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St. Johns University (NY)

Queens, NY 11439
New York Northeast
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Ian Stone

The winningest coach in St. John's women's soccer history, Ian Stone is entering his 30th season on the sidelines in Queens, holding a career record of 266-218-65 (.544).


Stone is one of six active NCAA Division I women's soccer coaches to spend 30 years at the same school and the winningest active coach in the BIG EAST Conference.


Stone enters the 2023 campaign with many impressive accolades, including 21 winning seasons, 20 postseason tournament appearances and four NCAA Tournament berths (2009, 2013, 2015, 2021). In addition to his teams taking home a number of championships (1994 BIG EAST Tournament, 2002 ECAC Championship and 2015 BIG EAST Regular Season), Stone has also earned a number of individual coaching accolades. He has twice been named the BIG EAST Coach of the Year (2006 and 2015) and has twice taken home NSCAA Northeast Region Coach of the Year honors (2009 and 2015). Stone is also a four-time winner of the St. John's Athletic Department's Herbert V. Hess Coach of the Year Award, winning in 1998, 2008, 2016, 2021.


A coach that values his team's classroom and character development, Stone's squads received 17 National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) Team Academic Awards.


He also boasts a player resume that includes 47 All-BIG EAST players and 13 BIG EAST All-Rookie team members, including the 2002 Rookie of the Year Kaitlyn Schmidt, the 2013 Newcomer of the Year Rachel Daly, and two-time offensive player of the year Zsani Kajan. Stone has also mentored 16 BIG EAST All-Tournament Team honorees. He also coached the 1994 BIG EAST Tournament Most Valuable Player in Cristin Burtis.


In 2022, Stone led the Johnnies to a 7-5-7 record and earned a win in the BIG EAST Tournament for the second-straight year. A stout defensive unit, the Red Storm logged seven shutouts and allowed just 17 goals across 19 matches. Red Storm players racked up accolades as Brooke Boyd and Jessica Garziano both earned All-BIG EAST and United Soccer Coaches' All-East Region honors. Freshman Emily Riggins garnered a spot on the conference's all-rookie team and Katherine Turner and Melina Couzis were named to the BIG EAST All-Tournament Team for a stellar postseason performance.


Stone wrapped up his most successful season at the helm for the Red Storm in the fall of 2021. Boasting a 13-7-3 record, the Johnnies reached BIG East Tournament championship match for the first time since the 1994 championship season. Earning an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, St. John’s downed Brown 1-0 before taking down Samford in a shootout, 3-0, to advance to the NCAA Tournament Round of 16 for the first time in program history.


Individually, Jessica Garziano was named to the All-BIG EAST Second Team and Athina Sofroniou found a place on the BIG EAST All Freshman squad.


Most notably, Kajan was unanimously selected as the BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year, the second time in her career she earned the accolade. Following the year, Kajan was tabbed to the United Soccer Coaches All-America Second Team as the Budapest, Hungary, native recorded 17 goals in 23 games this year to lead the league and rank inside the top-five among Division I opponents. Kajan continued to make history as she was selected eight overall by OL Reign in the 2022 NWSL Draft.


From 2014-21 spring season, Stone’s players combined to earn eight major BIG EAST awards. Diana Poulin earned three-straight Goalkeeper of the Year honors (2014-16), Georgia Kearney-Perry won back-to-back BIG EAST Defensive Player Year awards (2014-15), Rachel Daly took home BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year honors (2013 and 2015) on two different occasions and most recently, Kajan was named the top offensive player in the conference following the 2019 campaign.


Daly and Kearney-Perry, arguably the two greatest players to ever lace up their cleats on Belson Stadium, were honored at the conclusion of the 2015 season with a pair of NSCAA All-America Team nods, as Daly became the first player in program history to earn a spot on the First Team and Kearney-Perry found a place on the Second Team. Kajan, who joins Daly and Kearney-Perry as one of the Johnnies’ most elite players, earned a spot on the CoSIDA Academic All-America First Team. The Budapest, Hungary, native became the first player in program history to find a spot on the organization’s top team.


One of Stone’s most notable season came in 2015, as the Red Storm shattered school records and reached unprecedented levels of success. The Johnnies broke program marks for wins (15) and shutouts (12), while claiming the Red Storm’s first-ever BIG EAST Regular Season title with a 7-1-1 mark in conference play. Despite falling to Butler in the BIG EAST Semifinals, the NCAA Selection Committee rewarded the Red Storm’s body of work with the program’s third-ever at-large selection to the Tournament and the first NCAA home game at Belson Stadium in program history.


2014 proved to a successful season for St. John's women's soccer. Led by a dominant defensive core that included BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year Georgia Kearney-Perry and the BIG EAST Goalkeeper of the Year Diana Poulin, the Red Storm compiled an overall record of 11-7-2, including a 6-2-1 mark in conference action. In addition to compiling the Red Storm's then-best-ever winning percentage in BIG EAST play, Stone's team also turned in a conference GAA of just 0.70, allowing only three goals in the first eight games of league action. After setting a program record with seven All-BIG EAST honorees, Stone saw his squad advance to the semifinals of the conference tournament before falling to Georgetown in penalty kicks.


In addition to their All-BIG EAST accolades, Stone's players received a litany of other awards following the 2014 season. Kearney-Perry and Daly were named to the NSCAA/Continental Tire All-Northeast Region First Team, while Poulin and Emily Cubbage found a spot on the NSCAA/Continental Tire All-Northeast Region Second Team. Daly became the first player in program history to be named NSCAA Scholar All-America, earning a second team nod. Cubbage also found a spot on the NSCAA Scholar All-East Region Second Team.

