CONTENTS

S 22008008 SSENIORSENIORS N O I TTABLEABLE OFOF CCONTENTSONTENTS P Table of Contents 1 Helena Zbilut 35 5

M Quick Facts 2 Newcomers 36

2008 Roster 2 N A Media Information 3 C H 2008 Preview 4 RRECORDS/HISTORYECORDS/HISTORY A C Coaching Staff 6 557-807-80

Head Coach Michael Moynihan 6 A

E Letterwinners 57

Associate Head Coach David Nikolic 8 Retired Numbers 60 T U Assistants/Support Staff 9 22007007 IINN RREVIEWEVIEW All-Time Numbers 61 O G 39-4539-45 Moynihan Awards 62 U A Recap 39 National/Regional Award Winners 63 E Statistics 40 League/Academic Award Winners 65 R L

Schedule/Results 41 NCAA Teams 66 N

Box Scores/Notes 42 Coaching Records 71 A N Recap 44 Annual Leaders 72 M O PPANTHERANTHER PROFILESPROFILES The Horizon League 45 Team Records 73 Z 10-3810-38 Individual Records 74 E I

Erin Kane 10 Miscellaneous Records 77 N R

Jodi Klagos 12 Yearly Results 78 T O

Beth Steuer 14 v. Ranked Opponents 81 S

H Sarah Teegarden 16 Andrea Wisniewski 18 E Kayla DeJardin 20 22008008 OOPPONENTSPPONENTS

M Erin Kreuser 22 46-5646-56 I Kate Megna 24 /Ohio State/Samford 46 T Louise Vraney 26 Marquette/Western / State 47 - Leslie Deebach 28 New Mexico/UNLV/ University 48 TTHISHIS ISIS UWMUWM 9 Erin DeYoung 29 Brown/Northwestern/Green Bay 49 82-9582-95 Nicole Hirsch 30 Loyola/Wright State/Cleveland State 50 University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee 82 Kelly McGrath 31 Youngstown State/Butler/Detroit 51 City of Milwaukee 84 Heather Roadhouse 32 Valparaiso/Horizon League Tournament 52 UWM Athletics 86 Nicole Sperl 33 All-Time Record v. Opponents 53 Chancellor Carlos Santiago 88 Sarah Talbert 34 All-Time Series Histories 54 Director of Athletics Bud Haidet 89 Athletics Administration 90 The 2008 Women’s Soccer Media Guide was written, designed and edited by Kevin Conway, Milwaukee Assistant Staff Directory 91 Sports Information Director. Editorial assistance provided by Kevin O’Connor and Chris Zills of the UWM Sports The Student-Athlete 92 Information Offi ce, David Nikolic and Brittany Oliveira. Photographs courtesy of Trevor Thompson, John Ward, Sports Medicine 94 Jeff Golden, Joe Raymond, Kevin Conway, Milwaukee Convention and Visitors Bureau and UWM Photographic The Pavilion 95 1 Services. Printing by Commercial Communications, Inc. of Hartland, Wis. Engelmann Field 96

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide 2008 PANTHERS QQUICKUICK FACTS/ROSTERFACTS/ROSTER MEDIA INFORMATION QQUICKUICK FACTSFACTS NNUMERICALUMERICAL ROSTERROSTER GENERAL INFORMATION # NAME YEAR POS HEIGHT HOMETOWN/HIGH SCHOOL Name University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee 1 Erin Kane Sr. GK 5-9 St. Charles, Ill./North City/Zip Milwaukee, Wis. 53211 2 Mary Wandolowski Fr. MF/F 5-3 Aurora, Ill./Batavia Founded 1885 3 Erin DeYoung So. D/MF 5-6 Grand Rapids, Mich./Grand Rapids Christian Enrollment 28,000 4 Chelsea Colling Fr. F 5-3 Appleton, Wis./Xavier Nickname Panthers 5 Nicole Hirsch So. F 5-5 Brookfi eld, Wis./Central Colors Black and Gold 6 Heather Roadhouse So. MF 5-5 Brookfi eld, Wis./Central Home Field Engelmann Field 7 Nicole Sperl So. MF 5-4 Wauwatosa, Wis./West Capacity 2,000 8 Louise Vraney Jr. F 5-2 DePere, Wis./DePere S Affi liation NCAA Division I 9 Makenzie Gillaspie Fr. MF 5-8 Omaha, Neb./Elkhorn N Conference Horizon League 10 Sarah Hagen Fr. MF/F 5-11 Appleton, Wis./North

O Chancellor Dr. Carlos Santiago 11 Sarah Talbert So. D/MF 5-6 Brookfi eld, Wis./Central I Director of Athletics Bud Haidet 12 Keara Thompson Fr. MF 5-2 Calgary, Alberta/Bishop Carroll P Assoc. AD/SWA Kathy Litzau 13 Sarah Teegarden Sr. MF 5-7 Batavia, Ill./Batavia 5

M Athletics Phone 414-229-5151 14 Kate Megna Jr. D/MF 5-8 Middleton, Wis./Middleton

N A Ticket Offi ce Phone 414-229-5886 15 Kayla DeJardin Jr. D/MF 5-5 Oneida, Wis./Pulaski

16 Helena Zbilut So. D 5-9 Kenosha, Wis./Bradford C H WOMEN’S SOCCER INFORMATION 17 Laurel Ragalie Fr. F 5-7 Kenosha, Wis./Bradford A C

Head Coach Michael Moynihan 18 Beth Steuer Sr. MF/F 5-3 Madison, Wis./LaFollette A

E Alma Mater, Year Wisconsin, 1990 19 Leslie Deebach So. GK 5-8 Woodbury, Minn./Woodbury Record at UWM 132-65-31 (11 years) 23 Sammy Vovos Fr. F 5-6 Middleton, Wis./Middleton T U Career Record Same 24 Andrea Wisniewski Sr. D/MF 5-8 Mundelein, Ill./Mundelein O G Associate Head Coach David Nikolic 25 Erin Kreuser Jr. MF/F 5-4 West Allis, Wis./Hale U A Assistant Coach Chris Maravalli 26 Jodi Klagos Sr. F 5-3 Madison, Wis./Memorial E Volunteer Assistant Coach Brittany Oliveira 27 Kelly McGrath So. MF 5-3 Wauwatosa, Wis./Wisconsin Lutheran R L N

2007 Record 13-4-4 30 Lindsay Boeckman Fr. GK 5-10 Fort Dodge, Iowa/Fort Dodge

2007 League Record/Finish 7-0-1/1st A N 2007 League Tourn. Results Cleveland St. - W, 1-0 HEAD COACH: Michael Moynihan (12th Season) M O Butler - W, 2-1 (2ot) ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH: David Nikolic (15th Season) Z E

I Loyola - T, 2-2 (2ot, Loyola adv. on PKs, 3-2) ASSISTANT COACH: Chris Maravalli (2nd Season) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 17/5 VOLUNTEER ASSISTANT COACH: Brittany Oliveira (1st Season) N R

Starters Returning/Lost 7/4 ATHLETIC TRAINER: Becky Worman (19th Season) T O

Newcomers/Redshirts 8/0 S H

HISTORY E First Year of Soccer 1984

M All-Time Record 225-158-43 (.579) I NCAA Appearances/Last 5/2006 AALPHABETICALLPHABETICAL ROSTERROSTER PPRONUNCIATIONSRONUNCIATIONS T 30 Boeckman, Lindsay GK 17 Ragalie, Laurel F Boeckman BECK-man - Last NCAA Opponent #1 Notre Dame Result L, 1-0 (2006 Second Round) 4 Colling, Chelsea F 6 Roadhouse, Heather MF Deebach DEE-bock 9 All-Time Tournament Record 0-5-2 19 Deebach, Leslie GK 7 Sperl, Nicole MF DeJardin DAY-jard-in 15 DeJardin, Kayla D/MF 18 Steuer, Beth MF/F Klagos KLA-gos MEDIA RELATIONS 3 DeYoung, Erin D/MF 11 Talbert, Sarah D/MF Kreuser KROY-zer Asst. SID/W-Soccer Contact Kevin Conway 9 Gillaspie, Makenzie MF 13 Teegarden, Sarah MF Megna MEG-na Offi ce Phone 414-229-2413 10 Hagen, Sarah MF/F 12 Thompson, Keara MF Ragalie ra-GAH-lee Cell Phone 414-750-0298 5 Hirsch, Nicole F 23 Vovos, Sammy F Steuer STOY-er E-mail [email protected] 1 Kane, Erin GK 8 Vraney, Louise F Vovos vo-VOSE SID Kevin O’Connor 26 Klagos, Jodi F 2 Wandolowski, Mary MF/F Vraney ver-RAINY Assistant SID Chris Zills 25 Kreuser, Erin MF/F 24 Wisniewski, Andrea D/MF Zbilut HEL-len-a z-BEE-loot SID Fax 414-229-5749 27 McGrath, Kelly MF 16 Zbilut, Helena D Nikolic NIK-o-LITCH 2 Press Box Phone 414-750-0298 14 Megna, Kate D/MF Maravalli mare-a-VALLEY Internet www.uwmpanthers.com Oliveira OLIVE-era 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com QUICK FACTS/ROSTER MMEDIAEDIA INFORMATIONINFORMATION 2008 PANTHERS

SSPORTSPORTS INFORMATIONINFORMATION UUWMPANTHERS.COMWMPANTHERS.COM Assistant SID/Women’s Soccer Contact Kevin Conway Sports Information Director Kevin O’Connor Asstant Sports Information Director Chris Zills Press Box Phone (414) 750-0298

Website www.uwmpanthers.com Conway Offi ce/Cell 414-229-2413/750-0298 Conway E-Mail [email protected] Media members are invited to visit www.uwmpanthers.com - the offi cially- O’Connor Offi ce/Cell 414-229-5674/750-2091 sanctioned website of the UWM Athletic Department - to keep up with all of S O’Connor E-Mail [email protected] the latest information on the Milwaukee women’s soccer program. The site N Zills Offi ce/Cell 414-229-4593/750-2090 features weekly releases and previews prior to gameday, plus complete game

O Zills E-Mail [email protected] recaps, postgame quotes, box scores and up-to-date statistics. Fans can also I SID Offi ce Fax 414-229-5749 follow the stats of all home games live online. The site also features profi les P Shipping Address UWM Athletics - Sports Information on every UWM women’s soccer player, as well as special feature stories on 5

M UWM Pavilion, Room 140 the team, updated throughout the season. Plus the website - hosted by CSTV

N

A Milwaukee, WI 53211 Online - has updated information on all 15 of UWM’s varsity sports. C H INFORMATIONAL RELEASES A C The sports information offi ce produces weekly press releases for women’s

soccer. To be added to an electronic mailing list for prompt delivery of those A E

releases to your home or offi ce computer, contact Kevin Conway. The release T U is also available on the internet. O G U A CREDENTIAL REQUESTS E All requests for media credentials for UWM women’s soccer home matches R L

should be made to Kevin Conway in the UWM Sports Information offi ce as N early as possible. A N M O INTERVIEWS Z All interviews with players and coaches should be arranged through Kevin E I

Conway. Players’ personal phone numbers will not be released to the media. N R Practices are open to the media and players and coaches are available to the T

O media at that time. MILWAUKEE NEWSPAPERS S H

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel UWM Post

E KKEVINEVIN CCONWAYONWAY 333 W. State St. UW-Milwaukee - Union-EG80 Milwaukee, WI 53203 Milwaukee, WI 53201

M SPORTS INFORMATION • 5TH SEASON • MILWAUKEE, 2003

I (P): 414-224-2310 (P): 414-229-4578 Kevin Conway is in his fi fth year as an assistant sports information director at T (F): 414-224-2049 (F): 414-229-4579 UWM. He is the main contact for women’s soccer, women’s , track - and fi eld and cross country, while also handling much of the design work for 9 MILWAUKEE TELEVISION Milwaukee media guide covers, posters and other publicity materials. WDJT-TV (CBS-Ch. 58) WITI-TV (Fox-Ch. 6) 809 S. 60th St. 9001 N. Green Bay Rd. Conway graduated from UWM in 2003 with a degree in broadcast journalism Milwaukee, WI 53214 Milwaukee, WI 53209 before spending a year as a media relations intern at Miami (Ohio) University. (P): 414-607-8140 (P): 414-586-2181 He was Miami’s contact for women’s soccer, swimming and diving, track and (F): 414-777-5802 (F): 414-586-2141 fi eld, cross country and , while assisting with the men’s basketball and programs. WISN-TV (ABC-Ch. 12) WTMJ-TV (NBC-Ch. 4) 719 N. 19th St. 720 E. Capitol Dr. As an undergraduate at Milwaukee, Conway worked in the sports information Milwaukee, WI 53233 Milwaukee, WI 53212 offi ce performing a variety of duties, working extensively on Horizon League (P): 414-937-3337 (P): 414-967-5316 Championships for men’s and women’s soccer and men’s basketball. He also (F): 414-342-7505 (F): 414-967-5466 3 produced the 2002 and 2003 media guides.

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide 2008 PANTHERS SSEASONEASON PREVIEWPREVIEW SEASON PREVIEW

PANTHERS SET SIGHTS ON NCAA TOURNAMENT, NINTH-STRAIGHT LEAGUE CROWN IN 2008 Milwaukee returns seven starters in search for third NCAA Tournament in four seasons The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee women’s “Our midfi eld and forward lines will be up to the fense at outside back, the most starts of any of soccer team enters each season with the same task this season. They will be called upon to give the returners. Junior Kayla DeJardin may be the goals: win the Horizon League and then make and us more goal-scoring. We are still looking for one most experienced, starting nine times last season advance in the NCAA Tournament. player to emerge as a consistent threat. We need while also seeing time in the midfi eld. Senior An- one player to step up and score 12-or-more goals. drea Wisniewski has an inside track, starting six Last season, the Panthers fell shy of that goal. It’s been quite some time since we’ve had that.” times in 2008, including a number of late-season S After winning an eighth-straight league regular matches. N season title, the team was stopped short on pen- Eight newcomers will be added to the mix all over

O alty kicks in the league championship game. On the fi eld, with a handful being put into competi- Junior Louise Vraney and sophomore Helena Zbi- I the bubble for an at-large berth into the NCAA tion for starting roles on that defense. lut also saw time in the back, with Zbilut making P Tournament, the team again fell just short and three starts. Vraney played some outside back as 5

M was left out of the fi eld. “Our incoming players will give us tremendous a sophomore, though focused more on her usual

N A depth and will greatly enhance our athleticism,” forward position.

But, seven starters return to Milwaukee in 2008 Moynihan said. “It will make for very competitive C H looking to make it back to the NCAA Tournament training sessions. That’s where playing time will “Kayla and Drea have the most experience of our A C

for the third time in four years. be earned and I look forward to seeing who steps returning defenders,” Moynihan said. “Drea has A

E up. Whoever it is, our team will be better from this fought through a lot of injuries and, if she can stay

“We are always excited to get a new season competition.” healthy, she off ers us a strong, athletic presence. T U started,” head coach Michael Moynihan said. “We DeYoung could play in the back or up front and O G played well in the spring—playing good soccer GOALKEEPERS Helena is good technically and is a smart player.” U A and scoring goals—and we have every reason to Kane returns for her senior season, having already E feel optimistic about this season.” played more minutes in goal than any player in A surprise candidate for an outside defender po- R L N

school history. She has also already set school re- sition is sophomore Nicole Sperl. Sperl led the

One question mark lingers on the Panthers’ minds cords for career goals against average, wins and team in scoring last season with fi ve goals and A N as preseason training begins and that is the back shutouts. four assists (14 points) as a forward. Sophomore M O line, which lost three starters from a year ago. Kelly McGrath, who played in six games in the Z E

I But, if the defense is a question mark, that would She will be backed up by sophomore Leslie Dee- midfi eld last season, saw time in the back during

make goalkeeping and the midfi eld exclamation bach and freshman Lindsay Boeckman. Deebach the spring and is another player that could spend N R

points for the team. appeared in one game last season as a redshirt time on defense. T O

freshman and combined with Kane on a shutout. S

H “The key for us this season will be to establish a Boeckman, meanwhile, was a three-time all-con- “Sperl played outside back for us in the spring

consistent back four,” Moynihan said. “We lost ference selection at Fort Dodge High School in for the fi rst time and we felt she did a good job,” E three starters from last season and multiple play- Iowa. Moynihan said. “Kelly really came on in the spring.

M ers made up that fourth position. Finding the Both players have the fl exibility to play multiple I right chemistry back there will be one of our goals “Erin is our number one goalkeeper and has been positions and could fi nd time in the back.” T

- for the preseason.” outstanding for us. We have a lot of confi dence in her abilities,” Moynihan said. “Leslie put in good Freshman Makenzie Gillaspie will also likely play a 9 Seniors Erin Kane in goal and Sarah Teegarden in work in the off -season and will be pushing Erin factor in shoring up the Panther defense. Primarily the midfi eld have started and each been named for playing time. Lindsay can come in this season a midfi elder at Elkhorn High School in Nebraska, to the all-league fi rst team over their fi rst three and has two keepers with experience that she can she was a two-time all-state selection and helped seasons together. The pair will lend great leader- learn from.” her team to two state titles. ship to a backline that will see three new full-time starters. DEFENDERS Other incoming players that might be given a look Milwaukee has become known for a stingy defen- back there are Sammy Vovos, Laurel Ragalie and “Our goalkeeper play will be big,” Moynihan said. sive squad that yields few shots and even fewer Mary Wandolowski. “We are fortunate in that Erin is experienced and goals. With three starters gone, it remains to be is coming off a strong summer. She has always seen who will make up the back line. ”While we lack a group that has played a lot to- 4 been good for us. We expect her to continue get- gether, I think we have a very deep roster and a ting better and anchor our defense from the goal. Sophomore Erin DeYoung made 12 starts on de- lot of talent to work with,” Moynihan said. “I’m 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com SEASON PREVIEW SSEASONEASON PREVIEWPREVIEW 2008 PANTHERS

not concerned with what position players have “Nicole played defensive central mid for the re- Kreuser led the team with seven assists in 2007 played in the past. The key is fi nding what works gional team this past summer and they loved her and added three goals of her own. best for this group and how it all fi t together. I’m back there,” Moynihan said. “If she can assume confi dent in the talent we have and I’m confi dent that role, it would free up Teegs to go forward Klagos is working her way back from a second in the chemistry and the sense of ‘team’ we have more and be more of an off ensive force than she ACL reconstruction and hopes to join the lineup in developed. was allowed last season.” mid-season.

“It may take some time, but if people can look at Junior Erin Kreuser split time between being an Sophomore Nicole Hirsch rounds out the return- it from a team perspective and contribute where attacking midfi elder and forward last season, ers at forward while Erin DeYoung could see time S the team needs them, we’ll establish a formidable emerging as a true playmaker. She led the team up top, as well. Hirsch capped her rookie season N defense once again.” with seven assists, added three goals and fi nished on a strong note, combining on both of UWM’s

O second on the team with 13 points. goals in the league title game last season, tallying I MIDFIELDERS a goal and assisting on the other. She also ended P Teegarden, junior Kate Megna and sophomore

Senior Beth Steuer will also be back in the mid- the spring on a high note, scoring twice against 5

M Heather Roadhouse each return to the midfi eld dle. She has played in all 43 games the last two Iowa.

after outstanding seasons in 2008. Teegarden and N A seasons, tallying six goals and two assists in that Megna were all-league fi rst-team selections and C

H time. Last season, both of her goals came as Freshmen Thompson, Sarah Hagen and Laurel Roadhouse started all 21 games and was named game-winners. Ragalie will bring new blood to the mix. Each A C

to the Soccer Buzz Freshman All-Region team. player is technically sound and has shown to be A

E Two freshmen midfi elders join the cause in Keara profi cient at scoring during their high school ca- Sophomore Sarah Talbert will also fi gure promi- T U Thompson and Wandolowski. The coaching staff reers. Thompson is a three-year member of the nently. After earning a starting position as a fresh-

thinks Thompson will be another playmaker like Canadian U20 National Team pool. Hagen is a O G man, she was set back with an ankle injury. Kreuser and should see her fair share of time in three-time all-state honoree and tallied 33 goals U A the midfi eld or up top. Wandolowski is a fl exible as a senior, including 10 game-winners. Ragalie E Teegarden has been a clutch all-around player for R player that will likely see most of her time in the was the Gatorade Wisconsin State Player of the L

the Panthers in her career. She is second in school N midfi eld, but could be looked at in a number of Year as a senior and fi nished her prep career with history with eight game-winning goals and leads A

N positions. 104 goals. all active players with 13 career goals. She has M O also proven herself as one of the top defensive FORWARDS “Sarah is a tall target that is really good with the Z midfi elders in the region. E I In recent years, Milwaukee has lacked a go-to ball,” Moynihan said. “She will allow us to have a N

R scorer capable of putting up gaudy numbers on big player up top that can hold the ball. Hopefully

“Teegs has had a great career,” Moynihan said. T

O off ense. Instead, UWM has relied on a number our small, speedy players will be able to combine

“She is coming off a good spring and is going to S of players stepping up and contributing to the eff ectively with her. That’s something we haven’t H have a great season. She is a ball-winner and has a phenomenal work rate, but she is also very con- off ense, with four players reaching the 10-point had in a while.” E fi dent and crafty with the ball at her feet.” mark in each of the last three seasons. Wandolowski, Vovos and another freshman, Chel- M I Megna has been a key playmaker for Milwaukee Moynihan and his staff will have a good number sea Colling, will all be new to the squad and be T and broke out last season. She fi nished tied for of players vying for the go-to scorer’s role, includ- looking to contend for playing time at forward. - third on the team in scoring with four goals and ing the leading scorer from each of the last three Wandolowski earned all-area honors multiple 9 four assists (12 points). Roadhouse saw a lot of seasons. Sperl remains an option at forward, but times and Vovos was an all-region second team time as a defensive midfi elder and out wide. other returning scorers include Vraney, senior Jodi selection last season. Colling, meanwhile, scored Klagos and Kreuser. Vraney and Klagos have been 44 goals as a senior and shared area player of the “Kate had a great spring after having her best sea- slowed by injury, but have demonstrated their year honors with fellow freshman Hagen. son for us last year,” Moynihan said. “Heather has ability for fi nding the goal. done well for us in the midfi eld, but could also be “All of our forwards are very energetic and put in another option for us in the back. She’s another Vraney picked up six goals and two assists as a a great work rate, but as a whole we need to be player for us that will help on the fi eld with her freshman and added one of each last season. Kla- more technically profi cient at fi nishing,” Moyni- versatility.” gos, on the other hand, tallied fi ve goals and two han said. “We need to fi nd the right chemistry up assists as a freshman, but has been limited to two top and have them work together in an intelligent Another player whose versatility could impact the goals in 22 games (12 starts) since. After collect- manner. They will be more eff ective once they un- 5 midfi eld is Sperl. ing fi ve goals and an assist as a freshman in 2006, derstand each other’s role more.”

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide COACHING STAFF MMICHAELICHAEL MOYNIHANMOYNIHAN MICHAEL MOYNIHAN

S MMICHAELICHAEL MMOYNIHANOYNIHAN N HEAD COACH • 12TH SEASON • WISCONSIN, 1990 • 132-65-31 (.647) OVERALL RECORD/ 57-5-5 (.888) IN LEAGUE GAMES O

I With each passing year, the achievements continue to mount for head coach The national notoriety did not end there. MMOYNIHANOYNIHAN

P Michael Moynihan. The Panthers defeated a ranked oppo-

nent for the second time in team history YYEAR-BY-YEAREAR-BY-YEAR 5 M YEAR OVERALL LEAGUE He enters his 12th season at the helm of the Panther soccer team with eight- (W, 1-0 v. #16 Missouri) and fi nished N A straight Horizon League regular season championships in tow, a gaudy .888 among the nation’s leaders in goals 2007 13-4-4 7-0-1 C H wining percentage in league games, fi ve league coach of the year awards against average, shutout percentage 2006 16-4-2 7-0-0 2005 12-5-5 6-0-1 A C and a school-record 132 wins overall. Moynihan also sits just fi ve wins shy of and winning percentage. Ginny Graczyk

2004 11-8-3 7-0-0

becoming the winningest soccer coach, men’s or women’s, in school history. then became the program’s fi rst overall A

E 2003 9-9-1 5-1-0

All-American since 1985. 2002 11-6-5 5-0-1 T U Last season was no exception, as the Panthers ran through the league schedule 2001 15-5-0 6-0-0 O G unbeaten for the fourth-straight time and seventh time in eight seasons. Four Graczyk also headed a list of four all- 2000 11-8-1 5-0-0 U

A players were named to the all-league fi rst team, the squad’s most since 2001. region honorees, three all-league fi rst 1999 11-8-3 3-2-0 UWM also captured its fi rst crown, advanced to the league title E team members and three more players 1998 10-5-3 2-2-1 R

L game for a league-record ninth time and posted an unbeaten streak of at least selected to the league’s second team. N

1997 13-3-4 4-0-1 11 games for the third-straight season. The awards are not just limited to the

Total 132-65-31 57-5-5 A N field, as Graczyk was named an Aca- M

O Under his guidance, the Panthers experienced the most accomplished season in demic All-American—one of fi ve under Moynihan—and is one of 15 players

Z school history in 2005. Then, as an encore, Milwaukee topped the performance to be named to an academic all-region team since 1997. E I in 2006. That year, Milwaukee won a school-record 16 games on the way to a N

R seventh-straight Horizon League regular season championship. It earned the The NCAA Tournament trip was UWM’s fi fth overall, while its current streak of T

O fi rst women’s soccer at-large berth into the NCAA Tournament in school and eighth-straight regular season league crowns represent the second-longest league history. Then the Panthers matched the 2005 team by reaching the S

H current streak of its kind. Only Penn State in the Big Ten (10) has won more. second round of the NCAA Tournament for the second straight year. They also In that time, the Panthers have gone 48-1-3 in league play, including the E fi nished the season receiving votes in the NSCAA National poll and ranked by two longest league unbeaten streaks in league history. Currently, Milwaukee Soccer Buzz for the second-straight year. M has not lost a regular season league contest since 2003, a league-record 30- I straight games (28-0-2). T - Overall, Moynihan boasts a 57-5-5 (.888) record in league play and has led the 9 team to nine Horizon League regular season titles. The Panthers went 5-0 in 2000 to post the league’s fi rst perfect season since 1995. They followed that up with a 6-0 campaign in 2001 and then posted 7-0 league records in 2004 and 2006. UWM has also posted unbeaten seasons in 1997, 2002, 2005 and 2007 and has won the league tournament a league-record four times.

Already the winningest coach in history of the UWM women’s soccer program, toward the end of the 2005 regular season Moynihan became just the fourth soccer coach in school history, men’s or women’s, to reach 100 wins. He now has 132 for his career, fi ve back from breaking the school all-gender record. 6 Moynihan has never experienced a losing season while winning at least 10 games in all but one season.

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com MICHAEL MOYNIHAN MMICHAELICHAEL MOYNIHANMOYNIHAN COACHING STAFF THE MOYNIHAN FILE The Milwaukee native has been rewarded for his eff orts as he has won fi ve • 132-65-31 Career Record league coach of the year awards. He was honored after his fi rst season in 1997 and in back-to-back years in 2000 and 2001. He was then honored in 2004 • 48-1-3 Horizon League Record since 2000 and again last season. • Nine Horizon League Regular Season Championships

Moynihan’s players have also earned their fair share of awards, as four players • Five NCAA Tournament Appearances have been named Horizon League Player of the Year, including three straight • Advanced to NCAA Second Round (2005, 2006) from 1999 to 2001 (Fanta Cooper, 1999 and 2000; Erin Blaedow, 2001). • Four Horizon League Tournament Championships Panthers have also earned all-region honors 27 times and 60 all-league fi rst

S or second team awards. On top of that, Erin Kane and Sarah Teegarden were

N both Freshman All-Americans in 2005. • 2006 team ranked as high as #2 in the region

O and #20 in the nation by Soccer Buzz I In 1997, Moynihan’s first season as head coach, Milwaukee earned the

P school’s fi rst berth in the NCAA Tournament by virtue of winning the league

tournament. The Panthers went 13-3-4 that season after getting off to a • UWM has received votes in fi nal 5 M

school-record 7-0-2 start. N

A NSCAA National Poll in 2005, 2006 C H The next season saw the Panthers pull off their fi rst victory over a ranked foe, as they topped No. 8 Nebraska, 2-1, in overtime, in Lincoln, Neb., to open the A C • Two Wins Over Nationally-Ranked Teams season. In 1999, the Panthers spent the entire season ranked in the top 10 of A

E the Great Lakes Region by the NSCAA, another fi rst for the program. Sept. 17, 2006 (UWM 1, #16 Missouri 0)

T U Sept. 4, 1998 (UWM 2, #8 Nebraska 1 - 2ot) Moynihan began his collegiate coaching career in 1993 as an assistant coach O G with Milwaukee. Coaching under his sister, Susan, he helped the Panthers to U A a 40-33-4 mark in four seasons as an assistant. That time laid the groundwork • Five-Time Horizon League Coach of the Year E for when he would take over the program in 1997. (1997, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2007) R L N

Moynihan has taken pride in his soccer ties to the community. Giving back to • Great Lakes Region Coach of the Year Runner-Up A N the area that supported his growth as a player, Moynihan has coached and (Soccer Buzz, ‘06) M O infl uenced many local soccer clubs and players. He currently serves on the board Z of directors for the Shorewood Kickers and formerly was the the director of E I

coaching for the Wisconsin Girls Olympic Development Program. Moynihan also • Three All-Americans N R coached both the Milwaukee Pius XI varsity girls and Marquette High School 2006 - Ginny Graczyk (Soccer Buzz Third Team) T

O freshman boys teams, along with club soccer for F.C. Milwaukee. 2005 - Erin Kane S H

Moynihan and his players regularly host soccer camps and clinics throughout (Soccer America Freshman First Team/ E the area to help spread their knowledge and love of the game. His coaching Soccer Buzz Freshman Third Team) philosophy is based on his players having a simple desire to learn. He excels in M

I developing not only players’ skills, but also their appreciation for the game. 2005 - Sarah Teegarden

T (Soccer Buzz Freshman Honorable Mention) - He graduated from Wisconsin in 1990 with a degree in history. While at Wiscon-

9 sin, Moynihan was a four-year letterwinner with the Badger soccer team. He served two years as team captain and was also the recipient of the team’s Bill • Four Horizon League Players of the Year Reddan Award for Sportsmanship as a senior. In addition, he was named the 1997 - Lisa Krzykowski team’s most valuable freshman in 1986. Continuing his education, he earned a teaching certifi cate in secondary education from UWM in 1993. 1999, 2000 - Fanta Cooper 2001 - Erin Blaedow Moynihan holds a USSF ‘A’ coaching license as well as a USSF national youth license. He is currently on the advisory staff for Region II ODP and a coach for the ‘92 ODP team at the state level. He has also served as the head coach for • 31 All-Horizon League First Team Members the ‘91 ODP regional team • 29 All-Horizon League Second Team Members Moynihan and his wife, Holly, have one son, Gabriel, and reside in Shore- • 23 Horizon League All-Newcomer Team Members 7 wood.

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide COACHING STAFF DDAVIDAVID NIKOLICNIKOLIC ASSISTANTS/SUPPORT

S DDAVIDAVID NNIKOLICIKOLIC N ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH • 15TH SEASON • MILWAUKEE, 1992 O

I David Nikolic enters his fi fth season as the UWM women’s soccer associate In addition to his collegiate MMILWAUKEEILWAUKEE HIGHLIGHTSHIGHLIGHTS P head coach after having spent the previous nine seasons as an assistant coach coaching career at UWM,

with the Panther women. In his 14 seasons at Milwaukee, he has helped the Nikolic has coached exten- • 164-89-33 (.631) record 5 M

program reach the success it continues to this day. sively at both the club and in his 14 years at UWM N A high school levels for the C H “David and I have worked together a long time and that helps us to know past 14 years. He coached • 12 seasons of 10 wins or more A C each other’s strengths and weaknesses,” head coach Michael Moynihan said. at Wauwatosa East High • Won 68 of 85 league matches

“We compliment each other very well and that has been a big reason for our School before moving to A E program’s success. He is a true student of the game and is able to bring tactical Milwaukee Pius XI, where • Nine League Championships

T U insight as well as technical ability.” he led the Lady Popes to an • Five trips to the NCAA Tournament O G undefeated season, a state • Helped Panthers to U

A Nikolic has been an integral part of the women’s soccer program and has helped championship and a No. 16 NCAA Second Round in 2005 and 2006 E

guide Milwaukee to fi ve NCAA Tournament berths, nine regular season league national ranking. R

L championships and four league tournament titles. In 2005, the Panthers won • Five League Players of the Year N both the Horizon League’s regular season and tournament crowns to move on As a staff coach with the

• 72 All-League honorees A N to the NCAA Tournament. Once there, they outlasted Purdue in penalty kicks Milwaukee Kickers Soc- M

O to advance to the second round for the fi rst time in school history. cer Club, Nikolic led three • Named Associate Head Coach in 2002 Z

teams to third-place fin- E I

“I have enjoyed being a part of the growth of women’s soccer at UWM the past ishes at the Region II Midwest Championships. In his time with the club, he has N

R 14 seasons,” Nikolic said. “I take a lot of pride in the fact we attract players in coached seven state championship teams. Nikolic has also been director of the T

O the region who look at Milwaukee as a place where they can come and become club’s summer camps and currently coaches at summer camps regionally and S

H better students of the game, consistantly play nationally-ranked opponents nationally. Nikolic also served as the coach of the Milwaukee Kickers Majors and have a good opportunity for postseason play.” men’s team, which won the Wisconsin Open Cup in 2004, the regular season E title in 2005 and the 2006 Wisconsin Amateur Championship.

M Nikolic assists Moynihan in a variety of I areas, including recruiting, on-the-fi eld Nikolic has also coached F.C. Milwaukee’s adult program. In 2002, his U-23 T coaching and the development of train- men’s team won the regional championship and fi nished third nationally. He - ing sessions. He is also responsible for is a USSF ‘B’ licensed coach and is a Region II Olympic Development Program 9 coordinating team travel, the upkeep of staff coach. He has coached with the Wisconsin girls ODP program for 12 years. Engelmann Field and fundraising and His teams have been Region II ODP fi nalists in 1999, 2001 and 2003. He is marketing eff orts. currently the fi rst assistant for the Region II Girls 1992 ODP team that toured Germany in March 2008. Prior to the 2006 team, lights were in- stalled at Engelmann Field, enhancing its Nikolic had a successful 2005-06 campaign with the Kickers. His men’s reputation as one of the premier soccer team won the 2006 Wisconsin State Outdoor Championship, Indoor facilities in the region. Nikolic played an Championship,Wisconsin Amateur Cup and also the Region II Over 30 Regional intrical role in helping to secure funds for Event. The Over 30’s fi nished as runners-up in the National Championship. the project through various donors. He 8 also participated in the planning stages In 1992, he earned his bachelor’s degree from UWM in mass communication of the project. and history.

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com DAVID NIKOLIC AASSISTANTS/SUPPORTSSISTANTS/SUPPORT COACHING STAFF

CHRISCHRIS BBRITTANYRITTANY MARAVALLIMARAVALLI OOLIVEIRALIVEIRA ASSISTANT COACH • 2ND SEASON • CASTLETON STATE, 2007 VOLUNTEER ASSISTANT COACH • 1ST SEASON • STANFORD, 2004 S Chris Maravalli is in his second season as an assistant coach at Milwaukee. Brittany Oliveira has joined the Milwaukee coaching staff this season as a N Among his duties are working with the goalkeepers, assisting in recruiting, volunteer assistant, following two successful seasons on the staff of the UNLV O

I training session preparation and match management. women’s soccer program. In addition to assisting the Panthers, she also serves as a staff coach with FC Milwaukee. P “Chris has been a great addition to the staff ,” head coach Michael Moynihan 5

M said. “He has great experience as a goalkeeper and does a great job training At UNLV, Oliveira helped the squad to a league tournament title in 2006

N A our keepers. Chris is very ambitious and hard-working. He has been a good and league regular season crown in 2007. The Rebels advanced to the NCAA

fi t for our program.” C

H Tournament in 2006. A C

He also serves as goalkeeper coach for FC Milwaukee and is a coach with the Oliveira began her coaching career at Northwestern, where she spent two A

E Shorewood Kickers U13 boys team. seasons as an assistant. At Northwestern, she was involved in all aspects of the

T U program, including training, game preparation, recruiting and fundraising. Maravalli spent the 2006 season as an assistant at Castleton State College in a O G similar capacity, including working with the Spartan goalkeepers. That season, She also has extensive experience at the club level, coaching for the U13 U A CSC keepers fi nished with 150 saves and fi ve shutouts. and U14 girls teams for Team Evanston Soccer Club while at Northwestern. E Oliveira is currently a Region 2 ODP 1991 age group coach, while at UNLV R

L Maravalli has also been a coach with the Rutland County Soccer Club and at N the SoccerPlus Goalkeeper School. He also spent time as assistant director at she also served as the Nevada ODP State Team Coach and head coach for the A N SPGS, which is regarded as the top goalkeeping school in the country and is Neusport Football Club. M

O run by former U.S. National Team coach Tony DiCicco. She was a standout player at Stanford, helping the Cardinal to four straight Z E

I Maravalli earned his undergraduate degree from Castleton State in 2007, where NCAA appearances. Oliveira appeared in 84 matches during her collegiate N

R he completed his major in English with a minor in fi lm studies. He began his career, starting 33 times, and fi nished with 12 goals and 10 assists. Her senior collegiate career at Hobart College. He was a two-year letterwinner on the season, she posted four goals on the way to earning honorable mention all- T O nationally-ranked men’s soccer team and earned a training contract with Grecia conference honors. S H

FC and FC Zapotal of the Costa Rica 2nd Division professional league in 2004. He

E has played keeper for Addison United of the Amateur Soccer League Oliveira received her bachelor of arts degree in American studies from Stanford and with the Vermont Voltage of the Professional Development League. in 2004. M I

T Maravalli holds an NSCAA regional diploma and national goalkeeping diploma.

- He also has a USSF ‘D’ license and ‘Level 2’ goalkeeping license. 9 Becky Worman is in her 19th season as an assistant athletic trainer with the Milwaukee Athletic Department.

“We are very fortunate to have a trainer like Becky ,” had coach Michael Moynihan said. “She is dedicated and brings a soccer background to her job. She carries BECKYBECKY that understanding into her work and that helps tremendously.” Worman attended UWM and was a three-year letterwinner for the soccer team, graduating in 1988. In 1984, she tallied a school-record six goals in a game WORMANWORMAN against Beloit. Her six goals in one game is tied for third-best in NCAA History. ATHLETIC TRAINER • 19TH SEASON • MILWAUKEE, 1988 In 1985, she garnered All-American Second Team honors. While a member of 9 the soccer team, she also served as the team’s student athletic trainer. www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES EERINRIN KKANEANE ERIN KANE

SHUTOUTS JUNIOR • Aug. 31 Indiana State (3 sv) • Sept. 9 v. UC Santa Barbara (2ot, 5 sv) • Sept. 21 @ Wisconsin (3 sv) • Sept. 23 No. 24 Marquette (2ot, tied career-high 7 sv) • Sept. 30 @ Detroit (2ot, 3 sv) • Oct. 3 @ Green Bay (3 sv) S • Oct. 5 Iowa (2ot, 5 sv)

N • Oct. 12 @ Valparaiso (1 sv)

O • Oct. 19 Cleveland State (Shared) I • Oct. 21 Wright State (2 sv)

P • Nov. 3 Cleveland State (League Quarters) 5 M

SOPHOMORE N A • Sept. 3 @ Washington (5 sv) C H • Sept. 8 v. Rhode Island (3 sv) A C • Sept. 12 @ Marquette (3 sv)

• Sept. 15 v. Kentucky (2ot, 1 sv) A E

• Sept. 17 v. No. 16 Missouri (3 sv) T U • Sept. 24 South Dakota State (2 sv) O G • Oct. 1 @ Wright State (5 sv) U A • Oct. 6 @ Youngstown State E • Oct. 8 @ Cleveland State (2 sv, Shared) R

L • Oct. 13 @ Loyola (2ot, 3 sv) N • Oct. 15 Butler (ot, 1 sv) A N • Oct. 20 Detroit (2 sv) M

O • Oct. 22 Wisconsin (4 sv) Z • Nov. 10 v. Michigan (2ot, 2 sv, NCAA 1st Rd) E I N

R FRESHMAN T

O • Aug. 28 No. 13 Illinois (2ot, 6 sv) S

H • Sept. 7 Marquette (2ot, 4 sv) • Sept. 9 @ UCF (ot, career-high 7 sv) E • Sept. 25 Illinois State (ot, 3 sv)

M • Sept. 30 Cleveland State I • Oct. 2 @ Butler (4 sv) T • Oct. 14 Youngstown State (1 sv) - • Oct. 21 Loyola (3 sv) 9 • Oct. 28 Colorado College (1 sv) • Nov. 3 v. Cleveland State (League Quarters) • Nov. 4 v. Butler (2ot, League Semis) • Nov. 6 v. Detroit (2ot, 3 sv, League Championship) • Nov. 11 v. Purdue (2ot, 5 sv, NCAA 1st Rd) GOALS/ASSISTS SOPHOMORE Assists 10 • Sept. 17 v. No. 16 Missouri (game-winner)

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com ERIN KANE EERINRIN KKANEANE PROFILES 1

S EERINRIN KKANEANE N Senior • 5-10 • Goalkeeper • St. Charles, Ill./North • Pre-Veterinary Major O I 2007 (JUNIOR) ... had a streak of fi ve-straight shutouts (Sept. P PERSONAL

Soccer Buzz All-Region Third Team ... All-Horizon 12-Oct. 4, 557:06) ... in a six-game span (Oct. 5

M League First Team ... NSCAA Scholar All-Ameri- 6-22, 595:22) had fi ve shutouts and combined FULL NAME: Erin H. Kane NICKNAME(S): “Jane” N A can ... ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District on a sixth ... posted a double-overtime shutout BORN: Dec. 15, 1986 C

H Second Team ... named to Soccer Buzz National in the NCAA Tournament for the second-straight Elite Team of the Week and the league player of year, blanking Michigan with two saves. PARENTS: Patricia and Greg Kane A C SIBLINGS: Mark and Tim the week Sept. 25 after shutting out state rivals FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I can blow A E Wisconsin and Marquette ... Sept. 23 shutout of 2005 (FRESHMAN)

bubbles off my tongue and can sound T U No. 24 Marquette was third shutout of a ranked Soccer America Freshman All-America First Team like Chewbacca

opponent in her career ... broke school record for ... Soccer Buzz Freshman All-America Third Team O G goalkeeper wins, pushing her career total to 38 and All-Region Freshman Team ... All-Horizon WEIRDEST THING A COACH EVER TOLD U A ... also eclipsed school mark for career minutes League First Team ... League Tournament MVP ME: “Stop doing cartwheels in goal!” E played ... led league in goals against average ... three-time Horizon League Player of the (Kosuke) Fukudome HAS THE COOLEST R L

NAME IN SPORTS N and shutouts for the third-straight season ... Week (Aug. 29, Sept. 12, Oct. 24) ... set school IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER IT was among nation’s top-50 in GAA. and league record for shutouts ... posted 14th- A N WOULD BE: Knowledge of EVERYTHING

longest shutout streak in NCAA Division I his- M O 2006 (SOPHOMORE) tory (717:10) ... set then-school record for GAA so I wouldn’t have to go to class and I Z could win millions on ”Jeopardy” E I Soccer Buzz All-Region Second Team ... All-Hori- ... fi nished 15th in the nation in GAA and tied

Amber Tambland SHOULD PLAY ME IN A N

R zon League First Team ... fi nished eighth in the for second in shutouts ... made four PK saves to MOVIE nation in GAA (0.486) ... NSCAA National Player lead UWM to back-to-back shootout wins in the T O FANTASY JOB: Animal rescue veterinarian of the Week (Sept. 17) ... two-time league player postseason. S H

of the week (Sept. 17, Oct. 2) ... named to Soc- FAVORITES

E cer Times’ Weekly Honorable Mention list (Sept. ST. CHARLES NORTH 17) ... tied own school and league records with Starter in the nets for St. Charles North in each ROAD TRIP: Vegas trip!

