2004-05 ODU Men’s Soccer Media Guide

SOC CER

MEDIA INFORMATION ...... 2-3 Media Instructions ...... 2 Directions to Soccer Stadium ...... 2 Quick Facts ...... 2 Media List ...... 3 Travel Plans ...... 3 Why Monarchs? ...... 3 COACHING STAFF ...... 4-6 Head Coach Alan Dawson ...... 4-5 Assistant Coaches ...... 6 THE 2003 MONARCHS ...... 7-15 2004 Outlook ...... 7 2004 Rosters ...... 8 Player bios ...... 9-15 UNIVERSITY INFORMATION ...... 16-21 This is Hampton Roads ...... 16-17 Old Dominion University ...... 17-18 Old Dominion Soccer Stadium ...... 20 Athletic Facilities ...... 21 Academic Support ...... 22 University President ...... 23 Athletic Director ...... 23 Athletic Department Staff & Phone Directory ...... 23 2003 IN REVIEW ...... 24-26 2003 Wrap-Up ...... 24 2003 Old Dominion Statistics ...... 25 2003 Old Dominion Results ...... 25 2003 Game-by-Game box scores ...... 26 OPPONENTS INFORMATION ...... 27-32 2004 Opponents ...... 27-28 Hall of Fame & Alumni Game ...... 29 Old Dominion Stihl Soccer Classic ...... 30 The Colonial Athletic Association ...... 31 2003 CAA Standings ...... 32 2003 CAA Statistics ...... 32 Past CAA Standings and Champions ...... 32 RECORDS ...... 33-42 Honored Monarchs ...... 33-35 Letterwinners ...... 36 Alumni Game ...... 36 Year-by-Year Results ...... 37-39 All-Time vs. Opponents ...... 40-41 Past Old Dominion Champions ...... 42-43 Old Dominion Boys’ Soccer Camp ...... 44

CREDITS: The 2004 Old Dominion University Men’s Soccer Brochure is a publication of the Old Dominion University Athletic Public Relations Office. Written by: Bobby Parks , Sports Information Graduate Assistant. Layout and Design by: Tina Price, Director of Athletic Publications and Chrisie Henn ,Athletic Publications Graduate Assistant. Special Assistance by: Debbie Byrne, Associate Athletic Director & Kim Zivkovich, Assistant Sports Information Director. Photography: Rick Voight (RSVP Media), Steve Chinnis, FestEvents and the Old Dominion Athletic Public Relations Office. Printing: Letton Gooch of Norfolk, VA. ON THE COVER: Seniors Brian Kluckman, Trevor McEachron, Ian Kaila, & Kevon Harris. ON THE BACK Seniors Kyle Hartley, Belus Vendegh, & Kevin McMenamin Old Dominion University is an affirmative action/equal opportunity institution. This publication was printed without the support of tax dollars from the state of Virginia. Media Information WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW IN COVERING THE MONARCHS

The Old Dominion University Sports Information Office welcomes all coverage of the men’s soccer pro- MONARCH QUICK FACTS gram and its student-athletes. Statistics, photos, or story ideas can always be obtained from Sports Infor- Location: ...... Norfolk, VA mation Director Carol Hudson, Jr. Founded: ...... 1930, as the Norfolk Div. of the College of William & Mary To assist you in your coverage of Old Dominion Enrollment: ...... 20,802 President: ...... Dr. Roseann Runte (SUNY New Palz) men’s soccer, here are a few brief points to keep in Athletic Director: ...... Dr. Jim Jarrett (SIU-Carbondale) mind: Colors: ...... Slate Blue, Sky Blue & Silver Nickname: ...... Monarchs INTERVIEWS Homefield: ...... Old Dominion Soccer Stadium Capacity: ...... 4,000 Head Coach Alan Dawson will be available for inter- Conference: ...... Colonial Athletic Association views immediately following all home games. Player 2003 Record: ...... 15-4-1/ 6-2-1 CAA (2ndt place) (NCAA Tourn. Second Rd.) interviews are asked to be set up through the sports Starters Returning/ Lost: ...... 8/3 information office. Coach Dawson is available during Letterwinners Returning/Lost: ...... 15/4 the week for interviews before and after practice. Please Newcomers: ...... 9 Key Returnees: ...... Brian Cvilikas - Jr., F contact the sports information office at (757) 683-3372 Kevon Harris - Sr., MF for more information. Ian Kaila - Sr., D Trevor McEachron - Jr.,D Keven McMenamin - Sr., F COVERING THE GAME Head Coach: ...... Alan Dawson Admission is charged for all home soccer games at the Alma Mater/ Year: ...... Lock Haven/ 1984 Old Dominion Soccer Stadium and reporters wishing Career Record: ...... 202-77-19 (16 years) to cover the Monarchs should notify the Sports Infor- Record at ODU: ...... 73-47-9 (7 years) Assistant Coach: ...... Mark Waite mation Office no later than 24 hours before the match to Assistant Coach: ...... Jonathan Jones arrange credentials. There is no charge for parking, and Men’s Soccer Office Phone: ...... 757-683-3607 parking passes are unneccessary. Sports Information Director: ...... Carol Hudson, Jr. Men’s Soccer Contact: ...... Bobby Parks SID phone: ...... 757-683-3372 Office Fax: ...... 757-683-3119

PHOTOGRAPHERS Only working photographers will be allowed on the playing field during games. Credentials must be secured FINDING YOUR WAY TO THE SOCCER STADIUM... at least 24 hours in advance of games. Photographers will be asked to wear a photo pass at all times when shooting.

COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Men's soccer statistics for the ten CAA schools are com- piled throughout the fall at the conference office in Richmond, VA. For up-to-date information, call 804-754-1616.

PRESS BOX FACILITIES A fully enclosed press box is located in the west stands of the Old Dominion Soccer Stadium, and seats a maxi- mum of five media members at all home games. The press box phone numbers are (757) 683-4135 and 683- 4142.

RADIO BROADCAST LINES Visiting teams requesting to broadcast games from the soccer stadium are asked to contact the sports informa- tion office at least two weeks prior to the game. The stadium is located at Parker and 43rd. All radio lines must be secured through the Verizon office in Norfolk, by calling (757) 667-5000.

INTERNET:

Directions to the Old Dominion Soccer Stadium: Proceed west off Hampton Blvd. on 43rd Street (this will be a right hand turn if coming from I-564/Terminal Blvd.; a left hand turn if coming from downtown Norfolk). The stadium is on the right immediately past Parker Avenue. Bus parking is available on Parker between the Soccer Stadium and the Bud Metheny Complex; we recommend fans and media park in the lot on the east side of the Field House (access off Elkhorn Avenue) and take the footpaths to the Stadium. Teams requiring additional information are asked to contact Ken Turner, Asst. A.D. for Event Management, at (757) 683-5924.

2 Travel Plans Media Outlets

VIRGINIA TECH PRINT MEDIA NATIONAL MEDIA DEPART: ODU 8/20/04 The Virginian Pilot USA Today RETURN: ODU 8/21/04 Sports Desk Sports Department 150 W. Brambleton Avenue 1000 Wilson Boulevard HOTEL: FAIRFIELD INN & SUITE Norfolk, VA 23510 Arlington, VA 22229 (540) 381-9596 757-446-2366 703-276-3400, ext. 3761 FAX: 757-533-9004 FAX: 703-276-5527 UMBC Newport News Daily Press Washington Post Sports Desk Sports Department DEPART: ODU 9/17/04 7505 Warwick Blvd. 1150 15th Street NW RETURN: ODU 9/18/04 Newport News, VA 23607 Washington, DC 20071 757-247-4630 202-334-7350 HOTEL: COURTYARD MARRIOTT FAX: 757-247-9420 FAX: 202-334-7685 (410) 859-8855 Richmond Times-Dispatch Soccer America Sports Desk Mike Woitalla, P. O. Box 85333 College Soccer Ed. UNC-WILMINGTON / VA. COMMONWEALTH Richmond, VA 23293 P.O. Box 23704 DEPART: ODU 9/30/04 804-649-6554 Oakland, CA 94623 FAX: 804-775-8085 510-528-5000 HOTEL: FAIRFIELD INN FAX: 510-528-5177 (910) 392-6767 The Mace and Crown Sports Editor COMCAST Sportsnet (CSN) DEPART: UNCW 10/2/04 Webb University Center Soccer Contact ARRIVE: VCU 10/2/04 Norfolk, VA 23529 7700 Wisconsin Avenue 757-683-3456 Bethesda, MD 20814 RETURN: ODU 10/3/04 301-718-3200 HOTEL: COURTYARD MARRIOTT FAX: 301-718-3300 (804) 652-0500 TELEVISION Southern Soccer Scene WTKR TV-3 (CBS) Ray S. Alley TOWSON / DELAWARE Ted Alexander, Sports Director P.O. Box 19445 720 Boush Street Greensboro, NC 27419 DEPART: ODU 10/14/04 Norfolk, VA 23510 336-292-7015 RETURN: ODU 10/16/04 757-446-1352 FAX: 212-292-8135 FAX: 757-446-1376 HOTEL: HOLIDAY INN BALTIMORE - TOWSON Soccer Buzz (410) 823-1100 WAVY TV-10 (NBC) Randy Diggs Bruce Rader, Sports Director 225 East Sixth Street 300 Wavy Street New York, NY 10003 Portsmouth, VA 23704 212-955-8854 WHY MONARCHS? 757-393-4676 FAX: 212-253-2850 FAX: 757-397-8279 Many people have won- WVEC TV-13 (ABC) WIRE SERVICES dered how the Old Do- Scott Cash, Sports Director Associated Press minion University ath- 613 Woodis Avenue Sports Director letic teams came to be Norfolk, VA 23510 700 East Main Street Suite 1380 officially known as the 757-628-6215 FAX: 757-628-5855 Richmond, VA 23219 Monarchs. 1-800-552-9935 For many years, the WVBT TV 43 (Fox) 804-649-6554 athletic teams of the FAX: 804-643-6223 Norfolk Division of the 300 Wavy Street College of William & Portsmouth, VA 23704 Mary (as Old Dominion 757-393-4343 was formerly called) Fax: 757-393-7615 CONFERENCE were known as the Colonial Athletic Association Braves. This was a deri- Tripp Sheppard, vation of the William & Asst. Commissioner Mary nickname of Indians. As Old Dominion achieved its own four- RADIO Rob Washburn, SID year status and saw its enrollment surpass that of its Williamsburg ESPN Radio1310 WGH 8625 Patterson Avenue neighbor, it was no longer suitable or acceptable to have its teams Tony Mercurio, Sports Director Richmond, VA 23229-6349 called the Braves. 5589 Greenwich Road 804-754-1616 The name Monarchs evokes much of the early history of the Com- Suite 200 FAX: 804-754-1830 monwealth of Virginia and of Old Dominion’s mother institution, the Virginia Beach, VA 23464 College of William and Mary. The nickname “Old Dominion” was first 757-490-8973 coined to the Virginia colony by King Charles II after Virginia’s loy- FAX: 757-671-1010 alty to the crown during the English Civil War. Furthermore, William III and Mary II, whose patronage helped found the College of William WODU AM 1630 and Mary in Virginia in 1693, ruled England at the invitation of Par- Sports Director liament as “joint monarchs.” Webb University Center The Monarch used by Old Dominion has a royal crown on a lion’s Norfolk, VA 23529 head, representing an historic past and a strong future. The school's 757-683-3441 current family of athletic logos were adopted in April of 2002.

3 Head Coach Alan Dawson

◆ Lock Haven’84 ◆ Eighth Season at Old Dominion ◆ 202-77-19 Overall (.724), Sixteen Seasons

three-time CAA Coach of the Year, to the NCAA Division III Championship game. head coach Alan Dawson enters his While at Methodist, he guided the school to A eighth season guiding the Monarchs. seven consecutive conference championships In just a few short years, Dawson has led the and six straight NCAA tournament Old Dominion University men’s soccer team appearances in only nine seasons. He was back to national prominence. inducted into the Methodist College Sports Last year, the Monarchs reached the Hall of Fame in 2002. second round of the NCAA Tournament for His combined career record at the second consecutive year. Old Dominion Methodist was 129-30-1 and his squads defeated N.C. State 6-3 at home in the first finished in the top 10 of the ISAA national polls round before falling to #2 seed Maryland 2-1 for seven consecutive seasons. The 1995 team on the road in the second round. The was ranked number one nationally all eight Monarchs were ranked as high as #2 during a weeks of the regular season as it advanced to season which saw ODU race to a 14-0-0 start the 1995 championship game. He also guided and become the last Division I team to lose a Methodist squads to the round of 16 in 1990 game. The Monarchs started the season with and 1991 and into the quarterfinals in 1992. a nine game shutout streak before VCU found Dawson accumulated several coaching the net in the 10th game. The Monarchs’ 15-4- awards during his stay at Methodist. He 1 record marks the fourth season since 1999 in garnered Dixie Conference Coach of the Year which Dawson has led his team to double- honors five times and South Region Coach of digit wins. For his efforts, Dawson received the Year honors in 1990 and 1995. He produced his third CAA Coach of the Year award and 32 All-South selections, seven All-Americans, was named the National Soccer Coaches and two Academic All-Americans during his Association of America (NSCAA) South- tenure at the school. Atlantic Coach of the Year. Dawson also coached three teams to In 2001, the Monarchs finished 10-6-2 undefeated seasons: in 1991 (15-0-3), 1992 (14- as CAA semifinalists and captured a slew of 0-2) and 1993 (17-0-0). He served as head coach 2003 post-season awards, including Dawson’s of the North Carolina Olympic Development CAA Coach of the Year second CAA Coach of the Year honor. In 1999, team from 1989-94, winning the USSF Region NSCAA South-Atlantic Regional the men’s team finished 15-4-0, winning the III championship game in 1993. He was a USSF CAA regular season title and earning him South Region (III) staff member from 1992 to Coach of the Year CAA Coach of the Year honors and the 1996, and served as the 1979 Region III head 2001 Virginia Sports Information Directors’ Coach coach. CAA Coach of the Year of the Year Award. Coming into 2004, From 1988-91, Dawson served as a 1999 Dawson’s Monarchs will look once again to member of the NCAA Division III South challenge for another title run. Region selection committee and is currently a CAA Coach of the Year Dawson, a former assistant coach at the member of the Adidas Scholar-Athlete All- 1999 University of North Carolina (1996) and a two- American Committee. He has also served as VaSID Coach of the Year time NCAA Division III South Region Coach Chairman of the Intercollegiate Soccer of the Year at Methodist, has always been Association South Region rating committee. known as a winner. In 1995, he led Methodist This year, Dawson will be a member of the NCAA Regional Selection Committee for the South-Atlantic Region. Before coaching at Methodist, he served as a graduate assistant coach at UNC- Greensboro from 1984-86. UNCG reached the NCAA Division III quarterfinals in 1984 and won the championship in 1985. He also led the Virginia ODP team to back-to-back regional championships as the head coach in 1999 and 2000. Dawson holds a United States Soccer Federation (USSF) ‘B’ license, and a Full Irish Badge (Grade One) coaching license. Dawson earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from Lock Haven University in 1984, and a Master of Science degree in physical education from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 1986. He and his wife Mari have three Coach Dawson with 2003 CAA Defender of the year, Trevor McEachron children, Alec (13), Garrick (12) and Ellesse (10). Alan is the son of Isabel and Stanley Dawson of Belfast, Northern Ireland.

4 The Dawson Family: Front: Garrick, Alec, Ellesse. Back: Alan Dawson, his wife Mari.

Year-by-Year with Alan Dawson 1987 Methodist College 8-6-3 1988 Methodist College 12-5-0 1989 Methodist College 14-5-0 1990 Methodist College 15-3-1 NCAA Division III Tournament 1991 Methodist College 16-1-3 NCAA Division III Tournament 1992 Methodist College 16-1-2 NCAA Division III Tourn. Quarterfinals 1993 Methodist College 14-4-0 NCAA Division III Tournament 1994 Methodist College 13-4-1 NCAA Division III Tournament 1995 Methodist College 21-1-0 NCAA Division III Tourn. Finalist 1997 Old Dominion 7-9-1 1998 Old Dominion 8-8-2 1999 Old Dominion 15-4-0 2000 Old Dominion 10-6-2 2001 Old Dominion 8-7-2 2002 Old Dominion 10-9-1 NCAA Division I Second Round 2003 Old Dominion 15-4-1 NCAA Division I Second Round Methodist College Total 129-30-10 Nine seasons Old Dominion Total 73-47-9 Seven seasons Totals 202-77-19 Sixteen seasons MILESTONE WINS First Win - Methodist 2-1 over St. Andrews College (Sept. 16, 1987 in Laurinburg, N.C.) 100th Win - Methodist 5-0 over Christopher Newport Univ. (Sept. 17, 1994 in Fayetteville, N.C.) First win at Old Dominion 1-0 over Robert Morris (Sept. 5, 1997) 200th Win - Old Dominion 3-0 over Towson (Oct. 24,2003) COACHING HONORS Dixie Conference Coach of the Year (1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1995) NCAA Division III South Region Coach of the Year (1990, 1995) CAA Coach of the Year (1999, 2001 and 2003) VaSID Coach of the Year (1999) NCAA/NSCAA Division I South Atlantic Coach of the Year (2003) COACHING HISTORY [Graduate Assistant Coach] UNC Greensboro, 1984-86. During his time with the Spartans, UNCG reached the NCAA Division III Tournament in 1984, and the championship game in 1985. [Volunteer Soccer Coach] Andrews High School, High Point, N.C., 1986. Helped Andrews to state boys’ semifinals. [Head Coach] High Point Stars, High Point, N.C., 1987. Guided club to the N.C. U-19 championship match. [Head Coach] Methodist College, Fayetteville, N.C., 1987-95. Led Methodist to six NCAA Tournament appearances, including 1995 national title game. [Assistant Coach] University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C., 1986. [Head Coach] Old Dominion University, 1997.

5 Assistant Coaches Mark Waite Jonathan Jones

◆ Lock Haven '94 ◆ Appalachian State '01 ◆ Seventh Season ◆ Fourth Season ssistant coach Mark Waite onathan Jones is set for his returns for his seventh season fourth year as an assistant Awith the Monarchs men’s Jcoach at Old Dominion soccer team, serving under Alan University. Dawson. After six seasons of helping Jones started at ODU as a Coach Dawson establish a consistently volunteer assistant in 2001 successful program at ODU, Waite, a before becoming a full-time staff native of Grimsby, England, has member in 2002. become one of the top assistant Jones currently has a ‘B’ coaches in the CAA. license from the United States While under the tutelage of Soccer Federation and is Coach Waite, the Monarchs have never currently working with U-14 finished under .5000 including two boys team for Beach FC. CAA regular season titles and last Prior to coming to Old season’s return run to the NCAA Dominion, the Greensboro, NC Tournament Second Round. native served as an assistant Prior to ODU, Waite played for coach at Watauga High School in the Hampton Roads Mariners of the Boone, NC from 1998-01. USISL from 1994-96. In 1996, he joined Watauga won three conference the Hershey Wildcats of the A-League and went on to be named the 1998 championships during that stretch. A-League All-Star Game MVP. Jones is a graduate of Page High School in Greensboro, Waite also served as assistant men’s soccer coach at Virginia NC and played soccer at Radford University before transferring to Wesleyan College from 1994-96 and then at Bloomsburg University from Appalachian State University. He graduated in May 2001 with a 1996-98. Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration and Marketing. In 1992, Waite was named a first team All-American and first team Jones currently resides in Virginia Beach. Academic All-American at Lock Haven University. He currently stands as the all-time leading scorer in Lock Haven history with 57 goals and holds the single season record of 25 goals. He was also a two-time PSAC Most Valuable Player. He is currently the head coach of the Beach FC U-16 Super Y League team and holds a USSF ‘B’ coaching license. Waite graduated from Lock Haven in 1994 with a bachelor’s degree in health sciences and holds a master of arts degree in communications from Bloomsburg University.

Robbie Johnson James Mitchell ◆ Old Dominion, ‘02 ◆ TRAINER ◆ First Season ◆ Southwestern University '04 ormer Monarch goalkeeper James Mitchell is in his first Robbie Johnson joins the Old year as a graduate assistant in Dominion coaching staff this F the Old Dominion athletic season as a volunteer assistant, assist- training program. He will be ing the goalkeepers. Johnson played working with the Old Domin- for the Monarchs from 1998 to 2000. ion men’s soccer team as the Prior to coming to ODU, Johnson was athletic director for the 2004 a four-year starter at Tallwood High season. Mitchell graduated School in Virginia Beach, under head with a bachelor’s degree in ki- coach Chris McVey, where he earned nesiology with an athletic honorable mention All-Beach honors. training emphasis from He currently coaches the U-13 ACN Southwestern University. He Zico in the local youth soccer league. will complete his master’s Johnson is a graduate student, hop- degree at ODU in the spring ing to complete his master’s degree of 2006. Personal: Born March in biology in May of 2005. 17, 1982…Son of John and Tracey Mitchell…Has one brother, Brian.

6 2004 Outlook Monarchs continue Successful Climb to National Prominence ODU looks to build on a record breaking 2002 season

he Old Dominion men’s soccer team concluded a storybook season in 2003 with a return appearance in the NCAA Tournament second round and a 15-4-1 record. T After starting out the season 14-0-0 and achieving a #2 national ranking last season, the Monarchs are looking to take the program to the next level in 2004. Despite losing three key seniors from last year’s squad, including ODU’s all- time leading scorer, Attila Vendegh, to graduation, the Monarchs have six starters returning to the team and a nationally ranked seven-member recruiting class that should help ODU continue its recent string of successes. Last season, the Monarchs were the last Division I team to lose a contest and had a nine-game shutout streak to start off the season. The anchors of last year’s stellar defense, Seniors Trevor McEachron (Woodbridge, VA) and Ian Kaila (Fredericksburg, VA), will return to the team this season after both suffering season-ending knee injuries near the end of last season. “I think we’re a little deeper than last year,” says head coach Alan Dawson. “We’re going to be more balanced and we’ll have more ways to attack teams. The big concern will be our backs, how solid they’ll be, and also Trevor’s status.”

Forwards

Attila Vendegh (Bratislava, Slovakia) once again led the Monarchs in scoring (10 goals, six assists, 26 points) last season, but ODU will have to look to others to carry the load after losing Vendegh to graduation. The Monarchs will look to Junior Brian Cvilikas (Highlands Ranch, CO) take up some of the slack. In 2003, Cvilikas tied Vendegh in goals scored last season (10) and was second on the team in points (21). The team will also look to Kevin McMenamin (West Springfield, MA) to help fill the void. McMenamin had a breakout season last year in his first year with the Monarchs, scoring nine goals, two assists and 20 points. He scored game-winning goals against nationally-ranked California as well as Hofstra. Ado Fazlic (Richmond, VA) and Kyle Hartley (Virginia Beach, VA) will both add considerable experience to the Monarch frontline, as should transfer Elson Elcock (Brooklyn, NY), who finished 6th in the SAC conference in goals and points en route to being named the SAC Freshman of the Year last season for Wingate University. “We’ll miss Attila for what he does best—finishing chances,” Dawson says. “He was our go-to guy. We’ll have to get things done by committee this year and we’re going to need a lot of guys to contribute.”

Midfielders Senior Defender Trevor McEachron was a NSCAA/Adidas First Team All-American in 2003

Senior Kevon Harris (Kingston, Jamaica) will anchor a very capable ODU midfield as the lone senior. Harris finished 4th on the team in points (4 goals, 5 assists, 13 points) Goalkeepers last season. “The team looks up to Kevon,” Dawson says. “He’s our creative midfield player.” ODU loses last season’s starting goalkeeper, Sam Cameron, to graduation. John Joining Harris in the midfield is Gregg Mottinger (Carrollton, TX), a sophomore. Connelly (Rockville, MD), Cameron’s back-up in 2003, saw action in 16 minutes against Mottinger had a tremendous freshman campaign, starting every game and recording Longwood in the Stihl Soccer Classic. two assists to help the Monarchs. Joining Connelly will be two freshmen, Jon Curry-Edwards (Brielle, NJ) and Oluwalana started in three games in 2003, seeing action in 19. He scored the Bryan Fossi (Lilitz, PA). Connelly will be the front-runner to take the starting spot, but game-winning goal against Stanford in the Cal-Berkeley soccer tournament. both Curry-Edwards and Fossi will be competing for the job. Jared Kent (Marietta, GA) returns to the Monarch lineup after a two year Mormon “What we lose in Cameron,” Dawson says, “is experience. Playing in actual mission. games makes a difference.” “Jared’s more mature physically and mentally,” Head Coach Alan Dawson says. “We’ll look for him to be an immediate impact player.” Schedule and Outlook Rounding out the Monarch midfield are two very talented true freshmen, Braden McPherson (Virginia Beach, VA), who comes from nearby Kellam High School, and A.J. The Monarchs are looking once again at a very difficult schedule in 2004, hosting Kulp (Ephrata, PA). powerhouse North Carolina, as well as very tough teams in Navy and Rutgers, in the ODU Stihl Soccer Classic. ODU will face American and Hartwick at the Nike Tribe Defenders Soccer Classic, hosted by William & Mary and host a very talented Davidson squad. “The schedule’s very competitive,” Dawson says. “The conference is getting Defense was the name of the game last season, contributing to a CAA-best 0.69 stronger every year. I feel we have a nationally-competitive schedule this year.” Goals Against Average, allowing only 14 goals in 20 games. Losing no players to The Monarchs will once again start off the regular season with an extended graduation, the Monarch defense should look very similar to last season’s. Trevor home stand, hosting Campbell and Davidson before kicking off the Stihl Soccer Classic, McEachron was named National Player of the Week by Soccer News (9/14), was back- where ODU will meet Navy and Rutgers. After a brief road trip to UMBC, the Monarchs to-back CAA Player of the Week (9/15 and 9/22), the CAA Defender of the Year, was will return home to face North Carolina September 21. American University and named to the All-CAA First Team and was a NSCAA/Adidas First Team All-American perennial contender Hartwick will be the Monarchs’ opponents at the Nike Tribe Soccer selection. McEachron started in 15 games before being sidelined with a knee injury Classic before ODU kicks off a very tough Colonial Athletic Association schedule. ODU against George Mason last year. will travel to Charlottesville, VA on October 27 to face a very formidable foe in the Ian Kaila also suffered a season-ending knee injury last season, in a game against University of Virginia before once again ending the season with a match-up against James Madison. Kaila is a solid defender and should once again be a vital part of the William & Mary. The CAA Tournament will begin November 9. Monarchs’ defense. Senior Defender Brian Kluckman (Springfield, VA) was one of only After making back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances for the first time two Monarchs to start every game last year. In 2004, Kluckman should be one of the in school history, and a record-breaking 2003 campaign, the Monarchs will look to leaders on defense. Bamidele Oluwalana (Oslo, Norway), Belus Vendegh (Bratislava, once again be a national contender in Division I men’s soccer. Slovakia) and Eric Hoglund (Fairfax County, VA) should also add considerable depth to “Momentum is big,” Dawson says. “We need to get a good start and stay injury- the backfield. David Horst (Pine Grove, PA) will join the Monarchs squad this season as free. If we can create the chemistry and camaraderie that we had last season, we’ll be a true freshman. very competitive.” Trevor McEachron hopes to be able to significantly contribute for the Monarchs this season, as a senior.

