
2009 NCAA.com Division I Men's Soccer Blog
Three months ago, more than 200 teams opened up the D-I Men's Soccer season. Today, just eight remain. After a Round of 16 that saw the top team in the country set even more records, two unranked teams attack the nets to the tune of 10 goals between them and three ACC teams stay alive, read on for a breakdown of Sunday's action before the Tournament starts again on Friday.
And, as always, for everything you need to know, from quarterfinal info to recaps to highlights to Tournament leaders, check out our Interactive Bracket!
*All pictures below are courtesy of their respective athletic departments.
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The second-seeded Cavaliers got a goal from Ari Dimas in the 46h minute, and then held on vice-tight over the final 20 minutes to blank an immensely talented Portland team, 1-0. The goal from Dimas was the very first of his career. Meanwhile, Virginia ran its unbeaten streak to 13 games and posted its 10th straight shutout, pushing goalie Diego Restrepo's shutout streak to 1127:34, breaking the great Tony Meola's school record.
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Maryland hasn't had to play on the road in the Tournament since 1997. But playing away from Ludwig Field hasn't seemed to affect the defending champs at all, with the Terps downing No. 7 seed Penn State, then blanking 10th-seeded Harvard. It took an epic effort from Zac MacMath in goal to keep the Crimson -- a team that scored three goals a week prior -- off the scoreboard, and goals from Billy Cortes and Casey Townsend to win
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We should have expected something like this. Two teams coming into the Tournament after torching their late-season schedules. Two offenses that can strike from anywhere. But it would have been nearly impossible to predict this. When the game ended, the Bulldogs were the ones moving on, the winners of a 6-4 offensive explosion. After falling behind early, senior-led Drake rallied back to tie it...and then never slowed.
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When North Carolina scores first, few teams still left in the Tournament are better at making the rest of the day miserable for their opponents. And that's just what the Tar Heels did, getting a goal from Alex Dixon and then clamping down on an Indiana attack that had recently found its stride to post the 11th shutout of the season earn he Tar Heels' second straight national quarterfinal berth.
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In a rain-drenched match in Tulsa, the hosts finally broke through in the 74th minute, getting a goal off the foot of Austin McNeill -- his team-leading 14th of the season -- and then held off Northwestern over the final 16 to earn the Golden Hurricane's first quarterfinal berth since 2004. They'll be taking on Akron, a team that Tulsa coach Tom MacIntosh called "one of the best teams in college soccer that I've seen in my 15 years of coaching."
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Akron is now just three wins away from the first-ever 24-0-0 season in D-I Men's Soccer history. Of course, the Patriots were a win away from going 19-0-0 in 2007-08. But to date, few teams outside those New England Patriots have looked as dominant as Akron. On Sunday, the record-setting season continued with the Zips controlling the pace from the start, getting goals from stars Teal Bunbury and Anthony Ampaipitakwong and notching their program-record 16th shutout.
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In the lone Round of 16 matchup between conference rivals, Wake Forest took another step toward a national championship that it seemed destined for last year, pounding away at the Duke defense all day, en route to the Demon Deacons' fourth quarterfinal appearance in four years. Zach Schilawski led the way with five points on the day, notching his third multi-goal game of the year.
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Three years ago, UCSB ran over UCLA in the national championship game. On Sunday, the Bruins returned the favor, earning a berth in the national quarters for the first time since that year, climbing back from an early 1-0 deficit to move on. After UCSB scored in the 11th minute, two unanswered goals followed for the Bruins -- the first from Fernando Mongo just four minutes later, the second from Ryan Hollingshead in the 37th minute.
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- Akron,
- Boston College,
- Drake,
- Duke,
- Harvard,
- Indiana,
- Maryland,
- NCAA Tournament,
- North Carolina,
- Northwestern,
- Portland,
- Stanford,
- Third Round,
- Tulsa,
- UCLA,
- UCSB,
- Virginia,
- Wake Forest
Isaac Taylor (11) after scoring the Golden Goal in BC's 2-OT win over Dartmouth. Courtesy of Boston College
Look up. Take that picture in for a second. Witness Isaac Taylor fairly levitating off the grass in Newton, Mass. after scoring his first-ever collegiate goal at the perfect time to send a young -- very, very young -- Boston College team into the second round. And that, in a 626x328 frame, is The Tournament. In that picture we see the compressed feelings of chance and determination, of hope and fear, of the explosive borderline between success and failure -- between, as far as seasons are concerned, life and death. Taylor's was a look and a burst felt by 16 teams in yesterday's D-I Tournament First Round, one that featured six overtime games -- two of which went into double-OT, with two more going into PKs -- and only two games decided by more than one goal. We saw seasons of unprecedented success keep going: Monmouth defeated UConn in PK's to win its first-ever Tourney game in a season in which the Hawks earned the highest-ever ranking for any Monmouth sport; UNC Wilmington, CAA regular season and first-time tournament champs, also used PK's to end Charlotte's season and clinch its 14th straight game without a loss; MPSF champ Sacramento State took its first NCAA win by a 2-1 margin over Loyola Marymount. We saw equally possessed seasons finally fade away: Wofford, springing out of six straight years in the SoCon basement, fell to UCSB with a late goal; Green Bay, in its first Tourney since 1983, dropped to Notre Dame; Missouri St. won the MVC regular season but lost to Saint Louis, 2-1. We saw hyper-regional clashes: In that UNC Wilmington-Charlotte game, UNCW coach Aidan Heaney matched up against his alma mater, where he started in goal from 1989-92 and had his number retried in 2003. A little up the Atlantic Coast Maryland downed Loyola (Md.), 2-1, in a battle of Beltway teams about a half hour's drive from each other. Partly because far too much went on yesterday to put in a single reaction piece, and partly because we're staying with the picture metaphor, we now take a look at some of the best moments from yesterday -- the single slices of time that define seasons, feed our hope and remind us just how much championship season can evoke out of us.
