Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
| Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) |
|
|---|---|
| Established | 1980 |
| Association | NCAA |
| Division | Division I non-football |
| Members | 10 |
| Sports fielded | 22 (men's: 10; women's: 12) |
| Region | Northeastern United States |
| Headquarters | Edison, New Jersey |
| Commissioner | Richard J. Ensor |
| Website | maacsports.com |
| Locations | |
The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC,
/ˈmæk/) is an NCAA's Division I college athletic conference with members coming from the northeastern United States -- Connecticut, Maryland, New Jersey and New York. The members are all relatively small private institutions, many of them Catholic or formerly Catholic; the only exception being the private but secular Rider University. The conference headquarters are located in Edison, New Jersey. The Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference sponsors 22 sports and has many associate member institutions.
Richard J. Ensor is the commissioner of the MAAC, a post he has held since 1988.
The conference was founded in 1980 by six charter members: the U.S. Military Academy, Fairfield University, Fordham University, Iona College, Manhattan College and Saint Peter's College. Competition officially began the next year, in the sports of men’s cross-country and men’s soccer.
Competition in men's and women's basketball began in the 1981-1982 season. 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. In 1982, Saint Peter's was the first women's basketball team to represent the MAAC in the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament.
The league added football in 1993, and dropped 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 Atlantic Hockey.
In September 2011, the conference announced the launch of MAAC.TV, the league's first broadband network.
Contents |
[edit] Sports
[edit] Member institutions
The MAAC has ten Member Institutions:
| Institution | Location | Founded | Type | Enrollment | Nickname | Joined | Athletics' Website |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canisius College | Buffalo, NY | 1870 | Private | 4,708 | Golden Griffins | 1989 | www.gogriffs.com |
| Fairfield University | Fairfield, CT | 1942 | Private | 5,100 | Stags | 1981 | www.fairfieldstags.com |
| Iona College | New Rochelle, NY | 1940 | Private | 4,648 | Gaels | 1981 | www.icgaels.com |
| Loyola University Maryland | Baltimore, MD | 1852 | Private | 3,500 | Greyhounds | 1989 | www.loyolagreyhounds.com |
| Manhattan College | Riverdale, NY | 1853 | Private | 3,500 | Jaspers | 1981 | www.gojaspers.com |
| Marist College | Poughkeepsie, NY | 1929 | Private | 6,115 | Red Foxes | 1995 | www.goredfoxes.com |
| Niagara University | Lewiston, NY | 1856 | Private | 3,746 | Purple Eagles | 1989 | www.purpleeagles.com |
| Rider University | Lawrenceville, NJ | 1865 | Private | 5,000 | Broncs | 1995 | www.gobroncs.com |
| Saint Peter's College | Jersey City, NJ | 1872 | Private | 3,700 | Peacocks | 1981 | spc.edu/pages/408.asp |
| Siena College | Loudonville, NY | 1937 | Private | 3,000 | Saints | 1989 | www.sienasaints.com |
[edit] Associate member institutions
- Jacksonville University men's lacrosse, men's and women's crew
- Virginia Military Institute - men's lacrosse
- University of Detroit Mercy - men's lacrosse
- Saint Francis College (New York) - water polo
- Villanova University - water polo
- Wagner College - water polo
- Drake University - women's crew
- Robert Morris University - women's crew
- Sacred Heart University - women's crew
- Boston University - women's golf
- University of Albany - women's golf
- University of Hartford - women's golf
[edit] Former members
- Army (1981-82 to 1989-90)
- Fordham University (1981-82 to 1989-90)
- College of the Holy Cross (1983-84 to 1989-90)
- La Salle University (1983-84 to 1991-92)
[edit] Membership timeline

[edit] Conference facilities