7 2004 Rosters OLD DOMINION UNIVERSITY MEN'S SOCCER

No. Name Pos. Cl. Ht. Wt. Hometown/High School 1 John Connelly GK R-Jr. 5-10 185 Rockville, MD/Rockville 2 Bamidele Oluwalana M/D Jr. 5-7 160 Oslo, Norway/Bredtvet VGS 3 Kyle Hartley F Sr. 5-11 165 Va. Beach, VA/Kempsville 4 Eric Hoglund D So. 5-1 160 Fairfax County, VA/Hayfield 5 Jared Kent MF So. 5-7 145 Marietta, GA/Sprayberry 6Walston Ferrell MF So. 5-9 148 Fayetteville, NC/Pine Forest 7Trevor McEachron D Sr. 6-2 180 Woodbridge, VA/Woodbridge 8 Edson Elcock F So. 5-7 140 Brooklyn, NY/Brooklyn Friends School 9 Kevon Harris MF Sr. 5-7 140 Kingston, Jamaica/ Kingston College 10 Kevin McMenamin F Sr. 5-10 175 West Springfield, MA/Univ. of Mass-Lowell 11 Belus Vendegh D Sr. 6-1 170 Bratislava, Slovakia 12 David Horst D Fr. 6-4 195 Pine Grove, PA/Pine Grove 13 Ian Kaila D Sr. 5-10 165 Fredericksburg, VA/Massaponax 14 Brian Kluckman D Sr. 6-3 195 Springfield, VA/W.Springfield 15 Justin Monroe D So. 5-8 149 Disputanta, VA/Prince George 16 Ross Mackenzie F Sr. 5-10 170 Richmond, VA/Clover Hill 17 Gregg Mottinger MF So. 5-7 140 Carrollton, TX/Newman Smith 18 Ado Fazlic F Jr. 5-8 180 Richmond, VA/Tucker 19 A.J. Kulp MF Fr. 5-6 158 Ephrata, PA/Ephrata 20 Brian Cvilikas F Jr. 6-3 180 Highlands Ranch, CO/Highlands Ranch 21 Braden McPherson MF Fr. 5-8 165 Virginia Beach, VA/Kellam 22 Jon Curry-Edwards GK Fr. 6-2 175 Brielle, NJ/St. Rose 23 Bryan Fossi GK Fr. 6-1 190 Lititz, PA/Manheim Township

Head Coach: Alan Dawson (Lock Haven ‘84) Assistant Coaches: Mark Waite (Lock Haven ‘94) Jonathan Jones (Appalachian St. ‘01) Trainer: Jason Mitchell

PRO-NUN-SEE-A-SHUN GUIDE

Cvilikas ...... C-val-kas McEachron ...... Mick-each-ron Fazlic ...... FAZ-lick Bamidele Oluwalana ...... Bau-me-del-a Olu-wa-lana Kaila ...... KAY-la Belus Vendegh ...... Ven-degg

Alphabetical Roster The Monarchs by Origin No. Name COLORADO TEXAS 1 John Connelly Brian Cvilikas Highlands Ranch, CO Gregg Mottinger Carrollton, TX 22 Jon Curry-Edwards GEORGIA VIRGINIA 20 Brian Cvilikas Jared Kent Marietta, GA Kyle Hartley Va. Beach, VA 8 Edson Elcock MARYLAND Eric Hoglund Fairfax County, VA 18 Ado Fazlic John Connelly Rockville, MD Trevor McEachron Woodbridge, VA 6Walston Ferrell MASSACHUSETTS Braden McPherson Va. Beach, VA 23 Bryan Fossi Kevin McMenamin West Springfield, MA Ross Mackenzie Richmond, VA 9 Kevon Harris Ian Kaila Fredericksburg, VA 3 Kyle Hartley Jon Curry-Edwards Brielle, NJ Brian Kluckman Springfield, VA 4 Eric Hoglund NEW YORK Ado Fazlic Richmond, VA 12 David Horst 13 Ian Kaila Edson Elcock Brooklyn, NY Justin Monroe Disputanta, VA 5 Jared Kent NORTH CAROLINA JAMAICA 14 Brian Kluckman Walston Ferrell Fayetteville, NC Kevon Harris Kingston, Jamaica 19 A.J. Kulp PENNSYLVANIA NORWAY 16 Ross Mackenzie David Horst Pine Grove, PA Bamidele Oluwalana Oslo, Norway 7Trevor McEachron A.J. Kulp Ephrata, PA SLOVAKIA 10 Kevin McMenamin Bryan Fossi Lititz, PA Belus Vendegh Bratislava, Slovakia 21 Braden McPherson 15 Justin Monroe 17 Gregg Mottinger 2 Bamidele Oluwalana 11 Belus Vendegh

8 Meet the Seniors Kevon Harris Ian Kaila ● Midfielder ● Defender ● ● 5'8" Senior ● 5'9" ● Senior ● Kingston, Jamaica ● Fredericksburg, VA ● Kingston College 9 ● Massaponax13 Career: 2003: Competed and started in 15 games before Career: 2003: Competed in all 20 games for the Monarchs, a season-ending knee injury in game against James starting 19. Scored career-high four goals, including the Madison. Vital part of Monarchs defense that allowed game-winning goal against UNC-Wilmington. Tied for only 14 goals and achieved a 0.70 Goals Against third on the team in shots (29). Second on the team in Average. 2002: Anchored the Monarch defense with assists (5). Fourth on the team in points (13). Named to 19 starts in 2002. Took a career-high three shots. Has All-CAA First Team, All-South Atlantic Second Team and only missed one start in his first two years at Old VaSID All-State Second Team. 2002: Harris fought through injuries to start nine Dominion. 2001: Made an immediate impact starting in all 17 matches as a freshman. games. Will be a leader for the Monarchs in the midfield this season. Scored his lone Helped the team post four shutouts. Prep: Was a first team All-State, All-Region goal in the CAA opener against UNCW. Tied for second on the team with four assists, and All-Battlefield District selection his senior year...Also a honorable mention All- which matches his freshman year output. 2001: Played in all 17 matches with 14 Metro honoree, 1998-2001...Member of the State Team and ODP, 1997-2000. Also starts ... Tied for second on team with four a ssists ... Scored his first career goal in wrestled for Massaponax. Off the Field: Born February 14, 1983...Son of John and ODU’s 2-1 win over Georgetown. Prep: Kevon had an outstanding career in Charlene Kaila...Has one sister, Ashley (25) ... Listed in Who’s Who Among American Jamaica...Member of Jamaica’s U-20 World Cup team ...Was the Major League Rookie High School Students...Member of the honor roll and National Honor Society of the Year with his club in ‘98-99. Off the Field: Born June 1, 1981...Son of Donald throughout high school. Majoring in communications. and Lorrete Wade ... Has three sisters, Regina (26), Theresa (14), and Odene Clark (8), and one brother, Tiras ... Majoring in mechanical engineering. YEAR GP/GS G A PTS GWG SHOTS *2003 All-CAA First Team* 2001 17/17 0 0 0 0 1 *2003 All-South Atlantic Second Team* 2002 19/19* 0 0 0 0 3* *2003 VaSID All-State Second Team* 2003 15/15 0 0 0 0 1 Totals: 51/51 0 0 0 0 5 * career high Year GP/GS G A Pts. GWG Shots 2001 17/14* 2 4* 8 1* 20* 2002 10/9 1 4* 6 0 16 2003 20/19 4* 5 13* 1* 31 Totals: 47/42 7 13 27 2 67 * career high

Kyle Hartley

● Forward ● 5'11" ● Senior ● Virginia Beach, VA ● Kempsville 3

Career: 2003: Saw action in 13 games, while starting in two. Tied career high in goals (2) and set new career-highs in assists (2) and points (6). 2002: Saw action in 18 games with three starts. Scored ODU’s first goal of the year in their 3-2 opening win over visiting Va. Tech. Hartley’s gamewinner against American gave ODU a 3-2 win over the #12 Eagles. Notched his first career assist. Set career highs in all major offensive categories. 2001: Played in 11 matches last season for the Monarchs with one goal. Prep: Joined ODU after an outstanding career at Kempsville...A first team All-Beach, All-Region, All-Tidewater and All-State selection...Tidewater Player of the Year and member of the NSCAA’s All-South Team in 2001...Recipient of the Norfolk Sports Club’s 2001 Outstanding Metropolitan Scholastic Men’s Soccer Player Award. Off the Field: Born November 11, 1982...Son of David and Shelley Hartley...Has two younger sisters, Deanna (19) and Lisa (16)...Major is sports management.

YEAR GP/GS G A PTS GWG SHOTS 2001 11/0 1 0 20 0 2 2002 18/3* 2* 1 5 1* 9* 2003 13/2 2* 2* 6* 0 5 Totals: 42/5 5 3 13 1 16 * career high

9 Meet the Seniors Brian Kluckman Trevor McEachron ● ● Defender Defender ● ● ● 6'3" ● Senior 6'2" Senior ● ● Springfield, VA Woodbridge, VA ● ● West Springfield14 Woodbridge 7 Career: 2003: Had career-breaking year for the Monarchs, competing in 17 games and starting in 16 Career: 2003: Competed and started in all 20 games before season-ending knee injury in game against for ODU, setting new career-highs in both games George Mason. Named National Player of the Week played and games started. Took four shots for the by College Soccer News for week ending September season as a defender. 2002: Early season injuries to 14. Named CAA Player of the Week two weeks in a row (September 15 and 22). Set teammates allowed him to step into the starting lineup. Played in 17 games with 12 career-high in goals (4) and points (8). Vital part of the ODU defense that went starts. Kluckman ranked second on the team with three goals, including the winner through first nine games of the season without allowing a goal. Named to the against CAA foe Delaware. His first career goal came at Virginia and he also scored NSCAA All-American First Team, All-CAA First Team, VaSID All-State First Team against Richmond in the NCAA First Round. Posted his first career assist. 2001: and College Soccer News All-American First Team. 2003 CAA Defender of the After one game of action last season, Kluckman will look for more time on the field Year. 2002: Has established himself as one of the toughest and quickest defenders and bring leadership to the younger players. Prep: A first team All-District and in the league. Selected to All-Region, All-State and All-CAA teams. Started 19 of All-Region selection...Also a second team All-Met at West Springfield...His team the team’s 20 games. Played with the U-23 Jamaica National Team this past summer. captured the state championship during his tenure. Off the Field: Born February Scored his first career goal to defeat Ga. State in the first game of the 2002 ODU 14, 1983...Son of Jim and Tamie Kluckman of Reston, VA ... Has one brother, Sean Stihl Classic. Helped the ODU backfield hold opponents to one goal or less nine (23)... Majoring in business. times. 2001: Named an Honorable Mention Freshman All-American. Earned second team All-CAA honors as a freshman in 2001...Named team MVP last year starting YEAR GP/GS G A PTS GWG SHOTS in all 17 contests ... Tallied one assist. Prep: In three years of soccer at Woodbridge 2001 1/0 0 0 0 0 0 McEachron earned All-Area and All-District honors... Focused on training and 2002 17/12 3* 1* 7* 2* 12* preparing for college during his senior year, skipping his final season of high school 2003 20/20* 0 0 0 0 4 competition ...Was a member of the Region I ODP team and toured with the team Totals: 38/32 3 1 7 2 16 last year in Italy...Recipient of the coaches MVP award. Off the Field: Born August * career high 4, 1983...Son of Earl McEachron and Barbara Sheehan...Has one older brother, Errol (24) and one younger sister, Jasmine (15)...Major is business management.

2003 NSCAA All-American First Team 2003 CAA Defender of the Year 2003 All-CAA First Team 2003 VaSID All-State First Team 2003 All-South Atlantic First Team 2003 College Soccer News All-American 1st Team 2002 VaSID All-State First Team 2002 All-South Region Third Team 2002 All-CAA First Team 2001 All-CAA Second Team 2001 Honorable Mention Freshman All-American

YEAR GP/GS G A PTS GWG SHOTS 2001 17/17 0 1* 1 0 17* 2002 19/19* 1 0 2 1* 11 2003 17/16 4* 0 8* 0 12 Totals 53/52 5 1 11 1 38 * career high

10 Meet the Seniors Kevin McMenamin

● Forward ● 5’10” ● Senior ● West Springfield, MA ● University of Massachusetts10 Lowell Career: 2003: Competed in 19 games for the Monarchs, starting in 13. Ranked third on the team in goals (9) and third in points (20) in his first year with the team. Scored two game-winning goals for the year, including ODU’s 1-0 victory over Cal-Berkeley in the Cal-Berkeley Tournament. Took 31 shots during the year, to tie for third on the team. Prep: McMenamin came to ODU after playing one year each at Holyoke Community College (00) and the University of Massachusetts Lowell (01). Named to the All- New England team while competing at both schools and earned Third Team All- Conference Honors at UMASS Lowell. Set the Lowell record for most points in a season (25) and is tied for most goals in a season (7). Was a two-time All-State performer at Union News High School. Off the Field: Born January 28, 1981. Son of Kevin McMenamin and Linda Danoff. Has two siblings, Kerry (30) and Kristy (25). Majoring in sociology.

Year GP/GS Min. GA Saves GAA SO 2003 19/13 9 2 20 2 31

Belus Vendegh

● Defender ● 6'1" ● Senior ● Bratislava, Slovakia11 Career: 2003: Saw action in eight games. Earned first career assist in ODU’s 6-3 victory over NC State in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Took three shots as a defender. 2002: Started all but one game last season. Scored his first career goal in ODU’s 3-0 win over Richmond in the NCAA Tournament. Took a career-high 18 shots. Showed his versatility starting as a defender and as a midfielder in 2002 Ö Helped the team earn four shutouts. 2001: Played in 13 matches with four starts last year...Missed four games with a broken hand. Off the Field: Born March 30, 1983...Son of Vojtech and Maria Vendegh...Has one brother, Attila ... 2002 CAA Scholar Athlete. Major is international business.

YEAR GP/GS G A PTS GWG SHOTS 2001 13/4 0 0 0 0 1 2002 20/19* 1* 0 2* 0 18* 2003 8/0 0 1* 1 0 3 Totals 41/23 1 1 3 0 22 * career high

11 Meet the Monarchs John Connelly Adnan Fazlic

● ● Forward Goalkeeper ● ● ● 5'10" ● Junior 5'8" Junior ● ● ● Richmond, VA Rockville, MD Rockville1 ● Tucker 15

Career: 2003: Played for 16 minutes in ODU’s 6-0 victory Career: 2003: Saw action in19 games and started 15. over Longwood in the Stihl Soccer Classic. 2002: Made Had career-high two assists and two points in his three starts with 16 saves. Stopped 69% of the shots he sophomore year. Had career-high seven shots. 2002: faced with a 2.33 goals against average. Tallied a career Played in six games with one assist. Will provide depth high nine saves at home against #22 Wake Forest in September. 2001: After red- for the Monarchs up front. Recorded his first career shirting John followed in the footsteps of his older brother Chuck, who was a standout assist against Wilmington. Prep: Played for the Richmond Strikers and the Virginia goalie with the Monarchs in the late ‘90’s. Prep: During his senior season with ODP team ... Four-year member of the varsity soccer team at Tucker High School Rockville, Connelly earned All-County honors and was an honor roll student ... Also ... Named to the All-Metro team ... First team selection to the All-District and won the science fair. Off the Field Born July 12, 1983...Son of Bennett and Helen Region teams ... Scored 14 goals and added 12 assists as a senior. Off the Field: Connelly...Has one brother, Chuck (26), a former Monarch...Major is physical Born April 11, 1984 ... Son of Dzemal and Edina Fazlic of Richmond, VA ... Has education. one sister, Aida (17) ... Majoring in international business.

YearYear GP/GS GP/GS Min. G GA A Saves Pts. GAA GWG SO Shots Year GP/GS G A Pts. GWG Shots 20012002 RED 17/6 SHIRT 1 1 3 0 2 2002 6/0 0 1 1 0 2 20022003 3/3 19/7* 270 1 7 2* 16 4* 2.33 0 0 6* 2003 19/15* 0 2* 2* 0 7* 2003Totals: 1/0 36/13 16 2 0 3 0 7 0.00 0 0 8 Totals: 25/15 0 3 3 0 9 Totals:* career high 4/3 296 7 16 2.33 0 * career high

Brian Cvilikas ● Foward ● 6'3" ● Junior ● Highlands Ranch, CO ● Highlands Ranch18 Career: 2003: Saw action in all 20 games for ODU, starting 17. Tied for team lead in goals (10). Second on the team in points (21). First career assist came in ODU’s 4-1 victory over Drexel. Ranked second on the team in shots (44). Scored three game-winning goals during the season. Named CAA Player of the Week for October 20. Named to All-CAA Second Team. 2002: Led all freshmen with two goals. Played in 17 games with five starts. Scored the golden goal in double overtime against Drexel. Fired off 12 shots. Notched his first career-goal against UNCW in the CAA opener. Prep: Played three seasons of soccer at Highlands Ranch High School ... Named to the first team All-State and All-League ... Member of the Colorado ODP State Program. Scored 19 goals during both his junior and senior seasons ... Selected to the All-State Coaches second team and the All-County team. Off the Field: Born March 16, 1984 ... Son of Anthony and Valerie Cvilikas... Has one brother, Brandon (16) ... Major is business management. *2003 All-CAA Second Team* *CAA Player of the Week—Oct. 20, 2003*

YEAR GP/GS G A PTS GWG SHOTS 2002 17/5 2 0 4 1 12 2003 20/17* 10* 1* 21* 3* 44* Totals: 37/22 12 1 25 4 56 * career high

12 Meet the Monarchs Walston Ferrell Ross Mackenzie ● Midfielder ● ● 5’9” ● Sophomore Forward ● ● ● Fayetteville, NC 5’10” Sophomore ● ● Pine Forest High School Richmond, VA 25 ● Clover Hill High12 School Career: 2003: Did not see action. Prep: Four year starter Career: 2003: Competed in 18 games for the Monarchs, at midfield for Pine Forest High School. Scored more starting in four. Scored two goals and added four assists than 20 goals and added 15 assists in his senior season. to his season totals to give him eight points for the season. Two-time All-Region selection. Led Pine Forest to the Took eight shots during the year. Prep: Mackenzie was Two Rivers 4-A Conference regular season and selected to the All-District, All-Metro, All-Region and tournament championships as a junior. Team co-captain as a junior and senior. Played All-State First Teams as a senior at Clover Hill High under his father, Tony, for eight seasons on the club level, winning the State School. Tallied 29 goals and 20 assists in two seasons. All-District First Team and Championships four times. Made the team as a walk-on on an academic scholarship. All-Metro Second Team as a junior... Scored a record 67 goals in the Scottish Youth Off the Field: Born September 15, 1984. Son of Tony and Laura Ferrell. Has one League while playing for the U-16 and U-18 Scotland National Team. Won a State brother, Jackson (13). Major is undecided. Cup Championship with the Richmond Strikers club team. Also played with the St. Johnstone and Dundee United club squads. Off the Field: Born October 21, 1984. Son of Gordon and Sheena Mackenzie. Has one sister, Julie (17). Major is undecided.

Year GP/GS Min. GA Saves GAA SO 2003 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 Year GP/GS Min. GA Saves GAA SO 2003 18/4 2 4 8 0 8

Eric Hoglund Justin Monroe

● Defender ● Defender ● 5’11” ● Sophomore ● Sophomore ● Fairfax County, VA ● Disputanta, VA ● Hayfield High School4 ● Prince George26 High School Career: 2003: Saw action in 19 games, starting in 10. Career: 2003: Did not see any action. Prep: Joins ODU got an assist in ODU’s 4-0 season-opening win over after four years of competition at Prince George High St.Francis (PA). Stepped into starting role after School. Named the Most Valuable Player of offense as a injuries to top defenders. Took four shots in his role freshman and sophomore. Three-time All-District as defender. Prep: Hoglund was named the Virginia selection as well as a two-time All-Region and All-State AAANorthern Region Player of the Year and the performer. Chosen to the All-Metro team as junior. WASHINGTON POST’s All-Met Player of the Year as a senior at Hayfield High Named to the ODP State Team in 2001. Off the Field: Born October 30, 1985. Son of School. Won the 2003 Patriot District High School Championship. Member of Jennifer Monroe. Has one sister, Clatrina (20). Major is undecided. the Grasshopper FC team when they became the first American team to win the Merseyside Football Festival in Liverpool, England. Earned “Man of the Match” honors in both the group play and finals of the Festival. Named captain of his Grasshopper team as well as his Hayfield squad ... Won the Virginia State Year GP/GS Min. GA Saves GAA SO championship while serving as captain of the Gunston American Premier team. 2003 0/0 0 0 0 0 0 Spent one year with the Regional Olympic Development Program. Off the Field: Born Nov. 1, 1985. Son of Bruce and Rhonda Hoglund. Earned the Student Scholar Athlete Award as a honor roll student at Hayfield. Major is undecided.

Year GP/GS Min. GA Saves GAA SO 2003 19/10 0 1 1 0 4

13 Meet the Monarchs Gregg Mottinger Bamidele Oluwalana ● Midfielder ● MF/Defender ● ● 5’7” Sophomore ● 5'7" ● Junior ● Carrollton, TX ● Oslo, Norway ● Newman Smith High School ● Bredtvet Videregaende School Career: 2003: One of the top17 freshmen for ODU, starting Career: 2003: Saw action in 2a career-high 18 games, all 20 games for the Monarchs. Had two assists and took while starting in three. Had game-winning shot against nine shots during the season. Prep: Named Defensive then #5 Stanford, giving ODU the 1-0 victory at the Player of the Year while playing for Newman Smith Cal-Berkeley Tournament. Scored career-high two High School ... An All-District and All-Region selection. goals and had career-high four points and six shots. Served as captain for the Dallas Comets club team. 2002: Played in 15 games with five starts as a rookie. Played five years for the Texas ODP team, two on the Scored one goal and took 4 shots. Won the season Region III Pool squad ... Selected to attend the Adidas Elite Soccer Program in 2002. opener over Va. Tech with his first career goal in overtime. Prep: Played three Mottinger also spent three seasons on the swimming team and was the starting seasons at the Bredtvet Videregaende School in Oslo, Norway ... Member of the kicker for the Newman Smith football team where he tallied 69 total points. Off Norwegian Champion Team in 2000 ... Named Player of the Year that same season. the Field: Born January 24, 1985. Son of William and Janice Mottinger. Has one Off the Field: Born Nov. 25, 1981 ... Son of Michael and Grete Oluwalana of Oslo, brother, Marc (22). Awarded the YMCA Dye Foundation Scholarship and the Dallas Norway ... Has three siblings, Omotuyi (25), Sade (17), and Babatunde (15) ... Burn Scholarship. Majoring in education. Majoring in international business.

CAA Rookie-of-the-Week Year GP/GS Min. GA Saves GAA SO 2003 20/20 0 2 2 0 9 YEAR GP/GS G A PTS GWG SHOTS 2002 15/5 1 0 2 1 4 2003 18/3 2* 0 4* 1 6* Totals: 33/8 3 0 6 2 10 * career high

2003 CAA Award Winners (Left-to-Right): Trevor McEachron, Attila Vendegh, Kevon Harris, Sam Cameron, Brian Cvilikas, Head Coach Alan Dawson

14 Meet the Newcomers Jared Kent Jon Curry-Edwards

● Midfielder ● Goalkeeper ● 5’6” ● Sophomore ● 6’3” ● Freshman ● Marietta, GA ● Brielle, NJ ● Sprayberry HS5 ● St. Rose HS22

Career: Kent returns to the Monarchs after spending the past Career: At St. Rose High School, Edwards recorded 33 two years on a Mormon mission…Was a three-time Team MVP shutouts…In 2003, he led his high school to the Parochial at Sprayberry High School and was also named a Scholar B South Championship while recording 17 shutouts… Athlete there…Was a member of the U-16 United States Curry-Edwards was named to the First Team All- National Team and was a Region III ODP starter for two years…Kent will add considerable Division, Second Team Monmouth County, Second Team Shore Conference and talent to the Monarch midfield. All-State Honorable Mention teams…Played for the Jersey Shore BOCA last year. Edson Elcock Bryan Fossi

● Forward ● Goalkeeper ● Sophomore ● 6’2” ● Freshman ● Brooklyn, NY ● Lilitz, PA ● Brooklyn Friends8 School ● Manheim Township23 HS Career: Elcock will join the ODU squad after signing a letter of Career: In 2003, Fossi led his high school to the league intent last season…Playing for Wingate University in 2003, he was championship to cap an undefeated season, while named Freshman of the Year in the SAC conference after finishing recording a .66 goals against average with 10 shutouts… 6th in the conference in goals and points…At Brooklyn Friends Was voted coaches league all-star in both 2002 and 2003 School, Elcock led his team to the State Final and won the New and was the team’s varsity captain in 2003. Was varsity York State Championship with the Silver Lake Rams, a Region 1 Olympic Development captain in 2003 and was a three-year starter at Manheim Township High School… Team based in Staten Island, NY…Was named an Adidas ESP Top 150 player in the nation. Was named to the EPYSA state team in 2001 and 2002…Last year, was a member of the Leeds United FC club team. Braden McPherson David Horst

● Midfielder ● Defender ● 5'10" ● Freshman ● 6’4” ● Freshman ● Virginia Beach, VA ● Pine Grove, PA ● Kellam 21 ● Pine Grove12 HS Career: McPherson was the Kellam team captain his junior year, earning 1st Team Beach District and 2nd team All-region honors Career: During his four year high school career, Horst as a sophomore and was a Freshman honorable mention Beach was named to the Regional All-American and District selection…Won varsity letters his freshman and Pennsylvania All-State Soccer teams, and was the sophomore years. Schuylkill League Player of the Year, Soccer Scholar Athlete and was named to the first team all four years…Helped his high school to the PIAA District Championship and played with FC Leeds United last season…Was named to the All-State team. A.J. Kulp

● Midfielder ● 5’8” ● Freshman ● Ephrata, PA ● Ephrata HS 19

Career: During his time at Ephrata High School, Kulp was named one of the Adidas ESP Top 150 players in the nation, was a two-time NSCAA Regional All-American, two-time Pennsylvania All-State selection, two-time EPYSA ODP player selection and a two-time MVP of the Lancaster Lebanon League…Was a three-year all- league selection while playing for Ephrata…Played for the FC Delco club last year.

