2015 Roster

2015 Numerical roster No. Name Pos. Ht. Yr. Hometown High School 00 Kendall Thomas GK 5-7 Fr. Cornelius, N.C. Cannon School 0 Alex Carpenter GK 5-7 Fr. Lee’s Summit, Mo. Blue Springs South 1 Becca Ravitz GK 6-0 So. Skillman, N.J. Montgomery 2 Jenni Isaac MF/F 5-8 Sr. Bridgewater, Conn. Shepaug Valley 3 Maddie Fisher D/MF 5-8 Sr. Idianapolis, Ind. Cathedral 4 Vicky Bruce MF 5-4 Sr. Cornelius, N.C. Cannon 5 Natalie Connell MF 5-4 Fr. Lancaster, Pa. Hempfield 6 Dani Johnson D 5-6 Sr. Norfolk, Va. Norfolk Academy 8 Kate Joss F 5-7 Jr. Louisville, Ky. Christian Academy 9 Ashley Finke F 5-6 Jr. Charlotte, N.C. Charlotte Latin 11 Shannon Ballard D/F 5-6 Fr. Plano, Texas Plano West 12 Megan Goodling D 5-6 Fr. Charlotte, N.C. 13 Madison See F/D 5-7 Sr. Midland, Ga. Columbus 14 Perry Zollicoffer MF/D 5-6 Fr. Charlotte, N.C. Charlotte Latin 15 Erin Gross MF 5-5 So. Boca Raton, Fla. West Boca Raton Comm. School 16 Rachel Western D 5-6 So. Atlanta, Ga. The Lovett School 17 Maggie Boyd F/MF 5-5 Jr. Laytonsville, Md. Our Lady of Counsel 19 Katie Im F 5-3 So. Tarpon Springs, Fla. Palm Harbor University 20 Adelaide Cummings MF 5-5 Jr. Charlotte, N.C. Charlotte Country Day 21 Megan Smith D/F 5-5 Fr. Germantown, Md. The Academy Holy Cross 22 Sarah Tuggle F/MF 5-3 Sr. Simpsonville, S.C. Mauldin 23 Ann-Robert Goode MF 5-5 Fr. Richmond, Va. Collegiate School 24 Kennedy Jones F 5-5 So. Washington, D.C. National Cathedral School 25 Lauren Grace Himes D 5-10 So. Nashville, Tenn. The Harpeth Hall School 26 Mia Hodges MF 5-8 Fr. Bellingham, Wash. Bellingham 27 Catherine Leon MF 5-6 Fr. Portland, Ore. Oregon Episcopal School 28 Alexa Landsberger MF 6-0 Fr. Arlington Heights, Ill. Buffalo Grove

Name Position Year Alma Mater Greg Ashton Head Coach 12th UTSA ’02 Adam Denton Assistant Coach 3rd Wingate ‘01 Brian Wheeler Athletic Trainer 9th Florida State ’04

2 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS Coach Ashton

SoCon Freshman of the Year honors after pacing the team in goals and points, while tying for the team-lead in assists. Fellow GreG ashToN classmates Stephanie Piperno and goalkeeper Rachel Locke were also key first-year contributors and earned a spot on the SoCon Head Coach All-Freshman Team with Fisher. Piperno was right behind Fisher 12th Year at Davidson in scoring, while Locke stepped into the starting lineup Sept. 11 UTSA ‘02 at Navy and never looked back, compiling an 8-6-1 record with three shutouts. Davidson's season came to an end in the first Record at Davidson: 106-92-27 round of the league tournament, falling 2-1 to rival Furman at Entering his 12th year for the 2015 home. season, head coach Greg Ashton has In 2010, Davidson went 6-8-6 overall and 2-4-5 in league play. done nothing to disappoint the Wildcat faithful in his 11 years at The six ties were a program record, breaking the previous mark the helm of the women’s soccer program. Davidson has made a of three set during the 1997 and 2008 campaigns. Ashton also led name for its self nationally after a successful run in the Southern the program to its 100th SoCon win with a 1-0 triumph over Conference that included three regular season titles and fourth Chattanooga, Oct. 24. Ashton had two players earn spots on the tournament titles. The Wildcats moved to the Atlantic 10 in 2014. All-SoCon Second Team, while two other of his players, Allison Ashton enters the 2015 season with a career coaching record of Drutchas and Callan Elswick, earned prestigious postgraduate 177-100-29 (106-92-27 at Davidson), while he guided the 'Cats to a scholarships from the NCAA and Southern Conference for their 64-31-11 record in SoCon play. They went 2-5-1 in their first year excellent work on the field as well as in the classroom. The pair in the A-10. were also named to CoSIDA/ESPN Academic All-District III Davidson has been very successful under Ashton when play- Teams, with Drutchas earning first-team honors. Davidson as a ing at Alumni Stadium, compiling a 57-32-15 record during his 11 team was honored for the 16th straight year with the Women's years at the helm. The 2010 team went for the first time in pro- College Team Academic Award from the NSCAA for the 2009-10 gram history unbeaten at Alumni Stadium with a 5-0-3 record. season. The 'Cats also set a program record with a 13-game home un- The 2009 season was a milestone season for Ashton and the beaten streak (10-0-3) with a win and tie in the first two home women's soccer program as they earned their first trip to the games of the 2011 season. The streak had started in the final three NCAA Tournament after winning the program's fourth SoCon home contests of the 2009 campaign. Tournament Title. The 'Cats finished with a 12-10-1 overall mark, It was a new beginning for the 2014 campaign as Davidson while closing out league play at 7-3-1. Ashton and the Wildcats was making its inaugural debut in the Atlantic 10 after a 20-year rode a six-game unbeaten streak to clinch the fourth and final run in the SoCon. The Wildcats finished 5-12-2 overall and 2-5-1 seed in the SoCon Tournament, and then captured a 1-0 victory in league play. They played their first ranked opponent since over No. 1-seeded UNC Greensboro to earn a trip to the finals. 2010, hosting No. 5 Virginia Tech, which reached the College Cup Taking on College of Charleston in the finals, Davidson played in 2013. Davidson also faced five new opponents in 2014, includ- 108 minutes of shutout ball until netting the game-winner in the ing A-10 members VCU, St. Bonaventure and UMass. On Oct. 3, 109th minute to send the 'Cats to the NCAA Tournament, where the 'Cats collected their first-ever A-10 win with a 2-0 victory on they faced off against No. 8 South Carolina. Though Davidson the road against St. Bonnies. lost 4-0 to the Gamecocks, the Wildcats still finished with their Junior Jenni Isaac earned a spot on the A-10 All-Academic sixth straight winning record, all under Ashton. Davidson placed Team, while the team earned the Women's College Team Aca- five players on the All-SoCon First or Second Team, including demic Award from the NSCAA for the 20th year in a row. In ad- Kyri Bye-Nagel who was named to the first team for the third dition, eight Wildcats were honored with a spot on the A-10 straight season. The Wildcats also put four players on the SoCon Commissioner's Honor Roll. All-Tournament Team, which included tournament MVP The 2013 season was a memorable 10th season for Ashton as Amanda Flink. he won his 100th game at Davidson after the Wildcats earned a 4- The 2008 season saw Davidson hit the 10-win mark for the 3 decision on the road at Francis Marion, Oct. 13. Davidson fifth straight season as it closed at 10-6-3 in Ashton's fifth year. reached the SoCon Tournament for the 10th straight season, fin- The Wildcats had another successful year in SoCon play as well, ishing seventh in the league standings at 4-5-1 and had a 6-11-4 finishing fourth with an 8-3-0 mark. overall record. Freshman Ashley Finke became the program's His fourth season was one for the record books. Davidson tied fifth player to earn a spot on the SoCon All-Freshman Team since the school record for wins in a season with a 14-5-1 mark that in- 2009. Davidson as a team was honored once again for its hard cluded eight- and six-game unbeaten streaks. The 'Cats also fin- work in the classroom as the Wildcats garnered for an 19th ished second in league play with an 8-1-1 record and advanced to straight year the Women's College Team Academic Award from the SoCon tournament semifinals for the third time in the past NSCAA. In addition, seven players were honored with a spot on four years. In addition, the 2007 squad tied the school record for the SoCon All-Acaemic Team in 2013. shutouts with 10. During the 2012 season, Davidson went 7-10-3 overall with a The 2006 campaign saw Davidson go 11-7-2 and finish second 5-5-1 mark in SoCon action. The young Wildcat squad consisted in the conference with a league mark of 7-3, after being picked to of 19 first and second-year players. The Wildcats reached the finish fifth in the preseason poll. tournament for the ninth time under Ashton, but their bid for an- After an outstanding first year that saw him win Southern other SoCon title came up short when they were eliminated by Conference Coach of the Year honors while taking the Wildcats to Furman 3-2 in the quarterfinals. Julie Calhoun gave Ashton yet the SoCon finals, Ashton guided Davidson to the school’s first another all-league player when she was named to the All-SoCon undefeated mark in league play, and its third regular season Second Team. Davidson as a team was honored once again for its SoCon title in 2005. The Wildcats also achieved its highest rank- hard work in the classroom as the Wildcats garnered for an 18th ing, ninth, in the Soccer Buzz and NSCAA/adidas Southeast Re- straight year the Women's College Team Academic Award from gional poll over the last five years, and a program-best 14-game NSCAA. Rachel Locke, Julia Singley and Lauren Swany were unbeaten streak. All those accomplishments earned him his sec- each named to the SoCon All-Academic Team. ond straight coach of the year award as the Wildcats fashioned a The 2011 Wildcats compile a 9-9-2 overall mark and 7-4 in 14-5-2 overall mark in 2005. SoCon play as they broke in 11 first-year players. Three of the in- Ashton’s athletes have also shined under his tutelage with coming freshmen made an immediate impact. Becca Fisher led five different players earning all-league honors including Mel the way as she became the third Wildcat under Ashton to garner Smith, who was the 2005 Freshman of the Year, and standout for- 2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 3 Head Coach ward Kara Koehrn, the 2005 Player of Year. Koehrn also was a excellence in the classroom. NSCAA Scholar-Athlete All-American and CoSIDA Academic All- Before he became head coach at Trinity, Ashton served as the District performer. assistant there for five seasons, during which time the Tigers won With the arrival of Ashton in 2004, Davidson ushered in a new the conference title and played in the D-III playoffs four times. era of Wildcat women’s soccer. He led the 2004 squad all the way Trinity also reached the quarterfinals of the NCAA D-III Tourna- to the tournament finals, earning the native New Zealander with ment twice. his first SoCon Coach of the Year award. The Wildcats earned Ashton, who earned his bachelor’s degree in kinesiology from recognition as the NCAA’s 16th-most improved women’s soccer the University of Texas-San Antonio, also holds a business degree program, doubling the number of wins collected in 2003 with an from Auckland (New Zealand) Tech. He played soccer profession- overall record of 12-9-1 while posting a league mark of 7-3-1 to ally in New Zealand from 1985 to 1992, and he represented his finish fifth in the final SoCon standings. country as a Youth National Team member beginning with the U- Eventually falling to rival Furman in the finals, Davidson 15 team through the U-19 squad. made history as the second-lowest seed to ever contend for the Ashton is married to Cheri Lofquist and they reside in Cor- SoCon Tournament title in the championship game. nelius, N.C. Formerly the head coach at Division-III Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, Ashton arrived at Davidson with a remark- able record of success. Twice during his four-year tenure at Trinity Ashton took the Tigers to the NCAA D-III semifinals. His team also won the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference crown three times. Trinity finished the 2003 season with a 16-1-1 record and an 8-1 mark in the SCAC. The conference defeat was Ashton’s lone loss in the SCAC in four seasons, having won 35 straight during his career there. In 2002, he led the Tigers to a 21-2 record, accumulating the most victories ever during a single season in the school’s history. Ashton was named Coach of the Year for the SCAC and the NSCAA South Region. He finished his tenure at Trinity with an impressive overall record of 71-8-2. He has coached five All-America honorees, and each of his four Trinity teams received an NSCAA Team Academic Award for

ASHTON FILE

•2009 NCAA Tournament, first in program history •2009 SoCon Tournament Champions •2005 SoCon Regular Season Champions •Two-time SoCon Coach of the Year – 2004 & 2005

Coaching Record Year W L T Pct. School 2000 19 2 1 .886 Trinity 2001 15 3 0 .833 2002 21 2 0 .913 2003 16 1 1 .916 2004 12 9 1 .568 Davidson 2005 14 5 2 .737 2006 11 7 2 .600 2007 14 5 1 .725 2008 10 6 3 .605 2009 12 10 1 .543 2010 6 8 6 .450 2011 9 9 2 .500 2012 7 10 3 .425 2013 6 11 4 .381 2014 5 12 2 .316 Totals 177 100 29 .640 15 years Davidson 106 92 27 .531 11 years

