2005 NCAA Men's and Women's Soccer Records Book
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2021 Record Book 5 Single-Season Records
PROGRAM RECORDS TEAM INDIVIDUAL Game Game Goals .......................................................11 vs. Old Dominion, 10/1/71 Goals .................................................. 5, Bill Hodill vs. Davidson, 10/17/42 ............................................................11 vs. Richmond, 10/20/81 Assists ................................................. 4, Damian Silvera vs. UNC, 9/27/92 Assists ......................................................11 vs. Virginia Tech, 9/14/94 ..................................................... 4, Richie Williams vs. VCU, 9/13/89 Points .................................................................... 30 vs. VCU, 9/13/89 ........................................... 4, Kris Kelderman vs. Charleston, 9/10/89 Goals Allowed .................................................12 vs. Maryland, 10/8/41 ...........................................4, Chick Cudlip vs. Wash. & Lee, 11/13/62 Margin of Victory ....................................11-0 vs. Old Dominion, 10/1/71 Points ................................................ 10, Bill Hodill vs. Davidson, 10/17/42 Fastest Goal to Start Match .........................................................11-0 vs. Richmond, 10/20/81 .................................:09, Alecko Eskandarian vs. American, 10/26/02* Margin of Defeat ..........................................12-0 vs. Maryland, 10/8/41 Largest Crowd (Scott) .......................................7,311 vs. Duke, 10/8/88 *Tied for 3rd fastest in an NCAA Soccer Game Largest Crowd (Klöckner) ......................7,906 -
Men's Soccer Records Book
Men’s Championship Records Division I Championship Records ......... 2 Division II Championship Records ....... 9 Division III Championship Records ...... 15 2 DIVISION I MEN’S CHAMPIONSHIP RECOrdS Division I Men’s Championship Notre Dame 2, Oakland 1 Wake Forest 2, Virginia Tech 0 2007 Results West Virginia 1, Virginia 0 Goals by period 1 2 Total Wake Forest 1, Furman 0 Virginia Tech ............................................................. 0 0 0 Wake Forest .............................................................. 0 2 2 FIRST ROUND THIRD ROUND Massachusetts 2, Boston U. 1 Massachusetts 3, Central Conn. St. 1 SCORING SUMMARY Central Conn. St. 3, Harvard 2 Ill.-Chicago 1, Creighton 0 50:19 WF Marcus Tracy (Sam Cronin) *Ill.-Chicago 0, St. Louis 0 (2 ot, pk) Ohio St. 4, UC Santa Barb. 3 (2 ot) 82:41 WF Tracy (Zack Schilawski) SMU 1, Gonzaga 0 Bradley 3, Maryland 2 (2 ot) Shots: Virginia Tech 6, Wake Forest 8. Louisville 1, Duke 0 Connecticut 5, South Fla. 0 Saves: Virginia Tech 3 (Markus Aigner 3), Wake Forest 3 Washington 1, Portland 0 Virginia Tech 1, Old Dominion 0 (Brian Edwards 3). Loyola (Md.) 2, Liberty 0 Notre Dame 2, Santa Clara 0 Fouls: Virginia Tech 12, Wake Forest 13. Bradley 2, DePaul 0 Wake Forest 3, West Virginia 1 Corner Kicks: Virginia Tech 9, Wake Forest 4. *Vermont 1, Dartmouth 1 (2 ot, pk) Attendance: 8,611. South Fla. 2, Colgate 1 QUARTERFINALS California 2, UC Davis 1 (2 ot) Massachusetts 2, Ill.-Chicago 1 CHAMPIONSHIP Old Dominion 1, Providence 0 Ohio St. 4, Bradley 0 DECEMBER 16 AT CARY, N.C. UCLA 1, New Mexico 0 Virginia Tech 1, Connecticut 0 Wake Forest 2, Ohio St. -
Division I Men's Soccer Records
DIVISION I MEN’S SOCCER RECORDS Individual Records 2 Individual Leaders 3 Annual Individual Champions 10 Team Records 12 Team Leaders 14 2017 Most-Improved Teams 20 Annual Team Champions 21 Final Coaches’ Polls 23 Final Soccer America Polls 28 Division I Winningest Teams 32 INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Official NCAA Division I men’s soccer records Career (Minimum 45 Goals) Career (Minimum 2,500 Minutes) began with the 1959 season and are based on 2.31—Herb Schmidt, Rutgers, 1959-61 (90 in 0.34—Tony Meola, Virginia, 1988-89 (11 GA in information submitted to the NCAA statistics ser- 39 games) 2,922 min.) vice by institutions participating