THE PR IDE CE L CAA C HAMP EBRATE THE IONSH I IP WIN R OVERTIME .
CAA NSHIP CHAMPIO OST M DING OUTSTAN ILY M PLAYER E IS AND MORPHIT IATE OC CAA ASS SIONER COMMIS NABY. STEVE KA
ii • hofs tra uni versi ty
LULU SAM SCOLARICI AND TE ECHEVERRY CELEBRA AS LEAH ECHEVERRY’S GOAL JOIN THEM. GALTON RACES TO
2013 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER QUICK FACTS Location: Hempstead, New York 11549 Founded: 1935 Enrollment: 11,090 Affiliation: NCAA Division I Conference: Colonial Athletic Association Nickname: Pride Colors: Gold, White and Blue Home Field: Hofstra Soccer Stadium (1,600) Playing Surface: Field Turf President: Stuart Rabinowitz NCAA Faculty Athletics Representative:
Michael Barnes
E-mail: Stephen.A.Gorchov@hofstra.edu Senior Sports Information Director:
Jim Sheehan Office Phone: (516) 463-6764 Cell Phone: (516) 523-6692 E-mail: Jim.B.Sheehan@hofstra.edu Senior Assistant Director of Athletic Communications: Brian Bohl
(Women’s Soccer contact) Office Phone: (516) 463-6759 E-mail: Brian.Bohl@hofstra.edu Director of Athletic Publications:
Len Skoros
Vice President and Director of Athletics:
Jeffrey A. Hathaway Deputy Director of Athletics:
Dino Mattessich
Office Phone: (516) 463-4602 E-mail: Leonard.M.Skoros@hofstra.edu Athletic Communications Fax:
(516) 463-5033
Senior Associate Director of Athletics:
Cindy Lewis Senior Associate Director of Athletics/ Facilities: Jay Artinian Associate Director of Athletics/ Communications: Stephen Gorchov Associate Director of Athletics/ External Affairs: TBA Associate Director of Athletics/NCAA Education and Compliance Services:
Jim Gibbons Assistant Director of Athletics/NCAA Education and Compliance Services:
Samantha Sweeney Assistant Director of Athletics/Marketing and Promotions:
Chrissy Arnone Assistant Director of Athletics/Ticket Operations: Maria Corvino Assistant Director of Athletics/ Administration: Rachel August Assistant Director of Athletics/StudentAthlete Services and Life Skills Development: James Lally Athletic Department Phone:
(516) 463-3800 Associate Director of Athletics/ Communications: Stephen Gorchov Office Phone: (516) 463-4933
Head Athletic Trainer: Evan Malings Women’s Soccer Athletic Trainer:
Marie Siler Equipment Manager: Kathy Theiling Photographers: Brian Ballweg,
Will Schneekloth, Mike Tureski
WOMEN’S SOCCER INFORMATION Head Coach: Simon Riddiough
(Hofstra, 1994) Record at Hofstra: 88-46-10/7 years Overall College Record: Same Assistant Coaches: Tobias Bischof and
Courtney Breen Soccer Office Phone: (516) 463-6946/3685 2012 Record: 11-9-2 2012 Conference Record/Finish: 6-4/T-4th
(reg. season), CAA Champions 2012 Postseason: NCAA First Round Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 18/5 Starters Returning/Lost: 10/1
TOP RETURNEES Name
Pos.
Cl.
Leah Galton Sam Scolarici Lulu Echeverry Ruby Staplehurst Emily Morphitis
F/M M M D GK
So. 11 G, 5 A, 27 P/CAA Rookie of the Year Jr. 10 G, 1 A, 21 P Jr. 8 G, 5 A, 21 P Sr. 0 G, 6 A, 6 P/All-CAA Third Team Sr. 11-9-2, 74 svs., 1.39 GAA/CAA Championship MOP
2012 Stats/Honors
HOFSTRA SOCCER ONLINE
GoHofstra.com
TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Quick Facts/Table of Contents 2 Hofstra Women’s Soccer Tradition 4 This is Hofstra University 6 Hofstra Highlights 8 Head Coach Simon Riddiough 10 Assistant Coaches 11 2013 Roster 12 2013 Outlook 15 Player Bios 30 Hofstra University President 31 University Senior Administration/Trustees 32 Hofstra University Director of Athletics 34 Hofstra Athletic Administration and Head Coaches 36 Long Island and New York City 37 Athletic Academic Support 38 Sports Medicine/ Athletic Training 39 Hofstra in the Community 40 Hofstra Soccer Stadium/ Facilities 42 2012 Statistics and Results 43 The Colonial Athletic Association 44 2012 CAA Review 46 Hofstra Honor Roll 48 Hofstra Soccer Record Book 50 Women’s Soccer Alumnae 52 Hofstra in the NCAA Tournament 55 All-Time Series Records 56 All-Time Results 62 Media Information 63 Campus Map/Getting to Hofstra 64 2013 Schedule
2013 Women’s Soccer • 1
HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER TRADITION BROOKE DEROSA LED THE TEAM IN SCORING IN 2007 AND WAS AN NSCAA ALLAMERICA SELECTION
238 Wins in program history at the Division I 2 26 Wins level in 20 seasons Years of existence for 21 the program win total 19 inProgram-best 2010
18
Seasons at .500 or better
All-Americans 4 Academic (Chrissy Arnone.
DANA BERGSTROM WAS AN ACADEMIC ALLAMERICAN AND THE CAA WOMEN’S SOCCER SCHOLAR-ATHLETE OF THE YEAR IN 2010
Sue Weber, Dana Bergstrom, Tiffany Yovino)
SIMON RIDDIOUGH HAS LED THE PRIDE TO TWO NCAA APPEARANCES AND 88 WINS, INCLUDING A PROGRAM-BEST 19 IN 2010, IN HIS SEVEN SEASONS
Tournament 4 NCAA appearances in 3 All-Americans program history (Sue Weber, Brooke DeRosa, Tiffany Yovino)
3
Colonial Athletic Association championships
coaches in 2 Head program history
SUZANNE NEWELL IS HOFSTRA’S ALL-TIME LEADING SCORER WITH 89 POINTS
SUE WEBER WAS A TWOTIME ALLAMERICAN AND THREETIME CAA DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
named to 2 Players the CAA 25th
Anniversary Team (Becky Wachsberger and Sue Weber)
Tournament 2 NCAA victories
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THE 2007 CAA CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM WON ITS FIRST ROUND NCAA GAME, 1-0, OVER OHIO STATE
HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER TRADITION
KRYSTAL ROBENS POSTED 34 WINS IN GOAL DURING HER HOFSTRA CAREER
THE PRIDE WON THEIR FIRST CAA CHAMPIONSHIP IN 2005 TO ADVANCE TO THE NCAA TOURNAMENT FOR THE FIRST TIME IN PROGRAM HISTORY
THE 2010 TEAM WAS RANKED 23RD IN THE NATION, EARNED AN AT-LARGE BID TO THE NCAA TOURNAMENT AND DEFEATED CONNECTICUT, 1-0, IN THE FIRST ROUND
THE 1992 TEAM WAS HOFSTRA’S FIRST WOMEN’S SOCCER SQUAD
KRISTA THORN WAS THE STARTING GOALKEEPER ON THE 2010 SQUAD AND BECAME THE FIRST FEMALE STUDENT-ATHLETE IN SCHOOL HISTORY TO PLAY IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT IN TWO DIFFERENT SPORTS (2010 SOFTBALL)
CHRISTA EIDENWEIL’S 39 CAREER GOALS RANK FIRST ON HOFSTRA’S GOAL SCORING LIST
TIFFANY YOVINO, A 2010 ALL-AMERICAN AND CAA PLAYER OF THE YEAR, WAS PART OF 58 WINS DURING HER FOURYEAR CAREER WITH THE PRIDE
JOANNE RUSSELL (CENTER), A 2006 INDUCTEE INTO THE HOFSTRA ATHLETICS HALL OF FAME, WAS THE FIRST COACH IN PROGRAM HISTORY AND WON 150 GAMES IN 14 YEARS
2013 Women’s Soccer • 3
THIS IS HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY
H
ofstra University provides a dynamic college experience tailored for engaged and ambitious individuals. Students find pride and purpose at Hofstra, through small classes, a faculty whose primary concern is teaching, cutting edge technology, extensive library resources, internships, and active and compelling educational programs that appeal to their interests and abilities. The Hofstra community is driven, dynamic and energetic, helping students find and focus their strengths to prepare them for a successful future. In its relatively short 78-year history, Hofstra has established itself as a world-class institution of higher education and cultural enterprise. Each academic year, the Hofstra campus and the programs offered grow and change to meet the demands of our students and our community. Hofstra opened in 1935 as a commuter school with all classes and offices housed in one building. Since those early days, Hofstra has evolved into an international institution with a student body hailing from all 50 states and 66 countries around the world. The beautiful campus is an accredited arboretum with 115 buildings on 240 acres. There are approximately 3,800 students living on campus, and Hofstra offers them and all students an extensive array of academic and social activities. Additionally, Hofstra’s close proximity to Manhattan means that students have easy access to the wondrous cultural, social and career offerings of the city. While the campus and its offerings have changed, what has remained consistent throughout the years is the sense of community on campus, the eagerness of our students to learn and the commitment of the Hofstra faculty and administration to provide a challenging education that encourages the pursuit of lifelong learning. The Colleges and Schools of the University are: Hofstra College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Honors College, Frank G. Zarb School of Business, Lawrence Herbert School of Communication, School of Education, School of Engineering and Applied Science, School of Health Sciences and Human Services, Maurice A. Deane School of Law, Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine at Hofstra University, School for University Studies and Hofstra University Continuing Education. Hofstra offers six undergraduate degrees in 140 different areas of study. Eleven graduate degrees are also offered with approximately 150 programs of study to choose from. The University offers three first professional degrees and 14 dual degrees as well. Hofstra joined with North Shore-LIJ Health System in establishing a medical school on the University campus in October 2007. The new school, which welcomed its first class in July 2011, is the first allopathic (MD) medical school in Nassau County and the first in New York State since 1963. On October 16, 2012, Hofstra hosted its second Presidential Debate, held in the “town hall” format, between President Barack Obama and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney. Hofstra also hosted the third and final presidential debate of the 2008 election cycle, between then Senator Barack Obama and Senator John McCain, on October 15, 2008. The debate was a transformational moment for the University, highlighting the achievements of our students and faculty and their engagement in the political process. Leading up to the first debate, students and the entire community were engaged by the year-long Educate ’08 program – almost 150 lectures, conferences, and events focused on the issues, history and politics of the presidency – followed by Define ’09, which looked at the first year of the Obama presidency. The University continues to host important political events, such as
4 • hofs tra uni versi ty
the New York State Gubernatorial Debate in 2010 and a visit from Newark, NJ, Mayor Cory Booker to kick of the Debate 2012 - Pride, Politics & Policy program. Hofstra opened its School of Engineering and Applied Science in September 2012. The new school features a co-op education program that will partner with a network of industry leaders to offer students substantial work experience before they graduate. The School of Engineering and Applied Science will combine and expand the University’s existing Engineering and Computer Science departments to develop a curriculum that emphasizes high-tech research, practical work experience and inter-disciplinary study, integrating resources and faculty from other parts of the institution, including the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine and the Frank G. Zarb School of Business. Hofstra’s Herbert School of Communication is one of the largest, most advanced non-commercial television facilities in the East. Students take classes and work in a sophisticated television production/postproduction facility with two broadcast-quality studios and control rooms; two advanced online video edit suites; two Avid non-linear digital editing systems and several cuts-only video work stations. Two satellite dishes are available with one dish providing special news feeds for the broadcast journalism room, which also has access to Associated Press, Lexis-Nexis and Dow Jones services. In addition, the facility is capable of broadcasting student-produced programming to the entire campus on our own cable channels. Also located here is the University’s radio station (WRHU/88.7-FM), audio production studios, a film/video screening room, film editing rooms, a computer laboratory, a speech performance studio and a large dance studio. Hofstra’s C.V. Starr Hall offers academic facilities that are among the most technologically advanced in the nation. Every seat in every classroom allows students direct access to the Internet and Hofstra network, including the resources of Hofstra’s Axinn Library. Hofstra’s growing computer facilities offer extensive high-tech training opportunities. There are computer terminals throughout the campus for student and faculty use, with more than 750 PC, Macintosh and UNIX workstations available in labs and classrooms. Hofstra hosts more than 500 cultural events annually, bringing thousands of scholars, dignitaries and other participants to campus. More than 200 musical and dramatic performances take place on campus each year.
THIS IS HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY The Hofstra Museum, which houses one of the largest art collections in the metropolitan area, coordinates approximately eight exhibitions annually and offers exhibition areas and an extensive outdoor sculpture collection, with 750 pieces. The Hofstra Museum is accredited by the American Association of Museums – one of only 94 universities in the nation and one of six in New York to hold that distinction. Hofstra also has six theaters, a student newspaper, a lively student center, a recently renovated recreation center and numerous athletic facilities, including the 13,000-seat James M. Shuart Stadium and the 5,046-seat David S. Mack Sports and Exhibition Complex. Hofstra also has an indoor, Olympic-sized (eight lane, 50-meter) swimming pool, one of the largest such facilities in the New York metropolitan area. The Hofstra athletics program competes on the NCAA Division I level and is a member of the Colonial Athletic Association. The University sponsors 17 intercollegiate programs – eight men’s sports and nine women’s sports. Hofstra has men’s teams in basketball, baseball, lacrosse, golf, tennis, wrestling, soccer and cross country. Women’s sports include basketball, volleyball, softball, tennis, soccer, field hockey, lacrosse, cross country and golf. Hofstra’s academic programs are accredited by numerous national agencies and the University is one of only 280 schools, out of more than 3,600 colleges and universities nationwide, with a chapter of the national honor society Phi Beta Kappa. Of Hofstra’s 1,135 faculty members, 517 are full time and 93 percent hold the highest degree in their fields. The average undergraduate class size is 21 students, while student-faculty ratio is 14-to-1.
Hofstra University is 100-percent program accessible to persons with disabilities, and has been cited as a national model for this achievement.
NATIONAL RECOGNITION For the fourth straight year, Hofstra has been selected as one of Chronicle of Higher Education’s “Great Colleges to Work For” receiving recognition for having an innovative and high quality teaching environment as well as clear requirements for tenure. Hofstra has also been named to the 2012 President’s Higher Education & Community Service Honor Roll for exemplary commitment to service and civic engagement on and off campus. Hofstra continues to be recognized by U.S. News & World Report, Princeton Review, Fiske, Washington Monthly, and Forbes on each of their Best College lists. The University was ranked in Tier One in US News & World Report at number 134, an improvement of 17 positions since the 2006 edition. Princeton Review has also recognized Hofstra for the 3rd year in their “Guide to Green Colleges”, which profiles colleges and universities committed to sustainability inside and outside the classroom. U.S. News & World Report has once again ranked The School of Education, the Frank G. Zarb School of Business, and the Maurice A. Deane School of Law as Best Graduate Schools, as well as recognized Hofstra’s graduate online programs in business, information technology, and education as top 100 programs. The Frank G. Zarb School of Business was also ranked among the top 75 M.B.A. programs by Forbes magazine, one of the top 5 Largest M.B.A. programs by Crain’s New York, and the undergraduate business program was ranked 117th in the country by U.S. News & World Report. The undergraduate engineering program was ranked at 57 in U.S. News & World Report ranking of non-doctoral engineering programs.
HOFSTRA BY THE NUMBERS
17 18
Varsity sports
Eateries on campus
20
Local and national fraternities and sororities
21
Average undergraduate class size
22 37 100 200+ 500 1935
Academic accreditations Residence halls Percent program accessibility to persons with disabilities Student clubs and organizations Cultural events per year Founding date
6,899
Full-time undergraduate enrollment
11,090
Total University enrollment, including part-time undergraduate, graduate and School of Law
124,000+ 1.2 Million
Hofstra alumni Volumes available at Hofstra University Libraries
2013 Women’s Soccer • 5
HOFSTRA HIGHLIGHTS WRHU, HOFSTRA’S RADIO STATION, WAS RECENTLY RATED THE FIFTH BEST COLLEGE RADIO STATION IN THE NATION BY THE PRINCETON REVIEW.
HOFSTRA HOSTED A PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE ON OCTOBER 16, 2012, AND BROUGHT A SLATE OF TOP POLITICAL STRATEGISTS, ACTIVISTS, SCHOLARS AND JOURNALISTS TO CAMPUS AS PART OF AN ELECTIONTHEMED EVENT SERIES. RAPPER SNOOP DOGG WAS ONE OF THE HEADLINERS AT VIBE LIVE DURING THE 2012 FALL FESTIVAL.
HOFSTRA CELEBRATED ITS DUTCH ROOTS WITH THE 30TH ANNUAL DUTCH FESTIVAL ON MAY 5, 2013.
THE PRINCETON REVIEW RECENTLY NAMED THE ZARB SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ONE OF ITS “GREAT SCHOOLS FOR MARKETING AND SALES MAJORS”
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HOFSTRA HIGHLIGHTS HOFSTRA IS JUST 25 MILES FROM NEW YORK CITY.
THE E.M.B.A. AND ONLINE M.B.A. PROGRAM VISITED JAPAN AND CHINA ON THEIR 2013 GLOBAL PRACTICUM.
APPROXIMATELY 2,000 UNDERGRADUATE, GRADUATE AND LAW STUDENTS CELEBRATED THE COMPLETION OF THEIR STUDIES DURING FOUR SEPARATE GRADUATION EXERCISES IN MAY 2013.
THE HOFSTRA COMMUNITY RAISED MORE THAN $111,000 FOR THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY AS PART OF THE ANNUAL RELAY FOR LIFE, SETTING A NEW RECORD FOR THE HOFSTRA EVENT.
NEWARK MAYOR CORY BOOKER WAS THE KEYNOTE SPEAKER FOR HOFSTRA’S ANNUAL P.R.I.D.E. WEEK.
2013 Women’s Soccer • 7
HEAD COACH SIMON RIDDIOUGH
S
imon Riddiough is entering his eighth year as the Hofstra Women’s Soccer Head Coach in 2013. He was named the second head coach in the history of the program when he was promoted to the position following JoAnne Russell’s retirement at the conclusion of the 2005 season.
Since taking over the head coaching responsibilities, Riddiough has not had a losing season and has guided Hofstra to two Colonial Athletic Association championships, capturing the title in 2007 and 2012 while leading the Pride to the league’s title game in 2008 and 2010. Riddiough’s career record is 88-46-10 in his seven years for an average of more than 12 wins per season. Hofstra made its third NCAA Tournament appearance under Riddiough in 2012, going 11-9-2 with a dramatic playoff run that saw the Pride advance through the first two rounds on penalty kicks before defeating UNC Wilmington in double overtime to win the CAA championship. Under Riddiough, Hofstra has qualified for six straight CAA Tournaments. The Pride is 5-4-3 in CAA Tournament matches with Riddiough at the helm. In 2010, Riddiough led Hofstra to the most successful season in school history (19-3). The Pride set a school record with 19 wins and went 11-0 in the Colonial Athletic Association to become the first team to go undefeated and untied in CAA play since 1998. The squad won a school-record 18 straight games. Hofstra advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament with a 1-0 win over Connecticut, its second NCAA win in program history, and Riddiough was named the CAA Coach of the Year and the Mid-Atlantic Region Coach of the Year by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA). The 2007 season was another landmark campaign for the program; surpassing the high standard that Riddiough’s team has set. Hofstra finished with an 18-4 record, setting a school record that was passed in 2010, won the CAA championship and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament, defeating Ohio State 1-0 in the first round and taking regional top seed Penn State into overtime in the second round. He was named the Northeast Region Coach of the Year by the NSCAA. In between the two historic seasons, Riddiough led Hofstra to an 11-8-3 record in 2008, including a return trip to the CAA finals (where it fell 1-0 in double-overtime). He also guided the pride to another successful season in 2009, finishing 10-6-3, including 7-2-2 in conference play.
8 • hofs tra uni versi ty
Riddiough has been a member of the Hofstra Women’s Soccer staff for 17 years, including the previous four as an associate head coach prior to his promotion to the head coaching position. Riddiough joined the coaching ranks in 1996 after spending two years as a graduate assistant in the Hofstra Sports Facilities Department, pursuing a master’s degree in counseling. Riddiough, a 1994 Hofstra graduate with a degree in physical education, was a four-year letterman and captain on the Flying Dutchmen soccer team from 1990 through 1994. He was an All-New York Region performer in 1993 and 1994, and an All-East Coast Conference pick in 1993. Riddiough was also a member of the allregion academic squad. In his Hofstra career he recorded 13 goals and 15 assists. A hard-nosed defender as a player, Riddiough has helped develop the Hofstra Women’s Soccer program into one of the top defensive teams in the nation during his tenure. The Pride ranked third in the nation in team defense in 2003 (0.45 goals per game), while tying for the fewest goals allowed in the entire country (nine), and also ranked 16th in the nation in 2002 (0.69 goals per game). In 2005, Hofstra allowed only three goals in 11 conference games on its way to winning the CAA championship and earning its first-ever NCAA Division I tournament appearance. In 2007, Hofstra set a school record with 12 shutouts, including seven straight. Riddiough played with the Greek American Atlas from 1995 through 1997 and won a USYSA Region I championship with the club. He also appeared in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Open Cup with the Greek American Atlas. In 1998 and 1999, Riddiough played with the New York Freedoms of the United Soccer League and played on the 1999 PDL Northeast Division championship squad that placed third in the nation. In 2001 Riddiough played with the Long Island Rough Riders of the A-League.
