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Senior Defender<br />

Brooke Bendernagel<br />

All-CAA Third Team<br />

Selection<br />

2012<br />

women’s<br />

<strong>soccer</strong><br />

Media Guide


Tara Kerns<br />

Kerry Cummings<br />

Ruby Staplehurst


2012 Hofstra WOmen’s Soccer Quick Facts<br />

Location: Hempstead, New York 11549<br />

Founded: 1935<br />

Enrollment: 11,453<br />

Affiliation: NCAA Division I<br />

Conference: Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Nickname: Pride<br />

Colors: Gold, White and Blue<br />

Home Field: Hofstra Soccer Stadium (1,600)<br />

Playing Surface: Field Turf<br />

President: Stuart Rabinowitz<br />

NCAA Faculty Athletics Representative:<br />

Michael Barnes<br />

Vice President and Director of Athletics:<br />

Jeffrey A. Hathaway<br />

Executive Associate Director of Athletics:<br />

Danny McCabe<br />

Senior Associate Director of Athletics:<br />

Cindy Lewis<br />

Senior Associate Director of Athletics for<br />

Facilities: Jay Artinian<br />

Associate Director of Athletics for<br />

Communications: Stephen Gorchov<br />

Associate Director of Athletics for<br />

External Affairs: Tim McMahon<br />

Associate Director of Athletics for<br />

Compliance: John Heck<br />

Assistant Director of Athletics for<br />

Development: Daniel Solow<br />

Assistant Director of Athletics for<br />

Corporate Relations: Ellen Johnson<br />

Assistant Director of Athletics for Student-<br />

Athlete Development:<br />

Samantha Sweeney<br />

Assistant Director of Athletics for<br />

Marketing and Promotions:<br />

Chrissy Arnone<br />

Assistant Director of Athletics for Ticket<br />

Operations: Maria Corvino<br />

Director of Ticket Sales: Michael Neely<br />

Director of Student-Athlete Services:<br />

James Lally<br />

Assistant Director for Administration:<br />

Rachel August<br />

Athletic Department Phone: (516) 463-3800<br />

Associate Director of Athletics for<br />

Communications: Stephen Gorchov<br />

Office Phone: (516) 463-4933<br />

E-mail: Stephen.A.Gorchov@hofstra.edu<br />

Senior Sports Information Director:<br />

Jim Sheehan<br />

Office Phone: (516) 463-6764<br />

Cell Phone: (516) 523-6692<br />

E-mail: Jim.B.Sheehan@hofstra.edu<br />

Senior Assistant Director of Athletic<br />

Communications: Brian Bohl<br />

(Women’s Soccer contact)<br />

Office Phone: (516) 463-6759<br />

E-mail: Brian.Bohl@hofstra.edu<br />

Director of Athletic Publications:<br />

Len Skoros<br />

Office Phone: (516) 463-4602<br />

E-mail: Leonard.M.Skoros@hofstra.edu<br />

Athletic Communications Fax:<br />

(516) 463-5033<br />

Head Athletic Trainer: Evan Malings<br />

Women’s Soccer Athletic Trainer:<br />

Marie Siler<br />

Equipment Manager: Kathy Theiling<br />

Photographers: Brian Ballweg,<br />

Kathy Kmonicek<br />

WOMEN’S SOCCER INFORMATION<br />

Head Coach: Simon Riddiough (Hofstra, 1994)<br />

Record at Hofstra: 77-37-8/6 years<br />

Overall College Record: Same<br />

Assistant Coaches: Tobias Bischof,<br />

Brooke DeRosa<br />

Volunteer Assistant: Ed Schieferstein<br />

Soccer Office Phone: (516) 463-6946/3685<br />

2011 Record: 10-8<br />

2011 Conference Record/Finish: 6-5/T3rd<br />

2011 Postseason: CAA Quarterfinals<br />

Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 16/5<br />

Starters Returning/Lost: 8/3<br />

HOFSTRA SOCCER ONLINE<br />

www.<strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong><br />

Table of Contents<br />

1 Quick Facts/Table of Contents<br />

2 Hofstra Women’s Soccer Tradition<br />

4 This is Hofstra University<br />

6 Hofstra Highlights<br />

8 Head Coach Simon Riddiough<br />

10 Assistant Coaches<br />

11 2012 Roster<br />

12 2012 Outlook<br />

14 Player Bios<br />

24 Hofstra University President<br />

25 University Senior Administration/<br />

Trustees<br />

26 Hofstra University Vice President<br />

and Director of Athletics<br />

28 Hofstra Athletic Administration<br />

and Head Coaches<br />

30 Long Island and New York City<br />

31 Athletic Academic Support<br />

32 Sports Medicine/Athletic Training<br />

33 Hofstra in the Community<br />

34 Hofstra Soccer Stadium/Facilities<br />

36 2011 Statistics and Results<br />

37 The Colonial Athletic Association<br />

38 2011 CAA Review<br />

40 Hofstra Honor Roll<br />

42 Hofstra Soccer Record Book<br />

44 Women’s Soccer Alumnae<br />

46 Hofstra in the NCAA Tournament<br />

48 All-Time Series Records<br />

49 All-Time Results<br />

55 Media Information<br />

56 Campus Map/Getting to<br />

Hofstra University<br />

Top Returnees<br />

Name pos. Cl. 2011 Stats/Honors<br />

Sam Scolarici F So. 5 G, 2 A, 12 P, CAA All-Rookie Team<br />

Brooke Bendernagel D Sr. Third team All-CAA selection<br />

Ruby Staplehurst D Jr. Team-high 6 A<br />

Caylin Dudley D So. 4 G, 8 P<br />

Emily Morphitis GK Jr. 7-7, 1.03 GAA, 44 svs.<br />

Hofstra University is <strong>com</strong>mitted to extending equal opportunity to<br />

all qualified individuals without regard to race, color, religion, sex,<br />

sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, age, national or<br />

ethnic origin, physical or mental disability, marital or veteran status in<br />

employment and in the conduct and operation of Hofstra University’s<br />

educational programs and activities, including admissions, scholarship<br />

and loan programs and athletic and other school administered<br />

programs. This statement of nondiscrimination is in <strong>com</strong>pliance with<br />

Title VI and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title IX of the<br />

Education Amendments of 1972, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation<br />

Act of 1973, the Americans with Disabilities Act Amendments Act,<br />

the Age Discrimination Act and other applicable federal, state and<br />

local laws and regulations relating to nondiscrimination (“Equal<br />

Opportunity Laws”). The Equal Rights and Opportunity Officer is the<br />

University’s official responsible for coordinating its overall adherence<br />

to Equal Opportunity Laws. Questions or concerns regarding any of<br />

these laws or other aspects of Hofstra’s Equal Opportunity Statement<br />

should be directed to the Equal Rights and Opportunity Officer at<br />

EROO@hofstra.edu, (516) 463-7310, C/O Office of Legal Affairs and<br />

General Counsel, 101 Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 11549. For<br />

additional contacts and related resources, see http://www.hofstra.<br />

edu/About/Policy/policy_eoe.html<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 1


HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER TRADITION<br />

227 Wins in program history<br />

215 Wins at Division I level in 19 seasons<br />

20 Years of existence for the program<br />

19 Program-best win total in 2010<br />

17 Seasons at .500 or better<br />

4 Academic All-Americans (Chrissy Arnone. Sue Weber, Dana Bergstrom, Tiffany Yovino)<br />

3 NCAA Tournament appearances<br />

3 All-Americans in program history (Sue Weber, Brooke DeRosa, Tiffany Yovino)<br />

2 Head coaches in program history<br />

2 Colonial Athletic Association championships<br />

2 Players named to the CAA 25th Anniversary Team (Becky Wachsberger and Sue Weber)<br />

2 NCAA Tournament victories<br />

Simon<br />

Riddiough has<br />

led the Pride<br />

to two NCAA<br />

appearances<br />

and 77 wins,<br />

including a<br />

program-best<br />

19 in 2010, in<br />

his six seasons<br />

The Pride won their first CAA Championship in 2005 to advance to<br />

the NCAA Tournament for the first time in program history<br />

Krystal Robens posted 34 wins<br />

in goal during her Hofstra<br />

career<br />

Brooke<br />

DeRosa<br />

led the<br />

team in<br />

scoring in<br />

2007<br />

and was<br />

an NSCAA<br />

All-<br />

America<br />

selection<br />

JoAnne Russell (center), a 2006 inductee<br />

into the Hofstra Athletics Hall of Fame,<br />

was the first coach in program history<br />

and won 150 games in 14 years<br />

2 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


Tiffany Yovino, a<br />

2010 All-American<br />

and CAA Player<br />

of the Year, was<br />

part of 58 wins<br />

during her fouryear<br />

career with<br />

the Pride<br />

Christa Eidenweil’s<br />

39 career goals<br />

rank first on<br />

Hofstra’s goal<br />

scoring list<br />

Krista Thorn was the starting<br />

goalkeeper on the 2010 squad<br />

and became the first female<br />

student-athlete in school<br />

history to play in the NCAA<br />

Tournament in two different<br />

sports (2010 softball)<br />

Sue Weber<br />

was a twotime<br />

All-<br />

American and<br />

three-time<br />

CAA Defensive<br />

Player of the<br />

Year<br />

The 2007 CAA Championship team won its first<br />

round NCAA game, 1-0, over Ohio State<br />

The 2010 team was ranked 23rd in the nation,<br />

earned an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament<br />

and defeated Connecticut, 1-0, in the first round<br />

Suzanne<br />

Newell is<br />

Hofstra’s<br />

all-time<br />

leading<br />

scorer with<br />

89 points<br />

Dana Bergstrom was an<br />

Academic All-American<br />

and the CAA Women’s<br />

Soccer Scholar-Athlete<br />

of the Year in 2010<br />

The 1992 team was Hofstra’s<br />

first women’s <strong>soccer</strong> squad<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 3


THIS IS HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY<br />

Hofstra University<br />

provides a dynamic<br />

college experience<br />

tailored for engaged and<br />

ambitious individuals.<br />

Students find pride and<br />

purpose at Hofstra,<br />

through small classes, a<br />

faculty whose primary<br />

concern is teaching,<br />

cutting edge technology,<br />

extensive library resources,<br />

internships, and active and<br />

<strong>com</strong>pelling educational<br />

programs that appeal to<br />

their interests and abilities.<br />

The Hofstra <strong>com</strong>munity<br />

is driven, dynamic and<br />

energetic, helping students<br />

find and focus their<br />

strengths to prepare them<br />

for a successful future.<br />

In its relatively short 77-year history, Hofstra<br />

has established itself as a world-class<br />

institution of higher education and cultural<br />

enterprise. Each academic year, the Hofstra<br />

campus and the programs offered grow and<br />

change to meet the demands of our students<br />

and our <strong>com</strong>munity.<br />

Hofstra opened in 1935 as a <strong>com</strong>muter school<br />

with all classes and offices housed in one<br />

building. Since those early days, Hofstra<br />

has evolved into an international institution<br />

with a student body hailing from 47 states<br />

and territories, and 50 countries around the<br />

world. The beautiful campus is an accredited<br />

arboretum with 115 buildings on 240 acres.<br />

There are approximately 3,900 students living<br />

on campus, and Hofstra offers them and all<br />

students an extensive array of academic and<br />

social activities. Additionally, Hofstra’s close<br />

proximity to Manhattan means that students<br />

have easy access to the wondrous cultural,<br />

social and career offerings of the city.<br />

While the campus and its offerings have<br />

changed, what has remained consistent<br />

throughout the years is the sense of <strong>com</strong>munity<br />

on campus, the eagerness of our students<br />

to learn and the <strong>com</strong>mitment of the Hofstra<br />

faculty and administration to provide a<br />

challenging education that encourages the<br />

pursuit of lifelong learning.<br />

The Colleges and Schools of the University are:<br />

Hofstra College of Liberal Arts and Sciences,<br />

Frank G. Zarb School of Business, School of<br />

Communication, School of Education, Health<br />

and Human Services, Maurice A. Deane<br />

School of Law, School for University Studies,<br />

School of Engineering and Applied Science,<br />

Honors College, Hofstra University Continuing<br />

Education and Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School<br />

of Medicine at Hofstra University. Bachelor’s<br />

degrees are offered in about 140 areas of study.<br />

Graduate degrees are<br />

offered, including Ph.D.,<br />

Ed.D., Psy.D., Au.D.,<br />

J.D., and M.D. degrees,<br />

advanced certificates and<br />

professional diplomas, in<br />

more approximately 150<br />

programs of study.<br />

Hofstra joined with North<br />

Shore-LIJ Health System<br />

in establishing a medical<br />

school on the University<br />

campus in October 2007.<br />

The new school, which<br />

wel<strong>com</strong>ed its first class<br />

in July 2011, is the first<br />

allopathic (MD) medical<br />

school in Nassau County<br />

and the first in New York<br />

State since 1963.<br />

In October 2011 the Commission on<br />

Presidential Debates announced that it had<br />

chosen Hofstra University for the site of<br />

its October 16, 2012 Presidential Debate,<br />

which will be in the “town meeting” format.<br />

The Commission on Presidential Debates,<br />

a nonprofit, nonpartisan corporation, has<br />

sponsored and produced every presidential<br />

and vice-presidential debate since 1988.<br />

Hofstra University hosted the third and final<br />

presidential debate of the 2008 election cycle,<br />

between then Senator Barack Obama and<br />

Senator John McCain, on October 15, 2008.<br />

The debate was a transformational moment for<br />

the University, highlighting the achievements<br />

of our students and faculty and their<br />

engagement in the political process. Leading<br />

up to the debate, students and the entire<br />

<strong>com</strong>munity were engaged by the year-long<br />

Educate ’08 program, almost 150 lectures,<br />

conferences, and events focused on the issues,<br />

history and politics of the presidency, followed<br />

4 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


y Define ’09, which looked at the first year<br />

of his presidency. The University continues to<br />

host important political events, such as the New<br />

York State Gubernatorial Debate in 2010 and<br />

a visit from Newark, NJ, Mayor Cory Booker<br />

to kick of the Debate 2012 - Pride, Politics &<br />

Policy program.<br />

In 2011 Hofstra announced that it would<br />

launch a School of Engineering and Applied<br />

Science with a co-op education program that<br />

will partner with a network of industry leaders<br />

to offer students substantial work experience<br />

before they graduate.<br />

The new school, which will open in September<br />

2012, will <strong>com</strong>bine and expand the University’s<br />

existing Engineering and Computer Science<br />

departments to develop a curriculum that<br />

emphasizes high-tech research, practical<br />

work experience and inter-disciplinary study,<br />

integrating resources and faculty from other<br />

parts of the institution, including the Hofstra<br />

North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine and the<br />

Frank G. Zarb School of Business.<br />

Hofstra’s School of Communication is one of<br />

the largest, most advanced non-<strong>com</strong>mercial<br />

television facilities in the East. Students<br />

take classes and work in Dempster Hall, a<br />

sophisticated television production/postproduction<br />

facility with two broadcast-quality<br />

studios and control rooms; two advanced<br />

online video edit suites; two Avid non-linear<br />

digital editing systems and several cuts-only<br />

video work stations. Two satellite dishes are<br />

available with one dish providing special news<br />

feeds for the broadcast journalism room, which<br />

also has access to Associated Press, Lexis-<br />

Nexis and Dow Jones services. In addition,<br />

the facility is capable of broadcasting studentproduced<br />

programming to the entire campus<br />

on our own cable channels. Also located here<br />

is the University’s radio station (WRHU/88.7-<br />

FM), audio production studios, a film/video<br />

screening room, film editing rooms, a <strong>com</strong>puter<br />

laboratory, a speech performance studio and a<br />

large dance studio.<br />

17 Varsity sports<br />

20 Eateries on campus<br />

20 Local and national fraternities<br />

and sororities<br />

21 Average undergraduate class<br />

size<br />

22 Academic accreditations<br />

37 Residence halls<br />

Hofstra’s C.V. Starr Hall offers academic<br />

facilities that are among the most<br />

technologically advanced in the nation. Every<br />

seat in every classroom allows students direct<br />

access to the Internet and Hofstra network,<br />

including the resources of Hofstra’s Axinn<br />

Library.<br />

Hofstra’s growing <strong>com</strong>puter facilities offer<br />

extensive high-tech training opportunities.<br />

There are <strong>com</strong>puter terminals throughout<br />

the campus for student and faculty use, with<br />

more than 750 PC, Macintosh and UNIX<br />

workstations available in labs and classrooms.<br />

Hofstra hosts more than 500 cultural events<br />

annually, bringing thousands of scholars,<br />

dignitaries and other participants to campus.<br />

More than 200 musical and dramatic<br />

performances take place on campus each<br />

year. The University <strong>com</strong>pleted a year-long<br />

celebration of its 75th anniversary in 2010,<br />

<strong>com</strong>plete with a concert, academic convocation<br />

and cake, several conferences and signature<br />

events which brought together students, faculty,<br />

alumni and <strong>com</strong>munity.<br />

Hofstra by the Numbers<br />

100 Percent program<br />

accessibility to persons<br />

with disabilities<br />

200 Student clubs and<br />

organizations<br />

500 Cultural events per year<br />

1935 Founding date<br />

1,191 Full-time undergraduate<br />

enrollment<br />

The Hofstra Museum, which houses one of the<br />

largest art collections in the metropolitan area,<br />

coordinates approximately eight exhibitions<br />

annually and offers exhibition areas and an<br />

extensive outdoor sculpture collection, with 75<br />

pieces. The Hofstra Museum is accredited by<br />

the American Association of Museums – one of<br />

only 94 universities in the nation and one of six<br />

in New York to hold that distinction.<br />

Hofstra also has six theaters, a student<br />

newspaper, a lively student center, a recently<br />

renovated recreation center and numerous<br />

athletic facilities, including the 13,000-seat<br />

James M. Shuart Stadium and the 5,046-seat<br />

David S. Mack Sports and Exhibition Complex.<br />

Hofstra also has an indoor, Olympic-sized<br />

(eight lane, 50-meter) swimming pool, one<br />

of the largest such facilities in the New York<br />

metropolitan area.<br />

The Hofstra athletic program <strong>com</strong>petes on the<br />

NCAA Division I level and is a member of the<br />

Colonial Athletic Association. The University<br />

sponsors 17 intercollegiate programs – eight<br />

men’s sports and nine women’s sports. Hofstra<br />

has men’s teams in basketball, baseball,<br />

lacrosse, golf, tennis, wrestling, <strong>soccer</strong><br />

and cross country. Women’s sports include<br />

basketball, volleyball, softball, tennis, <strong>soccer</strong>,<br />

field hockey, lacrosse, cross country and golf.<br />

Hofstra’s academic programs are accredited by<br />

numerous national agencies and the University<br />

is one of only 280 schools, out of more than<br />

3,600 colleges and universities nationwide,<br />

with a chapter of the national honor society<br />

Phi Beta Kappa. Of Hofstra’s 1,114 faculty<br />

members, 525 are full time and 92 percent hold<br />

the highest degree in their fields. The average<br />

undergraduate class size is 21 students, while<br />

student-faculty ratio is 14-to-1.<br />

Hofstra University is 100-percent program<br />

accessible to persons with disabilities, and<br />

has been cited as a national model for this<br />

achievement.<br />

11,453 Total University<br />

enrollment, including<br />

part-time undergraduate,<br />

graduate<br />

and School of Law<br />

119,000+ Hofstra alumni<br />

1.2 Million Volumes available at<br />

Hofstra University<br />

Libraries<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 5


HOFSTRA HIGHLIGHTS<br />

Newark Mayor Cory Booker<br />

was the keynote speaker for<br />

Hofstra’s annual P.R.I.D.E. week.<br />

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein,<br />

the reporters who broke the Watergate scandal for The Washington<br />

Post, spoke at Hofstra on March 20, 2012, for the 40th anniversary of<br />

the story that forced President Nixon to resign.<br />

Hofstra students raised<br />

more than $100,000 for<br />

cancer research during<br />

the 2012 Relay for Life.<br />

Hofstra will host a Presidential Debate on<br />

October 16, 2012, and will bring a slate of top<br />

political strategists, activists, scholars and<br />

journalists to campus as pART of an electionthemed<br />

event series.<br />

CBS Corporation President and Chief Executive Officer Leslie<br />

Moonves was the speaker at the undergraduate ceremony<br />

during Hofstra’s 2012 Commencement Exercises.<br />

6 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


The Princeton<br />

Review<br />

recently<br />

named the<br />

Zarb School<br />

of Business<br />

One of<br />

its “Great<br />

Schools for<br />

Marketing<br />

and Sales<br />

Majors”.<br />

Hofstra is just<br />

25 miles from<br />

New York City.<br />

The<br />

HofstranORTH<br />

Shore LIJ<br />

School of<br />

Medicine<br />

COMPLETED<br />

ITS FIRST<br />

YEAR OF<br />

EXISTENCE IN<br />

JULY 2012.<br />

Rapper Rick Ross<br />

performs at the<br />

Vibe Live concert<br />

during Fall<br />

Festival .<br />

WRHU, Hofstra’s<br />

radio station, was<br />

recently rated the<br />

fifth best college<br />

radio station in<br />

the nation by The<br />

Princeton Review.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 7


HEAD COACH SIMON RIDDIOUGH<br />

SIMON<br />

RIDDIOUGH<br />

HEAD COACH<br />

Simon Riddiough is entering his seventh year as the Hofstra<br />

Women’s Soccer Coach in 2012. He was named the second head<br />

coach in the history of the program when he was promoted to the<br />

position following JoAnne Russell’s retirement at the conclusion of the<br />

2005 season.
<br />

Since taking over the head coaching responsibilities, Riddiough has not<br />

had a losing season. The streak continued with a 10-8 record in 2011<br />

that saw the Pride win its final four CAA regular season games to help<br />

qualify for the conference tournament.<br />

In 2011, Riddiough led Hofstra to the most successful season in school<br />

history (19-3). The Pride set a school record with 19 wins, went 11-0<br />

in the Colonial Athletic Association, be<strong>com</strong>ing the first team to go<br />

undefeated and untied in CAA play since 1998, and won a school-record<br />

18 straight games. Hofstra advanced to the second round of the NCAA<br />

Tournament with a 1-0 win over Connecticut, its second NCAA win in<br />

program history, and Riddiough was named the CAA Coach of the Year<br />

and the Mid-Atlantic Region Coach of the Year by the National Soccer<br />

Coaches Association of America (NSCAA). 

<br />

Riddiough’s career record is 77-37-8 in his six years for an average of<br />

more than 12 per season.<br />

The 2010 season was another landmark campaign for the program;<br />

surpassing the high standard that Riddiough’s team set in 2007. Hofstra<br />

finished with an 18-4 record, setting a school record that was passed in<br />

2010, won the CAA championship and advanced to the second round<br />

of the NCAA Tournament, defeating Ohio State 1-0 in the first round<br />

and taking regional top seed Penn State<br />

into overtime in the second round. He was<br />

named the Northeast Region Coach of the<br />

Year by the NSCAA. 

<br />

In between the two historic seasons,<br />

Riddiough led Hofstra to an 11-8-3<br />

record in 2008, including a return trip<br />

to the CAA finals (where it fell 1-0 in<br />

double-overtime). He also guided the<br />

pride to another successful season in<br />

2009, finishing 10-6-3, including 7-2-2 in<br />

conference play. 

<br />

Riddiough has been a member of the<br />

Hofstra Women’s Soccer staff for 16 years,<br />

including the previous four as an associate<br />

head coach prior to his promotion to the<br />

head coaching position. Riddiough joined<br />

the coaching ranks in 1996 after spending<br />

two years as a graduate assistant in the<br />

Hofstra Sports Facilities Department,<br />

pursuing a master’s degree in counseling.

