Thursday, January 16, 2025

I'll Be Quirky: Hofstra at Towson

Can the Dutchmen zzzzzap John Waters' hometown team tonight?


The one-game-in-nine-days stretch of the CAA schedule came at the perfect time for the Flying Dutchmen, who needed a brief break in the worst way after last Saturday’s all-hands-on-deck 66-63 win over UNC Wilmington. Of course, going to Towson and Drexel within a four-day span isn’t exactly a cakewalk, but Speedy Claxton is expected to be back tonight as the Dutchmen begin the annual Thursday-Monday stretch by visiting the Tigers. 


As will hopefully be the routine now that conference play has begun, I ran down the boilerplate material from Saturday’s big win in Wednesday’s Keep It Perky. Today will be about the individual news and notes from that win as well as a preview of the Seahawks as the Dutchmen look to even their CAA record. Enjoy!


SPEEDY SIDELINED

Speedy Claxton missed Saturday’s game due to personal reasons. He’s the first head coach to miss part or all of a game since Dec. 27, 2008, when Tom Pecora exited due to illness in the first half of a 62-57 win at New Hampshire. I’ll forget to take out the garbage tonight but I’ll remember this.


PHEW

The Dutchmen led by 11 points twice in the second half and fell behind in the final minute before Jean Aranguren converted the go-ahead nostalgic 3-point play with 31.1 seconds left. It was the first time the Dutchmen won a game in which they fell behind after squandering all of a double-digit second-half lead since Feb. 5, 2022, when they led James Madison by 10 points in the second half and fell behind by one point in overtime before earning an 85-78 victory. The 11-point second-half lead was the biggest the Dutchmen have squandered in an eventual win since Jan. 9, 2020, when they led Northeastern by 16 and then trailed by one before Eli Pemberton hit the game-winning shot just before the buzzer in a 74-72 win. 


STUCK IN THE SIXTIES

The Dutchmen scored fewer than 70 points Saturday for the sixth straight game, a span in which they are 2-4. It’s the longest streak of consecutive games with fewer than 70 points since a 12-game run from Jan. 16 through Feb. 20, 2013, during which the Dutchmen went 1-11. However, the Dutchmen didn’t score more than 70 points in any of their last 22 games during that miserable season. They went 4-18 from Dec. 15, 2012 through Mar. 9, 2013 while reaching exactly 70 points in wins over William & Mary and Old Dominion. So this note might have a sequel of sorts brewing! (Or, again, the Dutchmen could put up 100 points today and win, which would result in me updating the much cooler note about winning in factors of 10)


OFFENSIVE REBOUNDING NO LONGER OFFENSIVE

For a second straight game, a long but appropriate subhead! Counting dead ball rebounds, the Dutchmen collected 10 offensive rebounds Saturday afternoon. Two nights earlier, the Dutchmen had a season-high 16 offensive rebounds in the 67-61 loss to Charleston. This marks the first time the Dutchmen have recorded at least 10 offensive rebounds in consecutive games since Dec. 6-9, 2023, when they had 12 offensive rebounds in a 62-57 win over Iona and 12 offensive rebounds in a 71-68 loss to Saint Louis. The 26 offensive rebounds over the last two games are two more than the Dutchmen had in their previous six games, a span that began with the 114-46 win over Division III St. Joseph’s (NY) on Dec. 6.


FILLING IT UP FROM OUTSIDE

The Dutchmen had a much-needed strong game from the 3-point line Saturday, when they were 12-of-28 (42.9 percent) from beyond the arc. The 12 3-pointers were the second-most of the season for the Dutchmen and their most against a Division I foe. The Dutchmen had 19 3-pointers Dec, 6, when they beat Division III St. Joseph’s (NY) 114-46. The shooting percentage from 3-point land was the Dutchmen’s fourth-best of the season and their best since they shot a season-high 50 percent (11-of-22) Dec. 9 in the 80-67 win over Norfolk State.