HEAD COACH SIMON RIDDIOUGH
In addition to his playing experience, Riddiough has been a head coach for the Eastern New York Youth Soccer Association Girls Under-17 team, which serves as part of the New York Olympic Development Program (ODP), since 2000. In 2005 he helped coach the team to the ODP National Championship. He also previously coached several Long Island Select teams from 1996 to 1999 and served as a director for Noga Soccer Camps
since 1991. In June 1992 he coached the New Hyde Park Girls Under-19 club to the New York State championship. Riddiough, a native of Barnsley, England, and his wife, Heather, a former two-sport athlete at Hofstra, reside in Massapequa Park, New York, with their two sons, Kain and Cole, and daughter, Quinn.
THE RIDDIOUGH FAMILY
2013 Women’s Soccer • 9
ASSISTANT COACHES
Tobias Bishof
Courtney Breen
ASSISTANT COACH
ASSISTANT COACH
T
C
obias Bischof is entering his third season with the Pride in 2013. During his two years he has helped the Pride to a Colonial Athletic Association Championship in 2012, and NCAA Tournament appearance and a 21-17-2 overall record. In his first year with the Pride in 2011, Hofstra posted a 10-8-0 overall record and earned a spot in the CAA Championship. The 2012 team tallied an 11-9-2 overall record, winning the CAA title and a NCAA berth as the fifth seed in the conference tournament.
ourtney Breen is entering her first season as an assistant coach with the Hofstra Women’s Soccer program in 2013.
Breen, who graduated from Hofstra in 2012 with a degree in physical education, was a member of the Pride women’s soccer team from 2008-11 and served as captain in 2010 and 2011. A two-sport studentathlete, Breen also played for the women’s basketball team during the 2011-12 campaign.
Bischof came to Hofstra in 2011 after a decade of prominent involvement in Long Island soccer, particularly at the youth level. Bischof led two U-15 teams - the East Meadow Sparks U-15 Girls and the Massapequa Arsenal U-15 Boys - to state championships in the New York State Open Cup during the summer of 2011.
A highly-decorated student-athlete during her soccer career, Breen garnered third team National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) honors in 2010 and was a four-time All-Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) selection. She was a member of the first team in 2009 and 2011 and earned second team honors in 2008 and 2010. Breen also was selected to the CAA All-Rookie team in 2008, and was named to the CAA All-Tournament squad that same season.
Bischof has also coached the East Meadow Dynamite and Sachem Blazers in the Region 1 Premier League. Overall, he has had tremendous success with his youth programs, leading seven teams to the state finals between 2006 and 2011.
Since 2012, Breen has served as the head junior varsity soccer and basketball coach at Holy Trinity High School in Hicksville, New York.
In addition, Bischof has served as the Select PDP program administrator for the Long Island Junior Soccer League (LIJSL), a program that included more than 500 players, and has run a select coaching program to prepare athletes for collegiate soccer. He has helped place dozens of his youth players into college programs in his short time on Long Island. A native of Winterstein, Germany, Bischof played soccer in his native country after graduating from high school. In 1997 he enrolled at Friedrich-Schiller University in Jena, Germany, where he earned a degree in sports science, finishing in the top 10 percent of his class. He also coached youth soccer in Germany, primarily with 16-17 year olds, before coming to the United States. Bischof first moved to Long Island in 2002 to accept a position with Globall Soccer, an International training and management company. He worked with the Long Island Rough Riders of the Premier Development League (PDL) after Globall Soccer purchased the team. Bischof currently resides in Long Beach, New York.
10 • hofs tra uni versi ty
Breen also has extensive training, camps and clinic experience in addition to volunteering her time with the Special Olympics, Holy Family CYO and with the Empire State Games for the Physically Challenged. During her career with the Pride women’s soccer team, Breen tallied 16 goals and 12 assists for 44 points. She played in 81 games and was a member of the 2010 squad that advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament and finished the season with a 19-3 record.
2013 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER ROSTER No.
Name
Pos.
Cl.
Ht.
Hometown/High School/Last School
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 13 14 15 17 19 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
Emily Morphitis Tara Kerns Nicki Choffel Lea Hinnen Erin Havard Ingrid Moyer Ruby Staplehurst Chloe Dale Amber Stobbs Brittany Farriella Kerry Cummings Jeannine Molleda Lulu Echeverry Mallory Ullrich Jill Mulholland Sam Scolarici Leah Galton Samantha Calvet Caylin Dudley Danielle Lewis Emily Agudelo Kristin Robeson Friederike Mehring Laura Magistrali Melissa Kress Maria Pettet
GK D/M M D/M D/M F/D D/F M M/F D D/M M/F M/F D M M/F F/M F/M D F M D/M GK M GK F
Sr. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. So. So. Jr. So. So. Jr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. So. Jr. Fr.
5-6 5-3 5-4 5-7 5-7 5-8 5-4 5-6 5-2 5-7 5-5 5-2 5-5 5-1 5-5 5-3 5-7 5-7 5-3 5-8 5-5 5-2 5-5 5-5 5-10 5-3
London, England/Therfield Chesapeake, VA/Great Bridge Bellerose, NY/Mary Louis Academy Moehlin, Switzerland/Gymnasium Baumlihof Fairfax, VA/W.T. Woodson Souderton, PA/Souderton Area London, England/St. Thomas More Birmingham, England/Langley/Merrist Wood College London, England/Warlingham Lake Grove, NY/Sachem North Kansas City, MO/St. Teresa’s Academy/St. John’s Clifton, VA/Robinson Secondary East Meadow, NY/East Meadow South Riding, VA/Freedom/UNC Greensboro Levittown, NY/MacArthur Aldie, VA/Freedom Harrogate, England/St. John Fishers Bangkok, Thailand/New International School of Thailand Grasonville, MD/Kent Island Summerville, GA/Trion Long Beach, NY/Long Beach Manheim, PA/Manheim Central Hannover, Germany/Potsdam Modena, Italy/Liceo Carlo Sigonio Canandaigua, NY/ Canandaigua Academy Brooklyn, NY/Fort Hamilton
Head Coach: Simon Riddiough (Hofstra ’94) Assistant Coaches: Tobias Bischof, Courtney Breen
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE 1 3 5 8 10 13 14
Emily Morphitis Nicki Choffel Erin Havard Chloe Dale Brittany Farriella Jeannine Molleda Lulu Echeverry
mor-FEE-tiss shuh-FELL huh-VARD clo-EE fair-ee-ELL-uh muh-YAY-da ETCH-uh-vary
19 25 26 27 28 30 HC AC
Sam Scolarici Emily Agudelo Kristin Robeson Friederike Mehring Laura Magistrali Maria Pettet Simon Riddiough Tobias Bischof
sko-la-REECH-ee Ah-goo-dell-O ROBE-ah-son Fred-a-rika Mer-ring Mag-is-trail-e Pet-it rid-ee-OFF bish-OFF
2013 Women’s Soccer • 11
2013 OUTLOOK
P
ast success never guarantees anything for the future. But Hofstra is hoping a championship run last season will springboard a title defense as the Pride return 10 of 11 starters from a squad that captured the Colonial Athletic Association crown and the program’s fourth-ever appearance in the NCAA Tournament. Despite having just one senior in the starting lineup, a young squad spearheaded a gritty tournament run that included three successful efforts away from home. The best news for head coach Simon Riddiough is that 18 letter-winners are returning from the team that knocked off Northeastern and top-seeded William & Mary on the road in penalty kicks before outlasting UNC Wilmington, 2-1, in double overtime of the conference championship game. Riddiough, who has never had a losing season in his first seven seasons on the job, will have all of Hofstra’s top-10 scorers from 2012 coming back for the new campaign. What once were talented-butunproven players are now playoff-tested veterans who guided the fifthseeded Pride to a NCAA berth and an 11-9-2 record last season. At forward, Hofstra returns CAA Rookie of the Year and conference preseason player of the year Leah Galton along with juniors Lulu Echeverry and Sam Scolarici. As underclassmen, the trio started 56 out of a possible combined 66 games and combined for 29 of Hofstra’s 40 total goals. A midfield outfit led by Tara Kerns, Chloe Dale and All-CAA firstteam member Jill Mulholland could also have a familiar look. The Pride registered 31 more shots than the opposition last year, which should be a good sign as the unit is now more experienced entering 2013. Hofstra out-scored opponents by a plus-8 differential thanks to a potent offense and a defensive unit that shut out six teams and allowed one goal or fewer in 12 games. The back line only loses Brooke Bendernagel, with Ruby Staplehurst, Caylin Dudley and Brittany Farriella all returning. In goal, senior Emily Morphitis is back after capturing Most Outstanding Player honors for her efforts in the CAA Championship.
“Our goal hasn’t changed,” Riddiough said. “We expect to compete for the CAA championship and do everything in our power to improve every game.” Here is a position-by-position look at the Hofstra Pride entering the 2013 season:
FORWARD Galton frequently displayed her goal-scoring ability, notching three multigoal games. But Galton’s scoring prowess didn’t prevent Riddiough from playing her all over the field to capitalize on matchups. The Harrogate, England, native saw frequent time at midfield and even provided one of LULU ECHEVERRY the best Hofstra defensive efforts of the season when she moved to the back line and shut down CAA Player of the Year Mallory Schaffer in Hofstra’s shootout win over William & Mary in the CAA semifinals. Her versatility didn’t preclude Galton from finishing second in the CAA with 27 points including a team-leading 11 goals. The NSCAA All-Region first-team member is a key part of the attack, but Scolarici and Echeverry will look to prevent defenses from keying on any one player. Scolarici will look to sustain her crunchtime success rate after scoring three game-winning goals, including the championship-winning strike that secured a NCAA Tournament appearance against Boston College. Echeverry, who had eight goals and five assists, expanded her role greatly from her first season and will now look to settle into a starting forward position after spending a sizable portion of 2012 as a midfielder. Senior Amber Stobbs, who will be entering her senior season in 2013, played for the Washington Spirit Reserves this past summer and earned an all-star selection in the W-League. After having her season limited to 11 games because of injury, the London, England, native will look to have a healthy and productive season and build on a seven-point effort in her shortened campaign. A proven playmaker, Stobbs netted Hofstra’s only multi-assist game last season when she compiled two assists in a win over Colgate. Freshman Maria Pettet will look to add depth after starring for Fort Hamilton in Brooklyn. Fellow freshman Danielle Lewis is also an option after playing four years of varsity soccer for Trion in Summerville, Ga.
LEAH GALTON
12 • hofs tra uni versi ty
2013 OUTLOOK an impact from her first day and started all 22 games. A defensive-minded player, Dale contributed two assists and fired 12 shots in total. Riddiough has familiar faces and newcomers who could also provide options for improving depth and resting the potential starters. Sophomore Jeannine Molleda played in all 22 games, making four starts as a freshman, and provided a bench boost with a goal and an assist. Nicki Choffel returns for a sixth season after having missed 2009 and 2010 in its entirety because of injuries. Junior Erin Havard was credited with the decisive assist in the Opening Day victory over Ohio State and played in 11 games. She could see time at midfield as well as senior Kerry Cummings, who appeared in three contests. Sophomores Samantha Calvet and Laura Magistrali, and freshman Emily Agudelo could also be in the mix for playing time.
AMBER STOBBS
MIDFIELD A strength of 2012 should also be an asset this season. Mulholland earned a spot on the CAA All-Preseason team after earning an all first-team selection as a freshman. Now in her second season, the Levittown, N.Y., product tied Scolarici with three game-winning goals in a season that saw her net six goals and five assists as one of Hofstra’s best two-way players. Kerns transitioned from a defensive role to a dependable midfielder last season and started 14 of 17 games. As a true freshman, Dale made
RUBY STAPLEHURST
DEFENSE The back line’s starting unit should also be established early in camp. Staplehurst, a senior, will likely play another important role on set pieces. As one of Hofstra’s top options on corner kicks, Staplehurst finished third in the CAA with six assists. Dudley started all 22 games last season and the junior is on track to return to a starting role once again. Farriella, who scored one goal last season, will look to provide another steady hand as a senior after starting 17 of 19 games in 2012.
JILL MULHOLLAND
Junior Ingrid Moyer has seen action up front but could earn time on defense with a strong camp showing. Moyer chipped in a goal and
2013 Women’s Soccer • 13
2013 OUTLOOK an assist last season. Sophomore Mallory Ullrich will also look to make an impression on her new team after transferring from UNC Greensboro. Sophomore Lea Hinnen could fortify the defense and freshman Kristin Robeson could open some eyes as a full back.
GOALIE Morphitis was Hofstra’s bulwark against opposing threats with the netminder playing all but 4:57 to account for more than 99 percent of the team’s minutes in goal. She recorded five individual shutouts and combined on another clean sheet versus Georgia State. But her best efforts came in the end with two outstanding shootout performances, including a key save in the penalty kick session after shutting out the top-seeded Tribe on its home field in Williamsburg, Va., in the semifinals for 110 minutes of a scoreless tie. Morphitis made five saves in the CAA championship win, including three in the second half, to lock up the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player honors. She compiled a .698 save percentage and a 1.39 goals against average. A pair of freshmen who could be the future of the position for the Pride will also look to turn some heads in camp. Friederike Mehring comes to Hempstead from Hannover, Germany, after having played for her domestic club team Frauen Bundesliga. Junior Melissa Kress will also help to shore up the position after a stellar high school career for Canandaigua Academy in upstate New York.
BRITTANY FARRIELLA
SCHEDULE A matchup against College Cup finalist Penn State and a home game against Boston College in a NCAA Tournament rematch will highlight the non-conference slate. In CAA play, Hofstra will host UNC Wilmington, the College of Charleston, William & Mary and James Madison. The Pride will play league road games at Northeastern, Delaware, Drexel and Towson. Hofstra will face a schedule in which the 17 opponents finished a combined 19 games over .500 (171-142-29) in 2012 and 11 teams were .500 or better. Riddiough guided Hofstra to a 7-1 home record last season and will look to sustain the success at Hofstra Soccer Stadium starting with the home opener on Aug. 30 against North Dakota State. It will be the program’s first all-time meeting versus the Bison. A three-game homestand will continue on Sept. 1 versus Boston College. The two teams met in the first round of last season’s NCAA Tournament with the Eagles defeating the Pride, 2-0, in Chestnut Hill, Mass. The Pride will then play Marist on Sept. 6 before traveling to play Albany. Hofstra will conclude the home non-conference schedule on Sept. 13 before playing St. Bonaventure and St. Joseph’s in back-to-back road games. The Pride will then open league play against the Seahawks on Sept. 27 before facing the newest CAA-member in the College of Charleston two days later. That game will mark the first-ever league game of any Hofstra team against the Cougars.
EMILY MORPHITIS
14 • hofs tra uni versi ty
The Pride will then play four consecutive road games – its entire slate of CAA away contests – starting on Oct. 5 against the Huskies. The game will bring Hofstra back to the site where it posted a late tying goal before advancing on penalty kicks in the CAA Quarterfinals. Hofstra will then play at Delaware, Drexel and Towson before ending the regular season with back-to-back home games against CAA regular-season champion William & Mary on Oct. 25 and James Madison on Oct. 27. The CAA Tournament is scheduled for Nov. 3-10 with the top overall seed hosting the semifinals and championship game.
PLAYER PROFILES
NICKI CHOFFEL MIDFIELD, 5-4, GRADUATE BELLEROSE, NY/MARY LOUIS ACADEMY Sixth season on the Hofstra soccer roster, including two seasons she missed in their entirety due to injuries…Was on the roster of the WPSL’s Long Island Fury in 2008 and again in 2010 and 2012…2012: Appeared in 12 games, including three starts…Totaled six shots, including five on net…Led the team with a .833 shot-on-goal percentage… Team out-scored opponents by a plus-6 margin in games in which she appeared…Logged two shots versus Georgia State on Sept. 23…Saw playing time as a reserve in three CAA Tournament games plus the NCAA Tournament first round contest at Boston College on Nov. 9…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…2011: Appeared in five games as a reserve…Tallied one shot…Contributed to a defensive unit that produced shutouts against Columbia and Albany in games for which she played…Recorded her lone shot (and shot on goal) versus Albany on Sept. 4…2010: Missed the year with a torn ACL suffered in the summer…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2009: Missed the year with a torn ACL suffered in preseason, taking a medical redshirt…2008: Appeared in eight games off the bench for the Pride, primarily in the midfield…High School: Played on the Mary Louis soccer team in Jamaica Estates, New York for four years…Helped the Hilltoppers to Division B championships in 2005 and 2007…Was a four-time team Most Valuable Player… Earned her school’s scholar-athlete award as a senior…Earned the Queens Times Ledger Player of the Year honor in 2007… Personal: Has one older sister…Started playing soccer at age 4…Also recruited by Villanova, Delaware and Binghamton… Teaching of writing major. Year GP G A P 2008 8 0 2009 Medical red-shirt 2010 DNP - injured 2011 5 0 2012 12 0 Totals 25 0
0
0
0 0 0 0 0 0
3
2013 Women’s Soccer • 15
PLAYER PROFILES
KERRY CUMMINGS MIDFIELD/DEFENSE, 5-5, SENIOR KANSAS CITY, MO/ST. TERESA’S ACADEMY/ ST. JOHN’S Third season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Played for one season at St. John’s University before transferring to Hofstra…2012: Appeared in three games as a reserve… Played against Ohio State, Temple and Marist…Hofstra was 2-1 in games in which she played…Tallied a shot in a win over the Buckeyes on Aug. 17…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…2011: Played in 12 games, making 11 starts…Made an instant impact on defense, helping Hofstra shut out three opponents…Took seven shots… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…At St. John’s: Appeared in nine games for the Red Storm in 2010, scoring one goal, which was a late game-winner in a 1-0 victory over Big East rival Seton Hall…High School: Played four years of soccer at St. Teresa’s Academy in Kansas City…Helped her team to a third place finish in the state championships as a sophomore… Earned team captain honors as a senior…Led club team (BVSC All-Stars) to seven straight state titles in Kansas…Personal: Has two brothers and one sister…Lists Wayne Rooney and Michael Jordan as her favorite athletes…Names “Rudy” as her favorite movie…Started playing soccer at age 5… Nicknamed “Bear”…Lists “Decoded” as her favorite book… Has volunteered at homeless shelters in the Kansas City area and worked for Operation Breakthrough day care for inner city children…Health science major.
Year GP G 2011 12 0 2012 3 0 Totals 15 0
16 • hofs tra uni versi ty
A 0 0 0
P 0 0 0
12
PLAYER PROFILES
BRITTANY FARRIELLA DEFENDER, 5-7, SENIOR LAKE GROVE, NY/SACHEM NORTH Fifth season on the Hofstra soccer roster, including one redshirt year…Coming off her second year as a starter and was a key member of a defensive unit that posted six shutouts for a second consecutive season…2012: Played in 19 games, making 17 starts…Scored one goal and tallied 12 shots… Scored a goal against William & Mary on Oct. 21…Registered a season-high three shots in a 2-1 win over Albany on Sept. 14…Started both the CAA championship-winning game against UNC Wilmington and in the NCAA Tournament at Boston College on Nov. 9…Finished with a .583 shot-on-goal percentage…2011:…Played and started all 18 games…Scored one goal and registered three shots…Member of a defensive group that held opponents to 22 goals in 18 games…Scored first career goal versus James Madison on Sept. 23…2010: Appeared in four games off the bench for the Pride…2009: Red-shirted and did not play…High School: Played five years of Soccer at Sachem North High School in Lake Ronkonkoma, New York, earning a spot on the varsity in eighth grade… Earned both All-County and All-League honors…Also played for four years in Long Island’s Olympic Development Program…Personal: Has an older sister, Krysten, who played goalie on the Hofstra Women’s Soccer team…Lists Cristiano Ronaldo as her favorite athlete…Started playing soccer at age 4…Also recruited by Miami, Connecticut, Boston University and Loyola…Criminology major.