in the statistics rankings. Career records of players include only Assists Solo Shutouts those years in which they competed in Division Game Season I. Annual champions started in the 1998 season, 7—Mike Granelli, Saint Peter’s vs. NYU, Oct. 18—John Putna, Indiana, 1979; David Meves, which was the first year the NCAA compiled 17, 1985 Akron, 2009 (25 games played); Trey Muse, weekly leaders. In statistical rankings, the round- Season Indiana, 2017 (25 games played) ing of percentages and/or averages may indicate 24—Ben Ferry, George Washington, 1997 (18 Career ties where none exists. In these cases, the numeri- games) 55—David Meves, Akron, 2009-12 cal order of the rankings is accurate. Must have Career completed career to be ranked in per game career 66—Dante Washington, Radford, 1988-92 (88 Goalkeeper Minutes categories. games) Played Assists Per Game Career Season 8,608—David Meves, Akron, 2009-12 SCORING 1.64—Joe Casucci, Niagara, 1970 (23 in 14 games) Points Career (Minimum 30 Assists) 0.95—Hayden Knight, Marquette, 1976-79 (42 MISCELLANEOUS Game in 44 games) 18—Jim McMillan, Cleveland St. -
2008 NCAA Men's Soccer Records (Division I Records)
Division I Men’s Records Individual Records ....................................... 2 Individual Leaders ....................................... 2 Annual Individual Champions ............... 7 Team Records ................................................ 8 Team Leaders ................................................. 8 Annual Team Champions ......................... 12 2007 Most Improved Teams .................... 13 Polls .................................................................... 13 2 INDIVIDUal RECORDS Individual Records Official NCAA Division I men's soccer records GOALS PER GAME Career began with the 1959 season and are based on Season 12.08—Dale Hetherington, Western Mich., 1973-76 (604 information submitted to the NCAA statistics ser- 2.71—Thompson Usiyan, Appalachian St., 1980 (46 in in 50 games) vice by institutions participating in the statistics 17 games) SAVE PERCENTAGE rankings. Career records of players include only Career (Min. 45 Goals) Season those years in which they competed in Division 2.31—Herb Schmidt, Rutgers, 1959-61 (90 in 39 games) .955—Joe Zimka, Northern Ill., 2006 (3 GA, 64 saves in I. Annual champions started in the 1998 season, 15 games) which was the first year the NCAA compiled ASSISTS weekly leaders. In statistical rankings, the round- Game GOALS-AGAINST AVERAGE ing of percentages and/or averages may indicate 7—Mike Granelli, St. Peter’s vs. New York U., Oct. 17, 1985 Season (Min. 1,200 Minutes) ties where none exist. In these cases, the numeri- Season 0.21—Joe Zimka, Northern Ill., 2006 (3 GA in 1,304 min.) 24—Ben Ferry, George Washington, 1997 (18 games) Career (Min. 2,500 Minutes) cal order of the rankings is accurate. Career 0.34—Tony Meola, Virginia, 1988-89 (11 GA in 2,922 min.) 66—Dante Washington, Radford, 1988-92 (88 games) GOALKEEPER MINUTES PLAYED Scoring ASSISTS PER GAME 8,489—Brian Edwards, Wake Forest, 2004-07 Season 1.64—Joe Casucci, Niagara, 1970 (23 in 14 games) POINTS Career (Min. -
The Impact of Designated Players in Major League Soccer
Superstar Salaries and Soccer Success: The Impact of Designated Players in Major League Soccer Dennis Coates Department of Economics University of Maryland, Baltimore County Bernd Frick Department of Management University of Paderborn Todd Jewell Department of Economics University of North Texas December 2012 Abstract This study estimates the relationship between production and salary structure in Major League Soccer (MLS), the highest level of professional soccer (association football) in North America. Soccer production, measured as league-points-per- game, is modeled as a function of a team’s total wage bill, the distribution of the team’s wage bill, and goals per game. Both the gini coefficient and the coefficient of variation are utilized to measure salary inequality. The results indicate that production in MLS is negatively responsive to increases in the salary inequality; this effect is consistently significant when using the coefficient of variation to measure dispersion. 