Patriot League Explained

Patriot League
Color:
  1. 15366F;
Font Color:
  1. FFFFFF
Association:NCAA
Division:Division I
Subdivision:FCS
Teams:10 full, 4 associate
Sports:24
Mens:11
Womens:13
Region:Northeast
Formerly:Colonial League
Headquarters:Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
Commissioner:Jennifer Heppel
Since:2015
Map:Patriot League Map.svg
Map Size:260

The Patriot League is a collegiate athletic conference comprising private institutions of higher education and two United States service academies based in the Northeastern United States. Except for the Ivy League, it is the most selective group of higher education institutions in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I and has a very high student-athlete graduation rate for both the NCAA graduation success rate and the federal graduation rate.[1]

The Patriot League has 10 core members:[2] American University, the United States Military Academy (Army), Boston University, Bucknell University, Colgate University, College of the Holy Cross, Lafayette College, Lehigh University, Loyola University Maryland, and the United States Naval Academy (Navy). All 10 core members participate in the NCAA Division I for all Patriot League sports that they offer. Since not all schools sponsor every available NCAA sport, most schools are affiliated with other collegiate conferences for sports such as ice hockey and wrestling.

Only half of the conference's core members compete in the Patriot League for football, as part of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS): Bucknell, Colgate, Holy Cross, Lafayette, and Lehigh. Of the five other conference members, American, Boston University, and Loyola Maryland do not sponsor football, while Army and Navy play in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision as football-only members of the American Athletic Conference (The American).

Four other private institutions are Patriot League members only for specific sports, and are referred to as associate members. Fordham University and Georgetown University are associate members in football, while MIT is an associate member in women's rowing and the University of Richmond is an associate member in women's golf. Starting in the 2025 season, Richmond will also be an associate member in football.

About

Patriot League members are schools with very strong academic reputations that adhere strongly to the ideal of the "scholar-athlete", with the emphasis on "scholar". An academic index ensures that athletes are truly representative of and integrated with the rest of the student body. Out-of-league play for Patriot League schools is often with members of the Ivy League, which follow similar philosophies regarding academics and athletics.

Patriot League members have some of the oldest collegiate athletic programs in the country. In particular, "The Rivalry" between Lehigh University and Lafayette College is both the nation's most-played and longest-uninterrupted college football series.[3]

The winner of the Patriot League basketball tournament receives an automatic invitation to the NCAA Division I basketball tournament every March. In recent years, Bucknell (twice) and Lehigh have both won NCAA tournament games. The Patriot League champions in a number of other sports also receive an automatic invitation to their respective NCAA tournaments.

History

The origins of the Patriot League began after the eight Ivy League schools expanded their football schedules to ten games starting in 1980. Needing opponents with a similar competitive level on a regular basis for each team's three nonconference games, the league contacted two university presidents, the Reverend John E. Brooks, S.J., of Holy Cross, and Peter Likins of Lehigh, about forming a new conference that also prohibited athletic scholarships.[4] The result was the Colonial League, a football-only circuit that began competition in 1986.[2] [5] Its six charter members were Holy Cross, Lehigh, Bucknell, Colgate, Lafayette, and Davidson. Davidson dropped out after the 1988 season for reasons related to geography, lack of competitiveness, and a reluctance to relinquish its basketball scholarships in case the conference expanded into other sports.[4] [6]

In 1990, the league changed its name to the Patriot League at the suggestion of Carl F. Ullrich,[4] who would go on to become the conference's first full-time administrator. At the start of the 1990–91 academic year, the league became an all-sport conference, with 22 sports (11 for men and 11 for women), and now had seven full members, including Fordham and the United States Military Academy (Army) as new members. In 1991, the league gained an eighth full member, the United States Naval Academy (Navy).[5]

In 1993, the league hired Constance (Connie) H. Hurlbut as executive director. She was the first woman and youngest person to be the leader of an NCAA Division I conference.[5]

