VANDERBILT SOCCER 2016 VANDERBILT SOCCER 2016 Numerical Roster NO NAME POS. CL HOMETOWN - PREVIOUS SCHOOL 0 Kaitlyn Fahrner Goalkeeper R-JR Las Vegas, Nev. - Oklahoma 00 Taiana Tolleson Goalkeeper FR Kailua-Kona, Hawaii - Konawaena 1 Lauren Demarchi Goalkeeper FR Hudson, Ohio - Walsh Jesuit 3 Lydia Simmons Midfielder R-JR Londonberry, N.H. - Londonberry COACHING STAFF 4 Lea Waddle Midfielder FR Lake Forest, Ill. - Lake Forest 6 Hannon Eberts Forward FR Somers, N.Y. - Somers Head Coach ................ Darren Ambrose 7 Grace Jackson Midfielder FR Atlanta, Ga. – The Lovett School Assistant Coach ................... Ken Masuhr 8 Carley Bogan Forward R-JR Pittsburgh, Pa. - William & Mary Assistant Coach ....................Kelly Keelan 9 Danae O’Halloran Defender R-JR Toms River, N.J. - North Carolina Volunteer Assistant Coach Kyle Roelke 10 Caroline Saltmarsh Midfielder FR Atlanta, Ga. - North Atlanta 12 Simone Charley Forward R-JR Hoover, Ala. - Spain Park Director of Operations......... 13 Nia Dorsey Forward FR Elkridge, MD. - Our Lady of Good Counsel 14 Jacqueline Welch Goalkeeper R-FR Overland Park, Kan. – St. Teresa’s Academy 15 Kacy Scarpa Midfielder R-SR Lakeland, Fla. - Florida State PRONUNCIATION GUIDE 17 Christina De Zeeuw D/MF JR Overland Park, Kan. - St. Teresa’s Academy Brook Colangelo..................COL-ang-ello 18 Alexandra Bruder Defender R-SO Bell Canyon, Calif. – Southern Cal Cristina De Zeeuw....................da-ZAY-oh 19 Gabrielle Rademaker Defender SO East Lake Florida - East Lake Hannon Eberts..............................EE-berts 20 Sasha Gray MF/D SO Nesconset, N.Y. - Smithtown East 21 Kaylann Boyd Forward FR Atlanta, Ga. - Greater Atlanta Christian Ken Masuhr.................................MA-sewer 22 Brook Colangelo F/MF SO Fayetteville, Ga. - Whitewater Danielle Snajder.............................Sneider 23 Sydney O’Donnell Midfielder FR Nove, Mich. - Novi 25 Hannah Menard Defender SO Orlando, Fla. - Lake Highland Prep 26 Danielle Snajder Defender JR Monroe, Conn. - George Washington 34 Claire Anderson Defender SR Seattle, Wash. - Lakeside School 2016 Schedule Date Opponent Location Time (CT) Aug. 8 Southeast Missouri St. (exhibition) Nashville 7 p.m. Aug. 13 at Furman (exhibition) Greenville, SC 5 p.m. Aug. 19 at Miami (Oh) Oxford, Ohio 3 p.m. Aug. 21 at Lipscomb Nashville 5 p.m. Post Season: Aug. 25 Florida State Nashville 7:30 p.m. Aug. 28 Jackson State Nashville 1 p.m. SEC Tournament Sept. 1 Murray State Nashville 5 p.m. Oct. 31-Nov. 6 ..........Orange Beach, Ala. Sept. 4 San Francisco Nashville 12 p.m. Sept. 8 *at Auburn Auburn, Ala. 7 p.m. NCAA Tournament Sept. 11 Northern Kentucky Nashville 4 p.m. Nov. 11-13, First Round... Campus Sites Sept. 18 *at Mississippi State Starkville, Miss. 2 p.m. Sept. 22 *Texas A&M Nashville 7 p.m. Nov. 18-20, Second/Third Rounds..Campus Sites Sept. 25 *LSU Nashville 1 p.m. Nov. 25-26, Quarterfinals ........Campus Sites Sept. 29 *at Tennessee Knoxville, Tenn. 6 p.m. Dec. 2-4, College Cup .............. Cary, N.C. Oct. 6 *at Arkansas Fayetteville, Ark. 6 p.m. Oct. 9 *Kentucky Nashville 1 p.m. All times are Central and subject to change. Oct. 14 *at Missouri Columbia, Mo. 6:30 p.m. Home matches will be played at the Vanderbilt Soccer Complex. Oct. 20 *South Carolina Nashville 7 p.m. *Denotes Southeastern Conference Game *Denotes game televised on SEC Network. Oct. 23 *Ole Miss Nashville 1 p.m. Oct. 27 *at Alabama Tuscaloosa, Ala. 7 p.m. 2 Vanderbilt Soccer 2016 0 00 1 3 4 6 7 Kaitlyn Fahrner Taiana Tolleson Lauren Demarchi Lydia Simmons Lea Waddle Hannon Eberts Grace Jackson R-Jr. • GK Fr. • GK Fr • GK R-Jr. • MF Fr • MF Fr • F Fr • MF Las Vegas, Nev. Kailua-Kona, HI. Hudson, Ohio Londonderry, N.H. Lakeforest, Ill. Somers, N.Y. Atlanta, Ga. 8 9 10 12 13 14 Carley Bogan Danae O’Halloran Caroline Saltmarsh Simone Charley Nia Dorsey Jacqueline Welch R-Jr. • F R-Jr. • D Fr. • MF R-Jr. • F Fr. • F R-Fr. • D Pittsburgh, Pa. Toms River, N.J. Atlanta, Ga. Hoover, Ala. Elkridge, Md. Winnetka, Ill. 15 17 18 19 20 21 22 Kacy Scarpa Cristina DeZeeuw Alexandra Bruder Gabrielle Rademaker Sasha Gray Kaylann Boyd Brook Colangelo R-Jr. • MF Jr. •D/MF R-Fr. • F So. • D Sr. • D Fr. • F So. • MF Lakeland, Fla Overland Park, Kan. East Lake, Fla. Nesconset, N.Y. Atlanta, Ga. Fayetteville, Ga. 23 25 26 28 34 Sydney O’Donnell Hannah Menard Danielle Snajder Megan Henry Claire Anderson Fr • MF So. • D Jr. • D So. • D Sr. • D Novi, Mich. Orlando, Fla. Monroe, Conn. Memphis, Tenn. Seattle, Wash. HC AC AC VA DO Darren Ambrose Ken Masuhr Kelly Keelan Kyle Roelke Andrea Bigler Head Coach Assistant Coach Assistant Coach Volunteer Assistant Director of Operations Second Season Second Season Second Season Fifth Season First Season COACHING & SUPPORT STAFF Darren Ambrose, Head Coach Darren Ambrose enters his second season at COACHING CAREER Vanderbilt after a successful run at the University 2015–present . Head Coach, Vanderbilt of Pennsylvania. 