Thursday, February 5, 2026

I'll Be Quirky: Northeastern

Boston music legend Nuno Bettencourt was much happier to finally win his first Grammy on Sunday night! 


New month, new attitude! Fresh off ending a rough January with a win, the Flying Dutchmen will look to get back over .500 in CAA play tonight, when they open a two-game homestand by hosting our old pals Northeastern. 


As will hopefully become the routine once again the rest of the season, I ran down the boilerplate material from Saturday afternoon’s win over Monmouth in last night’s Keep It Perky. Today will be about the individual news and notes from that loss as well as a preview of the Huskies. Enjoy!


WIRE-TO-WIRE WIN

The Dutchmen never trailed Saturday afternoon. It was their third wire-to-wire win of the season and their first since beating Drexel, 70-67, on Jan. 3. The Dutchmen also never trailed in a 92-23 win over Division III Old Westbury 92-23 on Dec. 10.


NO LONGER STREAKING

As you may have gathered by now, the Dutchmen halted their five-game losing streak with Saturday’s 73-57 win over Monmouth. The losing streak was the second-longest of the Speedy Claxton era behind the six-game skid from Feb. 1-20, 2025. It was also tied for the second-longest active losing streak in the CAA with Campbell, which also ended its streak in wire-to-wire fashion Saturday with a 104-96 win over William & Mary. The longest active losing streak in the CAA now belongs to Northeastern, which has lost four straight entering tonight. Oh no. 


BACK-TO-BACK (sorta)

The Dutchmen’s win last Saturday was their first since Jan. 10, when they beat…Monmouth. This is the first time the Dutchmen have bookended wins over the same opponent around a losing streak since Jan 18-27, 2018, when they beat Delaware twice while losing consecutive games in the middle to Charleston and Northeastern, and the fourth time it’s happened since joining the CAA in 2001-02. The Dutchmen bracketed wins against Towson around eight straight losses from Jan. 30, 2002 through Mar. 1, 2002, when the second win over the Tigers came in the first round of the CAA Tournament. The Dutchmen then lost five straight in between wins over Delaware from Jan. 29 through Feb. 19, 2002. A quirky side note: The Dutchmen lost consecutive CAA games in between their wins over Towson from Dec. 5, 2009 through Jan. 6, 2010 (wow! spanning two years!), but that was when the CAA schedule included a standalone December opener. The Dutchmen were actually 3-4 in between the wins over Towson with losses to William & Mary and George Mason to open January. The loss to George Mason happened an hour or so before a drunken Mason grad crashed into me south of Baltimore. Those were good times!


DRY JANUARY (or slightly less so)

With Saturday afternoon’s win, the Dutchmen finished 4-5 in January and improved to 12-14 in January over the last three years. They’ve lost consecutive games in January once in each of the last three years. They were 19-6 in January from 2021 through 2023, a span in which they had just one losing streak (a three-game skid from Jan. 7-15, 2021, in the midst of the condensed pandemic season).


STAYING (within) SINGLE (digits)

Since the Dutchmen won Saturday, that means this stat remains intact! The Dutchmen (14-9) have yet to lose a game this season by more than eight points. They are one of just 14 Division I schools nationwide without a double-digit loss this season — and one of two in the CAA, where UNC Wilmington (19-3) has yet to lose a game by more than nine points. The Dutchmen and Seahawks are two of just six mid-majors who have yet to suffer a double-digit loss and the CAA is the only mid-major league with two such teams.


HOFSTRA (14-9)

Miami Ohio (23-0)

Saint Louis (22-1)

Belmont (21-3)

Stephen F. Austin (20-3)

UNC Wilmington (19-3)


And I guess here are the other teams yet to suffer a double-digit loss:


Arizona (22-0)

Connecticut (22-1)

Duke (21-1)

Michigan (20-1)

Nebraska (20-2)

Houston (20-2)

Clemson (19-4)

Florida (16-6)


Michigan State fell off the list last Friday with an 83-71 loss to Michigan. This is pretty good company for the Dutchmen, UNC Wilmington and the CAA in general. The only other leagues with multiple teams who have yet to suffer a double-digit loss are the Big 10, Big 12 and ACC.


