2009 Marquette Men's Soccer Media Guide

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2009 MEDIA GUIDE TABLE OF CONTENTS 2009 QUICK FACTS

MEDIA GUIDE CONTENTS 2009 MARQUETTE MEN’S SOCCER

pg. 2-8

Radio/Television Roster 2009 Schedule Numerical Roster Alphabetical Roster/Roster Breakdown

2 3 4 5

COACHES AND SUPPORT STAFF

pg. 6-13

Louis Bennett, Head Coach Stan Anderson, Associate Head Coach Steve Bode, Assistant Coach Marcelo Santos, Volunteer Assistant Coach Lauren Boyler, AthleticTraining Nate Heyrman, Strength and Conditioning

6-8 9 10 10 11 12-13

2009 GOLDEN EAGLES

pg. 14-57

Addis / Alfano / Calvopina Check / Colaizzi / Flynn Greene / Herrera / Jallow Kay / Lynn / Madsen Mallace / Miller / Monsen Navarro / Pignataro / Pyzdrowski Stummer / Von Rueden Newcomer Profiles

14-19 20-25 26-31 32-37 38-43 44-49 50-53 54-56

2008 SEASON REVIEW

pg. 58-65

Statistics and Results Match-by-Match Summaries BIG EAST Conference Recap/Postseason Awards

MARQUETTE HISTORY Career Records Season Records Match Records/Misc. Records All-Time Player Roster All-Time Series Histories Year-by-Year Results

THIS IS MARQUETTE Discover Marquette University Campus Map Senior Leadership Athletics Department Staff Distinguished Alumni Milwaukee, Wisconsin BIG EAST Conference Inside Marquette Men’s Soccer

58 59-62 63-65

pg. 66-81 66-67 68-69 70-71 72-74 75-77 78-81

pg. 82-108

GENERAL INFORMATION School Marquette University Location Milwaukee, Wis. Enrollment 11,516 Nickname Golden Eagles Colors Blue (PMS 281) and Gold (PMS 123) Home Field Valley Fields (1,750) Conference BIG EAST President Rev. Robert A. Wild, S.J. Director of Athletics Steve Cottingham Senior Woman Administrator Sarah Bobert

COACHING STAFF Head Coach Alma Mater Record at School Career Record Assoc. Head Coach Office Phone Assistant Coaches Office Phone

Louis Bennett Crewe & Alsagar (1982) 6-37-9 (4th season) 141-101-26 (14th seasons) Stan Anderson (Wis.-Parkside, 1990) (414) 288-4452 Steve Bode/Marcelo Santos (414) 288-6628

TEAM INFORMATION 2008 Record BIG EAST Record BIG EAST Finish Post-season Ranking Starters Returning/Lost Letterwinners Returning/Lost

3-10-4 1-8-2 8th (Blue Division) None None 9/0 20/0

MEDIA RELATIONS Soccer Contact Office Phone Office FAX E-mail Website Mailing Address

82-87 88-89 90-92 93-97 98 100-101 102-103 104-108

Luke LeNoble (414) 288-6980 (414) 288-6519 lucas.lenoble@marquette.edu GoMarquette.com P.O. Box 1881 Milwaukee, WI 53201

Credits The 2009 Marquette Men’s Soccer Media Guide was designed , written and edited by Luke LeNoble, along with editorial assistance from Scott Kuykendall, Amy Ufnowski and Mike Wittliff and writing assistance from Shannon Walsh. Cover design by Tim Raasch. Photography provided by Dan Johnson, Maggie Casey, Gino Alfano, Ben Smidt and Trevor Thompson. This guide was printed at United Press and Graphics in Hartland, Wis. About Marquette Marquette University does not discriminate in any manner contrary to law or justice on the basis of race, color, age, religion, veteran's status, sex, national origin or handicap in its education programs or activities, including employment and admissions. At the same time, Marquette cherishes its right and duty to seek and retain personnel who will make a positive contribution to its religious character, goals and mission.

MARQUETTE ATHLETICS ON FACEBOOK

MARQUETTE ATHLETICS ON YOUTUBE

Facebook.com/GoMarquette

MARQUETTE ATHLETICS ON TWITTER www.GoMarquette.com

@muathletics

YouTube.com/muathletics


RADIO/TELEVISION ROSTER

1

2

MATT PYZDROWSKI

7

3

AMILCAR HERRERA

8

TIM JALLOW

13

21 MICHAEL ALFANO

27 GREG PIGNATARO

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2009 Media Guide

SCOTT MILLER

NICK KAY

15 TOM LYNN

5

10

ANTHONY COLAIZZI

KEITH SIERRA

ADAM LYSAK

ANDREW KRYNSKI

9

14

19

4

ANDY HUFTALIN

22 BILLY VON RUEDEN

29 KEENAN FLYNN

CALUM MALLACE

11 DAN ADDIS

16

AARON CRANFILL

17

PAUL MONSEN

23

MATT LEONARD

24

MATT STUMMER

30

CHRIS MADSEN

31 DAVID CHECK

6

BEN CALVOPINA

RYAN ROBB

12 MICHAEL GREENE

18 HECTOR NAVARRO

25 ANTHONY SELVAGGI


2009 SCHEDULE EXHIBITION Day

Date

Opponent

Location

Time

Sun.

Aug. 16

Blue vs. Gold (Fan Fest)

Valley Fields

Thrs.

Aug. 20

at Michigan

Grand Rapids, Mich.

6 p.m.

Sat.

Aug. 22

at Valparaiso

Valparaiso, Ind.

5 p.m.

Fri.

Aug. 28

Kentucky

Valley Fields

5:05 p.m.

1:05 p.m.

REGULAR SEASON Day

Date

Opponent

Location

Time

Tues.

Sept. 1

Wis.-Milwaukee# (TV) (WMUR)

Valley Fields

Sun.

Sept. 6

at Drake

Des Moines, Iowa

7 p.m.

7:05 p.m.

Marquette Invitational Fri.

Sept. 11

UC Irvine vs. DePaul^

Valley Fields

5 p.m.

Fri.

Sept. 11

Buffalo^ (WMUR)

Valley Fields

7:05 p.m.

Sun.

Sept. 13

Buffalo at DePaul^

Chicago, Ill.

Sun.

Sept. 13

UC Irvine^ (WMUR)

Valley Fields

Fri.

Sept. 18

at USF* (WMUR)

Tampa, Fla.

6:30 p.m.

Sun.

Sept. 20

at DePaul*

Chicago, Ill.

4 p.m.

Fri.

Sept. 25

Cincinnati* (WMUR)

Valley Fields

7:05 p.m.

Sun.

Sept. 27

Louisville* (WMUR)

Valley Fields

2:05 p.m.

Sat.

Oct. 3

Alumni Game

Valley Fields

Noon

Sat.

Oct. 3

West Virginia* (WMUR)

Valley Fields

7:05 p.m.

Wed.

Oct. 7

Notre Dame* (TV) (WMUR)

Valley Fields

7:05 p.m.

Sat.

Oct. 10

at Seton Hall*

South Orange, N.J.

6 p.m.

Tues.

Oct. 13

Bucknell (WMUR)

Valley Fields

2 p.m.

Sat.

Oct. 17

Georgetown* (WMUR)

Valley Fields

7:05 p.m.

Wed.

Oct. 21

at Wisconsin

Madison, Wis.

Sat.

Oct. 24

at Providence*

Providence, R.I.

Wed.

Oct. 28

at Connecticut* (WMUR)

Storrs, Conn.

6 p.m.

Sat.

Oct. 31

Pittsburgh* (WMUR)

Valley Fields

7:05 p.m.

Noon 12:05 p.m.

7 p.m. Noon

* - denotes BIG EAST Conference game

# - Milwaukee Cup

Home games listed in BOLD

All times listed are Central Time (CT)

^ - Marquette Invitational TV - Time Warner Cable Sports32 WMUR - Live streaming audio on Marquette Radio: http://marquetteradio.mu.edu/

Marquette Men’s Soccer

3


Front Row (l-r): Andy Huftalin, Hector Navarro, Anthony Selvaggi, Amilcar Herrera, Matt Stummer, Ryan Robb; Second Row: Billy Von Rueden, Matt Leonard, Andrew Krynski, Calum Mallace, Michael Greene, head co ach Louis Benn ett, a ssociate head coach Stan Ande rso n, Dan Addis, Scott Miller, Tom Lynn, A dam Lysak, Keith Sierra, Back Row: volunteer assistant Marcelo Santos, ath letic trainer Lau ren Boyler, Paul Monsen, Chris Madsen, Nick Kay, Tim Jallow, D avid Check, Ke enan Flynn, Matt Pyzdrowski, B en Calvopina, Aaro n Cra nfill, Michael A lfano, Anthony Colaizzi, Greg Pignataro , assistant coach Steve Bode, director of soccer operations Dave Doggett.

NUMERICAL ROSTER NO 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 21 22 23 24 25 27 29 30 31

NAME Matt Pyzdrowski Amilcar Herrera Andrew Krynski Scott Miller Calum Mallace Ryan Robb Tim Jallow Anthony Colaizzi Nick Kay Dan Addis Aaron Cranfill Michael Greene Keith Sierra Tom Lynn Andy Huftalin Paul Monsen Matt Leonard Hector Navarro Adam Lysak Michael Alfano Billy Von Rueden Matt Stummer Chris Madsen Anthony Selvaggi Greg Pignataro Keenan Flynn David Check Ben Calvopina

POS GK MF F MF/D MF MF D MF/F F MF D F MF/F MF/F F D MF MF F D D MF/F F MF/F D GK GK GK

Head Coach: Louis Bennett (4th season) Associate Head Coach: Stan Anderson Assistant Coach: Steve Bode AthleticTrainer: Lauren Boyler

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2009 Media Guide

YR Sr. So. Fr. R-So. So. Fr. Sr. Jr. Sr. RS-Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. So. Fr. RS-Jr. Fr. So. Sr. Jr. So. Fr. So. Jr. So. So.

HT 6-4 5-8 6-2 6-2 6-2 5-8 6-0 6-0 6-0 5-11 6-3 5-10 5-8 5-10 5-11 5-11 5-9 5-8 5-10 6-3 6-2 5-7 6-0 5-8 5-11 6-1 6-0 6-0

WT 200 158 180 185 175 145 165 175 175 175 180 165 145 180 165 175 165 170 170 180 175 145 175 145 175 185 175 205

HOMETOWN/PREVIOUS SCHOOL Hinsdale, Ill./Fenwick Panama City, Panama/Milwaukee Riverside Algonquin, Ill./Marian Jefferson City, Mo./Helias Torphichen, Scotland/Henry Sibley (Minn.) Ampthill, England/Redbourne Upper Uppsala, Sweden/IK Sirius Gurnee, Ill./WarrenTownship Stevens Point, Wis./Stevens Point Area Dublin, Ohio/Dublin Scioto New Berlin, Wis./New Berlin West Brooklyn Park, Minn./Osseo Tampa, Fla./Jesuit Libertyville, Ill./Libertyville Rockford, Ill./Winnebago Stoughton, Wis./Shattuck-St. Mary's Palatine, Ill./William Fremd Milwaukee, Wis./Riverside Janesville, Wis./Milton Sussex, Wis./Hamilton Mequon, Wis./Marquette Woodridge, Ill./Benet Academy Brookfield, Wis./Central Elmhurst, Ill./York Algonquin, Ill./Jacobs Sacramento, Calif./Christian Brothers Mequon, Wis./Homestead Palatine, Ill./Palatine


PRONUNCIATION GUIDE

BY STATE / COUNTRY

BY YEAR

Michael Alfano AL-FAHN-oh Anthony Colaizzi COAL-eh-zee Amilcar Hererra Ah-MEAL-car HER-rare-ah Tim Jallow yah-LOW Andrew Krynski Krin-skee Adam Lysak LIE-sack Calum Mallace CAL-lum MAL-iss Greg Pignataro Pin-YAH-TARE-o Matt Pyzdrowski PIZZ-drawh-skee Anthony Selvaggi Sell-VAH-gee Billy Von Rueden Von-REE-dunn

Wisconsin (10): Michael Alfano, David Check, Aaron Cranfill, Amilcar Hererra, Nick Kay, Adam Lysak, Chris Madsen, Paul Monsen, Hector Navarro, Billy Von Rueden

Senior (7) Dan Addis, Michael Greene, Tim Jallow, Nick Kay, Tom Lynn, Matt Pyzdrowski, Billy Von Rueden

Illinois (10): Ben Calvopina, Anthony Colaizzi, Andy Huftalin, Andrew Krynski, Matt Leonard, Tom Lynn, Greg Pignataro, Matt Pyzdrowski, Anthony Selvaggi, Matt Stummer Florida (1): Keith Sierra Missouri (1): Scott Miller Minnesota (1): Michael Greene Ohio (1): Dan Addis California (1): Keenan Flynn England (1): Ryan Robb Sweeden (1): Tim Jallow Scotland (1): Calum Mallace

Junior (4) Anthony Colaizzi, Keenan Flynn, Hector Navarro, Matt Stummer Sophomore (9) Michael Alfano, Ben Calvopina, David Check, Amilcar Herrera, Chris Madsen, Calum Mallace, Scott Miller, Paul Monsen, Greg Pignataro Freshman (8) Aaron Cranfill, Andy Huftalin, Andrew Krynski, Matt Leonard, Adam Lysak, Ryan Robb, Anthony Selvaggi, Keith Sierra

ALPHABETICAL ROSTER NO 10 21 31 30 8 11 29 12 2 15 7 9 3 17 14 19 24 5 4 16 18 27 1 6 25 13 23 22

NAME Dan Addis Michael Alfano Ben Calvopina David Check Anthony Colaizzi Aaron Cranfill Keenan Flynn Michael Greene Amilcar Herrera Andy Huftalin Tim Jallow Nick Kay Andrew Krynski Matt Leonard Tom Lynn Adam Lysak Chris Madsen Calum Mallace Scott Miller Paul Monsen Hector Navarro Greg Pignataro Matt Pyzdrowski Ryan Robb Anthony Selvaggi Keith Sierra Matt Stummer Billy Von Rueden

POS MF D GK GK MF/F D GK F MF F D F F MF MF/F F F MF MF/D D MF D GK MF MF/F MF/F MF/F D

YR RS-Sr. So. So. So. Jr. Fr. Jr. Sr. So. Fr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Sr. Fr. So. So. R-So. So. RS-Jr. So. Sr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Sr.

HT 5-11 6-3 6-0 6-0 6-0 6-3 6-1 5-10 5-8 5-11 6-0 6-0 6-2 5-9 5-10 5-10 6-0 6-2 6-2 5-11 5-8 5-11 6-4 5-8 5-8 5-8 5-7 6-2

WT 175 180 205 175 175 180 185 165 158 165 165 175 180 165 180 170 175 175 185 175 170 175 200 145 145 145 145 175

HOMETOWN/PREVIOUS SCHOOL Dublin, Ohio/Dublin Scioto Sussex, Wis./Hamilton Palatine, Ill./Palatine Mequon, Wis./Homestead Gurnee, Ill./Warren Township New Berlin, Wis./New Berlin West Sacramento, Calif./Christian Brothers Brooklyn Park, Minn./Osseo Panama City, Panama/Milwaukee Riverside Rockford, Ill./Winnebago Uppsala, Sweden/IK Sirius Stevens Point, Wis./Stevens Point Area Algonquin, Ill./Marian Palatine, Ill./William Fremd Libertyville, Ill./Libertyville Janesville, Wis./Milton Brookfield, Wis./Central Torphichen, Scotland/Henry Sibley (Minn.) Jefferson City, Mo./Helias Stoughton, Wis./Shattuck-St. Mary's Milwaukee, Wis./Riverside Algonquin, Ill./Jacobs Hinsdale, Ill./Fenwick Ampthill, England/Redbourne Upper Elmhurst, Ill./York Tampa, Fla./Jesuit Woodridge, Ill./Benet Academy Mequon, Wis./Marquette

Marquette Men’s Soccer

5


LOUIS BENNETT Head Coach • 14th season • 141-101-26 (overall record) 4th Season at Marquette University Head Coach Louis Bennett heads into his fourth season at Marquette University, boasting a 141-101-26 career record in his 13 previous years as a collegiate head coach. Bennett, who in 2009 received the Wisconsin Socer Association’s Meritous Award, continues to focus on the improvement of the soccer program as whole. Upon his arrival at Marquette, Bennett spearheaded an initiative to build a practice facility at The Valley. In the end, an Astro Turf recreational sports field was transformed into a game-quality Field Turf pitch that the men’s and women’s soccer teams use for training. Previously teams had to go off campus, upwards of a 30-minute drive, to find practice fields. The practice pitch maximizes the time of the student-athlete and gives an added sense of a home field as the teams now practice in the same location that they play. While freshening up the home of Marquette soccer, Bennett has also been focusing on changing the product on the field. In his first season at Marquette, the new staff was focused on implementing a new system in a short time. After being hired in December of 2005, Bennett’s first spring campaign quickly led to the fall with the returning players still adapting to the new system. Success came early as Bennett won his first game at Marquette, defeating Loyola (Ill.) 2-1. However, it was a long year for the Golden Eagles on the scoreboard as the team finished 1-15-1. The team showed vast improvement, however, from its early-season growing pains to the end of the season, where hard-fought games with frustratingly-unlucky results characterized the contests down the stretch. The same type of improvement occurred during the 2007 season. Complete with a deep freshman class targeted to his style, Bennett and his team added a victory to the 2006 campaign, finishing the year with a 2-12-4 record in the ever-competitive BIG EAST Conference. The BIG EAST landed seven teams in the 2007 NCAA Tournament for the third straight year, including three teams the Golden Eagles played to within one goal. Bennett's squad finished the year with four consecutive overtime matches, with the team's seven overtime appearances tying a school record previously set in 1993. Despite a youthful team, in extra time, Bennett was 1-2-4, including a 2-1 loss in overtime at Connecticut to the eventual BIG EAST Tournament Champions. The Golden Eagles also came within one goal of Blue Division champion, Notre Dame early in the season. Bennett brought this wealth of success to Marquette, coming to MU after 10 successful seasons at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. At UWM, Bennett led the Panthers to five straight NCAA Tournament berths, including four consecutive appearances in the second round of the tournament and 136 victories over his last five seasons. The most successful coach in the history of UWM men's soccer, Bennett compiled a 136-63-17 record in 10 seasons. Marquette marks the second institution at which Bennett has served as head coach. Since 2001, the Panthers dominated the Horizon League posting a 41-4-2 record in conference play and earning five league titles. Over the same time, UWM was 14-1 in the conference tournament, reached five

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2009 Media Guide

conference championship games, and won four tournament titles. Bennett also guided his squad to a 25-game league unbeaten streak (23-02) that stretched into the 2004 season. In 2005, Bennett led Wis.-Milwaukee to its fifth straight NCAA Tournament appearance, winning the regular season crown for the fifth consecutive year and the conference tournament for fourth straight time. Bennett had UWM poised to upset top-seeded New Mexico in the second round of the 2005 national tournament before falling in penalty kicks. The 2004 campaign included a fourth-straight trip to the NCAA Tournament, winning the regular season crown for the fourth-straight season and the league tournament for the third consecutive year. That same year, Bennett surpassed Dan Harris in the UWM coaching ranks, becoming the school's all-time winningest coach in a Sept. 25 victory over Detroit. The Panthers' run in the NCAA Tournament included a 3-2 win at No. 16 San Francisco in the first round and an overtime loss at UC-Santa Barbara in the second round. UCSB made it the NCAA Championship game.


In 2003, Bennett earned a third consecutive Horizon League Coach of the Year award while leading UWM to its fifth-straight winning season. Milwaukee defeated Western Michigan, 4-1, to advance to the second round of the tourney for the second-straight year. All of this came on the heels of a record-breaking season in 2002 which included a school-record 19-2-1 record, a no. 8 national ranking — the highest in school history, an NCAA-best 19 consecutive wins and the program's first-ever NCAA Tournament win. Bennett also earned NSCAA Great Lakes Region Coach of the Year honors as well as League Coach of the Year accolades. In the 2001 season, UWM posted an 18-5 overall record, including a perfect 7-0 mark in Horizon League play. Under Bennett's direction, the Panthers advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1990 and for the fourth time in school history. “It's the next stage in my career and it affords me a real challenge and excitement that I'm ready for,” Bennett said. “I look forward to competing in the BIG EAST and the opportunity to re-create the brand of Marquette soccer.” Widely regarded as one of the top head coaches in college soccer, Bennett is a five-time winner of the Horizon League's Coach of the Year Award and twice was named Great Lakes Coach of the Year. Prior to taking over the head coaching position in 1996, Bennett served as an assistant coach at Wis.-Milwaukee from 1993 to 1995.

A tireless worker off the field, Bennett helped transform the UWM program by helping upgrade facilities and equipment. He oversaw the renovation of the playing surface at Engelmann Field and the locker room to reflect a more inspiring pre-game atmosphere. Bennett acquired and furnished the Panther Room to hold meetings, “chalk talks” and watch video on the 60-inch TV screen. A native of Great Britain, Bennett has made the Milwaukee area his home since 1985. Two years later, he started the British-American Soccer Program in Milwaukee. He is now the owner and director of the organization that operates as a camp and touring program for soccer players ages 6-18. Prior to his assistant position at UWM, Bennett coached the boys' and girls' varsity soccer teams at Nicolet High School for five years. He also has coaching experience at the adult club level in Wisconsin with F.C. Victoria, the Bavarian Soccer Club and the ODP. Bennett played collegiate soccer at Crewe & Alsager College in England, helping win the British Colleges National Championship in 1982. He was also honored as a Great Britain Colleges International Player for three years. Bennett played professional soccer for seven years in the U.S., including three seasons with the Milwaukee Wave of the NPSL (1985-87). Bennett is married to the former Julie Harper of Yorkshire, England. The couple has three children — Eston, Yve and Louis — and resides in Shorewood.

THE BENNETT RECORD Season Record 2008 MU 3-10-4 2007 MU 2-12-4 2006 MU 1-15-1 2005 UWM 14-4-5 2004 UWM 14-5-3 2003 UWM 16-6-1 2002 UWM 19-2-1 2001 UWM 18-5-0 2000 UWM 11-9-1 1999 UWM 12-8-1 1998 UWM 5-13-1 1997 UWM 13-8-1 1996 UWM 13-4-3 Career record 141-101-26

Pct. 29.4 22.2 8.8 71.7 70.5 71.7 88.6 78.3 54.7 59.5 28.9 61.4 72.5 57.5

Conf. Pct. Notes 1-8-2 18.2 1-9-1 12.5 0-11-0 0.0 First year at MU 4-2-1 71.4 NCAA Second Round 6-1-0 85.7 NCAA Second Round 6-0-1 92.9 NCAA Second Round 4-2-1 64.3 NCAA Second Round 7-0-0 100.0 NCAA First Round 4-2-1 64.3 5-1-1 78.6 2-4-1 35.7 6-1-0 85.7 Horizon season champs 5-1-2 75.0 50-34-9 58.6 Five NCAA appearances

Horizon League Regular Season Titles 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003 Horizon League Tournament Titles 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 NCAA Postseason Appearances 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Horizon League Coach of the Year 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003 Great Lakes Region Coach of the Year 2001, 2002

Marquette Men’s Soccer

7


Trent Furtsch Don Gramenz Chris Jahr

Antou Jallow David Marshall Evan Richardson Paul Royal

Joaquin Santos Trevor Sisk Tony Sanneh

Brad Swenby Dale Weiler Erik White Kyle Zenoni

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2009 Media Guide

TONY SANNEH (rear) San Jose (MLS)

Tighe Dombrowski

TIGHE DOMBROWSKI

Neil Dombrowski Scott Dombrowski

Milwaukee Rampage (A-League) Orlando Sharks (MISL) Draftee Chicago Fire (MLS) 4th Round Lafayette Swamprats (EISL) Milwaukee Wave (NPSL) Draftee Chicago Stingers (USISL) Chicago Fire (MLS) 5th Round Milwaukee Wave United (A-League) Milwaukee Wave (MISL) Detroit Ignition (MISL) Rochester Raging Rhinos (A-League) Milwaukee Wave (NPSL) Draftee Milwaukee Rampage (A-League) San Jose Earthquakes (MLS) 5th Round Sirius (Swedish Premiership) Milwaukee Wave (MISL) Draftee Milwaukee Wave (NPSL) Minnesota Thunder (A-League) Milwaukee Rampage (A-League) Milwaukee Wave (NPSL) Lehigh Valley Steam (A-League) Chicago Stingers (USISL) Gefle IF (Swedish Premiership) San Jose Earthquakes (MLS) Draftee Milwaukee Rampage (A-League) Minnesota Thunder (A-League) Milwaukee Wave (NPSL) New Jersey Stallions (USISL) South Jersey Barons (USL) Philadelphia Kixx (MISL) Milwaukee Rampage (A-League) Rockford Raptors (USISL) Chicago Power (NPSL) Milwaukee Wave (NPSL) Milwaukee Rampage (USISL) D.C. United (MLS) Hertha Berlin (German Bundesliga) FC Nurenberg (German Bundesliga) U.S. National Team (2002 World Cup) Minnesota Thunder (A-League) Orlando Sharks (MISL) Milwaukee Wave (NPSL) Milwaukee Rampage (A-League) Chicago Storm (MISL)

San Jose (MLS)

Joe Bernstein Matt Blouin Steve Bode Jon Coleman Tony Colvin Kevin Deck Chad Dombrowski

ANTOU JALLOW

In his 16 seasons coaching on the collegiate level, Louis Bennett has had 24 players move on to play in the professional ranks. One player, Tony Sanneh, played on the national team level, competing in the 2002 World Cup.

(U.S. National Team)

PLAYERS IN THE PROS


STAN ANDERSON Associate Head Coach 4th Season at Marquette University Stan Anderson is in his fourth season as Associate Head Coach with the Marquette men's soccer program. He is focused on coaching the Marquette goalkeepers, recruiting and community relations. Many in the soccer world know of Anderson’s success with goalkeepers, but his community relations efforts are unparalleled. Highlighting his highly successful efforts in his first year at Marquette was the Soccer Mom Camp, a unique five-week long clinic that promoted soccer among adult women and raised $5,000 for a breast cancer awareness group. Anderson joined the staff after the hiring of Louis Bennett as head coach in December 2005. Anderson and Bennett spent 10 years together at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where the Panthers compiled a 136-63-17 record and five straight NCAA Tournament berths, including four consecutive appearances in the second round of the tournament. “Working with someone for so long, you learn to recognize their strengths and weaknesses. The reason that we work so successfully in the past and want to continue to do so in the future is Stan does a lot of things well that I don't do well,” Bennett said. “It's like working with two head coaches. His knowledge of college sports, and especially college soccer, is superb. He specializes in on-campus recruiting, knowing the right places to go and the right people to see. And he’s probably one of the top goalkeeper coaches in the country.”

At UWM, Anderson was responsible for the coaching of the Panthers’ goalkeepers. Under his guidance, UWM led the Horizon League in goals against average for each of the last five seasons, posting 40 shutouts in that time. In 2005, Anderson coached UWM keeper Grant Fernstrum to a 0.466 goals against average, the best mark in the nation. Anderson has also received several personal accolades. He has been named to the nation’s top assistant coach list by College Soccer News three straight seasons. Anderson has ties to Bennett dating back to 1989 when the two played club soccer and coached at soccer camps together. He currently owns and operates Camp Shutout, based in metro Milwaukee, one of the most attended camps in the nation. He also is presently an Olympic Development Program staff head coach for the ’91 Wisconsin state team. From 1993-95, Anderson served as the boys assistant varsity coach at Fremd High School in Palatine, Ill., and helped lead the team to the state championship game in 1993. Prior to coaching at Fremd, he was an assistant coach for one season at Nicolet High School in Glendale, Wis. Anderson rewrote the record books at Wis.-Parkside, where he was named an All-American and selected to play in the Senior Bowl. His 14 shutouts in 1989 ranks second at the NCAA Division II level, and his 61 percent shutout percentage that season ranks sixth all-time. In 1990, Anderson graduated from Wis.-Parkside with a marketing degree and then played one season of professional soccer with the Dayton Dynamo. Born and raised in Palatine, Ill., he attended Palatine High School, where he was a member of the soccer team. He was inducted into the Palatine High School Hall of Fame in 2007. Anderson resides in Racine, Wis., with his wife, Mary, and their sons, Anthoney and Michael.

Marquette Men’s Soccer

9


STEVE BODE Assistant Coach 2nd Season at Marquette University Steve Bode enters his first season as assistant coach with the Marquette University men’s soccer program. Bode graduated from UW-Milwaukee in 2008, where he was recruited by MU head coach Louis Bennett, then head coach of the Panthers. He was named the school’s male Athlete of the Year and was also selected to receive the Herman Kluge Award, an annual honor given for academic and athletic achievement and dedication to community service, following the 2007-08 season. Twice Bode was named UWM’s Most Valuable Player. He started all 83 games he played in his career. In 2003 and in 2005, Bode matched a single-season school record starting 23 games for the Panthers.

Named the Horizon League’s Newcomer of the Year after the 2003 season, Bode redshirted in 2004 and went on to earn Third Team ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America honors in 2005 after the defender finished the season with a career-high 11 points on five goals and one assist. Bode, the anchor of UWM’s defensive units, helped guide the Panthers to the second round of the NCAA Tournament in each of his first two seasons on the field. UWM also captured two Horizon League regular season championships and three Horizon League Tournament titles. The Panthers won a total of 43 games in the four seasons Bode played. After wrapping up his career at UWM, Bode was drafted by the Chicago Fire in the MLS supplemental draft, and was also taken by the Milwaukee Wave. As a professional, Bode has played in reserve games with the Fire. Coach Bode lives in Wauwatosa, Wis., with his wife Ashley.

MARCELO SANTOS Volunteer Assistant Coach 2nd Season at Marquette University Volunteer assistant coach Marcelo Santos begins his first season with the Marquette men's soccer program. Santos, a native of Sao Paulo, Brazil, has served as a fulltime assistant coach with the Thunder Bay Chill of the USL's Premier Development League since April of 2007. Santos helped coach the Chill to a division title in his first season with the team. Thunder Bay finished the 2007 season with a 10-3-3 record after posted a 2-11-3 mark the season prior to Santos' arrival. In 2008, the Chill won the USL-PDL Championship with a mark of 18-2-1. His duties with the Chill include executing training sessions, game analysis, recruitment of players, overseeing the youth program and team administration.

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2009 Media Guide

Since 2006, Santos has played professionally with three clubs of the former Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL), including the Orlando Sharks, locally with the Milwaukee Wave and most recently with California Cougars. He also spent the 2004 season playing professional soccer in Sweden with Sandareds I.F. Santos played with the Thunder Bay Chill from 2005-2006, while also playing futsal for World United F.C. in San Francisco, Calif., where he captured a U.S. National Championship in 2006. After arriving in the United States in 2002, Santos played collegiately with Union College (Ky.), Alliant International University (Calif.) and at Holy Names University in Oakland, Calif. Santos began his coaching career as a senior at Holy Names, helping the head coach with team training and recruitment of student-athletes. He graduated from Holy Names with a bachelor's degree in business administration in May 2006.


SPORTS MEDICINE Marquette’s athletic trainers have one of the most important jobs in MU’s Department of Athletics — keeping the Golden Eagles healthy. The athletic training facility in the Al McGuire Center facility houses state-of-the-art equipment including an extensive hydrotherapy area. Marquette also has the resources of the Aurora Sports Medicine Institute and a family of team physicians to handle all athletic training and sports medicine needs.

LAUREN BOYLER Men’s Soccer Athletic Trainer 3rd Season at Marquette Lauren Boyler is in her second season as an athletic trainer for the Marquette men's soccer program. She is also involved with athletic training for the Golden Eagles women's tennis program. Boyler is on staff at the Aurora Sports Medicine Institute and is in her second year. She previously served as a graduate assistant athletic trainer at the University of Louisville, where she was involved with the Cardinals cross country and track and field teams. While at Louisville, Boyler earned a master's degree in Sports Administration. She earned a bachelor's degree in Kinesiology from DePauw University. A native of Waukesha, Wis., Boyler has been tied to the Marquette men's soccer program for the past eight years as an athletic trainer at Camp Shutout, a goalkeepers camp directed by the Associate Head Coach Stan Anderson.

Marquette Men’s Soccer

11


STRENGTH & CONDITIONING NATE HEYRMAN Strength and Conditioning 2nd Season at Marquette The goal for the strength and conditioning program of the Marquette soccer team is injury prevention, strengthening of muscles, joints and connective tissue and becoming a tougher soccer player. This is done through a year-round comprehensive, total body strength and conditioning program. This systematic program aggressively challenges the athlete from every angle and helps them overcome adverse situations both physically and mentally. The Golden Eagles conduct their strength training under the direction of head strength and conditioning coach Todd Smith and assistant strength and conditioning coach Alex Evans at the Al McGuire Center weight room. The facility is a 3,000square foot workout room that features 30 stations with Paramount and Trotter free-weight equipment and Tetrix stationary bicycles and climbers.

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2009 Media Guide


Marquette Men’s Soccer

13


10 Dan Addis Midfielder • RS-Senior • Dublin, Ohio/Dublin Scioto

ADDIS’ CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2005 17 0 0 2006 17 2 0 2007 18 3 2 2008 Did Not Play - Redshirt Totals 52 5 2

Pts 0 4 8

Shots 10 19 19

12

48

Shot% 00.0 10.5 15.8

SOG 7 7 11

10.4

25

SOG% 70.0 36.8 57.9 52.1

2008: Addis garnered redshirt status due to injury. 2007: Addis emerged as a team leader and significant contributer during his junior season with the Golden Eagles. One of five players to play in all of the team's 18 contests, Addis made 17 starts overall. His eight points tied for the team lead, while his three goals, including 11 shots on goal, led MU. Addis was credited with the Marquette's first goal of the season, unassisted, in a 3-1 loss to No. 25 UIC. Addis also netted a goals against Georgetown and UW-Milwaukee. Addis also recorded a pair of assists. 2006: Making significant improvement from is freshman to his sophomore season, Addis proved to be one of Marquette's more dangerous players. He had two goals on the year amongst his 19 shots. He scored his first career goal in the season opener at Loyola (Ill.) (Aug. 25), tallying the first goal in the Louis Bennett era. He scored two matches later, picking up MU's score in a contest at Loyola Marymount (Sept. 2). He played in all 15 games, starting 12. 2005: Addis proved to be a solid freshman addition to the squad. He played in all 17 contests, starting 13. He recorded 10 shots -- seven were on goal -- during his freshman year. Prior to Marquette: Addis was a midfielder and started every varsity game over his four-year career for division I Dublin Scioto High School, where he scored 42 goals and had 38 assists. He was a four-time all-conference and all-region selection. He was a National College Soccer Scout All-American selection as a senior. Addis was

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2009 Media Guide

also a member of the OFC/Team Dayton Club Team that won seven state titles, were runners up once, and were regional finalists twice.

Personal: Daniel Jacob Addis is the son of Doug and Julie Addis. He is a business administration major.


DAN

Marquette Men’s Soccer

15


21 Michael Alfano Defender • Sophomore • Sussex, Wis./Hamilton-Sussex

ALFANO’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2008 13 0 0 Totals 13 0 0

2008: Alfano started in the first 13 games of the season before an injury sidelined him for the final four games. In 1,131 minutes, he cemented a back line that allowed just 21 goals in 201 shot attempts. In the final four games of the year, Marquette allowed eight goals without Alfano on the field. He supported the offense with four shots, two on goal. 2007: Alfano joined the Marquette squad during the spring season and impressed the coaching staff enough to garner valuable playing time during exhibition contests. That experience has proven to be key to Alfano's development. Prior to Marquette: Alfano was a three-year starter at Hamilton-Sussex under head coach Adam Marshall. He was named the school's Student-Athlete of the Year in 2007 and graduated at the top of his class. Alfano was a second team All-Greater Metro Conference selection as a senior and an honorable mention selection the year prior. An outstanding all-around athlete, Alfano was the kicker for the Chargers football team and also competed in the high jump. He played club soccer for FC Milwaukee under coach John Sweeney. FC Milwaukee won the 2008 state championship. Alfano also played under Joe Luedke for the Milwaukee Sport Club, where Alfano helped his team reach the USA Cup finals. Personal: Born March 23, 1989, Michael Alfano is the son of Gino and Renee Alfano. He is majoring in marketing and international business.

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2009 Media Guide

Pts 0 0

Shots 4 4

Shot% 00.0 00.0

SOG 2 2

SOG% 50.0 50.0


MICHAEL

Marquette Men’s Soccer

17


31 Ben Calvopina Goalkeeper • Sophomore • Palatine, Ill./Palatine

CALVOPINA’S CAREER STATS Year Games Min. GA 2008 ---Totals ----

2008: Calvopina did not play in his first season, as goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski played every minute in net for the Golden Eagles. Prior to Marquette: Calvopina was an All-MidSuburban League honoree each of the past three seasons playing for Palatine High School and head coach Willie Fillian. Calvopina also served as team captain for the last two years. He led Palatine to a regional championship in 2007 as well as a conference title in 2005. Calvopina played club soccer with the highly regarded Chicago Magic under head coach Todd Bailey. In 2007, Calvopina helped lead the Magic to a state title and a Super Y-League U-18 National Championship. Personal: Benjamin A. Calvopina was born Nov. 2, 1989. He is the youngest child of Ozzie and Dianne Calvopina and is majoring in chemistry and education.

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2009 Media Guide

GAA ---

Sv ---

W/L/T ---

SHO ---


BEN

Marquette Men’s Soccer

19


31 David Check Goalkeeper • Sophomore • Mequon, Wis./Homestead

CHECK’S CAREER STATS Year Games Min. 2008 --Totals ---

2008: Check did not play in his first season, as goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski played every minute in net for the Golden Eagles. Prior to Marquette: Check helped lead the Homestead High School Highlanders to a North Shore Conference title in double overtime his senior year under head coach Rich Dorn. Check lettered in three varsity sports -- track, baseball and soccer -- while at Homestead. He has also played under coach Sinisa Angelovski for the Mequon Soccer Club, which has produced five national team players, three All-Americans, 15 professional players, and three MLS players. Personal: David Charles Check was born April 16, 1990. He is the son of Charlie and Lynn Check and majoring in engineering.

