Post on 11-Mar-2016
description
Courtney BREEN
LauraGREENE
Brittany BUTTS
2011 women’s soccer media Guide
2010 NCAA Tournamentnovember 12-14, 2010
newton, ma
First round: Hofstra 1, connecticut 0second round: Boston college 3, Hofstra 1
Laura Greene looks to beat her defender in Hofstra’s first round win over connecticut
Brittany Butts crosses midfield in the Pride’s second round game against Boston college
The Pride celebrate a 1-0 win over connecticut, the second ncaa win in program history
Tiffany Yovino looks to spin past two eagle defenders in the Hofstra offensive zone
Tara Kerns passes the ball versus connecticut
PB Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 1
2011 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER QUICK FACTS
Table of Contents
1 Quick Facts/Table of Contents
2 Hofstra Women’s Soccer Tradition
4 This is Hofstra University
6 Hofstra Highlights
8 Head Coach Simon Riddiough
10 Assistant Coaches
11 2011 Roster
12 2011 Outlook
14 Player Bios
26 Hofstra University President
27 University Senior Administration/Trustees
28 Hofstra University Director of Athletics
29 Hofstra Athletics
30 Hofstra Athletic Administration and Head Coaches
32 Long Island and New York City
33 Athletic Academic Support
34 Sports Medicine/ Athletic Training
35 Hofstra in the Community
36 Hofstra Soccer Stadium/Facilities
38 2010 Statistics and Results
39 The Colonial Athletic Association
40 2010 CAA Review
42 Hofstra Honor Roll
44 Hofstra Soccer Record Book
46 Women’s Soccer Alumnae
48 Hofstra in the NCAA Tournament
50 All-Time Series Records
51 All-Time Results
55 Media Information
56 Campus Map/Getting to Hofstra University
Location: Hempstead, New York 11549Founded: 1935Enrollment: 12,000Affiliation: NCAA Division IConference: Colonial Athletic AssociationNickname: PrideColors: Gold, White and BlueHome Field: Hofstra Soccer Stadium (1,600)Playing Surface: Field Turf
President: Stuart RabinowitzNCAA Faculty Athletics Representative:
Michael BarnesDirector of Athletics: Jack HayesExecutive Associate Director of Athletics:
Danny McCabeSenior Associate Director of Athletics:
Cindy LewisAssociate Director of Athletics for
Communications: Stephen GorchovAssociate Director of Athletics for External
Affairs: Tim McMahonAssociate Director of Athletics for Facilities:
Jay ArtinianAssociate Director of Athletics for
Compliance: John HeckAssistant Director of Athletics for
Development: Daniel SolowAssistant Director of Athletics for Corporate
Relations: Ellen JohnsonAssistant Director of Athletics for Student-
Athlete Development: Samantha SweeneyAssistant Director of Athletics for Marketing
and Promotions: Chrissy ArnoneAssistant Director of Athletics for Ticket
Operations: Maria CorvinoDirector of Ticket Sales: Michael Neely Director of Student-Athlete Services:
James LallyDirector of Athletic Administration:
Rachel AugustAthletic Department Phone: (516) 463-3800
Associate Director of Athletics for Communications: Stephen Gorchov
Office Phone: (516) 463-4933 E-mail Address:
Stephen.A.Gorchov@hofstra.eduSenior Sports Information Director:
Jim Sheehan Office Phone: (516) 463-6764 Cell Phone: (516) 523-6692 E-mail Address: Jim.B.Sheehan@hofstra.eduSenior Assistant Director of Athletic
Communications: TBA Office Phone: (516) 463-6759
Director of Athletic Publications: Len Skoros (Women’s Soccer contact) Office Phone: (516) 463-4602 E-mail Address:
Leonard.M.Skoros@hofstra.eduAthletic Communications Fax: (516) 463-5033
Head Athletic Trainer: Evan MalingsEquipment Manager: Kathy TheilingWomen’s Soccer Athletic Trainer: Marie SilerPhotographers: Brian Ballweg, Gil Talbot,
Alex Trautwig, Len Skoros, Jeremy Kniffin
WOMEN’S SOCCER INFORMATION
Head Coach: Simon Riddiough (Hofstra, 1994)Record at Hofstra: 67-29-8/5 yearsOverall College Record: Same Assistant Coaches: Tobias Bischof,
Tiffany YovinoVolunteer Assistant: Ed SchiefersteinSoccer Office Phone: (516) 463-6946/36852010 Record: 19-32010 Conference Record/Finish: 11-0/1st2010 Postseason: CAA Finalist, NCAA Second
RoundLetterwinners Returning/Lost: 11/8Starters Returning/Lost: 5/6
Top Returnees
Name Pos. Cl. 2010 Stats/Honors Laura Greene F Sr. 6-7-19Courtney Breen M Sr. 4-5-13, Second-team All-CAA, Third-team NSCAA All-RegionBrittany Butts M Sr. 2-1-5, First-team All-CAA, Second-team NSCAA All-RegionDanielle Murino D Jr. 0-4-4Brooke Bendernagel D Jr. 0-1-1
HOFSTRA SOCCER ONLINE:
www.GoHofstra.com
2 Hofstra University
HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER TRADITION217 Winsinprogramhistory205 WinsattheDivisionIlevelin17seasons19 Program-bestwintotalin201019 Yearsofexistencefortheprogram16 Seasonsat.500orbetter4 AcademicAll-Americans(ChrissyArnone.SueWeber,DanaBergstrom,TiffanyYovino)3 NCAATournamentappearances3 All-Americansinprogramhistory(SueWeber,BrookeDeRosa,TiffanyYovino)2 Headcoachesinprogramhistory2 ColonialAthleticAssociationchampionships2 PlayersnamedtotheCAA25thAnniversaryTeam(BeckyWachsbergerandSueWeber)2 NCAATournamentvictories
The 1992 team was Hofstra’s first women’s soccer squad
Tiffany Yovino, a 2010 All-American and CAA Player of the Year, was part of 58 wins during her four-year career with the Pride
The 2010 team was ranked 23rd in the nation, earned an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament and defeated Connecticut, 1-0, in the first round
Krystal Robens posted 34 wins in goal during her Hofstra career
Sue Weber was a two-time All-American and three-time CAA Defensive Player of the Year
Christa Eidenweil’s 39 career goals rank first on Hofstra’s goal scoring list
Suzanne Newell is Hofstra’s all-time leading scorer with 89 points
2 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 3
Dana Bergstrom was an Academic All-American and the CAA Women’s Soccer Scholar-Athlete of the Year in 2010
The 2007 CAA Championship team won its first round NCAA game, 1-0, over Ohio State
The 1992 team was Hofstra’s first women’s soccer squad
Simon Riddiough has led the Pride to two NCAA appearances and 67 wins, including a program-best 19 in 2010, in his five seasons
The Pride won their first CAA Championship in 2005 to advance to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in program history
JoAnne Russell (center), a 2006 inductee into the Hofstra Athletics Hall of Fame, was the first coach in program history and won 150 games in 14 years.
Brooke DeRosa led the team in scoring in 2007 and was an NSCAA All-America selection
Krista Thorn was the starting goalkeeper on the 2010 squad and became the first female student-athlete in school history to play in the NCAA Tournament in two different sports (2010 softball)
4 Hofstra University
THIS IS HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY
Hofstra University provides a dynamic college experience tailored for engaged and ambitious individuals. Students find pride and purpose at Hofstra, through small classes, a faculty whose
primary concern is teaching, cutting edge technology, extensive library resources, internships, and active and compelling educational programs that appeal to their interests and abilities. The Hofstra community is driven, dynamic and energetic, helping students find and focus their strengths to prepare them for a successful future.
In its relatively short 76-year history, Hofstra has established itself as a world-class institution of higher education and cultural enterprise. Each academic year, the Hofstra campus and the programs offered grow and change to meet the demands of our students and our community.
Hofstra opened in 1935 as a commuter school with all classes and offices housed in one building. Since those early days, Hofstra has evolved into an international institution with a student body hailing from 50 states and territories, and 72 countries around the world. The beautiful campus is an accredited arboretum with 115 buildings on 240 acres. There are approximately 4,000 students living on campus, and Hofstra offers them and all students an extensive array of academic and social activities. Additionally, Hofstra’s close proximity to Manhattan means that students have easy access to the wondrous cultural, social and career offerings of the city.
While the campus and its offerings have changed, what has remained consistent throughout the years is the sense of community on campus, the eagerness of our students to learn and the commitment of the Hofstra faculty and administration to provide a challenging education that encourages the pursuit of lifelong learning.
The Colleges and Schools of the University are: Hofstra College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Frank G. Zarb School of Business, School of Communication, School of Education, Health and Human Services, School of Law, School for University Studies, Honors College, Hofstra University Continuing Education and Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine at Hofstra University. Bachelor’s degrees are offered in about 150 areas of study. Graduate degrees are offered, including Ph.D.,
Ed.D., Psy.D., Au.D., J.D., and M.D. degrees, advanced certificates and professional diplomas, in more approximately 160 programs of study.
Hofstra joined with North Shore-LIJ Health System in announcing plans to establish a medical school on the University campus in October 2007. The new school, which welcomed its first class in July 2011, is the first allopathic (MD) medical school in Nassau County and the first in New York State since 1963.
In 2011 Hofstra announced that it would launch a School of Engineering and Applied Science with a co-op education program that will partner with a network of industry leaders to offer students substantial work experience before they graduate.
The new school, set to open in September 2012, will combine and expand the University’s existing Engineering and Computer Science departments to develop a curriculum that emphasizes high-tech research, practical work experience and inter-disciplinary study, integrating resources and faculty from other parts of the institution, including the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine and the Frank G. Zarb School of Business.
Hofstra’s School of Communication is one of the largest, most advanced non-commercial television facilities in the East. Students take classes and work in Dempster Hall, a sophisticated television production/post-production facility with two broadcast-quality studios and control rooms; two advanced online video edit suites; two Avid non-linear digital editing systems and several cuts-only video work stations. Two satellite dishes are available with one dish providing special news feeds for the broadcast journalism room, which also has access to Associated Press, Lexis-Nexis and Dow Jones services. In addition, the facility is capable of broadcasting student-produced programming to the entire campus on our own cable channels. Also located here is the University’s radio station (WRHU/88.7-FM), audio production studios, a film/
4 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 5
video screening room, film editing rooms, a computer laboratory, a speech performance studio and a large dance studio.
Hofstra’s C.V. Starr Hall offers academic facilities that are among the most technologically advanced in the nation. Every seat in every classroom allows students direct access to the Internet and Hofstra network, including the resources of Hofstra’s Axinn Library.
Hofstra’s growing computer facilities offer extensive high-tech training opportunities. There are computer terminals throughout the campus for student and faculty use, with more than 750 PC, Macintosh and UNIX workstations available in labs and classrooms.
Hofstra hosts more than 500 cultural events annually, bringing thousands of scholars, dignitaries and other participants to campus. More than 200 musical and dramatic performances take place on campus each year. The University recently completed a year-long celebration of its 75th anniversary, complete with a concert, academic convocation and cake, several conferences and signature events which brought together students, faculty, alumni and community. In October 2008 the eyes of the world were on Hofstra for the final presidential debate between Barack Obama and John McCain. The debate was a transformational moment for the University, highlighting the achievements of our students and faculty and their engagement in the political process. Leading up to the debate, students and the entire community were engaged by the year-long Educate ’08 program, almost 150 lectures, conferences, and events focused on the issues, history and politics of the presidency, followed by Define ’09, which looked at the first year of his presidency. The University continues to host important political events, such as the New York State Gubernatorial Debate in 2010.
The Hofstra Museum, which houses one of the largest art collections in the metropolitan area, coordinates approximately eight exhibitions annually and offers exhibition areas and an extensive outdoor sculpture collection, with 75 pieces. The Hofstra Museum is accredited by the American Association of Museums – one of only 94 universities in the nation and one of six in New York to hold that distinction.
Hofstra also has six theaters, a student newspaper, a lively student center, a recently renovated recreation center and numerous athletic facilities, including the 13,000-seat James M. Shuart Stadium and the 5,046-seat David S. Mack Sports and Exhibition Complex. Hofstra also has an indoor, Olympic-sized (eight lane, 50-meter) swimming pool, one of the largest such facilities in the New York metropolitan area.
The Hofstra athletic program competes on the NCAA Division I level and is a member of the Colonial Athletic Association. The University sponsors 17 intercollegiate programs – eight men’s sports and nine women’s sports. Hofstra has men’s teams in basketball, baseball, lacrosse, golf, tennis, wrestling, soccer and cross country. Women’s sports include basketball, volleyball, softball, tennis, soccer, field hockey, lacrosse, cross country and golf.
Hofstra’s academic programs are accredited by numerous national agencies and the University is one of only 280 schools, out of more than 3,600 colleges and universities nationwide, with a chapter of the national honor society Phi Beta Kappa. Of Hofstra’s 1,165 faculty members, 533 are full time and 93 percent hold the highest degree in their fields. The average undergraduate class size is 21 students, while student-faculty ratio is 14-to-1.
Hofstra University is 100-percent program accessible to persons with disabilities, and has been cited as a national model for this achievement.
Hofstra by the Numbers
17 Varsitysports20 Eateriesoncampus20 Localandnationalfraternitiesandsororities21 Averageundergraduateclasssize22 Academicaccreditations37 Residencehalls100 Percentprogramaccessibilitytopersonswithdisabilities175 Studentclubsandorganizations500 Culturaleventsperyear1,165 Facultymembers1935 Foundingdate6,804 Full-timeundergraduateenrollment12,000 TotalUniversityenrollment,includingpart-time
undergraduate,graduateandSchoolofLaw119,000+ Hofstraalumni1.2Million VolumesavailableatHofstraUniversityLibraries
6 Hofstra University
HOFSTRA HIGHLIGHTS
Chart-topping recording artist Trey Songz headlined the Live at 75 Concert
Hofstra’s Diamond Celebration Weekend featured a Grucci Fireworks show
Legendary hip-hop group Public Enemy were one of the featured performers at Hofstra’s Live at 75 Concert
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo spoke at Hofstra in May 2011 as part of his People First Tour of the state.
6 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 7
The Princeton Review recently named the Zarb School of Business One of its “Great Schools for Marketing and Sales Majors”
A packed house turned out for Jimmy Fallon’s show at the David S. Mack Sports and Exhibition Complex
Hofstra celebrated its 75th Anniversary with a cake from Charm City Cakes, which was featured on the Food Network show “Ace of Cakes”. Charm City executive sous chef Geof Manthorpe delivered and assembled the cake for the celebration.
The Hofstra-North Shore LIJ School of Medicine welcomed its first class in July 2011
8 Hofstra University
Simon Riddiough is entering his sixth year as the Hofstra
Women’s Soccer Coach in 2011. He was named the second head coach in the history of the program when he was promoted to the position following JoAnne Russell’s retirement at the conclusion of the 2005 season. This past year, Riddiough guided Hofstra to the most successful season in school history (19-3). The Pride
set a school record with 19 wins, went 11-0 in the Colonial Athletic Association, becoming the first team to go undefeated and untied in CAA play since 1998, and won a school-record 18 straight games. Hofstra advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament with a 1-0 win over Connecticut, its second NCAA win in program history, and Riddiough was named the CAA Coach of the Year and the Mid-Atlantic Region Coach of the Year by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA).
The 19-3 record improved Riddiough’s record to 67-29-8 in his five years, an average of over 13 wins a season.
The 2010 season became the most successful season in program history by surpassing the high standard that Riddiough’s team set in 2007. Hofstra finished with an 18-4 record, setting a school record that was passed in 2010, won the CAA championship and advanced to the second round of the NCAA
Tournament, defeating Ohio State 1-0 in the first round and taking regional top seed Penn State into overtime in the second round. He was named the Northeast Region Coach of the Year by the NSCAA.
In between the two landmark seasons, Riddiough led Hofstra to an 11-8-3 record in 2008, including a return trip to the CAA finals (where it fell 1-0 in double-overtime). He also guided the pride to another successful season in 2009, finishing 10-6-3, including 7-2-2 in conference play.
Riddiough has been a member of the Hofstra Women’s Soccer staff for 16 years, including the previous four as an associate head coach prior to his promotion to the head coaching position. Riddiough joined the coaching ranks in 1996 after spending two years as a graduate assistant in the Hofstra Sports Facilities Department, pursuing a master’s degree in counseling.
Riddiough, a 1994 Hofstra graduate with a degree in physical education, was a four-year letterman and captain on the Flying Dutchmen soccer team from 1990 through 1994. He was an All-New York Region performer in 1993 and 1994, and an All-East Coast Conference pick in 1993. Riddiough was also a member of the all-region academic squad. In his Hofstra career he recorded 13 goals and 15 assists.
A hard-nosed defender as a player, Riddiough has helped develop the Hofstra Women’s Soccer program into one of the top defensive teams in the nation in recent seasons. The Pride ranked third in the nation in team defense in 2003 (0.45 goals per game), while tying for the fewest goals allowed in the entire country (nine), and also ranked 16th in the nation in 2002 (0.69 goals per game). In 2005, Hofstra allowed only three goals in 11 conference games on its way to winning the CAA championship and earning its first-ever NCAA Division I tournament appearance. Iin 2007, Hofstra set a school record with 12 shutouts, including seven straight.
