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2002 MARYLAND SOCCER terrapin 18 2002 maryland men’s soccer media guide 22 19 5 18 23 david Glaudemans DEFENSE FRESHMAN, 5-9, 155 BETHESDA, MD. WALT WHITMAN H.S. Cirovski on Glaudemans: “David is a great athlete who quickly emerges as one of the best players on every team he plays on. He will be a rapidly developing player and will undoubtedly increase his impact with every season of his career.” Before Maryland: Attended Walt Whitman High School, which the NSCAA ranked third nationally in 2000 after winning the state championship and finishing with a 10-4-1 record ... a 2001 All-Met selection by the Washington Post, he earned all-state honors as well as All- South region and All-American honors ... was also named to the Powerade McDonald’s All- American game his senior year ... 2000 USYSA champions with the Soccer Club of Baltimore ... Glaudemans was the leading scorer on his team his sophomore (10 goals) and junior (15 goals) seasons ... also played baseball his senior year. Personal: Full name is David Michael Glaudemans ... born on October 3, 1984 in Washington, D.C., he is the son of Jon and Jennifer Glaudemans ... he is one of two children and has a sister Katie (15) ... he was a four-year member of the symphonic orchestra ... majoring in letters and sciences. a.j. Godbolt MIDFIELD FRESHMAN, 5-9, 150 AUSTIN, TEXAS ST. STEPHEN’S EPISCOPAL H.S. Cirovski on Godbolt: “A.J. is starting to come into his own as an attacking midfielder. He’s a very athletic, skillful player who’s got some bite to his game. He will improve tremendously competing with the quality midfielders we have on a day-to-day basis.” Before Maryland: A member of the Region III ODP team, he was on the Texas state team for seven years, earning the regional spot for three years ... an all-state selection all four years at St. Stephen’s Episcopal School, his team won a state championship in 2001 after going 20-4 ... captained the team his junior and senior years, and was Phillips Tournament MVP his sophomore and junior years ... played for the Capital Soccer Club, winning the state championship in 2001. Personal: The son of Michael and Patricia Godbolt, his full name is Aaron John Godbolt ... born on March 7, 1984 in Boston, Mass. ... he is one of four children, and has one brother, Kyle (12) and two sisters,Veronica (15) and Jordan (14) ... majoring in letters and sciences. chris Lancos MIDFIELD/DEFENSE FRESHMAN, 6-1, 175 MIDDLETOWN, N.J. MIDDLETOWN H.S. Cirovski on Lancos: “Chris is a very skillful and versatile big man who will have an immediate impact in either the defensive midfield or center back. He has a great personality and will fit in right from the start.” Before Maryland: Tabbed No. 8 among Soccer America’s Top 25 recruits, he was a 2002 Parade All-American ... attended Middletown North High School except for his junior year when he was enrolled in the U.S. residency program at Bradenton Academy ... played for the U.S. Under-17 team and was called to camp for the U.S. Under-20 team, but was unable to attend because of a shoulder injury ... earned 20 caps with the Under- 17 team, scoring one goal ... international experience was highlighted by the FIFA Under- 17 World Championship in 2001 ... scored 25 goals and added 20 assists in two years at Middletown ... a member of the Region I ODP team from 1998-99 and state ODP team from 1997-99, winning the championship in 1997 and ’98 ... played for the Middletown New Jersey Vipers Club team for 14 years, leading the team to a state championship ... played with Erwin Diaz on the U.S. Under-17 team. Personal: Full name is Chris J. Lancos ... born on July 12, 1984 in Glendale, W.Va., he is the son of Stephen and Patty Lancos ... he is one of three children and has two sisters, Allison (15) and Julie (12) ... majoring in letters and sciences. nino Marcantonio FORWARD JUNIOR, 5-9, 160 BETHESDA, MD. CHURCHILL/AMERICAN UNIV. Cirovski on Marcantonio: “Nino has always been a tremendous attacking talent, but I’ve seen him mature and become more humble than ever over the past few years. As a result, he will provide a great deal of balance and variety to our attack.We’re looking for great things from Nino. Nino should be fully recovered by preseason after fracturing a bone in his foot, he just won’t have the benefit of training all summer.” At American in 2000: His record-setting freshman campaign earned him a place in the U.S. Soccer Under-20 national team ... tallied six goals in an international tournament in Portugal in May of 2000 ... earned first team All-CAA honors ... named to third team NSCAA/adidas All-South Atlantic ... had six goals and six assists. At American in 1999: Earned Soccer America All-Freshmen team honors and AU’s first-ever Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) men’s soccer Rookie of the Year award ... earned second team All-CAA honors with 10 goals, 11 assists and 31 points ... starting all 19 games, he finished second in the league in scoring and was ninth in the NCAA in assists per game ... broke the AU freshman record for points in a season and tied the record for goals in a season ... set the school’s assist mark with 11 ... tied the AU single- game assist record with three against UNC-Wilmington ... had four game-winning goals. High School: Selected to the prestigious Soccer America Top-25 high school seniors and named 1998 Washington Post All-Met Player of the Year ... tallied 26 goals and 13 assists as a senior leading Churchill High School to the state final his senior year ... an all-state and All- South selection ... played for Region I and Maryland ODP teams. Personal: Full name is Nino Marcantonio ... born October 13, 1981, in Cucera, Italy ... he is the son of Rosanna and Nick Marcantonio ... has three siblings: one brother, Antonio (22), and two sisters, Cristina (20) and Erica (9) ... majoring in criminal justice. career statistics Year M-S Goals Assts Pts 1999 AU 19-19 10 11 31 2000 AU 17-12 6 6 18 Career 36-31 16 17 49 pat Wilson MIDFIELD FRESHMAN, 5-8, 140 LAUREL, MD. GONZAGA COLLEGE H.S. Cirovski on Wilson: “Pat is a very skillful player who will improve his chances to play as he gets physically stronger and develops a comfort level with the players and the speed of the game.” Before Maryland: A graduate of Gonzaga College High School, he was a three-year letterwinner ... led team to the 2000 and ’01 WCAC titles ... earned first team All-WCAC in 2001 and was a second team All-WCAC selection in 2000 ... second team All-Met selection by the Washington Post in 2001 ... was a member of the Maryland state ODP team and the Region I ODP team from 1997-2002 ... scored 19 goals and added six assists as a senior, 10 goals and eight assists his junior season ... high school teammate Erwin Diaz. Personal: The son of William and Mary Pat Wilson, his full name is Patrick Daniel Wilson ... born on April 7, 1984 ... has two brothers, Kevin (16) and Chris (23) ... his mother, father and brother all attended Catholic University and played sports there ... his mother Mary Pat played basketball at Catholic from 1967-71, while his father Bill played there from 1965-69 ... his brother Chris was a soccer player from 1996-2000 ... a member of the National Honor Society, he is majoring in letters and sciences.

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Page 1: david 23 19 18 - Maryland Terrapins...2002 MARYLAND terrapinSOCCER 18 2002 maryland menÕs soccer media guide 22 19 5 18 david 23 Glaudemans DEFENSE FRESHMAN, 5-9, 155 BETHESDA, MD

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23 david Glaudemans DEFENSE FRESHMAN, 5-9, 155 BETHESDA, MD. WALT WHITMAN H.S.

Cirovski on Glaudemans: “David is a great athlete who quickly emerges as one of thebest players on every team he plays on. He will be a rapidly developing player and willundoubtedly increase his impact with every season of his career.”

Before Maryland: Attended Walt Whitman High School, which the NSCAA ranked thirdnationally in 2000 after winning the state championship and finishing with a 10-4-1 record... a 2001 All-Met selection by the Washington Post, he earned all-state honors as well as All-South region and All-American honors ... was also named to the Powerade McDonald’s All-American game his senior year ... 2000 USYSA champions with the Soccer Club of Baltimore... Glaudemans was the leading scorer on his team his sophomore (10 goals) and junior (15goals) seasons ... also played baseball his senior year.

Personal: Full name is David Michael Glaudemans ... born on October 3, 1984 inWashington, D.C., he is the son of Jon and Jennifer Glaudemans ... he is one of twochildren and has a sister Katie (15) ... he was a four-year member of the symphonicorchestra ... majoring in letters and sciences.

a.j. Godbolt MIDFIELD FRESHMAN, 5-9, 150 AUSTIN, TEXAS ST. STEPHEN’S EPISCOPAL H.S.

Cirovski on Godbolt: “A.J. is starting to come into his own as an attacking midfielder.He’s a very athletic, skillful player who’s got some bite to his game. He will improvetremendously competing with the quality midfielders we have on a day-to-day basis.”

Before Maryland: A member of the Region III ODP team, he was on the Texas stateteam for seven years, earning the regional spot for three years ... an all-state selection allfour years at St. Stephen’s Episcopal School, his team won a state championship in 2001after going 20-4 ... captained the team his junior and senior years, and was PhillipsTournament MVP his sophomore and junior years ... played for the Capital Soccer Club,winning the state championship in 2001.

Personal: The son of Michael and Patricia Godbolt, his full name is Aaron John Godbolt ...born on March 7, 1984 in Boston, Mass. ... he is one of four children, and has one brother,Kyle (12) and two sisters, Veronica (15) and Jordan (14) ... majoring in letters and sciences.

chris Lancos MIDFIELD/DEFENSE FRESHMAN, 6-1, 175 MIDDLETOWN, N.J. MIDDLETOWN H.S.

Cirovski on Lancos: “Chris is a very skillful and versatile big man who will have animmediate impact in either the defensive midfield or center back. He has a great personalityand will fit in right from the start.”

Before Maryland: Tabbed No. 8 among Soccer America’s Top 25 recruits, he was a 2002Parade All-American ... attended Middletown North High School except for his junioryear when he was enrolled in the U.S. residency program at Bradenton Academy ...played for the U.S. Under-17 team and was called to camp for the U.S. Under-20 team,but was unable to attend because of a shoulder injury ... earned 20 caps with the Under-17 team, scoring one goal ... international experience was highlighted by the FIFA Under-17 World Championship in 2001 ... scored 25 goals and added 20 assists in two years atMiddletown ... a member of the Region I ODP team from 1998-99 and state ODP teamfrom 1997-99, winning the championship in 1997 and ’98 ... played for the Middletown

New Jersey Vipers Club team for 14 years, leading the team to a state championship ...played with Erwin Diaz on the U.S. Under-17 team.

Personal: Full name is Chris J. Lancos ... born on July 12, 1984 in Glendale, W.Va., he isthe son of Stephen and Patty Lancos ... he is one of three children and has two sisters,Allison (15) and Julie (12) ... majoring in letters and sciences.

nino Marcantonio FORWARD JUNIOR, 5-9, 160 BETHESDA, MD. CHURCHILL/AMERICAN UNIV.

