40
2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 1 The 2005 University of North Carolina at Greensboro women’s soccer media guide was written by Mark Kimmel, UNCG Assistant Sports Information Director. This guide was designed using Adobe Creative Suite CS2. Cover design by Mike Hirschman, UNCG Sports Information Director. Editorial assis- tance provided by Mike Hirschman and Jay D’Abramo. Photography by Jerry Wolford, John Bell, Chris English and others. Special thanks to Virginia Cornell, Rod Wyatt, UNCG university relations, and former sports information office staff members for their assistance in building this publica- tion. On the front cover: Senior Amy Carnell was the 2004 SoCon Player of the Year, while sophomore Karla Davis was named the Freshman of the Year one season ago. Also featured is Deven Beachum, who led the club in scoring in 2004. UNIVERSITY FACTS Location ..................................................................................................... Greensboro, NC Founded .......................................................................................................................1891 Enrollment .................................................................................................................14,900 Nickname............................................................................................................... Spartans Colors ................................................................................................... Gold, White & Navy Stadium .............................................................................. UNCG Soccer Stadium (3,540) Affiliation ..................................................................................................... NCAA Division I Conference ............................................................................................................ Southern Chancellor ........................................................................................ Dr. Patricia A. Sullivan Alma Mater ........................................................... Notre Dame College of St. John’s, 1963 Director of Athletics......................................................................................Nelson E. Bobb Alma Mater ................................................................................................ Kent State, 1970 Athletics Dept. Phone .................................................................................... 336-334-5952 Ticket Office Phone ....................................................................................... 336-334-3250 SPORTS INFORMATION OFFICE Sports Information Director......................................................................... Mike Hirschman Email................................................................................................. [email protected] Cell Phone ................................................................................................... 336-202-5331 Assistant Sports Information Director ..............................................................Mark Kimmel Email................................................................................................ [email protected] Cell Phone ................................................................................................... 336-207-2383 Sports Information Intern (Women’s Soccer contact) .................................... Jay D’Abramo Email................................................................................................. [email protected] Cell Phone ................................................................................................... 662-312-7253 Sports Information Phone .............................................................................. 336-334-5615 Sports Information Fax .................................................................................. 336-334-3182 Press Box Phone ........................................................................................... 336-334-5625 SID Office Address ......................................................................................UNCG Athletics ...................................................................................................................... PO Box 26168 ............................................................................................... Greensboro, NC 27402-6168 Website...........................................................................................www.uncgspartans.com UNCG WOMEN’S SOCCER INFORMATION Head Coach.............................................................................................. Eddie Radwanski Alma Mater ..................................................................................... UNC Greensboro, 1997 Email.................................................................................................. [email protected] Record at UNCG ................................................................................ 51-32-5 (Four Years) Career Record ............................................................................................................. same Assistant Coach............................................................................ Siri Mullinix (UNC, 1998) Volunteer Coaches .......... Jennifer Kennedy (UNCG, 2002) & Nathan Kipp (UNCG, 2000) Women’s Soccer Office Phone ...................................................................... 336-334-4474 2004 Overall Record.................................................................................................. 14-5-1 2004 SoCon Record .................................................................................. 9-1-1 (1st Place) Letterwinners Returning/Lost.........................................................................................20/5 Starters Returning/Lost....................................................................................................9/2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents/Quick Facts/Roster ................................................................................1 Coaching Staff ................................................................................................................ 2-3 Player Bios ................................................................................................................... 4-13 2004 Statistics ..................................................................................................................14 2004 Recaps .............................................................................................................. 15-17 About the SoCon ..............................................................................................................18 2004 SoCon Review .........................................................................................................19 Year-by-Year Results .................................................................................................. 20-22 All-Time results ........................................................................................................... 23-24 Record Book ............................................................................................................... 25-27 All-Time Roster .................................................................................................................28 Spartan Soccer History.....................................................................................................29 UNCG Soccer Stadium.....................................................................................................30 This is UNCG.............................................................................................................. 31-33 UNCG Administration ................................................................................................. 34-36 UNCG Athletics History: A Success Story .................................................................. 37-40 No. Student-Athlete Pos. Ht. Yr. Hometown Previous School 0 Michelle Crowder GK 5-6 Jr. Eden, NC Morehead HS 00 Katherine Ryan GK 5-9 So. Pittsboro, NC Northwood HS 1 Jennifer Stillman GK 5-8 Sr. Randolph, NJ Randolph HS 2 Becca Voss D 5-6 Fr. Raleigh, NC Broughton HS 3 Jessie Jay M/F 5-3 Jr. Raleigh, NC Broughton HS 4 Christine Jodrie D 5-8 Jr. Frederick, MD Thomas Johnson HS/George Washington 5 Cara Hammond F/D 5-5 Sr. Howell, NJ Howell HS 6 Nicollette DeLaine D 5-5 Sr. Clayton, NC Southeast Raleigh HS 7 Carolin Feierabend M/F 5-11 Fr. Ulm, Germany Valckenburgschule 8 Karla Davis M 5-6 So. Monroe, NC Parkwood HS 9 Megen Kepley M/F 5-5 Jr. Chapel Hill, NC East Chapel Hill HS 10 Mary Kate Towne F/M 5-10 So. Royal Palm Beach, FL Suncoast HS 11 Skye Dregalla M 5-2 Sr. Larspur, CO Douglas County HS/Samford University 12 Jessica Patterson M/F 5-8 So. Jacksonville, NC Jacksonville HS 13 Heather Deutschle F/M 5-6 Fr. Burlington, NC Williams HS 14 Amy Carnell F 5-10 Sr. Lake Stevens, WA Lake Stevens HS 15 Dacia Beachum M/F 5-3 Sr. Raleigh, NC Sanderson HS 16 Deven Beachum M/F 5-3 Jr.-r Raleigh, NC Sanderson HS 17 Meredith Paisley M/D 5-7 Jr. Greensboro, NC Northwest Guilford HS 18 Shannon Donovan D 5-7 Jr. Melville, NY Half Hallow Hills East HS 19 Tyson Davis D 5-6 Sr. Hope Mills, NC South View HS 20 Jamie Corti D 5-6 So. Apex, NC Apex HS 21 Carolyn Lindsay M 5-7 Jr. Hope Mills, NC South View HS 22 Heather Mitrisin M/D 5-6 Fr. Hope Mills, NC South View HS 24 Emilie Stewart M 5-5 Jr.-r Dallas, TX Ursline Academy/Southeast Louisiana 25 Amanda Zimmerman D 5-7 Jr.-r Greensboro, NC Page HS/Appalachian State Head Coach: Eddie Radwanski (UNCG, 1997) - fifth season Assistant Coach: Siri Mullinix (UNC, 1998) - first season Volunteer Coaches: Jennifer Kennedy (UNCG, 2002) & Nathan Kipp (UNCG, 2000)

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Page 1: 2005 UNCG Women's Soccer Media Guide

2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 1

The 2005 University of North Carolina at Greensboro women’s soccer media guide was written by Mark Kimmel, UNCG Assistant Sports Information Director. This guide was designed using Adobe Creative Suite CS2.

Cover design by Mike Hirschman, UNCG Sports Information Director. Editorial assis-tance provided by Mike Hirschman and Jay D’Abramo. Photography by Jerry Wolford, John Bell, Chris English and others.

Special thanks to Virginia Cornell, Rod Wyatt, UNCG university relations, and former sports information offi ce staff members for their assistance in building this publica-tion.

On the front cover: Senior Amy Carnell was the 2004 SoCon Player of the Year, while sophomore Karla Davis was named the Freshman of the Year one season ago. Also featured is Deven Beachum, who led the club in scoring in 2004.

UNIVERSITY FACTSLocation ..................................................................................................... Greensboro, NCFounded .......................................................................................................................1891Enrollment .................................................................................................................14,900Nickname ............................................................................................................... SpartansColors ................................................................................................... Gold, White & NavyStadium .............................................................................. UNCG Soccer Stadium (3,540)Affi liation ..................................................................................................... NCAA Division IConference ............................................................................................................SouthernChancellor ........................................................................................ Dr. Patricia A. SullivanAlma Mater ........................................................... Notre Dame College of St. John’s, 1963Director of Athletics ......................................................................................Nelson E. BobbAlma Mater ................................................................................................Kent State, 1970Athletics Dept. Phone .................................................................................... 336-334-5952Ticket Offi ce Phone ....................................................................................... 336-334-3250

SPORTS INFORMATION OFFICESports Information Director .........................................................................Mike Hirschman Email .................................................................................................mwhirsch@uncg.edu Cell Phone ................................................................................................... 336-202-5331Assistant Sports Information Director ..............................................................Mark Kimmel Email ................................................................................................mdkimmel@uncg.edu Cell Phone ................................................................................................... 336-207-2383Sports Information Intern (Women’s Soccer contact) ....................................Jay D’Abramo Email ................................................................................................. [email protected] Cell Phone ................................................................................................... 662-312-7253Sports Information Phone .............................................................................. 336-334-5615Sports Information Fax .................................................................................. 336-334-3182Press Box Phone ........................................................................................... 336-334-5625SID Offi ce Address ......................................................................................UNCG Athletics...................................................................................................................... PO Box 26168............................................................................................... Greensboro, NC 27402-6168Website ...........................................................................................www.uncgspartans.com

UNCG WOMEN’S SOCCER INFORMATIONHead Coach ..............................................................................................Eddie RadwanskiAlma Mater .....................................................................................UNC Greensboro, 1997Email .................................................................................................. [email protected] at UNCG ................................................................................ 51-32-5 (Four Years)Career Record .............................................................................................................sameAssistant Coach ............................................................................ Siri Mullinix (UNC, 1998)Volunteer Coaches .......... Jennifer Kennedy (UNCG, 2002) & Nathan Kipp (UNCG, 2000)Women’s Soccer Offi ce Phone ...................................................................... 336-334-44742004 Overall Record .................................................................................................. 14-5-12004 SoCon Record ..................................................................................9-1-1 (1st Place)Letterwinners Returning/Lost .........................................................................................20/5Starters Returning/Lost ....................................................................................................9/2

TABLE OF CONTENTSTable of Contents/Quick Facts/Roster ................................................................................1Coaching Staff ................................................................................................................ 2-3Player Bios ................................................................................................................... 4-132004 Statistics ..................................................................................................................142004 Recaps .............................................................................................................. 15-17About the SoCon ..............................................................................................................182004 SoCon Review .........................................................................................................19Year-by-Year Results .................................................................................................. 20-22All-Time results ........................................................................................................... 23-24Record Book ............................................................................................................... 25-27All-Time Roster .................................................................................................................28Spartan Soccer History .....................................................................................................29UNCG Soccer Stadium .....................................................................................................30This is UNCG .............................................................................................................. 31-33UNCG Administration ................................................................................................. 34-36UNCG Athletics History: A Success Story .................................................................. 37-40

No. Student-Athlete Pos. Ht. Yr. Hometown Previous School0 Michelle Crowder GK 5-6 Jr. Eden, NC Morehead HS00 Katherine Ryan GK 5-9 So. Pittsboro, NC Northwood HS1 Jennifer Stillman GK 5-8 Sr. Randolph, NJ Randolph HS2 Becca Voss D 5-6 Fr. Raleigh, NC Broughton HS3 Jessie Jay M/F 5-3 Jr. Raleigh, NC Broughton HS4 Christine Jodrie D 5-8 Jr. Frederick, MD Thomas Johnson HS/George Washington5 Cara Hammond F/D 5-5 Sr. Howell, NJ Howell HS6 Nicollette DeLaine D 5-5 Sr. Clayton, NC Southeast Raleigh HS7 Carolin Feierabend M/F 5-11 Fr. Ulm, Germany Valckenburgschule8 Karla Davis M 5-6 So. Monroe, NC Parkwood HS9 Megen Kepley M/F 5-5 Jr. Chapel Hill, NC East Chapel Hill HS10 Mary Kate Towne F/M 5-10 So. Royal Palm Beach, FL Suncoast HS11 Skye Dregalla M 5-2 Sr. Larspur, CO Douglas County HS/Samford University12 Jessica Patterson M/F 5-8 So. Jacksonville, NC Jacksonville HS13 Heather Deutschle F/M 5-6 Fr. Burlington, NC Williams HS14 Amy Carnell F 5-10 Sr. Lake Stevens, WA Lake Stevens HS15 Dacia Beachum M/F 5-3 Sr. Raleigh, NC Sanderson HS16 Deven Beachum M/F 5-3 Jr.-r Raleigh, NC Sanderson HS17 Meredith Paisley M/D 5-7 Jr. Greensboro, NC Northwest Guilford HS18 Shannon Donovan D 5-7 Jr. Melville, NY Half Hallow Hills East HS19 Tyson Davis D 5-6 Sr. Hope Mills, NC South View HS20 Jamie Corti D 5-6 So. Apex, NC Apex HS21 Carolyn Lindsay M 5-7 Jr. Hope Mills, NC South View HS22 Heather Mitrisin M/D 5-6 Fr. Hope Mills, NC South View HS24 Emilie Stewart M 5-5 Jr.-r Dallas, TX Ursline Academy/Southeast Louisiana25 Amanda Zimmerman D 5-7 Jr.-r Greensboro, NC Page HS/Appalachian State

Head Coach: Eddie Radwanski (UNCG, 1997) - fi fth seasonAssistant Coach: Siri Mullinix (UNC, 1998) - fi rst seasonVolunteer Coaches: Jennifer Kennedy (UNCG, 2002) & Nathan Kipp (UNCG, 2000)

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and reached the NCAA Tournament all four seasons. He was the fi rst two-time All-American in UNCG athletics history. Radwanski earned fi rst team Division III All-America honors in 1983 and 1984. The fi fth-leading scorer in UNCG history with 38 goals and 56 assists, he remains one of only three men’s soccer players in school history to earn more than one All-America award. He stands second all-time in UNCG men’s soccer history with those 56 assists, including a team-high 21 in 1983. Radwanski went on to earn MVP hon-ors of the 1984 Senior Bowl all-star game. He was also selected as one of 17 individuals who were charter inductees into the UNCG Athletics Hall of Fame in September of 2000. In the fall of 2004, the entire 1982 squad was inductd into the school’s Hall of Fame. Selected fi rst in the 1985 MISL draft by the Dallas Sidekicks, Radwanski was the fi rst UNCG student-athlete to be drafted by a pro sports team and remains the highest draft pick ever. He had a fi ve-year pro indoor career with the Sidekicks and the Tacoma Stars and helped the Sidekicks win the 1987 MISL title. Radwanski played five seasons for the Greensboro (later Carolina) Dynamo, helping them win the 1993 and 1994 U.S. Interregional Soccer League national titles and fi nish as A-League national fi nalist in 1997. He was the USISL MVP and National Finals MVP in 1993. He also played two seasons for the Dallas Rockets and helped them to the 1991

national title. A member of the U.S. National Team Pool from 1985-92, he made fi ve starts for the National Team in 1985, including a World Cup qualifi er against Costa Rica. He also played with the World Cup, Olympic, World University and National Indoor teams in the 1980s and early 1990s. The Neptune, NJ, native was also named First Team All-Decade for the 1980s on the All-Century Team for New Jersey by the Newark Star-Ledger. Radwanski earned a bachelor degree in business and economics from UNCG in 1997. He resides in Greensboro with his wife Stephanie and daughter Logan.

“I have followed Eddie’s career since he played for Mike Berticelli. He was one of those players who, when you saw him out on the fi eld, just jumped out at you. When he reamerged as a coach I really liked what he did with his players and how he taught on the fi eld. I liked what he was doing so much I began to recruit his youth players. Because of my involve-ment with him in recruiting, I gained respect for him as a coach and told him that I would support him for any job he was interested in. I think he was a wonderful hire for UNCG and it is great that things have come full circle for him.”

Anson DorranceWomen’s Soccer CoachNorth Carolina

“Eddie is a guy who is as much a Spartan as anyone that has ever played at UNCG. He may be a New Jersey guy, like me, but he grew up in Greensboro. He found something he was passionate about and his success is a direct result of that pas-sion. He has played and coached at every level of soccer in this country. He is intimately knowledgable about every level. When you bring that knowledge, you bring experience and relationships. He has the ability to interact with soccer people at all levels. As a coach, he is going to be tactically sound. He will teach the technique and will instill enthusiasm and passion. He will remind his play-ers of whom they represent and what they are trying to accomplish.”

Doug HamiltonGeneral ManagerLos Angeles Galaxy

Eddie Radwanski, who helped UNC Greensboro gain national prominence in men’s soccer as an All-American in the 1980s, begins his fi fth year at the helm of the women’s program in 2005. Radwanski was a perfect fi t for the university and the program to replace Jack Poland, the only other head coach in the program’s history, when he ws named to the post on February 15, 2001. “For me, the opportunity to coach at my alma mater is a tremendous honor,” said Radwanski. “It is not often that one is given a chance to do so. There is always something about your alma mater, that pride, that special feeling inside. I have those feelings for this place.” “Our women’s soccer team has been built on a great foundation,” said Radwanski. “I want to continue that building process by raising the bar year in and year out. We have consistently won the Southern Conference and qualifi ed for the NCAA Tournament, but I want this program to reach new heights.” The 2004 campaign was another banner season for the Spartans. The club won the SoCon regular season crown with a 14-5-1 overall record (9-1-1 in league play) and took home both Player of the Year and Freshman of the Year awards by the conference. Amy Carnell became the fourth player in UNCG’s eight-year affi liation with the SoCon to win Player of the Year honors. Meanwhile, Karla Davis gave UNCG back-to-back Freshman of the Year honors. In 2003, Radwanski led UNCG to its fi fth SoCon Tournament crown and its second in a three-year span. The Spartans fi nished the season by winning 12 of their fi nal 14 games, including a 2-1 victory over Wake Forest in the fi rst round of the NCAA Tournament. The vic-

tory over the Demon Deacons was the fi rst in eight tries for the Spartans, and it also marked the program’s third appearence in the second round of the Tournament. Radwanski guided an expe-rienced squad in 2001 to its fourth league Tournament title in fi ve years and another berth in the NCAA Tour-nament. Unfortunately, the run ended in the fi rst round with a hard-fought setback to North Carolina. His women’s soccer coaching experience includes a season as head coach of the Piedmont Spark of the W-2 League, three years as head coach and coaching director for the Twisters Soccer Club of Greensboro

and a season as a volunteer assistant with the 1998 UNCG squad. Radwanski guided the Piedmont Spark to the W-2 League regular-season championship in 1999 and a rare win over the W-1 League champion Raleigh Wings. With the Twisters, Radwanski was coach of the girls’ under-18 teams and had players selected for U.S. National, Regional and State teams. He has earned the United States Soccer Federation “A” coaching license and the National Soccer Coaches Association of America Premier Diploma. Prior to coaching, Radwanski was a four-year letterwinner for the Spartans (1981-84) and captained the NCAA Division III men’s soccer National Championship teams in 1982 and 1983. Radwanski and the rest of his Spartan teammates went 75-9-4 in his four years

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 3

Former United States Olympic goalkeeper Siri Mullinix returned to her hometown and the site on which she won a collegiate national championship when she was named the new assistant coach for the UNC Greensboro women’s soccer program on May 23, 2005. Mullinix won an NCAA title on the UNCG campus as a member of the North Carolina team in 1997. She went on to earn a silver medal in the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, Australia. As the starting keeper for the U.S. team in 2000, she appeared in 29 matches, with a record 28 starts. She also set a record with 15 shutouts during the calendar year, recording an 18-5-5 mark with a 0.60 goals against average. Mullinix spent the last three seasons with the Washington Freedom in the WUSA. The squad made back-to-back Founders Cup game appearances in 2002 and 2003, winning the 2003 championship. In 2003, Mullinix earned a place as a reserve on the WUSA All-Star team. At UNC, Mullinix was a three-year starter, appearing in 90 matches during her career. She won two NCAA titles and three ACC championships during her time with the Tar Heels under legendary coach Anson Dorrance. During her freshman season, she backed up All-American Tracy Ducar, who became an assistant coach at UNCG fol-lowing her graduation. Mullinix played in 25 games as a sophomore, allowing just six goals, and 26 more the following season. She allowed just three goals in that 1997 season, recording a 0.19 GAA and leading UNC to the national championship, which was held at UNCG Soccer Stadium. For her performance in the national semifi nals and championship game, Mullinix earned Defensive Most Valuable Player honors. In her senior season, she started all 26 games, leading North Carolina back to the na-tional title game. For her collegiate career, Mullinix had a 0.27 GAA, second-best in school-history. Mullinix is a product of Ragsdale High School, where she earned all-state honors as a sophomore and junior. Mullinix graduated early from high school and began attending UNC in what would normally have been her senior year.

“She is one of the legends from our program and we are very proud of Siri for what she has accomplished both in the WUSA and with the US National Team. She will bond well with the student-athletes and will set a standard for the program. She will be a wonderful mentor.”

Anson DorranceWomen’s Soccer CoachNorth Carolina

UNCG Women’s SoccerCoaching History

Year Coach ......................Record 1988 Jack Poland ..................10-7 1989 Jack Poland ...............11-5-1 1990 Jack Poland ..................14-5 1991 Jack Poland ..................12-8 1992 Jack Poland ...............10-8-1 1993 Jack Poland ..................12-7 1994 Jack Poland ...............11-6-3 1995 Jack Poland ..................13-5 1996 Jack Poland ...............16-6-1

Year Coach ......................Record 1997 Jack Poland ..................19-6 1998 Jack Poland ...............13-9-1 1999 Jack Poland ..................8-12 2000 Jack Poland ...............14-8-1 2001 Eddie Radwanski .......15-8-0 2002 Eddie Radwanski .......7-12-2 2003 Eddie Radwanski .......15-7-2 2004 Eddie Radwanski .......14-5-1 17 Years ..........................214-124-13

Jennifer Kennedy begins her fi rst season as an assistant coach at UNCG after com-peting on the fi eld for the Spartans from 1999-2002. Kennedy was a four-year starter that appeared in 83 games and made 80 career starts, the fourth most in school history. She tallied 12 points on fi ve goals and two assists as a mainstay on the back line for the UNCG defense. Kennedy was named fi rst team All-Southern Conference as a junior in 2001, while also being named to the second team as both a sophomore and freshman. Kennedy has coached with the Greensboro Twisters club program the past two sea-sons, the ‘91 White and ‘89 Gold squads. Born and raised in Greensboro, Kennedy was an all-state player her senior season at Northwest Guilford High School. Kennedy is a physical education teacher at Hall River elementary school.

Nathan Kipp returns for his second stint as an assistant coach for the UNCG wom-en’s soccer program. Kipp previously worked with the club during the 2001 and 2002 cam-paigns after closing out a stellar career on the men’s squad. Kipp played at UNCG from 1996-99 and was a starting goalkeeper his fi nal two sea-sons. He fi nished his career with 124 saves and a 0.96 goals against average. As a junior, Kipp posted a 16-2-2 record in leading UNCG to the second round of the NCAA Tournament for the fi rst time in school history. In addition, he earned 1998 Southern Conference Tournament MVP honors that same year. As a senior, Kipp was named to the 1999 All-SoCon Tournament team. A CoSIDA/Academic All-District selection in 1998, Kipp graduated in 2000 with a bachelor of science degree in physics. The Gambier, OH native joined the Carolina Dynamo in 2001 and went on to capture United States League Goalkeeper of the Year honors after leading the league with a 0.87 GAA in 2002. The past two seasons, Kipp was the assistant women’s soccer coach at Iona College in New Rochelle, NY.

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2004: Appeared in all 20 games and made one start during her junior campaign...scored three goals and picked up an assist for seven points...had the game-winner in a 2-0 victory over Pittsburgh (9/10)...posted a season-high three points with one goal and one assist in a 7-0 win over Western Carolina (11/4) in the Southern Conference Tournament...was named a 2005 Arthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholar and to the SoCon Academic All-Conference team.

2003: Finished her sophomore season third on the team in scoring with 12 points (5g, 2a)...played in all 24 matches with fi ve starts...scored the game-winning goal in UNCG’s 1-0 win at Wofford (10/17)...assisted on goals against Furman (10/2) and College of Charleston (10/5).

2002: Saw action in all 21 games and started 11, including each of the fi nal nine matches...fi nished second on the club with fi ve goals...registered 12 points on the season, which was good for fourth on the team...scored goal in SoCon Tourney semifi nal against Furman (11/9)...added goals against Georgia Southern (10/6) and College of Charleston (10/14)...scored goals in consecutive matches against Air Force (10/4) and Colorado College (10/6)...tallied fi rst goal of ca-reer in 4-0 win over Liberty in the home opener (9/3).

High School: Earned four letters in soc-cer and basketball at Sanderson HS...named all-conference, all-region and all-state...was also named all-conference and all-regional tournament team in basketball…played club soccer for seven years with CASL...helped CASL to six state championship game appearances and four titles...captured the regional championship in 1999 and fi nished second in 1998...captured titles at the Greensboro Labor Day Tourney, Fairfax Tourney, Elk Tourney and Atlanta Cup Tourney...led the squad in scoring (12 goals, 5 assists) at the 2000 regional...led the team in points, goals and assists over the 1999-00 season.

Personal: Dacia Shantrese Beachum...born August 30, 1984 in Raleigh, NC...daughter of Stephen and Willie Beachum...majoring in speech pathology and audiology...twin sister, Deven, is a redshirt junior on the squad...named Who’s Who Among Scholars of America...participated in the James F. Wertz oratorical contest...honor roll all four years...brother, Shohn, played at North Carolina State and for the U-17 national team, Raleigh Flyers and Capital Express.