In 1995, Fordham resigned its full membership (leaving the league with seven full members) but continued as an associate member in football. In 1996, Fairfield and Ursinus joined as associate members in field hockey.[5] (Fairfield left after the 2003 fall season and is now an associate member of the Northeast Conference. Ursinus left after the 2001 fall season and is now a full member of the Division III Centennial Conference.[7]) In 1997, Towson joined as an associate member in football. (Towson left after the 2003 fall season to join the Atlantic 10 Conference, whose football conference would be absorbed by the Colonial Athletic Association in 2007.) In 1999, Hobart joined as an associate member in men's lacrosse and Villanova joined as an associate member in women's lacrosse. (Hobart left after the 2004 spring season, to join the ECAC Lacrosse League, while Villanova left after the 2006 spring season.) In 2001, American University joined as the eighth full member and Georgetown University joined as an associate member in football.[5] Two schools announced in summer 2012 that they would join the league for the 2013–14 academic year, with Boston University making its announcement on June 15,[8] and Loyola University Maryland doing so on August 29.[9]

In May 2024, the University of Richmond, who was already an associate member of the league for women's golf, announced that they would also move their football program to the Patriot League for the 2025 season, becoming the Patriot League's first new football-playing member in over 20 years.[10]

Athletic scholarships

While Patriot League colleges have always offered need-based financial aid, league members have only been allowed to give athletic scholarships in recent years. Basketball scholarships were first allowed beginning with freshmen entering the league in the fall of 1998.

In 2001, when the league admitted American, which gave scholarships in all its sports (AU does not play football), the league began allowing all schools to do so in sports other than football. Lafayette, the last holdout with no athletic scholarships, began granting full rides in basketball and other sports with freshmen entering the school in the fall of 2006. Most Patriot League schools do not give athletic scholarships in a number of sports, and Bucknell only granted them in basketball prior to the addition of football scholarships in 2013.

In the spring of 2009, Fordham University announced that it would start offering football scholarships in the fall of 2010. This action made Fordham ineligible for the league championship in that sport, but it also prompted a league-wide discussion on football scholarships. On February 13, 2012, the Patriot League announced its members could begin offering football scholarships starting with the 2013–14 academic year. Since then, each school has been allowed no more than the equivalent of 15 scholarships to incoming football players. Presidents from six of the seven football schools indicated they would award scholarships in the fall of 2012. Georgetown University did not commit to offering scholarships.[11] Since the transition to scholarship football was completed for the 2016–17 academic year, each football member has been allowed up to 60 scholarship equivalents per season,[12] a total only slightly lower than the NCAA limit of 63 scholarship equivalents for FCS programs.

Executive directors

NameYearsCurrent
Alan Childs1986 - 1989Lafayette College Professor of Psychology[13]
Carl F. UllrichLeague's first full-time Executive Director; retired
Connie Hurlbut1993 - 1999Western Athletic Conference Deputy Commissioner and SWA[14]
Carolyn Schlie Femovich1999 - 2015The PICTOR Group Senior Partner[15]
Jennifer Heppel2015 - Previously Big Ten Conference Associate Commissioner for Governance[16]

Member schools

Full members

There are ten "full" member schools:[17]

InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeUndergraduate
enrollment
EndowmentNicknameJoinedColors
American UniversityWashington, D.C.1893United Methodist8,463$708,000,000Eagles2001
West Point, New York1802Federal
4,594N/ABlack Knights1990
Boston UniversityBoston, Massachusetts1839Nonsectarian18,229$3,350,000,000Terriers2013
Bucknell UniversityLewisburg, Pennsylvania1846Nonsectarian3,724$801,000,000Bison1986
Colgate UniversityHamilton, New York1819Nonsectarian3,164$908,000,000Raiders1986
Worcester, Massachusetts1843Catholic
3,138$1,230,000,000Crusaders1986
Lafayette CollegeEaston, Pennsylvania1826Nonsectarian2,725$693,700,000Leopards1986
Lehigh UniversityBethlehem, Pennsylvania1865Nonsectarian5,451$1,400,000,000Mountain Hawks1986
Loyola University MarylandBaltimore, Maryland1852Catholic
3,787$308,000,000Greyhounds2013
Annapolis, Maryland1845Federal
4,528N/AMidshipmen1991
Notes:

Associate members

There are three associate-member schools:

InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeUndergraduate
enrollment
NicknameJoinedColorsPatriot
sport
Primary
conference
Fordham UniversityThe Bronx, New York1841Catholic
9,904Rams1995footballAtlantic 10 (A-10)
Georgetown UniversityWashington, D.C.1789Catholic
7,598Hoyas2001football,
women's rowing
Big East
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT)
Cambridge, Massachusetts1861Nonsectarian4,638Engineers2009women's rowingNew England (NEWMAC)
Notes:

Former full members

Notes:

Former associate members

InstitutionLocationFoundedTypeNicknameJoinedLeftColorsPatriot
sport
Primary
conference
Current
conference
in former
PL sport
Davidson CollegeDavidson, North Carolina1837Presbyterian
Wildcats19861989footballAtlantic 10 (A-10)Pioneer (PFL)
Fairfield UniversityFairfield, Connecticut1942Catholic
Stags19962004field hockeyMetro Atlantic (MAAC)
Hobart CollegeGeneva, New York1822NonsectarianStatesmen19992004men's lacrosseLibertyAtlantic 10 (A-10)
University of RichmondRichmond, Virginia1830NonsectarianSpiders20142024women's golfAtlantic 10 (A-10)
Towson UniversityTowson, Maryland1866PublicTigers19972004footballCoastal (CAA)CAA Football
Ursinus CollegeCollegeville, Pennsylvania1869NonsectarianBears19962002 [18] field hockeyCentennial
Villanova UniversityVillanova, Pennsylvania1842Catholic
Wildcats19982006women's lacrosseBig East
Notes:

Membership timeline

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ImageSize = width:1000 height:auto barincrement:20

DateFormat = yyyy

Period = from:1986 till:2028

TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal

Colors = id:barcolor value:rgb(0.99,0.7,0.7)

id:line value:black

id:bg value:white id:Full value:rgb(0.742,0.727,0.852) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in all sports id:FullxF value:rgb(0.551,0.824,0.777) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in all sports except for football id:AssocF value:rgb(0.98,0.5,0.445) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member for football only id:AssocOS value:rgb(0.5,0.691,0.824) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in some sports, but not all (consider identifying in legend or a footnote) id:OtherC1 value:rgb(0.996,0.996,0.699) # Use this color to denote a team that has moved to another conference id:OtherC2 value:rgb(0.988,0.703,0.383) # Use this color to denote a team that has moved to another conference where OtherC1 has already been used, to distinguish the twoPlotData = width:15 textcolor:black shift:(5,-5) anchor:from fontsize:s

bar:1 color:AssocF from:1986 till:1989 text:Davidson (1986–1989)

bar:2 color:AssocF from:1986 till:1990 text:Bucknell (1986–present) bar:2 color:Full from:1990 till:end

bar:3 color:AssocF from:1986 till:1990 text:Colgate (1986–present) bar:3 color:Full from:1990 till:end

bar:4 color:AssocF from:1986 till:1990 text:Holy Cross (1986–present) bar:4 color:Full from:1990 till:end

bar:5 color:AssocF from:1986 till:1990 text:Lafayette (1986–present) bar:5 color:Full from:1990 till:end

bar:6 color:AssocF from:1986 till:1990 text:Lehigh (1986–present) bar:6 color:Full from:1990 till:end

bar:7 color:OtherC1 from:1986 till:1989 text:MAAC bar:7 color:AssocF from:1989 till:1990 bar:7 color:Full from:1990 till:1995 text:Fordham (1990–1995, all sports; 1995–present, football-only) bar:7 color:AssocF from:1995 till:end