Cirovski on Marcantonio: “Nino has always been a tremendous attacking talent, butI’ve seen him mature and become more humble than ever over the past few years. As aresult, he will provide a great deal of balance and variety to our attack. We’re looking forgreat things from Nino. Nino should be fully recovered by preseason after fracturing abone in his foot, he just won’t have the benefit of training all summer.”

At American in 2000: His record-settingfreshman campaign earned him a place inthe U.S. Soccer Under-20 national team ...tal l ied six goals in an internationaltournament in Portugal in May of 2000 ...earned first team All-CAA honors ... namedto third team NSCAA/adidas All-SouthAtlantic ... had six goals and six assists.

At American in 1999: Earned Soccer America All-Freshmen team honors and AU’sfirst-ever Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) men’s soccer Rookie of the Year award ...earned second team All-CAA honors with 10 goals, 11 assists and 31 points ... starting all19 games, he finished second in the league in scoring and was ninth in the NCAA inassists per game ... broke the AU freshman record for points in a season and tied therecord for goals in a season ... set the school’s assist mark with 11 ... tied the AU single-game assist record with three against UNC-Wilmington ... had four game-winning goals.

High School: Selected to the prestigious Soccer America Top-25 high school seniors andnamed 1998 Washington Post All-Met Player of the Year ... tallied 26 goals and 13 assists as asenior leading Churchill High School to the state final his senior year ... an all-state and All-South selection ... played for Region I and Maryland ODP teams.

Personal: Full name is Nino Marcantonio ... born October 13, 1981, in Cucera, Italy ... heis the son of Rosanna and Nick Marcantonio ... has three siblings: one brother, Antonio(22), and two sisters, Cristina (20) and Erica (9) ... majoring in criminal justice.

career statisticsYear M-S Goals Assts Pts1999 AU 19-19 10 11 312000 AU 17-12 6 6 18Career 36-31 16 17 49

pat Wilson MIDFIELD FRESHMAN, 5-8, 140 LAUREL, MD. GONZAGA COLLEGE H.S.

Cirovski on Wilson: “Pat is a very skillful player who will improve his chances to play ashe gets physically stronger and develops a comfort level with the players and the speedof the game.”

Before Maryland: A graduate of Gonzaga College High School, he was a three-yearletterwinner ... led team to the 2000 and ’01 WCAC titles ... earned first team All-WCACin 2001 and was a second team All-WCAC selection in 2000 ... second team All-Metselection by the Washington Post in 2001 ... was a member of the Maryland state ODP teamand the Region I ODP team from 1997-2002 ... scored 19 goals and added six assists as asenior, 10 goals and eight assists his junior season ... high school teammate Erwin Diaz.

Personal: The son of William and Mary Pat Wilson, his full name is Patrick Daniel Wilson... born on April 7, 1984 ... has two brothers, Kevin (16) and Chris (23) ... his mother, fatherand brother all attended Catholic University and played sports there ... his mother MaryPat played basketball at Catholic from 1967-71, while his father Bill played there from1965-69 ... his brother Chris was a soccer player from 1996-2000 ... a member of theNational Honor Society, he is majoring in letters and sciences.

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2001 Season Review

season results

OVERALL: 11-9-1 • ACC: 1-4-1 • HOME: 7-5-1 • AWAY: 1-4-0 • NEUTRAL: 3-0-0 • OVERTIME: 1-1-1Date Opponent WL Score Overall ACC Goals (GWG in caps) Saves Att.Aug 31, 2001 vs UCLA 1 W 2ot 2-1 1-0-0 0-0-0 Herrera, SALYER Schmidt-1, Palmer-2 1871Sep 02, 2001 vs Liberty 1 W 2-1 2-0-0 0-0-0 Buete, HERRERA Schmidt-0, Palmer-0 333Sep 07, 2001 CREIGHTON 2 L 1-2 2-1-0 0-0-0 Kirk Schmidt-0, Palmer-2 2,240Sep 09, 2001 AMERICAN 2 W 5-1 3-1-0 0-0-0 Sumed, STAMMLER, Sumed, Herrera, Sumed Palmer-3 1,025Sep 19, 2001 LOYOLA L 0-1 3-2-0 0-0-0 Palmer-4 737Sep 22, 2001 at Duke * L 0-1 3-3-0 0-1-0 Palmer-2 655Sep 30, 2001 WAKE FOREST * T 2ot 2-2 3-3-1 0-1-1 Herrera, Mediate Palmer-1 778Oct 03, 2001 PRINCETON W 5-2 4-3-1 0-1-1 Kirk, Siba, SUMED, Sjolund, Dello-Russo Palmer-2 778Oct 07, 2001 at North Carolina * L 1-2 4-4-1 0-2-1 Rodway Palmer-6 1,057Oct 10, 2001 GEORGE MASON L 0-1 4-5-1 0-2-1 Schmidt-1 923Oct 14, 2001 VA. COMMONWEALTH W 1-0 5-5-1 0-2-1 SJOLUND Palmer-1 811Oct 19, 2001 at South Carolina 3 W 1-0 6-5-1 0-2-1 BUETE Palmer 5 1,739Oct 21, 2001 vs Charleston 3 W 3-0 7-5-1 0-2-1 SUMED, Siba, Rodway Palmer-3 393Oct 28, 2001 at Clemson * L 0-2 7-6-1 0-3-1 Palmer-5 2,010Oct 31, 2001 HOLY CROSS W 5-1 8-6-1 0-3-1 Herrera, VITAGLIANO, Hollenbach, Sumed, Stammler Palmer-2 572Nov 04, 2001 VIRGINIA * L 0-3 8-7-1 0-4-1 Palmer-5 1,673Nov 07, 2001 MANHATTAN W 10-0 9-7-1 0-4-1 HERRERA, Welker, Sumed, Herrera, Sumed, Palmer-0, Schmidt-2

Salyer, Welker, Sjolund, Sumed, Sjolund 117Nov 11, 2001 NC STATE * W 3-0 10-7-1 1-4-1 HERRERA, Sjolund, Arnold Palmer-4 817Nov 15, 2001 at Clemson 4 L 1-3 10-8-1 1-4-1 Stammler Palmer-4Nov 23, 2001 NOTRE DAME 5 W 1-0 11-8-1 1-4-1 BUETE Palmer-1 2,091Nov 25, 2001 LOYOLA 6 L 2ot 0-1 11-9-1 1-4-1 Palmer-4 1,6851-Virginia Coca-Cola Classic (Charlottesville, Va.); 2-MARYLAND/FILA CLASSIC (College Park, Md.); 3-Gamecock Soccer Classic (Columbia, S.C.); 4-ACC Tournament (Clemson, S.C.);5-NCAA College Cup First Round (College Park, Md.); 6-NCAA College Cup Second Round (College Park, Md.)

season statistics

SCORING## Name GP GS G A Pts Sh GWG YC RC6 Sumed Ibrahim 21 21 9 13 31 55 2 1 07 A.J. Herrera 21 21 8 5 21 33 3 2 019 Robert Sjolund 20 9 5 5 15 28 1 0 010 Siba Mohammed 21 11 2 8 12 34 0 2 09 Scott Buete 17 17 3 4 10 22 2 3 018 Seth Stammler 19 19 3 2 8 32 1 5 02 Philip Salyer 21 21 2 4 8 11 1 0 016 Ellis Welker 13 1 2 3 7 3 0 0 08 Wes Kirk 17 11 2 2 6 14 0 0 015 Michael Dello-Russo 21 10 1 4 6 19 0 1 021 Ian Rodway 17 17 2 1 5 19 0 3 017 Bryan Vitagliano 16 7 1 2 4 15 1 0 04 Beckett Hollenbach 21 21 1 1 3 19 0 2 012 Jason Arnold 13 1 1 1 3 8 0 0 020 Domenic Mediate 10 3 1 1 3 7 0 0 05 Chris Gormley 21 20 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

Total 21 43 56 142 320 11 20 0Opponents 21 24 29 77 177 9 32 4

GOALKEEPING## Name GP GS Minutes GA Avg Saves Pct W-L-T Sho Faced0 Noah Palmer 20 17 1705:14 20 1.06 63 .759 11-7-1 5 1581 Kevin Schmidt 5 4 270:00 4 1.33 4 .500 0-2-0 0 19

Total 21 1975:14 24 1.09 67 .736 11-9-1 6 177Opponents 21 1975:14 43 1.96 100 .699 9-11-1 6 316

GOALS BY PERIOD1st 2nd OT OT2 Total

Maryland 13 29 0 1 43Opponents 12 11 0 1 24

SHOTS BY PERIOD1st 2nd OT OT2 Total

Maryland 144 158 11 7 320Opponents 68 102 3 4 177

SAVES BY PERIOD1st 2nd OT OT2 Total

Maryland 26 39 1 1 67Opponents 48 47 3 2 100

CORNER KICKS BY PRD1st 2nd OT OT2 Total

Maryland 50 58 4 7 119Opponents 39 36 3 0 78

FOULS BY PERIOD1st 2nd OT OT2 Total

Maryland 116 146 3 3 268Opponents 192 188 9 11 400

ATTENDANCE SUMMARYMARYLAND OPP

Total 14247 7648Dates/Avg Per Date 13/1096 5/1530Neutral Site #/Avg 3/242

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2001 ACC Review

acc statistics acc honors

ALL-ACC FIRST TEAMJon Cole VirginiaAlecko Eskandarian VirginiaRyan Gibbs VirginiaSumed Ibrahim MarylandDanny Jackson North CarolinaKyle Martino VirginiaDonald McIntosh DukeOguchi Onyewu ClemsonAaron Thomas Wake ForestDoug Warren ClemsonJeremiah White Wake Forest

SECOND TEAMOskar Bringsved ClemsonBrian Carroll Wake ForestJordan Cila DukeWilliam Hesmer Wake ForestRyan Kneipper North CarolinaChris Leitch North CarolinaMatt Oliver VirginiaLogan Pause North CarolinaKevin Sakuda DukePhilip Salyer MarylandFabio Tambosi Clemson

ACC Player of the Year Kyle Martino, VirginiaACC Rookie of the Year

Marcus Storey, North CarolinaACC Coach of the Year

George Gelnovatch, Virginia

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSPoints GP G-A Pts.Jeremiah White, Wake Forest 19 15-7 37Ryan Kneipper, North Carolina 24 14-6 34Sumed Ibrahim, Maryland 21 9-13 31Ian Fuller, Clemson 23 11-8 30David Testo, North Carolina 25 11-6 28Marcus Storey, North Carolina 25 9-8 26Jordan Cila, Duke 16 8-8 24Dimelon Westfield, Clemson 19 9-5 23Ryan Gibbs, Virginia 17 9-5 23Christian Lonteen, Wake Forest 21 7-8 22