AS EASY AS ONE, TWO, THREE…

The Dutchmen had another terrific game defending the 3-pointer Saturday, when they held Monmouth to 16.7 percent (3-of-18) from beyond the arc. It’s the second straight game in which an opponent made only three 3-pointers. Charleston somehow earned a 66-64 win last Thursday despite also going 3-of-18 from 3-point land. The consecutive stingy efforts follows a six-game span in which the Dutchmen allowed opponents to shoot 38.3 percent (62-of-161) from 3-point land — a stretch that ended with William & Mary shooting 40.9 percent (18-of-44) in a 89-82 win on Jan. 24.


CRUZ-IN

Cruz Davis bounced back from his worst game of the season in impressive fashion Saturday afternoon, when he scored a game-high 24 points while adding four rebounds and two assists. Davis, whose streak of 21 straight double-digit scoring efforts ended when he was held to seven points in last Thursday’s 66-64 loss to Charleston, was 9-of-15 from the field Saturday, including 4-of-7 from 3-point land. He was just 8-of-35 from the field in his previous two games, including 3-of-16 from beyond the arc. Davis has scored in double figures in 43 of the 54 games in which he’s played for Hofstra after reaching double figures just five times over 28 games in his first two seasons at Iona and St. John’s. The Dutchmen are 26-17 when Davis scores in double figures.


JUST JOSH-IN

Graduate student Joshua Aaron Reaves continued his surprising emergence into the rotation Saturday afternoon, when he scored a season-high 17 points on 5-of-6 shooting — including 4-of-5 from 3-point land — over a season-high 34 minutes while adding four rebounds off the bench. The 17 points were just two fewer than Reaves had in his first 12 games this season while the four 3-pointers were one fewer than he had all season entering Saturday. The 17 points and four 3-pointers were his most since Nov. 16, 2024, when he had 21 points while going 5-of-8 from beyond the arc for Illinois-Chicago in a 117-59 win over Division III St. Mary’s. Reaves previously had at least 17 points and four 3-pointers against a Division I foe on Mar. 9, 2024 when he finished with 18 points on 6-of-11 shooting from beyond the arc for Mount St. Mary’s in a 96-92 win over Fairfield. The 34 minutes Reaves logged Saturday were also his most against any foe since since he played 35 minutes in that win over Fairfield. Reaves has 26 points over 71 minutes in the lats three games after recording just 10 points — all against non-Division I foes — over 71 minutes in his first 12 appearances of the season. He didn’t play in four straight games prior to his appearance against William & Mary on Jan. 24 and sat for 10 of the Dutchmen’s first 20 games.


MVP OFF THE BENCH

Here’s something fun and quirky: Joshua Aaron Reaves earned KenPom.com MVP honors Saturday after scoring 17 points over 34 minutes off the bench. He’s the first Hofstra reserve to be named a KenPom.com game MVP since Warren Williams flirted with a double-double (19 points, nine rebounds) off the bench in an 84-52 win over Northeastern on Feb. 25, 2023. 


SUNDAY SUNDAY SUNDAY!

Silas Sunday continued a quietly terrific season Saturday afternoon, when he posted his first career-double (12 points, 10 rebounds) while going a career-best 6-of-6 from the field over 22 minutes. The six field goals without a miss are the most by a Hofstra player since Jacco Fritz went 6-of-6 from the field in a 76-71 win over Delaware on Jan. 6, 2024. Sunday went 5-of-5 from the field twice previously, most recently last Feb. 20 in a 68-62 loss to Monmouth. The 12 points Saturday were the most for Sunday since he scored a career-high 15 points in a 78-58 win over Merrimack on Nov. 29 while the 10 rebounds were his most since he pulled down a career-high 15 boards in a 89-85 loss to ELO on Jan. 17. Sunday has at least six points in 10 games this season after recording six or more points 12 times over 66 games in the previous two seasons. He has also scored in all 23 games this season after scoring in 26 of 33 games last season.