bar:8 color:OtherC1 from:1986 till:1990 text:MAAC bar:8 color:FullXF from:1990 till:end text:Army (1990–present)

bar:9 color:OtherC1 from:1986 till:1991 text:CAA bar:9 color:FullXF from:1991 till:end text:Navy (1991–present)

bar:11 color:AssocF from:1997 till:2004 text:Towson (1997–2004)

bar:12 color:OtherC1 from:1986 till:2001 text:CAA bar:12 color:FullXF from:2001 till:end text:American (2001–present)

bar:13 color:AssocF from:2001 till:end text:Georgetown (2001–present)

bar:14 color:OtherC1 from:1986 till:1988 text:ECAC-N bar:14 color:OtherC1 from:1988 till:1996 text:NAC bar:14 color:OtherC1 from:1996 till:2013 text:America East bar:14 color:FullXF from:2013 till:end text:Boston University (2013–present)

bar:15 color:OtherC1 from:1986 till:1988 text:ECAC-M bar:15 color:OtherC1 from:1988 till:1989 text:NEC bar:15 color:OtherC2 from:1989 till:2013 text:MAAC bar:15 color:FullXF from:2013 till:end text:Loyola (Md.) (2013–present)

bar:16 color:AssocOS from:2014 till:2024 text:Richmond (women's golf, 2014–2024; football, 2025–future) bar:16 color:AssocF from:2025 till:end

ScaleMajor = gridcolor:line unit:year increment:2 start:1986TextData = fontsize:L textcolor:black pos:(0,30) tabs:(400-center) text:^"Patriot League membership history"

  1. > If the chart uses more than one bar color, add a legend by selecting the appropriate fields from the following six options (use only the colors that are used in the graphic.) Leave a blank line after the end of the timeline, then add a line with the selected values from the list, separated by a space. <#

Sports

The Patriot League sponsors championship competition in 12 men's and 13 women's NCAA-sanctioned sports.[19] Georgetown and Fordham are Associate members for football, and Georgetown and MIT are Associate members for rowing.

Men's sponsored sports by school

School Baseball Basketball Cross
Country
FCS
Football
Golf Lacrosse Soccer Swimming
& Diving
Tennis Track
& Field
(Indoor)
Track
& Field
(Outdoor)
Total
American 6
Army 10
Boston 8
Bucknell 11
Colgate 10
Holy Cross 11
Lafayette 11
Lehigh 11
Loyola 7
Navy 10
Totals 6 10 10 5+2 8 9 10 10 9 9 9 95+2
Associate Members
Fordham 1
Georgetown 1
Future Associate Members
Richmond 1

Men's varsity sports not sponsored by the Patriot League which are played by Patriot League schools

School Fencing FBS Football Sprint
Football
Gymnastics Ice
Hockey
Rifle Rowing Rugby Sailing Squash Water
Polo
Wrestling
American EIWA
Army Rugby East EIWA
Boston
Bucknell EIWA
Colgate Independent
Holy Cross
Lafayette MACFA
Lehigh EIWA
Loyola Independent
Navy MASC EIWA

Women's sponsored sports by school

School Basketball Cross
Country
Field
Hockey
Golf Lacrosse Rowing Soccer Softball Swimming
& Diving
Tennis Track
& Field
(Indoor)
Track
& Field
(Outdoor)
Volleyball Total
American 9
Army 10
Boston 12
Bucknell 13
Colgate 12
Holy Cross 13
Lafayette 11
Lehigh 13
Loyola 10
Navy 11
Totals 10 10 7 5 10 7+2 10 7 10 9 10 10 9 113+2
Associate Members
Georgetown 1
MIT 1

Women's varsity sports not sponsored by the Patriot League which are played by Patriot League schools

School Fencing Ice
Hockey
Rifle Lightweight
Rowing
Rugby Sailing Water
Polo
Army NIRA
Boston
Bucknell CWPA
Colgate
Holy Cross
Lafayette MACFA
Navy

President's Cup

The Patriot League Presidents' Cup is awarded to the member institution with the highest cumulative sports point total for their Patriot League standings in sponsored men's and women's sports. Points are awarded based upon a combination of an institution's regular-season and tournament finishes in each sport.