4 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS 2015 Outlook

The 2015 season has Davidson beginning •Ravitz did not see any official game ac- Carolina State, and enter their second year in its second year in the Atlantic 10. After a 20- tion last year backing up Locke. She hails the Atlantic 10 by being the host school for year stay in the Southern Conference, the from Skillman, N.J., where she started 82 the league championship in November. Wildcats began a new era last year as they games and earned 35 shutouts in her prep The Wildcats biggest road trip will be a moved to the A-10. This year’s roster is full career. visit to Virginia Tech, which two years ago of experience in 16 returners, including six •A local product, Thomas comes to advanced to the College Cup and last year seniors who will look to help the program Davidson from Cornelius, N.C., and played reached the round of 16. earn its second bid to the NCAA Tourna- at Cannon School. She was a NCSCA Girl’s As part of the Atlantic 10 schedule, com- ment. Soccer All-Region Team pick in both 2013 ing to face the 'Cats at Alumni Stadium will Davidson will look to improve on last and 2014. be VCU, Duquesne, George Mason, St. season’s 5-12-2 record, while it finished 2-5-1 •Carpenter hails from Lee’s Summit, Mo., Bonaventure and Saint Joseph's. in its first year in the new league. The ‘Cats where she played at Blue Springs South. She Davidson begins the campaign at home hope to carry their end of the season success was a ECNL North American League Na- for the fifth straight year when it hosts Al- a year ago (a win and tie) into this year with tional Finalist. bany and former Southern Conference oppo- a roster that has a great balance of veterans nent Elon over the weekend of Aug. 21-23. It and newcomers. They were picked to finish Offense: Midfielders & Forwards will be a first time matching up against the 13th in this year’s A-10 coaches poll. Offensive quick hits... Great Danes. The all-time series vs. the Head coach Greg Ashton enters his 12th •Davidson’s offense scored 12 goals to go Phoenix has the 'Cats owning a 12-8-1 ad- season, having guided Davidson to 106 wins with eight assists. vantage, but they are seeking to halt a two- during his tenure. He ranks second all-time • The ‘Cats fired off 170 shots (8.9 per game losing streak. in program history in wins and has collected game). Playing just two games over the next two 177 career victories overall in 15 years. • The offense returns nearly 75 percent of weeks, Aug. 29 & Sept. 6, Davidson will “I’m always excited for a new year and its scoring, led by Vicky Bruce. travel to Big South foe Campbell to face the the opportunity to continue to accomplish •Bruce, a transfer from Fighting Camels for the first time since 1998 what we set out every season to do, which is last year, tallied a pair of goals and a team- and just the fifth time overall. The following win a league title and reach the NCAA Tour- high three assists for seven points. She regis- weekend another former SoCon opponent nament,” said Ashton. “After a fun transition tered a pair of game-winning scores. visits in the Furman Paladins for a Sunday year last season into the A-10, we are looking •Defender Johnson scored a game-win- contest. The 'Cats are seeking their first win to move forward and make a name for our- ning goal on a penalty kick to pace Davidson in the series, which dates back to 1994, since selves in our second year in the conference.” over Army, 3-1. 2009 when it scored a 1-0 shutout victory at With the return of 16 letterwinners from •Sarah Tuggle and Lauren Grace Himes home. last year’s squad, eight of them starters, plus each recorded a goal and an assist for three A pair of ACC foes follow on the sched- the addition of 11 newcomers, the ’Cats have points. ule. Davidson goes to Virginia Tech for a a solid foundation on which to build a strong •Ashley Fink will look to rebound after a Thursday night game, Sept. 10. The Hokies 2015 campaign. down sophomore season. As a freshman she came to Alumni Stadium ranked fifth in the “I think the talent and depth on our scored three goals and assisted on another to nation a year ago and scored a 4-0 win. It fin- squad are good strengths again for us, and earn All-SoCon Freshman Team honors. ished the year 16-6 and reached the round of we are excited for the season to start and put •Davidson will have to replace offensive 16 before falling to Penn State. all our hard work during the preseason into staples Stephanie Piperno and Becca Fisher. Sunday, Sept. 13, has the 'Cats hosting real game situations,“ said Ashton. Piperno finished her career with 16 goals N.C. State, which went just 2-15-2 and 0-10 and nine assists after getting four scores and in league play last year. They are seeking Defense an assist as a senior last year. their second win in the series that first Defensive quick hits... •Fisher, the 2011 SoCon Freshman of the started in 1992 and is 10 games old. •The ‘Cats will need to replace three- Year, registered a pair of assists in her final A two-game road swing has Davidson fourths of their defense with the graduation season to finish with 10 goals and nine as- playing its third member of the SoCon, at of Rachel Stelter, Zoe Hayes and goalkeeper sists, while starting all but two of her 73 ca- Wofford (Sept. 18), and then ending the Rachel Locke. reer games played. weekend on Sunday in Atlanta, Ga., against •Locke, a four-year starter, left Davidson •Junior Kate Joss scored a goal last year George State (6-10-4 last year). The Panthers as one of the program’s top all-time keepers, to give her four through her first two years. and Wildcats played to a scoreless tie last ranking second in career goals against aver- •Filling the middle is Jenni Isaac and year at Alumni Stadium, while Davidson is age at 1.24 and shutouts with 19.5, including Adelaide Cummings. Isaac has started 45 of riding an 11-game unbeaten streak (7-0-4) vs. five of them in 2014. She also finished third her 58 career games played in. The senior the Terriers. The two teams played to a tie in all-time in saves with 327. was named to the A-10 All-Academic Team their last meeting in 2013. •The defense last season had a 1.16 GAA, last year, while earning A-10 Commis- Davidson's final non-conference game while shutting out five opponents. sioner’s Honor Roll for both the Fall and has it hosting Francis Marion. •Returning to lead the defense is senior Spring semesters. A-10 action begins at home the following captain Dani Johnson. •Cummings saw action in 18 of David- week, Oct. 1, with a game against VCU. •She has started 52 of her 60 career son’s 19 games, scoring her first collegiate Three of the next four league games has the games, including all 19 a year ago. goal in a win vs. Army. 'Cats hitting the road with contests at La •Johnson also is a threat to score on of- Salle, Dayton and Massachusetts. Both La fense, having scored six career goals. Newcomers Salle and Dayton advanced to the NCAA •Helping Johnson on defense will be fel- •Head coach Ashton brought in 11 fresh- Tournament after the Explorers won the A- low senior Maddie Fisher. She saw action in men for the 2015 season. 10 regular season title with an 8-0-0 record, 11 games last year, starting nine of them. •The freshmen hail from 10 different while the Flyers captured the league's tour- •The sophomore duo of Rachael Western states, including three from North Carolina nament title. The lone home game during and Lauren Grace Himes also return. They where they are down the road from Cor- that stretch is against Duquesne, Oct. 11. played in 18 and 19 games, respectively, as nelius and Charlotte. Davidson next will host a three-game freshmen last year. Himes started nine of her •In addition to keepers Carpenter and homestand from Oct. 18-25, facing Geoge games, while Western saw her name in the Thomas, the group includes six midfielders, Mason, St. Bonaventure and Saint Joseph's. starting lineup 13 times. Natalie Connell, Perry Zollicoffer, Ann- The Wildcats' first-ever A-10 win came •Himes chipped in a goal and an assist Robert Goode, Mia Hodges, Catherine Leon against the Bonnies. Closing out the regular during her first year. and Alexa Landsberger. In addition to Mia season are trips to Fordham (Oct. 29) and •Freshmen Megan Goodling, Shannon Hodges and Zollicoffer, who each can play Rhode Island (Nov. 1), which went 12-5-2 Ballard and Megan Smith all could see time defender, the other defenders are Megan last year. off the bench. Gooding and Shannon Ballard, who also This year's Atlantic 10 Tournament, an ­­ played forward in high school as did Megan eight-team format, will be held at Davidson, Goalkeeper quick hits... Smith. Nov. 5-8. The Wildcats will be hosting the •For the first time in four years, the ‘Cats quarterfinals, semifinals and championship will have a new goalkeeper as sophomore The Schedule game at Alumni Stadium. It's the first time Becca Ravitz, and freshmen Alex Carpenter Beginning the program's 27th season, the since 2011 they will have hosted a league and Kendall Thomas will look to replace Davidson women's soccer team will host five tournament game and the first time since Locke. non-conference opponents, including North 2007 hosting the SoCon semifinals and final. 2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 5 2014 Review

Davidson Scores Season-Opening 2-0 Win at Home Himes' first collegiate score in the second half. Davidson started off their 2014 season in winning fashion by getting two early first-half goals and playing shutout ball the rest Davidson Earns A-10 Win After Lengthy Delay of the way in a 2-0 win over Winthrop. The Davidson women's soccer team overcame a lighting delay Davidson avenged a 2-1 defeat to the Eagles a year ago and im- of over two hours by coming back to score a pair of goals in the proved to 11-15 all-time in season openers. The 'Cats also im- late stages of the first half and held on for a 2-1 victory on a rainy proved to 16-10 in home openers all time. Friday night against Atlantic 10-foe Rhode Island. Junior transfer Vicky Bruce put the Wildcats on the board first Defender Madison See and forward Stephanie Piperno each with a penalty kick goal, the first score of her career, 20 minutes scored to help the Wildcats (5-12-1, 2-5 A-10) snap a five-game into the contest. skid, which was the longest since 2003. The victory was also the Just over five minutes later in the half, Becca Fisher kicked a program's first against the Rams, who fell to 11-4-2 overall and 3- long through ball to a streaking Kate Joss, who gathered in the 3-1 in league play. In their only other matchup, both schools pass and shot to the far post, going top shelve for her fourth ca- played to a 3-all draw back in 1994. reer goal. The game was delayed with 29:53 left in the first half after a se- Goalkeeper Rachel Locke stopped four Eagle shots for her 15th vere weather storm blew through the area and forced a lighting career shutout. delay for over two hours.

No. 5 Virginia Tech Proves Too Much For Davidson, 4-0 ‘Cats Earn Scoreless Draw in Season Finale Sunday No. 5 Virginia Tech scored three of its four goals in the first half Behind the stellar play of goalkeeper Rachel Locke and the and Davidson was unable to counter as it fell at Alumni Stadium, Wildcat defense, the Davidson women's soccer team closed out 4-0. The Wildcats were playing their first ranked opponent since the regular season with a scoreless draw on Senior Day against taking on No. 7 Texas A&M in 2010, while it was the highest Massachusetts at Alumni Stadium in Atlantic 10 play. ranked opponent they have faced since traveling to face No. 1 The game was fairly even across the board, with the Minute- North Carolina in 2005. women firing off 18 shots and Davidson 13, while corner kicks Rachel Locke made some impressive saves early for the 'Cats were 7-5 in favor of UMass. between the pipes and ended with eight saves. Locke capped off her outstanding four-year career with seven saves, including some big ones late in regulation as well as in ‘Cats Close Out Homestand Victorious, both overtimes. She earned her fifth shutout of the season to 3-1, vs. Army move into second place all-time with 19 for her career. The senior Three different Wildcats scored their first goals of the season keeper also finished second in the record books in minutes and the Davidson women's soccer team closed out a four-game played and third all-time in saves (327). homestand with a solid 3-1 win over Army. With her seven saves today, Locke wrapped up the year with 93 The Wildcats split their four games to open the season at home. to pace all A-10 goalkeepers. For the second game in a row, Davidson was facing a first-time opponent. Both teams played evenly through the first 42 minutes Jenni Isaac Garners A-10 Academic Honors until the Wildcats struck first. Senior Stephanie Piperno knocked Davidson junior midfielder Jenni Isaac was honored for her in her 13th career goal off a great feed from Vicky Bruce at the play on the field as well as off it by earning a spot on the Atlantic 42:12 mark. 10 All-Academic team. Then right before halftime, defender Dani Johnson lined up and Isaac was one of 11 players named to the academic team, based scored her fourth career PK for a 2-0 lead. on a vote of the women's soccer media relations directors at each Davidson held on the rest of the way, getting one more insur- of the 14 member institutions. ance goal off the foot of Adelaide Cummings in the 67th minute. The Bridgewater, Conn. native started all 19 games this year for Becca Fisher earned an assist on the play. the Wildcats, firing off nine shots and putting three of them on goal. For her career, Isaac has started 45 of her 58 games played Wildcats Play to First Draw of the Season vs. Ga. State in, scoring a goal and adding two assists. The Davidson women's soccer team played to their first draw of She also has excelled in the classroom, carrying a 3.92 cumula- the season, earning a scoreless tie against visiting Georgia State at tive grade point average and majoring in center for interdiscipli- Alumni Stadium. nary studies. Isaac was named to the 2013 Southern Conference Both teams were playing each other for just the second time, All-Academic team last Fall in Davidson last year in the league. and first since 1995, with the 'Cats now holding a 1-0-1 record in the series. Davidson Earns Academic Honors From NSCAA Davidson controlled possession the majority of the afternoon. It The Wildcat women's soccer team was honored for the 20th con- fired off 17 shots to GSU's nine, putting six of those shots on goal. secutive year for their outstanding academic success this past season as they were awarded as a team by the National Soccer ‘Cats Score First A-10 Win, Blank Bonnies on the Road, 2-0 Coaches Association of America (NSCAA). Senior Stephanie Piperno scored a goal for the second game in a Davidson earned the Women's College Team Academic Award row and Davidson went on to collect its first-ever Atlantic 10 win from the NSCAA for the 2013-14 season. The program has won with a 2-0 shutout of host St. Bonaventure. the award every year since the inception of it in 1996. The Wild- Women's soccer also earned the first Atlantic 10 victory for all cats were one of 600 women's teams to post a team grade point of Davidson's 19 sports that moved to the A-10 this year. average of 3.0 or above to earn the academic team honor. “Terrific first win in the A-10 for the team this afternoon on the Davidson as team under the guidance of 11th-year head coach road," said head coach Greg Ashton. "The whole team put in a Greg Ashton finished with a team GPA of 3.36. great effort defending throughout the whole game. Rachel [Locke] made some big saves, Lauren [Grace Himes] scored her first career goal and Stephanie [Piperno] hit a tremendous shot for the game-winner. Overall, it was a great team win and they deserve the result after all the hard work they put in this week preparing for the weekend.” Vicky Bruce assisted on both goals, including Lauren Grace 6 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS 2014 Statistics 2014 a-10 fiNal sTaNdiNGs 2014 schedUle/resUlTs Aug. 22 Winthrop W, 2-0 CONFERENCE OVERALL 24 Virginia Tech L, 0-4 Standings W L T Pct GF GA W L T Pct GF GA 29 UAB L, 0-1 La Salle 1 8 0 0 1.000 18 3 14 6 2 .682 40 26 31 Army W, 3-1 VCU 5 1 2 .750 9 4 10 5 5 .625 25 24 Sept. 5 at East Carolina L, 0-2 2 Dayton 5 2 1 .688 17 12 12 9 2 .565 45 42 7 at Coastal Carolina W, 2-0 Rhode Island 4 3 1 .562 9 9 12 5 2 .684 28 20 11 at Liberty L, 0-1 George Wash. 4 3 1 .562 6 9 12 6 1 .658 26 16 14 Georgia State T, 0-0 (2ot) Saint Joseph’s 4 4 0 .500 10 8 11 9 0 .550 23 23 18 William & Mary L, 0-2 Richmond 3 3 2 .500 14 10 9 9 2 .500 37 37 21 at Charlotte L, 0-2 28 at North Florida L, 1-2 (2ot) UMass 3 3 2 .500 8 7 5 9 5 .395 14 24 Saint Louis 3 5 0 .375 11 11 8 10 0 .444 31 27 Oct. 3 at *St. Bonaventure W, 2-0 George Mason 2 4 2 .375 9 13 4 11 2 .294 15 30 5 at *Duquesne L, 0-1 (2ot) Fordham 2 5 1 .312 4 9 8 9 1 .472 18 21 11 *Richmond L, 0-1 Duquesne 2 5 1 .312 5 10 5 10 3 .361 14 25 17 at *George Washington L, 0-1 19 at *VCU L, 0-1 Davidson 2 5 1 .312 4 7 5 12 2 .316 12 22 25 *Saint Louis L, 0-2 St. Bonnies 2 6 0 .250 4 16 7 11 1 .395 17 28 31 *Rhode Island W, 2-1