Scoring (Points Per Game) GP Pts. Avg.Jeremiah White, Wake Forest 19 37 1.95Jordan Cila, Duke 16 24 1.50Sumed Ibrahim, Maryland 21 31 1.48Ryan Kneipper, North Carolina 24 34 1.42Ryan Gibbs, Virginia 17 23 1.35Ian Fuller, Clemson 23 30 1.30Dimelon Westfield, Clemson 19 23 1.21David Testo, North Carolina 25 28 1.12Marcus Storey, North Carolina 25 26 1.04Christian Lonteen, Wake Forest 21 22 1.05

Goals GP GLSJeremiah White, Wake Forest 19 15Ryan Kneipper, North Carolina 24 14Ian Fuller, Clemson 23 11David Testo, North Carolina 25 11Dimelon Westfield, Clemson 19 9Sumed Ibrahim, Maryland 21 9Marcus Storey, North Carolina 25 9Alecko Eskandarian, Virginia 16 9Ryan Gibbs, Virginia 17 9Scott Sealy, Wake Forest 21 9

Goals Per Game GP GLS Avg.Jeremiah White, Wake Forest 19 15 0.79Ryan Kneipper, North Carolina 24 14 0.58Alecko Eskandarian, Virginia 16 9 0.56Ryan Gibbs, Virginia 17 9 0.53Ian Fuller, Clemson 23 11 0.48Dimelon Westfield, Clemson 19 9 0.47David Testo, North Carolina 25 11 0.44Sumed Ibrahim, Maryland 21 9 0.43Scott Sealy, Wake Forest 21 9 0.43Marcus Storey, North Carolina 25 9 0.36

Assists GP Ats.Sumed Ibrahim, Maryland 21 13Noz Yamauchi, North Carolina 25 11Vicente Bastidas, Wake Forest 21 10Ian Fuller, Clemson 23 8Fabio Tambosi, Clemson 20 8

2001 ACC STANDINGSACC Overall

Team W L T Pct. W L T Pct.Virginia 6 0 0 1.000 17 2 1 .875North Carolina 4 2 0 .667 21 4 0 .840Clemson 4 2 0 .667 19 5 0 .792Wake Forest 3 2 1 .583 13 6 2 .667Duke 2 4 0 .333 8 10 1 .447Maryland 1 4 1 .250 11 9 1 .548NC State 0 6 0 .000 4 15 0 .211

Siba Mohammed, Maryland 21 8Marcus Storey, North Carolina 25 8Kyle Martino, Virginia 18 8Christian Lonteen, Wake Forest 21 8Jordan Cila, Duke 16 8

Assists Per Game GP Ats. Avg.Sumed Ibrahim, Maryland 21 13 0.62Jordan Cila, Duke 16 8 0.50Vicente Bastidas, Wake Forest 21 10 0.48Noz Yamauchi, North Carolina 25 11 0.44Kyle Martino, Virginia 18 8 0.44Fabio Tambosi, Clemson 20 8 0.40Siba Mohammed, Maryland 21 8 0.38Christian Lonteen, Wake Forest 21 8 0.38Ian Fuller, Clemson 23 8 0.32Marcus Storey, North Carolina 25 8 0.32

Goals Against Average Min. GA GAADavid Comfort, Virginia 1553.10 11 0.64Michael Ueltschey, No. Carolina 2308 19 0.74Doug Warren, Clemson 2029.18 18 0.80Wiliam Hesmer, Wake Forest 1889.14 19 0.91Scott Maslin, Duke 1490.25 14 0.93Noah Palmer, Maryland 1705.14 20 1.06Mitchell Watson, NC State 1723 40 2.10

Save Percentage GP Svs. Pct.David Comfort, Virginia 17 47 .810Doug Warren, Clemson 23 76 .809William Hesmer, Wake Forest 21 78 .804Scott Maslin, Duke 15 53 .791Michael Ueltschey, North Carolina 25 68 .782Noah Palmer, Maryland 20 63 .759Mitchell Watson, NC State 19 110 .733

Saves GP Svs. Avg.Mitchell Watson, NC State 19 110 5.79William Hesmer, Wake Forest 21 78 3.71Scott Maslin, Duke 15 53 3.53Doug Warren, Clemson 23 76 3.30Noah Palmer, Maryland 20 63 3.15David Comfort, Virginia 17 47 2.76Michael Ueltschey, North Carolina 25 68 2.72

TEAM STATISTICSTeam GP Gls. Avg. GA GAA ShONorth Carolina 25 65 2.60 19 0.73 14Clemson 24 59 2.46 20 0.81 10Wake Forest 21 48 2.29 19 0.87 7Virginia 20 42 2.10 12 0.59 11Maryland 21 43 2.05 24 1.09 6Duke 19 27 1.42 23 1.21 5NC State 19 19 1.00 40 2.10 1 All-ACC first team selection Sumed Ibrahim

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2001 NSCAA FINAL POLLSchool Record PR

1. North Carolina 21-4-0 82. Indiana 18-4-1 53. Stanford 19-2-1 24. St. John’s 17-3-3 75. Southern Methodist 21-1-0 16. Saint Louis 18-2-0 47. Clemson 19-5-0 68. Penn State 14-5-1 179. Rutgers 15-7-3 1610. Loyola (Md.) 17-2-2 1111. Fairleigh Dickinson 17-7-0 NR12. Ala.-Birmingham 15-6-0 2313. Virginia 17-2-1 314. American 13-8-2 NR15. UCLA 12-7-4 NR16. Portland 13-6-1 2117. Seton Hall 12-7-2 NR18. Connecticut 15-5-2 919. Washington 13-6-0 1020. South Carolina 12-5-2 1421. Wake Forest 13-6-2 1522. San Diego 12-4-1 1323. Kentucky 14-6-1 NR24. Massachusetts 15-6-1 2425. Maryland 11-9-1 NROthers Receiving Votes: Furman, Notre Dame

2001 Review Notebook

TERPS MAKE NCAA SECONDROUND

Maryland’s men’s soccer team made its sixthappearance in the NCAA second round in 2001.The NCAA bid was the 21st overall in programhistory.

TWO TERPS GRAB ALL-SOUTHATLANTIC HONORS

Sumed Ibrahim (Tamale, Ghana)and Beckett Hollenbach (Havertown,Pa.) were both named second team All-South Atlantic. The honor was the firstof its type for Sumed and the secondsuch accolade for Hollenbach.

TWO TERPS ALL-ACCTwo Terrapins received All-ACC honors

at the annual banquet held in conjunction withthe ACC men’s soccer tournament. Redshirt-sophomore Sumed Ibrahim was voted to thefirst team, while sophomore Philip Salyer(Dallas, Texas) earned second team honors. TheAll-ACC team is voted on by all sevenconference coaches; the honor was the first ofits kind for both Terps.

SUMED MAKING HIS MARKMaryland redshirt-sophomore Sumed

Ibrahim added his name to the Terps’ all-timesingle-season assists chart with his 2001 effort.Sumed had 13 assists, and finished the seasonthird overall in Terps’ history.

BeckettHollenbach

Sumed has scored over five-times as much ashis freshman year totals when a nagging groin injuryheld the midfielder back. That year, he scored one

goal and had two assists in 20 games.

HERRERA EARNS HONORSRedshirt-sophomore A.J. Herrera’s(Albuquerque, N.M.) nine-point week

against Manhattan (Nov. 7)and NC State (Nov.

11) earned him ACCPlayer of the Weekhonors. Herrera hadthe game-winner inthe 3-0 shutout of

the Wolfpack, Maryland’s firstACC win of the season.

BUETE GETS ACC,SA HONORSMaryland men’s soccermidfielder Scott Buete(Bowie, Md.) was selected to

the Soccer America team of theweek as well as co-ACC player

of the week honors for the weekending Oct. 21. The redshirt-

sophomore scored the Terps’ game-winning goal to upset then-No. 11South Carolina at the GamecockSoccer Classic on Oct. 19,propelling the Terps’ to thetournament title.

NATIONAL HONORS FOR SUMEDAfter helping the Terps to a 5-1 win over

American on Sept. 9 with his first career hat trick,Sumed Ibrahim earned a spot on Soccer America’steam of the week. For his offensive feat, he alsoreceived all-tournament honors at the Maryland/FILA Classic.

HONORS ROLL IN FOR SALYERMaryland defender Philip Salyer picked up

three honors the week of Sept. 3 for hisperformance at the Virginia Soccer Classic: VirginiaSoccer Classic MVP, co-ACC Player of the Week,and Soccer America team of the week. All of hishonors were the first of Salyer’s career.

To earn his conference and national honors,Salyer scored the Terps’ golden goal at the 119:20mark to lift Maryland to the 2-1 upset win over No.7 UCLA. The starting defender also turned in twosolid efforts for the Terps, beginning the 2001campaign with a pair of 2-1 wins over No. 7 UCLA(in double overtime) and Liberty.

single season assists chart1. 14 Gino Ferrin (1985)

14 Keith Beach (1998)3. 13 Sumed Ibrahim (2001)

13 Eberhard Klein (1964)5. 12 Carlos Martin (1961)6. 11 Keith Beach (1996)7. 10 Rocco Morelli (1969)

10 Randy Merkel (1997)9. 9 John Garvey (1990)

9 Taylor Twellman (1999)

SUMED ON THE CHARTS AGAINRedshirt-sophomore Sumed Ibrahim was

hot all season for the Terps, scoring goals and settingthem up with great frequency. The Ghana-nativeaveraged 1.48 ppg and led the team in goals (9) andassists (13). His 31 points moved him onto thesingle-season points chart at the No. 10 spot, tyinghim with Abe Thompson (2000) and GaryFurlong (1986). His point-total makes 2001 thefourth consecutive season that a Terrapin has tallied31 or more points. In 1998, it was Taylor Twellman(1998-99) with 40, and then Twellman again in 1999with 33. 2000 saw Thompson accumulate 31 andnow Sumed, also with 31.