HOW MANY PLAYERS HAVE STARTED A GAME THIS SEASON FOR THE DUTCHMEN?

Niiiiine players. Silas Sunday became the ninth player to join the starting lineup (not at the same time, that’d be illegal) Saturday, when he started in place of Michael Graham. The nine different starters this season are the most for the Dutchmen since 2021-22, which was Speedy Claxton’s first season at the helm.


JEAN FITS

Jean Aranguren recovered from a slow start to have another solid game Saturday afternoon, when he converted the go-ahead nostalgic 3-point play with 31.1 seconds left. Aranguren scored 17 of his 20 points in the second half and finished with four assists and three rebounds, though he committed a team-high five turnovers. He has scored in double figures in seven straight games and 14 times in 17 games overall after reaching double figures just nine times in 33 games last season with Iona.


JEAN FROM THREE

Jean Aranguren was especially productive from outside Saturday afternoon, when he finished 5-of-9 from 3-point land. The five 3-pointers were a career-high for Aranguren, who drained four 3-pointers in a game three times previously including last Thursday against Charleston. Aranguren is 9-for-14 from 3-point land in the last two games after going just 9-for-33 from beyond the arc in his previous seven games from Dec. 1 through Jan. 4. 


FARMER AID

Khalil Farmer, who played just nine minutes in the previous three games combined, had perhaps his best game in a Hofstra uniform Saturday afternoon, when he started in place of German Plotnikov and scored 13 points in a career-high 38 minutes. Farmer was especially valuable on defense in the final seconds, when he blanketed UNC Wilmington leading scorer Donovan Newby and hounded him into missing three shots after the Dutchmen took the lead. The 13 points are the second-most of Farmer’s career as well as one more than he had in his previous six games combined dating back to Dec. 9 and his most in a single game against a Division I opponent. He had 16 points in the 114-46 win over Division III St. Joseph’s on Dec 6.


A SPINAL TAP DOUBLE-DOUBLE

Play Stonehenge! Michael Graham, who came off the bench so that 7-foot Silas Sunday could start against 7-foot UNC Wilmington center Harlan Obioha, recorded his second straight double-double Saturday, when he was 5-of-5 from the field while finishing with 11 points and 11 rebounds in 21 minutes. It’s the third time in Graham’s career he’s posted at least two straight double-doubles and the first time since Jan. 20-27, 2022, when he had three consecutive double-doubles for Not Twitter Guy against Drexel, Delaware and William & Mary. Overall this season, Graham has three double-doubles, as many as he had the previous two seasons combined at Loyola Marymount. In addition, the Dutchmen are 7-2 this season when Graham plays at least 20 minutes.


DOUBLE-DOUBLES OFF THE BENCH

Michael Graham (11 points, 11 rebounds) is the second Hofstra player this season to post a double-double off the bench and the first since Nov. 4, when KiJan Robinson had 10 points and 10 rebounds in an 89-62 win over Division III Old Westbury in the season opener. Graham is the first Hofstra player to record a double-double off the bench against a Division I foe since Nov. 30, 2020, when Kvonn Cramer had 12 points and 10 rebounds in a 73-58 win over Fairleigh Dickinson.


CAN’T MISS GRAHAM

Michael Graham had a sharp shooting afternoon Saturday, when he scored 11 points while going 5-of-5 from the field. It was the second perfect shooting game (minimum five field goal attempts) this season for Graham, who also had 11 points while going 5-of-5 from the field in an 80-67 win over Norfolk State on Dec. 9. Silas Sunday (5-of-5 in the 90-76 win over Iona on Nov, 8) has the Dutchmen’s other perfect shooting performance this season.


SEVEN WISHES

Night Ranger reference! Cruz Davis scored fewer than 10 points for the second straight game Saturday, when he was 2-of-9 from the field and finished with seven points and seven assists. The back-to-back single-digit scoring performances are the first of the season for Davis, who has scored at least 10 points in nine games after doing so just five times in his first two seasons at Iona and St. John’s. The seven assists were the most for Davis since Nov. 30, when he had seven assists in the 61-59 loss to Tarleton State. 