Year GP G 2010 4 0 2011 18 1 2012 19 1 Totals 41 2
A 0 0 0 0
P 0 2 2 4
10
2013 Women’s Soccer • 17
PLAYER PROFILES
TARA KERNS MIDFIELD/DEFENSE, 5-2, SENIOR CHESAPEAKE, VA/GREAT BRIDGE Fourth season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster… Coming off her second season as a starter…2012: Played in 17 games, making 14 starts…Hofstra posted a plus-11 goal differential (32-21) in games in which she played…Totaled 12 shots, including five on-target…Netted a season-high three shots in a win over Temple on Aug. 24…Registered two shots in a 1-0 win over George Mason on Oct. 12…Also tallied two shots at William & Mary in the CAA semifinals on Nov. 2…Started all three CAA Tournament games and also got the start in the NCAA Tournament first round game at Boston College on Nov. 9…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…2011: Played and started all 18 games…Notched two assists in her first year as a starter… Took eight shots…Picked up her first point of the season and the second of her career when she facilitated Brittany Butts’ opening goal in a 5-0 win versus Albany on Sept. 4… Also assisted on Laura Green’s game-opening goal on Sept. 23 versus James Madison…Part of a defensive unit that shut out six opponents… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2010: Appeared in 21 games for the Pride, primarily as a defender and defensive midfielder…Had one assist in a home win over Rhode Island…Took four shots… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played for four years at Great Bridge High School in Chesapeake, Virginia…Led her squads to the district and regional tournaments in all four seasons…Was named the MVP of the Wildcats as both a freshman and senior…Was named the Southeastern District Player of the Year in 2010… Was also a first-team all-district and an all-Tidewater selection in 2010…Traveled to Russia with the Olympic Development Program (ODP) regional team in 2010…Also chosen to the National Honor Society as a senior…Personal: Has two older brothers…Played with the Virginia Rush soccer club… Nicknamed “T.K.”…Started playing soccer at age 6…Hopes to coach soccer after graduation…Has volunteered with TOPS Soccer, a community-based training program for young athletes with disabilities, and as a Wyldlife Youth Group leader… Physical education major. Year GP G 2010 21 0 2011 18 0 2012 17 0 Totals 56 0
18 • hofs tra uni versi ty
A 1 2 0 3
P 1 2 0 3
2
PLAYER PROFILES
EMILY MORPHITIS GOALKEEPER 5-6, SENIOR LONDON, ENGLAND/THERFIELD Fourth season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Coming off her second season as the starting goalkeeper…2012: Played and started all 22 games…Went 11-9-2 while logging all but 4:57 in net…Named Most Outstanding Player of the CAA Tournament after helping Hofstra advance in shootouts during the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds…Made five saves in the overtime CAA championship victory over UNC Wilmington… Made five-or-more saves six times while registering a .698 save percentage…Made one save in shutting out an Ohio State team receiving votes in the national poll on Aug. 17…Blanked St. Bonaventure on Sept. 7…Made three saves in a shutout to open CAA play at UNC Wilmington on Sept. 20…Posted five saves to lead Hofstra to a 1-0 win over George Mason on Oct. 20… Saved her best performances for the postseason, making two saves in the shootout of the quarterfinals against Northeastern on Oct. 28…Made three saves in regulation against top-seeded William & Mary in a scoreless draw before making two additional stops in the shootout in the CAA semifinals on Nov. 2…Tied a season high with seven saves against Boston College in a first-round NCAA Tournament loss on Nov. 9…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2011: Played and started 14 games…Posted a 7-7-0 record with four shutouts… Allowed just 14 goals on 146 shots faced…Finished with a .759 save percentage…Logged a 1.03 goals-against average in 1226:00 of playing time…Made two saves for her first shutout of the season in a 2-0 win versus Columbia on Sept. 2... Registered three consecutive CAA shutouts, blanking Georgia State, UNC Wilmington and Northeastern in succession to cap the regular season…Stopped all 12 shots on goal faced during the shutout stretch, which all came on the road…Made a career-high nine saves in a 1-0 loss versus Delaware in the CAA Tournament on Nov. 3…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2010: Appeared in 18 games for the Pride, usually playing the second half while platooning at goalkeeper…Started three games…Had a 7-1 record in net, suffering only one loss on opening day against Boston College…Had a season-high three saves in wins over Delaware and Drexel…Had two second-half saves in a 1-0 win over James Madison…Combined on eight shutouts on the year… Had a .643 save percentage and a 1.03 goals against average… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Attended the Therfield School in Surrey, England… Played soccer for the Chelsea Ladies in Surrey, England, along with Hofstra classmates Amber Stobbs and Ruby Staplehurst… Has played for the England Under-19, Under-17 and Under-15 teams…Named to the Inner London Squad and the English Colleges Squad…Personal: Has an older sister and a younger brother…Lists David Beckham as her favorite athlete… Started playing soccer at age 7…Nicknamed “Morph”…Lists “Freedom Writers” as her favorite movie…Criminology major.
1
Year GP W-L-T Min. GA Svs. Sv.% GAA SO 2010 18 7-1-0 869:40 10 18 .643 1.03 0 2011 14 7-7-0 1226:00 14 44 .758 1.03 4 2012 22 11-9-2 2066:40 32 74 .698 1.39 5 Totals 54 25-17-2 4162:20 56 136 .708 1.21 9
2013 Women’s Soccer • 19
PLAYER PROFILES
RUBY STAPLEHURST DEFENSE, 5-4, SENIOR LONDON, ENGLAND/ST. THOMAS MORE Fourth season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster… Served as one of Hofstra’s most reliable defenders and is expected to fill a similar role this season…2012: Named to the All Colonial Athletic Association Third Team…Played and started all 22 games…Led team in assists with six… Assist total was the third-highest in the CAA…Finished fifth in the league in assists-per-game with 0.28…Tallied 17 total shots , including 12 on-target…Notched a threegame point streak with assists against Georgia State, James Madison and Delaware…Hofstra was 5-1 in games in which she recorded an assist…Contributed to a defensive unit that posted six shutouts…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…2011: Played and started all 18 games…Tallied a team-leading six assists in her first season as a starter… Took eight shots…Twice logged games with multiple assists, including two assists at Harvard on Sept. 16 and another pair of helpers versus James Madison on Sept. 23 for four points in a two-game span…Also assisted on Courtney Breen’s goal versus Albany on Sept. 4… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2010: Appeared in 11 games, while seeing time as both an outside defender and a forward…Had two goals and one assist…Scored her first collegiate goal on a breakaway in a 2-0 road win over VCU…Added a goal on a header in a win over George Mason…Assisted on a goal in a 4-1 win over Fordham…Took five shots…High School: Attended St. Thomas More Language College in London, England…Played soccer for the Chelsea Ladies in Surrey, England, along with Hofstra classmates Emily Morphitis and Amber Stobbs…Helped her squad to a league championship in 2009, as well as the County Cup…Personal: Has one brother… Lists David Beckham as her favorite athlete…Favorite book is “Angela’s Ashes”…Hopes to enter the media profession after graduation…Started playing soccer at age 7…Enjoys Indian food…Favorite movies are the “Toy Story” series…Speech communication and rhetorical studies major. Year GP G 2010 11 2 2011 18 0 2012 22 0 Totals 51 2
20 • hofs tra uni versi ty
A 1 6 6 13
P 5 6 6 17
7
PLAYER PROFILES
AMBER STOBBS MIDFIELD/FORWARD, 5-2, SENIOR LONDON, ENGLAND/WARLINGHAM Fourth season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Earned All-Northeast Conference honors and led the W-League in assists as a member of the Washington Spirit Reserves this past summer…2012: Started the first 11 games before suffering a season-ending injury…Still finished fifth on the team in total points despite missing half the season…Netted two goals and three assists for seven points…Scored the gamewinning goal in a 2-1 victory over Albany on Sept. 14…Also scored a goal in her final game action of the season at James Madison on Sept. 30…Notched her first career multi-point game when she tallied two assists against Colgate on Aug. 31…Averaged 0.64 points-per-game…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…2011: Played in four games, making three starts…Tallied one assist…Took seven shots… Played a disciplined game that resulted in no yellow cards… Assisted on Laura Greene’s first goal versus Albany on Sept. 4…Hofstra was 3-1 in games in which she played… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…2010: Appeared in 17 games, including three starts…Had two goals and one assist…Scored the game’s first goal in the second half of a 2-1 win over Drexel… Had a goal in a 5-0 win over George Mason to give the Pride a 2-0 lead just before halftime, helping her earn CAA Rookie of the Week honors on Oct. 11…Assisted on a goal in a win over Towson…Suffered a late-season injury that kept her out of the line-up for over three weeks… Took 16 shots…Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Attended the Warlingham School in Warlingham, England…Also played for the Chelsea Ladies F.C., along with Hofstra classmates Emily Morphitis and Ruby Staplehurst…Was a scholastic sprinter while at Warlingham, competing in the 100 and 200 meter events…Personal: Has an older brother…Lists David Beckham and Cristiano Ronaldo her favorite athletes… Lists the “Toy Story” series as her favorite movies and the “Twilight” series as her favorite books… Nicknamed “Stobzy”… Started playing soccer at age 6…Psychology major. Year GP G 2010 17 2 2011 4 0 2012 11 2 Totals 32 4
A 1 1 3 5
P 5 1 7 13
9
2013 Women’s Soccer • 21
PLAYER PROFILES
CAYLIN DUDLEY
23
DEFENSE, 5-3 JUNIOR GRASONVILLE, MD/ KENT ISLAND
Third season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…2012: Started all 22 games… Registered one assist and 27 shots…Picked up first career assist in a 3-1 CAA win versus Delaware on Oct. 4…Finished with three shots in a game on four separate occasions, including the CAA-championship winning game against UNC Wilmington on Nov. 4…Had two shots on goal at Drexel on Oct. 7…Helped a Hofstra defensive unit that shutout six opponents…Logged one shot in Hofstra’s NCAA Tournament game at Boston College on Nov. 9…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…2011: Made an immediate impact as a freshman, playing in all 18 games, including 12 starts…Scored four goals, marking the fourth-highest total on the team…Took 21 shots…Out of the Hofstra players with multiple goals, she posted the highest shooting percentage at .190…Scored her first career goal versus Columbia on Sept. 2…Scored her first CAA goal and first career game-winner in a 1-0 victory over VCU on Sept. 25… Notched her first career two-goal game, providing Hofstra’s only offense in a 3-2 loss at Delaware on Oct. 2… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played for four seasons at Kent Island High School…Earned first-team All-Bayside honors all four years…Was a three-time team MVP…Scored 15 goals and 11 assists as a sophomore, 16 goals and 10 assists as a junior and 18 goals and 14 assists as a senior…Was named the League Player of the Year as a senior, when she led the conference in both goals and assists…Earned the Maryland State Merit Scholastic Award for academic achievement…Personal: Has one brother and one sister…Lists “Pride and Prejudice” by Jane Austen as her favorite book… Started playing soccer at age 4…Accounting major. Year GP G 2011 18 4 2012 22 0 Totals 40 4
22 • hofs tra uni versi ty
A 0 1 1
LULU ECHEVERRY
14
MIDFIELD/FORWARD, 5-5, JUNIOR EAST MEADOW, NY/ EAST MEADOW
Third season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…2012: Played in all 22 games, making 15 starts…Set career highs with eight goals, five assists and 21 total points…Finished tied for sixth in the CAA in goals, tied for fifth in points and tied for fourth in assists…Also tied teammate Sam Scolarici for eighth in the league in points-pergame…Assisted on Scolarici’s CAA championship-winning goal 3:39 into the second overtime to lift Hofstra to a 2-1 win over UNC Wilmington and secure the Pride’s berth in the NCAA Tournament…Also scored Hofstra’s first goal in the CAA championship contest...Scored goals in three straight games after finding the net against Georgia State, James Madison and Delaware…Netted the game-winning goal against Temple on Aug. 24…Also scored against Marist on Sept. 9…2011: Played an invaluable role as a freshman, appearing in all 18 games, including three starts…Recorded one assist… Took eight shots…Picked up her first career point by assisting on Laura Greene’s first goal in a 2-1 CAA win versus Drexel on Sept. 29…High School: Played for four seasons at East Meadow High School…Was an all-county selection as a senior, as well as second-team All-New York… Also an all-conference selection as a junior and senior…Helped her team to two Nassau County finals as a sophomore and senior, and a semifinals appearance as s junior…Also ran on the track team, earning all-county honors in the steeplechase. and played on the badminton team as a senior…Was on the honor roll every semester…Personal: Full name is Luisa Echeverry…Born in Cali, Colombia…Has one sister…Lists Lionel Messi, Wayne Rooney and Marta as her favorite athletes…”Nineteen Minutes” by Jodi Picoult is her favorite book…Hopes to continue playing soccer after graduation...Started playing soccer at age 5.
P Year GP G 8 18 0 2011 1 2012 22 8 9 Totals 40 8
A 1 5 6
P 1 21 22
PLAYER PROFILES
ERIN HAVARD
5
MIDFIELD/DEFENSE, 5-7, JUNIOR FAIRFAX, VA/W.T. WOODSON
Third season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…2012: Appeared in 11 games, making five starts…Tallied one assist and posted four total shots (including two on goal)…Assisted on Hofstra’s first goal of the season, setting up Lulu Echeverry’s game-winning goal in a 2-0 victory over Ohio State on Aug. 17…Hofstra out-scored opponents by a plus-six differential in games in which she played… Recorded two shots in a start against Temple on Aug. 24…Also started against George Mason, Towson and Northeastern…2011: Played in 12 games as a reserve…Registered one assist…Took seven shots…Made college debut versus TCU on Sept. 11…Recorded first career point by assisting on Courtney Breen’s goal in a CAA Win at UNC Wilmington on Oct. 23…High School: Played on the varsity team at W.T. Woodson for four years…Scored the gamewinning goal to help the Cavaliers win the Northern Region championship as a senior…Also helped her squad to a district championship as a junior…All-district selection as a junior and senior and a team captain as a senior…Member of the national honors society…Also played club soccer for 10 years with McLean Azul, helping her team to six Virginia State Cup championships (2005-09, 2011)…Personal: Has one brother and one sister, who was a swimmer at East Carolina…Fiveyear member of the Virginia Olympic Development Program, helping her team to a third-place finish in the 2009 national championships…Lists Brett Favre and Steve Nash as her favorite athletes…Started playing soccer at age 5…Chose Hofstra in part for its business program and its proximity to New York City…Finance major. Year GP G 2011 12 0 2012 11 0 Totals 23 0
A 1 1 2
INGRID MOYER
6
FORWARD/DEFENSE, 5-8, JUNIOR SOUDERTON, PA/ SOUDERTON AREA
Third season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster… Attended Eastern University in Pennsylvania for a year, but did not play soccer…2012: Filled a key role as a reserve, playing in 14 games and making two starts…Scored one goal and added an assist…Logged five total shots…Started the first two games of the year against Ohio State and Temple…Scored first career goal against Georgia State on Sept. 23…Compiled a two-game point streak when she assisted on Lulu Echeverry’s goal at James Madison on Sept. 30…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…2011: Appeared in six games as a reserve…Took one shot…Made college debut versus Columbia on Sept. 2… Team went 3-3 in games in which she played… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played for four seasons at Souderton Area High School, where she graduated in 2010…Started all four years…Helped lead team to only its second playoff appearance in school history as a junior, when she led the team in scoring and was an all-conference selection…Also was a member of the Eastern Pennsylvania ODP program for four years, and played for the FC Bucks Fusion club team…Also participated on the diving team for one year, qualifying for districts…Personal: Has one brother and one sister…Sister played soccer at Lafayette…Lists Mia Hamm as her favorite athlete…Started playing soccer at age 4…Lists “Mind Gym: An Athlete’s Guide To Inner Excellence” by Gary Mack as her favorite book…Exercise science major.
Year GP G A P 2011 6 0 0 1 2012 14 1 1 1 Totals 20 1 1 2
P 0 3 3
2013 Women’s Soccer • 23
PLAYER PROFILES
SAM SCOLARICI
19
MIDFIELD/FORWARD, 5-3, JUNIOR ALDIE, VA/FREEDOM
Third season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…2012: Played in all 22 games, making 20 starts…Finished second on the team with 10 goals and 21 points…Scored the CAA championship-winning goal 3:39 into double overtime against UNC Wilmington on Nov. 4…Started the season with goals in five straight games…One of just two Hofstra players to score double-digit goals…Finished tied for third in the league in goals scored and fifth in goals-per-game (0.45)… Scored two goals, including the game-tying marker off a penalty kick late in the second half, and added a goal in the shootout to help Hofstra advance in the CAA quarterfinals at Northeastern on Oct. 28… Also scored goals against Ohio State, Temple, Georgetown, Colgate and Wake Forest…Credited with 15 total shots in Hofstra’s three CAA Tournament games…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…2011: All Colonial Athletic Association Rookie Team member… Started all 18 games as a freshman...Finished third on the team with five goals while adding two points for 12 points…One of just three Hofstra players with double-digit point totals…Needed just 18 shots on goal to score five times…Scored first career goal at Texas Tech on Sept. 9…Scored first career CAA goal at Towson on Oct. 7… Netted a key goal in a 2-1 win over Old Dominion on Oct. 16… Registered first career multi-goal game in regular season finale at Northeastern on Oct. 28… Received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award…High School: Played at Freedom High School in South Riding, Virginia for four years…First-team alldistrict and second-team all-region selection as a senior…Helped her team to a 13-4-1 record her senior year, the school’s bestever record…Second team All-Met selection by the Washington Post as a senior…Was an all-region selection for four years, including the only freshman chosen in 2007, when she was a team MVP…Scored a goal in the 2009 U.S. Youth Soccer ODP national championships to help Virginia to a third-place finish… Personal: Has one younger brother…Lionel Messi has her favorite athlete…Nicknamed “Sammy”…Started playing soccer at age 7…Chose Hofstra for its atmosphere and its women’s soccer program…Journalism major. Year GP G A 2011 18 5 2 2012 22 10 1 Totals 40 15 3
24 • hofs tra uni versi ty
P 12 21 33
SAMANTHA CALVET
22
FORWARD/MIDFIELD, 5-7, SOPHOMORE BANGKOK, THAILAND/ NEW INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL OF THAILAND
Second season on Hofstra women’s soccer roster…2012: Did not see any game action…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…High School: Played soccer, basketball and softball at the New International School of Thailand…Named her team’s MVP for four consecutive seasons…Earned four consecutive athlete of the year awards for the Falcons…Served as a team captain for her soccer, basketball and softball teams in her senior season…Personal: Majoring in athletic training… Lists Hope Solo as her favorite athlete…Has one older brother.