President's Cup Winners (combined men and women):

Baseball

Tournament champion and MVP
  • See: Patriot League baseball tournament

    Basketball

    Men's tournament champion, runner-up, and MVP
  • See: Patriot League men's basketball tournament
    Women's tournament champion
  • See: Patriot League women's basketball tournament
    NCAA

    In NCAA basketball, Boston, Bucknell, Navy, Lehigh, and Holy Cross are the only teams in the conference ever to have recorded NCAA Tournament victories. Bucknell won tournament games in 2005 over Kansas and in 2006 over Arkansas. Lehigh won over Duke in the first round in the 2012 tournament.

    The Bison, Mountain Hawks, and Crusaders are the only teams to win in the NCAA tournament while actually representing the Patriot League. A Navy team—then representing the Colonial Athletic Association—led by future Hall of Famer David Robinson won three tournament games while advancing to the regional finals in 1986, while BU won two games in the 1959 tournament before falling in the regional finals. Holy Cross was among the best teams in the country in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and won the 1947 national championship with a team that included future Hall of Famer Bob Cousy. Its combined record in the NCAA tournament is 8–12. After a 63-year drought, Holy Cross defeated Southern University in the 2016 NCAA Tournament. Bryan Cohen of Bucknell was named Patriot League Defensive Player of Year in 2010, 2011, and 2012; he was the only player in league history to win the award three times.[22] [23] [24]

    Field hockey

    Tournament champion[25]

    Football

    League champions:

    The Patriot League prohibited athletic scholarships for football from its founding (as the Colonial League) until the league presidents voted to approve football scholarships starting with the 2013 recruiting class. Since then, each school has been allowed no more than the equivalent of 15 scholarships to incoming football players in any given season. With the transition to scholarship football having been completed in 2016, each school is now allowed a maximum of 60 scholarship equivalents per season, three short of the NCAA FCS maximum. However, Georgetown does not offer scholarships.

    Until 1997, Patriot League teams did not participate in the NCAA Division I Football Championship playoffs. This practice was in step with the Ivy League's policy of not participating in the playoffs, since the Patriot League was founded with the Ivy League's athletics philosophy. Since 1997, the league champion receives an automatic playoff berth. If there are co-champions, a tie-breaker determines the playoff participant, though the other co-champion is eligible to be selected with an at-large invitation.

    Colgate was the first team to receive the league's automatic berth, in 1997. The following year, Lehigh won the league's first playoff game. This was also the first year in which a Patriot League team, Colgate, received a playoff invitation without being a league co-champion. Fordham has since repeated that feat in 2013, 2015 and 2022.

    Because the Georgetown Hoyas opted out of the 2020-21 NCAA Division I FCS football season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Patriot League split into a north and south division for the first time. This led to the first ever Patriot League Football Championship Game

    Lacrosse

    Men's league champions:

    , the Army Black Knights men's lacrosse team has thirteen conference championships, the most of any school in the conference. Prior to the 2004 season, no conference tournament was held to determine a single winner.[34]

    Women's league champions:

    Soccer

    Men's tournament champion, runner-up, and MVP
  • See: Patriot League Men's Soccer Tournament
    Women's league champions:

    Facilities

    Future members in gray.

