Colorado College Women’s Soccer€¦ · August Colorado College/Fairfield Inn Invitational 28,...

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Transcript of Colorado College Women’s Soccer€¦ · August Colorado College/Fairfield Inn Invitational 28,...

Page 1: Colorado College Women’s Soccer€¦ · August Colorado College/Fairfield Inn Invitational 28, Friday Washington State vs. Syracuse University 1:30 pm 28, Friday Drake University
Page 2: Colorado College Women’s Soccer€¦ · August Colorado College/Fairfield Inn Invitational 28, Friday Washington State vs. Syracuse University 1:30 pm 28, Friday Drake University

August Colorado College/Fairfield Inn Invitational28, Friday Washington State vs. Syracuse University 1:30 pm 28, Friday Drake University 4 pm 30, Sunday Drake vs. Syracuse Noon 30, Sunday Washington State University 2:30 pm

September University of Washington Invitational4, Friday vs. University of Portland 4:30 pm 6, Sunday at University of Washington 1:30 pm Colorado College Invitational11, Friday University of Kansas vs. University of Denver 1:30 pm 11, Friday Texas Christian University 4 pm 13, Sunday Texas Christian vs. Denver Noon 13, Sunday University of Kansas 2:30 pm

18, Friday University of New Hampshire 4 pm 20, Sunday Cal Poly Noon 25, Friday SMU (Southern Methodist)* 4 pm 27, Sunday University of Tulsa* Noon

October 2, Friday at UAB (Alabama-Birmingham)* 7 pm 4, Sunday at University of Memphis* Noon 9, Friday at Southern Miss* 4 pm 11, Sunday at UCF (Central Florida)* Noon 16, Friday East Carolina University* 2 pm 18, Sunday Marshall University* 2 pm 23, Friday Rice University* 2 pm 25, Sunday University of Houston* Noon 30, Friday UTEP (Texas-El Paso)*+ 7 pm

November 4-8, Wed.-Sun Conference USA Championships (Dallas, TX) TBD

* Conference USA game BOLD indicates home game at Stewart Field+ indicates home game at Washburn Field Italics indicates neutral game at Stewart Field

Colorado College Women’s Soccer 2009 Schedule / All Times Local

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Contents

The 2009 Women’s Soccer Media Guide is a production of the Colorado College Athletic Media Relations Office and Dina Snow / Azteca Design; Editor: Dave Moross; Editing Assistants: Jen Kulier, Nancy Luther, Dave Reed, Judy Reissmann & Helen Richardson; Interior Design & Layout: Dina Snow; Cover Design: Rick Specht; Action photography: Casey B. Gibson & Anthony Vasser; Posed photography: A Better Image (Ted Mehl); President Celeste head shot: Sean Cayton; Printing: Dolan Printing, Minneapolis. A special thanks to Steve Paul for providing extensive research materials and historic photographs.

Celebrating our 25th season as an NCAA Division I program and fourth as an affiliate member of Conference USA

Hosted first National Championship Tournament (1980) Nine NCAA playoff bids Reached the NCAA semifinals five times Played in two NCAA Championship matches 30 winning seasons in 34 years Produced 15 All-Americans

CC Athletics Mission StatementColorado College believes participation in sports to be an integral part of a well-ordered program of liberal education and, therefore, encourages the widest possible participation in its programs by members of the college community. The college is committed to a philosophy of sport, which stresses the value and enjoyment of participation in the physical testing of oneself, and which challenges individuals to develop their physical and mental capacities.

Tiger Soccer ‘09 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2-10

Team Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3

Conference USA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-5

Head Coach’s Perspective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-7

Preseason Facts of Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Rosters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9-10

The PlayerS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11-29

Returning Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11-25

Newcomers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26-29

Soccer TradiTion aT cc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30-37

Historical Perspective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30-33

Program Milestones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

NCAA Playoff Appearances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

All-Time Alumnae List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 & 35

Past All-Americans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34

Hall of Fame Inductees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

All-Time Coaches’ Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36

Stewart Field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37

The comPeTiTion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38-44

All-Time Records vs . All Opponents . . . . . . .38-39

Opponents’ Capsules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41-44

looking Back . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44-48

2008 Game Summaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44-46

2008 Results & Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47

2008 Game-Winning Goals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48

recordS SecTion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48-53

Career Scoring Leaders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49

Individual Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49

Team Superlatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50

Year-by-Year Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51-53

aBouT colorado college . . . . . . . . . . . .54-60

President Richard F . Celeste . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56

Athletics Staff Bios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58-60

Staff Directory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60

August Colorado College/Fairfield Inn Invitational28, Friday Washington State vs. Syracuse University 1:30 pm 28, Friday Drake University 4 pm 30, Sunday Drake vs. Syracuse Noon 30, Sunday Washington State University 2:30 pm

September University of Washington Invitational4, Friday vs. University of Portland 4:30 pm 6, Sunday at University of Washington 1:30 pm Colorado College Invitational11, Friday University of Kansas vs. University of Denver 1:30 pm 11, Friday Texas Christian University 4 pm 13, Sunday Texas Christian vs. Denver Noon 13, Sunday University of Kansas 2:30 pm

18, Friday University of New Hampshire 4 pm 20, Sunday Cal Poly Noon 25, Friday SMU (Southern Methodist)* 4 pm 27, Sunday University of Tulsa* Noon

October 2, Friday at UAB (Alabama-Birmingham)* 7 pm 4, Sunday at University of Memphis* Noon 9, Friday at Southern Miss* 4 pm 11, Sunday at UCF (Central Florida)* Noon 16, Friday East Carolina University* 2 pm 18, Sunday Marshall University* 2 pm 23, Friday Rice University* 2 pm 25, Sunday University of Houston* Noon 30, Friday UTEP (Texas-El Paso)*+ 7 pm

November 4-8, Wed.-Sun Conference USA Championships (Dallas, TX) TBD

* Conference USA game BOLD indicates home game at Stewart Field+ indicates home game at Washburn Field Italics indicates neutral game at Stewart Field

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During five short years at Colorado College, Geoff Bennett has helped restore the winning tradition and high expectations that defined CC women’s soccer during its glory years. Then again, Bennett’s magic is nothing new. His impressive .613 winning percentage with the Tigers, which includes a 15-6-1 record and return to the NCAA playoffs in 2006, comes on the heels of equally impressive stints at St. Bonaventure University and the University of Rhode Island earlier in his coaching career. He has compiled a 102-73-21 (.574) mark, including his 54-32-11 (.613) ledger at CC, in 10 campaigns overall in the Division I women’s ranks. In 1999, his second campaign at St. Bonaventure, he helped the Bonnies earn their first-ever berth in the Atlantic 10 Conference playoffs. In 2002, his second year at the Rhode Island helm, the Rams won their first Atlantic 10 regular-season title and made their initial appearance in the NCAA tournament. Bennett, meanwhile, was named league Coach of the Year once at each school. Two years later, after guiding Colorado College to its first national post-season berth since 1991, he finished as runner-up for SoccerBuzz.com’s Central Region Coach-of-the-Year honors.

The seventh head coach in three decades of women’s soccer at CC, Bennett set the wheels of change in motion shortly after his arrival in April 2004. He immediately raised the level of commitment required for continued involvement with the program. He recruited a 2009 graduating class – last year’s seniors – that provided a strong, solid foundation on which to build. And, after hiring a pair of outstanding assistants in Heather Kasparek and April Kater, he’s continued to complement and replace that group with more outstanding newcomers the last four years. Bennett also spearheaded the behind-the-scenes effort that resulted in the Tigers’ affiliate membership in Conference USA, starting in 2006. Finally, after competing as a Division I independent since the mid-1980s, Colorado College now has a direct avenue to the NCAA tournament, with the conference playoff champion receiving an automatic bid. CC has tied for fourth place in each of its three years as a C-USA member, and in ‘06 received an at-large nod to the national playoffs after upsetting UTEP and regular-season champion SMU in the league tournament. In 2004, his first season behind the Colorado College bench, Bennett guided his new team to an impressive .625 winning percentage (9-5-2). A year later, despite arguably the program’s toughest schedule ever up until that time, the Tigers at one point achieved their first Top 25 national ranking in more than a decade. Last fall they finished 13-7-2 (.636) overall after advancing to the C-USA semifinals. A 1995 graduate of Hartwick College, where he lettered three years in soccer (1992-94) and earned his bachelor’s degree in English, Bennett eventually returned to the Oneonta, N.Y., campus in 2003 as an assistant coach of the school’s nationally ranked men’s soccer team. The Hawks finished 15-2-1 (.861) that season. Bennett also was versatile during his own playing career, contributing at both forward and defense. As a junior in 1993, he helped Hartwick reach the third round of the NCAA tournament and finish with an overall record of 16-4-2. He was a fourth-round draft pick of the National Professional Soccer League’s Milwaukee Wave in 1994. Bennett owns a Premier Diploma from the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA). He also has served as a member of the NSCAA Northeast Division I Regional Ranking Committee and the NCAA Regional Advisory Committee.

BeNNett AS A HeAd COACH

Season team Record (Overall/Conference) Notes1998 St . Bonaventure 8-10-1/4-6-1 1999 St . Bonaventure 9-8-3/5-4-2 Atlantic-10 Tournament & Coach of the Year 2000 St . Bonaventure 5-11-3/3-6-1 2001 University of Rhode Island 10-6-2/5-4-2 2002 University of Rhode Island 16-6-1/10-1 NCAA Tournament / Atlantic-10 Coach of the Year2004 Colorado College 9-5-22005 Colorado College 7-8-32006 Colorado College 15-6-1/6-3 NCAA Tournament / C-USA playoff runner-up2007 Colorado College 10-6-3/5-3-12008 Colorado College 13-7-2/6-4-1 Totals 10 seasons 102-73-21/44-31-8

GeOff BeNNett, Head Coach

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APRIL KAteR, Assistant Coach April Kater joined Geoff Bennett’s staff as an assistant coach in March 2006 and the following fall proceeded to help guide Colorado College to its best showing in 15 years. Overall, the Tigers are 38-19-6 (.651) in Kater’s three seasons with the program. A 1991 graduate of the University of Massachusetts, where she built an extensive collection of prestigious national awards during an illustrious playing career, Kater went on to serve as head coach of the women’s program at Syracuse University for eight seasons (1996-2003). During her tenure at the helm, Syracuse enjoyed seven winning campaigns, qualified for the Big East conference tournament three times and reached the second round of the NCAA playoffs on two occasions. Kater has served on the Region I ODP staff since 1998 and the U.S. Soccer staff with various youth national teams since 2004. She was an assistant coach at her alma mater for two seasons (1993 and 1994), helping UMass reach the NCAA tournament both years, including a national semifinal appearance in 1993. Co-author of a book on techniques, tactics and teamwork in women’s soccer, published in the spring of 2001, Kater also has worked as a volunteer with Soccer Without Borders since spring of 2008. She and several CC players have been directly involved with a project in Granada, Nicaragua, as well as collecting equipment and funds to support the organization, which focuses on using soccer as a vehicle for youth development around the world. Kater was recipient of the 1990 Herman Award as the top player in collegiate women’s soccer. That same year, as a senior, she earned first-team All-America honors for the third consecutive season as well as serving as team captain and emerging as a first-team Academic All-American for the second time. She was named Freshman of the Year by Soccer America in 1987. Kater currently holds a USSF A License and an NSCAA Premier Certification.

HeAtHeR MASteRS, Assistant Coach Heather Masters joined the Colorado College staff in 2004 after spending the previous season coaching at the high school level in her home state of Connecticut. She served as assistant coach of the girls varsity soccer team at Wilton High School in fall 2003 then as strength and conditioning coach at Weston High School in spring 2004. She owns an advanced national diploma for coaching from the NSCAA and is an NSCA certified strength and conditioning specialist. A former standout at the University of Rhode Island during Geoff Bennett’s tenure as head coach there, Masters graduated from URI in 2003 with a bachelor’s degree in health and fitness. She earned Atlantic-10 first-team all-conference honors as a senior team captain in 2002, and still holds school records for most matches started and played in a career. She and her husband, Rob, married in May of this year.

JASON fOX, team trainer/Co-director of Sports MedicineA member of Colorado College’s sports medicine staff since 2005, Jason Fox was promoted to co-director of the department last spring. He and student assistant Amy Howard will work with the women’s soccer team duringthe 2009 season. Fox is a 2002 graduate of Minnesota State University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in athletic training. He went on to complete his master’s at Indiana University in 2005, after compiling hands-on experience with anumber of National Football League clubs including the Minnesota Vikings and Arizona Cardinals. The Marshall, Minn., native also served as an athletic trainer while attending grad school, working with the Division I baseball, wrestling and women’s crew programs at IU. Fox, who has contributed to a number of professional publications and presentations since his arrival at CC, currently is a member of the governance task force for the Rocky Mountain Athletic Trainers Association. He and his wife, Lisa, celebrated their first anniversary in June.

SPUd HAMILtON, team ManagerGord “Spud” Hamilton returns in 2009-10 for his second season as equipment manager for Colorado College’s two Division I programs – women’s soccer and men’s ice hockey. A 27-year veteran of the professional and junior hockey ranks in both the United States and Canada, Hamilton came to the Tigers from the San Antonio Rampage, the top farm club of the National Hockey League’s Phoenix Coyotes. Hamilton began his career at age 15 and has worked for the Augusta Lynx of the East Coast Hockey League, the Elmira Jackals of the United Hockey League and the El Paso Buzzards of the former Western Professional Hockey League. He also spent seven seasons in the Ontario Hockey League, four with the Sarnia Sting and three with the Newmarket/Cornwall Royals. Hamilton, a 1991 graduate of Sheridan College in Oakville, Ont., is a member of the Society of Professional Hockey Equipment Managers. The Ottawa, Ont., native and his wife, Yvonne, celebrated their ninth anniversary in May.

Assistant Coaches and team Staff

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2008 fINAL StANdINGS LeAGUe PLAy OveRALL

Team W-L-T Pct. Home Away Pts. W-L-T Pct. Home Away Neutraly-East Carolina 7-0-4 .818 4-0-2 3-0-1 25 14-4-4 .727 6-1-2 5-2-2 3-1-0x,y-Memphis 8-2-1 .773 4-1-0 4-1-1 25 15-5-2 .727 6-3-1 6-1-1 3-0-0UCF 7-2-2 .727 3-1-1 4-1-1 23 14-6-3 .674 6-1-2 7-3-2 0-1-0UTEP 6-4-1 .591 4-1-1 2-3-0 19 13-7-1 .643 11-1-1 2-5-0 0-1-0Colorado College 6-4-1 .591 4-1-0 2-3-1 19 13-7-2 .636 8-1-1 2-5-1 3-1-0Rice 6-5-0 .545 4-1-0 2-4-0 18 10-9-0 .526 7-3-0 3-6-0 0-0-0UAB 5-4-2 .545 3-2-1 2-2-1 17 7-11-2 .400 5-3-1 2-7-1 0-1-0SMU 4-7-0 .364 2-3-0 2-4-0 12 6-13-1 .325 3-5-1 3-7-0 0-1-0Tulsa 3-6-2 .364 2-3-1 1-3-1 11 8-9-3 .475 5-4-2 2-5-1 1-0-0Houston 3-7-1 .318 2-3-1 1-4-0 10 7-10-1 .417 5-5-1 3-5-0 0-0-0Marshall 3-8-0 .273 1-5-0 2-4-0 9 5-10-4 .368 1-5-2 4-5-2 0-0-0Southern Miss 1-10-0 .091 0-5-0 1-5-0 3 5-13-1 .289 0-7-1 3-6-0 2-0-0

x – Playoff champion y – Regular-season co-champions

Memphis

Huntington, W. Va.

Greenville, N.C.

Birmingham, Ala.

OrlandoHattiesburg, Miss.

Houston

El Paso

TulsaColorado Springs

Dallas

After adding six nationally prominent universities a year earlier, Conference USA began yet another new chapter in 2006 with Colorado College joining as an affiliate member in women’s soccer. More than ever, C-USA feels it has an opportunity to play a pivotal role in the changing face of conference affiliations and has reinforced its position in collegiate athletics for years to come.

Making their debuts in the decade-old conference during the 2005-06 academic year were Marshall, Rice, SMU (Southern Methodist), Tulsa, UCF (Central Florida) and UTEP (Texas-El Paso). Those institutions combined forces with tradition-rich members East Carolina, Houston, Memphis, Southern Miss, Tulane and UAB (Alabama Birmingham) to form a new look to the league. While Tulane has since been forced to drop women’s soccer and several other programs indefinitely due to Hurricane Katrina, the addition of CC in 2006 further enhanced programs steeped in athletic success and academic prowess.

Conference USA sent three teams (Colorado College, SMU and UAB) to the NCAA Division I post-season tournament in 2006, then two each (Memphis and UCF both years) in 2007 and 2008. It sponsors competition in 19 sports altogether – nine for men (baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, soccer, tennis and indoor and outdoor track and field) and 10 for women (basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, indoor and outdoor track and field and volleyball).

Conference USA, along with league administrators and coaches, maintains an unwavering commitment to the academic and athletic excellence of its member institutions. The league sponsors numerous academic awards, including the Commissioner’s Honor Roll and the Commissioner’s Academic Medal, indicative of outstanding achievement in the classroom. Conference USA annually awards six postgraduate scholarships, along with the Sport Academic Award, Scholar Athletes of the Year and the Institutional Academic Excellence Award.

COLORAdO COLLeGe IN tHe C-USA tOURNAMeNt

2006 Tigers 2, UTEP 1 (ot) Tigers 4, SMU 1 UAB 3, Tigers 2 2007 UTEP 3, Tigers 2 (2ot)2008 Tigers 1, UTEP 0 East Carolina 2, Tigers 1 (ot)

Overall Record in Tournament: 3-3 Record in Championship Game: 0-1

Conference USA

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2008 C-USA tOURNAMeNt ReSULtSAt Rice University (Houston, Texas)Quarterfinals: Colorado College 1, UTEP 0; East Carolina 1, SMU 0; Memphis 2, UAB 0; UCF 2, Rice 1 Semifinals: East Carolina 2, Colorado College 1 (ot); Memphis 2, UCF 0 Championship: Memphis 4, East Carolina 1

2008 POSt-SeASON AwARdSOffensive Player of the Year: Vendula Strnadova, MemphisDefensive Player of the Year: Amber Campbell, East CarolinaMidfielder of the Year: Vendula Strnadova, MemphisCo-Freshmen of the Year: Lizzy Simonin, MemphisTiffini Turpin, UABCoach of the Year: Rob Donnenwirth, East Carolina

ALL-CONfeReNCe fIRSt teAMForwards: Erin Scott, Rice; Tameka Sumter, UTEP; Tiffini Turpin, UAB Midfielders: Vendula Strnadova, Memphis; Becca Thomas, UCF; Shelley Wong, RiceDefenders: Madison Keller, East Carolina; Nikki Moore, UCF; Kim Peabody, SMU; Molly Uyenishi, Colorado CollegeGoalkeeper: Amber Campbell, East Carolina

ALL-CONfeReNCe SeCONd teAMForwards: Yvonne George, UCF; Kelly LaVoie, Colorado College; Sarah McFadden, Southern Miss; Lizzy Simonin, MemphisMidfielders: Kate Edwards, Rice; Emiko Schwab, Memphis; Chelsea Winbush, UTEPDefenders: Kelsey Bakker, Memphis; Alexa Coralli, Rice; Jessica Rathweg, Houston; Savanna Russo, East CarolinaGoalkeeper: Aline Reis, UCF

ALL-fReSHMAN teAM *unanimous selectionKelsey Wise, MF, Colorado CollegeCatlin Hulyo, GK, Colorado College Amanda Malkiewicz, MF, East CarolinaStephanie Dereig, D, HoustonAngela DeSumma, F/MF, Marshall*Lizzy Simonin, F, MemphisLizzy Hildebrandt, MF, MemphisHope Ward, F, RiceLogan May, F, SMUCarolyn Polcari, MF, UAB*Tiffini Turpin, F, UABStacie Hubbard, MF, UCFAline Reis, GK, UCF

2008 SCORING LeAdeRS (All games)Player (Team) GP G A Pts. 1. Tameka Sumter (UTEP) 21 10 3 23 2. Erika Duncan (Marshall) 19 9 4 22 Lizzy Simonin (Memphis) 21 9 4 22 4. Tiffany Brown (CC) 22 9 3 21 5. Erin Scott (Rice) 19 7 6 20 Vendula Strnadova (Memphis) 20 8 4 20 7. Shelley Wong (Rice) 18 9 1 19 Jennifer Kacergis (Tulsa) 20 6 7 19 9. Blair Heffner (East Carolina) 22 7 4 1810. Danielle Dos Santos (UCF) 21 6 5 17 Yvonne George (UCF) 21 5 7 17 Kelly LaVoie (CC) 22 7 3 17

CONfeReNCe USA COMMISSIONeR’S HONOR ROLLA total of 1,958 student athletes were named to the Commissioner’s Honor Roll during the 2008-09 academic year. To qualify, student athletes must maintain a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 or better. UCF placed the highest number of student athletes on the honor roll for the third year in a row, producing a record 224 members. SMU followed with 209, while East Carolina ranked third with 190 student athletes on the list. Student athletes with a cumulative GPA of 3.75 or better also receive the Commissioner’s Academic Medal. Nineteen Colorado College soccer players were among those named to last year’s Honor Roll. In addition to Geneva Sills and Molly Uyenishi, who graduated in May, they were: Ericka Baer; Emma Bailey; Emily Beans; Tiffany Brown; Sydney Fetter; Jessie Kautz; Alison Kreisler; Kelly LaVoie; Vanessa Newman; Kaley Ortiz; Erin Rhodes; Meredith Smith; Lauren Talbot; Lacey Wirt; Kelsey Wise; Sarah Wolff; and Beth Wright.

2008 GOALKeePING LeAdeRS (All games)Player (Team) GP Min Svs Svs% GA GAA 1. Catlin Hulyo (CC) 13 864:31 33 .805 8 0.83 2. Sara Kaltwasser (UTEP) 10 744:45 39 .848 7 0.85 3. Elise Kuhar-Pitters (Memphis) 12 1088:00 35 .761 11 0.91 4. Amber Campbell (ECU) 22 2108.19 113 .831 23 0.98 5. Geneva Sills (CC) 14 991:07 48 .814 11 1.00 6. Jordan Boyle (Memphis) 10 714:54 29 .784 8 1.01 7. Kendall Harclerode (Tulsa) 20 1865:14 84 .771 25 1.21 8. Aline Reis (UCF) 20 1823:26 96 .793 25 1.23 9. Courtney Webb (SMU) 12 1015:00 55 .797 14 1.2410. Shelby Scott (Houston) 17 1569:48 79 .782 22 1.26

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Q. For starters, how empty does it feel to have finally lost Alexa Bannerman, Geneva Sills and Molly Uyenishi to graduation? A. “It feels different, but I wouldn’t say empty. They have been such a big part of the program and our resurgence, that they will always be remembered very fondly. They will be missed, but I know the groundwork that they laid will continue to grow.”

Q. Apart from the obvious disappointment of falling in overtime to East Carolina University in the Conference USA semifinals and failing to reach the NCAA tournament, how satisfied or dissatisfied were you with the way the 2008 campaign unfolded? A. “Last season was very rewarding, even though we didn’t reach our goal of the NCAA tournament. We had some quality wins and we played the majority of the season without Emily Beans, a first-team C-USA pick (in 2007). We ended with 13 wins and that is usually enough for an NCAA bid, but last season was very competitive across the board in Division I women’s soccer.”

Q. Despite the absence of last year’s three seniors, the outlook heading into a new season once again appears quite promising with the return of eight starters and 18 letter winners overall. Are your team goals any different from those of past years? A. “Our goal is to be the best that this team can be, and obviously, that changes every year. That being said, the NCAA tournament will be the goal for our 2009 team. However, that also starts with us winning Conference USA. I think I can speak for everyone when I say that winning C-USA would be an incredible accomplishment and moment.”

Q. Do you sense that, as a group, the returning players understand and embrace what it will take to achieve those goals? A. “We believe so. This group is strong willed and hard working and we expect that everyone will stress the ‘team first’ mentality. If we put team above self, we will go far.”

Q. Compared to your first five seasons at CC, are expectations any higher in 2009? A. “As long as we keep producing good teams, the expectations will always be high, which I enjoy. The 2009 season will be fun, and I hope we are able to reach our potential as a program.”

Q. Can the Tigers challenge for a Conference USA championship? A. “We can and we will.”

Q. How much of a factor is team chemistry, and do you foresee it being any different than in the last few years? A. “Team chemistry is always very important at the collegiate level. Will it be different next season? Of course it will, but it is different every year compared to the last. We believe in this group and know that they believe in each other.”

Q. You actually have four veterans who, due to medical hardship rulings, are eligible to play two more seasons after already having been with the program for three years. How big of a factor is that for this fall and next? A. “Hopefully we can stay healthy, and if we do, we believe we will have a very competitive team. Those four (Ericka Baer, Emily Beans, Kelly LaVoie and Vanessa Newman) have learned a lot over the last year and I know they are ready to help us take the next step as a program.”

Q. Considering that you were 8-1-1 at Stewart Field in 2008, you must be pleased to have 12 games, including six C-USA outings, scheduled at home this fall. How important is that?

A. “It is always great to be playing at home at Stewart field in front of our home fans. We know we need to protect our home turf and we will do everything in our power to do so this coming fall.”

Q. On the other hand, have you given much thought to how the team might approach the challenge of attaining some improved results on the road? A. “We will continue to work on our mentality and routine for the road. We know what we need to do on the road and now it is all about following through on that plan.” Q. You certainly seem to have an abundance of experienced and proven scoring potential in Beans and LaVoie, along with Tiffany Brown and Sydney Fetter – all of whom will be in their junior year of eligibility. Are there any other “dark horses” who you think might emerge and join that group as legitimate offensive threats? A. “We think Meredith Smith can continue to get better in the final one third, and we have some incoming players who will help us out tremendously as well. We can be multi-dimensional in the attack and that can only help us as the season progresses.”

Q & A with Geoff Bennett Talented Tigers shooting for the stars in 2009

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Q. At which positions will the team be strongest, and conversely, where do you have your biggest concerns and question marks? A. “We think this will be the deepest this program has been since we have been here. We are excited to watch all of the competitions for spots.”

Q. With veterans Jessie Kautz and Lauren Talbot returning to anchor the back, are you fairly confident with the defensive aspect of things? A. “I believe we will have the best back four in Conference USA.”

Q. What kind of contribution do you anticipate getting from this year’s newcomers? A. “This is a deep class and one which is capable of producing three to four starters at any given time. They will be fun to watch and a big part of our success.”

