Merrimack Warriors men's basketball

Merrimack Warriors men's basketball
2025–26 Merrimack Warriors men's basketball team
UniversityMerrimack College
Head coachJoe Gallo (10th season)
LocationNorth Andover, Massachusetts
ArenaMerrimack Athletics Complex
(capacity: 1,200[1])
ConferenceMetro Atlantic Athletic Conference
NicknameWarriors
ColorsBlue and gold[2]
   
NCAA Division I tournament Sweet Sixteen
1977*, 1978*
NCAA Division I tournament appearances
1977*, 1978*, 1991*, 1992*, 2000*, 2008*, 2009*, 2010*, 2017*, 2018*, 2019*
Conference tournament champions
NE-10: 1992, 2000, 2019

NEC: 2023
Conference regular-season champions
NE-10: 2000

NEC: 2020, 2023, 2024

MAAC: 2026
ECAC Division II tournament champions
1989, 1998, 1999

* at Division II level

The Merrimack Warriors men's basketball team represents Merrimack College in North Andover, Massachusetts, United States. The school's team currently competes in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They are currently led by 9th year head coach Joe Gallo and play their home games in Hammel Court[3] and Lawler Arena at the Merrimack Athletics Complex.

The Warriors played their first season in 1949 at the D2 level. In 1984 they joined the Northeast 10 conference. They would stay there from 1984 to 2019 and win three conference championships and one regular season title. They would also make 11 NCAA D2 tournament appearances. Making it to the sweet 16 in 1976 and 1977. They would also win 3 ECAC tournament titles during this period.

In their first year at the Division 1 level, the 2019–20 team went 14–4 in NEC play and won the regular season title, despite in the preseason being picked by the media to finish 11th out of 11 teams. Due to the NCAA's policy on reclassifying programs, the Warriors were not eligible to compete in the NCAA tournament or the NIT until the 2023–24 season. The Warriors have never appeared in the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. In 2024, the Warriors joined the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, leaving the NEC.[4]

History

The Merrimack basketball program started in 1949 they would play as a D2 independent. Paul Lanni was hired as their first ever head coach and led them to a 7-2 record in their first season. Lanni would leave after just one season. From 1950 to 1958 the Warriors would go through three coaching changes. In 1958 they would hire William S. LaRochelle who would lead the team for the next decade in his 12 seasons LaRochelle would lead the warriors to nine winning seasons. With his best season coming in 1966-67 when he led the warriors to a 17-6 record. Roger Damphousse would be the first player in program history to be named an all American in 1961. LaRochelle would leave after the 1969-70 season being the first ever warrior coach to get to the 100 win mark ending with an overall record of 153-114.[5]

The Monahan era

After LaRochelle left in 1970 then at the time Merrimack Athletic director Frank T. Monahan would take over as head coach. Monahan's first five seasons would be very up and down going 55-71 during this time. Steve McMahon would be the first ever warrior to be drafted to the NBA in 1972. During the 1975–76 season Monahan and the warriors took a big step forward as he led them to their first 20 win season in program history. They would keep this momentum going into next season. As he led the warriors to a 19–9 record this resulted in their first ever NCAA Division II tournament birth in program history. The warriors would make it to the sweet sixteen that year beating Bridgeport in the first round 107–83. They would eventually fall to Sacred Heart 110–104 in the sweet 16. After leading the warriors to one of the best seasons in program history. Monahan would one up this the following season in 1977–78 by leading the warriors to a program high 22–6 record and getting them back into the NCAA Division II tournament. The warriors would also be ranked as high as #2 in the nation during this season. On top of this star player Ed Murphy led NCAA in scoring this year and Coach Monahan would be named the New England coach of the year. Once again the Warriors would win their first round match up dominating Bryant Bulldogs 116–91. But for the second year in a row the Warriors would meet Sacred heart in the sweet sixteen and would once again lose 84–83. These two seasons would be the furthest Merrimack ever made it in the D2 tournament. Monahan would coach another two seasons before eventually resigning in 1980.

