Sun Belt Conference - 1
THE During the 2014-15 academic year, Sun Belt member institutions awarded $48,393,375.06 in scholarships to over 3,084 student-athletes.
EXPERIENCE Sun Belt student-athletes have access to career services counselors assisting with writing resumes and identifying internships and summer jobs, career workshops, preparation for interviews/mock interviews, and etiquette classes.
Sun Belt members have on average over 20 tutors for academic support and employ full-time academic advisors.
During the 2013-14 academic year, Sun Belt member institutions gave $2,088,954.35 from the Student Assistance Fund (SAF) to over 1,779 student-athletes.
917 student-athletes earned Academic Honor Roll (3.0-3.49 GPA) honors for the 2014-15 academic year.
2 - Sun Belt Conference
In recent years Sun Belt student-athletes have participated in foreign tours or tournaments in Costa Rica, British Virgin Islands, Canada, Scotland, Bahamas, Spain, and Italy.
Sun Belt student-athletes have life experiences such as team building, domestic and foreign travel, community service, mentoring, and recognition through honors and awards. 825 student-athletes earned Commissioner’s List (3.5-4.0 GPA) honors for the 2014-15 academic year.
CONFERENCE SUN BELT CONFERENCE
1500 Sugar Bowl Drive New Orleans, Louisiana 70112 www.sunbeltsports.org
TABLE OF CONTENTS The Sun Belt Conference Experience............................................................................ 4-6
Commissioner Karl Benson
Commissioner Karl Benson..............................................................................................8
Senior Associate Commissioner/ Chief Operating Officer Kathy Keene, Ph. D.
2015 Sun Belt Conference Composite Schedule....................................................... 10-11
Associate Commissioner/ Chief Financial Officer Herbert L. Carter, III
Appalachian State Mountaineers.............................................................................. 12-15
Associate Commissioner/ Chief Branding & Communications Officer John McElwain
Georgia State Panthers.............................................................................................. 20-23
Associate Commissioner/ Corporate Sales & Marketing John Barranco Assistant Commissioner/ Director of Compliance Scott Connors, Esq. Assistant Commissioner/ Director of Championships Dominick Giambrone, Jr. J.D.
Sun Belt Conference Staff.................................................................................................9
Georgia Southern Eagles........................................................................................... 16-19 Hartwick Hawks......................................................................................................... 24-27 Howard Bison............................................................................................................. 28-31 NJIT Highlanders....................................................................................................... 32-35 2014 Statistical Leaders............................................................................................ 36-47
Team Leaders....................................................................................................... 36-37
Individual Leaders................................................................................................ 38-39
Single Match Highs.....................................................................................................40
Assistant Commissioner/ Director of Electronic Media Travis Llewellyn
Opponent Lows...........................................................................................................41
Team Leaders (Conference Matches Only)........................................................... 42-43
Assistant Director of Communications Keith Nunez
Individual Leaders (Conference Matches Only).................................................... 44-45
Assistant Director of Communications Randy Lieberman
Single Match Highs (Conference Matches Only)........................................................46
Opponent Lows (Conference Matches Only)...............................................................47
Compliance Coordinator Erinn Banks, Esq. Championships Coordinator Spencer Dodd Championships Coordinator Kyle Wilborn Digital Communications Assistant Kati Morse Office and Events Coordinator Kristen Stuart Coordinator of Football Officials Steve Shaw
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Dr. Denise Trauth President, Texas State Dr. Tim Hudson Chancellor, Arkansas State Dr. Joel Anderson Chancellor, UALR Dr. Nick Bruno President, UL Monroe
Sun Belt Conference Record Book............................................................................ 48-53
All-Conference Teams.......................................................................................... 48-49
All-Tournament Teams...............................................................................................50
Tournament Results...................................................................................................51
Year-By-Year Results..................................................................................................52
Records.......................................................................................................................53
NCAA History..............................................................................................................53
All-Americans.............................................................................................................53 2015 Sun Belt Conference Championship Bracket.........................................................54 Editor: Randy Lieberman, Sun Belt Conference Editorial Assistance: Dan Butler, Appalachian State; A.J. Henderson, Georgia Southern; Charlie Taylor, Georgia State; Chris Gondek, Hartwick; Lamar Carter, Howard; Stephanie Pillari, NJIT. Photography: Sun Belt Conference and member institution files.
Sun Belt Conference - 3
THE Is the Sun Belt Conference a modern-day fixture among the decision-makers in the ever-changing world of college athletics? Or is the league a long-time innovator, responsible for advance-
EXPERIENCE already-existing Division I conference to take such action.
ments in many sports that we now take for granted? The Sun Belt was originally founded to give home to some of the Is the Sun Belt home of an alumni base that includes national and
nation’s premier mid-major basketball teams, and the league’s
international leaders in the areas of government, business and
history is dotted with success in many different men’s and wom-
entertainment as well as athletics?
en’s sports through its history. But when the desire for a higher national profile and the desire of its membership brought about
Or is the conference one that has established itself as a national
football sponsorship in 2001, the conference was figuratively
contender in a variety of sports, and one that continues to evolve in
reborn, and now stands as one of the 10 premier college football
ways that directly benefit its institutions and more importantly its
leagues in the country.
student-athletes? And, with the recent debut of the College Football Playoff, the The answer is yes, yes, yes and yes.
Sun Belt is guaranteed universal access based strictly on performance. A worthy football team in the Sun Belt can be in the na-
The Sun Belt Conference’s “Together We Rise” motto isn’t just hy-
tional championship picture, and the league is a permanent part
perbole. It’s proven fact on many different levels, not the least be-
of the “Group of Five” conferences (joining the American Athletic
ing its place in the hierarchy of collegiate athletics. As the league
Conference, the Mountain West Conference, the Mid-American
prepares to celebrate four decades since its founding in 1976, the
Conference and Conference USA) that will send its highest-rated
Sun Belt occupies a “seat at the table” as a permanent part of the
champion to a premier Jan. 1 bowl game.
NCAA’s 24-member Board of Directors. That alone insures that the conference has a voice in determining the future as college sports
In only 15 years of football, the Sun Belt has earned ties to no
continues to change and evolve.
fewer than seven bowl games. In addition to the potential of the College Football Playoff, the league has guaranteed spots in the
Changing and evolving have been hallmarks of the league since its
R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl, the GoDaddy Bowl, the Raycom
existence. College basketball might be a shadow of its current self
Media Camellia Bowl and the new Cure Bowl for bowl-eligible
had the Sun Belt not led the way in the establishment of the shot
teams each and every season. Beginning in 2016, the Sun Belt will
clock. The conference also wrote history at the start of the century
also be part of a conference rotation that will send teams to the
when it inaugurated football as a league sport – becoming the first
Popeyes Bahamas Bowl and the Miami Beach Bowl.
4 - Sun Belt Conference
CONFERENCE No football conference in history has ever boasted as many bowl
NCAA tournament . With the league’s postseason tournaments
relationships in its first two decades of existence, but such break-
headed back to the conference’s home city, the “Big Easy” of New
throughs have been the rule rather than the exception for a league
Orleans, and a plethora of standouts returning for this season, the
that continues to exceed expectations. Just in the last three
league is poised for another successful hoops season.
seasons, league members have recorded 52 non-conference wins including a record 21 victories outside the league in 2013. The Sun
Baseball and softball continue to put the league in the national
Belt also has a winning record over its fellow “Group of Five” con-
spotlight during the spring season, with deep runs into postsea-
ferences over the past two seasons, and has claimed three bowl
son play and high visibility in the national polls becoming a tra-
victories in those two years.
dition. UL Lafayette’s baseball team was the nation’s No. 1 team in the final third of the 2014 season and has reached the NCAA
Gridiron success has grown in the league for several years, but
Super Regional round each of the past two years, while the UL
success can also happen overnight. New league member Georgia Southern claimed the Sun Belt football title in its first year in the conference last fall. Appalachian State, another league newbie, rattled off six consecutive wins to close the 2014 football season and finish with a winning 7-5 record. Texas State has finished its two football seasons in the conference as a bowl eligible team, going 6-6 in its inaugural Sun Belt campaign and then 7-5 this past season. Football, though, is by no means the only hallmark of success for the league. Just this past season, Georgia State knocked off third-seeded Baylor in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament and Little Rock defeated sixth-seeded Texas A&M in the women’s Georgia State won the Sun Belt Men’s Basketball Championship, played annually at Lakefront Arena in New Orleans (below). The Panthers went on to win a last-second thriller against Baylor in the NCAA Tournament when RJ Hunter (above) drained a deep three pointer. Hunter went on to be selected by the Boston Celtics in the first round of the NBA Draft.
Sun Belt Conference - 5
Lafayette softball team has advanced to the Super Regional three
The strength of any league lies in its membership, with the Sun
straight years including a trip to the 2014 College World Series.
Belt’s 11-school football membership including Appalachian State, Arkansas State, Georgia Southern, Georgia State, Idaho, UL
Many league sports have made statements on the national level,
Lafayette, UL Monroe, New Mexico State, South Alabama, Texas
and that is a tribute to the university and athletic administrators
State and Troy. Little Rock and UT Arlington compete in all sports
that serve both the league institutions and the student-athletes
as non-football members while Idaho and New Mexico State are
at each school. That this level of success comes at a time of
football-only members. Those members give the Sun Belt a mix
sweeping change in collegiate athletics adds even more to these
of the “old” and the “new”, with many long-time Sun Belt institu-
accomplishments.
tions continuing to have success and a solid corps of conference newcomers ready to make their marks on the league and national
With those changes, opportunities for student-athletes to succeed
levels.
both on and off the field have never been greater, and the Sun Belt is well positioned in the areas of scholarship, student welfare and
The varied campuses and locations reflect another league
academic success. During the 2014-15 academic year alone, Sun
strength – its diversity. The mix of regions and regional cultures
Belt member institutions awarded nearly $50 million in scholar-
provide a rare opportunity for the league’s student-athletes to
ship funds to over 3,084 student-athletes while also contributing
experience many environments. But those same student-athletes
over $2 million from the Student Assistance Fund (SAF) to over
can also experience that without leaving their own campuses.
1,779 student-athletes. For every All-Pro linebacker DeMacus Ware (Troy) and Walter The league and its institutions rewrite the Sun Belt’s record book
Payton NFL Man of the Year Charles Tillman (UL Lafayette), and
each year in grade-point averages and academic honors, and
for every World Series MVP David Freese (South Alabama) coming
member schools’ success in the NCAA’s APR rankings provide
from Sun Belt campuses, there are also U.S. presidents (Lyndon
even more proof of the league’s academic commitment. In 2015,
Johnson, Texas State), business icons (Chick-fil-a president Dan-
the conference doubled the number of teams that received NCAA
iel Cathy, Georgia Southern), nationally-known entertainers (Tim
Public Recognition Awards, given to teams that post APR scores
McGraw, UL Monroe, and Ludacris, Georgia State), and there is
in the top 10 percent of their sport, as 14 teams were among the
royalty (Miss America Debbye Turner, Arkansas State).
national honorees compared to seven in 2014. These proud alumni, as well as the thousands of student-athletes “We have never been as strong as we are now academically and
and staff members at all of its institutions, are proof that the Sun
financially, and I believe we are getting stronger all the time
Belt Conference continues to gain stature and provide the prom-
athletically,” said former Sun Belt Conference president and Troy
ise of future success with every sunrise. “Together We Rise” has
University chancellor Dr. Jack Hawkins, Jr. recently. “I truly believe
never been more appropriate.
the best is yet to come.”
In just its first season of Sun Belt play, Georgia Southern went undefeated in the league and won the conference championship.
6 - Sun Belt Conference
CONFERENCE 2015 schedule Thursday, September 3 Ohio at Idaho - 8 p.m (ESPN3) September 4 Charlotte at Georgia State - 2:30 p.m. (ESPNU) Saturday, September 5 UL Monroe at Georgia - 11 a.m. (SEC Network) Howard at Appalachian State - 2:30 p.m. [ESPN3/App State TV] Troy at NC State - 5 p.m. (ESPN3) Gardner-Webb at South Alabama - 5 p.m. (ESPN3) UL Lafayette at Kentucky - 6 p.m. (ESPNU) Georgia Southern at West Virginia - 6:30 p.m. (FSN/Root Sports) New Mexico State at Florida - 6:30 p.m. (SEC Network) Texas State at Florida State - 7 p.m. (ESPNEWS) Arkansas State at Southern California - 10 p.m. (Pac-12 Network) Saturday, September 12 Appalachian State at Clemson - 11:30 a.m. (ESPN3) Western Michigan at Georgia Southern - 5 p.m. (ESPN3) Northwestern State at UL Lafayette - 6 p.m. (ESPN3) Nicholls State at UL Monroe - 6 p.m. (ESPN3) Prairie View A&M at Texas State - 6 p.m. (ESPN3) Charleston Southern at Troy - 6 p.m. (ESPN3) Missouri at Arkansas State - 6 p.m. (ESPN3) * Georgia State at New Mexico State - 7 p.m. (ESPN3/AggieVision) Idaho at Southern California - 7 p.m. (Pac-12 Networks) South Alabama at Nebraska - 7 p.m. (Big Ten Network) Saturday, September 19 Georgia State at Oregon - 1 p.m. (Pac-12 Networks) Troy at Wisconsin - 2:30 p.m. (Big Ten Network) Wofford at Idaho - 4 p.m. (ESPN3) The Citadel at Georgia Southern - 5 p.m. (ESPN3) Southern Mississippi at Texas State - 6 p.m. (ESPN3) Missouri State at Arkansas State - 6 p.m. (ESPN3) UTEP at New Mexico State - 7 p.m. (ESPN3/AggieVision) South Alabama at San Diego State - TBA Saturday, September 26 Appalachian State at Old Dominion - TBA Arkansas State at Toledo - TBA * Georgia Southern at Idaho - 8 p.m. Akron at UL Lafayette - TBA UL Monroe at Alabama - TBA NC State at South Alabama - TBA Texas State at Houston - TBA Saturday, October 3 * Georgia Southern at UL Monroe - 6 p.m. UL Lafayette at Louisiana Tech - 6 p.m. (ASN) Wyoming at Appalachian State - TBA * Idaho at Arkansas State - TBA Liberty at Georgia State - TBA New Mexico State at New Mexico - TBA * South Alabama at Troy - TBA Saturday, October 10 * Appalachian State at Georgia State - TBA * Texas State at UL Lafayette - TBA UL Monroe at Tulsa - TBA New Mexico State at Ole Miss - TBA Troy at Mississippi State - TBA Tuesday, October 13 * Arkansas State at South Alabama - 7 p.m. (ESPN2) Saturday, October 17 * New Mexico State at Georgia Southern - 5 p.m. * Appalachian State at UL Monroe - 6 p.m. Georgia State at Ball State - TBA * Idaho at Troy - TBA
COMMISSIONER KARL BENSON Since being named the fifth commissioner of the Sun Belt Conference on February 16, 2012, Karl Benson has helped reinvigorate the Sun Belt with his optimism, energy and enthusiasm. His vigor and forward thinking have often been called upon during his tenure – perhaps best exemplified when he hit the ground running in the spring of 2012. Benson quickly set the tone for the future of the Sun Belt Conference by adding Georgia State, UT Arlington and Texas State to the league after only being in his post for several weeks. In May of 2012 Benson had begun to further shape the Sun Belt Conference by promoting the league’s rebranding efforts. Sure enough only a year later, the Sun Belt had unveiled a new logo and new mantra “Together We Rise” - that is in line with the optimistic attitude that Benson has become so well-known for. Further solidifying the place of the Sun Belt Conference, Benson helped lead the league to the additions of Appalachian State and Georgia Southern as all-sports members and Idaho and New Mexico State as football playing members. All four announcements took place throughout the course of the day on March 27, 2013. In addition to strengthening the league through membership additions and rebranding efforts, Benson has been able to secure new homes for Sun Belt teams in the football postseason. With the 2014-15 year marking the debut of the College Football Playoff (CFP) the Sun Belt continues to find itself among the 10 premier college football conferences and the new system is guaranteed universal access based on performance – there are no automatic qualifiers for the playoff system. Additionally, the CFP will mean that a spot among the premier bowl games of college football will be guaranteed to the highest-ranked champion from the other “Group of Five” conferences: the Sun Belt Conference, American Athletic Conference, Mountain West Conference, Mid-American Conference and Conference USA. With the College Football Playoff included with the league’s other bowl arrangements, the Sun Belt Conference is tied to seven total bowl games. The R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl, the GoDaddy Bowl, the Raycom Media Camellia Bowl, the Cure Bowl (debuting in 2015) all guarantee a home for a bowl eligible Sun Belt Conference team each year. And beginning with the 2016 season, the Sun Belt is also part of a rotation of conferences that will send a team to the Bahamas Bowl and the Miami Beach Bowl. Benson came to the Sun Belt after serving as the commissioner of the Western Athletic Conference since 1994. During his time at the WAC, Benson developed numerous multi-year agreements with postseason football games, including the Holiday Bowl, Cotton Bowl, Copper Bowl, Las Vegas Bowl, Silicon Valley Football Classic, GMAC Bowl, New Mexico Bowl, the Humanitarian Bowl, Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl, Poinsettia Bowl and Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl. Under Benson’s leadership, the WAC achieved noted success by sending multiple teams to Bowl Championship Series (BCS) games as well as having sent a total of 38 teams to bowl games since 2001.
8 - Sun Belt Conference
Benson served on the NCAA Management Council from 1999-2002 and a five-year term on the NCAA Men’s Basketball Committee from 2002-06. Prior to his time at the WAC, Benson served as the commissioner of the Mid-American Conference for four years. There, he implemented several innovative projects and was instrumental in the formation of the Las Vegas Bowl. Prior to taking the reins of the MAC, Benson served on the NCAA staff for more than four years where he was the director of NCAA championships when selected as MAC commissioner. Benson joined the NCAA staff in January 1986, as a compliance representative and was appointed assistant director of championships in June 1987. He was promoted to director of championships in 1988. In that position, Benson actively supervised eight assistant directors in their administration of 68 NCAA championships. A native of the state of Washington, Benson graduated from high school in Pullman in 1970, attended Spokane Falls Community College and then received a bachelor of science degree in physical education from Boise State University in 1975. He has also completed course work toward his master’s degree in athletics administration at the University of Utah. Benson played baseball at both Spokane Falls Community College and Boise State University before serving as the baseball coach at Fort Steilacoom Community College in Tacoma, Wash., for eight years and as the director of athletics at Fort Steilacoom from 197984. From 1984-86, he was an assistant baseball coach and an administrative assistant in the athletics department at Utah. He received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Boise State in April of 2006. Benson is also a member of the Spokane Falls and Fort Steilacoom Halls of Fame. Benson was born on December 1, 1951 and has one daughter, Jessica, 23, a graduate of the University of Southern California and current Sports Anchor/Reporter for KNDU-TV - a NBC affiliate television station based in Southeastern Washington.
CONFERENCE
Karl Benson
Kathy Keene
Bert Carter
John McElwain
John Barranco
Scott Connors
Dominick Giambrone
Travis Llewellyn
Randy Lieberman
Keith Nunez
Erinn Banks
Kyle Wilborn
Spencer Dodd
Kati Morse
Kristen Stuart
Commissioner
Associate Commissioner
Assistant Director
Championships Coordinator
Chief Operating Officer
Assistant Commissioner
Assistant Director
Digital Communications Assistant
Associate Commissioner
Assistant Commissioner
Compliance Coordinator
Associate Commissioner
Assistant Commissioner
Championships Coordinator
Executive Assistant
Sun Belt Conference - 9
2015 MEN’S SOCCER SCHEDULE August 28 (Friday)
September 15 (Tuesday)
Appalachian State at North Florida
Jacksonville, Fla.
4:00 PM
Liberty vs. Howard
Hartwick at New Hampshire
Durham, N.H.
6:00 PM
Washington, D.C.
Stetson vs. Georgia Southern
Statesboro, Ga.
6:00 PM
September 16 (Wednesday)
Howard at George Mason
Fairfax, Va.
6:30 PM
Rhode Island vs. NJIT
NJIT at St. Bonaventure
Olean, N.Y.
6:30 PM
Georgia State at Jacksonville
Jacksonville, Fla.
7:00 PM
September 18 (Friday)
Newark, N.J.
3:00 PM
6:00 PM
Howard at LIU Brooklyn
Brooklyn, N.Y.
5:00 PM
August 30 (Sunday)
Longwood vs. Appalachian State
Boone, N.C.
5:00 PM
Hartwick at Umass Lowell
Lowell, Mass.
6:00 PM
Appalachian State at Jacksonville
Jacksonville, Fla.
11:00 AM
NJIT at Canisius
Buffalo, N.Y.
2:00 PM
Georgia Southern at Lipscomb
Nashville, Tenn.
7:00 PM
Georgia State at North Florida
Jacksonville, Fla.
4:00 PM
Brown vs. Georgia State
Atlanta, Ga.
7:00 PM
Howard vs. George Washington
Fairfax, Va.
4:00 PM
September 20 (Sunday)
August 31 (Monday)
Georgia Southern at Belmont
Nashville, Tenn.
12:00 PM
Georgia Southern at South Carolina
Columbia, S.C.
6:00 PM
Howard at St. Francis Brooklyn
Brooklyn, N.Y.
1:00 PM
Hartwick at St. Bonaventure
St. Bonaventure, N.Y.
6:00 PM
Manhattan vs. NJIT
Newark, N.J.
2:00 PM
Clinton, S.C.
5:00 PM
Georgia State at Presbyterian
September 2 (Wednesday) Presbyterian vs. Georgia Southern
Statesboro, Ga.
5:00 PM
September 22 (Tuesday)
Appalachian State at Winthrop
September 3 (Thursday)
Rock Hill, S.C.
6:00 PM
Howard at American
Washington, D.C.
2:00 PM
September 23 (Wednesday)
Mercer vs. Georgia State
Atlanta, Ga.
6:30 PM
NJIT at Rider
Cornell vs. Hartwick
September 4 (Friday)
Lawrenceville, N.J.
6:00 PM
Oneonta, N.Y.
6:00 PM
Bucknell vs. Hartwick
Oneonta, N.Y.
5:00 PM
September 25 (Friday)
NJIT at Marist
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
6:00 PM
Howard at Saint Joseph’s
Philadelphia, Pa.
6:30 PM
September 6 (Sunday)
September 26 (Saturday)
St. Francis vs. Hartwick
Oneonta, N.Y.