Q. In fairly limited action as a freshman last season, Catlin Hulyo finished with the lowest goals-against average of any keeper in the conference. Is she likely to get much better? A. “We believe Caitlin can become one of the best goalkeepers in our region and we know

that she has the work ethic to reach that goal.”

Q. How about sophomores-to-be Kelsey Wise and Beth Wright? What will their roles be in 2009 after such impressive seasons as rookies? A. “They will be important to the team as they are both very hard workers and great people. They will help us remain a hard working, blue-collar team.”

Q. Do you, as a coaching staff, intend to implement any different systems than what you’ve used in the past? A. “We will play the system that best suits our personnel.”

Q. What are spectators and opposing teams most likely to say about Colorado College after seeing the Tigers play in 2009? A. “We will be entertaining in the attack and very organized in the back. I hope people watch us and are impressed with the effort and desire we show for 90 minutes every game.”

PReSeASON fACtS Of INteReSt

•   The 2009 season marks Colorado College’s 25th as an NCAA Division I program and fourth as an affiliate member of Conference USA.

•   The Tigers have tied for fourth place in the C-USA regular-season standings in each of the last three campaigns, advancing to the league’s playoff championship game and the NCAA tournament in 2006. They reached the conference semifinals in 2008.

•   CC returns eight starters, including four of its top five point producers, from a 2008 team that finished 13-7-2 overall.

•   Included among Colorado College’s 16 returning letter winners are a pair of former All-Central Region selections in Emily Beans (2007) and Tiffany Brown (2008); three previous All-Conference USA picks in Beans (2007), Brown (2007) and Kelly LaVoie (2008); and five past C–USA All-Freshman Team members in Beans (2006), Brown (2007), Sydney Fetter (2007), Catlin Hulyo (2008) and Kelsey Wise (2008).

•   The Tigers own an all-time record of 192-34-17 (.825) in 243 all-time games on the CC campus, incuding an 8-1-1 mark in 2008, and are 204-38-17 (.820) overall in 259 home matches played in Colorado Springs.

•   The 2009 regular-season schedule features 13 matches at home and six on the road, and for the second consecutive year includes one each against all 11 Conference USA opponents.

Talented Tigers shooting for the stars in 2009

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

4

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Meet the tigers

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

ROSteR BReAKdOwN By CLASS (2008 Stats in Parentheses)

SENIORS (4)Jessie Kautz, Defender (0g,0a); Alison Kreisler, Midfielder (1g,1a); Lauren Talbot, Midfielder/Defender (2g,0a); Sarah Wolff, Forward (1g,0a)

JUNIORS (8)*Ericka Baer, Midfielder (4g,0a); *Emily Beans, Forward (2g,0a); Tiffany Brown, Forward (9g,3a); Sydney Fetter, Forward (5g,3a); *Kelly LaVoie, Forward/Midfielder (7g,3a); *Vanessa Newman, Midfielder (0g,0a); Meredith Smith, Midfielder/Forward (0g,0a); Lacey Wirt, Defender (0g,0a)

SOPHOMORES (3)Caitlin Hulyo, Goalkeeper (4-3-1, 0.83 GAA, .805 Svs%); Kelsey Wise, Midfielder (1g,3a); Elizabeth Wright, Defender (0g,2a)

FRESHMEN (8)Hanna Berglund, Goalkeeper; Lauren Hatch, Midfielder/Defender; Kaitlin Kirkpatrick, Midfielder/Forward; Brittney Lyman, Midfielder/Forward; Brennan O’Connell, Midfielder/Forward; Hannah Peterson, Midfielder/Forward; Carter Vettese, Defender/Midfielder; Marika Viragh, Defender/Midfielder

* denotes seniors academically

No. Name yr. Pos. Ht. Hometown Pronunciation 13 Ericka Baer *Sr. M 5-8 Westlake Village, Calif. BARE

10 Emily Beans *Sr. F 5-6 Griffith, Ind. BEANS

Geoff Bennett Head Coach Lawrenceville, N.J. BEN-it

00 Hanna Berglund Fr. G 6-0 Steamboat Springs, Colo. BERG-lund

31 Tiffany Brown Jr. F 5-8 Sterling, Va. BROWN

8 Sydney Fetter Jr. D 5-6 Albuquerque, N.M. FED-er

Jason Fox Team Trainer Marshall, Minn. FOX

9 Lauren Hatch Fr. M/D 5-6 Mesquite, Texas HATCH

1 Caitlin Hulyo So. G 5-6 Lititz, Pa. HOO-lee-oh

April Kater Assistant Coach Mendham, N.J. KAY-ter

12 Jessie Kautz Sr. D 5-4 Truckee, Calif. COWTS

25 Kaitlin Kirkpatrick Fr. M/F 5-5 Carmel, Ind. Kirk-PAT-rick

17 Alison Kreisler Sr. M 5-8 Escondido, Calif. CRISE-ler

7 Kelly LaVoie *Sr. M/F 5-6 Round Rock, Texas La-VOY

11 Brittney Lyman Fr. M/F 5-3 Arvada, Colo. LIE-men

Heather K. Masters Assistant Coach Trumbull, Conn. MASS-ters

16 Vanessa Newman *Sr. M 5-9 Chevy Chase, Md. NEW-men

2 Brennan O’Connell Fr. M/F 5-2 Littleton, Colo. Oh-CON-el

15 Hannah Peterson Fr. M/F 5-2 Denver, Colo. PEET-er-sun

19 Meredith Smith Jr. M/F 5-5 Englewood, Colo. SMITH

3 Lauren Talbot Sr. D/M 5-4 Highland Village, Texas TAL-but

5 Carter Vettese Fr. D/M 5-5 Pasadena, Calif. Ve-TEES

24 Marika Viragh Fr. D/M 5-7 Columbus, Ohio VEER-ogg

22 Lacey Wirt Jr. D 5-2 Fort Collins, Colo. WERT

21 Kelsey Wise So. M 5-4 Fairview, Texas WISE

18 Sarah Wolff Sr. F 5-2 Arlington, Va. WOLF

23 Elizabeth Wright So. D 5-7 Redmond, Wash. RIGHT

* Junior year of athletic eligibility due to medical hardship

2009 Alphabetical Roster & Pronunciation Guide

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

No. Name yr. Pos. Ht. dOB Hometown High School/Club team(s)

00 Hanna Berglund Fr. G 6-0 6/3/91 Steamboat Springs, Colo. Steamboat Springs/Real Colorado

1 Caitlin Hulyo So. G 5-6 5/11/90 Lititz, Pa. Lancaster Catholic/Penn Strikers

2 Brennan O’Connell Fr. M/F 5-2 12/7/90 Littleton, Colo. Mullen/Riverside SC

3 Lauren Talbot Sr. D/M 5-4 10/25/87 Highland Village, Texas Marcus/Dallas Texans ‘88 Red North

5 Carter Vettese Fr. D/M 5-5 10/12/89 Pasadena, Calif. Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy/Wolfpack SC

7 Kelly LaVoie *Sr. M/F 5-6 2/19/88 Round Rock, Texas Stony Point/88 Lonestars Premier

8 Sydney Fetter Jr. D 5-6 5/10/89 Albuquerque, N.M. Bosque/Rio Vista FC 89 Showcase

9 Lauren Hatch Fr. M/D 5-6 11/9/90 Mesquite, Texas Dr. Ralph H. Poteet/Dallas Texans Red 91

10 Emily Beans *Sr. F 5-6 1/16/88 Griffith, Ind. Illiana Christian/America’s Soccer Club

11 Brittney Lyman Fr. M/F 5-3 3/30/91 Arvada, Colo. Arvada West/Real National

12 Jessie Kautz Sr. D 5-4 11/10/87 Truckee, Calif. Truckee/San Juan Spirits ‘88, Nevada Pride

13 Ericka Baer *Sr. M 5-8 1/27/88 Westlake Village, Calif. Westlake/SoCAL United

15 Hannah Peterson Fr. M/F 5-2 5/16/91 Denver, Colo. Mullen/Denver SC, CO Fusion & CO Rush Nike

16 Vanessa Newman Sr. M 5-9 3/2/88 Chevy Chase, Md. Bethesda-Chevy Chase/Reston FC Rovers

17 Alison Kreisler Sr. M 5-8 12/16/87 Escondido, Calif. San Pasqual/Rancho Santa Fe Attack

18 Sarah Wolff Sr. F 5-2 1/16/88 Arlington, Va. Yorktown/Reston FC Rovers

19 Meredith Smith Jr. M/F 5-5 9/28/88 Englewood, Colo. Mullen/Colorado Rush Nike

21 Kelsey Wise So. M 5-4 6/21/90 Fairview, Texas Allen/Texas Spirit

22 Lacey Wirt Jr. D 5-2 12/2/88 Fort Collins, Colo. Fort Collins/Fort Collins Arsenal

23 Elizabeth Wright So. D 5-7 6/10/90 Redmond, Wash. Eastlake/Washington Premier ‘89

24 Marika Viragh Fr. D/M 5-7 2/18/91 Columbus, Ohio The Wellington School/Eagles SC

25 Kaitlin Kirkpatrick Fr. M/F 5-5 12/10/90 Carmel, Ind. Carmel/Carmel United SC 91 Sparx

31 Tiffany Brown Jr. F 5-8 10/1/89 Sterling, Va. Park View/SYA Elite

* Junior year of athletic eligibility due to medical hardship

Head Coach: Geoff Bennett (Hartwick College ‘95)

Assistant Coaches: April Kater (Massachusetts ‘91); Heather Masters (Rhode Island ‘03)

Team Trainer: Jason Fox

Student Trainer: Amy Howard

Equipment Manager: Spud Hamilton

Student Manager: Emma Bailey

Media Relations Contact: Dave Moross

Tigers 2009 Numerical Roster

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

No. Name yr. Pos. Ht. dOB Hometown High School/Club team(s)

00 Hanna Berglund Fr. G 6-0 6/3/91 Steamboat Springs, Colo. Steamboat Springs/Real Colorado

1 Caitlin Hulyo So. G 5-6 5/11/90 Lititz, Pa. Lancaster Catholic/Penn Strikers

2 Brennan O’Connell Fr. M/F 5-2 12/7/90 Littleton, Colo. Mullen/Riverside SC

3 Lauren Talbot Sr. D/M 5-4 10/25/87 Highland Village, Texas Marcus/Dallas Texans ‘88 Red North

5 Carter Vettese Fr. D/M 5-5 10/12/89 Pasadena, Calif. Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy/Wolfpack SC

7 Kelly LaVoie *Sr. M/F 5-6 2/19/88 Round Rock, Texas Stony Point/88 Lonestars Premier

8 Sydney Fetter Jr. D 5-6 5/10/89 Albuquerque, N.M. Bosque/Rio Vista FC 89 Showcase

9 Lauren Hatch Fr. M/D 5-6 11/9/90 Mesquite, Texas Dr. Ralph H. Poteet/Dallas Texans Red 91

10 Emily Beans *Sr. F 5-6 1/16/88 Griffith, Ind. Illiana Christian/America’s Soccer Club

11 Brittney Lyman Fr. M/F 5-3 3/30/91 Arvada, Colo. Arvada West/Real National

12 Jessie Kautz Sr. D 5-4 11/10/87 Truckee, Calif. Truckee/San Juan Spirits ‘88, Nevada Pride

13 Ericka Baer *Sr. M 5-8 1/27/88 Westlake Village, Calif. Westlake/SoCAL United

15 Hannah Peterson Fr. M/F 5-2 5/16/91 Denver, Colo. Mullen/Denver SC, CO Fusion & CO Rush Nike

16 Vanessa Newman Sr. M 5-9 3/2/88 Chevy Chase, Md. Bethesda-Chevy Chase/Reston FC Rovers

17 Alison Kreisler Sr. M 5-8 12/16/87 Escondido, Calif. San Pasqual/Rancho Santa Fe Attack

18 Sarah Wolff Sr. F 5-2 1/16/88 Arlington, Va. Yorktown/Reston FC Rovers

19 Meredith Smith Jr. M/F 5-5 9/28/88 Englewood, Colo. Mullen/Colorado Rush Nike

21 Kelsey Wise So. M 5-4 6/21/90 Fairview, Texas Allen/Texas Spirit

22 Lacey Wirt Jr. D 5-2 12/2/88 Fort Collins, Colo. Fort Collins/Fort Collins Arsenal

23 Elizabeth Wright So. D 5-7 6/10/90 Redmond, Wash. Eastlake/Washington Premier ‘89

24 Marika Viragh Fr. D/M 5-7 2/18/91 Columbus, Ohio The Wellington School/Eagles SC

25 Kaitlin Kirkpatrick Fr. M/F 5-5 12/10/90 Carmel, Ind. Carmel/Carmel United SC 91 Sparx

31 Tiffany Brown Jr. F 5-8 10/1/89 Sterling, Va. Park View/SYA Elite

* Junior year of athletic eligibility due to medical hardship

Head Coach: Geoff Bennett (Hartwick College ‘95)

Assistant Coaches: April Kater (Massachusetts ‘91); Heather Masters (Rhode Island ‘03)

Team Trainer: Jason Fox

Student Trainer: Amy Howard

Equipment Manager: Spud Hamilton

Student Manager: Emma Bailey

Media Relations Contact: Dave Moross

12

Class: SeniorPosition: DefenderHeight: 5-4Date of Birth: November 10, 1987Major: Biology/Pre-MedHometown: Truckee, CaliforniaHigh School: Truckee Club Team: San Juan Spirits ‘88/Nevada Pride

AS A TIGER 2008: Kautz returned healthy and started in all 22 matches as a junior, helping to anchor a defense that surrendered only 19 goals all season...established herself as a durable and reliable left back with the potential to become a dominant force her final campaign at CC...spent spring break in Granada, Nicaragua, working as a volunteer at an ongoing Soccer Without Borders project there. 2007: Started in Colorado College’s first 11 games as a sophomore before suffering a season-ending injury...instrumental in a defensive effort that allowed only nine goals and posted five shutouts in those 11 outings.....a quick and explosive wide defender who hopes to return healthy and make an impact this season and next. 2006: The only Tiger to play every minute of every match, Kautz helped the Tigers limit their opponents to just over five shots on goal per outing...assisted on the game-winning goal by Emily Beans just 70 seconds into a 1-0 victory over Iowa State during the CC Invitational in mid-September.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEKautz earned first-team all-league and all-state recognition as a standout defender the last two seasons of her prep career while playing for Truckee High School…helped her team win a Nevada 3A state title her freshman year, when she played forward, and continued to be a perennial contender, reaching the finals in 2004 and the semifinals in 2005…participated in Nevada’s Olympic Development Program in 2002 and 2003, made the state team and went to regional camp before joining the San Juan Spirits ’88.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Jessie Marie Kautz, daughter of Rob and Kerry Kautz of Truckee, California...enjoys playing basketball, water skiing, snowboarding, skiing and reading when she’s not busy with soccer and school...a member of the All State Academic Team and recipient of the Evening of Excellence Award as a prep.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Jessie had a great spring season and we expect her to be a fierce 1v1 defender this fall. She always gives 100 percent, day in and day out, and we know we can count on her every game day to be focused and very effective.”

Jessie Kautz

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2006 22/22 0 1 12007 11/11 0 0 02008 22/22 0 0 0totals 55/55 0 1 1

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: SeniorPosition: MidfielderHeight: 5-8Date of Birth: December 16, 1987Major: NeuroscienceHometown: Escondido, CaliforniaHigh School: San PasqualClub Team: Rancho Santa Fe Attack

AS A TIGER2008: A smart player who is at her best when she keeps her game simple, Kreisler returned to CC’s midfield corps as a junior last season and became one of the team’s most reliable players off the bench...appeared in 17 games, scoring the first goal of her collegiate career in a 6-0 victory over Southern Miss after assisting on Lauren Talbot’s game winner in a 3-0 triumph over Army. 2007: Spent most of her sophomore season learning a new position as a central defender...made appearances in a substitute role in Conference USA victories over Tulsa and Marshall. 2006: Played in five matches – all victories – as a freshman...demonstrated an ability to play one- and two-touch, as well as a knack for staying out of trouble.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEKreisler was a three-sport athlete at Escondido’s San Pasqual High School…in soccer, she helped San Pasqual to three consecutive Valley League championships, as well as a California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) crown in 2006…served as captain her final two years, earning team MVP, first-team all-league and all-academic honors as a senior…previously named Freshman of the Year in 2002, when San Pasqual reached the CIF semifinals...her club team, Rancho Santa Fe Attack, won a WAGS title in 2004 and competed in the finals of the Boise Club Regionals in 2005.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Alison Deborah Kreisler, daughter of Fritz Kreisler and Nancy Caine of Escondido, California…enjoys creating scrapbooks, watching movies and shopping when she’s not busy with soccer and school…awarded GPA awards for softball and soccer 2002-2006 and named Biology Student of the Year in 2002 as a prep.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Al has gotten better every year and we expect her to take another step forward. She strikes a great ball, has good feet, and she should compete for time in the midfield block.”

17

Alison Kreisler

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2006 5/0 0 0 02007 2/0 0 0 02008 17/1 1 1 3totals 24/1 1 1 3

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3

Class: SeniorPosition: Defender/MidfielderHeight: 5-4Date of Birth: October 25, 1987Major: PsychologyHometown: Highland Village, TexasHigh School: MarcusClub Team: Dallas Texans ’88 Red North

AS A TIGER2008: Despite missing five games due to injury, Talbot established herself as a force to be reckoned with in a defensive corps that allowed opponents to score only 19 times all season...also tripled her career offensive production with the game-winning goal in a 3-0 non-conference victory over Army and the Tigers’ only tally in a 2-1 Conference USA playoff loss to East Carolina University, after which she was named to the All-Tournament Team...a tough, physical back with the potential to emerge as one of C-USA’s top defenders during her senior year. 2007: Started in 16 of CC’s 19 matches as a sophomore, demonstrating excellent versatility while playing both at midfield and in the back...her 1,464 minutes overall ranked fifth among all Tigers.2006: One of two CC players named to SoccerBuzz.com’s Central Region All-Freshman Team, Talbot started in all but one match her freshman season...her first goal as a Tiger was the game winner in the team’s Conference USA opener, a 1-0 victory over the University of Tulsa...she also assisted on a pair of GWGs against Houston and Memphis...maintained her high level of play in the post-season, earning all-tournament honors at the C-USA tournament as Colorado College upset UTEP and SMU before falling to UAB in the championship match.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGETalbot earned team MVP, all-state tournament and all-state academic honors as a senior at Marcus High School in 2006…also named all-state as a junior after raking in numerous county and district honors her first two years as a prep...tied for the team lead with nine goals in 2004 as Marcus won regional and state championships at the 5A level…helped her team claim a regional title in 2003, when Marcus eventually reached the state finals… participated in the Olympic Development Program for four years (2001-04)…her club team, the Dallas Texans ’88 Red North, won the girls U18 national championship in July 2006.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Lauren Michelle Talbot, daughter of Brent and Leslie Talbot of Highland Village, Texas...enjoys dancing, music, skiing and shopping when she’s not busy with soccer and school…named Magnificent Marauder for calculus AP as a prep.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Lauren is arguably our most effective defender. She’s very competitive, athletic, tough and a great leader by example. I expect Lauren to be a great force for us defensively and I know that she will give everything she has for our team.”

Lauren talbot

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2006 22/21 1 3 52007 16/16 0 0 02008 17/16 2 0 4totals 55/53 3 3 9

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: SeniorPosition: Forward Height: 5-2Date of Birth: January 16, 1988Major: MathematicsHometown: Arlington, VirginiaHigh School: YorktownClub Team: Reston Football Club Rovers

AS A TIGER2008: Honored as the team’s Most Improved Player for the second consecutive season after successfully adapting to an attacking position, Wolff came off the bench to play in 20 of CC’s 22 games as a junior last fall...scored the first goal of her collegiate career in a 6-0 victory over Southern Miss that improved the Tigers overall record to 10-3-1 in early October...spent spring break in Granada, Nicaragua, working as a volunteer at an ongoing Soccer Without Borders project there. 2007: Made appearances in shutout victories over Conference USA opponents Tulsa and Marshall en route to being named co-recipient of CC’s Most Improved Player award, and the only Tiger to earn a C-USA Commissioner’s Academic Medal for the first of two consecutive years...demonstrated an excellent work ethic and sense for the game as a sophomore. 2006: Played in two matches as a freshman, helping the Tigers defeat Bucknell (5-0) and Stephen F. Austin (3-2) in non-conference action at home.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEWolff was one of Yorktown High School’s leading scorers and is a four-time all-district selection, having earned first-team honors as a sophomore, junior and senior… helped Yorktown claim four consecutive district titles and reach the regional semifinals in 2006, when the team finished 17-2…played for the Reston FC Rovers and spent three seasons (2003-05) in her state’s Olympic Development Program…was an alternate on the Virginia ODP regional tournament team in 2004…trained with and played for the Honolulu Bulls in the 2006 Hawaii International Cup.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Sarah Elizabeth Wolff, daughter of Holly and Rick Wolff of Arlington, Virginia...enjoys playing basketball, snowboarding and music when she’s not busy with soccer and school…a math major, with a double minor in Spanish and physics, she also plans to complete the 4-2 engineering program...National Honor Society and Spanish Honor Society member, National Merit Scholar and AP Scholar as a prep.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Sarah was our most improved player last season and we expect her to be even more impactful this year. She will compete for time as a forward where she can come into a game and make her mark with her work ethic and ability to create in the final third.”

18

Sarah wolff

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2006 2/0 0 0 02007 2/0 0 0 02008 20/0 1 0 2totals 24/0 1 0 2

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13

Class: Junior/Senior Position: MidfielderHeight: 5-8Date of Birth: January 27, 1988Major: Biology/Pre-MedHometown: Westlake Village, CaliforniaHigh School: Westlake Club Team: SoCAL United

AS A TIGER2008: Baer emerged as recipient of the team’s Stephen J. Paul Award, presented annually to the player who best exemplifies the spirit of Tiger Soccer...played in 21 of CC’s 22 games, starting in 19...scored a goal in regular-season victories over Army (3-1), UAB (4-0) and Marshall University (3-1), as well as the game winner in a 1-0 Conference USA quarterfinal playoff triumph over UTEP...a second-team All-Academic selection in C-USA, and destined to emerge as one of the league’s top midfielders while making a major impact in 2009. 2007: Co-recipient of the team’s Most Improved Player Award, Baer returned to the lineup early in the season and quickly re-established herself in a starting role...demonstrated excellent poise, skill and ball-winning ability along with her intense desire to win...picked up her first career points with assists in victories over Southern Miss and Houston.2006: One of CC’s starting midfielders as a freshman before a knee injury in the fourth match of the season ended her rookie campaign...was granted an extra year of eligibility due to medical hardship.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEA starting midfielder at Westlake High School throughout her prep career, Baer helped her team win league championships in 2003 and 2004, as well as the California Interscholastic Federation title in 2003…earned first-team all-conference recognition all four years there, was second-team all-county three times and third-team all-CIF as a junior in 2004…a former team MVP at Westlake…her club team, SoCAL United, claimed a state crown in 2004 and finished the 2005 season as Premier League champion.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Ericka Whittni Baer, daughter of Erick and Jheri Baer of Thousand Oaks, California...enjoys snowboarding, dancing and wakeboarding when she’s not busy with soccer and school…a participant in CC’s Cover One international assistance project that received a $10,000 grant in 2008 from The Kathryn Wasserman Davis Projects for Peace.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Ericka has the ability to be the best midfielder in Conference USA when it comes to being a ball winner. She’s great in the air, has soft feet and can be a playmaker for us.”

ericka Baer

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2006 4/4 0 0 02007 16/11 0 2 22008 21/19 4 0 8totals 41/34 4 2 10

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: Junior/Senior Position: ForwardHeight: 5-6Date of Birth: January 16, 1988Major: BiologyHometown: Griffith, IndianaHigh School: Illiana ChristianClub Team: America’s Soccer Club

AS A TIGER2008: After emerging as Conference USA’s Preseason Offensive Player of the Year, Beans suffered an early injury that prematurely ended her campaign after only six games...started in CC’s first five outings and scored in two of the first three..her second tally was the game winner in a 2-1 victory over Idaho State University...has two years of athletic eligibility remaining after applying for medical hardship, and already ranks sixth on the program’s all-time chart with 24 career goals...also heads into this fall tied for 10th with 52 overall points as a Tiger. 2007: Scored nine times as a sophomore, tying for the team lead, and struck for the game winner in a 2-0 victory over Davidson College...voted All-Conference USA for the second consecutive season, earning first-team honors...also received All-Central Region recognition from NSCAA/adidas (first-team) and SoccerBuzz.com (third-team) after logging 1,539 minutes of playing time, fourth most on the team.2006: Finished as CC’s leading scorer with 13 goals and 29 points, earning Freshman All-America recognition from TopDrawerSoccer.com (first team) and SoccerBuzz.com (third team), along with national All-Freshman accolades from Soccer America (second team), in the process...voted Conference USA Freshman of the Year, she also received second-team all-league honors and a spot on the C-USA All-Freshman Team...she was a third-team All-Central Region (SoccerBuzz.com and NSCAA/adidas) selection, as well as being named to the Central Region All-Freshman Team (SoccerBuzz.com) ...among her 13 goals, the most by a Tiger rookie since Hall of Famer Kerri Tashiro scored 21 in 1986, were five game winners...she also assisted on the GWG in her collegiate debut, a 2-0 victory over California Riverside.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEA prolific scorer throughout her prep career, Beans finished with 152 goals and 53 assists in four seasons at Illiana Christian High School in Lansing, Illinois...served as team captain her last three years there, striking for 48 goals as a senior in 2006 when she earned all-state honors...a four-time all-sectional selection...named Prep Soccer Player of the Year in 2004 and in 2006 by the South Suburbs Times...led Illiana Christian to the conference finals on two occasions...as a member of America’s Soccer Club Team, she was involved in the Indiana Olympic Development Program for five years (2000-04).

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Emily Elizabeth Beans, daughter of Ross and Carol Beans of Griffith, Indiana...enjoys playing the French horn in her leisure time...a National Honor Society member throughout high school...one of 30 players from across the nation to attend an elite evaluation camp for the United States National Under-20 Team in February 2007.

COACH’S COMMENTS“We are looking forward to having Emily back on the field. We believe she will pick up right where she left off – running at people in the final third and being the most dangerous 1v1 player in C-USA.”