The 2013 campaign marked a season for the record books as Stone led his squad to the program's first ever NCAA Tournament win with a 3-1 victory over UCF on Nov. 16. Following a 6-0 run to open the season, the Red Storm finished the season with an impressive 12-6-3 record that included a 4-3-2 mark in BIG EAST play where the team finished fourth overall, falling to eventual champion Marquette, 2-0, in the semifinals.


History wasn't finished there; however, as Stone mentored the program's first-ever NSCAA All-American and BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year in Rachel Daly. The sophomore led the nation in goals scored with 23 on the year, earning Second Team All-American accolades after being named a member of the NSCAA All-Northeast Region First Team as well as the ECAC Offensive Player of the Year. Stone also saw three other All-BIG EAST honors in 2013, as Georgia Kearney-Perry earned first team honors, Amy Marron was selected to the second team and freshman Diana Poulin found a spot on the third team. Kearney-Perry was also picked as a NSCAA All-Northeast Region Third Team selection.

Off the pitch, Stone saw four of his 2013 squad members earn NSCAA Scholar All-East Region Honorable Mention accolades while Kristina Quan received a BIG EAST Postgraduate Scholarship.


In 2012, Stone's squad finished 6-10-1 overall and 2-7-1 in BIG EAST play. Once again, Stone boasted a student-athlete on the All-BIG EAST squad, as junior Amy Marron was voted to the third team. Junior Sarah Ashmore was selected to the CoSIDA Academic All-District I First Team, while Marron and Runa Stefansdottir were awarded NSCAA/adidas Scholar All-East Region accolades. Additionally, Kristina Quan, Morgan Ritter and Ashmore received NSCAA/adidas All-East Region honorable mention.

In the classroom, Stone had three student-athletes selected to the St. John's University President's Society: Lauren Ferris, Casey Marks and Quan, the most in one induction class for women's soccer. The 2012 squad had 22 student-athletes named to the BIG EAST All-Academic team and for the fourth-straight year (2009, 2010, 2011, 2012), Stone's women's soccer team boasted an exceptional multi-year APR score that was recognized by the NCAA with a score of 997.


The 2011 season marked the return to the BIG EAST Championship for St. John's, as Stone led his squad to his 10th conference tournament. Stone had three players honored by the conference as Jen Leaverton and Marron were named to the All-BIG EAST Second Team and Caitlyn McLaughlin was selected as a BIG EAST All-Rookie selection. The Red Storm finished 9-9-1 overall and fifth in the BIG EAST American Division with a 5-6-0 record. St. John's had key wins over Connecticut, Villanova, Rutgers, Seton Hall and in-state rival Syracuse. The Red Storm was ranked as high as sixth in the NSCAA Northeast Regional rankings.


Off the field, Leaverton was named to the NSCAA Scholar Athlete East Region team for the second-consecutive season, and was named as a Capital One CoSIDA Academic All-District First team honoree. She was also a Lowes® Senior CLASS Award candidate, Stone's second in as many seasons.


Similarly, in 2010, the off-the-field success of his individual players included a Lowes® Senior CLASS Award finalist and a CoSIDA ESPN The Magazine Academic All-American in Nicole Pasciolla, three NSCAA Scholar All-Region honorees in Pasciolla, Leaverton and Raelynne Lee and two student-athletes that were inducted into the prestigious St. John's President's Society with Leaverton and Lindsey Hall. The squad also received St. John's Community Service Award for the third time after volunteering more than 300 hours of community service. Pasciolla was honored by the St. John's athletic department as she won the Rickard F. McSwiney Award, recognizing her athletic contribution and exceptional character. On the turf that season, Pasciolla and Kristin Russell were named to the All-BIG EAST squads and Stone tallied his 150th win as head coach with a 1-0 victory over James Madison at the JMU/Comfort Inn Harrisonburg Invitational on Aug. 27.


The then-highlight of Stone's consistently successful career at St. John's was the 2009 season as the Red Storm earned its first-ever NCAA Tournament berth, compiled a 13-6-2 record and posted the third-most wins in program history, one victory short of tying the then-record set in 1994. The Red Storm also tied school-records for BIG EAST wins (six, 2007), home victories (eight, 2007) and shutouts (10, 2008).


Stone guided St. John's to its first-ever NSCAA Top 25 Poll appearance in 2009, eventually rising to No. 17 on Sept. 28. The program also received its highest ranking in history in the Soccer America Poll, when it was listed as No. 11 on Oct. 5. The Red Storm recorded three victories over Top 25 opponents, nabbing 2-1 victories over then-No. 12 USC on Aug. 30 and then-No. 12 Indiana on Sept. 13, and posting a 1-0 win over then-No. 16 UConn on Sept. 24. The Red Storm also advanced to the BIG EAST Championship Semifinals, losing a closely-decided contest in overtime. For his efforts, Stone was named the BigAppleSoccer.com Coach of the Year and earned NSCAA Northeast Region Coach of the Year accolades.


Amanda Pasciolla, Nicole Doran, Nicole Pasciolla and Sarah McGrath earned All-BIG EAST accolades in 2009, while Amanda Pasciolla and Kelly McConnell were named CoSIDA Academic All-Americans and Raelynne Lee was bestowed one of the highest honors on campus by being named to the prestigious President's Society. The squad won the BIG EAST Team Excellence Award for academic achievement.


Stone continued to build off each year's successes as his 2008 squad set new school-records in shutouts (10) and goals against average (0.593) and made its third-straight BIG EAST Tournament appearance.