15 Norfolk and

Above, a view of the Norfolk waterfront. Left, the Waterside Marketplace is a center of activity in downtown Norfolk. Right, Harbor Park, opened in 1993, is home to the Norfolk Tides, AAA affiliate of the New York Mets. Below, the Hampton Roads area was recently ranked the number one region in the south by Money magazine!

orfolk serves as the cultural, financial and business hub of the Hampton Roads Met- ropolitan Area, which comprises the N cities of Norfolk, Portsmouth, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Suffolk, Hampton, and Newport News. With a combined population of 1.5 million, the Hampton Roads area is the 27th largest Metro- politan Statistical Area in the U.S. and in 1998 was rated the number one city in the south by Money magazine. Founded in 1682, Norfolk has been a gateway to Virginia for commerce and industry since the early 17th century. The city is home to the Norfolk Naval Base, the world’s largest naval installation and homeport to the U.S. Navy’s Atlantic and Mediterranean fleets; the MacArthur Memorial, the final resting place of famed General Douglas MacArthur; The Chrysler Museum, an art museum showcasing the collection of Walter P. Chrysler, son of the auto company founder; and Norfolk Botanical Garden, host to many celebrations including the International Aza- lea Festival. Norfolk’s 12,000-seat Harbor Park is home to the Norfolk Tides, the top minor league team in the New York Mets organization. Waterside marketplace and Town Point Park create a lively waterfront activity center for outdoor concerts, many festivals, and dining with the best sunset views around. 16 Hampton Roads

Above, Nauticus, the National Maritime Museum and home for the US Battleship Wisconsin, is a popular destination for visitors. Far right, Norfolk hosted OpSail 2000, a tall ships festival which brought in millions of visitors. Near upper right, MacArthur Memorial in Norfolk is the resting place of Gen. Douglas MacArthur, and contains many of the general’s personal awards and belongings. Near lower right, the Virginia Marine Science Museum in Virginia Beach recently opened two new wings and a 3-D IMAX theatre. Far lower right, the sand castle competition is the highlight of the annual Neptune festival in Virginia Beach. Bottom of the page, the concert stage at Town Point Park is the site of numerous free concerts and festivals during the entire year.

Tall ship cruises, harborside shops, the quaint whistle of the Elizabeth River Ferry, the new Nauticus, one of the nation’s premier maritime museums and learning centers, and a climate ranked among the nation's most desirable, all make Norfolk an exciting location for university studies. Just 20 minutes from downtown Norfolk is the oceanfront resort city of Virginia Beach, with its miles of beaches on the Atlantic Ocean and the Chesapeake Bay. Hampton is home to NASA’s Langley research center as well as Langley Air Force Base, while New- port News is the location of the Newport News Ship- building Company, manufacturer of the Nimitz-class aircraft carriers. Just 45 minutes west of Norfolk is the Jamestown- Williamsburg-Yorktown triangle, where, it can be said, the nation was founded, debated its independence, and then won it on the battlefield. Also within an easy drive are Richmond, the capi- tal of Virginia and former capital of the Confederacy during the Civil War; the North Carolina Outer Banks, including the Wright Brothers Memorial at Kitty Hawk and the Cape Hatteras National Seashore; and the nation’s capital in Washington, D.C.

PHOTOS PROVIDED BY NORFOLK CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU AND THE VIRGINIA BEACH CONVENTION AND VISITORS DEVELOPMENT OFFICE. 17 This is Old Dominion ld Dominion University opened its doors 74 years ago in an abandoned O public school building with 206 students as the Norfolk Division of the Col- lege of William and Mary, and became an independent institution in 1962. Today, the University enrolls more than 20,000 stu- dents, including approximately 6,500 graduate students. Its 188-acre Norfolk campus is the primary hub of activity, along with four additional higher education cen- ters (Virginia Beach Center, Peninsula Cen- ter, Tri-Cities Center and Northern Virginia Center). Old Dominion is a versatile university, committed to its students, their education, personal development and overall success. The University offers 66 bachelor's degrees, 67 master's degrees, two education special- ist degrees and 24 doctoral degrees, and consists of six colleges: Arts and Letters, Business and Public Administration, Edu- cation, Engineering and Technology, Health Sciences, and Sciences. Students who live on campus may choose residence hall or apartment-style liv- ing. The attractive Webb University Center provides a food court, video arcade, lounge areas and other shops to serve the student body. gley Research Center, and its Oceanography, In the classroom, Old Dominion stu- Old Dominion is one of Virginia's lead- Nuclear Physics, and Modeling and Simu- dents continue to earn high marks. Former ing Ph.D. research institutions. The total lation programs are among the best in the student-athlete and 1996 graduate value of its research activity is about $50 nation. Samantha Salvia became the University's million annually. The University contrib- The University Village, a 75-acre devel- first Rhodes Scholar. utes approximately $600 million a year to opment along the east side of Hampton Bou- An international leader in delivering the Hampton Roads economy and provides levard, is yet another economic spark for the interactive instructional television, the Uni- the community with a variety of programs region. The 8,600-seat Ted Constant Convo- versity operates TELETECHNET, a distance and services, including the Bank of America cation Center, which opened in the fall of learning system that offers students an op- Entrepreneurial Center, Technology Appli- 2002, is the centerpiece of the project. The portunity to earn one of 17 baccalaureate cations Center and Military Career Transi- Village also currently includes 960 modern or eight master's degrees without leaving tion Program. A leader in space-related re- apartment units for students. Plans call for their area of residence. Since its inception search, Old Dominion ranks first in the state the addition of a hotel and parking garage, in 1992, TELETECHNET has exceeded in funding from NASA for research projects. a variety of restaurants, a shopping center growth projections and is the largest tele- The University operates one of the largest with a large grocery store and research fa- vised, interactive distance learning pro- wind tunnels in the world at NASA's Lan- cilities. gram of its kind in the United States. Left, the Old Dominion University Lion in front of Webb Center. Below, the Diehn Fine and Performing Arts Center houses the theatre and music departments as well as the music collection of the late composer F. Ludwig Diehn

18 University

Old Dominion is also well known for Above, the Ted Constant Convocation Center is the site of many campus events and is the home of its international focus in both its curricula the University's men's and women's basketball programs. Below, Rollins Hall houses the admissions, and student population. More than 1,200 registrar, and financial aid offices. international students from 100 countries are enrolled at the University. The University also contributes to the cultural life of Hampton Roads by present- ing music and dance concerts, art exhibits, and annual literary and film and video fes- tivals. In addition, the President's Lecture Series brings a variety of nationally known speakers to campus each year. The University is located about 200 miles south of Washington, D.C., and is but a short drive to Virginia Beach and the Outer Banks of North Carolina.

19 Old Dominion Soccer Stadium

e built it, and they came. The Old Dominion as one of the best sites for games and tournaments, but will University Soccer Stadium has become not only also enable us to recruit the top student-athletes.” W one of the most visited sites on campus, but has The Old Dominion Soccer Stadium has also served claimed it’s fame as home to some of the biggest, most as a site for numerous prestigious events in its short history, boisterous crowds in collegiate soccer. including CAA championships and numerous state high Fans young and old regularly flock to the stadium school championships. Two summers ago, Old Dominion and its first seven seasons, the stadium has taken its place hosted the Adidas soccer camp, which brought in the best as one of the top facilities in collegiate soccer. high school soccer players from all over the country. In the The spacious facility is located at the corner of 43rd summer of 1994, the stadium served as the site of the U.S. Street and Parker Avenue, directly across the street from the U-23 team’s 1-0 win over Trinidad and Tobago, which was Bud Metheny Baseball Complex, and boasts seating for 4,000 broadcast back to the Caribbean. In June of 1992, Old fans. Permanent lighting illuminates action at night, and Dominion hosted the United States Olympics Soccer team fans also appreciate the array of refreshments available at vs. the Bermuda National Team in the final warm-up for the concession booth, located under the west stands, along the U.S. prior to the Olympics in Barcelona. A stadium- with restrooms. record crowd of 3,933 watched the match. Old Dominion Sitting atop the west stands is a modern, fully- has also hosted back-to-back NCAA Tournament games, in equipped press box, which allows media to view the game, 2002 and 2003. and file their stories immediately afterward. Separate areas In addition to the stadium, a newly constructed for television cameras are also available. state-of-the-art practice field has been opened for the The field itself is Bermuda grass with a sand base, Monarchs teams. Located behind the stadium and across and conforms to both NCAA and international standards. Powhatan Avenue, the practice facility is fenced-in, irrigated “The is one of the best ‘soccer only’ facilities in the and of the finest quality, with Tifton 419 Bermuda grass. country,” said Head Coach Alan Dawson. “One of the first Coming in 2005, the Monarchs Soccer Programs built specifically for soccer, and still one of the premier will boast brand new locker rooms and office facilities facilities in the country. A facility like ours helps us not only located overlooking the stadium. This state-of-the-art building will complete the ODU Soccer Stadium as one of the finest of its kind in the nation. 20 Athletic Facilities ld Dominion University prides itself on being able to offer the student-athlete the best possible facilities to achieve maximum O potential on the field. The Intercollegiate Athletics Building, opened in 1991, houses both strength training and athletic training facilities which are always at the full disposal of the stu- dent-athlete. The athletic training room ranks as one of the top facilities in the nation, providing the best in modern re- habilitation equipment for athletic injuries. The seven- foot deep running pool, located in the hydrotherapy room, along with three whirlpools and one jacuzzi, pro- vides Old Dominion athletes the opportunity to rehabili- tate through exercise in water. The room also includes nine training tables, a Kinkom rehabilitation machine, and a traction table. The athletic training room is under the supervision of Head Athletic Trainer Marty Bradley, M.S., A.T., C., and his two full-time assistants, along with a staff of graduate assistants and student assistants. Adjacent to the athletic training room is the strength training room, built specifically for student-athlete use. Above, the Constant Convocation Center opened in the fall of 2002. The room includes the most up-to-date in nautilus and free weight equipment, all under the supervision of Strength and Conditioning Coach Andy Zucker. The Intercollegiate Athletics Building also houses the administrative staff including the athletic director, the associate and assistant athletic directors, the offices of sports information, athletic development and promo- tions, and the ticket office. The Athletic Support Office and Buildings and Grounds offices are also located in the Intercollegiate Athletics Building. The Intercollegiate Athletics Building is located in the middle of the athletic quadrant of the campus that includes the 4,000 seat Old Dominion Soccer Stadium, the 2,500 seat Bud Metheny Baseball Complex, the 15- court Tennis Complex that includes a 1,000 seat champi- onship court, and the Health & Physical Education Build- ing. The H&PE Building contains the 5,500 seat Old Do- minion Fieldhouse, home to the Lady Monarch basket- ball and Old Dominion wrestling programs, and the J.C. “Scrap” Chandler Pool. Foreman Field, located behind Rollins Hall on the northern edge of the campus, is home to the field hockey and lacrosse teams, as well as being the site for much of Old Dominion’s intramural sports program. The fourth largest stadium in the Commonwealth of Virginia (be- hind Virginia Tech’s Lane Stadium,Virginia’s Scott Sta- Above, the Strength and Conditioning Room provides Old dium and Norfolk State's Price Stadium), 20,000 seat Fore- Dominion student-athletes with the most modern of man Field regularly hosts local high school and college workout facilities under the direct supervision of Strength football games. and Conditioning Coach Andy Zucker and his assistants. The Old Dominion Sailing Center, located on the Left, a student-athlete works out in the Hydrotherapy Elizabeth River on the western side of the campus, was Room in the Athletic Training Center. A staff of three full- opened in 1985, and serves as home to the Monarch sail- time and eight graduate student athletic trainers serve ing program. Featuring a 200-foot pier and launch area, the preventative and rehabilitative sports medicine needs the Sailing Center also has storage space for the entire of the student-athletes. Old Dominion fleet of FJ’s, Lasers, 420’s, and various support craft, locker rooms, classrooms, workshop, and office space for the sailing coaches. The University opened the Ted Constant Convocation Center in 2002. The state-of-the-art 8,600 seat building hosts all home men's and women's basketball games, graduation, concerts and other University events.

21 Academic Support

he Old Dominion University Athletic Department offers a wide variety of programs to assist the academic and personal well-being of the student- athlete. These programs are overseen by TTianna Scott, the academic advisor for stu- dent-athletes, and April Brecht, the Life Skills Pro- gram director. Their offices are located in Webb Cen- ter, within convenient access to all the student-ath- letes. Among the programs available to all student- athletes: SUPERVISED STUDY SESSIONS Supervised study sessions are required for all fresh- men and transfer student-athletes, and organized accord- ing to the needs of the individual for upperclassmen. Study sessions meet in a variety of locations across campus, for a minimum of two hours per night, three nights per week.

”RISING STARS”- THE LIFE SKILLS PROGRAM Above, Life-Skills The Life Skills Program provides a comprehensive ap- Coordinator April Brecht proach to the overall academic and personal development and Academic Advisor of student-athletes at Old Dominion University. With the Tianna Scott at their student-athlete welfare in mind, the Athletic Department office in Webb University provides: Center. The Academic Commitment ◆ Academic, major choice and career counseling Relations, Social Development, and Fiscal The Career Development ◆ Academic advising - class scheduling and eligibility Responsibility. Commitment review ◆ Networking and appropriate campus ◆ Networking and referral are provided in co- ◆ Supervised study sessions three times per week program promotion operation with our career management center ◆ Tutoring program by request and/or referral ◆ Rising Stars newsletter - includes study ◆ Educational programming and career ◆ Computer room with specialized programs (Writing skills, motivational and inspirational items, ◆ ELS 121 (Career Planning) class Tutor, Grammar Tools, Quatro, Word Perfect, etc.) plus a calendar of coming events ◆ Interview, cover letter, and resume techniques ◆ Study Group sessions ◆ SAMs Program - Student-Athlete Men- ◆ ELS 101 (University Orientation) class tor Peer Advising Program ◆ Academic progress/attendance reports during each The Service Commitment semester ◆ Monarch ReachOut service project refer- ◆ Rising Stars monthly Life Skills newsletter articles rals and contacts ◆ Complementary campus programs (Instant study ◆ Campus/community service through skills) SAMs and class credit ◆ Retention groups, probation groups, assessment instru- ments ◆ Intervention - illness, injuries, etc. reported to SAM - faculty The Athletic Commitment STUDENT ATHLETE MENTORS ◆ Title IX information, coach and support staff standards of conduct, the coach as a teacher, departmental opera- The Student-Athlete Mentor (SAM) is a peer advising program. SAMs are tions and standards, and athletic support program infor- nomimated and elected by their peers. The goal is for each athletic team to have mation ◆ at least one SAM. A SAM on the team can help provide leadership, help team- Team-building and conflict resolution intervention/ mates with problems, provide support for freshmen, answer questions, and re- training The Personal Development Commitment fer teammates to University support services. SAMs are elected on a yearly ◆ Educational programming for new students and teams: basis and any upperclassmen may be chosen by their peers to serve as a SAM. Understanding Values, Appreciating Diversity, Personal All SAMs participate in a training program following elections. Health (Sexual Responsibility, Alcohol Choices, Stress Management), Interpersonal Communication and Media

22 Administration ATHLETIC DIRECTORY (757) AREA CODE Dr. Roseann Runte UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT President: Dr. Roseann Runte ...... 683-3159 Dr. Roseann Runte became the seventh president of Old Dominion Uni- versity in the summer of 2001. Runte, who has 21 years of experience as a Athletic Director: Dr. Jim Jarrett ...... 683-3369 professor and academic administrator, became only the third woman to head a four-year college or university in Virginia. Runte previously served Associate Athletic Director: Deb Polca ...... 683-3358 as president of Victoria University in Toronto, principal of Glendon Col- lege (York University), president of Université Sainte-Anne in Nova Scotia Associate Athletic Director: Debbie H. Byrne ...... 683-3359 and assistant dean of arts and science at Dalhousie University. She is an associate to the Council of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons Assistant A.D./Finance: Mark Brown ...... 683-3569 of Canada, a board member of the National Bank of Canada and a mem- ber of the executive committee of the Club of Rome. Runte has served as Assistant A.D./Event Management: Greg Smith ...... 683-6026 president of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO for two terms, as president of the Hu- Compliance Coordinator: Jeff Wilson ...... 683-5474 manities Federation of Canada, as a Sports Information Director: Carol R. Hudson, Jr...... 683-3372 member of the advisory board of the National Library, as founding president of ACFAS- Asst. Sports Information Director: Kim Zivkovich ...... 683-3372 Toronto, as a board member for the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia and of the board of Associated Director of Athletic Publications: Tina Price ...... 683-3372 Medical Services, as chair of the board of the Foundation for International Training, and as Asst. Athletic Ticket Manager: Scott Lowery ...... 683-4444 vice chair of the board of the Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art. The author of five volumes of Athletic Camp Director: Mindy Seidel-Adler ...... 683-4358 creative writing, she has edited nine books and has written more than 100 articles and book chap- Dir. of Sales & Corp. Sponsorships: Chuck Gray ...... 683-3372 ters on topics ranging from literature and edu- cation to economic and cultural development. Runte has a Ph.D. in French from the University of Dir. of Game Atmosphere & Student Att.: David Weisser ...... 683-3372 Kansas and has received honorary degrees from Acadia University, Memorial University and the universities of Timisoara and Arad in Romania. She received the prix François Coppée from the Academic Counselor: Tianna Scott ...... 683-3699 Académie française as well as the Palmes Académiques and the Order of Merit from the French government, the Order of Canada, the Queen Elizabeth Jubilee medal, and is a Fellow of the Royal Asst. Academic Advisor: April Brecht ...... 683-3709 Society of Canada and of the World Academy of Arts and Sciences. Equipment Room Manager: Andrea Allen ...... 683-3371 Head Athletic Trainer: Marty Bradley ...... 683-3383 Dr. Jim Jarrett A THLETIC DIRECTOR Asst. Athletic Trainer: Scott Johnson...... 683-3397 When Jim Jarrett arrived on the campus of Old Dominion University in the Asst. Athletic Trainer: fall of 1967 as a Health and Physical Education professor, he had little idea that Tina Lathrop ...... 683-5444 his tenure would be counted in decades. During that time span, he has led the program from a well respected NCAA Division II member to a nationally re- Director of Recreational Sports: spected Division I power that has captured 25 national championships. Dr. Kevin Marbury ...... 683-3384 Jarrett began his 34th year as athletic director in 2004, taking over the reigns Athletic Faculty Representative: in 1970 when Bud Metheny stepped down from that position. As one of the Dr. Janis Sanchez-Hucles ...... 683-4995 youngest athletic directors in the nation at that time, Jarrett quickly began to Baseball Coach: make a name for himself and ODU. He committed early on to a philosophy of Jerry Meyers ...... 683-4360 “selective excellence,” whereby the department “selected” its competitive sports Men’s Basketball Coach: and committed itself financially, academically and competitively to the sports Blaine Taylor ...... 683-3362 it felt the University could best excel. In 1974, Jarrett became the first athletic director in the state of Virginia to Women’s Basketball Coach: award grant-in-aids to women student-athletes. It was a bold move at the time Wendy Larry ...... 683-3401 for a young athletic Field Hockey Coach: director and equally Beth Anders ...... 683-3785 young University, but one that paid great dividends. Golf Coach: Just five years later, in 1979, the Lady Monarchs won Dr. Murray Rudisill ...... 683-3300 the first of three national championships in women’s Women’s Golf Coach: basketball, and led the nation in attendance. Pat Kotten ...... 683-4553 Under his leadership, the department’s athletic venues have tripled and are considered state of the Lacrosse Coach (W): art facilities. They include the construction of the Sue Stahl ...... 683-4541 2,500-seat Bud Metheny Baseball Complex in 1983, Sailing Coach (M&W): the Sailing Center in 1981, the Outdoor Tennis Com- Mitch Brindley ...... 683-3387 plex which has been expanded to 15 lighted courts Men’s Soccer Coach: and a championship court with seating for 1,000- Alan Dawson ...... 683-4360 plus, the 4,000-seat ODU Soccer Stadium in 1990, Women’s Soccer Coach: renovations to Foreman Field, which included Joe Pereira ...... 683-5343 Astro-Turf and new locker room facilities, and the 8,600 seat Constant Convocation Center. Swimming Coach (M&W): For all his efforts, Jarrett’s has been honored many times by national and local groups. Most recently, Carol Withus ...... 683-5752 Jarrett was named the 2003 Southeast Regional Athletic Director of the Year by NACDA. Other awards Tennis Coach (M&W): receive include the Collegiate Director’s Award from the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association, and the Darryl Cummings ...... 683-5312 Norfolk Sports Club Man of the Year. He served as a member of the NCAA Women’s Basketball Committee Wrestling Coach: and is a past president of the Colonial Athletic Association and the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame. Steve Martin ...... 683-5311 An avid golfer, Jarrett and his wife Sugie reside in Norfolk. Strength & Conditioning Coach: Andy Zucker ...... 683-5313 23 2003 Review Old Dominion University Men's Soccer Longwood respectively, the Monarchs ollowing the team's 10-9-1 performance in 2002, few would have predicted claimed their second tournament title of the season. McEachron was once again named the record-breaking year 2003 became F the Tournament MVP. Full of confidence, for ODU men’s soccer. The Monarchs were ODU next faced Wake Forest, then ranked #5 the last Division I team in the country to be defeated, improving to a school-record 14-0, in the country. The Monarchs had faced Wake Forest three times in the previous two years, starting Colonial Athletic Association play 6- 0 for the first time since 1991 and advancing losing the last two by one goal each time. This time, things would go differently as ODU to the second round of the NCAA Men’s Col- lege Cup for the second year in a row—and won 2-0 to improve to 6-0-0. Going into their 10th game of the second time in program history. ODU re- corded nine straight shutouts to start the sea- season against Virginia Commonwealth, the Monarch defense had not allowed a goal all son before finally allowing a goal in the first half at home against Virginia Commonwealth season. That streak ended in the first half against VCU as the Rams took a quick 1-0 lead and achieved a #2 ranking by Soccer America throughout the month of October. before the Monarchs bounced back to win the contest 2-1. The Monarch winning streak Senior Goalkeeper Sam Cameron (Raleigh, NC) had a career year, recording a extended to 14, as the team celebrated their best start in program history, before falling career-high 10 shutouts—tied for the CAA lead—and allowing only 14 goals the entire to James Madison 3-2. ODU was also 6-0 in the CAA for the first time since 1991. The season. Cameron was named the CAA Player of the Week for the week of September 22. Monarchs subsequently fell to George Mason 1-0 two days later. ODU’s first conference loss Junior defender Trevor McEachron (Woodbridge, VA) was twice named CAA of the year was further marred with the loss of two key defenders: juniors Trevor Player of the Week (9/8 and 9/15) and named the National Player of the Week by College McEachron (against George Mason) and Ian Kaila (against JMU), both with torn ACL Soccer News. All-time Monarch scoring leader Attila Vendegh (Bratislava, Slovakia) injuries. The Monarchs ended their regular season with a 1-1 tie against William & Mary. ended his four-year career with 56 goals, 22 assists and 134 points (10 goals, 6 assists and ODU earned a first-round bye in the CAA Tournament after securing a #2 seed 26 points in 2003) and was named Co-Player of the Week in the CAA (along with VCU’s with a 6-2-1 conference record. The Monarchs were defeated 1-0 by a streaking George Matthew Delicate) for the week of October 27. Sophomore Brian Cvilikas (Highlands Mason squad for their fourth straight Ranch, CO) had a breakout year, recording a tournament loss. ODU was however, career-high 10 goals and one assist to place rewarded for its impressive season with a second on the team in points with 21. He was home first round game in the NCAA Men’s named CAA Player of the Week for the week College Cup for the second year in a row. The of October 13. Junior transfer Kevin Monarchs defeated the N.C. State Wolfpack McMenamin (West Springfield, MA) scored 6-3 in the first round of the tournament to nine goals and two assists for 20 points to advance to the second round for the second Senior Kevon Harris led all midfielders place third on the team. consecutive year. ODU squared off against the with 13 points in 2003 McEachron was named the CAA #2 seed Maryland in College Park, MD. A 2- Defensive Player of the Year, the first Monarch 1 loss to the Terrapins ended the Monarchs ever to receive the award and Head Coach season. Alan Dawson was named the CAA Coach of the Year for the third time in the past five years. Named to the first team All-CAA were Attila Vendegh, Trevor McEachron and Kevon Harris. Brian Cvilikas and Sam Cameron were named to the second team. OLD DOMINION 2003 HONORS After a 4-0 season-opening win over St. Francis (PA), the Monarchs traveled Trevor McEachron: Attila Vendegh: west to participate in the Adidas-Cal Legacy NSCAA All-American First Team NSCAA All-American Second Team Classic Tournament in Berkeley, CA, which CAA Defender of the Year CAA Scholar-Athlete featured 19th ranked Cal-Berkeley and fifth- All-CAA First Team VaSID All-State First Team ranked Stanford, last year’s NCAA tournament finalist. ODU defeated Cal- VaSID All-State First Team All-CAA First Team Berkeley the first day of the tournament 1-0 All-South Atlantic First Team Kevon Harris: off a Kevin McMenamin goal. The Monarchs College Soccer News All-American 1st Team All-CAA First Team next defeated Stanford 1-0 for it’s first win Team MVP Alan Dawson: over a top-five team since Coach Alan Dawson’s first season in 1997, when ODU Brian Cvilikas NSCAA South Atlantic Region Coach of the Year defeated third-ranked Virginia 1-0 in Norfolk. All-CAA Second Team CAA Coach of the Year Defender Trevor McEachron was named the Sam Cameron Tournament MVP and ODU won the All-CAA Second Team tournament. ODU came into their home tournament, the Stihl Soccer Classic, with a 3-0-0 record and a #6 national ranking. After 1-0 and 6-0 wins over American and 24 2003 Final Statistics Old Dominion University Men's Soccer HOME: 10-0-0 AWAY: 4-2-1 NEUTRAL: 1-1-0 REGION: 8-4-1 STATE: 2-3-1 COLONIAL: 6-2-1 Dawson at ODU: 73-47-9 (7th season) Dawson Career: 202-77-19 (16th season)

