Men's Soccer Award Winners
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2021 Record Book 5 Single-Season Records
PROGRAM RECORDS TEAM INDIVIDUAL Game Game Goals .......................................................11 vs. Old Dominion, 10/1/71 Goals .................................................. 5, Bill Hodill vs. Davidson, 10/17/42 ............................................................11 vs. Richmond, 10/20/81 Assists ................................................. 4, Damian Silvera vs. UNC, 9/27/92 Assists ......................................................11 vs. Virginia Tech, 9/14/94 ..................................................... 4, Richie Williams vs. VCU, 9/13/89 Points .................................................................... 30 vs. VCU, 9/13/89 ........................................... 4, Kris Kelderman vs. Charleston, 9/10/89 Goals Allowed .................................................12 vs. Maryland, 10/8/41 ...........................................4, Chick Cudlip vs. Wash. & Lee, 11/13/62 Margin of Victory ....................................11-0 vs. Old Dominion, 10/1/71 Points ................................................ 10, Bill Hodill vs. Davidson, 10/17/42 Fastest Goal to Start Match .........................................................11-0 vs. Richmond, 10/20/81 .................................:09, Alecko Eskandarian vs. American, 10/26/02* Margin of Defeat ..........................................12-0 vs. Maryland, 10/8/41 Largest Crowd (Scott) .......................................7,311 vs. Duke, 10/8/88 *Tied for 3rd fastest in an NCAA Soccer Game Largest Crowd (Klöckner) ......................7,906 -
Men's Soccer Records Book
Men’s Championship Records Division I Championship Records ......... 2 Division II Championship Records ....... 9 Division III Championship Records ...... 15 2 DIVISION I MEN’S CHAMPIONSHIP RECOrdS Division I Men’s Championship Notre Dame 2, Oakland 1 Wake Forest 2, Virginia Tech 0 2007 Results West Virginia 1, Virginia 0 Goals by period 1 2 Total Wake Forest 1, Furman 0 Virginia Tech ............................................................. 0 0 0 Wake Forest .............................................................. 0 2 2 FIRST ROUND THIRD ROUND Massachusetts 2, Boston U. 1 Massachusetts 3, Central Conn. St. 1 SCORING SUMMARY Central Conn. St. 3, Harvard 2 Ill.-Chicago 1, Creighton 0 50:19 WF Marcus Tracy (Sam Cronin) *Ill.-Chicago 0, St. Louis 0 (2 ot, pk) Ohio St. 4, UC Santa Barb. 3 (2 ot) 82:41 WF Tracy (Zack Schilawski) SMU 1, Gonzaga 0 Bradley 3, Maryland 2 (2 ot) Shots: Virginia Tech 6, Wake Forest 8. Louisville 1, Duke 0 Connecticut 5, South Fla. 0 Saves: Virginia Tech 3 (Markus Aigner 3), Wake Forest 3 Washington 1, Portland 0 Virginia Tech 1, Old Dominion 0 (Brian Edwards 3). Loyola (Md.) 2, Liberty 0 Notre Dame 2, Santa Clara 0 Fouls: Virginia Tech 12, Wake Forest 13. Bradley 2, DePaul 0 Wake Forest 3, West Virginia 1 Corner Kicks: Virginia Tech 9, Wake Forest 4. *Vermont 1, Dartmouth 1 (2 ot, pk) Attendance: 8,611. South Fla. 2, Colgate 1 QUARTERFINALS California 2, UC Davis 1 (2 ot) Massachusetts 2, Ill.-Chicago 1 CHAMPIONSHIP Old Dominion 1, Providence 0 Ohio St. 4, Bradley 0 DECEMBER 16 AT CARY, N.C. UCLA 1, New Mexico 0 Virginia Tech 1, Connecticut 0 Wake Forest 2, Ohio St. -
Men's Award Winners
