2010 Wofford Women's Soccer Media Guide

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2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer


Wofford

2010 Women’s Soccer Media Guide

First Row : Katie O’Brien, Maggie McLaughlin, Daniella Fatti, Sydney Reed, Megan Polson, Jewel Kawamoto, Maggie O’Brien Second Row: Assistant Coach Erik Turnblom, Athletic Trainer Alyss Hart, Head Coach Amy Kiah, Rachael Blackburn, Bridget Hutter, Chelsea Ashworth, Katie McChesney, Kimberly Cohn, Erika Christensen, Nikki Siebert, Megan Wellborn, Erin Stephenson Third Row: Anne Phillips, Shaquana West, Evie Kytan, Emily Bougas, Lauren Cozzarelli, Amanda Morris, Elizabeth Hall, Maggie Bosley, Ellen Ezekiel, Alex Kachulis

2010 Schedule Aug. 14 Aug. 20 Aug. 22 Aug. 27 Aug. 29 Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 24 Sept. 26 Oct. 1 Oct. 3 Oct. 7 Oct. 10 Oct. 15 Oct. 17 Oct. 22 Oct. 24 Oct. 27 Oct. 31 Nov. 5 and 7

Winthrop (exhibition) at Troy at Alabama State Presbyterian College at Francis Marion USC Upstate at UNC Asheville Converse at Georgia Southern * at Davidson * Western Carolina * Appalachian State * Samford * at Chattanooga * UNC Greensboro * Elon * at The Citadel * at College of Charleston* Furman * SoCon Tournament First Round SoCon Tournament

6:00 pm 3:00 pm (CT) 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 4:00 pm 2:00 pm 1:00 pm 2:00 pm 4:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 3:00 pm 1:00 pm 7:00 pm (campus sites) (Cullowhee, N.C.)

Contents

Quick Facts..................................................2 Snyder Field................................................3 Wofford College...................................... 4-8 Head Coach Amy Kiah.................................9 Assistant Coach/Staff................................10 2010 Rosters.............................................11 Players................................................ 12-22 2009 Statistics...........................................23 Career Records..........................................24 Season Records.........................................25 Match Records...........................................26 Honors and Awards...................................27 Year-By-Year Results........................... 28-30 Year-by-Year Statistics...............................31 All-Time Series Records....................... 32-33 All-Time Roster................................... 34-35 Wofford Administration . .................... 36-39 Spartanburg..............................................40 Phi Beta Kappa..........................................41 Southern Conference........................... 42-43 Wofford College Athletics Hall of Fame......44

* - Southern Conference match Home matches in bold played at Snyder Field

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide


Quick Facts General Information Location: ......................................................................................... Spartanburg, SC Founded:............................................................................................................1854 Enrollment: ......................................................................................................1,450 Affiliation:......................................................................................... NCAA Division I Conference: ...............................................................................................Southern Colors: ........................................................................Old Gold (PMS 873) and Black Nickname: ....................................................................................................Terriers Home Facility.............................................................................Snyder Field (2,250) Program Started................................................................................................1994 Campus Administration President: ............................... Dr. Benjamin B. Dunlap (University of the South ‘59) Faculty Athletic Representative: ..................................Dr. Jameica Hill (Wofford ‘88) Athletic Director: ................................................. Richard Johnson (The Citadel ‘76) Athletic Department Phone:...............................................................864-597-4090 Mailing Address:.................................429 N. Church Street, Spartanburg, SC 29303 Athletics Web Site:..................................................................... woffordterriers.com Fax......................................................................................................864-597-4112 Coaching Staff Head Coach................................................................................Amy Kiah, 12th year Alma mater (year)............................................................................Converse (1999) Wofford record (years)...................................................................... 73-115-23 (11) Overall record (years)........................................................................ 73-115-23 (11) Office phone........................................................................................864-597-4153 Office fax.............................................................................................864-597-4112 Email........................................................................................ kiahab@wofford.edu Assistant coach....................................................................................Erik Turnblom Alma mater (year)................................................................... North Carolina (2007) Office phone........................................................................................864-597-4124 Season Outlook and Review 2009 Record....................................................................................................4-13-2 2009 SoCon Record.............................................................................. 3-6-2 (Ninth) Starters Returning/Lost........................................................................................8/3 Letterwinners Returning/Lost............................................................................17/8 Newcomers............................................................................................................. 9 Athletic Administration Athletic Director.............................................................................. Richard Johnson Associate AD/Development..................................................................... Terri Lewitt Associate AD/Sports Programs.................................................................. Mark Line Assistant AD/Media Relations........................................................Brent Williamson Assistant AD/Marketing and Promotions.............................................Lenny Mathis Assistant AD/Development and Major Gifts..................................................Al Clark Assistant AD/Compliance.................................................................. Elizabeth Rabb Director of Facilities...................................................................................Andy Kiah Asst. Athletic Media Relations Director................................................................TBA Facilities Assistant.................................................................................. Donny Jobe Sports Information Assistant....................................................................Ty Osborne Marketing and Promotions Assistant.................................................... Gregor Walz Ticket Manager.................................................................................... Shelby Taylor Administrative Assistant................................................................. Caroline Thomas Administrative Assistant - Football........................................................ Traci Wilson Administrative Assistants - Coaches...................................................... Dana Mason It is the policy of Wofford College to provide equal opportunities and reasonable accommodation to all persons regardless of race, color, creed, religion, sex, age, national origin, disability, veteran status, or other legally protected status in accordance with applicable federal and state laws.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

athletic media relations

Assistant AD for Media Relations: Brent Williamson Office Phone: 864-597-4093 E-Mail: williamsondb@wofford.edu Assistant Director for Media Relations: Kevin Young E-Mail: youngkm@wofford.edu Office Phone: 864-597-4092 Media Relations Assistant (SOCCER CONTACT): Ty Osborne E-Mail: osbornewb@wofford.edu Office Phone: 864-597-4098 FAX: 864-597-4129 Mailing Address: 429 North Church Street, Spartanburg, SC 29303 Athletic website: www.woffordterriers.com

directions to campus

From the West/GSP Airport: Take I-85 north to exit 69 (Business 85 North). Exit at 5A, I-585 South/US 176. After 2.5 miles, turn right on McGreavy, then left at the light on Wood Street, which turns into Cummings Street. Street leads to Gibbs Stadium and campus. From the North: Take I-26 east to exit 15 (US 176). Follow for 7 miles. Turn right on McGreavy, then left at the light on Wood Street, which turns into Cummings Street. Street leads to Gibbs Stadium and campus. From the East/Charlotte Airport: Take I-85 south to exit 77 (Business 85 South). Exit at 5A, I-585 South/US 176. After 2.5 miles, turn right on McGreavy, then left at the light on Wood Street, which turns into Cummings Street. Street leads to Gibbs Stadium and campus. From the South: Take I-26 west to exit 21B (US 29 North). After 3.5 miles, turn left on St. John Street. Turn left at North Church Street. Turn right on Evins Street to reach the athletic facilities.

Woffordterriers.com

In the fall of 2009, Wofford College launched an updated website for athletics which can be found at athletics.wofford.edu and www.woffordterriers.com. The site contains all the information any Terrier fan is looking for, including rosters, schedules, student-athlete bios, updated statistics and archives. Live stats for most sports are also provided. Another key feature is TerrierVision. With this pay-per-view video service, fans can watch a wide variety of events, including football, men’s and women’s basketball and baseball, live on any computer with a broadband connection.

Credits The 2010 Wofford College women’s soccer media guide is a publication of the Wofford athletic media relations office. Editor: Brent Williamson. Editorial assistance provided by Kim Tonkin, Ty Osborne and Amy Kiah. Research conducted by Phillip Stone of the Wofford Library Archives. Photographs provided by Willis Glassgow and Mark Olencki. Headshots by Mark Olencki. Front cover designed by Amy Kiah. Printed August 2010.

Wofford College Mission Statement

Wofford’s mission is to provide superior (quintessential) liberal arts education that prepares its students for extraordinary and positive contributions to society. The focus of Wofford’s mission is upon fostering commitment to excellence in character, performance, leadership, service to others, and life-long learning.


Wofford

Snyder Field

Snyder Field

In 1996, with the construction of Gibbs Stadium for the football team, Snyder Field underwent a near-complete renovation. Included in the changes were a widening of the field to make it one of the top soccer-specific stadiums in the southeast. The Wofford men’s and women’s teams have made Snyder Field home since the 1997 season. Located between the Richardson Building, the Campus Life Building and Russell C. King Field, Snyder Field is centrally located on campus. The Wofford men’s soccer team previously played on Snyder Field until the 1989 season, when they moved to the Terrier Soccer Complex. The facility is named for former Wofford president Henry Nelson Snyder (19021942) and can seat 2,250 in bleachers. Additional standing-room areas are located around the perimeter of the facility.

Snyder Field INformation First Men’s Game First Men’s Goal First Men’s Victory First Women’s Game First Women’s Goal First Women’s Victory Men’s Record at Snyder Field Women’s Record at Snyder Field

September 3, 1997 vs. Limestone, W 9-0 Miles Drake (9/3/97) 13:50 September 3, 1997 vs. Limestone, W 9-0 September 3, 1997 vs. UNC Greensboro, L 3-4 Brigid Meadow (9/3/97) 48:48 September 21, 1997 vs. Ohio, W 2-1 38-70-10(13 seasons) 56-55-13 (13 seasons)

THE TERRIER SCULPTURE

A sculpture of a Terrier was unveiled on March 25, 2008 outside of the Student Life Building as a gift to Wofford College from the Class of 1956. The following is the text of an address given by Talmage Boyd Skinner, Jr., 1956, Chaplain Emeritus of Wofford College on the dedication. The mascot of a college should, in large measure, represent the character of the place. In this Palmetto State, we are surrounded by a bevy of mascots. There are Gamecocks and Tigers, Bulldogs and a Rooster named Chanticleer, Indians, Paladins, Cougars, Valkyries, and one school has a sock for an ensign. There are Trojans, Pioneers, and Spartans, and various Cats and feathered creatures. In all the land, only two other schools are Terriers. Some will laugh when we affirm that we are the only true Terriers. Some chuckle when we are audacious enough to claim to be unique and even superior in so many aspects of being a college. The most arrogant of us will admit that there are many good colleges. We have even tried to copy some. I have always been a bit uncomfortable when we talk of another school being a – “flagship” that we need to emulate. Hey! We ARE the flagship! Forgive the pride of some old guys who have loved this little school for over half a century. Yes, we did not come to Wofford just to purchase an education; we joined Wofford. We were adopted into the family with a bond that cannot be broken. Many colleges claim to be family. We truly are. Ours is a bond of shared experience hammered out on the playing fields against foes our size and those with more students than we have living alumni. It does not stop with athletics. The term “student athlete” has authenticity at Wofford. The bond is from a shared academic experience that is not content just to pass on socalled facts, but prepares students to think and to continue to grow. The “proof of the pudding” is in the doctors, lawyers, college presidents and professors, teachers, coaches, leaders in business and service - even in the ministry of the Church. A bond is created in the experience of the arts - the theater program, choral music, strings. One thing we lack - a band - not just the band class that plays well once or twice a year, but a BAND for spirit and musical experience. A bond is created through service programs and the physical arts witnessed by so many exhibitions on campus. Not the least is a religious life program that is open and tolerant, that walks with students seeking answers and helps them first learn to ask questions. We, the Class of 1956 present this Terrier to our college as a symbol of Wofford Spirit in all aspects of this place like no other. We want to add to the tradition of this sacred ground. We want to remind the present Wofford that there is a past on which she stands and remind all of us that it all will be forgotten if we do not have a vision for the future. Our goal should be deeper than the usual quest for reputation, wealth, and prestige. Dr. Dunlap has always called Wofford a “kingdom of the just.” May that ever be our watchword. It may be a simple, unsophisticated phrase, but we are called not to be powerful, but good. As the prophet Micah said, “What does the Lord require of you but to do justice and to love kindness and to walk humbly with your God.” The Class of 1956 proudly and humbly presents this physical representation of the Spirit of Wofford College and all those members of our family who ever lived or presently live on the “City’s Northern Border,” and all who are yet to dwell in the shadow of the Twin Towers.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide


Wofford

This is Wofford

Wofford College consistently finds itself as a benchmark for what higher education should be now and in the future, and how students can find an exciting and fulfilling undergraduate experience that also is a good value both in financial investment and in value-added by that educational experience. The college consistently has scored high on the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE), which measures the level of academic challenge, active and collaborative learning, student-faculty interaction, enriching educational experiences, and a supportive campus environment. Wofford can be found in numerous commercial and non-commercial college guides that provide statistical information as well as perspectives from a variety of sources. Among those are U.S. News & World Report’s “America’s Best Colleges,” The Princeton Review College Guide; The Fiske Guide to Colleges, The (Yale) Insider’s Guide, and Peterson’s Colleges for Top Students. Forbes.com ranked Wofford as one of “America’s Best Colleges” in 2009, with the college being the highest rated institution in South Carolina. In its November 2009 issue, Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine ranked Wofford among the nation’s best private college values, at number 31. Wofford consistently lands on “best value” lists in various other national college guides and publications. In U.S. News & World Report’s 2010 “America’s Best Colleges,” Wofford was included in “Great Schools, Great Prices,” a listing of 31 liberal arts colleges. Wofford ranks 6th in the country in the percentage of undergraduates receiving credit for studying abroad, according to Open Doors 2009, an annual report published by the New York-based Institute of International Education (IIE). The Village, Wofford’s apartment-style housing for its senior students, has earned a number of national recognitions. In July 2008, The Village was named as the top “Dorm of Distinction” in its category by University

Business Magazine, a national publication. In October 2007, the complex was recognized nationally in the 27th Annual Builder’s Choice Design & Planning Awards presented by Builder magazine. Wofford was named to the President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll with Distinction for 2010, presented by the Corporation for National and Community Service, an independent federal agency tasked with fostering an ethic of volunteerism and service in America. Wofford also was included in the 2009 Guide to Service-Learning Colleges & Universities, highlighting the college’s programs to encourage student engagement. Wofford’s entire 175-acre campus is a national arboretum, which was named the Roger Milliken Arboretum at Wofford College in honor of the longtime trustee and benefactor. More than 5,000 trees have been planted on the Wofford campus since 1992.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide


Wofford

Academics

Wofford offers distinctive learning opportunities that set it apart from other liberal arts colleges. They provide students with meaningful study-abroad experiences, exciting and socially useful service opportunities, career-related and experiential learning possibilities, interaction with great academians from across the world, and exposure to renowned authors, artists, and business and professional leaders. Such “focal point” programs include, but are not limited to: The Interim, a January term that encourages students and faculty to explore new interests both on and off campus. The Bonner Scholar Program, a service-learning scholarship program that places deserving students in volunteer positions throughout the community. The Success Initiative, a leadership and scholarship program that offers practical, project-based experience. The Vocational Discernment and Pre-Ministerial Program, a counseling and mentoring approach to helping students make personal decisions regarding further study and careers in the ministry. Environmental Studies provides a creative and supportive learning environment that helps students pursue their goals in the rigorous and challenging program. It operates both on Wofford’s campus and at the new Glendale Shoals Environmental Studies Center at Glendale, S.C. The property where the center is located borders 19 acres of protected green space along the Lawson’s Fork Creek. Neuroscience, a program in which students examine the nervous system and its regulation of behavior through an experimental approach, offered jointly by the Departments of Psychology and Biology. Computational Science, a fast-growing interdisciplinary field that is at the intersection of the sciences, computer science and mathematics, involves learning to store, retrieve, process and visualize massive amounts of information in web-accessed databases.

Learning Communities, an interdisciplinary approach to learning that links courses in two or more departments through a common theme. The Novel Experience, a first-year reading and writing program that offers an introduction to the academic rigors of Wofford while familiarizing students with the Spartanburg community. The Creative Writing Concentration, a program led by outstanding published faculty writers that provides additional opportunities for students to hone their creative writing skills, earn coveted prizes and become published writers themselves. Presidential International Scholar, an opportunity for an outstanding, intellectually gifted student to visit other parts of the world researching specific academic areas of interest.

Academic Majors Accounting Art History Biology Business Economics Chemistry Chinese Computer Science Economics English Environmental Studies Finance French German Government History Humanities Intercultural Studies Intercultural Studies for Business Mathematics Philosophy Physics Psychology

The Community of Scholars. Student fellows in this summer program work under the supervision of faculty mentors engaged in parallel or related research. The projects encompass all disciplines, including science, the humanities, the social sciences and the fine arts. Presidential Seminar, a weekly seminar hosted by Wofford President Benjamin Dunlap for outstanding seniors, in which seminar members explore interdisciplinary subjects of current significance. Liberty Fellowship, a two-year leadership experience hosted by the college and a partnership of South Carolina businessman Hayne Hipp, of Greenville, the Aspen Institute and Wofford, for young citizens of South Carolina with exemplary promise for societal achievement.

Religion Sociology Spanish Theatre

Academic Minors Art History Business Chinese Studies Computer Science Economics English Environmental Studies German Studies Government History Mathematics Philosophy Religion Sociology

Pre-Professional Programs Pre-Engineering Pre-Dental Pre-Law Pre-Medical Pre-Ministry Pre-Pharmacy Pre-Veterinary Science

Other Programs African/African-American Studies Communications/Journalism Computational Science Creative Writing Gender Studies Geology Information Management Latin American & Caribbean Studies Medical Humanities Military Science Music Neuroscience 19th Century Studies

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide


Wofford

Prominent Alumni alumni

Wofford alumni live in all 50 states and more than 25 foreign countries. They include five Rhodes Scholars, five Truman Scholars and two Barry M. Goldwater Scholars. Of 15,587 living alumni (graduates and non-graduates), 1,155 are presidents or owners of corporations or organizations, 924 are practicing medicine, dentistry or other health-care professions, and 803 are attorneys or judges. Brigadier General Rodney Anderson ‘79 Executive assistant to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. David Bresenham ‘93 Producer of Keeping Up With the Kardashians. Has also worked on Real World/Road Rules Challenge and Big Brother. Harold Chandler ‘71 CEO, Univers Workplace Benefits michael Copps ‘63 Commissioner, Federal Communications Commission. Previously served as Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Trade Development. Fisher Deberry ‘60 Former football coach at Air Force (1983-2006) and served as president of American Football Coaches Association.

chad fiveash ‘94 Writer and producer of Kyle XY and One Tree Hill. Van Hipp, jr. ‘82 President and CEO, American Defense Institute DAnny MOrrison ‘75 President, Carolina Panthers. Previously served as Athletic Director at TCU and Wofford, as well as Commissioner of the Southern Conference. wendI nix ‘96 On-air talent for ESPN, covering NFL, college football and PGA golf. greg o’dell ‘92 CEO of Washington Convention Center Authority. As Chief Executive of the District of Columbia Sports and Entertainment Commission, oversaw construction of the Washington Nationals Ballpark. Costa M. Pleicones ‘65 Associate Justice, Supreme Court of South Carolina

The Carolina panthers

The Carolina Panthers have held training camp at Wofford since their inaugural season in1995. The camp provides Wofford tremendous national exposure and visibility. Media members that visit Wofford during the five-week camp include ESPN, Fox Sports Net, USA Today, and Sports Illustrated. Local print and television media from markets including Columbia, Charlotte, Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill, Asheville and Greensboro/Winston-Salem are on campus on a daily basis. According to SI.com’s Tim Layden, “as I like to think of it: Training Camp Heaven. Wofford is 70 miles west of Charlotte on I-85, and presents all the reasons why there is something special about taking the team on the road for camp. Three pristine, Bermuda-grass fields with a stand of tall pines on two sides and a steep hillside -- where fans sit and watch -- on another. Fans, many of them young boys and girls, lined up along the fence, getting autographs after practice. It’s a scene straight out of football’s past.”

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

JERRY RICHARDSON ‘59 Jerry Richardson came to Wofford in the mid-1950s as an unheralded pass receiver from Fayetteville, N.C. He still holds Wofford’s single-game record with 241 receiving yards vs. Newberry in 1956 and is the record holder for touchdown receptions in a season (9 in 1958) and in a career (21). Richardson was an Associated Press Little All-America selection in 1957 and ‘58. Drafted by the defending world champion Colts, Richardson played two seasons in the NFL, earning Colt Rookie of the Year honors in 1959 and finishing third in the balloting for top NFL rookie. As a senior at Wofford, he scored 72 points on nine touchdowns, 12 extra points and two field goals. He is the founder and owner of the Carolina Panthers. Joe Taylor, Jr. ‘80 Secretary of Commerce, State of South Carolina John Waller, Jr. ‘59 Former Associate Justice, Supreme Court of South Carolina walt wilkins ‘96 Former United State Attorney, State of South Carolina


Wofford

The richardson Richardson Building

The Richardson building

The home of the Wofford College Athletic Department is the Richardson Physical Activities Building. The facility includes offices for the administration, football, basketball and other sports on the second floor. Also included on the second floor is an aerobic dance room and weight room with machine and free weights along with a variety of cardio machines. Locker rooms for football, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s soccer and a training room are located on the first floor. Wofford alumnus and Carolina Panthers owner Jerry Richardson made a $1 million donation in 2008 that was used for enhancing the Richardson Building. Numerous improvements were made in the twelve-year old facility to ensure that it is one of the most advanced athletic facilities in the nation. Enhancements to the Richardson Building include new paint and carpet in the entire facility. The coaching and administration suites have been reconfigured to provide better reception areas. Football and men’s basketball offices are outfitted with a new video system, including computers, editing software and large-screen monitors. This new system is similar to those being used by the NFL and NBA. Inside the Harley Room, a new audio/video system was installed to handle the variety of events held in the room. New displays for academic honors, Southern Conference honors and the Hall of Fame are a part of the project. Additional murals and photos compliment the building and give it a fresh look. In addition, the fitness facilities have been upgraded as well. Nearly $100,000 worth of new equipment was added to supplement the current selection of treadmills and elliptical machines. The cardio area features six flat panel televisions for viewing while working out. The fitness area is used by the entire student body at Wofford.

Left: The fitness facility is available for all students and has numerous cardio machines in addition to free weights and weight machines. Top: The reception area for the football office suite. Above: The women’s soccer locker room.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide


Wofford

Strength strength and Conditioning conditioning

The Joe E. Taylor Center

Wofford alumnus and South Carolina Secretary of Commerce Joe Taylor donated $1 million for the renovation of the Curry Building into the Joe E. Taylor Athletic Center The Taylor Center features a 7,000 square foot weight room and offices for athletic department staff. The building, located next to Gibbs Stadium, was completed in June of 2009. The weight room facility is equipped with a total of 24 racks with built-in pull-up bars and nearly 25,000 pounds of plates, dumbells and olympic weights. The 24 racks are divided, with twelve used with platforms and twelve used with benches. Additional equipment includes four pulldown machines, four low row machines, five power runners, six glute/ham machines, two decline ab machines, a leg press and exercise bike. Also included is a large area of Mondo track flooring, which is used with the step-up boxes, plyo boxes and hurdle sets in speed development. The Taylor Center also provides offices for administration and numerous sports, including men’s and women’s soccer, baseball, men’s and women’s golf, volleyball, men’s and women’s tennis and cross country and track and field. A conference room and several work areas give the coaching staff much needed space.