Riddiough played with the Greek American Atlas from 1995 through
HEAD COACH SIMON RIDDIOUGH
Coach Riddiough was the CAA Coach of the Year in 2010
8 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 9
1997 and won a USYSA Region I championship with the club. He also appeared in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Open Cup with the Greek American Atlas. In 1998 and 1999, Riddiough played with the New York Freedoms of the United Soccer League and played on the 1999 PDL Northeast Division championship squad that placed third in the nation. In 2001 Riddiough played with the Long Island Rough Riders of the A-League.
In addition to his playing experience, Riddiough has been a head coach for the Eastern New York Youth Soccer Association Girls Under-17 team, which serves as part of the New York Olympic Development Program (ODP), since 2000. In 2005 he helped coach the team to the ODP National Championship. He also previously coached several Long Island Select teams from 1996 to 1999 and served as a director for Noga Soccer Camps since 1991. In June 1992 he coached the New Hyde Park Girls Under-19 club to the New York State championship.
Riddiough, a native of Barnsley, England, and his wife, Heather, a former two-sport athlete at Hofstra, reside in Massapequa Park, New Yorkwith their two sons, Kain and Cole.
10 Hofstra University
Tobias BishofAssistantCoach
Tobias Bischof joins the Pride in 2011 after a decade in which he has
been prominently involved in Long Island soccer, particularly at the youth level. This past summer, Bischof led two U-15 teams – the East Meadow Sparks U-15 Girls and the Massapequa Arsenal U-15 Boys – to state championships in the New
York State Open Cup.
Bischof has also coached the East Meadow Dynamite and Sachem Blazers in the Region 1 Premier League. Overall, he has had tremendous success with his youth programs, leading seven teams to the state finals in the last five years.
In addition, Bischof has served as the Select PDP program administrator for the Long Island Junior Soccer League (LIJSL), a program that included more than 500 players, and has run a select coaching program to prepare athletes for collegiate soccer. He has helped place dozens of his youth players into college programs in his short time on Long Island.
A native of Winterstein, Germany, Bischof played soccer in his native country after graduating from high school. In 1997 he enrolled at Friedrich-Schiller University in Jena, Germany, where he earned a degree in sports science, finishing in the top 10 percent of his class. He also coached youth soccer in Germany, primarily with 16-17 year olds, before coming to the United States.
Bischof first moved to Long Island in 2002 to accept a position with Globall Soccer, an international training and management company. He worked with the Long Island Rough Riders of the Premier Development League (PDL) after Globall Soccer purchased the team.
Bischof currently resides in Long Beach, New York.
Tiffany YovinoAssistantCoach
After a well-decorated four-year career on the field at Hofstra,
Tiffany Yovino begins her first season as an assistant coach in 2011.
Yovino achieved a long list of accolades after a senior year that saw her lead Hofstra to a 19-3 record (setting a school record for wins in a season),
an 11-0 mark in the Colonial Athletic Association, and an appearance in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. She earned third-team All-America honors from the National Soccer Coaches Association of America, and was named both the CAA Player of the Year and the Big Apple Soccer Player of the Year. She also became the first player in Hofstra history to earn all-region honors from the NSCAA four times.
Off the field, Yovino’s accolades were equally impressive. A dual major in history and early childhood education with a 3.69 grade point average, Yovino was a first-team ESPN/CoSIDA Academic All-American, a first-team NSCAA Scholar All-American, and became Hofstra’s first-ever recipient of a NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship. She also earned membership into Phi Alpha Theta, a national honors society for exceptional university history students, and was named the Female College Athlete of the Year by the Nassau County Sports Commission for outstanding achievement in sport, academic excellence and community service.
Yovino, a four-time All-CAA selection, also graduated as the winningest player in the history of the program with 58 wins over her four seasons. She helped the Pride to a school record with 18 wins as a freshman, and then helped break that record with 19 wins as a senior, including wins in the first round of the NCAA Tournament in both seasons. She had the game-winning goal in a 1-0 win over Connecticut in the first round of the 2010 NCAA Tournament.
During her playing career, Yovino recorded 21 goals and eight assists for 50 points. She will become the 25th student-athlete in program history to have their jersey retired when she is honored this fall.
ASSISTANT COACHES
Tiffany Yovino receives her 2010 CAA Player of the Year Award
10 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 11
2011 WOMEN’S SOCCER ROSTER
No. Name Pos. Cl. Ht. Hometown/High School/Last School 00 Jules Kantor GK Fr. 5-10 Coral Springs, FL/St. Thomas Aquinas0 Kylie Shuster GK So. 5-6 Austin, TX/Cedar Park1 Emily Morphitis GK So. 5-6 London, England/Therfield2 Tara Kerns D/M So. 5-3 Chesapeake, VA/Great Bridge3 Nicki Choffel M Jr. 5-4 Bellerose, NY/Mary Louis Academy5 Laura Greene F Sr. 5-8 Holbrook, NY/Sachem East6 Ingrid Moyer M/F Fr. 5-8 Souderton, PA/Souderton Area7 Ruby Staplehurst D/F So. 5-4 London, England/St. Thomas More8 Erin Havard M Fr. 5-7 Fairfax, VA/W.T. Woodson9 Amber Stobbs F So. 5-3 London, England/Warlingham10 Brittany Farriella D So. 5-7 East Meadow, NY/Sachem North11 Anya Koren M/F Fr. 5-7 Scottsdale, AZ/Desert Mountain12 Kerry Cummings D/M So. 5-5 Kansas City, MO/St. Teresa’s Academy/St. John’s14 Lulu Echeverry M/F Fr. 5-5 East Meadow, NY/East Meadow15 Brooke Bendernagel D Jr. 5-7 Smithtown, NY/Smithtown West16 Erin Breen F Jr. 5-7 Hicksville, NY/Hicksville19 Sam Scolarici M/F Fr. 5-3 Aldie, VA/Freedom21 Courtney Breen M Sr. 5-8 Hicksville, NY/Hicksville22 Danielle Murino D/M Jr. 5-3 Bohemia, NY/Connetquot23 Caylin Dudley F Fr. 5-3 Grasonville, MD/Kent Island25 Brittany Butts M Sr. 5-7 Massapequa Park, NY/Massapequa31 Lucy Gillett GK Fr. 5-10 Rockville Centre, NY/South Side Head Coach: Simon Riddiough (Hofstra ’94)Assistant Coaches: Tobias Bischof, Tiffany Yovino, Ed Schieferstein
Pronunciation Guide
0 Kylie Shuster SHOO-ster
1 Emily Morphitis mor-FEE-tiss
3 Nicki Choffel shuh-FELL
8 Erin Havard huh-VARD
10 Brittany Farriella fair-ee-ELL-uh
14 Lulu Echeverry ETCH-uh-vary
19 Sam Scolarici sko-la-REECH-ee
22 Danielle Murino mur-EE-no
31 Lucy Gillett jill-ETTE
HC Simon Riddiough rid-ee-OFF
AC Tobias Bischof bish-OFF
AC Tiffany Yovino yo-VEE-no
AC Ed Schieferstein SHEEF-er-stine
12 Hofstra University
2011 OUTLOOK
Following up the greatest season in school history is always a challenge. Doing it without six of the starters who helped make it the greatest season makes the challenge that much tougher.
The 2010 Hofstra Women’s Soccer team went 19-3 on the year, setting a school record for wins in a season. The Pride won 18 straight games at one point, shattering the previous school record of 10 in a row, and finished 11-0 in CAA play, the first unbeaten and untied season in the CAA since 1998.
Much of the offensive production from a year ago came from its senior class, including All-American midfielder Tiffany Yovino and two-time first team All-CAA forward Salma Tarik, who each had 12 goals and two assists. All-CAA defender Dana Bergstrom led the Pride with 10 assists, while central defender Amy Turner was the team’s top defensive stopper and will need to be replaced as well.
Hofstra does have several key weapons returning, including senior All-CAA midfielders Brittany Butts and Courtney Breen, and standout forward Laura Greene (six goals, seven assists in 2010). For the Pride to lead the CAA standings again this year, though, several younger players who had complementary roles last season will need to step up and be more consistent contributors in 2011.
Here is a position-by-position look at the Hofstra Pride, heading into 2011.
Forward
Tarik has been the team’s center forward for the last two years, the type of player who would draw multiple defenders and make everyone else’s jobs easier. Kayla Pifer and Grace Hawkins were also part of the Pride’s regular forward rotation last year and will need to be replaced.
Greene will be a key part of Hofstra’s forward line this year after tallying nine goals and 15 assists in the last two years combined. Her speed on the outside has caused match-up problems for opponents her entire career, while her improved finishing ability in 2010 made her an even more dangerous weapon. Head Coach Simon Riddiough would like to keep her on the outside where her speed allows her to turn the corner, but she could also get a look as a center forward as well.
Sophomore Amber Stobbs had a solid freshman season off the bench and provides another speedy winger to use up front. She scored two goals last season and consistently provided a spark off the bench with her athleticism, which the coaching staff hopes will allow to be productive in a starting role this fall. Junior Erin Breen has been utilized in center forward spot during her career.
Newcomers expected to add to the competition at forward include freshman Lulu Echeverry of nearby East Meadow High School, Samantha Scolarici of Freedom High School in Virginia and Caylin Dudley of Kent Island High School in Maryland, although any of the three are versatile enough to play in an attacking midfield role as well. Sophomore transfer Ingrid Moyer will also be in the mix for playing time at forward.
Midfield
Despite the loss of Yovino, Hofstra still figures to be in solid shape in the midfield, where seniors Courtney Breen and Brittany Butts will be entering their fourth seasons as starters and have all-CAA accolades to their credit.
Breen has been the Pride’s starting defensive midfielder for her first three years and has been an All-CAA and all-region selection in both of her first three seasons. Her ability to cover large stretches of ground defensively has given the Pride the freedom to send numbers forward. She is Hofstra’s strongest player in the air, making her a dangerous weapon on set pieces, as she showed with a header goal in the second round of the NCAA Tournament against Boston College.
Laura Greene
Courtney Breen
Brittany Butts
12 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 13
Butts came into her own last season, earning first-team All-CAA accolades after a year which saw her consistently dominate possession in the midfield. Butts is Hofstra’s most creative player with the ball at her feet and her ability to beat defenders consistently was crucial in forcing teams to abandon their defensive alignments to bring help.
Junior Danielle Murino was a reserve midfielder as a freshman and went back to an outside defender position last year. This year, there’s a strong chance she will move back to her original position and give the Pride a dangerous three-player midfield. Murino is a sure tackler with a deceptive burst of speed that allows her to get free from defenders, and she also has the ability to shoot from distance.
Hofstra also hopes to have some depth in the midfield to utilize as well. Junior Nicki Choffel has missed the last two seasons with knee injuries after seeing some playing time off the bench as a freshman, but returned last spring and appears ready to rejoin the midfield rotation. Incoming freshmen Erin Havard and Anya Koren also figure to be in the hunt for playing time in their rookie seasons, while sophomore Kerry Cummings played in nine games for St. John’s last year and will give Hofstra a defensive midfielder who can also slide back to the central defense if needed.
Defense
Junior Brooke Bendernagel stepped into the starting line-up last year and did a sensational job, providing the athleticism on the back line that Hofstra needed for the final piece in its puzzle. This year, she may be the only person from last year’s back four that is returning to the defense (if Murino moves up to the midfield).
Two players who saw significant playing time off the bench as freshmen last year are projected to be starting defenders for the Pride this year. Tara Kerns saw action as both
an outside defender and a midfielder, and gave Hofstra many valuable minutes with her tenacity and work rate. Ruby Staplehurst, who also saw playing time at forward last year, is a technically sound player who has a burst of speed that should make her valuable on the outside.
Sophomore Brittany Farriella is a player who Hofstra may need to step up this season, the same way that Bendernagel did a year ago. She has the size and technical skill to be a prototype central defender, and could fill in to the central defense hole left behind by Turner’s departure. The Pride also has the option of moving one of its midfielders back onto the defensive unit.
Goalie
The Pride will have a wide range of options to use in goal this season. Emily Morphitis split time last year as a freshman in a two-person platoon, and she showed veteran savvy in making key saves and helping the Pride preserve many second half leads. Returning sophomore Kylie Shuster saw action in 2009 as a freshman before being sidelined by a knee injury last year, and she could also see significant playing time as well. Incoming freshmen Jules Kantor and Lucy Gillett will make the battle for minutes in net even more competitive.
Brooke Bendernagel
Emily Morphitis
Tara Kerns
14 Hofstra University
PLAYER PROFILES
Brooke Bendernagel #15
Defense, 5-7, JuniorSmithtown, NY/Smithtown West
Fourth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster, including
one red-shirt year…Expected to start at center back again this season…2010: Played in and started 21 games on the Hofstra central defense…Tallied one assist in a win over Fordham…Took one shot…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009: Played in nine games, including three starts…Started three straight games for the Pride against Columbia, Delaware and Drexel…Helped the defense to a shutout of Drexel in her third start…Took two shots on the year….2008: Red-shirted and did not play…High School: Played on the Smithtown West High School soccer team for four seasons…Also ran track for three years…Helped the Bulls to back-to-back division championships in 2006 and 2007…Was a two-time all-conference selection…Personal: Plans to be an elementary school teacher after graduation…Lists Alex Rodriguez as her favorite athlete...Has one younger sister…Started playing soccer at age 5…Dual major in elementary education and psychology.
Year GP G A Pts.2009 9 0 0 02010 21 0 1 1Totals 30 0 1 1
14 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 15
Courtney Breen #21
Midfield, 5-8, SeniorHicksville, NY/Hicksville
Fourth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster…Expected to hold down the defensive midfield role for the fourth straight year…2010: Second team
All-Colonial Athletic Association...Third team NSCAA All-Mid Atlantic Region...Started all 22 games for the Pride…
Tallied four goals and five assists…Scored the tying goal in the first half of an NCAA second round game…Scored twice in a 4-1 win over Fordham to earn MVP honors of the Hofstra Invitational…Also named CAA Player of the Week following the Hofstra Invitational…had the game-winning goal on a header in overtime of a 3-2 win over Georgia State…Had an assist in a road win over Indiana…Also picked up assists in conference wins over Delaware, Towson and William & Mary…The William & Mary assist came on the game-winning goal in the final minute of regulation on a crossing pass…Took 35 shots…2009: First team All-Colonial Athletic Association...Third team NSCAA All-Mid Atlantic Region...Started all 19 games for the Pride…Scored three goals and added two assists for eight points…Tallied the overtime game-winner in a 2-1 win over Richmond on Aug. 28…Also had the game-winner in the second half of a 2-1 win over Princeton on Sept. 4…Scored the tying goal in a 4-1 comeback win over defending league regular season champion William & Mary on Oct. 11…Assisted on both Hofstra goals in a 3-2 overtime loss to No. 25 Indiana on Sept. 11…2008: Named to Colonial Athletic Association All-Rookie Team...Second team All-CAA selection...CAA All-Tournament Team pick…Appeared in all 22 games, including 19 starts…Tallied three goals and one assist…Scored game-winning goal in closing minutes of a 4-3 victory over Georgia State…Had the tying goal in the second half of a 2-2 tie with Old Dominion in the first round of the CAA Tournament, when Hofstra rallied from a 2-0 deficit to go on to win on penalty kicks…Scored in a 3-3 tie with Central Connecticut…Assisted on the game’s only goal in a 1-0 victory over Delaware…Took 25 shots…High School: Played three years of soccer at Hicksville High School in Hicksville, New York, missing her senior season due to injury…Was a two-time all-county selection and a two-time team Most Valuable Player…Had 22 goals as a sophomore and 15 as a junior…Also a two-time All-New York State selection in basketball after leading the team to a pair of county championships…Scored over 1,000 points in her scholastic basketball career…Personal: Has four sisters, including twin sister Erin, who is also a member of the Pride…Started playing soccer at age 7…Volunteered at the Empire State Games for the Physically Challenged and the Special Olympics…Also recruited by St. John’s, Rutgers and Maryland…Lists Steve Nash as her favorite athlete…Played club soccer for the East Meadow Shooting Stars, which she helped to state cup championships in 2003, 2005 and 2008.
Year GP G A Pts.2008 22 3 1 72009 19 3 2 82010 22 4 5 13Totals 63 10 8 28
16 Hofstra University
PLAYER PROFILES
Erin Breen #16
Forward, 5-7, JuniorHicksville, NY/Hicksville
Fourth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster, including one red-shirt year…2010: Appeared in four games off the bench at forward…Received
CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009: Appeared in five games off the Hofstra bench as a reserve forward…2008: Red-shirted and did not play…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played four years of soccer at Hicksville High School in Hicksville, New York, where she also played four years of basketball and one year of softball…Earned all-conference and all-league honors in soccer…Also was an Exceptional Seniors selection in soccer last fall…Earned all-conference, all-division, and all-class honors in basketball…Personal: Has four sisters, including twin sister Courtney, who is also a member of the Pride…Started playing soccer at age 7…Volunteered at the Empire State Games for the Physically Challenged and the Special Olympics…Also recruited by Kentucky, Eastern Kentucky, Marist, and Siena…Lists Kristine Lilly as her favorite athlete…Played club soccer for the East Meadow Shooting Stars, which she helped to state cup championships in 2003, 2005 and 2008…Member of the national honors society, the national art honors society and the national Spanish honors society…Lists “My Sister’s Keeper” by Jodi Picoult as her favorite book.
Year GP G A Pts.2009 5 0 0 02010 4 0 0 0Totals 9 0 0 0
Brittany Butts #25
Midfield, 5-7, SeniorMassapequa Park, NY/Massapequa
Fifth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster, including one medical red-shirt season...2010: First team All-Colonial Athletic Association...
