Shenandoah Hornets
| Shenandoah Hornets | |
|---|---|
| University | Shenandoah University |
| NCAA | Division III |
| Conference | ODAC (primary) |
| Athletic director | DeShon Foxx |
| Location | Winchester, Virginia |
| Varsity teams | 23 |
| Football stadium | Glo Fiber Field at Shentel Stadium |
| Basketball arena | James R. Wilkins, Jr. Athletics & Events Center |
| Nickname | Hornets |
| Colors | Red and Blue |
| Mascot | Buzzy |
| Website | suhornets |
The Shenandoah Hornets are the athletic teams that represent Shenandoah University, located in Winchester, Virginia, in intercollegiate sports. The Hornets are members of the NCAA's Division III and the Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC). Shenandoah joined the ODAC in 2012 after previously competing in the USA South Athletic Conference (USA South) from 1992-2012.
Varsity teams
Shenandoah University competes in 23 intercollegiate varsity sports.
| Men's sports | Women's sports |
|---|---|
| Baseball | Basketball |
| Basketball | Cross country |
| Cross country | Field hockey |
| Football | Golf |
| Golf | Lacrosse |
| Lacrosse | Soccer |
| Soccer | Softball |
| Tennis | Tennis |
| Track and field (indoor and outdoor) | Track and field (indoor and outdoor) |
| Volleyball [n 1] | Volleyball |
| Wrestling |
- Notes
- ^ Added in 2025-26.
Baseball
Shenandoah University's baseball program is coached by Kevin Anderson, who was introduced as the program’s fourth full-time coach in July 2003. In 22 seasons under Anderson, Shenandoah is 644-266-2, has won five conference tournament championships (2010, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2022) and made back-to-back NCAA Division III baseball championship appearances in 2009 and 2010.
Shenandoah has won six conference championships in program history — including four as a member of the ODAC (2015, 2018, 2019, 2022) and one each as a member of the USA South (2010) and Eastern States Athletic Conference (1991) — and four NCAA Regional titles (2009, 2010, 2019 and 2023). The Hornets have made 12 NCAA Regional appearances, two NCAA Super Regional appearances (2019, 2023) and two NCAA Division III baseball championship appearances (2009, 2010).
Shenandoah University’s baseball program plays its home games at Kevin Anderson Field at Bridgeforth Stadium, located in Jim Barnett Park in Winchester, Virginia.
NCAA Appearances
| Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Regional Regional Regional Regional Championship Championship Championship |
Johns Hopkins York (Pa.) Christopher Newport Johns Hopkins Farmingdale State St. Thomas (Minn.) Carthage |
W, 8-2 W, 11-2 W, 8-4 W, 11-7 W, 12-2 L, 16-5 L, 9-8 |
| 2010 | Regional Regional Regional Regional Championship Championship |
Bridgewater York (Pa.) Mary Washington Salisbury Illinois Wesleyan Johns Hopkins |
W, 11-1 W, 9-6 W, 10-5 W, 6-4 L, 7-5 L, 7-4 |
| 2011 | Regional Regional Regional Regional Regional |
Wabash Piedmont Piedmont Salisbury Salisbury |
W, 4-0 W, 14-5 W, 6-1 L, 9-8 L, 8-7 |
| 2012 | Regional Regional Regional Regional |
Rowan Salisbury Salisbury Christopher Newport |
W, 5-4 W, 6-1 L, 2-1 L, 9-5 |
| 2014 | Regional Regional Regional Regional |
Covenant (Ga.) Birmingham Southern Bridgewater Emory |
W, 11-3 W, 5-4 L, 5-3 L, 12-8 |
| 2015 | Regional Regional Regional |
Adrian Heidelberg Frostburg State |
W, 5-1 L, 5-0 L, 7-2 |
| 2016 | Regional Regional Regional Regional Regional |
Marietta Birmingham Southern Emory Birmingham Southern Emory |
W, 3-2 W, 6-2 L, 14-7 W, 10-8 L, 15-2 |
| 2017 | Regional Regional Regional Regional Regional Regional Regional |
Maritime (N.Y.) Wheaton, (Mass.) Lesley Alvernia Johns Hopkins Wheaton (Mass.) Wheaton (Mass.) |
W, 5-3 L, 6-0 W, 4-1 W, 8-6 W, 4-2 W, 5-4 L, 1-0 |
| 2018 | Regional Regional Regional |
Marietta Wooster Ithaca |
W, 3-2 L, 13-5 L, 7-5 |
| 2019 | Regional Regional Regional Regional Regional Super Regional Super Regional |
Kean Ithaca Westfield State Kean Kean Johns Hopkins Johns Hopkins |
L, 5-3 W, 9-2 W, 7-1 W, 6-4 W, 4-1 L, 6-3 L, 7-3 |