SUNDAY SUNDAY SUNDAY

Silas Sunday made his second career start Saturday (boy did I want to write Silas Sunday started Saturday for the second time, but that wouldn’t have made for as clean a transition, the things I do for you guys), when he had six points, seven rebounds, one assist and one steal while posting a plus/minus of plus-20 (!!!) over 19 minutes. The 19 minutes were the most for Sunday since Dec. 15, when he played 29 minutes in the 60-42 loss to Temple. The start was the first for Sunday since Dec. 30, 2023, when he had four points and six rebounds over 13 minutes in place of an injured Jacco Fritz in an 84-79 loss to St. John’s at UBS Arena.


TJ TO THE EXTREME

TJ Gadsden made his third straight start Saturday, when he had six points and four rebounds over 29 minutes. The playing time was the most extensive for Gadsden since Nov. 16, when he logged 39 minutes in a 75-71 overtime win over UMass.  It also marked just the third time this season he’s finished with at least six point and four rebounds. Gadsden has scored in double figures just once this season after scoring at least 10 points in 11 of 25 games last season for Canisius.


HERE’S TO YOU, MR. ROBINSON

KiJan Robinson saw slightly less playing time Saturday, when he had two points in 18 minutes. Robinson, who finished 0-for-4 shooting, was scoreless from the field for just the third time this season while scoring fewer than six points for just the fifth time in 17 games.


DECADY’S DANCE

Freshman Joshua DeCady helped make up for the absence of German Plotnikov Saturday when he had one point and one rebound in seven minutes. DeCady has scored in each of the last seven games in which he’s appeared dating back to Nov. 30, though his errant 3-pointer in his lone field goal attempt marked his first miss from the field since Dec. 29.


PARNELL’S CAMEO

Redshirt sophomore Eric Parnell played the final four seconds of the first half. Parnell is the first Hofstra player to see less than one minute of playing time since Khalil Farmer played the final 15 seconds in overtime of the 75-71 win over UMass on Nov. 16.


PLOTNIKOV SIDELINED

German Plotnikov, who started each of the previous six games, sat out Saturday with a leg injury. Plotnikov, who was on the bench in warmups Saturday, played at least 30 minutes in each of his starts after exceeding 20 minutes just three times in the first 10 games.


SANDERS SIDELINED

Junior Jaquan Sanders missed Saturday’s game due to personal reasons. It was the second straight absence for Sanders, who started the first 13 games in which he played before coming off the bench against Northeastern on Jan. 4. He is expected to rejoin the Dutchmen soon.


OVER THE AIR

Tonight’s game is slated to be carried live on CBS Sports Network, which is channel 215 in the Optimum/Altice Are Our Overlords Universe, at least until our Optimum/Altice overlords decide to drop CBSSN in a carriage dispute. Hofstra will provide a radio feed as well as live stats at the Pride Productions hub.


SCOUTING TOWSON

The Tigers, under 14th-year head coach Pat Skerry, are 8-9 this season and 3-1 in CAA play following a 93-82 overtime win over Drexel on Saturday. It was the fourth win in five games overall for Towson, whose seven Division I wins have all come by single digits.


The Dutchmen and Tigers had no common opponents in non-league play. In CAA play, both teams have beaten Northeastern and UNC Wilmington and lost to Charleston. This is the first time this season the Dutchmen are playing a CAA foe with whom they have common league opponents.


The Dutchmen, who were picked to finish fourth in the CAA preseason poll, are ranked 179th at KenPom.com, which was also their preseason ranking, The Tigers, who were picked to finish first, are ranked 189th, a drop of 62 spots from their preseason ranking but a 43-spot improvement since the morning of Dec. 22, when they beat Bryant to begin the current 4-1 stretch. Towson leaped 17 spots following Saturday’s win over Drexel.


