes, lounges and meeting rooms, as well as additional retail spaces such as the University Bookstore. Additionally, the University completed construction of the new dining facility on Main Street, Holloway Commons, as well as the renovation of the Dimond Library. Combining the atmosphere of a small New England liberal arts college with the resources and opportunities of a major research university, the University of New Hampshire is a place where all students can find or create their own niche and succeed. While the University offers an extremely broad academic base with an inspiring faculty, it also provides students with thousands of opportunities to get involved, either through athletics, campus recreation, student life, or research. The University is a dynamic community that not only challenges its members academically but also expands their understanding and appreciation of cultural diversity and leads to incredible growth as students, faculty, staff, and as a community
Jerry Azumah ‘99 Former NFL Pro Bowler, Chicago Bears Susan Blanchard Ryan ’89 Star of movie “Open Water” Andy Brickley ’82 Former NHL Player & Current Analyst, Boston Bruins (NESN) Karyn Bye ’94 1998 Olympic Gold, Ice Hockey Marcy Carsey ’66 Producer, Cosby Show & That 70’s Show
DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI Carlton Fisk ‘69 Hall of Fame Baseball Player Corey Graham ’07 NFL Player, Chicago Bears John Irving ’65 Author, “Cider House Rules” Natalie Jacobson ‘65 Former News Anchor, WCVB-Boston
Mike Minnigan ’78 Vice President, AOL Mark Mowers, ‘98 Former NHL Player, Boston Bruins Ron Noble ’79 Secretary General, Interpol Mike O’Malley ’92 Actor, “Glee”
Jason Krog, ‘99 AHL Player, Manitoba Moose
Peter Paul ’67 Owner, Paul Financial & Peter Paul Wines
Ty Conklin ’01 NHL Player, Detroit Red Wings
Kathryn Kross ’82 Producer, “ABC Nightline”
Robert Towse ’63 Senior Partner, Morgan Stanley
Gary DeStefano ’78 President, Nike Team Sports
Richard Linnehan ’80 NASA Astronaut
Jack Edwards ’79 Announcer, Boston Bruins (NESN)
Jackie MacMullan ’82 Journalist, ESPN & ESPN.com
Barbara Walsh ’81 Pulitzer-prize winner, Portland Press Herald
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The 2013-14 academic year will mark the 14th year Marty Scarano will serve as the Director of Athletics at the University of New Hampshire. During his tenure, Scarano has heightened national exposure for UNH athletics with academics, facility renovations and programmatic advancement being top priorities. His many accomplishments have ¬played a key role in UNH being named one of the Top 20 Athletic Departments in the Country in U.S. News and World Report college athletics rankings. The Graduation Success Rate (GSR) of UNH athletes during the 2012-13 academic year was 87 percent, amongst 20 varsity sports. Additionally, the NCAA honored five Wildcat teams that scored a perfect Academic Progress Rate (APR) of 1,000. The UNH teams include: men’s skiing, women’s cross country, women’s indoor track & field, women’s outdoor track & field and gymnastics. Men’ soccer and women’s lacrosse were ranked at the top in America East with scores of 985 and 991 respectively. The football team and men’s ice hockey team were runner’s up in their respective conferences, registering scores of 991 and 978. Women’s swimming & diving posted the second highest score amongst all New Hampshire sports with a 994 mark. In the America East Academic Cup, UNH finished second for the third time in the last four years, achieving a 3.18 cumulative grade-point average. It is UNH’s highest GPA in the 18-year history of the award. New Hampshire led all institutions with 108 student-athletes on the 2012 America East Fall Academic Honor Roll while earning the highest percentage of studentathletes named to the 2012-13 America East Winter/Spring Academic Honor Roll. New Hampshire had 155 honorees, which represented 72 percent of the student-athletes who competed in those seasons an improvement of 10 percent from the previous year. Scarano has helped elevate moving UNH athletics into the collegiate national arena. To accomplish that goal, the University has taken on the task of hosting major NCAA championships. The Wildcat athletic department has played host to highly successful NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey Northeast Regionals at the Verizon Wireless Arena (Manchester, N.H.) in 2004, 2007, 2009, 2011 and 2013. UNH was host of the NCAA Women’s Ice Hockey Frozen Four at the Whittemore Center in 2002 and 2005. In addition, UNH successfully hosted the 2007 NCAA Skiing Championships in Washington Valley as well as the 2005 NCAA Women’s Gymnastics Northeast Regional at the Whittemore Center Arena. The women’s hockey team also played in the first outdoor game in the history of NCAA women’s hockey in 2010 at the Sun Life Frozen Fenway game and defeated Northeastern while the men’s squad played in the 2012 Sun Life Frozen Fenway game against Maine. Football also competed in Colonial Clash games at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass. in 2010, 2011 and 2012 against UMass. During the Scarano’s tenure, UNH teams have made 44 NCAA post-season appearances and captured 14 conference titles. Gymnastics has participated in 12 NCAA tournaments, leading all programs over that span. Men’s hockey holds a pair of Hockey East titles and has made 11 trips to the NCAA tournament, including Frozen Four appearances in 2002 and 2003. The football program has qualified for the NCAA FCS postseason for a nation leading nine consecutive seasons and advanced to the quarterfinals six times during the streak. Women’s ice hockey has seen NCAA action five times with two Frozen Four appearances. The squad also captured consecutive Hockey East Championships from 2006-09. The field hockey team captured its second ever America East crown in 2011 en route to its second national tournament appearance under Scarano’s tutelage. Volleyball has made a pair of NCAA appearances after capturing back-to-back conference titles in 2002 and 2003. Women’s lacrosse has too earned a pair of NCAA berths (2004, 2008), one coming after an America East championship victory in 2004. Additionally, 24 head or assistant coaches have won 65 “Coach of the Year” awards during Scarano’s tenure, ranging from conference coach of the year to New England and Northeast Regional Coach of the Year, honors. Furthermore, head football coach Sean McDonnell garnered the Eddie Robinson National Coach of the Year by The Sports Network in 2005 after a stellar 11-2 campaign. There has been over $10 million in capital improvements since Scarano’s hiring in the summer of 2000. Recently, the athletic training room has been completely renovated over the winter break of the 2012-13 academic year. With a redesigned
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layout, energy efficient lighting and state-of-the art equipment, the athletic training room is larger, more comfortable, enjoyable and efficient for student-athletes and staff. Last year, a new scoreboard was put in at Cowell Stadium while the football locker room received a facelift as part the most recent renovation phase. Changes to the locker room included a new lighting system while a 55-inch flat-screen TV and Fathead-designed murals featuring former players and UNH historical images were added to the walls. A memorial of Todd Walker was also added in honor of the former Wildcat wide receiver who suffered an untimely and heroic death in March of 2011. In the summer of 2007, the Cowell Stadium grass field was replaced with a $1 million Field Turf synthetic surface. As part of a $650,000 renovation project in the summer of 2011, the field turf at Bremner Field was replaced with a new state-of-the-art surface used by many varsity teams and for student recreational activities. In the fall of 2008, the Paul Sweet Oval renovation was completed to include new surfaces, lighting, painting, infrastructure upgrades and the replacement of windows that existed in the original architecture. The total cost of the project exceeded $500,000. Additionally in 2007, a complete renovation of Lundholm Gymnasium was undertaken. The $600,000 overhaul included a new state-ofthe-art bleacher system, new scoreboards, competition baskets and other aesthetic enhancements. In 2007, Scarano was also awarded the National Association of College Directors of Athletics (NACDA) AD of the Year for the FCS. Additionally, Scarano was also named the All-American Football Foundation Athletic Director of the Year for FCS football in the Northeast region. Scarano has also been an active member in the leadership of UNH’s three major conferences and was the chair of the executive committees for Atlantic 10 football, Hockey East and America East from 2003 to 2007. He also served as chair of the NCAA Division I Men’s Ice Hockey Committee in 2005-06 and 2006-07 and is currently on the America East Executive Council. Most recently, Scarano was a member of the Hockey East restructuring team that successfully recruited Notre Dame and the University of Connecticut to the conference. Outside of athletics, Scarano is in his 11th year on the Board of Corporators at Canterbury Shaker Village, a non-profit museum located in Canterbury, N.H. Before arriving at the University of New Hampshire, Scarano held the position of Athletics Director at Colorado College from July 1996 through June 2000. During his tenure, Colorado College was ranked among the top 20 Division III programs in the Sears Cup national standings and produced several All-Americans, all-academic award winners and NCAA post-graduate scholarship recipients. Prior to his stay in Colorado Springs, Scarano worked for 13 years at Colgate University, where he served as assistant director of athletics, director of physical education, associate director, and senior associate director. Scarano, a native of Pittsburgh, Pa., is a 1978 graduate of Penn State University, where he started his athletic career as assistant ticket manager and the athletics events manager from 1980-83. Scarano holds a Master’s Degree in Environmental History from Colgate. He and his wife, Cydney, have three children, Lynden, Kyle, a junior at UNH, and Corey who will be enrolling at UNH as well this fall.
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Mark W. Huddleston was elected the 19th president of the University of New Hampshire in July 2007, bringing three decades of experience in public and private education as a faculty member, dean and senior administrator. At UNH, President Huddleston oversees the implementation of a strategic plan that is transforming the University’s mission as the state’s flagship public research university and one the nation’s few land-, sea- and space-grant universities. Created through a collaboration of faculty, students, staff, alumni and the University’s wider communities, this effort challenges the University to be innovative, entrepreneurial and responsive so that it can remain vital and financially sustainable. The plan continues to guide the University’s diverse work, from its response to a historic cut in state support in 2011 to the creation of groundbreaking new initiatives. Among these are: the integration of UNH and the UNH School of Law (formerly Franklin Pierce Law Center), an expansion of the UNH Manchester campus and the creation of the Emerging Technology Center, the construction of the Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics, UNH’s participation in an agreement to double the number of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) graduates by 2025, and the development of a comprehensive fundraising campaign. President Huddleston has also advocated for a dramatic increase in international engagement. In 2010, UNH launched the state’s only Confucius Institute with a partnership with Chengdu University, entered a partnership with Navitas, an Australian firm that recruits and supports international students, and celebrated the 25th anniversary of the International Affairs Dual Major. In May 2013, President Huddleston’s leadership as a strategic thinker, fiscal steward and collaborative problem-solver was recognized with his appointment to the newly formed Governor’s Commission on State Government Innovation, Efficiency and Transparency. President Huddleston was raised in Syracuse, N.Y., and was the first member of his family to attend college. He earned his bachelor’s degree in political science from the State University of New York-Buffalo, and both a master’s degree and Ph.D. in political science from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He began his academic career at SUNY-Buffalo in 1977 as an assistant professor of political science. In 1980, he joined the faculty of the University of Delaware, where he served 24 years. There, he chaired the Department of Political Science and International Relations and was associate provost for international programs. In 2001, he was named dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, overseeing 45 academic departments and centers, and serving in that capacity until he was named president of Ohio Wesleyan University in 2004. An author of numerous books and articles, he has been a consultant for both the U.S. government and international organizations. He also served as an adviser in Bosnia on rebuilding financial and administrative infrastructures after the Dayton accords. President Huddleston is an incorporator of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation and serves on the board of directors of the New Hampshire Business Committee for the Arts. He and his wife, Emma Bricker, have three children, Andy, Kate and Giles.
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ACADEMICS
Athletic excellence is one-half the formula for success in the collegiate experience for University of New Hampshire basketball players. The primary measure of achievement is the student-athlete’s success in the classroom. For the 1998-99 and 1999-2000 academic years, UNH was awarded the America East Academic Cup for recording the highest GPA in the conference. In both the Fall 2004 and Winter/Spring 2005 semesters, UNH placed the highest number of student-athletes on the America East Honor Roll; the University accomplished the feat again in Fall ‘06, Fall ‘09 and Fall ‘11. New Hampshire also boasts one of the top graduation rates in the country. UNH is dedicated to enhancing the student-athlete’s ability to achieve academic excellence. Realizing the time commitment the student-athletes give to the school, the University administers a comprehensive program of academic support services that is available to all student-athletes. This program includes the monitoring of academic progress and providing tutorial services, as well as interacting with the academic advisors within Joanne Carly Brandon the various colleges. M aldari B arbato Thomas Serving as Student-Athlete Support Coordinator is Assistant Athletic for Academic Support Director Joanne Maldari, a 1990 graduate of Holy Cross who went on to earn her master’s degree in Athletic Counseling at Springfield College. She was recognized for her outstanding efforts at UNH by receiving the University’s 2001 Academic Advising Award. Before coming to Durham, Maldari served athletic counseling internships at Springfield and Central Connecticut State University. Carly Barbato was appointed as the Coordinator of Student-Athlete Academic Support during the winter of 2013. Earning her Bachelor of Science in Biology with a minor of Exercise Science at St. Lawrence University in 2007, she was a four-year letterwinner as a goalkeeper, earning Liberty League Honorable Mention in her final two seasons. Additionally, she was named a co-captain in her senior season. Draper also earned her Master of Arts in Educational Leadership at Loyola University of Maryland in 2009 while working as a graduate assistant coach for the women’s soccer team. At UNH, she will provide comprehensive support services to student-athletes, mentoring, counseling, and proactive monitoring. Furthermore, she will tutor and meet one-on-one with academically “at risk” student-athletes. Draper will serve as a liaison between prospective student-athletes and families during the recruiting process regarding the academic services UNH offers. Before her current position, she served as an assistant coach for women’s soccer team at UNH as well an academic center supervisor and tutor. In the dual role, Barbato’s accolades with the Wildcats include: CoSIDA Capital One All-Academic All America District 1 First Team (2012), America East All-Academic Team (2012), America East Commissioner’s Honor Roll (2010), Defensive Most Valuable Player (2010) and All-Tournament Team at the University of Vermont TD Bank Classic (2010). Furthermore, the women’s soccer team cumulative grade point average never fell below a 3.0 during her tenure as assistant coach. Brandon Thomas was appointed as an academic coordinator during August of 2013. A two-time time graduate from Winthrop University earning a Bachelor’s of Arts in English (2010) and a Master’s of Science in Sport & Fitness Administration (2012). Before coming to New Hampshire, Brandon worked in the athletic depart-
STUDENT-ATHLETE DEVELOPMENT
Cathleen “Cathy” Coakley enters her sixth year as director of Student Athlete Development at the University of New Hampshire. Coakley oversees a comprehensive educational program designed to enhance the personal/ professional development and welfare of UNH student athletes. The many areas of student athlete development include first year (Freshmen, transfer) behavioral education, Sophomore to Senior leadership and life skill development, community service projects and advising SAAC (Student Athlete Advisory Committee), the leadership group comprised of members from all 18 athletic teams. In addition, she has established and continues to expand networks and liaison relationships with other departments, organizations and resources across campus. Coakley has an extensive career in college athletics and higher education. Prior to her return to UNH, she was an instructor of Sport Marketing in the Kinesiology Department at James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA. Her curriculum included personal development, life skills, professional/ career skill inventory and assessment. She coordinated all practicums and internships required of Sport Management majors. While at JMU she served as Assistant Field Hockey Coach (2005- 2007) helping to rebuild the program and guiding the Dukes to a CAA Conference championship and NCAA appearance in 2007. Prior to her tenure at JMU, Coakley was a college basketball coach. She started her collegiate career at UNH as an assistant coach, then moved on to become the Head Coach at Fordham University in New York City.
Cathy Coakley
After spending several years in corporate business, Coakley returned to college basketball as an assistant coach at Northeastern University in Boston. During her years at Northeastern, the Huskies won the America East Conference championship, advancing to the NCAA tournament. Coakley is a UNH graduate, earning her Bachelor’s Degree in Earth Science and her Master’s Degree in Educational Administration.
ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION & SUPPORT STAFF
Dot Sheehan
Steve Metcalf
Heather Barber
MichelleBronner
Sr. Associate Athletic Director for External Relations
Athletics Faculty Representative
Deputy Athletic Director
Associate Athletic Director for Compliance/SWA
Donna Brownell
Carrie Kimball
Amber Lilyestrom
Associate Athletic Sr. Associate Athletic Associate Athletic Director Director for Marketing Director for Finance/ for Operations Director of Central & Communications Administration BSC
Diane Metcalf
Director of Athletics Development
Jean Mitchell
Athletic Facilities/ Housekeeping Manager
Neal Lavoie
Equipment Room Manager
Mike Murphy
Associate Athletic Director for Media & Public Relations
Liz McAllister
Administrative Assistant for Swimming & Diving
Kate McAfee
Assistant Athletic Director for Event Management
Nicole Ayer
Assistant Athletic Director for Ticketing
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SPORTS MEDICINE Jon Dana has been involved with University of New Hampshire athletic program since 1984. He began his career as an assistant athletic trainer and was promoted to men’s head athletic trainer in 1987 and head athletic trainer for the entire program in 1989. In 2001, he was named UNH’s Director of Sports Medicine. In addition to overseeing operations and supervising the Sports Medicine staff, Dana works specifically with the football and ski teams. The Sports Medicine Department at the University of New Hampshire consists of eight full- and part-time certified and licensed athletic trainers. The department works out of two locations – the Field House and the Whittemore Center. Both athletic training rooms utilize currently available modalities, including muscle stimulators, ultrasound, heat, cryotherapy, and Jon Meg hydrotherapy. D ana L esnikoski The Certified Athletic Trainer provides a myriad of services to the department and the student-athlete. These include, but are not limited to, initial injury assessment and management, emergency injury/illness management, referral to appropriate professionals, interface with associated physicians and others, rehabilitation, counseling, administrative duties, including insurance coordination, supervision of practices and games, development and implementation of emergency plans, as well as student athletic trainer supervision. The athletic training room is considered to be “a designated facility where comprehensive health care services are provided. Comprehensive health care services include practice and game preparation, injury/ illness evaluation, first aid and emergency care, follow-up care, rehabilitation and related services.” (National Athletic Trainer’s Association Education Council). Dana is well respected in the athletic training field. His international experience includes: working at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing with the U.S. Canoe/ Kayak team; working for the USA Canoe/Kayak teams at the World Cup in Prague, Slovenia, Augsburg and Germany; working at the 2004 Paralympics in Athens; working for the U.S. Men’s Team Handball squad at the Pan American Games in the Dominican Republic; and working with the U.S. Track and Field Team at the Paralympics World Championships in Lille, France. Additionally, he has worked at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials in Sacramento, Calif., and at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Lake Placid, N.Y. Since 1980, Dana has worked as an athletic trainer at the Boston Marathon. Dana has been Team Captain of the Finish Line Medical Area since 1996. Dana has served as Drug Testing Site Coordinator and Head Athletic Trainer at various NCAA championship events, including men’s and women’s ice hockey, and skiing. Dana is certified by the National Athletic Trainer’s Association and is a licensed athletic trainer in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and New Hampshire. In addition, Dana has a CPR Re-Certification and a Massachusetts Teacher Certification in physical education, health and science. A native of Uniondale, N.Y., Dana is a 1979 graduate of Northeastern University. He began his athletic training career at Brookline and Newton South High Schools in Massachusetts, and then was the head athletic trainer at Fitchburg State College from 1980-84. Margaret Lesnikoski, a 2009 graduate of the University of Vermont, joined the University of New Hampshire Sports Medicine staff in summer 2009. Lesnikoski is a certified member of the NATA and EATA. She is a licensed athletic trainer in New Hampshire, has American Red Cross CPR/AED Certification, and is a BOC certified athletic trainer. Her responsibilities at UNH include: providing preventative care, treatment, evaluations and rehabilitation for women’s soccer as well as the men’s and women’s indoor/outdoor track & field teams. She previously worked with the volleyball team (2009) and has also worked at various UNH summer camps (football, women’s volleyball and women’s soccer). As a three-year student athletic trainer at UVM, Lesnikoski worked specifically with the women’s lacrosse, baseball, track & field and men’s soccer teams.
STRENGTH & CONDITIONING Paul Chapman enters his 13th year as the director of strength and conditioning at the University of New Hampshire and John Ciani is entering his 10th year with the UNH athletic department. After four years as an assistant coach in the University’s strength and conditioning office, Ciani was promoted to the position of Associate Director of Strength and Conditioning in 2006. Chapman and Ciani helped coordinate the building of the state-of-the-art Jerry Azumah Performance Center and both have been key in guiding UNH student-athletes to NCAA appearances in both women’s and men’s ice hockey, football, Paul John gymnastics, women’s volleyball, women’s lacrosse, skiing and track and field. Chapman is a member of the Collegiate Strength an Conditioning Coaches Association (strength and conditioning coach Chapman Ciani certified), USA Weightlifting (certified level 1 coach), the National Strength and Conditioning Association, and he was the state director of the National Strength and Conditioning Association in North Dakota from 1991-95. He has also authored four publications related to strength and conditioning and has trained and consulted several NFL, CFL and NHL athletes, and prospective athletes preparing for all-star games, bowl games and pre-draft testing. Prior to UNH, Chapman was the director of strength and conditioning for the University of North Dakota from 1992-2001 and served there on an interim basis during the 1991-92 season. His efforts were an integral part of a winning tradition at UND, as the football team was the Division II national champions in 2001, the men’s ice hockey team won a Division I national title in 2000 and 1997 and the women’s basketball team was the Division II national champion in 1997, 1998 and 1999. Chapman is a 1990 graduate of Dickinson State University in North Dakota with a B.S. degree in Biology. He then went on to earn at M.S. in Exercise Science from North Dakota in 1994. An outstanding college athlete, Chapman was inducted into the Dickinson State Athletic Hall of Fame for his efforts on the football field. He was a two-time AllAmerica First Team selection as well as an All-America Second Team honoree in his four-year playing career. Upon graduation, he was a fourth-round draft choice of the Saskatchewan Rough Riders in the Canadian Football League. Ciani is very passionate about his commitment to strength and conditioning. He has taken his wide range of experiences to come up with a distinct sport-specific training philosophy. In conjunction with the coaching staff, Ciani develops individualized training programs depending on the athlete’s initial evaluation, experience level and current athletic ability. Under Ciani’s program, improvement is not based on the weight on the bar, but rather how injury resistant the student-athlete is and his/her athletic performance. Strength and conditioning programs designed by Ciani utilize all facets of training, from conventional strength training and Olympic Weightlifting to simple conditioning and sport-specific metabolic runs that enhance the athlete’s abilities during competition. No single training style dominates the program; Ciani uses a combination of all training techniques for the total development of the student-athlete. Ciani, a native of the San Diego, Calif. area, came to UNH after a stint as assistant strength coach at the University of North Dakota. During his tenure at UND, Ciani worked primarily with the 2001 Division II national championship football team, women’s volleyball and men’s basketball teams. In 2000, he began his career at Long Beach State as a graduate assistant working with the perennial national power women’s volleyball team, where he trained many All-American and national team level volleyball players, including Misty May. Ciani received his B.A. degree in Psychology from Long Beach State and attended graduate school at both Long Beach State and the University of North Dakota.