M SOCCER MEMORY: Game vs. Notre Dame

I 13 shutouts and set school and league marks of her four years ... fi nished her career with a 66- in ‘06

T for GAA ... broke the school record for career 19-14 record, 57 shutouts and over 500 saves ... SUPER HERO: Captain Planet - shutouts with 20th at Wright State in just 30th 57 shutouts put her eighth in state history... HISTORICAL FIGURE: FDR and Winston

9 career match ... broke league record with 25th earned all-area honors in each season from career shutout against Wisconsin in 37th career the Daily Herald, Kane County Chronicle and St. Churchill match ... tallied fi rst career assist on game-win- Charles Republican ... added all-state to her re- FOOD: Peaches ner v. No. 16 Missouri ... made three saves in the sume as a junior and senior ... helped her team QUOTE: “Be a Tigger, not an Eeyore.” game for second career shutout of a ranked team to three regional championships. - Randy Pausch

OVERALL LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS MIN. GA GAA SV PCT. W-L-T SHO GP/GS MIN. GA GAA SV PCT. W-L-T SHO 2005 21/21 2009:30 13 0.58 65 .833 11-5-5 13 6/6 560:00 2 0.32 14 .875 5-0-1 4 2006 20/20 1852:00 10 0.49 48 .828 14-4-2 13 7/7 642:00 2 0.28 14 .875 7-0-0 5 2007 21/21 1978:43 16 0.73 66 .805 13-4-4 10 8/8 716:54 3 0.36 17 .850 7-0-1 4 Totals 62/62 5840:13 39 0.60 179 .821 38-13-11 36 21/21 1918:54 7 0.33 45 .865 19-0-2 13 11

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES JJODIODI KLAGOSKLAGOS JODI KLAGOS S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

T U O G U A E R L N

A N M O Z E I N R T O S H GOALS/ASSISTS E SOPHOMORE

M Goals I • Sept. 17 v. No. 16 Missouri (game-winner) T

- • Oct. 1 @ Wright State 9 FRESHMAN Goals • Sept. 4 Drake • Sept. 23 @ Green Bay • Oct. 14 Youngstown State (game-winner) • Nov. 3 v. Cleveland State (x2, GW, League Quarters)

Assists • Sept. 4 Drake • Sept. 30 Cleveland State 12

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com JODI KLAGOS JJODIODI KLAGOSKLAGOS PROFILES 26

S JJODIODI KKLAGOSLAGOS N Senior • 5-3 • Forward • Madison, Wis./Memorial • Kinesiology Major O I 2007 (JUNIOR) 40 shots ... generated a shot in 21-of-22 games P

Played in nine games after returning from an on the season ... scored fi rst collegiate goal and PERSONAL 5

M injury ... made four starts ... saw time at for- assisted on another v. Drake ... netted game-

FULL NAME: Jodi Anne Klagos N A ward and as an attacking midfi elder ... took 17 winners in shutouts over Youngstown State and NICKNAME(S): “Jodes” C H shots on the year, including a season-high fi ve Cleveland State during the league tourney ... BORN: July 22, 1987 shots against Cleveland State ... had four shots against the Vikings, scored the fi rst two Panther

PARENTS: Sally and Kent Klagos A C

against Youngstown State. goals and tied a season-high with four shots ... SIBLINGS: Tim, Jami and Danny A

E also had four shots against No. 13 Illinois, hit- FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I have a twin

T U 2006 (SOPHOMORE) ting both posts in the second half. brother (Tim)

Appeared in 13 games before suff ering a sea- WEIRDEST THING A COACH EVER TOLD O G son-ending injury ... made eight starts ... saw MADISON MEMORIAL ME: He stopped practice to tell me I run U A time at forward and as an attacking midfi elder Four-year letterwinner at Madison Memo- funny E ... scored two goals and took 27 shots before her rial High School ... named to the WSCA All-State Coco Crisp HAS THE COOLEST NAME IN R L N injury ... one goal came as the game-winner Best 11 as a senior ... helped Madison Memorial SPORTS

against No. 16 Missouri to a 23-4 record and the sectional fi nals that A N IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER IT

year, in addition to the state quarterfi nals twice WOULD BE: Being able to see through M O 2005 (FRESHMAN) ... made a semifi nal appearance as a freshman walls Z E

I Started 20 games while playing in all 22 ...... garnered All-Big 8 Conference and all-city Reese Witherspoon SHOULD PLAY ME IN N

R tied for the team lead in points (12), goals (5), honors in each of her last two years. A MOVIE

game-winning goals (2) and led the team with FANTASY JOB: Sports agent T O S H

FAVORITES

E ROAD TRIP: (2006) SOCCER MEMORY: Going to the NCAA M

I Tournament in 2005 and 2006

T SUPER HERO: Hancock

- CLASS: Accounting

9 FOOD: Everything BOOK: Any book by Janet Evanovich MOVIE: “Love and Basketball” TV SHOW: “Jon and Kate Plus 8”

OVERALL LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2005 22/20 40 5 2 12 2 0 0-0 7/6 11 2 1 5 1 0 0-0 2006 13/8 27 2 0 4 1 0 0-0 3/3 12 1 0 2 0 0 0-0 2007 9/4 17 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 7/3 15 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 Totals 44/32 84 7 2 16 3 0 0-0 17/12 38 3 1 7 1 0 0-0 13

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES BBETHETH STEUERSTEUER BETH STEUER S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

T U O G U A E R L N

A N M O Z E I N R

GOALS/ASSISTS T O

JUNIOR S

H Goals • Oct. 3 @ Green Bay (game-winner) E • Nov. 3 Cleveland State (GW, League Quarters) M I SOPHOMORE T

- Goals • Sept. 3 @ Washington (game-winner) 9 • Sept. 12 @ Marquette • Oct. 8 @ Cleveland State (x2)

Assists • Oct. 4 Green Bay (equalizer) • Oct. 20 Detroit (game-winner)

FRESHMAN Assists • Sept. 4 Drake (game-winner) 14

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com BETH STEUER BBETHETH STEUERSTEUER PROFILES 18

S BBETHETH SSTEUERTEUER N Junior • 5-3 • Midfi elder • Madison, Wis./LaFollette • Psychology Major O I 2007 (JUNIOR) a goal at Marquette and assist against Green P

Appeared in all 21 games, starting eight times Bay. 5

M ... scored a pair of goals on the year, both go- PERSONAL FULL NAME: Elizabeth Laura Steuer N A ing for game-winners ... named Academic All- 2005 (FRESHMAN) NICKNAME(S): “Beth” or “Peanut” C

H Region Honorable Mention by the NSCAA ... at Started the fi rst eight games of the year before Green Bay, had four shots and tallied the fi rst suff ering an ankle injury at Wisconsin ... re- BORN: June 1, 1987 in Brooklyn, N.Y. A C PARENTS: Amy and Jeff Steuer goal in a 4-0 rout ... took a season-high fi ve turned to the fi eld against Loyola and fi nished SIBLINGS: Casey and Kate A E shots and scored the game’s only goal in UWM’s with 13 appearances on the year ... picked up

FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I have been a T U league quarterfi nal win over Cleveland State ... an assist on the game-winning goal v. Drake ... Bon Bon

selected as the Horizon League Scholar-Athlete took a season-high three shots v. Colgate. O G of the Week following the game. WEIRDEST THING A COACH EVER TOLD U A LAFOLLETTE ME: “Get the refrigerator off your back.” E 2006 (SOPHOMORE) Earned team MVP, all-conference and all-city PRE-GAME RITUAL: Listen to Mariah R L

IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER IT N Played in all 22 games, starting four times ... awards in her fi nal two seasons ... as a junior, WOULD BE: Flying, teleportation took just 15 shots, but was fourth on the team she was also named to the all-state team ... club A N FANTASY JOB: Sushi chef

with 10 points and four goals ... also picked up team, the Capital Elite, held a na- M O two assists ... fi rst collegiate goal was the game- tional ranking after winning a state champion- Z FAVORITES E I winner at Washington ... scored two goals at ship and taking second place at the Washington

ROAD TRIP: Vegas N

R Cleveland State ... assisted on the game-winner Area Girls Soccer Tournament. SOCCER MEMORY: The Notre Dame game against Detroit in the regular season ... also had T O in the NCAA Tournament S

H SUPER HERO: Batman CLASS: Cognition or African dance E FOOD: Chocolate ice cream

M BOOK: “The Lords of Discipline” I MOVIE: “The Princess Bride” and “Forrest T Gump” - TV SHOW: “The Offi ce” and “America’s Best 9 Dance Crew” QUOTE: Anything from the mouth of Dwight Schrute

OVERALL LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2005 13/8 7 0 1 1 0 0 0-0 1/0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 2006 22/4 15 4 2 10 1 1 0-0 7/3 6 2 2 6 0 1 0-0 2007 21/8 26 2 0 4 2 0 0-0 7/1 14 1 0 2 1 0 0-0 Totals 56/20 38 6 3 15 3 1 0-0 15/4 21 3 2 8 1 1 0-0 15

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES SSARAHARAH TEEGARDENTEEGARDEN SARAH TEEGARDEN S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

T U O G U A E R L

GOALS/ASSISTS N JUNIOR A N Goals M

O • Oct. 16 Loyola Z • Oct. 21 Wright State E I

• Nov. 9 Butler (GW, 2ot, League Semis) N R T

O SOPHOMORE S

H Goals • Sept. 12 @ Marquette (game-winner) E • Sept. 24 South Dakota State (game-winner)

M • Oct. 15 Butler (ot, game-winner) I • Oct. 20 Detroit (game-winner) T • Oct. 22 Wisconsin (game-winner) - Assists 9 • Oct. 4 Green Bay • Oct. 28 Cleveland State (game-winner, League Qtrs)

FRESHMAN Goals • Sept. 4 Drake • Sept. 9 @ UCF (ot, game-winner) • Oct. 14 Youngstown State (x2) • Oct. 15 @ Detroit (game-winner) Assists 16 • Sept. 30 Cleveland State

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com SARAH TEEGARDEN SSARAHARAH TEEGARDENTEEGARDEN PROFILES 13

S SSARAHARAH TTEEGARDENEEGARDEN N Senior • 5-7 • Midfi elder • Batavia, Ill./Batavia • Elementary Education Major O I 2007 (JUNIOR) with 42 shots ... third player in school history P PERSONAL

Named to the Academic All-American Third with game-winners in three-straight matches 5

M Team by the NSCAA ... selected to the Soccer (Oct. 15-22) against Butler, Detroit and Wis- FULL NAME: Sarah Rachael Teegarden NICKNAME(S): “Teegs” N A Buzz All-Region Second Team ... was an all- consin ... all three matches were 1-0 victories BORN: Oct. 18, 1986 in Menomonee Falls, Wis. C

H league fi rst-team honoree for third time ... one for Milwaukee ... then assisted on the winner of three players to start all 21 games ... fi nished in UWM’s next match against Cleveland State in PARENTS: Cynthia and John Teegarden A C SIBLINGS: Katie and Laura with three goals on the year, including her the league tournament. WHY UWM? Because I love the city of A E eighth career game-winner, putting her third in

Milwaukee and all of the girls on the T U school history ... was second on the team with 2005 (FRESHMAN) team are some of the best friends I will

55 shots, registering at least one in every game Soccer Buzz Freshman All-American Honorable O G ... game-winning goal came in second overtime Mention and All-Region Freshman Team ... All- ever have U A of league semifi nals against Butler ... took seven Horizon League First Team ... Horizon League FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I have one E shots in a game twice, doing so against Wash- All-Newcomer Team ... named to Milwaukee Cup mini thumb R L

PHRASE I OVERUSE: “If you really think N ington and in the league quarterfi nals against and Big Toe Invitational All-Tournament Teams about it...” Cleveland State ... named to all-tournament ... started all 22 games ... tied for the team lead A N Picabo Street HAS THE COOLEST NAME

teams at the Milwaukee Cup and the Horizon with fi ve goals ... Horizon League Player of the M O League Tournament. Week (Oct. 17) ... picked up a pair of goals in 7-0 IN SPORTS Z E

I rout of Youngstown State less than fi ve minutes

FAVORITES N

R 2006 (SOPHOMORE) apart ... two days later, scored the game-winner ROAD TRIP: Seattle, Wash. Named to the All-Region First Team by Soccer at Detroit, clinching the league title for UWM ... T O SOCCER MEMORY: Playing Notre Dame in Buzz and third team by the NSCAA ... All-Hori- had a season-high fi ve shots vs. Cleveland State S

H the NCAA Tournament

zon League First Team for the second-straight during the regular season. CARTOON CHARACTER: Gumby

E year ... named to Soccer America and Soccer Buzz National Teams of the Week Oct. 23 .. also BATAVIA/TEAM CHICAGO SELECT SUPER HERO: Jeff Schulz as Batman

M HISTORICAL FIGURE: Randy Pausch

I named the league player of the week that week Earned All-Suburban Prairie Conference, all-area BOOK: “The Last Lecture”

T ... fi nished second on the team with 12 points and all-sectional honors as a junior last season MOVIE: The Bourne series - and fi ve goals ... all fi ve goals were game-win- ... played with Team Chicago Select ... helped TV SHOW: “The Offi ce”

9 ners, tying a school record ... tied for team lead the Panthers to four State Cup Championships. QUOTE: “When all is said and done, it’s not the shots that won the championship that you remember, but the friendships you made along the way.”

OVERALL LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2005 22/22 34 5 1 11 2 0 0-0 7/7 14 3 1 7 1 0 0-0 2006 20/20 42 5 2 12 5 1 0-0 7/7 23 2 1 5 2 0 0-0 2007 21/21 55 3 0 6 1 0 0-0 8/8 18 2 0 4 0 0 0-0 Totals 63/63 131 13 3 29 8 1 0-0 22/22 55 7 2 12 3 0 0-0 17

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES AANDREANDREA WISNIEWSKIWISNIEWSKI ANDREA WISNIEWSKI S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

T U O G U A E R L N

A N M O Z E I N R T O S H

E M I T - 9

GOALS/ASSISTS JUNIOR Assists 18 • Oct. 19 Cleveland State

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com ANDREA WISNIEWSKI AANDREANDREA WISNIEWSKIWISNIEWSKI PROFILES 24

S AANDREANDREA WWISNIEWSKIISNIEWSKI N Senior • 5-8 • Midfi elder/Defender • Mundelein, Ill./Mundelein • Elementary Education Major O I 2007 (JUNIOR) 2004-05 (FRESHMAN/REDSHIRT) P PERSONAL

Played in 16 of UWM’s 21 games, starting fi ve Suff ered a season-ending knee injury in the 5

M times ... played mostly as a defender, taking just third game of the 2004 season against Kansas FULL NAME: Andrea N. Wisniewski NICKNAME(S): “Drea” N A nine shots on the season and registering one ... missed 2005 while recovering from that knee BORN: Oct. 16, 1985 in Augsburg, Germany C

H assist ... took a season-best two shots against injury ... redshirted one season ... returned to Washington and again v. Cleveland State during action during the 2006 spring season. PARENTS: Kris and Sharon Wisniewski A C SIBLINGS: Ammanda (plays at Illinois St.) the regular season ... that CSU match was where IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER IT A E she tallied her fi rst collegiate assist. MUNDELEIN

WOULD BE: To fl y T U Was a four-year letterwinner ... earned all-sec- WHY UWM? Soccer, small campus, close

2006 (SOPHOMORE) tional honorable mention, all-area and all-con- O G Returned from a knee injury suff ered in her sec- ference honors as both a junior and senior ... to home U A ond appearance of 2004 to play in fi ve games ... high school teammate of former Panther team- FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I am an army E played a season-high 64 minutes at Youngstown mate Pam Shipway, two of three Mustangs to brat R L

PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Really...” N State ... fi nished with one shot, taken at Wright commit to Division I programs that year ... also FANTASY JOB: Working with kids and State. ran cross country. A N obesity in the community M O Z FAVORITES E I

SPOT ON CAMPUS: Engelmann Field N R ROAD TRIP: St. Louis T

O SOCCER MEMORY: (Deebach) stepping on S

H a cone and making horse noises CARTOON CHARACTER: Tom and Jerry E SUPER HERO: Batman

M HISTORICAL FIGURE: Abraham Lincoln I BOOK: “Five People You Meet in Heaven” T MOVIE: “P.S. I Love You” - TV SHOW: “One Tree Hill” 9 FOOD: Pizza QUOTE: “If you don’t dream big, what’s the use in dreaming? If you don’t have faith, there’s nothing worth believing.”

OVERALL LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2004 2/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 — — — — — — — — 2006 5/0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 3/0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 2007 16/5 9 0 1 1 0 0 0-0 7/4 4 0 1 1 0 0 0-0 Totals 23/5 10 0 1 1 0 0 0-0 10/4 5 0 1 1 0 0 0-0 19

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES KKAYLAAYLA DEJJARDINARDIN KAYLA DEJARDIN S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

T U O G U A E R L N

A N M O Z E I N R T O S H

E M I T - GOALS/ASSISTS 9 SOPHOMORE Goals • Oct. 3 @ Green Bay (x2) Assists • Aug. 31 Indiana State (game-winner) • Sept. 21 @ Wisconsin (game-winner)

FRESHMAN Assists • Aug. 27 Bowling Green 20 • Oct. 4 Green Bay

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com KAYLA DEJARDIN KKAYLAAYLA DEJJARDINARDIN PROFILES 15

S KKAYLAAYLA DEJJARDINARDIN N Junior • 5-5 • Defender • Oneida, Wis./Pulaski • Photography Major O I 2007 (SOPHOMORE) UWM’s heralded back line, playing in all 22 P

Played in 19 games, starting the fi rst nine of the games ... took three shots and tallied two assists PERSONAL 5

M season ... tallied a pair of goals and two assists on the year ... helped the Panthers to school re-

FULL NAME: Kayla Lynn DeJardin N A on the season ... both assists came as game- cords for shutouts and goals against average. NICKNAME(S): “Kay” C H winners ... second assist was on the game’s only BORN: Aug. 30, 1987 goal at in-state rival Wisconsin ... scored two PULASKI

PARENTS: Wayne and Terri DeJardin A C

goals at Green Bay in front of a hometown crowd Lettered all four years at Pulaski High School ... SIBLINGS: Jacob (twin) and Danielle A

E ... fi nished that game with a career-high three named all-conference each year ... selected to IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER IT

T U shots ... contributed to a defense that posted 11 the Green Bay Press-Gazette All-Area team her WOULD BE: X-ray vision

shutouts and a league-best 0.72 goals against last three seasons. WHY UWM? I love the city and all the O G average ... also saw some time in the midfi eld. amazing people. A lot of opportunity U A MISCELLANEOUS FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I have a pet E 2006 (FRESHMAN) Works in the sports information offi ce during bunny named “Eva” R L N Started 15 games as an outside defender on basketball season. PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Thanks” A

N FANTASY JOB: Working for “National

Geographic” as a photographer M O Z E

I FAVORITES N

R SPOT ON CAMPUS: My lovely home

ROAD TRIP: Colorado T O SOCCER MEMORY: Going to the NCAA S H

Tournament

E SUPER HERO: Batman CLASS: Art history M

I BOOK: The Harry Potter books

T MOVIE: The Harry Potter movies

- TV SHOW: Anything on the National

9 Geographic channel FOOD: Tacos QUOTE: “Obstacles are what you see when you take your eyes off the goal.”

OVERALL LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2006 22/15 3 0 2 2 0 0 0-0 7/6 2 0 1 1 0 0 0-0 2007 19/9 6 2 2 6 0 2 0-0 7/1 5 2 0 4 0 0 0-0 Totals 41/24 9 2 4 8 0 2 0-0 14/7 7 2 1 5 0 0 0-0 21

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES EERINRIN KKREUSERREUSER ERIN KREUSER S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

T U O G U A E R L N

A N M O Z E I

GOALS/ASSISTS N R SOPHOMORE T

O Goals S

H • Sept. 21 @ Wisconsin (game-winner) • Sept. 28 @ Butler (game-winner) E • Oct. 19 Cleveland State

M Assists I • Sept. 2 Washington (x2, inc. game-winner) T • Sept. 9 v. UC-Santa Barbara (2ot, game-winner) - • Sept. 28 @ Butler (x2) 9 • Oct. 3 @ Green Bay (game-winner) • Oct. 26 @ No. 2 Texas A&M

FRESHMAN Goals • Aug. 27 Bowling Green (game-winner) • Oct. 1 @ Wright State • Oct. 8 @ Cleveland State (game-winner) • Oct. 28 Cleveland State (x2 inc. GW, League Qtrs) Assists 22 • Sept. 24 South Dakota State (game-winner)

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com ERIN KREUSER EERINRIN KKREUSERREUSER PROFILES 25

S EERINRIN KKREUSERREUSER N Junior • 5-4 • Midfi elder/Forward • West Allis, Wis./Hale • Education Major O I 2007 (SOPHOMORE) all-tournament at the Milwaukee Cup and P

Played in 20 games, starting 19 times ... led league tournament ... elusive midfi elder that PERSONAL 5

M the team with seven assists, including four on played some at forward ... played in all 22

FULL NAME: Erin Kristine Kreuser N A game-winning goals ... tied the second-most games, starting 14 times ... tied for second on BORN: May 24, 1988 C H game-winning assists in a season in school his- the team with fi ve goals and was third with 11 PARENTS: Bill and Kathy Kreuser tory ... was second on the team with 13 points points ... three goals were game-winners for

SIBLINGS: Billy and John A C

... scored or assisted on six-straight Panther Milwaukee, tying for the ninth-most in a season IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER IT A

E goals (Sept. 2-28) ... named Off ensive MVP of in school history. WOULD BE: To fl y

T U the Milwaukee Cup to open the season ... had WHY UWM? It’s close to home and I like

a season-best six shots against Indiana State WEST ALLIS HALE the coaches O G in that tournament ... scored game-winners at Four-year letterwinner at West Allis Hale High FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I live with U A Wisconsin and at Butler ... against Butler, added School ... was named all-state as a junior and Leslie Deebach E a pair of assists ... also had two assists in a game senior ... earned all-area honors from the Mil- PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Blah, blah, blah” R L N against Washington. waukee Journal Sentinel as a senior ... four-time FANTASY JOB: Food tester

all-conference honoree, including fi rst-team A N Ronaldinho HAS THE COOLEST NAME IN

2006 (FRESHMAN) honors her last three ... suff ered a knee injury af- SPORTS M O Horizon League All-Newcomer Team ... named ter scoring fi ve goals in two games as a junior. Eva Longoria SHOULD PLAY ME IN A Z E

I MOVIE N R

FAVORITES T O SPOT ON CAMPUS: Our locker room S H

ROAD TRIP: Going to Vegas

E SOCCER MEMORY: Going to the NCAA Tournament M

I CARTOON CHARACTER: Scooby Doo

T SUPER HERO: Superman

- CLASS: African Dance

9 BOOK: “The Notebook” MOVIE: “Wedding Crashers” TV SHOW: “That 70’s Show” FOOD: Stuff ed French toast from IHOP

OVERALL LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2006 22/14 34 5 1 11 3 1 0-0 7/3 8 2 0 4 1 0 0-0 2007 20/19 39 3 7 13 2 4 0-0 8/8 20 2 3 7 1 2 0-0 Totals 42/33 73 8 8 24 5 5 0-0 15/11 28 4 3 11 2 2 0-0 23

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES KKATEATE MEGNAMEGNA KATE MEGNA S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

T U O G U A E R L N

A N M O Z E

I GOALS/ASSISTS

SOPHOMORE N R

Goals T O

• Sept. 2 Washington S

H • Oct. 7 Youngstown State • Oct. 19 Cleveland State E • Oct. 21 Wright State (game-winner)

M Assists I • Aug. 31 Indiana State (game-winner) T • Sept. 21 @ Wisconsin (game-winner) - • Sept. 28 @ Butler 9 • Oct. 26 @ No. 2 Texas A&M

FRESHMAN Goals • Sept. 1 v. No. 1 Portland • Oct. 28 Cleveland State (League Quarters) Assists • Aug. 25 v. Sacred Heart • Sept. 3 @ Washington • Oct. 22 Wisconsin (game-winner) 24 • Oct. 28 Cleveland State (GW , League Quarters)

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com KATE MEGNA KKATEATE MEGNAMEGNA PROFILES 14

S KKATEATE MMEGNAEGNA N Junior • 5-8 • Midfi elder • Middleton, Wis./Middleton • Mathematics Major O I 2007 (SOPHOMORE) Portland, 2-1, before halftime ... assisted on P

Selected to the All-Horizon League First Team ... game-winners in consecutive games v. Wiscon- PERSONAL 5 M started 18 games and played in 20 on the year sin and in the league tournament v. Cleveland FULL NAME: Katherine Laura Megna N A ... fi nished the season with four goals and four State ... added a goal in that game with CSU. BORN: July 17, 1987 C

H assists for 12 points ... fi nished third on the team in goals and tied for second in assists ... one goal 2005 (REDSHIRT) PARENTS: Sherri and Richard Megna A C

and two assists came as game-winners ... as- Missed the season with an injury suff ered dur- SIBLINGS: Tony A E sisted on the game-winner in the season opener ing the preseason ... redshirted and maintained IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER IT

T U against Indiana State ... scored a goal two days freshman eligibility. WOULD BE: Be as fast as Erin Kreuser

later vs. Washington ... also helped on the de- O G ciding goal at Wisconsin ... tallied a season-high MIDDLETON/MADISON 56ERS WHY UWM? Why not UWM? U A fi ve shots against Youngstown State during the 2004 NSCAA Youth All-American ... one of just PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Just kidding” E regular season and Cleveland State in the league three Wisconsin players honored ... won three FANTASY JOB: Tattoo artist R L N quarterfi nals. state championships with the Madison 56ers WEIRDEST THING A COACH EVER TOLD

... competed with the state ODP team for seven A N ME: “I’m like a light switch” (By David)

2006 (FRESHMAN) years, including the regional team the last three M O Named to the Horizon League All-Newcomer ... as a freshman, played for Middleton and Z FAVORITES E I Team ... played in all 22 games, starting 18 ... helped the team to a conference championship SPOT ON CAMPUS: Engelmann Field N

R suff ered what was thought to be a season-end- on her way to fi rst-team all-conference honors.

ing shoulder injury in UWM’s league semifi nal ROAD TRIP: Vegas T O match ... returned to play in both NCAA Tourna- MISCELLANEOUS SOCCER MEMORY: Beating Michigan in S H

ment games ... took 26 shots to go with two Brother, Tony, played soccer at Notre Dame the NCAA Tournament

E goals and four assists ... fi rst collegiate goal put (2002-05) ... works in the sports information of- Panthers ahead of defending national champ fi ce during the basketball and baseball seasons. CARTOON CHARACTER: Doug

M SUPER HERO: Superman I

T HISTORICAL FIGURE: Ben Franklin

- CLASS: Math

9 BOOK: “Into the Wild” MOVIE: “Mr. Holland’s Opus” TV SHOW: “Merv Griffi n’s Crossword”

OVERALL LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2006 22/18 26 2 4 8 0 2 0-0 7/6 6 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 2007 20/18 39 4 4 12 1 2 0-0 8/8 18 3 1 7 1 0 0-0 Totals 42/36 65 6 8 20 1 4 0-0 15/14 24 3 1 7 1 0 0-0 25

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES LLOUISEOUISE VRANEYVRANEY LOUISE VRANEY S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

T U O G U A E R L N

A N M O Z E I N R T O S H

E GOALS/ASSISTS

M SOPHOMORE I Goals T • Aug. 31 Indiana State (game-winner) - Assists 9 • Nov. 11 Loyola (League Championship)

FRESHMAN Goals • Aug. 25 v. Sacred Heart (x2 inc. game-winner) • Aug. 27 Bowling Green • Sept. 1 v. No. 1 Portland • Oct. 1 @ Wright State (89:57 mark) • Oct. 13 @ Loyola (2ot, game-winner) Assists 26 • Oct. 8 @ Cleveland State (x2, inc. game-winner)

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com LOUISE VRANEY LLOUISEOUISE VRANEYVRANEY PROFILES 8

S LLOUISEOUISE VVRANEYRANEY N Junior • 5-2 • Forward • DePere, Wis./DePere • Physical Therapy/Spanish Major O I 2006 (FRESHMAN) Panther in school history with two goals in her P

Played in 12 games, starting six ... missed nine collegiate debut, scoring twice v. Sacred Heart ... PERSONAL 5

M games with an injury suff ered at Butler ... start- was fi rst to tally game-winner in fi rst game and FULL NAME: Louise Marie Vraney

N A ed the six games prior to her injury ... began the fi rst player to score three times in her fi rst two NICKNAME(S): “Lou”, “Louie” or “Weezy” C

H season at forward, but also saw time at outside games when she scored two days later against BORN: Feb. 23, 1988 defender later in the season ... tallied a goal and Bowling Green. PARENTS: Paul and Janet Vraney A C

an assist ... scored in the fi rst game of the sea- SIBLINGS: Chloe A

E son for the second-straight year, picking up the DEPERE IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER IT

T U game-winner against Indiana State. Four-year all-conference fi rst-team member at WOULD BE: Speed demon

DePere High School ... tallied 29 goals and nine WHY UWM? The people, the location, the O G 2006 (FRESHMAN) assists as a senior, leading her team to a 24-0-1 atmosphere were all exactly what I was U A All-Region Freshman Team selection by Soc- record ... named all-state and Green Bay Press- looking for in a school and a team E cer Buzz ... named to the All-Horizon League Gazette Area Player of the Year ... three times Natalie Portman SHOULD PLAY ME IN A R L N

Second Team and league all-newcomer team was named fi rst-team all-area and once sec- MOVIE

... played in all 22 games, starting 18 times ... ond team ... as a junior, named Bay Conference PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Whatever” A N

led the team with six goals and 14 points ... tied Player of the Year after fi nishing with 27 goals FANTASY JOB: Personal fi tness trainer M O for team lead with 42 shots and was third with and fi ve assists ... led the conference in scoring Roger Federer HAS THE COOLEST NAME IN Z E

I two game-winning goals ... a member of the three times. SPORTS N

R Milwaukee Cup all-tournament team ... second

FAVORITES T O

SPOT ON CAMPUS: The water fountain S H

ROAD TRIP: Seattle, Wash.

E SOCCER MEMORY: Stacey Faude dancing and singing to “The Little Mermaid” M

I CARTOON CHARACTER: Kronk

T SUPER HERO: Iron Man

- CLASS: Spanish

9 BOOK: The Harry Potter books MOVIE: “Star Wars” and “National Treasure” TV SHOW: “Friends” FOOD: Pizza and noodles

OVERALL LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2006 22/18 42 6 2 14 2 1 0-0 7/7 16 2 2 6 1 1 0-0 2007 12/6 13 1 1 3 1 0 0-0 1/1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 Totals 34/24 55 7 3 17 3 1 0-0 8/8 19 2 2 6 1 1 0-0 27

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES LLESLIEESLIE DEEBACHDEEBACH ERIN DEYOUNG 19

S LLESLIEESLIE DDEEBACHEEBACH N Sophomore • 5-8 • Goalkeeper • Woodbury, Minn./Woodbury • Civil Engineering Major O I 2007 (FRESHMAN) P PERSONAL

Appeared in one game as a redshirt freshman ... 5

M FULL NAME: Leslie Kathleen Deebach played just over 23 minutes against Cleveland

N A NICKNAME(S): “Wild Deebach” State, preserving the shutout with one save. BORN: Nov. 28, 1987 in Boston, Mass. C H IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER 2006 A C

IT WOULD BE: To not have to study to Redshirted the 2006 season and maintained her A

E do well in school freshman eligibility. FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I live with T U Louise Vraney

WOODBURY O G WHY UWM? UWM gives me the oppor- Played three years in goal for Woodbury High U A tunity to play with not only fantastic School ... led her team to the state champion- E soccer players and athletes but great ship game each year ... fi nished career with 50 R L

people as well N shutouts in 68 games and a 0.38 goals against FANTASY JOB: Professional skier average ... Royals won state titles in her sopho- A N

more and junior years ... earned all-state honors M O FAVORITES and state all-tournament team honors twice Z BOOK: “Angels and Demons” E I each ... also was a three-time all-conference

MOVIE: “Garden State” N

R selection.

TV SHOW: “Jeopardy” T O

FOOD: Crab legs MISCELLANEOUS S

H QUOTE: “Don’t ever give up on some-

Works in the sports information offi ce during thing you can’t go a day without

E basketball season. thinking about.”

M SOCCER MEMORY: Getting headed in I the lip during the spring (2007) in Las T

- Vegas, spitting blood all over the fi eld, and then walking around the strip 9 with a gigantic bottom lip.

OVERALL YEAR GP/GS MIN. GA GAA SV PCT. W-L-T SHO 2007 1/0 23:06 0 0.00 1 1.000 0-0-0 0 Totals 1/0 23:06 0 0.00 1 1.000 0-0-0 0

LEAGUE SHUTOUTS YEAR GP/GS MIN. GA GAA SV PCT. W-L-T SHO FFRESHMANRESHMAN 2007 1/0 23:06 0 0.00 1 1.000 0-0-0 0 28 • Oct.Oct. 1919 ClevelandCleveland SStatetate ((11 ssv,v, SShared)hared) Totals 1/0 23:06 0 0.00 1 1.000 0-0-0 0

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com LESLIE DEEBACH EERINRIN DEYYOUNGOUNG PROFILES 3

S EERINRIN DEYYOUNGOUNG N Sophomore • 5-6 • D/MF • Grand Rapids, Mich./Grand Rapids Christian • Undeclared Major O I 2007 (FRESHMAN) P PERSONAL

Played in the fi nal 17 games of the season, start- 5

M FULL NAME: Erin Eileen Young ing the last 12 ... appeared at outside defender,

N A NICKNAME(S): “Eddy” contributing to eight of the team’s 11 shutouts BORN: Sept. 26, 1988 C

H ... fi nished the season with 24 shots taken ... PARENTS: Mark and Jane DeYoung took a season-high three shots in a game fi ve A C

SIBLINGS: Alison and Sarah times. A

E IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER

IT WOULD BE: Flying T U GRAND RAPIDS CHRISTIAN FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I speak

All-state and city off ensive MVP all four years at O G french Grand Rapids Christian High School ... named U A WHY UWM? I really liked the city of all-state fi rst team as a junior and senior ... E Milwaukee and I knew that I wanted GRCHS’ all-time leading scorer with 129 goals in R L

to play soccer here N 93 games ... tallied 36 goals as a senior with six PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Really... that’s assists ... played defender, midfi elder and for- A N fi n e .”

ward in her career. M O PRE-GAME RITUALS: I always listen to Z “Spice Up Your Life” by the Spice Girls E I

FANTASY JOB: Relief doctor in Africa N R

WEIRDEST THING A COACH EVER T O

TOLD ME: “Take the mickey out of her.” S H FAVORITES E SUPER HERO: Wonder Woman

M HISTORICAL FIGURE: Eleanor Roosevelt I BOOK: The Harry Potter books T

- MOVIE: “Beyond Borders” TV SHOW: “Grey’s Anatomy” 9 FOOD: Wheat Thins and hummus

OVERALL YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2007 17/12 24 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 Totals 17/12 24 0 0 0 0 0 0-0

LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2007 8/7 14 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 Totals 8/7 14 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 29

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES NNICOLEICOLE HIRSCHHIRSCH KELLY MCGRATH 5 NNICOLEICOLE HHIRSCHIRSCH Sophomore • 5-3 • Forward • Brookfi eld, Wis./Central • Undeclared Major

2007 (FRESHMAN) PERSONAL

Appeared in 15 games ... tallied a goal and 5 FULL NAME: Nicole S. Hirsch three assists on the season ... fi rst collegiate as-

NICKNAME(S): “Hirschy” or “Cole” sist came on game-winning goal v. Youngstown N BORN: March 10, 1989 State ... in the league title game, assisted on C PARENTS: Mark and Susan Hirsch UWM’s fi rst goal and scored its second in a 2-2 A SIBLINGS: Ashley draw ... fi nished that game with a season-high FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I have a four shots. A crush on Beth’s dad T WHY UWM? It’s close to home, but still

BROOKFIELD CENTRAL O far enough away Four-year letterwinner at Brookfi eld Central U PHRASE I OVERUSE: “That’s legit.” High School ... as a senior was an all-state sec- PRE-GAME RITUALS: Secret handshake ond team selection and was named to an all- R

with Roadhouse area team for the fourth time ... also picked up N THE WIERDEST THING A COACH EVER her fourth all-conference award ... led the team A TOLD ME: Stop dialing collect

in scoring as a senior, fi nishing with 10 goals M and 14 assists ... helped the Lancers to state ti- FAVORITES tles in her fi rst two seasons ... high school team- E SUPER HERO: Batman mate of teammates Sarah Talbert and Heather N

HISTORICAL FIGURE: Abraham Lincoln Roadhouse ... left as Brookfi eld Central’s fourth T

BOOK: “The BFG” all-time leading scorer. S MOVIE: “What About Bob?” TV SHOW: “Entourage” CLASS: English FOOD: Sushi QUOTE: “It’s time to kick butt and chew bubble gum and I’m all outta gum.” SPOT ON CAMPUS: Anywhere but the EMS building

OVERALL GOALS/ASSISTS YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK FRESHMAN 2007 15/0 9 1 3 5 0 1 0-0 GGoalsoals Totals 15/0 9 1 3 5 0 1 0-0 • Nov.Nov. 1111 L Loyolaoyola ((LeagueLeague CChampionship)hampionship) AAssistsssists LEAGUE • Oct.Oct. 7 YoungstownYoungstown StateState ((game-winner)game-winner) YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK • Oct.Oct. 1919 ClevelandCleveland StateState 2007 7/0 2 0 2 2 0 1 0-0 30 • Nov.Nov. 1111 L Loyolaoyola ((LeagueLeague Championship)Championship) Totals 7/0 2 0 2 2 0 1 0-0

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com NICOLE HIRSCH KKELLYELLY MCGGRATHRATH PROFILES 27

S KKELLYELLY MCGGRATHRATH N Sophomore • 5-3 • Midfi elder • Wauwatosa, Wis./Wisconsin Lutheran • Physical Therapy Major O I 2007 (FRESHMAN) P PERSONAL

Appeared in six games on the year ... took a pair 5

M FULL NAME: Kelly Kay McGrath of shots, both coming against Cleveland State

N A NICKNAME(S): “K-Mac” during the regular season ... played a season- BORN: Aug. 8, 1988 C

H high 28 minutes in that game ... made collegiate PARENTS: Dan and Cindy McGrath debut in overtime against UC Santa Barbara. A C

SIBLINGS: Chris A

E IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER WISCONSIN LUTHERAN IT WOULD BE: Teleport T U Played three years at Wisconsin Lutheran High FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I have a

School, missing her junior season with an injury O G fake tooth ... bounced back to earn all-area second team U A WHY UWM? I like the atmosphere and honors ... was also an all-conference fi rst team E the soccer girls honoree for the third time ... despite playing in R L

“Typical” N PHRASE I OVERUSE: the back, scored 11 goals and had 15 assists as FANTASY JOB: An actress, so I can live a sophomore ... had fi ve goals and 12 assists as A N in California

a freshman. M O PRE-GAME RITUALS: When I put my Z stuff on, the right leg goes fi rst E I N R

FAVORITES T O

SOCCER MEMORY: USA Cup S

H SUPER HERO: Batman BOOK: “The Notebook” or Harry Potter E MOVIE: “Now & Then”

M TV SHOW: “Saved By the Bell” I CLASS: Math T

- FOOD: Bagels CARTOON CHARACTER: SpongeBob 9 SPOT ON CAMPUS: The Gasthaus

OVERALL YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2007 6/0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 Totals 6/0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0-0

LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2007 5/0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 Totals 5/0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 31

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES HHEATHEREATHER ROADHOUSEROADHOUSE NICOLE SPERL 6

S HHEATHEREATHER RROADHOUSEOADHOUSE N Sophomore • 5-5 • Midfi elder • Brookfi eld, Wis./Central • Undeclared Major O I 2007 (FRESHMAN) P PERSONAL

Selected to the Soccer Buzz Freshman All-Re- 5

M FULL NAME: Heather Lauren Roadhouse gion Team as well as the Horizon League All-

N A NICKNAME(S): “Roadie” Newcomer team ... fi rst freshman to start every BORN: Feb. 28, 1989 C

H game in a season for UWM since 2005 ... one PARENTS: Gina and Cal Roadhouse of just three players on the team to start all 21 A C

SIBLINGS: Matthew and Corey games ... tallied a goal and assist on the year ... A

E IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER goal was the game-winner against Youngstown IT WOULD BE: To be able to hear T U State ... had a season-high six shots in that what people think

game ... named to the all-tournament teams at O G FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: My torso is the season-opening Milwaukee Cup and Hori- U A 3/4 my body zon League Tournament. E THE WIERDEST THING A COACH EVER R L

To use my toolbox N TOLD ME WAS: BROOKFIELD CENTRAL PRE-GAME RITUAL: Mine and Nicole Earned all-area honors her last two years at A N Hirsch’s secret handshake

Brookfi eld Central High School ... named all- M O conference second team as a senior ... made the Z FAVORITES E I regional pool for the Olympic Development Pro-

SOCCER MEMORY: Nicole Sperl getting N

R gram ... helped the Lancers to state titles in her

hit in the face with the ball and she fi rst two seasons ... named team MVP ... high T O

didn’t stop running or close her eyes school teammate of teammates Sarah Talbert S

H ROADTRIP: Boston

and Nicole Hirsch. TV SHOW: “SpongeBob SquarePants” E FOOD: Mac and cheese MISCELLANEOUS

M HISTORICAL FIGURE: Christopher

I Father, Cal, was a professional hockey player for Columbus

T eight years, including three seasons with the

- CARTOON CHARACTER: Doug Funnie . SPOT ON CAMPUS: Klotsche gym 9

OVERALL YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2007 21/21 23 1 1 3 1 0 0-0 GOALS/ASSISTS Totals 21/21 23 1 1 3 1 0 0-0 FFRESHMANRESHMAN GGoalsoals LEAGUE • Oct.Oct. 7 YoungstownYoungstown StateState ((game-winner)game-winner) YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK AAssistsssists 2007 8/8 10 1 0 2 1 0 0-0 32 • Nov.Nov. 9 B Butlerutler (League(League SemifiSemifi nnals)als) Totals 8/8 10 1 0 2 1 0 0-0

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com HEATHER ROADHOUSE NNICOLEICOLE SPERLSPERL PROFILES 7

S NNICOLEICOLE SSPERLPERL N Sophomore • 5-4 • Midfi elder • Wauwatosa, Wis./West • Undeclared Major O I 2007 (FRESHMAN) P PERSONAL

Named to Horizon League All-Newcomer Team 5

M FULL NAME: Nicole Ashley Sperl ... played in all 21 games, starting 13 ... led the

N A NICKNAME(S): “Sperling” or “Squirrel” team with fi ve goals and 14 points ... was also BORN: Feb. 6, 1989 C

H second on the team with four assists ... four PARENTS: Thomas and Cheryl Sperl game-winning goals on the season are fi fth in A C

SIBLINGS: Steve school history, while 63 shots are sixth ... had A

E IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER nine shots in collegiate debut v. Indiana State IT WOULD BE: Transport (myself/ T U ... had a goal and assist at Butler and against things anywhere)

Cleveland State in the regular season ... as- O G FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: 3/4 of my sisted on game-winners in back-to-back games U A body is in my legs against Loyola and in that CSU game. E WHY UWM? It is close to home and I R L

like the campus N WAUWATOSA WEST PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Seriously” Was named conference player of the year in her A N

last two years at Wauwatosa West High School M O FAVORITES ... had 23 goals and 10 assists as a senior on her Z SOCCER MEMORY: Beating Wisconsin E I way to all-state and all-area fi rst team honors ...

last year in the worst rainstorm ever! N

R tallied 17 goals in 2006 and assisted on 18 more

ROADTRIP: Boston while adding all-state and all-area honors to T O

BOOK: “Last Lecture” her credit ... four-time all-conference honoree S

H MOVIE: “Blades of Glory”

... Tosa West won conference titles in each of her TV SHOW: “Grey’s Anatomy” and

E fi rst three years, posting a 30-0-1 league mark “Wipeout” in that time.

M CLASS: Psychology I FOOD: Cereal

T MISCELLANEOUS

- CARTOON CHARACTER: Tommy Pickles Brother, Steve, was a four-year letterwinner GGOALS/ASSISTSOALS/ASSISTS SPOT ON CAMPUS: Engelmann locker 9 FFRESHMANRESHMAN with the UWM men’s soccer team (2003-06). room GGoalsoals • SSept.ept. 2 W Washingtonashington ((game-winner)game-winner) • SSept.ept. 9 U UCC SSantaanta BBarbaraarbara ((2ot,2ot, ggame-winner)ame-winner) OVERALL • SSept.ept. 2288 @ BButlerutler (game-winner)(game-winner) YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK • OOct.ct. 1122 @ VValparaisoalparaiso ((game-winner)game-winner) 2007 21/13 63 5 4 14 4 2 1-1 • Oct.Oct. 1919 ClevelandCleveland StateState Totals 21/13 63 5 4 14 4 2 1-1 AAssistsssists • SSept.ept. 2288 @ BButlerutler LEAGUE • OOct.ct. 3 @ GGreenreen BBayay YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK • OOct.ct. 1166 L Loyolaoyola ((game-winner)game-winner) 2007 8/4 18 3 4 10 2 2 1-1 • Oct.Oct. 1919 ClevelandCleveland SStatetate ((game-winner)game-winner) Totals 8/4 18 3 4 10 2 2 1-1 33

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES SSARAHARAH TALBERTTALBERT HELENA ZBILUT 11

S SSARAHARAH TTALBERTALBERT N Sophomore • 5-6 • D/MF • Brookfi eld, Wis./Central • Undeclared Major O I 2007 (FRESHMAN) P PERSONAL

Played in 14 games, starting seven times ... 5

M FULL NAME: Sarah Jean Talbert started the fi rst four games of the season before

N A NICKNAME(S): “Talbs” missing seven games with an injury ... scored a BORN: Nov. 29, 1988 C

H pair of goals and added an assist on the year ... PARENTS: Leslie and Richard Talbert became second Panther freshman with a goal in A C

SIBLINGS: Kristin, Rachel and Lauren the season opener in the team’s Division I era ... A

E PRE-GAME RITUALS: I wrap tape on lone assist on the year came on the game-win- my left pinky T U ner at Valparaiso ... second goal broke a score- WHY UWM? Great soccer and academic

less tie in the league title game against Loyola. O G programs and close to home. U A FANTASY JOB: Own a smoothie shop BROOKFIELD CENTRAL E IF I COULD HAVE ONE SUPER POWER Four-year all-conference player for Brookfi eld R L

The ability to fl y N IT WOULD BE: Central High School ... was a Wisconsin First 11

selection her last two years ... also a fi rst-team A N FAVORITES

all-area selection by the Milwaukee Journal M O FOOD: Sushi Sentinel ... tallied six goals and seven assists as Z BOOK: “The Pilot’s Wife” E I a junior and earned all-region honors from the

MOVIE: “The Holiday” N

R NSCAA and all-area honors ... won state cham-

TV SHOW: “One Tree Hill” pionships with BCHS twice and fi ve times at the T O

QUOTE: “Love what you do.” club level ... named Outstanding Female Athlete S

H FAVORITE ROAD TRIP: South Dakota

of the Year as a senior at Brookfi eld Central. for regionals E SPOT ON CAMPUS: Women’s locker

M room at Engelmann Field I CLASS: Microeconomics T

- SUPER HERO: Batman 9

OVERALL YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK GGOALS/ASSISTSOALS/ASSISTS 2007 14/7 12 2 1 5 0 1 0-0 FFRESHMANRESHMAN Totals 14/7 12 2 1 5 0 1 0-0 GGoalsoals • Aug.Aug. 3131 IndianaIndiana StateState LEAGUE • Nov.Nov. 1111 L Loyolaoyola ((LeagueLeague CChampionship)hampionship) YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK AAssistsssists 2007 5/2 3 0 1 1 0 1 0-0 34 • OOct.ct. 1212 @ VValparaisoalparaiso ((game-winner)game-winner) Totals 5/2 3 0 1 1 0 1 0-0

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com SARAH TALBERT HHELENAELENA ZBILUTZBILUT PROFILES 16

S HHELENAELENA ZZBILUTBILUT N Sophomore • 5-9 • Defender • Kenosha, Wis./Bradford • Undeclared Major O I 2007 (FRESHMAN) P PERSONAL

Appeared in nine games, starting three times 5

M FULL NAME: Helena Michalina Zbilut ... contibuted on defense to four shutouts ...

