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2020-21 MEN’S SOCCER MEDIA GUIDE MICHAEL G. MORRISON, S.J., STADIUM

-OPENED IN 2003 -BLUEJAYS ARE 143-28-21 OVERALL AT THE STADIUM (.805 WINNING PERCENTAGE) -CREIGHTON ANNUALLY RANKS AMONG NCAA LEADERS IN ATTENDANCE, INCLUDING 2ND-HIGHEST AVERAGE IN 2019 -HAS HOSTED MORE THAN 5,000 FANS FOR A CREIGHTON MATCH 10 DIFFERENT TIMES -STADIUM-S RECORD FOR A CREIGHTON MATCH IS 6,848 (VS. OLD DOMINION, 9/14/2012) -FIELDTURF CORE SYSTEM INSTALLED PRIOR TO 2019 SEASON -HOSTED U.S. WOMEN'S NATIONAL TEAM FRIENDLY IN JULY OF 2010 Table of Contents and Quick Facts Creighton Quick Facts University Information Location Omaha, Neb. Founded 1878 Enrollment 8,770 Nickname Bluejays Colors & White President Rev. Daniel S. Hendrickson, S.J., Ph.D. Director of Athletics Bruce Rasmussen Affiliation NCAA Division I Conference BIG EAST

Bluejay Soccer Head Coach Johnny Torres Alma Mater Creighton, 2008 Career Record/Yrs 8-7-2 / 1 Record at Creighton/Yrs 8-7-2 / 1 Assistant Coach Ian Sarachan Alma Mater -, 2010 Assistant Coach Michael Gabb Alma Mater Creighton, 2002 Volunteer Assistant Mitch Kavanagh Alma Mater Bellevue University, 2013 Home Field Michael G. Morrison, S.J., Stadium Capacity 7,500 Table of Contents 2019 Overall Record 8-7-2 Introduction Record Book 2019 BIG EAST Record/Finish 4-4-1/T-4th Table of Contents and Quick Facts 1 Weekly Poll History 34-35 Letterwinners Returning / Lost 11 / 10 Bluejays in the MLS 2-3 All-Time Honor Roll 36-38 Starters Returning / Lost 5 / 6 Bluejays in the Pros 4 Yearly Stats and Coaching History 39 Goalkeepers Returning / Lost 1 / 1 Creighton at Home 5 Annual Leaders 40 Newcomers 10 Rasmussen Fitness & Center 6 Single-Match Records 41 2020-21 Roster 7 Season and Career Records 42 Conference Regular-Season Titles 14 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2003, 2006, 2020-21 Season Outlook 8 Records 43 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2018 NCAA Tournament Teams 44-54 Meet the Bluejays NCAA Tournament History and Records 55 Conference Tournament Titles 13 Head Coach Johnny Torres 9-10 All-Time Roster 56-57 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000, Assistant Coach Ian Sarachan 11 Year-by-Year Scores 58-61 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2011, 2012 Assistant Coach Michael Gabb and Support Staff 12 Diego Gutierrez & Musa Qongo 13 General Information NCAA Tournament Appearances 24 Charles Auguste and Keegan Boyd 14 62-63 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, Antonio Chavez Borrelli & Mitch Dobson 15 Omaha, Neb. 64 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, Daniel Espeleta & Paul Kruse 16 65-66 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 Alejandro Maillet & Callum Watson 17 Creighton Administration 67 Jake Ashford & Cameron Briggs 18 Head Coaches & 2019-20 Highlights 68 NCAA Sweet 16 Appearances 14 Dominic Briggs & Diego Dutilh 19 Creighton Athletics Staff Directory 69 1996, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, Luke Mitchell & Jake Ronneberg 20 Student-Athlete Support 70 2007, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016 Braeden Beard & Andrew Karcher 21 Recent Morrison Stadium Renovations 71 Steevie Lamarre & Duncan McGuire 22 Media Information 72 NCAA Elite Eight Appearances 11 1996, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2008, Owen O’Malley & Mark O’Neill 23 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015 Nathan Schnur & Landon Sloan 24 Luke Waters 25 NCAA College Cup Appearances 5 1996, 2000, 2002, 2011, 2012 2019 Season Review 2019 Statistics 27 Sports Information 2019 Results and Final Polls 28 Men’s Soccer Contact Anthony Robinson 2019 Review and Honors 29 Office Phone 402-280-5801 Cell Phone 712-250-4900 The Opposition Email [email protected] 2021 Spring Schedule & Opponents Info 28 Sports Information Director Rob Anderson All-Time Results and Series History 29-33 Office Phone 402-280-5544 Sports Information FAX 402-280-2495 Ticket Office 402-280-JAYS Athletic Website GoCreighton.com Conference Website BIGEAST.com

1 Bluejays in the MLS

Bluejays on 2020 MLS Rosters

Ethan Finlay Fabian Herbers Brent Kallman Minnesota United FC Chicago Fire Minnesota United FC Creighton (2008-11) Creighton (2013-15) Creighton (2009-12)

Eric Miller Seth Sinovic Connor Sparrow Nashville SC New England Revoloution Chicago Fire Creighton (2011-13) Creighton (2005-09) Creighton (2013-15)

2 Bluejays in the MLS All-Time Bluejays in MLS Player Team(s) Player Team(s) Mehdi Ballouchy Real Salt Lake, , Brian Mullan Los Angeles Galaxy, , New York Bulls, San Jose Earthquakes, Houston Dynamo, Colorado Rapids Vancouver Whitecaps FC, New York City FC Richard Mulrooney San Jose Earthquakes, FC Dallas, Steve Bernal Dallas Burn, Chicago Fire Houston Dynamo Andrew Duran Sounders Julian Nash San Jose Earthquakes, Houston Dynamo Ethan Finlay Columbus Crew, Minnesota United FC Ross Paule Colorado Rapids, N.Y./N.J. Metrostars, Fabian Herbers Philadelphia Union, Chicago Fire Columbus Crew Daniel Hernandez Los Angeles Galaxy, N.Y/N.J. Metrostars, Andrew Peterson Columbus Crew Tampa Bay Mutiny, , FC Dallas Ricardo Perez Colorado Rapids Lance Hill Colorado Rapids Timo Pitter FC Dallas Brian Holt Philadelphia Union Tyler Polak New England Revolution Greg Jordan Philadelphia Union Andrew Ribeiro Chivas USA Ryan Junge Columbus Crew Angel Rivillo Dallas Burn Brent Kallman Minnesota United FC Brett Rodriguez San Jose Earthquakes Brian Kamler D.C. United, Miami Fusion, N.Y/N.J. Metrostars, Chris Schuler Real Salt Lake, Orlando City New England Revolution, Real Salt Lake Seth Sinovic New England Revolution, Sporting Kansas City Alex Kapp Minnesota United FC Connor Sparrow Real Salt Lake, Chicago Fire Michael Kraus Kansas City Wizards Johnny Torres New England Revolution, Chicago Fire, Ricky Lopez-Espin Real Salt Lake Miami Fusion Eric Miller Montreal Impact, Colorado Rapids David Wagenfuhr FC Dallas Minnesota United FC, New York FC, Nashville SC Akeem Ward D.C. United

MLS Draft Picks Brian Kamler - 1996 Sixth Round Ryan Junge - 2007 Supplemental Second Round Eric Miller - 2014 First Round (60th overall) by D.C. United (15th overall) by Columbus Crew (5th overall) by Montreal Impact

Lance Hill - 1996 11th Round Michael Kraus - 2007 Supplemental Fourth Round Zach Barnes - 2014 Third Round (102nd overall) by Colorado Rapids (48th overall) by Kansas City Wizards (56th overall) by D.C. United

Ross Paule - 1997 Second Round Matt Allen - 2008 Third Round Fabian Herbers - 2016 First Round (11th overall) by Colorado Rapids (34th overall) by Los Angeles Galaxy (6th overall) by Philadelphia Union

Johnny Torres - 1998 First Round Tony Schmitz - 2008 Fourth Round Timo Pitter - 2016 Second Round (5th overall) by New England Revolution (52nd overall) by D.C. United (33rd overall) by FC Dallas

Richard Mulrooney - 1999 First Round Tim Bohnenkamp - 2008 Supplemental Second Vincent Keller - 2016 Third Round (3rd overall) by the San Jose Clash Round (57th overall) by Chicago Fire (15th overall) by San Jose Earthquakes David Wright - 2000 Third Round Connor Sparrow - 2016 Fourth Round (25th overall) by Miami Fusion Andrei Gotsmanov - 2009 Second Round (65th overall) by Real Salt Lake (24th overall) by New England Revolution Steve Bernal - 2000 Third Round Alex Kapp - 2017 Fourth Round (34th overall) by Dallas Burn Seth Sinovic - 2010 Second Round (68th overall) by Atlanta United (25th overall) by New England Revolution Tom Zawislan - 2000 Fifth Round Lucas Stauffer - 2018 Second Round (50th overall) by K.C. Wizards Chris Schuler - 2010 Third Round (26th overall) by Vancouver FC (39th overall) by Real Salt Lake Angel Rivillo - 2000 Sixth Round Ricky Lopez-Espin - 2018 Second Round (70th overall) by Dallas Burn Sergio Castillo - 2011 Supplemental Second (33rd overall) by Real Salt Lake Round Brian Mullan - 2001 First Round (25th overall) by Houston Dynamo Noah Franke - 2018 Fourth Round (9th overall) by Los Angeles Galaxy (80th overall) by FC Dallas Ethan Finlay - 2012 First Round Ishmael Mintah - 2002 Sixth Round (10th overall) by Columbus Crew Akeem Ward - 2019 First Round (69th overall) by Los Angeles Galaxy (14th overall) by D.C. United Andrew Duran - 2012 First Round Mike Tranchilla - 2003 Fourth Round (15th overall) by Seattle Sounders Joel Rydstrand - 2019 Second Round (34th overall) by Dallas Burn (44th overall) by Seattle Sounders Tyler Polak - 2012 Second Round David Wagenfuhr - 2004 Fourth Round (22nd overall) by New England Revolution Luke Haakenson - 2020 Fourth Round (31st overall) by Dallas Burn (80th overall) by Nashville SC Greg Jordan - 2012 Second Round Julian Nash - 2005 Fourth Round (32nd overall) by Philadelphia Union Younes Boudadi - 2020 Fourth Round (40th overall) by FC Dallas (102nd overall) by LAFC Jose Gomez - 2013 Supplemental Second Round Brett Rodriguez - 2005 Supplemental First Round (38th overall) by Toronto FC Diego Gutierrez - 2021 Third Round (5th overall) by San Jose Earthquakes (70th overall) by Portland Timbers Andrew Ribeiro - 2013 Supplemental Fourth Round (70th overall) by New York Red Bulls Matt Wieland - 2006 Supplemental Fourth Round (47th overall) by New England Revolution

3 Bluejays in the Pros Bluejays in the Pros Player Team Player Team Player Team David Abidor Dalkurd (Sweden) FF, Brian Holt Philadelphia Union, Ricardo Perez Colorado Rapids Tulsa Roughnecks FC, New York Red Bulls II Reading United A.C., Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC FC Haka (Finland), Harrisburg City Islanders, New York Cosmos, , Lansing Ignite Hapoel Petah Tikva (Israel) Jacksonville Armada Andrew Peterson Cleveland City Stars Matt Allen Bryne (Norway) FK Geoff Huber San Francisco Bay Seals Columbus Crew, Minnesota Thunder Sandefjord (Norway) San Diego Flash, Rajpracha FC (Thailand) Timo Pitter FC Dallas, Johnny Anderson Kansas City Attack Greg Jordan Philadelphia Union Oklahoma City Energy FC Mehdi Ballouchy Real Salt Lake, Ryan Junge Columbus Crew, Omaha Vipers Tyler Polak New England Revolution, Colorado Rapids New York Red Bulls, Comets FC Cincinnati, Miami FC San Jose Earthquakes, Vancouver Whitecaps FC, Brent Kallman Minnesota United FC Kuba Polat FCA Waldorf (Germany) New York City FC Brian Kallman Minnesota Thunder Zion Renfurm New Orleans Storm, Steve Bernal Dallas Burn, Chicago Fire NSC Minnesota, Minnesota United FC Atlanta Silverbacks Milwaukee Wave United Brian Kamler D.C. United Jose Ribas Guayaquil SC (Ecuador), Younes Boudadi Reno 1868 FC, Miami Fusion, D.C. N.Y/N.J. Metrostars Guayaquil City FC New England Revolution, Real Salt Lake Andrew Ribeiro Harrisonburg City Islanders Michael Byrne Toulon (France) Alex Kapp Minnesota United FC Chivas USA, Pittsburgh Riverhounds Keith DeFini Kansas City Attack Michael Kraus Kansas City Wizards Charlotte Independence, Jeff Deist Cleveland Crunch Paul Lekics Richmond Strikers Angel Rivillo Tennessee Rhythm Luiz Del Monte Auckland City FC Riggs Lennon SL Dallas Burn, Milwaukee Wave Andrew Duran Seattle Sounders, Marios Lomis North Carolina FC Brett Rodriguez San Jose Earthquakes Atlanta Silverbacks Ricky Lopez-Espin Real Salt Lake, Joel Rydstrand Tacoma Defiance Billy Duranceau Milwaukee Wave Real Monarchs San Roque Lupe (Spain) Ray Ferri Dallas Sidekicks, Houston Hotshots Los Angeles FC, Lansing Ignite, Chris Schuler AC St. Louis, Real Salt Lake Ethan Finlay Columbus Crew, Fort Lauderdale CF Real Monarchs SLC, Orlando City Minnesota United FC Brian McTighe Kansas City Attack Seth Sinovic New England Revolution Noah Franke Pittsburgh Riverhounds Christian Michner Colorado Rapids Sporting Kansas City Mike Gabb Syracuse Salty Dogs San Jose Clash, S.F. Bay Seals, Connor Sparrow Real Monarchs SLC, Andrei Gotsmanov Minnesota Thunder Seattle Sounders, El Paso Patriots, Nashville SC, Chicago Fire, Miami FC NSC Minnesota San Diego Flash Lucas Stauffer New York Red Bulls II Luke Haakenson Charlotte Independence Eric Miller Montreal Impact, Colorado Rapids Wacker 90 Nordhausen (Germany) Jaime Harris Brussels (Belgium) Minnesota United, New York FC, Nashville SC Carl Zeiss Jena (Germany) Peter Henning Milwaukee Wave United Ishmael Mintah Yudai Tashiro Delfines Del Este FC (D.R.) Fabian Herbers Philadelphia Union, Long Island Rough Riders Johnny Torres New England Revolution Chicago Fire Brian Mullan Los Angeles Galaxy Chicago Fire, Miami Fusion, Daniel Hernandez Los Angeles Galaxy, San Jose Earthquakes, Houston Dynamo Minnesota Thunder N.Y/N.J. Metrostars, Colorado Rapids Milwaukee Wave United, Omaha Vipers Tampa Bay Mutiny, New England Revolution Richard Mulrooney San Jose Earthquakes Mike Tranchilla FC Dallas FC Dallas, Toronto FC, Houston Dynamo David Wagenfuhr Milwaukee Wave United Lance Hill New Orleans Rivermen Julian Nash Houston Dynamo, FC Dallas Colorado Rapids San Jose Earthquakes Akeem Ward D.C. United, Loudoun United Brendan Hines-Ike Orebro (Sweden) Chris Nieroda North Carolina FC, Oakland Roots KV Kortrijk (Belgium) Tony Odorisio FC KooTeePee (Finland) David Wright Pittsburgh Riverhounds, Pietari Holopainen FC Haka Ross Paule Colorado Rapids Rochester Rhinos N.Y./N.J. Metrostars, Columbus Crew Tom Zawislan Friska Viljor (Sweden) Toronto Lynx (Canada) Professional Leagues include: ; ; Major League; Foreign Leagues

Former Creighton men’s soccer players Richard Mulrooney (left) and Brian Mullan (right) have trained and earned caps with the U.S. National Team. 4 Creighton at Home

The Bluejays at Home he Creighton soccer program entered a new era in 2003 with the opening of an on-campus soccer facility, the Michael G. Morrison, Overall Overall Conf. Conf. T S.J., Stadium. The Bluejays moved to the facility after playing home Year Record Home Record Home matches at Tranquility Park in west Omaha from 1990-2002. 1979 12-5-1 8-0-1 –– –– With the downtown Omaha skyline to the south, CHI Health 1980 13-7-1 5-0-0 –– –– Center Omaha to the east, Ryan Athletic Center to the north and 1981 9-6-3 6-1-2 –– –– The Championship Center to the west, Morrison Stadium places 1982 7-8-2 4-3-0 –– –– student-athletes in the middle of it all. 1983 8-9-1 5-2-0 –– –– Morrison Stadium’s seating capacity is 7,500. Construction on the 1984 4-9-2 3-3-1 –– –– stadium was completed in 2004 and included a video scoreboard, 1985 5-12-0 5-3-0 –– –– champions room, nearly 2,000 covered chairback seating, five luxury Creighton did not field a team from 1986-89 suites, an enclosed press box, concession stands and a banquet 1990 12-5-3 7-0-1 –– –– area. An athletic training room and locker rooms were built in the 1991 12-5-2 6-1-0 3-1-0 1-0-0 adjacent Ryan Athletic Center, which opened in 2009. 1992 14-3-1 7-1-0 4-0-1 2-0-0 A project to construct coaching, staff and resource offices to the 1993 19-1-0 13-1-0 5-0-0 3-0-0 north side of the upper west concourse was announced in July of 1994 15-5-1 7-1-1 5-1-0 2-1-0 2017. The project, completed in the summer of 2018, includes the 1995 14-3-1 7-3-1 4-0-1 2-0-1 addition of suites to enhance fan experience and improve 1996 17-5-2 7-3-0 5-0-0 2-0-0 event space, a winterization to provide maximize usage 1997 16-5-1 9-1-0 6-1-0 5-0-0 opportunities for student-athletes, staff and the community and a 1998 16-4-2 8-0-0 4-1-2 2-0-0 renovation of the existing club area to include an in-venue 1999 11-5-2 7-1-0 5-1-1 5-0-0 multi-purpose space for student-athletes (pictures and details of the 2000 22-4-0 9-1-0 9-2-0 4-0-0 2018 renovation can be found on page 71). 2001 11-9-1 7-2-1 6-3-0 4-1-0 Morrison Stadium received a surface upgrade prior to the start 2002 18-4-2 8-1-1 7-1-1 3-1-0 of the 2019 season. FieldTurf’s CORE system was installed during the final weeks of July and first of August. The FIFA Quality Pro 2003 12-6-4 7-2-2 7-1-1 4-0-1 certified surface is featured at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, 2004 14-4-2 10-1-1 6-3-0 3-1-0 the home facility of the MLS Atlanta United FC and at Providence 2005 15-5-3 8-1-1 5-2-0 4-0-0 Park in Portland, the home facility of the MLS Portland Timbers and 2006 13-5-3 6-1-2 4-1-1 3-0-0 NWSL Portland Thorns. CORE includes VersaTile, which features a 2007 12-3-5 6-3-4 4-0-2 2-0-1 state of the arc drainage system and shock absorption. The drainage 2008 16-2-2 10-1-0 4-0-1 2-0-0 system offers a free draining surface area of 82 percent and the 2009 7-4-5 5-2-1 4-2-4 3-2-0 shock absorption properties are expected to lessen the impact of 2010 13-5-2 7-2-1 5-1-1 2-1-1 the normal wear and tear of soccer. FieldTurf’s CoolPlay system 2011 21-2-1 14-0-0 5-1-0 3-0-0 will be installed to complete the playing surface. The CoolPlay 2012 17-4-3 9-2-1 5-0-1 3-0-0 composite dressing has been tested to keep the playing surface 2013 9-9-2 7-2-1 4-4-1 3-1-0 about 35 degrees (fahrenheit) cooler than traditional sand or rubber 2014 16-3-3 12-2-1 7-1-1 4-1-0 infill systems (photos of new turf on page 71). 2015 19-4-0 13-1-0 7-2-0 3-1-0 Creighton soccer has enjoyed incredible success at home since its 2016 13-7-3 9-2-2 5-3-1 4-1-0 reinstatement in 1990. The Bluejays’ home record is 245-44-26 for an 2017 9-7-2 7-1-1 3-4-2 3-0-1 impressive winning percentage of .819 since 1990. The Bluejays, who 2018 11-4-3 6-2-3 7-1-1 3-1-1 annually rank among NCAA leaders in attendance, are 143-28-21 2019 8-7-2 7-3-0 4-4-1 3-1-0 overall and 52-10-5 in conference play all-time at Morrison Stadium. 1979-1985 58-56-10 36-12-4 –– ––­­­­ The $13 million facility hosted its first match on Aug. 29, 2003, and was 1990-2002 197-58-18 102-16-5 63-11-6 35-3-1 officially dedicated on October 15, 2004. The stadium also played host 2003-2019 225-84-45 143-28-21 86-30-18 52-10-5 to a friendly between the U.S. Women’s National Team and Sweden in Total 480-195-71 281-56-30 149-41-24 87-13-6 July 2010 that welcomed a crowd of nearly 6,500 fans and was televised Home matches played at Dodge Park (North Omaha) in 1979 live on ESPN. Home matches played at Rosenblatt Stadium (13th & I-80) from 1980-1985 Home matches played at Tranquility Park (120th & Maple) from 1990-2002 Home matches played at Morrison Stadium (19th & California) from 2003-present

2019 Attendance Leaders Rk. Team Matches Total Avg. 1. Maryland 13 30,042 2,311 2. Creighton 10 22,404 2,240 3. UC Santa Barbara 12 26,760 2,230 4. Wake Forest 15 30,885 2,059 5. Cal Poly 10 20,168 2,017 6. Indiana 13 25,146 1,934 7. Grand Canyon 8 15,254 1,907 Pictured at the stadium’s dedication on Oct. 15, 2004, from left 8. Clemson 15 28,292 1,886 to right; Rev. Michael G. Morrison, S.J., Walter and Suzanne 9. Virginia 16 29,658 1,854 Scott and Rev. John P. Schlegel, S.J. Fr. Morrison served 10. South Carolina 11 19,047 1,732 as Creighton’s president from 1981 through 2000 and was succeeded by Fr. Schlegel, who served as president for the next decade. 5 Rasmussen Fitness & Sports Center Rasmussen Fitness & Sports Center The Rasmussen Fitness & Sports Center, a 50,000-square-foot building offering a multipurpose field house with synthetic turf for athletic team practices and intramural sports, was officially opened on Oct. 23, 2012. The men’s soccer team utilizes the Rasmussen Center during the season for training during inclement weather situations. In addition to the indoor practice area, the Rasmussen Center offers a suspended two-lane running track and a fitness level furnished with cardio, circuit-training and free-weight equipment for all Creighton students, faculty and staff. Named for Creighton’s McCormick Endowed Director of Athletics Bruce Rasmussen, the facility was made possible by generous gifts from Ruth and Bill Scott, as well as several other donors. The Scotts have been long-time supporters and friends of Creighton. In 1995, the Scotts established a scholarship for international students who enrolled in the School of Medicine. The Nebraska natives have deep roots in the Omaha community and have donated millions of dollars to more than 100 different organizations. Rasmussen has been with Creighton for 41 years, the last 27 years as athletic director. During his tenure, Creighton’s athletic teams have risen to national prominence both on and off the field. Since Rasmussen assumed the role of athletic director, Creighton has won 42 regular-season and 42 conference tournament titles, which have helped lead to 87 postseason appearances. The Bluejays have made the NCAA Tourney in men’s soccer in 24 of the past 28 years. Creighton’s reputation as one of the nation’s top academic institutions is reflected in the success that its student-athletes have had in the classroom during Rasmussen’s service as athletic director. Creighton’s , men’s and women’s , volleyball, men’s and women’s cross country, men’s golf, women’s golf, women’s soccer and men’s and women’s teams all have received national awards for their academic success. Bluejay student-athletes consistently own collective GPAs of 3.25 or above. Rasmussen was inducted into the Omaha Sports Hall of Fame in 2008. A member of the College World Series of Omaha, Inc., Executive Committee, Rasmussen played a vital role in seeing that Creighton and the city of Omaha remain as hosts of the College World Series.

From top: The Rasmussen Fitness & Sports Center main entrance; a look inside the main practice area; Bill Scott, Bruce Rasmussen and Ruth Scott. 6 2020-21 Roster Numerical Roster Pronunciation Guide No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Yr. Hometown (Last School / Last Club) Auguste: AW • guhst (silent e) 1 Paul Kruse GK 6-6 190 Jr. Heilbronn, Germany (Monchseegymnasium / TSG 1899 Hoffenheim) Dutilh: DOO • teel 2 Musa Qongo D/M 5-7 165 Sr. Johannesburg, South Africa (Tyler JC / Kaizer Chiefs) Fohr: FOUR 3 Luke Mitchell D 6-1 175 So. Denver, Colo. (Rivers Academy / ) Kruse: CREWS 4 Mitch Dobson D 6-0 180 Jr. Lake Munmorah, Australia (Monroe College / Edgeworth) 5 Jake Ronneberg D 6-0 180 So. Naperville, Ill. (Benet Academy / Chicago Fire Academy) Lamarre: Lah • MARR (rolled r) 6 Keegan Boyd M 5-10 165 Jr. DuPont, Wash. (Steilacoom / Federal Way FC) Maillet: MY • yay 7 Daniel Espeleta M 5-9 165 Jr. San Jose, Costa Rica (Apex Learning Online / Uruguay FC [Costa Rica]) Musa Qongo: MOO • sah CON • go 8 Charles Auguste M 5-11 175 Jr. Montreal, Quebec (College Ahuntsic / St-Hubert) Ronneberg: RON • uh • berg 10 Diego Dutilh F 5-6 150 So. Santiago, Chile (Northwood [N.Y.} / Black Rock FC) Sarachan: SARA • can 11 Diego Gutierrez F 5-10 145 Sr. Omaha, Neb. (Nebraska-Omaha / Elite Academy EBA 98 Maroon) Schnur: SCHNUR (one syllable) 12 Dominic Briggs F 5-10 160 So. Oconomowoc, Wis. (Oconomowoc / Elmbrook United) 13 Duncan McGuire F 6-1 185 Fr. Omaha, Neb. (Creighton Prep / Elkhorn Soccer Club) 14 Callum Watson M 5-11 150 Jr. Essex, England (Hastings College / AFC Sudbury) 15 Landon Sloan M 5-11 160 Fr. Raleigh, N.C. (Heritage / North Carolina FC Academy) Breakdown by Class 17 Alejandro Maillet M 5-9 160 Jr. Copenhagen, Denmark (Kansas City Kansas CC / Akademisk Boldklub) 18 Owen O’Malley M 6-0 155 Fr. Cary, N.C. (Crossroads FLEX / North Carolina FC Academy) Seniors (2): Diego Gutierrez, Musa 19 Braeden Beard F 6-0 150 Fr. Wichita, Kan. (Olathe Northwest / Kansas City Rush) Qongo 21 Steevie Lamarre F 6-0 155 Fr. Port-au-Prince, Haiti (Totino-Grace [Minn.] / Minneapolis United Premier 1) Juniors (8): Charles Auguste, Keegan 22 Cameron Briggs D 5-10 160 So. Oconomowoc, Wis. (Oconomowoc / Elmbrook United) Boyd, Antonio Chavez Borrelli, Mitch 23 Mark O’Neill M 6-0 160 Fr. Louisville, Colo. (Fairview / Real Colorado) Dobson, Daniel Espeleta, Paul Kruse, 24 Nathan Schnur GK 6-0 180 Fr. Evergreen, Colo. (ASU Preparatory Academy / Barca Academy) Alejandro Maillet, Callum Watson 25 Jake Ashford D 6-1 165 So. Shawnee, Kan. (Mill Valley / KC Fusion) 28 Luke Waters D 6-1 165 Fr. Omaha, Neb. (Creighton Prep / Elkhorn Soccer Club) Sophomores (6): Jake Ashford, 30 Andrew Karcher GK 6-2 170 Fr. Houston, Texas (Strake Jesuit / Albion Hurricanes FC) Cameron Briggs, Dominic Briggs, 33 Antonio Chavez Borrelli GK 6-0 180 Jr. Los Angeles, Calif. (Boston College / Santa Monica United B97 Premier) Diego Dutilh, Luke Mitchell, Jake Ronneberg Freshmen (9): Braeden Beard, Andrew Karcher, Steevie Lamarre, Duncan McGuire, Owen O’Malley, Mark O’Neill, Nathan Schnur, Landon Alphabetical Roster Sloan, Luke Waters No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Yr. Hometown (Last School / Last Club) 25 Jake Ashford D 6-1 165 So. Shawnee, Kan. (Mill Valley / KC Fusion) Breakdown by Location 8 Charles Auguste M 5-11 175 Jr. Montreal, Quebec (College Ahuntsic / St-Hubert) California (1): Antonio Chavez Borrelli 19 Braeden Beard F 6-0 150 Fr. Wichita, Kan. (Northwest / Kansas City Rush) Colorado (3): Luke Mitchell, Mark 6 Keegan Boyd M 5-10 165 Jr. DuPont, Wash. (Steilacoom / Federal Way FC) 22 Cameron Briggs D 5-10 160 So. Oconomowoc, Wis. (Oconomowoc / Elmbrook United) O’Neill, Nathan Schnur 12 Dominic Briggs F 5-10 160 So. Oconomowoc, Wis. (Oconomowoc / Elmbrook United) Illinois (1): Jake Ronneberg 33 Antonio Chavez Borrelli GK 6-0 180 Jr. Los Angeles, Calif. (Boston College / Santa Monica United B97 Premier) Kansas (2): Jake Ashford, Braeden 4 Mitch Dobson D 6-0 180 Jr. Lake Munmorah, Australia (Monroe College / Edgeworth) Beard 10 Diego Dutilh F 5-6 150 So. Santiago, Chile (Northwood [N.Y.] / Black Rock FC) Nebraska (3): Diego Gutierrez, 7 Daniel Espeleta M 5-9 166 Jr. San Jose, Costa Rica (Apex Learning Online / Uruguay FC [Costa Rica]) Duncan McGuire, Luke Waters 11 Diego Gutierrez F 5-10 145 Sr. Omaha, Neb. (Nebraska-Omaha / Elite Academy EBA 98 Maroon) 30 Andrew Karcher GK 6-2 170 Fr. Houston, Texas (Strake Jesuit / Albion Hurricanes FC) North Carolina (2): Owen O’Malley, 1 Paul Kruse GK 6-6 190 Jr. Heilbronn, Germany (Monchseegymnasium / TSG 1899 Hoffenheim) Landon Sloan 21 Steevie Lamarre F 6-0 155 Fr. Port-au-Prince, Haiti (Totino-Grace [Minn.] / Minneapolis United Premier 1) Texas (1): Andrew Karcher 17 Alejandro Maillet M 5-9 160 Jr. Copenhagen, Denmark (Kansas City Kansas CC / Akademisk Boldklub) (1): Keegan Boyd 13 Duncan McGuire F 6-1 185 Fr. Omaha, Neb. (Creighton Prep / Elkhorn Soccer Club) Wisconsin (2): Cameron Briggs, 3 Luke Mitchell D 6-1 180 So. Denver, Colo. (Rivers Academy / Atlanta United 2) Dominic Briggs 18 Owen O’Malley M 6-0 155 Fr. Cary, N.C. (Crossroads FLEX / North Carolina FC Academy) 23 Mark O’Neill M 6-0 160 Fr. Louisville, Colo. (Fairview / Real Colorado) International (9): Charles Auguste, 2 Musa Qongo D/M 5-7 165 Sr. Johannesburg, South Africa (Tyler JC / Kaizer Chiefs) Mitch Dobson, Diego Dutilh, Daniel 5 Jake Ronneberg D 6-0 180 So. Naperville, Ill. (Benet Academy / Chicago Fire Academy) Espeleta, Paul Kruse, Steevie 24 Nathan Schnur GK 6-0 180 Fr. Evergreen, Colo. (ASU Preparatory Academy / Barca Academy) Lamarre, Alejandro Maillet, Musa 15 Landon Sloan M 5-11 160 Fr. Raleigh, N.C. (Heritage / NCFC Academy) Qongo, Callum Watson 28 Luke Waters D 6-1 165 Fr. Omaha, Neb. (Creighton Prep / Elkhorn Soccer Club) 14 Callum Watson M 5-11 150 Jr. Essex, England (Hastings College / AFC Sudbury)

Head Coach: Johnny Torres (Creighton, 2008) - 2nd season Assistant Coach: Ian Sarachan (Illinois-Chicago, 2010) - 2nd season Assistant Coach: Michael Gabb (Creighton, 2002) - 5th season Volunteer Assistant: Mitch Kavanagh (Bellevue University, 2013) - 3rd season Graduate Assistant: Julius Fohr (Creighton, 2020) - 1st season

7 2020-21 Season Outlook

Under the direction of Senior Musa Qongo tied for second year head coach Johnny the team lead in assists with four Torres, the Creighton men’s soccer during his first season in a Creighton program will seek to return to the uniform. The South Africa native NCAA Tournament during the spring claims 14 career helpers, which of 2021 after the NCAA postponed the includes 10 during two seasons at 2020 fall championships because of Tyler Junior College. the COVID-19 pandemic. Auguste and Briggs each made The Bluejays finished 8-7-2 in the impacts offensively during their first fall of 2019 during Torres’ first as head seasons playing as Bluejays, while coach after spending 12 seasons as an sophomore defenders Luke Mitchell assistant at his alma mater. Creighton and Jake Ronneberg also showcased tied for fourth in the BIG EAST and their skills with significant minutes as ended the regular-season with a rookies in 2019. 1-1 double overtime draw against Creighton bolstered its roster eventual national champion with the addition of 10 newcomers, Georgetown. including five upperclassmen Creighton must replace over transfers. Diego Gutierrez headlines half of its scoring from 2019 as the group after spending three seasons Yudai Tashiro, Luke Haakenson Junior Daniel Espeleta owns 27 career at Nebraska-Omaha. The Omaha and Younes Boudadi each signed starts in a Bluejay uniform. native made 37 starts and appeared in professionally after combining for 11 44 matches while recording 10 goals goals and nine assists as seniors. Kuba scored twice and sophomore and 13 assists, which both rank in the Polat also headed to the professional Jake Ashford scored once -- the top-10 on the Mavericks’ career charts. ranks after starting 50 matches and game-winner in double overtime Defender Mitch Dobson heads to tallying nine assists in three seasons against Butler to help the Bluejays Omaha after helping Monroe College as a Bluejay. secure a home match for the opening to the 2019 NJCAA Division I title Four players return who scored round of the BIG EAST Championships. and midfielder Callum Watson joins at least one goal a season ago. Junior Paul Kruse is expected to the Bluejay program after leading Juniors Charles Auguste and lead Creighton’s defense in his third Hastings College to a runner-up finish Daniel Espeleta each had two, while season as the starting goalkeeper. The in the 2019 NAIA Championship and sophomore Dominic Briggs also Germany native struggled with an earning an individual spot on the injury in 2019 that limited him to only All-America First Team. 10 matches during his second season in a Bluejay uniform after starting all 18 matches in 2018, posting a 0.64 goals against average and earning All-BIG EAST Second Team recognition as well as unanimous All-BIG EAST Freshman Team accolades. Overall, the Bluejays welcome back 11 different players who started at least one match in 2019. Espeleta owns 27 career starts, the most of any returning field player. He tallied logged 1,214 minutes last season, which is the most of any returner. Paul Kruse returns for his third year as Musa Qongo tied for the team lead with the Bluejays’ goalkeeper. four assists in 2019.

8 Head Coach Johnny Torres

Second Season Torres Career Highlights • NSCAA National Assistant Coach of the Year (2012) as Head Coach • NSCAA Great Lakes Region Assistant Coach of the Year (2015) • NSCAA Midwest Region Assistant Coach of the Year (2011, 2012) 14th Season on Staff • Three College Cup Appearances: Creighton, 2008 - Coaching Staff (2011, 2012) - Player (1996) • 13 NCAA Tournament Appearances - Coaching Staff (2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, JOHNNY TORRES Head Coach 2016) - Player (1994, 1995, 1996, 1997) • Five-time Conference Coaching Staff of the Year (2008, 2010, 2011, 2014, Two-time National Player of the Year and Creighton Athletics 2018) Hall of Fame selection Johnny Torres completed his first season • 10 regular-season conference titles as head coach of the Bluejays in 2019. Torres spent 12 seasons - Coaching Staff (2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2018) - Player (1994, 1995, 1996) as an assistant coach on the Bluejay coaching staff prior to • Six conference tournament championships being promoted to head coach in November of 2018. Arguably - Coaching Staff (2008, 2011, 2012) the greatest soccer player in Creighton and Missouri Valley - Player (1994, 1995, 1997) Conference history, Torres competed for the Bluejays from • National Player of the Year (1996, 1997) 1994-97 and played professional soccer for over 10 years. • Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame (2004); MVC Hall of Fame (2011) Creighton compiled an 8-7-2 record in 2019 and tied for fourth • Missouri Valley Conference All-Centennial Team (2006) in the final BIG EAST regular-season standings despite enduring multiple injuries throughout the season. Yudai Tashiro earned a Creighton won the Missouri Valley Conference regular-season spot on the All-BIG EAST First Team, while Luke Haakenson and and tournament titles for a second straight season. Along the Younes Boudadi earned spots on the All-League Second Team way, the Bluejays tied the MVC record for the fewest goals and Kuba Polat garnered a Third Team slot. Both Haakenson allowed (1) in a Valley season set by CU in 2011. CU entered the and Boudadi were selected in the fourth round of the 2020 MLS 2012 College Cup on a 14-match unbeaten streak before falling SuperDraft while Tashiro and Polat each signed professionally in 1-0 to eventual national champion Indiana in a semifinal. international leagues. Three times in Torres’ first five seasons on the Bluejay bench, Torres claimed the National Assistant Coach of the Year honor the Creighton men’s soccer staff was honored as the MVC from the National Soccer Coaches Association of America in Coaching Staff of the Year, earning the nod in 2008, 2010 and January 2012. He was also named the NSCAA Midwest Region 2011. His roles on the coaching staff include scouting, recruiting Assistant Coach of the Year recognition after the 2011 and 2012 and training. seasons and Great Lakes Region Assistant Coach of the Year in He also plays a major role in working with student-athletes 2015. on service projects in the Omaha area. Torres, a member of the 2018 BIG EAST Coaching Staff of the Year, assisted the Bluejays to the conference regular-season title. A total of five players were selected to the all-conference teams, and both Sven Koenig (Offensive Player of the Year) and Joel Rydstrand (Midfielder of the Year) garnered major awards. Torres helped lead the Bluejays to the most wins in Division I (19) during the 2015 season as Creighton had four players selected in the 2016 MLS SuperDraft. The Bluejays started the season 15-0-0, the program’s best start since 1993, and finished the year with the third-best offense in Division I. A member of the 2014 BIG EAST Co-Coaching Staff of the Year, Torres helped lead the Bluejays to the nation’s best winning percentage at 16-3-3 (.795). Creighton won its first BIG EAST regular season title with a 7-1-1 mark in just the second year in the conference and advanced to its third NCAA quarterfinal appearance in four seasons. Three CU players earned spots on NSCAA All-America squads and four earned unanimous All-BIG EAST selections and two major awards. In 2013, he aided the Bluejays through their inaugural season in the BIG EAST Conference and a tough non-conference slate. Creighton finished the season with a 9-9-2 overall record and a 4-4-1 mark in league play. Seven Bluejays claimed spots on 2013 All-BIG EAST Teams. Eric Miller and Zach Barnes claimed NSCAA All-Great Lakes Region honors and later were drafted in the 2014 MLS SuperDraft. He helped direct the Bluejays to a 17-4-3 record and their second consecutive appearance in a College Cup In 2012.

9 Head Coach Johnny Torres

Torres himself has always been active in service throughout his collegiate and professional playing days. He visited thousands of youth in the Omaha community in the 1990s. Torres was tabbed the Children’s Miracle Network National “Hometown Hero” in 1996. A native of Medellin, Colombia, he was honored by the Omaha City Council with “Johnny Torres Day” on Oct. 27, 1996, in recognition of earning U.S. Citizenship just days before, his community service and his soccer skills. Torres was named to the MVC All-Centennial Team in 2006 and in 2011 he became the first men’s soccer player inducted into the Missouri Valley Conference Hall of Fame. In 1997 he won both the Hermann Trophy and the Missouri Athletic Club Award (prior to the combination of the awards), recognizing him as the National Player of the Year. In 1996, he earned National Player of the Year honors from Soccer America after leading the Bluejays to their first College Cup appearance. When his career ended, he was the Valley’s all-time scoring (128 points) and assists (36) leader. He was the fifth overall pick in the first round of the 1998 MLS Draft by the New England Revolution, and played for the Revolution for four seasons. He also played for the Miami Fusion and Chicago Fire of Major League Soccer, before continuing his career in the USL for the Minnesota Thunder and the Milwaukee Wave United, before moving to indoor soccer with the Milwaukee Wave. In 2010, Torres returned to the professional ranks as a player, leading the Omaha Vipers of the Major Indoor Soccer League in goals scored. In 2009, he played on the United States Adult Soccer Association Over 30 championship team – Nebraska 402 – which qualified and participated in the U.S. Open Cup in 2009. Torres returned to the Creighton campus in the fall of 2007 to complete his undergraduate degree while serving as the Bluejays’ undergraduate manager. After receiving the NCAA Degree Completion Award, he earned his degree in social work from Creighton in the spring of 2008. The 2004 Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame inductee and two-time First Team All-American selection has two sons, Dominic and Javi, and two daughters, Perla and Isla. Torres married Sara Heck in 2013. Torres’ Year-by-Year As Head Coach at Creighton Year Overall Pct. Conf. Pct. Highlights 2019 8-7-2 .529 4-4-1 .500 Four All-BIG EAST Selections, Two MLS Draft Picks Totals 8-7-2 .529 4-4-1 .500

Torres’ Year-by-Year As Assistant Coach at Creighton Year Head Coach Overall Pct. Conf. Pct. Highlights 2007 Bob Warming 12-3-5 .725 4-0-2 .833 NCAA Tournament Third Round 2008 Bob Warming 16-2-2 .850 4-0-1 .900 NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals; MVC Coaching Staff of the Year 2009 Bob Warming 7-4-5 .594 4-2-4 .600 2010 Jamie Clark 13-5-2 .700 5-1-1 .785 NCAA Tournament Second Round; MVC Coaching Staff of the Year; Midwest Region Asst. Coach of the Year 2011 Elmar Bolowich 21-2-1 .896 5-1-0 .833 NCAA Tournament Semifinals; MVC Coaching Staff of Year; National Assistant Coach of the Year 2012 Elmar Bolowich 17-4-3 .771 5-0-1 .917 NCAA Tournament Semifinals 2013 Elmar Bolowich 9-9-2 .500 4-4-1 .500 NCAA Tournament First Round 2014 Elmar Bolowich 16-3-3 .795 7-1-1 .833 NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals, BIG EAST Coaching Staff of Year 2015 Elmar Bolowich 19-4-0 .826 7-2-0 .778 NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals; Great Lakes Region Assistant Coach of the Year 2016 Elmar Bolowich 13-7-3 .630 5-3-1 .611 NCAA Tournament Third Round 2017 Elmar Bolowich 9-7-2 .556 3-4-2 .444 Three MLS Draft Picks 2018 Elmar Bolowich 11-4-3 .694 7-1-1 .833 BIG EAST Regular Season Champions; BIG EAST Coaching Staff of the Year Totals 163-54-31 .719 60-19-15 .718 2 College Cup’s, 5-Time Coaching Staff of the Year; 9 NCAA Tournaments

10 Assistant Coach Ian Sarachan

Second Season Illinois-Chicago, 2010

IAN SARACHAN Assistant Coach

Ian Sarachan enters his second season as an assistant coach. The Illinois-Chicago graduate helped lead the Bluejays to an 8-7-2 mark in 2019 and guided four players to All-BIG EAST selections. Johnny Torres announced the addition of Sarachan as an assistant coach for the Bluejay men’s soccer program on Jan. 14, 2019. “We are thrilled to be welcoming Ian to the Creighton family,” Torres said. “I am confident our program will benefit from his Sarachan moved to Omaha after spending three seasons as wealth of experience.” an assistant at Santa Clara under head coach Cameron Rast. “I feel truly honored to be joining the men’s soccer program The Broncos finished the 2018 season at 5-10-2, including an at Creighton University,” Sarachan said. “Having the opportunity overtime victory against Cal. to be part of one of the best, and historically most successful Sarachan helped guide Santa Clara to a total of eight victories programs in college soccer is very special.” during his first two seasons. The Virginia native also served as an assistant at Wisconsin for two seasons prior to his stint on the west coast. He helped lead the Badgers to the 2013 NCAA Tournament, the program’s first NCAA appearance since its 1995 national championship season. Sarachan played four seasons at Illinois-Chicago and helped guide the Flames to three NCAA Tournament appearances, including the 2007 Elite Eight. He converted the game-winning goal during the 2007 Sweet 16 against Creighton at Morrison Stadium. The midfielder helped the Flames compile a 44-19-24 record from 2006-09. Following his playing career, Sarachan worked as an agent with Wasserman Media Group and represented multiple players, including Creighton alumnus and current Minnesota United FC midfielder Ethan Finlay. Sarachan started his coaching career in July of 2012 as an assistant coach for the LA Galaxy’s U-14 and U.S. Soccer Development Academy U-16 teams. He transitioned to assistant coach of the Galaxy’s USSDA U-18 team in January of 2013 where he worked with current LAFC assistant coach, Ante Razov. “Being around this game for a long time I’ve learned that the people you work with on a daily basis are what make programs special,” Sarachan said. “I’m very excited to work with Johnny, as well as the entire staff. Johnny is someone who has proven himself in the college game and I take great pride in being part of his first staff as a head coach.” His father, Dave Sarachan, served as the interim manager for the U.S. Men’s National Team (Oct. 2017-Nov. 2018) and most recently spent two seasons as head coach of North Carolina FC. Ian and his wife Rea have two children, Shay and Edison.

11 Assistant Coach Michael Gabb and Support Staff The Bluejays won three Missouri Valley Conference tournament championships and made it to the NCAA Tournament each season during his time as a player. Fifth Season Following graduation from Creighton in 2002, Gabb played professionally with the Syracuse Salty Dogs in the United Soccer Creighton, 2002 League for one season. An Omaha native, Gabb earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology with a minor in business from Creighton in 2002. Gabb and his wife Bethany have three children, Jackson, Asher and Gage. MICHAEL GABB Assistant Coach

Former Bluejay goalkeeper Michael Gabb enters his fifth Men’s Soccer Support Staff season as Creighton’s goalkeeping coach. Gabb returned to Omaha to take over as an assistant prior to the 2016 season. The 2002 graduate guided Creighton’s goalkeepers to a 1.23 goals against average as Paul Kruse and Collin Valdivia split time in goal during 2019 Kruse posted 42 saves in 10 matches, while Valdivia recorded two shutouts and 22 saves during eight contests. Gabb helped guide Kruse to 2018 All-BIG EAST Second Team and unanimous selection to the All-BIG EAST Freshman Team. Scott Bankers Joey Gardner Kruse posted a 0.64 goals against average, the fifth-best mark Strength and Marketing in program history and second-best by a freshman (0.51 by Brian Performance Holt in 2008). The 2017 Bluejay squad posted seven shutouts and held opponents to one goal or less a total of 10 times. Gabb helped Alex Kapp earn NSCAA All-America and BIG EAST Co-Goalkeeper of the Year honors following the 2016 season as the senior transfer tallied seven shutouts and a 0.84 goals against average during his only season at Creighton. Atlanta United FC drafted Kapp during fourth round of the 2017 MLS Draft. As a player, Gabb spent five seasons with the Bluejays from 1998-2002 while playing for Bret Simon (1998-2000) and Bob Warming (2001-02). In 2007 he returned to his alma mater and Mitch Kavanagh Julius Fohr spent one season as an assistant under Warming. Volunteer Assistant Graduate Prior to returning to Omaha, Gabb served as the director of Assistant goalkeeping at the Colorado Rush Soccer Club for five years, and spent two seasons as the goalkeepers coach for Metropolitan State University in Denver. He helped guide the Roadrunners to a 13-4-2 record and 1.12 goals against average in 2015. He also spent two seasons as a graduate assistant coach for the men’s and women’s soccer programs at Winthrop University in 2005-06. Additonally, he served as Director of Coaching at the Discoveries Soccer Club while attending school in Rock Hill, S.C. Gabb earned his master’s in business and leadership from Winthrop in 2007. Brandon McCarville Anthony Robinson He is no stranger to working in the Omaha community. Gabb Facilities Assistant SID served as an assistant coach at Bellevue University. He also Men’s Soccer Contact served as the supervisor of the Millard Soccer Center, the Arsenal Soccer Club goalkeeping director and founded and directed the Nebraska Goalkeeping Academy. During his collegiate playing career, Gabb helped lead the Bluejays to the College Cup twice, including the 2000 College Cup Final. In 2000, he set school records with 2,279 minutes in goal and 21 victories, while playing for Simon. The Bluejays won a program-best 22 matches during the 2000 season. As a senior (2002), Gabb played every minute in goal, and led Creighton to its second College Cup appearance in three seasons. He earned Second Team All-MVC honors after Kevin Sarver Aaron Spencer accumulating a 0.96 goals against average and an 18-4-2 record. Associate Athletic Athletic Training Gabb owns the fourth-most wins (41) all-time as a Creighton Director goalkeeper and the second-best winning percentage (.802). Soccer Administrator 12 #11 • DIEGO GUTIERREZ • Sr. • Forward • Omaha, Nebraska

Team in 2017 ... Played at UNO for head coaches Bob Warming and 5-10 • 145 Jason Mims, both of whom spent more than a decade at Creighton. Last School: Nebraska-Omaha Club/Prep Career Last Club: Elite Academy EBA Finished time at Ralston High School as state’s all-time leading goal 98 Maroon scorer (112), also adding 43 assists ... As a senior led the Rams to the 2017 state tournament ... Tallied 79 points on 35 goals and nine assists during his senior campaign, leading all-classes in points and goals ... Career Statistics Earned First Team All-Nebraska honors and was the team’s honor- Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG ary captain as a senior ... Four-time All-State selection ... Was MVP of 2017 (UNO) 16-9 2 (1) 2 6 14 7 the Nebraska Shrine Classic … Also played football as a freshman and 2018 (UNO) 15-15 7 (3) 7 21 52 24 2019 (UNO) 13-13 1 4 6 30 11 sophomore in high school ... Made the Dean’s List ... Played club soccer Totals 44-37 10 (4) 13 33 96 42 for Elite Academy EBA 98 Maroon for Chris Dunford.

Personal Son of Jorge and Rosa ... Has siblings Jorge, Luis and Alexa, with both 2020-21 (Senior at Creighton) his brothers having played soccer at Iowa Western ... Is pursuing a Joined Creighton program prior to the 2020 fall semester and trained degree in business. with Bluejays ... Drafted by Portland Timbers during third round (70th overall) of 2021 MLS SuperDraft on Jan. 21.

