Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
Association | NCAA |
---|---|
Founded | 1980 |
Commissioner | Travis Tellitocci (since 2023) |
Sports fielded |
|
Division | Division I |
Subdivision | Non-football |
No. of teams | 13 |
Headquarters | Edison, New Jersey |
Region | Northeastern United States |
Official website | www |
Locations | |
The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC, /mæk/) is a collegiate athletic conference affiliated with NCAA Division I. Its current 13 full members are located in five Northeastern states: Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York.
Members are all relatively small private institutions, a majority Catholic or formerly Catholic, with the only exceptions being two secular institutions: Rider University and Quinnipiac University.
The MAAC currently sponsors 25 sports and has 17 associate member institutions.
History
[edit]The conference was founded in 1980 by six charter members: the U.S. Military Academy, Fairfield University, Fordham University, Iona College, Manhattan University, and Saint Peter's College.[1] Competition officially began the next year, in the sports of men's cross-country and men's soccer.[1]
Competition in men's and women's basketball began in the 1981–1982 season.[1] In 1982, Saint Peter's was the first women's team to represent the MAAC in the NCAA women's basketball tournament. In 1984, the MAAC received an automatic bid to the NCAA men's basketball tournament, where Iona was the first team to represent the MAAC on the men's side.
The conference currently possesses 15 automatic bids to NCAA championships.[1] In 2012–13, the MAAC became eligible for its 15th NCAA championship automatic bid when women's rowing fulfilled the qualifying requirements.[1]
The league added football in 1993, but discontinued it following the 2007 season.
From 1997 to 2003, the MAAC sponsored ice hockey. At that time, the hockey league split from the MAAC and changed its name to the Atlantic Hockey Association (now Atlantic Hockey America after its 2024 merger with College Hockey America). Also, Marist College and Rider University moved the majority of their intercollegiate athletic programs to the MAAC in 1997 with the intent that the MAAC would enhance media exposure and competition for their men's and women's Division I basketball programs.[2]
In September 2011, the conference announced the launch of MAAC.TV, the league's first broadband network.
In March 2012, for the first time in 16 years, the MAAC had two teams advance to the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, with Loyola earning the league's automatic bid and Iona garnering an at-large bid.[1]
In July 2013, Quinnipiac University and Monmouth University joined the MAAC to replace Loyola University Maryland, departing to the Patriot League.[3] Also in 2013, the MAAC announced that it would add field hockey with league play set to begin in the 2013–14 academic year.[4] However, field hockey was dropped after the 2018 season. The MAAC field hockey league was effectively taken over by the Northeast Conference (NEC), which reinstated the sport the following year.[5] The conference decided to no longer host a conference championship for men's rowing after the 2016 season, which is governed by the Intercollegiate Rowing Association.
On January 25, 2022, Monmouth announced it was leaving the MAAC after the 2021–22 school year to join the Colonial Athletic Association, now known as the Coastal Athletic Association.[6] The MAAC responded by entering into negotiations with Mount St. Mary's University, a full but non-football NEC member. ESPN reported on April 27, 2022 that the addition of Mount St. Mary's for 2022–23 and beyond would be finalized in early May.[7] The last of these developments came shortly after the MAAC's greatest success in men's basketball, when Saint Peter's became the first 15-seed ever to reach an NCAA regional final, losing there to North Carolina. Mount St. Mary's would be confirmed as Monmouth's replacement on May 2.[8]
Also in 2022, four schools that were already MAAC affiliates added men's lacrosse to their MAAC memberships. All were full members of conferences that dropped the sport following the addition of men's lacrosse by the Atlantic 10 Conference. LIU, Sacred Heart, and Wagner are members of the Northeast Conference,[9] and VMI is a member of the Southern Conference. LIU is the only one of the four that had not previously housed men's lacrosse in the MAAC.[10]
In October 2023, the MAAC announced that Merrimack College and Sacred Heart University would join the conference for the 2024-25 season.[11]
Athletic and academic success
[edit]Over the conference's history, MAAC teams have achieved national acclaim in many sports. In the summer of 2002, the Marist men's varsity eight boat advanced to the semifinals of the Temple Challenge Cup at the Henley Royal Regatta.[12] In 2007, the Marist women's basketball team advanced to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament.[13] The Red Foxes have recorded five NCAA wins since their run in 2007. In the fall of 2011, the Iona men's cross country team finished tied for ninth place at the NCAA Championship race, extending the Gaels' streak to 10 straight Top 10 national finishes.[1] During the 2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, the Saint Peter's Peacocks became the first 15 seed to reach the Elite Eight.[14] With an overall record of 22–12, Saint Peter's had the best NCAA postseason run with the most wins in a single NCAA Tournament by any MAAC program (men or women) in the conference's 41-year history.[15] In basketball, MAAC teams have made a total of 80 NIT appearances and 50 NCAA basketball tournament appearances.[1]
Notable MAAC student athletes include Mary Beth Riley, a 1991 graduate of Canisius, who was the first recipient of the NCAA Woman of the Year Award and Erin Whalen, a member of the Iona women's rowing team who in the fall of 1998 was awarded one of the nation's 32 Rhodes Scholarships for academic achievement and civic leadership.[1]
Member institutions
[edit]Current
[edit]Current full members
[edit]The MAAC currently has thirteen full member institutions; all are private schools. Of these, all but Quinnipiac, Rider, and Marist College are Catholic, though Marist is formerly Catholic.
- ^ The Mount St. Mary's campus has an Emmitsburg mailing address, but lies in unincorporated Frederick County.
- ^ Mailing address is "Niagara University, New York".
- ^ Sacred Heart was founded by the bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport, but has been led and primarily staffed by Catholic laity from its creation.
Associate members
[edit]Of the MAAC's ten current affiliate members, only two are Catholic. Drake, Jacksonville, LIU, Robert Morris, and Stetson are nonsectarian and Wagner College is Lutheran. There are also two public institutions, the University at Albany and the Virginia Military Institute.
Departing members are in red.
- Notes
- ^ The LIU athletic program, created with the 2019 merger of the athletic programs that previously represented the school's Brooklyn and Post campuses, bases some sports at the Brooklyn campus and others at the Post campus in Brookville, New York. LIU's current MAAC sports operate from separate campuses, with men's lacrosse based at Post and women's water polo at Brooklyn.[17]
- ^ Includes enrollment at both the Brooklyn and Post campuses. All LIU sports are open to undergraduates at both campuses who meet NCAA eligibility requirements.