10

emily Beans

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2006 22/22 13 3 292007 19/19 9 1 192008 6/5 2 0 4totals 47/46 24 4 52

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

31

Class: JuniorPosition: ForwardHeight: 5-8Date of Birth: October 1, 1989Major: EnglishHometown: Sterling, VirginiaHigh School: Park ViewClub Team: SYA Elite

AS A TIGER2008: Brown repeated as an NSCAA/adidas All-Central Region selection, earning second-team honors after leading Colorado College in scoring for the second consecutive season...also received third-team All-Region recognition from SoccerBuzz.com...among her nine goals overall were three game winners in victories over Ball State (2-0), Conference USA champion Memphis (2-1) and the University of Houston (1-0), giving her seven GWG in two just campaigns as a Tiger...all three of her assists as a sophomore also came on game-winning tallies...with 18 goals and 42 points already in her collegiate career, she enters the 2009 campaign tied for 12th and 21st place on the program’s all-time charts. 2007: Made an immediate impact her rookie year, topping CC with 21 points and four game-winning goals...one of 54 players nationwide selected as a Freshman All-American (fourth team) by SoccerBuzz.com...earned an abundance of other post-season accolades including second-team All-Conference USA honors...also named to the C-USA All-Rookie Team, the SoccerBuzz.com Central Region All-Freshman Team, the TopDrawerSoccer.com All-Rookie second team, and the NSCAA/adidas All-Central Region third team...her nine goals overall tied her with Emily Beans for the CC lead.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEA three-sport athlete at Park View High School, where she also starred in basketball and track, Brown led the soccer team in scoring her freshman and sophomore years…involved in the Olympic Development Program as a member of her state team since 2003…also a top playmaker and scoring threat on her club team, SYA Elite, which won consecutive state championships in 2003, ’04, ’05 and ’06, as well as the Disney Showcase in 2006.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Tiffany Nicole Brown, daughter of Willie and Phyllis Brown of Sterling, Virginia...a member of the Foreign Language and National Honor Societies, she served as class president her last three years in high school…enjoys listening to music and reading in her leisure time.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Tiffany has the chance and ability to take the next step forward in her career. She can be a game changer and we are looking forward to her becoming more consistent, as well as the player in Conference USA opposing coaches focus on.”

tiffany Brown

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2007 19/13 9 3 212008 22/22 9 3 21totals 41/35 18 6 42

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: JuniorPosition: DefenderHeight: 5-6Date of Birth: May 10, 1989 Major: EconomicsHometown: Albuquerque, New MexicoHigh School: Bosque Club Team: Rio Vista FC 89 Showcase

AS A TIGER2008: Fetter factored in on three game-winning goals as a sophomore, scoring two in victories over Oklahoma (3-1) and SMU (2-1), and in between setting one up in a 2-0 triumph over Ball State...also scored a tally of her own in the contest against BSU...after making a position switch from defender to forward, improved upon her impressive rookie totals of the previous campaign with five goals and three assists overall...her 13 points ranked third highest among all Colorado College players. 2007: One of three defenders and 12 players overall voted to the Conference USA All-Freshman Team, Fetter finished as CC’s fourth leading scorer overall with three goals and a pair of assists...recipient of the team’s Rookie of Year Award...two of her tallies were game winners on the road, in victories at Ole Miss (2-1) and Southern Mississippi (2-0)...one of only seven Tigers to play in all 19 matches, starting in 18.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEFetter earned all-district and all-state honors as a sophomore in 2005 while helping district champion Bosque School reach the A-AAA state semifinals in New Mexico…was named team MVP a year later…twice (2003 and 2005) selected to the state’s Olympic Development Program roster…her club team, Rio Vista FC 89 Showcase, won a New Mexico crown in 2005 and was runner-up in 2006.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Sydney Elizabeth Fetter, daughter of Kelley and Sharon Fetter of Albuquerque, New Mexico...an honor-roll student all four years in high school and a UNM Star Scholar…is minoring in Spanish at CC...enjoys dancing, mountain biking, listening to music and watching Latin films in her leisure time.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Syd will be playing in the backline this year and we are very excited to get her leadership, composure and ability on the ball back into our defense. She had a great freshman year playing in the back and we are excited to get her back where she is comfortable.”

8

Sydney fetter

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2007 19/18 3 2 82008 21/14 5 3 13totals 40/32 8 5 21

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

7

Class: Junior/SeniorPosition: Midfielder/ForwardHeight: 5-6Date of Birth: February 19, 1988Major: EconomicsHometown: Round Rock, TexasHigh School: Stony Point Club Team: 88 Lonestars Premier

AS A TIGER2008: LaVoie returned healthy from an injury she suffered a year earlier, quickly regained her form and finished as Colorado College’s second leading scorer...tied for first among Conference USA players with six goals in league play...among her seven tallies overall were three game winners in victories over the University of Denver (2-1 in overtime), Southern Miss (6-0) and Marshall University (3-1)...struck twice in the shutout of USM...has two years of athletic eligibility remaining after winning a medical hardship case resulting from 2007. 2007: Logged only 27 minutes on opening weekend before suffering an injury that prematurely ended her season. 2006: Played in 21 games as a freshman, missing only the season finale against the University of Colorado due to an injury, and finished as CC’s second leading scorer behind fellow freshman Emily Beans...tied for the team lead with five assists, including one on the game-winning goal in a 1-0 victory over Air Force...also scored a pair of unassisted game winners of her own, in triumphs over Stephen F. Austin (3-2) and Marshall (3-1).

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGELaVoie received first-team all-district and team Offensive MVP honors all four years at Stony Point High School, where she struck for 109 goals during her prep career…a two-year captain who scored 33 times as a senior in 2006, leading Stony Point to a district championship while earning team MVP, all-region and academic all-state accolades…named Williamson County Player of the Year in ’06…also led Stony Point in assists her freshman and junior year…was involved with the South Texas Olympic Development Program for five years (2001-05)…helped her club team – 88 Lonestars Premier – finish as high as second in the state and rank 25th nationally.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Kelly Jean Ann LaVoie, daughter of Kevin and Karen LaVoie of Round Rock, TX...intends to major in economics at CC...enjoys tutoring elementary students, spin classes and hanging out with friends in her spare time…a National Honor Society member and Academic Excellence letter winner as a prep.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Kell is one of our most dangerous players going forward and has the talent to change a game. She loves to go 1v1 and we believe she can be both a great goal scorer and playmaker in the final third of the field.”

Kelly Lavoie

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2006 21/19 6 5 172007 1/1 0 0 02008 22/21 7 3 17totals 44/41 13 8 34

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: Junior/SeniorPosition: MidfielderHeight: 5-9Date of Birth: March 2, 1988Major: NeuroscienceHometown: Chevy Chase, MarylandHigh School: Bethesda-Chevy Chase Club Team: Reston Football Club Rovers

AS A TIGER2008: Newman sat out the entire season while continuing to rehabilitate from surgery a year earlier... was able to participate in spring practice, and after declaring medical hardship, now has two years of athletic eligibility remaining...a naturally left-footed player blessed with excellent technique and the ability to serve a great ball from the flank, she’s determined to make an impact her final two years at CC.2007: Came off the bench to compete in three matches early in the campaign, logging 60 strong minutes of playing time before suffering a season-ending injury.2006: One of Newman’s four appearances as a freshman included entry as a substitute into the Conference USA championship game against UAB (Alabama Birmingham).

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGENewman helped Bethesda Chevy Chase High School win a state championship in 2004, two regional titles in 2002 and 2004 and three divisional crowns in 2002, 2004 and 2005…served as team captain as a senior in 2005 and is a former MVP and winner of the Most Improved Player award, as well as a first-team All-County selection…helped her club team, the Reston FC Rovers, claim a Virginia State-Cup championship in 2004.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Vanessa Nicole Kramer Newman, daughter of Mark Newman and Carol Kramer of Chevy Chase, Maryland...enjoys spending time with friends, being outside, reading, watching movies, shopping and traveling in her leisure time…National Honor Society member, recipient of the Student Athlete Award and International Baccalaureate Diploma student as a prep.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Vanessa is coming off two years of injuries and we know that she will continue to work hard to get back to her level of play. She‘s a worker, is very dedicated, and we know that those qualities will help her get back onto the field.”

16

vanessa Newman

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2006 4/0 0 0 02007 3/0 0 0 02008 0/0 0 0 0totals 7/0 0 0 0

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: JuniorPosition: Midfielder/ForwardHeight: 5-5Date of Birth: September 28, 1988Major: NeuroscienceHometown: Englewood, ColoradoHigh School: MullenClub Team: Colorado Rush Nike

AS A TIGER2008: One of only six Tigers to play in all 22 matches last fall, when she started 18 times, Smith has yet to miss a game during her collegiate career...finished fourth on the team with 30 shots attempted and tied for fourth with 15 on goal. 2007: Earned five starting assignments as a freshman, and scored her first collegiate goal in a shutout victory at home over Marshall University late in the season...earlier collected her first career point with an assist against Rhode Island in the fifth game of the campaign.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGESmith was a standout performer at Mullen High School, where she helped the Lady Mustangs win a Class 5A state title as a senior in 2007…a two-time all-conference selection in the Centennial League, as well as the academic all-state team… led conference champion Mullen in assists and was second in points her junior year…former member (2002-05) of Colorado’s Olympic Development Program.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Meredith Colleen Smith, daughter of George and Cynthia Smith of Englewood, Colorado...has an older sister who plays soccer at Clemson University…four-time recipient of her high school’s annual Torch Award…plans to major in biology/pre-med at CC...enjoys hiking, skiing and traveling in the off-season.

COACH’S COMMENTS “Meredith can be a very dynamic 1v1 player for us as she has the ability to beat players out wide with her speed and ability on the ball. She improved greatly from her freshman to sophomore year and we know that she will continue to improve her game again this year.”

19

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2007 19/5 1 1 32008 22/18 0 0 0totals 41/23 1 1 3

Meredith Smith

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

22

Class: JuniorPosition: DefenderHeight: 5-2Date of Birth: December 2, 1988 Major: SociologyHometown: Fort Collins, Colorado High School: Fort CollinsClub Team: Fort Collins Arsenal

AS A TIGER2008: A quick, tenacious defender with the ability to get forward on the outside, Wirt started one game and came off the bench to play in 15 more as a sophomore last fall...has shown steady improvement her first two seasons at Colorado College and is destined to make more of an impact as she gains experience this season and next. 2007: Appeared in four matches as a freshman, earning a pair of starting assignments late in the season against Conference USA opponents Southern Miss and Marshall...averaged more than 53 minutes in those outings.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEWirt helped Fort Collins High School to Front Range Conference championships her first three years as a prep, earning honorable mention in the all-league voting as a junior in 2006…the Lambkins reached the state 5A finals in 2004, semifinals in 2005 and quarterfinals the last two years…team captain and a first-team academic all-state selection as a senior in 2007…her club team, Fort Collins Arsenal, won the State Cup in 2005 and was a finalist in 2000, 2003 and 2006.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Lacey Nicole Wirt, daughter of Tim and Candy Wirt of Fort Collins, Colorado...an academic team champion her freshman and junior years in high school, as well as a first-team academic all-state selection in 2006…a wide variety of interests include camping, cooking, hiking, music, reading, swimming, playing volleyball and just hanging out with friends.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Lacey is a very good 1v1 defender and is always one of our fittest players. We expect her to continue improving on the technical side of her game, and if she does, she can have a very successful junior year. Lacey will compete for a starting spot on our back line.”

Lacey wirt

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2007 4/2 0 0 02008 16/1 0 0 0totals 20/3 0 0 0

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: SophomorePosition: GoalkeeperHeight: 5-6Date of Birth: May 11, 1990Major: UndeclaredHometown: Lititz, PennsylvaniaHigh School: Lancaster CatholicClub Team: Penn Strikers

AS A TIGER2008: One of two Colorado College players voted to the Conference USA All-Freshman Team, Hulyo played in 13 matches overall including a relief appearance in both post-season games against UTEP and East Carolina...posted a pair of shutouts, in a 4-0 victory over UAB at home and a scoreless tie against regular-season league co-champion ECU on the road...also made seven saves while backstopping a 2-1 victory at SMU…her overall goals-against average of 0.83 was the best among all C-USA goalkeepers.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEStarting goalkeeper for the highly competitive Penn Strikers club team, Hulyo is a four-year veteran of the Region I Olympic Development Program...also was a member of the United States National U15 Pool in 2005...as a senior at Lancaster Catholic High School, which she helped win a sectional championship in 2006, she served as team captain, was named team MVP and earned first-team all-league recognition...listed among the nation’s Top 200 Recruits by SoccerBuzz.com.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Caitlin Ryan Hulyo, daughter of Michael and Julia Hulyo of Lititz, Pennsylvania...enjoys music, reading, anything outdoors, sporting events, traveling and watching movies in her leisure time...hopes to major in chemistry or environmental sciences at CC.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Caitlin has the ability to be the best goalkeeper in Conference USA and we are going to push her to become that. She is vocal, has great distribution and great hands. We expect a big year from her in goal.”

1

Caitlin Hulyo

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS w-L-t Minutes Svs Svs% GA GAA SO2008 13/6 4-3-1 864:31 33 .805 8 0.83 2

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: SophomorePosition: MidfielderHeight: 5-4Date of Birth: June 21, 1990Major: UndeclaredHometown: Fairview, TexasHigh School: AllenClub Team: Texas Spirit

AS A TIGER: 2008: Wise turned in a glittering rookie season, when she was one of only six Tigers to play in every match...earned All-Freshman Team honors in the Central Region from SoccerBuzz.com, as well as in Conference USA...assisted on the game-winning goal in her collegiate debut, a 3-1 opening-day victory over the University of Oklahoma…factored in on three GWG altogether, scoring one in a 4-0 triumph over UAB in early October after setting up Kelly LaVoie’s overtime tally against Denver three weeks earlier…also collected an assist in the game with UAB.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEWise earned High School All-America honors from the National Soccer Coaches Association of America as a junior in 2007...earned all-region recognition her last two years and was all-district all four years as a prep, including first-team accolades three times, during an illustrious career at two-time defending district champion Allen (Texas) High School...served as team captain and was named District Defensive Player of the Year in 2008...a former member (2002-04) of the North Texas ODP State Team.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Kelsey Lane Wise, daughter of Rick and Janet Wise of Fairview, Texas...enjoys hanging out with friends, watching movies, writing, reading, working out, going out to eat, baking and swimming in her spare time...hopes to major in biology at CC.

COACH’S COMMENTS“Kelsey had a great freshman year and we expect her to continue that as a sophomore. She covers ground, is very tough and has good technical ability for a midfielder. Kelsey always works very hard and we know she will do everything in her power to continue to improve and help our team.”

21

Kelsey wise

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2008 22/20 1 3 5

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

23

elizabeth wright

Class: SophomorePosition: DefenderHeight: 5-7Date of Birth: June 10, 1990Major: UndeclaredHometown: Redmond, WashingtonHigh School: EastlakeClub Team: Washington Premier ‘89

AS A TIGER2008: Wright started in all 14 of Colorado College’s games against Conference USA opponents, including both playoff matches, while establishing herself as a key member of a defense that allowed only 19 goals all season…handled most of the team’s corner kicks throughout her rookie campaign, picking up a pair of assists in victories over SMU and UAB.

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEWright completed her prep career at Eastlake High School last fall, helping her team go 19-0-0, win a state 4A championship and earn a No. 6 national ranking from the NSCAA...was named Eastlake’s Defensive Player of the Year, as well as to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer All-Star squad...a veteran of the U14, U15 and U16 National Team Pools, and a member of the Region 4 Olympic Development Program...listed among the nation’s Top 75 Recruits by SoccerBuzz.com, she was invited to and attended the USASA Elite Player National Team Camp in San Bernardino, Calif., in July 2008.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Elizabeth Jeanette Wright, daughter of Dean and Karolyn Wright of Redmond, Washington...lists snowboarding, skiing, wakeboarding, kneeboarding, wakeskating, running, hanging with friends, playing guitar hero, watching movies and listening to music among her many interests...recipient of the U.S. Army Reserve National Scholar/Athlete Award in 2008...has considered sports medicine, sports nutrition and sports psychology as potential fields of study at CC.

COACH’S COMMENTS “Beth has the ability to be one of the best defenders in C-USA and we expect her to make her mark on the conference this season. She’s vocal, composed, technical and a natural leader. Beth will be looked upon to provide us with stability and leadership from the back.”

CAReeR StAtIStICS

Season GP/GS G A Pts2008 19/18 0 2 2

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: FreshmanPosition: Goalkeeper Height: 6-0 Date of Birth: June 3, 1991 Major: UndeclaredHometown: Steamboat Springs, ColoradoHigh School: Steamboat Springs Club Team: Real Colorado

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEA versatile all-around athlete, Berglund was a two-time all-state selection in alpine skiing at Steamboat Springs High School, where she also lettered four years in soccer and one in basketball...helped backstop the soccer team to four consecutive playoff appearances, and served as captain of the ski team, a perennial contender for the state championship.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Hanna Marie Berglund, daughter of Peter and Renee Berglund of Golden, Colorado...a consistent academic all-state selection who lists Spanish and international business as potential fields of study at CC...enjoys camping and water skiing during her leisure time.

COACH’S COMMENTS “Hanna is a great athlete we believe will thrive in the college environment. We look forward to watching her train at this level and we are sure she will adapt quickly. Hanna has great presence and is also a good shot stopper.”

FAVORITESMusical Performer: Matchbox 20 Song: American pie by Don Mclean Movie: Remember the Titans Vacation Spot: Lake Okoboji, IA Food: Pasta Professional Sports Team: Broncos Professional Athlete: Kristine Lilly

Class: FreshmanPosition: Defender/Midfielder Height: 5-6 Date of Birth: November 9, 1990 Major: UndeclaredHometown: Mesquite, Texas High School: Dr. Ralph H. Poteet Club Team: Dallas Texans Red 91

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEAn all-region and all-district defender at Dr. Ralph H. Poteet High School in Mesquite, Texas, Hatch served as team captain her last two seasons and helped lead the team to an 18-1-1 regular-season record as a senior in 2009...District champion Poteet allowed only three goals the entire campaign... ...Hatch was named Defender of the Year in the district, as well as Academic All-State...scored 21 career goals and added 18 assists...her club team, Dallas Texans Red 91, is the defending U.S. Youth Soccer U17 national champion.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Lauren Nicole Hatch, daughter of Jeff and Carol Hatch of Mesquite, Texas...plans to major in psychology at Colorado College...enjoys drawing, watching movies, reading and hanging out with friends when she’s not busy with school work or athletics.

COACH’S COMMENTS “Lauren has a tremendous engine and work ethic, and we know that she will give us 100 percent effort at all times. She can play as an outside midfielder or outside back, and is very quick and tenacious. She also has the technical ability to jumpstart our attack from out wide. Lauren will love competing at this level.”

FAVORITESMusical Performer: Carrie Underwood Song: “My Life Would Suck Without You” by Kelly Clarkson Movie: Step Up Vacation Spot: Jackson Hole, Wyoming Food: Bacon Professional Sports Team: Dallas Stars Hockey Team Professional Athlete: Steve Ott

Hanna Berglund Lauren Hatch

00 9

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: FreshmanPosition: Midfielder/Forward Height: 5-5 Date of Birth: December 10, 1990 Major: UndeclaredHometown: Carmel, Indiana High School: Carmel High SchoolClub Team: Carmel United SC ’91 Sparx

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEA four-year letter winner in soccer at Carmel High School, where she also competed as a sprinter and long jump in track and field one season, Kirkpatrick helped her team win three consecutive conference championships...was involved in Indiana’s Olympic Development Program from 2003 until 2007, and has been the leading scorer for her club team – Carmel United SC ’91 Sparx – since its inception at U10.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Kaitlin Victoria Kirkpatrick, daughter of Rob and Sue Kirkpatrick of Carmel, Indiana...an exceptional student and recipient of numerous academic awards as a prep...interested in biology and creative writing as potential fields of study at CC...enjoys tutoring, lifeguarding, snowboarding, wakeboarding and photography among her interests outside soccer.

COACH’S COMMENTS “Kaitlin has very good speed and athleticism. We believe she can fit in either up top as a forward or as an outside midfielder. Kaitlin likes to run at people 1v1 and will give us a needed boost with regard to athleticism.”

FAVORITESMusical Performer: The Fray and OneRepublic Song: “Say All I Need” by OneRepublic Movie: Armageddon Vacation Spot: Negril, Jamaica Food: Spaghetti Professional Sports Team: Manchester United Professional Athlete: Cristiano Ronaldo

Class: FreshmanPosition: Midfielder/Forward Height: 5-3 Date of Birth: March 30, 1991 Major: UndeclaredHometown: Arvada, Colorado High School: Arvada West Club Team: Real National

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGELyman earned first-team all-conference and academic all-state honors all four years at Arvada West High School, where she was named team MVP after collecting 29 points (7 goals, 15 assists) as a senior last spring...scored nine goals as a junior in 2008, when her team reached the second round of the state 5A playoffs for the third consecutive campaign..served as a captain both season...was involved in Colorado’s Olympic Development Program from 2004 until 2007, and her club team – Real National – is the 2009 State Cup champion.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Brittney McCall Lyman, daughter of Christopher and Cynthia Lyman of Arvada, Colorado...a member of the National Honor Society who is interested in pre-med as a potential major at CC...was a placekicker on her high-school football team...enjoys skiing and snowboarding, as well as taking road trips and just hanging out with friends, during her leisure time.

COACH’S COMMENTS “Brittney can score goals and has a knack for performing on big stages. She will be a dangerous attacking player for us and can create opportunities for herself and her teammates. Brittney will help us greatly in the final third of the field with her ability as a pure finisher.

FAVORITESMusical Performer: Rascal Flats Song: Us Against the World (Christina Malian) Movie: A Walk to Remember Vacation Spot: Italy Food: Mom’s cooking and spaghetti Professional Sports Team: Pittsburgh Steelers Professional Athlete: Carli Lloyd

Kaitlin Kirkpatrick Brittney Lyman

25 11

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: FreshmanPosition: Midfielder/Forward Height: 5-2 Date of Birth: December 7, 1990Major: UndeclaredHometown: Llittleton, Colorado High School: Mullen Club Team: Riverside SC

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEO’Connell played on a pair of championship teams in recent years, first at Mullen High School, which claimed a 5A state title in 2007, then with Riverside SC, which claimed a State Cup crown in 2008...she and fellow Colorado College freshman Hannah Peterson were teammates at Mullen, where they both also played basketball.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Brennan O’Connell, daughter of Tim and Lauren O’Connell of Littleton, Colorado...interested in biology, neuroscience and pre-physical therapy as potential fields of study while at CC.

COACH’S COMMENTS “Brennan is quick and tenacious for her size and loves to take people on 1v1. She is a classic flank player, where she can run all day and can beat defenders 1v1 and provide great service. We look forward to seeing Brennan take her game to the next level.”

FAVORITESMusical Performer: Living Legends Song: Hey Baby Movie: Cars Vacation Spot: The mountains Food: Spaghetti Professional Sports Team: FC Barcelona Professional Athlete: Cristiano Ronaldo

Class: FreshmanPosition: Midfielder/Forward Height: 5-2 Date of Birth: May 16, 1991 Major: UndeclaredHometown: Denver, Colorado High School: MullenClub Team: Denver Soccer Club/CO Fusion, CO Rush Nike

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEA two-year captain at Mullen High School, Peterson earned all-state recognition as a senior in 2009, when she also was a first-team all-conference selection for the second consecutive season...Mullen won both the Colorado 5A championship and Centennial League title in ‘07...was involved in the state’s Olympic Development Program from 2005 until 2007, and was invited to the elite Region IV camp in ‘05.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Hannah Carol Peterson, daughter of John and Christa Peterson of Denver, Colorado...hopes to pursue a career in the medical field, possibly with nursing, pre-med, sports medicine or pediatrics...served as president of the student council her senior year in high school...enjoys outdoor activities such as biking, camping, hiking, skiing and whitewater rafting in her leisure time.

COACH’S COMMENTS “Hannah is a tough forward who likes to play with her back to the goal and who also works hard all the time. She also can run at defenders when the game calls for it and can create scoring opportunities for us. Hannah will also bring a great knack for creating chances due to her work ethic.”

FAVORITESMusical Performer: Michael Franti/The Fray Song: Say Hey Movie: Tommy Boy Vacation Spot: Costa Rica, Europe, the mountains, Maryland Food: Italian Professional Sports Team: Manchester United FCProfessional Athlete: Mia Hamm, Kristine Lily

Brennan O’Connell Hannah Peterson

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Class: FreshmanPosition: Defender/Midfielder Height: 5-5 Date of Birth: October 12, 1989Major: UndeclaredHometown: Pasadena, California High School: Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy Club Team: Wolfpack SC

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEVettese was named Soccer Player of the Year by the Glendale Newspress, Los Angeles Daily News and San Marino Star News her final season as a prep at Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy in Southern California, also earning all-area and first-team all-league honors for the second time...served as a team-co-captain her junior and senior years...her club team – Wolfpack SC – reached the Super Y national finals in 2006 and 2007.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Carter Anne Vettese, daughter of Mark and Jodi Vettese of Pasadena, California...has worked as a volunteer with the National Charity League since she was in the seventh grade, and tutored elementary school children in math throughout her four years in high school...

COACH’S COMMENTS “Carter can play either as a central defender or a central midfielder. She has very good technical skills and is able to read the game very well. We will look towards Carter to help us organize and dictate tactics, as well as bring us composure on the ball.”

FAVORITESMusical Performer: RadioheadSong: Three Little Birds (Bob Marley)Movie: Horror films and Disney moviesVacation Spot: The beach or mountainsFood: In-n-out BurgerProfessional Sports Team: Los Angeles LakersProfessional Athlete: Derek Fisher

Class: FreshmanPosition: Defender/Midfielder Height: 5-7 Date of Birth: February 18, 1991 Major: UndeclaredHometown: Columbus, Ohio High School: The Wellington School Club Team: Eagles Soccer Club

BEFORE COLORADO COLLEGEA two-year captain, as well as a prolific scorer and playmaker at The Wellington School in Columbus, Ohio, Viragh was named first-team All-District and team MVP in each of her final two seasons there...helped lead her team to the district semifinals in 2007 and 2008, and finished her four-year prep career with 28 goals and 70 assists including 11 and 25, respectively, as a senior in ‘08...also lettered in basketball at Wellington.

PERSONAL NOTESBorn Marika Kramer Viragh, daughter of Les Viragh of Dublin, Ohio, and Nancy Kramer of Columbus...recipient of numerous awards in biology, chemistry and math during her high-school career, as well as winning a Connecticut College Book Prize in 2008...interested in the arts.

COACH’S COMMENTS “Marika is the only left-footed player in our freshman class, which makes her very important. She can play centrally as a midfielder and control the game by playing quickly and simply, but we believe she could also play as a left back and be creative from playing deep.”