1 I. Introduction Economic theory indicates that the distribution of salaries can affect the productivity of workers and firms. In the theory of tournaments, Lazear and Rosen (1981) discuss the possibility that greater salary inequality can lead to more worker effort and increased productivity. However, cohesion theory (Levine, 1991) implies firms may be able to increase the productivity of workers by equalizing salaries, since a more equal salary distribution will increase unity within the firm. The implication is that firms with more equal salary distributions will be more productive than similar firms with less equal salary structures. The present study attempts to shed light on the question of the connection between salary structure and productivity using professional sports data. -
2015 Media Guide
2015 MEDIA GUIDE Updated Through: March 27, 2015 League Information Website: www.NASL.com Phone: (646) 832-3565 Fax: (646) 832-3581 Facebook: /NASLFanPage Twitter: @NASLOfficial, @LaCanchaNASL Mailing Address: North American Soccer League 112 West 34th Street – Suite 2110 New York, NY 10120 Media Contacts: Neal Malone Director of Public Relations Contact: (708) 712-5709 [email protected] Steven Torres Manager of Public Relations & International/Hispanic Media Contact: (646) 785-1155 [email protected] Jack Bell Senior Media Specialist Contact: (201) 881-6800 [email protected] Matthew Levine Digital Content Manager Contact: (516) 972-1267 [email protected] The 2015 North American Soccer League Media Guide was published by the North American Soccer League, LLC. Edited & Written by: Steven Torres, Matthew Levine Layout & Design: Michael Maselli Front Cover: A celebration of 2014 season champions from Minnesota United FC (Spring) San Antonio Scorpions (Fall) and The Championship Final Table of Contents About the NASL �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 2-3 The Commissioner / Board Of Governors ���������������������������������������������������������������������������� 4-5 Directors & Staff �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������6 COMPETITION FORMAT ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������7 Rules & Regulations ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� -
200-242 MLS.Pdf
mls staff directory 420 Fifth Avenue, 7th Floor New York, New York 10018 Phone (212) 450-1200 Fax (212) 450-1300 www.MLSnet.com DON GARBER MLS Commissioner COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE LEGAL Commissioner Don Garber VP Business and Legal Affairs William Z. Ordower President, MLS Mark Abbott Legal Counsel Jennifer Duberstein President, SUM Doug Quinn Associate Legal Counsel Brett Lashbrook Executive VP MLS JoAnn Neale Administrator, Legal Jasmin Rivera Chief Financial Officer Sean Prendergast Sr. VP of Strategic Business Development Nelson Rodriguez BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Special Assistant to the Commissioner Ali Curtis Exec. Vice President, SUM Kathryn Carter Executive Assistant to the Commissioner Erin Grady VP, Business Development Michael Gandler Executive Assistant to Mark Abbott Ashley Drezner Director, Online Ad Network Chris Schlosser Manager, Business Development Courtney Carter BROADCASTING Manager, Business Development Steve Jolley Executive Producer, Broadcasting/SUM Michael Cohen Manager, Business Development Anthony Rivera Director, Broadcasting Larry Tiscornia Executive Assistant, SUM Monique Beau Manager, Broadcasting Jason Saghini Executive Assistant, SUM Alyssa Enverga Coordinator, Broadcasting Johanna Rojas Consultant, SUM Dave Mosca Consultant, Digital Strategy Ahmed El-Kadars COMMUNICATIONS AND MLS INTERNET NETWORK Sr. VP, Marketing and Communications Dan Courtemanche PARTNERSHIP MARKETING Director, Communications Will Kuhns Vice President, Partnership Marketing David Wright Director, International Communications Marisabel Munoz -
Southern Connecticut State University Athletics