Men’s Award Winners Division I First-Team All-Americans (1910-2012) ................................................ 2 Division I First-Team All-Americans by School ..................................................... 6 Division II First-Team All-Americans (1981-2012) ................................................ 10 Division II First-Team All-Americans by School ..................................................... 11 Division III First-Team All-Americans (1981-2012) ................................................ 12 Division III First-Team All-Americans by School ..................................................... 13 National Award Winners ........................... 15 2 2013 MEN'S SOCCER RECORDS - All-AMERICA TEams All-America Teams NOTE: The All-America teams were SPRING 1914 F–Francis Righter, Cornell D–William Lingelbach, Penn selected by the various team cap- G–Arthur Jackson, Princeton F–J. Moulton Thomas, Princeton D–H. Bradley Sexton, Princeton tains of the Intercollegiate Associa- D–Thomas Elkinton, Haverford F–C.J. Woodridge, Princeton F–Depler Bullard, Lehigh D–Henry Francke, Harvard F–Dick Marshall, Penn St. tion Football League for the 1909- D–Francis Grant, Harvard 1922 F–George Olditch, Cornell 10 season. Various team managers D–Shepard, Yale G–J. Crossan Cooper, Princeton F–Henry Rudy, Swarthmore selected the team from the 1910-11 D–Clement Webster, Penn D–Bayard Amelia, Penn F–Smith, Yale season until 1917. No teams were F–John Bell, Penn D–David Beard, Penn selected in 1918 or 1919 due to F–Shanholt, Columbia D–John Smart, Princeton 1929 World War I. From 1926 to 1940, the F–Samuel Stokes, Haverford D–John Sullivan, Harvard G–Bob McCune, Penn St. F–Tripp, Yale D–Elliot Thompson, Cornell teams were selected by coaches D–Herb Allen, Penn St. F–Walter Weld, Harvard F–Randolph Heizer, Harvard D–William Frazier, Haverford from the Intercollegiate Soccer F–N. -
Crystal River
Project1:Layout 1 6/10/2014 1:13 PM Page 1 Hoops: CR girls, Lecanto boys claim road victories /B1 SATURDAY TODAY CITRUSCOUNTY & next morning HIGH 69 Possible AM rain, LOW mostly sunny and breezy. 48 PAGE A4 www.chronicleonline.com DECEMBER 5, 2020 Florida’s Best Community Newspaper Serving Florida’s Best Community 50¢ VOL. 126 ISSUE 58 NEWS BRIEFS Chamber pushes for relief plan Citrus COVID-19 already failed Requests state assistance for struggling local businesses twice this fall, update even as Demo- According to the Flor- MICHAEL D. BATES “We are in an emergency,” John Murphy, chairman of the cratic leaders and ida Department of Health, Staff writer Chamber president/CEO Josh chamber’s governmental affairs a bipartisan Wooten said in an email to the committee. Murphy is also the group of moder- 70 positive cases were The Citrus County Chamber of three legislators. “The year is Chronicle’s digital manager and ates offered reported in Citrus County Commerce has fired off a letter to ending soon and many hundreds regional sales manager. concessions in since the latest update. U.S. Congressman Daniel Webster of thousands of small businesses Time is running out. hopes of passing Josh Six new hospitalizations and Senators Rick Scott and and families are facing financial The Associated Press said top pandemic aid Wooten were reported; one new Marco Rubio, asking them to sup- disaster unless Congress passes Senate Republican Mitch McCon- before Congress Chamber death was reported. port a bipartisan effort on pan- further pandemic relief assis- nell said Tuesday he’s largely adjourns for president/CEO. -
Men's Soccer 2016 Record Book
MEN’S SOCCER 2016 RECORD BOOK HUSKY SOCCER STADIUM OPENED: 1997 | SEATING CAPACITY: 2,200 | TOTAL CAPACITY: 3,100 Top Crowds Husky Soccer Stadium, a soccer-only facility that opened in 1997, is located adjacent to Here are the largest men’s soccer crowds for a Lake Washington as part of Washington’s athletic village and ranks among the top in the UW game at Husky Soccer Stadium: nation for soccer game attendance. Date Opponent Att. Sept. 25, 2016 Seattle U 3,419 Oct. 22, 2000 Stanford 3,280 With comfortable seating and a large capacity, the soccer stadium has been chosen to host Nov. 24, 2013 Seattle U 3,100 Sept. 28, 2008 Gonzaga 2,981 NCAA post-season play and has been used as a practice facility for international soccer Nov. 9, 2001 Portland 2,808 teams including European powerhouses