Former members
[edit]Former Full members
[edit]Institution | Location | Founded | Joined | Left | Type | Enrollment | Nickname | Current conference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
United States Military Academy (Army) |
West Point, New York | 1802 | 1981 | 1990 | Federal | 4,491 | Black Knights | Patriot |
Fordham University | Bronx, New York | 1841 | 1981 | 1990 | Private | 16,515 | Rams | Atlantic 10 |
College of the Holy Cross | Worcester, Massachusetts | 1843 | 1983 | 1990 | 3,128 | Crusaders | Patriot | |
La Salle University | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 1863 | 1983 | 1992 | 5,191 | Explorers | Atlantic 10 | |
Loyola University Maryland | Baltimore, Maryland | 1852 | 1989 | 2013 | 5,670 | Greyhounds | Patriot | |
Monmouth University | West Long Branch, New Jersey | 1933 | 2013 | 2022 | 6,167 | Hawks | Coastal |
Former associate members
[edit]Institution | Location | Founded | Joined | Left | Type | Enrollment | Nickname | Current conference, former MAAC sport(s) |
MAAC sport(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boston University | Boston, Massachusetts | 1839 | 2009–10 | 2012–13 | Private | 34,657 | Terriers | Patriot League[a] | Women's golf |
Bryant University | Smithfield, Rhode Island | 1863 | 2012–13 | 2019–20 | Private | 3,788 | Bulldogs | America East[a] | Men's swimming & diving |
2013–14 | 2018–19 | Field hockey | |||||||
Butler University | Indianapolis, Indiana | 1855 | 2012–13 | 2012–13 | Private | 5,506 | Bulldogs | Big East[a] | Women's golf |
Colgate University | Hamilton, New York | 1819 | 1989–90 | 1989–90 | Private | 2,969 | Raiders | Patriot[a] | Baseball |
University of Dayton | Dayton, Ohio | 1850 | 2014–15 | 2024–25 | Private | 11,241 | Flyers | Atlantic 10[a] | Women's golf |
University of Detroit Mercy | Detroit, Michigan | 1877 | 2009–10 | 2020–21 | Private | 5,111 | Titans | Northeast[b] | Men's lacrosse |
Duquesne University | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | 1878 | 1994–95 | 2007–08 | Private | 9,274 | Dukes | Northeast[c] | Football |
1996–97 | 1997–98 | Women's lacrosse | |||||||
Georgetown University | Washington, D.C. | 1789 | 1993–94 | 1999–2000 | Private | 19,204 | Hoyas | Patriot[d] | Football |
University of Hartford | West Hartford, Connecticut | 1877 | 2009–10 | 2022–23 | Private | 6,770 | Hawks | Independent (D-III)[e] | Women's golf |
Jacksonville University[f] | Jacksonville, Florida | 1934 | 2010–11 | 2012–13 | Private | 4,213 | Dolphins | ASUN[a] | Men's lacrosse |
La Salle University | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 1863 | 1999-2000 | 2007–08 | Private | 5,191 | Explorers | N/A[g] | Football |
2016–17 | 2024–25 | Atlantic 10[a] | Women's golf | ||||||
Le Moyne College | Syracuse, New York[h] | 1946 | 1989–90 | 2007–08 | Private | 3,356 | Dolphins | Northeast[a] | Baseball |
1998–99 | 2006–07 | Women's lacrosse | |||||||
Long Island University | Brooklyn & Brookville, New York[i] | 1926 | 2023–24 | 2024–25 | Private | 15,197[j] | Sharks | Northeast | Men's lacrosse |
LIU Brooklyn[k] | Brooklyn, New York | 1926 | 2016–17 | 2018–19 | Private | 15,197 | Blackbirds[l] | Northeast[m] | field hockey |
Loyola University Chicago | Chicago, Illinois | 1870 | 2022-23 | 2024-25 | Private
(Jesuit) |
16,437 | Ramblers | Atlantic 10[a] | Women's golf |
Marist College[n] | Poughkeepsie, New York | 1929 | 1995–96m.lax. 1996–97m.row. 1995–96m.sw.dv. 1996–97w.lax. 1996–97w.row. 1995–96w.sw.dv. |
1996–97m.lax. 1996–97m.row. 1996–97m.sw.dv. 1996–97w.lax. 1996–97w.row. 1996–97w.sw.dv. |
Private | 6,624 | Red Foxes | MAAC | Men's lacrosse, men's rowing, men's swimming and diving, women's lacrosse, women's rowing, women's swimming and diving |
Mount St. Mary's University[n] | Emmitsburg, Maryland[o] | 1808 | 1995–96m.lax, 1996–97w.lax |
2009–10m.lax, 1997–98w.lax |
Private | 2,407 | Mountaineers | MAAC | Men's lacrosse, women's lacrosse |
Providence College | Providence, Rhode Island | 1917 | 1995–96 | 2008–09 | Private | 4,922 | Friars | Big East[a] | Men's lacrosse |
Quinnipiac University[n] | Hamden, Connecticut | 1929 | 1998–99 | 2000–01 | Private | 10,207 | Bobcats | MAAC | Men's lacrosse |
Rider University[n] | Lawrenceville, New Jersey | 1865 | 1996–97m.gf 1995–96m.sw.dv. 1995–96w.sw.dv. |
1996–97m.gf 1996–97m.sw.dv. 1996–97w.sw.dv. |
Private | 4,825 | Broncs | MAAC | Men's golf, men's swimming and diving, women's swimming and diving |
Robert Morris University[p] | Moon Township, Pennsylvania | 1921 | 2013–14 | 2013–14 | Private | 4,895 | Colonials | N/A[q] | Field hockey |
Sacred Heart University[n] | Fairfield, Connecticut | 1963 | 2013–14 | 2018–19 | Private | 8,958 | Pioneers | MAAC | Field hockey |
St. Francis College (Brooklyn) | Brooklyn Heights, New York | 1859 | 2003–04 | 2022–23 | Private | 2,453 | Terriers | N/A[r] | Women's water polo |
Saint Joseph's University | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 1851 | 1996–97 | 2009–10 | Private | 7,589 | Hawks | Atlantic 10[a] | Men's lacrosse |
St. John's University | Queens, New York | 1870 | 1993–94 | 1998–99 | Private | 21,643 | Red Storm | N/A[s] | Football |
Virginia Military Institute | Lexington, Virginia | 1839 | 2023–24 | 2024–25 | Public | 1,685 | Keydets | Northeast[t] | Men's lacrosse |
Wagner College | Staten Island, New York | 1883 | 1999–2000 | 2009–10 | Private
(Lutheran) |
2,211 | Seahawks | Northeast | Men's lacrosse |
2023–24 | 2024–25 | ||||||||
1996–97 | 1997–98 | Women's lacrosse |
- Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Same as school's current primary conference.
- ^ Primary conference: Horizon
- ^ Primary conference: Atlantic 10
- ^ Primary conference: Big East
- ^ Primary: Conference of New England (Division III), which sponsors golf only for men.
- ^ Jacksonville remains in the MAAC as an affiliate in men's and women's rowing.
- ^ La Salle, a full member of the Atlantic 10 since the 1995–96 school year, dropped football after the 2007 fall season (2007–08 school year). Even though the A-10 operated a football league from the 1997 to 2006 fall seasons (1997–98 to 2006–07 school years), La Salle was never an A-10 football member.
- ^ The Le Moyne campus has a Syracuse mailing address, but almost entirely lies in the adjacent town of DeWitt.
- ^ The LIU athletic program, created with the 2019 merger of the athletic programs that previously represented the school's Brooklyn and Post campuses, bases some sports at the Brooklyn campus and others at the Post campus in Brookville, New York. LIU's current MAAC sports operate from separate campuses, with men's lacrosse based at Post and women's water polo at Brooklyn.[17]
- ^ Includes enrollment at both the Brooklyn and Post campuses. All LIU sports are open to undergraduates at both campuses who meet NCAA eligibility requirements.
- ^ After the 2018–19 school year, Long Island University merged the athletic programs of its Brooklyn and Post campuses into a single Division I program that now competes as the LIU Sharks. The unified program inherited all of LIU Brooklyn's memberships.[18]
- ^ Replaced by the LIU Sharks.[19]
- ^ The merged LIU program remains in the NEC.
- ^ a b c d e Marist, Mount St. Mary's, Rider, Quinnipiac, and Sacred Heart are currently full members of the MAAC.
- ^ The Mount St. Mary's campus has an Emmitsburg mailing address, but is located in unincorporated Frederick County.
- ^ Robert Morris remains in the MAAC as an affiliate in women's rowing.
- ^ Robert Morris, currently a full member of the Horizon League, dropped field hockey after the 2013 fall season (2013–14 school year).
- ^ St. Francis discontinued its athletic program at the end of the 2022–23 season.
- ^ St. John's, a full member of the Big East throughout its tenure in MAAC football, dropped the sport after the 2002 fall season (2002–03 school year).
- ^ Primary: Southern Conference
Membership timeline
[edit]Full members Full members (non-football) Assoc. members (football only) Other conference Other conference
Sports
[edit]The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference sponsors championship competition in 10 men's and 13 women's NCAA sanctioned sports, plus two sports not organized by the NCAA—esports, which are fully coeducational, and men's rowing.[20]
Sport | Men's | Women's | Coed |
---|---|---|---|
Baseball | 13 |
– |
–
|
Basketball | 13 |
11/3 |
–
|
Cross country | 13 |
13 |
–
|
Esports | – |
– |
(8)
|
Golf | 11 |
11 |
–
|
Lacrosse | 8 |
12 |
–
|
Rowing | (5) |
11 |
–
|
Soccer | 13 |
13 |
–
|
Softball | - |
13 |
–
|
Swimming and diving | 9 |
12 |
–
|
Tennis | 9 |
10 |
–
|
Track and field (indoor) | 9 |
11 |
–
|
Track and field (outdoor) | 10 |
11 |
–
|
Volleyball | - |
12 |
–
|
Water polo | - |
9 |
–
|
Men's
[edit]School | Baseball | Basketball | Cross country | Esports[a] | Golf | Lacrosse | Rowing[b] | Soccer | Swimming | Tennis | Track and field (indoor) |
Track and field (outdoor) |
Total MAAC sports |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Canisius | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 10 |
Fairfield | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No[c] | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | 8 |
Iona | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 9 |
Manhattan | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 11 |
Marist | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 11 |
Merrimack | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | 9 |
Mount St. Mary's | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 11 |
Niagara | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | 8 |
Quinnipiac | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | 7 |
Rider | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 9 |
Sacred Heart | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | 9 |
Saint Peter's | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 9 |
Siena | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | 9 |
Totals | 13 | 13 | 13 | 8 | 11 | 8 | 4+1[d] | 13 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 10 | 120+1 |
Unsponsored
[edit]School | Fencing | Football | Ice hockey | Volleyball | Water polo | Wrestling |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Canisius | No | No | AHA | No | No | No |
Iona | No | No | No | No | CWPA | No |
Manhattan | No | No | No | [e] | No | No |
Marist | No | PFL | No | No | No | No |
Merrimack | No | Independent | Hockey East | TBA | No | No |
Mount St. Mary's | No | No | No | No | CWPA | No |
Niagara | No | No | AHA | No | No | No |
Quinnipiac | No | No | ECAC | No | No | No |
Rider | No | No | No | No | No | MAC |
Sacred Heart | NEIFC | Independent | AHA | EIVA | No | EIWA |
- Notes
- ^ Esports, in which men and women directly compete alongside and against one another, are not sanctioned by the NCAA, but governed by the Electronic Gaming Federation.