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BILL HERRION KEN DEMPSEY CHRIS MOHR MARC KUNTZ SCOTT WEITZELL
12-13 14 14 15 16
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Bill Herrion, one of the most successful coaches in America East men’s basketball history, begins his ninth season at the University of New Hampshire with a legitimate chance to bring the first conference title in school history to Durham. Herrion’s first seven years have yielded numerous achievements such as being fourth all-time on UNH’s wins list (83), second all-time in wins during a coach’s first five years at UNH, and only the second coach in program history to reach 50 wins in less than five full seasons. It is the previous four seasons, however, that Herrion hopes to build upon after becoming the first head coach in program history to reach three conference semifinals and just the second to make back-to-back semifinal appearances. Last season, Herrion led the Wildcats to a 13-16 overall record, reaching double-digit wins for the fourth straight season. New Hampshire, propelled by a four-game winning streak late in conference play, secured the fifth seed in the America East tournament, but fell to No. 4 Albany in the second round. Once again, the Wildcats were one of the strongest defensive teams in the country and finished the year ranked 13th nationally in 3-point defense, limiting opponents to 29.7 percent from beyond the arc. In the season prior, Herrion guided New Hampshire to a 12-18 record, putting together another successful campaign despite a plethora of injuries, finishing with double-digit victories for the third straight year. UNH earned the No. 7 seed in the America East tournament, but fell to second-seeded and eventual conference champion Boston University in the quarterfinals. Despite the loss, the Wildcats made their mark as one of the country’s best defensive teams, ranking 18th nationally in scoring defense by holding opponents to 60.9 points per game. In 2009-10, UNH posted a 13-17 record and achieved Year Team Record Postseason numerous accomplishments that had not been reached 1991-92 Drexel 16-14 America East Finals in 15-plus seasons, including best home record (9-4) 1992-93 Drexel 22-7 America East Finals and best non-conference record (7-7). The team yielded 1993-94 Drexel 25-5 NCAA Regional First Round the fewest points per game (62.4 ppg) in at least nearly 1994-95 Drexel 22-8 NCAA Regional First Round 50 years, reached New Year’s Day at .500 or better for 1995-96 Drexel 27-4 NCAA Regional Quarterfinals the first time in 12 years and also reached multiple 1996-97 Drexel 22-9 NIT First Round attendance achievements at Lundholm Gymnasium. 1997-98 Drexel 13-15 America East Semifinals Despite a 6-10 record in the conference, the Wildcats 1998-99 Drexel 20-9 America East Finals upset Maine in the quarterfinal round of the America 1999-00 East Carolina 10-18 CAA First Round East tournament with a 68-57 win to reach the semifi 2000-01 East Carolina 14-14 nals, where they fell to Vermont. 2001-02 East Carolina 12-18 Conference USA First Round In 2008-09, Herrion led the Wildcats to their most suc 2002-03 East Carolina 12-15 cessful campaign in nearly 15 years. The ‘Cats finished 2003-04 East Carolina 13-14 Conference USA First Round 14-16, with 14 being their highest number of victories 2004-05 East Carolina 9-19 since a 19-win campaign in 1994-95. The Wildcats were 2005-06 New Hampshire 12-17 America East Semifinals 8-8 in the conference and grabbed the No. 4 seed in 2006-07 New Hampshire 10-20 America East Quarterfinals the America East tournament, their best seed since 2007-08 New Hampshire 9-20 America East Quarterfinals 2002. Herrion guided UNH to just its sixth semifinal 2008-09 New Hampshire 14-16 America East Semifinals appearance in school history and second during his 2009-10 New Hampshire 13-17 America East Semifinals tenure. The Wildcats nearly knocked off top-seeded 2010-11 New Hampshire 12-18 America East Quarterfinals Binghamton, coming within two minutes of making it 2011-12 New Hampshire 13-16 America East Quarterfinals to – and hosting – their first title game ever. 2012-13 New Hampshire 9-20 America East Quarterfinals Although the 9-20 record may not show it, the 2007-08 Totals campaign was a giant leap in the right direction for the Drexel 167-71 (.702) future of the program. The Wildcats were picked dead East Carolina 70-98 (.417) last in the America East preseason poll, but ended up New Hampshire 92-144 (.399) finishing seventh out of nine teams and nearly upset Career 304-279 (.521) the second-ranked Hartford Hawks in the quarterfinal round of the tournament. UNH began the season with only five returners from the previous year and by the end of it, had only three of those players available to suit up. Six newcomers joined the program at the beginning of the year and all of them saw significant minutes, including three who were
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in the top five on the team in minutes per game. In 2006-07, the Wildcats posted a 10-20 record en route to a seventhTHE HERRION FILE place finish in the conference. The Wildcats were knocked out of the America East tournament in the quarterfinal round, falling 64-47 to even- HOMETOWN: Oxford, Massachusetts tual champion, Albany, for the second straight season. EDUCATION: Merrimack College (B.A.History, 1981) Picked to finish last in the preseason America East poll in the 2005-06 season, New Hampshire rebounded in the second half of the season to COACHING EXPERIENCE: Drexel 1991-99; finish in fifth place with a regular season record of 11-16. The Wildcats East Carolina 1999-05; New Hampshire 2005-Present posted a conference record of 8-8 that included a regular-season sweep against UMBC, as well as conference champion, Albany. UNH advanced to the semifinals of the America East Championship, its furthest advancement since 1995. Herrion was named the 20th men’s basketball head coach in UNH history on May 26, 2005. Herrion, who arrived at New Hampshire after a short stint as the associate head coach at the University of Arkansas, is best known for his outstanding accomplishments at Drexel where he posted an impressive 167-71 record from 1991-1999. During that period, Herrion led the Dragons to three NCAA tournament appearances in 1994, 1995 and 1996 and also led the school to its first-ever NIT appearance in 1991. The team finished first or second in conference play in seven of his eight seasons. Herrion also posted five consecutive 20-win seasons, including his best, a 27-4 campaign in 1996. That same year, Herrion led Drexel to its first-ever NCAA tournament victory with a first-round upset over Memphis. In 1998, America East celebrated its 20th year of men’s basketball by naming the 20 individuals (players, coaches, administrators) who had been the most influential in the growth of the conference over the first two decades. Four coaches were named to that team: Jim Calhoun, Rick Pitino, Mike Jarvis and Bill Herrion. Herrion is still the only coach in America East/NAC/ECAC North history to earn four Coach of the Year awards (1994, 1995, 1996 and 1999). He also has a conference-record 21 tournament wins (21-10) and is second only to Calhoun with three conference championships. The .677 America East tournament winning percentage is first among active America East coaches, first among anyone with at least 10 tournament appearances and fifth overall all-time. Herrion holds an overall conference record in America East of 150-92 for a winning percentage of .620. “I’m obviously very excited about the opportunity to be the head coach at UNH,” Herrion said when he was hired. “It’s a great opportunity to get back into America East, a league that I’m very familiar with and have a lot of respect for. We are looking forward to moving this basketball program in the right direction and to compete for the championship in America East.” Following his success at Drexel, Herrion was hired as the head coach at East Carolina University where he lead the Pirates from 1999-2005, posting a record of 70-98. The Pirates were sometimes overmatched after the school stepped up to high-powered Conference USA, but Herrion’s teams were tenacious and beat a top-10 team with a win over No. 9 Marquette. ECU also enjoyed its first-ever victory over national powerhouse Louisville during his tenure. Herrion also had America East ties as an assistant coach at Boston University from 1985-1990. During his stay in Boston, the Terriers posted a 101-51 record, made NCAA appearances in 1988 and 1990 and were invited to the NIT in 1986. Herrion served as an assistant coach at George Washington University from 1990-91. Other coaching experience on his resume includes serving as an assistant coach of the Under-19 U.S. National Team that competed in Athens, Greece in 1995. He was also the assistant coach for the Under-22 U.S. National Team that went on to win gold in San Juan, Puerto Rico in 1996. Herrion is a 1981 graduate of Merrimack College, where he earned his bachelor of arts degree in History.
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KEN DEMPSEY ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH MORAVIAN
‘83
Dempsey is entering his seventh season as Associate Head Coach of the Wildcat program. The veteran college coach, who joined the UNH program in June 2007, lends more than 20 years of successful experience to Coach Herrion’s staff. Dempsey spent the six seasons prior to joining the Wildcat program as the Associate Men’s Basketball Head Coach at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Dempsey also served as the University of North Carolina-Greensboro assistant coach from 1999-2001. Dempsey is familiar with the Northeast region, where he served as the assistant coach at Northeastern University from 1994-1999. Prior to joining the staff at Northeastern, Dempsey was an assistant coach at Monmouth (N.J.) University from 1984-94. The players he recruited earned 21 all-conference selections and helped the team to three conference championship game appearances. Dempsey is a proven, self-directed and high-profile coaching/recruiting professional with over 25 years of full-time leadership experience at the aforementioned Division I institutions. Dempsey has a reputation as one of the top recruiters in the country by numerous national recruiting and coaching publications and boasts a 100-percent graduation rate among student-athletes recruited. Each of Dempsey’s past four recruiting classes at UMKC were ranked as one of the nation’s top 100 by Hoop Scoop Online. As recruiting coordinator for head coach Wayne Szoke at Monmouth for eight seasons, Dempsey’s recruiting efforts produced the school’s all-time Division I scoring co-leaders, seven of the school’s top-10 Division I scoring leaders and a GTE Academic all-American. Dempsey is an active member of the NABC and presently serves as president of the assistant coaches committee. He has been a member of the assistant coaches executive committee and now is a member of the Division 1 Coaches Congress. Dempsey earned a bachelor’s degree in Journalism in 1983 from Moravian College in Bethlehem, Pa., where he was a fouryear letter-winner in basketball and baseball. He also completed a master’s degree in Education from Monmouth in 1991. A native of Howell, N.J., he and his wife Bridget have two sons, Riley and Brody, and a daughter, Molly-Kate.
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CHRIS MOHR ASSISTANT COACH MERRIMACK
‘97
Mohr enters his ninth season at New Hampshire under head coach Bill Herrion. Mohr worked the previous six seasons as an assistant coach at Merrimack College with longtime head coach Bert Hammel. In his first year as an assistant at Merrimack, Mohr helped guide the Warriors to a 22-9 record, the Northeast-10 Regular Season and Tournament Championships and the NCAA Division II Northeast Regionals during the 1999-2000 season. The Warriors posted an overall record of 69-73 and were 5-3 in postseason play while Mohr was on staff. Mohr was also a player at Merrimack from 1992-97. He finished with 879 career points. His senior year he averaged 10.5 points per game and was also a captain. Mohr was a two-time recipient of the Gregory Newman Award given to the ultimate team player. He also received the Ray Gallant award in 1995-96 and the Most Improved Player award in his second year in the program. Prior to coaching at Merrimack, Mohr taught high school English and was an assistant basketball coach for the varsity program at Carmel High School in Mundelein, Ill. Mohr is an active member of the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC). Mohr lives in North Andover, Mass., with his wife, Meghan, son, Cooper and daughter, McKenna.
MARC KUNTZ ASSISTANT COACH XAVIER
‘00
Marc Kuntz enters his second season as an assistant coach with the Wildcats. Kuntz comes to New Hampshire after a seven-year stint at University of Massachusetts Lowell, where he served as associate head coach the last two seasons. While at UMass Lowell, Kuntz was responsible for recruiting, scouting, player development and community and alumni outreach. He played an integral role in the program’s rise to prominence over the past four seasons, helping the River Hawks to the 2010 NE-10 Conference Tournament Championship and four-straight trips to the NCAA Tournament with an overall record of 80-43 in that span. Prior to arriving at UMass Lowell, Kuntz served as head coach at Wilmington (OH) College for one season. Previously, he served as an assistant at Wilmington (2003-04), Norwich University (2000-03) and as a student manager at Xavier University (1996-2000). A 2000 graduate of Xavier, Kuntz was a student manager under the late Skip Prosser for three years while receiving his degree in sports management. While at Xavier, he worked with current and former NBA players James Posey (formerly Indiana Pacers), Torraye Braggs (formerly Houston Rockets) and David West (Indiana Pacers). After graduation, Kuntz moved on to Norwich where he served under Paul Booth as the recruiting coordinator. Having brought in two recruiting classes, he was vital in helping the Cadets emerge from a 6-18 record in 2001-02 to a 14-12 clip in 2002-03, which marked the first winning season at Norwich in six years. Kuntz then served as an assistant to Will Rey at Wilmington for one season before moving on to the head coaching position in 2004-05. After a 1-25 finish in 2003-04, he guided the Quakers to a much-improved 10-16 record in 2004-05, marking a nine-win improvement.
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SCOTT WEITZELL DIRECTOR OF BASKETBALL OPERATIONS
RYAN HERRION VIDEO COORDINATOR / PLAYER DEVELOPMENT NEW HAMPSHIRE
Weitzell enters his 12th season with the Wildcats. His responsibilities include community relations, coordination of the men’s basketball Cage Club, Alumni Affairs, team budgeting and fundraising and organizing player and coaches’ clinics. Weitzell has organized such events as a fundraising golf tournament and the celebration of the 100 Years of UNH Basketball. He has been critical in getting former New Hampshire basketball players involved in the program. His leadership has elevated the level of the community involvement for the program. Weitzell, a native of the New Hampshire Seacoast area, coached high school and middle school boys’ basketball at Newmarket for 19 seasons, nine at the middle school level and 10 at the varsity level. During Weitzell’s tenure the Mules reached the playoffs in seven of the 10 seasons. In 2001, Weitzell was honored by the New Hampshire Coaches Association as the Class M Coach of the year after leading Newmarket to the No. 2 seed in the Class M state tournament and a 17-3 record.
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‘12
Ryan Herrion, son of head coach Bill Herrion, played four years at the University of New Hampshire and was captain of the squad his senior season. He was part of the winningest four-year class in school history. Prior to returning to his alma mater, Herrion worked on the men’s basketball staff at Marshall as a graduate assistant. His primary responsibilities are producing game film for the program as well as cutting and editing video. He will also have a big hand in handling the social media outlets used by the team.
2012-13 SEASON PREVIEW ROSTER 22 OUTLOOK 23-24 PLAYER PROFILES 26-36
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NUMERICAL ROSTER No. 0 1 3 5 10 11 12 14 22 23 24 30 32 44
Player Class Jaleen Smith Fr. Patrick Konan* Sr. Jacoby Armstrong Fr. Jordon Bronner* Sr. Logan Mortenson* So. Tommy McDonnell* Jr. Frank Okeke* So. John Edwards Fr. Scott Morris* Sr. Matt Miller Jr. Williams Gabriel Fr. Daniel Dion Fr. Joe Bramanti # So. Chris Pelcher* R-Sr.
Pos. G F F G F G F F G G F G G C
Ht. 6-4 6-6 6-6 6-0 6-7 6-3 6-6 6-6 6-2 6-4 6-8 6-0 6-2 6-10
Wt. 185 220 220 185 210 190 225 200 210 190 215 170 195 250
Hometown/Recent School Freeport, Texas/Brazosport High School Gainesville, Fla./The Rock School Sachse, Texas/Wylie High School Sleepy Hollow, N.Y./Iona Prep South Jordan, Utah/St. Johns Northwestern Durham, N.H./Bridgton Academy DeSoto, Texas/DeSoto High School Charlotte, N.C./Brewster Academy Walkersville, Md./Walkersville Arnold, Md./Seton Hill University Lagos, Nigeria/Huntington Prep Cedar Park, Texas/Vista Ridge High School Andover, Mass./Wright State Albany, N.Y./Albany Academy
* - Denotes returning letterwinners (7) # - Sitting out 2013-14 season due to NCAA transfer regulations Head Coach: Bill Herrion (Merrimack ‘81/Ninth Season) Associate Head Coach: Ken Dempsey (Moravian College ’83/Seventh Season) Assistant Coach: Chris Mohr (Merrimack ’97/Ninth Season) Assistant Coach: Marc Kuntz (Xavier ’00/Second Season) Director of Basketball Operations: Scott Weitzell (12th Season) Video Coordinator: Ryan Herrion (New Hampshire ‘12/First Season) Athletic Trainer: Meg Lesnikoski Strength & Conditioning Coach: John Ciani Administrative Assistant: Liz McAllister
ALPHABETICAL ROSTER
No. 3 32 5 30 14 24 1 11 23 22 10 12 44 0
Player Class Jacoby Armstrong Fr. Joe Bramanti # So. Jordon Bronner* Sr. Daniel Dion Fr. John Edwards Fr. Williams Gabriel Fr. Patrick Konan* Sr. Tommy McDonnell* Jr. Matt Miller Jr. Scott Morris* Sr. Logan Mortenson* So. Frank Okeke* So. Chris Pelcher* R-Sr. Jaleen Smith Fr.
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE
Pos. Height Wt. F 6-6 220 G 6-2 195 G 6-0 185 G 6-0 170 F 6-6 200 F 6-8 215 F 6-6 220 G 6-3 190 G 6-4 190 G 6-2 210 F 6-7 210 F 6-6 225 C 6-10 250 G 6-4 185
Patrick Konan...............................................................Co-nan Jaleen Smith..............................................................Jay-lynn Frank Okeke.........................................................Oh-key-key
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Hometown/Previous Team Sachse, Texas/Wylie High School Andover, Mass./Wright State Sleepy Hollow, N.Y./Iona Prep Cedar Park, Texas/Vista Ridge High School Charlotte, N.C./Brewster Academy Lagos, Nigeria/Huntington Prep Gainesville, Fla./The Rock School Durham, N.H./Bridgton Academy Arnold, Md./Seton Hill University Walkersville, Md./Walkersville South Jordan, Utah/St. Johns Northwestern DeSoto, Texas/DeSoto High School Albany, N.Y./Albany Academy Freeport, Texas/Brazosport High School
The University of New Hampshire men’s basketball team opens the 2013-14 season ranked fifth in the America East preseason poll. Following a season in which the Wildcats advanced to the AE tournament quarterfinals, UNH returns seven letterwinners and welcomes in four newcomers to the lineup. Head Coach Bill Herrion enters his ninth season at the helm of UNH. Herrion, who became the all-time leader in America East Conference victories last season (155 wins), looks to continue his success in conference play during the 2013-14 season. New Hampshire (9-20, 5-11) will start the 2013-14 campaign with hopes of contending for an America East title. The Wildcats enter the season following one of the best defensive efforts in school history. UNH has always relied on a strong defense, but last season the Wildcats took it to a new level, leading the entire country in 3-pt field goal defense (28.1%) and holding opponents to 62.7 points per game. Though UNH will lose two of its top-four leading scorers to graduation, they will return some of its key players for the 2013-14 season. UNH’s frontcourt looks to be its strength this season, as seniors Patrick Konan (Gainesville, Fla.) and Chris Pelcher (Albany, N.Y.) were among the Wildcats’ leading scorers last year. Konan ranked second on the team in scoring, netting 11.8 points per game in 2012-13. The senior forward was also third on the team in rebounding (5.4 rebounds per game) and second on the team in offensive rebounds per contest (1.8). Pelcher, who played his first season with the Wildcats after transferring from Iona College, ranked fourth on the squad in scoring (9.1 points per game). The senior center also led the team in rebounding, grabbing 6.3 boards per game. Pelcher scored double-digit points in 11 games and added two double-doubles on the year. He scored 17 points and
snagged 11 rebounds in a 69-67 loss to NJIT for his first double-double. Pelcher secured his second doubledouble in a 61-53 defeat at the hands of UConn (16 points, 12 rebounds). Senior Jordon Bronner (Sleepy Hollow, N.Y.) will lead the backcourt for UNH this season. The Wildcat senior played every game for UNH last season, averaging 3.9 points, 1.5 rebounds, and a teamhigh 2.1 assists per game. Bronner reached doubledigit points three times last season, including a 10-point, three-assist performance in a 63-50 win over Brown. New Hampshire also welcomes back junior Tommy McDonnell (Durham, N.H.) and sophomores Frank Okeke (DeSoto, Texas) and Logan Mortenson (South Jordan, Utah). The trio of forwards played in some good minutes for UNH in 2012-13. McDonnell appeared in 16 games, collecting 16 rebounds, six assists, and one steal. He recorded a career-high four rebounds during UNH’s opening night win over Suffolk (Nov. 10) Okeke also saw action in 16 games for the Wildcats during his freshman campaign. The sophomore scored 12 points and collected 16 rebounds in limited minutes for UNH. Okeke scored points in five separate games during the year. Mortenson played in 17 games in his first season with UNH. He scored 23 points, collected 17 rebounds, and dished out seven assists. He scored a career-high
seven points, snagged three rebounds and added two assists in a loss to Hartford (Feb. 20). Junior transfer Matt Miller (Arnold, Md.) will make his debut for UNH during the 2013-14 season. Miller transferred to UNH from Seton Hill University, but sat out last
SENIOR GUARD
JORDON BRONNER 23
2013 Preseason Poll
Rank Team (1st-place votes) Points
1. Vermont (6) 2. Stony Brook (3) 3. Albany 4. Hartford 5. New Hampshire 6. UMBC 7. Binghamton 8. Maine 9. UMass Lowell
64 58 49 44 31 28 24 20 8
season due to NCAA transfer regulations. The junior started all 27 games for the Giffins during the 2011-12 season, averaging 20.1 points, 4.4 rebounds, 3.3 assists, and 1.6 steals. Scored a career-high 33 points in a loss at Ohio Valley (Dec. 28, 2012). The Wildcats have added a quartet of freshmen to its roster for the upcoming season. Jacoby Armstrong (Sachse, Texas), Daniel Dion (Cedar Park, Texas), John Edwards (Charlotte, N.C.), and Jaleen Smith (Freeport, Texas) all look to make an impact for UNH during the 2013-14 year. Armstrong joins UNH after a successful career at Wylie High School where he earned All-District honors three times and was named District MVP during his senior season. Dion comes to UNH after a prolific career at Vista Ridge High School in Cedar Park Texas. Dion was All-District for three years, MVP of the district during his senior year, and leaves Vista Ridge as its all-time leading scorer. Edwards will add some depth to the frontcourt after playing at Brewster Academy. Edwards won three championships in high school, a high school state championship, a prep school national championship, and a NEPSAC championship. Smith joins the Wildcats following a great career at Brazosport High School. Smith was a three-time All-District first-teamer and claimed District Defensive Player
24
of the Year during his senior campaign. UNH has also added sophomore Joe Bramanti (Andover, Mass.) as a transfer student. Bramanti comes to UNH from Wright State where he played 35 games for the Raiders in 2012-13. The sophomore scored 57 points, dished out 39 assists, and grabbed 58 rebounds on the year for Wright State. Bramanti will sit out the 2013-14 season due to NCAA transfer regulations. With a good balance of experience and youth, the Wildcats look to improve on last year’s finish and make a run at the America East Championship.
SENIOR CENTER
CHRIS PELCHER
25
MEET THE WILDCATS
Chris Pelcher R-Senior Forward/Center 6-10 240 Albany, NY
44
2012-13
Saw action in 25 games with 17 starts ... averaged 25.1 minutes per contest ... ranked first on the team in rebounds per game (6.3) and blocks per game (1.4) ... fourth on the team with 228 total points and a 9.1 average ... ranked third on the team in field goal percentage (.534) ... recorded two double-doubles (Nov 21 at NJIT and Nov 29 at UConn) ... scored in double figures 11 times ... registered a career-high 12 rebounds Nov 29 at UConn ... totaled a career-high 17 points Nov 21 at NJIT.
2011-12
Sat out the 2011-12 season due to NCAA transfer regulations.
BEFORE UNH
Chris Pelcher spent the last two seasons with Iona College, playing in 35 games, including one start in his sophomore campaign, helping lead the Gaels to a 25-12 record. He posted 2.9 points and 2.1 rebounds per game while ranking third on the squad with 17 blocks. Additionally, he posted the third-best field goal percentage on the team with a shooting clip of .603 (38-63) from the field. As a freshman he appeared in 20 games, making one start, serving as a valued role player off the bench.Prior to arriving at Iona, Pelcher was the No. 45 prospect at the center position and one of the Top 300 recruits in the nation according to ESPNU’s basketball recruiting website. He posted 19.6 points per game as a senior at Albany Academy, leading the Cadets to a 22-2 record along with a berth in the NYSPHSAA Section II Class AA championship game and a No. 17 ranking in New York State Class AA. Along the way he collected All-League, All-Section II and NYSSWA Class AA All-State Fifth Team honors. As a junior he averaged more than 18 points and 12 rebounds per game, earning All-Colonial Council honors for his efforts. In addition to basketball, he was a three-year varsity letter winner for the Cadets’ football team and was an Albany Times Union All-Region performer at the tight end position.
PERSONAL
Born Feb. 12, 1991 in Albany, N.Y. … son of Pam and John Waitekus and the late Chris Pelcher ... majoring in Sociology.
PELCHER CAREER HIGHS Points: �����������������������������������������������������������������17 at NJIT (11/21/12) Field Goals Made:..................................................7, three times 3-Point FG Made:...........................................................................N/A Free Throws Made:........................................................ ........6, twice Rebounds..................................................12 at UConn (11/29/12) Assists:....................................................................... ................3, twice Steals:........................................................................................ .3, twice Blocks: �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������5 (2/20/13) Minutes:..................................................................................37, twice
Year G/GS Min. AVG FG/A FG% 3FG/A 3FG% FT/A FT% PTS AVG REB AVG PF/FO A TO Blk Stl 2009-10 (Iona) 20/1 124 6.2 15/28 .536 0/0 ---- 7/14 .500 37 1.9 29 1.5 22/0 2 4 2 4 2010-11 (Iona) 35/1 324 9.3 38/63 .603 0/0 ---- 24/42 .571 100 2.9 74 2.1 53/0 11 12 17 6 2011-12 ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- 2012-13 25/17 628 25.1 95/178 .534 0/0 ---- 38/62 .613 228 9.1 158 6.3 66/0 22 31 34 20 Totals 70/19 1076 15.4 148/269 .550 0/0 ---- 69/118 .585 365 5.2 210 3.0 141/0 35 47 55 30
26
Jordon Bronner Senior Guard 6-0 170 Sleepy Hollow, NY
5
ACCOLADES
2010-11– America East All-Rookie Team
2012-13
Saw action in 29 games with 24 starts ... averaged 23.9 minutes per contest ... totaled 112 points with a 3.9 average ... ranked first on the team in assist/turnover ratio (2.4) and second in total assists (62) ... season high of four rebounds and eight assists at NJIT (Nov 21) ... scored in double figures three times ... registered at least two steals in six games ... ranked fourth on the team in 3-point field goal percentage (.302).
2011-12
Played in 28 games with 19 starts ... total of 140 points with a 5.0 average ... second on the team in total assists (67) and assists per game (2.4) ... career high of 24 points vs. Colgate (Dec 31) ... second on
2011-12
Played in 28 games with 19 starts ... total of 140 points with a 5.0 average ... second on the team in total assists (67) and assists per game (2.4) ... career high of 24 points vs. Colgate (Dec 31) ... second on the team in free throw percentage (64.8) ... ranked third on the team in steals per game (0.8) ... recorded double-figure scoring in four games ... registered at least two steals in five games ... pulled down a season-high eight rebounds against vs. Brown (Dec. 7).
2010-11
Saw action in 30 games, making 15 starts ... averaged 22.7 minutes per contest ... ranked second on the team in assists (65) and steals (17) ... ranked 10th in the America East in assists (2.7 apg) during conference play ... finished the season averaging 4.0 points, 2.2 assists, and 1.4 rebounds per game ... led all Wildcat freshmen in minutes (680), points (121), assists (65), games played (30), steals (15) and free throw percentage (.630; 29-46) ... led the team in assists 11 times ... led the squad in steals six times ... tied his career high in scoring twice, posting 13 points against Stony Brook (Feb. 9) and Boston University (March 5) ... posted a career-best six assists against Albany (Feb. 2) ... scored in double-digits twice ... compiled a season-best three steals against Albany (Feb. 2).
BEFORE UNH
Played at Iona Prep where he was the school’s first four-year varsity starter ... averaged 12 points and four assists per game his senior year for a team that won 25 games ... won 27 games his junior season en route to the school’s first Catholic State Championship ... the Gaels won their league championship three years in a row, while Bronner made all-county and all-league squads his junior and senior seasons.
PERSONAL
BRONNER CAREER HIGHS Points:...................................................... 24 vs. Colgate (12/31/11) Field Goals Made:...................................7 vs. Colgate (12/31/11) 3-Point FG Made..................... 3 vs. Central Conn. St. (12/5/12) Free Throws Made:................................................................ 8, twice Rebounds:.........................................................8 vs. Brown (Dec. 8) Assists:....................................................................................... 8, twice Steals:..... ........................................................................3, three times Blocks:................................................... .....................................1, twice Minutes:......................................................................40, three times
Born Dec. 20, 1991 in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y. … son of Carl Bronner and Diana Garrant ... relative Tony Taylor played for the men’s basketball team at George Washington ... enjoys hanging out with friends and swimming ... lists his favorite athlete as Kobe Bryant and his mom as the person he admires most ... hopes to play basketball overseas ... major is undeclared. Year G/GS Min. AVG FG/A FG% 3FG/A 3FG% FT/A FT% PTS AVG REB AVG PF/FO A TO Blk Stl 2010-11 30/15 680 22.7 40/118 .339 12/47 .255 29/46 .630 121 4.0 42 1.4 65/0 65 37 0 15 2011-12 28/19 754 26.9 46/129 .357 13/53 .245 35/54 .648 140 5.0 59 2.1 70/2 67 28 0 23 2012-13 29/24 692 23.9 33/90 .367 13/43 .302 33/50 .660 112 3.9 43 2.1 66/0 62 26 2 18 Totals 87/58 2126 24.4 119/337 .353 38/143 .266 97/150 .647 373 4.3 144 1.7 201/2 194 91 2 56
27
Patrick Konan Senior Forward 6-6 220 Gainesville, FL
1
2012-13
Played in 28 games, making 27 starts ... averaged 11.8 points per game and 5.4 rebounds per game in 31.9 minutes per contest ... posted a double-double, scoring 14 points and grabbing 11 rebounds in a 72-58 victory over Dartmouth (Nov. 13) ... tallied 14 points and six rebounds in a 63-50 win against Brown (Dec. 1) ... registered 14 points during the Wildcats’ 64-56 win against Yale (Dec. 8) ... claimed his second double-double (11 points, 13 boards) of the year in a loss to Boston University (Jan. 19) ... recorded his third doubledouble of the season, scoring 22 points and collecting 10 rebounds, during a 92-86 win over UMBC (Feb. 13) ... scored a career-high 24 points against Albany (Feb. 28) ... scored in double-digits 19 times during the year ... collected three double-doubles on the year.