Year GP-GS Shots G A Pts. 2002 21-11 16 5 2 12

2003 24-5 12 5 2 12 2004 20-1 17 3 1 7

Totals 65-17 45 13 5 31

Dacia Beachum’s Career Stats

2004: Honored as the Southern Conference Player of the Year during her junior season...also named fi rst team All-SoCon...fi nished second on the team with 27 points on 11 goals and fi ve assists...had 37 shots...started 18 games and appeared in 19 contests overall...named to the All-Tournament team at the UNCG adidas Women’s Soccer Classic...named all-state by the North Carolina Collegiate Sports Information Directors Association...scored two goals on three occasions against Coastal Carolina (9/12), at Appalachian State (10/3) and at ETSU (10/21)...led UNCG with four game-winning goals, including a thrilling season-opening 1-0 overtime win at Old Dominion (8/27).

2003: Played in all 24 matches, start-ing 22 of them...named second team All-Southern Conference...led the Spartans in goals with nine and was second in points with 21...selected to the SoCon All-Tournament team...scored a pair of goals in wins over The Citadel (9/24), College of Charleston (10/5), Appalachian State (10/9) and Georgia Southern (10/31)...tied for team lead in game-winning goals (4).

2002: Saw action in 21 games and started six...fi nished second on the squad in goals (9) and points (20)...second among SoCon freshmen in goals and points...her nine goals were the fourth-most ever scored by a freshmen in a single-season at UNCG...ranked sixth in the SoCon in goals and ninth in points...tallied two goals against Furman (10/27)...recorded a single-game school-re-cord 10 shots in the 2-0 victory over The Citadel (10/20)...scored a pair of goals in the 4-0 win over Liberty in the home opener (9/3)...tallied goals in four consecutive games.

High School: Named second team all-state and fi rst team All-Wesco Conference during both the 1999-00 and 2000-01 seasons...led the state of Washington in goals her junior (20) and senior (22) seasons...helped Lake Stevens HS to its fi rst ever district championship in 2000-01...team captain in 2001-02...played club soccer for fi ve years with the Stellarz Nationals...led the club, league and state in scoring...led team to the top spot in the Premier I Division four times...captured the state title and qualifi ed for the Far West Regional in 1999-00...advanced into the Far West Regional semifi nals in 1997-98.

Personal: Amy Lynn Carnell...born January 25, 1984 in Monroe, WA...daughter of Mary Jo Peacock...stepdaughter to Charlie Peacock...major is exercise and sports science.

Amy Carnell’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.

2002 21-6 45 9 2 20 2003 24-22 59 9 3 21 2004 19-18 37 11 5 27

Totals 64-46 141 29 10 68

Page 5: 2005 UNCG Women's Soccer Media Guide

2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 5

2004: One of fi ve players to start all 20 games last season for UNCG...named to the All-Tournament team at the UNCG adidas Women’s Soccer Classic...dished out an assist in the 7-1 win over Coastal Carolina (9/12)...registered four shots.

2003: Played in all 23 matches with 18 starts during her sophomore season...selected to the All-Tournament team at the UNCG/adidas Classic.

2002: Saw action in 18 games and started four contests at marking back, including both of the Spartans matches in the 2003 SoCon Tournament...did not register any points, but did record a pair of shots on goal.

High School: Earned four letters at South View HS...named Most Outstand-ing Player in 1999, Most Outstanding Offensive Player in 2000 and Most Valuable Player in 2001...named fi rst team all-conference in 1999, 2000 and 2001...was second team all-region in 1999 and 2001...fi rst team all-region in 2000...played three years of club soc-cer for the Fayetteville Force and one year for CASL...helped CASL squad to the WAGS Flight “A” Championship in 2001...also placed second in the North Carolina Cup in 2001.

Personal: Tyson Breeon Davis...born February 25, 1984 in Tacoma, WA...

daughter of Kenneth and Jocelyn Davis...majoring in biology...named Who’s Who Among American High School Students in 1999 and 2000...member of HOSA in 2000 and 2001.

Tyson Davis’ Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.2002 18-4 2 0 0 02003 23-18 6 0 0 0

2004 20-20 4 0 1 1Totals 61-42 12 0 1 1

2004: Named second team All-Southern Conference during junior campaign...dished out 11 assists on the year, which was tied for the sixth most in a single-season at UNCG...named to the All-Tournament team at the UNCG adidas Women’s Soccer Classic...fi nished fourth on the club with 13 points...tied a school-record with four assists in the 7-0 win over Western Carolina in the SoCon Tournament (11/4)...assisted on both goals of a 2-1 win over Western Carolina (10/15) in the regular season...scored her fi rst collegiate goal in a 2-0 victory over Furman (9/24)...named to the SoCon Academic All-Conference team.

2003: Played in 21 matches, record-ing six starts during her sophomore season...recorded an assist in the 7-0 win over The Citadel (9/24)...tallied fi ve shots.

2002: Saw action in 20 games for the Spartans...recorded four shots on goal... spent most of her time in the midfi eld, but fi lled in extremely well when forced to play in the back in the 2002 SoCon Tournament.

High School: Earned four letters in soc-cer and two in basketball at Southeast Raleigh HS...established a new school record for career assists in soccer...stands second in school history in career points...named first team All-Triangle Athletic Alliance...honored as team’s Most Valuable Player twice...National Honor Society and African-American Student Union member...was a National Achievement Scholarship fi nalist...also

played three years of club soccer for CASL...helped the ’82 Spartan Storm to the WAGS fi nals and the ‘83 Spartan Vipers to the WAGS Flight A Championship and state runner-up.

Personal: Nicollette Camille DeLaine...born April 17, 1984 in Raleigh, NC...daughter of Jocelin Hood and Henry DeLaine...major is exercise and sports science.

Nicollette DeLaine’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.

2002 20-0 4 0 0 02003 23-7 5 0 1 1

2004 20-20 14 1 11 13Totals 63-27 23 1 12 14

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2004: Finished sixth on the team in scoring with 10 points on four goals and two assists...started once and appeared in 16 games during junior season...had 14 shots...registed three points, including the game-winning goal in a 2-0 victory over Wofford (10/10)...scored once in both games of the Southern Conference Tournament...named to the SoCon Academic All-Conference team.

2003: Named second team All-Southern Conference for the second consecutive year...scored four goals in her sophomore season after moving to the defender position...recorded game-winning goals against Elon (10/13) and Wofford (11/6).

2002: Saw action in all 21 games for UNCG and started 20...led UNCG in goals (10) and points (29) and was second in assists (9) as a freshman...led all SoCon freshmen in goals, assists and points...fi nished second in the SoCon in points, fourth in goals and third in assists...the 10 goals were the third-most ever scored by a freshmen in UNCG history...tallied her 10th goal of season in a thrilling 4-3 victory over Davidson (10/30)...also scored a goal at Wake Forest (9/25)...scored the game-winner in 1-0 win at East Tennessee State (9/20)...was named SoCon Player of the Week after scoring twice and dishing out one assist at the George Mason Invitational...added second goal of the season in 4-0 shutout of Liberty in the home opener (9/3)...scored game-winning goal in 1-0 win over Old Dominion (8/31).

High School: Earned four letters in soccer and track and fi eld at Howell HS...scored 66 goals and recorded 24 assists in scholastic career...named fi rst team All-Shore Confer-ence, all-county and all-district...third team all-state selection...also named Divisional Player of the Year and MVP at Howell...

member of the ODP Regional I squad for two years...also fi ve year member of the ODP New Jersey state team...played club soccer for Players Development Academy Splash for four years...under-18 team was ranked tops in the nation by National Soccer Rankings.com.

PERSONAL: Cara Chantay Hammond...born April 5, 1984 in Perth Amboy, NJ...daughter of Dennis and Darlene Hammond...majoring in exercise and sports science...relative Pearlie Kelly graduated from UNCG in 1979.

Cara Hammond’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.

2002 21-20 65 10 9 29 2003 22-17 31 4 0 8 2004 16-1 14 4 2 10

Totals 59-38 110 18 11 47

2004: Recorded a 10-5-1 record during junior season...registered the lowest goals against average in UNCG history with a 0.74 average...allowed only 12 goals in over 1,457 minutes between the pipes...posted seven shutouts, which included three straight games...only allowed more than one goal on three occasions...started 15 games and appeared in 17 contests overall...had a season high seven saves in the season-opening 1-0 overtime win at Old Dominion (8/27).

2003: Started all 24 matches as a sophomore...registered 10 shutouts (second most in a single-season at UNCG)...named Southern Conference Player of the Month for October in which she recorded a 0.44 goals against average...allowed only fi ve goals in 11 league matches...tallied a career-high 14 saves in the match against Princeton (9/12)...posted a 1.15 goals against average and came up with a school-record 110 saves.

2002: Saw action in 17 games and started 11 between the pipes for UNCG...registered one solo shut-out...logged 1,130 minutes in net and recorded a 2.15 goals against average...blanked Wofford (10/23)...teamed up with Angie Rudy to post fi ve other shutouts.

High School: Four-year letterwinner and two-year captain at Randolph HS... registered 42 shutouts and 426 saves in 67 career matches...participated in the 2001 New Jersey Girls Soccer Coaches Association (NJGSCA) All-Star Game...named fi rst team Gannett and Associated Press All-New Jersey during her se-nior year...awarded the Morris County Tournament MVP...three-time first team all-county, all-area, all-conference and NJGSCA all-state selection...two-time Newark Star-Ledger All-New Jersey pick...helped the 2000 squad to a 23-1-1 record and a No. 7 national ranking...four-year member of the New Jersey ODP program...two-year member of the state and region team...played club soccer for Players Development Academy Splash for fi ve years...helped the Splash to tournament titles at the Disney Classic, New Jersey State Cup, Orange Classic, WAGS, Raleigh Shoot-out and Vorhees Tournament.

Personal: Jennifer L. Stillman...born March 11, 1984 in Westwood, NJ...daughter of John and Ginger Stillman...major is exercise and sports science...goalkeeper trainer for Randolph under-13 girls soccer team...twice accepted into Soccer Plus Goalkeeper Advanced National Training Center at Nike Headquarters.

Year GP-GS Min GA GAA Svs Sho 2002 17-11 1130:00 27 2.15 73 1 2003 24-24 2190:59 28 1.15 110 10 2004 17-15 1457:17 12 0.74 60 7

Totals 58-50 4678:16 67 1.29 243 18

Jennifer Stillman’s Career Stats

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 7

2004: Saw limited action as a reserve for UNCG during junior season.

2003: Played in 14 contests...recorded an assist in UNCG’s season opening win over Old Dominion (8/29).

2002 at Samford: Started all 21 games...helped the Bulldogs to a 13-6-1 record and 6-4-1 slate in the Atlantic Sun...scored three goals and registered three assists...scored two goals in a 3-1 victory over South Alabama (9/6)...added assists against Campbell (9/19), Austin Peay (11/1) and Jacksonville (11/7).

High School: Earned four letters in soccer for head coach Ron Kingery at Douglas County HS in Castle Rock, CO...served as captain in 2002 and was named team MVP...named fi rst team Continental Alliance Conference in 2002...also All-Colorado honorable mention in 2002...participated in Colorado All-Star Game...was selected second team All-Confer-ence during sophomore and junior seasons...played three years of club soccer with the Colorado Rush...helped the Rush to the fi nals of the State Cup and Houston Shootout.

Personal: Skye Elizabeth Dregalla...born December 16, 1983 in Houston, TX...daughter of Mike and Cherie Dregalla...major is recreation, parks and tourism.

Year GP-GS Shots G A Pts. 2003 14-0 1 0 1 1 2004 0-0 0 0 0 0 Totals 14-0 1 0 1 1

Skye Dregalla’s Career Stats

2004: Appeared in 15 games off the bench during her fi rst season with UNCG...scored once in a 3-1 win at Appalachian State (10/3) and once against Western Carolina (11/4) in the Southern Conference Tournament...had six shots on goal.

2003: Did not play and earned a redshirt to retain sophomore eligibility.

2002 At Southeast Louisiana: Played in all 21 games, starting 17 games with the Lions...scored three goals, including one game-winner and tallied fi ve assists for the 2002 Southland Conference champions.

High School: Three-year letterman for coach Susan Ellis at Ursline Academy where she was a member of the 1999, 2000 and 2001 TAPPS 5A State Champion squad.

Personal: Emilie Jane Stewart...born February 1, 1984 in Dallas, TX...majoring in biology.

Emilie Stewart’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.

2004 15-0 6 2 0 4

2004: Appeared in all 20 games and made two starts during fi rst season with UNCG...had fi ve shots...named to the SoCon Academic All-Conference team.

2003: Did not play during the 2003 season...had to sit out the season due to SoCon transfer rules, but was able to use redshirt season, thus retaining sophomore eligibility.

2002 at Appalachian State: Played in all 19 matches, starting 17 at defender...recorded one assist...had 12 shots.

High School: Four year starter at Page HS...captain during her senior year...named fi rst and second team All-Metro 4-A Conference...participated in the East/West All-Star Game in 2002.

Personal: Amanda Michele Zimmerman...born May 2, 1984 in Greensboro, NC...majoring in elementary education...minor is psychology.

Amanda Zimmerman’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.

2004 20-2 5 0 0 0

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2004: Appeared in one game in a 7-1 win over Coastal Carolina (9/12)...made one save in 28 minutes of action.

2003: Did not see action as a true freshman.

High School: Earned three varsity letters as a goalkeeper at Morehead HS for coach Ken Price...two-time all-conference selection...twice named team MVP... set school record for career and single season shutouts...earned four varsity letters in tennis...two-time all-confer-ence selection on the courts...also played three years of basketball...named Morehead Female Athlete of the Year...Wendy’s High School Heisman Nominee.

Personal: Michelle Lynn Crowder...born November 16, 1984 in Greensboro, NC...daughter of Wayne and Marie Crowder...major in exercise and sports science.

Michelle Crowder’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Min GA GAA Svs Sho

2004 1-0 28:26 0 0.00 1 0

2004: First team All-Southern Conference selection...anchored the back line for the Spartans...named tournament MVP at the UNCG adidas Women’s Soccer Classic...also named to the OSU Nike Invitational All-Tournament team...named all-state by the North Carolina Collegiate Sports Information Directors Association.

2003: Named the Southern Conference Freshman of the Year...named to the North Carolina Collegiate Sports Information Association (NCCSIA) University Division All-State Team...selected to the All-Southeast Freshmen Team by Soccer Buzz...second on the team in as-sists with seven...assisted on all three of UNCG’s goals against Penn (9/14)...named to the SoCon All-Tournament Team.

2004: Led the Spartans in scoring with 30 points on a team-high 12 goals to go with six assists...named second team All-Southern Conference after fi nishing second in the league with 1.50 points per game...named to the All-Tournament team at the UNCG adidas Women’s Soccer Classic...scored two goals in a 7-1 win over Coastal Carolina (9/12) and in a 5-0 victory at ETSU (10/21)...started in 19 of 20 games...had at least one point in 10 of the last 11 games of the year, including the fi nal six outings...fi nished second on the team with 46 shots and three game-winning goals...was named a 2005 Arthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholar and a SoCon Academic All-Conference team.

2003: Played in 22 matches with 17 starts...scored fi rst career goal against The Citadel (9/24)...teamed up with twin sister, Dacia, for a goal against Furman (10/2).

2002: Missed the 2002 season with an injury and earned a medical redshirt.

High School: Earned four letters in soccer and basketball at Sanderson HS...named all-conference, all-region and all-state...led Sanderson in scor-ing as a freshman...four-year starter in basketball...played club soccer for seven years with CASL...helped CASL to six state championship game appearances and four titles...captured the regional championship in 1999 and fi nished sec-ond in 1998...captured tournament titles at the Greensboro Labor Day Tourney, Fairfax Tourney, Elk Tourney, Atlanta Cup Tourney...named MVP of regional tourna-ment...club’s all-time leader in goals.

Personal: Deven Deneen Beachum...born August 30, 1984 in Raleigh, NC...daughter of Stephen and Willie Bea-chum...major is speech pathology and audiology... twin sister, Dacia, is a senior

on the squad...named Who’s Who Among Scholars of America...participated in the James F. Wertz oratorical contest...honor roll students all four years...brother, Shohn, played at North Carolina State and for the U-17 national team, Raleigh Flyers and Capital Express.

Year GP-GS Shots G A Pts. 2003 22-17 20 2 1 5 2004 20-19 46 12 6 30 Totals 42-36 66 14 7 35

Deven Beachum’s Career Stats

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2004: Appeared in 18 games off the bench during sophomore season with UNCG...dished out three assists and had two shots...registered two assists in a 3-1 win at Appalachian State (10/3)...also had an assist in the 7-0 win at The Citadel (10/31)...named to the SoCon Academic All-Conference team.

2003: One of seven players to compete in all 24 matches...made 15 starts in her freshman sea-son with the Spartans...recorded three shots.

High School: Earned four letters in soccer for head coach Izzy Hernandez at Broughton HS...named fi rst team All-North Carolina...led Broughton to back-to-back North Carolina State Championships...Broughton climbed all the way to the top of the USA Today Top-25 national poll in 2001...led Broughton to Cap 6 title in 2002...also played club soccer for 1984 Spartan CASL Elite...helped CASL capture State Champion-ships in 1997, 2001 and 2002...led nationally ranked CASL Spartan Elite to the North Carolina State Cup Championships in 2002 and 2003...

2004: Key reserve off the bench for UNCG that appeared in all 20 games as a sophomore...also made three starts...notched six shots.

2003: Played in 23 games, including three starts, during her freshman campaign...scored fi rst career goal and game-winner in a 1-0 Southern Conference Tournament semifi nals win over Appalachian State (11/7).

High School: Earned four letters for head coach Michael Oehler at perennial state power East Chapel Hill HS...named fi rst team All-North Carolina...also all-region and all-conference performer...four-year starter...helped East Chapel Hill to the 2000 state championship and a Top-20 national ranking...helped lead East Chapel Hill to its fourth consecutive Wachovia Cup, which symbols overall athletic excellence in the State of North Carolina High School Sports...named all-conference in 2002 and 2003...involved in Student Council both junior and senior years...captured conference championship all four years...played club soccer for Triangle Futbol Club...helped Triangle Futbol reach the North Carolina State Cup Final Four.

Personal: Margaret Ellen Kepley...born Novem-ber 14, 1984 in Chapel Hill, NC...daughter of Tim and Sharon Kepley...major is elementary educa-tion...member of Fellowship of Christian Ath-

letes...grandaughter of former North Carolina head men’s basketball coach Dean Smith.

Year GP-GS Shots G A Pts.2003 24-15 3 0 0 0

2004 18-0 2 0 3 3 Team 42-15 5 0 3 3

Jesse Jay’s Career Stats

Year GP-GS Shots G A Pts.2003 23-3 2 1 0 2

2004 20-3 6 0 0 0 Team 43-6 8 1 0 2

Megan Kepley’s Career Stats

Year GP-GS Shots G A Pts. 2003 23-22 4 0 7 7 2004 20-20 14 2 3 7 Team 43-42 18 2 10 14

Shannon Donovan’s Career Stats

High School: Earned five letters for head coach Marty Hearney at Hale Hollow Hills East HS...named all-county and all-league as a junior...all-state nominee as a senior...named all-county, all conference and all-league as a senior...scored 22 goals and had 42 assists in her high school career...team captain as a senior...helped team to league championships from 8th grade though her junior season...also competed for the HBC Fury as a midfi elder/de-fender for nine years...also played six years for the Eastern New York Olympic Development Program.

Personal: Shannon Marie Donovan...born July 14, 1985 in Mineola, NY...daughter of Susanne and Glenn Donovan...undecided on a major...sister, Jennifer, is an All-American in the steeplechase at Boston College.

Spartan Elite was a fi nalist in the 2002 Region III Championships.

Personal: Jessica Murphy Jay...born in Raleigh, NC...daughter of John and Paula Jay...international business major...member of the National Honor Society, Spanish Honor Society, Service Club and Student Council...brother, Johnny, is a member of the North Carolina track & fi eld team.

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2004: Started seven games and appeared in 15 matches as a sophomore...picked up fi rst collegiate point with an assist in a 7-1 win over Coastal Carolina (9/12).

2003: Saw action in 16 matches and made 11 starts...had two shots.

High School: Four year letterwinner at nearby Northwest Guilford HS...named all-conference, all-region and all-state as a senior...North Carolina Player of the Year fi nalist as a senior...named all-conference as a junior...helped lead the Greensboro Twisters club team to the 2003 Region Three championship.

Personal: Meredith Anne Paisley...born August 5, 1985 in Greensboro, NC...daughter of Richard and Carmen Paisley...undecided on a major.

Year GP-GS Shots G A Pts.2003 16-11 2 0 0 0

2004 15-7 6 0 1 1 Team 31-18 8 0 1 1

Meredith Paisley’s Career Stats

Year GP-GS Shots G A Pts.2003 24-17 7 3 1 7

2004 20-13 16 0 4 4 Team 44-30 23 3 5 11

Carolyn Lindsay’s Career Stats

2004: Started 13 games and saw action in all 20 games during sophomore campaign...registered 16 shots and dished out four assists...had two assists in the 7-0 victory over Western Carolina (11/4) in the Southern Conference Tournament...also had assists in a 2-1 win at Georgia Southern (10/24) and in a 7-0 win at The Citadel (10/31)...named to the SoCon Academic All-Conference team.

2003: Played in all 24 games as a fresh-man and made 17 starts...scored goals against The Citadel (9/24), College of Charleston (10/5) and Georgia Southern (10/31)...assisted on the game-winner against ETSU (10/26).

High School: Earned four letters in soccer for head coach Brian Edkins at South View HS...named fi rst team All-North Carolina...also earned three letters in basketball and one letter in cross country...considered one of the top high school players in North Carolina...shat-tered the state high school record with 217 career goals (previous mark was 195)...broke three records for goals in a single-season by class; freshman (48), sophomore (62), junior (56)...chosen as region Player of the Year in 2002...named All-North Carolina in 2002...selected as the All-Two Rivers Confer-ence Player of the Year three times...also named all-region and all-conference

three times...led South View to a share of the conference championship...member of National Honor Society...chosen as Sophomore of the Year...high school teammate of current UNCG player Tyson Davis...played club soccer for 1985 Spartan CASL Elite...helped club squad to the 2003 North Carolina Final Four...Spartan Elite captured the Raleigh Shootout and participated in Disney & Final Four Showcases.

PERSONAL: Carolyn Jean Lindsay...born October 3, 1985 in Homestead, FL...daughter of William & Tammy Lindsay...major is exercise and sports science.

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 11

2004: Led all UNCG freshmen with 12 points on four goals and four assists...was named to the All-Tournament team at the UNCG adidas Women’s Soccer Classic after putting up fi ve points (two goals, one assist) in the 7-1 win over Coastal Carolina (9/12)...scored once and assisted on another goal in a 2-1 win at Elon (10/7)...had 20 shots and one game-winning goal.

High School: A member of Team Boca and Florida ODP...state cup fi nalist in 2003...Team MVP and leading scorer for Florida high school powerhouse Suncoast HS.

Personal: Mary Katelyn Towne...born September 18, 1985 in West Palm Beach, FL...daughter of Judy and Don Towne...undecided on a major.

2004: Named the Southern Conference Freshman of the Year...also named to the Southeast Region All-Rookie team by SoccerBuzz...started all 20 games and scored one goal and had four assists for six points...had the game-winner in the 7-0 win over The Citadel (10/31)...notched 17 shots.

High School: Named the Gatorade North Carolina High School Soccer Player of the Year...three-year starter for Parkwood HS...tallied 30 goals and 70 assists in her fi rst three seasons...as a freshman, led Parkwood to state fi nals while tallying 10 goals and a record 35 assists...a member of the ’85 Charlotte Soccer Club squad which won four consecutive state cup championships and were region III fi nalists in 2003...South Piedmont Conference and county Player of the Year and all-region as junior...also named all-conference and all-county in basketball.

Karla Davis’ Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.

2004 20-20 17 1 4 6

Mary Kate Towne’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.

2004 18-8 20 4 4 12

2004: Appeared in one game during freshman season...made collegiate debut in the 2-0 win over Pittsburgh (9/10).

High School: First team all-state and team MVP in 2003...won a state cup championship with CASL...member of the Greensboro Twisters 2003 region III champion...member of North Carolina ODP...grew up playing against boys in Florence, Italy.

Personal: Jamie Lauren Corti...born February 26, 1986 in Florence, Italy...daughter of Nancy and Orazio Corti...majoring in business administration.

Jamie Corti’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.

2004 1-0 0 0 0 0

Personal: Karla Elizabeth Davis...born March 3, 1986 in Charlotte, NC...daughter of Jim and Lisa Da-vis...undecided on a major.

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2004: Started 15 games and saw time in all 20 games as a freshman...scored three goals and had two assists for eight points...had 26 shots....scored the game-winner in the 2-1 win at Georgia Southern (10/24)...scored UNCG’s lone goal in a 1-1 tie with Chattanooga (10/17).

High School: Named All-Area, All-Region & Mid-Eastern Conference Player of the Year...Jacksonville HS’s 2003 Offensive Player of the Year (17 goals, 12 assists)...won state cup playing with Jacksonville boys club team...outstanding student scored a perfect 800 on Math portion of SAT...also all-conference performer in basketball and volleyball...one of 34 players named to the 2004 NSCAA/adidas Girls High School Scholar All-America team.

Jessica Patterson’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Shots G A Pts.

2004 20-15 26 3 2 8

2004 at GW: Started once and appeared in 13 games for the Colonials...dished out three assists...had one shot on goal as a defender.

2003 at GW: Appeared in 16 games in 2003, starting six...made her fi rst career start in a 2-1 win at Howard...notched fi rst career point with an assist in the fi nal game of 2003 at La Salle...part of a defense that posted a 0.87 GAA and recorded seven shutouts...member of the 2003 A-10 Commissioner’s Honor Roll.