...The day's first result might have been its most thrilling.

Courtesy of Monmouth
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After Monmouth and Connecticut battled through 110 minutes of scoreless soccer -- despite a 15-4 shot advantage by the Huskies -- the game went into PK's. Through its five shots UConn went up 3-2, pushing Monmouth into a must-make situation with freshman Ryan Clark kicking. Clark didn't hesitate, burying a shot to even the PK sequence. Then, with Connecticut's always-dangerous Mike Pezza kicking, Monmouth keeper Bryan Meredith leapt for the top-left corner, picking off Pezza's shot just before it snuck under the left 90. One shot later, Cesar Blacido drove a shot home to send Monmouth to its first-ever NCAA win with a 4-3 margin in PKs, and into a second-round date with 10th-seeded Harvard in Cambridge, Mass. ...After UCSB was given a first-round game, many complained that the Gauchos -- ranked

Tony Mastres/UCSB
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as high as fourth before falling hard to UC Irvine in the Big West championship game -- deserved a seed and first-round bye. Until the second half, UCSB didn't do a whole lot to support its argument, limping through a lifeless first half with Wofford.
"I was massively disappointed in our energy, our work rate, our
commitment," said head coach Tim Vom Steeg in the UCSB release. "We played a
first half like we didn't care. And that's one thing that's never going
to happen while I'm here. We're always going to care. I like our group
and know we're capable of winning every night; sometimes it's just a
matter of fighting through it."
The Gauchos ended up out-shooting Wofford, 15-4, in the second half. But until the 84th minute, the closest either team got to scoring was a Wofford centering pass that UCSB's Tim Pontius attempted to head clear but missed, sending the shot just barely off the Gauchos' crossbar into safety. Then, with under six minutes left in regulation, David Walker rocketed in a shot from eight yards out to send UCSB to a second-round date with San Diego. ...Just three minutes into overtime with New Mexico, Portland's all-conference goalie Austin Guerrero was shown a red card, bringing in freshman Justin Baarts, who hadn't seen a minute all year, and sending the Pilots down a man for the remainder of the game. UNM couldn't score on the ensuing corner kick, and five minutes later, Portland's Logan Emory hit Collen Warner streaking down the middle of the field with a perfect lob. A few strides later, Warner slipped a shot in past New Mexico goalie Justin Holmes for his second goal of the game, sending the Pilots to a 2-1 OT win. ...Against a Stony Brook team that came into the Tournament with a losing record,

Courtesy of Brown
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qualifying via an America East championship, Brown looked perfectly matched-up. For 103 minutes, the Bears and Seawolves went back and forth, playing tight and scoreless soccer. Fatigue had begun to dig in, and the game looked destined for PK's. But with seven minutes left in the second OT, Jon Okafor curved a pass across from left to right across the Stony Brook goal mouth, right onto Sean Rosa's foot. Rosa did what he'd done only four other times on the year -- hammered it home, scoring the biggest goal of his career to send Brown to the second round. "I saw the post was empty, and immediately took off for it,"
said Rosa in the Brown post-game release. "Jon [Okafor] saw me there and did what he does
best, and gave the ball back to me in the perfect spot for the
goal."
Courtesy of UNC Wilmington
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...In Charlotte, the host 49ers opened up to a 1-0 lead in their first Tournament game since 1997 and hung onto it through the first 80 minutes of the contest. But with just nine minutes left in the match, UNC Wilmington -- a team that hasn't lost since a 2-OT loss to Duke on Sept. 22 -- evened it up with a slicing free kick off the foot of Daniel Roberts that danced inside the left post from 22 yards out. Then, after two OT periods couldn't settle the game, Wilmington dominated in PK's, rolling out to a 4-1 mark with sophomore Shaun Utterson sealing the win for the Seahawks and delivering them to the second round. ...In Los Angeles, Sacramento State got an OT goal off the head of Brian Baker to take down Loyola Marymount, 2-1, and extend its unbeaten streak to 10 games -- and earn the right to stay in L.A. for another game, drawing UCLA in the second round. The goal came after Loyola Marymount ripped the game's momentum back with a goal that tied the game at 1-1 in the 74th minute. Then, after Sacramento State goalie Brian Oliver stoned a shot from LMU's Brock Smith six minutes into overtime, the Hornets earned a free kick from 25 yards out. That was all Fernando Cabadas needed, serving a ball right above Baker, who headed it home. ...There's much, much more, and any other moments are very welcome in the comments section. Thanks for reading, and stay with us through Cary, N.C.
- Boston College,
- Brown,
- D-I Tournament,
- First Round,
- Maryland,
- Moments,
- Monmouth,
- Portland,
- Sacramento State,
- UCSB,
- Wilmington
Photo Courtesy of UCSB
Eight different countries are represented on the the third-ranked UCSB soccer team, giving the Gauchos a diversity-born vitality that's carried them a long, long way. And as UCSB, the Big West regular season champs, open up postseason play, the Gauchos are still finding themselves.
