2005 George Mason Women`s Soccer Media Guide.pmd

Athletic Directory
2
Colonial Athletic
Association
3
CAA Results, 2004
22
Coaching Staff
Head Coach, Diane Drake
4
Assistant Coach,
Carl Wateridge
5
Assistant Coach,
Robert Liessem Jr.
5
George Mason University
By the Numbers
31
Honor Roll
24-25
Media Information
2
Player Profiles
9-19
Alecci, Amy
9
Arkwright, Christine
18
Bahr, Petria
18
Brown, Olivia
13
Daulton, Jaime
13
Davenport, Kasey
15
Duarte, Nilani
18
Fack, Sarah
15
Feldman, Alison
16
Hart, Jessie
18
Killiany, Colleen
19
MacDonald, Danielle
10
Paris, Jessica
16
Portell, Kristin
11
Raveia, Mary
19
Salichs, Laura
17
Schmidt, Amanda
Sorenson, Amy
Sparks, Jenny
Williams, L.J.
Wiggins, Rachel
Woods, Katy
Program History
Records
Individual Records
Series Records
Team Records
Year-By-Year Records
Roster, All-Time
Roster, 2005
Season Outlook
Season Results, 2004
Season Review, 2004
Season Stats, 2004
The University
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12
19
14
17
19
23
26-29
26
27
27
28-29
30
6
7-8
21
21
20
32-39
CREDITS
The 2005 George Mason University
women’s soccer media guide is an official publication of the George Mason
Sports Information Department, with all
graphic design by Richard Coco. Cover
design by Jeff O’Bier. Copy compiled by
Carlton White. Edited by Richard Coco,
Diane Drake and Maureen Nasser. Photos by John Aronson. Printing by Winchester Printing.
Quick Facts
General Information
Location
Enrollment
Founded
Nickname
Colors
Facility
Capacity
Surface
Press Box
Affiliation
Conference
President
Ath. Dir.
4400 University Drive
Fairfax, VA 22030-444
28,874
1957 (University Status, ‘72)
Patriots
Green and Gold
George Mason Stadium
5,000
Bermuda Perscription Turf
(703) 993-3033
NCAA Division I
Colonial Athletic Association
Dr. Alan G. Merten
Thomas J. O’Connor
Women’s Soccer Program
Head Coach
Mason Record
Career Record
Office Phone
E-mail
Asst. Coach
Office Phone
Asst. Coach
Office Phone
2004 Record
CAA Record
Starters R/L
Letterwinners R/L
Newcomers
Diane Drake
10-7-3 (One Year)
55-51-9 (Six Years)
(703) 993-3295
[email protected]
Carl Wateridge
(703) 993-3213
Robert E. Liessem Jr.
(703) 993-3199
10-7-3
5-2-2/T-3rd
9/3
12/6
7
Sports Information
Dir. of PR
Maureen Nasser
Office Phone (703) 993-3263
E-mail
[email protected]
Asst. Dir. of P.R. Richard Coco
Office Phone (703) 993-3264
Dir. of Multimedia Jeff O’Bier
Office Phone (703) 993-3261
Asst. SID
Maggie Walsh
Office Phone (703) 993-3268
E-mail
[email protected]
SID Main Phone (703) 993-3260
SID Fax
(703) 993-3259
Patriot Sports Hotline
(703) 993-4074
Web site
www.GoMason.com
Mail. Add. MS 3A5/Sports Info.
George Mason University
4400 University Drive
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
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ON THE COVERS: Front - Danielle
MacDonald, Kristin Portell; Back - Amy
Sorenson, Amy Alecci.
At left, members of the 2004 women’s soccer team celebrate after a goal.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
1
Sports Information
The Sports Information Department is located in the Recreation Sports
Complex (Fieldhouse) on the West Campus at the intersection of University Drive and Rt. 123 (Ox Road). The mailing address is:
MS 3A5/Sports Info
George Mason University
4400 University Drive
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
Media Services
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Patriot Sports Hotline ....................................................(703) 993-4074
Web site .................................................................www.GoMason.com
Sports Information Office .......................................................993-3260
Sports Information Fax ...........................................................993-3259
Credentials
Press credentials for all home women’s soccer matches can be obtained by calling Richard Coco at (703) 993-3264 or Maureen Nasser
at (703) 993-3263. Additionally, credentials can be obtained by faxing
a credential request on official letterhead to the office at (703) 9933259. Please make requests at least 24 hours in advance.
Interviews Policy
Locker rooms are off limits to the press; however, the Sports Information staff will provide athletes and coaches for interviews after a 10minute cool down period following an event. Please notify the SID
prior to the event.
Media Parking
Parking is available in front of the Recreation and Sports Complex
and George Mason Stadium.
Media Services
Media guides, game-by-game statistics and final results packets are
available for the media at each home match upon request. Workroom
space can be made for home matches when requested, and limited
space is available in the George Mason Stadium press box.
Colonial Athletic Association
For information on CAA women’s soccer, call (804) 754-1616. CAA
headquarters are located at 8625 Patterson Avenue, Richmond, VA,
23229. The fax number is (804) 754-1830. To reach the official CAA
web site, go to www.CAAsports.com.
Mason Sports Online
Final updated statistics, schedules, results and releases can be found
24-hours a day on George Mason’s official athletic web site,
www.GoMason.com.
Athletic Directory
Area Code: 703
Women’s Soccer
Diane Drake, Head Coach .................................................. 993-3295
Carl Wateridge, Assistant Coach ........................................ 993-3213
Robert E. Liessem Jr., Assistant Coach .............................. 993-3199
Athletic Administration
Athletics Department .............................................. 993-3200/3220
Butler, D.R., Associate AD/Community Relations ............ 993-3251
Collins, Sue, Sr. Assoc. AD/Administration & Compliance 993-3204
Cooper, Bruce, Assistant AD/Facilities ............................. 993-3225
Gregg, Debby, Administrative Assistant, AD’s Office ....... 993-3256
Hairston, Todd, Director of Compliance ........................... 993-3230
Holt, Wendy, Administrator/Internal Operations ............... 993-3210
Houston, Lee Ann, Manager, RSC/Scheduling Coord. ..... 993-3190
Jaksic, Sharon, Coaches’ Secretary ................................... 993-3238
Kirk, Tracy, Assistant AD/Event Administration .............. 993-3195
Marsh, Jay, Associate AD/Events & Fieldhouse ............... 993-3191
McDade, Mickey, Sr. Associate AD/
Operations, Facilities & Administration ........... 993-2578
McNamee, Kevin, Deputy AD/Intercollegiate Sports ....... 993-3209
Medford, Jeanne, Assistant AD/Finance ........................... 993-3211
Meyers, James, Director, Tickets and Promotions ............ 993-3265
Murphy, Jim, Assistant AD/Aquatics & Rec. Sports ........ 993-3290
O’Connor, Tom, Assistant VP/Director of Athletics ......... 993-3210
Rogers, Nena, Director, Life Skills ................................... 993-3594
Ruge, Andy, Associate AD/Marketing & External Affairs . 993-3271
Schulien, Kathi, Business Office Manager ....................... 993-3211
Shayka, Ron, Assistant AD/Admin. & Info. Systems ....... 993-2809
Voltz, Sherri, Coaches’ Secretary ...................................... 993-3221
Woodfork, Cindy, Manager, Athletic Services/Equip. ...... 993-3226
Academic Services
Wilson, Debbie, Associate AD for Academic Services ..... .993-3254
Hunte, Cheryl Ann, Senior Academic Coordinator .......... 993-3250
Bruno, Pam, Academic Coordinator ................................. 993-3252
Reese, George, Academic Coordinator .............................. 993-3252
Shepard-White, Felisha, Academic Coordinator .............. 993-3704
Sports Information
Nasser, Maureen, Director of Public Relations ................. 993-3263
Coco, Richard, Asst. Director of Public Relations ............ 993-3264
O’Bier, Jeff, Director, Multimedia .................................... 993-3261
Walsh, Maggie, Asst. SID ................................................. 993-3268
Patriot Club
Patriot Club ....................................................................... 993-3215
Correll, James “Buzzy”, Exec. Dir. of Patriot Club ......... 993-3217
Baker, Max, Assistant Executive Director/Patriot Club .... 993-3216
Training and Conditioning
George Mason University is an equal opportunity and affirmative action
employer committed to the principle that access to study or employment
opportunities afforded by the University, including all benefits and
privileges, be accorded to each person - student, faculty, staff member or
applicants for employment or admission on the basis of individual merit
and without regard to race, color, religion, national origin, disability,
sexual orientation, veteran status, sex or age (except where sex or age is a
bona fide occupational qualification.)
2
Pullen, Linda, Coordinator of Sports Medicine ................ 993-3280
Bagherzadeh, Shereen, Assistant Trainer ......................... 993-3277
Corbatto, Debi, Assistant Trainer ...................................... 993-3280
Hamer, Todd, Assistant Strength & Cond. Coach ............. 993-2306
Handerahan, Robert, Head Strength & Cond. Coord. ..... 993-3237
Russo, Christina, Coord. of Fitness and Personal Training . 993-3935
Yamrus, Ray, Head Athletic Trainer .................................. 993-3280
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
Fresh off the celebration of its 20th Anniversary, the Colonial
Athletic Association enters its third decade with two new members
and an expanded geographic footprint that gives the conference a
presence in five of the nation’s nine largest metropolitan areas.
The addition of Georgia State University in Atlanta and Northeastern University in Boston brings the membership of the CAA to
12 and enhances the league’s reputation as one of the nation’s top
collegiate conferences both athletically and academically. On the
playing field, the CAA has produced 16 national team champions in
five different sports, 33 individual national champions, 11 national
coaches of the year, 11 national players of the year and 12 Honda
Award winners. Even more impressive, however, are the honors accumulated away from competition, which include five Rhodes Scholars and 16 NCAA post-graduate scholars. In 2004-05, the CAA had
seven CoSIDA Academic All-Americans and more than 1,500 student-athletes posted at least a 3.2 grade point average while lettering
in a varsity sport and received the CAA Commissioner’s Academic
Award.
The landscape of the conference now stretches along the majority of the East Coast, and includes six of the nation’s top 25 media
markets – New York (1), Philadelphia (4), Boston (5), Washington,
D.C. (8), Atlanta (9) and Baltimore (23).
The number of television homes
in the CAA market exceeds 19 million.
The CAA
conducts championships in 21
sports. Male
athletes compete
for
championships in baseball, basketball, cross
country, golf,
lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving,
tennis, track &
field and wrestling.
Female athletes battle
for conference titles in
basketball, cross country, field
hockey, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball,
swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and
volleyball. The CAA will also begin sponsorship of a 12-team Division I-AA football league in the fall of 2007.
In men’s basketball, the CAA has earned a reputation as a “giant killer” in the NCAA Tournament. Since 1981, CAA schools have
posted 12 wins over higher-seeded teams. In 2004-05, the conference had four teams earn post-season berths for the first time in league
history and five teams were ranked among the top 100 in the RPI. In
women’s basketball, the CAA has had two teams earn post-season
berths for five consecutive years. Perennial power Old Dominion,
which has won the past 14 conference titles, has captured three national championships (1979, 1980, 1985) and reached the title game
again in 1997.
The conference has also excelled in many other sports. CAA
squads have won 10 field hockey national titles since the championship began in 1981, which is not only more than any other conference but represents nearly half of all titles won. In baseball, at least
two CAA teams have earned NCAA Tournament berths for seven of
the past eight seasons. The CAA is annually ranked among the nation’s
top 10 conferences in men’s and women’s soccer, and has traditionally sent multiple teams to the NCAA Tournament. In 2004-05, 24
league teams earned NCAA Tournament berths in 15 sports, with the
CAA having multiple representatives in men’s and women’s soccer,
field hockey, men’s and women’s golf, men’s lacrosse and men’s
tennis. There were 29 CAA student-athletes who earned All-America
honors.
CAA member institutions are also committed to excellence in
the classroom. The Colonial Academic Alliance was created in 2002
by the league’s presidents with a goal of expanding their partnership
to all aspects of university life outside of intercollegiate athletics.
Among the programs already established are an undergraduate research conference, coordination of study abroad programs and granting visiting academic status to student-athletes traveling to an away
contest so that they have access to libraries, academic resource centers and computer labs.
In 2002, two faculty members from CAA institutions were
awarded academia’s most coveted distinction – the Nobel Prize. John
B. Fenn, a research professor in the Department of Chemistry at Virginia Commonwealth University, received the Nobel Prize for chemistry, and Vernon Smith, a professor of economics and law at George
Mason University, shared the Nobel Prize in
economic sciences.
Commissioner Thomas E. Yeager has
guided the CAA since
its inception. Core
members George
Mason University, James
Madison
University,
the University of North
Carolina at
Wilmington,
Old Dominion University,
Virginia Commonwealth University and the College of William &
Mary were joined by the
University of Delaware, Drexel
University, Hofstra University and Towson
University in 2001. Georgia State University and
Northeastern University became members of the conference on July
1, 2005.
The CAA traces its roots back to 1983 when three of its current
members- George Mason, James Madison, and William and Mary were aligned with East Carolina University, the United States Naval
Academy and the University of Richmond as a basketball league
(ECAC South). During the next two years, the league added 11 sports,
acquired two new members (UNC Wilmington and American University) and decided to form a new association. The transformation
from ECAC South to CAA took place on June 6, 1985. By the fall of
1986, the league gained automatic bids to NCAA Championships in
men’s basketball, soccer, baseball and women’s basketball and formed
an officials’ bureau. Old Dominion became a member of the CAA in
1991-92 and Virginia Commonwealth University joined the conference prior to the 1995-96 season.
From all-star athletes to Nobel Prize winning faculty, the CAA
takes great pride in producing performers who stand out both on the
playing field and in the classroom.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
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DIANE DRAKE
HEAD COACH
Second Season at George Mason
Seventh Season as a Head Coach
Year-by-Year Records
at Georgetown
Overall Record (Pct.)
Big East (Pct.)
8-10-2 (.450)
2-3-1 (.417)
8-9-2 (.474)
2-3-1 (.417)
11-7-1 (.605)
1-4-1 (.250)
11-7-0 (.611)
3-3-0 (.500)
7-11-1 (.394)
0-6-0 (.000)
45-44-6 (.505)
8-19-3 (.317)
at George Mason
Year
Overall Record (Pct.)
CAA (Pct.)
2004
10-7-3 (.575)
5-2-2 (.667)
Career Totals 55-51-9 (.517)
13-21-5 (.397)
Year
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
GU Totals
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Diane Drake continues a new chapter in
the history of George Mason women’s soccer
as she begins her second season as mentor of
the Patriots. She is only the third head coach
in the program’s 23-year history.
In her first season in 2004, Drake led
George Mason to a solid 10-7-3 overall record
and recorded a stellar 5-2-2 mark in the Colonial Athletic Association. Two of her athletes were named to the NSCAA all-Region
team, while four others earned all-CAA recognition, including goalkeeper Sarah
Coughlin, who became the first Mason
women’s soccer player selected CAA Defender of the Year.
Drake came to Mason after spending five
seasons (1999-2003) at the helm of
Georgetown, where she was the all-time
winningest coach in program history with an
overall record of 45-44-6. Under her tutelage,
the Hoyas won one ECAC Championship,
went to two Big East Championships and
posted back-to-back 11-win seasons.
The Hoyas finished the 2003 season with
a 7-11-1 record, reversing the finish from the
previous season where Georgetown finished
with an overall mark of 11-7 and a Big East
profile of 3-3. The 2002 Georgetown squad
earned its first victory over a top-10 opponent with a thrilling 4-3 victory over No. 9
Notre Dame, qualifying for the Big East
Championship for the second time in four
years.
The 2002 Hoyas led the BIG EAST in
several offensive categories, including goals
per game and assists, while climbing as high
as No. 7 in the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA)/adidas Division I Mid-Atlantic Regional Poll and Soccer Buzz Mid-Atlantic Regional Poll. The
2002 team earned the best winning percentage in program history (.611), and narrowly
missed securing an at-large bid to the NCAA
Tournament, prompting Soccer Buzz magazine to write, “We have to admit we had
Georgetown in our field of 64.”
In her first season at Georgetown in
1999, Drake elevated the team to new heights.
Postseason
Big East Tournament
ECAC Championship
Big East Tournament
Postseason
CAA Tournament
The Hoyas earned their first-ever postseason
berth since the program’s inception in 1993
and recorded its first eight-win season since
1994 as the Hoyas finished 8-10-2 under her
tutelage. Drake also led the team to three conference wins for the first time in its history.
She matched her win total in 2000 before embarking on a record setting 2001 campaign
in which the Hoyas posted their first 10-win
season - an 11-7-1 record - en route to winning its first ECAC Championship.
Prior to her arrival at Georgetown, Drake
served as an assistant coach at the University
of North Carolina-Greensboro from 1996 to
1998. Before arriving at UNCG, Drake was
an assistant coach at Louisiana State University during the 1995 season. Drake was an
assistant coach at Wright State in 1994.
An Olympic Development Regional
team player in 1990, 1991 and 1995, Drake
played for the GSE Cardinals, USASA National semifinalists in 1994. During the summers, Drake has played in the W-League of
the USISL. Recently, she was a member of
the Northern Virginia Majestics in 2000. She
also played on the National semifinalist Maryland Pride in 1999 and she was a member of
the 1998 National Champion Raleigh Wings.
Beginning with the 2004 season, the
NSCAA tabbed Drake as its College Representative for all divisions of women’s college
soccer. As the spokesperson of this constituent group, she is expected to keep the NSCAA
Board of Directors advised of appropriate issues regarding college women’s soccer, acting as the communication liaison between the
Board and all levels and organizations
(NCAA, NAIA, NCCAA, junior college) of
college women’s soccer, including attending
meetings of those organizations and their subdivisions at the national convention.
A 1993 graduate from the University of
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
Dayton with a degree in Psychology, Drake
was a four-year letterwinner on the soccer
team. Serving as team captain her senior year,
she was honored as Dayton’s NCAA Woman
of the Year, and was selected as the Midwestern Collegiate Player of the Year.
In 1996, she received her master’s degree in kinesiology from Louisiana State
University. Drake holds a United States Soccer Federation “A” license, an NSCAA Premiere Badge and was on the Region I Senior
ODP Staff as the assistant coach of the U-14
Region I team. She co-authored a book on
the U.S. National team titled “Goals of Their
Own”, which is a complete look into the history of the U.S. women’s program from 19851999. She resides in South Riding, Va., with
her husband, Rob, and their two children,
Tyler and Dru.
THE DRAKE FILE
Years at George Mason:
Second
Record at Mason
10-7-3
Overall Record:
55-52-9
Alma Mater, Year:
Dayton, ‘93
Degree:
Psychology
Master’s, Year: Louisiana State, ‘96
Degree:
Kinesiology
Most Wins:
11 (2001, 2002)
Winning Seasons:
3
ROBERT LIESSEM JR.
ASSISTANT COACH
First Season at George Mason
Third Season as an Assistant Coach
the program as the Patriots’ goalkeeping
coach.
Liessem spent the 2003 and 2004 seasons as an assistant and goalkeeping coach at
Colonial Athletic Association school Old
Dominion. He has been the head goalkeeper
coach with the Virginia Olympic Development Program Girls State team since 2002,
and has also served as a goalkeeping coach
for the Premier Goalkeeping School, Elite
Soccer Academy and the New Jersey ODP.