High School: Three-year letterwinner at Governer Thomas Johnson HS...team captain senior year for club that was FCGST Champions and East Region Finalists...junior year named fi rst team All-Central Maryland Conference and All-State Honorable Mention...had two goals (one of which was a game-winner) and an assist to lead 2001 team to East Region Championship and 4A State Championship...also played point guard for two years on the basketball team and served as a team captain...graduated in the top fi ve percent of her class with academic honors...member of the National Honor Society and was a state of Maryland Distinguished scholar...played seven years for the Frederick United soccer club team...team was a State Cup Finalist in 2003 and Region 1 Finalist as well as Maryland State Cup Champions and Regional Finalists in 2002...Prince William team were Ice Breakers Champions and ranked #5 in the nation in 2002.

Personal: Christine Marie Jodrie...born April 16, 1985 in Lancaster, NH...daughter of Larry and Mary Jodrie...father played soccer for Plymouth State (NH)...majoring in exercise and sports science.

2004: UNCG’s primary backup goalkeeper as a freshman...made four starts and appeared in seven games...posted a 4-0 record with a 1.57 goals against average...came up with 13 saves in 343 minutes in net...picked up fi rst collegiate win in a 2-1 victory over Fresno State (9/3) at the OSU/Nike Invitational...notched fi rst SoCon win in a 3-1 triumph over Ap-palachian State (10/3).

High School: Led CASL Elite to three consecutive State Cup Titles (’01,’02,’03) and two regional championship fi nals (’01 & ’02)...a member of the North Carolina ODP team and Region III pool...was considered the top goalkeeping prospect in North Carolina.

Personal: Katherine Grace Ryan...born December 7, 1985...daughter of Darlene and Mike Ryan...majoring in biochemistry.

Katherine Ryan’s Career StatsYear GP-GS Min GA GAA Svs Sho

2004 7-4 343:10 6 1.57 13 0

Personal: Jessica Lee Patterson...born August 17, 1986 in Alexandria, VA...daughter of Robert and Deborah Pat-terson...undecided on a major.

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 13

High School: Three-year starter at Williams HS...competed in the East/West High School All-Star Game at UNCG...all-time leading goal scorer at Williams with 105 markers...twice named All-State...three-time All-Region, All-Area and a four-time All-Five-County Conference selection...tabbed team MVP as senior after scoring 29 goals with 18 assists...scored a school record 39 goals during junior campaign...as a sophomore, scored 19 goals...also competed in cross country and basketball...member of the French National Honor Society, Mu Alpha Theta and the DREAM team...recipient of William’s Female Athlete of the Year award...also a member of the North Carolina Olympic Development Program team and has played club soccer for the Greensboro Twisters and the Twisters’ “W” League team each of the last two years.

Personal: Heather Marie Deutschle...born January 28, 1987 in Burlington, NC...daughter of Dennis and Becky Deutschle...majoring in exercise and sports science.

High School: Four-year member of the South View HS soccer team...scored 121 goals and dished out 89 assists for her career...named 4-A All-Cape Fear Region and All-Region by the Fayetteville Observer team as a senior after tallying 97 points on 36 goals and 25 assists...also named fi rst team All-Two Rivers Conference as a senior...earned all-state honors and was the conference’s MVP, compiling 34 goals and 24 assists during junior year...led Cumberland County in scoring as a junior...three time fi rst team all-confererence selection after earning second team honors as a freshman...was a second team all-region selection as a sophomore before earning fi rst team all-region honors as a junior...also ran cross country, in which she has twice earned all-conference, and was a member of the swimming team...was a member of North Carolina’s Olympic Development Program team and played her club soccer with the Fayetteville Force, who won the 2004 Directors Cup National Championship...Mitrisin was a teammate of current UNCG player Carolyn Lindsay at South View and with the Force.

Personal: Heather Renee Mitrisin...born January 23, 1987 in Fayetteville, NC...daughter of Bill and Vicky Mitrisin...undecided on a major.

Prior to UNCG: Brings a tremendous amount of international experience to UNCG...ex-pected to see time up front...played two years in the second German Division...member of Germany’s U-16, U-17 and, most recently, U-18 national teams...led her club to three German State Championships...fi rst German player to compete for UNCG...played for the Carolina Dynamo under coach Rich Winslow during the summer of 2004.

Personal: Carolin Feierabend...born September 14, 1983 in Ulm, Germany...daughter of Walter and Margarete Feierabend...majoring in business administration.

High School: Played for coach Jonathan Hasbrouck at Southeast Raleigh HS...competed in the East/West High School All-Star Game at UNCG...three-time All-State, All-Region and All-Conference perfomer...named team Player of the Year and Academic All-Conference as a senior...scored six goals and had eight assists during junior campaign...as a sophomore, scored 12 goals and eight assists and was named Conference Player of the Year...also com-peted in indoor track...member of National Honor Society, Student Goverment and SHINE...honored with the Presidential Academic Excellence award for a 3.5 GPA or above...North Carolina Scholar’s Award recipient.

Personal: Rebecca Kathaleen Voss...born July 5, 1987...daughter of Joseph and Kathy Voss...majoring in elementary education.

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14 • 2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Overall: 14-5-1 Conf: 9-1-1 Home: 7-2-1 Away: 6-3-0 Neut: 1-0-0

POINTS 6 ............Amy Carnell vs. Coastal Carolina (9/12) 5 ....................... Rakel Logadóttir vs. WCU (11/4) 5 ............................ Amy Carnell at ETSU (10/21) 5 ..................... Deven Beachum at ETSU (10/21) 5 ...................... Mary Kate Towne vs. CCU (9/12) GOALS 2 ..................................Amy Carnell (three times) 2 .....................................Rakel Logadóttir (twice) 2 .....................................Deven Beachum (twice) 2 ...................... Mary Kate Towne vs. CCU (9/12) ASSISTS 4 .................... Nicollette DeLaine vs. WCU (11/4) 2 ............................. Rakel Logadottir (four times) 2 ...........................................fi ve other occasions SHOTS 8 ....... Rakel Logadóttir at C. of Charleston (9/30) 7 ............ Deven Beachum at The Citadel (10/31) 7 .....................Rakel Logadóttir vs. WCU (10/15) SAVES 7 ........... Jennifer Stillman at Old Dominion (8/27) 6 .............Jennifer Stillman at Wake Forest (8/30)

POINTS 9 ............................................ vs. Davidson (11/5) 9 ........................................ at Wake Forest (8/30) GOALS 3 ............................................ vs. Davidson (11/5) 3 ........................................ at Wake Forest (8/30) ASSISTS 3 ............................................ vs. Davidson (11/5) 3 ........................................ at Wake Forest (8/30) SHOTS 20 ...................................... at Wake Forest (8/30) 16 .......................................at Oregon State (9/5) SAVES 15 ...................................... at The Citadel (10/31) 13 .................................. vs. Chattanooga (10/17) CORNER KICKS 6 ............................................ vs. Davidson (11/5) 6 ..........................................vs. Davidson (10/28) 6 ........................................ at Wake Forest (8/30) FOULS 19 ............................................ vs. Furman (9/24)

POINTS 23 .............................. vs. Coastal Carolina (9/12) 22 ............................. vs. Western Carolina (11/4) GOALS 7 ............................... vs. Western Carolina (11/4) 7 ........................................ at The Citadel (10/31) 7 ................................ vs. Coastal Carolina (9/12) ASSISTS 9 ................................ vs. Coastal Carolina (9/12) 8 ............................... vs. Western Carolina (11/4) SHOTS 36 ...................................... at The Citadel (10/31) 25 .............................. vs. Coastal Carolina (9/12) SAVES 9 ........................................ at Wake Forest (8/30) 7 .......................................at Old Dominion (8/27) CORNER KICKS 15 .............................. vs. Coastal Carolina (9/12) 10 ...................................... at The Citadel (10/31) FOULS 17 .........................................vs. Pittsburgh (9/10)

GOALS BY PERIOD 1st 2nd OT 2OT Total UNCG 22 29 1 0 52 Opp 7 11 0 0 18

SHOTS BY PERIOD 1st 2nd OT 2OT Total UNCG 177 159 2 1 339Opp 84 87 1 2 174

SAVES BY PERIOD 1st 2nd OT 2OT Total UNCG 32 43 1 0 76Opp 66 57 1 1 125

CORNER KICKS BY PERIOD 1st 2nd OT 2OT Total UNCG 57 53 4 1 115Opp 15 36 1 0 52

FOULS BY PERIOD 1st 2nd OT 2OT Total UNCG 100 98 4 3 205Opp 90 105 4 3 202

NAME GP-GS G A Pts Sh GW PKDeven Beachum 20-19 12 6 30 46 3 0-1Amy Carnell 19-18 11 5 27 37 4 0-0Rakel Logadottir 20-20 6 15 27 57 5 0-0Nicollette DeLaine 20-20 1 11 13 14 0 0-0Mary Kate Towne 18-8 4 4 12 20 1 0-0Cara Hammond 16-1 4 2 10 14 1 0-0Jaime Ableman 20-13 3 2 8 32 2 0-0Jessica Patterson 20-15 3 2 8 26 1 0-0Dacia Beachum 20-1 3 1 7 17 1 0-0Shannon Donovan 20-20 2 3 7 14 0 0-0Karla Davis 20-20 1 4 6 17 1 0-0Emilie Stewart 15-0 2 0 4 6 0 0-0Carolyn Lindsay 20-13 0 4 4 16 0 0-0Jessie Jay 18-0 0 3 3 2 0 0-0Meredith Paisley 15-7 0 1 1 6 0 0-0Tyson Davis 20-20 0 1 1 4 0 0-0Megan Kepley 20-3 0 0 0 6 0 0-0Amanda Zimmerman 20-2 0 0 0 5 0 0-0Kelly Murphy 5-0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0Jaime Corti 1-0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0Totals 20-20 52 64 168 339 14 0-1Opponents 20-20 18 16 52 174 5 1-1

NAME GP-GS Min GA GAA Svs. Pct. W-L-T ShoMichelle Crowder 1-0 28:26 0 0.00 1 .000 0-0-0 0Jennifer Stillman 18-16 1457:17 12 0.74 60 .833 10-5-1 7Katherine Ryan 7-4 343:00 6 1.57 13 .684 4-0-0 0Team 2 1Totals 20-20 1828:53 18 0.89 76 .809 14-5-1 8Opponents 20-20 1828:53 52 2.56 125 .706 5-14-1 2

Team Statistics

Individual Game Highs Team Game Highs Opponents Game Highs

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 15

ExhibitionUNCG 1, North Carolina State 1

August 16 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TNC State 0 1 1UNCG 1 0 1

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Dacia Beachum (Logadottir), 32:46NC State - Anna Helenius (Buescher, Wilkerson), 81:59

Game SummaryShots: NC State 14, UNCG 6Corner Kicks: UNCG 4, NC State 1Saves: UNCG 5, NC State 4Fouls: UNCG 17, NC State 10

Attendance: 363

ExhibitionUNCG 3, Charlotte 1

August 21 Charlotte, NC

Goals by Period 1 2 TUNCG 1 2 3Charlotte 0 1 1

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Rakel Logadottir (unassisted), 21:08UNCG - Jessie Jay (Lindsay), 53:30UNCG - Logadottir (Davis), 83:35CHAR - Kelly Ducray (Beam), 89:09

Game SummaryShots: Charlotte 13, UNCG 12Corner Kicks: Charlotte 7, UNCG 5Saves: UNCG 7, Charlotte 3Fouls: Charlotte 13, UNCG 1

Attendance: n/a

Game 1UNCG 1, Old Dominion 0 (OT)

August 27 Norfolk, VA

Goals by Period 1 2 OT TUNCG 0 0 1 1Old Dominion 0 0 0 0

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Amy Carnell (Logadottir), 98:53

Game SummaryShots: ODU 8, UNCG 4Corner Kicks: UNCG 8, ODU 4Saves: UNCG 7, ODU 3Fouls: ODU 9, UNCG 8

Attendance: 304

Game 2Wake Forest 3, UNCG 2

August 30 Winston-Salem, NC

Goals by Period 1 2 TUNCG 1 1 2Wake Forest 1 2 3

Scoring SummaryWFU - Sarah Kozey (Schneider), 3:57UNCG - Rakel Logadottir (Donovan), 24:40WFU - Melanie Schneider (Toombs, Kozey), 57:16WFU - Elizabeth Remy (unassisted), 59:30UNCG - Mary Kate Towne (Logadottir), 70:32

Game SummaryShots: Wake Forest 20, UNCG 7Corner Kicks: Wake Forest 6, UNCG 0Saves: UNCG 9, Wake Forest 2Fouls: Wake Forest 7, UNCG 6

Attendance: 379

Game 3UNCG 2, Fresno State 1

September 3 Corvallis, OR

Goals by Period 1 2 TFresno State 1 0 1UNCG 1 1 2

Scoring SummaryFS - Kortney Lewis (Sugano), 21:49UNCG - Deven Beachum (Logadottir), 22:00UNCG - Amy Carnell (Ableman), 89:59

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 19, Fresno State 14Corner Kicks: Fresno State 5, UNCG 3Saves: Fresno State 5, UNCG 4Fouls: UNCG 7, Fresno State 6

Attendance: 55

Game 4Oregon State 2, UNCG 1

September 5 Corvallis, OR

Goals by Period 1 2 TUNCG 0 1 1Oregon State 1 1 2

Scoring SummaryOSU - Jodie Taylor (Mescher), 18:04OSU - Jodie Taylor (Mescher), 82:07UNCG - Shannon Donovan (unassisted), 86:30

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 19, Oregon State 16Corner Kicks: UNCG 8, Oregon State 1Saves: UNCG 4, Oregon State 3Fouls: Oregon State 15, UNCG 12

Attendance: 402

Game 5UNCG 2, Pittsburgh 0

September 10 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TPittsburgh 0 0 0UNCG 0 2 2

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Dacia Beachum (Logadottir), 65:44UNCG - Deven Beachum (unassisted), 89:48

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 11, Pittsburgh 7Corner Kicks: UNCG 2, Pittsburgh 2Saves: Pittsburgh 6, UNCG 5Fouls: UNCG 17, Pittsburgh 8

Attendance: 338

Game 6UNCG 7, Coastal Carolina 1

September 12 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TCoastal Carolina 1 0 1UNCG 6 1 7

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Deven Beachum (Logadottir, Towne), 9:59UNCG - Mary Kate Towne (unassisted), 12:15UNCG - Amy Carnell (Logadottir), 15:54UNCG - Deven Beachum (Davis, Carnell), 18:22CCU - Bobbie Parsons (Blevins), 20:50UNCG - Carnell (DeLaine, Paisley), 23:13UNCG - Jessica Patterson (Donovan), 27:08UNCG - Towne (Carnell), 49:33

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 25, Coastal Carolina 7Corner Kicks: UNCG 15, Coastal Carolina 0Saves: Coastal Carolina 10, UNCG 4Fouls: UNCG 9, Coastal Carolina 5

Attendance: 262

Amy Carnell led the Spartans with four game-winning goals during the 2004 season.

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16 • 2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Game 7No. 17 Princeton 2, UNCG 0

September 17 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TPrinceton 1 1 2UNCG 0 0 0

Scoring SummaryPRIN - Diana Matheson (Negron), 14:47PRIN - Emily Behncke (Negron), 79:44

Game SummaryShots: Princeton 12, UNCG 9Corner Kicks: Princeton 4, UNCG 2Saves: UNCG 4, Princeton 4Fouls: Princeton 18, UNCG 11

Attendance: 143

Game 8UNCG 2, Furman 0

September 24 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TFurman 0 0 0UNCG 1 1 2

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Amy Carnell (Davis), 5:02UNCG - Nicollette DeLaine (Deven Beachum), 65:59

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 8, Furman 8Corner Kicks: Furman 3, UNCG 0Saves: UNCG 5, Furman 1Fouls: Furman 19, UNCG 14

Attendance: 501

Game 9College of Charleston 1, UNCG 0September 30 Mt. Pleasant, SC

Goals by Period 1 2 TUNCG 0 0 0College of Charleston 1 0 1

Scoring SummaryCOFC - Kristin Rhyne (Andrews), 31:55

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 19, COFC 6Corner Kicks: UNCG 5, COFC 0Saves: COFC 8, UNCG 2Fouls: COFC 16, UNCG 15

Attendance: 229

Game 10UNCG 3, Appalachian State 1

October 3 Boone, NC

Goals by Period 1 2 TUNCG 0 3 3Appalachian State 0 1 1

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Amy Carnell (Logadottir, Deven Beachum), 48:34UNCG - Carnell (Logadottir, Jay), 64:46ASU - Courtney O’Brien (penalty kick), 70:33UNCG - Emilie Stewart (Jay, Towne), 73:36

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 17, ASU 12Corner Kicks: UNCG 3, ASU 2Saves: ASU 4, UNCG 2Fouls: ASU 8, UNCG 6

Attendance: 204

Game 11UNCG 2, Elon 1

October 7 Elon, NC

Goals by Period 1 2 TUNCG 1 1 2Elon 1 0 1

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Mary Kate Towne (unassisted), 3:41Elon - Jaclyn Immordino (Petitt), 41:25UNCG - Deven Beachum (Towne), 52:14

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 17, Elon 9Corner Kicks: Elon 4, UNCG 2Saves: Elon 6, UNCG 4Fouls: Elon 8, UNCG 5

Attendance: 130

Game 12UNCG 2, Wofford 0

October 10 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TWofford 0 0 0UNCG 0 2 2

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Cara Hammond (DeLaine), 53:39UNCG - Deven Beachum (Hammond, Davis), 84:47

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 17, Wofford 5Corner Kicks: UNCG 8, Wofford 2Saves: Wofford 8, UNCG 2Fouls: UNCG 9, Wofford 5

Attendance: 179

Game 13UNCG 2, Western Carolina 1

October 15 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TWestern Carolina 0 1 1UNCG 0 2 2

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Rakel Logadottir (DeLaine, Patterson), 45:23WCU - Brittany Bennefi eld (unassisted), 77:01UNCG - Deven Beachum (DeLaine), 85:07

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 19, WCU 4Corner Kicks: UNCG 6, WCU 2Saves: UNCG 3, WCU 3Fouls: UNCG 9, WCU 7

Attendance: 1,063

Jennifer Stillman posted her third shutout of the sea-son against Furman on September 24

Cara Hammond’s game-winner against Wofford led the Spartans to their 11th straight win over the Terriers.

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 17

Game 14UNCG 1, Chattanooga 1 (2OT)

October 17 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 OT 2OT TChattanooga 0 1 0 0 1UNCG 1 0 0 0 1

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Jessica Patterson (Carnell, Logadottir), 6:11UTC - Susan Ward (Chismark), 73:18

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 22, UTC 12Corner Kicks: UNCG 7, UTC 1Saves: UTC 13, UNCG 2Fouls: UNCG 14, UTC 14

Attendance: 614

Game 15UNCG 5, East Tennessee State 0October 21 Johnson City, TN

Goals by Period 1 2 TUNCG 2 3 5ETSU 0 0 0

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Deven Beachum (Logadottir, Carnell), 12:19UNCG - Amy Carnell (DeLaine, Deven Beachum), 24:04UNCG - Carnell (Logadottir), 57:23UNCG - Cara Hammond (Donovan, Towne), 59:02UNCG - Deven Beachum (unassisted), 65:55

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 22, ETSU 10Corner Kicks: UNCG 8, ETSU 3Saves: ETSU 6, UNCG 5Fouls: ETSU 9, UNCG 8

Attendance: 214

Game 16UNCG 2, Georgia Southern 1October 24 Statesboro, GA

Goals by Period 1 2 TUNCG 2 0 2Georgia Southern 0 1 1

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Amy Carnell (Deven Beachum, Lindsay), 8:07UNCG - Jessica Patterson (Davis), 14:42GSU - Ellen Shuler (Znosko), 64:19

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 22, GSU 3Corner Kicks: UNCG 7, GSU 0Saves: GSU 8, UNCG 2Fouls: UNCG 6, GSU 5

Attendance: 72

Game 17UNCG 2, Davidson 0

October 28 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TDavidson 0 0 0UNCG 0 2 2

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Jaime Ableman (Logadottir), 70:23UNCG - Deven Beachum (Logadottir), 86:15

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 11, Davidson 6Corner Kicks: UNCG 7, Davidson 6Saves: Davidson 6, UNCG 4Fouls: UNCG 14, Davidson 7

Attendance: 262

Game 18UNCG 7, The Citadel 0

October 31 Charleston, SC

Goals by Period 1 2 TUNCG 3 4 7The Citadel 0 0 0

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Karla Davis (unassisted), 11:46UNCG - Jaime Ableman (DeLaine, Carnell), 17:52UNCG - Amy Carnell (unassisted), 25:06UNCG - Rakel Logadottir (Jay, Lindsay), 50:13UNCG - Rakel Logadottir (Deven Beachum), 56:12UNCG - Dacia Beachum (Ableman), 70:23UNCG - Shannon Donovan (Deven Beachum), 84:38

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 36, The Citadel 2Corner Kicks: UNCG 10, The Citadel 1Saves: The Citadel 15, UNCG 1Fouls: UNCG 11, The Citadel 10

Attendance: 84

Game 19UNCG 7, Western Carolina 0

November 4 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TWestern Carolina 0 0 0UNCG 2 5 7

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Jaime Ableman (DeLaine), 0:58UNCG - Rakel Logadottir (unassisted), 16:24UNCG - Logadottir (DeLaine), 47:34UNCG - Deven Beachum (DeLaine), 60:32UNCG - Cara Hammond (DeLaine), 61:01UNCG - Dacia Beachum (Lindsay, Logadottir), 65:49UNCG - Emilie Stewart (Lindsay, Dacia Beachum), 67:41

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 19, WCU 6Corner Kicks: UNCG 6, WCU 0Saves: WCU 9, UNCG 4Fouls: UNCG 9, WCU 9

Attendance: 176

Game 20Davidson 3, UNCG 2

November 5 UNCG Soccer Stadium

Goals by Period 1 2 TDavidson 0 3 3UNCG 2 0 2

Scoring SummaryUNCG - Deven Beachum (DeLaine), 14:30UNCG - Cara Hammond (Logadottir), 37:50DAV - Kara Koehrn (Wilbrandt), 48:48DAV - Kara Koehrn (Stevens), 69:58DAV - Kristen Koehrn (Kara Koehrn), 86:05

Game SummaryShots: UNCG 16, Davidson 8Corner Kicks: UNCG 8, Davidson 6Saves: Davidson 5, UNCG 3Fouls: Davidson 17, UNCG 15

Attendance: 306Nicollette DeLaine tied a school-record with four as-sists against Western Carolina on November 4

Deven Beachum and Rakel Logadottir (7) hooked up for UNCG’s second goal against Davidson on Oct. 28.

Page 18: 2005 UNCG Women's Soccer Media Guide

18 • 2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide

The Southern Conference, which enters its 85th season of intercollegiate competition in 2005, has become known as one of the nation’s leaders in emphasizing the development of the student-athlete and defi ning the league’s role in helping to build lifelong leaders and role models.

The Southern Conference has excelled as the premier Division I-AA football conference since earning that classifi cation in 1981. The Conference currently consists of 11 members in four states throughout the Southeast and sponsors 19 varsity sports and championships that produce participants for NCAA Division I Championships.

The Southern Conference is the nation’s fi fth-old-est NCAA Division I collegiate athletic association. Only the Big Ten (1896), the Missouri Valley (1907), the Pacifi c 10 (1915) and the Southwestern Athletic (1920) conferences are older in terms of origination.

Throughout its history, the Southern Conference has been an innovator in college athletics. The Southern Conference was the fi rst “super conference” with its charter membership including the likes of Alabama, Auburn, and North Carolina. The SoCon, as it has come to be known by headline writers throughout the country, is the league that gave birth to the three-point shot in college basketball and was the college home of such sporting greats as Ar-nold Palmer, Jerry West and Charlie “Choo Choo” Justice.

Academic excellence has been a major part of the Southern Conference’s tradition. League athletes have been recognized countless times on CoSIDA Academic All-America and district teams. A total of 19 Rhodes-Schol-arship winners have been selected from the conference.

The Southern Conference offi ce is located in the Beaumont Mill in Spartanburg, SC. A textile mill that was in operation from 1880 until 1999, the Beaumont Mill was renovated in 2004 and today offers the SoCon a fi rst class meeting area as well as a spacious library for storage of the conference’s historical documents.

MEMBERSHIP HISTORYThe Southern Conference was formed on

February 25, 1921 at a meeting in Atlanta, GA. Fourteen institutions from the 30-member Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA) reorganized as the Southern Conference. Those charter members included Alabama, Auburn, Clemson, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Maryland, Mississippi State, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Tennessee, Virginia, Virginia Tech and Washington & Lee. Athletic competition began in the fall of 1921.

In 1922, six more schools - Florida, Louisiana State, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tulane and Vanderbilt - joined the fold. A year later, the University of the South joined the ranks. Virginia Military Institute became a mem-ber in 1925 and Duke University came into the fold in 1929. Since then, conference membership has experienced a series of membership changes with 42 institutions having been affi liated with the league. The league has undergone two major transitions during its history.

The fi rst occurred in December 1932 when the Southeastern Conference was formed out of the 23-school Southern Conference. The league’s 13 members west and south of the Appalachian Mountains reorganized to help reduce the extensive travel demands that were present in the league at the time. In 1936, the Southern Conference invited The Citadel, William & Mary, Davidson, Furman, Richmond and Wake Forest to join the membership.

The second major shift happened in 1953 when Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina and Wake Forest offi cially withdrew from the league to form the Atlantic Coast Conference. This change was brought about due to the desire of many of those schools to schedule a greater number of regular

season basketball games against their local rivals.Today, the league continues to thrive with a

membership that spans four Southeastern states. Cur-rent league members are Appalachian State, College of Charleston, The Citadel, Davidson, Elon, Furman, Georgia Southern, UNC Greensboro, Chattanooga, Western Carolina and Wofford. The most recent addition, Elon Uni-versity, joined the Southern Conference on July 1, 2003. The Phoenix replaced Virginia Military Institute which left the conference on June 30, 2003. East Tennessee State, which joined the SoCon in 1978, left the conference follow-ing the conclusion of the 2004-05 academic year.