Tidbits from around the country, teed up just for you every Thursday. For virtually every conference with a postseason tournament, only two weekends remain in the regular season. For the always-packed BIG EAST, this weekend's the final one before tourney play begins on Wednesday. Keep an eye on action this weekend, especially in the Red Division, where nobody's secured a postseason berth yet, with five teams within seven points of each other. Akron's Teal Bunbury scored two more goals on Wednesday night, as the top-ranked Zips rolled over Penn State, 3-0. The sophomore has now scored a goal in nine of his last 11 games and has put up four multi-goal games this year. Akron is very, very good. And in the second installment of the Akron Watch, the Zips' defense has allowed just three goals in 1,440:00 of play for a
team goals-against-average of 0.19, which out-paces Evansville's NCAA single-season record of 0.24, set in 1990. Also, because we missed it earlier in the week, Darlington Nagbe was named MAC Player of the Week after notching a seven-point day against Michigan last week. In another Story We Wish We Wrote, Santa Barbara News-Press senior writer Mark Patton takes a look at two stories of perseverance on the fourth-ranked Gauchos, where Waid Ibrahim is playing with a pacemaker that revived his soccer career and David Walker just got the rods removed from his broken wrist. Neither of the forwards, Patton writes, has missed a game this year.

Photo Courtesy of Ohio State
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In another Photo Gallery Of Current Varsity Soccer Players In Their Childhood Halloween Costumes And Telling Traumatizing Childhood Stories, Ohio State ran a feature this week called 'Trick-or-Treating with Ohio State Men's Soccer.'
The first story? From senior defender Doug Verhoff: "My dad use to
always take the chain off his chain saw and then run the chain saw
across his chest. Everyone would always freak out. He's a wild one so
I'm sure this does not surprise many people." UMBC once again features the No. 1 and 2 scorers in the country, after Levi Houapeu was named America East Player of the Week following his second hat trick of the year. The goals came as the Retrievers clinched a spot in the America East Tournament with a win over Albany on Saturday. Houapeu sits just below teammate Andrew Bulls and his 2.67 goals per game with a ledger of 2.60 a contest. UMBC, who's gone through a few rough patches this year after starting the season undefeated at 9-0-0 (the Retrievers are only 3-4-0 since then, with all but one of those games conference clashes) can finish no lower than fifth in the conference. Michigan State, which had taken a mid-season tumble, downed Notre Dame on Wednesday for the Spartans' fourth straight win. The Spartans' notched their 10th win of the year, given them 10 wins for the ninth time this decade, while Cyrus Sadee scored the game-winner for the second straight MSU game. Louisville tied the school record for wins on Wednesday, downing Cincinnati to improve to 12-2-2. The Big East Red Division leaders wrap up the regular season at Villanova on Saturday, Oct. 31 at 1:00 p.m.
- Akron,
- Andrew Bulls,
- Big East,
- Darlington Nagbe,
- David Walker,
- Halloween,
- Levi Houapeu,
- Louisville,
- Michigan State,
- Ohio State,
- Set Pieces,
- Teal Bunbury,
- UCSB,
- UMBC,
- Waid Ibrahim
Two Fridays ago, Maryland looked to be ready to set the pace in the ACC, with the then-No. 4 Terps dropping No. 2 North Carolina, 1-0. Today, the Terps find themselves out of the top-10, coming in at No. 11 as the recipients of two tough losses last week -- the first to unranked George Mason on Tuesday, then another to No. 14 Duke on Friday night. But, after a poll last week that looked like a tornado hit it, this week's looks relatively tame. Only two teams exited the top-25, with two more -- Drake and previously ranked Dartmouth -- taking their spots at No. 22 and 24, respectively. Two more left the top-10, with Indiana also falling after a 3-0 loss at UCSB on Friday night. In their places climb those Gauchos (up to No. 7 after taking No. 11 last week) and Duke, with the not-so-surprising-anymore Blue Devils firing five spots up to No. 9.

Photo Courtesy of Duke |
Meanwhile, Akron maintained its hold on the top spot, despite scoring only six goals and posting two shutouts in two wins last week against Ohio State and Florida Atlantic. In doing so, Michael Nanchoff, who -- along with his legendary Akron family -- was profiled by NCAA.com last week, earned a spot on his third straight Team of the Week, this time on the College Soccer News squad, after two straight weeks on the Soccer America team. The Zips earned a total of 575 points, including all 23 first-place votes. Just below the Zips sits North Carolina, who rose up from No. 5 after a huge ACC win over Virginia, which the Tar Heels took, 1-0 in OT. South Florida's in third now, up from No. 6 last week, thanks to a shutout win over Cincinnati. UCLA stood firm in the No. 4 spot, after a weekend that saw the Bruins go 1-0-1, downing Oregon State and tying Washington. The win marked Kyle Nakazawa's sixth straight game with a goal and pushed UCLA's unbeaten streak to six games. Into the fifth spot slides Pac-10 rival Cal, whose conference win over then-No. 20 (and now No. 23) Stanford moved the Golden Bears up one spot in the polls. A 5-1 win over Virginia Tech couldn't offset Wake Forest's loss earlier in the week to Charlotte, as the Demon Deacons fell to No. 6 after standing at No. 3 last week. For Charlotte, who snapped Wake Forest's nation-leading non-conference win streak and tacked on a win over Furman on Saturday, the 49ers made the biggest jump up, now finding themselves at No. 15, up seven spots from No. 22. Rounding out the top-10 are No. 8 Harvard and No. 10 Monmouth, who both hung onto their spots from a week prior with wins over Yale and Fairleigh Dickinson, respectively. In the second stratus, the big risers included N.C. State (up six spots to No. 18), Portland (up four to No. 17) and Northwestern (who dropped Ohio State in its Big Ten opener to shoot up to No. 21). UMBC led teams taking the biggest hits, as the Retrievers plummeted seven spots to No. 25 after taking its first loss of the year in its first game in America East play, falling 3-1 at Vermont. Higher up the poll, but falling five spots, was Indiana, whose loss in Santa Barbara trumped a 3-0 win over then-No. 20 Kentucky earlier in the week.