The Hammel era

Frank Monahan's assistant Bert Hammel took over the head coaching position after he left in 1980, and Hammel was here for the long haul as he would stay as Merrimack head coach from 1980 all the way till 2016. Hammel led the warriors to a some success in his first 4 years. But big changes came in 1984 when for the first time in program history the warriors joined a conference that being the Northeast 10. In just their second year in the conference during the 1985-86 season. The warriors would go 19-9 overall and 9-5 in their conference, finishing in 2nd place. They would then beat Assumption in the quarterfinals 83-78. They would then meet AIC in the semifinals, beating them 107-92. Punching their ticket to their first appearance in the NE10 Championship game. They would eventually fall to Springfield 70-65. Even with the loss it was still a great year for the program showing they could hold their own in their new conference. During the 1988-89 season, the Warriors compiled a 22-9 record and were invited to the ECAC metro tournament. The warriors would go on to beat New York tech in the semifinals 102-78 and would beat Long Island-C.W. Post 98-85 to win their first championship in program history. Hammel would lead the Warriors to their 3rd NCAA tournament appearance in 1991 with a 21-9 record. Hammel would be named NE10 coach of the year and Paul Neal would be named NE10 MVP. But the Warriors would lose in the first round of the NCAA tournament to Franklin Pierce 82-79. The Warriors would have a historic season the following year in 1992 going 22-9 and beating Saint Anslem 92-77 to win their first NE10 championship in program history and making it to back-to-back NCAA tournaments. In the 1992 NCAA tournament the warriors would lose in the first round to Bridgeport 91-84. After a couple of mediocre seasons, the Warriors would hit a nice stretch in the late 90s going into the 2000s. As they would win back to back ECAC metro championships in 1998 and 1999 beating St Michaels 80-75 for the title in 1998 and beating NJIT 96-82 for the title 1999. The following year they would go 22-9 and win both the NE10 regular season and tournament championships, beating AIC 84-78. Punching their 5 ticket to the 2000 NCAA tournament the warriors would beat Saint rose 92-64 in the first round before losing in the round of 32 to Adelphi 90-64. After some unsuccessful seasons, two Warriors players would win NE10 rookies of the year: Darren Duncan 2007 and Darin Mency in 2008. Hammel would lead the warriors to three straight NCAA tournament appearances in 2008, 2009 and 2010. In 2008, they would lose in the first round to Bentley 81-61. In 2009, they would beat Umass Lowell in the first round 86-84 before getting eliminated by Bentley again in the round of 32 79-76. Hammel's final run in the tournament in 2010 would look awfully similar to the year prior, as they would beat Umass Lowell 81-62 in the first round before getting eliminated by Bentley for the third year in a row, losing 83-79. Hammel would coach for another 6 seasons after the 2010 season before retiring in 2016 finishing with a record of 526-491 setting the all-time wins record for the warriors.[6]

The Gallo era

In 2016, Gallo was hired as head coach at his alma mater, replacing Bert Hammel. Gallo led the program to immediate success. In his first 3 seasons he led the warriors to the NCAA division II tournament 3 years in a row in 2017 2018 and 2019. The warriors would make it to the round of 32 in 2017 and 2018. Gallo would also lead the program to their first NE10 title in 19 years during the 2018-19 season beating New Haven 51-46 for the title. 2019 would be the warriors last ever appearance in the NCAA D2 tournament and they would lose to Dominican (NY) 64-50 in the first round. They would finish with 11 total appearances. After 35 years in the NE10 In 2019 The warriors jumped to division I. Moving to the NEC In just their second game at the DI level the warriors would shock the world by beating big ten opponent Northwestern 72-62 for their first ever D1 victory. From here In just their first season in Division I Gallo would go on to lead Merrimack to a 20-11 overall record and a 14-4 conference record and a Northeast Conference regular season title in 2020, Gallo was named conference coach of the year along with getting a plethora of other coaching awards.[7] Juvaris Hayes was named the Lefty Driesell Award winner and would be the first player in team history to be named a D1 all American. Capping off a historic season. During the 2022-23 season the warriors would start out 2-13 overall. But they would only lose 3 more games after that finishing the regular season 15-16 overall and 12-4 in conference winning another regular season titles in 2023. For the first time the warriors were allowed to compete in the NEC tournament. As the 1 seed the warriors would beat LIU and Sacred heart to advance to the championship game. The Warriors would play FDU in the title game and win a nail biter 67-66 to win their first and only NEC tournament. But the warriors could not go to the NCAA division I tournament due to NCAA transitional rule. Jordan Minor would be named NEC player of the year and the warriors would end the that season on an 11 game win streak which was longest by any team in the country that season. The warriors would go 21-12 and 13-3 in conference the next season in 2023-24 and win their third NEC regular season title in just 5 years. The warriors would also sweep the NEC awards this year as Adam Clark won NEC rookie of the year, Brian Etumnu would be named most improved player and Jordan Derkack would be named defensive of the year and conference MVP. Gallo and the warriors would also get back to the NEC championship game in 2024 now eligible for the tournament but would fall to Wagner 54-47. This would be the warriors last season in NEC. The warriors would end their time in the NEC with an overall record of 82-64 and a dominant conference record 58-28 they never had a losing record in NEC conference play. In 2024 Gallo and the warriors would move to the MAAC Conference.[4] They would finish in second place in their first year going 18-15 overall and 14-6 in conference before losing to Mount Saint Mary's in the MAAC semifinals 57-55. During the 2025–26 season the Warriors won a program best 23 games and claimed their first MAAC regular season championship. Freshman Kevair Kennedy also became the first player to win both the MAAC Rookie and Player of the year awards.[8] They reached the 2026 MAAC men's basketball tournament final however they were defeated by Siena.