1 – denotes regular-season champion Nov. 2 *Massachusetts T, 0-0 (2ot) 2 – denotes tournament champion Boldface type denotes home match *Asterisk denotes A-10 opponent

2014 fiNal sTaTisTics ## Name GP-GS G A Pts Sh Sh% SOG SOG% GW PK-ATT 11 Stephanie Piperno 19 19 4 1 9 41 .098 18 .439 2 0 0 4 Vicky Bruce 19 19 2 3 7 33 .061 9 .273 2 1 1 22 Sarah Tuggle 19 16 1 1 3 13 .077 3 .231 0 0 0 25 Lauren Grace Himes 19 9 1 1 3 4 .250 2 .500 0 0 0 6 Dani Johnson 19 19 1 0 2 5 .200 4 .800 1 1 1 20 Adelaide Cummings 18 8 1 0 2 4 .250 2 .500 0 0 0 13 Madison See 18 16 1 0 2 4 .250 1 .250 0 0 0 8 Kate Joss 19 2 1 0 2 3 .333 2 .667 0 0 0 9 Ashley Finke 18 11 0 0 0 19 .000 5 .263 0 0 0 2 Jenni Isaac 19 19 0 0 0 9 .000 3 .333 0 0 0 17 Maggie Boyd 16 10 0 0 0 7 .000 2 .286 0 0 1 24 Kennedy Jones 8 0 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 16 Rachel Western 18 13 0 0 0 1 .000 1 1.000 0 0 0 15 Erin Gross 14 0 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 3 Maddie Fisher 11 9 0 0 0 1 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 23 Rachel Stelter 15 3 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 19 Katie Im 7 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0 18 Charlotte Scott 3 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 .000 0 0 0

Totals 19 12 8 32 170 .071 62 .365 5 2 3 Opponents 19 22 19 63 278 .079 116 .417 12 2 2

Goalkeeping GP- GS Min GA GAA Svs Sv% W L T Sho 0 Rachel Locke 19 19 1,780:06 22 1.11 100 .809 5 12 2 5/0 Team 1 1.000 0/0

Total 19 1,780:06 22 1.11 94 .810 5 12 2 5 Opponents 19 1,780:06 12 0.61 50 .806 12 5 2 13

2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 7 All-Time Series

all-TiMe record Vs. oPPoNeNTs Opponent W L T First Last Lehigh 0 0 1 2008 2008 Opponent W L T First Last Lenoir-Rhyne 1 0 0 1992 1992 Air Force 0 1 0 2007 2007 Liberty 5 2 0 1989 2014 Albany 0 0 0 2015 2015 Louisville 2 0 0 1993 1994 Alabama 0 1 0 1994 1994 LSU 1 0 0 2007 2007 Appalachian State 19 4 3 1994 2013 Maryland 0 3 0 1992 1996 Arkansas 0 1 0 1991 1991 Massachusetts 0 0 1 2014 2014 Army 1 0 0 2014 2014 Mercer 2 4 0 1989 2008 Brown 0 1 1 1997 1999 Morehead State 1 0 0 1998 1998 Butler 0 0 1 1991 1991 North Florida 0 1 1 2012 2014 California Riverside 0 1 0 2004 2004 N.C. State 1 9 0 1992 2009 Campbell 2 1 1 1992 1998 Navy 0 3 0 2001 2011 Catawba 1 0 1 1992 1993 North Carolina 0 1 0 2005 2005 Central Florida 1 0 0 1995 1995 Northwestern 0 1 0 2005 2005 Coll. of Charleston 12 6 0 1993 2012 Oregon 1 0 0 1999 1999 Colorado College 0 1 1 2005 2007 Presbyterian 3 1 0 1989 2010 Charleston Southern 2 0 0 1993 1995 Princeton 1 0 0 1996 1996 Charleston (W.Va.) 1 0 0 1991 1991 Providence 0 0 1 2011 2011 Charlotte 5 12 2 1994 2014 Queens 4 0 0 1989 1992 Chattanooga 18 1 1 1996 2013 Radford 0 4 0 1990 1993 Citadel 12 1 0 2001 2013 Randolph-Macon 0 1 1 1989 1990 Clemson 0 7 1 1994 2013 Rhode Island 0 1 1 1994 2014 Coastal Carolina 1 0 1 2013 2014 Richmond 0 4 1 1997 2014 Coker 4 0 0 1994 1999 Samford 1 3 3 2008 2013 Columbia 0 1 0 2001 2001 Saint Joseph’s 0 0 0 2015 2015 Dartmouth 0 1 0 2003 2003 San Diego State 0 1 0 2004 2004 Dayton 0 2 0 1992 1993 Saint Louis 0 2 0 2002 2014 Duke 0 9 0 1990 2005 St. Andrew’s 0 1 1 1989 1989 Duquesne 1 1 1 1999 2014 St. Bonaventure 1 0 0 2014 2014 East Carolina 0 6 0 1997 2014 South Carolina 2 7 0 1996 2009 East Tennessee State 7 1 0 1997 2004 Southern Methodist 0 2 0 2010 2013 Elon 12 8 1 1989 2013 Stetson 1 0 0 1995 1995 Erskine 2 2 0 1989 1992 Tennessee Tech 1 0 0 2012 2012 Fairfield 0 1 0 1994 1994 Texas A&M 0 1 0 2010 2010 Florida 0 1 0 1995 1995 UAB 0 1 0 2014 2014 Florida Atlantic 0 0 1 2013 2013 UC Santa Barbara 1 0 0 2006 2006 Florida Gulf Coast 0 1 1 2011 2013 UNC Asheville 9 4 0 1992 2011 Fordham 0 0 0 2015 2015 UNCG 5 23 1 1989 2013 Francis Marion 3 0 0 2007 2013 UNC Wilmington 2 7 0 2001 2012 Furman 8 21 3 1994 2013 Vanderbilt 1 3 1 1990 2007 Gardner-Webb 5 0 0 1990 2006 VCU 0 0 0 2015 2015 Georgetown 0 0 1 2006 2006 Vermont 1 0 0 2000 2000 George Mason 0 0 0 2015 2015 Villanova 0 1 0 2009 2009 George Washington 1 1 0 2011 2014 Virginia Tech 4 4 1 1993 2014 Georgia 0 5 0 1995 1999 Virginia Commonwealth 0 1 0 2014 2014 Georgia Southern 19 9 1 1993 2013 Wake Forest 1 11 0 1994 2006 Georgia State 1 0 1 1995 2014 Western Carolina 10 5 1 1999 2013 Guilford 2 0 0 1990 1991 Wheeling Jesuit 1 0 0 1990 1990 Harvard 0 3 0 1994 2008 William & Mary 0 3 0 1990 2014 High Point 9 1 0 1992 2010 Winthrop 4 1 1 2005 2014 Iowa 0 1 0 2010 2010 Wisconsin 0 1 0 2002 2002 James Madison 0 3 0 1990 2013 Wofford 15 3 4 1995 2013 Kent State 1 0 0 2005 2005 Yale 0 1 0 1997 1997 Kennesaw State 0 0 1 2008 2008 Totals 234 239 45 1989 2014 Kentucky 0 4 0 1992 2003 2015 opponents in bold La Salle 0 0 0 2015 2015

8 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS Alumni Stadium

It all began with a small meeting group 2003. The bulk of the fundraising, in large of several alumni, throwing around the part due to the soccer alumni, was com- idea of a soccer-specific facility at David- pleted within a calendar year. son College. From there the idea stemmed “The complex is a huge leap forward to a multi-million dollar complex that for Davidson soccer,” Spear commented. fully opened its gates for the 2005 season. “It celebrates the rich history of the men’s The new complex, is named Alumni Sta- and women’s soccer programs, and we dium due to the amazing contributions can’t overstate our hearty thanks for so from Davidson soccer alumni. many generous contributors.” While preventing the men’s and The new stadium allows both the women’s soccer teams from having to men’s and women’s teams to place bids to share time with Wildcat football and track hold the Southern Conference and field teams at Richardson Stadium, Tournament and NCAA Tournament Davidson’s new soccer facility includes a games at Davidson. completely new field designed with a top- Many people deserve thanks for their notch irrigation system. Two poles of generous contributions to Alumni Sta- lights on each side of the complex allow dium. A majority of the 175-plus donors for night games, something that was were former men and women players, as never possible at the old field. A new well as their families, with other large grandstand and press box line the west gifts coming from the many friends of side of the field while a new scoreboard Davidson soccer. Spear gained the sup- stands on the east port of his former side. Additional College Cup team- seating is available mates and their on a landscaped hill coach, Charlie Sla- on the north end gle ’74. The Ukrop, behind the goal. Sprinkle, and New fencing, land- Schwab families of- scaping, sidewalks fered a $300,000 and perimeter light- challenge to the ing also make the 1992 Final Four Davidson soccer ex- team to raise a half- perience more en- million dollars to joyable. name the field in One of the honor of that illus- biggest additions to trious team and the field is a club- special season. The house, dubbed “Sla- college also re- gle Locker Rooms,” ceived major gifts after longtime leg- from former players endary coach Char- Mike ’85 and Alison lie Slagle, located ’84 Mauze, Peter behind the grand- Andrews ’59, Pete stand housing Boylan and parents locker rooms for Ken and Elizabeth both Davidson soc- Stevens. An addi- cer programs. An- Alumni Stadium opened October 1, 2004 when Davidson’s women’s team hosted Chattanooga. The men’s team tional gift from the other new played their first game in the 2,000-seat stadium on October 12 in a 2-1 loss to then ranked #2 UNC Greensboro. Mauzes and a structure, named commitment from for Peter Andrews, near the locker rooms Lowell Bryan ’68 at the reception prior to serve as the ticket office, concession area the 2004 Hall of Fame dinner put the cam- and restroom facility for fans. The facility paign over the top. also has a locker room for the officials and The members of the official fundraising a training room for injured athletes. The committee were Annie Adams ’92, Shan- entranceway includes the Alumni Sta- non Lowrance Allen ’96, Colleen dium sign, plus plaques to recognize 1992 Camione-Edmonston ’94, Chris Davis (fa- Team Field and all its donors. ther of Preston ’06), Kevin Hundley, Pat The concept for this new soccer com- Millen ’86, Liz Clarke Rogers ’92, Ross Sal- plex began with a casual dinner that in- darini ’91, Matt Spear ’93, Phelps Sprinkle cluded a few soccer alumni, Spear and ’93, Lucia Plosser Tabb ’97, Richard Terry former head women’s soccer coach, Kevin ’81, Ellen Sprinkle Thomas ’95, Rob Hundley, in the fall of 2001. The group Ukrop, Jr. ’92, Heather Wineberg ’96, and agreed on the need for a dedicated facility, Ginny Dye Zimmerman ’00. and found $100,000 worth of commitment Alumni Stadium and 1992 Team Field just from those seated at the table. A 15- were officially dedicated on November 2, person committee, headed by John Bell of 2004 when the men’s soccer team hosted the college’s development office, was co- the nationally-ranked Wake Forest Demon ordinated to organize and lead a fundrais- Deacons. ing campaign that kicked off in February 2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 9 2009 NCAA

daVidsoN MaKes ProGraM’s 1st Ncaa Tournament

2009 NCAA Women’s Soccer then ended it with a rebound goal with while senior Loring Ward (Charleston, Tournament 55:44 on the clock. In between, Sam Diaz- S.C.) closed out her final career game #8 South Carolina 4, Davidson 0 Matosas netted her fourth of the season playing the last six minutes of the contest. November 13, 2009 and the ‘Cats quickly found themselves “It was an unbelievable season for us,” down 4-0. said senior Kyri Bye-Nagel (Hanau, Ger- COLUMBIA, S.C. — A three-goal at- The Wildcats never stopped, continu- many). “We seniors had never been to the tack in a four-minute stretch at the begin- ing to pressure the Gamecocks’ defense, SoCon finals, and to earn that chance and ning of the second half helped but just never was able to get a clean look then win it, was awesome. As a team we second-seeded South Carolina hold off a on goal. They finished with three total knew we always could do it, we just resilient Davidson Wildcat team as the shots, getting two of them in the second needed a chance to put it all together, Gamecocks earned a 4-0 win in the first half. They also had four corner kicks. which we did this year. Then, to make the round of the NCAA Women’s Soccer “USC is a very good team and I think program’s first NCAA Tournament, it’s a Tournament on Friday evening at Stone we played fantastic the first 10 minutes of great accomplishment and we have defi- Stadium in front the contest, putting them nitely set the foundations for this pro- of a record-crowd back on their heels a bit,” gram.” of 3,813. said Ashton. “We wanted to The game marked the final contest for The Game- play straight up and com- the Wildcats’ eight seniors led by Hart, cocks (18-3-2) ad- pete with them, and I think Bye-Nagel and Ward. Joining that trio was vance to play we did a solid job of that Sophie Funderburk (Wilmington, N.C.), Rutgers, which most of the evening.” Katharine Laco (Bethesda, Md.), Blakely defeated Duke, 2- Davidson came out with Low (San Antonio, Texas), Suzanne Sittko 0, in the first all the momentum and did (Greenwood Village, Colo.) and Lauren game of the first not look like a team making Conner (Mechanicsburg, Pa.). round. their first appearance in the The Wildcats, NCAA Tournament, playing Scoring Summary who were making aggressively and it nearly 29:02 USC Brooke Jacobs (unassisted) their first appear- paid off. The ‘Cats earned 51:23 USC Kayla Grimsley (Sam Diaz-Matosas) ance in the tour- two corner kicks in the first 54:24 USC Sam Diaz-Matosas (unassisted) nament after five minutes of action, but 55:44 USC Kayla Grimsley (Brooke Jacobs) capturing the were not able to put a shot program’s fourth on frame as South Carolina Southern Conference Tournament Title cleared each attempt. last weekend (Nov. 6-8), saw their season “Those two set plays early were nice,” come to an end as they closed at 12-10-1. said Ashton. “We work on all them all sea- They also saw their eight-game unbeaten son and it would have been great to get a streak snapped. score early, but South Carolina was able to “I’m so thrilled and proud of the team stop those plays and start to counter our tonight and this whole season,” said head attack.” coach Greg Ashton. “It’s a privilege to be “We came out strong and I think we here and representing Davidson College did frustrate them a bit early, but they for the first time in program history, and I were able to counter very quickly,” said couldn’t be more proud of the team.” senior co-captain Courtney Hart (Ashland, Davidson was down just 1-0 after Mass). playing a solid first half, but USC’s team South Carolina then started to take con- speed helped it take control of the game trol of the possession a bit, but like last with three quick strikes in a four-minute weekend at the Southern Conference stretch. All-SEC First Team pick Kayla Tournament, the defense and goalkeeper Jessie Baxa (Bloomfield were nearly air tight as they held off numerous Gamecock shot attempts on goal. The defense played 227 total min- utes of shutout ball over the three games, including the first 28 minutes tonight before USC put a goal in during the 29th minute. The frontline of South Carolina worked the ball down the field with some quick passes. From there Brooke Jacobs struck a ball from 35 yards out that found the back of the net for a 1-0 Gamecock advantage. USC ended the half with 11 shots and Baxa was there to stop five of Grimsley started the flurry with her 12th them, including a couple of great diving score of the season at the 51:23 mark and saves. Baxa finished with seven saves,