- Akron,
- Cal,
- Charlotte,
- Duke,
- Harvard,
- Indiana,
- Maryland,
- Monmouth,
- N.C. State,
- North Carolina,
- Northwestern,
- NSCAA Poll,
- South Florida,
- Top-25,
- UCLA,
- UCSB,
- UMBC,
- Wake Forest
FRIDAYNo. 2 Maryland lost to No. 14 Duke, 2-0 No. 3 Wake Forest def. Virginia Tech, 5-1 No. 4 UCLA def. Oregon State, 3-1 No. 5 North Carolina def. No. 12 Virginia, 1-0 (2 OT) No. 7 Cal def. No. 20 Stanford, 1-0No. 9 Indiana lost to No. 11 UCSB, 3-0 No. 10 Monmouth tied Sacred Heart, 0-0 No. 21 Portland def. Santa Clara, 1-0 No. 24 North Carolina State def. Boston College, 2-1 (OT)
- Boston College,
- Cal,
- Duke,
- Indiana,
- Maryland,
- Monmouth,
- North Carolina,
- North Carolina State,
- Oregon State,
- Portland,
- Sacred Heart,
- Santa Clara,
- Stanford,
- UCLA,
- UCSB,
- Virginia,
- Virginia Tech,
- Wake Forest
No. 11 UCSB went into Friday's game with No. 9 Indiana hoping to set the all-time NCAA regular season attendance record. While the ticket sales fell just a little short of expectation -- the 10,114 in the bleachers did set a school record -- very little else did on Friday for the Gauchos, who celebrated the five-year anniversary of its legendary 2004 team with a 3-0 win over Indiana at Harder Stadium.
Just up the coast, No. 20 Stanford's six-game win streak came to an end in its Pac-10 opener with No. 7 Cal, as Golden Bear leading scorer Andrew Wiedeman tallied the game's lone goal to send Cal to a 1-0 win over the Cardinal.
Heading East to the ACC, two wild results capped off a day that saw four top-25 matchups.
In Chapel Hill, North Carolina got a goal from Cameron Brown in the 109th minute to break a 0-0 tie and send No. 5 UNC to a 1-0 double-OT win over No. 12 Virginia, who just two weeks ago upset No. 2 Wake Forest. With the win, the Tar Heels start their ACC season at 3-1 and take the top spot in the conference.
Just down Tobacco Road, No. 14 Duke handed No. 2 Maryland a 2-0 loss in Durham. The win gave the Blue Devils their first win in the ACC since knocking off then-No. 16 Virginia on Sept. 11. For Maryland, the loss came after the Terps fell to unranked George Mason on Tuesday.
Check back on Saturday for more from Friday!
Friday night brings us four top-25 matchups as the season begins to pick up speed, with two big ACC clashes and two more on the West Coast - including one that could feature the largest crowd in NCAA Men's Soccer history. No. 9 Indiana @ No. 11 UC Santa Barbara | Santa Barbara, Calif. | 11 p.m. (ET)TV: Fox Soccer Channel | Live Stats | Audio Five years ago, soccer claimed Santa Barbara. In the fall of 2004, a Gaucho team that played in a town with a friendly, if fleeting, relationship with soccer converted the seaside city into a soccer circus. While a UCSB team that, after winning its first-ever NCAA Tournament game two years prior, blasted to the College Cup final, the crowds got bigger. And bigger. And bigger. By the time the Gauchos took on VCU in the national quarterfinals, 11,214 fans showed up at Harder Stadium, amounting to one of the largest crowds in the history of D-I Men's soccer. On Friday, the No. 11 Gauchos commemorate that 2004 team, the one that lost in PK's to Indiana, on a night when the ninth-ranked Hoosiers come to town for a nationally televised affair. Fourteen players from that team are expected to be in attendance on a night when the place looks to be packed. UCSB officials are predicting a crowd at Harder that could break the NCAA all-time regular season attendance record of 12,224, set in 1987. And what they'll see is a battle between one of the premier teams in the history of college soccer and one that's begun to settle into the elite. Indiana, the owner of seven national championships, has been a fixture on the NCAA scene for decades. UCSB, who won its first and only title in 2006, hasn't left the spotlight since that '04 season. Last weekend, the Gauchos recovered from a 4-2 loss to San Diego State on Friday with a win over then-No. 23 UC Irvine on Sunday. The nation's 18th-ranked offense (2.22 goals per game) is led offensively by freshman Michael Nonni, whose four goals, five assists and 13 points are all tops on the team. For Indiana, who re-entered the top-10 after a one-week hiatus, hasn't lost since the Hoosiers fell to top-ranked Akron on Sept. 18, rattling off wins over FIU, Wisconsin and No. 13 Kentucky. Will Bruin (5 goals, 11 points) and Andy Adlard (two goals against Kentucky) lead the way for the Hoosiers. Read more about it here (or here or here). No. 2 Maryland @ No. 14 Duke | Durham, N.C. | 7 p.m. (ET)Live Stats Last Friday, Maryland couldn't have gotten much higher, with captain Kevin Tangney - profiled on NCAA.com last week - scoring the game-winning goal in the 89th minute to send the Terps (then No. 4) over ACC nemesis and then-second-ranked North Carolina at Ludwig Field with a 1-0 win. On Tuesday, the Terps fell. Hard. On the road at George Mason, Maryland couldn't find the net, taking a 2-0 loss to the unranked Patriots. "It was a very un-Maryland like performance tonight and I take full responsibility for not having us ready today," head coach Sasho Cirovski said in the Maryland released. "We just weren't very connected today." It's a safe bet that a coach of the caliber of Cirovski will make sure the defending champs are ready for Friday's 7 p.m. test in