Season-by-season record

Year Coach Overall Record Conference record Conference champs/standings Postseason
W L W L
1949-50 Paul Lanni 7 2
1950-51 Larry Cicero 8 9
1951-52 Larry Cicero 8 11
1952-53 Larry Cicero 8 10
1953-54 Irman Pierce 4 15
1954-55 Kevin Harrington 8 15
1955-56 Kevin Harrington 9 15
1956-57 Kevin Harrington 8 18
1957-58 Kevin Harrington 4 16
1958-59 William S. LaRochelle 12 11
1959-60 William S. LaRochelle 11 11
1960-61 William S. LaRochelle 15 11
1961-62 William S. LaRochelle 12 9
1962-63 William S. LaRochelle 14 9
1963-64 William S. LaRochelle 13 7
1964-65 William S. LaRochelle 14 6
1965-66 William S. LaRochelle 7 15
1966-67 William S. LaRochelle 17 6
1967-68 William S. LaRochelle 14 11
1968-69 William S. LaRochelle 11 11
1969-70 William S. LaRochelle 12 10
1970-71 Frank T. Monahan 11 13
1971-72 Frank T. Monahan 16 8
1972-73 Frank T. Monahan 8 18
1973-74 Frank T. Monahan 9 17
1974-75 Frank T. Monahan 11 15
1975-76 Frank T. Monahan 21 8
1976-77 Frank T. Monahan 19 9 NCAA Sweet 16 (W Bridgeport 107-83)

L Sacred Heart 110-104)

1977-78 Frank T. Monahan 22 6 NCAA Sweet 16 (W Bryant 116-91) ( L Sacred Heart 84-83)
1978-79 Frank T. Monahan 3 24
1979-80 Frank T. Monahan 9 18
1980-81 Bert Hammel 12 15 10 10
1981-82 Bert Hammel 17 10 13 5
1982-83 Bert Hammel 13 14 8 11
1983-84 Bert Hammel 14 13 10 11
NE10
1984-85 Bert Hammel 11 17 3 11 6th place NE10 Semifinal
1985-86 Bert Hammel 19 9 9 5 2nd place NE10 Runner up
1986-87 Bert Hammel 13 16 7 7 3rd place NE10 Semifinal
1987-88 Bert Hammel 9 19 4 14 9th place NE10 First round
1988-89 Bert Hammel 22 9 13 5 3rd place ECAC[9] tournament champions (W New York tech 102-78) (W Long Island-C.W. Post 98-85)
1989-90 Bert Hammel 15 15 11 7 3rd place NE10 Semifinals
1990-91 Bert Hammel 21 9 14 4 2nd place NCAA Round of 32 ( L Franklin Pierce 82-79)
1991-92 Bert Hammel 18 14 9 9 6th place

NE10Tournament champions

NCAA Round of 32 (L Bridgeport 91-84)
1992-93 Bert Hammel 11 16 7 11 8th place NE10 Quarterfinals
1993-94 Bert Hammel 11 17 7 11 9th place NE10 Quarterfinals
1994-95 Bert Hammel 14 13 9 9 6th place NE10 Quarterfinals
1995-96 Bert Hammel 12 16 7 9 6th place NE10 Semifinals
1996-97 Bert Hammel 11 15 6 12 8th place
1997-98 Bert Hammel 16 13 9 11 7th place ECAC tournament champions (W U Albany 92-82)

(W St Michaels 80-75)

1998-99 Bert Hammel 22 7 12 6 4th place ECAC tournament champions (W U Albany 76-62)

(W NJIT 96-82)

1999-00 Bert Hammel 22 9 13 5 1st place

NE10 regular champions

NE10 tournament champions

NCAA Round of 32 ( W Saint Rose 92-64)