2:00 PM
Howard at Monmouth
West Long Branch, N.J. 6:00 PM
NJIT at Fordham
New York, N.Y.
6:00 PM
September 27 (Sunday)
September 8 (Tuesday) Howard at Radford
Radford, Va.
Georgia Southern at North Florida 5:00 PM
Jacksonville, Fla.
6:00 PM
September 29 (Tuesday)
September 9 (Wednesday)
Appalachian State at Presbyterian
Clinton, S.C.
6:00 PM
Hartwick at Albany
Albany, N.Y.
6:00 PM
Howard at UMBC
Catonsville, Md.
6:00 PM
September 11 (Friday)
Birmingham, Ala.
7:00 PM
ETSU vs. Appalachian State
Boone, N.C.
6:00 PM
Georgia State at UAB
Georgia State vs. Gardner-Webb
Birmingham, Ala.
2:00 PM
Hartwick at Gonzaga
Spokane, Wash.
4:00 PM
September 30 (Wednesday)
Appalachian State at Belmont
Nashville, Tenn.
5:30 PM
NJIT at LIU Brooklyn
Georgia Southern at USF
Tampa, Fla.
6:00 PM
Niagara vs. NJIT
Newark, N.J.
6:00 PM
October 2 (Friday)
Howard at Robert Morris
September 13 (Sunday)
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Moon Township, Pa.
5:00 PM
2:00 PM
Appalachian State at Lipscomb
Nashville, Tenn.
11:00 AM
October 3 (Saturday)
Georgia State vs. Illinois-Chicago
Birmingham, Ala.
11:00 AM
Hartwick at Bryant
Smithfield, R.I.
Hartwick vs. Houston Baptist
Spokane, Wash.
St. Francis Brooklyn vs. NJIT
Newark, N.J.
3:00 PM
Appalachian State vs. Georgia State
Atlanta, Ga.
12:00 PM 4:00 PM TBA
10 - Sun Belt Conference
CONFERENCE October 6 (Tuesday)
October 30 (Friday)
Georgia State at Belmont
Nashville, Tenn.
6:00 PM
Georgia Southern vs. NJIT
UNC Asheville vs. Appalachian State
Boone, N.C.
6:00 PM
Newark, N.J.
6:00 PM
October 31 (Saturday)
October 7 (Wednesday)
Howard vs. Georgia State
Atlanta, Ga.
1:00 PM
Howard at James Madison
Harrisonburg, Va.
6:00 PM
Hartwick vs. Appalachian State
Boone, N.C.
6:00 PM
NJIT at Central Connecticut State
New Britain, Conn.
6:00 PM
November 1 (Sunday)
October 9 (Friday) Georgia Southern vs. Hartwick
Oneonta, N.Y.
Georgia Southern at LIU Brooklyn 6:00 PM
Brooklyn, N.Y.
1:00 PM
November 3 (Tuesday)
October 10 (Saturday)
Bowling Green vs. Appalachian State
Boone, N.C.
2:00 PM
Howard vs. Appalachian State
Boone, N.C.
6:00 PM
NJIT vs. Georgia State
Atlanta, Ga.
6:00 PM
November 4 (Wednesday)
NJIT at Sacred Heart
October 12 (Monday) Bucknell vs. Howard
Washington, D.C.
Fairfield, Conn.
3:00 PM
2:00 PM
November 7 (Saturday)
Hartwick vs. Howard
Washington, D.C.
1:00 PM
October 13 (Tuesday)
Appalachian State vs. NJIT
Boone, N.C.
4:00 PM
Georgia State vs. Georgia Southern
Atlanta, Ga.
6:00 PM
Jacksonville vs. Georgia Southern
Statesboro, Ga.
6:00 PM
Georgia State at Memphis
Memphis, Tenn.
7:00 PM
October 14 (Wednesday) Lafayette vs. NJIT
Newark, N.J.
6:00 PM
* denotes Sun Belt Conference game
Schedule is subject to change
October 16 (Friday) USC Upstate vs. Appalachian State
Boone, N.C.
6:00 PM
October 17 (Saturday) Georgia Southern vs. Howard
Washington, D.C.
1:00 PM
Hartwick vs. NJIT
Newark, N.J.
4:00 PM
October 19 (Monday) Appalachian State at NC State
Raleigh, N.C.
6:00 PM
October 20 (Tuesday) Howard at Longwood
Farmville, Va.
5:00 PM
Georgia State at Wake Forest
Winston-Salem, N.C.
6:00 PM
Georgia Southern at Clemson
Clemson, S.C.
6:00 PM
Colgate vs. Hartwick
Oneonta, N.Y.
6:00 PM
October 24 (Saturday) NJIT vs. Howard
Washington, D.C.
1:00 PM
Georgia State vs. Hartwick
Oneonta, N.Y.
4:00 PM
Appalachian State vs. Georgia Southern Statesboro, Ga.
6:00 PM
October 27 (Tuesday) UNC Asheville vs. Georgia State
Atlanta, Ga.
6:00 PM
Vermont vs. Hartwick
Oneonta, N.Y.
6:00 PM
Sun Belt Conference - 11
MOUNTAINEERS
ADMINISTRATION
QUICK FACTS Location................................................Boone, North Carolina Founded.............................................................................1899 Enrollment......................................................................18,026 Nickname............................................................Mountaineers Dr. Sheri N. Everts President
Dr. Alan Hauser Faculty Representative
Doug Gillin Athletics Director
Debbie Richardson SWA
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY Appalachian State University is located in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Boone, N.C. At an elevation of 3,333 feet, Boone began as a frontier outpost named after pioneer Daniel Boone, who first explored the area in the 1760s. Boone now attracts those seeking a breathtaking location, adventure and a quality education. Appalachian is a member of the 16-campus University of North Carolina system and offers a challenging learning experience. The university combines a small-town atmosphere with a strong academic reputation. Appalachian’s academics are supported by an accomplished faculty, close, personal interaction between students and faculty, and intimate class sizes that average 25 students. Originally founded as a teachers college, Appalachian now cultivates leaders in business, science, the arts, communication, music, nursing, education and other careers. Innovation and creativity are hallmarks of Appalachian graduates, many of whom are leaders in communities in North Carolina and around the world. Appalachian also emphasizes the importance of sustainability and service to communities, both locally and globally. Today, Appalachian is a leader in the fields of energy-focused green technology and the health sciences. Consistently ranked among U.S. News and World Report’s best public universities in the Southeast, Appalachian is also noted as a “best value” by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine and other publications. Notable Alumni: Eric Church, Nashville recording artist; Dexter Coakley, former NFL Pro Bowler; Stephen J. Dubner, journalist/author; Armanti Edwards, two-time Walter Payton Award Winner (NCAA Division I FCS Player of the Year) winner; Charles Frazier, novelist; Alvin Gentry, former NBA head coach; Melissa Morrison-Howard, two-time Olympic bronze medalist (100m hurdles); Mary Ellen Snodgrass, author; J. Bradley Wilson, former Chairperson, University of North Carolina Board of Governors and current President and CEO of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina.
12 - Sun Belt Conference
Colors................................................................... Black & Gold Athletics Website............................. www.appstatesports.com All-Time Record......................................................431-383-67 All-Time Sun Belt Record.................................................1-1-2 2014 Record......................................................................7-8-3 2014 SBC Record (Finish)........................................ 1-1-2 (5th) SBC Championships................................................................0 Lettermen Returning.............................................................14 Lettermen Lost........................................................................4 Starters Returning...................................................................9 Starters Lost............................................................................3 Stadium.......................................Appalachian Soccer Stadium Capacity.........................................................................1,000 Playing Surface.......................................................FieldTurf Media Contact..........................................................Dan Butler Office Phone:................................................. (828) 262-7166 Mobile Phone:................................................ (704) 526-8274 E-mail:............................................ butlerdp1@appstate.edu Facebook:............................../AppalachianStateMountaineers Twitter:........................................................... @appstatesports
2015 SCHEDULE Date Aug. 28 Aug. 30 SEP. 9 Sep. 11 Sep. 13 SEP. 15 Sep. 18 Sep. 22 Sep. 29 Oct. 3 OCT. 6 OCT. 10 OCT. 16 Oct. 19 Oct. 24 OCT. 31 NOV. 3 Nov. 7
2014 RESULTS (7-8-3, 1-1-2 Sun Belt)
Opponent at North Florida at Jacksonville ETSU at Belmont at Lipscomb LONGWOOD at Radford at Winthrop at Presbyterian at Georgia State* UNC ASHEVILLE HOWARD* USC UPSTATE at NC State at Georgia Southern* HARTWICK * BOWLING GREEN at NJIT*
Location Jacksonville, Fla. Jacksonville, Fla. BOONE, N.C. Nashville, Tenn. Nashville, Tenn. BOONE, N.C. Radford, Va. Rock Hill, S.C. Clinton, S.C. Atlanta, Ga. BOONE, N.C. BOONE, N.C. BOONE, N.C. Raleigh, N.C. Statesboro, Ga. BOONE, N.C. BOONE, N.C. Newark, N.J.
Time (TV) 8:00 p.m. 12:00 p.m. 7:00 P.M. 6:30 p.m. 12:00 p.m. 6:00 P.M. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 P.M. 7:00 P.M. 7:00 P.M. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 P.M. 3:00 P.M. 7:00 p.m.
All times central and subject to change; Home games in BOLD CAPS; * denotes Sun Belt game
Head Coach Matt Nelson
Matt Nelson will be entering his fifth season as the head coach of the Appalachian State University men’s soccer program and carries an overall record of 28-25-18 into the 2015 season. The 2011 Southern Conference Coach of the Year took the Mountaineers to the Sun Belt Conference semifinals in its inaugural season in the league. In 2014, App State finished 7-8-3 and 1-4-4 in conference play. Last year, six Mountaineer student-athletes earned all-conference recognition (Stanley Broaden, Alex Herbst, Alex Beranger, Stephen Chapman, Donovan Japp and Ben Steen). Since 2011, Nelson has had 15 players earn all-conference honors. Nelson was an App State assistant from 2008-2011. Prior to arriving in Boone, Nelson played professionally in the United Soccer League (USL) for four different organizations while completing coaching stops at Virginia Wesleyan and William and Mary. A collegiate standout goalkeeper at Lynn College, Nelson was an NSCAA all-region and scholar All-America, while setting many goalkeeping records.
Date Opponent
Result
AUGUST 29
vs. Albany (1)
31
vs. Vermont (1)
T, 0-0 (2 OT) L, 1-3
SEPTEMBER 5
at Navy
7
at UMBC
L, 0-5
12
PRESBYTERIAN
15
at Marshall
24
RADFORD
27
at USC Upstate
W, 3-1
30
at Duke
L, 0-2
L, 1-3 W, 4-0 W, 2-0 L, 0-1 (OT)
OCTOBER 3
at Hartwick*
8
JACKSONVILLE
T, 0-0 (2 OT)
11
at Howard*
T, 2-2 (OT)
18
GEORGIA STATE*
L, 0-1 (OT)
25
GEORGIA SOUTHERN*
L, 0-1
29
at Longwood
W, 3-2
W, 2-1
NOVEMBER 8
NJIT*
13
vs. NJIT (2)
W, 2-1 (OT) W, 1-0
14
vs. Hartwick (2)
L, 0-2
(1) – James Madison Invitational (Harrisonburg, Va.) (2) - Sun Belt Conference Championship (Statesboro, Ga.)
ROSTER NO. NAME POS. 0 Jaron Bradley GK 00 Jake Chasteen GK 1 Paul West GK 2 Jamir James D 3 Chris O’Grady F 4 Jeremy Tshongo D 5 John Walrath D 6 Mason McCarter MF 7 Donovan Japp MF 8 Jordan Melia D 9 Trey Hemphill MF 11 Austin Stamey F 12 Alex Beranger D 13 Caleb Moore MF 14 Keegan Tanaka D/MF 15 Ben Steen D 16 Ian Bennett MF 17 Stephen Chapman F 18 Alex Herbst MF 19 Cooper Coughlin MF 20 Anson Girrone 21 Thibaut Arpinon D 22 Daniel Avila MF 23 Raheem Somersall MF
HT. 6-0 6-1 6-4 5-9 6-0 5-6 6-1 5-10 5-9 5-11 5-11 5-8 6-0 5-4 6-0 6-1 5-11 6-2 5-8 6-1 6-1 5-8 5-11
YEAR HOMETOWN (PREVIOUS SCHOOL) Sr. Davidson, N.C/ Hough (UNC Asheville) So. Blowing Rock, N.C./Watauga Sr. Apex, N.C./ Apex Fr. Charlotte, N.C./ Charlotte Catholic Fr. Mattews, N.C./ Weddington So. Hamersley, Western Australia (Quinns Baptist College) So. Raeford, N.C./ Hoke County Sr. Shelby, N.C./ Shelby Jr. Oakridge, N.C./ Northwest Guilford Jr. Bolton, England/ Rivingting & Blackrod Sr. Asheville, N.C./ T.C. Roberson (UNC Asheville) So. Arden, N.C./ T.C. Roberson Sr. Meudon, France/Richland College Fr. Rock Hill, S.C./ Northwestern Jr. Austin, Texas/ James Bowie Jr. Mooreville, N.C./ Lake Norman Fr. Wilmington, N.C./ New Hanover Jr. Greensboro, N.C./ Northwest Guilford Sr. Apex, N.C./ Apex So. Suwanee, Ga./ Lambert So. Fr. Fr.
Home games in BOLD CAPS * - Sun Belt Conference match
Nimes, France/ St. Stanislas Smithfield, N.C./ Smithfield-Selma) Durham, N.C./Southern School of Energy & Sustainability
Sun Belt Conference - 13
MOUNTAINEERS TO WATCH
Stephen Chapman F - 6’2 Junior Greensboro, N.C. Physical Education Appeared in 10 games and made seven starts in 2015. Finished third on the team in points (6), while tallying three goals and put together a multi-goal performance on the road at Longwood (Oct. 29) - scored two goals on on a season-high seven shots, including the game-winner. He was named Sun Belt Conference Offensive Player of the Week following the game at Longwood (Nov. 4) and tied season-high in shots with seven against NJIT in the opening round of the Sun Belt Conference tournament (Nov. 13) - scored the game-winning goal at the 77:49 mark to propel the Mountaineers into the semifinals. He saw action in 18 contests and made 11 starts in 2013 and finished tied for second on the team with four goals and tallied one assist for nine points. He scored the game-winning goal in a 5-0 rout of UNC Asheville (Sept. 6) and assisted on Stanley Broaden’s golden goal with 33 seconds remaining in the second overtime at ETSU (Sept. 26). He earned Southern Conference all-freshman team honors with teammate Donovan Japp.
Donovan Japp MF - 5’9 Junior Oakridge, N.C. Medicine He saw action in 12 games with 10 starts before injury and tallied his first assist on the game-winning goal in a 2-0 win at Marshall (Sept. 15). He came up with another assist in a 3-1 win at USC Upstate (Sept. 27) and tallied a multi-assist game in a 2-0 win over Jacksonville (Oct. 8) ... scored a goal in a 2-2 draw at Howard (Oct. 11) ... following the two-assist game and goal at Howard, Japp was named Sun Belt Conference Offensive Player of the Week (Oct. 14). 2013: Appeared in 17 games and made 10 starts ... scored first career goal in a 5-0 rout of UNC Asheville (Sept. 6) ... tallied a goal and lone assist of the season in a 2-1 win over Longwood (Nov. 5) ... earned Southern Conference freshman team honors with teammate Stephen Chapman. Personal: Full name is Donovan Gordon Japp ... son of Deborah Thompson and Brian Japp ... born February 3, 1995 (20 years old) ... father, Brian, played soccer at UNCG and was a two-time All-American, while going on to play professional soccer for the Miami Freedom ... majoring in medicine.
2014 MOUNTAINEERS OVERALL STATS NAME GP GS G A PTS SH SH% SOG SOG% YC-RC GW PK-ATT 13 Broaden, Stanley 18 18 7 0 14 48 .146 25 .521 0-0 4 1-1 18 Herbst, Alex 18 18 0 8 8 14 .000 5 .357 5-0 0 0-0 17 Chapman, Stephen 10 7 3 0 6 35 .086 15 .429 0-0 2 0-0 7 Japp, Donovan 12 10 1 4 6 17 .059 9 .529 3-1 0 0-0 5 Harrow, Patrick 18 18 1 3 5 26 .038 7 .269 1-0 0 0-0 12 Beranger, Alex 14 11 2 0 4 8 .250 6 .750 2-0 0 0-0 4 Tshongo, Jeremy 16 5 2 0 4 4 .500 3 .750 0-0 0 0-0 14 Tanaka, Keegan 18 17 1 1 3 24 .042 7 .292 0-0 0 0-0 9 Hemphill, Trey 15 7 1 1 3 24 .042 9 .375 2-0 0 0-0 11 Stamey, Austin 17 3 1 1 3 7 .143 4 .571 0-0 0 0-0 6 McCarter, Mason 17 15 1 0 2 8 .125 3 .375 5-0 1 0-0 2 White, Walker 17 15 1 0 2 6 .167 4 .667 3-0 0 0-0 19 Coughlin, Cooper 17 6 0 1 1 5 .000 2 .400 1-0 0 0-0 20 Walrath, John 14 1 0 1 1 3 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 15 Steen, Ben 17 16 0 0 0 6 .000 2 .333 2-0 0 0-0 8 Melia, Jordan 11 9 0 0 0 5 .000 1 .200 2-0 0 0-0 3 Williams, Seth 14 4 0 0 0 3 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 21 Arpinon, Thibaut 6 0 0 0 0 2 .000 2 1.000 1-0 0 0-0 26 Hammond, Holland 6 4 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 22 Adams, Jack 2 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 16 Le Gal, Ben 4 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 1-0 0 0-0 1 West, Paul 14 2 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 Total............... 18 18 21 20 62 245 .086 104 .424 28-1 7 1-1 Opponents........... 18 18 25 16 66 198 .126 86 .434 27-1 7 2-3 ## PLAYER GP GS MIN. GA GAA SV SV% W L T SHO SF 00 Chasteen, Jake 1 0 7:22 0 0.00 0 .000 0 0 0 0/1 0 26 Hammond, Holland 6 4 469:20 5 0.96 12 .706 1 2 1 0/1 39 1 West, Paul 14 13 1223:24 20 1.47 47 .701 6 6 2 3/2 155 TM TEAM 0:00 0 0.00 2 1.000 0 0 0 2/0 0 Total............... 18 18 1700:06 25 1.32 61 .709 7 8 3 5 194 Opponents........... 18 18 1700:06 21 1.11 83 .798 8 7 3 7 239
14 - Sun Belt Conference
MOUNTAINEERS
THE EXPERIENCE Appalachian State boasts a 120,000-square-foot athletics center, located adjacent to Kidd Brewer Stadium, which serves as the hub for Mountaineer athletics and its 20 varsity programs and provides student-athletes and coaches the opportunity to excel on and off the field. The Appalachian Athletics Center was the centerpiece of a $50 million athletics facilities enhancement that began in 2006. The Appalachian Athletics Center contains a 9,000-sqaure-foot athletic training facility (used by all 20 varsity sports), which houses two plunge pools, an underwater treadmill, rehab equipment, and a modality/treatment area. The Athletic Center also holds a 9,000-squarefoot strength and conditioning center (used by all 20 varsity sports). App State employs 13 athletic trainers who work daily with student-athletes, three local orthopedic providers who visit daily for an injury clinic and attend all home contests. The campus also has a first-rate health center for student-ath-
Appalachian State student-athletes are reguarly part of community service projects throughout Boone and the surrounding areas.
letes.
the 2015 NCAA Student-Athlete Leadership Forum.
Recently the Mountaineer women’s basketball traveled to Costa Rica
In total, $4,573,270.53 worth of athletic scholarships in the 2014-15 ac-
for a foreign tour where, the team spent time at Roblealto, a non-profit
ademic year were awarded to 348 student-athletes. Of that, $1,915,115
social service organization
worth of athletic scholarships in the 2014-15 academic year were awarded to 85 football student-athletes. In the 2013-14 academic year
Men’s soccer and track and field standout Stanley Broaden was one of
alone $260,110.97 was given to 113 student-athletes from the Student
two student-athletes selected to represent the Sun Belt Conference at
Assistance Fund (SAF).
Sun Belt Conference - 15
ADMINISTRATION quick facts
Dr. Jean Bartels Interim President
Dr. Chris Geyerman Faculty Representative
Tom Kleinlein Athletics Director
Cathy Beene SWA
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY Georgia Southern University offers more than 100 academic majors in a comprehensive array of baccalaureate degrees and selected master’s and doctoral programs. The University has earned a reputation for providing all of the benefits of a major university with the feeling of a much smaller college. In 2011, Georgia Southern was named the fourth most popular university in the country in the U.S. News & World Report’s “Top 20 Most Popular Universities.” One of the top choices in Georgia for new freshmen, including HOPE Scholars, Georgia Southern enrolls an increasingly selective student body representing the United States and nearly 100 nations. The nearly 700 acre park-like campus continues an era of capital construction that has opened new facilities for colleges and academic programs, student recreation and development, university housing, athletics, and public service. The learning environment is enhanced by a museum of cultural and natural history, a botanical garden, a unique wildlife education and raptor center, a performing arts center, the Center for Art and Theatre, and a continuing education and conference center. The campus is located in Statesboro, a classic Main Street community near historic Savannah and Hilton Head Island. Notable Alumni: Daniel Cathy, President Chick-Fil-A; Tony Townley, co-founder of Zaxby’s Restaurant; Hala Moddelmog, President of Arby’s; Luke Bryan, Country Music Singer; Mike Davis, Executive Director, USGA.
EAGLES
Location...........................................Statesboro, Georgia Founded................................................................... 1906 Enrollment............................................................ 20,517 Nickname.............................................................. Eagles Colors......................................................... Blue & White Athletics Website..............................www.gseagles.com All-Time Record............................................ 262-327-53 All-Time SBC Record..................................................3-2 2014 Record................................................................8-9 2014 SBC Record (Finish)................................. 3-2 (2nd) SBC Championships...................................................... 0 Lettermen Returning................................................... 15 Lettermen Lost.............................................................. 8 Starters Returning......................................................... 8 Starters Lost.................................................................. 3 Stadium..........................................................Eagle Field Capacity................................................................. 500 Playing Surface...................................... Natural Grass Media Contact......................................... A.J. Henderson Office:.................................................... (912) 478-5071 Cell:....................................................... (912) 678-5052 E-mail:.................ajhenderson@georgiasouthern.edu Facebook:.................................................... /GSAthletics Twitter:........................................................ @gsathletics
16 - Sun Belt Conference
2015 SCHEDULE Date AUG. 28
2014 RESULTS (8-9, 3-2 Sun Belt)
Opponent
Location
STETSON
Time (TV) STATESBORO, GA.