LEADERSHIPEntering the 2005 football campaign, Geoff Cabe

serves as the Southern Conference’s interim commis-sioner. A member of the conference staff since 1988, Cabe has been involved in every facet of the SoCon’s operation. Since 2002, he has been senior associate commissioner where his duties have included serving as the executive producer for all of the SoCon’s championship events and coordinator of all external relationships for the conference. Cabe previously headed up the league’s media relations department (1991-95) and its championships area (1995-99) and has been both an assistant commissioner and associate commissioner.

Cabe, now in his second term as the interim commissioner, replaced Danny Morrison who served as commissioner from November 13, 2001 until June 15, 2005. Morrison recently became the director of athletics at Texas Christian University.

The Southern Conference named its fi rst com-missioner in December 1950. Duke head football coach Wallace Wade made the transition from Blue Devil football coach to athletics administration as the fi rst person at the helm of the conference.

Lloyd Jordan replaced Wade as the commissioner in 1960 and served a 14-year term until Ken Germann became the league head in 1974. Germann was the com-missioner for 13 years and orchestrated the league’s ex-pansion to include women’s athletics. He was succeeded by Dave Hart in 1987 who spearheaded the transfer of the league offi ce from Charlotte, NC to Asheville, NC.

Wright Waters succeeded Hart upon his retirement in 1991. Under Waters’ leadership, the Southern Confer-ence expanded to 12 members, added three women’s sports and posted record revenue from the basketball Tournament. Waters, who is currently the commissioner of the Sun Belt Conference, was followed by Alfred B. White in 1998. White, a veteran member of the NCAA offi ce, introduced the current SoCon logo and elevated the conference’s commitment to marketing and development of corporate partners. He became the president of the Asheville franchise of the National Basketball Development League in 2001.

CHAMPIONSHIPS HISTORYThe fi rst Southern Conference Championship

was the league basketball tournament held in Atlanta in 1922. The North Carolina Tar Heels won the tournament to become the fi rst recognized league champion in any sport. The Southern Conference Tournament remains the oldest of its kind in college basketball.

In May of 1923, the league held its fi rst outdoor track and fi eld championship in Montgomery, AL. Missis-sippi A&M (now Mississippi State) captured six individual titles on its way to winning the team championship. Two other sports - cross country and tennis - held their fi rst championships during the 1920s. North Carolina won the initial cross country team championship in 1926 in Athens, GA. Tennis crowned its fi rst singles and doubles champions in New Orleans, LA in 1928. Donald Cram of Vanderbilt was the league’s fi rst singles champion, while Leonard Chamberlin and Maurie Bayon of Tulane won the doubles title.

The 1930s saw four more sports - wrestling, indoor track and fi eld, swimming and golf - celebrate their fi rst conference championships. VMI played host to and won the fi rst league wrestling team championship in 1930. Washington & Lee won the fi rst indoor track team championship, which also took place in 1930 and was held at Chapel Hill, NC The University of Virginia hosted and won the fi rst league swimming championship in 1933, while Duke captured the fi rst conference golf team title at Sedgefi eld Country Club in Greensboro, NC later that same year.

Baseball was introduced as a Southern Confer-ence sport in 1947 as Clemson captured the league championship that year. Rifl e held its fi rst conference championship in 1956, while soccer was the most recently added men’s sport in 1967.

The Southern Conference began sponsoring women’s sports during the 1983-84 season. That year, volleyball, basketball and tennis championships were held in the league. Cross country joined the mix in 1985 and the league began holding indoor and outdoor track champion-ships in 1988. Most recently, the conference instituted golf and softball championships in the spring of 1994 and added soccer in the fall of 1994.

The Southern Conference currently declares champions in 10 men’s sports - football, soccer, cross country, basketball, indoor track and fi eld, outdoor track and fi eld, wrestling, baseball, tennis and golf - and nine women’s sports - soccer, volleyball, cross country, basket-ball, indoor track and fi eld, outdoor track and fi eld, tennis, golf and softball.

SoCon Members

Appalachian State(Boone, NC • 1971)

College of Charleston(Charleston, SC • 1998)

The Citadel(Charleston, SC • 1936)

Davidson Wildcats(Davidson, NC • 1936-88, 1991)

Elon Phoenix(Elon, NC • 2003)Furman Paladins

(Greenville, SC • 1936)Georgia Southern Eagles

(Statesboro, GA • 1991)UNC Greensboro Spartans

(Greensboro, NC • 1997)Chattanooga Mocs

(Chattanooga, TN • 1976)Western Carolina Catamounts

(Cullowhee, NC • 1976)Wofford Terriers

(Spartanburg, SC • 1997)

Page 19: 2005 UNCG Women's Soccer Media Guide

2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 19

Southern Conference Standings Conference Overall

2004 SoCon Tournament

First TeamF - Amy Carnell, UNC GreensboroF - Kara Koehrn, DavidsonF - Diana Jallo, ChattanoogaF - Kristin Rhyne, College of CharlestonMF - Rakel Logadottir, UNC GreensboroMF - Kat Kelley, FurmanMF - Tara Marker, FurmanD - April Raymer, FurmanD - Claire Wigfall, College of CharlestonD - Shannon Donovan, UNC GreensboroGK - Sara Hobart, Davidson

Second TeamF - Nicky Darling, FurmanF - Deven Beachum, UNC GreensboroF - Stephanie Svoboda, Western CarolinaMF - Nicole Blume, College of CharlestonMF - Nicollette DeLaine, UNC GreensboroMF - Megan Chismark, ChattanoogaMF - Erin Ashton, East Tennessee State D - Mallory Bramlett, WoffordD - Nancy Haskell, DavidsonD - Sydney Strong, College of CharlestonGK - Breland Meany, Appalachian State

Player of the Year: Amy Carnell, UNCG

Freshman of the Year: Karla Davis, UNCG

Coach of the Year: Greg Ashton, Davidson

Quarterfi nals #2 Furman 7, #7 Elon 0

#3 College of Charleston 3, #6 Appalachian St. 1 #5 Davidson 2, #4 Chattanooga 1

#1 UNC Greensboro 7, #8 Western Carolina 0

Semifi nals #2 Furman 1, #3 College of Charleston 0

#5 Davidson 3, #1 UNC Greensboro 2

Finals #2 Furman 3, #5 Davidson 1

All-Tournament Team Rakel Logadottir, UNCG

Nicollette DeLaine, UNCGDana Gregg, College of Charleston

Carolyn Morris, College of CharlestonKara Koehrn, Davidson

Kristen Koehrn, DavidsonSarah Hobart, Davidson

Alice Martin, FurmanStacey Simpson, Furman

Nicky Darling, FurmanMicky Palanza, Furman

Andrea Morrison, Furman

Most Outstanding Player Andrea Morrison, Furman

Team W-L-T Pts Pct. GF GA W-L-T Pts Pct. GF GA UNCG * 9-1-1 28 .864 28 6 14-5-2 43 .725 52 18 Furman # 9-2-0 27 .818 25 9 14-9-0 42 .609 48 37 College of Charleston 7-2-2 23 .727 20 7 12-5-3 39 .675 34 16 Chattanooga 7-3-1 22 .682 25 8 12-5-1 37 .694 51 17 Davidson 7-3-1 22 .682 24 10 12-9-1 37 .568 38 35 Appalachian State 5-5-1 16 .500 22 18 10-9-1 31 .525 48 30 Elon 4-6-1 13 .409 16 14 5-12-1 16 .306 21 34 Western Carolina 3-5-3 12 .409 23 18 5-10-3 18 .361 29 37 East Tennessee State 2-5-4 10 .364 7 15 5-8-4 19 .412 16 24 Wofford 3-7-1 10 .318 10 21 8-8-1 25 .500 26 28 Georgia Southern 2-9-0 6 .182 9 28 4-12-1 13 .265 14 39 The Citadel 0-10-1 1 .045 9 64 2-15-1 7 .139 23 89 * 2004 Southern Conference Regular Season Champion

# 2004 Southern Conference Tournament Champion

2004 All-SoCon

August 27: Diana Jallo, ChattanoogaSeptember 7: Austin Somers, WoffordSeptember 14: Diana Jallo, Chattanooga September 21: Lauren Merchant, The Citadel September 28: Megan Chismark, ChattanoogaOctober 5: Austin Somers, Wofford October 12: Sara Prendergast, ETSUOctober 19: Teryn Shuetz, College of CharlestonOctober 26: Amy Carnell, UNCGNovember 1: Breland Meany, Appalachian State & Kristin Rhyne, College of Charleston

2004 SoCon Players of the Week

Karla Davis’ 2004 Freshman of the Year plaudits gave UNCG back-to-back winners of the award. Shannon

Donovan took home the honor in 2003.

Page 20: 2005 UNCG Women's Soccer Media Guide

20 • 2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide

1988 Record: 10-7Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/3 at Virginia .......................................................L 0-59/7 NORTH CAROLINA WESLEYAN ................. W 2-19/10 MARYLAND .........................................W 2-0 (OT) 9/14 LYNCHBURG ............................................... W 6-19/18 MARYVILLE ............................................... W 11-09/21 at Salem ..................................................... W 10-09/24 RANDOLPH-MACON ................................... W 5-19/28 at Radford .......................................................L 0-110/1 LOUISVILLE ............................................... W 10-010/6 at Methodist ....................................................L 0-310/11 at Guilford ..................................................... W 5-010/13 NORTH CAROLINA STATE ...........................L 0-110/16 Keene State# ..................................................L 0-310/17 at Barry ...........................................................L 0-110/20 at UNC Chapel Hill .........................................L 0-410/26 DUKE ...................................................W 2-1 (OT)10/29 ELON ............................................................ W 5-1

# at Miami, FL

1989 Record: 11-5-1Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/4 BUFFALO ..................................................... W 2-09/6 UNC CHAPEL HILL ........................................L 1-79/10 at Maryland ................................................... W 3-29/15 at Roanoke ................................................... W 5-09/17 VIRGINIA ........................................................L 0-59/20 DAVIDSON ................................................. W 10-09/23 MISSOURI-ST. LOUIS .................................. T 1-19/24 BARRY ...........................................................L 1-39/27 at North Carolina State ...................................L 1-29/30 CHARLESTON (WV) .................................... W 4-010/5 at Elon .......................................................... W 4-110/10 METHODIST ........................................W 3-1 (OT)10/14 Keene State# ................................................ W 2-110/15 Adelphi# ....................................................... W 1-010/21 at St. Andrews .............................................. W 7-010/24 at Duke ...........................................................L 3-710/28 at Erskine ..................................................... W 1-0

# at Kutztown, PA

1990 Record: 14-5-0Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/2 at Virginia .......................................................L 0-49/7 MARYLAND ................................................. W 1-09/9 NOTRE DAME ............................................. W 5-19/13 RADFORD ......................................................L 0-29/15 at Erskine ..................................................... W 3-09/19 NORTH CAROLINA STATE ...........................L 1-29/22 BARRY ......................................................... W 3-09/24 QUINCY ....................................................... W 1-09/26 at Davidson .................................................. W 4-09/29 JAMES MADISON ........................................ W 1-010/2 ST. ANDREWS ............................................. W 6-010/4 ROANOKE ................................................... W 5-010/8 LENOIR-RHYNE ........................................ W 12-010/12 at Denver ........................................................L 0-110/14 at Regis ........................................................ W 2-010/15 at Northern Colorado .................................... W 1-010/21 KUTZTOWN ................................................. W 8-010/24 at UNC Chapel Hill .........................................L 0-410/28 ELON ............................................................ W 2-0

1991 Record: 12-8-0Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/7 at American .................................................. W 2-09/8 at Maryland ................................................... W 3-09/11 DUKE .............................................................L 0-49/13 ERSKINE ...................................................... W 7-09/16 at Elon .......................................................... W 1-09/21 GEORGE WASHINGTON# .......................... W 2-19/22 VANDERBILT# ............................................. W 3-29/28 at James Madison ........................................ W 3-210/1 DAVIDSON ................................................... W 5-010/5 DAYTON ....................................................... W 1-010/6 ARKANSAS ....................................................L 0-110/9 at Radford .......................................................L 1-210/12 at Florida International ....................................L 0-210/14 at Central Florida .......................................... W 2-010/17 at North Carolina State ...................................L 0-210/20 BERRY ...........................................................L 2-310/23 UNC CHAPEL HILL ........................................L 0-210/25 at Lenoir-Rhyne ............................................ W 6-110/27 VIRGINIA ........................................................L 1-210/30 NORTH CAROLINA WESLEYAN ................. W 1-0

# TWIST (Greensboro, NC)

1992 Record: 10-8-1Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/7 at Campbell .................................................. W 9-09/12 vs. Central Florida* .........................................L 0-19/13 vs. Villanova* ................................................ W 5-09/16 ELON ............................................................ W 2-09/18 JAMES MADISON ..........................................L 0-19/23 at Methodist .................................................. W 4-09/25 SMU# .............................................................L 3-49/27 GEORGE MASON# ...................................... T 2-29/30 NORTH CAROLINA STATE ......................... W 2-110/3 MERCER ...................................................... W 2-110/6 RADFORD .................................................... W 4-110/9 at Davidson .................................................. W 2-010/14 at Duke ...........................................................L 0-2

10/17 at Vanderbilt ...................................................L 0-210/19 at Arkansas .....................................................L 2-310/24 NEW HAMPSHIRE ....................................... W 3-210/25 KENTUCKY ..........................................W 6-1 (OT)10/27 at UNC Chapel Hill .........................................L 0-310/30 FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL ...........................L 0-3

* Wolfpack Classic (Raleigh, NC)# TWIST (Greensboro, NC)

1993 Record: 12-7-0 (7-0-0 Big South, 1st)Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/6 at Virginia .......................................................L 1-39/10 at Liberty* ..................................................... W 9-09/12 MARYLAND ...................................................L 1-39/15 at North Carolina State ...................................L 0-19/17 DAVIDSON .....................................................L 0-19/19 at James Madison ........................................ W 2-09/22 CAMPBELL* ................................................. W 7-29/25 VIRGINIA TECH ........................................... W 6-09/28 at UNC Asheville* ......................................... W 3-010/1 TULSA# ..........................................................L 2-310/3 OHIO STATE# .............................................. W 2-010/6 RADFORD* ..........................................W 1-0 (OT)10/9 ARKANSAS .................................................. W 3-110/12 DUKE .............................................................L 0-110/16 at Mercer ...................................................... W 4-210/18 at Charleston Southern* ............................... W 2-110/22 TOWSON STATE* ........................................ W 5-010/24 UMBC* ......................................................... W 8-010/29 Campbell^.......................................................L 0-1

* Big South Conference match# TWIST (Greensboro, NC)^ Big South Tournament (Baltimore, MD)

Big South Regular Season Champions

1994 Record: 11-6-3 (5-0-0 Big South, 1st)Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/3 at George Mason ............................................L 0-4 9/5 at Maryland .....................................................L 0-49/9 CHARLESTON SOUTHERN* ...................... W 7-09/11 CLEMSON ......................................................L 1-29/17 at Davidson .................................................. W 3-19/19 LIBERTY* ..................................................... W 7-09/21 at Campbell .................................................. W 4-19/25 NORTH CAROLINA STATE ..................T 0-0 (OT)9/27 UNC ASHEVILLE ......................................... W 4-09/30 TEXAS A&M# ............................................... W 2-110/2 CINCINNATI# .................................................L 1-210/5 RADFORD* .................................................. W 3-110/7 JAMES MADISON .................................T 0-0 (OT)10/11 DUKE .............................................................L 0-410/16 at Tulsa ......................................................... W 2-010/18 at SMU ...........................................................L 1-310/22 at UMBC* ..................................................... W 3-110/23 at Towson State* .......................................... W 4-010/29 Radford^ ................................................T 0-0 (OT)10/30 Charleston Southern^ ................................... W 2-1

* Big South Conference match# TWIST (Greensboro, NC)

The inaugural 1988 squad dropped its fi rst match to Virginia, but responded with six consecutive wins. Despite a heavily ladened Division I schedule, the Spartans ended that season ranked eighth in NCAA Division II.

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^ Big South Tournament (Baltimore, MD)

Big South Regular Season Champions Big South Tournament Champions

1995 Record: 13-5-0 (5-0-0, Big South 1st)Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/2 at Clemson .....................................................L 0-69/4 at Charleston Southern* ............................... W 6-09/8 CHARLOTTE ................................................ W 2-09/10 at James Madison ........................................ W 3-29/15 DAVIDSON ................................................... W 2-19/17 GEORGIA ..................................................... W 7-09/20 at North Carolina State ...................................L 2-39/23 UMBC* ......................................................... W 6-19/26 at UNC Asheville* ......................................... W 3-29/29 CAMPBELL .................................................. W 2-010/10 at Liberty* ..................................................... W 4-010/14 at Florida International .................................. W 4-110/20 at Ohio State ................................................ W 1-010/22 at Cincinnati ....................................................L 1-210/24 at Duke ...........................................................L 2-310/30 RADFORD* .................................................. W 5-011/3 CHARLESTON SOUTHERN^ ...................... W 5-111/5 UNC ASHEVILLE^..........................................L 0-1

* Big South Conference match^ Big South Tournament (Greensboro, NC)

Big South Regular Season Champions

1996 Record: 16-6-1 (5-0-0 Big South, 1st)Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/1 at Kentucky .....................................................L 1-29/3 COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON ..................... W 8-09/7 GEORGE MASON ....................................... W 4-19/10 DUKE ........................................................... W 2-19/18 at Radford* ................................................... W 4-29/22 PORTLAND ....................................................L 0-39/24 UNC ASHEVILLE* ........................................ W 4-2 9/27 CENTRAL FLORIDA# .................................. W 3-09/29 FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL#....................... W 4-110/2 at Davidson ..........................................W 4-1 (OT) 10/4 NORTH CAROLINA STATE ......................... W 4-310/11 CHARLESTON SOUTHERN* ...................... W 3-010/13 vs. Florida+ .....................................................L 1-410/16 at Virginia Tech ............................................. W 1-010/19 at UMBC* ..................................................... W 4-210/23 LIBERTY* ..................................................... W 5-010/26 JAMES MADISON ........................................ W 3-110/29 at Campbell ..........................................W 4-1 (OT)11/1 at Texas A&M$ ...............................................L 0-211/3 vs. George Mason$ ........................................L 1-511/8 CHARLESTON SOUTHERN^ ...................... W 6-211/10 UNC ASHEVILLE^......................................... T 1-111/17 JAMES MADISON% ......................................L 1-3

* Big South Conference match# TWIST (Greensboro, NC)+ WAGS (Fairfax, VA)$ Post Oak Mall Classic (College Station, TX)^ Big South Tournament (Greensboro, NC)% NCAA Tournament (Greensboro, NC)

Big South Regular Season ChampionsBig South Tournament Champions

NCAA Tournament

1997 Record: 19-6-0 (7-0-0 SoCon, 1st)Head Coach: Jack Poland

8/29 VIRGINIA TECH ........................................... W 1-09/3 at Wofford*.................................................... W 4-39/6 at George Mason ............................................L 1-29/10 at North Carolina State ................................. W 1-09/13 at East Tennessee State* ........................... W 10-09/16 CAMPBELL .................................................. W 5-09/20 FURMAN* ..................................................... W 3-1 9/23 at College of Charleston .......................W 3-2 (OT)9/26 WASHINGTON# .............................................L 0-59/28 OREGON# ................................................... W 6-0 9/30 APPALACHIAN STATE* ............................... W 7-010/3 FLORIDA STATE .......................................... W 3-210/7 at Davidson* ................................................. W 3-010/10 FLORIDA ........................................................L 1-210/14 at Duke ...........................................................L 0-210/17 CHATTANOOGA* ......................................... W 8-010/19 CLEMSON ............................................W 2-1 (OT)10/21 at Georgia Southern* .................................... W 3-010/26 at James Madison ..........................................L 0-210/28 EAST TENNESSEE STATE^ ...................... W 11-011/1 at Davidson^ ................................................. W 4-011/2 vs. Wofford^ .................................................. W 9-011/11 SOUTH ALABAMA% .................................... W 5-011/15 at Duke& ....................................................... W 3-1 11/22 at Clemson! ....................................................L 0-5

* Southern Conference match# adidas/Spartan Classic (Greensboro, NC)^ SoCon Tournament (Davidson, NC)% NCAA play-in game (Greensboro, NC)& NCAA First Round (Durham, NC)! NCAA Second Round (Clemson, SC)

SoCon Regular Season ChampionsSoCon Tournament Champions

NCAA Tournament

1998 Record: 13-9-1 (8-0-0 SoCon, 1st)Head Coach: Jack Poland

9/1 at UNC Charlotte ............................................L 1-2

9/5 at Washington............................................... W 2-19/7 at Oregon .......................................................L 0-29/10 NORTH CAROLINA STATE ......................... W 3-19/12 GEORGE MASON .........................................L 0-29/16 EAST TENNESSEE STATE* ...................... W 10-29/18 at College of Charleston* ............................. W 5-1 9/20 at Chattanooga* ........................................... W 5-09/23 DUKE .................................................... L 1-2 (OT)9/25 JAMES MADISON# ...............................T 1-1 (OT) 9/27 SAN DIEGO STATE# .....................................L 1-39/30 at Appalachian State* ................................... W 1-010/4 DAVIDSON* ................................................. W 4-110/9 at Florida ........................................................L 0-610/11 at Central Florida ............................................L 0-310/18 at Wake Forest ...............................................L 2-310/23 GEORGIA SOUTHERN* .............................. W 4-310/27 at Furman* ............................................W 2-1 (OT)10/30 WOFFORD* ................................................. W 3-111/3 vs. East Tennessee State^ ........................... W 9-011/7 vs. Wofford^ .................................................. W 6-011/8 vs. Furman^ ..........................................W 2-0 (OT)11/11 at Vanderbilt% ................................................L 1-5

* Southern Conference match# adidas/Spartan Classic (Greensboro, NC)^ SoCon Tournament (Greenville, SC)% NCAA First Round (Nashville, TN)

SoCon Regular Season ChampionsSoCon Tournament Champions

NCAA Tournament

1999 Record: 8-12-0 (6-3-0 SoCon, 3rd)Head Coach: Jack Poland

8/28 at Old Dominion .............................................L 0-19/1 at Richmond ...................................................L 0-49/4 UNC CHARLOTTE ........................................L 0-59/8 at North Carolina State ................................. W 3-09/11 COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON*.................... W 5-09/14 at Wofford*.................................................... W 1-09/17 at East Tennessee State* ............................. W 3-09/19 CHATTANOOGA* ......................................... W 4-09/21 FURMAN* .......................................................L 0-39/24 WILLIAM & MARY# ........................................L 0-29/26 CALIFORNIA# ................................................L 0-410/1 APPALACHIAN STATE* ............................... W 3-010/5 WAKE FOREST .............................................L 0-210/8 at James Madison ........................................ W 2-110/12 at Clemson .....................................................L 0-310/17 WESTERN CAROLINA* ............................... W 2-0

The 1996 UNCG squad recorded its fourth straight undefeated Big South Regular Season before winning its second Big South Tournament Title. The Spartans also made their fi rst appearance into the NCAA Tournament.

The 1997 squad went undefeated in its fi rst year in the SoCon and was the fi rst team in UNCG Division I history to advance past the fi rst round of the NCAA Tournament.