SAM SCOLARICI
PLAYER PROFILES
CHLOE DALE
8
MIDFIELD, 5-6, SOPHOMORE BIRMINGHAM, UNITED KINGDOM / LANGLEY SECONDARY
Second season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…2012: Made an instant impact as a freshman in starting all 22 games…Registered two assists and 13 total shots playing primarily as a midfielder…Picked up first career assist (and point) in just her second career game against Temple on Aug. 24…Also assisted on a goal in a 5-0 win over Georgia State on Sept. 23… Recorded one shot in Hofstra’s 2-1 overtime win over UNC Wilmington in the CAA championship game on Nov. 2… Had a season-high four shots in the CAA quarterfinals at Northeastern on Oct. 28…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…Previous College: Played two seasons of soccer for Merrist Wood College in Guildford, England… Won Player of the Year in both 2011 and 20102…Helped her team to the Chelsea Reserves League title in 2011 and the County Cup and Subsidary Cup in 2012…High School: Played soccer and ran cross country for Langley Secondary School in Birmingham, United Kingdom…Won the Role of Honor award as a senior…Ran 800m/1500m for five years… Personal: Has one younger brother…Started playing soccer at age 7…Lists Jack Wilshere as her favorite athlete…Undecided major. Year GP G A P 2012 22 0 2 2
LEAH GALTON
21
MIDFIELD/FORWARD, 5-7, SOPHOMORE HARROGATE, ENGLAND/ ST. JOHN FISHERS CATHOLIC
Second season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…Became one of the top players in the conference as a freshman, earning league and national recognition…2012: Colonial Athletic Association Rookie of the Year…Named to the All-Colonial Athletic Association First Team…NSCAA All-Mid Atlantic First Team pick… Selected to the All-CAA Rookie Team and named to the CAA All-Tournament Team… Played in 22 games, making 21 starts…Led Hofstra with 11 goals, 27 points and 70 shots…Finished second in the CAA in goals and points…Ranked third in CAA in shots…Registered two gamewinning goals, netting the gamewinners in league games against Georgia State and Delaware… Picked up first career assist (and point) against Temple on Aug. 24… Scored first collegiate goal against Colgate on Aug. 31…Scored a goal and added a season-high eight shots versus Towson on Oct. 14…Had a trio of two-goal games, notching multiple scoring strikes against Georgia State, Delaware and Northeastern in the regular season…Moved to defender in the CAA semifinals and helped the unit shutout top-seeded William & Mary at home to send the Pride to the championship game…High School: Competed in soccer, cross country and athletics at St. John Fishers Catholic High School in Harrogate, England... Helped cross country team to a national championship in 2006...Played club soccer for the Leeds United Ladies FC... Was a member of the England U15, U17 and U19 squads... Personal: Has two sisters...Nicknamed “Galts”...Lists Jess Enis and Lionel Messi as her favorite athletes...Names “Boy in the Striped Pajamas” as her favorite book...Undecided major. Year GP G A P 2012 22 11 5 27
2013 Women’s Soccer • 25
PLAYER PROFILES
LEAN HINNEN DEFENSE, 5-2, SOPHOMORE MOEHLIN, SWITZERLAND/ GYMNASIUM BAUMLIHOF
4
Second season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster… 2012: Played in one game as a reserve…Made her collegiate debut in Hofstra’s 5-0 victory over Georgia State on Sept. 23…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…High School: Attended Gymnasium Baumlihof in Basel, Switzerland...Is a 2011 graduate...Played club soccer with FC Moehlin, FC Basel and FC Yverdon-Feminin...Also a member of the U17 and U19 Swiss Women’s National Teams...Helped her U19 team to the semifinals of the European Championship in Italy...Captained the U18 FC Basel from 2007 to 2009...Selected to Regional Talent’s Team from 2006 to 2009...Was one of the youngest players to compete in National League A, Switzerland’s top league, in 2009...Graduated in the top 15 of her class... Personal: Has one brother and one sister...Hobbies include reading, sports and spending time with family and friends... Lists hip hop and electronic music as her favorite genre’s... Nicknamed “Lane”...Began playing soccer at age 11... Sociology major. Year GP G A P 2012 1 0 0 0
JEANNINE MOLLEDA
13
FORWARD/MIDFIELD, 5-2, SOPHOMORE CLIFTON, VA/ ROBINSON SECONDARY
Second season the Hofstra women’s soccer roster… Emerged as one of Hofstra’s most reliable reserves in her first collegiate season…2012: Appeared in all 22 games, making four starts…Scored a goal and added an assist while compiling 18 shots…Recorded a shot against Ohio State in her NCAA debut on Aug. 17…Scored her first career goal at William & Mary in a CAA contest on Oct. 21…Notched first career assist (and point) against Wake Forest on Sept. 2… Earned the start and logged two shots in the CAA semifinals at William & Mary on Nov. 2…Also played as a reserve in the CAA championship winner over UNC Wilmington and the NCAA Tournament loss to Boston College on Nov. 9…Totaled seven games with multiple shots…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient…High School: Played on the Robinson Secondary School’s varsity soccer team for four seasons in Fairfax, Virginia…Also ran track for two years years…Helped the Rams to a district title and an appearance in the regional finals as a sophomore… Was named to the Elite Clubs National League All-Event Team…Personal: Has one older brother…Plans to pursue academic coursework in marine science or psychology…Lists Sergio Ramos as her favorite athlete…Started playing soccer at age 5… Sustainability studies major. Year GP G A P 2012 22 1 1 3
26 • hofs tra uni versi ty
PLAYER PROFILES
JILL MULHOLLAND
17
MIDFIELD, 5-5, SOPHOMORE LEVITTOWN, NY/ MACARTHUR
Second season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster… Became an immediate-impact player as a freshman…2012: Named to the All-Colonial Athletic Association First Team…Selected to the All-CAA Rookie Team and named to the CAA All-Tournament Team…Played and started all 22 games…Scored six goals and added five assists for 17 points…Named CAA Rookie of the Week two consecutive times on Sept. 24 and Oct. 1…Tied for fourth in the CAA in assists…Also tied a team-high with three game-winning goals, with the first coming versus St. Bonaventure on Sept. 7…Scored the only goal in a 1-0 CAA win over UNC Wilmington on Sept. 20…Also scored the gamewinner at James Madison on Sept. 30…Scored first collegiate goal in a 3-1 win over Temple on Aug. 24…Registered a goal and an assist versus Georgia State on Sept. 23…Compiled a season-high six shots against Colgate on Aug. 31…Picked up an assist and finished with five shots at Marist on Sept. 9… Averaged 2.09 shots-per-game…Had four shots in the CAA championship-winning game against UNC Wilmington on Nov. 4…CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award recipient… High School: Played soccer at MacArthur High School in Levittown, NY for four years…Member of the varsity soccer state championship team in 2011…Also helped the Generals to Nassau County and Long Island title…Was named the Conference CAA Player of the Year and was the Nassau County finals MVP…Earned three all-county selections in her final three seasons…Was a two-time All Long Island selection… Personal: Has two brothers…Lists Dan Girardi as her favorite athlete…Undecided major.
MALLORY ULLRICH
15
DEFENDER, 5-1 SOPHOMORE SOUTH RIDING, VA/ FREEDOM/UNC GREENSBORO
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster… Previous College: Played in 11 games, making four starts for UNC Greensboro as a freshman in 2012…Scored one goal and totaled four shots for a Spartans team that went 12-7-1 and won the Southern Conference regular season championship... Scored first career goal on first collegiate shot versus UNC Ashville on Aug. 26…High School: Four-year varsity letterwinner at Freedom High School in South Riding, Virginia… Set team record for most goals scored during a game (4)…First team all-district selection…First team all-region selection and second team all-state selection…Played for the Virginia state team in 2006…Member of the Virginia Northern District team in 2006-07, where she was named team captain…USYS State Cup champions from 2007 to 2009 and 2011…USYS State Cup finalists in 2010 and 2012…USYS regional champions in 2009…USYS national championship tournament bronze medal recipients…Personal: Has one older sister…Majoring in business…Aspires to be a CEO of a major company…Lists Alex Morgan as her favorite athlete…Started playing soccer at age 4…Business economics major. JILL MULHOLLAND
Year GP G A P 2012 22 6 5 17
2013 Women’s Soccer • 27
PLAYER PROFILES
EMILY AGUDELO
25
MIDFIELD, 5-5 FRESHMAN LONG BEACH, NY/ LONG BEACH
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played varsity soccer for Long Beach High School in Long Beach, New York… Named the 2012 Conference AA2 Player of the Year while also earning All-Nassau County honors…All-class selection in 2010…Earned the Career Achievement Award in 2013… Personal: Has one older brother…Lists Lionel Messi, Mesut Ozil and Rafael Nadal as her favorite athletes…Started playing soccer at age 8.
MELISSA KRESS
29
GOALKEEPER, 5-10, JUNIOR CANANDAIGUA, NY/ CANANDAIGUA ACADEMY
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played four years of varsity soccer for Canandaigua (NY) Academy…Also ran indoor and outdoor track…Was a Section V Class B indoor track champion…Earned three academic achievement awards… Personal: Father, Ken, played baseball at Tompkins Courtland Community College…Started playing soccer at age 5…Was a member of Hofstra’s club soccer team…Plans to pursue a career as a financial advisor or an actuary…Majoring in mathematical economics.
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DANIELLE LEWIS
24
FORWARD, 5-8 FRESHMAN SUMMERVILLE, GA/ TRION
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played for four seasons at Trion (GA) High School…Was named her school’s MVP as both a sophomore and senior, and best offensive players as a freshman and junior…Named all-area as a sophomore…Also played two seasons of varsity basketball for the Bulldogs… Personal: Has one brother…Made her school’s honor roll all four years in high school while winning the Principal’s Award as a junior and senior…Was a member of the Mu Alpha Theta math honor society…Started playing soccer at age 5...Majoring in biology with a minor in Spanish.
LAURA MAGISTRALI
28
MIDFIELD, 5-5 SOPHOMORE MODENA, ITALY/LICEO CARLO SIGONIO
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Played for Liceo Carlo Sigonio…Also played tennis and participated in rhythmic gymnastics…Personal: Has one brother and one sister…Started playing soccer at age 11…Plans to attend graduate school…Majoring in international business.
PLAYER PROFILES
FRIEDERIKE MEHRING
27
GOALKEEPER, 5-5 FRESHMAN HANNOVER, GERMANY/POTSDAM
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster…High School: Helped team to a World School championship in 2009…Played for domestic club team Frauen Bundesliga…Personal: Has two brothers… Lists photography, skiing and snowboarding as hobbies… Started playing soccer at age 3.
MARIA PETTET
30
FORWARD, 5-3, FRESHMAN BROOKLYN, NY/FORT HAMILTON
KRISTIN ROBESON
26
MIDFIELD/DEFENSE, 5-2 FRESHMAN MANHEIM, PA/ MANHEIM CENTRAL
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster… High School: Played four seasons of soccer and basketball for Manheim (PA) Central High School…Led the Barons to a 14-5 record and a section championship in 2011…Named a Lancaster Lebanon League second-team all-star…Also earned league academic all-star accolades…Scored 10 goals and added three assists as a senior…Tallied eight goals and five assists as both a junior and a sophomore…Netted two goals and two assists as a freshman…Played for the club team Penn Legacy Black for three seasons, helping the team win the USYSA EPYSA President’s Cup and place third at nationals before joining LDC Elite in her senior year… Personal: Has one brother… Member of the National Honor Society…Joined Rho Kappa; a national social studies honor society…Also a member of the National Spanish Honor Society…Started playing soccer at age 4.
First season on the Hofstra women’s soccer roster… High School: Played four years of varsity soccer for Fort Hamilton High School in Brooklyn, NY…Scored 34 goals and added 14 assists as a senior…Finished as the second-leading scorer in New York City and in the top-10 for assists…Earned a NYC Mayor’s Soccer Cup invitation as one of the best players in the city…Scored 24 goals and registered 10 assists as a junior…Also played for the Brooklyn Celtics club team…Personal: Has one brother and one sister…Plans to attend medical school after graduation…Majoring in biology.
2013 Women’s Soccer • 29
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT
S
tuart Rabinowitz was chosen by the Hofstra University Board of Trustees to serve as the eighth president of the University on December 20, 2000. Prior to his appointment, he served as dean of Hofstra University School of Law from September 1989 through June 2001. He joined the faculty of the School of Law in 1972. President Rabinowitz currently holds the Andrew M. Boas and Mark L. Claster Distinguished Professorship in Civil Procedure. President Rabinowitz holds positions with a number of important government and community organizations, including the Judicial Advisory Council of the State of New York Unified Court System - County of Nassau, and the Nassau County Health and Welfare Council. He serves as a trustee of the Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities, and on the Board of Directors for the Fair Media Council and the Long Island Technology Network. President Rabinowitz is a former member of the Nassau County Blue Ribbon Financial Review Panel, former chair of the Nassau County Local Advisory Board, and a former member of the Board of Directors of the Long Island Association. Additionally, President Rabinowitz served as a member of the Nassau County Commission on Government Revision, which was charged with drafting a new charter and a new form of government for the County. He is the recipient of the Martin Luther King Living the Dream Award, EOC; Distinguished Service in the Cause of Justice, Legal Aid Society; UJA Federation Leadership Award; the Bar Association of Nassau County Proclamation for Outstanding Service to both the legal profession and the community; the Community Service Award from the Conference of Jewish Organizations of Nassau County; and the Alumni Association of the City College of New York 2005 Townsend Harris Medal. He has also been honored by the Long Island Software and Technology Network (LISTnet) and was the recipient of Networking magazine’s David Award. President Rabinowitz received a juris doctor, magna cum laude, from Columbia University School of Law, where he was a member of the board of editors of the Columbia Law Review and a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar. He graduated from City College of New York with honors, and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and the American Law Institute.
PRESIDENT RABINOWITZ, HOFSTRA PRIDE CLUB BOARD MEMBER JAMES C. METZGER ’83 AND HOFSTRA PRIDE CLUB PRESIDENT E. DAVID WOYCIK ’77
30 • hofs tra uni versi ty
UNIVERSITY SENIOR ADMINISTRATION/TRUSTEES As of June 2013
OFFICERS Janis M. Meyer,* Chair James E. Quinn,* Vice Chair Peter G. Schiff, Vice Chair David S. Mack,* Secretary Stuart Rabinowitz, President M. PATRICIA ADAMSKI Senior Vice President for Planning and Administration
JESSICA EADS Vice President for Enrollment Services
JOSEPH M. BARKWILL Vice President for Facilities and Operations
DOLORES FREDRICH, ESQ. Vice President for Legal Affairs and General Counsel
SANDRA S. JOHNSON Vice President for Student Affairs
RICHARD V. GUARDINO, JR., ESQ. Vice President for Business Development
ROBERT W. JUCKIEWICZ Vice President for Information Technology
DR. HERMAN BERLINER Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs
STEPHANIE BUSHEY Vice President for Institutional Research and Assessment
MELISSA CONNOLLY Vice President for University Relations
JEFFREY A. HATHAWAY Vice President and Director of Athletics
CATHERINE HENNESSY Vice President for Financial Affairs and Treasurer
MEMBERS
ALAN J. KELLY Vice President for Development
Alan J. Bernon* Tejinder Bindra Robert F. Dall* Helene Fortunoff Steven J. Freiberg* Arno H. Fried Martin B. Greenberg* Leo A. Guthart Peter S. Kalikow* Arthur J. Kremer Karen L. Lutz John D. Miller* Marilyn B. Monter* Martha S. Pope Julio Portalatin* Edwin C. Reed Robert D. Rosenthal* Debra A. Sandler* Thomas J. Sanzone* Joseph Sparacio* Frank G. Zarb*
DELEGATES Stuart L. Bass,* Chair, University Senate Executive Committee Tanya Levy-Odom,* President, Alumni Organization William F. Nirode, Speaker of the Faculty Andrea Standrowicz, President, Student Government Association Ron Singh, Vice President, Student Government Association Eugene Maccarrone,* Chair, University Senate Planning and Budget Committee James M. Shuart,* President Emeritus Wilbur Breslin, Trustee Emeritus Emil V. Cianciulli,* Chair Emeritus John J. Conefry, Jr., Chair Emeritus Maurice A. Deane,* Chair Emeritus George G. Dempster,* Chair Emeritus Joseph L. Dionne,* Trustee Emeritus Florence Kaufman, Trustee Emerita Walter B. Kissinger, Trustee Emeritus Ann M. Mallouk,* Chair Emerita Thomas H. O’Brien, Trustee Emeritus Arnold A. Saltzman, Trustee Emeritus Norman R. Tengstrom,* Trustee Emeritus * Hofstra Alumni
2013 Women’s Soccer • 31
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS enjoyed a successful tenure as the director of athletics at Colorado State University from 2001 to 2003. During Hathaway’s career, he has always made the academic success of studentathletes a top priority. In the classroom, more than 50% of UConn’s 650 student-athletes achieved a 3.0 “B-or better” semester grade point average during the spring and/or fall semesters of the 2010 calendar year, including 16 who earned a perfect 4.0 grade point average. In addition, the Division of Athletics consistently maintained a 99 percent academic retention rate among its student-athletes.
J
effrey A. Hathaway is entering his second year as the Vice President and Director of Athletics at Hofstra University in 2013-14.
Hathaway, formerly the Director of Athletics at the University of Connecticut and the chairman of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee, was introduced by Hofstra University President Stuart Rabinowitz on May 15, 2012. “In collegiate athletics, the name Jeff Hathaway means success on any number of levels: in the classroom, on the playing field, in the boardroom, with donors and the media. Most importantly, Jeff ’s focus on excellence, ethics, leadership and academics will allow the Hofstra Pride athletics program to move to the next level of excellence,” said Rabinowitz. “His tenure at the University of Connecticut was one of unprecedented growth, and under his leadership, we look forward to ushering in a new era of Hofstra Pride athletic success.” “I am excited to join the Hofstra University community and to have the opportunity to provide leadership and serve the studentathletes, coaches and staff in this outstanding athletics program,” commented Hathaway at his introductory press conference. “I particularly would like to thank President Stuart Rabinowitz for allowing me to become part of the Hofstra University family. Throughout my career I have been part of programs that have competed against Hofstra and I have seen firsthand the success the Pride has had over the years. My primary focus will be on the academic achievement of our student-athletes and providing them the opportunity to participate and achieve in their academic and athletic endeavors as we
32 • hofs tra uni versi ty
prepare them for their lives after graduation from Hofstra.” In his first year at Hofstra, Hathaway oversaw a department that produced four Colonial Athletic Association championship and NCAA Tournament teams, as well as two other teams that reached the conference championship game. In addition, Hofstra Athletics saw three student-athletes earn Academic All-America accolades and five garner CAA ScholarAthlete of the Year honors. On of those Academic All-Americans, Joe Burg, also was a finalist for a Rhodes Scholarship in 2012, becoming just the second Hofstra student to ever earn the distinction. The Pride not only flourished on the fields and in the classroom, but also in the area of athletic development. The Hofstra Pride Club enjoyed a banner year with $1.1 million in cash funds raised, a 13% increase over 201112, and a 16% increase in annual funds. In 2013 Hathaway was named to the NCAA Division I Leadership Council, continuing his long tradition of service on a national level. Hathaway guided the University of Connecticut (UConn) Division of Athletics through an unprecedented period of academic and athletic achievement during his eight years as director of athletics from 2003 to 2011. At the same time, he became an influential leader for college athletics on both the national and conference level. Hathaway played a vital role in UConn’s success story for nearly 20 years as he was the executive associate director of athletics at the school from 1990 to 2001. In his two years away from the Storrs campus, Hathaway
The University of Connecticut was saluted for its community service efforts by the National Consortium for Academics and Sports (NCAS) three times under Hathaway’s watch for its community service efforts. UConn was also honored by the NCAS in 2006 and 2007 for its efforts to assist former student-athletes in earning their college degree. Hathaway’s leadership positions have extended beyond the campus. He recently completed a five-year term as a member of the prestigious NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee, representing the BIG EAST Conference, serving as chair in 201112. As a member of the 10-person committee, Hathaway took part in the selection and administration of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship and the administration of the CBS/Turner television contract. During his tenure at both Colorado State and UConn, he was a member of the NCAA Division I Championships/Competition Cabinet. On the conference level, Hathaway was the chair of the BIG EAST Athletic Directors Executive Committee through November of 2009. He is also past chairman of the BIG EAST Championship and Competition Committee as well as the league’s Finance Committee, and also served on the Television Committee. Hathaway is a past member of the Division I-A Athletic Directors Association Board of Trustees and the Executive Committee of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA). In 2004 The Sporting News named Hathaway to its “Power 100 List” - comprised of the 100 most powerful people in sports. During his time at the University of Connecticut, private fundraising averaged more than $13 million a year. Hathaway was also responsible negotiating several key revenue and partnership agreements, securing major gifts, and guiding the building of two
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS LEED certified athletic facilities, UConn’s first, which received recognition from the University and from the Connecticut Real Estate Exchange. Hathaway led a head coaching staff that is one of the most experienced in the country. At the conclusion of Hathaway’s tenure, UConn had 12 head coaches that had been in their current position 10 or more years as of the 2010-11 academic year. In Hathaway’s final year with UConn, the Huskies experienced great athletic success. The men’s basketball team won its third NCAA Division I Championship while the football team played in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. In addition, the women’s basketball team played in the NCAA Final Four for the fourth consecutive season and set a college basketball record for most consecutive wins with 90. The UConn baseball team made history with its first-ever appearance in NCAA Super Regional play. The men’s soccer, women’s soccer and field hockey teams participated in NCAA tournaments while representatives from men’s and women’s track and field and women’s diving also took part in NCAA action. Hathaway originally came to Connecticut in November of 1990 as senior associate athletic director. In that role, he oversaw the day-today operations of the Division of Athletics and served as a program administrator for several sports. During Hathaway’s tenure at Colorado State, he oversaw a 15-sport program – nine women’s teams and six men’s. Hathaway was an extremely successful fundraiser during his time in Fort Collins. The school drew national attention for a $15.2 million gift for football stadium renovations and expansion. Prior to joining UConn, Hathaway served in a number of capacities at his alma mater, the University of Maryland, from 1982 to 1990, including assistant athletics director for marketing and communications, acting assistant athletics director for business affairs, athletics business manager and men’s basketball trainer. Hathaway earned his degree in athletic administration from Maryland in 1981. He later received a master’s degree in general administration from Maryland and is currently continuing work on a PhD in the Department of Educational Leadership at the University of Connecticut.