<br />

Riddiough, a 1994 Hofstra graduate with<br />

a degree in physical education, was a four-<br />

8 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


year letterman and captain on the Flying Dutchmen <strong>soccer</strong> team from<br />

1990 through 1994. He was an All-New York Region performer in 1993<br />

and 1994, and an All-East Coast Conference pick in 1993. Riddiough<br />

was also a member of the all-region academic squad. In his Hofstra<br />

career he recorded 13 goals and 15 assists.

<br />

A hard-nosed defender as a player, Riddiough has helped develop the<br />

Hofstra Women’s Soccer program into one of the top defensive teams in<br />

the nation in recent seasons. The Pride ranked third in the nation in team<br />

defense in 2003 (0.45 goals per game), while tying for the fewest goals<br />

allowed in the entire country (nine), and also ranked 16th in the nation<br />

in 2002 (0.69<br />

goals per game).<br />

In 2005, Hofstra<br />

allowed only<br />

three goals in 11<br />

conference games<br />

on its way to<br />

winning the CAA<br />

championship<br />

and earning<br />

its first-ever<br />

NCAA Division<br />

I tournament<br />

appearance. Iin<br />

2007, Hofstra set<br />

a school record<br />

with 12 shutouts,<br />

including seven<br />

straight.

<br />

Coach Riddiough and<br />

his wife, Heather<br />

Riddiough<br />

played with the<br />

Greek American<br />

Atlas from<br />

1995 through<br />

1997 and won a<br />

USYSA Region I championship with the club. He also appeared in the<br />

quarterfinals of the U.S. Open Cup with the Greek American Atlas. In<br />

1998 and 1999, Riddiough played with the New York Freedoms of the<br />

United Soccer League and played on the 1999 PDL Northeast Division<br />

championship squad that placed third in the nation. In 2001 Riddiough<br />

played with the Long Island Rough Riders of the A-League.
<br />

In addition to his playing experience, Riddiough has been a head coach<br />

for the Eastern New York Youth Soccer Association Girls Under-17<br />

team, which serves as part of the New York Olympic Development<br />

Program (ODP), since 2000. In 2005 he helped coach the team to the<br />

ODP National Championship. He also previously coached several Long<br />

Island Select teams<br />

from 1996 to 1999<br />

and served as a<br />

director for Noga<br />

Soccer Camps<br />

since 1991. In<br />

June 1992 he<br />

coached the New<br />

Hyde Park Girls<br />

Under-19 club to<br />

the New York State<br />

championship.

<br />

Riddiough, a<br />

native of Barnsley,<br />

England, and his<br />

wife, Heather,<br />

a former twosport<br />

athlete at<br />

Hofstra, reside in<br />

Massapequa Park,<br />

New York with<br />

their two sons,<br />

Kain and Cole, and<br />

daughter, Quinn.<br />

Kain, Cole and<br />

Quinn Riddiough<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 9


ASSISTANT COACHES<br />

TOBIAS<br />

BIScHOF<br />

ASSISTANT COACH<br />

Tobias Bischof is entering his second<br />

season with the Pride in 2012. In his<br />

first year, he helped Head Coach Simon<br />

Riddiough guide Hofstra to a 10-8-0 overall<br />

record and a spot in the Colonial Athletic<br />

Association Championship.<br />

Bischof came to Hofstra in 2011 after a decade<br />

of prominent involvement in Long Island<br />

<strong>soccer</strong>, particularly at the youth level. Bischof<br />

led two U-15 teams – the East Meadow Sparks<br />

U-15 Girls and the Massapequa Arsenal U-15<br />

Boys – to state championships in the New York<br />

State Open Cup during the summer of 2011.<br />

Bischof has also coached the East Meadow<br />

Dynamite and Sachem Blazers in the Region<br />

1 Premier League. Overall, he has had<br />

tremendous success with his youth programs,<br />

leading seven teams to the state finals between<br />

2006 and 2011.<br />

In addition, Bischof has served as the Select<br />

PDP program administrator for the Long Island<br />

Junior Soccer League (LIJSL), a program that<br />

included more than 500 players, and has run a<br />

select coaching program to prepare athletes for<br />

collegiate <strong>soccer</strong>. He has helped place dozens<br />

of his youth players into college programs in<br />

his short time on Long Island.<br />

A native of Winterstein, Germany, Bischof<br />

played <strong>soccer</strong> in his native country after<br />

graduating from high school. In 1997 he<br />

enrolled at Friedrich-Schiller University in<br />

Jena, Germany, where he earned a degree in<br />

sports science, finishing in the top 10 percent<br />

of his class. He also coached youth <strong>soccer</strong><br />

in Germany, primarily with 16-17 year olds,<br />

before <strong>com</strong>ing to the United States.<br />

Bischof first moved to Long Island in 2002<br />

to accept a position with Globall Soccer,<br />

an International training and management<br />

<strong>com</strong>pany. He worked with the Long Island<br />

Rough Riders of the Premier Development<br />

League (PDL) after Globall Soccer purchased<br />

the team.<br />

Brooke<br />

derosa<br />

ASSISTANT COACH<br />

Brooke DeRosa, an All-America<br />

selection for the Pride in 2007, enters<br />

her first season as an assistant coach<br />

at her alma mater. DeRosa returns to Hofstra<br />

after most recently serving as the head women’s<br />

<strong>soccer</strong> coach at Nassau Community College<br />

during the 2011-12 academic year.<br />

During her one year at Nassau CC, DeRosa<br />

coached the Lions to an 8-5-3 record and saw<br />

eight players earn All-Region XV honors,<br />

including five first team selections. Prior to<br />

coaching at Nassau she served as head junior<br />

varsity coach at Calhoun High School in<br />

Bellmore, New York.<br />

DeRosa’s other coaching experience includes<br />

serving as a trainer for Intense Soccer<br />

Academy, Soccer Tots and various <strong>soccer</strong><br />

clubs around Long Island. She also served as<br />

a counselor for the Long Island Rough Riders<br />

Soccer Camp for nine years.<br />

After beginning her career at Syracuse, where<br />

she was a Big East All-Rookie selection<br />

in 2002 and a three-year starter, DeRosa<br />

transferred to Hofstra in 2007. During her one<br />

season with the Pride, she helped the team to<br />

an 18-4 record, a Colonial Athletic Association<br />

(CAA) Championship and a trip to the second<br />

round of the NCAA Tournament. She tallied<br />

14 goals, five assists and 33 points, ranking<br />

second in the CAA in scoring. Her 14 goals are<br />

the second-best single season total in program<br />

history, while the 33 points are third in the<br />

single season record book. For her efforts,<br />

DeRosa earned third team All-America honors<br />

from the NSCAA and was a first team allconference<br />

selection.<br />

DeRosa has also played for the Long Island<br />

Rough Riders of the W-League from 2002 to<br />

2004 and then again from 2007 through 2012.<br />

She led the team in points in 2009 and 2010.<br />

A native of Ronkonkoma, New York, DeRosa<br />

was a five-year letterwinner on the Connetquot<br />

High School <strong>soccer</strong> team and was the first eight<br />

grade female to play varsity <strong>soccer</strong> in school<br />

history.<br />

DeRosa holds a degree in ceramics from<br />

Syracuse and is currently pursuing her master’s<br />

in art education from Hofstra.<br />

ED<br />

SCHIEFERSTEIN<br />

ASSISTANT COACH<br />

Bischof currently resides in Long Beach,<br />

New York. Ed Schieferstein enters his<br />

sixth season as an assistant coach with<br />

the Hofstra Women’s Soccer program, where<br />

his primary responsibility will be coaching<br />

the Pride goalkeepers. Schieferstein had spent<br />

five seasons coaching the goalkeepers on the<br />

Hofstra Men’s Soccer team, helping them<br />

to three CAA championships and NCAA<br />

Tournament appearances, before moving over<br />

to the women’s team.<br />

He has been involved with Long Island <strong>soccer</strong><br />

for nearly 40 years, since his playing days at<br />

Harborfields High School (1973-76). Before<br />

<strong>com</strong>ing to Hofstra, Schieferstein served as an<br />

assistant coach at Kellenberg Memorial High<br />

School from 1991 through 1999 and then spent<br />

one year as an assistant women’s <strong>soccer</strong> coach<br />

at Caldwell College in New Jersey.<br />

Schieferstein has also been heavily involved<br />

in Long Island club <strong>soccer</strong>, serving as coach<br />

for the Syosset Soccer Club since 1995 and<br />

coaching the Huntington Soccer Club from<br />

1974 to 1993.<br />

A native of Huntington, New York,<br />

Schieferstein played <strong>soccer</strong> for three seasons<br />

at Slippery Rock University in Slippery Rock,<br />

Pennsylvania, from 1976 to 1978.<br />

tobias bischof<br />

10 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


2012 roster<br />

No. Name pos. Cl. Ht. Hometown/High School/Last School<br />

0 Kylie Shuster GK Jr. 5-6 Austin, TX/Cedar Park<br />

1 Emily Morphitis GK Jr. 5-6 London, England/Therfield<br />

2 Tara Kerns M Jr. 5-3 Chesapeake, VA/Great Bridge<br />

3 Nicki Choffel M Sr. 5-4 Bellerose, NY/Mary Louis Academy<br />

4 Lea Hinnen D Fr. 5-7 Moehlin, Switzerland/Gymnasium Baumlihof<br />

5 Erin Havard M/D So. 5-7 Fairfax, VA/W.T. Woodson<br />

6 Ingrid Moyer F So. 5-8 Souderton, PA/Souderton Area<br />

7 Ruby Staplehurst D Jr. 5-4 London, England/St. Thomas More<br />

8 Chloe Dale M Fr. 5-6 Birmingham, England/Langley/Merrist Wood College<br />

9 Amber Stobbs F Jr. 5-2 London, England/Warlingham<br />

10 Brittany Farriella D Jr. 5-7 East Meadow, NY/Sachem North<br />

11 Anya Koren F So. 5-7 Scottsdale, AZ/Desert Mountain<br />

12 Kerry Cummings M/D Jr. 5-5 Kansas City, MO/St. Teresa’s Academy/St. John’s<br />

13 Jeannine Molleda M Fr. 5-2 Clifton, VA/Robinson Secondary<br />

14 Lulu Echeverry F So. 5-5 East Meadow, NY/East Meadow<br />

15 Brooke Bendernagel D Sr. 5-7 Smithtown, NY/Smithtown West<br />

17 Jill Mulholland M Fr. 5-5 Levittown, NY/MacArthur<br />

19 Sam Scolarici F So. 5-3 Aldie, VA/Freedom<br />

21 Leah Galton F Fr. 5-7 Harrogate, England/St. John Fishers<br />

22 Samantha Calvet M Fr. 5-7 Bangkok, Thailand/New International School of Thailand<br />

23 Caylin Dudley F So. 5-3 Grasonville, MD/Kent Island<br />

25 Amanda Heyde D Sr. 5-3 Somers, NY/Somers<br />

31 Lucy Gillett GK So. 5-10 Rockville Centre, NY/South Side<br />

Head Coach: Simon Riddiough (Hofstra ’94)<br />

Assistant Coaches: Tobias Bischof, Brooke DeRosa, Ed Schieferstein<br />

Pronunciation Guide<br />

0 Kylie Shuster SHOO-ster<br />

8 Chloe Dale clo-EE<br />

10 Brittany Farriella fair-ee-ELL-uh<br />

25 Amanda Heyde HI-dee<br />

31 Lucy Gillett JILL-ett<br />

1 Emily Morphitis mor-FEE-tiss<br />

13 Jeannine Molleda muh-YAY-da<br />

HC Simon Riddiough<br />

rid-ee-OFF<br />

3 Nicki Choffel shuh-FELL<br />

14 Lulu Echeverry ETCH-uh-vary<br />

AC Tobias Bischof<br />

bish-OFF<br />

5 Erin Havard huh-VARD<br />

19 Sam Scolarici sko-la-REECH-ee<br />

AC Ed Schieferstein SHEEF-er-stine<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 11


2012 HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER OUTLOOK<br />

Hofstra finished with a winning record last season, which was<br />

no surprise when you consider the Pride has never posted a<br />

losing season through the first six years under Head Coach<br />

Simon Riddiough. Despite losing seven starters from a 2010 squad<br />

that produced the most successful season in program history, the Pride<br />

finished 2011 with a 10-8 record while holding opponents to just 22 total<br />

goals.<br />

The 2012 team should benefit from greater continuity <strong>com</strong>pared to<br />

last year’s squad. Entering the new campaign, Hofstra will return<br />

eight starters and six of the team’s top-10 scorers. But the Pride will<br />

also be looking for players to step up after Laura Green and Courtney<br />

Breen – the team’s top-scoring forward and midfielder, respectively,<br />

and defensive-minded midfielder Brittany Butts – graduated. Unlike<br />

the wholesale changes required from a large roster turnover last year,<br />

Riddiough’s team features a <strong>com</strong>bination of youth and experience. Six<br />

freshmen could be in the mix and three of the team’s four juniors started<br />

at least 14 games in 2011, giving Hofstra a versatile crop of game-tested<br />

veterans to <strong>com</strong>plement the new faces.<br />

A strong defense, which served as the backbone of the team, remains<br />

largely intact heading into the new season. Goalkeepers Emily Morphitis<br />

and Kylie Shuster, who <strong>com</strong>bined for six shutouts last year, are both<br />

back. Four of the team’s starting defenders are back as well, with Ruby<br />

Staplehurst, Brittany Farriella, Brooke Bendernagel and Tara Kerns all<br />

looking to improve after earning valuable minutes last season, though<br />

Kerns is slated to move into the midfield in 2012. Their efforts in front of<br />

the goal resulted in opponents shooting just .109 percent while allowing<br />

Hofstra to register a plus-78 shot differential.<br />

While the offense lost some key members to graduation, the Pride will<br />

be looking for All-Colonial Athletic Association Rookie Team selection<br />

Sam Scolarici to take a leap forward as a sophomore. Caylin Dudley,<br />

Staplehurst, Anya Koren, Farriella and Kerns are the other returnees who<br />

recorded multiple points in 2011.<br />

Here is a position-by-position look at the Hofstra Pride heading into the<br />

2012 season:<br />

Forward<br />

Greene scored 13 goals last year, more than doubling her next closest<br />

teammate in Breen. Both members of the high-scoring duo graduated,<br />

though there is still plenty of talent up front. Junior Amber Stobbs didn’t<br />

have many chances to show her skills, as she was limited by injuries, but<br />

still managed to rack up seven shots in just four games, including three<br />

starts. Koren also presents an intriguing option at forward after scoring<br />

sam scolarici<br />

a goal and adding two assists in just 10 games as a freshman, including<br />

three starts.<br />

Lulu Echeverry started three games but played in every single contest<br />

for the Pride as a freshman. After providing depth at midfield in 2011,<br />

the East Meadow, NY, native will be looking to expand her role on<br />

the forward line. She had one assist and took eight shots in her rookie<br />

campaign.<br />

Scolarici could also be an answer at the forward position. She is the<br />

team’s leading returning scorer after striking for five goals and two<br />

assists while starting all 18 games as a freshman.<br />

Ingrid Moyer played in six games as a freshman, but is hoping to take a<br />

step up and earn more playing time in 2012. Freshman Leah Galton, who<br />

played high-level club <strong>soccer</strong> in her native Engand is also in the mix for<br />

playing time on the Pride’s front line.<br />

Midfield<br />

The loss of Greene will be felt at forward, though Breen and Butts’<br />

absence in the midfield will also be important to address.<br />

Kerns, who started all 18 games last season, mostly on defense, will slide<br />

up into a midfield role this season. The junior tallied two assists in 2011<br />

and her experience will be counted on as Riddiough plans on using a<br />

young lineup at the position.<br />

Three freshmen – Chloe Dale, Jeannine Molleda and Jill Mullholland<br />

– all have a strong chance of starting for the Pride and all three bring<br />

strong credentials to the position. Dale was Player of the Year in each of<br />

the past two seasons at Merrist Wood College in England, while Molleda<br />

was a standout at Robinson Secondary School in Virginia. Mulholland is<br />

one of the most decorated scholastic players to don a Hofstra uniform, as<br />

she was an NSCAA All-American and New York State co-Player of the<br />

Year as a senior at MacArthur High School in Levittown, NY.<br />

Senior Nicki Choffel, junior Kerry Cummings and sophomore Erin<br />

Havard are also in the midfield rotation. Choffel saw action in five games<br />

last season. Cummings, who started 11 of the 12 games in which she<br />

played, will give the Pride a more defensive-minded look, while Havard<br />

provided a lift off the bench last season, appearing in 12 games as a<br />

reserve with one assist.<br />

Freshman Samantha Calvet, a four-time team Most Valuable Player at the<br />

New International School of Thailand, is also in the mix for playing time.<br />

Defense<br />

The core of last year’s team<br />

returns with another year of<br />

valuable game experience.<br />

Staplehurst, Farriella and<br />

Bendernagel are all back<br />

from a defensive unit that<br />

allowed the fourth-fewest<br />

goals in the CAA last season<br />

and ended the regular season<br />

with three consecutive<br />

shutout wins. With<br />

Bendernagel the only starter<br />

from 2010 who returned last<br />

year, Staplehurst and Farriella<br />

all capitalized on the chance<br />

to earn more playing time.<br />

brittany<br />

farriella<br />

12 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


ooke<br />

bendernagel<br />

tara kerns<br />

Bendernagel, who was a third team All-CAA selection last season,<br />

is the backbone of the Hofstra defensive unit and plays with a great<br />

deal of emotion that the rest of the team feeds off of. Farriella fortified<br />

the central defender position while Staplehurst used her speed on the<br />

outside, giving Hofstra an array of options to protect the goal area.<br />

Staplehurst also was a key offensive cog for the Pride as her six assists<br />

led the team.<br />

The trio will be joined by Dudley, who appeared in all 18 games (starting<br />

12) at both forward and defense as a freshman. She notched four goals<br />

on just 21 shots, showing a flair for finding the net as her .190 shooting<br />

percentage was the highest of any Hofstra player who finished with<br />

multiple goals.<br />

The Pride could also see the back line supported by the arrival of<br />

freshman Lea<br />

Hinnen, who<br />

<strong>com</strong>es to Hofstra<br />

from Moehlin,<br />

Switzerland, where<br />

she played on<br />

the U17 and U19<br />

Swiss National<br />

Teams. Though<br />

not a freshman,<br />

Amanda Heyde will<br />

be entering her first<br />

year with the <strong>soccer</strong><br />

program after a<br />

four-year career as a<br />

goalie for Hofstra’s<br />

ruby<br />

staplehurst<br />

field hockey<br />

program. Heyde,<br />

who went 13-8 in<br />

her last year as the<br />

Pride’s goalie in field<br />

hockey, will now<br />

look to add depth as<br />

a defender.<br />

Havard and<br />

Cummings could also see action on defense this season as well.<br />

Goalie<br />

Morphitis (14 starts) and Shuster (four starts) played every second in<br />

net for the Pride last season and both return this year. Now entering<br />

her junior year, Morphitis will try to hold on to her spot on top of<br />

the depth chart after posting a 7-7 record with a 1.03 goals against<br />

average and four shutouts last season. Morphitis improved as the season<br />

progressed last year, posting three consecutive shutouts to cap the<br />

regular season while allowing only one goal in a loss to Delaware in<br />

the CAA Tournament. She allowed just one goal on 21 shots on net in<br />

her final four games, giving Hofstra hope she can carry that momentum<br />

into 2012. Shuster was solid in her five appearances, going 3-1 with a<br />

shutout against VCU. Lucy Gillett is also waiting in the wing to provide<br />

<strong>com</strong>petition for playing time in goal.<br />

Schedule<br />

Matchups against four teams that qualified for last season’s NCAA<br />

Tournament highlight the 2012 schedule. The Pride will play a<br />

challenging slate of games against 18 opponents that last year posted a<br />

collective 175-151-41 record.<br />

The Pride will face one of its toughest opponents in the season opener<br />

when they host Ohio State on Aug. 17. The Buckeyes advanced to the<br />

third round of last season’s national tournament before losing to No.<br />

3 Duke in the round of 16. Games against Temple and Georgetown at<br />

James Madison will start a stretch of four consecutive contests at neutral<br />

sites. Hofstra will then face Colgate on Princeton’s campus before taking<br />

on NCAA qualifier<br />

emily morphitis<br />

Wake Forest on<br />

Sept. 1. The Demon<br />

Deacons were 18-4-4<br />

last season.<br />

A road game at<br />

Marist on Sept. 9<br />

will also pit the Pride<br />

against a national<br />

tournament team<br />

from 2011. Hofstra<br />

will then start the<br />

CAA portion of<br />

the schedule versus<br />

UNCW on the road<br />

on Sept. 20. The<br />

home opener in CAA<br />

play will take place<br />

against Georgia<br />

State on Sept. 23.<br />

Hofstra will also host<br />

Delaware, George<br />

Mason, Towson and<br />

Northeastern in league play. Road CAA games include matchups at<br />

James Madison, Drexel, ODU and against defending champion William<br />

and Mary.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 13


PLAYER PROFILES<br />

15<br />

Defense<br />

5-7, Senior<br />

Smithtown, NY/<br />

Smithtown West<br />

Brooke Bendernagel<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2009 9 0 0 0<br />

2010 21 0 1 1<br />

2011 18 0 0 0<br />

Totals 40 0 1 1<br />

Fifth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster, including one red-shirt<br />

year…Expected to start at center back again this season…2011:<br />

Third team All-Colonial Athletic Association…Started<br />

all 18 games on the Hofstra central defense…Led a defensive<br />

unit that posted six shutouts…Helped Hofstra post a plus-78<br />

shot differential…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic<br />

Award…2010: Played in and started 21 games…Tallied one<br />

assist in a win over Fordham…Took one shot…Received CAA<br />

Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009: Played in nine games,<br />

including three starts…Started three straight games for the Pride<br />

against Columbia, Delaware and Drexel…Helped the defense<br />

to a shutout of Drexel in her third start…Took two shots on the<br />

year….2008: Red-shirted and did not play…High School:<br />

Played on the Smithtown West High School <strong>soccer</strong> team for<br />

four seasons…Also ran track for three years…Helped the Bulls<br />

to back-to-back division championships in 2006 and 2007…<br />

Was a two-time<br />

all-conference<br />

selection…<br />

Personal: Plans to<br />

be an elementary<br />

school teacher after<br />

graduation…Lists<br />

Alex Rodriguez<br />

as her favorite<br />

athlete…Has one<br />

younger sister…<br />

Started playing<br />

<strong>soccer</strong> at age 5…<br />

Dual major in<br />

early childhood<br />

education and<br />

psychology.<br />

Nicki Choffel<br />

3<br />

Midfield<br />

5-4, Senior<br />

Bellerose, NY/<br />

Mary Louis Academy<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2008 8 0 0 0<br />

2009 Medical red-shirt<br />

2010 DNP - injured<br />

2011 5 0 0 0<br />

Totals 13 0 0 0<br />

Fifth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster, including two seasons<br />

she missed in their entirety due to injuries…Was on the roster<br />

of the WPSL’s Long Island Fury in 2008 and again in 2010<br />

and 2012…2011: Appeared in five games as a reserve…<br />

Tallied one shot…Contributed to a defensive unit that produced<br />

shutouts against Columbia and Albany…Recorded her lone shot<br />

(and shot on goal) versus Albany on Sept. 4…2010: Missed<br />

the year with a torn ACL suffered in the summer…Received<br />

CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009: Missed the<br />

year with a torn ACL suffered in preseason, taking a medical<br />

redshirt…2008: Appeared in eight games off the bench for the<br />

Pride, primarily in the midfield…High School: Played on the<br />

Mary Louis <strong>soccer</strong> team in Jamaica Estates, New York for four<br />

years…Helped the Hilltoppers to Division B championships in<br />

2005 and 2007…Was a four-time team Most Valuable Player…<br />

Earned her school’s scholar-athlete award as a senior…Earned<br />

the Queens Times Ledger Player of the Year honor in 2007…<br />

Personal: Has one older sister…Started playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age<br />