The 2007 campaign was also a success as the Red Storm posted an 11-5-3 overall record and set new program-records in BIG EAST wins (six) and home victories (eight). Stone's 2007 Red Storm opened up the season with an eight game (6-0-2) unbeaten streak and was ranked as high as third in the region in the NSCAA poll, after being consistently ranked for 15 weeks. Another highlight of the 2007 campaign was the Red Storm's defeat of then-No. 18 UConn on Oct. 26. The victory was only the second in history for St. John's over the Huskies, with the first coming on Nov. 5, 1994, in the BIG EAST Tournament Semifinals. The 2006 campaign featured the Red Storm advancing to the BIG EAST Quarterfinals and posting another successful season with a 10-5-4 record; while the 2005 season saw the Red Storm win six games, including the Columbia University tournament title, while senior Holly Ryder was named to the All-BIG EAST second team. On Oct. 15, 2004, Stone tallied a marquee personal and program achievement as the Red Storm topped BIG EAST rival Pittsburgh and, in front of his home crowd at Belson Stadium, he reached the 100-win plateau.


Stone's squad concluded the 2004 season with a record-setting fourth-consecutive appearance at the BIG EAST Tournament, after beginning the season with a program-best six-straight wins. In addition, the Red Storm took home two tournament titles with wins at the BAE Systems Army Classic and the St. John's NYC Nike Classic, the first-ever tournament hosted by the Red Storm women's soccer program. That year marked the second-straight season that Stone's team topped a nationally ranked opponent, as St. John's shut out the then-No. 18 Villanova Wildcats.


Following the 2004 season, Natasha Lee was recognized with several postseason awards, including second team All-BIG EAST honors and third team NSCAA/adidas All-Northeast Region accolades. Kaitlin Schmidt received the Dr. Peter Vitulli Award, given to the St. John's student-athlete who demonstrated the most courage, perseverance, dedication and spirit of self-sacrifice in seeking to attain the highest ideals of sportsmanship.


The 2003 season marked Stone's 10th at the helm of the St. John's women's soccer program, and the team finished 9-9-1 overall to qualify for the BIG EAST Tournament for the third-straight season. On Oct. 12, the team knocked off nationally-ranked Boston College in a 1-0 win at Belson Stadium. Two players, Courtney Rett and Schmidt, were named to the 2003 All-BIG EAST second team and the SoccerBuzz Northeast Region third team. The incoming freshmen class was ranked No. 11 in the Northeast.


In 2002, Stone led his squad to its most successful season since 1994. The Red Storm, with an 11-6-4 record, captured its first-ever ECAC Championship after making its second-consecutive appearance in the BIG EAST Tournament. Playing one of its toughest schedules in program history, St. John's posted a 3-1-3 record against NCAA Tournament teams from the previous year, including a tie against then-No. 14 Villanova and a shutout against Rutgers. The Red Storm appeared in the Northeast Regional rankings throughout the year, reaching as high as No. 3.


Stone's student-athletes received individual honors as Kaitlin Schmidt was named 2002 BIG EAST Rookie of the Year, becoming the first St. John's player to earn a major conference award. Courtney Rett was named to the NSCAA/adidas All-Northeast Region First Team and Dominica Reina was named to the Verizon All-Academic District I first team and represented St. John's on the Academic All-America ballot. Goalkeeper Tina Fogg received the ECAC Most Valuable Player trophy, while classmate Jen Taylor was a Verizon All-Academic District I third team honoree.


The 2002 season marked the opening of the Red Storm's new home, Belson Stadium, a state-of-the-art stadium featuring a FieldTurf playing surface situated on a raised platform with parking underneath. Stone earned his first victory at Belson on Oct. 15, 2002, with a 1-0 shutout victory over league and regional rival Rutgers.


The 2001 Red Storm posted a 6-11-0 overall record, while going 3-3-0 in BIG EAST Northeast Division play. For the second time in the program's history, the St. John's women's soccer team qualified for the BIG EAST Tournament. The Red Storm fell to nationally-ranked and eventual BIG EAST Champion, Notre Dame, 2-0, in a hard-fought quarterfinal match.

In 2000, St. John's posted a 12-9-0 record and, for the second-consecutive year, advanced to the finals of the ECAC Tournament. Courtney Rett was selected to the BIG EAST All-Rookie team.


Stone's 1999 team finished with a 10-6-3 record as SoccerBuzz named the squad the fifth-most improved Division I program in the nation and chose Stone as the runner-up for Northeast Region Coach of the Year. Stone guided the Red Storm to the University of Maine Black Bear Invitational title with victories over New Hampshire and Maine. The team also reached the ECAC Tournament final, falling 1-0 to Villanova.


In Stone's inaugural season, 1994, he converted a roster that went 4-10-1 the previous season into a 14-4-1 squad that won the BIG EAST Tournament Championship Title. The run to the program's first BIG EAST Championship title included a win against then-No. 3 Connecticut in the semifinals and a victory over Boston College in the final.


Stone's dedication to St. John's Vincentian Mission has been evident throughout his tenure. In 2004, 2008, 2010 and 2015 the women's soccer team received the Athletics Department's Community Service Award, which is given to the team that exemplifies the qualities of the Vincentian mission by taking part in activities that extend it beyond its academic and athletic arenas. His teams have participated in countless community service projects over the past 20 seasons, including breast cancer walks, the Score For A Cure initiative that began in 2011 and several other service activities.