2017-19 (Freshman-Junior at Nebraska-Omaha) DIEGO GUTIERREZ & MUSA QONGO Played in 44 matches during the previous three seasons at Nebraska- Omaha, making 37 starts and recording 10 goals and 13 assists ... In just three seasons, moved into top-10 in UNO history in assists (3rd), shots on goal (3rd), points (4th), shots (4th), game-winning goals (5th) and goals (7th) ... As a junior, had one goal and led the team with four assists and 30 shots while starting all 13 appearances ... Started 15 matches as a sophomore in 2018, with seven goals and seven assists ... His 21 points rank third-most in UNO single-season history ... Named First Team All- in 2018, when he was a two-time Offensive Player of the Week ... Appeared in 16 games with nine starts as a freshman, finishing with two goals and two assists ... Named to Summit League All-Tournament Team and All-Newcomer

#2 • MUSA QONGO • Sr. • Defender/Midfielder • Johannesburg, South Africa

5-7 • 165 Club/Prep Career Most recently played at the club level for the Kaizer Chiefs ... Attended Last School: Tyler Junior College Waterstone College for high school education. Last Club: Kaizer Chiefs Personal Son of George and Dikeledi ... Has one sister, Nombulelo ... Is pursuing Career Statistics a degree in healthy lifestyle management. Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG 2017 (Tyler) 25-13 4 (1) 5 13 31 16 2018 (Tyler) 18-17 0 5 5 3 1 2019 (CU) 13-11 0 4 4 1 0 Totals 56-41 4 (1) 14 22 35 17

2019 (Junior at Creighton) Tied for team lead with four assists ... Appeared in 13 matches and made 11 starts ... Recorded two assists against Tulsa (Sept. 24) ... Helped on Luke Haakenson’s game-winning goal against Nebraska-Omaha (Sept. 16) ... Also had assist on game-winning goal against Villanova (Sept. 28) ... Wore jersey number six.

2017-18 (Freshman and Sophomore at Tyler Junior College) Named to United Soccer Coaches NJCAA All-America First Team in 2018 ... Helped lead the Apaches to the 2017 NJCAA National Championship and a 42-5 record in two seasons ... Recorded career- best two assists on Sept. 1, 2018 against Blinn.

13 #8 • CHARLES AUGUSTE • Jr. • Midfielder • Montreal, Quebec

St-Hubert squad in 2018 ... Also played at the club level for St-Hubert 5-11 • 175 ... Served as team captain in summer of 2017 on U21AAA squad ... Last School: College Ahuntsic Nominated for the red carpet FSQ during summer of 2017 as one of the 10 best players of Quebec in U-21 ... Spent five years of Last Club: St-Hubert study at College Francais (2011-16) ... Earned selection to Haiti U-20 squad in 2017. Career Statistics Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG Personal 2019 9-7 2 (1) 2 6 13 6 Son of Martin Auguste and Marie-Helene Genest ... Has one sibling, Totals 9-7 2 (1) 2 6 13 6 Alexandre ... Plans to pursue a degree in management.

2019 (Sophomore at Creighton) Earned playing time during nine matches in first season with Bluejays, including seven starts ... Ended season with six points from two goals and two assists ... Started first three matches of season ... Recorded first point at Creighton with an assist on Dominic Briggs’ goal against No. 21 Akron (Sept. 6) ... Tallied first career goal with a header off a corner kick against Columbia (Sept. 9) ... Delivered game-winning goal at home versus Villanova (Sept. 28) ... Missed final eight matches of season because of injury ... Wore jersey number 13.

Club/Prep Career Helped lead College Ahuntsic to a silver medal finish at the 2018 CCAA National Championship ... Named to the Championship All-Stars Team ... Two-time RSEQ All Star ... Played for semi-pro

#6 • KEEGAN BOYD • Jr. • Defender • DuPont, Washington

SPSL Sound Division MVP as a senior in the spring of 2017 ... Earned 5-10 • 165 2017 Class 2A All-State First Team accolades during final season at Steilacoom ... Played at the club level for Federal Way FC under the Last School: Steilacoom direction of George Phiffer ... Earned a spot on the principal’s honor Last Club: Federal Way FC roll all four years at Steilacoom ... Part of the National Honor Society and volunteered at Wear Blue: Run to Remember event.

CHARLES AUGUSTE & KEEGAN BOYD Career Statistics Personal Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG 2018 6-0 0 0 0 2 0 Son of Mark and Kim ... Has two siblings, Courtney and Morgan 2019 8-2 0 1 1 3 2 ... Father, Mark, played soccer at Oregon State ... Sister, Courtney, Totals 14-2 0 1 1 5 2 attends the Creighton School of Dentistry ... Plans to pursue a degree in sociology.

2019 (Sophomore at Creighton) Appeared in eight matches and made two starts ... Logged first career complete match with 90 minutes of playing time during Creighton’s 3-1 victory against Columbia (Sept. 9) ... Awarded first career assist as a Bluejay during final regular-season match at No. 3 Georgetown (Nov. 6) ... Wore No. 17 during his second season as a Bluejay.

2018 (Freshman at Creighton) Made six appearances as a rookie on the Bluejay roster ... Recorded two shots. ... Logged season-high 39 minutes against Providence (Oct. 20) ... Wore the number 26 for his first season at Creighton.

Club/Prep Career Attended Steilacoom High School ... Owns Steilacoom’s single-season and career marks for both goals and assists ... Named the Class 2A

14 #33 • ANTONIO CHAVEZ BORRELLI • Jr. • GK • Los Angeles, California

five shots at No. 10 Clemson (Sept. 15) in the 1-0 loss ... Earned his first 6-0 • 180 career win on Sept. 19 against Providence, making five saves in the overtime victory ... Named to ACC Academic Honor Roll each season. Last School: Boston College Last Club: Santa Monica United Club/Prep Career Helped lead Loyola High School to the 2016 CIF SoCal Boys Division I championship … Loyola finished No. 4 in the country in 2016 and was Career Statistics as high as No. 2 in 2017 … High school teammate of former Bluejay Year M-MS Min. Sv GAA W-L-T goalkeeper Collin Valdivia … Earned 2017 Most Valuable Goaltender 2017 17-14 1312 51 1.99 4-10-0 award in the Mission League … Played club soccer with Santa Monica 2018 14-13 1295 37 1.46 3-7-4 2019 Did not play United’s B97 Blue Premier Team for head coach Javier Perez, and Totals 31-27 2607 88 1.73 7-17-4 then for Total Football Academy-FC Los Angeles’s Red 98 Team for Rodrigo Donoso.

Personal

2017-19 (Freshman-Junior at Boston College) Son of Sonya Chavez and Lisa Borrelli … Has one brother, Lorenzo ANTONIO CHAVEZ BORRELLI & MITCH DOBSON Appeared in 31 matches and made 27 starts as a Golden Eagle ...... Graduated from Boston College with degrees in psychology and Did not appear in any matches and redshirted during the 2019 communications ... Pursuing his MBA at Creighton. season ... Played in 14 games, making 13 starts for the Eagle in 2018 … Made a season-high nine saves at Providence on Aug. 31 … Had eight saves in a 0-0 tie at Syracuse on Oct. 26 … Posted back-to-back shutouts against NC State (Oct. 5) and Harvard (Oct. 9) for his first and second individual shutouts of his career ... Played in all 17 matches, making 14 starts during freshman season in 2017… Started all eight ACC matches ... Contributed to three shutouts on the season ... Split time in three of the team’s first four games before assuming the starting role full-time against No. 6 Notre Dame (Sept. 8) ... Made his career debut in the season opener against Quinnipiac (Aug. 25), making five saves in 45 minutes of action ... Made his first career start against New Hampshire (Sept. 1), making two saves in the loss ... Had a career-high six saves against No. 6 Notre Dame (Sept. 8) ... Stopped

#4 • MITCH DOBSON • Jr. • Defender • Lake Munmorah, Australia

6-0 • 180 Club/Prep Career Played at the club level for the Edgeworth Eagles FC and coach Last School: Monroe College Damian Zane ... Also competed for the Australian Schoolboys National Last Club: Edgeworth Eagles FC Team ... Attended Hunter Sports High School in Gateshead, Australia ... In addition to soccer, Dobson also ran cross country. Career Statistics Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG Personal 2018 (MC) 14-14 0 0 0 0 0 Son of Martin and Maree ... Has two brothers, Matthew and Noah ... 2019 (MC) 16-16 2 (1) 0 4 10 5 Plans to major in healthy lifestyle management. Totals 30-30 2 (1) 0 4 10 5

2020 (Sophomore Year Spring/Junior Year Fall at Creighton) Enrolled at Creighton in January and was with the program during spring semester ... Studied in Australia during fall 2020 semester.

2018-19 (Freshman-Sophomore at Monroe College) Had a pair of goals on 10 shots in 16 matches as a sophomore ... Earned All-Region selection both years ... In 2019, helped Monroe College to an 18-0 season that culminated in a win vs. Eastern Florida State College in the 2019 NJCAA Division I championship game, the program’s first title ... Team outscored opponents 117-8 ... One of seven Mustangs who signed on to play at the Division I level ... Started all 14 matches as a freshman in 2018, playing 1,049 minutes with nine games of 90 minutes or more of playing time ... Played for coach Marcus DiBernardo ... Monroe College is located in New Rochelle, New York. 15 #7 • DANIEL ESPELETA • Jr. • Midfielder • San Jose, Costa Rica

5-8 • 165 Club/Prep Career Last School: Apex Learning, Inc. Most recently played for Uruguay FC (Costa Rica) in the Adult League ... Took part in U-17 Costa Rica National Team camp in 2014 (30-player Online School camp) ... Played at four different levels for Deportivo Saprissa Last Club: Uruguay FC (Costa Rica) (U-14, U-15, U-17, U-20) and helped guide squad to pair of national championships ... Played two years for the Soccer Career Statistics Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG Club (Seattle) at the U-18 level ... Spent 2013 on the U-15 team of the 2018 16-10 0 1 1 19 2 Seattle Sounders FC Academy ... Two-time King County Conference 2019 17-16 2 (1) 0 4 31 10 All-Star Selection while playing for Mercer Island High School Totals 33-26 2 (1) 1 5 50 12 (Washington) ... Selected to the Olympic Development Program in the state of Washington in 2014.

Personal Son of Javier Espeleta and Adriana Quiros ... Has one sister, Ana ... 2019 (Sophomore at Creighton) Plans to pursue a degree in neuroscience. Played in all 17 matches and made 16 starts ... Scored first career goal as the game-winner during Creighton’s BIG EAST opener at Marquette (Sept. 20) ... Gave Creighton a 2-1 edge against Tulsa (Sept. 24) with his second goal of the season ... Ended season ranked second on team with 10 shots on goal ... Wore the number 14 for his first two seasons ... Named to CoSIDA Academic All-District 7 First Team.

2018 (Freshman at Creighton) Played in 16 matches and made 10 starts as a Bluejay rookie ... Recorded one assist and launched 19 shots ... Tallied first point at Creighton with an assist during 2018 Socctoberfest match against Memphis (Sept. 7) ... Logged season-high 85 minutes in second game of the season versus UC Davis (Aug. 26).

#1 • PAUL KRUSE • Jr. • Goalkeeper • Heilbronn, Germany

2018 (Freshman at Creighton) 6-6 • 190 2018 All-BIG EAST Second Team selection and unanimous pick to the All-BIG EAST Freshman Team ... Started all 18 matches and played Last School: Monchseegymnasium each minute in goal for the Bluejays ... Posted a 0.64 goals against Last Club: TSG 1899 Hoffenheim average, the fourth-best mark in program history, second-best PAUL KRUSE & DANIEL ESPELETA Academy for a freshman ... Tallied seven shutouts, the most by a Creighton freshman since Brian Holt posted 12 in 2008 ... Made season-high seven saves at DePaul (Oct. 27) ... Allowed more than one goal only Career Statistics Year M-MS Min. Sv GAA W-L-T once (Oct. 31 vs. Georgetown) ... Led the BIG EAST with only seven 2018 18-18 1697 52 0.64 11-4-3 goals against during league play, including four shutouts. 2019 10-10 952 42 1.23 4-4-2 Totals 28-28 2650 94 0.85 15-8-5 Club/Prep Career Played for Club TSG 1899 Hoffenheim Academy ... Part of three season-champion teams (U-12, U-14, U-15) ... Also guided squad to runner-up at the 2016 U-19 German National Championship ... Participated in first international match for the U-16 German National Team against Belgium (2013) ... Part of German U-18 National Pool ... 2021 Spring (Junior at Creighton) Attended Monchseegymnasium for high school. Named BIG EAST Preseason Co-Goalkeeper of the Year. Personal 2019 (Sophomore at Creighton) Son of Thomas Kruse and Andrea Siller ... Has one sibling, Louisa Started 10 matches in goal for Bluejays ... Led team with 1.23 goals ... Will graduate from the Heider College of Business in December against average and 42 saves ... Started first four matches of season with degrees in international business, marketing and business before incurring an injury ... Did not play from Sept. 10 - Oct. 18 intelligence & analytics. (missed seven matches) ... Posted seven saves in season-opener during 110 minutes of a 2-2 draw at No. 6 North Carolina (Aug. 30) ... Made career-high nine saves while helping Creighton record a 1-1 draw (2OT) at No. 3 Georgetown during the final match of the regular season ... Named final BIG EAST Goalkeeper of the Week (Nov. 8) ... Selected as BIG EAST Preseason Goalkeeper of the Year ... Earned Young Leadership Award at Creighton’s Jeffrey C. Kasch Foundation banquet.

16 #17 • ALEJANDRO MAILLET • Jr. • Midfielder • Copenhagen, Denmark

5-9 • 160 Last School: Kansas City Kansas Personal Son of Eric Maillet and Marta Tapias ... Born in Alicante, Spain ... One of nine Community College siblings, as he has four sisters and four brothers each ... Intends to Last Club: Akademisk Boldklub pursue a degree in international business.

Career Statistics Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG 2018 (KCKCC) 11-11 1 2 4 12 11 2019 (KCKCC) 13-13 4 (1) 0 8 18 13 Totals 24-24 5 (1) 2 12 30 24

2018-19 (Freshman and Sophomore at Kansas City Kansas Community College) ALEJANDRO MAILLET & CALLUM WATSON Earned spot on Kansas Jayhawk Community College Conference (KJCCC) Eastern Division First Team following both 2018 and 2019 seasons ... As a sophomore, played in 13 matches and finished with four goals on 18 shots ... Also had one game-winning goal ... During his rookie campaign in 2018, notched one goal and two assists in 11 games ... Recognized at school’s annual Academic Achievement Night.

Club/Prep Career Played club soccer with Akademisk Boldklub (AB) in Denmark and coach Patrick Braune ... Has been on title-winning teams at the U19 Danish Cup and the indoor national championship ... Won Best Player Award at the Danish Cup at the U17 level as team finished as runner-up ... Played soccer in high school at Bagsvaerd Kostskole og Gymnasium, where he also ran track.

#14 • CALLUM WATSON • Jr. • Midfielder • Essex, England

5-11 • 150 Club/Prep Career Most recently played at the club level for AFC Sudbury under the Last School: Hastings College direction of Danny Laws. Last Club: AFC Sudbury Personal Son of Jeff and Karen ... Has one sister, Sophie ... Plans to pursue a Career Statistics degree in healthy lifestyle management. Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG 2018 (HC) 18-17 4 13 21 41 21 2019 (HC) 20-18 10 (4) 15 35 74 37 Totals 38-35 14 (4) 28 56 115 58

2017-18 (Freshman and Sophomore at Hastings College) Spent two seasons at Hastings (Neb.) College and tallied 14 goals and 28 assists during 38 matches played ... Earned spot of 2019 NAIA All- America First Team ... Helped lead the Broncos to runner-up finish in the 2019 NAIA Men’s Soccer Championship .... Named to 2019 NAIA Men’s Soccer National Championship All-Tournament Team ... Ranked sixth in NAIA Division I with 15 assists as a sophomore and seventh with 13 assists his freshman campaign ... Two-time All-GPAC First Team selection ... Helped lead Hastings College to two GPAC tournament championships and one conference regular-season title ... Played for head coach Tim Bohnenkamp, a former Creighton midfielder.

17 #25 • JAKE ASHFORD • So. • Defender • Shawnee, Kansas

6-1 • 165 assists in 2018, while posting 19 goals and 11 assists in 2017 ... Five-time Last School: Mill Valley Kansas State Cup Champion (2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017) ... Four-time First Team All-Sunflowr League selection ... Named to Top Drawer Last Club: KC Fusion Soccer Fall 2018 All-Region Team ... Played at the club level for KC Fusion ... Also played basketball, football, track and bowling ... Holds the school record for 400 meters and high jump as well as part of Career Statistics Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG record-setting 4x400 team. 2019 6-3 1 (1) 0 2 4 1 Totals 6-3 1 (1) 0 2 4 1 Personal Son of Jeff and Stephanie ... Has two siblings, Alea and Dylan ... Plans to study with a focus on pre-physical therapy.

2019 (Freshman at Creighton) Had possible redshirt pulled on Oct. 19 vs. St. John’s in CU’s 12th game of the season ... Appeared in six matches and made three starts at forward ... Delivered game-winning golden goal during 105th minute against Butler (Nov. 2) ... Named BIG EAST Freshman of the Week on Nov. 4 ... Logged season-high 70 minutes during first career start on Oct. 19 against No. 7 St. John’s ... Also started against DePaul (Oct. 23) and Providence (Oct. 26).

Club/Prep Career Played at Mill Valley High School in Shawnee, Kansas ... Named Kansas 5A Offensive Player of the Year twice (2017, 2018) ... Selected to the west team for the 2018 High School All-American game ... First Team All-State in 2016, 2017 and 2018 ... Two-time Eastern Kansas League Midfielder of the Year honoree (2017, 2018) ... Tallied 24 goals and six

#22 • CAMERON BRIGGS • So. • Defender • Oconomowoc, Wisconsin

5-10 • 160 Classic 8 Conference Co-Player of the Year in 2017 ... Four-year varsity Last School: Oconomowoc starter ... First Team All-Conference selection following both junior and senior seasons ... Played at the club level for Elmbrook United ... Last Club: Elmbrook United Also played basketball all four years at Oconomowoc. JAKE ASHFORD & CAMERON BRIGGS Career Statistics Personal Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG Son of Anthony and Sasha ... Has three brothers, Anthony, Dominic 2018 Redshirted and Sebastian ... Twin brother, Dominic, also part of Creighton men’s 2019 10-3 0 0 0 2 1 Totals 10-3 0 0 0 2 1 soccer team ... Father, Anthony, played professional baseball at the minor league level within the Atlanta Braves and Colorado Rockies organizations ... Plans to pursue a degree in psychology.

2019 (Redshirt-Freshman at Creighton) Appeared in 10 matches and made three starts for the Bluejays ... Started first two matches of season on road against nationally- ranked North Carolina and Wake Forest ... Also started at Providence (Oct. 26) and logged season-high 95 minutes.

2018 (Freshman at Creighton) Earned a redshirt during his first season in Omaha.

Club/Prep Career First Team All-State in Wisconsin as a senior at Oconomowoc High School ... One of eight finalists for the 2018 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel High School Sports Award boys soccer player of the year ...

18 #12 • DOMINIC BRIGGS • So. • Forward • Oconomowoc, Wisconsin

5-10 • 160 Club/Prep Career Last School: Oconomowoc First Team All-Conference in the Classic 8 Conference ... Co-Conference Last Club: Elmbrook United Player of the Year as a sophomore when Oconomowoc played in the Wisconsin Little Ten ... Part of 2017 State Cup Champion squad. ... Played at the club level for Elmbrook United ... Also played basketball Career Statistics all four years at Oconomowoc ... Four year scholar-athlete. Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG 2018 Redshirted Personal 2019 16-4 2 (1) 1 5 11 5 Totals 16-4 2 (1) 1 5 11 5 Son of Anthony and Sasha ... Has three brothers, Anthony, Cameron and Sebastian ... Twin brother, Cameron, also part of Creighton men’s soccer team ... Father, Anthony, played professional baseball at the minor league level within the Atlanta Braves and Colorado Rockies organizations ... Plans to pursue the pre-medical track at Creighton.

2019 (Redshirt-Freshman at Creighton) Made 16 appearances, including four starts ... Recorded first collegiate goal on first career touch during season-opener at No. 6 North Carolina (Aug. 30) ... Tallied game-winning goal during home-opener against No. 21 Akron (Sept. 6) ... Collected BIG EAST DOMINIC BRIGGS & DIEGO DUTILH Freshman of the Week honors (Sept. 9) following game-winner during Creighton’s Socctoberfest ... Earned assist on game-winner in Creighton’s BIG EAST-opener at Marquette (Sept. 20) ... Logged season-high 88 minutes played during Bluejays’ double-overtime victory against Tulsa (Sept. 24) ... Claimed Rookie of the Year award at Creighton’s Jeffrey C. Kasch Foundation banquet.

2018 (Freshman at Creighton) Used his redshirt option in first year at Creighton.

#10 • DIEGO DUTILH • So. • Forward • Santiago, Chile

and earned MVP honors of ISF School Soccer World Cup Chilean 5-6 • 150 classification tournament in 2016 ... Ranked third at the ISF School Last School: Northwood (N.Y.) Soccer World Cup with seven goals in eight matches ... Helped Black Rock FC reach the semifinals of the 2019 Dallas Cup with three goals in Last Club: Black Rock FC five games ... Also part of the USL2 team with Black Rock ... Attended Everest School in Chile before completing classes at Northwood School in Lake Placid, New York while playing for Black Rock FC. Career Statistics Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG 2019 11-1 0 0 0 12 3 Personal Totals 11-1 0 0 0 12 3 Son of Felipe and Jimena ... Has three siblings, Tomas, Santiago and Antonia ... Plans to pursue a degree in business or economics.

2019 (Freshman at Creighton) Appeared in 11 matches and made one start during his first season as a Bluejay ... Logged season-high 48 minutes and four shots against Nebraska-Omaha (Sept. 16) ... Earned lone start on Oct. 11 at Xavier .. Wore jersey number 16.

Club/Prep Career Earned more than 25 nominations to the Chilean national team ... Part of AC Barnechea from 2013 to 2018 (from U-13 to U-20) ... Invited to train during two weeks with the U.S. Pistoiese 1921 professional team in Italy and made debut playing against FC Esperia Viareggio during summer of 2017 ... The 2017 winner of the Fonterra-Soprole trophy as “Best Chilean high school soccer player of the year” .. Helped lead first place team

19 #3 • LUKE MITCHELL • So. • Defender • Denver, Colorado

6-1 • 175 Personal Last School: Rivers Academy Son of D.J. and Rachel ... Has three siblings, Peter, Robert and Lexi ... Plans to study international business. Last Club: Atlanta United 2

Career Statistics Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG 2019 13-10 0 2 2 6 1 Totals 13-10 0 2 2 6 1

2019 (Freshman at Creighton) Appeared in 13 matches and made 10 starts ... Only freshman on Creighton’s roster to log more than 1,000 minutes (1,137) ... Recorded a pair of assists ... Tallied first career point with an assist on game-winning goal against Nebraska-Omaha (Sept. 16) ... Had second assist of season against Tulsa (Sept. 24).

Club/Prep Career Most recently played for the Atlanta United 2 (USL) ... Held captain status and started at center back with Colorado Rapids DA before joining Atlanta United ... Selected for the U17, U16 and U15 National Team rosters ... Earned Colorado State Cup MVP honors in 2017 ... Attended Rivers Academy in Atlanta ... Part of academic honor roll ... Member of student government and environmental club.

#5 • JAKE RONNEBERG • So. • Defender • Naperville, Illinois

Club/Prep Career 6-0 • 180 Played three years for Chicago Magic PSG Academy Team ... Also Last School: Benet Academy played two years for Chicago Fire Academy Team ... Invited to train Last Club: Chicago Fire with Chicago Fire First Team ... Served as captain for both Chicago Magic and Chicago Fire ... Invited to U.S. Soccer Regional Training ... Also a two-year varsity basketball player and member of National LUKE MITCHELLL & JAKE RONNEBERG Career Statistics Honor Society while attending Benet Academy. Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG 2018 Redshirted Personal 2019 10-8 0 0 0 3 0 Totals 10-8 0 0 0 3 0 Son of Steve and Ann ... Has one sibling, Sam ... Plans to pursue a degree in business ... A Heider College of Business Dean’s Fellow.

2019 (Redshirt-Freshman at Creighton) Appeared in 10 matches and made eight starts ... Started six BIG EAST matches ... Logged season-high 104 minutes against Butler (Nov. 2) ... Earned Creighton’s Most Improved Player Award at the Jeffrey C. Kasch Foundation banquet ... Wore jersey number 27.

2018 (Freshman at Creighton) Did not appear in a match and redshirted during his first season in Omaha.

20 BRAEDEN BEARD & ANDREW KARCHER

Personal Personal • Wichita, Kansas • Wichita,

Son of Scott and Linda ... Has one sibling, Kaitlin ... Plans to pursue a Son of Scott and Linda ... Has one sibling, degree in international business. Son of Jeff and Gina ... Has two siblings, Jack and Bret ... Father, Jeff Father, ... Bret and Jack siblings, two Has ... Gina and Jeff of Son (now Truman Missouri State for one year at Northeast played soccer to three years at Friends University ... Plans State) and football for pursue a degree in business. 21

• Fr. • Forward • Fr. • • Fr. • Goalkeeper • Houston, Texas • Fr. • Goalkeeper • Houston, - SOG -

W-L-T -

Shots

-

- GAA Pts

- - A Sv

- - Min. G (GW) Redshirted Redshirted

6-0 • 150 0-0 6-2 • 170 0-0 M-MS Career Statistics Career Statistics M-MS

Last School: Strake Jesuit Last School: Strake Last Club: Kansas Rush Academy Rush Last Club: Kansas

Year 2019 Totals Last School: Olathe Northwest Year 2019 Totals Last Club:FC Hurricanes Albion Club/Prep Career Club/Prep Career 2019 (Freshman at Creighton) 2019 (Redshirted at Creighton) #19 • BRAEDEN BEARD BRAEDEN #19 • #30 • ANDREW KARCHER community service through membership in the National Honor in the National Honor community service through membership Society. Redshirted during first season in Omaha. in Kansas (2017, 2018) Two-time Class 6A All-State First Team selection guide the Ravens to while playing for Olathe Northwest ... Helped Regional Championships a pair of Sunflower League titles and two and helped lead (2018 and 2019) ... Part of the Kansas Rush Academy ... Formerly Championship NPL 2018 the to team select Rush the Academy ... Also a a member of the Sporting KC Development meter relay team and state champion while part of in the 4x800 Olathe the for 2019 in team relay third place 4x400 meter member of over 60 hours of Northwest Track and Field team ... Completed Redshirted during his first year in Omaha. Played for Strake Jesuit High School in Houston, Texas ... Helped the Crusaders to an 18-8-2 record and regional semifinal finish in UIL 6A (Texas) in 2019 ... Earned First Team All-District honors and was named Hurricanes Albion club level for ... Played at the Defensive MVP team FC ... Member of First Team in the Olympic Development Program for South Texas from 2011-13 ... Member of National Honor Society and listed on Academic Honor Roll throughout high school ... Volunteered at Camp Blessing and at St. Francis Episcopal Church. #21 • STEEVIE LAMARRE • Fr. • Forward • Port-au-Prince, Haiti

6-0 • 155 for Minneapolis United Premier I, where he played for coach Tamba Last School: Johnson and helped lead team to pair of Minnesota Premier League Totino-Grace [Minn.] Championships and a runner-up finish at U.S. Club Nationals. Last Club: Personal Minneapolis Premier United 1 Son of Francklyn Lamarre and Michele Mannella ... Has siblings Witslin, Kimberline, Taina and Marco ... Has not yet declared a major ... Has done mission trips to New Orleans and Washington, D.C., among a multitude of community service activities.

Club/Prep Career Earned Team MVP honors and was a finalist for Class A Mr. Soccer honors in the state of Minnesota as a senior, when he had 30 goals and nine assists in 16 games ... Had nine games with multiple scores as a senior with six hat tricks, including a four-goal effort vs. Park Center (Sept. 21, 2019) after his team trailed 4-0 with 25 minutes left ... Named to 2019 United Soccer Coaches Fall Boys High School All-Great Lakes Region Team and the Minneapolis Star Tribune All-Metro Team ... Earned All-State honors as a junior after posting 15 goals and six assists ... Scored the lone goal in 2017 state title game win at US Bank Stadium vs. St. Thomas Academy, helping the Eagles to their first state title since 2004 ... Minnesota State High School Soccer Coaches Association All-Star Game MVP ... Recognized with the Spotlight On Scholarship for academic excellence four times ... Played club soccer

#13 • DUNCAN McGUIRE • Fr. • Forward • Omaha, Nebraska

6-1 • 185 goals (21) and added six assists during 2018 as a junior ... Had nine Last School: Creighton Prep matches with multiple goals ... Helped lead the Junior Jays to the 2017 Last Club: Elkhorn Soccer Club Nebraska Class A state championship in match played at Morrison Stadium ... Last played at the club level for the Elkhorn Soccer Club ... Volunteered at Madonna School. Career Statistics STEEVIE LAMARRE & DUNCAN MCGUIRE Year M-MS G (GW) A Pts Shots SOG 2019 Redshirted Personal Totals 0-0 - - - - - Son of Brian and Tara ... Has two siblings, Holden and Maren ... Plans to study business.

2019 (Redshirted at Creighton) Did not appear in a match and redshirted during his first season with the Bluejays.

Club/Prep Career Two-time Omaha World-Herald All-Nebraska First Team selection (2018 and 2019) ... Chosen to play at the 2019 Nebraska High School Soccer Senior Showcase ... Named to the 2018-19 TopDrawerSoccer Spring All-America Second Team and All-Midwest (Iowa and Nebraska) First Team ... A 2018 Lincoln Journal Star Super-State First Team selection ... Ranked second in Class A in Nebraska for

22 #18 • OWEN O’MALLEY • Fr. • Midfielder • Cary, North Carolina

6-0 • 155 Personal Last School: Crossroads FLEX Son of Patrick and Erica ... Has two siblings, Shea and Finn ... Sister Last Club: North Carolina FC Shea plays soccer at Ole Miss ... Father Patrick played soccer at Academy Villanova ... Plans to pursue a degree in business.

Club/Prep Career Played four years for North Carolina FC Academy under the direction of John Bradford ... Trained with North Carolina FC’s First Team, teaming with fellow Bluejay freshman Landon Sloan ... Helped OWEN O’MALLEY & MARK O’NEILL lead academy team to U19 and U17 playoffs and scored more than 25 goals during academy career ... Ranked as high as No. 89 nationally and No. 10 in the South Atlantic region by Top Drawer Soccer ... Invited to US Soccer Market ... Two-time North Carolina State Cup champion ... Helped guide squad to Region 3 Premier League Championship in 2015.

#23 • MARK O’NEILL • Fr. • Midfielder • Louisville, Colorado

6-0 • 160 Last School: Fairview Personal Last Club: Real Colorado Son of Colm and Christine ... Has siblings Darragh, Shane, Enda, Kate and Grace ... Brother Shane plays for the Seattle Sounders and has played 94 matches in MLS since 2012; brother Darragh was a punter on the football team at Colorado from 2011-14; brother Enda was a captain on the soccer team at Wisconsin (2014-17) and played one season at Villanova (2018); sister Grace plays basketball at Regis ... Intends to become a business major.

Club/Prep Career Played for Real Colorado and coach Clint Baumstark since 2017-18, scoring 15 goals in 54 games ... Helped Real Colorado to the Dallas Cup final and the NPL national final, as well as three regional quarterfinals ... Named to Dallas Cup U16 All-Star Team in 2017 ... Also spent time with FC Boulder ... Was an all-conference performer and a three-year starter on the basketball court in high school, helping his 2019-20 team to the 5A Final Four.

23 #24 • NATHAN SCHNUR • Fr. • Goalkeeper • Evergreen, Colorado

6-0 • 180 Last School: ASU Preparatory Academy Last Club: Barca Academy

Club/Prep Career Three-time Magna Cum Laude honoree at ASU Preparatory Academy ... Played for 2017-18 Arizona state champions. ... Two-year captain of Barca Academy, where he was coached by Ged Quinn ... Also trained with Phoenix Rising for a stint ... Was a member of the 2018-19 USSDA Western Conference champions as well as the 2017-18 Arizona State champions.

Personal Son of Ronald and Rebecca ... Has one sibling, Logan ... Cousin Meghan Schnur played women’s soccer on US Women’s National Team and at UConn ... Plans to pursue a business degree.

#15 • LANDON SLOAN • Fr. • Midfielder • Raleigh, North Carolina

5-11 • 160 Personal Last School: Heritage Son of Scott and Jennifer ... Has one sibling, Marisa ... Father, Scott, Last Club: North Carolina FC played college baseball at SUNY Cortland ... Plans to pursue a degree Academy in business. NATHAN SCHNUR & LANDON SLOAN

Club/Prep Career A 2019 United Soccer Coaches Fall High School Boys All-American ... Named 2019 North Carolina Soccer Coaches Association (NCSCA) Player of the Year and 2019-20 Boys Soccer Gatorade Player of the Year ... Nominated for National Player of the Year honors ... Posted 11 goals and 12 assists as a senior in 2019 while making the NCSCA All-State Team ... Helped guide North Carolina FC Academy team to playoffs during each of four seasons played (2015-19) ... Served as team captain of academy team from 2017-19 and teamed with fellow Bluejay freshman Owen O’Malley ... Earned 2017 Hamilton Sportsmanship Award ... Spent two weeks training with West Ham United FC in London during 2015 ... Claimed spot as 2014 Olympic Development Program (ODP) pool player ... Graduated Summa Cum Laude and was member of National Honor Society, National Math Honor Society and National Science Honor Society ... Volunteered with Best Buddies, Student Government, Hooligans Spirit Club, Miracle League, and Husky Summer Sports Camp. 24 LUKE WATERS Personal Son of Dave and Susy ... Has two sisters, Marin (twin) and Madisen and sisters, Marin (twin) and and Susy ... Has two Son of Dave Creighton ... brother Joe attended Rob and Joe ... Oldest two brothers, Plans to study business. 25

- SOG

• Fr. • Defender • Omaha, Nebraska Defender • • Fr. •

- Shots

- Pts

- A

- G (GW) Redshirted

6-1• 165 0-0 M-MS Career Statistics

Last School: Creighton Prep Last School: Creighton Last Club: Elkhorn Soccer Club Last Club: Elkhorn Soccer Year 2019 Totals Club/Prep Career 2019 (Redshirted at Creighton) #28 • LUKE WATERS LUKE WATERS #28 • Redshirted during his first season at Creighton. played at the club current Bluejay Duncan McGuire ... Most recently Club ... Also played level with Elkhorn Ajax in the Elkhorn Soccer Named Second Team All State in 2019 and 2018 ... Also First Team Named Second Team All State in 2019 and Prep to the 2017 Nebraska All-Metro in 2019 ... Helped lead Creighton match in 2019, Class A state championship and state championship Stadium ... Teammate of Morrison played at were of which both hockey until junior year of high school ... Involved with Operation hockey until junior year of high school ... as a retreat leader ... Others, Big Brothers, Lolo’s Angels and served Earned first honors academically. 2019 Statistics Overall BIG EAST CU Career (Conference) No. Name MP-MS SHOTS SOG G (GW) A PTS. MP-MS G (GW) A PTS. G A PTS. 5 Yudai Tashiro 16-16 33 8 6 (1) 3 15 9-9 4 1 9 7 (5) 6 (3) 20 (13) 15 Luke Haakenson 17-17 49 19 5 (3) 2 12 9-9 1 (1) 0 2 12 (2) 11 (5) 35 (9) 13 Charles Auguste 9-7 13 6 2 (1) 2 6 2-2 1 (1) 0 2 2 (1) 2 (0) 6 (2) 12 Dominic Briggs 16-4 11 5 2 (1) 1 5 8-2 0 1 1 2 (0) 1 (1) 5 (1) 9 Ziyad Fares 6-4 11 7 2 1 5 - - - - 5 (2) 2 (1) 12 (5) 14 Daniel Espeleta 17-16 31 10 2 (1) 0 4 9-9 1 (1) 0 2 2 (1) 1 (0) 5 (2) 8 Kuba Polat 17-16 7 1 0 4 4 9-9 0 2 2 3 (1) 9 (6) 15 (8) 2 Younes Boudadi 16-16 5 3 0 4 4 8-8 0 3 3 1 (1) 8 (5) 10 (7) 6 Musa Qongo 13-11 1 0 0 4 4 7-6 0 1 1 0 (0) 4 (1) 4 (1) 7 Tor Trosten 13-7 17 4 1 0 2 9-4 0 0 0 2 (1) 1 (1) 5 (3) 11 Nico Engelking 12-7 12 2 1 0 2 6-4 0 0 0 1 (0) 0 (0) 2 (0) 25 Jake Ashford 6-3 2 1 1 (1) 0 2 5-3 1 (1) 0 2 1 (1) 0 (0) 2 (2) 3 Luke Mitchell 13-10 6 1 0 2 2 6-5 0 0 0 0 (0) 2 (0) 2 (0) 21 Bryce Gibson 14-13 5 4 0 1 1 9-9 0 1 1 1 (1) 2 (1) 4 (3) 17 Keegan Boyd 8-2 3 2 0 1 1 3-0 0 1 1 0 (0) 1 (1) 1 (1) 16 Diego Dutilh 11-1 12 4 0 0 0 6-1 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 27 Jake Ronneberg 10-8 3 0 0 0 0 7-5 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 22 Cameron Briggs 10-3 2 1 0 0 0 4-1 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 23 Connor Ramlo 10-9 1 0 0 0 0 4-4 0 0 0 2 (1) 0 (0) 4 (2) Creighton Totals 17 226 78 22 25 69 9 8 10 26 Opponent Totals 17 234 89 22 20 64 9 9 7 25 Overall BIG EAST CU Career (Conference) No. Name MP-MS MIN. SV GA GAA ShO MIN. SV GA GAA ShO Mins. SV GA GAA ShO 1 Paul Kruse 10-10 952:25 42 13 1.23 1 491:43 23 7 1.28 1 2,651 (1,325) 94 (55) 25 (13) 0.85 (0.88) 8 (5) 33 Collin Valdivia 8-7 655:02 22 9 1.24 2 360:00 13 2 0.50 2 851 (522) 28 (18) 13 (6) 1.37 (0.98) 2 (2) Creighton Totals 17 1607:27 67 22 1.23 3 851:43 38 9 0.95 3 Opponent Totals 17 1607:27 56 22 1.23 5 851:43 33 8 0.85 3 Goalkeeper W-L-T: Kruse (4-4-2), Valdivia (4-3-0)

Miscellaneous Statistics 2019 Record Breakdown

CU Opp. Overall...... 8-7-2 Corner Kicks . . . . 90 ...... 107 Home...... 7-3-0 Offsides ...... 39 ...... 46 Away...... 1-4-2 Penalty Kicks . . . 0-0 ...... 2-2 Conference...... 4-4-1 Yellow Cards . . . . 25 ...... 20 Home...... 3-1-0 Boudadi 6, Haakenson 3, Tashiro 3, Dutilh Away...... 1-3-1 2, Gibson 2, Qongo 2, Polat 2, Ashford 1, Non-Conference...... 4-3-1 Engelking 1, Espeleta 1, Mitchell 1, Trosten 1. Home...... 4-2-0 Red Cards ...... 1 ...... 3 Away...... 0-1-1 Trosten 1. Creighton Scored First...... 5-1-1 Opponent Scored First...... 3-6-1 Score by Periods Scoreless ties...... 0-0-0 1 2 OT1 OT2 Total Ahead at halftime...... 3-0-1 CU 9 11 0 2 22 Trailing at halftime...... 1-4-1 Opp. 10 11 1 0 22 Tied at halftime...... 4-3-0 Overtime...... 2-1-2 Attendance Breakdown Monday ...... 2-0-0 Matches Total Average Tuesday ...... 1-0-0 OVERALL...... 17...... 29,130...... 1,714 Wednesday...... 1-0-1 Home...... 10...... 22,403...... 2,240 Thursday...... 0-0-0 Away...... 7...... 6,727...... 961 Friday...... 2-3-1 Saturday...... 2-3-0 Sunday...... 0-1-0 Against Top 25...... 1-2-2 Daniel Espeleta scored two goals in the fall of 2019, which is tied for the most among returners. 26 2019 Final Results and Polls

Date Opponent Score Record BE Site Att. Creighton Goals (Individual season total) Aug. 30 at #6 North Carolina T, 2-2 (2OT) 0-0-1 0-0-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. 2,417 Tashiro (1), D. Briggs (1) Sept. 1 at #4 Wake Forest L, 0-1 0-1-1 0-0-0 Winston-Salem, N.C. 2.089 - Sept. 6 #21 AKRON W, 2-1 1-1-1 0-0-0 MORRISON STADIUM 4,818 Fares (1), D. Briggs (2) Sept. 9 COLUMBIA W, 3-1 2-1-1 0-0-0 MORRISON STADIUM 886 Engelking (1), Haakenson (1), Auguste (1) Sept. 13 UC IRVINE L, 1-3 2-2-1 0-0-0 MORRISON STADIUM 3,158 Fares (2) Sept. 16 NEBRASKA-OMAHA W, 2-1 3-2-1 0-0-0 MORRISON STADIUM 4,096 Trosten (1), Haakenson (2) Sept. 20 at Marquette* W, 1-0 4-2-1 1-0-0 Milwaukee, Wis. 587 Espeleta (1) Sept. 24 TULSA W, 4-3 (2OT) 5-2-1 1-0-0 MORRISON STADIUM 1,017 Haakenson (3, 4), Espeleta (2), Tashiro (2) Sept. 28 VILLANOVA* W, 1-0 6-2-1 2-0-0 MORRISON STADIUM 1,512 Auguste (2) Oct. 4 at Seton Hall* L, 0-1 6-3-1 2-1-0 South Orange, N.J. 267 - Oct. 11 at Xavier* L, 0-1 6-4-1 2-2-0 Cincinnati, Ohio 340 - Oct. 19 #7 ST. JOHN’S* L, 0-2 6-5-1 2-3-0 MORRISON STADIUM 2,049 - Oct. 23 DEPAUL* W, 1-0 7-5-1 3-3-0 MORRISON STADIUM 1,312 Haakenson (5) Oct. 26 at Providence* L, 2-3 (OT) 7-6-1 3-4-0 Providence, R.I. 628 Tashiro (3, 4) Nov. 2 BUTLER* W, 2-1 (2OT) 8-6-1 4-4-0 MORRISON STADIUM 1,627 Tashiro (5), Ashford (1) Nov. 6 at #3 Georgetown* T, 1-1 (2OT) 8-6-2 4-4-1 Washington, D.C. 399 Tashiro (6) Nov. 9 (5) BUTLER^ L, 0-1 8-7-2 4-4-1 MORRISON STADIUM 1,928 -

Home matches in BOLD CAPS * - BIG EAST Conference regular season match (#) - Tournament Seed ^ - BIG EAST Tournament

2019 Final National Polls

United Soccer Coaches Top 25 CollegeSoccerNews Top 30 NCAA Top 25 Season-Ending Poll Season-Ending Poll Season-Ending RPI Rank Team Record Rank Team Record Rank Team Record 1 Georgetown 20-1-3 1 Georgetown 20-1-3 1 Virginia 21-2-1 2 Virginia 21-2-1 2 Virginia 21-2-1 2 Georgetown 20-1-3 3 Wake Forest 16-5-2 3 Stanford 14-3-5 3 SMU 18-2-3 4 Stanford 14-3-5 4 Wake Forest 16-5-2 4 Clemson 18-2-2 5 Clemson 18-2-1 5 SMU 18-2-1 5 Wake Forest 16-5-2 6 Clemson 18-2-2 6 Washington 17-4-0 6 UCF 15-3-2 7 Washington 17-4-0 7 SMU 18-2-1 8 UCSB 15-5-4 7 Virginia Tech 10-6-3 8 UCSB 15-5-4 9 Indiana 15-3-4 8 Washington 17-4-0 9 Indiana 15-3-4 10 UCF 15-3-2 9 St. John’s 14-5-1 10 UCF 15-3-2 11 Missouri State 18-1-1 10 Stanford 14-3-5 11 Marshall 16-3-3 12 Marshall 16-3-3 11 UCSB 15-5-4 12 St. John’s 14-5-1 13 Saint Mary’s 16-2-0 12 Providence 16-7-0 13 Virginia Tech 10-6-3 14 Michigan 11-5-6 13 Marshall 16-3-3 14 Providence 16-7-0 15 Providence 16-7-0 14 Indiana 15-3-4 15 Saint Mary’s 16-2-0 16 Seattle U 15-3-5 15 Missouri State 18-1-1 16 Missouri State 18-1-1 17 Virginia Tech 10-6-3 16 Louisville 10-8-2 17 Michigan 11-5-6 18 Louisville 10-8-2 17 New Hampshire 15-2-3 18 Penn State 12-4-3 19 St. John’s 14-5-1 18 Saint Mary’s 16-2-0 19 Seattle U 15-3-5 20 Penn State 12-4-3 19 Charlotte 12-4-4 21 Kentucky 13-5-3 20 Louisville 10-8-2 20 Kentucky 13-5-3 22 New Hampshire 15-2-3 21 Charlotte 12-4-4 21 UC Davis 13-5-2 23 Charlotte 12-4-4 22 New Hampshire 15-2-3 24 UC Davis 13-5-2 22 Notre Dame 10-8-1 23 Kentucky 13-5-3 25 Campbell 17-3-2 23 Penn State 12-4-3 24 Campbell 17-3-2 26 Maryland 11-8-2 24 Michigan 11-5-6 25 UC Davis 13-5-2 27 Boston College 9-6-3 25 Boston College 9-6-3 28 Yale 13-3-2 29 Pittsburgh 10-8-2 30 Coastal Carolina 10-8-3 2019 opponents in bold

27 2019 Review and Honors 2019 All-BIG EAST Honors BIG EAST Overall Team W L T Pts. Pct. GF GA W L T Pct. GF GA First Team Georgetown 7 0 2 23 .889 17 2 20 1 3 .896 58 14 F Derek Dodson, Jr. Georgetown St. John’s 6 2 1 19 .722 19 9 14 5 1 .725 38 19 Providence 6 3 0 18 .667 14 10 16 7 0 .696 41 23 F Tani Oluwaseyi, So. St. John’s Butler 4 4 1 13 .500 15 13 11 7 2 .600 31 27 F Samson Sergi, Sr. Xavier* Creighton 4 4 1 13 .500 8 9 8 7 2 .529 22 22 M Yudai Tashiro, Sr. Creighton Marquette 4 5 0 12 .444 8 15 8 9 1 .472 25 31 M Jacob Montes, Jr. Georgetown* Seton Hall 3 5 1 10 .389 7 13 6 9 1 .406 22 21 M Tiago Mendonca, Sr. Providence Xavier 3 6 0 9 .333 8 12 8 8 1 .500 24 19 D Max de Bruijne, Sr. DePaul Villanova 2 6 1 7 .278 2 11 9 8 1 .528 14 14 DePaul 1 5 3 6 .278 7 11 5 9 3 .382 17 22 D Dylan Nealis, Sr. Georgetown D Patrick Seagrist, Sr. Marquette D Joao Serrano, Sr. Providence 2019 BIG EAST Championship Recap GK Giannis Nikopolidis, So. Georgetown Opening Round – Nov. 9 #3 Providence 3, #6 Marquette 0 Second Team^ #5 Butler 1, #4 Creighton 0 Championship – Nov. 17 F Wilmer Cabrera Jr., Fr. Butler #1 Georgetown 3, #3 Providence 1 F Luke Haakenson, Sr. Creighton Semifinals – Nov. 13 Georgetown earned automatic bid to NCAA F Achara, Sr. Georgetown #1 Georgetown 2, #5 Butler 2 Tournament GU advances on PKs, 4-3 F Carlton McKenzie, Sr. Seton Hall #3 Providence 2, #2 St. John’s 1 M Sean Zawadzki, So. Georgetown M Luka Prpa, Sr. Marquette M Paulo Lima, So. Providence 2019 Individual Honors & Awards M Skage Simonsen, So. St. John’s D Younes Boudadi, Sr. Creighton Jake Ashford Paul Kruse D Brandon Duarte, Sr. St. John’s BIG EAST Freshman of the Week (11/4) Preseason BIG EAST Goalkeeper of the Year D Shane Bradley, Sr. Villanova Preseason All-BIG EAST Team, GK GK Jan Hoffelner, Jr. St. John’s Younes Boudadi BIG EAST Goalkeeper of the Week (11/8) All-BIG EAST Second Team, D Luke Mitchell Third Team^ (at-large) Dominic Briggs BIG EAST Freshman of the Week (9/23) F Brandon Guhl, Sr. Butler BIG EAST Freshman of the Week (9/9) M Jack Haywood, So. Butler Kuba Polat M Jared Timmer, Sr. Butler Daniel Espeleta All-BIG EAST Third Team, M M Kuba Polat, Jr. Creighton CoSIDA Academic All-District 7 First Team M Connor Alba, Sr. Marquette Connor Ramlo F Josh Coan, Sr. Marquette Bryce Gibson CoSIDA Academic All-America Third Team GK Austin Aviza, Sr. Providence CoSIDA Academic All-District 7 First Team CoSIDA Academic All-District 7 First Team M/F Danny Griffin, Sr. Providence M Brandon Knapp, So. St. John’s Luke Haakenson Yudai Tashiro All-BIG EAST Second Team, F All-BIG EAST First Team M Einar Lye, So. St. John’s BIG EAST Sport Excellence Award BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week (9/30) M Derrick Otim, Sr. Xavier CoSIDA Academic All-District 7 First Team GK Matthew Rosenberg, Jr. Xavier Rev. Carl M. Reinert, S.J., Male Student-Athlete of the Year Collin Valdivia *unanimous selection BIG EAST Goalkeeper of the Week (9/23) CoSIDA Academic All-District 7 First Team ^extra player added due to tie in voting

BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year Tani Oluwaseyi, St. John’s, F

BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year Dylan Nealis, Georgetown

BIG EAST Midfielder of the Year Jacob Montes, Georgetown

BIG EAST Freshman of the Year Wilmer Cabrera Jr., Butler, F

BIG EAST Co-Goalkeepers of the Year Giannis Nikopolidis, Georgetown Jan Hoffelner, St. John’s

BIG EAST Coaching Staff of the Year St. John’s

28 2021 Spring Schedule & Opponents Info 2021 Creighton Men’s Soccer Spring Schedule

Date Opponent Location Time (CST) Saturday, Feb. 20 at Marquette * Milwaukee, Wisconsin 4 pm Wednesday, Feb. 24 CENTRAL METHODIST # OMAHA SPORTS COMPLEX 3 pm Saturday, Feb. 27 at Nebraska-Omaha Omaha, Nebraska (Caniglia Field) 2 pm Saturday, March 6 XAVIER * MORRISON STADIUM 11 am Saturday, March 13 at DePaul * Chicago, Illinois 1 pm Wednesday, March 17 BUTLER * MORRISON STADIUM 2 pm Saturday, March 20 MARQUETTE * MORRISON STADIUM 1 pm Wednesday, March 24 at Xavier * Cincinnati, Ohio 10 am Sunday, March 28 at Kansas City Kansas City, Missouri (Swope Park) 4 pm Saturday, April 3 DEPAUL * MORRISON STADIUM 1 pm Saturday, April 10 at Butler * Indianapolis, Indiana 1 pm