4…Also recruited by Villanova, Delaware and Binghamton…<br />

Teaching of writing major.<br />

14 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


12<br />

Midfield/Defense<br />

5-5, Junior<br />

Kansas City, MO/<br />

St. Teresa’s Academy/<br />

St. John’s<br />

Kerry Cummings<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2011 12 0 0 0<br />

Second season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…Played<br />

for one season at St. John’s University before transferring…Can<br />

play either in the defensive midfield or central defense…2011:<br />

Played in 12 games, making 11 starts…Made an instant impact<br />

on defense, helping Hofstra shut out three opponents…Took<br />

seven shots…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…<br />

At St. John’s: Appeared in nine games for the Red Storm in<br />

2010, scoring one goal, which was a late game-winner in a 1-0<br />

victory over Big East rival Seton Hall…High School: Played<br />

four years of <strong>soccer</strong> at St. Teresa’s Academy in Kansas City…<br />

Helped her team to a<br />

third place finish in the<br />

state championships as<br />

a sophomore…Earned<br />

team captain honors as a<br />

senior…Led club team<br />

(BVSC All-Stars) to<br />

seven straight state titles<br />

in Kansas…Personal:<br />

Has two brothers and<br />

one sister…Lists Wayne<br />

Rooney and Michael<br />

Jordan as her favorite<br />

athletes…”Rudy” is<br />

her favorite movie…<br />

Started playing <strong>soccer</strong><br />

at age 5…Nicknamed<br />

“Bear”…”Decoded” is<br />

her favorite book…Has<br />

volunteered at homeless<br />

shelters in the Kansas<br />

City area and worked for<br />

Operation Breakthrough<br />

day care for inner<br />

city children…Health<br />

science major.<br />

10<br />

Defense<br />

5-7, Junior<br />

Lake Grove, NY/<br />

Sachem North<br />

Brittany Farriella<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2010 4 0 0 0<br />

2011 18 1 0 2<br />

Totals 22 1 0 2<br />

Fourth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster, including one redshirt<br />

year…Coming off her first year as a starter and was a key<br />

member of a defensive unit that posted six shutouts…2011:<br />

Played and started all 18 games…Scored one goal and registered<br />

three shots…Member of a defensive group that held opponents<br />

to 22 goals in 18 games…Scored first career goal versus James<br />

Madison on Sept. 23…2010: Appeared in four games off the<br />

bench for the Pride…2009: Red-shirted and did not play…<br />

High School: Played five years of Soccer at Sachem North<br />

High School in Lake Ronkonkoma, New York, earning a spot<br />

on the varsity in eighth grade…Earned both All-County and<br />

All-League honors…Also played for four years in Long Island’s<br />

Olympic Development Program…Personal: Has an older sister,<br />

Krysten, who played goalie on the Hofstra Women’s Soccer<br />

team…Full name is Brittany Farriella…Lists Cristiano Ronaldo<br />

as her favorite<br />

athlete…<br />

Started playing<br />

<strong>soccer</strong> at<br />

age 4…Also<br />

recruited<br />

by Miami,<br />

Connecticut,<br />

Boston<br />

University<br />

and Loyola…<br />

Criminology<br />

major.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 15


PLAYER PROFILES<br />

Tara Kerns<br />

Midfield<br />

5-2, Junior<br />

Chesapeake, VA/<br />

Great Bridge<br />

2<br />

1<br />

Goalkeeper<br />

5-6, Junior<br />

London, England/<br />

Therfield<br />

Emily Morphitis<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2010 21 0 1 1<br />

2011 18 0 2 2<br />

Totals 39 0 3 3<br />

Year GP W-L-T Min. GA Svs. Sv.% GAA<br />

2010 18 7-1-0 869:40 10 18 .643 1.03<br />

2011 14 7-7-0 1226:00 14 44 .758 1.03<br />

Totals 32 14-8-0 2095:40 24 62 .720 1.03<br />

Third season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…Can play<br />

either outside back or defensive midfield…2011: Played and<br />

started all 18 games…Notched two assists in her first year as<br />

a starter…Took eight shots…Picked up her first point of the<br />

season and the second of her career when she assisted on Brittany<br />

Butts’ opening goal in a 5-0 win versus Albany on Sept. 4…<br />

Also assisted on Laura Green’s game-opening goal on Sept.<br />

23 versus James Madison…Part of a defensive unit that shut<br />

out six opponents…Named to the New York City Classic All-<br />

Tournament Team…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic<br />

Award…2010: Appeared in 21 games for the Pride, primarily<br />

as a defender and defensive midfielder…Had one assist in a<br />

home win over Rhode Island…Took four shots…Received<br />

CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played<br />

for four years at Great Bridge High School in Chesapeake,<br />

Virginia…Led her squads to the district and regional tournaments<br />

in all four seasons…Was named the MVP of the Wildcats as both<br />

a freshman and senior…Was named the Southeastern District<br />

Player of the Year in 2010…Was also a first-team all-district<br />

and an all-Tidewater selection in<br />

2010…Traveled to Russia with the<br />

Olympic Development Program<br />

(ODP) regional team in 2010…<br />

Also chosen to the National Honor<br />

Society as a senior…Personal:<br />

Has two older brothers…Played<br />

with the Virginia Rush <strong>soccer</strong><br />

club…Nicknamed “T.K.”…Started<br />

playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age 6…Hopes to<br />

coach <strong>soccer</strong> after graduation…Has<br />

volunteered with TOPS Soccer, a<br />

<strong>com</strong>munity-based training program<br />

for young athletes with disabilities,<br />

and as a Wyldlife Youth Group<br />

leader…Physical education major.<br />

Third season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…Coming off<br />

her first season as the starting goalkeeper…2011: Played and<br />

started 14 games…Posted a 7-7-0 record with four shutouts…<br />

Allowed just 14 goals on 146 shots faced…Finished with a<br />

.759 save percentage…Logged a 1.03 goals-against average in<br />

1226:00 of playing time…Made two saves for her first shutout of<br />

the season in a 2-0 win versus Columbia on Sept. 2...Registered<br />

three consecutive CAA shutouts, blanking Georgia State, UNC<br />

Wilmington and Northeastern in succession to cap the regular<br />

season…Stopped all 12 shots on goal faced during the shutout<br />

stretch, which all came on the road…Made a career-high nine<br />

saves in a 1-0 loss versus Delaware in the CAA Tournament<br />

on Nov. 3…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic<br />

Award…2010: Appeared in 18 games for the Pride, usually<br />

playing the second half while platooning at goalkeeper…Started<br />

three games…Had a 7-1 record in net, suffering only one loss on<br />

opening day against Boston College…Had a season-high three<br />

saves in wins over Delaware and Drexel…Had two second-half<br />

saves in a 1-0 win over James Madison…Combined on eight<br />

shutouts on the year…Had a .643 save percentage and a 1.03<br />

goals against average…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic<br />

Award…High School: Attended the Therfield School in Surrey,<br />

England…Played <strong>soccer</strong> for the Chelsea<br />

Ladies in Surrey, England, along with<br />

Hofstra classmates Amber Stobbs and<br />

Ruby Staplehurst…Has played for<br />

the England Under-19, Under-17 and<br />

Under-15 teams…Named to the Inner<br />

London Squad and the English Colleges<br />

Squad…Personal: Has an older sister<br />

and a younger brother…Lists David<br />

Beckham as her favorite athlete…Started<br />

playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age 7…Nicknamed<br />

“Morph”…Lists “Freedom Writers” as<br />

her favorite movie…Criminology major.<br />

16 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


Kylie Shuster<br />

0<br />

Goalkeeper<br />

5-6, Junior<br />

Austin, TX/Cedar Park<br />

Year GP W-L-T Min. GA Svs. Sv.% GAA<br />

2009 5 0-0-1 156:03 0 11 1.000 0.00<br />

2010 DNP-injured<br />

2011 5 3-1-1 405:00 8 16 .667 1.78<br />

Totals 10 3-1-2 561:03 8 27 .771 1.28<br />

Fourth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster,<br />

including one medical red-shirt season…2011:<br />

Appeared in five games, making four starts…<br />

Faced 54 total shots and made 16 saves…Posted<br />

a 1.78 goals-against average…Went 3-1-0 with a<br />

shutout…Notched her second career shutout by<br />

making two saves in a 2-0 blanking over VCU on<br />

Sept. 25…Played the second half to <strong>com</strong>bine with<br />

Morphitis on a shutout in a 5-0 win versus Albany<br />

on Sept. 4…Allowed just eight goals in 405:00<br />

of playing time…Received CAA Commissioner’s<br />

Academic Award…2010: Injured her knee in the<br />

spring and took a medical red-shirt…Received<br />

CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009:<br />

Appeared in five games for the Pride, including<br />

one start…Picked up a shutout with eight saves in<br />

her only start, a 0-0 tie with Georgia State, in which she made<br />

two key saves in overtime to help preserve the tie…Stopped all<br />

11 shots she faced on the year in 156:03 of playing time…Came<br />

on in relief of a 2-1 win over UNC Wilmington in the closing<br />

minutes after an injury to starter Krysten Farriella and preserved<br />

the win…High School: Played four years on the Cedar Park<br />

(TX) High School team…Helped her teams to the district<br />

championship as a junior and to the district finals as a senior…<br />

Had 11 shutouts and a 0.38 goals against average in 2008…Was a<br />

first team all-district selection in each of her last three seasons…<br />

Was also a two-time district MVP, an all-region selection by the<br />

Texas Association of Soccer Coaches, and was named a High<br />

School Prime Time Player of the Year by ESPN as a senior…<br />

Was also an Academic All-Texas selection…Personal: Has<br />

two younger twin sisters…Lists David Beckham as her favorite<br />

athlete…Started playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age 4…Also recruited by<br />

Baylor, Stephen F. Austin, Rice and TCU…Chose Hofstra in part<br />

due to its <strong>com</strong>munications school and internship opportunities…<br />

Speech <strong>com</strong>munication and rhetorical studies major.<br />

7<br />

Defense<br />

5-4, Junior<br />

London, England/<br />

St. Thomas More<br />

Ruby Staplehurst<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2010 11 2 1 5<br />

2011 18 0 6 6<br />

Totals 29 2 7 11<br />

Third season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…Can play<br />

either forward or outside back…2011: Played and started all 18<br />

games…Tallied a team-leading six assists in her first season as<br />

a starter…Took eight shots…Twice logged games with multiple<br />

assists, including two assists at Harvard on Sept. 16 and another<br />

pair of helpers versus James Madison on Sept. 23 for four points<br />

in a two-game span…Also assisted on Courtney Breen’s goal<br />

versus Albany on Sept. 4…Received CAA Commissioner’s<br />

Academic Award…2010: Appeared in 11 games, while seeing<br />

time as both an outside defender and a forward…Had two goals<br />

and one assist…Scored her first collegiate goal on a breakaway<br />

in a 2-0 road win over VCU…Added a goal on a header in<br />

a win over George Mason…Assisted on a goal in a 4-1 win<br />

over Fordham…Took five shots…High School: Attended<br />

St. Thomas More Language College in London, England…<br />

Played <strong>soccer</strong> for the Chelsea Ladies in Surrey, England, along<br />

with Hofstra classmates Emily Morphitis and Amber Stobbs…<br />

Helped her squad to a league championship in 2009, as well<br />

as the County Cup…Personal: Has one brother…Lists David<br />

Beckham as her favorite athlete…Favorite book is “Angela’s<br />

Ashes”…Started playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age 7…Enjoys Indian food…<br />

Favorite movies are the “Toy Story” series…Journalism major.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 17


PLAYER PROFILES<br />

Amber Stobbs<br />

9<br />

Forward<br />

5-2, Junior<br />

London, England/<br />

Warlingham<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2010 17 2 1 5<br />

2011 4 0 1 1<br />

Totals 21 2 2 6<br />

Third season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…<br />

Expected to challenge for a starting spot at forward or outside<br />

midfield…2011: Played in four games, making three starts<br />

before missing rest of season due to injury…Tallied one assist…<br />

Took seven shots…Assisted on Laura Greene’s first goal versus<br />

Albany on Sept. 4…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic<br />

Award…2010: Appeared in 17<br />

games, including three starts…<br />

Had two goals and one assist…<br />

Scored the game’s first goal in<br />

the second half of a 2-1 win<br />

over Drexel… Had a goal in a<br />

5-0 win over George Mason to<br />

give the Pride a 2-0 lead just<br />

before halftime, helping her<br />

earn CAA Rookie of the Week<br />

honors on Oct. 11…Assisted on<br />

a goal in a win over Towson…<br />

Suffered a late-season injury<br />

that kept her out of the line-up<br />

for over three weeks…Took<br />

16 shots…Received CAA<br />

Commissioner’s Academic<br />

Award…High School:<br />

Attended the Warlingham School<br />

in Warlingham, England…<br />

Also played for the Chelsea<br />

Ladies F.C., along with Hofstra<br />

classmates Emily Morphitis<br />

and Ruby Staplehurst…Was a<br />

scholastic sprinter while at Warlingham, <strong>com</strong>peting in the 100<br />

and 200 meter events…Personal: Has an older brother…Lists<br />

David Beckham and Cristiano Ronaldo her favorite athletes…<br />

Lists the “Toy Story” series as her favorite movies and the<br />

“Twilight” series as her favorite books… Nicknamed “Stobzy”…<br />

Started playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age 6…Psychology major.<br />

Caylin Dudley<br />

23<br />

defense<br />

5-3 Sophomore<br />

Grasonville, MD/<br />

Kent Island<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2011 18 4 0 8<br />

Second season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…2011:<br />

Made an immediate impact as a freshman, playing in all 18<br />

games, including 12 starts…Scored four goals, marking the<br />

fourth-highest total on the team…Took 21 shots…Out of the<br />

Hofstra players with multiple goals, she posted the highest<br />

shooting percentage at .190…Scored her first career goal versus<br />

Columbia on Sept. 2…Scored her first CAA goal and first<br />

career game-winner in a 1-0 victory over VCU on Sept. 25…<br />

Notched her first career two-goal game, providing Hofstra’s only<br />

offense in a 3-2 loss at Delaware on Oct. 2…Received CAA<br />

Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played for<br />

four seasons at Kent Island High School…Earned first-team All-<br />

Bayside honors all four years…Was a three-time team MVP…<br />

Scored 15 goals and 11 assists as a sophomore, 16 goals and 10<br />

assists as a junior and 18 goals and 14 assists as a senior…Was<br />

named the League Player of the Year as a senior, when she led the<br />

conference in both goals and assists…Earned the Maryland State<br />

Merit Scholastic Award for academic achievement…Personal:<br />

Has one brother and<br />

one sister…Spent<br />

the summer of 2011<br />

playing for the ASA<br />

Chesapeake Charge<br />

in the Women’s<br />

Premier Soccer<br />

League, helping<br />

her team to the<br />

Eastern Conference<br />

Championship…Lists<br />

“Pride and Prejudice”<br />

by Jane Austen as<br />

her favorite book…<br />

Started playing<br />

<strong>soccer</strong> at age 4…<br />

Accounting major.<br />

18 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


14<br />

Forward<br />

5-5, Sophomore<br />

East meadow, ny/<br />

east meadow<br />

Lulu Echeverry<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2011 18 0 1 1<br />

Second season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…Can play<br />

either forward or an attacking midfield role…2011: Played<br />

an invaluable role as a freshman, appearing in all 18 games,<br />

including three starts…Recorded one assist…Took eight shots…<br />

Picked up her first career point by assisting on Laura Greene’s<br />

first goal in a 2-1 CAA win versus Drexel on Sept. 29…Made<br />

her first career start versus Old Dominion on Oct. 16…High<br />

School: Played for four seasons at East Meadow High School…<br />

Was an all-county selection as a senior, as well as second team<br />

All-New York State…Also an all-conference selection as a junior<br />

and senior…Helped her team to two Nassau County finals as a<br />

sophomore and senior, and a semifinals appearance as s junior…<br />

Also ran on the track team, earning all-county honors in the<br />

steeplechase, and played on the badminton team as a senior…Was<br />

on the honor roll every semester…Personal: Full name is Luisa<br />

Echeverry…Born in Cali, Colombia…Has one sister…Lists<br />

Lionel Messi, Wayne Rooney and Marta as her favorite athletes…<br />

“Nineteen Minutes” by Jodi Picoult is her favorite book…Hopes<br />

to continue playing <strong>soccer</strong> after graduation...Started playing<br />

<strong>soccer</strong> at age 5…Exercise science major.<br />

Lucy Gillett<br />

31<br />

Goalkeeper<br />

5-10, Sophomore<br />

Rockville Centre, NY/<br />

South SidE<br />

Second season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…2011:<br />

Did not play…High School: Played for two seasons on the<br />

<strong>soccer</strong> team at South Side High School in Rockville Centre, New<br />

York, one of the top scholastic programs in the country…Also<br />

played on the lacrosse team for two years…Was a high honor<br />

roll selection and a member of the national honor society…<br />

Personal: Has two brothers…Lists Hope Solo as her favorite<br />

athlete…Hopes to coach <strong>soccer</strong> after graduation…Physical<br />

education major.<br />

Caylin Dudley is interviewed by FiOS Sports after<br />

her goal gave the Pride a 1-0 win over VCU on<br />

September 25.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 19


PLAYER PROFILES<br />

Erin Havard<br />

Midfield/defense<br />

5-7, Sophomore<br />

Fairfax, VA/<br />

W.T. Woodson<br />

5<br />

Anya Koren<br />

11<br />

Forward<br />

5-7, Sophomore<br />

Scottsdale, AZ/<br />

Desert Mountain<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2011 12 0 1 1<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2011 10 1 2 4<br />

Second season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…2011:<br />

Played in 12 games as a reserve…Registered one assist…Took<br />

seven shots…Made college debut versus TCU on Sept. 11…<br />

Recorded first career point by assisting on Courtney Breen’s<br />

goal in a CAA Win at UNC Wilmington on Oct. 23…High<br />

School: Played on the varsity team at W.T. Woodson for four<br />

years…Scored the game-winning goal to help the Cavaliers<br />

win the Northern Region championship as a senior…Also<br />

helped her squad to a district championship as a junior…Alldistrict<br />

selection as a junior and senior and a team captain as a<br />

senior…Member of the national honors society…Also played<br />

club <strong>soccer</strong> for 10 years with McLean Azul, helping her team<br />

to six Virginia State Cup championships (2005-09, 2011)…<br />

Personal: Has one brother and one sister, who was a swimmer<br />

at East Carolina…Five-year member of the Virginia Olympic<br />

Development Program, helping her team to a third-place finish in<br />

the 2009 national<br />

championships…<br />

Lists Brett Favre<br />

and Steve Nash<br />

as her favorite<br />

athletes…Started<br />

playing <strong>soccer</strong><br />

at age 5…Chose<br />

Hofstra in part<br />

for its business<br />

program and<br />

its proximity to<br />

New York City…<br />

Finance major.<br />

Second season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…2011:<br />

Played in 10 games, making three starts as a freshman…Scored<br />

one goal and added two assists for four points…Took 26 shots…<br />

Made college debut versus Fairfield on Aug. 26…Started first<br />

college game versus Texas Tech on Sept. 9…Picked up first<br />

career point by assisting on Caylin Dudley’s goal in a win over<br />

Columbia on Sept. 2…Also notched an assist versus Harvard<br />

on Sept. 16…Scored first career goal in a CAA win at Georgia<br />

State on Oct. 21…High School: Played for three seasons on the<br />

Desert Mountain High School team, missing her junior year…<br />

Tallied 33 goals and 12 assists as a senior while helping to lead<br />

her team to the state quarterfinals…Was named to the Arizona<br />

All-State teams, as well as the All-Desert Valley, All-Region, and<br />

All-Tribune teams…Was listed as one of the Top 20 Players to<br />

Watch in the Rocky Mountain region by Top Drawer Soccer…<br />

Had 13 goals and 12 assists as a sophomore, and 12 goals and 11<br />

assists as a freshman…Personal: Has one sister…Born in San<br />

Jose, California…Played on the SC Del Sol club team, which<br />

has won Arizona<br />

state championships<br />

eight times…Lists<br />

Cristiano Ronaldo,<br />

Didier Drogba, Thierry<br />

Henry and LeBron<br />

James as her favorite<br />

athletes…Starting<br />

playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age<br />

3…Hopes to get a job<br />

in sports marketing<br />

after graduation…<br />

Chose Hofstra in<br />

part for its business/<br />

marketing programs…<br />

Coaches <strong>soccer</strong> for the<br />

Special Olympics for<br />

four years…Undecided<br />

major.<br />

20 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


Ingrid Moyer<br />

Forward<br />

5-8, Sophomore<br />

Souderton, PA/<br />

Souderton Area<br />

6<br />

Sam Scolarici<br />

19<br />

Forward<br />

5-3, Sophomore<br />

Aldie, VA/Freedom<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2011 6 0 0 0<br />

Year GP G A Pts.<br />

2011 18 5 2 12<br />

Second season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…Attended<br />

Eastern University in Pennsylvania for a year, but did not play<br />

<strong>soccer</strong>…Played the summer of 2011 for the Buxmont Torch FC of<br />

the Women’s Premier Soccer League (WPSL)…2011: Appeared<br />

in six games as a reserve…Took one shot…Made college debut<br />

versus Columbia on Sept. 2…Received CAA Commissioner’s<br />

Academic Award…High School: Played for four seasons at<br />

Souderton Area High School, where she graduated in 2010…<br />

Started all four years…Helped lead team to only its second<br />

playoff appearance in school history as a junior, when she led<br />

the team in scoring and was an all-conference selection…Also<br />

was a member of the Eastern Pennsylvania ODP program for<br />

four years, and played for the FC Bucks Fusion club team…<br />

Also participated on the diving team for one year, qualifying<br />

for districts…Personal: Has one brother and one sister…Sister<br />

plays <strong>soccer</strong> at Lafayette…Lists Mia Hamm as her favorite<br />

athlete…Started playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age four…Nickamed “Ingie”…<br />

“Mind Gym: An Athlete’s Guide To Inner Excellence” by Gary<br />

Mack is her favorite book…Undecided major.<br />

Second season on the Hofstra women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…2011: All<br />

Colonial Athletic Association Rookie Team member…<br />

Started all 18 games as a freshman...Finished third on the team<br />

with five goals while adding two points for 12 points…One of<br />

just three Hofstra players with double-digit point totals…Needed<br />

just 18 shots on goal to score five times…Scored first career<br />

goal at Texas Tech on Sept. 9…Scored first career CAA goal<br />

at Towson on Oct. 7…Netted a key goal in a 2-1 win over Old<br />

Dominion on Oct. 16…Registered first career multi-goal game in<br />

regular season finale at Northeastern on Oct. 28…Received CAA<br />

Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played at<br />

Freedom High School in South Riding, Virginia for four years…<br />

First team all-district and second team all-region selection as a<br />

senior…Helped her team to a 13-4-1 record her senior year, the<br />

school’s best-ever record…Second team All-Met selection by the<br />

Washington Post as a senior…Was an all-region selection for four<br />

years, including the only freshman chosen in 2007, when she was<br />

a team MVP…Scored a goal in the 2009 U.S. Youth Soccer ODP<br />

national championships to help Virginia to a third-place finish…<br />

Personal: Has one younger brother…Lists Lionel Messi has her<br />

favorite athlete…Nicknamed “Sammy”…Started playing <strong>soccer</strong><br />

at age 7…Chose Hofstra for its atmosphere and its women’s<br />

<strong>soccer</strong> program…Journalism major.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 21