| School | Baseball stadium | Capacity | Basketball arena | Capacity | Soccer stadium | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canisius | Demske Sports Complex | 1,200 | Koessler Athletic Center | 2,176 | Demske Sports Complex | 1,200 |
| Fairfield | Alumni Baseball Diamond | 600 | Webster Bank Arena | 9,000 | Lessing Field | 600 |
| Iona | Salesian Field | Hynes Athletic Center | 2,611 | Mazzella Field | 2,440 | |
| Loyola | N/A | N/A | Reitz Arena | 3,000 | Ridley Athletic Complex | 6,000 |
| Manhattan | Van Cortlandt Park | 500 | Draddy Gymnasium | 2,345 | Gaelic Park | 2,000 |
| Marist | James J. McCann Baseball Field | 350 | McCann Arena | 3,200 | Tenney Stadium | 5,000 |
| Niagara | Sal Maglie Stadium | 4,000 | Gallagher Center | 2,400 | Niagara Field | 1,200 |
| Rider | Sonny Pittaro Field | 2,000 | Alumni Gymnasium | 1,650 | Rider Campus Soccer Field | 1,000 |
| Siena | Siena Baseball Field | 500 | Times Union Center (men) Alumni Recreation Center (women) |
15,229 4,000 |
Siena Turf Field | 1,000 |
| Saint Peter's | Joseph J. Jaroschak Field | Yanitelli Center | 3,200 | Joseph J. Jaroschak Field |
[edit] Notable sports figures
Some of the notable sport figures who played collegiately and/or graduated from a MAAC school, include:
[edit] Baseball
-
Luis Castro
1st Hispanic in MLB
Manhattan -
Al Downing
MLB All-Star Pitcher
Rider -
John Lannan
MLB Pitcher
Siena -
Joe McCarthy
Hall of Fame MLB Manager
Niagara -
Jason Motte
MLB Pitcher
Iona
- Jack Armstrong, former MLB pitcher; 1990 MLB All-Star and World Champion (Rider)
- 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)
- 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, current 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 two-time All-Star and World Champion MLB pitcher (Niagara)
- 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)
[edit] Basketball
-
Hubie Brown,
Hall of Fame NBA Coach
Niagara -
Calvin Murphy,
NBA All-Star Guard
Niagara -
Digger Phelps,
ESPN NCAA Analyst
Rider -
Rik Smits,
NBA All-Star Center
Marist -
Mike Smrek
Two-Time NBA Champion
Canisius
- Joe Arlauckas, former NBA player (Niagara)
- John Beilein, collegiate men's basketball head coach (Niagara)
- Matt Brady, current James Madison men's basketball coach (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
- Joe DeSantis, former men's college basketball coach; 1979 NCAA All-American (Fairfield)
- Chris D'Orso, current Orlando Magic executive (Fairfield) [1]
- Kathy Fedorjaka, current Bucknell women's basketball coach (Fairfield)[2]
- 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, current Miami Heat player (Siena)
- 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)
- Nick Macarchuk, former men's college basketball coach (Fairfield)[3]
- 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)
- 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)
- Tricia Fabbri, current Quinnipiac women's basketball coach (Fairfield)[4]
- Lionel Simmons, former NBA player (La Salle)
- Mike Smrek, former NBA player (Canisius)
- Jason Thompson, current Sacramento Kings player (Rider)
- Randy Woods, former NBA player (La Salle)
- A. J. Wynder, former NBA player (Fairfield)
[edit] Soccer
-
Adam Braz,
MLS Defender
Fairfield -
Miloš Kočić,
MLS Goalie
Loyola -
Justin Thompson,
USL-1 Defender
Fairfield -
Zach Thornton,
MLS All-Star Goalie
Loyola
- 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, Women's Professional Soccer player (Fairfield)
- Jim McElderry, Fordham men's soccer coach and A-League player (Fairfield)[5]
- Jim McKeown, former NASL defender (Rider)
- Tennant McVea, Finnish Premier Division player (Loyola)
- Thomas Skara, Melbourne Knights FC player
- Bobby Smith, National Soccer Hall of Fame member; former U.S. National and NASL defender (Rider)
- Murphy Wiredu, S. League player (Saint Peter's)
- Dennis Wit, former U.S. National and NASL player (Loyola)
[edit] Basketball
[edit] Men's Basketball
