LIU Post Pioneers explained

LIU Post Pioneers
University:C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University
Association:NCAA
Conference:East Coast Conference
Northeast-10 Conference
(Northeast Conference starting in 2019)
Division:Division I
Director:Bryan Collins
Location:Brookville, New York
Teams:19
Stadium:Bethpage Federal Credit Union Stadium
Basketballarena:Pratt Recreation Center
Baseballfield:LIU Post Baseball Field
Soccerstadium:Pioneer Soccer Park
Softballstadium:LIU Post Softball Complex
Nickname:Pioneers
Pageurl:http://liupostpioneers.com/

The LIU Post Pioneers (also Long Island–Post Pioneers and formerly the C.W. Post Pioneers) were the athletic teams that represented the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University, located in Brookville, New York, in NCAA Division II intercollegiate sports through the 2018–19 school year. The Pioneers most recently competed as members of the East Coast Conference for most sports; the football team was an affiliate of the Northeast-10 Conference. LIU Post has been a member of the ECC since 1989, when the league was established as the New York Collegiate Athletic Conference.

The LIU Post Pioneers passed into history after the 2018–19 school year when LIU merged the Pioneers with the LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds, the Division I program of the school's Brooklyn campus. The current LIU program now competes as the LIU Sharks, with the new nickname having been selected by polling of alumni and students of the two campuses.[1] Since LIU Brooklyn was a long-established Division I program, the Division II LIU Post teams for sports that had not been sponsored by LIU Brooklyn immediately moved to Division I without the usual transition period for an institution moving to a different division. Teams for sports sponsored by both campuses were merged, and D-II athletes unable to make the D-I teams were allowed to either continue their athletic scholarships without competing or to be granted waivers that allowed them to transfer to another D-II school without having to sit out a season. The LIU Sharks inherited the Northeast Conference membership of the Brooklyn campus.[2] [3]

Varsity teams

Men's sports (8)

Women's sports (11)

Facilities

The Pratt Center is also a venue for Nassau County and New York State high school basketball playoff games, both men's and women's, along with the Clark Center at the State University of New York College at Old Westbury.

History

Classifications

Football conferences

National championships

Team

NCAADivision IIWomen's Lacrosse[4] 2001West Chester13–9
200715–7
201217–16
2013Limestone10–7

Individual sports

Baseball

In baseball, future Major League Baseball outfielder Richie Scheinblum batted .415 in 1964, and set the C.W. Post records in career triples (12) and batting average (.395). He was inducted in the college's sports Hall of Fame in 2005.[5]

Football

In 1993, future NFL quarterback Perry Klein played for the C. W. Post Pioneers, throwing for 38 touchdowns.[6] [7] Klein was named the Division II Player of the Year, after throwing for an NCAA Division II record 614 yards passing (623 yards total yardage), 35 completions, and seven touchdowns in a single game, and a Division II record 3,757 regular season yards passing and 4,025 regular season yards in total offense, while also setting a school single-season records of most touchdowns.[8] [9] [6] [10]

Lacrosse

LIU Post won three NCAA Division II Men's Lacrosse Championships. Their first title came in 1996 when they defeated Adelphi 15–10 in the championship and their second came in 2009 when they defeated Le Moyne 8–7 at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass. The third title came in 2010 when they defeated Le Moyne 14–9 in a rematch of the 2009 title game at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore.

The LIU Post women's lacrosse team had a perfect, undefeated season and won the NCAA Division II Women's Lacrosse Championship in 2007.

Sports clubs

LIU Post is the only college campus on Long Island to maintain an Equestrian Center for horseback riding.

LIU Post has a nationally ranked ACHA ice hockey club team that competes in the Great Northeast Collegiate Hockey Conference.

Notes and References

  1. Welcome to the Shark Tank: Long Island University Chooses the Shark as New Mascot . Long Island University . May 15, 2019 . May 16, 2019.
  2. Web site: LIU combining Post and Brooklyn athletic programs . Newsday.. October 3, 2018 . 9 October 2018 .
  3. Web site: #OneLIU website . Long Island University . 9 October 2018 . 21 August 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190821135943/http://athletics.liu.edu/ . dead .
  4. Web site: Division II Women's Lacrosse Championship Results . NCAA. NCAA.org. January 10, 2016.
  5. http://liupostpioneers.com/mobile/hof.aspx?hof=30 LIU Post Pioneers Mobile – LIU Post Athletic Hall of Fame
  6. Web site: Football History and Record Books. LIU Post Athletics.
  7. Web site: Scramblin' Man : Quarterback Perry Klein Has Been Vilified for Switching Schools--But That Was Before the NFL Called. June 30, 1994. Rob Fernas. Los Angeles Times.
  8. Web site: Sports Scene Great, growing grid corps. Jewish Post. January 12, 1994. Shel Wallman.
  9. News: Notebook. Steve. Berkowitz. November 11, 1993. The Washington Post.
  10. https://static.post.liuathletics.com/custompages/football/FB%202011.pdf "Records"