Second team NSCAA All Mid-Atlantic Region...Started in 21 games after missing the season opener at Boston College…Tallied two goals and one assist on the year…Scored the game’s first goal in a road win over Indiana…Tallied a goal in a home win over Towson…Assisted on a second half goal in a comeback win over Old Dominion…Took 34 shots…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009: Appeared in all 19 games for the Pride, including 18 starts as a defensive midfielder…Had an assist in a 3-0 win over Towson…Took seven shots…2008: Named to Colonial Athletic Association All-Rookie Team…Started all 22 games in the Hofstra midfield…Tallied one assist on the season in a 4-3 win over Georgia State…Took 22 shots…2007: Was injured in preseason and took a medical red-shirt…High School: Played four seasons on the soccer team at Massapequa High School…Helped the Chiefs to a state championship as a freshman, when she was named second team All-New York…Led Massapequa to a second state championship as a junior, when she earned first team all-state honors…Helped the Chiefs to four consecutive Nassau County Class AA championships and to a 39-1-6 record against Nassau County schools from 2003-05…Personal: Has one sister…Member of the National Honor Society in high school…Lists the Beatles as her favorite musical group…Started playing soccer at age 8…Psychology major.
Year GP G A Pts.2008 22 0 1 12009 19 0 1 12010 21 2 1 5Totals 62 2 3 7
16 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 17
Nicki Choffel #3
Midfield, 5-4, JuniorBellerose, NY/Mary Louis Academy
Fourth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster, including two seasons she missed in their entirety due to injuries…Was on the roster of
the WPSL Champion Long Island Fury in 2008 and again in 2010…2010: Missed the year with a torn ACL suffered in the summer…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009: Missed the year with a torn ACL suffered in preseason, taking a medical redshirt…2008: Appeared in eight games off the bench for the Pride, primarily in the midfield…High School: Played on the Mary Louis soccer team in Jamaica Estates, New York for four years…Helped the Hilltoppers to Division B championships in 2005 and 2007…Was a four-time team Most Valuable Player…Earned her school’s scholar-athlete award as a senior…Earned the Queens Times Ledger Player of the Year honor in 2007…Personal: Has one older sister…Started playing soccer at age 4…Also recruited by Villanova, Delaware and Binghamton…Pre-elementary education major.
Year GP G A Pts.2008 8 0 0 02009 Medical red-shirt2010 DNP - injured
Brittany Farriella #10
Defender, 5-7, SophomoreEast Meadow, NY/Sachem North
Third season on the Hofstra Soccer roster, including one red-shirt year…Could take on an expanded role in the Hofstra defense this fall as a central
defender…2010: Appeared in four games off the bench for the Pride…2009: Red-shirted and did not play…High School: Played five years of Soccer at Sachem North High School in Lake Ronkonkoma, New York, earning a spot on the varsity in eighth grade…Earned both All-County and All-League honors…Also played for four years in Long Island’s Olympic Development Program…Personal: Has an older sister, Krysten, who played goalie on the Hofstra Women’s Soccer team…Lists Cristiano Ronaldo as her favorite athlete…Started playing soccer at age 4…Also recruited by Miami, Connecticut, Boston University and Loyola…Would like to be an elementary school teacher after graduation.
Year GP G A Pts.2010 4 0 0 0
18 Hofstra University
PLAYER PROFILES
Laura Greene #5
Forward, 5-8, SeniorHolbrook, NY/Sachem East
Fourth season on the Hofstra Soccer roster…Played in the summer for the Long Island Lady Riders of the W-League…Ranks tied for eighth on
the school’s career assist leaders with 15 through her first three seasons…2010: Started all 22 games for the Pride…Tallied six
goals and seven assists on the year…Assisted on two of Hofstra’s goals in its 3-0 win over Georgia State in the CAA semifinals…Scored the game’s only goal in a 1-0 win over Princeton…Had the tiebreaking goal in the second half of a 3-1 win over Old Dominion…Had the game-winning goal in a 3-1 win over Indiana…Scored the game-winner in the second half of a 2-1 win over Drexel…Scored in a win over George Mason…Had two assists in a 3-2 road win over William & Mary…Also had assists against Purdue, Delaware and UNC Wilmington…Took 58 shots…2009: Started all 19 games for the Pride…Had three goals and a team-high eight assists for 14 points…The 14 points was the second-highest total on the team…Scored a first half goal in a 2-1 overtime loss to UNC Wilmington the semifinals of the CAA Tournament…Tallied the game-winning goal in the second half of a 2-1 win over UNC Wilmington in the regular season…Assisted on the game-tying goal with 1:45 left in regulation in a season-opening 2-1 win over Richmond, as well as the game-winning goal with 1:49 left in a 3-2 win over Delaware…Also scored the Pride’s first goal against Delaware to start a comeback from a 2-0 second half deficit…Picked up an assist against No. 25 Indiana…Assisted on the opening goal in a 3-2 win over Harvard…Had points in four straight mid-season games, with assists against Towson, Old Dominion and William & Mary and a goal against UNC Wilmington…Took 13 shots in a 0-0 tie with Georgia State…Tallied 60 shots overall on the year…2008: Played in 20 games…Scored two goals, both of which were game-winners…Tallied the game’s only goal in a 1-0 win over Delaware…Also scored with one minute to play in regulation to break a 1-1 tie in a 2-1 win at VCU…Converted a penalty kick in a shootout win over Old Dominion in the first round of the CAA Tournament…Took 15 shots…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played on the soccer and track and field teams at Sachem East High School in Farmingville, New York… Named the Suffolk County Player of the Year in 2007…Helped her squads to the New York State semifinals as a junior and senior and to a Suffolk League I championship in 2006…Was a three-time all-county and all-conference selection and earned All-New York State honors as a junior and senior…Had 24 goals and 15 assists as a senior, after tallying 24 goals and 13 assists as a junior… Was a seven-time all-county performer in track and field and a three-time all-state selection…Personal: Hopes to be a math teacher after graduation…Lists “To Kill A Mockingbird” as her favorite book…Started playing soccer at age 5…Also recruited by St. John’s, Iowa, and Fairfield…Mathematics major.
Year GP G A Pts.2008 20 2 0 42009 19 3 8 142010 22 6 7 19Totals 61 11 15 37
18 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 19
Tara Kerns #2
Sophomore, 5-2, Midfield/DefenseChesapeake, VA/Great Bridge
Second season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Can play either outside back or defensive midfield…2010:
Appeared in 21 games for the Pride, primarily as a defender and defensive midfielder…Had one assist in a home win over Rhode Island…Took four shots…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played for four years at Great Bridge High School in Chesapeake, Virginia…Led her squads to the district and regional tournaments in all four seasons…Was named the MVP of the Wildcats as both a freshman and senior…Was named the
Southeastern District Player of the Year in 2010…Was also a first-team all-district and an all-Tidewater selection in 2010…Traveled to Russia with the Olympic Development Program (ODP) regional team in 2010…Also chosen to the National Honor Society as a senior…Personal: Has two older brothers…Played with the Virginia Rush soccer club…Nicknamed “T.K.”…Started playing soccer at age 6…Hopes to coach soccer after graduation…Plans to major in exercise science with a minor in education…Has volunteered with TOPS Soccer, a community-based training program for young athletes with disabilities, and as a Wyldlife Youth Group leader.
Year GP G A Pts.2010 21 0 1 1
Emily Morphitis #1
Sophomore, 5-6, GoalkeeperLondon, England/Therfield
Second season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Should see playing time at goalkeeper this season…2010: Appeared in 18 games for the Pride,
usually playing the second half while platooning at goalkeeper…Started three games…Had a 7-1 record in net, suffering only one loss on opening day against Boston College…Had a season-high three saves in wins over Delaware and Drexel…Had two second-half saves in a 1-0 win over James Madison…Combined on eight shutouts on the year…Had a .643 save percentage and a 1.03 goals against average…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Attended the Therfield School in Surrey, England…Played soccer for the Chelsea Ladies in Surrey, England, along with Hofstra classmates Amber Stobbs and Ruby Staplehurst…Has played for the England Under-19, Under-17 and Under-15 teams…Named to the Inner London Squad and the English Colleges Squad…Personal: Has an older sister and a younger brother…Lists David Beckham as her favorite athlete…Started playing soccer at age 7…Nicknamed “Morph”…Lists Freedom Writers as her favorite movie.
Year GP W-L-T Min. GA Svs. Sv.% GAA2010 18 7-1-0 869:40 10 18 .643 1.03
20 Hofstra University
PLAYER PROFILES
Danielle Murino #22
Defense/Midfield, 5-3, JuniorBohemia, NY/Connetquot
Third season on the Hofstra Soccer roster…Played primarily in the midfield as a freshman and on the defensive unit
as a sophomore and could fill either role this year…Was a member of the Long Island Lady Riders the past two summers…2010: Started all 22 games as a defender…Finished the year with four assists…Had assists in wins over Rhode Island, Purdue, Delaware and UNC Wilmington…Took 13 shots…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009: Appeared in all 19 games as a reserve midfielder…Had
two goals and one assist on the year…Scored the game-winner in a 4-1 victory over William & Mary…Assisted on the Pride’s goal in a 2-1 loss to UNC Wilmington in the semifinals of the CAA Tournament…Also had a goal in a narrow 3-2 win over Harvard…Took 19 shots…High School: Played four years of Soccer at Connetquot High School in Bohemia, New York…Helped her team to a league championship as a senior…Was named the MVP of League II as a senior, when she led Suffolk County in goals scored with 22…Was a two-time All-New York State selection and a three-time all-conference honoree…Also played on the Connetquot basketball and track teams…Personal: Has three younger sisters and one younger brother…Lists Mia Hamm and David Wright as her favorite athletes…Started playing soccer at age 3…Would like to be an elementary school teacher after graduation...Chose Hofstra in part due to its education program.
Year GP G A Pts.2009 19 2 1 52010 22 0 4 4Totals 41 2 5 9
Kylie Shuster #0
Goalkeeper, 5-6, SophomoreAustin, TX/Cedar Park
Third season on the Hofstra Soccer roster, including one medical red-shirt…2010: Injured her knee in the spring and took a medical red-shirt…
Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009: Appeared in five games for the Pride, including one start…Picked up a shutout with eight saves in her only start, a 0-0 tie with Georgia State, in which she made two key saves in overtime to help preserve the tie…Stopped all 11 shots she faced on the year in 156:03 of playing time…Came on in relief of a 2-1 win over UNC Wilmington in the closing minutes after an injury to starter Krysten Farriella and preserved the win…High School: Played four years on the Cedar Park (TX) High School team…Helped her teams to the district championship as a junior and to the district finals as a senior…Had 11 shutouts and a 0.38 goals against average in 2008…Was a first team all-district selection in each of her last three seasons…Was also a two-time district MVP, an all-region selection by the Texas Association of Soccer Coaches, and was named a High School Prime Time Player of the Year by ESPN as a senior…Was also an Academic All-Texas selection…Personal: Has two younger twin sisters…Lists David Beckham as her favorite athlete…Started playing soccer at age 4…Also recruited by Baylor, Stephen F. Austin, Rice and TCU…Chose Hofstra in part due to its communications school and internship opportunities.
Year GP W-L-T Min. GA Svs. Sv.% GAA2009 5 0-0-1 156:03 0 11 1.000 0.002010 DNP-injured
20 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 21
Ruby Staplehurst #7
Sophomore, 5-4, Forward/DefenseLondon, England/St. Thomas More
Second season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Can play either forward or outside back…2010: Appeared in 11 games, while seeing time as both an
outside defender and a forward…Had two goals and one assist…Scored her first collegiate goal on a breakaway in a 2-0 road win over VCU…Added a goal on a header in a win over George Mason…Assisted on a goal in a 4-1 win over Fordham…Took
five shots…High School: Attended St. Thomas More Language College in London, England…Played soccer for the Chelsea Ladies in Surrey, England, along with Hofstra classmates Emily Morphitis and Amber Stobbs…Helped her squad to a league championship in 2009, as well as the County Cup…Personal: Has one
brother…Lists David Beckham as her favorite athlete…Favorite book is Angela’s Ashes…Hopes to enter the media profession after graduation…Started playing soccer at age 7…Enjoys Indian food…Favorite movies are the Toy Story series.
Year GP G A Pts.2010 11 2 1 5
Amber Stobbs #9
Sophomore, 5-3, Midfield/ForwardLondon, England/Warlingham
Second season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Expected to see significant playing time at forward this year...2010: Named to the 2010
CAA All-Rookie team...Appeared in 17 games, including three starts…Had two goals and one assist…Scored the game’s first goal in the second half of a 2-1 win over Drexel…Had a goal in a 5-0 win over George Mason on Oct. 8 to give the Pride a 2-0 lead just before halftime, helping her earn CAA Rookie of the Week honors…Assisted on a goal in a win over Towson on Oct. 10…Suffered a late-season injury that kept her out of the line-up for over three weeks…Took 16 shots… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Attended the Warlingham School in Surrey, England…Played for five years at the Arsenal Ladies F.C. Academy...Also played for the Chelsea Ladies F.C., along with Hofstra classmates Emily Morphitis and Ruby Staplehurst…Was a scholastic sprinter while at Warlingham, competing in the 100 and 200 meter events…Personal: Has an older brother Zale…Lists David Beckham and Cristiano Ronaldo her favorite athletes… Lists the Toy Story series as her favorite movies and the Twilight series as her favorite books… Nicknamed “Stobzy”… Started playing soccer at age 6.
Year GP G A Pts.2010 17 2 1 5
22 Hofstra University
PLAYER PROFILES
NEWCOMERS
Kerry Cummings #12
Sophomore, 5-5, Midfield/DefenseKansas City, MO/St. Teresa’s Academy/St. John’s
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Played for one season at St. John’s University before
transferring…Can play either in the defensive midfield or central defense…At St. John’s: Appeared in nine games for the Red Storm in 2010, scoring one goal, which was a late game-winner in a 1-0 victory over Big East rival Seton Hall…High School: Played four years of soccer at St. Teresa’s Academy in Kansas City…Helped her team to a third place finish in the state championships as a sophomore…Earned team captain honors as a senior…Led club team (BVSC All-Stars) to seven straight state titles in Kansas…Personal: Has two brothers and one sister…Lists Wayne Rooney and Michael Jordan as her favorite athletes…Rudy is her favorite movie…Started playing soccer at age five…Nicknamed “Bear”…Decoded is her favorite book…Has volunteered at homeless shelters in the Kansas City area and worked for Operation Breakthrough day care for inner city children.
Caylin Dudley #23
Freshman, 5-3 Midfield/ForwardGrasonville, MD/Kent Island
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played for four seasons at Kent Island High
School…Earned first-team All-Bayside honors all four years…Was a three-time team MVP…Scored 15 goals and 11 assists as a sophomore, 16 goals and 10 assists as a junior and 18 goals and 14 assists as a senior…Was named the League Player of the Year as a senior, when she led the conference in both goals and assists…Earned the Maryland State Merit Scholastic Award for academic achievement…Personal: Has one brother and one sister…Spent this past summer playing for the ASA Chesapeake Charge in the Women’s Premier Soccer League, helping her team to the Eastern Conference Championship…Lists Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen as her favorite book…Started playing soccer at age four.
Lulu Echeverry #14
Freshman, 5-5, Midfield/ForwardCoral Springs, FL/St. Thomas Aquinas
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Can play either forward or an attacking midfield role…High
School: Played for four seasons at East Meadow High School, which is five miles from Hofstra’s campus…Was an all-county selection as a senior, as well as second-team All-New York…Also an all-conference selection as a junior and senior…Helped her team to two Nassau County finals as a sophomore and senior, and a semifinals appearance as s junior…Also ran on the track team, earning all-county honors in the steeplechase. and played on the badminton team as a senior…Was on the honor roll every semester…Personal: Full name is Luisa Echeverry…Born in Cali, Colombia…Has one sister…Lists Lionel Messi, Wayne Rooney and Marta as her favorite athletes…Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult is her favorite book…Hopes to continue playing soccer after graduation...Started playing soccer at age five.
Lucy Gillett #31
Freshman, 5-10, GoalkeeperRockville Centre, NY/South Side
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played for two seasons on the soccer team at South Side High School in Rockville
Centre, New York, one of the top scholastic programs in the country…Also played on the lacrosse team for two years…Was a high honor roll selection and a member of the national honor society…Personal: Has two brothers…Lists Hope Solo as her favorite athlete…Hopes to coach soccer after graduation…Plans to major in physical education at Hofstra.
22 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 23
Erin Havard #8
Freshman, 5-7, MidfieldFairfax, VA/W.T. Woodson
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played on the varsity team at W.T. Woodson for four years…Scored the game-winning
goal to help the Cavaliers win the Northern Region championship as a senior…Also helped her squad to a district championship as a junior…All-district selection as a junior and senior and a team captain as a senior…Member of the national honors society…Also played club soccer for 10 years with McLean Azul, helping her team to six Virginia State Cup championships (2005-09, 2011)…Personal: Has one brother and one sister, who was a swimmer at East Carolina…Five-year member of the Virginia Olympic Development Program, helping her team to a third-place finish in the 2009 national championships…Lists Brett Favre and Steve Nash as her favorite athletes…Started playing soccer at age five…Chose Hofstra in part for its business program and its proximity to New York City.