FAVORITESMusical Performer: U2 Song: “Montego Stay” (People Under the Stairs) Movie: Rocky Vacation Spot: Martha’s Vineyard Food: Lasagna Professional Sports Team: Cleveland Cavaliers Professional Athlete: Ronaldo de Assis Moreira

Carter Vettese Marika Viragh

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Tigers Proud of Past, Set Sites High for Future When Geoff Bennett was hired as head coach at Colorado College in April 2004, he inherited a program rich in tradition and success. In 2006, his third season at the helm, Bennett not only led the Tigers into a new phase of their storied history – as an affiliate member of Conference USA – but also guided them back to the NCAA playoffs for the first time in 15 years. A pioneer in the evolution of collegiate women’s soccer since the mid-1970s, as well as a perennial contender for the national championship in the late 1980s and early ‘90s, CC remains poised as ever to rekindle the memorable achievements of its past. Another experienced, veteran team shoots for the stars in 2009 while celebrating its 25th anniversary in the Division I ranks and its fourth in C-USA, determined to add yet another exciting chapter to a proud history that now spans 35 years overall.

The Early YearsIt all began in the spring of 1975. Officially formed as a club program, women’s soccer at Colorado College quickly earned a reputation as one of the most popular sports on campus. Steve Paul, a freshman reserve on the NCAA Division III men’s team, agreed to serve as coach and molded a team that went undefeated (8-0). That fall, the Tigers followed up with a 10-1 record, including a 4-0 mark in the inaugural CC Invitational, a tournament they won without allowing a goal in victories over the University of Colorado, Western State, Colorado State and Northern Colorado.

The first invitational in state history at the women’s intercollegiate level, the competition would continue for the next decade but needed only three years to become a national event. That happened in 1978, the same year that Paul’s troops attained varsity status. The Colorado College Invitational expanded to 11 teams, including Stanford, Cal-Santa Barbara, Texas and Wyoming. It received coverage from Soccer America Magazine, as well as from local and regional news media. By 1981, when CC hosted the seventh annual event, the University of Arizona and Indiana had joined the field. The Tigers won the tournament for the third time in 1983. Colorado College co-founded the Rocky Mountain Women’s Intercollegiate Soccer League in 1977 with charter members CU, CSU, UNC, Western State and the CU Medical Center. After merging with the men to form RMISL in ’78, the Tigers won league titles in ’81 and ’82. They were undefeated in league play and ranked as high as No. 9 nationally in the fall of 1982, going 14-4 overall in Paul’s final season at the helm. Paul, who was inducted into the Colorado College Athletics Hall of Fame in May 2004, left with an eight-year record of 110-46-7. His program had produced its first All-Americans in Kristen Fowler (1980), goalkeeper Robyn Waltz (1981) and Kathy Ludwig (1982), as well as several All-RMISL selections in Fowler (three times), Cheryl

Storied tradition Beckons for More Glory

Rainy weather could not dampen the spirits of Steve Paul and Judy Sondermann during the 1978 CC Invitational.

Martina Holan (1994-97), above, and Karla Thompson, (1988-91), right, rank No.2 and No.3, respec-tively, on CC’s all-time points chart.

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Murphy, Debbie Parks and Judy Sondermann. The school initially offered athletics scholarships for women’s soccer in the fall of 1981, and as Region VII champions, the Tigers received their first bid to the national post-season tournament in Chapel Hill, N.C., that same campaign. Meanwhile, increasing efforts to comply with Title IX legislation promised an even brighter future.

Birthplace of the National ChampionshipWhile establishing its own storied tradition, CC carved a special niche in the history of collegiate athletics as well. In 1980, Paul spearheaded an effort that brought seven teams to Colorado College from schools across the United States. At stake? The first-ever national collegiate championship for women’s soccer.

The Tigers, who had attained their varsity status just two years earlier, didn’t even participate after posting a 12-7-1 record that season. Instead, they let legitimate contenders from the University of North Carolina, Harvard, Texas A&M, UCLA, Cortland State of New York, Northern Colorado and Colorado State battle each other for bragging rights at present-day Washburn Field. Another and certainly no less important reason for the tournament was to earn an official sanction for the sport from the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women. And, by complying with and fulfilling guidelines set forth by the AIAW, Paul and his fellow organizers ultimately achieved their goal. After the Red Dragons of Cortland State claimed that inaugural crown, collegiate women’s soccer was off and running. North Carolina hosted and won the competition in 1981, under the AIAW’s sanction. A year later, the National Collegiate Athletic Association took over sponsorship of the event and crowned the University of Central Florida as champion. The rest is history. Colorado College, a pioneer in the development of the sport itself, takes great pride as the birthplace to the national tournament.

CC’s Golden EraThe early 1980s presented a dilemma in terms of gender equity. Deciding ultimately to upgrade a women’s sport rather than downgrade its Division I hockey program, the administration at Colorado College chose soccer as beneficiary of the change. Dang Pibulvech, an assistant at Central Florida, was hired as Paul’s successor. The Tigers celebrated his arrival with a 14-0-2 season in 1983 that saw them reach No. 7 in the national rankings but receive no bid to the NCAA playoffs.

MILeStONe yeARS

•   1975 – In their inaugural year as a club program, the Tigers go 8-0 in the spring season and 10-1 in the fall, including a 4-0 mark in the first Colorado College Invitational Tournament.

•   1978 – The Tigers attain varsity status while the CC Invitational expands to 11 teams and receives national coverage in Soccer America magazine.

•   1980 – Colorado College hosts the first national championship tournament.

•   1981 – CC initiates athletics scholarships for women’s soccer and receives its first bid to the AIAW-sanctioned national tournament in Chapel Hill, N.C.

•   1983 – Dang Pibulvech is hired as head coach. Tigers go undefeated at 14-0-2 and attain a No. 7 national ranking, but receive no national bid.

•   1986 – In its third consecutive trip to the NCAA tournament, CC reaches the national championship game.

•   1989 – The Tigers wind up national runners-up for the second time after losing to North Carolina in the NCAA championship match. Their final record of 16-4 includes playoff victories over Massachusetts (5-2) and Santa Clara (2-0).

•   1991 – Under second-year coach Carl Beal, CC earns a post-season bid for the eighth consecutive season and advances to the NCAA semifinals for the fifth time in seven years while tying a school record with 17 victories.

•   2000 – After tying a school record with eight consecutive victories to start the season, the Tigers go on to win their most matches since 1991 while finishing 13-7.

•   2001 – With a final record of 11-5-2, CC records its best winning percentage (.667) since 1991 and fewest losses since 1992.

•   2002 – A very young Colorado College team recovers from an 0-3 start to record the program’s third consecutive winning season (8-7-2), with three Tigers being voted to the national All-Independent team.

•   2004 – Geoff Bennett is hired as head coach.

•   2006 – Tigers join Conference USA as an affiliate member, finish as runner-up in the league’s post-season tournament with upsets of UTEP and regular-season champion SMU, and return to the NCAA playoffs for the first time in 15 years.

•   2008 – After tying for fourth place in the league standings for the third consecutive season, CC reaches the Conference USA semifinals before finishing with a winning percentage of .636 (13-7-2) overall.

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Competing primarily against Division I teams for the first time in 1984, CC took the next step. Pibulvech’s squad finished with an impressive 11-4-1 record including a 1-1 mark in the NCAA Tournament, defeating George Mason University, 2-1, in the first round before bowing out, 1-0 in a penalty-kick shootout after double overtime, to the University of California-Berkeley in the quarterfinals. In 1985, the Tigers officially entered the ranks of Division I and made their first of five national semifinal appearances within a span of seven years. Janine Szpara, the starting goalkeeper from 1985 through 1988, is one of only two student athletes in school history to earn All-America honors in her sport for four consecutive seasons. Szpara, along with former women’s soccer standouts Fowler, Tara Nott and Kerri Tashiro, are members of the Colorado College Athletics Hall of Fame. Starting with the undefeated season in 1983, the Tigers entered a “Golden Era” that would yield eight consecutive NCAA playoff bids (1984-91), two appearances in the championship match (1986 and ’89) and an overall winning percentage of .757 (164-49-11) against varsity opposition. The only prize that eluded them was the national title, as both trips to the finals ended with narrow defeats to North Carolina.

Moving Ahead in the 2000sA powerhouse among the Division I elite through the early 1990s, Colorado College can boast of 28 winning seasons in its previous 32 years of existence. While the ’90s were a bit lean in terms of NCAA playoff bids, the program still averaged 10 victories each season. Then, in 2000, the Tigers ushered in the new millennium with 13 victories, their most since 1991. A year later they recorded the program’s best winning percentage (.667) since 1991, going 11-5-2 while suffering CC’s fewest losses since 1992. In 2004, Bennett’s first season at the helm, they lost just twice in their final 13 games and finished 9-5-2.

They took a huge step forward in 2006, tying for fourth place in their inaugural season as a member of Conference USA, then earning an NCAA tournament bid after upsetting UTEP and regular-season champion SMU in the league playoffs. Along the way, Bennett’s troops attained a Top 25 national ranking and climbed as high as No. 8 in the Central Region poll.

History speaks for itself. Colorado College’s tradition of excellence has produced 14 All-Americans who have claimed a total of 23 plaques. Seven players have earned the ISAA/Adidas Scholar Athlete Award a total of 10 times, while many others have earned all-region recognition or district all-academic honors. Distinguished alumni such as Szpara, Tami Carteen, Charry Korgel, Robyn Neigel and Kris Zeits have gone on to play professionally in Japan. A handful more, including Maryclaire Robinson, Liza Grant and Karla Thompson – have graduated to the collegiate coaching ranks. The Tigers, who were 8-1-1 at home last season, own an incredible winning percentage of .825 (192-34-17) in 243 all-time games on the CC campus (Stewart and Washburn Fields) under Bennett and former coaches Pibulvech, Carl Beal (1991-93), Nicole Crepeau (1994-98),

COLORAdO COLLeGe IN tHe NCAA PLAyOffS

1984 Tigers 2, George Mason University 1 California 1, Tigers 0 (OT & penalty-kick shootout)

1985 Tigers 1, Wisconsin 0 Tigers 3, UC Santa Barbara 0 #North Carolina 2, Tigers 1 1986 Tigers 1, California 0 #Tigers 1, Massachusetts 0 (OT & penalty-kick shootout) *North Carolina 2, Tigers 0

1987 UC Santa Barbara 1, Tigers 0 1988 California 2, Tigers 1 (OT) 1989 Tigers 5, Massachusetts 2 #Tigers 2, Santa Clara 0 *North Carolina 2, Tigers 0 1990 Tigers 3, SMU 0 Tigers 2, Wisconsin 1 #North Carolina 2, Tigers 1 1991 Tigers 1, Stanford 0 (sudden-death OT) #Wisconsin 1, Tigers 0

2006 University of Colorado 2, Tigers 1

* denotes NCAA championship match # denotes NCAA semifinals

Overall Record in Tournament: 10-9 Record in Championship Games: 0-2

With 23 career assists, Maryclaire Robinson (1986-89) still ranks second on CC’s all-time list.

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1975Lynn HarrisonPeggy Reilly

1976Kim AustinDierdre Jo FrickeTracey HamillLori HorwitzSue JohnsonIllana Naylor

1977Denise FoleyLori JonesKris LauSue StenmarkSusan WhittleseyHilary Witt

1978Dee Dee CarlsonAlida ChanlerChris CowenPolly HewsonDottie HiersteingerNancy KittredgeSydney McNiffRuthie MerrellNancy NettletonJane SchapiroLiz ShacklefordMary WarnerLinda Weil

1979Cindy FloresDebbie ParksPam RhinehartMargaret Webb

1980Kathryn BeckleyNancy BristowPenny BrodeurMarly CardozoNancy CohenVicki GigliottiAnne JohansenSarah KingeryPam LumbardSharon MinzerCheryl MurphyJennifer MurryAnn OatmanSally TurnerCaroline Warren

1981Alice BiddleKristen FowlerKim HansonBeth LippittAlice PendletonPeggy SheehanJudy SondermannKathryn VolzTrish WollenweberJenny Wood

1982Carrie AmarosoJeannie ArmbrusterSue BrownSandy CollierTawana GillilandJanyce JaramilloLisa KitagawaJenny LewisKim LundLiz ManesRhonda PaynterCathy PfeifferMary SaffordBeverly Warren

1983Gail AllenLisa BrodeurShelly DaighKay DunshaneRobyn GoldmanJulie Keoppe Tina LeistnerDana NeillSue PayneJeanine RodriguezJudy SnyderSue Wolfe

1984Ali MorrisSusan NielandBetsy O’NeillStacie OultonJanet PhillipsNancy SchwappachMargot SmitCarol WillisRachel Young

wOMeN’S SOCCeR ALUMNAe

Continued on page 35

Greg Ryan (1999-2002) and Erik Oman (2003). That includes a perfect 5-0 record on Washburn’s AstroPlay surface. Toss in a 12-3 mark in 15 all-time matches at Stetson Hills Soccer Field in northeast Colorado Springs, along with a season-opening loss to William & Mary at Fountain Valley High School in 2001, and they officially are 204-38-17 in 259 home outings overall entering the 2009 season. And, with the thin air at 6,200 feet above sea level, there’s no reason to think out-of-town visitors will fare any better in the future.

Annie Hull, (1989-92), right, scored the game-winning goal in overtime of Colorado College’s longest match in history. The Tigers defeated Stanford University, 1-0, in the NCAA quarterfinals on November 16, 1991.

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Player (Position) team year

Kristin Fowler (M) First 1980

Robyn Waltz (G) First 1981

*Kathy Ludwig (F) Second 1982

*Sharon Hoag (D) Second 1983

Liza Grant (D) First 1984

*Kathy Ludwig (F) Third 1984

*Sharon Hoag (D) First 1985

*Janine Szpara (G) First 1985

*Shelley Separovich (D) Third 1986

*Janine Szpara (G) First 1986

Karen Willoughby (F) Third 1986

*Shelley Separovich (D) Second 1987

*Janine Szpara (G) First 1987

*Kerri Tashiro (F) First 1987

*Laura Jones (D) Second 1988

*Shelley Separovich (D) First 1988

*Janine Szpara (G) First 1988

*Laura Jones (D) Second 1989

Maryclaire Robinson (D) First 1989

*Kerri Tashiro (F) First 1989

Robyn Neigel (D) Second 1990

Karla Thompson (F) Second 1990

Cissy Wafford (F) Second 1990

* Earned multiple honors

Kathy Ludwig

Cissy Wafford

Laura Jones Janine Szpara

Liza GrantMaryclaire Robinson Shelley Separovich

Kristen FowlerKerri Tashiro

Robyn Neigel

Karen Willoughby

Karla Thompson

CC All-Americans

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Colorado College Athletics Hall of Fame

Mary Everett ‘99, who remains one of CC’s top 20 point producers of all time and also was a standout lacrosse player for the Tigers, was inducted into the Colorado College Athletics Hall of Fame in May 2008. Everett is one of six individuals with connections to women’s soccer now in the HOF, joining former players Kristen Fowler, Tara Nott, Janine Szpara and Kerri Tashiro along with the program’s first head coach, Steve Paul. The entire 1986 team, which reached the national championship game, also was inducted in October 2006.

1985Amy BloomBeth BransonIngrid Brook- KothlowAnne BushSara DaleJill ForsytheBetsy HamiltonMichelle HickeyKathy LudwigRobyn Waltz

1986Kim BeswickCarolyn DonnellySarah FlynnLiza GrantAllison GrimmJoanna HambidgeSharon HoagSheila JackAnn LindsayKathy MahoneyKaren RuehlMary SchonerLisa SeamanBetsy VosburghAmanda Whorf

1987Julie BartosMargot Stolte

1988Cheryl BartelsAnn CernicekNancy EberleBates FisherJennifer HickmanBrenda HullLibbey Sheldon

1989Lisa BeyerMichelle BulgerDeborah DumasMonica HoeneHoney HoganCheri HullKathy HutchingsJennifer MurpheeAnna ShorttJanine SzparaKaren Willoughby

1990Kristen JohnstonMaryclaire RobinsonKeri SchloredtShelley SeparovichKerri Tashiro

1991Lindsay ArmstrongMellissa Crabtree

Julianne CraigLaura JonesJennifer RodiMeg Williams

1992Tami CarteenAngie DiazCathy KinslowCharry KorgelCam MawStacy MesserRobyn NeigelNicole PlotkinTanya PrimeCissy WaffordKris Zeits

1993Stacy BlackAnnie HullTracey LoweJulie RappaportShelley RobinsonDara SmallKarla Thompson

1994Tamara BrowderTraci HolbrookJill JakowichLeslie JonesTara Nott

1995Sloan Miller

1996Lynn EvansErin GuinneeHeather JeffersonRebecca KernanPaula MathiasMary Kay MeintzerKatie ShenkAmy SnyderKatie Voorhees

1997Susan BierKatie BurdellEmily HinesKristen LaSassoAudrey MaxfieldMeagan McGuire

1998Robyn BilskiMartina HolanSusan HullLaura MurrayEmily Scherer

1999Sarah Reed BargrenAllison BukowskiCaroline Crittenden

Erin EdwardsMary EverettJessica Kehoe

2000Margaret BeckCorrine RobergeNicole RobergeThea RoggemanSydney Stoner

2001Kasey ClarkKris KiferMari MiezwaHaley MillerKyrsten Wilde

2002Sophie HinesAshley MagnusonJayme O’Bryan Molly Shea

2003Rebecca CarrollCortney Kitchen

2004 Caitlin CarlsonMolly HolmesBrittany KernanLia Martinez

2005 Christie GinanniAshley HooversonMeghann LosekeKelly Sweitzer

2006Kate ChadwickSarah ChadwickLindsay McDonald Courtney MitchelAlex West Laura Wilcox

2007Breanna KernanStephanie KernanKatlin Okamoto

2008Lisa BalsamaJessica BeinlichMegan CurreyWendy FarrensRachael HonickJamie MaltmanAmara Wilson

2009Alexa BannermanGeneva SillsMolly Uyenishi

wOMeN’S SOCCeR ALUMNAe (Continued)

Mary Everett, with her husband Jeff Connaroe, at the induction ceremony on May 10, 2008.

Robyn Neigel

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Season Record Coach Overall Record at CC

1975 (spring) 8-0 Steve Paul 110-46-8 (.695)/71-42-6 varsity (.622)1975 (fall) 10-1-0 Steve Paul 1976 (fall) 11-2-1 Steve Paul1977 (fall) 10-1-1 Steve Paul1978 (spring) 7-11-1 Steve Paul Program elevated to varsity status in 1978 1979 (spring) 11-7-1 Steve Paul1980 (spring) 12-7-1 Steve Paul1981 (spring) 9-8-1 Steve Paul1981 (fall) 18-5-2 Steve Paul Won RMISL championships in ’81 & ’82 1982 (fall) 14-4-0 Steve Paul

1983 14-0-2 Dang Pibulvech 119-26-8 (.804)1984 11-4-1 Dang Pibulvech Tigers begin string of eight consecutive NCAA tournament appearances1985 16-5 Dang Pibulvech Program attains Division I status in 1985 1986 17-4-1 Dang Pibulvech1987 15-3-1 Dang Pibulvech1988 14-3-1 Dang Pibulvech Reached NCAA championship in ’86 & ’89 1989 16-4 Dang Pibulvech1990 16-3-2 Dang Pibulvech

1991 17-3 Carl Beal 35-15-3 (.689)1992 9-4-3 Carl Beal Reached NCAA semifinals for fifth time in ’911993 9-8 Carl Beal

1994 4-11-1 Nicole Crepeau 41-47-7 (.468)1995 10-8-1 Nicole Crepeau1996 10-8-1 Nicole Crepeau1997 10-8-3 Nicole Crepeau1998 7-12-1 Nicole Crepeau

1999 8-9-2 Greg Ryan 40-28-6 (.581)2000 13-7 Greg Ryan2001 11-5-2 Greg Ryan2002 8-7-2 Greg Ryan

2003 8-9-2 Erik Oman 8-9-2 (.474)

2004 9-5-2 Geoff Bennett 54-32-11 (.613)2005 7-8-3 Geoff Bennett 2006 15-6-1 Geoff Bennett Earned ninth NCAA Tournament bid2007 10-6-3 Geoff Bennett2008 13-7-2 Geoff Bennett Reached C-USA semifinals

Year-by-Year Coaches’ Records

Nicole Crepeau

Erik Oman

Geoff Bennett

Greg Ryan

Steve Paul

Dang Pibulvech

Carl Beal

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Stewart Field’s integral role as a site for Colorado College athletic activities has spanned eight decades. Since its creation in the wash-up of a 1935 flood, the field has served the needs of baseball, football, lacrosse and soccer at CC, and has undergone many changes en route to becoming the current home turf for men’s and women’s varsity soccer, as well as the women’s lacrosse team.

Originally plotted as a city park, the open facility borders Washburn Field in the northwest corner of campus. In the early days, it was used mainly as a baseball field and practice area for football. Men’s soccer began using it from time to time in the early 1950s. In 1962, when the sport attained varsity status, Stewart was designated as its home field.

The first real renovations, however, did not occur until the late 1960s, when lack of maintenance and overgrowth of weeds forced the soccer team to temporarily move to Bonny Park, located about a mile further north on the east side of Monument Creek. The team’s first-ever NCAA playoff game, against St. Louis University in 1966, was played at adjacent Washburn Field.

With the inception of a women’s soccer program in the mid-1970s, Stewart Field still had no natural lines or definition. Its boundaries consisted of trees to the north and south, the creek to the west and a heavily wooded area to the east where wild animals roamed, lovers sought privacy and soccer balls disappeared for years. Nearby sorority houses overlooked the playing field from the hillside on the eastern fringe, and a steep, dangerous stairway leading down from McGregor Hall offered the most widely used entrance and exit.

Today, the landscape is clear and the natural-grass playing surface accommodates a regulation-size soccer field. An enclosed two-story press box, which houses a modest medical trainer’s room on its lower level, was built at midfield along the west sideline in the late 1990s, and covered benches were added in 2003. On the hill leading to CC’s newest dormitories to the east of the field, spectators can relax and watch a game with the snow-capped summit of Pikes Peak towering just a few miles to the west at 14,115 feet above sea level.

fACILIty ReCORdS

Most goals in a Match By Colorado College 12 (vs. College of St. Benedict, Oct. 5, 1986)

By Opponent 5 (by University of Hartford, Sept. 3, 1994)

By Both teams Combined 12 (Tigers and College of St. Benedict, Oct. 5, 1986)

By an Individual Player 4, by CC’s Ann Cernicek (vs. St. Benedict, Oct. 5, 1986)

fastest two Goals 17 seconds (by Cissy Wafford and Tara Nott vs. North Carolina State, Oct. 14, 1991)

Season Superlatives for CC

Most Victories 13 (in 1990)

Most Losses 6 (in 1994)

Ties 3 (in 1997)

Overtime Games 4 (in 1997)

Most Goals Scored 47 (in 1986, 11 matches)

Most Goals Allowed 20 (in 1994, 11 matches)

Shutouts 9 (in 1986)

Times Shut Out 2 (three times)

Most Consecutive (by Colorado College)

Victories 19 (1991-93)

Games Without a Loss 19 (19-0-0)

Losses 3, several times

Games Without a Victory 3, several times

Longest Match 129 minutes, 52 seconds (CC 1, Stanford 0 in NCAA quarterfinals, Nov. 16, 1991)

Soccer tradition at CC – Stewart field

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SCHOOL wON LOSt tIed Gf GA LASt MeetINGAir Force Academy 9 3 0 23 17 2006Alabama, University of 1 0 0 5 2 1996Alabama-Birmingham (UAB) 3 1 0 11 4 2008Arizona, University of 0 1 1 0 1 2004Arizona State University 0 1 0 0 2 1999Arkansas, University of 4 2 0 15 8 2000Army (U.S. Military Academy) 1 0 0 3 0 2008

Ball State University 1 0 0 2 0 2008Barry University 1 0 0 3 2 1988Baylor University 1 1 1 6 6 2001Belmont University 1 0 0 5 0 1999Boston College 0 1 0 0 1 1984Boston University 2 0 0 4 2 2003Brigham Young University 1 0 0 3 1 1998Brown University 2 0 0 7 3 1988Bucknell University 1 0 0 5 0 2006

California-Berkeley 4 8 3 9 18 2007California-Davis 1 1 1 6 4 2005California-Riverside 1 0 0 2 0 2006California-Santa Barbara 4 5 0 12 12 2002Cal State-Dominguez Hills 1 0 0 2 0 1987Cal State-Long Beach 1 0 0 4 2 1984Cal State-Northridge 1 0 0 1 0 1995Carleton College 2 0 0 20 0 1986Central Florida, University of (UCF) 2 2 1 6 6 2008Central Michigan University 1 0 0 4 1 2005Cincinnati, University of 3 0 0 10 2 1989Colgate University 1 0 1 5 4 1999Colorado, University of 3 5 0 17 10 2006Colorado State University 1 0 0 3 0 pre-1984Connecticut, University of 3 2 1 7 6 1991Cornell University 2 0 0 5 1 2000Cortland State 1 0 0 4 2 1986Creighton University 6 1 2 22 8 2002

Dartmouth College 1 1 0 1 3 2002Davidson College 1 0 1 4 2 2007Denver, University of 15 4 1 57 14 2008DePaul University 0 1 0 1 2 2003Drake University 1 0 0 2 1 2003Duke University 1 0 0 4 2 1991

East Carolina University 1 2 1 4 5 2008Eastern Washington University 1 0 1 6 1 2004Evansville, University of 0 1 0 1 2 1997

Fairfield University 0 0 1 1 1 2003Florida Atlantic University 0 1 0 0 1 2003 Florida International University 1 0 0 4 1 1999

George Mason University 3 2 2 7 10 1997George Washington University 3 0 0 6 1 1998Georgia State University 1 0 0 2 0 2001Gustavus Adolphus College 1 0 0 9 1 pre-1984

All-time Records vs. Opponents (Through 2008 Season)

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TIGER SOCCER 2009 All-time Records vs. Opponents (Through 2008 Season)

SCHOOL wON LOSt tIed Gf GA LASt MeetINGHartford, University of 2 2 0 8 8 1994Harvard University 1 0 0 5 4 2001Hawaii, University of 1 1 0 1 1 1997Houston, University of 3 0 0 6 2 2008

Idaho, University of 2 0 0 7 3 2004Idaho State University 1 0 0 2 1 2008Illinois, University of 0 2 0 1 4 2008Illinois State University 1 0 0 4 1 1996Indiana/Purdue-Indianapolis 1 0 0 8 0 1999Iowa, University of 2 0 0 5 0 2005Iowa State University 1 1 0 1 2 2006