Spring 2021 BIG EAST Men’s Soccer Championship Presented by Jeep Wednesday, April 14 Semifinal Campus Site (Highest Overall Seed) TBA Saturday, April 17 Championship Campus Site (Highest Overall Seed) TBA

All times listed are central and subject to change # Denotes Exhibition Match * Denotes BIG EAST Regular-Season Match Home matches listed in BOLD CAPS played at Michael G. Morrison, S.J., Stadium (19th and California, Omaha, Neb.) (Updated Feb. 19, 2021)

Opponent Information

Team 2019 W-L-T (Conf. W-L-T, Place) Head Coach (Year at School) MSOC SID MSOC SID Email Match Info Series History MSOC Athletic Website

Non-Conference Central Methodist Eagles 25-1-0 (11-0-0, 1st in Heart [NAIA]) Alex Nichols (7th season) Rachel Moore [email protected] Feb. 24, Home (Exhibition) First Meeting @CMUEagles CMUEagles.com

Nebraska-Omaha Mavericks 4-9-4 (2-2-1, 4th in Summit) Bob Warming (3rd season) Kayla Peterson [email protected] Feb. 27, Away Creighton leads 6-3-1 @OmahaMSOC OMavs.com

Kansas City Roos 6-11-0 (5-6-0, 8th in WAC) Ryan Pore (1st season) Jerod Fox [email protected] March 28, Away Creighton leads 12-2-1 @KCRoosMSoccer KCRoos.com

BIG EAST (Midwest Division) 8-9-1 (4-5-0, 6th in BIG EAST) Louis Bennett (15th season) E.J. Stevens [email protected] Feb. 20, Away; March 20, Home Creighton leads 8-7-1 @MarquetteSoccer GoMarquette.com

Xavier Musketeers 8-8-1 (3-6-0, 8th in BIG EAST) Andy Fleming (11th season) Greg Lautzenheiser [email protected] March 6, Home; March 24, Away Creighton leads 5-3-1 @XavierMSOC GoXavier.com

DePaul Blue Demons 5-9-3 (1-5-3, 10th in BIG EAST) Mark Plotkin (3rd season) Nate Jelinek [email protected] March 13, Away; April 3, Home Creighton leads 10-0-0 @DePaulMSoccer DePaulBlueDemons.com

Butler Bulldogs 11-7-2 (4-4-1, T-4th in BIG EAST) Paul Snape (10th season) John Dedman [email protected] March 17, Home; April 10, Away Creighton leads 8-3-1 @ButlerMSoccer ButlerSports.com

29 All-Time Results and Series History

Opponent W-L-T Last Result Streak Harvard 1-0-0 W, 6-0, 9/18/99 W1 Regis 4-1-1 W, 3-2, 9/16/90 W3 Air Force 4-4-2 L, 0-1 (2OT), 9/23/06 L1 Illinois-Chicago 1-2-0 W, 3-1, 9/16/14 W1 Rhode Island 1-0-0 W, 3-1, 9/22/96 W1 Akron 1-3-2 W, 2-1, 9/6/19 W1 Illinois State 6-3-0 L, 1-2, 10/22/94 L1 Rockhurst 1-3-0 L, 0-1, 10/26/85 L2 Alabama A&M 1-0-0 W, 3-2, 9/5/93 W1 Indiana 4-4-0 L, 0-1, 12/7/12 L1 Rutgers 2-0-0 W, 2-0, 8/26/16 W2 American 1-0-0 W, 1-0 (2OT), 9/26/93 W1 Iowa State 1-0-0 W, 3-2, 10/27/79 W1 St. John’s 5-4-2 L, 0-2, 10/19/19 L1 Arkansas-Little Rock 2-0-0 W, 2-1, 10/6/91 W2 Jacksonville 1-0-0 W, 2-1, 9/25/18 W1 Saint Louis 8-8-2 L, 0-1 (OT), 9/20/14 L3 Augustana (S.D.) 1-0-0 W, 2-1, 11/11/79 W1 Kansas Newman 1-0-0 W, 8-1, 10/9/90 W1 Saint Mary’s 2-0-0 W, 1-0, 9/9/12 W2 Avila 0-4-0 L, 1-2, 10/2/85 L4 Kentucky 3-0-0 W, 3-2, 11/20/16 W3 San Diego 1-0-1 T, 1-1 (OT), 11/26/03 T1 Belmont 1-0-0 W, 2-0, 10/15/00 W1 Lafayette 1-0-0 W, 3-0, 11/18/05 W1 San Diego State 1-0-1 T, 2-2 (2OT), 8/31/07 T1 Benedictine 4-0-1 W, 3-0, 9/24/85 W3 Louisiana Monroe 0-3-0 L, 0-3, 9/14/84 L3 San Francisco 2-1-0 W, 2-0, 9/5/97 W2 Boston College 1-0-0 W, 6-2, 12/8/02 W1 Loyola-Chicago 5-0-1 W, 3-0, 9/27/16 W3 Santa Clara 2-0-2 W, 1-0, 8/31/14 W2 Boston University 1-0-1 W, 1-0, 9/23/00 W1 Loyola-Maryland 1-0-0 W, 2-0, 9/8/91 W1 Seattle 0-1-0 L, 1-2, 11/21/13 L1 Bowling Green 1-1-0 W, 2-1, 9/3/00 W1 Loyola Marymount 2-1-0 W, 1-0 (OT), 9/15/07 W2 Seton Hall 4-3-0 L, 0-1, 10/4/19 L1 Bradley 25-7-1 W, 1-0, 10/20/12 W3 Marquette 8-7-1 W, 1-0, 9/20/19 W1 South Carolina 1-1-0 W, 4-3 (OT), 9/12/97 W1 Briar Cliff 1-0-0 W, forfeit, 11/5/79 W1 Maryland 1-3-1 L, 0-1, 9/30/11 L2 South Dakota 2-0-0 W, 11-0, 10/1979 W2 Brown 0-1-0 L, 0-1, 9/19/03 L1 Massachusetts 0-1-0 L, 0-1, 11/23/01 L1 South Dakota State 1-1-0 W, 10-2, 10/12/80 W1 Butler 8-3-1 L, 0-1, 11/9/19 L1 Memphis 5-0-1 W, 2-0, 9/7/18 W5 South Florida 4-0-0 W, 2-1, 9/3/18 W4 California 3-0-0 W, 3-0, 9/3/17 W3 Mercer 1-0-0 W, 1-0, 9/18/05 W1 SIU Edwardsville 6-4-1 W, 2-1, 11/11/12 W3 Cal Poly 2-0-0 W, 3-0, 9/1/13 W2 Metro State 1-1-0 W, 2-0, 9/25/81 W1 SMU 6-17-2 T, 2-2 (2OT), 11/21/10 T1 Cal State Fullerton 1-0-1 T, 0-0 (OT), 12/1/96 T1 Michigan 1-1-0 W, 1-0, 8/28/15 W1 Stanford 4-3-0 L, 0-3, 9/1/17 L1 Central Arkansas 4-0-0 W, 3-0, 10/13/12 W4 Michigan State 1-0-1 W, 1-0, 9/13/15 W1 Tarkio 3-0-0 W, 3-2, 10/8/85 W3 Charlotte 2-1-1 T, 0-0 (2OT), 12/9/11 T1 Milton 1-0-0 W, 6-0, 10/21/80 W1 TCU 3-1-0 W, 3-1, 10/29/00 W2 Cincinnati 1-0-0 W, 3-0, 9/7/14 W1 Minnesota 0-2-0 L, 0-2, 9/12/82 L2 Teikyo-Westmar 1-0-0 W, 10-0, 9/14/91 W1 Clemson 1-2-0 W, 2-0, 8/24/18 W1 Missouri State 22-8-4 W, 4-0, 9/29/15 W3 Truman State 3-0-0 W, 2-0, 10/5/85 W3 Coastal Carolina 1-0-0 W, 5-1, 10/16/93 W1 Missouri-Rolla 1-1-0 W, 3-2, 9/26/81 W1 Tulsa 20-10-3 W, 4-3 (2OT), 9/24/19 W3 College of Charleston 3-0-0 W, 4-1, 9/25/98 W3 Missouri-St. Louis 0-1-0 L, 0-3, 10/6/84 L1 UC Davis 0-0-1 T, 0-0 (2OT), 8/26/18 T1 Colorado College 0-0-1 T, 3-3 (OT), 9/12/81 T1 Morningside 1-0-0 W, 5-0, 10/13/79 W1 UC Irvine 2-1-0 L, 1-3, 9/13/19 L1 Colorado Mines 1-0-0 W, 3-1, 10/12/91 W1 Mount Marty 1-0-0 W, forfeit, 11/3/79 W1 UCLA 3-1-1 W, 1-0, 10/31/09 W1 Columbia 2-0-0 W, 3-1, 9/9/19 W2 Nebraska 2-1-2 W, 2-0, 10/21/82 W2 UC Riverside 1-0-0 W, 2-0, 9/7/08 W1 Concordia 3-0-0 W, 14-0, 9/25/90 W3 Nebraska-Omaha 6-3-1 W, 2-1, 9/16/19 W2 UC Santa Barbara 2-0-0 W, 2-1, 11/27/11 W2 Connecticut 2-1-0 W, 1-0, 12/2/12 W2 Nebraska Wesleyan 2-0-0 W, 7-0, 9/21/80 W2 UMBC 0-0-1 T, 0-0 (2OT), 12/5/14 T1 Cornell College 1-0-0 W, 5-0, 10/19/80 W1 New Mexico 6-0-0 W, 4-1, 11/18/10 W6 UMKC 12-2-1 W, 3-0, 9/13/16 W4 CSUN 2-0-0 W, 2-1, 9/4/15 W2 North Carolina 2-1-1 T, 2-2 (2OT), 8/30/19 T1 UNLV 2-1-0 L, 0-2, 9/12/03 L1 Dallas 1-0-0 W, 2-0, 10/18/81 W1 UNC Greensboro 3-1-0 W, 4-0, 9/4/10 W2 Vanderbilt 9-0-1 W, 4-0, 11/11/05 W8 Dartmouth 1-0-0 W, 3-2 (OT), 9/19/10 W1 North Carolina St. 1-0-0 W, 2-1, 9/9/94 W1 Vermont 1-0-0 W, 3-2, 9/19/92 W1 Dayton 1-0-0 W, 1-0, 9/13/02 W1 North Texas 0-2-0 L, 0-1, 9/27/92 L2 Villanova 5-2-0 W, 1-0, 9/28/19 W3 Denver 3-1-2 L, 0-1 (2OT), 10/2/18 L1 Northern Illinois 8-1-0 W, 2-0, 9/22/15 W7 Virginia 2-1-1 W, 3-1, 11/30/03 W1 DePaul 10-0-0 W, 1-0, 10/23/19 W10 Northwest Mo. St. 3-0-0 W, 2-0, 10/16/82 W3 Virginia Tech 0-1-0 L, 0-2, 8/25/17 L1 Dordt 3-1-0 W, 2-0, 9/19/81 W2 Northwestern 1-0-0 W, 3-2, 11/23/04 W1 Wake Forest 0-1-0 L, 0-1, 9/1/19 L1 Drake 27-3-8 W, 6-1, 10/10/17 W6 Northwestern College 0-1-0 L, 1-2, 11/10/79 L1 Wartburg 1-0-0 W, 6-0, 10/19/90 W1 Drexel 1-0-0 W, 3-0, 9/4/11 W1 Notre Dame 0-1-2 L, 1-4, 8/27/06 L1 Washington 6-2-0 W, 4-2, 11/18/12 W3 Duke 2-1-0 W, 2-1, 11/22/05 W1 Oakland 1-0-0 W, 1-0, 8/31/02 W1 Washington (Mo.) 0-0-1 T, 2-2 (OT), 9/3/84 T1 Eastern Illinois 17-4-2 W, 1-0, 10/1/10 W1 Ohio State 2-1-0 L, 1-4, 9/21/01 L1 Western Illinois 1-3-1 W, 1-0, 9/5/14 W1 Evansville 22-3-1 W, 2-1, 11/3/12 W3 Old Dominion 1-1-0 W, 2-1 (2OT), 9/13/13 W1 Western Kentucky 11-1-0 W, 2-1, 10/17/07 W2 Fairleigh Dickinson 0-0-1 T, 0-0 (2OT), 9/3/06 T1 Oral Roberts 2-0-0 W, 2-0, 9/15/02 W2 Western Michigan 2-0-0 W, 4-0, 9/3/04 W2 Florida Atlantic 1-0-0 W, 2-1, 9/24/99 W1 Oregon State 2-0-1 W, 1-0, 11/23/14 W1 Wichita State 1-0-0 W, 3-1, 10/27/80 W1 Florida International 2-1-0 W, 6-1, 9/12/98 W2 Ottawa (Kan.) 0-1-0 L, 1-2, 10/4/80 L1 William & Mary 1-2-0 L, 2-3 (2OT), 9/15/13 L1 Fordham 1-0-0 W, 1-0, 9/9/11 W1 Park College 2-2-0 L, 1-3, 11/2/85 L1 Wisconsin 8-2-1 W, 2-1 (OT), 10/5/11 W6 Fresno State 1-0-0 W, 2-0, 12/8/96 W1 Penn State 1-1-0 W, 3-1, 11/27/05 W1 Wisconsin-Milwaukee 4-1-1 W, 4-0, 8/30/15 W3 Furman 2-1-0 W, 3-1, 8/31/03 W1 Pennsylvania 1-0-0 W, 3-0, 9/9/16 W1 Xavier 5-3-1 L, 0-1, 10/11/19 L1 Georgetown 3-5-2 T, 1-1 (2OT). 11/6/19 T1 Portland 2-2-1 L, 1-2, 9/27/09 L1 Yale 2-0-0 W, 3-0, 9/17/06 W2 Gonzaga 1-1-0 W, 4-1, 8/29/08 W1 Princeton 1-0-0 W, 3-2 (OT), 10/9/12 W1 York (Neb.) 1-0-0 W, 10-2, 9/7/80 W1 Grand Canyon 1-1-0 L, 0-1, 8/31/18 L1 Providence 5-6-2 L, 2-3 (OT), 10/26/19 L1 Grand View 1-0-0 W, 7-0, 9/12/85 W1 Quincy 0-1-1 L, 0-5, 10/12/85 L1 TOTAL 480-195-73 (.691 all-time winning %) Green Bay 3-0-0 W, 3-0, 9/2/07 W3 2021 Spring Regular-Season Opponents in bold

Air Force Avila Bradley Butler Charlotte Series tied 4-4-2 Avila leads 4-0-0 Creighton leads 25-7-1 Creighton leads 8-3-1 Creighton leads 2-1-1 H: 2-2-0 • A: 1-2-0 • N: 1-0-2 H: 0-3-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 11-2-1 • A: 11-5-0 • N: 3-0-0 H: 4-1-1 • A: 3-2-0 • N: 1-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-1-1 Date Site Score Date Site Score Date Site Score Date Site Score Date Site Score 09/06/81 at AFA W, 2-1 10/30/82 at CU L, 0-2 09/29/90 at CU W, 4-0 10/15/96 Neutral W, 2-1 09/04/93 at CU W, 3-1 10/08/82 Neutral T, 2-2 (OT) 10/31/83 at CU L, 0-1 10/18/91 * at BU W, 2-1 10/17/00 at BU W, 3-1 10/24/93 at Charlotte W, 3-2 09/18/83 at AFA L, 1-5 10/27/84 at CU L, 0-1 10/09/92 * at CU W, 6-3 08/29/03 at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) 10/19/94 Neutral L, 2-5 09/30/85 at AFA L, 1-4 10/02/85 at Avila L, 1-2 10/01/93 * at BU W, 3-0 10/23/13 * at BU W, 3-2 12/09/11 # Neutral T, 0-0 (2OT) 09/22/91 Neutral T, 2-2 (OT) 10/23/94 * at CU W, 3-1 10/11/14 * at CU W, 2-1 Cincinnati 11/14/93 # at CU L, 1-2 (4OT) Belmont 10/06/95 * at BU W, 6-1 10/14/15 * at BU W, 1-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 09/08/96 Neutral W, 2-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 11/08/96 * at BU W, 3-1 (OT) 10/07/16 * at CU W, 1-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/23/97 # at CU W, 3-2 (OT) H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/17/97 * at CU W, 4-0 11/13/16 ** at BU L, 1-2 Date Site Score 09/25/04 at CU W, 3-1 Date Site Score 11/06/98 * at BU L, 0-1 (OT) 09/16/17 * at BU L, 2-3 (OT) 09/07/14 at CU W, 3-0 09/23/06 at CU L, 0-1 (2OT) 10/15/00 * at Belmont W, 2-0 10/22/99 * at CU W, 1-0 09/15/18 * at CU W, 3-0 11/12/99 ** at BU L, 0-1 11/02/19 * at CU W, 2-1 (2OT) Clemson Akron Benedictine 10/20/00 * at BU L, 1-4 11/09/19 * at CU L, 0-1 Clemson leads 2-1-0 Akron leads 3-1-2 Creighton leads 4-0-1 11/12/00 ** Neutral W, 2-1 (4OT) H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-2-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-0-1 • A: 0-3-1 • N: 0-0-0 H: 3-0-0 • A: 0-0-1 • N: 1-0-0 10/07/01 * at CU W, 2-0 California Date Site Score Date Site Score Date Site Score 10/27/02 * at BU W, 2-1 Creighton leads 3-0-0 12/02/05 # at Clemson L, 0-1 10/27/10 at Akron L, 0-1 10/01/81 at CU W, 3-1 11/17/02 ** Neutral W, 1-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 2-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 09/02/16 at Clemson L, 0-1 08/31/12 at CU T, 1-1 (2OT) 09/25/82 at Ben. T, 1-1 (OT) 10/24/03 * at CU W, 1-0 Date Site Score 08/24/18 at CU W, 2-0 11/25/12 # at AkronT, 1-1 (2OT) 09/13/83 at CU W, 1-0 10/08/04 * at BU W, 1-0 10/02/98 Neutral W, 2-1 (OT) 12/05/15 # at AkronL, 2-3 (2OT) 10/05/84 Neutral W, 2-0 10/15/05 * at CU W, 3-2 09/21/08 at Cal W, 2-0 Coastal Carolina 10/16/18 at Akron L, 0-1 09/24/85 at CU W, 3-0 11/13/05 ** at BU W, 2-0 09/03/17 at Cal W, 3-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 09/06/19 at CU W, 2-1 10/28/06 * at BU L, 1-2 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Boston College 11/05/06 ** at BU W, 2-1 (OT) Cal Poly Date Site Score Alabama A&M Creighton leads 1-0-0 10/10/07 * at CU T, 2-2 (2OT) Creighton leads 2-0-0 10/16/93 at CU W, 5-1 Creighton leads 1-0-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/18/07 ** at CU L, 0-1 H: 2-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score 10/18/08 * at BU W, 2-0 Date Site Score College of Charleston Date Site Score 12/08/02 # at BC W, 6-2 11/14/08 ** Neutral W, 2-0 09/05/09 at CU W, 1-0 Creighton leads 3-0-0 09/05/93 at CU W, 3-2 09/30/09 * at CU W, 1-0 09/01/13 at CU W, 3-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 Boston University 10/21/09 * at BU W, 3-0 Date Site Score American Creighton leads 1-0-1 11/06/10 * at CU L, 1-2 Cal State Fullerton 10/20/96 Neutral W, 5-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-1 • N: 0-0-0 11/12/10 ** at BU L, 2-3 Creighton leads 1-0-1 10/12/97 at C of C W, 8-1 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score 10/19/11 * at BU W, 1-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-1 • N: 1-0-0 09/25/98 at CU W, 4-1 Date Site Score 09/19/99 at BU T, 0-0 (OT) 11/11/11 ** at CU W, 1-0 Date Site Score 09/26/93 at CU W, 1-0 (OT) 09/22/00 at CU W, 1-0 10/20/12 * at CU W, 1-0 09/07/90 Neutral W, 2-1 Colorado College 12/01/96 # at CSF T, 0-0 (4OT) Series tied 0-0-1 Arkansas-Little Rock Bowling Green Briar Cliff H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-1 Creighton leads 2-0-0 Series tied 1-1-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 Central Arkansas Date Site Score H: 2-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Creighton leads 4-0-0 09/12/81 Neutral T, 3-3 (OT) Date Site Score Date Site Score Date Site Score H: 2-0-0 • A: 2-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/02/90 at CU W, 3-0 09/07/85 at BG L, 1-2 11/05/79 at CU W, forfeit Date Site Score Colorado Mines 10/06/91 at CU W, 2-1 09/03/00 at CU W, 2-1 09/27/06 at CU W, 6-1 Creighton leads 1-0-0 Brown 10/23/10 * at UCA W, 2-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 Augustana (S.D.) Brown leads 1-0-0 10/29/11 * at CU W, 3-0 Date Site Score Creighton leads 1-0-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 10/13/12 * at UCA W, 3-0 10/12/91 Neutral W, 3-1 H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score Date Site Score 09/19/03 Neutral L, 0-1 Columbia 11/11/79 at Augustana W, 2-1 Creighton leads 2-0-0 H: 2-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score 09/06/13 at CU W, 3-1 09/06/19 at CU W, 3-1 30 Series History

Concordia 10/14/09 * at CU L, 0-1 Fresno State Kansas Newman Memphis Creighton leads 3-0-0 11/07/09 * at DU T, 3-3 (2OT) Creighton leads 1-0-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 Creighton leads 5-0-1 H: 2-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/13/09 ** at DU L, 1-3 H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 3-0-1 • A: 2-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score 10/20/10 * at DU W, 2-1 Date Site Score Date Site Score Date Site Score 09/09/79 at Concordia W, 2-1 10/26/11 * at CU W, 2-0 12/08/96 # at FSU W, 2-0 10/09/90 at CU W, 8-1 09/01/01 at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) 09/13/80 at CU W, 2-1 09/29/12 * at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) 09/16/05 at CU W, 3-1 09/25/90 at CU W, 14-0 11/09/12 ** Neutral W, 3-2 (2OT) Furman Kentucky 10/07/06 at Memphis W, 3-2 10/30/13 at CU W, 2-0 Creighton leads 2-1-0 Creighton leads 3-0-0 10/07/07 at Memphis W, 3-1 Connecticut 10/07/14 at DU W, 1-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 1-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 10/08/08 at CU W, 1-0 Creighton leads 2-1-0 10/06/15 at CU W, 2-1 Date Site Score Date Site Score 09/07/18 at CU W, 2-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 11/22/15 # at CU W, 5-1 10/11/97 Neutral W, 1-0 09/06/02 Neutral W, 4-1 Date Site Score 10/10/17 at CU W, 6-1 09/08/02 at Furman L, 2-4 09/21/11 at CU W, 2-0 Mercer 12/10/00 # Neutral L, 0-2 08/31/03 at CU W, 3-1 11/20/16 # at Kentucky W, 3-2 Creighton leads 1-0-0 11/29/08 # at CU W, 2-1 (OT) Drexel H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 12/02/12 # at UConn W, 1-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 Georgetown Lafayette Date Site Score H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Georgetown leads 5-3-2 Creighton leads 1-0-0 09/18/05 at CU W, 1-0 Cornell (Iowa) College 09/04/11 at CU W, 3-0 H: 2-2-0 • A: 1-3-2 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 Date Site Score Date Site Score Metro State H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Duke 10/19/05 at GU W, 6-0 11/18/05 # at CU W, 3-0 Series tied 1-1-0 Date Site Score Creighton leads 2-1-0 09/01/06 at CU W, 3-2 (OT) H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/19/80 at CU W, 5-0 H: 0-1-0 • A: 2-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/28/13 * at GU T, 0-0 (2OT) Louisiana Monroe Date Site Score Date Site Score 10/25/14 * at CU L, 0-1 ULM leads 3-0-0 09/26/80 at MSU L, 0-4 CSUN 09/11/94 at Duke W, 3-1 11/05/15 * at GU L, 1-2 H: 0-1-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-1-0 09/25/81 at CU W, 2-0 Creighton leads 2-0-0 09/02/95 at CU L, 3-1 11/15/15 ** at GU L, 1-2 (2OT) Date Site Score H: 2-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/22/05 # at Duke W, 2-1 11/03/16 * at CU W, 3-0 10/10/82 Neutral L, 1-2 Michigan Date Site Score 11/01/17 * at GU L, 1-3 11/12/83 at ULM L, 1-2 Series tied 1-1-0 10/01/08 at CU W, 1-0 (2OT) Eastern Illinois 10/31/18 * at CU L, 1-2 (OT) 09/14/84 at CU L, 0-3 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/04/15 at CU W, 2-1 Creighton leads 17-4-2 10/06/19 * at GU T, 1-1 (2OT) Date Site Score H: 9-0-0 • A: 6-3-2 • N: 2-1-0 Loyola-Chicago 10/15/13 at UM L, 0-1 Dallas Date Site Score Gonzaga Creighton leads 5-0-1 08/28/15 at CU W, 1-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 10/10/81 at EIU L, 0-4 Series tied 1-1-0 H: 4-0-1 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/17/82 at EIU L, 0-1 H: 1-1-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score Michigan State Date Site Score 11/03/84 at EIU L, 0-3 Date Site Score 09/23/93 at CU W, 3-1 Creighton leads 1-0-1 10/18/81 at Dallas W, 2-0 09/08/85 Neutral L, 2-4 09/26/99 at CU L, 0-1 09/10/05 at CU W, 4-2 H: 0-0-1 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/10/96 * at EIU W, 6-0 08/29/08 at CU W, 4-1 09/01/09 at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) Date Site Score Dartmouth 10/19/97 * at CU W, 2-1 09/01/10 at LUC W, 2-0 09/24/13 at CU T, 2-2 (2OT) Creighton leads 1-0-0 11/08/98 * at EIU T, 1-1 (OT) Grand Canyon 10/02/12 at CU W, 1-0 09/13/15 at MSU W, 1-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 11/13/98 ** Neutral W, 1-0 Series tied 1-1-0 09/27/16 at CU W, 3-0 Date Site Score 10/24/99 * at CU W, 3-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 Milton 09/19/10 Neutral W, 3-2 (OT) 10/22/00 * at EIU W, 3-1 Date Site Score Loyola-Maryland Creighton leads 1-0-0 10/05/01 * at CU W, 2-1 08/27/17 at CU W, 1-0 (2OT) Creighton leads 1-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Dayton 10/25/02 * at EIU W, 4-1 08/31/18 at GCU L, 0-1 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 Date Site Score Creighton leads 1-0-0 11/09/02 ** at CU W, 6-0 Date Site Score 10/21/80 at CU W, 6-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/26/03 * at CU W, 4-0 Grand View 09/08/91 Neutral W, 2-0 Date Site Score 10/10/04 * at EIU W, 2-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 Minnesota 09/13/02 at CU W, 1-0 10/08/05 * at CU W, 5-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Loyola Marymount Minnesota leads 2-0-0 10/14/06 * at EIU W, 1-0 Date Site Score Creighton leads 2-1-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-2-0 • N: 0-0-0 Denver 11/03/06 ** Neutral W, 2-0 09/12/85 at CU W, 7-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 1-0-0 Date Site Score Creighton leads 3-1-2 10/13/07 * at CU W, 2-1 (2OT) Date Site Score 10/11/81 at UM L, 1-2 H: 2-1-1 • A: 1-0-1 • N: 0-0-0 11/08/08 * at EIU W, 5-3 Green Bay 09/07/03 at LMU L, 1-2 (2OT) 09/12/82 at CU L, 0-3 Date Site Score 10/11/09 * at CU W, 5-1 Creighton leads 3-0-0 09/05/04 at CU W, 2-1 09/29/80 at Denver T, 0-0 (OT) 10/24/09 * at EIU T, 0-0 (2OT) H: 3-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/15/07 Neutral W, 1-0 (OT) Missouri State 09/15/01 at CU W, 2-1 10/01/10 * at CU W, 1-0 Date Site Score Creighton leads 22-8-4 09/27/08 at CU W, 2-0 09/06/92 at CU W, 4-0 Marquette H: 13-3-0 • A: 4-5-4 • N: 5-0-0 08/27/11 at Denver W, 1-0 Evansville 09/17/95 at CU W, 6-0 Creighton leads 8-7-1 Date Site Score 09/21/16 at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) Creighton leads 22-3-1 09/02/07 at CU W, 3-0 H: 5-3-1 • A: 3-4-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/21/83 at CU W, 1-0 10/02/18 at CU L, 0-1 (2OT) H: 14-1-0 • A: 8-2-1 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score 11/10/85 at CU W, 3-1 Date Site Score Harvard 10/22/83 at CU L, 0-1 11/10/90 at MSU L, 4-5 (OT) DePaul 10/07/94 * at CU W, 2-1 Creighton leads 1-0-0 09/09/84 at MU L, 0-4 10/23/92 * at MSU W, 7-0 Creighton leads 10-0-0 11/09/94 ** at CU W, 3-2 (OT) H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/12/92 at CU W, 6-1 10/10/93 * at CU W, 4-0 H: 6-0-0 • A: 4-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/13/95 * at UE W, 2-1 Date Site Score 10/08/95 at MU W, 3-0 11/05/94 * at MSU W, 1-0 Date Site Score 11/05/91 ** at UE W, 2-1 09/18/99 at Harvard W, 6-0 10/11/96 at CU L, 1-2 10/20/95 * at CU W, 3-0 09/01/90 at CU W, 1-0 10/25/96 * at CU W, 2-1 10/03/99 at MU L, 0-1 11/03/95 ** Neutral W, 5-2 09/11/10 at CU W, 2-0 11/17/96 ** at CU L, 2-3 (OT) Illinois State 09/24/00 at CU L, 1-3 10/27/96 * at CU W, 6-2 09/11/11 at DPU W, 1-0 (2OT) 10/31/97 * at UE W, 2-0 Creighton leads 6-3-0 09/19/04 at CU W, 2-1 11/02/97 * at MSU L, 1-2 (OT) 11/02/13 * at CU W, 5-1 10/23/98 * at CU W, 2-1 H: 3-1-0 • A: 3-1-0 • N: 0-1-0 10/12/13 * at MU L, 0-1 11/16/97 ** Neutral W, 4-1 11/01/14 * at DPU W, 2-1 10/29/99 * at UE L, 0-1 Date Site Score 10/29/14 * at CU W, 2-0 10/25/98 * at CU W, 1-0 10/03/15 * at CU W, 1-0 10/06/00 * at CU W, 1-0 (OT) 09/06/82 at ISU W, 2-0 10/17/15 * at MU W, 3-1 11/15/98 ** at MSU W, 1-0 09/24/16 * at DPU W, 4-1 10/28/01 * at CU W, 5-1 10/16/83 at CU W, 3-1 10/15/16 * at CU W, 2-1 10/31/99 * at MSU T, 2-2 10/28/17 * at CU W, 2-0 11/09/01 ** at CU W, 5-3 10/21/90 at ISU L, 2-4 10/25/17 * at MU L, 3-4 09/29/00 * at MSU L, 1-2 10/27/18 * at DPU W, 2-1 10/20/02 * at UE W, 1-0 10/20/91 * at ISU W, 2-1 10/24/18 * at CU W, 2-1 10/26/01 * at CU L, 1-2 (2OT) 10/23/19 * at CU W, 1-0 10/10/03 * at CU W, 1-0 11/09/91 ** Neutral L, 0-2 11/07/18 ** at CU T, 1-1 (2OT) 11/16/01 ** Neutral W, 3-0 10/29/04 * at UE L, 1-2 10/11/92 * at CU W, 3-1 09/20/19 * at MU W, 1-0 10/18/02 * at MSU W, 1-0 Dordt 11/05/04 ** at CU W, 3-1 11/08/92 ** at CU W, 6-2 11/15/02 ** Neutral W, 3-1 Creighton leads 3-1-0 10/29/05 * at UE W, 2-0 10/03/93 * at ISU W, 4-1 Maryland 10/12/03 * at CU W, 2-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-1-0 • N: 1-0-0 10/21/06 * at CU W, 1-0 10/22/94 * at CU L, 1-2 Maryland leads 3-1-1 11/08/03 ** at CU L, 0-1 Date Site Score 11/10/07 * at UE W, 3-1 H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-3-1 • N: 0-0-0 10/31/04 * at MSU L, 0-1 09/15/79 at CU W, 3-0 11/16/07 ** at CU W, 2-0 Illinois-Chicago Date Site Score 10/12/05 * at CU W, 2-0 10/06/79 at Dordt L, 2-3 10/11/08 * at CU W, 3-2 Illinois-Chicago leads 2-1-0 12/05/98 # at UMD L, 2-3 10/04/06 * at MSU T, 1-1 (2OT) 10/07/80 N/A W, 4-3 10/03/09 * at CU W, 2-1 H: 1-2-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/07/01 at UMD W, 2-1 10/27/07 * at CU W, 1-0 09/19/81 at Dordt W, 2-0 10/17/09 * at UE T, 1-1 (2OT) Date Site Score 11/28/04 # at UMD T, 0-0 (2OT) 10/21/08 * at MSU T, 0-0 (2OT) 10/16/10 * at UE W, 2-1 (OT) 10/05/05 at CU L, 1-2 12/06/08 # at UMD L, 0-1 11/16/08 ** Neutral W, 1-0 Drake 10/05/11 * at CU W, 2-0 12/01/07 # at CU L, 0-1 09/30/11 at UMD L, 0-1 09/19/09 * at CU L, 0-1 Creighton leads 27-3-8 11/03/12 * at UE W, 2-1 09/16/14 at CU W, 3-1 10/07/09 * at MSU T, 0-0 (2OT) H: 16-1-2 • A: 8-2-5 • N: 3-0-1 Massachusetts 11/03/10 * at CU W, 2-0 Date Site Score Fairleigh Dickinson Indiana UMass leads 1-0-0 10/12/11 * at MSU L, 0-1 11/01/80 N/A W, 7-1 Series tied 0-0-1 Series tied 4-4-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 11/13/11 ** at CU W, 1-0 09/22/90 at DU W, 1-0 (OT) H: 0-0-1 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 0-1-0 • A: 1-1-0 • N: 3-2-0 Date Site Score 10/27/12 * at CU W, 1-0 10/03/90 at CU T, 1-1 (OT) Date Site Score Date Site Score 11/23/01 # Neutral L, 0-1 09/29/15 at CU W, 4-0 11/02/90 Neutral T, 2-2 (OT) 09/03/96 at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) 11/27/94 # at IU L, 0-1 10/27/91 * at CU W, 2-0 09/15/00 Neutral W, 4-1 10/18/92 * at DU T, 0-0 (OT) Florida Atlantic 12/08/00 # Neutral W, 2-1 (3OT) 11/07/92 ** at CU W, 4-1 Creighton leads 1-0-0 08/25/06 Neutral L, 0-1 (2OT) 09/14/93 * at CU W, 2-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/13/07 Neutral W, 2-1 11/06/92 ** at CU W, 2-1 Date Site Score 10/09/10 at CU L, 2-3 10/09/94 * at DU W, 2-0 09/24/99 at CU W, 2-1 (OT) 10/09/11 at IU W, 1-0 11/13/94 ** at CU W, 1-0 12/07/12 # Neutral L, 0-1 10/29/95 * at CU W, 1-0 Florida International 11/03/96 * at DU W, 3-2 Creighton leads 2-1-0 Iowa State 11/15/96 ** at CU W, 6-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 2-0-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 11/06/97 * at CU W, 2-1 (OT) Date Site Score H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/14/97 ** Neutral W, 3-0 09/28/91 at FIU L, 1-4 Date Site Score 11/01/98 * at DU W, 4-1 10/03/92 Neutral W, 3-2 10/27/79 at ISU W, 3-2 11/05/99 * at CU W, 7-0 09/12/98 Neutral W, 6-1 11/02/00 * at DU W, 3-2 Jacksonville 11/02/01 * at CU W, 2-1 (OT) Fordham Creighton leads 1-0-0 10/05/02 * at DU T, 1-1 (2OT) Creighton leads 1-0-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/03/03 * at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score 10/23/04 * at DU W, 2-1 09/09/11 at CU W, 1-0 09/25/18 at CU W, 2-1 10/26/05 * at DU L, 2-3 10/11/06 * at CU W, 1-0 11/03/07 * at DU T, 1-1 (2OT) 11/01/08 * at CU W, 2-0 31 Series History Missouri-Rolla Northwest Missouri State 11/07/14 * at CU W, 3-0 09/10/95 at USF W, 4-3 (OT) 09/01/17 at Stanford L, 0-3 Series tied 1-1-0 Creighton leads 3-0-0 11/14/14 ** Neutral L, 0-1 09/05/97 at CU W, 2-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 H: 3-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/31/15 * at PC W, 3-1 Tarkio Date Site Score Date Site Score 11/12/15 ** at CU W, 2-1 Santa Clara Creighton leads 3-0-0 10/23/80 N/A L, 1-2 09/10/80 at CU W, 10-0 10/29/16 * at CU L, 0-1 Creighton leads 2-0-2 H: 3-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/26/81 at CU W, 2-1 1981 at CU W, 5-0 11/10/16 ** at PC W, 2-1 H: 1-0-1 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-1 Date Site Score 10/16/82 at CU W, 2-0 11/26/16 # at CU L, 1-2 Date Site Score 11/07/82 at CU W, 3-2 Missouri-St. Louis 10/21/17 * at PC T, 0-0 (2OT) 09/04/94 at CU T, 1-1 (OT) 09/22/83 at CU W, 3-0 UMSL leads 1-0-0 Northwestern 10/20/18 * at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) 09/05/03 Neutral T, 0-0 (2OT) 10/08/85 at CU W, 3-2 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 10/26/19 * at PC L, 2-3 (OT) 09/07/12 at SCU W, 1-0 Date Site Score H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 08/31/14 at CU W, 1-0 TCU 10/06/84 at UMSL L, 0-3 Date Site Score Quincy Creighton leads 3-1-0 11/23/04 # at CU W, 3-2 Quincy leads 1-0-1 Seattle H: 2-0-0 • A: 1-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 Morningside H: 0-0-1 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 Seattle leads 1-0-0 Date Site Score Creighton leads 1-0-0 Northwestern College (Iowa) Date Site Score H: 0-1-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/13/90 at TCU L, 1-3 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 NC leads 1-0-0 10/20/84 at CU T, 0-0 (OT) Date Site Score 08/31/91 at CU W, 4-0 Date Site Score H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/12/85 at Quincy L, 0-5 11/21/13 # at CU L, 1-2 09/16/94 at TCU W, 3-0 10/13/79 at CU W, 5-0 Date Site Score 10/29/00 * at CU W, 3-1 11/10/79 at NC L, 1-2 Regis Seton Hall Mount Marty Creighton leads 4-1-1 Creighton leads 4-3-0 Teikyo-Westmar Creighton leads 1-0-0 H: 3-0-1 • A: 1-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 3-0-0 • A: 1-3-0 • N: 0-0-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 Notre Dame Date Site Score Date Site Score H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Notre Dame leads 1-0-2 09/27/80 at Regis W, 2-1 10/26/13 * at SHU L, 2-3 Date Site Score Date Site Score H: 0-0-1 • A: 0-1-1 • N: 0-0-0 09/05/81 at CU T, 1-1 (OT) 10/04/14 * at CU W, 3-2 09/14/91 at CU W, 10-0 11/03/79 at CU W, forfeit Date Site Score 10/02/82 at CU W, 5-1 09/26/15 * at SHU W, 4-2 10/07/90 at ND T, 0-0 (OT) 09/17/83 at Regis L, 0-1 09/17/16 * at CU W, 4-1 Truman State Nebraska 09/01/02 at CU T, 1-1 (2OT) 09/23/84 at CU W, 2-0 09/23/17 * at SHU L, 0-2 Creighton leads 3-0-0 Creighton leads 2-1-2 08/27/06 at ND L, 1-4 09/16/90 at CU W, 3-2 09/29/18 * at CU W, 1-0 H: 3-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-0-2 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 1-0-0 10/04/19 * at SHU L, 0-1 Date Site Score Date Site Score Oakland Rhode Island 08/31/83 at CU W, 1-0 10/21/79 at CU T, 0-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 South Carolina 09/21/84 at CU W, 3-1 11/02/79 at NU L, 0-1 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Series tied 1-1-0 10/05/85 at CU W, 2-0 10/01/80 N/A W, 3-2 Date Site Score Date Site Score H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/08/81 at CU T, 1-1 (OT) 08/31/02 at CU W, 1-0 09/22/96 at CU W, 3-1 Date Site Score Tulsa 10/21/82 at CU W, 2-0 10/18/96 at USC L, 1-3 Creighton leads 20-10-3 Ohio State Rockhurst 09/12/97 at CU W, 4-3 (OT) H: 14-2-1 • A: 6-6-2 • N: 0-2-0 Nebraska-Omaha Creighton leads 2-1-0 Rockhurst leads 3-1-0 Date Site Score Creighton leads 6-3-1 H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 1-2-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 South Dakota 10/25/80 at TU W, 2-1 H: 3-0-1 • A: 2-2-0 • N: 1-1-0 Date Site Score Date Site Score Creighton leads 2-0-0 11/08/80 N/A L, 2-6 Date Site Score 09/27/98 at CU W, 1-0 09/09/82 at CU L, 0-3 H: 2-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/14/83 at TU L, 1-4 09/08/79 Neutral W, 3-2 11/19/00 # at OSU W, 1-0 10/30/83 at CU W, 1-0 Date Site Score 10/31/81 at CU L, 1-2 (OT) 09/15/79 at CU W, 3-1 09/21/04 at OSU L, 1-4 10/23/84 at CU L, 1-2 (OT) 09/14/79 at CU W, forfeit 11/04/83 at TU W, 4-1 10/11/79 at UNO L, 1-2 10/26/85 at Rockhurst L, 0-1 10/19/79 at CU W, 11-0 11/05/91 * Neutral L, 1-2 09/06/80 Neutral L, 2-3 Old Dominion 10/25/92 * at TU W, 1-0 11/13/80 at UNO L, 0-1 Series tied 1-1-0 Rutgers South Dakota State 10/08/93 * at CU W, 5-3 10/25/81 at CU W, 3-0 H: 0-1-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Creighton leads 2-0-0 Series tied 1-1-0 11/07/93 ** at CU W, 2-0 10/23/82 at UNO W, 2-0 Date Site Score H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 1-0-0 10/15/94 * at TU W, 3-1 09/05/16 at CU T, 1-1 (2OT) 09/14/12 at CU L, 1-2 Date Site Score Date Site Score 10/22/95 * at TU T, 0-0 (OT) 09/26/17 at UNO W, 1-0 09/13/13 at ODU W, 2-1 (2OT) 09/02/12 at CU W, 3-0 09/22/79 at SDSU L, 2-6 09/02/96 at CU W, 2-1 09/16/19 at CU W, 2-1 08/26/16 at Rutgers W, 2-0 10/12/80 N/A W, 10-2 10/26/97 at TU W, 2-0 Oral Roberts 09/06/98 at CU W, 3-1 Nebraska Wesleyan Creighton leads 2-0-0 St. John’s South Florida 10/01/00 * at TU W, 2-1 (2OT) Creighton leads 2-0-0 H: 2-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Creighton leads 5-4-2 Creighton leads 4-0-0 11/05/00 ** at CU W, 2-1 H: 2-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score H: 2-1-1 • A: 3-1-1 • N: 0-2-0 H: 2-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 10/12/01 * at TU L, 0-2 Date Site Score 10/04/96 at CU W, 3-0 Date Site Score Date Site Score 11/01/02 * at CU W, 2-1 09/30/79 at CU W, 6-3 09/15/02 at CU W, 2-0 12/13/96 # Neutral L, 1-2 09/27/91 Neutral W, 3-1 11/02/03 * at TU L, 1-2 09/21/80 at CU W, 7-0 12/01/02 # at SJU W, 1-0 (OT) 12/04/11 # at CU W, 1-0 (OT) 10/03/04 * at CU W, 4-0 Oregon State 12/07/03 # Neutral L, 2-3 09/08/17 at CU W, 2-0 11/12/04 ** at CU T, 1-1 (2OT) New Mexico Creighton leads 2-0-1 09/21/13 * at CU W, 1-0 (2OT) 09/03/18 at USF W, 2-1 09/23/05 at TU L, 0-1 Creighton leads 6-0-0 H: 2-0-1 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/15/14 * at SJU W, 1-0 09/22/07 at CU L, 1-3 H: 3-0-0 • A: 3-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score 10/10/15 * at CU W, 2-1 SIU Edwardsville 11/25/08 # at CU W, 2-1 Date Site Score 09/02/01 at CU W, 4-2 10/01/16 * at SJU T, 1-1 (2OT) Creighton leads 5-4-1 10/05/10 at CU W, 3-1 09/09/90 at UNM W, 4-3 (OT) 09/15/06 at CU T, 2-2 (2OT) 10/06/17 * at CU T, 2-2 H: 3-1-1 • A: 2-3-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/25/12 at TU L, 0-2 10/14/91 at UNM W, 2-1 (OT) 11/23/14 # at CU W, 1-0 11/04/17 ** at SJU L, 1-3 Date Site Score 08/30/13 at CU W, 2-0 09/25/95 at CU W, 2-0 10/06/18 * at SJU W, 3-1 11/05/83 at SIUE L, 1-4 09/13/14 at TU T, 1-1 (2OT) 09/06/96 at UNM W, 3-0 Ottawa (Kan.) 10/19/19 * at CU L, 0-2 10/14/84 at SIUE L, 1-3 09/19/15 at CU W, 1-0 09/07/97 at CU W, 3-0 Ottawa leads 1-0-0 11/09/85 at CU L, 1-4 10/11/16 at TU L, 1-2 11/18/10 # at CU W, 4-1 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 Saint Louis 10/28/90 at SIUE L, 1-2 (OT) 11/17/16 # at CU W, 3-0 Date Site Score Series tied 8-8-2 09/01/91 at CU W, 3-2 09/19/17 at CU W, 2-1 (OT) North Carolina 10/04/80 N/A L, 1-2 H: 3-2-0 • A: 4-6-2 • N: 1-0-0 10/31/92 at SIUE W, 1-0 10/24/19 at CU W, 4-3 (2OT) Creighton leads 2-1-1 Date Site Score 09/30/94 at CU W, 5-1 H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-1-1 • N: 0-0-0 Park College 10/24/82 at SLU L, 0-2 10/30/10 * at CU T, 2-2 (2OT) UC Davis Date Site Score Series tied 2-2-0 09/01/84 at SLU L, 0-5 10/22/11 * at SIUE W, 1-0 Series tied 0-0-1 09/21/97 at UNC L, 1-2 (OT) H: 1-1-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 09/01/85 at SLU L, 2-3 10/06/12 * at CU W, 1-0 (2OT) H: 0-0-1 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score 10/02/92 at SLU W, 2-1 (OT) 11/11/12 ** Neutral W, 2-1 Date Site Score 09/05/99 at CU W, 3-0 10/11/80 N/A L, 1-2 (OT) 09/11/93 at CU W, 1-0 08/26/18 at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) 11/28/15 # at UNC W, 1-0 09/28/81 at CU W, 1-0 10/29/94 at SLU L, 1-2 (OT) Southern Methodist 08/30/19 at UNC T, 2-2 (2OT) 10/19/82 at Park W, 4-1 11/20/94 # at SLU W, 2-1 SMU leads 17-6-2 UC Irvine 11/02/85 at CU L, 1-3 09/14/96 Neutral W, 3-1 H: 3-7-0 • A: 3-7-1 • N: 0-3-1 Creighton leads 2-1 UNC Greensboro 08/29/97 at SLU T, 1-1 (OT) Date Site Score H: 2-1-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Creighton leads 3-1-0 Penn 08/31/97 at CU W, 1-0 09/13/81 Neutral L, 1-3 (OT) Date Site Score H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 1-1-0 Series tied 1-0-0 11/30/97 # at SLU L, 0-1 10/20/81 at SMU L, 2-6 10/15/11 at CU W, 3-1 Date Site Score H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 09/04/98 at CU W, 1-0 10/11/82 at SMU L, 0-2 09/06/15 at CU W, 4-0 10/23/93 Neutral W, 2-0 Date Site Score 11/22/98 # at SLU W, 4-1 (OT) 10/04/85 at CU L, 0-1 09/13/19 at CU L, 1-3 09/19/97 Neutral L, 0-4 09/09/16 at CU W, 3-0 09/12/99 at SLU W, 1-0 10/15/90 at SMU L, 0-4 10/20/07 at UNCG W, 2-0 10/04/08 at SLU T, 0-0 (2OT) 10/05/91 at CU L, 0-2 UCLA 09/04/10 at CU W, 4-0 Penn State 09/22/12 at CU L, 1-3 09/25/92 at SMU W, 2-1 Creighton leads 3-1-1 Series tied 1-1-0 10/02/13 at SLU L, 0-1 11/21/92 # at CU L, 0-1 H: 1-0-1 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 1-1-0 North Carolina State H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 09/20/14 at CU L, 0-1 (OT) 10/15/93 at CU W, 3-2 Date Site Score Creighton leads 1-0-0 Date Site Score 09/18/94 at SMU L, 1-2 09/20/91 Neutral L, 0-6 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 09/23/01 Neutral L, 1-2 Saint Mary’s (CA) 09/15/95 at CU L, 1-2 11/29/98 # at UCLA W, 2-0 Date Site Score 11/27/05 # at PSU W, 3-1 Creighton leads 2-0-0 11/24/96 # at SMU W, 2-0 09/10/04 Neutral W, 3-2 09/09/94 Neutral W, 2-1 H: 2-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/14/97 at CU L, 1-3 09/06/07 at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) Portland Date Site Score 09/11/98 at SMU L, 1-2 10/31/09 at CU W, 1-0 North Texas Series tied 2-2-1 09/24/11 at CU W, 1-0 11/20/99 # at SMU L, 1-2 UNT leads 2-0-0 H: 2-0-0 • A: 0-1-1 • N: 0-1-0 09/09/12 at SMC W, 1-0 10/27/00 * at CU W, 2-1 UC Riverside H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-2-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score 10/14/01 * at SMU L, 2-4 Creighton leads 1-0-0 Date Site Score 09/21/02 at UP L, 2-3 San Diego 11/18/01 ** Neutral L, 1-2 (4OT) H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/11/83 at UNT L, 1-5 09/14/03 at CU W, 2-1 Creighton leads 1-0-1 11/03/02 * at CU L, 1-2 Date Site Score 09/27/92 at UNT L, 0-1 09/02/05 at UP T, 1-1 (2OT) H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-1 • N: 0-0-0 10/31/03 * at SMU W, 2-0 09/07/08 at CU W, 2-0 09/05/08 at CU W, 3-0 Date Site Score 10/01/04 * at CU L, 0-1 Northern Illinois 09/27/09 Neutral L, 1-2 11/26/00 # at USD W, 3-0 09/25/05 Neutral T, 1-1 (2OT) UC Santa Barbara Creighton leads 8-1-0 11/26/03 # at USD T, 1-1 (2OT) 11/28/07 # at CU W, 3-0 Creighton leads 2-0-0 H: 6-0-0 • A: 2-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 Princeton 09/17/10 Neutral L, 2-3 (2OT) H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score Creighton leads 1-0-0 San Diego State 11/21/10 # at SMU T, 2-2 (2OT) Date Site Score 10/01/83 at NIU W, 2-1 H: 0-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 Creighton leads 1-0-1 09/07/10 at UCSB W, 1-0 09/08/84 at NIU L, 0-1 Date Site Score H: 0-0-1 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 Stanford 11/27/11 # at CU W, 2-1 10/30/93 at CU W, 4-0 10/09/12 at PU W, 3-2 (OT) Date Site Score Creighton leads 4-3-0 09/25/94 at NIU W, 3-2 09/17/93 Neutral W, 5-3 (OT) H: 2-0-0 • A: 1-1-0 • N: 1-1-0 UMBC 09/03/95 at CU W, 3-0 Providence 08/31/07 at CU T, 2-2 (2OT) Date Site Score Series tied 0-0-1 09/09/00 at CU W, 2-1 Providence leads 6-5-2 09/08/95 Neutral W, 2-1 H: 0-0-1 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 11/20/11 # at CU W, 3-0 H: 3-2-1 • A: 2-3-1 • N: 0-1-0 San Francisco 08/31/96 at CU W, 4-0 Date Site Score 08/24/12 at CU W, 3-1 Date Site Score Creighton leads 2-1-0 10/04/98 at Stanford L, 0-2 12/05/14 # at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) 09/22/15 at CU W, 2-0 09/17/11 at CU W, 3-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 12/13/02 # Neutral L, 1-2 (2OT) 11/08/13 * at PC L, 1-2 Date Site Score 09/19/08 at Stanford W, 1-0 11/12/13 ** at PC L, 1-2 09/29/85 Neutral L, 0-8 08/29/14 at CU W, 2-0 32 Series History UMKC Western Kentucky Creighton leads 12-2-1 Creighton leads 11-1-0 All-Time vs. Top 25 • 80-58-17 H: 9-2-1 • A: 3-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 H: 6-0-0 • A: 4-1-0 • N: 1-0-0 Date Site Score Date Site Score 10/15/90 at #4 SMU L, 0-4 9/16/05 #23 Memphis W, 3-1 09/19/90 at UMKC W, 9-1 09/28/97 * at CU W, 3-0 10/12/05 #9 Missouri State W, 2-0 09/17/91 at CU W, 5-0 10/18/98 * at WKU W, 2-0 9/7/91 at #4 Virginia T, 3-3 (OT) 11/13/05 at #17 Bradley W, 2-0 09/05/92 at CU W, 9-0 10/17/99 * at CU W, 2-0 10/04/94 at CU W, 3-2 10/08/00 * at CU W, 3-0 9/16/91 vs. #6 UCLA L, 0-6 11/22/05 at #6 Duke W, 2-1 09/29/95 at CU W, 8-1 11/10/00 ** Neutral W, 3-2 10/5/91 #11 SMU L, 0-2 11/27/05 at #9 Penn State W, 3-1 09/27/96 at CU L, 0-1 10/19/01 * at WKU W, 1-0 11/5/91 vs. #17 Tulsa L, 1-2 12/2/05 at #15 Clemson L, 0-1 09/18/98 at CU W, 3-1 10/11/02 * at CU W, 2-1 (OT) 11/22/03 # at CU W, 6-0 10/19/03 * at WKU W, 2-1 9/25/92 at #4 SMU W, 2-1 8/25/06 vs. #12 Indiana L, 0-1 (2OT) 10/01/05 at CU T, 0-0 (2OT) 10/17/04 * at CU W, 2-1 10/24/06 at UMKC W, 3-1 10/22/05 * at WKU L, 0-1 10/2/92 at #4 Saint Louis W, 2-1 (OT) 8/27/06 vs. #15 Notre Dame L, 1-4 09/13/08 at CU L, 0-1 09/30/06 * at CU W, 4-0 11/21/92 #14 SMU L, 0-1 10/7/06 #17 Memphis W, 3-2 08/31/11 at UMKC W, 5-0 10/17/07 * at WKU W, 2-1 10/16/12 at CU W, 3-0 9/4/93 #9 Charlotte W, 3-1 9/8/07 #11 UCLA T, 0-0 (2OT) 09/30/14 at CU W, 2-0 Western Michigan 9/11/93 #7 Saint Louis W, 1-0 9/13/07 vs. #2 Indiana W, 2-1 09/13/16 at CU W, 3-0 Creighton leads 2-0-0 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 9/24/07 #24 Washington W, 2-1 (OT) UNLV Date Site Score 9/11/94 at #17 Duke W, 3-1 11/28/07 #5 SMU W, 3-0 Creighton leads 2-1-0 10/05/90 Neutral W, 2-1 9/18/94 at #16 SMU L, 1-2 H: 1-1-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/03/04 at CU W, 4-0 10/19/94 vs. #10 Charlotte L, 2-5 9/21/08 at #6 California W, 2-0 Date Site Score 10/29/94 at #13 Saint Louis L, 1-2 (OT) 10/4/08 at #11 Saint Louis T, 0-0 (2OT) 09/19/93 at UNLV W, 8-2 Wichita State 09/03/94 at CU W, 3-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 11/20/94 at #16 Saint Louis W, 2-1 11/1/08 #24 Drake W, 2-0 09/12/03 at CU L, 0-2 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 11/27/94 at #1 Indiana L, 0-1 11/25/08 #6 Tulsa W, 2-1 Date Site Score 11/29/08 #22 Connecticut W, 2-1 (2OT) Vanderbilt 10/27/80 N/A W, 3-1 9/2/95 #20 Duke L, 1-3 12/6/08 at #3 Maryland L, 0-1 Creighton leads 9-0-1 9/10/95 at #25 USF W, 4-3 (OT) H: 5-0-0 • A: 3-0-1 • N: 1-0-0 William & Mary Date Site Score William & Mary leads 2-1-0 9/24/95 #9 Wisconsin W, 2-1 9/5/09 #23 Cal Poly W, 1-0 09/26/97 * at CU W, 7-0 H: 1-1-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-1-0 10/14/09 #19 Drake L, 0-1 10/16/98 * at VU T, 1-1 (OT) Date Site Score 9/14/96 vs. #22 Saint Louis W, 3-1 10/31/09 #7 UCLA W, 1-0 10/15/99 * at CU W, 2-0 11/18/95 # at CU L, 1-2 (4OT) 9/20/96 at #8 Wisconsin T, 0-0 (OT) 10/13/00 * at VU W, 5-1 09/16/12 at CU W, 2-1 11/17/96 #24 Evansville L, 2-3 (OT) 9/7/10 at #21 UC Santa Barbara W, 1-0 10/21/01 * at VU W, 3-0 09/15/13 Neutral L, 2-3 (2OT) 10/13/02 * at CU W, 4-0 11/24/96 at #7 SMU W, 2-0 9/17/10 vs. #18 SMU L, 2-3 (2OT) 10/17/03 * at VU W, 2-1 (2OT) Wisconsin 12/1/96 at #18 CS-Fullerton T, 0-0 (OT) 10/5/10 #5 Tulsa W, 3-1 10/15/04 * at CU W, 3-1 Creighton leads 8-2-1 12/8/96 at #11 Fresno State W, 2-0 10/27/10 at #1 Akron L, 0-1 11/05/05 * at CU W, 1-0 H: 5-0-0 • A: 3-1-1 • N: 0-1-0 12/13/96 vs. #4 St. John’s L, 1-2 11/21/10 at #7 SMU T, 2-2 (2OT) 11/11/05 ** Neutral W, 4-0 Date Site Score 10/09/83 at UW L, 0-2 Vermont 09/16/84 at CU W, 1-0 8/29/97 at #22 Saint Louis T, 1-1 (OT) 9/21/11 #22 Kentucky W, 2-0 Creighton leads 1-0-0 09/20/92 Neutral L, 0-2 8/31/97 #22 Saint Louis W, 1-0 9/30/11 at #3 Maryland L, 0-1 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 09/24/95 at CU W, 2-1 9/12/97 #10 USC W, 4-3 (OT) 10/9/11 at #10 Indiana W, 1-0 Date Site Score 09/20/96 at UW T, 0-0 (OT) 9/14/97 #12 SMU L, 1-3 10/15/11 #7 UC Irvine W, 3-1 09/19/92 Neutral W, 3-2 09/20/98 at CU W, 4-1 10/11/97 vs. #20 Furman W, 1-0 11/11/11 #22 Bradley W, 1-0 10/01/99 at UW W, 2-0 Villanova 09/17/04 at CU W, 2-1 11/16/97 vs. #12 Missouri State W, 4-1 11/27/11 #13 UC Santa Barbara W, 2-1 Creighton leads 5-2-0 09/10/06 at UW W, 1-0 (OT) 11/30/97 at #14 Saint Louis L, 1-2 12/4/11 #12 South Florida W, 1-0 (OT) H: 3-1-0 • A: 2-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/24/10 at CU W, 1-0 (OT) 12/9/11 vs. #14 Charlotte T, 0-0 (2OT) Date Site Score 10/05/11 at UW W, 2-1 (OT) 9/4/98 #4 Saint Louis W, 1-0 10/19/13 * at CU L, 0-1 (OT) 9/11/98 at #11 SMU L, 1-2 8/31/12 #7 Akron T, 1-1 (2OT) 09/27/14 * at VU W, 1-0 Wisconsin-Milwaukee 10/24/15 * at CU W, 5-1 Creighton leads 4-1-1 10/4/98 at #19 Stanford L, 0-2 9/14/12 #14 Old Dominion L, 1-2 10/22/16 * at VU L, 0-1 H: 1-1-0 • A: 1-0-1 • N: 2-0-0 10/25/98 #23 Missouri State W, 1-0 11/18/12 #21 Washington W, 4-2 09/23/17 * at CU W, 2-0 Date Site Score 11/6/98 at #25 Bradley L, 0-1 (OT) 11/25/12 at #1 Akron T, 1-1 (2OT) 09/22/18 * at VU W, 1-0 09/10/83 at UWM T, 1-1 (OT) 11/22/98 at #17 Saint Louis W, 4-1 (OT) 12/2/12 at #7 Connecticut W, 1-0 09/28/19 * at CU W, 1-0 09/09/99 at UWM W, 3-0 11/29/98 at #6 UCLA W, 2-0 09/17/01 at CU L, 0-3 Virginia 11/27/02 # Neutral W, 3-2 12/5/98 at #18 Maryland L, 2-3 8/30/13 #14 Tulsa W, 2-0 Creighton leads 2-1-1 09/08/06 Neutral W, 1-0 9/21/13 #7 St. John’s W, 1-0 (2OT) H: 0-0-0 • A: 2-0-1 • N: 0-1-0 08/30/15 at CU W, 4-0 9/12/99 at #2 Saint Louis W, 1-0 9/28/13 at #12 Georgetown T, 0-0 (2OT) Date Site Score 10/31/99 at #6 Missouri State T, 2-2 (OT) 10/2/13 at #22 Saint Louis L, 0-1 09/07/91 at UVA T, 3-3 (OT) Xavier 11/20/99 at #17 SMU L, 1-2 12/02/00 # at UVA W, 3-0 Creighton leads 5-3-1 09/09/01 Neutral L, 2-3 H: 4-1-0 • A: 1-2-1 • N: 0-0-0 8/29/14 #20 Stanford W, 2-0 11/30/03 # at UVA W, 3-1 Date Site Score 9/2/00 #12 Washington W, 2-0 9/20/14 #20 Saint Louis L, 0-1 (OT) 10/05/13 * at CU W, 2-0 9/15/00 vs. #6 Indiana W, 4-1 10/25/14 #17 Georgetown L, 0-1 Virginia Tech 10/18/14 * at XU T, 1-1 (2OT) 9/24/00 #18 Marquette L, 1-3 10/29/14 #24 Marquette W, 2-0 Virginia Tech leads 1-0-0 11/30/14 # at CU W, 2-1 9/29/00 at #16 Missouri State L, 1-2 11/7/14 #19 Providence W, 3-0 H: 0-1-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 10/28/15 * at CU L, 1-2 Date Site Score 10/26/16 * at XU L, 1-2 (2OT) 10/27/00 #2 SMU W, 2-1 11/14/14 vs. #23 Providence L, 0-1 08/25/17 at CU L, 0-2 11/06/16 ** at CU W, 3-1 11/17/00 at #12 Ohio State W, 1-0 11/23/14 #25 Oregon State W, 1-0 10/14/17 * at CU W, 4-1 11/25/00 at #3 San Diego W, 3-0 11/30/14 #14 Xavier W, 2-1 Wake Forest 10/12/18 * at XU W, 3-1 12/2/00 at #5 Virginia W, 3-0 Wake Forest leads 1-0-0 10/11/19 * at XU L, 0-1 12/8/00 vs. #16 Indiana W, 2-1 (3OT) 9/6/15 #13 UC Irvine W, 4-0 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-1-0 • N: 0-0-0 Date Site Score Yale 12/10/00 vs. #7 Connecticut L, 0-2 11/5/15 at #6 Georgetown L, 1-2 09/01/19 at WF L, 0-1 Creighton leads 2-0-0 11/15/15 at #3 Georgetown L, 1-2 (2OT) H: 1-0-0 • A: 1-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 9/7/01 at #5 Maryland W, 2-1 11/28/15 at #4 North Carolina W, 1-0 Wartburg Date Site Score 9/9/01 vs. #12 Virginia L, 2-3 12/5/15 at #4 Akron L, 2-3 (2OT) Creighton leads 1-0-0 09/21/03 at Yale W, 3-1 9/21/01 at #13 Ohio State L, 1-4 H: 1-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0 09/17/06 at CU W, 3-0 Date Site Score 9/23/01 vs. #16 Penn State L, 1-2 8/26/16 at #25 Rutgers W, 2-0 10/19/90 at CU W, 6-0 York 10/14/01 at #1 SMU L, 2-4 9/2/16 at #2 Clemson L, 0-1 Creighton leads 1-0-0 11/18/01 vs. #1 SMU L, 1-2 (4OT) 9/21/16 #8 Denver T, 0-0 (2OT) Washington H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 1-0-0 9/27/16 #12 Loyola-Chicago W, 3-0 Creighton leads 6-2-0 Date Site Score 9/1/02 #23 Notre Dame T, 1-1 (2OT) 10/7/16 #9 Butler W, 1-0 H: 3-0-0 • A: 2-1-0 • N: 1-1-0 09/07/80 Neutral W, 10-2 Date Site Score 9/6/02 vs. #19 Kentucky W, 4-1 11/10/16 at #25 Providence W, 2-1 09/02/00 at CU W, 2-0 9/8/02 at #23 Furman L, 2-4 11/13/16 at #15 Butler L, 1-2 09/19/02 at UW W, 2-1 (2OT) 10/27/02 at #19 Bradley W, 2-1 11/20/16 at #18 Kentucky W, 3-2 09/12/04 Neutral L, 1-2 * - conference regular-season 11/3/02 #4 SMU L, 1-2 09/04/05 Neutral W, 3-2 matches 11/27/02 #10 UW-Milwaukee W, 3-2 8/25/17 #17 Virginia Tech L, 0-2 11/10/06 # at UW L, 0-3 ** - conference tournament 09/29/07 at CU W, 2-1 (OT) matches 12/1/02 at #3 St. John’s W, 1-0 (OT) 9/1/17 at #1 Stanford L, 0-3 09/25/09 at UW W, 1-0 # - NCAA Tournament matches 12/8/02 at #6 Boston College W, 6-2 9/26/17 at #24 Nebraska-Omaha W, 1-0 11/18/12 # at CU W, 4-2 12/13/02 vs. #15 Stanford L, 1-2 (2OT) 11/1/17 at #18 Georgetown L, 1-3