More than half of the student-athletes Stone has coached at St. John's have been named BIG EAST Academic All-Stars and have appeared on the Athletic Director's Honor Roll. In 2002, Theresa Bulman was the first of Stone's 12 student-athletes to be inducted into the President's Society, the most prestigious honor awarded to a St. John's student. Since then, Erin Henderson (2005), Kelly McConnell (2009), Nicole Pasciolla (2009), Raelynee Lee (2010), Jen Leaverton (2011), Lindsey Hall (2011), Lauren Ferris (2013), Casey Marks (2013), Kristina Quan (2013), Sarah Chaides (2016) and Naya Lipkins

(2021) have also been inducted into the President's Society. From 2000-2002, a women's soccer player was awarded the Elizabeth Lapchick Award, presented annually by St. John's University to the male and female student-athletes who improved the most academically during their years. In addition, the Rickard F. McSwiney Award, given to the female student-athlete who `best typifies the St. John's woman,' was presented to women's soccer players following the 2001, 2002, 2007, 2010 and 2012 seasons. In 2016, Emily Cubbage was presented by the BIG EAST with the extremely prestigious Michael Tranghese Award, which included a $5,000 scholarship for postgraduate study.


Stone came to St. John's by way of the city of Bristol, in the county of Avon, England. He reached a high level of success in the youth ranks, playing for the nationally renowned Bristol Boys team, which produced many professional English Premier League players. Stone went on to captain his county team and was identified as one of the top 60 schoolboy players in the country. He was affiliated with the local professional club, Bristol Rovers, as a youth player and reached the national semifinal with his team.


He graduated with honors from the West London Institute of Education (now called Brunel University) in 1990 with a bachelor's degree in physical education and English. During Stone's collegiate playing career, the team won the British Collegiate Championship three-consecutive years, 1986-88. He captained the team his senior year and set the school record for goals scored in a season. While at West London, he also captained the National Collegiate team and played on the reserve team of the Premier League club, Chelsea. Stone comes from an outstanding soccer background, having grown up in a family rich with soccer tradition. His late father, Roger Stone, was associated with Bristol City as a young player and also managed the Somerset County Women's Soccer Chairman and Boys' Youth Team.


His first soccer coaching experience in the United States came under the tutelage of Gary Book at the Noga Soccer Camps in Long Island. He began working full-time at Noga in 1991 and continued there for the next five years, until his position at St. John's was upgraded to a full-time appointment in 1996. At Noga, he gained top coaching licenses in the United States Soccer Federation "A" license and a National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) Advanced National Diploma.


Stone also coached at Herricks High School in Long Island for two seasons. The team won the 1992 Nassau County Class A Championship and the1993 Nassau County Conference I title.

Outside of St. John's, Stone was an age group coach in the Eastern New York South Girls Olympic Development Program and was previously the head coach of the Youth Soccer Olympic Development Region 1 East U-17 squad.


In summer 2010, he was elected head coach of the ODP Region 1 East team after serving five years as a member of the team's senior staff. His team represented the U.S. in Russia for tournament play. He is also the head coach for the Eastern New York Under 12 team. Stone served as an assistant coach for the Region I East U-17 squad from 2007-10, including their run as the 2007, 2008 and 2009 ODP Interregional champions.


In June 2005, he led the Eastern New York South Under-16 girls team to the 2005 U.S. Youth Soccer Region I Championship.


In mid-March 2005, the same team won the 2005 U.S. Youth Soccer ODP National Championship in the Under-15 Division, having won the Region I title the year before. At one point, the team won 14-straight games in ODP play in its respective age group. His ODP team also reached the National Final in 2002, before losing in overtime. Stone also coached the two-time Region I Champion HBC Magic from 1999-2002.


In the spring of 2009, Stone was selected to coach a U-19 team that represented the United States in an international tournament in Russia. He led his squad to the championship game, where it lost a close contest to the Chinese U-19 National Team in penalty kicks.


Stone also coached the New York City Open women's team from 2006-08 at the Empire State Games. He led that team to a bronze medal in 2006, marking the first time in the 30-year history of the Empire State Games that a NYC Open women's team has medaled. He improved the team to a silver medal in 2007 but topped the feat in 2008 when his NYC Open squad won the gold.


Stone is currently pursuing a master's degree in school counseling from the St. John's School of Education.

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Amy Marron

A Red Storm alumna and former professional soccer player overseas, Amy Marron joined the St. John’s staff during the 2014 season. She served as a volunteer assistant coach during that first campaign before being elevated to the position of graduate assistant prior to the 2015 season.


Marron played a crucial role during the Johnnies’ record-breaking 2015 campaign, as she helped guide the Red Storm to a school record 15 wins and the first BIG EAST Regular Season title in program history.


Marron, a three-time All-BIG EAST honoree during her time in Queens, played professionally in Iceland for Afturleding in the summer of 2014, a team that plays in one of the top leagues in Iceland.


A stalwart defender that also played midfield and forward for Coach Stone, Marron was an integral part of the 2013 squad that advanced to the Second Round of the NCAA Tournament. That season, Marron led the team in assists (7) while finishing second in goals (4) and points (15).


Following the 2013 campaign, the Valhalla, N.Y., native earned a spot on the All-BIG EAST Second Team, the second time in her career she garnered that accolade. She also found a place on the All-BIG EAST Third Team following her junior campaign in 2012.


During her time playing for the Red Storm, Marron appeared in 70 games, starting all but one, tallying eight goals, 11 assists, 27 points and 121 shots.