Date Opponent
Result
6:00 PM
AUGUST 29
at Gardner-Webb
W, 2-1
31
vs. Winthrop
L, 1-3
Aug. 31
at South Carolina
Columbia, S.C.
6:00 PM
SEP. 2
PRESBYTERIAN
STATESBORO, GA.
5:00 PM
Sep. 11
at USF
Tampa, Fla.
6:00 PM
Sep. 18
at Lipscomb
Nashville, Tenn.
7:00 PM
Sep. 20
at Belmont
Nashville, Tenn.
12:00 PM
Sep. 27
at North Florida
Jacksonville, Fla.
6:00 PM
Oct. 9
at Hartwick*
Oneonta, N.Y.
6:00 PM
OCT. 13
JACKSONVILLE
STATESBORO, GA.
6:00 PM
Oct. 17
at Howard*
Washington, D.C.
6:00 PM
Oct. 20
at Clemson
Clemson, S.C.
6:00 PM
OCT. 24
APPALACHIAN STATE*
STATESBORO, GA.
6:00 PM
Oct. 30
at NJIT*
Newark, N.J.
6:00 PM
Nov. 1
at LIU Brooklyn
Brooklyn, N.Y.
1:00 PM
NOV. 7
GEORGIA STATE*
ATLANTA, GA.
6:00 PM
All times central and subject to change; Home games in BOLD CAPS; * denotes Sun Belt game
Head Coach Kevin Kennedy
Kevin Kennedy enters his 10th season as head coach at Georgia Southern in 2015 as the Eagles look for a second chance to win the coveted Sun Belt Championship. The 2014 Eagles made an immediate impact on the Sun Belt Conference, finishing second in the regular season and reaching the Championship Game following a rivalry win over Georgia State in the semifinals. It was Kennedy’s second trip to a conference championship game after taking the 2006 Eagles to the SoCon finale. In 2006 Kennedy was named SoCon Coach of the Year and has remained one of the region’s most respected coaches. In 2015 he was selected to the NCAA Men’s Soccer Committee to serve a three-year term. He earned an undergraduate degree in English from Georgia Regents in 1995, then received a Master of Science degree in Sport Management from Georgia Southern. Kennedy is married to the former Ale Sabio, and they are the parents of a daughter, Meghan and a son, Jackson.
SEPTEMBER 4
MERCER
L, 0-1
12
FLORIDA ATLANTIC
W, 5-4
14
UNC ASHEVILLE
W, 3-0
23
at Presbyterian
W, 5-0
27
at Jacksonville
L, 0-3
OCTOBER 1
at #22 South Florida
L, 0-3
7
at Stetson
L, 2-5
12
HARTWICK*
18
HOWARD*
L, 1-2
25
at Appalachian State*
W, 1-0
28
at North Carolina
L, 2-6
W, 2-0
NOVEMBER 2
NJIT*
8
at Georgia State
W, 1-0
14
GEORGIA STATE (2)
16
HARTWICK (2)
L, 0-1 W, 2-1 L, 0-1
(1) – SoCon/Big South Chalenge (Boiling Springs, S.C.) (2) - Sun Belt Conference Championship (Statesboro, Ga.) Home games in BOLD CAPS; * denotes Sun Belt match
ROSTER NO. NAME POS. YEAR 0 Chase Herzog GK Fr. 1 Torgeir Fjaer GK Fr. 2 Chase Park M Sr. 3 David Rhoades D Fr. 4 Emil Laursen D Fr. 5 Christian Duncan F/MF Fr. 6 Aidan Reising D/MF Jr. 7 Hunter Loyden D So. 8 Matt Melton MF Sr. 9 Jeremy Rector F Jr. 10 Alfonso Ochoa MF Fr. 11 Juan DeLima MF/D Fr. 12 Eric Dinka F Sr. 13 Adam Abdellaoui F So. 14 Blake Wilson F So. 16 Landon Barrow MF So. 17 Emmanuel Raji F Sr. 19 Nick Wells MF/F So. 20 Austin Johnson D So. 21 Chris MacMurray MF So. 22 Andrew Deltac MF Fr. 24 Luis Aponte D Fr. 25 Thor Sveinbjornsson MF So. 26 Chase Ball MF Fr. 27 Dalton Churchwell MF/D Sr. 34 Jack Falle GK Sr. 35 Patrick Hagerman GK So.
HT. 6-2 6-0 5-11 5-10 6-1 5-11 5-9 5-7 5-9 6-0 5-8 5-9 5-6 5-9 6-0 5-11 5-10 5-11 5-8 6-1 5-8 5-10 5-8 5-9 5-9 6-4 6-2
WT. HOMETOWN (PREVIOUS SCHOOL) 185 Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. (Ponte Vedra H.S.) 150 Trondheim, Norway 165 Peachtree City, Ga. (Starrs Mill HS) 155 Wilmington, Del. (Delaware Military Academy) 189 Silkeborg, Denmark 165 McDonough, Ga. (Luella H.S.) 150 Gainesville, Ga. (Gainesville HS) 150 St. Petersburg, Fla. (St. Petersburg HS) 145 Suwanee, Ga. (North Gwinnett HS) 150 Duluth, Ga. (Peachtree Ridge HS) 145 Tyler, Texas (Robert E. Lee H.S.) 150 Barranquilla, Colombia (Westwood H.S.) 141 Coppell, Texas (Coppell HS) 165 Alpharetta, Ga. (Chattahoochie HS) 165 Tampa, Fla. (Steinbrenner HS) 150 Saint Simons Island, Ga. (Frederica Academy) 165 Lawrenceville, Ga. (Collins Hill HS) 165 Stockbridge, Ga. (Our Lady of Mercy Catholic HS) 160 Atlanta, Ga. (Norcross HS) 165 Hilton Head, S.C. (Hilton Head HS) 155 Marietta, Ga. (Harrison H.S.) 165 Atlanta, Ga. (St. Pius X H.S.) 160 Hafnarfjordur, Iceland (Flensborgarskolinn HS) 180 Statesboro, Ga. (Statesboro H.S.) 170 Saint Simons, Ga. (Pembroke Pines Charter) 205 Lilburn, Ga. (Parkview HS) 185 Richmond, Va. (Mills E. Godwin HS)
Sun Belt Conference - 17
EAGLES TO WATCH
Jack Falle
Emmanuel Raji GK - 6’4 Senior Lilburn, Ga. Management
2014: Named First Team All-Sun Belt Conference ... Played every minute between the pipes for the Eagles ... Posted a 1.80 goals against average ... Recorded 97 saves at an average of 5.7 saves per game ... Five of his eight wins came via shutout ... Member of the Dean’s List in both semesters. 2013: Did not see game action. 2012: Played the first eight games of the season in goal for the eagles, compiling 720 minutes of work ... Posted a clean sheet against Gardner-Webb in the third contest of the season ... Allowed a 2.50 goals against average while earning a pair of wins ... Posted 31 saves on the season including a career-high nine saves against Winthrop on August 31st. 2011 (UAB): Redshirted. Personal: Born Jack Falle in Lilburn, Ga. on February 15, 1993 ... Son of Jim and Janna Falle.
F - 5’10 Senior Lawrenceville, Ga. Information Systems 2014: Named to 2014 All-Sun Belt Conference Second Team ... Started all 17 games ... Led the Eagles in scoring with 13 points ... Scored five goals and assisted on three others ... Posted two game-winning goals, scoring the winner against UNC Asheville (9/14) and Georgia State (11/14) in the Sun Belt Semifinals ... Led the team with 26 shots and 15 on frame ... Averaged 51 minutes played per game ... Earned Dean’s List honors in spring of 2015. 2013: Played 16 matches and picked up three starts on the season ... Scored his only goal of the season in the 3-0 win against Stetson (9-13) ... Took eight shots with four on target ... Averaged 30 minutes per game. 2012: Played in 14 matches with seven starts as a freshman with the Eagles ... Took a season-high four shots against North Florida on September 8th ... Scored first career point with an assist against Presbyterian College on Sept. 26th, helping on Chase Park’s 59th minute goal ... Totaled nine shots with three on frame in an average of 36 minutes per match. Personal: Born Emmanuel Raji in Lagos, Nigeria on December 28, 1993 ... Son of Augustina and Ola Raji.
2014 EAGLES OVERALL STATS NAME GP GS G A PTS SH SH% SOG SOG% YC-RC GW PK-ATT 17 Raji, Emmanuel 17 17 5 3 13 26 .192 15 .577 1-0 2 0-0 12 Dinka, Eric 14 5 5 1 11 21 .238 9 .429 0-0 1 0-0 11 Vargas Masis, David 17 14 3 2 8 23 .130 11 .478 4-0 2 0-0 9 Rector, Jeremy 15 10 3 2 8 21 .143 8 .381 0-0 0 1-1 13 Abdellaoui, Adam 15 0 3 1 7 14 .214 9 .643 0-0 0 0-0 25 Sveinbjornsson, Thor 16 16 2 0 4 24 .083 10 .417 1-0 1 1-1 19 Wells, Nick 16 2 2 0 4 11 .182 6 .545 0-0 1 0-0 27 Churchwell, Dalton 14 3 1 2 4 9 .111 1 .111 0-0 1 0-0 10 LaPan, Ethan 17 17 0 4 4 12 .000 5 .417 2-0 0 0-1 24 Bagley, Rocco 12 2 1 1 3 6 .167 3 .500 0-0 0 0-0 16 Barrow, Landon 10 0 1 0 2 2 .500 1 .500 0-0 0 0-0 4 Ward, Josh 7 7 1 0 2 2 .500 2 1.000 2-0 0 0-0 22 Wilson, Blake 11 0 0 1 1 10 .000 2 .200 2-0 0 0-0 8 Melton, Matt 16 14 0 1 1 2 .000 0 .000 3-0 0 0-0 6 Reising, Aidan 17 17 0 0 0 6 .000 4 .667 0-0 0 0-0 21 MacMurray, Chris 14 13 0 0 0 2 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 7 Loyden, Hunter 17 17 0 0 0 2 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 2 Park, Chase 12 12 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 2-0 0 0-0 20 Johnson, Austin 2 2 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 15 Conner, Jon 7 2 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 14 Andreoli, Pierre 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 Total............... 17 17 27 18 72 194 .139 86 .443 17-0 8 2-3 Opponents........... 17 17 31 31 93 277 .112 130 .469 22-0 9 2-2 ## PLAYER GP GS MIN. GA GAA SV SV% W L T SHO SF 34 Falle, Jack 17 16 1548:51 31 1.80 97 .758 8 9 0 5/0 273 TM TEAM 0:00 0 0.00 2 1.000 0 0 0 0/0 0 Total............... 17 1548:51 31 1.80 99 .762 8 9 0 5 273 Opponents........... 17 1548:51 27 1.57 59 .686 9 8 0 5 190
18 - Sun Belt Conference
EAGLES
THE EXPERIENCE The academic component of Georgia Southern’s Student-Athlete Services employs 18 tutors, five mentors and six dual role mentors/tutors. After moving to Cone Hall in 2011, the new space provides 17 study rooms to student-athletes along with 36 computers for use. Eagles in Transition is a student-athlete specific career counseling opportunity that helps student-athletes tailor their resumes, network with alumni and businesspeople in the area, and complete mock interviews. The program began in the 2014-15 academic year. Career Month hosts workshops throughout one month to stress students’ futures and careers beyond college. Eagle Expo is a job fair available to all students to meet with potential employers. Academic Services also refers student-athletes to Career Services to help them with career aspirations and networking. A nationally recognized program, the Georgia Southern University Concussion Research platform is dedicated to the scientific understanding
Georgia Southern’s Concussion Research program provides real-time feedback on hits to the head that could result in a concussion. The program, which was recently featured on NBC Nightly News, is also used to study the recovery period following concussions.
of sports-related concussion and their resulting consequences. The program’s primary line of research is related to identifying and under-
The match was reported to be the first collegiate golf match held on the
standing the lingering deficits which appear to persist well past recovery
Old Course in St. Andrews.
on standard clinical testing. Recently, with the inclusion of the Helmet Impact Telemetry System, the research program has been expanded to
In total, $4,510,301 worth of athletic scholarships in the 2014-15 aca-
further understanding the relationship between helmet impacts and the
demic year were awarded to 305 student-athletes. Of that, $1,653,101
resultant impairments in postural control.
worth of athletic scholarships in the 2014-15 academic year were awarded to 85 football student-athletes. In the 2013-14 academic year alone
The Eagles Men’s Golf team competed in an international tournament in
$191,071 was given to 201 student-athletes from the Student Assistance
October 2014 in St. Andrews, Scotland against St. Andrews University.
Fund (SAF).
Sun Belt Conference - 19
PANTHERS
ADMINISTRATION
QUICK FACTS
Dr. Mark P. Becker President
Dr. George Pierce Faculty Representative
Charlie Cobb Athletics Director
Kelcey Roegiers-Jensen SWA
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY The second-largest member of the state university system, Georgia State is an enterprising urban public research institution and a national leader in graduating students from widely diverse backgrounds. Centered in the historic financial hub of downtown Atlanta, the university provides unsurpassed connections to the city’s business, government, nonprofit and cultural organizations. Its 32,000 students can choose from 55 undergraduate and graduate programs that cover more than 250 fields of study. The university is classified as a Research University with Very High Activity, according to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Since its inception, 192,785 degrees have been conferred. The university has a full-time faculty count of 1,142, with 69 percent of those faculty members either tenured or on tenure track. Since its opening, Georgia State has graduated 175,000 alumni. Currently, it is estimated there are 100,000 alumni living in the metro Atlanta area. In the athletic arenas, GSU was one of the six original schools to form the Sun Belt Conference in 1976 and participated in the league for five years. It returned to its roots to fortify regional rivalries when it rejoined the conference as a full member in 2013. Notable Alumni: Charles Shapiro, former United States Ambassador to Venezuela, Deputy Assistant Secretary at the U.S. State Department; Jody Powell, former White House Press Secretary; Ken Lewis, former CEO of Bank of America; David Brown, former host of public radio show Marketplace; Glenn Richardson, former Speaker, Georgia House of Representatives; Ludacris, musician, actor (attended); Julia Roberts, actress (attended).
20 - Sun Belt Conference
Location.................................................Atlanta, Georgia Founded................................................................... 1913 Enrollment............................................................ 32,000 Nickname.......................................................... Panthers Colors......................................................... Blue & White Athletics Website............. www.georgiastatesports.com All-Time Record.................................. 418-382-41 (.521) All-Time SBC Record..................................................3-2 2014 Record..............................................................8-10 2014 SBC Record (Finish)................................. 3-2 (2nd) SBC Championships...................................................... 0 Lettermen Returning................................................... 16 Lettermen Lost.............................................................. 9 Starters Returning......................................................... 5 Starters Lost.................................................................. 6 Stadium..........................................GSU Soccer Complex Capacity............................................................... 1,892 Playing Surface...................................... Natural Grass Media Contact........................................... Charlie Taylor Office Phone:......................................... (404) 413-4031 Cell Phone:........................................... (404) 556-2295 E-mail:............................................... ctaylor@gsu.edu Facebook:.................................. /GeorgiaStateAthletics Twitter:............................................... @GSUMensSoccer
2015 SCHEDULE Date Aug. 28 Aug. 30 SEP. 3 Sep. 11 Sep. 13 SEP. 18 Sep. 20 Sep. 29 OCT. 3 Oct. 6 OCT. 10 Oct. 13 Oct. 20 Oct. 24 OCT. 27 OCT. 31 Nov. 7
2014 RESULTS (8-10, 3-2 Sun Belt)
Opponent at Jacksonville at North Florida MERCER vs. Gardner-Webb vs. Illinois-Chicago BROWN at Presbyterian at UAB APPALACHIAN STATE* at Belmont NJIT* at Memphis at Wake Forest at Hartwick* UNC ASHEVILLE HOWARD* at Georgia Southern*
Location Jacksonville, Fla. Jacksonville, Fla. ATLANTA, GA. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. ATLANTA, GA. Clinton, S.C. Birmingham, Ala. ATLANTA, GA. Nashville, Tenn. ATLANTA, GA. Memphis, Tenn. Winston-Salem, N.C. Oneonta, N.Y. ATLANTA, GA. ATLANTA, GA. Statesboro, Ga.
Time (TV) 7:00 PM 4:00 PM 6:30 PM 2:00 PM 11:00 AM 7:00 PM 5:00 PM 7:00 PM TBA 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 7:00 PM 6:00 PM 4:00 PM 6:00 PM 1:00 PM 6:00 PM
All times central and subject to change; Home games in BOLD CAPS; * denotes Sun Belt game
Head Coach Brett Surrency
Brett Surrency enters his sixth season as the leader and his 11th overall with the Georgia State Panthers. As the face of the program, he has built the program to championship-contending status. Appointed head coach prior to the 2010 season, Surrency quickly orchestrated a Panthers’ turnaround from a losing season to their best finish in the Colonial Athletic Association since they joined the conference in 2005. The initial year laid the groundwork for his program’s philosophy going forward: High expectations, hard work and excellence on the field of play. In the five years of growth, GSU has a 43-46-5 report card. In 2014, GSU and the Sun Belt began conference play with its six teams and a championship postseason event. The Panthers finished second in that inaugural campaign, going 3-2 in the conference. In April 2014, former defender Michael Nwiloh was selected with the second pick in the fourth round by Chivas USA in the MLS SuperDraft. He came to Georgia State in 2010 and thanks to the guidance of Surrency he became the first GSU men’s soccer player to sign a professional contract with a MLS franchise.
ROSTER NO. NAME 0 Greyson Walldorff 1 Jon Nelson 2 Cory Plasker 3 Liam Fitzsimmons 4 Everick Little 5 Conor Acheson 6 Junior Akande 7 Amiri Abraham 8 Nenad Smiljanic 9 Jad Elkhalil 10 Rashid Alarape 11 Tristen Trevino 12 Nomis Cisic 14 Casey Shultis 15 Kwaku Adu 16 Marcus Holm 17 Andrew Thompson 18 Lukas Joyner 19 Jake Bingham 20 Eddie Wilding 21 Max Hemmings 23 Hannes Burmeister 24 Oliver Haines 26 Salomon Lorenzano 27 Andy Anglade 28 Evan Mendoza 30 Luke Oesterle
POS. GK GK MF D D D D/MF F/MF MF F MF MF MF MF F D MF/D D/MF F MF MF MF MF MF/D F/MF MF GK
HT. 5-10 6-0 5-10 5-6 5-10 6-1 6-2 5-10 6-2 6-0 5-10 5-8 5-9 6-0 5-11 6-1 5-7 5-10 6-0 5-11 5-9 5-10 5-8 5-10 5-9 5-9 6-1
WT. YEAR HOMETOWN (PREVIOUS SCHOOL) 169 R-Fr. Atlanta, Ga. (Ben Franklin Academy) 195 Jr. Mableton, Ga. (East Paulding) 162 Sr. Marietta, Ga. (Walton HS) 161 R-Fr. Liverpool, England (All Saints Catholic HS) 166 So. Warner Robbins, Ga. (Houston County HS) 168 Sr. Tipperary, Ireland (CBS High School Clonmel) 180 R-Fr. Liverpool, England (De La Salle Academy) 162 Jr. Lawrenceville, Ga (Collins Hill HS) 175 Jr. Barnsley, England (Barnsley College) 188 So. Beirut, Lebanon/Marietta, Ga. (Walton HS) 165 So. Stone Mountain, Ga (Archer HS) 160 R-Fr. Athens, Ga. (Clarke Central HS) 156 Sr. Rijeka, Croatia (Clayton State) (Collins Hill HS) 155 Jr. McDonough, Ga. (Clayton State) (Ola HS) 145 Fr. Cumming, Ga. (West Forsyth HS) 190 Fr. Kumla, Sweden (Orebro University) 160 Fr. Lawrenceville, Ga. (Hebron Christian Academy) 160 Fr. Macon, Ga. (Stratford Academy) 177 So. Columbus, Ga. (Columbus HS) 170 Sr. Felixstowe, England (Doncaster Prep) 160 Fr. Wokingham, England (Bradfield College) 160 Fr. Bentwisch, Germany (CJD Rostock) 140 Fr. London, England (Oasis Academy Shirley Park) 155 Jr. Peachtree City, Ga. (Middle Georgia) 162 Sr. Alpharetta, Ga. (Clemson) (Alpharetta HS) 170 Fr. Atlanta, Ga. (Collins Hill HS) (CSUB) 160 So. Newman, Ga. (East Coweta HS)
Date Opponent
Result
AUGUST 29
at Mercer
L, 0-2
SEPTEMBER 5
vs. College of Charleston (1)
7
at Furman (1)
L, 0-2
13
NORTH FLORIDA
W, 4-1
16
PRESBYTERIAN
W, 1-0
20
at UNCG
W, 2-1
26
at Lipscomb
30
at South Carolina
L, 0-5
W, 3-1 L, 1-2 (OT)
OCTOBER 7
BELMONT
11
at NJIT*
L, 0-2
14
at #15 North Carolina
L, 0-4
18
at Appalachian State*
W, 1-0 (OT)
21
JACKSONVILLE
25
HARTWICK*
L, 1-2
28
at Duke
L, 1-2
31
at Howard*
W, 4-0
L, 1-2 (OT)
W, 1-0
NOVEMBER 8
GEORGIA SOUTHERN*
W, 1-0
14
at Georgia Southern (2)
L, 1-2
(1) – Gray Griffin Memorial Tournament (Greenville, S.C.) (2) - Sun Belt Conference Championship (Statesboro, Ga.) Home games in BOLD CAPS * - Sun Belt Conference match
Sun Belt Conference - 21
PANTHERS TO WATCH
Rashid Alarape MF - 5’11 Sophomore Stone Mountain, Ga. Undecided 2014: Earned multiple awards last season including 2014 All-Sun Belt First Team, 2014 College Sports Madness Sun Belt Freshman of the Year and 2014 College Sports Madness All-Sun Belt First Team. Named to the All-Sun Belt Conference first team as a true freshman … First Panther to accomplish this since 2001 … Appeared in 16 matches and started 11 for a total of more than 859 minutes … Started just once in the first six matches, but then started nine of GSU’s final 11 … Led all Sun Belt freshmen with nine points … Finished tied for first on the team and sixth in the conference with four goals scored and was second on the team in points … First career goal was the match-winner at UNCG (9/20) … Scored Panthers’ opening goal in road win over regionally-ranked Lipscomb (9/26) … Found the back of the net against Hartwick (10/25) and scored the match-winner against in-state rival Georgia Southern (11/8) … Attempted 19 shots on the year, including 11 on target … Fired a season-high three shots on goal against Jacksonville (10/21). Personal: Rashid Ayodeji Alarape was born on May 31, 1996 in Stone Mountain, Ga. … Son of Bola Adetoro and Rahman Alarape… Has one older sister, Rashidat, and one older brother, Rahman … Brother Rahman currently plays soccer for new Sun Belt foe Howard … Father Rahman played soccer at Alabama A&M and for the Atlanta Lasers in the USSL
Eddie Wilding MF - 5’11 Senior Felixstowe, Sussex, England Psychology Career: Wilding has started all 54 career matches he has played in, including every match in his first two seasons with the Panthers. He has totaled more than 2,531 minutes played at Georgia State and has recorded six total points on two goals and two assists. Wilding has attempted 36 shots at GSU with 17 on target. 2014: Earned multiple awards including 2014 Sun Belt All-Tournament Team, 2014 College Sports Madness All-Sun Belt Second Team and was anmed to the Dean’s List in the 2013 Fall Semester...Started all 18 matches during his second season with the Panthers and played more than 1,269 minutes … Recorded two assists to finish tied for the team lead … Assisted on Rashid Alarape’s opening goal against Hartwick (10/25) … Also assisted on Alarape’s match-winning goal against Georgia Southern (11/8) in the regular-season finale … Attempted a career-high 21 shots, including nine on goal … Attempted a season-high five shots against Georgia Southern … Took two shots versus South Carolina (9/30), Appalachian State (10/18), Jacksonville (10/21), Duke (10/28), Howard and Georgia Southern in the conference tournament … Fired a season-high two shots on goal at Appalachian State.