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2009 Media Guide

GA ---

GAA ---

Sv ---

W/L/T ---

SHO ---


DAVID

Marquette Men’s Soccer

21


8 Anthony Colaizzi Midfielder • Junior • Gurnee, Ill./Warren Township

COALIZZI’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2007 17 0 1 2008 14 4 3 Totals 31 4 4

Pts 1 11 12

Shots 10 27 37

Shot% 00.0 14.8 10.8

SOG 5 13 18

SOG% 50.0 48.1 48.6

2008: The only Golden Eagle to tally double-digit points, Colaizzi finished his sophomore season with 11 points off of a team-high four goals and a team-leading three assists. He also led the team in shots, shots on goal and assists. In the regular season and home opener against Bryant (Sept. 1), he netted two goals and an assist, including his first collegiate goal in the 25th minute. He also registered goals against Notre Dame (Sept. 11) and Louisville (Sept. 26). Colaizzi's 0.79 points per game ranked him tenth amongst BIG EAST players. With three yellow cards and two red cards on the season, he was forced to sit out three games, playing in 14. Colaizzi spent the summer playing with the Chicago Fire's Super 20s PDL team along with MU teammates Billy Von Rueden and Samuel Etim. Colaizzi started for the squad which captured a national title by claiming the USL-20 League Championship with a 2-1 win over Toronto. Colaizzi tallied five assists during the tournament. 2007: In his debut season, Colaizzi provided the team with solid play and a quick first step. Colaizzi started his first college game at Denver (Aug. 31) and also recorded his first shot on goal. He played a total of 17 games, including 10 starts for the Golden Eagles. His 17 games were the most of any freshmen on the roster. Colaizzi started each of the last seven games of the year. He tallied one point on the year, an assist at Seton Hall (Oct. 6). He concluded the year with ten total shots and a shots on goal percentage of .500. Colaizzi was one of three Golden Eagles (Billy Von Rueden and Anthony Colaizzi) to play with the Chicago Fire's (MLS) PDL team during the 2008 summer. Prior to Marquette: Anthony Colaizzi earned NSCAA All-America status and Illinois State Player of the Year honors after his four-year ca-

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2009 Media Guide

reer playing for Jim McNamara at Warren Township High School. He scored 25 goals and 20 assists as a senior and was the Chicago Sun Times and Pioneer Press player of the year. He was also selected first team all-state by the Chicago Tribune and was an all-area selection by the Daily Herald. He set his school record with 70 points in his senior season, guiding the team to a

26-3 record and a spot in the state championship game. He played club soccer for John Dalinsky with the Chicago Wind with fellow incoming player Stefan Antonijevic. Personal: Anthony James Colaizzi was born May 1, 1989, and is the son of Christopher and Carol Colaizzi. He has an older sister, Ashley.


ANTHONY

Marquette Men’s Soccer

23


29 Keenan Flynn Goalkeeper • Junior • Sacramento, Calif./Christian Brothers

FLYNN’S CAREER STATS (at Marquette) Year Games Min. GA GAA 2008 ----Totals -----

2008: Flynn did not play in his first season, as goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski played every minute in net for the Golden Eagles. Prior to Marquette: Flynn played his freshman (2006) and sophomore (2007) seasons at the College at Saint Mary's of California, a member of the West Coast Conference (WCC). Flynn played in four games as a freshman and 11 of 18 games as a sophomore. In 2007, Flynn posted three shutouts and his 1.10 GAA set a school record. Flynn graduated from Christian Brothers High School in his hometown of Sacramento, Calif. He played two years of varsity soccer and was captain of the squad in 2006, while helping the Falcons win a conference title in 2005. Upon graduating from high school, Flynn spent part of 2006 playing for a pair of amateur teams in Den Haag, Netherlands. Personal: Born Sept. 20, 1988, Keenan is the son of Terry and Joyce Flynn. He also has two older sisters -- Elizabeth and Catherine. Elizabeth played soccer at Saint Mary's College of California and Catherine played water polo at Santa Clara Unversity. Keenan had two grandparents that attended Marquette. Flynn is majoring in Health Science.

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2009 Media Guide

Sv ---

W/L/T ---

SHO ---


KEENAN

Marquette Men’s Soccer

25


12 Michael Greene Forward • Senior • Brooklyn Park, Minn./Osseo

GREENE’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2006 13 0 0 2007 17 0 2 2008 14 0 0 Totals 44 0 2

Pts 0 2 0 2

Shots 12 12 14 38

Shot% 00.0 00.0 00.0 00.0

SOG 6 3 7 16

SOG% 50.0 25.0 50.0 42.1

2008: Greene started all 14 games in which he appeared. With seven of his 14 shots on goal, Greene tallied a .500 shot on goal percentage and averaged one shot per game in 1162 minutes. 2007: Michael Greene built on a solid first-year in the program and only improved as a sophomore. Greene started eight games at forward for the Golden Eagles and saw action in all but one game. Despite a season which saw somewhat of an offensive drought with a team average of 0.62 goals per game and 12 goals in 18 games, Greene provided two assists in a win against Cincinnati (Sept. 30) and a 1-1 draw versus UW-Milwaukee (Oct. 31). In the Cincinnati game, Greene sent a beautiful through ball from the top of the box where Nick Kay finished it off just inside the far post for the game's first goal. A forward with a quick and dangerous shot, he took 12 total shots and recorded a .250 shots on goal percentage. 2006: Greene was a late arrival at Marquette as he was ineligible at season's beginning due to some questions about his schooling in Liberia. Once squared away, Greene quickly joined the team and became an immediate force in the lineup. He arrived on campus after the start of the semester and missed all of the pre-season workouts. He jumped into the lineup just days after his first practice, making his collegiate debut against DePaul (Sept. 8). He made his first collegiate start one match later against USF (Sept. 10). Greene had a busy freshman year at Marquette, also competing on the track and field team. Greene, as the lone Liberian on MU's campus, had the opportunity to escort Liberian president Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf in her visit to the school. Prior to Marquette: Greene was an all-conference selection and league MVP. He was a two-

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2009 Media Guide

time all-state and all-conference selection and was named his league's rookie of the year. He was also a goal scorer in the state section semifinal game, leading his team to a sectional runner-up spot. He also played club for Wings Soccer Club. Prior to coming to the United States, Greene spent most of his life in Liberia, where his

love for soccer began. He has also lived in Ghana. Personal: Greene was born December 18, 1985, and is the son of George Greene and Catherine Hill.


MICHAEL Marquette Men’s Soccer

27


2 Amilcar Herrera Midfielder • Sophomore • Panama City, Panama/Milwaukee Riverside

HERRERA’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2008 17 0 0 Totals 17 0 0

Pts 0 0

his first collegiate start against Bryant University (Sept. 1) and played 62 minutes, tallying two shots.

2008: Herrera started 10 games and made appearances in all 17 games, one of nine Golden Eagles to do so. In his debut season, he played a career-high 1,000 minutes in a loss at Georgetown (Nov. 1). In over a thousand minutes, he put six shots on goal of 17 total shots. Hererra made

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2009 Media Guide

Prior to Marquette: Herrera was a four-time First Team All-Milwaukee City Conference performer at Riverside University High School where he played under head coach Tyrell Perkins. At Riverside, Herrera was part of a conference championship in 2006. He scored 20 goals as a freshman, a school record. Herrera was one of the stars of

Shots 17 17

Shot% 00.0 00.0

SOG 6 6

SOG% 35.3 35.3

the FC Milwaukee club team under head coach Billy Solberg. Herrera's FC Milwaukee squad finished as national runner-up in 2006 and as national finalist in 2007. Personal: Amilcar Reyes Herrera was born Feb. 10, 1990 in Panama. He is the oldest child of Reyes and Jeannette Herrera and is majoring in Business. Herrera attended the same high school (Riverside University HS), where he played with current MU teammate Hector Navarro.


AMILCAR

Marquette Men’s Soccer

29


7 Tim Jallow Defender • Senior • Uppsala, Sweden/IK Sirius

JALLOW’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2006 14 0 0 2007 18 0 2 2008 16 0 2 Totals 48 0 4

Pts 0 2 2 4

2008: Jallow, a constant presence at the defensive end for the Golden Eagles, started 16 games in his third season. Jallow registered the second assist of the season against Bryant (Sept. 1), feeding Anthony Colazzi to put Marquette ahead 2-0. He added another assist to Colazzi against Louisville (Sept. 26). He helped the defensive line hold opponents to a .104 shot percentage and 21 goals on 201 shot attempts. 2007: In his second season, Jallow saw action in a team-high 18 games, starting all but one. Jallow contributed to a strong defensive line which limited opponents to 28 goals, a .111 shot percentage, and 14.1 shots per game. On the back line, Jallow supported the offensive with two assists, both in 1-1 ties, against in-state foes UWGreen Bay (Sept. 9) and UW-Milwaukee (Oct. 31). Against Connecticut, he recorded a personal season-best three shots in an attempt to provide scoring from the back against the nation's thenNo. 2 team. (Oct. 27). 2006: Marquette's most played freshman, Jallow stepped into his role as a central defender. Only nagging injuries and illnesses kept him out of the lineup as he played in 14 games, starting 13. He made his collegiate debut and earned his first career start in the win over Loyola (Ill.) (Aug. 25) in the season opener. His play was also crucial to a shutout in the second game of the season, a 0-0 tie with Denver (Aug. 27). Prior to Marquette: Jallow played with IK Sirius in Uppsala and led his team to the quarterfinal round in the Swedish National Youth Championships in 2005.

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2009 Media Guide

Personal: Born December 10, 1987, son of Bouba and Lena Jallow and has three siblings, Pa, Antou and Ted. His brother, Antou, was a standout at UWM under current MU coach Louis Bennett. Jallow is a business administration major.

Shots 2 5 2 9

Shot% 00.0 00.0 00.0 00.0

SOG 1 3 0 4

SOG% 50.0 60.0 00.0 44.4


TIM

Marquette Men’s Soccer

31


9 Nick Kay Forward • Senior • Stevens Point, Wis./Stevens Point Area

KAY’S CAREER STATS Year Games G 2005 8 1 2006 4 0 2007 14 4 2008 17 2 Totals 43 7

A 0 1 0 1 2

Pts 2 1 8 5 16

Shots 4 3 18 14 39

Shot% 25.0 00.0 22.2 14.3 17.9

SOG 2 0 8 11 21

SOG% 50.0 00.0 44.4 78.6 53.8

2008: One of nine Golden Eagles to appear in all 17 games, Kay started all but one match. His .786 shot on goal percentage ranked first on the team amongst players with two or more shots during the fall. Kay netted the game winner at Cincinnati (Sept. 28) and tallied the equalizer against Seton Hall days later (Oct. 11) on a header to the far post. Against Louisville (Sept. 26), he set up the lone Marquette goal of the match, feeding the ball to Colaizzi for the finish. Kay finished the season third on the team in points, goals, shot percentage, and shot on goal percentage. 2007: Kay had a breakthrough season, garnering the team's Most Improved Player Award and the Golden Boot Award for most goals scored. Following setbacks that kept Kay out of most of his freshman (2005) and redshirt-sophomore (2006) seasons, Kay tallied four goals on 18 shots, including eight shots on goal as a sophomore in 2007. He found the back of the net twice and was credited with the game-winner in Marquette's first-ever victory in the BIG EAST, a 2-1 decision over Cincinnati (Sept. 30). Kay's header in double-overtime defeated the Bearcats in the 104th minute of action. He was subsequently named to the league's Honor Roll for the week for his performance. Kay's other two goals were also came at opportune times, as he tallied the equalizers in a 1-1 tie at in-state rival Wisconsin (Oct. 17) and a 2-1 overtime loss at No. 2-ranked Connecticut. Kay played in a total of 14 matches and made 10 starts as a forward. 2006: Like his freshman season, Kay saw limited action as a sophomore. Unlike his freshman season, his lack of time was due to injury, illness and other setbacks that kept him from re-taking the field. While playing just four times, he scored one point recording an assist against Loyola (Ill.) (Aug. 25). He earned starts against Loyola (Ill.)

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2009 Media Guide

and Denver (Aug. 27) and played in the next two matches, but illness slowed him down and he was unable to regain the strength to return to the lineup. He earned a medical hardship as a result, preserving his sophomore season. He did flourish for his second straight spring, showing his potential for the upcoming season. 2005: Kay saw action in half of Marquette's matches as a freshman, playing in eight of 17. He scored one goal on four shots during the year. His tally came in MU's 3-1 loss at Seton Hall (Oct. 26). In the spring, Kay blossomed, turning into a goal scoring option for Marquette.

Prior to Marquette: Kay was team captain at SPASH as a senior, earning second-team allstate honors after an 11 goal, 11 assist season. He was a two-time all-conference selection, earning player-of-the-year honors as a senior. Kay's team was conference champion his sophomore season. He tallied six goals and two assists as a junior and had five goals and three assists as a sophomore. Personal: Nicolas T. Kay is the son of Ted and Ida Kay. He was born on February 7, 1987, in Lexington, Ky. He has a younger brother, Tom, and he is a biology major.


NICK

Marquette Men’s Soccer

33


14 Tom Lynn Midfielder/Forward • Senior • Libertyville, Ill./Libertyville

LYNN’S CAREER STATS Year Games G 2006 8 0 2007 18 0 2008 17 1 Totals 43 1

2008: Lynn, one of nine Marquette players to see action in every game, started in ten matches on the year. Off the bench, he contributed an assist against Bryant (Sept. 1) and a goal at UW-Milwaukee (Oct. 22) in the Milwaukee Cup. His first career goal was assisted by Billy Von Rueden, and came outside of the box on the right side. Lynn also registered nine shots and four shots on goal in 969 minutes. 2007: One of five Golden Eagles to play in all of the team's 18 matches, Lynn was a solid contributor in 2007. In addition, Lynn made eight starts at

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2009 Media Guide

A 0 1 1 2

Pts 0 1 3 4

the midfield position. He tallied eight shots, five of which were on goal, and was credited with one point on one assist. Lynn assisted teammate Nick Kay on MU's go-ahead goal in the 33rd minute versus Cincinnati, as the Golden Eagles went on to win their first-ever match in the BIG EAST in double overtime. Lynn was also selected to receive the team's Scholar Athlete Award at the annual postseason banquet. 2006: Lynn found action in eight games, starting four in his first season. He made his collegiate debut in MU's first conference game of the 2006 season, a game at Cincinnati (Sept. 15). The next outing, he made his first career start in the Louisville (Sept. 17) contest. In his eight games played all came in BIG EAST action.

Shots 1 8 9 18

Shot% 00.0 00.0 11.1 5.6

SOG 0 5 4 9

SOG% 00.0 62.5 44.4 50.0

Prior to Marquette: The Chicago Daily Herald named Lynn to their all-area team as a senior. He was also named to the Chicago Fire MLS AllState All-Academic Team Special Mention list. Lynn scored 25 goals and added seven assists in his senior year, leading Libertyville to a regional final spot for the third straight year. He played club for FC United Select, where he helped the club to a second place finish in the Northern Illinois Soccer League in 2005. Personal: Lynn is the son of Mike and Peggy Lynn. He has a brother, Brian. A National Honor Society member, Lynn is an electrical engineering major.


TOM Marquette Men’s Soccer

35


24 Chris Madsen Forward • Sophomore • Brookfield, Wis./Central

MADSEN’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2008 ---Totals ----

2009: During the summer he helped his club team the Milwaukee Kickers win the USASA U20 National Championship, netting two goals in the tournament. 2008: Madsen did not play in his first season. Prior to Marquette: Madsen was a 2007 first team all-state and all-region honoree playing under head coach Jon Mroz at Brookfield (Wis.) Central High School. As team captain in 2007, Madsen scored 19 goals to go along with eight assists. He played goalkeeper during his junior season at Central High School. As goalkeeper, Madsen registered a single-season school record 11 shutouts. He played club soccer for current Marquette women's soccer associate head coach, Frank Pelaez, as a member of Brookfield U-18 Red. Personal: Christopher Mark Madsen was born April 8, 1990. He is the son of Mark and Nancy Madsen and is majoring in history education.

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2009 Media Guide

Pts ---

Shots ---

Shot% ---

SOG ---

SOG% ---


CHRIS

Marquette Men’s Soccer

37


5 Calum Mallace Midfielder • Sophomore • Torphichen, Scotland/Henry Sibley (Minn.)

MALLACE’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2008 17 1 1 Totals 17 1 1

2008: Mallace made appearances in all 17 games for the Golden Eagles, and started in 12. In his first college game, he came off the bench against Bryant (Sept. 1) and logged 28 minutes. Six days later, Mallace marked his first career start against Columbia (Sept. 7). His first points of the season came with an assist on Nick Kay's gamewinning goal at Cincinnati (Sept. 28). Mallace tallied 25 shots on the season, with a career-high four shots apiece coming against Pittsburgh (Oct. 5) and Connecticut (Oct. 18). With eleven consecutive starts to end the season, Mallace tallied the game-winning goal in a 2-0 victory against UW-Milwaukee at the Milwaukee Cup (Oct. 22). Prior to Marquette: Mallace was a five-year starter at Henry Sibley High School and played under head coach Terry Doud. He began play with Sibley as an eighth grader, earning the team's Rookie of the Year honors. Mallace is a two-time Minnesota Class AA Boys All-State selection, team captain and was named MVP following his junior and senior seasons. Mallace was honored as a member of the NSCAA/Adidas High School Boys All-Region V team. Under head coach Don Gramenz, Mallace helped lead his Woodbury Predators club team to a championship in the USA Cup, leading the team in goals in 2007. Personal: Calum Mallace was born Jan. 10, 1990 and is the son of Jim and Val Mallace. He is a native of Scotland. His brother Craig played for the Minnesota Thunder of the United Soccer Leagues' First Division. Mallace is deciding on a major.

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2009 Media Guide

Pts 3 3

Shots 25 25

Shot% 4.0 4.0

SOG 6 6

SOG% 24.0 24.0


CALUM

Marquette Men’s Soccer

39


4 Scott Miller Midfielder/Defender • RS-Sophomore • Jefferson City, Mo./Helias

MILLER’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2007 15 2 0 2008 2 0 0 Totals 17 2 0

2008: Miller got off to a slow start in his second year after a knee injury sidelined him for most of September. He started in two games, against Syracuse (Sept. 19) and St. John's (Sept. 21) before an emergency appendectomy forced him to sit out the remainder of the season. In two starts, Miller played 156 minutes for Marquette. 2007: Miller was selected as Marquette's Newcomer of the Year following a stellar freshman season, as the central defender became the biggest force on a solid Golden Eagles backline. Miller made 14 starts in his debut season and played in a total of 15 matches. His four points and two goals ranked third on the team. He scored his first collegiate goal at Seton Hall (Oct. 6) and netted his second goal in the regular season finale versus Pittsburgh (Nov. 3). Miller is a smart defender as evidenced by just two yellow cards during the season. He tallied a total of seven shots on goal. Prior to Marquette: Miller played all four seasons for coach Chuck Register at Helias High School, where he scored 62 career goals and had 26 career assists. He was a first-team all-state selection as a senior and a second-team selection as a junior. He was his region's player of the year as a senior and was a four time all-district selection. Miller played club soccer for the St. Louis Soccer Club (formerly Busch Soccer Club) and was coached by Mark Brcic. He scored 15 goals and 12 assists in two years with the St. Louis Soccer Club. Personal: Scott Michael Miller is the son of Lawrence and Therese Miller. He has an older sister, Becca, and a younger brother, Kevin.

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2009 Media Guide

Pts 4 0 4

Shots 10 0 10

Shot% 20.0 20.0 20.0

SOG 7 0 7

SOG% 70.0 00.0 70.0


SCOTT

Marquette Men’s Soccer

41


16 Paul Monsen Defender • Sophomore • Stoughton, Wis./Shattuck-St. Mary’s (Minn.)

MONSEN’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2008 17 0 0 Totals 17 0 0

2008: In his premiere season, Monsen started in every game for the Golden Eagles, one of only four players to do so. He helped the defensive line hold opponents to a .104 shot percentage and 21 goals on 201 shot attempts. Monsen joined Matt Pyzdrowski and Billy Von Rueden as one of three Marquette players to play every minute. Prior to Marquette: Monsen spent the final two years of his high school career playing and training with the Shattuck-St.Mary's residency program in Fairbault, Minn. He was named the team's Most Improved Player in 2007 under head coach Tim Carter. Previously, Monsen was an All-Southern Badger Conference defender as a sophomore at Stoughton (Wis.) High School. He also trains with the Wisconsin Youth Soccer Olympic Development Program. Monsen was part of the "1990" team that played in Costa Rica, Feb. 10-17, 2008, and advanced through regionals. The 2008 U-18 team was a national finalist in Little Rock, Ark. Personal: Paul Noah Victor Monsen was born April 10, 1990. He was born and raised on a farm in Stoughton, Wis. He is the son of Paul and Kim Monsen. Monsen's sister, Anna, ran track and played volleyball at the University of Oklahoma. He is majoring in business.

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2009 Media Guide

Pts 0 0

Shots 4 4

Shot% 00.0 00.0

SOG 2 2

SOG% 50.0 50.0


PAUL

Marquette Men’s Soccer

43


18 Hector Navarro Midfielder • RS-Junior • Milwaukee, Wis./Riverside

NAVARRO’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2006 15 0 0 2007 Did Not Play - Redshirt 2008 17 3 0 Totals 32 3 0

2008: Navarro appeared in all 17 games for the Golden Eagles, making 10 starts. He netted three goals, bookending the season with one in the season opener against Bryant (Sept. 1) and two in the final game against Georgetown (Nov. 1). The only player on the squad to register points without an assist, Navarro accounted for the second highest number of points on the team with six. His 18 shots ranked third on the team, and his .167 shot percentage led the squad. Navarro garnered BIG EAST Honor Roll status the week of November 4 after tallying two goals against Georgetown (Nov. 1). 2007: Navarro did not play in 2007 due to redshirt status, but showed great strides during the 2008 spring season. He will be expected to contribute again immediately this fall. 2006: Navarro played in 15 games his freshman season, starting six. He made his collegiate debut and started in MU's win over Loyola (Ill.) (Aug. 25). He proved to be a pesky midfielder as a freshman and found his way into the offensive push at times. He had nine shots on the season, launching a season-high three in the season finale against Georgetown (Oct. 21). Prior to Marquette: Navarro was a second-team all-state selection and league Most Valuable Player at Milwaukee Riverside. He was a firstteam all-conference selection as senior and was a second-team selection as a junior. He was his league's Freshman of the Year in his first season. Navarro played club for the Simba Lions. Personal: Navarro was born on February 16, 1988, to Leticia Cerda. He has three sisters and one brother. He is a history major.

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2009 Media Guide

Pts 0

Shots 9

6 6

18 27

Shot% 00.0

SOG 1

16.7 11.1

9 10

SOG% 11.1 50.0 37.0


HECTOR

Marquette Men’s Soccer

45


27 Greg Pignataro Defender • Sophomore • Algonquin, Ill./Jacobs

NAVARRO’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2008 ---Totals ----

2008: Pignataro did not play in his first season. Prior to Marquette: Pignataro was a team captain and two-time All-Fox Valley Conference performer at H.D. Jacobs High School under head coach Jim Dzialo. Pignataro helped the Jacobs High Golden Eagles win the regional championship in triple overtime in 2007 and finished sixth all-time at the school in total points. He was named a Northwest Herald All-Area Second Team selection following his senior season. Pignataro played club soccer for the Chicago Magic North under coach Karl Smith. Personal: Gregory Redmond James Pignataro was born March 22, 1990. He is the son of Philip and Martha Pignataro and is majoring in exercise science.

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2009 Media Guide

Pts ---

Shots ---

Shot% ---

SOG ---

SOG% ---


GREG

Marquette Men’s Soccer

47


1 Matt Pyzdrowski Goalkeeper • Senior • Hinsdale, Ill./Fenwick

PYZDROWSKI’S CAREER STATS Year Games Min. GA 2006 14 1191:35 24 2007 12 1074:54 17 2008 17 1622:15 21 Totals 43 3888:44 62

2008: In his third season, Pyzdrowski joined Billy Von Rueden and Paul Monsen as one of three Marquette players to play every minute in 17 games. His goals against average of 1.17 was amongst the top 100 in the nation, a career best, and ninth in program history for a single season. On the back line, Pyzdrowski tallied four shutouts, double the number in his first two seasons. His eight saves against Cincinnati (Sept. 28) tied a career-high. Over the course of the season, he proved resilient in 92:15 minutes of extra time, recording four double-overtime ties and just one loss to No. 5 St. John's on a penalty kick in double overtime. He was named the BIG EAST Goalkeeper of the Week on Sept. 29, and was recognized with a BIG EAST Honor Roll selection the week of Sept. 8 after opening the season with one goal allowed in three games, including two double overtime shutouts. Pyzdrowski garnered national attention the week of Sept. 29 when he was named to the College Soccer News National Team of the Week. The goalkeeper led a defensive line that held opponents to a .104 shot percentage on 201 shot attempts. Pyzdrowski rose in the Marquette record books, currently ranked sixth all-time with 3888:44 minutes in goal, seventh all-time with a 1.43 goals against average, tied for seventh with six career shutouts, and eighth all-time with 148 career saves. 2007: Pyzdrowski played in 12 matches with 11 starts. He held eight teams to one goal or less, and posted the team's lone shutout of the season against West Virginia (Oct. 24). He recorded a 1-6-4 personal record in goal, playing over 1000 minutes. During the course of the season, Pyzdrowski saw just under 85 minutes of overtime action, recording four ties and allowing one goal in extra time against Connecticut (Oct. 27). He made a career-high eight saves against Connecticut (Oct. 27) in 96:45. En route to tallying 46

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2009 Media Guide

GAA 1.81 1.42 1.17 1.43

total saves his sophomore campaign, Pyzdrowski owned a 1.42 goals against average and a .730 save percentage 2006: Pllayed and started in 14 games. Originally, he was supposed to split time in goal with Marc Dettmann, but a untimely pregame injury forced Pyzdrowski into the net against Loyola (Ill.) (Aug. 25). Marquette won that game 2-1 and Pyzdrowski made four saves. The next contest, he stopped six shots in a 0-0 shutout against Denver (Aug. 27). Twice he recorded a careerhigh seven saves, stopping that amount at Cincinnati (Sept. 15) and at West Virginia (Oct. 7).

Sv 47 46 55 148

W/L/T 1-10-1 1-6-4 3-10-4 5-26-9

SHO 1 1 4 6

Prior to Marquette: Pyzdrowski was team captain and sectional goalkeeper of the year as a senior at Fenwick High School in Oak Park, Ill. He was the Catholic League MVP and was First Team All-Region. He also played club soccer for the Milwaukee Bavarians. Personal: Born August 17, 1986, Pyzdrowski is the son of Bob and Sue Pyzdrowski. He has three siblings, Kate, Cali and John. An honor roll student, he is a marketing and finance major.


MATT

Marquette Men’s Soccer

49


23 Matt Stummer Midfielder/Forward • Junior • Woodridge, Ill./Benet Acad.

STUMMER’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2007 11 0 0 2008 17 1 1 Totals 28 1 1

2008: In his second year, Stummer started every game for the Golden Eagles, one of four players to do so. In the season opener against Bryant (Sept. 1), Stummer tallied a goal and an assist, the first points of his collegiate career. He assisted Navarro on the first goal of the game, and scored Marquette's third goal on a one-touch from eight yards out off of a cross from Anthony Colaizzi. His 18 shots and six shots on goal were a career best in 1416 minutes. 2007: Stummer made giant strides during his freshman season and a solid spring positioned him into being an impact player immediately for the Golden Eagles in 2008. Stummer played in 11 matches and made a total of seven starts. He tallied five shots overall, two of which were on goal. His first collegiate start was at UIC (Sept. 2). Prior to Marquette: Stummer was a four year letter winner who played for coach Henry Wind at Benet Academy. He concluded his career with an all-state selection by the Chicago Tribune in 2006 and was an all-area selection by the Naperville Sun, Chicago Daily Herald and the Chicago Sun Times. The Libertyville Suburban Newspaper and the Daily Herald named him area player of the year. A three year varsity starter, Stummer was an East Suburban Catholic Conference all-conference selection three times. Stummer played club soccer for David Richardson with the Chicago Sockers. He helped his club team to a U16 national club championship in 2006, a state semifinalist spot in 2004 and a Midwest Regional League title in 2003. Personal: Matthew R. Stummer is the son of Robert and Joan Stummer. He has an older sister, Shannon, and an older brother, Christopher.

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2009 Media Guide

Pts 0 3 3

Shots 5 18 23

Shot% 00.0 5.6 4.3

SOG 2 6 8

SOG% 40.0 33.3 34.8


MATT

Marquette Men’s Soccer

51


22 Billy Von Rueden Defender • Senior • Mequon, Wis./Marquette

VON RUEDEN’S CAREER STATS Year Games G A 2006 17 0 0 2007 18 0 3 2008 17 0 3 Totals 52 0 6

Pts 0 3 3 6

Shots 2 7 18 27

Shot% 00.0 00.0 00.0 00.0

SOG 1 2 4 7

SOG% 50.0 28.6 22.2 25.9

2008: Von Rueden, one of four Golden Eagles to start every game, helped limit opponents to a .104 shot percentage on 201 shot attempts. His three assists, including two against Milwaukee (Oct. 22) and one against Georgetown (Nov. 1), tied him for first on the team. Von Rueden joins Matt Pyzdrowski and Paul Monsen as one of three Marquette players to play every minute for the Golden Eagles. He tallied 18 shots on the season, a career-high, with four on frame. Von Rueden spent the summer playing with the Chicago Fire's Super 20s PDL team. He started for the squad which captured a national title by claiming the USL-20 League Championship with a 2-1 win over Toronto. 2007: Von Rueden was named the team's Most Valuable Player and Man of the Year following his sophomore season. He was the only player to start all 18 matches for the Golden Eagles. Offensively, the defender tallied three points on three assists -- tying a team high -- in addition to bolstering a solid backline. Von Rueden assisted Marquette's first goal in a 2-1 win over Xavier (Sept. 7) and assisted the game-winner in a 2-1 double overtime win over Cincinnati (Sept. 30), giving the Golden Eagles their first-ever BIG EAST Conference victory. His third assist of the season was the equalizer in the 87th minute versus No. 2-ranked Connecticut. MU eventually lost to the Huskies, 2-1, in overtime. Von Rueden was one of three Golden Eagles (Anthony Colaizzi and Sam Etim) to play with the Chicago Fire's (MLS) PDL team during the 2008 summer. 2006: Von Rueden played in every contest as a freshman, starting all but one. He was one of just four players to play every game and set the team high for starts with 16. His talent was used as an outside back playing the majority of minutes

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2009 Media Guide

every game. His size and strength was a commodity as he helped solidify the Marquette defense.

Year. He plays club for the Brookfield Soccer Club and was a member of the State ODP and Regional ODP teams.

Prior to Marquette: Von Rueden was a first-team all-state player as well as an all-area team member and all-area player of the year. He was an NSCAA All-American and State Player of the

Personal: Von Rueden was born June 3, 1998, and is the son of Tony and Lynn Von Rueden. He has a sister, Brittany. He is a business major.


BILLY

Marquette Men’s Soccer

53


11 Aaron Cranfill Defender • Freshman • New Berlin, Wis./New Berlin West

Prior to Marquette: A first team all-conference player for New Berlin West High School his sophomore, junior and senior years. Honorable mention all-state selection as a junior. Helped the Vikings defense hold the shutout record two years in a row. Played for Billy Solberg with FC Milwaukee. Team captain his freshman through junior seasons. Helped FC Milwaukee to a state

championship in 2007. Participant in the inaugural USSF Academy season. Personal: Born March 17, 1991. Oldest child of Brian and Jennifer Cranfill. Mother, Jennifer, earned her MBA from Marquette. Also played basketball in high school.

15 Andy Huftalin Forward • Freshman • Rockford, Ill./Winnebago

Prior to Marquette: Named to the 2008 NSCAA/adidas Boys High School All-America Team and to the All-Region V (Midwest) squad. Two-time all-state selection and four-time unanimous All-Big Northern Conference honoree. His 118 career assists while at Winnebago High School set an Illinois High School Association (IHSA) record, while his 134 career goals ranks seventh all-time in the IHSA. Garnered all-sectional honors in 2006 and earned all-sectional honorable mention in 2005. Under head coach Mary Beth Elsen, helped Winnebago win the

IHSA Class 1A state championship in 2008. Won four consecutive Big Northern Conference championship and four sectional championship while playing for the Indians. Played for Louis Mateus' Chicago Fire Academy U18 squad that finished sixth in the academy finals, leading the team in scoring with 10 goals and nine assists. Also spent four years playing with the Illinois Olympic Development Program. Personal: Born Dec. 2, 1990. He is the son of Carl and Amy Huftalin.

3 Andrew Krynski Forward • Freshman • Algonquin, Ill./Marian

Prior to Marquette: Named a "rising star" by SoccerAmerica magazine, highlighting Krynski's four goals in three games during the 2007 Development Academy Nike Friendlies. Helped Marian Central Catholic win three regional titles under head coach Mike Golda. Was twice named first team all-area. Under head coach David Richardson, is one of three incoming players (Matt Leonard and Anthony Selvaggi) to star for the

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2009 Media Guide

Chicago Sockers FC team that is consistently ranked among the top club programs in the country. Lists one of his favorite soccer memories as scoring the game-winning goal in a high school sectional semifinal match. Personal: Born Jan. 10, 1991. He is the son of Andrzej and Barb Krynski.


17 Matt Leonard Midfielder • Freshman • Palatine, Ill./William Fremd

Prior to Marquette: Helped team to the sectional final his sophomore year at William Fremd High School. Two-year starter on the Vikings. All-conference and all-sectional honoree his junior year. All-area honorable mention as a sophomore. Led Chicago Sockers FC as captain from U-16 to present. Played with fellow freshman Anthony

Selvaggi on the Sockers ... U-16 State Cup Champions with the Sockers. Quarterfinalist in the Dallas Cup. Personal: Born May 29, 1991. He is the son of Frank and Marti Leonard. Also played hockey in high school.

19 Adam Lysak Forward • Freshman • Janesville, Wis./Milton

Prior to Marquette: Member of the Polish U-18 national team. Was a first team all-state selection by the Wisconsin Soccer Coaches Association in 2008. Tallied 23 goals and 15 assists for 61 points his senior season while helping Milton High School advance to the semifinals of the WIAA Division 1 state tournament. Unanimous choice as Southern Lakes Conference Player of the Year as a senior and was also named all-area

Player of the Year by the Wisconsin State Journal. Scored 32 goals with 13 assists in 20 games as a junior, earning second team all-conference accolades. Owns the Milton High School scoring record. Personal: Born July 26, 1991. He is the son of Andrew and Anna Lysak.

6 Ryan Robb Midfielder • Freshman • Ampthill, England/Redbourne Upper

Prior to Marquette: A native of England, captained his Redbourne Upper School team. High school earned Bedfordshire Division winners and County Cup runner ups in 2008. Competed with club squad Barton Rovers FC and was named the squad's 2008 Most Improved Player. Led 2006 Milton Keynes Wanderers. Led team to Rushden and Diamonds Academy Cup. Also

played for Crystal Palace and Luton Town youth academy teams. Personal: Born Jan. 12, 1991 in Ampthill, Bedfordshire, England. He is the son of James and Nicola Robb. Played golf, cricket, rugby, and table tennis in high school. Graduated high school with a perfect GPA.

Marquette Men’s Soccer

55


25 Anthony Selvaggi Midfielder/Forward • Freshman • Elmhurst, Ill./York

Prior to Marquette: A York Community High School product from Elmhurst, Ill. that earned allconference and all-sectional recognition. AllWSC Silver Team selection. Helped his high school squad win the West Suburban Conference for the first time in 11 years. Recognized as York team MVP. Led team with assists, second with goals. Helped Sockers win the Disney

Showcase tournament and state championship. Led team to Dallas Cup semifinals. In state final, tallied two assists and made a penalty kick to win the championship. Member of 1991 Illinois Youth Soccer ODP National Championship Team. Personal: Born to Michael and Kimberly Selvaggi on April 30, 1991.

13 Keith Sierra Midfielder/Forward • Freshman • Tampa, Fla./Jesuit

Prior to Marquette: Sierra was the top player for Jesuit High School, which finished the 2008 season with an overall record of 27-3-0 en route to a state semifinal showing. He was named an NSCAA/adidas All-American and ESPN RISE allarea honors following his senior season. A team captain for both his Jesuit High School team and

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2009 Media Guide

Hillsborough County United club team. Led Jesuit in assists as a a sophomore and junior and led team in points as a junior. Personal: Born Aug.17, 1991. He is the son of Kevin and Diane Sierra.


Marquette Men’s Soccer

57


2008 STATISTICS & RESULTS OVERALL: 3-10-4 BIG EAST: 1-8-2

2008 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

(1-6-3 home, 2-4-1 road) (0-4-1 home, 1-4-1 road)

Date Opponent W/L Score Att. Sept. 1 Bryant Univ. W 4-1 547 Sept. 5 Penn^ T 2OT 0-0 775 Sept. 7 Columbia Univ.^ T 2OT 0-0 475 Sept. 11 at #5 Notre Dame* L 1-4 654 Sept. 19 Syracuse* L 0-1 482 Sept. 21 #5 St. John’s* L 2OT 0-1 672 Sept. 26 at #19 Louisville* T 2OT 1-1 1234 Sept. 28 at Cincinnati* W 1-0 521 Oct. 2 #9 UIC L 0-1 335 Oct. 5 at Pitt* L 0-1 302 Oct. 11 Seton Hall* L 2OT 1-1 427 Oct. 15 Wisconsin L 0-1 393 Oct. 18 #20 Connecticut* L 0-1 444 Oct. 22 at Milwaukee W 2-0 1348 Oct. 25 Providence* L 0-2 445 Oct. 29 at West Virginia* L 0-2 296 Nov. 1 at Georgetown L 2-4 495 * denotes BIG EAST match. Home matches in Bold. ^ - Marquette Invitational

Team Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SHOT STATISTICS Goals-Shot attempts . . . . . . . . . Goals scored average . . . . . . . . Shot pct. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shots on goal-Attempts . . . . . . SOG pct. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shots/Game . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Assists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CORNER KICKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PENALTY KICKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PENALTIES Yellow cards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Red cards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ATTENDANCE Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dates/Avg Per Date . . . . . . . . . .