2011-12
Played in all 29 games with 28 starts ... total of 281 points and an average of 9.7 per game ... ranked second in total rebounds with 168 ... earned first double-double against Holy Cross (Dec. 3) ... sixth in the conference in 3-point field goal percentage (.378) ... career high of 20 points againt UMBC (Jan. 2) ... Scored in double-figures 14 times ... ranked third on the team in scoring (9.7) and 3-point shooting percentage (37.8) ... notched multiple 3-pointers in 17 games, including four treys in two games ... reached doubl-digit rebounds three times.
2010-11
Sat out the entire season due to NCAA transfer regulations.
BEFORE UNH
Played one season at Liberty University before transferring to UNH ... started 24 of the 31 games he played in as a freshman ... led the team in field goal percentage (.542), including 42.9 percent (3-7) from behind the arc, was third in rebounding (4.4 rpg) and blocks (9), and fourth in scoring (6.9 ppg) ... led the team in scoring three times and rebounding four times ... prior to arriving at Liberty, played at The Rock School in Gainesville, Fla., where he helped the Lions to a 24-5 record and a Final Four appearance in the Florida State High School Championships ... named the North Central Florida 1A-2A Player of the Year after he led The Rock in scoring and rebounding at 14.6 points and 8.3 caroms per game, while hitting on 57.8 percent of his field goal attempts and 31 percent of his 3-point shots ... tallied a season-high 30 points on 12-of-17 shooting to top Lakewood, ranked No. 4 in Class 5A at the time, 79-69, in the opening round of the prestigious 35th Annual Kingdom of the Sun tournament in Ocala, Fla.
KONAN CAREER HIGHS Points:.........................................................24 at Albany (2/28/13) Field goals......................................................9 at Albany (2/28/13) 3-Point FG Made:.......................................6 at Albany (2/28/13) Free throws made...................................10 at Vermont (1/29/13) Rebounds: �������������������������������������������������������������13 vs. BU (1/19/13) Assists............................................................................. 4, three times Steals...........................................................................................3, twice Blocks.... ..........................................................................2, three times Minutes...............................................................42 at BC (12/16/12)
PERSONAL
Born July 15, 1990 in Abidjan, Ivory Coast … grew up in Marseilles, France ... son of Antoine Dja and Lucie Konan ... enjoys playing video games ... lists his favorite athlete as Terrell Owens and Year G/GS Min. AVG FG/A FG% 3FG/A 3FG% FT/A FT% PTS AVG REB AVG PF/FO A TO Blk Stl 2009-10 (LIBERTY) 31/24 629 20.3 84/155 .542 3/7 .429 42/76 .553 213 6.9 135 4.4 72/4 17 41 9 19 2011-12 29/28 750 25.9 96/247 .389 42/111 .378 47/74 .635 281 9.7 168 5.8 93/3 34 65 5 16 2012-13 28/27 892 31.9 113/287 .394 48/147 .327 55/76 .724 329 11.8 150 5.4 55/0 22 69 10 22 Totals 88/79 2271 25.8 293/689 .425 93/265 .351 144/226 .637 823 9.35 453 5.15 220/7 63 175 24 57
28
Scott Morris Senior Guard 6-2 200 Walkersville, MD
22
2012-13
Appeared in 28 games making 2 starts ... averaged 17.5 minutes per contest ... scored 127 points on the season ... shot 40.0 percent from 3-point range ... registered double-digit points in four games during the year ... scored 13 points, on 5-7 shooting, in a victory over Suffolk (Nov. 10) ... posted 11 points and one steal during a loss to Vermont (Feb. 6) ... shot 5-7, including 3-5 from three-point range, and scored 13 points in a 92-86 victory over UMBC ... posted a career-high 15 points on 5-6 from beyond the arc in the Wildcats 68-56 win against Binghamton ... hit multiple 3-pointers in 10 contests ... notched a steal in nine games.
2011-12
Appeared in 27 games ... averaged 7.1 minutes per contest ... scored 54 points on the season ... shot 36.4 percent from 3-point range ... scored 10 points, on 4-8 shooting, against Vermont (Jan. 14) ... drilled a season-high three 3-pointers against Sacred Heart (Dec. 29) ... hit multiple 3-pointers in four contests ... notched a steal in nine games.
2010-11
Saw action in 27 games, making one start ... averaged 10.7 minutes per contest ... finished the season with an average of 3.6 points per game ... tallied 4.6 points per game in conference action ... ranked second on the team in 3-point field goal percentage with a .329 clip (28-85) from deep ... hit the second-most 3-point field goals of any Wildcats with 28 treys ... tallied 14 rebounds and eight assists ... reached his career high of 14 points against Boston University (Jan. 4), Albany (Feb. 2) and Hartford (Feb. 27) ... registered a career-best two assists and four 3-point field goals in the regular season finale versus Hartford (Feb. 27) ... snared multiple rebounds three times ... notched a steal in five contests ... scored in double-digits three times.
BEFORE UNH
Played at Walkersville High School where he averaged 22.0 points, 6.5 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 2.9 steals per game as a senior as he led his team to the Class 2A West Region championship game and a 14-9 overall record ... selected as the Frederick/Carroll County Player of the Year by the Maryland Gazette ... as a junior, averaged 18.6 points, 6.3 rebounds. 6.6 assists and 2.0 steals per game as he led the Lions to the regional finals and an 18-7 record ... named to the Frederick News Post All-County First Team, as well as the All-Gazette First Team, and was First Team All-Piedmont Division ... owned a 4.0 grade point average that ranked No. 1 in his class of 328.
MORRIS CAREER HIGHS Points:...............................................15 vs. Binghamton (2/23/13) Field Goals Made:............................................................5, six times 3-Point FG Made ��������������������������������5 vs. Binghamton (2/23/13) Free Throws Made:..................................2 at Vermont (2/6/13) Rebounds:.......................................4 vs. Binghamton (2/23/13) Assists:..........................................................3 vs. Maine (3/3/13) Steals:........................................... ..............................................2, twice Blocks:...............................................................................1, four times Minutes: ����������������������������������������������������������37 vs. UMBC (2/13/13)
PERSONAL
Born Oct. 10, 1991 in Maryland … son of Karl and Karen Morris ... enjoys lacrosse and music... Year G/GS Min. AVG FG/A FG% 3FG/A 3FG% FT/A FT% PTS AVG REB AVG PF/FO A TO Blk Stl 2010-11 27/1 290 10.7 34/107 .318 28/85 .329 1/2 .500 97 3.6 14 0.5 30/0 8 14 1 5 2011-12 27/0 192 7.1 19/55 .345 16/44 .364 0/0 .000 54 2.0 6 0.2 23/0 6 8 2 10 2012-13 28/2 489 17.5 45/105 .429 34/85 .400 3/5 .600 127 4.5 21 0.8 46/0 16 17 1 13 Totals 82/3 971 11.8 98/267 .367 78/214 .364 4/7 .571 278 3.39 41 0.5 99/0 30 39 4 28
29
Tommy McDonnell Junior Guard 6-3 175 Durham, NH
11
2012 - 13
Saw action in 16 games ... ranked third on the team in assist/turnover ratio (1.0) ... recorded career high four rebounds Nov 10 vs. Suffolk ... totaled 16 rebounds averaging 1.0 per game.
2011-12
Redshirted the season but appeared in one game
BEFORE UNH
Tommy McDonnell finished his prep year at Bridgton Academy averaging seven points, four rebounds and two steals per game last year. In the three years prior, McDonnell was a standout at Oyster River High School, posting 18 points and five boards per contest during his senior year. He also collected team MVP and Foster’s Daily Democrat All-Dream Team honors, while playing in the New Hampshire versus Vermont all-star game during his senior campaign.
PERSONAL
Born Dec. 27, 1991 in Durham, N.H. … son of Sean McDonnell and Jenny Sheehan ... majoring
McDONNELL CAREER HIGHS Points:.......................................................... 2 at Vermont (2/26/13) Field Goals Made:.................................... 1 at Vermont (2/26/13) 3-Point FG Made:................................................................................-Free Throws Made:....................................... 1 at Maine (1/30/13) Rebounds:.................................................. 4 vs. Suffolk (11/10/12) Assists:........................................................ 2 at Penn St. (12/23/12) Steals:....................................................................... 1 at BU (2/17/13) Blocks:...................................................................... 1 at BU (2/17/13) Minutes:...................................................... 9 vs. Suffolk (11/10/12)
Year G/GS Min. AVG FG/A FG% 3FG/A 3FG% FT/A FT% PTS AVG REB AVG PF/FO A TO Blk Stl 2011-12 1/0 1 1.0 0/0 .000 0/0 .000 0/0 .000 0 0.0 0 0.0 0/0 1 0 0 0 2012-13 16/0 64 4.0 1/5 .200 0/0 .000 1/2 .500 3 0.2 16 1.0 6/0 6 6 1 1 Totals 17/0 65 3.8 1/5 .200 0/0 .000 1/2 .500 3 0.2 16 0.9 6/0 7 6 1 1
30
Logan Mortenson Sophomore Forward 6-7 210 South Jordan, UT
10
2012-13
Played in 17 games for the Wildcats during his freshman season ... averaged 1.4 points per game and 1.0 rebounds per game ... played in 124 minutes, averaging 7.3 minutes per game ... registered a career-best four rebouds in a 11-minuite effort against Brown (Dec. 1) ... notched a career-high eight points on 2-of-5 shooting from three-point range during an 87-84 loss to CCSU (Dec. 5) ... Scored seven point, collected three rebounds, and dished out two assists in a career-high 24 minutes during a 49-44 loss to Hartford (Feb. 20).
BEFORE UNH
Played at Juan Diego Catholic High School in Draper, Utah... averaged 15.0 points and 7.0 rebounds per game over his four year career... averaged 14.0 points and 6.0 rebounds per game as a senior and was named a McDonald’s All-American Nominee and an All-State Second-Team selection... posted 12.0 points, 5.0 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game this past season at St. John’s Northwestern.
PERSONAL
Born on August 14, 1993 in San Ramon, California... son of Jeff and Janel Mortenson... lists his
MORTENSON CAREER HIGHS Points:................................................ 8 at Central Conn. (12/5/12) Field Goals Made:......................2, 2X MR at Hartford (2/20/12) 3-Point FG Made:......................... 2, vs. Central Conn. (12/5/12) Free Throws Made:.............................................................................-Rebounds:.................................................. 1 vs. Suffolk (11/10/11) Assists:......................................................... 1 vs. Suffolk (11/10/11) Steals:......................................................................................................-Blocks:.....................................................................................................-Minutes:...................................................... 1 vs. Suffolk (11/10/11)
Year G/GS Min. AVG FG/A FG% 3FG/A 3FG% FT/A FT% PTS AVG REB AVG PF/FO A TO Blk Stl 2011-12 17/0 124 7.3 7/28 .250 5/18 .278 4/4 1.000 23 1.4 17 1.0 12/0 7 7 0 4 Totals 17/0 124 7.3 7/28 .250 5/18 .278 4/4 1.000 23 1.4 17 1.0 12/0 7 7 0 4
31
Frank Okeke Sophomore Forward 6-6 220 DeSoto, TX
12
2012-13
Played in 16 games in his first season with UNH ... totaled 12 points, 16 rebounds, two steals, and 96 minutes ... scored three points and snagged three rebounds in his collegiate debut, a 91-51 victory over Suffolk (Nov. 10) ... registered two points, one rebound, and one steal against Penn. St. (Dec. 23) ... grabbed two rebounds and scored two points against Vermont (Feb. 6) ... played a career-high 18 minutes, scoring two points and grabbing three rebounds against Boston U. (Feb. 17).
BEFORE UNH
Played at DeSoto High School in Desoto, Texas... posted 9.0 points, 9.0 rebounds and 3.0 blocks per game as a junior... 5A Regional II District Champions and McDonald’s Invitational Gold Division Champions... played for the Deron Williams Elite AAU program... was named to the First-Team All-District and First-Team All-Academic as a senior.
PERSONAL
Born on August 24, 1994 in Dallas, Texas... son of Caleb and Loveline Okeke... lists his favorite athlete as Carmelo Anthony... hopes to play overseas and get a degree in coaching or athletic training... undeclared major.
OKEKE CAREER HIGHS Points:....................................3, 2X MR at Albany (N.Y.) (2/28/13) Field Goals Made:..............1, 4X MR at Albany (N.Y.) (2/28/13) 3-Point FG Made:...............1, 2X MR at Albany (N.Y.) (2/28/13) Free Throws Made:.................................2 at Boston U. (2/17/13) Rebounds:....................................3, 3X MR at Hartford (2/20/13) Assists:............................................................ 1at Bryant (11/17/12) Steals:.......................................... 1, 2X MR at Penn. St. (12/23/12) Blocks:.....................................................................................................-Minutes:.................................................. 18 at Boston U. (2/17/13)
Year G/GS Min. AVG FG/A FG% 3FG/A 3FG% FT/A FT% PTS AVG REB AVG PF/FO A TO Blk Stl 2012-13 16/0 96 6.0 4/25 .160 2/11 .182 2/4 .500 12 0.8 16 1.0 8/0 1 4 0 2 Totals 16/0 96 6.0 4/25 .160 2/11 .182 2/4 .500 12 0.8 16 1.0 8/0 1 4 0 2
32
Joe Bramanti Sophomore Guard 6-2 195 Andover, Mass.
32
BEFORE UNH
In 2009-10 was an All Conference player ... In 2010-11 he was on the Boston Herald Dream Team, All Scholastic Player of the Year in the Merrimack Valley Conference, 1,000 point scorer ... In 2011-12 won a National Championship with Brewster Academy ... In 2012-13 at Wright State University he avaraged 1.6 ppg, 1.7 rbg and 39 assists in 35 games.
PERSONAL
Born on Aug. 23, 1992 in Boston ... son of Robert Bramanti and Linda Bramanti ... his favorite part of UNH is the campus and community ... his goal is to recieve his graduates degree in the business program at UNH, as well as making it to the NCAA tournament ... his favorite food is Chicken Alfredo ... favorite movie is Wedding Crashers.
Jacoby Armstrong Freshman Forward 6-7 230 Sachse, Texas
3
BEFORE UNH
In 2010-11 he was 1st Team All District and lead the state of 4A in Rebounds with 11.3 per game ... In 2011-12 he was 1st Team All District 13-4A ... In 2012-13 he was MVP for District 13-4A as well as 1st Team All Region Selection and was BI-District Playoffs Champions.
PERSONAL
Born on Feb. 12, 1995 in Texas ... son of Clemente Armstrong and Marla Armstrong ... his two favorite athletes are Kobe Bryant and Ron Artest ... he admires his mother and uncle the most outside of sports ... his favorite part of UNH is the French Toast ... his favorite movie is Rambo.
33
Daniel Dion Freshman Guard 6-0 175 Cedar Park, TX
30
BEFORE UNH
In 2009-10 he made the Varsity team as a Freshman and was awarded Academic All District as well as playing in the Playoffs ... In 2010-11 he was 3rd Team All District as a Sophomore and won the Newcomer of the Year Award as well as competing in the Playoffs, Academic All District ... In 2011-12 he was 1st Team All District as a Junior, All Centex Team Dazzling Dozen, Academic All District team, Top 100 recruit in state, competed in the playoffs and Co Captain of the Dazzling Dozen ... In 2012-13 he was Offensive MVP in district, Leading scorer in Central Texas, All Centex team, All Academic First Team, Captain of the Dazzling Dozen, Leading scorer in school histroy, First Division one player from Vista Ridge, Playoffs 2013, All Tournament team (three times), 1st Team All District, second leading scorer in 4A for guards.
PERSONAL
Born on Jan. 24, 1995 in California ... son of Derek Dion and Lela Dion ... his favorite athletes are Steve Nash and Stephen Curry ... his favorite part of UNH is the campus ... one of his aspirations is to bring UNH to the March Madness tournament for the first time ... his favorite movie is Hoosiers ... enjoys eating salad.
John Edwards
Freshman Forward 6-6 205 Charlotte, NC
14
BEFORE UNH
In 2009-10 John won a State Championship ... In 2011-12 he won the Prep School National Championships ... 2012-13 he won the NEPSAC Championships.
PERSONAL
Born April 22, 1994 in Charlotte, N.C. son of Bob Edwards and Laney Edwards ... His two favorite athletes are Kobe Bryant and Carmelo Anthony and admires his parents ... he enjoys BBQ people and watching Breaking Bad ... His goal is a 3.0 and to play professional basketball.
34
Williams Gabriel Freshman Forward 6-8 214 Lagos, Nigeria
24
BEFORE UNH
His overall record for four years with Huntington Prep was 83-8 becoming the winningest player in school history ... Helped the team achieve a No. 1 ranking as a senior and was named McDonald’s All-American nominee ... averaged 2.5 ppg and 3.0 rpg and graduated with high honors.
PERSONAL
Born on Sep. 13, 1994 in Nigeria ... son of Gabriel Otor and Grace Gabriel ... he likes the basketball program the most at UNH ... his goal is to one day play professionally ... his favorite food is rice ... enjoys studying and basketball.
Jaleen Smith Freshman Guard 6-4 195 Freeport, Texas
0
BEFORE UNH
In 2010-11 he was 1st Team District 23-4A and recieved Newcomer of the Year Starter as a Sophomore with 8 ppg, 7 rpg and 3 apg ... In 2011-12 he was 1st Team District 23-4A with 17 ppg, 10 rpg, 6 apg ... In 2012-13 he was 1st Team All-State as well as 1st Team District 24-4A, he recieved Defensive Player of the Year and was a TABC All-Star with 19 ppg, 8 rpg, 6 apg
PERSONAL
Born Nov. 24, 1994 in Texas ... the son of Andre Smith and Kadrean Williams ... his favorite athlete is Paul George ... he admires his mother ... school spirit is his favorite part of UNH ... his favorite TV show is Fresh Prince of Bel Air ... most memorable moment was signing day
35
Matt Miller Junior Guard 6-4 185 Arnold, MD
23
2012-13
Sat out the 2012-13 season due to NCAA transfer regulations.
BEFORE UNH
Spent the last two season at Seton Hill. started all 27 games for the Griffins last season as a sophomore. Miller was one of the top scorers in the nation last season as he ranked 22nd in the Division II ranks with 20.1 points per game, shooting 50 percent from the field.
PERSONAL
Miller comes from a rich basketball family, as two of his cousins are head coaches at the Division I level. Sean Miller is the head coach at Arizona while Archie Miller just completed his first season at Dayton.
36
SEASON REVIEW HISTORY & RECORDS AMERICA EAST 38-39 2012-13 STATISTICS 40 RECORDS 41-46 YEARLY RESULTS 47-50 ALUMNI ROSTER 51-52 WILCAT HONOR ROLL 53
37
Stony Brook - X Vermont Boston University Hartford Albany - y Maine New Hampshire UMBC Binghamton
CONFERENCE
W L Pct. H A Streak 14 2 .875 8-0 6-2 W6 11 5 .688 6-2 5-3 L1 11 5 .688 6-2 5-3 L1 10 6 .625 6-2 4-4 W3 9 7 .563 5-3 4-4 L1 6 10 .375 5-3 1-7 L3 5 11 .313 3-5 2-6 W1 5 11 .313 4-4 1-7 W1 1 15 .063 0-8 1-7 L10
OVERALL
W L Pct. H A N Streak 25 8 .758 11-1 13-7 1-0 L1 21 12 .636 10-5 9-7 2-0 L2 17 13 .567 9-3 7-9 1-1 L2 17 14 .548 10-5 7-8 0-1 L2 24 11 .686 12-4 11-5 1-2 L1 11 19 .367 8-4 3-15 0-0 L4 9 20 .310 6-6 3-13 0-1 L1 8 23 .258 6-8 1-14 1-1 L1 3 27 .100 2-12 1-14 0-1 L11
x-America East Regular-Season Champions y-America East Tournament Champions
2013 America East Championship
First three rounds at SEFCU Arena (Albany, N.Y.) Title game played at Patrick Gymnasium (Burlington, Vt.)
Quarterfinals: Saturday, March 9 No. 2 Vermont 61, No. 7 New Hampshire 42 (ESPN3) No. 6 UMBC 69, No. 3 Hartford 62 (ESPN3) No. 1 Stony Brook 72, No. 8 Binghamton 49 (ESPN3) No. 4 Albany 50, No. 5 Maine 49 (ESPN3) Semifinals: Sunday, March 10 No. 2 Vermont 85, No. 6 UMBC 72 (ESPN3) No. 4 Ablany 61, No. 1 Stony Brook 59 (ESPN3) Title Game: Saturday, March 16 No. 4 Albany 53, No. 2 Vermont 49 (ESPN2) All-Championship Team Mike Black, Albany Jacob Iati, Albany Sam Rowley, Albany Ethan O’Day, Vermont Ryan Cook, UMBC
Reggie Lewis Most Outstanding Player: Mike Black, Albany NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship at Philadelphia (PA) First Round: Friday, March 22 No. 2 Duke 73, No. 15 Albany 61
2012-13 America East Awards Kevin Roberson Player of the Year: Tommy Brenton, Stony Brook Rookie of the Year: Jameel Warney, Stony Brook Defensive Player of the Year: Tommy Brenton, Stony Brook Coach of the Year: Steve Pikiell, Stony Brook
First Team
Mike Black, Albany D.J. Irving, Boston U. Mark Nwakamma, Hartford Tommy Brenton, Stony Brook Brian Voelkel, Vermont
Second Team Justin Edwards, Maine Alasdair Fraser, Maine Ryan Cook, UMBC Jameel Warney, Stony Brook Clancy Rugg, Vermont
Third Team
Jordan Reed, Binghamton Dom Morris, Boston U. Maurice Watson, Jr., Boston U. Dave Coley, Stony Brook Sandro Carissimo, Vermont
All-Rookie Team
Peter Hooley, Albany Jordan Reed, Binghamton John Papale, Boston U. Maurice Watson, Jr., Boston U. Jameel Warney, Stony Brook
All-Academic Team
Jacob Iati, Albany Sam Rowley, Albany Scott Morris, New Hampshire Luke Apfeld, Vermont Sandro Carissimo, Vermont
38
STAFF DIRECTORY AMY HUCHTHAUSEN
Founded: 1979 (as ECAC North, men’s basketball only), 1988-89 (all sports) Membership (year joined): University at Albany (2001), Binghamton University
Senior Associate Commissioner/CFO & SWA
(2001), University of Hartford (1985), University of Maine (1979), UMBC (2003), University of Massachusetts-Lowell (2013), University of New Hampshire (1979), Stony Brook University (2001), University of Vermont (1979), Fairfield University* (2007), Providence College^ (2010)
MATT BOURQUE
*Associate member in field hockey only ^Associate member in women’s volleyball only
Commissioner
SHONNA BROWN
Sr. Assoc. Commissioner for External Relations
FRANK SULLIVAN
Associate Commissioner for Men’s Basketbal/Officiating
MARY MULVENNA
Associate Commissioner for Compliance
CHAD DWYER
Assistant Comminssioner for Championships
SEAN TAINSH
Director of Communications
JARED HAGER
Director of Strategic Media
ERIN IWASKIEWICZ
Associate Director of Video & Creative Services
KELLY POWERS
Assistant Director for Administration
KATIE MCDEVITT
Administrative Intern
CONTACT INFORMATION PHONE NUMBER 617-695-6369
FAX NUMBER
(617) 695-6380
MAILING ADDRESS
215 First Street, Suite 140 Cambridge, MA 02142
WEBSITE
www.AmericaEast.com
Sports (20): Baseball, Men’s Basketball, Women’s Basketball, Men’s Cross Country,
Women’s Cross Country, Field Hockey, Men’s Indoor Track & Field, Women’s Indoor Track & Field, Men’s Lacrosse, Women’s Lacrosse, Men’s Outdoor Track & Field, Women’s Outdoor Track & Field, Men’s Soccer, Women’s Soccer, Softball, Men’s Swimming & Diving, Women’s Swimming & Diving, Men’s Tennis, Women’s Tennis, Women’s Volleyball
About America East...
Now in its fourth decade of operation, America East has evolved into one of the most comprehensive NCAA Division I conferences with a commitment to broad-based, competitive athletics programs, complementing the academic integrity and missions of the member institutions. Progressive in its approach to its more than 3,400 student-athletes, America East recognizes champions in each of its 20 sports, including women’s basketball. America East also conducts the nation’s most comprehensive academic recognition program for student-athletes and partners. With a geographic footprint covering the Mid-Atlantic to Northeast regions of the United States, America East strives to develop champions in academics, athletics and leadership at its nine member institutions. America East has experienced unprecedented success in recent years on the playing surface, in the classroom and throughout its member institutions’ communities. Starting with the 2007-08 academic year, the conference has seen two individual national champions and over 120 student-athletes earn All-America recognition. In the classroom, hundreds of student-athletes have earned national or regional academic honors while America East’s Academic Progress Rate has improved every year since 2004-05 and ranks among the top three conferences in the country. America East has also sponsored programs aimed at improving its members’ communities, partnering with Newman’s Own Foundation for the Campus Community Challenge each of the past three years as well as teaming up with College For Every Student on student service projects each of the past two years. Under the leadership of new commissioner Amy Huchthausen, America East is positioned for even more success in the years ahead. Leadership… America East has partnered with Newman’s Own Foundation to encourage community service among students through the NOF Campus Community Challenge. Nine grants of $7,500 to $25,000 were awarded to honor and support student groups engaged in philanthropy and community service. In total, more than $100,000 was given to America East student groups. America East and College for Every Student (CFES), a national non-profit that helps underserved kids attend college, held an event on April 9. Student-athletes partnered with CFES Scholars at participating schools for a community service project, ranging from beautifying school property to collecting food and shoes for charity drives. Members of the America East Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), with at least one representative from each of the nine America East schools, volunteered their time to clean up and paint at the Heading Home Family Shelter in Boston as part of “Make a Difference Day.” Five America East institutions are ranked among the top 105 national universities according to the U.S News and World Report America’s Best College Guide and UMBC was recognized as the top “Up-and-Coming” university in the country for the second straight year.