| Year | Regular Season Champion(s) | Tournament Champion | Player 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 (23-8, 11-3) |
(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 (21-9, 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) | (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) | (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 | (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 | Rider (19-11, 13-5), Niagara | (1) Niagara (20-10, 13-5) | Juan Mendez (Niagara) | Deng Gai (Fairfield) | Joe Mihalich (Niagara) |
| 2006 | Manhattan (20-11, 14-4) | (2) Iona (23-7, 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 and Rider (13-5) | (1) Siena (23-10, 13-5) | Jason Thompson (Rider) | Jason Thompson (Rider) | Tommy Dempsey (Rider) |
| 2009 | Siena (16-2) | (1) Siena (26-7, 16-2) | Kenny Hasbrouck (Siena) | Tyrone Lewis (Niagara) | Fran McCaffery (Siena) |
| 2010 | Siena (17-1) | (1) Siena (27-6, 17-1) | Alex Franklin (Siena) | Anthony Johnson (Fairfield) | Kevin Willard (Iona) |
| 2011 | Fairfield (15-3) | (4) Saint Peter's (20–13, 11–7) | Ryan Rossiter (Siena) | Anthony Nelson (Niagara) | Ed Cooley (Fairifeld) |
[edit] Postseason men's basketball history
|
|
|
[edit] Women's Basketball
| Year | Regular Season Champion(s) | Tournament Champion | Player the Year | Defensive Player of the Year | Coach of the Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1982 | Saint Peter's | (1) Saint Peter's | Sheri Lauyer (Saint Peter's) | Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) | |
| 1983 | Saint Peter's | (1) Saint Peter's | Shelia Tighe (Manhattan) | Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) | |
| 1984 | Saint Peter's | (1) Saint Peter's | Shelia Tighe (Manhattan) | Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) | |
| 1985 | Saint Peter's | (2) Holy Cross | Janet Hourihan (Holy Cross) | Togo Palazzi (Holy Cross) | |
| 1986 | Saint Peter's | (2) La Salle | Adrienne Draughn (Saint Peter's) | Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) | |
| 1987 | La Salle | (5) Manhattan | Tracey Quinn (Holy Cross) | John Miller (La Salle) | |
| 1988 | La Salle | (3) Fairfield | Tracey Sneed (La Salle) | John Miller (La Salle) | |
| 1989 | La Salle | (2) Holy Cross | Jeanine Radice (Fordham) | John Miller (La Salle) | |
| 1990 | Fairfield | (2) Manhattan | Tonya Grant (Saint Peter's) | Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) | |
| 1991 | Fairfield | (1) Fairfield | Val Higgins (Siena) | Gina Castelli (Siena) | |
| 1992 | La Salle | (2) Saint Peter's | Jennifer Cole (La Salle) | Mike Rappl (Canisius) | |
| 1993 | Niagara | (2) Saint Peter's | Samantha David (Niagara) | Bill Agronin (Niagara) | |
| 1994 | Siena | (2) Loyola (MD) | Liz Lopes (Siena) | Gina Castelli (Siena) | |
| 1995 | Saint Peter's | (4) Loyola (MD) | Patty Stoffey (Loyola) | Kara Rehbaum (Canisius) | |
| 1996 | Saint Peter's | (2) Manhattan | Gina Somma (Manhattan) | Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) | |
| 1997 | Siena | (2) Saint Peter's | Heather Fiore (Canisius) Jessica Grosarth (Fairfield) |
Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) |
|
| 1998 | Siena | (2) Fairfield | Melanie Halker (Siena) | Gina Castelli (Siena) | |
| 1999 | Siena | (2) Saint Peter's | Melanie Halker (Siena) | Mike Granelli (Saint Peter's) | |
| 2000 | Fairfield | (2) Saint Peter's | Gail Strumpf (Fairfield) | Dianne Nolan (Fairfield) | |
| 2001 | Siena | (1) Siena | Gunta Basko (Siena) | Gina Castelli (Siena) | |
| 2002 | Siena | (2) Saint Peter's | Gunta Basko (Siena) | Gunta Basko (Siena | Sal Buscaglia (Manhattan) Gina Castelli (Siena) |
| 2003 | Manhattan | (1) Manhattan | Liene Jansone (Siena) | Eva Cunningham (Niagara) | Bill Agronin (Niagara) |
| 2004 | Siena | (2) Marist | Jenel Stevens (Canisius) | Jenel Stevens (Canisius) Jolene Johnston (Siena) |
Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
| 2005 | Marist | (2) Canisius | Eva Cunningham (Niagara) | Alisa Kresge (Marist) Lauren Surber (Siena) |