A financial planner for the mortgage division president of Commonwealth Financial
Services since July 2002, Liessem, who is a
native of New Jersery, played high school
soccer in Indian Hills, where he received allleague, all-area, all-suburban and all-state
honors. He also played in a semi-pro men’s
league from 1985-89.
A 1987 graduate of Longwood University with a Bachelor’s degree in business adRobert E. Liessem, Jr. enters first sea- ministration, Liessem played four years of
son as an assistant coach with the George college soccer for the Lancers, where he was
Mason women’s soccer team and his third named to the all-league, all-state and all-south
overall in collegiate coaching. He will assist teams.
CARL WATERIDGE
ASSISTANT COACH
Second Season at George Mason
Second Season as an Assistant Coach
Carl Wateridge enters his second season
as an assistant coach with the George Mason
women’s soccer team. He will assist in all aspects of the program, including on-field coaching, film breakdown and scouting. He will also
be the Patriots recruiting coordinator.
A native of London, Wateridge has held
various soccer coaching and administrative
positions since 1994. He is in his fourth season as an assistant coach with the Bethesda
(Md.) Excel women’s soccer team of the
Bethesda Soccer Club. In 2003, the Excel won
the state and regional championship crowns
before falling in sudden-death penalty-kicks
in the finals of the U-16 National Championship. As an assistant, Wateridge assists with
individual player development, scouting reports and classroom teaching.
Wateridge came to the U.S. in 1998 as a
regional manager for Britannia Soccer Camps,
where he was responsible for creating and
conducting summer soccer camps across New
England, New York and Pennsylvania, ranging in size of up to 130 players. He established two new field offices within the Northeast region and oversaw more than 100 camps
and clinics.
A 1998 graduate of the University of
London–Royal Holloway with a Bachelor of
Science degree in mathematics and management studies, Wateridge earned his English
Football Association Coaching License upon
graduation. During his time as a student, he
played semi-professionally for the Staines
Town and Egham Town soccer clubs. In May
2004, he received his Master’s in Business
Administration from George Washington
University, and he is a candidate for the
United States Soccer Federation “C” Coaching License.
Wateridge, single, resides in Washington, D.C.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
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Front Row (L to R): Jessie Hart, Jenny Sparks, Nilani Duarte, Colleen Killany, Christine Arkwright, Katy Woods, Amanda Schmidt; Middle Row (L to R): Head Coach Diane
Drake, Petria Bahr, Sarah Fack, Jaime Daulton, Laura Salichs, Danielle MacDonald, Amy Alecci, Rachel Wiggins, Emily Napolitano (no longer with team), Assistant Coach
Carl Wateridge; Back Row (L to R): Mary Raveia, Alison Feldman, Kristin Portell, Kasey Davenport, Olivia Brown, Jessica Paris, Amy Sorenson, L.J. Williams.
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2005 WOMEN
’S S
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WOMEN’S
SOC
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ROS
NO
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7
8
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NAME
Olivia Brown
Jenny Sparks
Jessie Hart
Danielle MacDonald #
Jessica Paris
L.J. Williams
Rachel Wiggins
Amanda Schmidt
Petria Bahr
Amy Sorenson
Laura Salichs
Kristin Portell #
Amy Alecci
Alison Feldman
Nilani Duarte
Mary Raveia
Colleen Killiany
Kasey Davenport
Sarah Fack
Katy Woods
Jaime Daulton
Christine Arkwright
POS
GK
M/F
D/M
M
M/D
M
F
D
F
M
D
D
M
D
M
D
F/M
GK
M/F
D
M/D
F
YR
Jr.
Fr.
Fr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.*
Jr.
Fr
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
So.*
So.
Fr
Jr.
Fr.
HT
5’8”
5’6”
5’5”
5’2”
5’8”
5’3”
5’8”
5’1”
5’7”
5’6”
5’5”
5’5”
5’4”
5’8”
5’4”
5’10”
5’5”
5’7”
5’7”
5’3”
5’4”
5’4”
HOMETOWN/H.S. (LAST SCHOOL)
Des Moines, Wash./Highline
Costa Mesa, Calif./Costa Mesa
Springfield, Va./Hayfield
Burke, Va./Paul VI
Clifton, Va./Centreville
Fairfax Station, Va./Lake Braddock
Acworth, Ga./Darlington
Princeton Junction, N.J./West Windsor-Plainsboro
Alexandria, Va./Mt. Vernon H.S.
Albuquerque, N.M./Eldorado
Alpharetta, Ga./Milton
Woodbridge, Va./Woodbridge
Cockeysville, Md./Notre Dame Preparatory
Potomac, Md./Winston Churchill
Costa Mesa, Calif./Costa Mesa
Fairfax, Va./W.T. Woodson
Fairfax, Va./W.T. Woodson
Williamsburg, Va./Walsingham Acad. (C. Newport)
Algonquin, Ill./H.D. Jacobs
Elkton, Md./St. Mark’s (Del.)
Chesterfield, Va./Manchester
Annandale, Va./Falls Church
# - 2005 Captains
* - Includes redshirt season
Head Coach:
Assistant Coaches:
6
Diane Drake (Dayton 1993, 2nd year at Mason, 7th overall)
Carl Wateridge (Univ. of London-Royal Holloway 1998, 2nd year)
Robert E. Liessem Jr. (Longwood 1987, 1st year)
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
2005 SEASON OUTLOOK
History was made 20 years ago at George Mason University
when the school’s fourth-year women’s soccer program defeated fourtime defending national champion North Carolina in Fairfax in the
finals of the NCAA Tournament to capture the 1985 NCAA Championship.
It was one of the proudest and stunning moments in Patriots
lore. Mason established itself as a national staple in collegiate
women’s soccer and went on to reach the NCAA “Final Four” four
times, while making 11 tournament appearances in 16 years.
Twenty-years later, Mason enters the 2005 season having missed
the NCAA Tournament for the seventh
consecutive season. But,
after finishing 2004 with a 10-7-3
record under then
first-year head coach Diane
Drake and posting 10 or more regular season
wins for the first
time since 2000, the Patriots are
not going to let
last year’s ending dictate their future. In fact, following a 5-6-1 start, Mason went
unbeaten
at 5-0-2 in its last seven regular season games, making its 10th straight
Colonial
Athletic Association
Tournament before falling in the
first round.
“It was disappointing to lose
in the first round of the Colonial
Athletic Association Tournament,” stated Drake, who enters her second year at Mason with a 55-51-9 overall
record in six seasons as a
head coach. “It was a bad way to
end the season after we were really
starting to gain momentum.”
“But, I’m proud of our players for rising to the occasion during our seven-game unbeaten
streak,” she continued. “In the beginning of the year, the
team was uncomfortable because no one felt secure about
their starting role. We probably lost some games early on that
we could have won if our players had confidence in their roles.
Returning players had to prove to me that they still deserved that
starting position, so players were not always producing to their level.
“We had to imprint a new style on this team that didn’t fully
develop until late in the season. We found that passion for playing
with one another during the second half of the year. Last season was
one of my most fulfilling as a head coach because the players were
very receptive to the changes and interested in learning as a means to
gain an advantage. Change can be good because it adds excitement.”
An exciting change for the Patriots this season are the return of
nine starters and 13 letterwinners from the 2004 squad, including
four of their top five scorers and the majority of the defensive unit.
Drake is expecting those units to continue where they left off last
season.
“Our team’s strength will be our depth and versatility at midfield,
where we have several players who can have five and six goal-type
seasons,” she explained. “We return key personnel at those positions, including several starters who can be used interchangeably in
the midfield or along the back line. For us to be successful, we need
point production from a half dozen players.”
Notable absences, however, include players who received regional accolades in Sarah Coughlin, Allison Cowan and Sarah
Wilkinson. Coughlin earned CAA Defender of the Year honors as a
goalkeeper, while Wilkinson led the team in scoring and Cowan was
a four-year starter.
“There are three things that we’ll lose that those players possessed: leadership, experience and determination,” Drake expressed.
“Losing those qualities from such pivotal players will be challenging. They were able to back whatever they said on the field and were
respected greatly by their peers. But, we also have four returning
seniors, who are all impacting leaders and will guide the team this
year. They are ready to step in and also lead by example.”
Among the returning seniors are captains Danielle MacDonald
in the midfield and Kristen Portell on defense. Joining them will be
senior midfielders Amy Sorenson and Amy Alecci.
MacDonald, an all-CAA selection in 2004, ranked third on the
team in points with 11 after scoring three goals and finishing second
on the squad with five assists. Portell, who started 19 of 19 games on
defense, also contributed an assist. Sorenson and Alecci each played
key roles in the midfield as Sorenson scored two goals and started 19
contests, while Alecci, who was one of two players to start all 20
games, totaled one goal and two assists.
“MacDonald is poised to have her best season yet,” mentioned
Drake. “She has a lot of skill and talent and had a great year
for us in 2004. This year, if she continues to raise her level
of expectations for herself, she could have 20 points on
the season. Portell is a stellar 1v1 defender and has
great leadership on the field. She reads the game better than most. I know that she will get done what needs
to get done.
“Sorenson will continue to be a staple for us in the
midfield. She plays great defense, is very fit, can spray the
ball well and is not afraid to tackle. We want to get her in
position to shoot more because she has a good shot on goal.
Alecci has experience, speed and determination. She had
better point production her sophomore season than last year,
but she did other things for us like covering the field defensively and linking the back line with the forward line. We
expect her to do that again as well as rekindle her point
production this year.”
The four senior leaders will be
counted on as they lead the team through
another system change. Drake will implement a 4-3-3 system alongside the 4-4-2
formation she coached last season.
“With our 4-3-3 and 4-4-2 systems,
Sophomore Sarah Fack
we’re now going to be floating more
players into different positions than we
were in the past,” Drake commented. “This way, we can better adjust
to our opponents and find the best home for our players in the system that best suits their productivity.”
Drake and the Patriots are expecting to get more versatility up
front by playing with three forwards. Among the returning forwards
are sophomore starter Sarah Fack and sophomore Rachel Wiggins.
Fack, a CAA all-Rookie selection, ranked second on the team in
scoring with five goals and two assists for 12 points in 15 of 20
starts. Wiggins appeared in 20 contests, earning four starts, and collected three assists.
“We lost three great forwards in seniors Wilkinson, Dianna
Russini and Franmarie Gregg,” stated Drake. “Fack and Wiggins are
both capable of scoring for us. Fack knows where to put the ball and
makes great tactical decisions. Wiggins was our most dangerous for-
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
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0
0
5
O
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7
2
0
0
5
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ward during Spring scrimmages and she’s
capable of being a 10-goal scorer. However,
I wanted more opportunities for this team to
get behind defenders and to have better opportunities. For Fack and Wiggins to be successful, they will need some complementary
speed up front. So, I moved us to a threefront system with Alecci or MacDonald along
the forward line. The team looked comfortable with the formation change, and with our
personnel, we’ll be much more dangerous
because we can shift systems should the need
arise.”
Also expected to compete for time at the
forward positions will be junior Jamie
Daulton along with freshmen Nilani Duarte,
Jenny Sparks, Colleen Killiany and Christine Arkwright. Daulton appeared in five
games off the bench for Mason last season,
while Schmidt, who started 13 of 18 games
at defense a year ago, will move up to the
forward line in 2005.
Duarte and Sparks were teammates at
Costa Mesa High School in California, where
they won the 2003 California Interscholastic
Federation championship and were three-time
undefeated Premier League champions.
Killiany and Arkwright are both three-time
all-district selections. Killiany is from W.T.
Woodson High School and hails from Fairfax,
Va., while Arkwright attended Falls Church
High School and is from Arlington, Va.
Drake is confident that the fluidity of the
midfield unit will produce solid results over
the course of the season. Led by Sorenson,
Alecci and MacDonald, as many as 10 athletes could see time in the midfield, including freshman Mary Raveia, who was also a
three-time all-district winner out of nearby
W.T. Woodson, and junior starter L.J. Williams, who totaled two goals and three assists
for seven points while starting 15 of 17 games.
Both Williams’ and Raveia’s seasons are in
question, however, due to injuries.
“It’s likely L.J. will have to sit out the
season as a red-shirt,” commented Drake.
“She could return late in the year and we’ll
make that decision as a staff as the season
unfolds. Raveia is also having problems that
could limit her effectiveness for us this year.”
Defensively, “we have our entire starting unit returning with Portell, sophomores
Laura Salichs and Jessica Paris, and
Amanda Schmidt,” said Drake.
Salichs started 11 of 19 games for the
Patriots on defense, scoring a key goal against
CAA rival Hofstra. Paris, a CAA all-Rookie
honoree, also started all 20 games and ranked
fourth on the team in scoring with 10 points
on four goals and two assists. Schmidt appeared in 18 games with 13 starts.
“Paris and Portell are expected to be the
anchors of our defense this season,” expressed
Drake. “They are the core of that unit. Paris
Sophomore Rachel Wiggins
has extraordinary vision and versatility. She’s
confident and she has very few weaknesses
to her game. Salichs is very polished on the
ball and continues to grow with every game.
Schmidt had a great year for us as a starter on
defense for most of the season. She is a very
capable scorer and could possess some of the
best physical speed on the team, so we could
be moving her forward more which will give
other players an opportunity to step up.”
Looking to step up will be sophomore
Alison Feldman and freshmen Jessie Hart
and Emily Napolitano. Feldman saw action
in 18 games, earning six starts, and posted
Sophomore Jessica Paris
one assist. Hart attended nearby Hayfield
High School and hails from Springfield, Va.,
while Napolitano played for Bordentown
Regional in Bordentown, N.J.
The biggest question mark headed into
the 2005 season will be at goalkeeper where
junior Olivia Brown will battle red-shirt
sophomore Kasey Davenport for the starting position. Brown started two games last
year and made seven appearances, earning a
2-1-0 record with 24 saves and four goals allowed. Davenport, who is a transfer from
Christopher Newport University, made great
strides last year and over the Spring scrimmages as she makes the adjustment to Division I soccer.
“That position is wide open and will go
to the player that comes out of preseason the
strongest, the most confident, and the one who
appears to learn the most from their mistakes,”
said Drake.
Following its preseason, Mason enters
a tough 19-game regular season schedule that
includes seven first-time opponents. Added
to the mix will be the addition of new conference foes Northeastern and Georgia State as
the CAA expands to 12 teams for the first time
in league history.
The Patriots begin 2005 with their firstever trip to Hawai’i, where they will face two
teams for the first time in host Hawai’i and
Brigham Young on back-to-back days. Mason returns to the mainland on Aug. 30 for a
visit to area-rival American.
Mason’s first home game will be a firsttime meeting versus St. Joseph’s on Tuesday,
Sept. 6. Other home contests against first-time
non-conference opponents include Yale (Fri.,
Sept. 16) and East Tennessee State (Sun.,
Sept. 18). The Patriots open their CAA slate
at home versus Towson on Saturday, Sept. 24,
in a doubleheader with the men’s program.
Five home games dot the schedule in
October, including the first-ever meeting
against new conference foe Northeastern Friday, Oct. 7. Mason is slated to face Georgia
State in Atlanta on Sunday, Oct. 16. Archrival and 2004 College Cup qualifier James
Madison visits Fairfax Sunday, Oct. 2.
“Our end goal is to make the NCAA
Tournament,” Drake said. “With a 6-2 nonconference record and seven or eight conference wins to finish in the top three in the
league, that should be good enough to reach
our goal.”
Twenty years ago, George Mason’s
women’s soccer team not only made the tournament, but also reached the ultimate goal in
capturing the National Championship. In
2005, the University, community and alumni
will celebrate the 20th anniversary of that
historic accomplishment. Hopefully, by the
end of the season, there will be another reason to celebrate.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
15
AMY ALECCI
Senior, 5’4”, Midfielder
Cockeysville, Md.
Notre Dame Prep
Amy Alecci begins her fourth year at George
“Amy is an unassuming
Mason and is a returning starter in the midfield
… Majoring in communication. 2004: Enand athletic player. She
joyed outstanding season as one of two players to start all 20 games for the Patriots at
is also one of our fastest
midfield... Scored four points with one goal
players and has good
and two assists... Took 25 shots... Netted the
game-winning goal in Mason’s 2-0 home vicservice ability.”
tory over Delaware (10/30)... Recorded all of
her points against CAA competition... Assisted
on the game-tying goal against Va. Common- Diane Drake
wealth (10/24)... Tallied an assist versus James
Madison (10/9)... Attempted 13 shots against
league opponents... Earned a spot on the
Dean’s List and the AD Honor Roll (both seAMY ALECCI’S CAREER STATISTICS
mesters) for excellence in the classroom...
Year
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
Received the CAA Commissioner’s Academic
2002
21/6
3
1
7
Award. 2003: Continued solid career in a Pa2003
21/17
5
2
12
triot uniform, finishing second in points (12)...
2004
20/20
1
2
4
Tied for the team lead with five goals and
TOTALS
62/43
9
5
23
added two assists... Appeared in all 21 games
with 17 starts at midfield... Attempted 29
shots... Tallied two game-winning goals... Versus CAA competition, posted two goals and one assist for five points, ranking
second on the team in goals scored and points... Netted the gamewinner in overtime in Mason’s 3-2 win against La Salle for first
goal of the season... Also had game-winner versus Drexel... Assisted on game-winning score against Villanova... Netted the only
Patriot goals in contests against NC State and Old Dominion...
Earned a spot on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll (both semesters) for outstanding work in the classroom... Received the
CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award. 2002: Enjoyed excellent freshman campaign, playing in all 21 games and starting six
on the left side of the midfield … Contributed three goals and
one assist for seven points, ranking fifth on the Patriots in both
categories … All scoring came against CAA opponents, ranking
her second in points and tied for second in goals in such games
… First two collegiate goals were game-winners, coming at
Drexel and vs. UNC Wilmington … Added third goal vs. Virginia Commonwealth … Had assist on game-winning goal vs.
VCU for first career three-point game … Earned spot on Athletic Director’s Honor Roll (both semesters) and Dean’s List
(Spring 2003) for outstanding work in the classroom … Also
received CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award. H.S./Club:
Three-year letterwinner at Notre Dame Preparatory School …
Named to All-Baltimore County/City (by The Sun) second team
for three straight seasons (1999-2001) … Also selected to AllIAAM second team as a senior … Captain of the Parkville Pumas club team which won WAGS under-16 Fall Division II championships and was a 2000 Maryland State Cup finalist … Also
played for the Shakedowns Elite and BFC Canons … Helped
teams to titles at the Raleigh Shootout and under-19 High School
Premier League tournaments... Also competed in track & field.
Personal: Full name is Amy Alecci ... Born May 23, 1984 …
Daughter of Sharon and John Alecci … Has one brother and one
sister ... Brother John plays soccer at Loyola (MD) College …
2002 graduate of Notre Dame Preparatory School.
Shots
13
29
25
67
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
GWG
2
2
1
5
P
L
A
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9
DANIELLE MACDONALD
Senior, 5’2”, Midfielder
Burke, Va.
Paul VI High School
P
L
A
Y
E
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S
10
Danielle MacDonald enters her fourth season with the Patriots and is a returning starter
at the wide midfield position… Majoring in
psychology... 2005 team captain. 2004: Enjoyed excellent season in the midfield at Mason... Saw action in 20 games with 16 starts...
Selected to the all-CAA second team... Finished third on the team in points with 11...
Registered three goals and finished second
on the team in assists (5)... Took 26 shots...