WHAT THEY ARE SAYING ABOUT JEFFREY A. HATHAWAY PHILIP E. AUSTIN, President Emeritus, University of Connecticut “I had the pleasure of working with Jeff Hathaway through my tenure as president of the University of Connecticut. He was a valuable member of our senior leadership team and led the athletic program to its most successful era. Jeff is committed to not only athletic excellence but also academic excellence, integrity and the overall welfare of student athletes.” JOSEPH R. CASTIGLIONE, Vice President for Intercollegiate Athletics, University of Oklahoma “From our days in college to the many years as colleagues in the profession, I have always known Jeff Hathaway to be a man of character. He has a tenacious work ethic, an innate ability to establish the right vision, mission and values for the organization he leads and a collaborative style to appropriately involve all stakeholders in the process of setting goals and creating the means to achieve them. At the heart of it all is a passionate commitment to creating the best possible environment for student athlete success. Hofstra University made a wonderful decision in hiring Jeff.” MARK EMMERT, President, National Collegiate Athletic Association “Jeff did a tremendous job as a member and later chair of the Division I Men’s Basketball Committee. His efforts directly contributed to lifelong experiences for thousands of student-athletes. I’m confident that he will bring the same dedication and passion to the athletic program and the student-athletes of Hofstra.” JIM NANTZ, CBS Sports “I have known Jeff Hathaway a long time and there is no one I respect more in college athletics than Jeff Hathaway. This is a big day for Hofstra University and the future of Hofstra has been placed in good hands. Jeff is a high-achieving, high-quality person that I have gotten to know well during his tenure as the Chair of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee. Jeff’s success as a leader speaks for itself. He has the Midas touch!” MIKE SLIVE, Commissioner, Southeastern Conference “I have known Jeff Hathaway for many years and had the pleasure of serving with him on the NCAA Men’s Basketball Committee. Jeff’s extensive experience, his enthusiasm and his energy makes him a leader no matter what room he is in. His commitment to assisting young men and women in getting an education while participating in college sports make him an outstanding choice as Hofstra’s new athletics director.” MIKE TRANGHESE, former Commissioner, Big East Conference “Jeff is an outstanding administrator who will provide Hofstra with great leadership in the future. He has long been a leader in collegiate athletics and Hofstra will do well with Jeff at the helm. ” TOM YEAGER, Commissioner, Colonial Athletic Association “Jeff Hathaway is one of the brightest, creative and competent administrators in college athletics. Everyone in the CAA is excited about his joining our team and we look forward to his contribution to the continued success of the Hofstra program and the CAA.” KEVIN WHITE, Vice President/Director of Athletics, Duke University “Hofstra literally hit the proverbial lottery! Hiring Jeff Hathaway as vice president and director of athletics – a highly seasoned athletic director who is clearly one of the most skilled and talented administrators within the NCAA – is nothing short of an immeasurable leadership acquisition!”
Hathaway and his wife, Paula, have two children – Meghan (22) and Michael (18).
2013 Women’s Soccer • 33
ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF AND HEAD COACHES
PETE ALFANO Cross Country Coach
ROB ANSPACH Wrestling Coach
CHRISSY ARNONE Assistant Director of Athletics/Marketing and Promotions
JAY ARTINIAN Senior Associate Director of Athletics/ Facilities
RACHEL AUGUST Assistant Director of Athletics/ Administration
CATHY AULL Athletic Department Secretary
ANN BALLER Associate Director of Athletic Facilities
DR. MICHAEL BARNES Faculty Athletics Representative
JAMES BARONE Assistant Director of Athletic Development
BRIAN BERT Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach
BRIAN BOHL Senior Assistant Director of Athletic Communications
ALLISON BRADSHAW Strength and Conditioning Coach
NEIL COLLINS Assistant Director of Athletic Facilities
JOHN CONSIDINE Assistant Equipment Manager
TARA COPPOLA Assistant Director of Athletic Facilities
MARIA CORVINO Assistant Director of Athletics/Ticket Operations
MAREN CROWLEY Women’s Golf Coach
KATHY DE ANGELIS Field Hockey Coach
BILL EDWARDS Softball Coach
JOE ELLIOTT Men’s Golf Coach
DAVID FERNANDEZ Athletic Facilities Coordinator
JIM GIBBONS Associate Director of Athletics/NCAA Education and Compliance Services
DOUG GILLIES Athletic Facilities Coordinator
STEPHEN GORCHOV Associate Director of Athletics/ Communications
KRISTINA HERNANDEZ Volleyball Coach
COLM KENNEDY Assistant Director of Athletic Facilities
34 • hofs tra uni versi ty
KRISTA KILBURN-STEVESKEY Women’s Basketball Coach
JAMES LALLY Assistant Director of Athletics/ Student-Athlete Services and Life Skills Development
ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF AND HEAD COACHES
LAUREN LEO Director of Tennis
CINDY LEWIS Senior Associate Director of Athletics
RICHARD NUTTALL Men’s Soccer Coach
JEANNE O’KEEFE Athletic Department Secretary
DIANE SCHUERLEIN Athletic Department Secretary
JIM SHEEHAN Senior Sports Information Director
MICHELLE SPATERELLA SAMANTHA SWEENEY Assistant Dean of Assistant Director Advisement of Athletics/NCAA Education and Compliance Services
RYAN WATSON Assistant Director of Athletic Facilities
EVAN MALINGS Head Athletic Trainer
DINO MATTESSICH Deputy Director of Athletics
JOE MIHALICH Men’s Basketball Coach
KEVIN MURGA Athletic Facilities Coordinator
RACHEL PEELJAMES PRENDERGAST SIMON RIDDIOUGH MACANDREW Assistant Strength and Women’s Soccer Coach Associate Dean of Conditioning Coach University Advisement
JOHN RUSSO Baseball Coach
DAVID SALOMON Athletic Facilities Coordinator
LEN SKOROS Director of Athletic Publications
CLARICE SMITH Athletic Department Secretary
SHANNON SMITH Women’s Lacrosse Coach
HARRIET TEITLE Athletic Department Secretary
KATHY THEILING Equipment Manager
SETH TIERNEY Men’s Lacrosse Coach
DAVE WALSH Assistant Equipment Manager
IRENE WYMES Ticket Office Graduate Assistant
WINNIE WYMES Athletic Department Secretary
DR. MICHAEL YORIO Team Physician
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LONG ISLAND AND NEW YORK CITY ABOUT LONG ISLAND… Long Island has a rich history as an active, vibrant community, a summer playground, and home to some of New York’s most prominent families.
FIVE DISTINCT REGIONS MAKE UP LONG ISLAND: • North Shore, otherwise known as the Gold Coast, with dozens of historic sites dating back to colonial days and Gatsby-era mansions. • South Shore, the Island’s spectator sports and entertainment center, with worldfamous Jones and Fire Island Beaches, and home to the New York Islanders. • Central Suffolk, with beautiful forests and natural inlets, the world’s largest factory outlet center and a huge water park. • North Fork, with an array of vineyards, waterfront ports and farm stands. • South Fork, widely known as “The Hamptons,” with its pristine beaches and exclusive villages. You can catch a Hofstra shuttle bus to Jones Beach – a state park with six miles of gorgeous coastline, a boardwalk, swimming pools, golf and outdoor concerts.
WITH EVERYTHING FROM : • museums, historical sites and lighthouses, • to sophisticated malls, designer outlets and shopping villages, • to wineries and farm stands, • to family fun parks, aquariums and zoos,
...there is plenty to do on Long Island!
ABOUT NEW YORK CITY… Hofstra is located only 30 miles from New York City – the capital of culture and finance. You can visit Carnegie Hall, South Street Seaport, Hard Rock Café, Grand Central Station, Central Park, NBC Studios in Rockefeller Center, Little Italy or Chinatown.
• Study the world’s finest sculptures and paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. • Go and cheer along with the crowd at a Yankees, Mets, Rangers or Knicks game. • Wave at the TV cameras in the street-level studios of FOX, CNN, NBC, CBS or ABC • Walk through the financial capital of the world at the New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street. • Take the subway to Coney Island for a Nathan’s hot dog and a ride on the Cyclone, the last of the great wooden rollercoasters. • Get half-priced tickets to Broadway’s finest shows at the TKTS booth in a new, glittering Times Square.
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ATHLETIC ACADEMIC SUPPORT
H
ofstra University is committed to the pursuit of academic and athletic excellence. The University views participation in intercollegiate athletics as benefiting the student-athlete in an educationally enhancing experience beyond any other opportunity available. Hofstra also realizes the time commitment made by student-athletes and has committed the facilities and resources to support all students. The University Tutorial Program (UTP) provides free tutoring in every subject area to any Hofstra student. Students are able to obtain up to 1 1/2 hours of individual tutorial assistance per week for up to three courses. They are also able to utilize the various help labs on campus, which specialize in providing assistance in writing, business and QM, and biology and chemistry. In addition to this service, student-athletes are assigned an academic advisor, through the Center for University Advisement, who helps address the various needs of student‑athletes. The academic advisor emphasizes four areas in their efforts to ensure the academic success of Hofstra’s student-athletes.
opportunities for early intervention should academic difficulties arise. Area four is study halls. The University Tutorial Program supports athletic study halls by providing tutors in various subjects as necessary. The academic advisors also assess the needs of individual student‑athletes to provide the most effective study environment. The assessment tool administered by the Center for University Advisement is also used to provide various enrichment seminars for the student‑athletes such as time management, writing skills, campus resources, and surviving the college transition. In 2010 The Fried Family StudentAthlete Development Center was opened on the second level of the James M. Shuart Stadium Building. The center houses the offices of the Student-Athlete Services Staff, as well as a large computer lab with printer access for use by Hofstra studentathletes, a quiet study area with wireless internet access and two group study/tutor rooms with power point access and white boards.
Area one is academic counseling. Services are provided in the areas of academic planning, career planning, personal counseling, and campus and community referrals. The advisor also meets with prospective student‑athletes, at the coach’s request, to share the many benefits of a Hofstra University education. Area two is academic advising. The academic advisor serves as the primary advisor for first-year and undecided student-athletes, and also assists upperclassmen who have declared a major. Area three is academic monitoring. The advisor monitors the academic progress of student‑athletes to ensure compliance with Hofstra University, NCAA and conference regulations. The advisor’s regular communication with the faculty and coaches provide
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SPORTS MEDICINE/ATHLETIC TRAINING
T
hrough a comprehensive athletic training program, Hofstra University student-athletes are provided excellent health care during their time at the University. A coordinated effort between the University Health and Wellness Center, the Athletic Department and outside health care providers ensures every student-athlete the best medical attention possible. University student-athletes have direct access to a myriad of health care services. Managing the coverage of every practice and competition event is Hofstra University’s athletic training staff, which is led by ninth-year Head Athletic Trainer Evan Malings and features six full-time athletic trainers and numerous student athletic trainers. The athletic trainers provide injury management, rehabilitation and treatment to the entire Athletic program. Utilizing three stateof-the-art athletic training rooms, these professionals work tirelessly to ensure the safe participation of Hofstra’s student-athletes and to return injured athletes to play quickly and safely. Supporting the athletic trainers is team physician Dr. Michael Yorio. Dr. Yorio, a physician with Pro Health Care, Inc. in Lake Success, New York, is in his third year on Hofstra’s medical team. Yorio is an internist with specialized
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training in sports medicine. He earned his undergraduate degree at Villanova University, and received his medical degree from the SUNY Health Science Center in Syracuse. Yorio previously served as a sports medicine fellow with the University of Maryland Orthopedics. Prior to that, he was a resident physician in internal medicine at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. Yorio was named the Director of Player Medical Services for the 2008 U.S. Open Tennis Tournament in Flushing, New York, and is on the medical staff for the
EVAN MALINGS
Head Athletic Trainer
New York Islanders. He also worked as a team physician for the University of Maryland from 2003 to 2005. Hofstra University sponsors a fully accredited, highly competitive undergraduate degree program for athletic training majors, in which Hofstra student athletic trainers participate in all aspects of the health care system.
DR. MICHAEL YORIO
MARIE SILER
Team Physician
Women’s Soccer Athletic Trainer
HOFSTRA IN THE COMMUNITY
T
he Hofstra Soccer team is quite active in the Long Island soccer community. The team conducts several clinics each year, working in conjunction with Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Long Island, the Uniondale Police Athletic League and the Town of North Hempstead. The Pride is also active in area schools, participating in the Read Across America program and the Reading with Pride initiative at local elementary schools. In addition to their on-field and classroom work within the community, Hofstra Soccer players also take part in charity fund raising events such as the Colleluori Lacrosse Classic to benefit the HEADstrong Foundation, as well as the American Cancer Society. The team also takes part in food drives in conjunction with Hofstra’s StudentAthlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) and partners with organizations such as Long Island Cares and The Interfaith Nutrition Network (INN). Last fall Pride student-athletes also were active in the community following Super Storm Sandy, which devastated many areas on Long Island. Team members assisted in rebuilding efforts in many ways, including clothing, food and supply drives as well as assisting in the cleanup of affected areas.
SERGIO VILLANUEVA SCHOLARSHIP FUND
T
he FDNY Soccer Club and Hofstra alumnus Jonathan Kanovsky (‘86) have created a scholarship fund at Hofstra University in memory of firefighter Sergio Villanueva, who was among those who perished on September 11, 2001. This soccer scholarship will assist a deserving Hofstra University student-athlete in pursuing their goal of a college education. The recipient will demonstrate the work ethic, integrity, discipline and courage that exemplified Sergio’s life. To get more information or to donate to the fund go to www.fdnysoccer.com or contact the Hofstra University Office of Development at (516) 463-5542.
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HOFSTRA SOCCER STADIUM/FACILITIES HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY SOCCER STADIUM
T
he Hofstra Soccer Teams play at the Hofstra University Soccer Stadium, located on the University’s north campus, adjacent to the David S. Mack Physical Education Center. The Stadium, constructed in 2003 through a partnership with the New York Jets, features a 120yard by 74-yard FieldTurf surface, stadium lighting, metal bleachers the length of the field, the Gorman Memorial Gateway and the Hofstra Soccer Walls of Honor. This past June a new FieldTurf product was installed, replacing the original surface. In 2009 a new press box was installed. In addition, signs commemorating Hofstra’s conference championships, NCAA Tournament appearances and retired jerseys are displayed on the west end of the stadium. Since its’ opening, the Pride is 63-16-6 at the Stadium. The FieldTurf system, which was installed by Landtek of Amityville, New York, replicates a natural grass surface, but offers the durability and cost benefits of synthetic fields. FieldTurf is a safe alternative, resulting in a documented reduction of sports injuries. The sand and rubber infill system is the biggest technical development that the sport surfacing industry has seen in the last 25 years. This patented technology sets FieldTurf apart from all other sports surfaces.
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In June 2001 the Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), the worldwide governing body for the sport of soccer, gave its official recommendation to the artificial grass FieldTurf installation at Boston University’s Nickerson Field for international competition and domestic league play. The historic ruling, the first and only certification of an artificial surface in the world at this time, means that venues with FieldTurf can be used for all preliminary competition matches for the FIFA World Cup and Olympic Football Tournaments as well as for professional league play. The facility is lit with a system from the Iowa-based Musco Lighting Company. Musco is recognized as a world-class leader in sports lighting with lighting systems installed around the globe. A leader in developing sports-lighting technology – including solutions for permanent and temporary lighting, and sports facility management – Musco offers innovative systems, a comprehensive package of services, and decades of experience. Working with organizations such as Amateur Softball Association, Babe Ruth League, Disney,
England and Wales Cricket Board, Little League Baseball®, Major League Baseball, NASCAR, and the NBA, Musco has played a key role in developing guidelines for safe, efficient sports facilities. Musco is a Major Partner with the National Recreation and Park Association (NRPA); provides the Official Sports-Lighting System for Little League Baseball and was selected to light Disney’s Wide World of Sports Complex — a state-ofthe-art 200-acre complex with facilities for more than 30 sports. The facility is outfitted with a seating system from the Southern Bleacher Company of Graham, Texas. Since 1946, Southern Bleacher has set the standard of excellence in the design and manufacturing of sports stadiums and entertainment venues. Southern Bleacher products grace professional baseball diamonds and soccer fields, college campuses, school districts, NASCAR tracks and rodeo arenas across the United States. The Hofstra Soccer Stadium served as the home site of first round Men’s NCAA Tournament games in 2005 and 2006, as well as hosting numerous high school playoff contests. The stadium also served as the practice field for the Jets during their public preseason camp workouts until the team moved its headquarters from Hofstra in 2008.
HOFSTRA SOCCER STADIUM/FACILITIES HOFSTRA INDOOR PRACTICE FACILITY
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he Pride has use of an indoor practice bubble located on the north campus, behind the Mack Sports Complex. The 50-yard turf field gives Hofstra a unique environment that many teams in the Northeast do not have.
MACK SPORTS COMPLEX WEIGHT ROOM
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he Mack Sports Complex Weight Room is a 3,500 square foot facility that was renovated during the Spring 2012. The renovations consisted of the installation of Everlast Performance rubber flooring, a new sound system and a several plate loaded Hammer Strength machines. This weight room serves the basketball, soccer, tennis, field hockey, cross country and golf teams.
THE GORMAN MEMORIAL GATEWAY
T
he Gorman Memorial Gateway, named in honor of former Hofstra Soccer player Frank Gorman, who died tragically on January 5, 2003, was officially dedicated on Sunday, September 17, 2006.
The Gorman Memorial Gateway project included a gated entrance to the Hofstra Soccer Stadium and ticket windows, as well as a Hofstra Men’s and Women’s Soccer Walls of Fame, the Sergio Villanueva Memorial Garden and a picnic area behind the east side goal. Future plans include alumni bleachers behind the east goal.
Donors to the Gorman Memorial Gateway Fund have their names inscribed on a plaque at the Gateway entrance to the Hofstra University Soccer Stadium.
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2012 STATISTICS AND RESULTS Overall: 11-9-2 Conference: 6-4 No. Name 21 Leah Galton 19 Sam Scolarici 14 Echeverry, Lulu 17 Jill Mulholland 9 Amber Stobbs 7 Ruby Staplehurst 13 Jeannine Molleda 6 Ingrid Moyer 10 Brittany Farriella 8 Chloe Dale 11 Anya Koren 23 Caylin Dudley 15 Brooke Bendernagel 5 Erin Havard 2 Tara Kerns 3 Nicki Choffel 12 Kerry Cummings 25 Amanda Heyde 4 Lea Hinnen Total Opponents
Home: 7-1 GP-GS 22-21 22-20 22-15 22-22 11-11 22-22 22-4 14-2 19-17 22-22 19-1 22-22 20-19 11-5 17-14 12-3 3-0 1-0 1-0 22 22
Away: 2-5-2 Neutral: 2-3 G A Pts. S S% GW 11 5 27 70 .157 2 10 1 21 50 .200 3 8 5 21 29 .276 1 6 5 17 46 .130 3 2 3 7 27 .074 1 0 6 6 17 .000 0 1 1 3 18 .056 0 1 1 3 5 .200 0 1 0 2 12 .083 0 0 2 2 13 .000 0 0 2 2 11 .000 0 0 1 1 27 .000 0 0 1 1 4 .000 0 0 1 1 4 .000 0 0 0 0 12 .000 0 0 0 0 6 .000 0 0 0 0 1 .000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 40 34 114 352 .114 10 32 19 83 248 .129 9
PK-ATT 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1 3-4
GOALKEEPING No. Name GP-GS 1 Emily Morphitis 22-22 31 Lucy Gillett 1-0 TM Team 0-0 Total 22 Opponents 22
Min. 2066:40 4:57 0:00 2071:00 2071:00
GA 32 0 0 32 40
Avg. 1.39 0.00 0.00 1.39 1.74
Svs. 74 0 2 76 143
Pct. .698 .000 1.000 .704 .781
W 11 0 0 11 9
L 9 0 0 9 11
T Sho 2 5.1 0 0.1 0 1 2 6 2 3
Goals Hofstra Opponents
1 2 OT OT2 Tot. 15 23 0 2 40 15 16 0 1 32
Corner Kicks 1 2 OT OT2 Tot. Hofstra 58 68 1 7 134 Opponents 32 32 4 0 68
Shots Hofstra Opponents
1 2 OT OT2 Tot. 159 170 9 14 352 113 124 5 6 248
Saves Hofstra Opponents
2012 RESULTS Date Opponent Ohio State 8/17 8/24 vs. Temple# vs. Georgetown# 8/26 8/31 vs. Colgate+ 9/2 vs. #15 Wake Forest+ 9/7 St. Bonaventure 9/9 at Marist 9/14 Albany 9/20 at UNCW* 9/23 Georgia State* 9/30 at James Madison* 10/4 Delaware* 10/7 at Drexel* 10/12 George Mason* 10/14 Towson* 10/19 at Old Dominion* 10/21 at William & Mary* 10/24 Northeastern* 10/28 at Northeastern^ 11/2 at William & Mary^ 11/4 vs. UNCW^ 11/9 at Boston College%
1 2 OT OT2 Tot. 37 34 4 1 76 69 62 6 6 143
SAM SCOLARICI W/L W W L L L W L W (2 OT) W W W W L W W L L (2 OT) L T (2 OT) T (2 OT) W (2 OT) L
#Fairfield Inn by Marriott Invitational (Harrisonburg, VA) +Princeton Invitational (Princeton, NJ) *Colonial Athletic Association game ^CAA Championship %NCAA Championship First Round
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Score Att. 2-0 272 3-1 297 1-2 321 2-3 522 1-2 332 2-0 178 2-4 474 2-1 442 1-0 308 5-0 110 3-1 166 3-1 259 0-3 125 1-0 372 3-1 230 1-2 284 2-3 361 2-3 345 2-2 231 0-0 476 2-1 178 0-2 458
THE COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
W
ith nearly three decades of success athletically and academically, the Colonial Athletic Association has built a reputation as one of the nation’s top collegiate conferences. The CAA encompasses many of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas with a geographic footprint that stretches from Boston to Charleston, S.C. The conference has produced 16 national team champions in five different sports, 33 individual national champions, 13 national players of the year, 12 national coaches of the year and 13 Honda Award winners. Just as impressive, however, are the honors accumulated away from competition, which include five Rhodes Scholars and 23 NCAA post-graduate scholars. In 201213, more than 1,900 of the league’s 4,000 student-athletes received the Commissioner’s Academic Award after posting at least a 3.2 grade point average while lettering in a varsity sport. The conference had 23 teams in 15 different sports receive NCAA Public Recognition Awards based on the latest Academic Progress Report released in 2013. The landscape of the conference stretches along the majority of the East Coast, and includes several of the nation’s top media markets – New York (1), Philadelphia (4), Boston (7), Washington, D.C. (9) and Baltimore (25). The number of television homes in the CAA market exceeds 20 million. The CAA conducts championships in 22 sports. Male athletes compete for championships in baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis and track & field. Female athletes battle for conference titles in basketball, cross country, field hockey, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. In 2012-13, 27 teams earned NCAA Tournament berths and 43 student-athletes received AllAmerica honors in 14 different sports.
more than 36,000 units of blood over the past 11 years. The first-ever CAA Food Drive Challenge last winter resulted in over 9,500 pounds of donated food. Behind the play of Honda Award winner Elena Delle Donne, the Blue Hens finished the season ranked #13 in the final USA Today Coaches Top 25 poll. Drexel captured the WNIT championship with a 46-43 victory over Utah and James Madison reached the quarterfinals of the WNIT. CAA teams have gone 20-9 in postseason play over the past two years. The conference also excels in many other sports. CAA squads have combined to win 10 field hockey national titles since the championship began in 1981. Three men’s soccer teams earned NCAA Tournament berths last season and each current member of the conference has reached the NCAA Tournament since 2006. In softball, Hofstra reached the NCAA Super Regionals in 2012 and the CAA placed two teams (Hofstra and James Madison) in the NCAA’s for the first time last season. At least two women’s soccer teams have reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament three times in the past six seasons. William & Mary’s men’s cross country squad has made the NCAA Championship in 12 of the past 14 years and the women’s team had two runners (Elaina Balouris and Emily Stites) earn All-America honors in 2012. Delaware and Towson have each reached the Final Four of the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championship. The CAA sent three teams to the NCAA Baseball Championship in 2013 and has had at least 11 players selected in nine of the last 11 Major League Baseball drafts. The conference also had individuals earn All-America honors in women’s lacrosse, track and field and swimming & diving last season and had players nationally ranked in tennis and golf.