Kansas, University of 0 1 0 1 2 2005

Liberty University 1 0 0 2 0 2004Long Island University 0 0 1 0 0 2008Louisiana-Monroe, Univ. of 1 0 0 3 0 2000Louisiana State University 1 0 0 3 0 1997Loyola College (Md.) 1 0 0 2 1 2007Loyola Marymount University 0 1 0 0 2 1999Lynn University 0 0 1 2 2 1995

Macalester College 1 0 0 8 0 1984Marshall University 3 0 0 13 2 2008Maryland, University of 0 1 0 1 2 1996Maryville College 1 0 0 3 0 1986Massachusetts, University of 3 4 0 10 12 1995McNeese University 1 0 0 1 0 2007 Memphis, University of 2 0 0 3 1 2008Metropolitan State College 13 0 0 45 4 1993Michigan State University 2 2 0 5 7 2004Minnesota, University of 0 0 1 1 1 1994Mississippi, University of 2 0 0 5 3 2007Missouri, University of 0 1 0 0 1 2005Missouri-Rolla, University of 1 0 0 8 0 1986Missouri-St. Louis, University of 2 1 1 7 3 1987Montana, University of 4 5 0 15 17 2005

Nebraska, University of 1 2 0 4 7 2005Nevada-Las Vegas 0 0 1 0 0 2003New Hampshire, University of 1 0 1 1 0 2002New Mexico, University of 5 3 0 13 9 2003North Carolina, University of 0 11 0 4 39 1998North Carolina-Greensboro 1 0 0 2 1 2002North Carolina State 2 1 1 9 7 1991North Texas, University of 0 1 0 0 7 1998Northeast Missouri State 1 0 0 8 1 pre-1984Northern Arizona, University of 2 0 0 7 2 2004Northern Colorado, University of 15 0 0 49 3 2004Northern Illinois University 1 0 0 3 0 2003Northern Iowa, University of 1 0 0 2 1 2002Northwestern University 1 1 0 4 7 2004

Oakland University 0 1 0 1 2 2005Ohio University 1 0 0 3 0 2006Oklahoma, University of 2 0 0 5 2 2008Oklahoma State University 0 0 1 0 0 2007Oral Roberts University 1 0 0 3 1 1998Oregon State University 0 3 0 1 5 1999

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

SCHOOL wON LOSt tIed Gf GA LASt MeetINGPacific, University of The 0 1 0 0 1 2006Pepperdine University 2 1 1 3 4 2003Portland, University of 3 3 0 10 12 1999Portland State University 2 1 0 11 2 2002Princeton University 0 0 1 1 1 2002Providence College 1 0 0 2 0 2005Puget Sound, University of 1 0 0 3 0 1985Purdue University 0 1 0 1 2 2008

Radford University 2 0 0 5 1 1986Regis University 5 0 0 27 1 1993Rhode Island, University of 1 1 0 2 2 2007Rice University 1 2 0 3 4 2008Rutgers University 1 0 0 3 0 1989

Sacramento State 1 1 1 7 4 2006St. Benedict, College of 1 0 0 12 0 1986St. Mary’s College (Calif.) 8 4 2 27 15 2007San Diego, University of 0 1 0 1 2 1999San Diego State University 1 1 1 5 9 2003San Francisco, University of 1 1 0 2 2 2001Santa Clara University 3 7 0 13 23 2001Sonoma State 1 0 0 1 0 1986Southern Illinois 1 0 0 2 0 pre-1984Southern Methodist University (SMU) 8 7 0 37 27 2008Southern Mississippi, University of 2 0 0 8 0 2008Stanford University 5 4 1 12 16 1997Stephen F. Austin 1 0 0 3 2 2006

Tennessee, University of 0 1 0 5 7 1998Texas, University of 1 1 0 3 1 1995Texas A & M 2 1 1 5 3 2003Texas Christian University 8 1 0 29 3 2007Texas El Paso (UTEP) 2 4 0 8 11 2008Texas State University 1 0 0 3 2 2004Texas Tech University 3 1 0 8 4 2006Toledo, University of 1 2 0 5 4 2004Trinity University 3 0 0 27 0 1985Tulane University 2 0 0 6 0 1996Tulsa, University of 7 2 1 24 10 2008

U.S. International 1 0 0 6 0 1987Utah, University of 1 0 0 5 0 1995Utah Valley State College 0 0 1 0 0 2004

Valparaiso University 1 0 0 1 0 2008Vanderbilt University 1 2 0 2 4 1998Virginia, University of 0 1 0 0 1 1992Virginia Tech 0 1 0 0 1 2005

Wake Forest University 0 2 0 0 5 2002Washington, University of 1 3 1 9 9 2003Washington State University 2 1 0 8 3 1995Weber State University 0 0 1 2 2 2002William & Mary 5 3 1 10 11 2001Wisconsin, University of 9 5 0 24 18 2005Wisconsin-Green Bay 2 0 0 12 2 1999Wisconsin-Milwaukee 0 1 0 0 1 2005Wyoming, University of 6 0 0 12 2 2000

Xavier University 1 0 0 4 0 2004

All-time Records vs. Opponents (Through 2008 Season)

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TIGER SOCCER 2009 All-time Records vs. Opponents (Through 2008 Season)

Location: Des Moines, Iowa Founded: 1881 Enrollment: 5,617 Conference: Missouri Valley School Colors: Blue & White Nickname: Bulldogs Home Field (w/capacity): Cownie Soccer Complex (1,000) President: David Maxwell Director of Athletics: Sandy Hatfield Clubb Women’s Soccer Region: Central Web Site: www.godrakebulldogs.com Year as Division I Program: 8th Trips to NCAA Tournament: One Most Recent: 2006

Head Coach: Lindsey Horner Alma Mater: University of Kansas ‘01 Record at School/Years: 8-10-1/1 year Career Record/Years: Same Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 8-10-1 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 4-2/3rd place Media Relations Contact: Sean Palchick Office Phone: (515) 271-4147 E-mail Address: [email protected]

drake university, aug . 28, at Stewart Field

Location: Pullman, Washington Founded: 1890 Enrollment: 25,135 Conference: Pac-10 School Colors: Crimson & Gray Nickname: Cougars Home Field (w/capacity): Lower Soccer Field (2,000) President: Elson S. Floyd Director of Athletics: Jim Sterk Women’s Soccer Region: West Web Site: www.wsucougars.com Year as Division I Program: 21st Trips to NCAA Tournament: Four Most Recent: 2008

Head Coach: Matt Potter Alma Mater: West London Record at School/Years: 55-43-6/6 years Career Record/Years: Same Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 10-6-5 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 4-3-2/5th place Media Relations Contact: Craig Lawson Office Phone: (509) 335-0265 E-mail Address: [email protected]

Washington State university, aug . 30, at Stewart Field

Location: Seattle, Washington Founded: 1861 Enrollment: 31,474 (undergraduate) Conference: Pacific-10 School Colors: Purple & Gold Nickname: Huskies Home Field (w/capacity): Husky Soccer Field (2,100) President: Mark Emmert Director of Athletics: Scott Woodward Women’s Soccer Region: West Web Site: www.gohuskies.com Year as Division I Program: 19th Trips to NCAA Tournament: Nine Most Recent: 2008

Head Coach: Lesle Gallimore Alma Mater: California ‘86 Record at School/Years: 157-127-20/15 years Career Record/Years: 189-152-29/19 years Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 15-6-1 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 5-3-1/Tied for 3rdMedia Relations Contact: Rosie Leutzinger Office Phone: (206) 685-3119 E-mail Address: [email protected]

university of Washington, Sept . 6, at Seattle

Location: Fort Worth, Texas Founded: 1873 Enrollment: 8,865 Conference: Mountain West School Colors: Purple & White Nickname: Horned Frogs Home Field (w/capacity): Garvey-Rosenthal Stadium (1,500) Chancellor: Victor J. Boschini Director of Athletics: Daniel B. Morrison Women’s Soccer Region: Central Web Site: www.gofrogs.comYear as Division I Program: 24th Trips to NCAA Tournament: None

Head Coach: Dan Abdalla Alma Mater: Nevada-Las Vegas ‘97 Record at School/Years: 34-34-6/4 years Career Record/Years: 88-72-14/9 years Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 11-4-2 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 4-2-1/3rd place Media Relations Contact: Matt Hoover Office Phone: (817) 257-5299 E-mail Address: [email protected]

Texas christian university, Sept . 11, at Stewart Field

2009 Opponents

Location: Portland, OregonFounded: 1901 Enrollment: 3,300 Conference: West CoastSchool Colors: Purple & WhiteNickname: Pilots Home Field (w/capacity): Merlo Field (4,892)President: Rev. E. William BeauchampDirector of Athletics: Larry WilliamsWomen’s Soccer Region: WestWeb Site: www.portlandpilots.comYear as Division I Program: 24thTrips to NCAA Tournament: 16 Most Recent: 2008

Head Coach: Garrett Smith Alma Mater: Portland ‘91 Record at School/Years: 116-17-7/6 years Career Record/Years: SameTeam’s 2008 Overall Record: 20-2Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 7-0/1st placeMedia Relations Contact: Jason Brough Office Phone: (503) 943-8439 E-mail Address: [email protected]

university of Portland, Sept . 4, at Seattle

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Location: Durham, New HampshireFounded: 1866 Enrollment: 14,000 Conference: America East School Colors: Blue & WhiteNickname: Wildcats Home Field (w/capacity): Lewis Fields (1,000)President: Mark HuddlestonDirector of Athletics: Marty ScaranoWomen’s Soccer Region: NortheastWeb Site: www.unhwildcats.comYear as Division I Program: 25thTrips to NCAA Tournament: None

Head Coach: Michael Jackson Alma Mater: Maine-Presque Isle ‘77 Record at School/Years: 109-136-24/14 years Career Record/Years: SameTeam’s 2008 Overall Record: 6-11-1Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 5-3/3rd placeMedia Relations Contact: Eric Coplin Office Phone: (603) 862-0717 E-mail Address: [email protected]

university of new hampshire, Sept . 18, at Stewart Field

Location: San Luis Obispo, California Founded: 1901 Enrollment: 19,779 Conference: Big West School Colors: Forest Green & Gold Nickname: Mustangs Home Field (w/capacity): Alex G. Spanos Stadium (11,075) President: Warren J. Baker Director of Athletics: Alison Cone Women’s Soccer Region: West Web Site: www.gopoly.com Year as Division I Program: 15th Trips to NCAA Tournament: 5 Most Recent: 2004

Head Coach: Alex Crozier Alma Mater: Cal Poly ‘84 Record at School: 202-105-34/17 years Career Record: Same Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 10-9-1 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 5-3/3rd place Media Relations Contact: Chris Giovannetti Office Phone: (805) 756-7513 E-mail Address: [email protected]

cal Poly, Sept . 20, at Stewart Field

Location: Dallas, Texas Founded: 1911 Enrollment: 10,981 Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Red & Blue Nickname: MustangsHome Field (w/capacity): Westcott Field (4,000) President: R. Gerald Turner Director of Athletics: Steve Orsini Women’s Soccer Region: CentralWeb Site: www.smumustangs.comYear as Division I Program: 23rd Trips to NCAA Tournament: 12 Most Recent: 2006

Head Coach: Brent Erwin Alma Mater: Texas Christian ‘97 Record at School/Years: 15-20-2/2 years Career Record/Years: Same Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 6-13-1 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 4-7-0/8th place Media Relations Contact: David Waxman Office Phone: (214) 768-1054 E-mail: [email protected]

Smu, Sept . 25, at Stewart Field

Location: Tulsa, Oklahoma Founded: 1894Enrollment: 4,100Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Old Gold, Royal Blue & CrimsonNickname: Golden HurricaneHome Field (w/capacity): Hurricane Soccer & Track Stadium (2,000)President: Steadman UphamDirector of Athletics: Bubba Cunningham Women’s Soccer Region: CentralWeb Site: www.TulsaHurricane.comYear as Division I Program: 22ndTrips to NCAA Tournament: None

Head Coach: Kyle Cussen Alma Mater: Southern Nazarene ‘94 Record at School/Years: 8-9-3/1 year Career Record/Years: 118-83-16/11 years Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 8-9-3 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 3-6-2/9th place Media Relations Contact: Stephanie Hall Office Phone: (918) 631-2163 E-mail: [email protected]

university of Tulsa, Sept . 27, at Stewart Field

Location: Birmingham, Alabama Founded: 1969 Enrollment: 16,246 Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Forest Green & Old Gold Nickname: Blazers Home Field (w/capacity): West Campus Field (2,500) President: Carol Garrison Director of Athletics: Brian Mackin Women’s Soccer Region: Southeast Web Site: www.uabsports.com Year as Division I Program: 14th Trips to NCAA Tournament: Two Most Recent: 2006

Head Coach: Paul Harbin Alma Mater: Mercer University ‘85 Record at School/Years: 126-117-17/13 years Career Record/Years: 163-143-19/17 years Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 7-11-2 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 5-4-2/7th place Media Relations Contact: Michelle Cunningham Office Phone: (205) 934-0725 E-mail Address: [email protected]

uaB, oct . 2, at Stewart Field

Location: Lawrence, Kansas Founded: 1866 Enrollment: 30,102 Conference: Big 12 School Colors: Crimson & Blue Nickname: Jayhawks Home Field (w/capacity): Jayhawk Soccer Complex (1,000) Chancellor: Bernadette Gray-Little Director of Athletics: Lew Perkins Women’s Soccer Region: Central Web Site: www.kuathletics.com Year as Division I Program: 14th Trips to NCAA Tournament: Four Most Recent: 2008

Head Coach: Mark Francis Alma Mater: SMU ‘87 Record at School/Years: 117-78-15/10 years Career Record/Years: 150-104-16/13 years Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 13-8-2 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 4-5-1/7th place Media Relations Contact: Mike Cummings Office Phone: (785) 864-3575 E-mail Address: [email protected]

university of kansas, Sept . 13, at Stewart Field

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Location: Hattiesburg, Mississippi Founded: 1910 Enrollment: 15,000 Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Black & Gold Nickname: Golden Eagles Home Field (w/capacity): Marshall Bell Track and Soccer Complex (1,500) President: Martha SaundersDirector of Athletics: Richard GianniniWomen’s Soccer Region: CentralWeb Site: www.southernmiss.comYear as Division I Program: 13th Trips to NCAA Tournament: None

Head Coach: Scott Ebke Alma Mater: Nebraska ‘99 Record at School/Years: 5-13-1/1st year Career Record/Years: Same Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 5-13-1 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 1-10-0/12th place Media Relations Contact: Jason Kirksey Office Phone: (601) 266-5332 E-mail Address: [email protected]

Southern miss, oct . 9, at marshall Bell complex

Location: Orlando, Florida Founded: 1963Enrollment: 50,254Conference: Conference USASchool Colors: Black and GoldNickname: KnightsHome Field (w/capacity): UCF Soccer Complex (1,000)Chancellor: John C. HittDirector of Athletics: Keith R. TribbleWomen’s Soccer Region: SoutheastInternet Address: www.ucfathletics.comYear as Division I Program: 29thTrips to NCAA Tournament: 13 Most Recent: 2008

Head Coach: Amanda Cromwell Alma Mater: Virginia ‘92 Record at School/Years: 141-63-14/10 years Career Record/Years: 161-78-15/12 years Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 14-6-3 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 7-2-2/3rd place Media Relations Contact: Brian Ormiston Office Phone: (407) 823-2409 E-mail Address: [email protected]

ucF, oct . 11, at ucF Soccer complex

Location: Greenville, North Carolina Founded: 1907 Enrollment: 25,990 Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Purple & Gold Nickname: PiratesHome Field (w/capacity): Bunting Field Chancellor: Steve Ballard Director of Athletics: Terry Holland Women’s Soccer Region: SoutheastWeb Site: www.ecupirates.comYear as Division I Program: 15th Trips to NCAA Tournament: None

Head Coach: Rob Donnenwirth Alma Mater: West Virgina Wesleyan ‘88 Record at School/Years: 98-71-27/10 years Career Record/Years: 160-97-36/15 years Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 14-4-4 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 7-0-4/Tied for 1st Media Relations Contact: Sarah Fetters Office Phone: (252) 737-4520 E-mail: [email protected]

east carolina university, oct . 16, at Stewart Field

Location: Huntington, West Virginia Founded: 1837 Enrollment: 13,814 Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Green & White Nickname: Thundering HerdHome Field (w/capacity): Sam Hood Field (1,500) President: Stephen J. Kopp Director of Athletics: Bob Marcum Women’s Soccer Region: Mid-AtlanticInternet Address: www.herdzone.comYear as Division I Program: 12th Trips to NCAA Tournament: None

Interim Head Coach: Kevin Long Alma Mater: George Mason ‘93 Record at School/Years: 5-10-4/1 year Career Record/Years: Same Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 5-10-4 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 3-8-0/11th placeMedia Relations Contact: Paige Schneider Office Phone: (304) 696-5276 E-mail: [email protected]

marshall university, oct . 18, at Stewart Field

Location: Houston, Texas Founded: 1891 (first classes in 1912) Enrollment: 5,145 Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Blue & Gray Nickname: OwlsHome Field (w/capacity): Rice Track/Soccer Stadium (5,000) President: David W. Leebron Director of Athletics: Chris DelConte Women’s Soccer Region: CentralWeb Site: www.riceowls.comYear as Division I Program: Ninth Trips to NCAA Tournament: Two Most Recent: 2005

Head Coach: Chris Huston Alma Mater: North Carolina ‘92 Record at School/Years: 82-64-10/8 years Career Record/Years: 104-80-12/10 years Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 10-9-0 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 6-5-0/6th place Media Relations Contact: John Sullivan Office Phone: (713) 348-5636 E-mail: [email protected]

rice university, oct . 23, at Stewart Field

Location: Memphis, Tennessee Founded: 1912 Enrollment: 20,379 Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Blue & Gray Nickname: Tigers Home Field (w/capacity): Mike Rose Complex (3,000) President: Shirley C. Raines Director of Athletics: R.C. Johnson Women’s Soccer Region: Central Web Site: www.gotigersgo.com Year as Division I Program: 16th Trips to NCAA Tournament: Two Most Recent: 2008

Head Coach: Brooks Monaghan Alma Mater: Memphis ‘94 Record at School/Years: 94-74-11 (9 years) Career Record/Years: 94-74-11 (9 years) Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 15-5-2 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/ Finish: 8-2-1/Tied for 1st Media Relations Contact: Mark Taylor Office Phone: (901) 678-5294 E-mail Address: [email protected]

university of memphis, oct . 4, at mike rose complex

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TIGER SOCCER 2009

Game No. 1 – auG. 22, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsUniv. of Oklahoma 1 0 – 1Colorado College 2 1 – 3First half: 1. CC-Emily Beans 1 (unassisted) 0:27; 2. OU-Kelsey Kraft 1 (Katie Corbitt) 11:52; 3. CC-Sydney Fetter 1 (Alexa Bannerman 1, Kelsey Wise 1) 24:52.Second half: 4. CC-Own Goal (Corner kick) 53:51.Shots (on goal): Oklahoma 3 (2); Colorado College 16 (10). Goalkeeper saves: OU-Lisa Jett (90:00) 7; CC-Geneva Sills (90:00) 1. Corner kicks: OU 3, CC 7; Fouls: OU 9, CC 9. Att. – 246.

Game No. 2 – auG. 29, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsValparaiso Univ. 0 0 – 0Colorado College 1 0 – 1First half: 1. CC-Molly Uyenishi 1 (Tiffany Brown 1) 14:55.Second half: No scoring.Shots (on goal): Valparaiso 10 (5); Colorado College 18 (8). Goalkeeper saves: VU-Male Cabral (90:00) 7; CC-Geneva Sills (90:00) 5. Corner kicks: VU 1, CC 4; Fouls: VU 12, CC 11. Att. – 188.

Game No. 3 – auG. 31, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsIdaho State Univ. 1 0 – 1Colorado College 1 1 – 2First half: 1. ISU-Joyner Crosby 1 (unassisted) 22:52; 2. CC-Tiffany Brown 1 (Sydney Fetter 1) 31:54.Second half: 3. CC-Emily Beans 2 (Tiffany Brown 2) 64:03.Shots (on goal): Idaho State 9 (6); Colorado College 22 (14). Goalkeeper saves: ISU-Michelle Harrison (45:00) 8, Bailey Williams (45:00) 4;CC-Geneva Sills (90:00) 5. Corner kicks: ISU 2, CC 2; Fouls: ISU 10, CC 6. Att. – 308.

Game No. 4 – Sept. 5, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsLong Island Univ. 0 0 0 0 – 0Colorado College 0 0 0 0 – 0First half: No scoring.Second half: No scoring.Overtime: No scoring.Shots (on goal): Long Islands 11 (3); Colorado College 23 (12). Goalkeeper saves: LIU-Christine DeLashmutt (110:00) 12; CC-Emma Bailey (110:00) 3. Corner kicks: LIU 1, CC 5; Fouls: LIU 12, CC 10. Att. – 63.

Game No. 5 – Sept. 7, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsBall State Univ. 0 0 – 0Colorado College 0 2 – 2First half: No scoring.Second half: 1. CC-Tiffany Brown 2 (Sydney Fetter 2) 57:22; 2. CC-Sydney Fetter 2 (unassisted) 69:07.Shots (on goal): Ball State 10 (4); Colorado College 16 (5). Goalkeeper saves: BSU-Rachel Murphy (90:00) 3; CC-Emma Bailey (90:00) 4. Corner kicks: BSU 5, CC 1; Fouls: BSU 15, CC 8. Att. – 185.

Game No. 6 – Sept. 13, 2008(@ AFA Falcon Invitational) Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 0 1 0 1 – 2University of Denver 1 0 0 0 – 1First half: 1. DU-Taryn Hemmings (Kari Storslett) 31:21.Second half: 2. CC-Tiffany Brown 3 (unassisted) 64:18.Overtime: 3. CC-Kelly LaVoie 1 (Kelsey Wise 2) 102:07.Shots (on goal): Denver 13 (5); Colorado College 13 (7). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Geneva Sills (102:07) 4; DU-Mackenzie Snyder (102:07) 5. Corner kicks: CC 3, DU 1; Fouls: CC 13, DU 10. Att. – 267.

tiger Soccer 2008 Game Summaries

Location: El Paso, Texas Founded: 1914 Enrollment: 20,000 Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Dark Blue, Orange & Silver Accent Nickname: MinersHome Field (w/capacity): University Field (500) President: Diana Natalicio Director of Athletics: Bob Stull Women’s Soccer Region: CentralWeb Site: www.utepathletics.comYear as Division I Program: 14th Trips to NCAA Tournament: One

Most Recent: 2005Head Coach: Kevin Cross Alma Mater: Austin College ‘95 Record at School/Years: 104-51-7/8 years Career Record/Years: Same Team’s 2008 Overall Record: 13-7-1 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/Finish: 6-4-1/Tied for 4th Media Relations Contact: Mark Brunner Office Phone: (915) 747-5722 E-mail: [email protected]

uTeP, oct . 30, at Stewart Field

Location: Houston, Texas Founded: 1927Enrollment: 36,098Conference: Conference USA School Colors: Scarlet & White, with Navy trim Nickname: CougarsHome Field (w/capacity): John O’Quinn Field at Robertson Stadium/32,000 President: Renu Khator Director of Athletics: Mack Rhoades Women’s Soccer Region: CentralWeb Site: www.uhcougars.comYear as Division I Program: 12th Trips to NCAA Tournamen: None

Head Coach: Susan Bush Alma Mater: North Carolina ‘04 Record at School/Years: 11-22-3/2 years Career Record/Years: SameTeam’s 2008 Overall Record: 7-10-1 Team’s 2008 Conference Record/Finish: 3-7-1/10th place Media Relations Contact: Jillian Rogers Office Phone: (713) 743-9404 E-mail: [email protected]

university of houston, oct . 25, at Stewart Field

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Game No. 7 – Sept. 14, 2008(@ AFA Falcon Invitational)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 1 2 – 3Army 0 0 – 0First half: 1. CC-Lauren Talbot 1 (Alison Kreisler 1) 35:09.Second half: 2. CC-Ericka Baer 1 (Sydney Fetter 3) 59:08; 3. CC-Molly Uyenishi 2 (Penalty kick) 60:42.Shots (on goal): Army 7 (4); Colorado College 19 (9). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Geneva Sills (45:00) 3, Caitlin Hulyo (45:00) 1; Army-Alex Lostetter (67:15) 5, Brittany Fearnside (22:45) 1. Corner kicks: CC 8, Army 1; Fouls: CC 6, Army 10. Att. – 255.

Game No. 8 – Sept. 19, 2008(@ Champaign, Ill.)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 0 0 – 0Univ. of Illinois 1 1 – 2First half: 1. UI-Chichi Nweke 3 (unassisted) 3:00.Second half: 2. UI-Marti Desjarlais (Laura Knutson) 86:36.Shots (on goal): Illinois 12 (4); Colorado College 6 (1). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Geneva Sills (73:39) 2, Caitlin Hulyo (16:21) 0; UI-Alexandra Kapicka (90:00) 1. Corner kicks: CC 1, UI 3; Fouls: CC 10, UI 9. Att. – 721.

Game No. 9 – Sept. 21, 2008(@ W. Lafayette, Ind.)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 0 1 – 1Purdue Univ. 2 0 – 2First half: 1. PU-Loredana Riverso 4 (Kellie Phillips) 25:19; 2. PU-Alex Jenkins 1 (Loredana Riverso, Felicia Schroeder) 37:40.Second half: 3.CC-Tiffany Brown 4 (Kelly LaVoie 1, Molly Uyenishi 1) 85:34.Shots (on goal): Purdue 8 (4); Colorado College 8 (3). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Geneva Sills (45:00) 1, Caitlin Hulyo (45:00) 1; PU-Jenny Bradfisch (90:00) 2. Corner kicks: CC 7, PU 3; Fouls: CC 8, PU 17. Att. – 240.

Game No. 10 – Sept. 26, 2008(@ Dallas, Texas)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 0 2 – 2SMU 0 1 – 1First half: No scoring.Second half: 1.CC-Molly Uyenishi 3 (Elizabeth Wright 1) 50:22; 2. SMU-Lauren Shepherd 1(Corner kick) 59:43; 3. CC-Sydney Fetter 3 (Tiffany Brown 3) 83:12.Shots (on goal): SMU 19 (8); Colorado College 8 (2). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Caitlin Hulyo (90:00) 7; SMU-Ashley Gunter (90:00) 0. Corner kicks: CC 9, SMU 4; Fouls: CC 10, SMU 8. Att. – 292.