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22 • 2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide

10/21 at Davidson* .......................................... L 1-2 (OT)10/24 at Georgia Southern* ......................................L 2-410/31 at Duke ...........................................................L 0-211/2 GEORGIA SOUTHERN^ ................................L 1-2

* Southern Conference match# adidas/Spartan Classic (Greensboro, NC)^ SoCon Tournament (Greensboro, NC)

2000 Record: 14-8-1 (7-2-0 SoCon, 2nd)Head Coach: Jack Poland

8/25 #12 at Wake Forest ........................................L 0-38/27 SOUTH CAROLINA ...................................... W 2-09/3 at George Mason ............................................L 0-29/6 NORTH CAROLINA STATE ...............T 0-0 (2 OT)9/9 at Charlotte ................................................... W 3-29/15 vs. Old Dominion# ..........................................L 1-29/17 at William & Mary# .........................................L 1-39/22 WESTERN CAROLINA* ............................... W 1-09/24 CHATTANOOGA* ......................................... W 5-09/29 at Georgia Southern* .................................... W 2-010/1 at College of Charleston* ...............................L 0-210/7 JAMES MADISON ................................. L 2-3 (OT)10/10 #9 DUKE ...................................................... W 2-010/14 WOFFORD* ................................................. W 1-010/16 FURMAN* .......................................................L 0-110/20 at East Tennessee State* ............................. W 5-110/22 at Appalachian State* ................................... W 1-010/28 DAVIDSON* ................................................. W 4-011/2 at College of Charleston^ ............................. W 1-011/4 vs. Western Carolina^ .................................. W 3-111/5 vs. Furman^ .................................................. W 1-011/8 #21 WILLIAM & MARY% ....................W 3-2 (2OT)11/11 #14 at Virginia& ..............................................L 1-6

* Southern Conference match# NIKE/Tribe Invitational (Williamsburg, VA)^ SoCon Tournament (Charleston, SC)% NCAA First Round (Greensboro, NC)& NCAA Second Round (Charlottesville, VA)

SoCon Tournament ChampionsNCAA Tournament

2001 Record: 15-8-0 (8-2-0 SoCon, 1st)Head Coach: Eddie Radwanski

8/31 OLD DOMINION ........................................... W 1-09/4 at North Carolina State .......................W 2-1 (2OT)9/7 VIRGINIA TECH# ...........................................L 2-39/9 PITTSBURGH# ............................................ W 3-19/12 CHARLOTTE ..................................................L 0-19/21 at Wofford*.................................................... W 3-09/23 at Furman* ......................................................L 0-39/28 EAST TENNESSEE STATE* ........................ W 8-19/30 APPALACHIAN STATE* ............................... W 6-110/3 WAKE FOREST .............................................L 0-510/5 at James Madison ............................... L 2-3 (2OT)10/12 at Western Carolina* ........................... L 1-2 (2OT)10/14 at Chattanooga* ........................................... W 3-110/19 GEORGIA SOUTHERN* .............................. W 3-010/21 COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON*.................... W 1-010/26 UNC WILMINGTON .............................W 3-2 (OT)10/28 at The Citadel* ............................................ W 10-010/31 at Davidson* ................................................. W 3-0

11/2 at South Carolina ............................................L 0-211/9 vs. Davidson^ ............................................... W 1-011/10 vs. Furman^ .................................................. W 2-011/11 vs. Western Carolina^ ........................W 2-1 (2OT)11/16 at North Carolina% .........................................L 0-3

* Southern Conference match# adidas/Spartan Classic (Greensboro, NC)^ SoCon Tournament (Greenville, SC)% NCAA Tournament (Chapel Hill, NC)

SoCon Co-Regular Season ChampionsSoCon Tournament Champions

NCAA Tournament

2002 Record: 7-12-2 (4-5-1 SoCon, 5th)Head Coach: Eddie Radwanski

8/31 at Old Dominion ............................................ W 1-09/3 LIBERTY....................................................... W 4-09/7 MARSHALL ....................................................L 1-29/13 vs. George Mason# ........................................L 1-59/15 vs. William & Mary# ...................................... W 2-09/20 at East Tennessee State* ............................. W 1-09/22 at Appalachian State* .....................................L 0-19/25 at Wake Forest ...............................................L 2-49/27 WESTERN CAROLINA* .................................L 0-19/29 CHATTANOOGA* ...........................................L 0-210/4 at Air Force .....................................................L 4-510/6 at Colorado State ...........................................L 1-210/12 at Georgia Southern* ......................................L 2-310/14 at College of Charleston* ....................T 3-3 (2OT)10/20 THE CITADEL* ............................................. W 2-010/23 WOFFORD* ................................................. W 3-010/27 FURMAN* .......................................................L 2-510/30 DAVIDSON* ................................................. W 4-311/1 SOUTH CAROLINA ........................................L 0-211/8 vs. Davidson^ ...................................T 1-1 (W, PK)11/9 vs. Furman^ ....................................................L 1-2

* Southern Conference match# George Mason Tournament (Fairfax, VA)^ SoCon Tournament (Greensboro, NC)

2003 Record: 15-7-2 (9-2-0 SoCon, 2nd)Head Coach: Eddie Radwanski

8/29 OLD DOMINION .................................W 4-3 (2OT)9/1 at UNC Wilmington ....................................... W 2-19/5 HOFSTRA ......................................................L 0-29/7 GEORGE MASON ..............................T 0-0 (2OT)9/12 at Princeton# ..................................................L 0-39/14 vs. Penn# ............................................T 3-3 (2OT)9/19 WAKE FOREST .............................................L 1-39/24 THE CITADEL* ............................................. W 7-09/28 #14 DUKE ......................................................L 0-210/2 at Furman* ......................................................L 1-210/5 COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON*.................... W 5-110/9 APPALACHIAN STATE* ............................... W 2-010/13 ELON* .......................................................... W 1-010/17 at Wofford*.................................................... W 1-010/19 at Western Carolina* .................................... W 1-010/23 at Chattanooga* .............................................L 0-110/26 EAST TENNESSEE STATE* ................W 1-0 (OT)10/31 GEORGIA SOUTHERN* .............................. W 5-011/2 at Davidson* ................................................. W 3-1

11/6 WOFFORD^ ................................................. W 2-011/7 APPALACHIAN STATE^ ............................... W 1-011/9 FURMAN^ .................................................... W 2-011/14 vs. Wake Forest% ........................................ W 2-111/16 vs. #1 North Carolina% ..................................L 0-5

* Southern Conference match# Princeton Tournament (Princeton, NJ)^ SoCon Tournament (Greensboro, NC)% NCAA Tournament (Chapel Hill, NC)

SoCon Tournament ChampionsNCAA Tournament

2004 Record: 14-5-1 (9-1-1 SoCon, 1st)Head Coach: Eddie Radwanski

8/27 at Old Dominion ....................................W 1-0 (OT)8/30 at Wake Forest ...............................................L 2-39/3 vs. Fresno State% ........................................ W 2-19/5 at Oregon State% ...........................................L 1-29/10 PITTSBURGH# ............................................ W 2-09/12 COASTAL CAROLINA# ................................ W 7-19/17 #17 PRINCETON ...........................................L 0-29/24 FURMAN* ..................................................... W 2-09/30 at College of Charleston* ...............................L 0-110/3 at Appalachian State* ................................... W 3-110/7 at Elon* ......................................................... W 2-110/10 WOFFORD* ................................................. W 2-010/15 WESTERN CAROLINA* ............................... W 2-110/17 CHATTANOOGA* ................................T 1-1 (2OT)10/21 at East Tennessee State* ............................. W 5-010/24 at Georgia Southern* .................................... W 2-110/28 DAVIDSON* ................................................. W 2-010/31 at The Citadel* .............................................. W 7-011/4 WESTERN CAROLINA^ .............................. W 7-011/5 DAVIDSON^ ...................................................L 2-3

* Southern Conference match% OSU Nike Invitational (Corvallis, OR)# adidas/Spartan Classic (Greensboro, NC)^ SoCon Tournament (Greensboro, NC)

SoCon Regular Season Champions

The 2004 squad won the Southern Conference regular season championship with a 14-5-1 overall record. It marked the Spartans fourth regular season crown since joining the league in 1997.

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 23

Adelphi (1-0)1989 Kutztown, PA W 1-0

Air Force (0-1)2002 Colorado Springs, CO L 4-5

American (1-0)1991 Washington, DC W 2-0

Appalachian State (8-1)1997 Greensboro, NC W 7-01998 Boone, NC W 1-01999 Greensboro, NC W 3-02000 Boone, NC W 1-02001 Greensboro, NC W 6-12002 Boone, NC L 0-12003 Greensboro, NC W 2-02003 Greensboro, NC (SoCon) W 1-02004 Boone, NC W 3-1

Arkansas (1-2)1991 Greensboro, NC L 0-11992 Fayetteville, AK L 2-31993 Greensboro, NC W 3-1

Barry (1-3)1988 Miami Shores, FL L 0-11989 Greensboro, NC L 1-31990 Greensboro, NC W 3-01991 Greensboro, NC L 2-3

Buffalo (1-0)1989 Greensboro, NC W 2-0

California (0-1)1999 Greensboro, NC L 0-4

Campbell (6-1)1992 Buies Creek, NC W 9-01993 Greensboro, NC W 7-21993 Greensboro, NC (Big South) L 0-11994 Buies Creek, NC W 4-11995 Greensboro, NC W 2-01996 Buies Creek, NC W 4-1 (OT)1997 Greensboro, NC W 5-0

Central Florida (2-2)1991 Miami, FL W 2-01992 Raleigh, NC L 0-11996 Greensboro, NC W 3-01998 Miami, FL L 0-3

Charleston Southern (7-0)1993 Charleston, SC W 2-11994 Greensboro, NC W 7-01994 Greensboro, NC (Big South) W 2-11995 Charleston, SC W 6-01995 Greensboro, NC (Big South) W 5-11996 Greensboro, NC W 3-01996 Greensboro, NC (Big South) W 6-2

Charleston (WV) (1-0) 1989 Greensboro, NC W 4-0

Charlotte (2-3)1995 Greensboro, NC W 2-01998 Charlotte, NC L 1-21999 Greensboro, NC L 0-52000 Charlotte, NC W 2-02001 Greensboro, NC L 0-1

Chattanooga (5-2-1)1997 Greensboro, NC W 8-01998 Chattanooga, TN W 5-01999 Greensboro, NC W 4-02000 Greensboro, NC W 5-02001 Chattanooga, TN W 3-12002 Greensboro, NC L 0-22003 Chattanooga, TN L 0-12004 Greensboro, NC T 1-1 (2OT)

Cincinnati (0-2)1994 Greensboro, NC L 1-21995 Cincinnatti, OH L 1-2

Clemson (1-4)1994 Greensboro, NC L 1-21995 Clemson, SC L 0-61997 Greensboro, NC W 2-1 (OT)1997 Clemson, SC (NCAA) L 0-5

1999 Clemson, SC L 0-3

Coastal Carolina (1-0)2004 Greensboro, NC W 7-1

College of Charleston (6-3-1)1996 Greensboro, NC W 8-01997 Charleston, SC L 2-3 (OT)1998 Charleston, SC W 5-11999 Greensboro, NC W 5-02000 Charleston, SC L 0-22000 Charleston, SC (SoCon) W 1-02001 Greensboro, NC W 1-02002 Charleston, SC T 3-32003 Greensboro, NC W 5-12004 Charleston, SC L 0-1

Colorado College (0-1)2002 Colorado Springs, CO L 1-2

Davidson (16-3-1)1989 Greensboro, NC W 10-01990 Davidson, NC W 4-01991 Greensboro, NC W 5-01992 Davidson, NC W 2-01993 Greensboro, NC L 0-11994 Davidson, NC W 3-11995 Greensboro, NC W 2-11996 Davidson, NC W 4-1 (OT)1997 Davidson, NC W 3-01997 Charleston, SC (SoCon) W 4-01998 Greensboro, NC W 4-11999 Davidson, NC L 1-2 (OT)2000 Greensboro, NC W 4-02001 Davidson, NC W 3-02001 Greenville, SC (SoCon) W 1-02002 Greensboro, NC W 4-32002 Greensboro, NC (SoCon) T 1-12003 Davidson, NC W 3-12004 Greensboro, NC W 2-02004 Greensboro, NC (SoCon) L 2-3

Dayton (1-0)1991 Greensboro, NC W 1-0

Denver (0-1)1990 Denver, CO L 0-1

Duke (4-10)1988 Greensboro, NC W 2-1 (OT)1989 Durham, NC L 3-71991 Greensboro, NC L 0-41992 Durham, NC L 0-21993 Greensboro, NC L 0-11994 Greensboro, NC L 0-41995 Durham, NC L 2-31996 Greensboro, NC W 2-11997 Durham, NC L 0-21997 Durham, NC (NCAA) W 3-1 (OT)1998 Greensboro, NC L 1-2 (OT)1999 Durham, NC L 0-22000 Greensboro, NC W 2-02003 Greensboro, NC L 0-2

East Tennesse State (10-0)1997 Johnson City, TN W 10-01997 Charleston, SC(SoCon) W 11-01998 Greensboro, NC W 10-21998 Greenville, SC (SoCon) W 9-01999 Johnson City, TN W 3-02000 Johnson City, TN W 5-12001 Greensboro, NC W 8-12002 Johnson City, TN W 1-02003 Greensboro, NC W 1-0 (OT)2004 Johnson City, TN W 5-0

Elon (7-0)1988 Greensboro, NC W 5-11989 Elon, NC W 4-11990 Greensboro, NC W 2-01991 Elon, NC W 1-01992 Greensboro, NC W 2-02003 Greensboro, NC W 1-02004 Elon, NC W 2-1

Erskine (3-0)1989 Due West, SC W 1-01990 Due West, SC W 3-01991 Greensboro, NC W 7-0

Florida (0-3)1996 Fairfax, VA L 1-41997 Greensboro, NC L 1-21998 Gainesville, FL L 0-6

Florida International (2-2)1991 Miami, FL L 0-21992 Greensboro, NC L 0-31995 Miami, FL W 4-11996 Greensboro, NC W 4-1

Florida State (1-0)1997 Greensboro, NC W 3-2

Fresno State (1-0)2004 Corvallis, OR W 2-1

Furman (7-6)1997 Greensboro, NC W 3-11998 Greenville, SC W 2-1 (OT)1998 Greenville, SC (SoCon) W 2-0 (OT)1999 Greensboro, NC L 0-32000 Greensboro, NC L 0-12000 Charleston, SC (SoCon) W 1-02001 Greenville, SC L 0-32001 Greenville, SC (SoCon) W 2-02002 Greensboro, NC L 2-52002 Greensboro, NC (SoCon) L 1-22003 Greenville, SC L 1-22003 Greensboro, NC (SoCon) W 2-02004 Greensboro, NC W 2-0

Georgia (1-0)1995 Greensboro, NC W 7-0

Georgia Southern (6-3)1997 Statesboro, GA W 3-01998 Greensboro, NC W 4-31999 Statesboro, GA L 2-41999 Greensboro, NC (SoCon) L 1-22000 Statesboro, GA W 2-02001 Greensboro, NC W 3-02002 Statesboro, GA L 2-32003 Greensboro, NC W 5-02004 Statesboro, GA W 2-1

George Mason (1-6-2)1992 Greensboro, NC T 2-21994 Fairfax, VA L 0-41996 Greensboro, NC W 4-11996 College Station, TX L 1-51997 Fairfax, VA L 1-21998 Greensboro, NC L 0-22000 Fairfax, VA L 0-22002 Fairfax, Va. L 1-52003 Greensboro, NC T 0-0

George Washington (1-0)1991 Greensboro, NC W 2-1

Guilford (1-0)1988 Greensboro, NC W 5-0

Hofstra (0-1)2003 Greensboro, NC L 0-2

James Madison (7-5-1)1990 Greensboro, NC W 1-01991 Harrisonburg, VA W 3-21992 Greensboro, NC L 0-11993 Harrisonburg, VA W 2-01994 Greensboro, NC W 3-11995 Harrisonburg, VA W 3-21996 Greensboro, NC W 3-11996 Greensboro, NC (NCAA) L 1-31997 Harrisonburg, VA L 0-21998 Greensboro, NC T 1-1 (OT)1999 Harrisonburg, VA W 2-12000 Harrisonburg, VA L 2-3 (OT)2001 Harrisonburg, VA L 2-3 (OT)

Keene State (1-1)1988 Miami, FL L 0-31989 Kutztown, PA W 2-1

Kentucky (1-1)1992 Greensboro, NC W 6-1 (OT)1996 Lexington, KY L 1-2

Kutztown (1-0)1990 Greensboro, NC W 8-0

Liberty (5-0)1993 Lynchburg, VA W 9-01994 Greensboro, NC W 7-01995 Lynchburg, VA W 4-01996 Greensboro, NC W 5-02002 Greensboro, NC W 4-0

Lenoir-Rhyne (2-0)1990 Greensboro, NC W 12-01991 Hickory, NC W 6-1

Louisville (1-0)1988 Greensboro, NC W 10-0

Lynchburg (1-0)1988 Greensboro, NC W 6-1

Marshall (0-1)2002 Greensboro, NC L 1-2

Maryland (4-2)1988 Greensboro, NC W, 2-0 (OT)1989 College Park, MD W 3-21990 Greensboro, NC W 1-01991 College Park, MD W 3-01993 Greensboro, NC L 1-31994 College Park, MD L 0-4

Maryland Baltimore-County (4-0)1993 Greensboro, NC W 8-01994 Baltimore, MD W 3-11995 Greensboro, NC W 6-11996 Baltimore, MD W 4-2

Maryville (1-0)1988 Greensboro, NC W 11-0

Mercer (2-0)1992 Greensboro, NC W 2-11993 Macon, GA W 4-2

Methodist (2-1)1988 Fayetteville, NC L 0-31989 Greensboro, NC W 3-1 (OT)1992 Fayetteville, NC W 4-0

Missouri-St. Louis (0-0-1)1989 Greensboro, NC T 1-1

New Hampshire (1-0)1992 Greensboro, NC W 3-2

North Carolina (0-7)1988 Chapel Hill, NC L 0-41989 Greensboro, NC L 1-71990 Chapel Hill, NC L 0-41991 Greensboro, NC L 0-21992 Chapel Hill, NC L 0-32001 Chapel Hill, NC (NCAA) L 0-32003 Chapel Hill, NC (NCAA) L 0-5

North Carolina State (6-6-2)1988 Greensboro, NC L 0-11989 Raleigh, NC L 1-21990 Greensboro, NC L 1-21991 Raleigh, NC L 0-21992 Greensboro, NC W 2-11993 Raleigh, NC L 1-31994 Greensboro, NC T 0-0 (OT)1995 Raleigh, NC L 2-31996 Greensboro, NC W 4-31997 Raleigh, NC W 1-01998 Greensboro, NC W 3-11999 Raleigh, NC W 3-02000 Greensboro, NC T 0-0 (OT)2001 Raleigh, NC W 2-1 (2OT)

North Carolina Wesleyan (2-0)1988 Greensboro, NC W 2-11991 Greensboro, NC W 1-0

Northern Colorado (1-0)1990 Greeley, CO W 1-0

Notre Dame (1-0)1990 Greensboro, NC W 5-1

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Opponent W L T First LastAdelphi 1 0 0 1989 1989Air Force 0 1 0 2002 2002American 1 0 0 1991 1991Appalachian State 8 1 0 1997 2004Arkansas 1 2 0 1991 1993Barry 1 3 0 1988 1991Buffalo 1 0 0 1989 1989California 0 1 0 1999 1999Campbell 6 1 0 1992 1997Central Florida 2 2 0 1991 1998Charleston Southern 7 0 0 1993 1996Charleston (WV) 1 0 0 1989 1989Charlotte 2 3 0 1995 2001Chattanooga 5 2 1 1997 2004Cincinnati 0 2 0 1994 1995Clemson 1 4 0 1994 1999Coastal Carolina 1 0 0 2004 2004College of Charleston 6 3 1 1996 2004Colorado College 0 1 0 2002 2002Davidson 16 3 1 1989 2004Dayton 1 0 0 1991 1991Denver 0 1 0 1990 1990Duke 4 10 0 1988 2003East Tennesse State 10 0 0 1997 2004Elon 7 0 0 1988 2004Erskine 3 0 0 1989 1991Florida 0 3 0 1996 1998Florida International 2 2 0 1991 1996Florida State 1 0 0 1997 1997Fresno State 1 0 0 2004 2004Furman 7 6 0 1997 2004Georgia 1 0 0 1995 1995

Opponent W L T First LastGeorgia Southern 6 3 0 1997 2004George Mason 1 6 2 1992 2003George Washington 1 0 0 1991 1991Guilford 1 0 0 1988 1988High Point First MeetingHofstra 0 1 0 2003 2003James Madison 7 5 1 1990 2001Keene State 1 1 0 1988 1989Kentucky 1 1 0 1992 1996Kutztown 1 0 0 1990 1990Liberty 5 0 0 1993 2002Lenoir-Rhyne 2 0 0 1990 1991Louisville 1 0 0 1988 1988Lynchburg 1 0 0 1988 1988Marshall 0 1 0 2002 2002Maryland 4 2 0 1988 1994UMBC 4 0 0 1993 1996Maryville 1 0 0 1988 1988Mercer 2 0 0 1992 1993Methodist 2 1 0 1988 1992Missouri-St. Louis 0 0 1 1989 1989New Hampshire 1 0 0 1992 1992North Carolina 0 7 0 1988 2003NC State 6 6 2 1988 2001NC Wesleyan 2 0 0 1988 1991Northern Colorado 1 0 0 1990 1990Notre Dame 1 0 0 1990 1990Ohio State 2 0 0 1993 1995Old Dominion 4 2 0 1999 2004Oregon 1 1 0 1997 1998Oregon State 0 1 0 2004 2004Penn 0 0 1 2003 2003

Opponent W L T First LastPittsburgh 2 0 0 2001 2004Portland 0 1 0 1996 1996Princeton 0 2 0 2003 2004Quincy 1 0 0 1990 1990Radford 5 3 1 1988 1996Randolph-Macon 1 0 0 1988 1988Regis 1 0 0 1990 1990Richmond 0 1 0 1999 1999Roanoke 2 0 0 1989 1990Salem 1 0 0 1988 1988San Diego State 0 1 0 1998 1998South Alabama 1 0 0 1997 1997South Carolina 1 2 0 2000 2002SMU 0 2 0 1992 1994St. Andrew’s 2 0 0 1989 1990Texas A&M 1 1 0 1994 1996The Citadel 4 0 0 2001 2004Towson 2 0 0 1993 1994Tulsa 1 1 0 1993 1994UNC Asheville 4 1 1 1993 1996UNC Wilmington 2 0 0 2001 2003Vanderbilt 1 2 0 1991 1998Villanova 1 0 0 1992 1992Virginia 0 6 0 1988 2000Virginia Tech 2 1 0 1996 2001Wake Forest 1 7 0 1998 2004Washington 1 1 0 1997 1998Western Carolina 7 2 0 1999 2004William & Mary 2 2 0 1999 2002Wofford 11 0 0 1997 2004

2005 Opponents in Bold

Ohio State (2-0)1993 Greensboro, NC W 2-01995 Columbus, OH W 1-0

Old Dominion (4-2)1999 Norfolk, VA L 0-12000 Fairfax, VA L 1-22001 Greensboro, NC W 1-02002 Norfolk, VA W 1-02003 Greensboro, NC W 4-3 (OT)2004 Norfolk, VA W 1-0 (OT)

Oregon (1-1)1997 Greensboro, NC W 6-01998 Eugene, OR L 0-2

Oregon State (0-1)2004 Corvallis, OR L 1-2

Penn (0-0-1)2003 Princeton, NJ T 3-3 (2OT)

Pittsburgh (2-0)2001 Greensboro, NC W 3-12004 Greensboro, NC W 2-0

Portland (0-1)1996 Greensboro, NC L0-3

Princeton (0-2)2003 Princeton, NJ L 0-32004 Greensboro, NC L 0-2

Quincy (1-0)1990 Greensboro, NC W 1-0

Radford (5-3-1)1988 Radford, VA L 0-11990 Greensboro, NC L 0-21991 Radford, VA L 1-21992 Greensboro, NC W 4-11993 Greensboro, NC W 1-0 (OT)1994 Greensboro, NC W 3-11994 Greensboro, NC (Big South) T 0-01995 Greensboro, NC W 5-0

1996 Radford, VA W 4-2

Randolph-Macon (1-0)1988 Greensboro, NC W 5-1

Regis (1-0)1990 Denver, CO W 2-0

Richmond (0-1)1999 Richmond, VA L 0-4

Roanoke (2-0)1989 Roanoke, VA W 5-01990 Greensboro, NC W 5-0

Salem (1-0)1988 Salem, WV W 10-0

San Diego State (0-1)1998 Greensboro, NC L 1-3

South Alabama (1-0)1997 Greensboro, NC (NCAA) W 5-0

South Carolina (1-2)2000 Greensboro, NC W 2-02001 Columbia, SC L 0-22002 Greensboro, NC L 0-2

SMU (0-2)1992 Greensboro, NC L 3-41994 Dallas, TX L 1-3

St. Andrew’s (2-0)1989 Laurinburg, NC W 7-01990 Greensboro, NC W 6-0

Texas A&M (1-1)1994 Greensboro, NC W 2-11996 College Station, TX L 0-2

The Citadel (4-0)2001 Charleston, SC W 10-02002 Greensboro, NC W 2-02003 Greensboro, NC W 7-0

2004 Charleston, SC W 7-0

Towson (2-0)1993 Greensboro, NC W 5-01994 Towson, MD W 4-0

Tulsa (1-1)1993 Greensboro, NC L 2-31994 Tulsa, OK W 2-0

UNC Asheville (4-1-1)1993 Asheville, NC W 3-01994 Greensboro, NC W 4-01995 Asheville. NC W 3-21995 Greensboro, NC (Big South) L 0-11996 Greensboro, NC W 4-21996 Greensboro, NC (Big South) T 1-1

UNC Wilmington (2-0)2001 Greensboro, NC W 3-2 (OT)2003 Wilmington, NC W 2-1

Vanderbilt (1-2)1991 Greensboro, NC W 3-21992 Nashville, TN L 0-21998 Nashville, TN (NCAA) L 1-5

Villanova (1-0)1992 Raleigh, NC W 5-0

Virginia (0-6)1988 Charlottesville, VA L 0-51989 Greensboro, NC L 0-51990 Charlottesville, VA L 0-41991 Greensboro, NC L 1-21993 Charlottesville, VA L 1-32000 Charlottesville, VA (NCAA) L 1-6

Virginia Tech (2-1)1996 Blacksburg, VA W 1-01997 Greensboro, NC W 1-02001 Greensboro, NC L 2-3

Wake Forest (1-7)1998 Winston-Salem, NC L 2-3

1999 Greensboro, NC L 0-22000 Winston-Salem, NC L 0-32001 Greensboro, NC L 0-52002 Winston-Salem, NC L 2-42003 Greensboro, NC L 1-32003 Chapel Hill, NC (NCAA) W 2-12004 Winston-Salem, NC L 2-3

Washington (1-1)1997 Greensboro, NC L 0-51998 Seattle, WA W 2-1

Western Carolina (7-2)1999 Cullowhee, NC W 2-02000 Greensboro, NC W 1-02000 Charleston, SC (SoCon) W 3-12001 Cullowhee, NC L 1-2 (2OT)2001 Greenville, SC (SoCon) W 2-1 (2OT)2002 Greensboro, NC L 0-12003 Cullowhee, NC W 1-02004 Greensboro, NC W 2-12004 Greensboro, NC (SoCon) W 7-0

William & Mary (2-2)1999 Greensboro, NC L 0-22000 Fairfax, VA L 1-32000 Greensboro, NC (NCAA) W 3-2 (OT)2002 Fairfax, VA W 2-0

Wofford (11-0)1997 Spartanburg, SC W 4-31997 Charleston, SC (SoCon) W 9-01998 Greensboro, NC W 3-11998 Greenville, SC (SoCon) W 3-11999 Spartanburg, SC W 1-02000 Greensboro, NC W 1-02001 Spartanburg, SC W 3-02002 Greensboro, NC W 3-02003 Spartanburg, SC W 1-02003 Greensboro, SC (SoCon) W 2-02004 Greensboro, NC W 2-0