The conference has made its presence known nationally in men’s basketball with two teams – George Mason (2006) and VCU (2011) – advancing to the NCAA Final Four over the past seven years. CAA teams have combined to win 41 games in postseason play since 2006, including 14 victories in the NCAA Tournament. The CAA has posted at least one NCAA Tournament win in six of the past eight years, including the last four in a row. The conference has seen five or more teams reach postseason play in four of the last five seasons.
CAA member institutions are committed to excellence in the classroom. The Colonial Academic Alliance was created in 2002 by the league’s presidents with a goal of expanding their partnership to all aspects of university education and life outside of intercollegiate athletics. Among the programs that have been established are an undergraduate research conference, coordination of study abroad programs, visiting faculty programs and a recent partnership with NBC Learn to provide educational videos to over 8,500 public schools across the United States.
In women’s basketball, 2013 CAA champion Delaware defeated West Virginia and North Carolina to become the 12th CAA team to reach the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament.
CAA schools are also very active in community service projects. The CAA Blood Challenge, which is held each fall, has raised
Commissioner Thomas E. Yeager has guided the CAA since its inception. The conference traces its roots back to 1983 when two of its current members- James Madison University and the College of William and Mary - were aligned with East Carolina University, George Mason University, the United States Naval Academy and the University of Richmond as a basketball league (ECAC South). During the next two years, the league added 11 sports, acquired two new members (the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and American University) and decided to form a new conference. The transformation from ECAC South to CAA took place on June 6, 1985. Old Dominion University joined the CAA in 1991 and was followed by Virginia Commonwealth University in 1995. The conference added the University of Delaware, Drexel University, Hofstra University and Towson University in 2001. Georgia State University and Northeastern University became members of the conference in 2005 and the College of Charleston began its first year as a CAA member on July 1, 2013. Elon University will join the conference beginning in 2014-15.
CAA Membership History Current Membership College of Charleston (2013-present) University of Delaware (2001-present) Drexel University (2001-present) Hofstra University (2001-present) James Madison University (1983-present) University of North Carolina-Wilmington (1985-present) Northeastern University (2005-present) Towson University (2001-present) College of William and Mary (1983-present)
Past Members American University (1985-2001) East Carolina University (1983-2001) George Mason University (1983-2013) Georgia State University (2005-2013) United States Naval Academy (1983-1991) Old Dominion University (1991-2013) University of Richmond (1983-2001) Virginia Commonwealth University (1995-2012)
Future Member Elon University (2014)
2013 Women’s Soccer • 43
2012 CAA REVIEW WOMEN’S SOCCER STANDINGS AND STATISTICS CAA OVERALL W L T Pts. W L T Pct. William and Mary 8 2 0 24 14 5 1 .725 7 2 1 22 13 3 3 .763 Drexel UNC Wilmington 7 3 0 21 12 7 3 .614 Northeastern 7 3 0 21 9 9 1 .500 #Hofstra 6 4 0 18 11 9 2 .545 6 4 0 18 9 8 1 .528 Delaware James Madison 5 5 0 15 7 11 0 .389 George Mason 3 6 1 10 7 11 1 .395 Old Dominion 2 8 0 6 4 14 0 .222 Georgia State 1 8 1 4 4 11 2 .294 Towson 1 8 1 4 1 15 2 .111 # - CAA Champion
2012 COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ALL-CONFERENCE TEAMS First Team F- Leah Galton, Hofstra F- Ali Miller, Delaware F- Stephanie Rose, UNCW M- Cortlyn Bristol, W&M M- Jill Mulholland, Hofstra M- Mallory Schaffer, W&M M- Hanna Terry, Northeastern D- Melissa Chapman, Drexel D- Allegra Gray, Delaware D- Kiersten Harpe, W&M GK- Eve Badana, Drexel
Second Team F- Tiana Kallenberger, George Mason F- Dani Rutter, W&M F- Greta Samuelsdottir, Northeastern F- Cheyenne Skidmore, Towson M- Kim Currie, UNCW M- Chelsea Duffy, Delaware M- Sam Greenfield, Drexel D- Emily Fredrikson, W&M D- Mary Kate Lowry, George Mason D- Becky Sparks, James Madison GK- Caitlin Hunter, UNCW
Third Team All-Rookie Team F- Maddie McCormick, UNCW F- Gabby Dixon, Drexel F- Whitney Ravan, Georgia State F- Leah Galton, Hofstra F- Lauren Wilson, James Madison F- Maddie McCormick, UNCW M- Stephanie Bronson, UNCW F- Barbara Platenberg, W&M M- Tania Domingos, Delaware M- Nicole Baxter, W&M M- Katie Menzie James Madison M- Jill Muholland, Hofstra D- Brooke Bendernagel, Hofstra M- Emily Market, Delaware D- Lindsay Henry, UNCW D- Lindsey Byrne, UNCW M- Katie Menzie James Madison D- Elissa Halik, James Madison D- Ruby Staplehurst, Hofstra D- Leci Irvin, W&M D- Awnalisa Walker, Northeastern D- Oksana Nicholls, Northeastern GK- Paige Burnett, Northeastern GK- Caroline Casey, W&M PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Mallory Schaffer, W&M DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Eve Badana, Drexel ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Leah Galton, Hofstra COACH OF THE YEAR: Ray Goon, Drexel
LEAH GALTON
BROOKE BENDERNAGEL
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2012 CAA REVIEW TEAM STATISTICS Points ## Team UNC Wilmington 1 2 Hofstra William & Mary 3 4 Drexel 5 Northeastern James Madison 6 7 George Mason Old Dominion 8 9 Delaware 10 Towson Georgia State 11
GP 22 22 20 19 19 18 19 18 18 18 17
Goals ## Team 1 UNC Wilmington 2 Hofstra 3 William & Mary 4 Drexel 5 Northeastern 6 George Mason James Madison 8 Old Dominion 9 Delaware 10 Georgia State Towson
GP G GPG 22 45 2.05 22 40 1.82 20 37 1.85 19 30 1.58 19 26 1.37 19 23 1.21 18 23 1.28 18 22 1.22 18 17 0.94 17 16 0.94 18 16 0.89
No. Avg 128 5.82 114 5.18 110 5.50 84 4.42 73 3.84 69 3.83 67 3.53 61 3.39 47 2.61 46 2.56 44 2.59
Assists ## Team 1 UNC Wilmington 2 William & Mary 3 Hofstra 4 Drexel 5 James Madison 6 George Mason Northeastern 8 Old Dominion 9 Towson 10 Delaware 11 Georgia State
GP A APG 22 38 1.73 20 36 1.80 22 34 1.55 19 24 1.26 18 23 1.28 19 21 1.11 19 21 1.11 18 17 0.94 18 14 0.78 18 13 0.72 17 12 0.71
Goals Against Average ## Team 1 Drexel 2 William and Mary 3 UNC Wilmington 4 Delaware 5 Hofstra 6 James Madison 7 Northeastern 8 George Mason 9 Georgia State 10 Old Dominion 11 Towson
GP 19 20 22 18 22 18 19 19 17 18 18
GA Min. GAA 13 1752:51 0.67 14 1851:48 0.68 21 2065:16 0.92 18 1686:42 0.96 32 2065:10 1.39 26 1651:38 1.42 29 1749:17 1.49 34 1755:23 1.74 34 1624:12 1.88 40 1624:46 2.22 49 1670:00 2.64
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Scoring ## Name, School 1 Rose, Stephanie - UNCW 2 Galton, Leah - Hofstra 3 Bristol, Cortlyn - W&M Schaffer, Mallory - W&M 5 Kallenberger, Tina - Mason Echeverry, Lulu - Hofstra Scolarici, Sam - Hofstra 8 Samuelsdottir, Greta - NU 9 McCormick, Maddie - UNCW 10 Wilson, Lauren - JMU
GP 22 22 20 20 19 22 22 19 22 18
Goals ## Name, School 1 Rose, Stephanie - UNCW 2 Galton, Leah - Hofstra 3 Schaffer, Mallory - W&M Scolarici, Sam - Hofstra 5 Samuelsdottir, Greta - NU 6 Wilson, Lauren - JMU Kallenberger, Tina - Mason Echeverry, Lulu - Hofstra McCormick, Maddie - UNCW 10 Miller, Ali - Delaware Hodges, Liz - Mason Rutter, Dani -W&M
G 14 11 5 10 8 8 10 9 8 8
A 12 5 13 3 5 5 1 2 3 2
Pts. 40 27 23 23 21 21 21 20 19 18
GP 22 22 20 22 19 18 19 22 22 18 19 20
G 14 11 10 10 9 8 8 8 8 7 7 7
GPG 0.64 0.50 0.50 0.45 0.47 0.44 0.42 0.36 0.36 0.39 0.37 0.35
PPG 1.82 1.23 1.15 1.15 1.11 0.95 0.95 1.05 0.86 1.00
Assists ## Name, School GP A APG 1 Bristol, Cortlyn - W&M 20 13 0.65 2 Rose, Stephanie - UNCW 22 12 0.55 3 Staplehurst, Ruby - Hofstra 22 6 0.27 18 5 0.28 4 Mertz, Taylor - ODU Germain, Kelly - JMU 18 5 0.28 Kallenberger, Tina - Mason 19 5 0.26 Terry, Hannah - NU 19 5 0.26 Mulholland, Jill - Hofstra 22 5 0.23 Galton, Leah - Hofstra 22 5 0.23 Echeverry, Lulu - Hofstra 22 5 0.23 Currie, Kim - UNCW 22 5 0.23 Goalkeeping (Min. 60 percent of games played) ## Name, School GP GA Min. 1 Badana, Eve - Drexel 19 13 1715:1 2 Casey, Caroline - W&M 20 14 1771:5 3 Hunter, Caitlin - UNCW 22 21 2044:5 4 Levy, Jessica - Delaware 16 16 1351.4 5 Morphitis, Emily-Hofstra 22 32 2060:1 6 Hokanson, Lyndse - Mason 17 22 1334:0 7 Burnett, Paige - NU 19 29 1738.1 8 Toler, Rebecca - GSU 14 27 1268.2 9 Bush, Laura - ODU 14 24 934.07 10 Quinn, Erin - Towson 18 49 1653.4
GAA 0.68 0.71 0.92 1.07 1.40 1.48 1.50 1.92 2.31 2.67
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HOFSTRA HONOR ROLL
BROOKE DEROSA NSCAA ALL-AMERICA Sue Weber - 2005, 2007 Brooke DeRosa - 2007 Tiffany Yovino - 2010 NSCAA ALL-REGION SELECTIONS Christa Eidenweil - 1999, 2000 Becky Wachsberger - 2003, 2004, 2005 Dolores Deasley - 2003 Elaine O’Connor - 2003 Marie Curtin - 2004, 2005, 2008 Emma Kilduff - 2004 Edel Malone - 2005, 2007, 2008 Sue Weber - 2005, 2006, 007 Brooke DeRosa - 2007 Jess Crankshaw - 2007, 2008 Tiffany Yovino - 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Salma Tarik - 2009, 2010 Courtney Breen - 2009, 2010 Diane Caldwell - 2009 Brittany Butts - 2010 Leah Galton - 2012 ALL-CONFERENCE ALL-COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Marisa Pistone - 2001, 2003 Elaine O’Connor - 2002, 2003 Charity Schmitt - 2002, 2003 Dolores Deasley -2002, 2003
JACKI POLLARO
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DIANE CALDWELL Becky Wachsberger - 2003, 2004, 2005 Elyse Bizzozzaro - 2003 Marie Curtin - 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008 Emma Kilduff - 2004 Brigit Canle - 2004 Amber Albrecht - 2005 Sue Weber - 2005, 2006, 2007 Edel Malone - 2005, 2007, 2008 Brooke DeRosa - 2007 Jess Crankshaw - 2007, 2008, 2009 Tiffany Yovino - 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Courtney Breen - 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Salma Tarik - 2009, 2010 Diane Caldwell - 2009 Brittany Butts - 2010, 2011 Dana Bergstron - 2010 Laura Greene - 2011 Brooke Bendernagel - 2011, 2012 Ruby Staplehurst - 2012 Leah Galton - 2012 Jill Mulholland - 2012 ALL-COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ROOKIE Jill Lipari - 2006 Diane Caldwell - 2006 Tiffany Yovino - 2007 Courtney Breen - 2008 Brittany Butts - 2008
DANA BERGSTROM
ELAINE O’CONNOR Amy Turner - 2009 Emily Morphitis - 2010 Amber Stobbs - 2010 Sam Scolarici - 2011 Leah Galton - 2012 Jill Mulholland - 2012 ALL-AMERICA EAST Heather Kain - 1998 Allyson Pullano - 1999 Joanne Chillingsworth - 1999 Christa Eidenweil - 1999, 2000 Tracy Naughton - 1999, 2000 Penny Stansfield - 2000 Jerilyn Marinan - 2000 Dolores Deasley - 2000, 2001 Marisa Pistone - 2001 COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION PLAYER OF THE YEAR Tiffany Yovino - 2010 COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR Dolores Deasley - 2003 Sue Weber - 2005, 2006, 2007 Jess Crankshaw - 2008
JESS CRANKSHAW
HOFSTRA HONOR ROLL
BECKY WACHSBERGER COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ROOKIE OF THE YEAR Jacki Pollaro - 2003 Marie Curtin - 2004 Edel Malone - 2005 Leah Galton - 2012 COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION COACH OF THE YEAR
SUE WEBER NSCAA SCHOLAR ALL-AMERICA Sue Weber - 2006, 2007 Jess Crankshaw - 2008 Tiffany Yovino - 2009, 2010 RETIRED JERSEYS Sue Weber #20 Tiffany Yovino #18
JoAnne Russell - 2002, 2006 Simon Riddiough - 2010
PROFESSIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PLAYERS
COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION SCHOLAR-ATHLETE OF THE YEAR
WOMEN’S PROFESSIONAL SOCCER (WPS)
Sue Weber - 2006, 2007 Dana Bergstrom - 2010
Sue Weber-Boston Breakers
COSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA Chrissy Arnone - 2005 Sue Weber - 2007 Dana Bergstrom - 2010 Tiffany Yovino - 2010 COSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-DISTRICT Sue Weber - 2006 Liz Guise - 2007 Dana Bergstrom - 2010 Tiffany Yovino - 2010
JILL LIPARI
W-LEAGUE LONG ISLAND LADY RIDERS Janine Cappello Dolores Deasley Brooke DeRosa Laura Greene Grace Hawkins Heather Kain Edel Malone Danielle Murino Elaine O’Connor Kayla Pifer
EDEL MALONE
TIFFANY YOVINO Marisa Pistone Penny Stansfield Salma Tarik Krista Thorn Becky Wachsberger Sue Weber Tiffany Yovino NEW YORK MAGIC Penny Stansfield Salma Tarik Becky Wachsberger FA WSL (ENGLAND) Amy Turner – Lincoln Ladies, Doncaster Belles NORWEGIAN LEAGUE Diane Cladwell – Avaldsnes IL Marie Curtin - Fortuna Alesund IRELAND NATIONAL TEAM Diane Caldwell Marie Curtin Dolores Deasley Edel Malone Elaine O’Connor
CHRISSY ARNONE
2013 Women’s Soccer • 47
HOFSTRA SOCCER RECORD BOOK SEASON RECORDS Goals 1) Carlene Wawrzonek 2) Brooke DeRosa 2) Suzanne Newell 4) Christa Eidenweil 4) Laura Greene 6) Tiffany Yovino 6) Salma Tarik 6) Suzanne Newell 9) Leah Galton 10) Jerilyn Marinan 10) Allyson Pullano 10) Chrissy Arnone 10) Salma Tarik 10) Sam Scolarici
17 14 14 13 13 12 12 12 11 10 10 10 10 10
1994 2007 1994 2000 2011 2010 2010 1996 2012 1997 1999 2005 2009 2012
Assists 1) Kara Ahlfeld 2) Dana Bergstrom 2) Elaine O’Connor 4) Jess Crankshaw 4) Jerilyn Marinan 6) Heather Kain 6) Jerilyn Marinan 6) Laura Greene 9) Laura Greene 9) Suzanne Newell 9) Elaine O’Connor 9) Emma Kilduff 9) Marie Curtin
12 10 10 9 9 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7
1994 2010 2002 2007 1998 1998 2000 2009 2010 1996 2000 2004 2005
Points 1) Carlene Wawrzonek 2) Suzanne Newell 3) Brooke DeRosa 4) Suzanne Newell 5) Laura Greene 6) Kara Ahlfeld 7) Leah Galton 8) Christa Eidenweil 8) Salma Tarik 8) Tiffany Yovino
35 34 33 31 30 28 27 26 26 26
1994 1994 2007 1996 2011 1994 2012 2000 2010 2010
JOANNE CHILLINGSWORTH
48 • hofs tra uni versi ty
Goalkeeper Saves 1) Joanne Chillingsworth 2) Christie Klouse 3) Christie Klouse 4) Kristine Winchester 4) Becky Wachsberger 6) Becky Wachsberger 6) Becky Wachsberger 8) Emily Morphitis 9) Krystal Robens 9) Krystal Robens
98 89 88 81 81 76 76 74 72 72
1998 1995 1997 2001 2005 2003 2004 2012 2007 2008
SUZANNE NEWELL
Single Game Records Goals: (4) Suzanne Newell vs. Central Connecticut, 10/5/96 Assists: (3) Kara Ahlfeld vs. Siena, 10/14/94; Heather Kain vs. Marist, 9/9/98; Audra Sherman vs. Eastern Michigan, 8/30/02; Dana Bergstrom vs. George Mason, 10/8/10 Points: (9) Suzanne Newell vs. Central Connecticut, 10/5/96 Saves: (21) Joanne Chillingsworth vs. Hartford, 10/23/98 Miscellaneous Records Longest Winning Streak: 18 games (2010) Longest Losing Streak: 7 games (1993) Home Victories: 10 (2010) Away Victories: 8 (1994, 2010) Conference Victories: 11 (2010)
CAREER RECORDS Goals 1) Christa Eidenweil 2) Suzanne Newell 3) Salma Tarik 4) Jerilyn Marinan 5) Elyse Bizzozzaro 6) Laura Greene 7) Penny Stansfield 8) Tiffany Yovino 9) Chrissy Arnone 10) Allyson Pullano
39 36 28 27 26 24 22 21 19 17
BECKY WACHSBERGER
1997-00 1994-97 2008-10 1997-00 2000-04 2008-11 1997-00 2007-10 2002-05 1998-99
10) Carlene Wawrzonek 10) Edel Malone
17 17
1994 2005-08
Assists 1) Jerilyn Marinan 2) Marie Curtin 3) Elaine O’Connor 4) Jess Crankshaw 5) Laura Greene 6) Heather Kain 6) Suzanne Newell 6) Penny Stansfield 9) Marisa Pistone 9) Edel Malone 9) Dana Bergstrom