PLAYER PROFILES<br />

Amanda Heyde<br />

25<br />

Defense<br />

5-3, Senior<br />

Somers, NY/Somers<br />

First season on the Hofstra’s women’s <strong>soccer</strong> roster…Played four<br />

years of field hockey with the Pride as a goalie…Finished her<br />

field hockey career with 360 saves to place eighth on Hofstra’s<br />

all-time career list…Posted 13 wins in 2011, tying for the secondmost<br />

in the regular season in school history…Compiled 34 career<br />

wins…Notched four career shutouts…High School: Played<br />

four years of field hockey at Somers High School in Lincolndale,<br />

New York...Was a National Field Hockey Coaches Association<br />

second team high school All-American and All-North Region<br />

selection as a senior...Earned Journal News and North County<br />

News All-Star accolades...Named all-state, all-section and allleague<br />

in 2007 and all-section and all-league in 2006...Holds<br />

school record with 42 career shutouts...Helped the Hudson Valley<br />

Region win gold medals in field hockey at the Empire State<br />

Games in 2005, 2006 and 2007... Personal: Has three sisters...<br />

Oldest sister, Melissa, played field hockey at SUNY-Cortland and<br />

won a Division II National Championship in 2001...Older sister,<br />

Kristen, played field hockey at Siena and holds the Saint’s career<br />

saves mark...Hobbies include playing <strong>soccer</strong> and lacrosse...Began<br />

playing field hockey at age 13...Member of the SADD Club and<br />

the Environmental Club in high school and also is a youth <strong>soccer</strong><br />

trainer...Plans to be<strong>com</strong>e a physical education teacher...Physical<br />

education major.<br />

Samantha Calvet<br />

High School: Played <strong>soccer</strong>, basketball and softball at the New<br />

International School of Thailand…Named her team’s MVP for<br />

four consecutive seasons…Earned four consecutive Athlete of<br />

the Year awards for the Falcons…Served as a team captain for<br />

her <strong>soccer</strong>, basketball and softball teams in her senior season…<br />

Personal: Lists Hope Solo as her favorite athlete…Has one<br />

older brother…Exercise science major.<br />

Chloe Dale<br />

22<br />

Midfield<br />

5-7, Freshman<br />

Bangkok, Thailand/<br />

New International<br />

School of Thailand<br />

8<br />

Midfield<br />

5-6, Freshman<br />

Birmingham, United<br />

Kingdom/Langley<br />

Secondary/Merrist<br />

Wood College<br />

Previous College: Played two seasons of <strong>soccer</strong> for Merrist<br />

Wood College in Guildford, England…Won Player of the Year in<br />

both 2011 and 2012…Helped her team to the Chelsea Reserves<br />

League title in 2011 and the County Cup and Subsidary Cup in<br />

2012…High School: Played <strong>soccer</strong> and ran cross country for<br />

Langley Secondary School in Birmingham, United Kingdom…<br />

Won the Role of Honor award as a senior…Ran 800m/1500m<br />

for five years…Personal: Started playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age 7…Lists<br />

Jack Wilshere as her favorite athlete…Has one younger brother…<br />

Undecided major.<br />

22 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


Leah Galton<br />

21<br />

Forward<br />

5-7, Freshman<br />

Harrogate, England/<br />

St. John Fishers<br />

High School: Competed in <strong>soccer</strong>, cross country and athletics at<br />

St. John Fishers Catholic High School in Harrogate, England…<br />

Helped cross country team to a national championship in 2006…<br />

Played club <strong>soccer</strong> for the Leeds United Ladies FC…Was a<br />

member of the England U15, U17 and U19 squads…Personal:<br />

Has two sisters…Nicknamed “Galts”…Lists Jess Enis and<br />

Lionel Messi as her favorite athletes…Names “Boy in the Striped<br />

Pajamas” as her favorite book…Undecided major.<br />

13<br />

Midfield<br />

5-2, Freshman<br />

Clifton, VA/Robinson<br />

Secondary<br />

Jeannine Molleda<br />

High School: Played on the Robinson Secondary School’s<br />

varsity <strong>soccer</strong> team for four seasons in Fairfax, Virginia…Also<br />

ran track for two years…Helped the Rams to a district title<br />

and an appearance in the regional finals as a sophomore…Was<br />

named to the Elite Clubs National League All-Event Team…<br />

Personal: Lists Sergio Ramos as her favorite athlete…Has one<br />

older brother…Started playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age 5…Athletic training<br />

major.<br />

4<br />

Defense<br />

5-7, Freshman<br />

Moehlin,<br />

Switzerland/<br />

Gymnasium Baumlihof<br />

Lea Hinnen<br />

High School: Attended Gymnasium Baumlihof in Basel,<br />

Switzerland…Is a 2011 graduate…Played club <strong>soccer</strong> with FC<br />

Moehlin, FC Basel and FC Yverdon-Feminin…Also a member<br />

of the U17 and U19 Swiss Women’s National Teams…Helped<br />

her U19 team to the semifinals of the European Championship in<br />

Italy…Captained the U18 FC Basel from 2007 to 2009…Selected<br />

to Regional Talent’s Team from 2006 to 2009…Was one of the<br />

youngest players to <strong>com</strong>pete in National League A, Switzerland’s<br />

top league, in 2009…Graduated in the top 15 of her class…<br />

Personal: Has one brother and one sister…Hobbies include<br />

reading, sports and spending time with family and friends…Lists<br />

hip hop and electronic music as her favorite genre’s…Nicknamed<br />

“Lane”…Began playing <strong>soccer</strong> at age 11…Sociology major.<br />

17<br />

Midfield<br />

5-5, Freshman<br />

Levittown, NY/<br />

MacArthur<br />

Jill Mulholland<br />

Played on the Long Island Fury (WPSL) this past summer…High<br />

School: Played <strong>soccer</strong> at MacArthur High School in Levittown,<br />

New York, for four years…Member of the varsity <strong>soccer</strong> state<br />

championship team in 2011…Also helped the Generals to Nassau<br />

County and Long Island title…Earned NSCAA All-America<br />

accolades and was named the New York Class AA Co-Player of<br />

the Year as a senior…Named Nassau County finals MVP…Posted<br />

17 goals and 11 assists on the season…Earned three all-county<br />

selections in her final three seasons…Was a two-time All Long<br />

Island selection…Personal: Lists Dan Girardi as her favorite<br />

athlete…Has two brothers…Undecided major.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 23


HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT<br />

Stuart Rabinowitz was<br />

chosen by the Hofstra<br />

University Board of<br />

Trustees to serve as the eighth<br />

president of the University on<br />

December 20, 2000. Prior to his<br />

appointment, he served as dean<br />

of Hofstra University School<br />

of Law from September 1989<br />

through June 2001. He joined<br />

the faculty of the School of Law<br />

in 1972. President Rabinowitz<br />

currently holds the Andrew<br />

M. Boas and Mark L. Claster<br />

Distinguished Professorship in<br />

Civil Procedure.<br />

President Rabinowitz holds<br />

positions with a number of<br />

important government and<br />

<strong>com</strong>munity organizations,<br />

including the Judicial Advisory<br />

Council of the State of New<br />

York Unified Court System<br />

- County of Nassau, and the<br />

Nassau County Health and<br />

Welfare Council. He serves as<br />

a trustee of the Commission<br />

on Independent Colleges and<br />

Universities, and on the Board of Directors for the Fair Media<br />

Council and the Long Island Technology Network. President<br />

Rabinowitz is a former member of the Nassau County Blue<br />

Ribbon Financial Review Panel, former chair of the Nassau<br />

County Local Advisory Board, and a former member of<br />

the Board of Directors of the Long Island Association.<br />

Additionally, President Rabinowitz<br />

served as a member of the<br />

Nassau County Commission on<br />

Government Revision, which<br />

was charged with drafting a<br />

new charter and a new form of<br />

government for the County. He is<br />

the recipient of the Martin Luther<br />

King Living the Dream Award,<br />

EOC; Distinguished Service<br />

in the Cause of Justice, Legal<br />

Aid Society; UJA Federation<br />

Leadership Award; the Bar<br />

Association of Nassau County<br />

Proclamation for Outstanding<br />

Service to both the legal<br />

profession and the <strong>com</strong>munity;<br />

the Community Service Award<br />

from the Conference of Jewish<br />

Organizations of Nassau County;<br />

and the Alumni Association of the<br />

City College of New York 2005<br />

Townsend Harris Medal. He has<br />

also been honored by the Long<br />

Island Software and Technology<br />

Network (LISTnet) and was<br />

the recipient of Networking<br />

magazine’s David Award.<br />

President Rabinowitz received a juris doctor, magna cum<br />

laude, from Columbia University School of Law, where he was<br />

a member of the board of editors of the Columbia Law Review<br />

and a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar. He graduated from City<br />

College of New York with honors, and is a member of Phi Beta<br />

Kappa and the American Law Institute.<br />

President Rabinowitz, Hofstra Pride Club Board member James C. Metzger ’83 and<br />

Hofstra Pride Club President E. David Woycik ’77 at the 2011 Pride Student-Athlete<br />

Awards Banquet<br />

24 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


UNIVERSITY SENIOR ADMINISTRATION/TRUSTEES<br />

As of August 2012<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Janis M. Meyer,* Chair<br />

James E. Quinn,* Vice Chair<br />

Peter G. Schiff, Vice Chair<br />

David S. Mack,* Secretary<br />

Stuart Rabinowitz, President<br />

M. Patricia Adamski<br />

Senior Vice President<br />

for Planning and<br />

Administration<br />

Joseph M. Barkwill<br />

Vice President for<br />

Facilities<br />

and Operations<br />

Jessica Eads<br />

Vice President for<br />

Enrollment Services<br />

Dolores Fredrich,<br />

Esq.<br />

Vice President for<br />

Legal Affairs and<br />

General Counsel<br />

Sandra S. Johnson<br />

Vice President for<br />

Student Affairs<br />

MEMBERS<br />

Alan J. Bernon*<br />

Tejinder Bindra<br />

Robert F. Dall*<br />

Helene Fortunoff<br />

Steven J. Freiberg*<br />

Martin B. Greenberg*<br />

Joseph M. Gregory*<br />

Leo A. Guthart<br />

Peter S. Kalikow*<br />

Abby Kenigsberg<br />

Arthur J. Kremer<br />

Karen L. Lutz<br />

Donna M. Mendes*<br />

John D. Miller*<br />

Marilyn B. Monter*<br />

Martha S. Pope<br />

Edwin C. Reed<br />

Robert D. Rosenthal*<br />

Debra A. Sandler*<br />

Thomas J. Sanzone*<br />

Joseph Sparacio*<br />

Frank G. Zarb*<br />

Dr. Herman Berliner<br />

Provost and Senior Vice<br />

President for<br />

Academic Affairs<br />

Richard V. Guardino,<br />

Jr., Esq.<br />

Vice President for Business<br />

Development<br />

Robert W. Juckiewicz<br />

Vice President for<br />

Information Technology<br />

DELEGATES<br />

William F. Nirode, Speaker of the Faculty<br />

Stuart L. Bass,* Chair, University Senate Executive Committee<br />

Elizabeth K. Venuti, Chair, University Senate Planning and<br />

Budget Committee<br />

Tevon Hyman, President, Student Government Association<br />

Ron Singh, Vice President, Student Government Association<br />

Tanya Levy-Odom,* President, Alumni Organization<br />

James M. Shuart,* President Emeritus<br />

Stephanie Bushey<br />

Vice President for<br />

Institutional Research and<br />

Assessment<br />

JEFFREY A. HATHAWAY<br />

Vice President and<br />

Director of Athletics<br />

Alan J. Kelly<br />

Vice President<br />

for Development<br />

Wilbur Breslin, Trustee Emeritus<br />

Emil V. Cianciulli,* Chair Emeritus<br />

John J. Conefry, Jr., Chair Emeritus<br />

Maurice A. Deane,* Chair Emeritus<br />

George G. Dempster,* Chair Emeritus<br />

Joseph L. Dionne,* Trustee Emeritus<br />

Bernard Fixler,* Trustee Emeritus<br />

Florence Kaufman, Trustee Emerita<br />

Walter B. Kissinger, Trustee Emeritus<br />

Ann M. Mallouk,* Chair Emerita<br />

Thomas H. O’Brien, Trustee Emeritus<br />

Arnold A. Saltzman, Trustee Emeritus<br />

Norman R. Tengstrom,* Trustee Emeritus<br />

Melissa Connolly<br />

Vice President for University<br />

Relations<br />

Catherine Hennessy<br />

Vice President for Financial<br />

Affairs and Treasurer<br />

* Hofstra Alumni<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 25


HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS<br />

jeffrey a. Hathaway<br />

vice president and<br />

director of Athletics<br />

Hofstra University President Stuart<br />

Rabinowitz announced on May 15,<br />

2012, that the University had hired<br />

Jeffrey A. Hathaway, formerly the director of<br />

athletics for the University of Connecticut and<br />

the outgoing chairman of the NCAA Division<br />

I Men’s Basketball Committee, as Hofstra<br />

University’s new vice president and director of<br />

athletics.<br />

“In collegiate athletics, the name Jeff Hathaway<br />

means success on any number of levels: in<br />

the classroom, on the playing field, in the<br />

boardroom, with donors and the media. Most<br />

importantly, Jeff’s focus on excellence, ethics,<br />

leadership and academics will allow the Hofstra<br />

Pride athletics program to move to the next<br />

level of excellence,” said Rabinowitz. “His<br />

tenure at the University of Connecticut was<br />

one of unprecedented growth, and under his<br />

leadership, we look forward to ushering in a<br />

new era of Hofstra Pride athletic success.”<br />

“I am excited to join the Hofstra University<br />

<strong>com</strong>munity and to have the opportunity to<br />

provide leadership and serve the studentathletes,<br />

coaches and staff in this outstanding<br />

athletics program,” <strong>com</strong>mented Hathaway. “I<br />

particularly would like to thank President Stuart<br />

Rabinowitz for allowing me to be<strong>com</strong>e part<br />

of the Hofstra University family. Throughout<br />

my career I have been be part of programs<br />

that have <strong>com</strong>peted against Hofstra and I have<br />

seen firsthand the success the Pride has had<br />

over the years. My primary focus will be on<br />

the academic achievement of our studentathletes<br />

and providing them the opportunity to<br />

participate and achieve in their academic and<br />

athletic endeavors as we prepare them for their<br />

lives after graduation from Hofstra.”<br />

Hathaway guided the University of Connecticut<br />

(UConn) Division of Athletics through an<br />

unprecedented period of academic and athletic<br />

achievement during his eight years as director<br />

of athletics from 2003 to 2011. At the same<br />

time, he became an influential leader for college<br />

athletics on both the national and conference<br />

level.<br />

Hathaway played a vital role in UConn’s success<br />

story for nearly 20 years as he was the executive<br />

associate director of athletics at the school from<br />

1990 to 2001. In his two years away from the<br />

Storrs campus, Hathaway enjoyed a successful<br />

tenure as the director of athletics at Colorado<br />

State University from 2001 to 2003.<br />

During Hathaway’s career, he has always made<br />

the academic success of student-athletes a top<br />

priority. In the classroom, more than 50% of<br />

UConn’s 650 student-athletes achieved a 3.0<br />

“B-or better” semester grade point average<br />

during the spring and/or fall semesters of the<br />

2010 calendar year, including 16 who earned a<br />

perfect 4.0 grade point average. In addition, the<br />

Division of Athletics consistently maintained<br />

a 99 percent academic retention rate among its<br />

student-athletes.<br />

The University of Connecticut was saluted for<br />

its <strong>com</strong>munity service efforts by the National<br />

Consortium for Academics and Sports (NCAS)<br />

three times under Hathaway’s watch for its<br />

<strong>com</strong>munity service efforts. UConn was also<br />

honored by the NCAS in 2006 and 2007 for<br />

its efforts to assist former student-athletes in<br />

earning their college degree.<br />

Hathaway’s leadership positions have extended<br />

beyond the campus. He recently <strong>com</strong>pleted a<br />

five-year term as a member of the prestigious<br />

NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee,<br />

representing the BIG EAST Conference,<br />

serving as chair in 2011-12. As a member<br />

of the 10-person <strong>com</strong>mittee, Hathaway took<br />

part in the selection and administration of the<br />

NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship and<br />

the administration of the CBS/Turner television<br />

contract.<br />

During his tenure at both Colorado State<br />

and UConn, he was a member of the NCAA<br />

Division I Championships/Competition<br />

Cabinet. On the conference level, Hathaway was<br />

the chair of the BIG EAST Athletic Directors<br />

Executive Committee through November<br />

of 2009. He is also past chairman of the<br />

BIG EAST Championship and Competition<br />

Committee as well as the league’s Finance<br />

Committee. Hathaway is a member of the<br />

Division I-A Athletic Directors Association<br />

Board of Trustees and on the Executive<br />

Committee of the National Association of<br />

Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA). In<br />

2004 The Sporting News named Hathaway to its<br />

“Power 100 List” - <strong>com</strong>prised of the 100 most<br />

powerful people in sports.<br />

During his time at the University of<br />

Connecticut, private fundraising averaged more<br />

than $13 million a year. Hathaway was also<br />

responsible negotiating several key revenue and<br />

partnership agreements, securing major gifts,<br />

and guiding the building of two LEED certified<br />

athletic facilities, UConn’s first, which received<br />

recognition from the University and from the<br />

Connecticut Real Estate Exchange.<br />

Hathaway led a head coaching staff that is one<br />

of the most experienced in the country. At the<br />

conclusion of Hathaway’s tenure, UConn had<br />

26 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


12 head coaches that had been in their current<br />

position 10 or more years as of the 2010-11<br />

academic year.<br />

In Hathaway’s final year with UConn, the<br />

Huskies experienced great athletic success.<br />

The men’s basketball team won its third<br />

NCAA Division I Championship while the<br />

football team played in the Tostitos Fiesta<br />

Bowl. In addition, the women’s basketball team<br />

played in the NCAA Final Four for the fourth<br />

consecutive season and set a college basketball<br />

record for most consecutive wins with 90. The<br />

UConn baseball team made history with its<br />

first-ever appearance in NCAA Super Regional<br />

play. The men’s <strong>soccer</strong>, women’s <strong>soccer</strong> and<br />

field hockey teams participated in NCAA<br />

tournaments while representatives from men’s<br />

and women’s track and field and women’s<br />

diving also took part in NCAA action.<br />

Hathaway originally came to Connecticut in<br />

November of 1990 as senior associate athletic<br />

director. In that role, he oversaw the day-today<br />

operations of the Division of Athletics and<br />

served as a program administrator for several<br />

sports.<br />

During Hathaway’s tenure at Colorado<br />

State, he oversaw a 15-sport program – nine<br />

women’s teams and six men’s. Hathaway was<br />

an extremely successful fundraiser during his<br />

time in Fort Collins. The school drew national<br />

attention for a $15.2 million gift for football<br />

stadium renovations and expansion.<br />

Prior to joining UConn, Hathaway served<br />

in a number of capacities at his alma mater,<br />

the University of Maryland, from 1982 to<br />

1990, including assistant athletics director<br />

for marketing and <strong>com</strong>munications, acting<br />

assistant athletics director for business<br />

affairs, athletics business manager and men’s<br />

basketball trainer.<br />

Hathaway earned his degree in athletic<br />

administration from Maryland in 1981. He<br />

later received a Master’s Degree in general<br />

administration from Maryland and is currently<br />

continuing work on a PhD in the Department<br />

of Educational Leadership at the University of<br />

Connecticut.<br />

Hathaway and his wife, Paula, have two<br />

children — Meghan (20) and Michael (17).<br />

What They Are Saying About Jeff Hathaway<br />

Philip E. Austin, President Emeritus,<br />

University of Connecticut<br />

“I had the pleasure of working with Jeff Hathaway through my<br />

tenure as president of the University of Connecticut. He was a<br />

valuable member of our senior leadership team and led the athletic<br />

program to its most successful era. Jeff is <strong>com</strong>mitted to not only<br />

athletic excellence but also academic excellence, integrity and the<br />

overall welfare of student athletes.”<br />

Joseph R. Castiglione, Vice President for<br />

Intercollegiate Athletics,<br />

University of Oklahoma<br />

“From our days in college to the many years as colleagues in<br />

the profession, I have always known Jeff Hathaway to be a man<br />

of character. He has a tenacious work ethic, an innate ability to<br />

establish the right vision, mission and values for the organization<br />

he leads and a collaborative style to appropriately involve all<br />

stakeholders in the process of setting goals and creating the means<br />

to achieve them. At the heart of it all is a passionate <strong>com</strong>mitment to<br />

creating the best possible environment for student athlete success.<br />

Hofstra University made a wonderful decision in hiring Jeff.”<br />

Mark Emmert, President,<br />

National Collegiate Athletic Association<br />

“Jeff did a tremendous job as a member and later chair of the<br />

Division I Men’s Basketball Committee. His efforts directly<br />

contributed to lifelong experiences for thousands of student-athletes.<br />

I’m confident that he will bring the same dedication and passion to<br />

the athletic program and the student-athletes of Hofstra.”<br />

Jim Nantz, CBS Sports<br />

“I have known Jeff Hathaway a long time and there is no one I<br />

respect more in college athletics than Jeff Hathaway. This is a big<br />

day for Hofstra University and the future of Hofstra has been placed<br />

in good hands. Jeff is a high-achieving, high-quality person that<br />

I have gotten to know well during his tenure as the Chair of the<br />

NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee. Jeff’s success as a<br />

leader speaks for itself. He has the Midas touch!”<br />

Mike Slive, Commissioner,<br />

Southeastern Conference<br />

“I have known Jeff Hathaway for many years and had the pleasure of<br />

serving with him on the NCAA Men’s Basketball Committee. Jeff’s<br />

extensive experience, his enthusiasm and his energy makes him a<br />

leader no matter what room he is in. His <strong>com</strong>mitment to assisting<br />

young men and women in getting an education while participating<br />

in college sports make him an outstanding choice as Hofstra’s new<br />

athletics director.”<br />

Mike Tranghese, former Commissioner,<br />

Big East Conference<br />

“Jeff is an outstanding administrator who will provide Hofstra with<br />

great leadership in the future. He has long been a leader in collegiate<br />

athletics and Hofstra will do well with Jeff at the helm. ”<br />

Tom Yeager, Commissioner,<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

“Jeff Hathaway is one of the brightest, creative and <strong>com</strong>petent<br />

administrators in college athletics. Everyone in the CAA is excited<br />

about his joining our team and we look forward to his contribution<br />

to the continued success of the Hofstra program and the CAA.”<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 27


ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF AND HEAD COACHES<br />

Alison Adamski<br />

Women’s Tennis Coach<br />

Pete Alfano<br />

Cross Country Coach<br />

Rob Anspach<br />

Wrestling Coach<br />

Chrissy Arnone<br />

Assistant Director of<br />

Athletics for Marketing<br />

and Promotions<br />

Jay Artinian<br />

Senior Associate<br />

Director of Athletics for<br />

Facilities<br />

Rachel August<br />

Assistant Director for<br />

Administration<br />

cathy aull<br />

Athletic Department<br />

Secretary<br />

Ann Baller<br />

Associate Director of<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

Dr. Michael Barnes<br />

Faculty Athletics<br />

Representative<br />

Susan Bauer<br />

Assistant Dean of<br />

University Advisement<br />

Brian Bert<br />

Assistant Strength and<br />

Conditioning Coach<br />

Allison Bradshaw<br />

Strength and<br />

Conditioning Coach<br />

Brittany Butts<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

Coordinator<br />

Mo Cassara<br />

Men’s Basketball Coach<br />

Neil Collins<br />

Assistant Director of<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

John Considine<br />

Assistant Equipment<br />

Manager<br />

Tara Coppola<br />

Assistant Director of<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

Maria Corvino<br />

Assistant Director of<br />

Athletics for Ticket<br />

Operations<br />

Maren Crowley<br />

Women’s Golf Coach<br />

Kathy De Angelis<br />

Field Hockey Coach<br />

Steve DeNapoli<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

Coordinator<br />

Bill Edwards<br />

Softball Coach<br />

Joe Elliott<br />

Men’s Golf Coach<br />

David Fernandez<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

Coordinator<br />

Stephen Gorchov<br />

Associate Director<br />

of Athletics for<br />

Communications<br />

John Heck<br />

Associate Director of<br />

Athletics for Compliance<br />

Kristina<br />

Hernandez<br />

Volleyball Coach<br />

Tim Holman<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

Coordinator<br />

Ellen Johnson<br />

Assistant Director of<br />

Athletics for Corporate<br />

Relations<br />

Colm Kennedy<br />

Assistant Director of<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

28 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


Krista Kilburn-<br />

Steveskey<br />

Women’s Basketball<br />

Coach<br />

James Lally<br />

Director of Student-<br />

Athlete Services<br />

Frantzer Le Blanc<br />

Assistant Director of<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

Cindy Lewis<br />

Senior Associate<br />

Director of Athletics<br />

Evan Malings<br />

Head Athletic Trainer<br />

Danny McCabe<br />

Executive Associate<br />

Director of Athletics<br />

Tim McMahon<br />

Associate Director of<br />

Athletics for<br />

External Affairs<br />

Kevin Murga<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

Coordinator<br />

Michael Neely<br />

Director of Ticket Sales<br />

Richard Nuttall<br />

Men’s Soccer Coach<br />

Jeanne O’Keefe<br />

Athletic Department<br />

Secretary<br />

Rachel Peel<br />

Associate Dean of<br />

University Advisement<br />

James Prendergast<br />

Assistant Strength and<br />

Conditioning Coach<br />

Simon Riddiough<br />

Women’s Soccer Coach<br />

John Russo<br />

Baseball Coach<br />

Diane Schuerlein<br />

Athletic Department<br />

Secretary<br />

Jim Sheehan<br />

Senior Sports<br />

Information Director<br />

clarice smith<br />

Athletic Department<br />

Secretary<br />

shannon smith<br />

Women’s Lacrosse<br />

Coach<br />

Daniel Solow<br />

Assistant Director<br />

of Athletics for<br />

Development<br />

Samantha Sweeney<br />

Assistant Director of<br />

Athletics for Student-<br />

Athlete Development<br />

Harriet Teitle<br />

Athletic Department<br />

Secretary<br />

Kathy Theiling<br />

Equipment Manager<br />

Seth Tierney<br />

Men’s Lacrosse Coach<br />

Dave Walsh<br />

Assistant Equipment<br />

Manager<br />

Ryan Watson<br />

Assistant Director of<br />

Athletic Facilities<br />

Philip Wayne<br />

Men’s Tennis Coach<br />

Winnie Wymes<br />

Athletic Department<br />

Secretary<br />

Dr. Michael Yorio<br />

Team Physician<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 29


LONG ISLAND AND NEW YORK CITY<br />

About Long Island…<br />

Long Island has a rich history as an active, vibrant <strong>com</strong>munity, a summer playground,<br />

and home to some of New York’s most prominent families.<br />

Five distinct regions make up Long Island:<br />

• North Shore, otherwise known as the Gold Coast, with dozens of historic sites dating back to colonial<br />

days and Gatsby-era mansions.<br />

• South Shore, the Island’s spectator sports and entertainment center, with world-famous Jones and Fire<br />

Island Beaches, and home to the New York Islanders.<br />

• Central Suffolk, with beautiful forests and natural inlets, the world’s largest factory outlet center and a<br />

huge water park.<br />

• North Fork, with an array of vineyards, waterfront ports and farm stands.<br />

• South Fork, widely known as “The Hamptons,” with its pristine beaches and exclusive villages.<br />

You can catch a Hofstra shuttle bus to Jones Beach – a state park with six miles of gorgeous coastline, a<br />

boardwalk, swimming pools, golf and outdoor concerts.<br />

With everything from :<br />

• museums, historical sites and lighthouses,<br />

• to sophisticated malls, designer outlets and shopping villages,<br />

• to wineries and farm stands,<br />

• to family fun parks, aquariums and zoos,<br />

...there is plenty to do on Long Island!<br />

About new york city…<br />

Hofstra is located only 30 miles from New York City – the capital of culture and finance. You can visit Carnegie Hall, South Street<br />

Seaport, Hard Rock Café, Grand Central Station, Central Park, NBC Studios in Rockefeller Center, Little Italy or Chinatown.<br />

• Study the world’s finest sculptures and paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.<br />

• Go and cheer along with the crowd at a Yankees, Mets, Rangers or Knicks game.<br />

• Wave at the TV cameras in the street-level studios of FOX, CNN, NBC, CBS or ABC<br />

• Walk through the financial capital of the world at the New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street.<br />

• Take the subway to Coney Island for a Nathan’s hot dog and a ride on the Cyclone, the last of the great wooden<br />

rollercoasters.<br />

• Get half-priced tickets to Broadway’s finest shows at the TKTS booth in a new, glittering<br />

Times Square.<br />

30 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


ATHLETIC ACADEMIC SUPPORT<br />

Hofstra University is <strong>com</strong>mitted<br />

to the pursuit of academic and<br />

athletic excellence. The University<br />

views participation in intercollegiate<br />

athletics as benefiting the student-athlete<br />

in an educationally enhancing experience<br />

beyond any other opportunity available.<br />

Hofstra also realizes the time <strong>com</strong>mitment<br />

made by student-athletes and has<br />

<strong>com</strong>mitted the facilities and resources to<br />

support all students.<br />

The University Tutorial Program (UTP)<br />

provides free tutoring in every subject<br />

area to any Hofstra student. Students<br />

are able to obtain up to 1 1/2 hours of<br />

individual tutorial assistance per week for<br />

up to three courses. They are also able to<br />

utilize the various help labs on campus,<br />

which specialize in providing assistance<br />

in writing, business and QM, and biology<br />

and chemistry. In addition to this service,<br />

student-athletes are assigned an academic<br />

advisor, through the Center for University<br />

Advisement, who helps address the<br />

various needs of student‐athletes. The<br />

academic advisor emphasizes four areas<br />

in their efforts to ensure the academic<br />

success of Hofstra’s student-athletes.<br />

Area one is academic counseling. Services<br />

are provided in the areas of academic<br />

planning, career planning, personal<br />

counseling, and campus and <strong>com</strong>munity<br />

referrals. The advisor also meets with<br />

prospective student‐athletes, at the coach’s<br />

request, to share the many benefits of a<br />

Hofstra University education.<br />

Area two is academic advising. The<br />

academic advisor serves as the primary<br />

advisor for first-year and undecided<br />

student-athletes, and also assists<br />

upperclassmen who have declared a major.<br />

Area three is academic monitoring. The<br />

advisor monitors the academic progress of<br />

student‐athletes to ensure <strong>com</strong>pliance with<br />

Hofstra University, NCAA and conference<br />

regulations. The advisor’s regular<br />

<strong>com</strong>munication with the faculty and<br />

coaches provide opportunities for early<br />

intervention should academic difficulties<br />

arise.<br />

Area four is study halls. The University<br />

Tutorial Program supports athletic study<br />

halls by providing tutors in various<br />

subjects as necessary. The academic<br />

advisors also assess the needs of<br />

individual student‐athletes to provide<br />

the most effective study environment.<br />

The assessment tool administered by<br />

the Center for University Advisement is<br />

also used to provide various enrichment<br />

seminars for the student‐athletes such as<br />

time management, writing skills, campus<br />

resources, and surviving the college<br />

transition.<br />

In 2010 The Fried Family Student-Athlete<br />

Development Center was opened on the<br />

second level of the James M. Shuart<br />

Stadium Building. The center houses the<br />

offices of the Student-Athlete Services<br />

Staff, as well as a large <strong>com</strong>puter lab with<br />

printer access for use by Hofstra studentathletes,<br />

a quiet study area with wireless<br />

internet access and two group study/tutor<br />

rooms with power point access and white<br />

boards.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 31


SPORTS MEDICINE/ATHLETIC TRAINING<br />

University, and received his medical degree from the SUNY<br />

Health Science Center in Syracuse. Yorio previously served<br />

as a sports medicine fellow with the University of Maryland<br />

Orthopedics. Prior to that, he was a resident physician in internal<br />

medicine at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, North<br />

Carolina.<br />

Yorio was named the Director of Player Medical Services for the<br />

2008 U.S. Open Tennis Tournament in Flushing, New York, and is<br />

on the medical staff for the New York Islanders. He also worked<br />

as a team physician for the University of Maryland from 2003 to<br />

2005.<br />

Hofstra University sponsors a fully accredited, highly <strong>com</strong>petitive<br />

undergraduate degree program for athletic training majors, in<br />

which Hofstra student athletic trainers participate in all aspects of<br />

the health care system.<br />

Through a <strong>com</strong>prehensive athletic training program, Hofstra<br />

University student-athletes are provided excellent health<br />

care during their time at the University. A coordinated effort<br />

between the University Health and Wellness Center, the Athletic<br />

Department and outside health care providers ensures every<br />

student-athlete the best medical attention possible.<br />

University student-athletes have direct access to a myriad of<br />

health care services. Managing the coverage of every practice<br />

and <strong>com</strong>petition event is Hofstra University’s athletic training<br />

staff, which is led by ninth-year Head Athletic Trainer Evan<br />

Malings and features six full-time athletic trainers and numerous<br />

student athletic trainers. The athletic trainers provide injury<br />

management, rehabilitation and treatment to the entire Athletic<br />

program. Utilizing three state-of-the-art athletic training rooms,<br />

these professionals work tirelessly to ensure the safe participation<br />

of Hofstra’s student-athletes and to return injured athletes to play<br />

quickly and safely.<br />

Supporting the athletic trainers is team physician Dr. Michael<br />

Yorio. Dr. Yorio, a physician with Pro Health Care, Inc. in Lake<br />

Success, New York, is in his third year on Hofstra’s medical<br />

team. Yorio is an internist with specialized training in sports<br />

medicine. He earned his undergraduate degree at Villanova<br />

Evan Malings<br />

Head Athletic<br />

Trainer<br />

Dr. Michael<br />

Yorio<br />

Team Physician<br />

Marie Siler<br />

Athletic Trainer<br />

32 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


HOFSTRA IN THE COMMUNITY<br />

The Hofstra Soccer<br />

team is quite active<br />

in the Long island<br />

<strong>soccer</strong> <strong>com</strong>munity. The<br />

team conducts several<br />

clinics each year,<br />

working in conjunction<br />

with Big Brothers/<br />

Big Sisters of Long<br />

Island, the Uniondale<br />

Police Athletic League<br />

and the Town of North<br />

Hempstead.<br />

The Pride is also<br />

active in area schools,<br />

participating in the Read<br />

Across America program<br />

at the Jackson Main<br />

Elementary School in Hempstead, New York, and Reading with Pride initiative at<br />

other local schools.<br />

In addition to their on-field and classroom work within the <strong>com</strong>munity, Hofstra<br />

Soccer players also take part in charity fund raising events such as Alex’s Lemonade<br />

Stand and the<br />

Colleluori Lacrosse<br />

Classic to benefit<br />

the HEADstrong<br />

Foundation, as well<br />

as volunteer with the<br />

Special Olympics.<br />

The team also takes<br />

part in food drives<br />

in conjunction with<br />

Hofstra’s Student-<br />

Athlete Advisory<br />

Committee (SAAC)<br />

and partners with<br />

organizations such as Long Island Cares and The Interfaith Nutrition Network (INN).<br />

SERGIO VILLANUEVA<br />

SCHOLARSHIP FUND<br />

The FDNY Soccer Club and Hofstra<br />

alumnus Jonathan Kanovsky (‘86) have<br />

created a scholarship fund at Hofstra<br />

University in memory of firefighter<br />

Sergio Villanueva, who was among<br />

those who perished on September<br />

11, 2001. This <strong>soccer</strong> scholarship will<br />

assist a deserving Hofstra University<br />

student-athlete in pursuing their goal<br />

of a college education. The recipient<br />

will demonstrate the work ethic,<br />

integrity, discipline and courage that<br />

exemplified Sergio’s life. To get more<br />

information or to donate to the fund<br />

go to www.fdny<strong>soccer</strong>.<strong>com</strong> or contact<br />

the Hofstra University Office of<br />

Development at (516) 463-5542.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 33


HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY SOCCER STADIUM<br />

The Hofstra Soccer Teams play at the Hofstra University Soccer<br />

Stadium, located on the University’s north campus, adjacent to<br />

the David S. Mack Physical Education Center. The Stadium,<br />

constructed in 2003 through a partnership with the New York Jets,<br />

features a 120-yard by 74-yard FieldTurf surface, stadium lighting, metal<br />

bleachers the length of the field, the Gorman Memorial Gateway and the<br />

Hofstra Soccer Walls of Honor. In 2009 a new press box was installed.<br />

In addition, signs <strong>com</strong>memorating Hofstra’s conference championships,<br />

NCAA Tournament appearances and retired jerseys are displayed on the<br />

west end of the stadium. Since its’ opening, the Pride is 56-15-6 at the<br />

Stadium.<br />

The FieldTurf system, which was installed by Landtek of Amityville,<br />

New York, replicates a natural grass surface, but offers the durability and<br />

cost benefits of synthetic fields. FieldTurf is a safe alternative, resulting<br />

in a documented reduction of sports injuries. The sand and rubber infill<br />

system is the biggest technical development that the sport surfacing<br />

industry has seen in the last 25 years. This patented technology sets<br />

FieldTurf apart from all other sports surfaces.<br />

In June 2001 the Federation Internationale de Football Association<br />

(FIFA), the worldwide governing body for the sport of <strong>soccer</strong>, gave its<br />

official re<strong>com</strong>mendation to the artificial grass FieldTurf installation at<br />

Boston University’s Nickerson Field for international <strong>com</strong>petition and<br />

domestic league play. The historic ruling, the first and only certification<br />

of an artificial surface in the world at this time, means that venues<br />

with FieldTurf can be used for all preliminary <strong>com</strong>petition matches<br />

for the FIFA World Cup and Olympic Football Tournaments as well as<br />

for professional league play. There have been more than 500 FieldTurf<br />

installations worldwide in recent years.<br />

The facility is lit with a system from the Iowa-based Musco Lighting<br />

Company. Musco is recognized as a world-class leader in sports lighting<br />

with lighting systems installed around the globe. A leader in developing<br />

sports-lighting technology – including solutions for permanent and<br />

temporary lighting, and sports facility management – Musco offers<br />

innovative systems, a <strong>com</strong>prehensive package of services, and decades of<br />

experience.<br />

Working with organizations such as Amateur Softball Association, Babe<br />

Ruth League, Disney, England and Wales Cricket Board, Little League<br />

Baseball®, Major League Baseball, NASCAR, and the NBA, Musco<br />

has played a key role in developing guidelines for safe, efficient sports<br />

facilities. Musco is a Major Partner with the National Recreation and<br />

Park Association (NRPA); provides the Official Sports-Lighting System<br />

for Little League Baseball and was selected to light Disney’s Wide World<br />

of Sports Complex — a state-of-the-art 200-acre <strong>com</strong>plex with facilities<br />

for more than 30 sports.<br />

The facility is outfitted with a seating system from the Southern Bleacher<br />

Company of Graham, Texas. Since 1946, Southern Bleacher has set<br />

the standard of excellence in the design and manufacturing of sports<br />

stadiums and entertainment venues. Southern Bleacher products grace<br />

professional baseball diamonds and <strong>soccer</strong> fields, college campuses,<br />

school districts, NASCAR tracks and rodeo arenas across the United<br />

States.<br />

The Hofstra Soccer Stadium served as the home site of first round<br />

Men’s NCAA Tournament games in 2005 and 2006, as well as hosting<br />

numerous high school playoff contests. The stadium also served as the<br />

practice field for the Jets during their public preseason camp workouts<br />

until the team moved its headquarters from Hofstra in 2008.<br />

HOFSTRA INDOOR PRACTICE FACILITY<br />

The Pride has use of an indoor practice bubble located on the<br />

north campus, behind the Mack Sports Complex. The 50-yard<br />

turf field gives Hofstra a unique environment that many teams<br />

in the Northeast do not have.<br />

34 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


MACK SPORTS COMPLEX WEIGHT ROOM<br />

Hofstra Soccer student-athletes conduct their weight training in the spacious, 3,024 square-foot Mack Sports<br />

Complex Weight Room. Located on the lower lever of the <strong>com</strong>plex, the weight room houses a wide variety of<br />

strength and conditioning equipment including free weights, Hammer Strength and 12 pieces of cardiovascular<br />

equipment. The team trains under the watchful eye of Strength Coach Alison Bradshaw, who is in her third year<br />

on the Hofstra staff, and first as head strength coach.<br />

THE GORMAN MEMORIAL GATEWAY<br />

The Gorman Memorial Gateway, named in honor of<br />

former Hofstra Soccer player Frank Gorman, who died<br />

tragically on January 5, 2003, was officially dedicated<br />

on Sunday, September 17, 2006.<br />

The Gorman Memorial Gateway project included<br />

a gated entrance to the Hofstra Soccer Stadium<br />

and ticket windows, as well as a Hofstra Men’s and<br />

Women’s Soccer Walls of Fame, the Sergio Villanueva<br />

Memorial Garden and a picnic area behind the east<br />

side goal. Future plans include alumni bleachers behind<br />

the east goal.<br />

Donors to the Gorman Memorial Gateway Fund have<br />

their names inscribed on a plaque at the Gateway<br />

entrance to the Hofstra University Soccer Stadium.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 35