| 2022 | Regional Regional Regional Regional Regional |
St. Joseph's (Long Island) Catholic St. Joseph's (Long Island) Catholic Catholic |
W, 10-3 L, 6-5 W, 10-8 W, 6-3 L, 13-10 |
| 2023 | Regional Regional Regional Regional Regional Super Regional Super Regional |
The College of New Jersey Immaculata The College of New Jersey Christopher Newport Christopher Newport Lynchburg Lynchburg |
L, 22-9 W, 11-7 W, 8-1 W, 14-5 W, 5-3 L, 9-6 L, 3-1 |
Men's basketball
Shenandoah University’s men’s basketball program is coached by Nick Doyle, who took over the program in April 2022. The Hornets have won 10 or more games in three straight seasons for the first time since 2007-10. During the 2023-24 season, Shenandoah won 17 games and earned the program’s first national Top 25 ranking.
Shenandoah University won back-to-back Eastern States Athletic Conference championships in 1989 and 1990, and advanced to the NCAA Division III tournament in 1989.
NCAA Appearances
| Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1989 | First Round | Stockton | W, 74-64 |
| Regional Semifinal | Trenton State | L, 96-74 | |
| Regional Consolation | Hampden-Sydney | L, 80-78 |
Women's basketball
Shenandoah University’s women’s basketball program is coached by Melissa Smeltzer-Kraft, who took over the program in June 2014. The Hornets have posted a winning record in six of the last seven seasons dating back to 2018-19, with the lone losing season coming in 2020-21 when Shenandoah played just 10 regular-season games. SU, which recorded 10 conference wins in a season just twice from 1988-2019, has won at least 11 ODAC games in each of the last five seasons and is 60-26 in conference play during that span.
Shenandoah won its first ODAC championship in 2019 as the eighth seed, the lowest seed ever to win an ODAC tournament title.[1] The Hornets won their second ODAC championship in 2022, the first of three consecutive ODAC championship game appearances. Shenandoah has won four conference championships in women’s basketball — two in the ODAC and two as a member of the Dixie Conference (1996, 2000). The Hornets have made six appearances in the NCAA Tournament (1996, 2000, 2019, 2022, 2024, 2026).
Shenandoah’s women’s basketball team plays its home games in the James R. Wilkins, Jr. Athletics and Events Center.
NCAA Appearances
| Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1996 | First Round | Randolph-Macon | L, 91-74 |
| 2000 | First Round | Roanoke | L, 69-55 |
| 2019 | First Round | DeSales | L, 77-49 |
| 2022 | First Round | Southern Virginia | L, 67-48 |
| 2024 | First Round | Messiah | L, 58-57 |
| 2026 | First Round | Trine | L, 90-45 |
Football
Shenandoah University’s football program is coached by Scott Yoder, who was named the Hornets’ head coach in January 2013. In 13 seasons under Yoder, Shenandoah is 72-55 overall and 43-44 in ODAC play. The Hornets are 36-16 (22-14 ODAC) since 2021 and have won eight games in three of the past four seasons. Shenandoah finished second in the ODAC in 2024 and 2025 while earning back-to-back bowl appearances in the Chesapeake Challenge, a bowl series partnership between the ODAC and the Landmark Conference.
Shenandoah was co-champion of the USA South twice, sharing the title both times with Christopher Newport in 2003 and 2004. Additionally, Shenandoah has made one appearance in the NCAA Division III Football Championship (2004), falling in the first round to Delaware Valley, 21-17.[2]
NCAA Appearances
| Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | First Round | Delaware Valley | L 21-17 |
Field hockey
Shenandoah University’s field hockey program is coached by Ashley Smeltzer-Kraft, who was appointed the third head coach in program history in February 2013. Excluding the pandemic-shortened 2020 season during which they finished 7-4, the Hornets have won 10 or more games each season since 2012. Shenandoah has posted 12 straight winning seasons since going 10-10 in Smeltzer-Kraft’s first season in 2013, and is 120-29 overall and 56-10 in ODAC play since 2018.