Jules Kantor #00
Freshman, 5-10, GoalkeeperCoral Springs, FL/St. Thomas Aquinas
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played on one of the top high school teams in
the country at St. Thomas Aquinas in Fort Lauderdale, Florida…Led her team to a 25-1 record as a senior, winning district, regional, state and national championships…The Raiders earned the Adidas Coaches Association national championship and was voted as the No. 2 girls athletic team of the year by MaxPreps…Led the nation with 24 shutouts, including 18 in a row…Allowed only two goals all season for a 0.08 goals against average…Earned ESPN RISE first-team All-American honors, as well as first-team All-State, the Miami Herald Player of the Year, and Team Defensive MVP…Also helped her junior team to a district championship and the regional finals in 2010…Named Team Defensive MVP…Personal: Full name is Julia Kantor…Has one brother, who plays lacrosse on Long Island at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy…Father played football at the College of New Jersey…Lists Hope Solo as her favorite athlete…Hopes to enter the teaching/coaching profession after graduation.
24 Hofstra University
PLAYER PROFILES
Anya Koren #11
Freshman, 5-7, Midfield/ForwardScottsdale, AZ/Desert Mountain
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played for three seasons on the Desert Mountain High School team, missing
her junior year…Tallied 33 goals and 12 assists as a senior while helping to lead her team to the state quarterfinals…Was named to the Arizona All-State teams, as well as the All-Desert Valley, All-Region, and All-Tribune teams…Was listed as one of the Top 20 Players to Watch in the Rocky Mountain region by Top Drawer Soccer…Had 13 goals and 12 assists as a sophomore, and 12 goals and 11 assists as a freshman…Personal: Has one sister…Born in San Jose, California…Played on the SC Del Sol club team, which has won Arizona state championships eight times…Lists Cristiano Ronaldo, Didier Drogba, Thierry Henry and LeBron James as her favorite athletes…Starting playing soccer at age three…Hopes to get a job in sports marketing after graduation…Chose Hofstra in part for its business/marketing programs…Coaches soccer for the Special Olympics for four years.
Ingrid Moyer #6
Freshman, 5-8, Midfield/ForwardSouderton, PA/Souderton Area
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Attended Eastern University in Pennsylvania for a year, but did not play soccer…Played this
past summer for the Buxmont Torch FC of the Women’s Premier Soccer League (WPSL)…High School: Played for four seasons at Souderton Area High School, where she graduated in 2010…Started all four years…Helped lead team to only its second playoff appearance in school history as a junior, when she led the team in scoring and was an all-conference selection…Also was a member of the Eastern Pennsylvania ODP program for four years, and played for the FC Bucks Fusion club team…Also participated on the diving team for one year, qualifying for districts…Personal: Has one brother and one sister…Sister plays soccer at Lafayette…Lists Mia Hamm as her favorite athlete…Started playing soccer at age four…Nickamed “Ingie”… Mind Gym: An Athlete’s Guide To Inner Excellence by Gary Mack is her favorite book.
Ruby Staplehurst
24 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 25
Sam Scolarici #19
Freshman, 5-3, Midfield/ForwardAldie, VA/Freedom
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played at Freedom High School in South Riding, Virginia for four years…First-team all-
district and second-team all-region selection as a senior…Helped her team to a 13-4-1 record her senior year, the school’s best-ever record…Second team All-Met selection by the Washington Post as a senior…Was an all-region selection for four years, including the only freshman chosen in 2007, when she was a team MVP…Scored a goal in the 2009 U.S. Youth Soccer ODP national championships to help Virginia to a third-place finish…Personal: Has one younger brother…Plans to major in communications at Hofstra…Lists Lionel Messi has her favorite athlete…Nicknamed “Sammy”…Started playing soccer at age seven…Chose Hofstra for its atmosphere and its women’s soccer program.
Richard Nuttall and Simon Riddiough Soccer Camp
FoRCHILDRENENTERINggRADES2-12
Hofstra University Men’s Soccer Coach Richard Nuttall and
Women’s Soccer Coach Simon Riddiough combine forces
to provide the most positive soccer training experience on
Long Island. The camp is designed for boys and girls of all
skill levels.
For more information visit: Hofstra.edu/camp
Brooke Bendernagel
26 Hofstra University
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT
Stuart Rabinowitz was chosen by the Hofstra
University Board of Trustees to serve as the eighth
president of the University on December 20, 2000.
Prior to his appointment, he served as dean of Hofstra
University School of Law from September 1989 through
June 2001. He joined the faculty of the School of Law in
1972. President Rabinowitz currently holds the Andrew M.
Boas and Mark L. Claster Distinguished Professorship in
Civil Procedure.
President Rabinowitz holds positions with a number of
important government and community organizations,
including the Judicial Advisory Council of the State of
New York Unified Court System - County of Nassau, and
the Nassau County Health and Welfare Council. He serves
as a trustee of the Commission on Independent Colleges
and Universities, and on the Board of Directors for the Fair
Media Council and the Long Island Technology Network.
President Rabinowitz is a former member of the Nassau
County Blue Ribbon Financial Review Panel, former
chair of the Nassau County Local Advisory Board, and
a former member of the Board of Directors of the Long
Island Association. Additionally, President Rabinowitz
served as a member of the Nassau County Commission on
Government Revision, which was charged with drafting a
new charter and a new form of government for the County.
He is the recipient of the Martin Luther King Living the
Dream Award, EOC; Distinguished Service in the Cause
of Justice, Legal Aid Society; UJA Federation Leadership
Award; the Bar Association of Nassau County Proclamation
for Outstanding Service to both the legal profession and the
community; the Community Service Award from
the Conference of Jewish Organizations of Nassau
County; and the Alumni Association of the City
College of New York 2005 Townsend Harris Medal.
He has also been honored by the Long Island
Software and Technology Network (LISTnet) and
was the recipient of Networking magazine’s David
Award.
President Rabinowitz received a juris doctor, magna
cum laude, from Columbia University School of
Law, where he was a member of the board of editors
of the Columbia Law Review and a Harlan Fiske
Stone Scholar. He graduated from City College of
New York with honors, and is a member of Phi Beta
Kappa and the American Law Institute.
STUART RABINOWITZ
President of Hofstra University
President Rabinowitz, Hofstra Pride Club Board member James C. Metzger ’83 and Hofstra Pride Club President E. David Woycik ’77 at the 2011 Pride Student-Athlete Awards Banquet
26 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 27
Trustees of Hofstra UniversityAsofAugust2011
UNIVERSITY SENIOR ADMINISTRATION/TRUSTEES
M. Patricia AdamskiSenior Vice President
for Planning and Administration
Joseph M. BarkwillVice President for
Facilities and Operations
Dr. Herman BerlinerProvost and Senior Vice
President for Academic Affairs
Melissa ConnollyVice President for
University Relations
Jessica EadsVice President for
Enrollment Services
Dolores Fredrich, Esq.Vice President for Legal Affairs and General Counsel
OFFICERS
Marilyn B. Monter,* ChairAlan J. Bernon,* Vice ChairDavid S. Mack,* Vice ChairJoseph M. Gregory,* SecretaryStuart Rabinowitz, President____________________
MEMBERS
George W. Bilicic, Jr.Tejinder BindraRobert F. Dall*Helene FortunoffSteven J. Freiberg*Colin GoddardMartin B. Greenberg*Leo A. GuthartPeter S. Kalikow*Abby KenigsbergArthur J. KremerKaren L. LutzDonna M. Mendes*Janis M. Meyer*John D. Miller*
Martha S. PopeJames E. Quinn*Edwin C. ReedRobert D. Rosenthal*Debra A. Sandler*Thomas J. Sanzone*Peter G. SchiffJoseph Sparacio* Frank G. Zarb*
DELEGATES
William F. Nirode, Speaker of the FacultyStuart L. Bass,* Chair, University Senate Executive CommitteeElizabeth K. Benuti, Chair, University Senate Planning and Budget CommitteeDavid Zuniga, President, Student Government AssociationAlexander Zelinski, Vice President, Student Government AssociationFrederick E. Davis, Jr.,* President, Alumni Organization
____________________
James M. Shuart,* President Emeritus
Wilbur Breslin, Trustee EmeritusEmil V. Cianciulli,* Chair EmeritusJohn J. Conefry, Jr., Chair EmeritusMaurice A. Deane,* Chair EmeritusGeorge G. Dempster,* Chair EmeritusJoseph L. Dionne,* Trustee EmeritusBernard Fixler,* Trustee EmeritusFlorence Kaufman, Trustee EmeritaWalter B. Kissinger, Trustee EmeritusAnn M. Mallouk,* Chair EmeritaThomas H. O’Brien, Trustee EmeritusArnold A. Saltzman, Trustee EmeritusNorman R. Tengstrom,* Trustee Emeritus
*Hofstra Alumni
Richard V. Guardino, Jr., Esq.Vice President for Business
Development
Catherine HennessyVice President for Financial
Affairs and Treasurer
Sandra S. JohnsonVice President for
Student Affairs
Robert W. JuckiewiczVice President for
Information Technology
Alan J. KellyVice President
for Development
STUART RABINOWITZ
President of Hofstra University
28 Hofstra University
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
Jack Hayes is in his eighth year as director of athletics at Hofstra University in 2011-12. Hayes was appointed by Hofstra
President Stuart Rabinowitz as the University’s director of athletics on October 4, 2004. Hayes came to Hofstra after serving as an associate director of athletics at the University of Connecticut for three years. Hayes, the eighth director of athletics at Hofstra, leads a department that includes 17 Division I teams, 90 coaches and administrative staff members and 350 student-athletes.
Hayes’ proven expertise in enhancing academic and athletic success of student-athletes, strategic planning, fund-raising, marketing, university relations, facility enhancement, budgetary management, and NCAA compliance complements Hofstra University’s athletic department in its quest to further enhance its athletic program, and assist Hofstra’s student-athletes both on and off the field.
The Hofstra Athletic program has flourished under Hayes’ leadership, winning 20 CAA Championships and making 33 postseason appearances, including 25 NCAA Tournaments, since the 2004-05 academic year. In 2010-11 four Pride teams advanced to postseason play with women’s soccer and men’s lacrosse reaching the NCAA Tournament as at-large selections. In addition, Hofstra hosted the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Quarterfinals in 2009 and 2011, setting a James M. Shuart Stadium attendance record in 2011.
Hayes has placed a significant emphasis on fund-raising during his tenure. Pride Club membership reached all-time highs, both in terms of the number of contributors and funds raised as the organization topped the $1 million mark for the three consecutive years. In addition, Hofstra Athletics signed its largest corporate sponsorship deal in department history when it partnered with W.B. Mason in 2010.
Resources generated through fund-raising efforts have been used to enhance programs and facilities available to student-athletes. Recent initiatives include the construction of the W.B. Mason Pride Lounge on the lower level of the Mack Sports Complex, baseball’s Quinn Family
Grandstand and the Fried Family Student-Athlete Development Center on the second floor of the James M. Shuart Stadium Building. Other recent renovations include locker rooms, the wrestling room, athletic training rooms in Margiotta Hall and the Physical Education Center, the basketball media room in the Mack Sports Complex, a press box at the Hofstra Soccer Stadium, replacement of the turf at James M. Shuart Stadium and the construction of the Hofstra Field Hockey Stadium.
In 2006 Hayes reintroduced the Hofstra Athletics Hall of Fame after more than a 50-year absence, inducting five classes since that time. He also led an effort to retire the uniform numbers of prominent Hofstra student-athletes with 20 jersey retirement ceremonies held during the 2008-09 academic year.
Active on a national level, Hayes served on the NCAA Division I Lacrosse Committee from September 2006 to September 2008.
In September 2010 he was appointed to the NCAA Leadership Council, which is an advisory body to the Division I Board of Directors.
Hayes came to Hofstra with more than 14 years of athletic administration experience, including management positions at four Division I institutions – Connecticut, Fordham, St. John’s and Fairfield. Hayes received a master’s degree in education in 1992 with a concentration in sport management from the University of Connecticut. He holds a bachelor’s degree (1989) from Providence College, where he was a member of Providence’s lacrosse team. He was also awarded a certificate of completion in 2001 from the Sports Management Institute, Consortium of the Universities of Michigan and Texas. A native of Providence, Rhode Island, Hayes graduated from the Providence Country Day School where he lettered in football, basketball and lacrosse. He was inducted, as a member of his high school basketball team, into the Providence Country Day Athletic Hall of Fame in October 2004. In October 2010 Hayes became a two-time member of Providence Country Day’s Athletic Hall of Fame when he was inducted along with the rest of his high school lacrosse team.
Hayes resides in East Northport, New York, with his wife Bridget, daughter Katie (9), and sons Matt (6), Tommy (3) and Michael, who was born in April 2011.
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY DIRECTORS OF ATHLETICS
1937-42 JohnBartlettMacDonald
1942-45 JohnArcherSmith(Interim)
1945-48 JohnBartlettMacDonald
1948-51 JohnArcherSmith
1951-74 Howard“Howdy”Myers
1974-75 DickThiebert
1975-87 Bobgetchell
1987-97 Jimgarvey
1997-04 HarryRoyle
2004-pres. JackHayes
JACK HAYESHofstra University Director of Athletics
28 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 29
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS
Charles Jenkins, Hofstra’s all-time
leading scorer, was a three-time Haggerty Award winner and two-
time CAA Player of the Year who was selected by
the Golden State Warriors in the 2011 NBA Draft
Jay Card led the Pride to four consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances for the first time in program history, and was a three-time All-American and four-time All-CAA selection
Tiffany Yovino helped lead the Pride to the second round of the NCAA
Tournament in 2007 and 2010 and was an All-American last season
Shaun Foster earned CAA Men’s Soccer Defensive Player and Rookie of the Year Awards in 2010
Shante Evans was an All-
American in 2010-11 after averaging a
team-high 18.4 points and 11
rebounds per game
Lou Ruggirello earned All-America and Academic All-America accolades in 2010-11 and was a four-time NCAA qualifier
Olivia Galati set the school single season victory, strikeout and shutout records with 29 wins, 348 strikeouts and 17 shutouts
30 Hofstra University
ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF AND HEAD COACHES
Alison AdamskiWomen’s Tennis Coach
Pete Alfano
Cross Country CoachPatrick AndersonBaseball Coach
Rob AnspachWrestling Coach
Chrissy ArnoneAssistant Director of
Athletics for Marketing and Promotions
Jay ArtinianAssociate Director of Athletics for Facilities
Rachel AugustDirector of Athletic
Administration
Cathy AullAthletic Department
Secretary
Ann BallerAssociate Director of
Athletic Facilities
Dr. Michael BarnesFaculty Athletics Representative
Anthony BattagliaEquipment Manager
Susan BauerAssistant Dean of
University Advisement
Marisa BigginsAssistant Director of
Compliance
Allison BradshawAssistant Strength and
Conditioning Coach
Mo CassaraMen’s Basketball Coach
Neil CollinsAssistant Director of
Athletic Facilities
John ConsidineAssistant Equipment
Manager
Tara CoppolaAssistant Director of
Athletic Facilities
Maria CorvinoAssistant Director of Athletics for Ticket
Operations
Maren Crowley
Women’s Golf CoachKathy De Angelis
Field Hockey CoachBill Edwards
Softball CoachJoe Elliott
Men’s Golf CoachDavid FernandezAthletic Facilities
Coordinator
Stephen GorchovAssociate Director
of Athletics for Communications
John HeckAssociate Director of
Athletics for Compliance
Kristina HernandezVolleyball Coach
Ellen JohnsonAssistant Director of
Athletics for Corporate Relations
Colm KennedyAssistant Director of
Athletic Facilities
Krista Kilburn-SteveskeyWomen’s Basketball
Coach
30 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 31
James LallyDirector of Student-
Athlete Services
Frantzer Le BlancAssistant Director of
Athletic Facilities
Cindy LewisSenior Associate
Director of Athletics
Evan MalingsHead Athletic Trainer
Danny McCabeExecutive Associate Director of Athletics
Tim McMahonAssociate Director of
Athletics for External Affairs
Abby MorganWomen’s Lacrosse Coach
Isaac NealTicket Office
Graduate Assistant
Michael NeelyDirector of Ticket Sales
Richard NuttallMen’s Soccer Coach
Jeanne O’KeefeAthletic Department
Secretary
Rachel PeelAssociate Dean of
University Advisement
James PrendergastAssistant Strength and
Conditioning Coach
Simon RiddioughWomen’s Soccer Coach
Diane SchuerleinAthletic Department
Secretary
Jim SheehanSenior Sports
Information Director
Clarice SmithAthletic Department
Secretary
Daniel SolowAssistant Director of
Athletics for Development
Samantha SweeneyAssistant Director of Athletics for Student-Athlete Development
Harriet TeitleAthletic Department
Secretary
Kathy TheilingEquipment Manager
Seth TierneyMen’s Lacrosse Coach
Michael UntersteinAssistant Director of Athletic Development
Dave WalshAssistant Equipment
Manager
Ryan WatsonAssistant Director of
Athletic Facilities
Philip WayneMen’s Tennis Coach
Scott WilksStrength and
Conditioning Coach
Winnie WymesAthletic Department
Secretary
Dr. Michael YorioTeam Physician
32 Hofstra University
LONG ISLAND AND NEW YORK CITY
FivedistinctregionsmakeupLongIsland:
• North Shore, otherwise known as the Gold Coast, with dozens of historic sites dating back to colonial days and Gatsby-era mansions.
• South Shore, the Island’s spectator sports and entertainment center, with world-famous Jones and Fire Island Beaches, and home to the New York Islanders.
• Central Suffolk, with beautiful forests and natural inlets, the world’s largest factory outlet center and a huge water park.
• North Fork, with an array of vineyards, waterfront ports and farm stands.
• South Fork, widely known as “The Hamptons,” with its pristine beaches and exclusive villages.