Mission Statement

The Wofford College Strength and Conditioning Department embraces the mission of both the college and athletic department. The mission of our program is to foster a positive, safe, challenging, and training environment. Our approach allows coaches, athletic trainers, and athletes to work together towards developing an athlete’s full physical and mental potential. A focal point of our training programs will be to not spend too much time training one specific aspect of development, but to train with balance. We will be hitting all areas, not neglecting another to prevent injury. Our coaches will inspire the athletes to be consistent, disciplined, and to put forth a great effort every day; never allowing their feelings to affect their performance.

The Philosophy

The Strength and Conditioning Program consists of a year-round training philosophy designed to improve all aspects of physical and mental development of each athlete. The training cycles consist of different phases, all of which follow sound fundamental training principle and periodization ranging from low to high intensity and high to low volume. These are all encompassing sport specific macrocycles, mesocycles, and microcycles, which will allow each athlete the best opportunity for reaching maximum genetic potential.

Goal

The goal is to improve the strength, speed, agility, balance, and coordination of the athletes. We will further develop proprioception, kinesthetic awareness, eye-hand and eye-foot coordination. We will be focusing on injury prevention, flexibility, and overall power of the athletes trained under the direction of the strength and conditioning department. This will enable each athlete to have the skills and tools necessary to achieve success.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide


Amy

Kiah

Head Coach Converse ‘99 13th Season

Amy Kiah enters her 12th season as the head women’s soccer coach at Wofford in 2010. Her tenure is the second longest among the Terrier head coaches, following only football’s Mike Ayers. Including one year as an assistant coach, this season marks Kiah’s 13th total campaign on the Wofford sidelines. She became the first Wofford women’s soccer coach to eclipse the 50-win plateau when the Terriers earned a 1-0 home victory against eventual Southern Conference Tournament champion Western Carolina Oct. 2, 2005. With the Terriers’ 4-0 win over Canisius Sept. 5, 2003, she became the program’s all-time winningest head coach and enters this season with a career tally of 59, eclipsing the mark of 35 by Josef Lorenz (1995-98). Wofford’s first-ever coach was Dr. Jhon Akers, who compiled 10 wins after starting the team in 1994. Kiah arrived in Spartanburg in 1997 as an assistant coach for Lorenz. She took over the reigns of the program in the fall of 1999 and led the Terriers to a school-record 13 victories in her first year. Under her direction, Wofford has remained competitive in the Southern Conference, advancing to the league tournament on numerous occasions. She coached another All-Southern Conference honoree in graduated senior Jessica Connett following the 2006 campaign. Connett, also a Phi Beta Kappa inductee, became the seventh all-league choice under Kiah out of the nine total Wofford has produced since joining the league in 1997. The Terriers were also one of four Wofford athletic teams in 2006 to receive initial Academic Progress Report (APR) recognition from the NCAA for outstanding academic achievement. Kiah had the honor of being on the sidelines for the Terriers’ double-overtime 2-1 triumph at The Citadel Oct. 6, 2006, which marked the 100th overall victory in the history of the program. A native of Atlanta, Ga., she attended North Carolina and played for legendary head coach Anson Dorrance. While in Chapel Hill, the squad captured the national

Head Coach championship three consecutive years from 1992-94. On the 1992 and ’93 teams, she was a key reserve at forward and was teammates with U.S. National Team and future World Cup and Olympic champions Mia Hamm, Kristine Lilly and Tisha Venturini. After redshirting the 1994 campaign, Kiah transferred to the College of Charleston and garnered 1995 first-team All-Trans America Athletic Conference honors. Kiah also has seen time on the semi-pro level by playing with the Charlotte Speed of the W-League. As a member of the Speed, she topped the team in goals and was among the squad’s leaders in assists as well. She sent the 2003 top Terrier point producer, Jaime Cutts, to the W-League where Cutts was a member of the Carolina Dynamo. While still living in Atlanta, Kiah was a member of the Blackburn United U-19 club team which captured the 1992 Georgia state championship. She is also a mainstay at a variety of summer camps throughout the Southeast, including the North Carolina Girls’ Soccer Camp and the Ralph Lundy Soccer Academy in Charleston, S.C. A 1999 graduate of Converse College, she is married to Wofford director of athletic facilities Andy Kiah. The couple have two daughters, Kayleigh, born in 2004, and Mikenna, who was born in 2010. They live in Spartanburg with their labrador retriever Champ.

The Kiah Family: Amy, Andy, Mikenna and Kayleigh.

Amy KIah Year by Year

SOCON Year School W L T W L T 1999 Wofford 13 9 0 5 4 0 2000 Wofford 1 9 0 5 4 0 2001 Wofford 4 14 0 3 7 0 2002 Wofford 6 12 3 4 5 1 2003 Wofford 7 9 3 5 4 2 2004 Wofford 8 8 1 3 7 1 2005 Wofford 5 12 3 4 4 2 2006 Wofford 6 7 4 3 5 2 2007 Wofford 7 11 2 3 6 1 2008 Wofford 3 11 5 2 7 2 2009 Wofford 4 13 2 3 6 2 OVERALL 64 115 23 40 59 13

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide


Coach/Staff

Erik

Turnblom Assistant Coach North Carolina ‘07 Second Season

Assistant coach Eric Turnblom is entering his second season with the Wofford women’s soccer team. Prior to being named the assistant women’s soccer coach, Turnblom spent one season as assistant coach at East Chapel Hill High School, in addition to three years coaching for the Triangle United Soccer Club. While at Triangle, he led his team to its first ever tournament final. Turnblom has also been a fixture at the North Carolina Girls Soccer Camp every summer since 2005. He graduated from the University of North Carolina in 2007 with a Bachelor of Arts in Excercise and Sport Science, along with a minor in coaching. While at North Carolina, Turnblom was a member of the UNC Heels Soccer Club. As president and captain, he led the men’s team to the regional finals and the Clemson Soctoberfest finals in 2006. While under his leadership, the Heels made two trips to the NIRSA Collegiate Championships. Turnblom is familiar with the Southern Conference, as he began his collegiate career at Elon University, where he played for one year under head coach Mike Riley.

NCAA Compliance

The importance of following all NCAA rules and regulations is imperative to maintaining the integrity of Wofford College and intercollegiate athletics. We ask all who are associated with the institutions athletics programs to help the College protect the spirit of competition, the athletics eligibility of our student-athletes and the reputation of the College by adhering to the rules and regulations of the NCAA and by contacting the Compliance Office or the NCAA with all questions. If you have any questions about NCAA rules, please contact Elizabeth Rabb at (864) 597-4090, the Wofford website at woffordterriers. com and click on ‘Compliance,’ or the NCAA at www.ncaa. org. What is a Representative of Athletics Interests (Booster/Donor)? All alumni, friends, and employees of the College are categorized as ‘representatives of athletics interest.’ The NCAA stipulates that once an individual has been identified as a ‘representative’ or “booster/donor” he/she retains this status forever even if the individual is no longer associated with the athletics program. Furthermore the NCAA states that it is possible for a person to be a representative of more than one institution at the same time. A representative of athletics interest may not: • Contact a prospect’s coach, principal or counselor in an effort to evaluate a prospect • Visit the prospect’s institution to pick up film or transcripts • Contact a prospect, his/her parents, legal guardians or spouse on or off campus • Contact a prospect by telephone or letter • Make special arrangements to entertain a recruit • Provide extra benefits to a prospect, student-athlete or the parents, family and/or guardians of the prospects or student-athletes

Remember the #1 Rule: ‘Ask Before You Act!’

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2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Alyss

HART

Athletic Trainer Wilmington ‘07 Second Season

Alyss Hart joined the Wofford staff in the fall of 2009 after spending two years at Auburn University. She works with the women’s basketball team along with women’s soccer and rifle. Hart graduated from Wilmington College of Ohio in 2007 with a degree in athletic training. She earned her master’s of education degree in administration of higher education with a sport management minor from Auburn in 2009. While at Auburn, Hart worked with the men’s and women’s tennis teams. A certified athletic trainer through the National Athletic Trainers’ Association, Hart also covered events such as the SEC Swimming Championships and SEC Track and Field Championships.

Todd

Riedel

Strength Coach Mount St. Joseph ‘01 First Season

Todd Riedel joined the Wofford College athletic department staff as Director of Strength and Conditioning in June of 2010. Riedel comes to Wofford following one year at Missouri State University where he served as the associate director of strength and conditioning for the Bears. He assisted with the training of all sixteen teams, while heading up the strength and conditioning efforts for the softball, volleyball and men’s and women’s soccer programs. Prior to Missouri State, Riedel spent a year at Western Kentucky University working directly with all aspects of Hilltopper football, and conducted programs for soccer, tennis and cheerleading. Riedel’s previous experience was at Colgate University where he assisted with football and was directly responsible for twelve Olympic sports including soccer, men’s basketball, hockey, lacrosse, softball, crew, tennis, volleyball, and swimming and diving. He also has additional experience as an intern at Xavier, Harvard and West Virginia University. A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Riedel graduated from the College of Mount Saint Joseph in 2001 where he was a four-year letter winner for the Lion’s football team. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in Physical Education and Health and also earned a Master of Education in Sports Administration from Xavier University in 2006. He is a member of numerous professional organizations and is certified by the International Sport Science Association, USA Weightlifting, and has two certifications through National Strength & Conditioning Association. Todd and his family reside in Spartanburg.


Rosters

2010 Numerical

No. 0 00 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 26

Name Erika Christensen Kimberly Cohn Katie McChesney Evie Kytan Jewel Kawamoto Amanda Morris Megan Wellborn Alex Kachulis Anne Phillips Chelsea Ashworth Lauren Cozzarelli Elizabeth Hall Katie O’Brien Sydney Reed Bridget Hutter Emily Bougas Megan Polson Rachael Blackburn Ellen Ezekiel Shaquana West Maggie McLaughlin Nikki Siebert Maggie Bosley Erin Stephenson Maggie O’Brien Daniella Fatti

Pos. GK GK GK M/F D M D M/D M F/M M M D D/F M F D/M D/M M/D D M/F F M/D D F M

Ht. Class 5-7 So. 5-5 Fr. 5-8 Sr. 5-3 Fr. 5-7 So. 5-2 So. 5-6 Sr. 5-4 Fr. 5-5 Jr. 5-6 So. 5-2 Sr. 5-5 Jr. 5-10 R-So. 5-8 Jr. 5-6 Fr. 5-3 Fr. 5-8 Fr. 5-7 R-Jr. 5-3 So. 5-5 Fr. 5-8 Jr. 5-5 Sr. 5-4 Fr. 5-8 So. 5-10 Jr. 5-9 Sr.

Hometown/High School Sullivans Island, S.C./Bishop England Clearwater, Fla./Countryside Raleigh, N.C./St. David’s School Marietta, Ga./ The Walker School Leawood, Kansas/The Barstow School Huntsville, Ala./Randolph School Decatur, Ga./Lakeside Weddington, N.C./Weddington Brentwood, Tenn./Battle Ground Academy Cumming, Ga./The Marist School Apex, N.C./Apex Mt. Pleasant, S.C./Wando Macon, Ga/Mount de Sales Academy Raleigh, N.C./Apex Springboro, Ohio/Springboro Grayson, Ga./Providence Christian Spartanburg,S.C./Spartanburg Raleigh, N.C./Leesville Road Vestavia Hills, Ala./Vestavia Hills Enoree, S.C./Woodruff Cary, N.C./Cary Naperville, Ill./North Aiken. S.C./South Aiken Gastonia, N.C./South Point/Old Dominon Macon, Ga./Mount de Sales Academy Charlotte, N.C./Vance

Head Coach: Amy Kiah (Converse College, 1999) Assistant Coach: Erik Turnblom (North Carolina, 2007)

2010 alphabetical No. Name

Pos.

9 17 22 15 0 00 10 18 26

F/M D/M M/D F GK GK M M/D M

Chelsea Ashworth Rachael Blackburn Maggie Bosley Emily Bougas Erika Christensen Kimberly Cohn Lauren Cozzarelli Ellen Ezekiel Daniella Fatti

No. Name

Pos.

No. Name

Pos.

11 14 6 3 2 1 20 4

M M M/D D M/F GK M/F M

12 24 8 16 13 21 23 5 19

D F M D/M D/F F D D D

Elizabeth Hall Bridget Hutter Alex Kachulis Jewel Kawamoto Evie Kytan Katie McChesney Maggie McLaughlin Amanda Morris

Katie O’Brien Maggie O’Brien Anne Phillips Megan Polson Sydney Reed Nikki Siebert Erin Stephenson Megan Wellborn Shaquana West

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 11


Returning Players

chelsea Ashworth

Rachael Blackburn

Forward/Midfielder 5-6 • Sophomore Cumming, Georgia The Marist School

Defender/Midfielder 5-7 • Junior Raleigh, North Carolina Leesville Road High School

9

2009: Saw playing time in all 19 games as a freshman ... scored her first career goal at Furman (10/29) ... goal was the game-winner in the Terriers’ final game of the season ... tallied four shots during the season, three of which were on goal ... also recorded shots at SC State, against Chattanooga and at Georgia Southern ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. HIGH SCHOOL: Three-year starter and letterwinner for coach Sergio Stadler...JV team was undefeated in 2006…led team to region 6AAAA championship and state semifinals as a junior…led team to undefeated season and region and state championship as a senior in 2008…played for Atlanta Fire United club and helped team to Georgia State Cup Finals in 2006 and semifinals in 2007 and 2008…third top scorer on the AFU team as a senior…named MVP of her club team and earned honorable mention in RPL league…earned the Coach’s Award as a junior…member of the Dean’s List from 2005-09…member of National Honor Society, Spanish Honor Society and National Honor Society of High School Scholars…elected homecoming queen her senior year…volunteered for Habitat for Humanity, Breakfast Club, Belmont Village Assisted Living, and as a Eucharistic minister. PERSONAL: Born October 22, 1990, in Alpharetta, Ga. ... daughter of Kevin and Edie Ashworth ... majoring in biology and Spanish.

Ashworth Career Statistics

Year 2009 Totals

GP/GS 19/0 19/0

G 1 1

A 0 0

PTS 2 2

GWG 1 1

Chelsea Ashworth

SHOTS 4 4

17

2009: Saw playing time in all 19 matches for the Terriers and earned starts in 18 during the season ... tied for second on the team with two goals during the season ... scored both goals at Georgia Southern (10/18) for a season-high four points ... recorded an assist at Furman (10/29) ... totaled 18 shots during the season, 10 on goal ... recorded three shots against Winthrop (9/13) ... also recorded three shots at Georgia Southern (10/18) ... 2008: Played in 15 matches for the Terriers and earned starting nods in 13 ... notched the first goal of her career against Georgia Southern (9/26) ... goal proved to be the lone score for the Terriers in a 1-2 loss ... recorded 16 shots on the season, seven on goal ... notched a career high four shots against South Carolina State (9/5), then matched the career high nine days later with four shots against Kennesaw State (9/14) ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll ... 2007: Injured and missed the entire campaign ... redshirted. HIGH SCHOOL: Saw much of her playing time with the club program … was a teammate of fellow recruits Lauren Cozzarelli and Katie McChesney on the squad … team captured the North Carolina State Cup in 2006 and was runner-up in 2005 and 2007 … member of the team’s US Club Soccer national championship title run in 2004 … squad was also a 2005 Disney Showcase semifinalist and 2004-06 Super Y League division champion … selected to the North Carolina state ODP team three times and the Super Y ODP Region squad once … attended the Super Y national camp … tabbed as an all-region pick … garnered Cap-7 Conference honors three seasons … received her high school team’s Iron Pride Award for most minutes played … also named its Outstanding Defender … a member of the A/B Honor Roll … recipient of various character education awards, including ones for courage, kindness, responsibility and respect … a student choice award winner … member of the Latin Club. PERSONAL: Born May 17, 1989, in Asheville, N.C. ... daughter of Wiley and Diane Blackburn ... majoring in philosophy.

Blackburn Career Statistics

Year 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 15/13 19/18 34/31

Rachael Blackburn

12

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

G 1 2 3

A 0 1 1

PTS 2 5 7

GWG 0 0 0

SHOTS 16 18 34


Returning Players

erika christensen

0

Goal Keeper 5-7 • Sophomore Sullivans Island, South Carolina Bishop England High School 2009: Played in 13 games for the Terriers as a freshman, earning starts in nine contests ... recorded 1091:59 minutes in goal ... tallied 43 saves during the season, including a career best six saves against UNC-Asheville (9/3) ... notched five saves against Winthrop (9/13) ... earned a shutout at USC Upstate (9/6) ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. HIGH SCHOOL: Four-year starter for coach Dave Snyder ... led her Bishop England team to three straight state championships ... led CUFC Elite club soccer team to two state runner-up titles ... named all-region as a sophomore and both SCHSSCA and HSSR all-state as a junior and senior ... named the Coaches Association of Women’s Sports AA Player of the Year as a senior ... also played two years of varsity basketball ... named a National Merit Commended Scholar ... member of the Model UN and Key Club. PERSONAL: Born February 12, 1991, in Charleston, S.C. ... daughter of Denis Christensen and Merle Tyroler ... major is undeclared.

Christensen Career Statistics

Year 2009 Totals

GP/GS 13/9 13/9

Mins. 1091:59 1091:59

GA 20 30

GAA 1.65 1.65

Saves 43 43

ShO 1 1

Erika Christensen

2008: Started in all 19 games for the Terriers as a sophomore ... recorded her first career goal against Kennesaw State (9/14) ... tallied eight shots during the season, including two against Presbyterian (9/12) ... one of the two shots was on goal against the Blue Hose ... registered one shot on six occasions, five of the six shots were on goal ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. 2007: Earned a start in 18 of the games in which she played … started nine of the 10 Southern Conference tilts … tallied a career-best three shots against UNC Greensboro (9/27) … two of the three shots were on goal … registered her only other shot and first of her career against Charleston Southern (9/21) … all four attempts came in the two games in which she did not start ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. HIGH SCHOOL: Graduated from high school early and enrolled at Wofford during the Spring 2007 semester … followed the footsteps of Mary Rea and Kendra Merchant to graduate high school and join the Terriers a semester early ... garnered all-conference accolades two seasons … selected to the 2006 All-Region VI squad by the North Carolina Soccer Coaches Association (NCSCA) … named her school’s Defensive Player of the Year … received academic all-conference accolades all three of her playing seasons … scored the game-winning goal in a win over Pinecrest High School … also a member of the same club program with fellow incoming freshmen Rachael Blackburn and Katie McChesney … member of the North Carolina state ODP team … played for the U.S. Club regional champion … won the 2002 and 2006 state championships with her club team … an Academic Emphasis recipient during the 2005-06 school year at her high school. PERSONAL: Born January 21, 1989, in Columbus, Ohio ... daughter of David and Stephanie Cozzarelli ... majoring in accounting and Spanish.

CozZarelli Career Statistics

Year 2007 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 20/18 19/19 19/19 58/56

G 0 1 0 1

A 0 0 0 0

PTS 0 2 0 2

GWG 0 0 0 0

SHOTS 4 8 2 14

Lauren Cozzarelli

lauren cozzarelli Midfielder 5-2 • Senior Apex, North Carolina Apex High School

10

2009: Started in all 19 games for the Terriers as a junior, including all 11 Southern Conference matchups ... registered a shot against High Point (9/11) and another on against Georgia Southern (10/18) ... named to the Southern Conference Fall Academic All-Conference team and the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 13


Returning Players

Ellen Ezekiel

Daniella Fatti

18

Midfielder/Defender 5-3 • Sophomore Vestavia Hills, Alabama Vestavia Hills High School

2009: As a freshman, played in 17 games for the Terriers and earned a starting nod twice ... recorded her first collegiate shot at USC Upstate (9/6) ... notched another shot against College of Charleston (10/2) ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. HIGH SCHOOL: Four-year starter and letterwinner for coach Brigid Littleton…led team to three consecutive 6A State Championships from 2006-08…led club team to three state championships in 2005, 2006 and 2008…club team claimed Disney Championship in 2008…team was Lakeshore Shootout Champions in 2006, 2007 and 2008…named the Lakeshore Shootout All-tournament player in 2007…earned Birmingham News Scholar-Athlete of the Week honors…member of National Honor Society and National German Honor Society…was a National German Exam silver medalist…participated in the Fellowship of Christian Athletes as a chaplain and the Presbyterian Youth Council as a co-director…volunteered with Habitat for Humanity and as a tutor. PERSONAL: Born March 17, 1991, in Tucker, Ga. ... daughter of Mark and Ginny Ezekiel ... major is undeclared.

Ezekiel Career Statistics

Year 2009 Totals

GP/GS 17/2 17/2

G 0 0

A 0 0

PTS 0 0

GWG 0 0

Ellen Ezekiel

SHOTS 2 2

2009: Played in 17 games for the Terriers as a junior, starting in 11 contests ... recorded the first goal of her career against The Citadel (10/4) ... goal was the game winner ... notched a season-best three shots on three occasions, once against UNC-Asheville (9/3), against the Citadel (10/4) and also against Chattanooga (10/8) ... recorded 17 shots during the season, six of which were on goal ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. 2008: Did not see playing time ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. 2007: Started three of the 20 games in which she played … garnered the starting nod against Charleston Southern (9/21), at No. 20 Clemson (9/23) and in Southern Conference action against The Citadel (10/5) … assisted on the team’s only goal in the win against VMI (9/7) … collected 16 shots on the season … posted a season-best four attempts at Elon (10/21) … three of her four shots against the Phoenix were on goal … notched three shots, two of which were on goal, at Furman (10/14) … other multi-shot affairs came against Charleston Southern, at No. 20 Clemson and in the Southern Conference Tournament match at Davidson (11/4). HIGH SCHOOL: A two-time all-region choice by the NCSCA and two-time all-conference honoree … started for the varsity squad since her freshman season … recognized as the team’s Player of the Year in 2005 and Defensive Player of the Year in 2004 and 2006 … served as the team captain in 2007 … played with the 2006 Greensboro Twisters club team which won the North Carolina State Cup and were finalists in Region III … squad traveled to Oklahoma in June 2007 for the regional tournament … a member of the Who’s Who Among High School Students, National Honor Society, A/ B Honor Roll, Unity Club, and yearbook staff … served as a Junior Marshall for graduation … worked at an after school program at the YMCA. PERSONAL: Born August 1, 1989, in Syracuse, N.Y. ... daughter of Frank and Kathy Fatti ... majoring in intercultural studies for business.