Shenandoah has won the ODAC tournament championship twice (2016, 2024) and has appeared in the conference championship game in three straight seasons. The Hornets have made two NCAA Division III tournament appearances and picked up their first NCAA tournament win in 2024.
NCAA Appearances
| Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | First Round | Rochester (NY) | L, 2-0 |
| 2024 | First Round | Westfield State | W, 11-0 |
| Round of 16 | Messiah | L, 2-1 |
Women's lacrosse
Shenandoah University’s women’s lacrosse program is coached by Lindsey Lutz, who was named the program’s fourth head coach in June 2008. Since joining the ODAC in 2013, the Hornets have posted 10 winning seasons and have finished no worse than third in the conference’s regular-season standings nine times.
Shenandoah reached the ODAC tournament championship game twice (2013, 2025), falling both times to conference powerhouse Washington and Lee. The Hornets made the NCAA Division III tournament for the first time in 2024, beating SUNY Canton, 17-9, in their debut to advance to the second round.
Shenandoah won the 2005 USA South Athletic Conference tournament for its lone conference tournament title.
NCAA Appearances
| Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | First Round | SUNY Canton | W, 17-9 |
| Second Round | Ithaca | L, 18-6 |
Women's soccer
Championships
Shenandoah University’s women’s soccer program is coached by Elizabeth Pike, who took over the program in August 2007. The Hornets have posted four straight winning seasons from 2022-2025, and they went 8-2 in ODAC play in 2025, their best conference mark since going 9-1 in 2015.
Shenandoah won the USA South Athletic Conference title in 2011, its final year in the conference before moving to the ODAC in 2012. The Hornets made their lone NCAA tournament appearance in 2011, falling to Rowan in overtime, 1-0, in the first round.
NCAA Appearances
| Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | First Round | Rowan | L, 1-0 OT |
Softball
Championships
- In the spring of 2008, the women's softball team captured its first-ever USA South Athletic Conference regular-season championship in school history, finishing with a record of 30-12 (15-3 in conference).
- In the spring of 2011, the softball team won the USA South Athletic Conference Tournament Championship, the first in school history. SU defeated Christopher Newport University 4-1 and 4–2, earning an automatic bid into the NCAA Regional Tournament.
NCAA Appearances
2011
Salisbury Regional
| Division | Round | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Division III | First Round | Rowan | W 4-1 |
| Second Round | Salisbury | L 0–4 | |
| Elimination Game | Kean | W 6–1 | |
| Elimination Finals | Rowan | L 1–8 |
Shenandoah Hornets championships
NCAA championships
| Sport | App. | Years |
|---|---|---|
| Track and field (m, indoor) | 2 |
2023, 2024 |
| Track and field (m, outdoor) | 2 |
2022, 2023 |
| Track and field (w, indoor) | 5 |
2014, 2015, 2019, 2023, 2024 |
| Track and field (w, outdoor) | 4 |
2012, 2014, 2015, 2024 |
Conference championships
| Sport | Conference | Titles | Winning years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseball | USA South | 2 |
2010, 2011 |
| ODAC | 4 |
2015, 2018, 2019, 2022 | |
| Basketball (m) | ESAC [n 1] | 3 |
1989, 1990, 1991 |
| Dixie | 1 |
1996 | |
| Basketball (w) | Dixie | 2 |
1996, 2000 |
| ODAC | 2 |
2019, 2022 | |
| Cross country (w) | USA South | 1 |
2010 |
| Field hockey | ODAC | 2 |
2016, 2024 |
| Football | USA South | 2 |
2003, 2004 |
| Lacrosse (w) | USA South | 1 |
2005 |
| Soccer (w) | USA South | 1 |
2011 |
| Softball | USA South | 2 |
2008, 2011 |
- Notes
- ^ Eastern States Athletic Conference.