( L Adelphi90-64)

2000-01 Bert Hammel 13 15 12 11 9th place NE10 Quarterfinals
2001-02 Bert Hammel 6 20 5 17 13th place
2002-03 Bert Hammel 11 17 8 14 11th place NE10 First round
2003-04 Bert Hammel 17 12 11 11 9th place NE10 Quarterfinals
2004-05 Bert Hammel 14 15 9 13 10th place NE10 Quarterfinals
2005-06 Bert Hammel 15 14 11 10 8th place NE10 Quarterfinals
2006-07 Bert Hammel 8 20 7 15 12th place NE10 First round
2007-08 Bert Hammel 17 12 11 11 6th place NCAA round of 64 ( L Bentley 81-68)
2008-09 Bert Hammel 21 9 16 6 4th place NCAA round of 32 ( W Umass Lowell 86-84) ( L Bentley 79-76)
2009-10 Bert Hammel 21 9 16 6 3rd place NCAA round of 32 (W Umass Lowell 81-62) (L Bentley 83-79)
2010-11 Bert Hammel 13 14 9 13 10th place NE10 First round
2011-12 Bert Hammel 15 12 12 10 5th place NE10 Quarterfinals
2012-13 Bert Hammel 12 15 9 13 11th place
2013-14 Bert Hammel 9 17 7 14 6th place
2014-15 Bert Hammel 16 12 10 11 5th place NE10 Quarterfinals
2015-16 Bert Hammel 15 12 10 11 7th place
2016-17 Joe Gallo 19 12 12 9 3rd place NCAA round of 32 (W Le Moyne 72-68) ( L St. Thomas Aquinas 73-70)
2017-18 Joe Gallo 20 12 14 7 2nd place NCAA round of 32 (W Bridgeport 85-70) (L Bloomfield 109-91)
2018-19 Joe Gallo 22 10 14 7 2nd place

NE10 tournament champions

NCAA round of 64(L Dominican (NY) 64-50)
NEC
2019-20 Joe Gallo 20 11 14 4 1st place

NEC regular season champions

Could not compete due to NCAA transitional period
2020-21 Joe Gallo 9 9 9 9 4th place Could not compete due to NCAA transitional period
2021-22 Joe Gallo 14 16 10 8 4th place The Basketball Classic ( UMBC game cancelled)
2022-23 Joe Gallo 18 16 12 4 1st place

NEC regular season and TournamentChampions

Could not compete due to NCAA transitional period
2023-24 Joe Gallo 21 12 13 3 1st place

NEC regular season champions

NEC Runner up
MAAC
2024-25 Joe Gallo 18 15 14 6 2nd place MAAC semifinals
2025-25 Joe Gallo 23 11 17 3 1st place MAAC regular season champions MAAC Runner up
TOTALS 1056 980 473 422

Source [10]

Postseason

NCAA Division II tournament results

The Warriors appeared in the NCAA Division II Tournament eleven times they have a combined record of 7-11

Year Round Opponent Result
1976 Round of 32

Sweet 16

Bridgeport

Sacred Heart

W 107-83

L 110-104

1977 Round of 32

Sweet 16

Bryant

Sacred heart

W 116-91

L 84-83

1991 Round of 32 Franklin Pierce L 82-79
1992 Round of 32 Bridgeport L 91-84
2000 Round of 64

Round of 32

Saint Rose

Adelphi

W 92-84

L 90-64

2008 Round of 32 Bentley L 81-64
2009 Round of 64

Round of 32

UMass Lowell

Bentley

W 86-84

L 79-76

2010 Round of 64

Round of 32

UMass Lowell

Bentley

W 81-61

L 83-79

2017 Round of 64

Round of 32

Le Moyne

St. Thomas A

W 72-68

L 73-70

2018 Round of 64

Round of 32

Bridgeport

Bloomfield

W 85-70

L 109-91

2019 Round of 32 Dominican (NY) L 64-50

ECAC Metro tournament results

The warriors appeared in 3 ECAC Metro tournaments and won all 3

Year Round Opponent Result
1989 Semi Final

Final

New York Tech

Long Island C.W post

W 102-78

W 99-85

1998 Semi Final

Final

U Albany

St Michael's

W 92-82

W 80-75

1999 Semi Final

Final

U Albany

NJIT

W 76-62

W 96-82

Head coaches

Coach Tenure Record Conf. Titles Regular season titles NCAA Apps.
Joe Gallo 2016-Pres 184-124 2 4 3
Bert Hammel 1980-2016 526-491 2 1 6
Frank T. Monahan 1970-80 128-134 0 0 2
William S. LaRochelle 1958-70 153-116 0 0 0
Kevin Harrington 1954-58 28-53 0 0 0
Irman Pierce 1953-54 4-15 0 0 0
Larry Cicero 1950-53 24-30 0 0 0
Paul Lanni 1949-50 7-2 0 0 0