Game No. 11 – Sept. 28, 2008(@ Tulsa, Okla.)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 0 0 – 0Univ. of Tulsa 0 1 – 1First half: No scoring.Second half: 1. TU-Alyvia Rogers 1 (unassisted) 49:09.Shots (on goal): Tulsa 3 (1); Colorado College 8 (3). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Caitlin Hulyo (90:00) 0; TU-Kendall Harclerode (90:00) 3. Corner kicks: CC 6, TU 1; Fouls: CC 9, TU 9. Att. – 103.

Game No. 12 – oCt. 3, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsAlabama-Birmingham 0 0 – 0Colorado College 2 2 – 4First half: 1. CC-Kelsey Wise 1 (Alexa Bannerman 2) 7:56; 2. CC-Kelly LaVoie 2 (Kelsey Wise 3) 21:54.Second half: 3. CC-Ericka Baer 2 (Kelly LaVoie 2) 53:49; 4. CC-Molly Uyenishi 4 (Elizabeth Wright 2) 57:43.Shots (on goal): Alabama-Birmingham 10 (6); Colorado College 25 (14). Goalkeeper saves: UAB-Kate Blankenship (90:00) 10; CC-Caitlin Hulyo (90:00) 6. Corner kicks: UAB 4, CC 8; Fouls: UAB 7, CC 10. Att. – 149.

Game No. 13 – oCt. 5, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsUniv. of Memphis 1 0 – 1Colorado College 1 1 – 2First half: 1. CC-Tiffany Brown 5 (unassisted) 18:42; 2. UM-Emiko Schwab (unassisted) 37:06.Second half: 3. CC-Tiffany Brown 6 (unassisted) 65:32.Shots (on goal): Memphis 20 (10); Colorado College 9 (4). Goalkeeper saves: UM-Jordan Boyle (90:00) 2; CC-Geneva Sills (90:00) 9. Corner kicks: UM 5, CC 5; Fouls: UM 6, CC 8. Att. – 255.

Game No. 14 – oCt. 10, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsSouthern Miss 0 0 – 0Colorado College 2 4 – 6First half: 1. CC-Kelly LaVoie 3 (Alexa Bannerman 3) 13:03; 2. CC-Tiffany Brown 7 (Alexa Bannerman 4).Second half: 3. CC-Kelly LaVoie 4 (Penalty kick) 71:55; 4. CC-Alison Kreisler 1 (Corner kick) 74:34; 5. CC-Sydney Fetter 4 (unassisted) 74:50; 6. CC-Sarah Wolff 1 (unassisted) 84:22.Shots (on goal): Southern Miss 4 (1); Colorado College 26 (17). Goalkeeper saves: USM-Holly Cox (45:00) 9, Hannah Vanderboegh (45:00) 2; CC-Geneva Sills (90:00) 1. Corner kicks: USM 5, CC 14; Fouls: USM 7, CC 6. Att. – 418.

tiger Soccer 2008 Game Summaries

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Game No. 15 – oCt. 12, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsUCF 1 0 0 1 – 2Colorado College 1 0 0 0 – 1First half: 1. CC-Kelly LaVoie 5 (unassisted) 3:36; 2. UCF-Hanna Wilde 3 (Becca Thomas) 28:48.Second half: No scoring.Overtime: 3. UCF-Christina Petrucco 1 (Becca Thomas) 107:43.Shots (on goal): Central Florida 15 (10); Colorado College 20 (7). Goalkeeper saves: UCF-Aline Reis (107:43) 5, Team 1; CC-Caitlin Hulyo (88:00) 5, Geneva Sills (19:43) 2, Team 1. Corner kicks: UCF 9, CC 7; Fouls: UCF 8, CC 14. Att. – 421.

Game No. 16 – oCt. 17, 2008(@ Greenville, N.C.)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 0 0 0 0 – 0East Carolina 0 0 0 0 – 0First half: No scoring.Second half: No scoring.Overtime: No scoring.Shots (on goal): East Carolina 12 (7); Colorado College 11 (5). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Caitlin Hulyo (110:00) 7; ECU-Amber Campbell (110:00) 5. Corner kicks: CC 2, ECU 5; Fouls: CC 8, ECU 8. Att. – 712.

Game No. 17 – oCt. 19, 2008(@ Huntington, W.Va.)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 2 1 – 3Marshall Univ. 1 0 – 1First half: 1. CC-Ericka Baer 3 (Kelly LaVoie 3) 2:28; 2. MU-Kristen Berquist (Angela Desumma) 14:21; 3. CC-Kelly LaVoie 6 (unassisted) 42:10.Second half: 4. CC-Sydney Fetter 5 (Alexa Bannerman 5) 75:33.Shots (on goal): Marshall 10 (3); Colorado College 13 (7). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Caitlin Hulyo (90:00) 2; MU-Liz Orton (90:00) 4. Corner kicks: CC 5, MU 2; Fouls: CC 14, MU 15. Att. – 157.

Game No. 18 – oCt. 24, 2008(@ Houston, Texas)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 1 0 – 1Rice University 1 1 – 2First half: 1. CC-Tiffany Brown 8 (Alexa Bannerman 6) 8:20; 2. RU-Alexa Coralli 2 (Christine Petric) 27:06.Second half: 3. RU-Erin Scott 7 (Shelley Wong) 58:42.Shots (on goal): Rice 16 (4); Colorado College 10 (5). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Caitlin Hulyo (90:00) 2; RU-Meghan Erkel (90:00) 4. Corner kicks: CC 1, RU 3; Fouls: CC 13, RU 18. Att. – 359.

Game No. 19 – oCt. 26, 2008(@ Stewart Field)Scoring by PeriodsUniv. of Houston 0 0 – 0Colorado College 1 0 – 1First half: 1. CC-Tiffany Brown 9 (unassisted) 6:18.Second half: No scoring.Shots (on goal): Houston 13 (5); Colorado College 15 (9). Goalkeeper saves: UH-Shelby Scott (90:00) 8; CC-Geneva Sills (90:00) 5. Corner kicks: UH 4, CC 5; Fouls: UH 9, CC 11. Att. – 139.

Game No. 20 – oCt. 31, 2008(@ El Paso, Texas)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 1 0 – 1UTEP 0 2 – 2First half: 1. CC-Kelly LaVoie 7 (unassisted) 34:23.Second half: 2. UTEP-Jordan Freiberg 2 (Cara Nordin) 47:54; 3. UTEP-Tameka Sumter 10 (Chelsea Winbush, Nordin) 63:20.Shots (on goal): Colorado College 15 (4); UTEP 12 (7); . Goalkeeper saves: CC-Geneva Sills (75:38) 5, Caitlin Hulyo (14:22) 0; UTEP- Sara Kaltwasser (90:00) 3. Corner kicks: CC 3; UTEP 6; Fouls: CC 10; UTEP 12. Att. – 703.

Game No. 21 – Nov. 5, 2008Conference USA Quarterfinals(@ Houston, Texas)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 0 1 – 1UTEP 0 0 – 0First half: No scoring.Second half: 1. CC-Ericka Baer 4 (Alexa Bannerman 7) 80:25.Shots (on goal): Colorado College 12 (5); UTEP 11 (5). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Geneva Sills (45:00) 3, Caitlin Hulyo (45:00) 2; UTEP- Sara Kaltwasser (90:00) 4. Corner kicks: CC 3, UTEP 1; Fouls: CC 11, UTEP 9. Att. – 572.

Game No. 22 – Nov. 7, 2008Conference USA Semifinals(@ Houston, Texas)Scoring by PeriodsColorado College 1 0 0 – 1East Carolina 1 0 1 – 2First half: 1. CC-Lauren Talbot 2 (Molly Uyenishi 2) 33:57; 2. ECU-Jessica Woodward 2 (Alexis Foltz, Jessica Swanson) 35:53.Second half: No scoring.Overtime: 3. ECU-Own goal 95:48.Shots (on goal): Colorado College 12 (5); East Carolina 6 (4). Goalkeeper saves: CC-Geneva Sills (45:00) 2, Caitlin Hulyo (50:48) 0; ECU-Amber Campbell (95:48) 4. Corner kicks: CC 4, ECU 7; Fouls: CC 6, ECU 6. Att. – 277.

tiger Soccer 2008 Game Summaries

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GAMe-By-GAMe ReSULtS (Home matches in CAPS)date Opponent w/L/t Score GwG Other Goal Scorers Record8-22 UNIVERSITY of OKLAHOMA W 3-1 Fetter Beans, own goal 1-0-08-29 VALPARAISO UNIVERSITY W 1-0 Uyenishi 2-0-08-31 IDAHO STATE UNIVERSITY W 2-1 Beans Brown 3-0-09-5 LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY T 0-0ot 3-0-1 9-7 BALL STATE UNIVERSITY W 2-0 Brown Fetter 4-0-1 9-13 vs University of Denver* W 2-1ot LaVoie Brown 5-0-19-14 vs Army* W 3-0 Talbot Baer, Uyenishi 6-0-19-19 @ University of Illinois L 0-2 6-1-19-21 @ Purdue University L 1-2 Brown 6-2-19-26 @ SMU W 2-1 Fetter Uyenishi 7-2-19-28 @ University of Tulsa L 0-1 7-3-1 10-3 UAB W 4-0 Wise LaVoie, Baer, Uyenishi 8-3-110-5 UNIVERSITY of MEMPHIS W 2-1 Brown (2) 9-3-110-10 UNIV. of SOUTHERN MISS W 6-0 LaVoie (2) Brown, Kreisler, Fetter, Wolff 10-3-110-12 UCF L 1-2ot LaVoie 10-4-110-17 @ East Carolina University T 0-0ot 10-4-210-19 @ Marshall University W 3-1 LaVoie Baer, Fetter 11-4-210-24 @ Rice University L 1-2 Brown 11-5-210-26 University of Houston W 1-0 Brown 12-5-210-31 @ UTEP L 1-2 LaVoie 12-6-211-5 # vs UTEP W 1-0 Baer 13-6-211-7 # vs East Carolina University L 1-2ot Talbot 13-7-2 Record at home: 8-1-1 Record on road (including neutral sites): 5-6-1 * Air Force Academy Falcon Invitational # Conference USA Tournament

MISCeLLANeOUS teAM StAtIStICS Shots SOG PK CK Fouls Colorado College 325 157 2-2 110 211 Opponents 234 108 0-0 76 226

INdIvIdUAL StAtIStICSPlayer GP/GS G(GWG) A(GWA) Pts. Shots (SOG) BROWN, Tiffany 22/22 9(3) 3(3) 21 64/32LaVOIE, Kelly 22/21 7(3) 3 17 51/24 FETTER, Sydney 21/14 5(2) 3(1) 13 44/25UYENISHI, Molly 22/22 4(1) 2 10 26/11BAER, Ericka 21/19 4(1) 0 8 17/8BANNERMAN, Alexa 21/21 0 7(4) 7 12/4WISE, Kelsey 22/20 1(1) 3(2) 5 26/15TALBOT, Lauren 17/16 2(1) 0 4 17/5BEANS, Emily 6/5 2(1) 0 4 12/7KREISLER, Alison 17/1 1 1(1) 3 7/4WOLFF, Sarah 20/0 1 0 2 8/3WRIGHT, Elizabeth 19/18 0 2 2 6/0SMITH, Meredith 22/18 0 0 0 30/15WIRT, Lacey 16/1 0 0 0 3/1 KAUTZ, Jessie 22/22 0 0 0 2/2ORTIZ, Kaley 2/0 0 0 0 0/0RHODES, Erin 2/0 0 0 0 0/0HULYO, Caitlin 13/7 0 0 0 0/0SILLS, Geneva 14/13 0 0 0 0/0Opponent “Own Goals” -- -- -- -- --Totals 22 37(13) 24(11) 98 325/157

GOALKeePeRSPlayer GP/GS W-L-T Minutes Saves GA Svs% GAA SOBAILEY, Emma 2/2 1-0-1 200:00 7 0 1.000 0.00 2HULYO, Caitlin 13/6 4-3-1 864:31 33 8 .805 0.83 2SILLS, Geneva 14/13 8-4-0 991:07 48 11 .814 1.00 3Team 1 2Totals 22/22 13-7-2 2055:38 89 19 .824 0.83 9 Opponents 22/22 7-13-2 2055:38 120 37 .764 1.62 4

SCORING By PeRIOd 1st 2nd Ot Ot2 totalCC 17 19 0 1 37 Opps. 11 6 1 1 19

KEY: GP/GS: games played/started; GWG: game-winning goals; GWA:Assists on GWG; SOG: shots on goal; PK: penalty kicks attempted-scored on; CK: corner kicks; GA: goals against; GAA: goals against average; SO: shutouts

tiger Soccer 2008 Game Summaries 2008 Results and Statistics

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2008 GAMe-wINNING GOALS Date Opponent Score GWG Time /Period Assist(s) 8-22 Oklahoma 3-1 Fetter (1) 24:52/1st half Bannerman (1), Wise (1)8-24 Valparaiso 1-0 Uyenishi (1) 14:55/1st half Brown (1)8-31 Idaho State 2-1 Beans (1) 64:03/2nd half Brown (2)9-7 Ball State 2-0 Brown (1) 57:22/2nd half Fetter (1) 9-13 Denver 2-1 LaVoie (1) 102:07/overtime Wise (2) 9-14 Army 3-0 Talbot (1) 35:09/1st half Kreisler (1) 9-26 SMU 2-1 Fetter (2) 83:12/2nd half Brown (3) 10-3 UAB 4-0 Wise (1) 7:56/1st half Bannerman (2) 10-5 Memphis 2-1 Brown (2) 65:32/2nd half unassisted 10-10 Southern Miss 6-0 LaVoie (2) 13:03/1st half Bannerman (3)10-18 Marshall 3-1 LaVoie (3) 42:10/1st half unassisted10-26 Houston 1-0 Brown (3) 6:18/1st half unassisted11-5 UTEP 1-0 Baer (1) 80:25/2nd half Bannerman (4)

Note: Numbers in parentheses indicate how many GWG or assists on GWG for the season. LaVoie has scored three while Bannerman and Brown have assisted on three apiece to lead the team in those categories.

HAt tRICK CLUB

Player Opponent Score Year

Ashley Hooverson University of Idaho 4-2 2004Jessica Reyes Harvard 5-4 2001Martina Holan St. Mary’s College 4-0 1997Martina Holan University of Colorado 5-2 1996Martina Holan University of Alabama 5-2 1996Martina Holan Univ. of Wisconsin-Green Bay 7-0 1995Traci Holbrook Washington State University 6-0 1991Cissy Wafford University of Washington 6-0 1991Cissy Wafford Metropolitan State College 5-1 1990Kerri Tashiro University of Massachusetts 5-2 1989Kerri Tashiro Santa Clara University 3-2ot 1988Kerri Tashiro University of Denver 5-0 1986Kerri Tashiro Carleton College 11-0 1986Maryclaire Robinson University of Denver 10-0 1988Karen Willoughby Carleton College 11-0 1986Ann Cernicek Carleton College 11-0 1986Ann Cernicek College of St. Benedict 12-0 1986Jennifer Hickman College of St. Benedict 12-0 1986Jennifer Murphree Southern Methodist University 6-0 1986

ISAA/AdIdAS SCHOLAR AtHLeteSPlayer year

Jennifer Murphree . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1986Anna Shortt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1986Shelley Separovich . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1987/88Kerri Tashiro . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1987/88/89Kris Zeits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1989/90/92Tami Carteen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1990Traci Holbrook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1993

SeNIOR ReCOGNItION teAM SeLeCtIONS

Player Year

Sharon Hoag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1985Sheila Jack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1985Margot Stolte . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1986Cheryl Bartels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1987Jennifer Hickman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1987Maryclaire Robinson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1988Janine Szpara . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1988Shelley Separovich . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1989Kerri Tashiro . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1989 Karen Willoughby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1989Laura Jones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1990Meg Williams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1990Charry Korgel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1991Stacy Messer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1991Karla Thompson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1991Cissy Wafford . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1991Stacy Black . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1992Kris Zeits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1992Tara Nott . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1993Martina Holan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1997

More Statistics & Honors

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CAReeR SCORING LeAdeRS (since 1984)ayer (Years at

\Player (Years at CC) G A Pts

1. Kerri Tashiro (1986-89) 60 17 137

2. Martina Holan (1994-97) 45 17 107

3. Karla Thompson (1988-91) 32 22 86

4. Cissy Wafford (1988-91) 29 13 71

5. Rebecca Carroll (1999-02) 25 18 68

6. Kasey Clark (1997-00) 17 29 63

7. Maryclaire Robinson (1986-89) 17 23 57

8. Tara Nott (1990-93) 21 12 54

9. Karen Willoughby (1985-88) 21 11 53

10. Emily Beans (2006-present) 24 4 52

Ann Cernicek (1984-87) 23 6 52

Amara Wilson (2004-07) 20 12 52

13. Meagan McGuire (1993-96) 18 14 50

14. Jessica Reyes (2000-01) 18 13 49

Amy Snyder (1992-95) 14 21 49

16. Charry Korgel (1988-91) 17 14 48

17. Mary Everett (1996-98) 18 9 45

18. Jennifer Hickman (1984-87) 20 4 44

19. Stevie Kernan (2002-04, 2006) 16 11 43

Ashley Hooverson (2001-04) 13 17 43

21. Tiffany Brown (2007-present) 18 6 42

Stacy Black (1989-92) 14 14 42 Traci Holbrook (1990-93) 17 8 42

24. *Sheila Jack (1982-85) 17 6 40

Laura Jones (1987-90) 17 6 40 26. Stacy Messer (1988-91) 14 11 39

27. Meg Williams (1987-90) 14 10 38

28. Cortney Kitchen (1999-02) 15 7 37

Caroline Crittenden (1995-98) 9 19 37

30. Kelly LaVoie (2006-present) 13 8 34

31. Katie Shenk (1992-1995) 11 10 32

32. Lisa Balsama (2005-07) 12 7 31

Mari Miezwa (1997-00) 11 9 31

Thea Roggeman (1996-99) 12 7 31

35. Ashley Magnuson (1998-01) 8 14 30

36. Keri Schloredt (1986-89) 8 11 27

37. Jennifer Murphree (1985-88) 11 4 26

Sydney Stoner (1996-99) 9 8 26

39. Jaime Haire (1994, 1996-97) 10 4 24

40. Erin Edwards (1995-98) 8 7 23

41. Katlin Okamoto (2003-06) 8 6 22

42. Sydney Fetter (2007-present) 8 5 21

43. Robyn Neigel (1988-91) 1 18 20

* totals include only Jack’s final two years when CC competed predominantly against NCAA Division I opposition.

All-time Records

INdIvIdUAL ReCORdS

Player/year(s)

Most points (career). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137, Kerri Tashiro (’86-89)Most points (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45, Tashiro (’86)Most goals (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60, Tashiro (’86-89)Most goals (season). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21, Tashiro (’86)Most goals (match) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4, Jessica Reyes (’01) vs. Harvard & Ann Cernicek (‘86) vs. College of St. BenedictMost consec. matches w/goal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5, Tashiro (’88 and ‘89) and Cissy Wafford (’90)Most multiple-goal matches (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16, Tashiro (’86-89)Most multiple-goal matches (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8, Tashiro (’86)Most hat tricks (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4, Martina Holan (’94-97) and Tashiro (’86) Most hat tricks (season). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, Cernicek (’86) and Tashiro (’86) and Martina Holan (’96)Most assists (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29, Kasey Clark (’97-00)Most assists (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10, Kasey Clark (’00) and Caroline Crittenden (’96)Most matches played (career). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .79, Keri Schloredt (’86-89) and Alexa Bannerman (’05-08)Most consecutive matches played . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79, Schloredt (’86-89)

CAReeR ASSISt LeAdeRS

1. Kasey Clark (1997-00) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 2. Maryclaire Robinson (1986-89) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 3. Karla Thompson (1988-91) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22 4. Amy Snyder (1992-95) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 5. Caroline Crittenden (1995-98) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 6. Carroll (1999-02) & Robyn Neigel (1988-91). . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 8. Holan, Ashley Hooverson (2001-04) & Tashiro . . . . . . . . . . . . .1711. Black, Korgel, Magnuson & McGuire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1415. Reyes & Wafford . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 17. Alexa Bannerman (2005-08), Nott & Wilson . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1220. Jessica Beinlich (2004-07), Kernan, Messer, Schloredt & Willoughby . .1125. Shenk & Williams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10

CAReeR GOAL LeAdeRSLPlayer . . . . . .G

1. Kerri Tashiro (19986-89) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60 2. Martina Holan (1994-97) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45 3. Karla Thompson (1988-91) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32 4. Cissy Wafford (1988-91) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 5. Rebecca Carroll (1999-02) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25 6. Emily Beans (2006-present) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24 7. Ann Cernicek (1984-87 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 8. Nott & Willoughby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2110. Hickman & Wilson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2012. Tiffany Brown, Everett, McGuire & Reyes . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 16. Clark, Holbrook, Jack, Jones, Korgel & Robinson . . . . . . . . . . .1722. Stevie Kernan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1623. Kitchen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1524. Black, Messer, Snyder & Williams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1428. Kelly LaVoie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13

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yeAR-By-yeAR SCORING LeAdeRS

Season Player Class G A Pts

1985 Sheila Jack Sr. 9 1 19 1986 Kerri Tashiro Fr. 21 3 45 1987 Kerri Tashiro So. 8 4 20 1988 Kerri Tashiro Jr. 15 5 35 1989 Kerri Tashiro Sr. 16 5 37 1990 Cissy Wafford Jr. 15 5 35 1991 Karla Thompson Sr. 7 6 20 1992 Stacy Black Sr. 6 6 18 1993 Tara Nott Sr. 12 3 27 1994 Meagan McGuire So. 5 3 13 1995 Martina Holan So. 16 2 34 1996 Martina Holan Jr. 14 6 34 1997 Martina Holan Sr. 13 8 34 1998 Kasey Clark So. 6 7 19 1999 Rebecca Carroll Fr. 8 4 20 2000 Kasey Clark Sr. 6 10 22 2001 Jessica Reyes So. 13 4 30 2002 Rebecca Carroll Sr. 8 4 20 2003 Kelly Sweitzer Jr. 6 2 14 2004 Stevie Kernan Jr. 9 3 21 2005 Lisa Balsama So. 6 2 14 2006 Emily Beans Fr. 13 3 29 2007 Tiffany Brown Fr. 9 3 21 2008 Tiffany Brown So. 9 3 21

CC GOALKeePeR ReCORdS Player/year(s)

Most matches played (career) . . . . . . . . 78, Janine Szpara (’85-88)Most matches played (season) . . . . . . . . 22, Szpara (’86) and Geneva Sills (’06)Most starts (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78, Szpara (’85-88) Most starts (season). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22, Szpara (’86) and Sills (’06) Most victories (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60, Szpara (’85-88)Most victories (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17, Szpara (’86) and Kris Zeits (’91)Most NCAA playoff victories (career) . . . 5, Zeits (’89-91) Most saves (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479, Meghann Loseke (’01-04);

403, Zeits (’89-92); 340, Sills (’05-08); 317, Szpara (’85-88)

Most saves (season). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173, Loseke (’02)Most shutouts (career, incl. shared) . . . 46, Szpara (’85-88)Most shutouts (season, incl. shared) . . . 16, Szpara (’86)Most shutouts (season, excl. shared) . . . 12, Szpara (’86) and Zeits (’91)Best saves percentage (4-year career) . . 0.859, Szpara (’85-88);

0.857, Zeits (’89-92)Best saves percentage (season) . . . . . . . 0.910, Szpara (’86)Lowest goals-against avg. (career) . . . . . 0.77, Szpara (’85-88)Lowest goals-against avg. (season) . . . . 0.36, Szpara (’87)Best winning percentage (career) . . . . . . 0.788 (60-15-3), Szpara (’85-88);

0.774 (54-14-5), Zeits (’89-91) Best winning percentage (season) . . . . . 0.850, Zeits (17-3 in ’91)

teAM SUPeRLAtIveS Most victories (regular season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 . . . . . 1991

Most victories (overall season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 . . . . . 1986, ’91

Most consecutive victories. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 . . . . . 1991

Most consecutive victories at home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 . . . . . 1991-93

(final 10 home matches of 1991, all eight in 1992 and opener in 1993)

Longest unbeaten streak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13. . . . . 1991Fewest victories (regular season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . 1994

Fewest victories (overall season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . 1994

Most losses (regular season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 . . . . . 1998

Most losses (overall season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 . . . . . 1998

Most consecutive losses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 . . . . . . 1998

(to St. Mary’s, Portland, North Texas, Texas Tech,

Denver, Vanderbilt and Tennessee to end 1998 season)

Most consecutive matches without a victory . . . . . . . . .11 . . . . . 1993-94

(0-5-0 to finish 1993 season and 0-4-2 to start 1994 season)

Fewest losses (regular season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . ’87,’88,’90,’91Fewest losses (overall season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . . ’87,’88,’90,’91

Most ties (regular season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . . ’92,’94,’97

Most goals (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65 . . . . . 1986

Fewest goals (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 . . . . . 1994

Most goals (match) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 . . . . . 1986

(vs. College of St. Benedict in 1986)

Most goals allowed (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57 . . . . . 1998

Most goals allowed (match) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 . . . . . . 1998

(vs. North Carolina, overtime, Sept. 6, 1998)

Fewest goals allowed (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 . . . . . . 1987

Fastest two goals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0:17 . . . . 1991 (by Cissy Wafford and Tara Nott vs. North Carolina State, Oct. 14, 1991) Most overtime matches (regular season) . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 . . . . . . 1997

Most overtime matches (overall season) . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 . . . . . . 1997

Most overtime matches won . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . 1988

Most overtime matches lost . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . 1994, ’98

Longest match (official time) . . . . . . . . . . . . 129 minutes, 52 seconds

(Nov. 16, 1991 – Colorado College 1, Stanford 0, in NCAA quarterfinals)

Most overtime periods (match) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

(Nov. 16, 1991 – CC won sudden-death decision at 9:52 of third OT)

Most assists (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44 . . . . . 1988

Fewest assists (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 . . . . . 1985

Most shutouts (regular season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 . . . . . 1986

Most shutouts (overall season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 . . . . . 1986

Most consecutive shutouts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 . . . . . 1986,’87Most times shut out (regular season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 . . . . . . 1997,’98

Most times shut out (overall season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 . . . . . . 1997,’98

Most consecutive times shut out . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . . ’84,’94,’97

All-time Records

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CC GOALKeePeR ReCORdS Player/year(s)

Most matches played (career) . . . . . . . . 78, Janine Szpara (’85-88)Most matches played (season) . . . . . . . . 22, Szpara (’86) and Geneva Sills (’06)Most starts (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78, Szpara (’85-88) Most starts (season). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22, Szpara (’86) and Sills (’06) Most victories (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60, Szpara (’85-88)Most victories (season) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17, Szpara (’86) and Kris Zeits (’91)Most NCAA playoff victories (career) . . . 5, Zeits (’89-91) Most saves (career) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479, Meghann Loseke (’01-04);