26 23 22 20 19 17 17 17 15 15 15
1997-00 2004-08 1999-03 2005-09 2008-11 1995-98 1994-97 1997-00 2000-03 2005-08 2008-10
CHRISTA EIDENWEIL
HOFSTRA SOCCER RECORD BOOK
JERILYN MARINAN
ELYSE BIZZOZZARO
Points 1) Suzanne Newell 2) Christa Eidenweil 3) Jerilyn Marinan 4) Laura Greene 5) Salma Tarik 6) Elyse Bizzozzaro 7) Penny Stansfield 8) Tiffany Yovino 9) Marie Curtin 9) Edel Malone
89 83 80 67 64 62 61 50 49 49
Goalkeeper Saves 1) Becky Wachsberger 2) Christie Klouse 3) Joanne Chillingsworth 4) Krystal Robens 5) Jean Hodermarsky 6) Kristine Winchester 7) Krysten Farriella 8) Emily Morphitis 9) Renata Carullo
302 2001-05 215 1995-97 196 1998-00 192 2004-08 179 1993-96 176 1998-01 147 2006-09 136 2010-pres. 107 1993-95
PENNY STANSFIELD
1994-97 1997-00 1997-00 2008-11 2008-10 2000-04 1997-00 2007-10 2004-08 2005-08
SALMA TARIK
YEAR-BY-YEAR RECORDS Year Coach Record 1992 JoAnne Russell 12-3 (Club Team) 1993 JoAnne Russell 5-11-1 1994 JoAnne Russell 16-2-1 (ECAC Quarterfinals) 1995 JoAnne Russell 5-12-0 1996 JoAnne Russell 6-12-0 1997 JoAnne Russell 10-7-1 1998 JoAnne Russell 10-7-2 1999 JoAnne Russell 13-6-0 2000 JoAnne Russell 12-5-2 2001 JoAnne Russell 8-8-3 2002 JoAnne Russell 14-5-1 2003 JoAnne Russell 13-3-3 2004 JoAnne Russell 12-6-1 2005 JoAnne Russell 14-4-3 2006 Simon Riddiough 9-8-2 2007 Simon Riddiough 18-4-0 2008 Simon Riddiough 11-8-3 2009 Simon Riddiough 10-6-3 2010 Simon Riddiough 19-3-0 2011 Simon Riddiough 10-8-0 2012 Simon Riddiough 11-9-2
MARIE CURTIN
LAURA GREENE
KARA AHLFELD
2013 Women’s Soccer • 49
WOMEN’S SOCCER ALUMNAE
AMBER ALBRECHT Ahlfeld, Kara Albrecht, Amber Aliperti, Carolyn Amato, Kristin Anderson, Erin Arenella, Dawn Arnone, Chrissy Bendernagel, Brooke Bergstrom, Dana Best, Bree Bisco, Nicole Bizzozzaro, Elyse Braico, Danielle Breen, Courtney Burkett, Patricia
BROOKE BENDERNAGEL 1995 2005 1996 1994 2003 1996 2005 2012 2010 2006 2008 2004 1999 2011 1999
Butts, Brittany Caldwell, Diane Canle, Brigit Cappello, Janine Carullo, Renata Chillingsworth, Joanne Ciamei, Mary Cinelli, Laura Clancy, Catherine Covelli, Kristina Crankshaw, Jess Croan, Carol Cuevas, Tina Curran, Sarah Curtin, Marie
LISA PRAZAK
50 • hofs tra uni versi ty
2011 2009 2004 2002 1995 2000 1996 1994 1997 2004 2009 1994 2000 1998 2008
CATHERINE CLANCY
LAURA DEL BIONDO
COURTNEY BREEN Deasley, Dolores DelBiondo, Laura DeRosa, Brooke Dinisio, Gina Eidenweil, Christa Farriella, Krysten Ferriso, Amy Fuertes, Erika Giannetta, Suzanne Gillett, Lucy Gilroy, Ann Marie Greene, Laura Guise, Liz Gulley, Sara Hargraves, Larkin
2003 2005 2007 1999 2000 2009 2007 2009 1995 2012 1992 2011 2008 2008 2007
Hawkins, Grace Heyde, Amanda Herzog, Nicole Hodermarsky, Jean Howie, Sarah Johnson, Debra Kain, Heather Kelleher, Erin Kilduff, Emma Klouse, Christie Knecht, Danielle Koch, Wendy Koren, Anya Leurini, Carol Levitan, Maureen
CAROL LEURINI
2010 2012 2002 1996 1995 1994 1998 2008 2004 1997 1997 2000 2012 2008 1994
WOMEN’S SOCCER ALUMNAE
ERIN MAGEE Lipari, Jill Magee, Erin Malone, Edel Marinan, Jerilyn Mikowski, Kathleen Montague, Colleen Monz, Erica Nanavrakis, Nina Naughton, Tracey Newell, Suzanne O’Connor, Elaine O’Connor, Robyn Pacinda, Christina Payne, Tessa Pegg, Julie
KATHLEEN MIKOWSKI
NINA NANAVRAKIS 2009 2002 2008 2000 2001 1994 2003 2005 2000 1997 2003 1998 2005 1995 1992
Penta, Bridget Pifer, Kayla Pistone, Marisa Pollaro, Jackie Presto, Elizabeth Pullano, Allyson Richards, Kareina Rizzi, Dianne Robens, Krystal Roesler, Valerie Rosen, Wendy Rosenfeld, Abbe Schaefer, Kerry Schmitt, Charity Schuster, Kylie
BRIDGET PENTA 2003 2010 2003 2007 1997 1999 2008 1993 2008 2003 1996 1995 2003 2003 2012
ROBYN O’CONNOR
Shaban, Ashley Sherman, Audra Stansfield, Penny Steinberg, Alex Suapengco, Kristine Sullivan, Kendra Sylva, Samantha Tarik, Salma Thorn, Krista Toyomasu, Yumi True, Julie Wachsberger, Becky Weber, Sue Winchester, Kristine Yovino, Tifffany
KAYLA PIFER 2005 2002 2000 2007 2008 2003 1994 2010 2010 2007 2000 2005 2007 2001 2010
Zoumas, Sofia
1996
This list was compiled through information provided by the Hofstra Alumni Relations Office. Any omission was purely unintentional. Please call the Hofstra Office of Athletic Communications at (516) 4636759 with any additions. Year listed is final year of competition.
KRISTINE WINCHESTER
2013 Women’s Soccer • 51
HOFSTRA IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT
T
he Pride has made four NCAA Tournament appearances and owns a 2-4 mark in NCAA play. The team won the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) Championship in 2005 to earn their first NCAA berth and won the CAA again in 2007 and 2012 to qualify for the NCAA Tournament. In 2010 the Pride, ranked 23rd in the nation, earned an at-large bid to the tournament field.
Hofstra’s NCAA Tournament History: 2005 Hofstra 0, #21 West Virginia 3 (at Penn State)
EDEL MALONE LEADS AN OFFENSIVE CHARGE AGAINST WEST VIRGINIA
SUE WEBER LOOKS TO CLEAR THE DEFENSIVE ZONE VERSUS THE MOUNTAINEERS
ASHLEY SHABAN ESCAPES HER WEST VIRGINIA DEFENDER
THE PRIDE CELEBRATE EDEL MALONE’S GOAL IN A 1-0 WIN OVER OHIO STATE
ALL-AMERICAN BROOKE DEROSA BRINGS THE BALL UP FIELD VERSUS PENN STATE
2007 Hofstra 1, Ohio State 0 (at Penn State) Hofstra 1, #6 Penn State 2 (OT) (at Penn State)
DIANE CALDWELL LOOKS TO CLEAR THE BALL IN HOFSTRA SECOND ROUND GAME AGAINST PENN STATE
52 • hofs tra uni versi ty
HOFSTRA IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT EMILY MORPHITIS, COACH SIMON RIDDIOUGH AND COURTNEY BREEN MEET THE MEDIA FOLLOWING HOFSTRA’S SECOND ROUND GAME
2010 #23 Hofstra 1, Connecticut 0 (at Boston College) #23 Hofstra 1, #18 Boston College 3 (at Boston College)
BRITTANY BUTTS ELUDES A CONNECTICUT DEFENDER IN HOFSTRA’S 1-0 WIN OVER THE HUSKIES
KRISTA THORN DELIVERS A PUNT FOLLOWING A SAVE AGAINST BOSTON COLLEGE
LAURA GREENE RUNS DOWN A LOOSE BALL IN THE PRIDE’S FIRST ROUND WIN
TIFFANY YOVINO’S HEADER IN THE 10TH MINUTE WAS THE ONLY GOAL IN HOFSTRA’S FIRST ROUND VICTORY
THE PRIDE CELEBRATE THE SECOND NCAA TOURNAMENT VICTORY IN PROGRAM HISTORY
KAYLA PIFER ATTACKS THE OFFENSIVE ZONE IN HOFSTRA’S SECOND ROUND GAME AT BOSTON COLLEGE
SALMA TARIK DRIBBLES THE BALL OUT OF HER DEFENSIVE ZONE AGAINST THE EAGLES
2013 Women’s Soccer • 53
HOFSTRA IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT 2012 Hofstra 0, Boston College 2 (at Boston College)
COACH RIDDIOUGH AND EMILY MORPHITIS SPEAK TO WRHU FOLLOWING THE MATCH
THE PRIDE LINEUP FOR THE NATIONAL ANTHEM PRIOR TO THE CONTEST
EMILY MORPHITIS DELIVERS A PUNT
TARA KERNS LOOKS TO CONTROL THE BALL AGAINST PRESSURE FROM A BC DEFENDER
CAYLIN DUDLEY LOOKS TO CLEAR THE DEFENSIVE END
54 • hofs tra uni versi ty
LEAH GALTON GETS A STEP ON HER DEFENDER
ALL-TIME SERIES RECORDS Albany 3-0-0
LaSalle 2-1-0
American 1-3-1
Lehigh 0-1-0
Army 1-2-0
Long Island University
4-0-0
Boston College
0-3-0
Loyola (MD)
0-1-0
Boston University
0-8-1
Maine 8-2-1
Boston University Club Team
1-0-0
Manhattan 3-4-2
Brown 1-0-0
Manhattanville 1-0-0
Buffalo 0-1-0
Marist 6-2-0
Campbell 0-1-0
Maryland-Baltimore County
1-0-0
Central Connecticut
5-6-1
Miami (OH)
1-0-0
College of Charleston
1-0-0
Mt. St. Mary’s
1-0-0
Colgate 0-1-0
New Hampshire
4-4-1
Columbia 5-4-1
New York University
1-0-0
Concordia 1-0-0
Niagara 1-0-0
Connecticut 1-3-1
North Carolina Greensboro
1-0-0
St. Bonaventure
1-0-0
Cornell 1-0-0
North Carolina Wilmington
10-3-1
St. Francis (PA)
1-0-0
Delaware 15-6-0
Northeastern 10-6-2
St. John’s
1-4-0
Drexel 15-2-0
Ohio State
2-0-0
St. Thomas Aquinas
1-0-0 8-3-0
East Carolina
0-1-1
Old Dominion
7-3-2
Stony Brook
Eastern Michigan
1-0-0
Penn State
0-2-0
TCU 0-1-0
Pennsylvania 0-1-0
Temple 1-0-0
Philadelphia College of Textiles and Sciences
Texas Tech
Fairfield 3-2-0 Fairleigh Dickinson Florida International
3-0-1 1-0-0
Fordham 10-2-1 Fordham Club Team Georgetown George Mason Georgia State
2-0-0 0-1-0 8-3-1 7-1-1
Hartford 0-9-1 Harvard 2-0-0 Indiana 1-1-0 Iona 5-3-0 James Madison
5-7-1
Lafayette 0-1-0
1-1-0
Pittsburgh 1-0-0 Princeton 3-1-0 Providence 1-0-1 Purdue 1-0-0 Quinnipiac 3-0-0 Rhode Island
1-0-0
Richmond 2-0-0 Rutgers 0-1-0 Sacred Heart
1-0-0
Saint Peter’s
2-2-1
Seton Hall
1-0-0
Siena 4-1-0
1-0-0
Towson 15-2-1 Vermont 4-5-0 Villanova 0-1-0 Virginia 0-1-0 Virginia Commonwealth
8-2-2
Wagner 7-0-0 Wake Forest
0-1-0
Washington 0-1-1 West Virginia
0-2-0
Western Connecticut
1-0-0
William & Mary
5-9-1
Wyoming 1-0-0 Yale 0-1-0
2013 Women’s Soccer • 55
WOMEN’S SOCCER ALL-TIME RESULTS 1992 Record: 12-3-0 (Club Team) Coach: JoAnne Russell 9/4 9/8 9/14 9/16 9/19 9/22 9/30 10/3 10/6 10/8 10/14 10/17 10/20 10/22 10/25
Philadelphia College of Textiles and Sciences at St. John’s at Western Connecticut Iona Siena at Fordham at Concordia at Manhattan New York University St. Thomas Aquinas Fairfield St. Peter’s Fordham at Manhattanville at Boston University
2-1 W (OT) 0-1 L 10-0 W 0-2 L 1-0 W 3-0 W 7-2 W 0-2 L 8-0 W 6-0 W 2-1 W (OT) 7-0 W 4-0 W 4-0 W 4-0 W
1993 Record: 5-11-1 Coach: JoAnne Russell 9/4 9/9 9/11 9/12 9/14 9/25 9/26 9/30 10/2 10/3 10/9 10/13 10/14 10/16 10/20 10/23 10/26
St. John’s 2-1 W at St. Peter’s 2-2 T at Philadelphia College of Textiles and Sciences 2-3 L (OT) at Lafayette 1-8 L at Iona 0-4 L Maine 0-5 L Buffalo 0-3 L Manhattan 2-3 L at Stony Brook 0-3 L Wagner 6-0 W Niagara 3-2 W (OT) at Fairfield 0-3 L Campbell 0-2 L American 0-5 L at Siena 3-0 W Loyola 3-4 L (OT) at Fordham 3-0 W
1994 Record: 16-2-1 Coach: JoAnne Russell 9/7 St. Peter’s Wagner 9/10 9/13 Iona 9/16 at La Salle 9/18 at Drexel 9/21 at Stony Brook at Manhattan 9/29 10/2 at Vermont at St. John’s 10/4 10/8 Wagner 10/9 at Seton Hall 10/12 Fairfield 10/14 Siena 10/17 at Maine 10/22 at Mount St. Mary’s 10/26 Fordham 10/29 St. Francis (PA) 10/30 New Hampshire at New Hampshire% 11/9 %ECAC Tournament Quarterfinals
56 • hofs tra uni versi ty
LULU ECHEVERRY 1995 Record: 5-12-0 Coach: JoAnne Russell
2-0 W 6-0 W 3-0 W 3-0 W 9-0 W 4-1 W 5-1 W 1-0 W 0-1 L 4-0 W 3-0 W 4-2 W 4-2 W 3-1 W 1-0 W( OT) 6-2 W 3-0 W 1-1 T (OT) 1-2 L
9/6 9/9 9/10 9/15 9/17 9/20 9/24 9/28 9/30 10/4 10/7 10/14 10/18 10/22 10/26 10/28 10/29
at St. Peter’s Iona Manhattan Stony Brook at Central Connecticut Hartford* American at New Hampshire* at Maine* St. John’s at Towson State* at Siena at Fordham Delaware* at Wagner Boston University Vermont*
*North Atlantic Conference game
3-4 L (OT) 1-2 L 1-2 L 1-2 L 2-0 W 0-9 L 1-0 W 0-8 L 3-2 W (OT) 0-4 L 3-1 W 2-3 L 1-2 L 0-6 L 3-1 W 0-3 L 0-6 L
WOMEN’S SOCCER ALL-TIME RESULTS 1996 Record: 6-12-0 Coach: JoAnne Russell 9/4 9/7 9/11 9/16 9/21 9/24 9/28 9/29 10/2 10/5 10/9 10/12 10/15 10/18 10/20 10/26 10/29 11/2
St. Peter’s Iona at U.S. Military Academy Northeastern at Vermont* Manhattan at Delaware* at American at Columbia Central Connecticut at Hartford* Boston University* Siena at Maine* at New Hampshire* at St. John’s Wagner at Towson State*
JILL MULHOLLAND 0-4 L 5-0 W 0-2 L 4-1 W 0-3 L 3-0 W 1-3 L 0-1 L 1-4 L 6-0 W 0-3 L 0-3 L 1-0 W (OT) 0-3 L 0-2 L 3-4 L 4-0 W 0-3 L
*America East game 1997 Record: 10-7-1 Coach: JoAnne Russell 9/3 9/7 9/11 9/17 9/20 9/21 9/24 9/27 10/1 10/3 10/5 10/10 10/12 10/18 10/24 10/26 10/31 11/2
at Wagner American at Manhattan at Long Island University Iona at Central Connecticut at Stony Brook Lehigh Marist Northeastern* Boston University* Maine* New Hampshire* Delaware* at Towson* at Drexel* at Hartford* at Vermont*
3-1 W 2-3 L 2-2 T 7-0 W 4-0 W 1-2 L 3-1 W 0-1 L (OT) 1-0 W 5-0 W 1-2 L 1-0 W 2-1 W (OT) 3-2 W 0-3 L 2-0 W 1-7 L 0-2 L
*America East game 1998 Record: 10-7-2 Coach: JoAnne Russell 9/3 9/6 9/9 9/12 9/16 9/20 9/22 9/24 9/27 10/2 10/4 10/8
at Central Connecticut College of Charleston at Marist Manhattan Wagner at American at UMBC Stony Brook at Iona at Northeastern* at Boston University* Delaware*
1-4 L 3-1 W 3-0 W 4-4 T (OT) 7-0 W 0-0 T (OT) 4-1 W 1-2 L (OT) 3-0 W 1-0 W (OT) 0-5 L 1-2 L
10/13 10/16 10/18 10/23 10/25 10/30 11/1
Long Island University at Maine* at New Hampshire* Hartford* Vermont* Towson* Drexel*
4-1 W 2-0 W 1-2 L 1-2 L (OT) 3-4 L (OT) 2-1 W 3-2 W
*America East game 1999 Record: 13-6 Coach: JoAnne Russell 9/1 9/4 9/8 9/12 9/15 9/19 9/23 9/26 9/29 10/3 10/7 10/13 10/16 10/19 10/22 10/24 10/29 10/31 11/3
Marist at Long Island University #8 Hartford* at Columbia at Army Central Connecticut State Fordham Vermont* Delaware* at Towson* at Manhattan at Stony Brook at Drexel* Iona Maine* New Hampshire* at Boston University* at Northeastern* at Boston University%
2-0 W 6-1 W 1-2 L 1-2 L (OT) 1-2 L 3-2 W 4-2 W 4-1 W 1-0 W 1-0 W 0-1 L 3-1 W 2-1 W 4-0 W 1-0 W (OT) 3-0 W 1-3 L 3-0 W 0-1 L
*America East game %America East Championship Semifinal
2013 Women’s Soccer • 57
WOMEN’S SOCCER ALL-TIME RESULTS 2000 Record: 12-5-2 Coach: JoAnne Russell 8/31 at Marist 9/2 Long Island University 9/6 at Central Connecticut State 9/11 at Hartford* 9/15 at East Carolina$ 9/17 UNC Wilmington$ 9/22 Boston University* 9/24 Northeastern* 9/27 Columbia 9/30 at Vermont* 10/5 Manhattan 10/10 at Fordham 10/13 Delaware* 10/15 Towson* 10/18 Stony Brook 10/21 Drexel* 10/27 at Maine* 10/29 at New Hampshire* 11/3 at Hartford%
0-1 L 4-2 W 0-1 L 0-2 L 2-2 T (OT) 2-0 W 0-1 L 2-1 W 5-2 W 3-2 W 5-1 W 3-3 T (OT) 5-2 W 1-0 W 4-3 W 3-1 W 2-1 W 3-2 W (2OT) 0-1 L
*America East game $East Carolina Tournament %America East Championship Semifinal 2001 Record: 8-8-3 Coach: JoAnne Russell 8/31 9/2 9/5 9/8 9/22 9/23 9/30 10/6 10/8 10/12 10/14 10/19 10/21 10/26 10/28 10/30 11/3 11/6 11/9
Florida International West Virginia Central Connecticut State Fordham at Boston University* at Northeastern* at Columbia Maine* New Hampshire* Hartford* Vermont* at Delaware* at Towson* at Albany* Stony Brook* at Rutgers at Drexel* Towson% (Hofstra advances on penalty kicks) at Hartford%
2-0 W 1-2 L (2OT) 3-0 W 4-1 W 0-0 T (2OT) 1-2 L 1-2 L (2OT) 1-1 T (2OT) 1-0 W 0-1 L 1-0 W 0-3 L 2-1 W 3-1 W 3-2 W (OT) 1-4 L 0-2 L 0-0 T (4OT) 0-1 L (3OT)
*America East game %America East Championship 2002 Record: 14-5-1, 6-3 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: JoAnne Russell 8/30 9/1 9/6 9/8 9/10 9/15
Eastern Michigan Miami (OH) vs. Providence# at Quinnipiac# at Stony Brook Fordham
58 • hofs tra uni versi ty
7-1 W 2-0 W 1-1 T (2OT) 3-1 W 6-0 W 2-1 W
RUBY STAPLEHURST 9/20 9/24 9/27 10/1 10/4 10/12 10/18 10/20 10/25 10/27 11/1 11/3 11/5 11/9
at Central Connecticut State Marist George Mason* Columbia James Madison* at Drexel* at Old Dominion* at William & Mary* at UNC Wilmington* at Virginia Commonwealth* Towson* Delaware* Delaware% vs. George Mason%
0-2 L 3-0 W 2-1 W 1-0 W 1-2 L 3-0 W 2-0 W 0-3 L 0-1 L (OT) 1-0 W 3-0 W 3-0 W 1-0 W 0-1 L
*Colonial Athletic Association game #Quinnipiac Tournament %Colonial Athletic Association Championship 2003 Record: 13-3-3, 6-1-2 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: JoAnne Russell 8/29 9/2 9/5 9/7 9/13 9/16 9/21 9/26 9/28 10/3 10/5 10/9 10/14 10/18 10/20 10/25 10/31 11/1 11/7
at Marist at Fordham at UNC Greensboro$ vs. LaSalle$ Central Connecticut State Quinnipiac Pittsburgh at Delaware* at Towson* Virginia Commonwealth* UNC Wilmington* at Connecticut Stony Brook William & Mary* Old Dominion* Drexel* at George Mason* at James Madison* William & Mary%
*Colonial Athletic Association game $UNC Greensboro Tournament %Colonial Athletic Association Championship
3-0 W 1-0 W (OT) 2-0 W 3-1 W 0-1 L 6-1 W 2-0 W 1-0 W (2 OT) 2-1 W 2-2 T (2 OT) 1-0 W 0-0 T (2 OT) 1-0 W 1-0 W 1-0 W 3-0 W 1-1 T (2 OT) 0-1 L 0-1 L