Source[5]

Player and coach awards

NCAA Division II scoring leader

MAAC player of the year

MAAC Defensive players of the year

  • Bryan Etumnu (2025)
  • KC Ugwuakazi (2026)

MAAC Rookie of the year

NEC player of the year

NEC Defensive players of the year

NEC Rookie of the year

  • Javon Bennett (2023)
  • Adam “Budd” Clark (2024)

NEC Most improved player

  • Bryan Etumnu (2024)

NE10 Awards

NE10 Player of the year

  • Paul Neal (1991)[11]

NE10 Defensive player of the year

NE10 Rookie player of the year

  • Steve Scott (1987)
  • Darren Duncan (2007)
  • Darin Mency (2008)
  • Juvaris Hayes (2017)

NE10 Coach of the year

Other awards

Lefty Driesell Award

MAAC Coach of the year

NEC Coach of the year

  • Joe Gallo (2020)

John McLendon Award

  • Joe Gallo (2020)

ECAC Coach of the Year

  • Joe Gallo (2020)

NABC District Coach of the Year

  • Joe Gallo (2020, 2023)

USBWA Coach of the Year

  • Joe Gallo (2020)

HoopDirt.com NCAA Div. 1 Coach of the year

  • Joe Gallo (2020)

New England UPI Division II coach of the year (1978)

All-Americans

  • Roger Damphousse —1961, 1962
  • Ed Murphy — 1976, 1977, 1978
  • Dana Skinner —1978
  • Joe Dickson — 1982, 1983, 1984
  • Paul Neal — 1983
  • John McVeigh — 1997
  • Darren Duncan — 2009, 2010
  • Dee Mency — 2011
  • Wayne Mack — 2012
  • Juvaris Hayes — 2018, 2019, 2020

Merrimack Athletics hall of fame

The following is a list of people associated with the Merrimack men's basketball program who were elected into the Merrimack Athletic Hall of Fame (induction date in parentheses)[12]

  • Roger Damphousse (1984)
  • Ed Murphy (1984)
  • W. Stephen McMahon (1985)
  • Dana Skinner (1985)
  • John Martin (1986)
  • Ro Walsh (1986)
  • Gerry Stopyra (1989)
  • Frank T. Monahan (1989)
  • Peter Dufour (1989)
  • Bob Lemay (1991)
  • Joseph P. Daley (1991)
  • Joe Dickson (1991)
  • Larry Roberson (1993)
  • Paul Neal (2004)
  • Darren Duncan (2017)
  • Gary Duda (2022)

Statistical leaders and records

All time point leaders
Rank Player Years Points
1 Ed Murphy 1974-1978 2,874
2 Joe Dickson 1980-1984 2,130
3 Gelvis Solano 2012-2016 2,063
4 Darren Duncan 2006-2010 2,049
5 Darin Mency 2007-2011 2,039
6 Gary Duda 1988-1992 2,008
7 Juvaris Hayes 2016-2020 1,951
8 Paul Neal 1987-1991 1,922
9 Rodger Damphousse 1958-1962 1,774
10 Dana Skinner 1975-1978 1,746
All time rebound leaders
Rank Player Years Rebounds
1 Larry Roberson 1971-1974 1,066
2 Craig Griffin 2000-2004 854
3 Jordan Minor 2019-2023 791
4 Reggie Carter 1996-2000 776
5 Juvaris Hayes 2016-2020 741
6 Darin Mency 2007-2011 735
7 Justin Leith 2001-2004 722
8 Billy Reilly 1966-1969 711
9 Steve McMahon 1968, 1970-1972 696
10 Tim Hart 1982-1986 678

Single season records

  • Scoring average: Ed Murphy (32.0) 1976-77
  • Field goals made: Ed Murphy (369) 1976-77
  • Field goals attempted: Ed Murphy (610) 1977-78
  • Field goal percentage: Tyler Young (72.5%) 2009-10
  • 3 point field goals made: Gary Duda (128) 1991-92
  • Most 3 point field goals attempted: Gary Duda (296) 1991-92
  • 3 point field goal percentage: Joe Pazera (50.3% 73-145) 1986-87
  • Free throws made: Darren Duncan (234) 2008-09
  • Free throws attempted: Darren Duncan (292) 2008-09
  • Free throw percentage: Dana Skinner (92.2%) 1977-78
  • Rebounds: Larry Roberson (383) 1972-73
  • Assist: Juvaris Hayes (287)