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Samantha Masur

St. John's Women's Soccer Head Coach Ian Stone announced the promotion of Samantha Masur to Assistant Coach in June 2021.


Masur previously served as director of women's soccer operations following a stellar playing career with the Johnnies.


As the director of operations, Masur helped guide the fall 2021 team to an impressive 13-7-3 record and a 6-3-1 mark in conference play. The Red Storm reached the BIG EAST Tournament championship for the first time since the 1994 campaign and first-ever NCAA Tournament Round of 16 appearance.


The Johnnies made the most of their trip to the postseason, as they took down Brown 1-0 on the Bears' home pitch. St. John's followed the match with a stunning takedown of Samford, advancing on penalty kicks, to reach the NCAA Tournament Round of 16.


Masur joined the Red Storm staff following a sensational playing career with the Johnnies. A two-year captain of the St. John's squad, she appeared in 53 total matches, while making the starting 11 on 38 occasions.


The Monclair, N.J., native saw her best offensive output come during her senior campaign, as the 5-foot-7 midfielder capped off her Red Storm career with a season-high two goals and four points. She netted her first career goal by way of a game-winner in the Johnnies victory over Syracuse on Sept. 12, 2019.


An outstanding student-athlete on and off the field, Masur graduated from St. John's in 2019 with a 3.63 GPA and a bachelor's degree in sport management

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Dr. Dave Masur

The third-winningest active Division I head men's soccer coach by victories (442) and the 22nd-winningest by percentage (.665), Dr. Dave Masur enters his 37th season as a head coach in 2023 with a 442-197-104 overall record that includes a 389-176-98 mark in 32 seasons at St. John's. During his tenure in Queens, St. John's has won a national championship (1996), made four appearances in the NCAA College Cup (1996, 2001, 2003 and 2008) and reached 22 NCAA Tournaments, including 15-straight from 1992-2006. A testament to the program's consistent success, the Red Storm was the only program in the nation to reach 10-consecutive NCAA Tournament Rounds of 16 from 1996-2005. With Masur on the sidelines, the Red Storm has won a conference-record nine BIG EAST Tournament titles as well as six BIG EAST regular season crowns, and has earned 29 BIG EAST Tournament berths.


Masur has instilled a team-first focus and an emphasis on group leadership and overall preparation to a St. John's program that has risen to the upper echelon of collegiate soccer. The Red Storm has garnered numerous team, individual and academic achievements, and Masur has guided the squad to an average of more than 12 wins per season.


Individual accomplishments are as varied for Masur as they are for the many highly decorated players he has coached. The Montclair, N.J., native has twice been named national coach of the year - by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America/United Soccer Coaches in 1996 and by Soccer America in 2001. He is also a two-time collegiate All-American, a four-time BIG EAST Coach of the Year and a six-time Northeast Region Coach of the Year. Masur is also a member of the St. John's University, Rutgers University, Columbia High School, New Jersey Soccer and Columbia Soccer halls of fame.


Chris Wingert’s 2003 MAC Hermann Trophy as the nation's top collegiate player highlights an impressive list of individual honors for Masur’s student-athletes. Red Storm players have combined for 15 All-America, 72 All-Region and 109 All-BIG EAST selections in his tenure. Additionally, 15 players have been selected in the Major League Soccer SuperDraft.


In addition to his work on the sidelines, Masur has excelled in the academic realm. He holds a doctorate in education administration supervision from St. John's, an M.A. in physical education from Montclair State and a B.S. in sports management from Rutgers and has instilled his value of education to each of the hundreds of players he has coached.


Wingert and Matt Groenwald were both named College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) Academic All-Americans of the Year. Since CoSIDA began awarding Academic All-America and Academic All-District honors, Red Storm players have racked up 19 All-District and nine All-America selections. Wingert and Groenwald earned Academic All-America honors three times each, while Jeff Stepan earned Academic All-America accolades twice. As a team, the squad has earned the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) Team Academic Award 14 times.


In 2022, St. John’s reached the NCAA Tournament for the second time in three opportunities and the 22nd time overall in program history after finishing third in the BIG EAST. The Johnnies turned in an overall record of 11-6-3, advancing to the second round of the NCAA Tournament against Oregon State after taking down Princeton in the opener at Belson Stadium. After the season, BIG EAST Goalkeeper of the Year Luka Gavran became the first St. John’s player to be named an All-American since 2008 and was one of three Johnnies alongside Lucas Bartlett and Tani Oluwaseyi to be selected in the MLS SuperDraft. Bartlett, a First Team All-BIG EAST selection, became the highest draft pick in program history after going sixth overall to FC Dallas.


St. John's reemerged as a national contender in 2019, returning to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2013 and earning a national seed (no. 16) for the ninth time in program history. The team reached the NCAA Round of 16 for the 12th time under Masur after rising as high as no. 4 in the United Soccer Coaches Poll and no. 1 in the RPI in late October. Masur led the BIG EAST Coaching Staff of the Year while Tani Oluwaseyi was named the BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year and Jan Hoffelner took home BIG EAST Co-Goalkeeper of the Year honors. Four other Johnnies earned spots on All-BIG EAST Teams, as Brandon Duarte and Skage Simonsen made the second team while Brandon Knapp and Einar Lye took home third team designation.


After a four-year absence from 2013-16, the Red Storm has qualified for the six-team BIG EAST Men’s Soccer Championship in each of the past four of the past five seasons. In 2017, BIG EAST Midfielder of the Year Harry Cooksley and BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year David Enstrom captained St. John’s to a 5-2-2 conference mark and a third place finish in the regular season standings. The Red Storm downed Creighton in the quarterfinals before falling to Georgetown in its first semifinal appearance since 2011. In 2018, Masur guided Skage Simonsen to BIG EAST Freshman of the Year honors, as the 6-foot-3 Norwegian became the first St. John’s player to claim the award since Wojtek Krakowiak in the national championship season of 1996.