WOMEN’S SOCCER ALL-TIME RESULTS 2004 Record: 12-6-1, 6-3-0 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: JoAnne Russell 8/27 8/29 9/3 9/5 9/8 9/10 9/12 9/16 9/19 9/24 9/26 10/1 10/3 10/15 10/17 10/22 10/24 10/30 11/5
at Army# vs. Hartford# LaSalle Providence at Fordham vs. Maine$ vs. Brown$ Quinnipiac Fairleigh Dickinson at Virginia Commonwealth* at UNC Wilmington* Delaware* Towson* George Mason* James Madison* at William & Mary* at Old Dominion* at Drexel* William & Mary%
LEAH GALTON
2-0 W 1-1 T (2 OT) 0-1 L 2-0 W 1-2 L 2-1 W (OT) 2-1 W 3-1 W 2-1 W 0-1 L (OT) 1-0 W 2-1 W 1-0 W 2-3 L (2 OT) 1-0 W 1-2 L 1-0 W (OT) 6-1 W 1-2 L (OT)
*Colonial Athletic Association game #United State Military Academy Tournament $ECAC Tournament %Colonial Athletic Association Championship 2005 Record: 14-4-3, 8-1-2 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: JoAnne Russell 8/26 8/28 9/2 9/4 9/10 9/14 9/18 9/24 9/30 10/2 10/7 10/9 10/15 10/16 10/21 10/23 10/27 10/29 11/4 11/6 11/11
vs. #9 Connecticut$ vs. #20 Washington$ vs. Maine+ at Boston University+ Marist Fordham Fairleigh Dickinson at Northeastern* Drexel* at Delaware* at Towson* at George Mason* William & Mary* Old Dominion* at Georgia State* at UNC Wilmington* James Madison* Virginia Commonwealth* vs. Delaware# at Virginia Commonwealth# vs. #21 West Virginia%
*Colonial Athletic Association game $Penn State Invitational +Boston University Invitational #Colonial Athletic Association Championship %NCAA Tournament at Penn State
0-3 L 1-1 T (2OT) 1-0 W 0-1 L (OT) 5-0 W 7-1 W 4-2 W 3-0 W 1-0 W 2-0 W 1-0 W 3-1 W 3-0 W 1-0 W 0-1 W 1-1 T (2OT) 1-0 T (2OT) 0-0 T (2OT) 2-1 W 1-0 W 0-3 L
2006 Record: 9-8-2, 5-5-1 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: Simon Riddiough 8/25 8/27 9/1 9/3 9/8 9/10 9/15 9/17 9/22 9/24 9/29 10/1 10/6 10/8 10/13 10/15 10/20 10/22 10/26
at Connecticut# vs. Fairfield# Sacred Heart Central Connecticut at Penn$ vs. Princeton$ at Fordham at Fairleigh Dickinson Towson* George Mason* at #16 William & Mary* at Old Dominion* Georgia State* UNC Wilmington* at James Madison* at Virginia Commonwealth* at Drexel* Delaware* Northeastern*
0-4 L 3-0 W 1-0 W 2-1 W 0-1 L 0-4 L 2-1 W 1-1 T (2OT) 1-0 W 3-0 W 0-1 L 0-1 L 2-1 W 0-3 L 0-2 L 0-2 L 1-0 W 2-0 W 1-1 T (2OT)
*Colonial Athletic Association game #UConn Husky Classic $University of Pennsylvania Tournament
2013 Women’s Soccer • 59
WOMEN’S SOCCER ALL-TIME RESULTS 2007 Record: 18-4-0, 9-2-0 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: Simon Riddiough 8/31 9/2 9/7 9/9 9/14 9/16 9/22 9/28 9/30 10/5 10/7 10/12 10/14 10/19 10/21 10/26 10/28 11/1 11/9 11/11 11/16 11/18
Cornell at Central Connecticut vs. Richmond# vs. Wyoming# Columbia Fairleigh Dickinson Fordham at Towson* at George Mason* William & Mary* Old Dominion* at Georgia State* at UNC Wilmington* James Madison* Virginia Commonwealth* Drexel* at Delaware* at Northeastern* vs. James Madison$ vs. Virginia Commonwealth$ vs. Ohio State% at #6 Penn State%
JEANNINE MOLLEDA
5-1 W 2-1 W (OT) 2-1 W 3-0 W 1-2 L 5-2 W 2-0 W 1-0 W 2-1 W (OT) 0-2 L 1-0 W 2-1 W 2-0 W 0-2 L 2-0 W 1-0 W 2-0 W 3-0 W 2-0 W 1-0 W 1-0 W 1-2 L (OT)
*Colonial Athletic Association game #James Madison Invitational $CAA Championship at Virginia Beach, VA %NCAA Tournament at Penn State 2008 Record: 11-8-3, 7-3-1 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: Simon Riddiough 8/29 8/31 9/5 9/7 9/12 9/14 9/18 9/21 9/26 9/28 10/3 10/5 10/10 10/12 10/17 10/19 10/24 10/26 10/30 11/4 11/7 11/9
vs. #11 Connecticut^ at #9 Penn State^ at Columbia Princeton vs. East Carolina# vs. Villanova# Stony Brook Central Connecticut Delaware* at Drexel* George Mason* Towson* at Old Dominion* at William & Mary* UNC Wilmington* Georgia State* at Virginia Commonwealth* at James Madison* Northeastern* at Old Dominion$ (Hofstra advances on penalty kicks) at William & Mary$ vs. Northeastern$
*Colonial Athletic Association game ^Penn State Invitational #Penn Invitational $CAA Championship
60 • hofs tra uni versi ty
0-1 L 1-4 L 1-0 W 1-0 W 1-2 L 2-3 L 1-0 W (OT) 3-3 T (2 OT) 1-0 W 1-0 W (OT) 2-0 W 1-0 W 0-0 T (2 OT) 0-1 L (OT) 2-0 W 4-3 W 2-1 W 1-2 L 1-2 L (OT) 2-2 T (OT) 3-2 W 0-1 L (OT)
2009 Record: 10-6-3, 7-2-2 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: Simon Riddiough 8/28 8/30 9/4 9/6 9/11 9/13 9/18 9/24 9/27 10/2 10/4 10/9 10/11 10/16 10/18 10/23 10/25 10/31 11/6
at Richmond at #10 Virginia at Princeton at Yale #25 Indiana Harvard Columbia at Delaware* Drexel* at George Mason at Towson* Old Dominion* William & Mary* at UNC Wilmington* at Georgia State* Virginia Commonwealth* James Madison* at Northeastern* vs. UNC Wilmington$
*Colonial Athletic Association game $CAA Championship
2-1 W (OT) 0-7 L 2-1 W 0-3 L 2-3 L (2 OT) 3-2 W 1-1 T (2 OT) 3-2 W 4-0 W 1-0 W 3-0 W 1-2 L 4-1 W 2-1 W 0-0 T (2 OT) 3-0 W 0-0 T (2 OT) 0-4 L 1-2 L (OT)
WOMEN’S SOCCER ALL-TIME RESULTS 2010 Record: 19-3-0, 11-0 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: Simon Riddiough 8/27 9/3 9/5 9/10 9/12 9/17 9/19 9/24 9/26 9/30 10/3 10/8 10/10 10/15 10/17 10/22 10/24 10/30 11/5 11/7 11/12 11/14
at #7 Boston College Rhode Island Fordham at Purdue at Indiana at Columbia Princeton at James Madison* at Virginia Commonwealth* at Drexel* Delaware* Towson* George Mason* at William & Mary* at Old Dominion* Georgia State* UNC Wilmington* Northeastern* Georgia State$ James Madison$ vs. Connecticut% at #18 Boston College%
NICKI CHOFFEL
0-5 L 3-1 W 4-1 W 3-1 W 3-1 W 1-0 W (2 OT) 1-0 W 1-0 W 2-0 W 2-1 W 2-0 W 4-1 W 5-0 W 3-2 W 3-1 W 3-2 W (OT) 2-0 W 2-1 W (2 OT) 3-0 W 0-2 L 1-0 W 1-3 L
*Colonial Athletic Association game $CAA Championship %NCAA Tournament at Boston College 2011 Record: 10-8-0, 6-5 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: Simon Riddiough 8/26 8/28 9/2 9/4 9/9 9/11 9/16 9/23 9/25 9/29 10/2 10/7 10/9 10/14 10/16 10/21 10/23 10/29
Fairfield vs. Columbia vs. Albany at Texas Tech vs. VCU at Harvard James Madison* Virginia Commonwealth* Drexel* at Delaware* at Towson* at George Mason* #23 William & Mary* Old Dominion* at Georgia State* at UNC Wilmington* at Northeastern* vs. Delaware$
*Colonial Athletic Association game $CAA Championship
0-1 L 2-0 W 5-0 W 2-1 W (OT) 0-1 L 5-4 W 3-4 L (OT) 1-0 W 2-1 W 2-3 L 2-3 L 0-1 L 0-1 L 2-1 W 2-0 W 2-0 W 3-0 W 0-1 L
2012 Record: 11-9-2, 6-4 Colonial Athletic Association Coach: Simon Riddiough 8/17 8/24 8/26 8/31 9/2 9/7 9/9 9/14 9/20 9/23 9/30 10/4 10/7 10/12 10/14 10/19 10/21 10/24 10/28 11/2 11/4 11/9
Ohio State vs. Temple vs. Georgetown vs. Colgate vs. #15 Wake Forest St. Bonaventure at Marist Albany at UNC Wilmington* Georgia State* at James Madison* Delaware* at Drexel* George Mason* Towson* at Old Dominion* at William & Mary* Northeastern* at Northeastern$ (Hofstra advances on penalty kicks) at William & Mary$ (Hofstra advances on penalty kicks) vs. UNC Wilmington$ at Boston College%
2-0 W 3-1 W 1-2 L 2-3 L 1-2 L 2-0 W 2-4 L 2-1 W (2 OT) 1-0 W 5-0 W 3-1 W 3-1 W 0-3 L 1-0 W 3-1 W 1-2 L 2-3 L (2 OT) 2-3 L 2-2 T 0-0 T 2-1 W (2 OT) 0-2 L
*Colonial Athletic Association game $CAA Championship %NCAA Tournament at Boston College
2013 Women’s Soccer • 61
3013 HOFSTRA SOCCER MEDIA INFORMATION
T
he Hofstra University Office of Athletic Communications welcomes the members of the media covering the 2013 Pride soccer team. If we can be of any assistance to you throughout the year, please do not hesitate to contact us. We hope the following items will help you during your visits to Hofstra University. Enjoy the season. OFFICE OF ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS 240 Hofstra University Hempstead, NY 11549 (516) 463-6759 - Brian Bohl’s office (516) 463-5033 - Fax (516) 523-6185 - Hofstra Soccer Stadium Press Box
Stephen Gorchov Associate Director of Athletics/Communications
Photography: Photographers can shoot from the sidelines on either side of the field, but are not permitted in team bench areas. Photography and videotaping is also permitted from the roof of the press box. Radio: The Hofstra Office of Athletic Communications will provide a touch-tone digital phone line for the opponent’s commercial and student radio stations. Visiting teams will need to give the Athletic Communications Office two weeks notice of their intention to broadcast. All calls must be made collect or direct dial from the radio station to the Hofstra Soccer Stadium. Postgame Interviews: Hofstra players and coaches will be available for postgame interviews, upon request, after a 10-minute cooling off period. Contact Brian Bohl with your request. Player Interviews: All requests for student-athlete interviews should be made at least one day in advance with the Office of Athletic Communications. If you are requesting a phone interview, we will have the student-athlete return your call at a mutually convenient time. Player home phone numbers will not be distributed. In-person interviews may be conducted in a number of locations in and around the Mack Physical Education Center. However, interviews may not be conducted in the locker room or the athletic training room.
2013 HOFSTRA SOCCER MEDIA OUTLETS Brian Bohl (Soccer Contact) Senior Assistant Director of Athletic Communications
Jim Sheehan Senior Sports Information Director
Len Skoros Director of Athletic Publications Press Seating: Hofstra Soccer Stadium press seating is located in the press box, which is located atop the bleachers on the north side of the stadium. Credential Requests: All members of the press should contact the Office of Athletic Communications at least 48 hours before each game to request credentials. Game Services: Game notes, statistics and lineups are available before the game in the press box. Halftime statistics will be distributed and final statistics will be available 10 minutes after the conclusion of each contest.
62 • hofs tra uni versi ty
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 50 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10020 (212) 621-1630 - Office (212) 621-1639 - Fax
LONG ISLAND HERALD 2 Endo Boulevard Garden City, NY (516) 569-4000 - Office (516) 469-4942 - Fax
NEWSDAY 235 Pinelawn Road Melville, NY 11747 (631) 843-2820 - Office (631) 454-6892 - Fax
LONG ISLAND PRESS 1103 Stewart Avenue Garden City, NY 11530 (516) 992-1800 - Office (516) 992-1801 - Fax
NEW YORK TIMES 229 West 43rd Street New York, NY 10036 (212) 556-7384 - Office (646) 428-6147 - Fax
HOFSTRA CHRONICLE Student Center Hempstead, NY 11550 (516) 463-6965 - Office (516) 463-6977 - Fax
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS 450 West 33rd Street New York, NY 10001 (212) 210-1692 - Office (212) 643-7845 - Fax
NEWS 12 LONG ISLAND 150 Media Crossways Woodbury, NY 11797 (516) 393-3740 - Office (516) 393-1269 - Fax
NEW YORK POST 1211 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10036 (212) 930-8700 - Office (212) 930-8727 - Fax
WRHU-FM 88.7 Hofstra University Dempster Hall Hempstead, NY 11549 (516) 463-5667 - Office (516) 463-5668 - Fax
CAMPUS MAP/GETTING TO HOFSTRA From Southern New Jersey, Southeastern Pennsylvania, Maryland, Washington, D.C. and Virginia: Take the New Jersey Turnpike to Exit 13. Cross the Goethals Bridge and continue on Route 278 to the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge. Stay in the left lane of the Bridge and take the Belt Parkway-East. The Belt Parkway becomes the Southern State Parkway at the Nassau County line. Take the Southern State Parkway to the Meadowbrook Parkway North (Exit 22). Exit the Meadowbrook Parkway at Exit M4 (Hempstead Turnpike Route 24). Head west to Hofstra (approximately 1 mile).
Neck Bridge. Follow directions from the Throgs Neck Bridge from this point.
From Northwestern New Jersey, Northern Pennsylvania and the Middle States: Take Interstate 78, Interstate 80, U.S. Route 22, New Jersey Route 4 or New Jersey Route 17 to the George Washington Bridge. Proceed over the bridge to the Cross Bronx Expressway. Take the Cross Bronx Expressway to the Throgs
From the Throgs Neck Bridge: Follow signs for Eastern Long Island. Take the Cross Island Parkway to the Grand Central Parkway-East. The Grand Central becomes the Northern State Parkway at the Nassau County line. Take the Northern State Parkway-East to the Meadowbrook Parkway-South (exit 31A). Take the Meadowbrook Parkway-South to Exit M4 West (Hempstead Turnpike Route 24). Follow Hempstead Turnpike West to Hofstra (approximately 1 mile).
From Upstate New York: Take New York Thruway over the Tappan Zee Bridge to Cross Westchester Expressway (Interstate 287). Stay on the Expressway to the New England Thruway (Interstate 95). Proceed south on the Thruway to the Throgs Neck Bridge. Follow directions from the Throgs Neck Bridge from this point.
For Team Travel Via Bus: Commercial buses are not allowed on New York City (Belt, Grand Central or Cross Island) or Long Island (Southern State or Northern State) Parkways. Team buses should take the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway from the south, and the Clearview Expressway from the north, to get to the Long Island Expressway for the trip to Hofstra. Once on the Long Island Expressway (I495), buses should proceed to Glen Cove Road-South (exit 39). Head south on Glen Cove Road for approximately eight miles to Hempstead Turnpike/ Fulton Avenue and turn left (east). Hofstra University is approximately two miles east on Hempstead Turnpike. Public Transportation from Airport: If a visitor arrives at either La Guardia or Kennedy Airport, the most direct means of reaching the University is by one of three limousine companies that service both airports and the Hofstra University area. Larry’s Taxi Service (516) 483-3333; Transport Limousine Service (800) 654-1164 (out of state) (800) 832-5466 (in New York state); Winston Limousine Service (800) 4-AIRPORT. Railroads: AMTRAK services Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan, approximately 30 miles from the Hofstra campus. To get to Hofstra from Penn Station, take the Long Island Rail Road to the Hempstead station. The Hofstra University Courtesy Bus and taxi services are available there. Hofstra is approximately 1.5 miles from the station.
2013 Women’s Soccer • 63
2013 HOFSTRA WOMEN’S SOCCER SCHEDULE
August
23 25
Penn State Invitational Fri. vs. Syracuse Sun. at Penn State
5 p.m. Noon
30
Fri.
North Dakota State
5 p.m.
Boston College Marist at Albany Monmouth at St. Bonaventure at Saint Joseph’s UNCW* College of Charleston*
1 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 7 p.m. Noon
at Northeastern* at Delaware* at Drexel* at Towson* William & Mary* James Madison*
6 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m.
CAA Quarterfinals (at higher seed) CAA Championship (at highest seed)
TBA TBA
September
1 6 8 13 15 21 27 29
Sun. Fri. Sun. Fri. Sun. Sat. Fri. Sun.
October 5 11 13 20 25 27
Sat. Fri. Sun. Sun. Fri. Sun.
November 3 8-10
Sun. Fri.-Sun.
*Colonial Athletic Association game. Dates and times subject to change. Home games played at the Hofstra Soccer Stadium.
64 • hofs tra uni versi ty
CAYLIN
DUDLEY
CHLOE
DALE
ERIN
HAVARD
INGR
ID
MOY
ER
LULU JILL
MULHOLLAND
LEAH
RRY
VE ECHE
GALTON
SAM
SCOLAR
ICI
2013 Women’s Soccer • 65
NICKI
KERRY
CHOFFEL
GS CUMMIN
TARA
KERNS
AMBE
R
STOBB
S