Notched the game-winning goal as time expired in the Patriots 3-2 double overtime win
at Hofstra (10/15)... Started all nine contests
against league opponents... Posted two goals,
three assists and seven points against CAA
foes... Scored goals against Miami (8/27) and
Delaware (10/30)... Assisted on the gamewinning goal at Liberty (9/25)... Earned a spot
on the Dean’s List and the AD Honor Roll
(both semesters) for excellence in the classroom... Posted a perfect 4.0 GPA in Spring
2005... Received the CAA Commissioner’s
Academic Award. 2003: Continued stellar
season as a member of the Patriots... Appeared
in 21 games, earning 15 starts including the
final seven contests... Recorded one goal and
added two assists... Finished with four
points... Attempted 18 shots... Scored the
game-winning goal at Delaware in the
quarterfinal round of the CAA Tournament...
Had an assist on game-winning overtime goal
against William & Mary. 2002: Enjoyed solid
freshman season, playing in 14 games and
starting three at forward … Contributed one
goal for two points … First collegiate goal
was a game-winner against Hofstra in the
CAA Championship semifinals. H.S./Club:
Had outstanding four-year career at nearby
Paul VI Catholic High School … Three-time
All-Washington Catholic Athletic Conference
(WCAC) selection... Was runner-up for
WCAC Player of the Year honors as a sophomore … Earned All-Metropolitan Washing-
ton (by The Washington Post) honors as a
junior and senior, and was nominee for
NSCAA All-America recognition as a senior
… Holds Panthers record for career goals with
67, added 43 assists … Scored 24 goals and
had 10 assists as a senior, contributed 21 goals
and 11 assists as a junior … Named Paul VI
Offensive Player of the Year during final three
seasons … Member of BRYC Electra club
team that won Virginia State Cup title and
was Region I finalist in 1999 … Also played
with under-19 national championship team
that year. Personal: Full name is Danielle
MacDonald ... Born August 20, 1984 …
Daughter of Joyce and Ron MacDonald …
Has one brother and two sisters ... Mother
graduated from George Mason Law School
Year
2002
2003
2004
TOTALS
4
“Danielle is very quick
with fantastic one-on-one
moves. She is a very
technically sound player
and has a strong service
selection.”
- Diane Drake
… 2002 graduate of Paul VI Catholic High
School … Received National Science Teachers Association Outstanding Achievement
Award.
DANIELLE MACDONALD’S CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
Shots
14/3
1
0
2
8
21/15
1
2
4
18
20/16
3
5
11
26
55/34
5
7
17
52
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
GWG
1
1
1
3
KRISTIN PORTELL
14
Senior, 5’5”, Defender
Woodbridge, Va.
Woodbridge High School
Kristin Portell enters her fourth season with
the Patriots and is expected to anchor the
defense as a returning starter … Majoring in
history/historical restoration... 2005 Team
captain. 2004: Had a strong season at defense
“Kristin is a very intelligent defender who will
be asked to organize the
back line. She has great
strength in her service
game.”
- Diane Drake
for Mason...
Appeared and
started in 19
games... Totaled only assist
and point of the
season against
Va. Commonwealth (10/
24)... Took four
shots... Started
all nine games
against CAA
opponents...
Part of a defensive unit that
produced six
shut outs... Recorded
unbeaten home
record against
league foes...
Named to the
AD Honor Roll
in the Spring
for excellence
in the classroom. 2003:
Produced a
solid season as
a member of
the Patriots...
Started 19 of 21
games on defense... Tallied
one goal and
one assist for
three points...
Recorded first collegiate assist and point on
game-winning goal at James Madison...
Scored first collegiate goal in the CAA Tournament quarterfinal contest at Delaware...
Earned UNCG/adidas Classic all-tournament
team honors... Attempted six shots on the season... Part of a defensive unit that produced
six shutouts and allowed just nine goals in
nine games against CAA opponents... Registered unbeaten home record versus league
foes. 2002: Had solid freshman season, play-
Year
2002
2003
2004
TOTALS
ing in 12 games and starting two in the defense … Missed several games late in the year
due to illness … Developed into reliable
member of a defensive unit that allowed just
12 goals over the final 10 games of the year,
and only nine in 11 contests vs. CAA opponents. H.S./Club: Four-year letterwinner at
nearby Woodbridge Senior High School …
Earned All-Cardinal District and All-Northwest Region honors as a senior as Vikings
advanced to Virginia Group AAA championship game … Woodbridge won four district
and three regional titles during her career …
Also named to All-Metropolitan Washington
(by The Washington Post) second team as a
senior … Missed junior year due to injury,
but was selected to all-district first team and
all-region second team as a sophomore …
Second-team all-district pick as a freshman
… Member of Prince William Sparklers club
team, serving as co-captain … Sparklers won
five Virginia State Cup titles and was under16 national finalist in 2000... Also played
basketball for four seasons … Earned AllCardinal District second-team honors in each
of final three basketball seasons … Team captain as a senior while being named to all-area
teams by the Potomac News and The Washington Post Prince William Extra … Helped
lead Vikings to district and Northwest Region
titles and state semifinals (also in 1999). Personal: Full name is Kristin Portell ... Born
February 17, 1984 … Daughter of Shirley and
Mick Portell … Has one brother and two sisters … 2002 graduate of Woodbridge Senior
High School.
KRISTIN PORTELL’S CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
Shots
12/2
0
0
0
4
21/19
1
1
3
6
19/19
0
1
1
4
52/40
1
2
4
14
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
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GWG
0
0
0
0
11
AMY SORENSON
Senior, 5’6”, Midfielder
Albuquerque, N.M.
Eldorado High School
All-Metropolitan Albuquerque and all-state
selection in final two seasons … Team’s
Playmaker of the Year as a senior after being
third-leading scorer as a junior … Member
of New Mexico State Olympic Development
Program (ODP) team from 1997-2000 and
selected for regional pool in 1998 … Also
played basketball for two seasons. Personal:
Full name is Amy Sorenson ... Born November 27, 1983 … Daughter of Cathy and Duane
Sorenson … 2002 graduate of Eldorado High
School... Ranked 10th among 500 members
of graduating class.
P
L
A
Y
E
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S
12
Amy Sorenson begins her fourth year with
the Patriots and is a returning starter in the
midfield … Majoring in administration of
justice. 2004: Continued solid season for
Mason, earning 19 starts in 20 appearances...
Anchored the Patriots offensively and defensively as their central midfielder... Scored two
goals for four points... Took 17 shots... Started
eight of nine games against CAA opponents...
Netted Mason’s lone goal in 1-1 double overtime tie against James Madison (10/9)... Registered unassisted score versus Towson (10/
28)... Named a Mason scholar-athlete for her
work in the classroom... Earned a spot on the
Dean’s List and the AD Honor Roll (both semesters) for excellence in the classroom...
Posted a perfect 4.0 GPA in Spring 2005...
Received the CAA Commissioner’s Academic
Award... Named a George Mason ScholarAthlete. 2003: Had stellar season as a member of the Patriots... One of only three players to start every game... Anchored the
midfield unit, contributing two goals and four
points... Scored first collegiate goal against
Virginia Tech... Added a score versus La
Salle... Earned UNCG/adidas Classic all-tournament team honors... Attempted 14 shots...
Named to the Dean’s List and the Athletic
Director’s Honor Roll (both semesters) for
excellence in the classroom... Received the
CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award.
2002: Enjoyed excellent freshman season
before missing last five games with an ankle
injury … Started 10 of 13 games played in
the midfield, contributing one assist …
Scored first collegiate point with assist at West
Virginia … Earned spot on Athletic Director’s
Honor Roll (both semesters) for outstanding
work in the classroom … Also received CAA
Commissioner’s Academic Award. H.S./
Club: Played four seasons at Eldorado High
School, earning three varsity letters … Helped
lead team to New Mexico state championships
as a sophomore and senior … All-District 4,
Year
2002
2003
2004
TOTALS
11
“Amy is one of our most
technically sound players.
She will quarterback the
midfield line and arrange
the distribution of the ball
around the field.”
- Diane Drake
AMY SORENSON’S CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
Shots
13/10
0
1
1
6
21/21
2
0
4
14
20/19
2
0
4
17
54/50
4
1
9
37
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
GWG
0
0
0
0
OLIVIA BROWN
Junior, 5’8”, Goalkeeper
Des Moines, Wash.
Highline High School
1
out overtime win at Liberty (9/25)... Named allowed as a sophomore … Served as team
CAA Co-Player of the Week on Sept. 27... captain during junior and senior years … Had
Made five saves in two games against CAA two assists in one game while playing goalfoes... Earned a spot on the Dean’s List and keeper in her senior year … Voted team Most
the AD Honor Roll (both semesters) for ex- Valuable Player twice and Most Inspirational
cellence in the classroom... Received the CAA Player once … Also played with F.C. Royals
Commissioner’s Academic Award... Named ’84 and the Washington State Olympic Dea George Mason Scholar-Athlete. 2003: velopment Program (ODP) team for three
Earned valuable experience in goal... Ap- years … Selected for ODP regional pool in
peared in two contests... Played 32 minutes 2002... Also competed four years in track &
and allowed one goal... Recorded 2.81 goals- field. Personal: Full name is Olivia Brown
against average and shared in the shutout of … Born August 25, 1984 … Daughter of
Pennsylvania... Earned a spot on the Dean’s Kaye and Michael Brown … Has two brothList and the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll ers … 2003 graduate of Highline High
Olivia Brown begins her third season at in Fall 2003... Received the CAA School... Member of National Honor SociGeorge Mason and is expected to challenge Commissioner’s Academic Award. H.S./ ety and selected to Honor Roll all four years
for the starting position at goalkeeper … Club: Was a four-year letterwinner at … Voted Junior and Senior Class Vice PresiMajoring in health science. 2004: Continued Highline High School ... Named to All- dent... Was a two-time Student of the Year
solid development in goal for the Patriots... Seamont League first team as a senior … finalist... Earned All-Seamont League AcaSaw action in seven games, earning two Registered 11 shutouts with only nine goals demic All-Star honors all four years.
starts... Allowed four goals in 361:40 minutes. Recorded a 1.00 goals-against average...
OLIVIA BROWN’S CAREER STATISTICS
Stopped 24 shots for an 85.7 save percentYear
GP/GS Min.
GA
GAA
Svs
Sv % SHO
W
L
T
age... Logged two wins and a solo shut out...
2003
2/0
32
1
2.81
0
.000
0.5
0
0
0
Earned first collegiate start at Brown (9/5)...
2004
7/2
361:40 4
1.00
24
.857
1.0
2
1
0
Made a career-best seven saves in reserve
TOTALS 9/2
393:40 5
1.14
24
.828
1.5
2
1
0
appearance at George Washington (9/22) for
first collegiate win... Had six saves in shut
JAIME DAULTON
Junior, 5’4”, Midfielder/Def.
Chesterfield, Va.
Manchester High School
Year
2003
2004
TOTALS
24
JAMIE DAULTON’S CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
Shots
9/1
0
1
1
0
5/0
0
0
0
0
14/1
0
1
1
0
Earned a post on the Athletic Director’s
Honor Roll in Fall 2004 for excellence in the
classroom...
Received
the
CAA
Commissioner’s Academic Award. 2003:
Enjoyed solid season, appearing in nine
games, earning one start... Had one assist and
Jaime Daulton enters her third season with one point... Tallied first collegiate point
the Patriots and is competing for playing time against CAA foe Old Dominion – assisting
in the midfield or along the defensive line … on game-tying goal to force overtime. H.S./
Majoring in biology. 2004: Solid contributor Club: Played four years on the varsity team
off the bench in five games… Did not attempt at Manchester High School ... Two-time seca shot... Appeared in two league contests... ond-team All-Dominion District and district
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GWG
0
0
0
All-Academic pick …Youngest member of
Hampton Roads Piranhas club team for the
2002-2003 season … Member of FC Richmond Mystx for two years... Also lettered in
track & field one season. Personal: Full name
is Jaime Daulton … Born April 12, 1985 …
Daughter of Theresa and Jeffrey Daulton …
Has one brother and one sister … 2003 graduate of Manchester High School... Member of
the Beta Club … Made Distinguished Honor
Roll three years and National Honor Roll one
year.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
13
AMANDA SCHMIDT
9
Junior, 5’1”, Defender
Princeton Junction, N.J.
West Windsor-Plainsboro North H.S.
Year
2004
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son with the Patriots, appearing in 19 games
on defense with 13 starts… Did not attempt a
shot... Member of the Patriots defensive unit
that produced six shut outs... Recorded unbeaten home record against CAA opponents...
Started three games and saw action in seven
contests versus league foes... Earned a spot
on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll in
Amanda Schmidt enters her third season with Spring 2005 for excellence in the classroom.
the Patriots and is a returning starter on de- H.S./Club: Played four years on the varsity
fense… Gained valuable experience partici- team at West Windsor-Plainsboro North High
pating in daily practices throughout the 2003 School … Three-time all-state choice in New
season, losing a year of eligibility... Major- Jersey … All-East Region pick by the U.S.
ing in business. 2004: Enjoyed a solid sea- Soccer Coaches Association with 13 goals and
7
GWG
0
eight assists as a senior … Chosen for Top 20
All-State, Top 20 All-Central and first-team
all-conference… Was team Most Valuable
Player twice … Had 20 goals and 13 assists
over high school career … Also played with
the FC Magic for two years, the WWP Fusion for one year and the New Jersey Wildcats for two years … Scored nine goals over
four games in the Vineland Memorial Tournament. Personal: Full name is Amanda N.
Schmidt … Born October 28, 1984 … Daughter of Julie and David Schmidt … Has one
sister … 2003 graduate of West WindsorPlainsboro North High School.
L.J. WILLIAMS
Junior, 5’3”, Midfielder
Fairfax Station, Va.
Lake Braddock H.S.
points... Finished fifth on the team in scoring... Took 14 shots... Appeared in nine contests against CAA opponents, earning eight
starts... Logged one score and two assists for
four points versus league foes... Netted first
career goal against Georgetown (9/11)... Also
scored versus UNC Wilmington (10/22).
2003: Enjoyed solid season as a member of
the Patriots... Appeared in 20 games with four
starts... Attempted five shots... Contributed
one assist in game against Drexel. H.S./Club:
Was a four-year letterwinner at nearby Lake
Braddock Secondary School … Earned AllMetropolitan Washington (by The Washington Post) first-team honors as a sophomore,
was a second-team choice as a freshman and
junior and received honorable mention as a
senior … Earned all-district and All-Journal
honors three years in a row … Played on the
Olympic Development Program (ODP) re-
L.J. Williams joins the Patriots for her third
season and is a returning starter at central
midfield… Majoring in health, fitness, and
recreation resources. 2004: Had an outstanding season for Mason at midfield... Saw action in 17 games with 15 starts... Recorded
two goals and three assists... Added seven
14
AMANDA SCHMIDT’S CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
Shots
18/13
0
0
0
0
Year
2003
2004
TOTALS
gional team for two years. Personal: Full
name is Laura Jane Williams … Born August
31, 1985 … Daughter of Vicky and Dan Williams … Has two brothers … 2003 graduate
of Lake Braddock Secondary School … Won
the Charlie Lee Nationals in karate and has a
brown belt.
L.J. WILLIAMS’ CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
20/4
0
1
1
17/15
2
3
7
37/19
2
4
8
Shots
5
14
19
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
GWG
0
0
0
KASEY DAVENPORT
21
Sophomore, 5’7”, Goalkeeper
Williamsburg, Va.
Walsingham Academy
KASEY DAVENPORT’S CAREER STATISTICS (at Christopher Newport)
Year
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
Shots
GWG
2003
9/1
0
1
1
0
0
TOTALS
9/1
0
1
1
0
0
Kasey Davenport joins the Patriots for her
second season after sitting out 2004 as a
redshirt... Is expected to challenge for the
starting position at goalkeeper... Transfer from
Division III Christopher Newport University... Will have three years of eligibility remaining... Majoring in physical education...
Earned a spot on the Athletic Director’s Honor
Roll in Spring 2005 for excellence in the
classroom. At CNU: Played goalkeeper for
the Trojans in 2003... Earned second-team
All-USA South conference honors... Named
to the USA South all-tournament team...
Started nine games with 15 appearances...
Played 1,118 minutes... Posted a 9-3-1 record
with three shutouts... Recorded a 76.8 save
percentage and a 1.05 goals-against average...
Made 43 saves and allowed 13 goals to help
lead CNU to eight overall shutouts and a 155-1 record. H.S./Club: Earned five varsity
letters at Walsingham Academy... Garnered
first-team all-TCIS honors for four straight
seasons (2000, 2001, 2002, 2003)... Named
a first-team Williamsburg Gazette all-star in
as a sophomore, junior and senior... Selected
to the Daily Press all-star team in 2001, 2002
and 2003... Led the Trojans and the conference in scoring with 29 goals and 28 assists...
Earned most valuable player accolades in
2002 and 2003 at the George Scott Tournament... Received Walsingham Academy Female Athlete of the Year award as a senior...
Played on the Virginia Olympic Development
Program (ODP) team. Personal: Full name
SARAH FACK
Sophomore, 5’7”, Mid./Fwd.
Algonquin, Ill.
Harry D. Jacobs H.S.
22
to the CAA all-Rookie Team... Appeared in
20 contests, earning 15 starts... Started the
final 13 games of the season... Ranked second on the team in goals scored (5) and points
(12)... Added two assists... Attempted 18
shots... Netted first collegiate assist against
Navy (8/29)... Was second on the squad with
three game-winning markers... Scored two
goals, including her first career goal and the
game-winning score, in a 3-1 win against
Texas Christian (9/19)... Tallied game-winners in 1-0 overtime victory at Liberty (9/25)
and 2-0 win over Towson (10/28)... Started
in all nine conference games... Registered two
goals and one assist for five points... Took 11
shots... Named a George Mason scholar-athlete for her work in the classroom... Received
the CAA Commissioner’s Academic Award
for... Earned a spot on the Dean’s List and
the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll (both seSarah Fack joins the Patriots for her second
season and is a returning starter in the midfield
or along the forward line... Major is undeclared. 2004: Made an immediate impact as
a freshman at the forward position... Named
Year
2004
is Kasey Lee Davenport... Born January 19,
1986... Daughter of Kim Davenport and Bill
Reagan... Mother, Kim, played tennis at Slippery Rock University... 2003 graduate of
Walsingham Academy... Has one sibling,
Kristin... Attended the invitation only 2003
Advanced National Training Center (ANTC)
camp at NIKE run by former National Team
coach Tony DiCicco... Also lettered in volleyball, tennis and basketball.
mesters)... Posted a perfect 4.0 GPA in Spring
2005. H.S./Club: Was a four-year varsity
letterwinner and starter at Harry D. Jacobs
High School... Earned Fox Valley All-Conference honors for three consecutive seasons
(2004, 2003, 2002)... Selected team co-captain as a senior... Collected 33 goals and 23
assists in four years with the Golden Eagles,
including 13 G and 8 A as a senior... Named
to the Chicago Tribune All-State team as an
honorable mention selection in 2004... Garnered Northwest Herald first-team All-Area
accolades in 2004 and 2002... Was a secondteam All-Area honoree as a junior... Received
All-Area award from the Daily Herald in
2004 and was an honorable mention selection in 2002 and 2003... Was selected one of
the top 50 local players by the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Sun-Times in 2003 and
2004... Played six years with the Soccers F.C.
Chicago club team that won the Illinois State
Championship in 2002 and advanced to the
State Cup finals in 2004. Personal: Full name
is Sarah Fack... Born October 22, 1985...