No. Player GP/GS G A PTS Shots GWG g/a/pts(Career) 8 Attila Vendegh 20/17 10 6 26 61 0 56/22/134 20 Brian Cvilikas 20/17 10 1 21 44 3 12/1/25 10 Kevin McMenamin 20/13 9 2 20 31 2 9/2/20 9 Kevon Harris 20/19 4 5 13 31 1 7/13/27 15 Josh Hill 19/11 0331300/3/3 7Trevor McEachron 17/16 4081205/1/11 12 Ross Mackenzie 19/4 248802/4/8 17 Gregg Mottinger 20/20 022900/2/2 5 Michael Goncalves 12/1 113703/4/10 18 Ado Fazlic 19/15 022700/3/3 16 Gianni Cimini 19/7 124602/3/7 2 Bamidele Oluwalana 19/3 204613/0/6 3 Kyle Hartley 14/2 226505/3/13 6Ryan Sniegoski 19/9 113503/6/12 4 Eric Hoglund 20/10 011400/1/1 11 Belus Vendegh 8/0 011301/1/3 14 Brian Kluckman 20/20 000403/1/7 13 Ian Kaila 15/15 000100/0/0 21 John McClain 6/0 000100/0/0 24 Matt Wilkinson 5/0 000000/0/0 19 Kyle Newcomer 3/0 000000/0/0 Totals ODU 20 46 33 125 258 7 OPP 20 14 12 40 204 3 GOALKEEPERS GP/GS MIN SAVES SA% SO GA AVG 22 Sam Cameron 20/20 1804 76 .844 10 14 0.70 01 John Connelly 1/0 16 0 .000 0 0 0.00 ODU Totals 20 1820 76 .844 11 14 0.69 OPP Totals 20 1820 96 .676 2 46 2.27 Score By Halves ODU 15-31=46 OPP 6-8=14 2003 Monarch Schedule and Results

Aug. 29 W, 4-0 vs. St. Francis Oct. 12 W, 2-1 vs. VCU* Sept. 5 W, 1-0 @ California^ Oct. 17 W, 4-1 @ Drexel* Sept. 7 W, 1-0 vs. Stanford^ Oct. 18 W, 1-0 @ Hofstra* Sept. 12 W, 1-0 vs. American% Oct. 24 W, 3-0 vs. Towson* Sept. 14 W, 6-0 vs. Longwood% Oct. 25 W, 3-1 vs. Delaware* Sept. 21 W, 2-0 vs. Wake Forest Oct. 31 L, 2-3 @ James Madison* Sept. 24 W, 2-0 vs. UMBC Nov. 2 L, 0-1 @ George Mason* Sept. 27 W, 5-0 @ Campbell Nov. 8 T, 1-1 @ William and Mary(2ot) Oct. 10 W, 1-0 vs. UNC-Wilmington* Nov. 14 L, 0-1 vs. George Mason! Nov. 22 W, 6-3 vs. NC State# Nov. 26 L, 1-2 @ Maryland# % denotes Old Dominion Stihl Soccer Classic (ODU) * CAA contest ^ denotes Cal-Berkeley Tournament ! denotes CAA Tournament # denotes NCAA Tournament 25 2003 Game Results Game #1 Game #8 Game #15 ODU 4, St. Francis (PA) 0 ODU 5, Campbell 0 JMU 3, ODU 2 Norfolk, VA, August 29, 2003 Buies Creek, NC, September 27, 2003 Harrisonburg, VA, October 31, 2003 STF: 0-0=0 ODU: 2-3=5 ODU: 1-1=2 ODU: 0-4=4 CU : 0-0=0 JMU: 1-2=3 Attendance: 345 Attendance: 267 Attendance: 391 Goals: Goals: Goals: ODU 49:41 Cvilikas, from Hartley ODU 28:43 Harris, from Fazlic ODU 41:27 Cvilikas, from A. Vendegh ODU 54:42 McEachron, from Mackenzie ODU 33:42 A. Vendegh JMU 44:32 Overton, form Morsink ODU 59:55 Mackenzie, from Hoglund & Hartley ODU 54:01 McEachron, from Mackenzie JMU 49:51 Overton, from Fulk & Sheridan ODU 64:54 A. Vendegh, from Harris ODU 66:00 Harris JMU 83:02 Toten, from Naguin Corners: STF 3, ODU 7 ODU 76:23 A. Vendegh ODU 87:37 A. Vendegh Saves: STF 7, ODU 3 Corners: ODU 6, CU 3 Corners: ODU 3, JMU 7 Saves: ODU 2, CU 5 Saves: ODU 4, JMU 4 Game #2 ODU 1, California 0 Game #9 Game #16 Berkeley, CA, September 5, 2003 ODU 1, UNC-Wilmington 0 GMU 1, ODU 0 Cal-Berkeley Tournament Norfolk, VA, October 10, 2003 Fairfax, VA, November 2, 2003 ODU: 1-0=1 UNCW: 0-0=0 ODU: 0-0=0 CAL: 0-0=0 ODU: 0-1=1 GMU: 0-1=1 Attendance: 100 Attendance: 638 Attendance: 338 Goals: Goals: Goals: ODU 3:50 McMenamin, from Harris ODU 81:25 Harris GMU 50:42 Mendy, from Kurspahic Corners: ODU 3, CAL 4 Corners: UNCW 3, ODU 6 Corners: ODU 3, GMU 8 Saves: ODU 4, CAL 0 Saves: UNCW 8, ODU 3 Saves: ODU 2, GMU 4 Game #3 Game #10 Game #17 ODU 1, Stanford 0 ODU 2, Va. Commonwealth 1 ODU 1, William and Mary 1 (2ot) Berkeley, CA, September 7, 2003 Norfolk, VA, October 12, 2003 Williamsburg, VA, November 8, 2003 Cal-Berkeley Tournament VCU: 1-0=1 ODU: 1-0-0-0=1 ODU: 1-0=0 ODU: 0-2=2 WM: 1-0-0-0=1 STAN: 0-0=0 Attendance: 713 Attendance: 800 Attendance: 50 Goals: Goals: Goals: VCU 19:30 Delicate, from Reed ODU 14:28 Cvilikas ODU 44:49 Oluwalana ODU 55:53 Cvilikas, from Hill WM 29:43 Scherder, from Hinkle Corners: ODU 2, STAN 4 ODU 62:38 Cvilikas, from Harris Corners: ODU 9, WM 5 Saves: ODU 3, STAN 3 Corners: VCU 5, ODU 2 Saves: ODU 4, WM 4 Saves: VCU 5, ODU 3 Game #4 Game #18 ODU 1, American 0 Game #11 GMU 1, ODU 0 Norfolk, VA, September 12, 2003 / ODU Stihl Soccer Classic ODU 4, Drexel 1 Richmond, VA (VCU), November 14, 2003 AU: 0-0=0 Philadelphia, PA, October 17, 2003 CAA Tournament Quarterfinals ODU: 0-1=1 ODU: 0-4=4 GMU: 1-0=1 Attendance: 843 DU: 0-1=1 ODU: 0-0=0 Goals: Attendance: 50 Attendance: 443 ODU 84:40 McEachron, from A. Vendegh Goals: Goals: Corners: AU 6, ODU 3 ODU 52:48 Oluwalana, from Harris GMU 2:33 Mendy, from Weitz Saves: AU 4, ODU 4 ODU 59:17 McEachron, from A. Vendegh Corners: GMU 1, ODU 1 ODU 79:52 McMenamin, from Cimini Saves: GMU 3, ODU 1 Game #5 ODU 81:30 McMenamin, from Cvilikas ODU 6, Longwood 0 DU 87:11 Caldwell, from Sadler Game #19 Norfolk, VA, September 14, 2003 / ODU Stihl Soccer Classic Corners: ODU 7, DU 6 ODU 6, NC State 3 ODU: 1-5=6 Saves: ODU 5, DU 6 Norfolk, VA, November 23, 2002 LONG: 0-0=0 NCAA Tournament First Round Attendance: 584 Game #12 NCSU: 0-3=3 Goals: ODU 1, Hofstra 0 ODU: 2-4=6 ODU 22:52 A. Vendegh Hempstead, NY, October 18, 2003 Attendance: 1,131 ODU 49:05 A. Vendegh ODU: 1-0=1 Goals: ODU 55:16 Hartley from Fazlic HU: 0-0=0 ODU 23:59 Hartley, from A. Vendegh ODU 64:50 McMenamin, from Goncalves Attendance: 941 ODU 41:26 McMenamin, from B. Vendegh ODU 75:46 McMenamin Goals: ODU 49:05 Harris, from A. Vendegh ODU 84:27 Cimini, from McMenamin ODU 25:32 McMenamin ODU 49:25 Mackenzie Corners: LONG 1, ODU 8 Corners: ODU 8, HU 10 NCSU 63:58 Peria (PK) Saves: LONG 4, ODU 1 Saves: ODU 5, HU 5 ODU 64:28 A. Vendegh, from Cimini ODU 68:32 McMenamin, from Harris Game #6 Game #13 NCSU 88:31 Queeley ODU 2, Wake Forest 0 ODU 3, Towson 0 NCSU 89:47 Kawase Norfolk, VA, September 21, 2003 Norfolk, VA, October 24, 2003 Corners: NCSU 1, ODU 4 WAKE: 0-0=0 TOW: 0-0=0 Saves: NCSU 3, ODU 5 ODU: 0-2=0 ODU: 1-2=3 Attendance: 654 Attendance: 859 Game #20 Scoring: Goals: Maryland 2, ODU 1 ODU 65:34 Cvilikas ODU 9:37 Cvilikas College Park, MD, November 26, 2003 ODU 88:28 A. Vendegh ODU 52:50 Cvilikas, from McMenamin NCAA Touenament Second Round Corners: WAKE 9, ODU 5 ODU 77:36 Cvilikas, from A. Vendegh ODU: 0-1=1 Saves: WAKE 8, ODU 7 Corners: TOW 4, ODU 6 MD: 1-1=2 Saves: TOW 4, ODU 4 Attendance: 2,114 Game #7 Goals: ODU 2, UMBC ) Game #14 MD 31:19 Garey, from Ibrahim & Thompson Norfolk, VA, September 24, 2003 ODU 3, Delaware 1 MD 75:19 Goodsen, from Marcantonio UMBC: 0-0=0 Norfolk, VA, October 25,2003 ODU 89:59 Sniegoski ODU: 1-1=2 DEL: 1-0=1 Corners: ODU 10, MD 4 Attendance: 538 ODU: 3-0=3 Goal Saves: ODU 6, MD 5 ODU 37:41 Cvilikas, from Sniegoski Attendance: 669 ODU 76:13 McMenamin Goals: Corners: UMBC 5, ODU 2 ODU 2:01 Goncalves, from Hill Saves: UMBC 8, ODU 8 DEL 9:59 Glanden ODU 12:12 A. Vendegh, from Mottinger ODU 15:06 A. Vendegh, from Hill Corners: DEL 2, ODU 3 Saves: DEL 6, ODU 2

26 2004 Opponents

CAMPBELL RUTGERS AMERICAN Wednesday, Sept. 1 Sunday, Sept. 12 Friday, Sept. 24 Old Dominion Soccer Stadium ODU Soccer Stadium / STIHL Classic Albert-Daly Field Nickname: Fighting Camels Nickname: Scarlet Knights Nickname: Eagles Colors: Orange & Black Colors: Scarlet Colors: AU Red, White and Blue 2003 Record/Conference: 4-14-1 (2-7-0 A-Sun) 2003 Record/Conference: 11-7-4 (5-2-3 Big East) 2003 Record/Conference: 7-9-1 (2-5-0 Patriot) Coach (Record/Years): Doug Hess (10-15-1/ Coach (Record/Years): Bob Reasso (319-142-62/25 Coach (Record/Years): Todd West (40-33-7/4 2 years) years) years) Soccer Field: Eakes Athletic Complex (1000) Soccer Field: Yurcak Field (5,000) Soccer Field: Reeves Field (1,000) SID Contact: Stan Cole SID Contact: Doug Drablik SID Contact: Shaun May SID Phone: 910-893-1331 SID Phone: 732-445-4200 SID Phone: 202-885-3030 SID Fax: 910-893-1330 SID Fax: 732-445-3063 SID Fax: 202-885-3033 Web site: www.GoCamels.com Web site: www.ScarletKnights.com Web site: www.AUEagles.com

DAVIDSON UMBC HARTWICK Saturday, Sept. 4 Saturday, Sept. 18 Sunday, Sept. 26 Old Dominion Soccer Stadium UMBC Soccer Stadium Albert-Daly Field Nickname: Wildcats Nickname: Retrievers Nickname: Hawks Colors: Red and Black Colors: Black and Gold with Red Colors: Royal Blue and White 2003 Record/Conference: 15-6-2 (6-1-0/ 2003 Record/Conference: 10-5-3 (5-1-3/1st American 2003 Record/Conference: 15-2-1 (3-1-1 1st Southern) East) Atlantic Soccer Conference) Coach (Record/Years): Matt Spear (36-20-6 Coach (Record/Years): Pete Caringi, (320-110-29/23 Coach (Record/Years): Ian McIntyre (15-2-1/2 /3 years) years) years) Soccer Field: Alumni Stadium (2,000) Soccer Field: UMBC Soccer Stadium (1,500) Soccer Field: Elmore Field (3,000) SID Contact: Erica Madden SID Contact: Steve Levy SID Contact: Mike Chilson SID Phone: 704-894-2931 SID Phone: 410-455-2197 SID Phone: 607-431-4703 SID Fax: 704-894-2636 SID Fax: 410-455-3994 SID Fax: 607-431-4720 Web site: www.davidson.edu/athletics Web site: www.umbcretrievers.com Web site: www.hartwick.edu/x2320.xml

NAVY NORTH CAROLINA UNC WILMINGTON Friday, Sept. 10 Tuesday, Sept. 21 Friday, Oct. 1 ODU Soccer Stadium / STIHL Classic Old Dominion Soccer Stadium UNCW Soccer Stadium

Nickname: Midshipmen Nickname: Tarheels Nickname: Seahawks Colors: Navy Blue & Gold Colors: Carolina Blue & White Colors: Teal, Gold & Navy 2003 Record/Conference: 5-10-1 (3-4-0 Patriot) 2003 Record/Conference: 12-4-4 (2-3-1/4th ACC) 2003 Record/Conference: 10-7-3 (4-4-2 CAA) Coach (Record/Years): Dr. Greg Myers Coach (Record/Years): (188- Coach (Record/Years): Aidan Heaney (43-48- (225-183-58/28 years) 103-18/15 seasons) 3/5 years) Soccer Field: Glenn Warner Soccer Field: Fetzer Field Soccer Field: UNCW Soccer Stadium (2,000) SID Contact: Kelli Sheesley SID Contact: John Martin SID Contact: Tom Riordan SID Phone: 410-293-2700 x 174 SID Phone: 919-962-0084 SID Phone: 910-962-4099 SID Fax: 410-293-8954 SID Fax: 919-962-0612 SID Fax: 910-962-3686 Web site: www.NavySports.com Web site: www.TarHeelBlue.com Web site: www.UNCWsports.com

27 2004 Opponents

VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH TOWSON GEORGE MASON Sunday, Oct. 3 Friday, Oct.15 Sunday, Oct. 24 VCU Sports Backers Stadium Towson Center Field Old Dominion Soccer Stadium

Nickname: Rams Nickname: Tigers Nickname: Patriots Colors: Black and Gold Colors: Gold, Black, White Colors: Green & Gold 2003 Record/Conference: 17-5-0 (8-1-0/1st 2003 Record/Conference: 1-12-4 (1-5-3/8th 2003 Record/Conference: 11-6-6 (4-2-3/3rd CAA) CAA) CAA) Coach (Record/Years): Fran O’Leary (156-85-31/ Coach (Record/Years): Tim Sullivan (219- Coach (Record/Years): Frank Olszewski 15 years) 173-46/21 years) (207-163-31/22) Soccer Field: George Mason Stadium (5,000) Soccer Field: Sports Backers Stadium (3,250) Soccer Field: Towson Center Field SID Contact: Maggie Walsh SID Contact: Phil Stanton SID Contact: Dan O’Connell SID Phone: 703-993-3260 SID Phone: 804-828-8476 SID Phone: 410-704-3102 SID Fax: 703-993-3259 SID Fax: 804-828-9428 SID Fax: 410-704-3861 Web site: www.GoMason.com Web site: www.vcu.edu/vcurams Web site: www.TowsonTigers.com

DREXEL DELAWARE VIRGINIA Friday, Oct. 8 Saturday, Oct. 16 Wednesday, Oct. 27 Old Dominion Soccer Stadium Delaware Mini Stadium Albert-Daly Field

Nickname: Dragons Nickname: Fightin’ Blue Hens Nickname: Cavaliers Colors: Navy Blue & Gold Colors: Royal Blue & Gold Colors: Navy and Orange 2003 Record/Conference: 7-12-1 (2-7-0/8th CAA) 2003 Record/Conference: 4-11-5 (1-5-2/10th CAA) 2003 Record/Conference: 11-10-2 (3-3-0 ACC) Coach (Record/Years): Lew Meehl (199-144-41 Coach (Record/Years): Marc Samonisky (50-135- Coach (Record/Years): George Gelnovatch /20 years) 18/11) (125-45-12/9 years) Soccer Field: Drexel Field Soccer Field: Delaware Mini-Stadium Soccer Field: Klockner Stadium SID Contact: Mike Tuberosa SID Contact: Scott Selheimer SID Contact: Adam Jones SID Phone: 215-895-1591 SID Phone: 302-831-2186 SID Phone: 434-982-5500 SID Fax: 215-895-2038 SID Fax: 302-831-8653 SID Fax: 434-982-5525 Web site: www.drexel.edu/sports Web site: www.udel.edu/sportsinfo Web site: www.virginiasports.com

HOFSTRA JAMES MADISON WILLLIAM AND MARY Sunday, Oct. 10 Friday, Oct. 22 Saturday, Nov. 6 Old Dominion Soccer Stadium Old Dominion Soccer Stadium Albert-Daly Field

Nickname: Pride Nickname: Dukes Nickname: Tribe Colors: Gold, White and Blue Colors: Purple & Gold Colors: Green, Gold and Silver 2003 Record/Conference: 7-9-2 (3-4-2 7th 2003 Record/Conference: 11-7-2 (4-3-2/4th CAA) 2003 Record/Conference: 9-6-4 (4-3-2/T-4th CAA) Coach (Record/Years): Tom Martin (372-124-41/ CAA) Coach (Record/Years): Richard Nuttall (133- 27 years) Coach (Record/Years): Chris Norris (First 127-26/15) Soccer Field: JMU Soccer Field (1,860) Season) Soccer Field: Hofstra Soccer Stadium (1,600) SID Contact: Milla Sue Wisecarver Soccer Field: Albert-Daly Field SID Contact: Jeremy Kniffin SID Phone: 540-568-6154 SID Contact: Dan Wakely SID Phone: 516-463-6759 SID Fax: 540-568-3703 SID Phone: 757-221-3368 SID Fax: 516-463-5033 Web site: www.jmusports.com SID Fax: 757-221-3412 Web site: www.hofstra.edu/Athletics Web site: www.TribeAthletics.com

28 Annual Alumni Weekend

Monarch Hall of Famers The following alumni have been inducted into the University's Sports Hall of Fame from the sport of soccer.

Michael Valantassis Prince Attoh Sean Crowley 1986 Inductee 1987 Inductee 1994 Inductee 1976 Virginia Player of the Year 26 goals in 1975 1988 Sun Belt Conference MVP 1978 All-District 1975 Virginia Player of the Year 1988 Academic All-American

Former Old Dominion coach Mike Berticelli was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2002. His wife Cynda accepted the honor for her late husband.

Sean Fahey Joe Mallia Neil Paynter 1999 Inductee 1998 Inductee 2001 Inductee 1977 & 78 All-South Region Fourth All-Time NCAA 1991 All CAA & All South Region Three Time All-State Goals Against Avg. Bermuda Olympic Team 29 Soccer Classic PAST TOURNAMENT RESULTS 1976 1989 Princeton, 1, American 1 William & Mary 1, Penn State 0 (Princeton on penalty kicks, 5-4) Old Dominion 2, Army 0 Old Dominion 4, East Carolina 3 (ot) William & Mary 1, Army 1 American 7, East Carolina 3 Old Dominion 2, Penn State 1 (Consolation) (Championship-Old Dominion) Old Dominion 3, Princeton 1 1990 (Championship) Old Dominion 1, Akron 1 (ot) 1977 William & Mary 1, Vermont 0 Long Island 5, American 3 Vermont 1, Old Dominion 0 Old Dominion 4, VMI 3 Akron 1, William & Mary 0 American 5, VMI 1 (Consolation) (Championship-Akron) Long Island 5, Old Dominion 1 1991 (Championship) Old Dominion 1, Wis.-Milwaukee 0 1978 Wake Forest 3, William & Mary 0 James Madison 1, William & Mary 0 William & Mary 3, Wis.-Milwaukee 0 UNC-Wilmington 3, Wake Forest 1, Old Dominion 0 Old Dominion 2 (ot) (Championship-Wake Forest) ld Dominion University welcomed STIHL as the title Old Dominion 2, William & Mary 0 1992 sponsor for the 1997 Old Dominion Soccer Classic, continuing a (Consolation) Old Dominion 3, San Diego State 0 UNC-W 6, James Madison 3 William & Mary 0, UCLA 0 O tournament with a tradition of over 20 years. (Championship) William & Mary 2, San Diego State 1 Originally started in 1976 as the Harbor Front Kiwanis Classic, MetLife 1979 UCLA 1, Old Dominion 0 Virginia 11, Cornell 0 (Championship-William & Mary) joined the partnership in 1986 and the tournament became the "Old Old Dominion 2, Campbell 0 1993 Dominion MetLife Classic presented by the Harbor Front Kiwanis Club." Cornell 5, Campbell 0 (Consolation) Old Dominion 4, Stanford 1 Thanks to the corporate partnership with STIHL, the tournament Old Dominion 1, Virginia 0 William & Mary 1, Washington 0 (Championship) William & Mary 1, Stanford 0 continues as the "STIHL Soccer Classic, presented by the Harbor Front 1980 Old Dominion 3, Washington 2 Kiwanis Club and Sheraton Norfolk Waterside Hotel." Old Dominion 3, East Carolina 0 (Championship-Old Dominion) North Carolina 2, St. John’s 1 1994 The tournament champion receives the Queen’s Cup, originally St. John’s 2, East Carolina 0 Old Dominion 2, Air Force 1 presented to Old Dominion by British soldiers stationed in Hampton Roads. (Consolation) William & Mary 2, Robert Morris 0 North Carolina 4, Old Dominion 0 William & Mary 2, Air Force 0 The STIHL Soccer Classic continues the longstanding tradition of (Championship) Old Dominion 5, Robert Morris 0 bringing some of the top teams regionally and nationally to Old Dominion 1981 (Championship-Old Dominion) for tournament play. Past tournament fields have included Virginia, UCLA, Duke 3, West Virginia 0 1995 American 1, Old Dominion 1 Loyola 2, William and Mary 1 William and Mary, Wake Forest, Rutgers and Cal-Berkeley. (American won on penalty kicks) Old Dominion 3, Adelphi 0 This year’s tournament features American, Longwood, and William and West Virginia 1, Old Dominion 0 William and Mary 4, Adelphi 0 (Consolation) Old Dominion 1, Loyola 0 (ot) Mary. Duke 3, American 2 (Championship) (Championship-Old Dominion) Rutgers and William and Mary will face each other at 4:30 p.m. on 1982 1996 Fairleigh Dickenson 2, North #15 San Diego 3, Radford 0 Friday, Sept. 10, followed by Old Dominion and Navy at 7:00 p.m. The Carolina 1 (ot) Navy 4, Old Dominion 3 pairings on Sunday, Sept. 12, will see William and Mary battle Navy at noon, Navy 1, Old Dominion 0 (ot) Old Dominion 3, #15 San Diego 2 Old Dominion 2, North Carolina 1 Radford 3, Navy 1 with Old Dominion and Rutgers squaring off in the tourney finale at 2:30 (Consolation) (Championship-San Diego - based on p.m. Navy 2, Fairleigh Dickenson 0 goal differential) (Championship) 1997 1983 Army 2, Towson State 1 Old Dominion 3, Marshall 0 Columbia 2, Old Dominion 1 West Virginia 3, Brooklyn 1 Towson State 2, Columbia 1 Brooklyn 2, Marshall 1 (Consolation) Army 2, Old Dominion 0 Old Dominion 1, West Virginia 0 Championship -Army) (Championship) 1998 1984 Old Dominion 2, GW 0 Old Dominion 2, Coll. of Charleston 1 Old Dominion 1, Pennsylvannia 0 Long Island 1, Campbell 0 William & Mary 4, GW 1 Campbell 3, Coll. of Charleston 1 Willam & Mary 2, Penn 1 (Consolation) (Championship-William & Mary - based on goal Long Island 1, Old Dominion 0 differential) (Championship) 1999 1985 Va Tech 2, William & Mary 1 William & Mary 1, Boston College 0 Cal-Berkeley 2, Old Dominion 1 (ot) Old Dominion 5, N.C. Wesleyan 0 Cal-Berkeley 2, William & Mary 1 William & Mary 1, N.C. Wesleyan 0 Old Dominion 2, Va Tech 0 Old Dominion 2, Boston College 1 (Championship-Cal-Berkeley) (Championship-Old Dominion) 2000 1986 Princeton 2, Old Dominion 1 Old Dominion 2, LaSalle 0 Georgetown 3, William & Mary 1 William & Mary 2, Cal St.-Fullerton 0 Old Dominion 3, Georgetown 2 (ot) William & Mary 1, LaSalle 0 Princeton 2,, William & Mary 1 Old Dominion 2, Cal St.-Fullerton 0 (Championship-Princeton) (Championship-Old Dominion) 2001 1987 Old Dominion 3, Syracuse 2 Old Dominion 5, Delaware 0 (Championship - Old Dominion) William & Mary 1, Rutgers 1 (ot) 2002 Rutgers 1, Old Dominion 0 Old Dominion 2, Georgia State 1 William & Mary 5, Delaware 0 Coastal Carolina 4, William & Mary 2 (Championship-William & Mary) William & Mary 4, Coastal Carolina 0 1988 Coastal Carolina 4, Old Dominion 0 Old Dominion 6, Boston College 0 (Champions- Coastal Carolina) William & Mary 2, Ohio State 0 2003 Old Dominion 2, Ohio State 0 (ot) William & Mary 6, Longwood 0 William & Mary 4, Boston College 0 Old Dominion 1, American 0 Trevor McEachron (left) and Ryan Sniegoski (right) hold up the (Championship-Old Dominion) American 4, William & Mary 1 2003 STIHL Soccer Classic Trophy. Old Dominion 6, Longwood 0 (Champions - Old Dominion) 30 Colonial Athletic Association The Colonial Athletic Association celebrates its 20th Anniversary in 2004-05, proud of its past and excited about the future.