Southern Connecticut State University Athletics CORPORATE SPONSOR MENU A TRADITION OF EXCELLENCE 10 NCAA TEAM TITLES 80 NCAA INDIVIDUAL TITLES 1,200+ ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS ABOUT SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT STATE ATHLETICS Southern Connecticut State University’s alumni, faculty, staff and friends are an affluent, influential group and represent a choice audience for a corporation's marketing, promotions and public relations efforts. As a member of the Connecticut State University system, the state, regional and national resource potential of the SCSU athletic program is unlimited. SCSU’s 19 intercollegiate programs recruit regionally, nationally and internationally, thus the Owls’ following and alumni base reflects that diversity. Southern Connecticut State University has set a unique standard of excellence in academics and athletics, a trend that will continue in the years ahead. The Owls consistently rank among the top Division II programs in the NCAA, as evidenced by 80 individual National Championships and 10 Team Championships. In addition, the Owls have produced more than 1,200 All-Americans, which ranks among the best in the nation. From the Olympics to the Super Bowl to the Pan American Games, current student-athletes and athletic alumni continually carry the Southern Connecticut State University name on the world’s biggest stages. Southern Connecticut State University Athletics • www.southernctowls.com ABOUT SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT STATE ATHLETICS The Owls’ teams annually compete against some of the top athletic and academic institutions in the nation, including: Yale University, Brown University, Dartmouth College, the University of Maryland, Princeton University, the University of Miami, the University of South Carolina, the University of Connecticut, the University of Massachusetts, the University of Rhode Island, Providence College, Rutgers University, and Marist College. -
Division I Men's Soccer Records
DIVISION I MEN’S SOCCER RECORDS Individual Records 2 Individual Leaders 3 Annual Individual Champions 16 Team Records 18 Team Leaders 20 2019 Most Improved Teams 28 Annual Team Champions 29 Final Coaches’ Polls 31 Final Soccer America Polls 38 Division I Winningest Teams 43 INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Official NCAA Division I men’s soccer records Career (Minimum 45 Goals) Career (Minimum 2,500 Minutes) began with the 1959 season and are based on 2.31—Herb Schmidt, Rutgers, 1959-61 (90 in 0.34—Tony Meola, Virginia, 1988-89 (11 GA in information submitted to the NCAA statistics ser- 39 games) 2,922 min.) vice by institutions participating in the statistics rankings. Career records of players include only Assists Solo Shutouts those years in which they competed in Division Game Season I. Annual champions started in the 1998 season, 7—Mike Granelli, Saint Peter’s vs. NYU, Oct. 18—John Putna, Indiana, 1979; David Meves, which was the first year the NCAA compiled 17, 1985 Akron, 2009 (25 games played); Trey Muse, weekly leaders. In statistical rankings, the round- Season Indiana, 2017 (25 games played) ing of percentages and/or averages may indicate 24—Ben Ferry, George Washington, 1997 (18 Career ties where none exists. In these cases, the numeri- games) 55—David Meves, Akron, 2009-12 cal order of the rankings is accurate. Must have Career completed career to be ranked in per game career 66—Dante Washington, Radford, 1988-92 (88 Goalkeeper Minutes categories. games) Played Assists Per Game Career Season 8,608—David Meves, Akron, 2009-12 SCORING 2.30—Adam Pintz, Cleveland St., 1959 (23 in 10 games) Points Career (Minimum 30 Assists) 1.43—Adam Pintz, Cleveland St., 1955-56, MISCELLANEOUS Game 58-59 (46 in 32 games) 18—Jim McMillan, Cleveland St. -
Division I Men's Soccer Championships Records Book