Parents are Michael and Jo Linn Fack... 2004
graduate of Harry D. Jacobs High School...
Has two siblings, Chris and Matt.
SARAH FACKS’ CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
20/15
5
2
12
Shots
18
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
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GWG
3
15
ALISON FELDMAN
Sophomore, 5’8”, Defender
Potomac, Md.
Winston Churchill H.S.
Year
2004
P
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16
Alison Feldman joins the Patriots for her second season and is challenging for a starting
position on defense... Majoring in psychology with a minor in communication. 2004:
Experienced a strong first season for the Patriots... Started six contests and made 18 appearances... Attempted three shots... Logged
5
17
ALISON FELDMAN’S CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
Shots
18/6
0
1
1
3
the game-winning assist as time expired in a
3-2 double overtime win at Hofstra (10/15)...
Saw action in eight conference games, earning one start... Took one shot... Selected CAA
Rookie of the Week on Oct. 18... Member of
the Patriots defensive unit that produced six
shut outs... Recorded unbeaten home record
against CAA opponents... Earned a spot on
the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll (both semesters) for excellence in the classroom.
H.S./Club: Was a four-year varsity
letterwinner for Winston Churchill High
School... Earned Washington Post first-team
All-Metropolitan honors in 2003 as a member of the Bulldogs... Received second-team
All-Met accolades from the Post as a junior...
GWG
0
Named first-team All-State by the Maryland
Association of Soccer Coaches (MACS) as a
junior and senior... Played on the Maryland
Olympic Development Program (ODP) team
for three years (2001, 2002, 2003)... Was a
member and captain of the Bethesda Rowdies club team (1996 through 2004) that won
the state championship three times... Participated in the 2003 DC United Super Y
League... Played on the 2004 Maryland Pepsi
Pride club team of the Women’s Premier Soccer League (WPSL). Personal: Full name is
Alison Feldman... Born May 8, 1986... 2004
graduate of Winston Churchill High School...
Parents are Wendy and Ira Feldman... Has one
sibling, Brian.
JESSICA PARIS
Sophomore, 5’8”, Midfielder/Def.
Clifton, Va.
Centreville H.S.
Jessica Paris joins the Patriots for her second
season and is a returning starter in the midfield
or on defense... Majoring in civil engineering. 2004: Capped an outstanding freshman
season with multiple honors... Named to the
Soccer Buzz Mid-Atlantic Region all-Freshman team... Selected first-team all-Virginia
(VaSID)... Member of the CAA all-Rookie
team... One of only two players to start every
game... Ranked fourth on the team in scoring
with 10 points... Listed second in goals scored
(4) and posted two assists... Attempted 23
shots... Netted back-to-back scores, including the game-winner, in 3-2 victory against
Va. Commonwealth (10/24)... Selected CAA
co-Rookie of the Week on Oct. 25... Scored
first collegiate goal versus Georgetown (9/
11)... Assisted on the game-winner against
Miami (8/27)... Tallied three goals against
conference opponents... Helped anchor a Patriots defensive unit that produced six shut
outs... Recorded unbeaten home record
against CAA opponents...Named to the
Dean’s List in Fall 2004... Earned a spot on
the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll (both semesters) for excellence in the classroom...
Received the CAA Commissioner’s Academic
Award. H.S./Club: Earned four varsity let-
ters at Centreville High School... Named 2004
first-team All-Metropolitan by the Washington Post and was a Post honorable mention
selection as a junior, sophomore and a freshman... Selected to the Fairfax Journal AllJournal first team as a senior... Recognized
as the 2003-04 Female Athlete of the Year by
the Centre View... Named team captain of the
Wildcats in 2004... Garnered first-team
Concorde All-District for four consecutive
seasons... Scored 47 career goals and added
36 career assists as a member of the Wildcats... Played on two District championship
teams (2004, 2001)... Wildcats also made the
region and state finals in 2004 and the District finals in 2003... Played on the Virginia
Olympic Development Program (ODP) State
“A” team from 1997 to 2003... Member of
the ODP Region I Pool from 2000 to 2002...
Also earned four varsity letters as a member
of the Centreville basketball team... Was a
three-year Wildcat starter who led the team
in scoring as a senior and in assists as a junior and senior... Named third-team Concorde
Year
2004
All-District in 2003 and 2002... Named team
captain and most valuable player as a senior.
Personal: Full name is Jessica Ann Paris...
Born January 21, 1986... 2004 graduate of
Centreville High School... Daughter of David
and Nancy Paris... Has two siblings, David
and Katherine... David is a junior at George
Mason... Awarded the scholar-athlete honor
for basketball following her junior and senior seasons.
JESSICA PARIS’ CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
20/20
4
2
10
Shots
23
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
GWG
1
LAURA SALICHS
Sophomore, 5’4”, Defender
Alpharetta, Ga.
Milton H.S.
first season with the Patriots at defense... Saw
action in 19 games, earning 11 starts... Registered two points... Attempted four shots...
Scored first collegiate goal in 3-2 doubleovertime win at Hofstra (10/15)...Appeared
in nine conference contests with six starts...
Took two shots... Member of a Patriots defensive unit that produced six shut outs...
Recorded unbeaten home record against CAA
opponents... Named a George Mason scholarathlete for her work in the classroom.... Received the CAA Commissioner’s Academic
Award... Earned a spot on the Dean’s List and
Laura Salichs joins the Patriots for her sec- the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll (both seond season and is a returning starter on de- mesters) for her work in the classroom. H.S./
fense... Majoring in communication with a Club: Earned four varsity letters at Milton
minor in the classics. 2004: Enjoyed a solid High School... Selected to the Georgia High
Year
2004
8
LAURA SALICHS’ CAREER STATISTICS
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
19/11
1
0
2
Shots
4
GWG
0
13
School All-Star team... Named to the AllAVUG girls team... Received post-season offensive MVP honors as a member of the
Eagles... Earned Palmer Dodge Athlete of
the Week accolades... Selected the
Alpharetta-Roswell Revue & News Athlete
of the Week... Played on the Georgia State
Olympic Development Program (ODP)
team... Also played volleyball as a freshman... Was a member of the Eagles team that
reached the Final Four in 2004. Personal:
Full name is Laura Salichs... Born July 28,
1986... Daughter of Norma Rodriguez...
2004 graduate of Milton High School... Was
a member of the Honor Roll... Earned
Scholar-Athlete Honors... Named to the
Latin National, Spanish National and National Honor Societies... Received first, second and third-place medals for finishes on
the national Latin and Spanish exams... Enjoys music... Chose George Mason over
Georgia State and Western Carolina.
RACHEL WIGGINS
Sophomore (RS), 5’8”, Forward
Acworth, Ga.
Darlington High School
Rachel Wiggins enters her second full season at George Mason and is challenging for a
starting position along the forward line…
Majoring in social work/pre-law. 2004: Appeared in 20 games with four starts... Logged
three assists and three points... Attempted 16
shots... Recorded an assist against Boston
University... Helped on back-to-back scores
versus Texas Christian, including the gamewinner... Saw action in all nine CAA contests... Made the Dean’s List in Spring 2005...
Earned a spot on the AD Honor Roll (both
semesters) for excellence in the classroom...
Named a George Mason scholar-athlete...
Received the CAA Commissioner’s Academic
Award. 2003: Received medical hardship
waiver after sustaining an injury two games
into the season, retaining full eligibility…
Saw action in two games, earning one start...
Netted one goal... Accounted for two assists...
Posted four points... Scored first collegiate
goal in first game of the season versus Virginia Tech... Assisted on game-winning goal
against the Hokies... Logged an assist versus
La Salle... Attempted one shot... Earned a spot
on the Dean’s List (Spring 2004) and the Ath-
letic Director’s Honor Roll (both semesters)
for outstanding work in the classroom... Received the CAA Commissioner’s Academic
Award. H.S./Club: Earned four varsity letters at Darlington High School … Was the
Greater-Rome Area Player of the Year as a
senior … Scored 81 goals over final three
seasons … Received Most Valuable Player
honors in final two seasons … Was a member of the Georgia State Olympic Development Program (ODP) for six years and went
to the 2003 ODP Nationals … Also a member of WAGS for two years, MNYSA for four
years and the Concorde ’03 Silver for two
years. Personal: Full name is Rachel Leigh
Wiggins … Born June 12, 1985 … Daughter
of Kathy Sultze and Joe Wiggins … Has one
brother … Father played tennis for the U.S.
Coast Guard Academy … 2003 graduate of
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Darlington High School, where she also competed in track & field for two seasons and
cross country and swimming for one season
each … Member of National Honor Society,
French Honor Society and Mu Alpha Theta,
and graduated cum laude.
RACHEL WIGGINS’ CAREER STATISTICS
Year
GP/GS
Goals
Assists
Points
Shots
2003*
2/1
1
2
4
1
2004
20/4
0
3
3
16
TOTALS
22/5
1
5
7
17
* - Medical hardship redshirt
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
GWG
0
0
0
17
CHRISTINE
ARKWRIGHT
Freshman, 5’4”, Fwd
Annandale, Va.
Falls Church H.S.
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Christine Arkwright enters her
first season at George Mason and
is challenging for a starting position along the forward line...
Majoring in art and visual communication. H.S./Club: Earned
four varsity letters from Falls
Church High School... Selected
second-team all-district as a junior (2004) and senior (2005)...
Received honorable mention alldistrict accolades as a sophomore... Named Rookie of the
Year as a freshman... Scored nine
goals during the 2005 regular
season and had four goals in the
post-season... Played youth soccer in Springfield for 11 years
and in Arlington for one year.
Personal: Full name is Christine
Anne Arkwright... Born Sept. 11,
1987... Daughter of Michele and
George Arkwright... Has two sib-
25
lings, sister Maria and brother
George... 2005 graduate of Falls
Church High School, where she
also lettered in field hockey and
track... Received the outstanding
GPA in athletics following her
junior and senior seasons.
Freshman, 5’7”
Forward
Alexandria, Va.
Mt. Vernon H.S.
Petria Bahr enters her first season at George Mason and is challenging for a starting position
along the forward line... Majoring in biology/pre-med. H.S./
Club: Earned four varsity letters
from Mt. Vernon High School...
Selected an honorable mention
all-National District choice in
2004... Received the 2005 Ann
Harris Award... Named captain of
the Mt. Vernon Majors’ for her
junior or seniors seasons...
Played six years of club soccer
for the LMVSA Patriots and
captained the team in 2004 and
2005. Personal: Full name is
Petria Lea Bahr... Born Nov. 8,
1987... Daughter of Mary and
Mark Bahr... Has three siblings,
Shauna, Brendan and Bryan...
2005 graduate of Mt. Vernon
High School... Member of the
10
German Honor Society... Enjoys
snowboarding, music and movies... Received the Mt. Vernon
Athletic Scholar and Virginia
H.S. League Academic Excellence awards as a freshman, junior and senior.
NILANI DUARTE
JESSIE HART
Freshman, 5’4”
Midfielder
Costa Mesa, Calif.
Costa Mesa H.S.
Freshman, 5’5”
Midfielder/Defender
Springfield, Va.
Hayfield Secondary
Nilani Duarte enters her first season at George Mason and is challenging for a starting position
along the midfield line... Majoring in administration of justice.
H.S./Club: Earned four varsity
letters from Costa Mesa High
School... Garnered first-team
honors from the California Interscholastic Federation for three
consecutive seasons (2003, 2004
and 2005)... Chosen two-time
Premier League offensive MVP
in 2004 and 2005... Selected
first-team all-Premier League as
a sophomore, junior and senior...
Selected a 2005 senior all-star...
Earned second-team all-League
accolades as a freshman... Member of the Mustangs’ 2003 CIF
championship and three-time
undefeated Premier League
(Southern California) champion-
18
PETRIA BAHR
18
ship teams. Personal: Full name
is Nilani Anais Duarte...Born
June 8, 1987... Daughter of
Maricela and Jose Duarte... Has
one brother, Franco... 2005
graduate of Costa Mesa High
School.
Jessie Hart enters her first season at George Mason and is challenging for a starting position on
defense or in the midfield... Majoring in education. H.S./Club:
Earned four varsity letters from
Hayfield Secondary School...
Two-time team captain (2004
and 2005) for the Hawks... Garnered first-team all-district honors as a sophomore, junior and a
senior... Was first-team all-region
pick as a sophomore... Named
first-team all-Journal from the
Fairfax Journal as a junior and
senior... Received Washington
Post first-team all-Metropolitan
accolades in 2004... Garnered
second-team all-Met honors as a
senior and was honorable mention in 2003... Selected all-state
honorable mention as a sophomore... Awarded Hayfield MVP
3
honor in 2003 and 2004. Personal: Full name is Jessica Leigh
Hart... Born Nov. 18, 1986... Parents are Kristen and Daniel
Hart... Has one sister, Kaitlyn,
and one brother, Danny... 2005
graduate of Hayfield Secondary.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
COLLEEN KILLIANY
MARY RAVEIA
Freshman, 5’5”
Midfielder/Forward
Fairfax, Va.
W.T. Woodson H.S.
Freshman, 5’10”
Defender
Fairfax, Va.
W.T. Woodson H.S.
Colleen Killiany enters her first
season at George Mason and is
challenging for a starting position along the forward or
midfield lines... Major is undeclared. H.S./Club: Earned four
varsity letters at W.T. Woodson
High School... Selected 2005
second-team all-Northern Region... Earned first-team all-Liberty District honors as a senior...
Garnered Liberty all-District second team accolades in 2004...
Was honorable mention all-Liberty District as a sophomore...
Played soccer for 10 years as a
member of the Braddock Road
Youth Club (BRYC) Aurora
team. Personal: Full name is
Colleen Mary Killiany... Born
Jan. 11, 1987... Parents are Lynn
and the-late Joe Killany... Has
one brother, Steven, and one sis-
Mary Raveia enters her first season at George Mason and is challenging for a starting position
along the forward line... Majoring in environmental science
with a minor in English. H.S./
Club: Earned three varsity letters from W.T. Woodson High
School... Named a 2005 team
captain... Earned second-team
Liberty all-District honors as a
senior... Selected a Washington
Post all-Metropolitan honorable
mention in 2004... Garnered
first-team all-District and received second-team all-Northern
Region accolades as a junior...
Named second-team all-District
in 2003. Personal: Full name is
Mary Adelina Raveia... Parents
are Catherine and Daniel
Raveia... Born Mar. 25, 1987...
Is the youngest of six children:
20
ter, Erin... 2005 graduate of W.T.
Woodson High School, where
she also received a varsity letter
in track and field and participated
in junior varsity basketball and
field hockey... Plans on attending graduate school.
Rachel, Allison, Jaclyn, Steve
and Carolyn... Sister Jaclyn
played varsity soccer at Richmond and two years professionally in the Women’s United Soccer Association... 2005 graduate
of W.T. Woodson High School.
JENNY SPARKS
KATY WOODS
Freshman, 5’6”
Midfielder/Forward
Costa Mesa, Calif.
Costa Mesa H.S.
Freshman, 5’3”
Defender
Elkton, Md.
St. Mark’s (Del.) H.S.
Jenny Sparks enters her first season at George Mason and is challenging for a starting position
along the midfield or forward
lines... Majoring in health, fitness and recreational resources.
H.S./Club: Earned four varsity
letters from Costa Mesa High
School... Named second-team
all-California Interscholastic
Federation (CIF) as a junior and
senior... Selected first-team allGolden West League... Offensive
MVP for Costa Mesa High
School... Scored 65 career goals
and 51 career assists... Member
of the Mustangs’ 2003 CIF
championship and three-time undefeated Premier League (Southern California) championship
teams... Two-year captain as a
junior and senior.. Personal: Full
name is Jennifer Michelle
2
Sparks... Born July 28, 1987...
Parents are Denise and William
Sparks... Has one sister, Sandra...
2005 graduate of Costa Mesa
High School, where she also lettered in volleyball, track and
field and cross country.
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23
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Prep: Earned three letters in soccer, two letters in field hockey
and one letter in freshman basketball at St. Mark’s High School
in Delaware… Was second team
All-State in soccer and field
hockey and was a senior all-star
in field hockey… first-team AllCatholic in both soccer and field
hockey… Played club soccer for
Kirkwood Soccer Club as well as
Cecil Soccer and High Impact
Soccer Club. Personal: Full
name is Kathryn Ann Woods…
Parents are Adrienne and
Howard Woods… Born October
22, 1987… Mother played field
hockey at University of Delaware… A 2005 graduate of St.
Mark’s High School… a native
of Elkton, Md... Was on the
honor roll at St. Mark’s… Major
is nursing.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
19
2004 STATISTICS
TEAM STATISTICS
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2
0
0
4
S
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S
OVERALL RECORD:
OVERALL HOME:
OVERALL AWAY:
OVERALL NEUTRAL:
10-7-3
6-1-2
3-5-1
1-1-0
CAA RECORD:
CAA HOME:
CAA AWAY:
CAA TOURNAMENT:
5-2-2
4-0-1
1-2-1
0-1-0
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Name
3 Sarah Wilkinson
22 Sarah Fack
4 Danielle MacDonald
5 Jessica Paris
7 L.J. Williams
2 Dianna Russini
16 Allison Cowan
11 Amy Sorenson
15 Amy Alecci
8 Rachel Wiggins
18 Laura Salichs
19 Kristine Gray
14 Kristin Portell
23 Franmarie Gregg
17 Alison Feldman
24 Jaime Daulton
9 Amanda Schmidt
6 S.F. Look
Bench
Totals
Opponents
Name
Sarah Coughlin
Olivia Brown
Defensive saves
Totals
Opponents
GP-GS
20-18
20-15
20-16
20-20
17-15
19-3
16-16
20-19
20-20
20-4
19-11
15-3
19-19
16-2
18-6
5-0
18-13
2-0
20
20
20
OFFENSIVE
Goals Assists
9
6
5
2
3
5
4
2
2
3
3
0
2
1
2
0
1
2
0
3
1
0
0
2
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
32
29
29
29
Points
24
12
11
10
7
6
5
4
4
3
2
2
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
93
87
Shots
56
18
26
23
14
11
12
17
25
16
4
3
4
3
3
0
0
0
0
235
202
GOALKEEPING
GP-GS Minutes GAA SV % Saves GA W
18-18
7-2
1520:36 1.48
361:40 1.00
.719
.857
20
20
1882:16 1.39
1882:16 1.53
.754
.742
64
24
1
89
92
GWG
4
3
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
10
7
YC
2
0
0
1
2
3
2
0
1
1
2
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
2
18
12
RC
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
L
T
SO
25
4
8
2
6
1
3
0
29
32
10
7
7 3
10 3
3
1
2
6
6
Mason
Opponents
SCORING
1st 2nd OT Total
15 15
2
32
18 11
0
29
Mason
Opponents
Corner Kicks
80
84
Mason
Opponents
Fouls
223
215
Mason
Opponents
Shots on Goal Pct.
.515
.559
Junior Olivia Brown led the Patriots in goal
against average in 2004.
Junior L.J. Williams was third on the team in
assists and fifth in points in 2004.
20
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
2004 SEASON IN REVIEW
Various adjustments were made at the
start of the season for the 2004 George Mason women’s soccer team. Most notably, was
the adjustment of first-year head coach Diane
Drake to a whole new crop of players, a new
coaching staff and a new conference. For the
players, the adjustment was also to a new
coaching staff as well as a new system and an
influx of new talent.