    Non-football schoolBender Arena3,044Non-baseball schoolReeves Field700
    Plays football in the American Athletic Conference.
    Army's home football games are at Michie Stadium
    38,000Christl Arena5,043Johnson Stadium at Doubleday Field880Clinton Field2,000
    Non-football schoolAgganis Arena
    Case Gym
    7,200
    1,800
    Non-baseball schoolNickerson Field10,412
    Christy Mathewson–Memorial Stadium13,100Sojka Pavilion4,000Eugene B. Depew Field500Emmitt Field at Holmes Stadium1,250
    Crown Field at Andy Kerr Stadium10,221Cotterell Court3,000Non-baseball schoolVan Doren Field2,000
    Coffey Field7,000Football-only member
    Cooper Field3,750Football-only member
    Fitton Field23,500Hart Center3,600Hanover Insurance Park at Fitton Field3,000Linda Johnson Smith Soccer Stadium1,320
    Fisher Stadium13,132Kirby Sports Center2,644Kamine Stadium500Oaks Stadium1,000
    Goodman Stadium16,000Stabler Arena5,600J. David Walker Field at Legacy Park370Ulrich Sports Complex2,400
    Non-football schoolReitz Arena2,100Non-baseball schoolRidley Athletic Complex6,000
    Plays football in the American Athletic Conference.
    Navy's home football games are at Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium
    34,000Alumni Hall5,710Max Bishop Stadium1,500Glenn Warner Soccer Facility2,500
    E. Claiborne Robins Stadium8,700Football-only member

    Literature

    The Patriot League was profiled in the John Feinstein book The Last Amateurs (2000). The title is derived from the belief that the Patriot League was the last Division I basketball league that plays a conference tournament (the Ivy League, which operates under the same model, albeit with no scholarships, did not hold a conference tournament until the 2016 - 17 season) and functions as a place for student-athletes rather than a de facto minor professional circuit with players not representative of their student bodies. The book is Feinstein's chronicle of all seven of the league's men's basketball teams at the time during the 1999 - 2000 season.[4]