oasting a roster of 10 (soon to be 12) well-respected 8625 Patterson Avenue Richmond, VA 23229-6349 academic institutions, the CAA has established Office Phone: (804) 754-1616 itself as one of the nation’s top collegiate Office FAX: (804) 754-1688 B Web page: www.caasports.com conferences. On the playing field, the league has produced 16 national team champions in five different sports, 33 individual national champions, 11 national wrestling, softball, men’s and women’s tennis and men’s coaches of the year, 11 national players of the year and and women’s lacrosse. 12 Honda Award winners. The CAA has consistently CAA member institutions are also committed to ranked among the top 15 in the Sears Directors Cup excellence in the classroom. The Colonial Academic standings and has been the nation’s top-ranked Division Alliance was created in 2002 by the league’s presidents I non-football conference in recent years. with a goal of expanding their partnership to all aspects Even more impressive, however, are the honors of university life outside of intercollegiate athletics. accumulated away from competition, which include five Among the programs already established are an Schools of the CAA Rhodes Scholars and 16 NCAA post-graduate scholars. undergraduate research conference, coordination of study Last year, the CAA had eight CoSIDA Academic All- abroad programs and granting visiting academic status Americans, including five who were selected to the first to student-athletes traveling to an away contest so that team. Over 1,200 CAA student-athletes posted at least a they have access to libraries, academic resource centers 3.2 grade point average while lettering in a varsity sport and computer labs. and received the CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award In 2002, two faculty members from CAA in 2003-04. institutions were awarded academia’s most coveted With a geographic footprint that currently distinction – the Nobel Prize. John B. Fenn, a research stretches from the shadow of the Statue of Liberty to the professor in the Department of Chemistry at Virginia beaches of North Carolina, the landscape of the Commonwealth University, received the Nobel Prize for conference includes four of the nation’s top 25 media chemistry, and Vernon Smith, a professor of economics markets – New York (1), Philadelphia (4), Washington, and law at George Mason University, shared the Nobel D.C. (8) and Baltimore (24). That reach will expand even Prize in economic sciences. wider in 2006 with the addition of Georgia State Under the direction of Commissioner Thomas E. University in Atlanta and Northeastern University in Yeager, who has guided the CAA since its inception, the Boston, giving the CAA a presence in five of the nation’s league currently includes 10 members and will expand nine largest metropolitan areas. to 12 in 2006. Core members George Mason University, The CAA conducts championships in 21 sports. James Madison University, the University of North Male athletes compete for championships in baseball, Carolina at Wilmington, Old Dominion University, basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, Virginia Commonwealth University and the College swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and wrestling. of William & Mary were joined by the University of Female athletes battle for conference titles in basketball, Delaware, Drexel University, Hofstra University cross country, field hockey, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, and Towson University in 2001. Georgia State swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. University and Northeastern University will In men’s basketball, the CAA has earned a become members of the conference in July, 2006. reputation as a “giant killer” in the NCAA Tournament. The CAA traces its roots back to 1983 Since 1981, CAA schools have posted 12 wins over when three of its current members- George higher-seeded teams. Last year, seven of the league’s 10 Mason, James Madison, and William and teams were among the top 140 in the RPI and four were Mary - were aligned with East Carolina ranked in the top 100. In women’s basketball, the CAA University, the United States Naval Academy and the ranked ninth among the nation’s 31 conferences in 2003- University of Richmond as a basketball league (ECAC 04. Perennial power Old Dominion has captured three South). During the next two years, the league added 11 national championships (1979, 1980, 1985) and reached sports, acquired two new members (UNC Wilmington CAA CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS the title game again in 1997. and American University) and decided to form a new The conference has also excelled in many other association. The transformation from ECAC South to Year Champion sports. CAA squads have won 10 field hockey national CAA took place on June 6, 1985. By the fall of 1986, the 1983 William & Mary 1994 James Madison titles since the championship began in 1981, which is league gained automatic bids to NCAA Championships 1984 American 1995 William and Mary not only more than any other conference but represents in men’s basketball, soccer, baseball and women’s George Mason 1996 William and Mary nearly half of all titles won. In baseball, at least two CAA basketball and formed an officials’ bureau. Old Dominion 1985 American 1997 VA Commonwealth George Mason teams have earned NCAA Tournament berths for seven became a member of the CAA in 1991-92 and Virginia 1986 George Mason 1998 Richmond consecutive seasons. The CAA is annually ranked among Commonwealth University joined the conference prior 1987 William & Mary 1999 William & Mary the nation’s top 10 conferences in men’s and women’s to the 1995-96 season. 1988 Navy 2000 William & Mary soccer, and has traditionally sent multiple teams to the From all-star athletes to Nobel prize winning 1989 George Mason 2001 James Madison NCAA Tournament. The conference finished the 2003- faculty, the CAA takes great pride in producing 1990 Richmond 2002 Virginia Commonwealth 04 campaign with teams ranked among the top 25 performers who stand out both on the playing field and 1991 Old Dominion 2003 Virginia Commonwealth nationally in cross country, field hockey, men’s soccer, in the classroom. 1992 James Madison 1993 James Madison 2003 CAA MEN’S SOCCER FINAL 2003 CAA STANDINGS 2003 CAA POST-SEASON AWARDS Team CAA Record Overall Record Player of the Year: Matthew Delicate (VCU) Va. Commonwealth 8-1-0 17-5-0 Defensive Player of the Year: Trevor McEachron (ODU) Old Dominion 6-2-1 15-4-1 Co-Rookies of the Year: Mark Totten (JMU) George Mason 4-2-3 11-6-6 Coach of The Year: Alan Dawson (ODU) James Madison 4-3-2 11-7-2 Tournament MVP: Matthew Delicate (VCU) William and Mary 4-3-2 9-6-4 OLD DOMINION ALL-CAA SELECTIONS UNC Wilmington 4-4-1 10-7-3 1ST Team: Attila Vendegh(F), Kevon Harris (MF), Hofstra 3-4-2 7-9-2 Trevor McEachron(D) Drexel 2-7-0 7-12-1 2nd Team: Brian Cvilikas (F), Sam Cameron (GK) Towson 1-5-3 1-12-4 Delaware 1-6-2 4-11-5

31 CAA Soccer History CAA Standings The CAA in the NCAA Tournament Since Old Dominion Joined The League 1991 Conference Overall 1983: Virginia 2, WILLIAM & MARY 1 (2nd rd.) 1996: Maryland 2, JAMES MADISON 1 (ot-pk) (1st rd.) James Madison 6-1-0 17-3-1 Old Dominion 5-0-2 18-2-2 1984: AMERICAN 2, GEORGE MASON 1 (1st rd.) GEORGE MASON 1, Virginia 0 (1st rd.) George Mason 5-2-0 13-6-0 Virginia 1, AMERICAN 0 (ot, penalty kicks) WILLIAM AND MARY 3, Army 1 (1st rd.) William & Mary 3-2-2 11-7-3 American 2-4-1 6-11-4 1985: GEORGE MASON 1, Virginia 0 (1st rd.) St. John’s 2, GEORGE MASON 1 (2nd rd.) Richmond 2-4-1 8-9-4 UNC-Wilmington 2-5-0 6-8-1 AMERICAN 3, GEORGE MASON 1 (2nd rd.) WILLIAM AND MARY 3, Maryland 0 (2nd rd.) East Carolina 0-7-0 5-14-0 AMERICAN 2, South Carolina 0 (3rd rd.) 1992 Conference Overall St. John’s 2, WILLIAM AND MARY 1 (ot) (3rd rd.) William & Mary 5-0-2 16-5-4 AMERICAN 1, Hartwick 0 (semifinals) 1997: AMERICAN 2, WILLIAM AND MARY 1 (ot) (1st rd) George Mason 5-1-1 12-5-3 James Madison 5-1-1 17-3-1 UCLA 1, AMERICAN 0 (ot) (Championship Game) Georgetown 2, VCU 1 (1st rd.) Old Dominion 4-2-1 11-6-3 Richmond 3-4-0 9-9-1 1986: GEORGE MASON 2, Maryland 1 (ot) (1st rd.) AMERICAN1, Maryland 0 (2nd rd.) UNC-Wilmington 2-5-0 3-12-0 Loyola 2, GEORGE MASON 0 (2nd rd.) Virginia 2, AMERICAN 1 (2 ot) (Quarterfinals) American 1-5-1 7-11-1 East Carolina 0-7-0 2-14-0 1987: Loyola 1, WILLIAM & MARY 0 (1st rd.) 1998: WILLIAM & MARY 2, Lafayette 1 (2ot) (1st rd) 1993 Conference Overall James Madison 7-0-0 19-2-1 Virginia 2, GEORGE MASON 0 (1st rd.) Maryland 2, RICHMOND 1 (1st rd) George Mason 5-2-0 10-6-3 1988: Philadelphia Textile 1, NAVY 0 (1st rd.) South Carolina2, VCU 1 (1st rd) William & Mary 3-2-2 12-5-3 UNC Wilmington 3-4-0 9-9-0 1989: George Washington 3, GEORGE MASON 1 (1st rd.) Clemson 1, WILLIAM & MARY 0 (2nd rd) Old Dominion 2-3-2 8-8-5 Richmond 2-3-2 7-10-3 1990: Virginia 1, RICHMOND 0 (1st rd.) 1999: VCU 1, Wake Forest 2 (1st rd) American 2-5-0 8-10-2 St. Louis 1, GEORGE MASON 0 (1st rd.) East Carolina 1-6-0 5-14-0 WILLIAM & MARY 0, Penn State 1 (1st rd) 1994 Conference Overall 1991: Rutgers 2, OLD DOMINION 0 (1st rd.) 2000: St John's 1, JMU 0 (1st rd) James Madison 6-0-1 20-3-2 William & Mary 6-0-1 18-3-1 1992: Duke 3, JAMES MADISON 0 (1st rd.) North Carolina 3, WILLIAM & MARY 2 (OT) (1st rd) Richmond 4-3-0 12-8-0 Old Dominion 4-3-0 10-7-2 WILLIAM & MARY 2, West Virginia 0 (1st rd.) 2001: Towson 4, JMU 1 George Mason 3-4-0 6-12-2 N.C. State 3, WILLIAM & MARY 2 (2nd rd.) 2002: OLD DOMINION 3, Richmond 0 (1st rd) American 2-5-0 8-10-2 East Carolina 1-5-1 4-14-1 1993: Loyola 1, JAMES MADISON 0 (1st rd.) WILLIAM & MARY 2, DUKE 1 (1st rd) UNC Wilmington 0-6-1 6-13-1 1995 Conference Overall Virginia 2, WILLIAM & MARY 1 (1st rd.) Wake Forest 1, OLD DOMINION 0 (2nd rd) William & Mary 6-2-0 18-6-0 1994: JAMES MADISON 3, North Carolina 0 (1st rd.) W&M 1, Virginia 1 (4-3 WM PK) (2nd rd) James Madison 6-2-0 17-5-2 George Mason 5-2-1 12-6-3 JAMES MADISON 2, Duke 1 (2nd rd.) Furman 0, VCU 0 (4-2 FU PK) (2nd rd) American 5-3-0 10-11-0 Old Dominion 4-3-1 10-9-1 Virginia 4, JAMES MADISON 1 (3rd rd.) Penn State 1, WILLIAM & MARY 0 (OT) (3rd rd) Richmond 3-4-1 8-10-1 1995: JAMES MADISON 1, Princeton 0 (1st rd.) VCU 2-5-1 8-11-1 2003: OLD DOMINION 6, NC State 3 (1st rd) UNC Wilmington 2-6-0 9-11-0 WILLIAM & MARY 2, Creighton 1 (3 ot) (1st rd.) Maryland 2, OLD DOMINION 1 (2nd rd) East Carolina 1-7-0 4-18-0 1996 Conference Overall JAMES MADISON 2, Maryland 2 (ot-pk, JMU Va. Commonwealth 5, Virginia Tech 2 (2nd rd) William & Mary 8-0-0 20-3-1 James Madison 6-1-1 14-5-2 advanced 3-2 on pk) (2nd rd.) Indian 5, Va. Commonwealth 0 (3rd round) Richmond 5-1-2 13-4-4 Wisconsin 1, WILLIAM AND MARY 0 (ot)(2nd rd.) American 5-3-0 12-8-1 George Mason 3-3-2 14-6-3 Duke 3, JAMES MADISON 2 (3rd rd.) VCU 2-5-1 6-9-4 Old Dominion 2-6-0 3-17-0 UNC Wilmington 2-6-0 9-12-0 East Carolina 0-8-0 5-14-0 1997 Conference Overall American 6-0-2 17-4-4 MONARCHS IN THE PROS George Mason 5-2-1 12-8-2 VCU 4-2-2 15-4-4 Steve Byrd (’79) Washington Diplomats 1980 NorthAmerican Soccer League William & Mary 4-2-2 14-6-2 Richmond 4-3-1 9-7-4 (Youngest member of the team at age 19) James Madison 3-3-2 12-5-2 Tom Boric (’80) Calgary Boomers 1981 North American Soccer League Old Dominion 3-5-0 7-9-1 Tampa Bay Rowdies 1983 North American Soccer League East Carolina 2-6-0 7-13-0 UNC Wilmington 0-8-0 6-14-0 Chris Haywood (’89) Baltimore Blast 1990-93 Major Indoor Soccer League 1998 Conference Overall Joe Mallia (’90) Baltimore Spirit 1993- NPSL VCU 7-0-1 12-6-3 JMU 6-1-1 13-6-1 Brett Phillips (’91) Las Vegas Dustdevils 1995 CISL William & Mary 5-3-0 15-7-2 Tampa Bay Rowdies Richmond 5-3-0 14-7-2 Harrisburg (Pa.) George Mason 5-3-0 13-7-0 Old Dominion 3-5-0 8-8-2 (Selected to the 1995 CISL All-Star game) UNC Wilmington 2-6-0 12-8-0 Lang Wedemeyer (’93) Richmond Kickers 1994 USISL American 1-7-0 7-14-1 East Carolina 1-7-0 3-15-1 Roanoke Riverdawgs 1995 USISL 1999 Conference Overall Hampton Roads Mariners 1996 USISL Old Dominion 7-1-0 15-4-0 Karl Byrd (’92) Richmond Kickers 1993 USISL Va.Commonwealth 6-2-0 14-7-1 Richmond 5-2-1 11-7-2 Hampton Roads 1994-96 USISL American 5-2-1 9-9-1 Gene Bowman (’94) Hampton Roads Mariners 1995-96 USISL William & Mary 5-3-0 14-7-3 James Madison 4-4-0 11-8-1 Tim Figureido (’93) Hampton Roads 1994-95 USISL East Carolina 1-7-0 3-12-1 Nathan Olansen (’94) Hampton Roads Mariners 1996 USISL UNC Wilmington 1-7-0 8-11-1 Byron Mitchell (’95) Hampton Roads Hurricanes 1994 USISL George Mason 1-7-0 5-15-1 2000 Conference Overall Roanoke Riverdawgs 1995 USISL James Madison 7-1-0 17-4-1 Hampton Roads Mariners 1996 USISL Old Dominion 6-1-1 10-6-2 American 5-2-1 7-9-2 Atlanta Silverbacks 2001 "A" League William & Mary 4-3-1 12-9-2 John Pratt ('96) Hampton Roads Mariners 1996 & 98 USISL George Mason 3-4-1 8-10-1 Byron Mitchell ('95) Cincinnati Silverbacks 1997 Va. Commonwealth 2-3-3 9-8-4 Richmond 2-5-1 11-7-1 Hampton Roads Mariners 1998 USISL East Carolina 2-6-0 8-11-0 Jimmy Tanner ('00) Greensboro 2000 NPSL UNC Wilmington 1-7-0 4-15-1 2001 Conference Overall Rochester Rhinos 2001 "A" League Old Dominion 3-0-2 8-7-2 Cleveland Crunch 2001 NISL James Madison 3-1-1 12-6-1 Carlos Mendes ('01) Hampton Roads Mariners 2001 USISL William & Mary 3-2-0 11-9-1 Va. Commonwealth 2-2-1 8-10-3 Attila Vendegh ('04) Atlanta Silverbacks 2004 "A" League George Mason 2-3-0 8-9-1 Syracuse Salty Dogs UNC Wilmington 0-5-0 3-15-0 2002 Conference Overall Va. Commonwealth 7-1-1 15-5-1 William and Mary 7-1-1 15-8-1 Old Dominion 6-2-1 10-9-1 Towson 4-4-1 10-8-2 Drexel 3-3-3 10-8-3 George Mason 3-4-2 8-7-4 Hofstra 3-6-0 10-7-1 UNC Wilmington 2-7-0 9-9-0 Delaware 0-7-2 2-12-4 2003 Conference Overall Va. Commonwealth 8-1-0 17-5-0 Old Dominion 6-2-1 15-4-1 George Mason 4-2-3 11-6-6 James Madison 4-3-2 11-7-2 William and Mary 4-3-2 9-6-4 UNC Wilmington 4-4-1 10-7-2 Hofstra 3-4-2 7-9-2 Jimmy Tanner (Top) with the Rochester Drexel 2-7-0 7-12-1 Rhinos and Carlos Mendes (Bottom) Towson 1-5-3 1-12-4 Delaware 1-6-2 4-11-5 32 Monarch Records CAREER GOALS Longest Game: 150 minutes vs. American (11-5-93) Name ( Goals/Year) Total Goals TEAM SINGLE SEASON RECORDS TOP INDIVIDUAL SINGLE SEASON ASSIST LEADERS Attila Vendegh (16/02, 10/03) 56 Most Wins: 18 (1991) Player Assists Year Sean Crowley (9/85, 4/86, 5/87, 18/88) 36 Fewest Losses: 1 (1985) Paul Cann 14 1988 Jimmy Tanner (0/96, 3/97, 11/98, 20/99) 34 Most Ties: 6 (1990) Chris Haywood 11 1988 Carlos Vasco (4/93, 1/94, 17/95, 9/96) 31 Best Record: 18-2-2 (1991) Carlos Mendes 10 1999 Doros Constantinou (13/84, 3/86, 1/87) 31 Best Won-Lost Percentage: .875 (1985) Sean Crowley 10 1986 Jae Cho (3/79, 9/80, 9/81, 10/82) 31 Most Goals: 66 (1975) Sean Crowley 10 1987 Prince Attoh (26/75) 26 Most Assists 54 (1988) Ralf Barner 10 1970 Mike Edmonds (8/76, 9/77, 4/78, 2/79) 23 Highest Total Points: 150 (1988) Chris Haywood 8 1987 George Cruz (year by year N/A) 23 Largest Winning Margin: 47 (1975) Guttorn Dilling 8 1980 Goran Elovsson (2/81, 10/82, 10/83) 22 Largest Winning Margin Average: 3.2 (1975) Mike Moyer 7 1993 Chris Haywood (7/86, 5/87, 5/88, 3/89) 20 Highest Scoring Average: 4.4 (1975) Sean Crowley 7 1988 Steve Byrd (9/78, 10/79) 19 Most Saves: 137 (1980) Petri Monola 7 1980 Peter Spargo (5/89, 6/91, 7/92) 18 Most Shutouts: 14 (1985, 1991) Mike Sweeney 7 1985 Fewest Goals Against: 9 (1985 and 1991) Jimmy Borges 7 1991 CAREER ASSISTS Lowest Goals Against Average: .31 (1985) Name (Assists/Year) Total Assists Fewest Times Shutout: 1 (1975, 1979) TOP INDIVIDUAL SINGLE SEASON POINT LEADERS Sean Crowley (5/85, 10/86, 10/87, 7/88) 32 Longest Winning Streak: 14 (2003) Player Points Year Chris Haywood (4/86, 8/87, 11/88, 5/89) 28 Longest Unbeaten Streak: 14 (1991, 2003) Prince Attoh 58 1975 Carlos Mendes (6/98, 10/99, 6/00, 3/01) 25 Jimmy Tanner 44 1999 Attila Vendegh (3/00, 6/01, 7/02, 6/03) 22 TOP INDIVIDUAL SINGLE SEASON GOAL SCORERS Sean Crowley 43 1988 Mike Wigg (3/74, 9/75, 9/76) 21 Player Goals Year Attila Vendegh 39 2002 Petri Monola (7/80, 4/81, 4/82, 5/83) 20 Prince Attoh 26 1975 Chris Haywood 38 1988 Paul Cann (2/87, 14/88) 16 Jimmy Tanner 20 1999 Carlos Vasco 36 1995 Ralf Barner (6/70, 10/71) 16 Sean Crowley 18 1988 Attila Vendegh 36 2001 Steve Chadwick (2/88, 3/89, 4/90, 4/91) 13 Carlos Vasco 17 1995 Doros Constantinou 35 1987 Guttorm Dilling (1/79, 8/80, 2/81, 1/82) 12 Attila Vendegh 16 2002 Atila Vendegh 33 2000 Doros Constantinou (3/84, 4/86, 5/87) 12 Doros Constantinou 15 1987 Mike Sweeney 31 1985 Peter Spargo (4/89, 3/91, 5/92) 12 Attila Vendegh 15 2001 Doros Constantinou 29 1984 George Cruz (year by year N/A) 12 Attila Vendegh 15 2000 Paul Cann 26 1988 Michael Tooley (7/99, 4/01) 11 Doros Constantinou 13 1984 Attila Vendegh 26 2003 Jimmy Tanner 11 Mike Sweeney 12 1985 Goran Elovsson 25 1982 Jae Cho (5/79, 2/80, 1/81, 3/82) 11 Jimmy Tanner 11 1998 Milo Iniguez 24 1993 Mike Valentassis (3/75, 3/76, 1/77, 4/78) 11 Milo Iniguez 10 1993 Carlos Vasco 23 1996 Jimmy Borges (2/89, 2/90, 7/91) 11 Alvaro Ibanez 10 1984 Sean Crowley 23 1985 Raul Ovalle (0/92, 1/93, 6/94, 4/95) 11 Goran Elovsson 10 1983 Alvaro Ibanez 23 1984 Phil Coates 11 Goran Elovsson 10 1982 Goran Elovsson 22 1982 Steve Byrd 10 1980 Jae Cho 22 1980 CAREER POINTS Jae Cho 10 1980 Guttorn Dilling 22 1980 Name Goals/Assists TPts. Steve Byrd 10 1979 Steve Byrd 22 1979 Attila Vendegh (2000-2003) 56/22 134 George Cruz 10 1974 Jimmy Tanner 22 1998 Sean Crowley (85-88) 36/32 104 Attila Vendegh 10 2003 Jimmy Tanner (96-99) 34/11 79 D. Constantinou (84, 86-87) 31/12 74 Jae Cho (1979-82) 31/11 73 Carlos Vasco (93-96) 31/8 70 Chris Haywood (86-89) 20/28 68 Prince Attoh (75) 26/6 58 PAST MONARCH CONFERENCE MVP’S Goran Elovsson (81-83) 22/9 53 Mike Edmonds (76-79) 23/4 50 Peter Spargo (89, 91-92) 18/12 48 Carlos Mendes (1998-2001) 11/25 47 Petri Monola (80-83) 13/20 46

INDIVIDUAL GAME RECORDS Most Goals: 5, Prince Attoh vs. Salisbury State (8-23-75) Most Assists: 5, Chris Haywood vs. UNCC (10-18-87) Most Points: 11, Prince Attoh vs. Salisbury State (8-23-75) Most Saves: 29, Pete Hill vs. Virginia Tech (10-13-69) Most Goalkeeper Minutes Played: 150, Tim Figureido vs. American (11-5-93) INDIVIDUAL SEASON RECORDS Chris Haywood Sean Crowley Rick Jenik Neil Paynter Most Goals: 26, Prince Attoh (1975) Most Assists: 14, Paul Cann (1988) Sun Belt 1987 Sun Belt 1988 Sun Belt 1989 CAA 1991 Most Total Points: 58, Prince Attoh (1975) Most Saves: 124, Tim Figureido (1993) Most Shutouts: 14, Brett Phillips (1991), Tim Borer (1985) Lowest Goals Against Average: 0.31, Tim Borer (1985)