Fatti Career Statistics

Year 2007 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 20/3 0/0 17/11 37/14

Daniella Fatti

14

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

26

Midfielder 5-9 • Senior Charlotte, North Carolina Vance High School

G 0 0 1 1

A 1 0 0 1

PTS 1 0 2 3

GWG 0 0 1 1

SHOTS 16 0 17 33


Returning Players

Elizabeth Hall

11

Midfielder 5-5 • Junior Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina Wando High School

Kawamoto Career Statistics

Year 2009 Totals

GP/GS 16/9 16/9

G 0 0

A 2 2

PTS 2 2

GWG 0 0

SHOTS 3 3

Jewel Kawamoto

2009: Did not see playing time. 2008: Saw time in one match during the season ... earned time against Canisius (8/29). HIGH SCHOOL: Selected to the 2005 All-Region VII 3-A Team ... member of her high school team which posted a 24-2-2 record in 2008 under the coaching of Shannon Champ ... squad captured the state championship in 2007 and 2008 ... transferred to Wando High after starting her career at St. James High ... tabbed the team MVP at St. James in 2004 and 2005 ... a four-year starter ... played four years with the South Carolina ODP ... competed on the Mount Pleasant U-18 club team coached by Paul Conway ... served as the team captain for women’s golf and basketball ... named the 2005-06 golf MVP ... member of the National Honor Society, Beta Club French Club, Key Club and International Club ... served as a SAAD Student Liason ... appointed to the 2004-05 Student Council. PERSONAL: Born November 22, 1989, in Charleston, S.C. ... daughter of Jim and Kim Hall ... majoring in biology.

Hall Career Statistics

Year 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 1/0 0/0 1/0

G 0 0 0

A 0 0 0

PTS 0 0 0

GWG 0 0 0

SHOTS 0 0 0

jewel Kawamoto

Katie McChesney

Defender 5-7 • Sophomore Leawood, Kansas The Barstow School

Goal Keeper 5-8 • Senior Raleigh, North Carolina St. David’s School

3

2009: Earned playing time in 16 games as a freshman and started in nine ... recorded two assists in the team’s 4-0 win over The Citadel (10/4) ... tallied three shots on the season ... recorded one shot at SC State (9/21) ... recorded two shots at Georgia Southern (10/18), one of which was on goal. HIGH SCHOOL: Four-year letterwinner for coach Scott Huppe ... led her Barstow team to District semifinals as a senior ... played for the Kansas City Comets Soccer Club ... led her KC Comets team to a Kansas State Cup Championship in 2002 and 2006 and helped her team qualify for KS State Cup in 2003, 2004 and 2008 ... served as captain of the varsity soccer tem in 2007 and 2008 ... named Most Valuable Player as a senior ... earned All-District honors for three consecutive years in 2006, 2007 and 2008 ... earned All-State accolades in 2008 ... named the Barstow School Most Valuable Athlete in 2007 and 2008 ... also ran cross country in 2005 and 2006 and qualified for the state meet both years ... earned All-District honors in cross country in 2006 ... member of the National Forensic League from 2005-06 ... worked for her school’s newspaper, the Barstow B-Line, for four years. PERSONAL: Born January 26, 1991, in San Diego, Ca. ... daughter of Brian and Robin Kawamoto ... major is undeclared.

1

2009: Sustained a leg injury in the first game of the season against Clemson, which sidelined her until October ... re-entered the lineup against the Citadel (10/4), helping the team to a 4-0 win ... ranks fourth in the Wofford record books in both career minutes played (4360:12) and career total saves (235) ... recorded two shutouts during the season, one at Samford (10/11) and the second at Furman (10/29) ... pushed her career shutouts to 10, good for fourth in the Wofford record books ... recorded eight saves against Western Carolina (10/25) ... recorded six saves on three separate occasions during October. 2008: Only goalkeeper to see action, playing all 1835:22 during the season ... career total of 3678:10 minutes ranks fourth in Wofford’s record books ... recorded 95 saves as a sophomore, which ranks seventh in Wofford’s single season record books ... recorded two shutouts during the 2008 season, upping her career total to eight ... one shutout came against Appalachian State on October 5, while the other was against Samford on October 12 ... recorded a 1.47 goals against average, which ranks seventh in the Terrier single season records ... holds a career mark of 1.52 GAA, good for fifth in Wofford’s career record books ... tied a career best 11 saves against NC State in the first match of the 2008 campaign ... previously stopped 11 shots against Western Kentucky (Sept. 14, 2007) and Kennesaw State (Sept. 9, 2007) ... tallied nine saves each

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 15


Returning Players against Samford (10/12) and Appalachian State (10/5) ... recorded eight saves against Canisius (8/29). 2007: Only goalkeeper to see action, playing all 1842:48 during the season ... onehalf of her shutouts came in Southern Conference play against The Citadel (10/5), against Davidson (10/12) and at Appalachian State (10/28) ... the shutout against Davidson was a double-overtime tie ... also went the distance in the tie at Western Kentucky (9/14) surrendering just one goal ... gathered a career-best tying 11 saves against the Hilltoppers ... previously stopped 11 shots in the preceding contest at Kennesaw State (9/9) ... opened the campaign with two shutouts in the first three games against Longwood (8/31) and against VMI (9/7) ... posted a blanking with four saves in her first career action against Longwood ... stopped nine shots in the tie against Davidson ... later recorded six saves against the Wildcats in the Southern Conference Tournament rematch (11/4) ... notched three saves in each of the conference shutouts against The Citadel and at Appalachian State … tallied six saves at No. 20 Clemson (9/23) … posted eight saves at Georgia Southern (10/25). HIGH SCHOOL: A 2006 All-North Carolina recipient ... tabbed as a conference co-player of the year in 2006 ... selected to the all-conference squad three-straight seasons ... earned a spot on the North Carolina state ODP team in 2003-04 and 2005-06 and its state team pool in 2004-05 ... also played for the Georgia state ODP program in 200203 and the SE Georgia District Team in 2000-01 and 2001-02 ... member of the 2006 Super Y League ODP Divisional Team in 2006 and the ODP Region II/III Team in 2004 ... also ran cross country and played basketball for her high school ... saw action on the same club team as Wofford team mates Rachael Blackburn and Lauren Cozzarelli ... member of the Spanish Club and Honor Roll ... served as a church youth group leader. PERSONAL: Born May 16, 1989, in Atlanta, Ga. ... daughter of Bill and Robyn McChesney ... majoring in sociology.

McChesney Career Statistics

Year 2007 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 20/20 19/18 9/2 48/40

Mins. 1842:48 1835:22 682:02 4360:12

GA 32 30 11 73

GAA 1.56 1.47 1.45 1.49

Saves 102 95 38 235

ShO 6 2 2 10

maggie McLaughlin Midfielder/Forward 5-8 • Junior Cary, North Carolina Cary High School

20

2009: Played in 13 matches for the Terriers, earning starts in 12 ... scored one goal at Elon (9/25) ... recorded a season high two shots against High Point (9/11) ... notched nine shots during the season, five of which were on goal. 2008: Saw time in all 19 games for the Terriers, earning starts in 18 as a true freshman ... scored the first goal of her collegiate career against Presbyterian (9/12) ... recorded the Terriers’ lone goal against Virginia Commonwealth (9/19) ... notched her third goal of the season at Chattanooga in the team’s 4-2 win on October 10 ... all three of her goals came off only one shot on goal ... second on the team with 29 total shots ... led the team with 15 shots on goal ... second on the team with six total points. HIGH SCHOOL: A four-year starter on her high school team, playing the last three seasons for coach Bobby Peterson ... selected to the 2006 and 2007 All-Tri-8 Conference team ... served as the captain in 2007-08 ... squad captured the conference championship in 2004-05 under coach John Pray ... played club since 2003 with the Capital Area Soccer League’s Spartan Elite ... team won the state and regional championships in 2006 and 2007 ... team finished 3-0-2 in the 2007 State Cup ... squad placed third at the 2007 national tournament ... received an Academic Letter Award from 2004-07 for having a 3.8 GPA or higher ... presented with six all “A” Honor Awards and six “A/B” Honor Rolls ... member of the Beta Club and Art Club ... volunteered with the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society and Second Chance Animal Adoption ... also assisted at the NCAA Men’s Soccer College Cup. PERSONAL: Born March 19, 1990, in Scotch Plains, N.J. ... daughter of Dr. William and Mary McLaughlin ... majoring in biology.

McLaughlin Career Statistics

Year 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 19/18 13/12 32/30

G 3 1 4

A 0 0 0

PTS 6 2 8

GWG 0 0 0

SHOTS 29 9 38

Maggie McLauglin

Katie McChesney

16

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide


Amanda Morris Midfielder 5-2 • Sophomore Huntsville, Alabama Randolph School

Returning Players

4

2009: Saw playing time in 18 contests as a freshman ... earned a starting nod at Clemson (8/22) in her first career game ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. HIGH SCHOOL: Four-year letterwinner for coach Marvin Chou at Randolph School ... starter since her eighth grade year at Randolph ... led her team to a 22-1 record and second-place finish in the state in 2007 and a third-place finish in 2006 ... led team to state playoffs for four consecutive years ... member of the Alabama Olympic Development Program team ... spent part of 2008 playing at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla. ... named to the Super All-Metro Team in 2006 as a freshman ... member of Mu Alpha Theta, Honor Roll and Dean’s List ... volunteered for Habitat for Humanity. PERSONAL: Born May 9, 1991, in Lynchburg, Va. ... daughter of Glenn and Carol Morris ... major is undeclared.

Morris Career Statistics

Year 2009 Totals

GP/GS 18/1 18/1

G 0 0

A 0 0

PTS 0 0

GWG 0 0

SHOTS 0 0

Amanda Morris

wealth (9/19), and against Southern Conference foes Appalachian State (10/05), Samford (10/12), Elon (10/19), The Citadel (10/25), and College of Charleston (10/26) ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. HIGH SCHOOL: A four-year starter on her high school soccer team ... also started four years in basketball and two years in cross country ... member of the 3-A state championship squads in cross country (2007) and soccer (2008) for the Georgia Independent Schools Association ... team tallied an 18-1-1 record during the 2008 soccer campaign for the first state championship title in school history ... the 2007 soccer team finished as the state runner-up with a 12-5-3 mark ... selected to the 2006-08 all-state soccer teams ... tabbed all-region for soccer every year since 2005 ... named the 2008 AllMiddle Georgia Women’s Player of the Year by the Macon Telegraph ... garnered a spot on the All-Middle Georgia First Team in 2007 and 2008 ... served as the soccer team captain from 2006-08 ... a three-time all-region choice for basketball ... selected to the All-Middle Georgia honorable mention team for basketball in 2007 and second team in 2008 ... picked to the 2008 all-star basketball team ... helped the team post 39 shutouts in 47 wins over her four year career ... received an Academic Excellence Award all four years (2005-08) ... member of the National Honor Society, National Junior Honor Society, French Honor Society, Phi Beta Kappa, and Fellowship of Christian Athletes ... presented with the 2007 Georgia Certificate of Merit ... a 2007 Presbyterian Fellow ... served as a Cavalier Ambassador ... was a counselor at the 2006 MGSA Soccer Camp and 2006 and 2007 Mount de Sales Basketball Camp ... volunteered at the 2007 Coliseum’s Rock N Roll Triathlon. PERSONAL: Born July 18, 1990, in Macon, Ga. ... daughter of Patrick and Nancy O’Brien ... majoring in biology ... twin sister Maggie also plays for the Terriers.

O’Brien Career Statistics

Year 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 9/1 2/0 11/1

G 0 0 0

A 0 0 0

PTS 0 0 0

GWG 0 0 0

SHOTS 0 0 0

Katie O’Brien

Katie O’Brien Defender 5-10 • Sophomore Macon, Georgia Mount de Sales Academy

12

2009: Saw time in games against VCU (8/30) and at USC Upstate (9/6) before receiving a medical redshirt due to injury. 2008: Played in nine games, earning a start against Georgia Southern (9/26) ... earned playing time against High Point (8/24), Canisius (8/29), Virginia Common-

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 17


Returning Players

Maggie O’Brien Forward 5-10 • Junior Macon, Georgia Mount de Sales Academy

24

2009: Earned playing time in 11 matches as a sophomore ... recorded two shots during the season, one at USC Upstate (9/6) and another against Chattanooga (10/8) ... shot against Chattanooga was on goal ... named to the Soutehrn Conference Fall Academic All-Conference team and the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. 2008: Saw playing time in 18 of Wofford’s 19 matches, earning starts in three consecutive games ... garnered a starting nod against Coastal Carolina (8/31), South Carolina State (9/5) and Presbyterian (9/12) ... notched the first goal of her collegiate career against Canisius (8/29) ... recorded another goal at Southern Conference opponent The Citadel (10/25) ... also recorded an assist at The Citadel, setting a career high three points ... both goals came on only one shot on goal ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. HIGH SCHOOL: A five-year starter on her high school soccer team ... also started in 2006 and 2007 for cross country and as a senior during a four-year basketball career ... member of the 3-A state championship squads in cross country (2007) and soccer (2008) for the Georgia Independent Schools Association ... netted the game-winning goal in the final three minutes during the state championship game ... team tallied an 18-1-1 record during the 2008 soccer campaign for the first state championship title in school history ... the 2007 soccer team finished as the state runner-up with a 12-5-3 mark ... selected to the 2007 and 2008 all-state soccer teams ... tabbed all-region for soccer since 2005 and for basketball since 2006 ... earned a place on the All-Middle Georgia Soccer First Team in 2007 and 2008 by the Macon Telegraph ... tallied team best totals of 22 goals and 57 points as a senior ... finished one shy of the team lead with 13 assists her final campaign ... concluded her high school career with 67 goals and 21 assists for 155 points ... garnered a spot on the 2008 Georgia All-Star Team for basketball ... selected to the All-Middle Georgia Basketball honorable mention squad in 2007 and the second team in 2008 ... received an Academic Excellence Award all four years (2005-08) ... member of the National Honor Society, National Junior Honor

Society, French Honor Society, Phi Beta Kappa, and Fellowship of Christian Athletes ... presented with the 2007 Georgia Certificate of Merit ... served as a Cavalier Ambassador ... was a counselor at the 2006 MGSA Soccer Camp and 2006 and 2007 Mount de Sales Basketball Camp ... volunteered at the 2007 Coliseum’s Rock N Roll Triathlon. PERSONAL: Born July 18, 1990, in Macon, Ga. ... daughter of Patrick and Nancy O’Brien ... majoring in chemistry ... twin sister Katie also plays for the Terriers.

O’Brien Career Statistics

Year 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 18/3 11/0 18/3

G 2 0 2

A 1 0 1

PTS 5 0 5

Anne Phillips Midfielder 5-5 • Junior Brentwood, Tennessee Battle Ground Academy

18

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

SHOTS 5 2 7

8

2009: Started in all 19 games as a sophomore ... tallied a goal against Appalachian State (10/22) ... recorded two assists during the season, one at USC Upstate (9/6) and the other against Chattanooga (10/8) ... recorded 12 shots during the season, five of which were on goal ... notched a season-high two shots at USC Upstate ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. 2008: Started in all 18 games in which she played ... tallied the first goal of her collegiate career against South Carolina State (9/5) ... registered nine shots during the season, four of which were on goal. HIGH SCHOOL: A four-year high school starter for coach Jan Brown ... team won the 2007 Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association Division II state championship and was runner-up in 2006 ... selected as a Division II all-state and All-Midstate honoree in 2007 and 2008 by the Tennessee Athletic Coaches Association and Tennessee Sports Writers Association ... named a 2007 Midstate Top Defender by the Tennessean ... played for the Brentwood Real Madrid club program since 1998 for coaches Brandy Gagliano and Renee Rice ... received Honorable Mention accolades for the 2005 AllWilliamson County Team ... team won the state title six of her seven years and was a Southern Region semifinalist in 2007 ... member of the state ODP team since 2002 ... attended the Region III Camp from 2005-07 in Montevallo, Ala. ... coached by Curtis Blair and Arton Rhoden ... also lettered in basketball, tennis and track & field ... a member of the National Honor Society, National Science Honor Society, High Honor Roll, and Student Council ... a mentor at the Boys and Girls Club and SAP Sorority ... a Homecoming attendant as a junior and senior ... participated with the 61st Avenue Methodist Church Toys for Underprivileged Families drive ... member of her church choir which sang the National Anthem in Summer 2007 at Fenway Park in Boston, Mass. PERSONAL: Born March 2, 1990, in Nashville, Tenn. ... daughter of Jeff and Cheryl Phillips ... majoring in English.

Phillips Career Statistics

Maggie O’Brien

GWG 1 0 1

Year 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 18/18 19/19 37/37

G 1 1 2

A 0 2 2

PTS 2 4 6

GWG 0 0 0

SHOTS 9 12 21


Returning Players State Cup title winners from 2003-06 ... a member of the National Honor Society and Spanish Honor Society ... received a National Student Council Award and the Kappa Scholars Academic Achievement Award ... served as Vice President of Student Council ... presented with an Academic Emphasis Award ... served as the Junior Class Secretary ... attended a National Student Leadership Conference ... named to the 2007 Homecoming Court ... volunteered at the Durham Rescue Mission. PERSONAL: Born March 29, 1990, in Raleigh, N.C. ... daughter of Frank Reed and Kim Gooden ... majoring in intercultural studies for business.

Reed Career Statistics

Year 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 19/19 19/18 38/37

G 1 2 3

A 0 1 1

PTS 2 5 7

GWG 0 1 1

SHOTS 23 30 53

Sydney Reed

Anne Phillips

sydney Reed Defender/Forward 5-8 • Junior Raleigh, North Carolina Apex High School

13

2009: Played in all 19 games as a sophomore, earning starts in 18 ... scored two goals on the season ... recorded the game-winning goal at USC Upstate (9/6) ... scored again versus The Citadel (10/4) ... also recorded an assist during the season against Appalachian State (10/22) ... led the team with 30 total shots during the season and tied for highest shots on goal with 15 ... recorded four shots against Chattanooga (10/8) ... tallied three shots on four occasions during the season ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. 2008: Started in all 19 games as a freshman ... scored the first goal of her collegiate career at The Citadel (10/25), helping the team to a 3-1 win ... finished third on the team, totaling 23 shots, including 11 on goal ... registered a career high four shots on goal against South Carolina State (9/5) ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. HIGH SCHOOL: Hails from the same high school as current Terrier Lauren Cozzarelli ... a three-year starter for coach Kevin Todd ... named to the all-state team in 2008 ... played in the July 2008 “Clash of the Carolinas” North Carolina/South Carolina All-Star Game ... received the 2006 and 2007 Outstanding Physical Presence Award ... picked as a March 2008 Wake County Athlete of the Week ... recognized on the 2006 and 2007 all-conference teams, including first team honors as a sophomore ... received the 2005 Defensive Player of the Year and Most Outstanding Player accolades ... team ranked No. 1 in the country and state in 2007 after finishing the season undefeated ... squad won the Tri-8 Conference from 2005-07 ... also competed in 2006 on the indoor track & field team ... broke a school record in the 4x400 meter relay and placed fifth in the state ... played club soccer with the Capital Area Soccer League’s Spartan Elite ’89 team ... a Top Drawer Soccer “Player to Watch” in the 2008 class ... selected for the USL Super Y-League National Pool and South Atlantic ODP Team in 2004 and 2005 ... club team won the USYSA Region III East Premier League Championship in 2005 ... squad was the

Nikki Siebert Forward 5-5 • Senior Naperville, Illinois North High School

21

2009: Played in 18 matches for the Terriers, earning starts in 14 ... led the team with 10 total points on the season ... also led the team in goals with four total ... tied for most shots on goal with 15 ... scored the game-winning goal in a 3-2 victory over Chattanooga (10/8) after scoring the tying goal ... added an assist against Chattanooga for a game-total five points ... also scored against Winthrop (9/13) and at USC Upstate (9/6) ... grabbed an assists in the team’s 4-0 win over The Citadel (10/4) ... recorded 25 shots during the season, 15 of which were on goal ... recorded a career high six shots on two occasions, first at Georgia Southern (10/18) and again versus Appalachian State (10/22). 2008: Saw playing time in all 19 matches of the season, earning her only start against High Point (8/24) ... scored the game-winning goal against Presbyterian on (9/21)

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 19


Returning Players helping the Terriers to a 2-1 win ... notched 12 shots during the year, seven of which were on goal ... recorded a career high four shots against South Carolina State (9/5). 2007: Saw action in 11 games, including five regular-season league matches ... also stepped onto the field in the Southern Conference Tournament contest at Davidson (11/4) ... scored the team’s only goal at Georgia Southern (10/25) ... her only shot at Appalachian State (10/28) was on goal ... began her collegiate career with three shots against Longwood (8/31) in the season opener ... posted two shots at Kennesaw State (9/9) and at Georgia Southern. HIGH SCHOOL: Member of the topdrawersoccer.com National List of Players to Watch Graduating in 2007 ... a 2006 honorable mention All-DuPage Valley Conference selection ... received second-team all-area honors by the Daily Herald in 2006 ... named a Top Player by the Chicago Sun-Times for the 2007 season ... served as the team captain as a senior ... her high school’s second-leading scorer in 2005 and 2006 ... tabbed as the Naperville Invite Team MVP in 2006 after scoring an overtime goal over Maine South High School during the opening round ... an academic all-conference pick in 2005 ... started for four seasons on her high school squad ... team was the regional champion from 2004-06 ... squad also captured the sectional title in 2004 while finishing fourth in the state that season ... member of the club team which placed second at the 2006 U.S. Club National Cup ... team also was the 2005 Score at the Shore champion and a finalist at the 2005 Illinois State Cup ... a 2005 national 3v3 finalist. PERSONAL: Born October 10, 1988, in Naperville, Ill. ... daughter of Donald and Bettina Siebert ... majoring in psychology.

Siebert Career Statistics

Year 2007 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 11/0 19/1 18/14 48/15

G 1 1 4 6

A 0 0 2 2

PTS 2 2 10 14

GWG 0 1 1 2

Nikki Siebert

SHOTS 9 12 25 46

Megan Wellborn Defender 5-6 • Senior Decatur, Georgia Lakeside High School

2009:Played in fifteen games for the Terriers as a junior and earned starts in eight ... scored the first goal of her career against The Citadel (10/4) ... also recorded an assist in the same match for a career high three points ... notched five shots during the season, four of which were on goal for a .800 SOG percentage ... notched a shot at Presbyterian (9/17) and another at Georgia Southern (10/18) ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. 2008: Played in eight games for the Terriers ... saw action against Canisius (8/29), Coastal Carolina (8/31), South Carolina State (9/5), Virginia Commonwealth (9/19) and against Southern Conference opponents Davidson (9/28) and The Citadel (10/25) ... named to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll. 2007: Selected to the Southern Conference Academic Honor Roll ... played in two games ... saw action at South Carolina State (9/18) and in Southern Conference play against The Citadel (10/5) ... both games in which she played the Terriers earned 3-0 shutout victories. HIGH SCHOOL: Led DeKalb County with 13 assists and tied for seventh in the county with 12 goals ... served as her high school team’s captain as a senior ... squad finished 2006 ranked No. 8 in the state after posting an 11-8-1 mark ... team captured the region championship during her freshman campaign of 2004 ... her club team won the state crown in 2005 and 2006 ... squad was the Region III semifinalist in 2005 and 2006 ... team also placed third at the 2005 Southern Regional Classic ... a member of the Key Club, French Club, French Honor Society, and Honor Roll ... participated in the Miss Lakeside pageant. PERSONAL: Born May 27, 1989, in Atlanta, Ga. ... daughter of Marshall and Debbie Wellborn ... majoring in English.

