MAAC men's soccer tournament
Conference soccer championship
SportCollege soccer
ConferenceMetro Atlantic Athletic Conference
Number of teams6
FormatSingle-elimination tournament
Played1988–present
Last contest2022
Current championQuinnipiac
Most championshipsLoyola Maryland (12)
Official websitemaacsports.com/msoc

The MAAC men's soccer tournament is the conference championship tournament in soccer for the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC). The tournament has been held every year since 1988. It is a single-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records. The winner, declared conference champion, receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I men's soccer championship.

In 2012, the tournament changed from a ten-team to a four-team tournament. In 2016, the tournament moved to a six-team, three-round tournament with the top two seeds receiving first round byes.

Key

(2) Title number
* Match went to extra time
Match decided by a penalty shootout after extra time
Bold Winning team won regular season
^ Winning team reached College Cup
Winning team lost National Championship
Winning team won National Championship

Finals

Year Champion Score Runner-up Venue Tournament MVP
1988 Army La Salle John Brence, Army
1989 Loyola Maryland 3–0 La Salle Vince Moskunas, Loyola
1990 Loyola Maryland 3–0 La Salle Doug Miller, Loyola
1991 Loyola Maryland 2–0 Fairfield Tom Donahue, Loyola
1992 Loyola Maryland 3–0 Fairfield Jim Garvey, Loyola
1993 Loyola Maryland 1–0* Fairfield Anthony Novello, Fairfield
1994 Loyola Maryland 4–0 Manhattan Doug Willey, Loyola
1995 Loyola Maryland 6–1 Iona Mike Barger, Loyola
1996 Loyola Maryland 2–0 Fairfield J. T. Dorsey, Loyola
1997 Rider 2–0* Loyola Maryland Mark Bennett, Rider
1998 Rider 1–0* Fairfield Craig Wicken, Rider
1999 Fairfield 2–1 Loyola Maryland David Mancini, Fairfield
2000 Marist 3–2* Fairfield Sean Murphy, Marist
2001 Loyola Maryland 1–0* Fairfield Graham Marchant, Loyola
2002 Loyola Maryland 2–1 Marist Steven Coleman, Loyola
2003 Saint Peter's 2–1 Loyola Maryland Rinaldo Chambers, Saint Peter's
2004 Marist 2–0 Rider Keith Detelj, Marist
2005 Marist 2–1 Fairfield Keith Detelj, Marist
2006 Fairfield 1–0 Saint Peter's Lessing Field (Fairfield, CT) Alex Cunliffe, Fairfield
2007 Loyola Maryland 1–0 Saint Peter's Disney's Wide World of Sports (Lake Buena Vista, FL) Miloš Kočić, Loyola
2008 Fairfield 1–0 Loyola Maryland Tenney Stadium (Poughkeepsie, NY) Christian Uy, Fairfield
2009 Loyola Maryland 1–0* Niagara Lessing Field (Fairfield, CT) Tennant McVea, Loyola
2010 Saint Peter's 2–1 Iona Diane Geppi-Aikens Field (Baltimore, MD) Lebogang Pila, Saint Peter's
2011 Fairfield 3–1 Manhattan ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex (Lake Buena Vista, FL) Jack Burridge, Fairfield
2012 Niagara 1–0* Loyola Maryland Leonidoff Field (Poughkeepsie, NY) Rene De Zorzi, Niagara
2013 Quinnipiac 0–0† Monmouth Lessing Field (Fairfield, CT) Borja Angoitia, Quinnipiac
2014 Monmouth 2–1* Fairfield Quinnipiac Field (Hamden, Connecticut) Emmanuel Senyah Agyemang, Monmouth
2015 Rider 3–2 Monmouth ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex (Lake Buena Vista, FL) Elliot Otmani, Rider
2016 Rider 3–1 Quinnipiac Quinnipiac Field (Hamden, Connecticut) Ryan Baird, Rider
2017 Fairfield 1–0 Rider Lessing Field (Fairfield, Connecticut) Angus Hastings, Fairfield
2018 Rider 1–0 Quinnipiac Quinnipiac Soccer Stadium (Hamden, Connecticut) Elliott Otmani, Rider
2019 Iona 3–2* Saint Peter's Jaroschak Field (Jersey City, New Jersey) Josh Plimpton, Iona
2020 Monmouth 1–0 Quinnipiac Quinnipiac Soccer Stadium (Hamden, Connecticut) Julian Gomez, Monmouth
2021 Marist 2–2† Rider Tenney Stadium (Poughkeepsie, New York) Kyle Galloway, Marist
2022 Quinnipiac (2) 3–2 Iona Quinnipiac Soccer Stadium (Hamden, Connecticut) Karl Netzell, Quinnipiac
2023 Rider (6) 2-1 Iona Mazzella Field (New Rochelle, New York) Momo Diop, Rider

Championships by school

Team Titles
Loyola Maryland 12
Rider 6
Fairfield 5
Marist 3
Monmouth 2
Saint Peter's 2
Quinnipiac 2
Army 1
Iona 1
Niagara 1

References

  • "Men's Soccer Championship History". Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.