Durham. They'll be facing a Duke team that rode through its first five games undefeated, parading into the Top-25 with an OT win over Maryland on Sept. 12 ( listen to the NCAA.com podcast with Duke's twin walk-ons, Dan and Chris Tweed-Kent, the former of whom scored the game-winner against Virginia) but one that's fallen off a bit lately. Though the Blue Devils did pick up a win over Elon on Tuesday, the win came after two losses in three games - although, to be fair, one was a 2-1 loss to UNC. The other came at the hands of a red-hot Boston College team, which picked up its fourth straight win in the process - a streak that ended on Tuesday with a loss to Siena. But every game in the ACC matters, and in a series that's split, 5-5, over the last 10 games, expect a thriller here. No. 12 Virginia @ No. 5 North Carolina | Chapel Hill, N.C. | 7 p.m. (ET)Live Stats The ACC's top two defensive teams square off in yet another battle between ranked teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference, six of whose teams are in the top-25, with another (Boston College) sitting just outside. The Cavs, the top-ranked defense in the conference, have posted a 0.47 GAA this year, with the Tar Heels putting up a 0.60 clip. But the disparity here lies on offense, with the Tar Heels scoring at a rate of 2.25 per game and Virginia at just 1.25. And playing in front of a hostile Fetzer Field crowd won't help Virginia. UNC's Michael Farfan's four goals lead the team, while Billy Schuler and Cameron Brown's three apiece pace the attack. For Virginia, Neil Barlow and Toni Tchani have scored three each. No. 20 Stanford @ No. 7 Cal | Berkeley, Calif. | 7 p.m (ET)Live Stats Last year, the Cardinal scored 14 times. In 17 games. They've hit that number in seven games this year, en route to six straight wins and their first ranking in the NSCAA poll this year, at No. 20 this week. On Friday night, they open Pac-10 play with by far their toughest opponent of the year, in the archrival Golden Bears. For Cal, 2009's gone off with only one hiccup - a 2-1 loss to New Mexico in the Stanford Nike Classic last Friday, followed up with a 3-0 win over Air Force on Sunday. The goals have come in bunches, with Andrew Wiedeman leading the way with 19 points on eight goals and three assists (fourth in goals- and fifth in points-per-game in the NCAA). As a team, the Bears sit at 11th nationally in scoring offense, at 2.5 goals per game. But they'll be taking on a Stanford team that, as the scoring's gone up, hasn't wavered defensively, giving up only six goals in 14 games.
All Times EasternLive stats/video where available *Top-25 matchups in bold* FRIDAYNo. 2 Maryland @ No. 14 Duke, 7 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 3 Wake Forest @ Virginia Tech, 7 p.m. - VideoNo. 4 UCLA @ Oregon State, 10 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 5 North Carolina vs. No. 12 Virginia, 7 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 7 Cal vs. No. 20 Stanford, 7 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 9 Indiana @ No. 11 UCSB, 11 p.m. - Live Stats | Audio | TV: Fox Soccer Channel No. 10 Monmouth @ Sacred Heart, 4 p.m. - Live Stats | VideoNo. 13 Kentucky vs. UAB, 4:30 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 21 Portland @ Santa Clara, 10 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 24 North Carolina State vs. Boston College, 7 p.m. - Live Stats SATURDAYNo. 1 Akron @ Florida Atlantic, 7 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 6 South Florida vs. Cincinnati, 7:30 p.m. - Live Stats | VideoNo. 8 Harvard @ Yale, 7 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 16 BU vs. Stony Brook, 7 p.m. - Live Stats | Audio | VideoNo. 17 Louisville @ DePaul, 1 p.m. - VideoNo. 18 UMBC @ Vermont, 1 p.m. - VideoNo. 19 Old Dominion vs. UNC-Wilmington, 7 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 22 Charlotte @ Furman, 7 p.m. No. 23 Brown @ Columbia, 7 p.m. SUNDAYNo. 4 UCLA @ Washington, 5 p.m. - Live StatsNo. 10 Monmouth @ Fairleigh Dickinson, 1 p.m. No. 15 Ohio State vs. No. 25 Northwestern, 2 p.m. - Live Stats | VideoNo. 21 Portland @ St. Mary's (Calif.), 5 p.m. - Live Stats
- Cal,
- Duke,
- Indiana,
- Maryland,
- North Carolina,
- Northwestern,
- Ohio State,
- Stanford,
- Top-25 Schedule,
- UCSB,
- Virginia
Tidbits from around the country, teed-up just for you, every Thursday.Monmouth now sits at No. 10 in the country, the highest-ever ranking for the Hawks in any sport. Heading into Northeast Conference play -- where the Hawks have dominated the past few years -- Monmouth still hasn't lost, opening the season at a perfect 8-0-0 clip. This, after top-seeded Monmouth was upset in the first round of last year's NEC Tournament, crashing to the ground after its fourth straight regular season conference title. ESPN Soccernet's Maria Burns-Ortiz opened her notebook this week with the great story coming out of Jersey. No. 1 Akron handed No. 15 Ohio State its first loss of the season on Wednesday, blanking the Buckeyes, 3-0 at home, after OSU had shot out to the best start in program history. The Zips, playing reasonably good soccer, have allowed one goal this year. In eight games. The shutout streak now sits at 484:00. Oh, also, they've outscored their opponents 21-1 in their last six games and out-shot their opponents 135-32 this year.