Brian Giorgis (Marist) Bill Agronin (Niagara) |
| 2006 | Marist | (1) Marist | Fifi Camara (Marist) | Alisa Kresge (Marist) | Anthony Bozzella (Iona) Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
| 2007 | Marist | (1) Marist | Martina Weber (Iona) | Alisa Kresge (Marist) | Joe Logan (Loyola) |
| 2008 | Marist | (1) Marist | Rachele Fitz (Marist) | Tania Kennedy (Saint Peter's) | Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
| 2009 | Marist | (1) Marist | Rachele Fitz (Marist) | Brittané Russell (Canisius) | Terry Zeh (Canisius) |
| 2010 | Marist (15-3) | (1) Marist (25-7, 15-3) | Rachele Fitz (Marist) | Stephanie Geehan (Fairfield) | Kendra Faustin (Niagara) |
| 2011 | Marist (18-0) | (1) Marist | Erica Allenspach (Marist) | Katie Sheahin (Loyola) | Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
| 2012 | Marist (17-1) | Corielle Yarde (Marist | Katie Sheahin (Loyola) | Brian Giorgis (Marist) |
[edit] Postseason women's basketball history
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[edit] Baseball
[edit] Champions
From 1990 through 1993, the MAAC, split into two divisions. |
[edit] Postseason Baseball History
|
[edit] Soccer
[edit] Men's Soccer
| Year | Regular Season Champ | Tournament Champ | Offensive/Overall Player the Year | Defensive/Goalkeeper of the Year | Coach of the Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1988 | Army (13-5-1 overall, 6-1-0 MAAC) | Army | |||
| 1989 | Loyola (10-5-2 overall, 5-0-0 MAAC) | Loyola | |||
| 1990 | Loyola (16-2-5 overall, 8-0-0 MAAC) | Loyola | |||
| 1991 | Loyola (12-8-2 overall, 8-0-0 MAAC) | 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 | |||
| 1994 | Loyola (15-5-2 overall, 6-1-0 MAAC) | Loyola | |||
| 1995 | Loyola (15-6-0 overall, 7-0-0 MAAC) | Loyola | |||
| 1996 | Canisius (5-12-2 overall, 4-1-2 MAAC) | Loyola | |||
| 1997 | Rider (15-6-1 overall, 8-1-0 MAAC) | Rider | Craig Wicken (Rider) | ||
| 1998 | Fairfield (15-4-1 overall, 7-1-1 MAAC) | Rider | Christof Lindenmayer (Loyola) | Carl Rees (Fairfield) | |
| 1999 | Loyola (13-6-2 overall, 7-1-1 MAAC) | Fairfield | Christof Lindenmayer (Loyola) | Reb Beatty (Loyola) | Bill Sento (Loyola) |
| 2000 | Loyola (12-4-2 overall, 9-0-0 MAAC) | Marist | Joseph Crespo (Marist) | Reb Beatty (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) | 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 | |||
| 2011 | Fairfield (12-5-1 overall, 8-0-1 MAAC) | Fairfield |
[edit] Women's Soccer
| Year | Regular Season Champ | Tournament Champ | Overall/Offensive Player of the Year | Defensive/Goalkeeper of the Year | 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 | |||
| 2011 | Marist (13-6-2 overall, 7-1-1 MAAC) | Marist |
[edit] Swimming and Diving
[edit] Champions
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[edit] Cross country
[edit] Champions
| Year | Men's Champion | Women's Champion |
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[edit] Football
The MAAC Football League was formed in 1993 and folded in the 2007-08 academic year. At its peak, it consisted of Canisius, Duquesne, Fairfield, Georgetown, Iona, La Salle, Marist, Saint John's, Saint Peter's and Siena.
Canisius, Fairfield, Saint John's and Siena have since disbanded their football programs. Saint Peter's disbanded its football team in June 2007, while La Salle did the same in November 2007. Iona disbanded their football program in November 2008 after competing as an FCS independent in the 2008 season.
Georgetown, a former MAACFL member, has moved to the Patriot League. Duquesne left the MAACFL after the 2007 season to join the Northeast Conference. Marist joined the Pioneer Football League in 2009.
[edit] Champions
- 1993 Iona (5-0-0)
- 1994 Marist (6-1-0) & St. John's (6-1-0)
- 1995 Duquesne (7-0-0)
- 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)
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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