- ^ Men's rowing is not sanctioned by the NCAA, but governed by the Intercollegiate Rowing Association.
- ^ Fairfield's men's lacrosse team does not participate in the MAAC; it currently plays in the Coastal Athletic Association.
- ^ Affiliate member Jacksonville.
- ^ Manhattan will add men's volleyball in 2025–26, competing as an affiliate of the Northeast Conference.[21]
Women's
[edit]School | Basketball | Cross country |
Esports[a] | Golf | Lacrosse | Rowing | Soccer | Softball | Swimming | Tennis | Track and field (indoor) |
Track and field (outdoor) |
Volleyball | Water polo |
Total MAAC sports |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Canisius | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 11 |
Fairfield | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | 10 |
Iona | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 11 |
Manhattan | Yes | Yes | Yes | No[b] | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 12 |
Marist | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 13 |
Merrimack | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 12 |
Mount St. Mary's | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | 12 |
Niagara | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 10 |
Quinnipiac | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 11 |
Rider | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 10 |
Sacred Heart | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 12 |
Saint Peter's | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 9 |
Siena | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | 12 |
Totals | 13 | 13 | 8 | 7+1[c] | 12 | 7+4[d] | 13 | 13 | 12 | 10 | 11 | 11 | 12 | 4+5[e] | 130+11 |
Unsponsored
[edit]School | Acrobatics and tumbling[f] |
Bowling | Equestrian[f] | Fencing | Field hockey | Ice hockey | Rugby[f] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fairfield | No | No | No | No | NEC | No | No |
Manhattan | [g] | No | No | No | No | No | No |
Merrimack | No | TBA | No | No | NEC | Hockey East | No |
Mount St. Mary's | No | Independent | No | No | No | No | Independent |
Niagara | No | NEC | No | No | No | No | No |
Quinnipiac | Independent | No | No | No | Big East | ECAC | Independent |
Rider | No | No | No | No | NEC | No | No |
Sacred Heart | No | TBA | Independent | NEIFC | NEC | NEWHA | Independent |
- Notes
- ^ Esports, in which men and women directly compete alongside and against one another, are not sanctioned by the NCAA, but governed by the Electronic Gaming Federation.
- ^ Manhattan will add women's golf in 2025–26.[21]
- ^ Affiliate member Albany
- ^ Affiliate members Drake, Jacksonville, Robert Morris, and Stetson
- ^ Affiliate members La Salle, LIU, Villanova, VMI, and Wagner.
- ^ a b c Currently part of the NCAA Emerging Sports for Women program.
- ^ Manhattan will add acrobatics & tumbling in 2025–26, competing as an independent.[21]
Facilities
[edit]School | Basketball arena | Capacity | Baseball stadium | Capacity | Soccer stadium | Capacity |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Canisius | Koessler Athletic Center | 2,176 | Demske Sports Complex | 1,200 | Demske Sports Complex | 1,200 |
Fairfield | Leo D. Mahoney Arena | 3,500 | Alumni Baseball Diamond | 600 | Lessing Field | 600 |
Iona | Hynes Athletic Center | 2,611 | City Park | — | Mazzella Field | 2,440 |
Manhattan | Draddy Gymnasium | 2,345 | Dutchess Stadium | 4,494 | Gaelic Park | 2,000 |
Marist | McCann Arena | 3,200 | James J. McCann Baseball Field | 350 | Tenney Stadium | 5,000 |
Merrimack | Hammel Court | 1,200 | Warrior Baseball Diamond[a] | — | Martone–Mejail Field | 3,000 |
Mount St. Mary's | Knott Arena | 3,121 | E. T. Straw Family Stadium | — | Waldron Family Stadium | 1,000 |
Niagara | Gallagher Center | 2,400 | Bobo Field | — | Niagara Field | 1,200 |
Quinnipiac | People's United Center | 3,570 | Quinnipiac Baseball Field | — | Quinnipiac Soccer Field | — |
Rider | Alumni Gymnasium | 1,650 | Sonny Pittaro Field | 2,000 | Ben Cohen Field | 1,000 |
Sacred Heart | William H. Pitt Center | 2,100 | Veterans Memorial Park | 500 | Park Avenue Field | — |
Saint Peter's | Run Baby Run Arena | 3,200 | Joseph J. Jaroschak Field | — | Joseph J. Jaroschak Field | — |
Siena | MVP Arena (men) Alumni Recreation Center (women) |
15,229 4,000 |
Siena Baseball Field | 500 | Siena Turf Field | 1,000 |
- ^ Merrimack also schedules home baseball games at off-campus venues in its area.
Basketball
[edit]Men's
[edit]Year | Regular Season Champion(s) | Tournament champion | Player of the Year | Defensive Player of the Year | Coach of the Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1982 | Saint Peter's (20–9, 9–1) | (3) Iona (24–9, 7–3) | William Brown (Saint Peter's) | Bob Dukiet (Saint Peter's) | |
1983 | Iona (22–9, 8–2) | (2) Fordham (19–11, 7–3) | Steve Burtt, Sr. (Iona) | Gordon Chiesa (Manhattan) | |
1984 | La Salle (20–11, 11–3) Saint Peter's (23–6, 11–3) Iona |
(3) Iona (23–8, 11–3) | Steve Burtt, Sr. (Iona) | Pat Kennedy (Iona) | |
1985 | Iona | (1) Iona (26–5, 11–3) | Randy Cozzens (Army) | Les Wothke (Army) | |
1986 | Fairfield | (1) Fairfield (24–7, 13–1) | Tony George (Fairfield) | Mitch Buonaguro (Fairfield) | |
1987 | Saint Peter's (21–8, 11–3) | (7) Fairfield (15–16, 5–9) | Kevin Houston (Army) | Ted Fiore (Saint Peter's) | |
1988 | La Salle | (1) La Salle (24–10, 14–0) | Lionel Simmons (La Salle) | Speedy Morris (La Salle) | |
1989 | La Salle | (1) La Salle (26–6, 13–1) | Lionel Simmons (La Salle) | Speedy Morris (La Salle) Ted Fiore (Saint Peter's) | |
1990 | (N) Holy Cross (24–6, 14–2) (S) La Salle |
(S1) La Salle (30–2, 16–0) | Lionel Simmons (La Salle) | George Blaney (Holy Cross) | |
1991 | Siena (25–10, 12–4) La Salle (19–10, 12–4) |
(3) Saint Peter's (24–7, 11–5) | Marc Brown (Siena) | Ted Fiore (Saint Peter's) | |
1992 | Manhattan (25–9, 13–3) | (2) La Salle (20–11, 12–4) | Randy Woods (La Salle) | Steve Lappas (Manhattan) | |
1993 | Manhattan | (1) Manhattan (23–7, 12–2) | Keith Bullock (Manhattan) | Jack Armstrong (Niagara) | |
1994 | Canisius (22–7, 12–2) | (5) Loyola (MD) (17–13, 6–8) | Doremus Bennerman (Siena) | John Beilein (Canisius) | |
1995 | Manhattan (26–5, 12–2) | (3) Saint Peter's (19–11, 10–4) | Craig Wise (Canisius) | Fran Fraschilla (Manhattan) | |
1996 | Iona (21–8, 10–4) Fairfield (20–10, 10–4) |
(5) Canisius (19–11, 7–7) | Darrell Barley (Canisius) | Paul Cormier (Fairfield) | |
1997 | Iona (22–8, 11–3) | (8) Fairfield (11–19, 2–12) | Mindaugas Timinskas (Iona) | Tim Welsh (Iona) | |
1998 | Iona | (1) Iona (27–6, 15–3) | Kashif Hameed (Iona) | Tim Welsh (Iona) | |
1999 | Niagara (17–12, 13–5) Siena |
(2) Siena (25–6, 13–5) | Alvin Young (Niagara) | Joe Mihalich (Niagara) | |
2000 | Siena (24–9, 15–3) | (2) Iona (20–11, 13–5) | Tariq Kirksay (Iona) | Paul Hewitt (Siena) | |
2001 | Iona Niagara (15–13, 12–6) Siena (20–11, 12–6) |
(1) Iona (22–11, 12–6) | Demond Stewart (Niagara) | Dave Magarity (Marist) | |