N A NICKNAME(S): “H” made fi rst collegiate start against UC Santa BORN: March 3, 1989 in Evanston, Ill. C

H Barbara and played all 104 minutes ... played PARENTS: Wally and Holly Zbilut over 60 minutes against Boston University and A C

SIBLINGS: Max Youngstown State. A

E IF I COULD HAVE ANY SUPER POWER

IT WOULD BE: Photographic memory T U KENOSHA BRADFORD FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: My dad was

Was a three-year all-county honoree at Keno- O G my fi rst soccer coach sha Bradford High School ... opted to play with U A WHY UWM? I love the campus size, it’s a her club team FC Milwaukee in spring 2007 ... E short distance from my home and it’s started every game in her three-year prep ca- R L

in a big city N reer ... garnered all-conference honors three FANTASY JOB: Star on Broadway times ... scored 18 goals and had seven assists A N Zinedine Zidane HAS THE COOLEST

as a freshman midfi elder ... made the transition M O NAME IN SPORTS to defensive midfi eld as a sophomore and junior Z PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Well...” E I ... still combined for 18 goals and 21 assists in N

R that time ... three times was named team MVP

FAVORITES ... served as student council president. T O

BOOK: “Ella Enchanted” S

H MOVIE: “Love Actually”

MISCELLANEOUS CLASS: International Progress of History

E Is a student trainee for the Florentine Opera and FOOD: Gnocchi or pierogis was Acapella Choir president.

M HISTORICAL FIGURE: Babe Didrickson I SUPER HERO: Batman T

- SPOT ON CAMPUS: A bench behind the union 9

OVERALL YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2007 9/3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 Totals 9/3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0

LEAGUE YEAR GP/GS SHOTS G A PTS GWG GWA PK 2007 4/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 Totals 4/0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 35

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES NNEWCOMERSEWCOMERS NEWCOMERS 3300 4 9 LLINDSAYINDSAY CCHELSEAHELSEA MMAKENZIEAKENZIE BBOECKMANOECKMAN CCOLLINGOLLING GGILLASPIEILLASPIE

S Freshman • 5-10 • GK Freshman • 5-3 • F Freshman • 5-8 • MF

N Fort Dodge, Iowa/Fort Dodge Appleton, Wis./Xavier Elkhorn, Neb./Elkhorn

O MOYNIHAN ON BOECKMAN MOYNIHAN ON COLLING MOYNIHAN ON GILLASPIE I “Lindsay is a solid goalkeeper who will add depth “Chelsea is a phenomenal athlete that just started “Kenzie is central midfi elder that brings tremen- P to the position for us. She is a gifted athlete that is competing with an elite-level club team. She is dous versatility. She is fantastic in the air and has a 5

M very driven and hungry to learn and compete. Her lightning quick and has wonderful instincts for strong assertive attacking presence, yet she is very

dedication is rather remarkable. That kind of hun- making runs off the ball. She is adjusting very athletic and can defend as well. She will play some- N A ger to play is infectious and we are eager to bring quickly to the level of play with her club and, at the where centrally for us and I expect her impact to be C H her into our program and work with her.” rate she is going, she stands a great chance of con- immediate.” A C tributing for us right away.”

FORT DODGE ELKHORN A E

Four-year letterwinner at Fort Dodge High School APPLETON XAVIER Lettered all four years at Elkhorn High School T U ... named all-conference her last three seasons ... Four-year letterwinner at Appleton Xavier High ... helped her team to state championships as O G was a unanimous fi rst-team selection as a senior School ... won conference, sectional and regional a junior and senior ... converted deciding PK in U A after earning honorable mention nods as a sopho- championships each season ... helped the Hawks shootout wins in semifi nals and championship E more and junior ... also played . to Division 2 state titles as a freshman and senior, as a senior ... was a four-time all-state honoree, R L

scoring the game-winner in both title games ... as including Super-State (both Class A and B) honors N

a senior, was named to the all-state second team, her last two years ... one of just two Class B players A N a unanimous all-conference fi rst-team selection on the team her senior year and three her junior M O and shared Appleton Post-Crecent Female Co- season ... three times was named to the All-Oma- Z Player of the Year with fellow Panther newcomer ha Area team ... tallied 54 goals and 42 assists in E I

Sarah Hagen ... tallied 44 goals as a senior. her career, including 23/12 as a senior. N R T

O PERSONAL PERSONAL PERSONAL FULL NAME: Lindsay Sue Boeckman FULL NAME: Chelsea Elizabeth Colling FULL NAME: Makenzie Rose Gillaspie S H

BORN: Sept. 4, 1989 BORN: Nov. 5, 1989 BORN: April 4, 1990

E PARENTS: Dean and Tammy Boeckman PARENTS: Joe and Stephanie Colling PARENTS: Mark and Dianne Gillaspie SIBLINGS: Stefanie SIBLINGS: Reed and Mitchell SIBLINGS: Conor and Casey M

I WHY UWM? I love the city! Everything just Hayden Panetierre SHOULD PLAY ME IN A WIERDEST THING A COACH EVER TOLD

T fi ts - the team, the coaches and academics MOVIE ME: If I scored on my fi rst touch outside - PREGAME RITUAL: Eat a Snickers Marathon FANTASY JOB: Editor for a huge magazine of the box, he’d buy me an ice cream

9 bar and listen to music sandwich Ronaldinho HAS THE COOLEST NAME IN FAVORITES FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I was home- SPORTS SPOT ON CAMPUS: Women’s soccer locker schooled room PRE-GAME RITUALS: Say a prayer FAVORITES BOOK: “Lords of Discipline” SPOT ON CAMPUS: Engelmann Field FOOD: Ribs FAVORITES BOOK: “Vision of a Champion” or “The Man HISTORICAL FIGURE: JFK TV SHOW: “Jon and Kate Plus 8” Watching” CARTOON CHARACTER: SpongeBob BOOK: “My Sister’s Keeper” MOVIE: “The Gift” SOCCER MEMORY: Scoring the winning goal FOOD: Stromboli QUOTE: “Ability is what you’re capable of doing. my senior year of high school HISTORICAL FIGURE: Abraham Lincoln Motivation determines what you do. Attitude QUOTE: “Be quick, but not in a hurry.” SUPER HERO: Mr. Incredible 36 determines how you will do it.” - Lou Holtz CLASS: Psychology

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com NEWCOMERS NNEWCOMERSEWCOMERS PROFILES 1100 1177 1122 SSARAHARAH LLAURELAUREL KKEARAEARA HHAGENAGEN RRAGALIEAGALIE TTHOMPSONHOMPSON

S Freshman • 5-11 • MF/F Freshman • 5-7 • F Freshman • 5-2 • MF

N Appleton, Wis./North Kenosha, Wis./Bradford Calgary, Alberta, Canada/Bishop Carroll

O MOYNIHAN ON HAGEN MOYNIHAN ON RAGALIE MOYNIHAN ON THOMPSON I “I love Sarah’s composure. She has a great sense for “Laurel is a very dynamic attacking player. She has “Keara is a little energizer who covers a lot of P the game. She is tall and strong and is able to hold great speed and has a nose for the goal. We have ground and links beautifully with other players. 5

M the ball extremely well. She is also tremendous in had some excellent attacking players over the years She’s always around the ball and she just doesn’t

the air and strikes the ball very well. Sarah will im- but it has been a while since we’ve had a prolifi c make mistakes with it. She is fantastic at reading N A mediately give us a diff erent type of attacking pres- goal scorer. Laurel has the ability to become that the game and she has a shot from distance that C H ence that we have not had in years. She will be an very quickly.” is as dangerous as anyone is our program’s recent A C excellent compliment to our other attacking players history. Her experience with the National Training

and she will give our attack a diff erent dimension.” KENOSHA BRADFORD will also be a great asset and it will allow her A E

Named the 2008 Gatorade Wisconsin Player of to contribute immediately.” T U APPLETON NORTH the Year ... three-time all-state honoree for Keno- O G Three-year letterwinner at Appleton North High sha Bradford High School, earning a fi rst-team BISHOP CARROLL U A School ... three-time all-state selection, including nod as a junior and senior ... all-conference and Starter in all three seasons at Bishop Carroll High E a fi rst-team nod as a senior, after honorable men- all-county fi rst-team member all four seasons ... School ... was a three-year member of the Canada R L

tion honors her fi rst two seasons ... selected as the named to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel All-Area U-20 National Team pool from 2003-06 ... also N

Appleton Post-Crecent Female Soccer Athlete of First Team as a junior and senior and to the NSCAA was a member of the Alberta Provincial Team in A N the Year as a junior and senior sharing the honor All-Region Team in 2007 ... two-time Southeast all four of the years she was eligible ... named M O as a senior with fellow Panther newcomer Chel- Conference Player of the Year ... tallied 104 goals BCHS Female Athlete of the Year three times. Z sea Colling ... scored 33 goals, including 10 game- in her career, including 31 game-winners, and 38 E I

winners, and tallied seven assists as a senior. assists. N R T

O PERSONAL PERSONAL PERSONAL FULL NAME: Sarah Marie Hagen FULL NAME: Laurel Anne Ragalie FULL NAME: Keara Meghan Thompson S H

BORN: Nov. 18, 1989 BORN: July 13, 1990 BORN: April 23, 1990

E PARENTS: Michele and Charles Hagen PARENTS: Wayne and Donna Ragalie PARENTS: Cheryl and Marshal Thompson WHY UWM: The players are so nice and I know SIBLINGS: Mike and Matt SIBLINGS: Lauren, Steven and Robynne M

I some of the players from my club team WHY UWM: I liked the team chemistry, the FANTASY JOB: Playing for Everton of the EPL

T WIERDEST THING A COACH EVER TOLD city and that it’s close to home THE WEIRDEST THING A COACH EVER - ME: We shot well... they just didn’t go in FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I have a twin TOLD ME WAS: I jump like a salmon

9 FEW PEOPLE KNOW THAT: I had cancer my brother (Matt) PREGAME RITUAL: I listen to cheesy inspi- freshman year of high school FANTASY JOB: Elementary school teacher rational music FANTASY JOB: Coach the women’s national PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Just kidding” Robinho HAS THE COOLEST NAME IN team SPORTS FAVORITES FAVORITES CARTOON CHARACTER: Mickey Mouse FAVORITES SUPER HERO: Batman SPOT ON CAMPUS: The library. I like to read HISTORICAL FIGURE: John A. MacDonald TV SHOW: “Veronica Mars” books and relax (First Canadian Prime Minister) SOCCER MEMORY: Going to state my senior BOOK: “The Five People You Meet in Heaven” BOOK: The Harry Potter series year of high school TV SHOW: “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition” TV SHOW: “The Offi ce” QUOTE: “Talent wins games, teamwork wins HISTORICAL FIGURE: George Gershwin SOCCER MEMORY: Scoring the game-win- championships.” because he is an exact image of my dad ning goal against Manitoba at nationals 37

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide PROFILES NNEWCOMERSEWCOMERS PPANTHERSANTHERS BYBY THETHE NUMBERSNUMBERS

90’s The 2008 freshmen is the fi rst class 2233 2 to feature players born in the 90’s. Of the eight incoming freshman, four SSAMMYAMMY MMARYARY were born in 1989, four in 1990.

VVOVOSOVOS WWANDOLOWSKIANDOLOWSKI 16 Wisconsin has supplied the most Panthers, as 16 hail from inside the

S Freshman • 5-6 • F Freshman • 5-3 • MF/F state. There are 4 players from Illinois,

N Middleton, Wis./Middleton Batavia, Ill./Batavia the only other state represented by

O MOYNIHAN ON VOVOS MOYNIHAN ON WANDOLOWSKI more than one player. I “Sammy is strong, dynamic and aggressive as an “Mary is a playmaker. She likes to have the ball at P attacking player. She has seen most of her time at her feet, has good vision and has a good sense for 15 At 5-11, Sarah Hagen will be the tall- 5

M forward, but has the ability to play a variety of po- distribution. Unlike a lot of playmakers, though, est player to play for the Panthers in

sitions because she plays with an aggressive edge. Mary also has a ball-winning mentality and ag- N A 15 years. Hagen and Nichole Schmidt She has been a great goal-scorer at the club and gressiveness. She is very good in the air for her size C

H (1991-93) are the tallest players in high school level, and its that attacking mentality and can play a number of positions.” the program’s Division I history. A C that will give us more scoring options.”

BATAVIA A E 11 Of the 23 players that answered the MIDDLETON Lettered three seasons at Batavia High School, T U question “Who is your favorite super Four-year letterwinner at Middleton High School missing her sophomore season with a knee injury O

G hero?”, Batman was the most popular ... all-state second-team selection as a senior ...... named to all-conference, all-sectional and all-

choice with 11. The second-most U A named to the all-conference fi rst team in each of area fi rst teams in each of her three seasons ... popular hero was Superman (5). E her last three seasons ... helped the Cardinals to named conference player of the year as a senior ... R

L Seven diff erent heroes received one

a state championship in 2006 as well as regional played forward in her fi rst two seasons and scored N

and sectional titles in 2005 and 2007 ... on that 34 goals and 19 assists, while leading her team vote. A N state championship team, tallied 17 goals on the to a 31-7-2 record ... moved to the midfi eld and M O year, including six game-winners ... fi nished with tallied six goals as a senior. 8’s Kelly McGrath’s birthday is Aug. Z 13 goals and three assists in helping team to the 8, 1988 (8/8/88). This summer, E I

the regional fi nals and 16-1-4 record as a senior. she celebrated her 20th birthday N R (08/08/08). T

O PERSONAL PERSONAL FULL NAME: Samantha Jo Vovos FULL NAME: Mary Elizabeth Wandolowski S H 3, 0 The Panthers’ roster features 3 twins BORN: March 1, 1990 in Omaha, Neb. BORN: Dec. 6, 1989 in Norwich, Conn. — Jodi Klagos, Kayla DeJardin and E PARENTS: Stan and Sarah Vovos PARENTS: Raymond and Marianne Laurel Ragalie. Of the three, 0 have SIBLINGS: Robby and Tyler Wandolowski M twin sisters (all fraternal brothers). I FANTASY JOB: Physical Therapist SIBLINGS: Amanda and Matthew

T PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Wait... what?” WHY UWM? The campus is not too big and

- 2 2 Panthers were born outside of the IF I COULD HAVE ONE SUPER POWER, IT the atmosphere is great. —Keara Thompson 9 WOULD BE: The power to fl y PHRASE I OVERUSE: “Snap!” (Canada) and Andrea Wisniewski Zinedine Zidane HAS THE COOLEST NAME IF I COULD HAVE ONE SUPER POWER, IT (Germany) IN SPORTS WOULD BE: Wicked fast speed

FAVORITES FAVORITES 2nd Keara Thompson will be the 2nd HISTORICAL FIGURE: Martin Luther King SPOT ON CAMPUS: Engelmann Field Canadian to play for the Panthers BOOK: “I Have Lived a Thousand Years” BOOK: “Mind Gym” and the Harry Potter series (Janice McGann, 2002-05) MOVIE: “The Devil Wears Prada” MOVIE: “Finding Nemo” FOOD: Mac and cheese TV SHOW: “Smallville” 1, 0 There is just 1 Panther with 0 sib- SUPER HERO: Batman SUPER HERO: Superman lings. Sarah Hagen is the team’s lone SOCCER MEMORY: Winning state in high SOCCER MEMORY: When I did a bicycle kick only child. 38 school during a 3v3 game in Florida

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com 22007007 SSEASONEASON RECAPRECAP 2007 IN REVIEW

Coming off back-to-back trips to the NCAA Tour- Six diff erent Panthers then scored in a 6-0 rout of nament, the bar was set high for the Panthers. Cleveland State at home to open the fi nal week- They did not waver from the challenge, posting a end of league play. Coming out of halftime with a perfect 2-0 record at the Milwaukee Cup for the 1-0 lead, sophomore Kate Megna kicked off a fi ve- second-straight season and winning their fi rst goal half just 37 seconds into the period. tourney title in the eight years of the event. On Sunday, Milwaukee said goodbye to four se- Milwaukee topped Indiana State, 3-0, in the sea- niors, then treated them to a 2-0 win over Wright son-opener and followed it up with a 2-1 win over State. The win, secured with goals from Megna S Washington. and Teegarden, gave the Panthers their eighth- N straight league title, the second-longest streak in

O A week later, the UWM off ense sputtered at the the nation. I Wisconsin Soccer Classic in Madison. The Panthers P fell to Boston University, 1-0, before outlasting UC In preparation for the league tournament, UWM 5

M Santa Barbara through two overtimes for a 1-0 headed to Texas for a showdown with second-

win. Freshman Nicole Sperl tallied the game-win- ranked Texas A&M. The Aggies, with help from N A EERINRIN KKREUSERREUSER ner in the 105th minute, combining with sopho- a hostile crowd of over 3,000, overwhelmed the C H more Erin Kreuser for the second time in three of seven-straight Horizon League regular season Panthers in a 6-1 win. Shipway scored Milwau- A C

games. titles. The league slate got off to a phenomonal kee’s only goal, breaking through late off assists A

E start, a 5-1 win at Butler. Kreuser scored and as- from Kreuser and Megna.

In fact, it was Kreuser’s third-straight assist on a sisted on the fi rst two goals, while senior Joanna T U UWM goal—a streak that would span every team Severson scored two goals of her own. The Bull- UWM returned home and the defense returned O G goal scored over eight-plus games. dogs’ lone goal was a penalty kick in the second to form in a 1-0 win over Cleveland State in the U A half. league quarterfi nals. The Panthers shut out the E Unfortunately, a September trip to Boston, Mass., Vikings on the scoreboard as well as in the shot R L

yielded no goals as Milwaukee lost back-to-back On the second half of the road trip at Detroit, column. It was the team’s fi rst game without al- N

games for the fi rst time in two years. On Friday goals were at more of a premium. The Panthers lowing a shot since exactly two years earlier, also A N of the weekend trip, the Panthers fell to No. 8 and Titans played to a scoreless draw. against CSU in the league quarters. M O Boston College, 1-0. Two days later, a 23-8 shot Z advantage was not enough as Harvard beat UWM The team’s third 0-0 tie of the season awaited a Individually, Kane collected her 37th career win E I

by another 1-0 score. week later, but not before the Panthers reaffi rmed in goal, breaking Kerri St. Aubin’s school-record N R

they could score goals at Green Bay mid-week. career win total of 36. T O

In-state foes welcomed the Panthers back to UWM traveled I-43 north and trounced the Phoe- S

H Wisconsin, and they responded with a win and a nix, 4-0, behind sophomore Green Bay-native tie. First, Kreuser scored the game’s lone goal in a Kayla DeJardin’s fi rst two collegiate goals. E 1-0 win at Wisconsin. It was Milwaukee’s second-

M straight win over the Badgers. After a 0-0 tie with Iowa in a break from I league play, Milwaukee held on to win against T Back at home, No. 24 Marquette and a locally- Youngstown State, 2-1, in a Sunday afternoon - televised showdown awaited UWM. It battled contest. Freshman Heather Roadhouse provided 9 through two overtimes for a 0-0 draw with the the game-winner off an assist from high school Golden Eagles, who had been averaging just un- teammate freshman Nicole Hirsch. der three goals per game. A 2-0 win at Valparaiso led into a showdown with Junior keeper Erin Kane was a rock in goal, collect- Loyola for fi rst place in the league standings. The ing seven saves in the match, including a handful Ramblers, picked second in the league preseason of highlight stops. The clean sheet also made her poll, were one point back of UWM (13-12), but the fi rst player in school or league history to tally still undefeated at 4-0. Junior Sarah Teegarden 30 career shutouts. got the scoring started just before halftime, but Loyola knotted the score at 1-1 in the 63rd min- With the non-league portion of its schedule near- ute. Eight minutes later, senior Pam Shipway con- DDEFENDEREFENDER CLAIRECLAIRE WATKINSWATKINS 39 ly complete, Milwaukee embarked on its defense verted a Sperl pass into the deciding goal.

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide 2007 IN REVIEW 22007007 SSEASONEASON RECAP/STATSRECAP/STATS

An improved Butler squad was next up for Mil- goal in the 60th minute. Four minutes later, Hirsch But, the Ramblers would not go away, tying the waukee in the semifi nals. The Bulldogs actually scored a goal of her own for a 2-0 Panther lead game with goals in the 77th and 82nd minutes. took a 1-0 lead late in the second half, but Ship- late in the match. The game then went into overtime, after which way evened the score just fi ve minutes later to the game remained knotted at 2-2. force overtime. Teegarden ended the game in the 108th minute when she scored off a rebounded For the second time in three seasons, Milwaukee corner kick. faced a penalty kick shootout in the league cham- pionship game. It was the team’s fi fth shootout in The win propelled the Panthers into their league- that time, with UWM escaping victorious in each S record ninth championship game appearance. of the previous four. N They were set to host second-seeded Loyola at

O Engelmann Field. It was not meant to be this time, however, as I Loyola emerged on top in sudden death PK’s, 3-2. P Everything appeared to be headed in Milwaukee’s Days later, the Panthers’ season came to an end as 5

M favor as Hirsch and sophomore Louise Vraney as- SSARAHARAH TALBERTTALBERT a second-straight at-large bid to the NCAA Tour-

sisted freshman Sarah Talbert for the game’s fi rst nament aluded their grasp. N A C H A

C OOFFENSIVEFFENSIVE STATISTICSSTATISTICS TTEAMEAM STATISTICSSTATISTICS

## NAME GP-GS MIN G A PTS SH SH% Y-R GW PK PANTHERS OPP A E

7 Nicole Sperl 21-13 1293 5 4 14 63 .079 0-0 4 1-1 SHOT STATISTICS T U 25 Erin Kreuser 20-19 1519 3 7 13 39 .077 0-0 1 0-0 Goals-Shot attempts 36-411 16-196 O G 17 Pam Shipway 21-15 1062 5 2 12 31 .161 0-0 2 0-0 Goals scored average 1.62 0.72 U

A 14 Kate Megna 20-18 1350 4 4 12 39 .103 0-0 1 0-0 Shot pct. .088 .082 E

13 Sarah Teegarden 21-21 1874 3 0 6 55 .055 0-0 1 0-0 Shots/Game 19.6 9.3 R

L 23 Joanna Severson 21-10 1107 3 0 6 15 .200 0-0 0 2-2 Assists 28 11 N 15 Kayla DeJardin 19-9 1110 2 2 6 6 .333 0-0 0 0-0 CORNER KICKS 116 48 A N 12 Amanda Winn 19-19 1767 2 1 5 23 .087 0-0 0 0-0 PENALTY KICKS 3-3 1-1 M

O 11 Sarah Talbert 14-7 727 2 1 5 12 .167 0-0 0 0-0 PENALTIES Z

5 Nicole Hirsch 15-0 278 1 3 5 9 .111 0-0 0 0-0 Yellow cards 1 6 E I

18 Beth Steuer 21-8 900 2 0 4 26 .077 0-0 2 0-0 Red cards 0 0 N

R 6 Heather Roadhouse 21-21 1864 1 1 3 23 .043 0-0 1 0-0 ATTENDANCE T

O 8 Louise Vraney 12-6 595 1 1 3 13 .077 0-0 1 0-0 Totalal 3567 4731 2 Claire Pignet 14-5 516 1 1 3 3 .333 0-0 0 0-0 Dates/Avg Per Date 11/324 8/591 S H

24 Andrea Wisniewski 16-5 805 0 1 1 9 .000 0-0 0 0-0 Neutral Site #/Avg 2/182

E 3 Erin DeYoung 17-12 1020 0 0 0 24 .000 0-0 0 0-0 26 Jodi Klagos 9-4 294 0 0 0 17 .000 0-0 0 0-0 M SSTATISTICSTATISTICS BYBY PERIODPERIOD I 27 Kelly McGrath 6-0 90 0 0 0 2 .000 0-0 0 0-0 GOALS 1ST 2ND OT OT2 TOT T 9 Claire Watkins 21-15 1466 0 0 0 2 .000 0-0 0 0-0 PANTHERS 12 22 0 2 - 36 - 16 Helena Zbilut 9-3 385 0 0 0 0 .000 0-0 0 0-0 OPPONENTS 6 10 0 0 - 16 9 TM Team — — 1 — 2 — — 1-0 0 — PANTHERS 21 — 36 28 100 411 .088 1-0 13 3-3 SHOTS 1ST 2ND OT OT2 TOT OPPONENTS 21 — 16 11 43 196 .082 6-0 4 1-1 PANTHERS 166 220 14 11 - 411 OPPONENTS 88 93 9 6 - 196 GGOALKEEPEROALKEEPER STATISTICSSTATISTICS SAVES 1ST 2ND OT OT2 TOT # PLAYER GP-GS MIN. GA GAA SV PCT W L T SHO PANTHERS 28 34 3 3 - 68 1 Erin Kane 21-21 1978:43 16 0.73 66 .805 13 4 4 10 OPPONENTS 60 62 4 3 - 129 19 Leslie Deebach 1-0 23:06 0 0.00 1 1.000 0 0 0 0 PANTHERS 21 2001:49 16 0.72 68 .810 13 4 4 11 CORNERS 1ST 2ND OT OT2 TOT 40 OPPONENTS 21 2001:49 36 1.62 129 .782 4 13 4 6 PANTHERS 51 57 5 3 - 116 Returning Panthers in BOLD OPPONENTS 17 29 0 2 - 48

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com 22007007 SSCHEDULE/RESULTSCHEDULE/RESULTS 2007 IN REVIEW

OVERALL RECORD: 13-4-4 • HOME: 8-0-3 • ROAD: 4-3-1 • NEUTRAL: 1-1-0

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE RECORD LEAGUE ATT. PANTHER GOAL SCORERS % Aug 31 INDIANA STATE W 3-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 351 Louise Vraney (Megna; DeJardin) OWN GOAL Sarah Talbert (Pignet) % Sept. 2 WASHINGTON W 2-1 2-0-0 0-0-0 203 Kate Megna (Kreuser) Nicole Sperl (Kreuser) LLOUISEOUISE VRANEYVRANEY $ Sept. 7 vs Boston University L 0-1 2-1-0 0-0-0 186 - S $ Sept. 9 vs UC Santa Barbara W O2 1-0 3-1-0 0-0-0 179 Nicole Sperl (Kreuser) N Sept. 14 @ #8 Boston College L 0-1 3-2-0 0-0-0 243 -

O Sept. 16 @ Harvard L 0-1 3-3-0 0-0-0 135 - I Sept. 21 @ Wisconsin W 1-0 4-3-0 0-0-0 720 Erin Kreuser (Megna; DeJardin) P Sept. 23 #24 MARQUETTE T O2 0-0 4-3-1 0-0-0 867 - 5

M * Sept. 28 @ Butler W 5-1 5-3-1 1-0-0 153 Erin Kreuser (Sperl)

N A Nicole Sperl (Kreuser)

Joanna Severson (penalty kick) C H Joanna Severson (Megna) A C JJOANNAOANNA SEVERSONSEVERSON Pam Shipway (Kreuser) A

E * Sept. 30 @ Detroit T O2 0-0 5-3-2 1-0-1 94 - * Oct. 3 @ Green Bay W 4-0 6-3-2 2-0-1 128 Beth Steuer (Kreuser; Shipway) T U Kayla DeJardin (unassisted) O G Amanda Winn (unassisted) U A Kayla DeJardin (Sperl) E Oct. 5 IOWA T O2 0-0 6-3-3 2-0-1 317 - R L N

* Oct. 7 YOUNGSTOWN STATE W 2-1 7-3-3 3-0-1 181 Kate Megna (Winn)

Heather Roadhouse (Hirsch) A N * Oct. 12 @ Valparaiso W 2-0 8-3-3 4-0-1 176 Nicole Sperl (Talbert) M O Joanna Severson (penalty kick)

Z E KKAYLAAYLA D JJARDINARDIN E

I * Oct. 16 LOYOLA W 2-1 9-3-3 5-0-1 331 Sarah Teegarden (unassisted) Pam Shipway (Sperl) N R

* Oct. 19 CLEVELAND STATE W 6-0 10-3-3 6-0-1 247 Pam Shipway (Sperl) T O

Kate Megna (unassisted) S

H Erin Kreuser (Wisniewski; Hirsch)

Amanda Winn (unassisted) E Nicole Sperl (penalty kick)

M Claire Pignet (unassisted) I * Oct. 21 WRIGHT STATE W 2-0 11-3-3 7-0-1 288 Kate Megna (unassisted) T

- Sarah Teegarden (Shipway) Oct. 26 @ #2 Texas A&M L 1-6 11-4-3 7-0-1 3082 Pam Shipway (Megna; Kreuser) 9 PPAMAM SHIPWAYSHIPWAY & Nov. 3 CLEVELAND STATE W 1-0 12-4-3 7-0-1 222 Beth Steuer (unassisted) & Nov. 9 BUTLER W O2 2-1 13-4-3 7-0-1 303 Pam Shipway (Roadhouse) Sarah Teegarden (unassisted) & Nov. 11 LOYOLA T O2 2-2 13-4-4 7-0-1 257 Sarah Talbert (Hirsch; Vraney) Nicole Hirsch (unassisted)

* - Horizon League Match • Home Games In CAPS • Game-Winning Goals in BOLD % - Milwaukee Cup (Engelmann Field) • $ - Wisconsin Soccer Classic (Madison, Wis.) & - Horizon League Tournament (Engelmann Field) National Rankings are according to most recent NSCAA Coaches’ Poll on day of game NNICOLEICOLE HIRSCHHIRSCH 41

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide 2007 IN REVIEW BBOXOX SSCORES/NOTESCORES/NOTES

Milwaukee 3, Indiana State 0 #8 Boston College 1, Milwaukee 0 Milwaukee 5, Butler 1 Milwaukee Cup • Aug. 31 • Engelmann Field Sept. 14 • Boston, Mass. Sept. 28 • , Ind. Goals by period 1 2 Tot Goals by period 1 2 Tot Goals by period 1 2 Tot Indiana State 0 0 0 Milwaukee 0 0 0 Milwaukee 2 3 5 Milwaukee 1 2 3 #8 Boston College 1 0 1 Butler 0 1 1 Goals Goals Goals 1 40:03 UWM Vraney (Megna, DeJardin) 1 28:28 BC Henderson (McNeill) 1 6:20 UWM Kreuser (Sperl) 2 57:19 UWM OWN GOAL Shots: UWM 3, BC 20 2 21:29 UWM Sperl (Kreuser) 3 74:27 UWM Talbert (Pignet) Saves: UWM 4 (Kane 4), BC 1 (Buonomo 1) 3 75:22 UWM Severson (penalty kick) S Shots: ISU 7, UWM 30 4 78:03 BU Muir (penalty kick)

N Saves: ISU 12 (Rudzis 12), UWM 3 (Kane 3) Harvard 1, Milwaukee 0 5 81:08 UWM Severson (Megna)

O Notes: Sarah Talbert is just the second freshman Sept. 16 • Cambridge, Mass. 6 88:55 UWM Shipway (Kreuser) I in school history to score a goal in the team’s sea- Goals by period 1 2 Tot Shots: UWM 16, BU 7 P son opener ... Louise Vraney now has three goals Milwaukee 0 0 0 Saves: UWM 2 (Kane 2), BU 3 (Larkin 2; Schein 1) in season openers over her fi rst two seasons, al- Notes: Milwaukee defeated Butler for the 13th- 5 M Harvard 1 0 1

ready the most season-opening goals in school straight time ... Erin Kreuser had a hand in six- N

A Goals history ... Nicole Sperl had nine shots in her debut, 1 38:58 HAR Wideroff (Sherman) straight goals scored by the Panthers, ending with C H the most by a Panther since Oct. 30, 2002. Shots: UWM 23, HAR 9 Joanna Severson’s PK. A C

Saves: UWM 1 (Kane 1), HAR 8 (Mann 8)

Milwaukee 2, Washington 1 Milwaukee 0, Detroit 0 - 2ot A

E Notes: UWM lost back-to-back games for the fi rst Milwaukee Cup • Sept. 2 • Engelmann Field Sept. 30 • Clinton Twp, Mich. time since Sept. 16-17, 2005 ... the slide puts the T U Goals by period 1 2 Tot Panthers at 3-3, the fi rst time since Sept. 25, 2005, Goals by period 1 2 OT 2OT Tot O

G Washington 1 0 1 they have not been at least one game over .500. Milwaukee 0 0 0 0 0 U

A Milwaukee 1 1 2 Detroit 0 0 0 0 0 Goals Shots: UWM 18, UDM 6 E Milwaukee 1, Wisconsin 0 R 1 14:18 WASH Bea (Alexander) UWM 3 (Kane 3), UDM 4 (Fortenberry 4) L Saves:

Sept. 21 • Madison, Wis. N 2 22:23 UWM Megna (Kresuer) Notes: The match was played off campus in Clin- Goals by period 1 2 Tot A

N 3 45:48 UWM Sperl (Kreuser) ton Township due to renovations at Titan Field ... Milwaukee 0 1 1 Shots: WASH 6, UWM 16 UWM was shut out in a league game for the fi rst M O Wisconsin 0 0 0 Saves: WASH 3 (Carr 2; TM 1), UWM 3 (Kane 3) time since Oct. 27, 1999 (46 games). Z Goals E I Notes: The Panthers won the Milwaukee Cup 1 46:42 UWM Kreuser (Megna; DeJardin) N

R title, their fi rst in-season tournament crown since Milwaukee 4, Green Bay 0 the Central Michigan Invitational in 2000. Shots: UWM 10, UW 5 Oct. 3 • Green Bay, Wis. T O Saves: UWM 3 (Kane 3), UW 7 (Klages 7) Goals by period 1 2 Tot S

H Notes: The game was delayed in the fi fth min-

Boston University 1, Milwaukee 0 Milwaukee 2 2 4 ute for 84 minutes due to lightning ... Milwaukee

E Wisconsin Invite • Sept. 7 • Madison, Wis. Green Bay 0 0 0 Goals by period 1 2 Tot defeated Wisconsin for the second-straight time Goals

M after a 1-17-4 record in the series prior to 2006 ...

I Boston University 1 0 1 1 36:23 UWM Steuer (Kreuser; Shipway) Erin Kreuser’s goal was the 800th in team history

T Milwaukee 0 0 0 2 42:06 UWM DeJardin (unassisted) ... this was the fi fth-straight 1-0 match the Pan- - Goals 3 54:55 UWM Winn (unassisted) thers have played, setting a school record.

9 1 9:09 BU McClernon (unassisted) 4 62:20 UWM DeJardin (Sperl) Shots: BU 5, UWM 12 Shots: UWM 24, GB 7 Saves: BU 2 (Reilly 2), UWM 1 (Kane 1) Milwaukee 0, Marquette 0 - 2ot Saves: UWM 3 (Kane 3), GB 7 (Wikgren 7) Sept. 23 • Valley Field Notes: A Green Bay-area native, Kayla DeJardin’s Milwaukee 1, UC Santa Barbara 0 - 2ot Goals by period 1 2 OT 2OT Tot goals were the fi rst two of her career ... Milwau- Wisconsin Invite • Sept. 9 • Madison, Wis. #24 Marquette 0 0 0 0 0 kee is unbeaten in its last six games against in- Goals by period 1 2 OT 2OT Tot Milwaukee 0 0 0 0 0 state opponents (5-0-1). UC Santa Barbara 0 0 0 0 0 Shots: MU 18, UWM 19 Milwaukee 0 0 0 1 1 Saves: MU 4 (Boyer 4), UWM 8 (Kane 7; TM 1) Milwaukee 0, Iowa 0 - 2ot Goals Notes: Erin Kane picked up her third career shut- Oct. 5 • Milwaukee, Wis. 1 104:17 UWM Sperl (Kreuser) out of a ranked foe ... head coach Michael Moyni- Goals by period 1 2 OT 2OT Tot 42 Shots: UCSB 9, UWM 17 han was issued a yellow card, his fi rst card since Iowa 0 0 0 0 0 Saves: UCSB 10 (Wright 10), UWM 5 (Kane 5) Oct. 20, 2000, a span of 139 games. Milwaukee 0 0 0 0 0

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com BBOXOX SSCORES/NOTESCORES/NOTES 2007 IN REVIEW

Shots: Iowa 12, UWM 13 6 84:46 UWM Pignet (unassisted) breaking the school record she tied Oct. 21 ... Saves: Iowa 4 (Boldt 4), UWM 5 (Kane 5) Shots: CSU 4, UWM 42 UWM allowed zero shots in a game for the fourth Saves: CSU 8 (Zinkiewich 3; Saunders 4; TM 1), time in school history. Milwaukee 2, Youngstown State 1 UWM 1 (Deebach, Leslie 1) Oct. 7 • Engelmann Field Milwaukee 2, Butler 1 - 2ot Goals by period 1 2 Tot Milwaukee 2, Wright State 0 League Semis • Nov. 9 • Engelmann Field Youngstown State 1 0 1 Oct. 21 • Engelmann Field Goals by period 1 2 OT 2OT Tot Milwaukee 1 1 2 Goals by period 1 2 Tot Butler 0 1 0 0 1 Goals Wright State 0 0 0 Milwaukee 0 1 0 1 2 S 1 14:06 UWM Megna (Winn) Milwaukee 1 1 2 Goals

N 2 27:52 YSU Brennan (Wack; Brady) Goals 1 74:20 BU Twyman (unassisted)

O 3 74:06 UWM Roadhouse (Hirsch) 1 22:00 UWM Megna (unassisted) 2 79:31 UWM Shipway (Roadhouse) I Shots: YSU 3, UWM 37 2 69:43 UWM Teegarden (Shipway) 3 107:32 UWM Teegarden (unassisted)

P Saves: YSU 15 (Bodzioney 15), UWM 0 Shots: WSU 5, UWM 20 Shots: BU 10, UWM 17 Saves: WSU 7 (Hackerson 6; TM 1), UWM 2 (Kane 2) Saves: BU 4 (Larkin 4), UWM 2 (Kane 2) 5 M

Milwaukee 2, Valparaiso 0 Notes: The Panthers extended a number of un- Notes: The Panthers defeated Butler for the 14th- N A Oct. 12 • Valparaiso, Ind. beaten streaks: 30-straight league games (28- straight time ... they met for the 10th time in C H Goals by period 1 2 Tot 0-2), 24-straight games in October (22-0-2) and league tourney play ... Sarah Teegarden’s game- A C Milwaukee 1 1 2 28-straight home league games (27-0-1) ... UWM winning goal was the eighth of her career, giving

Valparaiso 0 0 0 has allowed a goal or less in its last 27 games dat- her sole possession of third place in the school A E Goals ing back to last season. record books.

T U 1 34:08 UWM Sperl (Talbert) O

G 2 66:50 UWM Severson (penalty kick) #2 Texas A&M 6, Milwaukee 1 Loyola 2, Milwaukee 2 - 2ot

Shots: UWM 16, Valpo 7 U A Oct. 26 • College Station, Texas (Loyola advances on PKs, 3-2) Saves: UWM 1 (Kane 1), Valpo 5 (Murray 5) Goals by period 1 2 Tot League Finals • Nov. 11 • Engelmann Field E R Notes: Milwaukee is 8-0 against Valpo, its most Milwaukee 0 1 1 Goals by period 1 2 OT 2OT Tot L N wins against any opponent without a loss ... the #2 Texas A&M 1 5 6 Loyola 0 2 0 0 2 A

N shutout was the 150th in program history ... Jo- Goals Milwaukee 0 2 0 0 2

anna Severson fi nished a perfect 5-for-5 on PKs 1 40:48 TAMU Currie (unassisted) Goals M O in her career. 2 47:35 TAMU Garey (Currie) 1 59:39 UWM Talbert (Hirsch; Vraney) Z E

I Milwaukee 2, Loyola 1 3 58:38 TAMU OWN GOAL 2 63:36 UWM Hirsch (unassisted) N

R Oct. 16 • Engelmann Field 4 73:50 UWM Shipway (Megna; Kreuser) 3 76:35 LU Murray (Morote-Ariza) Goals by period 1 2 Tot 5 74:50 TAMU Jones (Gnatzig) 4 81:55 LU Colhoff (Morote-Ariza) T O Loyola 0 1 1 6 80:44 TAMU Jones (Dyer) Shots: LU 23, UWM 22 S H

Milwaukee 1 1 2 7 84:57 TAMU Jones (Hooper) Saves: LU 8 (Dougherty 8), UWM 9 (Kane 9)

E Goals Shots: UWM 11, TAMU 20 Shootout Results 1 41:57 UWM Teegarden (unassisted) Saves: UWM 6 (Kane 6), TAMU 4 (Arnold 3; TM 1) R1 LU - Heidenreich (G) UWM - Severson (X) M

I 2 62:23 LU Morote-Ariza (unassisted) - Elisabeth Jones is the fi rst opponent with a hat R2 LU - Vera (X) UWM - Sperl (G)

T 3 70:18 UWM Shipway (Sperl) trick against UWM since Sept. 17, 1995 ... the Pan- R3 LU - Lau (G) UWM - Shipway (G)

- Shots: LU 13, UWM 17 thers suff ered their worst loss since Sept. 2, 1995, R4 LU - Lomas (X) UWM - DeYoung (X)

9 Saves: LU 3 (Dougherty 2; TM 1), UWM 6 (Kane 6) and gave up more than one goal for the fi rst time R5 LU - Murray (X) UWM - Vraney (X) since Oct. 4, 2006, a span of 27 games. R6 LU - Trevillian (G) UWM - Kane (X) Milwaukee 6, Cleveland State 0 Notes: - The Panthers are now 2-3-4 in the Ho- Oct. 19 • Engelmann Field Milwaukee 1, Cleveland State 0 rizon League championship game and 3-1 in Goals by period 1 2 Tot League Quarters • Nov. 3 • Engelmann Field penalty kick shootouts ... Pam Shipway played in Cleveland State 0 0 0 Goals by period 1 2 Tot her 84th career game, tied for second in school Milwaukee 1 5 6 Cleveland State 0 0 0 history ... Milwaukee is now unbeaten in its last Goals Milwaukee 1 0 1 23 overtime games (10-0-13) ... Erin Kane has 1 30:42 UWM Shipway (Sperl) Goals still not allowed an overtime goal in her career, 2 45:37 UWM Megna (unassisted) 1 14:31 UWM Steuer (unassisted) pushing her shutout streak to 302:28 ... her nine 3 55:52 UWM Kreuser (Wisniewski; Hirsch) Shots: CSU 0, UWM 28 saves were a career-high ... two of Nicole Hirsch’s 4 57:50 UWM Winn (unassisted) Saves: CSU 10 (Zinkiewich 10), UWM 0 three assists this season have set up goals for high 43 5 79:45 UWM Sperl (penalty kick) Notes: Erin Kane picked up career win No. 37, school teammates (Talbert/Roadhouse Oct. 7).

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide 2007 IN REVIEW HHORIZONORIZON LEAGUELEAGUE RECAPRECAP HHORIZONORIZON LEAGUELEAGUE STANDINGSSTANDINGS HHORIZONORIZON LEAGUELEAGUE LEADERSLEADERS LEAGUE OVERALL GOALKEEPERS GP SV% GAA SHO TEAM W L T PCT. GF/GA W L T PCT. GF/GA 1. Kane, UWM 21 .805 0.73 10 Milwaukee 7 0 1 .938 23/3 13 4 4 .714 36/16 2. Hackerson, WSU 20 .823 0.85 7 Loyola 7 1 0 .875 18/4 14 9 1 .604 40/31 3. Larkin, Butler 20 .820 1.02 5 Wright State 5 2 1 .688 15/7 13 6 1 .675 38/17 4. Dougherty, Loyola 21 .771 1.12 7 Butler 5 3 0 .625 12/10 10 9 1 .525 30/26 5. Murray, Valpo 17 .750 1.13 6 Valparaiso 4 4 0 .500 8/9 10 9 0 .526 22/19 6. Fortenberry, UDM 19 .742 1.67 6 Detroit 2 3 3 .438 9/8 4 11 4 .316 17/34 7. Bodzioney, YSU 19 .814 2.06 1 Green Bay 2 6 0 .250 11/22 2 16 0 .111 14/46 8. Zinkiewich, CSU 20 .738 2.33 2 S Cleveland State 1 6 1 .188 5/21 5 14 1 .275 23/51 9. Wikgren, GB 18 .707 2.51 1

N Youngstown State 0 8 0 .000 4/21 1 18 1 .075 15/44

O SCORING GP G A PTS I 1. Morote-Ariza, Loyola 24 17 9 43 P 2. Kasmer, WSU 20 12 5 29 5

M 3. Muir, Butler 20 10 6 26

4. Miller, WSU 20 9 4 22 N A KKATEATE MEGNAMEGNA SSARAHARAH TEEGARDENTEEGARDEN 5. Brennan, YSU 20 8 3 19 C H Wieand, CSU 20 8 3 19 A C 7. Back, CSU 20 6 4 16

8. Twyman, Butler 19 7 1 15 A E

9. Sperl, UWM 21 5 4 14 T U Fox, Butler 19 5 4 14 O

G AAMANDAMANDA WINNWINN EERINRIN KKANEANE Rooma, WSU 20 6 2 14 U A E HHORIZONORIZON LEAGUELEAGUE AWARDSAWARDS HHORIZONORIZON LEAGUELEAGUE TOURNAMENTTOURNAMENT R

L PLAYER OF THE YEAR NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR COACH OF THE YEAR FIRST ROUND • TUESDAY, OCT. 30 N

Cynthia Morote-Ariza, Loyola Amber Kasmer, Wright State Michael Moynihan, UWM #8 Cleveland State 2, #9 Youngstown State 1 - OT A N ALL-LEAGUE FIRST TEAM LEAGUE ALL-NEWCOMER TEAM QUARTERFINALS -- SATURDAY, NOV. 3 M O F Cynthia Morote-Ariza, Loyola So. F Lindsey Fox, Butler So. at #4 Butler 2, #5 Valparaiso 0 Z at #3 Wright State 6, #6 Detroit 0 E

I F Amber Kasmer, Wright State Fr. F Laura Hayward, Green Bay Fr.

MF Angie Muir, Butler Jr. F Chelsea Lyons, Green Bay Fr. at #2 Loyola 5, #7 Green Bay 0 N R

MF Jackie Vera, Loyola So. F Amber Kasmer, Wright State Fr. at #1 Milwaukee 1, #8 Cleveland State 0 T O

MF Kate Megna, Milwaukee So. MF Courtney Lord, Butler Fr. SEMIFINALS -- FRIDAY, NOV. 9 S

H MF Sarah Teegarden, Milwaukee Jr. MF Heather Roadhouse, Milwaukee Fr. at Milwaukee, Wis. - Engelmann Field

MF Jess Rooma, Wright State Jr. MF Nicole Sperl, Milwaukee Fr. #2 Loyola 1, #3 Wright State 0 E D Abbie Kaul, Butler So. MF Jen Agueci, Wright State Fr. #1 Milwaukee 2, #4 Butler 1 - 2OT

M D Heather Lau, Loyola Sr. MF Lynnea Pappas, Valparaiso Fr. CHAMPIONSHIP -- SUNDAY, NOV. 11 I D Amanda Winn, Milwaukee Sr. D Alauna Pierce, Detroit So. at Milwaukee, Wis. - Engelmann Field T #2 Loyola 2, #1 Milwaukee 2 (LU wins in PKs, 3-2 )

- GK Erin Kane, Milwaukee Jr. GK Colleen Dougherty, Loyola Fr.