2014 PANTHERS OVERALL STATS NAME GP GS G A PTS SH SH% SOG SOG% YC-RC GW PK-ATT 24 McGill, Stephen 18 18 4 2 10 34 .118 11 .324 4-0 1 1-1 21 Alarape, Rashid 16 11 4 1 9 19 .211 11 .579 5-0 2 0-0 16 Abraham, Amiri 11 5 3 2 8 14 .214 6 .429 0-0 1 0-0 17 Jones, Aaron 17 16 2 2 6 21 .095 6 .286 2-0 0 0-0 7 Elkhalil, Ali 17 2 2 1 5 12 .167 4 .333 3-0 0 0-0 23 Alexander, Tyler 14 10 1 1 3 10 .100 3 .300 0-0 1 0-0 9 Elkhalil, Jad 16 9 1 0 2 25 .040 12 .480 4-0 1 0-0 2 Plasker, Cory 16 10 1 0 2 13 .077 6 .462 2-0 1 0-0 27 Anglade, Andy 15 0 1 0 2 11 .091 4 .364 2-0 1 0-0 19 Bingham, Jake 10 2 1 0 2 7 .143 3 .429 1-0 0 0-0 20 Wilding, Eddie 18 18 0 2 2 21 .000 9 .429 4-0 0 0-0 14 Stroup, Bo 18 11 0 1 1 11 .000 6 .545 0-0 0 0-0 10 Kivinen, Niklas 15 13 0 1 1 7 .000 1 .143 1-0 0 0-0 12 Cisic, Nomis 14 7 0 0 0 7 .000 0 .000 4-0 0 0-0 5 Acheson, Conor 18 18 0 0 0 6 .000 3 .500 1-0 0 0-0 18 Thompson, Andrew 6 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 8 Locandro, Chris 17 17 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 1-0 0 0-0 6 Akande, Junior 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 4 Little, Everick 14 13 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 2-0 0 0-0 Total............... 18 18 22 13 57 218 .101 87 .399 37-0 8 1-1 Opponents........... 18 18 28 28 84 247 .113 107 .433 20-1 10 1-3
## PLAYER GP GS MIN. GA GAA SV SV% W L T SHO SF 1 Cochran, CJ 18 18 1588:26 26 1.47 76 .745 8 9 0 5/0 237 30 Oesterle, Luke 1 0 45:00 2 4.00 3 .600 0 1 0 0/0 8 Total............... 18 18 1633:26 28 1.54 79 .738 8 10 0 5 245 Opponents........... 18 18 1633:26 22 1.21 65 .747 10 8 0 5 220
22 - Sun Belt Conference
PANTHERS
THE EXPERIENCE Georgia State’s academic support program for student-athletes is led by the Office of Student-Athlete Development. The department makes a continued commitment to provide Georgia State student-athletes with the personal tools and resources necessary to develop the total person, in addition to enhancing their success on the playing field. The department actively participates in the Student-Athlete Affairs Program, which aims to meet the following: academic excellence, athletic excellence, personal development, career development, and commitment to service. In order to accomplish their goals, Georgia State athletics has designed three programs and activities - Panther Academic Support Services (P.A.S.S.), Student-Athlete Affairs, and Panther DEN. PASS includes new student-athlete orientation, a learning lab, tutorial assistance, mandatory advisement, and academic monitoring. Student-Athlete Affairs is a comprehensive program that provides educational, personal, community, and career development to enhance the overall quality of our student-athletes’ university experience. The Georgia State Men’s Basketball team recently traveled to Costa Rica to Panther DEN offers a variety of services dedicated entirely to addressing support Samaritan’s Feet, an organization that provides shoes for underprivithe unique challenges that face the Georgia State University student-ath- leged children around the world. lete. These services are offered in conjunction with the Life Skills program, The academic program also offers internships for former student-athDepartment of Student Health Promotion and the University’s Counseling letes, which were established to assist with professional development. & Testing Center. The Panther DEN holds an academic study area, two computer labs, containing 90 computers for student-athlete use, and nine private study rooms. Recent renovation was complete on the academic study area and both computer labs. The institution has 42 tutors and six academic mentors available, free of charge, to all student-athletes. Tutorial assistance is provided on both a mandatory and walk-in basis.
Recently the men’s basketball team traveled on a Costa Rican International Tour in August 2014. The team held clinics for children and took part in a shoe distribution with the Samaritan’s Feet program. In total, $7,311,851 worth of athletic scholarships in the 2014-15 academic year were awarded to 333 student-athletes. Of that, $2,393,831 worth of athletic scholarships in the 2014-15 academic year were awarded to 108 football student-athletes. In the 2013-14 academic year alone $277,050 was given to 123 student-athletes from the Student Assistance Fund (SAF).
Sun Belt Conference - 23
HAWKS
ADMINISTRATION
QUICK FACTS
Margaret Drugovich President
Mark Davies Faculty Representative
Kim Fierke Athletics Director
Betty Powell SWA
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY Hartwick College, an engaged community, integrates a liberal arts education with experiential learning to inspire curiosity, critical thinking, creativity, personal courage and an enduring passion for learning. Our purpose as a college of the liberal arts and sciences is to educate people who will thrive in and contribute to the world of the future; people who are prepared to meet the personal, intellectual, and social challenges of a rapidly changing and increasingly interdependent world. Hartwick graduates will be noted as being able to thrive in a world of global interdependence in which people of the broadest range of national, ethnic, social, and personal backgrounds will interact personally and technologically. To thrive in this context will require that Hartwick students learn to: understand the world from a variety of perspectives; work constructively with people from a variety of backgrounds and life experiences; be avid learners and critical thinkers; communicate effectively and have a well-developed personal presence; be purposeful in their actions and value-based in their decisions; and know how to use information technology resources as a routine tool to enhance effectiveness. By being intentional in fulfilling our values—taking those actions that help us better be what we believe we should be—we are a college of both quality and distinctiveness. We are a future-directed community of learners where students, faculty, and staff are mutually engaged in intellectual, social, and personal learning inside and outside of the classroom. Our curricular and co-curricular educational experience emphasizes: shared and interdependent learning; a balance of challenge and support; a caring commitment to the individual; intellectual, social, and individual rigor; the development of personal responsibility; and approaches that link theory and practice, what we term “The Liberal Arts in Practice.”
24 - Sun Belt Conference
Location..................................................... Oneonta, N.Y. Founded................................................................... 1797 Enrollment.............................................................. 1,507 Nickname.............................................................. Hawks Colors......................................................... Blue & White Athletics Website................... www.hartwickhawks.com All-Time Record............................................ 579-296-97 All-Time SBC Record.............................................. 3-1-1 2014 Record.......................................................... 6-10-4 2014 SBC Record (Finish)............................... 3-1-1 (1st) SBC Championships...................................................... 1 Lettermen Returning................................................... 15 Lettermen Lost.............................................................. 9 Starters Returning......................................................... 8 Starters Lost.................................................................. 3 Stadium....................................................... Elmore Field Capacity............................................................... 3,000 Playing Surface...................................... Natural Grass Media Contact............................................Chris Gondek Office Phone:......................................... (607) 431-4703 Cell Phone:........................................... (607) 742-0170 E-mail:.................................... gondekc@hartwick.edu Facebook:..................... facebook.com/HartwickHawks Twitter:.......................................................... @HawkTalk
2015 SCHEDULE Date Aug. 28 Aug. 31 SEP. 4 SEP. 6 Sep. 11 Sep. 13 Sep. 18 SEP. 23 Sep. 29 Oct. 3 OCT. 9 Oct. 17 OCT. 20 OCT. 24 OCT. 27 Oct. 31 Nov. 7
2014 RESULTS (6-10-4, 3-1-1 Sun Belt)
Opponent at New Hampshire at St. Bonaventure BUCKNELL ST. FRANCIS at Gonzaga vs. Houston Baptist at Umass Lowell CORNELL at Albany at Bryant GEORGIA SOUTHERN* at NJIT* COLGATE GEORGIA STATE* VERMONT at Appalachian State* at Howard*
Location Durham, N.H. St. Bonaventure, N.Y. ONEONTA, N.Y. ONEONTA, N.Y. Spokane, Wash. Spokane, Wash. Lowell, Mass. ONEONTA, N.Y. Albany, N.Y. Smithfield, R.I. ONEONTA, N.Y. Newark, N.J. ONEONTA, N.Y. ONEONTA, N.Y. ONEONTA, N.Y. Boone, N.C. Washington, D.C.
Time (TV) 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 5:00 PM 2:00 PM 4:00 PM 3:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 12:00 PM 6:00 PM 4:00 PM 6:00 PM 4:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 1:00 PM
All times central and subject to change; Home games in BOLD CAPS; * denotes Sun Belt game
Head Coach John Scott
John Scott enters his sixth season at Hartwick. Last season, Scott led the Hawks to a conference championship and the NCAA Tournament for the first time in nine seasons. The Hawks, playing in their inaugural season in the Sun Belt Conference, captured all three major team honors. Scott guided the Hawks to a 3-1-1 conference mark to claim the Sun Belt regular season title and the tournament’s top seed. The Hawks shutout Appalachian State and then tournament host Georgia Southern to claim the 2015 Sun Belt Conference Championship and automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Hawks’ NCAA appearance would mark Hartwick’s 24th all-time, which ranks 14th of all Division I men’s programs. Scott would be crowned the Sun Belt Conference Men’s Soccer Coach of the Year and his Hawks would also earn the Sun Belt Men’s Soccer Academic Award with a 3.31 Team GPA to complete the conference treble. In 2014, Scott led the Hawks to memorable wins over national powers Akron and West Virginia in their final season in the Mid-American Conference. ’Wick qualified for the MAC Tournament for the first time since 2009 and Scott would be named the MAC’s Gary V. Palmisano Coach of the Year.
ROSTER NO. NAME 1 Lenny Wilson 3 Jack Miller 5 Kit Tregear 6 Ross MacKinnon 7 Marc Berry 8 Nick Hills 9 Marc Russell 10 Mike Rood 11 David Styles 12 Ellis Ashworth 13 Lachy Waugh 14 Wyatt Scott 15 Harry Morton 16 Christian Nlend 17 Dean Fowler 19 Hayden Hollinger 20 Marcus Nordgard 21 Jack Donaldson 22 Jamie O’Grady 23 Wyatt Raines 24 Justin Broome
YEAR POS. Fr. GK Sr. D Jr. D Sr. D So. MF Sr. MF Sr. MF Jr. MF Sr. MF Fr. D Fr. MF So. MF Fr. MF Fr. D Sr. F So. D So. D Jr. MF Jr. MF Fr F RSo. D
25 Maurizio Fornerino RSo. 27 Andreas Queen Fr.
MF GK
HT. 6-1 5-11 6-3 6-0 6-0 5-8 5-11 5-10 5-6 6-1 5-8 5-11 5-8 5-9 5-11 6-5 6-3 5-10 6-0 5-10 6-0
WT. HOMETOWN (PREVIOUS SCHOOL) 170 Aberdeen, Scotland/Cults Academy 175 Commack, NY/Commack HS 180 Brighton, England/BHSSFC 175 Glasgow, Scotland/Jordanhill School 164 Galashiels, Scotland/Galashiels Academy 163 Garden Suburb, Australia/U. of Newcastle 165 Glasgow, Scotland/Woodfarm HS 165 Conklin, NY/Susquehanna Valley HS 145 Bognor Regis, England/St. Phillip Howard 182 Brentwood, England/St. Martin’s School 153 Wellington, New Zealand/Samuel Marsden Whitby 160 Cicero, NY/Cicero North Syracuse HS 165 Napier, New Zealand/Te Aho O Te Kura Pounamu 160 Boyds Maryland/Northwest HS 169 Sydney, Australia/Colo HS 185 Inverness, Scotland/Inverness Royal Academy 175 Copenhagen, Denmark/Oeregaard Gymnasium 160 Paisley, Scotland/Mars Hill University 177 Falkirk, Scotland/Falkirk HS 145 Virginia Beach, VA/Landstown HS 175 Markham, Ontario/Bill Crothers Secondary School
5-10 6-2
150 Maracaibo, Venezuela/International School Brunei 192 Stone Ridge, NY/Rondout Valley HS
Date Opponent AUGUST 29 at Robert Morris 31 at Bucknell
Result T, 1-1 L, 0-2
SEPTEMBER 5 FAIRFIELD (1) 7 ST. PETER’S (1) 12 at #19 American (2) 14 at #22 George Mason (2) 20 ALBANY 24 at Cornell 28 at Bryant
T, 0-0 L, 1-2 L, 1-3 L, 0-1 T, 2-2 L, 0-1 L, 2-4
OCTOBER 3 APPALACHIAN STATE* 8 ST. BONAVENTURE 12 at Georgia Southern* 18 NJIT* 21 at Colgate 25 at Georgia State* 28 at Maryland
T, 0-0 W, 2-1 L, 0-2 W, 1-0 L, 0-1 W, 2-1 L, 2-5
NOVEMBER 8 HOWARD* 14 vs. Appalachian State (3) 16 at Georgia Southern (3) 20 at Penn State (4)
W, 5-0 W, 2-0 W, 1-0 L, 1-2
(1) – Mayor’s Cup (Oneonta, N.Y.) (2) - DC College Cup (Washington, D.C.) (3) - Sun Belt Conference Championship (Statesboro, Ga.) (4) - NCAA Tournament First Round (State College, Pa.) Home games in BOLD CAPS * - Sun Belt Conference match
Sun Belt Conference - 25
HAWKS TO WATCH
Jamie O’Grady MF - 6’0 Junior Falkirk, Scotland Business Administration 2014: Played in 1,522 minutes on the season … made 16 starting appearances in 17 games … registered a goal and two assists … scored the game’s only goal in the Sun Belt Conference Championship match at Georgia Southern to clinch league title … assisted goals in 1-1 draw against Robert Morris (8/29) and 5-0 win over Howard (11/8) … selected to Sun Belt Conference Academic Honor Roll. 2013: Played in 13 games for Hartwick in his first season ... made 12 starting appearances ... played in 1,003 minutes for the Hawks primarily in the back ... registered a goal and an assist ... recorded first point of college career in Hawks’ lone tally in Mayor’s Cup against Cornell ... scored first goal in a Hartwick uniform in 3-1 victory over UMass-Lowell (10/1) ... named to Mid-American Conference All-Tournament Team. Prior to Hartwick: Attended Falkirk High School ... helped team to Scottish Cup semifinals in both 2011 and 2012 ... represented Scotland Schools in 2012 and Forth Valley Regional Academy ... made final of the Scottish Cup ... also played with Livingston and Stenhousemuir Youth Teams. Personal: Born October 25, 1994 ... son of Anne and Peter O’Grady ... Business Administration major at ‘Wick.
Kit Tregear D - 6’3 Junior Brighton, England Undecided 2014: One of two players on the team to start in every game … second on the team in minutes played with 1,879 … named Sun Belt Conference Tournament Most Valuable Player … tallied two goals and two assists on the year … scored first goal of the year against #19 American … also tallied in 5-0 win over Howard in regular season finale (11/8) … earned assists on Hartwick’s final two goals of the season … assisted the Hawks’ lone goal in the Sun Belt Conference Championship 1-0 win over Georgia Southern (11/16) … assisted ’Wick’s only goal in NCAA Tournament game at Penn State (11/20) … named to Mayor’s Cup All-Tournament Team … named to Sun Belt Conference Commissioner’s List … two-time Sun Belt Conference Defensive Player of the Week on Sept. 9 and Nov. 11. 2013: Started in all 16 games in which he played at the center back position ... part of a defense which allowed only 20 goals and surrendered just 1.04 goals per contest ... lone goal of the season turned out to be the game-winning header in the second half of a 2-0 shutout at #9 Akron, ending the Zips’ NCAA record 49-game conference unbeaten streak. Prior to Hartwick: Attended Brighton Hove and Sussex Sixth Form College ... named Player of the Year with Burgess Hill Town FC in 2011 ... helped Burgess Hill Town to League and Cup double (2010-12) ... member of the Men’s and Youth Regional side
2014 HAWKS OVERALL STATS NAME GP GS G A PTS SH SH% SOG SOG% YC-RC GW PK-ATT 10 Rood, Mike 18 14 4 3 11 27 .148 13 .481 1-0 1 1-1 16 Beckford, Jhevaughn 18 13 4 1 9 28 .143 17 .607 1-0 2 0-0 12 Berry, Marc 16 5 4 1 9 20 .200 14 .700 0-0 0 0-0 17 Fowler, Dean 19 17 3 0 6 17 .176 9 .529 2-1 0 0-0 5 Tregear, Kit 20 20 2 1 5 29 .069 12 .414 1-0 0 0-1 6 MacKinnon, Ross 20 19 1 3 5 9 .111 5 .556 0-0 0 0-0 22 O’Grady, Jamie 17 16 1 2 4 21 .048 7 .333 7-1 1 0-0 11 Styles, David 20 12 1 2 4 14 .071 5 .357 0-0 0 0-0 3 Miller, Jack 20 20 1 2 4 9 .111 6 .667 0-0 1 0-0 23 Walter, Chris 18 18 0 4 4 22 .000 6 .273 6-0 0 0-1 14 Scott, Wyatt 18 3 1 0 2 2 .500 1 .500 1-0 0 0-0 9 Russell, Marc 16 7 0 2 2 8 .000 3 .375 3-0 0 0-0 26 Buckner, Tom 19 19 0 1 1 0 .000 0 .000 1-0 0 0-0 7 Horton, Nate 14 5 0 0 0 10 .000 2 .200 1-0 0 0-0 8 Hills, Nick 10 2 0 0 0 7 .000 3 .429 0-0 0 0-0 15 Dhat, Rio 15 6 0 0 0 4 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 19 Hollinger, Hayden 8 5 0 0 0 3 .000 2 .667 3-0 0 0-0 25 Fornerino, Maurizio 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 24 Broome, Justin 19 18 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 2-0 0 0-0 13 Wilson, Kenny 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 1 Munarriz, Mateo 3 1 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 Total............... 20 20 23 22 68 230 .100 106 .461 30-2 5 1-3 Opponents........... 20 20 28 19 75 227 .123 96 .423 21-0 10 2-3 ## PLAYER GP GS MIN. GA GAA SV SV% W L T SHO SF 26 Buckner, Tom 19 18 1749:03 25 1.29 59 .702 6 8 4 5/1 202 1 Munarriz, Mateo 3 1 130:57 3 2.06 7 .700 0 1 0 0/1 20 TM TEAM 20 20 0:00 0 0.00 2 1.000 0 0 0 1/0 0 Total............... 20 20 1880:00 28 1.34 68 .708 6 9 4 6 222 Opponents........... 20 20 1880:00 23 1.10 83 .783 9 6 4 7 223
26 - Sun Belt Conference
Sun Belt Conference - 27
BISON
ADMINISTRATION
QUICK FACTS
Wayne Frederick President
Dr. Jerome Pittman Faculty Representative
Louis Perkins Athletics Director
Shelley Davis-Hill SWA
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY Founded in 1867, Howard University is a private, research university comprised of 13 schools and colleges. Students pursue studies in more than 120 areas leading to undergraduate, graduate and professional degrees. To date, Howard has awarded more than 120,000 degrees in the arts, the sciences, and the humanities. The historic main campus sits on a hilltop in Northwest Washington blocks from the storied U Street and Howard Theatre. We are two miles from the U.S. Capitol where many students intern, and scores of alumni shape national and foreign policy.Howard is a leader in STEM fields. The University also produces more minority doctoral graduates in computer science than any other university in the nation and boasts nationally ranked programs in social work, business and communication sciences and disorders. In 2013, The Washington Post named Howard “An Incubator for Cinematographers.”The College of Medicine is internationally regarded for its illustrious legacy of training students to become competent and compassionate physicians who provide health care in medically underserved communities at home and abroad. The College is a national leader in studying health disparities among people of color and is one of America’s top institutions for training women surgeons. The Howard University Health Sciences division includes the Howard University Hospital and the Colleges of Dentistry, Pharmacy, and as well as Nursing and Allied Health Sciences.For more than 140 years, the Howard University School of Law has served as an advocate for social justice and as an architect of social change. It has produced more than 4,000 social engineers including the first African-American Supreme Court Justice, noted legislators, civil rights attorneys, mayors and public officials across the United States. In 2012, the Law School was ranked among the top 20 public service schools by National Jurist magazine. The University’s motto Veritas et Utilitas, Truth and Service, represents a key part of our identity. The more than 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students dedicate hundreds of hours each year to service in nearby LeDroit Park, around the nation and far-flung places around the world. Over the U.S. Peace Corps’ 50-year history, more than 200 Howard graduates have served as volunteers around the globe, the highest number among historically-Black colleges. In 2012, a Howard senior who led Engineers Without Borders service projects in Kenya and Brazil was named a White House “Champion of Change.”