All time records

  • Scoring average: Ed Murphy (26.4) 1974-78
  • Field goals made: Ed Murphy (1,213) 1974-78
  • Field goals attempted: Ed Murphy (2,098) 1974-78
  • Field goal percentage: Aaron Strothers (64.0%) 2008-12
  • 3 point field goals made: Gary Duda (389) 1988-92
  • Most 3 point field goals attempted: Gary Duda (904) 1988-92
  • 3 point field goal percentage: Troy Hammel (43.2% 205-473) 2012-16
  • Free throws made: Darren Duncan (715) 2006-10
  • Free throws attempted: Darren Duncan (918) 2006-2010
  • Free throw percentage: Troy Hammel (88.3) 2012-16
  • Rebounds per game average: Larry Roberson (14.0) 1971-74
  • Assist per game average: Peter Dufour (9.0) 1975-78
  • Assist: Juvaris Hayes (952) 2016-20

Single game records

  • Most points in a game: Steve McMahon (52) 1971-72
  • Most rebounds in a game: Larry Roberson (27) 1972-73
  • Most assists in a game: Greg Hendra (22) 1982-83
  • 3 point field goals made: Matt Van Leeuwen 3/7/99, Gary Duda 2/8/92, Ryan Boulter 1/30/17 and Ernest Shelton 10/13/25 (9)
  • Most 3 point field goals attempted: Darren Mency (19) 2/23/11
  • 3 point field goal percentage: Darren Alix (80% 8-10) 1/7/96

source[13]

Home Courts

Since the program's inception in 1949. The Warriors have played their home games at Hammel Court located in the Merrimack athletic complex. The gym is named after former head coach Bert Hammel. In 2021 the warriors announced that Lawler arena (the hockey rink) would host its first ever basketball game.[14] Ever since the 2021-22 season the warriors have split their home games between Hammel court and Lawler Arena.

During the 2025-26 season the team will play every single home game at Lawler Arena.[15]

Warriors in professional basketball

NBA/G League

International Leagues

References

  1. ^ "Facilities".
  2. ^ "Merrimack College Brand Guidelines". Retrieved February 22, 2017.
  3. ^ Merrimack athletic complex https://merrimackathletics.com/facilities/merrimack-athletics-complex-mac-/13
  4. ^ a b Merrimack joins the MAAC https://www.merrimack.edu/news/merrimack-college-accepts-invitation-to-join-metro-atlantic-athletic-conference/
  5. ^ a b Merrimack college coaches Database https://www.coachesdatabase.com/merrimack-warriors-basketball/
  6. ^ Bert Hammel page Merrimack website https://merrimackathletics.com/sports/mens-basketball/roster/coaches/bert-hammel/455
  7. ^ "Saint Francis U's Isaiah Blackmon Tabbed NEC Men's Basketball Player of the Year" (Press release). Northeast Conference. March 3, 2020. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
  8. ^ "2026 MAAC Men's Basketball Major Awards Announced". maacsports.com. 2026-03-04. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  9. ^ ECAC championship archives http://jonfmorse.com/wiki/index.php?title=ECAC_Men%27s_Basketball_Tournaments
  10. ^ Merrimack basketball season archives https://merrimackathletics.com/sports/2017/7/27/archives-mens-basketball.aspx
  11. ^ NE10 record books https://northeast10.org/documents/2024/8/22/Men_s_Basketball_Record_Book_2023_24_8_22_24.pdf
  12. ^ Merrimack hall of fame https://merrimackathletics.com/sports/2017/7/12/HOF-index.aspx
  13. ^ Merrimack basketball statical leaders https://merrimackathletics.com/documents/2023/6/22/Men_s_Basketball_Record_Book.pdf
  14. ^ Men's Basketball Rocks Lehigh in Inaugural Game at Lawler Arena https://www.merrimack.edu/news/mens-basketball-rocks-lehigh-in-inaugural-game-at-lawler-arena/
  15. ^ "2025-26 Women's Basketball Schedule". Merrimack College Athletics. Retrieved 2025-10-28.
  16. ^ Merrimack drafted players database https://basketball.realgm.com/ncaa/conferences/Northeast-Conference/27/Merrimack-College/1645/nba-draft