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Who We Are. patriotleague.org.
    2. Web site: "Who We Are" About the Patriot League. Patriot League. July 3, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131030125920/http://www.patriotleague.org/school-bio/patr-school-bio-aboutpl.html. October 30, 2013. dead.
    3. Web site: All the Lehigh University News First. The Brown and White.
    4. Book: Feinstein, John. John Feinstein. The Last Amateurs. Boston. Little, Brown and Company. 2000. 0-316-27842-4.
    5. Web site: Patriot League History. Patriot League. July 3, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20110727165720/http://www.patriotleague.org/school-bio/patr-school-bio-history.html. July 27, 2011. dead.
    6. Web site: Patriot League 2011 Football Media Guide..
    7. Web site: 2009 Field Hockey. Centennial Conference. March 2, 2010. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20101007194337/http://www.centennial.org/fhockey/index.html. October 7, 2010.
    8. Boston University accepts invitation to join Patriot League starting in 2013–14. Patriot League. June 15, 2012. July 3, 2013.
    9. Loyola University Maryland accepts invitation to join Patriot League starting with 2013–14 season. Patriot League. August 29, 2012. August 30, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120830114515/http://www.patriotleague.org/genrel/082912aaa.html. August 30, 2012. dead.
    10. Richmond Football to Move to Patriot League Following 2024 Season. Richmond Spiders Athletics . May 14, 2024 . May 14, 2024.
    11. Web site: February 13, 2012 . Comments from Patriot League Presidents on Football Financial Aid Announcement . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304110111/http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/patr/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/2011-12/misc_non_event/PLpresidentCommentsFootballFA.pdf . Mar 4, 2016 . Patriot League.
    12. News: Patriot League to Offer Football Scholarships Starting in 2013 . Bloomberg. Eben. Novy-Williams. February 13, 2012 . subscription . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20171001213802/https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2012-02-13/patriot-league-to-offer-football-scholarships-for-first-time-starting-2013 . Oct 1, 2017 .
    13. Web site: Alan Childs . Lafayette College Athletics . Dec 10, 2023 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230523064927/https://goleopards.com/sports/mens-basketball/roster/coaches/alan-childs/910 . May 23, 2023 .
    14. Web site: Western Athletic Conference. Western Athletic Conference.
    15. Web site: Carolyn Schlie Femovich (biography)  - The PICTOR Group..
    16. Web site: Patriot League - Staff Directory. www.patriotleague.org.
    17. Web site: "Who We Are" About the Patriot League. Patriot League. 1 November 2016.
    18. Web site: Just the Facts. Ursinus College. 19 November 2019.
    19. Web site: Patriot League. www.patriotleague.org.
    20. https://patriotleague.org/news/2021/6/24/general-navy-captures-seventh-consecutive-patriot-league-presidents-cup-title.aspx "Navy Captures Seventh-Consecutive Patriot League Presidents' Cup Title," Patriot League, Thursday, June 24, 2021.
    21. https://patriotleague.org/news/2023/5/24/general-navy-claims-ninth-consecutive-patriot-league-presidents-cup.aspx "Navy Claims Ninth-Consecutive Patriot League Presidents’ Cup," Patriot League, Thursday, May 25, 2023.
    22. Web site: Recent Bucknell Grads Bryan Cohen, G.W. Boon Sign Pro Contracts Overseas. August 27, 2012. patriotleague.org.
    23. Web site: Bill Bowman's college basketball column: Cohen as good as it gets on defense. William . Bowman. The Daily Item. February 8, 2011.
    24. Web site: Cohen a model of consistency. Chris. Brady. Standard-Journal. February 13, 2012.
    25. Web site: Patriot League Field Hockey Record Book. Patriot League. June 15, 2012.
    26. https://patriotleague.org/tournaments/?id=307 2021 Field Hockey Spring Championship  - Patriot League.
    27. https://patriotleague.org/tournaments/?id=336 2021 Field Hockey Championship  - Patriot League.
    28. https://lehighsports.com/news/2022/11/5/field-hockey-lehighs-epic-overtime-victory-captures-the-patriot-league-title-and-secures-first-ncaa-tournament-berth-in-program-history.aspx "Lehigh's Epic Overtime Victory Captures the Patriot League Title and Secures First NCAA Tournament Berth in Program History," Lehigh University Athletics, Saturday, November 5, 2022.
    29. https://patriotleague.org/tournaments/?id=277 2019 Men's Lacrosse Championship  - Patriot League.
    30. https://patriotleague.org/tournaments/?id=292 2020 Men's Lacrosse Championship  - Patriot League.
    31. https://patriotleague.org/tournaments/?id=317 2021 Men's Lacrosse Championship  - Patriot League.
    32. Web site: 2023 Patriot League Men's Lacrosse Championship . patriotleague.org . 5 May 2024.
    33. Web site: No. 2 Lehigh Downs No. 4 Boston University to Win 2024 Patriot League Men’s Lacrosse Championship (5.5.24) . patriotleague.org . 5 May 2024.
    34. News: 2021 Men's Lacrosse Record Book . 5 October 2021 . Patriot League . 2021 . en.
    35. https://loyolagreyhounds.com/news/2019/5/4/no-11-womens-lacrosse-downs-navy-to-win-patriot-league-title-in-record-breaking-fashion.aspx "No. 11 Women's Lacrosse Downs Navy To Win Patriot League Title In Record-Breaking Fashion," Loyola University Maryland Athletics, Saturday, May 4, 2019.
    36. https://patriotleague.org/tournaments/?id=310 2021 Women's Lacrosse Championship  - Patriot League.
    37. https://loyolagreyhounds.com/news/2022/5/7/womens-lacrosse-no-7-womens-lax-earns-sixth-patriot-league-title-with-15-8-win-over-navy.aspx "No. 7 Women's Lax Earns Sixth Patriot League Title WIth 15 - 8 Win Over Navy," Loyola University Maryland Athletics, Saturday, May 7, 2022.
    38. https://patriotleague.org/tournaments/?id=338 2021 Women's Soccer Championship  - Patriot League.