PRESTO!

Preston Edmead continued the most impressive freshman season by a Hofstra player this decade Saturday afternoon, when he scored 13 points while adding four rebounds and eight assists. Edmead has scored in double figures in 19 games this season, the most double-figure scoring efforts by a Hofstra freshman since Eli Pemberton scored in double figures 21 times in 31 games in 2016-17. The eight assists tied a season-high for Edmead, who also had eight assists in a 77-60 win over Pennsylvania on Nov. 30. He has 15 assists over the last two games after collecting just 15 assists in his previous five games dating back to Jan. 10. Edmead’s 355 points (15.4 ppg) through 23 games are 12 more than Antoine Agudio had through 23 games during his freshman season in 2004-05 and 10 more than Speedy Claxton had through 23 games during his freshman season in 1996-97. Pretty good company.


PRESTON VS. SPEEDY

Speaking of which…Preston Edmead’s first 23 games as a true freshman point guard have been just as impressive as Speedy Claxton’s first 22 games as a true freshman point guard way back in 1996-97.


Speedy Claxton: 15.0 points per game/3.3 assists per game/4.7 rebounds per game

Preston Edmead: 15.4 ppg/4.3 apg/3.0 rpg


Pretty quirky and neat!


GERMAN FOR STARTERS

German Plotnikov had one of his patented solid glue guy games Saturday afternoon, when he finished with seven points on 3-of-4 shooting — including 1-of-2 from 3-point land — while adding two rebounds, two assists and one steal over 31 minutes. Plotnikov has scored at lest seven points in 16 of the 21 games in which he’s played this season after scoring at least eight points 34 times in his first 95 games over the previous three seasons. He has also scored in a career-high 30 straight games dating back to last Feb. 8.


ALL OR NOTHING FOR PATTERSON

Biggie Patterson continued doing an uncanny impersonation of fellow hot-and-cold scorer Tareq Coburn Saturday afternoon, when he was scoreless on 0-for-4 shooting over 16 minutes one game after he scored a career-high 21 points in the 66-64 loss to Charleston. Patterson, who wears no. 0 like Coburn, is the first Hofstra player to go scoreless immediately after a game in which he scored at least 20 points since Coburn, who had a then-career high 24 points in a 72-59 win over Drexel on Jan. 25, 2020, five days before he went scoreless while missing all five of his shots in an 86-63 win over ELO. Quirky, right? Despite Patterson’s quiet game, the Dutchmen improved to 6-7 with him in the starting lineup. They are 6-0 when he comes off the bench. 


A DISQUALIFIED VICTORY

This is getting quirkier by the day. Victory Onuetu fouled out after 17 scoreless minutes Saturday afternoon, when he had six rebounds, one block and one steal while missing his only field goal attempt (obvs). It was the second straight game in which Onuetu has been disqualified without scoring a point — he was ejected after fewer than two minutes in last Thursday’s 66-64 loss to Charleston — and the third time he’s done so in the last four games. Onuetu played 11 scoreless minutes before fouling out in a 79-78 loss to North Carolina A&T on Jan. 22. He is the first Hofstra player to be disqualified without scoring a point three times in a season since Mike Davis-Sabb did it three times during the 2007-08 season. A Mike Davis-Sabb reference here in the dystopia that is 2026! Onuetu is averaging 2.0 points and 6.5 rebounds over 15 minutes per game over the last six games after he averaged 4.9 points and 8.6 rebounds over 22.8 minutes per game during the eight-game winning streak from Dec. 7 through Jan. 10. 