Shenandoah Hornets NCAA appearances
| Sport | App. | Years |
|---|---|---|
| Baseball | 9 |
2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2023 |
| Basketball (m) | 3 |
1989, 1991, 1996 |
| Basketball (w) | 6 |
1996, 2000, 2019, 2022, 2024, 2026 |
| Cross country (m) | 11 |
2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2017, 2023 |
| Cross country (w) | 17 |
2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023 |
| Field hockey | 2 |
2016, 2024 |
| Football | 1 |
2004 |
| Lacrosse (w) | 1 |
2024 |
| Football | 1 |
2004 |
| Soccer (w) | 1 |
2011 |
| Softball | 1 |
2011 |
Head coaches
| Sport | Head coach | Tenure | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseball | Kevin Anderson | 2004–present | 643–266–2 |
| Basketball (m) | Nick Doyle | 2022–present | 24–29 |
| Basketball (w) | Melissa Smeltzer-Kraft | 2014–present | 131–128 |
| Cross country (m/w) | Andy Marrocco | 2006–present | |
| Field hockey | Ashley Smeltzer-Kraft | 2013–present | 161–66 |
| Football | Scott Yoder | 2013–present | 56–49 |
| Golf (m/w) | Scott Singhass | 2006–present | |
| Lacrosse (m) | Tim Marshall | 2014–present | 75–98 |
| Lacrosse (w) | Lindsey Lutz | 2009–present | 160–110 |
| Soccer (m) | Brandon Kates | 2022-present | 13–11–10 |
| Soccer (w) | Elizabeth Pike | 2007–present | 165–140–25 |
| Softball | Courtney Allen | 2019–present | 63–101 |
| Tennis (m) | Jason Cole | 2019–present | 37–34 |
| Track and field (m/w) | Andy Marrocco | 2006–present | |
| Volleyball | Travis Abele | 2025–present | |
| Wrestling | Tim McGuire | 2020-present | 8–19 |
All-America/Academic All-America List
| Name | Year(s) Named | Sport(s) | Major(s) | Hometown |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gregg Anderson | 2002 | Football | ||
| Ryan Anderson | 2006 | Baseball | ||
| Courtney Beard | 2007* | Field Hockey/Lacrosse | Business Administration | Manchester, Md. |
| Jacob Bell | 2023*, 2024* | Baseball | Sport Management | Winchester, Va. |
| Liz Bereit | 2015* | Women's Lacrosse | Sport Management | Latrobe, Pa. |
| Shelby Berkheimer | 1997 | Women's Soccer | ||
| Catherine Beuerle | 2008*, 2009* | Softball | Doctor of Physical Therapy | Lynchburg, Va. |
| Alyson Bittinger | 2021 | Women's Lacrosse | Nursing | Westminster, Md. |
| Kevin Brashears | 2010, 2011, 2011* | Baseball | Business Administration/Kinesiology | Hagerstown, Md. |
| Pearce Bucher | 2022*, 2023* | Baseball | Doctor of Physical Therapy | Stephens City, Va. |
| Ainsley Buckner | 2024 | Women's Lacrosse | Public Health | Springfield, Va. |
| Ben Burgan | 2021 | Football | Kinesiology | Boonsboro, Md. |
| Danielle Burris | 2014*, 2015* | Women's Soccer | Doctor of Physical Therapy | Cooksville, Md. |
| William Crowder | 2024 | Men's Indoor T&F | Sport Management | Winchester, Va. |
| Phil Dixon | 1996 | Men's Basketball | ||
| Chris Dooley | 2006 | Football | ||
| Nick Erdman | 2012* | Football | Doctor of Physical Therapy | Moseley, Va. |
| Deanna Estes | 1998* | Women's Lacrosse | Biology | Rochelle, Va. |
| Kyle Feldman | 2011* | Football | Doctor of Physical Therapy | Woodstock, Md. |
| Kiara Felston | 2024 | Women's Indoor T&F | Master of Business Administration | Dover, Pa. |
| Katie Haskins | 2009* | Softball | Doctor of Physical Therapy | Montville, N.J. |
| Katya Hoover | 2024 | Women's Indoor T&F | Biology | Pen Argyl, Pa. |
| Gavin Horning | 2023, 2023*, 2024 | Baseball | Criminal Justice | Lancaster, Pa. |