28 - Sun Belt Conference
Location............................................... Washington, D.C. Founded................................................................... 1867 Enrollment............................................................ 10,000 Nickname................................................................Bison Colors........................... Navy Blue & White (Red Accent) Athletics Website............................... www.hubison.com All-Time Record.................................. 207-304-65 (.416) All-Time SBC Record.............................................. 1-3-1 2014 Record.......................................................... 2-15-2 2014 SBC Record (Finish)...............................1-3-1 (6th) SBC Championships...................................................... 0 Lettermen Returning...................................................XX Lettermen Lost............................................................XX Starters Returning.......................................................XX Starters Lost................................................................XX Newcomers..................................................................XX Stadium....................................................Green Stadium Capacity............................................................... 7,086 Playing Surface............................................. Field Turf Media Contact............................................Lamar Carter Office Phone:......................................... (202) 806-7182 Cell Phone:........................................... (202) 538-2293 E-mail:................................lamar.carter@howard.edu Facebook:...................... facebook.com/HUBisonSports Twitter:................................................. @HUBisonSports
2015 SCHEDULE Date Aug. 28 Aug. 30 Sep. 3 Sep. 6 Sep. 8 SEP. 15 Sep. 18 Sep. 20 Sep. 25 Sep. 29 Oct. 2 Oct. 7 Oct. 10 OCT. 12 OCT. 17 Oct. 20 OCT. 24 Oct. 31 NOV. 7
2014 RESULTS (2-15-2, 1-3-1 Sun Belt)
Opponent at George Mason vs. George Washington at American at Monmouth at Radford LIBERTY at LIU Brooklyn at St. Francis Brooklyn at Saint Joseph’s at UMBC at Robert Morris at James Madison at Appalachian State* BUCKNELL GEORGIA SOUTHERN* at Longwood NJIT* at Georgia State* HARTWICK*
Location Fairfax, Va. Fairfax, Va. Washington, D.C. West Long Branch, N.J. Radford, Va. WASHINGTON, D.C. Brooklyn, N.Y. Brooklyn, N.Y. Philadelphia, Pa. Catonsville, Md. Moon Township, Pa. Harrisonburg, Va. Boone, N.C. WASHINGTON, D.C. WASHINGTON, D.C. Farmville, Va. WASHINGTON, D.C. Atlanta, Ga. WASHINGTON, D.C.
Time (TV) 6:30 PM 4:00 PM 2:00 PM 6:00 PM 5:00 PM 3:00 PM 5:00 PM 1:00 PM 6:30 PM 6:00 PM 2:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 2:00 PM 1:00 PM 5:00 PM 1:00 PM 1:00 PM 1:00 PM
Date Opponent
Result
AUGUST 29
vs. George Mason (1)
L, 0-7
31
vs. George Washington (1)
L, 1-4
SEPTEMBER 5
vs. CSU Bakersfield
7
at UNLV
L, 0-5 L, 0-4
10
at Saint Joseph’s
L. 0-1
13
at Bucknell
L, 0-4
16
at St. Francis Brooklyn
20
at VMI
23
at Liberty
L, 0-4
26
LIU BROOKLYN
L, 1-4
28
ROBERT MORRIS
L, 1-2
L, 0-3 T, 2-2 (2 OT)
OCTOBER All times central and subject to change; Home games in BOLD CAPS; * denotes Sun Belt game
Head Coach Phillip Gyau
Howard University alumnus Phillip Gyau (B.A. ‘87) was named head coach of the men’s soccer team prior to the 2014 season. Gyau brings more than 20 years of experience to the position as a respected coach and a former U.S. National Team Player. Since 1998, Coach Gyau has placed 20 players on Youth National teams. He has played in six National Championships and won four of them. Gyau has several years of coaching experience. In 2007 and 2011, the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference (WCAC) named him Coach of the Year. In 2007, Gyau was inducted into the Maryland Soccer Hall of Fame. Gyau is married to Leslie Amina Gyau. Their son, Joseph-Claude Gyau, and daughter, Mia-Irene Gyau, are both soccer players. Joe is currently a member of the United States Men’s National Team.
ROSTER NO. NAME 1 Eric Hamilton 2 Ali Osman 3 Tyler Ellis 4 Aaron Dass 5 Donny-Joshua Felix 6 Frederick Todd III 7 Rahman Alarape 8 Stephen Douba 9 Kyle Celestine 10 Payton Atteloney 11 Jordan Rice 12 Austin Williams 13 Folarin Balogun 14 Samaila Samaila 15 Chika Okegbe 16 Michael Howell 17 Raynard Storey 18 Nathan Gill 19 Javid Murray 20 Anthony Rose 21 Adam Hylton 22 Emmanuel Iledare 23 Kojo Apraku 24 Jordan Austin 25 Nigel Grant 26 Isaac Mbappe 27 Raymond Ifeagwazi 28 Warren Dennis 29 Ryan Hubbard 30 McKinley Smith
YEAR Sr. Fr. Fr. So. Sr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Jr. So. Fr. Fr. So. Jr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Jr. So. So. So. So. Fr. So. Jr. Jr. Fr. Fr.
POS. GK F/M M M D D M/F M F M M M F/M D M M M F M D M F M GK F/M D F F D F
HT. WT. HOMETOWN (PREVIOUS SCHOOL) 6-4 200 Raleigh, NC / Cardinal Gibbons 5-7 150 Washington, D.C / Nile C Kinnick HS 5-4 150 Staten Island, NY / Curtis HS 5-10 150 Trinidad & Tobago / Naparima College 5-7 150 Pembroke Pines, FL / Pembroke Pines HS 6-1 185 Cedar Hill, TX / Oakridge HS 6-1 170 Stone Mountain, GA / Stephenson HS 6-1 175 Temple Hills, MD / Crossland HS 5-6 165 Trinidad & Tobago / St. Benedict’s College 5-7 150 Queens, NY / Christ The King Regional HS 5-6 135 New Orleans, LA / Jesuit HS 5-7 155 Dover, DE / Dover HS 5-9 165 Bowie, MD / Parkland College 6-1 150 McLean, VA / Langley HS 6-1 195 Dallas, TX / Loyola Jesuit College 6-0 180 Elmont, NY / Elmont Memorial HS 6-2 150 Chesapeake, VA / Oscar Smith HS 5-9 170 Foxborough, MA / Xaverian Brothers HS 5-8 150 Stamford, CT / Munro College 5-11 180 Abingdon, MD / Boys Latin HS 6-1 190 Kingston, Jamaica/Wolmer’s Boys High School 6-0 150 Baton Rouge, LA / McKinley HS 6-1 180 London, England / West Alabama 5-11 175 Carol Springs, FL / North Broward Preparatory 5-7 165 Riverdale, GA / The Lovett School 6-4 170 Temple Hills, MD / Crossland HS 6-1 175 Lagos, Nigeria / Brains HS 6-3 150 Newport News, VA / Warwick H.S. 6-0 170 Akron, OH / Akron Early College HS 5-11 155 Colleyville, TX / Oakride HS
1
APPALACHIAN STATE*
14
at Pittsburgh
T, 2-2 (2 OT) W, 1-0
18
at Georgia Southern*
W, 2-1
21
at Wake Forest
L, 0-4
25
at NJIT*
L, 0-5
31
GEORGIA STATE*
L, 0-4
NOVEMBER 8
at Hartwick
(1) – DC College Cup (Washington, D.C.)
Home games in BOLD CAPS * - Sun Belt Conference match
Sun Belt Conference - 29
L, 0-5
BISON TO WATCH
Kyle Celestine
McKinley Smith
F - 5’6 Sophomore Trinidad & Tobego
F - 5’11 Sophomore Colleyville, Texas
2014: Named College Sports Madness All-Sun Belt Second Team honors as a freshman…earned Player of the Week honors from CSM and SBC once last season…led team in goals (3) and points (6)…saw action in 15 of 19 games with nine starts
2014: Saw action in all 19 games with 16 starts…scored his lone goal of the season in Howard’s double-overtime road victory over ACC member Pittsburgh on October 14.
2014 BISON OVERALL STATS NAME GP GS G A PTS SH SH% SOG SOG% YC-RC GW PK-ATT 9 Celestine,Kyle 15 10 3 0 6 14 .214 8 .571 1-0 1 0-0 6 Todd III,Frederick 19 19 2 0 4 20 .100 5 .250 2-0 0 0-0 22 Iledare,Emmanuel 13 10 1 1 3 10 .100 3 .300 3-0 0 0-0 30 Smith,Mckinley 19 17 1 0 2 23 .043 11 .478 0-0 1 0-0 28 Ikpeme,Ita 13 4 1 0 2 8 .125 3 .375 1-0 0 0-0 12 Williams,Austin 19 12 1 0 2 8 .125 5 .625 0-0 0 0-0 17 Storey,Raynard 17 8 1 0 2 2 .500 1 .500 2-0 0 0-0 5 Felix,Donny-Joshua 19 19 0 2 2 7 .000 3 .429 3-0 0 0-0 8 Douba,Stephen 10 2 0 2 2 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 11 Rice,Jordan 16 16 0 1 1 8 .000 4 .500 1-0 0 0-0 25 Grant,Nigel 15 10 0 0 0 7 .000 1 .143 1-0 0 0-0 18 Gill,Nathan 19 7 0 0 0 4 .000 2 .500 0-0 0 0-0 7 Alarape,Rahman 18 18 0 0 0 3 .000 3 1.000 4-1 0 0-0 14 Samaila,Samaila 12 3 0 0 0 2 .000 1 .500 0-0 0 0-0 26 Mbappe,Isaac 12 6 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 2-0 0 0-0 20 Rose,Anthony 16 13 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 4-0 0 0-0 16 Howell,Michael 12 3 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 1-0 0 0-0 13 Johnson,Elijah 9 1 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 1-0 0 0-0 4 Dass,Aaron 9 6 0 0 0 1 .000 1 1.000 2-0 0 0-0 29 Hubbard,Ryan 2 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 27 Chinznyz,Raymond 6 1 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 24 Austin,Jordan 6 1 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 23 Balogun,Folarin 5 1 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 21 Hylton,Adam 4 1 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 15 Okegbe,Chika 6 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 10 Atteloney,Payton 9 3 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 3 Ellis,Tyler 3 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 1 Hamilton,Eric 18 18 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-1 0 0-0 Total............... 19 19 10 6 26 121 .083 51 .421 28-2 2 0-0 Opponents........... 19 19 62 64 188 368 .168 187 .508 20-1 15 1-1 ## PLAYER GP GS MIN. GA GAA SV SV% W L T SHO SF 1 Hamilton,Eric 18 18 1591:53 53 3.00 111 .677 2 13 2 1/0 315 24 Austin,Jordan 2 1 172:16 9 4.70 11 .550 0 2 0 0/0 50 TM Team 0:00 0 0.00 3 1.000 0 0 0 0/0 0 Total............... 19 1764:09 62 3.16 125 .668 2 15 2 1 365 Opponents........... 19 1764:09 10 0.51 41 .804 15 2 2 12 121
30 - Sun Belt Conference
Sun Belt Conference - 31
HIGHLANDERS
ADMINISTRATION
QUICK FACTS
Dr. Joel Bloom President
Michael Siegal Faculty Representative
Lenny Kaplan Athletics Director
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY One of the nation’s leading public polytechnic universities, New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) prepares students to be leaders in the technology-dependent economy of the 21st century.
Location......................................................Newark, N.J. Founded................................................................... 1881 Enrollment............................................................ 10,130 Nickname................................................................Bison Colors....................................Red & White (Blue Accent) Athletics Website................... www.njithighlanders.com All-Time Record.................................. 426-426-76 (.500) All-Time SBC Record.............................................. 1-3-1
The university’s multidisciplinary curriculum and computing-intensive approach to education provide the technological proficiency, business know-how and leadership skills that future CEOs and entrepreneurs will need to succeed. With an enrollment of more than 10,000 graduate and undergraduate students, NJIT offers small-campus intimacy with the resources of a major public research university.
2014 Record.......................................................... 2-15-2 2014 SBC Record (Finish)...............................2-3-0 (4th) SBC Championships...................................................... 0 Lettermen Returning................................................... 15 Lettermen Lost............................................................ 10 Total STEM enrollment: 10,646 (7,550 undergraduate, 3,096 graduate). SAT average comStarters Returning......................................................... 9 posite score for Fall 2014 freshmen is 1192. For Honors College freshmen, the average composite SAT score is 1347. More than 2,000 students live on campus in residence halls, Starters Lost.................................................................. 2 apartments and the Albert Dorman Honors College. 273 tenured or tenure track faculty; Newcomers.................................................................... 5 99% hold doctoral degrees or have the highest degree attainable in their field. The student-faculty ratio is 16:1. 1,270 full-time employees. 4,000 students and teachers in pre-college educational programs, the pipeline for STEM. 7,000 prospective students and their parents visit campus annually for open houses and tours
Stadium.................................................... Lubetkin Field Capacity............................................................... 1,000 Playing Surface.............................................. Sprinturf
NJIT’s research expenditures totaled more than $110 million in FY2014. As of September 1, 2014, NJIT had 185 issued U.S. Patents and 133 pending U.S. patent applications. In FY2014, NJIT was awarded 15 new U.S. patents. The Enterprise Development Center Media Contact.......................................Stephanie Pillari (EDC) at NJIT is New Jersey’s largest high technology and life science business incubator, Office Phone:......................................... (973) 596-8324 and one of the largest in the nation. EDC resident companies have attracted more than E-mail:................................................. pillari@njit.edu $80 million in third-party funding since entering the incubator, and generated revenues of $50 million last year. The approximately 90 member companies employ roughly 500 people.
Facebook:................... facebook.com/NJITHighlanders Twitter:...............................................@NJITHighlanders
32 - Sun Belt Conference
2015 SCHEDULE
2014 RESULTS (7-8-4, 2-3-0 Sun Belt)
Date Opponent Location Aug. 28 at St. Bonaventure Aug. 30 at Canisius Sep. 5 at Marist SEP. 11 NIAGARA SEP. 16 RHODE ISLAND SEP. 20 MANHATTAN Sep. 23 at Rider Sep. 26 at Fordham Sep. 30 at LIU Brooklyn OCT. 3 ST. FRANCIS BROOKLYN Oct. 7 at Central Connecticut State Oct. 10 at Georgia State OCT. 14 LAFAYETTE OCT. 17 HARTWICK Oct. 24 at Howard OCT. 30 GEORGIA SOUTHERN Nov. 4 at Sacred Heart NOV. 7 APPALACHIAN STATE Nov. 13-16 Sun Belt Conference Championship
Olean, N.Y. Buffalo, N.Y. Poughkeepsie, N.Y. NEWARK, N.J. NEWARK, N.J. NEWARK, N.J. Lawrenceville, N.J. New York, N.Y. Brooklyn, N.Y. NEWARK, N.J. New Britain, Conn. Atlanta, Ga. NEWARK, N.J. NEWARK, N.J. Washington, D.C. NEWARK, N.J. Fairfield, Conn. BOONE, N.C. Boone, N.C.
Time (TV) 6:30 PM 2:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 2:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 5:00 PM 4:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 4:00 PM 1:00 PM 6:00 PM 3:00 PM 4:00 PM TBA (ESPN3)
All times central and subject to change; Home games in BOLD CAPS; * denotes Sun Belt game
Head Coach Didier Orellana
Didier Orellana, who helped build NJIT’s most successful Division I men’s soccer team as an assistant coach, was promoted to head coach of the Highlanders in March 2013. In 2012, the Highlanders made a huge leap, doubling their wins total to 10. NJIT’s success in 2012 was recognized with near-continuous Top 10 ranking in the weekly National Soccer Coaches Association North Atlantic Region poll throughout the season and the final eighth-place ranking. In Orellana’s first season at the helm, he led NJIT to a 7-9-2 record in 2013 against an Independent schedule that saw the Highlanders play 12 of their 18 matches away from home, including a pair of one-goal losses on the road against nationally-ranked St. John’s (#19 at the time) and Fairleigh Dickinson (#22). The Highlanders completed its 2014 season with a record of 7-8-4 and 6-0-3 at home, including a 1-0 upset victory vs. Navy, who was ranked #22 in the NSCAA Top 25. NJIT spent seven weeks ranked in the Southeast Region Top 10 poll conducted by the NSCAA, entering in the final September poll and remaining there through November 11.
Date Opponent
Result
AUGUST 29
at Jacksonville
W, 3-2
31
at North Florida
L, 1-3
SEPTEMBER 4
at Rhode Island
L, 0-2
6
MARIST
13
FORDHAM
17
LIU BROOKLYN
W, 3-1
20
#22 NAVY
W, 1-0
24
RIDER
T, 3-3 (2 OT)
27
at Saint Joseph’s
T, 0-0 (2 OT)
W, 1-0 T, 1-1 (2 OT)
OCTOBER 1
SACRED HEART
4
at St. Francis Brooklyn
W, 1-0
11
GEORGIA STATE
15
CENTRAL CONNECTICUT STATE T, 1-1 (2 OT)
18
at Hartwick
22
at UMass Lowell
25
HOWARD
L, 0-2 W, 2-1 (OT) L, 0-1 L, 1-3 W, 5-0
NOVEMBER 5
at Georgia Southern
L, 0-1
8
at Appalachian State
L, 1-2 (OT)
13
vs. Appalachian State (2)
L, 0-1
(1) – Mike Gibbs Memorial Tournament (Jacksonville, Fla.)
ROSTER NO. NAME YEAR 00 Nick Cipriano Jr. 0 Sam Foster Fr. 1 Christian Foust Jr. 2 Ansel Ueshiro Jr. 3 Ryan Moore Fr. 4 Jonathan Onyeaka Jr. 5 Jimmy Myers Sr. 6 Mamadou Guirassy So. 7 Samuel Jester Fr. 8 William Ward So. 9 Victor Kausch Jr. 10 Joshua Mercer Sr. 11 Tommy Osipitan Sr. 12 Furkan Kokcu Fr. 13 Narayan Taterway Fr. 14 Rickardo Oldham Jr. 15 Jack Flanagan So. 16 Danny Cordeiro So. 17 Phillip Costa So. 18 Nikola Gogic Jr. 19 Jack Lee So. 20 Patrick Nuss Fr. 21 Antonio Nigro Fr. 22 Stephen McGeever Jr. 24 Eugene Listwan Sr. 25 Juan Gomez So. 29 Jake Bleyhl So. 30 Ricardo Garcia Fr.