2002 | Rider (17–11, 13–5) Marist (19–9, 13–5) |
(7) Siena (17–19, 9–9) | Mario Porter (Rider) | Deng Gai (Fairfield) | Don Harnum (Rider) |
2003 | Manhattan | (1) Manhattan (23–7, 14–4) | Luis Flores (Manhattan) | Deng Gai (Fairfield) | Bobby Gonzalez (Manhattan) |
2004 | Manhattan | (1) Manhattan (25–6, 16–2) | Luis Flores (Manhattan) | Tyquawn Goode (Fairfield) | Tim O'Toole (Fairfield) |
2005 | Niagara Rider (19–11, 13–5) |
(1) Niagara (20–10, 13–5) | Juan Mendez (Niagara) | Deng Gai (Fairfield) | Joe Mihalich (Niagara) |
2006 | Manhattan (20–11, 14–4) | (2) Iona (23–8, 13–5) | Keydren Clark (Saint Peter's) | Ricky Soliver (Iona) | Bobby Gonzalez (Manhattan) |
2007 | Marist (25–9, 14–4) | (2) Niagara (23–12, 13–5) | Jared Jordan (Marist) | Jason Thompson (Rider) | Matt Brady (Marist) |
2008 | Siena Rider (13–5) |
(1) Siena (23–11, 13–5) | Jason Thompson (Rider) | Jason Thompson (Rider) | Tommy Dempsey (Rider) |
2009 | Siena | (1) Siena (27–8, 16–2) | Kenny Hasbrouck (Siena) | Tyrone Lewis (Niagara) | Fran McCaffery (Siena) |
2010 | Siena | (1) Siena (27–7, 17–1) | Alex Franklin (Siena) | Anthony Johnson (Fairfield) | Kevin Willard (Iona) |
2011 | Fairfield (25–8, 15–3) | (4) Saint Peter's (20–14, 11–7) | Ryan Rossiter (Siena) | Anthony Nelson (Niagara) | Ed Cooley (Fairfield) |
2012 | Iona (25–8, 15–3) | (2) Loyola (MD) (24–9, 13–5) | Scott Machado (Iona) | Rhamel Brown (Manhattan) | Jimmy Patsos (Loyola (MD)) |
2013 | Niagara (19–14, 13–5) | (4) Iona (20–14, 11–7) | Lamont Jones (Iona) | Rhamel Brown (Manhattan) | Joe Mihalich (Niagara) |
2014 | Iona (22–11, 17–3) | (2) Manhattan (25–8, 15–5) | Billy Baron (Canisius) | Rhamel Brown (Manhattan) | Tim Cluess (Iona) |
2015 | Iona (26–9, 17–3) | (3) Manhattan (19–14, 13–7) | David Laury (Iona) | Ousmane Drame (Quinnipiac) | Kevin Baggett (Rider) |
2016 | Monmouth (28–8, 17–3) | (2) Iona (22–11, 16–4) | Justin Robinson (Monmouth) | Javion Ogunyemi (Siena) | King Rice (Monmouth) |
2017 | Monmouth (27–7, 18–2) | (3) Iona (22–13, 12–8) | Justin Robinson (Monmouth) | Chazz Patterson (Saint Peter's) | King Rice (Monmouth) |
2018 | Rider (22–10, 15–3) Canisius (21–12, 15–3) |
(4) Iona (20–14, 11–7) | Jermaine Crumpton (Canisius) Kahlil Dukes (Niagara) |
Pauly Paulicap (Manhattan) | Kevin Baggett (Rider) |
2019 | Iona | (1) Iona (17–15, 12–6) | Cameron Young (Quinnipiac) | Jonathan Kasibabu (Fairfield) | Tim Cluess (Iona) |
2020 | Siena (19–10, 15–5) | [a] | Jalen Pickett (Siena) | KC Ndefo (Saint Peter's) | Shaheen Holloway (Saint Peter's) |
2021 | Siena (12–4, 12–4) Monmouth (12–6, 12–7) |
(9) Iona (12–5, 6–3) | Manny Camper (Siena) | KC Ndefo (Saint Peter's) | King Rice (Monmouth) |
2022 | Iona (25–6, 17–3) | (2) Saint Peter's (19–11, 14–6) | Tyson Jolly (Iona) | KC Ndefo (Saint Peter's) | Rick Pitino (Iona) |
2023 | Iona (25–7, 17-3) | (1) Iona | Walter Clayton Jr (Iona) | Berrick JeanLouis (Iona) Josh Roberts (Manhattan) |
Rick Pitino (Iona) |
2024 | Quinnipiac (23–8, 15-5) | (5) Saint Peter's (19-14, 12-8) | Matt Balanc (Quinnipiac) | Latrell Reid (Saint Peter's) | Tom Pecora (Quinnipiac) |
- Notes
- ^ Conference Tournament was shortened after the semifinal and Siena was declared the champion
Postseason history
[edit]
|
|
'*' Best-of-three Championship Series
|
NCAA tournament at-large bids
[edit]In 2012, Iona, who was inspired by one of their all around best players Sean Armand, which had lost in the semifinals of that year's MAAC tournament, received an NCAA at-large tournament bid. This was the second time the conference was awarded multiple men's NCAA bids.
After St. Peter's won the 1995 MAAC tournament, the NCAA men's basketball tournament selection committee awarded Manhattan University an at large bid. The Jaspers proved the committee correct by defeating Oklahoma in the first round.[22]
The same first-round success Manhattan enjoyed in the 1995 NCAA tournament could not be matched by Iona. In the 2012 NCAAs, the Gaels unexpectedly relinquished a 25-point, first-half lead to the BYU Cougars, falling 78–72 in Dayton, Ohio. Further, Iona's offense, the highest-scoring (per game) in the nation, managed just 17 points in the second half of that upset.
It was the largest comeback in NCAA tournament history, besting the 22-point hole the Duke Blue Devils rallied from to defeat the Maryland Terrapins in the Final Four of the 2001 NCAA tournament.[23]
Women's
[edit]Year | Regular Season Champion(s) | Tournament champion | Player of the Year | Defensive Player of the Year | Coach of the Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1982 | Saint Peter's (25–5, 5–0) | (1) Saint Peter's | Sheri Lauyer (Saint Peter's) | Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) | |
1983 | Saint Peter's (25–3, 8–1) | (1) Saint Peter's | Shelia Tighe (Manhattan) | Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) | |
1984 | Saint Peter's (22–6, 9–3) | (1) Saint Peter's | Shelia Tighe (Manhattan) | Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) | |
1985 | Saint Peter's (25–4, 10–2) | (2) Holy Cross (21–7, 9–3) | Janet Hourihan (Holy Cross) | Togo Palazzi (Holy Cross) | |
1986 | Saint Peter's (26–3, 11–1) | (2) La Salle (21–9, 10–2) | Adrienne Draughn (Saint Peter's) | Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) | |
1987 | La Salle (21–7, 9–3) | (5) Manhattan (20–11, 6–6) | Tracey Quinn (Holy Cross) | John Miller (La Salle) | |
1988 | La Salle (25–4, 11–1) | (3) Fairfield (19–9, 8–4) | Tracey Sneed (La Salle) | John Miller (La Salle) | |
1989 | La Salle (27–2, 11–1) | (2) Holy Cross (21–9, 10–2) | Jeanine Radice (Fordham) | John Miller (La Salle) | |
1990 | Fairfield (25–6, 15–1) | (2) Manhattan (18–13, 8–2) | Tonya Grant (Saint Peter's) | Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) | |
1991 | Fairfield (25–6, 15–1) | (1) Fairfield | Val Higgins (Siena) | Gina Castelli (Siena) | |
1992 | La Salle (25–5, 14–2) | (2) Saint Peter's (24–7, 13–3) | Jennifer Cole (La Salle) | Mike Rappl (Canisius) | |
1993 | Niagara (17–10, 9–5) | (2) Saint Peter's (18–11, 9–5) | Samantha David (Niagara) | Bill Agronin (Niagara) | |
1994 | Siena (24–4, 13–1) | (2) Loyola (MD) (18–11, 12–2) | Liz Lopes (Siena) | Gina Castelli (Siena) | |
1995 | Saint Peter's (22–6, 12–2) | (4) Loyola (MD) (20–9, 7–6) | Patty Stoffey (Loyola (MD)) | Kara Rehbaum (Canisius) | |
1996 | Saint Peter's (23–5, 12–2) | (2) Manhattan (19–11, 11–3) | Gina Somma (Manhattan) | Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) | |
1997 | Saint Peter's (25–4, 14–0) | (1) Saint Peter's | Heather Fiore (Canisius) Jessica Grosarth (Fairfield) |
Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) | |
1998 | Siena (20–8, 16–2) | (2) Fairfield (20–10, 14–4) | Melanie Halker (Siena) | Gina Castelli (Siena) | |
1999 | Siena (22–9, 16–2) | (2) Saint Peter's (25–6, 15–3) | Melanie Halker (Siena) | Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) | |