Washington (Mo.) 8/31/03 #15 Furman W, 3-1 8/24/18 #11 Clemson W, 2-0 Series tied 0-0-1 H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-1 • N: 0-0-0 9/19/03 vs. #17 Brown L, 0-1 10/2/18 #5 Denver L, 0-1 (2OT) Date Site Score 10/24/03 #22 Bradley W, 1-0 09/03/84 at Wash T, 2-2 (OT) 12/7/03 vs. #6 St. John’s L, 2-3 8/30/19 at #6 North Carolina T, 2-2 (2OT) 9/1/19 at #4 Wake Forest L, 0-1 Western Illinois 9/10/04 vs. #6 UCLA W, 3-2 9/6/19 #21 Akron W, 2-1 WIU leads 3-1-1 H: 1-0-1 • A: 0-3-0 • N: 0-0-0 9/12/04 vs. #18 Washington L, 1-2 10/19/19 #7 St. John’s L, 0-2 Date Site Score 10/1/04 #17 SMU L, 0-1 11/6/19 at #3 Georgetown T, 1-1 (2OT) 09/19/82 at WIU L, 1-2 (OT) 10/3/04 #23 Tulsa W, 4-0 10/15/83 at WIU L, 1-2 11/23/04 #23 Northwestern W, 3-2 Overall vs. Top 25 80-58-17 (.571) 10/13/85 at WIU L, 0-1 11/28/04 vs. #7 Maryland T, 0-0 (2OT) Home 43-15-4 (.726) 10/05/07 at CU T, 1-1 (2OT) 09/05/14 at CU W, 1-0 Away 29-27-12 (.515) Neutral 8-16-1 (.340) 33 Weekly Poll History Bluejays in the National Polls 1991 1996 2000 2005 Date ISAA Date NSCAA Date NSCAA Date NSCAA S 10 24 S 2 16 Pre 21 Pre 12 S 17 22 S 9 4 S 4 14 S 5 16 O 15 24 S 16 2 S 11 10 S 12 15 O 22 25 S 23 3 S 18 3 S 19 9 O 29 24 S 30 6 S 25 8 S 26 T-19 N 5 24 O 7 5 O 2 16 O 3 T-25 O 14 11 O 9 12 O 17 15 1992 O 21 T-18 O 16 10 O 24 16 Date ISAA O 28 17 O 23 16 O 31 17 Pre 22 N 4 19 O 30 11 N 7 23 S 9 22 N 11 18 N 6 11 N 14 11 S 15 13 D 18 3 N 13 8 D 13 6 S 29 13 D 11 2 O 6 6 1997 2001 2006 O 13 4 Date NSCAA Date NSCAA Date NSCAA O 20 4 S 1 6 Pre 2 Pre 8 O 27 4 S 8 5 S 10 14 O 16 18 N 3 2 S 15 11 S 17 14 O 23 23 N 10 2 S 22 16 O 30 21 S 29 16 2002 N 6 21 1993 O 6 14 Date NSCAA Date ISAA O 13 12 Pre 19 2007 Pre 4 O 20 11 S 16 16 Date NSCAA S 6 4 O 27 11 S 23 20 S 4 25 S 13 2 N 3 T-15 S 30 22 S 11 16 S 20 2 N 10 T-15 O 14 21 S 18 7 S 27 2 N 17 11 O 21 12 S 25 13 O 4 2 D 17 10 O 28 10 O 2 10 O 11 1 N 4 12 O 9 12 O 18 1 1998 N 11 12 O 16 10 O 25 1 Date NSCAA N 18 11 O 23 8 N 1 1 Pre 10 D 16 4 O 30 8 N 8 1 S 7 5 N 6 7 S 14 12 2003 N 13 7 1994 S 21 8 Date NSCAA D 19 9 Date ISAA S 28 6 Pre 8 S 13 10 O 5 8 S 1 12 2008 S 20 18 O 12 8 O 27 16 Date NSCAA S 27 17 O 19 6 N 3 19 Pre 6 O 4 16 O 26 6 D 15 T-8 S 2 4 O 11 16 N 2 7 S 9 3 O 18 11 N 9 13 2004 S 16 12 O 25 T-21 N 17 T-12 Date NSCAA S 23 8 N 1 23 D 17 7 Pre 24 S 30 5 N 8 22 S 7 13 O 7 3 1999 S 14 16 O 14 3 1995 Date NSCAA S 21 9 O 21 3 Date ISAA Pre 7 S 28 4 O 28 3 A 28 21 S 8 6 O 5 11 N 4 2 S 19 18 S 15 1 O 12 8 N 11 2 S 26 16 S 22 3 O 19 7 N 18 2 O 3 18 S 29 12 O 26 7 D 16 5 O 10 18 O 6 17 N 2 18 O 17 16 O 13 17 N 9 17 2009 O 31 16 O 20 14 N 16 T-16 Date NSCAA N 7 10 O 27 10 D 14 13 Pre 6 N 14 10 N 3 15 S 8 5 N 10 12 S 15 6 N 17 21 S 22 17 D 15 21 Continued on next page

34 Weekly Poll History Bluejays in the National Polls 2010 2012 2014 2016 Date NSCAA Date NSCAA Date NSCAA Date NSCAA S 7 24 Pre 3 S 2 8 Pre 7 S 14 16 A 28 2 S 9 2 A 30 8 S 21 16 S 4 3 S 16 3 S 6 14 S 28 13 S 11 2 S 23 12 S 13 14 O 5 11 S 18 7 S 30 11 S 20 12 O 12 11 S 25 12 O 7 9 S 27 10 O 19 10 O 2 24 O 14 6 O 4 10 O 26 9 O 9 24 O 21 2 O 11 6 N 2 10 O 16 22 O 28 10 O 18 10 N 9 12 O 23 21 N 4 6 O 25 18 N 16 17 O 30 16 N 11 5 N 1 24 D 14 14 N 6 12 N 18 9 N 8 24 N 13 8 D 16 7 N 15 23 2011 D 11 4 D 13 15 Date NSCAA 2015 Pre 10 Date NSCAA 2017 A 30 6 2013 Pre 6 Date United Soccer Coaches S 6 5 Date NSCAA S 1 3 Pre 14 S 13 3 Pre 6 S 8 1 A 29 23 S 20 3 S 3 2 S 15 1 S 26 25 S 27 2 S 10 1 S 22 1 O 4 5 S 17 5 S 29 1 2018 O 11 4 S 24 3 O 6 1 Date United Soccer Coaches O 18 6 O 1 4 O 13 1 A 28 20 O 25 3 O 8 7 O 20 1 S 11 25 N 1 2 O 15 12 O 27 1 S 18 12 N 8 2 O 22 22 N 3 3 S 25 9 N 15 2 N 5 25 N 10 5 O 2 8 N 22 2 N 17 9 O 9 12 D 6 2 D 15 6 O 16 8 D 13 4 O 23 19 O 30 14 N 6 17 N 13 25

Former Creighton head coaches (left to right) Elmar Bolowich (2011-18), Bob Warming (1990-94, 2001-09) and Bret Simon (1995-2000) at the 2017 Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame banquet when Simon was inducted into the Hall of Fame.

35 All-Time Honor Roll National Players of the Year NSCAA National Hermann Trophy Assistant Coach of the Year Johnny Torres - 1997 Johnny Torres - 2012

Missouri Athletic Club NSCAA Regional Johnny Torres - 1997 Assistant Coach of the Year Johnny Torres - 2011, ‘12 Soccer America Jason Mims - 2008 Johnny Torres - 1996 Senior CLASS Award NSCAA All-America Brian Holt - 2011 FIRST TEAM Keith DeFini - 1993 College Soccer News All-America Ethan Finlay - 2011 Matt Allen - 2007 (3rd Team) Jose Gomez - 2012 Andrew Duran - 2011 (1st Team) Andrei Gotsmanov - 2008 Ethan Finlay - 2010 (2nd Team), Fabian Herbers - 2014, ‘15 ‘11 (1st Team) Brian Holt - 2011 Jose Gomez - 2012 (1st Team) Brian Kamler - 1993 Andrei Gotsmanov - 2008 (1st Team) Richard Mulrooney - 1998 Peter Henning - 2000 (1st Team) Timo Pitter - 2015 Fabian Herbers - 2014 (1st Team), Andrew Ribeiro - 2012 ‘15 (1st Team) Johnny Torres - 1996, ‘97 Two-time national Player of the Year Johnny Torres Brian Holt - 2011 (1st Team) Mike Tranchilla - 2002 (left) was presented the 1997 Missouri Athletic Club Brian Mullan - 2000 (1st Team) David Wright - 1999 Foundation Male Collegiate Player of the Year Award Timo Pitter - 2014 (2nd Team) at a banquet featuring 1991 award winner Alexi Lalas (right). Andrew Ribeiro - 2012 (2nd Team) SECOND TEAM Chris Schuler - 2008 (2nd Team) Andrew Duran - 2011 Chris Schuler - 2008 Mike Tranchilla - 2002 (1st Team) Ethan Finlay - 2010 Connor Sparrow - 2015 David Wagenfuhr - 2002 (3rd Team), Greg Jordan - 2011 Johnny Torres - 1995, ‘96, ‘97 ‘03 (1st Team) Brian Kamler - 1991 Mike Tranchilla - 2002 Matt Wieland - 2005 (2nd Team) Brian Mullan - 2000 David Wagenfuhr - 2001, ‘02, ‘03 Timo Pitter - 2014 Akeem Ward - 2018 NCAA College Cup Jose Ribas - 2014 Matt Wieland - 2005 All-Tournament Team Chris Schuler - 2008 David Wright - 1997, ‘98, ‘99 Mike Gabb - 2000 Tom Zawislan - 1999 Brian Holt - 2011 THIRD TEAM SECOND TEAM Ishmael Mintah - 2000 Brian Kamler - 1992 Dion Acoff - 2010 Brian Mullan - 2000 Alex Kapp - 2016 Matt Allen - 2006 Mike Tranchilla - 2000, ‘02 Vincent Keller - 2015 Mike Bustos - 1998 Joe Wieland - 2002 Matt Wieland - 2005 Bruno Castro - 2011 Tom Zawislan - 1999 Kevin Doyle - 1992 Conference Coach of the Year Jay Fitzgerald - 1995 BIG EAST NSCAA All-Region Andrei Gotsmanov - 2007 Elmar Bolowich - 2014 (Staff, co-winner), FIRST TEAM Lance Hill - 1993 ‘18 (Staff) Matt Allen - 2007 Greg Jordan - 2010, ‘11 MVC Mehdi Ballouchy - 2002 Michael Kraus - 2005 Elmar Bolowich - 2011 (Staff) Tim Bohnenkamp - 2007 Ricky Lopez-Espin - 2016 Jamie Clark - 2010 (Staff) Keith DeFini - 1991, ‘92, ‘93 Brad McTighe - 1995 Bret Simon - 1996 (Co-winner) Andrew Duran - 2011 Eric Miller - 2013 Bob Warming - 1992, ‘93, ‘08 (Staff) Ethan Finlay - 2009, ‘10, ‘11 Brian Mullan - 1999 Jose Gomez - 2012 Richard Mulrooney - 1996 Conference Player of the Year Andrei Gotsmanov - 2008 Ross Paule - 1994 MVC Fabian Herbers - 2014, ‘15 Ricardo Perez - 2015 Keith DeFini - 1993 Lance Hill - 1991, ‘94, Andrew Peterson - 2005 Ethan Finlay - 2010, ‘11 Brian Holt - 2011 Joel Rydstrand - 2018 Jose Gomez - 2012 Greg Jordan - 2011 Chris Schuler - 2007, ‘09 Andrei Gotsmanov - 2008 Ryan Junge - 2006 Seth Sinovic - 2008 Brian Kamler - 1992 Brian Kamler - 1991, ‘92, ‘93 Lucas Stauffer - 2017 Michael Kraus - 2006 Alex Kapp - 2016 Jeff Thayer - 2008 Paul Lekics - 1995 Vincent Keller - 2015 Johnny Torres - 1994 Richard Mulrooney - 1998 Sven Koenig - 2018 Mike Tranchilla - 2001 Ross Paule - 1996 Michael Kraus - 2006 Matt Wieland - 2003, ‘04 Johnny Torres - 1997 Paul Lekics - 1995 THIRD TEAM David Wright - 1999 Ricky Lopez-Espin - 2017 Zach Barnes - 2013 Brian Mullan - 2000 Jose Gomez - 2010 Conference Defensive Player Of The Year Richard Mulrooney - 1997, ‘98 Michael Kraus - 2003 MVC Julian Nash - 2004 Seth Sinovic - 2009 Matt Allen - 2006, ‘07 Ross Paule - 1995, ‘96 Connor Sparrow - 2014 Andrew Duran - 2011 Ricardo Perez - 2016 Jay Fitzgerald - 1995 Timo Pitter - 2014, ‘15 NSCAA Regional Ira Philson - 1993 Tyler Polak - 2010, ‘11 Coach of the Year Andrew Ribeiro - 2012 Jose Ribas - 2014 Elmar Bolowich - 2011, ‘14 Chris Schuler - 2008 Andrew Ribeiro - 2012 Bob Warming - 1992, ‘93, ‘05, ‘08 Matt Wieland - 2003 Brett Rodriguez - 2004 David Wright - 1997 Tony Schmitz - 2007 36 All-Time Honor Roll

Conference Freshman Of The Year Richard Mulrooney - 1996, ‘97, ‘98 THIRD TEAM MVC Julian Nash - 2004 BIG EAST Dion Acoff - 2009 Ross Paule - 1994, ‘95, ‘96 Kuba Polat - 2019 Byron Dacy - 2005 Brent Peterson - 1994 Brian Holt - 2008 Ira Philson - 1992, ‘93 HONORABLE MENTION Paul Lekics - 1992 Timo Pitter - 2012 BIG EAST Ross Paule - 1994 (Newcomer of the Year) Tyler Polak - 2011 Bruno Castro - 2013 Timo Pitter - 2012 Andrew Ribeiro - 2012 MVC Tyler Polak - 2010 Brett Rodriguez - 2004 Jeff Deist - 1996 Tony Schmitz - 2007 Jay Fitzgerald - 1994 Conference Goalkeeper of The Year Chris Schuler - 2007, ‘08, ‘09 Shane Havens - 2003 BIG EAST Seth Sinovic - 2008, ‘09 Lance Hill - 1994 Alex Kapp - 2016 Jeff Thayer - 2008 Brian Holt - 2008 Connor Sparrow - 2015 Johnny Torres - 1995, ‘96, ‘97 Matt Jewett - 2003 MVC Mike Tranchilla - 2001, ‘02 Richard Mulrooney - 1995 Kevin Doyle - 1992 David Wagenfuhr - 2001, ‘02, ‘03 Tony Odorisio - 2004 Brian Holt - 2011 Matt Wieland - 2003, ‘05 Andrew Ribeiro - 2011 David Wright - 1997, ‘98, ‘99 Keith Sawarynski - 2001 Conference Midfielder Of The Year Tom Zawislan - 1999 Jarod Tarver - 2005 BIG EAST Jeff Thayer - 2009 Ricardo Perez - 2016 SECOND TEAM Matt Thomas - 2003 Timo Pitter - 2014, ‘15 BIG EAST David Wright - 1996 Joel Rydstrand - 2018 Younes Boudadi - 2019 Tom Zawislan - 1998 Noah Franke - 2017 Conference Offensive Player Of The Year Luke Haakenson - 2019 ALL-FRESHMAN TEAM BIG EAST Brendan Hines-Ike - 2013 BIG EAST Fabian Herbers - 2014, ‘15 Alex Kapp - 2016 Fabian Herbers - 2013 Sven Koenig - 2018 Paul Kruse - 2018 Paul Kruse - 2018 Ricky Lopez-Espin - 2017 Mitch LaGro - 2016, 2018 Ricardo Perez - 2013 Riggs Lennon - 2016 Kuba Polat - 2017 All-Conference Ricky Lopez-Espin 2016 Joel Rydstrand - 2015 FIRST TEAM Timo Pitter - 2013 Lucas Stauffer - 2014 BIG EAST Jose Ribas - 2013 MVC Zach Barnes - 2013 Connor Sparrow - 2015 Dion Acoff - 2009 Fabian Herbers - 2014, ‘15 MVC Matt Allen - 2004 Vincent Keller - 2015 Dion Acoff - 2011 Rob Appel - 2001 Sven Koenig - 2018 Steve Bernal - 1998 Mehdi Ballouchy - 2002 Ricky Lopez-Espin - 2017 Tim Bohnenkamp - 2007 Steve Bernal - 1996 Ricardo Perez - 2016 Mike Bustos - 1998 Tim Bohnenkamp - 2004 Timo Pitter - 2014, ‘15 Sergio Castillo - 2008, ‘10 Mike Bustos - 1995 Jose Ribas - 2014 Bruno Castro - 2011 Joan Carvajal - 2004 (HM) Joel Rydstrand - 2018 Byron Dacy - 2005, ‘06 Sergio Castillo - 2007 Lucas Stauffer - 2016, ‘17 Kyle Deremer - 2009 Byron Dacy - 2005 Yudai Tashiro - 2019 Jon Epperson - 1996, ‘97 Trevor Eastman - 2005 Akeem Ward - 2018 Ray Ferri - 1991 Ethan Finlay - 2008 MVC Jay Fitzgerald - 1991 Rodrigo Faria - 2006 Dion Acoff - 2010 Pietari Holopainen - 2006 Brendan Hines-Ike - 2012 Matt Allen - 2006, ‘07 Brian Holt - 2009, ‘10 Brian Holt - 2008 Rob Appel - 2001 Mike Gabb - 2002 Matt Jewett - 2000 Steve Bernal - 1999 Jose Gomez - 2011 Greg Jordan - 2008 Mike Bustos - 1999 Andrei Gotsmanov - 2007 Brent Kallman - 2009 Keith DeFini - 1991, ‘92, ‘93 Ryan Junge - 2005 Liam Kelly - 2010 Jeff Deist - 1995, ‘97 Michael Kraus - 2005 Michael Kraus - 2003 Luiz Del Monte - 2002 Paul Lekics - 1992 Eric Miller - 2011 Kyle Deremer - 2010 Brad McTighe - 1996 Richard Mulrooney - 1995 Kevin Doyle - 1992 Ishmael Mintah - 2000 Brian Mullan - 1997 Andrew Duran - 2011 Josh Moran - 2009 Tony Odorisio - 2003 Billy Duranceau - 1992 Brian Mullan - 1997 Timo Pitter - 2012 Ray Ferri - 1993 Julian Nash - 2002 Tyler Polak - 2010 Ethan Finlay - 2009, ‘10, ‘11 Tony Odorisio - 2006 Chris Schuler - 2006 Jay Fitzgerald - 1993, ‘95 Vince Odorisio - 2005 Tucker Sindlinger - 2007 Jose Gomez - 2010, ‘12 Andrew Peterson - 2006 Jeff Thayer - 2006 Andrei Gotsmanov - 2008 Brent Peterson - 1993 Mike Tranchilla - 1999 Peter Henning - 2000 Tyler Polak - 2010 David Wagenfuhr - 2000 Lance Hill - 1991, ‘93 Zion Renfurm - 1996, ‘97 Damien Westfield - 2002 Brian Holt - 2011 Jose Ribas - 2012 Joe Wieland - 1999 Greg Jordan - 2010, ‘11 Angel Rivillo - 1999 David Wright - 1996 Ryan Junge - 2006 Seth Sinovic - 2007 Brian Kamler - 1991, ‘92, ‘93 Johnny Torres - 1994 Michael Kraus - 2006 Mike Tranchilla - 2000 Paul Lekics - 1994, ‘95 Joe Wieland - 2002 Bold indicates 2019 accomplishment Marc Madeley - 1996 Matt Wieland - 2004 Brad McTighe - 1995 Eric Miller - 2012 Brian Mullan - 1998, ‘99, ‘00

37 All-Time Honor Roll Conference Tournament Josh Moran - 2010 Ethan Finlay - 2009 Most Valuable Players Richard Mulrooney - 1996, ‘97 Matt Garlick - 1996 MVC Julian Nash - 2002 Shane Havens - 2002 Byron Dacy - 2006 Ross Paule - 1995, ‘96 Geoff Huber - 1995 Ray Ferri - 1992 Lane Peercy - 2000 Thomas Martin - 1995, ‘96 Jay Fitzgerald - 1994 Andrew Peterson - 2005 Robert Perran - 1994 Jose Gomez - 2012 Tyler Polak - 2011 Jace Peters - 2011 Andrei Gotsmanov - 2008 Andrew Ribeiro - 2010, ‘12 Andrew Ribeiro - 2010, ‘11 Brian Holt - 2011 Angel Rivillo - 1999 Brett Rodriguez - 2004 Brian Kamler - 1993 Chris Schuler - 2006, ‘08 Tony Schmitz - 2006 Brian Mullan - 2000 Seth Sinovic - 2007 Jarod Tarver - 2006 Richard Mulrooney - 1998 Johnny Torres - 1994, ‘96 Joe Wieland - 2000, ‘01 Ross Paule - 1995 Mike Tranchilla - 2001, ‘02 Matt Wieland - 2003 Johnny Torres - 1997 David Wagenfuhr - 2001, ‘02 Mike Tranchilla - 2002 Matt Wieland - 2004, ‘05 CoSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA OF THE Matt Wieland - 2005 David Wright - 1997, ‘98, ‘99 YEAR Tom Zawislan - 1998 Brian Holt - 2011 Conference All-Tournament Team BIG EAST Conference Scholar-Athlete CoSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA Myles Englis - 2016 FIRST TEAM Ethan Finlay - 2011 (2nd Team) Fabian Herbers - 2014, ‘15 MVC Shane Havens - 2003 (3rd Team) Alex Kapp - 2016 Brian Adams - 1994 Fabian Herbers - 2014 (3rd Team), Ricky Lopez-Espin - 2016 Brian Biggerstaff - 2004, ‘05 ‘15 (1st Team) Ricardo Perez - 2015 Bruno Castro - 2012 Brian Holt - 2011 (1st Team) Timo Pitter - 2014, ‘15 Keith DeFini - 1992, 1993 Vincent Keller - 2015 (3rd Team) Joel Rydstrand - 2018 Kyle Deremer - 2010 Sven Koenig - 2018 (1st Team) Connor Sparrow - 2015 Andrew Duran - 2011 Jace Peters - 2011 (2nd Team) Akeem Ward - 2018 Jon Epperson - 1996, 1997 Connor Ramlo - 2019 (3rd Team) MVC Ethan Finlay - 2011 Matt Wieland - 2005 (3rd Team) Brian Adams - 1991 Jay Fitzgerald - 1994 Matt Allen - 2007 Mike Gabb - 2000, ‘02 CoSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-DISTRICT Mehdi Ballouchy - 2002 Jamie Harris - 1992, ‘93 Brian Biggerstaff - 2004, ‘05 Tim Bohnenkamp - 2006 Shane Havens - 2003 Andrew Brown - 2004 Andrew Brown - 2001 Peter Henning - 1999, 2000 Bruno Castro - 2012, ‘13 Sergio Castillo - 2007, ‘09 Brian Holt - 2010, ‘11 Kyle Deremer - 2010 Byron Dacy - 2005, ‘06 Geoff Huber - 1996, ‘97 Daniel Espeleta - 2019 Keith DeFini - 1992, ‘93 Matt Jewett - 2003 Ethan Finlay - 2009, ‘11 Jeff Deist - 1997 Matt Mendlick - 1996, ‘97 Bryce Gibson - 2019 Andrew Duran - 2011 Eric Miller - 2012 Luke Haakenson - 2019 Billy Duranceau - 1992, ‘93 Brian Mullan - 2000 Shane Havens - 2003 Ray Ferri - 1992 Ross Paule - 1995, ‘96 Fabian Herbers - 2014, ‘15 Ethan Finlay - 2008, ‘09, ‘11 Lane Peercy - 2001 Brian Holt - 2010, ‘11 Jay Fitzgerald - 1995 Brent Peterson - 1992, ‘93, ‘94 Vincent Keller - 2015 Jose Gomez - 2012 Jose Ribas - 2012 Sven Koenig - 2018 Andrei Gotsmanov - 2008 Angel Rivillo - 1999 Mitch LaGro - 2018 Mark Haston - 1991 Jeremy Shelton - 2002 Eric Miller - 2012 Peter Henning - 2000 Tucker Sindlinger - 2008 Jace Peters - 2011 Lance Hill - 1994 Seth Sinovic - 2007, ‘08, ‘09 Connor Ramlo - 2019 Brian Holt - 2008, ‘11 Joe Wieland - 2002 Andrew Ribeiro - 2010, ‘11 Matt Jewett - 2003 Matt Wieland - 2004, ‘05 Brett Rodriguez - 2004 Brent Kallman - 2012 Tom Zawislan - 1998 Tucker Sindlinger - 2008 Brian Kamler - 1992, ‘93 Seth Sinovic - 2008 Michael Kraus - 2004, ‘05, ‘06 HONORABLE MENTION Connor Sparrow - 2014 Paul Lekics - 1993, ‘94, ‘95 Collin Valdivia - 2019 Marc Madeley - 1998 MVC Matt Wieland - 2004, ‘05 Brad McTighe - 1995 Jude Beller - 1995 Eric Miller - 2012 Andrew Brown - 2004 Bold indicates 2019 accomplishment Ishmael Mintah - 2000 Byron Dacy - 2006 Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame All-Centennial MVC Team Keith DeFini - 2005 (2006-2007) Lance Hill - 2007 Keith Defini Brian Kamler - 2002 Jay Fitzgerald Brian Mullan - 2008 Brian Kamler Brian Mullan Richard Mulrooney - 2008 Richard Mulrooney Ross Paule - 2012 Ross Paule Ira Philson - 2003 Ira Philson Bret Simon - 2017 Johnny Torres Johnny Torres - 2004 Mike Tranchilla Mike Tranchilla - 2020 Matt Wieland Bob Warming - 2010 David Wright David Wright - 2014 Bob Warming (Coach)

38 Yearly Stats and Coaching History Year-by-Year Statistics Year Coach Record Pct. Conf. Points Goals Assists Shots Corners Saves Shutouts GAA 1979 Mark Schmechel 12-5-1 .694 –– 112 44 24 NA NA 87 6 1.54 1980 Mark Schmechel 13-7-1 .643 –– 206 79 48 NA NA 103 6 1.81 1981 Wayne Rasmussen 9-6-3 .583 –– 100 34 32 NA NA 163 6 1.67 1982 Wayne Rasmussen 7-8-2 .471 –– 69 25 19 NA NA 94 3 1.33 1983 Don Klosterman 8-9-1 .472 –– 61 22 17 NA NA 126 5 1.50 1984 Don Klosterman 4-9-2 .333 –– 28 12 4 189 NA NA 4 NA 1985 Don Klosterman 5-12-0 .294 –– NA 27 NA NA NA NA 3 2.41 1986-89 Creighton did not field a men’s soccer team 1990 Bob Warming 12-5-3 .675 –– 184 68 48 444 NA 145 7 1.33 1991 Bob Warming 12-5-2 .684 3-1-0 140 47 46 167 103 98 5 1.45 1992 Bob Warming 14-3-1 .805 4-0-1 174 57 60 171 113 61 6 0.96 1993 Bob Warming 19-1-0 .950 5-0-0 195 64 67 203 150 80 8 0.99 1994 Bob Warming 15-5-1 .763 5-1-0 142 45 52 356 135 76 5 1.18 1995 Bret Simon 14-3-1 .806 4-0-1 153 52 49 336 92 70 7 0.93 1996 Bret Simon 17-5-2 .750 5-0-0 199 62 75 410 129 91 11 0.82 1997 Bret Simon 16-5-1 .750 6-1-0 175 55 65 307 120 99 10 0.95 1998 Bret Simon 16-4-2 .773 4-1-2 141 46 49 347 107 81 7 0.81 1999 Bret Simon 11-5-2 .667 5-1-1 112 35 42 245 96 62 11 0.47 2000 Bret Simon 22-4-0 .846 9-2-0 174 57 60 390 145 99 8 1.00 2001 Bob Warming 11-9-1 .548 6-3-0 114 39 36 229 125 80 5 1.49 2002 Bob Warming 18-4-2 .792 7-1-1 165 54 57 367 163 86 9 0.96 2003 Bob Warming 12-6-4 .636 7-1-1 106 36 34 320 123 91 9 0.77 2004 Bob Warming 14-4-2 .750 6-3-0 121 39 43 304 108 90 5 0.93 2005 Bob Warming 15-5-3 .717 5-2-0 161 49 63 348 147 83 10 0.80 2006 Bob Warming 13-5-3 .690 4-1-1 118 36 46 333 136 73 9 0.95 2007 Bob Warming 12-3-5 .725 4-0-2 103 33 37 316 151 77 7 0.79 2008 Bob Warming 16-2-2 .850 4-0-1 109 35 39 293 117 53 13 0.48 2009 Bob Warming 7-4-5 .594 4-2-4 66 20 26 275 107 39 8 0.76 2010 Jamie Clark 13-5-2 .700 5-1-1 121 40 41 320 123 52 8 1.06 2011 Elmar Bolowich 21-2-1 .896 5-1-0 124 40 44 391 121 63 19 0.20 2012 Elmar Bolowich 17-4-3 .771 5-0-1 111 39 33 371 121 98 11 0.80 2013 Elmar Bolowich 9-9-2 .500 4-4-1 94 32 30 292 100 79 6 1.09 2014 Elmar Bolowich 16-3-3 .795 7-1-1 94 32 30 313 117 58 12 0.48 2015 Elmar Bolowich 19-4-0 .826 7-2-0 153 53 47 449 137 53 10 0.81 2016 Elmar Bolowich 13-7-3 .630 5-3-1 117 42 33 381 147 79 8 0.84 2017 Elmar Bolowich 9-7-2 .556 3-4-2 96 32 32 284 124 63 7 1.36 2018 Elmar Bolowich 11-4-3 .694 7-1-1 75 25 25 306 101 52 7 0.64 2019 Johnny Torres 8-7-2 .529 4-4-1 69 22 25 226 90 67 3 1.23 Creighton Coaching History

Mark Schmechel Wayne Rasmussen Don Klosterman Bob Warming Bret Simon Jamie Clark Elmar Bolowich Johnny Torres 1979-80 1981-82 1983-85 1990-94, 2001-09 1995-2000 2010 2011-18 2019-Pres. 25-12-2 (.667) 16-14-5 (.529) 17-30-3 (.370) 190-61-34 (.726) 96-26-8 (.769) 13-5-2 (.700) 115-40-17 (.718) 8-7-2 (.529)

Coaching Ledger

Head Coach Overall Pct. Conference Pct. Years Accomplishments Bob Warming 190-61-34 .726 64-15-11 .772 1990-94, 2001-09 1 NCAA College Cup, 11 NCAA Tournaments, 14 combined conference titles Elmar Bolowich 115-40-17 .718 43-16-7 .674 2011-18 2 NCAA College Cups, 6 NCAA Tournaments, 6 combined conference titles Bret Simon 96-26-8 .769 33-5-4 .833 1995-00 2 NCAA College Cups, 6 NCAA Tournaments, 6 combined conference titles Mark Schmechel 25-12-2 .667 ––– –– 1979-80 Don Klosterman 17-30-3 .370 ––– –– 1983-85 Wayne Rasmussen 16-14-5 .529 ––– –– 1981-82 Jamie Clark 13-5-2 .700 5-1-1 .786 2010 NCAA Tournament, MVC Regular-Season title Johnny Torres 8-7-2 .529 4-4-1 .500 2019-Present Total 480-195-73 .691 149-41-24 .752 37 39 Annual Leaders Goals 2007 Tim Bohnenkamp 6 2001 Mike Tranchilla 29 1992 Kevin Doyle 5 1979 Bill Fehrenbach 10 2008 Seth Sinovic 6 2002 Mike Tranchilla 42 1993 Jay Fitzgerald 8 1980 Ray Nikodem 22 Jeff Thayer 6 2003 David Wagenfuhr 18 1994 Jay Fitzgerald 5 1981 Robert Addington 11 2009 Josh Moran 5 2004 Julian Nash 30 1995 Jay Fitzgerald 7 1982 John Probst 6 2010 Dion Acoff 10 2005 Byron Dacy 22 1996 Jon Epperson 11 1983 Robert Addington 8 2011 Bruno Castro 8 2006 Byron Dacy 20 1997 Jon Epperson 8 1984 Not Available Jose Gomez 8 2007 Tony Schmitz 22 1998 Tom Zawislan 7 1985 Not Available 2012 Jose Gomez 9 2008 Andrei Gotsmanov 21 1999 Tom Zawislan 11 1990 Keith DeFini 19 2013 Jose Ribas 6 Jeff Thayer 21 2000 Mike Gabb 6 1991 Brian Kamler 17 2014 Timo Pitter 9 2009 Jeff Thayer 18 2001 Andrew Brown 4 1992 Keith DeFini 16 2015 Fabian Herbers 17 2010 Ethan Finlay 32 2002 Mike Gabb 9 1993 Keith DeFini 21 2016 Joel Rydstrand 7 2011 Ethan Finlay 46 2003 Guido Leon 8 1994 Zion Renfurm 8 2017 Joel Rydstrand 8 2012 Timo Pitter 34 2004 Zac Gibbens 2 1995 Ross Paule 11 2018 Joel Rydstrand 5 2013 Timo Pitter 21 Matt Allen 2 1996 Johnny Torres 18 2019 Younes Boudadi 4 2014 Timo Pitter 36 2005 Matt Allen 9 1997 Johnny Torres 13 Kuba Polat 4 2015 Fabian Herbers 45 2006 Matt Allen 8 1998 Mike Bustos 10 Musa Qongo 4 2016 Riggs Lennon 34 2007 Matt Allen 7 1999 Mike Bustos 6 2017 Ricky Lopez-Espin 37 2008 Brian Holt 12 2000 Mike Tranchilla 19 Points 2018 Sven Koenig 38 2009 Brian Holt 8 2001 Mike Tranchilla 16 1979 Bill Fehrenbach 22 2019 Luke Haakenson 19 2010 Brian Holt 7 2002 Mike Tranchilla 15 Dave Erker 22 2011 Brian Holt 17 2003 Michael Kraus 6 1980 Ray Nikodem 52 Saves 2012 Jeff Gal 7 2004 Brian Biggerstaff 8 1981 Robert Addington 30 1979 Kevin Fitzgerald 87 2013 Connor Sparrow 3 2005 Byron Dacy 9 1982 Robert Addington 15 1980 Chris Feuerbach 68 2014 Connor Sparrow 11 2006 Michael Kraus 6 1983 Robert Addington 18 1981 Jim Dalla Riva 163 2015 Connor Sparrow 9 2007 Thomas Gjoesund 6 1984 Not Available 1982 Jim Dalla Riva 94 2016 Alex Kapp 7 Andrei Gotsmanov 6 1985 Not Available 1983 Jim Dalla Riva 126 2017 Michael Kluver 6 2008 Andrei Gotsmanov 10 1990 Keith DeFini 47 1984 Jim Dalla Riva 83 2018 Paul Kruse 7 2009 Ethan Finlay 8 1991 Brian Kamler 41 1985 Not Available 2019 Collin Valdivia 2 2010 Ethan Finlay 15 1992 Keith DeFini 39 1990 Kevin Doyle 122 2011 Ethan Finlay 14 1993 Keith DeFini 48 1991 Kevin Doyle 72 Goals Against Average 2012 Timo Pitter 10 1994 Paul Lekics 21 1992 Kevin Doyle 61 1979 Kevin Fitzgerald 1.54 2013 Timo Pitter 7 1995 Ross Paule 31 1993 Jay Fitzgerald 57 1980 Chris Feuerbach 1.78 2014 Fabian Herbers 10 1996 Johnny Torres 44 1994 Jay Fitzgerald 76 1981 Jim Dalla Riva 1.67 2015 Fabian Herbers 15 1997 Johnny Torres 39 1995 Jay Fitzgerald 65 1982 Jim Dalla Riva 1.33 2016 Riggs Lennon 10 1998 Richard Mulrooney 32 1996 Jon Epperson 74 1983 Jim Dalla Riva 1.50 Ricky Lopez-Espin 10 1999 Mike Bustos 17 1997 Jon Epperson 55 1984 Not Available 2017 Ricky Lopez-Espin 12 2000 Brian Mullan 49 1998 Tom Zawislan 76 1985 Not Available 2018 Sven Koenig 10 2001 Mike Tranchilla 41 1999 Tom Zawislan 54 1990 Kevin Doyle 1.08 2019 Yudai Tashiro 6 2002 Mike Tranchilla 37 2000 Mike Gabb 96 1991 Jay Fitzgerald 0.89 2003 Michael Kraus 21 2001 Andrew Brown 64 1992 Kevin Doyle 0.99 Assists 2004 Julian Nash 21 2002 Mike Gabb 77 1993 Jay Fitzgerald 0.99 1979 Dave Erker 4 2005 Byron Dacy 27 2003 Guido Leon 68 1994 Jay Fitzgerald 1.19 1980 John Probst 11 2006 Byron Dacy 16 2004 Matt Allen 45 1995 Jay Fitzgerald 0.89 1981 Ray Nikodem 12 2007 Andrei Gotsmanov 17 2005 Matt Allen 78 1996 Jon Epperson 0.78 1982 Robert Addington 5 2008 Andrei Gotsmanov 24 2006 Matt Allen 62 1997 Tom Zawislan 0.71 1983 John Probst 4 2009 Ethan Finlay 19 2007 Matt Allen 75 1998 Tom Zawislan 0.75 1984 Not Available 2010 Ethan Finlay 34 2008 Brian Holt 49 1999 Tom Zawislan 0.51 1985 Not Available 2011 Ethan Finlay 34 2009 Brian Holt 37 2000 Mike Gabb 1.03 1990 Keith DeFini 9 2012 Timo Pitter 24 2010 Brian Holt 49 2001 Andrew Brown 1.39 1991 Ray Ferri 12 2013 Timo Pitter 18 2011 Brian Holt 60 2002 Mike Gabb 0.96 1992 Ray Ferri 10 2014 Fabian Herbers 28 2012 Jeff Gal 57 2003 Guido Leon 0.66 Brian Adams 10 2015 Fabian Herbers 47 2013 Alex Bolowich 61 2004 Matt Allen 0.69 1993 Brian Kamler 11 2016 Ricky Lopez-Espin 22 2014 Connor Sparrow 58 2005 Matt Allen 0.81 1994 Johnny Torres 8 2017 Ricky Lopez-Espin 27 2015 Connor Sparrow 53 2006 Matt Allen 0.93 1995 Ross Paule 9 2018 Sven Koenig 20 2016 Alex Kapp 78 2007 Matt Allen 0.79 1996 Richard Mulrooney 16 2019 Yudai Tashiro 15 2017 Michael Kluver 55 2008 Brian Holt 0.51 1997 Johnny Torres 13 2018 Paul Kruse 52 2009 Brian Holt 0.77 1998 Richard Mulrooney 16 Shots On Goal 2019 Paul Kruse 42 2010 Brian Holt 1.06 1999 Brian Mullan 8 1990 Keith DeFini 64 2011 Brian Holt 0.21 Angel Rivillo 8 1991 Brian Kamler 41 Shutouts 2012 Jeff Gal 0.65 2000 Brian Mullan 13 1992 Keith DeFini 40 1979 Kevin Fitzgerald 6 2013 Connor Sparrow 0.38 2001 David Wagenfuhr 10 1993 Keith DeFini 51 1980 Chris Feuerbach 4 2014 Connor Sparrow 0.49 2002 Julian Nash 8 1994 Johnny Torres 29 1981 Jim Dalla Riva 6 2015 Connor Sparrow 0.82 David Wagenfuhr 8 1995 Ross Paule 26 1982 Jim Dalla Riva 3 2016 Alex Kapp 0.84 2003 Michael Kraus 9 1996 Johnny Torres 45 1983 Jim Dalla Riva 5 2017 Michael Kluver 1.29 2004 Julian Nash 9 1997 Jeff Deist 26 1984 Jim Dalla Riva 5 2018 Paul Kruse 0.64 2005 Tim Bohnenkamp 10 1998 Richard Mulrooney 30 1985 Not Available 2019 Paul Kruse 1.23 2006 Byron Dacy 6 1999 Mike Bustos 39 1990 Kevin Doyle 7 Pietari Holopainen 6 2000 Brian Mullan 44 1991 Kevin Doyle 5 Bold Indicates single-season best 40 Single-Match Records