| Caleb Hutson | 2017* | Football | Sport Management | Fairfax, Va. |
| Mark Isabelle | 2024* | Men's Lacrosse | Data Science & Applied Mathematics | Richmond, Va. |
| Laura Johnson | 1984, 1985 | Women's Basketball | ||
| Kelsey Jones | 2021, 2022 | Field Hockey | Biology and Public Health | Fredericksburg, Va. |
| Ben Judy | 2017* | Men's Lacrosse | Ellicott City, Md. | |
| Tucker Kindig | 2022, 2023 | Men's Track & FIeld | Exercise Science | Spotsylvania, Va. |
| Stephen LaTona | 2017* | Men's Lacrosse | Ellicott City, Md. | |
| Jeremiah Lawrence | 2008 | Men's Basketball | ||
| Jake Loew | 2016, 2017* | Baseball | Business Administration | Binghamton, N.Y. |
| Colby Martin | 2021, 2022, 2023 | Baseball | Business Administration | Lititz, Pa. |
| Jack Massie | 2020* | Football | Biology | Washington, Va. |
| Mairead McKibbin | 2022, 2023 | Field Hockey | Elementary Education | Magnolia, Del. |
| Lamont Moore | 2003, 2004 | Football | ||
| Miles Moore | 2023 | Men's Indoor T&F | Sport Management | Richmond, Va. |
| Jason Morgan | 2021* | Men's Lacrosse | Biology | Marlton, N.J. |
| Elijah Morton | 2020 | Men's Indoor T&F | Master of Business Administration | Culpeper, Va. |
| Michael Paul | 2014, 2014*, 2015 | Baseball | Mathematics | Red Hill, Pa. |
| Jake Pendergraft | 2012 | Baseball | Knoxville, Md. | |
| Ricky Perez-Macia | 2022 | Men's Lacrosse | Biology | Fredericksburg, Va. |
| Willie Porter | 1989 | Men's Soccer | ||
| Teddy Rogers | 2007*, 2008* | Men's Lacrosse | Chemistry/Biology | Rochester, N.Y. |
| Jeremy Schutt | 2000 | Baseball | ||
| Michael Scimanico | 2016 | Baseball | Dumont, N.J. | |
| Josh Simons | 2009 | Baseball | Charles Town, W.Va. | |
| Daniel Small | 2019 | Football | Business Administration | Atlanta, Ga. |
| Emma Stiffler | 2023 | Women's Lacrosse | Secondary Education/English | New Freedom, Pa. |
| Renee Summerson | 2008 | Women's Soccer | Doctor of Pharmacy | |
| Greg Van Sickler | 2009, 2010, 2010*, 2011 | Baseball | Business Administration | Stephenson, Va. |
| Elise Velasquez | 2023 | Field Hockey | Business Administration | Herndon, Va. |
| Rico Wallace | 2011 | Football | Hanover, Md. | |
| Alex Wessel | 2017* | Women's Soccer | Political Science/Global Studies | Severn, Md. |
| Shamyra Wilkerson | 2019 | Women's Indoor T&F | Psychology | Manquin, Va. |
| Geoff Williams | 2000 | Baseball | ||
| Keegan Woolford | 2018 | Baseball | Sport Management | Charlottesville, Va. |
| Daniel Ziccardy | 2007* | Baseball | Political Science/Spanish | Harrisonburg, Va. |
*-Denotes Academic All-America
Facilities
| Venue | Sport(s) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Shentel Stadium | Football Soccer Lacrosse (m) |
[3] |
| Aikens Stadium | Lacrosse (w) Field hockey |
[4] |
| James R. Wilkins, Jr. Athletics & Events Center |
Basketball Volleyball Track and field (indoor) Wrestling |
[5] |
| Bridgeforth Stadium | Baseball Softball |
[6] |
| Lowry Courts | Tennis | [7] |
| Kaye & JJ Smith Track | Recreational | [8] |
References
- ^ "Champions!". Shenandoah University. 2019-02-24. Retrieved 2025-07-18.
- ^ "2004 NCAA Division III National Football Championship Bracket" (PDF). NCAA. NCAA.org. p. 15. Retrieved January 19, 2015.
- ^ Shentel Stadium
- ^ Aikens Stadium
- ^ James R. Wilkins Athletics & Events Center
- ^ Bridgeforth Stadium
- ^ Lowry Courts
- ^ Kaye & JJ Smith Track