JAEDEN JUMPS INTO ACTION

Freshman Jaeden Roberts was scoreless with three rebounds and one assist while playing just four minutes Thursday night. Roberts has played six scoreless minutes over the last two games after averaging 7.5 points over 13.6 minutes per game in the 11 previous games in which he played from Dec. 7 through Jan. 24. The Dutchmen are 12-4 in Roberts’ appearances.


CLUB TRILLION FOR TSYNKEVICH

Graduate student Alex Tsynkevich, who had perhaps his best game at Division I in last Thursday’s 66-64 loss to Charleston, replaced Victory Onuetu after the latter fouled out and played the final 35 seconds without recording a stat last Saturday afternoon. Tsynkevich, who had four points and six rebounds against Charleston, has played in consecutive games for the first time since he appeared against La Salle and Merrimack on Nov. 28-29.


FEBRUARY = CRUNCH TIME

Last February didn’t go well at all for the Flying Dutchmen, who went 2-7 in regular season games played after Feb. 1. But the final month and change of the regular season is usually a successful one for the Dutchmen. Since joining the CAA in 2001-02, the Dutchmen are 122-77 (.613) in regular season games played on or after Feb. 1. Last year marked the first time the Dutchmen hd a losing record in regular season games played on or after Feb. 1 since 2021, when they went 1-3 before the rest of the regular season was canceled due to COVID issues. Prior to last year, the Dutchmen hadn’t posted a losing record in regular season games played after Feb. 1 since 2013, when they were 2-7 in Joe Mihalich’s first season at the helm.


OVER THE AIR

Tonight’s game is slated to be carried live on FloHoops.com (subscription required, click here for options) as well as on MSG Networks if you are in the New York area and/or somehow paid one billion dollars (approx) for the Gotham Sports app. Hofstra will provide a radio feed as well as live stats at the Pride Productions hub.


SCOUTING NORTHEASTERN

The Huskies, under 20th-year head coach Bill Coen, are 6-15 this season and 2-8 in CAA play following a 89-84 loss to Charleston last Saturday afternoon. It was the fourth straight loss for Northeastern, who were knotted at 78-78 with 2:48 to go before Jlynn Counter went on a 9-0 run for the Cougars.


The Dutchmen and Huskies had one common opponent during non-league play. The Dutchmen upset Syracuse 70-69 on Dec. 13, one week before the Orange beat Northeastern, 91-83. In CAA play, both teams have lost to Stony Brook and Charleston. The Dutchmen beat Campbell, Towson and Drexel, all of whom defeated Northeastern, and swept Monmouth, which also beat the Huskies. Hofstra lost to ELO, which split with Northeastern, and to North Carolina A&T, whom the Huskies defeated.


The Dutchmen, who were picked to finish tied for eighth with Northeastern in the CAA preseason poll, are ranked 115th at KenPom.com, second in the CAA and just four spots behind UNC Wilmington. The current ranking for the Dutchmen is 47 spots higher than they were to open the season but 18 spots lower than their season-high entering the Jan. 10 game against Monmouth. The Huskies are ranked a season-low 255th, which is 37 spots lower their preseason ranking as well as 97 spots lower than their season-high entering the Nov. 15 game against Vermont.


According to KenPom.com, the Dutchmen rank second in the CAA in conference-only offensive efficiency (114.9 points per 100 possessions) and eighth in defensive efficiency (110.7 points per 100 possessions) while averaging 64.8 possessions per 40 minutes, the 11th-most in league play. The Huskies rank third in the CAA in conference-only offensive efficiency (114.3 points per 100 possessions) and 13th and last in defensive efficiency (123.5 points per 100 possessions) while averaging 70.8 possessions per 40 minutes, the second-most in league play.


The Huskies return five players from last year’s team, but LA Pratt is out for the season with a broken foot suffered Nov. 11 while Youri Fritz, the younger brother of former Hofstra center Jacco Fritz, has missed the last five games with a knee injury suffered Jan. 10. In addition, Northeastern has also lost redshirt freshman Xander Alarie and true freshman Miles Newton, each of whom began the campaign in the starting lineup alongside Pratt and Fritz, to season-ending injuries.


