Stony Brook Seawolves men's lacrosse

The Stony Brook Seawolves men's lacrosse team represents Stony Brook University in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's college lacrosse. The Seawolves are led by Anthony Gilardi, who became the team's head coach prior to the 2020 season after eight seasons at Towson.[2] Stony Brook currently competes in the America East Conference and plays its home games on Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium.[3]

Stony Brook Seawolves men's lacrosse
Founded1983
UniversityStony Brook University
Head coachAnthony Gilardi (1st season)
StadiumKenneth P. LaValle Stadium
(capacity: 12,300)
LocationStony Brook, New York
ConferenceAmerica East Conference
NicknameSeawolves
ColorsRed, Blue, and Gray[1]
              
NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals
2010
NCAA Tournament appearances
2002, 2010, 2012
Conference Tournament championships
2002, 2010, 2012
Conference regular season championships
2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2018, 2019

Although a club team has existed since 1978, Stony Brook established a Division III program in 1983. Stony Brook entered Division I status in 1988. The team's most successful season came in 2010, when they were ranked in the top ten of the polls and appeared in their second NCAA Tournament, advancing to the quarterfinals and losing 10–9 to Virginia at home at the doorstep of a Final Four appearance. Overall, the team has won six America East regular season titles and appeared in three NCAA Tournaments.

Team history

Pre-Division I era (1983–1988)

The Stony Brook club lacrosse team, 1978

Stony Brook University first fielded a men's lacrosse team in the 1983 season at the NCAA Division III level.[4] Prior to that, a men's club lacrosse team had been started in 1978 by student Frank Ross.[5] John Ziegler was the program's first head coach, going 30–10 over a span of three seasons.[6] Before the 1986 season, Ziegler was replaced by Bruce Casagrande. Casagrande scheduled three Division I teams in 1986 and 1987, and Stony Brook defeated Ohio State 14–6 on March 21, 1987 at Huntington High School. Casagrande led the team during its transition from club status to official NCAA Division I program.

John Espey era (1988–2004)

Head coach John Espey took over for Casagrande beginning in 1988. Under Espey, Stony Brook expanded its facilities, recruiting efforts, and strength of schedule in order to build the program. By 1998, the program had achieved full funding status, allowing it to allocate the NCAA maximum of 12.6 scholarships for current athletes. In 2000, Stony Brook joined the ECAC Lacrosse League, but the Seawolves only played two seasons in the conference. Stony Brook joined the America East Conference and played its first season there in 2002.

In the Seawolves' inaugural America East season, the team was picked to finish first in the conference preseason poll.[7] Stony Brook headed into the America East Tournament at 8–6, and beat Hartford and Albany to reach the first NCAA Tournament in program history.[8][9] In the first round of the tournament, Cornell ran away with a 12–3 victory to end the Seawolves' season with a 10–7 record.

Espey resigned in 2004 after 16 seasons as head coach. In his final two years, Stony Brook was eliminated in the America East semifinals both times.[10]

Lars Tiffany period (2005–2006)

On August 10, 2004, Penn State assistant head coach Lars Tiffany was named as Espey's successor.[11] Tiffany spent two seasons as the Seawolves' head coach and did not return to the NCAA Tournament in either season, losing to Albany in the America East finals in 2005 and in the America East semifinals in 2006. Tiffany left in August 2006 to accept the head coaching job at his alma mater, Brown University, going 18–13 in his two seasons at Stony Brook.

Rick Sowell era (2007–2011)

St. John's head coach Rick Sowell was named Stony Brook's fifth head coach on August 15, 2006.[12] In Sowell's debut, the Seawolves lost at home 15–7 to the #8 Virginia Cavaliers. However, Stony Brook eventually won five games in a row and found themselves ranked as high as #18 in the polls. The Seawolves tumbled out of the rankings after suffering four conference losses, and took the fourth seed in the conference tournament, being blown out 17–5 by Albany in the semifinals to end their season at 8–5.