INDIVIDUAL CAREER RECORDS Most Goals: 56, Attila Vendegh (2000-2003) Most Assists: 32, Sean Crowley (1985-88) Most Points: 134, Attila Vendegh (2000-2003) Most Games: 80, Joe Cirrincione (1982-85) Most Saves: 206, Joey Mallia (1987-90) Most Shutouts: 20, Joey Mallia (1987-90) Lowest Goals Against Average: 0.53, Tim Borer (1984-85) Fewest Goals Against: 15, Tim Borer (1984-85)

TEAM SINGLE GAME RECORDS Attila Vendegh Trevor McEachron Most goals: 14 vs. Richmond (10-8-75) CAA 2002 CAA 2003 Most Assists: 11 vs. Richmond (10-8-75) Defensive Player Most Points: 39 vs. Richmond (10-8-75) Largest Victory Margin: 13 (14-1), vs. Richmond (10-8-75) of the Year Most Shots on Goal: 41 vs. Richmond (10-8-75) Most Saves:. 29 vs. Virginia Tech (10-13-69)

33 Honored Monarchs YEAR-BY-YEAR LEADERS YEAR GOALS ASSISTS POINTS GOALKEEPING LEADER LEADER LEADER LEADER (GAA) 1975 Prince Attoh - 26 Prince Attoh, Michael Wigg, Derek Robb - 6 Prince Attoh - 58 Steve Risso - 1.18 1976 Mike Edmonds - 12 Michael Wigg - 6 Mike Edmonds - 25 Steve Risso - 8.08 1977 Jack White - 4 G. Boles, M. Valantassis, J. Silberberg, J. White - 1 Jack White - 9 James Panzer - NA 1978 Steve Byrd - 9 Michael Valantassis - 4 Steve Byrd - 12 James Panzer - NA 1979 Steve Byrd - 10 Jae Cho - 5 Steve Byrd - 12 Risto Penttila - 0.84 1980 Jae Cho - 10 Guttorm Dilling - 8 Guttorm Dilling - 15 Tom Boric - 0.88 1981 Jae Cho - 9 Petri Monola - 4 Jae Cho - 19 Mike Smith - 0.82 1982 Goran Elovsson - 10 Petri Monola - 4 Goran Elovsson - 22 Rob Tymchyshyn - NA 1983 Goran Elovsson - 10 Goran Elovsson - 5 Goran Elovsson - 25 Fitz Bramble - NA 1984 Doros Constantinou - 13 David Whitmore - 5 Doros Constantinou - 29 Rob Tymchynshyn - 0.75 1985 Mike Sweeney - 12 Mike Sweeney - 7 Mike Sweeney - 31 Tim Borer - 0.31 1986 Chris Haywood - 7 Sean Crowley - 10 C. Haywood, S. Crowley - 18 Jon Parker - 0.76 1987 Doros Constantinou - 15 Sean Crowley - 10 Doros Constantinou - 35 Jon Parker - 0.64 1988 Sean Crowley - 18 Paul Cann - 14 Sean Crowley - 43 Joe Mallia - 0.92 1989 Peter Spargo - 5 Chris Haywood, Brian Sheehan - 5 Peter Spargo - 14 Joe Mallia - 0.68 1990 Jon Beevers - 5 Steve Chadwick - 4 Jimmy Borges, Jon Beevers - 10 Joe Mallia - 0.77 1991 M. Essabba, P. Coster - 7 Jimmy Borges - 7 Marcelo Essabba - 20 Brett Phillips - 0.32 1992 Peter Spargo - 7 Peter Spargo - 5 Peter Spargo - 19 Tim Figureido - 0.60 1993 Milo Iniguez - 10 Mike Moyer - 7 Milo Iniguez - 24 Tim Figureido - 1.16 1994 Gene Bowman - 8 Raul Ovalle - 6 Gene Bowman - 20 Michael Rodriguez - 1.30 1995 Carlos Vasco - 17 E. Romero, R. Ovalle, T. Manning - 4 Carlos Vasco - 36 Michael Rodriguez - 0.56 1996 Carlos Vasco - 9 Carlos Vasco - 5 Carlos Vasco - 23 Chuck Connelly - 2.62 1997 Patrick Halter - 5 James Tanner - 6 James Tanner - 15 Chuck Connelly - 1.15 1998 Jimmy Tanner - 11 Carlos Mendes - 6 Jimmy Tanner - 22 Chris Newlin - 1.33 1999 Jimmy Tanner - 20 Carlos Mendes - 11 Jimmy Tanner - 44 Chuck Connelly - .79 2000 Attila Vendegh - 15 Chad Denton/C.Mendes - 6 Attila Vendegh - 33 Sam Cameron - 1.26 2001 Attila Vendegh - 15 Attila Vendegh - 6 Attila Vendegh - 36 Chad Calderone - 1.26 2002 Attila Vendegh - 16 Attila Vendegh - 7 Attila Vendegh - 39 Sam Cameron - 1.43 2003 Attila Vendegh, Cvilikas - 10 Attila Vendegh - 6 Attila Vendegh - 26 Sam Cameron - 0.70

Jimmy Tanner Jae Cho Guttorm Dilling Brett Phillips PAST SOCCER POLL APPEARANCES The Old Dominion University men's soccer program first appeared in the national top 20 on Sept. 9, 1981, at number nine. The highest ranking ever in Division I was on October 6, 2003, at number two and lasted for four weeks. The last time the Monarchs appeared in the top ten was in 1993 at number ten.

FIRST NATIONAL RANKING HIGHEST NATIONAL RANKING LAST NATIONAL RANKING

ISAA Pre-Season Poll Soccer America Soccer America Sept. 9, 1981 October 6, 2003 November 17, 2003 1. San Francisco ...... 356 1. UCLA (8-1-0) ...... 2 1. UCLA (18-1-1) ...... 1 2. Indiana ...... 332 2. Old Dominion (8-0-0) ...... 3 2. Maryland (17-2-1) ...... 2 3. Alabama A&M ...... 314 3. North Carolina (8-1-2) ...... 6 3. Notre Dame (15-3-3) ...... 6 4. Hartwick ...... 263 4. Maryland (9-1-0) ...... 1 4. Wake Forest (15-4-0) ...... 3 5. Connecticut ...... 250 5. Notre Dame (7-1-3) ...... 4 5. Indiana (12-3-5) ...... 6. St. Louis ...... 242 6. Saint Louis (7-1-2) ...... 7 6. Santa Clara (13-3-3) ...... 4 7. Southern Illinois ...... 200 7. Wake Forest (5-3-0) ...... 10 7. St. John’s (14-5-2) ...... 5 8. Penn State ...... 174 8. St. John’s (8-3-1) ...... 11 8. Saint Louis (13-3-3) ...... 10 9. OLD DOMINION ...... 154 9. Washington (7-1-1) ...... 12 9. VCU (16-4-0) ...... 11 10. UCLA ...... 129 10. FIU (6-2-1) ...... 13 10. OLD DOMINION (14-3-1) ...... 7 11. Philadelphia Textile ...... 116 11. SMU (7-3-1) ...... 5 11. FIU (13-4-2) ...... 8 12. Duke ...... 106 12. Akron (7-3-1) ...... 9 12. Coastal Carolina (18-2-0) ...... 15 13. Akron ...... 64 13. Seton Hall (4-2-3) ...... 16 13. Washington (12-4-2) ...... 16 14. Boston University ...... 51 14. Santa Clara (8-2-3) ...... 20 14. North Carolina (12-3-4) ...... 12 15. Howard ...... 39 15. Loyola Marymount (7-3-1) ...... NR 15. Virginia Tech (14-4-2) ...... 14 16. Cornell ...... 27 16. UC Santa Barbara (7-1-1) ...... 14 16. CS Northridge (14-3-2) ...... 19 17. Southern Methodist ...... 22 17. Virginia Tech (8-2-1) ...... NR 17. SMU (13-6-2) ...... 21 18. American ...... 13 18. William & Mary (5-2-2) ...... 18 18. Oregon State (13-6-0) ...... 13 19. Columbia ...... 11 19. San Jose State (6-1-2) ...... 23 19. San Diego (12-4-3) ...... 25 20. Appalachian State ...... 4 20. UAB (6-2-2) ...... 8 20. Brown (10-3-3) ...... 20

NSCAA SOCCER TIMES Nov. 17, 2003 ODU ranked 17th Nov. 17, 2003 ODU ranked19th 34 Honored Monarchs ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS 1989 - Rick Jenik, Chris Haywood MOST VALUABLE PLAYERS 2003 - Attila Vendegh 1988 - Sean Crowley, Chris Haywood, Paul Cann, 2003 - Trevor McEachrin 2002 - Attila Vendegh Chris Pfau 2002 - Brandon Backer 1999 - Spiros Blackburn, Jimmy Tanner 1987 - Chris Haywood 2001 - Trevor McEachron 1988 - Sean Crowley ALL-SOUTH 2000 - Attila Vendegh SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION/adidas 1985 - Tim Borer, Mike Sweeney, Vincent Beck 1999 - Jimmy Tanner SCHOLAR ATHLETE SOCCER 1984 - Torbjorn Wik (1st) 1998 - Jimmy Tanner ALL-AMERICAN 1983 - Torbjorn Wik, Goran Elovsson 1997 - Andy Devlin 1993 - Lang Wedemeyer 1981 - Guttorm Dilling (2nd), Jae Cho (2nd) 1996 - Mark Woods ALL-AMERICANS (ISAA/NSCAA) 1980 - Jae Cho (1st), Guttorm Dilling (2nd), 1995 - Byron Mitchell 2003 - Trevor McEachron (1st), Attila Vendegh (3rd) Scott Stewart (5th) 1994 - Byron Mitchell 1999 - Jimmy Tanner (3rd) 1979 - Risto Penttila (4th), Jae Cho (5th) 1993 - Tim Figureido 1987 - Chris Haywood (3rd) 1978 - Mike Valantassis (1st), Steve Byrd (2nd), 1992 - Peter Spargo, Devarr Boyles 1985 - Tim Borer (1st), Mike Sweeney (2nd) Sean Fahey (3rd) 1991 - Neil Paynter 1978 - Mike Valantassis (2nd) 1977 - Sean Fahey (4th) 1990 - Joey Mallia ALL-AMERICANS (Collegesoccernews.com) VIRGINIA INTERCOLLEGIATE 1989 - Rick Jenik 2001 - Attila Vendegh (Honorable Mention) SOCCER ASSOCIATION 1988 - Sean Crowley 2001 - Trevor McEachron (Honorable Mention Freshman) PLAYER OF THE YEAR 1987 - Kevin Walsh FRESHMAN ALL-AMERICAN 1976 - Mike Valantassis 1986 - Mike Peckich 2000 - Attila Vendegh (Soccer America) 1975 - Prince Attoh 1985 - Tim Borer CONFERENCE MVP’s VIRGINIA STATE PLAYER OF THE YEAR 1984 - Doros Constantinou 2002 - Attila Vendegh 2001 - Attila Vendegh 1983 - Chip Stackhouse 2001 - Attila Vendegh ALL-STATE 1982 - Chip Stackhouse 1999 - Jimmy Tanner 2003 - Attila Vendegh (1st), Trevor McEachrin (1st), 1981 - Jae Cho 1991 - Neil Paynter (Co-MVP) Samuel Cameron (2nd) Kevon Harris (2nd) 1980 - Guttorm Dilling 1989 - Rick Jenik 2002 - Attila Vendegh (1st), Trevor McEachrin (1st) 1979 - Risto Penttila 1988 - Sean Crowley 2001 - Attila Vendegh (1st), Carlos Mendes (1st) 1978 - Mike Valantassis 1987 - Chris Haywood 2000 - Carlos Mendes (1st), Attila Vendegh (2nd) 1977 - Mike Valantassis CAA ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM 1999 - Jimmy Tanner (!st), Carlos Mendes (2nd), 1976 - Mike Valantassis 2001 - Carlos Mendes Adam Colborne Michel Tooley (2nd) 1975 - Prince Attoh ALL-CAA 1993 - Joe Lenard, Gene Bowman (2nd), 1974 - Carlos Theresin 2003 - Attila Vendegh (1st), Trevor McEachron (1st), Brian Tim Figureido (2nd) 1973 - Bill Horan Cvilikas (2nd), Samuel Cameron (2nd) 1992 - Tim Figureido (2nd), Peter Spargo (2nd) 1972 - David Shackelford 2002 - Attila Vendegh (1st), Trevor McEachron (1st) 1991 - Brett Phillips, Karl Byrd (2nd), Patrick Coster (2nd), 1971 - Ralf Barner 2001 - Attila Vendegh (1st), Carlos Mendes (1st), Ben Neil Paynter (2nd) 1970 - Ralf Barner Cummins (2nd), Trevor McEachron (2nd) 1989 - Chris Haywood, Mike Radwanski 1969 - Pete Hill (offense), Guido Escalante (defense) 2000 - Attila Vendegh(1st), Carlos Mendes (1st), Anders 1988 - Chris Pfau, Paul Cann, Chris Haywood, Sean COACHING RECORD YEAR-BY-YEAR Haugom (2nd), Adam Colborne (2nd) Crowley Year W-L-T Coach 1999 - Jimmy Tanner (1st), Carlos Mendes (1st), Chuck 1984 - Rob Tymchyshyn, Doros Constantinou, 2003 15-4-1 Alan Dawson Connelly (2nd), Anders Haugom (2nd), Michael Torbjorn Wik 2002 10-9-1 Alan Dawson Tooley (2nd) 1983 - Chip Stackhouse, Goran Elovsson 2001 8-7-2 Alan Dawson 1998- Mark Woods (2nd), Jimmy Tanner (2nd) 1982 - Jae Cho 2000 10-6-2 Alan Dawson 1997- Mark Woods (2nd) 1981 - Jae Cho, Guttorm Dilling 1999 15-4-0 Alan Dawson 1996 - Carlos Vasco (2nd) 1980 - Jae Cho, Guttorm Dilling, Scott Stewart, 1998 8-8-2 Alan Dawson 1995 - Byron Mitchell, Carlos Vasco, Mark Woods (2nd), Tim Boric 1997 7-9-1 Alan Dawson Raul Ovalle (2nd), Nathan Olansen (2nd) 1979 - Jae Cho, Steve Byrd, Illias Valantassis, 1996 3-17-0 Bob Warming 1994 - Byron Mitchell, Milo Iniguez (2nd), Raul Risto Penttila, Guttorm Dilling 1995 10-9-1 Ralph Perez Ovalle (2nd) 1978 - Steve Byrd (1st), Mike Valantassis (2nd) 1994 10-7-2 Ralph Perez 1993 - Gene Bowman, Tim Figureido, Joe Lenard, 1977 - Mike Valantassis (2nd), Mike Edmonds (2nd), 1993 8-8-5 Ralph Perez Milo Iniguez (2nd) Chris Achilleos (2nd) 1992 11-6-3 Ralph Perez 1992 - Devarr Boyles, Damon Wade, Peter Spargo (2nd) 1976 - Mike Valantassis (1st), Mike Edmonds (1st) 1991 18-2-2 Ralph Perez 1991 - Marcelo Essabba, Neil Paynter, Brett Phillips, 1975 - Mike Valantassis (1st), Prince Attoh (1st), Carlos 1990 8-6-6 Ralph Perez Peter Spargo, Steve Chadwick (2nd) Theresin (1st), Derik Robb (1st), 1989 14-4-4 Mike Berticelli CAA ROOKIE OF THE YEAR Mike Wigg (2nd) 1988 11-5-3 Mike Berticelli 2000 - Attila Vendegh 1974 - Carlos Theresin (1st), George Cruz (2nd), 1987 14-3-2 Mike Berticelli 1998 - Carlos Mendes Bill Horan (2nd) 1986 13-5-3 Mike Berticelli CAA COACH OF THE YEAR 1973 - David Shackleford (2nd), James Scott (2nd) 1985 16-1-3 Mike Berticelli 2003 - Alan Dawson 1972 - Bill Horan (HM), David Shackelford (HM), 1984 12-9-1 Mike Berticelli 2001 - Alan Dawson Kevin Hoffman (HM) 1983 11-7-5 Bill Killen 1999 - Alan Dawson UMBRO SELECT All-STAR 1982 7-8-4 Bill Killen ALL-SUN BELT CONFERENCE 1999 - Jimmy Tanner (East Team) 1981 7-8-4 Bill Killen 1990 - Joey Mallia, Mike Radwanski, David Chun VIL EAST 1980 13-5-0 Bill Killen 1989 - Rick Jenik (MVP), David Chun, Damon Wade, 1984 - Rob Tymchyshyn, Doros Constantinou, 1979 10-3-2 Bill Killen Joey Mallia Torbjorn Wik, Vincent Beck (HM) 1978 9-5-1 Bill Killen 1988 - Sean Crowley (MVP), Chris Haywood, 1983 - Chip Stackhouse, Torbjorn Wik 1977 5-6-2 Guenther Dietz Paul Cann, Chris Pfau 1981 - Jae Cho, Guttorm Dilling, Scott Stewart 1976 8-7-0 Guenther Dietz 1987 - Chris Haywood (MVP), Paul Cann, Kevin 1980 - Jae Cho, Steve Byrd, Illias Valantassis, 1975 13-2-0 Guenther Dietz Walsh, Jon Parker Risto Penttila 1974 4-6-1 Guenther Dietz 1986 - Chris Haywood, Sean Crowley, ALL-DISTRICT 1973 1-6-1 Guenther Dietz Doros Constantinou (HM) (Changed to VIL East in 1979) 1972 1-5-0 Guenther Dietz 1985 - Vincent Beck, Tim Borer, Mike Sweeney, 1978 - Mike Valantassis, Steve Byrd, Mark Bartz, 1971 2-4-0 Steve Cottrell Jan-Olav Aas (HM), Mike O’Neill(HM) Chris Achilleos, Jerry Albino 1970 4-6-0 Steve Cottrell 1984 - Doros Constantinou, Alvaro Ibanez, 1977 - Mike Edmonds, Chris Achilleos Overall: 291-194-62 Rob Tymchyshyn 1976 - Mike Edmonds, Mike Valantassis, Mike Wigg Division I (1976-1997): 266-165-60 1983 - Goran Elovsson, Petri Monola, Peter Yngwe 1975 - Prince Attoh, Mike Valantassis, TOP HOME SOCCER CROWDS 1982 - Jae Cho, Joe Cirrincione, Guttorm Dilling, Carlos Theresin, Derek Robb, Mike Wigg 1. 5,003 vs. Philadelphia Textile, Sept. 11, 1981 Goran Elovsson 1974 - George Cruz, Bill Horan, Carlos Theresin 2. 4,647 vs. Rutgers, Oct 4, 1987 ALL-SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION 1973 - Bill Horan,James Scott, Dave Shackelford 3. 4,300 vs. UCLA, Sept. 14, 1979 2003 - Samuel Cameron (1st), Trevor MaEachron (1st), 1972 - Bill Hoeler, Bill Horan, James Scott 4. 4,102 vs. Delaware, Oct. 2, 1987 Attila Vendegh (1st), Keven Harris (2nd) ALUMNI ASSOCIATION/ OLD DOMINION 5. 3,872 vs. Army, Sept. 29, 1989 2002 - Attila Vendegh (2nd), Trevor MaEachron (3rd) MALE ATHLETE OF THE YEAR 6. 3,852 vs. Boston College, Sept. 30, 1988 2001 - Attila Vendegh (1st), Carlos Mendes (3rd) 1993 - Peter Spargo 7. 3,672 vs. Ohio State, Oct. 2, 1988 2000 - Carlos Mendes (1st), Attila Vendegh (3rd) 1991 - Joe Mallia 8. 3,576 vs. Virginia, Sept. 10, 1986 1999 - Jimmy Tanner (1st) WTAR/OLD DOMINION MALE 9. 3,336 vs. Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Sept. 27, 1991 1996 - Carlos Vasco (3rd) SCHOLAR ATHLETE OF THE YEAR 10. 3,218 vs. Long Island, Sept. 24, 1977 1995 - Byron Mitchell (2nd), Carlos Vasco (2nd) (Highest GPA) 11. 3,207 vs. William and Mary, Sept. 12, 1990 1994 - Byron Mitchell (2nd) 1995 - Rob Caputo 1992 - Peter Spargo (2nd) 1991 - Brian Sheehan 1991 - Neil Paynter, Brett Phillips (2nd) 35 Letter Winners

-A- Cummins, Ben 2000-02 Horan, Bill 1973-74 -N- Silberg, Joe 1977 Achilleos, Chris 1976-78 Cvilikas, Brian 2002- Houpos, Lois 1969-71 Nelms, Willie 1969 Silberman, Peter 1970-71 Adams, Dockery 1973 Cypress, Larry 1994-95 Hughes, John 1969 Nerwinski, Kevin 1983 Sills, Bob 1973 Aiklen, Bill 1969-70 -D- Hurley, Michael 2002- Neville, James 1973-74 Silva, Bucky 1993-94 Albino, Jerry 1978-79 Daestrala, Ricardo 1985 -I- Newcomer, Kyle 2002- Smith, Jay 1984 Allen, Ross 1969-70 Darcy, Kevin 1986 Ibanez, Alvaro 1984 Nieowdrop, John 1970 Sniegoski, Ryan 2000-03 Attoh, Osia 1975-76 Darvishian, Ali 1978 Iniguez, Milo 1993-94 Nocera, Tony 1978 Solorzano, Giovinni 1999 Attoh, Prince 1975 Day, Greg 1987 -J- -O- Spargo, Peter 1989, 1991-92 -B- DelaRosa, Everett 1978-79 Jenik, Rick 1986-89 O’Keefe, John 1986-87 Stackhouse, Chris 1979, 81-83 Baker, Brandon 1999-01 DeLawter, Brian 1992-95 Jewell, Ken 1985-88 Olanitori, Bola 1974 Steward, Scott 1979-82 Ball, Calvin 1999 Denno, Alex 1993-94, 96 Johnson, Junior 1981-83 Olansen, Nathan 1992-94 Stockunas, Ed 1996 Barner, Ralf 1969-71 Denton, Chad 2000-01 Jones, Ken 1977 Oluwalana, Bamidele 2002- Sweeney, Mike 1985 Barnicle, Tommy 1999-00 Deslodge, Frank 1979 -K- O’Neill, Mike 1985-86 -T- Bartz, Mark 1976-78 Devlin, Andy 1996-99 Kaila, Ian 2001- Ornowski, Gregg 1996 Tanner, James 1996-99 Beck, Anthony 1985 Dia, Dave 1985 Kalezerski, Ed 1978 O’Shea, Kevin 1979 Taylor, Seth, 1995 Beck, Vincent 1983-85 DiCosmo, Nino 1986 Kerrigan, Brian 1980 Ovalle, Raul 1992-95 Theresin, Carlos 1973-74 Beevers, John 1988-91 DiGiacomo, Matt 2000 Klein, Chuck 1969-70 Owen, Ray 1969 Theresin, Jose 1975-78 Biddle, Bruce 1978-80 Dilling, Guttorm 1979-82 Klena, John 1987 -P- Thomas, David 1995 Birtchered, Bill 1969 Dolezal, Jeff, 1996 Kluckman, Brian 2001- Pagan, Mike 1974 Thompson, Geof 1991-94 Blackburn, Larry 1970 Duesterdick, Kurt 1977 Kotan, Chris 1991-94 Palmiero, Tony 1977 Toms, Simon 1985-88 Blackburn, Spiros 1996-99 -E- Kretizing, John 1982-84 Panzer, Jamie 1977-79 Tooley, Michael 1999-02 Blunt, Tony 1989-92 Edmonds, Mike 1978-79 -L- Parani, John 1984 Twait, Bill 1986 Bluthardt, Rob 1986 Elovsson, Goran 1981-83 Landman, Matt 1999-00 Parker, Jon 1984-87 Tymchyshyn, Rob 1979-82, 84 Boles, Greg 1977 Enos, Fred 1973 Lane, Eric 1977 Parker, Scott 1976-77 -V- Boocks, Joe 1981 Epperson, Phil 1970 Larson, Chris 1986 Passucci, Alex 1987 Valianos, Mike 1980-83 Borer, Tim 1985 Escalente, Guido 1967-69 Lehman, Jamie 1989-90 Patch, Buddy 1979-81 Valantassis, Mike 1980-83 Borges, Jimmy 1988-91 Escalente, Raul 1977 Lemberger, David 1976 Paynter, Neil 1988-91 Valantassis, Illias 1977-80 Boric, Tom 1978-80 Essaba, Marcelo 1990-91 Lenard, Joe 1991-93 Payton, Devin 1993-96 Vasco, Carlos 1993-96 Bowe, Jon 1992 Everhand, John 1969-70 Lessard, Joey 1986-89 Peckich, Mike 1985-88 Vaughn, Alan 1973 Bowes, Kenneth 1995-96 -F- Lewis, Troy 1988-90 Penttila, Risto 1979 Vendegh, Attila 2000-03 Bowles, Brig 1978 Fahey, Sean 1976-78 Libertore, Craig 1984-86 Pfau, Chris 1986-88 Vendegh, Belus 2001- Bowman, Gene 1993-94 Farr, George 1977 Liebenow, Paul 1976 Phillips, Brett 1987-89, 1991 Vogel, Billy 1980 Boyles, Devarr 1989-92 Fazlic, Adnan 2002- Lowery, Harrison 2001 Pillonen, Mika 1985-88 -W- Bramble, Fitzgerald 1983-86 Ferrell, Walston 2003- Lowery, Larry 1969 Pizzaro, Douglas 1976 Wade, Damon 1989-92 Bravo, Ramon 1976 Figureido, Tim 1990-93 -M- Porto, Ian, 1994 Wainwright, Russ 1976 Brinkley, Ron 1977-79 Fleck, Logan 1979-82 Maccaroni, Gary 1983 Pratt, Jon 1995-96 Wallace, John 1973 Brown, Mike 1976 Flores, David 1984-85 Mackenzie, Ross 2003- Preston, Patrick 1985-86 Walsh, Geoff 1987 Byrd, Karl 1989-92 Fotopoulos, George 1987-88 Malatesta, Chris 1990, 1992 Propster, Randy 1993-94 Walsh, Kevin 1984-87 Byrd, Steve 1978-79 Fotopoulos, John 1979-82 Mallia, Joey 1987-89 -R- Warner, Todd 1981-82 -C- Fredo, Geno 1975-76 Manning, Tom 1992-95 Radwanski, Mike 1987-90 Washburn, Scott 1989 Cameron, Sam 2000-03 -G- Markum, Steve 1971 Reed, Jamie 1991-94 Watson, Wally 1977-80 Cann, Paul 1987-88 Garrick, Rob 1989 McAndrew, Tom 1979-81 Reel, Roy 1971 Wedemeyer, Lang 1992-93 Caputo, Rob 1992-94 Gaynor, Peter 1985-87 McCatty, Michael 1997-00 Reese, Jason 2001 Wergeland, Jan 1984-87 Carter, Tom 1995-96 Germain, Greg 1980-83 McClain, John 2003- Reynolds, Robbie 1993-96 Wesenberg, Sven 2002- Caskran, Mark 1978 Glockner, Gunther 1988-89 McCreedy, Greer 1978-81 Ridenhour, Daniel 1997-00 Weyers, Bill 1985 Celec, Mike 1978 Glover, Byron 1969 McDonough, John 1974 Risso, Steve 1976 White, Jack 1976-77 Chadwick, Steve 1988-91 Goncalves, Michael 2002-03 McEachron, Trevor 2001- Ritchie, David 1976-77 Whitmore, David 1980, 82-84 Cho, Jae 1979-82 Green, Harlan 1973 McMenamin, Kevin 2003- Robb, Derek 1975 Wierzbowski, John 1995-96 Chun, David 1989-90 Greer, Jefrey 1977 Medhurst, Tony 1976-77 Roberts, Karl 1989-90 Wigg, Michael 1974-75 Cimini, Gianni 2002- Grover, Dwight 1976-77 Menard, Mike 1977 Robus, Chris 1978-81 Wik, Torbjorn 1983-84 Clark, Jason 1992 -H- Mendes, Carlos 1998-01 Roche, Bob 1986 Wilkerson, John 1979 Clerzniewski, Mitch 1979 Harris, Kevon 2001- Merila, Dan 1969-70 Rodriguez, Michael, 1994 Wilkinson, Mat 2003- Cirrincione, Joe 1982-85 Hartley, Kyle 2001- Merkh, Daniel 1973-74, 1976 Romero, Emilio 1992-95 Williams, Jay 1978 Coates, Phil 1997-00 Haugom, Ander 1999-02 Merrihew, John 1980-81, 83-84 Rouette, Mike 1985-88 Wilson, Mabricio 1997-00 Colborne, Adam 1998-01 Haywood, Chris 1986-89 Milanovic, Slavisa 1981 -S- Wilson, Scott 1986 Colston, Willie 1973 Helfer, Tim 1979-81 Minors, Dean 1990-92 Salamanca, Jose 1992, 96 Winslow, Randy 1984-85 Connelly, Chuck 1996-99 Henrique, Leandro 1987 Mirabito, Paul 1977-78 Sanford, Jack 1976-78 Wirth, Gilbert 1977 Connelly, John 2000- Higgins, John 1970 Mitchell, Byron 1991-92, 94-95 Scott, Bernie 1969-70 Wolf, Mike 1991-93 Constantinou Doros '84,86-87 Hill, Josh 2003- Monola, Petri 1980-83 Scott, James 1973 Woods, Mark 1995-96 Corneal, Alan 1979-80 Hill, Peter 1970 Monroe, Justin 2003- Schackelford, David 1973 Wormington, Edward 1969 Coster, Patrick 1988-91 Hilton, Glen 1969 Moore, Darian 1995 Shedlock, Jason 1991-94 -Y- Coughlin, Ed 1980 Hoeler, Bill 1973 Morgan, John 1971 Sheehan, Brian 1987-90 Yngwe, Peter 1981-83 Crowley, Martin 1999-00 Hoffman, Kevin 1973-74 Mottinger, Gregg 2003- Shy, Jamie 1996 -Z- Crowley, Sean 1985-88 Hofheimer, Charles 1969 Mount, Dan 1992 Siega, Anthony 1991 Zanardi, Daryl 1986 Cruse, Dave 1978 Holman, Charles 1973 Mott, Jim 1985 Siggard-Jensen, Kristian '95- Zeller, Scott 1975-77 Cruz, George 1973-76 Hoglund Eric 2003- Moyer, Mike 1993-95 96 36 Year-by-Year Results