2000 | Fairfield (25–8, 15–3) | (2) Saint Peter's (23–8, 14–4) | Gail Strumpf (Fairfield) | Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) | |
2001 | Siena (24–6, 17–1) | (1) Siena | Gunta Basko (Siena) | Gina Castelli (Siena) | |
2002 | Siena (23–7, 16–2) | (2) Saint Peter's (25–6, 15–3) | Gunta Basko (Siena) | Gunta Basko (Siena | Sal Buscaglia (Manhattan) Gina Castelli (Siena) |
2003 | Manhattan (20–10, 15–3) | (1) Manhattan | Liene Jansone (Siena) | Eva Cunningham (Niagara) | Bill Agronin (Niagara) |
2004 | Siena (17–11, 13–5) | (2) Marist (20–11, 13–5) | Jenel Stevens (Canisius) | Jenel Stevens (Canisius) Jolene Johnston (Siena) |
Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
2005 | Marist (22–7, 15–3) | (2) Canisius (21–10, 14–4) | Eva Cunningham (Niagara) | Alisa Kresge (Marist) Lauren Surber (Siena) |
Brian Giorgis (Marist) Bill Agronin (Niagara) |
2006 | Marist (23–7, 16–2) | (1) Marist | Fifi Camara (Marist) | Alisa Kresge (Marist) | Anthony Bozzella (Iona) Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
2007 | Marist (29–6, 17–1) | (1) Marist | Martina Weber (Iona) | Alisa Kresge (Marist) | Joe Logan (Loyola (MD)) |
2008 | Marist (32–3, 18–0) | (1) Marist | Rachele Fitz (Marist) | Tania Kennedy (Saint Peter's) | Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
2009 | Marist (29–4, 16–2) | (1) Marist | Rachele Fitz (Marist) | Brittané Russell (Canisius) | Terry Zeh (Canisius) |
2010 | Marist (25–7, 15–3) | (1) Marist | Rachele Fitz (Marist) | Stephanie Geehan (Fairfield) | Kendra Faustin (Niagara) |
2011 | Marist (31–3, 18–0) | (1) Marist | Erica Allenspach (Marist) | Katie Sheahin (Loyola (MD)) | Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
2012 | Marist (24–7, 17–1) | (1) Marist | Corielle Yarde (Marist) | Katie Sheahin (Loyola (MD)) | Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
2013 | Marist (23–6, 18–0) | (1) Marist | Damika Martinez (Iona) | Leanne Ockenden (Marist) | Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
2014 | Iona (25–4, 18–2) | (2) Marist (27–6, 18–2) | Damika Martinez (Iona) | Leanne Ockenden (Marist) | Billi Godsey (Iona) |
2015 | Quinnipiac (28–3, 20–0) | (1) Quinnipiac | Damika Martinez (Iona) | Tehresa Coles (Siena) | Tricia Fabbri (Quinnipiac) |
2016 | Quinnipiac (24–8, 17–3) | (2) Iona (23–11, 16–4) | Tori Jarosz (Marist) | Amani Tatum (Manhattan) | Tricia Fabbri (Quinnipiac) |
2017 | Quinnipiac (24–6, 17–3) | (1) Quinnipiac | Robin Perkins (Rider) | Jackie Benitez (Siena) | Lynn Milligan (Rider) |
2018 | Quinnipiac (26–5, 17–0) | (1) Quinnipiac | Victoria Rampado (Niagara) | Maura Fitzpatrick (Marist) | Tricia Fabbri (Quinnipiac) |
2019 | Quinnipiac (23–6, 18–0) | (1) Quinnipiac | Stella Johnson (Rider) | Courtney Warley (Manhattan) | Tricia Fabbri (Quinnipiac) |
2020 | Rider (25–4, 18–2) Marist (25–4, 18–2) |
[a] | Stella Johnson (Rider) | Amari Johnson (Rider) | Lynn Milligan (Rider) |
2021 | Marist (12–4, 14–2) | (1) Marist | Mackenzie DeWees (Quinnipiac) | Mikala Morris (Quinnipiac) | Brian Giorgis (Marist) Marc Mitchel (Saint Peter's) |
2022 | Fairfield (25–6, 19–1) | (1) Fairfield | Lou Lopez-Sénéchal (Fairfield) | Juana Camilion (Iona) | Joe Frager (Fairfield) |
2023 | Iona (24-6, 18–2) | (1) Iona | Juana Camilion (Iona) | Juana Camilion (Iona) | Billi Chambers (Iona) |
2024 | Fairfield (28-1, 20–0) | (1) Fairfield | Janelle Brown (Fairfield) | Elisa Mevius (Siena) | Carly Thibault-DuDonis (Fairfield) |
- Notes
- ^ Conference Tournament was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic and Rider was declared the champion.
Postseason history
[edit]
|
|
|
Baseball
[edit]
Champions[edit]
From 1990 through 1993, the MAAC, split into two divisions. |
Postseason history[edit]
|
Soccer
[edit]Men's
[edit]Year | Regular Season Champ | Tournament Champ | Offensive/Overall Player the Year/Golden Boot | Defensive of the Year | Goalkeeper of the Year/Golden Gloves | Coach of the Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1988 | Army (13–5–1 overall, 6–1–0 MAAC) | Army | David Hauck (Army) | Joe Chiavaro (Army) | ||
1989 | Loyola (10–5–2 overall, 5–0–0 MAAC) | Loyola | John Brence (Army) | Bill Sento (Loyola) | ||
1990 | Loyola (16–2–5 overall, 8–0–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Doug Miller (Loyola) | Bill Sento (Loyola) | ||
1991 | Loyola (12–8–2 overall, 8–0–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Tom Donahue (Loyola) | Dejan Cokic (Fairfield) | ||
1992 | Loyola (16–4–1 overall, 6–1–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Jim McElderry (Fairfield) | Dejan Cokic (Fairfield) | ||
1993 | Loyola (19–3–1 overall, 7–0–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Jim McElderry (Fairfield) | Bill Sento (Loyola) | ||
1994 | Loyola (15–5–2 overall, 6–1–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Bill Wnek (Loyola) | Gerry McKeown (Saint Peter's) | ||
1995 | Loyola (15–6–0 overall, 7–0–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Chris Doyle (Loyola) | Bobby Herodes (Iona) | ||
1996 | Canisius (5–12–2 overall, 4–1–2 MAAC) | Loyola | Tony Burke (Canisius) | Paul James (Niagara) | ||
1997 | Rider (15–6–1 overall, 8–1–0 MAAC) | Rider | Craig Wicken (Rider) | Mike Jacobs (Marist) | ||
1998 | Fairfield (15–4–1 overall, 7–1–1 MAAC) | Rider | Christof Lindenmayer (Loyola)
Craig Wicken (Rider) |
Carl Rees (Fairfield) | ||
1999 | Loyola (13–6–2 overall, 7–1–1 MAAC) | Fairfield | Christof Lindenmayer (Loyola) | Bill Sento (Loyola) | ||
2000 | Loyola (12–4–2 overall, 9–0–0 MAAC) | Marist | Joseph Crespo (Marist) | Mark Mettrick, Loyola | ||
2001 | Loyola (17–2–2 overall, 9–0–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Niall Lepper (Loyola) | Reb Beatty (Loyola) | Mark Mettrick (Loyola) | |
2002 | Loyola (13–5–3 overall, 8–0–1 MAAC) | Loyola | Niall Lepper (Loyola) | Reb Beatty (Loyola) | Bobby Herodes (Marist) | |
2003 | Loyola (11–7–3 overall, 6–2–1 MAAC) | Saint Peter's | Omar Alfonso (Loyola) | Alex Cunliffe (Fairfield)
Fabian Lewis (Canisius) |
Cesar Markovic (Saint Peter's) | |
2004 | Loyola (11–6–1 overall, 9–0–0 MAAC) | Marist | Douglas Narvaez (Saint Peter's) | Ben Castor (Marist) | Mark Mettrick (Loyola) | |
2005 | Fairfield (13–4–3 overall, 8–0–1 MAAC) | Marist | Matt Stedman (Niagara) | Ben Castor (Marist) | Dermot McGrane (Niagara) | |
2006 | Fairfield (15–6–1 overall, 7–2–0 MAAC) | Fairfield | Juan Gaviria (Saint Peter's) | Tom Skara (Fairfield) | Dermot McGrane (Niagara) | |
2007 | Loyola 19–3–1 overall, 8–1–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Murphy Wiredu (Saint Peter's) | Tennant McVea (Loyola) | Mark Mettrick (Loyola) | |
2008 | Loyola (18–2–1 overall, 9–0–0 MAAC) | Fairfield | Jamie Darvill (Loyola) | Tennant McVea (Loyola) | Mark Mettrick (Loyola) | |
2009 | Iona (14–2–2 overall, 8–1–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Jamie Darvill (Loyola) | Tennant McVea (Loyola) | Fernando Barboto (Iona) | |