Wellborn Career Statistics

Year 2007 2008 2009 Totals

GP/GS 2/0 6/0 15/8 23/8

Megan Wellborn

20

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

5

G 0 0 1 1

A 0 0 1 1

PTS 0 0 3 3

GWG 0 0 0 0

SHOTS 0 0 5 5


Maggie Bosley Midfielder 5-4 • Freshman Aiken, South Carolina South Aiken High School

Newcomers

22

HIGH SCHOOL: Three-year letterwinner at South Aiken High School ... named all-region for three consecutive seasons ... earned team MVP each of the last three seasons ... as a junior, scored eight goals with seven assists to earn All-State honors ... led her team to the AAA Lower State Championship with a 21-5 record ... added twelve goals with eight assists as a sophomore .... member of the South Carolina ODP team from 2004-09 and plays club soccer with Columbia United ... member of the National Honor Society ... served as student body president of her high school ... named a Wofford Scholar. PERSONAL: Born January 28, 1992 in Memphis, Tenn. ... daughter of Scott & Jamie Bosley ... intended major is pre-Law ... grandfather Alva Sibbitt played basketball and baseball at Hanover College ... uncle Joe Sibbitt played basketball at Austin Peay and cousin Harrison Petts currently plays soccer at Indiana University.

Emily Bougas Forward 5-3 • Freshman Grayson, Georgia Providence Christian

15

HIGH SCHOOL: Played club soccer for the Gwinnett Soccer Association Phoenix, whom she helped lead to five Georgia State cup championships in ’04, ’05, ’06, ’07, and ’09 ... awarded the “Golden Boot” Award in 2008 for stellar goal-scoring proficiency ... in 2009 helped the Phoenix to a Regional Championship ... the Phoenix have consistently been a top team in the region and ended the 2009 season ranked sixth in the nation .... also had much success with the Providence Christian Academy soccer team .... with 39 career goals and 10 assists, led her team to a State Championship in 2007 ... member of the National Honor Society and the Beta Club. PERSONAL: Born September 7, 1991 in Decatur, Ga. ... daughter of Pete and Salli Bougas ... intended major is pre-Med.

Kimberly Cohn Goal Keeper 5-5 • Freshman Clearwater, Florida Countryside High School

00

HIGH SCHOOL: Integral member of the Clearwater Chargers Soccer Club ... defended the net during the club’s Florida State Championship in 2007 ... as a senior captain at Countryside High School, posted twelve shutouts and helped the team team to a 14-5 overall record ... in 18 games played, recorded 101 saves and a 0.78 goals against average ... three-year letterman ... named team defensive MVP as a junior and also earned All-County honorable mention recognition ... member of the Florida ODP team. PERSONAL: Born January 26, 1992 in Boca Raton, Fla. ... daughter of Michael and Lisa Cohn ... major is undecided.

Bridget Hutter Midfielder 5-6 • Freshman Springboro, Ohio Springboro High School

14

HIGH SCHOOL: Had an impressive youth soccer career ... member of the Ohio South ODP team and was invited to the Region 2 ODP camp ... also selected to the Super Y-league national camp ... she has gained much experience at the club level as a yearround player for Cincinnati clubs Ohio Elite Soccer Academy and Classics Hammer FC ... played on the Springboro High School team her senior year, earning a place on the All-Conference team. PERSONAL: Born February 18, 1992 in Springboro, Ohio. ... daughter of Kurt and Beth Hutter ... major is undecided ... one of many athletes in her family as her sister played soccer for Middle Tennessee State, and her Father, Kurt, is a former baseball player at Southeast Louisiana University.

Alex Kachulis

6

Midfielder/Defender 5-4 • Freshman Weddington, North Carolina Weddington High School

HIGH SCHOOL: Critical to the success of Charlotte United FC’s Gold team .... as a central midfielder, Charlotte United reached six tournament finals in the last four years, including a North Carolina State Cup final in 2008 ... in 2006, Charlotte United gave Alex the honor of team MVP ... as a member of the Weddington High School Varsity team, awarded the Coaches Award in 2008 and 2009 ... also earned a spot on the 2009 North Carolina All-Region West team ... in 2007, she led the Weddington varsity team to the North Carolina 4A Finals ... also won a conference championship with the Weddington volleyball team. PERSONAL: Born May 14, 1992 in Naha, Japan ... daughter of Charles and Lisa Kachulis ... major is undecided.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 21


Newcomers

Erin Stephenson

Evie Kytan

2

Midfielder/Forward 5-3 • Freshman Marietta, Georgia The Walker School

HIGH SCHOOL: Key member of the North Atlanta Soccer Association 10 Elite team ... in 2007 and 2008, the NASA 10 girls participated in the prestigious Region III Premier League ... four-year starting center midfielder ...helped her team reach the Georgia state finals in 2007 and the semi-finals in 2008 ... also assisted in back-to-back state championships with The Walker School Varsity team in 2008 and 2009 ... played in the Super Y League for the Atlanta Silverbacks winning an Atlantic Division Championship and reaching the national semifinals in 2005 ... in 2007 and 2008, established herself as an elite player in Georgia when she was selected to the Georgia State ODP team, as well as Super Y National Camp in 2006 and 2007 ... a Wendy’s High School Heisman nominee ... also a member of the National Honor Society. PERSONAL: Born October 6, 1991 in Marietta, Ga. ... daughter of Ralph and Julie Kytan ... major is undecided.

Megan Polson

16

Defender/Midfielder 5-8 • Freshman Spartanburg, South Carolina Spartanburg High School

HIGH SCHOOL: Moved to Spartanburg in 2008 after a successful stretch at Bridge FA in Mt. Pleasant, S.C., reaching the state semifinals in ’06 and ’07 ... became a key member of the Carolina Elite Soccer Association Premier girls’ team that won back-toback state championships in ’08 and ’09 ... also won two state championships for the Wando High School Varsity team in ’07 and ‘08 ... honored with the “Coaches Award” in 2008 ... after moving to Spartanburg, helped Spartanburg High School reach the second round of the 4A state playoffs in 2009 ... named Female Athlete of the Year as a senior at Spartanburg High ... has been a member of the South Carolina ODP team for 5 consecutive years ... active in the community as a member of the Wando High School Anchor Club. PERSONAL: Born April 29, 1992 ... Daughter of Ralph and Susan Polson ... father is the head men’s soccer coach at Wofford ... major is undecided.

22

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

23

Defender 5-8 • Sophomore Gastonia, North Carolina South Point High School

At Old Dominion: Played in three games as a freshman at Old Dominion as the team posted a 7-8-5 overall record ... HIGH SCHOOL: Started two seasons for South Point High School ... scored 21 goals with 14 assists in 34 games ... team qualified for the state playoffs both seasons ... played for the North Carolina Olympic Development program for three years ... also played for the North Meck Soccer Club in the NCYSA Premier league ... team was co-champions in 2007 ... won the CSC adidas Cup and TCYSA Classic Tournaments ... member of the Beta Club and National Honor Society ... PERSONAL: Born May 1, 1991 in Glassboro, New Jersey ... daughter of Paul and Maria Stephenson ... undecided on major.

Shaquana West Defender 5-5 • Freshman Enoree, South Carolina Woodruff High School

19

HIGH SCHOOL: Pivotal player under Coach Fernando Gomez as a four year letterman at Woodruff High School ... Upper State champions in 2007 and 2008 ... helped her team finish second in 2007 and 2008 at the South Carolina state championships ... key player for her club team, coached by Solomon Nakom ... won the 2009 state championship with her club, starting at the stopper position ... named to the all-state team in 2010 and also honored as an all-region player in 2009 and 2010 ... participated in the 2010 North-South All-Star game ... recognized as a Top Scholar in 2010 ... recorded perfect attendance from 2007 to 2010 at Woodruff High School, where she sustained a 4.0 or higher from 2006-10 ... member of the Spanish club, Future Teachers of America, Teens for Christ, and FCA ... volunteered with March of Dimes, United Way, A Day of Caring, and Squealin’ on the Square. PERSONAL: Born June 16, 1992 ... daughter of Johnny and Bregina Sexton ... planning to major in biology.


2009 Statistics

Individual Statistics

No. Name 13 Sydney Reed 21 Nikki Siebert 17 Rachael Blackburn 26 Daniella Fatti 8 Anne Phillips 28 Monica Ploetzke 22 Cassie Rex 20 Maggie McLaughlin 5 Megan Wellborn 9 Chelsea Ashworth 16 Meredith Calcina 3 Jewel Kawamoto 24 Maggie O’Brien 6 Erika Bishop 23 Blair Green 18 Ellen Ezekiel 10 Lauren Cozzarelli 15 Michele Togno 4 Amanda Morris 12 Katie O’Brien 7 Jackie Togno Total Opponents

GP-GS G A 19-18 2 1 18-14 4 2 19-18 2 1 17-11 1 0 19-19 1 2 19-3 1 1 19-19 1 2 13-12 1 0 15-8 1 1 19-0 1 0 19-19 0 0 16-9 0 2 11-0 0 0 12-12 0 0 16-6 0 0 17-2 0 0 19-19 0 0 4-0 0 0 18-1 0 0 2-0 0 0 3-0 0 0 19 15 12 19 31 24

No. Goalie GP-GS 1 Katie McChesney 9-5 0 Erika Christensen 13-9 TM TEAM Total 19 Opponents 19

Pts. Shots Shot% SOG SOG% GWG PK-ATT 5 30 .067 15 .500 1 0-0 10 25 .160 15 .600 1 0-0 5 18 .111 10 .556 0 0-0 2 17 .059 6 .353 1 0-0 4 12 .083 5 .417 0 0-0 3 12 .083 4 .333 0 0-0 4 9 .111 7 .778 0 0-0 2 9 .111 5 .556 0 0-0 3 5 .200 4 .800 0 0-0 2 4 .250 3 .750 1 0-0 0 4 .000 1 .250 0 0-0 2 3 .000 1 .333 0 0-0 0 2 .000 1 .500 0 0-0 0 2 .000 1 .500 0 0-0 0 2 .000 1 .500 0 0-0 0 2 .000 0 .000 0 0-0 0 2 .000 0 .000 0 0-0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0-0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0-0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0-0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0-0 42 158 .095 79 .500 4 0-0 86 235 .132 116 .494 13 1-1

Mins. 682:02 1091:59 0:00 1774:01 1774:01

GA 11 20 0 31 15

GAA 1.45 1.65 0.00 1.57 0.76

Saves 38 43 4 85 64

Pct. .776 .683 1.000 .733 .810

W 1 1 0 2 11

Overall: 4-13-2 • Southern Conference: 3-6-2 Home: 2-6-1 • Away: 2-7-1 • Neutral: 0-0 1 Opponent 1 at Clemson L 0 VCU L 1 UNC ASHEVILLE L 1 at USC Upstate W 0 HIGH POINT L 0 WINTHROP L O2 1 at Presbyterian College L 0 at South Carolina State L OT 1 at Elon University * L 0 at UNC Greensboro * L 0 COLL. OF CHARLESTON * L 0 THE CITADEL * W 0 CHATTANOOGA * W 0 at Samford * T O2 0 at Davidson * L 0 at Georgia Southern * L 0 APPALACHIAN STATE * T O2 0 WESTERN CAROLINA * L 0 at Furman * W 0 * - Southern 6 Conference match 11 Date 8/22 8/30 9/3 9/6 9/11 9/13 9/17 9/21 9/25 9/27 10/2 10/4 10/8 10/11 10/16 10/18 10/22 10/25 10/29

L 3 8 0 11 4

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

Att. 478 142 72 253 117 97 282 187 263 276 137 108 216 397 147 117 206 256

T Sho 2 2 0 1 0 1 2 4 2 11

Team saves: 4

GOALS BY PERIOD Wofford Opponents

1st 4 11

2nd 11 18

OT 0 1

OT2 Total 0 15 1 31

SHOTS BY PERIOD Wofford Opponents

1st 68 92

2nd 86 130

OT 3 5

OT2 Total 1 158 8 235

SAVES BY PERIOD Wofford Opponents

1st 33 33

2nd 48 29

OT 0 1

OT2 Total 4 85 1 64

CORNER KICKS BY PRD 1st Wofford 36 Opponents 37

2nd 36 32

OT 1 2

OT2 Total 0 73 2 73

FOULS BY PERIOD Wofford Opponents

2nd 92 81

OT 6 4

OT2 Total 3 175 4 168

1st 74 79

TEAM STATISTICS

WOF OPP SHOT STATISTICS Goals-Shot attempts 15-158 31-235 Goals scored per game 0.79 1.63 Shot pct. .095 .132 Shots on goal-Attempts 79-158 116-235 SOG pct. .500 .494 Shots/Game 8.3 12.4 CORNER KICKS 73 73 PENALTY KICKS 0-0 1-1 PENALTIES Yellow cards 8 3 Red cards 1 0 ATTENDANCE Total 1272 2479 Dates/Avg Per Date 9/141 10/248 Neutral Site #/Avg 0/0

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 23


Career Records Goals Rank Name, Years

1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10

Game-Winning Goals Goals

Amanda Berman, 1998-2000 38 Faith Stewart, 1999-2002 33 Brigid Meadow, 1994-97 29 Thea Moen, 1998-99 24 Heidi Best, 1997-2000 18 Jaime Cutts, 2000-03 16 Whitney Steelman, 2004-07 16 Christie Clarke, 1994-97 15 Debbie Boyce, 1996-99 14 Amanda Leyland, 1997-2000 12

Shots Rank Name, Years

1 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Rank Name, Years

1 2 3 4 9 10

Shots

Amanda Berman

Saves 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Rank Name, Years

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Assists 1 2 4 5 6 8 10

Saves

Rank Name, Years

Jamie Cutts

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

24

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Ileana Moschos, 1994-97 Austin Somers, 2003-06 Katie Menegaz, 1999-2002 Katie McChesney, 2007- Lindsey Bigbie, 1998-99 Bernie Sikes, 2003-06 Alison Kinsler, 1998 Prentiss Counts, 1997 Katie North, 1995 Katie Relihan, 2003-04 Erika Christensen, 2009-

GAA

Bernie Sikes, 2003-06 0.88 Prentiss Counts, 1997 0.91 Becca Maloney, 2006 1.10 Austin Somers, 2003-06 1.32 Katie McChesney, 2007- 1.49 Erika Christensen, 2009- 1.65 Missy Polly, 1994 1.70 Sarah Goolsby, 2004-06 1.88 Lindsey Bigbie, 1998-99 1.92 Katie Menegaz, 1999-2002 2.03

Minutes Played

Shutouts

Assists

Amanda Berman, 1998-2000 23 Brigid Meadow, 1994-97 20 Emily Olmstead, 1996-99 20 Jenny Petrilyak, 1997-2000 19 Amanda Leyland, 1997-2000 17 Heidi Best, 1997-2000 14 Whitney Steelman, 2004-08 14 Faith Stewart, 1999-2002 13 Jaime Cutts, 2000-03 13 Jessica Connett, 2003-06 11

Goals-Against Average

Katie Menegaz, 1999-2002 381 Ileana Moschos, 1994-97 376 Austin Somers, 2003-06 247 Katie McChesney, 2007- 235 Lindsey Bigbie, 1998-99 97 Bernie Sikes, 2003-06 66 Katie North, 1995 52 Erika Christensen, 2009- 43 Alison Kinsler, 1998 40 Katie Relihan, 2003-04 20

Rank Name, Years

Points

Amanda Berman, 1998-2000 99 Brigid Meadow, 1994-97 84 Faith Stewart, 1999-2002 79 Thea Moen, 1998-99 53 Heidi Best, 1997-2000 50 Whitney Steelman, 2004-08 46 Jaime Cutts, 2000-03 45 Amanda Leyland, 1997-2000 41 Jenny Petrilyak, 1997-2000 39 Christie Clarke, 1994-97 36

Rank Name, Years

Jaime Cutts, 2000-03 169 Brigid Meadow, 1994-97 166 Faith Stewart, 1999-2002 166 Heidi Best, 1997-2000 157 Whitney Steelman, 2004-08 155 Amanda Berman, 1998-2000 154 Jessica Connett, 2003-06 116 Ginger Applegate, 1994-97 110 Jenny Petrilyak, 1997-2000 108 Thea Moen, 1998-99 95

Rank Name, Years

GWG

Amanda Berman, 1998-2000 13 Faith Stewart, 1999-2002 11 Brigid Meadow, 1994-97 8 Christie Clarke, 1994-97 5 Debbie Boyce, 1996-99 5 Thea Moen, 1998-99 5 Eve Van Harpen, 2001-04 5 Mallory Bramlett, 2002-05 5 Ginger Applegate, 1994-97 4 Lindsey Freeman, 1996-98 3 Jessica Connett, 2003-06 3 Bernie Sikes, 2003-06 3 Whitney Steelman, 2004-08 3 Kendra Merchant 2006-07 3

Points

Rank Name, Years

SO

15 13 11 10 8 6 4 2 1 1 1

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Katie Menegaz

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Min.

Katie Menegaz, 1999-2002 6125:24 Ileana Moschos, 1994-97 5878:00 Austin Somers, 2003-06 4790:40 Katie McChesney, 2007- 4360:12 Lindsey Bigbie, 1998-99 1831:00 Bernie Sikes, 2003-06 1122:20 Erika Christensen, 2009- 1091:59 Alison Kinsler, 1998 1050:00 Katie North, 1995 515:00 Becca Maloney, 2006 408:52


Season Records Goals Rank Name, Years

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 9

Thea Moen, 1999 Brigid Meadow, 1997 Amanda Berman, 1999 Faith Stewart, 2000 Amanda Berman, 2000 Brigid Meadow, 1994 Heidi Best, 1997 Amanda Berman, 1998 Christie Clarke, 1994 Vanessa Blank, 1996

Assists Goals

17 16 15 14 13 11 10 10 8 8

Shots Rank Name, Years

1 2 3 5 6 8 9 10

Brigid Meadow, 1997 Heidi Best, 1997 Amanda Berman, 1998 Faith Stewart, 2000 Faith Stewart, 2002 Brigid Meadow, 1995 Amanda Berman, 2000 Vanessa Blank, 1996 Jenny Petrilyak, 1998 Kendra Merchant, 2006

Rank Name, Years

1 2 3 4 8 10

Emily Olmstead, 1999 Whitney Steelman, 2006 Amanda Berman, 1999 Brigid Meadow, 1994 Jenny Petrilyak, 1998 Amanda Leyland, 1999 Amanda Berman, 2000 Brigid Meadow, 1995 Faith Stewart, 2000 Amanda Berman, 1997 Heidi Best, 2000 Jaime Cutts, 2000 Jessica Connett, 2004

Shots

82 75 59 59 53 50 50 48 47 46

1 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Ileana Moschos, 1994 Ileana Moschos, 1997 Katie Menegaz, 2002 Katie Menegaz, 2000 Katie McChesney, 2007 Katie Menegaz, 2001 Katie McChesney, 2008 Austin Somers, 2003 Ileana Moschos, 1995 Austin Somers, 2004

Assists

11 10 9 8 8 8 8 7 7 6 6 6 6

Rank Name, Years

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Brigid Meadow

1 2 3 5 8 10

Ileana Moschos, 1996 Austin Somers, 2003 Bernie Sikes, 2005 Katie McChesney, 2007 Lindsey Bigbie, 1998 Katie Menegaz, 2002 Austin Somers, 2004 Ileana Moschos, 1997 Alison Kinsler, 1998 Lindsey Bigbie, 1999 Katie Menegaz, 2000

Points

40 39 36 35 34 27 26 22 21 19

Game-Winning Goals

1 3 6

Brigid Meadow, 1994 Amanda Berman, 1999 Amanda Berman, 1998 Thea Moen, 1999 Mallory Bramlett, 2005 Ginger Applegate, 1994 Debbie Boyce, 1996 Lindsey Freeman, 1996 Faith Stewart, 1999 Amanda Berman, 2000 Faith Stewart, 2000 Faith Stewart, 2002

GWG

6 6 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3

Goals-Against Average Saves

117 117 117 105 102 98 95 91 83 79

Rank Name, Years

Ileana Moschos

1 2 3 5 6 7 8 9 10

Shutouts Rank Name, Years

Brigid Meadow, 1997 Amanda Berman, 1999 Thea Moen, 1999 Faith Stewart, 2000 Amanda Berman, 2000 Brigid Meadow, 1994 Amanda Berman, 1998 Heidi Best, 1997 Christie Clarke, 1994 Debbie Boyce, 1996

Rank Name, Years

Saves Rank Name, Years

Points

Bernie Sikes, 2005 Prentiss Counts, 1997 Ileana Moschos, 1996 Austin Somers, 2006 Austin Somers, 2003 Becca Maloney, 2006 Katie McChesney, 2009 Katie McChesney, 2008 Katie Menegaz, 2002 Lindsey Bigbie, 1999

GAA

0.88 0.91 1.05 1.05 1.07 1.10 1.45 1.47 1.50 1.54

Minutes Played SO

10 7 6 6 5 5 5 4 4 3 3

Rank Name, Years

Katie McChesney

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Min.