Single-Match Records Miscellaneous Individual Match Records Creighton - Individual Creighton - Team TIME ELAPSED BETWEEN GOALS BY THE SAME INDIVIDUAL Creighton: 0:14, Keith Sawarynski at Vanderbilt, 10-13-00 POINTS SCORED POINTS SCORED 10 Keith DeFini vs. Concordia 9-25-90 37 vs. Concordia (14 G, 9 A) 9-25-90 TIME ELAPSED FROM THE START OF THE GAME TO THE FIRST GOAL 8 Riggs Lennon vs. DePaul 9-26-16 29 vs. UMKC (9 G, 11 A) 9-5-92 8 Mike Tranchilla vs. Evansville 11-9-01 29 vs. Teikyo Westmar (10G,9A) 9-14-91 Creighton: 0:16, Brian Kamler vs. Bradley, 10-9-92 8 Keith Sawarynski vs. Vanderbilt 10-13-00 28 vs. UMKC (9 G, 10 A) 9-19-90 0:26, Vince Odorisio vs. UCLA, 9-10-04 8 Johnny Torres vs. Charleston 10-20-96 24 vs. Drake (7 G, 10 A) 11-5-99 0:30, Lance Hill at Missouri State, 11-5-94 8 Lance Hill vs. UNLV 9-19-93 24 vs. Vanderbilt (7 G, 10 A) 9-26-97 0:34, Johnny Torres at Bradley, 10-6-95 8 Keith DeFini vs. Teikyo Westmar 9-14-91 24 vs. UMKC (8 G, 8 A) 9-29-95 0:36, Andrei Gotsmanov vs. Tulsa, 11-25-08 0:41, Ethan Finlay vs. Tulsa, 10-5-10 GOALS GOALS 0:43, Ethan Finlay vs. SIU Edwardsville, 10-30-10 4 Riggs Lennon vs. DePaul 9-26-16 14 vs. Concordia 9-25-90 4 Mike Tranchilla vs. Evansville 11-9-01 11 vs. South Dakota 10-19-79 Opponent: 0:20, Dan Westwater, Charlotte, 10-19-94 4 Keith Sawarynski vs. Vanderbilt 10-13-00 10 vs. Teikyo Westmar 9-14-91 4 Johnny Torres vs. Charleston 10-20-96 10 at South Dakota State 10-12-80 CONSECUTIVE MATCHES WITH AT LEAST ONE GOAL 4 Lance Hill vs. UNLV 9-19-93 10 vs. Northwest Missouri State 9-10-80 7 by Keith DeFini from 9-4-92 to 9-23-92 4 Keith DeFini vs. Teikyo Westmar 9-14-91 10 vs. York College 9-7-80 6 by Mike Tranchilla from 10-21-01 to 11-16-01 4 Keith DeFini vs. Concordia 9-25-90 6 by Johnny Torres from 9-14-97 to 10-17-97 ASSISTS 6 by Brian Kamler from 8-31-91 to 9-17-91 ASSISTS 11 vs. UMKC 9-5-92 4 Richard Mulrooney at EIU 11-10-96 10 vs. Drake 11-5-99 3 Fabian Herbers vs. Drake 11-22-15 10 vs. Vanderbilt 9-26-97 CONSECUTIVE SHUTOUT MINUTES 3 Jose Gomez at Princeton 10-9-12 10 vs. UMKC 9-19-90 816:26 by Brian Holt from 10-15-11 to 11-27-11 3 Seth Sinovic at E. Illinois 11-8-08 9 vs. Eastern Illinois 10-11-09 753:34 by Brian Holt from 11-21-10 to 9-10-11 3 Joan Carvajal vs. E. Illinois 10-8-05 9 vs. Eastern Illinois 10-8-05 722:12 by Brian Holt from 9-13-08 to 10-11-08 3 Luiz Del Monte at BC 12-8-02 9 at Boston College 12-8-02 562:44 by Kevin Doyle from 10-11-92 to 11-7-92 3 David Wagenfuhr vs. Evansville 11-9-01 9 vs. Teikyo Westmar 9-14-91 538:05 by Jeff Gal from 9-16-12 to 11-3-12 3 Brian Kamler vs. SDSU 9-17-93 9 vs. Concordia 9-25-90 3 Mark Haston vs. UMKC 9-5-92 500:20 by Tom Zawislan from 10-1-99 to 10-29-99 SAVES 3 B. Kamler vs. Teikyo Westmar 9-14-91 480:00 by Matt Allen from 10-26-05 to 11-22-05 Keith Sawarynski 19 at Air Force 11-23-97 (1998-2001) SAVES 18 at Notre Dame 10-7-90 18 Kevin Doyle at Notre Dame 10-7-90 16 vs. Tulsa 10-31-81 16 Jim Dalla Riva vs. Tulsa 10-31-81 15 at Bradley 10-8-04 Miscellaneous Team Match Records 15 Tom Zawislan at Air Force 11-23-97 14 at Eastern Illinois 9-17-82 TIME ELAPSED BETWEEN GOALS 14 Matt Allen at Bradley 10-8-04 Creighton: 0:14 -- from 71:02 to 71:16 (both by Sawarynski) at Vanderbilt, 10-13-00 14 Jim Dalla Riva at E. Illinois 9-17-82 Opponent: 0:35 -- from 22:29 to 23:04 by Bradley, 10-10-07

CONSECUTIVE MATCHES WITH AT LEAST ONE GOAL Creighton: 40 from 9-4-93 to 11-27-94 Opponents - Individual Opponents - Team Opponent: 10 from 9-20-91 to 10-20-91 10 from 10-31-83 to 9-14-84 POINTS SCORED POINTS SCORED 6 Kevin Forrest, Washington 11-10-06 18 vs. UCLA (6 G, 6 A) 9-20-91 CONSECUTIVE SHUTOUTS 6 Jesse Baker, Drake 10-26-05 17 vs. Charlotte (5 G, 7 A) 10-19-94 Creighton: 8, from 8-27-11 to 9-24-11; from 10-19-11 to 11-20-11 6 Marshall Morehead, Marquette 9-24-00 14 at Missouri St. (5 G, 4 A) 11-10-90 Opponent: 3, from 10-12-13 to 10-19-13 5 Mohamed Fahim, SMU 10-14-01 13 at Marquette (4 G, 5 A) 10-25-17 3, from 10-12-85 to 10-26-85 5 Dan Westwater, Charlotte 10-19-94 13 at Bradley (4 G, 5 A) 10-20-00 3, from 9-8-84 to 9-14-84 5 Titto Torrejon, FIU 9-28-91 12 at SMU (4 G, 4 A) 10-14-01 3, from 9-9-82 to 9-17-82 5 Joe Max Moore, UCLA 9-20-91 12 at Ohio State (4 G, 4 A) 9-21-01 5 Jim Thwing, Missouri State 11-10-90 SHOTS ON GOAL GOALS Creighton: 26 vs. Concordia, 9-25-90 GOALS 8 vs. San Francisco 9-29-85 Opponent: 21 at Air Force, 11-23-97 3 Kevin Forrest, Washington 11-10-06 6 vs. UCLA 9-20-91 3 Jesse Baker, Drake 10-26-05 6 at SMU 10-20-81 3 Marshall Morehead, Marquette 9-24-00 6 at Tulsa 11-8-80 CONSECUTIVE WINS: 19, from 9-4-93 to 11-7-93 6 at South Dakota State 9-22-79 CONSECUTIVE LOSSES: 6, from 10-12-85 to 11-9-85, and ASSISTS from 10-23-84 to 9-8-85 4 Luka Prpa, Marquette 10-25-17 ASSISTS 3 Harry Cooksley, St. John’s 11-4-17 7 vs. Charlotte 10-19-94 CONSECUTIVE HOME WINS: 16, from 11-18-10 to 8-24-12 3 Randy Sheen, Charlotte 10-19-94 6 vs. UCLA 9-20-91 CONSECUTIVE HOME LOSSES: 2 (5 times), last from 11-26-16 to 8-25-17 5 5 times, last at Marquette 10-25-17 SAVES CONSECUTIVE ROAD WINS: 12, from 10-12-92 to 9-16-94 17 Olmstead, Colo. Mines 10-12-91 SAVES CONSECUTIVE ROAD LOSSES: 8, from 11-3-84 to 10-27-85 15 Mike Forensich, CS Fullerton 12-1-96 17 Colorado School of Mines 10-12-91 14 Dave Walther, Illinois State 10-3-93 15 Cal State Fullerton 12-1-96 CONSECUTIVE CONFERENCE REGULAR-SEASON WINS: 11, 14 Peter Gulli, Notre Dame 10-7-90 14 at SMU 11-21-10 from 10-29-95 to 10-31-97 13 Tim Deck, Wisconsin 9-20-92 14 Illinois State 10-3-93 CONSECUTIVE CONFERENCE REGULAR-SEASON LOSSES: 3, 14 Notre Dame 10-7-90 from 10-22-16 to 10-29-16

41 Season and Career Records Single-Season Records Individual Career Records POINTS SCORED GOALKEEPING VICTORIES POINTS SCORED MATCHES PLAYED 52 Ray Nikodem, So. 1980 21 Brian Holt, Sr. 2011 162 Keith DeFini 1990-93 90 David Wagenfuhr 2000-03 49 Brian Mullan, Sr. 2000 21 Mike Gabb, Jr. 2000 140 Mike Tranchilla 1999-02 89 Timo Pitter 2012-15 48 Keith DeFini, Sr. 1993 19 Connor Sparrow, Sr. 2015 130 Brian Kamler 1990-93 8 8 Ricardo Perez 2013-16 47 Fabian Herbers, Jr. 2015 19 Jay Fitzgerald, So. 1993 128 Johnny Torres 1994-97 88 Brian Mullan 1997-00 47 Mike Tranchilla, So. 2000 18 Mike Gabb, Sr. 2002 104 Brian Mullan 1997-00 87 Matt Wieland 2002-05 47 Keith DeFini, Fr. 1990 16 Connor Sparrow, Jr. 2014 103 Ethan Finlay 2008-11 87 Joe Wieland 1999-02 44 Johnny Torres, Jr. 1996 16 Brian Holt, Fr. 2008 89 Richard Mulrooney 1995-98 86 Lucas Stauffer 2014-17 41 Mike Tranchilla, Jr. 2001 16 Tom Zawislan, Jr. 1998 88 Timo Pitter 2012-15 86 Mike Tranchilla 1999-02 41 Brian Kamler, So. 1991 16 Jon Epperson, Jr. 1996 85 Fabian Herbers 2013-15 86 Keith Sawarynski 1998-01 39 Johnny Torres, Sr. 1997 15 Matt Allen, So. 2005 81 Ray Nikodem 1980-82 85 Noah Franke 2014-17 39 Keith DeFini, Jr. 1992 15 Jay Fitzgerald, Jr. 1994 85 Andrew Peterson 2003-06 TEAM: 206 (1980) OPP: 83 (1991) GOALS 85 Steve Bernal 1996-99 SAVES 68 Keith DeFini 1990-93 85 Richard Mulrooney 1995-98 GOALS 163 Jim Dalla Riva, Fr. 1981 55 Mike Tranchilla 1999-02 22 Ray Nikodem, So. 1980 126 Jim Dalla Riva, Jr. 1983 53 Brian Kamler 1990-93 GOALKEEPING VICTORIES 21 Keith DeFini, Sr. 1993 122 Kevin Doyle, Fr. 1990 46 Johnny Torres 1994-97 57 Brian Holt 2008-11 19 Mike Tranchilla, So. 2000 96 Mike Gabb, Jr. 2000 43 Ethan Finlay 2008-11 53 Jay Fitzgerald 1991-95 19 Keith DeFini, Fr. 1990 94 Jim Dalla Riva, So. 1982 36 Brian Mullan 1997-00 43 Matt Allen 2004-07 18 Brian Mullan, Sr. 2000 83 Jim Dalla Riva, Sr. 1984 33 Timo Pitter 2012-15 41 Mike Gabb 1998-02 18 Johnny Torres, Jr. 1996 78 Alex Kapp, Sr. 2016 30 Ricky Lopez-Espin 2014-17 37 Connor Sparrow 2013-15 17 Brian Kamler, So. 1991 78 Matt Allen, So. 2005 29 Ross Paule 1994-96 33 Kevin Doyle 1990-92 16 Mike Tranchilla, Jr. 2001 77 Mike Gabb, Sr. 2002 29 John Probst 1980-83 31 Tom Zawislan 1996-99 16 Keith DeFini, Jr. 1992 76 Jay Fitzgerald, Jr. 1994 29 Ray Nikodem 1980-82 29 Jon Epperson 1993-97 15 Fabian Herbers, Jr. 2015 76 Tom Zawislan, Jr. 1998 15 Ethan Finlay, Jr. 2010 TEAM: 163 (1981) OPP: 204 (1990) ASSISTS GK WIN PERCENTAGE (30 MP min.) 15 Mike Tranchilla, Sr. 2002 51 Richard Mulrooney 1995-98 .809 Jay Fitzgerald (53-11-4) 1991-95 15 Brian Kamler, Jr. 1992 GOALS AGAINST AVG. (1,000 min.) 36 Johnny Torres 1994-97 .802 Mike Gabb (41-9-3) 1998-02 TEAM: 79 (1980) OPP: 41 (1985) 0.21 Brian Holt, Sr. 2011 36 Ray Ferri 1990-93 .782 Jon Epperson (29-7-3) 1993-97 0.49 Connor Sparrow, Jr. 2014 32 Brian Mullan 1997-00 .780 C. Sparrow (37-9-4) 2013-15 ASSISTS 0.51 Brian Holt, Fr. 2008 30 Mike Tranchilla 1999-02 .778 Brian Holt (57-13-9) 2008-11 17 Fabian Herbers, Jr. 2015 0.51 Tom Zawislan, Sr. 1999 29 Fabian Herbers 2013-15 .761 Kevin Doyle (33-9-4) 1990-92 16 Richard Mulrooney, Sr. 1998 0.64 Paul Kruse, Fr. 2018 26 Jose Gomez 2010-12 .710 Matt Allen (43-14-12) 2004-07 16 Richard Mulrooney, So. 1996 0.65 Jeff Gal, Fr. 2012 26 Keith DeFini 1990-93 15 Brad McTighe, Sr. 1996 0.66 Guido Leon, Sr. 2003 25 David Wagenfuhr 2000-03 SAVES 13 Brian Mullan, Sr. 2000 0.75 Tom Zawislan, Jr. 1998 24 Brian Kamler 1990-93 466 Jim Dalla Riva 1981-84 13 Johnny Torres, Sr. 1997 0.77 Brian Holt, So. 2009 260 Matt Allen 2004-07 12 Richard Mulrooney, Jr. 1997 0.78 Jon Epperson, Jr. 1996 SHOTS ON GOAL 255 Kevin Doyle 1990-92 12 Ray Ferri, So. 1991 TEAM: 0.20 (2011) OPP: 0.75 (1984) 190 Keith DeFini 1990-93 224 Jay Fitzgerald 1991-95 12 Ray Nikodem, Jr. 1981 177 Johnny Torres 1994-97 196 Mike Gabb 1998-02 11 Brian Kamler, Sr. 1993 SHUTOUTS (Shared) 134 Timo Pitter 2012-15 195 Brian Holt 2008-11 11 John Probst, Fr. 1980 17 (2) Brian Holt, Sr. 2011 129 Mike Tranchilla 1999-02 TEAM: 75 (1996) OPP: 27 (2000) 12 (0) Brian Holt, Fr. 2008 129 Brian Kamler 1990-93 GOALS AGAINST AVG. (2,000 min.) 27 (2017) 11 (4) Tom Zawislan, Sr. 1999 118 Jeff Deist 1995-97 0.62 Brian Holt 2008-11 11 (4) Jon Epperson, Jr. 1996 107 Ethan Finlay 2008-11 0.63 Connor Sparrow 2013-15 SHOTS ON GOAL 11 (1) Connor Sparrow, Jr. 2014 103 Ross Paule 1994-96 0.66 Tom Zawislan 1996-99 64 Keith DeFini, Fr. 1990 9 (1) Matt Allen, So. 2005 101 Brian Mullan 1997-00 0.83 Matt Allen 2004-07 62 Jeff Deist, Sr. 1997 9 (1) Connor Sparrow, Sr. 2015 101 Robert Addington 1981-84 0.84 Alex Kapp 2016 55 Johnny Torres, Sr. 1997 9 (0) Mike Gabb, Sr. 2002 0.88 Jon Epperson 1993-97 54 Johnny Torres, So. 1995 8 (3) Jon Epperson, Sr. 1997 MULTIPLE-GOAL GAMES 1.02 Mike Gabb 1998-02 52 Ross Paule, So. 1995 8 (2) Jay Fitzgerald, So. 1993 17 Keith DeFini 1990-93 1.05 Jay Fitzgerald 1991-95 51 Keith DeFini, Sr. 1993 8 (0) Brian Holt, So. 2009 13 Brian Kamler 1990-93 1.20 Alex Bolowich 2011-14 47 Brad McTighe, Jr. 1995 8 (0) Matt Allen, Jr. 2006 11 Mike Tranchilla 1999-02 46 Ethan Finlay, Sr. 2011 TEAM: 19 (2011) OPP: 8 (1984) 10 Ethan Finlay 2008-11 SHUTOUTS (shared) 45 Fabian Herbers, Jr. 2015 6 Johnny Torres 1994-97 44 (3) Brian Holt 2008-11 45 Johnny Torres, Jr. 1996 GOALKEEPER MINUTES 6 Ross Paule 1994-96 26 (2) Matt Allen 2004-07 TEAM: 272 (1990) OPP: 134 (1990) 2,279 Mike Gabb, Jr. 2000 5 Brian Mullan 1997-00 24 (8) Jay Fitzgerald 1991-95 2,251 Mike Gabb, Sr. 2002 5 Jeff Deist 1995-97 23 (3) Connor Sparrow 2013-15 MULTIPLE-GOAL GAMES 2,179 Brian Holt, Sr. 2011 4 Ricky Lopez-Espin 2014-17 20 (11) Tom Zawislan 1996-99 6 Keith DeFini, Fr. 1990 2,145 Alex Kapp, Sr. 2016 4 Mike Bustos 1995-99 19 (11) Jon Epperson 1993-97 5 Ethan Finlay, Sr. 2011 2,110 Matt Allen, So. 2005 4 Zion Renfurm 1994-97 19 (3) Jim Dalla Riva 1981-84 5 Keith DeFini, Sr. 1993 2,083 Connor Sparrow, Sr. 2015 4 Robert Addington 1981-84 4 Ethan Finlay, Jr. 2010 2,072 Jon Epperson, Jr. 1996 GOALKEEPER MINUTES 4 Mike Tranchilla, So. 2000 2,039 Connor Sparrow, Jr. 2014 HAT TRICKS 7,305 Brian Holt 2008-11 4 Johnny Torres, Jr. 1996 2,039 Tom Zawislan, Jr. 1998 6 Keith DeFini 1990-93 6,531 Matt Allen 2004-07 4 Brian Kamler, Sr. 1993 1,963 Jay Fitzgerald, Jr. 1994 1 by 12 players 5,974 Jim Dalla Riva 1981-84 4 Brian Kamler, Jr. 1992 1,930 Matt Allen, Sr. 2007 5,847 Jay Fitzgerald 1991-95 3 by eight players, last by TEAM: 2,428 (2000) 5,099 Mike Gabb 1998-02 Mike Tranchilla, Sr. 2002 4,592 Connor Sparrow 2013-15 4,509 Tom Zawislan 1996-99 HAT TRICKS 4,489 Kevin Doyle 1990-92 2 Keith DeFini, Jr. 1992 2 Keith DeFini, Fr. 1990 Current student-athletes in bold

42 Morrison Stadium Records

Morrison Stadium Firsts Match: #2 Maryland vs. #15 Furman, Aug. 29, 2003, 4:30 p.m. (1-0) Creighton Match: #8 Creighton vs. Butler, Aug. 29, 2003, 7:00 p.m. (0-0, 2OT) Goal: Abe Thompson, Maryland vs. Furman, Aug. 29, 2003, 57:41 Creighton Goal: Zach Piercy vs. Furman, Aug. 31, 2003, 42:26 Assists: A.J. Herrera, Noah Palmer, Maryland vs. Furman, Aug. 29, 2003, 57:41 Creighton Assists: Matt Thomas, Vince Odorisio vs. Furman, Aug. 31, 2003, 42:26 Creighton Shot & Shot on Goal: David Wagenfuhr vs. Butler, Aug. 29, 2003, 2:36 Creighton Save: Guido Leon vs. Butler, Aug. 29, 2003, 24:48 Hat Trick: Brian Biggerstaff, Creighton vs. UMKC, Nov. 22, 2003 Overtime Match: Creighton vs. Butler, Aug. 29, 2003 (0-0, 2OT) Morrison Stadium opened in 2003 and the Bluejays have ranked among the Creighton Win: Creighton 3, Furman 1, Aug. 31, 2003 NCAA top 12 in attendance every year since, including second in 2019. Creighton Loss: Creighton 0, UNLV 2, Sept. 12, 2003 Creighton Tie: Creighton vs. Butler, 0-0, 2OT, Aug. 29, 2003 Morrison Stadium Single-Season Records Conference Tournament Match: Missouri State 1, Creighton 0, Nov. 8, 2003 Points Total Year Goalkeeping Victories NCAA Tournament Match: Creighton 6, UMKC 0, Nov. 22, 2003 1. Fabian Herbers 31 2015 1. Brian Holt 14 2011 2. Ethan Finlay 27 2011 2. Connor Sparrow 13 2015 Morrison Stadium Game Records 3. Ethan Finlay 23 2010 3. Connor Sparrow 12 2014 POINTS SCORED Goals Saves Creighton Individual: 6, Ethan Finlay (3G) vs. #7 UC Irvine, Oct. 15, 2011; 6, 1. Ethan Finlay 12 2011 1. Alex Kapp 43 2016 Byron Dacy (2 G, 2 A) vs. C. Arkansas, Sept. 27, 2006; 6, Julian Nash (3G) vs. #23 2. Ethan Finlay 10 2010 2. Matt Allen 39 2007 Tulsa, Oct. 3, 2004; 6, Brian Biggerstaff (3G) vs. UMKC, Nov. 22, 2003 Fabian Herbers 10 2015 3. Connor Sparrow 34 2014 Opponent Individual: 4, (12x) last by Harris Partain, Tulsa, Sept. 24, 2019 Creighton: 19 (5 G, 9 A) vs. Eastern Illinois, Oct. 11, 2009; 19 (5 G, 9 A) vs. Assists Goals Against Average* Eastern Illinois, Oct. 8, 2005 1. Fabian Herbers 11 2015 1. Brian Holt 0.14 2011 Opponent: 10 (3 G, 4 A), Tulsa, Sept. 24, 2019; 10 (3 G, 4 A), UC Irvine, Sept. 2. Timo Pitter 8 2014 2. Andrew Brown 0.40 2003 13, 2019; 10 (4 G, 2 A), #14 Old Dominion vs. Drake, Sept. 16, 2012; 10 (4 G, 2 A), 3. Bruno Castro 7 2011 3. Guido Leon 0.45 2003 William & Mary vs. Drake, Sept. 14, 2012; 10 (3 G, 4 A), Indiana, Oct. 9, 2010; 10 (4 Vince Odorisio 7 2004 G, 2 A), Maryland vs. Butler, Aug. 31, 2003 Shutouts Shots 1. Brian Holt 11 2011 GOALS 1. Ethan Finlay 64 2011 2. Connor Sparrow 8 2014 Creighton Individual: 3, Ethan Finlay vs. #7 UC Irvine, Oct. 15, 2011; 3, Julian 2. Fabian Herbers 62 2015 3. 6, (6x) last by Paul Kruse in 2018 Nash vs. #23 Tulsa, Oct. 3, 2004; 3, Brian Biggerstaff vs. UMKC, Nov. 22, 2003 3. Timo Pitter 49 2015 Opponent Individual: 2, (11x) last by Harry Cooksley, St. John’s, Oct. 6, 2017 Goalkeeper Minutes Played Creighton: 6 vs. Drake, Oct. 10, 2017 & vs. Central Arkansas, Sept. 27, 2006 & vs. Shots on Goal 1. Connor Sparrow 1,369 2014 UMKC, Nov. 22, 2003. 1. Ethan Finlay 34 2011 2. Matt Allen 1,278 2007 Opponent: 4, Maryland vs. Butler, Aug. 31, 2003; 4, William & Mary vs. Drake, 2. Fabian Herbers 33 2015 3. Brian Holt 1,256 2011 Sept. 14, 2012; 4, #14 Old Dominion vs. Drake, Sept. 16, 2012 3. Timo Pitter 30 2015 * Minimum 20% of team’s minutes ASSISTS Creighton Individual: 3, (2x) last Fabian Herbers vs. Drake, Nov. 22, 2015 Opponent Individual: 2 (7x) last by Harris Partain, Tulsa, Sept. 24, 2019 Morrison Stadium Career Records Creighton: 9, (2x) vs. Eastern Illinois, Oct. 11, 2009 and Oct. 8, 2005 Points Total Years Matches Played Opponent: 4, Tulsa, Sept. 24, 2019; 4, UC Irvine, Sept. 13, 2019; 4, Michigan 1. Ethan Finlay 67 2008-11 1. Ricardo Perez 52 2014-16 State, Sept. 24, 2013; 4, Indiana, Oct. 9, 2010; 4, Bradley, Oct. 15, 2005, 4, 2. Timo Pitter 60 2012-15 2. Timo Pitter 51 2012-15 Missouri State vs. Georgetown, Sept. 3, 2006 3. Fabian Herbers 56 2013-15 Lucas Stauffer 51 2014-17

SHOTS Goals Goalkeeping Victories Creighton Individual: 11, Timo Pitter vs. Villanova, Oct. 24, 2015 1. Ethan Finlay 28 2008-11 1. Brian Holt 36 2008-11 Opponent Individual: 10, Alejandro Bedoya, Fairleigh Dickinson vs. Missouri 2. Timo Pitter 22 2012-15 2. Connor Sparrow 27 2013-15 State, Sept. 1, 2006 3. Fabian Herbers 19 2013-15 Creighton: 39 vs. Villanova, Oct. 24, 2015 Ricky Lopez-Espin 19 2014-17 Saves Opponent: 29, Fairleigh Dickinson vs. Missouri State, Sept. 1, 2006 1. Matt Allen 114 2004-07 Assists 2. Brian Holt 94 2008-11 SHOTS ON GOAL 1. Fabian Herbers 18 2013-15 Creighton Individual: 6, (2x) last by Sven Koenig vs. Georgetown, Oct. 31, 2018 2. Timo Pitter 16 2012-15 Goals Against Average* Opponent Individual: 5, Bryan Jordan, Oregon State, Sept. 15, 2006 Jose Ribas 16 2011-14 1. Guido Leon 0.45 2003 Creighton: 17 vs. Drake, Nov. 22, 2015 2. Connor Sparrow 0.47 2013-15 Opponent: 15, #14 Old Dominion vs. Drake, Sept. 16, 2012 Shots 1. Timo Pitter 177 2012-15 Shutouts CORNER KICKS 2. Ethan Finlay 141 2008-11 1. Brian Holt 25 2008-11 Creighton: 15 vs. Missouri State, Oct. 27, 2007 3. Fabian Herbers 125 2013-15 2. Connor Sparrow 16 2013-15 Opponent: 12, SIU Edwardsville, Oct. 6, 2012; 12, Missouri State vs. UNLV, Sept. Matt Allen 16 2004-07 14, 2003 Shots on Goal 1. Timo Pitter 93 2012-15 Goalkeeper Minutes Played SAVES 2. Fabian Herbers 69 2013-15 1. Brian Holt 3,899 2008-11 Creighton Individual: 9, (2x) last by Alex Kapp vs. #8 Denver, Sept. 21, 2016 3. Ethan Finlay 66 2008-11 2. Matt Allen 3,382 2004-07 Opponent Individual: 12, (2x) last by A. Glaeser, Northern Illinois, Sept. 22, 2015 * Minimum 720 minutes Creighton: 10, vs. #14 Old Dominion, Sept. 14, 2012 Opponent: 13, Northern Illinois, Sept. 22, 2015

43 NCAA Tournament Teams

1992 NCAA Tournament 1993 NCAA Tournament Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions MVC Tournament Champions MVC Tournament Champions 14-3-1 Overall, 4-0-1 MVC 19-1-0 Overall, 5-0-0 MVC

The 1992 Bluejays were ranked as high as No. 2 in the major polls and cap- tured the MVC Player of the Year, Newcomer of the Year, Goalkeeper of the Year, Tournament MVP and Coach of the Year. Seniors Keith DeFini (left) and Brian Kamler (right) were both finalists for the Hermann Award and Missouri Athletic Club “National Player of the Year” hon- In the program’s third year, the Jays made their inaugural appearance ors in CU’s dominating season of 1993. in the NCAA Tournament by winning the MVC regular-season and The Jays won their second straight MVC regular and postseason titles tournament titles. The Jays were ranked second in the final ISAA while becoming the first NCAA team to go unbeaten and untied dur- national rankings. They were one of four teams (Virginia, UCLA, North ing the regular season since Howard University accomplished the feat Carolina State) to receive a first-round bye in the NCAA Tournament. in 1974. Creighton’s 19 victories to begin the season established what is The Jays were upset in their first NCAA Tournament game by SMU, 1-0, still a school mark for consecutive wins. The Jays were ranked No. 1 in on Nov. 21, in front of a then Bluejay single-match record crowd of 3,860 the country in the adidas/ISAA national poll for the final five weeks of at Tranquility Park. Creighton Hall of Famer, Brian Kamler, was named the season, becoming the first Creighton team to earn that recognition since the men’s basketball team was ranked No. 1 nationally during the MVC Player of the Year and NSCAA Third Team All-American. Kevin the 1942-43 season. For the second year in a row, the Jays received one Doyle, who later bacame a Creighton assistant coach, was honored of the top four overall seeds in the NCAA Tournament. Seniors Brian as the conference Goalkeeper of the Year. Joining Doyle and Kamler Kamler and Keith DeFini were named First Team All-Americans by the on the the MVC First Team were Keith DeFini, Billy Duranceau and Ira NSCAA and were finalists for both the Hermann Award and the Missouri Philson. Paul Lekics was honored as the MVC Freshman of the Year for Athletic Club “National Player of the Year” award. For the second year the Jays and head coach Bob Warming was tabbed as the MVC Coach in a row, the Jays were ousted in their opening match of the NCAA of the Year. Tournament, losing 2-1 to Air Force in sudden death overtime.

1994 NCAA Tournament Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions MVC Tournament Champions 15-5-1 Overall, 5-1-0 MVC The Jays completed a three-peat by clinching their third consecutive MVC regular season and tournament titles. They opened the season with a 10-1-1 mark, before finishing the season with a 15-5-1 record, ranked 22nd in the final ISAA poll. Despite losing 10 starters from the 19-1-0 1993 squad, the Jays began the season 4-0-1 while using five freshman starters, including standouts Johnny Torres, Zion Renfrum and MVC Newcomer of the Year Ross Paule. The 1994 squad became the first Creighton team to win an NCAA Tournament match when it avenged an earlier loss with a 2-1 victory over 16th-ranked Saint Louis on Nov. 20. The Jays then lost a heartbreaking 1-0 match at No. 2 Indiana to conclude their season. Soccer News chose goalkeeper Jay Fitzgerald as Lance Hill (left) was an NSCAA All-Region player and Ross Paule (right) was the MVC Newcomer of the Year in 1994. Both went on to play professionally in a junior All-American, while senior Lance Hill was named First Team All- MLS; Hill with the Colorado Rapids, Paule with the Rapids, NY/NJ Metrostars Midwest. Fitzgerald was also tabbed the MVC Tournament MVP after and Columbus Crew. shutting out Drake in the conference championship match. Paul Lekics and Brent Peterson joined Paule on the MVC First Team.

44 NCAA Tournament Teams

1995 NCAA Tournament 1996 NCAA Tournament • College Cup Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions MVC Tournament Champions NCAA College Cup Final Four • Richmond, Va. 14-3-1 Overall, 4-0-1 MVC 17-5-2 Overall, 5-0-0 MVC

Goalkeeper Jay Fitzgerald (left) was named the MVC Defensive Player of the Jon Epperson (left) was in net for 11 Bluejay shutouts during their 1996 Final Year, while Paul Lekics (right) was honored as the conference Player of the Four run. Richard Mulrooney (right) was a First Team All-MVC player, while Year in Creighton’s 1995 campaign. setting MVC and CU single-season records with 16 assists as a sophomore.

The first season of the Bret Simon era proved to be more of the same In its fifth consecutive NCAA Tournament, Creighton advanced to its first College Cup, with three road shutouts over ranked opponents on its way success for the Bluejays, as they clinched a fourth consecutive MVC to Richmond, Va. The Jays started the season unbeaten through eight regular-season title, coupled with the tournament title. After drop- games at 7-0-1, climbing to a No. 2 ranking in the NSCAA Coaches Poll. ping two of their first five matches on the year, the Jays rattled off a They were flawless in MVC action, going 5-0-0 for their fifth consecu- 12-match unbeaten streak heading into the NCAA Tournament. One of tive conference title, improving their league record to 23-1-2 since 1992. Creighton’s wins during the streak came against No. 9 Wisconsin, the Junior Johnny Torres led the Jays, the MVC and the Midwest Region with eventual national champions. The Jays dropped their first round match 18 goals and 44 points on his way to being recognized as the national in dramatic fashion, falling to William & Mary, 2-1, in four overtimes, the player of the year, as named by Soccer America. Torres had a banner longest match in Creighton history at the time. Omaha was once again year, not only on the pitch, but he earned his U.S. Citizenship, had Oct. 27 home to the MVC Player of the Year in Paul Lekics. The Jays also claimed proclaimed “Johnny Torres Day” by the Omaha City Council in honor of the conference defender of the year in Jay Fitzgerald. Five Bluejays his soccer skills and community service, was honored by the Children’s were named first-team all-conference, while Mike Bustos and Richard Miracle Network as a “National Hometown Hero” and was tabbed the Mulrooney were honored on the MVC All-Newcomer Team. top collegiate student-athlete in Nebraska. Goalkeeper Jon Epperson set school records with 11 shutouts and a 0.78 goals against average, while Richard Mulrooney set school and conference records by dishing out 16 assists during the season, including a school-best four assists, Nov. 10 at Eastern Illinois. Four Jays were tabbed First Team All-MVC with Torres and Ross Paule making the All-Midwest team, and Paule bring- ing home the MVC Player of the Year award. Bret Simon was honored as the MVC “Co-Coach of the Year,” in his second season at the helm. The Jays lost their opening match in the College Cup to eventual national champion St. John’s. Creighton

St. John’s, 2-1

St. John’s

St. John’s, 4-1 1996 NCAA UNC Charlotte Champion

FIU, 4-1

Fla. International

45 NCAA Tournament Teams

1997 NCAA Tournament 1998 NCAA Tournament Missouri Valley Conference Tournament Champions Missouri Valley Conference Tournament Champions 16-5-1 Overall, 6-1-0 MVC 16-4-2 Overall, 4-1-2 MVC

Johnny Torres (left) won the Hermann Trophy and the Missouri Athletic Steve Bernal (left) and Mike Bustos (right) were both key contributors to Club award as the National Player of the Year in 1997. Defender David the 1998 Bluejay squad, helping Richard Mulrooney become the fourth Wright (right) earned his first of three All-Region honors as a sophomore. consecutive Creighton player to be named the MVC Player of the Year. One year after being honored by Soccer America as the National Player Richard Mulrooney was tabbed the MVC Player of the Year as the Jays of the Year, Johnny Torres was named Missouri Athletic Club Player won their sixth tournament title in seven years, while finishing second of the Year and earned the Hermann Trophy as the National Player in the regular season. The Jays opened the season with a 1-0 win over of the Year for his stellar efforts during his senior campaign. Torres fourth-ranked Saint Louis in front of 3,045 fans at Tranquility Park. The was also tabbed the MVC Player of the Year. He was a First Team All- Jays once again advanced to the third round of the NCAA Tournament American after scoring 13 goals and adding 13 assists for 39 points. The Jays avenged a 1993 loss to Air Force in the NCAA Tournament with a with impressive victories over No. 17 Saint Louis 4-1, and defending 3-2 overtime victory, but were eliminated by College Cup participant, national champion, No. 6 UCLA, 2-0. Creighton’s season came to an end Saint Louis in the second round. They put together an eight-game when College Cup participant, Maryland, knocked off the Bluejays 3-2 winning streak midway through the season, outscoring the opposition on December 5. The Jays also put together their first undefeated season 29-2 during that span. David Wright earned the MVC Defensive Player at home since 1990, with a record of 8-0-0 (7-0-1 in 1990). Mulrooney was of the Year while being tabbed a First Team All-Region player. Wright also named First Team All-America by the NSCAA, before becoming the was joined by Richard Mulrooney on the team. Following the season, third overall pick in the MLS draft by the San Jose Clash. Ross Paule became the first active Creighton player to be selected in the Major League Soccer draft, as he was a second round pick by the Colorado Rapids.

1999 NCAA Tournament At-Large NCAA Bid 11-5-2 Overall, 5-1-1 MVC

Despite not capturing either Missouri Valley Conference title, the 1999 Jays would still claim the MVC Player of the Year in defender David Wright. Wright led a stingy Bluejay defense which allowed just nine goals on the season, led the NCAA in goals against average and posted an impressive 11 shutouts. Creighton’s goals against average was a mere 0.47 for the year, a then-school record. For his efforts in the back field, Wright was tabbed as a First Team All-American, while goalkeeper Tom Zawislan earned Third Team All-America honors. With a 2-0 victory at Vanderbilt on October 15, the Bluejays captured their 200th victory in school his- tory.The blanking of the Commodores was also one of a streak of five consecutive shutouts the Jays recorded, a school record at the time for Tom Zawislan (left) tied a then-school record with 11 shutouts and had consecutive shutouts. The Jays lost in the first round of the a then-school best 0.51 goals against average for the defense-oriented NCAA Tournament at No. 17 SMU, 2-1, in the Mustangs’ final season 1999 squad. Peter Henning (right) played a large role in the defensive before joining the MVC. success.

46 NCAA Tournament Teams

2000 NCAA Tournament • College Cup 2001 NCAA Tournament Missouri Valley Conference Tournament Champions 10th Consecutive NCAA Tournament Appearance NCAA College Cup Final Four • Charlotte, N.C. At-Large NCAA Bid 22-4-0 Overall, 9-2-0 MVC 11-9-1 Overall, 6-3-0 MVC

Brian Mullan (left) and Ishmael Mintah (right) helped the 2000 Bluejays Mike Tranchilla (left) paced the 2001 Bluejays with 16 goals and 41 points, to their second appearance in the College Cup. The Jays led the while being tabbed a First Team All-MVC selection. David Wagenfuhr (right) NCAA with 22 wins in 2000 and finished as the national runner-up. was honored as an All-Region player with his team-leading 10 assists.

The Jays made a return trip to the NCAA College Cup behind an even Despite a down season by Creighton standards, the Jays were one of five balance of offensive playmakers and a stellar defense. They led the teams to earn their 10th consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance. NCAA with 22 wins in 2000, also setting a school record for victories. The Bluejays were joined by Virginia, Indiana, UCLA and St. John’s as The Jays appeared in their first national championship match, falling the only five teams in the nation to appear in every NCAA Tournament 2-0 to Connecticut. They advanced to the final by knocking off two- over the last decade. Junior Mike Tranchilla led the team on offense time defending national champion, Indiana, 2-1, in three overtimes. The with 16 goals and 41 points. His four-goal effort against Evansville on Bluejays cruised through the first three rounds of the tournament on Nov. 9 tied a school record and set a Valley record for goals in a tourna- the heels of their defense, which recorded three road shutouts of ranked ment game. Creighton was plagued by injuries all season, including a opponents. Creighton struggled with No. 12 Ohio State to a 1-0 win in the season-ending injury to 2000 record-setting keeper, Mike Gabb, just first round, before battling third-ranked San Diego, and the fog, in a 3-0 four matches into the season. The Jays battled No. 1 SMU to two close victory in round two. With a 3-0 win at Virginia on Dec. 2, the Jays earned matches, falling 4-2 in Dallas on Oct. 14 and then dropping a marathon their second trip to the College Cup. The offense was guided by future match in the title bout of the MVC Tournament, 2-1, in four overtimes. MLS first-round draft pick, Brian Mullan. The forward scored 18 goals, Creighton bowed out in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, losing along with 13 assists to lead the team with 49 points. Sophomore Mike to Massachusetts, 1-0, in Garden City, N.Y. Tranchilla was a First Team All- Tranchilla netted 19 goals, the highest single-season total since 1993, and MVC pick, along with Rob Appel and First Team All-Midwest midfielder added nine assists for 47 points. Mullan and defender Peter Henning David Wagenfuhr. were tabbed First Team All-MVC, with Mullan also earning Second Team All-America recognition. Mullan, Tranchilla, Ishmael Mintah and goal- keeper Mike Gabb were each named to the College Cup All-Tournament Team for their efforts in Creighton’s final four run. Gabb set a school record, playing in net for 2,279 minutes and earning 21 wins in his first campaign as a starter.

Creighton

Creighton, 2-1 (3OT)

Indiana

UConn, 2-0 2000 NCAA Connecticut Champion

UConn, 2-0

SMU 2000 • College Cup Participants NCAA Leader - 22 Wins National Runner-Up

47 NCAA Tournament Teams

2002 NCAA Tournament • College Cup 2003 NCAA Tournament Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions Missouri Valley Conference Tournament Champions At-Large NCAA Bid NCAA College Cup Final Four • Dallas, Texas 12-6-4 Overall, 7-1-1 MVC 18-4-2 Overall, 7-1-1 MVC

Luiz Del Monte (left) was part of CU’s explosive offense, while Mike Gabb Matt Wieland (left) was named the MVC Defensive Player of the Year, (right) was in net again leading the Bluejays to their second College Cup combining with goalkeeper Guido Leon (right) for one of the top defenses in three seasons and third in school history. in the NCAA and the Bluejays’ first MVC regular-season title since 1996.

All-American forward Mike Tranchilla starred on offense and Mike Gabb Creighton’s stingy defense propelled the Bluejays to their first Missouri starred in goal, as the Bluejays returned to the College Cup for the second Valley Conference regular-season championship since 1996. Creighton’s time in three seasons. The Jays 15-3-2 mark and MVC Tournament cham- overall goals against average of 0.77 ranked 19th in the NCAA, while pionship earned them a first-round bye and an NCAA Tournament home goalkeeper Guido Leon’s 0.66 GAA ranked 15th in the nation. The Jays match for the first time since 1995. Creighton topped UW-Milwaukee, led the MVC with a 0.43 goals against average in conference play. snapping the Panthers’ 19-game winning streak, in the second round Sophomore Matt Wieland was tabbed the MVC Defensive Player of the and then traveled to the Northeast and eliminated third-ranked St. Year for pacing the defense, while being named to the MVC First-Team John’s, 1-0, and sixth-ranked Boston College, 6-2, en route to the third and All-Region Second Team. David Wagenfuhr closed out his career College Cup in school history. The Jays battled Stanford into double over- by being named a semifinalist for the MAC Hermann Trophy, earning time in the NCAA semifinals, but the Cardinal scored with just two min- First Team All-MVC and All-Region honors and being tabbed a First utes remaining to end Creighton’s season with a 2-1 defeat. Defender Joe Team All-America selection by CollegeSoccerNews. Freshman Michael Wieland – who made two saves in an open Creighton net against Stanford Kraus became just the fourth player in school history to lead the team in – and Tranchilla, were named to the College Cup All-Tournament team. goals, assists and points. Shane Havens became the first Academic All- Tranchilla finished fourth in the MAC Hermann Trophy voting for National American in Bluejay men’s soccer history. The Jays moved their home Player of the Year, while earning First Team All-America, All-Region and from Tranquility Park in Omaha to a new on campus soccer facility, All-MVC honors. Tranchilla, the MVC Tournament MVP, closed his career Morrison Stadium, and registered a 7-2-2 home mark, opening the facil- as the all-time MVC leader in goals and points scored. Gabb played ity in front of 3,483 fans against Butler on August 29. The Jays advanced every minute in goal for the Bluejays, notching nine shutouts en route to the NCAA Quarterfinals and came within 25 minutes of returning to to a 0.96 goals against average. Tranchilla, David Wagenfuhr and Mehdi the College Cup, but could not hold a 2-0 second-half lead over No. 6 St. Ballouchy earned First Team All-Region honors, while Luiz Del Monte John’s, falling 3-2 to the Red Storm to end the season. joined Tranchilla and Wagenfuhr on the MVC First Team.

Creighton

Stanford, 2-1 (2ot)

Stanford

UCLA, 1-0 2002 NCAA UCLA Champion

UCLA, 2-1

Maryland 2002 Creighton Bluejays • College Cup Participants

48 NCAA Tournament Teams

2004 NCAA Tournament 2005 NCAA Tournament

At-Large NCAA Bid Missouri Valley Conference Tournament Champions 14-4-2 Overall, 6-3-0 MVC 15-5-3 Overall, 5-2-0 MVC

Julian Nash (left) and Brett Rodriguez (right) were both named First Byron Dacy (left) was named the MVC Freshman of the Year while lead- Team All-Region and First Team All-Missouri Valley Conference before ing the team in goals and points. Ryan Junge (right) helped the Bluejay being drafted into Major League Soccer. defense to lead the MVC with a 0.80 goals against average. A balanced attack combined with the deepest goalkeeping corps in Creighton led the Missouri Valley Conference in scoring and in defense school history helped guide the Bluejays to their 13th consecutive as it captured its ninth MVC Tournament title. CU’s 2.13 goals per game NCAA Tournament appearance. Seven different Bluejays scored at ranked 14th in the NCAA, while its league-leading 0.80 goals against least three goals and had three assists on the season, led by Julian average ranked 23rd. The Bluejays played host to an NCAA Tournament Nash’s nine assists and 21 points. Brian Biggerstaff led the team with game for the fourth consecutive season, opening the event with a 3-0 eight goals scored, while Nash, Vince Odorisio and Jarod Tarver each win over Patriot League champion Lafayette. Creighton then went on found the back of the net six times. Nash was named a semifinalist the road to defeat ACC champion Duke and Big Ten champion Penn for the MAC Hermann Trophy, while he and defender Brett Rodriguez State before bowing out of the tournament with a 1-0 loss at Clemson were both named to the NSCAA/adidas All-Region First Team and First in the quarterfinals. The Jays were joined by Maryland as the only two Team All-Missouri Valley Conference. Matt Wieland earned Second teams in the nation to advance to three quarterfinals in the four-year Team All-Region and All-MVC honors and Tony Odorisio was tabbed an span of 2002-05. Matt Wieland was named the MVC Tournament MVP, honorable mention pick in The Valley. Newcomers Matt Allen and Tim First Team All-MVC and a consensus All-American, while serving as team Bohnenkamp were named to the MVC All-Freshman Team. Allen, along captain for the third straight season. Rookie Byron Dacy led the team with Zac Gibbens and Andrew Brown, gave the Bluejays a trio of talent- with nine goals and 27 points, as he was named the MVC Freshman ed goalkeepers. Each player started at least three games and appeared of the Year and earned Freshman All-America honors. The Jays tied in at least four contests, marking the first time in school history the Jays a school record by posting five consecutive shutouts - recording 10 had used three keepers so prevalently. Creighton once again topped the shutouts on the year - and went 5-1 against Top 25 teams. For the third straight season, Creighton ranked in the NCAA top 10 in attendance, MVC and ranked in the NCAA top 10 in attendance. Michael G. Morrison, not including a then-school record 5,743 fans which turned out for an S.J., Stadium was officially dedicated on October 15. exhibition match with Stanford.