Postseason designated in parenthsis

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 25

Megan Bynum(1998-01)

Goals Player 1. Ali Lord, 1995-98 .................................................78 2. Kerry Powell, 1990-93 .........................................53 3. Kati Kantanen, 1995-97 .......................................47 4. Heather Duryea, 1988-91 ....................................32 5. Jenny Moore, 1997-00 .........................................29 Amy Carnell, 2002-.............................................29 7. Megan Bynum, 1998-01 ......................................26 8. Rakel Logadóttir, 2001-04 ...................................25 Penny Rich, 1992-95 ...........................................23 10. Stephanie Guy, 1991-94 ......................................22 Kate Dylag, 1998-01 ............................................22

Assists Player 1. Rakel Logadóttir, 2001-04 ...................................44 2. Kati Kantanen, 1995-97 .......................................35 Ali Lord, 1995-98 .................................................29 Meghan Guarnotta, 1988-91 ...............................29 5. Danica Baker, 1995-98 ........................................20 Caroline Coberth, 1990-93 ..................................20 7. Shannon Carey, 1994-97 .....................................19 8. Pa’tra Glavin, 1997-00 .........................................18 Joy Scott, 1993-96 ...............................................18 10. Kelly Merriss, 1995-97 .........................................16

Points Player G-A Pts. 1. Ali Lord, 1995-98 ...............................78-29 ......185 2. Kati Kantanen, 1995-97 .....................47-35 ......129 3. Kerry Powell, 1990-93 .......................53-15 ......121 4. Rakel Logadóttir, 2001-04 .................25-44 ........94 5. Heather Duryea, 1988-91 ..................32-11.........75 6. Jenny Moore, 1997-00 .......................29-15 ........73 7. Amy Carnell, 2002-...........................29-10 ........68 8. Danica Baker, 1995-98 ......................21-20 ........62 Megan Bynum, 1998-01 ....................26-10 ........62 10. Meghan Guarnotta, 1988-91 .............15-29 ........59 11. Stephanie Guy, 1991-94 ....................22-14 ........58

Single Season Records

Saves Player Svs 1. Kathryn Clewley, 1998-01 ..................................347 2. Laura Mussulman, 1988-91 ...............................301 3. Jennifer Stillman, 2002-...................................243 4. Paula Domitrovits, 1995-98 ...............................229

Goals Against Average Player GAA 1. Kim Burnette, 1993-94 ......................................1.19 2. Heather Bridgewater, 1992-93 ..........................1.28 3. Jennifer Stillman, 2002-..................................1.29 4. Laura Mussulman, 1988-91 ..............................1.30

Shutouts Player Sho 1. Kathryn Clewley, 1998-01 ....................................21 2. Paula Domitrovits, 1995-98 .................................20 3. Laura Mussulman, 1988-91 .................................18 Jennifer Stillman, 2002-.....................................18

Career Matches Played Player 1. Lynsey McLean, 1997-01 ....................................94 2. Ali Lord, 1995-98 .................................................89 Kate Dylag, 1998-01 ............................................89 Megan Bynum (1998-01) .....................................89 5. Jenny Moore, 1997-00 .........................................88 6. Rakel Logadóttir, 2001-04 ...................................86 Shannon Carey, 1994-97 .....................................86

Career Matches Started Player 1. Lynsey McLean, 1997-01 ....................................93 2. Raila Maisonlahti, 1994-97 ..................................85 3. Rakel Logadóttir, 2001-04 ...................................84 4. Kristy Bell, 1997-00..............................................80 Ali Lord, 1995-98 .................................................80 Jennifer Kennedy, 1999-02 ..................................80

Jamie Ableman(2001-04)

Danika Baker(1994-98)

Kristy Bell(1997-00)

Melissa Boythe(1998-01)

Goals Player Year G 1. Ali Lord ..............................1996 ........................26 2. Ali Lord ...............................1997 ........................24 3. Kati Kantanen .....................1997 ........................24 4. Ali Lord ...............................1998 ........................22 5. Kerry Powell........................1993 ........................15 Kerry Powell........................1990 ........................15 7. Jenny Moore .......................1998 ........................14 Kerry Powell........................1992 ........................14 Kate Dylag ..........................2001 ........................14 10. Deven Beachum ................2004 ........................12 Kati Kantanen .....................1996 ........................12 Kara Lee .............................1989 ........................12 Heather Duryea ..................1988 ........................12

Assists Player Year A 1. Kati Kantanen .....................1997 ........................20 2. Rakel Logadóttir .................2004 ........................15 3. Rakel Logadóttir .................2002 ........................13 4. Rakel Logadóttir .................2003 ........................12 Ali Lord ...............................1996 ........................12 6. Meghan Guarnotta ..............1988 ........................11 Nicollette DeLaine.............2004 ........................11 8. Shannon Carey ...................1997 ........................10 Kati Kantanen .....................1996 ........................10 10. Cara Hammond ..................2002 ..........................9 11. seven players tied with 8

Points Player Year G-A Pts 1. Kati Kantanen .....................1997 ......24-20 ........68 2. Ali Lord ...............................1996 ......26-12 ........64 3. Ali Lord ...............................1997 ......24-8 ..........56 4. Ali Lord ...............................1998 ......22-6 ..........50 5. Jenny Moore .......................1998 ......14-8 ..........36 Kerry Powell........................1993 ......15-6 ..........36 7. Kate Dylag ..........................2001 ......14-7 ..........35 8. Kati Kantanen .....................1996 ......12-10 ........34 Kerry Powell........................1990 ......15-4 ..........34 10. Kerry Powell........................1992 ......14-3 ..........31

Saves Player Year Svs 1. Jennifer Stillman ...............2003 ......................110 2. Kathryn Clewley ..................2001 ......................101 3. Kathryn Clewley ..................2000 ........................94

Goals Against Average (min. 1,000minutes)

Player Year GAA 1. Jennifer Stillman ...............2004 .....................0.74 2. Kathryn Clewley ..................2000 .....................0.84 3. Laura Mussulman ...............1990 .....................0.94 4. Kim Burnette .......................1993 .....................0.99

Shutouts Player Year Sho 1. Paula Domitrovits................1997 ........................12 2. Jennifer Stillman ...............2003 ........................10 3. Kathryn Clewley ..................2000 ..........................9 4. Jennifer Stillman ...............2004 ..........................7

Career Records

Lynsey McLean

Ali Lord

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26 • 2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide

NSCAA All-Region1990 Caroline Coberth First Team1990 Heather Duryea First Team1990 Tracie Foels First Team1990 Lisa Leisten First Team1990 Laura Mussulman First Team1990 Meghan Guarnotta Second Team1990 Kerry Powell Second Team1989 Tracie Foels First Team1989 Jill Adams Second Team1989 Kara Lee Second Team1989 Laura Mussulman Second Team1989 Lisa O’Brien Second Team1988 Tracie Foels First Team1988 Laura Mussulman First Team1988 Julie Carson Second Team1988 Heather Duryea Honorable Mention1988 Meghan Guarnotta Honorable Mention1988 Lisa Leisten Honorable Mention

NSCAA Coach of the Year1990 Jack Poland

CoSIDA Academic All-American1991 Heather Duryea Second Team1991 Laura Mussulman Third Team1990 Heather Duryea Third Team

NSCAA All-American 1996 Ali Lord Third Team

Soccer Buzz All-American 1996 Ali Lord Second Team 1997 Kati Kantanen Third Team

Soccer Buzz Freshman All-American 1997 Lynsey McLean 1996 Heather Bernard

NSCAA All-Region 2004 Rakel Logadóttir Second Team 2003 Rakel Logadóttir Third Team 2001 Lynsey McLean Second Team2000 Lynsey McLean First Team1998 Ali Lord First Team1998 Danica Baker Third Team1997 Kati Kantanen Second Team1997 Ali Lord Second Team1997 Danica Baker Third Team Raila Maisonlahti Third Team1996 Ali Lord First Team1996 Joy Scott Third Team1995 Kati Kantanen First Team1995 Joy Scott Second Team1993 Joy Scott Third Team1991 Tracie Foels Second Team

Soccer Buzz All-Region 2004 Rakel Logadottir Second Team2004 Karla Davis All-Freshman2003 Shannon Donovan All-Freshman 2003 Rakel Logadottir Second Team2001 Lynsey McLean Second Team 2001 Kathryn Clewley Second Team 2000 Kathryn Clewley Third Team 2000 Lynsey McLean Second Team 1998 Ali Lord First Team 1997 Danica Baker Second Team Kati Kantangen Second Team Raila Maisonlahti Second Team 1997 Ali Lord Third Team 1996 Ali Lord Second Team Raila Maisonlahti Second Team Joy Scott Second Team 1996 Kati Kantanen Third Team

NSCAA Region Coach of the Year 1996 Jack Poland

CoSIDA Academic All-American District III 2004 Jaime Ableman2001 Jill Barrett2001 Megan Bynum2001 Kathryn Clewley

Southern Conference Player of the Year 2004 Amy Carnell2001 Lynsey McLean 1998 Ali Lord 1997 Kati Kantanen

Southern Conference Freshman of the Year 2004 Karla Davis2003 Shannon Donovan 1997 Lynsey McLean

Southern Conference Coach of the Year 1997 Jack Poland

All-Southern Conference 2004 Amy Carnell First Team2004 Rakel Logadóttir First Team2004 Shannon Donovan First Team2004 Deven Beachum Second Team2004 Nicollette DeLaine Second Team2003 Rakel Logadóttir First Team2003 Amy Carnell Second Team2003 Cara Hammond Second Team 2002 Rakel Logadóttir First Team 2002 Cara Hammond Second Team2001 Kathryn Clewley First Team2001 Lynsey McLean First Team2001 Jennifer Kennedy First Team2001 Kate Dylag Second Team2000 Kathryn Clewley First Team 2000 Lynsey McLean First Team 2000 Rebecca Shivers First Team2000 Jennifer Kennedy Second Team1999 Kathryn Clewley Second Team1999 Jennifer Kennedy Second Team1998 Danica Baker First Team1998 Paula Domitrovits First Team1998 Ali Lord First Team1998 Pa’tra Glavin Second Team1998 Lynsey McLean Second Team1997 Danica Baker First Team1997 Shannon Carey First Team1997 Paula Domitrovits First Team1997 Kati Kantanen First Team1997 Ali Lord First Team1997 Raila Maisonlahti First Team1997 Lynsey McLean First Team

All-Southern Conference Tournament Team 2004 Rakel Logadóttir2004 Nicollette DeLaine2003 Rakel Logadóttir2003 Amy Carnell 2003 Jennifer Stillman 2003 Shannon Donovan 2002 Jennifer Kennedy 2002 Rakel Logadóttir 2001 Kathryn Clewley 2001 Lynsey McLean 2001 Rebecca Shivers 2001 Kara Mirarchi 2000 Kathryn Clewley 2000 Lynsey McLean 2000 Jenny Moore 2000 Meredith Seawell1998 Danica Baker 1998 Kathryn Clewley 1998 Ali Lord 1998 Jenny Moore1997 Danica Baker 1997 Kati Kantanen 1997 Ali Lord 1997 Kim Rosenberg Shannon Carey

(1994-97)Keri Currutt

(1995-98)Kathryn Clewley

(1998-01)

Tracie Foels

Division I (1991-current)Division II (1988-90)

NSCAA All-American1989 Tracie Foels First Team

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 27

Southern Conference Tournament MVP 2003 Rakel Logadóttir2001 Kathryn Clewley 2000 Lynsey McLean 1998 Ali Lord 1997 Kim Rosenberg

Big South Player of the Year 1996 Ali Lord 1994 Penny Rich

Big South Rookie of the Year 1995 Kati Kantanen 1994 Raila Maisonlahati

Big South Coach of the Year 1996 Jack Poland 1994 Jack Poland

Big South Scholar-Athlete of the Year 1994 Brandy Palmer

All-Big South Conference 1996 Danica Baker First Team1996 Kati Kantanen First Team1996 Ali Lord First Team1996 Raila Maisonlahti First Team1996 Joy Scott First Team1996 Paula Domitrovitz Second Team1996 Kelly Merriss Second Team1995 Kati Kantanen First Team1995 Raila Maisonlahti First Team1995 Joy Scott First Team1995 Liz Wedemeyer First Team1995 Susie Williams First Team1995 Amy Gray Second Team1995 Ali Lord Second Team1995 Margaret Malloy Second Team1995 Sanna Råsånen Second Team1995 Penny Rich Second Team1994 Liza Levine First Team1994 Brandy Palmer First Team1994 Penny Rich First Team1994 Joy Scott First Team1994 Stephanie Guy Second Team1994 Susie Williams Second Team1993 Caroline Coberth First Team1993 Kerry Powell First Team1993 Liz Wedemeyer First Team1993 Susie Williams First Team1993 Heather Bridgewater Second Team1993 Brandy Palmer Second Team1993 Joy Scott Second Team

All-Big South Tournament Team 1996 Shannon Carey 1996 Stephanie Dearlove 1996 Paula Domitrovits 1996 Ali Lord 1996 Kim Rosenberg 1995 Shannon Carey 1995 Kati Kantanen 1995 Raila Maisonlahti 1995 Margaret Malloy 1995 Sanna Rasanen 1995 Liz Wedemeyer 1995 Susie Williams 1994 Raila Maisonlahti 1994 Margaret Malloy 1994 Penny Rich 1994 Susie Williams 1993 Liz Wedemeyer

Bg South Tournament MVP 1996 Raila Maisonlahati 1994 Margaret Malloy

Team Season Most Wins .............................................................19 (1997) Most Losses ...............................................12 (1999, 2002)Most Ties ................................................................3 (1994)Fewest Wins ...........................................................8 (1999)Fewest Losses ..........................5 (1989, 1990, 1995, 2004)Most Games Played .............................................25 (1997)Fewest Games Played ...............................17 (1988, 1989)Longest Winning Streak ............7 (1990, 1991, 2001,2003)Longest Losing Streak ............................................7 (2002) Most Home Victories ............................................12 (1996) Fewest Home Losses ...................................1 (1988, 1995) Most Away Victories ...............................................8 (1997) Fewest Away Losses ....................................2 (1993, 1996)Most Goals ...........................................................93 (1997) Fewest Goals ..............................................28 (1999, 2003) Most Assists ..........................................................88 (1997)Fewest Assists ......................................................28 (1999) Most Points .........................................................274 (1997) Fewest Points .......................................................84 (1999) Most Goals Allowed ..............................................41 (2002) Fewest Goals Allowed ..........................................14 (1990) Most Shutouts .............................................13 (1990, 1997) Fewest Shutouts .....................................................4 (1998) Most Times Shutout ................................................8 (1999) Most Shots ..........................................................345 (2002) Fewest Shots Allowed ........................................137 (1993) Winning Percentage .......................................... .760 (1997)

Individual Match Records Most Points .................................................................... 11

Kati Kantanen, vs. Chattanooga - Oct. 17, 1997 Most 1st Half Points ........................................................9

Kati Kantanen, vs. Chattanooga - Oct. 17, 1997 Most 2nd Half Points .......................................................6

Ali Lord, vs. Georgia Southern - Oct. 23, 1998 Most Goals .......................................................................4

Four occasions Most 1st Half Goals .........................................................3

Four occasions Most 2nd Half Goals ........................................................3

Ali Lord, vs. Georgia Southern - Oct. 23, 1998 Most Assists.....................................................................4

Meghan Guarnotta at Salem - Sept. 21 1988Nicollette DeLaine vs. Western Carolina - Nov. 4 2004

Most 1st Half Assists.......................................................3 Kati Kantanen, vs. Chattanooga - Oct. 17, 1997

Most 2nd Half Assists .....................................................3 Katie Bullington vs. Appalachian State - Sept. 30 1997Nicollette DeLaine vs. Western Carolina - Nov. 4 2004

Saves ...............................................................................15 Kathryn Clewley, vs. Wake Forest - Oct. 3, 2001

Shots ...............................................................................10 Ali Lord, at Charleston Southern - Sept. 4, 1995

Amy Carnell, vs. The Citadel - Oct. 20, 2002

Team Match Records Most Goals Scored ........................................................12............................................vs. Lenoir-Rhyne - Oct. 8, 1990 Most Goals Allowed.........................................................7..................................... vs. UNC Chapel Hill - Sept. 6, 1989 ........................................................at Duke - Oct. 24, 1989 Most Goals, Both Teams ..............................................12

vs. Lenoir-Rhyne - Oct. 8, 1990 Largest Margin of Victory .............................................12

vs. Lenoir-Rhyne - Oct. 8, 1990 Largest Margin of Victory, Shutout ..............................12

vs. Lenoir-Rhyne - Oct. 8, 1990 Largest Margin of Victory, Home..................................12

vs. Lenoir-Rhyne - Oct. 8, 1990 Largest Margin of Victory, Away ..................................10

at ETSU - Sept 13, 1997at Salem - Sept. 21, 1988

at The Citadel - Oct. 28, 2001 Largest Margin of Defeat ................................................6

at Florida - Oct. 9, 1998at Clemson - Sept. 2, 1995

vs. North Carolina - Sept. 6, 1989 Largest Margin of Defeat, Shutout .................................6

at Florida - Oct. 9, 1998at Clemson - Sept. 2, 1995

Largest Margin of Defeat, Home ....................................6vs. UNC Chapel Hill - Sept. 6, 1989

Largest Margin of Defeat, Away .....................................6at Florida - Oct. 9, 1998

at Clemson - Sept. 2, 1995 Most Shots .....................................................................50

vs. ETSU - Oct. 28, 1997 Most Shots Allowed.......................................................36

at Florida - Oct. 9, 1998 Fewest Shots ...................................................................0

vs. California - Sept. 26, 1999 Fewest Shots Allowed .....................................................0

vs. ETSU - Oct. 28, 1997at ETSU - Sept. 13, 1997at Liberty - Sept. 10, 1993

Quickest Goal, 1st Half ................................................:22J. Barrett vs. Wofford - Oct. 23, 2002

Quickest Goal Allowed, 1st Half ................................1:13Stephanie Strocco, vs. California - Sept. 26, 1999

Quickest Goal, 2nd Half ...........................................45:45Dana Arrowood, at ETSU - Sept 17, 1999

Quickest Goal Allowed, 2nd Half.............................45:37Carmie Landeen, at Clemson - Sept. 2, 1995

Quickest Goal, Overtime ..........................................90:15Stephanie Guy, vs. Kentucky - Oct. 26, 1992

Quickest Goal Allowed, Overtime ...........................97:40Betsy Coverdale, at Arkansas - Oct. 19, 1992

Shortest Span Between Goals ....................................:20vs. Central Florida - Sept. 26, 1996

Shortest Span Between Goals Allowed ......................:09vs. George Mason - Nov. 3, 1996

Attendance, Home .......................................................786vs. Duke - Sept. 23, 1998

Attendance, Away .....................................................1,335at Florida - Oct. 9, 1998

Attendance, Netrual .....................................................409vs. Wofford - November 7, 1998

Season & Game Records

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Jenny Moore ......................................................... 1997-00Kristi Munchel ....................................................... 1996-97Kelly Murphy ......................................................... 2003-04Laura Mussulman ................................................. 1988-90

NDeana Nowak ....................................................... 1992-93

OLisa O’Brien .......................................................... 1988-91Mandy Owen ........................................................ 1988-90

PMeredith Paisley ........................................ 2003-presentBrandy Palmer ...................................................... 1991-94Lynn Pantuosco ..........................................................1995Jessica Patterson ...................................... 2004-presentHolly Peterson ...................................................... 1988-89Sherri Pollans .............................................................1990Keri Powell ............................................................ 1990-93Heather Puckett .................................................... 1990-93

RTheresa Ramos ..........................................................1990Sanna Rasanen ..........................................................1995Tiffany Renard .................................................. 2000-2003Penny Rich ........................................................... 1992-95Lisa Riggioni ...............................................................1998Kim Rosenberg ..................................................... 1994-97Angie Rudy ....................................................... 1998-2002Sandy Rupolo ....................................................... 1989-90Rori Rushing ......................................................... 1988-91Katherine Ryan .......................................... 2004-present

SBrynn Saunders ..........................................................2000Zoe Schlegel ...............................................................1999Joy Scott ............................................................... 1993-96Dani Scouler ......................................................... 1992-93Meredith Seawell .................................................. 1999-01Paula Shelton ....................................................... 1988-90Rebecca Shivers .................................................. 1998-01Emilie Stewart ............................................ 2004-presentCheryl Stewart .................................................. 2000-2003Jennifer Stillman ........................................ 2002-presentHilary Stocker ....................................................... 1990-93Becky Sutorius ...................................................... 1990-94

TDana Tilley ............................................................ 1995-97Millicent Thorton .........................................................1990Mary Kate Towne ....................................... 2004-presentKatherin Trevillian ............................................. 1999-2002

WLiz Wedemeyer ..................................................... 1992-95Erika Williams .............................................................1988Susie Willliams ..................................................... 1992-95Jennifer Withrow ................................................... 1999-01Tracey Withrow ................................................. 2000-2003Janice Wols .......................................................... 1989-90

ZAmanda Zimmerman ................................. 2004-present

EBridget Eaton ..............................................................1993Kristine Edner .............................................................1995Andrea Ellison ............................................................1988Elise Epp .............................................................. 1994-95Teresa Ericsson .................................................... 1993-94

FTracie Foels .......................................................... 1988-91Natalie Friddle ............................................................1999

GChristine Galke ...........................................................1999Diana Gardner ............................................................2003Pa’tra Glavin ......................................................... 1997-00Joni Gomez ................................................................2002Amy Gray .............................................................. 1994-95Meghan Guarnotta ................................................ 1988-91Robyn Gurinsky .................................................... 1989-90Stephanie Guy ...................................................... 1991-94

HSam Haber .................................................................1991Holly Hall ....................................................................1995Tiffany Hallenbeck ......................................................2003Cara Hammond .......................................... 2002-presentAshley Hartsell ...................................................... 1993-94Kelly Hobbs ................................................................1989Jennifer Holder ...........................................................1989Laura Hollingsworth ....................................................1994Ashley Horton ....................................................... 1998-01Jordan Huber ..............................................................1999Silke Huttig .................................................................1995

JAllie Jackson ......................................................... 1992-95Jessie Jay................................................... 2003-presentHarmony Johnson ................................................ 1995-96

KKati Kantanen ....................................................... 1995-97Melyssa Kemp ............................................................1989Jennifer Kennedy .............................................. 1999-2002Megen Kepley ............................................ 2003-present

LLisa Leisten .......................................................... 1989-91Kara Lee .....................................................................1989Liz Lee ........................................................................1997Liza Levine ........................................................... 1991-94Carolyn Lindsay ......................................... 2003-presentRakel Logadottir ............................................... 2001-2004Ali Lord ................................................................. 1995-98

MRaila Maisonlahti .................................................. 1994-97Melissa Malick ............................................................1993Margaret Malloy .................................................... 1991-95Tanell Martin ......................................................... 1989-90Tara McCarroll ............................................................1991Lynsey McLean .................................................... 1997-01Kelly Merriss ......................................................... 1994-97Lea Meyer ...................................................................1991Kara Mirarchi ........................................................ 2000-01

Paula Domitrovits(1995-98)

Stephanie Guy(1991-94)

Rakel Logaddotir(2001-04)

Raila Maisonlahti(1994-97)

Margaret Malloy(1991-95)

AJaime Ableman ..................................................... 2001-04Jill Adams ............................................................. 1988-91Shannon Alger ............................................................2002Liza Rojas-Alford .................................................. 1998-99Lacy Allen ............................................................. 1990-93Dana Arrowood ................................................. 1998-2001Liz Aruta ......................................................................1990Elizabeth Auwarter ................................................ 1989-92

BJulie Baird ...................................................................2001Danika Baker ........................................................ 1994-98Jill Barrett .......................................................... 1999-2002Meg Barrett ....................................................... 1999-2002Dacia Beachum .......................................... 2002-presentDeven Beachum ......................................... 2002-presentKristy Bell .............................................................. 1997-00Kim Benningfi eld .........................................................2002Heather Bernard ................................................... 1996-99Melissa Boythe ..................................................... 1998-01Heather Bridgewater ............................................. 1992-93Amy Bullard .......................................................... 1991-92Katie Bullington ..................................................... 1994-97Kim Burnette ......................................................... 1993-94Chrissie Burns ............................................................1993Megan Bynum ...................................................... 1998-01

CJessica Cafi ero ...........................................................1991Jennifer Caldwell ........................................................1990Amy Cannon ......................................................... 1991-92Shannon Carey ..................................................... 1994-97Amy Carnell ................................................ 2002-presentJulie Carson ................................................................1988Astrid Chedid ..............................................................2003Krista Chilauski ...........................................................1988Stephanie Clark ..........................................................1992Kathryn Clewley .................................................... 1998-01Kaysie Clemmons .......................................................1995Caroline Corbeth .................................................. 1990-93Jamie Corti ................................................. 2004-presentMichelle Crowder ....................................... 2003-presentKelli Cummins .............................................................1988Keri Currutt ........................................................... 1995-98

DNatalie Daniel .............................................................1992Karla Davis ................................................. 2004-presentTyson Davis ................................................ 2002-presentStephanie Dearlove .............................................. 1993-96Nicollette DeLaine ..................................... 2002-presentDareth Delles ..............................................................1998Andi Diffenderfer .........................................................1988Michelle Dines ............................................................1989Paula Domitrovits ................................................. 1995-98Shannon Donovan ..................................... 2003-presentSkye Dregalla ............................................. 2003-presentCourtney Duncan .................................................. 1993-94Heather Duryea .................................................... 1988-91Kate Dylag ........................................................ 1998-2001

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Spartans connection to the WUSAThe UNCG women’s soccer program had several connections to the former Women’s United Soccer Association.