403, Zeits (’89-92); 340, Sills (’05-08); 317, Szpara (’85-88)

Most saves (season). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173, Loseke (’02)Most shutouts (career, incl. shared) . . . 46, Szpara (’85-88)Most shutouts (season, incl. shared) . . . 16, Szpara (’86)Most shutouts (season, excl. shared) . . . 12, Szpara (’86) and Zeits (’91)Best saves percentage (4-year career) . . 0.859, Szpara (’85-88);

0.857, Zeits (’89-92)Best saves percentage (season) . . . . . . . 0.910, Szpara (’86)Lowest goals-against avg. (career) . . . . . 0.77, Szpara (’85-88)Lowest goals-against avg. (season) . . . . 0.36, Szpara (’87)Best winning percentage (career) . . . . . . 0.788 (60-15-3), Szpara (’85-88);

0.774 (54-14-5), Zeits (’89-91) Best winning percentage (season) . . . . . 0.850, Zeits (17-3 in ’91)

Coach dang Pibulvech - 1984Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score (S 8) ..........4 ..........Metropolitan State ...............0(S 9) ..........6 .......... St. Mary’s College................0(S 16).........2 ...... @ University of Denver ............0(S 20).........2 ..........Metropolitan State ...............0(S 27).........0 .......... @ Boston College ................1(S 28).........0 ...... @ Univ. of Connecticut ............1(S 29).........0 ....@ Univ. of Massachusetts..........3(O 7) ..........3 ............... Texas A&M .....................0(O 13) ........8 ......... Macalester College ...............0(O 13) ........1 .........University of Denver ..............0(O 14) ........3 ........... Trinity University ................0(O 26) ........4 ..... @ Cal State-Long Beach ...........2(O 27) ........2 ........@ UC Santa Barbara .............1(O 28) ........0 ............ @ UC Berkeley ..................4(N 3) ..........2 ....... *George Mason Univ. ............1(N 4) ..........0 ..............*UC Berkeley ...................0Overall Record: 11-4-1*NCAA Playoff Matches

Coach dang Pibulvech - 1985Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 7) ..........8 ....... @ Metropolitan State .............1(S 14).........0 .......... Missouri-St. Louis ................1(S 17).........0 .......... UC Santa Barbara ................1(S 19).........2 ...............UC Berkeley ....................1(S 27).........2 ...... @ University of Denver ............0(O 3) ..........4 ..........Metropolitan State ...............0(O 5) .........11 .......... Trinity University .................0(O 6) ..........3 ........Univ. of Puget Sound .............0(O 11) ........1 ..... @ Univ. of Rhode Island ...........0(O 13) ........5 .........@ Brown University ..............2(O 15) ........1 .............. Texas A & M....................0(O 19) ........3 ......... Stanford University ...............0(O 20) ........1 ...... University of Wisconsin ............0 (O 24) ........2 ........@ Radford University .............1(O 26) ........0 .......... @ North Carolina ................3(O 27) ........0 ......@ George Mason Univ. ...........4(N 1) ..........2 .........University of Denver ..............0(N 2) ..........1 ..........Northern Colorado ...............0(N 10) .......*1 ..... University of Wisconsin ............0(N 17) .......*3 ......... UC Santa Barbara ................0(N 23) ..... **2 ..........North Carolina ..................3Overall Record: 16-5*NCAA playoff matches**NCAA Championship Tournament

Coach dang Pibulvech 1986Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 7) ..........1 ..........Metropolitan State ...............0(S 13).........8 .... @ Univ. of Missouri-Rolla ..........0 (S 14).........1 ..@ Univ. of Missouri-St. Louis .......0(S 18).........5 .........University of Denver ..............0(S 26).........3 ........@ Radford University .............0(S 27).........0 .......... @ North Carolina ................3(O 3) .........11 .......... Carleton College .................0(O 4) ..........3 ...........Maryville College ................0(O 5) ........ 12 .... College of St. Benedict ............0(O 7) ..........2 ....... @ Northern Colorado .............0(O 11) ........6 .........Southern Methodist ..............0 (O 12) ........4 .............Cortland State ..................2(O 17) ........1 ............William & Mary..................1 (O 18) ........2 ............ Texas Christian ..................0(O 19) ........1 ............. Sonoma State ...................0(O 23) ........0 ....@ Univ. of Massachusetts..........1(O 25) ........1 ...... @ Univ. of Connecticut ............2(O 31) ........2 ....... @ Univ. of Wisconsin .............0(N 1) ..........1 ............ @ UC Berkeley ..................0(N 15) ...... *1 .............UC Berkeley ....................0(N 22) ..... **1 ... Univ. of Massachusetts ............0

(N 23) ..... **0 ..........North Carolina ..................2Overall Record: 17-4-1*NCAA playoff matches**NCAA Championship Tournament

Coach dang Pibulvech 1987Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 1) ..........2 ....... @ Metropolitan State .............0(S 4) ..........6 ........... US International .................0(S 6) ..........2 ............Southern Illinois .................0(S 12).........9 ............ Texas Christian ..................0(S 13).........2 ....Cal State-Dominguez Hills ..........0(S 17).........2 ....... @ Northern Colorado ............0(S 20).........4 .................UC Davis ......................1(S 25).........1 ..........@ William & Mary ...............2(S 26).........3 ...... @ Univ. of Connecticut ............1(O 3) ..........1 ....... @ Univ. of Cincinnati .............0(O 4) ..........3 ....... @ Univ. of Wisconsin .............0(O 9) ..........8 .....Northeast Missouri State...........1(O 10) ........4 ....Univ. of Missouri-St. Louis .........0(O 15) ........2 .........University of Denver ..............0(O 23) ........2 .... George Washington Univ. ..........0(O 24) ........2 ......... Stanford University ...............0(O 30) ........1 .....George Mason University ..........1(O 31) ........0 ...............UC Berkeley ....................1(N 7) .........*0 ......... UC Santa Barbara ................1Overall Record: 15-3-1*NCAA playoff matches

Coach dang Pibulvech 1988Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 5) ..........4 ..........Univ. of Wisconsin ...............0(S 9) ..........3 .......... UC Santa Barbara .............. 1ot(S 11).........0 ........ North Carolina State ..............2(S 16).........3 .......@ Southern Methodist ............0(S 18).........3 ..........@ Barry University ............. 2ot(S 23).........0 .............North Carolina ..................3(S 25).........3 ...........Santa Clara Univ. ...............2(S 30).........2 ..........Metropolitan State ............. 0ot(O 2) ..........7 ..........Northern Colorado ...............0(O 6) .........10 ........University of Denver ..............0(O 8) ..........5 ..........Univ. of Cincinnati ...............1(O 15) ........2 ......@ George Mason Univ. ...........1(O 16) ........1 ..........@ William & Mary ............. 0ot(O 22) ........5 .......... St. Mary’s College................0(O 23) ........2 ...........Brown University.................1(O 28) ........0 ...... @ Univ. of Connecticut ............0(O 30) ........3 ....@ Univ. of Massachusetts..........1(N 13) .......*1 ..............UC Berkeley .................. 2ot Overall Record: 14-3-1*NCAA playoff match

Coach dang Pibulvech 1989Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 5) ..........3 ..........Northern Colorado ...............0(S 9) ..........4 ....... @ Univ. of Cincinnati ........... 1ot(S 10).........2 ......@ Michigan State Univ. ...........1(S 15).........2 ....@ University of Wisconsin..........1(S 17).........4 ........ @ Cornell University ..............1(S 24).........1 ......... Stanford University ............. 0ot(S 25)........11 .............Regis College ...................0(S 29).........4 ......@ North Carolina State ......... 3ot(O 1) ..........0 .......... @ North Carolina ................4(O 7) ..........3 ..........Metropolitan State ...............0(O 10) ........7 .........University of Denver ..............0(O 14) ........1 ........ George Mason Univ. ..............0(O 15) ........2 ............William & Mary..................1(O 21) ........2 .........Southern Methodist ............ 3ot(O 22) ........3 .......... Rutgers University ................0(O 27) ........1 ........@ St. Mary’s College .............0

(O 28) ........1 .....@ Santa Clara University ..........2(N 12) .......*5 ..... Univ. of Massachusetts ............2(N 18) ......**2 ..... Santa Clara University .............0(N 19) ......**0 ...........North Carolina ..................2Overall Record: 16-4*NCAA playoff matches**NCAA Championship Tournament

Coach dang Pibulvech 1990Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 2) ..........7 ..........Northern Colorado ...............0(S 7) ..........4 ..........University of Tulsa ...............0(S 8) ..........4 ........ Creighton University ..............1(S 11).........5 ..............Regis College ...................0(S 15).........1 ....... @ Univ. of Wisconsin .............2(S 16).........1 ......@ Michigan State Univ. ...........0(S 22).........5 ..........Metropolitan State ...............1(S 23).........6 .......University of Arkansas ............1(S 29).........2 ..........@ William & Mary ...............1(S 30).........1 ......@ North Carolina State ...........1(O 5) ..........4 .... Southern Methodist Univ. ..........1(O 6) ..........2 ........University of Hartford .............1(O 14) ........1 ....... @ Stanford University .............1(O 15) ........0 .....@ Santa Clara University ..........1(O 19) ........5 ........Texas Christian Univ. .............0(O 20) ........2 .... George Washington Univ. ..........0(O 27) ........1 .... St. Mary’s College (Calif.) ..........0(O 28) ........2 ........ Univ. of Connecticut ..............0(N 4) .........*3 ... Southern Methodist Univ. ..........1(N 7) .........*2 .........Univ. of Wisconsin ...............1(N 11) ......**1 ...........North Carolina ..................2Overall Record: 16-3-2*NCAA playoff matches**NCAA Championship Tournament

Coach Carl Beal 1991Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 7) ..........3 ... @ St. Mary’s College (Cal.) .........1(S 8) ..........1 ............ @ UC Berkeley ..................0(S 13).........2 ....... Santa Clara University .............3(S 14).........6 ........ Creighton University ..............0(S 21).........4 ..........@ Duke University ...............2 (S 22).........0 .......... @ North Carolina ................1(S 27).........6 ....Washington State University .........0(S 28).........2 .......... Univ. of Arkansas ................0(O 3) ..........6 ........ Univ. of Washington ..............0(O 5) ..........1 ............William & Mary..................0(O 7) ..........4 ..........University of Tulsa ...............0(O 12) ........4 ....... University of Portland .............1(O 14) ........4 ........ North Carolina State ..............1(O 19) ........1 ..........Univ. of Wisconsin ...............0(O 25) ........1 ...... @ Univ. of Connecticut ............0(O 27) ........3 .........@ Univ. of Hartford ..............0(N 2) ..........3 .......@ Southern Methodist .......... 2ot(N 3) ..........2 .. @ Texas Christian University ....... 0(N 16) .......*1 ........ Stanford University ............. 0ot(N 23) ......**0 ........Univ. of Wisconsin ...............1Overall Record: 17-3-0*NCAA playoff match**NCAA Championship Tournament

Coach Carl Beal 1992Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 5) ..........4 ............Regis University .................1(S 6) ..........3 .....Metropolitan State College...........2(S 11).........4 .........University of Denver ..............0(S 19).........2 ..........Air Force Academy ............. 1ot(S 20).........1 ........ Creighton University ............ 0ot(S 27).........0 ......@ University of Virginia ...........1(S 28).........1 ..........@ William & Mary ...............0

year-By-year Scores

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(O 3) ..........2 .... Southern Methodist Univ. ..........0(O 10) ........2 ............ @ UC Berkeley ................ 2ot(O 11) ........2 .....@ San Diego State Univ.......... 2ot(O 15) ........4 .....Univ. of Northern Colorado ..........0(O 17) ........1 .... St. Mary’s College (Calif.) ..........0(O 22) ........0 ........@ UC Santa Barbara .............2(O 25) ........2 .....@ Santa Clara University ..........4(O 30) ........3 ......@ Univ. of Washington ......... 3ot(N 1) ..........0 ..... @ University of Portland ...........3Overall Record: 9-4-3

Coach Carl Beal 1993Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score (S 5) ..........4 ..........Metropolitan State ...............0(S 11).........1 ..... @ University of Hartford ...........2(S 12).........0 ....@ Univ. of Massachusetts..........3(S 17).........0 .......University of California ............4(S 18).........2 ..........University of Tulsa ...............1(S 25).........3 .........University of Denver ..............0(O 3) ..........6 ..........@ Regis University ...............0(O 6) ..........3 ....... @ Air Force Academy ............2(O 9) ..........2 ......@ Texas Christian Univ. ...........0(O 10) ........3 ......@ Univ. of New Mexico ......... 1ot(O 13) ........2 .....Univ. of Northern Colorado ..........0(O 16) ........4 ...........Univ. of Portland .............. 1ot(O 21) ........0 .....@ San Diego State Univ............5(O 24) ........3 ........@ UC Santa Barbara .............4(O 30) ........1 ....... @ Stanford University .............4(O 31) ........1 ........@ St. Mary’s College .............5(N 6) ......... 0 ..... @ Creighton University ............1Overall Record: 9-8

Coach Nicole Crepeau 1994Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 3) ..........2 ........University of Hartford .............5(S 5) ..........0 ......Oregon State University ...........1(S 10).........1 ....... Cal State-Sacramento ........... 3ot(S 11).........0 ............ @ UC Berkeley ................ 0ot(S 17).........1 ....... @ Univ. of Minnesota ........... 1ot(S 18) .......3 ....... @ Univ. of Wisconsin ........... 7ot(S 24).........1 .......University of Montana ............0(S 30).........1 ........@ University of Tulsa ........... 1ot(O 2) ..........1 ........ @ Univ. of Arkansas ..............2(O 11) ........2 .........University of Denver ..............4(O 15) ........1 ........Univ. of New Mexico .............0(O 16) ........2 ......... Northern Colorado ...............0(O 21) ........1 ......... Stanford University ...............3(O 22) ........1 .......... Univ. of Nebraska ................2(O 27) ........0 ....@ Washington State Univ. .........2(O 29) ........0 ......@ Univ. of Washington ...........1(N 5) ..........0 .......... St. Mary’s College................2(N 6) ..........3 ..........University of Texas ...............0Overall Record: 4-11-3

Coach Nicole Crepeau 1995Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 2) ..........3 ........Brigham Young Univ. .............1(S 4) ..........5 .......... University of Utah ................0(S 9) ..........4 ..........University of Tulsa ...............2(S 11).........1 ........ Cal State-Northridge ..............0(S 16).........2 .... @ Washington State Univ. ..........1(S 17).........3 ........ @ Univ. of Montana ............ 5ot(S 24).........1 ....@ Univ. of North Carolina .........7(S 28).........3 .. ..@ Univ. of Central Florida.. ..... 1ot(S 30).........1 ....@ Univ. of Massachusetts..........2(O 6) ..........7 ....... Wisconsin–Green Bay .............0 (O 7) ..........2 ............ Lynn University ................ 2ot(O 14) ........1 .......University of Wyoming ............0(O 17) ........1 ............Regis University .................0

(O 20) ........1 ............@ Oregon State .................3(O 21) ........0 .........@ Univ. of Portland ..............2(O 26) ........2 ......@ Univ. of New Mexico ...........4(O 28) ........0 ......@ Texas Christian Univ. ...........1(O 29) ........0 ....... @ University of Texas .............1(N 4) ..........2 ........ Creighton University ..............0Overall Record: 10-8-1

Coach Nicole Crepeau 1996Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 30) ........4 .......Illinois State University ............1(S 3) ..........2 ..........Air Force Academy ...............0(S 6) ..........2 .......University of Montana .......... 3ot(S 8) ..........2 .......University of Arkansas ............1(S 13).........5 ...........Tulane University ................0(S 15).........1 ......... Dartmouth College ...............0(S 20).........2 ........@ Univ. of Nebraska .............5(S 22).........3 ...... @ Creighton University .......... 3ot(S 26).........4 ..........@ Texas Christian ................0(S 28).........0 ...... @ Southern Methodist. ............4(O 4) ..........1 ....U. of Maryland (Fairfax, VA) .........2(O 6) ..........0 ......@ George Mason Univ. ...........2(O 11) ........0 .....@ Santa Clara University ..........3(O 13) ........2 . Stanford Univ. (at Santa Clara) .......0(O 19) ........5 .......... Univ. of Colorado ................2(O 23) ........1 ........Univ. of New Mexico .............2(O 29) ........1 .........University of Hawaii ..............0(N 1) ..........5 .. U. of Alabama (Nashville, TN) .......2(N 3) ..........0 ......@ Vanderbilt University ...........1Overall Record: 10-8-1

Coach Nicole Crepeau 1997Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 29) ........1 ........ Vanderbilt University ..............0(A 30) ........4 ........Texas Christian Univ. .............0(S 2) ..........2 ........ Creighton University ............ 2ot(S 5) ..........3 ......@ Louisiana State Univ. ...........0(S 7) ..........1 .........@ Tulane University ............ 0ot(S 10).........2 ....... @ Air Force Academy .............3(S 14).........1 ...... University of Evansville .......... 2ot(S 19).........1 ........ George Mason Univ. ............ 1ot(S 21).........2 .... @ University of Wyoming ........ 1ot(S 25).........0 ...... @ University of Hawaii ............1(S 27).........2 ..... @ Pepperdine University ......... 1ot(O 1) ..........3 .....@ University of Colorado ..........0(O 5) ..........0 ....... @ Stanford University .............6(O 10) ........0 .....@ Santa Clara University ..........4(O 12) ........4 ........@ St. Mary’s College .............0(O 17) ........4 ........Texas Tech University .............1(O 19) ........2 ........... Baylor University ............... 2ot(O 24) ........0 ..........@ William & Mary ...............3(O 26) ........0 .... @ Wake Forest University ..........1(O 31) ........0 ......@ Univ. of New Mexico ...........2(N 9) ..........2 .........University of Denver ..............0Overall Record: 10-8-3

Coach Nicole Crepeau 1998Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(Exh.) .........3 ........Brigham Young Univ. .............1(S 1) ..........2 .. @ University of Wyoming ..........1(S 4) ..........2 ..@ George Washington Univ. .......1(S 6) ..........0 ...... Univ. of North Carolina ............9(S 13).........2 .........Southern Methodist ..............3(S 15).........5 ....... @ Air Force Academy ........... 4ot(S 18).........1 .....@ University of Montana ..........3(S 19).........3 ....... @ University of Idaho .............1(S 25).........0 ........@ University of Tulsa .............2(S 27).........3 ...... Oral Roberts University ............1(O 2) ..........1 ....... Pepperdine University .............0

(O 3) ..........3 ......University of Mississippi ......... 2ot(O 7) ..........0 .......University of Colorado .......... 1ot(O 10) ........1 ...... @ University of Denver .......... 1ot(O 16) ........2 ........@ St. Mary’s College ........... 3ot(O 18) ........0 ..... @ University of Portland ...........4(O 23) ........0 ......@ Univ. of North Texas ...........7(O 25) ........1 ..... @ Texas Tech University ...........2(O 27) ........0 ...... @ University of Denver ............2(O 30) ........1 ..............@ Vanderbilt ...................3(N 1) ..........5 ....... @ Univ. of Tennessee .............7Overall Record: 7-12-1

Coach Greg Ryan 1999Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 27) ........1 ........Univ. of New Mexico .............0(A 29) ........5 ..........Belmont University ...............0(S 3) ..........1 ....@ University of Wyoming. .........0(S 5) ..........3 ....... Alabama-Birmingham .............0(S 10).........8 ....... @ IUPU-Indianapolis. .............0(S 12).........0 ....... @ Oregon State Univ. .............1(S 19).........0 .....@ University of Colorado ..........1(S 24).........1 ....... @ Univ. of San Diego ........... 2ot(S 26).........0 ....... @ Loyola Marymount .............2(O 2) ..........0 .....@ University of Arkansas ..........3(O 3) ..........5 ..... @ Wisconsin-Green Bay ...........2(O 8) ..........4 ..........Colgate University.............. 4ot(O 15) ........4 ........ Florida International ..............1(O 16) ........2 ....... University of Portland .............1 (O 22) ........0 .......@ Arizona State Univ. ............2(O 24) ........0 ......@ University of Arizona ......... 0ot(O 29) ........1 .........University of Illinois............. 2ot(O 31) ........0 ....... @ Air Force Academy .............2(N 6) ..........0 ...... @ University of Denver ............1 Overall Record: 8-9-2

Coach Greg Ryan 2000Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 25) ........3 .......Univ. of Nor. Colorado ............0(A 27) ........4 .......... Univ. of Arkansas ................1(A 30) .......5 ........ E. Washington Univ. ..............0(S 1) ..........1 ............ *Colgate Univ. ..................0(S 3) .........2 .........*Univ. of Oklahoma ..............1(S 8) .........2 ........Air Force Academy ............. 1ot(S 10).........1 ..............Cornell Univ.....................0(S 12).........5 .........Portland State Univ. ..............0(S 15) .....0 ...... @ Univ. of Colorado ..............3(S 17).........1 .......... @ Baylor Univ. ..................3(S 22) .......4 ..........University of Tulsa ............ 3ot(S 24).........0 .......... St. Mary’s College................2(S 29).........1 ............ @ UC Berkeley ..................2(O 1) ..........0 .....@ Univ. of San Francisco ..........1(O 6) ..........3 ....Univ. of Louisiana-Monroe .........0(O 8) ..........1 .......... Univ. of Montana ................3(O 18) ........2 ............Univ. of Denver..................0(O 22) ........2 ....... @ Univ. of Wisconsin ........... 3ot (O 27) ........4 ..............Univ. of Iowa ...................0(O 29) ........3 ........@ Univ. of Wyoming .............0* Univ. of New Mexico Tournament (Albuquerque, NM)Overall Record 13-7

Coach Greg Ryan 2001Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(S 1) ..........1 ............ William & Mary .................3(S 2) ..........2 ..........Univ. of Wisconsin ...............1(S 7) ..........0 ....@ Univ.of New Hampshire ....... 0ot(S 9) ..........5 ........@ Harvard University ........... 4ot(S 14).........3 ........ Creighton University ..............1(S 21).........6 ..... Portland State University ...........0(S 23).........2 ......Georgia State University ...........0

year-By-year Scores

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The 1991 Tigers reached the national semifinals.

(S 28).........0 ..... @ Pepperdine University ...........0 (O 5) ..........2 ........Univ. of New Mexico .............0 (O 7) ..........1 .....@ University of Montana ..........2(O 12) ........2 ..........Air Force Academy ...............1(O 14) ........3 .......University of Wyoming ............1(O 21) ........0 .......University of Colorado ............1(O 26) ........4 .......... Northern Colorado ................1 (O 28) ........0 ...... @ University of Denver ............5 (N 2) ..........3 ........... Baylor University .................1 (N 5) ..........2 .......Univ. of San Francisco .............1(N 10) ........0 .....@ Santa Clara University ..........4Overall Record: 11-5-2

Coach Greg Ryan 2002Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 30) ........0 ...... @ Portland State Univ. ...........2(S 1) ..........0 ......@ Univ. of Washington ...........5(S 6) ..........2 .... Southern Methodist Univ. ....... 3ot(S 13).........2 .............Northern Iowa ..................1(S 15).........1 ..... Univ. of New Hampshire ..........0(S 20).........2 ...... Univ. of Central Florida ............3 (S 22).........2 .............. Weber State ....................2(S 26).........1 ........ @ Boston University ..............0(S 29).........0 ............. @ Dartmouth ...................3(O 4) ..........0 .......... UC-Santa Barbara ................2(O 6) ..........2 ...........UNC-Greensboro ................1(O 11) ........3 ...........Northern Arizona ................1(O 18) ........2 .........@ Liberty University ..............0(O 20) ........0 ........@ Wake Forest Univ. ............4(O 27) ........1 ...... @ Creighton University ............0(N 1) ..........3 .........Northwestern Univ. ........... 2ot(N 3) ..........1 .............. @ Princeton ....................1Overall Record: 8-7-2

Coach erik Oman 2003Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 29) ........1 ..........Fairfield University ............. 1ot(A 31) ........3 ....... Northern Illinois Univ. .............0(S 5) ..........3 ...........Boston University .............. 2ot(S 7) ..........0 .....University of Washington ..........1(S 14).........2 ........... Drake University .................1(S 19).........1 .......@ Southern Methodist ...........2 (S 21).........0 ........ Texas A&M (@SMU) ..............2(S 26).........0 ....... Pepperdine University .............3(S 28).........0 .......University of California ............1(O 3) ..........1 .......University of Montana .......... 0ot(O 5) ..........1 ...........DePaul University ................2(O 10) ........3 ............San Diego State .............. 2ot(O 12) ........0 ..........Nevada-Las Vegas ............. 0ot(O 16) ........1 ....... @ Air Force Academy .............2(O 19) ........3 ...... @ Univ.of New Mexico ............0(O 23) ........0 ......@ Florida Atlantic Univ. ..........1(O 26) .......1* ... @ Univ. of Central Florida ..........0(O 31) ........1 ........Michigan State Univ. .............2(N 2) ..........1 ....... @ Northern Colorado .............0* Match against UCF won by forfeitOverall Record: 8-9-2

Coach Geoff Bennett 2004Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 27) ........1 ......@ Michigan State Univ. ...........4(A 29) ........1 .......@ Northwestern Univ. ............5(S 3) ..........0 .........University of Toledo ..............1(S 5) ..........4 ..........University of Idaho ...............2(S 10).........4 ........... Xavier University .................0(S 11).........3 ....... Texas State University ............2 (S 17).........2 .....@ University of Montana ..........1(S 19).........1 ..@ Eastern Washington Univ. ..... 1ot(S 25).........1 ..........Air Force Academy ...............0(O 1) ..........4 ....@ Northern Arizona Univ. ..........1

(O 3) ..........0 ......@ University of Arizona ...........1(O 8) ..........1 ........@ St. Mary’s College ............0(O 10) ........1 ...............@ UC Davis ....................2(O 11) ........5 ........ @ Sacramento State ..............0(N 4) ..........0 .... Utah Valley State College ........ 0ot(N 6) ..........2 ..........Northern Colorado ...............1Overall Record: 9-5-2