Overall: 10-8 Conference: 6-5 Home: 3-3 Away: 5-3 Neutral: 2-2<br />

No. Name GP-GS G A Pts. S S% GW PK-ATT<br />

5 Laura Greene 18-18 13 4 30 79 .165 4 1-1<br />

21 Courtney Breen 18-18 6 4 16 43 .140 3 0-0<br />

19 Sam Scolarici 18-18 5 2 12 39 .128 0 0-0<br />

23 Caylin Dudley 18-12 4 0 8 21 .190 1 0-0<br />

7 Ruby Staplehurst 18-18 0 6 6 8 .000 0 0-0<br />

25 Brittany Butts 17-17 2 1 5 14 .143 1 0-0<br />

11 Anya Koren 10-3 1 2 4 26 .038 0 0-0<br />

16 Erin Breen 12-4 1 1 3 8 .125 1 0-0<br />

10 Britt Farriella 18-18 1 0 2 3 .333 0 0-0<br />

2 Tara Kerns 18-18 0 2 2 8 .000 0 0-0<br />

14 Lulu Echeverry 18-3 0 1 1 8 .000 0 0-0<br />

9 Amber Stobbs 4-3 0 1 1 7 .000 0 0-0<br />

8 Erin Havard 12-0 0 1 1 7 .000 0 0-0<br />

12 Kerry Cummings 12-11 0 0 0 7 .000 0 0-0<br />

6 Ingrid Moyer 6-0 0 0 0 1 .000 0 0-0<br />

3 Nicki Choffel 5-0 0 0 0 1 .000 0 0-0<br />

22 Danielle Murino 2-1 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0-0<br />

15 Brooke Bendernagel 18-18 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0-0<br />

1 Emily Morphitis 15-14 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0-0<br />

Total 18 33 25 91 280 .118 10 1-1<br />

Opponents 18 22 23 67 202 .109 8 0-1<br />

Goalkeeping<br />

No. Name GP-GS Min. GA Avg. Svs. Pct. W L T Sho<br />

1 Emily Morphitis 14-14 1226:00 14 1.03 44 .759 7 7 0 4<br />

0 Kylie Shuster 5-4 405:00 8 1.78 16 .667 3 1 0 1<br />

TM Team 0-0 0:00 0 0.00 1 1.000 0 0 0 1<br />

Total 18 1631:00 22 1.21 61 .735 10 8 0 6<br />

Opponents 18 1631:00 33 1.82 100 .752 8 10 0 5<br />

Goals 1 2 OT Tot. C corner Kicks 1 2 OT Tot.<br />

Hofstra 18 14 1 33 Hofstra 41 42 0 83<br />

Opponents 10 11 1 22 Opponents 26 25 1 52<br />

Shots 1 2 OT Tot. S saves 1 2 OT Tot.<br />

Hofstra 138 141 1 280 Hofstra 28 32 1 61<br />

Opponents 90 108 4 202 Opponents 46 54 0 100<br />

2011 Results<br />

2011 STATISTICS AND RESULTS<br />

Date Opponent W/L Score Att.<br />

Aug. 26 Fairfield L 0-1 558<br />

Sept. 02 vs. Columbia W 2-0 712<br />

Sept. 04 vs. Albany W 5-0 427<br />

Sept. 09 at Texas Tech W (OT) 2-1 1195<br />

Sept. 11 vs. TCU L 0-1 163<br />

Sept. 16 at Harvard W 5-4 267<br />

Sept. 23 James Madison* L (OT) 3-4 308<br />

Sept. 25 VCU* W 1-0 283<br />

Sept. 29 Drexel* W 2-1 285<br />

Oct. 02 at Delaware* L 2-3 150<br />

Oct. 07 at Towson* L 2-3 277<br />

Oct. 09 at George Mason* L 0-1 482<br />

Oct. 14 #23 William and Mary* L 0-1 513<br />

Oct. 16 Old Dominion* W 2-1 209<br />

Oct. 21 at Georgia State* W 2-0 252<br />

Oct. 23 at UNC Wilmington* W 2-0 295<br />

Oct. 28 at Northeastern* W 3-0 63<br />

Nov. 03 vs. Delaware^ L 0-1 172<br />

LAURA GREENE<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

^CAA Championship<br />

36 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


The Colonial Athletic Association<br />

has built a reputation as one of the<br />

nation’s top collegiate conferences<br />

both athletically and academically.<br />

The CAA en<strong>com</strong>passes five of the nation’s<br />

nine largest metropolitan areas with a<br />

geographic footprint that stretches from<br />

Boston to Atlanta. The conference has<br />

produced 16 national team champions in<br />

five different sports, 33 individual national<br />

champions, 12 national players of the year,<br />

12 national coaches of the year and 12<br />

Honda Award winners. Just as impressive,<br />

however, are the honors accumulated<br />

away from <strong>com</strong>petition, which include<br />

five Rhodes Scholars and 22 NCAA<br />

post-graduate scholars. In 2011-12, more<br />

than 1,900 of the league’s 4,000 studentathletes<br />

received the Commissioner’s<br />

Academic Award after posting at least a<br />

3.2 grade point average while lettering<br />

in a varsity sport. The conference had 19<br />

teams in 13 different sports receive NCAA<br />

Public Recognition Awards based on the<br />

latest Academic Progress Report released<br />

in 2012.<br />

The landscape of the conference stretches<br />

along the majority of the East Coast, and<br />

includes six of the nation’s top 25 media<br />

markets – New York (1), Philadelphia<br />

(4), Boston (7), Atlanta (8), Washington,<br />

D.C. (9) and Baltimore (25). The number<br />

of television homes in the CAA market<br />

exceeds 20 million.<br />

The CAA conducts championships in<br />

23 sports. Male athletes <strong>com</strong>pete for<br />

championships in baseball, basketball,<br />

cross country, football, golf, lacrosse,<br />

<strong>soccer</strong>, swimming & diving, tennis, track<br />

& field and wrestling. Female athletes<br />

battle for conference titles in basketball,<br />

cross country, field hockey, golf, lacrosse,<br />

rowing, <strong>soccer</strong>, softball, swimming &<br />

diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball.<br />

In 2011-12, 24 teams earned NCAA<br />

Tournament berths and 51 student-athletes<br />

received All-America honors in 16<br />

different sports.<br />

The conference has made its presence<br />

known nationally in men’s basketball with<br />

two teams – George Mason (2006) and<br />

VCU (2011) – advancing to the NCAA<br />

Final Four over the past six years. Three<br />

CAA teams earned NCAA Tournament<br />

berths for the first time in 2011 as<br />

conference champion Old Dominion<br />

was joined by VCU and George Mason.<br />

the COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION<br />

VCU knocked off USC, Georgetown,<br />

Purdue, Florida State and top-seeded<br />

Kansas, while Mason defeated Villanova.<br />

In 2006, George Mason captured the<br />

nation’s imagination by be<strong>com</strong>ing the first<br />

mid-major program since 1979 to reach<br />

the Final Four, posting victories over<br />

Michigan State, North Carolina, Wichita<br />

State and Connecticut along the way.<br />

At least five CAA teams have reached<br />

postseason play for the past four years.<br />

The CAA has also had great success<br />

in women’s basketball, with six teams<br />

making the postseason in 2011-12.<br />

Conference champion Delaware advanced<br />

to the second round of the NCAA<br />

Tournament for the first time and was<br />

ranked #7 in the final Associated Press<br />

Top 25 poll. James Madison beat two<br />

ACC and two Big East teams to reach<br />

the championship game of the WNIT.<br />

Drexel, Hofstra, UNCW and VCU joined<br />

the Dukes in the WNIT. Old Dominion,<br />

which won an NCAA-record 17 straight<br />

CAA titles from 1992-2008, boasts three<br />

national championships (1979, 1980,<br />

1985) and was national runner-up in 1997.<br />

The conference also excels in many other<br />

sports. CAA squads have <strong>com</strong>bined to win<br />

10 field hockey national titles since the<br />

championship began in 1981 and ODU<br />

reached the national semifinals in 2011.<br />

Four men’s <strong>soccer</strong> teams earned NCAA<br />

Tournament berths last season and James<br />

Madison became the seventh CAA team<br />

to reach the final 16 of the event in the<br />

past decade. Hofstra’s softball team won<br />

the Los Angeles Regional and became<br />

the first CAA squad to advance to the<br />

NCAA Super Regionals. At least two<br />

women’s <strong>soccer</strong> teams have reached the<br />

second round of the NCAA Tournament<br />

in three of the past five seasons. William<br />

& Mary’s men’s cross country squad has<br />

made the NCAA Championship in 12<br />

of the past 13 years. In the pool, George<br />

Mason’s Ashley Danner finished second<br />

in the 100 breaststroke and fifth in the<br />

200 breaststroke at the 2012 NCAA<br />

Championship and received All-America<br />

honors. Delaware and Towson have each<br />

reached the Final Four of the NCAA<br />

Men’s Lacrosse Championship. On the<br />

track, Mason’s David Verburg placed<br />

fourth in the 400 meters at the NCAA<br />

Championship. The CAA has sent<br />

multiple teams to the NCAA Baseball<br />

Championship in nine of the last 15<br />

years and has had at least 12 players<br />

selected in the eight of the last 10 Major<br />

League Baseball drafts. The conference<br />

also boasts numerous All-Americans in<br />

lacrosse, tennis, golf, women’s lacrosse<br />

and wrestling.<br />

CAA member institutions are <strong>com</strong>mitted<br />

to excellence in the classroom. The<br />

Colonial Academic Alliance was created<br />

in 2002 by the league’s presidents with<br />

a goal of expanding their partnership<br />

to all aspects of university life outside<br />

of intercollegiate athletics. Among the<br />

programs that have been established are<br />

an undergraduate research conference,<br />

coordination of study abroad programs<br />

and granting visiting academic status<br />

to student-athletes traveling to an away<br />

contest so that they have access to<br />

libraries, academic resource centers and<br />

<strong>com</strong>puter labs.<br />

Commissioner Thomas E. Yeager has<br />

guided the CAA since its inception.<br />

The conference traces its roots back to<br />

1983 when three of its current members-<br />

George Mason University, James Madison<br />

University, and the College of William and<br />

Mary - were aligned with East Carolina<br />

University, the United States Naval<br />

Academy and the University of Richmond<br />

as a basketball league (ECAC South).<br />

During the next two years, the league added<br />

11 sports, acquired two new members (the<br />

University of North Carolina at Wilmington<br />

and American University) and decided to<br />

form a new association. The transformation<br />

from ECAC South to CAA took place on<br />

June 6, 1985.<br />

Charter members George Mason, James<br />

Madison, UNC Wilmington and William<br />

and Mary were joined by Old Dominion<br />

University in 1991. The conference<br />

added the University of Delaware, Drexel<br />

University, Hofstra University and<br />

Towson University in 2001. Georgia State<br />

University and Northeastern University<br />

became members of the conference on<br />

July 1, 2005.<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 37


2011 CAA REVIEW<br />

Women’s Soccer Standings and Statistics<br />

caa<br />

oVERALL<br />

W L T Pts. W L T Pct.<br />

#William and Mary 10 1 0 30 17 3 2 .818<br />

VCU 6 2 3 21 9 8 4 .524<br />

George Mason 5 3 3 18 8 6 6 .550<br />

Delaware 5 3 3 18 10 7 4 .571<br />

Hofstra 6 5 0 18 10 8 0 .556<br />

Northeastern 5 5 1 16 9 10 2 .476<br />

James Madison 5 5 1 16 8 8 3 .500<br />

Drexel 4 4 3 15 6 8 5 .447<br />

Georgia State 4 6 1 13 7 12 1 .375<br />

Towson 4 7 0 12 9 10 0 .474<br />

Old Dominion 3 7 1 10 6 11 2 .368<br />

UNC Wilmington 1 10 0 3 3 16 0 .158<br />

# - CAA Champion<br />

2011 Colonial Athletic Association<br />

All-Conference Teams<br />

First Team<br />

second Team<br />

F- Laura Greene, Hofstra F- Jewel Evans, Georgia State<br />

F- Ali Miller, Delaware F- Tiana Kallenberger, George Mason<br />

F- Veronica Napoli, Northeastern F- Lauren Wilson, James Madison<br />

F- Amy Pickard, Delaware M- Zania Barnum, George Mason<br />

M- Courtney Breen, Hofstra M- Lisa Bernardini, Old Dominion<br />

M- Cortlyn Bristol, W&M M- Brittany Butts, Hofstra<br />

M-Mallory Schaffer, W&M<br />

M- Cristin Granados, VCU<br />

D- Kelly Matthews, Northeastern D- Emily Fredrikson, W&M<br />

D- Karol Sanchez, VCU D- Elizabeth Matta, Drexel<br />

D- Diana Weigel, W&M D- Becky Sparks, James Madison<br />

GK- Kristin Carden, VCU<br />

GK- Eve Badana, Drexel<br />

COURTNEY BREEN<br />

Third Team<br />

all-Rookie Team<br />

F- Courtney Conrad, VCU F- Maren Johansen, VCU<br />

F- Jenna Lindsay, Drexel F- Emory Camper, W&M<br />

F- Greta Samuelsdottir, Northeastern M- Cristin Granados, VCU<br />

F- Cheyenne Skidmore, Towson M- Sam Scolarici, Hofstra<br />

M- Tania Domingos Delaware D- Paige Babel, George Mason<br />

M- Chelsea Duffy, Delaware D- Emily Fredrikson, W&M<br />

M- Stephanie Rose Jr., UNCW D- Shannon Rano, James Madison<br />

D- Brooke Bendernagel Hofstra D- Sofia Reed, Towson<br />

D- Victoria Johnson, Old Dominion GK- Eva Badana, Drexel<br />

D- Mary Kate Lowry, George Mason GK- Paige Burnett, Northeastern<br />

GK- Paige Burnett, Northeastern<br />

SAM SCOLARICI<br />

PLAYER OF THE YEAR:<br />

Mallory Schaffer, W&M<br />

DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR:<br />

Karol Sanchez, VCU<br />

ROOKIE OF THE YEAR:<br />

Cristin Granados, VCU<br />

COACH OF THE YEAR:<br />

John Daly, W&M; Tiffany Roberts Sahaydak and Tim Sahaydak, VCU<br />

38 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


Team Statistics<br />

Points<br />

## Team GP No. Avg<br />

1 William & Mary 22 163 7.41<br />

2 Delaware 21 108 5.14<br />

3 George Mason 20 94 4.70<br />

4 Hofstra 18 91 5.06<br />

5 Towson 19 90 4.74<br />

6 James Madison 19 89 4.68<br />

7 Georgia State 20 78 3.90<br />

8 Old Dominion 19 77 4.05<br />

9 Northeastern 21 75 3.57<br />

10 VCU 21 64 3.05<br />

11 Drexel 19 47 2.47<br />

12 UNC Wilmington 19 32 1.68<br />

Goals<br />

## Team GP G GPG<br />

1 William & Mary 22 53 2.41<br />

2 Delaware 21 37 1.76<br />

3 Hofstra 18 33 1.83<br />

4 Towson 19 31 1.63<br />

George Mason 20 31 1.55<br />

6 Georgia State 20 29 1.45<br />

7 Northeastern 21 28 1.33<br />

8 James Madison 19 27 1.42<br />

Old Dominion 19 27 1.42<br />

10 VCU 21 24 1.14<br />

11 Drexel 19 16 0.84<br />

12 UNC Wilmington 19 12 0.63<br />

Assists<br />

## Team GP A APG<br />

1 William and Mary 22 57 2.59<br />

2 James Madison 19 35 1.84<br />

3 Delaware 21 34 1.62<br />

4 George Mason 20 32 1.60<br />

5 Towson 19 28 1.47<br />

6 Hofstra 18 25 1.39<br />

7 Old Dominion 19 23 1.21<br />

8 Georgia State 20 20 1.00<br />

9 Northeastern 21 19 0.90<br />

10 VCU 21 16 0.76<br />

11 Drexel 19 15 0.79<br />

12 UNC Wilmington 19 8 0.42<br />

Goals Against Average<br />

## Team GP GA Min. GAA<br />

1 VCU 21 15 2003:07 0.67<br />

2 William and Mary 22 17 2021:32 0.76<br />

3 Drexel 19 20 1817:56 0.99<br />

4 Delaware 21 25 1968:44 1.14<br />

5 Hofstra 18 22 1631:00 1.21<br />

6 James Madison 19 25 1782:09 1.26<br />

7 George Mason 20 28 1937:18 1.30<br />

8 Georgia State 20 34 1955:34 1.56<br />

9 Northeastern 21 34 1947:33 1.57<br />

10 UNC Wilmington 19 34 1730:17 1.77<br />

11 Towson 19 37 1746:43 1.91<br />

12 Old Dominion 19 47 1750:00 2.42<br />

Individual Statistics<br />

Scoring<br />

## Name, School GP G A Pts. PPG<br />

1 Schaffer, Mallory- W&M 22 17 6 40 1.82<br />

2 Greene, Laura- HU 18 13 4 30 1.67<br />

3 Miller, Ali- UD 21 14 2 30 1.43<br />

4 Skidmore, Cheyenne- TU 19 8 9 25 1.32<br />

5 Pickard, Amy- UD 21 10 7 27 1.29<br />

6 Napoli, Veronica- NU 21 10 6 26 1.24<br />

7 Wilson, Lauren- JMU 19 8 6 22 1.16<br />

8 Rutter, Dani- W&M 22 7 11 25 1.14<br />

9 Bennett, Sarah- GSU 19 9 3 21 1.11<br />

Banes, Emily- TU 19 8 5 21 1.11<br />

Goals<br />

## Name, School GP G GPG<br />

1 Schaffer, Mallory- W&M 22 17 0.77<br />

2 Miller, Ali- UD 21 14 0.67<br />

3 Greene, Laura- HU 18 13 0.72<br />

4 Pickard, Amy- UD 21 10 0.48<br />

Napoli, Veronica- NU 21 10 0.48<br />

6 Bennett, Sarah- GSU 19 9 0.47<br />

Evans, Jewel- GSU 20 9 0.45<br />

8 Skidmore, Cheyenne- TU 19 8 0.42<br />

Wilson, Lauren- JMU 19 8 0.42<br />

Banes, Emily-TU 19 8 0.42<br />

Samuelsdottir, Greta- NU 19 8 0.42<br />

Assists<br />

## Name, School GP A APG<br />

1 Rutter, Dani- W&M 22 11 0.50<br />

2 Skidmore, Cheyenne- TU 19 9 0.47<br />

Bristol, Cortlyn- W&M 22 9 0.41<br />

4 Kallenberger, Tiana- GMU 20 8 0.40<br />

5 Pickard, Amy- UD 21 7 0.33<br />

Camper, Emory- W&M 22 7 0.32<br />

7 Staplehurst, Ruby- HU 18 6 0.33<br />

Sparks, Becky- JMU 18 6 0.33<br />

Bernardini, Lisa- ODU 19 6 0.32<br />

Wilson, Lauren- JMU 19 6 0.32<br />

Goalkeeping (Min. 60 percent of games played)<br />

## Name, School GP GA Min. GAA<br />

1 Carden, Kristin- VCU 21 15 1991:1 0.68<br />

2 Young, Katherine- W&M 22 17 2011:4 0.76<br />

3 Badana, Eve- DU 17 12 1322:5 0.82<br />

4 Morphitis, Emily- HU 14 14 1226:0 1.03<br />

5 Hokanson, Lyndse- GMU 19 17 1471:1 1.04<br />

6 Stemler, Breanna- UD 21 25 1923:4 1.17<br />

7 Courter, Kate- JMU 18 22 1647:0 1.20<br />

8 Burnett, Paige- NU 21 34 1935:4 1.58<br />

9 Collins, Kellianne- GSU 14 23 1258:1 1.65<br />

10 Hunter, Caitlin- UNCW 17 30 1531:5 1.76<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 39


HOFSTRA HONOR ROLL<br />

Becky Wachsberger Sue Weber Tiffany Yovino<br />

NSCAA All-America<br />

Sue Weber - 2005, 2007<br />

Brooke DeRosa - 2007<br />

Tiffany Yovino - 2010<br />

NSCAA All-Region Selections<br />

Christa Eidenweil - 1999, 2000<br />

Becky Wachsberger - 2003, 2004, 2005<br />

Dolores Deasley - 2003<br />

Elaine O’Connor - 2003<br />

Marie Curtin - 2004, 2005, 2008<br />

Emma Kilduff - 2004<br />

Edel Malone - 2005, 2007, 2008<br />

Sue Weber - 2005, 2006, 007<br />

Brooke DeRosa - 2007<br />

Jess Crankshaw - 2007, 2008<br />

Tiffany Yovino - 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010<br />

Salma Tarik - 2009, 2010<br />

Courtney Breen - 2009, 2010<br />

Diane Caldwell - 2009<br />

Brittany Butts - 2010<br />

All-Conference<br />

All-Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Marisa Pistone - 2001, 2003<br />

Elaine O’Connor - 2002, 2003<br />

Charity Schmitt - 2002, 2003<br />

Dolores Deasley -2002, 2003<br />

Becky Wachsberger - 2003, 2004, 2005<br />

Elyse Bizzozzaro - 2003<br />

Marie Curtin - 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008<br />

Emma Kilduff - 2004<br />

Brigit Canle - 2004<br />

Amber Albrecht - 2005<br />

Sue Weber - 2005, 2006, 2007<br />

Edel Malone - 2005, 2007, 2008<br />

Brooke DeRosa - 2007<br />

Jess Crankshaw - 2007, 2008, 2009<br />

Tiffany Yovino - 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010<br />

Courtney Breen - 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011<br />

Salma Tarik - 2009, 2010<br />

Diane Caldwell - 2009<br />

Brittany Butts - 2010, 2011<br />

Dana Bergstron - 2010<br />

Laura Greene - 2011<br />

Brooke Bendermagel - 2011<br />

All-Colonial Athletic Association Rookie<br />

Jill Lipari - 2006<br />

Diane Caldwell - 2006<br />

Tiffany Yovino - 2007<br />

Courtney Breen - 2008<br />

Brittany Butts - 2008<br />

Amy Turner - 2009<br />

Emily Morphitis - 2010<br />

Amber Stobbs - 2010<br />

Sam Scolarici - 2011<br />

All-America East<br />

Heather Kain - 1998<br />

Allyson Pullano - 1999<br />

Joanne Chillingsworth - 1999<br />

Christa Eidenweil - 1999, 2000<br />

Tracy Naughton - 1999, 2000<br />

Penny Stansfield - 2000<br />

Jerilyn Marinan - 2000<br />

Dolores Deasley - 2000, 2001<br />

Marisa Pistone - 2001<br />

Diane Caldwell<br />

Brooke DeRosa<br />

Elaine O’Connor<br />

40 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


Retired Jerseys<br />

Sue Weber #20<br />

Tiffany Yovino #18<br />

Professional Players<br />

Sue Weber<br />

2009 member of the Boston Breakers of<br />

Women’s Professional Soccer (WPS)<br />

2008 W-League Defender of the Year with the<br />

Long Island Rough Riders<br />

Brooke DeRosa<br />

2008 Long Island Rough Riders<br />

Jill Lipari<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Player of the Year<br />

Tiffany Yovino - 2010<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Defensive Player of the Year<br />

Dolores Deasley - 2003<br />

Sue Weber - 2005, 2006, 2007<br />

Jess Crankshaw - 2008<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Rookie of the Year<br />

Jacki Pollaro - 2003<br />

Marie Curtin - 2004<br />

Edel Malone - 2005<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach of the Year<br />

JoAnne Russell - 2002, 2006<br />

Simon Riddiough - 2010<br />

Chrissy Arnone<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Scholar-Athlete of the Year<br />