2000-14 .......................Head Coach, Penn In his first season with Vandy, Ambrose led the 1999 ........Assistant Coach, Florida State Commodores to one of their most successful sea- sons in recent memory, achieving a team goal of an 1996-98 ...Asst. Coach, Rhodes College SEC Tournament appearance and notching their 1996 .................Asst. Coach, Connecticut first winning season since 2009. The team’s nine 1993-95 .....Grad. Asst., Rhodes College wins were also the most in six years. Defense set the tone in 2015, as Vanderbilt posted six shutouts for the second straight year and allowed just 23 goals – their fewest since 2006. FI R S T SE A S O N Ambrose spent the last 15 years as the head coach at Penn, and was the program’s AT VANDERBILT all-time winningest coach. He is the sixth head coach in the history of the program. In 15 years at Penn, Ambrose compiled an impressive record of 148-71-35, College USC Spartanburg, 1993 including a 54-34-17 mark in the Ivy League. His teams reached the NCAA Tour- Memphis, 1995 nament three times and won three Ivy League championships. His teams finished in the top three of the Ivy League in 10 of his 15 seasons, including seven of the past eight years. Ambrose never had a losing season in his 15 years overseeing the program, as the Quakers averaged nearly 10 wins a year under his watch. He coached the team’s first two All-Americans as well as its first NSCAA Scholar All-America, CoSIDA Academic All-America of the Year, Ivy League Player of the Year, Ivy League Defensive Player of the Year and Ivy League Rookies of the Year. In addition, Ambrose was at the helm for all of Penn’s Ivy League championships (2001, 2007, 2010), three of its four NCAA Championship berths (2001, 2007, 2010), and an ECAC title in 2000. “We conducted an intensive national search and we are convinced that we have hired one of the best soccer coaches in the NCAA,” Williams said. “Darren Ambrose has run a first-class program at Penn for many years. His familiarity with an academic institution, his ability to relate to his student-athletes, his proven record in recruiting and coaching and his character make him an extremely good fit for Vanderbilt. We look forward to working with him as he takes our soccer program to new heights.” Under Ambrose, more than 80 percent of the Penn women’s soccer players have graduated with GPAs above 3.0, and Penn is the only Ivy League program to have earned the NSCAA Team Academic Award each of the last 14 years. Three of the last five seasons, Penn has gone into its final match with an Ivy League championship still a possibility. From 2011- 2013, Penn had three women earn first-team All-Ivy each season. That had never happened in the history of the program. Penn’s 2013 campaign was one of the best in program history. The Quakers finished the year 12-1-4 overall, setting a program record for fewest losses in a season. Penn also shut out 12 of its 17 opponents and allowed just eight goals all season. The Quakers went 5-1-1 in the Ivy League to finish in second place, and at the end of the season three sophomores -- Caroline Dwyer, Erin Mikolai, and goalkeeper Kalijah Terilli -- were named first-team All-Ivy. Dwyer also was a third-team NSCAA All-America (just the second All-America in program history) and the inaugural Ivy League Defensive Player of the Year. He took over in 2000, winning 10 games in his first season and leading Penn to a ECAC Championship. The following year, he brought a share of Penn’s first-ever Ivy League title to Philadelphia in 2001 with an impressive 13-2-3 season that ended in the NCAA Tournament. The team won its second Ivy League title - and the program’s first outright crown - in 2007 with a 6-1-0 mark in Ivy play, earn- ing the program’s first outright Ivy title. The Quakers were 13-4-1, one win shy of the program record, and advanced to the NCAA College Cup first round before losing to James Madison. When the season finished, Penn had six players named All-Ivy, and two earned regional honors from the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA). In 2010, Ambrose led Penn to its second outright Ivy League championship and third overall as the Quakers went to the NCAA Championship for the fourth time in program history, falling to Big Ten champion Penn State.
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