Following the 2014 season, Tim Parker was chosen by Vancouver Whitecaps FC with the 13th overall pick in the 2015 MLS SuperDraft. The first player in program-history to be selected in the first round of the MLS SuperDraft, Parker capped his standout four-year Red Storm career by earning both third team NSCAA All-Region accolades and unanimous First Team All-BIG EAST honors as a senior.


The 20th NCAA Tournament appearance in program history highlighted the 2013 season as St. John's advanced to the Second Round and posted an 11-7-2 record. Tim Parker earned First Team All-BIG EAST honors as the squad had four all-conference selections for the second-straight season. St. John's also had three players earn NSCAA All-Northeast Region honors for the second-straight season as Parker, a first team honoree, was joined by third team selections Rafael Diaz and Jimmy Mulligan. The team also earned the NSCAA Team Academic Award, while Mulligan garnered third team NSCAA/adidas Scholar All-America accolades.


St. John's finished 10-5-4 in 2012 and capped the season by advancing to the NCAA Tournament for the fourth time in five seasons and 19th time in program-history. Led by a quartet of All-BIG EAST selections, including first teamers Jack Bennett and Rafael Diaz, and second team honorees Tim Parker and Jamie Thomas, the Red Storm posted eight shutouts and a 0.75 goals against average. Bennett, Diaz and Parker also earned NSCAA All-Northeast Region honors as the Red Storm garnered its most all-region selections since 2008.


A conference-record ninth BIG EAST Tournament crown highlighted a 2011 season that also featured the 18th NCAA Tournament appearance in program history. Connor Lade earned both first team NSCAA All-Region and second team All-BIG EAST honors and Pablo Punyed was named the BIG EAST Co-Midfielder of the Year, the fourth St. John's player to earn the award. Masur recorded both his 350th head coaching win and his 300th St. John's win as the squad finished with a 14-7-2 mark. Lade signed a homegrown contract with the New York Red Bulls following the season, while Punyed and Walter Hines were both selected in the MLS Supplemental Draft.


St. John's finished 10-6-2 in 2010 and had four players earn All-BIG EAST honors, including first team selection Tadeu Terra. Second team NSCAA All-Region and third team All-BIG EAST selection Connor Lade led a defense that posted 10 shutouts, while goalkeeper Rafael Diaz earned both second team Soccer America All-Freshman honors and BIG EAST All-Rookie accolades.


St. John's won its conference-record eighth BIG EAST Tournament title in 2009 and reached the NCAA Tournament for the 17th time in program history. Five All-BIG EAST selections, including one first team honoree and four second team choices, helped lead the squad to a 9-3-9 record. In a 2-0 win against Georgetown on Sept. 18, the night St. John's unveiled new mascot Johnny Thunderbird, the attendance of 2,518 set a new Belson Stadium record.


The 2008 season featured the fourth College Cup appearance in program-history, a BIG EAST regular season title and a No. 4 ranking in the season's final NSCAA poll. Joel Gustafsson earned both All-America and All-Region honors, and was the BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year, while Nelson Becerra earned All-Region honors and was named the BIG EAST Midfielder of the Year. A total of six players earned All-BIG EAST honors to pace the squad to a 19-3-3 mark. Stalwart defense and stellar goalkeeping gave the team a school-record and nation-leading 16 shutouts. Capped by three home wins in the NCAA Tournament, the Red Storm finished the year with a 12-0-0 record at Belson Stadium. St. John's earned its trip to the College Cup with a 3-2 overtime win against then-No. 12 Indiana, a game in which the Red Storm erased a 2-0 deficit with less than ten minutes in regulation.


In its run to the 2006 BIG EAST Tournament title, the Red Storm established a new school-record with seven-straight shutouts and defeated then-No. 2 West Virginia, 1-0, with 4.4 seconds left in overtime to earn a 15th-consecutive bid to the NCAA Tournament.


The 2005 team reached the NCAA Round of 16 for the 10th-straight season and finished with an 11-6-5 record, including a 4-1-2 mark against ranked teams. The Red Storm led the league with five All-BIG EAST selections, including three first team choices and two second team honorees, and Jason Landers became St. John's first-ever BIG EAST Goalkeeper of the Year.


A trip to the NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals capped a 2004 season in which the Red Storm finished 12-6-4.


The Red Storm made its third College Cup appearance in 2003 and finished with a 17-6-3 record. With wins over perennial national powers UC Santa Barbara, Creighton and Maryland, St. John's faced familiar foe Indiana again in the national championship. The Hoosiers scored twice in the first 20 minutes of the match and held on to win by a final score of 2-1.


The opening of Belson Stadium highlighted a 2002 season in which St. John's also reached No. 1 in the national rankings. St. John's played then-No. 1 Wake Forest to a 1-1 draw in front of a sellout crowd of 2,242 in the first game at Belson.


After the program's eighth and ninth-straight NCAA Tournament appearances in 1999 and 2000, the 2001 team won the BIG EAST Tournament championship and advanced to the College Cup. The Red Storm won six-consecutive postseason contests and defeated then-No. 1 Southern Methodist to advance to the national semifinals against Indiana. The Hoosiers prevailed, 2-1, in overtime to avenge a 1-0 season-opening win by St. John's.