One adjustment that wasn’t necessary
was the ability for the women’s soccer team
to continue to excel on the field and provide
Patriot fans with compelling matches and stellar play. Drake and her coaching staff demonstrated this by leading George Mason to a
10-7-3 overall record, six shut outs and a
third-place tie in the Colonial Athletic Association standings at 5-2-2.
Mason participated in the CAA Tournament for the 10th consecutive year, earning
the No. 5 seed due to tie-breaking procedures.
During the season, Drake earned her 50th
career head coaching win and improved her
overall record to 55-51-9 in six seasons.
Drake won her Mason head coaching
debut with a 2-0 home victory over Miami
and then tied Navy to start the season at 1-01. But, the Patriots stumbled in their next three
contests, falling to 1-3-1, as the team continued to adjust to the varying changes. Drake
snapped the skid with an emotional 3-1 win
over her former team Georgetown, which she
coached from 1999-2003. A loss at No. 4 Virginia was followed by three straight wins as
the Patriots began to build confidence in each
other and the new system. The third win in
the stretch was a 1-0 overtime victory at Liberty that gave Drake her 50th career coaching victory.
Entering conference play at 5-4-1, Mason took an early league hit on the road with
back-to-back losses to fall to 0-2 in the CAA
and 5-6-1 overall. The Patriots regrouped to
earn a 1-1 double-overtime tie against James
Madison – the first of three straight double
OT games – and remained unbeaten in their
next six contests, including dramatic victories at Hofstra (3-2 in double overtime) and
versus Va. Commonwealth (3-2) to secure a
spot in the CAA Tournament with their 5-2-2
league record and 10-6-3 mark. Mason saw
its unbeaten streak and season come to an end
after a 1-0 loss at fourth-seeded James Madison in the first round of the tournament.
Six players earned postseason accolades
for the Patriots. Senior goalkeeper Sarah
Coughlin was chosen the CAA Defender of
the Year and garnered all-CAA first team accolades. She was also named to the National
Soccer Coaches Association of America
(NSCAA) Mid-Atlantic all-Region third
team. Coughlin exits the team ranked second
in Mason in history in career saves (353) and
goalkeeper minutes played.
Three players were named second-team
all-CAA. The list included senior forward
Sarah Wilkinson, senior midfielder Allison
Cowan, and junior midfielder Danielle
MacDonald. Wilkinson, who was also an
NSCAA third-team Mid-Atlantic all-Region
selection, led George Mason in goals scored
(9), assists (6) and points (24). She also posted
four game-winning markers.
Two freshmen featured prominently in
the starting lineup throughout the season.
Forward Sarah Fack and defender Jessica
Paris both saw time in all 20 games and both
were named to the CAA all-Rookie team.
2004 RESULTS
DATE
8/27
8/29
9/3
OPPONENT
MIAMI
NAVY
at Boston University
W/L
W
T
L
SCORE
2-0
1-1 (2ot)
2-3
REC.
1-0
1-0-2
1-1-1
CAA
9/5
9/9
9/11
at Brown
HARVARD ^
GEORGETOWN ^
L
L
W
0-2
0-2
3-1
1-2-1
1-3-1
2-3-1
9/17
9/19
vs. #4 Virginia &
vs. Texas Christian &
L
W
0-4
3-1
2-4-1
3-4-1
9/22
at George Washington W
3-2
4-4-1
9/25
10/1
10/3
at Liberty
at William & Mary *
at Old Dominion *
W
L
L
1-0 (ot) 5-4-1
0-3
5-5-1
3-4
5-6-1
0-1
0-2
10/9
10/15
10/17
10/22
JAMES MADISON * T
at Hofstra *
W
at Drexel *
T
UNC WILMINGTON * W
1-1 (2ot) 5-6-2
3-2 (2ot) 6-6-2
0-0 (2 ot) 6-6-3
3-0
7-6-3
0-2-1
1-2-1
1-2-2
2-2-2
10/24
VCU *
W
3-2
8-6-3
3-2-2
10/28
10/30
TOWSON *
DELAWARE *
W
W
2-0
2-0
9-6-3
10-6-3
4-2-2
5-2-2
11/2
at James Madison #
L
0-1
10-7-3
SCORERS (ASSIST)
SAVES
ATT.
Wilkinson (Paris), MacDonald
Coughlin - 6 252
Russini (Fack)
Coughlin - 4 262
Wilkinson (MacDonald), Russini (Wiggins) Coughlin - 1 125
Brown - 1
Brown - 3
197
Coughlin - 0 226
Paris (Wilkinson), Wilkinson (Williams) Coughlin - 4 356
Williams (Wilkinson)
Coughlin - 2
55
Fack (Wiggins), Fack (Wiggins)
Coughlin - 1
56
Wilkinson (Gregg)
Brown - 2
Wilkinson, Russini (Wilkinson)
Coughlin - 1
65
Wilkinson (Gray)
Brown - 7
Fack (MacDonald)
Brown - 6
237
Coughlin - 2 204
Cowan (MacDonald), Cowan (Wilkinson) Coughlin - 0 252
Wilkinson (Cowan)
Sorenson (MacDonald)
Coughlin - 5 453
Salichs (Paris), Paris, MacDonald (Feldman) Coughlin - 9 165
Coughlin - 9
75
Wilkinson (Fack), Wilkinson (Gray)
Coughlin - 2 323
Williams (Wilkinson)
Brown - 4
Fack (MacDonald, Portell), Paris (Alecci) Coughlin - 11 158
Paris (Wilkinson)
Fack (Williams), Sorenson
Coughlin - 2 395
Alecci, MacDonald (Williams)
Coughlin - 1 257
Brown - 1
239
Coughlin - 4
2
0
0
4
S
E
A
S
O
N
R
E
V
I
E
W
Game-winning goal in bold
* - Colonial Athletic Association game
# - CAA Tournament
& - Nike/Tribe Invitational (Williamsburg, Va.)
^ - GEORGE MASON/BURGER KING INVITATIONAL
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
21
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM
N
A
T
I
O
N
A
L
C
H
A
M
P
I
O
N
S
H
I
P
T
E
A
M
22
Twenty years ago this fall, something
historic happened in Fairfax. A group of 23
women from seven different states came together to achieve an extraordinary goal. Just
four years after having played its first-ever
varsity match, the George Mason women’s
soccer team claimed the school’s first National Championship.
A
year
earlier,
George
Mason
had won
the right to
host
the
NCAA Final
Four
in
women’s soccer, hoping that the Patriots
would be one of those elite teams. When the
Final Four began in late November, Mason
found itself still alive after a 3-2 win on penalty kicks over William & Mary in the opening round and a 1-0 win over Cortland in the
quarterfinals.
Mason was, at best, an underdog heading into the Final Four. While the Patriots had
defeated Colorado College in the regular season, the other two teams at the championship
had weighty credentials. There was North
Carolina, which had tied Mason 3-3 in the
season opener and was the most respected
program in the nation. The Tar Heels had won
all three previous national championships.
UMass, meanwhile, was 16-0, had allowed
just two goals all season while outscoring the ship matches, the Tar Heels had not allowed
opposition 68-2, and had downed UNC 2-0 a goal.
That string of dominance in the finals
earlier in the year.
November 23, 1985 was a sunny Satur- ended less than 30 minutes into the 1985
day in Fairfax and 4,000 people showed up championship match. Pam Baughman, a seto see George Mason take on top-ranked nior from Fairfax, scored the biggest goal in
UMass as the Minutewomen were looking for George Mason history, a 10-yard blast from
their 17th-straight win.
After sitting through a
1985 George Mason Women’s Soccer Team
scoreless first half, the fans
finally got to see what so
No Name
Pos Yr
Hometown
many of them had come for –
Kim Maslin
GK Jr
Rutledge, Pa.
a Mason goal. At the 56:40
Yvonne Morris
GK Fr
Springfield, Va.
mark, Chris Tomek took her
2 Jan Smith
MF Fr
Marlboro, N.J.
3 Andrea Volpe
MF So
Springfield, Va.
only shot of the day, a 54 Chris Tomek
F
Jr
Wheaton, Ill.
yarder that deflected into the
5 Sheryl Waters
D
Sr
Alexandria, Va.
net to put the Patriots ahead.
6 Pam Baughman
F
Sr
Fairfax, Va.
Buoyed by the lead, Mason
7 Kim Crabbe
M/D So
Reston, Va.
needed less than six minutes
8 Sue Vodicka
D
Sr
Lansdowne, Pa.
to add to it, as Cathy Moon
9 Celia Gillen
D
So
Fairfax, Va.
connected on a 7-yarder from
10 Sis Koskinen
D
Sr
Lansdowne, Pa.
the left corner to put Mason
11 Lisa Gmitter
F
Jr
Trenton, N.J.
ahead, 2-0. Mason added an
12 Andrea Baines
MF Sr
Springfield, Va.
insurance goal with less than
13 Betsy Drambour
MF Jr Ballston Lake, N.Y.
a minute to play when Dana
14 Kathy Conroy
D
Jr Beachwood, N.J.
Hedin made a 10-yarder from
15 Michele D’Anjolell D
Jr
Lansdowne, Pa.
the corner. The Patriots had
16 Meg Romaine
M/F Sr
Brick, N.J.
scored more goals in one
Howell, N.J.
17 Sheri D’Amato-Wright M/D Sr
game against UMass then the
18 Maia Gemignani
M/D So Falls Church, Va.
Minutewomen had allowed
19 Michele Bell
MF Sr
Arvado, Col.
all year. Lisa Gmitter finished
20 Dana Hedin
F
Fr Col. Springs, Col.
the day with two assists while
21 Cathy Moon
M
Sr
Lima, N.Y.
Tomek had a goal and an asJen Wallace
sist. Goalkeeper Kim Maslin
Head Coach: Hank Leung
had her third straight shutout.
Assistant Coaches: Gene Mishalow, Ken Bernsteing
Sunday, November 24,
was also a sunny day. This
time, a then-NCAA record 4,500 people the left corner past goalie Kathleen O’Dell.
showed up to see if the Patriots could deny The goal raised the tension on the field, as
North Carolina its fourth-straight NCAA for the next hour, the Patriots fought to hold
women’s soccer title. The Tar Heels were 18- off each UNC charge while the Tar Heels des1-1, with a loss to UMass and a tie at the hands perately looked for a chink in Mason’s armor.
No weakness was ever exposed as
of George Mason. But UNC had championship experience. Gmitter iced the game on a pass from
The Tar Heels en- Baughman with fewer than five minutes to
tered the match play, sealing the national title with a 2-0 win.
Baughman was named the tournament’s
10-0 all-time in
the NCAA Tour- MVP while junior Betsy Drambour earned
nament while Ma- Defensive MVP honors. Also earning all-tourson was 4-3. Ac- nament honors for Mason were Maslin,
companying Ma- Gmitter and Kim Crabbe.
How historic was the victory for Mason?
son out on to the
field were the bad Considering that the program was only four
memories of two years old, that Mason had never won a nayears
earlier, tional championship in any sport, and that
when Mason had North Carolina went on to win nine straight
lost to UNC in the national titles beginning that historic streak
national finals, 4- the following season, it’s fair to say that
0. In the previous Mason’s 1985 women’s soccer national chamthree champion- pionship was one for the record books.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
PROGRAM HISTORY
NCAA Champion: 1985
NCAA Runner-up: 1983, 1993
NCAA Tournament: 1982-86, ‘88, ‘89, ‘93, ‘94, ‘96, ‘97
George Mason, once known only as the
first team to beat North Carolina for an NCAA
Division I National Championship in 1985, has
become one of the most enduring figures in
women’s collegiate soccer circles.
The Patriots have reached the NCAA
women’s soccer “Final Four” a total of four
times, have advanced to the “Sweet 16” another
four times, and Mason holds the distinction of
being one of five teams to have ever claimed a
first-, second- and third-place finish in the nation. The Patriots have been to a total of 11
NCAA Tournaments in the 22 years the sport
has been sponsored on the intercollegiate level
— ranking in the top 15 among all Division I
schools.
In addition, George Mason is ranked in
the top 10 for all-time winning percentage in
NCAA Tournament play at .563 (13-10-1).
Overall, the Patriots have an all-time record of
265-151-41 for an impressive .625 percentage,
and they have posted winning seasons in all but
five years (1990, 1995, 1999, 2001, 2002).
In 2004, George Mason entered into a new
era of athletic success with the addition of
Diane Drake, who become only the third Patriot head coach in the program’s storied history. Drake follows former head coach Jac
Cicala, who took Mason to or through the
NCAA Tournament “Sweet 16” three times in
four tries during his 12-year tenure.
The George Mason women’s soccer program began in 1982 and burst onto the national
scene when inaugural head coach Hank Leung
led a group of freshmen to the first round of
the NCAA Tournament. The next year, the same
group advanced to the finals before being eliminated by North Carolina, 4-0, earning Leung
his first of two national “Coach of the Year”
awards. In 1984, Colorado College upset the
widely recognized Patriots early in the tournament, but they vowed to return in 1985.
That loss to Colorado College may have
been the motivation they needed to win it all in
1985, an accomplishment which the Patriots
achieved in a well-documented fashion. Mason captured its first-ever national title at home
in front of the largest crowd in school history,
with Leung again receiving “Coach of the Year”
accolades.
The Patriots hosted the finals again in
1986, losing in overtime to North Carolina in
the semifinals, 3-2. After NCAA appearances
in 1988 and 1989, Leung bid farewell to George
Mason in 1991 after a respectable 11-8-1 mark.
Cicala, who assisted Leung in two different stints, took over the reins in 1992. He directed the Patriots to a seven-game unbeaten
streak (including six straight wins) to end the
season and opened the 1993 campaign on a tear,
extending that streak to 21 games midway
through the season before dropping a 1-0 deci-
sion at Wisconsin.
The Patriots, then ranked 10th in the nation, were invited to participate in the NCAA
Tournament for the first time since 1989. They
took full advantage of the opportunity, upsetting both Notre Dame and Wisconsin on the
same field on which they had lost to the Badgers earlier in the season. Those two wins put
the Patriots back into the “Final Four” — their
fourth such appearance and first in the 1990s.
George Mason then pulled off its biggest
feat of the year by tying No. 2 Stanford, 1-1,
and advancing (3-1) on penalty kicks in the
national semifinals. The Patriots’ run came to
an end in the final, however, as North Carolina
took the title on its home turf. Afterwards,
Cicala was honored as the collegiate “Coach
of the Year.”
Mason struck again on the national level
in 1994 as the No. 16 Patriots advanced to their
second consecutive NCAA Tournament.
Cicala’s team also recorded the fourth-best
record in school history (16-3-2) that year. The
Patriots advanced to their 10th NCAA Tournament in 1996 and returned with a vengeance in
1997, beating Maryland, 2-1, in the first round
in College Park before losing an overtime contest to Harvard in Boston the following week,
2-1.
George Mason’s postseason success has
also spilled over into conference competition.
The Patriots, who have a 55-18-6 (.734) alltime mark in Colonial Athletic Association
regular season play, shared the inaugural CAA
championship with William & Mary in 1993
before the league went to a tournament format
in 1995. Since then, Mason has made nine consecutive CAA Tournament showings, advancing to the finals in 1996, 1997, 2000 and 2002.
CAA HISTORY
Soccer teams from the Colonial Athletic Association have
enjoyed considerable success on
the national level since women’s
soccer became a championship
sport in 1993. Over the past 12
years, five different CAA teams,
including former member Richmond, have made a total of 22
appearances in NCAA Tournament action, with George Mason
advancing to the national finals in
that inaugural season.
Twelve member institutions
make up the CAA roster. They include the University of Delaware,
Drexel University, George Mason
University, Georgia State University, Hofstra University, James
Madison University, the University of North Carolina at
Wilmington, Northeastern University, Old Dominion University,
Towson University, Virginia Commonwealth University and the
College of William and Mary.
The CAA, which was
formed from the old ECAC-South
in 1985-86, offers championships
in 21 sports. The conference receives automatic bids to NCAA
competition in baseball, men’s &
women’s basketball, field hockey,
men’s & women’s golf, men’s &
women’s lacrosse, men’s &
women’s soccer, men’s &
women’s tennis, softball, women’s
volleyball and wrestling.
Since 1993, a CAA team has
reached the national quarterfinals,
or “Elite Eight,” three times –
George Mason in 1993 and Will-
iam & Mary in 1994 and 1997. At
least one CAA team has participated in the NCAA Women’s College Cup every year since 1993.
Two or more CAA teams have
been in the Tournament field in
nine of the past 11 seasons, and
three conference schools were invited to the College Cup each year
in 1996 and 1997. The Patriots
have made four of their 11 overall
appearances in the NCAA Tournament (1993-94 and 1996-97)
during this span, including a trip
to the championship game in
1993.
George Mason, which has a
55-18-6 record (.734 winning percentage) in 11 years of conference
regular-season competition, has
shared the CAA crown once
(1993). The Patriots also have tied
for the regular season title four
times, with William & Mary in
1993, 1997 and 2000 and with
James Madison in 1996. William
& Mary has won the conference
championship eight times and tied
for it once, while James Madison
has claimed two titles.
Six teams will advance past
the regular season as the CAA will
hold a season-ending tournament
for the 10th straight year to determine who receives its automatic
berth into the NCAA Tournament.
The CAA Tournament will be held
at the home venue of the highest
seed on Nov. 5 and 7, following
first-round contests at the site of
the No. 3 and 4 seeds on Nov. 2.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
P
R
O
G
R
A
M
/
C
A
A
H
I
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T
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Y
23
INDIVIDUAL/TEAM RECORDS
INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
S
C
H
O
O
L
R
E
C
O
R
D
S
GAME
GOALS
5 - Katy Robertson vs.
Richmond (10/10/98),
Lisa Echea vs.
East Carolina (9/10/95)
POINTS
10 -Katy Robertson vs.
Richmond (10/10/98),
Lisa Echea vs.
East Carolina (9/10/95)
ASSISTS
3 - Jaime Ricker vs. ODU (10/19/97),
Jenn Gross vs. UNCW (11/5/97),
Sherry Worsham vs. ECU (9/4/94),
Christine Ho vs. FIU (10/21/94)
SHOTS
12 - Jenn Gross vs.
George Washington (9/17/97)
GOALKEEPER SAVES
20 - Jaime Pagliarulo vs.