DIVISION I MEN’S SOCCER CHAMPIONSHIPS RECORDS BOOK 2016 Championship 2 History 3 All-Time Results 13 Brackets 23 2016 CHAMPIONSHIP HIGHLIGHTS Stanford wins College Cup championship in penalty kicks: For the second consecutive season, the Stanford Cardinal are the kings of college soccer. They defeated No. 2 national seed Wake Forest in a 5-4 shootout following a 0-0 draw at BBVA Compass Stadium in Houston. Stanford is the third team to win the national title while not surrendering a goal in the NCAA tournament (Wisconsin 1995, San Francisco 1976). “For me, it is very, very special,” Stanford midfielder Drew Skundrich said. “I think, we look at the squad we had last year and said, ‘Wow, we had some incredible individual players, some incredible talent all over the field.’ Going into winter, something just felt like a little missing, we just had to take that time to encourage and develop every single one of our players into something special like those guys were last year. Over time we did that, we did very well in spring, everyone trained hard over summer and we got after it right away during preseason and dropping those first few games it just made us realize that this is a new year, new team, new challenges and we need to take everything we can to get back to this stage and that’s what we did.” The match had plenty of drama and opportunities despite the lack of goals. The teams battled back and forth for 110 minutes, with no one able to break through. -
Radio/Tv Roster
2 0 1 5 I N D I A N A M E N ’ S S O C C E R E I G H T - T I M E N A T I O N A L C H A M P I O N S TRADITION UNRIVALED ST. JOHN’S 8•28 / NOTRE DAME 8•30 UAB 9•4 / USF 9•6 / Penn State 9•13 / Butler 9•16 / RUTGERS 9•20 / EVANSVILLE 9•23 Northwestern 9•27 / Saint Louis 9•30 / IUPUI 10•7 / OHIO STATE 10•10 / Maryland 10•16 LOUISVILLE 10•20 / MICHIGAN 10•24 / WISCONSIN 10•31 / Michigan State 11•4 Big Ten Tournament Quarterfinals 11•8 / Big Ten Tournament Finals 11•13-15 NCAA College Cup at Sporting Park, Kansas City 12•11-13 IUHOOSIERS.com @IUMensSoccer IUMensSoccer Schedule subject to change. Home games in bold. Game times on IUHoosiers.com 2015 INDIANA HOOSIERS RADIO/TV ROSTER 0 SEAN CAULFIELD 1 COLIN WEBB 2 BILLY MCCONNELL 3 DEREK CREVISTON 4 FEMI HOLLINGER-JANZEN 5 GRANT LILLARD 6 JACK GRIFFITH GK-FR.-EAST LAKE, FLA. GK-JR.-SAN DIEGO, CALIF. D-JR.-RICHBORO, PA. D-JR.-ATLANTA, GA. F-SR.-GOSHEN, IND. D-SO.-HINSDALE, ILL. D/M-SO.-DANVILLE, IND. 7 MATT FOLDESY 8 MICHAEL RIEDFORD 9 BEN MAUREY 10 TANNER THOMPSON 11 CORY THOMAS 12 AUSTIN PANCHOT 13 FRANCESCO MOORE M-SR.-NORTH OLMSTED, OHIO M-SO.-EVANSVILLE, IND. F-GR.-DOWNINGTON, PA. M-JR.-LOOMIS, CALIF. M-FR-R.-CORYDON, IND. M/F-FR.-ST. LOUIS, MO. D/M-FR-R.-HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. -
Remarks Honoring the 2010 Major League Soccer Champion Colorado Rapids June 27, 2011
Administration of Barack Obama, 2011 / June 27 That’s in the best interest of America’s secu- ing Partnership. It’s a partnership that brings rity, and it’s also in the best interest of Ameri- our Federal Government together with some ca’s economy. Even though we’ve turned our of America’s most brilliant minds and some of economy in the right direction over the past America’s most innovative companies and couple of years, many Americans are still hurt- manufacturers. ing, and now is the time to focus on nation- Their mission is to come up with a way to building here at home. get ideas from the drawing board to the manu- Of course, there’s been a real debate about facturing floor to the marketplace as swiftly as where to invest and where to cut, and I’m com- possible, which will help create quality jobs mitted to working with members of both par- and make our businesses more competitive. ties to cut our deficits and debt. But we can’t But they also have a broader mission. It’s to re- simply cut our way to prosperity. We need to new the promise of American manufacturing, do what’s necessary to grow our economy, cre- to help make sure America remains in this cen- ate good, middle class jobs, and make it possi- tury what we were in the last, a country that ble for all Americans to pursue their dreams. makes things, a country that outbuilds and That means giving our kids the best educa- outinnovates the rest of the world.