9 ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM ALL-LEAGUE SECOND TEAM PLAYERS OF THE WEEK Katie Heidenreich, Loyola F Jenny Southard, Butler Jr. Sept. 3 Amy Miller, Wright State Abbie Kaul, Butler F Jennifer Wieand, Cleveland State Jr. Sept. 10 Jennifer Wieand, Cleveland State Heather Lau, Loyola F Katie Heidenreich, Loyola Sr. Sept. 17 Angie Muir, Butler Heather Roadhouse, Milwaukee F Laura Hayward, Green Bay Fr. Sept. 24 Erin Kane, Milwaukee Jess Rooma, Wright State MF Ani Michl, Valparaiso So. Oct. 1 Katie Fortenberry, Detroit Pam Shipway, Milwaukee MF Lotte Rasmussen, Green Bay Sr. Oct. 8 Cynthia Morote-Ariza, Loyola Sarah Teegarden, Milwaukee D Melanie Slusher, Detroit Jr. Oct. 15 Amber Kasmer, Wright State Carrie Twyman, Butler D Jackie Thomas, Valparaiso Jr. Oct. 22 Pam Shipway, Milwaukee Jackie Vera, Loyola D Cassie Jones, Wright State Sr. Oct. 29 Carrie Twyman, Butler Amanda Winn, Milwaukee D Carrie Wack, Youngstown State Jr. 44 MVP: Cynthia Morote-Ariza, Loyola GK Katie Fortenberry, Detroit Jr. 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com HHORIZONORIZON LEAGUELEAGUE 2007 IN REVIEW

Celebrating its 30th anniversary in 2008-09, the goals, and to adhere to the principals of integrity, and Valparaiso followed in 2007. Horizon League continues to aspire toward its diversity, excellence and growth. goal of being one of the nation’s leading athletics The Horizon League sponsors competition in 19 • ATHLETIC SUCCESS conferences while being recognized as a leader in sports – nine for men (baseball, basketball, cross In the past few years, the Horizon League has the development of student-athletes as leaders country, , soccer, swimming and diving, indoor enjoyed unprecedented success on the national and role models. track and fi eld, outdoor track and fi eld and ) stage, highlighted by three Sweet 16 appearances and 10 for women (basketball, cross country, golf, (Butler 2003, 2007; Milwaukee 2005) and eight The Horizon League membership features 10 soccer, softball, swimming and diving, indoor wins in the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship public and private institutions that have impres- track and fi eld, outdoor track and fi eld, tennis and in the past fi ve seasons. In other sports, League S sive academic reputations and a storied tradi- volleyball). teams have won at least one game in their re- N tion of broad-based athletic programs. Current spective NCAA Championships each of the last six

O membership includes , Cleveland In all sports, all teams participate in their respec- seasons in men’s soccer (Milwaukee 2002-05, UIC I State University, the University of Detroit Mercy, tive postseason League championships regardless 2006-07), with UIC just one win away from the P the University of Illinois at Chicago, Loyola Univer- of regular-season performance, allowing all stu- College Cup in 2007. 5

M sity Chicago, , the University dent-athletes an opportunity to qualify for NCAA

of Wisconsin-Green Bay, the University of Wis- championships. The League receives automatic In softball, League teams won a game in the na- N A consin-Milwaukee, and bids to NCAA championships in baseball, men’s tional tournament four-straight years earlier in C H Youngstown State University. and women’s basketball, men’s golf, men’s and the decade (UIC 2002, 2004; Wright State 2003; A C

women’s soccer, softball, men’s and women’s ten- Green Bay 2005), while advancing into the second A

E The Horizon League’s primary focus is on adding nis, and women’s volleyball. round in women’s soccer three of the last four

value to the educational experience through its (Detroit 2004, Milwaukee 2005-06). Green Bay’s T U four platforms of athletic performance, academic The Horizon League is headquartered in India- women’s basketball team added to that resume O G achievement, community outreach, and personal napolis, the “Amateur Sports Capital of the World,” with a victory in the 2007 NCAA Women’s Bas- U A responsibility and accountability. It is the League’s with offi ces in the Pan American Plaza (201 S. ketball Championship. Butler’s Victoria Mitchell E belief that athletics is a powerful and visible re- Capitol Avenue), located across the street from became the League’s fi rst NCAA individual cham- R L

source tool that can be used to enhance stu- the RCA Dome and just blocks from Conseco Field- pion when she won the 3,000-meter steeplechase N

dent-athletes’ collegiate experience. The Horizon house, the State Capitol Building and the NCAA at the 2005 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Cham- A N League’s goals are to enhance the holistic univer- national offi ce. pionships and then fi nished fourth at the 2005 M O sity experience for the student-athlete, to create NCAA Cross Country Championships. Z an affi liation of institutions with similar athletic • HISTORY E I

Founded on June 16, 1979 as the Midwestern • ACADEMIC SUCCESS N R

City Conference with six charter members, the Horizon League student-athletes also excel in the T O

League changed its name to the Midwestern classroom as more than 500 have been named to S

H Collegiate Conference in 1985 and added the Academic Honor Roll each of the past seven women’s sports for the 1986-87 academic semesters for carrying a grade-point average of E year. 3.2 or better, including more than 600 for the

M fall 2007 and spring 2008 semesters. Forty-eight I Charter members of the conference in- student-athletes were named to ESPN The Maga- T cluded current members Butler and zine/CoSIDA Academic All-District teams in 2006- - Loyola as well as the 07 and 14 earned Academic All-America honors, 9 , including a pair of fi rst-team selections. Oklahoma City Univer- sity, Oral Roberts • DEMOGRAPHICS University and Horizon League institutions boast a combined . enrollment of more than 130,000 plus more than Among other current 700,000 living alumni centered in the League’s members, Detroit joined Midwest footprint. League media markets include in 1980 and Cleveland State, fi ve of the nation’s top 35 in Chicago, Detroit, UIC, Green Bay, Milwaukee and Cleveland, Indianapolis and Milwaukee, cover- Wright State came aboard in 1994 in the larg- ing more than ten million television households est non-merger conference expansion in history. and encompassing more than nine percent of the 45 Youngstown State joined the League in 2001 nation’s television audience.

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide OPPONENTS OPPONENT INFORMATION

WISCONSIN BADGERS Friday, August 22 • 7 p.m. • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics Barry Alvarez 2007 Overall Record 6-11-1 Home Field McClimonTrack/Soccer Complex 2007 League Record 2-8/10th Capacity 4,500 League Tournament N/A NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach PaulaWilkins Record at School 6-11-1 (1 year) Starters Returning/Lost 7/4 Career Record 125-30-12 (7 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 13/6 Location Madison,Wis. Assistant Coaches Tim Rosenfeld, Patrick Farmer Colors Cardinal andWhite Women’s Soccer Contact Jacqueline Boscacci Enrollment 41,466 Series Record Wisconsin leads 17-3-4 SID Phone (608) 262-3545 Founded 1848 Streak: Milwaukee - 2 wins SID E-mail [email protected] Conference BigTen Last Meeting 9/21/07 (UWM 1, UW 0) SID Fax (608) 262-8184 Chancellor JohnWiley — www.uwbadgers.com — OHIO STATE BUCKEYES Wednesday, August 27 • 7 p.m. • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics Eugene Smith 2007 Overall Record 12-10-1 Home Field Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium 2007 League Record 5-5-0/5th Capacity 10,000 League Tournament Championship Game NCAA Tournament At-Large/First Round Head Coach LoriWalker Record at School 119-92-18 (11 years) Starters Returning/Lost 6/5 Career Record 132-115-19 (13 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 20/7 Location Columbus, Ohio Assistant Coaches Greg Miller, Stephanie Gabbert Colors Scarlet and Gray Women’s Soccer Contact Jerry Emig Enrollment 51,818 Series Record First Meeting SID Phone (614) 688-0343 Founded 1870 Streak: N/A SID E-mail [email protected] Conference BigTen Last Meeting N/A SID Fax (614) 292-8547 President Gordon Gee — www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com — SAMFORD BULLDOGS Friday, August 29 • 7 p.m. • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics Bob Roller 2007 Overall Record 15-5-1 Home Field Bulldog Field 2007 League Record* 8-1-0/2nd Capacity 1,000 League Tournament* Championship Game NCAA Tournament At-Large/First Round Head Coach ToddYelton *As a member of the Ohio Valley Conference Record at School 76-31-15 (6 years) Starters Returning/Lost 9/2 Career Record 116-63-19 (10 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 15/6 Location Birmingham, Ala. Assistant Coaches JayYelton, SharonYoung Colors Red and Blue Women’s Soccer Contact Zac Schrieber Enrollment 4,500 Series Record First Meeting SID Phone (205) 726-2802 Founded 1841 Streak: N/A SID E-mail [email protected] 46 Conference Southern Last Meeting N/A SID Fax (205) 726-2545 President Dr. AndrewWestmoreland — www.samfordsports.com —

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com OPPONENT INFORMATION OPPONENTS

MARQUETTE GOLDEN EAGLES Wednesday, September 3 • 7 p.m. • Milwaukee, Wis. ()

Director of Athletics Steve Cottingham 2007 Overall Record 12-4-4 Home Field Valley Fields 2007 League Record 5-3-3/3rd Capacity 1,750 League Tournament Quarterfinals NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Markus Roeders Record at School 176-67-25 (12 years) Starters Returning/Lost 5/6 Career Record Same Letterwinners Returning/Lost 18/11 Location Milwaukee,Wis. Assistant Coaches Frank Pelaez, Dano Holcomb Colors Blue and Gold Women’s Soccer Contact Amy Ufnowski Enrollment 11,000 Series Record Milwaukee leads 6-5-5 SID Phone (414) 288-7419 Founded 1881 Streak: 1 tie SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Big East Last Meeting 9/23/00 (UWM 0, MU 0 - 2ot) SID Fax (414) 288-6519 President Rev. Robert A.Wild, S.J. — www.gomarquette.com — WESTERN MICHIGAN BRONCOS Friday, September 5 • 7 p.m. • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics 2007 Overall Record 4-11-3 Home Field WMU Soccer Complex 2007 League Record 2-7-2/12th Capacity 400 League Tournament N/A NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Mike Haines Record at School 83-97-16 (10 years) Starters Returning/Lost 9/2 Career Record 115-100-19 (12 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 16/3 Location Kalamazoo, Mich. Assistant Coach Suzie Grech Colors Brown and Gold Women’s Soccer Contact Adam Bodnar Enrollment 24,481 Series Record Milwaukee leads 2-0-0 SID Phone (269) 387-4122 Founded 1903 Streak: Milwaukee - 2 wins SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Mid-American Last Meeting 9/10/00 (UWM 3,WMU 0) SID Fax (269) 387-4139 President Dr. John M. Dunn — www.wmubroncos.com — Sunday, September 7 • Noon • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics Dr. Sheahon Zenger 2007 Overall Record 10-4-4 Home Field Adelaide Street Field 2007 League Record 4-0-2/1st Capacity N/A League Tournament Championship Game NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Drew Roff Record at School 10-4-4 (1 year) Starters Returning/Lost 6/5 Career Record 36-18-5 (3 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 12/7 Location Normal, Ill. Assistant Coaches ShaunnaDougherty,DeeNocero Colors Red andWhite Women’s Soccer Contact Jimmy Knodel Enrollment 20,261 Series Record Milwaukee leads 5-2-2 SID Phone (309) 438-3802 Founded 1857 Streak: Milwaukee - 1 win SID E-mail [email protected] Conference MissouriValley Last Meeting 9/25/05 (UWM 1, ISU0-ot) SID Fax (309) 438-5634 47 President Dr. Al Bowman — www.goredbirds.com — www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide OPPONENTS OPPONENT INFORMATION

NEW MEXICO LOBOS Friday, September 12 • 6:30 p.m. • Albuquerque, N.M. (UNM Soccer Complex)

Vice President Athletics Paul Krebs 2007 Overall Record 8-5-4 Home Field UNM Soccer Complex 2007 League Record 2-3-2/7th Capacity 5,000 League Tournament N/A NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach KitVela Record at School 48-63-20 (6 years) Starters Returning/Lost 7/4 Career Record Same Letterwinners Returning/Lost 14/7 Location Albuquerque, N.M. Assistant Coaches JorgeVela, Kristen Graczyk Colors Cherry and Silver WSOC Contacts Daniel Archuleta/Chris Deal Enrollment 26,500 Series Record New Mexico leads 1-0-0 SID Phone Archuleta (505) 925-5854/Deal x5523 Founded 1889 Streak: New Mexico - 1 win SID E-mail [email protected]/[email protected] Conference MoutainWest Last Meeting 10/23/94 (UNM 3, UWM 0) SID Fax (505) 925-5529 President Dr. David Schmidly — www.golobos.com — UNLV REBELS Sunday, September 14 • 11 a.m. • Albuquerque, N.M. (UNM Soccer Complex)

Director of Athletics Mike Hamrick 2007 Overall Record 11-5-5 Home Field Peter Johann Memorial Field 2007 League Record 5-1-1/1st Capacity 2,500 League Tournament Championship Game NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Katherine Mertz Record at School 33-23-11 (3 years) Starters Returning/Lost 6/5 Career Record Same Letterwinners Returning/Lost 17/7 Location LasVegas, Nev. Assistant Coach Jennifer Klein Colors Scarlet and Gray Women’s Soccer Contact MarkWasik Enrollment 28,000 Series Record First Meeting SID Phone (702) 895-3207 Founded 1957 Streak: N/A SID E-mail [email protected] Conference MountainWest Last Meeting N/A SID Fax (702) 895-0989 President Dr. David B. Ashley — www.unlvrebels.com — BOSTON UNIVERSITY TERRIERS Friday, September 19 • 4:30 p.m. • , Minn. (Robbie Stadium)

Director of Athletics Michael P.Lynch 2007 Overall Record 11-7-3 Home Field Nickerson Field 2007 League Record 6-1-1/t-1st Capacity 10,412 League Tournament Champions NCAA Tournament Auto/First Round Head Coach Nancy Feldman Record at School 160-81-25 (13 years) Starters Returning/Lost 9/2 Career Record 252-100-33 (20 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 21/4 Location Boston, Mass. Assistant Coach Liz Driscoll Colors Scarlett andWhite Women’s Soccer Contact Stefanie Howlett Enrollment 16,572 Series Record Boston leads 1-0-0 SID Phone (617) 353-7787 Founded 1839 Streak: Boston - 1 win SID E-mail [email protected] 48 Conference America East Last Meeting 9/7/07 (Boston U. 1, UWM 0) SID Fax (617) 353-5286 President Robert A. Brown — www.goterriers.com —

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com OPPONENT INFORMATION OPPONENTS

BROWN BEARS Sunday, September 21 • 10:30 a.m. • Minneapolis, Minn. (Robbie Stadium)

Director of Athletics Michael Goldberger 2007 Overall Record 6-10-1 Home Field Stevenson Field 2007 League Record 3-4/t-6th Capacity 3,500 League Tournament No LeagueTournament NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Phil Pincince Record at School 265-198-37 (31 years) Starters Returning/Lost 7/4 Career Record Same Letterwinners Returning/Lost 19/7 Location Providence, R.I. Assistant Coach Luis Faria Colors Brown andWhite Women’s Soccer Contact Jeanne Carhart Enrollment 5,701 Series Record First Meeting SID Phone (401) 863-1094 Founded 1764 Streak: N/A SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Ivy League Last Meeting N/A SID Fax (401) 863-1436 President Ruth Simmons — www.brownbears.com — Wednesday, Septmber 24 • 7 p.m. • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics Jim Phillips 2007 Overall Record 7-9-3 Home Field Lakeside Field 2007 League Record 4-5-1/7th Capacity 1,000 League Tournament Quarterfinals NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Stephanie Erickson Record at School 17-17-6 (2 years) Starters Returning/Lost 7/4 Career Record 46-24-9 (4 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 15/9 Location Evanston, Ill. Assistant Coaches Erin Ekeberg, Danielle Slaton Colors Purple andWhite Women’s Soccer Contact Dan Platt Enrollment 8,000 Series Record Northwestern leads 4-3-1 SID Phone (847) 467-0443 Founded 1851 Streak: Northwestern - 1 win SID E-mail [email protected] Conference BigTen Last Meeting 8/26/05 (NU 1, UWM 0) SID Fax (847) 491-8818 President Henry S. Beinen — www.nusports.com — Friday, September 26 • 7 p.m. • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics Ken Bothof 2007 Overall Record 2-16 Home Field Aldo Santaga Stadium 2007 League Record 2-6/7th Capacity 3,500 League Tournament Quarterfinals NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach TrevorWarren Record at School First Season Starters Returning/Lost 8/3 Career Record 103-87-7 (8 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 15/7 Location Green Bay,Wis. Assistant Coach GrantWilliams Colors Green, Silver and Red Women’s Soccer Contact Sheila Blackman Enrollment 5,416 Series Record Milwaukee leads 17-6-1 SID Phone (920) 465-5759 Founded 1965 Streak: Milwaukee - 4 wins SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Horizon League Last Meeting 10/3/07 (UWM 4, UWGB 0) SID Fax (920) 465-2357 49 Interim Chancellor Dr. David J.Ward — www.uwgbathletics.com — www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide OPPONENTS OPPONENT INFORMATION

LOYOLA RAMBLERS Friday, October 3 • 7 p.m. • Chicago, Ill. (Loyola Soccer Park)

Director of Athletics John Planek 2007 Overall Record 14-9-1 Home Field Loyola Soccer Park 2007 League Record 7-1/2nd Capacity 500 League Tournament Champions NCAA Tournament Auto/First Round Head Coach Frank Mateus Record at School 36-26-5 (3 years) Starters Returning/Lost 8/3 Career Record 47-47-5 (5 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 17/13 Location Chicago, Ill. Assistant Coaches Richard Drake, Brian Rigby Colors Maroon and Gold Women’s Soccer Contact Leo Krause Enrollment 14,764 Series Record Milwaukee leads 14-1-3 SID Phone (773) 508-2575 Founded 1870 Streak: 1 tie SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Horizon League Last Meeting 11/11/07 (LUC 2, UWM 2 - 2ot) SID Fax (773) 508-3855 President Fr. Michael Garanzini, S.J. — www.loyolaramblers.com — Sunday, October 5 • Noon • Dayton, Ohio (Alumni Field)

Director of Athletics Bob Grant 2007 Overall Record 13-6-1 Home Field Alumni Field 2007 League Record 5-2-1/3rd Capacity 750 League Tournament Semifinals NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Pat Ferguson Record at School 36-14-2 (3 years) Starters Returning/Lost 8/3 Career Record 112-76-19 (10 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 15/6 Location Dayton, Ohio Assistant Coach Chris Black Colors Hunter Green and Gold Women’s Soccer Contact Greg Campbell Enrollment 16,729 Series Record Milwaukee leads 14-4-4 SID Phone (937) 775-4687 Founded 1964 Streak: Milwaukee - 2 wins SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Horizon League Last Meeting 10/21/07 (UWM 2,WSU 0) SID Fax (937) 775-2818 President Dr. Kim Goldenberg — www.wsuraiders.com — Friday, October 10 • 6 p.m. • Cleveland, Ohio (Krenzler Field)

Director of Athletics Lee Reed 2007 Overall Record 5-14-1 Home Field Krenzler Field 2007 League Record 1-6-1/8th Capacity 1,680 League Tournament Quarterfinals NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Derrek Falor Record at School 9-70-2 (4 years) Starters Returning/Lost 8/3 Career Record 65-117-12 (10 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 14/4 Location Cleveland, Ohio Assistant Coach Dallas Boyer Colors Forest Green andWhite Women’s Soccer Contact Brian McCann Enrollment 16,245 Series Record Milwaukee leads 8-0 SID Phone (216) 687-5115 Founded 1929 Streak: Milwaukee - 8 wins SID E-mail [email protected] 50 Conference Horizon League Last Meeting 11/3/07 (UWM 1, CSU 0) SID Fax (216) 523-7257 President Dr. Michael Schwartz — www.csuvikings.com —

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com OPPONENT INFORMATION OPPONENTS

YOUNGSTOWN STATE PENGUINS Sunday, October 12 • Noon • Youngstown, Ohio (Stambaugh Stadium)

Director of Athletics Ron Strollo 2007 Overall Record 1-18-1 Home Field Stambaugh Stadium 2007 League Record 0-8/9th Capacity 20,630 League Tournament First Round NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Anthony James Record at School 6-66-3 (4 years) Starters Returning/Lost 10/1 Career Record 61-101-4 (7 years) Letterwinners Returning/Lost 17/9 Location Youngstown, Ohio Assistant Coach Greg Mitchell Colors Red andWhite Women’s Soccer Contact MeganVillers Enrollment 12,192 Series Record Milwaukee leads 7-0 SID Phone (330) 941-3192 Founded 1908 Streak: Milwaukee - 7 wins SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Horizon League Last Meeting 10/7/07 (UWM 2,YSU 1) SID Fax (330) 941-3191 President Dr. David Sweet — www.ysusports.com — Friday, October 17 • 7 p.m. • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics Barry Collier 2007 Overall Record 10-9-1 Home Field Varsity Field 2007 League Record 5-3/4th Capacity 1,000 League Tournament Semifinals NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Tari St. John Record at School 15-20-4 (3 years) Starters Returning/Lost 9/2 Career Record Same Letterwinners Returning/Lost 15/2 Location Indianapolis, Ind. Assistant Coaches Brett McIntosh, Elise Edwards Colors Blue andWhite Women’s Soccer Contact Chris Urban Enrollment 4,200 Series Record Milwaukee leads 17-5-2 SID Phone (317) 940-9994 Founded 1855 Streak: Milwaukee - 14 wins SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Horizon League Last Meeting 11/9/07 (UWM 2, BU 1 - 2ot) SID Fax (317) 940-9808 President Dr. Bobby Fong — www.butlersports.com — DETROIT TITANS Friday, October 24 • 7 p.m. • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics Keri Gaither 2007 Overall Record 4-11-4 Home Field Titan Field 2007 League Record 2-3-3/6th Capacity 500 League Tournament Quarterfinals NCAA Tournament N/A Head Coach Mike Lupenec Record at School 144-131-20 (15 years) Starters Returning/Lost 8/3 Career Record Same Letterwinners Returning/Lost 12/5 Location Detroit, Mich. Assistant Coaches Jamie Huff, Mary Parker Colors Red,White and Blue Women’s Soccer Contact Mekye Phelps Enrollment 5,600 Series Record Milwaukee leads 11-7-2 SID Phone (313) 993-1745 Founded 1877 Streak: 1 tie SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Horizon League Last Meeting 9/30/07 (UWM 0, UDM 0 - 2ot) SID Fax (313) 993-1765 51 President Fr. Gerald L. Stockhausen, S.J. — www.detroittitans.com — www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide OPPONENTS HORIZON LEAGUE TOURNAMENT

VALPARAISO CRUSADERS Sunday, October 26 • Noon • Engelmann Field

Director of Athletics Mark LaBarbera 2007 Overall Record 10-9 Home Field Eastgate Field 2007 League Record 4-4/5th Capacity 500 League Tournament: Quarterfinals NCAA Tournament: N//A Head Coach John Marovich Record at School First Season Starters Returning/Lost 6/5 Career Record Same Letterwinners Returning/Lost 14/8 Location Valparaiso, Ind. Assistant Coach Heather Clark Colors Brown and Gold Women’s Soccer Contact RyanWronkowicz Enrollment 4,000 Series Record Milwaukee leads 8-0 SID Phone (219) 464-5232 Founded 1859 Streak: Milwaukee - 8 wins SID E-mail [email protected] Conference Horizon League Last Meeting 10/12/07 (UWM 2,Valpo 0) SID Fax (219) 464-5762 President Mark Heckler — www.valpoathletics.com — 2008 HORIZON LEAGUE TOURNAMENT

Oct. 28 • First Round (at #8 Seed) • Game 1: #9 Seed @ #8 Seed Nov. 2 • Quarterfinals (at Higher Seed) • Game 2: Game 1Winner @ #1 Seed • Game 3: #7 Seed @ #2 Seed PANTHERS IN THE LEAGUE TOURNAMENT • Game 4: #6 Seed @ #3 Seed • Game 5: #5 Seed @ #4 Seed • 2007 (Milwaukee, Wis.) • 2000 (Dayton, Ohio) Nov. 7 • Semifinals (at Highest Remaining Seed) 11/3 Cleveland State (Quarters) W 1-0 11/3 v. Butler (Semis) W 1-0 • Game 6: Game 3Winner v. Game 4Winner 11/9 Butler (Semis) W (2ot) 2-1 11/5 @Wright State (Championship) L 0-1 • Game 7: Game 2Winner v. Game 5Winner 11/11 Loyola (Championship) T (2ot) 2-2 • 1999 (Indianapolis, Ind.) Nov. 9 • Championship (at Semifinals Site) (Loyola advanced on PKs, 3-2) 11/4 v. Green Bay (Quarters) W 3-0 • Game 8: Game 6Winner v. Game 7Winner • 2006 (Milwaukee, Wis.) 11/5 @ Butler (Semis) W 4-1 10/28 Cleveland State (Quarters) W 4-1 11/7 v.Wright State (Championship) ALL-TIME CHAMPIONS 11/3 Detroit (Semis) L 0-1 T (4ot) 1-1 YEAR CHAMPION RUNNER-UP SCORE • 2005 (Green Bay, Wis.) (WSU advanced on PKs, 4-2) 2007 Loyola Milwaukee *2-2 (3-2) 11/3 v. Cleveland State (Quarters) W 8-0 • 1998 (Indianapolis, Ind.) 2006 Loyola Detroit 2-1 11/4 v. Butler (Semis) W (2ot) 1-0 11/5 v.Wright State (Quarters) T (2ot) 0-0 2005 Milwaukee Detroit *0-0 (4-3) 11/6 v. Detroit (Championship) T (2ot) 0-0 (WSU advanced on PKs, 5-3) 2004 Detroit Milwaukee 1-0 (UWM advanced on PKs, 4-3) • 1997 (Indianapolis, Ind.) 2003 Loyola Detroit 1-0 • 2004 (Indianapolis, Ind.) 11/7 v.Wright State (Semis) W 4-0 2002 Milwaukee Butler 4-2 11/4 v. Cleveland State (Quarters) W 4-1 11/9 @ Butler (Championship) T (4ot) 1-1 2001 Milwaukee Butler 1-0 (3OT) 11/5 v. Loyola (Semis) T (2ot) 0-0 (UWM advanced on PKs, 5-4) 2000 Wright State Milwaukee 1-0 (UWM advanced on PKs, 5-4) • 1996 (DeKalb, Ill.) 1999 Wright State Milwaukee *1-1 (4-2) 11/7 v. Detroit (Championship) L 0-1 11/7 v. Green Bay (Quarters) W 2-0 1998 Wright State Butler 2-1 • 2003 (Chicago, Ill.) 11/8 v. Butler (Semis) L 0-4 1997 Milwaukee Butler *1-1 (5-4) 11/6 v. Detroit (Semis) L (2ot) 0-1 • 1995 (Green Bay, Wis.) 1996 Butler Detroit 3-1 • 2002 (Milwaukee, Wis.) 11/2 v.Wright State (Quarters) W 3-2 1995 Detroit Milwaukee 4-0 11/8 Wright State (Semis) W 3-1 11/3 v. Butler (Semis) W 6-2 1994 Notre Dame Butler 5-1 11/11 Butler (Championship) W 4-2 11/5 v. Detroit (Championship) L 0-4 1993 Notre Dame Xavier 4-0 • 2001 (Detroit, Mich.) • 1994 (Indianapolis, Ind.) 52 * Game decided in penalty kick shootout. 11/9 @ Detroit (Semis) W 2-0 11/3 v. Green Bay (Quarters) W (2ot) 2-1 PK score in parenthesis. 11/11 v. Butler (Championship) W (3ot) 1-0 11/4 @ Butler (Semis) L 0-3 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com ALL-TIME OPPONENTS OPPONENTS

2008 Opponents in BOLD Teams sorted by current league affiliation Division I W L T First Last GF GA Division I W L T First Last GF GA Arizona 1 1 0 1994 1999 5 5 New Hampshire 1 0 0 1995 1995 5 1 CONFERENCES Arkansas 1 0 0 2001 2001 5 0 New Mexico 0 1 0 1994 1994 0 3 Conference W L T Pct. Boston College 0 2 0 2004 2007 1 5 North Carolina 0 2 0 1991 1995 0 15 America East 1 1 0 .500 Boston University 0 1 0 2007 2007 0 1 Northern Illinois 5 1 0 1993 1998 14 8 Atlantic-10 6 14 1 .310 Bowling Green 1 0 0 2006 2006 3 0 Northern Iowa 1 0 0 2002 2002 3 0 Atlantic Coast 0 4 0 .000 BrighamYoung 0 2 0 1999 2000 1 7 Northwestern 3 4 1 1994 2005 13 13 Atlantic Sun 2 0 0 1.000 Buffalo 1 0 1 1991 2002 3 1 Notre Dame 1 4 0 1989 2006 2 14 Big East 12 16 5 .439 Butler 17 5 2 1994 2007 43 26 Oakland 2 3 0 1999 2003 7 11 Big Sky 1 1 0 .500 UCLA 0 1 0 2003 2003 0 4 Oklahoma 0 1 0 2000 2000 0 1 Big XII 2 6 0 .250 UC-Santa Barbara 1 0 0 2007 2007 1 0 Ohio 0 1 0 2002 2002 0 1 BigTen 12 36 10 .293 Canisius 1 0 0 1993 1993 2 0 Oral Roberts 0 0 1 2000 2000 2 2 BigWest 2 0 0 1.000 Central Florida 3 0 0 1997 2005 3 0 Pepperdine 0 1 0 2002 2002 0 2 Colonial Athletic 0 1 0 .000 Central Michigan 2 0 0 2000 2001 5 3 Portland 0 1 0 2006 2006 2 3 Conference USA 3 0 0 1.000 Cincinnati 2 4 0 1989 2003 6 11 Purdue 1 0 1 2004 2005 2 1 Horizon League 81 23 13 .748 Cleveland State 8 0 0 2004 2007 32 2 Rhode Island 1 1 0 2002 2006 1 1 Independent 4 1 0 .800 Colgate 0 1 0 2005 2005 0 1 Sacred Heart 1 0 0 2006 2006 2 0 Ivy League 0 2 0 .000 Colorado College 1 0 0 2005 2005 1 0 St. Francis (PA) 1 0 0 1988 1988 5 2 Mid-American 12 2 1 .833 Creighton 3 4 0 1991 2004 9 10 St. Joseph’s (PA) 1 0 0 1989 1989 2 1 Mid-Atlantic Athletic 1 0 0 1.000 Dartmouth 0 1 0 2001 2001 0 1 South Dakota State 2 0 0 2004 2006 3 0 MissouriValley 14 7 2 .652 Dayton 4 6 1 1985 2003 14 22 SIU-Edwardsville 1 1 0 1984 1993 5 3 MountainWest 0 3 0 .000 DePaul 2 1 0 1998 2004 5 3 Tennessee 1 0 0 2000 2000 3 0 Northeast 1 0 0 1.000 Detroit 11 7 2 1994 2007 24 23 Texas A&M 0 1 0 2007 2007 1 6 OhioValley 0 1 0 .000 Drake 1 0 0 2005 2005 4 2 Toledo 1 0 0 1995 1995 1 0 Pacific 10 2 4 0 .333 Eastern Illinois 0 1 0 1998 1998 1 2 Valparaiso 8 0 0 1993 2007 41 2 Patriot 0 1 0 .000 Eastern Michigan 1 0 0 1997 1997 2 0 Vanderbilt 0 1 0 2003 2003 0 1 Southeastern 2 4 1 .357 Evansville 3 1 0 1993 1999 8 4 Villanova 0 1 0 1999 1999 0 1 10 3 1 .750 Florida 0 1 0 2005 2005 2 0 Virginia 0 1 0 1995 1995 2 5 Sun Belt 1 1 1 .500 Fla. International 1 1 1 1991 1998 3 4 Washington 2 0 0 2006 2007 4 1 West Coast 0 2 0 .000 GeorgeWashington 1 1 0 1992 1993 3 3 Washington State 0 2 0 1995 1996 0 4 Green Bay 17 6 1 1988 2007 54 27 Weber State 1 0 0 1999 1999 1 0 Division W L T Pct. Harvard 0 1 0 2007 2007 0 1 Western Illinois 1 0 0 1997 1997 16 0 Division I 172 133 33 .558 Illinois 0 0 1 2005 2005 0 0 Western Michigan 2 0 0 1996 2000 8 0 Division II 10 8 0 .556 Illinois State 5 2 2 1996 2005 18 8 William & Mary 0 1 0 1992 1992 0 4 Division III 28 11 6 .689 Indiana 0 3 0 1993 2006 1 9 Wisconsin 3 17 4 1984 2007 7 72 NAIA 2 2 0 .500 Indiana State 1 0 0 2007 2007 3 0 Wright State 14 5 5 1989 2007 45 20 IPFW 1 0 0 2001 2001 2 0 Xavier 1 6 0 1990 2000 6 16 Division III W L T First Last GF GA Iowa 3 1 1 1997 2007 6 3 Youngstown State 7 0 0 2001 2007 24 2 Marian 1 0 0 1991 1991 8 0 Iowa State 1 1 0 1996 2004 5 3 St. Benedict’s (MN) 2 0 0 1988 1992 6 3 Kansas 0 2 0 2003 2004 0 4 Division II W L T First Last GF GA St. Mary’s (IN) 6 1 1 1985 1991 21 6 Kentucky 0 2 1 1992 2006 2 6 Barry (FL) 0 1 0 1992 1992 1 3 St. Mary’s (MN) 1 2 1 1986 1990 1 8 Long Beach State 1 0 0 2002 2002 3 1 Lewis 5 0 0 1988 1994 19 6 St. Norbert’s 2 1 0 1984 1989 13 4 Louisville 2 1 0 1990 1997 8 2 Missouri-Rolla 0 1 0 1984 1984 1 6 St.Thomas (MN) 3 2 0 1986 1991 5 9 Loyola Chicago 14 1 3 1992 2007 63 15 Missouri-St. Louis 4 2 0 1984 1993 15 13 Thomas More 0 0 1 1990 1990 2 2 Loyola Marymount 0 1 0 2003 2003 0 1 Quincy 1 4 0 1984 1991 9 13 Truman State 4 3 0 1984 1991 14 8 Marquette 6 5 5 1993 2007 17 14 Wheaton (IL) 2 0 0 1986 1986 8 0 Michigan 0 1 1 2000 2006 2 3 Division III W L T First Last GF GA Wilmington (OH) 0 0 1 1985 1985 1 1 Michigan State 1 6 0 1986 1993 4 17 Beloit 3 0 0 1984 1985 32 1 Minnesota 2 5 2 1993 2002 15 18 Gustavus Adolphus 0 0 1 1985 1985 2 2 NAIA W L T First Last GF GA Mississippi State 0 0 1 2004 2004 2 2 Kalamazoo 0 1 1 1986 1987 3 6 Geneva 1 0 0 1988 1988 3 2 Missouri 1 0 0 2006 2006 1 0 Lake Forest 2 0 0 1986 1989 15 1 Lindenwood 0 1 0 1988 1988 1 4 Montana 0 1 0 1996 1996 0 1 Lawrence 2 0 0 1984 1988 14 0 Missouri Baptist 1 0 0 1986 1986 7 0 53 Nebraska 1 1 0 1994 1998 2 3 Macalester 0 1 0 1986 1986 1 3 Siena Heights 0 1 0 1988 1988 0 4 www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide OPPONENTS SERIES HISTORIES

^ Horizon LeagueTournament $ NCAATournament ARIZONA 1-1-0 10/6/95 Away L 0-3 9/11/92 Away L 0-3 EASTERN MICHIGAN 1-0-0 9/11/99 Neutral L (2ot) 2-3 11/4/94 Away^ L 0-3 9/8/91 Home L (ot) 2-3 10/17/97 Away W 2-0 10/21/94 Away W (ot) 3-2 9/30/94 Home W (ot) 7-4 DARTMOUTH 0-1-0 EVANSVILLE 3-1-0 ARKANSAS 1-0-0 UCLA 0-1-0 11/16/01 Neutral$ L (2ot) 0-1 9/5/99 Home W 2-1 9/30/01 Home W 5-0 9/12/03 Neutral L 0-4 10/24/97 Away L 1-2 DAYTON 4-6-1 10/11/96 Home W 2-1 BARRY (FL) 0-1-0 UC-SANTA BARBARA 1-0-0 8/29/03 Neutral L (ot) 0-1 9/5/93 Home W 3-0 10/18/92 Away L 1-3 9/9/07 Neutral W(2ot) 1-0 9/24/99 Away W (ot) 1-0 9/19/98 Home W 2-1 FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL 1-1-1 BELOIT 3-0-0 CANISIUS 1-0-0 9/16/94 Away W 2-1 10/16/98 Neutral W 2-0 9/24/85 Away W 15-0 9/25/93 Neutral W 2-0 10/10/93 Home L 2-4 10/16/92 Away L 0-3 10/4/84 Away W 6-1 9/26/92 Away T (2ot) 2-2 9/14/91 Neutral T (2ot) 1-1 9/15/84 Home W 11-0 CENTRAL FLORIDA 3-0-0 10/27/91 Home L 0-2 9/9/05 Away W (ot) 1-0 9/9/90 Home W 3-1 GENEVA 1-0-0 BOSTON COLLEGE 0-1-0 10/18/98 Away W 1-0 10/7/89 Away L 1-4 10/29/88 Away W 3-2 9/10/04 Home L 1-4 9/26/97 Home W 1-0 9/29/85 Neutral L 1-3 9/15/85 Away L 0-3 GEORGE WASHINGTON 1-1-0 BOWLING GREEN 1-0-0 CENTRAL MICHIGAN 2-0-0 9/18/93 Neutral L 1-2 8/27/06 Home W 3-0 9/7/01 Home W 2-1 DEPAUL 2-1-0 9/13/92 Neutral W (ot) 2-1 9/8/00 Away W (ot) 3-2 9/12/04 Home L (2ot) 2-3 BRIGHAM YOUNG 0-2-0 9/1/99 Home W 1-0 GREEN BAY 17-6-1 9/23/00 Home L 0-2 CINCINNATI 2-4-0 9/13/98 Away W 2-0 10/3/07 Away W 4-0 9/9/99 Away L 1-5 10/3/03 Away W 1-0 10/4/06 Home W 3-2 9/13/00 Home L 1-2 DETROIT 11-7-2 9/23/05 Away W 2-1 BUFFALO 1-0-1 10/25/90 Home W 2-1 9/30/07 Away T (2ot) 0-0 9/21/04 Home W 2-1 9/6/02 Neutral T(2ot) 1-1 10/12/91 Away L 1-2 11/3/06 Home^ L 0-1 10/17/03 Away L (ot) 1-2 10/19/91 Neutral W 2-0 10/21/90 Home L 0-1 10/20/06 Home W 1-0 10/30/02 Home W 1-0 10/8/89 Away L 1-5 11/6/05 Neutral^ T(2ot) 0-0 9/25/01 Away W 2-0 BUTLER 17-5-2 (PKs: Milwaukee 4, Detroit 3) 9/20/00 Home W 5-2 11/9/07 Home^ W(2ot) 2-1 CLEVELAND STATE 8-0-0 10/16/05 Away W 2-1 11/4/99 Neutral^ W 3-0 9/28/07 Away W 5-1 11/3/07 Home^ W 1-0 11/7/04 Neutral^ L 0-1 10/27/99 Away L 0-1 10/15/06 Home W (ot) 1-0 10/19/07 Home W 6-0 10/24/04 Home W (ot) 2-1 9/26/98 Home W 3-2 11/4/05 Neutral^ W(2ot) 1-0 10/28/06 Home^ W 4-1 11/7/03 Neutral^ L(2ot) 0-1 10/3/97 Away W 5-0 10/2/05 Away W 1-0 10/8/06 Away W 5-0 10/10/03 Away W 2-1 11/7/96 Neutral^ W 2-0 10/24/04 Home W (2ot) 1-0 11/3/05 Neutral^ W 8-0 10/6/02 Away W (2ot) 1-0 8/31/96 Home L 0-3 9/21/03 Away W 1-0 9/30/05 Home W 3-0 11/9/01 Away^ W 2-0 10/11/95 Away L 2-4 11/10/02 Home^ W 4-2 11/4/04 Neutral^ W 4-1 10/19/01 Away W 2-0 11/3/94 Neutral^ W(ot) 2-1 10/20/02 Home W 1-0 10/3/04 Away W 1-0 10/6/00 Home W 2-0 10/7/94 Home W 2-0 11/11/01 Neutral^ W(3ot) 1-0 10/8/99 Away W (ot) 2-1 9/22/93 Home T (2ot) 3-3 10/21/01 Away W 1-0 COLGATE 0-1-0 10/11/98 Home L 2-4 10/21/92 Home L 1-2 11/3/00 Neutral^ W 1-0 9/16/05 Neutral L 0-1 10/19/97 Away W 1-0 10/5/91 Away W 3-0 10/15/00 Home W 2-0 9/27/96 Home L 1-2 9/18/91 Home L 1-2 11/5/99 Away^ W 4-1 COLORADO COLLEGE 1-0-0 11/5/95 Neutral^ L 0-4 10/17/90 Home W 1-0 10/10/99 Away L 1-3 10/28/05 Home W 1-0 10/14/95 Away L (ot) 0-3 9/13/89 Home W 5-1 10/9/98 Home L (ot) 0-1 9/11/94 Home W 4-3 10/19/88 Away W 1-0 11/9/97 Away^ T (2ot) 1-1 CREIGHTON 5-2-0 (PKs: Milwaukee 5, Butler 4) 9/19/04 Neutral W 3-0 DRAKE 1-0-0 GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS 0-0-1 9/28/97 Away T (2ot) 0-0 9/27/02 Away W 1-0 9/4/05 Home W 4-2 10/17/85 Away T (2ot) 2-2 11/8/96 Neutral^ L 0-4 10/15/99 Home W 2-1 54 10/13/96 Home W 2-0 10/14/94 Away L 0-1 EASTERN ILLINOIS 0-1-0 HARVARD 0-1-0 11/3/95 Neutral^ W 6-2 10/16/93 Home L 1-2 9/27/98 Home L 1-2 9/16/07 Away L 0-1

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com SERIES HISTORIES OPPONENTS

^ Horizon LeagueTournament $ NCAATournament ILLINOIS 0-0-1 LAWRENCE 2-0-0 MARQUETTE 6-5-5 MISSOURI-ST. LOUIS 4-2-0 8/28/05 Home T (2ot) 0-0 9/15/88 Home W 12-0 9/23/07 Home T (2ot) 0-0 9/12/93 Neutral W (2ot) 5-2 10/27/84 Home W 2-0 9/12/06 Away W 2-0 9/7/90 Home W 3-1 ILLINOIS STATE 5-2-2 11/13/05 Away$ L 0-1 10/29/89 Away W 2-1 9/25/05 Home W (ot) 1-0 LEWIS 5-0-0 9/7/05 Home T (2ot) 0-0 9/11/88 Neutral W 4-0 9/26/04 Away T (2ot) 0-0 10/5/94 Home W 3-2 9/8/04 Away L 0-1 9/27/85 Away L 0-3 9/7/03 Home T (2ot) 0-0 10/3/92 Home W 6-1 9/24/03 Home W (ot) 3-2 9/1/84 Neutral L 1-6 9/28/01 Away W 2-1 9/26/90 Home W 7-3 10/27/02 Away T (2ot) 1-1 MONTANA 0-1-0 9/29/00 Home W (ot) 4-3 9/3/89 Away W 2-0 11/1/01 Home L 0-3 10/4/96 Neutral L 0-1 10/22/99 Away L 0-2 9/25/88 Home W 1-0 9/1/00 Away L 1-2 9/11/98 Home L (ot) 0-1 9/21/99 Home T (2ot) 0-0 9/22/98 Away W 1-0 NEBRASKA 1-1-0 9/21/97 Away W 3-0 LINDENWOOD 0-1-0 9/4/98 Away W (2ot) 2-1 10/10/97 Away L 1-2 9/29/96 Home W 8-1 9/5/88 Away L 1-4 10/16/94 Away L 0-2 10/30/96 Home W 1-0 9/22/95 Away W 2-1 INDIANA 0-3-0 LONG BEACH STATE 1-0-0 NEW HAMPSHIRE 1-0-0 9/10/06 Away L 0-2 9/8/02 Neutral W 2-1 10/26/94 Home T (2ot) 1-1 9/10/95 Neutral W 5-1 8/29/04 Home L 1-2 9/15/93 Home W 4-0 10/3/93 Home L 0-5 LOUISVILLE 2-1-0 NEW MEXICO 0-1-0 10/12/97 Home W 6-1 MICHIGAN 0-1-1 10/23/94 Neutral L 0-3 INDIANA STATE 1-0-0 10/4/92 Home W 2-0 11/10/06 Neutral$ T (2ot) 0-0 8/31/07 Home W 3-0 10/27/90 Away L 0-1 (PKs: Milwaukee 5, Michigan 3) NORTH CAROLINA 0-2-0 10/22/00 Away L 2-3 9/2/95 Neutral L 0-8 IPFW 1-0-0 LOYOLA CHICAGO 14-1-3 9/29/91 Neutral L 0-7 MICHIGAN STATE 1-6-0 10/5/01 Home W 2-0 11/11/07 Home^ T (2ot) 2-2 9/26/93 Away L 0-3 (PKs: Loyola 3, Milwaukee 2) NORTHERN ILLINOIS 5-1-0 10/11/92 Home L 0-3 11/1/98 Home W 3-1 IOWA 3-1-1 10/16/07 Home W 2-1 10/20/91 Away L 1-2 9/19/97 Away W 3-0 10/5/07 Home T (2ot) 0-0 10/13/06 Away W (2ot) 1-0 10/13/90 Home L 0-3 9/22/96 Home W 3-0 10/24/03 Away W 3-1 10/21/05 Home W 1-0 11/5/89 Away L (2ot) 0-2 9/17/95 Home W 5-4 8/31/01 Neutral L 0-1 11/5/04 Neutral^ T(2ot) 0-0 10/2/88 Home L 1-3 9/25/94 Away W 1-0 10/23/98 Away W (ot) 2-1 (PKs: UWM 5, Milwaukee 4) 10/5/86 Home W 2-1 10/17/93 Away L 1-2 9/14/97 Home W 1-0 10/13/04 Away W 3-0 10/5/03 Home W 2-0 MINNESOTA 2-5-2 NORTHERN IOWA 1-0-0 IOWA STATE 1-1-0 10/17/02 Away T (2ot) 2-2 10/11/02 Home T (2ot) 2-2 9/29/02 Away W 3-0 9/17/04 Away L 1-2 10/25/01 Home W 4-0 10/28/01 Away W 2-0 9/7/96 Neutral W 4-1 10/27/00 Away W (ot) 3-2 10/13/00 Away L 0-1 NORTHWESTERN 3-4-1 8/26/05 Neutral L 0-1 10/5/99 Home W 5-0 8/29/99 Home L 2-3 11/2/03 Home W 2-1 KALAMAZOO 0-1-1 10/27/98 Away W 2-0 11/15/97 Away$ L 1-2 10/25/02 Away T (2ot) 1-1 9/9/87 Home T (2ot) 3-3 11/2/97 Home W 8-1 9/12/97 Home T (2ot) 2-2 10/11/86 Away L 0-3 11/3/96 Home W 8-1 10/14/01 Home L 1-2 9/20/96 Away L 0-1 9/8/98 Home L 0-4 9/26/95 Away W 5-0 9/9/94 Away L 1-5 KANSAS 0-2-0 10/30/94 Home L 3-4 9/10/96 Away W 3-0 10/31/93 Home W 5-2 10/20/95 Home L 2-3 9/3/04 Away L 0-1 10/23/93 Away W 4-2 Mississippi State 0-0-1 9/3/94 Away W 3-2 9/5/03 Home L 0-3 9/23/92 Home W 8-0 9/5/04 Neutral T(2ot) 2-2 NOTRE DAME 1-4-0 KENTUCKY 0-2-1 LOYOLA MARYMOUNT 0-1-0 MISSOURI 1-0-0 11/12/06 Away$ L 0-1 9/15/06 Neutral T (2ot) 0-0 9/14/03 Away L 0-1 9/17/06 Neutral W 1-0 10/6/93 Home L 0-6 10/1/95 Home L 0-1 10/6/91 Home L 0-3 9/5/92 Away L 2-5 MACALESTER 0-1-0 MISSOURI BAPTIST 1-0-0 10/10/90 Away L 0-3 9/12/86 Away L 1-3 9/19/86 Home W 7-0 9/8/89 Home W 3-1 LAKE FOREST 2-0-0 10/18/89 Home W 4-1 MARIAN 1-0-0 MISSOURI-ROLLA 0-1-0 OAKLAND 2-3-0 55 10/15/86 Home W 11-0 10/15/91 Home W 8-0 9/2/84 Neutral L 1-6 10/12/03 Away L 1-2 www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide OPPONENTS SERIES HISTORIES