Steve Cottrell 8-2 W Salisbury State 3-0 W at Virginia Commonwealth (1970-1971) 7-0 W at Hampden-Sydney 5-1 W Richmond 2-0 W Virginia Wesleyan Steve Cottrell served as the first 3-2 W at Madison College 14-1 W at Richmond 1-0 W George Mason head coach of the Monarchs, taking 3-2 W at Virginia Wesleyan 1-0 L at Loyola the helm in 1970. In the first season 5-4 W William and Mary 6-1 W Guilford of competition, Cottrell led Old Do- 3-1 W Virginia Military Institute 2-1 W George Washington minion to a 5-5 record, and followed 4-2 W at East Carolina 1-0 L at Maryland with a 2-6 mark in 1971. He began 1-0 W Luther-Rice* *Harborfront Classic his coaching career in basketball at 4-0 W St. Mary’s* Norfolk Collegiate in 1965, then 5-4 W at Randolph-Macon 1980 (13-5-0) came to Old Dominion as assistant 2-1 L at Madison College Coach Bill Killen basketball coach in 1969. He went on to coach basketball for 10 years 1-0 L Baltimore University# Home Field: Foreman Field (grass) at Western Carolina University. 1-0 W Loyola# 5-1 L at Clemson Final Old Dominion Record: 2 years, 7-11 *St. Mary’s Invitational 3-2 W Lehigh #NCAA South Regional 1-0 W at William and Mary 1970 (5-5-0) 1-0 W(ot) at American Coach Steve Cottrell 1976 (8-7-0) 3-0 W Virginia Wesleyan Home Field: City Park (grass) Coach Gunther Dietz 3-0 W Towson State 3-2 W Eastern Mennonite Home Field: Foreman Field (grass) 3-0 W East Carolina* 7-1 W Virginia Wesleyan 2-0 W Hampden-Sydney 4-0 L North Carolina* 2-1 W Virginia Tech 5-0 W at Salisbury State 3-1 W at Richmond 2-1 W at George Mason 2-0 L Loyola* 6-0 W Virginia Commonwealth 2-1 W Hampden Sydney 2-1 L Virginia* 2-0 L at Navy 1-0 L at Lynchburg College 8-0 W Richmond 3-0 W at George Mason 7-0 L at Campbell College 3-1 L Baltimore Univ. 3-1 W Loyola 2-1 L Randolph-Macon 4-2 W East Carolina# 3-1 L Howard 4-1 L Towson State 3-1 W Princeton# 2-1 W(ot) Hartwick 3-1 L at William and Mary 3-0 W at Christopher Newport 4-0 W Maryland 3-0 W at Virginia Military Institute 2-0 W Virginia # 1971 (2-6-0) 2-0 W Virginia Wesleyan 1-0 L William and Mary # Coach Steve Cottrell 4-2 L at William and Mary *Harborfront Classic Home Field: Powhatan Field (grass) 5-4 L Madison College # VIL Tournament 3-2 W Virginia Wesleyan 3-0 L at Randolph-Macon 11-0 L at Virginia 5-3 L Delaware 1981 (7-8-4) 2-0 W Pembroke State *Baltimore Invitational Coach Bill Killen 4-0 L Lynchburg College #ECAC South Regional Home Field: Foreman Field (Astroturf) 2-1 L William and Mary 1-0 W at Navy 8-1 L George Mason 1977 (5-6-2) 1-1 T Philadelphia Textile 4-3 L at Virginia Tech (ot) Coach Gunther Dietz 1-0 W Hartford 4-0 L at Randolph-Macon Home Field: Foreman Field (grass) 2-0 W Everett 4-0 W Salisbury State 1-0 L at Towson State Guenther Dietz 2-2 T Virginia* 1-0 L George Mason (1972-1977) 3-0 W Georgetown* 1-1 T American * 4-3 W Virginia Military Institute# 1-0 L West Virginia * Guenther Dietz took the helm of the 5-1 L Long Island# 1-0 L at Virginia Commonwealth Monarchs in 1972, serving as the sec- 5-2 L Alabama A&M 1-1 T at Fairleigh Dickinson ond Old Dominion coach. Prior to 1-0 L at Baltimore 2-2 T at Hartwick coming to Old Dominion, Dietz, a 2-2 T Randolph-Macon 2-1 L at Virginia native of Heidelberg, Germany, 1-0 W Virginia Wesleyan 3-1 W William and Mary served as a player-coach at Tennes- 2-0 L William and Mary 2-0 L San Francisco see Tech, where he led the Golden 2-1 W at George Mason 2-1 W UNC-Charlotte Eagles to a 28-5-2 record. He took 1-0 L at Loyola 4-1 W Richmond the Old Dominion program from its 2-0 L at James Madison 3-2 L at East Carolina earliest stages and built it into a respected regional power. The Mon- * William and Mary Classic 2-1 L at Loyola archs’ best year under Dietz came in 1975, when Old Dominion posted #Harborfront Classic 2-0 W at Howard a 13-2 record, with a win over Loyola in the NCAA South Regional. *Harborfront Classic Guenther passed away in the spring of 2001. Bill Killen Final Old Dominion Record: 6 years, 32-36-5 (1978-1983) 1982 (7-8-4) Coach Bill Killen A graduate of West Chester State Home Field: Foreman Field (Astroturf) 1972 (1-7-1) College, Killen was an All-American Coach Guenther Dietz 2-1 L Connecticut back at his alma mater, and 2-1 L at George Mason Home Field: Powhatan Field (grass) captained them to the 1961 national 3-2 W Virginia Wesleyan 1-0 L Boston College championship. He went on to play 0-1 L at George Mason 2-2 T Cleveland State * for the U.S. team in both the 1962 2-2 T Virginia Tech 3-3 T West Virginia * 0-1 L Randolph-Macon Pan American Games and the 1964 3-0 L William and Mary 2-1 L Hampden-Sydney Olympics. He joined the ODU staff 0-0 T(ot) Navy 3-1 L at Virginia Military Institute after serving as head coach at Yale 2-1 W North Carolina 7-1 L at Madison College from 1974-1977. Prior to his stint at Yale, Killen was head coach at 2-1 L Virginia 4-0 L at William and Mary Akron (1970-1973), where he led the Zips to four straight NCAA play- 1-1 T Virginia Commonwealth 4-0 L Virginia offs. While at Old Dominion, his Monarchs received several top 20 5-0 W Richmond rankings, reaching as high as fifth in 1981. 3-1 L at UNC-Charlotte 1973 (1-8-1) Final Old Dominion Record: 6 years, 57-36-16 3-1 W East Carolina Coach Gunther Dietz 3-1 W Loyola Home Field: Foreman Field (grass) 1978 (9-5-1) 2-0 W Howard 3-1 W Hampden-Sydney Coach Bill Killen 5-0 W Western Kentucky $ 1-0 L at Virginia Wesleyan Home Field: Foreman Field (grass) 2-1 W UNC-Charlotte $ 4-1 L at Virginia 5-0 W Campbell 2-1 L South Florida $ 1-1 T at Virginia Tech 4-1 W at Randolph-Macon 4-1 L at American 2-1 L George Mason 1-0 W(ot) Virginia Military Inst *West Virginia Univ. Tournament 2-1 L at Randolph-Macon 1-1 T(ot) Md.-Baltimore County #Harborfront Classic $Sun Belt Tournament 4-0 L Madison College 3-2 L(ot) UNC-Wilmington 1-0 L Virginia Military Institute 2-0 W William and Mary * 1983 (11-7-5) 1-0 L Salisbury State 4-2 W Virginia Wesleyan Coach Bill Killen 1-0 L William and Mary 6-0 W Virginia Commonwealth Home Field: Foreman Field (Astroturf) 1-0 L at William and Mary 1-0 W South Carolina 1974 (4-6-1) 3-1 L at George Washington 2-0 W Glassboro State Coach Gunther Dietz 3-1 L(ot) Loyola 1-0 L Atlantic Christian Home Field: Foreman Field (grass) 5-0 W at Richmond 2-0 W George Mason 2-2 T Hampden-Sydney 4-1 W Baltimore 4-2 W at Richmond 4-2 L at Salisbury State 1-0 W North Carolina 5-1 L Hartwick 3-2 W Virginia Wesleyan 4-1 L Rider# 5-1 W Roanoke College *Harborfront Classic 1-0 W American 3-0 L at Lynchburg College #ECAC South Regional 4-0 W at East Carolina 5-1 L at George Mason 1-1 T(ot) Yale 3-1 L Randolph-Macon 1979 (10-3-2) 0-0 T James Madison 2-1 W at Virginia Military Institute Coach Bill Killen 1-1 T(ot) William and Mary 4-3 L Virginia Home Field: Foreman Field (grass) 3-0 W Marshall* 3-0 W East Carolina 3-2 W UCLA 1-0 W West Virginia * 5-0 L at William and Mary 2-0 W Campbell 6-0 L at Virginia 1-0 W Virginia * 2-1 W at Messiah 1975 (13-2-0) 1-1 T(ot) North Carolina 3-1 W at Virginia Commonwealth Coach Gunther Dietz 1-1 T(ot) William and Mary 3-2 L(ot) at Boston College Home Field: Foreman Field (grass) 1-0 W at Rutgers 5-0 L at Connecticut 7-0 W Christopher Newport 3-2 L(ot) at Lehigh 2-0 L at Loyola 37 Year-by-Year Results

0-0 T(ot) Jacksonville # (USF wins shootout 5-4) 1-0 L Rutgers * 2-0 W South Alabama # * ODU Met Life Soccer Classic # Univ. of Evansville Classic 1-0 W Boston University * 0-0 T(ot) UNC-Charlotte # $ Rutgers Metropolis Classic @ Sun Belt Tournament at Tampa, Fl. 1-1 T(ot) William and Mary 4-1 L at Howard 2-1 L West Virginia * West Virginia Univ. Tournament # Sun Belt Tournament 1987 (14-3-2) 2-0 W Virginia Commonwealth Coach Mike Berticelli 1-0 W George Mason Mike Berticelli Home Field: Foreman Field (Astroturf) 1-1 T(ot) Akron @ (1984-1989) 3-0 W Radford 1-0 L Vermont @ Mike Berticelli came to Old Domin- 1-0 W at Howard 4-1 W Lehigh ion after a highly successful tenure 1-0 L at Virginia 1-0 W Western Kentucky 3-1 W George Washington 0-0 T(ot) at Howard at North Carolina-Greensboro, 3-1 W at Virginia Commonwealth 2-0 W at UAB where he coached the UNCG team 2-0 W(ot) West Virginia Wesleyan 4-0 L at South Alabama to three NCAA Division III champi- 2-1 W at William and Mary 1-1 T(ot) South Florida onships. The graduate of the Uni- 5-0 W Delaware * 3-0 W Jacksonville versity of Maine at Orono led his 1-0 L Rutgers * 2-0 L at Maryland Monarch squad to two Sun Belt Con- 2-1 W Wake Forest 0-0 T(ot) Loyola ference titles (1987 and 1989), and 1-0 L Loyola 2-0 W at UNC-Charlotte coached Old Dominion to a 16-1-3 1-1 T(ot) at Jacksonville # * Tribe Soccer Classic # UNLV Tournament mark in 1985. Three of his athletes earned All-American honors and 6-2 W at UNC-Charlotte # @ ODU Met Life Classic three others earned Sun Belt Conference MVP honors. In 1989, he led 1-0 W at James Madison Old Dominion to its first-ever NCAA Division I tournament bid. 1-1 T(ot) Brooklyn College 1991 (18-2-2) Berticelli was named Sun Belt Conference Coach-of-the-Year in his first 3-1 W Appalachian State * Coach Ralph Perez season at Old Dominion (1984). He left following the 1989 season to 1-0 W at Towson State Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) take the helm at Notre Dame. Berticelli passed away in January, 2000. 2-0 W South Florida $ 2-1 W(ot) SIU-Edwardsville # Final Old Dominion Record: 6 years, 80-27-16 1-0 W South Alabama $ 1-0 W College of Charleston # *ODU Met Life Soccer Classic # Sun Belt Mini Tournament 3-0 W James Madison 1984 (13-5-3) $ Sun Belt Tournament 4-1 W at Virginia Commonwealth Coach Mike Berticelli 5-1 W UNC-Wilmington Home Field: Foreman Field (Astroturf) 1988 (11-5-3) 1-0 W Wisconsin-Milwaukee % 2-0 L at Duke Coach Mike Berticelli 0-1 L Wake Forest % 2-1 L at Atlantic Christian Home Field: Foreman Field (Astroturf) 3-0 W at Lehigh 5-0 W Virginia Wesleyan 1-0 W Christopher Newport 1-0 W Howard 3-0 L at George Mason 4-2 W at Connecticut 2-1 W at George Mason 2-1 W Richmond 5-1 W at Oneonta State # 3-0 W at Richmond 0-0 T at UNC-Charlotte 3-2 L(ot) Akron # 0-0 T(ot) at American 2-1 L at South Carolina 4-1 W Glassboro State 1-0 W Robert Morris 4-0 W East Carolina 1-1 T William and Mary 2-1 W at Loyola 2-0 W Towson State 5-1 W Virginia Commonwealth 2-0 W East Carolina 1-0 W at James Madison 2-1 L Nevada-Las Vegas $ 3-0 W Alabama-Birmingham 1-0 L Virginia 1-0 L(ot) San Diego State $ 0-0 T(ot) at William & Mary 1-0 W at William and Mary 6-0 W Boston College ** 4-0 W Maryland 2-0 W Virginia Commonwealth 2-0 W(ot) Ohio State ** 6-1 W UNC-Wilmington & 2-1 W College of Charleston * 2-1 L Loyola 1-0 W Richmond & 1-0 L Long Island * 7-1 W at Jacksonville * 1-0 W James Madison & 1-0 L Howard 2-1 L UNC-Charlotte * 0-2 L at Rutgers @ 4-0 W Western Carolina 0-0 T James Madison #Tribe Soccer Classic %ODU-MetLife Classic 4-1 L at American 2-1 W(ot) Maryland &CAA Soccer Tournament at ODU @NCAA Trn.First Round 3-0 W at Jacksonville # 1-0 W Virginia Wesleyan 3-0 W at UNC-Charlotte # 4-1 W at South Alabama % 1992 (11-6-3) 2-1 W at South Florida # 1-1 T at Sout Florida % Coach Ralph Perez 2-1 L at Virginia $ % Sun Belt Conference $ SMU Classic in Dallas, Tx. Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) * Harborfront Classic # Sun Belt Tournament # Mayor’s Cup Tournament in Oneonta, NY * Met Life Classic at ODU 2-3 L(ot) Loyola $ Virginia Intercollegiate League Tournament 2-1 W at Maryland (Later forfeited three games) 1989 (14-4-4) 5-0 W Hofstra # Coach Mike Berticelli 1-1 T(ot) West Virginia # 1985 (16-1-3) Home Field: Foreman Field (Astroturf) 1-0 W(ot) American Coach Mike Berticelli 2-1 L at Loyola-Md. 3-0 W San Diego St. % Home Field: Foreman Field (Astroturf) 2-0 W Hartford # 0-1 L UCLA % 4-0 W Atlantic Christian 3-2 W Davidson # 3-1 W Va. Commonwealth 3-2 W Radford 3-0 W at William and Mary 1-0 W Boston Univ. @ 4-0 W Virginia Wesleyan 1-1 T(ot) Virginia Tech 0-0 T(ot) at Clemson @ 3-0 W at Virginia Commonwealth 2-1 L Stanford @ 1-1 T(ot) George Mason 0-0 T at East Carolina 2-0 W Army $ 2-0 W Richmond 2-1 W UC-Santa Barbara 2-1 W Penn State $ 0-1 L at James Madison 2-1 W at Richmond 2-0 W at Virginia Commonwealth 1-0 W at UNC Wilmington 5-0 W North Carolina Wesleyan * 2-0 W Howard 2-1 W at East Carolina 2-1 W(ot) Boston Colllege * 1-0 W Radford 0-1 L(ot) William & Mary 0-2 L American 3-1 W Jacksonville * 2-1 W St. Mary’s $ 2-0 W William and Mary 1-1 T UNC-Charlotte * 0-1 L(ot) at Air Force Academy $ 2-0 W Longwood 1-0 L at James Madison 2-0 W Richmond & 1-0 W at Virginia 0-0 T(ot) Maryland 1-2 L William & Mary & 0-0 T (ot) at Rutgers 2-0 W South Florida ** #Tribe Soccer Classic %ODU-MetLife Soccer Classic 2-0 W at St. Joseph’s 1-1 T South Alabama **% @Clemson Tournament $Air Force Academy Tournament 1-0 W Appalachian State 2-1 L Wake Forest & &CAA Tournament at ODU 1-0 W at Towson State # Tribe Soccer Classic at Williamsburg, Va. ** Sun Belt Conference 4-0 W UAB Tournament @ Constitution Cup at Hartford, Conn. 1993 (8-8-5) 1-0 W Virginia Commomwealth $ Met Life Soccer Classic at ODU * Sun Belt East Region Tournament Coach Ralph Perez 2-2 T(ot) South Florida % won by ODU in a shootout & NCAA first round game Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) * ODU-Harborfront Kiwanis Classic 0-1 L at Loyola # Sun Belt Tournament (USF wins title in shootout 4-3) Ralph Perez 4-1 W Alabama A&M # (1990-1995) 6-1 W Drexel # 1986 (13-5-3) Ralph Perez came to Old Dominion 1-2 L at George Mason 4-1 W Stanford % Coach Mike Berticelli University in the fall of 1990, imme- 3-2 W Washington % Home Field: Foreman Field (Astroturf) diately following his assignment as 0-1 L at Va. Commonwealth 1-0 W Atlantic Christian assistant coach of the U.S. National 1-0 W(ot) American 4-1 W at Boston College Team at the 1990 World Cup. A suc- 2-1 W at Appalachian State 2-2 T(ot) at Richmond cessful coach at both the collegiate 4-1 L at Wake Forest 0-1 L(ot) James Madison and international levels, Perez led 1-1 T(ot) Virginia 1-1 T(ot) at Naval Academy his first two Monarch teams to con- 2-1 W at George Washington 1-2 L UNC Wilmington 1-0 W Virginia Commonwealth ference championships. He coached 1-1 T(ot) at William & Mary 1-0 W Richmond 14 All-Conference players, 10 All-State players, the CAA player-of-the- 2-1 W Maryland 2-0 W LaSalle * year and tournament MVP, and was himself honored as Colonial Ath- 3-0 W East Carolina 2-0 W Cal State-Fullerton * letic Association and Virginia Collegiate Coach-of-the-Year in 1991, lead- 4-1 W Notre Dame 1-0 W Evansville # ing the Monarchs to their best season ever, 18-2-2, and their second trip 2-4 L at UCLA $ 2-1 L(ot) St. Louis # to the NCAA Division I tournament. Perez left Old Dominion in March, 0-1 L Cal State Fullerton $ 0-0 T(ot) Loyola 1996, to become assistant coach of the New York/New Jersey MetroStars 1-1 T(ot) William & Mary @ & 1-0 L Howard of the MLS. He is now an Assistant Coach with the L.A. Galaxy. 2-2 T(ot) American @ & 2-0 W at Rutgers Final Old Dominion Record: 6 years, 65-38-19 0-3 L James Madison @ 1-0 W at Princeton #Tribe Soccer Classic %ODU MetLife Soccer Classic 2-1 L(ot) James Madison 1990 (8-6-6) $UCLA/adidas MetLife Classic @CAA Tourney at Richmond 3-0 L Maryland Coach Ralph Perez &Advanced on Penalty Kicks (5-4, 4-3) 5-2 W Towson State Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) 2-0 W UAB @ 0-0 T(ot) UNLV # 2-2 T South Florida @ 3-0 L UCLA # 38 Year-by-Year Results