MARQ

OPP

12-191 0.71 .063 82-191 .429 11.2 14 83 0-0

21-201 1.24 .104 81-201 .403 11.8 14 78 1-2

21 4

26 0

4,995 10/500

4,850 7/693

Individual Statistics . . . 8 COLAIZZI, A. . . . . . 18 NAVARRO, H. . . . . 9 KAY, N.. . . . . . . . . . 5 MALLACE, C. . . . . 23 STUMMER, M. . . . 14 LYNN,T. . . . . . . . . . 22 VON RUEDEN, B. . 7 JALLOW,T.. . . . . . . 17 CURRY, J. . . . . . . . 11 ETIM, S.. . . . . . . . . 2 HERRERA, A.. . . . . 12 GREENE, M. . . . . . 21 ALFANO, M. . . . . . 16 MONSEN, P. . . . . . 19 SWEENEY,T. . . . . . 6 SCHWAB,T. . . . . . . 4 MILLER, S.. . . . . . . Total. . . . . . . . . . . . Opponents . . . . . .

MP-MS 14-14 17-10 17-16 17-12 17-17 17-10 17-17 16-16 15-2 8-0 17-10 14-14 13-13 17-17 1-0 5-0 2-2 17 17

Date 9/21

Opponent Bryant Univ.

W/ L W

Penn^ T Columbia^ T #5 Notre Dame* L Syracuse* L #5 St. John’s* L #19 Louisville* T Cincinnati* W #9 UIC L Pittsburgh* L Seton Hall* T Wisconsin L #20 Connecticut* L Milwaukee W

2nd 92 101

OT OT2 5 4 — 10 6 —

Tot 191 201

Saves by Period . . . .1st Marquette . . . . . . . . . .25 Opponents . . . . . . . . .31

2nd 31 35

OT OT2 3 1 — 2 2 —

Tot 60 70

Corners by Period . . .1st Marquette . . . . . . . . . .43 Opponents . . . . . . . . .36

2nd 38 37

OT OT2 2 0 — 3 2 —

Tot 83 78

10/25 Providence* 10/29 at West Virginia* 11/1 at Georgetown*

Fouls by Period . . . . .1st Marquette . . . . . . . . . .88 Opponents . . . . . . . . .84

2nd 125 130

OT OT2 5 4 — 12 9 —

Tot 222 235

* - denotes BIG EAST match. ^ - Marquette Invitational

58

OT OT2 0 0 — 0 1 —

2009 Media Guide

Tot 12 21

Pts. Sh. Sh% SOG SOG% 11 27 .148 13 .481 6 18 .167 9 .500 5 14 .143 11 .786 3 25 .040 6 .240 3 18 .056 6 .333 3 9 .111 4 .444 3 18 .000 4 .222 2 2 .000 0 .000 1 10 .000 6 .600 1 6 .000 2 .333 0 17 .000 6 .353 0 14 .000 7 .500 0 4 .000 2 .500 0 4 .000 2 .500 0 1 .000 1 1.000 0 1 .000 1 1.000 0 0 .000 0 .000 38 191 .063 82 .429 56 201 .104 81 .403

YC-RC GW PK-ATT 3-2 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 1-0 1 0-0 2-0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 1-0 0 0-0 3-0 0 0-0 1-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 2-0 0 0-0 3-2 0 0-0 1-0 0 0-0 1-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 1-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 21-4 3 0-0 26-0 10 1-2

Pct. .724

W 3

L 10

T 4

Sho 4

.741 .854

3 10

10 3

4 4

4 10

2008 GAME-BY-GAME SCORING

Shots by Period . . . .1st Marquette . . . . . . . . . .90 Opponents . . . . . . . . .84

2nd 6 11

A 3 0 1 1 1 1 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 14

Goalkeeper Statistics . MP-MS Min. GA Avg. Sv. 1 PYZDROWSKI, M.. 17-17 1622:15 21 1.17 55 Team . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Total. . . . . . . . . . . . 17 1622:15 21 1.17 60 Opponents . . . . . . 17 1622:15 12 0.67 70

9/5 9/7 9/11 9/19 9/21 9/26 9/28 10/2 10/5 10/11 10/15 10/18 10/22

Goals by Period . . . .1st Marquette . . . . . . . . . . .6 Opponents . . . . . . . . . .9

G 4 3 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 21

at

at at at

at

L L L

2OT 2OT

2OT 2OT

2OT

Score MU Goals (Assists) 4-1 Navarro (Stummer), Colaizzi (Jallow), Stummer (Colaizzi), Colaizzi (Lynn; Etim) 0-0 -0-0 -1-4 Colaizzi 0-1 -0-1 -1-1 Colaizzi (Jallow; Kay) 1-0 Kay (Curry; Mallace) 0-1 -0-1 -1-1 Kay (Colaizzi) 0-1 -0-1 -2-0 Mallace (Von Rueden); Lynn (Von Rueden) 0-2 -0-2 -2-4 Navarro (Colaizzi); Navarro (Von Rueden Game-winning goals in Bold.


2008 MATCH-BY-MATCH Marquette 4, Byrant University 1

Marquette 0, Penn 0 • 2OT

Marquette 0, Columbia Univ. 0 • 2OT

Sept. 1 • Valley Fields • (1-0-0)

Sept. 5 • Valley Fields • (1-0-1)

Sept. 7 • Valley Fields • (1-0-2)

MILWAUKEE - Marquette University opened its 2008 men's soccer season at Valley Fields on Monday night in the fashion of which they were looking for. The Golden Eagles defeated Bryant University by a final of 4-1 as three Golden Eagles found the back of the net while the young MU squad played with the poise of a veteran team. Marquette sophomore midfielder Anthony Colaizzi was the man of the match. He tallied two goals and an assist in amassing the highest single-match point total (5) for a Golden Eagles player since Chris Lee scored six points against UW-Green Bay in 2004. In fact, four goals total is the highest offensive output by a Marquette team since a 4-1 victory over UWGB on Oct. 25, 2003. Sophomore midfielder Hector Navarro displayed his extraordinary touch when he gave Marquette the go-ahead score in the 12th minute by bending a strike far post from roughly 30 yards out to give MU the 1-0 advantage. Colaizzi then netted what would be the eventual game-winner when he beat a Bulldogs' backline defender and the goalkeeper for an open goal in the 24th minute. Sophomore Matt Stummer, who assisted Navarro earlier in the evening, scored his first collegiate goal five minutes later with a one-touch into the back of the net off a cross from Colaizzi. Sam Etim and Tom Lynn assisted Colaizzi on Marquette's final score at 57:34. A celebration with the Birdcage, Marquette's student section, ensued. Bryant finally capitalized on one of its few opportunities of the evening when Anthony Restivo found Robb Rodriguez in the 77th minute. Marquette out-shot Bryant, a NCAA Division II program transitioning into Division I affiliation, by a final of 16-5 and by virtue also won the shots-on-goal margin, 9-2. It was a physical match from kick off to final horn with both teams totaling 18 fouls each, including four yellow cards. Bryant claimed responsibility for three of the bookings. A red card was issued to the Bulldogs' Trevor Krapels in the 87th minute for a hard tackle on Lynn. Krapels was sent off, but the action was later downgraded to a yellow card by head referee David Harris following the match. Marquette has experienced modest success in recent home openers. The Golden Eagles defeated Xavier, 2-1, last season, played to scoreless draw with Denver in 2006, and won 1-0 against Drake in 2005.

MILWAUKEE -- The nightcap of Friday's Marquette Invitational proved to be an epic opening-round contest that saw Marquette duel Penn to a scoreless draw. Playing a man down for a majority of the match, the Golden Eagles (1-0-1) managed to out-shoot their opponent 12-7, while both team's outlasted each other's mounting offensive pressure. Marquette sophomore Anthony Colaizzi, who tallied five points in Monday's 4-1 win over Bryant, was sent off near the 23-minute mark after responding to a tackle on teammate Matt Stummer. Colaizzi received a red card for his reaction, which led to his automatic dismissal from the contest and left MU a man short of 11 players. Added pressure on Marquette's defense was evident as the Golden Eagles forced some fouls, especially late in the second half, that led to a few Penn opportunities off set pieces. Penn's best opportunity of the night was a discounted goal in the 44th minute, as Aaron Ross had committed a foul on the play, fighting a Marquette defender and goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski for the ball. In the 103rd minute, another dicey situation arose for the Golden Eagles when a Penn striker was fouled near the top of the box, which nearly resulted in a penalty kick. Alex Fairmen sent the free kick around MU's wall, but it was saved nicely by Pyzdrowski, who recorded four saves overall. Remarkably, Marquette was able to counter throughout the match with its own pointed attack by choosing its opportunities wisely, attacking gaps in the Quakers defensive unit, and exhibiting an offensive swagger perhaps not yet seen during Bennett's tenure at the helm. In the 72nd minute, Matt Stummer brought the MU crowd to its feet after dribbling through a pair of defenders. With a third defender closing in, Stummer fired a shot from approximately 18 yards out, but was wide left. The Golden Eagles had another prime opportunity in the 97th minute when Tom Lynn had an open shot at Penn goalkeeper Drew Healy, who rejected Lynn and recorded one of his three saves on the evening. Each team registered four shots on goal. Marquette won the corner kick tally by a margin of 6-5, and out-shot Penn 3-1 in the two, 10-minute overtime periods.

MILWAUKEE - For the second time in three days, the Marquette men's soccer team played its opponent to a draw. During the same span, the Golden Eagles (1-0-2) neither scored a goal, nor let up a goal as they wrapped up play at the inaugural Marquette Invitational with a 0-0 non-decision Sunday against Columbia (0-1-1) at Valley Fields. Marquette managed well despite the offbeat start. In the first half, MU took seven shots, five of which were on goal. Amilcar Herrera, Matt Stummer and Hector Navarro rattled off a flurry of strikes around the 40-minute mark, but a Lions defender was able to deflect each Marquette attempt away from the goal. Stummer, who was named to the 10-member all-tournament team along with teammates Matt Pyzdrowski and Billy Von Rueden, recorded Marquette's first shot of the second half, which didn't come until 13 minutes in. Marquette went on to control play the remainder of the day, although they were not as on target as in the first half. In all, the Golden Eagles generated nine of the last 12 shots seen in the match. With seconds remaining in the first overtime period, Monsen headed a corner kick wide of the goal. Navarro also had a beautiful cross in front of the goal, but his serve was barely out of reach of two MU attackers. Columbia tallied nine shots overall in the match. Pyzdrowski registered one save in posting his second shutout of the tournament, and in three games this season has progressively lowered his goals against average to 0.29. Marquette has already tripled their opponents' shots on goal margin this season, owning a 21-7 advantage. The cumulative effort in three games has given the Golden Eagles some confidence heading into BIG EAST Conference play. MU travels to Notre Dame this Thursday, Sept. 11.

Scoring Summary 1. 11:18 MU -- Navarro (Stummer); 2. 24:05 MU -- Colaizzi (Jallow); 3. 29:45 MU -- Stummer (Colaizzi); 4. 57:34 MU -- Colaizzi (Lynn, Etim); 5. 76:51 BU -- Rodriguez (Restivo).

Scoring Summary --

Statistics Marquette Bryant University

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

16 5

1 5

Halftime: Marquette 3, Byrant University 0 Attendance: 547

3 1

18 18

3 0

Statistics Marquette Penn

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

12 7

4 4

6 5

14 18

2 6

Halftime: Marquette 0, Penn 0 Attendance: 775

Scoring Summary -Statistics Marquette Columbia University

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

16 9

1 8

7 6

9 15

1 3

Halftime: Marquette 0, Columbia 0 Attendance: 475

Notre Dame 4, Marquette 1 Sept. 11 • Notre Dame, Ind. • (1-1-2) NOTRE DAME, Ind. -- Notre Dame (4-1-0) snapped Marquette's unbeaten streak Thursday with a 4-1 victory at Alumni Field. Marquette (1-1-2) couldn't contain Notre Dame's Dave Donohue, who registered a hat trick in the BIG EAST opener for both teams. Notre Dame managed 16 shots total to Marquette's 10, and nine of the Fighting Irish's shots were on goal. Marquette showed vulnerability early against the high-powered Notre Dame offense, as the Fighting Irish -- ranked No. 5 in this week's NSCAA/adidas National Rankings -- applied consistent pressure throughout the match. Dave Donohue scored the first of his three goals in the 17th minute. A serve from Bright Dike was deflected away nicely by Marquette defender Paul Monsen at the top of the box. But Donohue was there to collect the loose ball and sent it far post into the back of the net. Notre Dame recorded five shots on goal in the first half with MU Goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski making four saves, mostly in heavy traffic, but none more masterfully than the save he made near the 25th minute. Jeb Brovsky rocketed a shot at the diving 6-foot-4 Pyzdrowski whose outstretched arms were enough to deflect a sure Fighting Irish goal out of bounds. Marquette almost scored an easy equalizer moments later when Billy Von Rueden sent a free ball into the box which took a high hop over Notre Dame keeper Andrew Quinn. Quinn was quick to retreat and cleared the ball inches before it crossed over the goal line. Donohue struck again in the 49th minute to give Notre Dame a 2-0 advantage, when he found a free kick that scooted past a pair of attackers and MU defenders far post. Notre Dame jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the 55th minute as Michael Thomas -- who was without an option to pass due to a lack of available strikers -- fired a shot far post from the top corner of the box. Donohue finished off the hat trick in the 64th minute to make it 4-0. In the 70th minute, Tom Lynn played a beautiful through ball to Matt Stummer, who out-ran his defender and was left one-on-one with Quinn. With the Notre Dame defender quickly gaining ground, Stummer fired a shot wide left of the goal. The Golden Eagles finally got their opportunity off a Notre Dame mistake, as Anthony Colaizzi intercepted a weak pass to Irish defender Aaron Maund and Colaizzi beat the keeper in the 74th minute. Scoring Summary 1. 16:04 ND -- Donohue; 2. 48:51 ND -- Donohue; 3. 54:15 ND -- Thomas (Donohue); 4. 63:51 ND -- Donohue; 5. 74:00 MU -- Colaizzi. Statistics #5 Notre Dame Marquette

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

16 10

3 5

3 5

12 7

1 0

Halftime: Notre Dame 1, Marquette 0 Attendance: 654

Anthony Colaizzi Marquette Men’s Soccer

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2008 MATCH-BY-MATCH Syracuse 1, Marquette 0 Sept. 19 • Valley Fields • (1-2-2) MILWAUKEE -- Syracuse remained unbeaten while handing Marquette its first home loss of the season Friday night as the Orange came out on top of a 1-0 decision following 90 minutes of BIG EAST men's soccer action at Valley Fields. Syracuse managed only two shots total in the second half. Its only shot on goal in the period resulted in the deciding goal, while Marquette out-shot the Orange 9-7 overall. Spencer Schomaker scored the game winner in the 76th minute. Syracuse teammate Justin Arena played a cross that was headed back by Kyle Hall to the top of the box where Schomaker laced a one-touch strike into the back of the net. Neither squad controlled the ball well enough as there were minimal quality scoring opportunities throughout the evening. Perhaps over-eager and a little off cue, it took most of the first half before both teams began finding a rhythm. Billy Von Rueden, Matt Stummer and Tom Sweeney each tallied a shot on goal for the Golden Eagles, all in the second half. Marquette also won the margin on corner kicks, 6-4. With the win, Syracuse moved to 4-0-2 on the season. It was the BIG EAST opener for the Orange and their first time ever stepping foot on Valley Fields. Syracuse now leads the all-time series with Marquette 2-0-1. Meanwhile, the Golden Eagles have lost two straight matches. Scoring Summary 1. 75:34 SU -- Schomaker (Hall, Arena). Statistics Syracuse Marquette

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

7 9

3 1

4 6

5 7

2 0

Halftime: Marquette 0, Syracuse 0 Attendance: 482

St. John’s 1, Marquette 0 • OT Sept. 21 • Valley Fields • (1-3-2) MILWAUKEE -- The Marquette men's soccer team stayed close, but could not hold off No. 5 St. John's from tallying a game winner on a penalty kick Sunday afternoon at Valley Fields. Despite outshooting the squad from Queens, N.Y. 169, the Golden Eagles fell 1-0 on a penalty kick two minutes and 15 seconds into the second overtime period. After junior Ryan Soroka drew a foul on a tackle in the box two minutes into the second overtime, St. John's looked to freshman Bjorn de Hoop for the game winner. de Hoop placed the ball in the lower right corner of the goal, just past diving senior goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski to help St. John's remain undefeated in overall and conference play (6-0-2, 1-0-0 BIG EAST). Marquette (1-3-2, 0-3-0 BIG EAST) was not without it's goal scoring opportunities in the game. With a season-high 16 shots, 8 of which were on frame, the Golden Eagles were unable to capitalize. In the seventh minute of play, junior Billy Von Rueden fed a ball to sophomore Anthony Colaizzi, whose shot from ten yards out deflected off a St. John's defender. Minutes later, at the 13:18 mark, a blood stoppage occurred for freshman Paul Monsen. After about a five minute halt in play, Monsen was able to return after taking jersey number 26 for the remainder of the game. The Red Storm had their first quality opportunity of the afternoon in the 26th minute when a corner kick taken by Ale Ivo squirted through the box to Soroka, who was unable to finish it from ten yards out. In the 36th minute of play, junior Tim Jallow played a ball to junior Mike Greene. Greene launched the ball from 25 yards out, forcing Red Storm goalkeeper Kitson to backpedal and deflect the ball over the crossbar. After a scuffle in front of the goal prior to a St. John's corner kick, St. John's

junior defender Joel Gustafsson and Marquette's Von Rueden were each issued a yellow card. An opportunity for the Golden Eagles came off a Colaizzi cross in the 57th minute, finding junior Nick Kay's head but ending up just left of the goal. St. John's countered later with a free kick, with Ivo missing a straight-on shot from thirty yards out in the 63rd minute. After a foul on St. John's in the 72nd minute, Colaizzi fired a rocket from 40 yards on a direct kick, forcing a Kitson save. A minute later, St. John's almost gave up an own goal when junior defender David Reed misplayed a header back to Kitson in the box. Kitson was forced to dive for the save. Scoring Summary 1. 102:15 STJ -- De Hoop (penalty kick) Statistics #5 St. John’s Marquette

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

9 16

8 3

6 8

12 17

5 0

Halftime: Marquette 0, St. John’s 0 Attendance: 672

Marquette 1, Louisville 1 • 2OT Sept. 26 • Louisville, Ky. • (1-3-3) LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Head coach Louis Bennett and the Marquette men's soccer team can take a collective sigh of relief. For 110 minutes Friday, the Golden Eagles dodged multiple bullets and played two men down for the duration of both overtime periods to escape Cardinal Park with a 1-1 draw against nationally ranked Louisville. Louisville (6-1-2, 1-1-1 BIG EAST), ranked No. 20 in the latest NSCAA/adidas poll, rattled off a total of 32 shots -- compared to just seven by the Golden Eagles -- and set a new single-match record for number of shots taken by an MU opponent. But perhaps no shot was more significant than the strike taken by Marquette's Anthony Colaizzi that found the back of the net in the seventh minute. Colaizzi, who seemed to be the only player on the field from either team prepared to receive the ball at that particular moment, picked up a deflected loose ball at the top of the box and fired an unsuspecting shot into the back of the net. The decisive goal was Marquette's first in over two matches. Additionally, for the first time since its home opener, Marquette (1-3-3, 0-21 BIG EAST) played with a lead for a majority of the match. While the Cardinals were guilty of botching a handful of prime scoring opportunities in the first period, credit must also be given to goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski, who made a pair of nice saves, and the MU defense as the Golden Eagles were able to fend off numerous Louisville chances. It appeared Marquette had trouble adjusting the pace of play and the Bermuda grass -- a shorter-cut, quicker surface than the Golden Eagles are used to -- early in the first half. MU had trouble maintaining possession and suffered from unforced turnovers. Marquette continued to dodge bullets as Louisville applied more pressure on the MU defenders in the final 65 minutes. The Cardinals finally netted the equalizer in the 76th minute, when Austin Berry converted a header off the Cardinals' seventh corner kick of the evening. Then things got dicey. Michael Greene was booked in the 83rd minute due to a hard foul at the top of the box and as a result was sent off. A few minutes later, Colaizzi was whistled after trying to break free from a pair of Cardinal defenders. Colaizzi's response toward the referee earned him his second red card of the season and Marquette was left with nine men on the field for the final two minutes of regulation, including both overtime periods. Scoring Summary 1. 6:06 MU -- Colaizzi (Jallow, Kay); 2. 75:00 UofL -- Berry (Clapham).

Statistics Marquette #19 Louisville

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

7 32

7 1

3 11

13 16

0 1

Halftime: Marquette 1, Louisville 0 Attendance: 1234

Marquette 1, Cincinnati 0 Sept. 28 • Cincinnati, Ohio • (2-3-3) CINCINNATI -- For the second straight year, Marquette forward Nick Kay delivered the dagger that earned the Golden Eagles' their first BIG EAST victory of he season at the hands of Cincinnati, as MU earned a hard-fought 1-0 decision Sunday at Gettler Stadium. Kay's first goal of the season was the product of a combination serve and volley, sent by Calum Mallace and dished ahead by Josh Curry, assisting MU on the game-winner in the 71st minute. It was Kay who scored both of Marquette's goals in a 2-1 double-overtime decision over the Bearcats at Valley Fields a season ago. While it was Kay's touch into the upper-right of the net that provided the difference on the scoreboard, it was Marquette's stingy defense that inspired the victory. Junior goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski, who was credited with a collegiatehigh eight saves and his third shutout of the season, was supported strongly by his back line. All four of Marquette's defenders never left the field the entire 200:00 minutes of the action over the weekend. Marquette began the first half with virtually no presence in the attacking part of the field. The Golden Eagles finally recorded their first shot in the 30th minute when Matt Stummer missed putting a good boot on a cross from Tyler Schwab. MU eventually put three shots on target in the final eight minutes of the period. Brian Odem, playing in his first game since the season-opener against Bryant on Sept. 1, rocketed a header that was deflected by Cincinnati goalkeeper Matt Williams. Odem immediately picked up the rebound and fired another shot on goal, but Williams was able to once again re-direct the strike, and the ball was cleared from the box by a Bearcat defender. Cincinnati continued to put the pressure on in the second half, and ultimately ended up with eight shots on goal during the contest. A potentially disastrous, but questionable, foul was called on MU's Michael Alfano within the 18-yard box, allowing Cincinnati a penalty kick and a golden opportunity to net the equalizer in the 85th minute. But the penalty kick, taken by the Bearcats' Branden Stelmak, was denied by a diving Pyzdrowski. Scoring Summary 1. 70:08 MU -- Kay (Curry, Mallace). Statistics Marquette Cincinnati

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

10 18

8 5

4 5

16 12

0 5

Halftime: Marquette 0, Cincinnati 0 Attendance: 521

UIC 1, Marquette 0 Oct. 2 • Valley Fields • (2-4-3) MILWAUKEE -- UIC (8-0-2) remained undefeated by picking up a decisive goal in the 85th minute Thursday at Valley Fields to defeat a short-handed Marquette (2-4-3) squad, 1-0. Ranked as high as sixth in the national polls, the visiting Flames ended MU's five-match non-conference unbeaten streak in the process. Moriba Diallo came off of the UIC bench to net his first collegiate goal and game-winner Thursday. Diallo scooped up a loose ball near the left corner of the box and chipped it from 20 yards out far post, over the outstretched arms of Marquette goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski. While UIC's scoring offense statistically ranks third in NCAA Division I, it was the Flames' defense that quieted MU's attack in the second half. Although UIC produced 11 shots -- three on target -- the Golden Eagles meanwhile managed just three shots in the first half and none in the final 48 minutes. Marquette's lone shot on goal was a 30-yard rocket by Mike Greene toward the upper-left post, but deflected by UIC keeper Jovan Bubonja, in the 26th minute. After sitting out the team's last match due to a previous red card, Greene's evening would come to an early ending on Thursday as well. He was sent off after being cited for his second caution, thus earning the automatic red card, for a hard tackle in the 76th minute. The infraction sparked a confrontation between players near midfield and UIC's Charlie Trout was also given a yellow. Both benches were also warned by the referee. Marquette was then forced to play the remainder of the contest a man down for the third time this season. Already without the team's leading scorer, Anthony Colaizzi was sidelined for his second consecutive game Thursday as the result of his second red card of the season last Friday at Louisville. Scoring Summary 1. 84:38 UIC -- Diallo. Statistics #9 UIC Marquette

Billy Von Rue den

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2009 Media Guide

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

Halftime: Marquette 0, UIC 0 Attendance: 335

11 3

1 2

1 1

11 19

5 1


2008 MATCH-BY-MATCH Pittsburgh 1, Marquette 0 Oct. 5 • Indianola, Pa. • (2-5-3) INDIANOLA, Pa. -- The Marquette University men's soccer team dropped its second straight 1-0 decision, as Pittsburgh's Andy Kalas netted the game-winner 10 minutes into the second half Sunday to defeat the Golden Eagles at Founders Field In the 55th minute, Calum Mallace was whistled for a foul for going over the back of a Panther defender to win a header near the middle of the field. The foul set up a free kick for Pittsburgh, which Kalas headed into the back of the net Although there were not an overwhelming amount of scoring opportunities for either team, both squad's had great chances early in the match. Pittsburgh's first strike came in the first minute off a corner kick that was headed on target, leading to one of three saves by Marquette goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski. Later in the half, Mallace defeated two Pittsburgh defenders and rocketed a shot from approximately 30 yards in the 25th minute that sailed inches over the cross bar, toward the back post. Mallace attempted four of the Golden Eagles' nine shots, a collegiate high, but only Anthony Colaizzi and Hector Navarro recorded shots on goal for MU. Pittsburgh managed 11 shots total, four of which were on goal. Navarro had a great chance at the equalizer when he picked a loose ball in the 82nd minute near the right corner of the box, but the shot was directly at Pittsburgh goalkeeper Jordan Marks, who recorded two saves. A Marquette free kick in the closing seconds led to another shot by Mallace that was blocked in the the box and re-directed out of bounds. But the Golden Eagles could not get lucky on the corner kick that ensued. Scoring Summary 1. 54:27 PITT -- Kalas (McCormick). Statistics Marquette Pittsburgh

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

9 11

3 2

4 7

18 18

0 4

Halftime: Marquette 0, Pittsburgh 0 Attendance: 302

Marquette 1, Seton Hall 1 • 2OT Oct. 11 • Valley Fields • (2-5-4) MILWAUKEE -- Marquette's struggling offense responded in a big way Saturday at Valley Fields as eight different Golden Eagles registered at least one shot on goal against visiting Seton Hall. Following two overtime periods, neither team had earned the decision and instead settled for a 1-1 draw. Junior forward Nick Kay suffered a broken nose but one of his three headers found the back of the net off a cross from MU teammate Anthony Colaizzi. Kay precisely directed the ball far post, into the upper left corner, for the equalizer in the 63rd minute of action. It was the first MU goal since Kay tallied the game-winner at Cincinnati on Sept. 28. A free kick taken by Pirates sophomore Steven Rose in the 50th minute had given Seton Hall a 1-0 advantage. Marquette freshman Paul Monsen was called for a foul near the top left corner of the box. Rose converted on the set piece by curling the ball over the MU wall and into the top left corner of the net. Marquette set the tone early with a pair of one-on-one chances with the Seton Hall keeper within the first three minutes of play. Once the Golden Eagles were able to settle in, they became more dangerous with a total of eight shots on goal in the second half. Coming into the match, Seton Hall ranked second in the BIG EAST in shots taken, while MU ranked second to last. Unexpectedly, Marquette's 19 shot attempts, including 10 shots on goal, were both season highs. Expectedly, Seton Hall managed 16 shots Saturday -- seven shots on goal -- and had the only four opportunities in overtime. MU had just two shots on goal combined in its previous two contests. Matt Pyzdrowski recorded five saves for Marquette and Seton Hall's Paul McHenry made eight stops. Both keepers entertained fans with acrobatic plays between the posts. Seton Hall remains unbeaten in overtime games (3-0-1) and stays one spot above Marquette in the Blue Division standings at 6-5-2 overall and 2-3-2 in league play. Meanwhile, the Golden Eagles move to 2-5-4 on the season and 14-2 in the BIG EAST. Scoring Summary 1. 49:06 SHU -- Rose. 2. 62:52 MU -- Kay (Colaizzi). Statistics Seton Hall Marquette

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

16 19

9 6

3 5

17 10

3 6

Halftime: Marquette 0, Seton Hall 0 Attendance: 427

Wisconsin 1, Marquette 0 Oct. 15 • Valley Fields • (2-6-4) MILWAUKEE - MILWAUKEE -- Scott Lorenz's unassisted goal in the 15th minute proved to be the eventual game-winner as Wisconsin (6-5-2) secured bragging rights over in-state rival Marquette (2-6-4) by taking a 1-0 decision Wednesday over the Golden Eagles at Valley Fields. MU had its chances, but managed to put only two of eight shots on goal. Wisconsin's score was the first of two shots on goal for the Badgers, and resulted in the team-leading seventh goal of the season for Lorenz. A long serve from Pablo Delgado was misplayed by a group of Marquette defenders. Lorenz

Nick Kay Marquette Men’s Soccer

61


2008 MATCH-BY-MATCH yard strike from MU freshman Calum Mallace in the 53rd minute in which Ford dove back across his body after committing to the near post. Sophomore Anthony Colaizzi was arguably Marquette's biggest offensive threat, rattling off a season-high seven shots, four of which were on goal. Scoring Summary 1. 7:53 UCONN -- Arad (Pezza) Statistics #20 Connecticut Marquette

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

10 16

8 4

6 6

10 10

2 1

Halftime: Connecticut 1, Marquette 0 Attendance: 444

Marquette 2, Milwaukee 0 Oct. 22 • Milwaukee, Wis. • (3-7-4) MILWAUKEE -- MILWAUKEE -- Marquette reclaimed the coveted Milwaukee Cup on Wednesday with a 2-0 win over the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in front of 1,348 fans Engelmann Field. The victory snapped a five-game winless streak for the Golden Eagles and was MU's first win over its crosstown foe since the 2003 season. Marquette had some missed opportunities in the first half before freshman midfielder Calum Mallace received a back pass from junior defender Billy Von Rueden in the 43rd minute. Mallace side-stepped a Panthers defender at the top of the box and deposited the ball into the back of the net for his first collegiate goal. Junior midfielder Tom Lynn provided the Golden Eagles with some muchneeded insurance midway through the second half by getting in on the action and scoring his first collegiate goal. Lynn, who sat the entire first half and didn't check in until the 75th minute, took a long serve from Von Rueden far side of the field and placed a perfect strike from 22 yards out far post at the 77:51 mark. Both of Marquette's goals were assisted by Von Rueden. It was the first multi-goal game for Marquette since its season-opening 4-1 rout over Bryant University on Sept. 1. Since then, the Golden Eagles have suffered six losses by a final score of 1-0. While finishing in front of the net has been a challenge for Marquette, holding the Panthers scoreless proved to be just as large of a task on Wednesday. UWM rattled of 16 shots, five of which were on goal, and failed to capitalize during key moments. Adam Skalecki had beat Marquette goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski -- a former UWM Panther -- in a one-on-one situation in the 32nd minute. With an open net, Skalecki gently lobbed the ball over Pyzdrowski, but the shot hit the post. Skalecki's miss was the first of many point blank shots taken by the Panthers that were off-target. Other chances either never materialized, or cleaned up by Pyzdrowski or by the Golden Eagles solid back line.

Hector Navarro scooped up the turnover, took a few steps inside the box and fired it on target - near post -- from approximately 16 yards out. Although MU, which has struggled finishing in front of net this season, didn't create as many chances as they would have liked during the pace of play, the Golden Eagles certainly had more than their fair share of set pieces. Marquette was unable to capitalize on a season-high 10 corner kicks, in addition to numerous free kicks in the attacking half of the field. Conversely, Marquette didn't allow a corner for the first time this season and out-shot the Badgers by a final tally of 8-5. Scoring Summary 1. 14:12 UW -- Lorenz. Statistics Wisconsin Marquette

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

5 8

2 1

0 8

13 12

3 0

Halftime: Wisconsin 1, Marquette 0 Attendance: 393

Connecticut 1, Marquette 0 Oct. 18 • Valley Fields • (2-7-4) MILWAUKEE -- Marquette's trademark resiliency was once again on display Saturday night at Valley Fields, but for the second time in as many games an early goal cost the Golden Eagles (2-7-4, 1-5-2 BIG EAST). MU fell to No. 20 Connecticut by a final of 1-0 despite looking more dangerous than the visiting Huskies (7-3-4, 4-3-1 BIG EAST) on the attack. UConn's Dori Arad netted the game-winning score at the 7:53 mark -- a header off a Mike Pezza corner kick -- from just inside the six-yard box. Five of Marquette's eight shots on goal came in the second half, including three in the final 10 minutes of action. UConn managed to put five of its 10 shots on target, while the Golden Eagles registered 16 shots total. The Golden Eagles also contained 2007 BIG EAST Player of the Year and M.A.C. Hermann Trophy award-winner O'Brian White. Marked by freshman central defender Paul Monsen, White attempted only two shots. UConn goalkeeper Josh Ford had to make a season-high seven saves to preserve his league-leading eighth shutout of the season. Ford stopped a 20-

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2009 Media Guide

Scoring Summary 1. 42:53 MU -- Mallace (Von Rueden); 2. 77:51 MU -- Lynn (Von Rueden). Statistics Marquette Milwaukee

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

11 16

5 2

6 4

14 7

5 2

Halftime: Marquette 1, Milwaukee 0 Attendance: 1348

Providence 2, Marquette 0 Oct. 25 • Valley Fields • (3-8-4) MILWAUKEE -- The Marquette University men's soccer team is still on the outside looking in at the 2008 BIG EAST Championship field after falling 2-0 to Providence College in the Golden Eagles' final home match of the regular season Saturday at Valley Fields. With the loss, MU dropped to 3-8-4 overall and 1-6-2 in league play. The visiting Friars meanwhile picked up three more points -- and their first road win of the season -- with the victory and boast a 7-5-3 record overall, including a 4-51 mark in the BIG EAST. Early on, both teams had trouble maintaining possession and controlling the ball due to wet field conditions and swirling winds with gusts of up to 25 mph. The Friars were eventually able to push forward efficiently with the wind at their backs in the first half and race out to a 2-0 lead by halftime. Ryan Maduro played a cross from the left side of the box that was credited as an own goal, as the pass was deflected off Marquette's Tom Lynn in the 20th minute. Lynn slid in front of the Friars' Michael Narciso in order to prevent an easy score, but the ball hit Lynn and his momentum carried the ball past the goalline. Maduro had another perfectly placed cross, this time from the left corner, in the 24th minute. With a pair of Providence attackers and just one MU defender near post, Maduro's serve found the inside of teammate Matt Marcin's right foot, which was one-touched into the back of the net.