According to KenPom.com, the Dutchmen rank last in the CAA in offensive efficiency (97.8 points per 100 possessions) but first in defensive efficiency (99.0 points per 100 possessions) while averaging 64.3 possessions per 40 minutes, the 11th-most in the league. Strange numbers, especially on offense. The Tigers rank sixth in the CAA in offensive efficiency (104.3 points per 100 possessions) and fourth in defensive efficiency (106.2 points per 100 possessions) while averaging 63.1 possessions per 40 minutes, the fewest in the league.


The Tigers return a whopping 10 players from last year’s team, including their top eight scorers who had eligibility remaining. True sophomore Tyler Tejada, a preseason all-CAA first team selection, leads Towson with 16.9 points per game while redshirt sophomore Dylan Williamson, a preseason all-CAA honorable mention selection, is averaging 12.8 points per game and a team-high 2.4 assists per game. Redshirt senior Nendah Tarke, who began his career with three seasons at Coppin State, is averaging 10.6 points per game. True sophomore Mekhi Lowery leads the Tigers with 5.8 rebounds per game. True junior Christian May, a preseason all-CAA second-team selection, is averaging 7.1 points per game and 5.1 rebounds per game but has missed four contests. 


KenPom.com predicts a 61-58 loss for the Dutchmen. Per the wise guys in Vegas, for entertainment purposes only, the Dutchmen are 3 1/2-point underdogs. The Dutchmen are 8-7 against the spread this season.


NICE TO ECC YOU

The Dutchmen will oppose an East Coast Conference foe (hi Litos) for the first time this season. This is the latest in a CAA season the Dutchmen have opened CAA play since 2018-19, when they also visited Towson in the fifth game of the league schedule. That was the game in which Jalen Ray sank a 3-pointer at the buzzer to complete a 10-point comeback and lift the Dutchmen to a 76-73 win.


ALL-TIME VS. TOWSON

Hofstra is 48-30 against Towson in a series that began during the 1982-83 season, when both schools were in the East Coast Conference. The Dutchmen won the lone meeting between the teams last season last Feb. 3, when Tyler Thomas (23 points, nine assists, seven rebounds) had a monster game in a 59-56 victory. 


Hofstra and Towson opposed one another in the ECC and the North Atlantic Conference/America East before moving together to the CAA for the 2001-02 school year. Hofstra has faced only two opponents as often as it’s faced Towson: Longtime conference rivals Delaware and Drexel. Yeah, about that…


ONE TIME ONLY

Tonight marks the only scheduled regular season game between Hofstra and Towson. These last two seasons mark the second and third times since 1982-83 — when I believe the ECC schedule consisted of just a single round-robin — that Hofstra and Towson are in the same conference and playing each other just once in the regular season. They played each other twice apiece from 1983-84 through then-Towson State’s last year in the ECC in 1991-92 and twice a season every year from 1995-96 — when Towson joined the NAC following a short pitstop in the Big South — through 2010-11 before playing just once during the 2011-12 season when the CAA had 12 teams. That’s 36 times in 37 years the two teams played each other twice per season, including a campaign played in a pandemic. I know there’s a lot of balls to juggle in the air when scheduling a 14-team league, but it’s a bummer there’s no home-and-home this season.


THINGS YOU CAN SHOUT ON TWITTER (OR BLUESKY) IF CALLS GO DO NOT GO HOFSTRA’S WAY

Tales From The Crypt bias! (John Kassir, the voice of the Cryptkeeper, went to Towson State — hey that’s what it was called back then!)

Lee Warner can’t lose bias! (The youngest son of Lee, our good friend, fellow Hofstra alum and fantasy football rival, goes to Towson, so blame Lee if the Dutchmen lose this)

John Waters bias! (The subversive filmmaker is a Towson native)

We still remember when you were a state bias! (Maybe the best of the oldies but goodies)

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Keep It Perky: UNC Wilmington postgame

People are traveling from two towns over to see the Farmer who saved the day last Saturday!