Now entering its 18th year, the UNCG women’s soccer program has been one of the most successful throughout the entire NCAA and is now considered one of the nation’s elite. UNCG has captured fi ve Southern Conference Tournament titles and four SoCon regular season crowns since the Spartans became a league member in 1997. In addition, UNCG was twice crowned Big South champions and has qualifi ed for the NCAA Division I Tourna-ment fi ve times. UNCG has advanced into the second round of the NCAA Tournament on three occasions (1997, 2000, 2003). In all, the Spartans have registered an all-time record of 214-124-13 (.628). The program was created in 1987 with the hiring of Jack Poland as head coach. The team competed from 1988-90 as an independent, NCAA Division II affi liate. In fact, UNCG was nationally ranked before ever taking the fi eld. The Spartans opened the 1988 season ranked 13th in the country by an NCAA Division II pre-season poll. UNCG climbed the poll, week by week, and by the end of that fi rst season, the Spartans were ranked as high as ninth. In 1989 and 1990, UNCG continued its assent to the top of the rankings. The Spartans rose all the way to the top of the 1990 NCAA Division II rankings, but a loss late in the season, despite it being UNC, left UNCG out of the four-team Division II National Tournament. The Spartans fi nished the 1990 campaign with a record of 14-5-0. In 1991, its inaugural season at the Division I level, UNCG achieved its fi rst Division I national ranking. The Spartans competed as an independent their fi rst two season in Division

Rori Rushing(1988-91)

Joy Scott(1993-96)

Susie Williams(1992-95)

Kerry Gragg (formerly Pow-ell), who spent one full sea-son with the Atlanta Beat, is third all-time in points (121) and second in goals (53) at UNCG.

Former UNCG goalkeepers coach Tracy Ducar spent time with the Boston Breakers.

Former assistant coach Marcia McDermott was the fi rst female head coach in WUSA history with the Carolina Courage. McDermott also served as Assistant GM with the Courage.

Hillary Stocker(1990-93)

Rebecca Shivers(1999-01)

I, before joining the Big South Conference in 1993. In 1994 and 1996, UNCG captured a pair of Big South Championships. The 1996 squad also earned its highest Division I ranking, climbing all the way to ninth and in the process, the Spartans reached the NCAA Tournament for the fi rst time. UNCG received an at-large bid, but dropped its fi rst round game against James Madison. 1997 marked the inagural year as member of the Southern Conference. The new sur-roundings did not change a thing as the Spartans won the league with a 7-0-0 slate. To take that a step further, the Spartans went six consecutive years (1993-98) without a conference loss. The 1997 team became the fi rst UNCG athletic team to reach the second round of an NCAA Division I Tournament. The Spartans would also advance to the NCAA Tournament in 1998 for the third straight year. In the program’s brief, but storied history, two Spartan players have earned All-America awards. Sophomore Tracie Foels was named a Division II All-American in 1989, while Ali Lord, also a sophomore, was named a Division I All-American in 1996. Laura Mussulman, Liz Wedemeyer and Heather Duryea each earned Academic All-America awards. In fact, Duryea won the award twice during her four-year career. To say that UNCG has dominated its respective conferences would be an understate-ment. The Spartans have been awarded 62 (30 Big South, 32 SoCon) All-Conference ac-colades since joing the Big South in 1993, thats an average of over fi ve per season.

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The UNCG Soccer Stadium is a modern soccer-only facility located in the heart of campus. Both the men’s and women’s teams will enter their 15th season in the state-of-the-art facility. The $3.6 million stadium rivals any collegiate soccer facility in the nation and has several outstanding features: • Permanent seating for 3,540 spectators in the grandstand along the east sideline, including 1,112 chairback seats in three sections at midfi eld and an-other 2,428 bleacher seats (with backs) in four other sections. • Lighting, at 150-candle power, to accomodate live TV coverage. • A soccer scoreboard with message center, press box and brick wall completely surrounding the facility. • A bermuda style natural-grass playing fi eld equipped with a state-of-the-art drainage system capable of removing up to six inches of water within a 24-hour period. • A Wall of Honor recognizing outstanding UNCG soccer players and coaches on the stadium concourse.

Record atUNCG Soccer Stadium

1991 ....................... 6-5-0 .545 1992 ....................... 6-3-1 .650 1993 ....................... 8-4-0 .667 1994 ....................... 5-3-2 .600 1995 ....................... 8-1-0 .889 1996 ......................11-2-1 .821 1997 ......................10-2-0 .833 1998 ....................... 5-3-1 .611 1999 ....................... 4-6-0 .400 2000 ....................... 7-2-1 .750 2001 ....................... 7-3-0 .700 2002 ....................... 4-5-0 .444 2003 ......................10-3-1 .750 2004 ....................... 7-2-1 .750

Total ................ 98-44-8 .680

The stadium’s opening coincided with UNCG’s entry into NCAA Division I competition. It was dedi-cated before a sellout crowd September 7, 1991, as the men’s team christened the new facility with a 3-1 win over Campbell. Four nights later, the squad stunned the college soccer world by defeating then-No. 2 NC State, 2-1. The fi rst women’s soccer game played in UNCG Soccer Stadium was against Duke on September 11, 1991. The Blue Devils blanked the Spartans, 4-0. The fi rst victory for UNCG came in a 7-0 rout of Erskine on September 13, 1991. UNCG owns one of the strongest home fi eld ad-vantages in the country. In 14 seasons in the stadium, the women’s team is 98-44-8(.680). The largest crowd to attend a UNCG athletic event at the stadium was 4,225 on Oct. 5, 1991, for a homecoming men’s soccer game against Ohio State. The Spartans won 6-0. Besides providing UNCG’s teams with a fi rst-class home, the stadium has also attracted a number of outside events to the campus. UNCG hosted the semifi nal and fi nal rounds of the NCAA Women’s Soccer Championship in 1997 and 1998, focusing nationwide attention on Greensboro. A champion-ship-record 20,058 fans attended in 1998, including a stadium single-event record 10,583 for the fi nal. The championship was nationally televised by ESPN.

The stadi-um served as a site for the U.S. Youth Soccer A s s o c i a t i o n regional cham-pionship during t h e s u m m e r of 1997. The Olympic cham-pion women’s national soccer team played the opening game in the Victory Tour presented by Nike in the

stadium April 24, 1997, defeating France. Also, prior to the 1996 Olympic Games, the Nor-wegian women’s soccer team trained at the stadium and played an exhibition match against United States select players. A match between the men’s national teams of the U.S. and Canada was played in the stadium in 1992. The stadium served as the home of the professional Greensboro Dynamo from 1993-95, and is the site of the North Carolina East-West High School All-Star soccer games each year. In the summer of 2001, the Boston Breakers of the WUSA held their pre-season camp in the sta-dium. UNCG Soccer Stadium has also hosted numer-ous Big South, Southern Conference and NCAA Tournament matches, most recently the 2004 SoCon Women’s Soccer Championships. In 2005, the women’s program will host the an-nual UNCG Soccer Classic over Labor Day weekend. This years participants include Oregon State, Old Dominion and Richmond. In all, the Spartans will host 10 home contests and two exhibitions against Atlantic Coast Conference foe Clemson and pre-season No. 27 Texas.

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With a record number 15,347 students enrolled for Fall 2004, a dedicated fac-ulty and staff numbering more than 2,000, and exciting new developments under-way, UNCG is rapidly taking its place as one of the fi nest institutions of higher learning in the country.

The University of North Carolina at Greensboro is classifi ed as a Doctoral/Re-search-Intensive University. The University was established in 1891 and became coeducational in 1963. The 200-acre campus is located one mile from the center of Greensboro, a city of 227,793. The Greensboro/Winston-Salem/High Point Metropolitan Statistical Area has a population of approximately 1,089,155, with the population of Guilford County representing approximately 390,000.

University HistoryThe University has a rich history. It was chartered Feb. 18, 1891, as the State

Normal and Industrial School (later College), the fi rst state-supported school for the higher education of women in North Carolina.

The institution came into being as a direct result of a crusade made by Charles Duncan McIver on behalf of the education of women. Other pioneers in public school education — notably, Charles B. Aycock, Edwin A. Alderman, and James Y. Joyner — came to Dr. McIver’s assistance; but to him, more than to any other individual, the University owes its foundation.

In the past century the University has evolved in its mission, as suggested with its sequence of names. It was known fi rst as the State Normal and In-dustrial School, and after 1896 as the State Normal and Industrial College until 1919. During the period 1919-1931 it was known as the North Carolina College for Women, and became the Woman’s College of the University of North Carolina from 1932 to 1963. It is warmly remembered as “the WC” by its many alumnae of the period.

During the years 1932-1963 the University was one of the three branches of the Consolidated University of North Carolina. The other branches included The University of North Carolina (at Chapel Hill) and the North Carolina State College of Agricul-ture and Engineering (at Raleigh). In 1962, the Board of Trustees recommended that the Greensboro campus become coeduca-tional at all levels of instruction in the fall of 1964. Subsequently, by act of the General Assembly in the Spring of 1963, the name of the institution was changed to the University of North Caro-lina at Greensboro.

In December of 1934, during the years of the Consolidated University, the Woman’s College Section of the Alpha of North Carolina Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa was installed. (Alpha Chapter is the one at Chapel Hill.)

On February 17, 1956 Epsilon Chapter of North Carolina was installed at this campus.

In October of 1971 the North Carolina General Assembly adopted legislation which combined all 16 of the state-sup-ported institutions of higher education into a single Univer-sity of North Carolina. The UNC system is governed by a board of governors and administered by a president. Each constituent institution has a separate board of trustees and is administered by a chancellor.

The crusader for founding the institution, Charles Dun-can McIver, served the institution as its fi rst chief execu-tive offi cer with the title of President. By act of the Board of Trustees in 1945, the title was changed to Chancellor. Dr. Patricia A. Sullivan became UNCG’s fi rst woman chan-cellor in January 1995, succeeding Dr. Debra W. Stewart, Dean of the Graduate School at North Carolina State Uni-versity who was named Interim Chancellor in the summer of 1994.

During its fi rst seven decades, the institu-tion’s mission was to prepare women, primar-ily undergraduates, for the most effective living of that day. Today that goal — effective living — remains the same, but its scope has been greatly expanded.

As UNCG, it now offers men and women over 150 graduate and under-graduate programs and provides opportunities

to apply classroom learning to real life situations through internships and practica. It also offers students the chance to tailor-make their own pro-grams of study based on individual needs and goals.

Although contemporary in its educational program, UNCG is also realistic. In its effort to prepare graduates for effective living, it has built

into its program the fl exibility needed to meet the rapidly changing needs of society. UNCG, therefore, will remain a university in tran-

sition, not satisfi ed with yesterday or today, but always looking toward tomorrow.

Today’s UNCGToday’s UNCG consists of:

• The College of Arts and Sciences, which is made up of the depart-ments of Anthropology, Art, Biology, Broadcasting and Cinema, Chem-

istry, Classical Studies, Communication, English, Geography, German and Russian, History, Mathematical Sciences, Philosophy, Physics and

Astronomy, Political Science, Psychology, Religious Studies, Romance Languages, Sociology, and Theatre. It also includes the Residential Col-lege and The Center for Critical Inquiry in the Liberal Arts.

• The Joseph M. Bryan School of Business and Economics, which was established in 1969 as the School of Business and Economics and renamed in 1987. It is made up of the departments of Accounting, Busi-

ness Administration, Economics, Information Systems and Operations Management, the Center for Applied Research, the Center for Eco-nomic Education, and the Center for Global Business Education and Research.

• The School of Education, which is made up of the depart-ments of Counseling and Educational Development, Curriculum and Instruction, Educational Leadership and Cultural Founda-tions, Educational Research Methodology, Library and Informa-tion Studies, Specialized Education Services. Founded in 1921, the School of Education also includes The Collegium for the Advancement of Schools, Schooling and Education. The Colle-gium is comprised of the Center for Educational Research and Evaluation, the Center for Educational Studies and Develop-ment, the Center for Information Technologies Education, the Center for School Accountability and Staff Development, and the Piedmont Triad Horizons Education Consortium.

• The School of Health and Human Performance, which was established in 1970 as the School of Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance was renamed in 1990. It is made up of fi ve departments: Communication Sciences and Disorders; Dance; Exercise and Sport Science; Public Health Education; and Recreation, Parks and Tourism.

• The School of Human Environmental Sciences, which was established in 1949 as the School of Home Economics and renamed in 1987. It is made up of the departments of Housing and Interior Design, Human Development and Fam-ily Studies, Nutrition and Foodservice Systems; Social Work, and Textile Products Design and Marketing.

• The Graduate School, which was established in 1921.

• The School of Music, which was estab-lished in 1921.

• The School of Nursing, which was established in 1966.

In addition, beginning in 2006, UNCG’s honors program will become the Honors College.

Of the record 15,437 students enrolled last year, 70% were fe-

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male. In the fall of 2004, UNCG enrolled a record 2,158 freshman. The University also enrolled 1,257 transfer students, its most ever.

In the fall of 2004, 67% of freshman applicants were accepted and 25% enrolled to make up a class of 2,158. The average SAT score for the freshman class enrolling in 2003 was 1041.

Undergraduates have more than 100 areas of study from which to choose a major leading to one of six undergraduate degrees. In addition, there are 59 master’s degrees and 18 doctoral degrees offered.

In the spring of 2004, UNCG awarded 1,884 bachelor’s and 729 master’s degrees. Also, 67 doctoral degrees were awarded in English, psychology, education, nutrition, human development and family studies, exercise & sport science, and music.

UNCG has long had a reputation for academic excellence and is one of only six higher education institutions in the state with a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.

Athletes at UNCG are not an exception to the rule. At the end of each of the last two academic years, more than 40% of UNCG student-athletes held a grade-point-aver-age of 3.0 or better. Nearly one-third of UNCG’s 268 student-athletes made the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll (3.0 GPA in a semester) in both semester during the 2004-05 academic year.

In October 2004, “Cosmo GIRL”, a magazine geared towards young women, rated UNCG one of the Top 50 institutions in America. For its study, the magazine focused on specifi c factors important to female students: small class size, prominent female faculty, strong women’s athletic programs, a career center that facilitates internship opportunities, leadership options among clubs and activities and an active alumni net-work. The fi nalists were selected from 2,685 colleges and universities.

In August 2004, The Princeton Review rated UNCG the second-best bargain in its “The Best 357 Colleges” guide. It marked the sixth-straight UNCG appeared in the guide, and its highest-ever rating.

UNCG was also ranked in the Top 50 public universities by Consumer’s Digest, making it the only institution to appear in both rankings.

In-state tuition and room and board rates for UNCG are just over $9,000 per year, while out-of-state rates are just over $20,000 per year.

Campus life is enriched by a “small college” atmosphere and many extracur-

ricular and coeducational activities. There are more than 130 student organizations, an active Student Government, fraternities and sororities, and a Campus Recreation program which offers informal, intramural and club sports, as well as an extensive outdoor adventure program.

The 76 buildings on the campus refl ect the 110-year history of the University. Also, there are new features, including a new, $26 million music building which opened in August 1999, and renovations to the Elliott University Center, which were recently completed. A new baseball stadium opened in February 1999. UNCG will receive ap-proximately $159 million from the state for construction and renovation, based on voter approval of the Higher Education Bonds last November 7. A $46 million science building is the centerpiece of the new projects. Groundbreaking took place in spring of 2001.

The Second Century Campaign for UNCG concluded Dec. 31, 1998, after fi ve years and raised $55.4 million to create 77 new scholarship and fellowship funds, as well as funds for research, programs and acquisitions.

In the Fall of 2004, the University announced that its newest campaign, entitled the Students First Campaign. is almost one-quarter of the way to its goal of $78 mil-lion. The Students First Campaign will set aside $52 million for scholarships to make UNCG the school of choice for top high school students in the North Carolina and elsewhere.

Remaining funds will also be used for endowments to attract top professors, ex-pansion of university facilities and expansion of public services. UNCG hopes to meet its goal by the year 2009.

UNCG is a member of the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges (NASULGC) and the American Association of Colleges and Universi-ties (AASCU). In athletics, UNCG began NCAA Division I competition in 1991 and is a member of the Southern Conference.

In the Fall of 2004, the University unveiled a new look to the Spartan.

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 33

The UNCG Plan

In spring 1998, the Uni-versity community adopted The UNCG Plan, a compre-hensive document developed by the University Planning Council that articulates the vision of the University and identifi es fi ve key strategic directions which will shape its future:

• UNCG will provide exemplary learning environ-ments.

• UNCG will expand its research and infuse the ex-citement of scholarship into its teaching and learning.

• UNCG will build a strong sense of community as a student-centered uni-versity.

• UNCG will expand its outreach in the Piedmont Triad, the state of North Caro-lina, and beyond.

• UNCG will increase its enrollment by actively recruiting and retaining students with the academic preparedness and potential to succeed in a rigorous academic environment.

The Rock

Not all colleges and universities can boast a message board with a circumference of 25’ and a width that exceeds 10’. UNCG houses a campus marker that is a visual representation of University history, tradition, and legacy.

Known simply as “The Rock” — not to be confused with the nationally recognized wrestler/actor — the boulder-sized message board was brought to UNCG’s campus in 1973 by members of Alpha Phi Omega. Initially located where the fountain is today, it currently rests between the Dining Hall and Jackson Library, where it has resided since 1987. Rather than force students and the community to solely rely upon cluttered bulletin boards, The Rock is an alternate campus informant.

Students also know the unwritten rule that the painted messages on The Rock can be removed after 24 hours. Thus, within a week’s time, seven messages could be posted on The Rock. This also speaks to the many activities and events that the University supports.

Easy access and its central location are other reasons The Rock is well known on campus. Plus, The Rock’s changing colors and special messages help attract the attention of students and visitors to the University. Those who encounter The Rock for the fi rst time are undoubtedly taken aback by its gran-diose appearance and are forced to wonder about its signifi cance.

The Rock, with its large exterior and eye-catching graphics, is an important part of UNCG’s history and legacy and is a solid representation of the Universi-ty’s unyielding belief in and dedication to tradition and uniqueness.

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Dr. Patricia A. Sullivan, who has served as UNCG’s Chancellor since January 1, 1995, is the institution’s ninth chief executive and the fi rst woman to serve in the position.Her leadership has sustained UNCG’s record of excellence and prepared a solid foundation for the future. UNCG was founded as State Normal and Industrial School, a college for women in 1891. The institution became coeducational in 1963. Today, UNCG offers a full range of undergraduate and graduate programs.

Sullivan led the University through a strategic planning process that produced the UNCG Plan. Created for fi ve-year increments, the Plan provides a framework for enhancing UNCG’s position as a diverse, student-centered research university, linking the Triad and North Carolina to the world through learning, discovery, and service.

Under Dr. Sullivan’s leadership, enrollment at UNCG exceeded 15,000 in fall 2005, while academic standards for admission have increased. The campus continues to lead the UNC system in minority enrollment, underscoring UNCG’s commitment to diversity. New undergraduate programs for freshman include Communication Across the Curriculum and the living-learning communities. Distinctive graduate programs include genetic counseling and management information systems, along with new Ph.D. programs in the areas of nursing, public health, economics, geography, history, information technology and special education.

Funding to support research and community projects has continued to grow, along with giving by the University’s friends and supporters. UNCG’s new Students First Campaign is under way, with a goal of raising $78.2 million through 2009. The earlier Second Century Campaign for UNCG, which ended in December 1998, raised $55.4 million, far exceeding the original goal of $42.8

million. As UNCG’s most ardent advocate, Dr. Sullivan has made a public case for

more state appropriations, which have brought additional funding for facilities. These efforts have resulted in a number of capital improvements at UNCG. Currently under construction are the Studio Art Center and a Hall for Humanities and Research Administration, both funded by the North Carolina Higher Education Bonds, and a new 400-bed residence hall - all expected to be completed for use in the 2006-07 year. Structures already completed include a $46 million Science Building, a $26 million School of Music building, a $5 million baseball stadium

and student recreation area, and a major renovation for the Elliott University Center, UNCG’s student union.

A native of Staten Island, NY, Dr. Sullivan is a graduate of St. John’s University, and earned her master’s and Ph.D. degrees in biology from New York University. She came to UNCG from Texas Woman’s University, where she was vice president for academic affairs for seven years. She also was interim president there for a year. From 1981-87, she was dean of the college at Salem College in Winston-Salem. She is married to Dr. Charles Sullivan, an electrical and computer software engineer.

Dr. Sullivan received the honorary Doctor of Pedagogy degree from St. John’s University in 1999. Her other awards and honors include: selection as one of 10 recipients of the 2003 Women in Business Awards and as one of “10 People to Watch in 2004,” annual honors by The Business Journal; and being named the 2003 inductee for the Business Leaders Hall of Fame of the Central North Carolina Junior Achievement chapter. Her academic honors include memberships in Beta Beta Beta biology honor society, Sigma Xi, and Phi Kappa Phi. She also was an NYU Honors Scholar.

UNCG ChancellorUNCG ChancellorDr. Patricia SullivanDr. Patricia Sullivan

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Now in his 23rd year as Director of Intercollegiate Athletics at UNCG, Nelson E. Bobb has developed a nationally recognized program that has continually succeeded in competition as well as in the classroom.

Bobb, the first full-time athletic director at the University, is the primary architect of a program that now features 16 NCAA Division I teams, eight for men and eight for women.

When he arrived in July 1983, there were eight Division III teams. The University authorized the shift to Division I in February 1987 and he guided the program through

the unprecedented change in competitive status in only five years. UNCG is one of only a dozen institutions to ever compete in all three divisions. However, no other institution has made the complete shift of all teams from Division III to Division I in that time frame.

In addition, with the reconstruction of UNCG’s softball venue this past year, he has overseen a complete overhaul of every UNCG athletic facility. During his tenure, he has watched over the construction or renovation of all of the Spartans’ athletic venues, beginning with serving on the committee that built Fleming Gymnasium and the HHP Building in 1989, moving onto the transformation of Campus Field into what is today UNCG Soccer Stadium in 1991, the construction of the UNCG Baseball Stadium in 1999, the renovation and lighting of the UNCG Tennis Courts in 1999, and current projects that include the transformation of UNCG’s softball facility to become a top-of-the-line stadium venue this coming fall and the reconfiguration of seating in Fleming Gym, which began this past summer.

Under Bobb’s guidance, Spartan student-athletes have consistently graduated at a rate equal to or higher than the general student population at UNCG. Each of the last two academic years, more than 40 percent of UNCG’s student-athletes earned Dean’s List.

In addition, during Bobb’s 22-year tenure, UNCG student-athletes have graduated at a higher rate than the University graduation rate every year.

Other recent program accomplishments include completing the NCAA certification process for Division I institutions twice and successfully transitioning the department’s teams into Southern Conference membership.

Under Bobb’s leadership, UNCG hosted the final two rounds of the 1997 and 1998 NCAA Division I Women’s Soccer Championship, and was home to Olympic athletes from several countries for training prior to the Olympic Games in Atlanta in 1996.

During his tenure, UNCG teams have won 33 conference tournament titles, 24 as an NCAA Division I member. They have also won 62 conference regular season titles, 36 of those since moving to NCAA Division I.

UNCG earned the Commissioner’s Cup for overall excellence in the Big South for three consecutive years. While Bobb was athletic director in the 1980’s, the men’s soccer team won four Division III national championships and the women’s basketball team made five consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances with a third-place finish in 1988.

During his tenure at UNCG, Bobb has also served in various NCAA appointments, including serving on one of the first NCAA Certification

teams. Most recently, Bobb served on the Division I Men’s Soccer National Committee and had a two-year term as the chair of the NCAA Men’s and Women’s Soccer Rules Committee.

UNCG student-athletes have received numerous awards. In 1984, he established the Chancellor’s Scholar-Athlete Award to honor the student-athlete(s) posting the highest grade-point average annually.

Bobb, a native of Gahanna, OH, oversees a staff of more than 50 full and part-time employees with administrative divisions of administration and business, student welfare, facilities and operations and integrated public affairs within the department.

Before coming to UNCG, Bobb served as an assistant athletic director at Cornell University for five years. He also served as an assistant football coach at Cornell for nine seasons.

A 1970 graduate of Kent State (OH) with a bachelor’s degree in education, Bobb also holds a master’s degree in secondary education from Kent. As an undergraduate, he was a three-year letterwinner on the football team as an offensive guard and earned All-Academic recognition from the Mid-American Conference as a junior. He was an all-conference choice his senior year.