39
2012-13 UNH Men's Basketball 2012-13 FINAL STATISTICS New Hampshire Combined Team Statistics (as of Sep 25, 2013) All games
RECORD: ALL GAMES CONFERENCE NON-CONFERENCE
OVERALL 9-20 5-11 4-9
Total 3-Point min avg fg-fga fg% 3fg-fga 3fg%
##
Player
gp-gs
15 14 03 44 33 22 05 35 10 02 12 11 01
Myrick, Ferg Konan, Patrick Rhoads, Chandler Pelcher, Chris Matagrano, Chris Morris, Scott Bronner, Jordon Trotman, Jeron Mortenson, Logan Orozco, Chris Okeke, Frank McDonnell, Tommy Jones, Garrett Team Total.......... Opponents......
28-20 856 30.6 125-358 28-27 893 31.9 113-287 29-29 1043 36.0 103-315 25-17 628 25.1 95-178 29-15 515 17.8 64-118 28-2 489 17.5 45-105 29-24 693 23.9 33-90 24-7 204 8.5 17-28 17-0 124 7.3 7-28 20-4 233 11.7 2-27 16-0 96 6.0 4-25 16-0 64 4.0 1-5 1-0 12 12.0 0-2 29 29
HOME 6-6 3-5 3-1
5850 5850
.349 .394 .327 .534 .542 .429 .367 .607 .250 .074 .160 .200 .000
43-135 48-147 30-116 0-0 3-15 34-85 13-43 0-0 5-18 1-9 2-11 0-0 0-2
609-1566 .389 179-581 639-1565 .408 137-487
.319 .327 .259 .000 .200 .400 .302 .000 .278 .111 .182 .000 .000
AWAY 3-13 2-6 1-7
F-Throw ft-fta ft%
89-136 55-76 77-137 38-62 26-35 3-5 33-50 5-13 4-4 15-21 2-4 1-2 0-0
.654 .724 .562 .613 .743 .600 .660 .385 1.000
.714 .500 .500 .000
.308 348-545 .639 .281 404-570 .709
off
43 50 20 48 37 2 7 12 6 10 3 7 0 53 298 300
NEUTRAL 0-1 0-0 0-1
Rebounds def tot avg
131 100 118 110 53 19 36 38 11 26 13 9 0 47 711 769
174 150 138 158 90 21 43 50 17 36 16 16 0 100 1009 1069
6.2 5.4 4.8 6.3 3.1 0.8 1.5 2.1 1.0 1.8 1.0 1.0 0.0
pf dq
75 55 53 66 55 46 66 29 12 26 8 6 1
34.8 498 36.9 504
2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
a
to blk stl
34 22 98 22 19 16 62 5 7 11 1 6 1
19 10 3 34 7 1 2 5 0 0 0 1 0
63 68 66 31 26 17 26 11 7 16 4 6 0 10 4 304 351 - 293 358
pts
avg
382 329 313 228 157 127 112 39 23 20 12 3 0
13.6 11.8 10.8 9.1 5.4 4.5 3.9 1.6 1.4 1.0 0.8 0.2 0.0
82 169 1745 84 185 1819
60.2 62.7
26 22 45 20 10 13 18 3 4 5 2 1 0
TEAM STATISTICS UNH OPP Date Opponent Score Att. SCORING UNH INDIVIDUAL 1745 GAME 1819 HIGHS W 91-51 667 11/10/12 SUFFOLK UNH TEAM GAME HIGHS Points per game 60.2 62.7 W 72-58 831 11/13/12 at Dartmouth Scoring margin -2.6 L 64-76 812 11/17/12 POINTS. at Bryant POINTS. ......................................................................27, Ferg Myrick vs. Maine (03/03/13) ................................................................... 92 vs. UMBC (02/13/13) FIELD GOALS-ATT 609-1566 639-1565 FIELD GOALS MADE...................................................10, Ferg Myrick vs. Yale (12/08/12) L 67-69 301 11/21/12 FIELD at NJIT GOALS MADE. . ........................................35 vs. Suffolk (11/10/12) FIELD GOAL at Maine (01/30/13) Field goal ATT. pct ..................................................... .389 21, Ferg.40Myrick 8 L 50-60 1546 11/24/12 at Holy Cross FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS...................................64 vs. Suffolk (11/10/12) FG3PCT (min 5 made)......................... .875 (7-8), Patrick Konan vs. UMBC (02/13/13) POINT FG-ATT 179-581 137-487 L 53-61 8705 11/29/12 at UCONN ................................................................... .875 (7-8), Chris Pelcher vs. Suffolk (11/10/12) GOAL PERCENTAGE..571 (28-49)Wvs. Central (12/5/12) 3-point FG pct .308 .281 63-50Conn. St. 602 12/01/12 FIELD BROWN 3 PT3-pt FGFG MADE............................................6, Patrick Konan at Albany (N.Y.) (02/28/13) 3 PT FIELD GOALS MADE..................12 vs. Central Conn. St. (12/5/12) made per game 6.2 4.7 L 84-87 613 12/05/12 CENTRAL CONN. ST 3 PT FG ATTEMPTS.................................... 10, Ferg Myrick vs. Stony Brook (02/02/13) FG ATTEMPTS.............................................29 at Bryant (11/17/12) FREE 348-545 404-570 W 64-56 653 12/08/12 3 PT YALE 3-PT FG THROWS-ATT PCT (min 2 made). 1.000 (6-6), Patrick Konan at Albany (N.Y.) (02/28/13) Free throw pct .639Myrick vs..7Central 09 FG PERCENTAGE... .480 (12-25) vs.LoCentral Conn. St. (12/05/12) t 59-61 2163 12/16/12 3 PT at Boston College FREE THROWS MADE....................... 10, Ferg Conn. St. (12/05/12) F-Throws game(twice), Chandler 12.0 Rhoads13.9 FREE THROWmade ATT..per .........13 vs. Binghamton (02/23/13)* THROWS (11/13/12) L at Dartmouth 45-72 0 12/23/12 FREE at Penn State MADE.................................28 FTREBOUNDS PCT (min 3 made)............................1.000 Myrick vs. Maine (03/03/13) 1009(8-8), Ferg1069 L at Dartmouth 63-65 237 12/30/12 FREE at Colgate THROW ATTEMPTS..........................44 (11/13/12) ....................................................... 1.000 (6-6), Chandler Rhoads Rebounds per game 34.8 36.9 at Penn St. (12/23/12) * 01/02/13 FREE VERMONT 51-64 629 THROW PERCENTAGE............... .900L(9-10) vs. Vermont (01/02/13) ...................................................................1.000 (6-6), Chris Pelcher at Bryant (11/17/12) Rebounding margin -2.1 * 01/05/13 REBOUNDS. at Stony Brook L 49-65 1630 ..........................................................51 vs. Suffolk (11/10/12) ...................................................... 1.000 (4-4), Chris Matagrano vs. Hartford (01/24/13) ASSISTS 304 293 * 01/09/13 at UMBC 1152 ..............................................................1.000 (4-4), Jordan Bronner at Bryant (11/17/12) ASSISTS............................................... 19 vs.LCentral57-68 Conn. St. (12/05/12) Assists per game 10.5 10.1 * 01/16/13 ALBANY L 62-68 578 ............................................. 1.000 (3-3) (twice), Patrick Konan at Penn St. (12/23/12)* STEALS. . ............................................................13 vs. Boston U. (02/17/13) TURNOVERS 351Patrick Konan 358 vs. Boston U. (01/19/13) * 01/19/13 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 59-69 764 REBOUNDS. ................................................... 13, BLOCKED SHOTS.................................................9 at40-51 Hartford (02/20/13) Turnovers per game 12.1 12.3 at Colgate (12/30/12) ASSISTS...........................................................9, Chandler Rhoads * 01/24/13 HARTFORD L 651 STEALS. ..................................................................6, vs. Yale (12/08/12) Turnover margin +0.2 Chandler Rhoads * 01/26/13 at Binghamton Univ. W 63-45 4203 BLOCKED SHOTS.ratio ............................................... Assist/turnover 0.95, Chris Pelcher 0.8 at Hartford (02/20/13) * 01/30/13 at Maine W 57-54 1299 STEALS 169 185 * 02/02/13 STONY BROOK L 54-56 912 *Most Recent Game BY PERIODS 1 2 L OT TOTAL 2085 Steals per game 5.8 6.4 * 02/06/13 SCORE at Vermont 48-63 BLOCKS 82 84 787 933 * 02/13/13 Wildcats UMBC Wot 25 1,745 92-86 569 Blocks per game 2.8 2.9 * 02/17/13 Opponents at Boston University L 56-68 483 841 957 21 1,819 ATTENDANCE 8256 27710 * 02/20/13 at HARTFORD L 44-49 2263 Home games-Avg/Game 12-688 16-1732 * 02/23/13 ATTENDANCE BINGHAMTON UNIV. W 68-56 513 Neutral site-Avg/Game 1-0 Cumulative: 45,706 L(1,57749-56 average) 0 * 2/28/13 at Albany * 03/03/13 Home: MAINE 79-74 1105 8,256 W(688 average) Score by Periods 1st 2nd OT Totals 0 3/9/13 vs Vermont Away: 37,450 L(2,34142-61 average) New Hampshire 787 933 25 1745 Neutral: 1,839 (1,839 average) Opponents 841 957 21 1819 * = Conference game
40
SINGLE-GAME RECORDS
Points:
Individual Records
44 by Frank McLaughlin vs. UMass, 1/15/55
Points, Half: 28 by Matt Alosa vs. Holy Cross, 12/21/95
Field Goals: 19 by Frank McLaughlin vs. UMass, 1/15/55 FG Attempts: 36 by Denny Hodgdon vs. Bowdoin, 12/2/66 FG %:
1.000 by Blagoj Janev (11-11) vs. Vermont 1/9/07
3-Pt. FGs:
8 by Tommy MacDonald vs. Brown, 1/12/93 8 by Marcus Bullock vs. Maine, 2/14/02
3-Pt. FGAs: 16 by Tyrone Conley at Stony Brook, 1/15/11 3-Pt. FG %: 1.000 by Alvin Abreu (7-7) vs. Santa Clara 1/4/09
1.000 by Patrick Konan (6-6) vs. Albany (N.Y.) 2/28/13 1.000 by Blagoj Janev (5-5) vs. Vermont, 1/9/07 1.000 by Chris Vetrano (4-4) vs. Hartford 1/8/06 1.000 by Austin Ganly (4-4) vs. Delaware 12/7/00
Team Records
Points:
116 vs. Brandeis, 2/20/71
Points, Half: 64 vs. Vermont (2nd half ), 2/4/89 Points, OT:
20 vs. St. Anselm, 12/8/64 20 vs. Dartmouth, 11/25/00
Field Goals:
50 vs. Brandeis (50-82), 2/20/71
FG Attempts: 114 vs. St. Mary’s (39-114), 1/1/64
Ties New England record
FG %:
.707 vs. Harvard (41-58), 1/2/84
3-Pt. FGs:
17 vs. Maine (17-23), 2/14/02
3-Pt. FGAs:
41 at UMBC, 2/23/08
3-Pt. FG %:
.739 vs. Maine, 2/14/02
Free Throws: 16 by Jose Powell vs. Providence, 11/22/91
Free Throws: 37 vs. Connecticut (37-50), 1960-61
FT Attempts: 25 by Billy Pappas vs. Bowdoin, 12/2/53
FT %:
1.000 vs. Colgate (10-10), 2/4/81
Rebounds:
81 vs. M.I.T., 1/13/60
Assists:
31 vs. Harvard, 11/29/88
FT %:
16 by Derek Counts vs. Harvard, 11/29/88
1.000 by Dane Diliegro (12-12) at Colgate, 12/04/10 1.000 by Jermaine Anderson (12-12) vs. Boston U., 2/11/07 1.000 by Chris Brown (12-12) vs. Hartford, 1/24/02 1.000 by Matt Alosa (12-12) vs. Delaware, 2/26/95
Rebounds:
27 by Pete Smilikis vs. Middlebury, 1/2/60
Assists:
19 by Randy Kinzly vs. Colgate, 2/4/81
Steals:
8 by Al McClain vs. Canisius, 3/8/83
Wildcats vs. All Opponents
Opponent
Akron Alabama Alabama-Birmingham Albany American Army Austin Peay Binghamton Boston College Boston University Brown Bryant Buffalo California Cansius Central Connecticut State Cincinnati Colgate Columbia Connecticut Cornell Dartmouth Davidson Delaware Delaware State Detroit Drexel Duke Duquesne East Carolina Elon Evansville Fairfield Florida Florida State Fordham Franklin Pierce Fresno State Gannon George Mason Gonzaga Hartford Harvard
G W L Pct.
1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 27 12 15 .444 1 0 1 .000 9 3 4 .333 1 0 1 .000 25 10 15 .400 30 6 24 .200 129 37 92 .287 44 23 21 .523 1 0 1 .000 2 0 2 .000 1 0 1 .000 18 6 12 .333 9 3 6 .333 1 0 1 .000 32 20 12 .625 3 0 3 .000 117 25 92 .214 3 3 0 1.000 61 30 31 .492 4 1 3 .250 25 7 18 .280 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 20 3 17 .150 1 0 1 .000 0 0 0 .000 2 0 2 .000 1 1 0 1.000 2 0 2 .000 9 1 8 .111 3 0 3 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 2 0 2 .000 1 1 0 1.000 1 0 1 .000 59 21 38 .356 36 14 22 .389
Opponent
Hofstra Holy Cross Idaho State Iona Jacksonville Keene State Kent State Lafayette Lehigh Lesley Liberty Long Beach State Long Island University Loyola (Md.) Maine Manhattan Marist Marquette Marshall Maryland Maryland-Baltimore Massachusetts Mass.-Lowell Miami (Ohio) Miami (Fla.) Michigan State Monmouth Mt. St. Mary’s Navy New England College NJIT New Mexico Niagara North Carolina St. UNC-Charlotte UNC-Wilmington Northeastern Northern Illinois Northwestern Notre Dame Ohio State Old Dominion Pennsylvania
FT Attempts: 59 vs. Bowdoin (26-59), 1953-54
G W L Pct.
18 5 13 .278 31 10 21 .323 1 1 0 1.000 4 2 2 .500 3 0 3 .000 1 1 0 1.000 1 0 1 .000 3 1 2 .333 3 0 3 .000 1 1 0 1.000 2 2 0 1.000 1 0 1 .000 4 0 4 .000 2 1 1 .500 180 65 115 .361 2 0 2 .000 5 3 2 .600 0 0 0 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 20 11 9 .550 93 28 65 .301 0 0 0 .000 1 1 0 1.000 1 0 1 .000 2 0 2 .000 2 0 2 .000 3 1 2 .333 5 3 2 .600 1 1 0 1.000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 17 5 12 .294 2 0 2 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 118 35 83 .297 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 2 1 1 .500 2 0 2 .000
Opponent
Penn State Pittsburgh Portland State Princeton Providence Quinnipiac Rhode Island Rice Richmond Rider Robert Morris Rutgers Sacred Heart Santa Clara Siena St. Anselm St. Francis St. Mary’s (Calif.) St. Peter’s (N.J.) South Alabama South Carolina State South Florida Stanford Stetson Stony Brook Suffolk Towson University Tulane Vanderbilt Vermont Virginia Virginia Commonwealth Virginia Tech Wake Forest West Virginia Western Kentucky William & Mary Wisconsin Wisconsin-Milwaukeee Xavier Yale
G W L Pct.
4 0 4 .000 2 0 2 .000 1 0 1 .000 2 1 1 .500 14 1 13 .071 3 2 1 .667 106 17 89 .160 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 2 1 1 .500 3 2 1 .667 3 0 3 .000 2 0 2 .000 2 1 1 .500 14 2 12 .143 64 28 36 .438 2 1 1 .500 1 0 1 .000 6 0 6 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 1 0 1.000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 2 2 0 1.000 26 14 12 .538 6 6 0 1.000 12 5 7 .417 1 1 0 1.000 2 0 2 .000 137 49 88 .358 1 0 1 .000 4 0 4 .000 2 0 2 .000 1 0 1 .000 2 0 2 .000 1 0 1 .000 2 0 2 .000 1 0 1 .000 1 0 1 .000 3 0 3 .000 18 6 12 .333
41
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 5. 6. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 8. 9. 10.
42
SCORING
INDIVIDUAL SEASON RECORDS
Scott Drapeau (94-95) Scott Drapeau (93-94) Al McClain (83-84) Matt Alosa (95-96) Matt Alosa (94-95) Robin Dixon (82-83) Al McClain (80-81) Al McClain (81-82) Tyrone Conley (10-11) Nick Mandravelis (63-64)
SCORING AVERAGE
Matt Alosa (95-96) Scott Drapeau (94-95) Scott Drapeau (93-94) Al McClain (83-84) Matt Alosa (94-95) Billy Pappas (53-54) Robin Dixon (82-83) Frank McLaughlin (55-56) Nick Mandravelis (63-64) Robert Gordon (50-51)
FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED Al McClain (83-84) Scott Drapeau (93-94) Matt Alosa (94-95) Matt Alosa (95-96) Joe Hargen (60-61) Wayne Morrison (75-76) Scott Drapeau (94-95) Jim Rich (63-64) Al McClain (80-81) Denny Hodgdon (66-67)
FIELD GOALS MADE
Al McClain (83-84) Scott Drapeau (93-94) Scott Drapeau (94-95) Robin Dixon (82-83) Al McClain (80-81) Matt Alosa (95-96) Matt Alosa (94-95) Al McClain (81-82) Wayne Morrison (75-76) Frank McLaughlin (54-55)
648 642 638 624 623 562 492 462 461 455
24.00 23.14 22.93 22.78 22.25 21.00 20.81 19.88 19.78 19.56
514 498 476 476 463 456 456 451 446 431
265 241 241 222 210 199 197 196 194 181
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
(Min. 100 attempts) Ben Sturgill (03-04) Dan Nolan (82-83) Dave Pemberton (71-72) Craig Walls (04-05) Rick Minkwitz (71-74) Ben Sturgill (02-03) Brendan Van Deventer (78-79) Peter Laskaris (77-78) Robin Dixon (82-83) Rick Minkwitz (72-73)
FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED Billy Pappas (54-55) Scott Drapeau (94-95) Scott Drapeau (93-94) Derek Counts (87-88) Chris Brown (01-02) Nick Mandravelis (63-64) Dan Nolan (82-83) Matt Alosa (95-96) Frank Davis (68-69) Matt Alosa (94-95)
.610 .581 .579 .566 .563 .559 .5559 .5556 .552 .550
230 205 189 187 187 186 186 180 177 168
FREE THROWS MADE
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 10.
1. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 10.
Matt Alosa (95-96) Nick Mandravelis (63-64) Scott Drapeau (94-95) Matt Alosa (94-95) Chris Brown (01-02) Billy Pappas (54-55) Scott Drapeau (93-94) Derek Counts (87-88) Paul Shepard (68-69) Robin Dixon (82-83) Austin Ganly (01-02)
(Min. 40 Attempts) Jermaine Anderson (05-06) Blagoj Janev (05-06) Jermaine Anderson (06-07) Rodney Johnson (85-96) Austin Ganly (01-02) Matt Alosa (94-95) Marcus Bullock (00-01) Matt Alosa (95-96) Jermaine Anderson (04-05) Alvin Abreu (07-08)
3 PT. FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED Tyrone Conley (10-11) Matt Alosa (94-95) Tyrece Gibbs (08-09) Matt Alosa (95-96) Tyrece Gibbs (07-08) Andy Cavo (98-99) Marcus Bullock (02-03) Marcus Bullock (03-04) Alvin Abreu (07-08) Alvin Abreu (09-10)
3 PT. FIELD GOALS MADE
Matt Alosa (94-95) Tyrece Gibbs (08-09) Tyrece Gibbs (07-08) Tyrone Conley (10-11) Matt Alosa (95-96) Andy Cavo (98-99) Marcus Bullock (01-02) Marcus Bullock (03-04) Andy Cavo (97-98) Tommy MacDonald (92-93) Alvin Abreu (07-08)
150 147 145 142 136 133 131 130 120 118 118
.919 .868 .856 .851 .849 .845 .837 .833 .821 .818
237 234 221 220 204 190 181 172 172 169
87 87 83 78 76 68 66 66 64 62 62
(Min. 35 Attempts) Matt Acres (96-97) .526 Brian Benson (11-12) .523 Andy Johnston (86-87) .500 Chris Brown (01-02) .484 Greg Steele (86-87) .456 Andy Cavo (97-98) .451 Chris Vetrano (05-06) .444 Austin Ganly (98-99) .447 Jermaine Anderson (06-07) .429 Ronnie Dennis (02-03) .423
Pete Smilikis (59-60) Dave Pemberton (71-72) Dave Pemberton (70-71) Chris Brown (01-02) Scott Drapeau (93-94) Scott Drapeau (94-95) Dirk Koopman (84-85) Nick Johnson (51-52) Dan Nolan (83-84) Dan Nolan (82-83)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
3 PT. FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
REBOUNDS
428 345 303 282 277 273 269 266 266 264
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
REBOUNDING AVERAGE
Pete Smilikis (59-60) Dave Pemberton (71-72) Nick Johnson (51-52) Dave Pemberton (70-71) Jim Greene (59-60) Jim Rich (60-61) Bob Glover (66-67) Bob Bron (61-62) Dave Pemberton (69-70) Peter Davis (59-60)
ASSISTS
Wayne Morrison (72-73) Erie Feragne (71-72) Colin Donahue (00-01) Keith Dickson (78-79) Wayne Morrison (73-74) Al McClain (82-83) Russell Graham (09-10) Al McClain (83-84) Erie Feragne (72-73) Carlos Bradberry (97-98)
18.6 15.0 13.3 13.2 11.6 11.0 10.9 10.8 10.8 10.6
163 162 135 133 131 123 121 118 112 109
STEALS
Al McClain (83-84) 82 Al McClain (80-81) 78 Al McClain (81-82) 77 Al McClain (82-83) 69 Doug Wilson (93-94) 63 Doug Wilson (94-95) 56 Shejdie Childs (03-04) 55 Jermaine Anderson (04-05) 52 Doug Wilson (95-96) 51 Dan Nolan (83-84) 49 Chris Brown (99-00) 49 Chris Brown (01-02) 49
BLOCKS
Rob Marquardt (99-00) 52 Mike Keeler (79-80) 41 Chris Pelcher (12-13) 34 Rob Marquardt (00-01) 33 Brian Benson (10-11) 32 Rob Marquardt (98-99) 32 Scott Drapeau (93-94) 30 Joe Rainis (82-83) 29 James Ben (91-92) 29 Scott Drapeau (94-95) 26
MINUTES
Al McClain (83-84) Chandler Rhoads (11-12) Tyrone Conley (10-11) Matt Alosa (94-95) Chandler Rhoads (12-13) Tyrece Gibbs (07-08) Alvin Abreu (11-12) Greg Steele (86-87) Dan Nolan (83-84) Tyrece Gibbs (08-09)
1,066 1,061 1,049 1,045 1,044 1,038 1,036 1,026 1,022 1,017
INDIVIDUAL CAREER RECORDS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 24. 25.
SCORING
Al McClain (80-84) Robin Dixon (79-83) Alvin Abreu (08-12) Wayne Morrison (72-76) Blagoj Janev (03-07) Tyrece Gibbs (06-09) Tyrone Conley (08-11) Scott Drapeau (93-95) Dan Nolan (80-84) Matt Alosa (94-96) Billy Pappas (52-55) Keith Dickson (75-79) Greg Steele (83-87) Jim Rich (60-64) Matt Acres (94-98) Dave Pemberton (69-72) Austin Ganly (98-02) Peter Laskaris (74-78) Erie Feragne (71-74) Mike Christensen (05-08) Eric Montanari (91-95) Derek Counts (85-89) Paul Dufour (76-80) Dirk Koopman (82-86) Eric Thielen (87-91)
SCORING AVERAGE
1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Matt Alosa (94-96) Scott Drapeau (93-95) Frank McLaughlin (54-57) Billy Pappas (52-55) Patrick Konan (10- ) Al McClain (80-84) Robert Gordon (50-56) Jim Rich (60-64) Dave Pemberton (69-72) John Parker (51-54)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Al McClain (80-84) Wayne Morrison (72-76) Alvin Abreu (08-12) Robin Dixon (79-83) Jim Rich (60-64) Tyrone Conley (08-11) Tyrece Gibbs (06-09) Tom Horne (63-66) Denny Hodgdon (65-68) Blagoj Janev (03-07)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED
FIELD GOALS MADE
Al McClain (80-84) Wayne Morrison (72-76) Robin Dixon (79-83) Alvin Abreu (08-12) Greg Steele (83-87) Scott Drapeau (93-95) Dan Nolan (80-84) Jim Rich (60-64) Tyrece Gibbs (06-09) Keith Dickson (75-79)
1,861 1,590 1,564 1,501 1,340 1,329 1,304 1,290 1,258 1,247 1,228 1,202 1,187 1,180 1,169 1,136 1,127 1,115 1,105 1,087 1,038 1,026 1,026 1,023 1,019 23.1 23.0 19.9 18.9 18.9 18.4 16.9 16.9 16.5 15.2 1,601 1,567 1,420 1,284 1,249 1,216 1,125 1,111 1,108 1,019 784 654 625 527 483 482 477 471 461 452
TYRECE GIBBS 2006-09 FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE (Min. 100 made)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 3. 4. 5. 7. 9.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Rick Minkwitz (71-74) Randy Kinzly (78-82) Tony Stanfield (81-82) Frank Davis (68-72) Dan Nolan (80-84) Brendan Van Deventer (75-79) Ben Sturgill (01-05) Peter Laskaris (74-78) Dave Pemberton (69-72) Steve Seay (65-68) Scott Drapeau (93-95)
.549 .544 .543 .540 .538 .527 .520 .512 .507 .505 .505
GAMES PLAYED
Tyrece Gibbs (06-09) Alvin Abreu (08-12) Tyrone Conley (08-11) Chandler Rhoads (09-13) Dirk Koopman (82-86) Greg Steele (83-87) Tommy MacDonald (90-94) Marcus Bullock Keith Carpenter (86-90) Austin Ganly (98-02)
FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED
Billy Pappas (52-55) Dan Nolan (80-84) Robin Dixon (79-83) Chandler Rhoads (09-13) John Parker (51-54) Dirk Koopman (82-86) Dave Pemberton (69-72) Derek Counts (85-89) Chris Brown (97-02) Mike Christensen (05-08)
117 117 116 114 113 113 111 111 110 110 576 547 492 485 441 428 415 414 408 407
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 8. 9. 10.