Katie Menegaz, 2002 1919:10 Ileana Moschos, 1997 1890:00 Katie McChesney, 2007 1842:48 Katie McChesney, 2008 1835:22 Katie Menegaz, 2000 1752:20 Ileana Moschos, 1996 1710:00 Austin Somers, 2003 1509:44 Austin Somers, 2004 1451:06 Katie Menegaz, 2001 1444:54 Ileana Moschos, 1994 1263:00

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 25


Match Records Goals Individual 4 Thea Moen vs. ETSU

3 eight times, most recently Cassie Rex at. UTC Team 9 8 8 7 6 6 6

vs. Citadel vs. SC State vs. Jacksonville vs. Limestone vs. SC State at Chattanooga at Newberry

Assists 09.09.98 10.10.08

09.22.02 10.02.99 10.08.95 09.19.94 09.19.06 10.01.00 10.22.96

Individual 4 Whitney Steelman vs. SCSU 09.19.06

2

Team 8 6 5 5 5

nine times, most recently Natalie Ferrara vs. Citadel 10.05.07 Monica Ploetzke vs. High Point 09.30.07 Kendra Merchant vs. CCU 09.03.07 vs. SC State four times, most recently vs. Duquesne at Citadel vs. Coll. of Charleston vs. Tennessee Tech

Thea Moen

09.19.06 09.17.00 09.30.02 10.25.00 09.01.00

Individual 8 Thea Moen vs. ETSU

09.09.98 Brigid Meadow vs. Limestone 09.19.94 Faith Stewart vs. Citadel 09.22.02 five times, most recently Cassie Rex vs. UTC 10.10.08

8 7 6

Team 22 vs. Citadel

Whitney Steelman

22 21 20 18 17

South Carolina State vs. South Carolina State vs. South Carolina State vs. MTSU vs. Limestone

09.22.02 10.02.99 09.15.04 09.19.06 09.19.98 09.19.94

Faith Stewart

Shots

Shots on Goal

Saves

Individual 13 Monica Ploetzke vs. SCSU 09.05.08

Individual 13 Monica Ploetzke vs. SCSU 09.05.08 13 Heidi Best vs. CofC 10.01.97 12 Faith Stewart vs. Citadel 09.22.02 9 Whitney Steelman at Citadel 10.17.04 9 Faith Stewart vs. Campbell 09.09.02 8 six times, most recently Kendra Merchant at Citadel 10.06.06

Individual 16 Katie Menegaz vs. Furman 10/19/00

Team 38 38 37 32 31 27

Team 22 22 21 21 21 19 19 18

26

Points

13 12 9 9 8

Heidi Best vs. CofC 10.01.97 Faith Stewart vs. Citadel 09.22.02 Whitney Steelman at Citadel 10.17.04 Faith Stewart vs. Campbell 09.09.02 six times, most recently Kendra Merchant at Citadel 10.06.06 vs. SC State vs. Morehead State vs. Citadel vs. Chattanooga vs. Citadel five times, most recently vs. Citadel

09.05.08 10.03.98 09.22.02 09.25.98 10.13.05 10.05.07

vs. South Carolina State vs. Liberty vs. Citadel vs. Morehead State at Newberry vs. South Carolina State vs. Chattanooga vs. ETSU

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

09.15.04 09.21.96 09.22.02 10.03.98 10.26.96 09.05.08 09.25.98 10.21.97

13 12 12 12 11

Team 16 13 13 12

Katie Menegaz vs. CofC 10/25/00 Katie Menegaz at UTC 10/13/02 Alison Kinsler at NC State 10/14/98 Ileana Moschos vs. UNCG 9/3/97 six times, most recently Katie McChesney at NC State 8/22/08 vs. Furman vs. Chattanooga vs. Coll. of Charleston five times, most recently vs. Davidson

10.19.00 09.28.03 10.25.00 10.12.07


Honors and Awards

All-Southern Conference 1997 Heidi Best1 Brigid Meadow1

Southern Conference All-Tournament Team

1998 Heidi Best1 Amanda Berman2

1997 Cathy Green Ileana Moschos Brigid Meadow

1999 Kara Vogelpohl Amanda Berman

2000 Katie Menegaz2 Faith Stewart2

2001 Week 8: Katie Menegaz 2002 Week 6: Katie Menegaz

2002 Faith Stewart Katie Menegaz

2003 Jamie Cutts2

2004 Week 2: Austin Somers Week 6: Austin Somers

2004 Mallory Bramlett2

2006 Week 10: Kendra Merchant

2006 Jessica Connett2

2007 Week 2: Monica Ploetzke

First team selection 2 Second team selection 1

NSCAA All-Region Ileana Moschos 1996 Third team selection

1997 Week 4: Brigid Meadow Week 7: Brigid Meadow 2000 Week 4: Faith Stewart Week 5: Amanda Berman Week 6: Faith Stewart

1998 Brenda Wichman Amanda Berman

1999 Thea Moen2 Amanda Berman2

Southern Conference Players of the Week

TIAA Cref SoCon Student-Athlete of the Week

Eve Van Harpen - September 17, 2003 Bernie Sikes - October 19, 2005 Natalie Ferrara - October 18, 2006

Special Honors 2004 Summer Olympics Ileana Moschos (Greece) Carolina Dynamo (W-League) Jamie Cutts, 2004

Wofford Hall of Fame

Charles J. Bradshaw Award

Richardson Scholars

Brigid Meadow, 2003 Heidi Best, 2009

Faith Stewart 2003

Nikki Perrin, 1995-98 Bernie Sikes, 2003-06

Brigid Meadow

Faith Stewart

Bernie Sikes

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 27


Year-By-Year Results 1994

Record: 8-7 Home: 4-3, Away: 4-4 Head Coach: Jhon Akers Sept. 3 at Queens Sept. 7 at Coker Sept. 10 Tusculum Sept. 13 College of Charleston Sept. 15 at Lenior-Rhyne Sept. 17 at Furman Sept. 19 Limestone Sept. 24 Barry Sept. 28 Presbyterian Oct. 1 at Carson-Newman Oct. 12 at Wingate Oct. 15 at Erskine Oct. 18 Mars Hill Oct. 21 at Gardner-Webb Oct. 29 Northeast Missouri State

1995

1996

L, 0-2 L, 4-5 W, 5-1 W, 4-2 L, 1-4 W, 3-1 W, 7-0 L, 0-8 L, 2-5 W, 3-2 W, 3-1 L, 1-2 W, 2-1 W, 1-0 L, 0-4

Record: 2-15 Home: 2-8, Away: 0-7 Head Coach: Josef Lorenz Sept. 6 Carson-Newman W, 2-0 Sept. 9 at Davidson L, 0-8 Sept. 11 Wingate L, 2-3 Sept. 13 Furman L, 2-3 Sept. 16 vs. Stetson# L, 1-2 Sept. 17 at Georgia Southern# L, 2-7 Sept. 19 at UNC Asheville L, 0-5 Sept. 22 at College of Charleston L, 0-3 Sept. 27 Charleston Southern L, 1-2 Sept. 30 vs. Lynn* L, 0-7 Oct. 1 at Auburn* L, 0-5 Oct. 8 Jacksonville W, 8-0 Oct. 14 at Georgia State L, 0-1 Oct. 20 UNC Asheville L, 0-3 Oct. 22 at Appalachian State L, 0-1 Oct. 24 at South Carolina L, 1-3 Oct. 27 Wake Forest L, 0-6 # - Reebok/GSU Eagle Invitational (Statesboro, Ga.) * - Lanzera Tournament (Auburn, Ala.)

Record: 11-5-2 Home: 7-3, Away: 4-2-2 Head Coach: Josef Lorenz Sept. 4 Belmont Abbey Sept. 7 Davidson Sept. 11 Georgia Southern Sept. 14 East Carolina Sept. 17 at Furman Sept. 21 Liberty Sept. 29 at Jacksonville Sept. 30 at USF Oct. 6 UNC Wilmington Oct. 8 South Carolina Oct. 14 Carson-Newman Oct. 17 at College of Charleston Oct. 19 Georgia State Oct. 22 at Newberry Oct. 24 at Middle Tennessee State Oct. 26 at UNC Asheville Oct. 30 at Charleston Southern Nov. 3 Appalachian State

1997

Record: 12-7-3, SoCon Record: 5-2 Home: 5-1-2, Away: 4-4-1, Neutral: 2-3 Head Coach: Josef Lorenz Sept. 3 UNC Greensboro* L, 3-4 Sept. 5 at Florida State L, 1-5 Sept. 12 vs. Buffalo# W, 3-2 Sept. 14 vs. USF# L, 0-3 Sept. 17 at South Carolina L, 0-2 Sept. 21 Ohio W, 2-1 Sept. 26 Louisville W, 2-1 Sept. 28 at Chattanooga* W, 4-0 Oct. 1 College of Charleston T, 1-1 (2OT) Oct. 4 at East Carolina L, 1-3 Oct. 5 at UNC Wilmington T, 2-2 (2OT) Oct. 7 Newberry W, 4-0 Oct. 10 at Davidson* L, 0-2 Oct. 13 at Furman* W, 2-1 Oct. 15 Appalachian State* W, 3-1 Oct. 18 at Georgia Southern* W, 4-3 (OT) Oct. 21 East Tennessee State* W, 4-1 Oct. 22 UNC Asheville T, 1-1 (2OT)

The 1996 Team

28

W, 3-0 W, 1-0 L, 1-2 W, 1-0 W, 3-0 W, 2-0 W, 1-0 T, 3-3 (2OT) L, 1-2 L, 0-3 W, 2-0 T, 0-0 (2OT) W, 3-1 W, 6-0 W, 2-0 L, 1-3 L, 1-4 W, 5-2

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Oct. 24 at Liberty W, 4-2 Oct. 28 Chattanooga^ W, 3-0 Nov. 1 vs. Georgia Southern^ W, 1-0 Nov. 2 vs. UNC Greensboro^ L, 0-9 # - UNC Charlotte Puma Classic (Charlotte, N.C.) * - Southern Conference ^ - Southern Conference Tournament

1998

Record: 10-11, SoCon Record: 4-4 Home: 5-6, Away: 3-4, Neutral: 2-1 Head Coach: Josef Lorenz Sept. 6 vs. Mercer# Sept. 9 at East Tennessee State* Sept. 12 at Ohio% Sept. 13 vs. Central Michigan% Sept. 16 South Carolina Sept. 19 Middle Tennessee State Sept. 23 at College of Charleston* Sept. 25 Chattanooga* Sept. 27 Radford Sept. 30 Davidson* Oct. 3 Morehead State Oct. 6 Furman* Oct. 8 at UNC Asheville Oct. 11 Georgia Southern* Oct. 14 at North Carolina State Oct. 20 at Appalachian State* Oct. 24 Jacksonville Oct. 27 Georgia State Oct. 30 at UNC Greensboro* Nov. 3 at Davidson^ Nov. 7 vs. UNC Greensboro^ # - Georgia State Tournament (Atlanta, Ga.) % - Ohio Tournament (Athens, Ohio) * - Southern Conference ^ - Southern Conference Tournament

W, 3-2 W, 6-1 L, 0-6 W, 2-0 L, 0-2 W, 6-0 L, 1-2 W, 4-0 L, 1-2 L, 0-1 W, 6-1 L, 2-3 W, 3-0 W, 3-2 L, 1-9 W, 2-0 L, 0-3 L, 1-5 L, 1-3 W, 1-0 L, 0-6

1999

Record: 13-9, SoCon Record: 5-4 Home: 7-5, Away: 6-3, Neutral: 0-1 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Sept. 4 at Davidson* Sept. 6 High Point Sept. 8 College of Charleston* Sept. 12 at Chattanooga* Sept. 14 UNC Greensboro* Sept. 17 VCU Sept. 19 at Georgia Southern* Sept. 22 UNC Asheville Sept. 25 at Liberty Sept. 26 at Radford Sept. 28 Georgia State Oct. 2 South Carolina State Oct. 5 at Furman* Oct. 9 North Carolina State Oct. 12 at South Carolina Oct. 14 Appalachian State* Oct. 20 East Tennessee State*

L, 0-2 W, 5-0 L, 0-1 W, 2-1 L, 0-1 L, 1-2 (OT) W, 2-1 W, 3-2 W, 3-1 W, 2-1 W, 3-1 W, 8-0 L, 2-3 (OT) L, 0-1 (OT) L, 1-2 (OT) W, 3-2 W, 5-2


Year-By-Year Results Oct. 23 Western Carolina* Oct. 25 Charleston Southern Oct. 31 Iowa Nov. 2 at College of Charleston^ Nov. 6 vs. Furman^ * - Southern Conference ^ - Southern Conference Tournament

W, 4-1 W, 4-0 L, 1-6 W, 3-2 L, 1-4

2000

Record: 10-9, SoCon Record: 5-4 Home: 7-4, Away: 3-4, Neutral: 0-1 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Aug. 29 High Point Sept. 1 Tennessee Tech Sept. 8 IUPUI Sept. 13 East Tennessee State* Sept. 17 Duquesne Sept. 20 at Coastal Carolina Sept. 24 Appalachian State* Sept. 26 South Carolina Sept. 29 at Western Carolina* Oct. 1 at Chattanooga* Oct. 6 Georgia Southern* Oct. 10 at Clemson Oct. 14 at UNC Greensboro* Oct. 16 at Davidson* Oct. 19 Furman* Oct. 22 Liberty Oct. 25 College of Charleston* Oct. 27 at Alabama Nov. 3 vs. Davidson^ * - Southern Conference ^ - Southern Conference Tournament

2001

W, 1-0 W, 3-1 W, 5-1 W, 4-1 W, 4-1 W, 3-0 W, 4-0 L, 2-3 W, 3-2 W, 6-1 L, 1-2 L, 2-7 L, 0-1 L, 0-6 L, 1-6 L, 1-2 (OT) W, 4-3 (OT) L, 2-4 L, 0-4

Record: 4-14, SoCon Record: 3-7 Home: 2-7, Away: 1-6, Neutral: 1-1 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Aug. 31 vs. Lehigh# W, 3-1 Sept. 2 at Florida Atlantic# L, 0-4 Sept. 18 Elon L, 0-1 Sept. 21 UNC Greensboro* L, 0-3 Sept. 23 South Carolina L, 0-4 Sept. 26 Davidson* L, 0-4 Sept. 29 UNC Asheville L, 1-3 Sept. 30 at The Citadel* W, 5-0 Oct. 6 at Furman* L, 0-9 Oct. 9 Coastal Carolina L, 1-5 Oct. 11 Liberty L, 0-1 Oct. 14 at Appalachian State* L, 0-2 Oct. 19 Western Carolina* W, 1-0 Oct. 21 Chattanooga* W, 1-0 Oct. 26 at Georgia Southern* L, 0-5 Oct. 28 at College of Charleston* L, 1-4 Nov. 4 at East Tennessee State* L, 3-4 (OT) Nov. 8 vs. Western Carolina^ L, 1-2 # - Florida Atlantic Tournament (Boca Raton, Fla.) * - Southern Conference ^ - Southern Conference Tournament

The 1999 Team 2002

Record: 6-12-3, SoCon Record: 4-5-1 Home: 3-3-2, Away: 2-5-1, Neutral: 1-4 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Sept. 2 at Clemson L, 0-2 Sept. 4 Campbell T, 2-2 (2OT) Sept. 8 vs. #17/23 Duke# L, 0-2 Sept. 13 vs. Coastal Carolina% L, 0-3 Sept. 16 vs. Georgetown% L, 1-5 Sept. 22 The Citadel* W, 9-0 Sept. 27 East Tennessee State* T, 2-2 (2OT) Sept. 29 Alabama L, 0-3 Oct. 1 at Elon W, 1-0 Oct. 4 Appalachian State* W, 1-0 Oct. 6 Georgia Southern* W, 2-1 Oct. 11 at Western Carolina* L, 0-1 Oct. 13 at Chattanooga* W, 3-0 Oct. 15 Furman* L, 0-1 Oct. 20 College of Charleston* L, 0-2 Oct. 23 at UNC Greensboro* L, 0-3 Oct. 27 at Davidson* L, 0-2 Oct. 29 at South Carolina L, 0-1 Nov. 2 at High Point T, 0-0 (2OT) Nov. 7 vs. Western Carolina^ W, 1-0 Nov. 9 vs. College of Charleston^ L, 1-2 (2OT) # - Nike/Carolina Classic (Chapel Hill, N.C.) % - Umbro Kickoff Classic (Greenville, S.C.) * - Southern Conference ^ - Southern Conference Tournament

2003

Record: 7-9-3, SoCon Record: 5-4-2 Home: 5-2-2, Away: 2-7-1 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Sept. 1 at #20 Clemson Sept. 5 Canisius Sept. 7 Samford Sept. 10 Coastal Carolina Sept. 16 at College of Charleston* Sept. 18 at Mercer Sept. 24 South Carolina Sept. 28 Chattanooga* Oct. 3 at Elon* Oct. 5 at Appalachian State*

L, 2-6 W, 4-0 T, 0-0 (2OT) W, 1-0 W, 1-0 (OT) L, 0-1 L, 0-2 T, 0-0 (2OT) W, 1-0 L, 0-1

Oct. 10 at Georgia Southern* Oct. 12 Western Carolina* Oct. 17 UNC Greensboro* Oct. 19 at East Tennessee State* Oct. 24 The Citadel* Oct. 26 Davidson* Oct. 29 at Furman* Nov. 1 at High Point Nov. 6 at UNC Greensboro^ * - Southern Conference ^ - Southern Conference Tournament

T, 1-1 (2OT) W, 1-0 L, 0-1 L, 2-3 (OT) W, 2-0 W, 2-1 L, 2-3 L, 0-4 L, 0-2

2004

Record: 8-8-1, SoCon Record: 3-7-1 Home: 6-4, Away: 2-4-1 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Aug. 27 at Coastal Carolina Sept. 1 Guilford Sept. 5 Houston Sept. 10 at Georgia Sept. 15 South Carolina State Sept. 19 Appalachian State* Sept. 26 Elon* Sept. 28 Winthrop Oct. 3 Georgia Southern* Oct. 8 at Western Carolina* Oct. 10 at UNC Greensboro* Oct. 14 East Tennessee State* Oct. 17 at The Citadel* Oct. 20 at Davidson* Oct. 24 College of Charleston* Oct. 29 Furman* Oct. 31 at Chattanooga* * - Southern Conference

W, 2-1 W, 3-0 W, 1-0 L, 1-6 W, 8-0 L, 1-3 W, 3-1 W, 1-0 W, 1-0 L, 0-1 L, 0-2 L, 0-1 W, 3-2 T, 0-0 (2OT) L, 0-4 L, 2-3 L, 0-4

2005

Record: 5-12-3, SoCon Record: 4-4-2 Home: 4-5-1, Away: 1-5-2, Neutral: 0-2 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Aug. 26 at Samford Aug. 29 at South Carolina State Sept. 2 High Point Sept. 5 at Winthrop Sept. 9 vs. Florida International#

L, 0-3 W, 2-0 L, 0-2 L, 0-1 L, 1-2

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 29


Year-By-Year Results Sept. 11 vs. Virginia Tech# L, 0-1 Sept. 18 Clemson L, 0-1 Sept. 21 Coastal Carolina L, 2-1 (2OT) Sept. 25 at Appalachian State* L, 0-4 Sept. 29 at Georgia Southern* L, 1-2 Oct. 2 Western Carolina* W, 1-0 Oct. 10 Guilford T, 2-2 (2OT) Oct. 13 The Citadel* W, 3-0 Oct. 16 College of Charleston* W, 1-0 Oct. 20 Davidson* L, 0-1 Oct. 23 at Furman* T, 0-0 (2OT) Oct. 25 UNC Greensboro* L, 0-2 Oct. 28 Chattanooga* W, 1-0 Oct. 30 at Elon* T, 0-0 (2OT) Nov. 3 at Furman^ L, 0-4 # - Quality Inn & Suites Classic (Charleston, S.C.) * - Southern Conference ^ - Southern Conference Tournament

2006

Record: 6-7-4, SoCon Record: 3-5-2 Home: 4-2-2, Away: 2-5-1, Neutral: 0-0-1 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Aug. 25 at VMI W, 3-0 Aug. 27 at Longwood L, 2-3 (OT) Sept. 2 at Charleston Southern# L, 2-1 Sept. 4 vs. Coastal Carolina# T, 2-2 (2OT) Sept. 8 Kennesaw State T, 0-0 (2OT) Sept. 15 at Western Carolina* L, 0-1 Sept. 19 South Carolina State W, 6-0 Sept. 29 at UNC Greensboro* L, 0-1 Oct. 1 Guilford W, 2-0 Oct. 6 at The Citadel* W, 2-1 Oct. 8 College of Charleston* L, 0-1 Oct. 12 at Davidson* L, 0-3 Oct. 15 Furman* W, 2-1 Oct. 20 at Chattanooga* T, 1-1 (2OT) Oct. 22 Elon* L, 0-1 Oct. 27 Georgia Southern* W, 2-1 Oct. 29 Appalachian State* T, 1-1 (2OT) # - Big South/SoCon Challenge (Charleston, S.C.) * - Southern Conference

2007

Record: 7-11-2, SoCon Record: 3-6-1 Home: 4-5-1, Away: 3-6-1 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Aug. 31 Longwood W, 1-0 Sept. 3 Coastal Carolina W, 3-2 (OT) Sept. 7 VMI W, 1-0 Sept. 9 at Kennesaw State L, 1,2 (OT) Sept. 14 at Western Kentucky T, 1-1 (2OT) Sept. 18 at South Carolina State W, 3-0 Sept. 21 Charleston Southern L, 0-1 Sept. 23 at No. 20 Clemson L, 0-8 Sept. 27 UNC Greensboro* L, 0-2 Sept. 30 High Point L, 2-4 Oct. 5 The Citadel* W, 3-0 Oct. 7 at College of Charleston* L, 0-2

30

Oct. 12 Davidson* Oct. 14 at Furman* Oct. 19 Chattanooga* Oct. 21 at Elon* Oct. 25 at Georgia Southern* Oct. 28 at Appalachian State* Oct. 31 Western Carolina* Nov. 4 at Davidson^ * - Southern Conference ^ - Southern Conference Tournament

T, 0-0 (2OT) L, 0-2 L, 0-2 W, 2-1 L, 1-2 W, 1-0 L, 0-1 L, 1-2

2008

Record: 3-11-5, SoCon Record: 2-7-2 Home: 1-5-3, Away: 2-4-2, Neutral: 0-2-0 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Aug. 22 at North Carolina State L, 0-1 (OT) Aug. 24 at High Point T, 1-1 (2OT) Aug. 29 vs. Canisius# L, 1-5 Aug. 31 vs. Coastal Carolina# L, 0-2 Sept. 5 South Carolina State T, 1-1 (2OT) Sept. 12 Presbyterian^ W, 2-1 (2OT) Sept. 14 Kennesaw State^ T, 1-1 (2OT) Sept. 19 at VCU L, 1-5 Sept. 26 Georgia Southern* L, 1-2 Sept. 28 Davidson* L, 0-1 Oct. 3 at Western Carolina* L, 0-1 Oct. 5 at Appalachian State* T, 0-0 (2OT) Oct. 10 at Chattanooga* W, 4-2 Oct. 12 Samford* T, 0-0 (2OT) Oct. 17 UNC Greensboro* L, 0-1 Oct. 19 Elon* L, 0-1 (OT) Oct. 25 at The Citadel* W, 3-1 Oct. 26 at College of Charleston L, 0-3 Oct. 30 Furman* L, 0-1

Year-By-Year Results

Year 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

Coach Jhon Akers Josef Lorenz Josef Lorenz Josef Lorenz Josef Lorenz Amy Kiah Amy Kiah Amy Kiah Amy Kiah Amy Kiah Amy Kiah Amy Kiah Amy Kiah Amy Kiah Amy Kiah Amy Kiah

Overall 8-7 2-15 11-5-2 12-7-3 10-11 13-9 10-9 4-14 6-12-3 7-9-3 8-8-1 5-12-3 6-7-4 7-11-2 3-11-5 4-13-2