(2) – Sun Belt Conference Championship (Statesboro, Ga.) HT. WT. 5-11 175 6-1 190 6-3 195 5-8 160 6-2 130 6-5 220 6-4 210 6-0 180 5-11 170 5-9 150 6-2 195 5-10 145 6-2 185 5-9 155 6-0 175 6-0 175 5-11 165 5-11 140 6-0 150 6-3 185 6-2 172 6-1 160 6-2 165 6-0 170 6-0 180 5-8 165 5-10 160 6-0
POS. HOMETOWN (PREVIOUS SCHOOL) GK Wood-Ridge, NJ / St. Peter’s Prep GK Magnolia, TX / IMG Academy (Bradenton, FL) GK Vandalia, OH / Shattuck St. Mary’s (MN) D Farmingville, NY / Sachem East MF Middletown, DE / Appoquinimink D Solihull, England / The Sixth Form College D Hicksville, NY / Hicksville MF Paris, France / Lycee Maurice Ravel F Middletown, DE / Appoquinimink MF Trincity, Trinidad and Tobago / Fatima College B Berlin, Germany / BBS MF Selbyville, DE / Indian River F Albany, NY / Colonie Central MF Wellington, New Zealand/Te Kura Correspondence MF Leesburg, VA/Flint Hill/NOVA Community College MF Kingston, Jamaica /Northern Oklahoma College-Tonkawa MF Holmdel, NJ / Holmdel F North Arlington, NJ / North Arlington M/D Kenilworth, NJ / David Brearley D Fort Lee, NJ / Fort Lee F Bensalem, PA / Bensalem MF Fort Worth, TX / Fossil Ridge (Keller, TX) M/D Edison, NJ / John P. Stevens MF Lincroft, NJ / Middletown South D Rockaway, NJ / Morris Hills MF Union, NJ / St. Peter’s Prep (Jersey City, NJ) GK Estell Manor, NJ / Buena Regional MF Stroudsburg, PA/Pocono Mountain East
Home games in BOLD CAPS; * denotes Sun Belt match
Sun Belt Conference - 33
HIGHLANDERS TO WATCH
Joshua Mercer MF - 5’10 Senior Selbyville, Del. Computer Technology 2014: Appeared in 16 games, with 12 starts. ... tied in first on the team in goals with 5. ...recorded one assist. ... ranks second on the team in points with 11. ... named Sun Belt Conference Co-Offensive Player of the Week (9/23). ... selected to 2014 All-Sun Belt Conference second team. ...tied for fourth on the all-time Division I list for career goals (10). ... 2014-15 NJIT men’s soccer Outstanding Performer award winner and Chi Alpha Sigma award recipient. 2013: Appeared in 12 matches, with 10 starts. ...tied for fourth on team in points (5). ... notched two goals and added one assist. 2012: Appeared in 16 matches, including five starts. ... notched three goals and two assists for eight points in his first season at NJIT. Prior to NJIT: An outside midfielder/forward from Indian River High School, was one of the top players in Delaware. After competing in the Disney Soccer Showcase during the 2010-11 Holiday season, he was one of just two players from Delaware named to the ODP Region I (East) squad that went on a tour of Italy, where the ODP stars took on youth teams of some of the top pro clubs in that country. ...He was one of the two top finalists for Delaware Gatorade State Player of the Year, as listed on ESPNHS, after putting up 15 goals and 9 assists as a senior
Jimmy Myers D - 6’4 Senior Hicksville, N.Y. Biology 2014: Appeared and started in all 19 matches for the Highlanders. ... tallied two goals. ... earned Sun Belt Conference Defensive Player of the Week (10/14). ... 2014 All-Sun Belt Conference second team selection. 2013: Started all 17 matches. ...scored two goals as a defender. 2012: Started all 19 matches on the backline of the NJIT defense. ...scored two goals. Prior to NJIT: Myers represents a recruiting coup for NJIT, having been one of the top players on Long Island, where he starred at Hicksville High School, a team that finished 18-1-2 and ranked second in the final NSCAA Region II poll and 14th in the final national poll. Hicksville was the Nassau, Long Island, and New York state champion in its division. ...an imposing 6-foot-4, 210-pound central defender, Myers was all-New York State, all-Long Island, All-Nassau County, Conference Player of the Year, and MVP of the Nassau County finals. He was the team captain at Hicksville and also captained a Long Island ODP team on a tour of England for “friendlies”. He was one of eight players listed by ESPNHS as a top candidate for New York State Gatorade Player of the Year. ...His club team, Albertson Soccer Club, is one of the top outfits in the United States Soccer Development Academy circuit
2014 HIGHLANDERS OVERALL STATS NAME GP GS G A PTS SH SH% SOG SOG% YC-RC GW PK-ATT 12 Marcel, Cristian 19 11 5 2 12 35 .143 10 .286 0-0 3 0-0 10 Mercer, Joshua 16 12 5 1 11 25 .200 13 .520 1-0 1 0-0 3 Drljic, Marko 16 14 3 4 10 40 .075 15 .375 8-0 0 0-0 22 McGeever, Stephen 19 7 2 0 4 20 .100 10 .500 1-0 1 0-0 14 Osipitan, Tommy 17 7 2 0 4 18 .111 9 .500 0-0 0 0-0 5 Myers, Jimmy 19 19 2 0 4 9 .222 5 .556 2-0 0 0-0 9 Kausch, Victor 17 14 1 2 4 8 .125 3 .375 7-0 0 0-0 30 Conrads, Brett 13 9 1 1 3 7 .143 2 .286 0-0 0 0-0 16 Cordeiro, Danny 18 15 0 3 3 28 .000 10 .357 7-0 0 0-0 17 Costa, Phillip 19 19 0 3 3 15 .000 7 .467 3-0 0 0-0 4 Onyeaka, Jonathan 14 12 1 0 2 6 .167 1 .167 1-0 1 0-0 20 Keegan, Shaun 10 0 1 0 2 5 .200 2 .400 0-0 1 0-0 7 Blazic, Matija 12 3 1 0 2 4 .250 2 .500 1-0 0 0-0 23 Chippy, Jason 13 2 0 1 1 18 .000 8 .444 0-0 0 0-0 18 Gogic, Nikola 19 17 0 0 0 11 .000 4 .364 1-0 0 0-0 6 Guirassy, Mamadou 19 11 0 0 0 7 .000 3 .429 1-0 0 0-0 2 Ueshiro, Ansel 12 2 0 0 0 6 .000 3 .500 1-0 0 0-0 8 Ward, William 3 0 0 0 0 3 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 27 Morales, Ivan 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 24 Listwan, Eugene 19 15 0 0 0 1 .000 1 1.000 3-0 0 0-0 13 Diveny, DJ 4 1 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 15 Farrell, Tom 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 11 Monahan, Michael 6 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 1 Foust, Christian 18 18 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 1-0 0 0-0 Total............... 19 19 24 17 65 268 .090 108 .403 38-0 7 0-0 Opponents........... 19 19 24 18 66 241 .100 105 .436 29-1 8 3-4 ## PLAYER GP GS MIN. GA GAA SV SV% W L T SHO SF 1 Foust, Christian 18 18 1673:31 21 1.13 73 .777 7 7 4 3/2 214 0 Bradhe, Max 3 1 123:37 3 2.18 2 .400 0 1 0 0/2 17 TM TEAM 0:00 0 0.00 6 1.000 0 0 0 2/0 0 Total............... 19 19 1797:08 24 1.20 81 .771 7 8 4 5 231 Opponents........... 19 19 1797:08 24 1.20 84 .778 8 7 4 6 267
34 - Sun Belt Conference
2014 Sun Belt Conference CONFERENCE SOCCER STATISTICS Through games of May 11, 2015 (All games)
2014 TEAM LEADERS Team Miscellaneous
GP
Shots
Fouls
Offside
Corners
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State Hartwick Howard New Jersey Institute
18 17 18 20 19 19
245 194 218 230 121 268
230 182 250 223 269 248
40 29 43 31 9 29
88 59 81 104 56 83
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
SHOTS
GP
No.
Avg/G
New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Hartwick Georgia State Georgia Southern Howard
19 18 20 18 17 19
268 245 230 218 194 121
14.11 13.61 11.50 12.11 11.41 6.37
GOALS
GP
No.
Avg/G
Georgia Southern New Jersey Institute Hartwick Georgia State Appalachian State Howard ASSISTS
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Hartwick Appalachian State Georgia Southern New Jersey Institute Georgia State Howard GOALS ALLOWED
1. 2. 3. 5. 6.
New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Georgia State Hartwick Georgia Southern Howard SAVES
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Howard Georgia Southern New Jersey Institute Georgia State Hartwick Appalachian State FOULS
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Howard Georgia State New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Hartwick Georgia Southern OFFSIDES
1. 2. 3. 4. 6.
Georgia State Appalachian State Hartwick Georgia Southern New Jersey Institute Howard
36 - Sun Belt Conference
17 19 20 18 18 19
GP
20 18 17 19 18 19
GP
19 18 18 20 17 19
GP
19 17 19 18 20 18
GP
27 24 23 22 21 10
No.
22 20 18 17 13 6
No.
24 25 28 28 31 62
No.
125 99 81 79 68 61 No.
19 18 19 18 20 17
269 250 248 230 223 182
GP
No.
18 18 20 17 19 19
43 40 31 29 29 9
1.59 1.26 1.15 1.22 1.17 0.53
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Avg/G
1.10 1.11 1.06 0.89 0.72 0.32
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Avg/G
1.26 1.39 1.56 1.40 1.82 3.26
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Avg/G
6.58 5.82 4.26 4.39 3.40 3.39
1. 2.
6.
Avg/G
14.16 13.89 13.05 12.78 11.15 10.71
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Avg/G
2.39 2.22 1.55 1.71 1.53 0.47
1. 2. 3. 4. 6.
PK-PKA
YC-RC
1-1 3-2 1-1 3-1 0-0 0-0
28-1 17-0 37-0 30-2 28-2 38-0
POINTS
GP
No.
Avg/G
Georgia Southern Hartwick New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Georgia State Howard
17 20 19 18 18 19
72 68 65 62 57 26
4.24 3.40 3.42 3.44 3.17 1.37
GOALS PER GAME
GP
No.
Avg/G
ASSISTS PER GAME
GP
No.
Avg/G
GOALS AGAINST AVERAGE GP
GA
Georgia Southern New Jersey Institute Georgia State Appalachian State Hartwick Howard Appalachian State Hartwick Georgia Southern New Jersey Institute Georgia State Howard
17 19 18 18 20 19 18 20 17 19 18 19
27 24 22 21 23 10 20 22 18 17 13 6
New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Hartwick Georgia State Georgia Southern Howard
19 18 20 18 17 19
SHUTOUTS
GP
CORNERS
GP
20 18 19 18 17 19
104 88 83 81 59 56
YELLOW CARDS
GP
Hartwick Georgia Southern Georgia State Appalachian State New Jersey Institute Howard Hartwick Appalachian State New Jersey Institute Georgia State Georgia Southern Howard New Jersey Institute Georgia State Hartwick Appalachian State Howard Georgia Southern
20 17 18 18 19 19
19 18 20 18 19 17
1.59 1.26 1.22 1.17 1.15 0.53 1.11 1.10 1.06 0.89 0.72 0.32
Minutes
24 25 28 28 31 62
1797:08 1700:06 1880:00 1633:26 1548:51 1764:09
No.
Avg/G
No.
Avg/G
No.
Avg/G
6 5 5 5 5 1
38 37 30 28 28 17
0.30 0.29 0.28 0.28 0.26 0.05 5.20 4.89 4.37 4.50 3.47 2.95 2.00 2.06 1.50 1.56 1.47 1.00
GA Avg.
1.20 1.32 1.34 1.54 1.80 3.16
2014 Sun Belt Conference CONFERENCE SOCCER STATISTICS Through games of May 11, 2015 (All games) Team
Hartwick Georgia Southern Georgia State New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Howard
Conference
Pts
3-1-1 3-2-0 3-2-0 2-3-0 1-2-2 1-3-1
10 9 9 6 5 4
Pct. GF GA
.700 .600 .600 .400 .400 .300
8 3 5 3 8 4 8 5 4 5 4 17
Overall
Pts
6-10-4 8-9-0 8-10-0 7-8-4 7-8-3 2-15-2
22 24 24 25 24 8
Team Miscellaneous
GP GF-GA
Score Avg.
Margin
PK-Att
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State Hartwick Howard New Jersey Institute
18 17 18 20 19 19
1.17-1.39 1.59-1.82 1.22-1.56 1.15-1.40 0.53-3.26 1.26-1.26
-0.22 -0.24 -0.33 -0.25 -2.74 +0.00
1-1 2-3 1-1 1-3 0-0 0-0
Attendance
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State Hartwick Howard New Jersey Institute Totals
21-25 27-31 22-28 23-28 10-62 24-24
Home Average
6-2769 8-3953 6-1806 7-2054 4-375 9-5840 40-16797
462 494 301 293 94 649 420
Away Average
8-3094 8-3121 11-7463 12-4075 12-4089 9-3163 60-25005
387 390 678 340 341 351 417
Pct. GF GA
.400 .471 .444 .474 .472 .158
23 27 22 24 21 10
2014 TEAM LEADERS
Current unbeaten streak
28 31 28 24 25 62
Shots
Saves
Save%
Corners
245 194 218 230 121 268
61 99 79 68 125 81
70.9 76.2 73.8 70.8 66.8 77.1
88 59 81 104 56 83
Neutral Average
4-1106 1-106 1-200 1-545 3-315 1-561 11-2833
276 106 200 545 105 561 258
Total Average
18-6969 17-7180 18-9469 20-6674 19-4779 19-9564 111-44635
387 422 526 334 252 503 402
Sun Belt Conference - 37
2014 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
2014 Sun Belt Conference INDIVIDUAL SOCCER STATISTICS Through games of May 11, 2015 (All games)
To be ranked, a player must appear in at least 50.0% of their team's games, goalies at least 33.0% of their team's minutes.
1. 2. 3. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10.
1. 2. 3. 4.
7. 9.
SHOTS
GP
Broaden, Stanley-APP Drljic, Marko-NJIT Chapman, Stephen-APP Marcel, Cristian-NJIT McGill, Stephen-GSU Tregear, Kit-Hartwick Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick Cordeiro, Danny-NJIT Rood, Mike-Hartwick Raji, Emmanuel-GS Harrow, Patrick-APP
18 16 10 19 18 20 18 18 18 17 18
POINTS
GP
Broaden, Stanley-APP Raji, Emmanuel-GS Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Dinka, Eric-GS Mercer, Joshua-NJIT Rood, Mike-Hartwick Drljic, Marko-NJIT McGill, Stephen-GSU Alarape, Rashid-GSU Berry, Marc-Hartwick Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick GOALS
1. 2.
6.
Broaden, Stanley-APP Dinka, Eric-GS Mercer, Joshua-NJIT Raji, Emmanuel-GS Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Berry, Marc-Hartwick Alarape, Rashid-GSU Rood, Mike-Hartwick Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick McGill, Stephen-GSU
ASSISTS
1. 2.
6.
Herbst, Alex-APP Japp, Donovan-APP Drljic, Marko-NJIT LaPan, Ethan-GS Walter, Chris-Hartwick Raji, Emmanuel-GS Rood, Mike-Hartwick Cordeiro, Danny-NJIT Harrow, Patrick-APP Costa, Phillip-NJIT MacKinnon, Ross-Hartwick GAME-WINNING GOALS
1. 2. 3.
Broaden, Stanley-APP Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Chapman, Stephen-APP Alarape, Rashid-GSU Raji, Emmanuel-GS Vargas Masis, David-GS Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick
38 - Sun Belt Conference
18 17 19 14 16 18 16 18 16 16 18
GP
18 14 16 17 19 16 16 18 18 18
GP
18 12 16 17 18 17 18 18 18 19 20
GP
18 19 10 16 17 17 18
No. Avg/G
48 40 35 35 34 29 28 28 27 26 26 G
7 5 5 5 5 4 3 4 4 4 4
2.67 2.50 3.50 1.84 1.89 1.45 1.56 1.56 1.50 1.53 1.44
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 9.
A Pts Avg/G
0 3 2 1 1 3 4 2 1 1 1
14 13 12 11 11 11 10 10 9 9 9
0.78 0.76 0.63 0.79 0.69 0.61 0.62 0.56 0.56 0.56 0.50
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
No. Avg/G
7 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4
0.39 0.36 0.31 0.29 0.26 0.25 0.25 0.22 0.22 0.22
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 10.
No. Avg/G
8 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3
0.44 0.33 0.25 0.24 0.22 0.18 0.17 0.17 0.17 0.16 0.15
No. Avg/G
4 3 2 2 2 2 2
0.22 0.16 0.20 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.11
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
SHOTS PER GAME
GP
No. Avg/G
POINTS PER GAME
GP
G
GOALS PER GAME
GP
No. Avg/G
ASSISTS PER GAME
GP
No. Avg/G
Chapman, Stephen-APP Broaden, Stanley-APP Drljic, Marko-NJIT McGill, Stephen-GSU Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Hemphill, Trey-APP Mercer, Joshua-NJIT Elkhalil, Jad-GSU Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick Cordeiro, Danny-NJIT
Dinka, Eric-GS Broaden, Stanley-APP Raji, Emmanuel-GS Abraham, Amiri-GSU Mercer, Joshua-NJIT Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Drljic, Marko-NJIT Rood, Mike-Hartwick Chapman, Stephen-APP Berry, Marc-Hartwick Alarape, Rashid-GSU Broaden, Stanley-APP Dinka, Eric-GS Mercer, Joshua-NJIT Chapman, Stephen-APP Raji, Emmanuel-GS Abraham, Amiri-GSU Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Berry, Marc-Hartwick Alarape, Rashid-GSU Rood, Mike-Hartwick McGill, Stephen-GSU Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick Herbst, Alex-APP Japp, Donovan-APP Drljic, Marko-NJIT LaPan, Ethan-GS Walter, Chris-Hartwick Douba,Stephen-HOW Abraham, Amiri-GSU Raji, Emmanuel-GS Harrow, Patrick-APP Cordeiro, Danny-NJIT Rood, Mike-Hartwick
10 18 16 18 19 15 16 16 18 18
14 18 17 11 16 19 16 18 10 16 16
18 14 16 10 17 11 19 16 16 18 18 18 18 12 16 17 18 10 11 17 18 18 18
35 48 40 34 35 24 25 25 28 28
5 7 5 3 5 5 3 4 3 4 4
3.50 2.67 2.50 1.89 1.84 1.60 1.56 1.56 1.56 1.56
A Pts Avg/G
1 0 3 2 1 2 4 3 0 1 1
7 5 5 3 5 3 5 4 4 4 4 4
8 4 4 4 4 2 2 3 3 3 3
11 14 13 8 11 12 10 11 6 9 9
0.39 0.36 0.31 0.30 0.29 0.27 0.26 0.25 0.25 0.22 0.22 0.22
0.44 0.33 0.25 0.24 0.22 0.20 0.18 0.18 0.17 0.17 0.17
0.79 0.78 0.76 0.73 0.69 0.63 0.62 0.61 0.60 0.56 0.56
2014 Sun Belt Conference INDIVIDUAL SOCCER STATISTICS 2014 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Through games of May 11, 2015 (All games)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
GOALS AGAINST AVG
GP
GA Minutes GAavg
Foust, Christian-NJIT Buckner, Tom-Hartwick West, Paul-APP Cochran, CJ-GSU Falle, Jack-GS Hamilton,Eric-HOW
18 19 14 18 17 18
21 25 20 26 31 53
SAVES
GP
Hamilton,Eric-HOW Falle, Jack-GS Cochran, CJ-GSU Foust, Christian-NJIT Buckner, Tom-Hartwick West, Paul-APP Hammond, Holland-APP Austin,Jordan-HOW Munarriz, Mateo-Hartwick Oesterle, Luke-GSU SHUTOUTS
1.
4. 6.
Falle, Jack-GS Buckner, Tom-Hartwick Cochran, CJ-GSU Foust, Christian-NJIT West, Paul-APP Hamilton,Eric-HOW
Team Identification
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State Hartwick Howard New Jersey Institute
18 17 18 18 19 14 6 2 3 1
GP
17 19 18 18 14 18
1673:3 1749:0 1223:2 1588:2 1548:5 1591:5
1.13 1.29 1.47 1.47 1.80 3.00
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
No. Avg/G
111 97 76 73 59 47 12 11 7 3
6.17 5.71 4.22 4.06 3.11 3.36 2.00 5.50 2.33 3.00
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
No. Avg/G
5 5 5 3 3 1
0.29 0.26 0.28 0.17 0.21 0.06
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
SAVE PERCENTAGE
GP Saves
SAVES PER GAME
GP
SHUTOUTS PER GAME
GP
Foust, Christian-NJIT Falle, Jack-GS Cochran, CJ-GSU Buckner, Tom-Hartwick West, Paul-APP Hamilton,Eric-HOW
Hamilton,Eric-HOW Falle, Jack-GS Cochran, CJ-GSU Foust, Christian-NJIT West, Paul-APP Buckner, Tom-Hartwick
Falle, Jack-GS Cochran, CJ-GSU Buckner, Tom-Hartwick West, Paul-APP Foust, Christian-NJIT Hamilton,Eric-HOW
18 17 18 19 14 18
18 17 18 18 14 19
17 18 19 14 18 18
73 97 76 59 47 111
GA
21 31 26 25 20 53
Pct.
.777 .758 .745 .702 .701 .677
No. Avg/G
111 97 76 73 47 59
6.17 5.71 4.22 4.06 3.36 3.11
No. Avg/G
5 5 5 3 3 1
0.29 0.28 0.26 0.21 0.17 0.06
Team ID
APP GS GSU HARTWICK HOW NJIT
Sun Belt Conference - 39
2014 SINGLE MATCH HIGHS
2014 Sun Belt Conference Conference Team Highs Through games of May 11, 2015 (All games) TEAM HIGHS (highest totals made by)
GOALS
ASSISTS
SHOTS POINTS
SAVES
5 5 5 5 6 5 5 5 30 29 16 15 15 13 13
Georgia Southern vs Florida Atlantic (Sep 12, 2014) Georgia Southern at Presbyterian (Sep 23, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Hartwick vs Howard (11/08/14) Hartwick vs Howard (11/08/14) Georgia Southern vs Florida Atlantic (Sep 12, 2014) Georgia State at Howard (Oct 31, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Central Connecticut (Oct 15, 2014) Hartwick vs Howard (11/08/14) Georgia Southern vs Florida Atlantic (Sep 12, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Howard at UNLV (Sep 07, 2014) Georgia State at Duke (Oct 28, 2014)
2014 Sun Belt Conference Conference Individual Highs Through games of May 11, 2015 (All games) INDIVIDUAL PLAYER GAME HIGHS POINTS GOALS
ASSISTS
SHOTS
SAVES
5 5 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 7 7 7 7 13 13
Marcel, Cristian (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Berry, Marc (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Marcel, Cristian (New Jersey Institute) at Jacksonville (Aug 29, 2014) Broaden, Stanley (Appalachian State) at Marshall (Sep 15, 2014) Broaden, Stanley (Appalachian State) at USC Upstate (Sep 27, 2014) Celestine,Kyle (Howard) at Georgia Southern (Oct 18, 2014) Abdellaoui, Adam (Georgia Southern) at North Carolina (Oct 28, 2014) Chapman, Stephen (Appalachian State) at Longwood (Oct 29, 2014) Marcel, Cristian (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Berry, Marc (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Herbst, Alex (Appalachian State) vs Presbyterian (Sep 12, 2014) LaPan, Ethan (Georgia Southern) vs Florida Atlantic (Sep 12, 2014) Abraham, Amiri (Georgia State) at UNCG (Sep 20, 2014) Churchwell, Dalton (Georgia Southern) at Presbyterian (Sep 23, 2014) Japp, Donovan (Appalachian State) vs Jacksonville (Oct 08, 2014) Harrow, Patrick (Appalachian State) at Longwood (Oct 29, 2014) Drljic, Marko (New Jersey Institute) vs Central Connecticut (Oct 15, 2014) Chapman, Stephen (Appalachian State) at Longwood (Oct 29, 2014) Berry, Marc (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Chapman, Stephen (Appalachian State) vs New Jersey Institute (Nov 13, 2014) Hamilton,Eric (Howard) at UNLV (Sep 07, 2014) Cochran, CJ (Georgia State) at Duke (Oct 28, 2014)
40 - Sun Belt Conference
2014 Sun Belt Conference Conference Opponent Lows Through games of May 11, 2015 (All games)
2014 OPPONENT LOWS
OPPONENT LOWS (lowest totals allowed by) GOALS
SHOTS
SAVES
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 2 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Appalachian State vs Albany (Aug 29, 2014) Hartwick vs Fairfield (09/05/14) New Jersey Institute vs MARIST (Sep 6, 2014) Appalachian State vs Presbyterian (Sep 12, 2014) Georgia Southern vs UNC Asheville (Sep 14, 2014) Appalachian State at Marshall (Sep 15, 2014) Georgia State vs Presbyterian (Sep 16, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Navy (Sep 20, 2014) Georgia Southern at Presbyterian (Sep 23, 2014) New Jersey Institute at Saint Joseph's (09/27/14) New Jersey Institute vs Sacred Heart (Oct,1 2014) Appalachian State at Hartwick (10/03/14) Hartwick vs Appalachian State (10/03/14) Georgia Southern vs Hartwick (Oct 12, 2014) Howard at Pitt (Oct 14, 2014) Georgia State at Appalachian State (Oct 18, 2014) Hartwick vs New Jersey Institute (10/18/14) Georgia State vs Jacksonville (Oct 21, 2014) Georgia Southern at Appalachian State (Oct 25, 2014) Georgia State at Howard (Oct 31, 2014) Georgia Southern vs New Jersey Institute (Nov 02, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Hartwick vs Howard (11/08/14) Georgia State vs Georgia Southern (Nov 08, 2014) Appalachian State vs New Jersey Institute (Nov 13, 2014) Hartwick vs Appalachian State (Nov 14, 2014) Hartwick at Georgia Southern (Nov 16, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Hartwick vs Saint Peter's (09/07/14) Appalachian State vs Presbyterian (Sep 12, 2014) Georgia State at South Carolina (9/30/2014) Howard at UNLV (Sep 07, 2014) Howard at Saint Joseph's (09/10/14) Georgia State at North Carolina (Oct 14, 2014) Georgia Southern at Appalachian State (Oct 25, 2014) Hartwick at Maryland Terrapins (Oct 28, 2014) Howard at Hartwick (11/08/14)
Sun Belt Conference - 41
2014 Sun Belt Conference CONFERENCE SOCCER STATISTICS Through games of Jun 04, 2015 (Conference games only)
2014 TEAM LEADERS (CONFERENCE MATCHES) Team Miscellaneous
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State Hartwick Howard New Jersey Institute SHOTS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Hartwick Georgia State Georgia Southern Howard GOALS
1.