FREE THROWS MADE
Robin Dixon (79-83) Billy Pappas (52-55) Dan Nolan (80-84) Keith Dickson (75-79) Alvin Abreu (08-12) Al McClain (80-84) Mike Christensen (05-08) Matt Alosa (95-96) Derek Counts (85-89) Dave Pemberton (69-72)
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE (Min. 100 Attempts)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Jermaine Anderson (03-07) Norm Higgins (61-63) Randy Kinzly (77-81) Matt Alosa (94-95) Marcus Bullock (00-04) Paul Dufour (76-80) Jose Powell (91-92) David Lloyd (54-57) Austin Ganly (98-02) George Ford (50-53)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
3-PT. FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED
Tyrone Conley (08-11) Alvin Abreu (08-12) Tommy MacDonald (90-94) Tyrece Gibbs (06-09) Marcus Bullock (01-04) Blagoj Janev (04-07) Matt Alosa (94-96) Mike Christensen (05-08) Austin Ganly (98-02) Carmen Maciariello (96-99)
340 334 304 298 295 293 293 292 289 278
.851 .847 .841 .839 .822 .814 .811 .796 .787 .784 680 652 615 592 515 481 454 404 375 373
43
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
3-PT. FIELD GOALS MADE
Marcus Bullock (01-04) Tyrece Gibbs (06-09) Alvin Abreu (08-12) Tyrone Conley (08-11) Tommy MacDonald (90-94) Blagoj Janev (04-07) Matt Alosa (94-96) Austin Ganly (98-02) Andy Cavo (97-99) Carmen Maciariello (96-99) Mike Christensen (05-08)
3-PT. FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE (Min. 50 Attempts)
1. Andy Johnston (83-87) 2. Greg Steele (83-87) 3. Matt Acres (94-98) 4. Andy Cavo (97-99) 5. Eric Montanari (91-95) 6. Tyrece Gibbs (06-09) 7. Chris Brown (97-02) 8. Eric Gilchrese (08-09) 9. Austin Ganly (98-02) 10. Scott Drapeau (93-95) REBOUNDS 1. Dave Pemberton (69-72) 2. Dane DiLiegro (08-11) 3. Dan Nolan (80-84) 4. Dirk Koopman (82-86) 5. Jim Rich (61-64) 6. Eric Thielen (87-91) 7. Matt Acres (94-98) 8. Brian Benson (08-12) 9. Chris Brown (98-02) 10. Pete Smilikis (57-60) REBOUNDING AVERAGE 1. Nick Johnson (51-52) 2. Dave Pemberton (69-72) 3. Jim Rich (60-64) 4. Phil Blum (67-70) Scott Drapeau (93-95) 6. Bob Glover (66-69) Jeff Bannister (67-69) 8. Peter Davis (58-60) 9. Jim Greene (58-60) Dan Nolan (80-84) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
44
ASSISTS
Wayne Morrison (72-76) Al McClain (80-84) Keith Dickson (75-79) Erie Feragne (71-74) Chandler Rhoads (09-13) Andy Johnston (83-87) Doug Wilson (92-96) Keith Carpenter (86-90) Robin Dixon (79-83) Randy Kinzly (77-81)
249 233 215 144 197 172 163 144 132 130 130
.500 .455 .419 .398 .397 .394 .390 .388 .384 .368 897 637 826 726 721 717 680 626 613 603
STEALS
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Al McClain (80-84) Doug Wilson (92-96) Dan Nolan (80-84) Keith Carpenter (86-90) Jermaine Anderson (03-07) Chris Brown (97-02) Bryant Davis (89-93) Robin Dixon (79-83) Ed Eusebio (92-96) Derek Counts (85-89)
BLOCKS
Rob Marquardt (97-01) Brian Benson (09-12) Mike Keeler (79-82) Tyrece Gibbs (06-09) Scott Drapeau (93-95) Brian Benson (09-) Joe Rainis (79-83) Ferg Myrick (09-13) Blagoj Janev (03-07) Tyrone Conley (08-11)
MINUTES
Alvin Abreu (08-12) Al McClain (80-84) Tyrece Gibbs (06-09) Greg Steele (83-87) Matt Acres (94-98) Tyrone Conley (08-11) Chandler Rhoads (09-13) Marcus Bullock (00-04) Keith Carpenter (86-90) Dan Nolan (80-84)
306 193 145 134 130 128 125 121 117 113
90 78 60 60 56 53 51 51 49 48 3,844 3,770 3,711 3,637 3,583 3,520 3,494 3,468 3,464 3,247
13.3 13.0 10.3 9.8 9.8 8.4 8.4 8.2 8.1 8.1 505 415 361 359 307 286 283 277 272 260
ALVIN ABREU 2008-12
AL MCCLAIN 1980-84
SCORING
1. 2,256 2. 2,038 2,038 4. 2,032 5. 2,000
Top Five UNH Single-Season Efforts
1994-95 1993-94 1983-84 2000-01 1995-96
SCORING AVERAGE 1. 80.6 2. 78.5 3. 77.7 4. 75.0 75.0
1994-95 1963-64 1966-67 1970-71 1964-65
FIELD GOALS MADE 1. 813 2. 807 3. 773 4. 740 5. 728
1983-84 1994-95 1982-83 1975-76 1976-77
FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED 1. 1,893 2. 1,891 3. 1,830 4. 1,825 5. 1,770
1965-66 1963-64 1960-61 1959-60 1961-62
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE 1. .504 2. .490 3. .489 4. .480 5. .476
SCORING
1. 2,353 2. 2,310 3. 2,299 4. 2,223 5. 2,209
1983-84 1982-83 1976-77 1980-81 1981-82
1999-00 1987-88 2000-01 1995-96 1994-95 1965-66 1967-68 1964-65 1956-57 1968-69
FIELD GOALS MADE 1. 874 2. 863 3. 848 4. 846 5. 835
1976-77 1987-88 1999-00 1965-66 1983-84
FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED 1. 1,926 2. 1,833 3. 1,811 4. 1,801 5. 1,789
1. 275 2. 240 3. 229 4. 227 5. 225
2007-08 2008-09 2000-01 2006-07 2005-06
3 PT. FGS ATTEMPTED 1. 741 2. 740 3. 682 4. 658 5. 655
2008-09 2007-08 2000-01 2010-11 2006-07
3 PT. FG PERCENTAGE 1. .434 2. .372 3. .367 4. .359 5. .348
1986-87 2007-08 1994-95 1998-99 2005-06
FREE THROWS MADE 1. 489 2. 462 3. 457 4. 455 5. 448
2001-02 1968-69 1985-86 1994-95 1987-88
FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED 1. 742 2. 705 3. 689 4. 674 5. 673
1987-88 1968-69 2001-02 1988-89 2002-03
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE 1. .785 2. .738 3. .728 4. .717 5. .714
REBOUNDS
1. 1,384 2. 1,272 3. 1,245 4. 1,182 5. 1,101
2005-06 1976-77 1978-79 1972-73 2001-02
REBOUNDING AVERAGE 1. 60.2 2. 53.0 3. 51.8 4. 51.7 5. 51.3
1959-60 1960-61 1968-69 1951-52 1961-62
OFFENSIVE REBOUNDS 1. 383 2. 382 3. 378 4. 375 5. 363
2009-10 1999-00 2000-01 2008-09 2010-11
DEFENSIVE REBOUNDS 1. 729 2. 711 3. 706 4. 701 5. 696
1865-66 1987-88 1994-95 1968-69 1999-00
FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED
3 PT. FIELD GOALS MADE
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
1. 218 218 3. 204 204 5. 198
1980-81 1978-79 1981-82 1977-78 1955-56 2000-01 2001-02 1999-00 2007-08 2004-05
3 PT. FGS ATTEMPTED 1. 605 2. 595 3. 588 4. 574 5. 523
2001-02 2004-05 2002-03 2000-01 2007-08
3 PT. FG PERCENTAGE 1. .440 2. .412 3. .398 4. .397 5. .396
1986-87 1987-88 1989-90 1999-00 1992-93
FREE THROWS MADE 1. 592 2. 553 3. 550 4. 545 5. 514
1991-92 2000-01 1992-93 1997-98 1990-91
1. 866 2. 819 3. 787 4. 773 5. 738
1. .738 2. .736 3. .735 4. .731 5. .722
REBOUNDS
1. 1,355 2. 1,352 3. 1,332 4. 1,315 5. 1,260
1991-92 2000-01 1990-91 1992-93 1997-98 1997-98 1986-87 1979-80 1983-84 1987-88 1961-62 1967-68 1968-69 1960-61 1999-00
REBOUNDING AVERAGE 1. 59.0 2. 58.8 3. 55.5 4. 55.0 5. 54.8
1966-67 1967-68 1968-69 1966-67 1960-61
OFFENSIVE REBOUNDS 1. 420 2. 384 3. 368 4. 356 5. 345
1. 454 1994-95 2. 438 1983-84 3. 421 1972-73 4. 419 1993-94 5. 411 1982-83 1. 257 2. 243 3. 222 4. 221 5. 217
BLOCKS
1. 101 2. 98 3. 93 4. 84 5. 83
TURNOVERS 1. 525 2. 510 3. 501 4. 500 5. 491
1993-94 2000-01 1999-00 1991-92 1980-81 1999-00 1998-99 2010-11 2008-09 1997-98
1987-88 1999-00 1993-94 1990-91 1991-92
2001-02 2012-13 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE 1. .517 2. .513 3. .509 4. .506 5. .504
ASSISTS
STEALS 1959-60 1960-61 1968-69 1961-62 1987-88
Top Five Opponent Single-Season Efforts
SCORING AVERAGE 1. 89.9 2. 89.0 3. 88.3 4. 87.3 5. 85.4
3 PT. FIELD GOALS MADE
1999-00 1994-95 2004-05 2000-01 1995-96
DEFENSIVE REBOUNDS 1. 839 2. 822 3. 778 4. 769 5. 764 764
ASSISTS
1. 476 2. 463 3. 459 4. 458 5. 440
STEALS
1. 279 2. 252 2. 238 3. 232 4. 231
BLOCKS
1. 169 2. 135 3. 123 4. 121 5. 114
TURNOVERS 1. 534 2. 501 3. 489 4. 480 480
1999-00 2000-01 2010-11 2012-13 2008-09 2009-10
1999-00 2000-01 1980-81 1979-80 1995-96 1999-00 2002-03 2001-02 1991-92 1990-91 1999-00 1989-90 2000-01 2002-03 1988-89 2000-01 1993-94 1999-00 1980-81 1989-90
45
YEAR-BY-YEAR RECORDS YEAR W L PCT. COACH 1902-03 4 4 .500 No Coach 1903-04 3 3 .500 “ “ 1904-05 6 4 .600 “ “ 1905-06 3 4 .429 “ “ 1906-07 7 4 .583 “ “ 1907-08 8 3 .727 Alexander Gion 1908-09 6 5 .545 No Coach 1909-10 5 3 .625 “ “ 1910-11 6 3 .667 Ray Thomas 1911-12 7 4 .583 Percy Reynolds 1912-13 5 5 .500 Todd Eberle 1914-15 4 11 .267 No Coach 1915-16 6 7 .461 Carl Reed 1916-17 7 6 .538 William Cowell 1917-18 7 3 .700 “ “ 1918-19 11 3 .786 “ “ 1919-20 9 6 .600 “ “ 1920-21 12 5 .706 “ “ 1921-22 10 8 .556 “ “ 1922-23 10 5 .667 “ “ 1923-24 12 2 .857 “ “ 1924-25 11 3 .786 “ “ 1925-26 11 4 .733 “ “ 1926-27 14 1 .933 “ “ 1927-28 5 8 .385 “ “ 1928-29 10 4 .714 Henry Swasey 1929-30 8 6 .571 “ “ 1930-31 8 8 .500 “ “ 1931-32 9 5 .643 “ “ 1932-33 10 5 .643 “ “ 1933-34 6 7 .462 “ “ 1934-35 11 3 .786 “ “ 1935-36 7 8 .467 “ “ 1936-37 3 12 .200 “ “ 1937-38 11 6 .647 “ “ 1938-39 3 14 .176 George Sauer 1939-40 5 10 .333 Henry Swasey 1940-41 9 8 .529 “ “ 1941-42 4 15 .211 “ “ 1942-43 4 14 .222 “ “ 1943-44 < CANCELLED > 1944-45 < CANCELLED > 1945-46 3 7 .300 “ “ 1946-47 6 11 .353 Ed Stanczyk 1947-48 5 12 .294 “ “ 1948-49 7 10 .412 “ “ 1949-50 4 11 .267 “ “ 1950-51 4 12 .250 Andy Mooradian 1951-52 11 9 .550 Dale Hall 1952-53 8 10 .440 Bob Kerr 1953-54 8 10 .440 “ “ 1954-55 4 14 .220 “ “ 1955-56 2 15 .118 “ “ 1956-57 3 16 .158 Bill Olsen 1957-58 10 12 .455 “ “
46
YEAR 1958-59 1959-60 1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 1964-65 1965-66 1966-67 1967-68 1968-69 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13
W L PCT. COACH 9 14 .391 Bill Olsen 9 14 .391 “ “ 6 18 .250 “ “ 3 20 .130 “ “ 7 17 .292 “ “ 8 15 .348 “ “ 2 19 .095 “ “ 3 21 .125 “ “ 10 12 .455 Bill Haubrich 1 22 .043 “ “ 9 15 .375 “ “ 12 11 .522 Gerry Friel 11 12 .478 “ “ 11 9 .550 “ “ 11 15 .423 “ “ 16 9 .640 “ “ 6 18 .250 “ “ 8 18 .308 “ “ 12 14 .461 “ “ 7 19 .269 “ “ 10 16 .385 “ “ 4 22 .154 “ “ 7 19 .269 “ “ 9 18 .333 “ “ 16 12 .571 “ “ 15 13 .536 “ “ 7 22 .241 “ “ 11 17 .392 “ “ 4 24 .143 “ “ 4 25 .138 “ “ 4 22 .154 “ “ 5 23 .179 Jim Boylan 3 25 .107 “ “ 7 21 .250 “ “ 6 21 .222 Gib Chapman 15 13 .536 “ “ 19 9 .679 “ “ 6 21 .222 “ “ 7 20 .259 Jeff Jackson 10 17 .370 “ “ 4 23 .148 “ “ 3 25 .107 Phil Rowe 7 21 .250 “ “ 11 17 .393 “ “ 5 23 .217 “ “ 10 20 .333 “ “ 9 19 .321 “ “ 12 17 .413 Bill Herrion 10 20 .333 “ “ 9 20 .310 “ “ 14 16 .467 “ “ 13 17 .433 “ “ 12 18 .400 “ “ 13 16 .448 “ “ 9 20 .310 “ “
YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS
2012-13 (9-20, AE 5-11) 11/10 Suffolk W 91-51 11/13 @ Dartmouth W 72-58 11/17 @ Bryant L 64-76 11/21 @ NJIT L 67-69 11/24 @ Holy Cross L 50-60 11/29 @ Connecticut L 53-61 12/1 Brown W 63-50 12/5 Central Conn. St. L 84-87 12/8 Yale W 64-56 12/16 @ Boston College L (OT) 59-61 12/23 @ Penn State L 45-72 12/30 @ Colgate L 63-65 1/2 Vermont L 51-64 1/5 @ Stony Brook L 49-65 1/9 @ UMBC L 57-68 1/16 Albany L 62-68 1/19 Boston U. L 59-69 1/24 Hartford L 40-51 1/26 @ Binghamton W 63-45 1/30 @ Maine W 57-54 2/2 Stony Brook L 54-56 2/6 @ Vermont L 48-63 2/13 UMBC W (OT) 92-86 2/17 @ Boston U. L 56-68 2/20 @ Hartford L 44-49 2/23 Binghamton W 68-56 2/28 @ Albany L 49-56 3/3 Maine W 79-74 3/9 vs. Vermont* L 42-61 *America East Tournament @ SEFCU Arena (Albany, N.Y.) 2011-12 (13-16, AE 7-9) 11/11 Suffolk W 85-64 11/14 @ Boston College L 67-64 11/20 Loyola L 66-60 11/30 Dartmouth W 53-50 12/3 @ Holy Cross L 62-57 12/7 @ Brown W 69-56 12/11 @Fairfield L 58-52 12/17 Marist W 73-56 12/20 @ Providence L 67-52 12/29 Sacred Heart L 77-59 12/31 Colgate W 71-64 1/2 UMBC L 82-76 1/5 @ Hartford L 56-49 1/11 @ Albany L 86-63 1/14 Vermont W 72-64 1/16 @ Stony Brook L 61-52 1/19 Boston University L 52-50 1/22 @ Binghamton W 64-49 1/25 Maine L 80-69 1/29 @ Vermont L 77-60 2/1 Hartford W 52-51 2/6 Stony Brook L 57-48 2/9 Albany W 69-64 2/12 @ UMBC W 66-60 2/15 @ Boston University W 56-54 2/18 Towson W 72-58 2/22 @ Maine L 71-58 2/26 Binghamton W 58-49 3/3 Albany L 63-45 *America East Tournament @ Chase Arena (West Hartford, CT) 2010-11 (12-18, AE 6-10) 11/13 LESLEY 11/16 @ Dartmouth 11/20 HOLY CROSS 11/23 @ Sacred Heart 11/27 BROWN 11/30 @ Connecticut 12/4 @ Colgate 12/9 ARMY 12/18 @ Rhode Island 12/22 @ Central Conn. St. 12.29 @ Cornell $ 12/30 @ Va. Commonwealth $ 1/2 @ Albany 1/4 @ Boston University 1/8 BINGHAMTON 1/11 HARTFORD 1/15 @ Stony Brook 1/20 VERMONT 1/23 UMBC 1/25 @ Maine 1/29 BOSTON UNIVERSITY 1.31 @ Vermont 2/2 ALBANY 2/5 @ Binghamton 2/9 STONY BROOK 2/12 @ UMBC 2/19 @ Marist # 2/22 MAINE
W 79-47 W 55-53 W 55-52 L 50-42 W 70-66 L 62-55 W 65-60 L 71-63 L 64-52 L 71-50 W 68-66 L 78-65 L 59-44 L 61-54 L 66-61 W 57-54 L (2OT) 64-60 L 61-53 W 80-60 L 64-50 W 60-48 L 63-49 W (OT) 62-59 W 65-59 L 63-56 W 63-46 L 58-49 L 70-53
2/27 @ Hartford L 62-54 3/5 @ Boston University* L 69-60 $ Marriott Holidays on the Hardwood Classic @VerizonWireless Center (Richmond,VA) # ESPN BracketBusters @ McCann Center (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.) * American EastTourney @Chase Arena (West Hartford, CT) 2009-10 (13-17, AE 6-10) 11/14 SUFFOLK W 91-45 11/20 @ No. 25 Maryland L 55-82 11/25 @ Harvard L 60-78 11/28 MARIST W 72-58 12/04 @ Pittsburgh L 32-47 12/09 CENTRAL CONNECTICUT W 67-55 12/12 @ Hofstra L 58-75 12/20 DARTMOUTH W 69-59 12/22 @ Army L 46-54 12/30 COLGATE W 63-55 01/02 @ Santa Clara L 68-71 01/07 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 56-60 01/10 @ Stony Brook L 63-69 01/13 ALBANY W 67-59 01/16 @ Hartford L 53-56 01/18 @ Maine L 42-56 01/21 @ UMBC W 62-58 01/27 VERMONT W 75-56 01/30 @ Binghamton L (OT) 73-76 02/04 Boston University L 47-69 02/06 HARTFORD L 54-57 02/09 @ Albany W 62-53 02/11 BINGHAMTON W 67-60 02/14 @ Vermont L (OT) 76-85 02/17 MAINE L 53-72 02/20 @ Loyola (Md.) # W 61-60 02/24 UMBC L 50-79 02/28 STONY BROOK W 77-55 03/06 vs. #3 Maine* W 68-57 03/07 vs. #2 Vermont* L 38-57 # ESPN BracketBusters @ Reitz Arena (Baltimore, Md.) *AmericaEastTournament@ ChaseArena(WestHartford,Conn.) 2008-09 (14-16, AE 8-8) 11/16 SUFFOLK W 101-50 11/19 HARVARD L 69-80 11/23 @ Penn State L 50-70 11/29 @ Marist L 61-63 12/03 @ Colgate W 57-54 12/06 BROWN W 64-61 12/09 @ Rhode Island L 56-88 12/13 @ Long Island L 72-76 12/23 @ Fordham L 56-60 12/27 HOFSTRA L 57-62 01/04 SANTA CLARA W 58-54 01/07 HARTFORD W 55-47 01/11 @ Boston University L 37-68 01/14 UMBC W 65-47 01/17 @ Dartmouth W 68-59 01/19 @ Maine L (2OT) 75-78 01/22 BINGHAMTON L 47-60 01/25 @ Vermont L 56-72 01/28 @ Stony Brook W 71-60 01/31 VERMONT L 39-83 02/04 @ Hartford W 62-55 02/07 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 49-67 02/10 @ UMBC L 76-81 02/15 @ Albany W 78-59 02/18 MAINE W 63-54 02/22 @ Binghamton L (OT) 69-70 02/26 ALBANY W 64-56 03/01 STONY BROOK W (OT) 58-57 03/07 vs. #5 Stony Brook* W 76-73 03/08 vs. #1 Binghamton* L 67-72 *America East Tournament @ SEFCU Arena (Albany, N.Y.) 2007-08 (9-20, AE 6-10) 11/10 @ Boston College 11/14 SUFFOLK 11/17 @ Central Connecticut 11/25 QUINNIPIAC 11/28 @ Harvard 12/01 @ Rhode Island 12/03 NORTHEASTERN 12/06 @ Brown 12/10 LONG ISLAND 12/15 IONA 12/30 COLGATE 01/03 ALBANY 01/06 UMBC 01/09 @ Boston University 01/12 @ Vermont 01/15 DARTMOUTH 01/19 @ Maine 01/24 BINGHAMTON 01/27 HARTFORD 01/30 @ Stony Brook
L W W W L L L L L L L W L L L L (OT) W L W W
67-57 95-46 78-70 77-70 72-67 87-76 62-57 68-52 84-78 87-81 49-46 75-66 86-73 82-72 64-61 65-60 81-75 67-58 74-59 68-60
02/02 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 67-52 02/06 @ Albany L 80-59 02/09 MAINE L (OT) 75-72 02/14 @ Binghamton L 56-54 02/17 @ Hartford L 82-63 02/20 STONY BROOK W 74-67 02/23 @ UMBC L (OT) 71-68 02/28 VERMONT W 68-65 03/08 vs. #2 Hartford* L 68-65 *America EastTournament @ Events Center (Binghamton, N.Y.)