# - Select Kick-Off Classic (Greenville, S.C.) ^ - Academy Sports Shootout (Spartanburg, S.C.) * - Southern Conference

2009

Record: 4-13-2, SoCon Record: 3-6-2 Home: 2-6-1, Away: 2-7-1, Neutral: 0-0 Head Coach: Amy Kiah Aug. 22 at Clemson L, 0-4 Aug. 30 Virginia Commonwealth L, 0-3 Sept. 3 UNC-Asheville L, 0-1 Sept. 6 at USC Upstate W, 2-0 Sept. 11 High Point L, 0-1 Sept. 13 Winthrop L, 1-2 (OT) Sept. 17 at Presbyterian L, 0-1 Sept. 21 at SC State L, 0-1 (OT) Sept. 25 at Elon* L, 1-2 Sept. 27 at UNC Greensboro* L, 0-3 Oct. 2 Coll. of Charleston* L, 0-2 Oct. 4 The Citadel* W, 4-0 Oct. 8 Chattanooga* W, 3-2 Oct. 11 at Samford* T, 0-0 (2OT) Oct. 16 at Davidson* L, 0-4 Oct. 18 at Georgia Southern* L, 2-3 Oct. 22 Appalachian State* T, 1-1 (2OT) Oct. 25 Western Carolina* L, 0-1 Oct. 29 at Furman* W, 1-0 * - Southern Conference

Jhon Akers

SoCon

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

Career Coaching Records

Jhon Akers Josef Lorenz Amy Kiah

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

1 4 11

1994 1995-1998 1999-present

8-7 35-38-5 64-115-23

Josef Lorenz


Year-by-Year Statistics

Year-by Year Team Leaders Year Goals 1994 Meadow 11 1995 Meadow 5 1996 Blank 8 1997 Meadow 16 1998 Berman 10 1999 Moen 17 2000 Stewart 14 2001 Stewart 7 2002 Stewart 7 2003 Cutts/Anderson 4 2004 Steelman 6 2005 Bramlett 5 2006 Merchant 7 2007 Steelman 5 2008 Rex/McLaughlin 3 2009 Siebert 4

Assists Meadow/Clarke 5 Meadow 7 Boyce/Olmstead 5 Meadow 8 Petrilyak 8 Olmstead 11 Berman 8 Pezzutti 4 Bacote/Cutts/Stewart 2 Connett 3 Connett 6 Bramlett/Broderick/ Connett 2 Steelman 10 Ferrara 4 Rex/Ploetzke 3 Siebert/Phillips/Rex/Kawamoto 2

Points Meadow Meadow Boyce Meadow Berman Berman Stewart Stewart Stewart Cutts Steelman Bramlett

27 17 19 40 26 39 35 15 16 10 14 12

Steelman Steelman Rex Siebert

18 12 9 2

Shutouts Moschos 1 North 1 Moschos 10 Moschos 4 Bigbie 5 Bigbie 3 Menegaz 3 Menegaz 2 Menegaz 5 Somers 7 Somers 5 Sikes 6 No Individual SO McChesney 6 McChesney 2 McChesney 2

Goals-Against Average Moschos 2.35 North 2.97 Moschos 1.05 Counts 0.91 Kinsler 2.23 Bigbie 1.54 Menegaz 2.31 Menegaz 2.62 Menegaz 1.50 Somers 1.07 Somers 1.61 Sikes 0.88 Somers 1.05 McChesney 1.56 McChesney 1.47 McChesney 1.45

Year 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

Saves Moschos Moschos Moschos Moschos Bigbie Menegaz Menegaz Menegaz Menegaz Somers Somers Sikes Somers McChesney McChesney Christensen

117 83 59 117 42 61 105 98 117 91 79 66 50 102 95 43

Game-Winning Goals Applegate 3 Clarke/Hinchey 1 Boyce/Freeman 3 Meadow 6 Berman 4 Berman 6 Stewart/Berman 3 Stewart 2 Stewart 3 Sikes 2 Eight players 1 Bramlett 4

Shots Green Meadow Blank Meadow Berman Berman/Moen Stewart Cutts Stewart Cutts Steelman Connett/Steelman

39 50 48 82 59 45 59 42 53 40 45 39

Steelman/Merchant Poloetzke Rex/O’Brien/Siebert

Merchant Ploetzke Ploetzke Reed

46 36 36 30

2 2 1 Reed/Siebert/Fatti/Ashworth 1

Minutes Moschos 1263:00 Moschos 1015:00 Moschos 1710:00 Moschos 1890:00 Kinsler 1050:00 Menegaz 1009:00 Menegaz 1752:20 Menegaz 1444:54 Menegaz 1919:10 Somers 1509:44 Somers 1451:06 Sikes 1122:20 Somers 1204:28 McChesney 1842:48 McChesney 1835:22 Christensen 1091:59

Year-by Year Team statistics

Year 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

Goals 36 19 40 45 43 53 46 17 23 19 26 12 24 20 15 15

Assists 22 13 22 39 32 50 44 14 13 11 23 11 23 22 11 12

Points 94 51 102 129 118 156 136 48 59 49 75 35 71 62 41 42

GWG 8 2 11 12 10 13 10 4 6 7 8 5 6 7 3 4

Shots 181 173 264 369 293 241 249 157 222 187 253 238 227 242 181 158

Saves 131 135 59 28 82 116 109 106 121 127 127 108 73 114 96 85

Shutouts 1 2 10 4 6 3 3 3 6 8 6 7 4 6 2 4

GAA 2.53 3.47 1.05 1.90 2.29 1.62 2.31 2.88 1.47 1.26 1.63 1.24 1.03 1.56 1.47 1.57

Minutes 1350:00 1530:00 1710:00 2088:00 1890:00 2000:00 1752:20 1626:00 1964:10 1779:44 1550:00 1891:34 1652:46 1842:48 1835:22 1774:01

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 31


All-Time Series Records Opponent Alabama Appalachian State Auburn Barry Belmont Abbey Buffalo Campbell Canisius Carson-Newman Central Michigan Charleston Southern Chattanooga The Citadel Clemson Coastal Carolina Coker College of Charleston Davidson Duke Duquesne East Carolina East Tennessee State Elon Erskine Florida Atlantic Florida International Florida State Furman Gardner-Webb Georgetown Georgia Georgia Southern Georgia State Guilford High Point Houston Iowa IUPUI Jacksonville

32

Series Record 0-2 7-5-3 0-1 0-1 1-0 1-0 0-0-1 2-1 3-0 1-0 1-4 9-3-2 9-0 0-6 4-4-1 0-1 5-11-2 3-13-2 0-1 1-0 1-1 4-3-1 4-4-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 5-12-1 1-0 0-1 0-1 7-7-1 2-2 2-0-1 2-4-2 1-0 0-1 1-0 2-1

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

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

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Neutral 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-2-1 0-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-1 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

First Meeting Oct. 27, 2000 Oct. 22, 1995 Oct. 1, 1995 Sept. 24, 1994 Sept. 4, 1996 Sept. 12, 1997 Sept. 4, 2002 Sept. 5, 2003 Oct. 1, 1994 Sept. 13, 1998 Sept. 27, 1995 Sept. 28, 1997 Sept. 30, 2001 Oct. 10, 2000 Sept. 20, 2000 Sept. 7, 1994 Sept. 13, 1994 Sept. 9, 1995 Sept. 8, 2002 Sept. 17, 2000 Sept. 14, 1996 Oct. 21, 1997 Sept. 18, 2001 Oct. 15, 1994 Sept. 2, 2001 Sept. 9, 2005 Sept. 5, 1997 Sept. 17, 1994 Oct. 21, 1994 Sept. 16, 2002 Sept. 10, 2004 Sept. 17, 1995 Oct. 14, 1995 Sept. 1, 2004 Sept. 6, 1999 Sept. 5, 2004 Oct. 31, 1999 Sept. 8, 2000 Oct. 8, 1995

Last Meeting Sept. 29, 2002 Oct. 22, 2009 Oct. 1, 1995 Sept. 24, 1994 Sept. 4, 1996 Sept. 12, 1997 Sept. 4, 2002 Aug. 29, 2008 Oct. 14, 1996 Sept. 13, 1998 Sept. 21, 2007 Oct. 8, 2009 Oct. 4, 2009 Aug. 22, 2009 Aug. 31, 2008 Sept. 7, 1994 Oct. 2, 2009 Oct. 16, 2009 Sept. 8, 2002 Sept. 17, 2000 Oct. 4, 1997 Oct. 14, 2004 Sept. 25, 2009 Oct. 15, 1994 Sept. 2, 2001 Sept. 9, 2005 Sept. 5, 1997 Oct. 29, 2009 Oct. 21, 1994 Sept. 16, 2002 Sept. 10, 2004 Oct. 18, 2009 Sept. 28, 1999 Oct. 1, 2006 Sept. 11, 2009 Sept. 5, 2004 Oct. 31, 1999 Sept. 8, 2000 Oct. 24, 1998

Result L, 0-3 T, 1-1 (2OT) L, 0-5 L, 0-8 W, 3-0 W, 3-2 T, 2-2(2OT) L, 1-5 W, 2-0 W, 2-0 L, 0-1 W, 3-2 W, 4-0 L, 0-4 L, 0-2 L, 4-5 L, 0-2 L, 0-4 L, 0-2 W, 4-1 L, 1-3 L, 0-1 L, 1-2 L, 1-2 L, 0-4 L, 1-2 L, 1-5 W, 1-0 W, 1-0 L, 1-5 L, 0-2 L, 2-3 W, 3-1 W, 2-0 L, 0-1 W, 1-0 L, 1-6 W, 5-1 L, 0-3


All-Time Series Records

Kennesaw State Lehigh Lenior-Rhyne Liberty Limestone Longwood Louisville Lynn Mars Hill Mercer Middle Tennessee State Morehead State Newberry North Carolina State Northeast Missouri State Ohio Presbyterian Queens Radford Samford South Carolina South Carolina State Stetson Tennessee Tech Tusculum UNC Asheville UNC Greensboro UNC Wilmington USC Upstate USF VCU VMI Virginia Tech Wake Forest Western Carolina Western Kentucky Wingate Winthrop 2010 Opponents in Bold

0-1-2 1-0 0-1 3-2 1-0 1-1 1-0 0-1 1-0 1-1 2-0 1-0 2-0 0-3 0-1 1-1 1-2 0-1 1-1 0-1-3 0-9 5-1-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 2-4-1 0-16 0-1-1 1-0 0-1-1 0-3 2-0 0-1 0-1 6-7 0-0-1 1-1 1-2

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

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

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

Sept. 8, 2006 Aug. 31, 2001 Sept. 15, 1994 Sept. 21, 1996 Sept. 19, 1994 Aug. 27, 2006 Sept. 26, 1997 Sept. 30, 1995 Oct. 18, 1994 Sept. 6, 1998 Oct. 24, 1996 Oct. 3, 1998 Oct. 22, 1996 Oct. 14, 1998 Oct. 29, 1994 Sept. 21, 1997 Sept. 28, 1994 Sept. 3, 1994 Sept. 27, 1998 Sept. 7, 2003 Oct. 24, 1995 Oct. 2, 1999 Sept. 16, 1995 Sept. 1, 2000 Sept. 10, 1994 Sept. 19, 1995 Sept. 3, 1997 Oct. 6, 1996 Sept. 6, 2009 Sept. 30, 1996 Sept. 17, 1999 Aug. 25, 2006 Sept. 11, 2005 Oct. 27, 1995 Oct. 23, 1999 Sept. 14, 2007 Oct. 12, 1994 Sept. 28, 2004

Sept. 14, 2008 Aug. 31, 2001 Sept. 15, 1994 Oct. 11, 2001 Sept. 19, 1994 Aug. 31, 2007 Sept. 26, 1997 Sept. 30, 1995 Oct. 18, 1994 Sept. 18, 2003 Sept. 19, 1998 Oct. 3, 1998 Oct. 7, 1997 Aug. 22, 2008 Oct. 29, 1994 Sept. 12, 1998 Sept. 17, 2009 Sept. 3, 1994 Sept. 26, 1999 Oct. 11, 2009 Sept. 24, 2003 Sept. 21, 2009 Sept. 16, 1995 Sept. 1, 2000 Sept. 10, 1994 Sept. 3, 2009 Sept. 27, 2009 Oct. 5, 1997 Sept. 6, 2009 Sept. 14, 1997 Aug. 30, 2009 Sept. 7, 2007 Sept. 11, 2005 Oct. 27, 1995 Oct. 25, 2009 Sept. 14, 2007 Sept. 11, 1995 Sept. 13, 2009

T, 1-1 W, 3-1 L, 1-4 L, 0-1 W, 7-0 W, 1-0 W, 2-1 L, 0-7 W, 2-1 L, 0-1 W, 6-0 W, 6-1 W, 4-0 L, 0-1 L, 0-4 L, 0-6 L, 0-1 L, 0-2 W, 2-1 T, 0-0 (2OT) L, 0-2 L, 0-1 (OT) L, 1-2 W, 3-1 W, 5-1 L, 0-1 L, 0-3 T, 2-2(2OT) W, 2-0 L, 0-3 L, 0-3 W, 1-0 L, 0-1 L, 0-6 L, 0-1 T, 1-1(2OT) L, 2-3 L, 1-2 (2OT)

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 33


All-Time Roster Name Abby Anderson Beth Anderson Anne Anttila Ginger Applegate Chelsea Ashworth Kyrah Bacote Leah Bailey Lindsay Barnard DeAnna Beasley Jaime Belford Kara Bennewitz Abbie Bentley Amanda Berman Heidi Best Lindsey Bigbie Erika Bishop Rachael Blackburn Vanessa Blank Liz Blaz Linnie Boteler Debbie Boyce Mallory Bramlett Anne Breeden Kelly Broderick Aimee Bross Mary Brumbach Louise Buchholz Sarah Burbank Claire Burke Amber Cagle Meredith Calcina Kelly Campbell Ashley Cannon Jennifer Chapple Erika Christensen Christie Clarke Jessica Connett Sarah Cook Sarah Corfman Kara Couch Prentiss Counts Lauren Cozzarelli Heather Crain Kate Cross Jaime Cutts Sharayah Davis Becky Dedman Katie Donnelly Jackie Dudas Sarah Evans Ellen Ezekiel Daniella Fatti Natalie Ferrara Julie Forster Tanya Frantz Lindsey Freeman Meghan Gasmovic Isabel Ghowanlu Janelle Gisel Sarah Goolsby Ginny Gray Blair Green Cathy Green Elizabeth Hall Melissa Hamilton Karen Hembree Nell Hinchey Liz Howell Jane Hubbard Bonnie Hughson Brooke Huntley Hee Hwang Rachel Hyatt Susie Jakel Amy Jakobe Brittnee Jones Amanda Jopling Mary Cathryn Joyce

34

Class 2005 1999 1998 1998 2013 2005 2000 2005 2002 2001 2008 2006 2002 2001 2002 2010 2012 2000 2010 1999 2000 2006 2012 2008 2000 2003 1999 2004 2009 2000 2010 2010 1996 2000 2013 1998 2007 2003 1999 2002 2001 2011 1998 2001 2004 2009 2005 2005 2011 2006 2013 2011 2008 2005 2007 2000 2006 1998 2002 2008 2005 2010 1998 2012 1998 2003 1997 2003 2007 2003 2001 1998 2008 2000 2001 2004 1999 2007

Years Played 2001-02-03-04 1995-96 1994 1994-95-96-97 2009 2002 1996 2001-02-03-04 1998-99-2000-01 1997-98-99-2000 2004-05-06-07 2002 1998-99-2000 1997-98-99-2000 1998-99 2006-07-08-09 2008 1996-97 2006-07 1995-96-97 1996-97-98-99 2002-03-04-05 2008 2004-05-06-07 1996 2000 1995 2001 2006-07-08 1996-97-98-99 2006-07-08-09 2007-08 1994 1996 2009 1994-95-96-97 2003-04-05-06 1999 1995-96 1998 1997 2007-08-09 1994 1997-98 2000-01-02-03 2006 2001 2001 2007-08 2002-04-05 2009 2007-08-09 2004-05-06-07 2001-02 2003-04 1996-97-98 2002-03-04-05 1994-95 1998-99 2004-05-06 2001-02 2006-07-08-09 1994-95-96-97 2008-09 1994 2000-01 1994-95-96 1999-2000 2004 2000 1997-98 1994-95-96 2004-05-06-07 1996-97 1997-98 2000-01 1995 2003

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Goals 4 0 1 11 1 2 1 0 7 0 4 0 38 18 0 1 1 8 0 0 14 8 0 0 3 0 0 2 0 6 0 0 1 0 0 15 8 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 7 2 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 2 7 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 3 2 2 0 1 1 0 0

Assists 3 1 1 4 0 2 0 1 2 0 2 0 23 14 0 3 0 0 0 0 7 6 1 3 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 0 2 0 0 6 11 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 13 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 7 1 0 5 0 2 3 1 0 2 8 0 0 0 1 4 0 0 5 1 8 0 1 0 0 0

Points 11 1 3 26 2 6 2 1 16 0 10 0 99 50 0 5 2 16 0 0 35 22 1 3 6 0 0 6 1 14 0 0 4 0 0 36 27 2 0 1 0 2 0 0 45 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 21 5 0 17 0 2 3 1 0 6 22 0 0 0 5 8 0 0 11 5 12 0 3 2 0 0

GWG 1 0 0 4 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 13 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 5 5 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

Shots 14 1 7 110 4 12 1 15 29 9 19 4 154 157 0 29 16 56 1 5 72 70 5 47 17 0 1 5 0 22 7 1 1 8 0 90 116 3 0 0 0 14 0 1 169 0 1 0 1 1 2 33 72 21 1 57 3 7 6 1 2 22 78 0 5 2 19 7 0 0 22 3 31 6 10 1 2 0

Saves Shutouts 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 97 8 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 43 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

GAA Minutes Played 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.92 1831:00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.65 1091:59 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.91 198:00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 39:26 0 0 4.97 181:06 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.88 143:52 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0


All-Time Roster Jessie Kandl Kappi Karneckis Jewel Kawamoto Allison Kelley Alison Kinsler Sarah Kuszaj Caroline Labban Lindsey Lane Katie Langley Ingrid Lesemann Amanda Leyland Traci Lynch Becca Maloney Chrissy Mastry Meghan McAdams Katie McChesney Kelly McElhiney Maggie McLaughlin Hedda McLendon Brigid Meadow Katie Menegaz Kendra Merchant Thea Moen Beth Moller Anne-Meree Morehead Amanda Morris Ileana Moschos Melissa Murphy Katie North Katie O’Brien Maggie O’Brien Emily Olmstead Anne-Marie Pages Kara Palmquist Sarah Penn Kristen Perez Nikki Perrin Jenny Petrilyak Christine Pezzutti Anne Phillips Monica Ploetzke Missy Polly Mary Rea Sydney Reed Katie Relihan Cassie Rex Jennifer Rice Audrey Roach Kelsey Rogers Maritza Roncancio Kelsey Roth Erin Russ Jackie Savage Kate Schallhorn Nikki Siebert Bernie Sikes Missy Simons Rachel Smith Megan Snaider Austin Somers Whitney Steelman Faith Stewart Nikki Tabron Heather Thompson Aubrey Thomson Michele Togno Laura Trent Eve Van Harpen Laura Vaughn Kara Vogelpohl Megan Wellborn Brenda Wichmann Laura Wile Adrienne Winghart Ashley Worley

2009 1995 2013 1998 2002 1999 2006 2008 2006 2010 2001 2008 2010 2010 2002 2011 2005 2012 2001 1998 2003 2010 2001 1998 1997 2013 1998 2001 1999 2012 2012 2000 1997 2002 2003 2010 1999 2001 2005 2012 2010 1998 2009 2012 2007 2010 1998 1997 2006 2001 2007 1998 2009 2004 2011 2007 2002 2006 2006 2007 2008 2003 1998 2010 2010 2012 2010 2005 2006 2002 2011 1999 2001 2001 2006

2005-06-07 1994 2009 1994 1998 1995-96 2002-03-04-05 2005 2002-03 2006 1997-98-99-2000 2004-05 2006 2006-07-08 1998-99 2007-08-09 2001-02-03-04 2008-09 1997 1994-95-96-97 1999-2000-01-02 2006-07 1998-99 1994 1994 2009 994-95-96-97 1997-98 1995 2008-09 2008-09 1996-97-98-99 1994 2000-01 1999-2000 2006 1995-96-97 1997-98-99-2000 2001-02-03-04 2008-09 2006-07-08-09 1994 2005-06-07-08 2008-09 2003-04 2006-07-08-09 1994 1994 2002-03-04 1997 2003 1994-95 2005 2000-01-02-03 2007-08-09 2003-04-05-06 1998-99 2002 2002-03-04-05 2003-04-05-06 2004-05-06-07 1999-2000-01-02 1994 2006-07-08 2006-07-08 2008-09 2006-07 2001-02-03-04 2002-03 1998-99-2000-01 2007-08-09 1995-96-97-98 1997 1997 2002-03-04-05

2 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 12 2 0 0 1 0 0 4 0 32 0 11 24 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 2 4 0 1 4 0 3 10 10 2 5 0 1 3 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 1 6 8 1 0 3 0 16 33 0 0 2 0 1 10 0 0 1 2 1 2 0

0 0 2 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 17 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 20 0 6 6 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 16 1 7 1 0 0 19 5 2 7 0 2 1 0 5 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 3 2 4 6 0 6 0 14 13 0 1 2 0 0 3 0 0 1 3 2 1 1

4 0 2 0 0 7 2 0 0 0 41 6 0 0 2 0 2 8 0 84 0 28 54 0 0 0 0 12 0 0 5 24 1 9 9 0 6 39 25 6 17 0 4 5 0 13 0 2 0 1 0 8 0 5 14 20 8 0 12 0 46 79 0 1 6 0 2 23 0 0 3 7 4 5 1

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 3 5 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 1 0 3 11 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 1 1 0 0

8 0 3 0 0 23 48 0 0 19 69 11 0 1 9 0 18 38 2 166 0 70 85 0 0 0 0 18 0 0 7 24 3 25 27 0 11 108 85 21 84 0 40 53 0 22 0 2 2 0 5 10 0 25 46 80 14 1 55 0 155 166 2 3 15 0 8 88 3 7 5 26 4 8 18

0 0 0 0 40 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 0 0 235 0 0 0 0 381 0 0 12 0 0 376 0 52 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 20 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 66 0 0 0 247 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 15 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 2.23 0 0 0 .00 0 0 0 1.10 0 0 1.49 0 0 0 0 2.03 0 0 10.59 0 0 2.10 0 2.97 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.89 0 0 2.20 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.88 0 0 0 1.32 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 1050:00 0 0 0 45:00 0 0 0 408:52 0 0 4360:12 0 0 0 0 6125:24 0 0 34:00 0 0 5878:00 0 515:00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 53:00 0 0 368:54 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1122:20 0 0 0 4790:40 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Players on the all-time roster list must have played in at least one game throughout their career to be included. Others have been listed on rosters, but have not played. Current players in bold.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 35


Wofford Administration

Dr. Benjamin

Dunlap

Johnson

Dr. Benjamin Bernard Dunlap took office as Wofford’s president in July 2000, becoming only the 10th chief executive in the 150-year history of the Phi Beta Kappa liberal arts college. A native of Columbia, S.C., Dunlap graduated summa cum laude from Sewanee: The University of the South in 1959. He attended Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar and Harvard University as a graduate student, receiving his Ph.D. in English Language and Literature in 1967. From that year until 1993, he held academic appointments at Harvard and the University of South Carolina, where he was awarded both the USC Teacher of the Year Award and the university’s Russell Award for Distinguished Scholarship. During that time, he twice served as a Fulbright Senior Lecturer in Bangkok, Thailand, and Chiang Mai, Thailand, and was also a member of the inaugural class of U.S.-Japan Leadership Fellows in Tokyo. In 1993, he accepted an appointment at Wofford College as the Chapman Family Professor in the Humanities, a position he still holds. In 2000, he became the 10th president of Wofford College. Dunlap’s academic fields include literature, intellectual history, Asian studies, film history and criticism, fiction writing, and the arts. On those subjects and others, especially leadership and higher education, he has lectured and spoken widely in this country and abroad including an appearance as one of “Fifty Remarkable People” at the 2007 TED Conference in Monterey. A frequent moderator for the Aspen Institute’s Executive and C.E.O. Seminars as well as its Henry Crown Fellowship and such affiliated programs as the Executive Seminar Asia, the Faculty Seminars at Wye, the Aspen-Rodel Fellowship, the Africa Leadership Initiative, the Central European Leadership Initiative, and the Liberty Fellowship of South Carolina, he has also designed and moderated seminars in Europe, Africa, and the United States for corporate clients as varied as the Netflix Corporation, Young & Rubicam, the Waters Global Forum, the Nova Chemical Corporation, and the Arab Banking Corporation. Dunlap’s many publications include poems, essays, anthologies, guides, and opera libretti as well as two novels in manuscript, Famous Dogs of the Civil War and Sunshine: The Autobiography of a Genius. As a writer-producer and on-camera talent for public television, he has been a major contributor to more than 200 programs, for which he has won numerous national and international awards, and, for four and a half years in the 1970’s and 80’s, he performed as soloist and principal dancer for the Columbia City Ballet. Since 1963, he has been married to Anne Boyd Dunlap. They have three grown children. In 2006, he was awarded an honorary doctorate by his alma mater, Sewanee: The University of the South.