Before we proceed with Keep It Perky, best wishes to Speedy Claxton, who missed Saturday’s 66-63 win over UNC Wilmington due to personal reasons. Hope to see him back on the sidelines Thursday, when the Flying Dutchmen visit Towson.


Thanks to Jean Aranguren’s go-ahead nostalgic 3-point play with 31.1 seconds left and four subsequent defensive stands, the Dutchmen, under acting head coach Mike DePaoli, evened their CAA record at 2-2 by outlasting UNC Wilmington in a slobberknocker that should be put into a time capsule and preserved so future generations can appreciate what a truly ugly but truly great CAA game looked like.


As will hopefully remain the case throughout the CAA season (3-for-3 so far!), here’s the postgame boilerplate material in Keep It Perky form. The individual news and notes from Saturday afternoon and preview of Towson will be posted early tomorrow morning.


THE MOST RECENT GAME SUMMARIZED IN ONE PARAGRAPH

The Flying Dutchmen squandered a double-digit second-half lead and scored just two field goals in the final eight minutes, but Jean Aranguren produced the winning points with his nostalgic 3-point play and Khalil Farmer clamped down on Donovan Newby over the next three possessions. There were five ties and two lead changes in a nearly nine-minute stretch in the first half before Aranguren’s 3-pointer with 2:57 gave the Dutchmen a 25-24 lead and started a 36-24 run in which the Dutchmen took a pair of 11-point leads. The Dutchmen then went scoreless for more than four minutes, a span in which the Seahawks scored just six points, before Farmer’s 3-pointer extended the lead to 61-54. The Dutchmen endured five straight empty trips while UNC Wilmington went on a 9-0 run and took a 63-61 lead on Newby’s free throws with 55 seconds left. Aranguren followed with his nostalgic 3-point play, which was generated when he drove the lane and drew the foul on Bo Montgomery. Newby (30 points) was draped by Farmer and missed a potential go-ahead layup on the Seahawks’ next trip, but the ball glanced off Aranguren’s hands. Newby missed another another layup with 11 seconds left but Michael Graham missed the front end of a one-and-one. Following a timeout at halfcourt, the Seahawks again worked the ball into the paint to Newby, whose jumper over Farmer bounced off the rim before Farmer was fouled. Farmer drained both free throws and Cruz Davis blocked a long 3-pointer by Josh Corbin at the buzzer. Aranguren scored 17 of his 20 points in the second half and added four assists. Farmer, who played just nine minutes combined in the previous three games, had 13 points in 38 minutes while seeing time at power forward with German Plotnikov sidelined. Graham (11 points, 11 rebounds) posted a double-double off the bench despite posting a plus/minus of minus-17 while Silas Sunday, who started in place of Graham, had six points and seven rebounds and finished with a plus/minus of plus-20. Davis had seven points and seven assists. 


3 STARS OF THE GAME (vs. UNC Wilmington, 1/11)

3: Jean Aranguren

2: Khalil Farmer

1: Michael Graham 


SEASON STANDINGS

Jean Aranguren 36

Cruz Davis 20

Jaquan Sanders 12

Michael Graham 10

KiJan Robinson 9

Khalil Farmer 5

German Plotnikov 3

TJ Gadsden 3

Silas Sunday 2

Eric Parnell 2


WAS THIS A UNICORN SCORE?

No! Not much of a surprise there, but I wish the most recent of the three previously known 66-63 victories wasn’t the win over South Dakota State on Nov. 16, 2012 — the first of three wins in as many days in the blasted Gazelle Group tournament that provided the final good moments of the 2012-13 season. *shudders*


The Dutchmen have recorded four unicorn score victories this season and 57 unicorn score victories since the start of the 2018-19 season, when we first started tracking unicorn scores.