2006-07 (10-20, AE 6-10) 11/10 @ Boston College L 86-47 11/13 FRANKLIN PIERCE L(OT) 70-69 11/18 CENTRAL CONNECTICUT L 73-66 11/21 @ Robert Morris L 77-64 11/26 @ Quinnipiac W 64-59 11/29 HARVARD L 83-81 12/02 @ Long Island L(OT) 70-62 12/06 @ Rutgers L 55-58 12/18 @ Northeastern L 51-41 12/22 @ Iona W 62-49 12/29 vs. Elon $ W 67-52 12/30 @ Kent State $ L 74-47 01/03 @ Albany L 69-52 01/06 @ Maine W 73-68 01/09 VERMONT L 62-60 01/11 HARTFORD W 72-59 01/13 @ Boston University L 53-29 01/16 @ Dartmouth W 65-61 01/18 @ Binghamton W 75-72 01/21 STONY BROOK W 69-56 01/25 @ UMBC L 45-44 01/28 ALBANY L 71-64 01/31 @ Vermont L(2OT) 82-79 02/03 MAINE L 65-56 02/08 @ Hartford L 62-46 02/11 BOSTON UNIVERSITY W 60-55 02/18 @ Stony Brook L 67-49 02/20 BINGHAMTON L 66-37 02/25 UMBC W 64-51 03/03 vs. #2 Albany * L 64-47 $ Kent State Tournament *America East Tournament @ Agganis Arena (Boston) 2005-06 (12-17, AE 8-8) 11/18 @ Columbia$ L 64-61 11/19 vs. Quinnipiac$ L 64-62 11/23 @ Providence L 75-51 11/26 @ Colgate W 60-52 11/30 @ Harvard L 70-51 12/03 LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY L 59-56 12/06 ROBERT MORRIS W 71-65 12/08 @ Boston University L 67-46 12/10 @ Vermont L 58-53 12/18 @ Connecticut L 86-44 12/20 @ Penn State L 51-75 12/28 @ NC State L 62-81 01/05 BINGHAMTON L 62-49 01/08 HARTFORD W 77-69 01/11 @ UMBC W 72-58 01/14 @ Stony Brook W 54-50 01/16 DARTMOUTH W 71-59 01/19 MAINE L 67-53 01/22 @ Albany W(OT) 75-72 01/28 VERMONT L 64-56 02/01 BOSTON UNIVERSITY W 63-54 02/05 UMBC W 68-65 02/08 @ Binghamton L 57-46 02/11 @ Hartford L 69-56 02/15 STONY BROOK W 59-51 02/19 @ Maine L(OT) 59-56 02/23 ALBANY W(OT) 78-71 03/04 vs. #4 Hartford * W 66-62 03/05 vs. #1 Albany * L 67-54 $ Tyler Ugolyn Columbia Classic *America East Tournament @ Events Center (Vestal, N.Y.) 2004-05 (9-19, AE 5-13) 11/19 @ Liberty 11/21 SUFFOLK 11/23 @ Boston College 11/28 ARMY 12/01 HARVARD 12/04 BOSTON U. 12/08 @ Brown 12/11 @ Dartmouth 12/21 @ West Virginia 12/28 @ Ohio State 01/02 @ UMBC 01/06 ALBANY 01/09 @ Stony Brook 01/13 MAINE
W W L W WO L L L L L W L L L
59-58 89-55 64-82 77-71 67-60 42-65 64-76 67-69 48-82 59-77 60-41 73-51 64-73 65-70
01/16 @ Binghamton W 69-60 01/19 VERMONT L 54-64 01/23 @ Hartford L 62-74 01/26 @ Boston U. L 63-79 01/29 UMBC W 73-64 02/02 NORTHEASTERN L 67-73 02/05 @ Albany L 68-81 02/09 @ Maine L 70-76 02/13 BINGHAMTON L 54-62 02/17 HARTFORD W 71-57 02/21 @ Vermont L 67-81 02/24 @ Northeastern L 65-88 02/27 STONY BROOK W 76-66 03/04 #9 UMBC* L 73-78 *America East Tournament @ Events Center (Vestal, N.Y.) 2003-04 (10-20, AE 5-13) 11/16 MT. ST MARY’S & W 94-68 11/18 @ Richmond $ L 49-63 11/22 @ Virginia Tech. L 49-79 11/29 @ Harvard W 81-75 12/5 COLGATE L 66-70 12/7 CORNELL L 67-83 12/14 DARTMOUTH # W 56-45 12/21 @ Rhode Island L 53-82 12/27 @ Pittsburgh L 38-52 12/30 @ Army L 61-47 1/2 @ Boston University L 51-56 1/4 NORTHEASTERN L 72-75 1/8 ALBANY L 52-57 1/11 @ Stony Brook L 60-62 1/14 MAINE L 58-70 1/17 @ Binghamton W 57-55 1/21 UMBC L 56-60 1/24 @ Vermont L 68-82 1/28 HARTFORD L 58-85 1/31 @ Northeastern L 69-76 2/4 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 59-70 2/7 @ Albany W 60-54 2/11 @ Maine L 58-60 2/14 BINGHAMTON L 53-59 2/18 @ UMBC W 62-60 2/21 VERMONT W 78-57 2/26 @ Hartford L 71-80 2/29 STONYBROOK WO 74-72 3/5 vs. #10 Albany* W 43-38 3/6 vs. #2 Vermont* L 50-58 & @Lundholm first round of Guardians Classic $ @Richmond second round of Guardians Classic # @ Verizon Wireless Arena, Manchester, N.H * America EastTournament @Walter Brown Arena, Boston 2002-03 (5-23, AE 3-13) 11/23 @ Miami L 58-93 11/25 @ Northwestern L 55-81 11/30 LIBERTY L 70-80 12/2 @ Mount St. Mary’s L 68-70 12/6 @ Colgate L 68-87 12/8 @ Cornell W 78-62 12/11 @ Wisconsin L 36-85 12/28 @ Furman L 52-75 12/29 vs. Stetson L 69-75 1/2 BINGHAMTON L 50-80 1/4 @ Hartford L 84-88 1/8 MAINE W 74-64 1/11 @ Albany L 58-61 1/13 BROWN L 76-93 1/15 @ Dartmouth College W 62-57 1/18 @ Northeastern L 58-81 1/22 Boston University L 64-94 1/26 @ Binghamton L 71-82 1/29 VERMONT L 75-92 2/2 STONY BROOK L 71-77 2/5 @ Maine L 72-77 2/8 NORTHEASTERN L 61-75 2/12 HARTFORD W 72-61 2/16 ALBANY L 79-87 2/19 @ Vermont L 68-85 2/26 @ Boston University L 62-76 3/2 @ Stony Brook W 62-55 3/9 vs. #1 Boston Univ.* L 61-75 *America East Tournament @ Walter Brown Arena, Boston 2001-02 (11-17, AE 8-8) 11/16 @Notre Dame 11/21 @Boston College 11/24 DARTMOUTH 11/26 @Connecticut 11/28 FLORIDA 12/1 @BUFFALO 12/6 NEW ENGLAND COLLEGE 12/8 @ Lehigh University 12/12 HARVARD 12/29 NORTHEASTERN 1/2 BOSTON UNIVERSITY
L 53-95 L 77-80 L 70-72 L 58-110 L 56-108 L 72-73 W 96-51 L 49-72 L 65-70 L 72-84 L 65-70
47
1/8 @Vermont W 84-75 1/10 @Hartford L 59-79 1/15 vs. Maine L 63-76 1/21 DREXEL W 69-66 1/23 HOFSTRA L 45-83 1/27 @Delaware L 55-102 1/29 @Towson L 52-80 2/3 HARTFORD L 71-84 2/5 VERMONT L 82-90 2/11 MAINE L 68-79 2/15 HOLY CROSS L 53-73 2/18 @Hofstra L 57-90 2/20 @Drexel L 54-77 2/24 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 58-60 2/26 NORTHEASTERN L 77-81 3/3 vs. Hartford* L 88-117 * America East Tournament @ U. of Delaware 1998-99 (4-23, 2-16 AE) 11/14 BROWN W 77-71 11/20 vs. Delaware St.% W 85-73 11/21 @ Central Conn. % L 76-88 11/28 @ Yale L 62-86 12/5 @ Virginia L 52-93 12/9 @ Hartford L 72-89 12/13 @ Dartmouth L 79-92 12/28 @ New Mexico & L 67-93 12/29 vs. Portland State & L 73-91 1/2 HOFSTRA L 56-69 1/4 DREXEL L 51-68 1/9 @ Northeastern L 67-74 1/12 @ Boston University L 49-84 1/16 @ Maine L 56-91 1/19 VERMONT W 58-47 1/22 @ Towson L 58-55 1/24 @ Delaware L 41-67 1/27 HARTFORD L 78-94 1/30 @ Hofstra L 64-77 2/1 @ Drexel L 61-69 2/4 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 52-63 2/6 NORTHEASTERN L 67-72 2/10 @ Vermont L 54-65 2/14 MAINE L 66-91 2/18 TOWSON W 74-70 2/20 DELAWARE L 72-96 2/26 vs. Northeastern $ L 69-77 % Central Connecticut Tourney & Lobo Invitational 1997-98 (10-17, 6-12 AE) 11/19 HARVARD 11/23 @ Davidson 11/25 KEENE STATE 11/29 @ Rider 12/3 VERMONT 12/6 NAVY 12/9 @ Hartford 12/13 DARTMOUTH 12/28 @ California 12/29 vs. Cornell 1/2 @ Northeastern 1/4 @ Boston University 1/8 DELAWARE 1/10 TOWSON 1/13 @ Vermont 1/18 @ Maine 1/22 HOFSTRA 1/31 MAINE 2/3 HARTFORD 2/6 @ Delware 2/8 @ Towson 2/12 NORTHEASTERN 2/14 BOSTON UNIVERSITY 2/20 @ Hofstra 2/21 DREXEL 2/22 @ Drexel 2/27 vs. Towson
L 54-72 L 53-72 W 75-48 L 67-84 W 75-68 W 57-51 L 73-80 W 67-54 L 67-75 W 56-51 L 58-56 L 61-76 W 68-62 W 64-56 L 67-81 L 65-68 L 64-67 W 90-89 L 73-85 L 69-72 W 58-56 W 84-74 L 66-79 L 42-79 L 65-90 L 66-75 L 65-67
1996-97 (7-20, 5-13 AE) 11/23 RIDER W 57-49 11/25 @ Boston College L 40-82 11/30 @ Harvard L 58-67 12/3 @ Navy L 81-89 12/6 DREXEL L 55-80 12/8 HOFSTRA W 51-50 12/10 @ Notre Dame L 47-68 12/14 @ Dartmouth L 56-73 12/21 DAVIDSON L 57-75 1/2 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 54-61 1/4 @ Northeastern W 59-57 1/7 @ Vermont L 65-77 1/11 @ Maine L 56-62 1/16 DELAWARE L 47-81 1/18 TOWSON W 72-71 1/21 @Hartford W 68-67 1/24 @ Hofstra L 54-67 1/26 @ Drexel L 74-77 1/30 HARTFORD L 61-71 2/2 VERMONT W 65-61 2/8 MAINE L 53-57 * - denotes NAC/Yankee games
48
2/10 HOLY CROSS 2/13 @ Towson 2/15 @ Delaware 2/20 @ Boston University 2/22 NORTHEASTERN 2/28 vs. Maine $
W L L L L L
78-76 65-71 54-81 60-63 56-57 47-76
1995-96 (6-21, 5-13 NAC) 11/25 @ Providence L 78-92 11/27 @ Miami (Ohio) L 64-90 12/2 NAVY L 63-66 12/8 NORTHEASTERN (2OT) W 98-90 12/10 @ Boston University L 67-70 12/21 @ Holy Cross L 79-101 12/28 vs. Seton Hall% L 80-95 12/29 vs. Texas Christian% L 74-93 1/4 TOWSON STATE L 68-79 1/6 DELAWARE L 52-57 1/9 HARTFORD W 89-68 1/11 @Drexel L 68-110 1/13 @ Hofstra L 56-75 1/17 DARTMOUTH W 72-69 1/19 at Maine (4OT) W 106-103 1/23 at Vermont L 90-92 1/26 Maine L 73-82 1/30 Harvard L 61-66 2/2 Drexel L 75-87 2/4 Hofstra W 77-65 2/9 at Towson State L 70-79 2/11 at Delaware L 75-93 2/16 Vermont L 79-88 2/18 at Hartford L 66-87 2/22 at Northeastern W 78-72 2/24 Boston University L 69-80 3/1 Hartford $ L 73-76 % Seton Hall/Meadowlands Tournament, E. Rutherford, N.J. $ NAC Play-In Game, Newark, Delaware 1994-95 (19-9, 11-5 NAC) 11/25 HOLY CROSS W 80-73 11/27 @Hofstra* W 104-97 12/2 vs. St. Peter’s (N.J.) § L 68-84 12/3 vs. S. Carolina State § W 87-66 12/8 @Old Dominion L 64-75 12/21 MIAMI (OHIO) W 74-71 12/28 @Navy W 81-79 12/30 @George Mason W 99-78 1/3 @Evansville L 60-93 1/6 HOFSTRA* W 99-84 1/13 @Delaware* L 61-69 1/15 @Drexel* L 72-90 1/19 HARTFORD* L 82-87 1/21 @Vermont* W 64-61 1/23 @Dartmouth W 87-60 1/26 NORTHEASTERN* W 87-69 1/28 @Boston Univ.* L 73-88 1/31 @Harvard W 73-60 2/4 MAINE* W 83-70 2/9 BOSTON UNIV.* W 73-60 2/11 @Northeastern* 2ot W 94-91 2/16 VERMONT* W 95-84 2/18 @Hartford* W 78-75 2/24 DREXEL* L 74-83 2/26 DELAWARE* ot W 113-111 2/28 @Maine* W 78-75 3/4 DELAWARE$ W 83-81 3/6 NORTHEASTERN$ L 70-91 § - Red Auerbach Classic, Washington, D.C. 1993-94 (15-13, 8-6 NAC) 11/27 DARTMOUTH 12/1 @Providence 12/8 YALE 12/11 @Wisconsin-Mil. 12/22 @Brown ot 12/27 @Gonzaga § 12/28 vs. William & Mary § 1/5 HOFSTRA 1/9 @Xavier 1/11 @Cent. Conn. St. 1/14 DELAWARE* 1/16 DREXEL* 1/20 @Hartford* 1/22 VERMONT* 1/27 @Northeastern* ot 1/29 BOSTON UNIV.* 2/1 HARVARD 2/5 @Maine* 2/10 @Boston Univ.* 2/12 NORTHEASTERN* 2/17 @Vermont* 2/19 HARTFORD* 2/22 @Holy Cross 2/25 @Drexel* 2/27 @Delaware* 3/2 MAINE* 3/5 DELAWARE$ 3/7 @Drexel$ § - Shootout Spokane, Spokane, Wash.
$ - denotes NAC playoffs
W 79-58 L 60-92 L 70-74 L 70-72 W 79-71 L 74-84 L 75-88 W 68-55 L 65-82 W 97-82 W 85-77 L 57-70 L 71-78 W 82-76 W 64-62 L 72-83 W 77-68 W 65-64 W 64-56 W 74-69 W 84-70 W 64-58 W 96-84 L 62-81 L 59-61 L 70-92 W 80-67 L 75-85
1992-93 (6-21, 4-10 NAC) 12/1 @Virginia Commonwealth L 68-103 12/5 @Providence College L 27-56 12/9 HOLY CROSS L 63-76 12/29 Michigan State § L 51-81 12/30 Princeton § L 60-75 1/2 MASSACHUSETTS L 61-75 1/4 @Dartmouth L 67-77 1/9 WISC. MILWAUKEE L 70-86 1/12 BROWN W 70-53 1/15 @Delaware* L 54-65 1/17 @Drexel* L 52-73 1/21 HARTFORD* W 77-65 1/23 @Vermont* L 69-76 1/28 NORTHEASTERN* L 62-75 1/30 @BostonUniv.* L 66-77 2/2 @Harvard 2ot W 87-76 2/6 MAINE* L 65-71 2/11 BOSTON UNIV.* L 69-76 2/13 @Northeastern* L 45-73 2/16 CENTRAL CONN. ST. L 77-87 2/18 VERMONT* ot W 66-65 2/20 @Hartford* L 56-69 2/23 @Yale L 49-63 2/26 DREXEL* L 63-65 2/28 DELAWARE* W 64-62 3/3 @Maine* W 55-49 3/6 @Delaware$ L 65-70 § - Oldsmobile Spartan Classic, East Lansing, Mich. 1991-92 (7-21, 5-9 NAC) 11/22 @Providence L 73-92 11/26 YALE L 74-76 12/2 @Boston College L 78-123 12/4 DARTMOUTH W 56-48 12/10 @Massachusetts L 63-84 12/14 MONMOUTH L 54-71 12/29 Vanderbilt § L 67-100 12/30 Pennsylvania § L 55-93 1/4 XAVIER L 59-91 1/9 @Vermont* W 71-65 1/13 @Hartford* ot W 72-71 1/17 DELAWARE* L 74-89 1/19 DREXEL* W 75-72 1/22 @Dartmouth L 56-62 1/25 VERMONT* W 76-70 1/28 HARVARD W 66-65 1/30 @Northeastern* L 51-90 2/1 BOSTON UNIV.* ot L 68-72 2/8 @Maine* L 64-84 2/11 VCU L 37-42 2/13 @Boston Univ.* L 62-78 2/15 NORTHEASTERN* W 66-64 2/17 @Holy Cross L 70-80 2/22 HARTFORD* L 71-83 2/28 @Drexel* L 51-71 2/29 @Delaware* L 49-55 3/4 MAINE* L 39-55 3/7 @Drexel$ L 72-78 § - Music City Tournament, Nashville, Tenn. 1990-91 (3-25, 0-10 NAC) 11/24 @VCU 11/27 BOSTON COLLEGE ot 12/1 @Providence 12/4 MASSACHUSETTS 12/6 @Manhattan 12/8 @Monmouth 12/12 @Connecticut 12/27 vs. S.Florida § 12/28 vs. Brown § ot 1/2 @Xavier 1/5 @Maine* (Bangor) 1/8 @Dartmouth 1/12 VERMONT* 1/16 BOSTON UNIV.* 1/17 DARTMOUTH (@Derry) 1/19 DELAWARE 1/22 @Yale 1/26 @Hartford* 1/29 @Harvard 2/2 MAINE* 2/5 @Northeastern* 2/11 HOLY CROSS 2/13 @Vermont* 2/16 @Boston Univ.* ot 2/23 NORTHEASTERN* 2/27 @Wake Forest 3/2 HARTFORD* 3/5 @Boston Univ.$ § - South Florida Tourney, Tampa Fla. 1989-90 (5-23, 3-9 NAC) 11/24 vs. Providence § 11/25 vs. Jacksonville § 11/28 HARVARD 12/5 @Brown ot 12/8 vs. Long Beach State! 12/9 vs. South Alabama! ot 12/12 DARTMOUTH
L 58-80 L 58-68 L 70-103 L 64-76 L 81-104 L 47-49 L 32-85 L 51-88 W 87-78 L 54-75 L 64-85 L 47-59 L 66-87 L 63-69 L 75-94 L 55-72 W 42-39 L 42-45 L 64-71 L 68-71 L 39-57 `W 72-56 L 71-75 L 64-67 L 57-73 L 49-65 L 60-79 L 57-88
L L L W L W L
70-49 57-49 94-74 50-48 68-47 66-65 79-77
12/14 @Massachusetts 12/29 @UAB% 12/30 vs. Rice% 1/6 COLGATE* ot 1/9 @Dartmouth 1/13 @Northeastern* 1/17 MANHATTAN 1/20 @Vermont* ot 1/23 YALE 1/27 BOSTON UNIV.* 1/29 @Holy Cross 2/1 NORTHEASTERN* 2/7 @Maine* 2/10 @Hartford* 2/12 HARTFORD* 2/15 MAINE* 2/18 VERMONT* 2/22 @Boston College 2/28 @Boston Univ.* 3/3 @Colgate* 3/6 vs. Boston Univ.$ § - Fleet Classic, Providence, R.I. ! - Hoosier Classic, Bloomington, Ind. % - UAB Classic, Birmingham, Ala. 1988-89 (4-22, 3-14 NAC) 11/26 BROWN ot 11/29 @Harvard 12/1 @Boston College 12/3 HOLY CROSS 12/7 MASSACHUSETTS 12/10 @Yale 12/20 @Fresno State 12/22 @St. Mary’s 1/3 @Hartford* 1/7 @Northeastern* 1/10 DARTMOUTH ot 1/12 CANISIUS* 1/14 MAINE* 1/17 NIAGARA* 1/19 @Canisius* 1/21 @Niagara* 1/25 NORTHEASTERN* 1/28 COLGATE* 1/30 @Siena* 2/4 @Vermont 2/8 BOSTON UNIV.* 2/11 @Boston Univ.* 2/25 VERMONT* 2/27 SIENA* 3/1 @Maine* 3/4 @Colgate* 1987-88 (4-25, 3-15 NAC) 11/28 @Brown 12/1 RHODE ISLAND 12/3 @Boston College 12/5 HARVARD 12/10 @Massachusetts 1/4 YALE 1/6 NIAGARA* 1/9 @Hartford* 1/12 @Dartmouth 1/14 CANISIUS* 1/16 VERMONT* 1/18 @Holy Cross 1/21 @Niagara* 1/23 @Canisius* 1/27 MAINE* 1/30 NORTHEASTERN* 2/3 @Colgate* 2/7 COLGATE* 2/9 BOSTON UNIV.* 2/13 HARTFORD* 2/15 FAIRFIELD 2/17 @Siena* 2/20 @Boston Univ.* 2/23 @Northeastern* 2/27 SIENA* 3/1 @Maine* 3/5 @Vermont* 3/8 vs. Siena$ 3/10 vs. Niagara$ $ - Hartford Civic Center (HCC) 1986-87 (4-24, 3-15 NAC) 11/29 BROWN 12/1 BOSTON COLLEGE 12/6 @Harvard 12/9 @Yale 12/11 MASSACHUSETTS 12/13 @Rhode Island 12/30 @Fairfield 1/3 HARTFORD* 1/4 NORTHEASTERN* 1/8 CANISIUS* 1/10 MAINE* 1/13 DARTMOUTH 1/17 @Niagara* 1/19 @Canisius*
L 76-53 L 76-47 L 57-52 L 88-86 L 62-59 L 79-69 L 86-57 W 79-75 L 65-62 L 67-71 L 82-59 L 71-53 W 67-57 L 73-47 L 65-58 L 78-67 L 63-61 L 85-57 L 85-77 W 74-72 L 63-56
L 78-83 W 93-74 L 76-90 L 73-89 L 72-73 L 74-87 L 58-91 L 56-95 L 55-62 L 72-88 L 88-91 L 72-99 L 57-69 L 61-71 L 69-89 W 81-80 L 79-86 L 66-72 L 72-90 W 107-89 L 55-67 L 59-75 L 62-65 L 79-92 W 63-58 L 69-74 L 77-86 L 67-96 L 59-92 L 71-74 L 67-92 L 69-71 L 61-68 L 39-65 L 65-83 W 60-59 L 59-72 L 92-130 L 56-63 L 61-74 L 81-94 L 78-90 L 57-58 W 65-64 L 83-99 L 71-79 L 57-70 L 66-95 L 64-79 L 60-71 L 81-98 L 68-86 W 82-77 W 70-63 L 59-62
L 55-71 W 51-49 L 67-93 L 62-76 L 59-61 L 74-88 L 60-63 W 59-58 L 64-91 L 62-73 L 70-72 L 81-83 L 76-96 L 65-88
1/24 COLGATE* 1/27 @Siena* 1/29 HOLY CROSS 1/31 @Vermont* 2/3 BOSTON UNIV.* 2/7 @Boston Univ.* 2/10 NIAGARA* 2/14 SIENA* 2/17 @Hartford* 2/22 VERMONT* 2/23 @Northeastern* 2/25 @Maine* 2/28 @Colgate* 3/3 @Northeastern$
L 55-59 L 58-79 L 54-57 W 72-68 L 58-72 L 58-82 L 67-85 L 59-71 L 55-61 W 66-64 L 69-76 L 69-81 L 67-79 L 71-85
1985-86 (11-17, 5-13 NAC) 11/23 @Brown W 63-60 11/26 @Massachusetts W 57-54 11/29 @Hartford L 47-59 12/2 @Boston College L 55-78 12/4 RHODE ISLAND ot L 62-65 12/7 HARVARD ot W 65-62 12/14 MAINE* W 72-60 1/2 @Dartmouth W 72-64 1/4 CANISIUS* W 60-58 1/6 HARTFORD* L 48-59 1/11 YALE W 67-64 1/14 SIENA* L 61-63 1/16 @Holy Cross W 85-73 1/18 @Boston Univ.* L 58-70 1/21 @Northeastern* L 65-78 1/23 @Niagara* L 59-65 1/25 @Canisius* L 49-76 1/28 @Maine* L 69-76 1/31 COLGATE* ot W 64-62 2/4 VERMONT* W 53-52 2/11 BOSTON UNIV.* L 63-64 2/15 @Colgate* W 56-53 2/17 FAIRFIELD L 63-65 2/19 NIAGARA* L 78-95 2/22 @Siena* L 72-91 2/27 @Vermont* L 64-65 3/1 NORTHEASTERN* L 53-66 3/4 @Boston Univ.$ L 57-69 1984-85 (7-22, 4-12 NAC) 11/24 BROWN L 60-65 11/27 BOSTON COLLEGE L 63-86 12/1 MASSACHUSETTS L 51-55 12/3 @Harvard L 63-69 12/6 @Rhode Island L 74-82 12/8 SIENA* L 66-73 12/15 @Fairfield L 64-73 12/28 Connecticut § L 57-81 12/29 William & Mary § L 45-53 1/2 CANISIUS* L 47-56 1/5 @Colgate* W 52-40 1/8 NIAGARA* L 69-71 1/10 HOLY CROSS W 68-67 1/12 @Yale L 63-65 1/16 @Maine* L 56-51 1/19 BOSTON UNIV.* L 64-81 1/24 @Northeastern* W 57-55 1/26 @Niagara* L 57-81 1/28 @Canisius* L 55-63 1/31 VERMONT* L 52-57 2/2 @Siena* L 54-73 2/5 DARTMOUTH W 62-59 2/12 @Boston Univ.* L 51-64 2/16 COLGATE* W 43-42 2/22 NORTHEASTERN* L 70-78 2/26 @Vermont* W 75-69 3/1 MAINE* L 59-60 3/4 COLGATE$ W 53-47 3/5 @Canisius$ L 56-90 § - Connecticut Mutual Classic (Hartford Civic Center) 1983-84 (15-13, 8-6 NAC) 11/26 @ Brown 11/29 @Massachusetts 12/3 @Boston College 12/6 RHODE ISLAND 12/9 @Marshall § 12/10 @Idaho State § 12/29 FAIRFIELD 1/2 HARVARD 1/5 NORTHEASTERN* 1/7 CANISIUS* 1/12 @Canisius* 1/14 @Niagara* 1/20 NIAGARA 1/23 @Dartmouth 1/25 @Connecticut 1/28 YALE 2/1 @Vermont* 2/4 MAINE* 2/7 @Holy Cross 2/9 @Northeastern* 2/15 BOSTON UNIVERSITY* 2/19 COLGATE* 2/21 @Princeton
L 84-92 L 73-75 L 64-97 W 81-72 L 72-99 W 69-58 W 102-82 W 93-76 L 86-91 W 82-77 L 62-68 W 66-51 W 78-66 W 54-47 L 65-67 W 89-77 W 77-63 L 67-71 L 83-61 L 81-95 W 77-70 W 60-53 W 58-45
2/24 VERMONT* 2/27 @Boston University* 2/29 @Colgate* 3/2 @Maine* 3/5 MAINE$
W L W L L
73-60 60-64 63-49 70-82 77-82
1982-83 (16-12, 8-2 NAC) 11/27 BROWN 11/30 MASSACHUSETTS 12/3 @Boston College 12/8 NORTHEASTERN* 12/14 @Harvard 12/28 @East Carolina 12/29 @Duke 1/2 vs. Marist § 1/3 @Dartmouth § 1/9 CONNECTICUT 1/13 @Lafayette 1/15 @Lehigh 1/18 CANISIUS* ot 1/20 @Yale 1/26 @Vermont* 1/29 DARTMOUTH 2/2 VERMONT* 2/5 COLGATE* 2/10 NIAGARA* 2/14 @Boston University* 2/17 HOLY CROSS* 2/19 @St. Anselm’s 2/22 @Rhode Island 2/24 @Fairfield 3/2 @Maine* 3/5 @Northeastern* 3/8 CANISIUS# 3/10 @Holy Cross# § - Dartmouth Tourney, Hanover, N.H.