4. 5.
Georgia State Hartwick New Jersey Institute Georgia Southern Appalachian State Howard ASSISTS
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Hartwick Georgia State New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Howard Georgia Southern GOALS ALLOWED
1. 3. 4. 6.
Hartwick Georgia Southern Georgia State Appalachian State New Jersey Institute Howard SAVES
1. 2. 3. 5. 6.
Howard Georgia Southern Georgia State New Jersey Institute Hartwick Appalachian State FOULS
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Georgia State Howard Georgia Southern New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Hartwick OFFSIDES
1. 2. 4. 5. 6.
Georgia State New Jersey Institute Hartwick Appalachian State Georgia Southern Howard
42 - Sun Belt Conference
GP
Shots
Fouls
Offside
Corners
5 5 5 5 5 5
78 51 62 70 30 86
59 69 72 56 71 65
10 4 14 12 0 12
36 22 18 26 13 30
GP
No.
Avg/G
5 5 5 5 5 5
86 78 70 62 51 30
17.20 15.60 14.00 12.40 10.20 6.00
GP
No.
Avg/G
5 5 5 5 5 5
GP
5 5 5 5 5 5
GP
5 5 5 5 5 5
GP
5 5 5 5 5 5
GP
5 5 5 5 5 5
GP
5 5 5 5 5 5
8 8 8 5 4 4
No.
9 8 7 3 2 2
No.
3 3 4 5 5 17
No.
39 29 18 18 15 14
No.
72 71 69 65 59 56
No.
14 12 12 10 4 0
1.60 1.60 1.60 1.00 0.80 0.80
2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
1.
4. 5.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Avg/G
0.60 0.60 0.80 1.00 1.00 3.40
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Avg/G
7.80 5.80 3.60 3.60 3.00 2.80
1.
4. 6.
Avg/G
14.40 14.20 13.80 13.00 11.80 11.20
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Avg/G
2.80 2.40 2.40 2.00 0.80 0.00
YC-RC
0-0 1-1 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0
8-0 6-0 10-0 10-1 8-2 8-0
POINTS 1.
Avg/G
1.80 1.60 1.40 0.60 0.40 0.40
PK-PKA
1. 3.
6.
GP
No.
Avg/G
5 5 5 5 5 5
25 24 23 12 11 10
5.00 4.80 4.60 2.40 2.20 2.00
GOALS PER GAME
GP
No.
Avg/G
ASSISTS PER GAME
GP
No.
Avg/G
GOALS AGAINST AVERAGE GP
GA
Minutes
Hartwick Georgia State New Jersey Institute Georgia Southern Appalachian State Howard Hartwick Georgia State New Jersey Institute Georgia Southern Appalachian State Howard Hartwick Georgia State New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Howard Georgia Southern Hartwick Georgia Southern Georgia State Appalachian State New Jersey Institute Howard
5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
8 8 8 5 4 4 9 8 7 3 2 2
3 3 4 5 5 17
1.60 1.60 1.60 1.00 0.80 0.80 1.80 1.60 1.40 0.60 0.40 0.40
470:00 450:00 461:00 503:14 457:08 470:00
SHUTOUTS
GP
No.
Avg/G
CORNERS
GP
No.
Avg/G
YELLOW CARDS
GP
No.
Avg/G
Georgia Southern Hartwick Georgia State New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Howard Appalachian State New Jersey Institute Hartwick Georgia Southern Georgia State Howard Hartwick Georgia State Howard New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Georgia Southern
5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
5 5 5 5 5 5
3 3 3 1 1 0
36 30 26 22 18 13
10 10 8 8 8 6
0.60 0.60 0.60 0.20 0.20 0.00 7.20 6.00 5.20 4.40 3.60 2.60
2.00 2.00 1.60 1.60 1.60 1.20
GA Avg.
0.57 0.60 0.78 0.89 0.98 3.26
2014 Sun Belt Conference CONFERENCE SOCCER STATISTICS Through games of Jun 04, 2015 (Conference games only) 2014 TEAM LEADERS (CONFERENCE MATCHES) Team
Hartwick Georgia State Georgia Southern New Jersey Institute Appalachian State Howard Team Miscellaneous
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State Hartwick Howard New Jersey Institute Attendance
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State Hartwick Howard New Jersey Institute Totals
Conference
Pts
3-1-1 3-2-0 3-2-0 2-3-0 1-2-2 1-3-1
10 9 9 6 5 4
GP GF-GA
5 5 5 5 5 5
4-5 5-3 8-4 8-3 4-17 8-5
Pct. GF GA
.700 .600 .600 .400 .400 .300
Overall
Pts
3-1-1 3-2-0 3-2-0 2-3-0 1-2-2 1-3-1
10 9 9 6 5 4
Score Avg.
Margin
PK-Att
0.80-1.00 1.00-0.60 1.60-0.80 1.60-0.60 0.80-3.40 1.60-1.00
-0.20 +0.40 +0.80 +1.00 -2.60 +0.60
0-0 1-1 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0
Home Average
3-1276 3-1123 2-724 3-925 2-175 2-1572 15-5795
8 3 8 4 5 3 8 5 4 5 4 17
425 374 362 308 88 786 386
Away Average
2-725 2-895 3-1590 2-502 3-1396 3-687 15-5795
362 448 530 251 465 229 386
Pct. GF GA
.700 .600 .600 .400 .400 .300
8 3 8 4 5 3 8 5 4 5 4 17
Current unbeaten streak Hartwick -- 3-0-0 Georgia State -- 2-0-0 Appalachian State -- 1-0-0
Shots
Saves
Save%
Corners
78 51 62 70 30 86
14 29 18 15 39 18
73.7 90.6 81.8 83.3 69.6 78.3
36 22 18 26 13 30
Neutral Average
0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total Average
5-2001 5-2018 5-2314 5-1427 5-1571 5-2259 30-11590
400 404 463 285 314 452 386
Sun Belt Conference - 43
INDIVIDUAL SOCCER STATISTICS Through games of Jun 04, 2015 (Conference games only)
2014 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS (CONFERENCE MATCHES) To be ranked, a player must appear in at least 50.0% of their team's games, goalies at least 33.0% of their team's minutes. SHOTS 1. 2. 4. 5.
8.
GP
Broaden, Stanley-APP Chapman, Stephen-APP McGeever, Stephen-NJIT Tregear, Kit-Hartwick Mercer, Joshua-NJIT McGill, Stephen-GSU Drljic, Marko-NJIT Chippy, Jason-NJIT Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Wilding, Eddie-GSU
POINTS
1. 3.
7.
10.
Celestine,Kyle-HOW Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Berry, Marc-Hartwick Alarape, Rashid-GSU Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick Mercer, Joshua-NJIT Dinka, Eric-GS McGeever, Stephen-NJIT McGill, Stephen-GSU Elkhalil, Ali-GSU GOALS
1. 2.
10.
1. 3.
5 4 5 5 5 5 5 4 5 5 5
GP
3 5 3 4 5 5 5 5 5 5
GP
No. Avg/G
16 14 14 12 11 11 11 10 10 10 10
G
3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1
3.20 3.50 2.80 2.40 2.20 2.20 2.20 2.50 2.00 2.00 2.00
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
10.
A Pts Avg/G
0 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1
6 6 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 3
2.00 1.20 1.67 1.25 1.00 1.00 0.80 0.80 0.80 0.60
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 7.
10.
No. Avg/G
SHOTS PER GAME
GP
No. Avg/G
POINTS PER GAME
GP
G
GOALS PER GAME
GP
No. Avg/G
Chapman, Stephen-APP Broaden, Stanley-APP McGeever, Stephen-NJIT Chippy, Jason-NJIT Tregear, Kit-Hartwick Berry, Marc-Hartwick Drljic, Marko-NJIT McGill, Stephen-GSU Mercer, Joshua-NJIT Wilding, Eddie-GSU Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick Hemphill, Trey-APP Celestine,Kyle-HOW Berry, Marc-Hartwick Alarape, Rashid-GSU Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick Mercer, Joshua-NJIT McGill, Stephen-GSU McGeever, Stephen-NJIT Dinka, Eric-GS Elkhalil, Ali-GSU
Celestine,Kyle-HOW 3 Berry, Marc-Hartwick 3 Alarape, Rashid-GSU 4 McGeever, Stephen-NJIT 5 Dinka, Eric-GS 5 McGill, Stephen-GSU 5 Mercer, Joshua-NJIT 5 Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick 5 Marcel, Cristian-NJIT 5 Japp, Donovan-APP 2 Abraham, Amiri-GSU 2 Kausch, Victor-NJIT 4 Tshongo, Jeremy-APP 4 Hemphill, Trey-APP 4 Scott, Wyatt-Hartwick 4 Blazic, Matija-NJIT 4 Bingham, Jake-GSU 4 Elkhalil, Ali-GSU 5 McCarter, Mason-APP 5 Todd III,Frederick-HOW 5 Wells, Nick-GS 5 Raji, Emmanuel-GS 5 Anglade, Andy-GSU 5 Sveinbjornsson, Thor-GS 5 Tregear, Kit-Hartwick Through 5 Miller, Jack-Hartwick 5
3 1.00 1. Celestine,Kyle-HOW 2 0.67 2. Berry, Marc-Hartwick 2 0.50 3. Alarape, Rashid-GSU 2 0.40 4. Dinka, Eric-GS 2 0.40 Marcel, Cristian-NJIT 2 0.40 Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick 2 0.40 Mercer, Joshua-NJIT 2 0.40 McGill, Stephen-GSU 2 0.40 McGeever, Stephen-NJIT 1 0.50 10. Kausch, Victor-NJIT 1 0.50 Bingham, Jake-GSU 1 0.25 Blazic, Matija-NJIT 1 0.25 Scott, Wyatt-Hartwick 1 0.25 Hemphill, Trey-APP 1 0.25 Tshongo, Jeremy-APP 1 0.25 1 0.25 1 0.20 1 0.20 1 0.20 1 0.20 1 0.20 2014 Sun Belt Conference 1 0.20 SOCCER STATISTICS 1 INDIVIDUAL 0.20 1 0.20of Jun 04, 2015 (Conference games games 1 0.20
SHUTOUTS
No. Avg/G
GP
Falle, Jack-GS Cochran, CJ-GSU Buckner, Tom-Hartwick
Team Identification
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State Hartwick Howard New Jersey Institute
Team ID
5 5 5
APP GS GSU HARTWICK HOW NJIT
44 - Sun Belt Conference
3 3 2
0.60 0.60 0.40
SHUTOUTS PER GAME
1. 3.
Cochran, CJ-GSU Falle, Jack-GS Buckner, Tom-Hartwick
4 5 5 4 5 3 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 3 3 4 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
3 3 4 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4
14 16 14 10 12 7 11 11 11 10 10 10 8
3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1
3.50 3.20 2.80 2.50 2.40 2.33 2.20 2.20 2.20 2.00 2.00 2.00 2.00
A Pts Avg/G
0 1 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 1
3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1
6 5 5 6 5 5 4 4 4 3
1.00 0.67 0.50 0.40 0.40 0.40 0.40 0.40 0.40 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.25
only) GP
5 5 5
No. Avg/G
3 3 2
0.60 0.60 0.40
2.00 1.67 1.25 1.20 1.00 1.00 0.80 0.80 0.80 0.60
2014 Sun2014 BeltINDIVIDUAL Conference LEADERS (CONFERENCE MATCHES INDIVIDUAL SOCCER STATISTICS Through games of Jun 04, 2015 (Conference games only) ASSISTS 1.
6.
1. 2.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Wilding, Eddie-GSU Felix,Donny-Joshua-HOW Walter, Chris-Hartwick Herbst, Alex-APP Berry, Marc-Hartwick Alexander, Tyler-GSU Kivinen, Niklas-GSU Rood, Mike-Hartwick Chippy, Jason-NJIT Conrads, Brett-NJIT Russell, Marc-Hartwick Alarape, Rashid-GSU Elkhalil, Ali-GSU Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick Mercer, Joshua-NJIT Jones, Aaron-GSU Buckner, Tom-Hartwick MacKinnon, Ross-Hartwick Vargas Masis, David-GS Wilson, Blake-GS O'Grady, Jamie-Hartwick Costa, Phillip-NJIT Stroup, Bo-GSU Harrow, Patrick-APP Drljic, Marko-NJIT
3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
5 5 5 5 5 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
GAME-WINNING GOALS
GP
GOALS AGAINST AVG
GP
Beckford, Jhevaughn-Hartwick Abraham, Amiri-GSU Celestine,Kyle-HOW Alarape, Rashid-GSU McCarter, Mason-APP Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Wells, Nick-GS Sveinbjornsson, Thor-GS Dinka, Eric-GS Miller, Jack-Hartwick McGeever, Stephen-NJIT Anglade, Andy-GSU Falle, Jack-GS Buckner, Tom-Hartwick Cochran, CJ-GSU Hammond, Holland-APP Foust, Christian-NJIT Hamilton,Eric-HOW Austin,Jordan-HOW SAVES
1.
GP
Hamilton,Eric-HOW Falle, Jack-GS Cochran, CJ-GSU Foust, Christian-NJIT Buckner, Tom-Hartwick Austin,Jordan-HOW Hammond, Holland-APP West, Paul-APP
5 2 3 4 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
5 5 5 4 5 4 2
GP
4 5 5 5 5 2 4 2
No. Avg/G
2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
0.40 0.40 0.40 0.40 0.40 0.33 0.33 0.33 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20
1.
6.
9.
ASSISTS PER GAME
GP
SAVE PERCENTAGE
GP Saves
SAVES PER GAME
GP
Felix,Donny-Joshua-HOW Marcel, Cristian-NJIT Wilding, Eddie-GSU Walter, Chris-Hartwick Herbst, Alex-APP Kivinen, Niklas-GSU Berry, Marc-Hartwick Alexander, Tyler-GSU Rood, Mike-Hartwick Chippy, Jason-NJIT Conrads, Brett-NJIT Russell, Marc-Hartwick Alarape, Rashid-GSU
5 5 5 5 5 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4
No. Avg/G
2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
0.40 0.40 0.40 0.40 0.40 0.33 0.33 0.33 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.25
No. Avg/G
2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
0.40 0.50 0.33 0.25 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20 0.20
GA Minutes GAavg
3 3 4 4 5 8 9
450:00 443:33 461:00 363:33 428:13 297:44 172:16
0.60 0.61 0.78 0.99 1.05 2.42 4.70
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
No. Avg/G
28 28 18 15 13 11 10 4
7.00 5.60 3.60 3.00 2.60 5.50 2.50 2.00
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Falle, Jack-GS Cochran, CJ-GSU Buckner, Tom-Hartwick Hamilton,Eric-HOW Foust, Christian-NJIT Hammond, Holland-APP Austin,Jordan-HOW Hamilton,Eric-HOW Falle, Jack-GS Austin,Jordan-HOW Cochran, CJ-GSU Foust, Christian-NJIT Buckner, Tom-Hartwick Hammond, Holland-APP
5 5 5 4 5 4 2 4 5 2 5 5 5 4
28 18 13 28 15 10 11
GA
3 4 3 8 5 4 9
Pct.