Richard Johnson is in his tenth year as director of athletics at

president

Dr. Dunlap cheers for the Terriers at the 2010 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament.

36

Richard

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Athletic Director

Wofford College. The former head basketball coach has been an instrumental figure on campus for over 25 years. Johnson officially began his new duties on Dec. 3, 2001. In 17 years as head basketball coach at Wofford (1985-2002), Johnson had a 100 percent graduation rate for all players who completed their eligibility under him. He was the runner-up for SoCon Coach of the Year honors twice in the Terriers’ five seasons of league play under him. His 200th win was a 79-74 victory at Clemson during the 1999-2000 campaign. A 1976 graduate of The Citadel, Johnson came to Wofford after serving nine years as a basketball assistant at his alma mater under then-coach and now athletic director Les Robinson. Johnson also holds an MBA from The Citadel. During his Wofford coaching tenure, Johnson guided the Terriers from NAIA membership to NCAA Division II in 1988, Division I Independent status in 1995 and the Southern Conference in 1997. Over the past several years as athletic director, he also has been a driving force behind the development of several facility projects. Russell C. King Field and Switzer Stadium returned baseball to campus in 2003. The Richardson Building was renovated in 2008, while the Joe E. Taylor Athletic Building and a golf practice facility were completed in 2009. Johnson has also been responsible for the growth of the athletic endowment, with a long-term goal of endowing all scholarships in the department. He currently chairs the Southern Conference’s men’s basketball committee and is a member of the NCAA’s Men’s Basketball Issues Committee. Johnson and his wife Carol, have two daughters, Lindsay and Lauren, and a son, Rich. Lindsay is a 2001 Wofford graduate, Lauren graduated from Wofford in 2003 and Rich is a sophomore at the University of the South. The Johnsons also have three grandchildren. Lindsay and Brad Lowry are the parents of Louisa and Brady Lowry, while Lauren and Reece McWilliams are the parents of Mac McWilliams.

Dr. Jamecia

Hill

Faculty Athletic Representative Dr. Jameica Hill, a professor of chemistry, is in her fifth year as the Faculty Athletic Representative (FAR) at Wofford. In her role as the FAR, Dr. Hill represents Wofford to the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the Southern Conference. The FAR is responsible for certifying the eligibility of student-athletes and assuring integrity in the eligibility process. In addition to supervising athletics policies, the FAR also serves as a liaison between the faculty and the student athletes, looking out for their individual well-being with regard to academics and athletics. Hill, a native of Due West, S.C. and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, earned her Ph.D. degree in inorganic chemistry at Clemson University, where she was a Graduate Teaching Assistant of the Year. She received Wofford’s 1995 Martin Luther King Jr. Humanitarian Award and was also an associate director for a summer program that was funded by a grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Center. Hill’s interest in athletics has been a lifelong one. Her father was a high school coach, and her two children are competitive in many different sports. As a professor at Wofford and the wife of Jason Hill ’89, a former Wofford quarterback and assistant coach, Hill has always supported Terrier athletics. Her daughter Shelby is active in competitive cheerleading (Level 5), while her son J.L. plays football as well as AAU basketball on a team based in Charlotte. Hill was also a cheerleader for the football and basketball teams as a student at Wofford.


Wofford Athletic Staff terri lewitt

Associate athletic director for development / SWA Terri Lewitt is in her 26th year as a member of the Wofford athletic department. Lewitt’s main duties revolve around the Terrier Club and serving as the Senior Woman Administrator. She also chairs, along with the Terrier Club president, many of the events and activities administered by the Terrier Club and its board of directors, including the Terrier Ball. After coming to the college as an administrative assistant in March 1985, Lewitt became the sports information director two months later. In addition to those duties, she was the business and ticket manager for the department. She has also served as the compliance director. In 2008, she was recognized by the Southern Conference for her role in the growth of women’s athletics as the conference celebrated 25 years of women’s championships. Lewitt was promoted to assistant athletic director in 1989 and to associate director in 1996. The Burlington, N.C. native earned her B.A. degree in history from Elon in 1984. Lewitt and her husband, Mark, have two children: Lauren and David.

mark line

Associate athletic director for internal operations Mark Line, Wofford’s all-time winningest baseball coach, returned to the Terrier athletic department in July 2003 in the role of associate athletic director for internal operations and sports programs. Among his myriad of duties, Line supervises the Olympic sports while also overseeing the department’s budget and serving as liaison to the Carolina Panthers and several on-campus groups and committees. A 1977 graduate of Erskine, Line posted a 210-158 record (.571) in 10 years as the Terriers baseball coach (1986-95). He received District Coach of the Year honors in his second season as the 1987 squad put together as a 23-11 mark. Wofford then set a single-season school record for victories the following campaign with a 27-12 record. It marked the first time Wofford qualified for postseason play in consecutive seasons. Line’s 1991 team established another Terrier mark for wins with a 30-9 record. Line was selected as a 2004 inductee into Wofford’s Athletic Hall of Fame. The first-base dugout at Russell C. King Field, the Terriers’ on-campus baseball facility, is named in his honor. Line has served as chairman of the physical education department since 1988. Following the 1995 season, Line accepted a role as associate dean of students in the Wofford student affairs office. He worked with volunteer services, Bonner Scholars, the campus judicial system and a host of other activities involving campus life. Line and his wife, Pam, have two children: Alyse, a 2010 graduate of Wofford, and Sam, a sophomore at Emory and Henry.

al clark iii

assistant athletic director for development and major gifts Al Clark is in his fifth year at Wofford. For two years, he served as the assistant director of the Terrier Club. In May, 2008, he was promoted to assistant athletic director for development and major gifts. In this role, Clark has responsibility for many of the major fundraising efforts for the athletic department. Included in these efforts are scholarship endowments and facilities, such as the Taylor Center. He also continues to coordinate the Terrier Club Mini-Tour, a series of golf tournaments held throughout the Southeast that help raise scholarship funds for Wofford student-athletes. Clark worked for five years as a sales executive before joining the Wofford staff in 2007. Clark is a third generation Wofford football player. His father, Al Clark Jr. ’76, and grandfather, Al Clark Sr. ’50, preceeded him as Terriers. On the field, Al III was a four-year letterman and was Wofford’s Linebacker of the Year in 2000. He was a preseason All-SoCon selection in 2001 and his 79-yard fumble return vs. Middle Tennessee State in 1999 is the second-longest in Wofford history.

A 1996 graduate of Dorman High School, Clark was the team’s Defensive Player of the Year as a senior. Clark graduated from Wofford in 2001 with a bachelor of arts in history. He and his wife Jennifer reside in Spartanburg.

Andy Kiah Director of Athletic facilities Andy Kiah is in his 15th year on the staff at Wofford and tenth as the director of athletic facilities. Kiah oversees the maintenance and operation of all athletic facilities, including Gibbs Stadium, the practice fields, the Richardson Building, Snyder Field, Russell C. King Field and the Benjamin Johnson Arena. Wofford’s facilities, which are also used by the Carolina Panthers for training camp, have been ranked among the best in the country. Kiah first came to Wofford as an assistant baseball coach. A 1996 graduate of the University of Massachusetts, Kiah was a four-year letterman for the UMass baseball team. The 1995 Minuteman squad advanced to the NCAA Regionals and was within one game of reaching the College World Series. He was captain of the 1996 team that set a school record with 40 wins. A native of Brewer, Maine, Kiah holds a bachelor’s degree in sports management from the University of Massachusetts. His wife Amy, is head coach of the Wofford women’s soccer team. They have two daughters, Kayleigh and Mikenna.

lenny mathis

Assistant athletic director for marketing and promotions Lenny Mathis joined the Wofford staff in 2003 as the assistant athletic director for marketing and promotions. Mathis came to Wofford after serving as the general manager of the Spartanburg Stingers in the Coastal Plain League, a summer wooden bat baseball league for collegiate players. He directed the Stinger operations in their inaugural 2003 season. Mathis is a 2000 graduate of the University of South Carolina where he received a degree in sport and entertainment management. Mathis comes from a minor league baseball background. Prior to running the Stingers, he served as the director of ticket operations in 2002 for the Class A Savannah Sand Gnats (an affiliate of the Texas Rangers at the time). He also worked two summers, 1999 and 2000, with the Greenville Braves (then a AA affiliate of the Atlanta Braves). In 200001, he served as a marketing representative for the Clemson Tiger Network’s radio affiliate in Columbia, SC. A native of Manning, S.C., Mathis volunteers his time as the media and public relations chairman for the Carolina Miracle League, a baseball league for children with disabilities in Spartanburg County and surrounding areas. He is also a member of the National Association of Collegiate Marketing Administrators (NACMA), co-chair of Spartanburg Young Professionals (SYP) and serves as the president of the “Friends of Duncan Park,” a grass roots organization working to preserve Historic Duncan Park Stadium in Spartanburg, South Carolina’s oldest baseball park (1926). He and Amanda Ingram were married on May 30, 2009.

elizabeth rabb

assistant athletic director for compliance Elizabeth Rabb is in her tenth year as a member of the Wofford athletic department. In her current role, she oversees NCAA, Southern Conference and Wofford regulatory issues for all Terrier student-athletes. This includes interpreting NCAA regulations and monitoring recruiting, financial aid and eligibility issues. A member of the NCAA’s Administration Cabinet, she has also served as Wofford’s ticket manager and cheerleading coach during her tenure. A native of Johnson City, Tenn., Rabb earned a B.A. degree in history from Wofford in 2001. She earned her master’s degree from Converse College in December 2007. While an undergraduate, she worked as a student assistant in the athletic department and was a member of both the cheerleading and dance squads. Rabb also worked as an intern at

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 37


Wofford Athletic Staff Tennessee State and the Southern Conference office. Rabb and her husband, Marc, were married on June 23, 2007. Marc is the director of media relations at Gardner-Webb University. Their daughter, Ella, was born in June of 2010.

brent williamson

assistant Athletic Director for media relations

Brent Williamson is in his fourth season at Wofford as Assistant Athletic Director for Media Relations. He joined the Terriers after spending four years as the Assistant Athletic Director for Public Relations at the University of Maine. He is responsible for the media relations operations for the Wofford College Athletic Department and is the primary contact for football, men’s basketball and baseball. He oversees all department publications, news releases and the website. In four years at Maine, Williamson oversaw the media relations for nineteen sports. He was the primary contact for the men’s ice hockey team, which advanced to three NCAA Frozen Fours. He worked with six All-Americans and a Hobey Baker Finalist, along with several current NHL players and two Stanley Cup Champions. At Maine he also oversaw the development and production of a bi-weekly television show, The Black Bear Insider, along with other special projects. Prior to Maine, he spent eight years working in media relations in the National Football League. After two seasons with the Atlanta Falcons, he joined the Jacksonville Jaguars in 1997. In 2002, he was named Director of Media Relations for the Houston Texans. He assisted in the media relations operations at four Super Bowls. A native of Taylors, S.C., Williamson graduated from Wake Forest University in 1994 with a bachelors degree in history. He added a masters of sports management from the University of Richmond in 1996. His grandfather, W.S. Williamson, graduated from Wofford College in 1932.

shelby taylor

ticket manager

Shelby Taylor is in her fifth year as Wofford’s ticket manager. She joined the Terrier staff in 2006 after working as a sales representative for Powers Solutions. In her role, she supervises all ticket operations including season and game day sales. She has also been responsible for the Terriers move to electronic ticketing for football and basketball. Taylor is a 1982 graduate of the University of South Carolina-Upstate with a bachelor of science degree in administration. She and her husband David are the parents of a daughter Meg and a son Rob. Meg is a freshman volleyball player at Gardner-Webb University.

Graham Gooley

Sports Marketing/IMG College

Graham Gooley is in his first year as account executive for Wofford Sports Network. In this role, he is responsible for the development of corporate sponsorships for Wofford College and marketing partner IMG College. Along with researching prospects and developing proposals, he handles the fulfillment of the sponsorship agreements. Prior to joining the Terriers he was working with IMG College at Furman University. In addition, while in college he worked as a restuarant manager. A native of Palm Beach, Florida, he graduated from Florida State University in 2009 with a degree in sports management. He currently resides in Greenville.

Administrative Assistant

Administrative Assistant

Dana Mason

Ron Robinson

Donny JObe

Sam Linette

Gordon Rodgers

Gregor Walz

Rebekah Danklefsen

Caroline Thomas

Chaplain

Russ Bradley

Director of Video Services Russ Bradley joined the Wofford staff in July of 2010 as the Director of Video Services. Bradley will oversee an expansion of TerrierVision, and will be responsible for video services throughout the athletic department, including the training of students as members of the Video Services Department. Bradley will also work with the Wofford College Communications Department on projects. Bradley came to Wofford after 28 years in television, most recently at WSPA-TV in Spartanburg. Bradley began his television career while still in high school, worked his way through college as a reporter and photographer for his hometown television station, and during his career has covered everything from hurricanes to Super Bowls. He spent the past 11 seasons as part of the “Inside Wofford Football” television show crew. A native of Charleston, SC, Bradley is an alumnus of Leadership South Carolina and Leadership Spartanburg, and attended The Poynter Institute where he completed the Media Leadership program in 2005. Bradley also volunteers his time for several Upstate charities and his local church. He is married to Karen Bradley, executive director of TOTAL Ministries in Spartanburg.

Facilities Assistant

TY OSBORNE

Media Relations Assistant

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2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Strength and Conditioning Assistant

Marketing Assistant

Office Assistant

Athletic Training Intern


Sports Medicine Sports medicine

Regional Sports Medicine at Wofford is the official sports medicine provider of Wofford College athletics. Regional Sports Medicine at Wofford was developed in a partnership with the Spartanburg Regional Healthcare System. The goal was to elevate the care and services for student-athletes to the highest level possible. By partnering with Spartanburg Regional, the student-athletes have access to all the services and specialties of a teaching hospital as well as a Level 1 trauma center. This includes specialty physicians, diagnostic testing such as MRI and CT, pharmacy services, drug testing and nutritional counseling.

dr. Stephen kana

team orthopedist

Dr. Stephen Kana is in his twelfth year as the team orthopedist for Wofford College. The Saratoga, N.Y. native works out of the Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine Center in Spartanburg. Kana received his bachelor’s degree from the State University of New York, before receiving his medical degree from the Georgetown Medical School. He also completed his orthopaedic residency at Georgetown. Prior to coming to Spartanburg in August 1994, Kana worked at the nationally-respected Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic in Los Angeles. Kana was recognized by the Wofford Hall of Fame as an Honorary Letterman in 1999. Kana and his wife, Jean, have two daughters: Sarah, a student at Wofford, and Claire.

Dr. mack poole

team physician

Dr. Mack Poole has a long and distinguished relationship with Wofford College for over 55 years. A 1955 graduate of Wofford who received his medical degree in 1959 at the Medical University of South Carolina, Poole’s office is at the Family Medical Center in Spartanburg. He has worked with Wofford in the area of family practice since 1968. For his years of serve to all of the Terrier athletic teams, Poole was selected by the Wofford Lettermen’s Club as an Honorary Letterman in 1995. The Wofford Captain’s Council, which consists of a representative from each athletic team on campus, honored him with its Distinguished Service Award in 2001. Poole and his wife, Bert, have three children and four grandchildren.

Dr. Eric Cole

team physician

Dr. Eric Cole is in his fifth season as a team family physician for the Terriers. He is in private practice at the Family Medical Center with Dr. Poole. A 1999 graduate of Wofford College with a degree in biology, he was a four-year letterman on the football team. He earned CoSIDA Academic All-District honors as a junior and was the recipient of Carolina Panthers Post-Graduate Scholarship. He also received the Charles Bradshaw Award in 1999. He graduated from the University of South Carolina School of Medicine in 2003 and completed his residency in family practice in Greenwood, South Carolina. While in Greenwood, he was associate team doctor for Lander University. Cole and his wife, Susan, a 1998 graduate of Wofford, have two children, Andrew and Katie.

Ivan Curry

team Physical therapist

Ivan Curry is in his sixth year with Wofford as a physical therapist. In his role, he works with student-athletes in the prevention and recovery from injuries. Curry has been on the staff of Spartanburg Regional Healthcare System since 2000. He graduated from Wofford in 1990 and was a member of the soccer team for four seasons. In 2000, Curry received his Masters of Science in Rehabilitation and Physical Therapy from MUSC. His sister and three brothers also graduated from Wofford College. A native of Newtownards,

County Down, Northern Ireland, Curry became an American citizen in 2000.

will christman

head athletic trainer

Will Christman is in his third season as Wofford’s head athletic trainer. He joined the Terriers in 2008 after working the last two years at Furman University. He works primarily with the football team and oversees the athletic training room. At Furman, Christman worked with men’s basketball and men’s and women’s golf in addition to assisting with football. During the 2005 season he interned with the Buffalo Bills. He was a graduate assistant at Georgia Tech for two years while earning his masters degree at Georgia State. In 2002, he was a season-long intern for the Carolina Panthers and also worked for the Panthers during the 2001 training camp at Wofford. In addition, he has spent time as an athletic trainer at Wingate University, South Carolina, and Dreher High School. Christman is a certified athletic trainer through the National Athletic Trainers Association and is also a National Academy of Sports Medicine Performance Enhancement Specialist. He graduated from Wingate University in 1999 and 2002 with degrees in athletic training and physical education. He added a masters of sports medicine in 2005 from Georgia State.

Alyss Hart

assistant athletic trainer

Alyss Hart joined the Wofford staff in the fall of 2009 after spending two years at Auburn University. She works with the women’s basketball team along with women’s soccer and rifle. Hart graduated from Wilmington College of Ohio in 2007 with a degree in athletic training. She earned her master’s of education degree in administration of higher education with a sport management minor from Auburn in 2009. While at Auburn, Hart worked with the men’s and women’s tennis teams. A certified athletic trainer through the National Athletic Trainers’ Association, Hart also covered events such as the SEC Swimming Championships and SEC Track and Field Championships.

mark mancebo

assistant athletic trainer

Mark Mancebo is in his third season at Wofford as an assistant athletic trainer. He worked at Spartanburg Methodist College for three years as the head athletic trainer before joining Wofford in June of 2008. He works with men’s soccer and the men’s basketball teams. Mancebo graduated from Sacramento State in 2001 with a degree in kinesiology. He earned a masters degree in health science education from Western Carolina University. He was a graduate assistant athletic trainer for two years with the Catamounts, working mostly with football and men’s basketball. A certified athletic trainer through the National Athletic Trainers’ Association, Mancebo is a native of Sacramento, California.

Patrick O’Neal

assistant athletic trainer Patrick O’Neal is in his first season working at Wofford. He will work primarily with baseball and assist with football. He joins the Terrier staff after spending the last two years at The Citadel as a graduate assistant athletic trainer. In Charleston he worked with football along with baseball, basketball and track and field/cross country. O’Neal earned a bachelors degree from Appalachian State University in 2008. While a student, he worked for two years with primarily wrestling and women’s soccer. He also earned a masters degree from The Citadel in 2010. A native of Dobson, North Carolina, O’Neal is a certified athletic trainer through the National Athletic Trainers’ Association.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 39


Spartanburg

The hub city

The City’s origins predate the Revolutionary War. Spartanburg was named for a unit of American Revolution forces called the “Spartan Rifles” who helped defeat the British at the Battle of Cowpens in 1781, under the leadership of General Daniel Morgan. The town of Spartanburg was incorporated in 1831 and later as a city in 1880 by the 13 Original States and Tennessee. During this time Spartanburg was booming due in large part to the rapidly expanding textile industry. In the 1870s, Spartanburg became a railroad “hub city,” with mainline railroads extending from Magnolia Street depot in all directions, taking passengers and freight to Charleston, Augus­ta, Atlanta, Asheville, Charlotte and points beyond. As many as 90 trains per day could be seen and heard operating in Spartanburg during the golden age of the American railroad, 1900-20. During the 1920s, Spartanburg built South Caro­lina’s first municipal airport and claimed the state’s first commercial radio station (WSPA). Its leader­ship in the state was reflected by the election of several residents as governor. Thousands of U.S. soldiers bound for overseas service in World Wars I and II trained at camps in Spartanburg. The post headquarters for Camp Wadsworth (1917-19) was located at the present site of WestGate Mall, and the Camp Croft (1940-45) was located south of the city. Much of that military reservation has become Croft

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State Park. After World War II, Spartanburg made a con­certed effort to promote its location at the junction of Interstates 85 and 26 to international business. One of the greatest successes of this campaign was the development of the BMW manufacturing center near the Greenville-Spartanburg Airport. Spartanburg’s downtown, which always has been anchored by the campuses of Wofford and Converse Colleges, has been undergoing a major revival since the mid-1990s. In addition to the corporate headquarters for Denny’s, Advance America, QS-1 and several other companies, the city has acquired a magnificant public library, the Marriott Hotel at Renaissance Park and most recently, the Chapman Arts Center and the USC Upstate George Dean Johnson School of Business. The area surrounding Morgan Square gradually is redeveloping with a variety of interesting restaurants and urban apartment-style housing. Throughout the 20th century, textile manufac­turing companies formed the backbone of the Spartanburg

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

economy. The most significant of these companies still in operation is internation­ally respected Milliken & Company. Blessed by geography and climate as well as by energetic and well-educated citizenry, Spartan­burg is emerging as one of the centers of a 21st century metroplex that extends along the South Carolina portion of the I-85 corridor.