10 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS All-Time Roster

Player Letters Years Player Letters Years Player Letters Years Frances Abernathy 1 1989 Liz Gross 1999 Carrie Porath 2 1997-98 Allison Adams 2 1991-92 McKensy Gruelle 2000 Caroline Prioleau 1 1989 Annie Adams 3 1989-91 Launa Hankins 1 1992 Carryn Quibell 1998-99 Kelly Ammann 4 1993-96 Cameron Hardesty 4 2003-06 Becca Ravitz 2014- Alia Antonucci-Alter 4 2000-03 Morill Harrington 1 1989 Kelly Rennick 3 1996-99 Shannon Ballard 2015- Jocelyn Harris 2000 Becca Rinkevich 2 2011-12 Amy Balsinger 4 1996-99 Courtney Hart 4 2006-09 Ali Rittenberg 4 2005-08 Melissa Bandy 3 2002-04 Nancy Haskell 4 2004-07 Lexie Rittenberg 4 2005-08 Rachel Barnett 3 2009- Kara Hawkesworth 2 2003-05 Rhina Roberts 4 1995-98 Garrett Barnes 1 2014- Zoe Hayes 2 2013-14 Courtney Robertson 4 1990-93 Jessie Baxa 4 2008-11 Mary Helms 3 1989-91 Andrea Rogers 2 1989-90 Jennifer Beebe 1 1993 Sarah Henry 1 1999-01 Linda Rothemund 2 1995-96 Cady Blackey 4 2002-05 Ann Hicks 1 1989 Dylan Runyan 1996 Lindsay Blum 4 2010-14 Lauren Grace Himes 1 2014- Meg Sanborn 4 2010-14 Jane Boer 1 2001-02 Sarah Hobart 4 2001-04 Jennifer Satterfield 4 1990-93 Laura Booher 1998-00 Amy Hoffheimer 3 1990-92 Madison See 3 2012- Lindsay Boozer 2 1991-92 Mia Hodges 2015- Mary Ellen Schaefer 2 1999-00 Stephanie Bouts 4 2001-04 Rachael Horton 2012 Liz Schaper 4 1991-94 Maggie Boyd 2 2013- Leigh Anne Hoskins 4 2000-03 Kelly Schmidt 4 1994-97 Angela Boyer 4 1996-99 Sarah Huber 4 2000-03 Laura Schulenborg 4 2002-05 Carly Brahim 2 2011-12 Lauren Hungarland 3 2002-05 Katie Schwab 2 1992-93 Deprise Brazel 1 2010 Katie Im 1 2014- Jennifer Scott 3 1996-99 Alyson Browett 2 1992-93 Jenni Isaac 3 2012- Charlotte Scott 1 2014- Talli Bruce 1 1994 Dani Johnson 3 2012- Rebecca Sheridan 1996 Vicky Bruce 1 2014- Amy Johnston 4 1999-02 Kristin Simmons 1 2002 P.J. Bugg 2 1999-00 Kennedy Jones 1 2014- Julia Singley 3 2011-13 Ashley Burgin 4 2002-06 Kate Joss 2 2013- Suzanne Sittko 4 2006-09 Erin Butcher 1 1992-93 Amy Kanoff 4 1994-97 Lauren Skorb 1 2012-13 Kyri Bye-Nagel 4 2006-09 Mandy Kinane 1 1997 Melanie Smith 4 2005-08 Katie Byrnes 1 1997 Chloe King 4 2005-08 Megan Smith 2015- Renae Cairns 4 2010-14 Liz Kline 1989 Brianne Smithson 1996-97 Jessica Calandra 2009 Kara Koehrn 4 2002-05 Jenny Soldano 4 2002-05 Julia Calhoun 4 2009-12 Kristen Koehrn 4 2004-07 Natalie Spach 2 2012-13 Colleen Camione 4 1990-93 Tori Krause 4 2010-14 Ellen Sprinkle 4 1991-94 Sarah Cantrell 4 1991-94 Kelsey Krueger 4 2010-14 Carie Stanley 1 1990 Isabell Carlton 2006 Katharine Laco 4 2006-09 Rachel Stelter 4 2011-14 Christy Carry 4 2008-11 Jessica Lahre 4 2003-06 Anne Stevens 4 2003-06 Alex Carpenter 2015- Jennifer Lake 1 1992 Lucia Stein-Montalvo 2 2011-12 Lora Chavis 2 1993-94 Alexa Landsberger 2015- Jennifer Stott 1 1989 Alexandra Clark 1 2011 Amy Leitch 4 2000-03 Lucy Stroup 1998-99 Liz Clarke 3 1989-91 Lisa LeNard 2 1989-90 Carolyn Stumpf 4 1998-02 Annie Cleaver 3 2011-13 Catherine Leon 2015- Natalie Stumpf 3 1996-99 Natalie Connell 2015- Jodi Lewis 4 1991-94 Ali Sutton 2007 Lauren Conner 4 2006-09 Amy Lindstrom 2 1993-94 Lauren Swany 4 2010-14 Christie Cook 1 2003 Rachel Locke 4 2011-14 Susan Taylor 4 1990-93 Katherine Cornelius 4 1995-98 Claudia Lombard 4 1992-95 Kendall Thomas 2015- Winnie Corrigan 3 1997-00 Blakely Low 4 2006-09 Louise Timboe 4 2009-12 Natalie Cox 4 1998-02 Shannon Lowrance 4 1992-95 Ann Todd 4 1989-92 Adelaide Cummings 2 2013- Jessica Luttrell 2011 Amanda Traver 4 2003-06 Elizabeth Dahm 1 1990 Lisa Lyons 1 1991 Maria Tucker 2 1989-90 Lauren Dennis 4 1999-02 Madelynn Mabry 2000 Sarah Tuggle 3 2012- Megan Driscoll 2 1993 Elizabeth MacDonald 1 1991 Elizabeth Underwood 4 2008-11 Allison Drutchas 4 2007-10 Heather Maloney 4 1999-02 Ashley Vagt 1 1990 Ginny Dye 4 1996-99 Tara Maloney 4 1999-02 Susan Van Rheenan 3 1989-91 Brittany Eddy 4 2002-05 Liz Mannino 4 2001-04 Natasha Vasavada 2 1995-96 Callan Elswick 4 2007-10 Leslie Marquez 1997 Ida Wainschel 1997-98 Bevin English 4 2004-07 Tracy McCausland 4 2005-08 Adah Walker 1997 Deneille Erikson 4 2000-03 Kate McCormick 4 2005-08 Anne Wampler 3 1990-92 Meghan Estes 1999-00 Kathryn McDonald 1 1989 Loring Ward 3 2006-07, 09 Garyth Evans 2001 Maura McGinn 1 2007 Sarah Way 1 1990 Sarah Falconi 4 1997-00 Kate McKnight 4 1996-99 Mary Weisskopf 1 2001 Melissa Farrell 1997 Elizabeth McLaughlin 4 1989-92 Rachael Western 1 2014- Erica Fenton 1 1995-96 Neely Meeks 4 2005-08 Rachel Wightman 2 2003-05 Meghan Ferriter 3 1999-02 Mary Marshall Meredith 4 2008-11 Heidi Wilbrandt 4 2003-06 Ashley Finke 2 2013- Lauren Mihan 3 2010-14 Jen Wilbur 1996 Becca Fisher 4 2011-14 Vera Misra 2 1989-90 Catie Williams 4 2000-03 Maddie Fisher 3 2012- Melissa Moser 4 1993-96 Tyler Wilson 1 2010 Amanda Flink 4 2007-10 Tiffany Mumby 4 2005-08 Heather Wineberg 4 1992-95 Lindsey Forsythe 2 1989-90 Carla Naegele 1 1989 Kate Wiseman 2005 Robin French 3 2003-05 Sophie Newsom 3 2008-09, 2011 Katharine Wolf 2000-01 Sophie Funderburk 4 2006-09 Cliare Naisby 1 2008 Maggie Womack 4 2003-06 Chesley Garrett 4 1996-99 Sarah Nall 1 1989 Leila Wormuth 3 1996-99 Stephnaie Gerow 4 2008-11 Tricia Nativi 1998 Perry Zollicoffer 2015- Leila Giesenschlag 1 1995-96 Caroline Nelson 1 1989 Rachel Gimpel 1 1995 Rachel Newmister 3 2009-12 Ann-Robert Goode 2015- Alison Noznesky 4 1994-97 Megan Goodling 2015- Amanda Oberholtzer 2000 Sally Graham 2 1991-92 Beth Peters 4 2007-10 Penn Graves 4 1998-02 Jamye Pleasants 1998 Leslie Greiner 1 1993-94 Lucia Plosser 4 1993-96 Erin Gross 1 2014- Stephanie Piperno 4 2011-14 2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 11 Hall of Fame Members

claUdia loMBard - 1sT WoMeN’s soccer Player iNdUcTed iN daVidsoN hall of faMe

The 18th group of inductees into the Davidson Athletics Hall of Fame were honored on Jan. 20, 2006, and it was a special group for the Davidson women's soccer program. Claudia D. Lombard ’96, one of four individu- als to be honored that day, became the first-ever women's soccer player to be inducted. Lombard was a standout on the women’s soccer team as soon as she hit the field for the Wildcats in the fall of 1992. As a freshman, the native from Guilford, Conn. scored six goals and led the team with nine assists as the squad went 10-8-1. Lombard’s nine assists at the time were a single-sea- son record and she would go on to match her career-high in assists two other times during her four-year playing career. The following year she was named the team MVP for the second straight year with a career-best 14 goals and again chipped in with nine assists for a career-high 37 points. Her 37 points still rank third most in a sin- gle-season. For her outstanding efforts during her sophomore campaign, Lombard became the program’s first-ever player to garner a spot on the All-South Region Division I Team. Women’s soccer became a Southern Conference sport in 1994, and Lombard helped Davidson enshrine their first year in the league with a season for the ages. After scoring 11 goals and tallying 28 points, both team highs, Lombard was voted the SoCon Player of the Year as a junior to become the first Wildcat to earn the honor. She ranked second in the league in goals and assists, and led Davidson to its first SoCon Regular-Season title with a 5-1 mark in league play. Then in the SoCon Tournament, Lombard guided the Wildcats to their first tourna- ment title with 2-0 wins over Appalachian State and Georgia Southern. Lombard’s final season saw her carry the ’Cats to yet another SoCon title as she earned tournament MVP honors. In addition, she was named to the all-conference first team after scoring eight goals, and pacing Davidson with nine as- sists and 25 points. Lombard still remains atop many of the Wildcat career records. She is tied for first in scoring with 39 goals, while her 33 career assists and 111 points place her first in program history. Lombard is also tied for most goals in a game with four, which she accomplished against Louisville on Oct. 17, 1993. Her three assists in a single-game are tied for first and her eight points she recorded against Louisville, are second most in a single-game.

allisoN NoZNesKy - 2Nd WoMeN’s soccer Player iNdUcTed iN daVidsoN hall of faMe

The 22nd group of inductees into the Davidson Athletics Hall of Fame were honored on Jan. 29, 2011, and the Davidson women's soccer program saw it place a second player into the school’s hall of fame. Allison Noznesky Clark ’98, was one of four individuals to be honored that day. In her four-year career, Allison Noznesky (1994-97) helped lead the ’Cats to three consecutive Southern Conference Tournament titles. She ranks second on the school’s career record lists in minutes played (5900:19), saves (399), goals against average (1.40) and shutouts (18.5). Noznesky is tops on the single-season record list for minutes played (2100:00) and saves (173) and earned Southern Conference Player of the Year honors for the Wildcats in 1996 after she and her team- mates won both the SoCon regular-season title and the league tournament championship. The success of the 1996 team was due in large part to Noznesky’s impressive performance in the net as she led the conference in goals against average at 1.05, allowing just 22 goals in 19 contests. Noznesky broke out in her sophomore campaign in 1995, compiling 117 saves and a 1.16 goals against average, both ranking in the top-five of the single-season books, while starting all 22 games in goal. She picked up seven shutouts, which ranks fourth in the single-season record books.

aMy KaNoff - 3rd WoMeN’s soccer Player iNdUcTed iN daVidsoN hall of faMe

The 25th group of inductees into the Davidson Athletics Hall of Fame were honored on Feb. 7, 2015, and the Davidson women's soccer program saw it place a third player into the school’s hall of fame. Amy Kanoff Schumacher ’98, was one of five individuals to be honored that day. Kanoff was a member of one of the best three-year runs in women's soccer program history from 1994-96. She assisted the Wildcats to two regular-season Southern Conference titles and the program's only three tour- nament titles during that time span, starting 82 of her 85 games. One of the Wildcats’ main contributors on offense during her playing career, Kanoff compiled 21 goals to go along with 26 assists, which placed her second all-time in the Wildcat record books at the time. Three times she finished first or second on the team in assists, including a career-high 10 during her junior season, which ranks first in the single-season record books. Kanoff burst onto the scene during her freshman season in 1994, finishing second on the team with nine goals and 23 points in guiding the Wildcats to the first of three straight SoCon tournament titles and earning all-tournament team honors after scoring a goal in the championship game. Kanoff is one of five Wildcats in the program's 26-year history to twice be named to the SoCon All-Tournament team as she also earned a nod in 1995. In Davidson's championship run that year, the Wildcat midfielder scored two goals and assisted on two others in wins over Georgia Southern and Furman. The '95 season also saw Kanoff record the second-most points in a single game in school history with eight vs. Georgia Southern, Oct. 19. During the 1996 campaign, Kanoff finished seventh in the league with 18 points as Davidson went 7-1-0 to capture the regular season conference title. She added 10 assists, which paced the team and was good for second-best in the SoCon.