.903 .818 .812 .778 .750 .714 .550
No. Avg/G
28 28 11 18 15 13 10
7.00 5.60 5.50 3.60 3.00 2.60 2.50
Sun Belt Conference - 45
2014 Sun Belt Conference Conference Team Highs Through games of Jun 04, 2015 (Conference games only)
2014 MATCH HIGHS (CONFERENCE MATCHES)
TEAM HIGHS (highest totals made by) GOALS ASSISTS
SHOTS POINTS SAVES
5 5 6 5 5 30 25 16 15 10 10 10
New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Hartwick vs Howard (11/08/14) Hartwick vs Howard (11/08/14) Georgia State at Howard (Oct 31, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Hartwick vs Howard (11/08/14) Hartwick vs Howard (11/08/14) New Jersey Institute vs Howard 25,Conference 2014) 2014 Sun(Oct Belt Howard vs Appalachian State (Oct Individual 11, 2014) Conference Highs Georgia Southern at Appalachian (Oct 25, 2014) Through games of Jun 04,State 2015 (Conference games only) Howard at Hartwick (11/08/14) INDIVIDUAL PLAYER GAME HIGHS
POINTS GOALS
ASSISTS
SHOTS
SAVES
5 5 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 7 6 6 10 10
Marcel, Cristian (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Berry, Marc (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Celestine,Kyle (Howard) at Georgia Southern (Oct 18, 2014) Marcel, Cristian (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Berry, Marc (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Felix,Donny-Joshua (Howard) vs Appalachian State (Oct 11, 2014) Herbst, Alex (Appalachian State) at Howard (Oct 11, 2014) Marcel, Cristian (New Jersey Institute) vs Georgia State (Oct 11, 2014) Drljic, Marko (New Jersey Institute) vs Georgia State (Oct 11, 2014) Vargas Masis, David (Georgia Southern) vs Hartwick (Oct 12, 2014) Elkhalil, Ali (Georgia State) at Appalachian State (Oct 18, 2014) Felix,Donny-Joshua (Howard) at Georgia Southern (Oct 18, 2014) Buckner, Tom (Hartwick) vs New Jersey Institute (10/18/14) Russell, Marc (Hartwick) at Georgia State (Oct 25, 2014) Walter, Chris (Hartwick) at Georgia State (Oct 25, 2014) Wilding, Eddie (Georgia State) vs Hartwick (Oct 25, 2014) Alexander, Tyler (Georgia State) at Howard (Oct 31, 2014) Alarape, Rashid (Georgia State) at Howard (Oct 31, 2014) Kivinen, Niklas (Georgia State) at Howard (Oct 31, 2014) Jones, Aaron (Georgia State) at Howard (Oct 31, 2014) Stroup, Bo (Georgia State) at Howard (Oct 31, 2014) Wilson, Blake (Georgia Southern) vs New Jersey Institute (Nov 02, 2014) Conrads, Brett (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Mercer, Joshua (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Chippy, Jason (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Costa, Phillip (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Marcel, Cristian (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Walter, Chris (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) O'Grady, Jamie (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Rood, Mike (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Beckford, Jhevaughn (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Berry, Marc (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) MacKinnon, Ross (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Harrow, Patrick (Appalachian State) vs New Jersey Institute (Nov 08, 2014) Herbst, Alex (Appalachian State) vs New Jersey Institute (Nov 08, 2014) Wilding, Eddie (Georgia State) vs Georgia Southern (Nov 08, 2014) Berry, Marc (Hartwick) vs Howard (11/08/14) Mercer, Joshua (New Jersey Institute) at Hartwick (10/18/14) Marcel, Cristian (New Jersey Institute) vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Hamilton,Eric (Howard) vs Appalachian State (Oct 11, 2014) Hamilton,Eric (Howard) at Hartwick (11/08/14)
46 - Sun Belt Conference
2014 Sun Belt Conference Conference Opponent Lows Through games of Jun 04, 2015 (Conference games only)
2014 OPPONENT LOWS (CONFERENCE MATCHES
OPPONENT LOWS (lowest totals allowed by) GOALS
SHOTS
SAVES
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 5 5 0 0
Hartwick vs Appalachian State (10/03/14) Appalachian State at Hartwick (10/03/14) Georgia Southern vs Hartwick (Oct 12, 2014) Georgia State at Appalachian State (Oct 18, 2014) Hartwick vs New Jersey Institute (10/18/14) Georgia Southern at Appalachian State (Oct 25, 2014) Georgia State at Howard (Oct 31, 2014) Georgia Southern vs New Jersey Institute (Nov 02, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Hartwick vs Howard (11/08/14) Georgia State vs Georgia Southern (Nov 08, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Howard (Oct 25, 2014) Appalachian State at Howard (Oct 11, 2014) New Jersey Institute vs Georgia State (Oct 11, 2014) Georgia Southern at Appalachian State (Oct 25, 2014) Howard at Hartwick (11/08/14)
Sun Belt Conference - 47
ALL-CONFERENCE TEAMS 1976 No Team Selected
Coach of the Year Roy Patton, South Alabama
Coach of the Year Bob Norman, UAB 1977 Dick Hill Aleks Mihailovic John Bifulco Jim Siracusa Bobby Moody Robbi Colcord Jimmy Koutsokalis Ralph Baker Fran Lemmons Declan O’Donoghue Harry Jean-Charles
Jacksonville Jacksonville Jacksonville Georgia State Georgia State Georgia State UNC Charlotte South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida
Coach of the Year Bill Coulthart, Jacksonville 1978 Aleks Mihailovic Delroy Allen Gary Levengood Bobby Moody Ty Martin Jeff Leach Kyle White Shay Smith Declan O’Donoghue Fernando Sosa
Jacksonville Jacksonville Georgia State Georgia State Georgia State Georgia State South Florida South Florida South Florida UNC Charlotte
Coach of the Year Scottie O’Neil, Georgia State 1979 Delroy Allen David Douglas Fernando Sosa Ahmed Fashola Ralph Baker Paul Ritter Kyle White Jesper Pederson Keith Matney Tim Ryan John Struder
Jacksonville Jacksonville UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida VCU VCU VCU
Coach of the Year Ike Gardner, UNC Charlotte 1980 Jeff Leach Ty Martin Danny Clavijo Tony Novo Fernando Sosa Dan Peterson Kyle White Mike Metzner Nigel Clarke Bob Bauman Said Kamali
Jacksonville Jacksonville UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte Old Dominion Old Dominion Old Dominion South Alabama South Alabama South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida VCU
Honorable Mention Mike Stuckel Robert Edward David Higgens Ray Leone Jay Tymchyshyn Nigel Clarke Jay White Tommy Ber Brian Davidson Chunkie Hong Victor Hayes
UAB Jacksonville UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte Old Dominion South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida VCU Western Kentucky
Coach of the Year Bob Warming, UNC Charlotte 1983 Mike Johnson Craig Brown Michael Johnston Ray Leone Gary Mangione Goran Elovsson Petri Monola Peter Yngwe Declan McSheffrey Kelvin Jones Roy Wegerle Polycarpos Melaisis
Jacksonville UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte Old Dominion Old Dominion Old Dominion South Alabama South Florida South Florida Western Kentucky
Coach of the Year Bob Warming, UNC Charlotte Georgia State Georgia State Georgia State Georgia State UNC Charlotte South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida VCU
Coach of the Year Dan Holcomb, South Florida 1981 Tony Novo Brian McInerny Tureh Doh Tony Rossi Declan McSheffrey Declan Mooney Juan Bernal Hisham Ramzi Jim Peterson Kyle White Jay White Nigel Clarke Tedmore Henry Said Kamali
1982 Jason Phitides Tony Novo Pierre Imar Tony Rossi Jay Cho Joe Cirrincione Goran Elovsson Declan McSheffrey Gerald McGonagle Roy Wegerle Johann Westerhorstmann Ranier Kuhn Garnett Craig Tedmore Henry
Jacksonville Jacksonville UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte South Alabama South Alabama South Alabama South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida VCU VCU
48 - Sun Belt Conference
1984 Michael Johnson Michael Johnston Alvaro Ibanez Doros Constantinou Rob Tymchyshyn Decland McSheffrey Aris Bogdaneris Johann Westerhorstmann Ray Perlee Kelvin Jones Alan Anderson Thor Hockett
Jacksonville UNC Charlotte Old Dominion Old Dominion Old Dominion South Alabama South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida South Florida VCU
Honorable Mention Frank Matte Jason Phitides Craig Brown John Griffith Ray Leone John Merrihew David Whitmore David Udrescu Thomas McLendon Matt Westerhorstmann Matt Lord
UAB Jacksonville UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte Old Dominion Old Dominion South Alabama South Alabama South Florida VCU
Coach of the Year Mike Berticelli, Old Dominion
1985 First Team David Cooper Steve Railton Vincent Beck Tim Borer Mike Sweeney Jeff Dexter Aris Bogdaneris David Dodge Raymond Perlee Thor Hockett Mecit Koydemir
UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte Old Dominion Old Dominion Old Dominion South Alabama South Florida South Florida South Florida VCU Western Kentucky
Second Team Faud Moh Rasdl Bobby Medallada Ian Stevenson Patrick Cushing Jan-Olov Aas Mike O’Neil Joe Midlik Mark Pederson Lenny Armuth Donal McDonaugh Ronnie Lane Mahlon Moore Chris Trinza Ramin Ranjbar
UAB Jacksonville Jacksonville UNC Charlotte Old Dominion Old Dominion South Alabama South Alabama South Florida South Florida VCU VCU VCU Western Kentucky
Coach of the Year David Holmes, Western Kentucky 1986 Aris Bogdaneris Sean Crowley Patrick Cushing Thor Geirsson Chris Haywood Mecit Koydemir Bobby Medallada Raymond Perlee Ronnie Lane David Udrescu Orlin Weise
South Florida Old Dominion UNC Charlotte South Alabama Old Dominion Western Kentucky Jacksonville South Florida VCU South Alabama VCU
Honorable Mention Harvey Torman George McDermott Doros Constantinou Alan Anderson Mark Shepherd Luis Llontop
UAB Jacksonville Old Dominion South Florida South Florida Western Kentucky
Coach of the Year Bob Norman, UAB 1987 First Team David Udrescu Chris Haywood John Dugan Thor Geirsson Alan Anderson Tony Pagano Paul Cann Kevin Walsh Giles Hooper Todd Rittenberry Jon Parker
South Alabama Old Dominion VCU South Alabama South Florida South Alabama Old Dominion Old Dominion South Florida Western Kentucky Old Dominion
Second Team Sigfus Karason Michael Bates David Cooper R.C. Campagnolo Bill Buerger Sam Hinson Orlin Weise Pat Moriarty Tim Updike Richard Butler Eduardo Carvacho George McDermott
South Alabama South Florida UNC Charlotte South Florida UNC Charlotte Jacksonville VCU VCU Jacksonville UAB South Alabama Jacksonville
Coach of the Year Roy Patton, South Alabama 1988 First Team Andri Marteinsson Chris Haywood Sean Crowley Michael Bates John Dugan Sigfus Karason Thor Geirsson Chris Pfau Ricky Riera-Gomez Ian Gruno Eduardo Carvacho
South Alabama Old Dominion Old Dominion South Florida VCU South Alabama South Alabama Old Dominion UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte South Alabama
Second Team John King Orlin Weise Paul Cann Jeff Paciolla Rich Biondi Chris Grecco Giles Hooper Craig Fossett Pat Moriarty Richard Butler Mike Coons Aidan Heaney Robert RoJhan
South Florida VCU Old Dominion UNC Charlotte South Florida Western Kentucky South Alabama South Florida VCU UAB South Florida UNC Charlotte Jacksonville
Coach of the Year Bob Warming, UNC Charlotte 1989 First Team Goggi Rognvaldsson Gabe Garcia David Chun Rick Jenik Mark Chung Sal Gloria Eric Dade Bobby Ricks Ian Gruno R.C. Campagnolo Eduardo Carvacho
South Alabama UNC Charlotte Old Dominion Old Dominion South Florida Jacksonville VCU UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte South Florida South Alabama
Second Team Kurt Tierney Tim Geltz Damon Wade Brian Hall Carlos Garcia Brian McCurry Stuart Fitzsimmons Ricky Riera-Gomez Rory Lithgow Gunnar Gylfason Joey Mallia
Jacksonville South Florida Old Dominion Western Kentucky UNC Charlotte South Alabama South Alabama UNC Charlotte Western Kentucky South Alabama Old Dominion
Coach of the Year Mike Berticelli, Old Dominion 1990 First Team Gabe Garcia Anthony Richardson Chris Hutchinson Stebbi Steinsen Mark Chung Sal Gloria R.C. Campagnolo Stuart Fitzsimmons Mike Radwanski Mike Rock Joey Mallia
UNC Charlotte UNC Charlotte Western Kentucky South Alabama South Florida Jacksonville South Florida South Alabama Old Dominion UNC Charlotte Old Dominion
Second Team David Chun Derek Deavors Kevin Kinley Bobby Wetzork Brian McCurry Houssam Rafeh Greg Kile Neil Mason Randy Sheen Eduardo Carvacho Aidan Heaney
Old Dominion South Alabama Jacksonville South Florida South Alabama UAB Jacksonville VCU UNC Charlotte South Alabama UNC Charlotte
Coach of the Year Lincoln Phillips, VCU Player of the Year Gabe Garcia, UNC Charlotte 1991 No Team Selected Coach of the Year Roy Patton, South Alabama Player of the Year Stephen Small, South Alabama Freshman of the Year Zach Corn, Jacksonville
2014 First Team Stanley Broaden David Vargas Masis Rashid Alarape Cristian Marcel Alex Herbst Thor Svienbjornsson Stephen McGill Alex Beranger Chase Park Marko Drljic Jack Falle
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State NJIT Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia State Appalachian State Georgia Southern NJIT Georgia Southern
Second Team Stephen Chapman Eric Dinka Emmanuel Raji Donovan Japp Jhevaughn Beckford Joshua Mercer Ben Steen Aaaron Jones Chris Locandro Jimmy Myers Tom Buckner
Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia Southern Appalachian State Hartwick NJIT Appalachian State Georgia State Georgia State NJIT Hartwick
Offensive Player of the Year Cristian Marcel, NJIT Defensive Player of the Year Marko Drljic, NJIT
1992 No Team Selected
Freshman of the Year Thor Sveinbjornsson, Georgia Southern
Coach of the Year Roy Patton, South Alabama Player of the Year Stephen Small, South Alabama
Coach of the Year John Scott, Hartwick
Freshman of the Year Mario Ribera, UT Pan American 1993 No Team Selected Coach of the Year Roy Patton, South Alabama Player of the Year Shaun Rothuysen, South Alabama Co-Freshmen of the Year Brad Massey, North Texas Jason Mesusan, South Alabama 1994 Frank Filo Geoff Thompson Tony Suman Bryan Wilkinson Dale Edwards Jason Mesusan Shaun Rohuysen Luke Whittle Mario Ribera Alois Bunjira Tom Morgan
UALR UALR Jacksonville Jacksonville South Alabama South Alabama South Alabama South Alabama UT Pan American Western Kentucky Western Kentucky
1995 Luis Cardenas Papayaw Danso-Ampogo Michael Dewers Dan Eardley Soren Jorgenson Tom Morgan Jay Radtke Mark Robson Shaun Rohuysen Daniel Villarreal Bryan Wilkinson
UT Pan American Jacksonville Vanderbilt UALR South Alabama Western Kentucky Vanderbilt Western Kentucky South Alabama Jacksonville Jacksonville
Sun Belt Conference - 49
ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS 1977 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Fran Lemmons, South Florida 1978 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Aleks Mihailovic, Jacksonville 1979 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Ralph Baker, South Florida 1980 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Nigel Clark, South Florida 1981 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Jay Whitr, South Florida 1982 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Roy Wegerle, South Florida 1983 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Craig Brown, UNC Charlotte 1984 No Team Selected
1991 Didier Menard Fredy Sanguinett Stuart Fitzsimons Daron Rush Greg Kile Derek Deavours Brian Hall Jeff Lipa Tony LaCount Stephen Small Chris Hutchinson
Central Florida UT Pan American South Alabama UALR Jacksonville South Alabama Western Kentucky UALR Central Florida South Alabama Western Kentucky
Tournament MVP Stephen Small, South Alabama 1992 Greg Kile Damaon Gore Mario Ribera Stephen Small Darron Rush Biki Sigfusson Tim McMullen Luke Whittle Bryan Lewis Colin Carimichael Roy Lithgow
Jacksonville South Alabama UT Pan American South Alabama UALR South Alabama Western Kentucky South Alabama Western Kentucky South Alabama Western Kentucky
Tournament MVP Stephen Small, South Alabama 1993 Brian Armstrong Jeff Lipa Greg Kile Brad Massey Gabriel Gentile Luke Whittle Luis Guzman Mario Ribera Jesus Tavarez Brian Lewis
UALR UALR Jacksonville North Texas North Texas South Alabama South Alabama UT Pan American UT Pan American Western Kentucky
Tournament MVP Alvaro Ibanez, Old Dominion
Co-Tournament MVPs Shaun Rothuysen, South Alabama Luke WHittle, South Alabama
1985 No Team Selected
1994 No Team Selected
Tournament MVP Ray Perler, South Florida
Tournament MVP Dale Edwards, South Alabama
1986 No Team Selected
1995 No Team Selected
Tournament MVP Aris Bogdaneris, South Florida
Tournament MVP Shaun Rothuysen, South Alabama
1987 No Team Selected
2014 Stanley Broaden Stephen Chapman Eric Dinka Jack Falle Emmanuel Raji Stephen McGill Eddie Wilding Jhevaughn Beckford David Styles Chris Walter Danny Cordeiro
Tournament MVP Chris Haywood, Old Dominion 1988 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Sean Crowley, Old Dominion 1989 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Rick Jenik, Old Dominion 1990 No Team Selected Tournament MVP Stephen Small, South Alabama
50 - Sun Belt Conference
Most Outstanding Player Kit Tregear, Hartwick
Appalachian State Appalachian State Georgia Southern Georgia Southern Georgia Southern Georgia State Georgia State Hartwick Hartwick Hartwick NJIT
TOURNAMENT RESULTS 1985 (at Norfolk, Va.)
1991 (at Mobile, Ala.)
First Round South Florida 3, Jacksonville 0 UNC Charlotte 1, South Alabama 0 VCU 1, Western Kentucky 0 Old Dominion 4, UAB 0
Semifinals South Alabama 3, UALR 0 Western Kentucky 3, Central Florida 0 South Alabama 5, UT Pan American 0 Western Kentucky 3, Jacksonville 1
Semifinals Old Dominion 1, VCU 0 South Florida 2, UNC Charlotte 1
Consolations UALR 4, UT Pan American 2 Jacksonville 4, Central Florida 3 (OT)
Championship *Slouth Florida 2, Old Dominion 2 (2 OT) * - (USF Wins on Penalty Kicks)
Championship South Alabama 3, Western Kentucky 0
1986 (at Tampa, Fla.)
First Round Western Kentucky 2, South Alabama 1 VCU 3, UNC Charlotte 2 Old Dominion 2, UAB 0 South Florida 1, Jacksonville 0 Semifinals Western Kentucky 1, VCU 0 *South Florida 2, Old Dominion 2 (2 OT) (USF Wins on Penalty Kicks) Consolations South Alabama 2, UNC Charlotte 1 UAB 1, Jacksonville 0 Championship Slouth Florida 1, Western Kentucky 0 1987 (at Norfolk, Va.)
Semifinals South Alabama 3, Jacksonville 0 Old Dominion 2, South Florida 0 Consolation South Florida 2, Jacksonville 0
Championship Old Dominion 1, South Alabama 0 1988 (at Mobile, Ala.)
Semifinals South Florida 2, UNC Charlotte 1 Old Dominion 4, South Alabama 1
Consolation South Alabama 3, UNC Charlotte 0 Championship *South Florida 1, Old Dominion 1 (2 OT) * - (USF Wins on Penalty Kicks) 1989 (at Norfolk, Va.)
Semifinals Old Dominion 2, South Florida 0 South Alabama 2, UNC Charlotte 0 Consolation UNC Charlotte 2, South Florida 0
Championship *Old Dominion 1, South Alabama 1 (2 OT) * - (ODU Wins on Penalty Kicks) 1990 (No Tournament Held)
2014 (at Statesboro, Ga.)
First Round Appalachian State 1, NJIT 0
Semifinals Hartwick 2, Appalachian State 0 Georgia Southern 2, Georgia State 1 Championship Hartwick 1, Georgia Southern 0
1992 (at Mobile, Ala.)
Semifinals Western Kentucky 3, UT Pan American 2 South Alabama 5, Jacksonville 0 Western Kentucky 4, UALR 1 UT Pan American 5, Jacksonville 0 Championship *South Alabama 1, Western Kentucky 1 * - (WKU Wins on Penalty Kicks) 1993 (at Edinburg, Texas)
Semifinals *UALR 3, UT Pan American (2 OT) * - (UALR Wins on Penalty Kicks) Western Kentucky 3, Jacksonville 0
Consolation 5th Place UT Pan American 3, Jacksonville 2 South Alabama 3, Western Kentucky 0 *UALR 0, North Texas 0 (2 OT) * - (UALR Wins on Penalty Kicks, 4-3) Consolation 3rd Place *North Texas 3, Western Kentucky 3 (2 OT) * - (UNT Wins on Penalty Kicks, 3-1) Championship South Alabama 5, UALR 0 1994 (at Mobile, Ala.)
First Round UALR 2, UT Pan American 1 *Western Kentucky 2, Jacksonville 2 (2 OT) * - (WKU Wins on Penalty Kicks, 4-2) South Alabama 3, UALR 0 Consolation Cancelled Due To Inclement Weather Championship South Alabama 3, Western Kentucky 0 1995 (at Bowling Green, Ky.)
First Round Vanderbilt 2, UALR 1 South Alabama 4, UT Pan American 1 (OT) South Alabama 2, Jacksonville 1 (OT) Western Kentucky 3, Vanderbilt 1 Consolation Vanderbilt 1, Jacksonville 0 Championship South Alabama 3, Western Kentucky 2
Sun Belt Conference - 51
YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS 1986 TEAM OVERALL PCT. Old Dominion 13-5-3 .690 Western Kentucky 15-6-2 .696 Alabama-Birmingham 11-4-3 .694 South Alabama 12-5-3 .675 Va. Commonwealth 12-6-1 .658 Jacksonville 10-8-0 .556 South Florida 9-8-2 .526 UNC Charlotte 9-13-0 .409 1987 EAST DIVISION TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. Old Dominion 2-0-1 .833 14-3-2 .789 Jacksonville 2-0-1 .833 6-9-3 .417 UNC Charlotte 1-2-0 .333 8-7-2 .529 VCU 0-3-0 .000 11-7-2 .600 WEST DIVISION TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. South Alabama 3-0-0 1.000 19-2-1 .886 South Florida 2-1-0 .667 8-8-2 .500 Western Kentucky 0-2-1 .167 13-5-2 .700 UAB 0-2-1 .167 6-7-2 .467 1988 EAST DIVISION TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. UNC Charlotte 3-0-0 1.000 10-4-3 .676 Old Dominion 2-1-0 .667 11-5-3 .658 VCU 1-2-0 .333 6-9-2 .412 Jacksonville 0-3-0 .000 7-10-1 .417 WEST DIVISION TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. South Alabama 3-0-0 1.000 17-4-1 .795 South Florida 2-1-0 .667 9-7-2 .526 UAB 1-2-0 .333 7-8-1 .469 Western Kentucky 0-3-0 .000 7-11-1 .395 1989 EAST DIVISION TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. Old Dominion 2-0-1 .833 10-4-4 .667 UNC Charlotte 1-0-2 .500 12-5-2 .684 VCU 1-1-1 .500 4-12-1 .265 Jacksonville 0-3-0 .000 2-15-1 .139 WEST DIVISION TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. South Alabama 3-0-0 1.000 17-1-2 .900 South Florida 2-1-0 .667 9-11-0 .450 Western Kentucky 1-2-0 .333 13-5-1 .710 UAB 0-3-0 .000 6-10-1 .382 1990 TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. South Florida 5-1-1 .786 12-3-2 .765 Old Dominion 5-1-1 .786 8-6-6 .550 South Alabama 4-2-1 .643 12-7-1 .625 UNC Charlotte 4-3-0 .571 11-10-1 .523 Western Kentucky 3-3-1 .500 10-6-3 .605 VCU 2-3-2 .429 5-9-4 .389 Jacksonville 2-5-0 .286 7-9-1 .441 UAB 0-7-0 .000 3-14-1 .194 1991 TEAM OVERALL PCT. South Alabama 14-4-2 .750 UT Pan American 10-5-1 .656 Western Kentucky 11-8-1 .579 UALR 8-12-0 .400 Jacksonville 7-11-1 .378 Central Florida 5-13-0 .277 1992 TEAM OVERALL PCT. UT Pan American 11-2-0 .846 South Alabama 10-7-3 .575 Western Kentucky 9-9-3 .500 UALR 7-9-3 .447 Jacksonville 4-12-0 .250
52 - Sun Belt Conference
1993 TEAM OVERALL PCT. South Alabama 16-5-0 .762 North Texas 7-7-2 .500 UALR 7-12-3 .386 UT Pan American 4-7-2 .385 Western Kentucky 6-14-3 .326 Jacksonville 6-13-1 .325 1994 TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. South Alabama 3-0-1 .875 18-2-2 .864 Western Kentucky 3-1-0 .750 8-11-1 .425 Jacksonville 2-2-0 .500 7-8-2 .471 UALR 1-2-1 .375 4-12-3 .289 UT Pan American 0-4-0 .000 0-12-0 .000 1995 TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. Jacksonville 4-1-0 .800 12-7-0 .632 Western Kentucky 4-1-0 .800 12-8-0 .600 South Alabama 3-2-0 .600 15-8-0 .652 Vanderbilt 3-2-0 .600 9-8-2 .526 UT Pan American 1-4-0 .200 2-10-0 .167 UALR 0-5-0 .000 4-15-0 .211 2014 TEAM SUN BELT PCT. OVERALL PCT. Hartwick 3-1-1 .700 6-10-4 .400 Georgia Southern 3-2-0 .600 8-9-0 .471 Georgia State 3-2-0 .600 8-10-0 .444 NJIT 2-3-0 .400 7-8-4 .474 Appalachian State 1-2-2 .400 7-8-3 .472 Howard 1-3-1 .300 2-15-2 .158
TOURNAMENT RESULTS RECORDS 1983-95 SEASON MOST GOALS 29........... Mario Ribera, UTPA (1992) MOST ASSISTS 18................ Craig Peter, USA (1993) MOST POINTS 68........... Mario Ribera, UTPA (1992) MOST SAVES 159............... Jeff Brunner, JU (1985) MOST SHUTOUTS 13.........Jason Mesusan, USA (1994) CAREER MOST GOALS 52..... David Udrescu, USA (1983-86) MOST ASSISTS 40.... Sigfus Karason, USA (1987-90) MOST POINTS 138... Sigfus Karason, USA (1987-90)
NCAA HISTORY TEAM South Florida Old Dominion South Alabama Hartwick * - NCAA Play-In Match
APP. LAST RECORD 1 1982 0-1 1 1989 0-1 1* 1995 0-1 1 2014 0-1
ALL-AMERICANS NAME, SCHOOL TEAM/HONORED BY YEARS Tim Borer, ODU 1st/ISAA 1985 Craig Brown, UNCC CoSIDA Academic 1985,86 Adidas Academic Eduardo Carvacho, USA 2nd/MetLife 1989 2nd/NSCAA 1990 Nigel Clark, USF 1980 Chris Haywood, ODU 3rd/ISAA 1987 Fergus Hopper, USF 1976 Goggi Rognvaldsson, USA 2nd/MetLife 1989 Adidas Academic 1989 2nd/NSCAA 1990 Mike Sweeney, ODU 2nd/ISAA 1985 Jason Phitides, JU NSCAA 1984 Roy Wegerle, USF 1982,83
SUN BELT TOURNAMENT MOST GOALS (GM) 5............ Mario Ribera, UTPA (1992) MOST GOALS (TOURN.) 6............ Mario Ribera, UTPA (1992)
Sun Belt Conference - 53
No. 1 Seed M2 - FRIDAY (Nov. 13) 3:00 PM ET
M4 - SUNDAY (Nov. 15) 1:00 PM ET
The Sun Belt Conference Champion earns the automatic bid to the Men’s NCAA Soccer Tournament.
NOVEMBER 12-15, 2015 - Boone, NC - HOST: Appalachian State
2015 SUN BELT CONFERENCE MEN’S SOCCER CHAMPIONSHIP
No. 4 Seed M1 - THURSDAY (Nov. 12) 3:00 PM OR 6:30 PM ET
No. 5 Seed No. 2 Seed M3 - FRIDAY (Nov. 13) 6:30 PM ET
No. 3 Seed
NOTE: Appalachian State reserves the right to choose the playing time for Friday’s match only. All times are Eastern and Subject to Change without Notice.
54 - Sun Belt Conference
Sun Belt Conference - 55