Celtic and Barcelona. The site has also welcomed Dec. 1, 2013 Stanford 2,690 numerous Major League Soccer and national teams, including the U.S., Canada and Hon- Oct. 10, 2010 California 2,529 Oct. 24, 1999 Stanford 2,524 duras. Nov. 5, 2004 UCLA 2,520 Oct. 13, 2001 Oregon State 2,490 Nov. 8, 2013 Stanford 2,425 The 72 x 120 yard grass playing surface provides the Husky men’s and women’s program Oct. 22, 2006 UCLA 2,303 with a premier playing field on a year-round basis. Dec. 7, 2013 New Mexico 2,240 Nov. 11, 2007 Stanford 2,238 Oct. 5, 2014 Stanford 2,155 Since opening in 1997, the Huskies have posted a 135-54-16 overall record at Husky Soccer Nov. -
Messi, Ronaldo, and the Politics of Celebrity Elections
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by LSE Research Online Messi, Ronaldo, and the politics of celebrity elections: voting for the best soccer player in the world LSE Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/101875/ Version: Accepted Version Article: Anderson, Christopher J., Arrondel, Luc, Blais, André, Daoust, Jean François, Laslier, Jean François and Van Der Straeten, Karine (2019) Messi, Ronaldo, and the politics of celebrity elections: voting for the best soccer player in the world. Perspectives on Politics. ISSN 1537-5927 https://doi.org/10.1017/S1537592719002391 Reuse Items deposited in LSE Research Online are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved unless indicated otherwise. They may be downloaded and/or printed for private study, or other acts as permitted by national copyright laws. The publisher or other rights holders may allow further reproduction and re-use of the full text version. This is indicated by the licence information on the LSE Research Online record for the item. [email protected] https://eprints.lse.ac.uk/ Messi, Ronaldo, and the Politics of Celebrity Elections: Voting For the Best Soccer Player in the World Christopher J. Anderson London School of Economics and Political Science Luc Arrondel Paris School of Economics André Blais University of Montréal Jean-François Daoust McGill University Jean-François Laslier Paris School of Economics Karine Van der Straeten Toulouse School of Economics Abstract It is widely assumed that celebrities are imbued with political capital and the power to move opinion. To understand the sources of that capital in the specific domain of sports celebrity, we investigate the popularity of global soccer superstars. -
2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Records
Division I Men’s Records Individual Records ....................................... 2 Individual Leaders ....................................... 2 Annual Individual Champions ............... 7 Team Records ................................................ 8 Team Leaders ................................................. 8 Annual Team Champions ......................... 12 2012 Most Improved Teams .................... 13 Polls .................................................................... 14 2 2013 MEN'S SOccER RECORDS - DIVISION I INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Individual Records Official NCAA Division I men's soccer records be- Career SAVES PER GAME gan with the 1959 season and are based on infor- 109—Thompson Usiyan, Appalachian St., 1977-80 (49 Season mation submitted to the NCAA statistics service games) 21.8—John Santos, Fairleigh Dickinson, 1959 (218 in 10 by institutions participating in the statistics rank- GOALS PER GAME games) ings. Career records of players include only those *Career Season 12.08—Dale Hetherington, Western Mich., 1973-76 (604 years in which they competed in Division I. Annual 2.71—Thompson Usiyan, Appalachian St., 1980 (46 in in 50 games) champions started in the 1998 season, which was 17 games) the first year the NCAA compiled weekly leaders. *Career (Min. 45 Goals) SAVE PERCENTAGE In statistical rankings, the rounding of percent- 2.31—Herb Schmidt, Rutgers, 1959-61 (90 in 39 games) Season ages and/or averages may indicate ties where .981—Chester Kowalewski, SIU Edwardsville, 1973 (4 GA, ASSISTS 211 saves in 14 games) none exists. In these cases, the numerical order of Game the rankings is accurate. * - Must have completed 7—Mike Granelli, Saint Peter’s vs. New York U., Oct. 17, GOALS-AGAINST AVERAGE career to be ranked in this catergory. 