^ Horizon LeagueTournament $ NCAATournament 8/30/02 Neutral L 1-2 ST. MARY’S (IN) 6-1-1 9/15/95 Home W 7-0 9/4/93 Home L 0-5 9/2/01 Home L 1-5 10/4/91 Away W 3-0 9/23/94 Away W 4-1 10/7/92 Away L 0-2 10/20/00 Away W (ot) 2-1 9/22/90 Home W 3-0 9/19/93 Home W 12-0 9/22/91 Home L 0-8 10/3/99 Home W (ot) 2-1 9/23/89 Home W 1-0 10/5/90 Away L 0-10 10/22/88 Neutral L (2ot) 0-1 VANDERBILT 0-1-0 9/28/89 Home L 0-5 OKLAHOMA 0-1-0 9/28/88 Away W (2ot) 1-0 8/31/03 Home L 0-1 10/7/88 Away L 0-2 9/15/00 Away L 0-1 9/2/87 Home W 4-0 10/8/86 Home L 0-4 10/12/86 Away T (2ot) 3-3 VILLANOVA 0-1-0 10/2/85 Away L 0-4 OHIO 0-1-0 10/6/85 Home W 6-1 10/1/99 Home L 0-1 10/6/84 Away L 0-5 9/1/02 Home L 0-1 9/8/84 Home L 0-7 ST. MARY’S (MN) 1-2-1 VIRGINIA 0-1-0 ORAL ROBERTS 0-0-1 10/20/90 Home T (2ot) 0-0 9/9/95 Away L 2-5 WRIGHT STATE 14-5-5 9/17/00 Away T (2ot) 2-2 9/16/89 Away L 0-2 10/21/07 Home W 2-0 9/18/88 Home W 1-0 WASHINGTON 2-0-0 10/1/06 Away W 4-0 PEPPERDINE 0-1-0 9/6/86 Home L 0-6 9/2/07 Home W 2-1 10/9/05 Home T (2ot) 1-1 11/16/02 Neutral$ L 0-2 9/3/06 Away W 2-0 10/10/04 Away W 2-0 ST. NORBERT 2-1-0 9/28/03 Home W (2ot) 3-2 PORTLAND 0-1-0 9/12/89 Home L 1-3 WASHINGTON STATE 0-2-0 11/8/02 Home^ W 3-1 9/1/06 Neutral L 2-3 9/3/88 Away W 4-2 10/6/96 Away L 0-2 9/22/02 Away W 1-0 10/28/84 Home W 6-1 9/4/95 Neutral. L 0-2 9/23/01 Home W 2-0 PURDUE 1-0-1 11/5/00 Away^ L 0-1 11/11/05 Neutral$ T (2ot) 0-0 ST. THOMAS (MN) 3-2-0 WEBER STATE 1-0-0 10/1/00 Away W 2-0 9/18/99 Home W 1-0 (PKs: Milwaukee 5, Purdue 4) 9/13/91 Neutral W 3-2 11/7/99 Neutral^ T(2ot) 1-1 10/30/04 Home W 2-1 (PKs: Wright State 5, Milwaukee 3) 9/29/90 Home W 1-0 WESTERN ILLINOIS 1-0-0 9/19/99 Home W 2-0 9/17/89 Away W 1-0 QUINCY 1-4-0 9/5/97 Home W 16-0 11/5/98 Neutral^ T(2ot) 0-0 10/23/88 Home L 0-1 9/28/91 Neutral L 2-3 (PKs: Wright State 4, Milwaukee 2) 9/14/86 Away L 0-6 9/25/90 Away L 1-3 WESTERN MICHIGAN 2-0-0 10/4/98 Away T (2ot) 0-0 10/15/89 Home W 3-2 9/10/00 Away W 3-0 11/7/97 Neutral^ W 4-0 10/27/85 Home L (2ot) 2-3 TENNESSEE 1-0-0 10/26/96 Home W 5-0 10/26/97 Home W 3-0 11/3/84 Away L 1-2 8/27/00 Home W 3-0 10/20/96 Away L 1-2 WHEATON 2-0-0 11/2/95 Neutral^ W 3-2 RHODE ISLAND 1-1-0 TEXAS A&M 0-1-0 9/9/86 Home W 8-0 9/29/95 Home W 6-1 9/8/06 Neutral W 1-0 10/26/07 Away L 1-6 9/19/85 Away W 5-3 9/18/94 Away W 2-1 9/15/02 Home L 0-1 10/2/93 Home T (2ot) 2-2 THOMAS MORE 0-0-1 WILLIAM & MARY 0-1-0 9/27/92 Away L 0-2 SIENA HEIGHTS 0-1-0 10/28/90 Away T (2ot) 2-2 9/19/92 Neutral L 0-4 9/3/90 Away L 0-2 10/16/88 Away L 0-4 10/1/89 Home L (ot) 1-2 TRUMAN STATE 5-2-0 WILMINGTON (OH) 0-0-1 SIU-EDWARDSVILLE 1-1-0 10/26/91 Home W 1-0 9/14/85 Away T (2ot) 1-1 XAVIER 1-6-0 9/11/93 Neutral W 5-2 9/16/90 Away L 0-2 9/3/00 Home L 1-2 9/13/84 Home L 0-1 10/28/89 Away W 2-1 WISCONSIN 3-17-4 9/26/99 Away L 0-2 9/24/88 Home L 1-2 9/21/07 Away W 1-0 10/2/94 Home W 2-1 SOUTH DAKOTA STATE 2-0-0 9/28/85 Neutral W 3-1 10/22/06 Home W 1-0 10/24/93 Home L 2-4 9/24/06 Home W 1-0 9/21/85 Home W 3-0 9/17/05 Away L 0-4 9/20/92 Home L 0-3 8/30/04 Neutral W 2-0 11/4/84 Away W 4-0 10/21/04 Home L 0-2 10/13/91 Away L 0-2 10/29/03 Away L 1-2 9/23/90 Home L 1-2 ST. BENEDICT’S (MN) 2-0-0 TOLEDO 1-0-0 10/13/02 Home L 0-1 10/24/92 Home W 3-2 10/21/95 Home W 1-0 10/10/01 Away W 2-0 YOUNGSTOWN STATE 7-0-0 10/14/88 Home W 3-1 8/25/00 Neutral L 0-3 10/7/07 Home W 2-1 VALPARAISO 8-0-0 10/24/99 Away T (2ot) 0-0 10/6/06 Away W (ot) 1-0 ST. FRANCIS (PA) 1-0-0 10/12/07 Away W 2-0 10/25/98 Home T (2ot) 0-0 10/14/05 Home W 7-0 10/28/88 Away W 5-2 11/1/02 Home W 4-1 10/31/97 Away T (2ot) 0-0 10/1/04 Away W 6-1 9/9/01 Away W 3-0 9/15/96 Away L (ot) 0-1 10/26/03 Home W 1-0 56 ST. JOSEPH’S (PA) 1-0-0 8/30/97 Home W 3-0 10/29/95 Home T (2ot) 2-2 9/20/02 Away W 2-0 9/2/89 Neutral W 2-1 10/18/96 Away W 6-0 9/5/94 Away L 0-5 10/7/01 Home W 5-0

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com History Letterwinners letterwinners History

Lisa Bengtsson Fanta Cooper Mary Duffy Evann Franklin ‑ A ‑ ‑ D ‑ Player Hometown High School Letters Player Hometown High School Letters Danielle Alberg Hudson, Wis. Hudson 1997-98-99-00 Leslie Deebach Woodbury, Minn. Woodbury 2007 Michelle Aldridge Milwaukee, Wis. Nicolet 1988-89-90 Kayla DeJardin Oneida, Wis. Pulaski 2006-07 Michelle Alioto Milwaukee, Wis. Hamilton 1995-97-98-99 Erin DeYoung Grand Rapids, Mich. G-R Christian 2007 Meredith Ammons Cedarburg, Wis. Cedarburg 1990-91-92-93 Jenna Dougherty Franksville, Wis. Racine Case 1995-96 Deborah Anderson Milwaukee, Wis. Custer 1985 Laura Drezek Milwaukee, Wis. King 1987-88 Brenda Andrews South St. Paul, Minn. South St. Paul 2001-02-03-04 Laura Driscoll DePere, Wis. Notre Dame Academy 2001 Mary Duffy Madison, Wis. LaFollette 1999-00-01-02 ‑ B ‑ Molly Duffy Madison, Wis. LaFollette 2004-05-06 Player Hometown High School Letters Carrie Durand Brighton, Mich. Brighton 1999-00-01-02 Tasha Bainbridge Madison, Wis. West 1992-93 Barb Endes Wauwatosa, Wis. East 1991-92-93 Kristen Baluta Buffalo Grove, Ill. Stevenson 2003 Rebecca Englund Woodbury, Minn. Woodbury 2002-03-04-05 Illana Bar-Av Madison, Wis. Memorial 2006 Shannon Erickson Cottage Grove, Minn. Park 1992-93-94-95 Barbara Barnes Cincinnati, Ohio Sycamore 1989 Lisa Bengtsson Uppsala, Swe. Frysskolan 2000-01-02-03 ‑ F ‑ Melissa Beverung Cedarburg, Wis. Cedarburg 1993-94-95 Player Hometown High School Letters Deanna Bierman Milwaukee Vincent 1984-85 Kathleen Farley Greendale, Wis. Greendale 1990-91-92-93 Erin Blaedow West Allis, Wis. Central 1988-99-00-01 Stacey Faude Waukesha, Wis. West 2002-04-05-06 Renee Blechner Chicago, Ill. Palatine 1987-88-89-90 Sylvia Filapek Milwaukee. Wis. Bay View 1990 Jackie Boldt Shoreview, Minn. Moundsview 1993-94-95-96 Pam Florek Neenah. Wis. Neenah 1987-88-89-90 Julie Bonk Green Bay, Wis. East 1991 Renee Florence Mukwonago, Wis. Mukwonago 1994 Bailey Briggs Plainfield, Ill. Plainfield 2005-06 Evann Franklin Milwaukee, Wis. Marshall 2000-01-02-03 Amy Buchanon Neenah, Wis. Neenah 1991 Sarah Freidel Madison, Wis. West 2004-05 Erin Burke West Bend, Wis. Slinger 1987 Julie Friesler Milwaukee, Wis. Whitefish Bay 1989-90-91-92 Sue Burkhardt Milwaukee, Wis. St. Mary’s 1984 ‑ G - ‑ C ‑ Player Hometown High School Letters Player Hometown High School Letters Elizabeth Georg Whitefish Bay, Wis. Whitefish Bay 1984-85-86-87 Alicia Campbell Pewaukee, Wis. Sussex Hamilton 1991-92 Samantha George Greenfield, Wis. Catholic Memorial 2004 Chris Campbell Shoreview, Minn. Moundsview 1993-94-95 Lori Goesch Milwaukee, Wis. Custer 1987-88-89-90 Katie Campion Schaumburg, Ill. Schaumburg 2003-04-05 Barbara Goese Milwaukee, Wis. Wisconsin Lutheran 1984-85 Chris Cash Hartford, Wis. Hartford 1994 Jaime Goller St. Germain, Wis. Northland Pines 2001-02-03 Carly Chertos Fond du Lac, Wis. Fond du Lac 2006 Ginny Graczyk Libertyville, Ill. Libertyville 2003-05-06 Elizabeth Chudy Milwaukee, Wis. Pius XI 2002-03-04-05 Beth Ciurlik Cudahy, Wis. Cudahy 1984 - H - I ‑ Kristine Coburn Racine, Wis. Case 1998-99-00-01 Player Hometown High School Letters Fanta Cooper Oklahoma City, Okla. Westmoore 1997-98-99-00 Chanin Hanson Green Bay, Wis. East 1985 Val Cooper Palatine, Ill. St. Viator 2003-04-05 Tracy Haschker Whitefish Bay. Wis. Whitefish Bay 1990 PB Jennifer Cummings Milwaukee, Wis. Riverside 1984 Margaret Hayek Milwaukee, Wis. Shorewood 1985-87-88-89 57

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History Letterwinners letterwinners History

Josha Krueger Mary Jakubczak Sara Lewis Janice McGann

Sherri Hicks Wauwatosa, Wis. East 1988-89-90-91 Erin Lambo Brookfield, Wis. Pius XI 1989-90-91 Nicole Hirsch Brookfield, Wis. Central 2007 Karen Langlois Evansville, Ind. Madison Memorial 1991 Stefanie Hosni Waukesha, Wis. Catholic Memorial 1997-98-99-00 Sue Leising Wauwatosa, Wis. East 1994-95-96-97 Kathy Hoverman Ft. Wayne, Ind. Snider 1995-96-97-98 Pat Leonard Milwaukee, Wis. Juneau 1985 Maria Iaizzo White Bear Lake, Minn. White Bear Lake 2002-03 Sara Lewis Green Bay, Wis. Notre Dame Aca. 2001-02-03-04 Patricia Leys Milwaukee, Wis. King 1984-85 ‑ J ‑ Laura Lindsay Racine, Wis. Horlick 1984 Player Hometown High School Letters Patti Liskow Appleton, Wis. East 1987 Mary Jakubczak Greendale, Wis. Pius XI 1992-93-94-95 Denise Lumley Pt. Washington, Wis. HS 1984 Sonja Jarret Racine, Wis. Case 1987 Amber Jelinek Milwaukee, Wis. Pius XI 2001-02-03 ‑ M ‑ Emily Jessen Omaha, Neb. Marian 1999-00-01-02 Kirstin Juzenas Whitefish Bay, Wis. Whitefish Bay 1986-87-88-89 Player Hometown High School Letters Megan Mann Muskego, Wis. Muskego 2000-01-02-03 ‑ K ‑ Susan Martini Oshkosh, Wis. West 1985 Player Hometown High School Letters Jamie May Oconomowoc, Wis. Oconomowoc 1995-96-97-98 Erin Kalkwarf Burnsville, Minn. Apple Valley 1990 Janice McGann Oakville, Ont. Trafalgar 2002-03-04-05 Erin Kane St. Charles, Ill. North 2005-06-07 Becky McGaw Hartland, Wis. Arrowhead 1988 Debbie Keddie Brookfield, Wis. Central 1988 Kelly McGrath Wauwatosa, Wis. Wisconsin Lutheran 2007 Jennifer Kelley Wauwatosa, Wis. Pius XI 1990-91-92-93 Elizabeth McNally Libertyville, Ill. Libertyville 2004 Holly Kiecker Burnsville, Minn. Burnsville 1993-94-95-96 Kate Megna Middleton, Wis. Middleton 2006-07 Jodi Klagos Madison, Wis. Memorial 2005-06-07 Kristen Mehring Brookfield, Wis. East 1991-92-93 Jenny Kleiser South Bend, Ind. St. Joseph’s 1988-89-90 Janet Menzia Cudahy, Wis. Notre Dame 1987 Liana Kleszczynski Greenfield, Wis. Greenfield 1994-95-96-97 Mary Micelli Racine, Wis. Horlick 1990-91-92 Jennifer Klink Wauwatosa, Wis. East 1986-87-88 Lisa Mickey Wauwatosa, Wis. East 1990-91-92-93 Jill Kondracki Milwaukee, Wis. Pulaski 1988 Shari Mills Glendale, Wis. Nicolet 1987 Chandra Konkol Sussex, Wis. Hamilton 1993-94-96-97 Tracie Mittelsteadt Hartland, Wis. Arrowhead 1990-91-92-93 Michelle Koziczkowski Greendale, Wis. Pius XI 1996-97-98 Karen Moeller Evansville, Wis. Reitz Memorial 1990 Andrea Kramer Shoreview, Minn. Moundsview 2002-03-04-05 Crystalin Montgomery St. Paul, Minn. Cretin-Durham Hall 1995-96-97-98 Heidi Kratochvil Milwaukee, Wis. Pius XI 1992-93-94-96 Kitty Montgomery St. Paul, Minn. Central 2005 Karen Kraus Delafield, Wis. Kettle Moraine 1998-99 Nicole Motl Middleton, Wis. Middleton 2001-03-04-05 Erin Kreuser West Allis, Wis. Hale 2006-07 Linda Moynihan Racine, Wis. Horilick 1990-91-92-93 Josha Krueger St. Charles, Ill. St. Charles 1994-95-96-97 Stephanie Krueger Milwaukee, Wis. Dominican 1987 Maureen Moynihan Wauwatosa, Wis. Pius XI 1991-92-93 Kari Krzykowski Cedarburg, Wis. Cedarburg 1999-00 Mary Mueller Milwaukee, Wis. Bay View 1990 Lisa Kryzkowski Cedarburg, Wis. Cedarburg 1994-95-96-97 Lindsey Munkwitz Waukesha, Wis. Catholic Memorial 1997-98-99-00 Katie Kubacki Milwaukee, Wis. Pius XI 1999-00-01-02 Kristin Munyon Omaha, Neb. Burke 1999-00 Monica Kunesh Milwaukee, Wis. Pius XI 1984-85 Anne Murphy Milwaukee, Wis. Pius XI 1984 Patricia Kurtz Milwaukee, Wis. Whitefish Bay 1985 ‑ N - O - P ‑ ‑ L ‑ Player Hometown High School Letters 58 Player Hometown High School Letters Lisa Nagel Hartford, Wis. Hartford Union 1989 59 Julie LaLoggia Milwaukee, Wis. Whitefish Bay 1987 Brenda Neigbauer New Berlin, Wis. Catholic Memorial 2003-04-05-06 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History Letterwinners letterwinners History

Amy Oechsner melissa ricter Rana Thompson Jeney Walter

Jenny Neuser Green Bay, Wis. Southwest 1985-86-87 Kerri St. Aubin Sterling Hts, Mich. Utica 2000-01-03-04 Julie Nussberger Sheboygan, Wis. Sheboygan 1986 Beth Steuer Madison, Wis. LaFollette 2005-06-07 Amy Oechsner Hartford, Wis. Hartford 1999-00-01-02 Jackie Strobel Schaumburg, Ill. Conant 1988 Molly Pape Grafton, Wis. Grafton 1995-96-97-98 Maggie Suminski Shorewood, Wis. Shorewood 1999-00-01-02 Meghan Peot Green Bay, Wis. Southwest 1998-99 Kelly Peterson Hudson, Wis. Hudson 2003 ‑ T ‑ U ‑ V ‑ Claire Pignet Mukwonago, Wis. Catholic Memorial 2004-05-06-07 Player Hometown High School Letters Cammy Polson Thornton, Colo. Horizon 1994-95-96-97 Sarah Talbert Brookfield, Wis. Central 2007 Taylor Powell Madison, Wis. West 2003-04-05-06 Sarah Teegarden Batavia, Ill. Batavia 2005-06-07 Joy Provan Cudahy, Wis. Cudahy 1996-97-98 Laura Teeter Milwaukee, Wis. Whitefish Bay 1985 Mara Thompson Highlands Ranch, Colo. HS 1994-95-97-98 ‑ R ‑ Rana Thompson Highlands Ranch, Colo. HS 1998-99-00-01 Player Hometown High School Letters Alexa Torres Monona Grove, Wis. Monona Grove 2000-01-02-03 Betsy Ribares Whitefish Bay, Wis. Whitefish Bay 1992-93-94 Liz Ulicki Mukwonago, Wis. Mukwonago 1996-97-99-00 Melissa Ricter Cottage Grove, Wis. Monona Grove 2001-02-03-04 Mary Vander Putten Green Bay, Wis. St. Joseph Aca. 1985-87-88 Kim Ring Cottage Grove, Wis. Monona Grove 1996 Kari Van Pieterson Cedarburg, Wis. Cedarburg 1989 Lisa Rintelmann Racine, Wis. Horlick 1990-91-92 Sue Volkman Milwaukee, Wis. Pius XI 1984 Heather Roadhouse Brookfield, Wis. Central 2007 Louise Vraney DePere, Wis. DePere 2006-07 Meg Roback Greenfield, Wis. St. Mary’s 1987-88-89-90 Sommer Rouse Cambridge, Minn. Cambridge-Isanti 2000-01-02-03 ‑ W ‑ Nancy Ruel Milwaukee, Wis. Pius XI 1987-88 Player Hometown High School Letters Julie Ruma Omaha, Neb. Marian 1998-99-00-01 Abby Waite Houston, Texas Taylor 1992-93-94 Katie Waltenberger Racine, Wis. Horilick 1997-98-99-00 ‑ S ‑ Jeney Walter Racine, Wis. Park 2000-01-02-03 Player Hometown High School Letters Claire Watkins Hinsdale, Ill. Central 2007 Elicia Scaife Racine, Wis. Park 2002-04-05-06 Elizabeth Weirick Kenosha, Wis. Tremper 2004 Nicole Schmidt Brookfield, Wis. Central 1990-91-92-93 Dawn Wernicke Milwaukee, Wis. Pius XI 1984-85 Jill Schneider Green Bay, Wis. St. Joseph Aca. 1987-88-89-90 Joanne Wilde New Berlin, Wis. Catholic Memorial 1996-97-98-99 Molly Schneider Rochester, Minn. Century 2002-03 Karen Wilman Hartland, Wis. Arrowhead 1995-96 Andrea Schroeder New Berlin, Wis. New Berlin 1991 Amanda Winn Wauwatosa, Wis. East 2004-05-06-07 Andrea Schulze Wauwatosa, Wis. East 1987 Wendy Winn Glendale, Wis. Nicolet 1991-92-93 Molly Schwab Wauwatosa, Wis. Pius XI 1992-93-94-95 Andrea Wisniewski Mundelein, Ill. Mundelein 2006-07 Heidi Seefeld Mequon, Wis. Homestead 1993-94 Pam Wiza Waukesha, Wis. South 1989 Joanna Severson White Bear Lake, Minn. White Bear Lake 2004-05-06-07 Becky Worman Milwaukee, Wis Pius XI 1984-85-86 Erin Shaughnessy Orono, Minn. Orono 2000-01-02-03 Linda Worden Racine, Wis. Case 1990-91-92-93 Libby Shern Marine St. Croix, Minn. Stillwater 2005 Pam Shipway Vernon Hills, Ill. Mundelein 2004-05-06-07 ‑ Z ‑ Kirsten Sisk Wauwatosa, Wis. East 1987-88-89 Player Hometown High School Letters Tammy Sobaski Cottage Grove, Minn. Park 1996-97-98-99 Helena Zbilut Kenosha, Wis. Bradford 2007 58 Nicole Sperl Wauwatosa, Wis. West 2007 Frances Zink Hartland, Wis. Arrowhead 1985 59 Jody Stafne Hudson, Wis. Hudson 1996-97-98 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History retired numbers numerical roster History

Upon leaving UWM, Krzykowski became the first woman from the state of Lisa Krzykowski Wisconsin to play professional soccer, competing for both the Atlanta Beat 21 1994-97 • Retired: 2000 and San Diego Spirit of the Women’s United Soccer Association (WUSA). She then continued to play with WUSA teams at festivals throughout the nation Perhaps the greatest women’s soccer player ever at the University of Wiscon- following the league’s decision to suspend operations in 2004. sin-Milwaukee, Lisa Krzykowski added the honor of Hall of Fame inductee to her vast collection of awards on April 28, 2004. Krzykowski’s Career Numbers Year GP/GS G A Pts Shots GW The first women’s soccer alumnus to earn the honor, Krzykowski was a mem- 1994 14/9 12 3 27 52 5 ber of the Panther squad from 1994-97, including the 1997 team that went 1995 19/19 16 5 37 62 0 to the NCAA tournament. She ended her illustrious career as UWM’s all-time 1996 19/19 13 12 38 77 5 leading scorer with 140 points, including school records of 57 goals and 26 1997 18/18 16 6 38 78 1 assists. She still holds school records for goals scored in a season (16 in 1995 Total 70/65 57 26 140 269 11 and 1997), assists in a season (12 in 1996), points in a season (38 in 1996 and School Records in BOLD 1997) and assists in a game (5 on Oct. 18, 1996).

“We were very fortunate to have a player like Lisa Krzykowski in our pro- gram,” said UWM coach Michael Moynihan. “While our most gifted athlete, Josha Krueger Lisa was also our hardest worker. She elevated our program to a higher level 22 1994-97 • Retired: 2001 and has helped us keep it there by setting an example for all who followed. A member of the same recruiting class that produced UWM Hall of Famer Lisa Krzykowski, Josha Krueger etched her name into the Panther record “She rewrote our record books and as a student, an athlete and a person, Lisa books once again, having her number 22 retired by the women’s soccer represented UWM with the highest standards, and her contributions will live squad during the 2001 season. on forever.” From 1994-97 Krueger donned the black and gold becoming the only The Cedarburg native received numerous accolades in recognition of her player in team history to play every minute of every game for four sea- outstanding athletic performances. She was selected to NSCAA All-West sons as a key defender in Milwaukee’s rise to the top of the league. With Region team as a freshman (1994), as well as the NSCAA and Soccer Buzz All- the Illinois native anchoring UWM’s defense, the 1997 squad set prec- Great Lakes Region first team (1995 and 1997) and NSCAA All-Great Lakes edents for stinginess that still stand today. Among those marks are few- Region Second Team (1996). Twice named the MCC Player of the Year (1995 est goals allowed in a season (12) and goals against average (0.60). For and 1997), Krzykowski was a three-time first-team all-conference member her efforts she was three times named to the all-region third team and (1995, 1996 and 1997), the MCC Tournament MVP (1995) and she earned All- MCC First Team (1995, ‘96, ‘97). As a freshman, Krueger earned MCC spots on the MCC All- Newcomer team and All-MCC second team in 1994. All-Newcomer team and All-MCC Second-Team honors. On Oct. 14, 2000, she became just the second athlete to have their number The 2001 W-League Defender of the Year, Krueger has continued her soc- retired in any sport in school history, when the Panthers retired her No. 21 cer career since leaving Milwaukee. She has twice won W-League Na- jersey. Krzykowski remains one of just three people in UWM history to have tional Championships, first with the Chicago Cobras in 2000 and again their numbers retired. with the in 2001. Krueger became the third Panther to join the WUSA ranks, spending some time in the Carolina Courage camp in 2001.

After her playing days, Krueger spent two seasons as an assistant coach at Aurora College in Illinois. Krueger’s Career Numbers Year GP/GS G A Pts Shots GW 1994 20/20 3 1 7 14 0 1995 19/19 6 3 15 16 4 1996 19/19 1 0 2 10 0 1997 20/20 3 1 7 20 0 60 Total 78/78 13 5 31 60 4 61

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History retired numbers numerical roster History Current Panthers in BOLD Karen Kraus 17 • Laurel Regalie 24 • Andrea Wisniewski Cammy Polson Pam Shipway Val Cooper Nicole Schmidt Lisa Bengtsson Carrie Durand Joanne Wilde Maureen Moynihan 11 • Sarah Talbert Molly Schwab Shelley Hacker Taylor Powell Karen Langlois Renee Florence liz ulicki Maggie Suminski Karen Moeller Linda Moynihan Michelle Koziczkowski 0 5 • Nicole Hirsch Melissa Beverung 18 • Beth Steuer 25 • Erin Kreuser Liz Ulicki Janice McGann Jennie Kelly Brenda Andrews Rebecca Englund Erin Blaedow Lori Goesch Fanta Cooper Nicole Motl 00 Chandra Konkol Michelle Alioto Erin Shaughnessy Kathy Hoverman Tasha Bainbridge 12 • Keara Thompson Mary Jakubczak Jody Stafne Abby Waite Meg Roback Amanda Winn Andrea Schroeder Susan Martini Linda Moynihan Katie Kubacki Jenny Kleiser Betsy Ribares 6 • Heather Roadhouse Joy Provan 01 Stacey Faude Shannon Erickson 19 • Leslie Deebach 26 • Jodi Klagos Molly Pape Sommer Rouse Heidi Kratochvil Sarah Freidel Samantha George Sue Leising Kristine Coburn Tracie Mittelsteadt Evann Franklin Brenda Neigbauer Alicia Campbell Lisa Mickey Pam Florek Michelle Alioto Andrea Kramer Linda Worden Chris Campbell Laura Driscoll 1 • Erin Kane Tracy Haschker 13 • Sarah Teegarden Lisa Rintelmann Evann Franklin Katie Campion Sarah Lewis Mary Duffy 7 • Nicole Sperl Kristin Munyon 20 • Chelsea Frye 27 • Kelly McGrath Molly Pape Nicole Motl Mara Thompson Carly Chertos Libby Shern Barb Endes Julie Ruma Heidi Seefeld Katie Campion Melissa Ricter Lisa Mickey Liana Klesczcynski Linda Moynihan Stacey Faude Holly Kiecker Renee Blechner Jeney Walter 28 2 • Mary Wandowlowski Linda Worden Carrie Durand Andrea Kramer Claire Pignet Mary Miceli 14 • Kate Megna Jamie May Sommer Rouse Jeney Walter Amber Jelinek Amy Buchanon Rana Thompson 8 • Louise Vraney Stefanie Hosni 29 Karen Wilman Elizabeth Chudy Heidi Kratochvil 21 • Lisa Krzykowski Molly Duffy Chandra Konkol Lindsey Munkwitz Kristen Mehring Holly Kiecker Maureen Moynihan Kim Ring Shannon Erickson 30 • Lindsay Boeckman Julie Friesler Michelle Alioto 15 • Kayla DeJardin Lisa Mickey Illana Bar-Av Renee Florence Val Cooper Michelle Aldridge Elizabeth Weirick 3 • Erin DeYoung Tracie Mittelsteadt Kelly Peterson 21 Molly Schneider Elicia Scaife Erin Lambo Emily Jessen Megan Mann Erin Peot 22 • Josha Krueger 31 Tammy Sobaski 9 • Makenzie Gillaspie Sue Leising Kerri St. Aubin Maria Iaizzo Wendy Winn Claire Watkins Jenna Dougherty Liz Ulicki Jennie Kelly Bailey Briggs Heidi Seefeld Meredith Ammons 32 Elizabeth McNally Julie Bonk Tracie Mittelsteadt Kitty Montgomery 4 • Chelsea Colling 22 Elicia Scaife Linda Worden Kristen Baluta Brenda Neigbauer Katie Waltenberger 23 • Sammy Vovos Kari Krzykowski Erin Shaughnessy Liana Klesczcynski 16 • Helena Zbilut Joanna Severson Meghan Peot Kathleen Farley Ginny Graczyk Jamie Goller 33 Chris Cash Amy Oechsner Danielle Alberg Kerri St. Aubin Melissa Beverung 10 • Sarah Hagen Crystalin Montgomery Jackie Boldt 60 Julie Friesler Andrea Kramer Barb Endes Betsy Ribares Roster complete 61 Jill Schneider Alexa Torres Sherri Hicks Meredith Ammons since 1990 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History team awards Award Winners History

Laura Moynihan and Susan Moynihan Award “Take Care of My Girls” The Laura and Susan Moynihan Awards are given cious element of people. annually to the UWM women’s soccer player who best represents the spirit of these two women When Susan inherited the program, she faced nu- in soccer. Laura’s award has been awarded since merous obstacles and hardships; the program had 1993 and is reserved specifically for seniors on never had a winning season playing D-I soccer. the team, while Susan’s award has been awarded She faced financial constraints and she was only since 2000 and is open to any member of the employed on a part time basis. In the spirit of her team. mother, she became a fundraiser, tutor, advisor, organizer, provider and confidant on top of her This mother and daughter combination both duties as head coach. This was all for her players. Laura Moynihan served the Wisconsin soccer community selflessly She even poured her own financial resources back and tirelessly through years of involvement. For into the program. Recipients of the Laura Moynihan Award both, the sport of soccer involved a ball, yet the 1993 Nichole Schmidt game revolved around people and helping people Remarkably, when she stepped down in 1997 and 1994 Abby Waite, Maureen Moynihan was their passion. her sacrifices were commented upon, she replied 1995 Molly Schwab with a puzzled smile, “People keep talking about 1996 Holly Kiecker Laura Moynihan was appointed to head coach the sacrifices I’ve made, but I really don’t see any 1997 Susan Leising, Chandra Konkol of UWM women’s soccer in 1991 and Susan also of it as a sacrifice. I really enjoyed doing it for the 1998 Crystalin Montgomery joined the Panthers as an assistant coach. Unfor- team.” 1999 Michelle Alioto tunately, Laura was diagnosed with cancer in her first season. While her tenure with the Panthers In 1997, the Panthers went on to have the most 2000 Fanta Cooper was brief, it marked a new age in women’s soccer successful season in school’s history up to that 2001 Erin Blaedow at the UWM. Her spirit and determination were point. Nearly every previous record was shat- 2002 Mary Duffy infectious and her commitment to her players un- tered and the team achieved its first ever NCAA 2003 Erin Shaughnessy wavering. She was a source of inspiration until her Tournament berth. The success was inevitable, 2004 Melissa Ricter untimely death at the age of 47 in August 1992. owing to the momentum that had been building 2005 Elizabeth Chudy under Susan’s leadership. Yet, before the momen- 2006 Molly Duffy Not an easy task, but with a fine example to fol- tous season, she stepped aside and served in the 2007 Joanna Severson low, Susan became head coach and immediately role of assistant coach to help her successor and showed her capability. She lead the Panthers from the program make the transition to a new head 1992-96. She is second in school history in career coach. The recognition and publicity were incon- wins and, more importantly, ushered UWM into sequential to her; she was there to see her play- an era of national respectability and recognition. ers in all of their glory, and that is what mattered most to her. Before she died, Laura left Sue with a statement specific to UWM soccer, “Take care of my girls.” This selfless act sums up the UWM career of Susan When Laura said this, she meant far more than es- Moynihan and serves as a reminder to all of the tablish a winning program and this is something nature and true spirit of team sports. Susan understood. Both women were of different times, but shared the same heart. The heart they Laura and Susan Moynihan shared the same Sue Moynihan (with ball) shared was one of selflessness and giving. heart, and it is in the heart that lies the spirit of these awards. Recipients of the Sue Moynihan Award They also gave so that others might have. 2000 Erin Blaedow This piece was originally written by head coach 2001 Julie Ruma They gave so that others might learn. Michael Moynihan, but has been updated and edited for 2002 Erin Shaughnessy They gave from the depths of their being and they space restraints in time. At the time of Sue’s 2003 Molly Schneider gave without seeking reward or recognition. appointment at head coach, the story received national and regional attention, with stories appearing in the 2004 Rebecca Englund To them soccer possessed an intrinsic and aes- USA Today, Chicago Tribune, the NCAA News, Milwau- 2005 Molly Duffy 62 thetic beauty, yet there was an element to the kee Journal, Milwaukee Sentinel and 2006 Sarah Teegarden 63 game that altogether consumed them... the pre- the Capital Times in Madison. 2007 Sarah Teegarden

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History team awards Award Winners History Panther All-Americans national Awards Ginny Graczyk • 2006 Weekly Awards Soccer Buzz All-America Third Team NSCAA Player of the Week Soccer Times Honor Roll Graczyk had a decorated junior Erin Kane Sept. 18, 2006 Erin Kane Sept. 18, 2006 campaign in which she played ev- ery minute of every game at central Soccer Buzz Team of the Week defender. UWM set school records Pam Shipway Oct. 22, 2007 Amanda Winn Sept. 18, 2006 for wins, shutouts and goals against Erin Kane Sept. 24, 2007 Katie Campion Sept. 27, 2005 average, with all three figures Sarah Teegarden Oct. 23, 2006 Ginny Graczyk Sept. 30, 2003 among the national leaders. She also earned all-league first team Soccer America Team of the Week honors for the third time in her ca- Sarah Teegarden Oct. 23, 2006 Ginny Graczyk Sept. 30, 2003 reer. Regional Awards NSCAA Erin Kane • 2005 First Team Soccer America Freshman All-America First Team Ginny Graczyk 2006 Soccer Buzz Freshman All-America Third Team 2005 Kane posted one of the best seasons Erin Blaedow 2001 by a Panther keeper in team history Fanta Cooper 1998 Soccer Buzz as just a freshman. She set school Lisa Krzykowski 1997 First Team records with 13 shutouts and a 0.58 1995 Ginny Graczyk 2006 goals against average. She finished 1994 15th in the nation in GAA and es- 2005 Sarah Teegarden 2006 tablished a league record for shut- Second Team Fanta Cooper 1998 outs. Kane started 21 games in goal, Fanta Cooper 2000 Lisa Krzykowski 1997 played over 2000 minutes and was 1999 an all-league first team member Lisa Krzykowski 1996 and league tournament MVP. She Second Team Sarah Teegarden 2007 also posted a school-record shutout Third Team Erin Kane 2006 streak of over 717 minutes. Sarah Teegarden 2006 Janice McGann 2004 Janice McGann 2004 Maggie Suminski 2002 Sarah Teegarden • 2005 Josha Krueger 1997 Erin Blaedow 2001 Soccer Buzz Freshman All-America Honorable Mention 1996 Fanta Cooper 2000 Teegarden became a mainstay in 1995 1999 the Panther midfield, starting all 22 games. She tied for the team lead Third Team in goals and tied for third in points. Erin Kane 2007 She tallied five goals and an assist Janice McGann 2005 for 11 points on the year. Two of her Erin Blaedow 2000 goals came as game-winners, as she Josha Krueger 1997 proved to be the offensive catalyst Lisa Krzykowski 1996 from the midfield for Milwaukee. All-Freshman Team Heather Roadhouse 2007 Louise Vraney 2006 Becky Worman • 1985 Erin Kane 2005 NAIA All-America Second Team Sarah Teegarden 2005 Worman scored 13 goals and added two assists for 28 points. She scored a Ginny Graczyk 2003 school all-division record of six goals against Beloit Sept. 24 in a 15-0 Pan- Lisa Bengtsson 2000 ther win. In its second season as a varsity sport UWM’s women’s soccer team maggie suminski 62 Joy Provan 1996 63 finished 5-5-2 on the year. 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History award winners Award Winners History league awards Current Panthers in BOLD Horizon league players of the year League coach of the year 1996 Michael Moynihan 2007 1995 The Panthers hold several distinctions in league history, including the boast- 2004 Cammy Polson 1997 ing of a league-record five Players of the Year. In 1997, Lisa Krzykowski be- 2001 came the first league player to earn the award twice, while Fanta Cooper 2000 All-league second team remains the lone player to win the honor in back-to-back seasons. Between 1997 Taylor Powell 2006 Cooper and Erin Blaedow, a Milwaukee player won the award in three- Louise Vraney 2006 straight seasons, another league record. League player of the year Amanda Winn 2006 Erin Blaedow 2001 2005 Erin Blaedow • 2001 Fanta Cooper 2000 Janice McGann 2005 Blaedow started all 20 games in leading the Panthers to a school-record 15- 1999 Elizabeth McNally 2004 5 mark. She scored a team-high eight goals and finished with 17 points in Lisa Krzykowski 1997 Brenda Andrews 2003 leading Milwaukee to a second-straight league title, a league tournament 1995 2002 championship and the second NCAA Tournament in team history. UWM also Elizabeth Chudy 2003 posted a 0.68 goals against average, while not allowing a goal to league op- League newcomer of the year 2002 ponents through the regular season and league tournament. Ginny Graczyk 2003 Erin Shaughnessy 2003 Lisa Bengtsson 2000 Carrie Durand 2002 Fanta cooper • 2000 Evann Franklin 2001 In 2000, Milwaukee posted its first perfect league slate, going 5-0 on its way All-league first team Katie Kubacki 2001 to the first of eight-straight league regular season championships. A senior Erin Kane 2007 Kerri St. Aubin 2001 defender on the team, Cooper collected her second-straight honor after an- 2006 2000 choring the team’s defense and adding two assists on the offensive end. She 2005 Jeney Walter 2001 would end her career having started every team game from 1997-00. Kate Megna 2007 Lisa Bengtsson 2000 Sarah Teegarden 2007 Lindsey Munkwitz 2000 Fanta cooper • 1999 2006 1999 2005 1998 Cooper spent time both in the midfield and as defender for the 1999 Panthers, Amanda Winn 2007 Stefanie Hosni 1999 earning the first of back-to-back player of the year awards. She finished as Ginny Graczyk 2006 Liz Ulicki 1999 the team’s leading scorer with 12 points on five goals and two assists, despite 2005 Katie Waltenberger 1999 having just a goal and assist at the end of the regular season. The Oklahoma 2003 Joanne Wilde 1999 native tallied four goals and an assist in three league tournament games to Elizabeth Chudy 2004 Kathy Hoverman 1998 lead Milwaukee to its third league title game. UWM came within a penalty Janice McGann 2004 Mara Thompson 1998 kick shootout of its second NCAA Tournament. Kerri St. Aubin 2004 Fanta Cooper 1997 Jeney Walter 2003 Chandra Konkol 1997 Lisa Krzykowski • 1997 Molly Schneider 2002 Cammy Polson 1996 Krzykowski was the centerpiece of the most explosive offense in school his- Maggie Suminski 2002 1995 tory. In 1997, she led the league with 16 goals and 38 points and guided Mil- Erin Blaedow 2001 Joy Provan 1996 waukee to a 4-0-1 league mark and its first NCAA Tournament after a league 2000 1994 tournament title. As a team, the Panthers scored a school-record 62 goals Carrie Durand 2001 Josha Krueger 1994 with a record 50 assists. UWM did not slack on defense, yielding just 12 goals. Amy Oechsner 2001 Lisa Krzykowski 1994 Krzykowski tied her own school records for goals and points in a season and Julie Ruma 2001 tied another record with four goals in a game. The senior season capped a Maggie Suminski 2001 League All-Newcomer Team career where she scored more goals than any other player in school or league Fanta Cooper 2000 Heather Roadhouse 2007 history, as well as setting school records for career assists and points. 1999 Nicole Sperl 2007 1998 Erin Kreuser 2006 Lisa Krzykowski • 1995 Kristin Munyon 2000 Kate Megna 2006 After a standout freshman campaign where she scored 12 goals and 27 Kathy Hoverman 1997 Louise Vraney 2006 points, Krzykowski truly broke out as a sophomore. She set school records 1996 Erin Kane 2005 with 16 goals and 37 points and tallied three of her five career hat tricks that Josha Krueger 1997 Kitty Montgomery 2005 season. Despite a 3-3 conference mark, Milwaukee advanced to the first MCC 1996 Sarah Teegarden 2005 64 Championship game in school history in just its second season in the confer- 1995 Elizabeth McNally 2004 65 ence. Lisa Krzykowski 1997 Pam Shipway 2004 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History award winners Award Winners History Current Panthers in BOLD academic awards Ginny Graczyk 2003 Stefanie Hosni 1997 Taylor Powell 2003 Josha Krueger 1996 Academic All-Americans Elizabeth Chudy 2002 Lisa Krzykowski 1996 Erin Kane Pre-Veterinary Medicine (3.35 GPA) Molly Schneider 2002 1995 • 2007 NSCAA Third Team Brenda Andrews 2001 Mary Jakubczak 1995 Sarah Teegarden Education (3.46 GPA) Sara Lewis 2001 Heidi Kratochvil 1994 • 2007 NSCAA Third Team Ginny Graczyk Health Sciences/Psychology (3.87 GPA) Melissa Ricter 2001 • 2006 NSCAA Second Team Lisa Begtsson 2000 League tournament mvp • 2006 ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA Second Team Kerri St. Aubin 2000 Erin Kane 2005 Erin Blaedow Elementary Education (3.8 GPA) Katie Kubacki 1999 Lisa Bengtsson 2002 • 2001 NSCAA First Team Kristin Munyon 1999 Erin Blaedow 2001 Julie Ruma Psychology/Pre-Medicine (3.9 GPA) Erin Blaedow 1998 Lisa Krzykowski* 1995 • 2001 NSCAA Second Team Fanta Cooper 1997 Lisa Krzykowski Journalism/Mass Communication (3.66 GPA) Joy Provan 1996 league player of the week • 1997 NSCAA Second Team Jody Stafne 1996 Pam Shipway Oct. 22, 2007 Josha Krueger 1994 Erin Kane^ Sept. 24, 2007 NSCAA Scholar Team Award (Team GPA of 3.00 or better) Lisa Krzykowski 1994 Sarah Teegarden Oct. 22, 2006 2007 • 2006 • 2005 • 2004 • 2003 • 2001 • 2000 • 1999 • 1998 • 1997 Erin Kane Oct. 1, 2006 League All-tournament Team Erin Kane Sept. 18, 2006 Academic all-region/all-district Heather Roadhouse 2007 Erin Kane Oct. 24, 2005 NSCAA All-Region Janice McGann 2004 Pam Shipway 2007 Sarah Teegarden Oct. 17, 2005 First Team Sarah Teegarden 2007 Katie Campion Sept. 26, 2005 Erin Kane 2007 Honorable Mention Amanda Winn 2007 Erin Kane Sept. 12, 2005 Sarah Teegarden 2007 Beth Steuer 2007 2006 Erin Kane Aug. 29, 2005 Ginny Graczyk 2006 Joanna Severson 2006 2005 Joanna Severson Nov. 1, 2004 Erin Blaedow 2001 Melissa Ricter 2004 Ginny Graczyk 2006 Elizabeth Chudy Oct. 25, 2004 Julie Ruma 2001 2005 Stacey Faude Oct. 18, 2004 Lisa Krzykowski 1997 ESPN The Magazine/ Erin Kreuser 2006 Kerri St. Aubin* Oct. 11, 2004 CoSIDA All-District Rebecca Englund 2005 Kerri St. Aubin Sept. 27, 2004 Second Team First Team Erin Kane 2005 Elizabeth Chudy Nov. 3, 2003 Kerri St. Aubin 2004 Ginny Graczyk 2006 Nicole Motl 2005 Ginny Graczyk Sept. 29, 2003 Katie Campion 2005 2005 Elizabeth Chudy 2004 Elizabeth Chudy Nov. 4, 2002 Janice McGann 2005 Joanna Severson 2006 2002 Maggie Suminski Sept. 9, 2002 Crystalin Montgomery 1997 Elizabeth McNally 2004 Erin Blaedow Oct. 1, 2001 Second Team Kerri St. Aubin 2004 Kristin Munyon Oct. 31, 2000 Third Team Erin Kane 2007 2001 Fanta Cooper Oct. 10, 2000 Joanna Severson 2007 Joanna Severson 2007 Lisa Bengtsson 2002 Kristin Munyon Oct. 2, 2000 Stacey Faude 2006 Katie Campion 2005 Mary Duffy 2002 Stefanie Hosni Sept. 20, 1999 Brenda Andrews 2004 Kerri St. Aubin 2004 Maggie Suminksi 2002 Julie Ruma Aug. 30, 1999 Jeney Walter 2002 Kathy Hoverman Oct. 26, 1998 The NSCAA teams encompass all divisions, while the teams are seperated into two Erin Blaedow 2001 Fanta Cooper Oct. 19, 1998 University (Division I) and College (non-Division I) teams 2000 Danielle Alberg Sept. 8, 1998 Carrie Durand 2001 Cammy Polson Oct. 20, 1997 Horizon League Academic Awards 1999 Kathy Hoverman Sept. 29, 1997 Academic All-league Team Kerri St. Aubin 2004 Katie Kubacki 2001 Cammy Polson Sept. 22, 1997 Erin Kane 2007 Jamie Goller 2003 Fanta Cooper 2000 Mara Thompson Oct. 2, 1995 Joanna Severson 2007 1999 Cammy Polson Sept. 19, 1995 2006 u.s. army horizon league Kristin Munyon 2000 * Co-Player of the Week Ginny Graczyk 2006 scholar-athlete Katie Waltenberger 2000 ^ Erin Kane has earned League 2005 of the week Julie Ruma 1999 Player of the Week honors six times Katie Campion 2005 Beth Steuer Nov. 5, 2007 64 Joanne Wilde 1999 in her career, more than any other Janice McGann 2005 Ginny Graczyk Sept. 18, 2006 65 Jamie May 1998 player in Horizon League history.