Harvard (11/23/97)
SEASON
POINTS
1. Katy Robertson 1999
60
2. Jenn Gross
1997
48
3. Katy Robertson 1998
45
4. Lisa Gmitter
1986
44
Tammy Pearman 1994
44
6. Jenn Gross
1993
40
GOALS
1. Katy Robertson 1999
23
2. Lisa Gmitter
1986
20
3. Tammy Pearman 1994
18
4. Jenn Gross
1994
18
5. Katy Robertson 1998
17
Jenn Gross
1993, 97 17
ASSISTS
1. Sherry Worsham 1994
18
2. Katy Robertson 1999
14
3. Jaime Ricker
1999
13
4. Betsy Drambour 1983
12
5. Jaime Ricker
1996
12
GOALKEEPER SAVES
1. Jaime Pagliarulo 1997
123
2. Sarah Coughlin 2000
121
3. Naomi Hines
2001
114
4. Sarah Coughlin 2003
109
5. Skye Eddy
1993
108
LOWEST GAA (MINIMUM 1000 MINUTES)
1. Yvonne Morris 1988
0.53
2. Jen Mead
1985
0.54
3. Kim Maslin
1986
0.77
4. Kim Maslin
1986
0.77
5. Linda Hilberath 1984
0.80
GOALKEEPER MINUTES
1. Jaime Pagliarulo 1997
2162
2. Sarah Coughlin 2003
2000
3. Skye Eddy
1993
1894
4. Sarah Coughlin 2000
1855
5. Jen Mead
1994
1831
CAREER
POINTS
1. Jenn Gross
2. Katy Robertson
3. Lisa Gmitter
4. Tammy Pearman
5 Jaime Ricker
24
1993-97 168
1998-2000,
2002
150
1983-86 146
1991-94
95
1996-99
83
6. Sherry Worsham 1991-94
81
7. Pam Baughman
1983-85
73
65
8. Shannon Timberlake 1995-98
9. Keri Nelson
1996-98
51
10. Michele Bell
1985-88
47
Meg Romaine
1982-85
47
Jenn Jones
1996-98
47
Sarah Wilkinson 2001-04
47
GOALS
1. Jenn Gross
1993-97
71
2. Lisa Gmitter
1983-86
64
3. Katy Robertson
1998-2000,
2002
57
4. Tammy Pearman 1991-94
41
5. Pam Baughman
1983-85
28
27
6. Shannon Timberlake 1995-98
7. Sherry Worsham 1991-94
23
8. Jaime Ricker
1996-99
20
Meg Romaine
1982-85
20
10. Michelle Bell
1985-88
19
ASSISTS
1. Jaime Ricker
1996-99
43
2. Katy Robertson
1998-2000,
2002
36
3. Sherry Worsham 1991-94
35
4. Betsy Drambour 1983-86
24
5. Lisa Gmitter
1983-86
18
GAME-WINNING GOALS
1. Jenn Gross
1993-97
20
2. Lisa Gmitter
1983-86
19
3. Tammy Pearman 1991-94
14
Katy Robertson
1998-2000
2002
14
8
5. Shannon Timberlake 1995-98
Michele Bell
1985-88
8
Pam Baughman
1983-85
8
HAT TRICKS
1. Jenn Gross
1993-97
7
2. Katy Robertson
1998-2000,
2002
2
Shannon Timberlake 1995-98
2
4. Keri Nelson
1996-98
1
GOALKEEPER SAVES
1. Jaime Pagliarulo 1995-98 375
2. Sarah Coughlin
2000-04 289
3. Naomi Hines
1999-02 243
4. Kim Maslin
1983-86 180
5. Jennifer Brennan 1991-92 176
GOALKEEPER SHUTOUTS
1. Linda Hilberath
1982-84
21
2. Jaime Pagliarulo 1995-98 20.75
3. Kim Maslin
1983-86 20.5
4. Sarah Coughlin
2000-04 15.25
5. Yvonne Morris
1985-88 18.5
GOALKEEPER MINUTES
1. Jaime Pagliarulo 1995-98 7005
2. Sarah Coughlin 20004763
2. Naomi Hines
1999-02 3847
3. Kim Maslin
1983-86 3551
4. Jennifer Brennan 1991-92 3425
5. Yvonne Morris
1985-88 3380
MOST CONSECUTIVE
GAMES STARTED
1. Lisa Berra
1995-98
89
Jenn Gross
1993-97
89
3. Kelly Harlow
1989-92
72
4. Carol Lind
1989-92
59
5. Sherry Worsham 1991-93
58
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES
PLAYED
1. Lisa Berra
1995-98
89
Jenn Gross
1993-97
89
3. Kelly Harlow
1989-92
72
0-6, at N. Carolina (11/21/93)
0-6, vs. Wisconsin (9/16/95)
0-6, vs. Santa Clara (10/5/97)
0-6, vs. Penn State (11/4/01)
Lisa Gmitter, a member of the 1985 NCAA
Championship team, was a four-time AllAmerican and is second all-time in goals.
4. Debbie Fine
1989-92
68
5. Jenny Ohlson
1989-92
67
MOST GAMES PLAYED
1. Lisa Berra
1995-98
89
Jenn Gross
1993-97
89
3. Stephanie Hancock 1997-00
80
Erika Webster
1998-01
80
Jess Delucchi
1999-2002 80
Katy McGee
1999-2002 80
7. Katy Robertson
1988-2000,
2002
79
Caroline Kent
1999-2002 79
9. Megan Hawkins 1998-01
77
10. Liz Sims
1999-2002 76
11. Kerri Beck
1999-2002 75
12. Kelley Harlow
1989-92
73
13. Debbie Fine
1989-92
68
14. Jenny Ohlson
1989-92
67
15. Stacia Pollock
1988-91
66
16. Allison Cowan
2001-04
63
17. Linda Hilberath
1982-84
62
18. Sarah Coughlin
2000-04
61
Carol Lind
1989-92
61
20. Sherry Worsham 1991-93
60
CONSECUTIVE GAMES
WITH A POINT
1. Katy Robertson 9 10/10/99-8/25/00
2. Katy Robertson 8 9/4/98-9/26/98
3. Jenn Gross
7 9/15/93-10/8/93
4. Katy Robertson 6 9/4/98-9/23/98
CONSECUTIVE GAMES
WITH A GOAL
1. Jenn Gross
7 9/15/93-10/8/93
Katy Robertson 7 10/18/99-8/25/00
3. Katy Robertson 5 9/17/99-10/6/99
Lisa Gmitter
5 10/16/85-9/20/86
Active players in BOLD
TEAM RECORDS
GAME
Points: 41, vs. E. Carolina (9/4/94)
Goals: 14, at E. Carolina (9/10/95)
Assists: 15, vs. E. Carolina (9/4/94)
GK Saves: 20, at Harvard (11/23/97)
Goals Allowed: 6
at North Carolina (11/21/93);
vs. Wisconsin (9/16/95);
vs. Santa Clara (10/5/97);
vs. Penn State (11/4/01)
Largest Winning Margin: 14
14-0, at East Carolina (9/10/95)
Largest Losing Margin:
6
SEASON
Most Goals
Goals
Games
76
21
64
22
64
21
62
20
60
23
60
24
Most Assists
Assists
Games
67
21
58
20
57
24
50
21
48
23
Most Points
Points
Games
219
21
177
24
172
22
170
20
169
21
Most Goals Allowed
Goals
Games
49
21
45
20
42
21
32
21
30
18
30
23
Most Points Allowed
Points
Games
136
21
125
20
123
21
92
21
87
24
Year
1994
1983
1985
1982
1996
1997
Year
1994
1999
1997
1998
1996
Year
1994
1997
1983
1999
1985
Year
1995
1999
2001
2002
1990
1996
Year
1995
1999
2001
2002
1997
MISCELLANEOUS
Most Games: 24 (1988, 1997)
Most Wins: 18 (1985, 1993)
Fewest Wins: 4 (1990)
Fewest Losses: 2 (1985)
Most Losses: 12 (1995)
Most Ties: 6 (2003)
Best Winning Pct.: .881 (1985)
Best Home Record: 12-0 (1985)
Best Reg. Season Home Rec.:
10-0 (1993)
Best Road Record: 12-1-1 (1986)
Most Goals: 76 (1994)
Fewest Goals: 21 (1990)
Most Goals per Game: 3.62 (1994)
Fewest Goals Allowed: 8 (1994)
Most Goals Allowed: 49 (1995)
Most Shutouts: 14 (1988)
Goalkeeper Saves: 138 (2001)
Consecutive Game Streaks
Wins: 13 (10/14/92-9/23/93)
Unbeaten: 21 (10/11/92-10/15/93)
Wins (in a season):
10 (9/21/94-10/14/94)
Shutout Wins:
6 (9/26/93-10/15/93)
Scoring a Goal:
28 (9/13/92-10/15/93)
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
SERIES RECORDS
TEAM
Adelphi
Air Force Academy
American
Arkansas
Army
Barry (FL)
Berry (GA)
Boston College
Boston University
Brigham Young
Brown
California
UC-Santa Barbara
Central Florida
Cincinnati
Colorado College
Connecticut
Cornell
Cortland State
Creighton
Dayton
Dickinson
Duke
East Carolina
East Tennessee State
Elon
Florida Atlantic
Florida International
Florida State
Franklin & Marshall
Fresno State
Georgetown
George Washington
Hartford
Harvard
Hawai’i
Illinois
Indiana
W
L
2
0
1
0
12
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
3
1
0
2
First Meeting
4
2
2
1
2
2
5
1
8
1
2
3
2
1
1
2
2
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
2
7
1
First Meeting
1
0
1
0
2
0
0
2
2
0
1
0
2
0
15
0
0
4
2
3
First Meeting
0
1
1
0
T
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
1
0
0
SERIES RECORDS VS.
CAA OPPONENTS
Delaware
Drexel
Georgia State
Hofstra
James Madison
Northeastern
UNC Wilmington
Old Dominion
Towson
VA Commonwealth
William & Mary
4
0
2
0
First Meeting
2
1
9
9
First Meeting
12
3
11
2
2
1
10
1
12
16
1
1
1
2
0
1
0
1
5
TEAM
Iona
Keene State
La Salle
Liberty
Maryland
UMBC
Mary Washington
Massachusetts
Methodist
Miami (Fla.)
Michigan State
Minnesota
Missouri-St. Louis
Monmouth
Navy
North Carolina
UNC Greensboro
North Carolina State
Notre Dame
Oakland
Pennsylvania
Penn State
Pepperdine
Princeton
Radford
Randolph-Macon
Richmond
Roanoke College
Rutgers
St. Joseph’s
St. Mary’s (Calif.)
Santa Clara
Seton Hall
Southern Illinois
Southern Methodist
Stanford
Stony Brook
SUNY-Buffalo
Swarthmore
Temple
Tennessee
Texas
Texas A&M
Texas Christian
Villanova
Virginia
Virginia Tech
Washington State
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wright State
Xavier
Yale
TOTALS
W
L
1
0
1
0
2
0
1
0
5
9
1
0
3
0
1
6
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
0
2
0
5
1
1
2
1
14
5
1
5
10
1
2
0
1
3
2
0
6
0
1
4
2
10
3
1
0
6
1
1
0
9
4
First Meeting
3
0
0
3
1
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
2
0
2
0
1
0
2
1
1
0
12
3
11
10
2
0
1
0
0
2
4
5
3
0
3
1
First Meeting
275
158
CAA REVIEW
T
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
2
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
2
2
4
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
3
0
0
0
1
0
0
44
2005 Opponents in BOLD
2004 STANDINGS
VCU
Hofstra
William & Mary
James Madison
George Mason
Old Dominion
Delaware
Towson
UNC Wilmington
Drexel
CAA
6-3-0
6-3-0
5-2-2
5-2-2
5-2-2
5-3-1
4-4-1
2-6-1
1-7-1
0-7-2
Overall
15-7-0
12-6-1
12-7-4
11-8-3
10-7-3
9-8-2
9-6-3
6-11-1
10-7-1
4-12-4
Player of the Year: Sandra Anger (VCU)
Rookie of the Year: Marie Curtin (Hofstra)
Defender of the Year:
Sarah Coughlin (MASON)
Coach of the Year: Joe Pereira (ODU)
CAA Tournament Results: Quarterfinals –
JMU 1, Mason 0; W&M 1, Old Dominion 0.
Semifinals – VCU 2, JMU 1 (OT); W&M 2,
Hofstra 1 (OT). Final – VCU 3, W&M 1.
NCAA Tournament Results: First Round –
W&M 2, Virginia Tech 1; Virginia 6, JMU 0; Duke
2, VCU 1. Second Round - UNC 6, W&M 0.
2004 AWARD WINNERS
ALL-CAA FIRST TEAM: Sarah Coughlin
(MASON): Jen Parsons, Sarah Anger (VCU);
Shannon Alger (Delaware); Katie Hogwood
(W&M); Emma Kilduff, Marie Curtin (Hofstra);
Katy Swindells (JMU); Laura Beeman, Kim
Snyder (Old Dominion); Katie Kane (Drexel).
ALL-CAA SECOND TEAM: Allison Cowan,
Danielle MacDonald, Sarah Wilkinson (MASON); Brigit Canle, Becky Wachsberger
(Hofstra); Christine Wrightson (Delaware);
Caroline Renkin, Jenny Cauble (UNCW); Kristin
McHugh (Towson); Taline Tahmassian (W&M);
Solfird Andersen, Jennifer Woodie (VCU).
CAA ALL-ROOKIE TEAM: Sarah Fack,
Jessica Paris (MASON); Marie Curtin
(Hofstra); Solfrid Andersen, Shelley Lyle (VCU);
Jenny Cauble (UNCW); Annie Lowry, Melanie
Schaffer (JMU); Alli D’Amico (Delaware); Brittany Bode, Mary MacKenzie (W&M); Brandi
Daniels (Towson).
ALL-TIME CAA HONORS
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
CHAMPION
George Mason/W&M
William & Mary
James Madison
William & Mary
William & Mary
William & Mary
William & Mary
William & Mary
William & Mary
James Madison
William & Mary
Virginia Commonwealth
COACH AWARD
John Daly (W&M)
John Daly (W&M)
Colleen Corwell (AU)
Dave Lombardo (JMU)
Neil Roberts (ECU)
Joe Pereira (ODU)
John Daly (W&M)
Peter Albright (UR)
D. Schilte-Brown (VCU), Chris Brown (VCU)
Jac Cicala (Mason), JoAnne Russell (Hofstra)
JoAnne Russell (Hofstra)
Joe Pereira (ODU)
PLAYER AWARD
Natalie Neaton (W&M)
Tammy Pearman (Mason)
Natalie Neaton (W&M)
Christina Kenney (VCU)
Ann Cook (W&M)
Missy Wycinsky (W&M)
Missy Wycinsky (W&M)
Jennifer Henley (ODU), Jordan Krieger (W&M)
Tara Flint (W&M)
L. Vanderspiegel (W&M)
Jen Parsons (VCU)
Sandra Anger (VCU)
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
S
E
R
I
E
S
R
E
C
O
R
D
S
/
C
A
A
R
E
V
I
E
W
25
GEORGE MASON’S FINEST
Patriots on the
U.S. National Team
Name (Years Played)
Pam Baughman (1983-85)
Angela Berry (1986, 92-93)
Kim Crabbe (1983-85)
Betsy Drambour (1985-87)
Lisa Gmitter (1983-87)
Diane Hedin (1986)
Kim Maslin-Kammerdeiner
(1988-91)
Jen Mead (1993)
Jaime Pagliarulo (1997, 2001)
Tammy Pearman (1995-97)
Chris Tomek (1986-87)
H
O
N
O
R
R
O
L
L
26
NSCAA All-Americans
1983 Pam Baughman
Lisa Gmitter
1984 Pam Baughman (2nd)
Lisa Gmitter (3rd)
1985 Pam Baughman
Betsy Drambour (2nd)
Lisa Gmitter
1986 Betsy Drambour (2nd)
Lisa Gmitter
Kim Maslin (2nd)
Chris Tomek (2nd)
1987 Dana Hedin (2nd)
1988 Dana Hedin (2nd)
1989 Laura Anton
Diane Hedin
1991 Debbie Fine (2nd)
1993 Skye Eddy
1994 Jen Mead
Tammy Pearman (2nd)
1996 Jaime Pagliarulo (2nd)
1997 Jaime Pagliarulo (2nd)
1998 Jaime Pagliarulo (2nd)
NSCAA All-Region
1982 Sis Koskinen, Kim Moore
1983 Pam Baughman,
Lisa Gmitter,
Linda Hilberath
1984 Pam Baughman,
Lisa Gmitter
1985 Pam Baughman,
Kim Crabbe, Lisa Gmitter,
Chris Tomek
1986 Betsy Drambour,
Lisa Gmitter, Kim Maslin,
Chris Tomek
1988 Laura Anton, Diane Hedin,
Angela Berry, Dana Hedin,
Yvonne Morris
1989 Judy Allstadt,
Laura Anton, Diane Hedin
Angela Berry
1990 Kelley Harlow,
Kriste Mehew
1993 Skye Eddy, Jenn Gross,
Christine Ho,
Tammy Pearman
1994 Christine Ho, Jen Mead,
Tammy Pearman
1996 Mindy Bassett, Jenn Gross,
Keri Nelson, Jaime Ricker,
Jaime Pagliarulo
1997
1998
1999
2000
2002
2003
2004
Jenn Gross, Jennifer Jones,
Jaime Pagliarulo,
Jaime Ricker
Jamie Pagliarulo,
Jaime Ricker,
Katy Robertson (2nd)
Jaime Ricker,
Katy Robertson (2nd)
Sarah Coughlin (3rd),
Katy Robertson (2nd)
Naomi Hines
Sarah Coughlin
Sarah Coughlin (3rd),
Sarah Wilkinson (3rd)
NSCAA Team Academic Award
2002, 2003
Adidas Academic All-American
1986 Chris Tomek
1987 Laura Anton
1988 Laura Anton,
Yvonne Morris
1989 Laura Anton
1990 Stephanie Hylan
2004 Sarah Coughlin (3rd)
Adidas All-Region Scholar
2004 Sarah Coughlin
* ISAA Player of the Year
1985 Pam Baughman
* ISAA Goalkeeper of the Year
1994 Jen Mead
Soccer America
Player of the Year
1985 Lisa Gmitter
Soccer America
Freshman All-Americans
1985 Dana Hedin
(Freshman of the Year)
1986 Angela Berry
1998 Katy Robertson
Soccer Buzz
Freshman All-Americans
1998 Katy Robertson
(Mid-Atlantic Fr. of the Year)
2000 Sarah Coughlin
Soccer Buzz
All-Americans
1997 Jaime Pagliarulo
1999 Katy Robertson (3rd)
Soccer Buzz
Mid-Atlantic All-Region
1997 Jaime Ricker
Jaime Pagliarulo
Keri Nelson
Jennifer Gross (2nd)
Jennifer Jones (2nd)
1998 Jaime Ricker
Katy Robertson (2nd)
Jaime Pagliarulo (2nd)
Katy Robertson (Fr.)
1999 Katy Robertson
Jaime Ricker (2nd)
2000 Katy Robertson (2nd)
Jess Delucchi (3rd)
Pam Baughman, a member of the 1985 NCAA Championship team, was
a three-time All-American and played on the U.S. National Team.
2001
2003
2004
Sarah Coughlin (3rd, Fr.)
Jess Delucchi (2nd)
Sarah Coughlin
Allison Cowan (3rd),
Jessica Paris (Fr.)