1985 Season (Min. 1,200 Minutes) Season 0.21—Brian Holt, Creighton, 2011 (5 GA in 2,180 min.) 24—Ben Ferry, George Washington, 1997 (18 games) *Career (Min. -
2020 MLS Standings and Leaders Includes Games of Sunday, November 08, 2020 OVERALL HOME ROAD
2020 MLS Standings and Leaders Includes games of Sunday, November 08, 2020 OVERALL HOME ROAD East GP W L T PTS GF GA GD W L T GF GA W L T GF GA Philadelphia Union 23 14 4 5 47 44 20 24 9 0 0 24 4 3 4 4 16 14 Toronto FC 23 13 5 5 44 33 26 7 7 2 1 14 6 5 3 2 13 15 Columbus Crew SC 23 12 6 5 41 36 21 15 9 1 0 20 6 0 5 5 9 15 Orlando City SC 23 11 4 8 41 40 25 15 6 1 3 22 11 3 3 4 12 11 New York City FC 23 12 8 3 39 37 25 12 7 2 0 23 9 4 4 3 12 12 New York Red Bulls 23 9 9 5 32 29 31 -2 5 4 1 13 12 3 3 4 15 15 Nashville SC 23 8 7 8 32 24 22 2 4 2 5 14 9 4 5 3 10 13 New England Revolution 23 8 7 8 32 26 25 1 2 3 5 10 11 5 4 1 14 13 Montreal Impact 23 8 13 2 26 33 43 -10 3 6 1 12 16 4 5 1 17 22 Inter Miami CF 23 7 13 3 24 25 35 -10 5 2 2 14 13 2 8 1 9 17 Chicago Fire 23 5 10 8 23 33 39 -6 4 2 3 21 13 0 6 5 10 21 Atlanta United 23 6 13 4 22 23 30 -7 4 4 2 10 9 2 6 2 13 18 D.C. -
Men's Soccer Page 1/1 Combined Statistics As of Apr 12, 2021 All Games
MEN’S SOCCER 2020-21 GAME NOTES » 2001 & 2011 NCAA Champions » Eight NCAA College Cups ‘20-’21 SCHEDULE/RESULTS THE MATCHUP 7-4-3 overall, 7-2-3 ACC North Carolina (7-4-3) 4-3-1 home, 3-1-2 away Head Coach: Carlos Somoano (Eckerd College, ‘92) Career Record: 135-41-29 (10th season) Fall Record at North Carolina: same Oct. 2 at Duke* (ACCNX) W, 2-0 United Soccer Coaches Rank: No. 16 Oct. 9 Clemson* (ESPNU) W, 1-0 Oct. 18 at Wake Forest* (ACCNX) L, 0-1 ot Charlotte (6-3-1) Oct. 27 at Clemson* (ACCN) T, 3-3 2ot Head Coach: Kevin Langan Nov. 1 NC State* (ACCNX) T, 0-0 2ot United Soccer Coaches Rank: No. 14 Nov. 6 Duke* (ACCN) W, 2-0 2020 ACC Tournament (Chapel Hill) Nov. 15 Clemson (ACCN) L, 0-1 ot THE KICKOFF TAR HEEL RUNDOWN Spring Feb. 25 Liberty (ACCNX) L, 0-1 Matchup: North Carolina (7-4-3) vs. Home 4-3-1 March 5 #4 Pitt* (ACCNX) W, 3-0 Charlotte (6-3-1) Away 3-1-2 March 13 #24 Virginia* (ACCNX) W, 2-0 Rankings: UNC No. 16, Charlotte No. 14 Neutral 0-0-0 March 20 at Syracuse* (ACCNX) T, 0-0 2ot (United Soccer Coaches) vs. United Soccer Coaches ranked foes 3-1-1 March 27 at Notre Dame* (ACCNX) W, 2-1 ot vs. Unranked opponents 4-3-2 Date: Sunday May 2, 2021 April 2 Virginia Tech* (ACCNX) L, 0-1 vs. ACC teams (incl. ACC Tournament) 7-3-3 April 9 at Duke* (ACCNX) W, 1-0 Site: Cary, N.C. -
PHILADELPHIA UNION V PORTLAND TIMBERS (Sept
PHILADELPHIA UNION v PORTLAND TIMBERS (Sept. 10, PPL Park, 7:30 p.m. ET) 2011 SEASON RECORDS PROBABLE LINEUPS ROSTERS GP W-L-T PTS GF GA PHILADELPHIA UNION Union 26 8-7-11 35 35 30 1 Faryd Mondragon (GK) at home 13 5-1-7 22 19 15 3 Juan Diego Gonzalez (DF) 18 4 Danny Califf (DF) 5 Carlos Valdes (DF) Timbers 26 9-12-5 32 33 41 MacMath 6 Stefani Miglioranzi (MF) on road 12 1-8-3 6 7 22 7 Brian Carroll (MF) 4 5 8 Roger Torres (MF) LEAGUE HEAD-TO-HEAD 25 Califf Valdes 15 9 Sebastien Le Toux (FW) ALL-TIME: 10 Danny Mwanga (FW) Williams G Farfan Timbers 1 win, 1 goal … 7 11 Freddy Adu (MF) Union 0 wins, 0 goals … Ties 0 12 Levi Houapeu (FW) Carroll 13 Kyle Nakazawa (MF) 14 Amobi Okugo (MF) 2011 (MLS): 22 9 15 Gabriel Farfan (MF) 5/6: POR 1, PHI 0 (Danso 71) 11 16 Veljko Paunovic (FW) Mapp Adu Le Toux 17 Keon Daniel (MF) 18 Zac MacMath (GK) 19 Jack McInerney (FW) 16 10 21 Michael Farfan (MF) 22 Justin Mapp (MF) Paunovic Mwanga 23 Ryan Richter (MF) 24 Thorne Holder (GK) 25 Sheanon Williams (DF) UPCOMING MATCHES 15 33 27 Zach Pfeffer (MF) UNION TIMBERS Perlaza Cooper Sat. Sept. 17 Columbus Fri. Sept. 16 New England PORTLAND TIMBERS Fri. Sept. 23 at Sporting KC Wed. Sept. 21 San Jose 1 Troy Perkins (GK) 2 Kevin Goldthwaite (DF) Thu. Sept. 29 D.C. United Sat. Sept. 24 at New York 11 7 4 Mike Chabala (DF) Sun. -