In 2008, the Seawolves finished 7–7 and suffered another semifinal loss to Albany. The 2009 season saw Stony Brook come closest to returning to the NCAA Tournament since their 2002 appearance, but the Seawolves ended the season at 9–6 after losing to #11 UMBC in the America East Championship.

2010 season: NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals

Stony Brook began the 2010 season unranked, beating Siena 21–14 in its season opener before losing the next game, 13–8 to #2 Virginia. The Seawolves then won three in a row, including a 16–12 victory over #16 Delaware, before losing the next two games 13–12 to Denver and 12–9 to #9 Cornell. With a 4–3 record, Stony Brook beat Bryant 8–7 before running the table in America East play, going undefeated including a 15–0 clobbering at Albany and a 16–10 win over Vermont. The Seawolves entered the America East Tournament at 10–3 having won six games in a row, and their winning streak became eight after defeating Vermont and Albany in the playoffs to reach the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2002.

Stony Brook was ranked #6 in the country heading into the 2010 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship. The Seawolves were given the #8 seed in the NCAA Tournament. In front of 4,262 fans at LaValle Stadium, Stony Brook defeated Denver 9–7 in the First Round to advance to the national quarterfinals, improving to 13–3 with a nine-game winning streak. In the quarterfinals, Stony Brook lost 10–9 to #1 Virginia, falling one goal shy of the program's first Final Four appearance. A record-setting 10,024 people attended the quarterfinal game at LaValle Stadium.[13]

The Seawolves finished 2010 with a program-record 13 wins, going undefeated in America East play for the first time. Over a week after the loss to Virginia, Sowell's contract was extended through the 2015 season.[14]

2011 season

Stony Brook was ranked #5 in the USILA Coaches Poll heading into the season, and was unanimously picked to finish in first place in the America East.[15][16]

The season opened with a top-5 battle at LaValle Stadium, with #5 Stony Brook hosting #1 Virginia. The Seawolves blew an early lead and lost 11–10 in overtime but recovered to win their next three games over Marist, Delaware, and St. John's.[17][18] Stony Brook was then shocked on the road, falling 9–8 to unranked Towson before losing to #10 Cornell at home in a 17–9 blowout.

Sitting at 3–3, Stony Brook would go undefeated in America East play for a second straight year to end the regular season at 8–3 as the No. 1 seed in the conference tournament. After defeating Binghamton 12–8 in the semifinals, Stony Brook was stunned in an 11–10 loss to Hartford in the America East Championship off a last-second goal by Ryan Compitello, whose brother Tom played for Stony Brook at the same time.

The Seawolves ended the season ranked #17 and did not qualify for an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, ending their season in disappointment. A month after the season ended, Sowell announced his resignation in the middle of his contract to accept the head coaching position at Navy.[19] Sowell was 47–26 in five seasons as Stony Brook head coach.

The Jim Nagle years (2012–2019)

Colgate head coach Jim Nagle was named as Sowell's successor eleven days later on June 20, 2011.[20]

2012 season: Third NCAA Tournament appearance

Nagle's first season saw the graduation of 11 seniors, including Kevin Crowley, the first-overall draft pick in the 2011 NLL Draft.[21] The inexperience showed early on as Stony Brook began the season 0–3, including a loss to #1 Virginia. The Seawolves won their first game of the season at #18 Delaware, a 7–6 nailbiter on the road and their first win over a ranked opponent since 2010. The season continued to spiral downward as Stony Brook would embark on a four-game losing streak, suffering home defeats to St. John's and Towson and road stumbles at Siena and Bryant (in 2OT).

At 1–7, the Seawolves' season looked bleak, but they won the first three conference matchups to build momentum before falling to #20 Yale and Hartford, both one-goal losses in overtime at home. Stony Brook defeated Albany in the regular season finale to head into the America East Tournament at 5–9. Stony Brook squeaked past Hartford in the semifinals and trounced Albany in the championship game to clinch the team's third NCAA Tournament berth and second in the last three years, doing so in Nagle's first year as head coach. Nagle won America East Coach of the Year honors for his inaugural performance.