The Red Storm set a BIG EAST Conference record in 1998 by winning the fifth tournament championship in program-history.


St. John's won a second-straight BIG EAST regular season title in 1997 as the team went 9-1-1 in league play and finished 18-4-2 overall. The Red Storm posted a school-record 15 shutouts and allowed just 13 goals in 24 games on its way to the second-highest win total in program-history.


The 1996 team set new single-season records for wins (22), goals (80), assists (88) and points (248) on its way to the first NCAA national championship in St. John's University history and a BIG EAST regular season title. St. John's handled Florida International, 4-1, in the championship game to cap a 22-2-2 season.


A stellar run of success immediately followed Masur's arrival in 1991, as the Red Storm won a then-program record 12 games in his first season. In 1992, St. John's won its first-ever BIG EAST Tournament championship and made its first-ever appearance in the NCAA Tournament. The Red Storm followed that up with BIG EAST Tournament titles in 1993, 1994 and 1995 as part of a run of four-straight tournament crowns.


Prior to his remarkable success at St. John's, Masur began his career as a head coach at Montclair State in 1987. As a rookie coach, Masur nearly doubled the team's win total from the season before, finishing with a 7-5-2 overall mark. Montclair State went 17-4-3 and won the ECAC New York-New Jersey Regional Championship in 1988 and followed that up with a 13-8-1 record, a New Jersey Athletic Conference championship and an NCAA Tournament berth in 1989. In his final season at Montclair State in 1990, Masur led the Redhawks to a 16-4-0 overall record and its second berth in the NCAA Tournament.


Masur began his coaching career at his alma mater, Rutgers University, in 1984. He was an assistant to his former coach Bob Reasso for two seasons before taking the job at Montclair State.


Following his graduation from Rutgers, Masur was drafted by the New York Cosmos and went on to play professionally with the Chicago Sting, Toledo Pride, New Jersey Eagles, Penn Jersey Spirit and New Jersey Imperials.


As a player at Rutgers, Masur was a two-time All-American and just the third soccer player in school history to be inducted into the Rutgers Olympic Sports Hall of Fame. The only Scarlet Knight player to be named an All-American in back-to-back seasons, Masur earned national distinction in 1983 and 1984, as well as all-region honors from 1982-84.


As part of a playing career at Columbia High School, Masur was a Parade All-American and earned New Jersey State Player of the Year accolades.


Masur, and his wife, Shannon, have three daughters, Samantha, Jessica and Sidney, and a son, Christopher David. They reside in Montclair, N.J.

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David Janezic

Janezic, who enters his seventh year on staff in 2023, brings more than 20 years of club, collegiate and professional experience, both as a player and a coach, to the Red Storm. He was promoted to the position of associate head coach prior to the start of the 2021 campaign.


Janezic guided a pair of All-BIG EAST Second Team selections in Antek Sienkiel and Brandon Knapp following the 2022 campaign. He also assisted in the development of Wesley Leggett, who signed his first professional contract with Loudoun United FC, USL affiliate of DC United, following the senior slate.


In his first season as associate head coach, Janezic helped the Red Storm finish third in the BIG EAST, turn in a record of 11-6-3 and advance to the second round of the NCAA Tournament. BIG EAST Goalkeeper of the Year Luka Gavran became the first Johnnie since 2008 to earn All-American honors from United Soccer Coaches and was one of three players, alongside Lucas Bartlett and Tani Oluwaseyi, to hear his name called in the MLS SuperDraft. Bartlett, who was taken sixth overall by FC Dallas, was the highest SuperDraft pick in St. John’s history. Bartlett, Gavran and Brandon Knapp were all recognized with spots on the All-BIG EAST First Team for their efforts.


In addition to those SuperDraft selections, Anthony Herbert also signed a deal to play with FC Haka in Finland’s top professional division.


Janezic, who has been recognized on multiple occasions as one of the top assistant coaches in the nation by the likes of TopDrawerSoccer and College Soccer News, helped the Red Storm reemerge as national contenders in 2019, as the Johnnies returned to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2013. St. John’s earned the No. 16 national seed and beat Syracuse at home to advance to the round of 16 for the 12th time in program history. The Red Storm, which matched the program’s highest win total since the College Cup campaign of 2008 with 14 wins, rose as high as No. 4 in the United Soccer Coaches poll and occupied the top spot in the RPI in late October.


Janezic was part of the 2019 BIG EAST Coaching Staff of the Year and saw two additional Johnnies earn major end-of-season recognition, as Oluwaseyi took home BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year honors and Jan Hoffelner claimed BIG EAST Co-Goalkeeper of the Year accolades. Four other Johnnies earned spots on All-BIG EAST teams, as Skage Simonsen and Brandon Duarte made the second team while Knapp and Einar Lye earned All-BIG EAST Third Team recognition. Oluwaseyi, Hoffelner, Duarte and Lye were also named to United Soccer Coaches All-Atlantic Region teams.


In January of 2020, Niko Petridis was selected in the fourth round of the MLS SuperDraft by the New York Red Bulls.


In 2018, Janezic’s highly rated recruiting class helped the Red Storm register its second consecutive appearance in the BIG EAST Men’s Soccer Championship, as the team’s 3-3-3 conference record proved good enough for sixth in the league. A pair of freshmen earned end-of-season recognition from the conference, as Simonsen became the first St. John’s player since 1996 to be named the league’s freshman of the year and Oluwaseyi earned a spot on the BIG EAST All-Freshman Team. In addition to his top rookie honor, Simonsen also became the first Red Storm player in program history to earn a spot on the All-BIG EAST Second Team or better as a freshman.