SUMED IBRAHIMFirst team All-ACCAll-South AtlanticMaryland/FILA Classic all-tournament teamSoccer America team of the week (Sept. 9)Gamecock Classic all-tournament team

BECKETT HOLLENBACHAll-South AtlanticVirginia Soccer Classic all-tournament teamMaryland/FILA Classic all-tournament teamMaryland/FILA Classic Defensive MVPGamecock Classic all-tournament team

PHILIP SALYERSecond team All-ACCVirginia Soccer Classic MVPCo-ACC Player of the Week (Sept. 2)Soccer Americateam of the week (Sept. 2)

A.J. HERRERAACC Player of the Week honors (Nov. 11)Virginia Soccer Classic all-tournament team

SCOTT BUETESoccer America team of the weekCo-ACC player of the week (Oct. 21)Virginia Soccer Classic all-tournament teamGamecock Classic Most Valuable Attacking PlayerGamecock Classic all-tournament team

SIBA MOHAMMEDGamecock Classic all-tournament team

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321 game AUG. 31, 2001 VIRGINIA SOCCER

CLASSIC SALYER NETS

GOLDEN GOALTO UPSET UCLA

box scoreNo. 15 (SA) MARYLAND (1-0) 1 0 0 1 2No. 7 UCLA (0-1) 1 0 0 0 1

GOALS: 10:42-UM: A.J. Herrera (Penalty Kick); 39:42-UCLA: Cliff McKinley (Jimmy Frazelle); 119:20-UM:Philip Salyer (Seth Stammler)

SHOTS : UM 20, UCLA 9 CORNER KICKS : UM 7,UCLA 5 FOULS : UM 9, UCLA 18 OFFSIDES : UM 2,UCLA 3 GOALKEEPING : UM: Kevin Schmidt (45mins., 1 save, 1 goal against), Noah Palmer (74:40 mins., 2saves, 0 goals against); UCLA: Zach Wells (109:20 mins.,5 saves, 2 goals against) CARDS: UM: Noah Palmer (Yel-low 63:14), Scott Buete (Yellow 67:40). UCLA: Alex Yi(Yellow 1:22), Leonard Griffin (Yellow 18:15), Alex Yi (Red37:20), Adolfo Gregorio (Red 76:24), Aaron Lopez (Yel-low 93:40).

2001 Game Recaps

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.- Philip Salyer con-nected for the golden goal at 119:20 to lift No. 15 Mary-land 2-1 over No. 7 UCLA at the Virginia Soccer Classic.Seth Stammler sent the cross that would set up thegame-winner in the Terps’ season opener.

The Terps struck first at 10:42 when redshirt-sophomore’A.J. Herrera directed a penalty kick intothe lower right corner. Play continued to go back andforth, with both teams moving the ball well until UCLAdefender Alex Yi received his second yellow card of thegame, and was ejected for the remainder of the after-noon.

Maryland played man-up through the rest of the half,but gave up a goal late at 39:42 on a floater into theupper right corner off the head off Cliff McKinley. Thegame was tied entering the second half, with the Bruinsstill a man down until the 77th minute when UCLAmidfielder Aldolfo Gregorio took Terps’ midfielder SibaMohammed down just outside the box. Gregorio re-ceived a red card for the takedown, relegating UCLA tonine players for the remainder of the game.

Neither team could secure the win in regulation,sending the game into two overtime frames. UCLA foughthard despite the two-man deficit, but couldn’t hold theTerps off in the last minute when Salyer connected forthe win with the header.

“It was a great beginning and a great ending, withthe middle a little shaky,” said head coach SashoCirovski. “I give UCLA a lot of credit. When they lostAlex Yi, they could’ve folded, but they continued to playhard.

“At the end of the day, these are the kind of gameswe didn’t win last year and today we did.”

2

1CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.- Redshirt sophomore

A.J. Herrera scored his second goal of the weekend,this time the game-winner, to give the Terps a 2-1 vic-tory over Liberty at the Virginia Soccer Classic. Mary-land starts the season out 2-0 for the second year in arow, while Liberty falls to 0-2.

Maryland dominated the entire game, finishing withan 18-5 shot advantage and a 12-2 advantage on cornerkicks. Redshirt sophomore Scott Buete opened theday’s scoring with a header from six yards out offa’Sumed Ibrahim cross in the 10th minute. Marylandoutshot the Flames in the first half 11-1, generating sixshots on goal and keeping Liberty goalkeeper Dean Shortbusy.

Maryland scored again after stringing several passestogether in front of the Liberty net in the 68th minute.Sumed found Robert Sjolund on the left side whotapped it to Herrera in the center for the score fromless than three yards out. The goal would be the even-tual game-winner.

Liberty made it interesting, netting a goal with un-der two minutes to play when Jason Streets found thegoal on a scramble to make it 2-1 Maryland. Two otherpoint-blank saves by Terrapin keeper Noah Palmerstifled the Flames’ late charge.

For the Terps, redshirt junior Kevin Schmidt be-gan the game in goal, playing a scoreless 45 minutes be-fore the freshman, Palmer, took over for the secondstanza. Schmidt finished with zero saves and zero goalsagainst, while Palmer had two saves and one goal against.Liberty’s Short had eight saves and gave up two goals tothe Terps in 90 minutes.

game SEPT. 2, 2001 VIRGINIA SOCCER

CLASSIC HERRERA NETS

SECOND GOALOF THE YEAR

2

1(ot)

box scoreLiberty (0-2) 0 1 1No. 15 Maryland (2-0) 1 1 2

GOALS : 10:41-UM: Scott Buete (Sumed Ibrahim);67:58-UM: A.J. Herrera (Sumed Ibrahim, Robert Sjolund);88:31-LC: Jason Streets (Brentley Kellum)

SHOTS : UM 11+7=18, LC 1+2=3 CORNER KICKS :UM 4+8=12, LC 0+1=1 Fouls : UM 6+5=11, LC 4+5=9OFFSIDES : UM 1+4=5, LC 1+0=1 GOALKEEPING :UM: Kevin Schmidt (45 mins., 0 saves, 0 goals against),Noah Palmer (45 mins., 0 saves, 1 goal against); LC: DeanShort (90 mins., 8 saves, 2 goals against) CARDS: UM:None. LC: Chase Perry (Yellow 34:53), Jason Streets (Yel-low 66:22).

COLLEGE PARK, Md.- Creighton junior MikeTranchilla’s looping shot into the Maryland goal at 35:19would prove to be the game-winner for the Bluejays asthey upset the Terps 2-1 in the Maryland/FILA Classic.Maryland fell to 2-1-0 while Creighton is 2-0-1.

Scoring opened with Creighton’s Luiz Del Montetaking advantage of a fastbreak one-on-one to beat Mary-land keeper Kevin Schmidt to the right side of the net.Jeremy Shelton was credited with the assist on the score,which came at 29:50.

The Bluejays scored their second goal of the day,the eventual game-winner, when freshman forward JulianNash found Tranchilla on the right side. Tranchilla bootedone high over Schmidt’s head into the left side of the netto give Creighton a 2-0 lead that they would take intothe half.

Maryland would mount an offensive charge in thesecond half to no avail. Freshman Wes Kirk scored thefirst goal of his collegiate career off a cross from PhilipSalyer with 10 minutes remaining to draw the Terpswithin one goal, but that was as close as they would come.

The Terps held the shot advantage in the match 15-7. Bluejays’ goalie Mike Gabb earned the win with threesaves. Maryland’s Noah Palmer finished the game ingoal, and ended the day with two saves.

game SEPT. 7, 2001 MARYLAND/FILA

CLASSIC TERPS STUMBLE

AGAINSTCREIGHTON

2

1

box scoreNo. 11 Creighton (2-0-1) 2 0 2No. 5 Maryland (2-1-0) 0 1 1

GOALS : 29:50-CU: Luiz Del Monte (Jeremy Shelton),35:19-CU: Mike Tranchilla (Julian Nash), 79:58-UM: WesKirk (Philip Salyer)

SHOTS : UM 4+11=15, CU 3+4=7 CORNER KICKS :UM 2+2=4, CU 0+0=0 FOULS : UM 8+7=15, CU6+8=14 OFFSIDES : UM 1+0=1, CU 3+1=4GOALKEEPING : UM: Kevin Schmidt (45 mins., 0 saves,2 goals against), Noah Palmer (45 mins., 2 saves, 0 goalsagainst); CU: Mike Gabb (90 mins., 3 saves, 1 goal against)CARDS: UM: None. CU: Lane Peercy (Yellow 2:32).

COLLEGE PARK, Md.- Sophomore sensationSumed Ibrahim scored his first career hat trick tolead the No. 5 Terps over American 5-1. Maryland is now3-1, while American holds a 2-2 record.

American took a 1-0 advantage off some confusionon the Terrapins’ defensive end, with Matt Kopack pass-ing it through the center to Melvin Espinal, who headed

game SEPT. 9, 2001 MARYLAND/FILA

CLASSIC SUMED GETS

FIRST CAREERHAT TRICK

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1

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it past Maryland keeper Noah Palmer at 18:01.The Terps wouldn’t let the 1-0 American lead

last for long, though. Midfielder Sumed Ibrahimcame out on top of a scramble from five yardsout off a Wes Kirk pass.

Maryland took the 2-1 lead off a per-fectly executed set play from a 35-yardfree kick. Sumed Ibrahim tapped itto freshman Michael Dello-Russo , who back-heeled it tosophomore defender SethStammler for his first goal of theyear at 33:11. Stammler’s goal wouldbe the eventual game-winner.

Maryland added to its lead in thesecond half, scoring two goals off simi-lar sequences in the 58th and 59thminute. Sumed got his second goal ofthe game off a Scott Buete crossfrom the left side at 58:17. Buete didit again just over a minute later, thistime finding redshirt sophomore A.J.Herrera for the header from thecenter again to give Maryland the4-1 lead.

To finish the scoring action offa free kick, Sumed got his first ca-reer hat trick when he bended aperfect strike into the left sideof the net from the right side ofthe field for his third goal of theday and a 5-1 Terrapins’ win.

a shot from 15 yards out that was snuffed out by Loyolakeeper Reb Beatty to preserve the 1-0 Loyola lead intothe half.

In the 63rd minute, the Terps had another decentlook when sophomore Seth Stammler tried aroller that went wide right from 35 yards out.The Greyhounds’ counter attack haunted theTerps all night, however, and kept Maryland on

the run the entire 90 minutes.Loyola nearly stretched the lead

to two goals off a deflected shot fromGraham Marchant with a little over

20 minutes remaining. Terps’ keeperNoah Palmer was there for the leaping

tip over the net. Palmer finished with foursaves in the loss. Marchant wasn’t done andtried to put the game away again in the 74thminute, this time missing the 25-footer justover the upper left corner of the goal.

Sophomore defender PhilipSalyer had perhaps the best chance of thehalf for the Terps when Bryan Vitagliano ,playing in his first game this year after strug-

gling with a back injury, found him in the cen-ter of the box after shaking his defender. It

was not to be, however, as Beatty was thereto deflect the shot over the endline. The

Greyhound keeper ended the day withfour saves and got the win.