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

5 9

Halftime: Providence 2, Marquette 0 Attendance: 445

1 2

2 4

16 13

Oct. 29 • Morgantown, W.Va. • (3-9-4) STORRS, Conn. -- MORGANTOWN, W.Va. -- Marquette (3-9-4, 1-7-2 BIG EAST) was eliminated from postseason contention Wednesday, as West Virginia (5-75, 3-3-4 BIG EAST) picked up an early first-half goal and went on to defeat the Golden Eagles 2-0 from frigid Dick Diesk Soccer Stadium. Moments after the opening kick off -- after the mixture of snow fall and hail subsided -- the Mountaineers netted the decisive goal. Wednesday's match was a must-win game for both squads with all eight Blue Division teams still in the hunt for one of six divisional spots in the 2008 BIG EAST Championship heading into the final week of the regular season. WVU's Daniel Hagey won an encounter with a pair of Marquette defenders and settled a long cross from teammate Ryan Gillespie to beat MU goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski, near post, in the 16th minute of action. Less than a minute prior to the Mountaineers' goal, Anthony Colaizzi produced MU's first and only shot on goal when he received the ball near midfield, dribbled through three WVU defenders and put the ball on target from the top of the box. The Golden Eagles registered five of the their eight shots in the first period. Marquette's most advantageous opportunities were produced off of counter-attacks early on, often racing out to outnumber the retreating WVU back line. But nothing quite materialized on such chances. One goal was all the Mountaineers needed to seal Marquette's fate and preserve the win, as the Golden Eagles fell to 0-8-2 on the season when their opponent is the first team to score in a match. But the Mountaineers were able to add some cushion for their sophomore goalkeeper, Zach Johnson, with a header by Alex Yost that found the back of the Golden Eagles' net in the 84th minute. Johnson, one of the nation's top players between the posts, went on to record his eighth shutout of the season. Scoring Summary 1. 15:48 WVU -- Hagey (Gillespie); 82:55 WVU -- Yost (Gillespie, Silva). Statistics Marquette West Virginia

2 1

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

8 10

3 1

5 3

12 14

2 1

Halftime: West Virgnia 1, Marquette 0 Attendance: 296

Georgetown 4, Marquette 2 Nov. 1 • Washington, D.C. • (3-10-4) WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Marquette did not look like a team that had already been eliminated from the postseason tournament, as the Golden Eagles provided more of a scare than Georgetown may have expected on its senior day. But it was the BIG EAST tournament-bound Hoyas that prevailed 4-2 in the final match of the regular season for both teams from North Kehoe Field. Georgetown got on the scoreboard in the fourth minute when Seth C'deBaca side-stepped a defender to clear some space at the top of the box and placed a left-footed strike into the lower left corner of the net, which ricocheted off Marquette goalkeeper Matt Pyzdrowski who dove to get a hand on the ball. Marquette was quickly able to get back to even, however, as sophomore midfielder Hector Navarro netted the equalizer off a side volley from 15 yards out. Anthony Colaizzi, who was credited with the assist, served Navarro from the left corner in the 11:55 mark. It was Navarro's second goal of the season and his first since scoring in the Golden Eagles' season-opening 4-1 win over Bryant University. For the first time all season, Marquette thought it had rallied from an early deficit to take the lead, but junior forward Nick Kay had his goal nullified in the 16th minute. Moments later the Hoyas capitalized on the first corner kick of the game -and took advantage of their considerable height advantage over the Golden Eagles. Mark Zemen sent it into the six-yard box where it was headed in by a leaping 6-foot-2 Alex Verdi, who put Georgetown up by a 2-1 margin in the 25th minute. Georgetown built upon their lead in the 35th minute, as the Hoyas took a dangerous free kick that deflected off of a couple attackers and bounced from the near-side of the box to the far corner where it was crossed back in front of the net. Marquette's Billy Von Rueden tried to clear the ball out of bounds past the end line, but inadvertently misdirected the ball for an own goal inside the far post. The Hoyas were able to add some insurance in the 88th minute, however, on a goal by Sean Bellomy who received a touch pass from teammate Peter Grasso. Bellomy snuck past an MU defender and sent the ball into the back corner of the net. Scoring Summary 1. 3:21 GU -- C’deBaca (Grasso); 2. 11:55 MU -- Navarro (Colaizzi); 3. 24:12 GU - Verdi (Zeman); 4. 34:58 GU -- Own Goal; 5. 72:58 MU -- Navarro (Von Rueden); 6. 88:39 GU -- Bellomy (Grasso). Statistics Marquette Georgetown

Scoring Summary 1. 19:25 PC -- Own Goal; 2. 23:46 PC -- Marcin (Maduro). Statistics Providence College Marquette

West Virginia 2, Marquette 0

Shots Saves Corners Fouls Offsides

12 14

Halftime: Georgetown 3, Marquette 1 Attendance: 495

4 7

2 7

17 21

2 5


2008 BIG EAST CONFERENCE RECAP 2008 BIG EAST League Standings

2008 BIG EAST Conference Individual Statistical Leaders

Blue Division 1. Notre Dame^ 2. Connecticut^ 3. Georgetown 4. Providence 5. West Virginia 6. Pittsburgh 7. Seton Hall 8. Marquette

BIG EAST 7-2-2 6-3-2 5-3-3 5-5-1 3-4-4 3-6-2 2-5-4 1-8-2

Pts. Overall 23 .727 20 .636 18 .591 16 .500 13 .455 11 .364 10 .364 5 .152

Red Division 1. St. John’s^ 2. USF^ 3. DePaul 4. Louisville^ 5. Villanova 6. Cincinnati 7. Syracuse 8. Rutgers

BIG EAST 8-1-2 7-3-1 5-4-2 5-5-1 4-5-2 4-6-1 4-6-1 3-6-2

Pts. Overall 26 .818 22 .682 17 .545 16 .500 14 .455 13 .409 13 .409 11 .364

Final standings ^ NCAA Tournament Participant

2008 BIG EAST Tournament FIRST ROUND (campus sites) November 5 & 6, 2008 No. 6 Blue Pittsburgh, 1 at No. 3 Red DePaul, 3 No. 5 Red Villanova, 1 at No. 4 Blue Providence, 2 No. 5 Blue West Virginia, 0 at No. 4 Red Louisville, 2 No. 6 Red Cincinnati, 1 at No. 3 Blue Georgetown, 3 QUARTERFINALS (campus sites) November 8 & 9, 2008 No. 4 Blue Providence, 0 at No. 1 Red St. John’s, 1 (OT) No. 3 Red DePaul, 1 at No. 2 Blue Connecticut, 0 No. 4 Red Louisville, 0 at No. 1 Blue Notre Dame, 1 No. 3 Blue Georgetown, 1 at No. 2 Red USF, 2 SEMIFINALS USF Soccer/Track Stadium (Tampa, Fla.) November 14, 2008 No. 3 Red DePaul, 0 vs. No. 1 Red St. John’s, 2 No. 2 Red USF, 2 vs. No. 1 Blue Notre Dame, 1 FINALS USF Soccer/Track Stadium (Tampa, Fla.) November 16, 2008 No. 2 Blue Notre Dame, 0 vs. No. 1 Blue Connecticut, 2

SHOTS 1. B. Dike (ND) 2. B. Martinez (SHU) 3. A. Clapham (LOU) 4. S. Petrone (SHU) 5. N. Weightmann (CIN) 6. M. Pezza (CON) 7. T. Ritter (PC) 8. D. Duka (RU) J. Seabrook (USF) 10. Z. Boggs (USF)

79 63 58 56 55 54 53 51 51 49

POINTS 1. B. Dike (ND) 2. N. Becerra (STJ) 3. S. Petrone (SHU) M. Thomas (ND) 5. J. Seabrook (USF) 6. D. Duka (RU) S. Schomaker (SU) 8. P. Grasso (GU) J. Brovsky (ND) 10. A. Clapham (LOU) Z. Boggs (USF) T. Chiduku (STJ)

29 23 21 21 23 17 17 16 16 15 15 15

GOALS 1. B. Dike (ND) 2. S. Petrone (SHU) 3. D. Duka (RU) M. Thomas (ND) N. Becerra (STJ) 6. P. Grasso (GU) T. Chiduku (STJ) 8. Four players

12 9 8 8 8 7 7 6

ASSISTS 1. A. Clapham (LOU) M. Pezza (CON) 3. N. Becerra (STJ) 4. K. McFadden (RU) R. Maduro (PC) J. Brovsky (ND) T. Cascio (CON) J. Seabrook (USF) 9. 11 players

9 9 7 6 6 6 6 6 5

GAME WINNING GOALS 1. N. Becerra (STJ) 2. O. White (CON) S. Vroom (DEP) P. Grasso (GU) D. Arad (CON) Z. Boggs (USF)

5 4 4 4 4 4

SAVES 1. N. Kitson (STJ) 2. J. Ford (CON) 3. Z. Johnson (WVU) 4. P. McHenry (SHU) R. Cavicchia (SU) 6. C. Bresnahan (VU) 7. B. Visser (DEP) 8. M. Williams (CIN) 9. A. Haghshenas (RU) 10. T. Murray (PC)

95 83 81 72 72 71 67 63 61 59

TEAM GOALS 1. Notre Dame 2. St. John’s 3. Louisville 4. Georgetown 5. Seton Hall 6. USF 7. Connecticut Syracuse 9. Providence 10. Two teams

41 39 32 30 27 26 23 23 19 18

SHUTOUTS 1. N. Kitson (STJ) 2. J. Ford (CON) 3. B. Visser (DEP) 4. T. Murray (PC) J. Antinella (USF) 6. M. Williams (CIN) 7. R. Cavicchia (SU) M. Brutto (GU) Z. Johnson (WVU) 10. C. Bresnahan (VU)

15 12 11 10 10 9 8 8 8 7

TEAM ASSISTS 1. USF Notre Dame 3. St. John’s 4. Syracuse 5. Connecticut 6. Seton Hall Louisville 8. Georgetown 9. Providence Marquette

35 35 31 28 27 24 24 22 14 14

TEAM GAA 1. St. John’s 2. Connecticut 3. DePaul 4. West Virginia 5. USF 6. Georgetown 7. Providence 8. Syracuse 9. Villanova 10. Notre Dame

0.50 0.59 0.62 0.64 0.80 0.82 0.86 1.01 1.01 1.07

TEAM SAVES 1. St. John’s 2. Pittsburgh 3. Seton Hall 4. Connecticut 5. Georgetown 6. West Virginia 7. Notre Dame 8. Syracuse Villanova 10. DePaul

103 92 86 84 83 82 77 72 72 71

GOALS AGAINST AVERAGE 1. M. Brutto (GU) 0.45 2. N. Kitson (STJ) 0.48 3. J. Ford (CON) 0.59 4. B. Visser (DEP) 0.62 5. Z. Johnson (WVU) 0.64 TEAM SHOTS 1. Seton Hall 2. Louisville 3. Notre Dame 4. Connecticut 5. Rutgers 6. USF 7. Georgetown 8. St. John’s 9. Villanova 10. Cincinnati

330 316 311 297 276 270 265 261 242 241

TEAM POINTS 1. Notre Dame 2. St. John’s 3. Louisville 4. USF 5. Georgetown 6. Seton Hall 7. Syracuse 8. Connecticut 9. Providence 10. Pittsburgh Rutgers

117 109 88 87 82 78 74 73 52 49 49

TEAM SHUTOUTS 1. St. John’s 2. Connecticut USF 4. DePaul 5. Georgetown Providence

16 12 12 11 10 10

Marquette Men’s Soccer

63


2008 BIG EAST CONFERENCE RECAP BIG EAST CONFERENCE POST-SEASON AWARDS ALL-BIG EAST FIRST TEAM

ALL-BIG EAST SECOND TEAM

ALL-BIG EAST THIRD TEAM

HONORABLE MENTION

GK F F MF MF MF MF MF D D D

GK F F MF MF MF MF MF MF D D

GK F F F F F F MF D D D

GK F MF MF D D

Zach Johnson, West Virginia Bright Dike, Notre Dame O’Brian White, Connecticut Nelson Becerra, St. John’s Aaron Clapham, Louisville Brayan Martinez, Seton Hall Kevon Neaves, USF Toni Stahl, Connecticut Matt Besler, Notre Dame Joel Gustafsson, St. John’s Yohance Marshall, USF

Offensive Player of the Year: Midfield Player of the Year: Defensive Player of the Year:

Brian Visser, DePaul Kyle Hall, Syracuse Steffen Vroom, DePaul Ryan Maduro, Providence Akeem Priestley, Connecticut Jerry Saintil, Seton Hall Michael Thomas, Notre Dame Hansen Woodruff, Syracuse Dilly Duka, Rutgers Jack Traynor, Notre Dame Austin Berry, Louisville

O’Brian White, Connecticut Nelson Becerra, St. John’s Joel Gustafsson, St. John’s

Neal Kitson, St. John’s Zak Boggs, USF Jeb Brovsky, Notre Dame Tim Ritter, Providence Jordan Seabrook, USF Tafadzwa Chiduku, St. John’s Michael Seamon, Villanova Ryan Soroka, St. John’s Oscar Castillo, Connecticut Len Coleman, Georgetown Brad Simpson, Cincinnati

Goalkeeper of the Year: Rookie of the Year: Coaching Staff of the Year:

Jeff Attinella, USF Peter Grasso, Georgetown Michael Pezza, Connecticut Tadeu Terra, St. John’s Gift Maworerer, West Virginia Karol Wasielewski, Syracuse

Zach Johnson, West Virginia Colin Rolfe, Louisville St. John’s (Dave Massur, head coach)

BIG EAST ACADEMIC ALL-STARS Nominations for the All-Academic Team are submitted by each of the BIG EAST 's 16 member institutions. To be eligible for the honor, a nominee must have competed in a BIG E ASTsponsored sp ort, earned a varsity letter, attained a minimum grade-point average of 3.00 for the preceding academic year, and completed a minimum of two consecutive semesters or three consecutive quarters of academic work, with a total of 18 semester or 27 quarter credits, not including remedial courses.

MARQUETTE MEN’S SOCCER BIG EAST ACADEMIC ALL-STARS Daniel Addis Michael Alfano Ben Calvopina

Anthony Colaizzi Keenan Flynn Tim Jallow

Michael Alfano

Tim Jallow

64

2009 Media Guide

Tom Lynn Chris Madsen Scott Miller

Greg Pignataro Matt Stummer

Tom Lynn


2008 BIG EAST CONFERENCE RECAP BIG EAST CONFERENCE IN-SEASON AWARDS OFFENSIVE PLAYERS OF THE WEEK Sept. 1 Adam Himeno, St. John’s, Jr., MF Sept. 8 Sam Petrone, Seton Hall, So., F Sept. 15 D. Donohue, Notre Dame, Jr., MF Sept. 22 O’Brian White, Connecticut, Sr., F Sept. 29 Austin Berry, Louisville, So., MF Oct. 6 Alex Silva, West Virginia, Fr., MF Oct. 13 Steffen Vroom, DePaul, Jr., F Oct. 20 Trevor Chiduku, St. John’s, So., MF Oct. 27 Scott Larrabee, Georgetown, Jr., MF Nov. 4 Jeb Brovsky, Notre Dame, So., MF DEFENSIVE PLAYERS OF THE WEEK Sept. 1 Len Coleman, Georgetown, Jr., D Sept. 8 Rory Quinn, St. John’s, Sr., D Sept. 15 Oscar Castillo, Connecticut, Sr., D Sept. 22 Adam Brazitis, Villanova, Sr., MF Sept. 29 Yohance Marshall, USF, Sr., D Oct. 6 Brad Simpson, Cincinnati, R-Sr., D Oct. 13 Matt Besler, Notre Dame, Sr., D Oct. 20 Karol Wasielewski, Syracuse, Sr., D Oct. 27 Yohance Marshall, USF, Sr., D Nov. 4 Ben Clack, St. John’s, R-Jr., D GOALKEEPERS OF THE WEEK Sept. 1 Neal Kitson, St. John’s, RS-Sr., GK Sept. 8 Josh Ford, UConn, So., GK Sept. 15 Neal Kitson, St. John’s, RS-Sr., GK Sept. 22 Neal Kitson, St. John’s, RS-Sr., GK Sept. 29 Matt Pyzdrowski, Marquette, Jr., GK Oct. 6 Robert Cavicchia, Syracuse, Sr., GK Oct. 13 Tim Murray, Providence, Jr., GK Oct. 20 Matt Williams, Cincinnati, R-So., GK Oct. 27 Josh Ford, UConn, So., GK Nov. 4 Neal Kitson, St. John’s, RS-Sr., GK ROOKIES OF THE WEEK Sept. 1 Chris Bresnahan, Villanova, Fr., GK Sept. 8 Andre Boudreaux, Louisville, Fr., GK Sept. 15 Gaetano Panuccio, Rutgers, Fr., F Sept. 22 Aaron Maund, Notre Dame, Fr., D Sept. 29 Walter Hines, St. John’s, Fr., F Oct. 6 Colin Rolfe, Louisville, Fr., F Oct. 13 Chris Stoker, Providence, Fr., MF/F Oct. 20 Tony Cascio, Connecticut, Fr., MF Oct. 27 Sebastien Thuriere, USF, Fr., MF Nov. 4 Tony Cascio, Connecticut, Fr., MF

HONORABLE MENTION Sept. 1 - Peter Grasso, Georgetown, Sr., F; Yohance Marshall, USF, Sr., D; Paul McHenry, Seton Hall, Jr., GK; Tom Perevegyencev, Syracuse, Jr., MF/F; O’Brian White, Connecticut, Sr., F Sept. 8 - Matt Belser, Notre Dame, Sr., D; Robert Cavicchia, Syracuse, Sr., GK; Ibukun Otegbeye, Georgetown, So., D/MF; Connor Lade, St. John’s, Fr., D; Matt Pyzdrowski, Marquette, Jr., GK Sept. 15 - Dilly Duka, Rutgers, So., MF; Ryan Gillespie, West Virginia, Jr., D; Andy Kalas, Pittsburgh, So., D; Michael Pereira, Providence, So., MF; Colin Rolfe, Louisville, Fr., F Sept. 22 - Eric Barnes, Pittsburgh, Sr., GK; Matthew Brutto, Georgetown, So., GK; Yohance Marshall, USF, Sr., D; Gift Maworere, West Virginia, Jr., MF; Kevon Neaves, USF, Sr., MF Sept. 29 - Robert Cavicchia, Syracuse, Sr., GK; Bright Dike, Notre Dame, Sr., F; Dilly Duka, R utgers, So., MF; Zach Johnson, West Virginia, R-So., GK; O’Brian White, Connecticut, Sr., F Oct. 6 - Jason Bristol, West Virginia, Jr., D; John Jonke, Louisville, Sr., D; Jordan Marks, Pittsburgh, Sr., GK; Brayan Martinez, Seton Hall, So., MF; Brian Visser, DePaul, Sr., GK Oct. 13 - Nelson Becerra, St. John’s, Jr., MF; Zach Boggs, USF, Jr., F; Bright Dike, Notre Dame, Sr., F; Alex Verdi, Georgetown, So., D; Brian Visser, DePaul, Sr., GK Oct. 20 - Jordan Marks, Pittsburgh, Sr., GK; O’Brian White, Connecticut, Sr., F; Tom Perevegyencev, Syracuse, Jr., F/MF; Branden Stelmak, Cincinnati, So., F; Michael Thomas, Notre Dame, Jr., MF Oct. 27 - Jeff Attinella, USF, So., GK; Cruz Hernandez, Connecticut, Jr., D; Spencer Schomaker, Syracuse, Sr., F; Dritan Sela, Seton Hall, So., F; Brian Visser, DePaul, Sr., GK

Marquette goalke ep er Matt Py zd rowski g arnered BI G EAST Goalkeeper of the Week accolades and was named to the College Soccer News National Team of the Week for performances at Louisville and Cincinnati.

NATIONAL HONORS COLLEGE SOCCER NEWS NATIONAL TEAM OF THE WEEK Sept. 8 Matt Besler, Notre Dame, Sr., D Samuel Petrone, Seton Hall, So., F Sept. 15 Dave Donohue, Notre Dame, Jr., MF Andre Mittoo, USF, So., D Sept. 22 Neal Kitson, St. John’s, RS-Sr., GK Sept. 29 Matt Pyzdrowski, Marquette, Jr., GK Oct. 6 John Jonke, Louisville, Sr., D Oct. 13 Steffen Vroom, DePaul, Jr., F Oct. 20 Branden Stelmak, Cincinnati, So., F Trevor Chiduku, St. John’s, So., MF Oct. 27 Jeff Attinella, USF, So., GK Nov. 3 Nelson Becerra, St. John’s, Jr., MF Nov. 10 Brian Visser, DePaul, Sr., GK Nov. 17 Yohance Marshall, USF, Sr., D

Nov. 4 - Peter Grasso, Georgetown, Sr., F; Brendan King, Notre Dame, Fr., MF; Hec tor Navarro, Marquette, So., MF; Tim Ritter, Providence, Jr., F; Hansen Woodruff, Syracuse, Jr., MF/F

Marquette Men’s Soccer

65


CAREER RECORDS Career Goal Leaders 1. Jose Itarte Hayden Knight 3. Tom Comiskey 4. Chris Lee 5. Tim Tutaj 6. Todd Fitch Kevin Berry Brian Sayers 9. Cory Butler Marshall Morehead

Years 1982-85 1976-79 1983-86 2001-04 1982-85 1984-87 1993-96 1972-74 1992-95 1998-00

MP-MS 79-70 48-48 81-68 72-55 77-75 66-58 87-87 27-27 83-83 59-59

Career Matches Played 1. 87 Kevin Berry 87 Billy Solberg 87 Scott Ziemba 4. 84 Jim Welch 5. 83 Cory Butler 6. 82 Chad Garofola 82 Jay Spatzek 8. 81 Tag Gabmatese 81 Tom Comiskey 10. 80 Three players

1993-96 1993-96 1993-96 1995-98 1992-95 1996-99 1989-92 1988-91 1983-86

Career Assists Per Match 1. 1.22 Brian Sayers (33a, 27m) 2. 0.95 Hayden Knight (42a, 44m) 3. 0.39 Todd Fitch (26a, 66m) 4. 0.38 Jim Tutaj (29a, 77m) 5. 0.37 John Dueker (16a, 43m) 6. 0.34 John Dillon (19a, 56m) 7. 0.33 Jose Itarte (26a, 79m) 8. 0.30 Sean Reti (24a, 79m) 0.30 Tom Comiskey (24a, 81m) 0.30 D. Gutierrez (21a, 71m)

Career Matches Started 1. 87 Billy Solberg 87 Scott Ziemba 3. 84 Jim Welch 4. 80 Chad Garofola 80 Jay Spatzek 6. 77 Andy Hunter 7. 76 Sean Reti 8. 75 Steve Provan 75 Bryan Godfrey 75 Andy Wagner Career Goals Per Match 1. 1.18 Hayden Knight (52g, 44m) 2. 1.03 Brian Sayers (28g, 27m) 3. 0.86 Drew Watzka (19g, 22m) 4. 0.65 Jose Itarte (52g, 79m) 5. 0.49 Chris Lee (35g, 72m) 6. 0.47 Tom Comiskey (38g, 81m) 7. 0.46 M. Morehead (27g, 59m) 8. 0.44 Jim Tutaj (34g, 77m) 9. 0.42 Todd Fitch (28g, 66m) 10. 0.34 Two players Career Assists 1. 42 Hayden Knight 2. 33 Brian Sayers 3. 29 Jim Tutaj 4. 26 Jose Itarte 5. 24 Tom Comiskey 24 Sean Reti 7. 22 Cory Butler 8. 21 Derek Gutierrez 9. 20 Billy Solberg 10. 19 Two players

1993-96 1993-96 1995-98 1996-99 1989-92 1997-00 1998-01 1989-92 2000-02 2000-03

1976-79 1972-74 1996-97 1982-85 2001-04 1983-86 1998-00 1982-85 1984-87

1976-79 1972-74 1982-85 1982-85 1983-86 1998-01 1992-95 2000-03 1993-96

incomplete data exists prior to 1980

66

G 52 52 38 35 34 28 28 28 27 27

A 26 42 24 8 29 19 12 33 22 6

Pts. Sh. Sh% MWG 130 219 14.8 8 146 N/A N/A N/A 100 169 22.5 2 78 206 17.0 8 97 148 23.0 4 75 207 13.5 3 68 177 15.8 10 89 N/A N/A N/A 76 149 18.1 7 60 134 20.1 7

Career Points Per Match 1. 3.32 H. Knight (146p, 44m) 2. 3.30 Brian Sayers (89p, 27m) 3. 1.30 Jose Itarte (103p, 79m) 4. 1.26 Jim Tutaj (97p, 77m) 5. 1.23 T. Comiskey (100p, 81m) 6. 1.14 Todd Fitch (75p, 66m) 7. 1.08 Chris Lee (78p, 72m) 7. 1.02 M. Morehead (60p, 59m) 8. 0.93 John Dueker (40p, 43m) 9. 0.92 Two players Career Shots 1. 219 Jose Itarte 2. 207 Todd Fitch 3. 206 Chris Lee 4. 198 Jay Spatzek 5. 196 Mark Dillon 6. 177 Kevin Berry 177 Sean Reti 8. 169 Tom Comiskey 9. 160 Dan Stadler 10. 149 Cory Butler

1972-74 1976-79 1984-87 1982-85 1979-82 1978-82 1982-85 1998-01 1983-86 2000-03

Years 1976-79 1982-85 1983-86 1982-85 1972-74 2001-04 1992-95 1984-87 1993-96 1989-92

Match Winning Goals 1. 10 Kevin Berry 2. 8 Jose Itarte 8 Chris Lee 4. 7 Cory Butler 7 Steve Govin 7 Marshall Morehead 7 Sean Reti 8. 6 Martin Conway 8. 6 Drew Watzka 10. 5 Marty Tappel 5 Derek Gutierrez 5 Blair Kohlmeyer

1993-96 1982-85 2001-04 1992-95 1996-98 1998-00 1998-01 1997-98 1996-97 1995-98 2000-03 2002-05

MP-MS 48-48 79-70 81-68 77-75 27-27 72-55 83-83 66-58 87-87 84-80

G 52 52 38 34 28 35 27 28 28 24

A 42 26 24 29 33 8 22 19 12 16

Pts. 146 130 100 97 89 78 76 75 68 64

Sh. N/A 219 169 148 N/A 208 149 207 177 198

Sh% MWG N/A N/A 14.8 8 22.5 2 23.0 4 N/A N/A 17.0 8 18.1 7 13.5 3 15.8 10 12.1 4

Yellow Card Cautions (since 1995) 2003-07 1. 18 Mike Carlson 2. 16 Chris Lee 2001-04 3. 15 Bryan Dahlquist 2002-06 4. 12 Derek Gutierrez 2000-03 12 Danny Mullin 2001-04 6. 9 Tom Nolan 1999-02 9 Matt Darby 2000-03 8. 8 Billy Von Rueden 2006-pres. 8 Tim Jallow 2006-pres.

1976-79 1972-74 1982-85 1982-85 1983-86 1984-87 2001-04 1998-00 1979-82

1982-85 1984-87 2001-04 1989-92 1988-90 1993-96 1998-01 1983-86 1983-86 1992-95

Shot Percentage (goals/shots; min. 85 shots) 1982-85 1. 23.0 Jim Tutaj (34g, 148s) 2. 22.4 Tom Comiskey (38g, 169s) 1983-86 3. 21.7 Jose Itarte (52g, 219s) 1982-85 4. 20.1 M. Morehead (27g, 134s) 1998-00 5. 18.6 Adam Ithier (18g, 97s) 1990-91, 93 6. 18.1 Cory Butler (27g, 149s) 1992-95 7. 17.0 Eric Marshall (15g, 88s) 1999-02 Chris Lee (35g, 206s) 2001-04 8. 16.1 Matt Breines (17g, 105s) 1987-91 9. 15.8 Kevin Berry (28g, 177s) 1993-96 10. 13.5 Todd Fitch (28 g, 207s) 1984-87 13.5 Brian Brewer (13g, 96s) 1993-96

2009 Media Guide

Career Points Leaders 1. Hayden Knight 2. Jose Itarte 3. Tom Comiskey 4. Tim Tutaj 5. Brian Sayers 6. Chris Lee 7. Cory Butler 8. Todd Fitch 9. Kevin Berry 10. Jay Spatzek

HAYDEN KNIGHT Hayden Knig ht closed out his career as Marquette soccer's all-time leading g oal scorer (52) and point producer (146 points). Knight is the only former men’s soccer player to be inducted into the Marquette Hall of Fame. A two-time team M VP, his top goal-scoring campaigns were 1977 and 1979 with 16 g oals. Following his colleg iate career, Knig ht played on a number of successful professional soccer teams including the 1981 NA SL Indoor champion Edmonton Drillers and the 1986-87 MISL champions Dallas Sidekicks. His career also included stints in the 1980s with the Milwaukee Wave and Chicag o Sting .


CAREER RECORDS Career Saves Leaders

Years

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1995-98 1987-91 1992-94 2000-03 1986-89 1978-81 1983-86 2006-pres. 1985 2004-05

Jim Welch David Wulff Steve McCullough Adam Ubert Peter Ament Tom McConnell Dane Klingbeil Matt Pyzdrowski Mike Dietrich Steven Grow

MP-MS

GA

GAA

Sv.

W-L-T

Sho.

84-84 67-65 64-64 78-78 59-39 27-27 48-38 43-42 20-15 23-17

112 94 95 98 62 30 39 62 32 25

1.24 1.54 1.36 1.23 1.35 1.11 1.10 1.43 2.14 1.31

385 337 332 268 246 234 175 148 79 67

42-25-9 29-29-4 36-18-5 41-32-5 18-12-10 N/A 35-13-5 5-26-9 14-2-4 7-8-1

26 15 23 15 14 N/A 12 6 6 5

Career Minutes in Goal 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

8,112 7,162 6,300 5,507 4,154 3,888 3,183 2,430 1,711 1,492

7. 8. 9. 10.

112 98 95 94 62 62 39 35 32 30

Jim Welch 1995-98 Adam Ubert 2000-03 Steve McCullough 1992-94 David Wulff 1987-91 Peter Ament 1986-89 Matt Pyzdrowski 2006-pres. Dane Klingbeil 1983-86 Tom McConnell 1978-81 Steven Grow 2004-05 Andy Kroll 2004-05

Jim Welch 1995-98 Adam Ubert 2000-03 Steve McCullough 1992-94 David Wulff 1987-91 Peter Ament 1986-89 Matt Pyzdrowski 2006-pres. Dane Klingbeil 1983-86 Andy Kroll 2004-05 Mike Dietrich 1985 Tom McConnell 1978-81

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

88.6 81.1 79.9 78.2 77.8 77.5 73.2 70.5

10.

8.67 5.19 5.02 4.34 4.17 3.95 3.64 3.44 3.44 2.57

Dane Kingbeil Tom McConnell Adam Ubert Jim Welch Peter Ament Steve McCullough Matt Pyzdrowski David Wulff

Years 1983-86 1978-81 2000-03 1995-98 1986-89 1992-94 2006-pres. 1987-91

MP-MS

Min.

GA

GAA

48-38 27-27 78-78 84-84 59-39 64-64 43-42 67-65

3,183 2,430 7,162 8,112 4,154 6,300 3,888 5,507

39 30 98 112 62 95 62 94

1.10 1.11 1.23 1.24 1.35 1.36 1.43 1.54

min. 2,000 minutes, 2.00 GAA • accurate Goalkeepers stats were not kept until 1983

Tom McConnell 1978-81 Steve McCullough 1992-94 David Wulff 1987-91 Jim Welch 1995-98 Peter Ament 1986-89 Mike Dietrich 1985 Dane Klingbeil 1983-86 Matt Pyzdrowski 2006-pres. Adam Ubert 2000-03 Andy Kroll 2004-05

Tom McConnell Dane Klingbeil Peter Ament David Wulff Steve McCullough Jim Welch Adam Ubert Matt Pyzdrowski

1978-81 1983-86 1986-89 1987-91 1992-94 1995-98 2000-03 2006-pres.

Career Victories 1. 42-25-9 Jim Welch 2. 41-32-5 Adam Ubert 3. 36-18-5 Steve McCullough 4. 35-13-3 Dane Klingbeil 5. 29-29-4 David Wulff 6. 18-12-10 Peter Ament 7. 14-2-4 Mike Dietrich

1995-98 2000-03 1992-94 1983-86 1987-91 1986-89 1985

Career Shutouts 1. 2. 3. 4.

26 23 15 14 14 12 6 6 5

Career Saves Per Match 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

Career Save Pct. (saves/shots faced) (min. 2,000 minutes)

Career Goals Allowed 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Career GAA Leaders

6. 7. 9.

Jim Welch Steve McCullough David Wulff Adam Ubert Peter Ament Dane Klingbeil Mike Dietrich Matt Pyzdrowski Steven Grow

1995-98 1992-94 1987-91 2000-03 1986-89 1983-86 1985 2006-pres. 2004-05

Jim Welch still owns many career goalkeeping records

YEAR-BY-YEAR CATEGORY LEADERS Year

Individual Points

2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980

Anthony Colaizzi Two players Two players Blair Kohlmeyer Chris Lee Chris Lee Two players Sean Reti Marshall Morehead Marshall Morehead Steve Govin Donny Mark Drew Watzka Cory Butler Kevin Berry Allen Stoltman Steve Provan Adam Ithier Jay Spatzek Mark Dillon Matt Brienes Todd Fitch Tom Comiskey Jose Itarte Jose Itarte Jose Itarte John Dillon John Dueker Rade Latinovich

Goals 11 8 4 5 23 30 17 19 23 28 13 15 34 21 30 21 15 25 22 29 16 18 35 42 42 18 19 17 18

Anthony Colaizzi Nick Kay Two players Duncan Silvert-Noftle Chris Lee Chris Lee Two players Three players Marshall Morehead Marshall Morehead Steve Govin Drew Watzka Drew Watzka Cory Butler Kevin Berry Allen Stoltman Steve Provan Adam Ithier Jay Spatzek Mark Dillon Paul Jakubczak Todd Fitch Tom Comiskey Jose Itarte Jose Itarte Jose Itarte Jose Itarte John Dueker Rade Latinovich

Assists 4 4 2 2 10 14 7 7 10 13 5 5 14 7 13 10 7 10 9 12 6 8 13 16 16 9 9 6 8

Two players Two players Rob Walton Blair Kohlmeyer Four players Derek Gutierrez Matt Darby Derek Gutierrez Sean Reti Sean Reti S. Reti, D. Mark Andy Hunter Billy Solberg Cory Butler Cory Butler Billy Solberg Cory Butler James Danaher James Danaher Mark Dillon Matt Breines Bohdan Nedilsky Dominic D'Amato Jose Itarte Jose Itarte Jim Tutaj John Dillon John Dueker John Dueker

Saves 3 3 3 3 4 8 6 6 8 7 4 5 8 7 8 6 4 7 7 5 6 8 10 10 10 7 15 5 8

Matt Pyzdrowski Matt Pyzdrowski Matt Pyzdrowski Steven Grow Steven Grow Adam Ubert Adam Ubert Adam Ubert Adam Ubert Greg Guglielmino Jim Welch Jim Welch Jim Welch Jim Welch Steve McCullough Steve McCullough Steve McCullough David Wulff David Wulff David Wulff Peter Ament David Wulff Dane Klingbeil Dane Klingbeil Dane Klingbeil — Gregory Campbell Gregory Campbell Tom McConnell

GAA 55 46 47 35 32 61 64 81 62 66 80 92 119 94 104 138 90 104 72 70 110 91 47 79 79 — 61 50 125

Matt Pyzdrowski Matt Pyzdrowski Matt Pyzdrowski Steven Grow Steven Grow Adam Ubert Adam Ubert Adam Ubert Adam Ubert Greg Guglielmino Jim Welch Jim Welch Jim Welch Jim Welch Steve McCullough Steve McCullough Steve McCullough David Wulff David Wulff Peter Ament Peter Ament David Wulff Dane Klingbeil Dane Klingbeil Dane Klingbeil Dane Klingbeil Gregory Campbell Gregory Campbell Tom McConnell

1.17 1.42 1.81 1.49 1.17 1.61 1.12 0.95 1.28 1.41 1.38 0.90 1.15 1.14 1.20 1.07 1.85 1.73 1.31 1.08 1.46 1.88 0.89 0.83 0.83 1.33 2.18 1.36 2.00

Team Pts.

G

A

Sv. GAA

38 39 22 27 71 94 87 118 99 87 68 79 127 94 139 110 79 115 123 87 74 74 144 139 193 — 98 76 54

12 12 8 9 24 30 31 40 33 28 23 27 43 32 49 41 29 42 44 30 28 27 50 49 69 43 35 26 18

14 15 6 9 23 34 25 38 33 31 22 25 41 30 41 28 21 31 35 27 18 20 44 41 55 — 28 24 18

60 81 70 30 59 64 65 82 63 76 80 93 119 101 104 138 90 115 102 115 110 149 47 104 82 — 79 99 148

1.17 1.45 2.15 1.63 1.74 1.56 1.12 0.93 1.28 1.59 1.38 0.88 1.63 1.15 1.20 1.07 1.85 2.04 1.48 1.13 1.46 1.91 0.89 1.20 0.79 1.55 2.00 1.59 1.75

Marquette Men’s Soccer

67


INDIVIDUAL SEASON RECORDS Season Goal Leaders

Year

MP-MS

G

A

Pts.

Sh.

A

Pts.

Sh.

Sh%

MWG

1. Ed Nomo-Ongolo

1964

8-8

17

0

34

N/A N/A

N/A

1. Brian Sayers

1973

9-9

14

29

57

N/A

N/A

N/A

2. Hayden Knight

1979

12-12

16

13

45

N/A N/A

N/A

2. Hayden Knight

1979

12-12

16

13

45

N/A

N/A

N/A

Hayden Knight

1977

10-10

16

11

43

N/A N/A

N/A

3. Hayden Knight

1977

10-10

16

11

43

N/A

N/A

N/A

4. Chris Lee

2003

17-17

14

2

30

5. Jose Itarte

1983

21-21

14

6

34

Drew Watzka

1996

22-22

14

6

34

Brian Sayers

1973

9-9

14

29

57

8. Five players

6.

5.

MP-MS G

1

4. Jose Itarte

1984

20-20

16

10

42

78

.205

3

N/A N/A

1

5. Hayden Knight

1978

15-15

15

10

40

N/A

N/A

N/A

4

6. Jose Itarte

1985

22-22

13

10

36

80

.162

3

7. Jim Tutaj

1984

20-20

13

9

35

53

.245

0

Tom Comiskey

1986

21-20

13

9

35

69

.188

2

9. Drew Watzka

1996

22-22

14

6

34

47

.289

4

Jose Itarte

1983

21-21

14

6

34

N/A

N/A

1

Ed Nomo-Ongolo

1964

8-8

17

0

34

N/A

N/A

N/A

47

.289

N/A N/A

N/A

Season Assists Per Match (min. 8 assists)

Shot Percentage (goals/shots) (min. 50 shots)

Match Winning Goals (since 1981)

1994

1. 3.22 Brian Sayers (29a, 9m)

1973

1. 24.5 Jim Tutaj (13 g, 53sh)

1984

1.

6 Kevin Berry

1994

23 Cory Butler

1994

2. 1.40 Chris Lewandowski (14a, 10m)

1976

2. 20.9 Chris Lee (14 g, 67sh)

2003

2.

5 Mark Dillon

1989

23 Steve McCullough

1994

3. 1.08 Hayden Knight (13a, 12m)

1979

3. 20.5 Jose Itarte (16 g, 78sh)

1984

5 Allen Stoltman

1993

23 Billy Solberg

1994

4. 1.10 Hayden Knight (11a, 10m)

1977

4. 18.8 Tom Comiskey (13 g, 69sh)

1986

4 Tag Gambatese

1990

23 Scott Ziemba

1994

5. 0.94 John Dillon (15a, 16m)

1982

5. 17.2 Chris Lee (10 g, 58sh)

2004

4 Marshall Morehead

1999

6. 0.91 Hayden Knight (10a, 11m)

1978

6. 16.9 Marshall Morehead (10 g, 59sh)

2000

4 Tim Tappel

1996

7. 0.80 Hayden Knight (8a, 10m)

1976

7. 16.9 Todd Fitch (12 g, 71sh)

1985

4 Drew Watzka

1996

8. 0.57 Jim Tutaj (12a, 21m)

1983

8. 16.7 Jay Spatzek (9 g, 54sh)

1990

4 Blair Kohlmeyer

2003

9. 0.50 Jose Itarte (10a, 20m)

1985

9. 16.3 Jose Itarte (13 g, 80sh)

1985

1982

10. 15.0 Mark Dillon (12 g, 80sh)

1989

22 14 players

23 Cory Butler

1994

23 Steve McCullough

1994

23 Billy Solberg

1994

23 Scott Ziemba

1994

0.50 Michael Lumsden (8a, 16m)

1. 6.33 Brian Sayers (57p, 9m)

1973

2. 4.30 Hayden Knight (43p, 10m)

1977

3. 4.25 Ed Nomo-Ongolo (34p, 8m)

1964

1. 2.13 Ed Nomo-Ongolo (17g, 8m)

1963

4. 3.75 Hayden Knight (45p, 12m)

1979

2. 1.60 Hayden Knight (16g, 10m)

1977

5. 3.63 Hayden Knight (40p, 11m)

1978

3. 1.56 Brian Sayers (14g, 9m)

1973

6. 2.10 Jose Itarte (42p, 20m)

1984

4. 1.36 Hayden Knight (15g, 11m)

1978

7. 1.76 Chris Lee (30p, 17m)

2003

5. 1.33 Hayden Knight (16g, 12m)

1979

8. 1.75 Jim Tutaj (35p, 20m)

1984

6. 1.11 Dennis Ward (10g, 9m)

1967

9. 1.67 Tom Comiskey (35p, 21m)

1986

7. 0.82 Chris Lee (14g, 17m)

2003

8. 0.73 Jose Itarte (16g, 22m)

1984

9. 0.68 Marshall Morehead (13g, 19m)

1999

10. 0.67 Jose Itarte (14g, 21m)

10. 1.63 Jose Itarte (36p, 22m)

1985

Season Shots

1983

Season Assists 29 Brian Sayers

1.