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History ncaa teams ncaa teams History 2006 Horizon League Regular Season Champions 16-4-2 (7-0) NCAA Second Round

Aug. 25 v. Sacred Heart! W 2-0 Front Row (L-R): Erin Kreuser, Jodi Klagos, Beth Steuer, Elicia Scaife, Erika Bezue, Louise Vraney. Second Row (L-R): Illana Bar-Av, Kayla DeJardin, Amanda Winn, Claire Pignet, Pam Shipway, Bailey Briggs, Stacey Faude, Kate Megna, Brittany Aug. 27 Bowling Green% W 3-0 Miller, Leslie Deebach. Back Row (L-R): Head Coach Michael Moynihan, Associate Head Coach David Nikolic, Carly Chertos, Sept. 1 v. #1 Portland& L 2-3 Joanna Severson, Sarah Teegarden, Molly Duffy, Erin Kane, Taylor Powell, Andrea Wisniewski, Ginny Graczyk, Brenda Neigbauer, Sept. 3 @ Washington& W 2-0 Assistant Coach Kristin St. Clair. Sept. 8 v. Rhode Island$ W 1-0 Sept. 10 @ Indiana$ L 0-2 The Panthers of 2006 got off to a lightning quick Youth paced the offense, while experience- an Sept. 12 @ Marquette W 2-0 start, using a school-record winning streak to sit chored a nationally-ranked defense. Four under- Sept. 15 v. Kentucky# T (2ot) 0-0 at 16-2-1 on the year heading into the Horizon classman topped the 10-point mark, led by fresh- Sept. 17 v. #16 Missouri# W 1-0 League Semifinals. man Louise Vraney. Sarah Teegaren tied a school Sept. 24 South Dakota State W 1-0 record with five game-winning goals. Oct. 1 @ Wright State* W 4-0 That stretch included a win over No. 16 Missouri, a Oct. 4 Green Bay* W 3-2 near upset of No. 1 Portland and an unblemished On defense, Ginny Graczyk led a back line that 7-0 league mark. UWM swept Marquette, Green featured three upperclassman and was named an Oct. 6 @ Youngstown State* W (ot) 1-0 Bay and Wisconsin in the same season for the first All-American. Erin Kane was once again a rock in Oct. 8 @ Cleveland State* W 5-0 time ever. goal, breaking her own school GAA record and ty- Oct. 13 @ Loyola* W (2ot) 1-0 ing her shutout mark. Oct. 15 Butler* W (ot) 1-0 Milwaukee was dominant in tying a school re- Oct. 20 Detroit* W 1-0 cord by playing 13 games without a loss. Eleven Statistical Leaders Oct. 22 Wisconsin W 1-0 of those games were shutouts, including a school • Louise Vraney (Fr., F) 6g, 2a - 14 pts Horizon League Tournament (Engelmann Field) record-tying six-straight at one point. • Sarah Teegarden (So., MF) 5g, 2a - 12 pts Oct. 28 Cleveland State W 4-1 • Erin Kreuser (Fr., MF/F) 5g, 1a - 11 pts Nov. 3 Detroit L 0-1 UWM stumbled a bit in the post-season, falling • Beth Steuer (So., MF/F) 4g, 2a - 10 pts NCAA Tournament (South Bend, Ind.) to Detroit in a physical league semifinal match, • Erin Kane (Fr., GK) 14-4-2, 0.49 GAA, 13 SHO Nov. 10 v. Michigan T (2ot) 0-0 1-0. On the strength of the first at-large bid into (UWM advanced on PKs, 5-3) the NCAA Tourney in team history, Milwaukee re- School Records Nov. 12 @ #1 Notre Dame L 0-1 gained its footing and eliminated Michigan in a • 13-game Unbeaten Streak (tied, 12-0-1) *Horizon League Game penalty kick shootout in the first round. • 12-game Winning Streak ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field • Six-Straight Shutouts (tied) % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field Facing No. 1 Notre Dame in the second round, the • 16 Shutouts, 16 wins, .773 winning pct. & Husky Invitational (Seattle, Wash.) Panthers held their own. Despite surrendering • Teegarden: 5 Game-Winning Goals (tied) • Kane: 13 SHO (tied), 0.49 GAA $ Hoosier Classic (Bloomington, Ind.) an early goal, UWM held the Irish to one of their # Wisconsin Soccer Classic (Madison, Wis.) worst offensive showings of the season, well be- low average in goals and shots. Awards • All-America: Ginny Graczyk NCAA FIRST ROUND NCAA SECOND ROUND • All-Region: Graczyk, Teegarden, Kane Milwaukee 0, Michigan 0 - 2ot #1 Notre Dame 1, Milwaukee 0 • Freshman All-Region: Vraney Nov. 10 • South Bend, Ind. Nov. 12 • South Bend, Ind. • All-League 1st Team: Kane, Teegarden, Graczyk Goals by period 1 2 OT 2OT Tot Goals by period 1 2 Tot • All-League 2nd Team: Powell, Vraney, Winn Michigan 0 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 0 0 0 • League All-Newcomer Team: Kreuser, Kate Milwaukee 0 0 0 0 0 #1 Notre Dame 1 0 1 Megna, Vraney No Scoring Scoring • All-Tournament Team: Graczyk, Kreuser, Winn Shots: UM 6, UWM 12 1 4:37 UND Weissenhofer (Hanks; Buczkowski) • League Players of the Week: Kane (x2), 66 Saves: UM 4 (Tuura 4), UWM 2 (Kane 2) Shots: UWM 7, UND 9 Teegarden 67 (Milwaukee advances in shootout, 5-3) Saves: UWM 2 (Kane 2), UND 2 (Karas 2)

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History ncaa teams ncaa teams History 2005 Horizon League Regular Season Champions Horizon League Tournament Champion 12-5-5 (6-0-1) NCAA First Round Front Row (L-R): Kitty Montgomery, Nicole Motl, Pam Shipway, Maria Boyd, Erin Kane, Beth Steuer, Jodi Klagos, Elicia Scaife. 8/26 v. Northwestern! L 0-1 Second Row (L-R): Bailey Briggs, Joanna Severson, Rebecca Englund, Claire Pignet, Katie Campion, Val Cooper, Amanda 8/28 #13 Illinois% T (2ot) 0-0 Winn, Brenda Neigbauer, Stacey Faude. Third Row (L-R): Janice McGann, Molly Duffy, Sarah Freidel, Andrea Kramer, Andrea 9/4 Drake W 4-2 Wisniewski, Kate Megna, Sarah Teegarden, Ginny Graczyk. Back Row (L-R): Assistant Coach Crystalin Montgomery, Head Coach Michael Moynihan, Libby Shern, Taylor Powell, Elizabeth Chudy, Associate Head Coach David Nikolic. 9/7 Marquette T (2ot) 0-0 9/9 @ Central Florida W (ot) 1-0 The Panthers streaked into the NCAA Tourna- Kane had a standout rookie season, as she set a 9/11 @ #12 Florida L 0-2 ment in 2005, pushing its school-record unbeaten school record with a 0.58 goals against average. 9/16 v. Colgate^ L 0-1 streak to 13 games (10-0-3) by getting to the sec- She also set a school and league record with 13 9/17 @ Wisconsin^ L 0-4 ond round. shutouts, a figure that ranked second in the na- 9/23 @ Green Bay* W 2-1 tion. 9/25 Illinois State W (2ot) 1-0 After a 4-0 loss at Wisconsin, Milwaukee would 9/30 Cleveland State* W 3-0 not lose again for almost two months, shutting Four Panthers topped 10 points, led by Jodi Klagos 10/2 @ Butler* W 1-0 out 10 opponents and six-straight at one point. and Amanda Winn with 12 points apiece. Katie 10/9 Wright State* T (2ot) 1-1 The shutout streak of 717:10 is the 14th-best in Campion finished with 11, as did Sarah Teegarden, 10/14 Youngstown State* W 7-0 NCAA Division I history. who tied Klagos with a team-high five goals. 10/16 @ Detroit* W 2-1 10/21 Loyola* W 1-0 It seems appropriate the steak ecompassed the Statistical Leaders 10/28 Colorado College W 1-0 entire league schedule (6-0-1) and all three • Jodi Klagos (Fr., F) 5g, 2a - 12 pts Horizon League Tournament (Green Bay, Wis.) games of the league tourney, where the Panthers • Amanda Winn (So. D/MF) 4g, 4a - 12 pts 11/3 v. Cleveland State W 8-0 prevailed over Detroit in the title game. • Sarah Teegarden (Fr., MF) 5g, 1a - 11 pts 11/4 v. Butler W (2ot) 1-0 • Katie Campion (Sr., MF) 4g, 3a - 11 pts 11/6 v. Detroit T (2ot) 0-0 UWM headed across town for its third-straight • Erin Kane (Fr., GK) 11-5-5, 0.58, 13 SHO (UWM advanced on PKs, 4-3) NCAA Tourney trip, facing Purdue of the Big Ten. NCAA Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) Neither team scored through two overtimes and School Records 11/11 v. Purdue# T (2ot) 0-0 Erin Kane came up with two saves in a shootout • 13-game Unbeaten Streak (10-0-3) (UWM advanced on PKs, 6-5) to send the Panthers into the second round for the • Six-Straight Shutouts (717:10) 11/13 @ #17 Marquette# L 0-1 first time in school history. • 13 Shutouts (tied), Five Ties (tied) *Horizon League Game • Zero Shots Allowed (tied, Nov. 3) ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field Once there, they found a familiar foe in Marquette. • Kane: 13 SHO % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field The Golden Eagles, now ranked 17th nationally, ^ Big Toe Soccer Invitational (Madison, Wis.) scored the game-winner with just 20 seconds re- Awards # At Valley Field maining to advance to the next round. • Freshman All-Americans: Kane, Teegarden • All-Region First Team: Ginny Graczyk NCAA FIRST ROUND NCAA SECOND ROUND • Freshman All-Region: Kane Teegarden Milwaukee 0, Purdue 0 - 2ot #17 Marquette 1, Milwaukee 0 • All-League 1st Team: Kane, Teegarden, Graczyk Nov. 11 • Valley Field Nov. 13 • Valley Field • All-League 2nd Team: Winn, Janice McGann Goals by period 1 2 OT 2OT Tot Goals by period 1 2 Tot • League All-Newcomer Team: Kane, Teegarden, Milwaukee 0 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 0 0 0 Kitty Montgomery Purdue 0 0 0 0 0 #17 Marquette 0 1 1 • All-Tournament Team: Kane (MVP), Winn, No Scoring Scoring Graczyk, Nicole Motl, Rebecca Englund Shots: UWM 15, PU 11 1 89:40 MU Meghan Connelly (UA) • League Players of the Week: Kane (x3), Saves: UWM 5 (Kane 5), PU 5 (Mason 5) Shots: UWM 8, MU 10 66 Katie Campion, Teegarden 67 (Milwaukee advances in shootout, 6-5) Saves: UWM 5 (Kane 5), MU 3 (Boyer 3) 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History ncaa teams ncaa teams History 2002 Horizon League Regular Season Champions Horizon League Tournament Champion 11-6-5 (5-0-1) NCAA First Round Front Row (L-R): Kerri St. Aubin, Sommer Rouse, Molly Duffy, Erin Shaugnessy, Kelly Peterson, Jeney Walter, Mary Duffy. 8/30 v. Oakland ! L 1-2 Second Row (L-R): Assistant Coach Crystalin Montgomery, Maria Iazzo, Molly Schneider, Melissa Ricter, Stacey Faude, Elicia 9/1 Ohio% L 0-1 Scaife, Evann Franklin, Brenda Andrews, Lisa Bengtsson, Emily Jessen, Amber Jelinek, Sara Lewis, Megan Mann. Back Row (L-R): Athletic Trainer Becky Worman, Assistant Coach Kathy Hoverman, Brenda Neigbauer, Jamie Goller, Head Coach Michael 9/6 v. Buffalo^ T (2ot) 1-1 Moynihan, Rebecca Englund, Alexa Torres, Carrie Durand, Elizabeth Chudy, Assistant Coach David Nikolic, Nicole Motl, Janice 9/8 v. Long Beach State^ W 3-1 McGann, Amy Oechsner, Andrea Kramer, Katie Kubacki, Maggie Suminski, Anna Gebelein. 9/13 Cincinnati L 1-2 9/15 Rhode Island L 0-1 In winning a second-straight Horizon League this time 4-2. 9/20 @ Youngstown State* W 2-0 title, the 2002 Panthers had to overcome an 1-4-1 9/22 @ Wright State* W 1-0 start. For the second-straight season, Milwaukee was 9/27 @ Creighton W 1-0 sent across town to Valley Field, drawing No. 5 9/29 @ Northern Iowa W 3-0 The response was tremendous, as UWM would Pepperdine. Playing in snow and ice, the Waves 10/6 Detroit* W (2ot) 1-0 lose just one more time over its next 15 games scored a goal in the final minutes of each half for 10/11 Minnesota T (2ot) 2-2 (10-1-4). The span kicked off with a school-record the 2-0 win. 10/13 Wisconsin L 0-1 five-straight shutouts and featured ties with Big 10/17 @ Loyola* T (2ot) 2-2 Ten foes Minnesota (2-2) and Northwestern (1-1) Statistically, Elizabeth Chudy and Maggie Sumin- 10/20 Butler* W 1-0 as well as crosstown rival Marquette (1-1). ski each topped the 15-point mark, with Chudy 10/25 @ Northwestern T (2ot) 1-1 scoring a team-best 19 points in her first season. 10/27 @ Marquette T (2ot) 1-1 In league play, Milwaukee pushed its league un- Suminski, meanwhile, racked up more assists 10/30 Green Bay* W (ot) 1-0 beaten streak to 17 games with a 6-0-1 mark. than any Panther since 1997 (10) on her way to 11/1 Valparaiso W 4-1 The only blemish came in a 2-2 tie to Loyola. That 16 points. Horizon League Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) match also ended UWM’s 884:33 league scoreless 11/8 Wright State W 3-1 streak, one which included nine-straight shutouts In the nets, freshman Molly Schneider and se- 11/11 Butler W 4-2 by the UWM defense. nior Mary Duffy split time. Schneider snagged NCAA Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) all-league first team honors with a 6-2-4 record 11/16 v. #5 Pepperdine# L 0-2 The Panthers would go on to win a second-straight and 0.92 goals against average. Duffy boasted a * Horizon League Game league tourney, this time doing so on their home 0.87 GAA on her way to a 5-4-1 record and had the ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field field. In the semifinals, they topped Wright State, team’s lone shutout. The pair would combine on a % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field 3-2, at Uihlein Field. Then, playing in the first 0.90 GAA and seven shutouts. ^ Boilermaker Challenge (West Lafayette, Ind.) women’s title game in Engelmann Field history, # At Valley Field UWM topped Butler for the second-straight year, NCAA FIRST ROUND #5 Pepperdine 2, Milwaukee 0 Statistical Leaders Awards Nov. 16 • Valley Field • Elizabeth Chudy (Fr., F) 8g 3a - 19 pts • All-Region Second Team: Suminski Goals by period 1 2 Tot • Maggie Suminski (Sr., MF) 3g, 10a - 16 pts • All-League 1st Team: Schneider, Suminski Milwaukee 0 0 0 • Amber Jelinek (So., F) 4g, 1a - 9 pts • All-League 2nd Team: Chudy, Brenda #5 Pepperdine 1 1 2 • Mary Duffy (Sr., GK) 5-4-1, 0.87, 1 SHO Andrews, Carrie Durand Scoring • Molly Schneider (Fr., GK) 6-2-4, 0.92 • League All-Newcomer Team: Chudy, 1 43:57 PU Megan Woods (Fodor; Stuart) Schneider 2 87:10 PU Megan Woods (Fodor) School Records • All-Tournament Team: Chudy, Suminski, Duffy, Shots: UWM 8, PU 9 68 • Five Ties (tied) Jeney Walter, Lisa Bengtsson (MVP) Saves: UWM 4 (Duffy 1, Schneider 2, TM 1), PU 5 69 • League Player of the Week: Chudy (Picarelli 5)

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide History ncaa teams ncaa teams History 2001 Horizon League Regular Season Champions Horizon League Tournament Champion 15-5 (6-0)

NCAA First Round Front Row (L-R): Erin Blaedow, Jeney Walter, Kristin Coburn, Julie Ruma, Kerri St. Aubin. Second Row (L-R): Erin Shaugnessy, Rana Thompson, Jamie Goller, Amy Oechsner, Megan Mann, Mary Duffy, Emily Jessen, Brenda Andrews. Third Aug. 31 v. Iowa! L 0-1 Row (L-R): Director of Athletics Bud Haidet, Laura Driscoll, Nicole Motl, Alexa Torres, Maggie Suminski, Melissa Ricter, Carrie Sept.2 Oakland% L 1-5 Durand, Evann Franklin, Lisa Bengtsson, Sommer Rouse, Sara Lewis, Amber Jelinek, Assistant Coach Crystalin Montgomery. Sept.7 Central Michigan W 2-1 Back Row (L-R): Head Coach Michael Moynihan, Katie Kubacki, Student Trainer Cornell Smith, Assistant Coach Kathy Hover- Sept.9 @ Valparaiso W 3-0 man, Assistant Coach David Nikolic. Sept.23 Wright State* W 2-0 The Panthers got the 2001 season off to an inaus- Once Milwaukee reached the league tournament, Sept.25 @ Green Bay* W 2-0 picious start, sitting 0-2 and being outscored 6-1 it was more of the same. The Panthers defeated Sept.28 @ Illinois State W 2-1 after the first weekend of the season. host Detroit, 2-0, in the semifinals and came away Sept.30 Arkansas W 5-0 the 1-0 victors in the title game vs. Butler. Oct. 5 IPFW W 2-0 Milwaukee responded with a school-record nine- Oct. 7 Youngstown State* W 5-0 game winning streak, allowing just two goals That championship game remains the third-lon- Oct. 10 @ Wisconsin W 2-0 in that time. In all, UWM would yield just seven gest game in school history, as Kristin Coburn tal- Oct. 14 Northwestern L 1-2 more goals in the regular season and enter the lied the game-winner in the third overtime. Oct. 19 @ Detroit* W 2-0 league tournament at 13-4. Oct. 21 @ Butler* W 1-0 Facing Dartmouth across town at Marquette’s Oct. 25 Loyola* W 4-0 The Panthers had two different streaks of four- Valley Field, UWM and the Ivy League champs Oct. 28 @ Minnesota W 2-0 straight shutouts, tying a school mark. Those engaged in a defensive struggle. In a match that Nov. 1 Marquette L 0-3 clean sheets would add up, as the squad eclipsed featured just 12 total shots, the Big Green tallied Horizon Tournament (Detroit, Mich.) the school mark of 12 shutouts set by the 1997 the game-winner in the 112th minute. Nov. 9 @ Detroit W 2-0 team. Nov. 11 v. Butler W (3ot) 1-0 NCAA Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) In goal, Kerri St. Aubin started all 20 games and Nov. 16 v. Dartmouth L (2ot) 0-1 In league play, UWM’s success continued, as post- tallied six solo shutouts on her way to a school *Horizon League Game ed a second-straight perfect league record (6-0). record 0.63 goals against average. ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field The Panthers also posted just the second scoreless % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field league season in school history, outscoring league While defense was the key to the team’s success, # At Valley Field foes 16-0. the offense was no slouch. Led by three players with seven-or-more goals, Milwaukee finished Statistical Leaders Awards with 39 scores. Erin Blaedow garnered league • Amy Oechsner (Jr., F) 7g, 6a - 20 pts • All-Region Second Team: Blaedow player of the year honors with a team-high eight • Erin Blaedow (Sr., MF) 8g, 1a - 17 pts • League Player of the Year: Blaedow goals. • Evann Franklin (So., F) 7g, 2a - 16 pts • League Coach of the Year: Michael Moynihan • Kerri St. Aubin (So., GK) 15-5, 0.63, 6 SHO • All-League 1st Team: Blaedow, Oechsner, NCAA FIRST ROUND Carrie Durand, Julie Ruma, Maggie Suminski Dartmouth 1, Milwaukee 0 - 2ot School Records • All-League 2nd Team: Franklin, St. Aubin, Nov. 16 • Valley Field • 15 Wins Katie Kubacki, Jeney Walter Goals by period 1 2 OT 2OT Tot • .750 Winning Percentage (tied), • League All-Newcomer Team: Brenda Milwaukee 0 0 0 0 0 • 13 Shutouts (tied) Andrews, Sara Lewis, Melissa Ricter Dartmouth 0 0 0 1 1 • 8-0 Road Record • All-Tournament Team: Blaedow (MVP), Scoring • Nine-Straight Wins (tied) Durand, Kubacki, St. Aubin 1 111:18 DC K. Kannenberg (McVeigh) 68 • League Players of the Week: Blaedow Shots: UWM 5, DC 7 69 Saves: UWM 2 (St. Aubin 2), DC 2 (Mabarger 2) 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide records NCAA Teams coaching records records 1997 MCC Regular Season Champions MCC Tournament Champion 13-3-4 (4-0-1) NCAA First Round

Aug. 30 Valparaiso W 3-0 Sept. 5 Western Illinois W 16-0 Sept. 12 #21 Minnesota T (2ot) 2-2 Front Row (L-R): Crystalin Montgomery, Jamie May, Kathy Hoverman, Liz Ulicki, Molly Pape, Sue Leising, Kristin Coburn, Sept. 14 Iowa W 1-0 Danielle Alberg. Middle Row (L-R): Lindsey Munkwitz, Jody Stafne, Lisa Krzykowski, Cammy Polson, Mara Thompson, Josha Krueger, Joanne Wilde, Tammy Sobaski, Michelle Alioto. Back Row (L-R): Assistant Coach Rob Harrington, Assistant Coach Sept. 19 @ Northern Illinois W 3-1 David Nikolic, Joy Provan, Katie Waltenberger, Chandra Konkol, Michelle Koziczkowski, Liana Kleszczynski, Fanta Cooper, Rana Sept. 21 @ Illinois State W 3-0 Thompson, Stefanie Hosni, Head Coach Michael Moynihan, Assistant Coach Sue Moynihan. Sept. 26 Central Florida W (2ot) 1-0 The 1997 squad got off to a 7-0-2 start, a stretch overtimes, the longest game in school history. The Sept. 28 @ Butler* T (2ot) 0-0 that would be indicative of the team’s all-around Panthers won the tourney title on PKs, 5-4, and Oct. 3 @ Green Bay* W 5-0 strengths. It outscored opponents 34-3 over the advanced to their first NCAA Tournament. Oct. 10 @ Marquette L 1-2 first nine games, including a record-breaking 16- Oct. 12 Louisville W 6-1 0 win over Western Illinois. Once again facing the Gophers, this time ranked Oct. 17 @ Eastern Michigan W 2-0 11th in the country, UWM jumped out to a 1-0 Oct. 19 @ Detroit* W 1-0 That match established school records for goals lead on a goal from MCC Player of the Year Lisa Oct. 24 @ Evansville L (ot) 1-2 (16), assists (13) and shots (59). UWM also did Krzykowski. The U of M then scored a pair of un- Oct. 26 Wright State* W 3-0 not allow a shot in the match, the first time the answered goals for the 2-1 win. Goalkeeper Kathy team had ever accomplished the feat. Hoverman was called on to make 10 saves for Mil- Oct. 31 @ Wisconsin T (2ot) 0-0 waukee in the match. Nov. 2 Loyola* W 8-1 In their next match, the Panthers played No. 21 MCC Tournament (Indianapolis, Ind.) Minnesota to a 2-2 draw, an opponent they would The team dominated on both sides of the ball, Nov. 7 v. Wright State W 4-0 see in the NCAA Tournament. scoring a school-record 60 goals with records of 50 Nov. 9 @ Butler T (4ot) 1-1 assists and 431 shots. On the , UWM (UWM advanced on PKs, 5-4) Milwaukee won the Midwestern Collegiate Con- allowed a record 0.55 goals against average and a NCAA Tournament (Minneapolis, Minn.) ference regular season crown with a 4-0-1 record then-record 12 shutouts. Nov. 15 @ #11 Minnesota L 1-2 and advanced through the MCC Tournament. * MCC Game After a bye into the semifinals, UWM topped Individually, Krzykowski tied her own school re- Wright State, 4-0, and tied Butler, 1-1, after four cords with 16 goals and 38 points. Meanwhile, Polson tied another record with 12 assists. In the Statistical Leaders • Krzykowski: 78 Shots, 16 Goals (tied), 38 Points nets, Hoverman broke her own school GAA mark • Lisa Krzykowski (Sr., F) 16g, 6a - 38 pts (tied), 4 Goals & 9 Points (tied, Oct. 12) by almost 0.36 goals. • Cammy Polson (Sr., F) 11g, 12a - 34 pts • Fanta Cooper (Fr., D/F) 4g, 4a - 12 pts Awards NCAA FIRST ROUND • Kathy Hoverman (Jr., GK) 13-3-4, 0.66, 6 SHO • All-Region First Team: Krzykowski #11 Minnesota 2, Milwaukee 1 • All-Region Third Team: Josha Krueger Nov. 15 • Minneapolis, Minn. School Records • League Player of the Year: Krzykowski Goals by period 1 2 Tot • Goals (16), Assists (13), Points (45), Shots (59), • League Coach of the Year: Michael Moynihan Milwaukee 1 0 1 Shots Allowed (0- tied) - (Sept. 5) • All-League 1st Team: Hoverman, Krueger, #11 Minnesota 1 1 2 • .750 Win Percentage (tied) Krzykowski, Polson Scoring • 62 Goals, 50 Assists, 174 Points, 431 Shots • All-League 2nd Team: Cooper, Chandra Konkol 1 21:09 UWM Lisa Krzykowski (Polson) • 0.55 Goals Against Average • League All-Newcomer Team: Cooper 2 33:18 UM Laurie Seidl (Walek) 3 54:00 UM Kelly Shea (McElmary) • Polson: 12 Shots (Nov. 2), 12 Assists (tied), • All-Tournament Team: Hosni Shots: UWM 2, UM 12 5 Game-Winning Goals (tied) • League Players of the Week: Polson (x2), Hoverman 70 Saves: UWM 10 (Hoverman 10), UM 0 71

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide records NCAA Teams coaching records records

Year-By-Year Records Overall Record League-Only Year Coach W L T Pct. G/GA W L T Pct. G/GA 1984 Pam Tripp 5 6 0 .455 32/29 - - - .- - - -/- 1985 Pam Tripp 5 5 2 .500 38/25 - - - .- - - -/- 1986 Pam Tripp 4 5 1 .450 32/26 - - - .- - - -/- 1987 Brian Tompkins 1 0 1 .750 7/4 - - - .- - - -/- 1988 Brian Tompkins 10 7 0 .588 38/24 - - - .- - - -/- 1989 Pete Knezic 10 8 0 .556 29/33 - - - .- - - -/- 1990 Pete Knezic 6 9 2 .412 22/34 - - - .- - - -/- 1991 Laura Moynihan 6 10 1 .382 28/37 - - - .- - - -/- 1992 Sue Moynihan 6 10 1 .382 29/37 - - - .- - - -/- 1993 Sue Moynihan 8 9 2 .474 52/46 - - - .- - - -/- Moynihan nIkolic 1994 Sue Moynihan 12 7 1 .625 42/40 5 1 0 .835 19/12 1995 Sue Moynihan 9 9 1 .500 48/46 3 3 0 .500 18/15 Assistant Coaches 1996 Sue Moynihan 11 8 0 .579 46/20 3 3 0 .500 12/8 1997 Michael Moynihan 13 3 4 .750 62/12 4 0 1 .900 17/1 Stan Anderson 1998 Michael Moynihan 10 5 3 .639 23/18 2 2 1 .500 7/7 Goalkeeper Coach 1999-00 1999 Michael Moynihan 11 8 3 .568 32/26 3 2 0 .600 10/5 Kevin Armstrong Assistant Coach 1985-86 2000 Michael Moynihan 11 8 1 .575 37/27 5 0 0 1.000 14/4 Abby Bosack 2001 Michael Moynihan 15 5 0 .750 39/14 6 0 0 1.000 16/0 Assistant Coach 1998 2002 Michael Moynihan 11 6 5 .643 33/21 5 0 1 .917 8/2 Sasho Cirovski 2003 Michael Moynihan 9 9 1 .500 21/24 5 1 0 .835 10/5 Assistant Coach 1988 2004 Michael Moynihan 11 8 3 .568 35/23 7 0 0 1.000 17/3 Rob Harrington 2005 Michael Moynihan 12 5 5 .659 33/14 6 0 1 .929 17/3 Assistant Coach 1996-97 2006 Michael Moynihan 16 4 2 .773 35/10 7 0 0 1.000 16/2 Kathy Hoverman 2007 Michael Moynihan 13 4 4 .714 36/16 7 0 1 .938 23/3 Goalkeeper Coach 2001-04 Program Totals (24 years) 225 158 43 .579 829/606 68 12 5 .865 204/70 John Howard Goalkeeper Coach 1995 All-Time Panther Head Coaches Carmine Isacco Goalkeeper Coach 1998 Chris Maravalli Pam Brian Goalkeeper Coach 2007-Pr. Tripp Tompkins Eddie Miller 1984-1986 1987-1988 Assistant Coach 1991-92 Overall: 14-16-3 (.470) Overall: 11-7-1 (.605) Crystalin Montgomery Assistant Coach 2002-05 John Moynihan Assistant Coach 1992 Michael Moynihan Pete Laura Assistant Coach 1993-96 Knezic Moynihan Sue Moynihan 1989-1990 1991 Assistant Coach 1991, 1997 Overall: 16-17-2 (.486) Overall: 6-10-1 (.382) David Nikolic Assistant/Assoc. Head Coach 1994-Pr. Craig Peltonen Assistant Coach 1987 David Sollie Sue Michael Assistant Coach 1989 Moynihan Moynihan Kristen St. Clair 1992-1996 1997-Present Assistant Coach 2006 Overall: 46-43-5 (.516) Overall: 132-65-31 (.647) Brad Swenby 70 League: 11-7-0 (.611) League: 57-5-5 (.888) Goalkeeper Coach 2005 71

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Shots 1997 Kathy Hoverman 0.66 2007 Nicole Sperl 63 1996 Kathy Hoverman 0.92 2006 Louise Vraney 42 1995 Molly Pape 2.23 Sarah Teegarden 42 1994 Abby Waite 1.73 2005 Jodi Klagos 40 1993 Abby Waite 1.68 2004 Elizabeth Chudy 51 1992 Abby Waite 1.96 2003 Elizabeth Chudy 30 1991 Barb Endes 2.59 2002 Elizabeth Chudy 57 1990 Lisa Mickey 2.40 2001 Amy Oechsner 53 2000 Kristin Munyon 64 heidi kratochvil Wins 1999 Lindsey Munkwitz 49 2007 Erin Kane 13 1998 Mara Thompson 54 2003 Ginny Graczyk 7 Game-Winning Goals 2006 Erin Kane 14 1997 Lisa Krzykowski 78 2002 Maggie Suminski 10 2007 Nicole Sperl 4 2005 Erin Kane 11 1996 Lisa Krzykowski 77 2001 Julie Ruma 7 2006 Sarah Teegarden 5 2004 Kerri St. Aubin 10 1995 Lisa Krzykowski 62 2000 Lindsey Munkwitz 5 2005 Jodi Klagos 2 2003 Kerri St. Aubin 5 1994 Cammy Polson 63 1999 Katie Kubacki 3 Sarah Teegarden 2 2002 Molly Schneider 6 1993 Betsy Ribares 49 Stefanie Hosni 3 Katie Campion 2 2001 Kerri St. Aubin 15 1992 Betsy Ribares 43 Amy Oechsner 3 2004 Elizabeth Chudy 3 2000 Kerri St. Aubin 6 1991 Nicole Schmidt 30 Julie Ruma 3 2003 Elizabeth Chudy 2 1999 Liz Ulicki 11 1990 Erin Lambo 37 1998 Mara Thompson 3 Taylor Powell 2 1998 Kathy Hoverman 10 Lindsey Munkwitz 3 2002 Elizabeth Chudy 2 1997 Kathy Hoverman 13 Goals Julie Ruma 3 Amber Jelinek 2 1996 Kathy Hoverman 10 2007 Nicole Sperl 5 1997 Cammy Polson 12 2001 Amy Oechsner 4 1995 Molly Pape 7 Pam Shipway 5 1996 Lisa Krzykowski 12 2000 Kristin Munyon 2 1994 Abby Waite 11 2006 Louise Vraney 6 1995 Mara Thompson 10 Erin Blaedow 2 1993 Abby Waite 4 2005 Jodi Klagos 5 1994 Mara Thompson 8 Julie Ruma 2 Barb Endes 4 Sarah Teegarden 5 1993 Mary Jakubczak 7 Katie Kubacki 2 1992 Abby Waite 5 2004 Elizabeth Chudy 5 1992 Betsy Ribares 4 1999 Fanta Cooper 2 1991 Barb Endes 3 Andrea Kramer 5 1991 Nicole Schmidt 3 Katie Waltenberger 2 Linda Moynihan 3 Elizabeth McNally 5 1990 Michelle Aldridge 4 1998 Stefanie Hosni 4 1990 Lisa Mickey 5 2003 Elizabeth Chudy 5 1997 Cammy Polson 5 2002 Elizabeth Chudy 8 Points 1996 Lisa Krzykowski 5 Shutouts 2001 Erin Blaedow 8 2007 Nicole Sperl 14 1995 Josha Krueger 4 2007 Erin Kane 10 2000 Kristin Munyon 9 2006 Louise Vraney 14 1994 Lisa Krzykowski 5 2006 Erin Kane 13 1999 Fanta Cooper 5 2005 Jodi Klagos 12 1993 Betsy Ribares 2 2005 Erin Kane 13 1998 Mara Thompson 6 Amanda Winn 12 Lisa Mickey 2 2004 Kerri St. Aubin 7 1997 Lisa Krzykowski 16 2004 Elizabeth Chudy 15 1992 Betsy Ribares 2 2003 Kerri St. Aubin 2 1996 Lisa Krzykowski 13 2003 Elizabeth Chudy 11 Heidi Kratochvil 2 2002 Mary Duffy 1 1995 Lisa Krzykowski 16 Ginny Graczyk 11 1991 Nicole Schmidt 3 2001 Kerri St. Aubin 6 1994 Lisa Krzykowski 12 2002 Elizabeth Chudy 19 1990 Nicole Schmidt 2 2000 Kerri St. Aubin 4 1993 Betsy Ribares 14 2001 Amy Oechsner 20 1999 Liz Ulicki 8 1992 Betsy Ribares 8 2000 Kristin Munyon 22 GAA (At least 33% of team min.) 1998 Kathy Hoverman 8 1991 Nicole Schmidt 6 1999 Fanta Cooper 12 2007 Erin Kane 0.73 1997 Kathy Hoverman 6 Erin Lambo 6 1998 Mara Thompson 15 2006 Erin Kane 0.49 1996 Kathy Hoverman 5 1990 Nicole Schmidt 5 1997 Lisa Krzykowski 38 2005 Erin Kane 0.58 1995 Molly Pape 1 Erin Lambo 5 1996 Lisa Krzykowski 38 2004 Kerri St. Aubin 0.88 1994 Abby Waite 2 1995 Lisa Krzykowski 37 2003 Kerri St. Aubin 1.01 1993 Abby Waite 2 Assists 1994 Lisa Krzykowski 27 2002 Mary Duffy 0.87 1992 Abby Waite 1 2007 Erin Kreuser 7 1993 Betsy Ribares 33 2001 Kerri St. Aubin 0.63 1991 Barb Endes 2 2006 Amanda Winn 8 1992 Betsy Ribares 20 2000 Kerri St. Aubin 0.93 Linda Moynihan 2 72 2005 Amanda Winn 4 1991 Nicole Schmidt 15 1999 Liz Ulicki 1.09 1990 Lisa Mickey 2 73 2004 Nicole Motl 6 1990 Nicole Schmidt 13 1998 Kathy Hoverman 0.69 Linda Moynihan 2

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Single-Game Single-Season Goals Wins Assists 1. 16 Western Illinois 9/5/97 1. 16 (16-4-2) 2006 1. 50 1997 2. 12 Valparaiso 9/19/93 2. 15 (15-5) 2001 2. 40 1996 3. 8 Six Times 3. 13 (13-4-4) 2007 3. 38 2004 (Last v. Cleveland State, 11/3/05) 13 (13-3-4) 1997 Total Points Assists Winning Percentage 1. 174 (62 g, 50 a) 1997 1. 13 Western Illinois 9/5/97 1. .773 (16-4-2) 2006 2. 137 (52 g, 33 a) 1993 2. 9 Youngstown State 10/14/05 2. .750 (15-5) 2001 3. 132 (46 g, 40 a) 1996 3. 8 Valparaiso 9/19/93 .750 (13-3-4) 1997 4. 7 Loyola 11/3/96 Shots 7 Illinois State 9/29/96 1. 431 1997 7 Butler 9/30/94 Losses 1. 10 (6-10-1) 1992 2. 411 2007 3. 375 1994 Points 10 (6-10-1) 1991 1. 45 Western Illinois 9/5/97 3. 9 (Four Times) 2. 32 Valparaiso 9/19/93 Goals Against Average 1. 0.44 (10 GA, 2045:30) 2006 3. 23 Youngstown State 10/14/05 Ties 2. 0.55 (12 GA, 1961:45) 1997 23 Loyola 11/3/96 1. 5 (12-5-5) 2005 3. 0.60 (14 GA, 2099:30) 2005 23 Illinois State 9/29/96 5 (11-6-5) 2002 3. 4 (13-4-4) 2007 Shots Shutouts 4 (13-4-4) 1997 1. 59 Western Illinois 9/5/97 1. 16 2006 2. 52 Valparaiso 9/19/93 2. 13 2005 3. 44 Valparaiso 9/15/95 Consecutive Wins 13 2001 4. 49 Loyola 9/23/92 1. 11 (9/17-10/28) 2006 5. 48 Marian 10/15/91 2. 9 (9/7-10/10) 2001 Other Team Records 9 (9/11-10/7) 1994 Consecutive Losses 5 1993 Margin of Victory 5 1992 1. 16 Western Illinois (16-0) 9/5/97 Unbeaten Streak Winless Streak 7 (0-6-1) 2004 2. 12 Valparaiso (12-0) 9/19/93 1. 13 (12-0-1; 9/12-10/28) 2006 7 (0-6-1) 1993 3. 8 Cleveland State (8-0) 11/3/05 13 (10-0-3; 9/23-11/11) 2005 Home Record 7-1 (.875) 2006 8 Loyola (8-0) 9/23/92 3. 11 (8-0-3; 9/21-10/21) 2007 7-1 (.875) 1997 8 Marian (8-0) 10/15/91 7-1 (.875) 1996 Goals Road Record 8-0 (1.000) 2001 Shots Allowed 1. 62 1997 Consecutive Shutouts 6 2006 1. 0 Cleveland State 11/3/07 0 Cleveland State 11/3/05 2. 52 1993 6 2005 0 Western Illinois 9/5/97 3. 48 1995 Scoreless Streak 717:10 2005 0 Valparaiso 9/15/95 5. 1 Four Times Opponent Records (Last v. Youngstown St., 10/7/01) Goals (Team) Tracy Donahue, North Carolina 3 9/29/91 Wisconsin 10 10/5/90 Kari Maijala, Wisconsin 3 9/22/91 Saves Amy Stenholt, Lewis 3 9/26/90 1. 16 Arizona 10/21/94 Saves (TEAM) 16 Dayton 9/9/90 Northwestern 22 9/3/94 Assists 3. 15 Wright State 10/2/93 Cindy Fix, Detroit 3 11/5/95 15 Wisconsin 9/4/93 Goals in a Game - Opp. Hat Tricks Cindy Davis, Notre Dame 3 10/6/93 5. 14 Minnesota 9/20/96 Elisabeth Jones, Texas A&M 3 10/26/07 14 Creighton 10/16/93 Anne Mucci, Northern Illinois 3 9/17/95 Saves 72 Karin Schneider, Kentucky 3 9/5/92 Wendy Scholz, Northwestern 22 9/3/94 73

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B e tsy Goals M a r Assists Li s a Points