 Indiana's Andy Adlard scored twice in the Hoosiers' win over Kentucky on Tuesday. Photo Courtesy of Indiana |
No. 9 Indiana looked every bit the top-10 team it started the season as -- before falling to No. 13 in last week's rankings -- blanking No. 13 Kentucky, 3-0, on Tuesday night. The Hoosiers looked a little different in the win, as Indiana coach Mike Freitag took his players' advice and switched to a 4-4-2 look. After two games in group play at the FIFA U-20 World Cup in Cairo, the U.S. National Under-20 sits at 1-1 and in second place in Group C after a 3-0 loss to Germany and a 4-1 win over Cameroon. More importantly, the Americans -- with a roster full of eight NCAA players -- sit just a draw away from qualifying for the Round of 16. A win, combined with a few other results, would guarantee the U.S. the top spot coming out of Group C. For the full release from USA Soccer, click here! In another Story We Wish We Wrote, Cal State Northridge Athletics writes about how the 'international flavor' of the 2009 version of the Matadors has helped them to the program's best start since 2005, at 5-2-1. With seven international players this year, CSUN continues the tradition it's had over the past decade of sporting at least three foreign-born players on the team. It's a great read, and you can check it out here. UC Santa Barbara's looking to break the all-time D-I regular season attendance record on Friday, when the No. 11 Gauchos take on No. 9 Indiana at Meredith Field at Harder Stadium. The existing record of 12,224, was set on Sept. 27, 1987, when Fresno State took on San Francisco. The second-best mark ever? UCSB's match against Cal Poly on Oct. 17, 2008. Read the full story here...and if you happen to be driving down the PCH, stop on by. The last time these two teams met on the West Coast came in the 2004 College Cup final, which Indiana won in PK's. This is supposed to be a D-I blog, but we've got a cross-divisional story out of Montclair State, where the Red Hawks broke the NCAA All-Division Men's Soccer record for consecutive home wins on Wednesday night, taking their 41st straight win at Sprague Field. No. 18 Portland's off to the best start the Pilots have had since 2000, jumping out to a 5-1-1 record thanks in large part to goalkeeper Austin Guerrero, who made 10 saves and allowed one goal in the Pilots' Husky Fever Classic win last weekend. Blanking Cal Poly, 2-0, and holding Creighton to just one goal in a 2-1 win on Sunday, the junior earned his third shutout of the season to take home WCC Men's Soccer Player of the Week honors.
- Akron,
- Andy Adlard,
- Austin Guerrero,
- Cal State Northridge,
- Cortland State,
- FIFA,
- Indiana,
- Mike Freitag,
- Monmouth,
- Ohio State,
- Portland,
- U-20 Team,
- UCSB
Sunday ResultsWhere the top-10 suffered the most at the hands of upset-minded non-ranked teams on Friday night, the rest of the top-25 felt the pain on Sunday. And while teams like South Florida and UCSB responded with big wins, Friday victims Louisville and St. John's could only muster ties on Sunday. No. 3 South Florida def. Pittsburgh, 2-1 No. 5 California def. Air Force, 3-0 No. 7 UCSB def. No. 23 UC Irvine, 1-0 No. 9 Louisville tied Marquette, 2-2 No. 10 UCLA def. UNLV, 3-0 No. 16 NC State lost to Virginia Tech, 2-0 No. 17 Creighton lost to Portland, 2-1 No. 18 St. John's tied Providence, 0-0 No. 20 Kentucky def. UNC-Asheville, 3-1 No. 21 Michigan State lost to Ohio State, 1-0 No. 22 Michigan lost to Penn State, 2-0 No. 24 Cal St. Northridge lost to Coastal Carolina, 2-1 No. 25 Brown tied San Francisco, 1-1 Saturday Results
No. 8 Harvard's vaunted offense couldn't solve No. 6 Wake Forest, as the Demon Deacons won one of the week's best games, 1-0, in Winston-Salem. Meanwhile, one of the biggest upsets all year happened in Virginia, where then-winless Clemson dropped the host Cavaliers, 1-0 in ACC play.