87 Pat Sorrentino

1984

2.

80 Mark Dillon

1989

3.

80 Jose Itarte

1985

1973

4.

78 Jose Itarte

1984 1985

2.

15 John Dillon

1982

5.

71 Todd Fitch

3.

14 Chris Lewandowski

1976

6.

69 Tom Comiskey

1986

4.

13 Hayden Knight

1979

7.

67 Mark Dillon

1990

67 Chris Lee

2003

66 Tom Comiskey

1985

64 Bohdan Nedilsky

1987

5.

12 Jim Tutaj

1983

6.

11 Hayden Knight

1977

9.

7.

10 Jose Itarte

1985

10.

10 Dominic D'Amato

1986

10 Hayden Knight

1978

10 Jose Itarte

1984

68

4.

9.

3 11 players

Season Points Per Match min. 24 points)

22 13 players

Season Goals Per Match (min. 10 goals)

1.

Year

23 Kevin Berry

Season Matches Started 1.

Season Points Leaders

20.9

67

13

Season Matches Played 1.

Sh% MWG

2009 Media Guide

Jim Tutaj


INDIVIDUAL SEASON RECORDS Season Saves Leaders . . . . . . . . . .Year 1. Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1993 2. Tom McConnell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1980 3. Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 4. Peter Ament . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1988 5. Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1994 David Wulff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1987 7. Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1995 8. Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 9. Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2002 10. Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2003

MP-MS 21-21 9-9 22-22 19-17 23-23 15-13 21-21 21-21 19-19 19-19

Min. GA 2,100 25 810 18 2,085 36 1,484 24 2,250 30 1,147 24 1,971 25 2,102 21 1,761 22 1,674 30

GAA 1.07 2.00 1.55 1.46 1.20 1.88 1.14 0.90 1.12 1.61

Sv. 138 125 119 110 104 104 94 92 64 61

W-L-T Sho. 13-5-3 8 N/A N/A 12-9-1 5 6-5-4 4 16-6-1 10 6-8-1 2 9-8-4 5 12-6-3 7 10-8-1 5 9-9-1 3

Season GAA Leaders . . . . . . . . . .Year 1. Dane Klingbeil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 2. Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 3. Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2001 4. Peter Ament . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1986 5. Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1993 6. Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2002 7. Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1995 8. David Wulff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1989 9. Matt Pyzdrowski . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2008 10. Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1994

MP-MS 20-20 21-21 21-21 17-10 21-21 19-19 21-21 14-14 17-17 23-23

Min. GA 1,620 15 2,102 21 1,898 20 1,043 11 2,100 25 1,761 22 1,971 25 1,159 15 1,622 21 2,250 30

GAA Sv. W-L-T Sho. 0.83 79 14-2-4 8 0.90 92 12-6-3 8 0.95 81 12-8-1 5 0.95 33 7-2-1 4 1.07 138 13-5-3 8 1.12 64 10-8-1 5 1.14 94 9-8-4 5 1.16 70 6-6-2 4 1.17 55 3-10-4 4 1.20 104 16-6-1 10 min. 1,000 minutes

Season Minutes in Goal 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

2,250 2,102 2,100 2,085 1,971 1,954 1,950 1,898

Season Saves Per Match

Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . .1994 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . .1993 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1995 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1998 Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . .1992 Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2001

Season Goals Allowed 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

7.

40 36 35 32 30 30 30 26

1. 13.89 Tom McConnell (125sv, 9m) . . . . . . .1980 2. 8.17 Tom McConnell (49sv, 6m) . . . . . . . .1981 3. 6.57 Steve McCullough (138sv, 25m) . . . . . .1993 4. 6.07 David Wulff (91sv, 15m) . . . . . . . . . . .1987 5. 5.79 Peter Ament (110sv, 19m) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 6. 5.55 Tom Campbell (61sv, 11m) . . . . . . . . .1982 7. 5.41 Jim Welch (119sv, 22m) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 8. 5.27 Peter Ament (58sv, 11m) . . . . . . . . . .1987

Season Save Pct. (saves/shots faced)

Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . .1992 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 David Wulff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1991 Mike Dietrich . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1985 Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . .1994 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1998 Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2003 Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2000

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

87.4 84.7 84.0 83.9 82.4 82.2 82.1 81.8

Tom McConnell (125sv, 143sf) . . . . . .1980 Steve McCullough (138sv, 163sf) . . . . .1993 Dane Klingbeil (79sv, 94sf) . . . . . . . .1984 Dane Klingbeil (47sv, 56sf) . . . . . . . .1986 David Wulff (70sv, 85sf) . . . . . . . . . . .1989 Tom McConnell (60sv, 73sf) . . . . . . .1979 Peter Ament (110sv, 134sf) . . . . . . . . .1988 Peter Ament (45sv, 55sf) . . . . . . . . . .1989

Season Victories 1. 2. 3. 4.

16-6-1 14-2-4 13-5-3 12-6-3 12-9-1 12-8-1 7. 10-7-2 10-8-1

Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . .1994 Dane Klingbeil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . .1993 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2001 Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2000 Adam Ubert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2002

Season Shutouts 1. 2. 3.

6. 7. 8.

10 9 8 8 8 7 6 5

Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . .1994 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1998 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 Steve McCullough . . . . . . . . . . .1993 Dane Klingbeil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 Jim Welch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 Dane Klingbeil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 Four players

TEAM SEASON RECORDS Points 1. 193 (69g 55a) . . . . . . . . . . .1984 2. 164 (60g 44a) . . . . . . . . . . .1985 3. 144 (50g 44a) . . . . . . . . . . .1986 4. 139 (49g 41a) . . . . . . . . . . .1994 5. 127 (43g 41a) . . . . . . . . . . .1996 6. 123 (44g 35a) . . . . . . . . . . .1990 7. 118 (40g 38a) . . . . . . . . . . .2001 8. 115 (42g 31a) . . . . . . . . . . .1991 9. 110 (41g 28a) . . . . . . . . . . .1993 10. 99 (33g 33a) . . . . . . . . . . . .2000 11. 98 (35g 28a) . . . . . . . . . . . .1982 12. 94 (32g 30a) . . . . . . . . . . . .1995 94 (30g 34a) . . . . . . . . . . . .2004 14. 87 (31g 25a) . . . . . . . . . . . .2003 87 (28g 31a) . . . . . . . . . . . .1999 87 (30g 27a) . . . . . . . . . . . .1989 17. 79 (27g 25a) . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 79 (29g 21a) . . . . . . . . . . . .1992 19. 76 (26g 24a) . . . . . . . . . . . .1981 20. 74 (28g 18a) . . . . . . . . . . . .1988 Goals Against Average 1. 0.83 (15 GA, 1620 min) 2. 0.88 (21 GA, 2139 min) 3. 0.92 (20 GA, 1962 min) 4. 0.93 (20 GA, 1927 min) 5. 1.07 (25 GA, 2100 min) 6. 1.12 (22 GA, 1761 min) 7. 1.13 (25 GA, 1989 min) 8. 1.15 (26 GA, 2040 min) 9. 1.17 (21 GA, 1622 min) 10. 1.20 (30 GA, 2250 min)

Goals 1. 69 2. 60 3. 50 4. 49 5. 44 6. 43 7. 42 8. 41 9. 40 10. 35 11. 33 12. 32 13. 31 14. 30 30 16. 29 17. 28 18. 28 19. 27 27

. . . . . . . . . . .1984 . . . . . . . . . . .1997 . . . . . . . . . . .1986 . . . . . . . . . . .2001 . . . . . . . . . . .1993 . . . . . . . . . . .2003 . . . . . . . . . . .1989 . . . . . . . . . . .1995 . . . . . . . . . . .2008 . . . . . . . . . . .1994

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1985 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1986 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1994 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1990 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1991 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1993 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2001 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1982 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1995 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1989 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1992 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1988 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1999 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1987 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997

Steve McCullough

Assists 1. 55 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 2. 44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1985 3. 44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1986 4. 41 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 41 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1994 6. 38 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2001 7. 35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1990 8. 34 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2004 9. 33 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2000 10. 31 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1991 31 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1999 12. 30 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1995 13. 28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1993 28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1982 15. 27 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1989 16. 25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2003 25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 18. 24 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1981 19. 22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1998 20. 21 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1992

Goals Against Average (con’t) 11. 1.28 (26 GA, 1829 min) . . . . . . . . . . .2000 12. 1.33 (28 GA, 1900 min) . . . . . . . . . . .1988 13. 1.38 (30 GA, 1955 min) . . . . . . . . . . .1998 14. 1.44 (23 GA, 1440 min) . . . . . . . . . . .1982 15. 1.48 (32 GA, 1950 min) . . . . . . . . . . .1990 16. 1.59 (27 GA, 1533 min) . . . . . . . . . . .1981 17. 1.59 (31 GA, 1755 min) . . . . . . . . . . .1999 18. 1.63 (38 GA, 2100 min) . . . . . . . . . . .1996 1.63 (28 GA, 1550 min) . . . . . . . . . . .2005 20. 1.66 (32 GA, 1730 min) . . . . . . . . . . .2003

Wins 1. 16 (16-6-1) 2. 15 (15-4-2) 3. 14 (14-2-4) 4. 13 (13-9-0) 13 (13-5-3) 6. 12 (12-8-1) 12 (12-9-1) 12 (12-6-3) 9. 11 (11-9-1) 10. 10 (10-7-2)

Shots (Goals) 1. 435 (60) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1985 2. 393 (69) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 3. 378 (50) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1986 4. 375 (44) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1990 5. 367 (42) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1991 6. 335 (35) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1982 7. 324 (27) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1987 8. 309 (40) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2001 9. 292 (30) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1989 10. 292 (43) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 11. 290 (32) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1995 12. 288 (28) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1988 13. 281 (41) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1993 14. 277 (29) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1992 15. 266 (31) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2003 16. 263 (33) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2000 17. 254 (49) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1994 18. 253 (24) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2004 19. 235 (26) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1981 20. 233 (34) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2004

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1994 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1986 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1985 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1993 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2001 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1990 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2000

Saves (GA) 1. 149 (41) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1987 2. 139 (28) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1988 3. 138 (25) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1993 4. 129 (49) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1985 5. 119 (38) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1996 6. 115 (47) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1991 7. 115 (25) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1989 8. 104 (30) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1994 9. 102 (32) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1990 10. 101 (26) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1995 11. 99 (27) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1981 12. 93 (21) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1997 13. 90 (40) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1992 14. 82 (20) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2001 15. 81 (20) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1986 16. 80 (30) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1998 17. 79 (15) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1984 18. 76 (31) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1999 19. 70 (37) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2006 20. 67 (28) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2005

Wins (con’t) 10 (10-8-1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2003 10 (10-9-0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1999 13. 9 (9-9-1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2004 9 (9-8-4) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1995 9 (9-11-1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1987 9 (9-11-1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1998 9 (9-8-0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1980 9 (9-2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1978 19. 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Three times

Marquette Men’s Soccer

69


MATCH RECORDS Individual Points in a Match 1. 12 12 3. 8 8 8 6. 7

Brian Sayers Ed Nomo Ongolo Hayden Knight Matt Breines Mark Dillon Chris Lee

Individual Saves in a Match

St. Norbert Wis.-Platteville Wis.-Whitewater UAB at DePaul East Carolina

Oct. 6, ’73 Sept. 26, ’64 Sept. 20, ’79 Oct. 10, ’91 Sept, 10, ’89 Oct. 18. ’03

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

16 13 12 12 11

David Wulff vs. Wisconsin David Wulff at Dayton Steve McCullough Western Ky. Peter Ament Akron Seven times

Team Points in a Match Individual Goals in a Match 1. 12 12 3. 8 8 8 6. 6

Brian Sayers Ed Nomo Ongolo Hayden Knight Matt Breines Mark Dillon Five times

St. Norbert Wis.-Platteville Wis.-Whitewater UAB at DePaul

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

26 20 18 18 16 16 at 16 16 16 10. 15 15 at

Oct. 6, ’73 Sept. 26, ’64 Sept. 20, ’79 Oct. 10, ’91 Sept, 10, ’89

Individual Assists in a Match 1. 2.

4 Cory Butler 3 Derek Gutierrez

Butler East Carolina

Sept. 23, ’93 Oct. 18, ’03

Wis.-Whitewater Wis.-Whitewater Valparaiso Carthage Purdue Wis.-Whitewater Wis.-Platteville St. Norbert Wis.-Platteville Wis.-Green Bay Wis.-Milwaukee

Nov. 6, ’84 Sept. 20, ’79 Sept. 4, ’93 Oct. 4, ’69 Sept. 27, ’85 Nov. 3, ’83 Oct. 22, ’77 Oct. 5, ’74 Sept. 26, ’64 Oct. 31, ’01 Sept. 1, ’01

Team Goals in a Match

Individual Shots in a Match 1. 12 Mark Dillon vs. Central Mich. Valparaiso 2. 10 Marshall Morehead 3. 8 Chris Lee at TCU 8 Sean Reti at UMKC 8 Drew Watzka Wisconsin 8 Steve Provan Northern Ill. 8 Jay Spatzek Central Mich. 8 Mark Dillon at DePaul

Sept. 2, ’90 Oct. 8, ’00 Oct. 26, ’01 Sept. 8, ’98 Oct. 25, ’96 Oct. 10, ’92 Oct. 12, ’91 Sept. 10, ’89

1. 10 10 2. 9 3. 8 8 at 8 8 8 8. 7

Wis.-Whitewater Wis.-Whitewater Carthage Purdue Wis.-Whitewater Wis.-Platteville St. Norbert Wis.-Platteville Nine times

Nov. 6, ’84 Sept. 20, ’79 Oct. 4, ’69 Sept. 27, ’85 Nov. 3, ’83 Oct. 22, ’77 Oct. 5, ’74 Sept. 26, ’64

Team Assists in a Match Aug. 24, ’91 Sept. 15, ’90 Sept, 12, ’93 Oct. 4, ’88

1. 2.

8 5

Carthage Oct. 30, 1994 Seven times

Team Shots in a Match 1. 47 2. 38 vs 3. 37 37 5. 36 6. 33 7. 32 32 9. 30 10. 29

Wis.-Whitewater Central Michigan Wis.-Whitewater Northwestern at DePaul Northwestern Central Michigan at DePaul East Carolina at Ill.-Chicago

Nov. 6, ’84 Sept. 2, ’90 Sept. 20, ’79 Sept. 29, ’91 Sept. 21, ’83 Oct. 27, ’83 Oct. 12, ’91 Sept. 10, ’89 Oct. 11, ’01 Nov. 9, ’83

Team Saves in a Match 1. 2. 3. 4.

16 14 13 12 12 12 7. 11

Wisconsin Western Illinois at Dayton Western Kentucky Saint Louis Akron Six times

Oct. 24, ’91 Sept. 11, ’88 Sept. 15, ’90 Sept. 12, ’93 Oct. 17, ’93 Oct. 4, ’88

Records incomplete prior to 1983

CLASS RECORDS Matches Played . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 Matches Started . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 Points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45 Goals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Assists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 Shots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .87 Saves 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .104 Shutouts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 Goals Against Avg. 2 . . . . . . . . . .1.20 Fewest Goals Allowed 3 . . . . . . . .9

Senior Steve McCullough (1994) Steve McCullough (1994) Hayden Knight (1979) Hayden Knight (1979) John Dillon (1982) Pat Sorrentino (1984) Two players Steve McCullough (1994) Steve McCullough (1994) Dane Klingbeil (1986)

23 23 57 17 29 80 138 8 0.90 15

Junior Cory Butler (1994) Cory Butler (1994) Brian Sayers (1973) Ed Nomo-Ongolo (1964) Brian Sayers (1973) Matt Dillon (1989) Steve McCullough (1993) Jim Welch (1997) Jim Welch (1997) Gregory Campbell (1981)

Matches Played . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 Matches Started . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 Points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 Goals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Assists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 Shots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71 Saves 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .119 Shutouts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Goals Against Avg. 2 . . . . . . . . . .0.83 Fewest Goals Allowed 3 . . . . . . . .7

Sophomore Three players Two players Jose Itarte (1983) Hayden Knight (1977) Jim Tutaj (1983) Todd Fitch (1985) Jim Welch (1996) Dane Klingbeil (1984) Dane Klingbeil (1984) Two players

22 22 29 10 15 61 94 6 0.95 11

Freshman Steve Govin (1996) Steve Govin (1996) Brian Sayers (1972) Allen Stoltman (1993) Brian Sayers (1972) Jose Itarte (1982) Jim Welch (1995) Two players Peter Ament (1996) Peter Ament (1996)

beginning 1981 based on a minimum of 1,000 minutes 3 based on a minimum of 600 minutes 1 2

Mark Dillon

70

2009 Media Guide


MISC. RECORDS

OPPONENT RECORDS

MATCH RECORDS

TEAM

INDIVIDUAL MATCH RECORDS

TEAM MATCH RECORDS

Points Ed Nomo Ongolo Brian Sayers

12 9/26/64, vs. Wis.-Platteville 10/6/73, vs. St. Norbert

Goals Twice

Goals Ed Nomo Ongolo Brian Sayers

12 9/26/64, vs. Wis.-Platteville 10/6/73, vs. St. Norbert

Assists Cory Butler

4 9/23/93, vs. Butler

Saves David Wulff

16 8/24/91, vs. Wisconsin

10 (Nov. 6, 1984; Sept. 29, 1979)

Goals Allowed Three times

10

Assists vs. Carthage

8 Oct. 30, 1984

Saves vs. Wisconsin

16 Aug. 24, 1991

Points Goals Assists Shots Saves Corners Fouls

20 10 8 32 17 17 34

at at at at at

Four times Three times Portland (9/4/00) Louisville (9/26/08) Saint Louis (9/21/90) Saint Louis (9/21/90) UAB (11/13/94)

INDIVIDUAL Points

10

Goals

4

Assists Shots

3 10

Saves

17

Kevin Alvero USF (10/14/98) Kevin Alvero USF (10/14/98) Three players Aaron Clapham at Louisville ( Kevin Johnston at Saint Louis (9/21/90)

TEAM SEASON RECORDS Most Matches: Most Wins: Fewest Wins: Highest Winning Pct.: Lowest Winning Pct.: Longest Winning Streak: Most Losses: Fewest Losses: Longest Losing Streak: Most Shutouts: Most Overtime Games: Most Goals: Fewest Goals: Most Goals Allowed: Fewest Goals Allowed:

23 16 1 86.4 8.8 10 15 1 15 10 7 69 8 49 7

1994 1994 2006 1978 2006 1984-85 2006 1978, 1964 2006 1994 1993 1984 1984, 2006 1985 1978, 1967

Most Consecutive Shutouts: Most Times Shutout: Highest Scoring Average: Lowest Scoring Average: Opp. High Scoring Avg: Opp. Low Scoring Avg: Most Saves: Most Opponents' Saves: Most Assists: Most Points: Most Shots: Most Shots Allowed: Most Fouls: Most Opponents' Fouls: Most Corner Kicks:

4 11 3.5 0.5 3.6 0.6 149 147 45 165 375 435 421 441 151

1998, 1981 2006 1984 2006 1965 1978 1987 1990 1985 1985 1990 1985 1993 1986 1997

VALLEY FIELDS MEN’S RECORDS Marquette Records Goals

Points Assists Saves

Opponent Records Goals Points Assists Saves

Individual 3 Kevin Berry, vs. UAB (Sept. 26, 1994) 3 Eric Marshall, vs. UWGB (Oct. 31, 2001) 3 Chris Lee, vs. East Carolina (Oct. 18, 2003) 7 Chris Lee vs. East Carolina (Oct. 18, 2003) 3 Derek Gutierrez vs. East Carolina (Oct. 18, 2003) 11 Steve McCullough three times Individual 4 Kevin Alvero USF (Oct. 14, 1998) 10 Kevin Alvero USF (Oct. 14, 1998) 2 Four Times 12 Chris Timlin DePaul (Nov. 3, 1995)

Team 7 vs. Valparaiso (Sept. 4, 1993) 18 vs. Valparaiso (Sept. 4, 1993) 5 Two times 13 vs. Southern Ill. (Oct. 10, 1993) Team 6, USF (Oct. 14, 1998) 18, USF (Oct. 14, 1998) 6, USF (Oct. 14, 1998) 12, DePaul (Nov. 3, 1995)

Derek Gutierrez

Marquette Men’s Soccer

71


ALL-TIME ROSTER Mike Adrian

Ramsis Adam Dan Addis Mike Adrian Panait Aguayo Ghalib Al-Tikrit J.J. Alberts Albert Alexander Michael Alfano Gary Altikriti Peter Ament Gary Anders Rick Anderson Roman Andrew Richard Angello Stefan Antonijevic Andrew Arneth Gunther Ast

1980 20051997-2000 1967 1966 1990 1973 20081964 1986-89 1969-72 1990-91 1974 1975-77 2007 1992-95 1967-69

Edwin Baldwin Mike Banahan Dan Barrett David Basile Barry Bass Jeremiah Bass Danny Bauer Jeffrey Beach John Becehner Steve Bednarczyk Erik Beers Kurt Beers Alex Beil

1980,82 1975-78 1985-89 1984-85 1998-99 1997-99 2007 1968 1975 1975-79 1983-85 1983 2003-04

72

Alex Belfrage Donald Benson Francisco Berrizbetia Kevin Berry Grayson Bithell Aleksandar Bjelic Matt Blouin Edward Bolger Helmut Bolk Patrick Boutier Matt Breines Brian Brewer Pat Brezinski James Brigel Matt Brotschul James Bunta John Burke Cory Butler

2007 1971-73 1968-69 1993-96 1987 2005-07 2003-06 1968-69 1966 1968 1987-91 1993-96 1982 1980-81 1995-97 1980-82 1998 1992-95

Matt Callaghan Thomas Callinan Tom Callinan Ben Calvopina Greg Campbell Gregory Campbell Kevin Campbell Kevin Carlin Mike Carlin Mike Carlson Daniel Casey David Check John Chirichingo Richard Clarizio Jason Clark Jim Clark Mike Closs Kevin Coates Anthony Colaizzi Tom Comiskey Jerry Concannon Kevin Connolly Steve Constants Martin Conway Chip Corrigan Santo Costabile Steve Costants Kevin Cullen Josh Curry

2003-04 1964 1965 20081980-81 1982 1974-75 1991 1989, 91 2004-07 1964 20081977 1974 1993 1964-67 1976 1995-97 20071983-86 1989-92 1974 1980-83 1997-98 1983 1994-97 1980 1966 2007-08

Dominic D'Amato Niklas Dagervik Bryan Dahlquist James Danaher Matt Darby Stephen Deem Steve Deem Jorge DeQueiroz Miguel DeQueiroz Steve Deters Marc Dettmann Brian Devenish Tom Devine Kamal Dides Peter Dierbeck Mike Dietrich John Dillon

1984-88 2007 2003-06 1990-91 2000-03 1981 1979-82 1973-74 1973-74 1968-71 2006 1965 1985 1977 1981 1985 1978--82

2009 Media Guide

Mark Dillon Mark Dix Donn Domico James Donahue Jim Donahue Ryan DuBois John Dueker Steve DuFauchard

1988-90 1974 1990-91 1979 1976-78 2003-05 1979-82 1983-86

Kenneth Easey Kevin Eiler Tom Engle Mehdi Eslami Sam Etim Jeremy Evans William Ewald

1973 1995-98 1976-77 2006-07 2007-08 1998 1973

Mike Carlson

Dave Farley Kenneth Fasey Dan Feder Jon Fehrenbach John Ferguson Louis Fernandez Jeffrey Fernhoff Tom Fessler Todd Fitch Dennis Fitzpatrick Josh Fleming Gustavo Flores Keenan M. Flynn Sean Flynn Jeremy Foss Adam Frydman John Gaffney Vincent Galati

1979 1973 1983-84 1975-76 2006 1964-67 1967 1976-79 1984-87 1982-84 1992-95 1985-87 20082003-04 1996 2007 1971-73 1968

Joe Gallo Tag Gambatese Anthony Garavella Oswaldo Garcia Chad Garofola J.T. Garrity Brad Gaskowicz Jeff Gerlesits Albert Giesecke Andy Gill Tom Gilmartin Bryan Godfrey Steve Govin Tim Gramins Michael Greene Patric Gross Steven Grow Greg Guglielmino Derek Gutierrez

1997-99 1988-91 1973 1993 1996-99 2005 1974 1999-2001 1966, 68 2005-06 1973-74 1999-2002 1996-98 1989-90 20061994-95 2004-05 1999 2000-03

Jim Haggerty Edward Hahn Bruce Hall Patrick Hanley Richie Harris Jim Harwood Dennis Hatton Jack Hatzenbuhler Ken Haurie Richard Haurie John Hawkins Jake Hermann Amilcar Herrera A.J. Herrman Fred Hernandez Jake Herrmann Tom Herschel Dave Hodgson David Hodgson Pat Holton Tom Homann Jason Hood Andy Hunter

1986-87 1967-69 1976 2001 20031986-90 1974 1994 1974-75 1973 2000-02 1996 20082002 1966-67 1995 1977-80 1978 1979 1990-93 1988 1998-2001 1997-2000

Marty Igel Richie Ilk Jose Itarte Adam Ithier

1973-74 2002-03 1982-85 1990-93

Paul Jakubczak Mike Janusz Tim Jallow Matt Jermak Jason Jones

1986-89 2000 20061988-90 1989-90

Kenneth Kalafut Dennis Kapusta Robb Kashevarof Josh Kasun Nick Kay Mike Keelan John Kennedy William Keough Bijan Khajezadeh Roger Kieffer Mike Klemm

1968 1977-80 1986-87 1992-94 20051976 1981 1964 1968 1966-69 2005-06


ALL-TIME ROSTER Andy Hunter

Josh Kliebe Dane Klingbeil Hayden Knight Lloyd Knight Pat Knoelke Michael Knoeller William Kochanik Blair Kohlmeyer Andy Kroll Ed Kucaba Oscar Kuhr Pete Kuhr Al Kult Warren Kupin Henry Kwan Bennett Lafferty Richard LaForest Matt Lamale Andy Lambrecht Mark LaPlant Rade Latinovich Frank Lawrence Steve Lawrence Chris Lee Brian Lehky Mark Lembach Stephen Leonard Steve Lepak Chris Lewandowski Sergio Longoria Franklin Lue David Lugert Michael Lumsden Tom Lynn Gerald MacDonald Chris Madsen Calum Mallace Tony Mancini

1998 1983-86 1976-79 1977-80 2003-05 1964-65 1977 2002-05 2004-05 1977 1969 1968 1965-66 1973 1968 2003-06 1968-70 2006 1998 1982 1978-80 1973-74 1999-2002 2001-04 1995-98 2007 1964 1978-79 1974-76 1974 1967 1973 1982 20061973 200820081992

Mike Manone John Marina Donny Mark Eric Marshall Pat Mattingly Manny Mayta Tim McAvoy Zach McCallum Tom McConnell Steve McCullough Blaine McElroy John McGee Chris McGrath Paul McInerny Peter McIntosh Kevin McLaughlin Bill Mengele John Meser Alberto Mesta Edward Meyer Guy Miller Scott Miller Tony Milling Brian Mirek Tom Mittschel Fahad Mohsenian Rafael Molanphy Paul Monsen Jerry Moore Tom Moore Marshall Morehead Francisco Moreno Richard Morin Theran Motl George Muller Danny Mullin Harold Munroe Scott Murphy Jim Murray

2004 1964 1997-98 1999-2002 1974-76 2004 1986-87 2000-03 1978-81 1992-94 1991-92 1964-66 1986 1969-70 1979-82 1988-91 1974 1990-91 1974 1966-69 1975 20071965-66 1998 1978 1979-81 1973-75 20081975-76 1971-74 1998-2000 1976 1968 1999-2002 1973-74 2001-04 1968 1993 1975

Steve Names Cory Nava Hector Navarro Bohdan Nedilsky Andrew Nelson John Nelson Ryan Nikchevich Tom Nolan Ed Nomo-Ongolo John Noordover Josh Norman Mike Norris

1990-91 1996-97 20061985-88 1992 1974-76 2003-05 1999-2002 1964-65 1977 1989-92 1974

Brian Odem Jim O'Donnell Kevin O'Meara Bill O'Toole Michael Oehler Paul Oehler Ropo Olayiwola Matt Opgenorth Greg Orschein Jim Orscheln Brendan Ozanne Demetrios Pallas Stephen Peters

2006-08 1987 1974-77 1976-78 1973-74 1969-72 1975-76 2002 1983-85 1982 1988-89 1976 1968

Scott Peterson Werner Petrowitsch Somiat Phanuchaias Michael Pitterle William Plant Mike Plager Cary Plazak Tom Plodzien Michael Ponik Steve Provan Matt Pyzdrowski

1977 1976 1964-66 1967-69 1964 2006 1975-76 1977 1964-67 1989-92 2006-

Dan Rach David Radke Bernard Rahming Jeff Reep Kyle Reilly George Renchard Sean Reti Rock Richard Edward Riel Doug Riggins Mike Robards Joe Roedler Richard Rock Kyle Roge Blas Rojas Matt Rooney Erik Ruiz Jim Ruscheinski Ray Ruzioka Mike Ryan

1973-74 1971-72 2007 1977-78 1998-99 1966 1998-2001 1977-78 1966-67 2002 1999-2002 2001 1971-74 1980-82 1973 1992-95 2004-05 1983-84 1973 1968-69

Nathan Sabich Hassan Salamati Chris Salvatore Lennox Samuels Jim Sanford

2003-06 1974 1999-2000 1973 1974

Blair Kohlme yer

Sean Reti Francis Santschi Adam Savin Brian Sayers Hanes Sceroekka James Scerpella Thomas Schifinger David Schneider Michael Schneider Mike Schneider Brian Schnell Rusty Schoenherr Todd Schramm Eugene Schubert Erik Schuett John Schuetz Tyler Schwab Eric Score Casey Seymour Pat Sheahan Errol Shim Miguel Silva Duncan Silvert-Noftle J.W. Simpson Tyler Sisk John Slawson Michael Sliwa Al Smith Gregory Smith Robert Smithies David Snodgrass Billy Solberg Matt Soper Phillip Sorgel Pat Sorrentino Jay Spatzek Dan Stadler Daniel Stein Chad Steinbauer

1977 1986-87 1973-74 1973 1973 1966 1981,83-85 1982 1987 2000-03 1985-88 1999 1966-67 2005 1966 2007-08 1992 1987-88 1991-93 1967 1973 2005-07 2000 1991-92 1984-87 1964 1984-87 1967 1991-94 1996 1993-96 2002-06 1980-82 1981-84 1989-92 1983-86 1965 1988-89

Marquette Men’s Soccer

73


ALL-TIME ROSTER

COACHING HISTORY

Scott Steinbauer Daniel Steininger Donald St. George Max Stoka Allen Stoltman Michael Streit Matt Stummer Milan Sucevic Francis Sullivan Thomas Sweeney Tom Sweeney

1986-89 1964-66 2006 1993-97 1993-96 1994-95 20071988 1975-76 1968-70 2008

BARRY FAGAN (1964, one season)

Julian Taagen Ghobi Tabrizi Emil Tack Matthew Tadych Tim Tappel Matthew Taydich Ryan Taylor Joel Thibert Desmond Thomas Scott Thorvilson Raymond Tierney Jim Tutaj

1987-88 1964-65 1997 1981 1995-98 1980 1996-99 1992 1966-69 1983 1966 1982-85

Adam Ubert

2000-03

James Van Wagner Paul VanDerBosch Billy Von Rueden Luis Veloz

1966-67 1983-85 20061988

Andy Wagner Tony Walby Mike Walker Richard Walker Kellan Walsh

2000-03 2000-03 1974 1968-70 2002-04

Adam Ubert

1964

75.0

CHARLES NADER (1965-75, 10 seasons) 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 at Marquette

2-4-2 3-3-3 5-2-2 3-5-1 5-2-1 3-5-1 3-6-0 3-4-2 6-2-1 3-4-2 2-6-1 38-43-16

75.0 50.0 66.7 38.9 68.8 38.9 33.3 44.4 72.2 44.4 27.8 47.4

Fag an

Nadar

Born

Panek

Ad lard

Bennett

JOE BORN (1976-82, seven seasons)

Scott Ziemba Rick Walsh Rob Walton Andrew Wang Dennis Ward Gary Ward T.C. Ward Joe Waring Kevin Wasco Drew Watzka Kyle Weber Tom Weber Lothar Wedekind Craig Wehrle Jim Welch Robert Welsch Steve Weltzin Robert Wesolowski Marcus West Tom Wetterman Colin Williams Nate Winkel Brian Wirele Blake Wojski Paul Wolf Craig Wood Joseph Woring Vincente Wright David Wulff Frank Yakos Carl Zahner Joe Zahner Matt Zahner Panait Zaragozza Jaime Zarse Ted Zdeblick Tom Zdeblick Scott Ziemba Steve Zimmerman John Zoilo

74

5-1-2

2009 Media Guide

1964-66 2003-06 1968 1965-67,69 1968-69 2003-04 1979-81 1986-89 1996-97 2002-05 1989-92 1967-70 1968 1995-98 1964-66 1979 1968-71 1995 1985-86 1978-80 1998-99 1999 2003-04 1980 1973 1979 1973-74 1987-91 1966 1966-69 1969-71 1978 1968-69 2005-06 1977-78 1975-77 1993-96 1994-97 1973

1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 at Marquette

4-6-0 4-6-0 9-2-0 8-4-1 9-8-0 7-10-1 3-4-0 44-40-2

40.0 40.0 81.8 65.4 52.9 41.7 42.9 52.3

JERRY PANEK (1982-91, 10 seasons) 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 at Marquette

2-6-1 10-8-3 14-2-4 13-9-0 15-4-2 9-11-1 7-9-4 8-8-4 11-9-1 8-14-0 97-80-20

COACHING VICTORIES 27.8 54.8 80.0 59.1 76.2 45.2 45.0 50.0 54.8 36.4 54.3

STEVE ADLARD (1992-2005, 14 seasons) 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 at Marquette

7-12-1 13-5-3 16-6-1 9-8-4 12-9-1 12-6-3 9-11-1 10-9-0 10-7-2 12-8-1 10-8-1 9-9-1 6-11-1 5-11-1 140-120-21

1-15-1 2-12-4 3-10-4 6-37-9

140 97 44 35 6 5

WINNING PCT. (min. 40 games) Steve Adlard Jerry Panek Joe Born Charles Nadar Louis Bennett

53.6 54.3 53.2 48.3 20.2

ASSISTANT COACHES 37.5 69.0 71.7 52.4 56.8 64.3 45.2 52.6 57.9 59.5 55.3 50.0 36.1 30.5 53.6

LOUIS BENNETT (2006-present, three seasons) 2006 2007 2007 at Marquette

Steve Adlard Jerry Panek Joe Born Charles Nader Louis Bennett Barry Fagan

8.8 22.2 29.4 20.2

Stan Anderson * Barry Bimbi Steve Bode Joe Born Frank D’Amato Steve DuFauchard Khaled El-Ahmad Bob Gansler John Halliwill Dano Holcomb Bryan Mogford Jerry Panek Zach Papanikolaou Frank Pelaez Markus Roeders Jesse Rosen Dan Stadler Boro Sucevic Adam Ubert Jim Welch Colin Williams * - Associate Head Coach ^ - Volunteer Assistant

20062002-05 20081698-75 1987 1988 2006-07 1964-67 1992 1999-2000 1996-2000 1982 1984-86 2001 1992-95 2006-07 1988 1991 2004 2001-02 1981


SERIES HISTORIES Air Force Aug. 31, ’03

L

0-7

0-1 Colo. Spgs., Colo.

Akron Sept. 2, ’80 Sept. 17, ’83 Sept. 23, ’84 Nov. 2, ’85 Oct. 4, ’87 Oct. 28, ’88 Oct. 27, ’89 Sept. 7, ’90 Sept. 7, ’91 Sept. 30, ’95 Oct. 19, ’97 Sept. 12, ’98

L L L L L T T L L T T L

1-5 0-4 0-1 3-5 0-1 4-4 1-1 3-5 0-3 0-0 0-0 OT 1-2 OT

0-8-4 Wis.-Milwaukee Akron, Ohio Milwaukee Akron, Ohio Milwaukee Akron, Ohio Akron, Ohio Milwaukee Akron, Ohio Milwaukee Milwaukee Akron, Ohio

Alabama A&M Sept. 20, ’92 L

1-2 OT

0-1 Bowl. Grn., Ky.

Boston Univ. Sept. 14, ’86 L

0-1

Bowling Green Sept. 12, ’84 W Sept. 21, ’85 W Nov. 2, ’86 W Oct. 18, ’87 W Oct. 30, ’88 L Sept. 30, ’89 T Sept. 29, ’90 A Sept. 28, ’91 L Oct. 7, ’92 L Oct. 3, ’93 W Oct. 2, ’94 W Oct. 1, ’95 L Nov. 22, ’97 L

1-2 4-3 OT 1-0 3-1 0-1 1-1 1-0 0-1 OT 2-5 2-1 1-0 0-3 0-1

6-6-1 Bowl. Grn., Ohio Milwaukee Bowl. Grn., Ohio Milwaukee Bowl. Grn., Ohio Milwaukee Bowl. Grn., Ohio Milwaukee Bowl. Grn., Ohio Bowl. Grn., Ohio Milwaukee Bowl. Grn., Ohio Milwaukee

4-2 OT

1-0 Peoria, Ill.