L W L W L L L W W W W L W L W W W W W L W W L L L W W L
67-80 63-60 60-92 90-81 68-69 64-72 48-84 70-60 73-63 76-72 64-63 70-74 74-70 73-74 70-67 77-60 71-69 68-56 87-64 73-82 66-63 78-62 78-83 62-72 58-59 74-73 75-64 77-89
1981-82 (9-18, 2-9 ECAC/NAC) 11/27 @Alabama 12/2 @Connecticut 12/4 vs. Western Kentucky § 12/5 vs. Tulane § 12/10 UTICA 12/12 BOSTON COLLEGE 12/15 HARVARD 12/28 @Maine* # 12/29 vs. Delaware# 1/2 @Lafayette ot 1/4 @Rutgers 1/6 @Brown 1/9 @Dartmouth 1/12 NORTHEASTERN* 1/16 YALE 1/23 MAINE* 1/27 VERMONT* 1/31 @Niagara* 2/1 @Canisius* 2/4 @St. Peter’s 2/8 @Massachusetts 2/13 BOSTON UNIV.* 2/15 @Holy Cross* 2/17 @Vermont* 2/20 @Northeastern* 2/27 @Colgate* @Niagara$ § - Wendy’s Classic, Bowling Green, Ky. # - Best Holiday Classic, Portland, Maine 1980-81 (7-19, 3-7 ECAC) 11/29 ST. ANSELM § 11/30 DARTMOUTH § 12/2 @Boston College 12/4 SPRINGFIELD 12/9 @Maine 12/13 @Harvard 1/2 vs. American% 1/3 vs. Columbia% 1/7 ST. PETER’S 1/10 DARTMOUTH 1/12 CONNECTICUT 1/15 @Northeastern 1/17 NIAGARA 1/24 @Yale 1/26 BROWN 1/28 @Vermont 2/1 @Penn State 2/4 COLGATE 2/9 MAINE 2/12 HOLY CROSS 2/14 @Boston University 2/18 VERMONT 2/21 NORTHEASTERN 2/24 @Rhode Island 2/26 MASSACHUSETTS 2/28 @Siena § - Granite State Tourney, Durham, N.H. % - Old Dominion Classic, Norfolk, Va. 1979-80 (4-22) 11/30 @Brown §
L 65-99 L 68-87 L 52-83 W 50-48 W 78-53 L 50-82 L 73-77 L 64-80 W 64-52 L 68-73 L 51-65 W 86-71 W 59-58 L 65-81 W 63-60 W 66-54 L 76-77 L 74-76 L 84-91 L 50-58 W 67-63 L 55-77 L 54-67 W 87-65 L 71-72 L 59-62 L 87-105
W 67-58 L 65-86 L 58-72 W 70-57 L 68-93 L 79-80 L 71-75 L 47-59 L 53-75 W 63-60 L 58-61 L 76-85 W 82-77 L 66-69 L 68-71 L 64-65 L 72-85 W 94-71 W 71-60 L 84-87 L 64-77 L 64-66 L 69-70 L 73-81 W 94-66 L 72-88
L
56-67
12/1 vs. Robert Morris § W 58-56 12/4 @Connecticut L 62-71 12/7 @Springfield L 70-84 12/12 MAINE L 55-70 12/15 @ St. Peter’s L 34-72 12/28 vs. Austin Peay% L 60-69 12/29 vs. Evansville% L 72-86 1/3 CONNECTICUT W 67-59 1/5 vs. Boston College L 69-97 @ Portland (Maine) Civic Center 1/7 @Providence L 48-71 1/11 VERMONT L 70-84 1/17 ST. ANSELM L 50-52 1/19 @Boston University L 59-82 1/23 @Yale L 62-81 1/28 @Northeastern L 63-73 1/30 RHODE ISLAND L 63-86 2/1 @Colgate L 58-59 2/5 @Maine L 54-65 2/7 @Holy Cross L 86-97 2/10 NORTHEASTERN L 68-69 2/12 @Dartmouth W 55-54 2/16 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 76-102 2/18 @Massachusetts L 63-69 2/21 @Vermont L 76-103 2/23 SIENA W 72-70 § - Brown Tap-Off Tournament, Providence, R.I. % - Poinsettia Classic, Greenville, S.C. 1978-79 (10-16) 11/24 vs. Siena § L 74-89 11/25 @Brown § W 58-56 11/28 YALE W 72-68 12/2 @Rhode Island L 72-103 12/7 SPRINGFIELD W 76-72 12/10 @Boston College L 65-78 12/12 MAINE W 70-61 12/28 @Detroit# L 70-108 12/29 Denver# W 71-65 1/3 CONNECTICUT L 67-72 1/9 @Fairfield L 70-90 1/13 @Navy W 72-71 1/17 DARTMOUTH W 66-57 1/20 BOSTON UNIVERSITY L 72-76 1/25 MASSACHUSETTS L 57-61 1/27 COLGATE W 76-75 1/29 @Northeastern L 68-73 1/31 @Vermont L 81-84 2/3 @Connecticut L 64-81 2/5 NORTHEASTERN L 81-83 2/7 VERMONT W 72-70 2/12 @Rutgers L 73-83 2/15 HOLY CROSS L 58-73 2/17 @Boston University L 76-124 2/19 @St. Anselm W 87-74 2/22 @Maine L 61-75 § - Brown Tap-Off Tournament, Providence, R.I. 1977-78 (7-19) 11/30 BOSTON COLLEGE 12/3 ST. PETER’S 12/6 @Connecticut 12/8 @Springfield 12/10 MAINE 12/15 @Hofstra 12/17 @Virginia Tech 12/29 @Old Dominion § 12/30 vs. Michigan State § 1/4 @Lafayette 1/7 CONNECTICUT 1/12 BOSTON UNIV. ot 1/14 @Dartmouth 1/16 RHODE ISLAND 1/21 @Boston University 1/22 ST. ANSELM 1/24 @Northeastern 1/29 FAIRFIELD 2/1 VERMONT 2/4 @Navy 2/8 @Vermont 2/16 @Holy Cross 2/18 @Colgate 2/21 @Maine 2/23 @Massachusetts 2/27 NORTHEASTERN § - Old Dominion Classic, Norfolk, Va. 1976-77 (12-14) 12/1 @Boston College 12/4 MASSACHUSETTS 12/7 Rhode Island 12/9 SPRINGFIELD 12/11 @Northeastern 12/16 CONNECTICUT 12/29 vs. Davidson § 12/30 @UNC-Charlotte § 1/3 @UNC-Wilmington 1/4 @East Carolina 1/9 @St. Anselm 1/12 CANISIUS 1/15 COLGATE
W 87-77 L 63-67 L 68-82 L 77-82 W 65-61 L 72-79 L 66-88 W 72-68 L 65-102 L 64-84 L 50-60 L 77-79 L 60-62 L 64-99 W 84-66 L 57-79 L 60-71 L 55-90 L 59-72 L 64-78 W 57-54 L 69-98 L 81-85 L 59-68 W 73-60 W 64-62
L 71-74 L 67-80 L 62-68 W 89-75 W 79-67 L 51-65 W 63-62 L 68-104 L 68-88 L 65-76 W 93-77 W 89-77 W 95-86
1/18 @Connecticut 1/20 BOSTON UNIVERSITY 1/24 MAINE 1/26 DARTMOUTH 2/1 HOLY CROSS 2/3 VERMONT ot 2/5 @Boston University 2/9 @St. Peter’s 2/14 NORTHEASTERN 2/16 @Massachusetts 3ot 2/21 RHODE ISLAND ot 2/24 @Vermont 3/1 @Maine § - Charlotte (N.C.) Invitational
L 56-76 W 76-70 L 63-74 W 59-56 L 89-78 W 82-81 W 68-67 L 70-99 W 81-71 W 78-76 L 60-61 L 74-79 L 79-86
1975-76 (8-18, 3-9 Yankee) 12/1 @Dartmouth 12/3 @Vermont* 12/8 RHODE ISLAND* 12/10 @Springfield 12/12 BROWN 1/2 vs. Army § 1/3 vs. Rochester § 1/7 @ St. Michael’s 1/11 ST. ANSELM 1/12 ST. PETER’S 1/16 @Canisius 1/19 NORTHEASTERN 1/21 VERMONT* 1/24 MAINE* 1/27 BOSTON UNIV.* 1/29 @Massachusetts* 1/31 @Colgate 2/4 @Maine* 2/7 BOSTON COLLEGE 2/11 @Holy Cross 2/14 @Boston University* 2/17 @Rhode Island* 2/21 CONNECTICUT* 2/24 MASSACHUSETTS* 2/26 @Connecticut* 3/1 @West Virginia § - Lafayette Invitational, Easton, Pa.
L 58-63 L 63-74 L 50-72 W 76-69 L 66-74 L 63-81 W 80-72 L 72-74 W 86-74 L 60-71 L 72-86 L 71-72 L 58-72 W 76-72 L 73-75 L 72-81 W 51-48 L 75-82 L 61-63 L 70-71 W 80-71 L 63-85 W 85-82 L 72-82 L 54-99 L 67-91
1974-75 (6-18, 2-10 Yankee) 12/1 ST. ANSELM 12/4 @Vermont* 12/7 MERRIMACK 12/12 @Maine* 12/14 SPRINGFIELD 12/28 @Gannon § 12/29 vs. Delaware § 1/2 CINCINNATI 1/4 CONNECTICUT* 1/10 VERMONT* 1/15 @Connecticut* 1/18 RHODE ISLAND* 1/22 @St. Anselm ot 1/28 @Boston University* 1/30 @Massachusetts* 2/3 BRANDEIS 2/5 MAINE* 2/8 @Rhode Island* 2/11 DARTMOUTH 2/15 BOSTON UNIV.* 2/19 HOLY CROSS 2/24 MASSACHUSETTS* 2/28 @Northeastern 3/1 @Boston College § - Porreco Cup Invitational, Erie, Pa.
W 67-60 L 64-80 L 59-79 L 56-79 W 60-56 L 55-74 L 57-69 L 32-57 W 57-56 L 60-69 L 67-73 L 48-68 L 84-90 L 71-84 L 44-85 W 78-75 W 81-77 L 58-79 W 90-84 L 71-86 L 85-96 L 71-93 L 60-62 L 63-88
1973-74 (16-9, 8-4 Yankee) 11/30 @Pennsylvania L 43-93 12/5 @Vermont* L 59-69 12/8 ST. ANSELM W 76-58 12/11 MAINE* W 55-53 12/15 @Springfield W 76-67 12/18 @Rhode Island* W 48-46 12/21 @Roanoke § L 64-84 12/22 vs. Bloomsburg St. § L 52-72 1/3 @Connecticut* W 76-70 1/5 VERMONT* W 52-44 1/9 @Merrimack W 81-60 1/12 BOSTON COLLEGE# ot L 56-57 1/29 @Boston University* W 57-56 1/31 @Massachusetts* L 53-72 2/4 @Brandeis 2ot W 63-55 2/7 RHODE ISLAND* W 60-55 2/11 @St. Anselm 2ot W 63-61 2/13 CONNECTICUT* L 62-72 2/16 BOSTON UNIV.* W 72-70 2/20 @Holy Cross W 68-67 2/23 NORTHEASTERN L 65-67 2/26 @Dartmouth W 63-61 2/28 ST. MICHAEL’S W 69-65 3/2 MAINE* W 68-64 3/6 MASSACHUSETTS* L 58-83 § - Roanoke (Va.) Classic # - @ Dover High School
49
1972-73 (11-15, 2-10 Yankee) 11/30 MERRIMACK 12/4 SPRINGFIELD 12/8 vs. Wooster § 12/9 @Oswego State § 12/14 @Maine* 12/16 ST. FRANCIS (N.Y.) 12/22 @Brown 12/27 @Iona 1/3 CONNECTICUT* 1/6 VERMONT* 1/10 @Holy Cross 1/13 BOSTON UNIV.* 1/27 @Northeastern 1/31 @Vermont* 2/3 @Massachusetts* 2/5 BRANDEIS 2/8 RHODE ISLAND* 2/10 @St. Anselm 2/13 @Connecticut* 2/17 @Boston University* 2/15 @Rhode Island* 2/20 HOLY CROSS 2/23 MASSACHUSETTS* 2/26 DARTMOUTH 2/28 ST. ANSELM 3/3 MAINE* § - Max Zeil Classic, Oswego, N.Y.
W 71-51 L 70-71 W 58-46 W 61-56 L 55-70 W 79-77 L 71-77 L 47-55 L 59-60 L 85-88 L 60-78 W 73-68 L 65-75 W 71-68 L 59-74 W 81-74 L 79-95 W 80-76 L 69-81 L 60-73 L 59-67 W 71-67 L 64-76 W 77-66 W 67-60 L 71-75
1971-72 (14-9, 5-5 Yankee) 12/1 @Springfield 12/2 BOWDOIN 12/4 NORTHEASTERN @Maine* 12/9 RHODE ISLAND* 12/12 @Iona 12/15 @St. Francis 12/17 @St. Anselm 12/28 vs. Ohio Wesleyan § 12/29 vs. LeMoyne § 1/3 BOSTON UNIV. @Colby 1/11 VERMONT* 1/14 MAINE* 2/3 @Massachusetts* 2/5 @Brandeis ot 2/8 CONNECTICUT* 2/12 @Vermont* 2/16 @Connecticut* 2/20 ST. ANSELM 2/24 MASSACHUSETTS* 2/29 @Dartmouth 3/2 @Rhode Island* § - Syracuse, N.Y.
W 87-78 W 89-72 W 48-46 L 61-66 L 73-80 W 53-48 L 64-66 W 55-39 W 60-58 L 58-61 W 77-66 W 81-73 W 82-58 W 58-42 L 50-83 L 82-86 L 65-77 W 69-55 W 73-65 W 49-47 W 61-56 L 68-69 L 62-83
1970-71 (11-12, 3-7 Yankee) 12/1 SPRINGFIELD L 74-83 12/2 @Bowdoin W 73-62 12/4 RHODE ISLAND* L 73-86 12/9 CONNECTICUT* L 71-74 12/12 @Massachusetts* L 53-89 12/15 @Maine* W 80-65 12/28 @Worcester Polytechnic § W 72-58 12/29 vs. Assumption § L 48-84 12/30 vs. Wagner § W 74-65 1/5 COLBY W 99-74 1/7 @Connecticut* L 79-82 1/9 ST. ANSELM W 79-67 1/12 @Vermont* L 59-65 MAINE* W 86-67 2/6 @Northeastern L 65-75 2/9 DARTMOUTH ot L 74-78 2/13 VERMONT* W 77-75 2/16 @St. Anselm W 93-72 2/18 @Boston University L 78-90 2/20 BRANDEIS W 116-89 2/23 @Rhode Island* ot L 78-86 2/26 BOSTON UNIV. ot W 64-59 3/1 @Massachusetts* L 60-63 § - Junior College Holiday Tournament, Worcester, Mass. 1969-70 (12-11, 3-7 Yankee) 12/1 BOWDOIN 12/3 MERRIMACK 12/6 @Colby 12/8 NORTHEASTERN 12/11 @Connecticut* 12/13 @Massachusetts* 12/16 @Rhode Island* 1/1 @East Stroudsburg § 1/2 vs. Hofstra § 1/3 vs. Mt. St. Mary’s § 1/7 @Maine* ot 1/10 @St. Anselm 1/13 MAINE* 1/17 VERMONT* 2/4 @Vermont* 2/7 @Springfield 2/11 ST. ANSELM 2/13 RHODE ISLAND*
50
W 75-55 W 56-48 W 65-55 L 63-65 L 61-81 L 56-76 L 54-100 W 59-58 W 76-63 L 47-63 W 79-77 L 69-73 W 72-60 W 62-53 L 72-79 W 87-75 W 74-67 L 67-77
2/18 CONNECTICUT* L 69-80 2/21 @Bates W 99-70 2/26 @Brandeis W 73-69 2/27 @Boston Univ. L 78-84 3/2 MASSACHUSETTS* L 75-92 § - Pocono Classic, East Stroudsburg, N.J. 1968-69 (9-15, 3-7 Yankee) 12/2 MAINE* 12/4 @Bowdoin 12/7 @Dartmouth 12/11 CONNECTICUT* 12/14 @Massachusetts* 12/17 @Maine* 12/19 @Rhode Island* 12/30 @Florida State 1/2 @Jacksonville 1/3 @Stetson ot 1/7 COLBY 1/9 @Northeastern 1/11 @St. Anselm 1/15 BATES 1/18 VERMONT* 2/5 @Vermont* 2/8 SPRINGFIELD 2/13 RHODE ISLAND* 2/15 ST. ANSELM 2/19 @Connecticut* 2/20 BRIDGEPORT 2/27 @MIT 2/28 @Boston University 3/3 MASSACHUSETTS* 1967-68 (1-22, 0-10 Yankee) 12/2 @Massachusetts* 12/4 MIT 12/6 BOWDOIN 12/12 @Maine* 12/14 RHODE ISLAND* 12/16 HARVARD 12/29 @Gannon § 12/30 vs. Central (Ohio) State § 1/4 @Colby 1/6 VERMONT* ot 1/10 @Connecticut* 1/12 ST. ANSELM 1/17 @Bates 1/20 MASSACHUSETTS* 2/8 @Vermont* 2/9 COAST GUARD 2/13 MAINE* 2/15 @Rhode Island* 2/17 BOSTON UNIV. 2/20 CONNECTICUT* 2/22 @Springfield 2/28 @St. Anselm NORTHEASTERN § - Gem City Bowl, Erie, Pa.
W 98-80 W 78-75 L 57-74 W 97-78 L 57-89 L 86-125 L 107-117 L 52-104 L 66-111 W 94-90 W 87-81 W 75-72 L 65-78 W 87-80 W 75-68 L 67-88 L 74-84 L 65-92 L 69-72 L 84-88 L 58-64 W 81-76 L 79-87 L 50-76 L 67-88 W 84-82 L 85-90 L 78-100 L 50-60 L 52-78 L 42-64 L 59-97 L 80-84 L 68-73 L 70-96 L 79-81 L 101-108 L 73-98 L 74-88 L 80-84 L 90-97 L 59-110 L 65-85 L 68-94 L 78-117 L 73-106 L 56-69
1966-67 (10-12, 4-6 Yankee) 12/2 @Bowdoin L 73-90 12/7 CONNECTICUT* L 56-77 12/10 @Northeastern L 74-98 12/13 MAINE* W 74-69 12/15 @Rhode Island L 58-103 12/27 vs. Worcester Tech § L 72-87 12/28 vs. Stonehill § W 95-87 12/29 vs. Clark § W 86-64 1/4 COLBY W 98-73 1/7 @Massachusetts* L 73-77 1/10 VERMONT* W 100-76 1/14 @St. Anselm L 71-92 1/17 @M.I.T L 64-96 1/18 BATES ot W 97-91 1/21 @Vermont* W 101-74 2/8 SPRINGFIELD L 70-97 2/11 MASSACHUSETTS* L 52-84 2/14 @Boston University W 99-92 2/17 RHODE ISLAND* L 52-60 2/21 @Connecticut* L 75-114 2/25 ST. ANSELM W 75-64 2/28 @Maine* W 95-79 § - Worcester (Mass.) Jaycee Holiday Tournament 1965-66 (3-21, 0-10 Yankee) 12/1 @Harvard 12/4 ST. ANSELM 12/8 BOWDOIN 12/11 @Bates 12/14 RHODE ISLAND* 12/27 @Hofstra 12/28 vs. Adelphi § 12/29 vs. Otterbein § 1/4 BOSTON UNIV. 1/6 @Maine* 1/8 MASSACHUSETTS* 1/12 @Connecticut* 1/15 VERMONT* 1/19 M.I.T. 1/22 @Colby 2/8 @Vermont*
L 82-91 L 68-72 W 89-73 W 92-78 L 67-104 L 82-100 L 87-96 L 67-75 L 59-65 L 89-93 L 76-104 L 74-119 L 66-83 L 73-96 L 77-91
2/10 NORTHEASTERN 2/12 @St. Anselm 2/15 CONNECTICUT* 2/18 @Massachusetts* @Springfield 2/23 @Rhode Island* Middlebury 3/4 MAINE* § - Hofstra Tourney, Hempstead, N.Y. 1964-65 (2-19, 1-9 Yankee) 12/1 COLBY 12/2 @Bowdoin 12/5 @Rhode Island* 12/8 ST. ANSELM 12/11 @Vermont* 12/12 @St. Michael’s 12/16 SPRINGFIELD 12/18 @Massachusetts* 1/6 @Boston University 1/9 BATES 1/12 CONNECTICUT* 1/16 DARTMOUTH 1/19 @St. Anselm 2/11 @MIT 2/13 MAINE* 2/17 VERMONT* 2/20 MASSACHUSETTS* 2/22 @Northeastern 2/24 RHODE ISLAND* 2/27 @Connecticut* 3/2 @Maine* 1963-64 (8-15, 2-8 Yankee) 12/4 BOWDOIN 12/7 @Dartmouth 12/10 RHODE ISLAND* 12/14 MASSACHUSETTS* 12/17 @Boston Univ. 12/19 ST. ANSELM 1/1 @St. Mary’s (Canada) § 1/2 vs. M.I.T. § 1/7 MAINE* 1/8 @Springfield 1/11 @Connecticut* 1/16 @Bates 1/17 ST. MICHAEL’S 2/4 @Colby 2/6 VERMONT* 2/11 @Rhode Island* 2/13 NORTHEASTERN 2/15 @Maine* 2/18 M.I.T. 2/19 @St. Anselm 2/22 @Massachusetts* 2/25 CONNECTICUT* 2/29 @Vermont* § - Bluenose Classic, Halifax, Nova Scotia
L 66-90 L 79-108 L 62-113 L 66-104 L 82-99 L 62-99 W 67-65 L 68-72
L 61-77 L 71-78 L 78-110 W 88-76 L 76-81 L 74-106 L 75-76 L 78-93 L 72-87 L 64-77 L 62-82 L 79-85 L 86-90 L 94-101 L 67-84 W 93-76 L 63-78 L 72-92 L 77-90 L 61-109 L 70-105 W 76-69 W 75-66 L 90-91 W 98-73 W 78-72 W 82-74 W 91-71 W 74-73 L 76-77 W 96-84 L 60-73 L 84-96 L 82-84 L 72-98 W 103-81 L 95-86 L 64-71 L 75-76 L 71-81 L 82-87 L 78-98 L 55-58 L 73-82
1962-63 (7-17, 2-8 Yankee) 12/1 BOSTON UNIV. 12/8 @Northeastern 12/11 @Vermont* 12/14 ST. ANSELM 12/18 @Rhode Island* 12/28 @Davidson 12/29 @Stetson 12/31 @Jacksonville 1/2 @Oglethorpe 1/5 MASSACHUSETTS* 1/8 CONNECTICUT* 1/10 @MIT ot 1/11 BATES 1/16 COLBY 1/19 MAINE* DARTMOUTH 1/26 @St. Anselm 2/13 @Maine* 2/15 RHODE ISLAND 2/20 VERMONT* ot 2/23 @Massachusetts* 2/26 @Connecticut* 2/28 @Brandeis 3/2 SPRINGFIELD
W 64-63 L 44-72 L 73-78 L 60-70 L 92-121 L 54-115 W 82-74 L 77-118 L 46-63 L 80-83 L 58-86 L 65-71 W 83-74 W 77-70 W 101-84 L 50-66 L 57-75 L 57-78 L 85-98 W 97-94 L 67-93 L 72-102 W 84-76 L 61-74
1961-62 (3-20, 1-9 Yankee) 12/1 BRANDEIS 12/5 @St. Anselm 12/9 @Dartmouth 12/12 VERMONT* 12/15 @Rhode Island* 12/28 vs. Bates § 12/29 vs. Rochester § 12/31 vs. Maine § 1/4 @ Bates ot 1/6 MASSACHUSETTS* 1/9 MIT 1/11 @Connecticut* 1/13 BOSTON UNIV. 1/17 @Colby 1/20 MAINE*
L 74-82 L 60-93 L 50-68 L 59-79 L 64-76 W 53-52 L 75-96 L 60-77 L 59-65 L 65-67 L 71-73 L 56-104 W 75-73 L 70-93 W 82-75
2/6 @Maine* 2/10 ST. ANSELM 2/13 @Vermont* 2/16 RHODE ISLAND* 2/21 NORTHEASTERN 2/24 @Springfield 2/27 CONNECTICUT* 3/3 @Massachusetts* § - Downeast Classic, Bangor, Maine 1960-61 (6-18, 1-9 Yankee) 12/2 BRANDEIS 12/3 TUFTS 12/8 BATES 12/10 @St. Anselm 12/13 VERMONT* 12/16 @Rhode Island* 12/28 @Akron 12/30 @Wheaton 12/31 @Northern Illinois 1/2 @Youngstown State 1/7 @Bates 1/12 CONNECTICUT* 1/14 @Boston University 1/18 SPRINGFIELD 1/21 @Maine* 2/4 @Vermont* 2/8 @Connecticut* 2/11 MASSACHUSETTS* 2/14 @Northeastern 2/17 RHODE ISLAND* 2/21 ST. ANSELM ot 2/25 @MIT 2/28 MAINE* 3/4 @Massachusetts*
L 68-78 L 81-92 L 82-85 L 54-69 L 52-82 L 54-90 L 72-85 L 62-109
W 73-55 W 83-78 L 91-97 L 71-72 L 58-65 L 67-96 L 55-96 L 74-97 L 84-100 L 70-89 W 80-65 L 77-79 L 60-62 W 66-56 L 79-88 L 75-93 L 91-84 W 65-86 L 58-60 L 65-84 W 72-71 L 69-91 L 80-99 L 61-90
A
ALUMNI ROSTER (1917-2013)
Abbott, Matthew (‘05-06) Abreu, Alvin (‘08-12) Acres, Matt (‘94-98) Adams, Herb (‘38-41) Ahearn, William (‘34-35) Ahrendt, Dick (‘61-62) Alimi, George (‘41-42) Alosa, Matt (‘94-96) Anderson, Andy (‘17-21) Anderson, Jermaine (‘04-07) Appleby, Earl (‘28-29) Argereow, Paul (‘68-69) Armstrong, Frederick (‘54-57) Armstrong, Pallan (‘31-34) Askenazy, Sam (‘41-42) Atkins, Harry (‘19-20) Audley, Bob (‘44-45) Aulis, Clifford (‘16-17) Averka, Charles (‘28-29)
B
Badger, Phillips (‘16-17) Bagonzi, John (‘49-52) Bailey, Henry (‘44-45) Baker, Dick (‘61-62) Baker, Ken (‘60-61) Balcom, James (‘61-62) Ball, James (‘62-65) Bannister, Jeff (‘67-69) Barhos, Tony (‘51-52) Barlow, William (‘53-54) Barnes, Earl (‘48-49) Barron, Dick (‘44-45) Baskys, Julius (‘76-77) Battaglioli, Victor (‘59-62) Bauters, Russ (‘90-91) Bean, Charles (‘52-55) Beattie, Bob (‘25-26) Beattie, Richard (‘36-37) Beaudin, Joe (‘38-39) Beckett, Steve (‘96-97) Ben, James (‘88-92) Benson, Brian (‘09-12) Best, James (‘84-85) Bettencourt, Robert (‘56-58) Billings, Clark (‘61-63) Birdsall, Keith (‘62-63) Bishop, Arthur (‘51-55) Bishop, Kenneth (‘34-37) Bissell, Ralph (‘36-38) Black, Todd (‘83-87) Blakely, Matt (‘96-97) Blum, Phil (‘67-70) Blythe, Edward (‘41-42) Bobotas, Soc (‘43-47) Bograkas, Nick (‘44-45) Bongiovanni, Paul (‘62-65) Boomer, Stephen (‘17-21) Boy, Pierre (‘36-39) Boyd, Mike (‘98-99) Bradberry, Carlos (‘96-98) Brandt, Ryan (‘96-97) Branscombe, George (‘67-69) Brennan, Tom (‘28-29) Bridge, George S. (‘25-28) Bridge, Jason (‘58-60) Bridge, Ty (‘82-86) Britton, Albert (‘45-48) Broad, Bob (‘44-45) Bron, Robert (‘59-62) Bronner, Jordon (‘10-) Bronstein, Ben (‘33-36) Bronstein, Joe (‘29-32) Brown, Chris (‘96-02) Bruce, Bob (‘26-28)
Buckley, DeAndray (‘10) Bullock, Marcus (‘00-05) Burby, Hal (‘48-49) Burkholder, Dick (‘45-46) Burns, Jack (‘78-82) Burt, Herman (‘45-46) Bush, Ruben (‘99-00) Bussey, Jeff (‘65-68) Bustrin, Paul (‘95-96) Butler, T.R. (‘17-21)
C