2006 NCAA Tournament Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions MVC Tournament Champions 13-5-3 Overall, 4-1-1 MVC For the first time since 1995, the Bluejays captured both the MVC reg- ular-season and tournament titles while posting back-to-back tourna- ment championships for the first time since 1997-98. The Jays’ record 10th tournament title lifted them into their 15th straight NCAA tourna- ment. The Bluejays swept the MVC specialty awards for the first time since 1997, as senior Michael Kraus was named Player of the Year and junior goalkeeper Matt Allen was tabbed the Defensive Player of the Year. Ryan Junge joined Kraus and Allen on the MVC First Team, while four players were honored on the Second Team. Allen and the CU defense went over 422 consecutive minutes without allowing a goal during a September span. In one of the most thrilling endings in program history, MVC Tournament MVP Byron Dacy’s goal tied the championship match with 4.4 seconds remaining in regulation, and freshman All-American Chris Schuler scored the game-winning goal in the sixth minute of overtime to top Bradley on its home field, 2-1. Junge Michael Kraus (left) was named the MVC Player of the Year and earned and Kraus were both taken in the MLS draft, while Pietarti Holopainen MVC all-tournament recognition for the third straight season. Chris signed a professional contract in his home country of Finland after the Schuler (right) was a freshman All-American for his play in the back. season. CU’s 1-0 win over Drake on October 11 was Bob Warming’s 150th victory as the Bluejay head coach. 49 NCAA Tournament Teams

2007 NCAA Tournament 2008 NCAA Tournament Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions At-Large NCAA Bid MVC Tournament Champions 12-3-5 Overall, 4-0-2 MVC 16-2-2 Overall, 4-0-1 MVC

Matt Allen (left) became the first player to be named MVC Defensive Player Andrei Gotsmanov (left) was named the MVC Player of the Year and a first-team of the Year twice. Tony Schmitz (right) was a First Team All-MVC and All- All-American. Brian Holt (right) set a then-school record for shutouts and was Region selection. honored as the MVC Freshman of the Year and a Freshman All-America selection. The Bluejays earned an at-large NCAA Tournament bid and a first-round Creighton, an NCAA quarterfinalist for the fourth time in seven years, bye as the eighth seed in the tournament after again winning the earned a top-eight seed for the second consecutive season after put- Missouri Valley Conference regular-season title. The Jays went unde- ting together its second straight undefeated MVC regular-season for its feated in MVC play (4-0-2) for the first time since 1996 and lost just one third consecutive Valley title. The Bluejays were the seventh seed in their match in the regular-season. Following their lone regular-season loss, 17th straight NCAA Tournament after spending 10 weeks of the season Creighton put together an 11-match unbeaten streak before falling in in the NSCAA top-10 and losing just one regular-season match for the the MVC Tournament title match to eventual NCAA quarterfinalist and second consecutive season. Creighton established a school record with MVC co-champion Bradley. The Bluejays led the MVC with a 0.79 goals 13 shutouts, including a program-best six straight from late September against average, with goalkeeper Matt Allen playing every minute in into early October. The Jays tied for the NCAA lead in shutout percent- net to become the first player in league history to earn MVC Defensive age, posting 13 in 20 matches (.650), while they ranked second in the Player of the Year laurels twice. Allen was recognized by College Soccer NCAA with a 0.48 goals against average. Helping guide the record- News as a Third Team All-America selection. Midfielder Tony Schmitz setting defense was MVC Defensive Player of the Year and Second Team joined Allen as a First Team honoree by the MVC and the NSCAA All- NSCAA All-American Chris Schuler. Rookie goalkeeper Brian Holt set an Region Team. Chris Schuler was a First Team All-MVC and Second individual school record (which he would later break himself) with 12 Team All-Region defender, while Tim Bohnenkamp was a First Team shutouts to earn Valley Freshman of the Year and Freshman All-America All-Region and Second Team All-MVC performer. Creighton advanced honors, while Ethan Finlay was also a Freshman All-American. Andrei Gotsmanov, a MAC Hermann Trophy Semifinalist, was the MVC Player of to the NCAA round of 16 with a dominating 3-0 win over SMU. CU played the Year, MVC Tournament MVP and Creighton’s first NSCAA First-Team both of its NCAA Tournament games at home, where they finished third All-American since 2002. Bob Warming was named FieldTurf Tarkett’s in the nation in total attendance and fourth in average attendance. National Coach of the Year.

2010 NCAA Tournament Missouri Valley Conference Regular-Season Champions At-Large NCAA Bid 13-5-2 Overall, 5-1-1 MVC Creighton returned to the NCAA Tournament after a one-year hiatus and advanced to the second round of the event, defeating New Mexico 4-1 in a first-round home match before falling in a shootout after a 2-2 draw at fifth-seeded SMU. The Bluejays captured their 10th MVC regular-season championship with a 5-1-1 league mark. The Jays opened the season with four straight shutouts and jumped out to their best start since 1998 en route to cracking the top-10 after not receiving any top-25 votes to start the season. Creighton had the top-scoring offense in the MVC, ranking 15th in the NCAA with 2.0 goals per game, led by MAC Hermann Trophy Semifinalist and MVC Player of the Year Ethan Finlay. The junior finished sixth in the NCAA in goals per game, as his 15 goals and 34 points scored on the season were the most by a Bluejay since 2002. In addition to senior Kyle Deremer, three sophomore midfielders -- Dion Acoff, Jose Gomez, Greg Jordan -- were each named First Team All-MVC members. Acoff led the MVC and ranked 11th in the NCAA in assists per game, dishing 10 on the season. Rookie defender Tyler Polak was named the MVC Freshman of the Ethan Finlay (left) was named the MVC Player of the Year and was Year and a Freshman All-America selection by several publications after a MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist. Tyler Polak (right) was tabbed playing more minutes than any other CU field player. MVC Freshman of the Year and a Freshman All-America selection. 50 NCAA Tournament Teams

2011 NCAA Tournament • College Cup Missouri Valley Conference Regular Season and Tournament Champions NCAA College Cup Final Four • Hoover, Ala. 21-2-1 Overall, 5-1-0 MVC

The Bluejays in a final team huddle prior to the opening match of the College Cup in Hoover, Alabama.

All-American Ethan Finlay (left) finished his Bluejay career in the top 10 of nearly every statistical category, while fellow All-American Brian Holt (right) has his name atop the list in career GAA (0.61) and 44 shutouts in 57 victories.

Two-time All-American forward Ethan Finlay led a high-powered offense while Brian Holt set NCAA, Missouri Valley Conference and program records in his first All-American season in goal, helping the Bluejays return to the College Cup following a nine-year hiatus. The Bluejays cruised through the regular-season, putting together two eight-match shutout streaks and entering the conference tournament with a 16-2-0 mark. A sweep through the MVC Tournament, knocking off Bradley 1-0 in the semifinal before earning revenge on Missouri State with a 1-0 win in the final at Morrison Stadium, set the Bluejays up with the No. 2 national seed in the NCAA Tournament. Creighton’s impressive regular-season earned the team a bye through the first round of the tournament, and gave the Bluejays home field advantage the next three rounds. The Bluejays defeated Northern Illinois 3-0, knocked off No. 13 UC Santa Barbara 2-1 and then out-matched No. 12 South Florida in a 1-0, overtime win on a snowy Creighton finished the 2011 season seventh in the nation in home atten- Sunday afternoon in Omaha. The win advanced the Bluejays to the College dance, and the Bluejay faithful traveled to Hoover to support the Jays in Cup, where Creighton played No. 14 Charlotte to a 0-0 tie in Hoover, Ala., the College Cup. with the 49ers advancing to the national title game with a 4-1 edge in the shootout. Holt was named to the NCAA All-Tournament team, just one of dozens of honors the 2011 team picked up. The Bluejays led the nation with four players named to the NSCAA All-America teams, with Holt and Finlay each earning First Team honors and Andrew Duran and Greg Jordan honored on the second team. Duran, Finlay and Holt were also named All-Americans by College Soccer News. Holt became the program’s first Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award winner, in addition to his CoSIDA Academic All-America of the Year, First Team All-MVC and MVC Goalkeeper of the Year honors. He combined with the rest of the staff to allow just five goals, setting an NCAA record 0.20 goals against average. Finlay earned CoSIDA Academic All-America, First-Team All-MVC, MVC Player of the Year, as well as being named the runner-up for the Hermann Award, given to the top player in college soccer. In his first season on the Bluejay bench, Elmar Bolowich led the MVC Coaching Staff of the Year, and was named the NSCAA Midwest Region Coach of the Year. Johnny Torres was named the The semifinal match in Creighton’s first College Cup since 2002 came NSCAA Midwest Region Assistant Coach of the Year. down to a shootout after regulation and a pair of overtime periods. Charlotte advanced to the NCAA Finals with a 4-1 edge in the shootout.

Creighton Charlotte, 0-0 (2OT) Advances 4-1 on PK

Charlotte

UNC, 1-0 2011 UCLA NCAA UNC, 2-2 (2OT) Champion Advances 3-1 on PK 2011 Creighton Bluejays • College Cup Participants North Carolina 51 NCAA Tournament Teams

2012 NCAA Tournament • College Cup Missouri Valley Conference Regular Season and Tournament Champions NCAA College Cup Final Four • Hoover, Ala. 17-4-3 Overall, 5-0-1 MVC

Jose Ribas was one of several key defenders that allowed just one goal in Missouri Valley Conference play.

NSCAA All-America selections Jose Gomez (left) and Andrew Ribeiro (right) led the Jays to consecutive College Cups for the first time in program history. Gomez was a MAC Hermann finalist while Ribeiro was MVC Defensive Player of the Year.

Creighton finished 2012 with a 17-4-3 mark and its second consecutive appearance in a College Cup. CU won the Missouri Valley Conference (MVC) regular-season and tournament titles for a second straight season. Along the way the Bluejays tied the MVC team record for the fewest goals allowed (one) in a Valley season set by CU in 2011. The Bluejays advanced to the College Cup in consecutive seasons for the first time in program history and recorded their fifth College Cup appearance all-time (1996, 2000, 2002, 2011 and 2012). CU entered the 2012 College Cup on a 14-match unbeaten streak before falling 1-0 to eventual national champion Indiana in a national semi- final. The Bluejays earned a spot in the Final Four after advancing past host No. 7-ranked and No. 4-seeded Connecticut 1-0 in a Dec. 2 NCAA quarterfinal match. The victory snapped UConn’s 38-match home unbeaten streak. On Nov. 25, Creighton slipped past top-ranked and No. 5-seeded Akron 5-4 on penalty kicks after a 1-1 tie on the road in an NCAA Third Round match. On Timo Pitter scored the tying goal at Akron, then put away the game-winning Nov. 18 CU defeated No. 21 Washington 4-2 at Morrison Stadium in an NCAA penalty kick in the shootout as CU ousted the top-ranked Zips to reach the Second Round match that marked the return of former head coach Jamie quarterfinals. Clark, now UW head coach. Creighton made its 20th NCAA Tournament appearance in the past 21 seasons. After a 2-1 MVC tournament victory over SIUE, the Bluejays finished with a 33-8-1 all-time MVC tournament record, the most tournament victories in league history. CU owns more tournament titles, 13, than all other MVC teams combined. Freshman Timo Pitter led the team with 24 points, 10 goals and 34 shots on goal. Senior co-captain Jose Gomez topped CU with nine assists and was second on the Jays with 21 points, six goals and 22 shots on goal. Freshman goalkeeper Jeff Gal finished the season at 13-1-1 after a lone loss in the College Cup. CU finished the season ranked among the top 20 in four NCAA statistical categories including team goals against average (0.8 - No. 18), shutout percentage (0.46 - No. 18), total goals (39 - No. 19) and save percentage (0.831 - No. 20). MAC Hermann Trophy finalist Gomez and Andrew Ribeiro, were named NSCAA All-America selec- tions and CU placed six student-athletes on MVC All-Conference teams. In the 2013 MLS Supplemental Draft, Toronto FC selected Gomez in the second Christian Blandon came off the bench to score the goal that snapped UConn’s round with the 38th pick overall and the New York Red Bulls claimed Ribeiro 38-match home unbeaten streak and send Creighton back to a second as the 70th selection overall in the fourth round. straight College Cup.

Creighton

Indiana, 1-0

Indiana

Indiana, 1-0 Georgetown, 4-4 2012 Maryland NCAA (2OT) Advances Champion 4-3 on PK

Georgetown 2012 Creighton Bluejays • College Cup Participants 52 NCAA Tournament Teams

2013 NCAA Tournament 2014 NCAA Tournament At-Large NCAA Bid BIG EAST Conference Regular-Season Champions 9-9-2 Overall, 4-4-1 BIG EAST At-Large NCAA Bid 16-3-3 Overall, 7-1-1 BIG EAST

MLS 2014 draft selections Eric Miller (left) and Zach Barnes (right) led the Fabian Herbers (left) was named a First Team All-American and BIG Bluejays back to the NCAA Tournament in 2013. Creighton earned its first EAST Offensive Player of the Year, while Connor Sparrow (right) ranked at-large bid since 2010 following the program’s first full season of BIG second nationally in goals against average. EAST Conference play.

Creighton finished the 2013 campaign with a 9-9-2 overall mark. The Creighton ended the season with a 16-3-3 record, leading the nation Bluejays completed their first season in the BIG EAST Conference in winning percentage (.795) while reaching the NCAA Tournament with a 4-4-1 mark and a fifth-place finish. CU fell 2-1 to No. 4 seed quarterfinals for the 10th time in the past 19 seasons. The Bluejays Providence in the BIG EAST quarterfinals. The Jays claimed a spot in the won their first BIG EAST soccer title, finishing league play with a 7-1-1 NCAA Tournament for the 21st time in 22 seasons. CU attained the top record after clinching the crown on Senior Day with a 3-0 victory over ranking in the NSCAA poll released on September 10. It marked the Jays’ Providence. CU started the fall unranked but season-opening shutout first time back in the top spot since September 1999. CU hosted Seattle in a victories over No. 20 Stanford and Santa Clara moved the Jays into first-round match but fell 2-1 to complete the year. Creighton played a lot the top-12 of the national polls for the remainder of the season. Elmar of tight matches as each of the Jays’ nine losses came by a single goal. Bolowich was tabbed BIG EAST Coach of the Year, Fabian Herbers was CU finished with a 7-2-1 record at home inside Morrison Stadium. The named BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year, and Timo Pitter claimed Jays posted the fourth-best attendance mark nationally with over 27,000 BIG EAST Midfielder of the Year plaudits. Herbers would end the sea- fans attending home contests. Seven Bluejays claimed a spot on All-BIG son as a First Team All-American, while Pitter and defender Jose Ribas EAST Teams following the regular season. CU senior Zach Barnes earned were Second Team All-America honorees. Herbers was also a Third All-BIG EAST First Team honors. Junior Jose Ribas along with sophomores Team CoSIDA Academic All-American. In net, Connor Sparrow ranked Brendan Hines-Ike and Timo Pitter claimed All-BIG EAST Second Team second nationally with a 0.49 goals against average, allowing just one accolades. CU senior Bruno Castro won All-BIG EAST Honorable Mention first half score all season. Creighton defeated No. 25 Oregon State (1-0) recognition. Creighton freshmen Fabian Herbers and Ricardo Perez won and No. 14 Xavier (2-1) to reach the NCAA quarterfinals before falling in a spots on the BIG EAST All-Rookie Team. Creighton had two players drafted shootout to UMBC following 110 minutes of scoreless soccer. All three of in the 2014 MLS SuperDraft. Junior Eric Miller was selected fifth overall by Creighton’s losses came by 1-0 margins, including two setbacks in the the Montreal Impact to become the sixth first-round selection in program final six weeks of the fall after star freshman Ricky Lopez-Espin suffered history. D.C. United selected Barnes with the 56th overall pick in the third a season-ending knee injury in early October at Drake. round of the SuperDraft.

Fabian Herbers’ free kick with under two minutes left in double-overtime Sean Kim (center) scored his first goal of the year in the second minute set off a wild celebration in Creighton’s first BIG EAST game, a 1-0 win on Senior Day to help Creighton clinch the BIG EAST regular-season title over St. John’s before 5,282 fans. with a 3-0 victory over Providence. 53 NCAA Tournament Teams 2015 NCAA Tournament 2016 NCAA Tournament At-Large NCAA Bid At-Large NCAA Bid 19-4-0 Overall, 7-2-0 BIG EAST 13-7-3 Overall, 5-3-1 BIG EAST

Fabian Herbers (left) led the nation in assists (17) and points (47) while Alex Kapp (left) claimed a spot on the NSCAA All-America Third Team and finishing runner up in the MAC Hermann Trophy voting, claiming a NSCAA was named the BIG EAST Co-Goalkeeper of the Year. Kapp missed only All-America First Team selction, and earning unanimous selection as the five minutes of game time during Creighton’s 23 matches and played all BIG EAST Offensive Player of Year. MAC Hermann Trophy semifinalist 850 minutes of BIG EAST action. Ricardo Perez (right) earned BIG EAST Timo Pitter (right) repeated as BIG EAST Midfielder of the Year and was Midfielder of the Year status and a spot on the NSCAA All-Great Lakes named a NSCAA First Team All-American. Region First Team. For the third consective season, the Bluejays earned an at-large bid into Creighton claimed two NCAA Tournament victories for the third con- the NCAA Tournament and reached the NCAA quarterfinals for the sec- secutive season and finished 13-7-3 after advancing to the Sweet 16. The ond-straight season. Creighton started the 2015 campaign 15-0-0, mark- Bluejays started the season 7-1-2 with its lone loss coming to then-No. 2 ing its best start since 1993 (19-0-0) and spent a program-best eight Clemson. After receiving the No. 4 seed to the BIG EAST Championship, consecutive weeks as the No. 1 team in the NSCAA coaches’ poll, before Creighton advanced to the title match and finished runner-up to Butler. finishing the season ranked No. 6 with a 19-4-0 record. MAC Hermann The Bluejays received their fourth consecutive at-large selection into Trophy finalist Fabian Herbers set a single-season school record and led the NCAA Tournament, then shut out Tulsa during a first-round home all of Division I with 17 assists, while also tying for third in the country match and won at nationally-seeded Kentucky in second-round play. with 15 goals. Herbers claimed BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year Creighton jumped out to an early one-goal lead during its third round honors for the second consecutive season while Timo Pitter repeated match against Providence at Morrison Stadium, but the Friars tied the as BIG EAST Midfielder of the Year. The pair combined for 25 goals as match in the first half and converted the game-winner with less than 10 the Bluejays ranked third in Division I with 2.30 goals per match. Both minutes to play in regulation. The Bluejays ended the season ranked No. 15 Pitter and Herbers made the NSCAA All-America First Team. Vincent in the final NSCAA Division I poll, marking the sixth time in the past seven Keller, a Third Team All-American, led the defense as the Bluejays out- seasons the squad has ended the year nationally-ranked. Graduate scored their opponents 53-19. Connor Sparrow was named BIG EAST transfer Alex Kapp earned a spot on the NSCAA All-America Third Team Co-Goalkeeper of the Year after picking up a nation-best 19 victories and was voted BIG EAST Co-Goalkeeper of the Year after making 78 and allowing 0.82 goals per game. Creighton showcased its offense in saves and posting a 0.84 goals against average during 2,145 minutes the NCAA Tournament with a 5-1 victory against Drake before defeating in goal. BIG EAST Midfielder of the Year and NSCAA All-Great Lakes No. 4 North Carolina 1-0 in Chapel Hill to advance to the quarterfinals. Region First Team honoree Ricardo Perez guided the Creighton offense The Bluejays battled Akron to a tie in regulation time before falling 3-2 which ranked fifth in the country in shots per game (16.57). Ricky Lopez- in double-overtime in the Elite Eight. Espin, a NSCAA All-Great Lakes Region Second Team Selection, led the Bluejays with 22 points from 10 goals and two assists.

The 2015 Creighton seniors combined to lead the Bluejays to four NCAA Mitch LaGro (center) scored the first of three goals during Creighton’s Tournament appearances, two NCAA quarterfinals and one College Cup. shutout of Tulsa during the NCAA Tournament First Round. 54 NCAA Tournament History & Records All-Time NCAA Tournament Results • Overall: 34-20-7 • Home: 16-6-1 • Away: 17-8-5 • Neutral: 1-6-1 1992 CU Rank Opponent Result 2005 CU Rank Opponent Result Bluejay NCAA Tournament Records 11/21 2 #14 SMU L, 0-1 11/18 11 Lafayette W, 3-0 11/22 11 #6 Duke W, 2-1 GOALS 1993 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/27 11 #9 Penn State W, 3-1 Game: 3, Brian Biggerstaff vs. UMKC, 11/22/03 11/14 2 Air Force L, 1-2 (4 OT) 12/2 11 #15 Clemson L, 0-1 Career: 6, Ethan Finlay, 2008 & 2010-11 (8 games) 6, Brian Mullan, 1997-2000 (11 games) 6, Mike Tranchilla, 1999-2002 (11 games) 1994 CU Rank Opponent Result 2006 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/20 22 #16 Saint Louis W, 2-1 11/10 21 Washington L, 0-3 ASSISTS 11/27 22 #1 Indiana L, 0-1 Game: 3, (2x), last by Fabian Herbers vs, Drake, 11/22/15 2007 CU Rank Opponent Result Career: 6, Fabian Herbers, 2013-15 (6 games) 1995 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/28 11 #5 SMU - ! W, 3-0 6, Michael Kraus, 2003-06 (11 games) 6, Matt Jewett, 2000-03 (14 games) 11/18 10 William & Mary L, 1-2 (4 OT) 12/1 11 Illinois-Chicago L, 0-1 POINTS 1996 CU Rank Opponent Result 2008 CU Rank Opponent Result Game: 6, Brian Biggerstaff vs. UMKC, 11/22/03 11/24 8 #7 SMU W, 2-0 11/25 2 #6 Tulsa W, 2-1 Career: 17, Mike Tranchilla, 1999-2002 (11 games) 12/1 8 #18 CS-Fullerton T, 0-0 (4 OT) 11/29 2 #22 Connecticut W, 2-1 (OT) (CU advances 4-2 on PKs) 12/6 2 #3 Maryland L, 0-1 SAVES Game: 15, Tom Zawislan at Air Force, 11/23/97 12/8 8 #11 Fresno State W, 2-0 Career: 39, Tom Zawislan, 1997-99 (6 games) 12/13 8 #4 St. John’s L, 1-2 2010 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/18 17 New Mexico W, 4-1 1997 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/21 17 #7 SMU T, 2-2 (2OT) 11/23 11 Air Force - ^ W, 3-2 (OT) (SMU advances 5-3 on PKs) 11/30 11 #14 Saint Louis L, 0-1 2011 CU Rank Opponent Result 1998 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/20 2 Northern Illinois W, 3-0 11/22 12 #17 Saint Louis W, 4-1 (OT) 11/27 2 #13 UC Santa Barbara W, 2-1 11/29 12 #6 UCLA W, 2-0 12/4 2 #12 South Florida W, 1-0 (OT) 12/5 12 #18 Maryland L, 2-3 12/9 2 #14 Charlotte - # T, 0-0 (2OT) (Charlotte advances 4-1 on PKs) 1999 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/20 21 #17 SMU L, 1-2 2012 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/18 8 Washington W, 4-2 2000 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/25 8 #1 Akron T, 1-1 (2OT) 11/19 8 #12 Ohio State W, 1-0 (CU advances 5-4 on PKs) 11/26 8 #3 San Diego W, 3-0 12/2 8 #7 Connecticut W, 1-0 12/2 8 #5 Virginia W, 3-0 12/7 8 Indiana - # L, 0-1 12/8 8 #16 Indiana W, 2-1 (3 OT) 12/10 8 #7 Connecticut L, 0-2 2013 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/21 NR Seattle L, 1-2 2001 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/23 NR Massachusetts - $ L, 0-1 2014 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/23 9 #25 Oregon State W, 1-0 2002 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/30 9 #14 Xavier W, 2-1 Ethan Finlay owns Creighton’s career record for goals in NCAA 11/27 11 #10 UW-Milwaukee* W, 3-2 12/5 9 UMBC T, 0-0 (2 OT) action. Finlay had six goals, including the game-winner during 12/1 11 #3 St. John’s W, 1-0 (OT) (UMBC advances 4-3 on PKs) the NCAA Quarterfinals against South Florida on Dec. 4, 2011. 12/8 11 #6 Boston College W, 6-2 12/13 11 #15 Stanford L, 1-2 (2 OT) 2015 CU Rank Opponent Result NCAA Tournament Results 11/22 9 Drake W, 5-1 YEAR W-L-T Finish 2003 CU Rank Opponent Result 11/28 9 #4 North Carolina W, 1-0 1992 0-1-0 Second Round 11/22 NR UMKC W, 6-0 12/5 9 #5 Akron L, 2-3 (2OT) 1993 0-1-0 First Round 11/26 NR San Diego - & T, 1-1 (2 OT) 1994 1-1-0 Second Round (CU advances 5-3 on PKs) 2016 CU Rank Opponent Result 1995 0-1-0 First Round 11/30 NR Virginia W, 3-1 11/17 23 Tulsa W, 3-0 1996 2-1-1 College Cup Semifinals 12/7 NR #6 St. John’s - % L, 2-3 11/2 0 23 #18 Kentucky W, 3-2 1997 1-1-0 Second Round 11/26 23 Providence L, 1-2 1998 2-1-0 Quarterfinals 2004 CU Rank Opponent Result 1999 0-1-0 First Round 11/23 16 #23 Northwestern W, 3-2 Bold - Home match; Italics - College Cup 2000 4-1-0 National Runners-Up 11/28 1 6 #7 Maryland T, 0-0 (2 OT) ^ - CU shorthanded for 107:23 2001 0-1-0 First Round (UMD advances 5-4 on PKs) $ - Played in Garden City, N.Y. 2002 3-1-0 College Cup Semifinals * - Played at Nebraska Wesleyan in Lincoln, 2003 2-1-1 Quarterfinals Neb. 2004 1-0-1 Third Round & - CU shorthanded for 26:05 2005 3-1-0 Quarterfinals % - Played in College Park, Md. 2006 0-1-0 First Round ! - CU man advantage for 64:14 2007 1-1-0 Third Round # - Played in Hoover, Ala. 2008 2-1-0 Quarterfinals 2010 1-0-1 Second Round 2011 3-0-1 College Cup Semifinals 2012 2-1-1 College Cup Semifinals 2013 0-1-0 First Round 2014 2-0-1 Quarterfinals 2015 2-1-0 Quarterfinals 1996 College Cup 2000 College 2002 College 2011 College Cup 2012 College Cup 2016 2-1-0 Third Round Richmond, Va. Cup Hoover, Ala. Hoover, Ala. 24 years 34-20-7 55 All-Time Roster Name ...... Years . . . . Stats Corghi, Alessandro . . . 2018 ...... DNP Gutierrez, Diego . . . 2020- ...... Abdulgasem, Yasin . . . 2016 ...... DNP Crew, James . . . . .1996-97 . . 5 MP, 0 PTS Gutierrez, Eric . . . . 1997-98 . . 15 MP, 0 pts. Abidor, David ...... 2014 . . .20 MP, 0 G Currence, Tyler . . . . . 2009 ...... DNP Haakenson, Luke . . .2016-19 . . . . 12 G, 11 A Acoff, Dion ...... 2009-11 . . . . 5 G, 16 A D’Agrosa, Dave . . . 1979-80 . . . . .2 G, 5 A Haller, Denny . . . . 1979-80 . . . . 14 G, 8 A Adams, Brian . . . . .1991-94 . . . . 9 G, 23 A Dacy, Byron . . . . . 2005-09 . . . .17 G, 20 A Hammett, Todd . . . 1997-00 . . . . .2 G, 6 A Addington, Robert . . 1981-84 . . . .28 G, 15 A Dalla Riva, Jim . . . . 1981-84 . . . . 1.49 GAA Harris, Jamie . . . . .1990-93 . . . . 12 G, 6 A Aigotti, Matt ...... 1990 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Daut, Florian ...... 2017 ...... 2 MP Haston, Mark ...... 1990-93 . . . . .2 G, 9 A Akinrinade, Akin . . 2008-09 . . . . .0 G, 3 A Davis, Patrick . . . . 2000-01 . . . . . 10 MP Haston, Mike . . . . . 1991-92 . . . . .3 G, 2 A Alfieri, Chris ...... 1980 . . . . 0 G, 0 A DeFini, Keith . . . . .1990-93 . . . 68 G, 26 A Havens, Shane . . . 2000-03 . . . . . 1 G, 1 A Algya, Jason . . . . .1994-95 . . . . .0 G, 3 A Deist, Jeff ...... 1995-97 . . . .19 G, 18 A Helbig, Elias ...... 2015 ...... DNP Allen, Matt . . . . . 2004-07 72 MP, 0.83 GAA Del Monte, Luiz . . . 2001-02 . . . . 7 G, 13 A Henning, Peter . . . 1997-00 . . . . .7 G, 5 A Almquist, Kevin . . . . . 1992 . . . . GK, DNP DeJulio, Eric ...... 2012-15 . . . . .3 G, 0 A Herbers, Fabian . . . .2013-15 . . . 28 G, 29 A Altman, Ryan . . . . 2000-02 ...... 4 MP DeMarco, Chris . . . . . 1990 . . . .2.49 GAA Herrington, Danny . . . 1980 . . . . .6 G, 1 A Amaral, Benito . . . . 2012-13 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Deremer, Kyle . . . .2008-10 . . . . .0 G, 6 A Hernandez, Daniel . . . 1994 . . . . .3 G, 3 A Anderson, Johnnie . .1990-93 . . . . 3 G, 16 A DeZeeuw, Alex . . . . . 2008 ...... DNP Hill, Brian ...... 1998-01 . . . . . 37 MP Anderson, Michael . .1997-98 . . . . .2 G, 0 A Dobson, Mitch . . . . 2020- ...... Hill, Lance ...... 1990-94 . . . .21 G, 20 A Anton, Roberto . . . . . 2016 ...... DNP Dodge, Ian ...... 1992 . . . . .0 G, 1 A Hines-Ike, Brendan . .2012-14 . . . 49 MP, 1 G Appel, Rob ...... 2001 . . . . .0 G, 1 A Dokler, John ...... 1980 . . . . 1.86 GAA Hoie, Bryan ...... 2007-11 2 MP, 0.00 GAA Ashford, Jake . . . . 2019- . . .6 MP, 1 G Doyle, Kevin ...... 1990-92 . . 1.22 GAA, 2 A Holopainen, Pietari . . .2006 . . . . .1 G, 6 A Ashton, Tim ...... 1995 ...... 8 MP Duran, Andrew . . . .2007-11 . . . . .1 G, 2 A Holt, Brian ...... 2007-11 .77 MP, 0.61 GAA Auguste, Charles . . .2019- . . . .2 G, 2 A Duranceau, Billy . . .1990-93 . . . . 6 G, 13 A Hoover, Dave . . . . 1979-80 . . . . .6 G, 4 A Bacellar, Diego ...... 2015 ...... 4 MP Dutilh, Diego . . . . .2019- . . . . .11 MP Hoover, Tom . . . . . 1981-83 . . . . 4 G, 4 A Baker, Sean ...... 2001 ...... 12 MP Eastman, Trevor . . 2004-05 . . . . .1 G, 2 A Huber, Geoff . . . . .1994-97 . . . . .2 G, 9 A Bakke, Ben ...... 2013 ...... DNP Egan, Tom ...... 1979-82 . . . . .9 G, 2 A Hurd, Richie ...... 2002-03 ...... 4 MP Ballouchy, Mehdi . . . .2002 . . . . .5 G, 4 A Eid, Sam ...... 2004-07 . . . . . 1 G, 1 A Hylok, Dan ...... 1991 . . . . .0 G, 1 A Ban, Shota . . . . . 2003-04 ...... 21 MP Eldred, David ...... 1990 ...... 8 MP Hylok, Joe ...... 1991-92 . . . . .2 G, 1 A Barnes, Zach . . . . . 2012-13 . . . . .1 G, 2 A Ellefson, Nick ...... 2006 ...... DNP Iskra, Marvin ...... 2013 . . . . .2 G, 0 A Baumann, Josh . . . . .2009 . . . . GK, DNP Enemuo, Simeon . . . . 1994 . . . . . 1 G, 1 A Jewett, Matt . . . . 2000-03 . . . . 7 G, 13 A Beard, Braeden . . . .2019- . . . . . DNP Engelking, Niko . . . . . 2019 ...... 1 G Johnson, Ryan . . . .1994-95 . . . . 5 games Beckmann, James . . . 1994 ...... 1 MP Englis, Myles . . . . . 2012-16 . . . . 13 G, 3 A Johnson, Tom ...... 1980 . . . . .5 G, 1 A Behle, Mike ...... 1981 . . . . .2 G, 2 A Epperson, Jon . 1993, 1995-97 . . . .0.88 GAA Jones, Scott ...... 1995 . . . .4.50 GAA Bell, Brian ...... 1997, 99 3 MP, 0.00 GAA Erker, Dave ...... 1979 . . . . .9 G, 4 A Jordan, Greg . . . . . 2008-11 . . . . .7 G, 8 A Bell, Jon ...... 1990-93 . . . . .7 G, 1 A Ertz, Ben ...... 2005-06 ...... DNP Jorgenson, Dain . . .1995-96 . . .4 MP, 0 Pts Beller, Jude . . . . . 1992-95 . . . . .4 G, 5 A Espeleta, Daniel . . . 2018- . . . . 2 G, 1 A Jostmeyer, Scott . . . . 1980 . . . . 0 G, 0 A Bennah, Kama . . . 2002-04 . . . . 4 G, 4 A Fares, Ziyad ...... 2018-19 . . . . .5 G, 2 A Jungbluth, Perrin . . . . 1991 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Bernal, Steve . . . . .1996-99 . . . .10 G, 14 A Faria, Rodrigo . . . . 2006-07 . . . . .2 G, 2 A Junge, Ryan ...... 2004-06 . . . . 7 G, 20 A Biggerstaff, Brian . . 2001-05 . . . .17 G, 10 A Fehrenbach, Bill . . .1979-80 . . . . 18 G, 7 A Kallman, Brent . . . .2009-12 . . . . .3 G, 5 A Blakely, Danny . . . . . 1990 . . . . .0 G, 2 A Ferri, Ray ...... 1990-93 . . . .19 G, 36 A Kallman, Brian . . . . . 2005 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Blandon, Christian . . 2012-14 . . . . .7 G, 4 A Feuerbach, Chris . . . . 1980 . . . . 1.78 GAA Kamler, Brian . . . . 1990-93 . . . 53 G, 24 A Bohnenkamp, Tim . 2004-07 . . . . 8 G, 22 A Finlay, Ethan . . . . . 2008-11 . . . .43 G, 16 A Kapp, Alex ...... 2016 23 MP, 0.84 GAA Bolas, John ...... 1979 . . . . . 1G, 3 A Fitzgerald, Brock 2013, 2015-16 ...... 5 MP Karcher, Aaron . . . .2019- . . . . . DNP Bolowich, Alex . . . . 2011-14 27 MP, 1.20 GAA Fitzgerald, Jay . . . . 1991-95 . . . . 1.05 GAA Karver, Paul . . . . . 2000-01 . . . . GK, DNP Boudadi, Younes . . . 2018-19 . . . . .1 G, 8 A Fitzgerald, Kevin . . . . .1979 . . . . 1.50 GAA Keller, Vincent . . . . 2012-15 . . . . 3 G, 10 A Boyd, Keegan . . . . 2018- . . .14 MP, 1 A Fitzgerald, Mike . . . . . 1980 . . . . 0 G, 0 A Kelly, Clay ...... 1980 . . . . 4 G, 4 A Branstetter, Joe . . . . . 2010 ...... 1 MP Fleissner, Greg . . . . . 2006 ...... DNP Kelly, Liam ...... 2010-11 . . . . .1 G, 2 A Briggs, Cameron . . .2018- . . . . .10 MP Fleming, Drew . . . . . 1984 ...... Kerr, Brady ...... 1991 ...... 5 MP Briggs, Dominic . . . 2018- . . . . 2 G, 1 A Fohr, Julius ...... 2016-19 . . . . .1 G, 2 A Kilcullin, Pat ...... 1984 ...... Brown, Andrew . . .2000-04 41 MP, 1.28 GAA Foral, Brady ...... 2018 ...... DNP Kim, Sean ...... 2012-14 . . . . .7 G, 3 A Brown, Jake ...... 2011-12 . . . . .0 G, 1 A Foster, Sean ...... 1992 ...... DNP Kinney, Zach . . . . .2002-03 ...... 12 MP Brown, Stew . . . . 2008-09 ...... DNP Fox, Corey ...... 2000 . . . . . 1 G, 1 A Kluver, Michael ...... 2013-17 . . . . . 19 MP Brumbaugh, Scott . . . 1984 ...... Franke, Noah . . . . .2014-17 . . . . 6 G, 14 A Knopf, Keith ...... 1985 ...... Burke, Michael . . . . . 2009 ...... DNP Friel, Andrew . . . . .2005-06 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Kocourek, Pat ...... 1985 ...... Burns, TJ ...... 2007-09 ...... DNP Froyd, John ...... 1981-83 . . . . .6 G, 3 A Koenig, Sven . . . . . 2017-18 ...... 12 G Bustos, Mike . 1995-96, 98-99 . . . . 16 G, 9 A Gabb, Mike ...... 1998-02 . . . . 1.02 GAA Kollie, Zabarle . . . . .2013-14 ...... 11 MP Byrne, Michael . . . . . 1990 . . . . .8 G, 8 A Gal, Jeff ...... 2012 15 MP, 0.65 GAA Kollmannthaller, Felix . . 2015 ...... 7 MP Campbell, Colin . . .2004-07 ...... 8 MP Gama, Daniel ...... 2000 . . . . .0 G, 3 A Kozal, Mike ...... 1980 . . . . .1 G, 4 A Carrell, Jon ...... 1990-91 . . . . .2 G, 5 A Garcia, Stein . . . . .1996-97 . . . . .0 G, 1 A Kraus, Michael . . . .2003-06 . . . .21 G, 17 A Carroll, Mark ...... 1984 ...... Garlick, Matt . . . . .1995-97 . . . . .0 G, 3 A Krueger, Tim ...... 2008 ...... DNP Carvajal, Joan . . . . 2004-05 . . . . 4 G, 11 A Gavigan, Connor . . . . .2016 ...... DNP Kruse, Paul ...... 2018- . . . 0.85 GAA Castellanos, Fernando 2014-15 . . . . .5 G, 7 A Giancola, Joe ...... 1982 ...... Kucera, Benjamin . . . . 2013 ...... DNP Castelli, Joe . . . . . 1980-82 . . . . .0 G, 2 A Gibbens, Zac . . . . .2003-05 . 5 MP, 0.35 GAA Kudrna, Casey . . . . . 2002 ...... 1 MP Castillo, Chris . . . . 1992-93 . . . . .1 G, 5 A Gibson, Bryce . . . . 2015-2019 ...... 1 G, 2 A LaGro, Mitch . . . . . 2014-18 . . . . .2 G, 2 A Castillo, Sergio . . . .2007-10 . . . . .3 G, 1 A Gibson, Nathan . . . . . 2006 . 4 MP, 1.19 GAA Lamarre, Steevie . . .2020- ...... Castro, Bruno . . . . .2011-13 . . . .10 G, 14 A Gislason, Aron ...... 2019 ...... DNP Lawrence, Chris . . . . . 1994 ...... 1 MP Cejudo, Pepe . . . . . 2018-19 ...... 1 A Gjoesund, Thomas . 2006-09 . . . . .9 G, 3 A Lekics, Paul . . . . . 1992-95 . . . .18 G, 17 A Chaput, Chris . . . . 1979-80 . . . . .6 G, 2 A Glinsky, Brian ...... 1990 . . . . .2 G, 2 A Lennon, Riggs ...... 2016 ...... 10 G Chavez Borrelli, Antonio . 2021- ...... Golden, Nick ...... 2010 ...... 2 MP Leon, Guido . . . . . 2000-03 . . . .0.66 GAA Christline, Cody . . . . . 2001 . . . . GK, DNP Goldreich, Nick . . . 2007-09 .2 MP, 0.00 GAA Loescher, Zach ...... 1995 . . . . GK, DNP Christou, Nic ...... 2006 . . . . GK, DNP Gomez, Jose ...... 2010-12 . . . . 15 G, 26 A Lomis, Marios ...... 2017 . . . . .5 G, 1 A Ciambella, Bryce . . . . .2013 ...... DNP Goo, Nick ...... 2010 ...... 4 MP Lopez-Espin, Ricky . . 2014-17 . . . .30 G, 7 A Cini, Jacob ...... 2014 ...... DNP Gorman-Carter, Jovan . 2014 ...... DNP Lund, Christopher . . . .2017 ...... DNP Clark, Kris ...... 2008-11 . . . . 6 G, 13 A Gotsmanov, Andrei . 2007-08 . . . . 16 G, 9 A Lyons, Tim ...... 1998-99 . . 17 MP, 0 pts.