NCAA All-Tournament Teams
1983 Lisa Gmitter (Off. MVP),
Pam Baughman,
Sue Vodicka
1985 Pam Baughman
(Tournament MVP),
Kim Crabbe,
Betsy Drambour
(Defensive MVP),
Lisa Gmitter
1986 Angela Berry,
Betsy Drambour,
Lisa Gmitter, Kim Maslin
1993 Skye Eddy (Def. MVP),
Christine Ho,
Tammy Pearman
National Coach of the Year
1983 Hank Leung (16-4-2)
NCAA Runner-Ups
1985 Hank Leung (18-2-1)
NCAA Champions
1993
Jac Cicala (18-3-2)
NCAA Runner-ups
ALL-CAA
1993 Skye Eddy
Jenn Gross
Christine Ho
Kari Uppinghouse
Tammy Pearman (2nd)
Sherry Worsham (2nd)
1994 Kim Derrico
Jenn Gross
Christine Ho
Jen Mead
Tammy Pearman
Sherry Worsham
1995 Mindy Bassett
Lisa Berra
Jaime Pagliarulo (2nd)
Aimee Willard (2nd)
1996 Jenn Gross
Keri Nelson
Jaime Ricker
Mindy Bassett (2nd)
Jaime Pagliarulo (2nd)
1997 Jenn Gross
Jen Jones
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
GEORGE MASON’S FINEST
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
Jaime Pagliarulo
Jaime Ricker
Keri Nelson (2nd)
Lisa Berra
Jaime Pagliarulo
Jaime Ricker
Katy Robertson
Keri Nelson (2nd)
Jaime Ricker
Katy Robertson
Erika Webster (2nd)
Sarah Coughlin
Katy Robertson
Jess Delucchi
Sarah Wilkinson
Katy McGee (2nd)
Erika Webster (2nd)
Naomi Hines
Katy Robertson
Sarah Coughlin (2nd)
Sarah Coughlin
Sarah Coughlin
Allison Cowan (2nd)
Danielle MacDonald (2nd)
Sarah Wilkington (2nd)
CAA All-Rookie Team
2004 Jessica Paris, Sarah Fack
CAA All-Tournament Team
1998 Jaime Pagliarulo,
Jaime Ricker
2000 Sarah Coughlin, Stephanie
Hancock, Julianna Perovich
2001 Katy McGee,
Erika Webster
2002 Naomi Hines,
Cara Patton, Liz Sims
2003 Jennifer Orr, Cara Patton
2004 Allison Cowan
Coach of the Year
2002 Jac Cicala (co-Coach)
Player of the Year
1994 Tammy Pearman
Defender of the Year
2004 Sarah Coughlin
Rookie of the Year
1993 Jenn Gross
1996 Jaime Ricker
1998 Katy Robertson
ALL-VIRGINIA (VaSID)
(records missing from 1994-95)
1996 Jenn Gross
Keri Nelson
Jaime Pagliarulo
Mindy Bassett (2nd)
Jaime Ricker (2nd)
1997 Jenn Gross
Jennifer Jones
Jaime Pagliarulo
Jaime Ricker (2nd)
1998 Lisa Berra
Jaime Pagliarulo
Jaime Ricker
Katy Robertson
Shannon Jones (2nd)
Keri Nelson (2nd)
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
Jaime Ricker
Katy Robertson
Erika Webster
Jess Delucchi (2nd)
Stephanie Hancock (2nd)
Sarah Coughlin
Katy Robertson
Stephanie Hancock (2nd)
Erika Webster (2nd)
Erika Webster
Sarah Wilkinson
Jess Delucchi (2nd)
Katy McGee (2nd)
Jess Delucchi
Naomi Hines
Katy Robertson (2nd)
Sarah Coughlin
Jessica Paris,
Sarah Coughlin (2nd)
Note: ISAA was taken over by the
NSCAA in 1996 and awards
discontinued after 1995 season.
CAA Commissioner’s
Academic Award
2004
Amy Alecci, Oliva Brown
Sarah Coughlin, Allison Cowan
Jamie Daulton, Sarah Fack
Franmarie Gregg, Jessica Paris
Danielle MacDonald, Laura Salichs
Amy Sorenson, Rachel Wiggins
1997
Stephanie Hancock. Lisa Berra
Erica Henrich, Jaime Pagliarulo
Sarah Churchill, Carrie Dalton
Jenn Gross, Katherine Jeschke
1996
Melinda Bassett, Lisa Berra
Sarah Churchill, Nikola Francisco
Meredith Hampton, Keri Nelson
1995
Melinda Bassett, Lisa Berra
Sarah Churchill, Jill Whalen
1994
Melinda Bassett, Kristie Braunston
Michelle Cronan, Jenn Gross
Julie Hellmuth, Christine Ho
Sherry Worsham
1993
Melinda Bassett, Michelle Cronan
Elizabeth Kosco, Christine Ho
Andrea Lockhart, Wendy Lubell
Amanda Mitchell, Tamara Pearman
Sherry Worsham
Athletic Director’s
Honor Roll
2004-05
Amy Alecci, Olivia Brown
Sarah Coughlin, Allison Cowan
Jamie Daulton, Sarah Fack
Alison Feldman, Franmarie Gregg
Danielle MacDonald, Jessica Paris
Kristen Portell, Kasey Davenport
Laura Salichs, Amanda Schmidt
Amy Sorenson, Rachel Wiggins
Sarah Wilkinson
2003-04
Heather Bourne, Olivia Brown
Amy Alecci, Sarah Coughlin
Allison Cowan, Franmarie Gregg
Pamela Kent, Neda Keshani
Jennifer Orr, Cara Patton
Lauren Podvin, Becky Ragard
Amy Sorenson, Rachel Wiggins
Dean’s List
2004-05
Amy Alecci, Olivia Brown
Sarah Coughlin, Allison Cowan
Sarah Fack, Franmarie Gregg
Danielle MacDonald, Jessica Paris
Laura Salichs, Amy Sorenson
Rachel Wiggins
2003-04
Olivia Brown, Sarah Coughlin
Franmarie Gregg, Neda Keshani
Cara Patton, Lauren Podvin
Becky Ragard, Amy Sorenson
Rachel Wiggins
2003
Amy Alecci, Olivia Brown
Allison Cowan, Franmarie Gregg
Pamela Kent, Lauren Podvin
Becky Ragard, Amy Sorenson
Rachel Wiggins
H
O
N
O
R
R
O
L
L
2002
Amy Alecci, Allison Cowan
Pamela Kent, Mary Jo Lopez
Jennifer Orr, Becky Ragard
Amy Sorenson
2001
Erin Behbehani, Allison Cowan
Jess Delucchi, Danielle Free
Naomi Hines, Sarah Wilkinson
2000
Erin Behbehani, Danielle Free
Megan Hawkins, Naomi Hines
Caroline Kent, Andrea Matthews
Kristie Matthews, Cara Patton
Casey Peifer, Katy Robertson
1999
Rachelle Chretein, Sarah Coughlin
Stephanie Hancock, Cara Patton
Katy Robertson, Andrea Matthews
Megan Hawkins, Naomi Hines
Caroline Kent
1998
Lisa Berra, Stephanie Hancock
Megan Hawkins, Alicia Holmes
Shannon Jones, Andrea Matthews
Keri Nelson, Katy Robertson
Kim Crabbe, a member of the 1985 NCAA Championship team, also
played on the U.S. National Team.
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
27
YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS
Y
E
A
R
B
Y
Y
E
A
R
R
E
S
U
L
T
S
28
1982 (14-5-1)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
NCAA FIRST ROUND
1985 (18-2-1)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
NATIONAL CHAMPIONS
S. 10
S. 11
S. 21
S. 25
S. 26
S. 28
O. 2
O. 9
O. 9
O. 10
O. 10
O. 11
O. 15
O. 16
O. 17
O. 22
O. 17
O. 30
O. 31
N. 6
S. 1
S. 2
S. 14
S. 21
S. 22
S. 28
S. 29
O. 5
O. 6
O. 12
O. 12
O. 13
O. 13
O. 19
O. 26
O. 27
N. 2
N. 9
N. 16
N. 23
N. 24
at Swarthmore
W
at Frank. & Marshall W
Randolph-Macon
W
at Radford
T
at Virginia Tech
W
George Washington W
William & Mary
W
vs. Minnesota
W
vs. Old Dominion W
vs. Mary WashingtonW
vs. Radford
W
vs. North Carolina L
Virginia
W
Richmond
W
at James Madison W
Adelphi
W
North Carolina
L
at Connecticut
L
at Massachusetts
L
at Princeton#
L
9-0
2-0
10-0
2-2
1-0
3-0
4-1
7-1
3-0
3-0
2-1
0-2
2-0
3-0
7-3
4-0
0-5
0-1
0-2
0-1
1983 (16-4-2)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
NATIONAL CHAMPION
RUNNER-UP
S. 10
S. 17
S. 18
S. 24
S. 25
S. 28
O. 1
O. 8
O. 8
O. 9
O. 9
O. 10
O. 10
O. 15
O. 15
O. 16
O. 22
O. 23
N. 6
N. 12
N. 19
N. 22
at North Carolina
L
Radford
W
Franklin & Marshall W
Villanova
W
Brown
T
at George Washington W
at William & Mary W
vs. Mary WashingtonW
vs. Virginia
W
vs. Old Dominion W
vs. Radford
W
vs. William & Mary W
vs. North Carolina L
at Central Florida
W
vs. Texas A&M
T
vs. Southern Illinois W
vs. Massachusetts L
vs. Keene State
W
Missouri-St. Louis# W
Cortland State#
W
vs. Connecticut#
W
vs. North Carolina# L
0-5
4-0
8-1
4-0
1-1
3-1
3-1
2-0
4-0
4-0
4-1
2-0
1-2
2-0
1-1
7-0
1-2
4-2
6-2
2-1
1-0
0-4
1984 (15-3-3)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
NCAA FIRST ROUND
S. 1
S. 8
S. 15
S. 16
S. 20
S. 22
S. 23
S. 25
S. 29
S. 30
O. 6
O. 6
O. 7
O. 7
O. 8
O. 13
O. 14
O. 18
O. 20
O. 27
N. 3
at Villanova
at Radford
Cincinnati
NC State
California
Wisconsin
Missouri-St. Louis
UC-Santa Barbara
Adelphi
Central Florida
vs. Virginia
vs. NC State
vs. Texas
vs. Radford
vs. William & Mary
vs. Boston College
at Brown
George Washington
North Carolina
William & Mary
Colorado College#
W
W
W
L
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
T
W
W
T
W
L
W
T
W
L
5-0
4-2
4-1
0-1
2-0
2-1
1-0
2-1
3-0
3-2
4-2
0-0
2-0
1-0
0-0
4-2
0-1
5-0
1-1
4-1
1-2
at North Carolina
T
at Methodist
W
at William & Mary W
UC-Santa Barbara W
California
W
Brown
W
Connecticut
W
Radford
W
Dickinson
W
Virginia
W
vs. Boston College L
vs. James Madison W
vs. Harvard
W
Villanova
W
at NC State
L
vs. Colorado CollegeW
Rutgers
W
William & Mary# W
Cortland State#
W
Massachusetts#
W
North Carolina#
W
3-3
6-1
2-1
2-1
2-0
4-0
2-0
2-1
8-0
5-0
0-2
6-0
1-0
6-0
0-2
4-0
2-1
3-2
1-0
3-0
2-0
1986 (16-3-1)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
NCAA THIRD PLACE
A. 30
A. 31
S. 13
S. 14
S. 20
S. 21
S. 24
S. 27
S. 28
O. 4
O. 5
O. 11
O. 11
O. 12
O. 26
O. 31
N. 1
N. 2
N. 16
N. 22
vs. Central Florida
vs. Massachusetts
vs. Virginia
vs. Cincinnati
Wisconsin
North Carolina
George Washington
vs. Boston College
at Brown
at Radford
at Virginia
vs. James Madison
vs. Radford
vs. Army
NC State
at Villanova
at Rutgers
at Princeton
NC State#
North Carolina#
W
T
W
W
W
L
W
W
W
W
W
W
L
W
W
W
W
W
W
L
2-1 (ot)
1-1 (ot)
2-0
4-1
1-0
2-4
5-1
2-1 (ot)
1-0
5-1
2-0
5-0
0-1
4-1
2-0
2-1
2-0
3-0
1-0
2-3 (ot)
1987 (9-8-1)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
S. 5
S. 6
S. 11
S. 19
S. 26
S. 27
O. 3
O. 10
O. 10
O. 11
O. 11
O. 17
O. 18
O. 24
O. 25
O. 27
O. 30
N. 1
at North Carolina
L
1-4
vs. NC State
L
0-3
at William & Mary L
0-3
Virginia
W
2-1
Massachusetts
L
0-1
Rutgers
W
1-0
Radford
W 2-0 (ot)
vs. Maryland
W
4-0
vs. Villanova
W
2-1
vs. Elon
W
2-0
vs. William & Mary L
2-4
vs. Wisconsin
L
1-2
at Cincinnati
W
6-1
vs. Brown
W
1-0
vs. Central Florida L
0-5
Princeton
W
3-0
vs. Colorado CollegeT 1-1 (ot)
at UC-Santa Barbara L 1-2 (ot)
1988 (12-7-5)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
NCAA SECOND ROUND
S. 2
S. 4
Radford
W
3-0
at George Washington T 1-1 (ot)
S. 10
S. 11
S. 17
S. 18
S. 23
S. 25
S. 28
O. 1
O. 2
O. 8
O. 8
O. 9
O. 9
O. 10
O. 15
O. 16
O. 22
O. 23
O. 29
O. 30
N. 5
N. 13
North Carolina
L
at Virginia
W
at NC State
L
vs. California
L
at Hartford
L
at Brown
W
William & Mary
L
Central Florida
W
Barry (FL)
T
vs. Texas A&M
W
vs. Roanoke
W
vs. Villanova
W
vs. William & Mary T
vs. NC State
T
vs. Colorado CollegeL
vs. Wisconsin
T
vs. Cincinnati
W
vs. Dayton
W
at Princeton
W
at Rutgers
W
at William & Mary# W
at NC State#
L
1-2
1-0
0-2
0-2
0-1 (ot)
2-0
0-1
1-0
0-0 (ot)
1-0
5-0
2-0 (ot)
0-0 (ot)
0-0 (ot)
1-2
0-0 (ot)
1-0
1-0
4-3
4-2
1-0
0-1
1989 (11-7-1)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
NCAA FIRST ROUND
S. 1
S. 3
S. 8
S. 10
S. 16
S. 17
S. 23
O. 1
O. 6
O. 7
O. 8
O. 9
O. 14
O. 15
O. 18
O. 21
O. 22
O. 29
N. 5
Hartford
L
George Washington W
at North Carolina
L
Rutgers
L
at Monmouth
W
at Iona
W
Southern Methodist L
at William & Mary T
vs. Mary WashingtonW
vs. Texas A&M
W
vs. Radford
W
vs. Rutgers
W
at Colorado College L
vs. St. Mary’s (CA) W
Virginia
L
at La Salle
W
at Villanova
W
at Boston College W
at NC State#
L
0-1
2-0
1-5
0-1
1-0
10-0
1-2
2-2
2-1
2-0
3-2
3-0
0-1
2-1
1-2
8-0
1-0
2-1
0-3
1990 (4-11-3)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
S. 1
S. 7
S. 9
S. 15
S. 16
S. 22
S. 23
S. 30
O. 3
O. 6
O. 7
O. 13
O. 14
O. 20
O. 21
O. 24
O. 27
O. 28
at Virginia
L
American
W
Santa Clara
L
vs. Rutgers
L
at Stony Brook
W
vs. Hartford
L
at Massachusetts
T
North Carolina
L
Central Florida
T
vs. UC-Santa Barbara L
at Stanford
L
vs. NC State
L
vs. Duke
L
William & Mary
W
Villanova
T
at George Washington W
Cincinnati
L
Monmouth
L
1-5
6-1
0-2
0-1
7-0
0-5
1-1 (ot)
0-1
0-0 (ot)
0-2
1-4
1-2
1-2 (ot)
1-0 (ot)
0-0 (ot)
2-1 (ot)
0-2
0-1
1991 (11-8-1)
Head Coach: Hank Leung
S. 7
S. 10
S. 14
S. 15
S. 21
S. 24
S. 27
at William & Mary
James Madison
Princeton
Wright State
Maryland
at American
St. Mary’s (CA)
L
0-2
L
0-1
W 4-3 (ot)
W
2-1
W
5-1
W
3-0
W
4-1
NCAA POSTSEASON ROUNDUP
All-Time NCAA Tournament
Appearances Based on Percentages
(Seven or more appearances)
Name
Ap. W L T Pct.