Junior William Kermoury, who has spent his entire career with Northeastern and is the lone remaining member of the opening night lineup, leads the Huskies with 13.3 points per game. True freshman Xavier Abreu is averaging 11.8 points per game. Fritz is averaging 11.5 points and a team-high 4.5 rebounds per game. Junior guard Mike Loughnane, who opened his career with two seasons at Davidson, is averaging a team-high 3.7 assists per game. Sophomore guard Luca Soroa Schaller ranks second on the Huskies with 3.4 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game.


KenPom.com predicts an 84-73 win for the Dutchmen. Per the wise guys in Vegas, for entertainment purposes only, the Dutchmen are 10 1/2-point favorites. The Dutchmen are 12-9 against the spread this season after snapping a six-game spread losing streak Saturday, when they covered for just the second time in the last nine contests.


ALL-TIME VS. NORTHEASTERN

Hofstra is 32-27 against Northeastern in a series that began during the 1949-50 season. All but three of the meetings have come in conference play since the 1994-95 season, when Hofstra joined the North Atlantic Conference. Northeastern is the only school the Dutchmen have played twice per regular season since 2005-06, the Huskies’ first season in the CAA. 


The teams split the season series last year, when the Dutchmen rode a dominant defensive effort to a 55-37 win in Boston on Jan. 4, 2025 before the Huskies overcame Jean Aranguren’s monster game (35 points, eight rebounds) in a 77-68 win at Hofstra on Feb. 6. Hey! That’s 52 weeks ago tonight.


THE BARONE BOWL

The Barone Bowl was established by me and Northeastern graduate Mike Brodsky during the 2009-10 season, after Northeastern and Hofstra dropped football within two weeks of one another (Hofstra’s decision, of course, was reached after a multi-year study, wink wink nudge nudge).


The Barone Bowl pays homage to the episode of Everybody Loves Raymond in which a Hofstra kicker boots a 68-yard field goal against Northeastern but Frank Barone catches the ball and refuses to give it up. Apparently that wasn’t the type of publicity either school liked. Anyway.


Hofstra enters tonight with an 18-17 lead in the Barone Bowl series. The Dutchmen, who have ended the season with the all-time series lead just four times, have won 15 of the last 22 clashes between the teams since Northeastern’s eight-game winning streak from the 2011-12 through the 2014-15 seasons. The Dutchmen can position themselves to retain the trophy with one regular season win this year, but the trophy can be wrested away by the trailing team if it wins a CAA Tournament game between the rivals. 


This, unfortunately, is a purely symbolic trophy, one which you will not find displayed by either school. But you can find me and Brodsky talking about it on Twitter! Along with Immaculate Grid, which he’s much better at than me.


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

Nuno Bettencourt is finally a Grammy winner bias! (Homer Simpson may make fun of the Grammys but we’ll never mock anything won by the world’s greatest living guitarist)

Matt Janning also looks like Nathan Scott bias! (If you’re a longtime reader, you know the former Huskies star and current assistant coach was a Nathan Scott lookalike long before German Plotnikov ever arrived on the Hofstra campus)

You get a new arena soon bias! (But we’re gonna miss Matthews Arena, which closed its doors Dec. 13)

Oh come on the Patriots can’t already be back in the Super Bowl bias! (A terrible part of American life that ceased to torment us from 2021-24 is back, well that’s just a little on the nose, isn’t it?)

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Keep It Perky: Monmouth

Charlie Kelly, reacting to the ocean like we reacted to a victory Saturday!


IT HAS HAPPENED! The Flying Dutchmen finally halted their five-game skid Saturday afternoon, when they led wire-to-wire in a 73-57 win over Monmouth. Everyone, come back from the ledge! Especially me. 