Coach Geoff Bennett 2005Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 26) ........1 .......... University of Iowa ................0(A 28) ........3 .......University of Montana ...........0(S 2) ..........4 ...... Central Michigan Univ. ............1(S 4) ..........2 ......... Providence College ...............0(S 9) ..........1 .... @ University of Nebraska ..........0(S 11).........0 ......@ Iowa State University ..........2 (S 16).........0 ............@ Virginia Tech .................1(S 18).........2 ........ @ Davidson College ............ 2ot(S 21).........2 ....... @ Air Force Academy .............1(S 23).........1 .................UC Davis .................... 1ot(S 25).........0 .......... St. Mary’s College.............. 0ot(S 30).........1 .........Oakland University* .............2(O 2) ..........0 ...... @ Stanford University* ............2(O 7) ..........1 ........Texas Tech University .............0(O 21) ........1 ...... @ University of Kansas ............2(O 23) ........0 ..... @ University of Missouri ...........1(O 28) ........0 ..........@ UW-Milwaukee ...............1(O 30) ........0 ....@ University of Wisconsin..........2 * Stanford Nike Invitational Overall Record: 7-8-3

Coach Geoff Bennett 2006Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 25) ........2 .............. UC Riverside ....................0(S 1) ..........0 ......University of the Pacific ....... 1(ot)(S 3) ..........5 ......... Bucknell University ...............0(S 10).........2 .........@ Texas Tech Univ. .............1(S 15).........3 ............ Ohio University ..................0(S 17).........1 ........Iowa State University .............0 (S 20).........1 ..........Air Force Academy ............ 0(ot)(S 22).........3 .......... Stephen F. Austin ................2(S 24).........1 .......... Sacramento State ............. 1(ot)(S 29).........1 ........@ University of Tulsa .............0(O 1) ..........2 ..................@ SMU .......................4(O 6) ..........1 .............Rice University ..................0(O 8) ..........2 ....... University of Houston .............1(O 13) ........1 .......University of Memphis ............0(O 15) ........2 .................... UAB ....................... 1(ot)(O 21) ........0 ..................@ UTEP .......................2(O 27) ........3 ....... @ Marshall University .............1(O 29) ........1 ....@ East Carolina University .........2(N 1) .........2 ................ vs. UTEP* .................. 1(2ot)(N 3) ..........4 .................@ SMU* ......................1(N 5) ..........2 .................vs. UAB* ......................3 (N 10) ........1 ... @ University of Colorado # .........2* Conference USA Playoffs # NCAA Playoffs Overall Record: 15-6-1

Coach Geoff Bennett 2007Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 31) ........2 .........#St. Mary’s College............ 2(ot)(S 2) ..........0 ......#University of California ........ 1(ot)(S 7) ..........1 .....McNeese State University ..........0(S 9) ..........2 ...........Davidson College ................0(S 14).........1 ....University of Rhode Island .........2(S 16).........2 ........ Loyola College (Md.) ..............1 (S 21).........0 . @ Oklahoma State University .... 0(ot)(S 23).........2 ... @ University of Mississippi .........1(S 28).........1 .. @ Texas Christian University ........0

(O 5) ..........1 .................... SMU ..........................2(O 7) ..........4 ..........University of Tulsa ...............0(O 13) ........2 ....................UTEP .........................3(O 19) ........2 ...........@ Southern Miss ................0(O 21) ........0 .................. @ UCF ..................... 0(ot)(O 26) ........2 ......East Carolina University ...........1(O 28) ........7 ......... Marshall University ...............0(N 2) .........1 ...........@ Rice University ................2(N 4) ..........3 ..... @ University of Houston ...........1(N 7) ..........2 .................@ UTEP* ................... 3(ot)* Conference USA Playoffs # UC Berkeley Invitational * Conference USA Tournament Overall Record: 10-6-3

Coach Geoff Bennett 2008Date CC Score Opponent Opp. Score(A 22) ........3 ......University of Oklahoma ............1(A 29) ........1 ........Valparaiso University .............0(A 31) ........2 ....... Idaho State University .............1(S 5) ..........0 ....... Long Island University ......... 0(ot)(S 7) .........2 .........Ball State University ..............0(S 13).........2 ........University of Denver# .......... 1(ot)(S 14).........3 ...................Army# .......................0(S 19).........0 .......@ University of Illinois ............2(S 21).........1 ........ @ Purdue University ..............2 (S 26).........2 . @ SMU (Southern Methodist) .......1(S 28).........0 ........@ University of Tulsa .............1(O 3) ..........4 ....@ UAB (Ala.-Birmingham) .........0(O 5) ..........2 .......University of Memphis ............1(O 10) ........6 ........ Southern Mississippi ..............0(O 12) ........1 ........UCF (Central Florida) ........... 2ot(O 17) ........0 ....@ East Carolina University ...... 0(ot)(O 19) ........3 ....... @ Marshall University .............1(O 24) ........1 ...........@ Rice University ................2(O 26) ........1 ....... University of Houston .............0(O 31) ........1 ..................@ UTEP .......................2(N 5) .........1 ...................UTEP* .......................0(N 7) ..........1 .....East Carolina University* ....... 2(ot)* Conference USA Playoffs # Airforce Falcon Invitational * Conference USA Tournament Overall Record: 10-6-3

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INtelleCtual adveNture IN the roCky mouNtaIN WeSt

Right where the short grass prairie meets the foothills of the Rockies, there is a place where, with a certain amount of guts and an open mind, students can study the liberal arts and sciences in the mountain air .

A private, four-year college, Colorado College is located on a 90-acre campus in downtown Colorado Springs near the base of the 14,115-foot Pikes Peak . It’s the only college of its kind in the Rocky Mountain region and one of only a handful of its type located in a metropolitan area .

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Getting lost in a good book…Learning at CC is kind of like that. Under the school’s unique and intensive “Block Plan,” students take one course at a time for three and a half weeks. This means smaller classes, with more writing, discussion, and in-depth investigation of one subject at a time. During a block, students immerse themselves in environmental science or chemistry, Chinese or Spanish, poetry or medieval history, or any of our stimulating courses on campus or around the world. Our students come from many ethnic, religious, and socioeconomic backgrounds. They typically are independent-minded adventurers who love a challenge. At CC, they find the encouragement, opportunities, and inspiration they need to reach their greatest potential.

A full range of the performing arts, special interest clubs and organizations, student publications, and intramural and intercollegiate athletics rounds out the rigorous academic program at CC. The college encourages freedom of expression through an independent student press, as well as student and faculty forums on current issues and programs representing widely ranging viewpoints, often presented by distinguished visitors to the campus.

MORE ABOUT THE BLOCK PLANTeaching and learning are at the heart of all activity. Students never sit in a jam-packed lecture hall. With an enrollment of less than 2,000 and a nine-to-one ratio with faculty, our students get to know accomplished instructors who teach first and foremost – all in seminar-style classes. They may choose to work on a student/faculty collaborative research project, or create their own independent study. Students learn to venture their own opinions and begin the process of shaping their own direction and destiny. The student body is composed of men and women from all 50 states and 28 foreign countries. Seventy-one percent of students come from states other than Colorado. More than 19 percent are American ethnic minority; almost three percent are international students. Eighty-five percent live on campus, 84 percent participate in community service, 75 percent play intramural sports, and 80 percent study abroad at some point during their collegiate career.

SPEAKING OF ATHLETICSColorado College has a long and proud tradition of intercollegiate athletics and today offers competition in eight varsity sports for men,

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Richard f. Celeste, President Richard F. Celeste, former United States ambassador to India, director of the U.S. Peace Corps and two-term governor of Ohio, began his term as Colorado College’s 12th president in July 2002. A magna cum laude graduate of Yale University and former Rhodes Scholar who was active in academia before arriving at CC, Celeste has taught urban economics at John Carroll University and has served as a visiting fellow in public policy at Case Western University. He currently chairs the board of trustees for the Health Effects Institute in Boston, is a Board member of Glimcher Realty Trust and the Garden City Company, and serves on the advisory board of Stonebridge International. In addition he is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, an appointed lifetime Associate of the National Academies and an advisory board member of the Institute of International Education. At the local level, Celeste is president of the Colorado Springs Downtown Partnership. During the 2005-06 academic year he served on the NCAA Presidential Task Force on the Future of Intercollegiate Athletics. He also was a member of the Student-Athlete Well-Being subcommittee that submitted a report on its findings in summer 2006. Celeste served as an Ohio state representative (1970-74), lieutenant governor (1974-78), and governor (1982-90). He directed the Peace Corps from 1979 to 1981 and was appointed ambassador to India in 1997, serving until 2001. Equally at ease in the private sector, he also worked as a managing partner of Celeste and Sabety Ltd., an economic development consultancy. Celeste and his wife, Jacqueline Lundquist, have a 12-year-old son, Sam. Celeste also is the father of six grown children by his first marriage.

as well as nine for women. That includes NCAA Division I soccer for women and ice hockey for men. Otherwise, the Tigers compete at the Division III level. Other than varsity hockey, which practices and plays at the Colorado Springs World Arena located six miles south of campus, the intercollegiate, intramural, and recreational athletics programs are centered at a sports complex consisting of Stewart and Washburn Fields, the El Pomar Sports Center, and Honnen Ice Rink.

Historic Stewart Field serves as home venue for the men’s and women’s NCAA soccer teams, as well as the women’s lacrosse squad. Adjacent to Stewart lies Washburn Field, the home stadium for CC’s men’s lacrosse and track and field teams. A six-lane, quarter-mile, latex track borders the perimeter of the field, lights accommodate night activities, and bleacher seating allows for more than 2,000 spectators. El Pomar Sports Center houses the athletics department offices as well as J. Juan Reid Gymnasium, home court for the CC basketball and volleyball teams, and Schlessman Pool. The building also is equipped with an auxiliary gym, climbing wall, racquetball and squash courts, a training room, modern exercise-physiology and biomechanics labs, and the Gerald C. Carle Weight Room and Fitness Center. A 10,000-square-foot all-purpose Astroturf room accommodates indoor track, as well as facilities for limited team practice in other sports. Colorado College believes participation in sports to be an integral part of a well-ordered program of liberal education and, therefore, encourages the widest possible participation in its programs by members of the college community. The college is committed to a philosophy of sport that stresses the value and enjoyment of participation in the physical testing of oneself, and that challenges individuals to develop their physical and mental capacities.

SHAPING TOMORROW’S LEADERSThree alumni of Colorado College currently hold cabinet positions appointed by President Barack Obama. They are Lori Garver ’83, the deputy administrator of NASA; former Colorado Senator Ken Salazar ’77, secretary of the interior; and Jane Lubchenco ’69, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Garver, a political science and economics major who also received an honorary doctor of laws degree from CC in 2001, served as senior advisor for space at the Avascent Group, a strategy and management consulting firm in Washington, D.C.

Salazar, a political science major who received a doctor of humane letters honorary degree from CC in 1993, also is an honorary member of the college’s Board of Trustees.

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Lubchenco, a biology major awarded a doctor of humane letters honorary degree in 1994, previously worked as a marine biologist at Oregon State University. Additional CC-Obama administration connections include three parents: Tom Vilsack P ’03, secretary of agriculture; David Axelrod P ’09, senior advisor to Obama and married to Susan Landau Axelrod ’74; and Christine Varney P ’09, U.S. Department of Justice assistant attorney general. Also among the long list of notable CC alums are William J. Hybl ’64, former president of the U.S. Olympic Committee, member of the International Olympic Committee, and nominated delegate to the United Nations General Assembly; Lynne Cheney ’63, news commentator and wife of former Vice President Dick Cheney; Tara Nott Cunningham ’94, the United States’ first Olympic gold medalist in women’s weightlifting (2000 Games); Olympic gold medalist Peggy Fleming ’70; Olympic cyclist and World Mountain Bike Champion Alison Dunlap ’91; William “Bro” Adams ’69, Colby College’s 19th president and former president of Bucknell University; Neal Baer ’78, former executive producer and writer for “ER” and current executive producer for “Law & Order SVU”; Jay Engeln ’74, 2000 National High School Principal of the Year; U.S. Congresswoman Diana DeGette ’79; Glenna Goodacre ’61, a sculptor who designed the image of Sacagawea on the golden U.S. dollar coin; Peter Neupert ’78, former Microsoft executive and founder of Drugstore.com; and Marcia McNutt ’74, president and CEO of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.

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Ken Ralph director of Athletics Ken Ralph, now in his third year as director of athletics at Colorado College, accepted the position in July 2007 after serving as AD at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute since 2002. An energetic, visible and approachable leader with a knack for crunching numbers and utilizing common sense, Ralph has injected renewed enthusiasm into the department

with his own work ethic, spearheading the behind-the-scenes planning and fundraising efforts for a new fitness and recreation center on the CC campus. Also, during his short stint in office, the school has successfully launched a new, dynamic athletics Web site and implemented live video streaming of home games for nearly half of its 17 varsity sports.

Like Colorado College, Rensselaer is a Division III school with two Division I programs, so Ralph was no stranger to CC’s multi-divisional status when he took over his current position. He was involved in January 2004 when the NCAA voted overwhelmingly in favor of amended legislation that permits both schools and six other Division III institutions to continue granting financial aid to student-athletes who compete on their Division I teams. The outcome preserved men’s ice hockey and women’s soccer at the Division I level at Colorado College, as well as men’s and women’s Division I ice hockey at RPI. Other schools affected were Clarkson University, Hartwick College, Johns Hopkins University, Rutgers-Newark, St. Lawrence University, and SUNY-Oneonta.

At CC, the 40-year-old Ralph now manages a department with a budget of more than $6 million. A member of the Colorado Springs Sports Corporation board of directors, he served as tournament director for the 2008 NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey West Regional at the World Arena. CC and the Sports Corp were co-hosts of the event. He also ran two previous regionals – in 2004 and 2006, in Albany, N.Y. – while at RPI.

Prior to his years at RPI, Ralph served as senior assistant athletic director, head swimming coach and head water polo coach at Connecticut College; director of aquatics, head swimming coach and physical education instructor at University of Evansville; assistant swimming coach and physical education instructor at the U.S. Air Force Academy; director of aquatics and head swimming coach at Kutztown University; director of aquatics and head swimming coach at Georgetown University; assistant swimming coach at the University of Missouri; and assistant swimming coach at the University of Alaska Anchorage. He has served on committees for ECAC Hockey, USA Hockey, and the Liberty League.

Ralph is a 1991 graduate of Alaska Anchorage, where he earned five NCAA Division II All-America awards in swimming, was twice named UAA Swimmer of the Year, and was a USS Senior National Qualifier. In 2005, he was inducted into the school’s Athletic Hall of Fame. He earned his bachelor’s degree in political science. He and his wife, Mary, celebrated their 14th anniversary in June.

Greg Capell Associate director of Athletics

Now in his sixth year as associate director

of athletics, Greg Capell serves as Colorado College’s chief NCAA compliance officer and liaison with the school’s admissions office. In addition to overseeing the department’s community outreach efforts,

he also supervises 11 of CC’s 17 varsity programs including volleyball, men’s soccer, men’s and women’s cross country, men’s and women’s swimming, men’s lacrosse, men’s and women’s tennis and men’s and women’s track and field.

Capell brought a wealth of experience and professional diversity to Colorado Springs upon his arrival in July 2004. Prior to a five-year stint as AD at Division III Loras College in Dubuque, Iowa, he worked at the University of Minnesota – first as the director of athletics publications (1994-96) and then as an assistant to the director of men’s athletics (1996-99). A 1981 graduate of Loras, he stayed at his alma mater as an admissions counselor, assistant football and track & field coach for two years before accepting a position at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minn. He spent a full decade at St. Thomas, in a variety of roles including assistant football coach, assistant track & field coach, sports information director and assistant AD.

In his most recent position at Loras, Capell managed a department with a $1.8 million budget, and directed an athletics program that rose to 37th nationally among 425 Division III schools in the 2004 USSA Director’s Cup rankings. He also developed the winning proposal and served as tournament director for the 2004 NCAA Division III Wrestling Championships, an event that drew the second highest attendance in its history and generated $1.5 million in revenue for the city of Dubuque.

Capell, who earned his master’s degree in athletics administration from St. Thomas in 1999, is a member of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics, the National Association of Division III Athletics Administrators, and the Colorado Springs Sports Corporation. He and his wife, Marcy, have a daughter, Erin, who will turn seven in January, and a one-year-old son, Gabriel.

Anne Goodman James Senior woman Administrator Anne Goodman James, director of aquatics and head coach of the Colorado College swimming and diving teams since 2006, is in her second year as senior woman administrator for CC’s athletics department.

A 1975 graduate of Texas Tech University, where she earned her bachelor’s degree in physical education, Goodman

James went on to coach the swimming teams at her alma mater (1976-80 and 1982-86), as well as at California State University at Hayward (1980-81), Northern Michigan University (1986-96) and the University of Arkansas (1996-2006).

While at Northern Michigan, where she doubled as assistant director of athletics for five years (1991-96), she was named NCAA Division II National Coach of the Year on two occasions. She was inducted into the NMU Sports Hall of Fame in October 2007.

Goodman James, who also owns a master’s degree from Indiana University, is a former president (1993-95) of the College Swimming Coaches Association of America and recipient of the CSSAA’s prestigious Steadman Award for contributions to the sport and her athletes. She served on the NCAA Swimming and Diving Committee for seven years (1987-94).

She has made numerous presentations on coaching, training and Title IX legislation during her career. She also has written articles published in the NCAA News, Swimming World magazine and Coaching: Women’s Athletics magazine.

Athletics Staff

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Jessica Bennett Internal Marketing Manager A member of the Colorado College athletics department since October 2005, Jessica Bennett is involved in numerous behind-the-scenes projects and responsibilities related specifically to Tiger Soccer.

Bennett, the wife of head coach Geoff Bennett, coordinates the team’s annual wine reception and auction each spring,

securing donations and assisting in the overall planning of the event. During the season, in addition to training and supervising student workers for game-day operations, she serves as a liaison to Conference USA in matters pertaining to tickets, marketing and hotel reservations.

Included among Bennett’s broader duties with the department are the management of the Tiger Pride Fund, securing and maintaining sponsorships, scheduling and implementing special promotions, responding to charitable donation requests, and organizing induction ceremonies for the CC Athletics Hall of Fame.

The Sherrill, N.Y., native owns a bachelor’s degree from St. Bonaventure University and a master’s from the University of Connecticut.

Ralph Bertrand NCAA faculty Representative Ralph Bertrand, a professor in the biology department, has served as Colorado College’s NCAA and WCHA faculty representative for the last decade. He also is president elect of the Faculty Athletics Representative Association.

Bertrand joined the CC faculty in 1991, and in 1993 earned the distinction of being

named a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor. He has received many prestigious awards, including the Botanical Society of America’s Margaret Menzel Award in Genetics (1993), The University of California’s Presidents Postdoctoral Fellowship and the National Hispanic Scholarship. He also has written or co-authored numerous publications, abstracts and book reviews, and remains a member of the National Institute of Health/General Medical Sciences Sub Committee for Genetics.

Before coming to Colorado College, Bertrand spent four years (1987-91) as a research associate at the University of California-Berkeley, preceded by five years as a research assistant at Cal-Riverside (1982-87). He was named Outstanding Teaching Assistant at UNR in 1982, was cited in the Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers in 1998, and received an award for teaching and service in Colorado School District 14 in 2003.

Bertrand is a 1978 graduate of the University of Nevada-Reno, where he received bachelor’s and master’s degrees in biology before going on to earn his Ph.D. in botany from UC Riverside. He and his wife, Dianne, live in Cascade, Colo., west of Colorado Springs on the northern slope of Pikes Peak.

Scott Lowenberg Assistant Ad for Marketing

Scott Lowenberg has served as assistant director of athletics for marketing at Colorado College since December 2005. He oversees the corporate sponsorship program, all marketing and sales campaigns, the licensing of merchandise, and the Tiger Pride Fund and Center Ice Club fundraising organizations. He also

directs the campaign that has increased sponsorship revenue by more than 75 percent to its current annual total of more than $400,000.

In 2006, he created the CC Tiger Sports Radio Network and negotiated the flagship station agreement with what is now 103.9 RXP.

Responsible for conceptualizing, planning and carrying out all game-day activities and promotions, Lowenberg’s office annually receives national and local accolades for its radio and TV marketing campaigns. In fact, for the 2008-09 academic year, his staff won six awards (three gold and three silver) – more than any other NCAA program in the country – from the National Association of Collegiate Marketing Administrators.

A native of Iowa, the 38-year-old Lowenberg previously served as assistant vice president and general manager for Tulane University International Sports Properties (ISP), after earlier holding assistant AD positions at Northern Illinois University and the University of Maine. He is a 1993 graduate of the University of Southern Mississippi, where he also went on to earn a master’s degree. He and his wife, Christine, are the proud parents of three daughters – Britney, age eight; Jenna, who will turn six in February; and one-year-old Ashlynn.

Bruce Kola Coordinator of Sports Medicine One of the nation’s most prominent athletic trainers for more than three decades, Bruce Kola has directed Colorado College’s sports medicine program since 1974.

Kola has worked at two Winter Olympic Games and three United States Olympic Festivals. In 1980, he was a member of the U.S. medical staff at Lake Placid, N.Y.,

and in 1984 he served as coordinator of the medical staff in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. He also spent five years on the Medical Services Committee of the USOC Sports Medicine Council.

Kola currently supervises a staff of five professionals, in addition to a number of interns and student trainers, who serve the college’s 17 varsity athletics programs through the duration of their respective seasons.

Originally from Red Lodge, Mont., Kola graduated from Montana State University with a degree in physical education/pre-physical therapy in 1973 then attended the University of Arizona where he earned a master’s degree in physical education with specialization in athletic training a year later.

Kola formerly served as chair of the sports science department at Colorado College. As a lecturer in sport science, he continues to teach human anatomy and surgical anatomy, as well as coordinating the school’s pre-physical therapy and pre-P.A. advisory programs.

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colorado college STaFF direcTory

(Area code 719)

President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Richard F. Celeste

NCAA Faculty Representative . . . . . . . Ralph Bertrand

Director of Athletics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ken Ralph

Associate AD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Greg Capell

Assistant AD/Marketing . . . . . . . . . Scott Lowenberg

Marketing Dept. Phones . . . . . . . . . 389-6111/6324/6336

Athletics Dept. Office Supervisor . . . . Jane Newberry

Athletics Dept. Staff Assistant . . . . . . . Nancy Luther

Athletics Dept. Phones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6475/76

Athletics Dept. Fax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6873

CC Web Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . www.CCTigers.com

Head Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Geoff Bennett

Alma Mater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Hartwick College ‘95

Record at CC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54-32-11/5 years

Overall Record (Collegiate) . . . . . . . . 102-73-21/10 years

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6492

E-mail. . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]

Assistant Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . April Kater

Alma Mater . . . . . . . . . . University of Massachusetts ’91

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6496

Assistant Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Heather K. Masters

Alma Mater . . . . . . . . . . . .University of Rhode Island ’03

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6481

Team Trainer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jason Fox

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6208

Student Assistant Trainer . . . . . . . . . . . .Amy Howard

Equipment Manager . . . . . . . . . . . Gord “Spud” Hamilton

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 477-2184

Student Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Emma Bailey

CC Equipment Room Supervisor . . . . . . .Doug Payton

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6489

aThleTic media relaTionS

Director (Soccer Contact) . . . . . . . . . . . Dave Moross

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6755

E-mail. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]

Associate Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dave Reed

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6105

E-mail. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]

Media Relations Fax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6256

dave Moross director of Athletic Media Relations Dave Moross has served as director of athletic media relations at Colorado College since 1986. He previously worked as a writer and assistant sports editor at the Colorado Springs Sun newspaper, where his duties included covering Tiger teams for eight seasons.

A charter member of the CC Athletics Hall of Fame selection committee, Moross serves

as the primary contact for the school’s two Division I programs – women’s soccer and men’s ice hockey. He also writes, edits and distributes weekly press releases for both during their respective seasons, and is responsible for keeping their Web sites up to date year-round.

In 2002 and 2004, before the Tigers began their current affiliation with Conference USA, Moross coordinated the balloting and selection process for the Division I Women’s Soccer All-Independent Teams.

Moross graduated with honors from Michigan State University in 1973, earning a bachelor’s degree in advertising communications. A native of the Detroit area, he has served as a contributing writer and done freelance work for several national magazines during his professional career. Moross and his wife, Amy, have been Colorado Springs residents since 1974, and have five grown daughters and four grandchildren.

dave Reed Associate director of Athletic Media Relations Dave Reed, now in his 11th year at Colorado College, is the primary contact for CC’s 15 Division III programs and is heavily involved with maintaining the athletics department Web site on a year-round basis. He also is the primary contact with B2 Networks for live video streaming of Tiger sports.

A member of the College Sports Information Directors of America, Reed currently is completing a three-year term as a College Division Representative on the organization’s board of directors.

Prior to his arrival at Colorado College, Reed worked in athletic media relations at the University of Dayton (1989–91), the Ohio State University (1992–93) and the University of Notre Dame (1993–96). He has served as media coordinator for several Big East, Midwestern Collegiate Conference and NCAA Division I championships.

Reed left Notre Dame in 1996 to join USA TODAY.com, where he served as a content editor/stringer manager for three years. He was part of an 11-member team that specialized in the coverage of collegiate athletics, with an emphasis on basketball, football, ice hockey and volleyball.

A 1991 graduate of the University of Dayton with a degree in communications, Reed is a native of Piqua, Ohio. He and his wife, Gerri Anne, were married in May 2005. Their son, Jackson, was born in November 2006.

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colorado college STaFF direcTory

(Area code 719)

President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Richard F. Celeste

NCAA Faculty Representative . . . . . . . Ralph Bertrand

Director of Athletics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ken Ralph

Associate AD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Greg Capell

Assistant AD/Marketing . . . . . . . . . Scott Lowenberg

Marketing Dept. Phones . . . . . . . . . 389-6111/6324/6336

Athletics Dept. Office Supervisor . . . . Jane Newberry

Athletics Dept. Staff Assistant . . . . . . . Nancy Luther

Athletics Dept. Phones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6475/76

Athletics Dept. Fax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6873

CC Web Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . www.CCTigers.com

Head Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Geoff Bennett

Alma Mater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Hartwick College ‘95

Record at CC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54-32-11/5 years

Overall Record (Collegiate) . . . . . . . . 102-73-21/10 years

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6492

E-mail. . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]

Assistant Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . April Kater

Alma Mater . . . . . . . . . . University of Massachusetts ’91

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6496

Assistant Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Heather K. Masters

Alma Mater . . . . . . . . . . . .University of Rhode Island ’03

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6481

Team Trainer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jason Fox

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6208

Student Assistant Trainer . . . . . . . . . . . .Amy Howard

Equipment Manager . . . . . . . . . . . Gord “Spud” Hamilton

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 477-2184

Student Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Emma Bailey

CC Equipment Room Supervisor . . . . . . .Doug Payton

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6489

aThleTic media relaTionS

Director (Soccer Contact) . . . . . . . . . . . Dave Moross

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6755

E-mail. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]

Associate Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dave Reed

Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6105

E-mail. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]

Media Relations Fax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389-6256

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