Brigham Young Aug. 30, ’86 W

3-2

1-0 Milwaukee

Bryant University Sept. 1, ‘08 W

4-1

1-0 Milwaukee

Butler Sept. 30, ’90 Oct. 27, ’92 Sept. 23, ’94

H A N

2-1 1-2 4-1

2-1 Milwaukee Indianapolis, Ind. Milwaukee

Cal Poly Sept. 15, ’00

T

3-3 OT

Carthage Oct. 21, ’67 Oct. 4, ’69 Oct. 24, ’70 Oct. 30, ’84

W W W W

3-0 9-0 7-1 8-0

4-0 Kenosha, Wis. Milwaukee Kenosha, Wis. Kenosha, Wis.

Central Michigan Oct. 30, ’85 W Oct. 22, ’86 W Sept. 26, ’87 W Sept. 24, ’88 W Sept. 3, ’90 W Oct. 12, ’91 L Oct. 3, ’92 L

2-0 5-2 1-0 2-1 3-1 1-2 1-3

5-2 Mt. Pls., Mich. Milwaukee Mt. Pls., Mich. Milwaukee Madison, Wis. Milwaukee Milwaukee

Bradley Sept. 17, ’93

Cincinnati Oct. 27, ’85 Sept. 11, ’88 Oct. 6, ’91 Oct. 16, ’92 Oct. 15, ’93 Nov. 5, ’93 Oct. 16, ’94 Nov. 10, ’94 Oct. 15, ’95 Sept. 7, ’96 Nov. 15, ’96 Oct. 12, ’97 Nov. 9, ’97 Oct. 11, ’98 Oct. 16, ’99 Nov. 11, ’99 Oct. 14, ’00 Nov. 11, ’01 Sept. 22, ’02 Nov. 15, ’02 Nov. 8, ’03

W

L L L W T W W W W T W W W L W L L W L L L

0-1 Milwaukee

0-0-1 Milwaukee

13-11-2 1-3 Milwaukee 2-4 Cincinnati, Ohio 3-4 Milwaukee 2-1 OT St. Louis, Mo. 0-0 OT Milwaukee 1-0 Memphis, Tenn. 3-0 Cincinnati, Ohio 2-0 Birmingham, Ala. 4-1 Cincinnati, Ohio 1-1 OT Milwaukee 2-1 Birmingham, Ala. 2-1 OT Milwaukee 2-1 OT Milwaukee 1-2 Cincinnati, Ohio 2-1 OT Milwaukee 1-2 Birmingham, Ala. 0-1 Cincinnati, Ohio 3-1 Milwaukee 1-2 Cincinnati, Ohio OT 1-1 St. Louis, Mo. 0-1 Cincinnati, Ohio

Nov. 7, ’04 Sept. 23, ’05 Sept. 15, ’06 Sept. 30, ‘07 Sept. 28, ‘08

W L L W W

2-1 0-2 1-3 2-1 2OT 1-0

Cincinnati, Ohio Milwaukee Cincinnati, Ohio Milwaukee Cincinnati, Ohio

Charlotte Oct. 11, ’95 Nov. 9, ’95 Oct. 18, ’96 Sept. 19, ’97 Sept. 18, ’98 Oct. 10, ’99 Oct. 1, ’00 Oct. 21, ’01 Oct. 19, ’02 Nov. 1, ’03 Oct. 16, ’04

L L L W L L L L W L L

1-2 OT 1-2 1-5 1-0 1-3 1-2 OT 0-3 0-1 3-1 0-2 1-2

2-9 Charlotte, N.C. Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Charlotte, N.C. Charlotte, N.C. Milwaukee Charlotte, N.C. Milwaukee Charlotte, N.C. Milwaukee

Cleveland State Nov. 1, ’81 L Oct. 31, ’82 L Oct. 29, ’83 T Oct. 6, ’84 W Oct. 26, ’85 L Oct. 31, ’86 W Sept. 5, ’87 W Sept. 9, ’88 L Sept. 15, ’89 T Sept. 8, ’91 W Oct. 13, ’92 T Oct. 29, ’93 W Sept. 13, ’94 W Oct. 20, ’95 W

2-5 2-3 0-0 OT 2-1 1-3 2-1 1-0 1-2 0-0 OT 1-0 2-2 OT 1-0 2-0 3-0

7-4-3 Milwaukee Cleveland, Ohio Milwaukee Cleveland, Ohio Milwaukee Cleveland, Ohio Milwaukee Cleveland, Ohio Milwaukee Akron, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Milwaukee Cleveland, Ohio Milwaukee

Colorado College Oct. 24, ’83 L

0-1 0-2

Colo. Spgs., Colo.

2-4 0-6 0-1 1-2 OT 0-1

0-5 Storrs, Conn. Storrs, Conn. Milwaukee Storrs, Conn. Milwaukee

Columbia University Sept. 7, ‘08 T 0-0 OT

0-0-1 Milwaukee

Connecticut Nov. 3, ’91 Oct. 1, ’05 Oct. 19, ’06 Oct. 27, ’07 Oct. 18, ‘08

Creighton Oct. 22, ’83 Sept. 9, ’84 Sept. 12, ’92 Oct. 8, ’95 Oct. 11, ’96 Oct. 3, ’99 Sept. 24, ’00 Sept. 19, ’04

L L L L L

W W L L W W W L

1-0 4-0 1-6 0-3 2-1 1-0 3-1 1-2

5-3 Omaha, Neb. Milwaukee Omaha, Neb. Milwaukee Omaha, Neb. Milwaukee Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. 0-1 Davidson, N.C.

Davidson Sept. 1, ’ 04

L

0-1

Dayton Sept. 15, ’85 Sept. 21, ’86 Sept. 6, ’87 Nov. 2, ’89 Sept. 15, ’90 Oct. 1, ’93 Oct. 14, ’94

W W W L T T L

5-0 5-0 1-0 1-2 2-2 OT 1-1 OT 1-5

Denver Aug. 29, ’03 Aug. 27, ’06 Aug. 31, ‘07 DePaul Oct. 30, ’82 Sept. 21, ’83 Sept. 5, ’84 Sept. 8, ’85 Nov. 5, ’86 Nov. 7, ’87 Nov. 5, ’88 Sept. 10, ’89 Oct. 7, ’90 Oct. 23, ’91 Nov. 8, ’91 Oct. 31, ’92 Oct. 31, ’93 Sept. 30, ’94 Nov. 3, ’95 Sept. 22, ’96

3-2-2 Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Dayton, Ohio Dayton, Ohio Dayton, Ohio

W T L

1-1-1 2-1 Colo. Spgs., Colo. 0-0 OT Milwaukee 0-1 Denver, Colo.

W W W W W W W W W W W W W T W W

22-2-1 Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. St. Louis, Mo. Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill.

5-0 4-0 5-0 4-0 7-1 2-0 2-1 5-1 5-0 6-2 2-1 4-3 OT 2-1 0-0 OT 3-0 4-2

Marquette has faced BI G E AST Conference rival Cincinnati a total of 26 times heading into 2008. Oct. 4, ’97 Oct. 25, ’98 Sept. 22, ’99 Nov. 1, ’00 Sept. 3, ’00 Nov. 6, ’02 Sept. 10, ’03 Oct. 20, ’04 Sept. 8, ’06

W W W W W W W L L

3-0 1-0 2-1 4-3 OT 4-0 3-0 4-0 1-2 OT 0-2

Detroit Sept. 22, ’89 Oct. 29, ’89 Oct. 27, ’90

W W W

2-0 2-1 5-1

Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee 3-0 Milwaukee Detroit, Mich. Detroit, Mich.

Drake Oct. 1, ’88 Oct. 3, ’98 Sept. 24, ’99 Sept. 22, ’00 Sept. 17, ’04 Sept. 9, ’05 Oct. 3, ‘07

T W W W W W L

0-0 OT 2-0 2-0 3-2 2-0 1-0 0-1

5-1-1 Milwaukee Milwaukee Des Moines, Iowa Omaha, Neb. Des Moines, Iowa Milwaukee Milwaukee

East Carolina Oct. 11, ’01 Nov. 3, ’02 Oct. 15, ’03 Oct. 10, ’04

L T W L

1-2-1 0-1 0-0 OT 5-0 2-3

Milwaukee Greenville, N.C. Milwaukee Greenville, N.C.

Eastern Illinois Sept. 2, ’95 W Nov. 3, ’96 L

2-0 2-3

1-1-0 Milwaukee Charleston, Ill.

0-1 1-7 1-4 1-1 2-1 1-3 0-1 1-5 0-2 0-2 1-4 3-0 1-2 OT 1-0 1-2 1-0

4-11-1 Milwaukee Evansville, Ind. Milwaukee Evansville, Ind. Milwaukee Evansville, Ind. Milwaukee Evansville, Ind. Milwaukee Milwaukee Evansville, Ind. Milwaukee Evansville, Ind. Milwaukee Evansville, Ind. Milwaukee

Florida International0-1 Oct. 30, ’98 L 1-2

Miami, Fla.

Evansville Nov. 9, ’80 Nov. 8, ’81 Sept. 19, ’82 Sept. 25, ’83 Sept. 16, ’84 Sept. 24, ’85 Sept. 13, ’86 Oct. 11, ’87 Oct. 9, ’88 Oct. 14, ’90 Oct. 20, ’91 Oct. 8, ’93 Nov. 6, ’96 Sept. 4, ’00 Sept. 4, ’02 Sept. 13, ’03

L L L L W L L L L L L W T W L W

Georgetown Oct. 22, ‘05 L Oct. 21, ’06 L Oct. 20, ‘07 L

0-4 0-1 Milwaukee 0-1 OT Washington, D.C. 1-2 Milwaukee

Nov. 1, ‘08

2-4

Washington, D.C.

W W W

6-2 5-2 1-0

3-0 Milwaukee Champaign, Ill. Milwaukee

Illinois State Sept. 1, ’85 Oct. 12, ’86 Sept. 3, ’89 Sept. 1, ’91

W W W W

2-1 2-1 1-0 4-3

4-0 Milwaukee Normal, Ill. Normal, Ill. Madison, Wis.

Indiana Oct. 18, ’81 Sept. 10, ’82 Oct. 20, ’85 Oct. 19, ’86 Oct. 9, ’87 Oct. 8, ’88 Oct. 6, ’89 Oct. 6, ’90 Oct. 27, ’91 Sept. 14, ’96

L L L T L L L L L L

0-2 0-4 1-2 2-2 0-7 0-1 1-3 1-2 2-4 2-3 OT

0-9-1 Milwaukee Bloomington, Ind. Bloomington, Ind. Milwaukee Bloomington, Ind. Milwaukee Bloomington, Ind. Milwaukee Bloomington, Ind. Ft. Wayne, Ind.

IPFW Sept. 15, ’96

W

2-1

1-0 Ft. Wayne, Ind.

Indiana State Nov. 17, ’79 W

1-0 fft.

Terre Haute, Ind.

Jacksonville Nov. 1, ’98

1-3

4-6 OT

llinois Sept. 19, ’64 Sept. 16, ’78 Sept. 16, ’79

L

L

James Madison Oct. 28, ’94 L

La.-Monroe Sept. 3, ’83

L

2-3

0-1 St. Louis, Mo.

Louisville Oct. 13, ’95 Sept. 29, ’96 Oct. 10, ’97 Oct. 9, ’98 Sept. 26. ’99 Oct. 4, ’00 Oct. 6, ’01 Oct. 15, ’02 Oct. 22, ’03 Sept. 29, ’04 Sept. 25 ’05 Sept. 17, ’06 Sept. 28, ‘07 Sept. 26, ‘08

W W W W W L W W L T W L L T

2-1 4-1 2-1 2-0 2-1 0-1 3-0 2-0 0-1 2-2 2-1 0-4 0-2 1-1OT

8-4-2 Louisville, Ky. Milwaukee Milwaukee Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. Milwaukee Louisville, Ky. Milwaukee Louisville, Ky. Milwaukee Milwaukee Louisville, Ky. Milwaukee Louisville, Ky.

0-1 Miami, Fla.

Loyola (Ill.) Oct. 19, ’68 Oct. 18, ’69 Oct. 22, ’80 Oct. 21, ’81 Sept. 4, ’83 Oct. 29, ’84 Nov. 6, ’85 Nov. 8, ’86 Sept. 8, ’89 Oct. 11, ’89 Sept. 9, ’90 Nov. 1, ’90 Aug. 25, ’06

T W W W W W W W W W W W W

2-2 2-1 3-0 7-0 5-3 5-1 4-3 3-0 3-0 4-0 2-0 3-0 2-1

12-0-1 Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. St. Louis, Mo. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. St. Louis, Mo. Chicago, Ill.

0-1 Miami, Fla.

Loyola Marymount 0-1 Sept. 2, ’06 L 0-0

Los Angeles

4-3

1-0 Minneapolis, Minn.

Marshall Sept. 12, ’97

L

1-2 OT

W L W W L T L L T T T L L W

7-1 1-2 5-1 3-0 1-2 3-3 OT 1-3 0-1 0-0 OT 1-1 OT 1-1 OT 0-2 OT 0-1 3-0

4-6-4 Milwaukee Appleton, Wis. Milwaukee Appleton, Wis. Milwaukee Appleton, Wis. Milwaukee Appleton, Wis. Milwaukee Appleton, Wis. Milwaukee Appleton, Wis. Appleton, Wis. Milwaukee

Maryknoll Nov. 20, ’65 Nov. 19, ’66

L W

1-2 4-0

W

6-0

Memphis Sept. 17, ’88 Sept. 22, ’91 Sept. 27, ’92 Sept. 26, ’93 Nov. 6, ’93 Sept. 18, ’94 Sept. 20, ’95 Oct. 4, ’96 Oct. 26, ’97 Sept. 27, ’98 Nov. 13, ’98 Oct. 1, ’99 Oct. 21, ’00 Oct. 14, ’01

W L L T L W W W W W L W L W

3-0 0-1 0-1 OT 1-1 OT 1-2 1-0 4-1 2-0 4-3 OT 1-0 0-3 1-0 0-1 2-1

Lakehead Oct. 25, ’80

W

Lawrence Nov. 7, ’64 Nov. 4, ’65 Nov. 5, ’66 Nov. 3, ’67 Nov. 1, ’68 Oct. 25, ’69 Oct. 17, ’70 Oct. 16, ’71 Oct. 14, ’72 Oct. 13, ’73 Oct. 12, ’74 Oct. 11, ’75 Oct. 19, ’77 Nov. 4, ’78 Lewis Sept. 19, ’84

1-0 Milwaukee

0-1 Columbus, Ohio 1-1 Milwaukee Glen Ellyn, Ill. 11-6-1 Bowl. Grn., Ky. Memphis, Tenn. Milwaukee Memphis, Tenn. Memphis, Tenn. Milwaukee Milwaukee Memphis, Tenn. Memphis, Tenn. Milwaukee Tampa, Fla. Milwaukee Memphis, Tenn. Milwaukee

Marquette Men’s Soccer

75


SERIES HISTORIES Oct. 30, ’02 Oct. 4, ’03 Oct. 2, ’04

W W L

2-1 3-2 1-3

Memphis, Tenn. Milwaukee Memphis, Tenn.

Michigan State Oct. 23, ’65 L Oct. 22, ’66 L

0-9 0-7

0-2 E. Lansing, Mich. Milwaukee

Minnesota Oct. 26, ’80 Oct. 24, ’81 Oct. 1, ’82 Oct. 8, ’83

2-3 1-0 0-2 2-1

2-2 Minneapolis, Minn. Milwaukee Minneapolis, Minn. Milwaukee

L W L W

Northern Illinois Oct. 1, ’66 W Sept. 30, ’67 L Sept. 28, ’68 L Sept. 27, ’69 L Sept. 23, ’70 L Sept. 25, ’71 L Sept. 23, ’72 T Sept. 24, ’80 L Sept. 25, ’81 W Sept. 25, ’82 L Sept. 28, ’84 T Sept. 18, ’85 W Sept. 7, ’86 W Sept. 16, ’87 W Sept. 21, ’88 W Oct. 15, ’89 L Oct. 3, ’90 W Oct. 10, ’92 W Sept. 15, ’93 W Oct. 12, ’94 W Oct. 27, ’95 W Oct. 30, ’96 W

2-0 0-1 0-3 0-5 1-7 0-6 0-0 OT 0-3 1-0 0-3 1-1 OT 4-2 1-0 2-1 2-0 0-1 OT 3-1 2-1 4-3 OT 2-1 OT 1-0 4-0

12-8-2 Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee DeKalb, Ill. Milwaukee

Northwestern Oct. 16, ’64 W Oct. 30, ’65 W Oct. 14, ’66 L Oct. 14, ’67 W Oct. 5, ’78 W Oct. 13, ’81 T Nov. 6, ’82 L Oct. 27, ’83 W Oct. 26, ’84 W Sept. 27, ’86 W Oct. 28, ’87 L Oct. 16, ’88 L Sept. 20, ’89 W

16-4-1 4-2 4-2 2-3 2-0 6-0 1-1 OT 0-1 3-1 6-0 4-0 0-1 0-3 2-1

Milwaukee Evanston, Ill. Milwaukee Evanston, Ill. Milwaukee Evanston, Ill. Evanston, Ill. Milwaukee Evanston, Ill. Milwaukee Evanston, Ill. Milwaukee Evanston, Ill.

Sept. 29, ’91 Nov. 7, ’94 Nov. 5, ’95 Oct. 1, ’96 Sept. 4, ’97 Nov. 4, ’98 Sept. 19, ’99 Sept. 12, ’00

W W W W W W W W

1-0 2-1 2-1 2-1 1-0 2-0 3-0 1-0

Notre Dame Nov. 15, ’64 Oct. 3, ’70 Oct. 2, ’71 Oct. 5, ’79 Oct. 5, ’80 Oct. 9, ’81 Oct. 17, ’82 Oct. 14, ’83 Oct. 14, ’84 Oct. 9, ’85 Oct. 5, ’86 Nov. 6, ’87 Sept. 17, ’89 Sept. 24, ’89 Sept. 23, ’90 Oct. 5, ’05 Sept. 27, ’06 Sept. 15, ‘07 Sept. 11, ‘08

T T W L W L L L W W W L L T W L L L L

3-3 OT 1-1 OT 1-0 0-1 4-2 0-1 1-2 2-4 4-1 5-3 2-1 1-3 0-1 2-2 OT 4-0 0-1 0-4 0-1 1-4

Oakland Oct. 19, ’79 Sept. 5, ’98 Oct. 20, ’99 Sept. 19, ’00 Sept. 1, ’01 Sept. 11, ’02 Sept. 7, ’03 Sept. 10, ’04

W L L W L L L L

2-6 3-1 Milwaukee 0-1 Milwaukee 0-3 Rochester, Mich. 2-1 OT Milwaukee 0-1 Rochester, Mich. 0-1 Milwaukee 1-4 Rochester, Minn. 0-2 Milwaukee

Ohio State Nov. 2, ’94 Sept. 14, ’97 Sept. 2, ’05

W W L

5-1 1-0 OT 0-1

2-1 Milwaukee Columbus, Ohio Columbus, Ohio

0-0 OT

0-0-1 Milwaukee

Penn Sept. 5, ’08 Penn State Oct. 30, ’94 Sept. 4, ’05

T

W W

3-1 1-0

Milwaukee Milwaukee Evanston, Ill. Milwaukee Evanston, Ill. Milwaukee Evanston, Ill. Milwaukee 6-10-3 Notre Dame, Ind. Milwaukee Notre Dame, Ind. Notre Dame, Ind. Milwaukee Notre Dame, Ind. Milwaukee Notre Dame, Ind. Milwaukee Notre Dame, Ind. Milwaukee Notre Dame, Ind. Milwaukee Notre Dame, Ind. Milwaukee Milwaukee Notre Dame, Ind. Milwaukee Notre Dame, Ind.

2-0 Miami, Fla. Columbus, Ohio

Marquette’s rivalr y with Notre Dame kicked off with the teams’ first metting in 1964. Pittsburgh Oct. 8, ’05 Oct. 1, ’06 Nov. 3, ‘07 Oct. 5, ‘08

L L L L

0-1 0-3 1-2 2OT 0-1

0-4 Milwaukee Indianola, Pa. Milwaukee Indianola, Pa.

Portland Sept. 28, ’97 Sept. 4, ’99 Sept. 29, ’02

T L L

1-1 OT 0-7 0-3

0-2-1 Seattle, Wash. Portland, Ore. Seattle, Wash.

Providence Sept. 23, ”06 Oct. 13, ‘07 Oct. 25, ‘08

L L L

0-1 0-2 0-2

0-3 Milwaukee Providence, R.I. Milwaukee

Purdue Oct. 29, ’66 Oct. 28, ’67 Oct. 26, ’68 Sept. 27, ’80 Sept. 27, ’85

T T L W W

1-1 OT 1-1 OT 1-2 fft. 8-2

2-1-2 W. Lafayette, Ind. Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee

2-1 1-1 OT 2-1 0-3

2-1-1 Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee

Quincy Sept. 28, ’85 Sept. 12, ’87 Oct. 15, ’88 Oct. 24, ’93 Regis Oct. 25, ’83 Ripon Sept. 23, ’67 Sept. 21, ’68 Sept. 20, ’69 Sept. 19, ’70 Sept. 18, ’71 Sept. 16, ’72 Sept. 15, ’73 Sept. 14, ’74 Sept. 13, ’75 Oct. 9, ’76 Oct. 8, ’77 Rutgers Sept. 23, ‘07

W T W W

W

W W W W W W W W W W W

L

St. Francis (Pa.) Sept. 11, ’05 W

Marquette has posted eight victories over Louisville.

76

2009 Media Guide

St. John’s Sept. 18. ’05 Sept. 21, ‘08

L L

5-3

1-0 Denver, Colo.

4-0 2-1 3-1 2-1 3-0 3-1 5-1 5-2 3-1 3-0 fft.

11-0 Milwaukee Ripon, Wis. Milwaukee Ripon, Wis. Milwaukee Ripon, Wis. Milwaukee Ripon, Wis. Milwaukee Ripon, Wis. Milwaukee

0-1

0-1 Piscataway, N.J.

1-0

1-0 Milwaukee

0-1 0-1OT

0-2 Queens, N.Y. Milwaukee

Saint Louis Oct. 10, ’64 Nov. 13, ’65 Sept. 1, ’80 Oct. 12, ’85 Sept. 21, ’90 Nov. 2, ’90 Oct. 13, ’91 Nov. 9, ’91 Oct. 17, ’92 Oct. 17, ’93 Sept. 10, ’94 Nov. 11, ’94 Nov. 1, ’95 Aug. 31, ’96 Oct. 24, ’97 Nov. 14, ’97 Sept. 25, ’98 Oct. 27, ’99 Oct. 24, ’00 Nov. 3, ’01 Nov. 17, ’01 Sept. 7, ’02 Oct. 1, ’03 Sept. 4, ’04

L L L L L L L L L L L W W L L L L L L L L W T L

1-10 0-10 1-2 1-4 0-1 0-2 1-2 OT 0-5 0-3 0-3 0-1 1-0 1-0 0-5 1-2 0-2 1-2 OT 3-4 OT 0-1 0-1 0-2 1-0 0-0 OT 0-3

3-20-1 Milwaukee St. Louis, Mo. Wis.-Milwaukee Milwaukee St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Milwaukee St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Milwaukee St. Louis, Mo. Birmingham, Ala. Milwaukee St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Tampa, Fla. Milwaukee St. Louis, Mo. Milwaukee St. Louis, Mo. Tampa, Fla. Milwaukee St. Louis, Mo. Milwaukee

Saint Norbert Oct. 12, ’68 W Oct. 11, ’69 L Oct. 10, ’70 W Oct. 9, ’71 W Oct. 7, ’72 W Oct. 6, ’73 W Oct. 5, ’74 W Oct. 3, ’75 W Oct. 2, ’76 W Oct. 1, ’77 L Sept. 30, ’78 W Sept. 29, ’79 W Oct. 14, ’80 W Sept. 23, ’81 W Sept. 22, ’82 W

13-2 4-0 3-4 4-1 5-0 5-0 7-0 8-1 3-2 2-0 1-2 2-0 5-0 1-0 6-0 7-1

Milwaukee DePere, Wis. DePere, Wis. Milwaukee DePere, Wis. Milwaukee Milwaukee DePere, Wis. Milwaukee DePere, Wis. Milwaukee DePere, Wis. Milwaukee DePere, Wis. DePere, Wis.

Saint Scholastica Sept. 4, ’82 W

1-0 7-0

Milwaukee

San Diego State Sept. 10, ’95 T

3-3 OT

0-0-1 Las Vegas, Nev.

San Francisco Sept. 13, ’91 L Sept. 20, ’01 W

1-1 1-2 3-2 OT

San Francisco, Calif. Santa Clara, Calif.

Santa Clara Sept. 22, ’01

W

1-0

1-0 Santa Clara, Calif.

Seton Hall Oct. 26, ’05 Oct. 14, ’06 Oct. 6, ‘07 Oct. 11, ‘08

L L L T

0-3-1 1-3 Newark, N.J. 1-3 Milwaukee 1-5 South Orange, N.J. 1-1OT Milwaukee

SIU-Edwardsville 1-3-1 Sept. 30, ’84 T 2-2 Edwardsville, Ill. Sept. 9, ’87 L 2-4 Milwaukee Sept. 16, ’88 L 2-4 Bowl. Green, Ky. Sept. 15, ’92 L 0-5 Edwardsville, Ill. Oct. 10, ’93 W 2-0 OT Milwaukee Southern Indiana 1-0 Nov. 4, ’94 W 2-1 OT

Milwaukee

Stanford Sept. 15, ’91

L

2-3

0-1 San Francisco, Calif.

Syracuse Sept. 2, ’89 Sept. 16, ’05 Sept. 19, ‘08

L T L

0-3 1-12OT 0-1

TCU Oct. 26, ’01 Oct. 5, ’02

W W

1-0 4-1

2-0 Fort Worth, Texas Milwaukee

Tulsa Oct. 21, ’83

W

1-0

1-0 Omaha, Neb.

UAB Oct. 10, ’91 Sept. 26, ’92 Nov. 6, ’92 Sept. 24, ’93 Sept. 16, ’94 Nov. 13, ’94 Sept. 24, ’95 Sept. 27, ’96 Nov. 12, ’96 Sept. 21, ’97 Sept. 20, ’98 Nov. 8, ’98 Sept. 12, ’99 Oct. 27, ’00 Sept. 28, ’01 Nov. 16, ’01 Oct. 27, ’02 Sept. ’27, ’03 Sept. 25. ’04

W W L L W L L W W W L W L L L W W L L

7-0 2-0 0-1 1-3 4-0 1-5 OT 1-2 2-0 2-0 2-1 1-2 3-1 OT 1-2 1-2 OT 1-2 4-1 2-1 OT 2-3 1-2

9-10 Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Birmingham, Ala. Milwaukee Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Milwaukee Birmingham, Ala. Milwaukee Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Milwaukee Birmingham, Ala. Tampa, Fla. Milwaukee Birmingham, Ala. Milwaukee

0-2-1 Madison, Wis. Syracuse, N.Y. Milwaukee


SERIES HISTORIES Oct. 10, ’00 Oct. 31, ’01 Oct. 5, ’02 Oct. 25, ’03 Oct. 6, ’04 Oct. 12, ’05 Sept. 6, ’06 Sept. 9, ‘07

Marquette has played in-state rival the Univ. of Wisconsin a total of 46 times, and e ver y year since 1990. UCLA Sept. 14, ’83 UIC Oct. 24, ’64 Oct. 16, ’65 Nov. 9, ’83 Sept. 1, ’84 Sept. 3, ’03 Sept. 22, ’04 Sept. 2, ‘07 Oct. 2, ‘08 UMKC Sept. 1, ’97 Sept. 8, ’98 Nov. 1, ’99 Sept. 27, ’00

L

T W W W L W L L

W W L L

0-3

0-1 Milwaukee

1-1 3-2 3-2 3-1 0-3 2-0 1-3 0-1

4-3-1 Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee Chicago, Ill. Milwaukee

2-0 3-0 0-1 1-3

2-2 Milwaukee Kansas City, Mo. Milwaukee Kansas City, Mo.

UNLV Sept. 8, ’95

L

0-1

0-1 Las Vegas, Nev.

USF Oct. 29, ’95 Oct. 16, ’96 Nov. 17, ’96 Oct. 15, ’97 Oct. 14, ’98 Oct. 23, ’99 Sept. 9, ’00 Nov. 7, ’01 Nov. 15, ’01 Oct. 12, ’02 Sept. 19, ’03 Oct. 23, ’04 Sept. 10, ’06

L L L L L W W L W L W W L

1-2 2-3 1-2 0-3 0-6 3-1 4-1 0-1 2-1 0-1 2-1 1-0 1-2

5-8 Milwaukee Tampa, Fla. Tampa, Fla. Tampa, Fla. Milwaukee Milwaukee Tampa, Fla. Tampa, Fla. Tampa, Fla. Milwaukee Milwaukee Tampa, Fla. Milwaukee

Valparaiso Oct. 4, ’92 Sept. 4, ’93 Sept. 3, ’94 Oct. 8, ’00 Sept. 7, ’01

W W W W W

6-0 7-0 6-0 2-1 OT 4-0

5-0 Milwaukee Valparaiso, Ind. Milwaukee Valparaiso, Ind. Milwaukee

Vermont Sept. 1, ’90

L

1-3

0-1 Madison, Wis.

Villanova Sept. 21, ‘07

L

0-1

0-1 Villanova, Pa.

Virginia Oct. 3, ’81

L

0-2

0-1 Akron, Ohio

Washington Sept. 25, ’94 W Sept. 20, ’96 L Sept. 26, ’97 W Sept. 6, ’99 L Sept. 27, ’02 L Sept. 21, ’03 L

2-0 0-3 2-1 0-1 2-3 1-2

2-4 Evansville, Ind. Milwaukee Seattle, Wash. Portland, Ore. Seattle, Wash. Milwaukee

West Virginia Oct. 29, ’05 Oct. 7, ’06 Oct. 24, ‘07 Oct. 29, ‘08

L L T L

0-3-1 1-3 Milwaukee 0-4 Morgantown, W.Va. 2OT 0-0 Milwaukee 0-2 Morgantown, W.Va.

Western Illinois Sept. 12, ’81 L Sept. 12, ’82 L Sept. 10, ’83 L Sept. 8, ’84 W Sept. 6, ’85 L Oct. 10, ’86 L Sept. 11, ’87 W Sept. 4, ’88 W Sept. 9, ’92 W Sept. 8, ’93 W

0-4 0-1 0-1 2-0 0-4 0-2 3-2 3-0 2-0 3-1

5-5 Macomb, Ill. Milwaukee Macomb, Ill. Milwaukee Macomb, Ill. Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Macomb, Ill.

Western Kentucky Sept. 20, ’86 W Sept. 19, ’87 W Aug. 31, ’91 L Sept. 18, ’92 W Sept. 12, ’93 W

4-1 2-0 2-1 0-1 2-0 5-3

Milwaukee Milwaukee Madison, Wis. Bowl. Green, Ky. Milwaukee

Western Michigan Sept. 11, ’85 W Sept. 28, ’86 W Sept. 27, ’87 L Sept. 25, ’88 W Oct. 8, ’89 W Oct. 28, ’90 L

4-2 4-2 Kalamazoo, Mich. 3-1 Milwaukee 1-2 Kalamazoo, Mich. 4-1 Milwaukee 1-0 Milwaukee 1-4 OT Kalamazoo, Mich.

Wheaton Nov. 6, ’65 Nov. 12, ’66 Oct. 27, ’79 Sept. 19, ’81

T L T W

0-0 OT 2-3 2-2 OT 1-0

1-1-2 Milwaukee Wheaton, Ill. Wheaton, Ill. Milwaukee

Wisconsin Oct. 3, ’64 Oct. 10, ’65 Oct. 8, ’66 Oct. 6, ’67 Nov. 11, ’67 Oct. 5, ’68 Nov. 9, ’68 Nov. 8, ’69 Nov. 7, ’70 Nov. 6, ’71 Nov. 4, ’72 Nov. 3, ’73 Nov. 2, ’74 Nov. 1, ’75 Sept. 18, ’76 Oct. 30, ’76 Oct. 29, ’77 Oct. 28, ’78 Nov. 3, ’79 Nov. 1, ’80

W T T T L L L W L L L W L L L L L W L W

3-0 2-2 OT 1-1 OT 2-2 OT 1-2 0-2 0-5 2-0 1-2 0-1 0-2 2-0 1-4 0-5 1-3 1-3 0-1 1-0 1-2 2-0

12-26-10 Milwaukee Milwaukee Madison, Wis. Milwaukee Madison, Wis. Madison, Wis. Milwaukee Madison, Wis. Milwaukee Madison, Wis. Milwaukee Madison, Wis. Madison, Wis. Madison, Wis. Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Milwaukee Madison, Wis. Milwaukee

Oct. 30, ’81 Oct. 27, ’82 Oct. 11, ’83 Oct. 17, ’84 Oct. 6, ’85 Sept. 17, ’86 Sept. 23, ’87 Oct. 14, ’89 Sept. 1, ’88 Oct. 13, ’90 Aug. 24, ’91 Oct. 23, ’92 Oct. 26, ’93 Oct. 23, ’94 Oct. 22, ’95 Oct. 25, ’96 Oct. 30, ’97 Oct. 22, ’98 Oct. 6, ’99 Sept. 29, ’00 Sept. 28, ’01 Nov. 9, ’02 Oct. 15, ’03 Nov. 3, ’04 Oct. 19, ’05 Oct. 11, ’06 Oct. 17, ‘07 Oct. 15, ‘08

L T T W L W L L L L W L L L T W W T W T T W L L L L T L

1-5 Madison, Wis. 1-1 OT Milwaukee 1-1 OT Milwaukee 5-3 Madison, Wis. 1-2 Madison, Wis. 3-2 Madison, Wis. 1-3 Madison, Wis. OT 2-3 Milwaukee 1-2 Milwaukee 0-3 Milwaukee 6-3 OT Wis.-Milwaukee 1-2 Madison, Wis. 0-1 Madison, Wis. 1-4 Milwaukee OT 1-1 Madison, Wis. 3-2 OT Milwaukee 1-0 OT Madison, Wis. OT 0-0 Milwaukee 2-1 Madison, Wis. 0-0 OT Milwaukee 2-2 OT Madison, Wis. 3-0 Milwaukee 1-2 Madison, Wis. 3-5 Milwaukee 0-3 Madison, Wis. 0-1 Milwaukee 1-1 OT Madison, Wis. 0-1OT Milwaukee

Green Bay Nov. 11, ’70 Nov. 13, ’71 Oct. 4, ’72 Oct. 17, ’73 Oct. 2, ’74 Oct. 1, ’75 Oct. 6, ’76 Oct. 26, ’77 Oct. 25, ’78 Oct. 10, ’79 Oct. 8, ’80 Oct. 7, ’82 Oct. 6, ’82 Oct. 1, ’83 Oct. 3, ’84 Oct. 2, ’85 Oct. 1, ’86 Sept. 30, ’87 Sept. 28, ’88 Sept. 27, ’89 Oct. 24, ’90 Aug. 25, ’91 Sept. 23, ’92 Oct. 22, ’93 Oct. 7, ’94 Sept. 27, ’95 Oct. 8, ’96 Sept. 10, ’97 Sept. 15, ’98 Sept. 8, ’99

L L L L L L L L L L L L L L W W T L T L W W L W W T W L L L

0-2 1-3 0-1 0-7 0-1 0-10 0-4 2-3 2-3 1-5 2-4 0-3 2-6 1-2 2-1 2-1 1-1OT

1-4 0-0 OT 1-3 2-0 1-0 0-1 1-0 OT 2-1 1-1 OT 3-0 1-2 OT 0-3 1-2 OT

13-21-4 Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Green Bay, Wis. Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Wis.-Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee

W W W W W W L T

3-1 5-0 3-0 4-1 3-1 2-1 0-2 1-1 2OT

Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee Green Bay, Wis. Milwaukee

Wis.-Milwaukee Sept. 22, ’73 L Sept. 21, ’74 L Sept. 24, ’75 L Sept. 17, ’76 L Sept. 7, ’77 L Oct. 4, ’78 L Sept. 19, ’79 L Sept. 13, ’80 L Sept. 16, ’81 L Nov. 13, ’82 W Nov. 12, ’83 W Nov. 10, ’84 T Nov. 11, ’85 L Oct. 26, ’86 L Oct. 25, ’87 L Oct. 23, ’88 L Oct. 22, ’89 L Oct. 21, ’90 L Sept. 11, ’91 L Sept. 29, ’92 L Sept. 28, ’93 W Oct. 4, ’94 L Sept. 15, ’95 L Oct. 20, ’96 L Oct. 7, ’97 T Sept. 30, ’98 W Sept. 15, ’99 W Sept. 1, ’00 W Oct. 3, ’01 L Oct. 22, ’02 L Oct. 29, ’03 W Oct. 26, ’04 L Oct. 31, ’05 L Sept. 13, ’06 L Oct. 31, ‘07 T Oct. 22, ‘08 W

1-4 1-2 0-2 0-2 0-9 0-1 0-1 1-5 0-1 3-0 3-0 0-0 OT 2-4 0-2 1-2 0-1 1-2 OT 1-3 1-2 OT 0-2 2-0 0-2 OT 1-2 1-2 0-0 OT 1-0 3-2 OT 5-1 1-2 0-2 2-1 1-3 0-4 2-3 1-1 2OT 2-0

8-25-3 Marquette Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee Marquette Wis.-Milwaukee

Wis.-Parkside Oct. 21, ’71 Oct. 21, ’72 Oct. 24, ’73 Oct. 23, ’74 Oct. 18, ’75 Oct. 16, ’76 Oct. 15, ’77 Oct. 14, ’78 Oct. 12, ’79 Oct. 10, ’80 Sept. 28, ’81 Oct. 8, ’82 Oct. 5, ’83

6-9-3 1-6 1-3 4-1 0-3 1-1 OT 2-3 2-4 3-1 6-0 0-1 1-0 0-1 1-3

Milwaukee Kenosha, Wis. Milwaukee Kenosha, Wis. Milwaukee Kenosha, Wis. Milwaukee Kenosha, Wis. Milwaukee Kenosha, Wis. Milwaukee Kenosha, Wis. Kenosha, Wis.

L L W L T L L W W L W L L

Oct. 20, ’84 Oct. 15, ’85 Sept. 1, ’86 Nov. 1, ’87 Nov. 2, ’88

T W W L T

1-1 OT 3-1 4-0 0-2 0-0 OT

Milwaukee Kenosha, Wis. Milwaukee Milwaukee Kenosha, Wis.