2024-25: Four unicorn scores

2023-24: Seven unicorn scores

2022-23: 12 unicorn scores

2021-22: 11 unicorn scores

2020-21: Zero unicorn scores (really)

2019-20: 13 unicorn scores

2018-19: 10 unicorn scores 


The term unicorn score was coined by Mets superfan, historian and blogger Greg Prince to describe a score by which the Mets had never previously won. You may also know it as a “Scorigami,” a term popularized in the NFL.


WHO HAD THE KEITH HERNANDEZ?

Jean Aranguren moved into some rare company Saturday, when he converted the nostalgic 3-point play to put the Dutchmen ahead for good at 64-63 with 31.1 seconds left. It’s the third last-minute Keith Hernandez of the season and the second Keith Hernandez recorded via a nostalgic 3-point play (Warren Williams recorded the first against Delaware on Jan. 14, 2023). It was also the fifth Keith Hernandez of the season for Aranguren, which already vaults him into sole possession of third place in the all-time standings (or at least since the 2022-23 season).


Jean Aranguren tie-breaking layup vs. Old Westbury, 11/4/24 (19:47 left 2H)

Silas Sunday go-ahead layup vs. Iona, 11/8/24 (17:49 left 1H)

Jean Aranguren go-ahead layup vs. Seton Hall, 11/13/24 (2:19 left 2H)

Jean Aranguren tie-breaking free throw vs. UMass, 11/16/24 (4:58 left OT)

Cruz Davis tie-breaking layup vs. Rice, 11/29/24 (:59 left OT)

Michael Graham tie-breaking layup vs. Arkansas State, 12/1/24 (:00 left 2H)

Jean Aranguren tie-breaking layup vs. St. Joseph’s, 12/6/24 (19:30 left 1H)

KiJan Robinson go-ahead 3-pointer vs. Norfolk State, 12/9/24 (10:33 left 1H)

Michael Graham tie-breaking layup vs. Northeastern, 1/4/25 (19:14 left 2H)

Jean Aranguren go-ahead nostalgic 3-point play vs. UNC Wilmington, 1/11/25 (:31.1 left 2H)


SEASON STANDINGS 

Jean Aranguren 5

Michael Graham 2

KiJan Robinson 1

Cruz Davis 1

Silas Sunday 1


ALL-TIME STANDINGS (or at least since the 2022-23 season)

Tyler Thomas 16

Darlinstone Dubar 14

Jean Aranguren 5

Aaron Estrada 4

Warren Williams 3

Michael Graham 2

Silas Sunday 2

Jacco Fritz 2

Jaquan Carlos 2

German Plotnikov 2

KiJan Robinson 1

Cruz Davis 1

Bryce Washington 1


The Keith Hernandez is bestowed upon the player who scores the points that put the Dutchmen ahead for good in a victory. The stat pays homage to Hernandez, the World Series-winning Cardinals and Mets first baseman who had a record 129 game-winning RBIs when the stat was inexplicably discontinued after the 1988 season.


THE FLYING DUTCHMEN AFTER SEVENTEEN GAMES

With Saturday afternoon’s win, the Dutchmen improved to 10-7 this season. We’re gonna win the AFC and NFC South! This ties the 2024-25 team for the 32nd-best record in school history through 17 games. It’s the first time the Dutchmen have opened 10-7 since 2022-23 and the 12th time overall in school history. Here is how some notable Hofstra teams have fared through 17 games:


NCAA DIVISION I TOURNAMENT TEAMS

1975-76: 9-8

1976-77: 12-5

1999-2000: 12-5

2000-01: 13-4 (marked fifth win in program-record 18-game winning streak)

2019-20 (IT COUNTS TO US): 12-5 (most recent 12-5 start)


NIT TEAMS

1998-99: 11-6

2004-05: 11-6

2005-06: 13-4

2006-07: 12-5

2015-16: 12-5 

2018-19: 14-3 (most recent 14-3 start, win in 17th game marked 11th win in the 16-game winning streak)