Phi Beta Kappa

PHi Phi Beta Kappa At the end of the last academic year, there were approximately 2,000 four-year colleges in the United States. Only 262 of them have the right to induct their graduates into Phi Beta Kappa, the nation’s most prestigious liberal arts honor society. There are five independent Phi Beta Kappa colleges and universities in the Carolinas: Wofford, Davidson, Duke, Furman and Wake Forest. Phi Beta Kappa has an interesting history. Founded at the College of William and Mary in December 1776, Phi Beta Kappa was the first of the Greek letter fraternities and adopted such rituals as the badge, the secret oath, and the special handclasp from the various secret societies of the day. Phi Beta Kappa, however, was also devoted to the principles of “friendship, morality, and literature (or learning),” and these characteristics gradually attained the greatest emphasis. John Quincy Adams, Edward Everett and Joseph Story, members of the Harvard chapter, are credited with making the fraternity a public literary and honor society for undergraduates in the 1830’s. Women were first admitted to Phi Beta Kappa in 1875 at the University of Vermont. Only two chapters of Phi Beta Kappa existed in the Southeast before 1900, but gradually the historic state universities and the most outstanding private colleges began to secure chapters. The process of earning a charter often takes many years and standards are very high. Final approval comes by vote of all the chapters at the triennial meetings of the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa. At the August 1994 triennial meeting in San Francisco, 53 colleges and universities sought chapters, but only seven institutions even qualified for a vote. Wofford received its chapter at the 1940 triennial meeting, bringing to fruition more than ten years of work by three Phi Beta Kappa members who were then serving on the faculty: President Henry Nelson Snyder, Dr. David Duncan Wallace, class of 1894, and Dr. John West Harris ’16, a brash and brilliant young English professor not afraid to campaign vigorously in the conviction that his alma mater deserved membership. (Dr. Harris later founded the National Beta Club, which still has its headquarters in Spartanburg).

Mary Rea ‘09 was the latest women’s soccer player to be inducted into Phi Beta Kappa at Wofford. Rea, from Charlotte, North Carolina, graduated magna cum laude with a double major in finance and philosophy with a minor in business.

With about 350,000 members across the country, Phi Beta Kappa today sponsors numerous programs to encourage scholarship and learning, including the Phi Beta Kappa Book Awards and the visiting scholar, academic fellowship and leadership programs.

For these reasons, Phi Beta Kappa Day at Wofford has institutional significance, as well as being especially memorable for the new members, each of whom will receive the traditional Phi Beta Kappa watch key or pin.

Wofford’s Phi Beta Kappa Student-Athletes Name Sport Abigail A. Anderson ‘05 Women’s Soccer Katerine R. Annas ‘00 Tennis William Hawksley Barbee ’60 Basketball Margaret W. Barrett ’96 Volleyball John Patrick Batten, Jr. ’80 Basketball, Football Edward Milton Berckman ’52 Track Angela Colleen Berry ‘06 Volleyball Edward Barton Blackmon, Jr. ’74 Track Lauren MacKenzie Bosshardt ‘08 Cross Country/Track Thomas Leinbach Bower, III ’74 Football, Baseball Brandon M. Boyce ‘01 Basketball Kevin Mark Bringewatt ’89 Baseball William K. Brumbach III ‘00 Cross Country Thomas Casey Brittain ’75 Football George W. Burdette III ‘03 Men’s Soccer Timothy H. Burwell ’80 Baseball James Harold Chandler ’71 Football Augustus McKee Chreitzberg, Jr. ’47 Tennis Aaron Curtis Cole ’94 Cross Country Jessica Scheel Connett ‘07 Women’s Soccer Troy Michael Cox ’89 Cross Country Robert Scott Creveling ’74 Football Jonathan Dean Crumly ’91 Men’s Soccer Kenneth Joseph Davis ’59 Swimming Phillip Mark Dempsey ’90 Football Meredith P. Denton ‘00 Basketball Beverly Thomas Duncan ’69 Basketball Dendy E. Engelman ‘98 Volleyball Heidi Faber ’85 Volleyball Jennifer M. Ferguson ‘05 Rifle William Harvey Floyd, Jr. ’53 Tennis Joseph Edward Fornadel III ‘10 Football Benjamin J. Foster ‘02 Football LuAnne Vaughan Gatlin ’86 Volleyball Coleman Lane Glaze ’88 Baseball Scott Timothy Gould ’81 Basketball Cole Blease Graham, Jr. ’64 Baseball Joseph Andrew Green ’94 Football Donald James Grenier ’62 Golf Clary H. Groen ‘96 Golf Kristian P. Gusmer ‘00 Cross Country Kelly Ann Harvey ’92 Cross Country John Arthur Hendrix ’68 Baseball, Basketball Kristen A. Hite ‘00 Track William Stanley Hoole ’24 Baseball Courtney A. Howe ‘97 Volleyball Jonathan Douglas Hufford ‘09 Football April Lynn Hughes ’90 Volleyball Charles Haskell Hughes, Jr. ’81 Football Thomas Lloyd Jackson ’76 Football Elizabeth Bohlen Jeter ’93 Tennis Gerald Kenneth Johnson ’76 Football William R. Johnson ‘02 Tennis Larry Hudson Jones ’70 Basketball Scott H. Jones ‘98 Football Heidi M. Kadous ‘03 Volleyball

Name Sport William Paul Keesley ’75 Track C. Bailey King, Jr. ‘02 Football Meredith A. Knox ‘99 Volleyball, Basketball James William Logan ’86 Cross Country William Steven Lowrance ‘58 Football Lindsay R. Lyman ‘04 Volleyball Kathryn S. Maloney ‘04 Rifle Rudolph Ernest Mancke, III ’67 Football Michael Christopher Marshall ’83 Football Mary Beth Martin ‘00 Tennis Stephanie H. Martin ’97 Volleyball Jonathan Virett Maxwell ’71 Basketball Samuel Jesse McCoy ’25 Track Mary Ann McCrackin ’85 Volleyball Daniel Baker Morrison, Jr. ’75 Basketball Horace William Mullinax ’50 Baseball Stephen Christopher Mullins ’78 Men’s Soccer Jennifer A. Nett ‘02 Basketball William A. Newell ‘98 Cross Country Curt L. Nichols ‘96 Men’s Soccer John B. Nichols ‘01 Football Charles Phifer Nicholson ’82 Football George Bryan Nicholson, Jr. ’75 Football Albert Cook Outler ’28 Cross Country/Track Christi R. Owen ‘96 Tennis Kyung Seok Paek ’82 Soccer Edwin Thomas Parham, III ’94 Tennis Pamela Gaye Parnell ’83 Volleyball Manoj Pariyadath ‘98 Tennis Dwight Fleming Patterson, Sr. ’29 Cross Country/Track Rebecca J. Paulson ‘03 Volleyball Richard Duncan Pinson ’72 Basketball Thomas Clark Powell ‘09 Men’s Soccer Ray Hampton Price ’74 Track J. Bishop Ravenel ‘01 Basketball Jordan Whitney Rawl’10 Rifle Mary Alexander Rea ‘09 Women’s Soccer Robert Bruce Remler ’79 Golf Leah Karen Rhodes ’82 Volleyball, Basketball Carolyn Sophia Rivers ‘09 Volleyball Wendy M. Rohr ‘04 Tennis Neill Russell Sandifer ‘07 Men’s Soccer Kathleen Grace Sobczyk ‘06 Volleyball Faith A. Stewart ‘03 Women’s Soccer Reddick Bowman Still, III ’58 Golf, Football Allen Heath Stokes, Jr. ’64 Golf Meredith Lucille Swittenberg ’91 Tennis Brian William Thomas ’83 Men’s Soccer Robert E. Tibbetts ‘04 Men’s Soccer Stephen Michael Tomasovich ’90 Basketball Allyson C. Varn ‘99 Basketball Cheryl Elizabeth Vickers ’87 Basketball Albert Theodore Watson ’43 Football Wallace Steadman Watson ’58 Track Kirk Austin Whitehead ‘10 Men’s Golf Laura Lynne Wilkinson ’83 Basketball

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 41


Southern Conference

The Southern Conference

The Southern Conference, which began its 90th season of intercollegiate competition in 2010, is a national leader in emphasizing the development of the student-athlete and in helping to build lifelong leaders and role models. The Southern Conference has been on the forefront of innovation and originality in developing creative solutions to address issues facing intercollegiate athletics. From establishing the first conference basketball tournament (1921), tackling the issue of freshmen eligibility (1922), developing women’s championships (1984), to becoming the first conference to install the three-point goal in basketball (1980), the Southern Conference has been a pioneer. The Southern Conference is the nation’s fifth-oldest NCAA Division I collegiate athletic association. Only the Big Ten (1896), the Missouri Valley (1907), the Pacific 10 (1915) and the Southwestern Athletic (1920) conferences are older in terms of origination. Academic excellence has been a major part of the Southern Conference’s tradition. Hundreds of Southern Conference student-athletes have been recognized on ESPN The Magazine/ CoSIDA Academic All-America and all-district teams. A total of 19 Rhodes Scholarship winners have been selected from

conference institutions. The Conference currently consists of 12 members in five states throughout the Southeast and sponsors 19 varsity sports and championships that produce participants for NCAA Division I Championships. The Southern Conference offices are located in the historic Beaumont Mill in Spartanburg, S.C. A textile mill that was in operation from 1880 until 1999, Beaumont Mill was renovated in 2004 and today offers the league first class meeting areas and offices as well as a spacious library for storage of the conference’s historical documents. Membership History On Feb. 25, 1921, representatives from 14 of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association’s (SIAA) 30 members met at Atlanta’s Piedmont Hotel to establish the Southern Intercollegiate Conference. On hand at the inaugural meeting were officials from Alabama, Alabama Polytechnic Institute (Auburn), Clemson, Georgia, Georgia School of Technology (Georgia Tech), Kentucky, Maryland, Mississippi A&M (Mississippi State), North Carolina, North Carolina State, Tennessee, Virginia, Virginia Polytechnic Institute (Virginia Tech)

The Southern Conference office is located in the refurbished Beaumont Mill in Spartanburg, less than a mile from the Wofford campus.

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2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

and Washington & Lee. Dr. S.V. Sanford of Georgia was chosen as acting chairman and N.W. Dougherty of Tennessee was named secretary. The decision to form a new athletic conference was motivated by the desire to have a workable number of conference games for each league member. With 30 schools in the SIAA by the early 1920s, it was impossible to play every school at least once during the regular season and many schools went several years between playing some conference members. In addition, in 1920, the SIAA voted down proposed rules that an athlete must be in a college a year before playing on its teams and refused to abolish a rule permitting athletes to play summer baseball for money. Play began in the fall of 1921 and a year later, six more schools joined the fledgling league including Tulane (which had attended the inaugural meeting but had elected not to join), Florida, Louisiana (LSU), Mississippi, South Carolina and Vanderbilt. VMI joined in 1925 and Duke was added in 1929. By the 1930s, membership in the Southern Conference had reached 23 schools. C.P. “Sally” Miles of Virginia Tech, president of the Southern Conference, called the annual league meeting to order on Dec. 9, 1932 at the Farragut Hotel in Knoxville, Tenn. Georgia’s Dr. Sanford announced that 13 institutions west and south of the Appalachian Mountains were reorganizing as the Southeastern Conference. Members of the new league included Alabama, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Florida, Georgia, Georgia School of Technology, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Mississippi A&M, University of the South, Tennessee, Tulane and Vanderbilt. According to the minutes of the meeting, Dr. Sanford stated that the division was made along geographical lines. Florida’s


Southern Conference Southern Conference Members

Dr. J.J. Tigert, acting as spokesman for the withdrawing group, regretted the move but believed it was necessary as the Southern Conference had grown too large. The resignations were accepted and the withdrawing schools formed the new league which began play in 1932. The Southern Conference continued with membership of 10 institutions including Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina, Virginia, VMI, Virginia Tech and Washington & Lee. The second major shift occurred some 20 years later. By 1952, the Southern Conference included 17 colleges and universities. Another split occurred when seven schools including Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina and Wake Forest departed to form the Atlantic Coast Conference which began play in 1953. The revamped Southern Conference included members The Citadel, Davidson, Furman, George Washington, Richmond, VMI, Virginia Tech, Washington & Lee, West Virginia and William & Mary. Today, the league continues to thrive with a membership that includes 12 institutions and a footprint that spans five states: Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama and Georgia. Current league members are Appalachian State, College of Charleston, The Citadel, Davidson, Elon, Furman, Georgia Southern, UNC Greensboro, Samford, Chattanooga, Western Carolina and Wofford. Championship History The first Southern Conference Championship was the league basketball tournament held in Atlanta in 1922. The North Carolina Tar Heels won the tournament to become the first recognized league champion in any sport. The Southern Conference Tournament remains the oldest of its kind in college basketball. Commissioner Germann spearheaded the Southern Conference’s expansion to include women’s athletics during the 1983-84 season. That year, league championships were held in volleyball, basketball and tennis. Cross country joined the mix in 1985 and the league began holding indoor and outdoor track championships in 1988. Most recently, the conference instituted golf and softball championships in the spring of 1994 and added soccer in the fall of 1994. The Southern Conference declares champions in 10 men’s

sports - football, soccer, cross country, basketball, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, wrestling, baseball, tennis and golf - and nine women’s sports - soccer, volleyball, cross country, basketball, indoor track and field, outdoor track & field, tennis, golf and softball. Wofford won the 2003 and 2007 SoCon Football Championships.

Alabama (1921-1932) Appalachian State (1971-present) Auburn (1921-1932) College of Charleston (1998-present) Chattanooga (1976-present) The Citadel (1936-present) Clemson (1921-1953) Davidson (1936-1988, 1991-present) Duke (1928-1953) East Carolina (1964-1976) East Tennessee State (1978-2005) Elon (2003-present) Florida (1922-1932) Furman (1936-present) George Washington (1936-1970) Georgia (1921-1932) Georgia Southern (1991-present) Georgia Tech (1921-1932) Kentucky (1921-1932) Louisiana State (1922-1932) Marshall (1976-1997) Maryland (1921-1953) Mississippi (1922-1932) Mississippi State (1921-1932) North Carolina (1921-1953) North Carolina at Greensboro (1997-present) North Carolina State (1921-1953) Richmond (1936-1976) Samford (2008-present) South Carolina (1922-1953) Tennessee (1921-1932) Tulane (1922-1932) University of the South (1922-1932) Vanderbilt (1922-1932) Virginia (1921-1937) VMI (1924-2003) Virginia Tech (1921-1965) Wake Forest (1936-1953) Washington & Lee (1921-1958) West Virginia (1950-1968) Western Carolina (1976-present) William & Mary (1936-1977) Wofford (1997-present) Bold indicates current conference member

Wofford won the 2009 Men’s Soccer Regular Season and Tournament Championships.

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide 43


Wofford Hall of Fame

2009 Wofford Athletic Hall of Fame Inductees PRE-LETTERMAN’S CLUB Claude S. Finney ’29 Ted M. Phelps ’69 David Lemmons ’66 Warren Whittaker ’67 Daniel Lewis ’62 William Barbee ’60 Jerry Richardson ’59 Charles Bradshaw ’59 Trapier Hart ’60 George Lyons ’65 William Ziegler ’67 Donald Williams ’67 Harold Chandler ’71 Sterling Allen ’73 Stan Littlejohn ’73

POST-LETTERMAN’S CLUB 1979 – Joel Robertson ’41 1979 – C.B. Mooneyham ’34 1979 – P.J. Boatwright ’49 1979 – Elby Hammett ’49 1979 – Charlie Seay ’48 1979 – Phil Dickens 1980 – Gene Alexander 1980 – Warren Ariail ’49 1980 – Lou Bouknight ’33 1980 – Aubrey Faust ’42 1980 – James Neal ’53 1980 – Bob Prevatte ’50 1981 – A.B. Bullington ’33 1981 – Sammy Sewell ’50 1981 – Vernon Quick ’51 1981 – Jimmy Hilton ’42 1981 – Skip Corn ’73 1981 – Conley Snidow 1982 – William Childs ’25 1982 – Lorine King ’51 1982 – Jack Beeler ’52 1982 – Bob Pollard ’52 1982 – Bill Moody ’53 1982 – Jim Brakefield 1983 – Earle Buice 1983 – Don Fowler ’57 1983 – Ricky Satterfield ’76 1984 – Wally Dean ’50 1984 – Joe Hazle ’55 1984 – Bill Scheerer 1984 – Willie Varner ’52 1985 – Jack Abell ’54 1985 – Clifford Boyd ’71 1985 – Philip Clark ’50 1985 – Robert Jordan ’71 1986 – Thomas Bower ’74 1986 – Fisher DeBerry ’60 1986 – James Gordon ’52 1986 – Doug Lowe ’75 1986 – Harvey Moyer ’50 1987 – Coy Gibson ’75 1987 – George Rice ’57

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Football Football Track Football Football Basketball Football Football Basketball Basketball Golf Football Football Football Golf BKB/FB/BB Basketball/Baseball Golf Football Basketball Coach Coach Trainer Football Football/Basketball Basketball Football Basketball Football Football Football Football/Track Coach Tennis Football Football Football Basketball Coach Coach Basketball Football Basketball Football Special Football/Track Football/Basketball Football FB/BKB/BB Football Football Coach Football Basketball Football Football/Basketball Football

1988 – LeNoid Best ’82 1988 – Carter Davis, Jr. ’75 1988 – Alfred McGinnis ’56 1989 – William Carpenter ’58 1989 – Frank Ellerbe ’18 1990 – Thomas McIntyre ’56 1991 – Sid Allred ’70 1991 – Meg Hunt ’84 1991 – Jim Clary ’49 1991 – Bruce Johnson ’70 1991 – Eli Sanders ’54 1992 – Buddy Hayes ’66 1992 – Tim Renfrow ’83 1992 – Ronny Wilson ’72 1993 – Vic Lipscomb ’70 1993 – Tori Quick ’87 1994 – Fred “Skinny” Powers ’51 1994 – James Blair ’83 1995 – Pablo De Freitas ’87 1995 – Judy Nwajiaku ’90 1996 – Jimmy Littlefield ’69 1996 – Robert Mickle ’85 1997 – Bret Masters ’89 1997 – Lou McCullough ’49 1997 – Greg O’Dell ’92 1998 – Shawn Graves ’93 1998 – Clay Griffin ’88 1999 – Keith Kinard ’80 1999 – Justin Laughlin ’94 1999 – Tony Peay ’79 1999 – Wayne Rice ’87 1999 – Jason Smoak ’93 2000 – Libby Corry ’95 2000 – Bud Gault ’35 2000 – Tim Wallace ’83 2001 – Louise Maynard ’96 2001 – Willie Pegram ’68 2002 – Chad McLain ’91 2002 – Danny Morrison ’75 2003 – Dan Williams ’98 2003 – Brigid Meadow ’98 2003 – A.M. Chreitzberg 1895 2004 – Dr. Sam Black ’11 2004 – Mark Line 2005 – Stephon Blanding ’90 2005 – Brenda Jackson ’94 2005 – Darrell Brown ’86 2006 – Brian Bodor ’01 2006 – Ian Chadwick ’01 2007 – Bobby Cannon ’50 2007 – Seth Chadwick ’97 2007 – Jenny Nett ’02 2008 – Travis Wilson ‘03 2008 – Nathan Fuqua ‘03 2008 – Michael Lenzly ‘03 2009 – Heidi Best ‘01 2009 – Jimmy Miner ‘04 2009 – Matt Nelson ‘04 2009 – Wendy Rohr ‘04 2010 – Lee Basinger ‘05

2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Football Football Football FB/Basketball Baseball Baseball Football Women’s Basketball Football Football Football Basketball Football/Baseball Football Golf Women’s Basketball Basketball Basketball Soccer W. Basketball/VB Basketball Basketball Football/Baseball Administrator Basketball Football Baseball Football Baseball Soccer/Baseball Basketball Golf Women’s Basketball Football/Baseball/Track Baseball Women’s Tennis Basketball Baseball Athletic Director Football Women’s Soccer Baseball/Football Coach Baseball Coach Men’s Basketball Women’s Basketball Men’s Golf Football Men’s Basketball Football Men’s Basketball Women’s Basketball Football Football Men’s Basketball Women’s Soccer Football Football Women’s Tennis Football

2010 – Eric Deutsch ‘05 2010 – William McGirt ‘01 2010 – Ed Wile ‘73

HONORARY LETTERMAN Bernard Harrelson Durwood Hatchell Dick Hardy Charles Newcome John Holliday Walter Booth Bobby Ivey Jesse Davis Larry Smith Cleveland Harley Joe Lesesne Junie White Keith Laws Ray Leonard James Talley Ray Henderson Mack Poole Talmage Skinner Ralph Voyles Lee Hanning Steve Kana John Keith, Jr. Mark Hauser Greg McKinney Tom Brown Pete Yanity Toccoa Switzer Bob Pinson Gordon Orr Woody Willard ’74 Dr. Dan Maultsby ’61 Bill Drake Lucy Quinn ‘83 Mike Brown ‘76 Joe E. Taylor ‘80

DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD

Harry Williams Bob Pinson Ron Smith Jimmy Gibbs Douglas Joyce Martha Andrews Lt. Col. (ret.) Joe Miller Homozel Mickel Daniel (awarded posthumously) George Todd Joe Lesesne Robert Chapman ’49 Roger Milliken Cleveland Harley ’50 Grady Stewart ’50 Robbie Atkins ’65 Grover Eaker ‘34 (awarded posthumously) Eli Sanders ‘54 Ann C. Johnson

Football Men’s Golf Football 1981 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 1999 2000 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2010 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010



2010 Wofford Women’s Soccer Schedule

Aug. 14 Aug. 20 Aug. 22 Aug. 27 Aug. 29 Sept. 5 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 24 Sept. 26 Oct. 1 Oct. 3 Oct. 7 Oct. 10 Oct. 15 Oct. 17 Oct. 22 Oct. 24 Oct. 27 Oct. 31 Nov. 5 and 7

Winthrop (exhibition) at Troy at Alabama State Presbyterian College at Francis Marion USC Upstate at UNC Asheville Converse at Georgia Southern * at Davidson * Western Carolina * Appalachian State * Samford * at Chattanooga * UNC Greensboro * Elon * at The Citadel * at College of Charleston* Furman * SoCon Tournament First Round SoCon Tournament

* - Southern Conference match Home matches in bold played at Snyder Field

6:00 pm 3:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 4:00 pm 2:00 pm 1:00 pm 2:00 pm 4:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 7:00 pm 2:00 pm 3:00 pm 1:00 pm 7:00 pm (campus sites) (Cullowhee, N.C.)


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