You can catch a Hofstra shuttle bus to Jones Beach – a state park with six miles of gorgeous coastline, a boardwalk, swimming pools, golf and outdoor concerts.
Witheverythingfrom:
• museums, historical sites and lighthouses,
• to sophisticated malls, designer outlets and shopping villages,
• to wineries and farm stands,
• to family fun parks, aquariums and zoos,
...there is plenty to do on Long Island!
• Study the world’s finest sculptures and paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
• Go and cheer along with the crowd at a Yankees, Mets, Rangers or
Knicks game.
• Wave at the TV cameras in the street-level studios of FOX, CNN, NBC, CBS or ABC
• Walk through the financial capital of the world at the New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street.
• Take the subway to Coney Island for a Nathan’s hot dog and a ride on the Cyclone, the last of the great wooden rollercoasters.
• Get half-priced tickets to Broadway’s finest shows at the TKTS booth in a new, glittering Times Square.
About Long Island…
About New York City…
LongIslandhasarichhistoryasanactive,vibrantcommunity,asummerplayground,andhometosomeofNewYork’smostprominentfamilies.
Hofstraislocatedonly30milesfromNewYorkCity–thecapitalofcultureandfinance.YoucanvisitCarnegieHall,SouthStreetSeaport,HardRockCafé,grandCentralStation,CentralPark,NBCStudiosinRockefellerCenter,LittleItalyorChinatown.
32 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 33
ATHLETIC ACADEMIC SUPPORT
Hofstra University is committed to the pursuit of academic and athletic excellence. The University views participation in intercollegiate athletics as benefiting the
student-athlete in an educationally enhancing experience beyond any other opportunity available. Hofstra also realizes the time commitment made by student-athletes and has committed the facilities and resources to support all students.
The University Tutorial Program (UTP) provides free tutoring in every subject area to any Hofstra student. Students are able to obtain up to 1 1/2 hours of individual tutorial assistance per week for up to three courses. They are also able to utilize the various help labs on campus, which specialize in providing assistance in writing, business and QM, and biology and chemistry. In addition to this service, student-athletes are assigned an academic advisor, through the Center for University Advisement, who helps address the various needs of student-athletes. The academic advisor emphasizes four areas in their efforts to ensure the academic success of Hofstra’s student-athletes.
Area one is academic counseling. Services are provided in the areas of academic planning, career planning, personal counseling, and campus and community referrals. The advisor also meets with prospective student-athletes, at the coach’s request, to share the many benefits of a Hofstra University education.
Area two is academic advising. The academic advisor serves as the primary advisor for first-year and undecided student-athletes, and also assists upperclassmen who have declared a major.
Area three is academic monitoring. The advisor monitors the academic progress of student-athletes to ensure compliance with Hofstra University, NCAA and conference regulations. The advisor’s regular communication with the faculty and coaches provide opportunities for early intervention should academic difficulties arise.
Area four is study halls. The University Tutorial Program supports athletic study halls by providing tutors in various subjects as necessary. The academic advisors also assess the needs of individual student-athletes to provide the most effective study environment. The assessment tool administered by the Center for University Advisement is also used to provide various enrichment seminars for the student-athletes such as time management, writing skills, campus resources, and surviving the college transition.
In 2010 The Fried Family Student-Athlete Development Center was opened on the second level of the James M. Shuart Stadium Building. The center houses the offices of the Student-Athlete Services Staff, as well as a large computer lab with printer access for use by Hofstra student-athletes, a quiet study area with wireless internet access and two group study/tutor rooms with power point access and white boards.
34 Hofstra University
SPORTS MEDICINE/ATHLETIC TRAINING
Through a comprehensive athletic training program, Hofstra University student-athletes are provided excellent health care during their
time at the University. A coordinated effort between the University Health and Wellness Center, the Athletic Department and outside health care providers ensures every student-athlete the best medical attention possible. University student-athletes have direct access to a myriad of health care services. Managing the coverage of every practice and competition event is Hofstra University’s athletic training staff, which is led by ninth-year Head Athletic Trainer Evan Malings and features six full-time athletic trainers and numerous student athletic trainers. The athletic trainers provide injury management, rehabilitation and treatment to the entire Athletic program. Utilizing three state-of-the-art athletic training rooms, these professionals work tirelessly to ensure the safe participation of Hofstra’s student-athletes and to return injured athletes to play quickly and safely.
Supporting the athletic trainers is team physician Dr. Michael Yorio. Dr. Yorio, a physician with Pro Health Care, Inc. in Lake Success, New York, is in his third year on Hofstra’s medical team. Yorio is an internist with specialized training in sports medicine. He earned his undergraduate degree at Villanova University, and received his medical degree from the SUNY Health Science Center in Syracuse. Yorio previously served as a sports medicine fellow with the University of Maryland Orthopedics. Prior to that, he was a resident physician in internal medicine at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Yorio was named the Director of Player Medical Services for the 2008 U.S. Open Tennis Tournament in Flushing, New York, and is on the medical staff for the New York Islanders. He also worked as a team physician for the University of Maryland from 2003 to 2005.
Hofstra University sponsors a fully accredited, highly competitive undergraduate degree program for athletic training majors, in which Hofstra student athletic trainers participate in all aspects of the health care system.
Evan MalingsHeadAthleticTrainer
Dr. Michael YorioTeamPhysician
Marie SilerAthleticTrainer
34 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 35
HOFSTRA IN THE COMMUNITY
The Hofstra Soccer team is quite active in the Long island soccer community. The team conducts several clinics each year, working in conjunction with Big Brothers/Big Sisters
of Long Island, the Uniondale Police Athletic League and the Town of North Hempstead.
The Pride is also active in area schools, participating in the Read Across America program at the Jackson Main Elementary School in Hempstead, New York, and the Read Aloud event at the Meadow Drive School in Albertson, New York.
In addition to their on-field work with the community, Hofstra Soccer players also take part in charity fund raising events such as Alex’s Lemonade Stand, as well as volunteer with the Special Olympics.
The team also takes part in food drives in conjunction with Hofstra’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) and partners with organizations such as Long Island Cares and The Interfaith Nutrition Network.
SERGIO VILLANUEVA SCHOLARSHIP FUND
The FDNY Soccer Club and Hofstra alumnus Jonathan
Kanovsky (‘86) have created a scholarship fund at Hofstra University in memory of firefighter Sergio Villanueva, who was among those who perished on September 11, 2001. This soccer scholarship will assist a deserving Hofstra University student-athlete in pursuing their goal of a college education. The recipient will demonstrate the work ethic, integrity, discipline and courage that exemplified Sergio’s life. To get more information or to donate to the fund go to www.fdnysoccer.com or contact the Hofstra University Office of Development at (516) 463-5542.
36 Hofstra University
HOFSTRA SOCCER STADIUM/FACILITIES
The Hofstra Soccer Teams play at the Hofstra University Soccer Stadium, located on the University’s north campus, adjacent to the David S. Mack Physical Education Center. The Stadium,
constructed in 2003 through a partnership with the New York Jets, features a 120-yard by 74-yard FieldTurf surface, stadium lighting, metal bleachers the length of the field, the Gorman Memorial Gateway and the Hofstra Soccer Walls of Honor. In 2009 a new press box was installed. In addition, signs commemorating Hofstra’s conference championships, NCAA Tournament appearances and retired jerseys are displayed on the west end of the stadium. Since its’ opening, the Pride is 53-12-6 at the Stadium.
The FieldTurf system, which was installed by Landtek of Amityville, New York, replicates a natural grass surface, but offers the durability and cost benefits of synthetic fields. FieldTurf is a safe alternative, resulting in a documented reduction of sports injuries. The sand and rubber infill system is the biggest technical development that the sport surfacing industry has seen in the last 25 years. This patented technology sets FieldTurf apart from all other sports surfaces.
In June 2001 the Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), the worldwide governing body for the sport of soccer, gave its official recommendation to the artificial grass FieldTurf installation at Boston University’s Nickerson Field for international competition and domestic league play. The historic ruling, the first and only certification of an artificial surface in the world at this time, means that venues with FieldTurf can be used for all preliminary competition matches for the FIFA World Cup and Olympic Football Tournaments as well as for professional league play. There have been more than 500 FieldTurf installations worldwide in recent years.
The facility is lit with a system from the Iowa-based Musco Lighting Company. Musco is recognized as a world-class leader in sports lighting with lighting systems installed around the globe. A leader in developing sports-lighting technology – including solutions for permanent and temporary lighting, and sports facility management – Musco offers innovative systems, a comprehensive package of services, and decades of experience.
Working with organizations such as Amateur Softball Association, Babe Ruth League, Disney, England and Wales Cricket Board, Little League Baseball®, Major League Baseball, NASCAR, and the NBA, Musco has played a key role in developing guidelines for safe, efficient sports facilities. Musco is a Major Partner with the National Recreation and Park Association (NRPA); provides the Official Sports-Lighting System for Little League Baseball and was selected to light Disney’s Wide World of Sports Complex — a state-of-the-art 200-acre complex with facilities for more than 30 sports.
The facility is outfitted with a seating system from the Southern Bleacher Company of Graham, Texas. Since 1946, Southern Bleacher has set the standard of excellence in the design and manufacturing of sports stadiums and entertainment venues. Southern Bleacher products grace professional baseball diamonds and soccer fields, college campuses, school districts, NASCAR tracks and rodeo arenas across the United States.
The Hofstra Soccer Stadium served as the home site of first round Men’s NCAA Tournament games in 2005 and 2006, as well as hosting numerous high school playoff contests. The stadium also served as the practice field for the Jets during their public preseason camp workouts until the team moved its headquarters from Hofstra in 2008.
36 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 37
MACK SPORTS COMPLEX WEIGHT ROOM
Hofstra Soccer student-athletes conduct their weight training in the spacious, 3,024 square-foot Mack Sports Complex Weight Room. Located on the lower lever of the
complex, the weight room houses a wide variety of strength and conditioning equipment including free weights, Hammer Strength and 12 pieces of cardiovascular equipment. The team trains under the watchful eye of t Strength Coach Scott Wilks, who is in his third year on the Hofstra staff, and focuses on a blend of Olympic and power lifting that aims to increase strength and overall power development.
THE GORMAN MEMORIAL GATEWAY
The Gorman Memorial Gateway, named in honor of former Hofstra Soccer player Frank Gorman, who died tragically on January 5, 2003, was officially dedicated on Sunday, September 17, 2006.
The Gorman Memorial Gateway project included a gated entrance to the Hofstra Soccer Stadium and ticket windows, as well as a Hofstra Men’s and Women’s Soccer Walls of Fame, the Sergio Villanueva Memorial Garden and a picnic area behind the east side goal. Future plans include alumni bleachers behind the east goal.
Donors to the Gorman Memorial Gateway Fund have their names inscribed on a plaque at the Gateway entrance to the Hofstra University Soccer Stadium.
HOFSTRA INDOOR PRACTICE FACILITY
The Pride has use of an indoor practice bubble located on the north campus, behind the Mack Sports Complex. The 50-yard turf field gives Hofstra a unique environment that many teams
in the Northeast do not have.
38 Hofstra University
2010 STATISTICS AND RESULTS Overall: 19-3 Conference: 11-0 Home: 10-1 Away: 8-2 Neutral: 1-0
No. Name GP-GS G A Pts. S S% GW PK-ATT
8 Salma Tarik 22-22 12 2 26 72 .167 4 0-018 Tiffany Yovino 22-22 12 2 26 56 .214 4 1-25 Laura Greene 22-22 6 7 19 58 .103 4 0-021 Courtney Breen 22-22 4 5 13 35 .114 1 0-04 Amy Turner 22-22 4 4 12 10 .400 3 1-111 Dana Bergstrom 22-22 1 10 12 22 .045 0 0-024 Grace Hawkins 21-3 2 5 9 28 .071 1 0-025 Brittany Butts 21-21 2 1 5 34 .059 0 0-09 Amber Stobbs 17-3 2 1 5 16 .125 0 0-07 Ruby Staplehurst 11-0 2 1 5 5 .400 0 0-022 Danielle Murino 22-22 0 4 4 13 .000 0 0-013 Kayla Pifer 20-18 1 1 3 10 .100 1 0-017 Krysti Rodriguez 19-0 1 0 2 8 .125 1 0-02 Tara Kerns 21-0 0 1 1 4 .000 0 0-015 Brooke Bendernagel 21-21 0 1 1 1 .000 0 0-016 Erin Breen 4-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0-010 Brittany Farriella 4-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0-0 Total 22 49 45 143 372 .132 19 2-3 Opponents 22 22 19 63 155 .142 3 2-3
GOALKEEPING No. Name GP-GS Min. GA Avg. Svs. Pct. W L T Sho00 Krista Thorn 22-19 1141:04 12 0.95 28 .700 12 2 0 11 Emily Morphitis 19-3 869:40 10 1.03 18 .643 7 1 0 0 Total 22 2010:44 22 0.98 47 .681 19 3 0 9 Opponents 22 2010:44 49 2.19 122 .713 3 19 0 2
Goals 1 2 OT OT2 Tot. Corner Kicks 1 2 OT OT2 Tot.Hofstra 19 27 1 2 49 Hofstra 46 61 4 0 111Opponents 10 12 0 0 22 Opponents 31 29 3 0 63
Goals 1 2 OT OT2 Tot. Corner Kicks 1 2 OT OT2 Tot.Hofstra 168 198 4 2 372 Hofstra 24 21 2 0 47Opponents 65 88 2 0 155 Opponents 61 58 3 0 122
2010 RESULTS Date Opponent W/L Score Att.Aug. 27 at #7 Boston College L 0-5 325Sept. 03 Rhode Island W 3-1 301Sept. 05 Fordham W 4-1 376Sept. 10 at Purdue W 3-1 223Sept. 12 at Indiana W 3-1 211Sept. 17 at Columbia W (2 OT) 1-0 357Sept. 19 Princeton W 1-0 347Sept. 24 at James Madison* W 1-0 317Sept. 26 at VCU* W 2-0 194Sept. 30 at Drexel* W 2-1 50Oct. 03 Delaware W 2-0 350Oct. 08 Towson* W 4-1 309Oct. 10 George Mason* W 5-0 322Oct. 15 at William and Mary* W 3-2 284Oct. 17 at Old Dominion* W 3-1 157Oct. 22 Georgia State* W (OT) 3-2 309Oct. 24 UNC Wilmington* W 2-0 260Oct. 30 Northeastern* W (2 OT) 2-1 690Nov. 05 Georgia State^ W 3-0 1174Nov. 07 James Madison^ L 0-2 557Nov. 12 vs. Connecticut $ W 1-0 199Nov. 14 at #18 Boston College$ L 1-3 620
*Colonial Athletic Association game^CAA Championship$NCAA Championship (at Boston College)
Dana Bergstrom
38 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 39
THE COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
The Colonial Athletic Association continues to build on its reputation as one of the nation’s top collegiate conferences both athletically and academically.
The CAA encompasses five of the nation’s nine largest metropolitan areas with a geographic footprint that stretches from Boston to Atlanta. The conference has produced 16 national team champions in five different sports, 33 individual national champions, 12 national players of the year, 12 national coaches of the year and 12 Honda Award winners. Just as impressive, however, are the honors accumulated away from competition, which include five Rhodes Scholars and 22 NCAA post-graduate scholars. In 2010-11, more than 1,900 of the league’s 4,000 student-athletes received the Commissioner’s Academic Award after posting at least a 3.2 grade point average while lettering in a varsity sport. The conference had 21 teams in 12 different sports receive NCAA Public Recognition Awards based on the latest Academic Progress Report released in 2011.
The landscape of the conference stretches along the majority of the East Coast, and includes six of the nation’s top 25 media markets – New York (1), Philadelphia (4), Boston (7), Atlanta (8), Washington, D.C. (9) and Baltimore (25). The number of television homes in the CAA market exceeds 20 million.
The CAA conducts championships in 23 sports. Male athletes compete for championships in baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and wrestling. Female athletes battle for conference titles in basketball, cross country, field hockey, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. In 2010-11, 25 teams earned NCAA Tournament berths and 50 student-athletes received All-America honors in 13 different sports.
The conference has made its presence known nationally in men’s basketball with two teams – George Mason (2006) and VCU (2011) – advancing to the NCAA Final Four over the past five years. Three CAA teams earned NCAA Tournament berths for the first time in 2011 as conference champion Old Dominion was joined by VCU and George Mason. VCU knocked off USC, Georgetown, Purdue, Florida State and top-seeded Kansas, while Mason defeated Villanova. The Rams were ranked No. 6 in the final ESPN/USA Today Top 25 poll, which was the highest ranking ever for a CAA team. In 2006, George Mason captured the nation’s imagination by becoming the first mid-major program since 1979 to reach the Final Four, posting victories over Michigan State, North Carolina, Wichita State and Connecticut along the way.
Six CAA women’s basketball teams advanced to postseason play in 2011. James Madison represented the conference in the NCAA Tournament after capturing its second straight conference championship. Delaware, Drexel, UNC Wilmington, Old Dominion and VCU participated in the WNIT, with the Seahawks advancing to the second round. ODU, which won an NCAA-record 17 straight CAA titles from 1992-2008, boasts three national championships (1979, 1980, 1985) and was national runner-up in 1997.