2010 | Saint Peter's (13–6–1 overall, 7–1–1 MAAC) | Saint Peter's | Emery Welshman (Siena) | Assaf Sheleg (Saint Peter's) | Guy Abrahamson (Saint Peter's) | |
2011 | Fairfield (12–5–1 overall, 8–0–1 MAAC) | Fairfield | Carl Haworth (Niagara) | Michael O'Keeffe (Fairfield) | Carl Rees (Fairfield) | |
2012 | Loyola (13–6–1 overall, 7–1–1 MAAC) | Niagara | Sindre Ek (Siena) | Rene DeZorzi (Niagara) | Brett Petricek (Niagara) | Gareth Elliott (Siena) |
2013 | Monmouth (8–6–5 overall, 7–1–2 MAAC) | Quinnipiac | Franklin Castellanos (Iona) | Matt Jeffery (Monmounth) | Borja Angoitia (Quinnipiac) | Jorden Scott (Manhattan) |
2014 | Quinnipiac (10–4–5 overall, 7–0–3 MAAC) | Monmouth | Ignacio Maganto (Iona) | Matt Jeffery (Monmounth) | Borja Angoitia (Quinnipiac) | Eric Da Costa (Quinnipiac) |
2015 | Monmouth (11–3–4 overall, 7–0–3 MAAC) | Rider | Marcos Nunez (Iona) | David Acuna Camacho (Monmounth) | Eric Klenofsky (Monmouth) | Robert McCourt (Monmouth) |
2016 | Quinnipiac (13–7–0 overall, 8–2–0 MAAC) | Rider | Cameron Harr (Marist) | Thomas Teupen (Canisius) | Eric Klenofsky (Monmouth) Ryan Baird (Rider) |
Eric Da Costa (Quinnipiac) |
2017 | Fairfield (12–4–3 overall, 7–1–2 MAAC) | Fairfield | Allen Gavilanes (Marist) | Alex Grattarola (Canisius) | Marcellin Gohier (Manhattan) | Carl Rees (Fairfield) |
2018 | Fairfield (11–5–2 overall, 8–0–2 MAAC) | Rider | Eamon Whelan (Quinnipiac) | Jonas Vergin (Fairfield) | Gordon Botterill (Fairfield) | Carl Rees (Fairfield) |
2019 | Saint Peter's (13–6 overall, 9–1 MAAC) | Iona | Dominic Laws (Saint Peter's) | Malcolm Moreno (Iona) | Samuel Ilin (Marist) | Julian Richens (Saint Peter's) |
2020^ | Quinnipiac (7–2 overall, 5–1 MAAC) | Monmouth | Dominic Laws (Saint Peter's) | George Akampeke (Monmouth) | Sean Murray (Monmouth) Jared Mazzola (Quinnipiac) Gordon Botterill (Fairfield) |
Robert McCourt (Monmouth) |
2021 | Marist (12–6–3 overall, 7–2-1 MAAC) | Marist | Zaki Alibou (Rider) | Huib Achterkamp (Marist) | Sam Ilin (Marist) | Matt Viggiano (Marist) |
2022 | Quinnipiac (11-4-3 overall, 8–0-1 MAAC) | Quinnipiac | David Bercedo (Quinnipiac) | Nassim Akki (Manhattan) | Greg Monroe (Siena) | Eric Da Costa (Quinnipiac) |
2023 | Iona (12-4 overall, 9-1 MAAC) | Rider | Camil Azzam Ruiz (Iona) | Tim Timchenko (Iona) | Nacho Alfaro Monge (Iona) | James Hamilton (Iona) |
^ Tournament delayed until April 2021 due to Covid
Women's
[edit]Year | Regular Season Champ | Tournament Champ | Overall/Offensive Player of the Year/Golden Boot | Defensive of the Year | Goalkeeper of the Year/Golden Glove | Coach of the Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1992 | Iona | |||||
1993 | Fairfield | Stacy Wagenseil (Canisius) | Debbie Belkin (Fairfield) | |||
1994 | Loyola (11–10–0 overall, 6–1–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Stacy Wagenseil (Canisius) Val Kujan (Siena) |
Glenn Crooks (Saint Peter's) Dave Gerrity (Loyola) | ||
1995 | Loyola (10–6–4 overall, 6–1–0 MAAC) | Fairfield | Kelli Hurley (Fairfield) | Erin Gilroy (Loyola) | Dave Gerrity (Loyola) | |
1996 | Loyola | Nicole Tracey (Saint Peter's) | Erin Gilroy (Loyola) | Scott Sylvester (Saint Peter's) | ||
1997 | Fairfield | Abby Allen (Fairfield) | Maria Piechocki (Fairfield) | |||
1998 | Fairfield | Abby Allen (Fairfield) | Maria Piechocki (Fairfield) | |||
1999 | Loyola (13–4–1 overall, 8–0–1 MAAC) | Fairfield | Pam Cluff (Fairfield) | Julie Kapcala (Loyola) | Peter Veltri (Niagara) | |
2000 | Loyola (15–5–0, 9–0–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Pam Cluff (Fairfield) | Julie Kapcala (Loyola) | Joe Mallia (Loyola) | |
2001 | Loyola | Julie Anne Forman (Fairfield) | Megan McGonagle (Marist) Steve Karbowski (Siena) | |||
2002 | Fairfield (9–7–3 overall, 8–0–1 MAAC) | Loyola | Rosie Luzak (Niagara) | Noel Cox (Siena) | Steve Karbowski (Siena) | |
2003 | Loyola (12–9–1 overall, 8–0–1 MAAC) | Loyola | Tami Coyle (Rider) | Lindsay Tracey (Loyola) Katy Owings (Niagara) |
Peter Veltri (Niagara) | |
2004 | Loyola (16–4–0 overall, 9–0–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Ali Andrzejewski (Loyola) | Lisa Jaffa (Loyola) Noel Cox (Siena) |
Emma Hayes (Iona) | |
2005 | Loyola (15–5–0 overall, 9–0–0 MAAC) | Fairfield | Ali Andrzejewski (Loyola) | Sarra Moller (Loyola) | Peter Veltri (Niagara) | |
2006 | Loyola (10–7–2 overall, 8–1–0 MAAC) | Niagara | Kristen Turner (Siena) | Brett Maron (Fairfield) | John Byford (Loyola) | |
2007 | Marist (11–5–3 overall, 7–1–1 MAAC) | Loyola | Brittany Bisnott (Niagara) | Brittany Henderson (Loyola) | Elizabeth Roper (Marist) | |
2008 | Loyola (10–6–4 overall, 7–0–2 MAAC) | Fairfield | Ahna Johnson (Fairfield) | Sarra Moller (Loyola) | Jim Wendling (Canisius) | |
2009 | Loyola (13–4–3 overall, 9–0–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Theresa Ferraina (Loyola) | Brittany Henderson (Loyola) | Katherine Vettori (Loyola) | |
2010 | Canisius (14–7–0 overall, 7–2–0 MAAC) | Siena | Kelly Reinwald (Canisius) Nichole Schiro (Loyola) |
Ashleigh Bowers (Niagara) | Drayson Hounsome (Rider) | |
2011 | Marist (13–6–2 overall, 7–1–1 MAAC) | Marist | Nichole Schiro (Loyola) | Kelly Boudreau (Fairfield) | Katherine Lyn (Marist) | |
2012 | Marist (15–7–0 overall, 8–1–0 MAAC) | Loyola | Nichole Schiro (Loyola) | Alli Walsh (Fairfield) | Didi Haracic (Loyola) | Jim O'Brien (Fairfield) |
2013 | Monmouth (16–1–2 overall, 8–0–2 MAAC) | Monmouth | Dana Costello (Monmouth) | Emma Pichl (Fairfield) | Ashley Lewis (Monmouth) | Krissy Turner (Monmouth) |
2014 | Monmouth(14–5–0 overall, 9–1–0 MAAC) | Rider | Tara Ballay (Rider) | Alexa Freguletti (Monmouth) | Taylor Booth (Siena) | Krissy Turner (Monmouth) |
2015 | Monmouth(15–4–2 overall, 9–1–0 MAAC) | Siena | Alexis McTamney (Monmouth) | Jenny Bitzer (Manhattan) | Kristen Skonieczny (Manhattan) | Brendan Lawler (Manhattan) |
2016 | Monmouth(14–5–2 overall, 9–0–1 MAAC) | Monmouth | Alexis McTamney (Monmouth) | Tara Sobierjaski (Siena) | Bethany-May Howard (Rider) | Krissy Turner (Monmouth) |
2017 | Monmouth(14–5–2 overall, 9–0–1 MAAC) | Monmouth | Erica Modena (Manhattan) | Gabriella Cuevas (Monmouth) | Amanda Knaub (Monmouth) | Krissy Turner (Monmouth) |
2018 | Monmouth(16–4–1 overall, 9–1–0 MAAC) | Monmouth | Madie Gibson (Monmouth) | Jessica Johnson (Monmouth) | Taylor Dorado (Siena) | Leigh Howard (Marist) |
2019 | Monmouth(14-2-3 overall, 10–0 MAAC) | Monmouth | Lexie Palladino (Monmouth) | Anna Lazur (Monmouth) | Amanda Knaub (Monmouth) | David Barrett (Fairfield) |
2020^ | Siena (6-0-2 overall, 4–0-1 MAAC) | Siena | Makenzie Rodrigues (Rider) Lauren Karabin (Monmouth) |
Sarina Jones (Monmouth) Brianna Montinard (Siena) |
Leslie Adams (Siena) | Steve Karbowski (Siena) |
2021 | Monmouth (15-4-1 overall, 8-1-1 MAAC) | Monmouth | Florence Vaillancourt (Niagara) | Sarina Jones (Monmouth) | Natalie Kelchner (Marist) | Dr. Krissy Turner (Monmouth) |
2022 | Quinnipiac (15-2-1 overall, 9-1-0 MAAC) Fairfield (14-4-0 overall, 9-1-0 MAAC) |