12 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS Award Winners

socoN Players of The year

Claudia Lombard, 1994

Claudia Lombard (1992-95) earned Davidson’s first Player of the Year award in 1994 after lead- ing the ’Cats to their first-ever Southern Conference Tournament title. She earned first-team all-con- ference honors twice for her performances as a junior and a senior. In 1994, Lombard ranked second in the conference with 11 goals, tallying 28 points during the season. Lombard’s senior season was equally dominant as she led the Wildcats to repeat as tournament champions, earning tourney MVP honors in 1995 with three goals. The forward ranks first in every career scoring category in the Davidson record books with 39 goals, 33 assists and 111 points. Lom- bard also ranks among the top five in each of the Wildcats’ single-game scoring categories, includ- ing first in goals with four in one game.

Allison Noznesky, 1996

Allison Noznesky (1994-97) earned Southern Conference Player of the Year honors for the Wildcats in 1996. During the ’96 campaign, Noznesky and her teammates won both the SoCon regular-sea- son title and league tournament championship. The success of the 1996 team was due in large part to Noznesky’s impressive performance in the net when she led the conference in goals against average at 1.16, allowing just 22 goals in 19 contests. Noznesky also helped lead the ’Cats to three consecutive conference tournament titles dur- ing her career. She ranks in the school’s career record lists in minutes played (5900:19), saves (399), goals against average (1.40) and shutouts (17). Noznesky also ranks first for minutes played (2100:00) and saves (173) in a single season.

Kara Koehrn, 2005

Kara Koehrn (2002-2005) became the third and most recent Wildcat to earn the SoCon Player of the Year honors when she had one of the best individual seasons in school history as a senior in 2005. A four-time all-league pick, Koehrn tied Davidson’s single-season goal record of 19 and matched the career goal record of 39 during her senior campaign. Besides garnering the SoCon’s top honor, the forward was also selected to the Soccer Buzz All-Region Second Team after helping Davidson achieve its highest-ever regional ranking in 2005. The National Soccer Coaches Association of America named Koehrn to its all-region third team, an honor that no other women’s soccer player at Davidson has ever received. Also outstanding in the classroom, the biology major earned a spot on the NSCAA/adidas Scholar All-America Second Team. On top of earning numerous postseason hardware, Koehrn led the Wildcats to an undefeated league record (9-0-1) while earning an individual top-10 national ranking for goals per game with 0.90. socoN all-ToUrNaMeNT TeaM 1999 Sarah Falconi MeMBers Penn Graves Heather Maloney 1994 Leslie Griener 2000 Winnie Corrigan Amy Kanoff Sarah Falconi Shannon Lowrance- MVP 2004 Sarah Hobart Liz Schaper Kara Koehrn 1995 Amy Kanoff Kristen Koehrn Claudia Lombard- MVP 2005 Kara Koehrn Shannon Lowrance Chloe King Allison Noznesky 2007 Kyri Bye-Nagel 1996 Kelly Ammann Bevin English Amy Balsinger 2009 Amanda Flink- MVP Katherine Cornelius- MVP Louise Timboe 1997 Ginny Dye Jessie Baxa Allison Noznesky Lauren Conner

2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 13 Honors & Awards ALL-SOCON TEAM SOCON CHAMPS PLAYERS OF WEEK Regular-Season Tourney 1994 Kelly Ammann, MF 1994, ’96, ’05 1994, ’95, ’96, ‘09 Southern Conference Claudia Lombard, F 1994 Claudia Lombard (week 1) Melissa Moser, D SOCON COACH OF YEAR Kelly Ammann (wk 4) Claudia Lombard (wk 6) Ellen Sprinkle, MF 2004 Greg Ashton Amy Kanoff (wk 7) Heather Wineberg, F 2005 Greg Ashton Heather Wineberg (wk 8) 1995 Kelly Ammann, MF Claudia Lombard, F SOCON TOURNEY MVP 1995 Lucia Plosser (wk 2) Shannon Lowrance, D 1994 Shannon Lowrance Claudia Lomard (wk 6) 1996 Kelly Ammann, MF 1995 Claudia Lombard Kelly Ammann (wk 9) Ginny Dye, F 1996 Katherine Cornelius Melissa Moser, D 2009 Amanda Flink 1996 Allison Noznesky (wk 1) Kelly Rennick, MF/D Ginny Dye (wk 5) 1997 Ginny Dye, F* SOCON FRESH. OF YEAR 1999 Winnie Corrigan (wk 8) Kelly Rennick, MF/D* 2002 Kara Koehrn 1998 Kelly Rennick, MF/D 2005 Mel Smith 2000 Heather Maloney (Oct. 23) Ginny Dye, F* 2006 Suzanne Sittko 1999 Amy Balsinger, D 2011 Becca Fisher 2001 Sarah Hobart (Oct. 2) Winnie Corrigan, GK Ginny Dye, F NCCSIA ALL-STATE 2002 Sarah Hobert (Sept. 24) Tara Maloney, MF 2004 Kara Koehrn Heather Maloney (Oct. 1) Mary Ellen Schaefer, D* 2005 Kara Koehrn 2005 Kara Koehrn (wk 7) 2000 Heather Maloney, F 2006 Nancy Haskell Kara Koehrn (wk 8) Leigh Anne Hoskins, F* 2007 Kyri Bye-Nagel Tara Maloney, MF* 2008 Kyri Bye-Nagel 2006 Kristen Koehrn (Sept. 12) 2001 Penn Graves, D 2009 Kyri Bye-Nagel Bevin English (Sept. 26) Tara Maloney, MF Amanda Flink Suzanne Sittko (Oct. 24) 2002 Heather Maloney, F Tara Maloney, MF SOCCER BUZZ ALL-REGION 2007 Kyri Bye-Nagel (Sept. 25) Lauren Conner (Oct. 2) Kara Koehrn, D* 2005 Kara Koehrn 2003 Kara Koehrn, D Suzanne Sittko (Oct. 23) – 2nd team Kyri Bye-Nagel (Oct. 30) 2004 Sarah Hobart, GK Nancy Haskell Kara Koehrn, F – 3rd team 2008 Kyri Bye-Nagel (Sept. 2) Nancy Haskell, D* 2007 Nancy Haskell Kyri Bye-Nagel (Oct. 7) 2005 Nancy Haskell, D – 3rd team Kara Koehrn, F 2007 Kyri Bye-Nagel 2011 Julia Singley (Aug. 23) Becca Fisher (Oct. 18) Melanee Smith, D* – 3rd team 2006 Nancy Haskell, D 2007 Kyri Bye-Nagel, F SOCCER BUZZ ELITE FEET Nancy Haskell, D PLAYERS OF MONTH Bevin English, GK* NATIONAL TEAM OF WEEK Suzanne Sittko, F* 2005 Kara Koehrn Southern Conference 2008 Kyri Bye-Nagel, F 2006 Suzanne Sittko 2005 Kara Koehrn (October) Courtney Hart, M* 2007 Nancy Haskell 2006 Suzanne Sittko (October) 2009 Kyri Bye-Nagel, F 2008 Melanee Smith 2007 Lauren Conner (September) 2009 Kyri Bye-Nagel (October) Courtney Hart, M* Blakely Low, F* NSCAA ALL-REGION Amanda Flink, D* 2005 Kara Koehrn Louise Timboe, D! – 3rd team 2010 Allison Drutchas, MF* 2006 Nancy Haskell Amanda Flink, D* – 3rd team 2011 Sophie Newsom, D* 2011 Becca Fisher Becca Fisher, F! – 3rd team Rachel Locke, GK! Stephanie Piperno, F! 2012 Julie Calhoun* 2013 Ashley Finke! Nancy Haskell ex- *denotes second team celled on the field and in the class- !denotes all-freshman team room, earning All- SoCon team honors all four years during her playing career and twice being named to one of the CoSIDA Aca- Kara Koehrn finds her name peppered demic All-District throughout the Wildcat honors and III teams. awards pages, including earning SoCon Freshman of the Year and Player of the Year during her four-year plaing career. 14 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS Honors / Wildcat Record Book

ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE CAREER SCORING Goals Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award A-10 All-Academic Team Name Year Games Goals 2010 Callan Elswick 2014 Jenni Isaac Claudia Lombard 1992-95 81 39 (All-Senior All-America First Team) Kara Koehrn 2002-05 83 39 Heather Maloney 1999-02 78 36 NSCAA Scholar-Athlete All-American Heather Wineberg 1992-95 76 35 1996 Kelly Ammann Leigh Anne Hoskins 2000-03 83 30 1999 Ginny Dye* 2005 Kara Koehrn* Assists *Indicates second team Name Year Games Asst. Claudia Lombard 1992-95 81 33 NSCAA Scholar-Athlete All-Region Amy Kanoff 1994-97 85 26 1996 Kelly Ammann Heather Maloney 1999-02 78 23 Melissa Moser 1997 Ginny Dye Tara Maloney 1999-02 86 23 Kate McKnight Leigh Anne Hoskins 2000-03 83 20 1998 Ginny Dye Chelsey Garrett Points Kate McKnight Name Year G Gl Asst Pts 1999 Ginny Dye Claudia Lombard 1992-95 81 39 33 111 Kate McKnight Heather Maloney 1999-02 78 36 23 95 2001 Lauren Dennis Kara Koehrn 2002-05 83 39 13 91 Amy Johnston Heather Wineberg 1992-95 76 35 19 89 Heather Maloney Leigh Anne Hoskins 2000-03 83 30 20 80 2002 Lauren Dennis Ginny Dye 1996-99 86 29 17 75 Leigh Anne Hoskins 2007 Nancy Haskell * Bevin English (honor. mention) *Indicates second team

TIAA-CREF Student-Athlete of the Year 2004 Leigh Anne Hoskins Kara Koehrn fin- ished her career CoSIDA Academic All-District tied for most 1999 Ginny Dye goals in a single- 2000 Heather Maloney season (19) and 2001 Leigh Anne Hoskins matched the ca- 2002 Leigh Anne Hoskins reer goal record 2003 Leigh Anne Hoskins of 39. 2005 Kara Koehrn SINGLE-SEASON SCORING 2006 Nancy Haskell Goals 2007 Bevin English Name Year Games Goals Nancy Haskell Kara Koehrn 2005 21 19 2009 Callan Elswick Heather Maloney 2000 22 19 2010 Callan Elswick Allison Drutchas Launa Hankins 1992 18 15 Claudia Lombard 1993 19 14 Postgraduate Scholarships Leigh Anne Hoskins 2000 22 14 2010 Allison Drutchas ! Kyri Bye-Nagel 2007 20 12 ! Callan Elswick Lindsey Forsythe 1990 16 11 SINGLE-GAME SCORING !- awarded both NCAA and SoCon Scholarships Claudia Lombard 1994 20 11 Goals

Ginny Dye 1996 22 11 Name Opponent Date G NSCAA Team Academic Award 1996 3.10 GPA Kara Koehrn 2004 22 11 Kara Koehrn The Citadel 10/13/2004 4 1997 3.19 Claudia Lombard Louisville 10/17/1993 4 1998 3.06 Assists Launa Hankins Erskine 9/26/1992 4 Name Year Games Asst. 1999 3.13 2000 3.23 Heather Maloney 2000 22 10 Assists 2001 3.11 Amy Kanoff 1996 22 10 Name Opponent Date A 2002 3.22 Ginny Dye 1999 23 10 Brittany Eddy App. State 9/9/2004 3 2003 3.28 Claudia Lombard 1992 19 9 Heather Maloney UNCA 8/30/2000 3 2004 3.19 Claudia Lombard 1993 19 9 Kate McKnight App. State 11/9/1996 3 2005 3.32 Heather Wineberg 1993 19 9 Claudia Lombard High Point 10/2/1992 3 2006 3.00 Claudia Lombard 1995 22 9 2007 3.12 Ellen Sprinkle Erskine 9/26/1992 3 Allison Drutchas 2010 20 9 2008 3.37 Susan Taylor Gardner-Webb 9/16/1991 3 2009 3.44 Points 2010 3.26 Points Name Year G Gl Asst Pts 2011 3.32 Name Opponent Date P 2012 3.03 Heather Maloney 2000 22 19 10 48 Kara Koehrn The Citadel 10/13/2004 9 2013 3.34 Kara Koehrn 2005 21 19 4 42 Leigh Anne Hoskins UNCA 8/30/2000 8 2014 3.36 Claudia Lombard 1993 19 14 9 37 Amy Kanoff Ga. Southern 10/21/1994 8 Leigh Anne Hoskins 2000 22 14 7 35 Claudia Lombard Louisville 10/17/1993 8 Launa Hankins 1992 18 15 3 33 Launa Hankins Erskine 9/26/1992 8 Claudia Lombard 1994 20 11 6 28 2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 15 All-Time Records