In the First Round of the 2012 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship, Stony Brook lost 19–9 to Johns Hopkins in Baltimore to end the season at 7–10.

2013–2019: The drought years

In the years following the 2012 NCAA Tournament run, the Nagle-led Seawolves languished in mediocrity. Stony Brook played a tough schedule in 2013, with losses to #6 Virginia, #1 Maryland, and #12 Yale, but suffered a losing record in conference play for the first time since 2007 as the Seawolves lost two games in overtime. Their season ended with a 7–9 record after a loss to #12 Albany, 17–15, in the semifinals of the America East Tournament.

In 2014, Stony Brook had a second consecutive losing record in both overall and conference play. Stony Brook traveled to #1 Duke in a 14–6 loss, and played host to #1 Maryland in a 11–8 defeat.[22] Stony Brook went 2–3 in conference play for a second year in a row. In the semifinals of the America East Tournament, the Seawolves lost 17–16 to #18 Albany, ending their season at 6–10 overall.

The 2015 season initially appeared to be a bounceback year for Stony Brook, who saw winning streaks of both four and five games, winning nine games in a ten-game span. The Seawolves' lone loss during that stretch was a home defeat to #15 Albany, but the team also beat #12 Princeton. Stony Brook's 10–2 start was a new program best, but back-to-back home losses against Lehigh, 12–11, and #6 Duke, 17–11, halted momentum after the five-game winning streak. Stony Brook then won the final three games of the regular season, with two overtime wins, to head into the America East Tournament at 12–4. The Seawolves beat Vermont 16–13 in the semifinals before being crushed by #6 Albany in the championship game, 22–9. Stony Brook tied the program record for wins in a season, ending 13–5, but missed the NCAA Tournament for a third straight year.

Stony Brook started 2016 strong at 5–1, with home wins over #16 Rutgers and #12 Hofstra and a loss to #9 Brown. The team's lone loss in America East play was to #11 Albany for the second straight season. Stony Brook won seven of its last eight regular season games to reach a 12–3 record. However, the Seawolves lost to Vermont 10–9 in the conference semifinals. In 2017, Stony Brook started 4–0, including a win at #10 Brown, before losing five of the next six. In a familiar scene, #6 Albany routed Stony Brook 19–6 in the America East semifinals to cap off a 7–7 campaign.

Stony Brook began the 2018 season 0–4. On March 10, Stony Brook hosted #9 Virginia, but the 15–14 loss was more memorable for the on-field fight that occurred.[23] The Seawolves closed the season out strong, capturing a share of the America East regular season title for the first time since 2012. Nevertheless, Stony Brook lost in the semifinals of the America East Tournament for a third straight year.

In 2019, the Seawolves struggled initially, losing to #4 Penn State, Marist, Sacred Heart, and Hartford to bring their record to 3–4.[24] However, they upset St. John's on the road, and came back from a 7–1 deficit to beat Vermont 10–9. Stony Brook clinched the regular season title by defeating Albany 12–10 at home in a rain-delayed season finale.[25] Hosting the America East Tournament as the No. 1 seed, Stony Brook was upset at home 14–8 by UMBC in the semifinals, marking the team's fourth semifinal loss in a row.[26] On May 14, Stony Brook athletic director Shawn Heilbron announced that Nagle would not return as head coach. In eight seasons with the Seawolves, Nagle recorded a 68–61 record overall and 31–14 in conference play, but made just one NCAA Tournament in his first season and had six one-and-dones in the America East Tournament.[27]

Anthony Gilardi takes over (2020–present)

On June 20, Stony Brook named Towson associate head coach and offensive coordinator Anthony Gilardi as the team's new head coach.[28] Stony Brook began the season 5–1, with three overtime victories, all of which saw Caleb Pearson score the game-winning goal.[29]

Facilities

The Stony Brook Seawolves presently play their home games in Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium, which has a capacity of 12,300. LaValle Stadium is located on the west campus of Stony Brook University and was constructed for the 2002 season. The stadium hosted the largest lacrosse game crowd in school history in the 2010 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Quarterfinals, when there was a reported attendance of 10,024.[30]

Coaches

Head coaches

The men's lacrosse program has had a total of five coaches since its first season back in 1983. Espey being responsible for the transition of the program to Division I.