1. N. Carolina 23 83 6 0 .933
2. Notre Dame 12 32 10 1 .756
3. Portland
12 30 11 0 .732
4. Santa Clara 16 37 15 1 .708
5. UCLA
9 21 9 0 .700
6. Florida
8 15 7 0 .682
7. Penn State 10 20 10 0 .667
8. Nebraska
9 14 8 1 .630
9. Connecticut 23 40 24 0 .625
10. Mason
11 13 10 1 .563
Texas A&M 10 13 10 1 .563
S. 28
O. 2
O. 5
O. 6
O. 10
O. 13
O. 18
O. 19
O. 23
O. 26
O. 27
N. 2
N. 3
Massachusetts
Virginia
at Cornell
vs. SUNY-Buffalo
Central Florida
North Carolina
at Rutgers
at Monmouth
NC State
at Xavier
at Cincinnati
Radford
George Washington
L
0-1
W
1-0
L
0-1
W
9-0
W
1-0
L
1-4
T 0-0 (ot)
W
1-0
L
2-5
L
0-2
W
2-1
L
1-2
W
3-0
1992 (8-6-3)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
S. 6
S. 9
S. 12
S. 13
S. 19
S. 20
S. 25
S. 27
O. 3
O. 9
O. 11
O. 14
O. 17
O. 24
O. 25
O. 31
N. 1
at Villanova
W
at James Madison* L
at Virginia
L
Cincinnati
W
vs. Duke
L
at North Carolina
L
vs. NC State
T
at UNC Greensboro T
at Maryland
L
William & Mary* L
Rutgers
T
at George Washington W
Monmouth
W
American*
W
Creighton
W
Wisconsin
W
at Temple
W
3-1
2-3
0-2
2-0
1-3
1-3
1-1
2-2
1-2
2-3
1-1
1-0
5-1
5-0
1-0
3-1
1-0
1993 (18-3-2, 2-0-1 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
NATIONAL CHAMPION
RUNNER-UP
S. 4
S. 5
S. 8
S. 12
S. 15
S. 18
S. 23
S. 24
S. 26
S. 29
O. 2
O. 8
O. 10
O. 15
O. 17
O. 20
O. 24
O. 27
O. 31
N. 13
Xavier
Villanova
James Madison*
UMBC
at Rutgers
Wright State
Temple
at William & Mary*
vs. Harvard
George Washington
at Monmouth
Virginia
Berry (GA)
vs. Michigan State
at Wisconsin
Maryland
at Radford
at American*
vs. Cincinnati
vs. Notre Dame#
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
W
3-0
W
3-1
W
2-0
W
2-1
W 3-2 (ot)
W
5-1
W
6-0
T
1-1
W
4-0
W
2-0
W
4-0
W
1-0
W
3-0
W 1-0 (ot)
L
1-0
W
3-0
L
1-2
W
2-0
W
2-1
W
2-1
YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS
N. 14 at Wisconsin#
N. 19 vs. Stanford#
N. 21 at North Carolina#
W
3-1
T 1-1 (pk)
L
0-6
N. 8 vs. American**
W
N. 10 vs. William & Mary**L
N. 17 at Penn State#
L
3-0
0-2
0-2
1994 (16-3-2, 5-1-0 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
NCAA “SWEET 16”
1997 (14-6-4, 7-1-0 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
NCAA “SWEET 16”
S. 3
S. 4
S. 9
S. 18
S. 21
S. 23
S. 25
S. 28
O. 1
O. 2
O. 5
O. 10
O. 12
O. 14
O. 16
O. 21
O. 23
O. 26
O. 30
N. 9
N. 12
A. 30
S. 2
S. 6
S. 10
S. 13
S. 17
S. 19
S. 21
S. 24
S. 27
O. 3
O. 5
O. 12
O. 15
O. 19
O. 22
O. 26
O. 31
N. 2
N. 5
N. 8
N. 9
N. 16
N. 23
UNC Greensboro
W
4-0
East Carolina*
W
13-0
Notre Dame
L
1-0
at Virginia
T
0-0
American*
W
6-0
at Cincinnati
W
2-1
at Wright State
W
3-0
at NC State
W
2-0
UNC Wilmington * W
12-0
Monmouth
W
2-0
at Maryland
W
2-1
Rutgers
W
2-0
at James Madison* W
6-1
at Old Dominion* W
3-0
at William & Mary* L
1-2
Florida International W
5-1
Indiana
W
3-0
at George Washington W 3-1 (ot)
Michigan State
T
0-0
at Virginia#
W
3-0
at Notre Dame#
L
3-1
1995 (8-12-1, 4-3-0 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
S. 3
S. 6
S. 8
S. 10
S. 16
S. 17
S. 20
S. 23
S. 27
S. 30
O. 3
O. 6
O. 10
O. 13
O. 15
O. 20
O. 22
O. 27
O. 28
N. 2
N. 3
Villanova
L
2-3
Maryland
L
0-5
at UNCW*
W
4-2
at East Carolina*
W
14-0
vs. Wisconsin
L
0-6
vs. Massachusetts L
0-1
at American *
L 0-1 (ot)
Virginia
T 2-2 (ot)
George Washington W
3-1
NC State
L
0-5
at VCU *
W
3-1
William & Mary*
L
0-2
James Madison*
L
0-2
Cornell
L
0-2
Texas A&M
L
1-6
Old Dominion*
W
1-0
at Rutgers
L
0-3
vs. Florida Atlantic W
4-1
at Florida Int’l
W
1-0
vs. American**
W
6-2
vs. William & Mary** L
1-4
1996 (14-7-2, 7-0-1 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
NCAA FIRST ROUND
S. 7
S. 9
S. 16
S. 18
S. 21
S. 24
S. 27
S. 29
O. 4
O. 6
O. 12
O. 15
O. 19
O. 23
O. 26
O. 27
O. 29
N. 1
N. 3
N. 7
at UNC Greensboro L
at NC State
W
Va. Commonwealth* W
American*
W
at Virginia
L
at Maryland
L
at Old Dominion* W
at William & Mary* W
Penn State
L
Colorado College
W
at Richmond*
W
at James Madison* T
at Villanova
W
at George Washington T
UNC Wilmington* W
East Carolina*
W
Rutgers
W
vs. Massachusetts L
vs. UNC Greensboro W
at UNC Wilmington**W
1-4
2-0
8-1
4-0
1-2
0-2
3-1
4-1
1-2
2-0
5-0
1-1 (ot)
4-3 (ot)
2-2 (ot)
5-1
3-0
3-2 (ot)
0-2
5-1
3-1
Villanova
W
#11 Virginia
T
#21 UNC GreensboroW
#13 Maryland
L
Richmond*
W
George Washington T
at Colorado College T
at Air Force
W
at American*
W
#8 William & Mary* W
Harvard
T
#7 Santa Clara
L
NC State
W
James Madison*
W
Old Dominion*
W
at VCU *
W
#25 at Penn State
L
at East Carolina*
L
at UNC Wilmington*W
UNC Wilmington** W
Old Dominion**
W
#12 W & M **
L
at #8 Maryland#
W
at #17 Harvard#
L
3-0
0-0
2-1
0-3
3-0
2-2
1-1
2-1
6-1
2-0
1-1
0-6
3-2 (ot)
3-1
6-1
2-0
4-3 (ot)
0-1 (ot)
5-0
5-1
7-0
0-1
2-1
1-2 (ot)
1998 (12-8-1, 5-2-1 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
S. 1
S. 4
S. 6
S. 9
S. 12
S. 18
S. 20
S. 23
S. 26
O. 2
O. 4
O. 10
O. 13
O. 16
O. 18
O. 21
O. 24
O. 28
O. 31
N. 5
N. 6
at Old Dominion* L 1-2 (ot)
Fresno State
W
3-0
Va. Commonwealth* W
4-0
at George Washington W
5-0
at UNC Greensboro W
2-0
East Carolina*
W
7-1
UNC Wilmington* W
2-0
at #25 Maryland
L
2-4
Washington State
W
2-0
at #2 Santa Clara
L
0-1
vs. Saint Mary’s (CA) W
1-0
at Richmond*
W
8-2
at James Madison* L
1-5
vs. Cornell
W
2-0
at #23 Harvard
L
1-2
American*
W
3-1
at #9 W & M *
T
0-0
Pennsylvania
L
0-1
at #13 Virginia
L
2-3
vs. East Carolina** W
1-0
vs. #8 W & M **
L
0-2
1999 (9-11-0, 5-3-0 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
A. 8
S. 1
S. 4
S. 8
S. 11
S. 17
S. 19
S. 29
O. 1
O. 3
O. 6
O. 10
O. 13
O. 16
O. 18
O. 22
O. 24
O. 27
at Navy
L
0-2
at VCU *
W
4-0
Seton Hall
L 4-5 (ot)
George Washington W
7-1
#21 William & Mary*L
1-3
at #20 Tennessee
W
3-1
vs. Xavier
W
4-1
#14 Richmond*
W
3-1
at UNC Wilmington*L
2-3
at East Carolina*
W 4-3 (ot)
Maryland
L
0-1
#10 Virginia
L
2-3
James Madison*
L
1-5
at Rutgers
L
2-3
Pennsylvania
W
3-1
Old Dominion*
W
6-2
#5 Penn State
L
2-3
at American*
W
3-0
O. 31 Wisconsin
L 3-4 (ot)
N. 3 UNC Wilmington** L 2-3 (ot)
2000 (12-9-0, 6-2-0 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
A. 25
A. 27
S. 1
S. 3
S. 8
S. 10
S. 15
S. 20
S. 22
S. 24
S. 27
S. 30
O. 6
O. 10
O. 15
O. 20
O. 24
O. 27
O. 29
N. 3
N. 5
Navy
W
3-0
#4 at Penn State
L
0-3
Va. Commonwealth* W
4-1
UNC Greensboro
W
2-0
at Wisconsin
L
0-3
vs. Oakland
L
0-1
Tennessee
W
1-0
Rutgers
W
3-0
at #13 Virginia
L
1-4
vs. #9 Hartford
L
0-5
at Maryland
L
0-1
at #20 W & M *
W
1-0
at Seton Hall
W
2-1
at James Madison* L
0-1
UNC Wilmington* W
3-0
at Old Dominion* W 2-1 (ot)
at #25 Richmond* L
0-1
American*
W
4-0
East Carolina*
W
2-0
vs. VCU **
W 1-0 (ot)
vs. W & M **
L 0-1 (ot)
2001 (9-11-1, 4-1-0 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
A. 31
S. 2
S. 9
S. 21
S. 23
S. 26
O. 3
O. 7
O. 12
O. 14
O. 16
O. 19
O. 21
O. 24
O. 28
O. 30
N. 2
N. 4
N. 8
N. 9
at #16 Florida State L
vs. Miami
L
#22 W & M *
L
vs. Pennsylvania
L
vs. Arkansas
W
Maryland
T
at Delaware
W
#15 Virginia
L
at UNC Wilmington*W
at NC State
L
George Washington W
#21 West Virginia L
Old Dominion*
W
James Madison*
W
at Navy
L
Villanova
L
at VCU *
W
#8 Penn State
L
vs. UNCW **
W
vs. James Madison**L
2-3
2-3
1-5
0-3
4-0
1-1 (ot)
3-2
0-1
2-1
2-3 (ot)
4-0
2-3 (ot)
2-1
3-2 (ot)
0-3
1-2
3-1
0-6
3-0
1-2
A. 30
S. 5
S. 7
S. 9
S. 12
S. 14
S. 21
S. 26
S. 28
O. 1
O. 4
O. 11
O. 16
O. 18
O. 22
O. 24
O. 26
O. 30
N. 1
N. 4
N. 7
Virginia Tech
W
4-2
vs. La Salle
W 3-2 (ot)
at UNC Greensboro T 0-0 (ot)
at Georgetown
W 2-1 (ot)
Boston Univ.
L
0-1
NC State
T 1-1 (ot)
Arkansas
L
0-3
William & Mary* W 2-1 (ot)
Old Dominion*
T 1-1 (ot)
Pennsylvania
W
1-0
at James Madison* W
1-0
Villanova
W
1-0
at UNC Wilmington*L
1-2
at VCU *
L
0-3
Maryland
L
0-2
at Delaware*
T 0-0 (ot)
at Towson*
L
0-1
Hofstra*
T 1-1 (ot)
Drexel*
W
3-2
at Delaware**
W
2-1
vs. VCU **
T 0-0 (pk)
2004 (10-7-3, 5-2-2 CAA)
Head Coach: Diane Drake
A. 27 Miami
W
2-0
A. 29 Navy
T 1-1 (2ot)
S. 3 at Boston University L
2-3
S. 5 at Brown
L
0-2
S. 9 Harvard^
L
0-2
S. 11 Georgetown^
W
3-1
S. 17 vs. #4 Virginia&
L
0-4
S. 19 vs. Texas Christian& W
3-1
S. 22 at G. Washington
W
3-2
S. 25 at Liberty
W 1-0 (ot)
O. 1 at William & Mary* L
0-3
O. 3 at Old Dominion* L
3-4
O. 9 James Madison*
T 1-1 (2ot)
O. 15 at Hofstra*
W3-2 (2ot)
O. 17 at Drexel*
T 0-0 (2ot)
O. 22 UNC Wilmington* W
3-0
O. 24 Va. Commonwealth* W
3-2
O. 28 Towson*
W
2-0
O. 30 Delaware*
W
2-0
N. 2 at James Madison** L
0-1
& - Tribe Invitational, Williamsburg, Va.
* - CAA Regular Season
** - CAA Tournament
# - NCAA Tournament
^ - Mason Invitational, Fairfax, Va.
2002 (10-11-0, 7-2-0 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
A. 31
S. 4
S. 8
S. 13
S. 15
S. 20
S. 22
S. 27
S. 29
O. 2
O. 5
O. 11
O. 13
O. 16
O. 20
O. 23
O. 27
O. 31
N. 2
N. 8
N. 10
at Villanova
L
1-3
at Drexel*
W
3-0
at West Virginia
L
1-4
UNC Greensboro
W
5-1
Illinois
L
0-1
vs. #16 Virginia
L
0-2
vs. #13 Pepperdine L
0-3
at Hofstra*
L
1-2
at Pennsylvania
W
2-0
at #15 Princeton
L
1-3
at William & Mary* L
0-1
Towson*
W
1-0
Delaware*
W 2-1 (ot)
at Maryland
L
0-3
UNC Wilmington* W
1-0
at James Madison* W 2-1 (ot)
#24 Florida State
L
1-3
VCU *
W
2-1
at Old Dominion* W
2-1
vs. Hofstra**
W
1-0
vs. James Madison**L
0-2
2003 (9-6-6, 3-3-3 CAA)
Head Coach: Jac Cicala
CAA ALL-TIME
REGULAR SEASON RECORDS
W
William & Mary 64
George Mason 55
Hofstra
12
James Madison 50
Delaware
9
Richmond
18
Old Dominion 31
VCU
23
East Carolina
17
American
16
UNC Wilmington16
Towson
4
Drexel
1
L
11
18
4
22
6
19
39
39
35
38
55
14
16
T
4
6
2
7
3
3
6
8
1
2
5
0
1
Pct.
.835
.734
.722
.677
.583
.488
.447
.386
.330
.304
.243
.222
.083
Y
E
A
R
B
Y
Y
E
A
R
R
E
S
U
L
T
S
Richmond, American and ECU left
the CAA after the 2000 season; VCU
joined the CAA prior to the 1995
season; Delaware, Drexel, Hofstra,
Towson joined for 2002
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
29
ALL - TIME ROSTER
A
Ahlborn, Aubrey
1998
Alecci, Amy
2002Alessi, Anne
1988-91
Allen, Laura
1997-98, 2000
Allstadt, Judy
1986-89
Altemus, Stacy
1988
Ames, Julie
1994-97
Anton, Laura
1986-89
Arkwright, Christine
2005
A
L
L
T
I
M
E
R
O
S
T
E
R
B
Baday, Sherin
Bailey, Kristen
Baines, Andrea
Barber, Sue
Bardell, Sherry
Bassett, Mindy
Baughman, Pam
Beamer, Jayme
Beck, Kerri
Erin Behbehani
Bell, Michele
Berra, Lisa
Berry, Angela
Biosca, Lisette
Boswell, Beth
Bourne, Heather
Bouton, Heather
Bowers, Sheri
Bowles, Kim
Braunston, Kristie
Brawn, Jean
Brennan, Jennifer
Brodin, Allison
Brooks, Laura
Brown, Olivia
Burke, Janet
C
Chappon, Christina
1989
Chappon, Michelle
1989
Chilsen, Nikki
1986
Christian, Danielle
1990
Churchill, Sarah
1995-97
Clough, Maggie
1983-84
Colombell, Julie
1991
Conroy, Kathy
1983-85
Corrigan, Eileen
1992-95
Coughlin, Sarah
2000, ’02-04
Cowan, Allison
2001-04
Coyne, Margeaux
1994
Crabbe, Kim
1984-85
Cronan, Michelle
1993-95
Crump, Cindy
1982
D
Dahl, Jennifer
Dalton, Carrie
D’amato, Sheri
Dameron, Mary
D’anjolell, Michele
Daulton, Jaime
Davenport, Kasey
Dedrick, Kathy
Delucchi, Jess
Derge, Kathy
Derrico, Kim
30
1984
2001
1982-85
1982
1986-89
1993-96
1983-85
2000-01
1999-2002
2000-01
1985-88
1995-98
1986-89
1990
1988
2002-03
1990-91
1987
1993
1994
1983
1991-92
1982
1988-89
20032002
Dittmer, Lindsay
Dooley, Lea Ann
Dotsey, Danielle
Dourney, Daniella
Drambour, Betsy
Driscoll, Meaghan
Duarte, Nilani
2001-02
1989
1995-96
1991
1983-86
1993-95, ‘97
2005
E
Echea, Lisa
Eddy, Skye
Eiloo, Nicole
Eubank, Taylor
1995
1993
1990
1996-97
F
Fack, Sarah
Feldman, Alison
Ferrari, Kim
Fine, Debbie
Fiore, Margie
Fontaine, Annie
Ford, Jill
Francisco, Nikola
Free, Danielle
G
Gemignani, Maia
Gillen, Celia
Gmitter, Lisa
Gray, Kristine
Gregg, Franmarie
Gross, Jenn
Gurner, Angela
H
Haberstroh, Shelley
Hampton, Meredith
Hancock, Stephanie
Harlow, Kelley
Harsaghy, Christina
Hart, Jessie
Hawkins, Megan
Hedin, Dana
Hedin, Diana
Hellmuth, Julie
Henrich, Erica
Henry, Page
Hering, Jolene
Herr, Chris
Hilberath, Linda
Hines, Naomi
Ho, Christine
Holmes, Alicia
Hudson, Minni
Hylan, Stephanie
200420042002
1989-92
1982
1982-83
1995-96
1995-96
2000-01
1984-86
1984-85
1983-86
2003-04
2003-04
1993-97
1994, ‘96-97
1984
1995-98
1997-2000
1989-92
1989
2005
1998-2001
1985-88
1986-89
1992-95
1997
1997-98
1990
1987-88
1982-84
1999-2002
1991-94
1998-99
1991
1987-90
I
2002
1997
1982-85
1982-83
1983-84
200320041982
1999-2002
1998
1991-93
Ireland, Carrie
Kennedy, Kathy
1982
Kent, Caroline
1999-2002
Kent, Pamela 1999-2000, ’02-03
Keshani, Neda
2003-04
Kiely, Amy
1990
Killiany, Colleen
2005
Klapinski, Faith
1996-97
Kosco, Hollis
1990-93
Kosco, Leigh
2001
Koskinon, Sis
1982-85
Krawczyk, Karlene
1982
L
Laclare, Diana
Lecavalier, Shelley
Lecuire, Pascale
Lind, Carol
Lockhart, Andrea
Lombardi, Angela
Look, S.F.
Lopez, Mary Jo
Lubell, Wendy
Lutz, Jennifer
M
MacDonald, Danielle
Manna, Kara
Manion, Keleigh
Marchetti, Amy
Marin, Carolyn
Maslin, Kim
Matthews, Andrea
Matthews, Kristie
McGarry, Melissa
McGee, Katy
McGhee, Maura
McGill, Shelley
McNeill, Tarun
McNutt, Jen
Mcquerrey, Sandy
Mead, Jen
Michaelangelo, Ria
Michaud, Monica
Mitchell, Amanda
Moon, Cathy
Moore, Kim
Morris, Shannon
Morris, Yvonne
Murray, Eileen
N
Napolitano, Emily
Nehew, Kriste
Nelson, Keri
Nidiffer, Kathi
Nieves, Shannon
Novak, Kristi
1991-92
1987-88
1994
1989-92
1991-94
1999-2000
2004
2002
1992-93
1987-88
20021998
1996
1989
1999-2001
1983-86
1997-2001
1997-2000
1992
1999-2002
1994
1987
1995-97
1994-95
1987-90
1994
1986
1982-83
1990-93
1984-85
1982-83
1992
1986
1996
2005
1988-90
1996-98
1987-90
2002
2002
1996
O
J
Jackson, Vel
Jeschke, Shannon
Jones, Jennifer
Jones, Shannon
Joseph, Laura
1993-95
1997
1995-98
1996-98
1987
K
Kelley, Christa
1991
Ohlson, Jenny
O’Neil, Erin
Orange, Clarissa
Orr, Jennifer
1989-92
1990
1994
2000-03
P
Pagliarulo, Jaime
Paris, Jessica
Patton, Cara
1995-98
20042000-03
Pearman, Tammy
Peifer, Casey
Perry, Cory
Podvin, Lauren
Pollack, Stacia
Poole, Kathy
Portell, Kristin
1991-94
2001-02
1993-94
2003
1988-91
1995-96
2002-
R
Ragard, Becky
2001-03
Raveia, Mary
2005
Reiman, Joanne
1982
Ricker, Jaime
1996-99
Riley, Gabrielle
1989
Robertson, Katy 1998-2000, ‘02
Robinson, Amy
1992
Rodriguez, Laura
1990-92
Romaine, Meg
1982-85
Ross, Maureen
1982-85
Ruckert, Jennifer
1990
Russini, Dianna
2001-04
S
Salichs, Laura
Savini, Jessica
Schau, Nette
Schmidt, Amanda
Sims, Liz
Sims, Valerie
Sinclair, Molly
Sirotniak, Karen
Smith, Jan
Sorenson, Amy
Sparks, Jenny
T
Timberlake, Shannon
Tomek, Ann-Marie
Tomek, Chris
Turenne, Janet
U
Unterseher, Melissa
Uppinghouse, Kari
20041995
1982
20041999-2002
1987
1983
1989
1985-88
20022005
1995-98
1986
1985-86
1983-84
1991
1993
V
Vodicka, Sue
Volpe, Andrea
1983-85
1985
W
Wallace, Jen
Walters, Sheryl
Webster, Erika
Whalen, Jill
White, Kelly
Wiggins, Rachel
Wilkinson, Sarah
Willard, Aimee
Williams, L.J.
Wingerter, Erin
Wolff, Jaime
Wood, Tracie
Worsham, Sherry
1985-87
1982-85
1998-2001
1992-95
1997-98
20032001-04
1992-95
20031990-92
1999-2001
1995-96
1991-94
Y
Young, Liz
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S SOCCER
1987-88