SINGLE-SEASON GOALTENDING CAREER GOALTENDING Minutes Played Minutes Played Name Year Games Mins. Name Year Games Mins. Allison Noznesky 1995 22 2100:00 Sarah Hobart 2001-04 78 6845:24 Winnie Corrigan 2000 22 1900:42 Rachel Locke 2011-14 75 6,667:02 Rachel Locke 2013 20 1,883.26 Allison Noznesky 1994-97 67 5900:19 Allison Noznesky 1996 21 1879:00 Bevin English 2004-07 59 4861:18 Sarah Hobart 2002 20 1847:15 Winnie Corrigan 1997-00 61 4539:42 Saves Saves Name Year Games Saves Name Year Games Saves Allison Noznesky 1997 19 173 Sarah Hobart 2001-04 78 402 Winnie Corrigan 2000 22 129 Allison Noznesky 1994-97 67 399 Allison Noznesky 1995 22 117 Rachel Locke 2011-14 75 327 Sarah Hobart 2002 20 114 Winnie Corrigan 1997-00 61 303 Winnie Corrigan 1999 18 111 Liz Schaper 1991-94 47 231 Goals Against Average Goals Against Average Name Year G Mins. GAA Name Year G Mins. GAA Bevin English 2007 19 1,766:59 0.81 Bevin English 2004-07 57 4,861:18 1.06 Winnie Corrigan 1999 18 1,715:00 0.84 Bevin English set school records in goals against Rachel Locke 2011-14 75 6,667.02 1.24 Bevin English 2006 16 1,467:10 0.98 average and shutouts at the end of her outstand- Jesse Baxa 2008-11 40 3,330:02 1.29 Rachel Locke 2011 17 1,353.23 1.00 ing four-year career. Allison Noznesky 1994-97 92 5900:19 1.40 Allison Noznesky 1996 22 1,879:00 1.05 Winnie Corrigan 1997-00 72 4,539:42 1.43 Jesse Baxa 2010 20 1,485:42 1.15 Chesley Garrett 1996-99 38 1,880:42 1.82 Allison Noznesky 1995 27 2100:00 1.16 Sarah Hobart 2001-04 78 6,845:24 1.89 Rachel Locke 2012 19 1,650:07 1.36 Shutouts Shutouts Name Year G ShO Name Year G ShO Bevin English 2004-07 59 21 Bevin English 2007 19 10 Rachel Locke 2011-14 75 19.5 Winnie Corrigan 1999 18 8 Allison Noznesky 1994-97 67 18.5 Winnie Corrigan 2000 22 7.5 Winnie Corrigan 1997-00 61 18 Allison Noznesky 1995 22 7 Sarah Hobart 2001-04 78 16 Liz Schaper 1994 21 7 Jesse Baxa 2008-11 40 14 Jesse Baxa 2010 20 7 Rachel Locke 2013 20 6.5 *-current players in bold Bevin English 2006 16 6

Rachel Locke capped her career by finishing second all-time in minutes, goals against average and shutouts. She also was third in total saves with 327 during her four-year career.

In 2004, Sarah Hobart set record goaltending marks for both career minutes and career saves.

16 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS Year-by-Year Results

1989 1993 4-6-1; INDEPENDENT 9-9-1; INDEPENDENT

9/ 8 at Erskine 1- 6 L 9/ 5 College of Charleston 8- 0 W 9 at Mercer 1- 3 L 6 Charleston Southern 5- 4 W 13 Presbyterian 9- 0 W 10 Maryland 0- 3 L 20 at UNC Greensboro 0- 10 L 12 at Catawba (OT) 1- 1 T 10/ 6 at Randolph-Macon 1- 4 L 15 at Elon 4- 3 W 10 at Elon 0- 7 L 17 at UNC Greensboro 1- 0 W 16 at Coker 3- 1 W 22 Duke 0- 4 L 18 St. Andrew’s (OT)1- 1 T 25 Vanderbilt 0- 4 L 21 Queens 9- 0 W 28 Radford 0- 2 L 24 at St. Andrew’s 1- 3 L 10/ 1 at Georgia Southern 5- 1 W Regular-season and SoCon Tournament champs, the 28 Liberty 4- 1 W 2 Liberty 6- 0 W 1994 Wildcats were the first in program history to cap- 6 at UNC Asheville 4- 0 W ture both titles in the same year. 8 at Virginia Tech 1- 2 L 13 N.C. State 0- 6 L 1990 16 at Dayton 2- 4 L 6-9-1; INDEPENDENT 17 at Louisville (OT) 4- 3 W 1995 23 Campbell 1- 3 L 9/ 1 Mercer 0- 3 L 24 Kentucky (OT) 3- 4 L 11-9-2; 3-2-1 SOCON, 3RD 5 Randolph-Macon (OT) 2- 2 T 30 Virginia Tech 3- 0 W 8 at Radford 0- 11 L 9/ 3 at UNC Asheville 1- 2 L 12 Erskine 0- 6 L 6 at Charlotte 0- 2 L 19 at Duke 1- 8 L 9 Wofford 8- 0 W 26 UNC Greensboro 0- 4 L 10 Georgia Southern* 5- 1 W 30 James Madison 1- 4 L 1994 13 Georgia 0- 1 L 10/ 5 vs. Wheeling Jesuit1(OT) 3- 2 W 10-10-1; 5-1-0 SOCON, 1ST 15 at UNC Greensboro 1- 2 L 6 vs. William & Mary1 0- 9 L 17 Florida 0- 2 L 10 at Presbyterian 0- 3 L 9/ 4 Alabama 0- 2 L 23 at Charleston Southern 1- 0 W 14 Coker 2- 1 W 7 Charlotte 2- 4 L 27 at Appalachian State* 4- 2 W 17 at Guilford(OT) 2- 0 W 10 at Georgia Southern* 5- 1 W 10/ 1 at Virginia Tech (OT) 0- 0 T 21 Vanderbilt2 3- 4 L 17 UNC Greensboro 1- 3 L 7 at Central Florida (OT) 6- 3 W 24 at Queens 6- 1 W 20 at Clemson 0- 4 L 8 at Stetson 4- 0 W 1 27 at Liberty 3- 1 W 24 at Harvard 0- 1 L 11 Furman* 2- 3 L 1 31 at Gardner-Webb 6- 0 W 25 at Kentucky 1- 3 L 15 Clemson 0- 1 L 28 Wake Forest 1- 2 L 17 N.C. State 0- 2 L 1WAGS Real Vidicka Tournament; Washington D.C. 10/ 1 UNC Asheville 4- 0 W 18 Wake Forest 3- 1 W 2Davidson Invitational; Davidson, N.C. 2 Appalachian State* 8- 1 W 21 at Georgia Southern* 1- 2 L 5 at Furman* 1- 2 L 24 at Furman* (OT) 2- 2 T 8 at Fairfield 1- 2 L 27 Appalachian State* 2- 1 W 10 at Rhode Island 3- 3 T 29 Georgia State 2- 0 W 1991 15 Louisville 1- 0 W 11/ 4 Georgia Southern1 4- 0 W 1 8-7-1; INDEPENDENT 16 Virginia Tech 2- 1 W 5 Furman 3- 0 W 19 Georgia Southern* 7- 0 W 9/ 10 at Elon 0- 4 L 23 at N.C. State 1- 3 L 1SoCon Tournament; Davidson, N.C. 11 Guilford 5- 0 W 29 at Appalachian State* 3- 1 W 16 Gardner-Webb 5- 0 W 30 Furman* 6- 0 W 21 at James Madison 0- 6 L 11/ 5 vs. Appalachian State2 (OT) 2- 0 W 10/ 1 at UNC Greensboro 0- 5 L 6 vs. Georgia Southern2 2- 0 W 3 at Coker 3- 1 W 1996 4 Arkansas 1- 2 L 1Lanzera Invitational; Charlottesville, Va. 8 Charleston (W.Va.) 4- 0 W 2SoCon Tournament; Greensboro, N.C. 11-10-1; 7-1-0 SOCON, 1ST 12 Vanderbilt1 4- 6 L 9/ 1 South Carolina 2- 1 W 13 Butler1 (OT) 1- 1 T 7 at Wofford (OT) 0- 1 L 18 at Erskine 4- 1 W 9 at Clemson 1- 4 L 19 at Mercer (OT) 1- 3 L 13 Princeton1 1- 0 W 23 Presbyterian 4- 1 W 15 vs. Maryland1 1- 4 L 26 Liberty 5- 0 W 21 at Georgia Southern* 2- 1 W 30 Radford 1- 3 L 22 at College of Charleston 1- 2 L 11/ 2 Queens 1- 0 W 25 Appalachian State* 3- 1 W 30 at N.C. State (OT) 0- 1 L 1Davidson Invitational; Davidson, N.C. 10/ 2 UNC Greensboro (OT) 1- 4 L 4 at Georgia (OT) 0- 1 L 6 Chattanooga* 6- 0 W 9 Charlotte (OT) 0- 0 T 10 Furman* 2- 1 W 18 UNC Asheville 1- 2 L 20 at Wake Forest 0- 1 L 26 Georgia Southern* 3- 1 W 29 at Appalachian State* 3- 0 W 11/ 2 at Furman* 0- 1 L 3 at Chattanooga* 6- 0 W 9 Appalachian State2 10- 0 W 10 vs. Georgia Southern2 1- 0 W

1JMU Tournament; Harrisonburg, Va. 2SoCon Tournament; Davidson, N.C.

The 1995 squad shut out Furman 3-0 in the finals to capture the SoCon tournament title.

2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 17 Year-by-Year Results

1997 2001 4-14-3; 3-3-1 socoN, T-5Th 7-14-0; 6-4-0 socoN, 6Th

8/ 31 at South Carolina 2- 5 L 8/ 31 at Duke 0- 3 L 9/ 3 Clemson 0- 8 L 9/ 4 at South Carolina 0- 4 L 9 at Campbell (OT) 0- 0 T 7 at Navy1 1- 4 L 13 Georgia Southern* 1- 2 L 9 vs. Columbia1 1- 2 L 17 East Carolina 1- 2 L 18 at Charlotte 1- 2 L 21 at Appalachian State* (OT) 0- 0 T 21 at Furman* 1- 4 L 24 at Charlotte 0- 3 L 23 Elon 1- 0 W 27 at East Tennessee State* 4- 0 W 26 at Wofford* 4- 0 W 28 at UNC Asheville 2- 0 W 28 Appalachian State* 1- 0 W 10/ 3 at Georgia 0- 3 L 30 East Tennessee State* 4- 0 W 7 UNC Greensboro* 0- 3 L 10/ 5 at Virginia Tech 0- 2 L 10 Wofford* 2- 0 W In 1996, Davidson won both the SoCon regular-season 7 at The Citadel* 12- 1 W 12 at Yale 0- 3 L title and the tournament crown. 9 Wake Forest 0- 6 L 14 at Brown (OT) 1- 2 L 12 at Chattanooga* (OT) 2- 1 W 18 Chattanooga* 6- 0 W 14 at Western Carolina* 1- 3 L 19 Wake Forest 0- 2 L 19 College of Charleston*(OT) 2- 1 W 22 at Furman* 1- 2 L 1999 21 Georgia Southern* 0- 3 L 25 Richmond 1- 2 L 13-8-1; 8-1-0 socoN, 2Nd 27 at High Point 1- 3 L 28 at Furman1 (OT) 1- 1 T 31 UNC Greensboro* 0- 3 L 30 N.C. State 1- 4 L 8/ 28 at Charlotte 0- 3 L 11/ 3 UNC Wilmington 0- 1 L 2 11/ 1 vs. UNC Greensboro 0- 4 L 9/ 1 at N.C. State 0- 2 L 9 vs. UNC Greensboro2 0- 1 L 4 Wofford* 2- 0 W 1 SoCon Tournament; Greenville, S.C. 7 Oregon 2- 1 W 1Navy Invitational; Annapolis, Md. (campus site) 11 at UNC Asheville 2- 0 W 2SoCon Tournament; Greenville, S.C. 2 SoCon Tournament; Davidson, N.C. 18 Chattanooga* 2- 0 W (campus site) 21 at Appalachian State* 2- 0 W 23 Elon 3- 0 W 2002 26 at Duquesne (OT) 0- 0 T 1998 29 Georgia Southern* 3- 0 W 8-11-1; 6-3-1 socoN, 4Th 10/ 2 at East Tennessee State* 4- 0 W 7-13-0; 5-3-1 socoN, T-3rd 5 Clemson 0- 1 L 8/ 30 Charlotte (OT) 2- 3 L 8 at Duke 1- 2 L 9/ 1 South Carolina 0- 3 L 9/ 1 South Carolina 0- 5 L 12 at Furman* (OT) 1- 2 L 7 The Citadel* 6- 0 W 5 at East Carolina 1- 8 L 15 Brown (OT) 1- 1 T 10 at Wake Forest 1- 3 L 1 9 Wake Forest 0- 4 L 19 at South Carolina 1- 4 L 13 vs. Saint Louis 0- 2 L 1 12 at Georgia Southern* (OT) 0- 1 L 21 UNC Greensboro* (OT) 2- 1 W 15 at Wisconsin 1- 3 L 15 Furman* 1- 2 L 24 at College of Charleston* 1- 0 W 19 at Appalachian State* 2- 0 W 19 Morehead State 4- 1 W 29 at Georgia 0- 1 L 22 at East Tennessee State*(OT) 2- 1 W 23 Campbell 1- 0 W 31 Western Carolina* 6- 1 W 27 Chattanooga* 6- 2 W 25 Appalachian State* 1- 0 W 11/ 2 vs. Appalachian State1 2- 0 W 29 Western Carolina* (OT) 1- 1 T 27 College of Charleston* 3- 0 W 6 vs. Georgia Southern1 4- 1 W 10/ 4 Virginia Tech (OT) 2- 1 W 30 at Wofford* 1- 0 W 7 vs. Furman1 (4OT) 1- 2 L 9 at Elon (OT) 0- 1 L 10/ 3 at Richmond 0- 2 L 14 at Georgia Southern* 0- 2 L 4 at UNC Greensboro* 1- 4 L 1SoCon Tournament; Greensboro, N.C. 17 High Point 2- 1 W 9 Georgia 1- 6 L 23 Furman* 0- 4 L 12 at Clemson 0- 6 L 27 Wofford* 2- 0 W 15 at Elon 0- 1 L 30 at UNC Greensboro* 3- 4 L 18 at Chattanooga* 3- 0 W 2000 11/ 2 UNC Wilmington 2- 3 L 21 Charlotte 0- 1 L 14-8-0; 6-3-0 T-3rd 3 at College of Charleston* 3- 1 W 24 East Tennessee State* 5- 1 W 8 at UNC Greensboro2 (OT) 1- 2 L 29 UNC Asheville 1- 2 L 8/ 26 High Point 4- 0 W 11/ 3 vs. Wofford1 0- 1 L 30 UNC Asheville 7- 2 W 1Wisconsin Invitational Tournament; Madison, Wis. 9/ 4 Elon 1- 0 W 2SoCon Tournament; Greensboro, N.C. 1SoCon Tournament; Davidson, N.C. 6 Charlotte (OT) 2- 3 L (campus site) 9 N.C. State 1- 0 W 13 South Carolina 3- 1 W 2003 15 Duquesne 2- 1 W 19 Duke 1- 3 L 6-12-2; 3-6-2 socoN, 9Th 22 Chattanooga* 3- 0 W 24 Western Carolina* 2- 1 W 8/ 29 at Kentucky 0- 6 L 29 at College of Charleston* 2- 1 W 31 at UNC Asheville 2- 1 W 10/ 1 at Georgia Southern* 2- 3 L 9/ 5 Dartmouth 1- 3 L 6 vs. Vermont1 2- 0 W 7 at High Point 3- 2 W 8 at Harvard1 0- 7 L 9 Wake Forest 0- 5 L 14 Furman* 1- 2 L 12 Gardner-Webb 3- 0 W 16 Wofford* 6- 0 W 17 at South Carolina 1- 4 L 20 at Appalachian State* 1- 0 W 20 at Western Carolina* 1- 0 W 22 at East Tennessee State* 2- 1 W 26 Duke 0- 7 L 25 at Wake Forest 0- 4 L 28 College of Charleston* 0- 2 L 28 at UNC Greensboro* 0- 4 L 10/ 5 at Chattanooga* (OT) 0- 0 T 11/ 3 vs. Wofford2 4- 0 W 9 Elon* 0- 4 L 4 vs. Furman2 (OT) 1- 2 L 12 Georgia Southern* 1- 0 W 17 Appalachian State* (OT) 0- 0 T 1Harvard Invitational Tournament; Cambridge, 19 at The Citadel* 5- 0 W Mass. 21 at Charlotte 0- 2 L 2SoCon Tournament; Charleston, S.C. 24 at Furman* 0- 3 L 26 at Wofford* 1- 2 L 30 East Tennessee State* 1- 2 L 11/ 2 UNC Greensboro* 1- 3 L