56 All-Time Roster

Perdomo, Richard . 2004-05 ...... 21 MP Stock, Troy ...... 1983 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Perez, Ricardo . . . . 2013-16 . . . . 15 G, 9 A Stoeppler, Jim ...... 1983 . . . . .0 G, 1 A Perkins, Adrian . . . . . 2018 ...... DNP Surdell, Dan ...... 1992 ...... DNP Perran, Robert . . . . . 1994 . . . . .1 G, 2 A Swanson, Jim ...... 1982 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Peters, Jace ...... 2010-11 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Swartz, Matt . . . . .2005-06 ...... DNP Peterson, Andrew . . 2003-06 . . . . .1 G, 7 A Tarver, Jarod . . . . .2003-06 . . . .17 G, 14 A Peterson, Brent . . . .1991-94 . . . . .4 G, 5 A Tashiro, Yudai . . . . .2018-19 . . . . .7 G, 6 A Phillips, Shawn ...... 1985 ...... Tatten, Chris ...... 1984 ...... Brian Mullan Philson, Ira ...... 1990-93 . . . . 0 G, 8 A Tekeste, Warsay . . . . . 2017 ...... DNP Picard, Tyler ...... 2007 . . . . GK, DNP Thackaberry, Tim . . . . 1990 . . . . .2 G, 0 A Macchione, Anthony . 2017-18 . . . 33 MP, 1 G Piercy, Zach . . . . . 2000-03 . . . . .2 G, 4 A Thayer, Jeff . . . . . 2006-09 . . . .14 G, 13 A Madeley, Marc . . 1994-96, 98 . . . . .1 G, 2 A Pilney, Mark ...... 1979 . . . . .0 G, 2 A Thomas, Matt . . . . 2000-03 . . . . 3 G, 14 A Madrigal, Danny . . .1998-99 . . . . 11 G, 4 A Pitter, Timo ...... 2012-15 . . . 33 G, 22 A Torgersen, Zach . . . 2003-06 . . . . . 17 MP Maillet, Alejandro . . . 2020- ...... Polak, Tyler ...... 2010-11 . . . . .3 G, 6 A Torres, Johnny . . . .1994-97 . . . 46 G, 36 A Makh, Sonny ...... 2012-13 . . . . . 1 G, 0 A Polat, Kuba ...... 2017-19 . . . . .3 G, 9 A Tranchilla, Mike . . . 1999-02 . . . 55 G, 30 A Mangrum, Christian 2000, 03-05 . . . . . 5 MP Pouliot, Mike ...... 1984 ...... Travis, Mo ...... 2006-07 . . . . .6 G, 0 A Martin, Paul . . . . . 1984-85 ...... Prescott, Peter . . . . 2015-17 . . . . .2 G, 1 A Trosten, Tor ...... 2018-19 . . . . .2 G, 1 A Martin, Thomas . . . 1994-96 . . . . .3 G, 4 A Probst, John . . . . .1980-83 . . . 29 G, 20 A Turner, Jered . . . . 2002-04 . . . . .2 G, 3 A Martir, Tupac . . . . .1995-99 . 7 MP, 1.91 GAA Probst, Tom ...... 1985 ...... Ulveling, John ...... 1980 . . . . 0 G, 0 A Massman, John . . . 1983-85 ...... Prusa, Alex ...... 2013-14 ...... 8 MP Valdivia, Collin . . . . 2015-19 . . . . 1.37 GAA Matthews, Tom . . . . . 1980 . . . . .2 G, 0 A Qongo, Musa . . . . .2019- ...... 4 A Valdivia, Dominic . . .2017-18 ...... 4 MP Mattingly, Mike . . . . . 1983 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Quinn, Jim ...... 1980 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Veldhouse, Joel . . . 2000-01 ...... 1 MP McChesney, Brian . . . .1985 Ramlo, Connor . . . . 2015-19 . . . 30 MP, 2 G Venturi, Tiago ...... 2001 . . . . .1 G, 0 A McCormick, Matt . . . . 1983 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Reddington, Joel . . .1997-00 . . . . .3 G, 5 A Vidals, Bill ...... 1981 ...... McCrary, Carlos . . . .2012-13 . . . . .1 G, 3 A Renfurm, Zion . . . .1994-97 . . . .21 G, 13 A Wagenfuhr, David . 2000-03 . . . . 8 G, 25 A McGuire, Duncan . . .2019- . . . . . DNP Ribas, Daniel . . . . . 2016-17 ...... 15 MP Waldrep, Evan . . . . 2015-16 . . . . .2 G, 2 A McLaughlin, Tom . . . . 1981 ...... Ribas, Jose ...... 2011-14 . . . . 4 G, 21 A Walters, Tim . . . . 2006-08 . . . . .7 G, 9 A McNelis, Blake . . . . . 2014 ...... DNP Ribeiro, Andrew . . . 2009-12 . . . . 10 G, 3 A Ward, Akeem . . . . .2016-18 . . . . .2 G, 6 A McTighe, Brad . . . .1995-96 . . . .16 G, 19 A Rivera, Yoshimatts . . . 2009 ...... DNP Waters, Luke . . . . .2019- . . . . . DNP Mendlick, Matt . . . .1994-97 . . . . .3 G, 3 A Rivillo, Angel . . . . .1998-99 . . . . 4 G, 10 A Watson, Callum . . . 2020- ...... Michner, Chris . . . .1994-95 . . . . .5 G, 3 A Robinson, Jack . . . . . 2018 ...... Weis, Andy ...... 1995 . . . . GK, DNP Miech, Jesse . . . . .2000-01 . . . . GK, DNP Rodriguez, Brett . . .2001-04 . . . . .2 G, 1 A Wells, Zach . . . . . 2000-01 ...... 11 MP Miller, Eric ...... 2011-13 . . . . 4 G, 4 A Rohrer, Mike ...... 1993 . . . . .0 G, 1 A Welsh, Jonathan . . 2003-04 . . . . .1 G, 2 A Miller, Hondo ...... 1990 . . . . .1 G, 2 A Ronneberg, Jake . . .2018- . . . . .10 MP Werling, Duncan . . . 2018-19 ...... DNP Minges, Dave . . . . 2001-03 . . . . .3 G, 1 A Rooth, Jacob ...... 2015 ...... DNP Westfield, Damien . .2002-03 . . . . 13 G, 5 A Mintah, Ishmael ...... 1999-00 . . . . 5 G, 12 A Rudge, Tim ...... 1981-82 . . . . .1 G, 3 A Whiteley, Matt . . . .1997-98 . . . . 12 G, 4 A Minutillo, Danny . . 2004-07 . . . . . 3 G, 3A Rumpler, Fabio . . . . . 2016 ...... 1 A Wibbenmeyer, Scott . . .1985 ...... Mitchell, Erick . . . . 1992-95 . . . . .1 G, 3 A Rutter, Daniel ...... 2015 ...... 1 MP Wieland, Joe . . . . .1999-02 . . . . .1 G, 4 A Mitchell, Luke . . . . 2019- . . .13 MP, 2 A Rydstrand, Joel . . . .2015-18 . . . . 7 G, 23 A Wieland, Matt . . . . 2002-05 . . . . 10 G, 8 A Modglin, Gerry ...... 1982 . . . . .2 G, 1 A Sawaf, Karim ...... 2016 . . . . . 1 G, 1 A Williams, Jim ...... 1979 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Morales, Eddie . . . . 1981-83 . . . . .0 G, 3 A Sawarynski, Keith . . .1998-01 . . . .13 G, 10 A Williams, Trent ...... 2016 ...... DNP Moran, Josh . . . . . 2009-10 . . . . .4 G, 6 A Scheer, Marty . . . . 1982-83 . . . . .2 G, 5 A Wilson, Nic . . . . . 2000-03 ...... 4 MP Mullan, Brian . . . . .1997-00 . . . 36 G, 32 A Scheer, Mike . . . . . 1981-83 . . . . .3 G, 1 A Wittig, Jeremy . . . 2006-08 . . . . . 1 G, 1 A Mulrooney, Richard . 1995-98 . . . .19 G, 52 A Schelldorf, Brett . . . . 2001 ...... 1 MP Wormell, Austin . . . . . 2017 ...... DNP Murphy, Pat ...... 1985 ...... Schmitz, Tony . . . .2004-07 . . . . 6 G, 13 A Wright, David . . . . 1996-99 . . . . 8 G, 12 A Myers, Michael . . . .1991, 94 . . .GK, 17 min. Schneider, Kevin . . . . .1995 . . . . .0 G, 1 A Wutte, Stefan . . . . .2015-17 ...... 4 MP Nash, Julian . . . . . 2001-04 . . . .18 G, 22 A Schnur, Nathan . . . .2020- ...... Yordy, Matt ...... 1990 . . . . .2 G, 0 A Navarro, Felipe . . . . . 2010 ...... 6 MP Schoen, Kurt . . . . .1984-85 ...... Zabawa, Mike ...... 1984 ...... Neighbors, Tracy . . . . 1980 . . . . 0 G, 0 A Schuler, Chris . . . . 2006-09 . . . . .5 G, 4 A Zanotto, Alex . . . . 2007-09 ...... 1 MP Nelson, Josh ...... 1994 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Sconyers, Adam ...... 1999 ...... 2 MP Zawislan, Tom . . . .1996-99 . . . .0.69 GAA Nelson, Skylar . . . . 1998-02 . . . . .3 G, 1 A Scott, Randy ...... 1979 . . . . .5 G, 0 A Nester, John ...... 1979 . . . . .0 G, 1 A Seger, JT ...... 2011-13 ...... 4 MP Bold indicates current student-athlete Nicolarsen, John . . .1996-97 . . .8 MP, 0 Pts Senske, Trent . . . . 2006-09 . . . . . 18 MP Nieroda, Chris . . . . 1990-93 . . . . .4 G, 6 A Shams, Oshick ...... 2012 ...... DNP Nikodem, Gerard . . .1981-83 . . . . .8 G, 7 A Shanahan, Kevin . . . . .1979 . . . . .0 G, 2 A Nikodem, Keith . . . . . 1992 ...... DNP Sheehan, Tim . . . . 1984-85 ...... Nikodem, Ray . . . . 1980-82 . . . 29 G, 23 A Shelton, Jeremy . . .1998-02 . . . . .1 G, 4 A Nikodem, Steve . . . . . 1985 ...... Signorello, Bob . . . . . 1985 ...... Novoa, Jose . . . . . 1979-80 . . . . .0 G, 2 A Sindlinger, Tucker . 2007-09 . . . . .2 G, 8 A Odorisio, Tony ...... 2003-06 . . . . .2 G, 3 A Sinovic, Seth . . . . .2005-09 . . . . 8 G, 15 A Odorisio, Vince . . . .2003-05 . . . . 10 G, 11 A Sloan, Landon . . . . 2020- ...... O’Malley, Owen . . . .2020- ...... Small, Ryan . . . . . 1998-00 . . . . . 25 MP O’Neill, Mark . . . . .2020- ...... Soto Merchan, Carlos . . 2017 ...... DNP O’Neill, Nick . . . . .2008-09 . . . . . 1 G, 1 A Sparrow, Connor . . . 2013-15 51 MP, 0.63 GAA Orf, Dave ...... 1985 ...... Spencer, Kennedy . . . 2010 ...... 1 MP Parker, Brad . . . . .2002-05 . . . . GK, DNP Spinelli, Dante . . . . . 2014 ...... DNP Parker, Patrick . . . .1997-98 . . . . 0 G, 4 A Stadnyk, Mike ...... 1985 ...... Paule, Ross ...... 1994-96 . . . .28 G, 21 A Stannard, Kyle . . . .1996-99 . . . . .1 G, 3 A Paye, Mike ...... 2014-15 . . . 43 MP, 1 G Stansberry, Tyler . . .2005-06 . . . . . 1 G, 1 A Peercy, Lane . . . . . 1998-01 . . . . 4 G, 4 A Stauffer, Lucas . . . . 2014-17 . . . . 9 G, 12 A Pena, Guido ...... 2011 . . . . .1 G, 0 A Stillmock, Michael . .2005-06 ...... 6 MP David Wright 57 Year-By-Year Scores 1979 1982 1985 1991 12-5-1 Overall 7-8-2 Overall 5-12-0 Overall 12-5-2 Overall Head Coach: Mark Schmechel Head Coach: Wayne Rasmussen Head Coach: Don Klosterman 3-1-0 MVC (2nd) Date Opponent Result Date Opponent Result Date Opponent Result Head Coach: Bob Warming S 8 a vs. Omaha W, 3-2 S 6 at Illinois State W, 2-0 S 1 at Saint Louis L, 2-3 Date Opponent Result Att. S 9 a at Concordia (Neb.) W, 2-1 S 9 Rockhurst L, 0-3 S 7 at Bowling Green L, 1-2 A 31 m TCU W, 4-0 2,158 S 14 b South Dakota W, forfeit S 12 Minnesota L, 0-3 S 8 g vs. Eastern Illinois L, 2-4 S 1 m SIU Edwardsville W, 3-2 1,142 S 15 b Dordt W, 3-0 S 17 at Eastern Illinois L, 0-1 S 12 Grand View W, 7-0 S 7 n at #4 Virginia T, 3-3 (ot) 2,500 S 15 b Nebraska-Omaha W, 3-1 S 19 at Western Illinois L, 1-2 (ot) S 24 Benedictine W, 3-0 S 8 n vs. Loyola (Md.) W, 2-0 150 S 22 at South Dakota State L, 2-6 S 25 at Benedictine T, 1-1 (ot) S 29 h vs. San Francisco L, 0-8 S 14 Teikyo-Westmar W, 10-0 1,007 S 30 Nebraska Wesleyan W, 6-3 O 3 Regis W, 5-1 S 30 at Air Force L, 1-4 S 17 UMKC W, 5-0 418 O 6 at Dordt L, 2-3 O 16 Northwest Missouri State W, 2-0 O 4 e SMU L, 0-1 S 20 o vs. #6 UCLA L, 0-6 980 O 11 at Nebraska-Omaha L, 1-2 O 8 d vs. Air Force T, 2-2 (ot) O 5 e Truman State W, 2-0 S 22 o vs. Air Force T, 2-2 (ot) 250 O 13 Morningside W, 5-0 O 10 d vs. Louisiana Monroe L, 1-2 O 8 Tarkio W, 3-2 S 27 p vs. South Florida W, 3-1 250 O 19 South Dakota W, 11-0 O 11 at SMU L, 0-2 O 12 at Quincy L, 0-5 S 28 p at Fla. International L, 1-4 565 O 21 Nebraska T, 0-0 O 19 at Park W, 4-1 O 13 at Western Illinois L, 0-1 O 5 e #11 SMU L, 0-2 1,027 O 27 at Iowa State W, 3-2 O 21 Nebraska W, 2-0 O 26 at Rockhurst L, 0-1 O 6 e Ark.-Little Rock W, 2-1 427 N 2 at Nebraska L, 0-1 O 23 at Nebraksa-Omaha W, 2-0 O 2 at Avila L, 1-2 O 12 j vs. Colo. Mines W, 3-1 250 N 3 Mount Marty W, forfeit O 24 at Saint Louis L, 0-2 N 2 Park College L, 1-3 O 14 j at New Mexico W, 2-1 (ot) 310 N 5 Briar Cliff W, forfeit O 30 Avila L, 0-2 N 9 f SIU Edwardsville L, 1-4 O 18 * at Bradley W, 2-1 44 N 10 at Northwestern L, 1-2 N 7 Tarkio College W, 3-2 N 10 f Missouri State W, 3-1 O 20 * at Illinois State W, 2-1 263 N 11 at Augustana (S.D.) W, 2-1 d - at Dallas, Texas g - at Bowling Green State O 27 * Drake W, 2-0 312 a - Concordia (Neb.) College Tournament Home matches in bold at Rosenblatt Stadium h - at Air Force Academy N 5 * at #17 Tulsa L, 1-2 50 b - Northern States Soccer Conference Tournament e - Creighton Classic Soccer Tournament N 9 ^ vs. Illinois State L, 0-2 116 Home matches in bold at Dodge Park f - Creighton Classic Soccer Tournament II m - KPTM Classic 1983 Home matches in bold at Rosenblatt Stadium n - Coca-Cola Classic, Charlottesville, Va. 8-9-1 Overall o - Fresno St. Tournament, Fresno, Calif. 1980 Head Coach: Don Klosterman p - Golden Panther Invite, Miami, Fla. 13-7-1 Overall Date Opponent Result e - Creighton Classic Head Coach: Mark Schmechel A 31 Truman State W, 1-0 1986-89 j - New Mexico Invite, Albuquerque, N.M. Date Opponent Result S 10 at UW-Milwaukee T, 1-1 (ot) Creighton did not field a * - MVC regular-season matches S 6 a vs. Nebraska-Omaha L, 2-3 S 13 Benedictine W, 1-0 men’s soccer team ^ - MVC Tournament, Tulsa, Okla. S 7 a vs. York (Neb.) W, 10-2 S 17 at Regis L, 0-1 Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park S 10 NW Missouri State W, 10-0 S 18 at Air Force L, 1-5 S 13 Concordia (Neb.) W, 2-1 S 22 Tarkio College W, 3-0 1990 S 21 Nebraska Wesleyan W, 7-0 O 1 at Northern Illinois W, 2-1 12-5-3 Overall 1992 S 26 at Metropolitan State L, 0-4 O 9 at Wisconsin L, 0-2 Head Coach: Bob Warming 14-3-1 Overall S 27 at Regis W, 2-1 O 15 at Western Illinois L, 1-2 Date Opponent Result Att. 4-0-1 MVC (1st) S 29 at Denver T, 0-0 (ot) O 16 Illinois State W, 3-1 S 1 i DePaul W, 1-0 2,137 MVC Tournament Champs O 1 Nebraska W, 3-2 O 21 e Missouri State W, 1-0 S 2 i Arkansas-Little Rock W, 3-0 1,514 Head Coach: Bob Warming O 4 Ottawa (Kan.) L, 1-2 O 22 e Marquette L, 0-1 S 7 j vs. Cal State Fullerton W, 2-1 100 Date Opponent Result Att. O 7 Dordt W, 4-3 O 30 Rockhurst W, 1-0 S 9 j at New Mexico W, 4-3 (ot) S 5 i UMKC W, 9-0 1,198 O 11 Park L, 1-2 (ot) O 31 Avila L, 0-1 S16 Regis W, 3-2 1,019 S 6 i Green Bay W, 4-0 1,045 O 12 South Dakota State W, 10-2 N 4 at Tulsa W, 4-1 S 19 at UMKC W, 9-1 245 S 12 Marquette W, 6-1 1,253 O 19 Cornell (Iowa) College W, 5-0 N 5 at SIU Edwardsville L, 1-4 S 22 at Drake W, 1-0 (ot) S 19 q vs. Vermont W, 3-2 200 O 21 Milton W, 6-0 N 11 at North Texas L, 1-5 S 25 Concordia W, 14-0 524 S 20 q vs. Wisconsin L, 0-2 200 O 23 Missouri-Rolla L, 1-2 N 12 at Louisiana Monroe L, 1-2 S 29 Bradley W, 4-0 1,512 S 25 at #4 SMU W, 2-1 1,238 O 25 Tulsa W, 2-1 e - Creighton Tournament O 3 Drake T, 1-1 (ot) 1,342 S 27 at North Texas L, 0-1 315 O 27 Wichita State W, 3-1 Home matches in bold at Rosenblatt Stadium O 5 k vs. Western Michigan W, 2-1 O 2 r at #4 Saint Louis W, 2-1 (ot) 1,238 N 1 Drake W, 7-1 O 7 k at Notre Dame T, 0-0 (ot) 356 O 3 r vs. Fla. International W, 3-2 275 N 8 Tulsa L, 2-6 O 9 Kansas Newman W, 8-1 422 O 9 * Bradley W, 6-3 1,189 N 13 at Nebraska-Omaha L, 0-1 1984 O 13 at TCU L, 1-3 500 O 11 * Illinois State W, 3-1 1,086 a - Concordia (Neb.) College Tournament 4-9-2 Overall O 15 at #4 SMU L, 0-4 620 O 18 * at Drake T, 0-0 (ot) 225 Home matches in bold at Rosenblatt Stadium Head Coach: Don Klosterman O 19 Wartburg W, 6-0 1,222 O 23 * at Missouri State W, 7-0 328 Date Opponent Result O 21 at Illinois State L, 2-4 283 O 25 * at Tulsa W, 1-0 300 S 1 at Saint Louis L, 0-5 O 28 at SIU Edwardsville L, 1-2 (ot) 275 O 31 at SIU Edwardsville W, 1-0 198 1981 S 3 at Washington (MO) T, 2-2 (ot) N 2 l vs. Drake T, 2-2 (ot/SO) 75 N 7 ^ Drake W, 4-1 1,312 9-6-3 Overall S 8 at Northern Illinois L, 0-1 N 10 at Missouri State L, 4-5 (ot) N 8 ^ Illinois State W, 6-2 1,773 Head Coach: Wayne Rasmussen S 9 at Marquette L, 0-4 i - Ameritas Classic N 21 $ #14 SMU L, 0-1 3,860 Date Opponent Result S 14 e Louisiana Monroe L, 0-3 j - New Mexico Invitational i - Ameritas Classic Northwest Missouri StateW, 5-0 S 16 e Wisconsin W, 1-0 k - Notre Dame Invitational q - Illinois State Soccer Classic S 5 Regis (at S.S. Park) T, 1-1 (ot) S 21 Truman State W, 3-1 l - Big Central Soccer Tournament r - Umbro Soccer Classic at Saint Louis, Mo. S 6 at Air Force W, 2-1 S 23 Regis W, 2-0 Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park * - MVC regular-season matches S 12 c vs. Colorado College T, 3-3 (ot) O 5 f vs. Benedictine W, 2-0 ^ - MVC Tournament S 13 c vs. SMU L, 1-3 (ot) O 6 f at Missouri-St. Louis L, 0-3 $ - NCAA Tournament S 19 at Dordt W, 2-0 O 14 at SIU Edwardsville L, 1-3 Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park S 25 Metropolitan State W, 2-0 O 20 Quincy T, 0-0 (ot) S 26 Missouri-Rolla W, 3-2 O 23 Rockhurst L, 1-2 (ot) S 28 Park W, 1-0 O 27 Avila L, 0-1 O 1 Benedictine W, 3-1 N 3 at Eastern Illinois L, 0-3 O 10 at Eastern Illinois L, 0-4 e - Creighton Bluejay Classic O 11 at Minnesota L, 1-2 f - Missouri-St. Louis Tournament O 14 at Tulsa L, 1-4 Home matches in bold at Rosenblatt Stadium O 18 at Dallas W, 2-0 O 20 at SMU L, 2-6 O 25 Nebraska-Omaha W, 3-0 O 31 Tulsa L, 1-2 (ot) N 8 Nebraska T, 1-1 (ot) c - Falcon Classic at Air Force Home matches in bold at Rosenblatt Stadium

58 Year-By-Year Scores 1993 1995 1997 1999 19-1-0 Overall 14-3-1 Overall 16-5-1 Overall 11-5-2 Overall 5-0-0 MVC (1st) 4-0-1 MVC (1st) 6-1-0 MVC (2nd) 5-1-1 MVC (2nd) MVC Tournament Champs MVC Tournament Champs MVC Tournament Champs Head Coach: Bret Simon Head Coach: Bob Warming Head Coach: Bret Simon Head Coach: Bret Simon Date Opponent Result Att. Date Opponent Result Att. Date Opponent Result Att. Date Opponent Result Att. S 5 % North Carolina W, 3-0 1,762 S 4 i #9 Charlotte W, 3-1 2,408 S 2 i #20 Duke L, 1-3 3,120 A 29 at #22 Saint Louis T, 1-1 (ot) 3,241 S 12 at #2 Saint Louis W, 1-0 2,009 S 5 i Alabama A&M W, 3-2 1,166 S 3 i Northern Illinois W, 3-0 1,182 A 31 i #22 Saint Louis W, 1-0 4,407 S 18 at Harvard W, 6-0 450 S 11 #7 Saint Louis W, 1-0 3,097 S 8 x vs. Stanford W, 2-1 650 S 5 1 San Francisco W, 2-0 1,954 S 19 at Boston T, 0-0 (ot) n/a S 14 * Drake W, 2-0 654 S 10 x at #25 San Francisco W, 4-3 (ot) 1,861 S 7 1 New Mexico W, 3-0 758 S 24 ! Fla. Atlantic W, 2-1 (ot) 2,914 S 17 t vs. San Diego State W, 5-3 (ot) 300 S 15 e SMU L, 1-2 2,891 S 12 2 #10 S. Carolina W, 4-3 (ot) 2,204 S 26 ! Gonzaga L, 0-1 1,314 S 19 t at UNLV W, 8-2 800 S 17 e Green Bay W, 6-0 526 S 14 2 #12 SMU L, 1-3 1,676 O 1 at Wisconsin W, 2-0 459 S 23 Loyola (Ill.) W, 3-1 893 S 24 #9 Wisconsin W, 2-1 793 S 19 3 vs. UNC Greensboro L, 0-4 300 O 3 at Marquette L, 0-1 220 S 26 American W, 1-0 (ot) 961 S 25 New Mexico W, 2-0 702 S 21 3 at North Carolina L, 1-2 (ot) 418 O 9 at UW-Milwaukee W, 3-0 308 O 1 * at Bradley W, 3-0 200 S 29 UMKC W, 8-1 1,727 S 26 * Vanderbilt W, 7-0 1,914 O 15 +* Vanderbilt W, 2-0 1,221 O 3 * at Illinois State W, 4-1 322 O 6 * at Bradley W, 6-1 150 S 28 * W. Kentucky W, 3-0 1,776 O 17 +* Western Kentucky W, 2-0 684 O 8 * Tulsa W, 5-3 640 O 8 at Marquette W, 3-0 615 O 11 4 vs. No. 20 Furman W, 1-0 1,056 O 22 * Bradley W, 1-0 1,380 O 10 * Missouri State W, 4-0 1,504 O 13 * at Evansville W, 2-1 744 O 12 4 at College of Charleston W, 8-1 429 O 24 * Eastern Illinois W, 3-0 806 O 15 e SMU W, 3-2 3,032 O 20 * Missouri State W, 3-0 810 O 17 * Bradley W, 4-0 1,253 O 29 * at Evansville L, 0-1 444 O 16 e Coastal Carolina W, 5-1 1,790 O 22 * Tulsa T, 0-0 (ot) 1,262 O 19 * Eastern Illinois W, 2-1 726 O 31 * at #6 Missouri State T, 2-2 1,259 O 23 u vs. UNC Greensboro W, 2-0 509 O 29 * Drake W, 1-0 1,201 O 26 at Tulsa W, 2-0 105 N 5 * Drake W, 7-0 1,823 O 24 u at Charlotte W, 3-2 1,156 N 3 ^ vs. Missouri State W, 5-2 200 O 31 * at Evansville W, 2-0 312 N 12 ^ at Bradley L, 0-1 732 O 30 Northern Illinois W, 4-0 1,221 N 5 ^ at Evansville W, 2-1 512 N 2 * at Missouri State L, 1-2 (ot) 583 N 20 ~ at #17 SMU L, 1-2 753 N 6 ** Drake W, 2-1 1,049 N 18 $ Wm. & Mary L, 1-2 (4ot) 2,067 N 6 * Drake W, 2-1 (ot) 499 ! - Ameritas Classic N 7 ** Tulsa W, 2-0 2,752 i - Ameritas Classic N 14 ^ vs. Drake W, 3-0 200 + - US West TeleChoice Soccer Festival N 14 $ Air Force L, 1-2 (4ot) 2,629 x - MetLife Classic at San Francisco N 16 ^ vs. #12 Missouri State W, 4-1 200 % - Diadora Challenge i - Ameritas Classic e - Creighton Classic N 23 $ at Air Force W, 3-2 (ot) 1,450 * - MVC regular-season match t - Umbro/Snickers Rebel Classic, Las Vegas * - MVC regular-season matches N 30 $ at #14 Saint Louis L, 0-1 2,304 ^ - MVC Tournament, Peoria, Ill. * - MVC regular-season matches ^ - MVC Tournament at Evansville i - Ameritas Classic ~ - NCAA Tournament e - Creighton Classic $ - NCAA Tournament 1 - Diadora Challenge Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park u - Charlotte (N.C.) Soccer Foundation Classic Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park 2 - US West TeleChoice Classic ** - MVC Tournament 3 - adidas/Eurosport Classic, Chapel Hill, N.C. $ - NCAA Tournament 4 - First Union Classic, Charleston, S.C. 2000 Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park 1996 * - MVC regular-season match 22-4-0 Overall 17-5-2 Overall ^ - MVC Tournament, Evansville, Ind. 9-2-0 MVC (2nd) 5-0-0 MVC (1st) $ - NCAA Tournament MVC Tournament Champs 1994 NCAA College Cup Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park NCAA College Cup 15-5-1 Overall Head Coach: Bret Simon Head Coach: Bret Simon 5-1-0 MVC (1st) Date Opponent Result Att. Date Opponent Result Att. MVC Tournament Champs A 31 i Stanford W, 4-0 2,775 1998 S 2 % #12 Washington W, 2-0 1,078 Head Coach: Bob Warming S 2 Tulsa W, 2-1 1,076 16-4-2 Overall S 3 % Bowling Green W, 2-1 1,167 Date Opponent Result Att. S 6 j at New Mexico W, 3-0 620 4-1-2 MVC (2nd) S 9 Northern Illinois W, 2-1 1,690 S 3 i UNLV W, 3-0 3,397 S 8 j vs. Air Force W, 2-0 545 MVC Tournament Champs S 15 + #6 Indiana W, 4-1 1,000 S 4 i Santa Clara T, 1-1 (ot) 2,443 S 14 y vs. #22 Saint Louis W, 3-1 168 Head Coach: Bret Simon S 17 + at Butler W, 3-1 282 S 9 v vs. North Carolina State W, 2-1 400 S 15 y vs. Butler W, 2-1 91 Date Opponent Result Att. S 22 ! Boston W, 1-0 2,948 S 11 v at #17 Duke W, 3-1 1,850 S 20 at #8 Wisconsin T, 0-0 (ot) 1,742 S 4 ! #4 Saint Louis W, 1-0 3,045 S 24 ! #18 Marquette L, 1-3 1,002 S 16 at TCU W, 3-0 200 S 22 Rhode Island W, 3-1 1,949 S 6 ! Tulsa W, 3-1 791 S 29 * at Missouri State L, 1-2 1,273 S 18 at #16 SMU L, 1-2 935 S 27 UMKC L, 0-1 3,065 S 11 $ at #11 SMU L, 1-2 421 O 1 * at Tulsa W, 2-1 (ot) 375 S 25 at Northern Illinois W, 3-2 453 O 4 Oral Roberts W, 3-0 1,289 S 12 $ vs. Florida International W, 6-1 726 O 6 * Evansville W, 1-0 (ot) 511 S 30 SIU Edwardsville W, 5-1 2,606 O 11 Marquette L, 1-2 1,992 S 18 + UMKC W, 3-1 1,579 O 8 * Western Kentucky W, 3-0 631 O 4 UMKC W, 3-2 645 O 18 z at South Carolina L, 1-3 1,718 S 20 + Wisconsin W, 4-1 726 O 13 * at Vanderbilt W, 5-1 125 O 7 * Evansville W, 2-1 1,532 O 20 z vs. C. of Charleston W, 5-0 2,112 S 25 % College of Charleston W, 4-1 2,548 O 15 * at Belmont W, 2-0 167 O 9 * at Drake W, 2-0 650 O 25 * Evansville W, 2-1 1,251 S 27 % Ohio State W, 1-0 1,095 O 20 * at Bradley L, 1-4 760 O 15 * at Tulsa W, 3-1 125 O 27 * Missouri State W, 6-2 944 O 2 & vs. California W, 2-1 (ot) 960 O 22 * at Eastern Illinois W, 3-1 120 O 19 w vs. #10 Charlotte L, 2-5 814 N 3 * at Drake W, 3-2 205 O 4 & at #14 Stanford L, 0-2 563 O 27 * #2 SMU W, 2-1 1,321 O 22 * Illinois State L, 1-2 1,556 N 8 * at Bradley W, 3-1 (ot) 207 O 16 * at Vanderbilt T, 1-1 (ot) 605 O 29 * TCU W, 3-1 243 O 23 * Bradley W, 3-1 1,050 N 10 * at Eastern Illinois W, 6-0 44 O 18 * at Western Kentucky W, 2-0 215 N 2 * at Drake W, 3-2 373 O 29 at #13 Saint Louis L, 1-2 (ot) 2,511 N 15 ** Drake W, 6-0 701 O 23 *Evansville W, 2-1 1,151 N 5 ^ Tulsa W, 2-1 377 N 5 * at Missouri State W, 1-0 150 N 17 ** #24 Evansville L, 2-3 (ot) 628 O 25 *Missouri State W, 1-0 1,465 N 10 & Western Kentucky W, 3-2 250 N 9 ^ Evansville W, 3-2 (ot) 957 N 24 $ at #7 SMU W, 2-0 246 N 1 * at Drake W, 4-1 341 N 12 & Bradley W, 2-1 (4ot) 417 N 13 ^ Drake W, 1-0 1,518 D 1 $ at #18 CSF T, 0-0 (4ot) 1,984 N 6 * at #25 Bradley L, 0-1 (ot) 803 N 19 ~at #12 Ohio State W, 1-0 702 N 20 $ at #16 Saint Louis W, 2-1 1,613 D 8 $ at #11 Fresno State W, 2-0 2,923 N 8 * at Eastern Illinois T, 1-1 (ot) 154 N 26 ~at #3 San Diego W, 3-0 4,000 N 27 $ at #1 Indiana L, 0-1 769 D 13 ^ vs. #4 St. John’s L, 1-2 20,269 N 13 ^ vs. Eastern Illinois W, 1-0 n/a D 2 ~at #5 Virginia W, 3-0 2,317 i - Ameritas Classic i - Ameritas Classic N 15 ^ at Missouri State W, 1-0 1,012 D 8 ≈ #16 Indiana W, 2-1 (3ot) 10,752 v - MetLife Classic at Duke j - Bank of America Soccer Showcase N 22 ~ at #17 Saint Louis W, 4-1 (ot) 1,624 D 10 ≈ #7 Connecticut L, 0-2 * - MVC Rrgular-season matches y - SMU Mustang Classic N 29 ~ at #6 UCLA W, 2-0 1,825 11,421 w - at Davidson, N.C. z - MetLife Classic at South Carolina D 5 ~ at #18 Maryland L, 2-3 3,123 % - Diadora Challenge ^ - MVC Tournament * - MVC regular-season match ! - Ameritas Classic + - Butler/Nike Soccerfest V, Indianapolis $ - NCAA Tournament ** - MVC Tournament $ - Mustang Classic, Dallas, Texas ! - Ameritas Classic Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park $ - NCAA Tournament + - US West TeleChoice Soccer Festival * - MVC regular-season match ^ - NCAA College Cup, Richmond, Va. % - Diadora Challenge ^ - MVC Tournament Play-In Match Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park & - Stanford Invitational, Stanford, Calif. & - MVC Tournament, St. Louis, Mo. * - MVC regular-season match ~ - NCAA Tournament ^ - MVC Tournament, Springfield, Mo. ≈ - NCAA College Cup, Charlotte, N.C. ~ - NCAA Tournament Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park

The 1999 squad finished 11-5-2. 59 Year-By-Year Scores 2001 2003 2005 2007 11-9-1 Overall 12-6-4 Overall 15-5-3 Overall 12-3-5 Overall 6-3-0 MVC (3rd) 7-1-1 MVC (1st) 5-2-0 MVC (2nd) 4-0-2 MVC (T-1st) Head Coach: Bob Warming Head Coach: Bob Warming MVC Tournament Champs Head Coach: Bob Warming Date Opponent Result Att. Date Opponent Result Att. Head Coach: Bob Warming Date Opponent Result Att. S 1 % Memphis T, 0-0 (2ot) 1,410 A 29 % Butler T, 0-0 (2ot) 3,483 Date Opponent Result Att. A 31 & San Diego State T, 2-2 (2ot) 3,716 S 2 % Oregon State W, 4-2 1,427 A 31 % #15 Furman W, 3-1 1,021 S 2 % at Portland T, 1-1 (2ot) 1,363 S 2 & Green Bay W, 3-0 2,479 S 7 + at #5 Maryland W, 2-1 2,240 S 5 + Santa Clara T, 0-0 (2ot) 250 S 4 % Washington W, 3-2 938 S 6 #11 UCLA T, 0-0 (2ot) 5,812 S 9 + #12 Virginia L, 2-3 2,000 S 7 + at Loyola MarymountL, 1-2 (2ot) 535 S 10 Loyola W, 4-2 2,728 S 13 ! #2 Indiana W, 2-1 1,811 S 15 ! Denver W, 2-1 400 S 12 ! UNLV L, 0-2 1,474 S 16 + #23 Memphis W, 3-1 1,852 S 15 ! LMU W, 1-0 (ot) 3,864 S 17 ! UW-Milwaukee L, 0-3 475 S 14 ! Portland W, 2-1 722 S 18 + Mercer W, 1-0 1,106 S 22 Tulsa L, 1-3 4,023 S 21 $ at #13 Ohio State L, 1-4 652 S 19 $ #17 Brown L, 0-1 250 S 23 ! at Tulsa L, 0-1 633 S 29 #24 Washington W, 2-1 (ot) 2,820 S 23 $ #16 Penn State L, 1-2 168 S 21 $ at Yale W, 3-1 825 S 25 ! SMU T, 1-1 (2ot) 125 O 5 Western Illinois T, 1-1 (2ot) 3,236 O 5 * Eastern Illinois W, 2-1 1,017 O 3 * Drake T, 0-0 (2ot) 2,267 O 1 UMKC T, 0-0 (2ot) 2,407 O 7 at Memphis W, 3-1 361 O 7 * Bradley W, 2-0 552 O 10 * Evansville W, 1-0 915 O 5 Illinois-Chicago L, 1-2 964 O 10 * Bradley T, 2-2 (2ot) 2,271 O 12 * at Tulsa L, 0-2 501 O 12 * Missouri State W, 2-0 672 O 8 * Eastern Illinois W, 5-0 1,459 O 13 * Eastern Illinois W, 2-1 (2ot) 1,418 O 14 * at #1 SMU L, 2-4 2,466 O 17 * at Vanderbilt W, 2-1 (2ot) 201 O 12 * #9 Missouri State W, 2-0 2,480 O 17 * at W. Kentucky W, 2-1 330 O 19 * at Western Kentucky W, 1-0 224 O 19 * at Western Kentucky W, 2-1 153 O 15 * Bradley W, 3-2 2,733 O 20 at UNC Greensboro W, 2-0 377 O 21 * at Vanderbilt W, 3-0 89 O 24 * #22 Bradley W, 1-0 1,525 O 19 at Georgetown W, 6-0 163 O 27 * Missouri State W, 1-0 2,275 O 22 * at Western Kentucky L, 0-1 322 N 3 * at Drake T, 1-1 (2ot) 713 O 26 * Missouri State L, 1-2 (ot) 294 O 26 * Eastern Illinois W, 4-0 1,121 O 26 * at Drake L, 2-3 1,012 N 10 * at Evansville W, 3-1 1,105 O 28 * Evansville W, 5-1 333 O 31 * at SMU W, 2-0 551 O 29 * at Evansville W, 2-0 295 N 16 ^ Evansville W, 2-0 2,041 N 2 * Drake W, 2-1 (ot) 742 N 2 * at Tulsa L, 1-2 488 N 5 * Vanderbilt W, 1-0 2,034 N 18 ^ Bradley L, 0-1 1,617 N 9 ^ Evansville W, 5-3 513 N 8 ^ Missouri State L, 0-1 403 N 11 ^ Vanderbilt W, 4-0 1,606 N 28 $ #5 SMU W, 3-0 1,390 N 16 & Missouri State W, 3-0 662 N 22 ~ UMKC W, 6-0 670 N 13 ^ at Bradley W, 2-0 1,304 D 1 $ Illinois-Chicago L, 0-1 1,210 N 18 & #1 SMU L, 1-2 (4ot) 557 N 26 ~ at San Diego T, 1-1 (2ot) 1,324 N 18 $ Lafayette W, 3-0 2,380 & - Diadora Challenge N 23 ~ Massachusetts L, 0-1 500 N 30 ~ at Virginia W, 3-1 2,157 N 22 $ at #6 Duke W, 2-1 1,234 ! - Saint Louis Nike Classic, St. Louis, Mo. % - Diadora Challenge D 7 & vs. #6 St. John’s L, 2-3 150 N 27 $ at #9 Penn State W, 3-1 598 * - MVC regular-season match + - FILA Md. Classic, College Park, Md. % - Diadora Challenge D 2 $ at #15 Clemson L, 0-1 6,680 ^ - MVC Tournament ! - Ameritas Classic + - LMU Fall Classic, Los Angeles, Calif. % - Nike Invitational, Portland, Ore. $ - NCAA Tournament $ - Ohio St. Nike Classic, Columbus, Ohio ! - Ameritas Classic + - Diadora Challenge Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium * - MVC regular-season match $ - Yale Classic, New Haven, Conn. ! - Golden Hurricane Classic, Tulsa, Okla. ^ - MVC Tournament Play-In Match * - MVC regular-season match * - MVC regular-season match & - MVC Tournament, St. Louis, Mo. ^ - MVC Tournament Play-In Match ^ - MVC Tournament, Peoria, Ill. ~ - NCAA Tournament, Garden City, N.Y. 2008 ~ - NCAA Tournament $ - NCAA Tournament 16-2-2 Overall Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park & - NCAA Tournament, College Park, Md. Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium 4-0-1 MVC (1st) Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium MVC Tournament Champs Head Coach: Bob Warming 2002 2006 Date Opponent Result Att. 18-4-2 Overall 2004 13-5-3 Overall A 29 Gonzaga W, 4-1 4,071 7-1-1 MVC (2nd) 14-4-2 Overall 4-1-1 MVC (T-1st) S 5 Portland W, 3-0 3,045 MVC Tournament Champs 6-3-0 MVC (2nd) MVC Tournament Champs S 7 UC Riverside W, 2-0 1,552 NCAA College Cup Head Coach: Bob Warming Head Coach: Bob Warming S 13 UMKC L, 0-1 2,202 Head Coach: Bob Warming Date Opponent Result Att. Date Opponent Result Att. S 19 at Stanford W, 1-0 1,402 Date Opponent Result Att. S 3 % Western Michigan W, 4-0 2,089 A 25 % #12 Indiana L, 0-1 (2ot) 852 S 21 at #6 California W, 2-0 431 A 31 ! Oakland W, 1-0 906 S 5 % Loyola Marymount W, 2-1 1,536 A 27 % at #15 Notre Dame L, 1-4 1,452 S 27 Denver W, 2-0 3,156 S 1 ! #23 Notre Dame T, 1-1 (2ot) 2,297 S 10 + #6 UCLA W, 3-2 580 S 1 + Georgetown W, 3-2 (ot) 3,746 O 1 CSUN W, 1-0 (2ot) 2,027 S 6 + #19 Kentucky W, 4-1 319 S 12 + #18 Washington L, 1-2 950 S 3 + Fairleigh Dickinson T, 0-0 (2ot) 2,068 O 4 at #11 Saint Louis T, 0-0 (2ot) 2,185 S 8 + at #23 Furman L, 2-4 949 S 17 ! Wisconsin W, 2-1 2,854 S 8 ! UW-Milwaukee W, 1-0 230 O 8 Memphis W, 1-0 1,790 S 13 % Dayton W, 1-0 1,302 S 19 ! Marquette W, 2-1 1,834 S 10 ! at Wisconsin W, 1-0 (ot) 308 O 11 * Evansville W, 3-2 3,192 S 15 % Oral Roberts W, 2-0 526 S 25 Air Force W, 3-1 2,925 S 15 & Oregon State T, 2-2 (2ot) 2,311 O 18 * at Bradley W, 2-0 1,125 S 19 at Washington W, 2-1 (2ot) 542 O 1 * #17 SMU L, 0-1 2,833 S 17 & Yale W, 3-0 1,798 O 21 * at Missouri State T, 0-0 (2ot) 688 S 21 at Portland L, 2-3 904 O 3 * #23 Tulsa W, 4-0 1,711 S 23 Air Force L, 0-1 (2ot) 2,185 N 1 * #24 Drake W, 2-0 2,882 O 5 * at Drake T, 1-1 (2ot) 257 O 8 * at Bradley W, 1-0 2,081 S 27 Central Arkansas W, 6-1 1,216 N 8 * at Eastern Illinois W, 5-3 287 O 11 * Western Kentucky W, 2-1 1,165 O 10 * at Eastern Illinois W, 2-0 165 S 30 * Western Kentucky W, 4-0 2,212 N 14 ^ vs. Bradley W, 2-0 106 O 13 * Vanderbilt W, 4-0 766 O 15 * Vanderbilt W, 3-1 2,430 O 4 * at Missouri State T, 1-1 (2ot) 2,102 N 16 ^ vs. Missouri State W, 1-0 426 O 18 * at Missouri State W, 1-0 270 O 17 * W. Kentucky W, 2-1 1,160 O 7 at #17 Memphis W, 3-2 405 N 25 ! #6 Tulsa W, 2-1 2,467 O 20 * at Evansville W, 1-0 564 O 23 * at Drake W, 2-1 755 O 11 * Drake W, 1-0 1,015 N 29 ! #22 Connecticut W, 2-1 (ot) 2,263 O 25 * at Eastern Illinois W, 4-1 44 O 29 * at Evansville L, 1-2 248 O 14 * at Eastern Illinois W, 1-0 189 D 6 ! at #3 Maryland L, 0-1 2,902 O 27 * at #19 Bradley W, 2-1 953 O 31 * at Missouri State L, 0-1 253 O 21 * Evansville W, 1-0 1,208 * - MVC regular-season match N 1 * Tulsa W, 2-1 409 N 5 ^ Evansville W, 3-1 1,507 O 24 at UMKC W, 3-1 102 ^ - MVC Tournament, Evansville, Ind. N 12 ^ Tulsa T, 1-1 (2ot) 1,427 N 3 * #4 SMU L, 1-2 1,092 O 28 * at Bradley L, 1-2 1,577 ! - NCAA Tournament N 23 $ #23 Northwestern W, 3-2 1,871 N 9 ^ Eastern Illinois W, 6-0 425 N 3 ^ Eastern Illinois W, 2-0 790 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium N 28 $ at #7 Maryland T, 0-0 (2ot) 2,479 N 15 & Missouri State W, 3-1 488 N 5 ^ at Bradley W, 2-1 (ot) 713 % - Diadora Challenge N 17 & Bradley W, 1-0 356 N 10 $ at Washington L, 0-3 835 + - UNLV FILA Invitational, Las Vegas, Nev. N 27 $ vs. #10 UW-Milwaukee W, 3-2 812 % - Berticelli Memorial, South Bend, Ind. 2009 ! - Ameritas Classic D 1 ~ at #3 St. John’s W, 1-0 (ot) 527 + - Ameritas Classic 7-4-5 Overall * - MVC regular-season match D 8 ~ at #6 Boston College W, 6-2 1,541 ! - Wisconsin Invitational, Madison, Wis. 4-2-4 MVC (T-3rd) ^ - MVC Tournament D 13 ≈ #15 Stanford L, 1-2 (2ot) 7,025 & - Diadora Challenge Head Coach: Bob Warming $ - NCAA Tournament ! - Diadora Challenge * - MVC regular-season match Date Opponent Result Att. Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium + - Furman Invitational, Greenville, S.C. ^ - MVC Tournament, Peoria, Ill. S 1 Loyola (Ill.) T, 0-0 (2ot) 2,758 % - Ameritas Classic $ - NCAA Tournament S 5 #23 Cal Poly W, 1-0 3,068 * - MVC regular-season match Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium S 19 * Missouri State L, 0-1 5,609 ^ - MVC Tournament Play-In Match S 25 ! at Washington W, 1-0 723 & - MVC Tournament, St. Louis, Mo. S 27 ! vs. Portland L, 1-2 245 $ - NCAA Tournament, Lincoln, Neb. S 30 * Bradley W, 1-0 1,429 ~ - NCAA Tournament O 3 * Evansville W, 2-1 2,674 ≈ - NCAA College Cup, Dallas, Texas O 7 * at Missouri State T, 0-0 (2ot) 483 Home matches in bold at Tranquility Park O 11 * Eastern Illinois W, 5-1 851 O 14 * #19 Drake L, 0-1 751 Top Home Crowds in Bluejay History O 17 * at Evansville T, 1-1 (2ot) 595 1. 6,848 vs. Old Dominion, Sept. 14, 2012 (L, 1-2) O 21 * at Bradley W, 3-0 878 2. 6,453 vs. Tulsa, Sept. 29, 2015 (W, 1-0) O 24 * at Eastern Illinois T, 0-0 (2ot) 387 3. 5,812 vs. UCLA, Sept. 8, 2007 (T, 0-0, 2OT) O 31 #7 UCLA W, 1-0 2,273 4. 5,743 vs. Stanford (exhibition), Aug. 26, 2005 (L, 0-1) N 7 * at Drake T, 3-3 (2ot) 1,632 5. 5,609 vs. Missouri State, Sept. 19, 2009 (L, 0-1) N 13 ^ at Drake L, 1-3 751 6. 5,473 vs. Clemson, Aug. 24, 2018 (W, 2-0) * - MVC regular-season match 7. 5,425 vs. Drexel, Sept. 4, 2011 (W, 3-0) ! - Husky Fever Classic, Seattle, Wash. 8. 5,386 vs. Seton Hall, Sept. 17, 2016 (W, 4-1) ^ - MVC Tournament, Des Moines, Iowa 9. 5,282 vs. St. John’s, Sept. 21, 2013 (W, 1-0, 2OT) Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium 10. 5,102 vs. Columbia, Sept. 6, 2013 (W, 3-1) 11. 4,907 vs. CSUN, Sept. 4, 2015 (W, 2-1) 12. 4,838 vs. Michigan, Aug. 28, 2015 (W, 1-0) 13. 4,818 vs. Akron, Sept. 6, 2019 (W, 2-1) 14. 4,766 vs. Nebraska-Omaha, Sept. 5, 2016 (T, 1-1, 2OT) 60 Year-By-Year Scores N 3 * at Evansville W, 2-1 742 2010 N 9 % vs. Drake W, 3-2 (2ot) 125 2015 2018 13-5-2 Overall N 11 % vs. SIU Edwardsville W, 2-1 220 19-4-0 Overall 11-4-3 Overall 5-1-1 MVC (1st) N 18 ! #21 Washington W, 4-2 1,681 7-2-0 BIG EAST (2nd) 7-1-1 BIG EAST (1st) Head Coach: Jamie Clark N 25 ! & at #1 Akron T, 1-1 (2ot) 2,778 Head Coach: Elmar Bolowich Head Coach: Elmar Bolowich Date Opponent Result Att. D 2 ! at #7 Connecticut W, 1-0 5,100 Date Opponent Result Att. Date Opponent Result Att. S 1 at Loyola (Ill.) W, 2-0 379 D 7 $ vs. Indiana L, 0-1 11,074 A 28 Michigan W, 1-0 4,838 A 24 #11 Clemson W, 2-0 5,473 S 4 UNC Greensboro W, 4-0 2,524 + - Ameritas Classic A 30 Milwaukee W, 4-0 2,248 A 26 UC Davis T, 0-0 (2OT) 1,444 S 7 at #21 UCSB W, 1-0 2,567 ^ - Creighton Invitational S 4 CSUN W, 2-1 4,907 A 31 at Grand Canyon L, 0-1 3,402 S 11 DePaul W, 2-0 2,603 * - MiVC regular-season match S 6 #13 UC Irvine W, 4-0 2,326 S 3 at South Florida W, 2-1 541 S 17 ! vs. #18 SMU L, 2-3 (2ot) 300 % - Missouri Valley Tournament, Peoria, Ill. S 11 at Michigan State W, 1-0 1,630 S 7 Memphis W, 2-0 4,367 S 19 ! vs. Darmouth W, 3-2 (ot) 275 ! - NCAA Tournament S 19 Tulsa W, 1-0 6,453 S 15 * Butler W, 3-0 4,711 S 24 Wisconsin W, 1-0 (ot) 2,862 $ - NCAA College Cup, Hoover, Ala. S 22 Northern Illinois W, 2-0 2,093 S 22 * at Villanova W, 1-0 774 O 1 * Eastern Illinois W, 1-0 2,039 & - Creighton advances on penalty kicks 5-4 S 26 * at Seton Hall W, 4-2 938 S 25 Jacksonville W, 2-1 1,825 O 5 #5 Tulsa W, 3-1 2,431 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium S 29 Missouri State W, 4-0 2,132 S 29 * Seton Hall W, 1-0 2,587 O 9 Indiana L, 2-3 3,383 O 3 * DePaul W, 1-0 3,387 O 2 #5 Denver L, 0-1 (2OT) 3,076 O 16 * at Evansville W, 2-1 (ot) 793 O 6 Drake W, 2-1 2,427 O 6 * at St. John’s W, 3-1 761 O 20 * at Drake W, 2-1 867 2013 O 10 * St. John’s W, 2-1 3,888 O 12 * at Xavier W, 3-1 876 O 23 * at Central Arkansas W, 2-0 394 9-9-2 Overall O 14 * at Butler W, 1-0 913 O 16 at Akron L, 0-1 1,427 O 27 at #1 Akron L, 0-1 3,856 4-4-1 BIG EAST (5th) O 17 * at Marquette W, 3-1 1,232 O 20 * Providence T, 0-0 (2OT) 1,945 O 30 * SIU Edwardsville T, 2-2 (2ot) 2,592 Head Coach: Elmar Bolowich O 24 * Villanova W, 5-1 4,223 O 24 * Marquette W, 2-1 1,457 N 3 * Missouri State W, 2-0 1,477 Date Opponent Result Att. O 28 * Xavier L, 1-2 3,061 O 27 * at DePaul W, 2-1 363 N 6 * Bradley L, 1-2 1,780 A 30 #14 Tulsa W, 2-0 3,204 O 31 * at Providence W, 3-1 478 O 31 * Georgetown L, 1-2 (OT) 1,664 N 12 ^ at Bradley L, 2-3 980 S 1 Cal Poly W, 3-0 2,653 N 5 * at #6 Georgetown L, 1-2 1,541 N 7 ^ & Marquette T, 1-1 (2OT) 1,352 N 18 $ New Mexico W, 4-1 1,074 S 6 Columbia W, 3-1 5,102 N 12 ^ Providence W, 2-1 1,976 N 21 $ & at #7 SMU T, 2-2 (2ot) 524 S 13 # at Old Dominion W, 2-1 (2ot) 2,106 N 15 ^ at #3 Georgetown L, 1-2 (2ot) 1,541 * - BIG EAST regular-season match ! - Hotels at Grand Prairie Classic, Peoria, Ill. S 15 # vs William & Mary L, 2-3 (2ot) 555 N 22 $ Drake W, 5-1 2,212 ^ - BIG EAST Tournament * - MVC regular-season match S 21 * #7 St. John’s W, 1-0 (2ot) 5,282 N 28 $ at #4 North Carolina W, 1-0 1,432 & - Marquette advances on penalty kicks, 10-9 ^ - MVC Tournament, Peoria, Ill. S 24 Michigan State T, 2-2 (2ot) 2,104 D 5 $ at #5 Akron L, 2-3 (2ot) 3,043 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium $ - NCAA Tournament S 28 * at #12 Georgetown T, 0-0 (2ot) 1,491 * - BIG EAST regular-season match & - SMU advances on penalty kicks 5-3 O 2 at #22 Saint Louis L, 0-1 3,070 ^ - BIG EAST Tournament Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium O 5 * Xavier W, 2-0 2,864 $ - NCAA Tournament 2019 O 12 * at Marquette L, 0-1 1,165 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium 8-7-2 Overall O 15 at Michigan L, 0-1 688 4-4-1 BIG EAST (T-4th) 2011 O 19 * Villanova L, 0-1 (ot) 2,789 Head Coach: Johnny Torres 21-2-1 Overall O 23 * at Butler W, 3-2 710 2016 Date Opponent Result Att. 5-1-0 MVC (T-1st) O 26 * at Seton Hall L, 2-3 312 13-7-3 Overall A 30 at #6 North Carolina T, 2-2 (2OT) 2,417 MVC Tournament Champs O 30 Drake W, 2-0 937 5-3-1 BIG EAST (T-3rd) S 1 at #4 Wake Forest L, 0-1 2,089 NCAA College Cup N 2 * DePaul W, 5-1 1,637 Head Coach: Elmar Bolowich S 6 #21 Akron W, 2-1 4,818 Head Coach: Elmar Bolowich N 8 * at Providence L, 1-2 256 Date Opponent Result Att. S 9 Columbia W, 3-1 886 Date Opponent Result Att. N 12 ^ at Providence L, 1-2 210 A 26 at #25 Rutgers W, 2-0 1,135 S 13 UC Irvine L, 1-3 3,158 A 27 at Denver W, 1-0 941 N 21 $ Seattle L, 1-2 584 S 2 at #2 Clemson L, 0-1 2,869 S 16 Nebraska-Omaha W, 2-1 4,096 A 31 at UMKC W, 5-0 565 # - Stihl Classic, Norfolk, Va. S 5 Nebraska-Omaha T, 1-1 (2ot) 4,766 S 20 * at Marquette W, 1-0 587 S 4 Drexel W, 3-0 5,425 * - BIG EAST regular-season match S 9 Penn W, 3-0 2,888 S 24 Tulsa W, 4-3 (2OT) 1,017 S 9 Fordham W, 1-0 4,242 ^ - BIG EAST Tournament quarterfinal, Providence, S 13 UMKC W, 3-0 1,489 S 28 * Villanova W, 1-0 1,512 S 11 at DePaul W, 1-0 378 R.I. S 17 * Seton Hall W, 4-1 5,386 O 4 * at Seton Hall L, 0-1 267 S 17 Providence W, 3-0 2,525 $ - NCAA Tournament S 21 #8 Denver T, 0-0 (2ot) 2,048 O 11 * at Xavier L, 0-1 340 S 21 #22 Kentucky W, 2-0 2,557 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium S 24 * at DePaul W, 4-1 545 O 19 * #7 St. John’s L, 0-2 2,049 S 24 Saint Mary’s W, 1-0 3,215 S 27 #12 Loyola-Chicago W, 3-0 1,894 O 23 * DePaul W, 1-0 1,312 S 30 at #3 Maryland L, 0-1 5,648 O 1 * at St. John’s T, 1-1 (2ot) 542 O 26 * at Providence L, 2-3 (2OT) 628 O 5 at Wisconsin W, 2-1 (ot) 475 2014 O 7 * #9 Butler W, 1-0 3,119 N 2 * Butler W, 2-1 (2OT) 1,627 O 9 at #10 Indiana W, 1-0 2,171 16-3-3 Overall O 11 at Tulsa L, 1-2 873 N 6 * at #3 Georgetown T, 1-1 (2OT) 399 O 12 * at Missouri State L, 0-1 381 7-1-1 BIG EAST (1st) O 15 * Marquette W, 2-1 2,483 N 9 ^ Butler L, 0-1 1,928 O 15 #7 UC Irvine W, 3-1 3,761 Head Coach: Elmar Bolowich O 22 * at Villanova L, 0-1 704 O 19 * at Bradley W, 1-0 375 Date Opponent Result Att. O 26 * at Xavier L, 1-2 (2ot) 873 * - BIG EAST regular-season match O 22 * at SIU Edwardsville W, 1-0 2,167 A 29 #20 Stanford W, 2-0 2,612 O 29 * Providence L, 0-1 2,117 ^ - BIG EAST Tournament O 26 * Drake W, 2-0 2,236 A 31 Santa Clara W, 1-0 1,719 N 3 * Georgetown W, 3-0 2,027 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium O 29 * Central Arkansas W, 3-0 2,180 S 5 Western Illinois W, 1-0 3,750 N 6 ^ Xavier W, 3-1 1,676 N 5 * Evansville W, 2-0 3,540 S 7 Cincinnati W, 3-0 1,624 N 10 ^ at #22 Providence W, 2-1 2,568 N 11 ^ #22 Bradley W, 1-0 1,985 S 13 at Tulsa T, 1-1 (2ot) 2,500 N 13 ^ at #15 Butler L, 1-2 1,443 N 13 ^ Missouri State W, 1-0 2,243 S 16 Illinois-Chicago W, 3-1 1,509 N 17 $ Tulsa W, 3-0 1,404 N 20 $ Northern Illinois W, 3-0 2,034 S 20 #20 Saint Louis L, 0-1 (ot) 4,544 N 20 $ at #18 Kentucky W, 3-2 935 N 27 $ #13 UC Santa Barbara W, 2-1 2,436 S 27 * at Villanova W, 1-0 347 N 26 $ Providence L, 1-2 2,539 D 4 $ #12 South Florida W, 1-0 (ot) 2,341 S 30 UMKC W, 2-0 613 * - BIG EAST regular-season match D 9 $ % & vs. #14 Charlotte T, 0-0 (2ot) 9,623 O 4 * Seton Hall W, 3-2 1,727 ^ - BIG EAST Tournament * - MVC regular-season match O 7 at Drake W, 1-0 852 $ - NCAA Tournament ^ - MVC Tournament O 11 * Butler W, 2-1 2,684 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium $ - NCAA Tournament O 15 * at St. John’s W, 1-0 667 % - College Cup, Hoover, Ala. O 18 * at Xavier T, 1-1 (2ot) 839 & - Charlotte advances on penalty kicks 4-1 O 25 * #17 Georgetown L, 0-1 3,023 2017 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium O 29 * #24 Marquette W, 2-0 1,462 9-7-2 Overall N 1 * at DePaul W, 2-1 333 3-4-2 BIG EAST (T-5th) N 7 * #19 Providence W, 3-0 2,556 Head Coach: Elmar Bolowich 2012 N 14 ^ vs. #23 Providence L, 0-1 653 Date Opponent Result Att. 17-4-3 Overall N 23 $ #25 Oregon State W, 1-0 1,275 A 25 #17 Virginia Tech L, 0-2 4,089 5-0-1 MVC (1st) N 30 $ #14 Xavier W, 2-1 1,044 A 27 Grand Canyon W, 1-0 (2OT) 1,326 MVC Tournament Champs D 5 $ & UMBC T, 0-0 (2ot) 2,407 S 1 at #1 Stanford L, 0-3 1,916 NCAA College Cup * - BIG EAST regular-season match S 3 at California W, 3-0 310 Head Coach: Elmar Bolowich ^ - BIG EAST Tournament, Chester, Pa. S 8 South Florida W, 2-0 3,889 Date Opponent Result Att. $ - NCAA Tournament S 16 * at Butler L, 2-3 (OT) 413 A 24 Northern Illinois W, 3-1 2,689 & - UMBC advances on penalty kicks, 4-3 S 19 Tulsa W, 2-1 (OT) 1,311 A 31 + #7 Akron T, 1-1 (2ot) 3,077 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium S 23 * Villanova W, 2-0 2,887 S 2 + Rutgers W, 3-0 2,418 S 26 at #24 Nebraska-Omaha W, 1-0 4,986 S 7 at Santa Clara W, 1-0 768 S 30 * at Seton Hall L, 0-2 321 S 9 at Saint Mary’s W, 1-0 1,007 O 6 $ * St. John’s T, 2-2 1,011 S 14 ^ #14 Old Dominion L, 1-2 6,848 O 10 Drake W, 6-1 1,144 S 16 ^ William & Mary W, 2-1 1,451 O 14 * Xavier W, 4-1 1,309 S 22 Saint Louis L, 1-3 3,638 O 21 * at Providence T, 0-0 (2OT) 1,734 S 25 at Tulsa L, 0-2 467 O 25 * at Marquette L, 3-4 702 S 29 * at Drake T, 0-0 (2ot) 553 O 28 * DePaul W, 2-0 1,087 O 2 Loyola-Chicago W1-0 1,178 N 1 * at #18 Georgetown L, 1-3 357 O 6 * SIU Edwardsville W, 1-0 (2ot) 1,440 N 4 ^ at St. John’s L, 1-3 518 O 9 at Princeton W, 3-2 (1ot) 224 * - BIG EAST regular-season match O 13 * at Central Arkansas W, 3-0 234 ^ - BIG EAST Tournament O 16 UMKC W, 3-0 1,290 $ - Match ended during 81st minute because of O 20 * Bradley W, 1-0 1,843 lightning O 27 * Missouri State W, 1-0 1,143 Home matches in bold at Morrison Stadium 61 Creighton University Location Nine sophisticated on-campus The Creighton Campus Creighton is located in Omaha, Neb., living environments include two junior/ Creighton is committed to being a model which has a metropolitan area population senior townhome residence halls with living-learning campus environment. The of more than 900,000. technologically rich furnished apartments 120-acre campus is located within walking and complete kitchens. distance of downtown Omaha and many Creighton History Creighton students take part in more recreational, cultural and entertainment Founded in 1878, Creighton University is than 1 million hours of community service at opportunities. The campus design and a private university, one of 27 Catholic, local, national and international community master plan have received top awards in Jesuit colleges and universities in the organizations annually. landscape and architecture. United States. Creighton welcomes students of At the center of campus is the heart all religious beliefs and the University of the University, the historic and recently Creighton Today encourages students to participate in restored St. John’s Church, as well as the Creighton is a nationally recognized retreats, faith-sharing opportunities and California Street Mall, the Lied Education university, known for student-centered multi-faith services. Center for the Arts, the V.J. and Angela education and significant undergraduate Students may enroll in Creighton’s Skutt Student Center and the Kiewit student research opportunities. As a service-learning semester in the Fitness Center. Jesuit university, Creighton is committed Dominican Republic, faculty-led courses In recent years, the University to academic excellence and service to taught abroad, or study abroad in nearly undertook the largest renovation project others, and seeks to create an inclusive, every country in the world through in its history, with more than 100,000 sq. ft. diverse community. exchange or affiliate programs. of academic space being remodeled. Since In addition to the College of Arts and Creighton also offers online education 2000, Creighton has invested more than Sciences, the University’s oldest and and has campuses outside of the $300 million in on-campus improvements largest college, Creighton includes the Omaha area, including a health sciences and planned expansion to create a more Heider College of Business, the College campus in Phoenix; occupational therapy vibrant and robust campus: of Nursing, the College of Professional partnerships with the University of Alaska • Michael G. Morrison, S.J., Stadium Studies, the Graduate School, and the in Anchorage and Regis University is home to Creighton’s soccer teams Schools of Dentistry, Law, Medicine, and in Denver; and a campus for nursing and also hosts high school, club and Pharmacy and Health Professions. students in Grand Island, Neb. international soccer events and a variety For 2021, Creighton is ranked in the of Omaha community events. top third among Nebraska Universities by Student Snapshot • The Hixson-Lied Science Building, the U.S. News & World Report, and was also Creighton has more than 8,000 students: renovated Rigge Science Building and nationally recognized for undergraduate More than 4,000 are enrolled as Criss Health Sciences Building form the teaching, innovation and for being a best undergraduates and more than 4,000 are centerpiece of Creighton’s undergraduate value school. enrolled in the graduate or professional and health professions’ leading approach The Princeton Review named programs. to teaching and research. Creighton as one of the nation’s top 386 One-third of Creighton undergraduates • Davis Square and Opus Hall are colleges and universities in its 2021 college participate in research before graduating. upperclassman townhome residence guide. The University was also recognized Last year, Creighton undergraduates made halls located on the east side of campus. in the 2021 Princeton Review Guide to nearly 400 presentations at local, regional • The Wayne and Eileen Ryan Athletic Green Colleges for its sustainability efforts. and national research conferences. Center and D.J. Sokol Arena serves as an on-campus home to Creighton women’s Campus Life Our Alumni basketball and volleyball. Creighton offers more than 200 student More than 71,000 Creighton alumni live • The Rasmussen Fitness & Sports Center clubs and organizations, including in 89 countries, with 29 percent living in serves the fitness needs of all students. academic, athletic, cultural, Greek, Nebraska. The largest number of alumni • The Mike and Josie Harper Center political, professional, service, social and who live outside the United States reside became the home of the Heider College spiritual groups, as well as opportunities in Canada, Japan and Malaysia. of Business in the fall of 2013. to work on campus publications. • The Championship Center opened in 2014, and Ruth Scott Training Center opened in 2019. • A state-of-the-art 200,000-square foot School of Dentistry education and clinic building at 21st and Cuming streets opened in the summer of 2018. • In fall 2020, Creighton debuted a reconfigured 24th Street at the historic center of the campus, through a partnership with the city of Omaha.