Coach Years Conference Overall Conference Tournament Titles NCAA Tournament Appearances
John Ziegler 1983–85
Bruce Casagrande 1986–87 N/A 13–13 (.500)
John Espey 1988–2004 11–17 (.392)2 116–123 (.485) 1 1
Lars Tiffany 2005–06 8–3 (.727) 18–13 (.581)
Rick Sowell 2007–11 19–6 (.760) 47–26 (.643) 1 1
Jim Nagle 2012–19 31–14 (.564) 68–61 (.527) 1 1
Anthony Gilardi 2020–

Current Coaching staff

  • Anthony Gilardi – Head Coach, 1st year
  • J.P. Brazel — Associate Head Coach, 1st year
  • Mike Chanenchuk —Assistant Coach, 1st year

Season-by-season results

The following are the final year-end standings of the men's lacrosse program since 1983. In 2000 the Seawolves moved up to Division I and in 2002 the program joined the America East Conference.

Year Overall Record .WPCT Conference Record .CWPCT Postseason appearances
Division III: Independent (1983–1985, John Ziegler)
19839–3.750
198411–3.785
198510–4.714ECAC Tournament
(Semifinal Win over Drew 21–15)
(Championship Win over Fairleigh Dickinson-Madison 19–11)
Division II: Independent (1986–1988, Bruce Casagrande)
19866–6.500
19877–7.500ECAC Tournament
(Semifinal loss to Drew 5–7)
Division I: Independent (1988–1999, John Espey)
19886–8.428ECAC Tournament
(Semifinal loss to Montclair St. 5–7)
198910–4.714
199012–2.857
19918–5.615
19927–7.500
19933–11.214
19943–10.230
19957–7.500
19963–8.272
19979–4.692
19987–5.583
19995–8.384
ECAC Lacrosse (2000–2001, John Espey)
20005–11.3120–6.000
20017–7.5001–5.200
America East (2002–2004, John Espey)
200210–7.5883–2.600America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal Win over Hartford 7–6)
(Championship Win over Albany 8–6)
NCAA First Round (Loss to Cornell 12–3)
20035–10.3333–2.600America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal loss over Albany 11–5)
20049–6.6004–2.666America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal loss over Binghamton 7–6 OT)
America East (2005–2006, Lars Tiffany)
20059–6.6004–2.666America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal Win over UMBC 11–5)
(Championship loss to Albany 16–7)
20068–7.5334–1.800America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal loss to Albany 14–3)
America East (2007–2011, Rick Sowell)
20078–5.6152–3.400America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal loss to Albany 17–5)
20087–7.5003–2.600America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal loss to Albany 12–9)
20099–6.6004–1.800America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal Win over Albany 18–12)
(Championship loss to UMBC 11–7)
201013–4.7645–01.000America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal Win over Vermont 10–6)
(Championship Win over Albany 11–7)
NCAA First Round (Win over Denver 9–7)
NCAA Quarterfinals (loss to Virginia 10–9)
201110–4.7145–01.000America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal Win over Binghamton 12–8)
(Championship loss to Hartford 11–10)
America East (2012-2019, Jim Nagle)
20127–10.4114–1.800America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal Win over Hartford 9–8)
(Championship Win over Albany 14–8)
NCAA First Round (Loss to Johns Hopkins 19–9)
20137–8.4662–3.400America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal vs. Albany on 5/2 )
20146–11.3532–3.400America East Conference Tournament
(Finals loss to Albany 17-16 O/T )
201513–5.7225–1.833America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal loss to Albany 22-9 )
201612-4.7505–1.833America East Conference Tournament
(Semifinal loss to Vermont 10-9 )
20177-7.5003–3.500America East Conference Tournament
( Semifinal loss to Albany 19-6 )
20187-8.4675–1.833America East Conference Tournament
( Semifinal loss to Vermont 8-4 )
20199-6.6005–1.833America East Conference Tournament
( Semifinal loss to UMBC 14-8 )
America East (2020–present, Anthony Gilardi)
20205-2.7140–0
Total296-243.549
(.593* since AE)
38–26*.593*
(.711* in AE)

