Colgate Raiders men's lacrosse

The Colgate Raiders men's lacrosse team represents Colgate University in the Patriot League in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college lacrosse. They play at Crown Field at Andy Kerr Stadium in Hamilton, New York.

Colgate Raiders
Founded1921
UniversityColgate University
Head coachMatt Karweck (since 2019 season)
StadiumAndy Kerr Stadium
(capacity: 10,221)
LocationHamilton, New York
ConferencePatriot League
ColorsMaroon and White[1]
         
NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals
(1) - 2012
NCAA Tournament appearances
(3) - 2008, 2012, 2015
Conference Tournament championships
(2) - 2008, 2015
Conference regular season championships
(3) - 2006, 2012, 2015

History

The program first started at the varsity level in 1921. Since then, the team has amassed a record of 472-528–6 through 2019. The coach is currently Matt Karweck.[2]

Colgate has made three appearances in the NCAA Tournament, with the first coming in 2008.[3] They earned an automatic bid into the tournament by winning the Patriot League conference tournament over Bucknell, 13–9.[4]

Their first NCAA Tournament game ended in defeat, losing 8–7 in overtime against Notre Dame.[5] The Raiders would not make the tournament again until 2012 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship, in which they defeated Massachusetts, 13–11, for their first ever NCAA Tournament victory.[6]

Peter Baum played for the Raiders and was the 2012 Tewaaraton Trophy winner as the Division I Player of the Year, and won the Lt. Raymond J. Enners Award as the nation's top player, as was also the first overall pick of the 2012 Major League Lacrosse draft. He ended his career as the Patriot League's all-time leader in goals scored (164), the nation's active goal-scoring leader and hat-trick leader (34), and Colgate's all-time leader in goals and career points (225).

Season results

The following is a list of Colgate's season results since the institution of NCAA Division I in 1971:

Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Donald R. Hanington (Independent) (1968–1972)
1971 Donald R. Hanington 2–10
1972 Donald R. Hanington 1–8
Donald R. Hanington: 22–36–1 (.381)
Robert D. Colbert (Independent) (1973–1974)
1973 Robert D. Colbert 0–7
Robert D. Colbert: 0–7 (.000)
Donald W. Fudge (Independent) (1974–1975)
1974 Donald W. Fudge 2–8
1975 Donald W. Fudge 9–3
Donald W. Fudge: 11–11 (.500)
David F. Armstrong (Independent) (1976–1977)
1976 David F. Armstrong 5–7
1977 David F. Armstrong 5–9
David F. Armstrong: 10–16 (.385)
Kurt Van Valkenburgh (Independent) (1978–1980)
1978 Kurt Van Valkenburgh 5–7
1979 Kurt Van Valkenburgh 2–11
1980 Kurt Van Valkenburgh 5–8
Kurt Van Valkenburgh: 12–26 (.316)
Paul Rose (Independent) (1981–1985)
1981 Paul Rose 7–5
1982 Paul Rose 4–8
1983 Paul Rose 9–5
1984 Paul Rose 8–6
1985 Paul Rose 9–4
Paul Rose: 37–28 (.569)
Hank Jancyzk (Independent) (1986–1987)
1986 Hank Jancyzk 6–6
1987 Hank Jancyzk 6–6
Hank Jancyzk: 12–12 (.500)
Mike Toop (Independent) (1988–1990)
1988 Mike Toop 10–3
1989 Mike Toop 10–2
1990 Mike Toop 10–1
Mike Toop (Patriot League) (1990–1991)
1991 Mike Toop 4–82–3T–4th
Mike Toop: 34–14 (.708)2–3 (.400)
Pace Kessenich (Patriot League) (1992–1995)
1992 Pace Kessenich 3–91–45th
1993 Pace Kessenich 9–33–2T–2nd
1994 Pace Kessenich 4–82–34th
1995 Pace Kessenich 6–83–23rdECAC/ILA Division I Champion
Pace Kessenich: 22–28 (.440)9–11 (.450)
Dan Whelan (Patriot League) (1996–2001)
1996 Dan Whelan 9–53–23rdECAC/ILA Division I Champion
1997 Dan Whelan 8–73–23rdECAC/ILA Division I Champion
1998 Dan Whelan 8–63–2T–2ndECAC/ILA Division I Runner-Up
1999 Dan Whelan 6–63–2T–3rd
2000 Dan Whelan 4–93–34th
2001 Dan Whelan 3–102–4T–4th
Dan Whelan: 38–43 (.469)17–15 (.531)
Jim Nagle (Patriot League) (2002–2011)
2002 Jim Nagle 7–73–34th
2003 Jim Nagle 8–74–2T–3rd
2004 Jim Nagle 8–74–3T–3rd
2005 Jim Nagle 7–71–5T–5th
2006 Jim Nagle 11–45–1T–1st
2007 Jim Nagle 11–55–12nd
2008 Jim Nagle 11–64–2T–3rdNCAA Division I First Round
2009 Jim Nagle 9–65–12nd
2010 Jim Nagle 3–102–4T–5th
2011 Jim Nagle 11–55–12nd
Jim Nagle: 86–64 (.573)38–23 (.623)
Mike Murphy (Patriot League) (2012–2018)
2012 Mike Murphy 14–45–1T–1stNCAA Division I Quarterfinals
2013 Mike Murphy 8–73–34th
2014 Mike Murphy 9–74–4T–4th
2015 Mike Murphy 10–66–2T–1stNCAA Division I First Round
2016 Mike Murphy 4–102–68th
2017 Mike Murphy 5–93–5T–7th
2018 Mike Murphy 7–83–5T–5th
Mike Murphy: 57–51 (.528)26–26 (.500)
Matt Karweck (Patriot League) (2019–Present)
2019 Matt Karweck 4–92–68th
2020 Matt Karweck 0–60–2
Matt Karweck: 4–15 (.211)2–8 (.200)
Total:472–534–6 (.469)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

†NCAA canceled 2020 collegiate activities due to the COVID-19 virus.

gollark: Well, it makes XSS attacks pretty easy to do, and it's just weirdly object-oriented and often inconsistent.
gollark: JS's basic DOM API is just kind of awful.
gollark: If you use one of the many virtual DOM-type frameworks, you would have to deliberately *try* to introduce XSS.
gollark: Okay, yes, fair, but JS+frameworks make XSS really hard.
gollark: A panic is way better than silent memory corruption.

References

  1. "Colgate's Color Palette | Colgate University Communications Office". Retrieved March 18, 2019.
  2. "2012 Quick Facts" (PDF). Colgate University. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
  3. "Men's Lacrosse History". Colgate University. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
  4. "Colgate Wins First-Ever Patriot League Men's Lacrosse Tournament Title With 13-9 Victory Over Bucknell". Patriot League. 27 April 2008. Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
  5. "Men's Lacrosse: Notre Dame tops Colgate in overtime to advance to second round". Inside Lacrosse. 11 May 2008. Archived from the original on May 18, 2008. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
  6. "Men's Lacrosse: Colgate Defeats Previously Unbeaten UMass in NCAA First Round". Inside Lacrosse. 12 May 2012. Archived from the original on 14 May 2012. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.