Cahalane, Reginald (‘16-18) Caldwell, Mo (‘91-94) Callahan, Bob (‘29-30) Callahan, Henry (‘21-23) Cantin, Bob (‘60-61) Carbonneau, Lionel (‘48-52) Card, Edward (‘42-43) Caros, Paul (‘35-36) Carpenter, Keith (‘86-90) Carr, Fred (‘43-46) Carr, Jeff (‘88-92) Carruthers, Bob (‘50-52) Cartmill, Don (‘64-67) Cassidy, Tom (‘64-65) Castagna, Richard (‘86-87) Caterina, Jamaal (‘04-06) Catlett, Brady (‘01-03) Cavanaugh, Tom (‘74-78) Cavo, Andy (‘97-99) Chandler, John (‘26-29) Chapman, Dana (‘77-82) Chapman, Robert (‘59-60) Charron, Fred (‘40-42) Chavis, Will (‘98-99) Cheslock, Joe (‘07-08) Childs, Shejdie (‘02-05) Chodoski, Edward (‘35-37) Christensen, Mike (‘05-08) Cirino, Brad (‘95-97) Clapp, Wesley (‘45-46) Clark, John (‘26-28) Clark, Orrin “Tuffy” (‘64-67) Clark, Sam (‘45-46) Clark, Stacey (‘41-42) Clement, William (‘26-28) Cohen, Lon (‘71-74) Cole, Ethan (‘97-99) Collette, Shawn (‘99-03) Collins, Dan (‘83-85) Collins, Phil (‘04-05) Conley, Tyrone (‘08-11) Connelly, Vincent (‘81-84) Conroy, John (‘29-32) Conway, Bob (‘42-43) Copp, Charlie (‘48-49) Coppin, Darryl (‘77-78) Cormier, Paul (‘70-73) Cote, Ronald (‘61-64) Cotter, Edward (‘80-81) Cotter, Thomas (‘45-48) Cotton, Charles (‘35-37) Cotton, Harold (‘23-27) Counts, Derek (‘85-89) Couture, Jack (‘58-61) Craig, Ralph (‘25-27) Craig, Tom (‘17-21) Craigue, Joey (‘04-05) Crane, Charles (‘25-26) Crompton, Robert (‘45-50) Crosby, Marcus (‘91-94) Cryans, Louis (‘38-41) Cumming, Doug (‘71-72) Cummins, Bob (‘88-92) Cunningham, Paul (‘48-49)
Cushman, Tom (‘67-69)
Funston, Curtis (‘32-35)
D
G
Daniels, Randy (‘63-66) Dart, Richard (‘46-49) Davis, Arthur (‘16-20) Davis, Bob (‘40-41) Davis, Bryant (‘89-93) Davis, Bud (‘45-46) Davis, Frank (‘68-72) Davis, Peter (‘57-60) Davis, Wendell (‘23-26) Dawson, Drew (‘98-99) Dawson, George (‘27-29) Decato, Pete (‘66-67) DeFusco, A.J. (‘79-83) Delaney, Bill (‘74-78) Demers, Henry (‘32-35) Dennis, Ronnie (‘01-05) Dey, Kinsley (‘43-48) Dickson, Keith (‘75-79) DiGrande, Ted (‘82-86) DiLiegro, Dane (‘08-11) DiLiegro, Frank (‘72-75) Dinneen, Mike (‘80-84) Dion, Emile (‘53-54) Dixon, Robin (‘79-83) Djanabia, Georges (‘04-06) Docos, Andre (‘42-43) Donahue, Colin (‘97-01) Drapeau, Scott (‘93-95) Dresser, Holland (‘27-30) Drinon, Joe (‘63-66) Dryden, Paris (‘88-89) Duffley, Steve (‘80-81) Dufour, Paul (‘76-80) Dullea, John (‘99-02) Dunn, Ray (‘37-41) Dunn, Arin (‘07) DuRie, John (‘35-38)
E
Ebtyne, Doug (‘60-61) Eckhardt, Marck (‘73-75) Egan, Donald (‘37-38) Emery, Kenneth (‘53-55) Ericson, Richard (‘55-58) Eusebio, Ed (‘92-96) Eustis, Richard H. (‘58-59) Eustis, Richard J. (‘29-32)
F
Faye, Assane (‘97-02) Feragne, Erie (‘71-74) Ferguson, John (‘54-57) Fernald, Langdon (‘21-24) Ferrini, Lincoln (‘31-33) Feuer, Martin (‘40-41) Fidler, Doug (‘71-72) Fischer, Martin (‘58-61) Fisk, Bob (‘68-69) Flaherty, Matt (‘38-41) Flaker, Roy (‘58-59) Fleit, Gerry (‘48-49) Fleit, Marty (‘46-49) Fogarty, Jack (‘70-71) Foley, Tom (‘68-69) Fontaine, Milton (‘37-39) Ford, George (‘50-53) Foster, Robert (‘33-34) Foster, Wally (‘31-32) Foster, William (‘49-50) Fox, Gordon (‘21-22) Freeman, Erik (‘92-96) Friel, Jeremy (‘03-05) Fuller, Gerald (‘61-64)
Gale, George (‘61-63) Gale, Rich (‘72-76) Galvin, Pat (‘82-86) Ganly, Austin (‘98-02) Garlock, Ralph (‘26-29) Gatchell, Ryan (‘93-97) Gaunt, Nelson (‘27-30) Giarla, Thomas (‘36-37) Gibbs, Tyrece (‘06-09) Gilchrese, Eric (‘08-09) Gildea, Christopher (‘78-82) Glover, Bob (‘66-69) Glynn, Joe (‘45-46) Goodfellow, Roy (‘41-42) Gordon, Hymie (‘50-52) Gordon, Robert (‘55-56) Gormley, Eugene (‘30-33) Gould, Allen (‘00-02) Gozonsky, Abraham (‘36-37) Grady, John (‘40-42) Graebe, Mark (‘75-76) Graham, Russell (‘09-10) Grandmason, Norm (‘49-50) Grant, Steve (‘60-61) Greene, Charlie (‘54-55) Greene, James (‘57-60) Gregory, Mike (‘69-72) Griffiths, Joe (‘39-40) Gureckis, John (‘77-78)
H
Hagstrom, Herb (‘28-31) Hale, Fred (‘51-52) Hall, Hal (‘39-42) Hammer, Tommy (‘86-90) Hansen, Arthur (‘35-38) Hargen, Joe (‘58-61) Harriman, Don (‘26-30) Harris, Don (‘41-43) Harris, Lester (‘18-19) Harris, Marshall (‘42-46) Harvey, Paul (‘48-49) Hatch, Jim (‘38-40) Haubrich, William (‘48-51) Hauser, Mark (‘86-87) Hawkes, William (‘16-17) Hazen, Daniel (‘57-58) Healy, Gerry (‘96-97) Henneberger, John (‘44-46) Herbert, Ken (‘76-81) Hernandez, Jason (‘96-97) Herrick, Ronald (‘58-59) Herrick, Sam (‘07) Herrion, Ryan (‘09-12) Hersey, Jack (‘38-39) Hibbs, Chris (‘94-98) Hicks, Karl (‘78-83) Higgins, Norman (‘61-63) Hinderlie, Keith (‘84-88) Hird, Jack (‘45-46) Hobson, Joe (‘97-98) Hodgdon, Dave (‘79-80) Hodgdon, Denny (‘65-68) Hodgdon, James (‘50-53) Hodgdon, Phil (‘39-40) Hogan, Bob (‘56-57) Hogan, Jim (‘54-55) Hollerman, Billy (‘44-45) Hollingsworth, Bud (‘45-46) Hooker, Bruce (‘60-61) Horan, Brian (‘68-69) Horne, Tom (‘63-66) Horrigan, Frank (‘28-29)
Howe, Paul (‘71-72) Huckle, Kirk (‘74-75) Hurd, William (‘36-37) Hurst, Robert (‘57-58) Huse, Donald (‘32-34) Huss, Dave (‘64-65)
J
Jablonowski, Joe (‘25-27) Jackson, Danny (‘87-88) Jackson, Greg (‘70-71) Jackson, Jamahl (‘94-98) James, Jim (‘73-74) Janev, Blagoj (‘04-07) Jasinski, Jerry (‘60-62) Jervis, Fred (‘42-43) Johnson, Carl (‘42-43) Johnson, Nick (‘51-52) Johnson, Rodney (‘82-86) Johnston, Andy (‘83-87) Jones, Garrett (‘11-) Jones, John (‘51-52) Jones, Norm (‘74-77) Joslin, Bob (‘41-42) Joslin, Charles (‘34-35) Judkins, Roger (‘39-40)
K
Kabba, Abby (‘09) Kachavos, George (‘46-48) Kageleiry, Gregory (‘59-61) Karalis, Ioannis (‘02-06) Karelis, Sheik (‘40-42) Katsiaficas, Charles (‘46-50) Kauderer, Matt (‘00-02) Keeler, Mike (‘78-82) Kelleher, Smokey (‘42-43) Kelley, Elbert W. (‘51-53) Kelsea, Oscar (‘24-27) Kennedy, Haskell (‘67-68) Kennett, Paul (‘46-47) Keough, Mike (‘72-73) Kerschner, Jim (‘66-68) Kessaris, Ted (‘45-48) Kessel, McKeen (‘70-71) Kimble, John (‘68-69) Kinion, Skip (‘36-38) Kinzly, Randy (‘78-82) Kjellman, John (‘58-60) Knox, Robert (‘38-39) Koehler, Bruce (‘31-34) Kolinski, Bill (‘40-43) Konan, Patrick (‘11-) Koopman, Dirk (‘82-86) Krug, Brandon (‘01-02) Krupa, Emil (‘42-46) Kupferman, Spencer (‘94-96) Kupper, Robert (‘55-56)
L
Ladd, Karl (‘26-27) Lakeman, Gerald (‘51-53) Lammers, David (‘68-69) Lang, Doug (‘90-94) Larkin, Paul (‘62-65) Lasch, Brian (‘67-68) Laskaris, Peter (‘74-78) Latour, Kenneth (‘61-63) Lawrence, Oakes (‘19-20) Lawson, John (‘45-48) Laymon, John (‘70-71) Layne, Ron (‘74-78) Leavitt, Paul (‘61-64) Leen, Mervin (‘33-34) LeFlem, Brett (‘97-01) Leighton, Winfield (‘55-56)
51
Leocha, Vic (‘37-38) Leopold, Morris (‘26-27) Lepore, Robert (‘56-58) Levandowski, William (‘46-50) Lewis, Shaft (‘90-93) Lewis, Tim (‘87-90) Liddell, Damione (‘03-05) Lindman, Tim (‘58-60) Lizio, Ralph (‘25-26) Lloyd, David (‘54-57) Locke, Howard (‘36-37) Loiselle, Richard (‘57-58) Long, Hutch (‘47-50) Lord, Harry (‘28-30) Lundberg, James (‘57-58) Lunney, Mike (‘86-90) Lussier, Al (‘56-57)
M
Macauley, Wallace (‘46-47) MacDonald, Tommy (‘90-94) Macey, Douglas (‘57-60) Maciariello, Carmen (‘96-99) Mackel, Ed (‘40-41) MacLennan, Bruce (‘57-58) Mandravelis, Nick (‘60-64) Manor, Pat (‘89-93) Margil, Gerald (‘46-47) Marquardt, Rob (‘97-01) Marshall, Damion(‘06-07) Marshall, Dave (‘85-89) Marshall, Hugh (‘55-56) Martellini, Carmen (‘50-51) Matagrano, Chris (‘09-13) Matteson, Ryan (‘95-96) Matthews, Bob (‘40-42) McClain, Al (‘80-84) McCormick, Paul (‘47-48) McCoy, Rob (‘92-93) McCurry, Mike (‘69-70) McDonough, Bill (‘86-87) McDonnell, Tommy (‘11-) McEachern, John (‘59-61) McGeary, Dan (‘07) McKelvie, Donald (‘21-22) McKeon, James (‘53-54) McKiniry, Ken (‘32-35) McKinley, John (‘21-23) McLaughlin, Charles (‘42-43) McLaughlin, John (‘54-57) McLeod, Mac (‘37-40) Mercier, Ernest (‘57-58) Messer, Ralph (‘60-62) Metcalf, Daniel (‘21-25) Michel, Robert (‘53-56) Millman, Julius (‘46-50) Miner, Don (‘49-51) Minkwitz, Rick (‘71-74) Misiaszek, Fred (‘61-62) Mitchell, Walter (‘29-30) Moeller, John (‘64-66) Monica, Hal (‘39-42) Montalto, Ron (‘67-68) Montanari, Eric (‘91-95) Mooradian, Andrew (‘44-48) Morganstern, Bill (‘64-65) Morris, Scott (‘10-) Morrison, Jeremy (‘34-37) Morrison, Wayne (‘72-76) Mounkhall, Henry (‘69-70) Muller, Rick (‘71-72) Munsey, George (‘52-53) Murphy, Matt (‘93-95) Murphy, Peter (‘36-38) Murray, Dave (‘87-88) Myrick, Ferg (‘09-13)
N
Nayanguila, Kazadi (‘10-12)
52
Neal, Al (‘26-27) Nechtem, Todd (‘70-73) Neely, Bob (‘79-82) Neimeier, Matt (‘90-94) Nelson, John (‘49-50) Nelson, Paul (‘67-68) Newton, Carl (‘63-65) Nicora, Robert (‘23-27) Nolan, Dan (‘80-84) Norman, Richard (‘60-61) Noseck, Ken (‘37-38)
O
O’Connell, Dale (‘45-46) O’Connell, Tim (‘90-92) O’Connor, Chris (‘89-93) Odom, Brandon (‘05-07) Ogelsby, Anthony (‘00-01) Okeke, Frank (‘12-) Olson, Bob (‘61-62) Onguetou, Radar (‘07-10) Orozco, Chris (‘12-) Otey, Brady (‘78-80)
P
Paire, Len (‘46-47) Papazian, John (‘54-55) Pappas, Billy (‘51-55) Paquette, Dick (‘44-45) Paquette, Peter (‘56-57) Pardo, William (‘73-77) Parker, James (‘76-78) Parker, John (‘51-54) Parmenter, Terry (‘56-59) Pasichuke, George (‘42-43) Patch, Lloyd (‘27-30) Paton, Kelly (‘72-73) Peck, Crosby (‘56-58) Pelcher, Chris (‘12-) Pemberton, Dave (‘69-72) Perkins, Chris (‘86-90) Perry, Bob (‘18-22) Perry, John (‘90-91) Peters, Brian (‘67-71) Peters, Dwight (‘69-72) Peterson, Kyle (‘00-04) Petrochilios, George (‘45-46) Phillips, Jelani (‘97-99) Pinks, Morris (‘41-42) Pisperikos, Nick (‘46-47) Plante, Theodore (‘37-40) Podaras, Arthur (‘56-57) Poteet, James (‘51-53) Powell, Jose (‘91-92) Power, Eli (‘37-38) Prentiss, Fred (‘16-17) Price, Seth (‘07) Provost, Joe (‘95-97) Pucci, Albert (‘49-51) Pullen, Leon (‘37-38) Purdy, Dan (‘93-95)
Q
Quinn, Cornelius (‘34-35) Quinn, John (‘77-80)
R
Rafferty, George (‘48-49) Rahal, Joe (‘66-67) Rainis, Joe (‘79-83) Ranchynoski, Leon (‘33-34) Rangasas, Ernie (‘48-49) Rapp, Allen (‘59-60) Rapsis, Henry (‘41-42) Rasanen, Dan (‘99-00) Rassi, Ken (‘95-98) Reynolds, George (‘56-59) Rhoads, Chandler (‘09-13) Rhuland, Lionel (‘41-44)
Rich, Jim (‘60-64) Richardson, Herbert (‘45-51) Richardson, Howie (‘44-46) Robbins, William (‘34-35) Roberts, Dick (‘49-51) Robinson, Arthur (‘33-34) Rogean, Arnold (‘34-37) Rogers, Edward (‘34-35) Rosinski, Francis (‘35-38) Ross, Moe (‘38-39) Rowe, Dean (‘78-79) Roybal, Jude (‘07) Ryder, Edward (‘44-45)
S
Sands, David (‘01-03) Santos, Colbey (‘09-10) Sargent, Dennis (‘72-75) Sargent, Scott (‘66-69) Sasner, John (‘54-57) Saunders, Fred (‘40-41) Schurman, Charles (‘27-30) Schurman, David (‘25-26) Seay, Steve (‘65-68) Senulis, Jeff (‘98-03) Sficas, Costas (‘49-51) Sheldon, Henry (‘47-48) Shepard, Paul (‘68-70) Sherwood, Irvin (‘19-21) Shuttleworth, William (‘17-19) Sim, Chet (‘44-45) Simpson, Roger (‘55-56) Singelais, Steve (‘73-77) Skoog, Arthur (‘31-32) Slaten, Foster (‘25-28) Small, John (‘27-30) Smilikis, Pete (‘57-60) Smith, Henry (‘25-30) Smith, Matt (‘94-96) Smith, Thomas (‘75-78) Snider, William (‘41-42) Spano, Brian (‘85-87) Spenser, Charlie (‘73-74) Spitale, Joe (‘88-90) St. Angelo, Gregory (‘53-56) Stafford, Dave (‘29-30) Stafford, David (‘50-51) Stafford, Ted (‘20-23) Stanfield, Tony (‘81-82) Steele, Greg (‘83-87) Steele, James (‘17-18) Steininger, Tom (‘65-66) Stenberg, Clayton (‘53-54) Stephenson, Jim (‘88-90) Stergion, Andy (‘48-49) Stevens, George R. (‘16-17) Stevens, George R. III (‘41-42) Stevens, Leon (‘44-45) Stevens, Lum (‘50-52) Stewart, Bill (‘70-73) Stewart, Elmer (‘16-17) Stolovsky, Louis (‘27-30) Stone, Joe (‘48-51) Stone, Larry (‘46-47) Stover, Alcot (‘48-49) Stratton, Sam (‘49-51) Strobel, John (‘62-65) Sturgill, Ben (‘01-05) Stylianos, Tom (‘33-34) Sullivan, John (‘92-93) Sullivan, Robert (‘60-61) Sullivan, Tom (‘36-37) Swanson, Charles (‘55-57) Swicklas, John (‘34-35) Szydlik, Steve (‘74-75)
T
Tait, Marshall (‘84-85) Tansey, George (‘55-56)
Targonski, Joseph (‘31-34) Tatarczuk, Frank (‘42-48) Taylor, Alray (‘03-04) Taylor, Ralph (‘24-26) Tchatchoua, Rony (‘08-09) Teague, Albert (‘37-38) Tetzlaff, Gene (‘25-26) Thielen, Eric (‘87-91) Thomas, Bob (‘42-46) Thorp, C. Bradford (‘59-60) Tibbetts, Bud (‘44-45) Tilton, Richard (‘28-29) Tilton, Robert (‘36-38) Tobey, Shawn (‘06-08) Toll, Art (‘32-35) Travis, Stanley (‘53-54) Trotman, Jeron (‘11-13) Trudel, Theodore, Jr. (‘50-54) Truman, Jesse (‘99-00) Truskoski, Ben (‘31-33) Twaddle, James (‘55-58)
V
Vachon, Tom (‘49-50) Valladares, James (‘08-11) Vallo, John (‘49-50) Van Deventer, Brendan (‘75-79) Vasquez, Tom (‘65-66) Vaughn, Arky (‘40-42) Vetrano, Chris (‘04-06)
W
Walker, Frederick (‘32-35) Walker, Greg “G” (‘87-90)
Walker, Griffin (‘02-04) Walls, Craig (‘03-05) Warner, Richard (‘47-48) Waters, Bob (‘42-46) Webb, Walt (‘34-39) Weinberg, Lawrence (‘59-60) Weir, Thomas (‘69-70) Wentworth, Shirley (‘22-23) Wheeler, Bob (‘41-44) Wheeler, Donald (‘51-54) Whelton, Joseph (‘50-51) White, Fred (‘45-47) Wilde, Ronald (‘32-35) Wile, Lester (‘27-29) Willey, George (‘46-47) Willey, Leonard (‘52-54) Williams, Danny (‘91-92) Williams, Marcelle (‘99-00) Williams, Ralph (‘31-32) Williams, Roland (‘01-04) Wilson, Doug (‘92-96) Wilson, Doug (‘68-69) Wilson, Fred (‘38-39) Witter, Vincent (‘34-37) Wolcott, Casey (‘48-49) Wood, Ray (‘39-40) Wuth, Herbert (‘43-44)
Y
Yeaton, Mark (‘99-00)
Z
Zeko, Branimir (‘06-07) Zepernick, Keil (‘99-00) Zidovsky, Mike (‘39-40) Ziter, Lou (‘73-74) Zitrides, Art (‘40-41)
CONFERENCE HONORS 1980-81 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2001-02 2003-04 2004-05 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2006-07 2006-07 2007-08 2007-08 2007-08 2008-09 2008-09 2009-10 2009-10 2009-10 2010-11 2010-11 2010-11 2011-12 2011-12 2011-12 2012-13
Al McClain........................................................................ Rookie of the Year Robin Dixon................................................................... All-NAC First Team Gerry Friel......................................................................... Coach of the Year Al McClain....................................................................... All-NAC First Team Dan Nolan.................................................................All-NAC Second Team Greg Steele..........................................................................All-Rookie Team James Best...........................................................................All-Rookie Team Dirk Koopman.........................................................All-NAC Second Team Greg Steele.................................................. All-NAC Honorable Mention Pat Manor........................................................................ Rookie of the Year Pat Manor............................................................... Foreign Tour Selection Eric Thielen............................................................. Foreign Tour Selection Tommy MacDonald..........................................................All-Rookie Team James Ben.................................................................All-NAC Second Team Marcus Crosby....................................................................All-Rookie Team Jose Powell..........................................................................All-Rookie Team Pat Manor.............................................NAC Scholar-Athlete of the Year Ed Eusebio...........................................................................All-Rookie Team Scott Drapeau............................................................... All-NAC First Team Eric Montanari.........................................................All-NAC Second Team Scott Drapeau......................................................... All-Tournament Team Scott Drapeau............................................................... All-NAC First Team Matt Alosa.................................................................All-NAC Second Team Matt Acres............................................................................All-Rookie Team Matt Alosa.................................................................All-NAC Second Team Matt Acres.......................................................America East Second Team Andy Cavo................................................ America East All-Rookie Team Will Chavis................................................ America East All-Rookie Team Marcelle Williams.................................. .America East All-Rookie Team Chris Brown.............................................. ............America East First Team Austin Ganly...................................................America East Second Team Blagoj Janev............................................. America East All-Rookie Team Ben Sturgill.....................................................America East Second Team Mike Christensen................................... America East All-Rookie Team Blagoj Janev......................................................... America East First Team Blagoj Janev...................................................America East Second Team Jermaine Anderson......................................... America East Third Team Jermaine Anderson......................... America East All-Defensive Team Tyrece Gibbs...................................................... America East Third Team Alvin Abreu.............................................. America East All-Rookie Team Tyrone Conley......................................... America East All-Rookie Team Tyrece Gibbs..................................................America East Second Team Radar Onguetou............................... America East All-Academic Team Alvin Abreu....................................................America East Second Team Ferg Myrick............................................... America East All-Rookie Team Brian Benson...................................... America East All-Academic Team Tyrone Conley...............................................America East Second Team Jordon Bronner....................................... America East All-Rookie Team Chandler Rhoads.............................. America East All-Defensive Team Alvin Abreu....................................................America East Second Team Brian Benson...................................... America East All-Academic Team Chandler Rhodes.............................. America East All-Defensive Team Scott Morris........................................ America East All-Academic Team
Chandler Rhoads
2011, 2012 America East All-Defensive Team
SCOTT MORRIS: 2012-13 AMERICA EAST ALL-ACADEMIC TEAM
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