As will hopefully remain the case for the rest of the season however long it lasts, here’s the Keep It Perky featuring the usual postgame boilerplate material (with much more material than the previous five editions!). The individual news and notes from the win over the Hawks and a preview of Northeastern will be posted tomorrow. Enjoy! (Finally)


THE MOST RECENT GAME SUMMARIZED IN ONE PARAGRAPH

Cruz Davis (24 points) bounced back from his worst game of the season, Joshua Aaron Reaves (a season-high 17 points) continued his surprising emergence as a key rotation piece and Silas Sunday (12 points, 10 rebounds) had his best game of the year as the Dutchmen earned a much-needed victory. Davis, Reaves and Sunday combined for all of the Dutchmen’s points in a game-opening 21-5 run, a stretch in which Monmouth was 1-of-14 shooting with one turnover. A 3-pointer by Preston Edmead put the Dutchmen ahead by 16 again at 24-8 with 8:53 left before the Hawks ended the half on a 25-13 run in which they shot a blistering 11-of-14 from the field. But the Dutchmen entered the half with a 37-33 lead after Andrew Ball missed a 3-pointer (really!) on Monmouth’s last possession. The lead remained between four and eight points for the first five-plus minutes of the second half before Sunday hit a layup and German Plotnikov sank a 3-pointer to spark a 14-4 run that put the Dutchmen ahead by double digits for good. Davis was 4-of-7 from 3-point land after going 3-of-16 in his previous two games. Reaves was 4-of-5 from beyond the arc, the most 3-pointers he’s made against a Division I foe in almost two years, while Sunday recorded the first double-double of his career. Edmead had 13 points on 4-of-14 shooting and committed five turnovers, but he also had eight assists and four turnovers. Plotnikov (seven points) was the only other player to score for the Dutchmen.


3 STARS OF THE GAME (vs. Monmouth, 1/31)

3: Cruz Davis

2: Joshua Aaron Reaves

1: Silas Sunday


SEASON STANDINGS

Cruz Davis 52

Preston Edmead 36

Biggie Patterson 15

Silas Sunday 7

German Plotnikov 7

Victory Onuetu 6

Joshua DeCady 6

Joshua Aaron Reaves 3

Jaeden Roberts 3

A.J. Wills 2

Alex Tsynkevich 1


WAS THIS A UNICORN SCORE?

Nope! But it’s been so long since we got to do this, I don’t even care. This was at least the third 73-57 win for the Dutchmen, who previously earned a victory by that score when they beat Stony Brook on Dec. 5, 2006. That was not a league game, FYI. 


The Dutchmen have recorded three unicorn score victories this season and 63 unicorn score victories since the start of the 2018-19 season, when we first started tracking unicorn scores.


2025-26: Three unicorn scores

2024-25: Seven 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?

Sweet, we get to do this again too! Cruz Davis wasted little time snapping out of his two-game slump by opening the game with a 3-pointer that gave the Dutchmen the lead for good at (double checking here) 3-0 with 19:36 left in the first half. Davis is now tied with German Plotnikov atop the season standings and tied with Plotnikov for third place on the all-time list (or at least since 2022-23). It’s the second-earliest Keith Hernandez of the season for the Dutchmen and the earliest Keith Hernandez achieved via a basket. Davis opened the 92-23 win over Division III Old Westbury by hitting a pair of free throws with 19:50 left. The Dutchmen have now collected the Keith Hernandez via a 3-pointer or nostalgic 3-point play 12 times this season — or every time they went ahead on a field goal. Also quirky: The last two Keith Hernandezes have come against Monmouth, with Davis’ game-opening 3-pointer following the 3-pointer to open overtime by A.J. Wills, who didn’t play until late in the second half on Jan. 10. Super quirky!