18 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS Year-by-Year Results

2004 12-9-1; 7-3-1 5Th

8/ 29 Charlotte 1- 0 W 9/ 3 at San Diego State 0- 1 L 5 vs. UC Riverside 0- 3 L 9 at Appalachian State* 4- 1 W 12 at Gardner-Webb (OT) 2- 1 W 15 High Point 3- 1 W 17 at Wake Forest 2- 4 L 22 at Elon* 1- 0 W 24 at Duke 0- 8 L 29 UNC Asheville 0- 1 L 10/ 1 Chattanooga* 0- 4 L 6 Western Carolina* 2- 0 W 9 at Georgia Southern* 2- 1 W 13 The Citadel* 12- 0 W 17 Furman* 1- 0 W The 2008 squad made it five straight years with at least 10 wins, all under the direction of head 20 Wofford* 0- 0 T coach Greg Ashton. 24 at East Tennessee State* 1- 0 W 28 at UNC Greensboro* 0- 2 L 31 at College of Charleston* 1- 2 L 11/ 4 vs. Chattanooga1 2- 1 W 6 vs. UNC Greensboro1 3- 2 W 2006 2008 7 vs. Furman1 1- 3 L 11-7-2; 7-3-0 socoN, 2Nd 10-6-3; 8-3-0 4Th 1SoCon Tournament; Greensboro, N.C. 8/ 25 at Navy1 0- 1 L 8/ 23 Virginia Tech 2- 1 W 27 vs. Georgetown1 (2OT) 1- 1 T 8/ 29 at Mercer 1- 0 W 31 vs. Kennesaw State 1- 1 T 9/ 3 at UNC Wilmington 0- 2 L 1 2005 8 at High Point 2- 0 W 9/ 5 Lehigh 2- 2 T 7 Richmond1 1- 1 T 14-5-2; 9-0-1 1sT 10 at Gardner-Webb 4- 0 W 15 at No. 14 Wake Forest 0- 3 L 12 at Harvard 1- 2 T 14 at Providence Cancelled 8/ 26 at Charlotte 2- 1 W 19 Charlotte 3- 0 W 22 UC Santa Barbara 1- 0 W 21 UNC Wilmington 0- 2 L 28 Wake Forest 1- 5 L 25 at Furman* 3- 2 W 1 24 at Georgia Southern* 3- 1 W 9/ 2 at No. 1 North Carolina 0- 6 L 28 at Wofford* 1- 0 W 1 28 at Appalachian State* 0- 1 L 4 vs. Duke 0- 2 L 10/ 3 Samford* 3- 0 W 2 10/ 1 The Citadel* 7- 0 W 9 vs. Kent State 3- 0 W 5 Chattanooga* 5- 0 W 11 at Northwestern2 0- 3 L 5 Furman* 1- 2 L OT 8 at Winthrop (2OT) 2- 2 T 10 at Col of Charleston* ( ) 0- 1 L 16 UNC Wilmington 1- 0 W 12 The Citadel* 7- 0 W 18 Colorado College (2OT) 2- 2 T 12 Wofford* 3- 0 W 15 at UNC Greensboro* 1- 4 L 16 Appalachian State* 4- 0 W 25 at Chattanooga* (2OT) 1- 0 W 19 Western Carolina* 1- 2 L 29 Elon* 1- 0 W 19 at College of Charleston* 1- 0 W 22 Western Carolina* 1- 0 W 23 at Elon* 1- 0 W 10/ 2 Georgia Southern* 3- 0 W 26 UNC Greensboro* 0- 1 L 6 Appalachian State* 4- 1 W 27 at Elon* 2- 0 W 29 Chattanooga* 4- 1 W 30 at Georgia Southern* (OT) 2- 1 W 9 at The Citadel* 5- 0 W 11/ 2 Furman1 0- 1 L 13 at Furman* 3- 0 W 31 Georgia Southern2 0- 1 L

17 Winthrop 3- 0 W 1 2Navy Tournament; Annapolis, Md. Davidson Tournament; Davidson, N.C. 20 at Wofford* 1- 0 W 2 3SoCon Tournament; Davidson, N.C. (campus site) SoCon Quarterfinals; Davidson, N.C. 23 UNC Greensboro* (2OT) 2- 2 T (campus site) 27 Coll. of Charleston* (2OT) 2- 1 W 30 at Western Carolina* 2- 1 W 11/ 3 vs. Elon3 2- 0 W 4 vs. Western Carolina3 0- 2 L 2007 2009 1 14-5-1; 8-1-1 socoN, 2Nd Carolina Nike Classic; Chapel Hill, N.C. 12-10-1; 7-3-1 T-4Th 2Northwestern University Tournament; Evanston, 8/ 31 at N.C. State 1- 5 L Ill. 8/ 23 at Winthrop 3- 1 W 9/ 2 High Point (OT) 1- 0 W 3SoCon Tournament; Greenville, S.C. 7 at Air Force 0- 1 L 28 at N.C. State 1- 4 L 9 at Colorado College 0- 2 L 30 at UNC Wilmington 0- 4 L 16 Mercer 3- 1 W 9/ 4 Villanova 1- 4 L 1 6 Francis Marion 5- 0 W 21 vs. Vanderbilt (OT) 2- 1 W 23 vs. LSU1 3- 0 W 10 Charlotte 0- 2 L 13 at High Point 1- 0 W 27 Appalachian State* (OT) 2- 1 W 30 at The Citadel* 5- 0 W 18 at Richmond 2- 3 L 10/ 4 at Furman* 1- 0 W 20 at Virginia Tech 2- 3 L 7 Francis Marion 4- 0 W 25 at Western Carolina* 0- 2 L 27 at Appalachian State* 0- 2 L 12 at Wofford* (2OT) 0- 0 T 14 UNC Greensboro* 0- 3 L 10/ 2 UNC Greensboro* 2- 1 W 4 Elon* 2- 0 W 17 Coll. of Charleston* (OT) 2- 1 W 21 at Western Carolina* 3- 0 W 8 at Col of Charleston* 0- 2 L 25 Elon* 2- 0 W 11 at The Citadel* 1- 0 W 28 at Chattanooga* 4- 0 W 16 Wofford* 4- 0 W 11/ 1 Georgia Southern* 2- 0 W 18 Furman* 1- 0 W 4 Wofford2 2- 1 W 23 at Chattanooga* 4- 2 W 25 at Samford* (2OT) 1- 1 T 9 Furman3 (OT) 0- 1 L 31 Georgia Southern* 2- 1 W 1 1 11/ 6 at UNC Greensboro 1- 0 W Coll. of Charleston Tournament; Charleston, S.C. 1 The 2007 squad tied the school record for wins in a sea- 2 8 vs. CofC (2OT)1- 0 W SoCon Quarterfinals; Davidson, N.C. 2 son with 14 and also matched the school mark for (campus site) 13 at No. 8 South Carolina 0- 4 L shutouts by blanking 10 opponents. 3SoCon Semifinals; Davidson, N.C. 1 SoCon Semi/Finals; Greensboro, N.C. 2 NCAA Tournament, First Round; Columbia, S.C

2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 19 Year-by-Year Results

2010 Head Coach Greg Ashton and the 6-8-6; 2-4-5 socoN, 7Th 2009 squad became the first team in program history to earn a bid to the 8/ 22 UNC Wilmington 2- 0 W NCAA Tournament when they won 27 at Charlotte 0- 1 L the program’s fourth Southern Con- 29 High Point 1- 0 W ference Tournament Title. Davidson 9/ 3 at No. 7 Texas A&M 1- 5 L faced No. 8 South Carolina in its first 5 at Southern Methodist 0- 3 L NCAA Tournament, Nov. 13. 10 vs. Presbyterian College1 3- 0 W 12 vs. Iowa1 1- 3 L 19 Winthrop 2- 0 W 24 Furman* (2OT) 1- 1 T 26 Wofford* (2OT) 2- 2 T 10/ 1 at Elon* 0- 1 L 3 at UNC Greensboro* 0- 4 L 8 at Appalachian State* (2OT) 0- 0 T 10 at Western Carolina* 0- 1 L 14 College of Charleston* 2- 0 W year-By-year BreaKdoWN 17 at The Citadel* 1- 3 L

22 Samford* (2OT) 0- 0 T Overall Southern Conference 24 Chattanooga* 1- 0 W Year W L T Pct W L T Pct Finish Head Coaches 28 at Georgia Southern* (2OT) 1- 1 T 1989 4 6 1 .409 - - - - - Diane Boettcher 31 vs. Samford2 (2OT) 0- 0 T 1990 6 9 1 .406 - - - - - (10-15-2, two years) L, 3-4 PKs 1991 8 7 1 .531 - - - - - Kevin Hundley 1992 10 8 1 .553 - - - - - (118-133-15, 13 years) 1CofC Tournament; Charleston, S.C. 1993* 9 9 1 .500 - - - - - (52-27-5 SoCon) 2 SoCon Quarterfinals; Birmingham, Ala. 1994 10 10 1 .500 5 1 0 .833 1st (SoCon) (campus site) 1995 11 9 2 .545 3 2 1 .583 3rd 1996 11 10 1 .523 7 1 0 .875 1st 2011 1997 4 14 3 .262 3 3 1 .500 5th 1998 7 13 0 .350 5 3 0 .625 t-3rd 9-9-2; 7-4 socoN, 4Th 1999 13 8 2 .609 8 1 0 .889 2nd 2000 14 8 0 .636 6 3 0 .667 t-3rd 8/ 20 UNC Asheville 8- 1 W 2001 7 14 0 .333 6 4 0 .600 6th 26 Providence (2OT) 2- 2 T 28 Florida Gulf Coast 1- 2 L 2002 8 10 2 .450 6 3 1 .650 4th 9/ 2 East Carolina 1- 2 L 2003 6 12 2 .400 3 6 2 .455 9th 4 UNC Wilmington 1- 2 L 2004 12 9 1 568 7 3 1 .682 5th Greg Ashton 9 vs. George Washington1 4- 2 W 2005 14 5 2 .714 9 0 1 .950 1st (106-92-27, 11 years) 11 vs. Navy1 (OT) 0- 1 L 2006 11 7 2 .600 7 3 0 .700 2nd (65-31-11 SoCon) 18 Charlotte (2OT) 1- 1 T 2007 14 5 1 .725 8 1 1 .800 2nd (2-5-1 A-10) 23 at Furman* 0- 3 L 2008 10 6 3 .605 8 3 0 .727 4th 25 Wofford* 3- 1 W 30 Elon* 1- 0 W 2009 12 10 1 .543 7 3 1 .682 t-4th 10/ 2 UNCG* 0- 1 L 2010 6 8 6 .450 2 4 5 .409 7th 7 Appalachian State* 3- 0 W 2011 9 9 2 .500 7 4 0 .636 4th 9 Western Carolina* 1- 0 W 2012 7 10 3 .425 5 5 1 .500 6th 13 at Coll. of Charleston* 2- 3 L 2013 6 11 4 .381 4 5 1 .450 7th (SoCon) 16 The Citadel* (OT) 2- 1 W 2014 5 12 2 .316 2 5 1 .312 t-11th (A-10) 21 at Samford* 0- 2 L Totals 234 239 45 .495 118 63 31 .630 23 at Chattanooga* (OT) 2- 1 W 26 Georgia Southern* 2- 0 W 30 vs. Furman2 1- 2 L

1Navy Tournament; Annapolis, Md. 2SoCon Quarterfinals; Davidson, N.C. 2013 2014 (campus site) 6-11-4; 4-5-1 socoN, 7Th 5-12-2; 2-5-1 socoN, T-11Th