The conference also excels in many other sports. CAA squads have combined to win 10 field hockey national titles since the championship began in 1981. At least two women’s soccer teams have advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament in three of the past four seasons and William & Mary gave the CAA a team in the final 16 of the NCAA Men’s Soccer Championship for the sixth time in the last nine years. In men’s cross country, William & Mary advanced to the NCAA Championship for the 12th straight year and finished 19th overall. In the pool, Towson’s Meredith Budner finished as the runner-up in the 500 freestyle and 1650 freestyle at the 2011 NCAA Championship and received All-America honors along with George Mason’s Ashley Danner. Delaware and Towson have each reached the Final Four of the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championship in the past decade. The CAA has sent multiple teams to the NCAA Baseball Championship in nine of the last 14 years and has had at least 12 players selected in the eight of the last nine Major League Baseball drafts. The conference also boasts numerous All-Americans in lacrosse, tennis, golf, track and field, women’s lacrosse and wrestling.
CAA member institutions are committed to excellence in the classroom. The Colonial Academic Alliance was created in 2002 by the league’s presidents with a goal of expanding their partnership to all aspects of university life outside of intercollegiate athletics. Among the programs that have been established are an undergraduate research conference, coordination of study abroad programs and granting visiting academic status to student-athletes traveling to an away
contest so that they have access to libraries, academic resource centers and computer labs.
In 2002, two faculty members from CAA institutions were awarded academia’s most coveted distinction – the Nobel Prize. John B. Fenn, a research professor in the Department of Chemistry at Virginia Commonwealth University, received the Nobel Prize for chemistry, and Vernon Smith, a professor of economics and law at George Mason University, shared the Nobel Prize in economic sciences.
Commissioner Thomas E. Yeager has guided the CAA since its inception. The conference traces its roots back to 1983 when three of its current members- George Mason University, James Madison University, and the College of William and Mary - were aligned with East Carolina University, the United States Naval Academy and the University of Richmond as a basketball league (ECAC South). During the next two years, the league added 11 sports, acquired two new members (the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and American University) and decided to form a new association. The transformation from ECAC South to CAA took place on June 6, 1985.
Charter members George Mason, James Madison, UNC Wilmington and William and Mary were joined by Old Dominion University in 1991 and by Virginia Commonwealth University in 1995. The conference added the University of Delaware, Drexel University, Hofstra University and Towson University in 2001. Georgia State University and Northeastern University became members of the conference on July 1, 2005.
40 Hofstra University
2010 CAA REVIEW CAA OVERALL W L T Pts. W L T Pct.Hofstra 11 0 0 33 19 3 0 .864#James Madison 9 2 0 27 15 7 1 .674George Mason 7 4 0 21 11 7 2 .600Georgia State 6 4 1 19 12 7 2 .619William and Mary 6 4 1 19 10 7 2 .579UNC Wilmington 6 5 0 18 9 10 0 .474Northeastern 4 6 1 13 9 8 1 .528Delaware 4 6 1 13 8 10 1 .447Drexel 3 7 1 10 7 11 1 .395VCU 2 7 2 8 6 9 4 .421Towson 2 8 1 7 6 11 3 .375Old Dominion 2 9 0 6 4 12 1 .265
# - CAA Champion
PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Tiffany Yovino, Hofstra
DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Myriam Bouchard, VCU
ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Jewel Evans, Georgia State
COACH OF THE YEAR:Simon Riddiough, Hofstra
2010 All-Colonial Athletic Association Women’s Soccer Teams
2010 Colonial Athletic AssociationAll-Conference Teams
FIRsT TEAm sEcOnd TEAmF- Omolyn Davis, George Mason F- Sarah Bennett, Georgia StateF- Veronica Napoli, Northeastern F- Jenna Lindsay, DrexelF- Salma Tarik, Hofstra F- Cate Tisinger, James MadisonM- Brittany Butts, Hofstra M- Kristen Blake, Northeastern M- Teresa Rynier, James Madison M- Courtney Breen, HofstraM-Mallory Schaffer, W&M M- Cortlyn Bristol, W&MM- Tiffany Yovino, Hofstra M- Apryl Goodwin, Georgia State D- Myriam Bouchard, VCU D- Dana Bergstrom, Hofstra D- Lindsay Henry, UNCW D- Kimmy Moss, George MasonD- Diana Weigel, W&M D- Morgan Warrington, DelawareG- Diane Wszalek, James Madison G- Jocelyn Papciak, Towson
THIRd TEAm All-ROOKIE TEAmF- Audrey Barry, W&M F- Emily Banes, TowsonF- Jewel Evans, Georgia State F- Audrey Barry, W&MF- Stephanie Rose, UNCW F- Jewel Evans, Georgia StateM- Amanda Holmes, UNCW F- Shannon Kearney, DelawareM- Ashley Kukura, Old Dominion F- Amber Stobbs, HofstraM- Megan Novak, UNCW F- Lauren Wilson, James MadisonM- Meagan Simeone, UNCW M- Sam Greenfield, DrexelD- Jessica Barndt, James Madison M- Hillary Savoy, NortheasternD- Melissa Gomes, Towson D- Becky Sparks, James MadisonD- Corinna Strickland, James Madison G- Emily Morphitis, HofstraD- Kelly Thomas, George Mason G- Kellianne Collins, Georgia State G- Caitlin Hunter, UNCW
Tiffany Yovino
40 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 41
Team Statistics
PoINTS## Team GP No. Avg1 Hofstra 22 143 6.502 James Madison 23 125 5.433 Georgia State 21 112 5.334 George Mason 20 101 5.055 Northeastern 18 80 4.446 William & Mary 19 78 4.117 Delaware 19 77 4.058 VCU 19 69 3.63 UNC Wilmington 19 69 3.63 Drexel 19 69 3.6311 Old Dominion 17 64 3.7612 Towson 20 51 2.55
goALS## Team GP G GPG1 Hofstra 22 49 2.232 James Madison 23 42 1.833 Georgia State 21 39 1.864 George Mason 20 34 1.705 Northeastern 18 28 1.566 William & Mary 19 27 1.42 Delaware 19 27 1.428 UNC Wilmington 19 24 1.269 Drexel 19 23 1.21 Old Dominion 17 23 1.35 VCU 19 23 1.2112 Towson 20 18 0.90
ASSISTS## Team GP A APG1 Hofstra 22 45 2.052 James Madison 23 41 1.783 Georgia State 21 34 1.624 George Mason 20 33 1.655 Northeastern 18 24 1.33 William & Mary 19 24 1.267 VCU 19 23 1.21 Drexel 19 23 1.21 Delaware 19 23 1.2110 UNC Wilmington 19 21 1.1111 Old Dominion 17 18 1.0612 Towson 20 15 0.75
goALSAgAINSTAVERAgE## Team GP GA Min. GAA1 Hofstra 22 22 2010:44 0.982 James Madison 23 25 2100:22 1.073 VCU 19 25 1804:51 1.254 Northeastern 18 23 1654:09 1.255 Georgia State 21 28 1997:51 1.266 George Mason 20 27 1887:14 1.297 Towson 20 27 1884:40 1.298 William & Mary 19 26 1750:00 1.349 Drexel 19 27 1781:05 1.3610 UNC Wilmington 19 28 1752:45 1.4411 Delaware 19 28 1752:41 1.4412 Old Dominion 17 38 1578:46 2.17
Individual Statistics
SCoRINg## Name, School GP G A Pts. PPG1 Rynier, Teresa-JMU 23 9 13 31 1.352 Davis, Omolyn-Mason 19 10 9 29 1.533 Yovino, Tiffany-Hofstra 22 12 2 26 1.18 Tarik, Salma-Hofstra 22 12 2 26 1.185 Evans, Jewel-GSU 21 8 8 24 1.146 Schaffer, Mallory-W&M 19 10 3 13 1.217 Samuelsdottir, Greta-NU 18 8 5 21 1.17 Napoli, Veronica-NU 18 9 3 21 1.17 Bennett, Sarah-GAST 21 10 1 21 1.0010 Rose, Stephanie-UNCW 19 8 4 20 1.05
goALS## Name, School GP G GPG1 Yovino, Tiffany-Hofstra 22 12 0.55 Tarik, Salma-Hofstra 22 12 0.553 Davis, Omolyn-Mason 19 10 0.53 Schaffer, Mallory-W&M 19 10 0.53 Bennett, Sarah-GAST 21 10 0.486 Napoli, Veronica-NU 18 9 0.50 Rynier, Teresa-JMU 23 9 0.398 Samuelsdottir, Greta-NU 18 8 0.44 Rose, Stephanie-UNCW 19 8 0.42 Evans, Jewel-GSU 21 8 0.38 Wilson, Lauren-JMU 22 8 0.36
ASSISTS## Name, School GP A APG1 Rynier, Teresa-JMU 23 13 0.572 Bergstrom, Dana-HU 22 10 0.453 Davis, Omolyn-Mason 19 9 0.474 Evans, Jewel-GSU 21 8 0.385 Barry, Audrey-W&M 19 7 0.37 Tiana Kallenberger-Mason 19 7 0.37 Greene, Laura-Hofstra 22 7 0.328 Lowinger, Jess-Drexel 16 5 0.31 Evans, Kelly-ODU 17 5 0.29 Carroll, Rachael-ODU 17 5 0.29
goALKEEPINg(Min.60percentofgamesplayed)## Name, School GP GA Min. GAA1 Thorn, Krista-HU 22 12 1141:0 0.952 Sopko, Michelle-NU 11 12 1010:0 1.073 Wszalek, Diane-JMU 23 25 2100:2 1.074 Collines, Kellianne-GSU 19 18 1350:4 1.205 Sinclair, Nicole-Drexel 18 16 1188:4 1.216 Lynch, Megan-VCU 19 25 1804:5 1.257 Bodenschatz, Alex-Mason 20 24 1686:0 1.288 Stemler, Breanna-Delaware 16 21 1472:4 1.289 Papciak, Jocelyn-Towson 20 27 1884:4 1.2910 Barnard, Grace-W&M 14 18 1162:0 1.29
42 Hofstra University
HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER HONOR ROLL
NSCAAALL-AMERICASue Weber - 2005, 2007Brooke DeRosa - 2007Tiffany Yovino - 2010
NSCAAALL-REgIoNSELECTIoNSChrista Eidenweil - 1999, 2000
Becky Wachsberger - 2003, 2004, 2005Dolores Deasley - 2003Elaine O’Connor - 2003
Marie Curtin - 2004, 2005, 2008Emma Kilduff - 2004
Edel Malone - 2005, 2007, 2008Sue Weber - 2005, 2006, 007
Brooke DeRosa - 2007Jess Crankshaw - 2007, 2008
Tiffany Yovino - 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010Salma Tarik - 2009, 2010
Courtney Breen - 2009, 2010Diane Caldwell - 2009Brittany Butts - 2010
All-Conference
ALL-CoLoNIALATHLETICASSoCIATIoNMarisa Pistone - 2001, 2003
Elaine O’Connor - 2002, 2003Charity Schmitt - 2002, 2003Dolores Deasley -2002, 2003
Becky Wachsberger - 2003, 2004, 2005Elyse Bizzozzaro - 2003
Marie Curtin - 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008Emma Kilduff - 2004Brigit Canle - 2004
Amber Albrecht - 2005Sue Weber - 2005, 2006, 2007
Edel Malone - 2005, 2007, 2008Brooke DeRosa - 2007
Jess Crankshaw - 2007, 2008, 2009Tiffany Yovino - 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
Courtney Breen - 2008, 2009, 2010Salma Tarik - 2009, 2010
Diane Caldwell - 2009 Brittany Butts - 2010
Dana Bergstron - 2010
ALL-CoLoNIALATHLETICASSoCIATIoNRooKIE
Jill Lipari - 2006Diane Caldwell - 2006Tiffany Yovino - 2007Courtney Breen - 2008Brittany Butts - 2008Amy Turner - 2009
Emily Morphitis - 2010 Amber Stobbs - 2010
ALL-AMERICAEASTHeather Kain - 1998
Allyson Pullano - 1999Joanne Chillingsworth - 1999
Christa Eidenweil - 1999, 2000Tracy Naughton - 1999, 2000
Penny Stansfield - 2000Jerilyn Marinan - 2000
Dolores Deasley - 2000, 2001Marisa Pistone - 2001
Chrissy Arnone
Jill Lipari
Dana Bergstrom
Jacki Pollaro
Jess Crankshaw
Edel Malone
42 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 43
CoLoNIALATHLETICASSoCIATIoNPLAYERoFTHEYEAR
Tiffany Yovino - 2010
CoLoNIALATHLETICASSoCIATIoNDEFENSIVEPLAYERoFTHEYEAR
Dolores Deasley - 2003Sue Weber - 2005, 2006, 2007
Jess Crankshaw - 2008
CoLoNIALATHLETICASSoCIATIoNRooKIEoFTHEYEAR
Jacki Pollaro - 2003Marie Curtin - 2004Edel Malone - 2005
COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
COACH OF THE YEARJoAnne Russell - 2002, 2006
Simon Riddiough - 2010
CoLoNIALATHLETICASSoCIATIoNSCHoLAR-ATHLETEoFTHEYEAR
Sue Weber - 2006, 2007 Dana Bergstrom - 2010
ESPNTHEMAgAzINE/CoSIDAACADEMICALL-AMERICA
Chrissy Arnone - 2005Sue Weber - 2007
Dana Bergstrom - 2010 Tiffany Yovino - 2010
ESPNTHEMAgAzINE/CoSIDAACADEMICALL-DISTRICT
Sue Weber - 2006Liz Guise - 2007
Dana Bergstrom - 2010 Tiffany Yovino - 2010
NSCAASCHoLAR-ALL-AMERICASue Weber - 2006, 2007Jess Crankshaw - 2008
Tiffany Yovino - 2009, 2010
RETIREDJERSEYSSue Weber #20
Tiffany Yovino #18
Professional Players
Sue Weber2009 member of the Boston Breakers of
Women’s Professional Soccer (WPS)2008 W-League Defender of the Year with the
Long Island Rough Riders
Brooke DeRosa2008 Long Island Rough Riders
Elaine O’Connor2008 Long Island Rough Riders
Becky Wachsberger
Elaine O’Connor
Sue Weber
Diane Caldwell
Tiffany Yovino
Brooke DeRosa
44 Hofstra University
HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER RECORD BOOK
Season Records
Goals1) Carlene Wawrzonek 17 19942) Brooke DeRosa 14 20072) Suzanne Newell 14 19944) Christa Eidenweil 13 20005) Tiffany Yovino 12 20105) Salma Tarik 12 20105) Suzanne Newell 12 19968) Jerilyn Marinan 10 19978) Allyson Pullano 10 19998) Chrissy Arnone 10 20058) Salma Tarik 10 2009
Assists1) Kara Ahlfeld 12 19942) Dana Bergstrom 10 20102) Elaine O’Connor 10 20024) Jess Crankshaw 9 20074) Jerilyn Marinan 9 19986) Heather Kain 8 19986) Jerilyn Marinan 8 20006) Laura Greene 8 20099) Laura Greene 7 20109) Suzanne Newell 7 19969) Elaine O’Connor 7 20009) Emma Kilduff 7 20049) Marie Curtin 7 2005
Points1) Carlene Wawrzonek 35 19942) Suzanne Newell 34 19943) Brooke DeRosa 33 20074) Suzanne Newell 31 19965) Kara Ahlfeld 28 19946) Christa Eidenweil 26 20006) Salma Tarik 26 20106) Tiffany Yovino 26 20109) Allyson Pullano 24 19999) Jerilyn Marinan 24 19979) Salma Tarik 24 2009
Goalkeeper Saves1) Joanne Chillingsworth 98 19982) Christie Klouse 89 19953) Christie Klouse 88 19974) Kristine Winchester 81 20014) Becky Wachsberger 81 20056) Becky Wachsberger 76 20036) Becky Wachsberger 76 20048) Krystal Robens 72 20078) Krystal Robens 72 200810) Krysten Farriella 71 2009
Single Game RecordsGoals: (4) Suzanne Newell vs. Central Connecticut, 10/5/96Assists: (3) Kara Ahlfeld vs. Siena, 10/14/94; Heather Kain vs. Marist, 9/9/98; Audra Sherman vs. Eastern Michigan, 8/30/02; Dana Bergstrom vs. George Mason, 10/8/10Points: (9) Suzanne Newell vs. Central Connecticut, 10/5/96Saves: (21) Joanne Chillingsworth vs. Hartford, 10/23/98
Miscellaneous RecordsLongest Winning Streak: 18 games (2010)Longest Losing Streak: 7 games (1993)Home Victories: 10 (2010)Away Victories: 8 (1994, 2010)Conference Victories: 11 (2010)
Marie Curtin
Elyse Bizzozzaro Christa Eidenweil
Salma Tarik
Joanne Chillingsworth
44 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 45
Career Records
Goals1) Christa Eidenweil 39 1997-002) Suzanne Newell 36 1994-973) Salma Tarik 28 2008-104) Jerilyn Marinan 27 1997-005) Elyse Bizzozzaro 26 2000-046) Penny Stansfield 22 1997-007) Tiffany Yovino 21 2007-108) Chrissy Arnone 19 2002-059) Allyson Pullano 17 1998-999) Carlene Wawrzonek 17 19949) Edel Malone 17 2005-08
Assists1) Jerilyn Marinan 26 1997-002) Marie Curtin 23 2004-083) Elaine O’Connor 22 1999-034) Jess Crankshaw 20 2005-095) Heather Kain 17 1995-985) Suzanne Newell 17 1994-975) Penny Stansfield 17 1997-008) Marisa Pistone 15 2000-038) Edel Malone 15 2005-088) Dana Bergstrom 15 2008-108) Laura Greene 15 2008-pres.