No. 1 Akron def. Bowling Green, 6-0 No. 6 Wake Forest def. No. 8 Harvard, 1-0 No. 11 Virginia lost to Clemson, 1-0 No. 14 Dartmouth lost to Hartwick, 2-0 No. 19 Boston University def. Rhode Island, 2-1
- Air Force,
- Akron,
- Boston University,
- Bowling Green,
- Brown,
- Cal State Northridge,
- California,
- Clemson,
- Coastal Carolina,
- Creighton,
- Dartmout,
- Hartwick,
- Harvard,
- Kentucky,
- Louisville,
- Marquette,
- Michigan,
- Michigan State,
- NC State,
- Ohio State,
- Penn State,
- Pittsburgh,
- Portland,
- Providence,
- Rhode Island,
- San Francisco,
- South Florida,
- St. John's,
- UC Irvine,
- UCLA,
- UCSB,
- UNC-Asheville,
- UNLV,
- Virginia,
- Virginia Tech,
- Wake Forest
All Times EasternLive Stats where availableNo. 3 South Florida @ Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. | Live StatsNo. 5 California vs. Air Force, 5 p.m. | Live Stats No. 7 UCSB vs. No. 23 UC Irvine, 9:30 p.m. | Live StatsNo. 9 Louisville @ Marquette, 2 p.m. | Live StatsNo. 10 UCLA vs. UNLV, 8 p.m. | Live Stats No. 16 NC State @ Virginia Tech, 2 p.m | VideoNo. 17 Creighton vs. Portland (in Seattle, Wash.), 1 p.m. | Live Stats No. 18 St. John's @ Providence, 3 p.m. | Live StatsNo. 20 Kentucky vs. UNC-Asheville, 2 p.m. | Live StatsNo. 21 Michigan State vs. Ohio State, 2:30 p.m. | Live StatsNo. 22 Michigan @ Penn State, 2 p.m. | Live StatsNo. 23 UC Irvine @ No. 7 UCSB, 9:30 p.m. | Live StatsNo. 24 Cal St. Northridge vs. Coastal Carolina, 2 p.m. | VideoNo. 25 Brown @ San Francisco, 5 p.m.
- Air Force,
- Brown,
- Cal St. Northridge,
- California,
- Coastal Carolina,
- Creighton,
- Kentucky,
- Louisville,
- Marquette,
- Michigan State,
- NC State,
- Ohio State,
- Penn State,
- Pittsburgh,
- Portland,
- Providence,
- San Francisco,
- South Florida,
- St. John's,
- UC Irvine,
- UCLA,
- UCSB,
- UNLV,
- Virginia Tech
Top-25 Results from Friday, Sept. 25A wild Friday saw only two teams in the top-10 win, and one came by default, as No. 4 Maryland beat No. 2 North Carolina with an 89th-minute goal in a big ACC clash between top-5 teams. Meanwhile, four top-10 teams in action took losses to teams outside the top-25. No. 2 North Carolina lost to No. 4 Maryland, 1-0 No. 3 South Florida lost to West Virginia, 1-0 in OT No. 4 Maryland beat No. 2 North Carolina, 1-0 No. 5 California lost to New Mexico, 2-1 No. 7 UCSB lost to San Diego State, 4-2 No. 9 Louisville lost to Notre Dame, 4-0 No. 10 UCLA beat San Diego, 2-1 No. 12 Duke lost to Boston College, 2-0 No. 13 Indiana beat Wisconsin, 1-0 No. 17 Creighton beat Washington, 1-0No. 18 St. John's (N.Y.) lost to Connecticut, 1-0 No. 23 UC Irvine beat Princeton, 2-1 No. 24 Cal St. Northridge tied Denver, 0-0 No. 25 Brown tied Santa Clara, 1-1
- Boston College,
- Brown,
- Cal State Northridge,
- California,
- Connecticut,
- Creighton,
- Denver,
- Duke,
- Indiana,
- Louisville,
- Maryland,
- New Mexico,
- North Carolina,
- Notre Dame,
- Princeton,
- San Diego,
- San Diego State,
- Santa Clara,
- South Florida,
- St. John's,
- UC Irvine,
- UCLA,
- UCSB,
- Washington,
- West Virginia,
- Wisconsin
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| Maryland's Kevin Tangney celebrates his goal while UNC players look on during Maryland's 1-0 win over the Tar Heels on Friday night. |
Friday wasn't supposed to be a big night outside of College Park, Maryland, where Maryland took on North Carolina. It was, with four wins by unranked teams over clubs in the top-10 and big finishes all across the country, massive. In front of a Maryland-record crowd of 6,946 at College Park, the hosts took down No. 2 UNC, 1-0, in a rematch of last year's national championship pairing. The lone goal came off the foot of Maryland captain and defender Kevin Tangney, profiled this week by NCAA.com. Meanwhile, No. 9 Louisville was blown out by Big EAST rival Notre Dame, 4-0. The Irish, after plummeting out of the top-25, struck back with four second-half goals to drop the Cardinals. Third-ranked South Florida took its first loss of the season, falling 1-0 to West Virginia in Morgantown.