8/ 23 East Carolina 0- 2 L 8/ 22 Winthrop 2- 0 W 2012 25 Coastal Carolina 0- 0 T 24 Virginia Tech 0- 4 L 30 at Florida Gulf Coast 1 0- 0 T 29 UAB 0- 1 L 7-10-3; 5-5-1 socoN, 6Th 9/ 1 vs. Florida Atlantic 1 0- 0 T 31 Army 3- 1 W 6 Southern Methodist 0- 3 L 9/ 5 at East Carolina 0- 2 L 8/ 17 Liberty 0- 1 L 8 at Clemson 0- 2 L 7 at Coastal Carolina 2- 0 W 26 Tennessee Tech 2- 0 W 13 at Winthrop 1- 2 L 11 at Liberty 0- 1 L 31 at East Carolina 0- 3 L 15 James Madison 0- 2 L 14 Georgia State (2OT)0- 0 T 9/ 2 at UNC Wilmington 2- 3 L 22 Charlotte (2OT)1- 0 W 18 William & Mary 0- 2 L 7 Clemson 1- 1 T 27 at Chattanooga* 3- 2 W 21 at Charlotte 0- 2 L 9 North Florida 0- 0 T 29 at Samford* 0- 3 L 28 at North Florida (2OT)1- 2 L 13 at Charlotte 1- 0 W 10/ 4 Western Carolina* 2- 1 W 10/ 3 at St. Bonaventure* 2- 0 W 16 at William & Mary 0- 3 L 6 Appalachian State* (2OT)1- 2 L 5 at Duqeusne* (2OT)0- 1 L 21 Chattanooga* 3- 0 W 10 The Citadel* 3- 0 W 11 Richmond* 0- 1 L 23 Samford* 0- 2 L 13 at Francis Marion 4- 3 W 17 at George Washington* 0- 1 L 28 at Western Carolina* 2- 0 W 18 UNCG* 0- 1 L 19 at VCU* 0- 1 L 30 at App. State* (2OT)0- 1 L 20 Elon* 2- 4 L 25 Saint Louis* 0- 2 L 10/ 4 at The Citadel* 2- 1 W 25 at Wofford* 0- 0 T 31 Rhode Island* 1- 2 L 7 College of Charleston* 5- 2 W 27 at Furman* 1- 3 L 11/ 2 Massachusetts* (2OT)0- 0 T 12 at UNCG* 0- 1 L 30 at Georgia Southern* 2- 0 W 14 at Elon* 0- 0 T 11/ 3 at Elon 2 1- 3 L Did not make the A-10 Tournament 19 Wofford* 2- 1 W 21 Furman* 0- 2 L 1Embassy Sutie Classic hosted by FGCU; Fort 24 at Georgia Southern* 0- 1 L Myers, Fla. 28 vs. Furman1 2- 3 L 2SoCon Quarterfinals; Elon, N.C. (campus site) 2SoCon Quarterfinals; Greenville, S.C. (campus site) 20 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS AD / President

JiM MUrPhy carol QUilleN direcTor of aThleTics PresideNT Carol Quillen, who was previously Jim Murphy was introduced as Davidson Col- lege’s Director of Athletics in November of 1995, re- the vice president for international and turning to his alma mater to lead the Wildcats on the interdisciplinary initiatives at Rice Uni- eve of their 100th anniversary of intercollegiate ath- versity, became the 18th president of letics and into the next century. Davidson College on August 1, 2011. Prior to his appointment at Davidson, Murphy, Quillen has had a long and distin- 53, spent 10 years as executive associate athletic di- guished career at Rice. She joined the rector and chief financial officer for the Georgia Tech faculty as an assistant professor of his- Athletic Association. tory in 1990, and she earned promotion Murphy, an Atlanta native, played football and to associate professor in 1996. From 2004 to 2008, she served as the first baseball during his freshman year at Davidson. His director of Rice's Boniuk Center for the Study and Advancement of Re- experience has been invaluable as he guides a pro- ligious Tolerance, leading development of the center's new mission gram which is unique in its desire for excellence in both athletics and academ- and shaping an agenda that helped distinguish the center from other ics and has one of the smallest enrollments among NCAA Division I schools. organizations. Reflecting his support of academics, Davidson’s NCAA graduation rate From 2006 to 2010, Quillen served as Rice's vice provost for aca- of 91 percent was the highest in Division I in 2001-02, second in 2002-03 with demic affairs, focusing particularly on developing initiatives that cross a rate of 97 percent and continues to be above 90 percent each year. academic schools, faculty diversity and faculty development, and re- “I firmly believe Davidson repre- source development. During this time, she worked with faculty to de- sents the ideal in college athletics and velop and secure funding for a new Center for Asian Studies and a think the success of Davidson’s stu- new Institute for Urban Research. She co-chaired the president's diver- dents, both in competition and after sity task force, and instituted mentoring programs for junior faculty. graduation proves that,” said Murphy. As vice president for international and interdisciplinary initiatives, “It’s true that Davidson needs intercol- Quillen was responsible for developing and implementing Rice's over- legiate athletics, but intercollegiate ath- letics need Davidson even more.” all global strategy, which includes research partnerships, recruiting Since Murphy’s return to Davidson, strategies, curricular revision and international opportunities for stu- the Wildcats have pursued several dents. She also facilitates implementation of university-wide initia- major capital projects, including the cre- tives, including the Institute for Urban Research, Rice 360 (a global ation of the highly-innovative $10 mil- health effort), and collaborations with Baylor and other institutions lion Davidson Scholars Program, and within the Texas Medical Center. major improvements have been com- James W. Crownover, chair of Rice University's Board of Trustees, pleted in Belk Arena and at Smith Field said, "It's an honor for Rice that one of ours has been chosen to lead a at Richardson Stadium. place as respected as Davidson. She will work hard, and she will suc- The last five years have seen the con- ceed there." struction of the Belk Artificial Surface Quillen grew up in New Castle, Del., a small town where she says Field for field hockey, the new Alumni "it was second nature to support the community and look out for other Stadium for soccer, Wilson Baseball people." A Presbyterian, she attended Quaker schools from pre-kinder- Park and batting cages and the football Murphy and Michele Savage make a pres- garten through high school. She earned a B.A. degree in American his- stadium expansion project, which in- entation to Davidson’s all-time leading tory from the University of Chicago, graduating Phi Beta Kappa with cluded a state-of-the-art weight room, a scorer for women’s basketball Sophia Alek- special and general honors, then received a Ph.D. degree in European new press box and additional perma- sandravicius, who set seven all-time history from Princeton. A humanist whose academic interests include nent seating. records during her career. early modern European history, European intellectual history and gen- Murphy, the 2004 NACDA Division der studies, Quillen I-AA/I-AAA Southeast Region Athletic Director of the Year, served two terms has written two on the prestigious NCAA Division I Management Council, a policy-making books on Petrarch, body within the NCAA governance structure. He chaired the Division I-AA Governance Committee and formerly served on the NCAA Division I Busi- as well as a number ness and Finance Cabinet, the Division I Governance Committee and the Di- of scholarly articles, vision I Finance Committee. From 2002-04, Murphy chaired the Athletic reviews and papers. Directors Association of the Southern Conference. He was part of Charlotte’s She has received a successful bid to host the NCAA Division I Men’s Soccer Championships in number of teaching 1999 and 2000 and also served as Tournament Director of the first and sec- awards during her ond-round games of the 2005 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship in tenure at Rice. Charlotte. Quillen's daugh- Murphy is a past member of the Division I Football Issues Committee and ter, Caitlin, will be a Past-President of the Football Championship Subdivision Athletic Directors first-year student at Association. He was also a member of the NCAA Task Force on Recruiting, the University of an 18-member panel charged with changing the culture of recruiting in inter- North Carolina next collegiate athletics, and currently serves on the NCAA’s Fiscal Responsibility fall. Quillen's hus- Oversight Group. band, Ken A licensed Certified Public Accountant and 1978 graduate of Davidson Kennedy-a com- with a degree in economics, he earned a Master of Science degree in manage- puter pioneer who founded the computer science program at Rice— ment from Georgia Tech in 1979. He worked from 1979-85 as an audit manager died of pancreatic cancer in 2007. "His greatest gift to me, and to the with the international public accounting firm of KPMG Peat Marwick in At- Rice community, was in living the life he would have chosen," Quillen lanta with responsibility for financial statement audits of public and private said. "That's something I think about in a very profound way every companies with up to $1 billion in assets. day." Murphy has been active in the community since his return to Davidson. At Davidson, Quillen succeeds Tom Ross '72, who announced in He is involved with Social Venture Partners - Charlotte, chairs the Board of August 2010 that he would step down to become president of the Uni- Managers of the Lake Norman YMCA, the Board of Directors of the Charlotte Regional Sports Commission, served three years on the Board of the Charlotte versity of North Carolina system in January 2011. Council for Children and three years on the Board of Directors of the Town of Davidson Youth Baseball League. Murphy is married to Dr. Susan Roberts, a political science professor at Davidson, and his 24-year-old son, Matt, is a graduate of the University of North Carolina and works in advertising in Chapel Hill, N.C. 2200115 WWOOMMEEN’’SS SSOOCCCCEERR 21 Media Information coVeriNG The ‘caTs sPorTs iNfo. sTaff daVidsoN Media Charlotte Observer Press Box Harry Pickett (College Sports Editor) Alumni Stadium press box is adequate for Sports Information [email protected] most legitimate requests. Director P.O. Box 32188, Charlotte, NC 28232 Joey Beeler Phone: 704-358-5127 Fax: 704-358-5110 Press/Photography Credentials Office Phone: All requests for media credentials should Concord Independent Tribune 704-894-2123 Steve Winzenread be directed to the SID Office. Credentials Cell Phone: [email protected] should be picked up in person at the 980-297-9981 P.O. Box 608, Concord, NC 28026 press box in Alumni Stadium. A print cre- E-Mail: Phone: 704-782-3155 Fax: 704-786-0645 dential will give the holder access to the [email protected] press box and the designated media inter- The Davidsonian P.O. Box 7182, Davidson, NC 28035 view area after the game, but not the side- Phone: 704-894-2148 Fax: 704-892-2625 lines. Photography credentials will enable the holder access to the press box and the Assistant SID/ Mooresville Tribune designated photo areas marked on the W. Soccer Contact Larry Sullivan [email protected] sidelines. Credentials are limited to daily Gavin McFarlin newspapers, national magazines, student P.O. Box 300, Mooresville, NC 28115 Office Phone: Phone: 704-664-5554 Fax: 704-664-3614 newspapers, wire services, television sta- 704-894-2635 tions and team photographers. E-Mail: North Charlotte Weekly [email protected] Justin Ridge Radio Broadcasts [email protected] Stations originating broadcasts of David- 15720 John J. Delaney Dr., Charlotte, NC 28277 son w. soccer games receive press box lo- Phone: 704-543-9797 Fax: 704-543-9790 cations at Alumni Stadium. Permission to Salisbury Post broadcast must be secured at least two Ronald Gallagher weeks in advance from the SID Office. Assistant SID: [email protected] Phone lines are available upon request by Meghan Moore P.O. Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28677 contacting the SID Office to make Office Phone: Phone: 704-633-8950 Fax: 704-639-0003 704-894-2815 arrangements. Statesville Record-Landmark E-Mail: Jason Bullard Player Interviews [email protected] [email protected] Except for postgame, interviews with P.O. Box 1071, Statesville, NC 28677 Davidson players must be arranged Phone: 704-873-1451 Fax: 704-872-3150 through the SID Office. News 14 (Time Warner) Mike Solarte (Sports Director) Postgame [email protected] After a 10-minute cooling off period, in- 316 E. Morehead St., Charlotte, NC 28202 terviews will be conducted on the field. Assistant SID: Phone: 704-973-5800 Fax: 704-731-2760 Statistics and play-by-play will be pro- Kelly Shuman vided. WBTV (CBS) Office Phone: Delano Little (Sports Director) 704-894-2931 dlittle@.com Video Streaming E-Mail: 1 Julian Price Place, Charlotte, NC 28208 All home women’s soccer games will be [email protected] Phone: 704-374-3711 Fax: 704-374-3818 video streamed through the Wildcats’ Web site at www.DavidsonWildcats.com. WCNC-TV (NBC) Greg Bailey (Sports Director) Visit the All-Access page to sign up for [email protected] this service. Sports Information 1001 Woodridge Center Dr., Charlotte, NC 28217 Gavin McFarlin is entering his 11th year in Phone: 704-329-3667 Fax: 704-357-4975 Live Stats Davidson’s sports information office for the Live stats will be available for all home 2015-16 season. He serves as the primary con- WSOC-TV (ABC) games at www.DavidsonWildcats.com tact for women’s soccer, women's basketball, Tiffany Wright (Sports Director) men’s and women’s tennis and lacrosse, and [email protected] he has also covered volleyball and men’s P.O. Box 34655, Charlotte, NC 28234 Mailing Address Phone: 704-335-4746 Fax: 704-335-4736 Sports Information cross country/track and field while at David- son. McFarlin also manages the athletic de- Davidson College WCCB-TV (Fox) partment's photography needs. Bruce Snyder (Sports Director) Box 7158 Prior to coming to Davidson, he spent two Davidson, NC 28035 [email protected] years at University of the Pacific in Stockton, 1 Television Place, Charlotte, NC 28203 Calif., working in the media relations office as Phone: 704-632-7551 Fax: 704-358-4841 Overnight Address a graduate assistant, 2003-05. While at Pacific, Sports Information McFarlin received a master’s degree in mass WBT Radio Davidson College communication in May of 2005. A native of Jim Szoke (Sports Director) 209 Ridge Road Ashland, Ohio, McFarlin attended Ashland 1 Julian Price Place, Charlotte, NC 28208 Davidson, NC 28036 University in his hometown, graduating with Phone: 704-374-3500 Fax: 704-570-1109 a degree in sports communication and a minor in electronic media production, WFNZ Sports Radio 610 Press Box Phone: 704-894-2962 radio/television in May of 2002. D.J. Stout (Operations Manager) Web site: www.DavidsonWildcats.com McFarlin and his wife Courtenay live in 1520 South Blvd., Ste. 300, Charlotte, NC 28203 Huntersville, N.C. Phone: 704-319-3923 Fax: 704-319-3934 22 DDAAVVIIDDSSOONN W I LLDDCCAATTSS