St. John’s Church and Creighton Hall are the focal points on the west side of campus. 62 Creighton University Bluejay Athletics on the Web Visit the official home page of the Bluejays at www.gocreighton.com to get the latest news on Creighton athletics. The site contains updated as well as archived rosters, schedules and statistics, media guides, photo galleries and links on everything related to Bluejay athletics. Free live audio/video for home games in the following sports: baseball, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s soccer, as well as volleyball.

For More Information For more information on Creighton University, check out the University’s website at www.creighton.edu, or call the Admissions Office at 1-800-282-5835 (toll free) or 402- 280-2703.

Social Media Links For more information about Creighton University, visit us on Facebook or Twitter at: Facebook.com/creightonuniversity Facebook.com/gocreighton Twitter.com/creighton A view of the Creighton mall at night. Twitter.com/gocreighton

History of Billy Bluejay Billy Bluejay is the official mascot of the Creighton University Athletics Department. Creighton is a private, Jesuit NCAA Division I school in Omaha, Neb., founded in 1878. Prior to 1924, with no official athletics nickname, University publications and news media often referred to Creighton athletic teams by the school’s colors – the “White and Blue,” or vice versa. Because of Creighton’s location atop a bluff, the team was occasionally designated unofficially as the “Hilltoppers,” but the name lost favor because at least six other teams in the country went by the same nickname. At the behest of Creighton’s Athletics Board and Alumni Association, the Omaha Bee newspaper coordinated a public contest in late 1923 to select a nickname and mascot for Creighton University athletic teams. After reviewing 200 entries, the Athletics Board decided upon “Bluejays” because the color of the bird was in keeping with school colors. The Bluejays were originally depicted by an ornithologically correct rendition of the bird. In 1941, Creighton alumnus Joseph P. Murphy, a 1931 graduate of the College of Business and, at the time, a Creighton journalism professor and the head of its public relations department, designed a graphical image of the bird with a more human stance and expression. Murphy’s 1941 design remained largely intact for the past 72 years with only minor revisions. While it is unclear on the exact year the first walking costume mascot modeled after Murphy’s 1941 graphical image appeared publicly or the first time the image or mascot were referred to as “Billy Bluejay,” many costumes were created, changed/re-designed and replaced over seven decades as Billy became a fixture at Creighton Athletics events, roaming the sidelines to cheer on his beloved Bluejays. In October, 2013, in conjunction with Creighton’s move to the BIG EAST Conference, the University unveiled a new Athletics brand – athletic logo, sport-specific logos and corresponding secondary marks designed to increase overall awareness of the Creighton University Bluejays - locally, regionally and nationally. The new logo was designed to build on the history, tradition and love of previous Billy Bluejay icons while maintaining the integrity of the past and establishing the new Creighton Bluejay brand as a distinct and recognizable identity in the BIG EAST. Creighton Athletics turned to Street Characters to provide an updated Billy Bluejay walking mascot costume, one that was more vibrant, more athletic and one that more closely resembled the new athletics brand. The new-look Billy Bluejay walking mascot costume was complete in early December and he made his first public appearance in front of over 17,000 fans when the Creighton men’s basketball team hosted Nebraska on Dec. 8, 2013 at CHI Health Center Omaha. 63 Omaha, Neb.

Think of Omaha as center court: a dynamic and unique destination in the center of the country, full of action. Omaha has this special spirit that fills the city like an arena full of fans whose team just won with a buzzer beater. Excitement abounds for what it has built, what it has accomplished and what’s still ahead. It’s a spirit born on the banks of the Missouri River, a city founded in 1854 by land speculators convinced they were at the heart of something new. Soon after, the transcontinental railroad was built and Omaha emerged as a hotbed of activity and new technologies. There is a great story about Omaha’s growth in the early days that really speaks to the pioneering spirit of A view of the Omaha skyline at night. More than 900,000 people live in metro the city. As Omaha prepared to lay Omaha, and about 1.2 million people live within a 50-mile radius. underground cables for telephones, workers were trying to figure out the people listen, learn and make money. In international conservation needs. easiest way to string the lines. Being fact, as you look at the four Fortune 500 There are three Smithsonian-affiliated an inventive bunch, Omahans solved companies that call Omaha home, they museums in Omaha that feature diverse the problem by getting ferrets to help are all innovators: Berkshire Hathaway, offerings. Gaze at a 15,000-pound glass carry the lines through the tunnels. Union Pacific, Mutual of Omaha and sculpture suspended in the air at the Sounds extraordinary, but it worked. Peter Kiewit Sons’. Joslyn Art Museum, hop on board Today, Omaha is at the center of the It’s not just the business community Harry S. Truman’s press train at the telecommunications industry. Call for that embodies that spirit; you can also Durham Museum, or “pilot” a fighter jet a hotel reservation from anywhere in listen to it, touch it, taste it and feel it at the Strategic Air and Space Museum, the U.S. and you are probably calling when you visit Omaha. home to some of the most prized and Omaha. The city is home to the Hyatt, Home to the world’s largest indoor rarely displayed military aircraft. Discover Marriott, Radisson, and Omni reservation rainforest, next to the world’s how nature can seem brand new as you centers. That infrastructure is also key largest indoor desert under the world’s walk through over 100 acres of lush and to the nation’s defense. Offutt Air Force largest geodesic dome, Omaha’s rare flora at Lauritzen Gardens, Omaha’s Base, home to STRATCOM, is based here. Henry Doorly Zoo is a can’t miss when botanical center. STRATCOM is the nation’s eyes, ears and you’re in town. Experience what it’s Omaha is a mecca to music pioneers, muscle when it comes to protecting the like to go underground and see rare as the city is known by many as the country. creatures that only come out at night, or nation’s premier hot spot for the indie That spirit is also seen in Omaha’s surround yourself with sharks as you walk rock scene. It’s home to famed Saddle modern day pioneers. Warren Buffett, through an 850,000-gallon underwater Creek Records and nationally renowned one of the wealthiest men in the world, is a tunnel. Talk about innovative: The zoo bands such as Bright Eyes, The Faint plainspoken Omaha-born and bred has spent $6 million on a research facility and Cursive. financial pioneer. When Warren speaks, allowing it to respond to national and Omaha is a city that never forgets its past. The Old Market is the true merging of old and new. The historic warehouse district was preserved and transformed into an art, shopping and dining district. Unique shops and restaurants lining cobblestone streets, it’s a place to remember where you’ve been and where you’re going. The Bob Kerrey Pedestrian Bridge S-curves its way across the Missouri River. This one-of-a-kind structure is the longest pedestrian bridge to link two states. It’s just one more example of how Omaha stays fresh and innovative, all thanks to that indelible pioneering spirit.

Creighton’s baseball team shares the same home as the College World Series, TD Ameritrade Park Omaha.

64 BIG EAST Conference Creighton University officially became a member of the BIG EAST Conference at 12:01 a.m. on July 1, 2013. The 2020-21 season will be Creighton’s eighth in the league. Creighton, along with fellow newcomers Butler and Xavier, joined a BIG EAST that retained DePaul, Georgetown, Marquette, Seton Hall, Providence, Villanova and St. John’s. The partnership was announced on March 20, 2013, in New York. The University of Connecticut rejoined the league in the summer of 2020. The 2020-21 academic year will be the “We feel that joining the BIG EAST Conference gives 42nd in the history of the BIG EAST, a league synonymous with men’s basketball that us a greater opportunity to recruit, retain, develop, has evolved into a well-rounded league that and graduate outstanding students and outstanding competes nationally at the highest level in sports across the board. BIG EAST student-athletes. We know that continued success and basketball squads have captured 14 titles in excellence in each of our athletics programs will not the last 20 years, including a Villanova title in men’s basketball in 2017-18. be easy. We chose to join the BIG EAST not because it Since opening its doors in 1979, the league will be easy to be successful, we know it will be difficult. has won 42 national championships in eight At Creighton University, we believe that goals that are different sports and 145 student-athletes have won individual national titles through difficult to achieve are the most worthwhile.” 2019-20. Since the league’s 2013 alignment, the BIG EAST has produced 11 individual - Creighton’s McCormick Endowed national champions. Athletic Director Bruce Rasmussen All 11 universities reside within a top-71 media market, including nine schools in a top-37 market. The BIG EAST became a reality on May 31, 1979, following a meeting of athletic directors from the original seven-school alliance.

65 BIG EAST Conference The 2020-21 academic year will be the eighth the BIG EAST Men’s Basketball Tournament. The and faith can drive positive social change. Ackerman since the BIG EAST Conference began a new era by schools also announced the addition of three was a delegate at the inaugural Vatican conference returning to its basketball-centric heritage. distinguished institutions — Butler, Creighton and has served on an advisory committee to develop Since the league’s reconfiguration in 2013, the and Xavier — and forged a landmark, long-term the framework and content for the initiative. BIG EAST has established itself as one of the nation’s broadcast partnership with FOX Sports. The BIG The BIG EAST hosts Freshmen Fundamentals, a exceptional Conferences and a leader in collegiate EAST moved its headquarters from its original unique program designed to assist men’s basketball athletics, taking a proactive role on national issues. location in Providence, R.I., to midtown Manhattan student-athletes in the transition from high school Strong leadership is paramount as college in New York City. The new era officially began on to college and the elite level of BIG EAST basketball. athletics continues to face many significant July 1, 2013. The league hosts Transition Game for women’s challenges, exacerbated by the Coronavirus The BIG EAST has been lauded as a longstanding basketball, which assists women’s basketball pandemic. Dynamic leadership has been a staple of leader in innovative concepts, particularly television, student-athletes in the transition from college the BIG EAST throughout its history. and that reputation continues with the conference’s player to emerging professional on and off the court. Val Ackerman, who previously served as founding relationship with FOX Sports. The BIG EAST has The conference crowns champions in 22 sports. President of the WNBA, President of USA Basketball enjoyed a successful multi-year partnership with In men’s basketball, all 10 teams participated in the and U.S. representative to the International FOX Sports and its national cable network FS1. postseason for the first time in conference history in Basketball Federation (FIBA), was named the FOX’s comprehensive coverage of BIG EAST men’s 2019. Men’s basketball teams have earned 32 NCAA BIG EAST’s fifth Commissioner in 2013. Under basketball includes the broadcast of all regular- invitations in six years (2014-2019), averaging 5.3 per her leadership, the BIG EAST has maintained its season games on FOX, FS1, or FS2, as well as the season. reputation for achievement at the highest levels and BIG EAST Tournament at Madison Square Garden, BIG EAST men’s basketball programs have continued its influence on the national collegiate college basketball’s longest-running postseason enjoyed extraordinary success. Villanova has won landscape, with numerous conference and campus conference tourney held at the same venue. NCAA Championships in 2018, 2016 and 1985. administrators currently serving on important NCAA BIG EAST institutions are located in eight of Georgetown and Marquette also have won the committees. Ackerman is one of the few sports the nation’s 36 largest media markets, including national title. Butler, DePaul, Providence, St. John’s executives who has held leadership positions in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., and Seton Hall have all made the Final Four. The both men’s and women’s sports at the collegiate, Indianapolis, Hartford/New Haven, Cincinnati and BIG EAST placed three men’s basketball teams in professional, national team and international level. Milwaukee. the 1985 Final Four — Georgetown, St. John’s and For 2020-21, the BIG EAST has grown to 11 FOX Sports platforms carry extensive coverage Villanova—still the only time this has occurred in members. The University of Connecticut, a member of women’s basketball regular-season play and the NCAA history. of the conference from 1979 to 2013, was officially BIG EAST Women’s Basketball Tournament. Every The BIG EAST has achieved recent success readmitted on July 1, 2020. UConn brings a rich Olympic sport championship is carried on a network in other sports as well. The Georgetown men’s history of academic and athletic excellence, or digital platform. soccer team won the 2019 NCAA title. A BIG EAST especially in the sport of basketball. The Huskies’ The BIG EAST has also increased the visibility with team has won the NCAA women’s cross country women’s program won eight of its 11 national the BIG EAST Digital Network (BEDN). In 2014-15, the championship four of the last 11 years (Villanova championships as a BIG EAST member. The men’s league became the first collegiate conference to be twice, Providence and Georgetown once), with team won three national titles under the BIG EAST hosted on the FOX Sports mobile platform. For the one runner-up finish (Providence). Georgetown’s umbrella and an additional crown in 2014. sixth straight year, BEDN has aired live events with women’s soccer team reached the College Cup in In its sports venues, the BIG EAST has produced 12 an emphasis on women’s basketball, soccer and 2018 and 2016. As an affiliate member in field hockey, national champions over the past seven academic Olympic sport regular-season and championship Connecticut has won three national championships years. Seven BIG EAST teams have captured national events. in seven years. Denver, an affiliate member in men’s titles, including two in men’s basketball. BIG EAST Founded in 1979 by Dave Gavitt, the former , won the NCAA crown in 2015. student-athletes have won national championships Providence men’s basketball coach and athletic In the 41 years since the original league opened in five individual events. director, the BIG EAST Conference became a reality its doors, BIG EAST teams have won 42 national In the classrooms, 62 BIG EAST athletic programs in May of 1979. Providence, St. John’s, Georgetown, championships in eight different sports with 145 were recognized in 2019-20 by the NCAA with Public Syracuse, Seton Hall, Connecticut and Boston student-athletes winning individual national titles Recognition Awards for outstanding academic College formed the original seven-school alliance, in the league’s history. achievement in the previous academic year. The BIG and the conference became an immediate national EAST ranked third among all Division I conferences power in men’s basketball. While the composition of League Schools in the overall APR rate and has consistently been the BIG EAST has evolved, the focus of its schools has Butler www.butlersports.com ranked among the top three since reconfiguration not changed, reflecting a tradition of emphasizing UConn www.uconnhuskies.com in 2013. academic strength and fair play. Creighton www.gocreighton.com Outside of the arenas and playing fields, the To complement its athletic successes, the DePaul www.depaulbluedemons.com BIG EAST has always adhered to an unwavering conference launched BIG EAST Serves in 2014 to Georgetown www.guhoyas.com commitment to academic integrity, athletic align with the service missions of the member Marquette www.gomarquette.com excellence and community service while offering institutions. Initiatives housed under the BIG EAST Providence www.friars.com opportunities to help student-athletes to reach their Serves umbrella, the BIG EAST Career Consortium Seton Hall www.shupirates.com potential as students, athletes and leaders. and the national partnership with the It’s On Us St. John’s www.redstormsports.com In the summer of 2020, the conference launched campaign against campus sexual assaults, reflect Villanova www.villanova.com “BE the Change,” a conference-wide advocacy the conference’s commitment to developing the Xavier www.goxavier.com platform that will enable BIG EAST stakeholders to complete BIG EAST student-athlete and making engage on a range of contemporary racial and social a positive contribution to campus communities. justice issues. The BIG EAST hosts a Well Being Forum online In December of 2012, DePaul, Georgetown, series to help provide institutional personnel with Marquette, Providence, St. John’s, Seton Hall and information, insights and basic training so they can Villanova announced their intention to separate better support the mental and physical health of from the conference’s FBS football-playing schools their student-athletes. and form an independent association. The seven Commissioner Ackerman and the BIG EAST have schools reached an agreement to retain the BIG taken a leadership role in Sport at the Service of EAST name and assume the conference’s long- Humanity, an initiative created by the Vatican’s term pact with Madison Square Garden to host Pontifical Council for Culture to focus on how sport Val Ackerman Commissioner 66 Creighton Administration McCormick Endowed President Athletic Director Rev. Daniel S. Hendrickson, S.J.,Ph.D. Bruce Rasmussen The Rev. Daniel Hendrickson, S.J., Ph.D., is Bruce Rasmussen is in his 27th year as McCormick the 25th president of Creighton University. Endowed Athletic Director, and 41st overall at A Nebraska native, Fr. Hendrickson earned Creighton University, in 2020-21. his B.A. in psychology and theology from During Rasmussen’s tenure, Creighton has risen in 1993 and entered the to prominence with its success on and off the Society of Jesus in 1994. He received his M.A. in field, impressive facilities and record-breaking philosophical resources from Fordham fundraising efforts. Rasmussen also helped lead University, a Master of Divinity degree from the Jesuit School of the charge for one of the biggest moves in school history when the school Theology at Santa Clara University, and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from accepted an invitation into the BIG EAST Conference in March of 2013. Columbia University. Rasmussen’s efforts continue to be recognized on a national level. In Fr. Hendrickson’s first contact with Creighton was as a student in June of 2019, he became Division I’s first four-time recipient of the Under the Jesuit Humanities Program in 1996. He returned as an adjunct Armour Athletic Director of the Year Award, an honor he also received in instructor of philosophy from 2000 to 2003. He also served as an adjunct 2004, 2010 and 2015. Rasmussen was also honored by the Division I-AAA professor with Creighton’s Institute for Latin American Concern (ILAC) Athletic Directors Association with the 2019 Gary Cunningham Lifetime program in Santiago, Dominican Republic, in 2002. Fr. Hendrickson was Achievement Award at the annual NACDA Convention. a visiting instructor at Jordan University College in Morogoro, Tanzania, Rasmussen wrapped up a five-year term on the highly-esteemed and an adjunct professor of philosophy at Fordham University. NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Selection Committee, serving as In 2012, he returned to Marquette University as associate vice chairman in his final year in 2018. president in the Office of the Executive Vice President, working Under Rasmussen’s leadership, Creighton has built new athletic closely with the president, provost and academic deans. He then became facilities in virtually every sport. an associate provost for academic initiatives at Marquette. While in Michael G. Morrison, S.J., Stadium and CHI Health Center Omaha administrative posts at Marquette, Fr. Hendrickson also taught each opened during the 2003-04 academic year. The Wayne and Eileen Ryan semester jointly in the Department of Philosophy and College of Athletic Center and D.J. Sokol Arena opened in 2009 and immediately Education, and he served as the co-director of the Burke Scholars gave Creighton’s women’s basketball and volleyball teams a top-notch service and leadership program. He was elected to the Creighton Board facility to call home. of Trustees in 2013. Today, he serves on the boards of Boston College and TD Ameritrade Park Omaha, home to Bluejay baseball and the College and also is a trustee of the Red Cloud Indian School, World Series, opened in 2011 to rave reviews. A year later Creighton’s Pine Ridge, South Dakota. He was elected president of Creighton in opened a student recreation center named the Rasmussen Center in his December 2014 and began his tenure July 1, 2015. honor. Fr. Hendrickson has a special interest in education with a global In 2014, the Championship Center opened as a practice facility perspective. His international travel and immersion experiences have for men’s basketball and athletic training, academic and athletic taken him to over 30 countries on nearly every continent. He is a trustee of performance headquarters for all sports. ILAC/Centro de Educación para la Salud Integral (CESI) in the Dominican Most recently, the spring of 2019 saw the opening of Ruth Scott Republic and a trustee of Jesuit Worldwide Learning (JWL). Training Center, a practice facility for women’s basketball and volleyball. Fr. Hendrickson, who grew up in Fremont, Neb., and graduated Since Rasmussen assumed the role of athletics director, Creighton from Mount Michael Benedictine High School in Elkhorn, comes from a has won 42 regular-season and 42 conference tournament titles, which family of educators. His identical twin, the Rev. D. Scott Hendrickson, S.J., have helped lead to 87 postseason appearances. Since joining the BIG D.Phil., is an associate professor of modern languages at Loyola University EAST, Creighton has won league titles in baseball, men’s basketball, men’s Chicago, while his older brother, Ryan C. Hendrickson, Ph.D., is dean of soccer, women’s basketball and volleyball. the Graduate School and vice provost for sponsored research at Eastern Creighton has appeared in the postseason in 21 of the last 23 years in Illinois University. men’s basketball, 24 of the last 28 men’s soccer seasons and nine of the last 10 NCAA Tournaments in women’s volleyball. A member of the College World Series of Omaha, Inc., Executive Committee, Rasmussen continues to play a vital role in Creighton and the city of Omaha remaining as host of the College World Series. He was one of six individuals on the CWS Oversight Committee that helped decide the location for the new downtown TD Ameritrade Park Omaha, which will help keep the CWS in Omaha for another 25 years. With Creighton serving as host, the CWS has welcomed more than 300,000 fans in each of the last 14 times it has been held. Creighton’s reputation as one of the nation’s top academic institutions is reflected in the success the Bluejay student-athletes have had in the classroom during Rasmussen’s service as athletics director. Creighton’s baseball, softball, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s cross country, women’s golf, women’s soccer as well as men’s and women’s tennis teams all have received national awards for their academic success. Bluejay student-athletes have owned GPAs of 3.30 or above in 25 straight semesters entering the fall of 2020. Rasmussen accepted the associate athletics director position in 1992 after going 196-147 during a 12-year run as Creighton women’s basketball head coach, which culminated in the program’s his- toric 1991-92 season. The 1992 Western Athletic Conference Coach of the Year, Rasmussen led the 1991-92 Bluejay women to a program-record 28 wins (28-4), the WAC regular-season and tournament championships and a first-round NCAA Tournament victory in the program’s first-ever trip to the “Big Dance.” With that 28-4 record in 1991-92, Rasmussen completed his college coaching career with a 196-147 record, good for a .571 winning percentage. In 2008, he was inducted into the Omaha Sports Hall of Fame. After serving as associate athletics director for two years, 1992-94, Rasmussen was named athletics director on Aug. 1, 1994. A native of Webster City, Iowa, Rasmussen and his wife, Jill, have five children: Megan, David, John, Katie and Grace.

67 Head Coaches & 2019-20 Highlights

Kirsten Dan Debbie Judd Jim Chris Bernthal Booth Chipps Conry Cornell Flanery Gannon Volleyball Rowing Women’s Golf Men’s Golf Women’s Basketball Cross Country

Tom Greg Ross Ed Johnny Brent Lilly McDermott Paule Servais Torres Vigness Tennis Men’s Basketball Women’s Soccer Baseball Men’s Soccer Softball

2019-20 Athletics Highlights 2019-20 Season Records • Creighton student-athletes owned a GPA of 3.48 in the spring of 2020 and own a collective 3.40 cumulative Sport Overall Conference Finish GPA. Baseball 5-10 NA* • Creighton had at least one NCAA Tournament team for the 33rd straight school year as the Bluejay Men’s Basketball 24-7 13-5 T-1st/BIG EAST volleyball team reached the Second Round of the NCAAs. Postseason bids of the men’s and women’s basketball Women’s Basketball 19-11 11-7 T-3rd/BIG EAST teams were virtually assured before both tournaments Men’s Cross Country NA NA 8th/BIG EAST were canceled in early March. • Creighton men’s basketball beat No. 8 Seton Hall Women’s Cross Country NA NA 7th/BIG EAST on March 7 to clinch a share of its first BIG EAST regular-season title. Men’s Golf NA NA* • Creighton men’s basketball started the year picked Women’s Golf NA NA* seventh in the preseason BIG EAST poll, but finished the year ranked a best-ever seventh in the nation. Rowing NA NA* • Creighton ranked second nationally in men’s soccer in average home attendance, fifth in men’s basketball, 21st Men’s Soccer 8-7-2 4-4-1 T-4th/BIG EAST in volleyball and 25th in women’s soccer. Each of those Women’s Soccer 8-7-3 2-4-3 8th/BIG EAST teams led the BIG EAST in average home attendance. • Connor Ramlo (men’s soccer), Brittany Witt (volleyball) Softball 13-12 NA* and Nick Monkemeyer (men’s cross country) were named CoSIDA Academic All-Americans. Men’s Tennis 6-5 NA* • Five different men’s basketball alums (Kyle Korver, Women’s Tennis 11-4 NA* Anthony Tolliver, Doug McDermott, Justin Patton, Khyri Thomas) played in the NBA for the second straight Volleyball 25-6 17-1 1st/BIG EAST season. • Men’s basketball coach Greg McDermott won his 500th NCAA Second Rd career game, a 77-65 win at Xavier on January 11th. *Spring sports championships canceled because of COVID-19 pandemic • The volleyball team made its eighth consecutive NCAA Tournament and won a sixth straight BIG EAST regular-season title.

68 Creighton Athletics Staff Directory

Senior Administration

Steve Mark Lisa Adrian Bruce Adrian Kevin Lauren Kyle Brace Burgers Chipps Dowell Rasmussen Rider Sarver Steier Waterstone Associate Associate Associate AD Assistant McCormick Assistant Associate Miltenberger Associate Athletic Athletic / SWA Athletic Endowed Athletic Athletic Athletic Athletic Director Director Director Athletic Director Director Director Development Director Staff

Athletic Development Compliance Facilities

Tommy Shelley Nelson Rachel Tayler JJ Jaden Brandon Anderson Gates Pouliot Rider Vena Borecky Hill McCarville Sports Information Marketing/Multimedia/Sales

Rob Anthony Glen Tim Wilbur Joey Chris Joe Anderson Robinson Sisk Callahan DeLashmet Gardner Newhouse Willman

Athletic Training Athletic Performance

Stephanie Ben Curtis Aaron Molly Dan Scott Brad Hamersky McNair Self Spencer Trevathan Bailey Bankers Schmidt Business Administrative Assistants Academics Ticketing

Nicole Kevin Margaret Patty Adam Brad Brian Payne Schoenherr Bennett Galas Polacek Abramson Tweed 69 Student-Athlete Support Academic and Athletic Success • Creighton’s student-athletes combined for a 3.48 GPA last spring. The student-athletes also own a 3.40 cumulative GPA. • The NCAA uses a tool for the evaluation of the academic quality of participating programs. The Academic Progress Report is intended to gauge the progress student-athletes are making to degree completion and graduation. In the spring of 2020, Creighton had five teams post multi-year APR scores in the top 10 percent of all squads in their respective sports: volleyball, women’s basketball, women’s cross country, women’s golf and women’s Steve Brace Lisa Chipps Adam Polacek tennis. Associate AD/Director Associate AD/ Assistant Director • Forty-four Creighton student-athletes have earned a combined 55 CoSIDA Academic of Senior Woman of Academic All-American honors all-time. Nick Monkemeyer (men’s cross country), Connor Student-Athlete Administrator Services Ramlo (men’s soccer) and Brittany Witt (volleyball) gave CU three CoSIDA Academic Support Services All-Americans during the 2019-20 school year. Outstanding Student-Athletes • Creighton had 167 student-athletes make the Dean’s List at least one time last year, including 102 student-athletes who earned the honor both semesters. Creighton prides itself on the quality education it provides for stu- • Thirty-eight student-athletes (14 percent) earned perfect 4.0 GPAs during the spring dent-athletes. Those listed below were members of the Dean’s List 2020 semester, including men’s soccer’s Jake Ronneberg and Landon Sloan. (3.5 GPA) in 2019-20. (*Earned Dean’s List honors both semesters.) • Thirteen teams had team GPAs of 3.20 or better last spring and nine (women’s Baseball Women’s Golf Juelle Love* basketball, men’s cross country, women’s cross country, men’s golf, women’s golf, Jason Allbery* Katie Allen* Sammi Matula* Paul Bergstrom Delaney Benson Emma Paule* women’s soccer, men’s tennis, women’s tennis and volleyball) had GPA’s of 3.59 or Mitch Boyer* Kristin Goertz Jordy Rothwell* better last spring. Joseph Bryant* Margaret Hickey* Katie Sullivan Patrick Collins* Amelia Lee* Morgan Szarka Justin Divelbiss* Claire Orcutt* Jordan Vanderloo Ryan Mantle* Gabby Tremblay* Michaela Weist All-Time CoSIDA Academic All-Americans Andrew Meggs Katie Wilson* Emma Yackley* Jack Peluso* Rick Apke, 1977 & 1978 Jennie Hartjes, 2015 Connor Ramlo, 2019 Alan Roden* Rowing Softball Ty Blach, 2011 Shane Havens, 2003 Jamie Reiss, 2007 Jacob Snyder Mackenzie Allen Sam Alm* Megan Bober, 2012 Fabian Herbers, 2014 & 2015 Ernie Rongish, 1973 Jared Wegner Emma Carpender Lexie Black Karen Crouch* Logan Black Dennis Bresnahan, 1970 Brian Holt, 2011 Darin Ruf, 2009 Men’s Basketball Alissa Dolan Saren Croker Krystle Campa, 2003 Vincent Keller, 2015 Dave Schrage, 1983 Jett Canfield Ava Edison Haley Gatica* Becca Changstrom, 2013 Brooks Kendall, 2018 Paul Silas, 1964 Ally Einbeck Kaitlynn Hunt Tyler Clement, 2018 Taryn Kloth, 2018 Jean Tierney, 1983 Women’s Basketball Victoria Farrington* Sydney Jenkins* Jaylyn Agnew* Honor Foutch* Brittney Manthie Sam Crowley, 2018 Sven Koenig, 2018 Anthony Tolliver, 2007 Carly Bachelor* Grace Frechette* Kate Mullally* Zach Daeges, 2005 & 2006 Harrison Lang, 2017 Carrie Welle, 1998 Payton Brotzki* Katie Graham* Cayla Nielsen* Brody Deren, 2004 Dan Lawler, 1999, 2000 & 2001 Matt Wieland, 2005 Temi Carda* Mary Hartigan Mikayla Paulson* Chloe Dworak Sydney Hiatt Courtney Sandell* Ethan Finlay, 2011 Michael Lindeman, 2003 & 2004 Jaali Winters, 2017 & 2018 Olivia Elger Hayley Johnson* Madeline Vejvoda* Becky Flynn, 1995 Christy Lunceford, 1997 Brittany Witt, 2019 Mykel Parham* Destiny Jordan* Christine Fukumoto, 2005 Nick Monkemeyer, 2019 & 2020 Tatum Rembao Bernadette Lyons* Men’s Tennis Heidi Geier, 1998 & 1999 Tara Oltman, 2008, 2009 & 2010 Rachael Saunders* Rebecca Meyer* Stratton Brown Lauren Miranda Nick Campbell Emily Greisch, 2006 Jace Peters, 2011 Men’s Cross Country Cecilia Mohacsi Jose Oscar Diaz Bill Hahn, 1993 Jessica Powers, 1999 Danny Bohnemann* Madeline Smith* Armando Gandini* Michael Buckley Gretchen Strobbe* Joe Hoff* Aidan King* Erica Svenby Daniel Lopez-Rey* Creighton’s Championship Center Jack Larsen Kollyn Weimer Henry Lozano* Nick Monkemeyer* Eliana Wright Mac Mease Features New Academic Resource Center John Quigley* Luke Moorhead* Bryce Shirley* Men’s Soccer Boston Small* Braeden Beard Women’s Tennis In the summer of 2014, Creighton opened its Championship Center, a Christopher Smith Pepe Cejudo* Julia Aguirre facility that will benefit all student-athletes for years to come. Located Jackson Stamper* Daniel Espeleta Meredith Benson* adjacent to D.J. Sokol Arena and Max Wehrle Aron Gislason Erin Epperson* Luke Haakenson Laura Higueras* the Wayne and Eileen Ryan Athletic Women’s Cross Country Paul Kruse Julia King* Center, the Championship Center is Kate Cox* Musa Qongo Kate Krueger* Erica Cradeur* Connor Ramlo Kristal Kuo* highlighted by the Wayne and Eileen Katie Fukushima Jake Ronneberg* Kendra Lavallee* Ryan Athletic Training Center, the Haley Fye* Landon Sloan Gabby O’Connor* Parker Family Academic Resource Jordan Harmon* Tor Trosten Sarah Wilcox* Marguerite Hendrickson* Collin Valdivia Center, Doug McDermott Players Danielle Hotalling* Luke Waters Volleyball Lounge and the Kyle Korver Courts Elizabeth Kettler* Duncan Werling Megan Ballenger* inside D.J. Sokol Gymnasium, among Amy Leasure Madelyn Cole Caroline Pass* Women’s Soccer Erica Kostelac many other features. Ashley Riley* Ansley Atkinson* Makenna Krause* Erin Smith* Renee Berak Grace Nelson* Haylee Blach* Mahina Pua’a The Parker Family Academic Men’s Golf Emma Braasch* Kiana Schmitt* Resource Center features private Tucker Knaak* Ashleigh Cearlock Megan Sharkey* meeting and study rooms with Cade McCallum Josie Clough* Ally Van Eekeren* Andrew McCormick* Keelie Fothergill* Brittany Witt* access to tutors, a computer lab, Ethan Olson* Karina Gilson wireless internet, couches, tables, Jack Olson* Anna Grassinger* Brandt Radloff* Gabby Grimaldi* chairs and many more accoutre- Joe Torkelson* Jenny Grissom ments to help Bluejay student- Kevin Wahle* Mikayla Grocki* athletes make the most of their Lauren Harkes* Lea Høiness* time. Taryn Jakubowski Kate Johnson Aida Kardovic Cassie Legband*

70 Recent Morrison Stadium Renovations Opened in 2003, Michael G. Morrison, S.J., Stadium is considered one of the nation’s elite collegiate soccer venues. A new project to construct coaching, staff and resource offices to the north side of the upper west concourse was announced in July of 2017. The project, completed in the summer of 2018, includes the addition of suites to enhance fan experience and improve event space, a winterization to provide maximize usage opportunities for student-athletes, staff and the community and a renovation of the existing club area to include an in-venue multi-purpose space for student-athletes. Morrison Stadium received a surface upgrade prior to the start of the 2019 season. FieldTurf’s CORE system was installed during the final weeks of July and first of August. The FIFA Quality Pro certified surface is featured at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, the home facility of the MLS Atlanta United FC and at Providence Park in Portland, the home facility of the MLS Portland Timbers and NWSL Portland Thorns. CORE includes VersaTile, The addition of suites and coaches offices closed up areas which features a state of the arc drainage system and shock that were formally “gaps” along the second level. absorption. The drainage system offers a free draining surface area of 82 percent and the shock absorption properties are expected to lessen the impact of the normal wear and tear of soccer. FieldTurf’s CoolPlay system completed the playing surface. The CoolPlay composite dressing has been tested to keep the playing surface about 35 degrees (fahrenheit) cooler than traditional sand or rubber infill systems. The Bluejays, who annually rank among NCAA leaders in attendance, are 143-28-21 overall and 52-10-5 in conference play all-time at Morrison Stadium. The record attendance for a match at Morrison Stadium is 6,848 on Sept. 14, 2012 between Creighton and Old Dominion, while the venue has hosted more than 5,000 fans a total of 11 times (including 6,500 for a U.S. Women’s National Team Friendly in July of 2010), most recently on Aug. 24, 2018 (5,473) against No. 11 Clemson.

Morrison Stadium’s new FieldTurf CORE system was The new turf is designed to allow for quicker recovery time completed on Aug. 11, 2019, two days prior to the team’s first between training and matches. training.

Coaches offices were built, which allowed the men’s and The construction of a broadcast booth near midfield moved women’s soccer coaches to move from the Ryan Athletic the broadcasters perspective from the north goal line to Center to the upper level of Morrison Stadium. the center of the action. Creighton men’s soccer will be featured on BIG EAST Digital Network and Jays Video during the 2020-21 season. 71 Media Information

Credentials Bluejay Men’s Soccer Media Directory Members of the media needing credentials for men’s soccer must contact the Sports Information Office (402-280-5801) at least 48 hours NEWSPAPERS LOCAL TELEVISION prior to kickoff. Omaha World-Herald KETV (ABC, Ch. 7) 402-444-1000 402-978-8957 Press Box and Game Day Media Services 14th & Dodge Streets 1001 S 10th Street Limited seating is available for working media in the press box, Omaha, NE 68102 Omaha, NE 68131 located at the north end of the second level concourse. Media guides Beat Writer: Jon Nyatawa Sports Director: Andy Kendeigh and updated statistics from both schools will be available in the press box. Following the match, a final box score will be made available to Creightonian KMTV (CBS, Ch. 3) media outlets in attendance. A final box score and game summary will 402-280-4058 402-593-2706 be transmitted to requesting media outlets not in attendance. 2500 California Plaza 10714 Mockingbird Drive Omaha, NE 68178 Omaha, NE 68127 Interviews Sports Director: Adam Krueger During the week, all player interviews should be LOCAL RADIO coordinated through the Sports Information Office KOIL (1290 AM) & KZOT (1180 AM) NET Sports and Anthony Robinson (Phone: 402-280-5801; 402-342-2000 402-472-9333 Email: [email protected]). Interviews with head coach 5011 Capitol Ave. PO Box 83111 Johnny Torres may be arranged by calling the same number on Omaha, NE 68132 Lincoln, NE 68111 weekday mornings. Station Contact: Mark Shecterle Producer: Joe Turco Game-day player interviews, prior to the game, are not permitted. At home and on the road, Torres and requested players will be available KOZN (1620 AM The Zone) WOWT (NBC, Ch. 6) via Zoom or a phone call after the match following a 10-minute cooling 402-342-2000 402-233-7940 off period. 5011 Capitol Ave. 3501 Farnam Street Omaha, NE 68132 Omaha, NE 68131 Photo Policy Station Contact: Mark Shecterle Sports Director: Joe Nugent Only accredited photographers on assignment will be issued credentials. Photographers may pick up a copy of the game roster in the KMMQ WIRE SERVICES press box or upon entering the stadium. Photographers are permitted (La Nueva 99.5 FM y 1020 AM) Associated Press NOT permitted on field level. 402-342-2000 402-391-0031 5011 Capitol Ave. 1700 Farnam Street Creighton Athletics on the Web Omaha, NE 68132 Omaha, NE 68102 Fans of Creighton athletics now have several ways to stay connected Station Contact: Mark Shecterle Sports Writer: Eric Olson with the Bluejays online. For the most up-to-date information on Bluejay athletics, visit the Creighton athletic department’s homepage at KXSP (AM 590 ESPN Radio) ONLINE GoCreighton.com. 402-573-0590 White & Blue Review Fans can also follow the “Creighton Athletics Page” on 5030 N. 72nd St. WhiteAndBlueReview.com Facebook.com/GoCreighton and the official Twitter feed for Bluejay Omaha, NE 68135 Beat Writer: Matt DeMarinis athletics at Twitter.com/GoCreighton. Follow the men’s soccer program at Station Contact: Nick Handley Facebook.com/CreightonSoccer, Twitter.com/CreightonMSOC and Instagram.com/CreightonMSOC. KFAB (1110 AM) 402-556-5060 5010 Underwood Avenue Omaha, NE 68132

Directions to Morrison Stadium Media Guide Credits Morrison Stadium is located between 17th and 19th Streets The 2020-21 Creighton Bluejay Men’s Soccer Media Guide is a production of to the north of Cass Street, on the east side of the Creighton the award-winning Creighton University Sports Information Office. Interior University campus in downtown Omaha. The main design, writing and editing by Assistant Sports Information Director Anthony Robinson using an MacBook Pro with InDesign and Adobe Photoshop entrance and ticket window is located on the west side, at the CS6 software. Editorial assistance provided by Associate Athletics Director intersection of California and Florence Blvd. (19th Street). Kevin Sarver, Sports Information Director Rob Anderson, Associate Sports Information Director Glen Sisk, Creighton Marketing and Public From Interstate 80: Take Interstate 80 to the I-480 interchange. Follow Relations and the men’s soccer staff. Cover design by Creighton Athletics I-480 North to I-480 East, take the Capitol/Civic Auditorium exit. Turn Marketing. Images provided by Steven Branscombe, David Cao, Garrett left on 19th Street (Florence Blvd.) at the light signals and follow to the Ellwood/Colorado Rapids, Columbus Crew/Greg Bartram, Chi Philadelphia facility. Union/Sideline Photos, Olivia Brestal/FC Dallas, Creighton University Creative Services, C.W. Pack Sports, Fr. Don Doll, S.J., Vladimir Cherry, From Interstate 29: Take Interstate 29 to the I-480 interchange in Iowa. Bob Ervin, Eric Francis, Doug French, Bob Hunt, Mark Kuhlmann, Go west on I-480 across the bridge into Omaha. Take the 14th Street Mark Lauer, Nik Layman, Minesota United FC, Montreal Impact, Ruben exit which will run into Cass Street. Follow Cass Street to the facility. Morales, New England Revolution, A.J. Olnes, Tony Quinn, Anthony Robinson, Mark Romesser, Jamie Sabau/Getty Images, Thom Shea/ From the Airport: From the airport, make a left onto Abbott Drive. MLS/WireImage, Erik Schelkun/University of Dayton, Kent Sievers, Follow Abbott Drive towards downtown, Abbott Drive will change into Sporting Kansas City, Steve Smith/MLS/Getty Images, Jamie Sabau/ Cuming Street. Follow Cuming Street to 17th Street. Turn left on 17th MLS/Getty Images, Philadelphia Union, Dave Weaver and WireImage. Street and follow to the facility. Printing by Creighton University Print Center.

72 2020-21 CREIGHTON MEN’S SOCCER

#1 Paul Kruse • GK #2 Musa Qongo • D #3 Luke Mitchell • D #4 Mitch Dobson • D #5 Jake Ronneberg • D Jr. • Heilbronn, Germany Sr. • Johannesburg, So. • Denver, Colo. Jr. • Lake Munmorah, So. • Naperville, Ill. South Africa Australia

#6 Keegan Boyd • M #7 Daniel Espeleta • M #8 Charles Auguste • M #10 Diego Dutilh • F #11 Diego Gutierrez • F Jr. • DuPont, Wash. Jr. • San Jose, Costa Rica Jr. • Montreal, Quebec So. • Santiago, Chile Sr. • Omaha, Neb.

#12 Dominic Briggs • F #13 Duncan McGuire • F #14 Callum Watson • M #15 Landon Sloan • M #17 Alejandro Maillet • M So. • Oconomowoc, Wis. Fr. • Omaha, Neb. Jr. • Essex, England Fr. • Raleigh, N.C. Jr. • Copenhagen, Denmark

#18 Owen O’Malley • M #19 Braeden Beard • F #21 Steevie Lamarre • F #22 Cameron Briggs • D #23 Mark O’Neill • M Fr. • Cary, N.C. Fr. • Wichita, Kan. Fr. • Port-au-Prince, Haiti Fr. • Oconomowoc, Wis. Fr. • Louisville, Colo.

#24 Nathan Schnur • GK #25 Jake Ashford • D #28 Luke Waters • D #30 Andrw Karcher • GK #33 Antonio Chavez Borrelli •GK Fr. • Evergreen, Colo. So. • Shawnee, Kan. Fr. • Omaha, Neb. Fr. • Houston, Texas Jr. • Los Angeles, Calif.

Johnny Torres Ian Sarachan Michael Gabb Mitch Kavanagh Julius Fohr Head Coach Assistant Coach Assistant Coach Volunteer Assistant Graduate Assistant 2021 MEN’S SOCCER SCHEDULE FEB. 20 AT MARQUETTE* 4:00 PM FEB. 24 CENTRAL METHODIST% 3:00 PM FEB. 27 AT NEBRASKA-OMAHA 2:00 PM MARCH 03 DRAKE 2:00 PM MARCH 06 XAVIER* 11:00 AM MARCH 13 AT DEPAUL* 1:00 PM MARCH 17 BUTLER* 2:00 PM MARCH 20 MARQUETTE* 1:00 PM MARCH 24 AT XAVIER* 10:00 AM MARCH 29 VS. MISSOURI STATE^ 2:00 PM APRIL 03 DEPAUL* 1:00 PM APRIL 10 AT BUTLER* 1:00 PM *DENOTES BIG EAST MATCH | %DENOTES EXHIBITION | ^DENOTES MATCH IN KANSAS CITY TIMES ARE CENTRAL STANDARD TIME AND ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE

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