Points1) Suzanne Newell 89 1994-19972) Christa Eidenweil 83 1997-002) Elyse Bizzozzaro 83 2000-044) Jerilyn Marinan 80 1997-005) Salma Tarik 64 2008-106) Penny Stansfield 61 1997-007) Tiffany Yovino 50 2007-108) Marie Curtin 49 2004-088) Edel Malone 49 2005-08
Goalkeeper Saves1) Becky Wachsberger 302 2001-052) Christie Klouse 215 1995-973) Joanne Chillingsworth 196 1998-004) Krystal Robens 192 2004-085) Jean Hodermarsky 179 1993-966) Kristine Winchester 176 1998-017) Krysten Farriella 147 2006-098) Renata Carullo 107 1993-95
Year-by-Year Records
Year Coach Record1992 JoAnne Russell 12-3 (Club Team)1993 JoAnne Russell 5-11-11994 JoAnne Russell 16-2-1 (ECAC Quarterfinals)1995 JoAnne Russell 5-12-01996 JoAnne Russell 6-12-01997 JoAnne Russell 10-7-11998 JoAnne Russell 10-7-21999 JoAnne Russell 13-6-02000 JoAnne Russell 12-5-22001 JoAnne Russell 8-8-32002 JoAnne Russell 14-5-12003 JoAnne Russell 13-3-32004 JoAnne Russell 12-6-12005 JoAnne Russell 14-4-32006 Simon Riddiough 9-8-22007 Simon Riddiough 18-4-02008 Simon Riddiough 11-8-32009 Simon Riddiough 10-6-32010 Simon Riddiough 19-3-0Becky Wachsberger
Jerilyn Marinan
Suzanne Newell
Penny Stansfield
Kara Ahlfeld
46 Hofstra University
HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER ALUMNAE
Ahlfeld, Kara 1995
Albrecht, Amber 2005
Aliperti, Carolyn 1996
Amato, Kristin 1994
Anderson, Erin 2003
Arenella, Dawn 1996
Arnone, Chrissy 2005
Bergstrom, Dana 2010
Best, Bree 2006
Bisco, Nicole 2008
Bizzozzaro, Elyse 2004
Braico, Danielle 1999
Burkett, Patricia 1999
Caldwell, Diane 2009
Canle, Brigit 2004
Cappello, Janine 2002
Carullo, Renata 1995
Chillingsworth, Joanne 2000
Ciamei, Mary 1996
Cinelli, Laura 1994
Clancy, Catherine 1997
Covelli, Kristina 2004
Crankshaw, Jess 2009
Croan, Carol 1994
Cuevas, Tina 2000
Curran, Sarah 1998
Curtin, Marie 2008
Deasley, Dolores 2003
DelBiondo, Laura 2005
DeRosa, Brooke 2007
Dinisio, Gina 1999
Eidenweil, Christa 2000
Farriella, Krysten 2009
Ferriso, Amy 2007
Fuertes, Erika 2009
Giannetta, Suzanne 1995
Gilroy, Ann Marie 1992
Guise, Liz 2008
Gulley, Sara 2008
Hargraves, Larkin 2007
Hawkins, Grace 2010
Herzog, Nicole 2002
Hodermarsky, Jean 1996
Howie, Sarah 1995
Johnson, Debra 1994
Kain, Heather 1998
Kelleher, Erin 2008
Kilduff, Emma 2004
Amber Albrecht
Catherine Clancy
Laura Del Biondo
Kathleen Mikowski
Liz Guise
Carol Leurini
Erin Magee
46 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 47
Klouse, Christie 1997
Knecht, Danielle 1997
Koch, Wendy 2000
Leurini, Carol 2008
Levitan, Maureen 1994
Lipari, Jill 2009
Magee, Erin 2002
Malone, Edel 2008
Marinan, Jerilyn 2000
Mikowski, Kathleen 2001
Montague, Colleen 1994
Monz, Erica 2003
Nanavrakis, Nina 2005
Naughton, Tracey 2000
Newell, Suzanne 1997
O’Connor, Elaine 2003
O’Connor, Robyn 1998
Pacinda, Christina 2005
Payne, Tessa 1995
Pegg, Julie 1992
Penta, Bridget 2003
Pifer, Kayla 2010
Pistone, Marisa 2003
Pollaro, Jackie 2007
Presto, Elizabeth 1997
Pullano, Allyson 1999
Richards, Kareina 2008
Rizzi, Dianne 1993
Robens, Krystal 2008
Roesler, Valerie 2003
Rosen, Wendy 1996
Rosenfeld, Abbe 1995
Schaefer, Kerry 2003
Schmitt, Charity 2003
Shaban, Ashley 2005
Sherman, Audra 2002
Stansfield, Penny 2000
Steinberg, Alex 2007
Suapengco, Kristine 2008
Sullivan, Kendra 2003
Sylva, Samantha 1994
Tarik, Salma 2010
Thorn, Krista 2010
Toyomasu, Yumi 2007
True, Julie 2000
Wachsberger, Becky 2005
Weber, Sue 2007
Winchester, Kristine 2001
Yovino, Tifffany 2010
Zoumas, Sofia 1996
This list was compiled through information provided by the Hofstra Alumni Relations Office. Any omission was purely unintentional. Please call the Hofstra Office of Athletic Communications at (516) 463-6759with any additions. Year listed is final year of competition.
Nina Nanavrakis
Robyn O’Connor
Bridget Penta Kayla Pifer
Lisa Prazak
Kristine Winchester
48 Hofstra University
HOFSTRA IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT
The Pride has made three NCAA Tournament appearances and owns a 2-3 mark in NCAA play. The team won the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) Championship in 2005 to earn their first NCAA berth and won the CAA again in 2007 to qualify for the NCAA Tournament for the second time. In 2010 the Pride, ranked 23rd in the nation, earned an at-large bid to the tournament field.
Hofstra’s NCAA Tournament History:
2007Hofstra 1, Ohio State 0 (at Penn State)Hofstra 1, #6 Penn State 2 (OT) (at Penn State)
2005Hofstra 0, #21 West Virginia 3 (at Penn State)
Edel Malone leads an offensive charge against West Virginia
Diane Caldwell looks to clear the ball in Hofstra second round game against Penn State
Sue Weber looks to clear the defensive zone versus the Mountaineers
The Pride celebrate Edel Malone’s goal in a 1-0 win over Ohio State
Ashley Shaban escapes her West Virginia defender
All-American Brooke DeRosa brings the ball up field versus Penn State
48 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 49
2010#23 Hofstra 1, Connecticut 0 (at Boston College)#23 Hofstra 1, #18 Boston College 3 (at Boston College)
Emily Morphitis, Coach Simon Riddiough and Courtney Breen meet the media following Hofstra’s second round game
Salma Tarik dribbles the ball out of her defensive zone against the Eagles
Krista Thorn delivers a punt following a save against Boston College
Kayla Pifer attacks the offensive zone in Hofstra’s second round game at Boston College
Brittany Butts eludes a Connecticut defender in Hofstra’s 1-0 win over the Huskies
Laura Greene runs down a loose ball in the Pride’s first round win
The Pride celebrate the second NCAA Tournament victory in program history
Tiffany Yovino’s header in the 10th minute was the only goal in Hofstra’s first round victory
50 Hofstra University
ALL-TIME SERIES RECORDS
Albany 1-0-0
American 1-3-1
Army 1-2-0
Boston College 0-2-0
Boston University 0-8-1
Boston University Club Team 1-0-0
Brown 1-0-0
Buffalo 0-1-0
Campbell 0-1-0
Central Connecticut 5-6-1
Charleston 1-0-0
Columbia 4-4-1
Concordia 1-0-0
Connecticut 1-3-1
Cornell 1-0-0
Delaware 14-4-0
Drexel 14-1-0
East Carolina 0-1-1
Eastern Michigan 1-0-0
Fairfield 3-1-0
Fairleigh Dickinson 3-0-1
Florida International 1-0-0
Fordham 10-2-1
Fordham Club Team 2-0-0
George Mason 7-2-1
Georgia State 5-1-1
Hartford 0-9-1
Harvard 1-0-0
Indiana 1-1-0
Iona 5-3-0
James Madison 4-6-1
Lafayette 0-1-0
LaSalle 2-1-0
Lehigh 0-1-0
Long Island University 4-0-0
Loyola (MD) 0-1-0
Maine 8-2-1
Manhattan 3-4-2
Manhattanville 1-0-0
Marist 6-1-0
Maryland-Baltimore County 1-0-0
Miami (OH) 1-0-0
Mt. St. Mary’s 1-0-0
New Hampshire 4-4-1
New York University 1-0-0
Niagara 1-0-0
North Carolina Greensboro 1-0-0
North Carolina Wilmington 7-3-1
Northeastern 9-5-1
Ohio State 1-0-0
Old Dominion 6-2-2
Penn State 0-2-0
Pennsylvania 0-1-0
Philadelphia College of Textiles and Sciences 1-1-0
Pittsburgh 1-0-0
Princeton 3-1-0
Providence 1-0-1
Purdue 1-0-0
Quinnipiac 3-0-0
Rhode Island 1-0-0
Richmond 2-0-0
Rutgers 0-1-0
Sacred Heart 1-0-0
Saint Peter’s 2-2-1
Seton Hall 1-0-0
Siena 4-1-0
St. Francis (PA) 1-0-0
St. John’s 1-4-0
St. Thomas Aquinas 1-0-0
Stony Brook 8-3-0
Towson 14-2-1
Vermont 4-4-0
Villanova 0-1-0
Virginia 0-1-0
Virginia Commonwealth 7-2-2
Wagner 7-0-0
Washington 0-1-1
West Virginia 0-2-0
Western Connecticut 1-0-0
William & Mary 5-7-0
Wyoming 1-0-0
Yale 0-1-0
Courtney Breen
50 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 51
ALL-TIME RESULTS1992 Record: 12-3-0 (Club Team)
Coach: JoAnne Russell
Philadelphia College of Textiles and Sciences 2-1 W (OT)at St. John’s 0-1 Lat Western Connecticut 10-0 WIona 0-2 LSiena 1-0 Wat Fordham 3-0 Wat Concordia 7-2 Wat Manhattan 0-2 LNew York University 8-0 WSt. Thomas Aquinas 6-0 WFairfield 2-1 W (OT)St. Peter’s 7-0 WFordham 4-0 Wat Manhattanville 4-0 Wat Boston University 4-0 W
1993 Record: 5-11-1Coach: JoAnne Russell
St. John’s 2-1 Wat St. Peter’s 2-2 Tat Philadelphia College of Textiles and Sciences 2-3 L (OT)at Lafayette 1-8 Lat Iona 0-4 LMaine 0-5 LBuffalo 0-3 LManhattan 2-3 Lat Stony Brook 0-3 LWagner 6-0 WNiagara 3-2 W (OT)at Fairfield 0-3 LCampbell 0-2 LAmerican 0-5 Lat Siena 3-0 WLoyola 3-4 L (OT)at Fordham 3-0 W
1994 Record: 16-2-1Coach: JoAnne Russell
St. Peter’s 2-0 WWagner 6-0 WIona 3-0 Wat La Salle 3-0 Wat Drexel 9-0 Wat Stony Brook 4-1 Wat Manhattan 5-1 Wat Vermont 1-0 Wat St. John’s 0-1 LWagner 4-0 Wat Seton Hall 3-0 WFairfield 4-2 WSiena 4-2 Wat Maine 3-1 Wat Mount St. Mary’s 1-0 W( OT)Fordham 6-2 WSt. Francis (PA) 3-0 WNew Hampshire 1-1 T (OT)at New Hampshire% 1-2 L
%ECAC Tournament Quarterfinals
1995 Record: 5-12-0Coach: JoAnne Russell
at St. Peter’s 3-4 L (OT)Iona 1-2 LManhattan 1-2 LStony Brook 1-2 Lat Central Connecticut 2-0 WHartford* 0-9 LAmerican 1-0 Wat New Hampshire* 0-8 Lat Maine* 3-2 W (OT)St. John’s 0-4 Lat Towson State* 3-1 Wat Siena 2-3 Lat Fordham 1-2 LDelaware* 0-6 Lat Wagner 3-1 WBoston University 0-3 LVermont* 0-6 L
*North Atlantic Conference game
1996 Record: 6-12-0Coach: JoAnne Russell
St. Peter’s 0-4 LIona 5-0 Wat U.S. Military Academy 0-2 LNortheastern 4-1 Wat Vermont* 0-3 LManhattan 3-0 Wat Delaware* 1-3 Lat American 0-1 Lat Columbia 1-4 LCentral Connecticut 6-0 Wat Hartford* 0-3 LBoston University* 0-3 LSiena 1-0 W (OT)at Maine* 0-3 Lat New Hampshire* 0-2 Lat St. John’s 3-4 LWagner 4-0 Wat Towson State* 0-3 L
*America East game
Joanne Russell
52 Hofstra University
ALL-TIME RESULTS1997 Record: 10-7-1
Coach: JoAnne Russell
at Wagner 3-1 WAmerican 2-3 Lat Manhattan 2-2 Tat Long Island University 7-0 WIona 4-0 Wat Central Connecticut 1-2 Lat Stony Brook 3-1 WLehigh 0-1 L (OT)Marist 1-0 WNortheastern* 5-0 WBoston University* 1-2 LMaine* 1-0 WNew Hampshire* 2-1 W (OT)Delaware* 3-2 Wat Towson* 0-3 Lat Drexel* 2-0 Wat Hartford* 1-7 Lat Vermont* 0-2 L
*America East game
1998 Record: 10-7-2Coach: JoAnne Russell
at Central Connecticut 1-4 LCharleston 3-1 Wat Marist 3-0 WManhattan 4-4 T (OT)Wagner 7-0 Wat American 0-0 T (OT)at UMBC 4-1 WStony Brook 1-2 L (OT)at Iona 3-0 Wat Northeastern* 1-0 W (OT)at Boston University* 0-5 LDelaware* 1-2 LLong Island University 4-1 Wat Maine* 2-0 Wat New Hampshire* 1-2 LHartford* 1-2 L (OT)Vermont* 3-4 L (OT)Towson* 2-1 WDrexel* 3-2 W
*America East game
1999 Record: 13-6Coach: JoAnne Russell
Marist 2-0 Wat Long Island University 6-1 W#8 Hartford* 1-2 Lat Columbia 1-2 L (OT)at Army 1-2 LCentral Connecticut State 3-2 WFordham 4-2 WVermont* 4-1 WDelaware* 1-0 Wat Towson* 1-0 Wat Manhattan 0-1 Lat Stony Brook 3-1 Wat Drexel* 2-1 WIona 4-0 WMaine* 1-0 W (OT)New Hampshire* 3-0 Wat Boston University* 1-3 Lat Northeastern* 3-0 Wat Boston University% 0-1 L
*America East game%America East Championship Semifinal
2000 Record: 12-5-2Coach: JoAnne Russell
at Marist 0-1 LLong Island University 4-2 Wat Central Connecticut State 0-1 Lat Hartford* 0-2 Lat East Carolina$ 2-2 T (OT)North Carolina-Wilmington$ 2-0 WBoston University* 0-1 LNortheastern* 2-1 WColumbia 5-2 Wat Vermont* 3-2 WManhattan 5-1 Wat Fordham 3-3 T (OT)Delaware* 5-2 WTowson* 1-0 WStony Brook 4-3 WDrexel* 3-1 Wat Maine* 2-1 Wat New Hampshire* 3-2 W (2OT)at Hartford% 0-1 L
*America East game$East Carolina Tournament%America East Championship Semifinal 2001 Record: 8-8-3
Coach: JoAnne Russell
Florida International 2-0 WWest Virginia 1-2 L (2OT)Central Connecticut State 3-0 W Fordham 4-1 Wat Boston University* 0-0 T (2OT)at Northeastern* 1-2 Lat Columbia 1-2 L (2OT)Maine* 1-1 T (2OT)New Hampshire* 1-0 WHartford* 0-1 LVermont* 1-0 Wat Delaware* 0-3 Lat Towson* 2-1 Wat Albany* 3-1 WStony Brook* 3-2 W (OT)at Rutgers 1-4 Lat Drexel* 0-2 LTowson% 0-0 T (4OT) (Hofstra advances on penalty kicks)at Hartford% 0-1 L (3OT)
*America East game%America East Championship
Brittany Butts
52 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 53
2002 Record: 14-5-1, 6-3 CAACoach: JoAnne Russell
Eastern Michigan 7-1 WMiami (OH) 2-0 Wvs. Providence# 1-1 T (2OT)at Quinnipiac# 3-1 Wat Stony Brook 6-0 WFordham 2-1 Wat Central Connecticut State 0-2 L Marist 3-0 WGeorge Mason* 2-1 WColumbia 1-0 WJames Madison* 1-2 Lat Drexel* 3-0 Wat Old Dominion* 2-0 Wat William & Mary* 0-3 Lat UNC Wilmington* 0-1 L (OT)at Virginia Commonwealth* 1-0 WTowson* 3-0 WDelaware* 3-0 WDelaware% 1-0 Wvs. George Mason% 0-1 L
*Colonial Athletic Association game#Quinnipiac Tournament%Colonial Athletic Association Championship
2003 Record: 13-3-3, 6-1-2 CAACoach: JoAnne Russell
at Marist 3-0 Wat Fordham 1-0 W (OT)at UNC Greensboro$ 2-0 Wvs. LaSalle$ 3-1 WCentral Connecticut State 0-1 L Quinnipiac 6-1 WPittsburgh 2-0 Wat Delaware* 1-0 W (2 OT)at Towson* 2-1 WVirginia Commonwealth* 2-2 T (2 OT)UNC Wilmington* 1-0 Wat Connecticut 0-0 T (2 OT)Stony Brook 1-0 WWilliam & Mary* 1-0 WOld Dominion* 1-0 WDrexel* 3-0 Wat George Mason* 1-1 T (2 OT)at James Madison* 0-1 LWilliam & Mary% 0-1 L
*Colonial Athletic Association game$UNC Greensboro Tournament%Colonial Athletic Association Championship
2004 Record: 12-6-1, 6-3-0 CAACoach: JoAnne Russell
at Army# 2-0 Wvs. Fordham# 1-1 T (2 OT)LaSalle 0-1 LProvidence 2-0 Wat Fordham 1-2 L vs. Maine$ 2-1 W (OT)vs. Brown$ 2-1 WQuinnipiac 3-1 WFairleigh Dickinson 2-1 Wat Virginia Commonwealth* 0-1 L (OT)at UNC Wilmington* 1-0 WDelaware* 2-1 WTowson* 1-0 WGeorge Mason* 2-3 L (2 OT)James Madison* 1-0 Wat William & Mary* 1-2 Lat Old Dominion* 1-0 W (OT)at Drexel* 6-1 WWilliam & Mary% 1-2 L (OT)
*Colonial Athletic Association game#United State Military Academy Tournament$ECAC Tournament%Colonial Athletic Association Championship
2005 Record: 14-4-3, 8-1-2 CAACoach: JoAnne Russell
vs. #9 Connecticut$ 0-3 Lvs. #20 Washington$ 1-1 T (2OT)vs. Maine+ 1-0 W at Boston University+ 0-1 L (OT)Marist 5-0 WFordham 7-1 WFairleigh Dickinson 4-2 Wat Northeastern* 3-0 WDrexel* 1-0 Wat Delaware* 2-0 Wat Towson* 1-0 Wat George Mason* 3-1 WWilliam & Mary* 3-0 WOld Dominion* 1-0 Wat Georgia State* 0-1 Wat UNC Wilmington* 1-1 T (2OT)James Madison* 1-0 T (2OT)Virginia Commonwealth* 0-0 T (2OT)vs. Delaware# 2-1 Wat Virginia Commonwealth# 1-0 Wvs. #21 West Virginia% 0-3 L
*Colonial Athletic Association game$Penn State Invitational+Boston University Invitational#Colonial Athletic Association Championship%NCAA Tournament at Penn State
2006 Record: 9-8-2, 5-5-1 CAA Coach: Simon Riddiough
at Connecticut# 0-4 Lvs. Fairfield# 3-0 WSacred Heart 1-0 WCentral Connecticut 2-1 Wat Penn$ 0-1 Lvs. Princeton$ 0-4 Lat Fordham 2-1 Wat Fairleigh Dickinson 1-1 T (2OT)Towson* 1-0 WGeorge Mason* 3-0 Wat #16 William & Mary* 0-1 Lat Old Dominion* 0-1 LGeorgia State* 2-1 WUNC Wilmington* 0-3 Lat James Madison* 0-2 Lat Virginia Commonwealth* 0-2 Lat Drexel* 1-0 WDelaware* 2-0 WNortheastern* 1-1 T (2OT)
*Colonial Athletic Association game#UConn Husky Classic$University of Pennsylvania Tournament
Simon Riddiough
54 Hofstra University
ALL-TIME RESULTS2007 Record: 18-4-0, 9-2-0 CAA
Coach: Simon Riddiough