The Terps’ final legitimate chancefor the equalizer came in the 85th

minute with Siba Mohammedwas on the charge, but the playwas called offsides. When thebuzzer went off, Loyola had itsfirst win against the Terps since

Nov. 1, 1992 after scoring on Maryland for the first timesince 1994.

For the Terps’ offense, A.J. Herrera and SumedIbrahim both had two shots. It was Bryan Vitagliano ,however, in just his second game back after an injury,who had the best opportunity of the game.

box scoreAmerican (2-2) 1 0 1No. 5 Maryland (3-1) 2 3 5

GOALS : 18:01-AU: Melvin Espinal (Matt Kopack),20:37- UM: Sumed Ibrahim (Wes Kirk), 33:11-UM: SethStammler (Sumed Ibrahim, Michael Dello-Russo), 58:17-UM: Sumed Ibrahim (Scott Buete, Dello-Russo), 59:22-UM: A.J. Herrera (Buete, Siba Mohammed), 66:33-UM:Sumed Ibrahim (unassisted)

SHOTS : UM 13+5=18, AU 4+4=8 CORNER KICKS :UM 3+0=3, AU 3+3=6 FOULS : UM 4+7=11, AU10+13=23 OFFSIDES : UM 1+1=2, AU 0+1=1GOALKEEPING : UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 3 saves,1 goal against); AU: Michael Behonick (66:33 mins., 7 saves,5 goals against), Thomas Mayers (23:27 mins., 0 saves, 0goals against) CARDS: UM: None. AU: Kris Kuykendall(Yellow 34:39), Kris Bertsch (Yellow 43:19), Head CoachTodd West (Yellow 43:19), Jon Colton (Yellow 66:32),Larry McDonald (Yellow 71:48).

COLLEGE PARK, Md.- Senior defender MichaelNelson converted a header off a free kick less than twominutes into the match to lift Loyola over No. 12 Mary-land 1-0 at Ludwig Field. Loyola is now 3-1-1, while theTerps fall to 3-2-0.

After a 10-day layoff since downing American 5-1on Sept. 9, the Terrapins came out flat from the openingtap. Loyola didn’t take long, with Nelson shocking theTerps early with the header at 1:40, the eventual game-winner. Maryland’s best opportunity of the half came inthe 30th minute when Scott Buete broke away streak-ing down the left sideline. The redshirt-sophomore fired

game SEPT. 19, 2001 LOYOLA UPSETS

TERPS 1-0

1

0

The Terps celebrateSumed’ Ibrahim’s hattrick vs. American.

box scoreLoyola (3-1-1) 1 0 1No. 12 Maryland (3-2-0) 0 0 0

GOALS: 19:47- LC: Michael Nelson (A.J. Ogilvie)

SHOTS : UM 5+5=10, LC 5+4=9 CORNER KICKS :UM 3+0=3, LC 0+1=1 FOULS : UM 6+3=9, LC 7+10=17OFFSIDES : UM 0+1=1, LC 0+0=0 GOALKEEPING :UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 4 saves, 1 goal against); LC:Reb Beatty (90 mins., 4 saves, 0 goals against). CARDS:UM: Siba Mohammed (Yellow 29:13), Ian Rodway (Yel-low 68:29). LC: Arturo Lopez (Yellow 19:47), Bill Law(Yellow 71:35).

DURHAM, N.C.- The No. 12 Maryland men’s soc-cer team lost a 1-0 decision to unranked Duke off aTrevor Perea goal in the sixth minute. The loss was theTerps’ second of the week, evening their record at 3-3and starting the Terps off with a 0-1 conference mark.The Blue Devils are now 4-2 and have a 1-0 conferencerecord.

Freshman Noah Palmer handled the Terps’goalkeeping duties again, grabbing two saves in the loss.Duke’s Scott Maslin had four saves in the shutout. Mary-land did have several good opportunities to score, butcouldn’t convert, finishing with eight shots overall to theBlue Devils’ 12.

game SEPT. 22, 2001 DUKE TOPPLES

MARYLAND 1-0

1

0

box scoreNo. 12 Maryland (3-3, 0-1 ACC) 0 0 0Duke (4-2, 1-0 ACC) 1 0 1

GOALS: 5:05- DU: Trevor Parea (Donald McIntosh)

SHOTS: UM 4+4=8, DU 4+8=12, CORNER KICKS:UM 2+4=6, DU 2+0=2, FOULS: UM 5+7=12, DU9+14=23, OFFSIDES: UM 2+1=3, DU 0+0=0GOALKEEPING : UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 2 saves,1 goal against); DU: Scott Maslin (90 mins., 4 saves, 0goals against).CARDS: UM: Scott Buete (Yellow 83:14). DU: AdamGuren (Yellow 48:59), Demetrio Sanchez (Yellow 52:15),Owoicho Adogwa (Yellow 72:29).

COLLEGE PARK, MD.- The Maryland men’s soc-cer team tied ACC foe Wake Forest 2-2 in the Terps’ACC home opener at Ludwig Field. The Terps are now3-3-1 (0-1-1 ACC) with Wake Forest sitting at 4-3-1 (0-1-1 ACC).

While Maryland dominated with nine shots to WakeForest’s one in the first half, play was scoreless enteringthe break. The Terps were able to break it open in thesecond half off a penalty kick sequence, however. WakeForest’s Aaron Thomas fouled A.J. Herrera in the box,resulting in a penalty kick in the 53rd minute. Herreraconverted to the lower right corner for his fourth goalof the year.

The goal sparked Maryland’s intensity, and the Terpsscored again less than two minutes later. SumedIbrahim slipped the ball through the midfield to Herrerawho found freshman Domenic Mediate . Mediatecrossed the shot in front of Wake Forest goalkeeperWilliam Hesmer to the lower right corner for a 2-0Maryland advantage. The goal was the first of Mediate’scareer.

Wake Forest pressed on despite the two-goal defi-cit. Persistence paid off when a packed box yielded someconfusion on the Terps’ defense and a scramble ensued.The Deacon’s Kelvin Jones tapped it over a Marylanddefender to the foot of Scott Sealy who rocketed it tothe right side of the net past Terrapin keeper NoahPalmer . Thomas was also credited with an assist on theplay.

Wake Forest scored the equalizer in the 87th minutewhen the Deacs lined up for a corner kick. ChristianLonteen placed it perfectly to Bobby Gehring, who scoredwith 3:17 remaining in regulation.

The best chance for either team in overtime camewith 4:33 remaining when Maryland’s Ian Rodway fireda shot from 25 yards out that bounced off the crossbarand over the net. The tie would stand despite Marylanddominating statistically in the shot category with a 19-8advantage. Wake Forest accumulated 36 fouls to the Terps’16. Corner kicks were even at six. The Deacs’ Hesmerhad four saves and gave up both Terrapin goals. Terrapinkeeper Palmer tallied one save and had two goals against.

game SEPT. 30, 2001 WAKE’S LATE

CHARGE ENDSACC GAME AT2-2

2

2(ot)

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8COLLEGE PARK, MD.- The Maryland men’s soc-

cer team put one in the win column Wednesday night,pouncing all over Princeton and notching the 5-2 vic-tory at Ludwig Field. The Terrapins are now 4-3-1, whilethe Tigers suffered their first loss of the season and fellto 3-1-2.

Maryland freshman Wes Kirk found the back ofthe net in the 29th minute to start a night that wouldsee the teams combine for seven goals. Sumed Ibrahimstarted the play with a forward pass to A.J. Herrera ,who lobbed a perfect cross over the defense to Kirk onthe left side of the field. Kirk made the deposit for hissecond goal of the year and a 1-0 Terps’ lead.

Siba Mohammed sparked the Terps’ offense inthe second half, scoring at 48:37 off a pass from Sumedon a header from 10 yards out. Sumed crossed it fromthe right wing to an airborne Siba who fit it past Princetongoalie Jason White on the left side to give Maryland a 2-0 lead. White finished with five saves in the loss.

Princeton scored its first goal of the night at 55:11when Adrian Melville capitalized on a high volley in frontof the net and headed one past Terp keeper NoahPalmer , who finished the day with two saves and thewin.

In the 60th minute, Sumed scored the game-winnerfor Maryland off a right-to-left sequence from JasonArnold and midfielder Scott Buete . Sumed was wait-ing at the top of the box and headed the ball into theright side of the net from 10 yards out for the 3-1 Terps’advantage. He finished the day with four points off thegame-winner and two assists, the assist was Arnold’s firstcareer point.

Sophomore transfer Robert Sjolund providedsome insurance at 67:34, placing a slow roller into thelower right corner. Domenic Mediate and PhilipSalyer were both credited with assists on the goal, thefirst of Sjolund’s career.

Michael Dello-Russo added to the second-halfscoring barrage courtesy of a neat cross from Sjolund.The 10-yard conversion was Dello-Russo’s first colle-giate goal and gave the Terps a 5-1 lead, matching theirhighest scoring output of the year.

Princeton added one more to its total when Melvillefound the net again for his fifth goal of the year with lessthan four minutes remaining, leaving the final score a 5-2Maryland victory. Mike Nugent and Matt Douglas werecredited with assists on the play.

CHAPEL HILL, NC. - The Maryland men’s soccerteam dropped a 2-1 road decision to No. 12 North Caro-lina Sunday at Fetzer Field in ChapelHill. The Terps are now 4-4-1 (0-2-1ACC), while Carolina jumps to 8-2-0 (2-1-0 ACC).

The first half was scoreless, withonly five shots between both clubs.For the opening half of the pe-riod, Carolina dominated pos-session with the Terps takingcontrol as time wound down.

Second-half scoringstarted fast and furious,with Carolina openingit up at the47:08 mark.David Testoslipped it be-tween Terps’ goalieNoah Palmer andthe right post on ahard shot from 24yards out. MarcusStorey was creditedwith the assist to make it 1-0 Caro-lina.

Maryland’s intensity never waned,answering Carolina’s score 35 secondslater with one of its own. IanRodway hit for his first career goalwhen Scott Buete crossed a free kick to Rodway, whoheaded it into the lower right corner of the Tar Heelnet.

The game was locked at one goal each until Caro-lina executed a scoring run to perfection. Logan Pausefound Chris Leitch on the break who ripped one pastPalmer from 30 yards out for the 2-1 Carolina advan-tage.

The Terps had a chance to tie on a free kick at 61:30when Seth Stammler booted a shot from 24 yardsout that was saved by a diving Michael Ueltschey.Ueltschey finished with six saves.

COLLEGE PARK, MD.- George Mason’s CharlieSnee scored the game-winner to lift the visiting Patriotsover Maryland 1-0 at Ludwig Field. Maryland falls to 4-5-1 while George Mason is 4-6-0 on the season.