Single-Game Single-Game Single-GaMe 1. Lisa Krzykowski 4 10/12/97 1. Lisa Krzykowski 5 10/18/96 1. Lisa Krzykowski 9 10/12/97 Cammy Polson 4 11/3/96 2. Danielle Alberg 4 9/5/97 Cammy Polson 9 11/3/96 Betsy Ribares 4 9/11/93 Mara Thompson 4 9/30/94 3. Betsy Ribares 8 9/11/93 Betsy Ribares 4 9/23/92 4. Nicole Motl 3 10/1/04 Betsy Ribares 8 9/23/92 5. Cammy Polson 3 9/21/97 Ginny Graczyk 3 9/28/03 5. 12 Times 6 Lisa Krzykowski 3 9/7/96 Amy Oechsner 3 9/9/01 (Last by Lisa Krzykowski 11/2/97) Lisa Krzykowski 3 11/3/95 Lindsey Munkwitz 3 9/5/97 Lisa Krzykowski 3 9/26/95 Single-Season Lisa Krzykowski 3 9/10/95 Single-Season 1. Lisa Krzykowski 38 1997 Cammy Polson 3 9/30/94 1. Cammy Polson 12 1997 Lisa Krzykowski 38 1996 Betsy Ribares 3 10/3/92 Lisa Krzykowski 12 1996 3. Lisa Krzykowski 37 1995 3. Maggie Suminski 10 2002 4. Cammy Polson 34 1997 Single-Season Mara Thompson 10 1995 5. Betsy Ribares 33 1993 1. Lisa Krzykowski 16 1997 5. Amanda Winn 8 2006 6. Cammy Polson 30 1996 Lisa Krzykowski 16 1995 Cammy Polson 8 1996 7. Cammy Polson 27 1995 3. Betsy Ribares 14 1993 Mara Thompson 8 1994 Lisa Krzykowski 27 1994 4. Lisa Krzykowski 13 1996 8. Erin Kreuser 7 2007 9. Kristin Munyon 22 2000 5. Lisa Krzykowski 12 1994 Ginny Graczyk 7 2003 Mara Thompson 22 1995 6. Cammy Polson 11 1997 Julie Ruma 7 2001 Cammy Polson 11 1996 Mary Jakubczak 7 1993 Career Cammy Polson 11 1995 1. Lisa Krzykowski 140 1994-97 9. Kristin Munyon 9 2000 Career 2. Cammy Polson 104 1994-97 10. Elizabeth Chudy 8 2002 1. Lisa Krzykowski 26 1994-97 3. Betsy Ribares 60 1992-94 Erin Blaedow 8 2001 Cammy Polson 26 1994-97 4. Mara Thompson 57 1994-98 Betsy Ribares 8 1992 3. Mara Thompson 21 1994-98 5. Mary Jakubczak 53 1992-95 4. Julie Ruma 15 1998-01 6. Elizabeth Chudy 46 2002-05 Career 5. Amanda Winn 14 2004-07 7. Erin Blaedow 37 1998-01 1. Lisa Krzykowski 57 1994-97 Lindsey Munkwitz 14 1997-00 8. Amy Oechsner 36 1999-02 2. Cammy Polson 39 1994-97 6. Maggie Suminski 13 1999-02 Heidi Kratochvil 36 1992-96 3. Betsy Ribares 25 1992-94 Mary Jakubczak 13 1992-95 10. Lisa Bengtsson 34 2000-03 4. Mary Jakubczak 20 1992-95 9. Ginny Graczyk 11 2003-06 Nicole Schmidt 34 1990-93 5. Elizabeth Chudy 18 2002-05 Chandra Konkol 11 1993-97 Mara Thompson 18 1994-98 6. Erin Blaedow 16 1998-01 7. Lisa Bengtsson 14 2000-03 74 Heidi Kratochvil 14 1992-96 75 9. Six Players 13 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide records individual records individual records records Current Panthers in BOLD Polson Teega r dem ru ma

camm y Shots s a r ah Game-Winning Goals j ul ie Game-Winning Assists

Single-Game Single-Season Single-Season 1. Cammy Polson 12 11/2/97 1. Sarah Teegarden 5 2006 1. Mara Thompson 5 1995 2. Elizabeth Chudy 11 10/30/02 Cammy Polson 5 1997 2. Erin Kresuer 4 2007 Cammy Polson 11 9/15/95 Lisa Krzykowski 5 1996 Julie Ruma 4 2001 4. Chandra Konkol 10 9/5/97 Lisa Krzykowski 5 1994 Lisa Krzykowski 4 1997 Heidi Kratochvil 10 11/7/96 5. Nicole Sperl 4 2007 5. Kate Megna 3 2006 Lisa Krzykowski 10 9/15/95 Amy Oechsner 4 2001 Ginny Graczyk 3 2003 Lisa Krzykowski 10 9/30/94 Stefanie Hosni 4 1998 Maggie Suminski 3 2002 Heidi Kratochvil 10 9/12/93 Josha Krueger 4 1995 Cammy Polson 3 1997 Maureen Moynihan 10 10/15/91 9. Five Players 3 Cammy Polson 3 1996 10. Eight Times 9 Betsy Ribares 3 1992 (Last by Nicole Sperl 8/31/07) Career 1. Lisa Krzykowski 11 1994-97 Career Single-Season Cammy Polson 11 1994-97 1. Julie Ruma 7 1998-01 1. Lisa Krzykowski 78 1997 3. Sarah Teegarden 8 2005-Pr. Mara Thompson 7 1994-98 2. Lisa Krzykowski 77 1996 4. Stefanie Hosni 7 1997-00 Cammy Polson 7 1994-97 3. Cammy Polson 72 1997 Elizabeth Chudy 7 2002-05 Lisa Krzykowski 7 1994-97 4. Cammy Polson 65 1994 6. Katie Kubacki 5 1999-02 5. Erin Kreuser 5 2006-Pr. 5. Kristin Munyon 64 2000 Erin Blaedow 5 1998-01 6. Nine players 4 6. Nicole Sperl 63 2007 Katie Waltenberger 5 1997-00 7. Lisa Krzykowski 62 1995 Betsy Ribares 5 1992-94 8. Elizabeth Chudy 57 2002 Nicole Schmidt 5 1990-93 9. Sarah Teegarden 55 2007 10. Mara Thompson 54 1998

Career Games played/started 1. Lisa Krzykowski 269 1994-97 Career Games Played career Games Started 2. Cammy Polson 232 1994-97 1. Taylor Powell 85 2003-06 1. Maggie Suminski 81 1999-02 3. Mara Thompson 166 1994-98 2. Pam Shipway 84 2004-07 2. Fanta Cooper 80 1997-00 4. Elizabeth Chudy 141 2002-05 Maggie Suminski 84 1999-02 3. Janice McGann 78 2002-05 5. Heidi Kratochvil 132 1992-96 4. Joanna Severson 82 2004-07 Josha Krueger 78 1994-97 6. Sarah Teegarden 131 2005-Pr. 5. Katie Kubacki 81 1999-02 5. Cammy Polson 76 1994-97 7. Lindsey Munkwitz 126 1997-00 6. Carrie Durand 80 1999-02 6. Jamie May 75 1995-98 8. Amy Oechsner 120 1999-02 Fanta Cooper 80 1997-00 Julie Ruma 73 1998-01 9. Taylor Powell 116 2003-06 Julie Ruma 80 1998-01 8. Erin Blaedow 72 1998-01 10. Betsy Ribares 114 1992-94 9. Janice McGann 79 2002-05 9. Chandra Konkol 67 1993-97 74 Stefanie Hosni 79 1997-00 Mary Jakubczak 67 1992-95 75

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Ka t h y Saves k e rr i Goals Against Avg e r i n Shutouts

single-game Single-Season (min. 750 minutes) Single-Season 1. Lisa Mickey 16 9/9/90 1. Erin Kane 0.49 2006 1. Erin Kane 13 2006 Abby Waite 16 10/21/94 2. Erin Kane 0.58 2005 Erin Kane 13 2005 3. Barb Endes 15 10/2/93 3. Kerri St. Aubin 0.63 2001 3. Erin Kane 10 2007 4. Kathy Hoverman 14 9/20/96 4. Kathy Hoverman 0.66 1997 4. Liz Ulicki 8 1999 Barb Endes 14 10/16/93 5. Kathy Hoverman 0.69 1998 Kathy Hoverman 8 1998 Single-Season 6. Erin Kane 0.73 2007 6. Kerri St. Aubin 7 2004 1. Barb Endes 120 1993 7. Mary Duffy 0.87 2002 7. Kathy Hoverman 6 1997 2. Abby Waite 116 1994 8. Kerri St. Aubin 0.88 2004 Kerri St. Aubin 6 2001 3. Kathy Hoverman 106 1996 9. Kathy Hoverman 0.916 1996 9. Kathy Hoverman 5 1996 4. Lisa Mickey 103 1990 10. Molly Schneider 0.922 2002 10. Kerri St. Aubin 4 2000 5. Barb Endes 100 1991 6. Liz Ulicki 88 1999 Career (min. 2000 minutes) Career 7. Abbey Waite 83 1992 1. Erin Kane 0.60 2005-Pr 1. Erin Kane 36 2005-Pr. 8. Kathy Hoverman 80 1998 2. Kerri St. Aubin 0.84 2000-04 2. Kerri St. Aubin 19 2000-04 9. Kathy Hoverman 70 1997 3. Kathy Hoverman 1.00 1995-98 Kathy Hoverman 19 1995-98 10. Kerri St. Aubin 68 2004 4. Liz Ulicki 1.12 1996-99 4. Liz Ulicki 8 1996-99 Career 5. Mary Duffy 1.20 2000-02 5. Abby Waite 5 1993-94 1. Kathy Hoverman 293 1995-98 2. Kerri St. Aubin 238 2000-04 Wins Save Percentage 3. Abby Waite 233 1992-94 Single-season single-season (Min. 50 shots faced) 4. Barb Endes 231 1991-93 1. Kerri St. Aubin 15 2001 1. Kathy Hoverman .876 1996 5. Erin Kane 179 2005-Pr. 2. Erin Kane 14 2006 2. Kathy Hoverman .864 1997 3. Erin Kane 13 2007 3. Kathy Hoverman .860 1998 Minutes Played Kathy Hoverman 13 1997 4. Kerri St. Aubin .853 2001 Single-Season 5. Erin Kane 11 2005 5. Kerri St. Aubin .839 2000 1. Liz Ulicki 2138:17 1999 Liz Ulicki 11 1999 6. Erin Kane .833 2005 2. Erin Kane 2009:30 2005 Abby Waite 11 1994 7. Kerri St. Aubin .831 2003 3. Erin Kane 1978:43 2007 8. Kathy Hoverman 10 1998 8. Erin Kane .828 2006 4. Erin Kane 1852:00 2006 Kerri St. Aubin 10 2004 9. Molly Schneider .817 2002 5. Kerri St. Aubin 1851:18 2004 Kathy Hoverman 10 1996 10. Erin Kane .805 2007

Career Career Career (Min. 100 shots faced) 1. Erin Kane 5840:13 2005-Pr. 1. Erin Kane 38 2005-Pr 1. Kathy Hoverman .835 1995-98 2. Kerri St. Aubin 5353:55 2000-04 2. Kerri St. Aubin 36 2000-04 2. Kerri St. Aubin .826 2000-04 3. Kathy Hoverman 5238:54 1995-98 4. Abby Waite 3588:57 1993-94 3. Kathy Hoverman 34 1995-98 3. Erin Kane .821 2005-Pr. 76 5. Barb Endes 2685:35 1991-93 4. Abby Waite 20 1992-94 4. Molly Schneider .770 2002-03 77 5. Liz Ulicki 11 1996-99 5. Liz Ulicki .765 1996-99 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide records goalkeeping records miscellaneous records records Current Panthers in BOLD R o adh ous e p ow e ll ma nn

hea t he r Notable Freshmen t a ylor Streaks mega n Fast Goals

Started Every Game as a Freshman Consecutive Games Played Fastest Goal By UWM To Start A Game Heather Roadhouse 21 2007 1. Taylor Powell 85* 2003-06 1. Katie Waltenberger 0:26 10/27/98 Sarah Teegarden 22 2005 2. Maggie Suminski 84* 1999-02 2. Lisa Krzykowski 0:41 9/30/94 Ginny Graczyk* 19 2003 3. Julie Ruma 80* 1998-01 3. Megan Mann 0:49 9/9/01 Erin Blaedow 18 1998 Fanta Cooper 80* 1997-00 Fanta Cooper 20 1997 5. Josha Krueger 78* 1994-97 Quickest Back-To-Back Goals Mara Thompson 20 1994 * Played in every team game. Scored By UWM Cammy Polson 20 1994 1. vs. Western Illinois 0:28 9/5/97 Josha Krueger* 20 1994 Consecutive Games with Point Lindsay Munkwitz (65:24), Waltenberger (65:52) Karen Langlois 17 1991 1. Betsy Ribares 8 (9g, 4a) 1993 2. vs. Valparaiso 0:33 9/19/93 Kathleen Farley 17 1990 2. Amanda Winn 6 (4g, 4a) 2005 Betsy Ribares (50:37), Meredith Ammons (51:10) * Josha Krueger is the only Panther in school Mara Thompson 6 (5g, 9a) 1995 3. vs. Drake 0:46 9/4/05 history to play every minute of every game Betsy Ribares 6 (7g, 1a) 1993-94 Bailey Briggs (41:16), Sarah Teegarden (42:02) in four years. 5. Amy Oechsner 5 (3g, 4a) 2001 vs. Valparaiso 0:46 9/19/93 Ginny Graczyk played every minute Mara Thompson 5 (1g, 3a) 1998 Jackie Boldt (66:50), Barb Endes (67:36) in each of her three active seasons. Cammy Polson 5 (3g, 5a) 1997 Cammy Polson 5 (7g, 3a) 1996 Quickest Back-To-Back Goals Goals in First Collegiate Game Mary Jakubczak 5 (3g, 3a) 1995 Scored By UWM And Opponent Sarah Talbert 8/31/07 1. vs. Purdue 0:12 10/30/04 Louise Vraney* 8/25/06 Shutout Streaks Parissa Eyorokon, PU (10:21), Katie Waltenberger* 9/5/97 1. Erin Kane 717:10 2005 Elizabeth Chudy (10:33) * Louise Vraney scored two goals in her first 2. Erin Kane 595:22 2006 vs. Illinois State 0:12 9/29/96 collegiate game, which happened to be the 2006 3. Erin Kane 590:52 2006 Jodi Staffne (54:34), season opener; Katie Waltenberger scored two 4. Kathy Hoverman 458:10 1998 Kathie Keach, ISU (54:46) goals in her collegiate debut, which came in the 5. Liz Ulicki 447:11 1999 3. vs. Green Bay 0:19 10/4/06 second game of the 1997 season. Stephanie Gross, GB (76:27), Consecutive Game-Winners Stacey Faude (76:46) Shutout in First Collegiate Start 1. Sarah Teegarden 3 10/15-22/06 Illana Bar-Av* 8/25/06 Stefanie Hosni 3 9/19-26/98 Fastest Goal Kerri St. Aubin* 10/1/00 Lisa Krzykowski 3 9/11-18/94 By Opponent To Start A Game Linda Moynihan* 10/17/90 4. Pam Shipway 2 10/16-19/07 Carrie Maier, Wisconsin 0:57 9/22/91 * Each of the three Panther goalkeepers to post a Katie Campion 2 9/23-25/05 shutout in their first college start followed that up Amy Oechsner 2 9/25-28/01 Quickest Back-To-Back Goals with a second-straight shutout. Cammy Polson 2 9/21-26/97 Scored By Oppopnent Cammy Polson 2 10/30-11/3/96 Wisconsin 0:36 9/22/91 Kari Maijula (2:41), Cheri Skibski (3:27) 76 77

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide records yearly results yearly results records

2007 Nov. 3 Detroit L 0-1 Sept. 5 v. Mississippi State& T (2ot) 2-2 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan NCAA Tournament (South Bend, Ind.) Sept. 8 @ Marquette L 0-1 Record: 13-4-4 Nov. 10 v. Michigan T (2ot) 0-0 Sept. 10 Boston College L 1-4 League: 7-0-1 Horizon (Regular Season Champs) (UWM advanced on PKs, 5-3) Sept. 12 DePaul L (2ot) 2-3 Aug. 31 Indiana State^ W 3-0 Nov. 12 @ #1 Notre Dame L 0-1 Sept. 17 @ Iowa State^ L 1-2 Sept. 2 Washington^ W 2-1 *Horizon League Game Sept. 19 v. Creighton^ W 3-0 Sept. 7 v. Boston University% L 0-1 ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field Sept. 21 Green Bay* W 2-1 Sept. 9 v. UC Santa Barbara% W (2ot) 1-0 % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field Sept. 26 @ Illinois State T (2ot) 0-0 Sept. 14 @ #8 Boston College L 0-1 & Husky Invitational (Seattle, Wash.) Oct. 1 @ Youngstown State* W 6-1 Sept. 16 @ Harvard L 0-1 $ Hoosier Classic (Bloomington, Ind.) Oct. 3 @ Cleveland State* W 1-0 Sept. 21 @ Wisconsin W 1-0 # Wisconsin Soccer Classic (Madison, Wis.) Oct. 10 @ Wright State* W 2-0 Sept. 23 #24 Marquette T (2ot) 0-0 Oct. 13 @ Loyola* W 3-0 Sept. 28 @ Butler* W 5-1 2005 Oct. 17 Butler* W (2ot) 1-0 Sept. 30 @ Detroit* T (2ot) 0-0 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan Oct. 21 Wisconsin L 0-2 Oct. 3 @ Green Bay* W 4-0 Record: 12-5-5 Oct. 24 Detroit* W (ot) 2-1 Oct. 5 Iowa T (2ot) 0-0 League: 6-0-1 Horizon (Regular Season Champs) Oct. 30 Purdue W 2-1 Oct. 7 Youngstown State* W 2-1 Aug. 26 v. Northwestern! L 0-1 Horizon League Tournament (Indianapolis, Ind.) Oct. 12 @ Valparaiso* W 2-0 Aug. 28 #13 Illinois% T (2ot) 0-0 Nov. 4 v. Cleveland State W 4-1 Oct. 16 Loyola* W 2-1 Sept. 4 Drake W 4-2 Nov. 5 v. Loyola T (2ot) 0-0 Oct. 19 Cleveland State* W 6-0 Sept. 7 Marquette T (2ot) 0-0 (UWM advanced on PKs, 5-4) Oct. 21 Wright State* W 2-0 Sept. 9 @ Central Florida W (ot) 1-0 Nov. 7 v. Detroit L 0-1 Oct. 26 @ #2 Texas A&M L 1-6 Sept. 11 @ #12 Florida L 0-2 *Horizon League Game Horizon League Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) Sept. 16 v. Colgate^ L 0-1 ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field Nov. 3 Cleveland State W 1-0 Sept. 17 @ Wisconsin^ L 0-4 % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field Nov. 9 Butler W (2ot) 2-1 Sept. 23 @ Green Bay* W 2-1 & Crimson & Blue Invitational (Lawrence, Kan.) Nov. 11 Loyola T (2ot) 2-2 Sept. 25 Illinois State W (ot) 1-0 ^ Nike Invitational (Ames, Iowa) (Loyola advanced on PKs, 3-2) Sept. 30 Cleveland State* W 3-0 *Horizon League Game Oct. 2 @ Butler* W 1-0 2003 ^ Milwaukee Cup (Engelmann Field) Oct. 9 Wright State* T (2ot) 1-1 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan % Wisconsin Soccer Classic (Madison, Wis.) Oct. 14 Youngstown State* W 7-0 Record: 9-9-1 Oct. 16 @ Detroit* W 2-1 League: 5-1 Horizon (Regular Season Champs) 2006 Oct. 21 Loyola* W 1-0 Aug. 29 v. Dayton! L (ot) 0-1 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan Oct. 28 Colorado College W 1-0 Aug. 31 Vanderbilt% L 0-1 Record: 16-4-2 Horizon League Tournament (Green Bay, Wis.) Sept. 5 Kansas L 0-3 League: 7-0 Horizon (Regular Season Champs) Nov. 3 v. Cleveland State W 8-0 Sept. 7 Illinois State T (2ot) 0-0 Aug. 25 v. Sacred Heart! W 2-0 Nov. 4 v. Butler W (2ot) 1-0 Sept. 12 v. #3 UCLA# L 0-4 Aug. 27 Bowling Green% W 3-0 Nov. 6 v. Detroit T (2ot) 0-0 Sept. 14 atLoyola Marymount# L 0-1 Sept. 1 v. #1 Portland& L 2-3 (UWM advanced on PKs, 4-3) Sept. 21 @ Butler* W 1-0 Sept. 3 @ Washington& W 2-0 NCAA Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) Sept. 24 Marquette W (ot) 3-2 Sept. 8 v. Rhode Island$ W 1-0 Nov. 11 v. Purdue# T (2ot) 0-0 Sept. 28 Wright State* W (2ot) 3-2 Sept. 10 @ Indiana$ L 0-2 (UWM advanced on PKs, 6-5) Oct. 3 @ Cincinnati W 1-0 Sept. 12 @ Marquette W 2-0 Nov. 13 @ #17 Marquette# L 0-1 Oct. 5 Loyola* W 2-0 Sept. 15 v. Kentucky# T (2ot) 0-0 *Horizon League Game Oct. 10 @ Detroit* W 2-1 Sept. 17 v. #16 Missouri# W 1-0 ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field Oct. 12 @ Oakland L 1-2 Sept. 24 South Dakota State W 1-0 % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field Oct. 17 @ Green Bay* L (ot) 1-2 Oct. 1 @ Wright State* W 4-0 ^ Big Toe Soccer Invitational (Madison, Wis.) Oct. 24 @ Iowa W 3-1 Oct. 4 Green Bay* W 3-2 # At Valley Field Oct. 26 Youngstown State* W 1-0 Oct. 6 @ Youngstown State* W (ot) 1-0 Oct. 29 @ Wisconsin L 1-2 Oct. 8 @ Cleveland State* W 5-0 2004 Nov. 2 Northwestern W 2-1 Oct. 13 @ Loyola* W (2ot) 1-0 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan Horizon League Tournament (Chicago, Ill.) Oct. 15 Butler* W (ot) 1-0 Record: 11-8-3 Nov. 6 v. Detroit L (2ot) 0-1 Oct. 20 Detroit* W 1-0 League: 7-0 Horizon (Regular Season Champs) *Horizon League Game Oct. 22 Wisconsin W 1-0 Aug. 27 v. South Dakota State! W 2-0 ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field 78 Horizon League Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) Aug. 29 Indiana% L 1-2 % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field 79 Oct. 28 Cleveland State W 4-1 Sept. 3 @ #17 Kansas& L 0-1 # Loyola Marymount Invite (Los Angeles, Calif.) 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide records yearly results yearly results records

2002 Horizon League Tournament (Detroit, Mich.) Oct. 3 Oakland W 2-1 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan Nov. 9 @ Detroit W 2-0 Oct. 5 Loyola* W 5-0 Record: 11-6-5 Nov. 11 v. Butler W (3ot) 1-0 Oct. 8 @ Detroit* W (ot) 2-1 League: 5-0-1 Horizon (Regular Season Champs) NCAA Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) Oct. 10 @ Butler* L 1-3 Aug. 30 v. Oakland ! L 1-2 Nov. 16 v. Dartmouth L (2ot) 0-1 Oct. 15 Creighton W 2-1 Sept. 1 Ohio% L 0-1 *Horizon League Game Oct. 22 @ Illinois State L 0-2 Sept. 6 v. Buffalo^ T (2ot) 1-1 ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field Oct. 24 @ Wisconsin T (2ot) 0-0 Sept. 8 v. Long Beach State^ W 3-1 % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field Oct. 27 @ Green Bay* L 0-1 Sept. 13 Cincinnati L 1-2 # At Valley Field MCC Tournament (Indianapolis, Ind.) Sept. 15 Rhode Island L 0-1 Nov. 4 v. Green Bay W 3-0 Sept. 20 @ Youngstown State* W 2-0 2000 Nov. 5 @ Butler W 4-1 Sept. 22 @ Wright State* W 1-0 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan Nov. 7 v. Wright State T (4ot) 1-1 Sept. 27 @ Creighton W 1-0 Record: 11-8-1 (WSU advanced on PKs, 4-2) Sept. 29 @ Northern Iowa W 3-0 League: 5-0 MCC (Regular Season Champs) *MCC Game Oct. 6 Detroit* W (2ot) 1-0 Aug. 25 v. Wisconsin! L 1-3 ^ Provo, Utah Oct. 11 Minnesota T (2ot) 2-2 Aug. 27 Tennessee% W 3-0 # UWM Panther Primeco Classic Oct. 13 Wisconsin L 0-1 Sept. 1 @ Marquette L 1-2 Oct. 17 @ Loyola* T (2ot) 2-2 Sept. 3 Xavier L 1-2 1998 Oct. 20 Butler* W 1-0 Sept. 8 @ Central Michigan^ W (ot) 3-2 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan Oct. 25 @ Northwestern T (2ot) 1-1 Sept. 10 v. Western Michigan^ W 3-0 Record: 10-5-3 Oct. 27 @ Marquette T (2ot) 1-1 Sept. 15 @ Oklahoma L 0-1 League: 2-2-1 MCC (4th) Oct. 30 Green Bay* W (ot) 1-0 Sept. 17 @ Oral Roberts T (2ot) 2-2 Sept. 4 @ #8 Nebraska W (2ot) 2-1 Nov. 1 Valparaiso W 4-1 Sept. 20 Green Bay* W 5-2 Sept. 8 Northwestern L 0-4 Horizon League Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) Sept. 23 #24 Brigham Young L 0-2 Sept. 11 Illinois State L (ot) 0-1 Nov. 8 Wright State W 3-1 Sept. 29 Illinois State W (ot) 4-3 Sept. 13 @ DePaul W 2-0 Nov. 11 Butler W 4-2 Oct. 1 @ Wright State* W 2-0 Sept. 19 Dayton W 2-1 NCAA Tournament (Milwaukee, Wis.) Oct. 6 Detroit* W 2-0 Sept. 22 @ Marquette W 1-0 Nov. 16 v. #5 Pepperdine# L 0-2 Oct. 13 @ Minnesota L 0-1 Sept. 26 Green Bay*^ W 3-2 * Horizon League Game Oct. 15 Butler* W 2-0 Sept. 27 Eastern Illinois^ L (2ot) 1-2 ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field Oct. 20 @ Oakland W (ot) 2-1 Oct. 4 @ Wright State* T (2ot) 0-0 % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field Oct. 22 @ Michigan L 2-3 Oct. 9 Butler* L (ot) 0-1 ^ Boilermaker Challenge (West Lafayette, Ind.) Oct. 27 @ Loyola* W (ot) 3-2 Oct. 11 Detroit* L 2-4 # At Valley Field MCC Tournament (Dayton, Ohio) Oct. 16 v. Florida Int’l% W 2-0 Nov. 3 v. Butler W 1-0 Oct. 18 @ Central Florida% W 1-0 2001 Nov. 5 @ Wright State L 0-1 Oct. 23 @ Iowa W (2ot) 2-1 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan *MCC Game Oct. 25 Wisconsin T (2ot) 0-0 Record: 15-5 ! Milwaukee Cup Game at Valley Field Oct. 27 @ Loyola* W 2-0 League: 6-0 Horizon (Regular Season Champs) % Milwaukee Cup Game at Engelmann Field Nov. 1 Northern Illinois W 3-1 Aug. 31 v. Iowa! L 0-1 ^ Central Michigan Invite (Mt. Pleasant, Mich.) MCC Tournament (Indianapolis, Ind.) Sept. 2 Oakland% L 1-5 Nov. 5 v. Wright State T (2ot) 0-0 Sept. 7 Central Michigan W 2-1 1999 (WSU advanced on PKs, 5-3) Sept. 9 @ Valparaiso W 3-0 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan * MCC Game Sept. 23 Wright State* W 2-0 Record: 11-8-3 ^ Panther Showcase Sept. 25 @ Green Bay* W 2-0 League: 3-2 MCC (3rd) % Central Florida Tournament (Orlando, Fla.) Sept. 28 @ Illinois State W 2-1 Aug. 29 Minnesota L 2-3 Sept. 30 Arkansas W 5-0 Sept. 1 DePaul W 1-0 1997 Oct. 5 IPFW W 2-0 Sept. 5 Evansville W 2-1 Head Coach: Michael Moynihan Oct. 7 Youngstown State* W 5-0 Sept. 9 @ #11 Brigham Young L 1-5 Record: 13-3-4 Oct. 10 @ Wisconsin W 2-0 Sept. 11 v. Arizona^ L (ot) 2-3 League: 4-0-1 MCC (Regular Season Champs) Oct. 14 Northwestern L 1-2 Sept. 18 Weber State# W 1-0 Aug. 30 Valparaiso W 3-0 Oct. 19 @ Detroit* W 2-0 Sept. 19 Wright State*# W 2-0 Sept. 5 Western Illinois W 16-0 Oct. 21 @ Butler* W 1-0 Sept. 21 Marquette T (2ot) 0-0 Sept. 12 #21 Minnesota T (2ot) 2-2 Oct. 25 Loyola* W 4-0 Sept. 24 @ Dayton W (ot) 1-0 Sept. 14 Iowa W 1-0 78 Oct. 28 @ Minnesota W 2-0 Sept. 26 @ Xavier L 0-2 Sept. 19 @ Northern Illinois W 3-1 79 Nov. 1 Marquette L 0-3 Oct. 1 Villanova L 0-1 Sept. 21 @ Illinois State W 3-0 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide records yearly results yearly results records

Sept. 26 Central Florida W (2ot) 1-0 Sept. 15 Valparaiso W 7-0 Sept. 15 Marquette W 4-0 Sept. 28 @ Butler* T (2ot) 0-0 Sept. 17 Northern Illinois* W 5-4 Sept. 18 George Washington# L 1-2 Oct. 3 @ Green Bay* W 5-0 Sept. 22 @ Marquette W 2-1 Sept. 19 Valparaiso W 12-0 Oct. 10 @ Marquette L 1-2 Sept. 26 @ Loyola* W 5-0 Sept. 22 Green Bay T (2ot) 3-3 Oct. 12 Louisville W 6-1 Sept. 29 Wright State* W 6-1 Sept. 25 v. Canisius% W 2-0 Oct. 17 @ Eastern Michigan W 2-0 Oct. 1 Kentucky L 0-1 Sept. 26 @ Michigan State% L 0-3 Oct. 19 @ Detroit* W 1-0 Oct. 6 @ Butler* L 0-3 Oct. 2 Wright State T (2ot) 2-2 Oct. 24 @ Evansville L (ot) 1-2 Oct. 11 @ Green Bay* L 2-4 Oct. 3 Indiana L 0-5 Oct. 26 Wright State* W 3-0 Oct. 14 @ Detroit* L (2ot) 0-3 Oct. 6 #3 Notre Dame L 0-6 Oct. 31 @ Wisconsin T (2ot) 0-0 Oct. 20 Northwestern L 2-3 Oct. 10 Dayton L 2-4 Nov. 2 Loyola* W 8-1 Oct. 21 Toledo W 1-0 Oct. 16 Creighton L (2ot) 1-2 MCC Tournament (Indianapolis, Ind.) Oct. 29 #15 Wisconsin T (2ot) 2-2 Oct. 17 @ Northern Illinois L 1-2 Nov. 7 v. Wright State W 4-0 MCC Tournament (Green Bay, Wis.) Oct. 23 @ Loyola W 4-2 Nov. 9 @ Butler T (4ot) 1-1 Nov. 2 v. Wright State W 3-2 Oct. 24 Xavier L 2-4 (UWM advanced on PKs, 5-4) Nov. 3 v. Butler W 6-2 Oct. 31 Minnesota W 5-2 NCAA Tournament (Minneapolis, Minn.) Nov. 5 v. Detroit L 0-4 ^ Lewis Tournament (Romeoville, Ill.) Nov. 15 @ #11 Minnesota L 1-2 *MCC Game # At Madison, Wis. * MCC Game ! UW-Madison Tournament (Madison, Wis.) % Michigan State Invitational (East Lansing, Mich.) % Virginia Larenza Invite (Charlottesville, Va.) 1996 1992 Head Coach: Susan Moynihan 1994 Head Coach: Susan Moynihan Record: 11-8 Head Coach: Susan Moynihan Record: 6-10-1 League: 3-3-0 MCC (4th) Record: 12-7-1 Sept. 5 @ Kentucky L (2ot) 2-5 Aug. 31 @ Green Bay*# L 0-3 League: 5-1 MCC (2nd) Sept. 11 @ Creighton^ L 0-3 Sept. 7 v. Iowa State# W 4-1 Sept. 3 @ Northwestern W (2ot) 3-2 Sept. 13 v. G. Washington^ W (2ot) 2-1 Sept. 10 @ Northwestern W 3-0 Sept. 5 @ Wisconsin L 0-4 Sept. 19 v. #12 William & Mary* L 0-4 Sept. 15 @ Wisconsin L (2ot) 0-1 Sept. 9 @ Minnesota L 1-5 Sept. 20 Xavier L 0-3 Sept. 20 @ Minnesota L 0-1 Sept. 11 Detroit* W 4-3 Sept. 23 Loyola W 8-0 Sept. 22 Northern Illinois W 3-0 Sept. 16 @ Dayton W 2-1 Sept. 26 @ Dayton T (2ot) 2-2 Sept. 27 Detroit* L 1-2 Sept. 18 @ Wright State* W 2-1 Sept. 27 @ Wright State L 0-2 Sept. 29 Illinois State W 8-1 Sept. 23 @ Valparaiso W 4-1 Oct. 3 Lewis W 6-1 Oct. 4 v. Montana^ L 0-1 Sept. 25 @ Northern Illinois* W 1-0 Oct. 4 Louisville W 2-0 Oct. 6 @ Washington State^ L 0-2 Sept. 30 Butler* W (2ot) 7-4 Oct. 7 @ Wisconsin L 0-2 Oct. 11 Evansville W (2ot) 2-1 Oct. 2 Xavier W 2-1 Oct. 11 Michigan State L 0-3 Oct. 13 Butler* W 2-0 Oct. 5 Lewis W 3-2 Oct. 16 @ Florida Int’l L 0-3 Oct. 18 @ Valparaiso W 6-0 Oct. 7 Green Bay* W 2-0 Oct. 18 @ Barry (FL) L 1-3 Oct. 20 @ Wright State* L 1-2 Oct. 14 @ Creighton L 0-1 Oct. 21 Green Bay L 1-2 Oct. 26 Western Michigan W 5-0 Oct. 16 @ Nebraska L 0-2 Oct. 24 St. Benedict’s (Minn.) W (2ot) 3-2 Oct. 30 Marquette W 1-0 Oct. 21 @ Arizona^ W (2ot) 3-2 Oct. 25 Cincinnati W 2-1 Nov. 3 Loyola* W 8-1 Oct. 23 v. New Mexico^ L 0-3 ^ Creighton Invitational (Omaha, Neb.) MCC Tournament (DeKalb, Ill.) Oct. 26 Marquette T (2ot) 1-1 * At Madison, Wis. Nov. 7 v. Green Bay W 2-0 Oct. 30 Loyola* L 3-4 Nov. 8 v. Butler L 0-4 MCC Tournament (Indianapolis, Ind.) 1991 * MCC Game Nov. 3 v. Green Bay W (2ot) 2-1 Head Coach: Laura Moynihan # Green Bay Tournament (Green Bay, Wis.) Nov. 4 @ Butler L 0-3 Record: 6-10-1 ^ Washington St. Tournament (Pullman, Wash.) *MCC Game Sept. 8 Creighton L (2ot) 2-3 ^ Arizona Tournament (Tucson, Ariz.) Sept. 13 v. St. Thomas (Minn.)^ W 3-2 1995 Sept. 14 v. Florida Int’l^ T (2ot) 1-1 Head Coach: Susan Moynihan 1993 Sept. 18 Green Bay L 1-2 Record: 9-9-1 Head Coach: Susan Moynihan Sept. 22 #4 Wisconsin L 0-8 League: 3-3-0 MCC (4th) Record: 8-9-2 Sept. 28 v. Quincy# L 2-3 Sept. 2 v. #1 North Carolina! L 0-8 Sept. 4 #16 Wisconsin L 0-5 Sept. 29 v. #1 North Carolina# L 0-7 Sept. 4 v.#23Washington St.! L 0-2 Sept. 5 Evansville W 3-0 Oct. 4 @ St. Mary’s (Ind.) W 3-0 80 Sept. 9 @ #14 Virginia% L 2-5 Sept. 11 v. SIU-Edwardsville^ W 5-2 Oct. 5 @ Green Bay W 3-0 81 Sept. 10 v. New Hampshire% W 5-1 Sept. 12 v. MO-St. Louis^ W (2ot) 5-2 Oct. 6 Notre Dame L 0-3 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide records yearly results yearly results records

Oct. 12 @ Cincinnati L 1-2 1988 Oct. 6 St. Mary’s (Ind.) W 6-2 Oct. 13 @ Xavier L 0-2 Head Coach: Brian Tompkins Oct. 17 @ Gustavus Adolphus T (2ot) 2-2 Oct. 15 Marian W 8-0 Record: 10-7 Oct. 27 Quincy L (ot) 2-3 Oct. 19 v. Buffalo% W 2-0 Sept. 3 @ St. Norbert W 4-2 ^ UMSL Tournament (St. Louis, Mo.) Oct. 20 @ Michigan State% L 1-2 Sept. 5 @ Lindenwood L 1-4 Oct. 26 Truman State W 1-0 Sept. 11 v. MO-St. Louis^ W 4-0 1984 Oct. 27 Dayton L 0-2 Sept. 15 Lawrence W 12-0 Head Coach: Pam Tripp ^Nike Great Lakes Invite (Green Bay, Wis.) Sept. 18 St. Mary’s (Minn.) W 1-0 Record: 5-6-0 # Creighton Invitational (Omaha, Neb.) Sept. 24 Truman State L 1-2 Sept. 1 v. MO-St. Louis^ L 1-6 % Michigan State Tournament (E. Lansing, Mich.) Sept. 25 Lewis W 1-0 Sept. 2 v. MO-Rolla^ L 1-6 Sept. 28 @ St. Mary’s (Ind.) W (ot) 1-0 Sept. 8 Wisconsin L 0-7 1990 Oct. 2 Michigan State L 1-3 Sept. 13 SIU-Edwardsville L 0-1 Head Coach: Pete Knezic Oct. 7 @ Wisconsin L 0-2 Sept. 15 Beloit W 11-0 Record: 6-9-1 Oct. 14 St. Benedict’s (Minn.) W 3-1 Oct. 4 @ Beloit W 6-1 Sept. 3 @ Wright State L 0-2 Oct. 16 @ Siena Heights L 0-4 Oct. 6 @ Wisconsin L 0-5 Sept. 7 MO-St. Louis W 3-1 Oct. 19 @ Green Bay W 1-0 Oct. 27 Lawrence W 2-0 Sept. 9 Dayton W 3-1 Oct. 22 v. St. Mary’s (Ind.)^ L (ot) 0-1 Oct. 28 St. Norbert W 6-1 Sept. 15 @ Quincy L 1-3 Oct. 23 St. Thomas (Minn.) L 0-1 Nov. 3 @ Quincy L 1-2 Sept. 16 @ Truman State L 0-2 Oct. 28 @ St. Francis (Pa.) W 5-2 Nov. 4 @ Truman State W 4-0 Sept. 22 St. Mary’s (Ind.) W 3-0 Oct. 29 @ Geneva W 3-2 ^ Wisconsin Tournament (Madison, Wis.) ^ In Madison, Wis. Sept. 23 Xavier L 1-2 UWM v. Ranked Opponents Sept. 26 Lewis W 7-3 Date Rank Opponent Score Sept. 29 St. Thomas (Minn.) W 1-0 1987 Oct. 5 @ #4 Wisconsin L 0-10 Head Coach: Brian Tompkins 10/26/07 2 @ Texas A&M L 1-6 Oct. 10 @ Notre Dame L 0-3 Record: 1-0-1 9/23/07 8 @ Boston College L 0-1 Oct. 13 Michigan State L 0-3 Sept. 2 St. Mary’s (Ind.) W 4-0 9/14/07 24 Marquette T (2ot) 0-0 Oct. 17 Green Bay W 1-0 Sept. 9 Kalamazoo T (2ot) 3-3 11/12/06 1 @ Notre Dame* L 0-1 Oct. 20 St. Mary’s (Minn.) T (2ot) 0-0 (Remainder of the season cancelled) 9/17/06 16 v. Missouri W 1-0 Oct. 21 Cincinnati L 0-1 9/1/06 1 v. Portland L 2-3 1986 Oct. 27 @ Louisville L 0-1 11/13/05 17 @ Marquette* L 0-1 Head Coach: Pam Tripp Oct. 28 @ Thomas More T (2ot) 2-2 9/11/05 12 @ Florida L 0-2 Record: 4-5-1 8/28/05 13 Illinois T (2ot) 0-0 Sept. 6 St. Mary’s (Minn.) L 0-6 1989 9/3/04 17 @ Kansas L 0-1 Sept. 9 Wheaton (Ill.) W 8-0 Head Coach: Pete Knezic 9/12/03 3 v. UCLA L 0-4 Sept. 12 @ Macalester L 1-3 Record: 10-8-0 11/16/02 5 v. Pepperdine* L 0-2 Sept. 14 @ St. Thomas (Minn.) L 0-6 Sept. 2 v. St. Joseph’s^ W 2-1 Sept. 19 Missouri Baptist W 7-0 9/23/00 24 Brigham Young L 0-2 Sept. 3 @ Lewis^ W 2-0 Oct. 5 Michigan State W 2-1 9/9/99 11 @ Brigham Young L 1-5 Sept. 8 Notre Dame W 2-1 Oct. 8 Wisconsin L 0-4 9/4/98 8 @ Nebraska W (2ot) 2-1 Sept. 12 St. Norbert L 1-3 Oct. 11 @ Kalamazoo L 0-3 11/15/97 11 @ Minnesota* L 1-2 Sept. 13 Green Bay W 5-1 Oct. 12 @ St. Mary’s (Ind.) T (2ot) 3-3 9/12/97 21 Minnesota T (2ot) 2-2 Sept. 16 @ St. Mary’s (Minn.) L 0-2 Oct. 15 Lake Forest W 11-0 10/29/95 15 Wisconsin T (2ot) 2-2 Sept. 17 @ St. Thomas (Minn.) W 1-0 9/9/95 14 @ Virginia L 2-5 Sept. 23 St. Mary’s (Ind.) W 1-0 1985 9/4/95 23 v. Washington State L 0-2 Sept. 28 Wisconsin L 0-5 Head Coach: Pam Tripp 9/2/95 1 v. North Carolina L 0-8 Oct. 1 Wright State L (ot) 1-2 Record: 5-5-2 10/6/93 3 Notre Dame L 0-6 Oct. 7 @ Dayton L 1-4 Sept. 14 @ Wilmington (OH) T (2ot) 1-1 9/4/93 16 Wisconsin L 0-5 Oct. 8 @ Cincinnati L 1-5 Sept. 15 @ Dayton L 0-3 9/19/92 12 v. William & Mary L 0-4 Oct. 15 Quincy W 3-2 Sept. 19 @ Wheaton (Ill.) W 5-3 9/29/91 1 v. North Carolina L 0-7 Oct. 18 Lake Forest W 4-1 Sept. 21 Truman State W 3-0 9/22/91 4 Wisconsin L 0-8 Oct. 21 Texas A&M W 1-0 Sept. 24 @ Beloit W 15-0 10/5/90 4 @ Wisconsin L 0-10 Oct. 28 @ Truman State L 2-3 Sept. 27 @ MO-St. Louis^ L 0-3 * NCAA Tournament Game Oct. 29 @ MO-St. Louis W 2-1 Sept. 28 v. Truman State ^ W 3-1 Rankings according to most recent 80 Nov. 5 @ Michigan State L (ot) 0-2 Sept. 29 v. Dayton^ L 1-3 81 ^ Lewis Invitational (Romeoville, Ill.) Oct. 2 @ Wisconsin L 0-4 NSCAA Poll at time of game 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide THIS IS UWM UUWMWM UWM

Welcome to the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

T U O G U A E R L N

A N M O Z LOCATION/ENVIRONMENT the state. The university boasts 120 undergraduate majors and submajors, 48 E I

UWM’s 93-acre campus is located on Milwaukee’s upper East Side, one of the masters and 17 doctoral degree programs. N R

city’s most attractive residential areas and home to many faculty, staff and They are separated into the following schools and colleges: T O

students. The campus lies just fi ve blocks from the beautiful shoreline of Lake • Allied Health Professions S

H Michigan. • The Arts • Architecture and Urban Planning E Its location in the business, fi nancial, cultural and industrial heart of the • Education

M state gives students an edge in getting professional experience while still • Business Administration I in school. • Nursing T • Engineering & Applied Science - The compact campus is situated along residential tree-lined streets and • Social Welfare 9 stately homes 10 minutes from downtown. UWM is ranked as the second • Library & Information Science safest campus in Wisconsin. • Letters & Science

HISTORY FACULTY Originally founded in 1885 as the Milwaukee State Normal School, the school With a distinguished faculty of more than 1,300, UWM is listed among the expanded its curriculum in 1927 to become the Milwaukee State Teachers top 100 public institutions in the nation in research and development ex- College. In 1951, it became Wisconsin State College-Milwaukee, and in penditures. UWM’s individual schools and colleges have achieved national 1956, UW-Milwaukee was created with a merger of the State College and recognition, as well as top accreditation, by their review groups. the University of Wisconsin Extension Center in Milwaukee AREAS OF EXCELLENCE 82 UWM TODAY UWM has nine University System Centers of Excellence, areas of the university UWM has an enrollment of more than 25,000 students, the second largest in that have received special recognition from the UW System Board of Regents

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com UWM UUWMWM THIS IS UWM S N O I P 5 M

N A C H A C

A E

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A N M O Z for outstanding achievements in diverse area of instruction, scholarship, re- E I

search and performance. UWM FAST FACTS N R Students 28,000 • School of Architecture and Urban Planning T

O Degree Programs 149 • Center for Business Competitiveness S

H • Institute of Chamber Music Undergrad Programs 81

• Center for Great Lakes Studies Masters Programs 48 E • Professional Theatre Training Program Doctoral Programs 18

M • Laboratory for Surface Studies

I Schools and Colleges 12 • Center for Teacher Education T • Center for Twentieth-Century Studies the former prime minister of Israel, for whom the UWM library is named. - • Women’s Studies Consortium Other distinguished grads include Ben Marcus, founder of the Marcus Corpo- 9 ration, and Robert A. Uihlein Jr., the former president, chairman and CEO of AMONG THE BEST Schlitz Brewing UWM is one of 148 U.S. colleges and universities (from a total of 3,600) ranked by the Carnegie Foundation in the top group called Doctoral/Research Notable graduates in the sports world include the late NASCAR champion Universities - Extensive. Alan Kulwicki (Mechanical Engineering ‘77) and former NFL All-Pro Mike Reinfeldt (Business ‘75), vice president and chief fi nancial offi cer ALUMNI of the Seattle Seahawks of the . Reinfeldt previously 65 percent of alumni remain in Southeastern Wisconsin and include many of worked for the . NFL referee Bill Carollo, who offi ciated the Milwaukee’s business, cultural and community leaders. More than 100,000 2003 Super Bowl, is also a UWM grad. UWM grads live in all 50 states and abroad. U.S World Cup standout and star Tony Sanneh also at- 83 Among UWM’s many distinguished graduates are Golda Meir (Education ‘17), tended UWM, as did Illinois men’s basketball coach Bruce Weber.

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide THIS IS UWM CCITYITY OOFF MILWAUKEEMILWAUKEE CITY OF MILWAUKEE

Milwaukee, The Genuine American City, is steeped in tradition and history, The Historic Third Ward is quickly becoming the “off -Broadway” of Milwaukee’s alive in growth and development. From the sparkling clean water of Lake arts scene. It is home to the new Broadway Theatre Center as well as another, Michigan, to the rich heritage of our ethnic neighborhoods, Milwaukee in- smaller, experimental theatre. In addition, this restored warehouse district vites you to discover its unique, diverse community. features a number of art galleries, the well-regarded Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design, coff ee houses, cafes, and antique stores. An abundance of Heralded as “The City of Festivals,” Milwaukee hosts more than 15 annual new housing in the form of loft-style apartments and condominiums are also festivals, including the world’s largest music festival, Summerfest, and over a becoming a part of the landscape in the Historic Third Ward. dozen ethnic festivals all held along Milwaukee’s spectacular lakefront. Milwaukee’s museum scene is also active. The Milwaukee Art Museum has S The RiverWalk, which meanders through the heart of downtown, recently wrapped up a $100 million expansion featuring a dramatic wing-like sculp- N received a $13 million facelift, and development continues to the north and ture rising high above Milwaukee’s lakefront. The Milwaukee Public Museum

O south. Fine food, cultural venues, eclectic shops, exciting nightlife and a wide is in the midst of a $6.5 million project establishing a permanent interpre- I array of distinctive sports bars are located along the RiverWalk. Also preva- tation of “Butterfl ies Alive!,” the museum’s most successful exhibit ever. The P lent along the RiverWalk are many brewpubs and microbreweries. Gondolas Milwaukee County Zoo is well-known as one of the fi nest in the nation. 5

M and water taxies frequently travel Milwaukee’s scenic RiverWalk area.