Quinnipiac | Rebecca Cooke (Quinnipiac) | Maddie Mills (FairField) | Ellie Sciancalepore (Rider) | Ryan Louis (Canisius) |
2023 | Quinnipiac (13-4-1 overall, 9-0-1 MAAC) | Quinnipiac | Courtney Chochol (Quinnipiac) | Markela Bejleri, Kayla Mingachos, Olivia Scott (Quinnipiac) | Sofia Lospinoso (Quinnipiac) | Dave Clarke (Quinnipiac) |
^ Tournament delayed until April 2021 due to Covid
Lacrosse
[edit]
Men's[edit]
|
Women's[edit]
|
Swimming and diving
[edit]Conference champions
[edit]Year | Men's champion | Women's champion |
---|---|---|
1984 | La Salle | La Salle |
1985 | La Salle | Army |
1986 | La Salle | La Salle |
1987 | Army | Army |
1988 | Army | Army |
1989 | La Salle | Army |
1990 | La Salle | Army |
1991 | La Salle | La Salle |
1992 | La Salle | La Salle |
1993 | Iona | Loyola |
1994 | Niagara | Loyola |
1995 | Loyola | Loyola |
1996 | Marist | Loyola |
1997 | Marist | Marist |
1998 | Marist | Marist |
1999 | Marist | Marist |
2000 | Marist | Marist |
2001 | Marist | Rider |
2002 | Marist | Marist |
2003 | Marist | Rider |
2004 | Rider | Marist |
2005 | Marist | Marist |
2006 | Marist | Marist |
2007 | Marist | Marist |
2008 | Marist | Marist |
2009 | Loyola | Rider |
2010 | Loyola | Marist |
2011 | Loyola | Marist |
2012 | Rider | Marist |
2013 | Rider | Marist |
2014 | Rider | Marist |
2015 | Rider | Marist |
2016 | Rider | Marist |
2017 | Rider | Marist |
2018 | Rider | Fairfield |
2019 | Rider | Fairfield |
2020 | Rider | Fairfield |
2022 | Rider | Niagara |
2023 | Rider | Fairfield |
2024 | Marist | Niagara |
Cross country
[edit]Champions
[edit]Year | Men's champion | Women's champion |
---|---|---|
1981 | Iona | |
1982 | Iona | |
1983 | Iona | Holy Cross |
1984 | La Salle | Holy Cross |
1985 | Iona | Holy Cross |
1986 | Army | Manhattan |
1987 | Army | Fordham |
1988 | Iona | Fordham |
1989 | La Salle | Fordham |
1990 | La Salle | Canisius |
1991 | Iona | Canisius |
1992 | Iona | Canisius |
1993 | Iona | Manhattan |
1994 | Iona | Manhattan |
1995 | Iona | Canisius |
1996 | Iona | Manhattan |
1997 | Iona | Canisius |
1998 | Iona | Marist |
1999 | Iona | Manhattan |
2000 | Iona | Marist |
2001 | Iona | Iona |
2002 | Iona | Manhattan |
2003 | Iona | Loyola |
2004 | Iona | Marist |
2005 | Iona | Iona |
2006 | Iona | Iona |
2007 | Iona | Iona |
2008 | Iona | Iona |
2009 | Iona | Iona |
2010 | Iona | Iona |
2011 | Iona | Iona |
2012 | Iona | Iona |
2013 | Iona | Iona |
2014 | Iona | Iona |
2015 | Iona | Quinnipiac |
2016 | Iona | Iona |
2017 | Iona | Iona |
2018 | Iona | Iona |
2019 | Iona | Iona |
2020 | Iona | Iona |
2021 | Iona | Iona |
2022 | Iona | Quinnipiac |
2023 | Iona | Quinnipiac |
Football
[edit]The MAAC Football League was formed before the 1993 season, but it was discontinued following the 2007 season.
At its peak in 1997, it consisted of 10 teams:
- Canisius (1993-2002, discontinued football after 2002 season)
- Duquesne (1994-2007, joined Northeast Conference after 2007 season)
- Fairfield (1996-2002, discontinued football after 2002 season)
- Georgetown (1993-1999, joined Patriot League after 1999 season)
- Iona (1993-2007, became independent, discontinued football after 2008 season)
- La Salle (1997-2007, discontinued football after 2007 season)
- Marist (1994-2007, became independent, joined Pioneer Football League after 2008 season)
- St. John's (1993-1997, became independent, joined Northeast Conference after 1999 season, discontinued football after 2002 season)
- Saint Peter's (1993-2006, discontinued football after 2006 season)
- Siena (1993-2003, discontinued football after 2003 season)
Champions
[edit]- 1993 Iona (5-0-0)
- 1994 Marist (6-1) & St. John's (6-1)
- 1995 Duquesne (7-0)
- 1996 Duquesne (8-0)
- 1997 Georgetown (7-0)
- 1998 Fairfield (6-1) & Georgetown (6-1)
- 1999 Duquesne (7-1)
- 2000 Duquesne (7-0)
- 2001 Duquesne (6-0)
- 2002 Duquesne (8-0)
- 2003 Duquesne (5-0)
- 2004 Duquesne (4-0)
- 2005 Duquesne (4-0)
- 2006 Duquesne (3-1) & Marist (3-1)
- 2007 Duquesne, Iona & Marist (all 2-1)
Notable sports figures
[edit]Some of the notable sport figures who played collegiately and/or graduated from a MAAC school, include:
Baseball
[edit]- Jack Armstrong, former MLB pitcher; 1990 MLB All-Star and World Champion (Rider)
- John Axford, former MLB pitcher (Canisius)
- Kevin Barry, former MLB pitcher (Rider)
- Shad Barry, former MLB player (Niagara)
- Chris Begg, pitcher for Team Canada at the 2004 Summer Olympics and World Baseball Classic (Niagara)
- Brad Brach, former relief pitcher (Monmouth)
- Frank Brooks, former MLB relief pitcher (Saint Peter's)
- Frank Cashen, former General Manager of the Baltimore Orioles and 1986 World Series Champion New York Mets (Loyola)
- Keefe Cato, former MLB pitcher (Fairfield)
- Tim Christman, former MLB relief pitcher (Siena)
- Harry Croft, former MLB player (Niagara)
- Pete Harnisch, MLB All-Star Pitcher (Fordham)
- Billy Harrell, former MLB infielder (Siena)
- Jim Hoey, former MLB relief pitcher (Rider)
- Gary Holle, former MLB first baseman (Siena)
- Miguel Jimenez, former MLB pitcher (Fordham)
- Jeff Kunkel, former MLB player; 3rd overall pick of the 1983 MLB Draft by the Texas Rangers (Rider)
- Sal Maglie, former starting pitcher (Niagara)
- Nick Margevicius, current starting pitcher for TSG Hawks (Rider)
- Joe McCarthy, former MLB catcher (Niagara)
- Rinty Monahan, former MLB player (Niagara)
- Ray Montgomery, former MLB player (Fordham)
- Danny Napoleon, former MLB outfielder (Rider)
- Mike Parisi, former MLB pitcher (Manhattan)
- Victor Santos, former MLB relief pitcher (Saint Peter's)
- Chuck Schilling, former MLB second baseman (Manhattan)
- Tom Waddell, former MLB pitcher (Manhattan)
Basketball
[edit]- Joe Arlauckas, former NBA player (Niagara)
- John Beilein, former head coach of Cleveland Cavaliers and Michigan men's basketball (Canisius)
- Matt Brady, current Maryland assistant coach, former head coach of James Madison men's basketball (Siena)
- Steve Burtt, Sr., former NBA player (Iona)
- Al Butler, former NBA player (Niagara)
- Keydren Clark, two-time NCAA scoring leader; seventh all-time NCAA scoring leader (Saint Peter's)
- Larry Costello, former NBA player and coach; six-time NBA All-Star (Niagara)
- Joe DeSantis, former men's college basketball coach; 1979 NCAA All-American (Fairfield)
- Doug Edert, breakout star of Saint Peter's 2022 NCAA tournament run
- Kathy Fedorjaka, former Bucknell women's basketball coach (Fairfield)
- Luis Flores, former NBA player (Manhattan)
- Greg Francis, current Alberta men's basketball coach; former Canadian Olympic basketball player (Fairfield)
- Deng Gai, former NBA player; 2006 NCAA block shot leader (Fairfield)
- Sean Green, former NBA player (Iona)
- Kenny Hasbrouck, former NBA player (Siena)
- Bobby Joe Hatton – former professional basketball player; member of the Puerto Rico national basketball team at the 2004 Olympic Games (Marist)