The Terps made it exciting from the outset, hittingthe back of the net less than 30 seconds into the game.The goal would be called back, however, after the Terps

were whistled for being offsides for the first of fivetimes on the evening. Play was scoreless at thebreak with the teams combining for nine oppor-tunities in the opening half.

The Patriots put one on the board in the 68th minutewhen Will Lozano sent the forward pass to Hugh VanWagenen on the right side. Van Wagenen crossed it toSnee in the box for the header and the 1-0 GeorgeMason lead. The goal would be the eventual game-winner.Maryland had several other scoring chances beforethe final buzzer, including anA.J. Herrera shot that hit the crossbar in the 82ndminute. Siba Mohammed made it interesting withone final opportunity for Maryland in the last 30seconds, but also could not capitalize and fired ithigh.

box scoreWake Forest (4-3-1, 0-1-1) 0 2 0 0 2Maryland (3-3-1, 0-1-1) 0 2 0 0 2

GOALS: 52:18- UM: A.J. Herrera (Penalty Kick), 53:43-UM: Domenic Mediate (A.J. Herrera, Sumed Ibrahim),77:05- WFU: Scott Sealy (Kelvin Jones, Aaron Thomas),86:43- WFU: Bob Gehring (Christian Lonteen)

SHOTS: MD 9+5+3+2=19, WFU 1+6+1+0=8 COR-NER KICKS: MD 3+1+0+2=6, WFU 3+2+1+0=6FOULS: MD 3+11+0+2=16, WFU 11+11+7+7=36OFFSIDES: MD 0+1+1+0=2, WFU 0+1+1+0=2GOALKEEPING: MD: Noah Palmer (120 mins., 1 save,2 goals against), WFU: William Hesmer (120 mins., 4 saves,2 goals against). CARDS: UM: None. WFU: Aaron Tho-mas (Yellow 14:25), Bobby Gehring (Yellow 79:09)

game OCT. 3, 2001 FIVE DIFFERENT

TERPS SCORE INROUT

5

2

box scorePrinceton (3-1-2) 0 2 2Maryland (4-3-1) 1 4 5

GOALS : 16:49- UM: Wes Kirk (A.J. Herrera, SumedIbrahim), 48:37- UM: Siba Mohammed (Sumed Ibrahim),53:11- Princeton: Adrian Melville (Matt Behncke, RyanRich), 59:18- UM: Sumed Ibrahim (Jason Arnold, ScottBuete), 67:34- UM: Robert Sjolund (Domenic Mediate,Philip Salyer), 72:09- UM: Michael Dello-Russo (Sjolund),86:49- Princeton: Adrian Melville (Mike Nugent, MattDouglas)

SHOTS : UM 7+10=17, PU 1+6=7 CORNER KICKS :MD 2+2=4, PU 4+3=7 FOULS : MD 8+7=15, PU11+7=18 OFFSIDES : UM 1+1=2, PU 0+0=0GOALKEEPING : UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 2 saves,2 goals against); PU: Jason White (90 mins., 5 saves, 5goals against). CARDS: UM: Beckett Hollenbach (Yel-low 55:15). PU: Graeme Rein (Yellow 0:53), Jeff Hare(Yellow 44:42, Red 54:17), Gianfranco Trippicchio (Yel-low 65:49)

game OCT. 7, 2001 RODWAY

SCORES FIRSTCAREER GOAL

2

1

box scoreMaryland (4-4-1, 0-2-1) 0 1 1North Carolina (8-2-0, 2-1-0) 0 2 2

GOALS : 47:08- UNC: David Testo Marcus Storey47:43- UM: Ian Rodway (Scott Buete) 54:52- UNC:Chris Leitch (Unassisted)

SHOTS : UM 2+6=8, UNC 4+11=15 CORNER KICKS :UM 3+2=5, UNC 5+1=6 FOULS : UM 7+ 11=18, UNC8+7=15 OFFSIDES : UM 0+1=1, UNC 0+0=0GOALKEEPING : UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 6 saves,2 goals against), UNC: Michael Ueltschey (90 mins., 5saves, 1 goal against) CARDS: UM: None. UNC: None.

game OCT. 10, 2001 GEORGE MASON

DOWNSMARYLAND 1-0

1

0

box scoreGeorge Mason (4-6-0) 0 0 0Maryland (4-5-1) 0 1 1

GOALS : 67:23- GMU: Charlie Snee (Hugh VanWagenen,Will Lozano)

SHOTS : UM 5+10=15, GMU 4+4=8 CORNER KICKS :UM 0+2=2, GMU 3+1=4 FOULS : UM 2+5=7, GMU8+7=15 OFFSIDES : Maryland 5, GMU 0GOALKEEPING : UM: Kevin Schmidt (90 mins., 1 save,1 goal against); GMU: John O’Hara (90 mins., 3 saves, 0goals against). CARDS: UM: Scott Buete (Yellow 87:30).GMU: Will Lozano (Yellow 11:51), Rob Klug (Yellow 30:13).

The Tar Heels’ attacking pressure continued and al-most broke the Terps’ defense in the 65th minute whenPalmer came out of the goal to challenge an attackingJonathan Davis. Davis beat Maryland’s freshman keeper,but Stammler was there for the defensive save to keepthe Terps within one goal.

Carolina launched another potentially deadly attack,with Storey beating his defender and launching one frompoint-blank range that Palmer was able get in front ofand deny the Heels’ again to keep the final a 2-1 Caro-lina victory. Palmer ended the day with five saves.

IanRodway

scored hisfirst goal at

NorthCarolina.

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11COLLEGE PARK, MD. - Maryland (5-5-1) earned

its first shutout of the year, getting the 1-0 victory overVirginia Commonwealth (5-5-1) Sunday at Ludwig Fieldin men’s soccer.

Maryland’s defense stifled the Rams from the start,allowing them only three shots per half. The Terps’ de-fensive intensity allowed the offense to get into a flow,leading to 14 Terrapin shots on the day to VCU’s six.

Maryland’s Robert Sjolund scored the Terps’ game-winning goal at the 59:14 mark when Sumed Ibrahimfound him in the center of the field. Sjolund beat VirginiaCommmonwealth goalkeeper Steve Ankiel from 15 yardsout for the goal, his second of the season. Sumed’s assistwas his seventh of the season.

Maryland freshman goalkeeper Noah Palmer madeone save and earned the first Terps’ shutout of the sea-son, as well as the first of his career. Ankiel had five savesin the loss.

COLUMBIA, S.C. - Maryland defeated College ofCharleston 3-0 to claim the 2001 Gamecock SoccerClassic championship. Maryland was the only team un-defeated in this weekend’s tournament after defeatingSouth Carolina 1-0 on Friday.

Maryland’s first goal was scored at 38:32 whenSumed Ibrahim drove in Siba Mohammed’s passfrom 10 yards out. Just one minute and twenty-four sec-onds later, Siba struck again scoring the Terrapin’s sec-ond goal of the first half. The goal came off a breakawayafter Siba pilfered the ball from the Cougars in the midfieldand broke away toward the goal. Maryland would ride a2-0 lead into halftime. The Terrapins outshot College ofCharleston 11-2 in the first half.

At 46:42, Ian Rodway , scored a goal to extend theTerrapins’ lead to three. Wes Kirk and Sumed were bothcredited with assists on the goal. Sumed is now tied foreighth on the single-season assists chart with eight.

Maryland, tallying 17 shots on goal, would hold theCougars scoreless to record its third straight shutout.Maryland’s goalkeeper, Noah Palmer , was credited withthe shutout. Charleston’s goalkeeper, Wes Martino, re-corded nine saves.

CLEMSON, S.C. - The Maryland men’s soccer teamlost a 2-0 decision on the road to No. 9 Clemson. TheTerrapins fall to 7-6-1 (0-3-1 ACC), while Clemson is 12-3 (2-1 ACC).

It was an evenly-matched opening 25 minutes withonly three shots combined before Clemson strung to-gether a dangerous series of passes in front of the Mary-land goal. Terrapin goalkeeper Noah Palmer chargedthe play in an attempt to clear when the Tigers regainedthe slight advantage. Palmer could not recover in timeto stop Clemson’s Paul Souders’ shot that rolled intothe lower right side of the net for his second score ofthe year and the eventual game-winner.

Clemson struck again in the 62nd minute whenSouders sent a neat corner kick into the far post tosophomore Steven Rhyne. Rhyne tucked the ball just in-side the left post to make it a 2-0 Tiger advantage.

The Terps’ Bryan Vitagliano had the best chanceof the afternoon, firing in the 80th minute from just out-side the 18 and hitting the left side of the crossbar.

Maryland’s Palmer made several outstanding savesdown the stretch, finishing with four. Clemson’s DougWarren earned the shutout with one save. Maryland heldthe slight advantage on shots (13-11), while Clemsonfouled at almost a two-to-one pace. Two Terps and oneTiger were carded in what is always a heated battle be-tween the two ACC schools.

game OCT. 14, 2001 MARYLAND

GETS FIRSTSHUTOUT OFTHE YEAR

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box scoreVirginia Commonwealth (5-5-1) 0 0 0Maryland (5-5-1) 0 1 1

GOALS : 59:14- UM: Robert Sjolund (Sumed Ibrahim)

SHOTS : UM 9+5=14, VCU 3+3=6 CORNER KICKS :UM 2+4=6, VCU 2+1=3 FOULS : UM 3+6=9, VCU6+15=21 OFFSIDES : UM 1, VCU 0 GOALKEEPING :UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 1 save, 0 goals against); VCU:Steve Ankiel (90 mins., 5 saves, 1 goal against) CARDS:UM: None. VCU: None.

COLUMBIA, S.C. - The Maryland men’s soccerteam upset No. 11 South Carolina in it’s first match ofthe Gamecock Soccer Classic tonight at Stone Stadium.USC falls to 8-3, while the Terrapins improve to 6-5-1.

With only nine seconds remaining in the first half,Maryland’s Scott Buete fired from 15-yards out to scorethe lone goal of the match. Philip Salyer and SibaMohammed were credited with the assists. The shotcame from the near post for Buete’s second goal of theyear.

“To outshoot a team like Maryland, 13-5, shows wecame back with a great deal of intensity in the secondhalf,” stated South Carolina head coach Mark Berson. “Igive the team a lot of credit.”