M E N 'S Aw a Rd Wi N N E
Me n ’ s Awa r d Win n e r s Division I First-Team All-America (191 0 - 9 9 ) .. 64 Division I First-Team All-America by School.. 68 Division II First-Team All-America (198 1 - 9 9 ) .. 72 Division II First-Team All-America by School.. 72 Division III First-Team All-America (1 9 8 1 - 9 9 ) .. 73 Division III First-Team All-America by School.. 74 National Awa r d Win n e r s .. 75 64 DIVISION I FIRST-TEAM ALL-AMERICA D–Henry Francke, Harvard F–John Jewett, Princeton 19 2 8 Al l - A m e r i c a D–Francis Grant, Harvard F–Francis Righter, Cornell G–Ruddy, Yale D–Shepard, Yale F–J. Moulton Thomas, Princeton Tea m s D–Webster, Pennsylvania F–C. J. Woodridge, Princeton D–Henry Coles, Swarthmore F–Bell, Pennsylvania D–William Frazier, Haverford D–Howard Johnson, Swarthmore NOTE: The all-America teams were select- F–Shanholt, Columbia 19 2 2 F–Samuel Stokes, Haverford D–William Lingelbach, Pennsylvania ed by the various team captains of the G–J. Crossan Cooper, Princeton F–Tripp, Yale D–H. Bradley Sexton, Princeton Intercollegiate Association Football D–Amelia, Pennsylvania F–Walter Weld, Harvard F–Depler Bullard, Lehigh League for the 1909-10 season. Various D–Beard, Pennsylvania F–Dick Marshall, Penn St. team managers selected the team from the 19 1 4 D–John Smart, Princeton F–George Olditch, Cornell 1910-11 season until 1917. No teams D–John Sullivan, Harvard F–Henry Rudy, Swarthmore were selected in 1918 or 1919 due to G–Hopkins, Pennsylvania D–Elliot Thompson, Cornell F–Smith, Yale World War I. -
2002 NCAA Soccer Records Book
Men’s Award Winners Division I First-Team All-America (1910-2001).......... 68 Division I First-Team All-America by School......... 72 Division II First-Team All-America (1981-2001) ......... 76 Division II First-Team All-America by School........ 76 Division III First-Team All-America (1981-2001) ........ 77 Division III First-Team All-America by School....... 78 National Award Winners ................................... 80 68 ALL-AMERICA TEAMS—DIVISION I FIRST-TEAM ALL-AMERICA D–Henry Francke, Harvard F–John Jewett, Princeton 1928 All-America D–Francis Grant, Harvard F–Francis Righter, Cornell G–Ruddy, Yale D–Shepard, Yale F–J. Moulton Thomas, Princeton D–Henry Coles, Swarthmore Teams D–Webster, Pennsylvania F–C. J. Woodridge, Princeton F–Bell, Pennsylvania D–William Frazier, Haverford D–Howard Johnson, Swarthmore NOTE: The all-America teams were select- F–Shanholt, Columbia 1922 F–Samuel Stokes, Haverford D–William Lingelbach, Pennsylvania ed by the various team captains of the G–J. Crossan Cooper, Princeton F–Tripp, Yale D–H. Bradley Sexton, Princeton Intercollegiate Association Football D–Amelia, Pennsylvania F–Walter Weld, Harvard F–Depler Bullard, Lehigh League for the 1909-10 season. Various D–Beard, Pennsylvania F–Dick Marshall, Penn St. team managers selected the team from the 1914 D–John Smart, Princeton F–George Olditch, Cornell 1910-11 season until 1917. No teams D–John Sullivan, Harvard F–Henry Rudy, Swarthmore were selected in 1918 or 1919 due to G–Hopkins, Pennsylvania D–Elliot Thompson, Cornell F–Smith, Yale World War I. From 1926-40, the teams D–Clarence Dyer, Cornell F–Randolph Heizer, Harvard were selected by coaches from the D–Moore Gates, Princeton F–McElroy, Pennsylvania 1929 Intercollegiate Soccer Football Associa- D–Howard Lynch, Cornell F–Francis Righter, Cornell G–Bob McCune, Penn St.