A faulty clear by USF gave the ball to West Virginia's Alex Silva, who
delivered a pass to Abel Sebele, who in turn slid a shot past Jeff
Attinella to send the Mountaineers to the win. But there's more. A lot more. On the West Coast, the opening game of the Stanford Nike Classic wasn't
kind to fellow Bay Area team California, as the fifth-ranked Bears took a 2-1 loss to New Mexico. Just down the coast, No. 7 UCSB stumbled against SoCal rival San Diego State, falling, 4-2. SDSU junior Raymundo Reza led the way with two goals and an assist in the win. Back in the East, Connecticut made a big statement in the Big EAST, knocking off No. 18 St. John's (N.Y.), 1-0. Kwame Watson-Siriboe tallied the game-winner in the 40th minute to lead UConn. Stay tuned for more on Saturday!
- California,
- Connecticut,
- Louisville,
- Maryland,
- New Mexico,
- North Carolina,
- Notre Dame,
- San Diego State,
- Soccer,
- South Florida,
- St. John's,
- UC Santa Barbara,
- UCSB,
- West Virginia
No. 2 North Carolina (5-0-1, 2-0-0 ACC) vs. No. 4 Maryland (4-1-1, 1-0-1 ACC) Friday, 8 p.m. (ET) - College Park, Md. | Fox Soccer Channel In a rematch of last year's national championship combatants, the stakes are high. Both teams currently occupy the top two spots in an ACC that doesn't forgive any losses. For Maryland, the Terps are a team looking to find a way to re-ignite its offense, while for UNC, the Tar Heels are looking to avenge three losses to Maryland last year and earn its first win over the Terps since 2003.
Maryland started slow last year. The Terps haven't crawled this year, per se, but they've had trouble lighting up the scoreboard. Only once in Maryland's six games have the Terps scored more than two goals, when they plastered 7 on Duquesne on Sept. 15. They've put up only two, total, in the last two games, tying N.C. State last Saturday and just clipping St. Peter's, 1-0, on Tuesday.
For North Carolina, a win on Friday would give the Tar Heels their first 3-0 ACC start since 1968. But it hasn't been all smooth sailing for North Carolina, who just escaped a matchup with unranked ETSU with a 2-1 OT win on Tuesday after two straight 2-1 wins over N.C. State and Duke, respectively.
Ludwig Field set a Maryland men's soccer attendance record when the Terps opened with UCLA at home. Expect this crowd to make that one look like it was cheering for a chem lecture.
No. 8 Harvard (6-0) @ No. 6 Wake Forest (4-1-1) Saturday, 7 p.m. - Winston-Salem, N.C. Segueing from chem lectures...Harvard is undefeated. That's right. The Crimson started the year among the unranked, but wins over in-town rivals Boston College and Boston University, among others, have vaulted the Crimson to their highest ranking ever (No. 6 in the Soccer America poll), tied with the 2007 team.
And it's not just the wins that have gotten them there. This team can score. A lot. Andre Akpan hasn't slowed at all from his record-setting pace through three years in Cambridge, racking up a team-best six goals and four assists for 16 points (second in the nation in ppg, at 3.2), and Brian Rogers (11 points) has followed close behind. Plus, Austin Harms is pretty good in net, posting three shutouts, a .35 GAA and a .913 save percentage.
They'll be taking on a Wake Forest team that's hungry, after a loss to Virginia last weekend, but one that will be without arguably its top player, with reigning ACC Defender of the Year Ike Opara playing for the U-20 National Team in the FIFA U-20 World Cup. [LINK http://wakeforestsports.cstv.com/sports/m-soccer/spec-rel/092409aaa.html]
The Deacons, who roared through the regular season last year, still look to be a good way away from clicking, but the talent is certainly there. Look for a team playing a little shorthanded to rise up and defend its home against a Harvard club that will be looking to exploit a defense without its central cog.
No. 23 UC Irvine (5-2) @ No. 7 UC Santa Barbara (5-1-1) Sunday, 9:30 p.m. - Santa Barbara, Calif. Both of these Southern California powers open up Big West play on Sunday, when the Anteaters travel to Santa Barbara to clash with the Gauchos. And while Irvine's looking to stay ranked, UCSB's looking to dig into the top-10 after a week that saw the Gauchos down Milwaukee, then come back late to tie Wisonsin, 1-1, at the Milwaukee Panther Classic.
For UCI, look to Amani Walker (4g, 2a - 10 pts) to lead the way for the offense, while goalkeeper Andrew Fontein's brandishing an 0.95 GAA and four shutouts. Meanwhile, UCSB, the 13th-ranked offense in the country at 2.43 goals per game, have gotten 112 points from Michael Nonni, while Sam Hayden's posted an 0.95 GA and three shutsouts in net.
But to get there, Irvine has to get past Princeton on Friday, with UCSB matching up with San Diego State on the same night - both tough, tough draws.
UNDEFEATEDS - Akron looks to keep its perfect 6-0-0 record alive against Bowling Green on Saturday. - For as-yet-unranked UMBC, the Retrievers bring their 7-0-0 record to La Salle on Saturday. - Monmouth and its 6-0-0 mark meet up with Loyola (Md.) on Saturday. - Finally, 6-0-0 Stetson brings its perfect ledger to the Jacksonville/Nike Invitational, where it'll play the College of Charleston - just five votes out of the top-25 - on Friday and Alabama A&M on Sunday.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Kevin Scheitrum
Kevin grew up a football and baseball player in Pennsylvania who learned to love The Beautiful Game overseas. Now, he’s committed to bringing you the top stories and most compelling personalities across the country all the way through the College Cup in December. Stay with us, and, as always, stay in touch.
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