N A C H SSummerfestummerfest A C

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PPabstabst TTheatreheatre A N M O Z E I N R T O S H

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84 MMilwaukeeilwaukee ArtArt MuseumMuseum

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com CITY OF MILWAUKEE CCITYITY OOFF MILWAUKEEMILWAUKEE THIS IS UWM

Milwaukee also loves its sports. The city put its stamp on Major League Base- The Milwaukee Mile, an auto racing track located at State Fair Park, is home ball with the arrival of Miller Park in the spring of 2001. The $400 million, to a NASCAR Busch Series and an Indy Racing League event, added just this one-of-a-kind ballpark features a convertible roof and natural grass. Off ering year. Plus, the sports landscape also includes an annual PGA event and one the fi nest in ballpark amenities, Miller Park is a park within a park - that is, of the best county park systems in the nation. it includes places to tailgate along the Menomonee River, a sports-themed restaurant, and an elegantly fi nished restaurant, the .300 Club. Miller Park Milwaukee is also a tourist and business destination for travelers around the also played host the Major League All-Star Game in 2002. state and nation. The Midwest Express Center downtown serves as the city’s main convention center, and draws groups from around the world to host Two of the city’s other professional sports teams, including the NBA’s Mil- their annual activities in Milwaukee. S waukee Bucks, play at the downtown . In addition, the U.S. N Cellular Arena downtown is now the home of the UWM men’s basketball Milwaukee is also easy to get to, located at the intersections of interstates

O team, as well as the of the Major League. The 94 and 43. Milwaukee’s General Mitchell International Airport has nearly 20 I arena has undergone major renovations and also hosts a number of concerts airlines and over 500 daily departures and arrivals, and Amtrak runs daily P and other special events. non-stop trains to Chicago. 5 M

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T U O G U A E Miller Park R DDowntownowntow Milwaukee L n Milwau kee N

A N M O Z E I N R T O S H

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MMilwaukeeilwaukee SSkylinekyline 85

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide THIS IS UWM UUWMWM ATHLETICSATHLETICS UWM ATHLETICS UWM IN THE NCAAS UWM ATHLETICS - A WINNING WAY MEN’S SOCCER The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee has moved 1979 First Round • 1980 First Round itself into a prominent position both region- 1990 First Round • 2001 First Round ally and nationally in the world of intercollegiate 2002 Second Round • 2003 Second Round athletics. 2004 Second Round • 2005 Second Round

In fact, UWM has consistently shown it is the top TRACK & FIELD athletic program in the Horizon League. The school

S 1995 Nationals • 1996 Nationals has won the league’s McCaff erty four times 2007 Nationals N in the last eight years, including a stretch of three-

O straight victories from 2003-04 to 2005-06. UWM I WOMEN’S SOCCER has also won the women’s all-sports awards seven P times and the men’s all-sports award three times. 1997 First Round • 2001 First Round 2002 First Round • 2005 Second Round 5 M

2006 Second Round N

A The 2007-08 school year was another banner one for Panther sports. In the fall, UWM’s volleyball C H and women’s soccer teams each claimed Horizon WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL A C

League regular season titles. Then, later in the year, 1998 First Round • 1999 First Round A

E the men’s track and fi eld team captured both the 2000 First Round • 2001 First Round

indoor and outdoor league titles, bringing to 30 the T U 2002 First Round • 2006 First Round number of team track league titles UWM has won O G since 1998. Plus, the women’s track and fi eld team

BASEBALL U A fi nished second both indoor and outdoor while the 1999 Regionals • 2001 Regionals E baseball team advanced all the way to the title athletics on the national map in 2004-05. UWM R

L 2002 Regionals game of the league baseball tournament. pulled off upset wins over Alabama and Boston N

College to advance to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA A N But the 2007-08 season was far from the fi rst suc- Tournament. The Panthers were eventually elimi- WOMEN’S BASKETBALL M O cessful one for Panther athletics. In 2006-07, UWM nated from the tournament by national runner-up 2001 First Round • 2006 First Round Z teams won seven league titles while a number Illinois, but UWM had already captured the hearts E I

of individuals also claimed league crowns. The and minds of the nation’s fans. MEN’S BASKETBALL N R

success started in the fall as both the women’s 2003 First Round • 2005 Sweet 16 T O

soccer and women’s volleyball teams won the You have to go even further back to fi nd the true 2006 Second Round S

H league regular season crown, with the volleyball start of the great run of success at UWM. In the squad also capturing the league tourney title. Both 2002-03 season, UWM won fi ve league titles and E teams advanced to the NCAA Tournament, where sent four teams to NCAA Tourmament play. The UUWMWM ININ THETHE CLASSROOMCLASSROOM M the women’s soccer team moved to the second Panther men’s soccer team was ranked as high I round for the second-straight season. UWM also as eighth in the nation and the men’s basketball T DEPARTMENTAL TEAM CUME GPA swept the track and field titles, with both the team made its fi rst NCAA Tournament appearance. - (AS OF JUNE 2008) men and the women claiming indoor and outdoor UWM’s first McCafferty Trophy came after the 9 championships. Panthers won nine league titles in the 2000-01 3.172 school year. In 2005-06, UWM saw both of its soccer teams NUMBER OF STUDENT-ATHLETES WITH win league titles and advance to the second UWM student-athletes have also become known 3.0-OR-BETTER CUME GPA round of the NCAA Tournament, while the men’s for their work in the classroom. This past spring, (AS OF JUNE 2008) and women’s basketball teams also played in the 70 student-athletes were named to the Horizon 151 NCAA Tourney. The men again caught the eyes of League Academic Honor Roll. UWM student-ath- the nation with a win over Oklahoma in the fi rst letes also regularly appear on the league’s academic STUDENT-ATHLETES ON round before being eliminated by eventual national all-league teams and the cumulative grade-point LEAGUE HONOR ROLL champion Florida in the second round. average for the athletic department consistently is 70 86 above 3.0, with a 3.172 cumulative GPA the mark The men’s basketball team also helped put UWM as of this past June.

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com UWM ATHLETICS UUWMWM ATHLETICSATHLETICS THIS IS UWM LLEAGUEEAGUE AWARDSAWARDS MCCAFFERTY TROPHY WINNER 2001, 2004, 2005, 2006 WOMEN’S ALL-SPORTS AWARD 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008 MEN’S ALL-SPORTS AWARD 2000, 2005, 2006

S LLEAGUEEAGUE TITLESTITLES N BASEBALL O

I 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 P

MEN’S CROSS COUNTRY 5

M 1993

N A WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY C H 1992, 1993 A C

MEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD A

E 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001

T U 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 O G MEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD U A 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 E Quality facilities are also a part of the athletic played in the historic building. 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 R L

scene at UWM. The new Pavilion, an addition to N

the , opened in January of 2006 Meanwhile, UWM’s other recent facility improve- WOMEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD A N and now houses all of the athletics offi ces, as well ments have come at the soccer and baseball 2000, 2001,2003, 2006, 2007 M O as new locker rooms, team rooms, training rooms, fi elds. On-campus Engelmann Field, home of the WOMEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD Z weight rooms and an academic center. The facility, Panther soccer teams, is reknowned to be one of E I 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2007

which also includes a tremendous amount of space the best collegiate soccer facilities in the country. N R MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING for the general student population, rates as one of Lights were been added to the fi eld last summer, T

O 2000 the best athletic offi ce and workout facilities in the and a new team room has also been developed. S

H Horizon League. The baseball team plays at Henry Aaron Field and

WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING also plays a doubleheader annually at Miller Park.

E 2001 The project also included a renovation of the 5,000- Extensive work on the fi eld, fencing and dugouts

M seat Klotsche Center, which is home to the women’s has been completed over the last few years, with a MEN’ S SOCCER I volleyball, women’s basketball and track and fi eld new scoreboard put in place this past spring. 1990,1993,1997, 2001, T teams. The facility now has air conditioning and a - 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 new sound system, as well as two new concession Athletics has a long history at UWM. Some sports 9 stands. Plus, with it standing adjacent to the new records date back to the late 1800’s and UWM WOMEN’S SOCCER Pavilion, fans attending events can park in the fi elded a football team until 1974. UWM has played 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 Pavilion’s new parking garage and attend events on all levels of NCAA competition, including stints 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 without ever stepping outside. The swimming and as a Division II and Division III institution along WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL diving teams have their own pool in the Klotsche with its current run in Division I. UWM athletics also 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, Center, located on the lower level. spent some years in NAIA competition. The school’s 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 athletic teams have also competed in the Wisconsin UWM’s men’s basketball team has played at the state school league for a number of years, while MEN’S BASKETBALL U.S. Cellular Arena in downtown Milwaukee since competing in the Mid-Continent Conference and 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 the 2003 Horizon League Tournament. The move Midwestern Collegiate Conference/Horizon League WOMEN’S BASKETBALL downtown has been a successful one, with atten- since moving all of its varsity sports to Division I in 2001, 2006 87 dance records set each season the Panthers have the fall of 1990.

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide THIS IS UWM UUWMWM ADMINISTRATIONADMINISTRATION UWM ADMINISTRATION

Santiago also has a strong background in working with athletics. CCARLOSARLOS SSANTIAGOANTIAGO CHANCELLOR With the University at Albany, State University of New York, where he held the Carlos E. Santiago is beginning his fi fth academic position of Provost and Vice President for Academic Aff airs, Santiago was a member year as the Chancellor of the University of Wiscon- of its National Collegiate Athletic Association Certifi cation Steering Committee, sin-Milwaukee. worked closely with the athletics department on academics and admissions-re- lated issues, and was involved with the annual National Football Santiago is UWM’s seventh Chancellor. In this League summer training camp held at the University at Albany. position, he is the chief administrative offi cer of “Universities must focus on creating the scholar-athlete,” Chancellor Santiago said.

S the university and a partner with a great number of constituents on and off campus. “Winning is nice, but fi rst and foremost you must focus on the academics. UWM’s N consistent performance -- in both winning championships and placing leading

O Chancellor Santiago also holds the academic rank numbers of students on the Horizon League’s Academic Honor Roll -- demonstrates I of Professor of Economics at UWM. As a labor our commitment to both of these objectives.”

P economist, he has regional expertise in the Caribbean and Central America, with

special emphasis on Puerto Rico. Dr. Santiago is the author or co-author of fi ve books focusing on labor and economic 5 M development issues, with the latest being “Puerto Ricans in the United States: A

N A Cooperation and collaboration to strengthen UW-Milwaukee’s research portfolio, Contemporary Portrait,” co-authored with Edna Acosta-Belén. He has co-edited another book and has published more than 30 articles and book reviews in a wide C H academic excellence and diversity have been the highest priorities of Chancellor Santiago since his arrival on July 1, 2004. Among the primary results that UWM variety of scholarly journals. A C

has achieved during his tenure:

Along with Dr. Acosta-Belén, Dr. Santiago also is a founding co-editor of the Latino A E

• Securing a historic reinvestment by the State of Wisconsin in the university’s Research Review and was a member of the U.S. Congressional Hispanic Caucus T U and Southeastern Wisconsin’s future, especially in the targeted areas of advanced International Relations Advisory Group. O G automation, biomedical engineering, health care and freshwater science. Dr. Santiago’s wife, Azara Santiago-Rivera, is also part of the faculty at UWM. She U A • Completing the record-setting Campaign for UWM, the most ambitious fund- is an associate professor of educational psychology in the School of Education. E raising eff ort in university history. R L N

Chancellor Santiago has a Ph.D. in economics from Cornell University (‘82) and M.A. degrees in economics from Cornell University (‘79) and the University of • Developing Access to Success, the campus blueprint to enhance access to higher A N education while promoting greater success for all students. Puerto Rico (‘75). M O Z • Initiating a master planning process to create a template for regional growth Like most other boys growing up in Puerto Rico, Dr. Santiago played baseball E I year-round and aspired to follow national heroes Roberto Clemente and Orlando away from the university’s extremely compressed primary campus. N

R Cepeda to . Dr. Santiago played third base throughout high school and earned a place on his division’s all-star team. In recent years, his sporting T

O • Creating the UWM Research Foundation to support research and innovation, and the UWM Real Estate Foundation to partner with the public and private sectors to interests have included golf, tennis, downhill skiing, walking and jogging. He also S H helped coach softball teams for his daughters. develop and hold real estate for the university’s benefi t. E

M PROVOST/VICE CHANCELLOR VICE CHANCELLOR I RRITAITA CCHENGHENG HHELENELEN MMAMARCHEVAMARCHEV

T Rita Cheng is the Provost and Vice Chancellor Helen L. Mamarchev was named Vice Chancellor - at UWM, a position she has held since April for Student Aff airs in January of 2007. She came 9 2005.Cheng came to UWM in 1988 and has to UWM from Illinois State University, where subsequently served the university in several she served most recently as the Special Projects high-level administrative capacities. She was Assistant to the President. Prior to her current the Interim Dean of the School of Continuing position at Illinois State University, she served as Education in 2004 and 2005, Associate Vice its Vice President for Student Aff airs from 2000 Chancellor for Academic Aff airs from 2002 to to 2006. At the University of Florida, she was the 2005 and Associate Dean of the School of Busi- Associate Vice President for Student Aff airs from ness Administration from 1998 to 2003. She 1985 to 2000 and the Assistant Vice President holds a bachelor’s degree from Bishop’s University in Quebec, an MBA from the for Student Aff airs from 1983 to 1985. Dr. Mamarchev has a PhD in Counsel- University of Rhode Island and a Ph.D from Temple University. Cheng has also ing; Organizational Behavior and Industrial Relations from the University of 88 been actively involved with the athletic department throughout her career, Michigan in Ann Arbor. She also has degrees from Indiana University and serving as faculty athletics representative from 1996-2004. Southern Methodist University.

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com UWM ADMINISTRATION UUWMWM ADMINISTRATIONADMINISTRATION THIS IS UWM

beat Purdue before falling to Marquette on a last-second goal. BBUDUD HHAIDETAIDET DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS The success at UWM actually started long ago. UWM fi nished second in the Athletics has been a way of life for UWM Director McCaff erty Trophy standings during the 1997-98 school year and during the of Athletics Bud Haidet, and Haidet is busy mak- 1999-2000 school year. In fact, following the 1999-2000 season, UWM fi nished ing success a way of life for the UWM Athletics just one point out of fi rst place and won the MCC men’s all-sports champion- Department. ship. The Panthers then won the league’s all-sports trophy for the fi rst time after the 2000-01 season, and then won it again after the 2003-04 campaign. In fact, the department has experienced

S unprecedented success on and off the playing Many of UWM’s teams have also gained national recognition under Haidet. The great success of the men’s basketball team also includes an NCAA berth

N surface under Haidet. In 2007-08, UWM won the Horizon League’s Women’s All-Sports Trophy for in 2003 and a National Invitation Tournament appearance in 2004. The men’s O soccer team has qualifi ed for fi ve of the last seven NCAA Tournaments and has I a seventh time while seeing teams in women’s soccer, women’s volleyball and men’s indoor and been ranked as high as eighth in the nation. P

outdoor track and fi eld win league crowns. 5

M The women’s volleyball team has qualifi ed for six of the last 10 NCAA Tourna- ments. The women’s basketball team also made the NCAA Tournament in N A This continued a long line of success for Milwaukee athletics under Haidet. 2001 and 2006, the women’s soccer team has been in the tournament four

In 2006-07, the women’s soccer team advanced to the second round of the C H NCAA Tournament for a second-straight year, while in 2005-06, UWM won out of the last seven years and the baseball team has also been a regular in A C the NCAA Tournament.

the McCaff erty Trophy, the Horizon League’s All-Sports Trophy, for the fourth A

E time. UWM won 10 league titles that school year and claimed a third-straight In the classroom, 70 UWM student-athletes were named to the Horizon Aca- regular season league title in men’s basketball. T U demic Honor Roll in June, giving UWM the highest number per sport off ered in

the league. Numerous Panthers have also won league and national academic O G The biggest highlight of the 2005-06 campaign came after the Horizon League awards, including three student-athletes earning Academic All-America honors U A basketball season was completed. The Panther men again made their mark in 2006-07. And, the current cumulative grade point average of all student- E in the NCAA Tournament, beating Big 12 power Oklahoma before falling to athletes is above 3.0. R

L eventual national champion Florida. At the same time, the Panther women N

were battling with Michigan State in the NCAA Tournament, only to fall in Haidet has also directed an upgrade in facilities for all of UWM athletics. The A N the contest. Those basketball accomplishments came on the heels of a 2005 recently-completed Klotsche Center renovation - the Pavilion - has vastly M O postseason run that saw the Panther men advance to the Sweet 16 and garner improved the offi ce and training space for the athletic department and its national recognition. Z

student-athletes. Haidet has also led the extremely successful move by the E I

men’s basketball team to the U.S. Cellular Arena in downtown Milwaukee and N

R Basketball is far from the only sport where UWM has experienced tremendous shown the way for improvements at Henry Aaron Field and Engelmann Field, success. In fact, both the men’s and women’s soccer teams advanced to the T

O which had lights installed for play in 2006.

second round of the NCAA Tournament in 2005. The men knocked off Bradley S H before falling in overtime to national runner-up New Mexico, while the women Over Haidet’s tenure, athletics at UWM has moved from NAIA Division II to

E NCAA Division I status, and from independent status to membership in two athletic conferences. Haidet notes that the strong commitment to athletics by M FACULTY ATHLETIC REP the institution and student association has greatly contributed to the rapid and I MMAUREENAUREEN KKEYESEYES successful growth of the program. He also feels past student-athletes, coaches T Maureen Keyes is beginning her second year

- and administrators helped set in motion the success UWM enjoys. as the Faculty Athletic Representative for 9 UWM. She is also an associate professor in Haidet is active in numerous NCAA activities. He has completed Level I-III NCAA the Department of Exceptional Education. Athletics Management courses and was a member of two NCAA Division I Peer Keyes’ academic work has focused on school Review Certifi cation teams and two NCAA committees. He was also recently reform related to special education. Her the chair of the Horizon League’s Executive Council and is active in all of the research interests include spirituality and league’s activities. leadership for justice. Keyes taught children with disabilities in the public schools, includ- Prior to coming to UWM, Haidet was an athletics administrator at Miami ing Milwaukee Public Schools, for almost University in Oxford, Ohio, where he earned both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees. He was inducted into the Miami Athletics Hall of Fame in 2005. 20 years. She has written papers and book chapters and co-authored the book, “Meeting the Needs of Students of All Abilities.” Keyes earned her A former captain in the Marine Corps, Haidet enjoys weight training, hiking and undergraduate degree from UW-Whitewater, her master’s degree from fi shing, and spending time with his wife, Beth, stepson, Drew, four children 89 UW-Oshkosh and her Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin. and 13 grandchildren.

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide THIS IS UWM AATHLETICSTHLETICS ADMINISTRATIONADMINISTRATION ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION

KKATHYATHY LITZAULITZAU Assoc. Athletic Director JJASONASON CCLARKLARK Asst. Athletic Director

After spending 14 seasons as the head volley- Jason Clark was named the assistant athlet- ball coach at the University of Wisconsin-Mil- ics director for external operations in April of waukee, Kathy Litzau has moved into a role as 1999. Clark serves as the marketing director for an associate athletic director at the school. UWM’s athletics department while also partici- pating in other external aff airs. In her new role, Litzau is overseeing a variety S of sports as well as the areas of student-athlete His main responsibilities are maintenance of

N support services and student welfare. She is sponsorship sales, marketing, promotions and

O also acting as the liason between the athletic advertising for all 15 of UWM’s varsity sports. I department and the campus and community In addition, he oversees the Panther Media

P while coordinating community relations proj- Network, helping to coordinate UWM’s rela- 5

M ects for the department. tionships with its radio and tevelision partners. Clark also helps to coordinate

some special events for the athletic department, including the annual men’s N A The numbers in the 14-year coaching tenure of Litzau in Milwaukee are as- basketball golf outing and the athletic department’s participation in the Wis- C H tounding. She led the Panthers to nine 20-win seasons, eight Horizon League consin State Fair. He also coordinates the activities of the UWM cheerleaders A C regular season titles and six NCAA Tournaments. Litzau was also named and the school’s mascot, Pounce.

league coach of the year seven times and regional coach of the year twice. A E

In all, she tallied 271 wins in her 14 seasons after taking over a program that Clark and his wife, Ginger, have one daughter - Jorja. T U won just three matches the season prior to her arrival. O G U A Litzau is a graduate of Notre Dame, where she played volleyball for four years Asst. Athletic Director

E and was the team captain and most valuable player her senior season. She SSTEVETEVE LLAUTZAUTZ R L

also has a master’s degree from Illinois, where she spent time as an assistant N Steve Lautz is starting his fi fth year as the com- volleyball coach. The Naperville, Ill., native also worked at Wisconsin and A

N pliance coordinator for UWM Athletics and was Michigan State before taking over at UWM in 1993.

promoted to assistant director of athletics for M O compliance this past summer. Z Litzau and her husband, Steve, have three daughters - Lauren, Danielle and E I

Kayce - and a son - Nicholas. N

R Prior to coming to UWM, Lautz was a law clerk and associate for Bond, Schoeneck and T O UUWMWM ATHLETICATHLETIC BOARDBOARD The University of Wisconsin-Mil- and recreation program into the King in Overland Park, Kan., for four years. He S H

waukee Athletic Board plays a role life of the university, while also represented colleges and universities on mat-

E in connecting the athletic depart- ensuring that the UWM athletic, ters involving NCAA legislation and conducted investigations of alleged NCAA rules violations. He was also involved in con-

M ment to the rest of the campus intramural and recreation program

I community. Made up of a variety operates in a manner that meets ducting audits of athletic departments, particularly in the areas of recruiting,

T of staff and faculty members, the highest ethical and regulatory summer camps and clinics. He did his undergraduate work at Gustavus Adol- - students and alumni, the board standards. phus before attending law school at the University of Kansas. He also served

9 meets monthly and gets involved Members (As Of Aug. 1) as Editor-in-Chief of the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy. in a number of the activities of the Ann Snyder athletic department. Teresa Johnson Mark Keane The board’s stated mission in- Jennifer Earl cludes fostering an environment Dinah Gygi in which a diversifi ed UWM ath- Ginny Stoff el letic, intramural and recreation Jim Cleary program can be competitively and Douglas Woods fi nancially successful. The board Jose Torres LEVAR BRIAN JOHN MELANIE is also dedicated to integrating a Andrea Wrench RIDGEWAY MORGAN STEWART FISHER 90 Tickets and Tickets and Corporate Sales Athletic well-rounded athletic, intramural Filippo Carini Events Events Development

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION AATHLETICSTHLETICS ADMINISTRATIONADMINISTRATION THIS IS UWM

Athletics Administration and Support Staff All phone numbers are (414) 229-XXXX Bud Haidet [email protected] Director of Athletics 5669 The UWM Athletic Offi ces are located in the Pavilion, located on the northeast corner of campus. The Ann Brantman [email protected] parking garage adjacent to the Pavilion is accessible from both Edgewood and Downer. If you enter University Services Program Associate 5669 from the garage, turn left in the Pavilion lobby and the athletic offi ces are on the left. If you arrive Kathy Litzau [email protected] through the main entrance on the east side of the building, the athletic offi ces are on the right. Associate Athletic Director/SWA 3739 Jill Jurena [email protected] Brian Morgan [email protected] Men’s Soccer University Services Program Associate 3710 Asst. Ticket and Events Manager 2958 Jon Coleman [email protected] S Deidre Merritt [email protected] Melanie Fisher mnfi [email protected] Head Coach 5150 N University Services Program Associate 5158 Athletic Development 3904 Chris Dadaian [email protected]

O Assistant Coach 4498 I Business Offi ce Baseball Jesse Rosen [email protected] P Celita Kouzes [email protected] Scott Doff ek [email protected] Assistant Coach 5377 5

M Accountant 3383 Head Coach 5670

Brenda Brown [email protected] Cory Bigler [email protected] Women’s Soccer N A University Services Program Associate 5151 Assistant Coach 2433 Mike Moynihan [email protected] C H Head Coach 4554 A C

Camps and Clinics Men’s Basketball David Nikolic [email protected] A

E Dave Clark [email protected] Rob Jeter [email protected] Associate Head Coach 2305

Dir. of Camps, Facilities and Scheduling 2238 Head Coach 5158 Chris Maravalli [email protected] T U Brian Bidlingmyer [email protected] Assistant Coach 5581 O G Cheerleading Assistant Coach 6192 U A Vicki Hastings [email protected] Chad Boudreau [email protected] Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving E Cheerleading Co-Coach 3777 Assistant Coach 3738 Dave Griff ore griff [email protected] R L

Leigh Wallace [email protected] Duff y Conroy duff [email protected] Head Coach 5153 N

Cheerleading Co-Coach 3777 Assistant Coach 4294 Erica Janssen [email protected] A N Chip MacKenzie [email protected] Assistant Coach 1131 M O Compliance/Academic Assistance Director of Basketball Operations 4490 Addie Ardelt [email protected] Z Stephen Lautz [email protected] Ronnie Jones [email protected] Assistant Coach 0534 E I

Asstant Athletic Director/ Video Coordinator 5175 Todd Hill [email protected] N R

Compliance Coordinator 3073 Diving Coach 0534 T O

Tom Vollman [email protected] Women’s Basketball S

H Athletic Academic Advisor 2257 Sandy Botham [email protected] Women’s Tennis Sharif Chambliss [email protected] Head Coach 4405 Matt McCaskill [email protected] E Student-Athlete Tutor/Mentor 2257 John Motherwell [email protected] Head Coach 5523

M Assistant Coach 5661 I Sports Information/Media Relations Sheila Roux [email protected] Track & Field/Cross Country T Kevin O’Connor [email protected] Assistant Coach 4172 Pete Corfeld [email protected] - Sports Information Director 5674 Lindsay Bronson [email protected] Head Coach 5149 9 Kevin Conway [email protected] Assistant Coach 3889 Jason Francis [email protected] Asst. Sports Information Director 2413 Brenna Rollie [email protected] Associate Head Coach 2567 Chris Zills [email protected] Director of Basketball Operations 2468 Nate Weiland [email protected] Asst. Sports Information Director 4593 Assistant Coach 2567 Mailing Address Street Address External Aff airs UWM Athletics UWM Athletics Women’s Volleyball Jason Clark [email protected] PO Box 413 The Pavilion - Rm. 150 Susie Johnson [email protected] Assistant Athletic Director 2351 The Pavilion - Rm. 150 3409 N. Downer Ave. Head Coach 4483 LeVar Ridgeway [email protected] Milwaukee, WI 53201 Milwaukee, WI 53211 Lindsey Vanden Berg [email protected] Ticket and Events Manager 2958 Assistant Coach 0535 John Stewart [email protected] Departmental Fax Number Evan Berg [email protected] 91 Director Corporate Sales 5634 414-229-5749 Assistant Coach 3839

www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide THIS IS UWM TTHEHE STUDENT-ATHLETESTUDENT-ATHLETE THE STUDENT-ATHLETE

The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Athletic Department is committed The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee is a member of the NCAA to enhancing the opportunities of academic, athletic and personal success of CHAMPS/Life Skills Program. The mission of the NCAA and the University every student-athlete. As part of UWM’s commitment, a partnership has been of Wisconsin-Milwaukee is to maintain intercollegiate athletics as an created between the academic and athletic communities on campus to give integral part of the campus educational program and the student-athlete as an integral part of the student body. With this in mind, the UWM all student-athletes an opportunity to achieve academic success. program, “SUCCESS,” was created to support student-athlete development and to enhance the quality of the student-athlete experience within the UWM has had a full-time athletic academic advisor since 1998, and recently university setting. added a second staff member dedicated to academics, reinforcing its commit- S ment to its student-athletes’ academic success. All new student-athletes meet Student-Athletes

N with their advisor on an individual basis to assess specifi c needs. Programs for United for

O academic advancement are developed, including monitoring courses, grades Commitment to Excellence I and academic progress. Challenges P Education 5

M UWM’s commitment has paid off . The Panthers have regularly had more stu- Service to Community and

Skills for Life N A dent-athletes on the Horizon League Honor Roll than any other league school, C H and the department’s cumulative grade-point average is better-than-3.0. The life skills program includes fi ve major commitments: A C • COMMITMENT TO ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE – to support the aca-

The Academic Assistance Center, located in the new Pavilion, provides demic progress of the student-athlete toward intellectual development A E student-athletes with a quiet place to study, as well as one-on-one tutor- and graduation. T U ing opportunities. The academic center also houses a full computer lab and • COMMITMENT TO ATHLETIC EXCELLENCE – to build philosophical O G numerous tutoring rooms, and provides a closely-monitored atmosphere for foundations for the development of athletic programs that are broad- U A studying and academic progress. based, equitable and dedicated to the well-being of the student-ath- E lete. R L

• COMMITMENT TO PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT – to support the de- N

• PRIORITY REGISTRATION - ACADEMIC MONITORING velopment of a well-balanced lifestyle for student-athletes, encouraging

Student-athletes receive priority when registering for classes. Academic advi- A N emotional well-being, personal growth and decision-making skills.

sors provide ongoing assistance with class scheduling and career planning. M O to encourage the Progress reports from the professors of each student-athlete are sought peri- • COMMITMENT TO CAREER DEVELOPMENT – Z student-athlete to develop and pursue career and life goals. E I odically throughout the year, and academic progress is monitored regularly. • COMMITMENT TO SERVICE – to engage the student-athlete in service N R

to his/her campus and surrounding communities. T

O • TUTORS S

H Individuals and group tutors are available in all subjects to student-athletes As participants in the CHAMPS/Life Skills Program, numerous UWM upon request. The new Pavilion has private tutoring and study rooms for student-athletes - including two men’s basketball players - have been E student-athletes. chosen to participate in the NCAA Foundation Leadership Conference.

M Kalombo Kadima was chosen to be a part of the conference in 2000, I • STRUCTURED STUDY while Dan Weisse took part in the conference in 2001. Three women’s T soccer players from UWM - Fanta Cooper in 1999, Erin Blaedow in 2000 - All freshmen are required to attend study table for eight hours per week. and Erin Shaugnessy in 2003 - have also taken part in the conference, as

9 Students meet Monday through Thursday for two hours per night and are has Chris Dadaian of the men’s soccer team in 2004. monitored by a member of the coaching staff . Upperclassmen with a cumula-

tive grade point average of less than 3.0 are also required to attend, however The NCAA Foundation Leadership Conference is one of the largest non- their hours are pro-rated based on their GPA. competitive gatherings of student-athletes representing NCAA Divisions I, II and III. The participating student-athletes are selected from more • POST-GRADUATE OPPORTUNITIES than 1,000 nominations that were submitted by member institutions UWM boasts a 95 percent job placement rate through the on-campus Career that participate in the NCAA’s CHAMPS/Life Skills Program. Development Center. Approximately 200 employers interview on-campus each year. Workshops are off ered to assist student-athletes in planning their career Criteria for selection to the leadership conference include the student-ath- paths. Numerous internships and job opportunities are available in the metro letes’ demonstrated ability and strong desire to be a leader and potential 92 Milwaukee area, the business and economic center of Wisconsin. to benefi t signifi cantly from a leadership-development experience.

2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com THE STUDENT-ATHLETE TTHEHE STUDENT-ATHLETESTUDENT-ATHLETE THIS IS UWM

TEEGARDEN, KANE NAMED SCHOLAR ALL-AMERICANS The UWM Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) is composed of NSCAA honors junior pair for athletic, academic achievements current Panther student-athletes. It is assembled to provide insight into the student-athlete experience by promoting, fostering, designing and imple- Seniors Sarah Teegarden and Erin Kane were named Scholar All-Americans menting programs that encourage academic achievement, professional by the NSCAA last season. The pair were just two of 10 juniors to be placed on development, health-conscious life choices and social responsibility. any of the organization’s three academic teams. The UWM SAAC is committed to the following initiatives: Teegarden and Kane were each all-league fi rst team selections for the third time in their careers, while contributing to UWM’s league-leading defense. • Providing student-athletes with the opportunity to eff ectively communi- S cate with the department administration and off er suggestions to enhance

N Teegarden was a force in the midfi eld all season, starting all 21 games. She the quality of the student-athlete experience led the team in minutes played by a fi eld player and contributed three goals O

I on the off ensive end. The Batavia, Ill., native was selected to the Soccer Buzz • Promoting eff ective communication among coaches, the department

P All-Region Second Team and the league’s all-tournament team. She is an administration and student-athletes education major and boasts a 3.46 grade point average in the classroom. 5 M

• Promoting an awareness of UWM Athletics throughout the campus and N A Kane, an all-region third-teamer by Soccer Buzz, started all 21 games in goal the Greater Milwaukee area C

H for Milwaukee. She posted a league-best 0.73 goals against average and 10 shutouts. The 2007 season was a memorable one for Kane, as she set school A C

career records for goalkeeper wins and minutes played. She also pushed her • Reviewing NCAA legislative proposals and make recommendations to the A

E school and league record for career shutouts to 36. A native of St. Charles, Ill., department administration

T U Kane is a pre-veterinary medicine major and has maintained a 3.35 GPA. She SAAC members serve as liaisons between student-athletes, the athletic

has also earned academic all-district honors from ESPN The Magazine and O G been named to the league’s academic all-league squad. administration and the campus community. Athletes are encouraged to U A (For a complete list of Panther Academic All-Americans, see page 65) communicate concerns and ideas to their captains and/or for discussion E at scheduled committee meetings. R L N

The UWM SAAC operates in conjunction with the Horizon League SAAC and Athletics Academic Advisor A N TTOMOM VVOLLMANOLLMAN the NCAA SAAC. Steve Bode of men’s soccer and Sarah Moore of women’s M O Tom Vollman currently serves as UWM’s athletics volleyball represented UWM on the Horizon League SAAC last year. Moore Z also sat on the NCAA SAAC. E I academic advisor. In addition to developing a comprehensive program for academic enhance- N R

ment, Vollman is responsible for providing tutor- 2007-08 UWM SAAC MEMBERS T O ing and support service assistance, coordinating Shannon Buttchen, T&F Jody McClain, basketball S H coursework, and monitoring grade reports, Tim Hoy, baseball Tenzin Rampa, soccer academic progress, and degree completion E Bridget Fargen, swimming Amanda Winn, soccer requirements. Steph Ross, T&F David Adams, swimming M

I Angie Huebner, T&F/XC Brian Randall, swimming Vollman is also extensively involved in the T Darren Cole, T&F Jeremy Waldhart, swimming

- CHAMPS/Life Skills Program at UWM, coor- Steve Bode, soccer Kristin Skiba, swimming dinating academic workshops for student-athletes. He helps to spearhead 9 Nick Hawley, T&F/XC Lauren Fenley, tennis the athletic department’s various community service projects, including the Jess Kelly, swimming Ashley Schoneman, tennis regular “Neighborhood Clean-Up” events the athletic department participates Kate Megna, soccer Isaiah Adams, T&F in. Vollman is also part of the planning for UWM’s annual Student-Athlete Dave Yugo, swimming Lary Ehrhorn, T&F Awards Ceremony and has coordinated a number of student-athlete social Breit Nelson, volleyball Liz Brothen, T&F/XC activities. Before joining the UWM Athletics Department staff , Vollman worked Grant Fernstrum, soccer Jenni Saarinen, T&F as an English instructor with UWM’s Academic Opportunity Center. He also Sam Sivilotti, baseball Becky Peters, volleyball taught English, math, literature and history at the Marva Collins Preparatory Andy Hetebrueg, baseball School of Wisconsin. Zach Hoch, baseball Paige Paulsen, basketball Vollman is a native of Cincinnati, Ohio. He earned a Bachelor’s degree in both Aubri Rote, basketball psychology and philosophy from in 1999 and then earned Jody Crumble, basketball 93 a masters degree in Liberal Studies from UWM in 2004. www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide THIS IS UWM SSPORTSPORTS MEDICINEMEDICINE THE PAVILION

Taking care of Sports Medicine issues for the student-athletes is UWM’s in the day-to-day care of student-athletes sports-medicine needs. Athletic Training Staff . The licensed and certifi ed athletic training staff includes Director of Sports Medicine John Ochsenwald and Assistant The staff also includes a select group of sports medicine professionals, namely Athletic Trainers Becky Worman, Renee Manofsky, Chad Henneberry and the orthopedic physicians Dr. William Smith, Dr. Todd Swenson, and Dr. Don Drew Schaafsma. Middleton – all of whom are associated with Columbia Hospital directly adjacent to UWM’s campus and the Orthopaedic Hospital. Providing vital The entire staff is involved in the education of over 40 undergraduate athletic general medicine health care to the Panthers is Team Physician Dr. Brian training students. In conjunction with the Department of Human Movement Hirano who is on staff at Columbia St. Mary’s. Additionally, care is also pro- Sciences, these students are working and studying to become certifi ed vided by the team of medical providers at Norris Health Center on campus. S athletic trainers in the nationally-accredited Athletic Training Education The Panthers also have access to other specialized professionals to assist in N Program, which is spearheaded by Curriculum Director Dr. Jen Earl and as- peak performance, such as chiropractor Dr. Kendal Hoard, dentist Dr. Joseph

O sisted by Dr. Stephen Cobb and Dr. Kyle Ebersole. The undergraduate students Schell and registered dietician Julia Syburg, all of whom provide expert care I accrue valuable experiences while assisting the certifi ed athletic training staff for specifi c sports medicine needs. P 5 M

N A JJOHNOHN OOCHSENWALDCHSENWALD Dir. of Sports Med SSTEVETEVE FFELDEELDE Strength/Conditioning Coach C H Director of Sports Medicine John Ochsenwald oversees the sports medicine Steve Felde directs the strength and conditioning eff orts for the UWM athletic A C

department. Ochsenwald, who assumed his duties in July 1992, supervises department. A

E assistant trainers and student trainers in all sports, and serves as staff athletic

trainer for the men’s soccer program. He is also Felde came to UWM in August of 2006 after T U a clinical assistant professor and teacher in the working as an assistant strength coach at the O G Athletic Training Education Program. University of Minnesota. U A E Ochsenwald came to UWM from the University He has also worked as a personal trainer at the R L N

of Illinois, where he was an assistant athletic Wisconsin Athletic Club and Synergy Strategic

trainer for 10 years. At Illinois, Ochsenwald Fitness while serving as strength and condition- A N worked primarily with the football, baseball ing coach at Grafton High School and assistant M O and wrestling teams. strength and conditioning coach at Concordia Z E

I (Wis.) University.

A 1980 graduate of The Ohio State University, Ochsenwald received his master’s N R

degree from Illinois in 1982. He worked at Illinois as a graduate assistant Felde, a Milwaukee native, now lives in Grafton with his wife, Wendie. T O

athletic trainer before assuming a full-time position there. S H Ochsenwald and his wife, Jan, have two children, Jenna and Jamie, and make E their home in Cedarburg, Wis. M I T - 9

94 A view of the sports medicine suite The student-athlete-only weight room 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com SPORTS MEDICINE TTHEHE PAVILIONPAVILION THIS IS UWM

The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s newest on-campus building is the Pavilion, which is the home of UWM Athletics.

The Pavilion offi cially opened its doors to the public in January of 2006 and the building was offi cially dedicated by Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle and UWM Chancellor Carlos Santiago on May 2, 2006.

Among the new athletics facilities in the building are offi ces for S coaches and staff , a student-athlete-only weight room, new

N locker rooms for all teams and team rooms and lounges for

O men’s basketball, women’s basketball and women’s volleyball. I

P UWM student-athletes are also benefi tting from the brand-new sports medicine center in the Pavilion, which more than triples 5 M

the previous space available for UWM’s athletic trainers. The fa- N A cility also includes a 2,800-square-foot academic assistance cen- C H ter to help student-athletes in the classroom. The new academic A C center includes a computer lab along with group and individual

study and tutoring rooms. A 618-space indoor parking garage is A E also part of the facility.

T U O

G UWM’s general student population is also benefi tting tremen-

dously from the new facility. A new fi tness center has expan- U A sive rooms for cardio workouts, as well as a weight room. The E R state-of-the-art area is the most visible from the outside of the L N facility, as it features two levels of windows. The new recreation A

N center has two expansive levels and houses four sport courts

surrounded by a suspended 1/8 mile track. The facility is utilized M O by individuals seeking open gym space, run and walk space on Z E

I the track, and the University’s intramural programs. N R

The building also includes academic facilities for the College of T O Health Sciences along with accommodations for the new Physi- S H

cal Therapy and expanded Sports Medicine programs. E The $40 million project, which broke ground in June of 2003, M

I came in below budget due to a favorable bidding climate. Half of

T the funding is coming from UWM parking fees, while the other

- half is from state funds and student segregated fees. The athletic

9 department has also undertaken a variety of fundraising eff orts for even greater enhancements within its space in the facility.

The most distinctive feature of the 135,000-gross-square-foot Pavilion is the extensive use of glass “walls,” creating a feeling of openness and allowing expansive views of nearby Downer Woods and the campus.

Architects for the project were Venture Architects of Milwaukee, a joint venture of Kahler Slater Architects and the Zimmerman Design Group. They emphasize that placement and tinting of windows, called “cool daylighting,” allows a wash of daylight The exterior of the Pavilion (top), the new auxilary gym (middle) and 95 inside while reducing energy needs. the student-athlete computer lab www.uwmpanthers.com 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide THIS IS UWM EENGELMANNNGELMANN FIELDFIELD EENGELMANNNGELMANN FIELDFIELD FACTSFACTS DDRIVINGRIVING DIRECTIONSDIRECTIONS • First Year of Women’s Soccer: 1984 From the West • Record at Engelmann: 112-51-16 (.670) Take I-94 East to 794 East. Take Lakefront/Lincoln Memorial Drive North. Lincoln Memorial Drive be- • Largest Women’s Soccer Crowd: 867 comes Lake Avenue. Take it North to Hartford. Turn left on Hartford and continue west to campus until (Sept. 23, 2007 v. Marquette) you reach Engelmann Hall on the corner of Hartford and Cramer. • Lights Added Before 2006 Season • First Night Game: Sept. 13, 2006 From the North (Men’s Soccer v. Marquette) Take I-43 South to Capitol Drive East. Continue East on Capitol to Maryland. Turn right and travel south • Location: Corner of Hartford & Cramer on Maryland. Take Maryland to campus to Engelmann Field on the corner of Maryland and Hartford. (2033 E. Hartford Ave.) S From the South N RRECORDECORD AATT ENGELMANNENGELMANN FIELDFIELD Take I-43 North to 794 East. Take Lakefront/Lincoln Memorial Drive North. Lincoln Memorial Drive be-

O comes Lake Drive. Take it North to Hartford. Turn left on Hartford and continue west to campus until you

I Year W L T Pct. 2007 8 0 3 .864 reach Engelmann Hall on the corner of Hartford and Cramer. P

2006 7 1 0 .875 5

M 2005 6 0 3 .835 MILWAUKEE CUP League Tournaments at Engelmann Field

N A 2004 4 4 0 .500 In 2008, the Panthers will co-host the Milwaukee 2007 2-0-1 Adv. to championship Cup with crosstown rival Marquette for the eighth 2006 1-1 Lost in semifi nals C

H 2003 5 2 1 .688 2002 6 3 1 .650 time. The tournament has changed its format over 2002 1-0* Won championship A C

2001 8 1 0 .889 the years with each school hosting two games over * Semifi nals held at Uihlein Field A

E 2000 5 2 0 .714 the weekend. MU would host Friday’s action, while Sunday would see the tourney shift to Engelmann ENGELMANN FIELD RECORDS T U 1998 3 5 1 .389 Field. Since 2007, however, Milwaukee and Mar- Goals (Team)

1997 7 0 1 .938 O G 1996 7 1 0 .875 quette have hosted their own contests. This season Milwaukee U A v. Western Illinois 16 (16-0) 9/5/97 1995 4 2 1 .643 the Panthers will take on Ohio State on Wednesday, E 1994 5 1 1 .786 Aug. 27, and Samford on Aug. 29. R

L Opponents Panthers in the Milwaukee Cup N 1993 4 7 2 .385 #4 Wisconsin 8 (8-0) 9/22/91

1992 5 3 0 .625 Year UWM Record (Finish) Champion A N 2007 2-0-0 (Champions) Milwaukee

1991 2 5 0 .286 M

O Goals (Individual) 1990 6 3 1 .650 2006 2-0-0 (Second) Marquette Z 2005 0-1-1 (Tied for Third) Marquette Milwaukee E I 1989 6 3 0 .667 Lisa Krzykowski 4 10/12/97 2004 1-1-0 (Second) Indiana N R 1988 4 3 0 .571 Cammy Polson 4 11/3/96 1987 1 0 1 .750 2003 0-2-0 (Fourth) Dayton T

O Betsy Robares 4 9/23/92 1986 4 2 0 .667 2002 0-2-0 (Fourth) Oakland S

H 2001 0-2-0 (Fourth) Oakland 1985 2 1 0 .667 Opponents 2000 1-1-0 (Third) Marquette E 1984 3 2 0 .600 Anne Mucci, Northern Illinois 3 9/17/95 Total 112 51 16 .670 Kari Maijala, Wisconsin 3 9/22/91 M HORIZON LEAGUE TOURNAMENT I * The 1999 season was played at Uihlein Field Amy Stenholt, Lewis 3 9/26/90 Engelmann Field has been host to three league

T due to construction at Engelmann Field.

- tournaments, most recently as the setting for the Assists (Individual) semifi nals and championship in each of the last 9 LLARGESTARGEST ENGELMANNENGELMANN FIELDFIELD CROWDCROWD Milwaukee 3,256 - UWM Men v. Marquette two seasons. The Panthers also took advantage of Danielle Alberg 4 9/5/97 (Sept. 13, 2006) their turn in the league’s hosting rotation to claim Mara Thompson 4 9/30/94 a tournament crown in 2002. Opponents LLARGESTARGEST WOMEN’SWOMEN’S SOCCERSOCCER CROWDSCROWDS The Horizon League began a new format in 2006, 867 v. Marquette 9/23/07 Cindy Davis, Notre Dame 3 10/6/93 awarding hosting rights for the semifi nal and 625 v. Oakland 9/2/01 championship games to the highest remaining Goalkeeper Saves (Individual) 591 v. Marquette 9/21/99 seed after the quarterfi nals. Both seasons, the Milwaukee 555 v. Indiana 8/29/04 Panthers claimed the top seed in the tourney and Lisa Mickey 16 9/9/90 551 v. Illinois 8/28/05 rolled into the semifi nals. Last season, Milwaukee 538 v. Green Bay 9/21/04 advanced to the league title game, but fell in a Opponents 96 527 v. Marquette 9/28/03 penalty kick shootout after a 2-2 tie. Laurel Ellingson, Marian 21 10/15/91 2008 Milwaukee Women’s Soccer Media Guide www.uwmpanthers.com