1994 (10-7-2) 1997 (7-9-1) 2001 (8-7-2) Coach Ralph Perez Coach Alan Dawson Coach Alan Dawson Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) 0-2 L at Maryland 1-0 W Robert Morris 1-2 L(2ot) at UNCG 4-1 W at East Carolina 2-1 W(ot) Miami of Ohio 3-2 L at #20 Northeastern 5-1 W vs. Charleston at UNC 1-2L (ot) Columbia# 3-2 L(ot) vs. Hofstra 0-2 L at North Carolina 0-2 L Army# Canceled vs. C. of Charleston 2-1 W Air Force Academy % 0-0 T (ot) at Santa Barbara@ 3-2(OT) W vs. Syracuse 5-0 W Robert Morris % 0-6 L at San Diego@ 5-1 W vs. High Point 0-0 T(ot) Portland $ 4-0 W VMI 2-0 W vs. American 2-4 L at Washington $ 1-0 W UNC Wilmington* 1-0 W at George Mason* 1-0 W Richmond 2-3 L (ot) at George Mason* 2-1 W at Georgetown 1-2 L(ot) George Mason 0-2 L American* 3-2 W(2ot) at #21 William & Mary* 1-0 W(ot) Naval Academy 1-0 W James Madison* 3-0 L at Wake Forest 0-5 L at James Madison 0-1 L at Virginia Commonwealth* 4-0 W at Liberty 3-2 W(ot) at American 3-0 W East Carolina* 2-2 T(2ot) vs. VCU* 1-3 L William & Mary 1-4 L at William & Mary* 2-0 L at #6 UNC 1-0 W Virginia Commonwealth 1-0 W Virginia 0-0 T(2ot) vs. #25JMU* 1-4 L at Virginia 0-3 L at Richmond* 3-0 L vs. #18 Penn State 6-3 W(ot) at UNC Wilmington 0-2 L at George Mason! 5-1 W vs. UNCW* 2-1 W vs. American @ *CAA Game 1-0 L(4ot) vs. VCU$ 1-1 T vs. James Madison @ & # Stihl Classi $CAA tournament semifinals %ODU MetLife Soccer Classic $Washington Classic @CAA Tourney @ San Diego Tournament *Denotes CAA games at William & Mary & JMU Advanced in Shootout (3-1) ! CAA Championship game 2002 (10-9-4) 1995 (10-9-1) 1998 (8-8-2) Coach Alan Dawson Coach Ralph Perez Coach Alan Dawson Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) 3-2 W(ot) vs. Va. Tech 3-1 W at Navy # 1-0 W at Virginia Tech 1-2 L vs. #22 Wake Forest 0-1 L vs. Towson State # 2-0 W vs George Washington# 2-1 W vs. Ga. State^ 0-1 L vs. Connecticut % 1-0 W vs Pennsylvania # 0-4 L vs. Coastal Carolina^ 3-0 W vs. Ohio State % 0-4 L vs. Santa Clara (at W&M) 3-2 W(ot) at #12 American 7-1 W East Carolina 1-1 T vs. Hofstra (at W&M) 5-0 W at UNC-Wilmington* 3-0 W Adelphi * 1-1 T vs Campbell 0-4 L at #1 St. Johns# 1-0 W(ot) Loyola (Md.) * 2-3 L at Georgetown 2-3 L(ot) at #13 Rutgers 2-1 W at Stanford @ 0-4 L vs George Mason* 2-1 W(2ot) vs. George Mason* 2-4 L vs. San Francisco @ 2-0 W at Elon Ppd. Ppd. vs. James Madison* 2-3 L at George Mason 1-3 L vs Virginia Commonwealth*^ 1-0 W at Delaware* 1-0 W #5 James Madison 4-1 W vs William and Mary* 0-1 L at Towson* 0-1 L Wake Forest 0-2 L at James Madison* 2-3 L at #21 Virginia 0-1 L American 4-0 W at East Carolina* 3-2 W vs. #24 Hofstra* 2-1 W Mount St. Mary’s (Md.) 1-2 L at UNC Wilmington* 3-2 W(2ot) vs. Drexel* 0-3 L at #14 Maryland 1-0 W vs. Delaware 1-1 T(2ot) vs. James Madison* 0-0 T at Virginia Commonwealth 2-1 W at American* 1-0 W(2ot) at #19 VCU* 2-1 W at #18 William and Mary 0-2 L vs Richmond* Ppd. Ppd. at Penn State 0-1 L at Richmond 1-3 L vs William and Mary+ 0-2 L at William & Mary 3-0 W UNC Wilmington *CAA Game 1-2 L(2ot) vs. Drexel 1-2 L American + # Stihl Classic 3-0 W vs. Richmond@ # Navy Tournament %William and Mary Tournament ^ (at Virginia Beach Sportsplex) 0-1 L at Wake Forest * ODU MetLife Soccer Classic @ Stanford Tourn. +CAA Tourn. ^ denotes Old Dominion Stihl Soccer Classic * CAA contest + CAA Tournament at James Madison # denotes Rutgers Tournament & denotes CAA First Round 1999 (15-4-0) @ denotes NCAA First Round $ denotes NCAA Second Round Bob Warming Coach Alan Dawson (1996) Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) 2003 (15-4-1) Bob Warming came to Old Dominion 3-2 W at Delaware Coach Alan Dawson from Furman University, where he 2-1 W at Pennsylvania Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) was athletic director. Warming’s 3-0 W vs Elon 4-0 W vs. St. Francis coaching credentials prior to his ar- Ppd. Ppd. at Richmond* 1-0 W @ California^ rival in Norfolk included founding 1-2 L (ot) vs. California^ 1-0 W vs. Stanford^ the program at Creighton in 1990, and 1-0 W vs. #15 VCU* 1-0 W vs. American% 6-0 W vs. Longwood% guiding it to a number one ranking 2-0 W vs. Va. Tech^ 2-0 W vs. Wake Forest in 1993. Warming left Old Dominion 0-1 L at Richmond* 2-0 W vs. UMBC and accepted the head coaching po- 1-0 W vs. Radford% 3-2 W vs. Charleston# 5-0 W @ Campbell sition at St. Louis University on January 8, 1997. 0-1 L vs. Loyola % 1-0 W vs. UNC-Wilmington* Final Old Dominion Record: One year, 3-17-0 3-1 W vs. South Carolina# 2-1 W vs. VCU* 3-1 W vs. American* 4-1 W @ Drexel* 1996 (3-17-0) 3-1 W vs. UNC Wilmington* 1-0 W @ Hofstra* Coach Bob Warming 3-0 W vs. Towson* Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) Ppd. Ppd. at UNC Wilmington* 0-4 L at #1 Virginia 3-0 W vs. UNC Wilmington@ 3-1 W vs. Delaware* 0-3 L vs. #8 Santa Clara + 4-0 W at George Mason* 2-3 L @ James Madison* 1-3 L (ot) at UNLV + 0-1 L vs. William and Mary@ 0-1 L @ George Mason* 0-3 L vs. UNC Greensboro # 3-0 W vs. East Carolina* 1-1 T(2ot) @ William and Mary 2-4 L (ot) vs. Vanderbilt # 1-0 W vs. James Madison* 0-1 L vs. George Mason! 1-2 L at Loyola (Md.) 6-3 W vs. NC State# 3-4 L Navy @ 2-1 W at William and Mary* 3-2 W #15 San Diego @ * CAA game ^ Old Dominion Stihl Soccer Classic 1-2 L @ Maryland# 0-3 L (ot) George Mason % William and Mary Tournament # College of Charleston % denotes Old Dominion Stihl Soccer Classic (ODU) * CAA contest 1-2 L Va. Commonwealth Tournament @ CAA Tournament (Virginia Beach Sportsplex) ^ denotes Cal-Berkeley Tournament ! denotes CAA Tournament 2-3 L at American # denots NCAA Tournament 0-2 L Maryland 1-0 W at East Carolina 2000 (10-6-2) 0-3 L at #20 Wake Forest Coach Alan Dawson 1-3 L at Mount St. Mary’s Home Field: ODU Soccer Stadium (grass) 1-4 L #7 William and Mary 0-3 L vs. UNC-Greensboro 2-4 L Richmond 1-1 T (ot) vs. Fairleigh Dickinson# 2-0 W at UNC Wilmington 4-0 W vs. Delaware# 0-4 L at #19 James Madison 0-5 L vs. #17 James Madison ‡ 1-2 L vs. Princeton^ + Snickers Rebel Soccer Classic 3-2 W(ot) vs. #13 Georgetown^ # Papa John’s/William and Mary Soccer Classic 0-1 L vs. Liberty @ ODU MetLife Soccer Classic 0-4 L vs. #17 UNC-Chapel Hill ‡ CAA Championships in Wilmington, N.C. 4-2 W vs. George Mason* 2-0 W at EastCarolina* Alan Dawson 3-0 W vs. Richmond* (1997 - 1-0 W vs. William&Mary* Alan Dawson came to Old Domin- 3-2 W at American* ion from the University of North 7-0 W vs. Mt. St. Mary’s Carolina where he served as an as- 2-2 T(ot) at VCU* sistant coach for one year following 0-3 L at #12 James Madison* nine years as the head coach of Meth- 4-3 W at Virginia Tech odist College, where he was named 4-0 W vs. UNC-Wilmington* 0-2 L vs. W&M % NCAA Division III South Region #denotes William & Mary Tournament coach of the Year for two years. In ^ denotes Old Dominion Stihl Soccer Classic *CAA contest his first year, the Monarchs knocked % CAA Tournament off NCAA Tournament runnerup Virginia, 1-0. Old Dominion Record: Three Years, 30-21-3. 39 All-Time vs. Opponents

Adelphi (1-0) Campbell (3-1-1) Georgia State (1-0) 1987 T(ot) 1-1 1988 W(ot) 2-1 1995 W 3-0 1970 L 0-7 2002 W 2-1 1988 W 7-1 1989 T(ot) 0-0 1978 W 5-0 1989 W 3-1 1990 L 0-2 Air Force Academy (1-1) 1979 W 2-0 George Mason (9-15-1) 1990 W 3-0 1991 W 4-0 1992 L(ot) 0-1 1998 T 1-1 1970 L 2-11 1992 W 2-1 1994 W 2-1 2003 W 5-0 1974 L 1-5 James Madison (8-16-4) 1993 W 2-1 1977 W 2-1 1972 L 1-8 1994 L 0-2 Akron (0-1-1) Charleston (4-0) 1979 W(ot) 1-0 1973 L 0-4 1995 L 0-3 1990 T(ot) 1-1 1984 W 2-0 1980 W 3-0 1975 W 3-2 1996 L 0-2 1988 L(ot) 2-3 1991 W 1-0 1981 L 0-1 L 1-2 2003 L 2-1 1994 W 5-1 1982 L 1-2 1976 L 4-5 Alabama A&M (1-1) 1999 W 3-2 1983 W 2-0 1977 L 0-2 Maryland - Balt. Ct. (1-0-1) 1977 L 2-5 1984 L 0-3 1983 T(ot) 0-0 1978 T(ot) 1-1 1993 W 4-1 Christopher Newport (3-0) 1990 W 1-0 1984 W 1-0 2003 W 2-0 1975 W 7-0 1991 W 2-1 1986 L(ot) 1-2 Alabama-Birmingham (5-0) 1976 W 3-0 1992 T(ot) 1-1 1987 W 1-0 Messiah (1-0) 1980 W 2-0 1988 W 1-0 1993 L 1-2 1988 T(ot) 0-0 1983 W 2-1 1985 W 4-0 1994 L (ot) 1-2 1989 L 0-1 1986 W 2-0 Clemson (0-1-1) 1995 L 2-3 1991 W 3-0 Miam Ohio (1-0) 1990 W 2-0 1980 L 1-5 1996 L (ot) 0-3 W 1-0 1997 W (ot) 2-1 1991 W 3-0 1992 T(ot) 0-0 1997 L (ot) 2-3 1992 L 0-1 L 0-2 1993 L 0-1 Mount St. Mary’s (2-1) American (11-7-3) Cleveland State (0-0-1) 1998 L 0-4 L 0-3 1995 W 2-1 1980 W(ot) 1-0 1982 T(ot) 2-2 1999 W 4-0 1994 L 0-5 1996 L 1-3 1981 T(ot) 1-1 2000 W 4-2 T (ot) 1-1 2000 W 7-0 1982 L 1-4 Coastal Carolina (0-1) 2001 W 1-0 1995 W 1-0 1983 W 1-0 2002 L 0-4 2002 W(2ot) 2-1 1996 L 0-4 Naval Academy (3-2-2) 1984 L 1-4 2003 L 0-1 L 0-5 1980 L 0-2 1985 L 0-2 Columbia (0-1) L 0-1 1997 W (ot) 1-0 1981 W 1-0 1991 T(ot) 0-0 1997 L (ot) 1-2 1998 L 0-2 1982 T (ot) 0-0 1992 W(ot) 1-0 Georgetown (3-1) 1999 W 1-0 1993 T (ot) 1-1 1993 W(ot) 1-0 Connecticut (1-3) 1977 W 3-0 2000 L 0-3 1994 W (ot) 1-0 T (ot) 2-2 1982 L 1-2 1998 L 2-3 2001 T 0-0 1995 W 3-1 1994 W (ot) 3-2 1983 L 0-5 2000 W (ot) 3-2 2002 T(2ot) 1-1 1996 L 3-4 W 2-1 1988 W 2-0 2001 W 2-1 2003 L 2-3 1995 L 0-1 1995 L 0-1 Nevada-Las Vegas (0-2-1) L 1-2 George Washington (4-1) LaSalle (1-0) 1988 L 1-2 1996 L 2-3 Davidson (1-0) 1978 L 1-3 1986 W 2-0 1990 T (ot) 0-0 1997 L 0-2 1989 W(ot) 3-2 1979 W 2-1 1996 L (ot) 1-3 1998 W 4-0 1986 W 2-1 Lehigh (3-1) 1999 W 3-1 Delaware (6-1) 1987 W 3-1 1979 L(ot) 2-3 Northeastern (0-1) 2000 W 3-2 1976 L 3-5 1998 W 2-0 1980 W 3-2 2001 L 2-3 2001 W 2-0 1987 W 5-0 1990 W 4-1 2002 W 3-2 1998 W 1-0 Glassboro State (1-0) 1991 W 3-0 North Carolina (2-4-1) 2003 W 1-0 1999 W 3-2 1983 W 2-0 1978 W 1-0 2000 W 4-0 Liberty (1-1) 1979 T(ot) 1-1 Appalachian State (3-0) 2002 W 1-0 Greensboro College (1-0) 2000 L 0-1 1980 L 0-4 1985 W 1-0 2003 W 3-1 1988 W 4-1 2001 W 4-0 1982 W 2-1 1986 W 2-1 1994 L 0-2 1987 W 3-1 Drexel (3-1) Guilford (1-0) Long Island (0-2) 2000 L 0-4 1993 W 6-1 1979 W 6-1 1977 L 1-5 2001 L 0-2 Army (1-1) 2002 W(2ot) 3-2 1984 L 0-1 1989 W 2-0 2002 L(2ot) 1-2 Hampden-Sydney (4-1-1) UNC-Charlotte (5-2-3) 1997 L 0-2 2003 W 4-1 1970 W 2-1 Longwood (2-0) 1981 W 2-1 1972 L 1-2 1985 W 2-0 1982 L 1-3 Atlantic Christian (2-2) Duke (0-1) 1973 W 3-1 2003 W 6-0 W 2-1 1983 L 0-1 1984 L 0-2 1974 T(ot) 2-2 1983 T(ot) 0-0 1984 L 1-2 1975 W 7-0 Loyola (Md.) (5-13-2) 1984 T(ot) 0-0 1985 W 4-0 East Carolina (17-1-1) 1976 W 2-0 1975 W 1-0 W 3-0 1986 W 1-0 1974 W 3-0 1976 L 0-2 1987 W 6-2 1975 W 4-2 Hartford (2-0) 1977 L 0-1 1988 L 1-2 Averett (1-0) 1976 W 4-2 1981 W 1-0 1978 L(ot) 1-3 1989 T(ot) 1-1 1981 W 2-0 1980 W 3-0 1989 W 2-0 1979 L 0-1 1990 W 2-0 1981 L 2-3 1980 W 3-1 Baltimore University (1-3) 1982 W 3-1 Hartwick (1-1-1) 1981 L 1-2 UNC-Greensboro (0-3-0) 1975 L 0-1 1983 W 3-1 1980 W(ot) 2-1 1982 W 3-1 1996 L 0-3 1976 L 1-3 1984 W 4-0 1981 T(ot) 2-2 1983 L 0-2 2000 L 0-3 1977 L 0-1 1985 T(ot) 0-0 1983 L 1-5 1986 T(ot) 0-0 2001 L(ot) 1-2 1978 W 4-1 1991 W 2-0 1987 L 0-1 1992 W 2-1 High Point (1-0) 1988 L 1-2 UNC-Wilmington (9-3) Boston College (3-2) 1993 W 3-0 2001 W 5-1 1989 L 1-2 1978 L(ot) 2-3 1982 L 0-1 1994 W 4-1 1990 T(ot) 0-0 1991 W 5-1 1983 L(ot) 2-3 1995 W 7-1 Hofstra (3-1-1) 1991 W 2-1 W 6-1 1985 W 2-1 1996 W 1-0 1992 W 5-0 1992 L(ot) 2-3 1992 W 1-0 1986 W 4-1 1997 W 3-0 1998 T 1-1 1993 L 0-1 1993 L 1-2 1988 W 6-0 1998 W 4-0 2001 L 2-3 1995 W(ot) 1-0 1994 W (ot) 6-3 1999 W 3-0 2002 W 3-2 1996 L 1-2 2003 W 1-0 Boston University (2-0) 2000 W 2-0 2003 W 1-0 1999 L 0-1 1995 W 3-0 1990 W 1-0 1996 W 2-0 1992 W 1-0 Eastern Mennonite (1-0) Howard (5-4-1) Luther Rice (1-0) 1997 W 1-0 1970 W 3-2 1980 L 1-3 1975 W 1-0 1998 L 1-2 Brooklyn College (0-0-1) 1981 W 2-0 2000 W 4-3 1987 T(ot) 1-1 Elon (2-0) 1982 W 2-0 Lynchburg (0-3) 2001 W 5-1 1998 W 2-0 1983 L 1-4 1970 L 0-1 2002 W 5-0 Cal-Berkeley (1-1) 1999 W 3-0 1984 L 0-1 1971 L 0-4 1999 L(ot) 1-2 1986 L(ot) 0-1 1974 L 0-3 NC State (1-0) 2003 W 1-0 Evansville (1-0) 1987 W 1-0 2003 W 6-3 1986 W 1-0 1989 W 2-0 Marshall (1-0) Cal-Santa Barbara (1-0) 1990 T(ot) 0-0 1983 W 3-0 North Carolina Wesleyan (1-0) 1985 W(ot) 2-1 Fairleigh Dickenson (0-0-2) 1991 W 2-1 1985 W 5-0 1981 T(ot) 1-1 Maryland (4-8-1) Cal State-Fullerton (1-1) 2000 T (ot) 1-1 Jacksonville (4-0-2) 1979 L 0-1 Notre Dame (1-0) 1986 W 2-1 1983 T(ot) 0-0 1980 L 4-9 1993 W 4-1 1993 L 0-1 1984 W40 3-0 1986 L 0-3 All-Time vs. Opponents

Ohio State (2-0) St. Joseph’s (1-0) 1999 W 3-1 Virginia Military Inst. (6-2) West Va. Wesleyan (1-0) 1988 W(ot) 2-0 1985 W 2-0 W 3-0 1972 L(ot) 2-3 1987 W 2-0 1995 W 3-0 1973 L 0-1 St John's (0-1) Vanderbilt (0-1) 1974 W 2-1 Western Carolina (1-0) Oneonta State (1-0) 2002 L 0-4 1996 L 2-4 1975 W 3-1 1984 W 4-0 1988 W 5-1 1976 W 3-0 St. Louis (0-1) Vermont (0-1) 1977 W 4-3 Western Kentucky (2-0) Pembroke State (1-0) 1986 L(ot) 1-2 1990 L 0-1 1978 W(ot) 1-0 1982 W 5-0 1971 W 2-0 1997 W 4-0 1990 W 1-0 St. Mary’s (2-0) Virginia (4-13-2) Pennsylvania (2-0) 1975 W 4-0 1971 L 0-11 Virginia Tech (4-1-3) William and Mary (13-18-8) 1998 W 1-0 1992 W 2-1 1972 L 0-4 1970 W 2-1 1970 L 0-3 1999 W 2-1 1973 L 1-4 1971 L(ot) 3-4 1971 L 1-2 Salisbury State (3-2) 1974 L 3-4 1972 T(ot) 2-2 1972 L 0-4 Penn State (1-1) 1973 L 0-2 1976 L 1-2 1973 T(ot) 1-1 1973 L 0-1 1989 W 2-1 1974 L 2-4 1977 T(ot) 2-2 1989 T(ot) 1-1 1974 L 0-5 2001 L 0-3 1975 W 3-2 1979 W 1-0 1998 W 1-0 1975 W 5-4 1976 W 5-0 1980 W 2-0 1999 W 2-0 1976 L 2-4 Philadelphia Textile (0-0-1) 1977 W 4-0 1981 L 2-0 2000 W 4-3 1977 L 0-2 1981 T(ot) 1-1 1982 L 1-2 2002 W(ot) 3-2 1978 W 2-0 San Diego (1-1) 1983 L 0-6 L 0-1 Portland (0-0-1) 1996 W 3-2 1984 L 0-1 Virginia Wesleyan (13-0) 1979 T(ot) 1-1 1994 T (ot) 0-0 1997 L 0-6 L 1-2 1970 W 7-1 1980 W 1-0 1985 W 1-0 1971 W 3-2 L 0-1 Princeton (2-1) San Diego State (1-1) 1986 T(ot) 1-1 1972 W 3-2 1981 W 3-1 1976 W 3-1 1988 L(ot) 0-1 1987 L 0-1 1974 W 3-2 1982 L 0-3 1986 W 1-0 1992 W 3-0 1994 L 1-4 1975 W 3-2 1983 T(ot) 1-1 2000 L 1-2 1996 L 0-4 1976 W 2-0 1984 W 1-0 San Francisco (0-2) 1997 W 1-0 1977 W 1-0 1985 W 1-0 Radford (4-0) 1981 L 0-1 1978 W 4-2 1987 W 2-1 1985 W 3-2 1995 L(ot) 2-4 Va.Commonwealth (17-6-4) 1979 W 2-0 1988 T(ot) 1-1 1987 W 3-0 1978 W 6-0 1980 W 3-0 1989 W 3-0 1989 W 1-0 Santa Barbara (0-0-1) 1979 W 3-0 1984 W 5-0 1990 T(ot) 1-1 1999 W 1-0 1997 T 0-0 1980 W 6-0 1985 W 4-0 1991 T(ot) 0-0 1981 L 0-1 1988 W 1-0 1992 L(ot) 0-1 Randolph-Macon (2-5-1) Santa Clara (0-2) 1982 T(ot) 1-1 L 1-2 1970 L 1-2 1996 L 0-3 1983 W 3-1 Wake Forest (2-6) 1993 T(ot) 1-1 1971 L 0-4 1998 L 0-4 1984 W 2-0 1986 L 1-4 T(ot) 1-1 1973 L 1-2 1985 W 1-0 1987 W 2-1 1994 L 1-3 1974 L 1-3 South Alabama (3-1-1) 1985 W 3-0 1989 L 1-2 1995 W 2-1 1975 W 5-4 1983 W 2-0 1986 W 1-0 1991 L 0-1 1996 L 1-4 1976 L 0-3 1987 W 1-0 1987 W 3-1 1995 L 0-1 1997 L 1-4 1977 T(ot) 2-2 1988 W 4-1 1988 W 5-0 1996 L 0-3 1998 W 4-1 1978 W 4-1 1989 T(ot) 1-1 1989 W 2-0 2001 L 0-3 L 1-3 1990 L 0-4 1990 W 2-0 2002 L 1-2 1999 W 2-1 Richmond (17-5-1) 1991 W 4-1 2002 L 0-1 L 0-1 1975 W 14-1 South Carolina (2-1) 1992 W 3-1 2003 W 2-0 2000 W 1-0 1976 W 8-0 1983 W 1-0 1993 L 0-1 L 0-2 1978 W 5-0 1984 L 1-2 1994 W 1-0 Washington (1-1) 2001 W 3-2 1979 W 5-1 1999 W 3-1 1995 T 0-0 1993 W 3-2 2002 L 0-2 1980 W 3-1 1996 L 1-2 1994 L 2-4 2003 T(2ot) 1-1 1981 W 4-1 South Florida (3-1-4) 1997 L 0-1 1982 W 5-0 1982 L 1-2 1998 L 1-3 West Virginia (1-2-2) Wisconsin-Milwaukee (1-0) 1983 W 4-2 1984 W 2-1 1999 W 1-0 1981 L 0-1 1991 W 1-0 1984 W 2-1 1985 T(ot) 2-2 2000 T (ot) 2-2 1982 T(ot) 3-3 1985 W 2-1 1986 T(ot) 2-2 2001 T 2-2 1983 W 1-0 Yale (0-0-1) 1986 W 1-0 1987 W 2-0 L (4ot) 0-1 1990 L 1-2 1983 T(ot) 1-1 1991 W 3-0 1988 T(ot) 1-1 2002 W(2ot) 1-0 1992 T(ot) 1-1 W 1-0 1989 W 2-0 2003 W 2-1 1992 W 2-0 1990 T(ot) 1-1 W 2-0 1993 T(ot) 2-2 Southern Ill.-Edwardsville (1- 1994 W 1-0 0) 1995 L 0-1 1991 W 2-1 1996 L 2-4 1997 L 0-3 Stanford (3-1) 1998 L 0-2 1989 L 1-2 1999 L 0-4 1993 W 4-1 2000 W 3-0 1995 W 2-1 2002 W 3-0 2003 W 1-0

Rider (0-1) Syracuse (1-0) 1978 L 1-4 2001 W 3-2

Roanoke (1-0) Towson (6-3) 1974 W 5-1 1970 L 1-4 1980 W 3-0 Robert Morris (3-0) 1981 L 0-1 1991 W 1-0 1984 W 2-0 1994 W 5-0 1985 W 1-0 1997 W 1-0 1986 W 5-2 1987 W 1-0 Rutgers (2-3-1) 1995 L 0-1 1979 W 1-0 2003 W 3-0 1985 T(ot) 0-0 1986 W 2-0 UCLA (1-3) 1987 L 0-1 1979 W 3-2 SOC 1990 L 0-1 1990 L 0-3 C 1991 L 0-2 1992 L 0-1 E 2002 L 2-3 1993 L 2-4 R

St. Francis (PA) (1-0) UNC Wilmington (9-2) 2003 W 4-0 1997 W 1-0 41 MONARCH CHAMPIONSHIP TEAMS

1975 (13-2) 1989 (14-4-4) Competed in the NCAA Division II Regionals Sun Belt Conference Champions NCAA Regional

1987 (14-3-2) 1990 (8-6-6) Sun Belt Conference Champions Sun Belt Conference Champions

42 MONARCH CHAMPIONSHIP TEAMS

1991 (18-2-2) 2001 (8-7-2) Colonial Athletic Association Championship Colonial Athletic Association Regular Season Champions NCAA Regional

1999 (15-4-0) 2002 (10-9-1) Colonial Athletic Association Regular Season Champions NCAA Second Round

2003 (15-4-1) NCAA Second Round 43 2005

Day Camp Ages 5-High School Seniors I - June 20 - 24 II - August 1 - 5 Residential Camp Ages 10-High School Seniors July 24 - 28

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