Sue Weber - 2006, 2007<br />

Dana Bergstrom - 2010<br />

ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA Academic<br />

All-America<br />

Chrissy Arnone - 2005<br />

Sue Weber - 2007<br />

Dana Bergstrom - 2010<br />

Tiffany Yovino - 2010<br />

ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA<br />

Academic All-District<br />

Sue Weber - 2006<br />

Liz Guise - 2007<br />

Dana Bergstrom - 2010<br />

Tiffany Yovino - 2010<br />

NSCAA Scholar-All-America<br />

Sue Weber - 2006, 2007<br />

Jess Crankshaw - 2008<br />

Tiffany Yovino - 2009, 2010<br />

Elaine O’Connor<br />

2008 Long Island Rough Riders<br />

Edel Malone<br />

Jacki Pollaro<br />

Dana Bergstrom<br />

Jess Crankshaw<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 41


HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER RECORD BOOK<br />

Season Records<br />

Goals<br />

1) Carlene Wawrzonek 17 1994<br />

2) Brooke DeRosa 14 2007<br />

2) Suzanne Newell 14 1994<br />

4) Christa Eidenweil 13 2000<br />

4) Laura Greene 13 2011<br />

6) Tiffany Yovino 12 2010<br />

6) Salma Tarik 12 2010<br />

6) Suzanne Newell 12 1996<br />

9) Jerilyn Marinan 10 1997<br />

9) Allyson Pullano 10 1999<br />

9) Chrissy Arnone 10 2005<br />

9) Salma Tarik 10 2009<br />

Assists<br />

1) Kara Ahlfeld 12 1994<br />

2) Dana Bergstrom 10 2010<br />

2) Elaine O’Connor 10 2002<br />

4) Jess Crankshaw 9 2007<br />

4) Jerilyn Marinan 9 1998<br />

6) Heather Kain 8 1998<br />

6) Jerilyn Marinan 8 2000<br />

6) Laura Greene 8 2009<br />

9) Laura Greene 7 2010<br />

9) Suzanne Newell 7 1996<br />

9) Elaine O’Connor 7 2000<br />

9) Emma Kilduff 7 2004<br />

9) Marie Curtin 7 2005<br />

Salma Tarik<br />

Points<br />

1) Carlene Wawrzonek 35 1994<br />

2) Suzanne Newell 34 1994<br />

3) Brooke DeRosa 33 2007<br />

4) Suzanne Newell 31 1996<br />

5) Laura Greene 30 2011<br />

6) Kara Ahlfeld 28 1994<br />

7) Christa Eidenweil 26 2000<br />

7) Salma Tarik 26 2010<br />

9) Tiffany Yovino 26 2010<br />

10) Allyson Pullano 24 1999<br />

10) Jerilyn Marinan 24 1997<br />

10) Salma Tarik 24 2009<br />

Goalkeeper Saves<br />

1) Joanne Chillingsworth 98 1998<br />

2) Christie Klouse 89 1995<br />

3) Christie Klouse 88 1997<br />

4) Kristine Winchester 81 2001<br />

4) Becky Wachsberger 81 2005<br />

6) Becky Wachsberger 76 2003<br />

6) Becky Wachsberger 76 2004<br />

8) Krystal Robens 72 2007<br />

8) Krystal Robens 72 2008<br />

10) Krysten Farriella 71 2009<br />

Single Game Records<br />

Goals: (4) Suzanne Newell vs. Central<br />

Connecticut, 10/5/96<br />

Assists: (3) Kara Ahlfeld vs. Siena, 10/14/94;<br />

Heather Kain vs. Marist, 9/9/98; Audra<br />

Sherman vs. Eastern Michigan, 8/30/02; Dana<br />

Bergstrom vs. George Mason, 10/8/10<br />

Points: (9) Suzanne Newell vs. Central<br />

Connecticut, 10/5/96<br />

Saves: (21) Joanne Chillingsworth vs.<br />

Hartford, 10/23/98<br />

Miscellaneous Records<br />

Longest Winning Streak: 18 games (2010)<br />

Longest Losing Streak: 7 games (1993)<br />

Home Victories: 10 (2010)<br />

Away Victories: 8 (1994, 2010)<br />

Conference Victories: 11 (2010)<br />

Suzanne<br />

Newell<br />

Kara Ahlfeld<br />

Jerilyn Marinan<br />

42 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


Marie Curtin<br />

Career Records<br />

Goals<br />

1) Christa Eidenweil 39 1997-00<br />

2) Suzanne Newell 36 1994-97<br />

3) Salma Tarik 28 2008-10<br />

4) Jerilyn Marinan 27 1997-00<br />

5) Elyse Bizzozzaro 26 2000-04<br />

6) Laura Greene 24 2008-11<br />

7) Penny Stansfield 22 1997-00<br />

8) Tiffany Yovino 21 2007-10<br />

9) Chrissy Arnone 19 2002-05<br />

10) Allyson Pullano 17 1998-99<br />

10) Carlene Wawrzonek 17 1994<br />

10) Edel Malone 17 2005-08<br />

Assists<br />

1) Jerilyn Marinan 26 1997-00<br />

2) Marie Curtin 23 2004-08<br />

3) Elaine O’Connor 22 1999-03<br />

4) Jess Crankshaw 20 2005-09<br />

5) Laura Greene 19 2008-11<br />

6) Heather Kain 17 1995-98<br />

6) Suzanne Newell 17 1994-97<br />

6) Penny Stansfield 17 1997-00<br />

9) Marisa Pistone 15 2000-03<br />

9) Edel Malone 15 2005-08<br />

9) Dana Bergstrom 15 2008-10<br />

Becky<br />

Wachsberger<br />

Points<br />

1) Suzanne Newell 89 1994-97<br />

2) Christa Eidenweil 83 1997-00<br />

3) Jerilyn Marinan 80 1997-00<br />

4) Laura Greene 67 2008-11<br />

5) Salma Tarik 64 2008-10<br />

6) Elyse Bizzozzaro 62 2000-04<br />

7) Penny Stansfield 61 1997-00<br />

8) Tiffany Yovino 50 2007-10<br />

9) Marie Curtin 49 2004-08<br />

9) Edel Malone 49 2005-08<br />

Goalkeeper Saves<br />

1) Becky Wachsberger 302 2001-05<br />

2) Christie Klouse 215 1995-97<br />

3) Joanne Chillingsworth 196 1998-00<br />

4) Krystal Robens 192 2004-08<br />

5) Jean Hodermarsky 179 1993-96<br />

6) Kristine Winchester 176 1998-01<br />

7) Krysten Farriella 147 2006-09<br />

8) Renata Carullo 107 1993-95<br />

Penny Stansfield<br />

Year-by-Year Records<br />

Year Coach record<br />

1992 JoAnne Russell 12-3 (Club Team)<br />

1993 JoAnne Russell 5-11-1<br />

1994 JoAnne Russell 16-2-1<br />

(ECAC Quarterfinals)<br />

1995 JoAnne Russell 5-12-0<br />

1996 JoAnne Russell 6-12-0<br />

1997 JoAnne Russell 10-7-1<br />

1998 JoAnne Russell 10-7-2<br />

1999 JoAnne Russell 13-6-0<br />

2000 JoAnne Russell 12-5-2<br />

2001 JoAnne Russell 8-8-3<br />

2002 JoAnne Russell 14-5-1<br />

2003 JoAnne Russell 13-3-3<br />

2004 JoAnne Russell 12-6-1<br />

2005 JoAnne Russell 14-4-3<br />

2006 Simon Riddiough 9-8-2<br />

2007 Simon Riddiough 18-4-0<br />

2008 Simon Riddiough 11-8-3<br />

2009 Simon Riddiough 10-6-3<br />

2010 Simon Riddiough 19-3-0<br />

2011 Simon Riddiough 10-8-0<br />

Joanne Chillingsworth<br />

Elyse Bizzozzaro<br />

Christa Eidenweil<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 43


HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER ALUMNAE<br />

Amber Albrecht<br />

courtney breen<br />

Laura Del Biondo<br />

Erin Magee<br />

Ahlfeld, Kara 1995<br />

Albrecht, Amber 2005<br />

Aliperti, Carolyn 1996<br />

Amato, Kristin 1994<br />

Anderson, Erin 2003<br />

Arenella, Dawn 1996<br />

Arnone, Chrissy 2005<br />

Bergstrom, Dana 2010<br />

Best, Bree 2006<br />

Bisco, Nicole 2008<br />

Bizzozzaro, Elyse 2004<br />

Braico, Danielle 1999<br />

Breen, Courtney 2011<br />

Breen, Erin 2011<br />

Burkett, Patricia 1999<br />

Butts, Brittany 2011<br />

Caldwell, Diane 2009<br />

Canle, Brigit 2004<br />

Cappello, Janine 2002<br />

Carullo, Renata 1995<br />

Chillingsworth, Joanne 2000<br />

Ciamei, Mary 1996<br />

Cinelli, Laura 1994<br />

Clancy, Catherine 1997<br />

Covelli, Kristina 2004<br />

Crankshaw, Jess 2009<br />

Croan, Carol 1994<br />

Cuevas, Tina 2000<br />

Curran, Sarah 1998<br />

Curtin, Marie 2008<br />

Deasley, Dolores 2003<br />

DelBiondo, Laura 2005<br />

DeRosa, Brooke 2007<br />

Dinisio, Gina 1999<br />

Eidenweil, Christa 2000<br />

Farriella, Krysten 2009<br />

Ferriso, Amy 2007<br />

Fuertes, Erika 2009<br />

Giannetta, Suzanne 1995<br />

Gilroy, Ann Marie 1992<br />

Greene, Laura 2011<br />

Guise, Liz 2008<br />

Gulley, Sara 2008<br />

Hargraves, Larkin 2007<br />

Hawkins, Grace 2010<br />

Herzog, Nicole 2002<br />

Hodermarsky, Jean 1996<br />

Howie, Sarah 1995<br />

Johnson, Debra 1994<br />

Kain, Heather 1998<br />

Kelleher, Erin 2008<br />

Kilduff, Emma 2004<br />

Klouse, Christie 1997<br />

Knecht, Danielle 1997<br />

Koch, Wendy 2000<br />

Leurini, Carol 2008<br />

Catherine Clancy<br />

44 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong><br />

Carol Leurini<br />

Kathleen Mikowski


Nina Nanavrakis<br />

Bridget Penta<br />

Kayla Pifer<br />

Levitan, Maureen 1994<br />

Lipari, Jill 2009<br />

Magee, Erin 2002<br />

Malone, Edel 2008<br />

Marinan, Jerilyn 2000<br />

Mikowski, Kathleen 2001<br />

Montague, Colleen 1994<br />

Monz, Erica 2003<br />

Murino, Danielle 2011<br />

Nanavrakis, Nina 2005<br />

Naughton, Tracey 2000<br />

Newell, Suzanne 1997<br />

O’Connor, Elaine 2003<br />

O’Connor, Robyn 1998<br />

Pacinda, Christina 2005<br />

Payne, Tessa 1995<br />

Pegg, Julie 1992<br />

Penta, Bridget 2003<br />

Pifer, Kayla 2010<br />

Pistone, Marisa 2003<br />

Pollaro, Jackie 2007<br />

Presto, Elizabeth 1997<br />

Pullano, Allyson 1999<br />

Richards, Kareina 2008<br />

Rizzi, Dianne 1993<br />

Robens, Krystal 2008<br />

Roesler, Valerie 2003<br />

Rosen, Wendy 1996<br />

Rosenfeld, Abbe 1995<br />

Schaefer, Kerry 2003<br />

Schmitt, Charity 2003<br />

Shaban, Ashley 2005<br />

Sherman, Audra 2002<br />

Stansfield, Penny 2000<br />

Steinberg, Alex 2007<br />

Suapengco, Kristine 2008<br />

Sullivan, Kendra 2003<br />

Sylva, Samantha 1994<br />

Tarik, Salma 2010<br />

Thorn, Krista 2010<br />

Toyomasu, Yumi 2007<br />

True, Julie 2000<br />

Wachsberger, Becky 2005<br />

Weber, Sue 2007<br />

Winchester, Kristine 2001<br />

Yovino, Tifffany 2010<br />

Zoumas, Sofia 1996<br />

Lisa Prazak<br />

Robyn O’Connor<br />

This list was <strong>com</strong>piled through<br />

information provided by the<br />

Hofstra Alumni Relations<br />

Office. Any omission was<br />

purely unintentional. Please call<br />

the Hofstra Office of Athletic<br />

Communications at (516)<br />

463-6759 with any additions.<br />

Year listed is final year of<br />

<strong>com</strong>petition.<br />

Kristine Winchester<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 45


HOFSTRA IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT<br />

The Pride has made three NCAA Tournament appearances and owns a 2-3 mark in NCAA play. The<br />

team won the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) Championship in 2005 to earn their first NCAA<br />

berth and won the CAA again in 2007 to qualify for the NCAA Tournament for the second time. In<br />

2010 the Pride, ranked 23rd in the nation, earned an at-large bid to the tournament field.<br />

2005<br />

Hofstra 0, #21 West Virginia 3 (at Penn State)<br />

Edel Malone leads an<br />

offensive charge against<br />

West Virginia<br />

Sue Weber looks to clear the<br />

defensive zone versus the<br />

Mountaineers<br />

Ashley Shaban escapes her<br />

West Virginia defender<br />

2007<br />

Hofstra 1, Ohio State 0 (at Penn State)<br />

Hofstra 1, #6 Penn State 2 (OT) (at Penn State)<br />

Diane Caldwell looks to<br />

clear the ball in Hofstra<br />

second round game<br />

against Penn State<br />

The Pride celebrate Edel<br />

Malone’s goal in a 1-0 win<br />

over Ohio State<br />

All-American Brooke<br />

DeRosa brings the ball up<br />

field versus Penn State<br />

46 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


2010<br />

#23 Hofstra 1, Connecticut 0 (at Boston College)<br />

#23 Hofstra 1, #18 Boston College 3 (at Boston College)<br />

Emily Morphitis, Coach Simon Riddiough and Courtney Breen meet<br />

the media following Hofstra’s second round game<br />

Brittany Butts<br />

eludes a<br />

Connecticut<br />

defender in<br />

Hofstra’s 1-0<br />

win over the<br />

Huskies<br />

Laura<br />

Greene<br />

runs<br />

down<br />

a loose<br />

ball<br />

in the<br />

Pride’s<br />

first<br />

round<br />

win<br />

Krista Thorn<br />

delivers a punt<br />

following a save<br />

against Boston<br />

College<br />

The Pride celebrate the<br />

second NCAA Tournament<br />

victory in program<br />

history<br />

Kayla Pifer attacks<br />

the offensive<br />

zone in Hofstra’s<br />

second round<br />

game at Boston<br />

College<br />

Tiffany Yovino’s<br />

header in the<br />

10th minute was<br />

the only goal in<br />

Hofstra’s first<br />

round victory<br />

Salma Tarik dribbles the ball out of her<br />

defensive zone against the Eagles<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 47


ALL-TIME SERIES RECORDS<br />

Albany 2-0-0<br />

American 1-3-1<br />

Army 1-2-0<br />

Boston College 0-2-0<br />

Boston University 0-8-1<br />

Boston University Club Team 1-0-0<br />

Brown 1-0-0<br />

Buffalo 0-1-0<br />

Campbell 0-1-0<br />

Central Connecticut 5-6-1<br />

Charleston 1-0-0<br />

Columbia 5-4-1<br />

Concordia 1-0-0<br />

Connecticut 1-3-1<br />

Cornell 1-0-0<br />

Delaware 14-6-0<br />

Drexel 15-1-0<br />

East Carolina 0-1-1<br />

Eastern Michigan 1-0-0<br />

Fairfield 3-2-0<br />

Fairleigh Dickinson 3-0-1<br />

Florida International 1-0-0<br />

Fordham 10-2-1<br />

Fordham Club Team 2-0-0<br />

George Mason 7-3-1<br />

Georgia State 6-1-1<br />

Hartford 0-9-1<br />

Harvard 2-0-0<br />

Indiana 1-1-0<br />

Iona 5-3-0<br />

James Madison 4-7-1<br />

Lafayette 0-1-0<br />

LaSalle 2-1-0<br />

Lehigh 0-1-0<br />

Long Island University 4-0-0<br />

Loyola (MD) 0-1-0<br />

Maine 8-2-1<br />

Manhattan 3-4-2<br />

Manhattanville 1-0-0<br />

Marist 6-1-0<br />

Maryland-Baltimore County 1-0-0<br />

Miami (OH) 1-0-0<br />

Mt. St. Mary’s 1-0-0<br />

New Hampshire 4-4-1<br />

New York University 1-0-0<br />

Niagara 1-0-0<br />

North Carolina Greensboro 1-0-0<br />

North Carolina Wilmington 8-3-1<br />

Northeastern 10-5-1<br />

Ohio State 1-0-0<br />

Old Dominion 7-2-2<br />

Penn State 0-2-0<br />

Pennsylvania 0-1-0<br />

Philadelphia College of Textiles and Sciences 1-1-0<br />

Pittsburgh 1-0-0<br />

Princeton 3-1-0<br />

Providence 1-0-1<br />

Purdue 1-0-0<br />

Quinnipiac 3-0-0<br />

Rhode Island 1-0-0<br />

Richmond 2-0-0<br />

Rutgers 0-1-0<br />

Sacred Heart 1-0-0<br />

Saint Peter’s 2-2-1<br />

Seton Hall 1-0-0<br />

Siena 4-1-0<br />

St. Francis (PA) 1-0-0<br />

St. John’s 1-4-0<br />

St. Thomas Aquinas 1-0-0<br />

Stony Brook 8-3-0<br />

TCU 0-1-0<br />

Texas Tech 1-0-0<br />

Towson 14-2-1<br />

Vermont 4-5-0<br />

Villanova 0-1-0<br />

Virginia 0-1-0<br />

Virginia Commonwealth 8-2-2<br />

Wagner 7-0-0<br />

Washington 0-1-1<br />

West Virginia 0-2-0<br />

Western Connecticut 1-0-0<br />

William & Mary 5-8-0<br />

Wyoming 1-0-0<br />

Yale 0-1-0<br />

48 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


1992<br />

Record: 12-3-0 (Club Team)<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

9/4 Philadelphia College of<br />

Textiles and Sciences<br />

2-1 W (OT)<br />

9/8 at St. John’s 0-1 L<br />

9/14 at Western Connecticut 10-0 W<br />

9/16 Iona 0-2 L<br />

9/19 Siena 1-0 W<br />

9/22 at Fordham 3-0 W<br />

9/30 at Concordia 7-2 W<br />

10/3 at Manhattan 0-2 L<br />

10/6 New York University 8-0 W<br />

10/8 St. Thomas Aquinas 6-0 W<br />

10/14 Fairfield 2-1 W (OT)<br />

10/17 St. Peter’s 7-0 W<br />

10/20 Fordham 4-0 W<br />

10/22 at Manhattanville 4-0 W<br />

10/25 at Boston University 4-0 W<br />

1993<br />

Record: 5-11-1<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

ALL-TIME RESULTS<br />

1994<br />

Record: 16-2-1<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

9/7 St. Peter’s 2-0 W<br />

9/10 Wagner 6-0 W<br />

9/13 Iona 3-0 W<br />

9/16 at La Salle 3-0 W<br />

9/18 at Drexel 9-0 W<br />

9/21 at Stony Brook 4-1 W<br />

9/29 at Manhattan 5-1 W<br />

10/2 at Vermont 1-0 W<br />

10/4 at St. John’s 0-1 L<br />

10/8 Wagner 4-0 W<br />

10/9 at Seton Hall 3-0 W<br />

10/12 Fairfield 4-2 W<br />

10/14 Siena 4-2 W<br />

10/17 at Maine 3-1 W<br />

10/22 at Mount St. Mary’s 1-0 W( OT)<br />

10/26 Fordham 6-2 W<br />

10/29 St. Francis (PA) 3-0 W<br />

10/30 New Hampshire 1-1 T (OT)<br />

11/9 at New Hampshire% 1-2 L<br />

%ECAC Tournament Quarterfinals<br />

9/4 St. John’s 2-1 W<br />

9/9 at St. Peter’s 2-2 T<br />

9/11 at Philadelphia College of<br />

Textiles and Sciences<br />

2-3 L (OT)<br />

9/12 at Lafayette 1-8 L<br />

9/14 at Iona 0-4 L<br />

9/25 Maine 0-5 L<br />

9/26 Buffalo 0-3 L<br />

9/30 Manhattan 2-3 L<br />

10/2 at Stony Brook 0-3 L<br />

10/3 Wagner 6-0 W<br />

10/9 Niagara 3-2 W (OT)<br />

10/13 at Fairfield 0-3 L<br />

10/14 Campbell 0-2 L<br />

10/16 American 0-5 L<br />

10/20 at Siena 3-0 W<br />

10/23 Loyola 3-4 L (OT)<br />

10/26 at Fordham 3-0 W<br />

amber stobbs<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 49


ALL-TIME RESULTS<br />

1995<br />

Record: 5-12-0<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

9/6 at St. Peter’s 3-4 L (OT)<br />

9/9 Iona 1-2 L<br />

9/10 Manhattan 1-2 L<br />

9/15 Stony Brook 1-2 L<br />

9/17 at Central Connecticut 2-0 W<br />

9/20 Hartford* 0-9 L<br />

9/24 American 1-0 W<br />

9/28 at New Hampshire* 0-8 L<br />

9/30 at Maine* 3-2 W (OT)<br />

10/4 St. John’s 0-4 L<br />

10/7 at Towson State* 3-1 W<br />

10/14 at Siena 2-3 L<br />

10/18 at Fordham 1-2 L<br />

10/22 Delaware* 0-6 L<br />

10/26 at Wagner 3-1 W<br />

10/28 Boston University 0-3 L<br />

10/29 Vermont* 0-6 L<br />

*North Atlantic Conference game<br />

1996<br />

Record: 6-12-0<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

9/4 St. Peter’s 0-4 L<br />

9/7 Iona 5-0 W<br />

9/11 at U.S. Military Academy 0-2 L<br />

9/16 Northeastern 4-1 W<br />

9/21 at Vermont* 0-3 L<br />

9/24 Manhattan 3-0 W<br />

9/28 at Delaware* 1-3 L<br />

9/29 at American 0-1 L<br />

10/2 at Columbia 1-4 L<br />

10/5 Central Connecticut 6-0 W<br />

10/9 at Hartford* 0-3 L<br />

10/12 Boston University* 0-3 L<br />

10/15 Siena 1-0 W (OT)<br />

10/18 at Maine* 0-3 L<br />

10/20 at New Hampshire* 0-2 L<br />

10/26 at St. John’s 3-4 L<br />

10/29 Wagner 4-0 W<br />

11/2 at Towson State* 0-3 L<br />

*America East game<br />

1997<br />

Record: 10-7-1<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

9/3 at Wagner 3-1 W<br />

9/7 American 2-3 L<br />

9/11 at Manhattan 2-2 T<br />

9/17 at Long Island University 7-0 W<br />

9/20 Iona 4-0 W<br />

9/21 at Central Connecticut 1-2 L<br />

9/24 at Stony Brook 3-1 W<br />

9/27 Lehigh 0-1 L (OT)<br />

10/1 Marist 1-0 W<br />

10/3 Northeastern* 5-0 W<br />

10/5 Boston University* 1-2 L<br />

10/10 Maine* 1-0 W<br />

10/12 New Hampshire* 2-1 W (OT)<br />

10/18 Delaware* 3-2 W<br />

10/24 at Towson* 0-3 L<br />

10/26 at Drexel* 2-0 W<br />

10/31 at Hartford* 1-7 L<br />

11/2 at Vermont* 0-2 L<br />

*America East game<br />

1998<br />

Record: 10-7-2<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

9/3 at Central Connecticut 1-4 L<br />

9/6 Charleston 3-1 W<br />

9/9 at Marist 3-0 W<br />

9/12 Manhattan 4-4 T (OT)<br />

9/16 Wagner 7-0 W<br />

9/20 at American 0-0 T (OT)<br />

9/22 at UMBC 4-1 W<br />

9/24 Stony Brook 1-2 L (OT)<br />

9/27 at Iona 3-0 W<br />

10/2 at Northeastern* 1-0 W (OT)<br />

10/4 at Boston University* 0-5 L<br />

10/8 Delaware* 1-2 L<br />

10/13 Long Island University 4-1 W<br />

10/16 at Maine* 2-0 W<br />

10/18 at New Hampshire* 1-2 L<br />

10/23 Hartford* 1-2 L (OT)<br />

10/25 Vermont* 3-4 L (OT)<br />

10/30 Towson* 2-1 W<br />

11/1 Drexel* 3-2 W<br />

*America East game<br />

50 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


1999<br />

Record: 13-6<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

9/1 Marist 2-0 W<br />

9/4 at Long Island University 6-1 W<br />

9/8 #8 Hartford* 1-2 L<br />

9/12 at Columbia 1-2 L (OT)<br />

9/15 at Army 1-2 L<br />

9/19 Central Connecticut State 3-2 W<br />

9/23 Fordham 4-2 W<br />

9/26 Vermont* 4-1 W<br />

9/29 Delaware* 1-0 W<br />

10/3 at Towson* 1-0 W<br />

10/7 at Manhattan 0-1 L<br />

10/13 at Stony Brook 3-1 W<br />

10/16 at Drexel* 2-1 W<br />

10/19 Iona 4-0 W<br />

10/22 Maine* 1-0 W (OT)<br />

10/24 New Hampshire* 3-0 W<br />

10/29 at Boston University* 1-3 L<br />

10/31 at Northeastern* 3-0 W<br />

11/3 at Boston University% 0-1 L<br />

*America East game<br />

%America East Championship Semifinal<br />

2000<br />

Record: 12-5-2<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

2001<br />

Record: 8-8-3<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

8/31 Florida International 2-0 W<br />

9/2 West Virginia 1-2 L (2OT)<br />

9/5 Central Connecticut State 3-0 W<br />

9/8 Fordham 4-1 W<br />

9/22 at Boston University* 0-0 T (2OT)<br />

9/23 at Northeastern* 1-2 L<br />

9/30 at Columbia 1-2 L (2OT)<br />

10/6 Maine* 1-1 T (2OT)<br />

10/8 New Hampshire* 1-0 W<br />

10/12 Hartford* 0-1 L<br />

10/14 Vermont* 1-0 W<br />

10/19 at Delaware* 0-3 L<br />

10/21 at Towson* 2-1 W<br />

10/26 at Albany* 3-1 W<br />

10/28 Stony Brook* 3-2 W (OT)<br />

10/30 at Rutgers 1-4 L<br />

11/3 at Drexel* 0-2 L<br />

11/6 Towson% 0-0 T (4OT)<br />

(Hofstra advances on penalty kicks)<br />

11/9 at Hartford% 0-1 L (3OT)<br />

*America East game<br />

%America East Championship<br />

8/31 at Marist 0-1 L<br />

9/2 Long Island University 4-2 W<br />

9/6 at Central Connecticut State 0-1 L<br />

9/11 at Hartford* 0-2 L<br />

9/15 at East Carolina$ 2-2 T (OT)<br />

9/17 North Carolina-Wilmington$ 2-0 W<br />

9/22 Boston University* 0-1 L<br />

9/24 Northeastern* 2-1 W<br />

9/27 Columbia 5-2 W<br />

9/30 at Vermont* 3-2 W<br />

10/5 Manhattan 5-1 W<br />

10/10 at Fordham 3-3 T (OT)<br />

10/13 Delaware* 5-2 W<br />

10/15 Towson* 1-0 W<br />

10/18 Stony Brook 4-3 W<br />

10/21 Drexel* 3-1 W<br />

10/27 at Maine* 2-1 W<br />

10/29 at New Hampshire* 3-2 W (2OT)<br />

11/3 at Hartford% 0-1 L<br />

*America East game<br />

$East Carolina Tournament<br />

%America East Championship Semifinal<br />

anya koren<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 51


ALL-TIME RESULTS<br />

2002<br />

Record: 14-5-1, 6-3<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

8/30 Eastern Michigan 7-1 W<br />

9/1 Miami (OH) 2-0 W<br />

9/6 vs. Providence# 1-1 T (2OT)<br />

9/8 at Quinnipiac# 3-1 W<br />

9/10 at Stony Brook 6-0 W<br />

9/15 Fordham 2-1 W<br />

9/20 at Central Connecticut State 0-2 L<br />

9/24 Marist 3-0 W<br />

9/27 George Mason* 2-1 W<br />

10/1 Columbia 1-0 W<br />

10/4 James Madison* 1-2 L<br />

10/12 at Drexel* 3-0 W<br />

10/18 at Old Dominion* 2-0 W<br />

10/20 at William & Mary* 0-3 L<br />

10/25 at UNC Wilmington* 0-1 L (OT)<br />

10/27 at VCU* 1-0 W<br />

11/1 Towson* 3-0 W<br />

11/3 Delaware* 3-0 W<br />

11/5 Delaware% 1-0 W<br />

11/9 vs. George Mason% 0-1 L<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

#Quinnipiac Tournament<br />

%Colonial Athletic Association Championship<br />

2003<br />

Record: 13-3-3, 6-1-2<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

8/29 at Marist 3-0 W<br />

9/2 at Fordham 1-0 W (OT)<br />

9/5 at UNC Greensboro$ 2-0 W<br />

9/7 vs. LaSalle$ 3-1 W<br />

9/13 Central Connecticut State 0-1 L<br />

9/16 Quinnipiac 6-1 W<br />

9/21 Pittsburgh 2-0 W<br />

9/26 at Delaware* 1-0 W (2 OT)<br />

9/28 at Towson* 2-1 W<br />

10/3 VCU* 2-2 T (2 OT)<br />

10/5 UNC Wilmington* 1-0 W<br />

10/9 at Connecticut 0-0 T (2 OT)<br />

10/14 Stony Brook 1-0 W<br />

10/18 William & Mary* 1-0 W<br />

10/20 Old Dominion* 1-0 W<br />

10/25 Drexel* 3-0 W<br />

10/31 at George Mason* 1-1 T (2 OT)<br />

11/1 at James Madison* 0-1 L<br />

11/7 William & Mary% 0-1 L<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

$UNC Greensboro Tournament<br />

%Colonial Athletic Association Championship<br />

52 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong><br />

2004<br />

Record: 12-6-1, 6-3-0<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

8/27 at Army# 2-0 W<br />

8/29 vs. Fordham# 1-1 T (2 OT)<br />

9/3 LaSalle 0-1 L<br />

9/5 Providence 2-0 W<br />

9/8 at Fordham 1-2 L<br />

9/10 vs. Maine$ 2-1 W (OT)<br />

9/12 vs. Brown$ 2-1 W<br />

9/16 Quinnipiac 3-1 W<br />

9/19 Fairleigh Dickinson 2-1 W<br />

9/24 at VCU* 0-1 L (OT)<br />

9/26 at UNC Wilmington* 1-0 W<br />

10/1 Delaware* 2-1 W<br />

10/3 Towson* 1-0 W<br />

10/15 George Mason* 2-3 L (2 OT)<br />

10/17 James Madison* 1-0 W<br />

10/22 at William & Mary* 1-2 L<br />

10/24 at Old Dominion* 1-0 W (OT)<br />

10/30 at Drexel* 6-1 W<br />

11/5 William & Mary% 1-2 L (OT)<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

