Senior Day 4-28-18
Head Coach Cassandra Haase is entering her second season in charge of the University of the District of Columbia women's lacrosse team

UDC Women's Lacrosse Team Voted 9th in ECC Preseason Poll

West Babylon, N.Y. – The women's lacrosse coaches of the East Coast Conference have predicted LIU Post will win a fifth straight conference title in 2019 with the Pioneers overwhelmingly selected to the top spot in the league's preseason poll. Seniors Hunter Isnardi (Hicksville, N.Y.) and Talia Stagnitta (Patchogue, N.Y.), both from Mercy College, have been selected as the ECC Preseason Offensive and Defensive Player of the Year, respectively.  

 

After winning their fourth straight ECC title in 2018, LIU Post starts the 2019 campaign by earning seven of nine first place votes to top the poll with 79 points. The Pioneers also begins the season ranked No. 7 in the Intercollegiate Women's Lacrosse Coaches Association (IWLCA) Division II Preseason Poll. LIU Post also has a stacked roster with eight of their nine All-Conference honorees from last year, including First Team picks Brianna Feldman, Alyssa Mallery, Paige Sherlock, and Carly Spano, back in the fold.

 

Mercy, ECC runner-up each of the past two seasons, received the final two first place votes to come in second in the poll with 74 points.  NYIT is third with 63 points and is followed by Molloy in fourth with 50 points. Roberts Wesleyan, an ECC Championship participant each of the past two seasons is fifth with 46 points. Bridgeport rounds out the expected conference tournament participants at sixth with 35 points.

 

Isnardi earns the preseason honor after a historic 2018 season. During her junior campaign, Isnardi found the back of the cage an ECC and Division II-leading 97 times and added nine assists for 106 points on the season. Her goal total not only led the country, but was the second-highest single-season mark in Division II history. Isnardi also etched her name in the NCAA record book with 214 draw controls and 11.89 draw controls per game, both new Division II single-season records. On top of that, she also led all of Division II  with 5.39 goals per game and a free position percentage of 79.2. For her outstanding play, Isnardi was named the ECC Midfielder of the Year, an IWLCA All-America First Team selection, and the IWLCA Division II Midfielder of the Year. In addition, if Isnardi can repeat her 2018 output, she will be on milestone watch once again this season. With 211 career goals heading into 2019, she sits 89 goals away from breaking the Division II record of 299.

 

While Isnardi is a standout on the offensive end of the field, her teammate Stagnitta is nearly as decorated for her defensive prowess. Stagnitta earned her second straight All-America honor as an IWLCA First Team selection in 2018. Also the ECC Defender of the Year, Stagnitta compiled 50 ground balls, 33 caused turnovers, and 61 draw controls on the season. Her caused turnover mark was second in the ECC, while her ground ball total ranked fifth.

 



2019 ECC Women's Lacrosse Preseason Poll

School                Points    Last Year's Record

1. LIU Post (7)            79    14-6 (8-0 ECC)

2. Mercy (2)            74    14-4 (7-1 ECC)

3. NYIT             63    14-5 (6-2 ECC)

4. Molloy            50    11-8 (5-3 ECC)

5. Roberts Wesleyan        46    9-9 (3-5 ECC)

6. Bridgeport            35    6-9 (3-5 ECC)

7. St. Thomas Aquinas        30    6-10 (3-5 ECC)

8. Queens            19    5-11 (1-7 ECC)

9. Dist. Columbia        9    1-13 (0-8 ECC)

 

( ) - first place votes                     

 

Preseason Offensive Player of the Year:  Hunter Isnardi, Sr., M, Mercy

Preseason Defensive Player of the Year:  Talia Stagnitta, Sr., D, Mercy

 

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About the ECC

 

Founded as the New York Collegiate Athletic Conference in 1989 and rechristened the East Coast Conference in July 2006, the ECC was formed to enhance intercollegiate athletic competition among member institutions and to assist them in integrating athletics into their academic program in a fiscally sound way. The ECC is committed to the highest standards of scholarship, sportsmanship, teamwork, and citizenship. Its mission is to promote the total person concept in its student-athletes, which stresses the abilities to excel in academic achievement, athletic competition, and positive character traits. East Coast Conference members include: University of Bridgeport (Bridgeport, Conn.); University of the District of Columbia (Washington, D.C.); Daemen College (Amherst, N.Y.); LIU Post (Brookville, N.Y.); Mercy College (Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.); Molloy College (Rockville Centre, N.Y.); New York Institute of Technology (Old Westbury, N.Y.); Queens College (Flushing, N.Y.); Roberts Wesleyan College (Rochester, N.Y.) and St. Thomas Aquinas College (Sparkill, N.Y.). Associate Members include: Adelphi University (Garden City, N.Y.); Bloomfield College (Bloomfield, N.J.); Caldwell University (Caldwell, N.J.); Chestnut Hill College (Philadelphia, Pa.); Felician University (Rutherford, N.J.), Georgian Court University (Lakewood, N.J.), Holy Family University (Philadelphia, Pa.), Kutztown University (Kutztown, Pa.), Lincoln University (Lincoln University, Pa.), Lincoln Memorial University (Harrogate, Tenn.), Post University (Waterbury, Conn.), Southern New Hampshire University (Manchester, N.H.), and Wilmington University (New Castle, Del.).


The ECC sponsors the following championship sports: baseball; men's and women's basketball; women's bowling; men's and women's cross country; eSports (League of Legends); men's and women's lacrosse; softball; men's and women's tennis; men's and women's indoor track and field; men's and women's outdoor track and field; men's and women's soccer; and women's volleyball.

 

The East Coast Conference is a proud member of the NCAA and Division II. Division II is a dynamic and engaging group of colleges, institutions and conferences of varying sizes and educational missions. Division II members encourage and support diversity; value sportsmanship, fairness and equity; and place the highest priority on the overall educational excellence of the student-athlete.