- Stella Johnson, professional basketball player, drafted by Phoenix Mercury in 2020, played for Chicago Sky and Washington Mystics (Rider)
- Jared Jordan, professional basketball player in Europe, drafted by Los Angeles Clippers in 2007 (Marist)
- Frank Layden, former NBA coach and executive; NBA Coach of the Year and Executive of the Year (Niagara)
- Manny Leaks, former NBA player (Niagara)
- Tim Legler, former NBA player; current ESPN analyst (La Salle)
- Ralph Lewis, former NBA player (La Salle)
- Bob MacKinnon, former NBA Head Coach and General Manager of the New Jersey Nets (Canisius)
- Johnny McCarthy, member of the 1963–64 NBA Champion Boston Celtics and first of just three players in NBA history to record a triple-double in a playoff debut (Canisius)
- Brendan Malone, former NBA head coach (Iona)
- Michael Meeks, former Canadian Olympic basketball player (Canisius)
- Juan Mendez, professional basketball player in Europe; highest scoring Canadian in Division I men's basketball history (Niagara)
- Mike Morrison, former NBA player (Loyola)
- KC Ndefo, another key figure in Saint Peter's 2022 NCAA run
- Dan O'Sullivan, former NBA player (Fordham)
- Tim O'Toole, current ESPN analyst; former men's college basketball coach (Fairfield)
- Doug Overton, former NBA player (La Salle)
- Digger Phelps, current ESPN analyst; former men's college basketball coach (Rider)
- Darren Phillip, 2000 NCAA Top Rebounder (Fairfield)
- Rick Pych, current San Antonio Spurs executive (Fairfield)
- Jeff Ruland, former NBA player (Iona)
- Lionel Simmons, former NBA player (La Salle)
- Mike Smrek, former NBA player (Canisius)
- Jason Thompson, former Sacramento Kings lottery draft pick, former Toronto Raptors and Golden State Warriors forward (Rider)
- Edwin Ubiles former NBA player (Siena)
- Randy Woods, former NBA player (La Salle)
- A. J. Wynder, former NBA player (Fairfield)
Soccer
[edit]- Jose Aguinaga, New York Red Bulls draft pick, former USL forward (Rider)
- Abby Allan, New Zealand women's national football team (Fairfield)
- Jamie Darvill, USL-2 player (Loyola)
- Anthony Di Biase, USL-2 player (Niagara)
- Bryan Harkin, USL-2 player (Fairfield)
- Christof Lindenmayer, former MLS player (Loyola)
- Mark Longwell, former U.S. National and NASL defender (Fairfield)
- Brett Maron, current player in Sweden, Goalkeeper (Fairfield)
- Jim McElderry, current Rutgers men's soccer coach and former Fordham men's soccer coach (Fairfield)
- Jim McKeown, former NASL defender (Rider)
- Tennant McVea, current USL League Two player and associate head coach for Old Dominion men's soccer, former Finnish Premier Division player (Loyola)
- Michael O'Keeffe, New Zealand men's national football team (Fairfield)
- Bobby Smith, National Soccer Hall of Fame member; former U.S. National and NASL defender (Rider)
- Matt Turner, Nottingham Forest and USMNT goalkeeper (Fairfield)
- Florian Valot, currently plays for Miami FC in USL, former player for New York Red Bulls and FC Cincinnati, midfielder/forward (Rider)
- Murphy Wiredu, former S. League player (Saint Peter's)
- Dennis Wit, former U.S. National and NASL player (Loyola)
- Jordan Scarlett, Tampa Bay Rowdies, drafted by New York Red Bulls, Defender (Iona)
- Ignacio Maganto, current player for Union Adarve in Tercera Division in Spain, drafted by Los Angeles Galaxy, Midfielder (Iona)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i "About the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference". MAACsports.com.
- ^ "The Daily Gazette - Google News Archive Search".
- ^ "Quinnipiac, Monmouth to join MAAC". ESPN.com. 2012-12-14.
- ^ "MAAC to Add Field Hockey" (Press release). Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. April 19, 2013. Retrieved August 13, 2013.
- ^ "Northeast Conference Re-Establishes Field Hockey Championship" (Press release). Northeast Conference. September 6, 2018. Retrieved September 15, 2018.
- ^ "CAA Welcomes Hampton University, Monmouth University and Stony Brook University as New Members" (Press release). Colonial Athletic Association. January 25, 2022. Retrieved January 25, 2022.
- ^ Thamel, Pete (April 27, 2022). "Mount St. Mary's set to leave Northeast Conference, join MAAC, sources say". ESPN.com. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
- ^ "MAAC Welcomes Mount St. Mary's University as Newest Member Institution" (Press release). Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. May 2, 2022. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
- ^ "LIU, Sacred Heart, and Wagner Join MAAC Men's Lacrosse League for 2023 and 2024 Seasons" (Press release). Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. May 9, 2022. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
- ^ "Virginia Military Institute Rejoins MAAC Men's Lacrosse League" (Press release). Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. April 4, 2022. Retrieved May 10, 2022.
- ^ "MAAC Welcomes Merrimack College and Sacred Heart University as Newest Full Members". maacsports.com. 2023-10-23. Retrieved 2023-10-23.
- ^ Hildes-Heim, Norman (2002-07-06). "New York Times – Marist College Gains Cup Semifinals". The New York Times.
- ^ "Flores, Kresge lead Marist past Middle Tennessee". Archived from the original on March 28, 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-30.
- ^ "Saint Peter's Peacocks stun Purdue, become first 15-seed ever to make Elite Eight of NCAA tournament". Retrieved 2022-03-25.
- ^ "Saint Peter's Men's Basketball Historic Season Comes to an End at the Elite Eight". Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. March 27, 2022. Retrieved March 27, 2024.
- ^ "Marist College Profile".
- ^ a b "One LIU: Frequently Asked Questions". Long Island University. Archived from the original on October 12, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2018.
- ^ "Long Island University Announces Unification Into One LIU Division I Program" (Press release). LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds. October 3, 2018. Archived from the original on October 11, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2018.
- ^ "Welcome to the Shark Tank: Long Island University Chooses the Shark as New Mascot" (Press release). Long Island University. May 15, 2019. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
- ^ "Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference". Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference.
- ^ a b c "Manhattan Adds Three Sports for 2025-2026" (Press release). Manhattan Jaspers. July 9, 2024. Retrieved July 20, 2024.
- ^ "Can the Metro-Atlantic Earn an At-Large Bid". Bleacher Report.
- ^ Brennan, Sean (2012-03-14). "Gaels give away lead in First Four loss to BYU". Daily News.
- ^ "Men's Soccer Milos Kocic Taken by D.C. United in MLS Draft," Loyola University Maryland Alumni Association, Thursday, January 15, 2009.
- ^ Schwerin, Bo. "Game On," Loyola (Magazine of Loyola University Maryland), April 2010.