By Vincent Barone Over the recent months, construction workers undertook several major athletic renovation projects at Stony Brook, including complete makeovers of the university’s track and baseball field. Both experienced[...]
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Campus Sports · Sports · Top Stories
Chasing Swagger, One Win at a Time
By Vincent Barone Across Steve Pikiell’s desk hang two pictures that serve as a paradigm of Stony Brook athletics. One is a photo of Pikiell’s first home game as head[...]
The Weekend of the Seawolf! #Winning.
Men’s basketball has had a pretty neat weekend. After a disappointing 2011 regular season, which was fraught with injuries, the Seawolves are making a last-minute push for an America East[...]
Insert Melo Pun Here
By Vincent Barone I know that the Carmelo Anthony deal made for a pretty cool commercial. He was born in Brooklyn; now he’s coming back to play in The Garden—I[...]
Campus Sports · Sports · Top Stories
Men’s Lax Drops to #1 UVA, 11-10
By Vincent Barone The preseason for the Stony Brook lacrosse team was the most auspicious couple of months that any university sports team has ever had. After a stellar 2010[...]
Campus Sports · Sports · Top Stories
Stony Brook’s Lacrosse Boss: The First Round Pick
By Vincent Barone Back home, way out near the western coast of Canada, in New Westminister, B.C., Kevin Crowley was fiddling with some cables, connecting his laptop to his television.[...]
Sadly, Huge Explosions Leave Cusack Alive
I’m a lazy, apathetic asshole. If the alien gods from the planet Ufraton came down to me and asked me to write a tell-all story about my encounter, I would say, “Sorry man, I just popped an Ellio’s pizza in the oven, and I can’t leave that shit unattended”. But Director Roland Emmerich has found a way to inspire me to warn you about 2012…the movie.
Bayside’s Shudder
Long Island’s own pop punk band Bayside is set to release their fourth full length album, Shudder on September 30th. The CD opens powerfully with the track “Boy”, which, unfortunately, is one of the hardest-hitting songs on the album. Shudder is filled with morbidly well-written lyrics that longtime fans are familiar with, but it lacks the intensity of the band’s prior works.