#United State Military Academy Tournament<br />

$ECAC Tournament<br />

%Colonial Athletic Association Championship<br />

2005<br />

Record: 14-4-3, 8-1-2<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: JoAnne Russell<br />

8/26 vs. #9 Connecticut$ 0-3 L<br />

8/28 vs. #20 Washington$ 1-1 T (2OT)<br />

9/2 vs. Maine+ 1-0 W<br />

9/4 at Boston University+ 0-1 L (OT)<br />

9/10 Marist 5-0 W<br />

9/14 Fordham 7-1 W<br />

9/18 Fairleigh Dickinson 4-2 W<br />

9/24 at Northeastern* 3-0 W<br />

9/30 Drexel* 1-0 W<br />

10/2 at Delaware* 2-0 W<br />

10/7 at Towson* 1-0 W<br />

10/9 at George Mason* 3-1 W<br />

10/15 William & Mary* 3-0 W<br />

10/16 Old Dominion* 1-0 W<br />

10/21 at Georgia State* 0-1 L<br />

10/23 at UNC Wilmington* 1-1 T (2OT)<br />

10/27 James Madison* 1-0 T (2OT)<br />

10/29 VCU* 0-0 T (2OT)<br />

11/4 vs. Delaware# 2-1 W<br />

11/6 at VCU# 1-0 W<br />

11/11 vs. #21 West Virginia% 0-3 L<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

$Penn State Invitational<br />

+Boston University Invitational<br />

#Colonial Athletic Association Championship<br />

%NCAA Tournament at Penn State


2006<br />

Record: 9-8-2, 5-5-1<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: Simon Riddiough<br />

8/25 at Connecticut# 0-4 L<br />

8/27 vs. Fairfield# 3-0 W<br />

9/1 Sacred Heart 1-0 W<br />

9/3 Central Connecticut 2-1 W<br />

9/8 at Penn$ 0-1 L<br />

9/10 vs. Princeton$ 0-4 L<br />

9/15 at Fordham 2-1 W<br />

9/17 at Fairleigh Dickinson 1-1 T (2OT)<br />

9/22 Towson* 1-0 W<br />

9/24 George Mason* 3-0 W<br />

9/29 at #16 William & Mary* 0-1 L<br />

10/1 at Old Dominion* 0-1 L<br />

10/6 Georgia State* 2-1 W<br />

10/8 UNC Wilmington* 0-3 L<br />

10/13 at James Madison* 0-2 L<br />

10/15 at VCU* 0-2 L<br />

10/20 at Drexel* 1-0 W<br />

10/22 Delaware* 2-0 W<br />

10/26 Northeastern* 1-1 T (2OT)<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

#UConn Husky Classic<br />

$University of Pennsylvania Tournament<br />

2007<br />

Record: 18-4-0, 9-2-0<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: Simon Riddiough<br />

8/31 Cornell 5-1 W<br />

9/2 at Central Connecticut 2-1 W (OT)<br />

9/7 vs. Richmond# 2-1 W<br />

9/9 vs. Wyoming# 3-0 W<br />

9/14 Columbia 1-2 L<br />

9/16 Fairleigh Dickinson 5-2 W<br />

9/22 Fordham 2-0 W<br />

9/28 at Towson* 1-0 W<br />

9/30 at George Mason* 2-1 W (OT)<br />

10/5 William & Mary* 0-2 L<br />

10/7 Old Dominion* 1-0 W<br />

10/12 at Georgia State* 2-1 W<br />

10/14 at UNC Wilmington* 2-0 W<br />

10/19 James Madison* 0-2 L<br />

10/21 VCU* 2-0 W<br />

10/26 Drexel* 1-0 W<br />

10/28 at Delaware* 2-0 W<br />

11/1 at Northeastern* 3-0 W<br />

11/9 vs. James Madison$ 2-0 W<br />

11/11 vs. VCU$ 1-0 W<br />

11/16 vs. Ohio State% 1-0 W<br />

11/18 at #6 Penn State% 1-2 L (OT)<br />

2008<br />

Record: 11-8-3, 7-3-1<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: Simon Riddiough<br />

8/29 vs. #11 Connecticut^ 0-1 L<br />

8/31 at #9 Penn State^ 1-4 L<br />

9/5 at Columbia 1-0 W<br />

9/7 Princeton 1-0 W<br />

9/12 vs. East Carolina# 1-2 L<br />

9/14 vs. Villanova# 2-3 L<br />

9/18 Stony Brook 1-0 W (OT)<br />

9/21 Central Connecticut 3-3 T (2 OT)<br />

9/26 Delaware* 1-0 W<br />

9/28 at Drexel* 1-0 W (OT)<br />

10/3 George Mason* 2-0 W<br />

10/5 Towson* 1-0 W<br />

10/10 at Old Dominion* 0-0 T (2 OT)<br />

10/12 at William & Mary* 0-1 L (OT)<br />

10/17 UNC Wilmington* 2-0 W<br />

10/19 Georgia State* 4-3 W<br />

10/24 at VCU* 2-1 W<br />

10/26 at James Madison* 1-2 L<br />

10/30 Northeastern* 1-2 L (OT)<br />

11/4 at Old Dominion$ 2-2 T (OT)<br />

(Hofstra advances on penalty kicks)<br />

11/7 at William & Mary$ 3-2 W<br />

11/9 vs. Northeastern$ 0-1 L (OT)<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

^Penn State Invitational<br />

#Penn Invitational<br />

$CAA Championship<br />

caylin dudley<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

#James Madison Invitational<br />

$CAA Championship at Virginia Beach, VA<br />

%NCAA Tournament at Penn State<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 53


ALL-TIME RESULTS<br />

2009<br />

Record: 10-6-3, 7-2-2<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: Simon Riddiough<br />

8/28 at Richmond 2-1 W (OT)<br />

8/30 at #10 Virginia 0-7 L<br />

9/4 at Princeton 2-1 W<br />

9/6 at Yale 0-3 L<br />

9/11 #25 Indiana 2-3 L (2 OT)<br />

9/13 Harvard 3-2 W<br />

9/18 Columbia 1-1 T (2 OT)<br />

9/24 at Delaware* 3-2 W<br />

9/27 Drexel* 4-0 W<br />

10/2 at George Mason 1-0 W<br />

10/4 at Towson* 3-0 W<br />

10/9 Old Dominion* 1-2 L<br />

10/11 William & Mary* 4-1 W<br />

10/16 at UNC Wilmington* 2-1 W<br />

10/18 at Georgia State* 0-0 T (2 OT)<br />

10/23 VCU* 3-0 W<br />

10/25 James Madison* 0-0 T (2 OT)<br />

10/31 at Northeastern* 0-4 L<br />

11/6 vs. UNC Wilmington$ 1-2 L (OT)<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

$CAA Championship<br />

2011<br />

Record: 10-8-0, 6-5<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: Simon Riddiough<br />

8/26 Fairfield 0-1 L<br />

8/28 vs. Columbia 2-0 W<br />

9/2 vs. Albany 5-0 W<br />

9/4 at Texas Tech 2-1 W (OT)<br />

9/9 vs. VCU 0-1 L<br />

9/11 at Harvard 5-4 W<br />

9/16 James Madison* 3-4 L (OT)<br />

9/23 VCU* 1-0 W<br />

9/25 Drexel* 2-1 W<br />

9/29 at Delaware* 2-3 L<br />

10/2 at Towson* 2-3 L<br />

10/7 at George Mason* 0-1 L<br />

10/9 #23 William & Mary* 0-1 L<br />

10/14 Old Dominion* 2-1 W<br />

10/16 at Georgia State* 2-0 W<br />

10/21 at UNC Wilmington* 2-0 W<br />

10/23 at Northeastern* 3-0 W<br />

10/29 vs. Delaware$ 0-1 L<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

$CAA Championship<br />

2010<br />

Record: 19-3-0, 11-0<br />

Colonial Athletic Association<br />

Coach: Simon Riddiough<br />

8/27 at #7 Boston College 0-5 L<br />

9/3 Rhode Island 3-1 W<br />

9/5 Fordham 4-1 W<br />

9/10 at Purdue 3-1 W<br />

9/12 at Indiana 3-1 W<br />

9/17 at Columbia 1-0 W (2 OT)<br />

9/19 Princeton 1-0 W<br />

9/24 at James Madison* 1-0 W<br />

9/26 at VCU* 2-0 W<br />

9/30 at Drexel* 2-1 W<br />

10/3 Delaware* 2-0 W<br />

10/8 Towson* 4-1 W<br />

10/10 George Mason* 5-0 W<br />

10/15 at William & Mary* 3-2 W<br />

10/17 at Old Dominion* 3-1 W<br />

10/22 Georgia State* 3-2 W (OT)<br />

10/24 UNC Wilmington* 2-0 W<br />

10/30 Northeastern* 2-1 W (2 OT)<br />

11/5 Georgia State$ 3-0 W<br />

11/7 James Madison$ 0-2 L<br />

11/12 vs. Connecticut% 1-0 W<br />

11/14 at #18 Boston College% 1-3 L<br />

kylie shuster<br />

*Colonial Athletic Association game<br />

$CAA Championship<br />

%NCAA Tournament at Boston College<br />

54 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


2012 HOFSTRA SOCCER MEDIA INFORMATION<br />

The Hofstra University Office of Athletic Communications<br />

wel<strong>com</strong>es the members of the media covering the 2012 Pride<br />

<strong>soccer</strong> team. If we can be of any assistance to you throughout the<br />

year, please do not hesitate to contact us. We hope the following items<br />

will help you during your visits to Hofstra University. Enjoy the season.<br />

Press Seating: Hofstra Soccer Stadium press seating is located in the<br />

press box, which is located atop the bleachers on the north side of the<br />

stadium.<br />

Credential Requests: All members of the press should contact the<br />

Office of Athletic Communications at least 48 hours before each game<br />

to request credentials.<br />

Game Services: Game notes, statistics and lineups are available before<br />

the game in the press box. Halftime statistics will be distributed and<br />

final statistics will be available 10 minutes after the conclusion of each<br />

contest.<br />

Stephen Gorchov<br />

Associate Director of Athletics for Communications<br />

Brian Bohl (Soccer Contact)<br />

Senior Assistant Director of Athletic Communications<br />

Jim Sheehan<br />

Senior Sports Information Director<br />

Len Skoros<br />

Director of Athletic Publications<br />

Photography: Photographers can shoot from the sidelines on either<br />

side of the field, but are not permitted in team bench areas. Photography<br />

and videotaping is also permitted from the roof of the press box.<br />

Radio: The Hofstra Office of Athletic Communications will provide<br />

a touch-tone digital phone line for the opponent’s <strong>com</strong>mercial and<br />

student radio stations. Visiting teams will need to give the Athletic<br />

Communications Office two weeks notice of their intention to broadcast.<br />

All calls must be made collect or direct dial from the radio station to the<br />

Hofstra Soccer Stadium.<br />

Postgame Interviews: Hofstra players and coaches will be available<br />

for postgame interviews, upon request, after a 10-minute cooling off<br />

period. Contact Jeremy Kniffin with your request.<br />

Player Interviews: All requests for student-athlete interviews<br />

should be made at least one day in advance with the Office of Athletic<br />

Communications. If you are requesting a phone interview, we will have<br />

the student-athlete return your call at a mutually convenient time. Player<br />

home phone numbers will not be distributed. In-person interviews may<br />

be conducted in a number of locations in and around the Hofstra Physical<br />

Fitness Center. However, interviews may not be conducted in the locker<br />

room or the athletic training room.<br />

Office of Athletic Communications<br />

240 Hofstra University-Swim Center 262<br />

Hempstead, NY 11549<br />

(516) 463-6759 - Brian Bohl’s office<br />

(516) 463-5033 - Fax<br />

2012 HOFSTRA SOCCER MEDIA OUTLETS<br />

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />

50 Rockefeller Plaza<br />

New York, NY 10020<br />

(212) 621-1630 - Office<br />

(212) 621-1639 - Fax<br />

NEWSDAY<br />

235 Pinelawn Road<br />

Melville, NY 11747<br />

(631) 843-2820 - Office<br />

(631) 454-6892 - Fax<br />

NEW YORK TIMES<br />

229 West 43rd Street<br />

New York, NY 10036<br />

(212) 556-7384 - Office<br />

(646) 428-6147 - Fax<br />

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS<br />

450 West 33rd Street<br />

New York, NY 10001<br />

(212) 210-1692 - Office<br />

(212) 643-7845 - Fax<br />

NEW YORK POST<br />

1211 Avenue of the Americas<br />

New York, NY 10036<br />

(212) 930-8700 - Office<br />

(212) 930-8727 - Fax<br />

LONG ISLAND HERALD<br />

2 Endo Boulevard<br />

Garden City, NY<br />

(516) 569-4000 - Office<br />

(516) 469-4942 - Fax<br />

LONG ISLAND PRESS<br />

1103 Stewart Avenue<br />

Garden City, NY 11530<br />

(516) 992-1800 - Office<br />

(516) 992-1801 - Fax<br />

HOFSTRA CHRONICLE<br />

Student Center<br />

Hempstead, NY 11550<br />

(516) 463-6965 - Office<br />

(516) 463-6977 - Fax<br />

NEWS 12 LONG ISLAND<br />

150 Media Crossways<br />

Woodbury, NY 11797<br />

(516) 393-3740 - Office<br />

(516) 393-1269 - Fax<br />

WLNY-TV 55<br />

270 South Service Road<br />

Melville, NY 11747<br />

(631) 753-6397 - Office<br />

(631) 420-4846 - Fax<br />

WRHU-FM 88.7<br />

Hofstra University<br />

Dempster Hall<br />

Hempstead, NY 11549<br />

(516) 463-5667 - Office<br />

(516) 463-5668 - Fax<br />

2012 WOMEN’S SOCCER 55


CAMPUS MAP/GETTING TO HOFSTRA<br />

From Southern New Jersey, Southeastern Pennsylvania, Maryland,<br />

Washington, D.C. and Virginia:<br />

Take the New Jersey Turnpike to Exit 13. Cross the Goethals Bridge and continue on<br />

Route 278 to the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge. Stay in the left lane of the Bridge and<br />

take the Belt Parkway-East. The Belt Parkway be<strong>com</strong>es the Southern State Parkway<br />

at the Nassau County line. Take the Southern State Parkway to the Meadowbrook<br />

Parkway North (Exit 22). Exit the Meadowbrook Parkway at Exit M4 (Hempstead<br />

Turnpike Route 24). Head west to Hofstra (approximately 1 mile).<br />

From Northwestern New Jersey, Northern Pennsylvania and the Middle<br />

States:<br />

Take Interstate 78, Interstate 80, U.S. Route 22, New Jersey Route 4 or New Jersey<br />

Route 17 to the George Washington Bridge. Proceed over the bridge to the Cross<br />

Bronx Expressway. Take the Cross Bronx Expressway to the Throgs Neck Bridge.<br />

Follow directions from the Throgs Neck Bridge from this point.<br />

From Upstate New York:<br />

Take New York Thruway over the Tappan Zee Bridge to Cross Westchester Expressway<br />

Campus Map<br />

(Interstate 287). Stay on the Expressway to<br />

the New England Thruway (Interstate<br />

95). Proceed south on the Thruway to the<br />

Throgs Neck Bridge. Follow directions<br />

from the Throgs Neck Bridge from this<br />

point.<br />

From the Throgs Neck Bridge:<br />

Follow signs for Eastern Long Island.<br />

Take the Cross Island Parkway to the<br />

Grand Central Parkway-East. The Grand<br />

Central be<strong>com</strong>es the Northern State<br />

Parkway at the Nassau County line.<br />

Take the Northern State Parkway-East to<br />

the Meadowbrook Parkway-South (exit<br />

31A). Take the Meadowbrook Parkway-<br />

South to Exit M4 West (Hempstead<br />

Turnpike Route 24). Follow Hempstead<br />

Turnpike West to Hofstra (approximately<br />

1 mile).<br />

W<br />

N<br />

E<br />

For Team Travel Via Bus:<br />

Commercial buses are not allowed on<br />

New York City (Belt, Grand Central or<br />

Cross Island) or Long Island (Southern<br />

State or Northern State) Parkways. Team<br />

buses should take the Brooklyn-Queens<br />

Expressway from the south, and the<br />

Clearview Expressway from the north,<br />

to get to the Long Island Expressway<br />

for the trip to Hofstra. Once on the<br />

Long Island Expressway (I-495), buses<br />

should proceed to Glen Cove Road-<br />

South (exit 39). Head south on Glen<br />

Cove Road for approximately eight miles<br />

to Hempstead Turnpike/Fulton Avenue<br />

and turn left (east). Hofstra University<br />

is approximately two miles east on<br />

Hempstead Turnpike.<br />

Map Legend<br />

Adams Hall.....................................................25<br />

Adams Playhouse..........................................12<br />

Admission Center/Bernon Hall ................27<br />

Axinn Hall (Law)...........................................66<br />

Axinn Library ...................................................3<br />

Barnard Hall ..................................................10<br />

Baseball Field................................................72<br />

Berliner Hall ...................................................61<br />

Bird Sanctuary ..............................................76<br />

Breslin Hall.....................................................23<br />

Brower Hall......................................................11<br />

Butler Annex .................................................65<br />

Café on the Quad.........................................15<br />

Calkins Hall ....................................................14<br />

Career Center/<br />

M. Robert Lowe Hall................................64<br />

C.V. Starr Hall...............................................60<br />

Davison Hall.....................................................8<br />

Deli, Hofstra ...................................................18<br />

Dempster Hall ..............................................20<br />

Field Hockey Stadium.................................77<br />

Fitness Center ..............................................47<br />

Gittleson Hall................................................63<br />

Hagedorn Hall ..............................................55<br />

Hauser Hall ......................................................2<br />

Health and Wellness Center ....................42<br />

Heger Hall........................................................4<br />

Hofstra Dome ...............................................48<br />

Hofstra Hall......................................................7<br />

Hofstra USA .................................................40<br />

Human Resources Center..........................52<br />

Kushner Hall ..................................................22<br />

Law, School of................................................21<br />

Library Technical Services<br />

and Resource Center.................................3<br />

Lowe Hall..........................................................9<br />

Margiotta Hall ..............................................57<br />

Mason Hall/Gallon Wing..............................5<br />

McEwen Hall...................................................17<br />

Memorial Hall...................................................1<br />

Monroe Lecture Center .............................62<br />

New Academic Building .............................73<br />

Pedestrian Bridges...............................69, 70<br />

Phillips Hall ......................................................6<br />

Physical Education Building/Swim Center....49<br />

Physical Plant................................................59<br />

Public Safety and Information Center,<br />

David S. Mack ..........................................54<br />

Republic Hall .................................................42<br />

Roosevelt Hall................................................19<br />

Saltzman Community<br />

Services Center ........................................28<br />

School of Medicine. ....................................50<br />

Shapiro Alumni House ................................58<br />

Soccer Field....................................................71<br />

Softball Field.................................................75<br />

Spiegel Theater.............................................13<br />

Sports and Exhibition Complex,<br />

David S. Mack.............................................51<br />

Stadium, James M. Shuart ........................56<br />

Student Center, Sondra and<br />

David S. Mack.............................................31<br />

Unispan ..........................................................30<br />

University Club/Mack Hall ........................53<br />

University College Hall/Skodnek Business<br />

Development Center...............................43<br />

Weed Hall.......................................................26<br />

Weller Hall ......................................................16<br />

West Library Wing.......................................29<br />

Residence Halls<br />

Alliance Hall..................................................34<br />

Bill of Rights Hall .........................................35<br />

Colonial Square ...........................................46<br />

Constitution Hall..........................................36<br />

Enterprise Hall..............................................39<br />

Estabrook Hall ..............................................37<br />

Graduate Residence ...................................74<br />

Liberty Hall.....................................................41<br />

Nassau Hall ...................................................44<br />

Republic Hall .................................................42<br />

Suffolk Hall....................................................45<br />

Stuyvesant Hall.............................................32<br />

The Netherlands ..........................................33<br />

Vander Poel Hall ..........................................38<br />

S<br />

Public Transportation from Airport:<br />

If a visitor arrives at either La Guardia or<br />

Kennedy Airport, the most direct means<br />

of reaching the University is by one of<br />

three limousine <strong>com</strong>panies that service<br />

both airports and the Hofstra University<br />

area. Larry’s Taxi Service (516) 483-<br />

3333; Transport Limousine Service (800)<br />

654-1164 (out of state) (800) 832-5466<br />

(in New York state); Winston Limousine<br />

Service (800) 4-AIRPORT.<br />

Railroads:<br />

AMTRAK services Pennsylvania Station<br />

in Manhattan, approximately 30 miles<br />

from the Hofstra campus. To get to Hofstra<br />

from Penn Station, take the Long Island<br />

Rail Road to the Hempstead station. The<br />

Hofstra University Courtesy Bus and taxi<br />

services are available there. Hofstra is<br />

approximately 1.5 miles from the station.<br />

56 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY • <strong>GoHofstra</strong>.<strong>com</strong>


Amber Stobbs<br />

Sam Scolarici<br />

CAA All-Rookie<br />

Selection<br />

Kylie Shuster


2012 Hofstra Women’s Soccer Schedule<br />

August<br />

17 Fri. Ohio State 7 p.m.<br />

Fairfield Inn by Marriott Invitational<br />

(Harrisonburg, VA)<br />

24 Fri. vs. Temple 5 p.m.<br />

26 Sun. vs. Georgetown 11 a.m.<br />

Princeton Invitational (Princeton, NJ)<br />

31 Fri. vs. Colgate 5 p.m.<br />

October<br />

4 Thu. Delaware* 6 p.m.<br />

7 Sun. at Drexel* 1 p.m.<br />

12 Fri. George Mason* 7 p.m.<br />

14 Sun. Towson* 1 p.m.<br />

19 Fri. at Old Dominion* 7 p.m.<br />

21 Sun. at William & Mary* 2 p.m.<br />

24 Wed. Northeastern* 3:30 p.m.<br />

28 Sun. CAA Championship Quarterfinals<br />

(at higher seed)<br />

TBA<br />

September<br />

Princeton Invitational (Princeton, NJ)<br />

2 Sun. vs. Wake Forest 12 p.m.<br />

7 Fri. St. Bonaventure 7 p.m.<br />

9 Sun. at Marist 1 p.m.<br />

14 Fri. Albany 7 p.m.<br />

20 Thu. at UNCW* 7 p.m.<br />

23 Sun. Georgia State* 1 p.m.<br />

30 Sun. at James Madison* 1 p.m.<br />

November<br />

2 Fri. CAA Championship Semifinals<br />

(at highest seed)<br />

4 Sun. CAA Championship Game<br />

(at highest seed)<br />

*CAA game<br />

Home games in bold.<br />

Dates and times subject to change.<br />

TBA<br />

TBA<br />

Brittany Farriella<br />

Emily Morphitis

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