USC outshot the Terrapins, 7-1, in the second half ofplay, but the Terps’ defense, anchored by co-captainBeckett Hollenbach , held on for Maryland’s secondshutout of the year. Gamecock goalkeeper MichaelBachmeyer posted two saves, while Maryland’s NoahPalmer registered five saves in the win.

game OCT. 19, 2001 GAMECOCK

SOCCER CLASSIC TERPS UPSET

NO. 10 SOUTHCAROLINA

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box scoreMaryland (6-5-1) 1 0 0South Carolina (8-3-0) 0 0 0

GOALS : 44:51- UM: Scott Buete (Philip Salyer, SibaMohammed)

SHOTS : UM 4+1=5, USC 6+7=13 CORNER KICKS :UM 0+1=1, USC 3+2=5 FOULS : UM 5+8=13, USC9+3=12 OFFSIDES : UM 0, USC 0 GOALKEEPING :UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 5 save, 0 goals against); USC:Michael Bachmeyer (90 mins., 2 saves, 1 goal against)CARDS: UM: Seth Stammler (Yellow 00:48). USC: RyanBarber (Yellow 58:54).

game OCT. 21, 2001 GAMECOCK

SOCCER CLASSIC UM TAKES

CLASSIC WITH3-0 WIN

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box scoreMaryland (7-5-1) 0 0 0Charleston 0 1 1

GOALS : 38:32- UM: Sumed Ibrahim (Siba Mohammed)39:56- UM: Siba Mohammed (Unassisted) 46:42-UM: IanRodway (Wes Kirk, Sumed Ibrahim)

SHOTS : UM 11+6=17, CoC 2+3=5 CORNER KICKS :UM 3+3=6, CoC 0+1=1 FOULS : UM 4+2=6, CoC7+10=17 OFFSIDES : UM 0, CoC 0 GOALKEEPING :UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 3 saves, 0 goals against);CoC: Wes Martino (90 mins., 9 saves, 3 goals against)CARDS: UM: None. CoC: Allan Greenidge (Yellow61:39).

game OCT. 28, 2001

TERPS DROP 2-0DECISION ATCLEMSON

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box scoreMaryland (7-6-1, 0-3-1 ACC) 0 0 0No. 9 Clemson (12-3-0, 2-1-0 ACC) 1 1 2

GOALS : 27:43-Clemson: Paul Souders (Unassisted);61:31-Clemson: Steven Rhyne (Paul Souders)

SHOTS : UM 6+7=13, Clemson 3+8=11 CORNERKICKS : UM 2+4=6, Clemson 2+5=7 FOULS : UM6+5=11, Clemson 10+10=20 OFFSIDES : UM 0,Clemson 3 GOALKEEPING : UM: Noah Palmer (90mins., 5 saves, 2 goals against); Clemson: Doug Warren(90 mins., 3 saves, 0 goals against) CARDS: UM: SethStammler (Yellow 40:29), A.J. Herrera (Yellow 43:58).Clemson: Oguchi Onyewu (Yellow 47:50).

COLLEGE PARK, MD. - Seth Stammler andSumed Ibrahim led the Maryland charge with threepoints each as the Terps used a second-half explosion todown Holy Cross 5-1 in men’s soccer action. Marylandis now 8-6-1, while Holy Cross falls to 9-5-1.

Holy Cross owned the only score of the first half, aquick goal by Matt Ney in the sixth minute off a cornerkick sequence. Rusty Giudici was credited with the as-sist on Ney’s fifth goal of the season. The Crusaders wouldprotect the lead for the rest of the half and took the 1-0 lead into the break.

game OCT. 31, 2001 TERPS TRICK

HOLY CROSS 5-1ON HALLOWEEN

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Almost seven minutes into the second half,Maryland’s offense exploded for its first of five goals.Redshirt-sophomore A.J Herrera capitalized on a for-ward pass from Siba Mohammed to get the Terps going.Stammler was also credited with an assist.

Bryan Vitagliano got into the action seven min-utes later with his first goal of the season on an assistfrom Sumed. Sumed’s assist was his ninth of the season,moving him up to the No. 8 spot on Maryland’s singleseason assists chart.

Co-captain Beckett Hollenbach scored his firstgoal of the season to continue the Maryland run in the79th minute. The goal was unassisted and was followedless than a minute later by a Sumed breakaway. RobertSjolund had the assist, and then also found Stammlerfor the Terps’ last goal of the game in the 85th minute tofinish the scoring off with a bang.

Totten took a pass from Alecko Eskandarian and loftedthe ball over Palmer’s head for a 2-0 lead.

The Wahoos closed the book on the scoring whenthey scored just 50 seconds into the second half as Gibbsgrabbed a rebound and fed Jacob LeBlanc for the 3-0lead in the 46th minute.

Palmer was solid in the second half, keeping Virginiaat bay, making four important saves and finishing withfive in the match. Virginia’s David Comfort made threessaves in recording his 10th shutout of the season.

for goals in a game (10), assists (12), and points (32).Sumed’s nine points reset the Ludwig Field record forpoints in a game, previously six by Abe Thompson andTod Herskovitz (1995). He also tied Thompson andHersovitz’s Ludwig record for goals in a game (3).

box scoreHoly Cross (9-5-1) 0 0 0Maryland (8-6-1) 0 1 1

GOALS: 5:05-HC: Matt Ney (Rusty Guidici) 51:58-UM: A.J. Herrera (Seth Stammler, Siba Mohammed)57:18-UM: Bryan Vitagliano (Sumed Ibrahim) 78:29-UM: Beckett Hollenbach (Unassisted) 79:20-UM: SumedIbrahim (Robert Sjolund) 84:59-UM: Stammler (Sjolund)

SHOTS: UM 5+11=16, HC 3+1=4 CORNER KICKS:UM 3+3=6, HC 2+2=4 FOULS: UM 2+5=7, HC 5+4=9OFFSIDES: UM 4, HC 0 GOALKEEPING: UM: NoahPalmer (90 mins., 2 saves, 1 goal against), HC: Kevin Baker(90 mins., 4 saves, 5 goals against). CARDS: UM: SethStammler (Yellow 40:39). HC: Brian Weeks (Yellow 88:01).

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - An injury-plagued Mary-land men’s soccer team lost a 3-0 decision to No. 2 Vir-ginia in an ACC clash on a sunny Sunday afternoon atLudwig Field.

Already without last season’s leading scorer forwardAbe Thompson , the Terps played Sunday’s game with-out midfielders Wes Kirk and Ian Rodway , both side-lined with contusions to their right calf muscles, midfielderScott Buete , who was out with a left MCL sprain andmidfielder Domenic Mediate , who has been out witha facial injury suffered several weeks ago.

Add to that, sophomore defender Seth Stammler ,who went down with a right foot injury against the Cava-liers, after he started at forward due to all the injuries.

With just 13 healthy field players, the Terps foughthard in defeat.

“We battled well and did lots of things we neededto do in this game,” said head coach”Sasho Cirovski .“We were a little unfortunate in the first half and toVirginia’s credit, they finished off their chances well.”

Virginia completed the first undefeated season inthe ACC at 6-0 and moved to 15-0-1 with the win, whileMaryland stands at 8-7-1 overall and 0-4-1 in the league.The Cavaliers’ 6-0 mark in the league marks the firstleague-undefeated season since 1986, when Virginia alsoaccomplished the feat.

The Cavaliers jumped on top in the 20th minute asRyan Gibbs scored from 15 yards out on a shot thatbeat Maryland keeper Noah Palmer and deflected offthe left goalpost and into the goal for a 1-0 lead.

Virginia struck again in the 26th minute as Steve

game NOV. 4, 2001

INJURY-DEPLETEDTERPS FALL3-0 TO NO. 2UVA

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box scoreNo. 2 Virginia (15-0-1, 6-0 ACC) 2 1 3Maryland (8-7-1, 0-4-1 ACC) 0 0 0

GOALS: 19:58-UVA: Ryan Gibbs (Jacob LeBlanc, SteveTotten), 25:16-UVA: Steve Totten (Alecko Eskandarian,Kenny Arena) 45:50-UVA : Jacob LeBlanc (Ryan Gibbs).

SHOTS UM 4+4=8, UVA 4+6=10 CORNER KICKSUM 2+2=4, UVA 0+3=3 FOULS UM 11+12=23, UVA15+17=32 OFFSIDES UM 3, UVA 0.GOALKEEPING: UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 3 goalsagainst, 5 saves). UVA: David Comfort (90 mins., 0 goalsagainst, 3 saves). CARDS: UM: Seth Stammler (Yellow20:47), Beckett Hollenbach (Yellow 61:18). UVA: KennyArena (Yellow 53:10), Steve Totten (Yellow 57:56).

COLLEGE PARK, Md.- Redshirt-sophomoreSumed Ibrahim broke out with a nine-point effort tolead Maryland (9-7-1) to a 10-0 win over visiting Manhattan(6-9-1). With the win came several new school and fieldrecords for the Terps, including the new Maryland recordfor total points in a game, 32. The previously record was 24,set in 1956 against NC State.

An injury-depleted Terrapin team, playing with only12 healthy field players and six injured starters on thebench, started off slow but hit its stride when A.J.Herrera converted a penalty kick in the 17th minute.The Terps would score two more that half, freshman EllisWelker’s first collegiate goal and Sumed’s first score ofthe night.

The second half was all Maryland, with Herrera start-ing the action again for his second goal less than threeminutes into the half. Sumed scored his second goal ofthe night under two minutes later to make it a 5-0 Mary-land advantage with over 40 minutes remaining to play.Sophomore defender Philip Salyer got into the actionin the 66th minute, followed by Welker’s second goal ofthe night one minute and 20 seconds later. Welker andHerrera both ended with two goals and two assists, sec-ond only to Sumed’s three goal-three assist performance.

Maryland finished the game off with three more goals,one more by Sumed and two by sophomore RobertSjolund . The final tally, a 10-0 Maryland shutout, markedthe first time the Terps have scored 10 or more goalssince 1968 against George Washington.

All told, nine different Terrapin records were eitherbroken or tied in the game. Redshirt-sophomore SibaMohammed and Sumed both had a team-high threeassists, which tied the school record for assists in a game,previously shared by Jason Sardis (1997-00) and KeithBeach (1995-98). The Terrapins outshot Manhattan 49-4, establishing a new Ludwig Field record for shots in agame, and shattering the old record of 31 from both theMonmouth game in 1999 and the Robert Morris con-test in 1996. The Terps also reset Ludwig Field records

game NOV. 7, 2001 TERPS NOTCH

RECORD-BREAKINGGAME VS.JASPERS

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box scoreManhattan (6-9-1) 0 0 0Maryland (9-7-1) 3 7 10

GOALS : 16:41-UM : A.J. Herrera (Penalty Kick); 34:14-UM: Ellis Welker (Herrera); 36:01-UM: Sumed Ibrahim(Welker); 47:35-UM: Herrera (Philip Salyer, SibaMohammed); 48:48-UM: Sumed Ibrahim (Unassisted);65:37-UM: Salyer (Sumed Ibrahim, Siba Mohammed);66:57-UM: Welker (Sumed Ibrahim, Herrera); 71:30–UM: Robert Sjolund (Welker, Michael Dello-Russo),84:25-UM: Sumed Ibrahim (Unassisted); 89:27-UM:Sjolund (Siba Mohammed, Sumed Ibrahim)

SHOTS: UM 24-25=49, MC 0+4=4 CORNER KICKS:UM 6+5=11, MC 0+3=3 FOULS: UM 5+10=15, MC9+5=14 OFFSIDES: UM 4, MC 1 GOALKEEPING:UM: Noah Palmer (45 mins., 0 saves, 0 goals against),Kevin Schmidt (45 mins., 2 saves, 0 goals against); MC:Michael Sheehan (90 mins., 15 saves, 10 goals against).CARDS: UM: None. MC: None.