German Plotnikov go-ahead 3-pointer vs. Molloy, 11/10/25 (18:47 left 1H)

Preston Edmead go-ahead 3-pointer vs. Bucknell, 11/14/25 (13:30 left 2H)

Biggie Patterson tie-breaking free throw vs. La Salle, 11/28/25 (1:35 left 2H)

Preston Edmead tie-breaking 3-pointer vs. Merrimack, 11/29/25 (15:25 left 1H)

Biggie Patterson tie-breaking 3-pointer vs. Pennsylvania, 11/30/25 (18:03 left 2H)

Cruz Davis tie-breaking 3-pointer vs. Pittsburgh, 12/7/25 (8:38 left 1H)

Cruz Davis tie-breaking free throw vs. Old Westbury, 12/10/25 (19:50 left 1H)

German Plotnikov go-ahead 3-pointer vs. Syracuse, 12/13/25 (:31.9 left 2H)

Cruz Davis nostalgic 3-point play vs. Quinnipiac, 12/21/25 (3:54 left 2H)

Preston Edmead go-ahead 3-pointer vs. Campbell, 12/29/25 (12:05 left 1H)

German Plotnikov tie-breaking 3-pointer vs. Drexel, 1/3/26 (18:27 left 1H)

German Plotnikov go-ahead 3-pointer vs. Towson, 1/8/26 (3:33 left 1H)

A.J. Wills tie-breaking 3-pointer vs. Monmouth, 1/10/26 (4:31 left OT)

Cruz Davis tie-breaking 3-pointer vs. Monmouth, 1/31/26 (19:50 left 1H)


SEASON STANDINGS

Cruz Davis 4

German Plotnikov 4

Preston Edmead 3

Biggie Patterson 2

A.J. Wills 1


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

Tyler Thomas 16

Darlinstone Dubar 14

Cruz Davis 7

German Plotnikov 7

Jean Aranguren 5

Aaron Estrada 4

Preston Edmead 3

Michael Graham 3

Warren Williams 3

Biggie Patterson 2

Silas Sunday 2

Jacco Fritz 2

Jaquan Carlos 2

A.J. Wills 1

Eric Parnell 1

KiJan Robinson 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 TWENTY-THREE GAMES

The Dutchmen improved to 14-9 with Saturday afternoon’s win. This ties the 2025-26 team for the 25th-best record in school history through 23 games. This is the first time the Dutchmen have opened 14-9 since 2021-22 and the 10th time overall in program history. Here is how some notable Hofstra teams have fared through 23 games:


NCAA DIVISION I TOURNAMENT TEAMS

1975-76: 12-11 (loss in 23rd game was the final loss of the regular season)

1976-77: 17-6 (win in 23rd game marked third win of nine-game winning streak that carried Dutchmen into the NCAAs)

1999-2000: 17-6 (loss in 23rd game snapped 10-game winning streak)

2000-01: 19-4 (win in 23rd game marked 11th win in program-record 18-game winning streak)

2019-20 (IT COUNTS TO US): 16-7 (most recent 16-7 start)


NIT TEAMS

1998-99: 16-7

2004-05: 16-7

2005-06: 18-5 (most recent 18-5 start)

2006-07: 17-6 (most recent 17-6 start)

2015-16: 16-7

2018-19: 19-4 (most recent 19-4 start, loss in 23rd game snapped the 16-game winning streak)

2022-23: 15-8 (most recent 15-8 start, win in 23rd game marked third win of 12-game winning streak that continued into the CAA Tournament)


NCAA DIVISION II TOURNAMENT TEAMS

1958-59: 18-5

1961-62: 20-3 (most recent 20-3 start)

1962-63: 17-6 (sixth win of 11-game winning streak)

1963-64: 19-4


Some other notable 23-game records:


2024-25: 12-11 (most recent 12-11 start, loss to Campbell in 23rd game was the start of the Claxton-era six-game losing streak that dropped the Dutchmen under .500 for good)

2023-23: 13-10 (most recent 13-10 start)

2020-21: 13-10 (the Dutchmen’s shortest season — at least in terms of games played — since 1957-58 ends with a 76-58 loss to Elon in the CAA Tournament semifinals) 

2016-17: 10-13 (most recent 10-13 start)