Wis.-Platteville Sept. 26, ’64 W Oct. 16, ’66 T Nov. 4, ’67 W Nov. 2, ’68 W Nov. 1, ’69 W Oct. 31, ’70 L Oct. 30, ’71 L Oct. 28, ’72 L Oct. 27, ’73 W Oct. 26, ’74 T Oct. 25, ’75 L Oct. 23, ’76 L Oct. 22, ’77 W Oct. 21, ’78 W Oct. 30, ’79 W Oct. 1, ’80 W

9-5-2 8-1 3-3 OT 5-1 3-2 6-1 0-1 0-4 0-2 1-0 1-1 OT 0-1 1-2 8-0 3-0 7-0 4-0

Milwaukee Platteville, Wis. Platteville, Wis. Platteville, Wis. Milwaukee Platteville, Wis. Milwaukee Platteville, Wis. Milwaukee Platteville, Wis. Milwaukee Platteville, Wis. Milwaukee Platteville, Wis. Milwaukee Platteville, Wis.

Wis.-Stevens Point Sept. 30, ’72 W Sept. 29, ’73 W Sept. 28, ’74 W Sept. 27, ’75 L Sept. 25, ’76 W Sept. 24, ’77 W Sept. 23, ’78 W Sept. 8, ’79 W Sept. 6, ’80 W

8-1 2-0 3-1 2-1 0-3 2-0 7-3 7-0 5-0 fft.

Milwaukee Stevens Pt., Wis. Milwaukee Stevens Pt., Wis. Milwaukee Stevens Pt., Wis. Milwaukee Stevens Pt., Wis. Milwaukee

Wis.-Whitewater Sept. 11, ’76 W Sept. 10, ’77 W Sept. 9, ’78 W Sept. 20, ’79 W Sept. 10, ’80 W Sept. 9, ’81 W Sept. 15, ’82 W Nov. 3, ’83 W Nov. 6, ’84 W

9-0 2-0 4-2 4-0 10-1 2-0 4-0 6-2 8-0 10-0

Milwaukee Whitewater, Wis. Milwaukee Whitewater, Wis. Milwaukee Whitewater, Wis. Milwaukee Whitewater, Wis. Milwaukee

Wright State Sept. 1, ’98 Sept. 18, ’02 Oct. 7, ’03 Oct. 29, ’04

W W W W

1-0 4-2 2-1 1-0

4-0 Milwaukee Dayton, Ohio Milwaukee Dayton, Ohio

Xavier Oct. 31, ’87 Sept. 16, ’90 Sept. 7, ‘07

W W W

3-1 5-1 2-1

3-0 Milwaukee Cincinnati, Ohio Milwaukee

e ‘Milwaukee Cup’ is an annual match versus cross-town rival Wis.-Milwaukee. Marquette won the first two Cups in back-to-back fashion in 1973 and 1974.

Marquette Men’s Soccer

77


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS 1964 (5-1-2)

1969 (5-2-1)

Coach: Barry Fagin Top Scorer: Ed Nomo Ongolo (17 goals) Sept. 19 Illinois Sept. 26 Wis.-Platteville Oct. 3 Wisconsin Oct. 10 Saint Louis Oct. 16 Northwestern Oct. 24 at lll.-Chicago Nov. 7 Lawrence Nov. 15 at Notre Dame

W W W L W T W T

6-2 8-1 3-0 1-10 4-2 1-1 7-1 3-3

Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Dennis Ward (10 goals) Sept. 20 Ripon Sept. 27 at Northern Illinois Oct. 4 Carthage Oct. 11 at St. Norbert Oct. 18 Loyola (Ill.) Oct. 25 at Lawrence Nov. 1 Wis.-Platteville Nov. 8 at Wisconsin

1965 (2-4-2)

1970 (3-5-1)

Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Ghobi Tabrizi, Ed Nomo-Ongolo (3 goals) Oct. 10 Wisconsin T Oct. 16 Ill.-Chicago W Oct. 23 at Michigan State L Oct. 30 at Northwestern W Nov. 4 at Lawrence L Nov. 6 Wheaton T Nov. 13 at Saint Louis L Nov. 20 Maryknoll L

Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Steve Deters (5 goals) Sept. 19 at Ripon Sept. 23 Northern Illinois Oct. 3 Notre Dame Oct. 10 at St. Norbert Oct. 17 Lawrence Oct. 24 at Carthage Oct. 31 at Wis.-Platteville Nov. 7 Wisconsin Nov. 11 Wis.-Green Bay

2-2 3-2 0-9 4-2 1-2 0-0 0-10 1-2

W L W L W T W W

3-1 0-5 9-0 3-4 2-1 3-3 6-1 2-0

W L T W L W L L L

2-1 1-7 1-1 4-1 1-3 7-1 0-1 1-2 0-2

1966 (3-3-3) Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Helmut Bolk (8 goals) Oct. 1 Northern Illinois Oct. 8 at Wisconsin Oct. 14 Northwestern Oct. 16 at Wis.-Platteville Oct. 22 Michigan State Oct. 29 at Purdue Nov. 5 Lawrence Nov. 12 at Wheaton Nov. 19 at Maryknoll

Oct. 27 Nov. 3

1971 (3-6) W T L T L T W L W

2-0 1-1 2-3 3-3 0-7 1-1 5-1 2-3 4-0

Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Tom Sweeney (4 goals) Sept. 18 Ripon Sept. 25 at Northern Illinois Oct. 2 at Notre Dame Oct. 9 at St. Norbert Oct. 16 at Lawrence Oct. 21 Wis.-Parkside Oct. 30 Wis.-Platteville Nov. 6 at Wisconsin Nov. 13 at Wis.-Green Bay

W L W W L L L L L

3-0 0-6 1-0 5-0 0-1 1-6 0-4 0-1 1-3

1967 (5-2-2) Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Dennis Ward (10 goals) Sept. 23 Ripon Sept. 30 at Northern Illinois Oct. 6 Wisconsin Oct. 14 at Northwestern Oct. 21 at Carthage Oct. 28 Purdue Nov. 3 at Lawrence Nov. 4 Wis.-Platteville Nov. 11 at Wisconsin

1972 (3-4-2) W L T W W T W W L

4-0 0-1 2-2 2-0 3-0 1-1 3-0 5-1 1-2

Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Brian Sayers (7 goals) Sept. 16 at Ripon Sept. 23 Northern Illinois Wis.-Stevens Point Sept. 30 Oct. 4 Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 7 St. Norbert Oct. 14 Lawrence Oct. 21 at Wis.-Parkside Oct. 28 at Wis.-Platteville Nov. 4 Wisconsin

3-1 0-0 2-0 0-1 5-0 0-0 1-3 0-2 0-2

1973 (6-2-1) W L L W T L L W L

2-1 0-3 0-2 4-0 2-2 1-2 1-2 3-2 0-5

Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Brian Sayers (14 goals) Sept. 15 Ripon Sept. 22 Wis.-Milwaukee Sept. 29 at Wis.-Stevens Point Oct. 6 St. Norbert Oct. 13 at Lawrence Oct. 17 at Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 24 Wis.-Parkside

Wis.-Platteville at Wisconsin

W W

1-0 2-0

W L W L W T L T L

5-2 1-2 2-1 0-1 8-1 1-1 0-3 1-1 1-4

1974 (3-4-2) Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Brian Sayers (7 goals) Sept. 14 at Ripon Sept. 21 Wis.-Milwaukee Wis.-Stevens Point Sept. 28 Oct. 2 Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 5 St. Norbert Oct. 12 Lawrence Oct. 23 at Wis.-Parkside Oct. 26 at Wis.-Platteville Nov. 2 Wisconsin

1975 (2-6-1) W T W L W T L L L

1968 (3-5-1) Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Carl Zahner (5 goals) Sept. 21 at Ripon Sept. 28 Northern Illinois Oct. 5 at Wisconsin Oct. 12 St. Norbert Oct. 19 at Loyola (Ill.) Oct. 26 at Purdue Nov. 1 Lawrence Nov. 2 at Wis.-Platteville Nov. 9 Wisconsin

Marquette went 5-2-1 in the 1969 season.

W L W W T L W

5-1 1-4 3-1 7-0 1-1 0-7 4-1

Coach: Charles Nader Top Scorer: Mike Banahan, Kasali Olayiwola (2 goals) Sept. 13 Ripon W Sept. 24 at Wis.-Milwaukee L Sept. 27 at Wis.-Stevens Point L Oct. 1 at Wis.-Green Bay L Oct. 3 at St. Norbert W Oct. 11 at Lawrence L OT Oct. 18 Wis.-Parkside T OT Oct. 25 Wis.-Platteville L Nov. 1 at Wisconsin L

3-1 0-2 0-3 0-10 3-2 0-2 1-1 0-1 0-5

1976 (4-6) Coach: Joe Born Top Scorer: Hayden Knight (5 goals) Sept. 11 Wis.-Whitewater Sept. 17 at Wis.-Milwaukee Sept. 18 vs Wisconsin Sept. 25 Wis.-Stevens Point Oct. 2 St. Norbert Oct. 6 Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 9 at Ripon Oct. 16 at Wis.-Parkside Oct. 23 at Wis.-Platteville Oct. 30 Wisconsin

W L L W W L W L L L

2-0 0-2 1-3 2-0 2-0 0-4 3-0 2-3 1-2 1-3

L W W L W L L W L L

0-9 4-2 7-3 1-2 fft. 2-4 0-1 8-0 2-3 0-1

Coach: Joe Born Top Scorer: Hayden Knight (15 goals) Sept. 9 Wis.-Whitewater W Sept. 16 at Illinois W

4-0 5-2

1977 (4-6) Coach: Joe Born Top Scorer: Hayden Knight (16 goals) Sept. 7 Wis.-Milwaukee Sept. 10 at Wis.-Whitewater Sept. 24 at Wis.-Stevens Point Oct. 1 at St. Norbert Oct. 8 Ripon Oct. 15 Wis.-Parkside Oct. 19 at Lawrence Oct. 22 Wis.-Platteville Oct. 26 at Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 29 Wisconsin

1978 (9-2)

Marquette played its ďŹ rst season in 1964.

78

2009 Media Guide

Sept. 23 Sept. 30 Oct. 4 Oct. 5 Oct. 14 Oct. 21 Oct. 25 Oct. 28 Nov. 4

Wis.-Stevens Point St. Norbert at Wis.-Milwaukee Northwestern at Wis.-Parkside at Wis.-Platteville Wis.-Green Bay Wisconsin Lawrence

W W L W W W L W W

7-0 2-0 0-1 6-0 3-1 3-0 2-3 1-0 3-0

W W L W W L L W W T W L W

5-0 1-0 0-1 10-1 5-0 0-1 1-5 6-0 3-1 2-2 7-0 1-2 fft.

L L W W L L W W W L L W W W L W L

1-2 1-5 fft. 2-0 1-5 0-3 fft. 4-0 4-2 2-4 0-1 1-0 3-0 4-3 2-3 2-0 0-1

W L L W W W W L L L L T

4-0 0-4 0-1 1-0 6-0 1-0 1-0 0-2 0-5 0-3 0-1 1-1

1979 (8-4-1) Coach: Joe Born Top Scorer: Hayden Knight (16 goals) Sept. 8 at Wis.-Stevens Point Sept. 16 Illinois Sept. 19 Wis.-Milwaukee Sept. 20 at Wis.-Whitewater Sept. 29 at St. Norbert Oct. 5 at Notre Dame Oct. 10 at Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 12 Wis.-Parkside Oct. 19 Oakland Oct. 27 at Wheaton Oct. 30 Wis.-Platteville Nov. 3 at Wisconsin Nov. 17 at Indiana State

1980 (9-8) Coach: Joe Born Top Scorer: Rade Latinovich (8 goals) Sept. 1 vs Saint Louis Sept. 2 vs Akron Sept. 6 Wis.-Stevens Point Sept. 10 Wis.-Whitewater Sept. 13 at Wis.-Milwaukee Sept. 24 at Northern Illinois Sept. 27 Purdue Oct. 1 at Wis.-Platteville Oct. 5 Notre Dame Oct. 8 Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 10 at Wis.-Parkside Oct. 14 St. Norbert Oct. 22 Loyola (Ill.) Oct. 25 Lakehead Oct. 26 at Minnesota Nov. 1 Wisconsin Nov. 9 Evansville

1981 (7-10-1) Coach: Joe Born Top Scorer: John Dueker (11 goals) Sept. 9 at Wis.-Whitewater Sept. 12 at Western Illinois Sept. 16 at Wis.-Milwaukee Sept. 19 Wheaton Sept. 23 at St. Norbert Sept. 26 Northern Illinois Sept. 28 Wis.-Parkside Oct. 3 vs Virginia Oct. 4 vs Miami (Ohio) Oct. 7 at Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 9 at Notre Dame Oct. 13 at Northwestern


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS Oct. 18 Oct. 21 Oct. 24 Oct. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 8

Indiana at Loyola (Ill.) Minnesota at Wisconsin Cleveland State at Evansville

L W W L L L

0-2 7-0 1-0 1-5 2-5 1-7

W L L W L W L L L L T W L L W

7-0 0-4 0-1 6-2 1-4 7-1 0-2 2-6 0-1 1-2 1-1 5-0 2-3 0-1 3-0

1982 (5-10-1) Coach: Joe Born (through Oct. 1); Jerry Panek (Oct. 6 to end of season) Top Scorer: Jose Itarte (9 goals) Sept. 4 St. Scholastica Sept. 10 at Indiana Sept. 12 Western Illinois Sept. 15 Wis.-Whitewater Sept. 19 Evansville Sept. 22 at St. Norbert Oct. 1 at Minnesota Oct. 6 Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 8 at Wis.-Parkside Oct. 17 Notre Dame Oct. 27 Wisconsin Oct. 30 DePaul Oct. 31 at Cleveland State Nov. 6 at Northwestern Nov. 13 at Wis.-Milwaukee

1983 (10-8-3) Coach: Jerry Panek Top Scorer: Jose Itarte (14 goals) Sept. 3 vs La.-Monroe Sept. 4 vs Loyola (Ill.) Sept. 10 at Western Illinois Sept. 14 UCLA Sept. 17 at Akron Sept. 21 at DePaul Sept. 25 at Evansville Oct. 1 at Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 5 at Wis.-Parkside Oct. 8 Minnesota Oct. 11 Wisconsin Oct. 14 at Notre Dame Oct. 21 vs Tulsa Oct. 22 at Creighton Oct. 24 at Colorado Coll. Oct. 25 at Regis Oct. 27 Northwestern Oct. 29 Cleveland State Nov. 3 at Wis.-Whitewater Nov. 9 at Ill.-Chicago Nov. 12 Wis.-Milwaukee

L W L L L W T L L W T L W W L W W T W W W

2-3 5-3 0-1 0-3 0-4 4-0 1-1 1-2 1-3 2-1 1-1 2-4 1-0 1-0 0-2 5-3 3-1 0-0 8-0 3-2 3

1984 (14-2-4) Coach: Jerry Panek Top Scorer: Jose Itarte (16 goals) Sept. 1 Ill.-Chicago Sept. 5 DePaul Sept. 8 Western Illinois Sept. 9 Creighton Sept. 12 at Bowling Green Sept. 16 Evansville

W W W W L W

3-1 5-0 2-0 4-0 1-2 2-1

Sept. 19 Sept. 23 Sept. 28 Sept. 30 Oct. 3 Oct. 6 Oct. 14 Oct. 17 Oct. 20 Oct. 26 Oct. 29 Oct. 30 Nov. 6 Nov. 10

Lewis Akron at Northern Illinois at SIU-Edwardsville Wis.-Green Bay at Cleveland State Notre Dame at Wisconsin Wis.-Parkside at Northwestern Loyola (Ill.) at Carthage Wis.-Whitewater at Wis.-Milwaukee

W L T T W W W W T W W W W T

6-0 0-1 1-1 2-2 2-1 2-1 4-1 5-3 1-1 6-0 5-1 8-0 10-0 0-0

1985 (13-9) Coach: Jerry Panek Top Scorer: Jose Itarte, Todd Fitch (13 goals) Sept. 1 Illinois State W Sept. 6 at Western Illinois L Sept. 8 at DePaul W Sept. 11 at Western Mich. W Sept. 15 Dayton W Sept. 18 Northern Illinois W Sept. 21 Bowling Green W OT Sept. 24 at Evansville L Sept. 27 Purdue W Sept. 28 Quincy W Oct. 2 at Wis.-Green Bay W Oct. 6 Wisconsin L Oct. 9 at Notre Dame W Oct. 12 Saint Louis L Oct. 15 at Wis.-Parkside W Oct. 20 at Indiana L Oct. 26 Cleveland State L Oct. 27 Cincinnati L Oct. 30 Central Michigan W Nov. 2 at Akron L Nov. 6 at Loyola (Ill.) W Nov. 11 at Wis.-Milwaukee L

2-1 0-4 4-0 4-2 5-0 4-2 4-3 1-3 8-2 2-1 2-1 1-2 5-3 1-4 3-1 1-2 1-3 1-3 2-0 3-5 4-3 2-4

1986 (15-4-2) Coach: Jerry Panek Top Scorer: Tom Comiskey (13 goals) Aug. 30 Brigham Young Sept. 1 Wis.-Parkside Sept. 7 at Northern Illinois Sept. 13 vs Evansville Sept. 14 vs Boston Univ. Sept. 17 at Wisconsin Sept. 20 vs Western Ky. Sept. 21 vs Dayton Sept. 27 Northwestern Sept. 28 Western Mich. Oct. 1 at Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 5 Notre Dame Oct. 10 Western Illinois Oct. 12 at Illinois State Oct. 19 Indiana Oct. 22 Central Michigan Oct. 26 at Wis.-Milwaukee

W W W L L W W W W W T OT W L W T OT W L

3-2 4-0 1-0 0-1 0-1 3-2 2-0 5-0 4-0 3-1 1-1 2-1 0-2 2-1 2-2 5-2 0-2

Todd Fitch led MU to 14 wins in 1984. Oct. 31 Nov. 2 Nov. 5 Nov. 8

at Cleveland State at Bowling Green DePaul Loyola (Ill.)

W W OT W W

2-1 1-0 7-1 3-0

W W L W T W W L W L L L L L W L L W L L W

1-0 1-0 2-4 3-2 1-1 2-1 2-1 1-3 1-0 1-2 1-4 0-1 0-7 1-5 3-1 1-2 0-1 3-1 0-2 1-3 2-0

Coach: Jerry Panek Top Scorers: Paul Jakubczak, Kevin Wasco (6 goals) Sept. 1 Wisconsin L Sept. 4 Western Illinois W Sept. 9 at Cleveland State L Sept. 11 at Cincinnati L Sept. 16 vs SIU-Edwardsville L Sept. 17 vs Memphis W Sept. 21 at Northern Illinois W Sept. 24 Central Michigan W Sept. 25 Western Mich. W Sept. 28 Wis.-Green Bay T Oct. 1 Drake T Oct. 8 Indiana L Oct. 9 Evansville L Oct. 15 Quincy W Oct. 16 Northwestern L Oct. 23 at Wis.-Milwaukee L Oct. 28 at Akron T Oct. 30 at Bowling Green L Nov. 2 at Wis.-Parkside T Nov. 5 DePaul W

1-2 3-0 1-2 2-4 2-4 3-0 2-0 2-1 4-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-2 2-1 0-3 0-1 4-4 0-1 0-0 2-1

1987 (9-11-1) Coach: Jerry Panek Top Scorer: Todd Fitch (8 goals) Sept. 5 Cleveland State Sept. 6 Dayton Sept. 9 SIU-Edwardsville Sept. 11 vs Western Illinois Sept. 12 Quincy Sept. 16 Northern Illinois Sept. 19 Western Ky. Sept. 23 at Wisconsin Sept. 26 at Central Michigan Sept. 27 at Western Mich. Sept. 30 at Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 4 Akron Oct. 9 at Indiana Oct. 11 at Evansville Oct. 18 Bowling Green Oct. 25 Wis.-Milwaukee Oct. 28 at Northwestern Oct. 31 Xavier (Ohio) Nov. 1 Wis.-Parkside Nov. 6 at Notre Dame Nov. 7 at DePaul

1988 (7-9-4)

1989 (8-8-4)

John Duker tallied 11 goals in 1981

Coach: Jerry Panek Top Scorer: Mark Dillon (12 goals) Sept. 2 vs Syracuse Sept. 3 at Illinois State

L W

0-3 1-0

Sept. 8 Sept. 10 Sept. 15 Sept. 17 Sept. 20 Sept. 22 Sept. 24 Sept. 27 Sept. 30 Oct. 6 Oct. 8 Oct. 11 Oct. 14 Oct. 15 Oct. 22 Oct. 27 Oct. 29 Nov. 2

at Loyola (Ill.)* at DePaul Cleveland State Notre Dame* at Northwestern Detroit* at Notre Dame* at Wis.-Green Bay Bowling Green at Indiana Western Mich. Loyola (Ill.)* Wisconsin Northern Illinois at Wis.-Milwaukee at Akron at Detroit* vs Dayton#

W W T OT L W W T OT L T OT L W W L OT L OT L OT T W L

3-0 5-1 0-0 0-1 2-1 2-0 2-2 1-3 1-1 1-3 1-0 4-0 2-3 0-1 1-2 1-1 2-1 1-2

L W L W T W L W W W W L W L L L W W L OT W L

1-3 3-1 3-5 2-0 2-2 5-1 0-1 4-0 1-0 2-1 3-1 1-2 5-0 0-3 0-2 1-3 2-0 5-1 1-4 3-1 0-2

W OT W L W L W L OT L L L

6-3 1-0 0-1 4-3 0-3 1-0 1-2 1-2 2-3 0-1

*MCC matches #MCC Tournament

1990 (11-9-1) Coach: Jerry Panek Top Scorer: Jay Spatzek (9 goals) Sept. 1 vs Vermont Sept. 3 vs Central Michigan Sept. 7 Akron Sept. 9 at Loyola (Ill.)* Sept. 15 at Dayton* Sept. 16 at Xavier (Ohio)* Sept. 21 at Saint Louis* Sept. 23 Notre Dame* Sept. 29 at Bowling Green Sept. 30 Butler* Oct. 3 at Northern Illinois Oct. 6 Indiana Oct. 7 DePaul Oct. 13 Wisconsin Oct. 14 Evansville Oct. 21 Wis.-Milwaukee Oct. 24 Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 27 at Detroit* Oct. 28 at West. Michigan Nov. 1 vs Loyola (Ill.) # Nov. 2 at Saint Louis# *MCC Matches #MCC Tournament

1991 (8-14) Coach: Jerry Panek Top Scorer: Adam Ithier (10 goals) Aug. 24 vs Wisconsin Aug. 25 vs Wis.-Green Bay Aug. 31 vs Western Kentucky Sept. 1 vs Illinois State Sept. 7 at Akron Sept. 8 vs Cleveland State Sept. 11 Wis.-Milwaukee Sept. 13 at San Francisco Sept. 15 vs Stanford Sept. 22 at Memphis *

Marquette Men’s Soccer

79


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS Sept. 27 Sept. 29 Oct. 1 Oct. 4 Oct. 8 Oct. 11 Oct. 16 Oct. 18 Oct. 20 Oct. 25 Oct. 30 Nov. 3 Nov. 6 Nov. 12 Nov. 15 Nov. 17

at at at at at

at at at vs at

*C-USA matches

UAB* Louisville* Northwestern Memphis* Wis.-Green Bay Creighton USF* Charlotte* Wis.-Milwaukee Wisconsin Northern Illinois Eastern Illinois Evansville UAB# Cincinnati# USF#

W W W W W W L L L W OT W L L OT W W L

2-0 4-1 2-1 2-0 3-0 2-1 2-3 1-5 1-2 3-2 4-0 2-3 1-2 2-0 2-1 1-2

#C-USA Tournament

1997 (12-6-3) (NCAA Tourney)

Mark Dillon scored 12 goals in 1989. Sept. 28 Sept. 29 Oct. 6 Oct. 10 Oct. 12 Oct. 13 Oct. 20 Oct. 23 Oct. 27 Nov. 3 Nov. 8 Nov. 9

at at at at vs at

*GMC matches

Bowling Green Northwestern Cincinnati* UAB* Central Michigan Saint Louis* Evansville DePaul* Indiana Connecticut DePaul# Saint Louis#

L OT W L W L L OT L W L L W L

0-1 1-0 3-4 7-0 1-2 1-2 1-4 6-2 2-4 2-4 2-1 0-5

#GMC Tournament

1992 (7-12-1) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Steve Provan (7 goals) Sept. 5 at SIU-Edwardsville Sept. 9 Western Illinois Sept. 12 at Creighton Sept. 18 at Western Ky. Sept. 20 vs Alabama A&M Sept. 23 at Wis.-Green Bay Sept. 26 UAB* Sept. 27 Memphis* Sept. 29 at Wis.-Milwaukee Oct. 3 Central Michigan Oct. 4 Valparaiso Oct. 7 at Bowling Green Oct. 10 Northern Illinois Oct. 13 at Cleveland State Oct. 16 vs Cincinnati* Oct. 17 at Saint Louis* Oct. 23 at Wisconsin Oct. 27 at Butler Oct. 31 at DePaul* Nov. 6 vs UAB#

L W L W L OT L W L OT L L W L W T OT W OT L L L W OT L

0-5 2-0 1-6 2-0 1-2 0-1 2-0 0-1 0-2 1-3 6-0 2-5 2-1 2-2 2-1 0-3 1-2 1-2 4-3 0-1

Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Allen Stoltman (10 goals) Sept. 4 at Valparaiso W Sept. 8 at Western Illinois W Sept. 12 Western Ky. W Sept. 15 at Northern Illinois W OT Sept. 17 at Bradley W OT Sept. 24 at UAB* L Sept. 26 at Memphis* T OT Sept. 28 Wis.-Milwaukee W Oct. 1 at Dayton* T OT Oct. 3 at Bowling Green W Oct. 8 Evansville W Oct. 10 SIU-Edwardsville W OT Oct. 15 Cincinnati* T OT Oct. 17 Saint Louis* L Oct. 22 Wis.-Green Bay W OT Oct. 24 Quincy L Oct. 26 at Wisconsin L Oct. 29 Cleveland State W Oct. 31 DePaul* W Nov. 5 vs Cincinnati# W Nov. 6 at Memphis# L

7-0 3-1 5-3 4-3 4-2 1-3 1-1 2-0 1-1 2-1 3-0 2-0 0-0 0-3 1-0 0-3 0-1 1-0 2-1 1-0 1-2

*GMC matches

#GMC Tournament

1993 (13-5-3)

*GMC matches

80

#GMC Tournament

1994 (16-6-1) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Kevin Berry (13 goals) Sept. 3 Valparaiso Sept. 10 at Saint Louis* Sept. 13 at Cleveland State Sept. 16 UAB* Sept. 18 Memphis* Sept. 23 vs Butler Sept. 25 vs Washington Sept. 30 at DePaul* Oct. 2 Bowling Green Oct. 4 at Wis.-Milwaukee Oct. 7 at Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 12 Northern Illinois Oct. 14 at Dayton* Oct. 16 at Cincinnati* Oct. 23 Wisconsin Oct. 28 vs James Madison Oct. 30 vs Penn State Nov. 2 Ohio State Nov. 4 Southern Ind. Nov. 7 Northwestern Nov. 10 vs Cincinnati# Nov. 11 vs Saint Louis# Nov. 13 at UAB#

W L W W W W W T OT W L OT W W OT L W L L OT W W W OT W W W L OT

6-0 0-1 2-0 4-0 1-0 4-1 2-0 0-0 1-0 0-2 2-1 2-1 1-5 3-0 1-4 4-6 3-1 5-1 2-1 2-1 2-0 1-0 1-5

W L T OT L W L T OT T OT L L L OT W W W T OT W L W W W L

2-0 0-1 3-3 1-2 4-1 1-2 1-1 0-0 0-3 0-3 1-2 2-1 4-1 3-0 1-1 1-0 1-2 1-0 3-0 2-1 1-2

Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Drew Watzka (14 goals) Aug. 31 at Saint Louis* L Sept. 7 Cincinnati* T OT Sept. 14 vs Indiana (7) L OT Sept. 15 at IPFW W Sept. 20 Washington L Sept. 22 at DePaul* W

0-5 1-1 2-3 2-1 0-3 4-2

*GMC matches

#GMC Tournament

1995 (9-8-4) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Cory Butler (7 goals) Sept. 2 Eastern Illinois Sept. 8 at UNLV Sept. 10 vs San Diego State Sept. 15 Wis.-Milwaukee Sept. 20 Memphis* Sept. 24 at UAB* Sept. 27 Wis.-Green Bay Sept. 30 vs Akron Oct. 1 at Bowling Green Oct. 8 Creighton Oct. 11 at Charlotte* Oct. 13 at Louisville* Oct. 15 at Cincinnati* Oct. 20 Cleveland State Oct. 22 at Wisconsin Oct. 27 at Northern Illinois Oct. 29 USF* Nov. 1 Saint Louis* Nov. 3 DePaul* Nov. 5 at Northwestern Nov. 9 vs Charlotte# *C-USA matches

Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Donny Mark (6 goals) Sept. 1 UMKC Sept. 4 at Northwestern Sept. 10 Wis.-Green Bay Sept. 12 vs Marshall Sept. 14 at Ohio State Sept. 19 Charlotte* Sept. 21 UAB* Sept. 26 at Washington Sept. 28 vs Portland Oct. 4 DePaul* Oct. 7 Wis.-Milwaukee Oct. 10 Louisville* Oct. 12 Cincinnati* Oct. 15 at USF* Oct. 19 Akron Oct. 24 at Saint Louis* Oct. 26 at Memphis* Oct. 30 at Wisconsin Nov. 9 Cincinnati# Nov. 14 vs Saint Louis# Nov. 22 Bowling Green$

W W L OT L OT W OT W W W T OT W T OT W W OT L T OT L W OT W OT W OT L L

2-0 1-0 1-2 1-2 1-0 1-0 2-1 2-1 1-1 3-0 0-0 2-1 2-1 0-3 0-0 1-2 4-3 1-0 2-1 0-2 0-1

W L W L L L L L OT W W W W

1-0 0-1 3-0 1-2 0-3 1-3 1-2 1-2 1-0 1-0 2-0 2-0

*C-USA matches #C-USA Tournament $ NCAA Tournament

1998 (9-11-1) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Steve Govin (5 goals) Sept. 1 Wright State Sept. 5 Oakland Sept. 8 at UMKC Sept. 12 at Akron Sept. 15 at Wis.-Green Bay Sept. 18 at Charlotte* Sept. 20 at UAB* Sept. 25 Saint Louis* Sept. 27 Memphis* Sept. 30 Wis.-Milwaukee Oct. 3 Drake Oct. 9 at Louisville*

Oct. 11 Oct. 14 Oct. 22 Oct. 25 Oct. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 4 Nov. 8 Nov. 13

at Cincinnati* USF* Wisconsin at DePaul* at Florida Int’l vs Jacksonville Northwestern at UAB# vs Memphis#

L L T OT W L L W W OT L

1-2 0-6 0-0 1-0 1-2 1-3 2-0 3-1 0-3

Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Marshall Morehead (13 goals) Sept. 4 at Portland L Sept. 6 vs Washington L Sept. 8 Wis.-Green Bay L OT Sept. 12 at UAB* L Sept. 15 at Wis.-Milwaukee W OT Sept. 19 at Northwestern W Sept. 22 DePaul* W Sept. 24 at Drake W Sept. 26 at Louisville* W Oct. 1 Memphis* W Oct. 3 Creighton W Oct. 6 at Wisconsin W Oct. 10 at Charlotte* L OT Oct. 16 Cincinnati* W OT Oct. 20 at Oakland L Oct. 23 USF* W Oct. 27 at Saint Louis* L OT Nov. 1 UMKC L Nov. 11 vs Cincinnati# L

0-7 0-1 1-2 1-2 3-2 3-0 2-1 2-0 2-1 1-0 1-0 2-1 1-2 2-1 0-3 3-1 3-4 0-1 1-2

*C-USA matches

#C-USA Tournament

1999 (10-9-0)

*C-USA matches

#C-USA Tournament

2000 (10-7-2) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Marshall Morehead (10 goals) Sept. 1 Wis.-Milwaukee W Sept. 4 at Evansville W Sept. 9 at USF * W Sept. 12 Northwestern W Sept. 15 Cal Poly T OT Sept. 19 Oakland W OT Sept. 22 vs Drake W Sept. 24 at Creighton (3) W Sept. 27 at UMKC L Sept. 29 Wisconsin T OT Oct. 1 Charlotte* L Oct. 4 Louisville* L Oct. 8 Valparaiso W OT Oct. 10 at Wis.-Green Bay W Oct. 14 at Cincinnati* L Oct. 21 at Memphis* L Oct. 24 Saint Louis* (17) L Oct. 27 UAB L OT Nov. 1 DePaul W OT * C-USA matches

#C-USA Tournament

1996 (12-9-1)

2009 Media Guide

Max Stoka led MU to its first NCAA tournament appearance in 1997.

5-1 1-0 4-1 1-0 3-3 2-1 3-2 3-1 1-3 0-0 0-3 0-1 2-1 3-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 1-2 4-3


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS Oct. 19 Oct. 22 Oct. 26 Oct. 29 Oct. 31

at Wisconsin Georgetown * at Seton Hall (14) * West Virginia * Wis.-Milwaukee

L L L L L

0-3 0-1 1-3 1-3 0-4

*BIG EAST matches

2006 (1-15-1) Coach: Louis Bennett Top Scorer: Dan Addis, Matt Blouin (2 goals) Aug. 25 at Loyola (Ill.) W Aug. 27 Denver T 2OT L Sept. 2 at Loyola Marymount Sept. 6 at Wis.-Green Bay L Sept. 8 DePaul * L Sept. 10 USF * L Sept. 13 at Wis.-Milwaukee L Sept. 15 at Cincinnati * L Sept. 17 at Louisville * L Sept. 23 Providence * L Sept. 27 at Notre Dame (17) * L Oct. 1 at Pittsburgh * L Oct. 7 at West Virginia (5) * L Oct. 11 Wisconsin L Oct. 14 Seton Hall * L Oct. 19 Connecticut (24) * L Oct. 21 at Georgetown * L OT

2001 (12-8-1) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Three players (7 goals) Sept. 1 at Oakland Sept. 3 DePaul * Sept. 7 Valparaiso Sept. 20 vs San Francisco Sept. 22 at Santa Clara (23) Sept. 26 at Wisconsin Sept. 28 at UAB (9) * Oct. 3 Wis.-Milwaukee Oct. 6 at Louisville * Oct. 11 East Carolina * Oct. 14 Memphis * Oct. 17 at Northwestern Oct. 21 at Charlotte * Oct. 26 at TCU * Oct. 31 Wis.-Green Bay Nov. 3 at Saint Louis (5) * Nov. 7 at USF * Nov. 11 Cincinnati * Nov. 15 at USF # Nov. 16 vs UAB (24) # Nov. 17 vs Saint Louis (5) # *C-USA matches

L W W W OT W T OT L L W L W W L W W L L W W W L

0-1 4-0 4-0 3-2 1-0 2-2 1-2 1-2 3-0 0-1 2-1 3-0 0-1 1-0 5-0 1-2 0-1 3-1 2-1 4-1 0-2

#C-USA Tournament

2002 (10-8-1) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Derek Gutierrez, Eric Marshall (7 goals) Sept. 4 at Evansville L Sept. 7 Saint Louis* (23) W Sept. 11 Oakland L Sept. 18 at Wright State W Sept. 22 at Cincinnati* L Sept. 27 at Washington L Sept. 29 vs Portland L Oct. 5 TCU * W Oct. 8 at Wis.-Green Bay W Oct. 12 USF* L Oct. 15 Louisville* W Oct. 19 Charlotte* W Oct. 22 at Wis.-Milwaukee L Oct. 27 UAB* W OT Oct. 30 at Memphis* W Nov. 3 at East Carolina * T OT Nov. 6 at DePaul * W Nov. 9 Wisconsin W Nov. 15 vs Cincinnati # L OT (lost on PKs, 3-1) *C-USA matches

1-2 1-0 0-1 4-2 1-2 2-3 0-3 4-1 3-0 0-1 2-0 3-1 0-2 2-1 2-1 0-0 3-0 3-0 1-1

#C-USA Tournament

2003 (9-9-1) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Chris Lee (14 goals) Aug. 29 vs Denver Aug. 31 at Air Force Sept. 3 at UIC

W L L

2-1 0-7 0-3

Sept. 7 Sept. 10 Sept. 13 Sept. 19 Sept. 21 Sept. 27 Oct. 1 Oct. 4 Oct. 7 Oct. 15 Oct. 18 Oct. 22 Oct. 25 Oct. 29 Nov. 1 Nov. 8

at Oakland DePaul* Evansville USF* Washington at UAB* (7) at Saint Louis* (7) Memphis* Wright State at Wisconsin East Carolina* at Louisville* Wis.-Green Bay Wis.-Milwaukee at Charlotte* Cincinnati*

L W W W L L T OT W W L W L W W L L

1-4 4-1 1-0 2-1 1-2 2-3 0-0 3-2 2-1 1-2 5-0 0-1 4-1 2-1 0-2 0-1

L L L W L W L T 2OT L W L L L OT W L W L W

0-1 0-3 0-2 2-0 1-2 2-0 1-2 2-2 1-3 3-1 2-3 1-2 1-2 1-0 1-3 1-0 3-5 2-1

L L W T 2OT L L L L

at

*BIG EAST matches rank listed is NSCAA rank at match time.

0-1 1-3 2-1 1-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-2

*BIG EAST matches ^Marquette Invitational rank listed is NSCAA rank at match time.

2007 (2-12-4) Coach: Louis Bennett Top Scorer: Nick Kay (4 goals) Aug. 31 at Denver Sept. 2 at UIC (25) Sept. 7 Xavier Sept. 9 Wis.-Green Bay Sept. 15 Notre Dame* (8) Sept. 21 at Villanova* Sept. 23 at Rutgers* Sept. 28 Louisville*

at at at

Cincinnati* Drake Seton Hall* Providence* Wisconsin Georgetown* West Virginia* Connecticut* (2) Wis.-Milwaukee Pittsburgh*

2-1 0-0 1-2 0-2 0-2 1-2 2-3 1-3 0-4 0-1 0-4 0-3 0-4 0-1 1-3 0-1 0-1

*BIG EAST matches rank listed is NSCAA rank at match time.

