Northeast Conference men's soccer tournament

Northeast Conference
men's soccer tournament
SportSoccer
ConferenceNortheast Conference
Number of teams4
Formatsingle-elimination
Current stadiumCampus sites
Played1989-present
Last contest2025
Current championFDU (10th. title)
Most championshipsFDU (10 titles)
Official websitenortheastconference.org/msoc

The Northeast Conference soccer tournament is the conference soccer championship of the NCAA Division I Northeast Conference (NEC). The annual tournament takes place every November to determine the NEC conference champion and the NEC’s automatic bid into the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship.

In the current format, the top four regular season conference finishers based on winning percentage compete in the single-elimination tournament. The tournament features a semifinal and championship round with each game hosted on the campus of the higher seeded team. The NEC started fielding men's soccer games in 1985 and started a conference tournament in 1989, Fairleigh Dickinson won the inaugural championship.

Fairleigh Dickinson and St. Francis Brooklyn, the latter of which shut down its athletic program after the 2022 season, have won the most titles with nine (9). Fairleigh Dickinson holds the longest consecutive championship streak (4, 2000–03), followed by Monmouth (3, 2009–11). Participation of NEC Tournament Champions in the NCAA tournament has led to an overall record of 11–20, with Fairleigh Dickinson accounting for 7 wins followed by Central Connecticut and Monmouth with 2 wins apiece.

Champions

Finals

The following is a list of conference regular season champions, tournament champions and tournament MVPs listed by year.[1][2]

Key
  • (1) – Title number
  • a.e.t. – Match went to extra time
  • p – Match decided by a penalty shootout after extra time
  •   – Winning team won regular season
Year Champion Score Runner-up MVP Venue Att. Regular season
champion
Teams to NCAA
1985 (no final held) [n 1] LIU Brooklyn LIU Brooklyn
1986 (no final held) [n 1] LIU Brooklyn LIU Brooklyn
1987 (no final held) [n 1] Loyola
1988 (no final held) [n 1] FDU FDU
1989 FDU (1) 6–3 (a.e.t.) LIU Brooklyn German Quijano, FDU Teaneck, NJ LIU Brooklyn
1990 Monmouth (1) 1–0 FDU Jim Adams, MU West Long Branch, NJ Monmouth
1991 St. Francis (NY) (1) 1–0 Monmouth Joni Kallioinen, MU West Long Branch, NJ St. Francis (NY)
1992 Rider (1) 1–0 FDU Pepe St. Phard, Rider Teaneck, NJ Robert Morris
1993 Robert Morris (1) 2–0 LIU Brooklyn Brian Davis, RMU Teaneck, NJ Monmouth
Fairleigh Dickinson
Robert Morris
1994 Robert Morris (2) 2–0 (a.e.t.) Mount St. Mary's Marco Patitucci, RMU Coraopolis, PA Robert Morris Robert Morris
1995 St. Francis (NY) (2) 2–0 Monmouth Gary Goode, SFNY Coraopolis, PA Robert Morris
1996 St. Francis (NY) (3) 2–1 Robert Morris Victor Avwontom, SFNY Coraopolis, PA Robert Morris
1997 LIU Brooklyn (1) 1–0 FDU Andres Gomez, LIU Brooklyn, NY St. Francis (NY)
1998 St. Francis (NY) (4) 2–0 Central Connecticut Dmitri Petrouniak, SFNY Brooklyn, NY St. Francis (NY)
Central Connecticut
1999 UMBC (1) 2–1 Mount St. Mary's Pat Halter, UMBC Baltimore, MD 1,650 UMBC UMBC
2000 FDU (2) 2–0 UMBC Dirceu Hurtado, FDU Teaneck, NJ FDU
2001 FDU (3) 2–1 (a.e.t.) LIU Brooklyn Brian Romero, FDU Hamden, CT Robert Morris
FDU
FDU
2002 FDU (4) 0–0 (4–3 p) LIU Brooklyn Andrew Nucifora, FDU Baltimore, MD LIU Brooklyn
UMBC
FDU
2003 FDU (5) 2–0 Central Connecticut Antonio Nunziata, FDU Loretto, PA FDU FDU
2004 LIU Brooklyn (2) 1–0 FDU Jonas Stigh, LIU Brooklyn Teaneck, NJ FDU LIU Brooklyn
2005 Robert Morris (3) 3–2 (a.e.t.) Monmouth Jacek Przednowek, RMU West Long Branch, NJ 476 Monmouth Robert Morris
2006 Monmouth (2) 1–0 Saint Francis (PA) Steven Holloway, MU West Long Branch, NJ 550 Monmouth Monmouth
2007 Central Connecticut (1) 1–0 Saint Francis (PA) David Tyrie, CCSU West Long Branch, NJ 130 Monmouth Central Connecticut
2008 FDU (6) 7–2 Mount St. Mary's Samson Malijani, FDU West Long Branch, NJ 308 Monmouth FDU
2009 Monmouth (3) 2–1 Quinnipiac RJ Allen, MU West Long Branch, NJ 612 Monmouth Monmouth
2010 Monmouth (4) 1–0 Saint Francis (PA) Bryant Meredith, MU West Long Branch, NJ 950 Monmouth Monmouth
2011 Monmouth (5) 2–1 (a.e.t.) FDU Kalle Sotka, MU Fairfield, CT CCSU
Monmouth
Sacred Heart
Monmouth
2012 FDU (7) 1–1 (6–5 p) Saint Francis (PA) Jacob Lissek, FDU West Haven, CT 215 Quinnipiac FDU
2013 St. Francis Brooklyn (5) 3–2 Bryant Kevin Correa, SFBK New Britain, CT 625 Central Connecticut St. Francis Brooklyn
2014 St. Francis Brooklyn (6) 2–1 (a.e.t.) Saint Francis (PA) Andy Cormack, SFBK Loretto, PA 621 Saint Francis (PA) St. Francis Brooklyn
2015 LIU Brooklyn (1) 2–2 (3–1 p) Saint Francis (PA) Logan Keys, LIU Brooklyn, NY LIU Brooklyn LIU Brooklyn
2016 St. Francis Brooklyn (7) 1–0 (a.e.t.) Saint Francis (PA) Salvatore Barone (SFBK) Brooklyn, NY 511 St. Francis Brooklyn St. Francis Brooklyn
2017 St. Francis Brooklyn (8) 5–0 LIU Brooklyn Ali Tounkara (SFBK) Brooklyn, NY 445 St. Francis Brooklyn St. Francis Brooklyn
2018 LIU Brooklyn (2) 4–0 Bryant Zach Peterson (LIU) Brooklyn, NY 562 LIU Brooklyn LIU Brooklyn
2019 FDU (8) 1–1 (3–2 p) LIU [n 2] Jahmali Waite (FDU) Loretto, PA 38 Merrimack FDU
2020 St. Francis Brooklyn (9) 0–0 (6–5 p) LIU Callum James (SFBK) Brooklyn, NY 0 [n 3] St. Francis Brooklyn LIU
2021 LIU (3) 1–1 (6–5 p) St. Francis Brooklyn Demtri Skoumbakis (LIU) Brookville, NY 250 LIU
St. Francis Brooklyn
LIU
2022 FDU (9) 2–1 St. Francis Brooklyn Jaime Babero (FDU) Teaneck, NJ 518 FDU FDU
2023 LIU (6) 1–0 Sacred Heart Alan Martinez (LIU) Brookville, NY 226 St. Francis Brooklyn LIU
2024 LIU (7) 0–0 (5–4 p) FDU Alan Martinez (LIU) Teaneck, NJ Mercyhurst LIU
2025 FDU (10) 1–0 (a.e.t.) Saint Francis University Stadium Teaneck, NJ
Notes
  1. ^ a b c d Tournament championships began in 1989
  2. ^ After the merger of both athletics teams, LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds and LIU Post Pioneers.
  3. ^ Played without fans in attendance due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Champions by program