In his first season with the Johnnies, Janezic helped the Red Storm usher in success on the pitch that had not been achieved in nearly a half a decade. The Johnnies turned in an overall record of 9-7-3 and a 5-2-2 mark in BIG EAST play, the program’s best conference effort since 2009. Two Red Storm players earned major end-of-season awards, as Harry Cooksley garnered BIG EAST Midfielder of the Year honors while David Enstrom was named the BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year. Additionally, Jack Shearer earned unanimous selection to the BIG EAST All-Freshman Team and the Johnnies secured their first berth in the BIG EAST semifinals since 2011.


Before coming to Queens, Janezic most recently served as an assistant coach at Fairleigh Dickinson. During his time at FDU, both of Janezic’s recruiting classes were recognized by Top Drawer Soccer as some of the best in the nation, as they included three 2017 CONCACAF U-17 and U-20 national team players. Janezic mentored two NEC All-Rookie Team performers and saw nine of his newcomers start throughout the 2016 season. He also worked with the goalkeepers and was involved with all facets of the program. In addition to its accolades on the field, the program also had success in the classroom, maintaining a team GPA of 3.0 or higher throughout his time in Teaneck.


Prior to his time at FDU, Janezic served as an assistant at NJIT, where he helped the Highlanders reach new heights. In addition to being ranked for seven-consecutive weeks in the NSCAA Southeast Regional poll, the Highlanders also sported the 2014 Sun Belt Offensive and Defensive Players of the Year and peaked at 105 in the RPI, the highest ranking in program history. Two of his recruits were also named to the Atlantic Sun All-Rookie Team following their transition to that conference. In conjunction with the team’s on-field success, the Highlanders also carried a team GPA of 3.3 during Janezic’s tenure in Newark.


Prior to NJIT, Janezic was the head coach at Brookdale Community College for the 2012 season, leading the Jersey Blues men’s soccer team to the National Junior College Athletic Assocation Division III National Tournament. Brookdale finished with an 18-4-1 record and claimed the NJCAA Region XIX and Garden State Athletic Conference Championships with a 10-1-1 record in both the conference and region. Janezic was named both the Region XIX and GSAC Coach of the Year, as his team finished the season ranked sixth in the final NJCAA poll and ninth in the NSCAA rankings. His team led the nation in goals against average and was recognized by the school’s board of trustees for discipline and Leadership.


At the same time, Janezic was also coaching the USSDA U-15/16 Academy and the NJSA 04-United States Development Academy, where he worked alongside former Houston Dynamo and United States U-20 National Team Head Coach Tab Ramos.


Janezic served as the Director of Coaching for the Hazlet Soccer Association from 2002 to 2009 before returning to collegiate coaching as an assistant at Caldwell College. His collegiate coaching career began in 1997 as an assistant at his alma mater, Monmouth, where he remained until 2001.


Janezic played from 1992-96 at Monmouth, were he excelled as the team’s captain and MVP. After graduation, he saw both indoor and outdoor professional action with the Philadelphia Kixx and the Central Jersey Riptide.


A Garden State native, Janezic played soccer starred for Raritan High School before moving on to West Long Branch.


Janezic and his wife Maryann, reside in Ocean, N.J., with daughter, Macy Quinn, and sons Landon Robert, Hudson Christopher and Grayson David.

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John Ciano

Ciano joined the Red Storm staff in May 2023, handle responsibilities with the team's goalkeepers and recruiting.


Prior to his arrival in Queens, Ciano spent one season with Stony Brook in 2022-23. He helped the program transition from the America East into the CAA Conference in his lone campaign, guiding two players to all-conference selections.


Before his tenure with the Seawolves, the Syosset, N.Y., native produced the highest winning percentage of any men’s soccer head coach at The College of Saint Rose. He is also the only coach in the program’s 42-year history to complete his tenure with a career winning record.


During the 2021 campaign, Ciano made history by matching the program's record for wins (10), earning the squad’s highest finish in the Northeast-10 Conference and hosting the team's first home playoff game. The former goalkeeper guided the Golden Knights to the NE10 Tournament semifinals that season, seeing his program listed in the regional rankings by the NCAA and United Soccer Coaches polls. After posting the highest RPI in team history, Saint Rose received votes in the United Soccer Coaches national poll for the first time in 42 years.


Over his six campaigns in Albany, Ciano coached 17 all-conference, four all-region and the league's 2019 Rookie of the Year. During that season, the Golden Knights earned their first-ever appearance in the conference final following the program’s first postseason victory.


Prior to his stint with Saint Rose, he spent five seasons as a Division I assistant at Siena (2013-16) and NJIT (2011-13). He helped the Saints reach the postseason on two of three occasions while aiding the Highlanders, he aided them to the second-best record in the school's Division I history.


Before joining NJIT, Ciano began his collegiate coaching career as an assistant at the Division III level with Manhattanville College (2009-10), helping the team to consecutive double-digit win seasons and a 2009 regular season conference title.


Ciano has also been a Coaching Education Instructor with the U.S. Soccer Federation while serving in a variety of roles at the youth level and earning several coaching licenses and diplomas.


Known for his net protection, Ciano secured letters in four seasons as a starter at Central Connecticut State (2005) and Manhattan (2006-08), making starts in 45 of his 46 appearances between the two schools and earned a MAAC Defensive Player of the Week selection in his first season with the Jaspers. He also played semi-professionally with the Brooklyn Knights in the United Soccer League.

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