Nelson BobbNelson Bobb

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All Phones are area code (336)All E-Mail end in @uncg.edu unless otherwise noted[WM] Denotes offi ce located at West Market Street building[HHP] Denotes offi ce located at HHP Building

ADMINISTRATION Phone ........................E-mailPatricia Sullivan, Chancellor ...........................................334-5266Terry Ackerman, Faculty Athletics Rep. ..........................334-3474 ................... taackermNelson Bobb, Director of Athletics [HHP] .......................334-3000 ......................nebobb FAX ...........................................................................334-4063Sylvia Mims, Assoc. AD - Administration [HHP] ..............334-5649 ..................... sgmimsCathy Roberts, Assoc. AD - Facilities [HHP] ..................334-5537 ...................csrobertsDick Stewart, Assoc. AD - Public Affairs [HHP] ..............334-4464 .................... restewarRod Wyatt, Assoc. AD - Student Welfare [HHP] .............256-0108 ....................... jrwyattChristy Wilson, Asst. AD - Operations [HHP] ..................334-5213 ...................mcwilso2Josh Larsen Asst. AD - Facilities [HHP] ..........................334-3226 .....................dazuberDawn Zamrik, Asst. AD - Public Affairs [WM] .................256-0550 ................... dbzamrikJames Shipp, Asst. AD - Student Welfare [HHP] ............334-3700 ....................... jrshippStacy Kosciak, Special Asst. to the AD ...........................334-3494 ................ sbmeadow

ACADEMIC ENHANCEMENTJoanna Camp, Academic Enhancement Director ...........334-5172 ...................... jbcampKate LaCoste, Academic Enhancement Asst. ................334-3880 .....................kelacostKatie Fritinger, Academic Enhancement Asst. ................334-3880 ....................... kafritin Kwadjo Steele, Academic Compliance Director ............334-3465 .................... kosteele

BUSINESS OFFICEJackie Walsh, Asst. AD - Business .................................334-3253 ......................jawalshPaula Terrell, Accountant ................................................334-3367 ..............paula_terrell

COMPLIANCEJana Henderson, Compliance Director [HHP] ................334-3254 ........ jana_henderson

FACILITIESCathy Roberts, Assoc. AD - Facilities [HHP] ..................334-5537 ...................csrobertsJosh Larsen, Asst. AD - Facilities [HHP] .........................334-3226 ..................... jalarsenJennifer Aguilar, Facilities Assistant [HHP] .....................334-3032 ..................... jlaguilarJane Long, Equipment Assistant [HHP] ..........................334-3032

PUBLIC AFFAIRS - MARKETINGDick Stewart, Assoc. AD - Public Affairs [HHP] ..............334-4464 .................... restewarDawn Zamrik, Asst. AD - Public Affairs [WM] .................256-0550 ................... dbzamrikNeil Avent, Internal Relations [WM] ................................334-3420 .....................n_aventTBA, External Relations [WM] ........................................334-3252 WEST MARKET STREET OFFICE FAX ..................334-3798 HHP OFFICE FAX ....................................................334-3182

SPORTS INFORMATIONMike Hirschman, Sports Information Director [HHP] ......334-5615 ...................mwhirsch Hirschman’s Cell Phone ...........................................202-5331Mark Kimmel, Asst. Sports Information Director [HHP] ..334-5615 ................. mdkimmel Kimmel’s Cell Phone ................................................207-2383Jay D’Abramo, SID Intern [HHP] ....................................334-5615 ...................jedabram FAX ...........................................................................334-3182

SPORTS MEDICINEJames Shipp, Asst. AD - Athletic Training [HHP] ............334-3700 ....................... jrshippErica P. Thornton, Assoc. Athletic Trainer [HHP] ............334-5925 ...................eapearso SPORTS MEDICINE FAX ........................................256-0407

TICKETSJohn Comer, Ticket Manager..........................................334-3250 ...................... jfcomer

COACHING STAFFSBASEBALL (Offi ce located in stadium)Mike Gaski, Head Coach ................................................334-3247 .................... mggaskiShane Schumaker, Asst. Coach .....................................334-3247Sammy Serano, Asst. Coach ..........................................334-3247

MEN’S BASKETBALLMike Dement, Head Coach [HHP] ..................................334-3003 ..................basketballAnthony Jones, Associate Head Coach [HHP] ...............334-4473 ..................basketballRod Jensen, Asst. Coach [HHP] .....................................256-0120 ..................basketballBrooks Lee, Asst. Coach [HHP] ......................................334-3003 ..................basketballDoug Esleeck, Director of Basketball Operations [HHP] 334-3003 ..................basketball

WOMEN’S BASKETBALLLynne Agee, Head Coach [HHP] ....................................334-4021 ....................... lcageeCarol Peschel, Associate Head Coach [HHP] ................334-3002 .................. capescheVickie Henson, Asst. Coach [HHP] .................................334-3754 ................... vlhensonJon Hines, Asst. Coach [HHP] ........................................334-3754

CROSS COUNTRY / TRACK & FIELDRachelle Roberts, Head Coach [HHP] ...........................334-3231 ..................... rrobertsLinh Nguyen, Asst. Coach [HHP] ....................................334-4157 .................... ltnguye3

MEN’S GOLFTerrance Stewart, Head Coach [HHP] ............................334-3122 .................... tcstewar

WOMEN’S GOLFEmily Maron, Head Coach [HHP] ...................................334-5316 ....................elmarron

MEN’S SOCCERMichael Parker, Head Coach [HHP] ...............................334-5222 ...................mhparkerJustin Maullin, Asst. Coach [HHP] ..................................334-5258 ......................j_maulli

WOMEN’S SOCCEREddie Radwanski, Head Coach [HHP] ...........................334-4474 ..................eddie_radSiri Mullinix, Asst. Coach [HHP] ......................................334-3121 .....................s_mullin

SOFTBALLJennifer Herzig, Head Coach [HHP] ...............................334-5057 ...................... jlherzigHolly Burris, Asst. Coach [HHP] .....................................334-5057

MEN’S TENNISThomas Mozur, Head Coach [HHP] ...............................334-4302 .....................tamozur

WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALLShawn Garus, Head Coach [HHP] .................................334-5303 ....................smgarusSkydra Orzen, Asst. Coach [HHP] ..................................334-3001 .....................shorzen

WOMEN’S TENNISJeff Trivette, Head Coach [HHP] ....................................334-5581 ................ uncgtennis

WRESTLINGTom Shiffl et, Head Coach [HHP] ....................................334-5050 ....................... thshiffl Jason Loukides, Asst. Coach [HHP] ...............................334-5050 ......................jcloukid

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2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 37

The overnight success of the UNCG athletics program has been some 60 years in the making.

Spartan teams are big achievers in their 15th year in Division I competition.

The success story however, began while UNCG was still the Woman’s College of the University of North Carolina and intercollegiate competition for women was still in its infancy.

1940sNancy Porter may have been the fi rst student-athlete in the modern sense of the word at UNCG. The Ohio native competed in national women’s golf tournaments as early as 1948.

1950sWomen’s College hosted the 10th national golf tournament in 1954 at the Starmount Country Club. The College fi elded regionally competitive teams that had their beginnings in club sports, play days and other recreational events.

1960sUNCG launched women’s basketball in 1963 under coach Ellen Griffi n. Other early teams were tennis, golf and fi eld hockey.

LPGA Hall of Famer Carol Mann was a student at UNCG. She left school early to turn professional.

The University became co-educational in 1963.

Men’s athletics were added in 1967-68 and the intercollegiate program for men and women received formal recogni-tion from the University.

Men’s teams joined the Dixie Conference in 1968.

Bowling was one of the early men’s teams.

UNCG teams were nicknamed the Spartans.

1970sThe women’s basketball team fi nished fourth in the National Collegiate Tournament in 1971. The team was one of the fi rst to compete with the fi ve-player rule.

The women’s golf team won the University’s fi rst team national championship in 1973, coached by Nancy Porter and featuring future pro Donna Horton White.

UNCG was a leader in forming the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW).

1980sThe men’s basketball team, coached by Larry Hargett, won the Dixie Confer-ence Championship and competed in the NCAA Division III Tournament in 1980.

Ryan Fox won the 1981 individual national title in Division III men’s golf.

In the spring of 1981, the University streamlined its program from 12 to eight teams, all competing at the NCAA Division III level. The 1981-82 academic year was the fi rst in which the NCAA sponsored women’s championships.

The men’s soccer team was ranked in the national Top-20 for the fi rst time in September of 1981. It did not leave the poll for another 10 years.

Coached by Lynne Agee, in her fi rst season, the women’s basketball team fi nished runner-up in the inaugural Division III championship in 1982. It was the fi rst of seven straight NCAA trips for the team.

With Mike Berticelli at the helm, UNCG captured its fi rst men’s national champion-ship in soccer in 1982 and then repeated in 1983.

The women’s tennis team, under Agee’s direction, was the national runner-up in 1983.

Nelson E. Bobb was hired as the fi rst full-time athletic director in 1983.

The women’s volleyball team posted a 34-3 record and reached the NCAA quarterfi nals in 1984.

Page 38: 2005 UNCG Women's Soccer Media Guide

38 • 2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide

Men’s soccer player Eddie Radwanski, the fi rst two-time All-American in the program’s history, was the fi rst pick in the Major Indoor Soccer League draft in 1985.

Under Michael Parker’s direction, the men’s soccer team became the fi rst in NCAA history to win three consecutive national championships, in 1985, 1986 and 1987.

In February of 1987, the University announced the elevation of the athletic program from Division III to Division I, an unprecedented move in NCAA history.

The women’s basketball team fi nished third in the nation after entering the NCAA Tournament unranked in 1988.

The Division II era began in 1988-89 and women’s soccer was added to the program. The team wa ranked No. 13 nationally before ever playing a game.

Men’s soccer player Eddie Radwanski, the fi rst two-time All-American in the program’s history, was the fi rst pick in the Major Indoor Soccer League draft in 1985.

Under Michael Parker’s direction, the men’s soccer team became the fi rst in NCAA history to win three consecutive national champion-ships, in 1985, 1986 and 1987.

In February of 1987, the University an-nounced the elevation of the athletic program from Division III to Division I, an unprecedented move in NCAA history.

The women’s basketball team fi nished third in the nation after entering the NCAA Tournament unranked in 1988.

The Division II era began in 1988-89 and women’s soccer was added to the program. The team wa ranked No. 13 nationally before ever playing a game.

The men’s soccer team was runner-up in the 1989 Division II national tournament and Jason Haupt led all divisions in scoring.

1990sThe men’s and women’s soccer team were ranked No. 1 nationally in Division II at the same time in 1990.

The women’s volleyball and basketball teams made Division II playoff appearances in 1990-91.

Women’s golf returned to the athletic program and baseball was added in 1990-91.

UNCG Soccer Stadium, a $3.6 million facility, opens for its fi rst game on September 7, 1991, as the men’s team defeated Campbell, 3-1. Four days later, the Spartans stunned No. 2 NC State, 2-1.

Men’s soccer’s Mike Gailey led all Division I players in scoring in 1991.

UNCG joined the Big South Conference in 1992, ending a four-year period as an independent.

Softball claimed the 1993 Big South regular season title.

Brian Moehler became the fi rst Spartan to sign a professional baseball contract after being drafted in the sixth round of the 1993 Major League draft by the Detroit Tigers. He made his “big league” debut in 1996, and pitched the fi rst game ever in Comerica Park in 2000.

Men’s soccer won the 1993 Big South championship. Shawn Mahoney was named the tournament’s MVP.

Women’s golf was ranked in the Top-20 in the fall of 1993.

Men’s soccer claims its second straight Big South championship on Nov. 5, 1994. Larry Feniger was named the tournament MVP.

Women’s basketball claimed fi ve straight Big South regular season titles in 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1997. Vickie Henson was named the

league’s Player of the Year in 1993.

Volleyball won the 1995 Big South regular season championship with a record of 7-0. Liz Gremillion

was named the league’s MVP.

Softball captured three consecutive Big South regular season titles in 1995,

1996 and 1997. Erin Chandler was named the Player of the Year in

1995 and Christine Hornak was the Player of the Year

in 1997. Softball also captured four straight Big South Tournament championships in 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1997.

In just its fourth season, baseball claimed the Big

South title and won two games in the 1994 NCAA

Regionals. Mike Gaski was named Big South Coach of the Year.

On April 15, 1995, men’s tennis captured the Big South Championship.

On April 18, 1995, men’s and women’s golf sweep the Big South Tournament.

Becky Morgan (pictured right) was named the league’s Player of the Year.

regular season titles in 1995 and 1996.

On March 2, 1996, men’s basketball knocked off Liberty, 79-53, to claim the Big South Tournament Championship and advance to the NCAA Tournament for the

fi rst time in Division I. The Spartans lost to Cincinnati in the NCAA Tourna-ment, 66-61. The fi ve senior from the team had their numbers honored.

Scott Hartzell fi nished his career as the mens basketball’s all-time leading scorer with 1,539.

On April 15, 1996, women’s Golf wins the Big South Tournament. Becky Morgan was once again named the league’s Player of the Year. One day later, the UNCG men’s golf team won the Big South Tournament. Michael Way was the league’s Player of the Year.

Women’s golfer Becky Morgan earned her third straight Big South Player of the Year award in April 1997.

Women’s tennis captured the 1997 Big South Women’s Tennis champi-onship on April 19, 1997.

On May 18, 1997, the UNCG baseball team won the Big South tourna-ment championship with a 14-5 victory over Charleston Southern. Mike

Gaski was named Big South Coach of the Year. Baseball earned a bid to the NCAA South I regional, and fi nished with a school-record 45 wins, including one at the NCAA regional. Pitcher Jason Parsons led the nation

with 15 wins and was named third-team All-America.

Becky Morgan

Jay Joseph

AlejandroMoreno

Page 39: 2005 UNCG Women's Soccer Media Guide

2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide • 39

Women’s Volleyball – 1983Men’s Soccer – 1983Women’s Basketball – 1984Softball – 1984Men’s Tennis – 1984Women’s Tennis – 1984Women’s Volleyball – 1984Men’s Soccer – 1984Women’s Basketball – 1985Women’s Tennis – 1985Men’s Soccer – 1985Men’s Tennis – 1986Women’s Tennis – 1986Men’s Soccer – 1986Men’s Basketball – 1987Women’s Basketball – 1987Women’s Tennis – 1987Men’s Soccer – 1987Men’s Basketball – 1988Women’s Basketball – 1988Men’s Tennis – 1988Women’s Tennis – 1988Softball – 1993Women’s Basketball – 1993Men’s Soccer – 1993Women’s Soccer – 1993Women’s Basketball – 1994Baseball – 1994 **Men’s Soccer – 1994Women’s Soccer – 1994Men’s Basketball – 1995Women’s Basketball – 1995Softball – 1995Men’s Soccer – 1995Women’s Soccer – 1995Volleyball – 1995Men’s Basketball – 1996Women’s Basketball – 1996Softball – 1996Men’s Soccer – 1996Women’s Soccer – 1996Softball – 1997Baseball – 1997Women’s Basketball – 1997 **Women’s Soccer – 1997 **Men’s Soccer - 1997 **Women’s Basketball – 1998 **Baseball – 1998 **Women’s Soccer – 1998 **Men’s Soccer – 1998 **Women’s Basketball – 1999 **Women’s Soccer – 2000 **Men’s Tennis – 2001 **Women’s Soccer – 2001 **Women’s Basketball – 2002 **Men’s Basketball – 2002 **Men’s Soccer – 2004 **Women’s Soccer – 2004 **

Wrestling, in its fi rst year in the Southern Conference , tied for the 1997 SoCon title. Joe Stanton became the fi rst and only three-time NCAA qualifi er in UNCG history.

Women’s Soccer won its fi rst Southern Conference Championship in 1997, while outscoring opponents, 24-0, in the SoCon Tournament. The team earned its fi rst NCAA win with a 3-1 overtime upset of fi fth-seeded Duke.

In 1997, Siggi Eyjolfsson becomes the fi rst First-Team All-American in UNCG men’s soccer Division I history.

UNCG women’s basketball defeated top-seeded Georgia Southern, 75-68, in the SoCon Tournament and earned its fi rst-ever NCAA Division I Tournament bid in 1998.

In 1998, UNCG men’s soccer turns in its best season ever at the Division I level, claiming both its fi rst SoCon title and its fi rst-ever NCAA Division I Tournament win, a 2-1 upset at Washington in the fi rst round.

In 1998, women’s soccer won its second straight SoCon title, and made its third straight NCAA appearance.

On Feb. 12, 1999, the UNCG Baseball Stadium, a $5.4 million facility, opens to a crowd of 1,835.

On Dec. 21, 1999, Lynne Agee’s women’s basketball squad defeats defending ACC cham-pion Clemson in a thrilling come-from-behind overtime contest in Fleming Gym, 78-67.

2000sIn 2000, wrestler Dax Pecaro records his second straight undefeated season in the Southern Conference and wins the 184-pound title for the second year as well. Pecaro became the fi fth UNCG wrestler to win a match at the NCAA Tournament.

On Feb. 2, 2000, UNCG women’s basketball claimed a 77-71 victory at Appalachian State, the program’s 500th overall win.

In April 2000, UNCG women’s golf comes within one stroke on the fi nal hole of upsetting six-time champion Furman. The team set a new school-record for low round (292) and tournament (901) at the championship.

November 2000, the women’s soccer team wins its third SoCon title in four years and upset No. 21 William & Mary in Greensboro in the fi rst round of the NCAA Tournament, becoming the only team in UNCG history to advance to the second round of an NCAA Division I Tournament twice.

On March 4, 2001, the men’s basketball team won its fi rst Southern Conference champion-ship on David Schuck’s buzzer-beating layup. The team went on to play top-ranked Stanford in the fi rst round of the NCAA Tournament, its second trip to the “Big Dance” in fi ve years. Guard Nathan Jameson was named fi rst-team Verizon Academic All-America.

In April 2001, the men’s tennis team tied for the SoCon regular season champion-ship with Furman, after posting a 9-1 mark in league play. Head coach Jeff Trivette was named the SoCon Men’s Tennis Coach of the Year.

In May 2001, Leigh Irwin, the SoCon Player of the Year in 2000, fi nishes her softball career as the only player in SoCon history to reach the century mark in stolen bases with 103.

In June 2001, golfer Karl Mitchell was named a second-team Academic All-American.

On Nov. 11, 2001, UNCG women’s soccer captured the 2001 SoCon Tournament Championship and advanced to the NCAA Tournament to play North Carolina. Senior goalkeeper Kat Clewley was named the Tournament MVP. Fellow senior Lynsey McLean was named the league’s Player of the Year.

On Feb. 11, 2002, men’s soccer player Alejandro Moreno was selected by the L.A. Galaxy in the third round of the 2002 MLS SuperDraft.

On March 13 and 14, 2002, the men’s and women’s basketball teams both received their fi rst-ever invitations to the NIT and WNIT, resepec-

National Championships (6)Women’s Golf – 1973 (AIAW)Men’s Soccer – 1982 (NCAA III)Men’s Soccer – 1983 (NCAA III)Men’s Soccer – 1985 (NCAA III)Men’s Soccer – 1986 (NCAA III)Men’s Soccer – 1987 (NCAA III)

Conference Tournament Titles(36 overall; 24 in NCAA Division I)Women’s Volleyball – 1981Women’s Basketball – 1982Women’s Volleyball – 1982Women’s Volleyball – 1983Women’s Basketball – 1983Softball – 1983Women’s Basketball – 1984Women’s Volleyball – 1984Women’s Basketball – 1985Women’s Basketball – 1987Women’s Basketball – 1988Softball – 1988 Men’s Soccer – 1993 **Softball – 1994 **Women’s Soccer – 1994 **Men’s Soccer – 1994 **Softball – 1995 **Men’s Golf – 1995 **

Conference Reg. Season Titles(70 overall; 36 in NCAA Division I)Men’s Tennis – 1974Men’s Basketball – 1981Men’s Tennis – 1981Women’s Volleyball – 1981Men’s Soccer – 1981Women’s Basketball – 1982Softball – 1982Women’s Tennis – 1982Women’s Volleyball – 1982Women’s Basketball – 1983Softball – 1983Women’s Tennis – 1983

LynneAgee

Page 40: 2005 UNCG Women's Soccer Media Guide

40 • 2005 UNCG Women’s Soccer Media Guide

SoCon Freshman Wrestler of the Year, UNCG’s fi rst wrestling Freshman of the Year since joining the SoCon.

2004-05 SeasonOn September 25, 2004, as part of the fi fth induction class into the UNCG Athletics Hall of Fame, Lynne Agee became the fi rst active head coach to be enshrined in the UNCG Hall. Agee was inducted along with the 1982 men’s soccer team, the 1973 women’s golf team and deceased administrator David Knight.

On September 29, 2004, James Goodman’s goal 28 minutes into the contest was the lone tally as UNCG defeated rival-UNC Chapel Hill, 1-0, in front of a crowd of 2,608 at the UNCG Soccer Stadium. The crowd was the largest at UNCG Soccer Stadium since 1999. The win gave UNCG its fourth win of the season over an ACC-member squad.

On October 17, 2004, UNCG received its fi rst No. 1 national ranking since moving to Division I. The men’s soccer team received its fi rst Division I top ranking and became a consensus No. 1 a day later when all four major soccer polls – College Soccer News, Soccer America, Soccer Times and the NSCAA Coaches’ Poll – all listed the Spartans atop the national rankings. UNCG remained a consensus No. 1 for two more weeks and a top-ranked team for a fourth week before seeing its 18-match unbeaten streak snapped. The Spartans would evevntually earn the SoCon’s fi rst-ever at-large bid to the NCAA Men’s Soccer Tournament, garnering a No. 8 seed. UNCG advanced to the third round of the tournament, be-fore suffering a heartbreak-ing 1-0 overtime loss to UC Santa Barbara, the eventual national runner-up.

On October 31, 2004, UNCG wrapped up its fourth South-ern Conference women’s soccer regular season crown in an eight-year span with a convincing 7-0 win over The Citadel in Charleston. Rakel Logadottir would fi nish the season as UNCG’s all-time leader in career assists.

On November 3, 2004, UNCG’s Amy Carnell and Karla Davis swept the 2004 SoCon Women’s Soccer Player and Freshman of the Year honors. A week later, Randi Patterson and Matt Smith were named the 2004 SoCon Men’s Soccer Player and Freshman of the Year, respectively. It marked the fi rst time one school had swept all four awards. Patterson went on to earn several All-American honors.

In December 2004, men’s soccer coach Michael Parker was named the NSCAA South Region Coach of the Year. Parker had earlier been named the Southern Conference Coach of the Year.

Freshmen Kyle Hines and Kristen Boone swept the SoCon’s Men’s and Women’s Basketball Freshman of fthe Year honors in February. Hines set school and SoCon records for blocks in a season with 106, while Boone recorded 121 steals to set a new school record. Her total was the fourth-highest single-season total recorded by a freshman in NCAA history.

Joe Kemmerer, Daren Burns and Joe Lowe all qualifi ed for the NCAA Wrestling Championships in March. Burns had the best showing of the three, sadvancing to the quarterfi nals of the 197-lb. class. He wound up in the fourth round of the wrestlebacks and fi nished the season with a 30-6 mark. Two months later, Burns was the surprise of the Pan American Wrestling Championships, fi nishing third for Team USA at the international competition held in Guatemala City, Guatemala.

In May, Charles Jones became the fi rst Spartan to qualify for the NCAA Track and Field Champi-onships. After winning the SoCon Championship in the triple jump to qualify for NCAA Regional competition, Jones outlasted a two-hour thunderstorm delay and recorded a jump of 15.35 meters to break a tie for fi fth-place in earn automatic qualifi cation into the National Championship meet in Sacramento. Earlier in the meet, Jones had leaped a school-record 15.50 meters. Jones eventu-ally fi nished the national championship meet in 23rd place.

In June, Chris Mason was drafted in the second round of the Major League Baseball Draft, being selected by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

tively. The men’s team played eventual-champion Memphis, while the women’s team faced Virginia Tech.

In November 2002, Chris Goos was named the SoCon Men’s Soccer Player of the Year after leading the nation in scoring with 20 goals and 20 assists. Goos was also named a second-team All-American.

On November 19, 2002, the men’s basketball team defeated Wagner, 84-65, in the fi rst round of the Preseason NIT in Fleming Gymnasium. It marked UNCG’s fi rst ever win in the NIT. The Spartans advanced to play at Kansas in the second round.

On November 21, 2002, men’s soccer player Cliff Patterson was named third-team CoSIDA Academic All-American after scoring 17 goals on the season.

On Feb. 23, 2003, softball’s Amber Watson tossed a perfect game against Toledo in a 2-0 win. Watson struck out 17 batters, including the game’s fi rst nine.

On Feb. 27, 2003, James Maye broke the men’s basketball all-time scoring record with 17 points against Furman. Maye recorded a triple-double in the game with 17 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists. He fi nished his career with 1,574 points.

On May 7, 2003, Jennifer Hubbard was named the SoCon’s Softball Player of the Year after hit-ting .384 with 10 home runs and 30 runs batted in. Penny Thompson ended her standout career as the SoCon’s all-time home run leader with 36.

On May 25, 2003, softball’s Jennifer Moran earned fi rst-team CoSIDA Academic All-American honors.

On May 30, 2003, pitcher/outfi elder Ryan Gordon was named fi rst-team All-America by Louisville Slugger. The junior hit .416 on the season and captured the SoCon’s batting crown, the fi rst in school history to do so. Gordon was also named third-team All-America by Baseball America.

In November 2003, the UNCG women’s soccer team won the Southern Conference Tournament title to earn its third trip to the NCAA Tournament in the last four years. The Spartans defeated arch-rival Furman, 2-0, to win the SoCon crown. UNCG followed that with a fi rst round NCAA Tournament win over Wake Forest, 2-1, before losing to eventual-National Champion North Carolina in the second round. It marked the third time that the Spartans had advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

On January 7, 2004, UNCG women’s basketball coach Lynne Agee won her 500th game as a head coach when her Spartans defeated Furman, 63-60, in a SoCon tilt at Fleming Gymnasium. Agee became just the 23rd women’s basketball coach in NCAA history to achieve the milestone, joining the likes of legends Texas’ Jody Conradt, Tennessee’s Pat Summit, UConn’s Geno Auriemma, Louisiana Tech’s Leon Barmore, North Carolina State’s Kay Yow and UNC Chapel

Hill’s Sylvia Hatchell.

On January 31, 2004, UNCG defeated UNC Chapel Hill for the fi rst time in the sport of

Wrestling. After the match ended in a 20-20 tie, UNCG won the match on a tie-breaker, marking the fi rst time the Spartans had defeated the Tar Heels in seven tries. It was NCG’s fi rst win over an ACC school in fi ve years. Kevin Artis’ 24-9 win in the fi nal bout of the match tied the overall score and provided the only technical fall of the match, giving UNCG the edge in the tie-breaker.

On February 23, 2004, Jay Joseph became UNCG’s all-time leading scorer, eclipsing the mark held by his former teammate James Maye set one year earlier. Joseph

fi nished his career with 1,646 points. He also fi nished fi rst all-time at UNCG in games played, fi eld goals made and fi eld goal

attempts.

In March 2004, Darren Burns was named the

Brian Moehler

James Goodman