Chris Lee scored a total of 24 goals in 2003 and 2004.

Sept. 30 Oct. 3 Oct. 6 Oct. 13 Oct. 17 Oct. 20 Oct. 22 Oct. 27 Oct. 31 Nov. 3

W 2OT L L L T 2OT L T 2OT L OT T 2OT L 2OT

2-1 0-1 1-5 0-2 1-1 1-2 0-0 1-2 1-1 1-2

2008 (3-10-4) Coach: Louis Bennett Top Scorer: Anthony Colaizzi (4 goals) Sept. 1 Bryant Univ. W Sept. 5 Penn^ T2OT Sept. 7 Columbia Univ.^ T2OT Sept. 11 at Notre Dame (5) L Sept. 19 Syracuse L 2OT Sept. 21 St. John’s* (5) L Sept. 26 at Louisville* (19) T Sept. 28 at Cincinnati* W Oct. 2 UIC (9) L Oct. 5 at Pittsburgh* L Oct. 11 Seton Hall* T2OT Oct. 15 Wisconsin L Oct. 18 Connecticut* (20) L Oct. 22 at Milwaukee W Oct. 25 Providence* L Oct. 29 at West Virginia* L Nov. 1 at Georgetown* L

4-1 0-0 0-0 1-4 0-1 0-1 1-1 1-0 0-1 0-1 1-1 0-1 0-1 2-0 0-2 0-2 2-4

*C-USA matches

2004 (6-11-1) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Chris Lee (10 goals) Sept. 1 at Davidson Sept. 4 Saint Louis (4) * Sept. 10 Oakland Sept. 17 at Drake Sept. 19 at Creighton (16) Sept. 22 UIC Sept. 25 UAB * Sept. 29 Louisville * Oct. 2 at Memphis * Oct. 6 at Wis.-Green Bay Oct. 10 at East Carolina * Oct. 16 Charlotte * Oct. 20 at DePaul * Oct. 23 at USF (11) * Oct. 26 at Wis.-Milwaukee Oct. 29 at Wright State Nov. 3 Wisconsin Nov. 7 at Cincinnati * *C-USA matches

2005 (5-11-1) Coach: Steve Adlard Top Scorer: Duncan Silvert-Noftle (2 goals) Sept. 2 at Ohio State (18) L Sept. 4 vs Penn State (23) W Sept. 9 Drake W Sept. 11 St. Francis (Pa.) W Sept. 16 at Syracuse * T 2OT Sept. 18 at St. John’s (10) * L Sept. 23 Cincinnati * L Sept. 25 Louisville * W Oct. 1 at Connecticut (12) * L Oct. 5 Notre Dame * L Oct. 8 Pittsburgh * L Oct. 12 Wis.-Green Bay W

0-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-1 0-1 0-2 2-1 0-6 0-1 0-1 1-0

e L ouis Bennett era began with the start of the 2006 season.

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DISCOVER MARQUETTE Marquette University is a Catholic, Jesuit university in the heart of Milwaukee, Wisconsin -just two miles from the shores of Lake Michigan, one of America’s spectacular Great Lakes. Because we’re an urban university, you’ll never run out of things to do: festivals, cultural events, the fine arts, parks, restaurants and professional sports. Several academic and medical institutions, Fortune 500 companies and entrepreneurial businesses are also based in the this great city.

LEADERSHIP | FAITH | SERVICE | EXCELLENCE Marquette Men’s Soccer

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U . S. Ne ws & W o r l d R ep or t r an ks M arq uet te am ong th e natio n’s top 100 universities.

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OVER 100 MAJORS AND 50 MINORS. Helen Way Kingler College of Arts and Sciences African American Studies Anthropology Applied Mathematical Economics Biochemistry & Molecular Biology Biological Sciences (Biology) Chemistry Computational Mathematics Computer Science Criminology & Law Studies Economics English Foreign Languages Classical Languages French German Spanish History International Affairs Mathematics Philosophy Physics Physiological Sciences Political Science Psychology Social Welfare & Justice Sociology Theology Women's Studies College of Business Administration Accounting Business Economics Entrepreneurship Finance Human Resources Management Information Technology International Business Marketing Operations and Supply Chain Management Real Estate

J. William and Mary Diederich College of Communication Advertising Broadcast & Electronic Communication Corporate Communication Journalism Performing Arts Public Relations College of Engineering Biomedical Engineering - Biocomputing, Bioelectronics, Biomechanics Civil & Environmental Engineering Computer Engineering Electrical Engineering Electronic Engineering Mechanical Engineering College of Health Sciences Athletic Training Biomedical Sciences Clinical Laboratory Science Exercise Science Physical Therapy Physician Assistant Studies Speech Pathology & Audiology College of Nursing Nursing School of Education Elementary/Middle Education and Middle/Secondary Education Pre-Professional Studies Pre-dentistry Pre-law Pre-medicine

marquette.edu/explore 800.222.6544

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ST U DY H A R D. P L AY H A R D.

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GET I N VO LV E D . OV E R 2 5 0 STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS ON CAMPUS. HONOR SOCIETIES STUDENT GOVERNMENT FRATERNITIES & SORORITIES SPIRITUAL & RELIGIOUS GROUPS PERFORMING ARTS POLITICAL & SPECIAL INTERESTS COMMUNITY SERVICE CLUB SPORTS Marquette Men’s Soccer

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PRESIDENT REV. ROBERT A. WILD, S.J. Robert A. Wild, S.J., is the 22nd president of Marquette University. He began his duties as chief executive on June 17, 1996. Father Wild is building on Marquette's core strengths: an academically rigorous, values-centered curriculum; solid, practical preparation for work in a world of increasing complexity and diversity; formation for life of students as ethical and informed leaders in their religious, cultural, professional and civic communities; and graduating women and men who will dedicate their lives to the service of others. Under his leadership, the university in 2000 embraced a statement of shared vision for the future: "Our vision is to provide a Catholic, Jesuit education that is genuinely transformational so that our students graduate not simply better educated but better people, and to do so with such excellence that when asked to name the three or four best Catholic universities in America, people will include Marquette as a matter of course." Marquette has established clear, measurable goals and specific strategies to achieve this long-term vision. Under Father Wild's leadership, the university has improved academic quality, increased and stabilized enrollment and enhanced partnerships with the City of Milwaukee and community groups. In 2005 Marquette completed the most successful comprehensive campaign in the history of the university raising a total of $357 million. Marquette is committed to updating academic facilities for students in the 21st century: a new School of Dentistry opened in 2002, the John P. Raynor, S.J., Library was dedicated in 2003, and the Al McGuire Center, a practice facility for student-athletes, opened in 2004. Father Wild and his Marquette colleagues remain committed to providing students with a Catholic, Jesuit education in an atmosphere of care and faith. Immediately prior to assuming the Marquette presidency, from 1992 to 1996 Father Wild served as president of the Weston Jesuit School of Theology in Cambridge, Mass., a graduate school which trains clergy and laity for leadership roles in the Catholic Church. From 1985 to 1991 he served as provincial superior of the Chicago Province of the Society of Jesus, directing the activities of Jesuits in northern Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky and southwestern Ohio. A biblical scholar and author of two books and numerous scholarly articles, Father Wild taught theology at Marquette from 1975 to 1984. He has been a member of the university's Board of Trustees since 1990.

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Father Wild is a native of Chicago. He holds a doctoral degree in New Testament and Christian origins from Harvard University, a master's degree in classical languages, a bachelor's degree in Latin from Loyola University Chicago, and a licentiate in theology from the Jesuit School of Theology in Chicago. He has held visiting professorships at Loyola University Chicago and the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome. Father Wild began his teaching career at St. Xavier High School in Cincinnati, where he taught Latin, Greek and speech and debate from 1964 to 1967. He entered the Society of Jesus in 1957 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1970. Father Wild is a member of the boards of the University of Detroit Mercy, Saint Joseph's University, the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities, the Big East Conference, the Wisconsin Association of Independent Colleges and Universities (past board chair), the Greater Milwaukee Committee and the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce.


PROVOST DR. JOHN J. PAULY

Dr. John J. Pauly, is the provost of Marquette University. Reporting to the president, Dr. Pauly is responsible for academic affairs and institutional planning. As Provost he provides intellectual vision and leadership for the 10 academic deans and the dean of libraries. Prior to assuming the role of provost, Dr. Pauly was the dean of the J. William and Mary Diederich College of Communication from 2006 to 2008. Pauly specializes in the history and sociology of the mass media, the theory and practice of literary journalism, and cultural approaches to communication research. He has worked previously at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina (197879); Fordham University in New York City (1979-81); the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (1981-86); the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma (1986-93); and Saint Louis University in Missouri (1993-2006). He served as chair of the communication department at Saint Louis for nine years, and held a secondary appointment as professor of American Studies for five years. Pauly received a bachelor of science in journalism with honors in 1972, a master of science in journalism in 1974, and a Ph.D. in

communication in 1979, all from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Pauly has published more than 80 scholarly journal articles, book chapters, reviews and essays, and made numerous presentations in his fields of interest to both academic and professional organizations. He is a member of the editorial board of Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism and was formerly a board member of Critical Studies in Mass Communication and Journalism Monographs. He edited the quarterly journal of the American Journalism Historians Association from 1989 to 1993. Pauly has also held several offices within the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, most recently on its research committee. While at Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Pauly was a fellow at the Center for Twentieth Century Studies at UWM and a recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for College Teachers. In 2002 and 2006, the Student Government Association at Saint Louis honored him for excellence in teaching. In addition to his teaching and scholarship, Pauly has served as a writing skills consultant to private businesses, a technical writer and editor for the Construction Engineering Research Laboratory of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Champaign, and a drama reviewer for The Courier in Urbana.

SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT GREGORY KLIEBHAN Greg Kliebhan is the senior vice president of Marquette University. Reporting to the president, Kliebhan is responsible for top university support functions, which includes: Administration, Finance, General Counsel, Intercollegiate Athletics, Marketing and Communication, Public Affairs, Student Affairs and

University Advancement. Kliebhan has strong Marquette University legacy roots and a deep family allegiance. His father, wife Linda, daughters Kelly and Katy, brother, sister and brother-in-law are all Marquette alumni. Kliebhan, himself, is a product of a Marquette education, having earned his undergraduate degree in 1973 from the College of Liberal Arts (now Arts and Sciences). He went on to earn his masters of business administration at the University of Illinois at Urbana — Champaign. He was very pleased to return to Marquette in 1976 to join the university's administrative team as a management analyst. Since that time, Kliebhan has assumed increasing responsibility for university administration, finance and planning, and has held more than a dozen positions including key strategic positions such

as budget director, director of budget and institutional research, vice president for planning, vice president for administration, interim vice president for university advancement, corporate secretary, corporate treasurer and now senior vice president and corporate vice president. Passion for Marquette University and putting students first have characterized Kliebhan’s career at Marquette. His personal philosophy reads in part: "Together, we need to convince all of our staff that their work for students is noble, enriching, and absolutely vital to Marquette University’s success – whatever position they might hold and however far from daily contact with students it might be.” Kliebhan and his wife Linda, who graduated from Marquette in 1974 as a physical therapist, bring a similar passion to volunteer activities. As a couple, they served as president of Kelly and Katy's high school parents association at Divine Savior/Holy Angels. Greg also was active in the family's parish school, Sts. Cecilia and James School, including serving as coach of the girls' basketball team for eight years. He also coached grade school and high school AAU basketball teams for many years. In addition to his role as Marquette's corporate vice president, Kliebhan has served on the boards of a number of community organizations, including the Bridging the Gap Learning Center.

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UNIVERSITY LEADERSHIP COUNCIL

REV. ROBERT A. WILD, S.J. RANA H. ALTENBURG Vice President for Public President Affairs

DR. WILLIAM CULLINAN Dean of the College of Health Sciences

GREGORY KLIEBHAN Senior Vice President

DR. ROBERT J. DEAHL Dean of the College of Professional Studies

JOHN C. LAMB Vice President for Finance

CYNTHIA M. BAUER Vice President and General Counsel

DR. MARGARET L. BLOOM Vice Provost for Undergraduate Programs and Teaching

ROBY BLUST Dean of Undergraduate Admissions

DR. MARGARET FAUT CALLAHAN Dean of the College of Nursing

STEVE COTTINGHAM Athletic Director

TRICIA GERAGHTY V.P. for Marketing and Communication

DR. WILLIAM A. HENK Dean of the College of Education

DR. JEANNE HOSSENLOPP Interim Dean of the Helen Way Klingler College of Arts and Sciences

DR. STANLEY V. JASKOLSKI Dean of the College of Engineering

JOSEPH D. KEARNEY Dean of the Law School

DR. WILLIAM K. LOBB Dean of the School of Dentistry

DR. L. CHRISTOPHER MILLER Vice President for Student Affairs

DR. JOHN J. PAULY Provost

STEPHANIE RUSSELL Executive Director for University Mission and Identity

DR. LINDA SALCHENBERGER Dean of College of Bus. Admin. & Graduate School of Management

THE UNIVERSITY LEADERSHIP COUNCIL represents all academic and administrative units of Marquette. It also serves as an advisory board for President Robert A. Wild, S.J. NOT PICTURED: Dr. Lori Bergen, Dean of the J. William and Mary Diederich College of Communication; Anne O’Brien, Associate Senior Vice President; Dr. Thomas J. “Toby” Peters, Associate Senior Vice President; Dr. Jeffrey T. Snell, Special Advisor to the President. ARTHUR F. SCHEUBER Vice President for Administration

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JULIE TOLAN Vice President for University Advancement

2009 Media Guide

JANICE S. WELBURN Dean of University Libraries

DR. WILLIAM R. WIENER Vice Provost for Research and Dean of the Graduate School


ATHLETIC DIRECTOR STEVE COTTINGHAM A member of the Marquette University family for more than a decade, Steve Cottingham has played an intricate role in the development of the Intercollegiate Athletics program at the University. Cottingham was named Director of Athletics on Feb. 21, 2008 after serving as the department's interim director since January 2007. As Director of Athletics, Cottingham oversees Marquette’s 14 intercollegiate sports and coaching staffs. He also supervises the management of the Intercollegiate Athletics team that handles the administrative functions of the department including fiscal operations, media relations, facilities, fundraising, ticket sales and marketing. During his tenure with the Golden Eagles, he has negotiated contracts of the MU coaching staff and helped complete the current deal with the Bradley Center (home of Marquette men’s basketball). Cottingham’s efforts in the University’s move to the BIG EAST Conference were vital and helped elevate the program’s profile on a national level. He is a member of the Athletic Board and serves on its equity committee. The mission of the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics is to strive for excellence in academics, athletics, leadership and service to others in the Jesuit tradition. Marquette student-athletes, teams and coaches across the broad spectrum of the program continue to achieve academic, athletic, personal and professional prominence at the conference, regional and national levels. “We are very proud of the way our coaches and studentathletes represent Marquette,” Cottingham said. “Marquette hopes its students and alumni will ‘Be the Difference’ in their communities and the world. Our student-athletes do that every day as students, competitors and leaders for others.” Previously, Cottingham served as Associate Senior Vice President. In that role, Cottingham was part of the University’s administrative leadership team and a member

of the University Leadership Council. He served in the Senior Vice President’s office since 2003, after working the previous eight years as associate general counsel. Cottingham joined the University’s Office of the General Counsel in July 1995. Previously he was in private practice, specializing in corporate transactions, including the buying and selling of businesses, and securities law. He earned his undergraduate degree at UW-Madison in 1983 and received his law degree from George Washington University in 1987. A resident of Mequon, Cottingham and his wife, Lisa, have one daughter (Taira, 11).

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ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION MIKE BROEKER

SARAH BOBERT

Deputy Athletic Director

Senior Associate A.D. Internal Operations/SWA

Mike Broeker is in his seventh year at Marquette and his third as Deputy Athletic Director after serving as an associate athletic director for two years. In his capacity, Broeker oversees several areas, including marketing, media relations, licensing and merchandising (Spirit Shop), Nelligan Sports Marketing and ticket operations. He is the Chief Operating Officer responsible for management of Marquette's 14-sports NCAA Division I intercollegiate athletics program. He is also the sport administrator for men’s basketbal. Broeker joined the Marquette Athletics staff in November 2003 as Assistant Athletic Director for Media Relations, after nearly four years as a member of the basketball communications group at the NBA. While at the NBA, he worked to generate awareness and publicity for the league, its executive staff, events and initiatives and served as the primary contact for local and national electronic media outlets. Prior to working with the NBA, Broeker spent two years working in the communications group for the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA). He served as a primary on-site media contact for events including Wimbledon, the Australian Open, the U.S. Open, and the French Open. A graduate of Siena College, Broeker earned a bachelor of arts in English in 1997 and worked as a Marketing/Sports Information Assistant until 1998. Broeker and his wife, Anne, have two sons, Michael born in 2006 and Daniel born in 2008.

TOM FORD

DANIELLE JOSSETI

Associate A.D. Academic Support & Student Programs

Associate A.D./Compliance

Tom Ford is in his 20th year on the Marquette athletics staff and he oversees the academic support center (also known as "The Eagles Nest) at the Al McGuire Center. The academic support center offers programs designed to meet the academic needs of student-athletes, including an extensive freshmen orientation program, academic advising, tutoring, writing assistance, organized study sessions, computer lab and the design and implementation of individual study plans. Prior to coming to Marquette, Ford served as an advisor/mentor at Wis.Parkside. From 1982-87, he was the assistant director for the Educational Opportunity Program at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. Ford graduated from Wis.-Parkside with a bachelor’s degree in English in 1972 and received his Master's in Education in Guidance and Counseling from Carthage College in 1999. Ford and his wife, Susan, have two children, Jesse and Casey, both who currently attend Marquette University.

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Sarah Bobert is in her 10th year on the Marquette athletics staff and oversees the internal operations of the Athletic Department. In her position supervising internal operations, she is responsible for budget development and management, financial processing and reporting, oversight of facility management, all departmental human resources elements and other internal matters. She also oversees sports medicine, academic services and strength and conditioning. Bobert’s duties as related to serving as SWA include managing gender equity compliance, student-athlete welfare and working with the StudentAthlete Advisory Council. Bobert is also the sport administrator for women's basketball and women’s soccer. Prior to joining the staff in October of 2000, Bobert worked at the NCAA. She served the NCAA since 1989 in a number of business related areas including acting as the Business Services Manager, Accounting Manager, and Senior Accountant. Bobert earned her bachelor’s degree in business administration from Wis.-Stout in 1989. She and her husband, Clark, have two children, Bailee and Cody.

2009 Media Guide

Danielle Josetti is in her eighth year on the Marquette athletics staff and oversees Marquette’s student-athletes, athletics staff and boosters to ensure they follow NCAA guidelines. In her role with the Golden Eagles, she serves as the sport administrator for volleyball and is also a member of the BIG EAST Tennis Committee. She serves as an NCAA Peer Reviewer for Athletic Certification and is also a member of the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletic Administrators and National Association for Athletics Compliance. Prior to Marquette, Josetti worked at Creighton University as a Compliance Coordinator and External Operations Assistant. From 1997 until 2001, she served a dual role as assistant softball coach and assistant compliance coordinator. A member of the Creighton softball team from 1995-1997, Josetti was a 1995 Academic All-Conference Team honorable mention selection. She still ranks among the top 10 in the program’s record book in both single-season and career steals. Josetti earned a bachelor of arts in journalism from Creighton in 1997. Josetti resides in New Berlin, Wis. with her husband, Jake, and daughters Payton and Lauren.


ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION PAUL McINERNY, Ph.D.

JIM NASIOPULOS

Chief Advancement Officer

Associate A.D. Facilities & Event Management

Dr. Paul McInerny serves as Chief Athletic Advancement Officer at Marquette University. McInerny is responsible for major gifts, endowments, fund raising and special projects for intercollegiate athletics. He joined the department in March 2005 from Dominican High School, where he served as president since 1995. An alumnus of Marquette, McInerny earned two degrees from the University, a bachelor of arts in 1972 and a Ph.D. in education in 1989. He also holds a master’s in journalism from Southern Illinois University. Following a successful two-year journalism career in North Dakota, he returned to Marquette in 1976 as an administrator serving in several capacities before his tenure at Dominican. As an undergraduate, McInerny was a member of Marquette’s soccer team and also earned membership in Phi Gamma Mu, the national social studies academic honor society. He served on the M Club board of directors from 1985 to 2005 including serving as its representative to the Marquette University Alumni Association national board. In 1996, he was awarded the Hy Popuch Award for service to Marquette athletics. McInerny has also taught at the college level and published in several academic journals. He and his wife Carol, also a Marquette graduate, have two children, Colleen and Kevin who attend Catholic Memorial High School.

SCOTT KUYKENDALL Associate A.D./Media Relations Scott Kuykendall, Associate Athletic Director for Media Relations, is in his third season at Marquette. Kuykendall oversees the publicity efforts for each of the athletic department’s 14 NCAA Division I programs, while serving as the primary contact for men’s basketball and men’s tennis teams. A native of New Berlin, Wis., Kuykendall spent two years as an assistant sports information director at the University of South Florida. While in Tampa, he worked as the men’s basketball contact while also supervising the athletic departments official web site. Prior to USF, he spent six years at Western Michigan University. His duties included serving as the primary contact for seven sports, inlcuding men’s basketball and men’s and women’s soccer. A 1997 graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Platteville, Kuykendall also completed one-year internships at the University of Cincinnati and Mississippi State University.

Jim Nasiopulos is in his 28th year at Marquette and 17th in charge of facilities and events. Prior to his current position, Nasiopulos served as Director of the Helfaer Recreation Center and Tennis Stadium from 1982 to 1993. Nasiopulos was the Tournament Manager for the NCAA Basketball Tournament First and Second Rounds at the Bradley Center in 1999 and 2004. He also served as Tournament Manager when Marquette played host to the 2002 NCAA Women’s Basketball Mideast Regional at the U.S. Cellular Arena. Nasiopulos was the golf coach at Marquette from 1986-1992. Nasiopulos received his bachelor’s degree in physical education from Illinois-Chicago in 1969, and earned his master’s degree in physical education in 1972 from the University of Illinois. Nasiopulos and his wife, Phyllis, have two children, Kristen, a 1997 Marquette graduate and Michael, a 2000 Marquette graduate.

MARQUETTE HEAD COACHES Louis Bennett . . . . .Men’s Soccer Jody Bronson . . . . .Women’s Tennis Tim Grogan . . . . . .Men’s Golf Terri Mitchell . . . . . .Women’s Basketball Mike Nelson . . . . . .Men’s/Women’s Cross Country Steve Rodecap . . . .Men’s Tennis Markus Roeders . . .Women’s Soccer Bert Rogers . . . . . .Men’s/Women’s Track & Field Bond Shymansky . .Volleyball Buzz Williams . . . . .Men’s Basketball

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MARQUETTE ATHLETICS

TINA AIELLO Accounts Coordinator/ Marquette Spirit Shop

AARON BAKER Asst. Athletic Diretor/ Facilities and Events

ERIC BECKER Marketing and Ticketing Assistant

LARRY BIRKETT Associate Director/ Marquette Spirit Shop

SARAH BOBERT Senior Associate A.D. Internal Operations/SWA

BRIAN BOWSHER Director of Marketing

LAUREN BOYLER Assistant Athletic Trainer

MIKE BROEKER Deputy Athletic Director

MAGGIE CASEY Multimedia/Digital Production Assistant

SARAH CLAUS Athletics Special Events Coordinator

STEVE COTTINGHAM Athletic Director

BRENT CRANK Ticket Manager

AARON DOERING Assistant Athletic Trainer

JAIME ERICKSON Assistant Director Compliance/Operations

ERNEST EUGENE Athletic Trainer

TOM FORD Assoc. Athletic Dir. Acad. Support/Student Programs

DIANE GILBY Administrative Assistant

JIM GRAEBERT Senior Director/ Marquette Spirit Shop

JAMIE HAYS-SZELC Assistant Director of Athletics Development

NATE HEYRMAN Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach

WHITNEY HUGHES Marketing Assistant

JEREMY JOHNSON Head Athletic Trainer

DANIELLE JOSETTI Associate Athletic Director/Compliance

SCOTT KUYKENDALL Associate Athletic Director/Media Relations

MARY LARKIN Office Manager & Head Spirit Squad Coach

LUKE LENOBLE Assistant Director/ Media Relations

ASHLEY LEPARD Marketing Assistant

MAUREEN LEWIS Student Programs Coordinator

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www.GoMarquette.com

DR. PAUL MCINERNY Chief Athletic Advancement Officer

JULIE MIKOLAJEWSKI Spirit Shotp - Web and Marketing Coordinator

KIM MUELLER Assistant A.D. Marketing

JIM NASIOPULOS Associate Athletic Director Facilities/Events

DR. PHILLIP NAYLOR Faculty Athletic Representative

DR. LARRY PAN Faculty Athletic Representative

J.W. RESENHOEFT General Manager Marquette Properties

ELLIE ROZUMALSKI Assistant Athletic Trainer

TOM SAGE Marketing and Sales Assistant

TODD SMITH Head Strength & Conditioning Coach

AMANDA SUCHARDA Director of Marketing and Sales

RUDY THOMAS Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach

TODD WENSLAFF Coordinator of Internal Operations

MIKE WITTLIFF Athletics Media Relations Assistant

ADRIENNE RIDGEWAY Assistant A.D. Academic Services/Life Skills

JOE TRUE Director of Development

AMY UFNOWSKI Assistant Director Media Relations

GENERAL CONTACT INFO MAIN TELEPHONE NUMBER: (414) 288-6303 TICKET OFFICE: (414) 288-4668 EMAIL: athletics@mu.edu

TIM RAASCH Art Director

TAYLOR THOMASON Blue and Gold Fund Assistant

MARK WRIGHT Senior Director of Development

CAMPUS ADDRESSES AL McGUIRE CENTER 770 North 12th Street Milwaukee, WI 53233

VALLEY FIELDS 1818 Canal Street Milwaukee, WI 53233

MARQUETTE GYM 1532 W. Clybourn St. Milwaukee, WI 53233

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DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI The Marquette University Alumni Association (MUAA) develops alumni programming that encompasses the spiritual, educational, social and service components of the university’s mission; brings alumni together based on affinity and interest; and supports Marquette’s enrollment, retention, fund-raising, marketing and diversity efforts. MUAA signature events include Alumni Reunion Weekend, Alumni Awards Weekend, National Service Day and National Marquette Day.

The MUAA is an umbrella organization composed of more than 30 geographic clubs, eight college-based alumni associations, and four interestbased associations, all governed by a 27-member board of directors. Since 1891, the MUAA has served Marquette and the more than 100,000 Marquette alumni residing in the United States and 80 foreign countries.

Kathleen M. Quinn Abernathy, College of Speech 1982 Former Commissioner, Federal Communications Commission Joy T. Bennett Kinnon, College of Journalism 1979 Senior Editor, Ebony Richard A. Burke, College of Business Administration 1956 Co-founder and Chairman, Trek Corp. Richard Burton, Graduate School 1991 Commissioner, Australian National Basketball League (NBL) Colleen C. Campbell, Helen W. Klingler College of Arts & Sciences 1996 Fellow, Ethics and Public Policy Center, Washington, D.C. Author, The New Faithful: Why Young Adults are Embracing Christian Orthodoxy Gail Gleason Collins, College of Journalism 1967 Editorial page editor, The New York Times Steven J. Douglass, College of Business Administration 1971 Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Payless Shoesource Margaret A. Drain, Helen Way Klingler College of Arts and Sciences 1967 Vice President of National Programming, WGBH Boston Dr. Leona Patt Franciosi, Graduate School 1996 President, World Federation for Mental Health Kathleen Hall Jamieson, College of Speech 1967 Professor of Communication and Director, Annenberg Public Policy Center University of Pennsylvania Jeffrey Joerres, College of Business Administration 1983 Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Manpower Felicia Mabuza-Suttle, College of Journalism 1977, Graduate School 1978 Former host, The Felicia Show, South Africa television (12 years) Rep. Gwendolynne S. Moore, Helen Way Klingler College of Arts and Sciences 1978 U.S. Congresswoman Glenn “Doc” Rivers, Helen W. Klingler College of Arts & Sciences 1985 Head Coach, Boston Celtics Steve Rushin, College of Journalism 1988 Columnist, Sports Illustrated John J. Stollenwerk, College of Speech 1961, Graduate School 1966 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Allen-Edmonds Shoe Corp. Marianne Szymanski, Helen W. Klingler College of Arts & Sciences 1989 Founder and President, Toy Tips Inc. Publisher of Toy Tips.com and Kid Tips Magazine

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BOB GANSLER Robert Gansler, Arts ’64, Grad ’68, earned international recognition in the sport of soccer as a player and coach. As one of the premier players in the US, Gansler earned a spot on the US Olympic team as an MU student. He played 25 games with the Olympic and US National squads and captained the Olympic team twice. He also was a two-time selection to the US Pan-American team. He began his coaching career as an assistant at Marquette and went on to be head coach at the high school, collegiate, amateur and professional ranks winning numerous championships. Among his highlights was coaching the US National U-20 Team to a fourth place finish in the world, the highest-ever finish for a US team and the US National Team to its first World Cup appearance in 40 years, a feat only achieved twice.


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With 30 years under its belt, The BIG EAST Conference continues on a path of success in and out of the athletic arena. The goals have always been the same. The league wants and expects to compete at the highest level and does so with integrity and sportsmanship. The commendable performances of the student-athletes at BIG EAST schools are the indicators of the league’s proud tradition of success. The BIG EAST has gone through membership changes since its birth, but the 2009-10 academic year will mark the conference’s fifth straight with the same 16-member group, the nation’s largest Division I-A conference. In 2008-09, BIG EAST student-athletes again succeeded on the national stage. The Connecticut women’s basketball team won its sixth national championship by defeating conference foe Louisville in an all-BIG EAST NCAA title game. The Notre Dame women’s soccer team reached the NCAA championship game and the Syracuse field hockey squad advanced to the NCAA Final Four. Three BIG EAST women’s cross country teams finished in the top 10 at the NCAA Championships. West Virginia was fourth

followed by Villanova in sixth place and Georgetown in ninth. Individually in women’s sports, Providence’s Danette Doetzel won the 10,000 meters at the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships. Connecticut’s Maya Moore was the conference’s sixth winner of the Wade Trophy as the top player in women’s basketball. Notre Dame’s Kerri Hanks won the Hermann Trophy, the top award in women’s soccer. On the men’s side, Connecticut and Villanova advanced to the Final Four in basketball. The 2008-09 campaign was arguably the best men’s basketball season in the history of the BIG EAST with the league setting NCAA standards with three No. 1 tournament seeds, four teams in the round of the Elite Eight and five in the Sweet 16. The St. John’s men’s soccer team reached the NCAA College Cup before losing in the national semifinals. BIG EAST football has maintained its high profile and its reputation as a balanced group. Seven of the league’s eight squads were nationally ranked or received votes in the national polls

in 2008. Cincinnati was the league champion. The BIG EAST, a charter member of the Bowl Championship Series, has won three of its last four BCS bowl games. West Virginia, Louisville and Connecticut also have won or shared league crowns over the past four seasons. The BIG EAST has continued to produce student-athletes who were at the forefront of athletic and academic achievement. In 2008-09, 19 BIG EAST players were chosen to their respective ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America Teams, including eight first-team selections. Nearly 400 student-athletes have earned academic all-America honors. The BIG EAST became the nation’s largest Division I-A conference in 2005-06 when five new members began competing. The new schools were: University of Cincinnati, DePaul University, University of Louisville, Marquette University and the University of South Florida. BIG EAST institutions reside in nine of the nation’s top 34 largest media markets, including New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Tampa, Pittsburgh, Hartford, Milwaukee and Cincinnati. With its newest members, BIG

EAST markets contain almost one fourth of all television households in the U.S. Since opening its doors in 1979, the league has won 26 national championships in six different sports and 126 student-athletes have won individual national titles. The BIG EAST has enjoyed tremendous basketball success, especially in this decade. In 2008-09, the BIG EAST produced four of the eight Final Four teams in men’s and women’s basketball. It was only the second time in NCAA history that one conference placed that many Final Four teams in the same season. In 2003-04, Connecticut became the first school in NCAA history to win the men’s and women’s NCAA basketball titles in the same season. In ’02-03, the BIG EAST became the first conference in NCAA history to win the men’s and women’s titles in the same year when the Syracuse men and the Connecticut women captured their respective national championships. In men’s basketball, BIG EAST squads have won three of the last 11 NCAA champi-

onships. BIG EAST women’s teams have taken six of the last 10 NCAA titles. Proactive movement has been a signature strategy for the conference that was born in 1979. The BIG EAST continually turns challenges into opportunities to become stronger. In 2009-10, the BIG EAST will add men’s lacrosse to its growing list of sports, which will increase its total to 24 sport championships. The first women’s golf championship was held in the spring of 2003. Women’s lacrosse and rowing were added in 2001. The BIG EAST became a reality on May 31, 1979, following a meeting of athletic directors from Providence College, St. John’s, Georgetown and Syracuse universities. Seton Hall, Connecticut and Boston College completed the original seven school alliance. While the membership has both increased and changed, the focus of the BIG EAST has not wavered. The conference reflects a tradition of broad based programs, led by administrators and coaches who place a constant emphasis on aca-

demic integrity. Its student athletes own significantly high graduation rates and their record of scholastic achievement notably show a balance between intercollegiate athletics and academics. Any successful organization has been fortunate to have outstanding leadership. Michael Tranghese, the league’s first full-time employee, and for 11 years the associate to Dave Gavitt, became Commissioner in 1990. In his first year, he administered the formation of The BIG EAST Football Conference. More than 550 BIG EAST student-athletes have earned all America recognition and dozens have won individual NCAA national championships. The BIG EAST has been well represented in U.S. or foreign national and Olympic teams. Several athletes earned gold medals in each of the last six summer Olympiads. The BIG EAST has its headquarters in Providence where the conference administers to more than 5,500 athletes.

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BIG EAST CONFERENCE Marquette Men’s Soccer

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VALLEY FIELDS The Marquette men's and women's soccer teams are entering their 12th season of play at Valley Fields, an athletic complex and recreational area for Marquette students and Milwaukee Community. Located at 1818 Canal Street, Valley Fields is Marquette's first-ever on-campus soccer facility. The $8 million facility includes a grass field that is the home to Golden Eagles soccer. A practice facility was constructed east of the soccer stadium that give the men's and women's soccer teams the benefit of practicing on campus adjacent to the playing surface. The installation of the FieldTurf surface took place in the summer and was completed prior to the start of the 2006 season. Valley Fields also houses an eight-lane 400-meter running track that surrounds a football-sized artificial turf field; and an area for field events such as the long jump, high jump, triple jump, pole vault, shot put, discus and javelin. Among other things, Valley Fields features a lighting system, first-aid and vending areas and a high-tech security system. A donor wall also is located in the vestibule of the facility's main building. Future renovations to the soccer stadium and practice facility will make Valley Fields one of the state of the art soccer venues in the BIG EAST and the country and will certainly give the Golden Eagles a distinct home field advantage.

THE BIRDCAGE Marquette students have their own cheering section at all Golden Eagles home matches called “The Birdcage.� These are the loudest and most intense fans at Valley Fields. The Birdcage creates an intimate experience for fans as it is located directly behind the east endline, closest to the visiting team’s bench.

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ATHLETICS FACILITIES Marquette University offers its student-athletes the finest in athletic facilities. The 14 athletic teams that represent the university train, strengthen and get treatment at the Marquette Gym on campus. The MU Gym also serves as home for many of Marquette’s sports. MU’s men’s and women’s basketball as well as the volleyball teams have the opportunity to call one of the finest facilities in the country home, the Al McGuire Center. The state-of-the-art on-campus training and competition facility opened in October of 2003. The men’s basketball teams also play at the Bradley Center. Valley Fields serves as home to Marquette soccer and track and field with its sprawling, three-field complex providing plenty of room for the Golden Eagles to practice and compete. The soccer facilities will be going through a major upgrade at the end of this season. Men’s and women’s tennis plays in one of the finest facilities in the region. The Helfaer Tennis Stadium is a six-court indoor facility that offers year-round playing and training.

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IN YOUR COMMUNITY The Marquette men’s soccer team is very active in community involvement through soccer. The team routinely takes part in activities that benefit greater Milwaukee using soccer as a vehicle. The 2008-09 academic year was no exception as the team was very busy promoting the program through a positive message.

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FAN FEST 2009

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MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY SOCCER SCHOOL GoMarquette.com/SoccerSchool

The Marquette University Soccer School is a series of camps and clinics aimed at reaching out to the soccer community in southeastern Wisconsin, while helping participants, ranging in age from the youth level to adults, improve their all-around soccer abilities. "Marquette Soccer School is a great way to see what Marquette Soccer is all about and gives us an opportunity to work directly with local soccer players of all ages, utilizing our great facilities and great staff. In all, it provides every participant with quality instruction and a fantastic soccer environment." - Louis Bennett, head coach



AUGUST Sun Thu Sat Fri

16 20 22 28

Blue vs. Gold at Michigan at Valparaiso Kentucky

SEPTEMBER (Fan Fest) (exh) (exh) (exh)

HOME GAMES IN BOLD played at Valley Fields Game times listed are Central and subject to change. • Denotes BIG EAST Matches

5:05 6:00 5:00 1:05

p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m.

Tue 1 Sun 6

Milwaukee at Drake

(MKE Cup)

OCTOBER 7:05 p.m. 7:00 p.m.

MARQUETTE INVITATIONAL Fri 11 Buffalo (MU Invt’l) 7:05 p.m. Sun 13 UC Irvine (MU Invt’l) 12:05 p.m. Fri Sun Fri Sun

18 20 25 27

at USF • at DePaul • Cincinnati • Louisville •

6:30 4:00 7:05 2:05

p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m.

Sat 3 Sat 3 Wed 7 Sat 10 Tue 13 Sat 17 Wed 21 Sat 24 Wed 28 Sat 31

at at at at

Alumni Game West Virginia • Notre Dame • Seton Hall • Bucknell TV Georgetown • Wisconsin Providence • Connecticut • Pittsburgh •

Noon 7:05 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Noon 6:00 p.m. 7:05 p.m.


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