Cornell 5-1 Wat Central Connecticut 2-1 W (OT)vs. Richmond# 2-1 Wvs. Wyoming# 3-0 WColumbia 1-2 LFairleigh Dickinson 5-2 WFordham 2-0 Wat Towson* 1-0 Wat George Mason* 2-1 W (OT)William & Mary* 0-2 LOld Dominion* 1-0 Wat Georgia State* 2-1 Wat UNC Wilmington* 2-0 WJames Madison* 0-2 LVirginia Commonwealth* 2-0 WDrexel* 1-0 Wat Delaware* 2-0 Wat Northeastern* 3-0 Wvs. James Madison$ 2-0 Wvs. Virginia Commonwealth$ 1-0 Wvs. Ohio State% 1-0 Wat #6 Penn State% 1-2 L (OT)
*Colonial Athletic Association game#James Madison Invitational$CAA Championship at Virginia Beach, VA%NCAA Tournament at Penn State
2008 Record: 11-8-3, 7-3-1 CAACoach: Simon Riddiough
vs. #11 Connecticut^ 0-1 Lat #9 Penn State^ 1-4 Lat Columbia 1-0 WPrinceton 1-0 Wvs. East Carolina# 1-2 Lvs. Villanova# 2-3 LStony Brook 1-0 W (OT)Central Connecticut 3-3 T (2 OT)Delaware* 1-0 Wat Drexel* 1-0 W (OT)George Mason* 2-0 WTowson* 1-0 Wat Old Dominion* 0-0 T (2 OT)at William & Mary* 0-1 L (OT)UNC Wilmington* 2-0 WGeorgia State* 4-3 Wat Virginia Commonwealth* 2-1 Wat James Madison* 1-2 LNortheastern* 1-2 L (OT)at Old Dominion$ 2-2 T (OT)(Hofstra advances on penalty kicks)at William & Mary$ 3-2 Wvs. Northeastern$ 0-1 L (OT)
*Colonial Athletic Association game^Penn State Invitational#Penn Invitational$CAA Championship
2009 Record: 10-6-3, 7-2-2 CAACoach: Simon Riddiough
at Richmond 2-1 W (OT)at #10 Virginia 0-7 Lat Princeton 2-1 Wat Yale 0-3 L#25 Indiana 2-3 L (2 OT)Harvard 3-2 WColumbia 1-1 T (2 OT)at Delaware* 3-2 WDrexel* 4-0 Wat George Mason 1-0 Wat Towson* 3-0 WOld Dominion* 1-2 LWilliam & Mary* 4-1 Wat UNC Wilmington* 2-1 Wat Georgia State* 0-0 T (2 OT)Virginia Commonwealth* 3-0 WJames Madison* 0-0 T (2 OT)at Northeastern* 0-4 Lvs. UNC Wilmington$ 1-2 L (OT)
*Colonial Athletic Association game$CAA Championship
2010 Record: 19-3-0, 11-0 CAA Coach: Simon Riddiough
at #7 Boston College 0-5 LRhode Island 3-1 WFordham 4-1 Wat Purdue 3-1 Wat Indiana 3-1 Wat Columbia 1-0 W (2 OT)Princeton 1-0 Wat James Madison* 1-0 Wat Virginia Commonwealth* 2-0 Wat Drexel* 2-1 WDelaware* 2-0 WTowson* 4-1 WGeorge Mason* 5-0 Wat William & Mary* 3-2 Wat Old Dominion* 3-1 WGeorgia State* 3-2 W (OT)UNC Wilmington* 2-0 WNortheastern* 2-1 W (2 OT)Georgia State$ 3-0 WJames Madison$ 0-2 Lvs. Connecticut% 1-0 Wat #18 Boston College% 1-3 L
*Colonial Athletic Association game$CAA Championship%NCAA Tournament at Boston College
Danielle Murino
Grace Hawkins
54 Hofstra University 2011 Women’s Soccer 55
MEDIA INFORMATION
The Hofstra University Office of Athletic Communications welcomes the members of the media covering the 2011 Pride soccer team. If we can be of any assistance to you throughout the
year, please do not hesitate to contact us. We hope the following items will help you during your visits to Hofstra University. Enjoy the season.
Office Of Athletic cOmmunicAtiOns240 Hofstra University-Swim Center 262
Hempstead, NY 11549(516) 463-4602 - Len Skoros’ office
(516) 463-5033 - Fax
stephen GOrchOvAssociate Director of Athletics for Communications
Jim sheehAnSenior Sports Information Director
len skOrOs (soccer contact)Director of Athletic Publications
Press Seating: Hofstra Soccer Stadium press seating is located in the press box, which is located atop the bleachers on the north side of the stadium.
Credential Requests: All members of the press should contact the Office of Athletic Communications at least 48 hours before each game to request credentials.
Game Services: Game notes, statistics and lineups are available before the game in the press box. Halftime statistics will be distributed and final statistics will be available 10 minutes after the conclusion of each contest.
Photography: Photographers can shoot from the sidelines on either side of the field, but are not permitted in team bench areas. Photography and videotaping is also permitted from the roof of the press box.
Radio: The Hofstra Office of Athletic Communications will provide a touch-tone digital phone line for the opponent’s commercial and student radio stations. Visiting teams will need to give the Athletic Communications Office two weeks notice of their intention to broadcast. All calls must be made collect or direct dial from the radio station to the Hofstra Soccer Stadium.
Postgame Interviews: Hofstra players and coaches will be available for postgame interviews, upon request, after a 10-minute cooling off period.
Player Interviews: All requests for student-athlete interviews should be made at least one day in advance with the Office of Athletic Communications. If you are requesting a phone interview, we will have the student-athlete return your call at a mutually convenient time. Player home phone numbers will not be distributed. In-person interviews may be conducted in a number of locations in and around the Hofstra Physical Fitness Center. However, interviews may not be conducted in the locker room or the athletic training room.
2011 HOFSTRA SOCCER MEDIA OUTLETS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 50 Rockefeller PlazaNew York, NY 10020(212) 621-1630 - Office(212) 621-1639 - Fax
NEWSDAY 235 Pinelawn RoadMelville, NY 11747 (631) 843-2820 - Office(631) 454-6892 - Fax
NEW YORK TIMES 229 West 43rd StreetNew York, NY 10036(212) 556-7384 - Office(646) 428-6147 - Fax
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS 450 West 33rd StreetNew York, NY 10001 (212) 210-1692 - Office(212) 643-7845 - Fax
NEW YORK POST 1211 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, NY 10036 (212) 930-8700 - Office(212) 930-8727 - Fax
LONG ISLAND HERALD2 Endo BoulevardGarden City, NY(516) 569-4000 - Office(516) 469-4942 - Fax
LONG ISLAND PRESS1103 Stewart AvenueGarden City, NY 11530(516) 992-1800 - Office(516) 992-1801 - Fax
HOFSTRA CHRONICLEStudent CenterHempstead, NY 11550(516) 463-6965 - Office(516) 463-6977 - Fax
NEWS 12 LONG ISLAND 150 Media CrosswaysWoodbury, NY 11797(516) 393-3740 - Office(516) 393-1269 - Fax
WLNY-TV 55270 South Service RoadMelville, NY 11747 (631) 753-6397 - Office(631) 420-4846 - Fax
WRHU-FM 88.7 Hofstra UniversityDempster HallHempstead, NY 11549(516) 463-5667 - Office(516) 463-5668 - Fax
Grace Hawkins
56 Hofstra University
CAMPUS MAP/GETTING TO HOFSTRAFrom Southern New Jersey, Southeastern Pennsylvania, Maryland, Washington, D.C. and Virginia:Take the New Jersey Turnpike to Exit 13. Cross the Goethals Bridge and continue on Route 278 to the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge. Stay in the left lane of the Bridge and take the Belt Parkway-East. The Belt Parkway becomes the Southern State Parkway at the Nassau County line. Take the Southern State Parkway to the Meadowbrook Parkway North (Exit 22). Exit the Meadowbrook Parkway at Exit M4 (Hempstead Turnpike Route 24). Head west to Hofstra (approximately 1 mile).
From Northwestern New Jersey, Northern Pennsylvania and the Middle States:Take Interstate 78, Interstate 80, U.S. Route 22, New Jersey Route 4 or New Jersey Route 17 to the George Washington Bridge. Proceed over the bridge to the Cross Bronx Expressway. Take the Cross Bronx Expressway to the Throgs Neck Bridge. Follow directions from the Throgs Neck Bridge from this point.From Upstate New York:Take New York Thruway over the Tappan Zee Bridge to Cross Westchester Expressway (Interstate 287). Stay on the Expressway to the New England Thruway (Interstate
95). Proceed south on the Thruway to the Throgs Neck Bridge. Follow directions from the Throgs Neck Bridge from this point.
From the Throgs Neck Bridge:Follow signs for Eastern Long Island. Take the Cross Island Parkway to the Grand Central Parkway-East. The Grand Central becomes the Northern State Parkway at the Nassau County line. Take the Northern State Parkway-East to the Meadowbrook Parkway-South (exit 31A). Take the Meadowbrook Parkway-South to Exit M4 West (Hempstead Turnpike Route 24). Follow Hempstead Turnpike West to Hofstra (approximately 1 mile).
For Team Travel Via Bus:Commercial buses are not allowed on New York City (Belt, Grand Central or Cross Island) or Long Island (Southern State or Northern State) Parkways. Team buses should take the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway from the south, and the Clearview Expressway from the north, to get to the Long Island Expressway for the trip to Hofstra. Once on the Long Island Expressway (I-495), buses should proceed to Glen Cove Road-South (exit 39). Head south on Glen Cove Road for approximately eight miles to Hempstead Turnpike/Fulton Avenue and turn left (east). Hofstra University is approximately two miles east on Hempstead Turnpike.
Public Transportation from Airport:If a visitor arrives at either La Guardia or Kennedy Airport, the most direct means of reaching the University is by one of three limousine companies that service both airports and the Hofstra University area. Larry’s Taxi Service (516) 483-3333; Transport Limousine Service (800) 654-1164 (out of state) (800) 832-5466 (in New York state); Winston Limousine Service (800) 4-AIRPORT.
Railroads:AMTRAK services Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan, approximately 30 miles from the Hofstra campus. To get to Hofstra from Penn Station, take the Long Island Rail Road to the Hempstead station. The Hofstra University Courtesy Bus and taxi services are available there. Hofstra is approximately 1.5 miles from the station.
Map LegendAdams Hall.....................................................25Adams Playhouse..........................................12Admission Center/Bernon Hall ................27Axinn Hall (Law)...........................................66Axinn Library ...................................................3Barnard Hall ..................................................10Baseball Field................................................72Berliner Hall ...................................................61Bird Sanctuary ..............................................76Breslin Hall.....................................................23Brower Hall......................................................11Butler Annex .................................................65Café on the Quad.........................................15Calkins Hall ....................................................14Career Center/
M. Robert Lowe Hall................................64C.V. Starr Hall...............................................60Davison Hall.....................................................8Deli, Hofstra ...................................................18Dempster Hall ..............................................20Field Hockey Stadium.................................77Fitness Center ..............................................47
Gittleson Hall................................................63Hagedorn Hall ..............................................55Hauser Hall ......................................................2Health and Wellness Center ....................42Heger Hall........................................................4Hofstra Dome ...............................................48Hofstra Hall......................................................7Hofstra USA .................................................40Human Resources Center..........................52Kushner Hall ..................................................22Law, School of ................................................21Library Technical Services
and Resource Center .................................3Lowe Hall ..........................................................9Margiotta Hall ..............................................57Mason Hall/Gallon Wing..............................5McEwen Hall...................................................17Memorial Hall ...................................................1Monroe Lecture Center .............................62New Academic Building .............................73Pedestrian Bridges...............................69, 70Phillips Hall ......................................................6
Physical Education Building/Swim Center....49Physical Plant................................................59Public Safety and Information Center,
David S. Mack ..........................................54Republic Hall .................................................42Roosevelt Hall................................................19Saltzman Community
Services Center ........................................28School of Medicine. ....................................50Shapiro Alumni House ................................58Soccer Field....................................................71Softball Field .................................................75Spiegel Theater.............................................13Sports and Exhibition Complex,
David S. Mack.............................................51Stadium, James M. Shuart ........................56Student Center, Sondra and
David S. Mack.............................................31Unispan ..........................................................30University Club/Mack Hall ........................53University College Hall/Skodnek Business
Development Center...............................43
Weed Hall.......................................................26Weller Hall ......................................................16West Library Wing.......................................29
Residence HallsAlliance Hall ..................................................34Bill of Rights Hall .........................................35Colonial Square ...........................................46Constitution Hall..........................................36Enterprise Hall..............................................39Estabrook Hall ..............................................37Graduate Residence ...................................74Liberty Hall.....................................................41Nassau Hall ...................................................44Republic Hall .................................................42Suffolk Hall ....................................................45Stuyvesant Hall.............................................32The Netherlands ..........................................33Vander Poel Hall ..........................................38
Campus Map
N
S
EW
DanielleMURINO
BrookeBENDERNAGEL
2011 HOfSTRA UNIvERSITywOMEN’S SOCCER SCHEDULE
Amanda HEyDE
August26 Fri. Fairfield 4:30 p.m. 28 sun. Boston college 1 p.m.
September st. John’s nYc classic (Queens, nY)2 Fri. vs.Columbia 4p.m.4 Sun. vs.Albany 1p.m.
red raider classic (Lubbock, TX)9 Fri. atTexasTech 7:30p.m.11 Sun. vs.TCU 10a.m.
16 Fri. atHarvard 4p.m.23 Fri. James madison* 7 p.m. 25 sun. Virginia commonwealth* 1 p.m.29 Thu. drexel* 4 p.m.
October2 Sun. atDelaware* 1p.m.7 Fri. atTowson* 4p.m.9 Sun. atGeorgeMason* 2p.m.14 Fri. william & mary* 7 p.m.16 sun. old dominion* 1 p.m.21 Fri. atGeorgiaState* 7p.m.23 Sun. atUNCWilmington* 1p.m.29 Sat. atNortheastern* 3p.m.
November3-6 Thu.-Sun.atCAAChampionship(athighestseed) TBA
*CAAgameHomegamesinBoLd.Alltimeslocaltosite.