2022-23: 10-7


NCAA DIVISION II TOURNAMENT TEAMS

1958-59: 12-5

1961-62: 15-2 (loss in 17th game snapped 14-game winning streak, most recent 15-2 start)

1962-63: 11-6

1963-64: 14-3


Some other notable 17-game starts:


2023-24: 8-9 (most recent 8-9 start)

2020-21: 11-6 (most recent 11-6 start)

2016-17: 9-8 (most recent 9-8 start, last time over .500)

2014-15: 13-4 (most recent 13-4 start)

2013-14: 6-11 (most recent 6-11 start, Joe Mihalich’s first team)

2012-13: 5-12 (most recent 5-12 start)

2008-09: 10-6 (most recent 10-6 start)

2007-08: 4-13 (most recent 4-13 start)

2003-04: 7-10 (most recent 7-10 start)

1994-95: 3-14 (most recent 3-14 start, Jay Wright’s first team)

1993-94: 2-15 (only 2-15 start, worst 17-game start in school history, VBK’s last team)

1987-88: 4-13 (loss in 17th game was seventh loss of program-record 13-game losing streak)

1985-86: 8-9 (last time under .500)

1964-65: 9-8 (last time over .500)

1959-60: 16-1 (most recent 16-1 start & Hofstra’s winningest team, percentage-wise; win in 17th game was sixth win of season-ending 13-game winning streak)

1957-58: 13-4 (loss in 17th game snapped 10-game winning streak)

1939-40: 9-8 (over .500 for good)

1936-37: 7-10 (season complete)


Hofstra has never been 17-0, 1-16 or 0-17 through 17 games. 


One season was completed in fewer than 17 games:

1937-38 (10-4) 


Full records not available for the following seasons: 1936-37, 1941-42, 1942-43.


This feature is inspired by Greg Prince, who measures how the current Mets compare, record-wise, to previous teams through the same point in the season.


NUMBER TEN THROUGH ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN

With Saturday afternoon’s, Speedy Claxton improved to 76-41 (.650) as head coach. (The win counts on his record, since Mike DePaoli was the acting head coach in a temporary absence for Claxton) That’s tied for the third-best known winning percentage for a Hofstra coach through his first 117 games at the helm.


Butch van Breda Kolff I 82-35 (.701, 117th game was the 15th game of his fifth season in 1959-60) 68-34

Frank Reilly 81-36 (.692, 117th game was the 17th game of his fifth season in 1951-52) 66-34

Paul Lynner 76-41 (.650, 117th game was the seventh game of his fifth season in 1966-67) 73-37

SPEEDY CLAXTON 76-41 (.650, 117th game was the 17th game of his fourth season in 2024-25) 66-34

Joe Mihalich 63-54 (.538, 117th game was the 16th game of his fourth season in 2016-17) 54-47

Butch van Breda Kolff II 61-56 (.521, 117th game was the third game of his fifth season in 1992-93) 61-53

Dick Berg 60-57 (.513, 117th game was the seventh game of his fifth season in 1984-85) 56-54

Roger Gaeckler 55-62 (.470, 117th game was the 15th game of his fifth season in 1976-77) 45-57

Tom Pecora 54-63 (.462, 117th game was the 27th game of his fifth season in 2004-05) 34-56

Jay Wright 51-66 (.436, 117th game was the fourth game of his fifth season in 1998-99) 50-63


The standings remain the same as they were through 116 games, though Tom Pecora wins his 117th game at the helm to move three games ahead of fellow perpetual slacker Jay Wright, who loses his 117th game at the helm. Perpetual slackers!


The records are incomplete for Jack McDonald’s first stint from 1936 through 1943 as well as the tenure of Jack Smith (1943-46).


Smith finished 27-32 in his three seasons while Mo Cassara finished 38-59 in his three seasons. Three coaches had one-season tenures lasting at Hofstra. McDonald went 18-6 in the lone season of his second stint in 1946-47 while Joe Harrington went 14-14 in 1979-80 and Mike Farrelly went 13-10 in 2020-21.