Postseason results

Year Seed Round Opponent Score
2002 First Round Cornell L, 3–12
2010 #8 First Round

Quarterfinal

Denver

#1 Virginia

W, 9–7

L, 9–10

2012 First Round Johns Hopkins L, 9–19

    References

    1. "Stony Brook University Brand". Retrieved April 5, 2017.
    2. "Stony Brook Names Anthony Gilardi as Men's Lacrosse Head Coach". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    3. McLaughlin, Corey (October 12, 2010). "Stony Brook Out to Prove 2010 Was No Fluke". Lax Magazine. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
    4. "Timeline | Special Collections and University Archives". www.stonybrook.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    5. "Hall of Fame". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    6. "Men's Lacrosse Record Book" (PDF).
    7. http://www.goseawolves.org/sports/m-lacros/spec-rel/022602aaa.html. Missing or empty |title= (help)
    8. http://www.goseawolves.org/sports/m-lacros/archive/ston-m-lacros-sched-2001.html. Missing or empty |title= (help)
    9. http://www.goseawolves.org/sports/m-lacros/recaps/050402aaa.html. Missing or empty |title= (help)
    10. "Head Men's Lacrosse Coach John Espey Relinquishes Coaching Duties". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    11. "Lars Tiffany Named Head Men's Lacrosse Coach". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    12. "Rick Sowell Named Head Men's Lacrosse Coach". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    13. "Sold-Out Crowd Watches Stony Brook Battle But Fall Late To Virginia, 10-9". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    14. "Stony Brook Extends Contract of Head Lacrosse Coach Rick Sowell". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    15. "Stony Brook Tabbed to Win Second Straight Men's Lacrosse Crown". AmericaEast.com.
    16. "Men's lacrosse ranked in top 10 in national polls". goseawolves.org.
    17. "#1 Virginia edges #5 Men's Lacrosse in overtime, 11–10". goseawolves.org.
    18. "#5 Men's Lacrosse Tops St. John's, 9–4". goseawolves.org.
    19. "Rick Sowell accepts head coaching position at Navy". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    20. "Stony Brook names Jim Nagle head men's lacrosse coach". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    21. "#Seawolves rally falls short against Maryland". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    22. "Stony Brook battles back before falling to No. 9 Virginia". Newsday. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
    23. Pm, 2019 11:04. "Stony Brook loses first conference game to Hartford". Newsday. Retrieved 2019-05-17.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
    24. "UAlbany men's lacrosse loses to Stony Brook | The Daily Gazette". dailygazette.com. Retrieved 2019-05-17.
    25. "UMBC upsets Stony Brook 14-8 to advance to America East title game". We Never Stop Talking Baltimore Sports. 2019-05-03. Retrieved 2019-05-17.
    26. "Stony Brook Parts Ways with Jim Nagle". www.uslaxmagazine.com. Retrieved 2019-05-17.
    27. staff, Baltimore Sun. "Towson assistant Anthony Gilardi hired as men's lacrosse coach at Stony Brook". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved 2019-06-21.
    28. "AGAIN! Caleb Pearson Tallies Third OT Winner of Season as Men's Lax Rallies Past Sacred Heart". Stony Brook University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
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