The following is a list of conference tournament champions listed by school.

School App. Titles Winning years
FDU 16 10 1989, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2008, 2012, 2019, 2022, 2025
St. Francis Brooklyn [n2 1] 11 9 1991, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2020
LIU [n2 2] 13 7 1997, 2004, 2015, 2018,[n2 3] 2021, 2023, 2024
Monmouth [n2 1] 8 5 1990, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2011
Robert Morris [n2 1] 4 3 1993, 1994, 2005
Central Connecticut 3 1 2007
UMBC [n2 1] 2 1 1999
Rider [n2 1] 1 1 1992
Saint Francis (PA) 7 0
Mount St. Mary's [n2 1] 3 0
Bryant [n2 1] 3 0
Quinnipiac [n2 1] 1 0
Sacred Heart 1 0
Le Moyne [n2 4] 0 0
Merrimack [n2 5] 0 0
Stonehill [n2 6] 0 0
Notes
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h This school no longer sponsors men's soccer in the NEC.
  2. ^ Includes championships won by the LIU Brooklyn program, which was merged with the Division II program of the university's Post campus in July 2019, creating the current LIU program. The unified program inherited Brooklyn's Division I and NEC memberships.
  3. ^ Won by LIU Brooklyn, before the merger.
  4. ^ Le Moyne joined the NEC in 2023.
  5. ^ Merrimack joined the NEC in 2019.
  6. ^ Stonehill joined the NEC in 2022.

References

  1. ^ "NEC Men' Soccer History". NortheastConference.org. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  2. ^ "NEC men's Soccer Record Book" (PDF). northeastconference.org. Retrieved 28 October 2015.