2013-14: 7-16 (most recent 7-16 start, Joe Mihalich’s first team)

2012-13: 5-18 (most recent 5-18 start, tied for worst 23-game record in school history)

2009-10: 11-12 (most recent 11-12 start)

2007-08: 8-15 (most recent 8-15 start)

1995-96: 7-16 (loss in 23rd game marked last loss of Jay Wright-era record nine-game losing streak)

1994-95: 8-15 (Jay Wright’s first year)

1993-94: 5-18 (VBK’s last year)

1991-92: 15-8 (win in 23rd game was fourth in nine-game winning streak that ended in ECC title game)

1987-88: 5-18 (first 5-18 start in school history)

1986-87: 9-14 (most recent 9-14 start)

1981-82: 11-12 (under .500 for good, fifth loss of eight-game losing streak)

1978-79: 8-15 (first loss of season-ending five-game losing streak)

1971-72: 11-12 (under .500 for good, second loss of season-ending four-game losing streak)

1964-65: 11-12 (final win of season)

1960-61: 20-3

1959-60: 22-1 (only 22-1 start & Hofstra’s winningest team, percentage-wise; win in 23rd game was 12th win of season-ending 13-game winning streak)

1957-58: 15-8 (lost season finale)

1955-56: 20-3 (had only back-to-back losses in games 22-23)

1953-54: 14-9 (last loss of season)

1950-51: 13-10 (first 13-10 start and the only one until 2020-21)


Hofstra has never been 23-0, 21-2, 6-17, 4-19, 3-20, 2-21, 1-22 or 0-23 through 23 games.


Eleven seasons were completed in fewer than 23 games:


1936-37: 10-7

1937-38: 10-4

1938-39: 10-8

1939-40: 12-9

1940-41: 13-7

1941-42: 15-6

1942-43: 15-6

1943-44: 7-12

1944-45: 8-13

1945-46: 12-7

1947-48: 13-6


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 FIFTY-SIX

With Saturday afternoon’s win, Speedy Claxton improved to 95-61 (.609) as head coach. That’s the fourth-best known winning percentage for a Hofstra coach through his first 156 games at the helm.


Butch van Breda Kolff I 116-40 (.744, 156th game was the fifth game of his seventh season in 1961-62) 

Frank Reilly 112-44 (.718, 156th game was the 27th and final game of his sixth season in 1952-53) 

Paul Lynner 96-60 (.615, 156th game was the 21st game of his sixth season in 1967-68) 

SPEEDY CLAXTON 95-61 (.609, 156th game was the 23rd game of his fifth season in 2025-26) 

Joe Mihalich 83-73 (.532, 156th game was the 23rd game of his fifth season in 2017-18) 

Tom Pecora 81-75 (.519, 156th game was the third game of his seventh season in 2005-06) 

Jay Wright 79-77 (.506, 156th game was the 11th game of his fifth season in 1998-99) 

Dick Berg 78-78 (.500, 156th game was the 17th game of his sixth season in 1985-86) 

Roger Gaeckler 76-80 (.487, 156th game was the 24th game of his sixth season in 1977-78) 

Butch van Breda Kolff II 71-85 (.455, 156th game was the 15th game of his sixth season in 1993-94) 


No movement in the standings through game no. 156, though Jay Wright records perhaps the biggest signature win of his tenure (so far!) on Dec. 27, 1998 by beating Pennsylvania, 67-62 in the championship game of the ECAC Holiday Festival at Madison Square Garden. That really was one of the first moments we all thought this might be happening. In a quirky bit of quirkiness, Frank Reilly’s sixth season ends with a loss to Dartmouth, the same school that beats the 1993-94 Dutchmen to hand Butch van Breda Kolff’s final team its 10th straight loss as it drops to 1-14. Dick Berg climbs back to .500 in game no. 156 while Roger Gaeckler’s 1977-78 team earns its final win of the season in his 156th game at the helm.


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.