COLLEGE PARK, Md.- A.J. Herrera ledMaryland’s offense with three points and scored thegame-winner as the Terrapin men’s soccer team cruisedto a 3-0 win over ACC foe NC State at Ludwig Field. TheTerrapins are 10-7-1 (1-4-1 ACC) heading into the ACCtournament, while NC State is 4-14 (0-6 ACC).

Herrera converted the game winner in the 23rdminute off a Bryan Vitagliano cross that sailed overthe box. Ian Rodway settled it and tapped it to Herrerain front of the box for the goal. The Terps dominated thefirst half like they dominated most of the game,outshooting NC State 12-4 with close calls glancing offthe post and crossbar.

Over three minutes into the second half, Marylandscored its second goal of the day when Vitagliano startedit up again, finding Herrera this time. Herrera directed itto Sjolund, who found the back of the net past NC Stategoalie Mitchell Watson (3 saves).

The Terps’ final goal of the game was redshirt-fresh-man Jason Arnold’s first of his career. Arnold’s goal cameon assists from Sjolund and Siba Mohammed to givethe Terps the 3-0 win.

game NOV. 11, 2001 MARYLAND

GETS FIRST ACCWIN

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box scoreNC State (4-14-0, 0-6-0 ACC) 0 0 0Maryland (10-7-1, 1-4-1 ACC) 1 2 3

GOALS : 22:18-UM: A.J. Herrera (Ian Rodway, BryanVitagliano) 48:12-UM: Robert Sjolund (A.J. Herrera,Vitagliano) 70:60-UM: Jason Arnold (Sjolund, SibaMohammed)

SHOTS : UM 12+13=25, NCSU 4+3=7 CORNER KICKS :UM 4+6=10, NCSU 2+0=2 FOULS : UM 4+4=8, NCSU9+4=13 OFFSIDES : UM 5, NCSU 0 GOALKEEPING :UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 4 saves, 0 goals against); NCSU:Mitchell Watson (90 mins., 3 saves, 3 goals against) CARDS:MD: Ian Rodway (Yellow 18:51), Siba Mohammed (Yellow74:57). NCSU: Matt Tabor (Yellow 20:42).

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2002 maryland men’s soccer media guide

terrapin

21 game NOV. 25, 2001 NCAA SECOND

ROUND LOYOLA KNOCKS

TERPS OUT OFTOURNEY IN 2OT

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2019CLEMSON, S.C.- Ian Fuller, Oguchi Onyewu and

Ross Goodacre all had one goal and one assist each aseighth-ranked Clemson defeated Maryland 3-1 in thequarterfinal round in the 15th annual Atlantic CoastConference Men’s Soccer Tournament at Clemson’s RiggsField Thursday night.

Clemson improves to 15-4 overall, while Marylandfalls to 10-7-1 this season. This is the first semifinal ap-pearance for Clemson since the 1998 season, the yearthe Tigers won the championship.

Maryland struck first at the 12:05 mark.Seth Stammlerscored off a pass fromMichael Dello-Russo . Dello-Russo crossed the ball toStammler who sent a 18-yard, diagonal shot tothe left corner of the goal.

Clemson evened the score at the 18:43 point.Oguchi Onyewu cleared the ball long to Ian Fuller.Fuller laid the ball on the right to Ross Goodacrewho sent a 22-yard shot into the goal. Thiswas Goodacre’s fifth goal of the sea-son.

The Tigers took a 2-1 leadlate in the first half. RossGoodacre served his corner kickto the far post to Nick Rivera.Rivera headed the ball down toIan Fuller who headed the ball justinside the left post from six yards out.This was Fuller’s ninth goal of the season.

Oguchi Onyewu scored his fourth goalof the season and the Tigers had a 3-1 leadat the 53:56 point into the game. FabioTambosi lifted a pass from the left sideto the right post. Onyewu’s slidingshot near the right post wentinto the center of the net.

COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Scott Buete scored with1:41 left in regulation to lift the Maryland men’s soccerteam to a dramatic 1-0 over No. 18 Notre Dame in anNCAA Men’s College Cup match at Ludwig Field.

Buete took a through ball fromEllis Welker in traffic and beat Irish keeper Chris Saw-yer with a shot off his left foot under the crossbar. Theball actually tipped off Sawyer’s hand and in.

It was especially sweet for Buete, who had been side-lined since being injured in the first half of the Terps’ 5-1win over Holy Cross on Oct. 31. Buete suffered a strainedMCL in the match and had missed the last four matches.

The win was Maryland’s first in the NCAA tourna-ment since 1998, when the Terps made a run to thenational semifinals.“This game was everything I though it was going to

be,” said head coach”Sasho Cirovski . “We had twoof the hotter teams in the second half of the season.I knew going into the match, it was going to be 1-0.

It was a great game with goalkeepers making greatsaves with every ball being contested. We

were fortunate to come out on top. Wehad the willingness to fight for the vic-

tory against a strong team.”Maryland controlled the ball for much of the

game. The Terps outshot the Irish, 9-6 in thematch and Philip Salyer took all six of Maryland’scorner kicks, while Notre Dame did not record

one.The Terps’ defense was solid through the

match, in fact senior captain BeckettHollenbach called it “the Terps’ best

showing of the year.” Maryland heldNotre Dame’s leading scorer ErichBraun without a shot in the game.

Maryland freshman keeperNoah Palmer made four saves to

preserve the Terps’ sixth shutout ofthe year.

Notre Dame finished the season12-7-0 in Bobby Clark’s first season with the

Irish.“We lost a great game,” the coach said. “It

was one of those games you fight to play in.In the second half, the game opened up and I

have to give Maryland credit for making it hardfor us to get into the game. But I also credit our playerswith a hard-fought match.”

Ironically, the win is a sweet one for Maryland as itlost a nearly identical game in its last NCAA appearancein 1999, falling 1-0 to Big East school St. John’s on a goalwith 1:37 left in regulation.

COLLEGE PARK, Md.- The 2001 season cameto a close for the Maryland men’s soccer team, as a re-bound goal in the 116th minute by Loyola’s JulianoAdriano deOliveria advanced the Greyhounds to the thirdround where they will meet Saint Louis next weekend.The loss drops Maryland to 11-9-1 with Loyola at 17-1-2 for the year.

There was commotion around the final play of thegame, as Loyola gained a turnover in the midfield andbegan its attack. Greyhound midfielder Bill Law and Terps’midfielder Ian Rodway got tangled up 30 yards awayfrom the goal. DeOliveria’s goal came when he was ableto sneak a shot off his own rebound past Terrapin keeperNoah Palmer in the second overtime. Law was even-tually red carded for kicking Rodway after the goal, butdeOliveria’s goal stuck and the Greyhounds advanced.

The game, played in heavy rain that would come andgo making for sloppy conditions, yielded stats that wereeven in almost every facet. Loyola held a 5-4 advantagein shots-on-goal, while Maryland took one more shotoverall (12-11) and had three more fouls (22-19). Palmerhad four saves in the loss, while Loyola keeper Reb Beattyhad three in the shutout win. A hard-fought game byboth teams, three cards were given including the redcard to Law.

game NOV. 15, 2001 ACC

TOURNAMENT TERPS FALL TO

NO. 8 CLEMSON

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box scoreNo. 8 Clemson (15-4-0) 2 1 3Maryland (10-7-1) 1 0 1

GOALS: 12:05- UM: Seth Stammler (Michael Dello-Russo); 18:43- CU: Ross Goodacre (Oguchi Onyewu, IanFuller); 41:44- CU: Ian Fuller (Nick Rivera, Paul Souders);53:56- CU: Oguchi Onyewu (Fabio Tambosi)

SHOTS: UM 3+5=8, CU 7+5=12 CORNER KICKS :UM 1+1=2, CU 4+0=4 FOULS : UM 7+9=16, CU13+16=29 OFFSIDES : UM 2, CU 0 GOALKEEPING:UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 6 saves, 3 goals against), CU:Doug Warren (90 mins., 1 save, 1 goal against) CARDS:UM: Ian Rodway (Yellow- 24:30), Sumed Ibrahim (Yel-low- 54:23), Michael Dello-Russo (Yellow- 55:49). CU:Oscar Bringsved (Yellow- 14:38), Paul Souders (Yellow-60:02).

Scott Buete scored with 1:41left in regulation to liftMaryland to the NCAASecond Round.

box scoreNotre Dame (12-7-0) 0 0 0Maryland (11-8-1) 0 1 1

GOALS: 88:19- UM: Scott Buete (Ellis Welker)

SHOTS: UM 5+4=9, ND 3+3=6 CORNER KICKS :UM 4+2=6, ND 0+0=0 FOULS : UM 7+9=16, ND10+7=17 OFFSIDES : UM 1+1=2, ND 1+1=2GOALKEEPING: UM: Noah Palmer (90 mins., 1 save,1 goal against), ND: Chris Sawyer (90 mins., 1 save, 1goal against) CARDS: UM Seth Stammler (Yellow- 37:10).ND Justin Ratcliffe (Yellow 27:43), Jack Stewart (Yellow36:54).

game NOV. 23, 2001

NCAA FIRSTROUND

BUETE LIFTSTERPS TOSECOND ROUND

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(ot)

box scoreLoyola (17-1-2) 0 0 0 1 1Maryland (11-9-1) 0 0 0 0 0

GOALS: 115:54- LC: Juliano Adriano deOliveria (Un-assisted)

SHOTS: UM 1+7+2+2=12, LC 3+3+1+4=11 CORNERKICKS: UM 0+5+2+1=8, LC 3+2+2+0=7 FOULS: UM11+8+2+1=22, LC 11+6+1+1=19 OFFSIDES: UM 0,LC 0 SAVES: UM- Noah Palmer (90 mins., 4 saves, 1goal against) LC- Reb Beatty (90 mins., 3 saves, 1 goalagainst) CARDS: UM- A.J. Herrera (Yellow 72:23). LC-Michael Nelson (Yellow 61:51), Bill Law (Red 115:54).